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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-22 - Orange Coast Pilot7 I ) Jury Views Abortion P.ictfil.es Miller Geu New Hearing WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Ba nking Committee decided today lo reopen confirmaUon hearings loto the qualifications of Textron Inc. Chairman G. William Mill er to bead the Federal Reserve Board. The committee acted a fte r r e ceiving new e v i d e n c e o f • 'q u estiO'hable'' co m· missions paid by Bell Helicopter Inc .• a Textron subsidiary, In connection with a SSOO million sale or helicopters to Iran. Banking Committee Chairman William Prox- mire, D·Wis., said some or the evidence developed ln a month-Jong investigation by his panel's staff ap· pears to •.•flatly con- tradict" sworn testimony given by Miller when he appeared before the com· mlttee Jan. 24. Plane Crash Into Sclwol; SiXKill,ed 'Murder For Hire' Mleged 87 G.uY GltANVIU:B OI ... ...., ......... An e•·cellmate of accused Costa Mesa snuff film maker Fred Berre Dou1las testified Tuesday that Douglas offered him $1,SOO to kill ex-prostitute Pamela Sue Williams. Former Oran&e County Jail inmate Jesse Ray said Douglas made the offer because Mn. Williams "is the only thins the DA has against me." Ray•s testimony came in Orange County Superior Court as the Douglas trli.l entered its third wtek. The S4·year-old Costa Mesa man is charged with plottibg to murder two women hired to star in a pomo movie that was to end with their actual torture, murder and dismemberment. It was Mrs. Williams, an ex· prostitute and former drug ad· diet, who Douglas hired to recruit the starlets needed to produce bis porno epic. Instead, however, the onetime hooker reported the alleged snuff movie plot to Garden Grove police. They, lo tum, provided t•'O undercover,policewomen to pose as upirln8 movie actresses to star in what Douglas Initially claimed was to be a ~.ooo pro- duction. He was arrested Jut July 20 after drivine the two police.omen to a remote d~rt location wbere hia movie was to be filmed. Tuesday, Ray told the alx- w om an, 1ix-man Jur y that Do ualu offered to pa1 blm $1,500 •-to ....... tM ho61tft' .. ,.when be w .. i'eleMed H:om Jall. .. I was to make It look like an accident. bit her with a car or aometbing," Ray said. "Do you know what the word grease means in Oranae County Jail?" prosecutor William Morrissey asked Ray. "Yes," Ray answered . .. What does it mean?" Morrissey asked. "It means to kill aomebOdy, •• (See TOllTU&E, Paie AZ) BJ TOM BA•LEY .. OllN, .......... Juron iD the Superior Court trial of Dr. William Buter 'JI addnt ot HW'lu..n,to11 Harbour villbly winced Tuesday wbeo they were shown color photo-graphs or the baby girl be al- legedly strangled to death. The six photographs were taken during an autopsy performed on the dead infant by Dr. Robert Ric bards of the Orange County Coroner's office. .,And they were used by the prosecution witness to back bis stated convicUon that the baby that Waddill, 44, had earlier un- succeasfuJJy tried to abort was s trangled to death ln the nursery " of Westminster Community °"" ......... ..., "" .... .,.. Clements, 'Bill Bartc)I(, John Bowles and Brendap Shea. The students we(e assisted by lifeguard Bruce Baird llnd class in· structor John Cunningham. Hospital last March 2. A woman juror turned her head away and covered her face · with her hao4s while Richards pointed out bruised areas of tbe baby's neck which clearly, be said, supported the verdict of manual str&f\IUlation. - Severa) spectators left tbe courtroom after Judge James K. Turner warned the court shortly before the pictures were pro- duced that spectators might find the pictures -taken before and during the autopsy -to be dis· turblng. Other spectators left after the witness began to display the phot.paraJ)hs. It ls alleged that Waddill strangled the 28·week infant after a saline fluid he irtjected into the unwed 18-year-old mother failec! to abort the child. (See DOCl'OR, Page AZ> Coast I I • EATON. Ohio (AP) -An rmed baDk robber freed two youna brothers be had "'Id for more than 12 houra on a rural hlabway today, then beaded east wtth t.bei.r father still captive in a get-away car provided by the FBI. The FBI agre to aave a •S·mlnute be start to th• aunman, ad been trapped wltb his ta1es in a disabled' car on .S. 35 near the Ohlo- Indlana e. AfLer a1reeln1 to free the boys, the 1un~an allow~ct PanaftlG Otfiriab Senate Studies 'D~g Charge' WASHINGTON CAP> - Locked in lta toniest secret session, lhe Senate today con· linued Its examination of cla11lfled files on the alle1ed role of Panamanian officlal4 in drug trafficking, a review that could sway votes on the Panama Canal treaties. The Senate met behind locked and guarded doors for nine hours and 50 minutes Tuesday iind the few senators willlni to comment indicated their positions were unchanged. Sen. Bob Dole, R·K.an., one of the agreement's staunchest op. ponents, called It "useful" and said he thinks it "will have some impact." Nixon's Kin Shot to Death In Cleveland CLEVELAND (AP ) Richard V . Chambers, vice president of Malone College and a dis tant cousin of former President Nixon. was shot to death as he came to the aid of his wife at an east side intersection, police reported. Chambers, 57, had taken bis wife. Eleanore, to Cleveland Clinic for an examination Tues· day a nd wa.s driving with her toward Interstate 77 when he stopped al a traffic 11ignal, police said. Homicide detective Michael Cummings said two men came up to the side of lhe car where Mrs. Chambers was sitting. opened the door and ''tried to take her out of the car." When Chambers leaned over to protect hls wife, one ot the men shot him, Cummings said. The assailants, described by authorities as being In their 20s, fled on foot. Chambers got out of the car and collapsed. He wa.s pronounced dead at St. Vincent Charity Hospital. Ken Fisher, dean o( students at Malone, which Is affillllted with the Quakers, said Chambers, who was distantly re· lated to Nixon's mother, H.aMab Milhouse, had been Invited to the White House on one occasion when Nixon was in office. F,....PageAJ TORTURE. • Ray answered. The witness. who was in jail on a fugitive warrant from Colorado, said he reported the allege.d murder solicitation to jaH officials. . He then said he toid Douelas about a friend who might be willing to undertake the 1reue job. That friend turned out to be an undercover shertrf's In· veatlgator. He is scheduled to tesWy later In the Douglas trial. Head Start Probe . SAN DIEGO (AP) -fttad Start pro1rams are reported be· Ina lnveatlgated by the San Diego County arand Jury. DAILY PILOT But Sen. Gearae McGovern, D·S.D .• a backer of the treatlea, termed it "the biggest waste of time" in bh lS years in Ule Senate. Charles Percy, R·Ill., another s upporter', called the day a "desperation move" by the op. ponents. Sen. Alan Cranston, D· Calif., said the secret sesslon turned up •'nothing damaam1. •• Another four hours of seem· debate were planned today. Tuesday's debate was the fint closed session since July 1, wben the Senate discussed the neutron bomb. And its length surpuaed the record of five hour•, 44 minute., set during secret de· bate on the anU·ballistic mlsaUe m 1969. What the senators -up to 70 at one point, Dole said, but usually 20 to 25 -heard was a report by its intelligence COD"I· m ittee on allegations that Panamanian leader Oruar Torri· jos knew of or had been Involved In dru1 trafficlcirrg through his country. Sen. Birch Bayh, D·lnd., the chairman, presented the report, a censored version of which was made public. The report, much or which was based on federal drug agency mes containinf "laraely aecond hand" information oJ. "varying reliability," aald: . -Torrijos' friends and rel· alives, includinR brother Moises, were lied to an illicit druf trade. • -Gen. Torrijos, accordtns to lnformanu' alle1atlou, may have 1otten "a cut of tbe profits." -The Panam&ftf an leader, baled on report& the comm!~ called reliable, may ban known government ornc'41a wer• ln· volved In dealinl drup. -He also kne• ot hla brother'• involvement ln tbe aJ. JegecS operation,/ but did not "take sufficient acUon" to 1t.ep It. ~ut the committee said lt bad not produced any evldence against the Panamanian leader .. that could be used lD a CO\lrt of law." Reached ln Madrid where he is Panamanian ambuledor to Spain, Molset Torrijos aald, "l don't want to aet involved in the alle•atlona of tbl1 •lander because J have no reuon to de- fend m)'llelf. 'Ibe U.S. Senate, itself, will do It for me ... The committee's rePort a1ao cited an lnatance ln which the State Dtpartmentt_apparenUy on orden from the wrute House, alerted Torrijos that U.S. aaents were plannln1 to arrest Idol.see when a ship be wH aboard docked tn the Canal Zone. Accordlnl to the report;TOrrt· Joa then warned bl.a brother, ...m lert the llhlp at an earlier stop. In New York, a federal JUdae Tuesday opened a sealed 19'12 la· dictment char&~ MollU Toni• jos with smunllng 155 J)C>Unds of heroin Into the United Statel a year earlier. p,....p._AJ IHPPO ••• durlne their len1tb1 nleht· search, but feared their eyes were playina tricks UDdet' tM full mooa. ''You're lucky to see a few bubbles on the surface of tM waler when Bubblia 1Ub· merau," Mn. ScbeUer 1akl. authorltiea to talk to the Tbe gunman ·1 Chevrolet I'm nota~ to tie takui alive. .. b0tta1ea by citizens band tadlo Impala, 1U1T0unded by poll~• He bad t'O••~•red for the first lime since tbelr or-cars, bad ground to a halt more .W.OIDClblle .,.. ftMlal .~ deal began late Tuesday. than 12 houri earlier after rot.buy lA kllmond, I Robert Herrmann, 38, a pursulnd officers shot out the aboot 6 P • 1\ltlda)'. mailman from Eldorado, Ohio, four tir:a. Earlier, the eunman ~ Shortl)'. before daybre~ aald hla IOU, Rob, JO~ aJl4 Mike,• re. j e ct e d an o r f e r for runm• apparently thola&bl t, w.re "real 1ood." tr•ntportatlon In exchange for I a VI I h a r PI hoot e r I • • ~-----~--..~--~--~--~.;.....;.....-.~----~~~~~~~~--~~-'--:::----~--~~~c~ea~ned to 1bo0toae of Dils • .,,,. a s,,wer dUldnL •·1 dolt't lmow ll &Mn are f!# 1harp1boclUnbtre,ltiltUIMN are I want )'OG to no. l baft tocked, .,...JI pobiaAMl'.lt ldd'I head and If I 1•t It anywhere the kid is dead,.. ht said. ••we assure you 100 petcet1S there are no sharpshooters iO the area.'' an FBI spokesman told him. "l 'm gonna believe you. I hope you're rtght, but if )'OU're not, look out," the 1u1uJ1aA replied. : About 9 p.m. Tuesday, the 1\11· pect asked for and WM li\le.D mllk, coffee, water antJ cigarettes. Later, when temperatures dropped well below freezing, he requested gasoline for the car. "It's starting to get crlUcal id here," he told police. "I'm not worried, I have on a lone coat. but the klds will get eold." AuthoriUea asked for the re- lease of one of the boys in ex· change for the gasoline, but the &unman refus~d. They finally 1upplled him with three gallons o( gaa to keep the car warm. Dave Faµ1brough sHows oft his 18-f oot spider bunt from a Volkswagen and ir· rigation pipes near his home in Reno. Nev. His next project will be constrJcting a centipede out of a boxcar. The Incident began in Richmond, when police officer Joseph Edwards, responding to WASHINGTON CAP) -The coal industry today called for voluntary binding arbitration in the coal atrllte, but a apokeaman for the United Mine Workers said the union wa.s likely to re· ject it. The industry said binding arbitration is "preferable to the loss which the economy Is now sufferin1." ll urged UMW membera to return to the mines w b 11 e a lb re e . member arbltr1Uon bohrd wo\tld try to setUe the record 1t-day st:rtte. M eanwhUe, • officials uld ' ,.,.... Pflfll! AJ DOCTOR ••• Prosecution wltnessee have testified that he used hls hands to end the baby's life after com· menUng that the infant must have sustalned severe brain damage and would--be the sub- ject of lawsuits that could cost many t.bollsanda of dollars . It ls alleaed that Waddill sue· geated several other ways In which the baby could be killed, includln1 drownlnt the cblld In a bucket of water. The defense argues that there la no proo( that the ~ cvtr lived. In terma of mean.iqf11l breathtna and heart funetJoas and that WaddUl cannot. therefore, be ebar1~ wltb murder. bargainers for the two sides would meet face·to-face later in the day as Labor ~relary Ray Marshall conUnued ef(ort.s to mediate a negotiated settlement. A Carter administration of. ficial close to the talks who declined to be identified said the call for arbitration was "an in· terestlng proposal." He said be hope4 the UMW would con.sider the proposal seriously. A union spokesman said the f',...P-.eAJ PLANE ••• . The school wu closed today while emercency crews cleaned up the plane W?'ffkaae, police sa!_d. · Four bodies were round inside the maln part or the wreckage. .Son'ell aaid. Two other bod.Jes and l>l!t of the plane, believed to be • 1llaJSe-enalne Cessna 210. weu 1Httered over a distance of 100 yards, be said. Maureen Bu1ber, who lives one block ftom the school, said ap ex...,_.on from the Impact or the plane was so violent It shook , her out ot bed. She reported taearlnc the plane before the cruh and aald it sounded normal. Autborltles had not released names of the pilot or pauenaers. Sorrell said the Federal Aviation Admlni1tratlon has been called in to investl1ate the . crash. proposal was unlikely to meet with UMW approval. The White House announced that Manhall would meet later in the day with UMW negoltators to consider the ln· dustry's su11esUon for binding arbitration. The Joint session will follow, officials said. The industry issued its call in a letter to UMW President Arnold Mlller several hours after Marshall met separately with UMW and industry bargainers. "Tbe secretary met with both sides ••. and be bu received the positions of the parties and he's assessing them ," said Labor Department spokesman John Leslie. Privately, officials indicated the two sides rem-ained far apart. The talks came as new job layoffs were announced ln the nation's industrial heartland and power cutbacks deepened as a result of reduced coal pro· ducUon. The White House called the re· sumption of talks Tuesday "somewhat encouraging," but presidential press secretary Jody Powell cautioned, "whether it's possible through these dlscussions to make prog· ress remains to be seen." One administration otflcial, who asked not to be named, said the tentative agreement reached Monday between the union and a major Independent producer, Pittsburg & Midway Coal Min· Ing Co., would "figure In a ma, jor way" in the talks. an alarm, surprised two bandits as they ran from a branch of the Fir s t National Banlc of Richmond. In a flurry of gunfire one or the robbers was hit. Both men reached the getaway car and fled, but as they rounded a corner, the wounded suspect fell out of the car, along with most of the stolen money in a briefcase, of· ficials said. The wounded suspect, identified as Richard Eugene Baker, 44, of Springfield, Ohio, was list.ed in fair condition with a neck wound at Reid Memorial Hospital in Richmond. The second suspect abandoned the getaway car a short distance away and ran into another park· ing lot where he commandeerec\ the Herrmann auto, tatitff ~ Herrmann and his two sona hostage. Con Slices Off Finger LUCASVILLE, Ohio <AP> One of several prisoners who sliced off their finaerlips t~ dramatize efforts to gain freedom has cut off an entire finger. a state corrections de-partment spokesman said. David Cattano, 28, a prisoner a t the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility, used the pull tab from a pop.top beverage can to cut off the little finger on his left hand sometime during the nieht, George Lehner said Tuesday. Another inmate who toot oart in the original mulilations, Richard C. Armstronf, 37, tried . to cut ore a portion of the little finger on bis right hand Tues- day. but a guard saw him and stopped him, according to the spokesman . Rlcbardl ref~-the de(ense theorJ 'naetday uct. told tM Jut>' he was sat.ldied that th ~ waa Uvln1:__~dmltt4dly •~ cWffe\llty, W~ l1 Wddlokecl '°.' --------------------------------- cleatb~ • • The con•r'• olfleer \old taee Jury that the equipment uted while hospital staff tried to 're- vive the baby could nbt have caUJed the lnjuriet be pointed out tn bls photographs. And the physician repeated hla belief that the baby he examined on the autopsy tabla wu the victim of manual atraftgU}aUon ...:. the verdict he wrote on the baby's death certificate. · · Soybeana Sold W ASIUNGTON 1A.P) -The fint U.S. soybean sal~ of the HUOJl to the Sovlet. UnlOQ bu been announced by the A1rlculture Department. Of· flciall Aid 1\atsday tb1t Ruaala bu bo"'lbt 200.000 metric tou of aoybeans. Tennis Rackets Wilson-Yonex-Davis Dunlop-Prince Racket Stringing Racquetball Racquets RaccaUetballa HandbOlli-& Gloves Badminton Rackets I I Victim's PhOtos Displayed By TOM BAKLEY OI .. Dalf ~SUH Jurors Ln lhe Superior Court trial of Dr. William Baxter Waddill of Huntlneton Harbour visibly winced Tuesday when they were shown color photo- graphs of the baby &irl he al- legedly strangled to death. The six photographs were taken during an autopsy performed on the dead infant by Dr. Robert Richards of the Orange County Coroner's office. And they were used by the prosecution witness to back his stated conviction that the baby that Waddill, 44, had earlier un· successfully tried to abort was strangled to death in the nursery of Westminster Community Hospital last March 2. A woman juror turned her head away and covered her face with her hands while Richards pointed out bruised arus of the baby's neck which clearly, he eaid, supported the verdict of pianual strangulation. Several spectators left the to1'!'lroom aft.er Judge Jam es K. Turner warned lhe court shortly before the pictures were pro- duced that ~pectators might find the pictures -taken before p.nd during the autopsy -to be dis- turbing. Other spectators left after the witness began to display the photographs. It ls alleged that Waddill 1trangled tbe 28-week infant after a saline fiuid he injected loto the unwed 18-year-old mother failed to abort the child. Prosecution witnesses have testified that be used bis bands 1 to end the baby's life arter com· I menting that the infant must t have sustained severe brain .damage and would be the sub- ject of lawsuits UIAt eould cost many thousands of dollars. It is alleged that Waddill sug· gested several oU..r wayt in which the baby could be killed. including drowning the child in a bucket ol water. The defense argues that there ls no proof that the baby ever lived, in terms o( meaningful breathing and heart functions and that Waddill cannot. <See DOCl'OR, Page A2) Brown Names ... Irvine Mau !'f o Judge Post Irvine attorney Richard Luesebrink was appointed to the Harbor Judicial ..District bench today by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Luesebrink, 38, takes the post recently vacated .by the elevation of Judge Robert C. Todd to the OranJe County • Dae_ Egg and lJCI Can an egg survive the 110-f oot drop from the top of UC Irvine's engineering building (above) if properly »rotect- ed? UCI engineering students faced that chaltenge Tues- day ~ith devices ranging from popcorn and cornstarch paddmg to gyroscope retro-rockets. Judging the results were Steve Dwyer (below left), John Girouda (below c~nler) and Scott Rowe. The popcorn and cornstarch dep signed by Dave Adams was declared the winnet. Superior Court. A graduate of UC Berkeley"11 . Boalt Hall. Luesebrink leaves private practice ln Newport Beach to we over bis bench Autlea. He bu a.IJo sened as a deputy dlatrlct attorney in OranH Co.mt• and apeclal.lJed JD consumer fraUd tnveaUgation. • Luesebrink will receive $4S,235 a year as a mun,cipal court Judie. ·He is a member of the $tate Bar, the Orange County :.&ar Association and the CallfOnila Trlal J.awyera As· iOdaUoo. ~a Democrat, li\les m lnlne with his wife, Chris. He bas three sons: Terry. 14, Eric. 10, add Mark. 8. Costa Mesa eltJ councnm. will Usteo to a~~ posal thit Coild e ... the Costa Mesa Homeo-wnen Al• soclation to reftl'M Ila 1tUcl on its own reione tnltlatlve IP March 1 tnuniclJ>*) balloUnc. However ln ll'Ullnl tbe ~ quest 1'ue1daJ' nlJltt, couiicU~ said they woUM on!Y listen and wouldn't comment at a special 41~1 lloa-at 5: 30 p.ro. in~ll chambers. Homeowner auoelatlon President Jon Patadia aald IMl 14 unbappy with the no comment claua~ addlnl that the Intent of the council review wu to have - ..,.. counetr.memben ell.bet aupPort or reject Uii coippromlse lD con· represeotatlves and developers. Paradi.I salcl be will inform bomeownen tbat the developers have yet to deliver a suitable cOJ1tract blndlni them to the com promise plan if the homeowners support defeat of the initiative. ~ bOIMOwnefS ban yet to take a formal stand on the pro-~ eomprotnlse, which calls Jor replaelng pla~n'd apartments w\th a professtoul offl~e complex on a major portion of s:u actes alona Bear Str~t betWeen the Corona del Mar Freeway and Sunflower Avenue. P aradlt added that the council'• refuaal to comment could lead the borneownen .., - reject the compromise ancl llddt to their IUDS oo the lnlUaUve. ... · Councilmen said they were re- luctant to 1rant the bearin~ because any council comments could involve legal The homeowners a11octation wru meet t.ontcht at 7:30 p.m. at Bear Street School to once again dlscuss th' eompromtee pro· P.Oaed bt aaaoclatlon (See REZONE, •a•e AZ) ·~Battle? i Mesa Nixes Morch . Fairground Races B1 llOCllAEL PASKB\'ICB ot .. DllllY ........ Will Costa )(esans SOOD be hearinl the la.st abouts from the public addrell system and tbe Canal rentng of motorcycles at the Orange Count}' Fair· gro\anda? 'J'be-clty council took a step ln tba,.t dlrectiQD Tuesday n11ht, •otlnc 4·1 not to let race track operator Harry Oxley have ctty bu.lnes5 permits for two races on March 3and10. . Thia sets the stage for a possible coUrt battle should Ox· ley go ahead with tbe races .ay.,ay on the 1toun4s that they wilt .be be1d oo atateE ~-~·~eltt Oxley· cntwd'ed at tile Karch races would be --~ to teat .... m.tflera aact • plrwoo4 80llDf barrier tbat eoof d '°""" t.tie nbbe from the Friday llitbt races by u much .. .,. pereent. ,Councilman Ed HcFarlud cast a lone vote ln favor of the test dates. but the rest of the council made it clear that they bad bad enou&h. Last spring, councilmen re- luctantly granted Oxley a ooe- year e~ion for the races on the condition that noise. particularly from a frantic public ~ddresa announcer, be toned down. Dr. Robert Moore, Orange Cout College president and a resident of the Mesa del Mar area near tho fairgrounds, ar· rived at Tuesday'& council meet- lnc armed with a tape recording of races last AQgUSt. Cbareing Oxley with "a direct violation of the la..-.. for ex• eesslve oolae, Koon said the • race ~tors bad doDe nothing to red~ DOLie. After Moore•• noisy pre· tHUtlOG. -Jle WU fefted to ratse b1s wlce over th~ din from &be tape recording (See MCES, Page 42) .Mating Ctill 'Summoned' By PIOUP ROSMARIN ... ., .......... Bubbles, tbe fuglthe hlpp<>Jfota-mu-e from Lion Country Safari who'• been umpting the creeks and ponds Of the La&un• Hills for tbr.:e days, was reported algbted beforedawntoday. ~t lea.st. her considerable nostrils were· reported coming up for air. by park rangers wbO spent their second damp nlgbt loo~idg for Bubbles, who escaped unaer cover of dark Monday morning. Rangen stlll were at a loss, bowe••'t about bow to coax the mamma blppopotamus out of tbe-water. U you can mate the sound of a handsome mate hippo. Lion Cou.Dtry Safari needs 7oa. Jo Scbetter. park publlclst, sald the ranaers probably Will have to wait aga~ tOc'lay until Clafl(. because a hippo in water ls a-bappy hippo and ls llkelf t<> stay there. Ulp~ do abandon t.hmr wet security blankets at fttlbt to feed, boW6ver. Tile amall lake .in which Bubbles bas made her tut stand ag•lnst law and order la anue· sled amid the rolling bills behind Lion Country Safari. between Moulton Partway ancl Laguna Canyon Road. • ..If and when she leaves the water:• Mn. Schetter said. "a whole team ol people will be needed to circle her like a waeoa traln.0 Tbe rangers }>lan to fire a tranqUilb:ing dart into the beast. and have to try to bead her oft if she makes a break back to the water. where she could drown. tr the rangers are finall3' successful, Bubbles will be 1cooped info '-a front-loading earthmover ana provided a ride back t9 Lion Country. Bubbles will be· aceorded a bl1hway patrol escort up Laauna canyou Roatl. onto the San Diego Freeway to the Moult.on Parkwa)' entrance to the animal park. Weather Late. n1gbt and morning log alona the coast; othenrbe fair Thursday. Lo•s tonigb~ 45 to SQ. Htcbs Thund~ as to 12. Mat id.er•...:•.----.. tac Ute eUyT "Wltb Jarvis we're aoln• to be concerned with a lot of wues we weren't concerned with before and that will chan1e tho dlrectton ol the cJty. The houslnc sltuation Clack of moderately priced homes) la a 1reat con· cern , We're losing young famtUes so rapldly." Why are YCHl q..itfled for &be city councUT "I feel I'm the only qualllled candidate. Government is ex· tremely complicated and I have spent time and have made •n ef· for to understand it. I leel I've' been effecUve and I'm willing to continue for another four years." . DarrtlYll "Dany" Oliver, 39, is a homemaker who lives wlth her three chUdren at 3077 Yukon Ave. in North Costa Mesa. A city resident for nearly 10 years, Mrs. Oliver is a high sc hool graduate who attends Orange Coast College part· time, major· ing in social psychology. S he wa s known as Costa Mesa's ouvu "cookie lady" Cor her role in sending cookies to American soldiers in Vietnam. How will you vote on the North Costa Mesa re1tooe loltlaUve? "1 'm for 1l, ror the obvious rea· ::.on that, with future de- velopment coming into Costa Mesa, we have neglected the in· vitation to young families." Besides completloa of the Cosla Mesa Freeway, do you have any spednc Ideas to lessen city traffic problems? "I feel we s hould have alternative exit routes Crom Fairview Regional Park and we should have more arterial routes for heavy commercial traffic. I would work closely with the · traffic commission to reduce traffic noise." What Is yoar stand on the Jarvis tax lnltlatlve! "T he intent of Jarvis is fantastic. However, -I believe the initiative 1s incomplete. UnW I have a copy that 1 can un· derstand m total form, I'm going to have to vole it down. I want to know exactly where the cutbacks would be." What other key w11es are fac- ing the clly? Mrs. Oliver want!j more cooperation in the development of the Orange County Fair· grounds and sueeest.s formation of a junior dty council to work with the Jaycees on thls Issue. She believes this group could als o address the matter of school closures. Wby are you quallfied ror the city coaneUT "I 've been worklne with people at the grassroots level for nine years now and l understand their problems. I wouid like to form ally represent tbern oow. Kenneth "Paul" Raver,, 36. has worked as an Orange County administrator for tht past seven years. Jfe lives at F,....PllfleAJ ram ificatlons. Noting that at least one new member would be joinlnt the council alter the March 7 election, councilmen said there could be no guarantees that any compromise plan would be ap- proved. Passage of the initiative would eliminate anything but sinfle· family homes on three parcels planned for development by the Arnel Company, flepry Segerstrom and Henry Robert.a. The initiative was drawn up by homeowners angered by City Council approval of plana for several hundred apartm~mts on the Amel section or the prop- erty. The developers already have indicated they will m llJlt lf the rezoning lnlUaUve passes. Of'~ CG.\IT e DAILY PILOT ·-· .... .............. ....- Vk• ...... .::.~=--- "";:::"" He u attended Oranie Cout Colleae, bu ll degree ln public admlnist.raUon from Cal ~ Fullerton and bu at.t.ncMd the environmental M anaeement Institute at the University or Southern California. Raver ls ~enUy aervlnt Olll the Clty Councll· appointed Jfoualng and Community Development Committee and has served on the clty'a Goals and Ob · ~AYH j e c t l v e s Committee and the Water Dia· trlct Consolidation Committee. How wlU yoa vote oa the NOl1Jl Costa Meaa nlOlle laJtlatlveT "I can't answer that specifically because it could pnJ· udice my role as a councilman., but I don't think the lnltlative ls a proper tool in this case. It's far too restrictive." Besides completloa of tbe Costa Mesa Freeway, do 1" have aQY apedflc Ideas &o leuen city trarnc problems'! Raver said he would like to ex- p lo re the possibility of an em ere ency access road along the Santa Ana River near Fairview Regional Park instead of the proposed exit route ex· tension ol Pacific Avenue. He su11eats new morning routes for trucks delivering goods to minimize noise in res- idential areas. "I also want to engage the services of a run- time representative to apply pressure to CalTrans for com- pletion of the freeway,'' he said. What la yoar atHd on &lie Jarvb tu lllltlaUve! "I will vote again.It it because it's a sloppy piece of legl.slation," said Raver, com· paring the measure to "surgery with a eulllotlne." What odler key lssaea are fac· Ing thecUy! Raver supports letislation that would require public hear· lngs before county land use and transportation programs could be changed by tbe state Air Resources Board. Why are you quallned for t.be city coancU! Citing hl.s experiernce and ded- lca lion Raver says be would be able to cut taxes and &ov- ernmenl expenditures. NewTalb Scheduled in ' Coal Strike W ASBINGTON (AP) -Labor Secretary Ray Marshall called union and management toaether today aa the adm.1nlatratlon tried once more to produce a negotiated settlement in the 79-day coal strike. M auball arranaed the bargaintn1 session after the United Mine Workera unloo pve a cool reception to the Bituminous Coal Operators M· sociatlon'• call for biDdlDg arbitratioo and an lmmedlate return to work. Union oUlcials aU but lpand the propoaal, and the u~·a 89-member bargainina council WU eXl*ted to formally ~ it durln1 • pre·bar1alnln1 session wttb Marshall. A key district leader of the un- ion told reportera that blndine arbitration would deny union members their ••conatituUonal rt1ht" to vote on a contract pro- posal. Kenneth Dawes~ opponent or UMW Presl nt Arnold ldiUer, alao said ustty ex- ec uthes were ''l>llh•aded people who wm not alt down lo 1ood {al~ and neptlate." -Dawes' statement empbasbed the split in the Ullion and the tenuous grtp that Muter bolds over the memberablp. Miller hu not commented on the BCOA's ca~l for arbttraUon. ~ Asked about tbe proepecta for a settlement, Manball told a White House brtefin11• "l bope for it. You can't teu at this point." l',...P.,.aAJ DOCTOR ••• TONIGHT COAST COMMUNITY ·COLLEGE BOARD -Re1utar meetifte, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Survey of Para_psycbol~~Y." Fine Arts 119, 7:30 p.m. Tll'VUDAY.FEB.Z3 ODESSA BALALAUCAS - OCC Auditorium, 8 p.m. $2. OCC LECTURES -''In and Outs of eo.t Buyln1," Fine Arts 119l 7:30 p.m. "Hwnan Sexuali- ty, 'Science Lecture a, 2 :30 p.m. Estancia's Wrestlers SeekFuntb Wreatlen from Estancia Hhth School in Costa Meta are grap- plin1 lor funds to finance a trip to Japan lor a meet In early Apr:tl. Team member Dave Lorenzo brouaht a reque.st for funds to the City Council Tuesday nllht, sayin1 the team bad raised about '4, 750 of the $14,000 needed U> send eight wrestlers and two coaches to tbeueet. Mayor Norma Hertzog said she ts entbusluUc about using · city promotional funds to help out. However, the city attorney's omce must research posslble UabWty sulta should any team members be injured on a trip that could be listed u being un- der city apooaonblp. City Councilmen urged the wrestlen to continue thetr drive for private funds and to return to the council before their scheduled departure II arch Z2. Because of Calilornia Interscholastic Federation (CIF) rules, the te•m can Dot re· celve any support from the school or the district. lt must travel to Japan as the Estancia WresU1n1 Club. The wrestlers have .formed a non- profit organization and have been asking !oc:al service clubs for financial support. Resident.a or groups wishine to help out should contact Barbara Sheehan at 557-8403 or Barbara Schafer at 751-9901. Miller Getll NBUJ Hearing WASHINGTON (AP> - Tb• Senate Bapkine . Committee decided today to reopen conllrmation bearln1s into the qualifications of Textron Inc. Chairman G. WUUam Miller to bead the Federal Deserve Board. The commltlt:,.e acted after C'ecelvifig new e v I d e n c e o t .. qaestlona,ble'~ com- ml11lons paid bJ Bell Helicopter Inc., a Textron .aubtldlary, in eonneeUdo ••Ith a '500 mUllao sale of bellcopten to Iran. Bankiq Committee Chalnnail William Prox· mire, J>.wts .• 1ald aome or the evtdence developed tn a montll·loftC lnvestltat.lon by bla panel's s\alf ap· pears to '-'flaUy -con- tradict" sworn testimony given by Miller when he · ·appeand before the com· mlltee Jan. 24. 'No Evidence' Tiea Torrijoa To Drug Crime WASHINGTON CAP> -'Itae Senate unlocked it.a doon today alter meetinl 1n aec:ret for more than 14 boura to examine clasaifled Illes on the alleaed role of Panamanian orftolala In dru1 tralftcking. · Wben the docn were opened at ll:lJ a.rn. PST. MaJority Leader Rebtrt Byrd. J>.W.Va., declared that the two-day ex· aminaUon ol flies bad J>roduced ''no Wldence tbat would stand up iQiMY UnltedStatea eourtoflaw" llnkJn1 Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos to Wecal drue tr1tnck- in1. \-- Newport-Mesa school trustees have aut.boriled the formation of a non-profit ~orporation to market educational materials developed by the district, despite some objections trom a teacher. The corporation was set up Tuesday to avoid poulble lawaults by prlvato firms, Also, a manufacturer bad agreed to supply an addtUonal computer in return for shartni In the cQr· poratlon'a rlahta to market m atertllt whtch include com· puter procrama. Paul Jordan. president of tho Newport·Mesa Federation of Teacher•, told trustee• they were acttnc ln undue haste. The corporation was approved at a special board meetlna at An«Mraen School in Newpe>rt Beach. Althou&h several questions he raised wete answered by legal counsel d\lrlnc tbe meetine, Jordan aaid later, "I feel that they acted without fully con- siderin1 the possible problems in the proposal.'' "I was really kind or •P· palled," Jordan said . "The board has never pubUcly dis· cuased the merits of the proposal inP.ubllc .. 'Also, by dolna thiJ, they've effectively removed the budRt ror data ~roceuln• lrom public acrutiny.1 In response, Dr. John Nicoll, Newport-Mesa school superlnleDdent, pointed out that a member ol tbe school board will be chairman of the cor- poration. Also, be said, .. The budfet ror the newly authorised cor- pe>ra1lon will be surveyed b)' and reported to tbe board of education. Documents that become part of the record of tbe board or education b.ecome public documents. I fall to see his concern." Several chaneea were m•de ir\ an already revised packet of articles of iocorpe>ratloQ and contracts Tuesday before the corpe>ralion was.approved. The 'most sl1nlficant was a new name, the Newport-Mesa lrutructioaal Research Institute. Paul Tyndall, district director of l"Atailellniaa Serenaded Jnformation and computer services, said it was diacovered t.bal another company bad pro. ptletary rl•hts to the earller proPosed name, Newport-Mesa Educational Reaearch Corp. The board ot directors of tbe corPoration will be appotnted bf school trustees, possibly as SOGCl • as next Tuesday, district Sqpt. John Nl~oll said. The co poration could begin operatiaD within 30 days. The corporation will use Newport-Mesa school lacWUet and will handle the dlstrlct'J data processing. Profits from l!s projected revenues of $1.7 million in 1978-79 wUl eo for ad· dltlonal research and de· velopment. and into the dis· trlct 's general fund, trustees said. An aggressive marketing pro· gram is planned to gain new contracts for various tests, com· puter programs and other educational materials developed by the district. School employees who work in data processing wlll be aiven the choice of working ror the new corporation or being transferred to equivalent positions in the dis· trict, trustees said. • F,...P"fleAJ Hammett Wtnds Up RACES ••• , Costa Mesa Career I Costa Me1a Vice lfaYor Jack Hammett c1oMd out 23 years ol ctty aenfce on • musical note Tueadiy nlebt. Set to the strains of "A~bon Awel1b", 22-year·oltf. Joann Ruch broke up the Qty Council meetlng with a dJtty composed by school trustee Donald Smallwood. "I've eot a alnJjng telearam ror Jack Hammett." she an- nounced.' "Where do you want it!" . With that introduction, Miss Ruch tap danced her way lnto the number which included the following stanu: "No more aaendas Jack. no more council fiahts. You've lost your best excuse, for staylne out those lone late nijhta. •· Miss Ruch wasn't the only one who tumed out in ttlbule to Hammett, who ii steppinf down after elpt yeara on the councU whlcb included a sUnt u ma~r. Former Mayors Alvin Plnkley and Bob Wilson took the podium to otrer glowlne praise for Hammett'• dedlcaUon to the clty. Hammett headed the Costa Mesa Police Department's re· serve force for nine years and was a member of the city Plann· ing Commission for eleht years before his election. He said he had "mixed emotions" about his return to private life. For bis final meeting as a councilman. Mayor Norma Hertzog turned over the gavel to Hammett. councilmen took a few more shot.a at the race track. "Maybe another city should enjoy it ror awhile," Mayor Norma Hertzog said wryly. "I've had it." "Frankly, I don't want to be any part of it," said Councilwoman Mar y Smallwood, noting that the noise can be heard at her Mesa Verde home when the wind ls rl&ht. Oxl~y. a San Clemente res· ident, said he ls uncertain as to his next step, but said he would be returnirlg for a city business permit for the racing season set to begin in April and run for 2S . Friday ni1hta. The one-year city extension has now expired, but Oxley said he has just signed a three.year lease with the fairarounds. He added that his request for city business permits have been a courtesy to the city rather than a necessity lO"V&cancies Fi:Qed; Hiring. Freeze Ends Asked It Oxley might be in a Position to go ahead with the ru1l season without city approval, 0 -• ty Manager Fred Sorsabal hinl· ed that the city would be pre- pared to go to court to stop it. Oxley said the City CoaocU railed to note that bis extension was contingent on no more than three formal protests being filed against the noise generated by the races. Oxley said no such protests were rued and that he has been working hard to reduce noise. There wu DO menUon of that edict TUeaday, bdWever, wbeD supervilors ..agreed to fill 10 open jobs. Unfroien by the Board of Supervbon' action were nine lawyer jobs In the public de· fender'• office aa well u a health department nurslne poaltlon. A so-called "absolute hiring rreese" invoked by Orange County supervisors two weeks a10 ended without fanfare TUes· day when supervisors agreed to nu io vacant county government jobs. ·Shuttle Mission In a letter to county supervisors, Publlc Defender Frmk Willlam.a aald the lawyers are needed to keep pace wltb an increulni work load, Jncludlng that iml>C*!d by i.ur.recUon ol tbe dt•th penalty. The freeze wu generated on a unanhnous vote in anticlpatlon of fC)rced spendtne cutbacks should the Jarvl.s·Gann property tax reform Initiative be ap-proved June 6 by Call!ornia voters. Under term• of the freeze in· voked by supervisors, vacated county Jobe were to remain open unlen filled by a transterred worker al~dy on tbe county TEL.AVIV, Israel <AP) -As- sistant Secretary of State Allred Atherton left for Cairo today oop- ing to bring Israel and Egypt back to the neaotiatlni table. . Atherton said bis shuttle mission might last "for days or pos.sibly even weeks" before direct political talks on a Middle East settlement could reopen. Williama eaid the office would be a di.aadvantage in tryina 1..ch cue• unless liven the attorney• called torln thlsyear'a budaet. ·pl.)' roll. " Lynn •:"rt HART'S John Hort SPORTING GOODS .... 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 Warm Up Suits Wann Up Jackets . Sweat Shirts Sweat Pants Hooded Sweat Shirts Tennis Shirts Tennis Shorts Racquetball Shorts Running Shorts Gyrri Shorts Soccer Shorts Sweat Sox Tennis Rockets Wilson-Yonex-Davis Dunlop-Prince Racket Stringing Racquetball Racquets Racquetballs Handballs & Gloves Badminton Rac~ets V ley Balls. ea etballs. Sotc r Ball~ F tball~ )' seball, Softballs Running Shoes Baseball Shoes Baseball ShOes f ennls Shoes ~1919 .. I Dais Btlfl'a a Spider Oran1e County political benefactor Gene Conrad'a rags- lO·Hches story ended abruptly in a Los Angeles federal courtroom Tuesday when Conrad admitted he uaed a telephone to defraud a Joan client. A1 a consequence of his fU.llty ~lea, Conrad may be sent to lederal prison tor up to 3~ ye an. Conrad on leder&t charaes ,re- tat«t<t to tbe allecod •cheqie, In- cluding multtpJe ~~ Of USl.nl the telephone to detrau4. A Federal pr~ecutor: wnu.m urahatn told Judte Firth thtt a Jan. 2, lt'1'1, call fJ10m Conrad in Hawaii to hla oflice in Jr~lne constituted part ~ a cooUnuJng mlsrepresentati<:*l that hlb could obtatn a $40 mUllon loan tor Wbtttlerdl man.Jack Uricb. CWl y PllOT A:S • Funds o.n personal needs and luxuries. H was d-.rinf the closirig .stases of the 19'76 aeoeral election campalp that Conrad blouomed on t.b6 Oranae County Political scene. . In the ~ampalan's closing 30 days;· be pumped more than $50,000 ·into various Political c-amoalma. most of it into coun-ty Superviaor Pbll.lp Anthony's ~p~d!r ~auil~tbr1ougb shows off his 18-foot . rom a Volkswagen and ir-rigation plpes ·near. his home in Reno. Nev. ~lis next project will be ~tructing a centipede out of a boxcar. However. jutl how long Orance County's number one. 19'76 political donor will apeod behind bars WOD't be known un-til AprU3. Conrad 8'l'eed as be •d-mltt4a he bad JteVft placed a Joan for a client dUtlnl J>eosion Fund's brief business Jlte. IJ\.. his •swnenta before the jud~, Graham alleged that the 43-year.Ud paid police informer turned financier-spent most ot the money advanced Peo.slon winn1D,~"1an. Those political donations landed ~d and his allies in troub1e with tbe Oraage County Grand Jury when Conrad's poUtlcaJ pneroeity failed to ap- pea(' on campaign diaclosure statements. ·'Good Kids' ~Buried. Board Critic Asks That is when U.S. District Court Judge Robert Firth will sentence the burly ex-pollce in- former on a alngle telephone fraud char1e related to an al- leged U .5 million loan brokerage skam. . . ID Des Moines For Vacated Post Conrad's frvlne-based loan brokerage rmn, Pension Funds of America, purportedly ob- tained about $1.5 million in .advance feas that were not re- turned whtn the Joana went un-placed. WEST DEs MOINES Iowa <AP> -The graves o'i three .. pretty good kids" were dug in- to frozen earth on a hilltop dot- ted with barren trees. The men who chopped through the snow -'t Resthaven Cemetery refused to talk. The curious were turned away: Funerals for Jetf Hoffman 14 his brother Gerald Jr .• 15, ~d their friend Jeff Beavers 14 'were being held in this 'De~ 'Moines suburb today. The bodies of the boys were found Sunday in an old brick building that the Hoffman boys' father, a contractor, was re- .modeling from an adult book •store to a restaurant. ' The boys had been lined up '~ide by side on the floor and shot m the back of the head. Only hours later at an adult ;book store just four blocks •'away, William Baldwin, 30, was shot in the head and killed. One official suggested a mentally deranged person bad '1lppolnted himself a "one·man "llealth department to clean up these book stores." While Des Moines Police Chiet . Wendell Nichols said no co~ )'.lection had been made between the two incidents as of Tue$day. lowa Bureau of Criminal Jnvestlgation Director Craig Beek wouldn't discount the idea. He added it would be a mistake for investigators to make a link for which there ls no hard evidence. · "The balllsUcs test was in- conclusive," Nichols aald. · Some 50 city and stale in- vestigators are working around the clock, Nichol& aaid. They say they have liUle more than dust and wood 1bavin1s from the building to 10 on. Three mem are wanted for questioning, although police , stress they are not considered ·,suspects. Police have composite drawings of two. · The murders have sparked some concern about safety ln Des Moines,acityof200,000. Darrell Kearney, of the Support Your Local Police Committee, wrote a letter to the mayor, Richard Olaon saying, "This ian't a once in a lifetime occurrence. We bad 27 or 28 ~urden lut year, indudlq two ~lice officers," XeanMJ 1aJd.. ,, "Unfortunately, it sometimes ~kes a drastic aituatioia to get ~eo ple to take drastic rmeaaures, .. be said. •:.. Keame7'1 iroup last week ::&ircula'ted pet1Uou to lmpeacb a ?,.distrld eourt Judie cbareed ~Ith belnl too lenient. ~ Hoffmap 1earched bis •• memory for enemlel after ru. ~ona and tbelr frlen~ were :?Uiled. He came up wltb. not!Uq. )! Frequent Board of Supervisors crlUc John Simons • bf Laguna Hills stepped forward today to volunteer his services as interim Orange County re. corder. But Simons' bid for the job vacated by retiring county re- corder WyUe Carlyle wu re- buffed by the county !iupervtsors he so frequently criticixes. "You haven't followed pro- cedures," Board or Supervisors Chairman Thomas Riley told Simons. "I'm tired of following pro-c e du res that no one un. d-:rs~,'' the retired Laguna Hills resident said. Riley suggested that the Board of Supervisors delay ap- pointing an interim recorder un- til the nomination period closes next month. That way, Riley said, the board couJd avoJd appointing an interim replacement for Carlyle who would inherit the advantaee o( running for election as an in-cumbent. But Riley's fellow supervisors weren't buying. . They voted to eo ahead later today to select an interim re- corder, a move that Jett Slmom standing at the meeting podium . witb his volunteer services re-jected. Simons attends most board tneelings and frequently voices obj~Uon to board actions three or four times a meet.tne. In 1975, then Board of Supervisors Chairman Raloh Diedrich threatened lo· have Simona ejected from a bodlet meeting when Simons laid bia wallet and change on the podium and I~ "You're 1oing to get It all anyway. You might u well take Ulismoney now.•• <:onSllces Of/Finger LUCASVILLE, Ohio CAP) One of several prisoners who sliced ~rr their fingertips to dramatize efforts to 1ain freedom bas cut oft an entire ringer, a state corrections de- partment. spokesman sa1d. David Cattano, 28, a prisoner at the Southern Ohio Correctioaal Fadllty, uaed the pull tab from a pop-top bevera1e ~to cut olttbe UUle finger on hi& left band sometime during the night, Georee Lehner said Tuesday. Another inmate who took oart in the eri&inal mutilations, Rlcbard C. Armstron1, 31, tried to cut off a portion of the little finger on bia riaht band Tues- day, but a guard saw hlm and stopped him. accordiq to the- s_potestnan. 'Yretim' :CloblJen Sutpect A wapect apparenUy chose the wrong small market to rob, Orance pollce aa1d today. They aafd the 1uspect, identifted as James Howard, 26, of Santa Ana, was arrested Monday night after the martel.'a owur had roundly trounced him with a few well- delivered bJowa. · • IJOWAllD WAS TREATED at UC Irvine Medical Center for a hip injury and booked into Otani• County Jail, a~ to Set. Mite PoUok.. 'nle owner haa not bee11 ldeDtUled at hll o"° request. "TbJt IUY'• &eea Just pushed to the w.u:• Pollot aaid · · of the •,...--old oner. "He'• been burtlari1ed and he's -bad tbe .bell 1~ out of him." So When • man ~ame Sn M'Oftday nlaht ~d· after mak· · In' a JllUl'.ChUe, pull~ • ~nife on ~ owner 1 ~f• at the· ~btcbtaDd, the owner literally took thlnp Into bla own h1Jid1. I:ast May 4, a federal Grand Jury in Los An.celea indicted Fam' F~ Support Move .,..,, ,... Riff ..... OFFERS SERVICES CrtUc Sfmona Nixon's Kin· Shot to Death In Cleveland High Court ' To Rule on Jarvis Issue? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The California Supreme Court has been asked to throw the Ja.rvis- Gann property tax lnlUative otr the state' a June· 6 primary election ballot. Two opponents of the initiative asked the court Tuesday to over- turn a ruling by a SacraDlent.o Superior Court Judie, who last week refused to atrlke the measure from the ballot. The appeal was filed by Brw:e Sumner or Laguna Beacb, an Orange County Superior Court Judie, and Edward Wallin, a Santa Ana attorney. They con- tend the tlU• and summary or the lnitiatlve wu "fatally talae mllleadlna and inaccurate. ' Football fans eager to have the Los Angeles Rams move-to Anaheim Stadium have begun sehding unsolicited money to the committee formed to encourage the move (rom the Los Angel~ Memorial Coliseum. One donor sent $100 for use in the campaign to lure the Rams to Orange County. Buoyed by efforts of the Committee to Reloca~e the Rams in Oran('e County, two optimistic rans sent deposits on season ticlrets. The three checb were just openers. They were among about 2 ooo mail responses to full-p~ge newspaper ads the colDmittee sponsored taat week. With more than 1,900 envelopes yet to be opened com- m.ittee membel"S exr.ct 'there will be mOre unsohcited con· tributrons. The response (to the ads) has been fantastic,.. 3aid Orange county SuperYisor Ralph Clark, chairman of the commit.tee. "We haven't decided what tb do with the money because we certainly dicln•t intend for people to send us checks. We're likely to open a trust account " Clart added. ' Coupon.a that were part or the fuJ1.pa1e ads asked fans to in- dicate their support for a Ram move to Orange County. It wu in envelopes containing those coupons that Clark workers found the three un. so11cit.ed checks. Tareet ot the campaign for a Rams move to Orange County is Rams own•I" Carroll Rosenbloom. Rosenbloom has said he is un- happy with the Rams' present home, the Los Angeles CoUaeum, and is considering re- loc a tlng the team when his current l~aae expires at the end o! the 1979 season. Saeramento Judie Jnlne PerJua had refUaed to dllquallfy the measure, dlsan*lna wtUi eont-doat that It eheri inore than one subject. He said it dealt with taxes in 1..,..aL CLEVELAN D <AP> - Richard V. Chambers, vice president of Malone College and a distant eousln ot former Prealdent Nixon. wu shot to death .. be ca.me to the ald °'his . l ()(} S'' -_J n· wile at an eaat side intersection. ~ og1 'Trash B~' Killer Admits tO 2 'More poUcereported. ~ _ Two Or~ County murder i.1i.e OR ~'6i'l~6JL• cases are now considered solved Chambers, 51, had taken his °'. UelU baaed on the.guilty plea Tuesday wife, Eleanore, to Clevelud GODTHAAB, Greenland (AP> by confessed murderer Patrick Clinic for an examJnaUon Tues--More tban 100 ilod does Wayne Kearney to 18 more day and was drivlnl with her • 1 u ff oc ate d 0 b t t co'•nts of homicide. · toward Int----•-77 when be r a ered If 'fa1tuu1v tbemael..., to death In-a crate stopped at a traffic llpal, police dwini a transport fllaht from Kearney, already serving a said~ Greenland to nortMrQ Canada life term for three other last w-k-.a offlcl•'• murders in Riverside County, Homicide detective Michael ..,... enu, ~ Hid to-was sentenced in Los Angeles Cumminp said two men came d8fi.e dogs, destined to ac· Municipal Court to another life up t.o the side of the car where J term. Mrs. Chambers was sitting, compaQ)' a apaneae exitedition to tbe North Pole, Were put tn Orange County Sherifrs Capt. opened the door and •'tried to the three-tier container for '8 Robert Griffeth said the take beroutotthecar.n 400-mlle J>acific Western murders of Mark Lawrence When Chambers leaned over Airlines Hercules Transport Espy, 15, of Lawndale and Mark to protect h1a wife, one of the fll&ht from Thule in northern Orach, 20, a Canadian transient body was found less than two miles away on Oct. 6, 1976. Both bodies were stuffed into trash bags. GriReth said his orfice will ~ontlnue to investigate a killing in Sunftt Beach where the murderer rammed a wooden stake in!A) ,liis vjclim. He said Kearney is no longer considered a suspect in that murder or an almost identical one being investigated by Jrvine . pollce. Griffeth said the lrvine killer similarly rammed a tree branch into his vlctim. men 1hot him, Cummings sa1d. · Greenland to Alert in Canada's are considered cleared up but ~ The assailants, described by Northwest Territories, Canadian third similar murder in Sunset B_ ead Start Probed authorities as being in their a police said. Beach is not believed linked. fled on foot. Chai:nben got Out 0{ Only 8t of the 180 Hu.sties sur-Griffeth said Espy's mutilated SAN DIEGO (AP) _ Head the car and eollapsed. He was vived the four-hour flieht to remains were folUld Aug. 22, ~tart progratns are reported be- pronounced dead at SL Vincent Alert. on the northern tJp or EJ-1976, off the Ortega Highway. ing Jnvestigated by tbe San Cbartt,y HospUaL Jesmere Island, they said. Ora ch 's similarly· butchered Dieio County erand jury, Ken TI.sher, dean of students,--~~~~~__;;~~~~~~~~~~~.::__~~:.....:.:_~:::_:::;:::_:::_::~~:__~- at Malone, wbic:b la affill.ted with tbe Quakers, 1aid Chambers, who waa diltantly ~ lated to Nixon's mother, Hannah Milhouse, had been invited to the White House on one occasion when Nixon was in office. ·Gem Talk . ' B11 J.C. HUMPHRlES ~irt EV RE IC.At AUt.O~~rJI One of the lntft'fltlng thlngsabout the world of gemstones Is the Intrigue end exdte"*"t of new dlsco"9rles. In tecent months, for t)(ll'J\PI•, there were rumors of a new r\lby "find" In the Jungles of Thleland. SOme gem experts Who regutarly tr.awl to that Peftof the world wart skeptlcat. Pwt,.the rumors ptrsisted, so a hlghly·respecttd American aemotoaftt went to In •wttfpte. Followtng t~ rumor tr all worletd his way back Into tfM l(hol Nbl fOreS1 ,.., the Cembodlan border, Qn• amall mount.In about 6V2 h<>Urs by ce fro'." 8ang1Cotc, hi foUnd • small mint. He~ some rouoh rubl.s •~too them to be of e>ccellent qu111ty, vw close to ~ flntat ikll"mtlt red rublft wttlch are the most trusu ... d Of colon.d l\Oltft, I the man of fashiq_n is ~ring money WIDEBAND Ga.b COIN JEWELRY A al\Ow of money is '"in... ; : Riehl>' wotked coins, old • andncw. · That ~·M~ U.S. &Old . pfeob are bttu11rulfy fr11ned 111 J 4K DOid. CC'li111 can be yo~ oi ®I*. Corrio in co 1et our lar~ 1electio11 ~ T ~: ~ .de- rfd ,. • .. • • • --• If-• •• •• •• • • ,. r t' .. ~ ~ ~ . • • ~ .. • . . • . l ------------.... ---- 1 .I • • ' -- .. ··- J Ji .... • i i l I -- • :.~. ','•Ida~ T•a~~'' Mmplble- bare of H~p!a BEA VYWEIGBT BOO~: You hove lo take off YO\I" bat to Ute peop1e wbo nan oUr coaalll animal _preittvt,. known u Lfon Coun!Safari, qut IA LOIUDlHfll!. Wllon,tt comes todraWlnepu c lnk, they ar. una\LtPuHd. lo ·the free pub city departmOllll 'the Lfo'l· Cooijlff drum tieat...a~ake P.T. S.m~tookJike)ws,,. Pactin.1 for a des aDd. PobY Bbow. '..... · 1t.ll UU. becarn9~evldent some years le Safari people made a sex at.Ar out of an old beat:u,p ~lrcus liGll named Frqler. Safari olfielali let the. word leak out thlt Fruler bad a reeular harem and despite bi! anoJent age, was propQat- ing hiJ own kind all over the A.Qimal park. THE <WILY PUBLICITY drum beaters ot Lion Country burst into the public print.I \witb this revelaUon. FraJier became an example ot .aae be· '""''" • ing no deter:rent· ~ a real 1ov,.,r. The nen 111ent oyty'.' enormously an Leiaure World and otbtt Senior CiUaena' ·centers. He became a sex symbol for Gray Power. The feet tllat doddering md Frisier could ~ atUd on his four P.i'9 eluded public ICl'Utjpy. ll was b~ O\_b.er powers th•! dreW attention: , ... . , A·· Alas, Frqies ill~. No deubl with a amne on hls face_.." But alter a siait.able period Of mourilln1, the Lion Count9' publicity department fou.nd.Jtselt ooce &&'ain nuni lntO°tbe public prints,,despite lta effortl to maJ.nt.atn a low proftle. TRIS 11ME 1T was tilth an ape. Tbb ape had a bad habit of chewing up thibgs-someUmes otbei a'pie-and thus required the bhmtina·of his molars with oral alp'lel'J. So the7 put him to ., ... and "°"1ed bl"''"" to the • dentist. My den£ist--on8 John Reibert TbOIAPfO' of Newport Beach,. ,.... . This molar manue"ering drew worldwide·..atteaticn. with photographs of t.be ape 1illiDI in my den~t chair moving across the international wires of The-'Aaioe:lated. Press. Personally, I had mJxed emotlON about m;r dental chair being occupied by a large monkey but Dr. Thompson suggested he couldn't see where there waa vecy much difference. · . w ELL. YOU JlllGHT be left wi~ the notiob tllat the· Lion Country publicity department bad now run out fta string of novel animal antics. But wait! There bu been an. escape! · ,. • One of Lion Country's animals baa nect tbe flJ'ID. add ls loose among the populace. But none of the man.e.ating beasts are free. Instead, it's a preposterous hippopotamus named . Bubbles. Bubbles has b~ captivity. Once aiain, the Lion Country publicity de~ent is blusllibc beeaU&e headlines all across U.e region are .streamin& out the news. FURmER, BUBB[.ES mana1es to elude., capture. They can't find bet'. Sbe bu'vanilbed, poulblJ lurking beneath" the surface or the water in some coastal reHrvolr. How in the world do you lose track of tbe lhree-ton hlppo7 It's the equivalent of the Annyloain1 a Sberman tank. But never mind. all that. ~ Ollunl(Y Safart.)I back iD the news again. ~ It just leaves you 'WonderlDC-wbat'• next? f : 4 U.S .. May Pro~e New ·copper ·Do.liar WASl:DNGTON (AP> -The Treasury Oeparl.rnent hopes to get dollars jin.-Jin1 lo your pocket, the way that sliver dollars clfilked and ~lank~ in Americans' poclr:ets.~ar.qo. And the reason is purely economic. Treasury Undersecretary Bette B. Anderson says the eov· eroment wants to produce a s malle r and mostly copper venion of the silver dollar. It would be the same value Jo you as the paper dollar -wlileb would be continued -but It would streU:h a lot futtber !Or the United St.a tea Trusury. The proposed coin would COit. between two and three cents to produce and would last at. least 15 years, Mrs. Anderion aaid in a Jan. 16 letter to the House ,. •· colnase subci:>mmJltee. The paper dollar, wlille' eost- in1 just 1. 7 Cf'nta to prodw:e, 101•1 its economJc beaefit. becau1e it weaT& out much quicker. "It ii antic!~ that the new dollar coln, shed between. the quarter and Jlalf-dollar, woWd be mora acceptable to U.e gener•I public than the preeent 'do118r coin;• Mn.· Anderloa said . Tbe coinage su.beommlttee wll'f eon1ider the proposed cJian.c' befcn O:lall'ell acta.-u tbe la~en: approte tbe new cold -tbQ. year-, tile ~emment can produce 2$0 mUUO.. ot Ille/II for 'di!tributloo early 1n JJ'1'91 ac- cordln1 to Terry l('artSben)r, a~elal proj~ offtter for the Treasury. • •• :: .. " ... .. . .. = 1' ~1: .. ~ . " " " . .... " .. at ,, • M• : :' ll: a :: I t • n. I-... .. . ._ I :!-'1~-tl!!B ,~.~ -- . Sadat ·Attacks t 1 . • " , _:Cyprus Action ··-......._,. ... U.S. Rep. John Flynt. 63, chairman of the House Ethics Committee in- vestigating Korean in- fluence-peddling case, says his post is so important he won 't have time to campaign for re-election and therefOf'e, won 't run. T'ld9 Beautlfal Repro- dactloa ot .. Aatlqae Pl'eDda ....... Rack .. -on Sale! Wrought lroa ID Bi.ck. Old World ·-Antique White with Solld Jina Trim. Reg.$639.00 Sale $575.00 While our selections are still at their peak, take advantage of ourBiggestSaleever. We'll guide you to the best up· holstery buys .•. Introduce you to tempting dining room, bedroom and occasional fumitur<; specials. There's simply no sole that can touch ltl Save up to NATION /WORL . Russia Deploys Missiles l 514 NORTH MAIN SAl'ITA ANA · 541-<la\\ . . o PBUNEDALE (AP) -A youn• mother ap· v parenU1 shot her four cblldren and then turned the 8Wl on herself in the bloody climax ol a depression r ca\&Md by marital problems, autboritlea said. ·-Police aaid at least 20 lhota were fired ln the famlly1s house. Oflicera, ruahed to the scene after a wounded child mana&ed to summon help, found n the llfeless bodies of two of the children and told of c-the erialy discovery of a seriously wounded baby • aprawled 1n 1\s blood-stained crib. .. '11 (.. TWO SONS, AGES 10 AND Z, were ktlled, " while Sue Barber, 28, and a 9-year-<>ld daughter and a six-month-old son were criUcally wounded ,,1. when sbo9ting broke out Tuesday. 11 .. • .. All indications are that Sue Barber was .. reaponible for the shooting and then turned the aun •1 on herself," said Bud Cook, assistant Monterey ,1: County sheriff. "From the information we have, .• · she was solely responsible." • Cook said Mrs. Barber has been despondent ., because of the recent breakup of her marriage to ,.~, Guy Barber, from whom she was separated. MRS. BARBER WAS NOT charged or arr~t­ ! · ed and Cook said no legal action was likely until > 4ihe started to recover from her wounds. ~'. Cook said his deputies had determined that at l least 20 shots were fired in the family's fashionable two-story house in thlr rural communi-... , ty just east of Monterey Bay. • ' Authorities learned of the shootings when. J{athy Barber, 9, fled the home and went to a " neighbor's, where she collapsed from her own ' wounds. 1•• DEPUTIES ARRIVED to find bodies littering ·the house, Cook said. Mrs. Barber was sprawled in a front bedroom, a bullet wound in her stomach and a .25-caliber automatic pistol at her side. Andy Barber, 10, and Christopher Barber, 2, were lying on a bed in a rear bedroom. Both had suffered gunshot wounds in the chest and were · dead on arrival at a local hospital. Six-month-old Nicholas Barber was tound m •· his bloodstained bassinet. Hospital officials late Tuesday listed the Korean·bom Mrs. Barber, in critical condition along with her son Nicholas. Kathy Barber was in serious condition. ·~-.......... Ref~erg Explosion A 2.1 million-gallon gasoline storage tank at Rialto exploded into a massive fireball Tuesday and caused more than $450,000 in damage and injured a motorist on a nearby street, officials say. The .raging fire, with flames s hooting 200 feet into the air and billowing smoke visible for 50 miles, was battled for 10 hours by 200 firefighters from 15 Southern California cigencies. •• ,. ' ~ . \ ' • 'No ConteSt' in Arson I i SANTA BARBARA (AP) -A Goleta man has • pleaded no contest to charges of deliberately set-t ting four major brush fires in Santa Barbara Coun- • ty last year, including the Cachuma blaze last July ( 31 which burned close to "Rosemary's Baby" and "Chinatown," promptly announced Tuesday be hoped to be able to persuade Polanski to return from France to the court's custody. Seell ... ,. c..ii...e t 2,000 acres. (--------) ~ James Seymore, 19, STATE LOS ANGEL~ (AP>-~ County Board of : entered the plea Tuesday Supervisors, d.iBcounting reports that cloud- ) n Superior Court. seeding operations intensified a reeent storm that , Authorities dropped devastated paru of Southern California. voted :: i>ther arson charges against Seymore. stemmine ~ueaday lo allow the county to continoe ralnmak· : from about a dozen blazes in the county. ing efforts. •! • Another Goleta teen-ager, Robin Mack, 18, a Supervisor Kenneth Hahn offered a motion co-defendant in the case, was scheduled for that would have voided the county's contract with ~. ;Jeparate trial on arson charges. a cloud·seeding company. but the move was voted down. Gtat9lell 1t'o-cl Drleer ( ' INGLEWOOD CAP) -A group of youngsters ; helped themselves to the goodies from an ice fl cream truck while its wounded driver lay on the ground a few feet away after being shot by would- be robbers, police say. Officers said Tuesday that three <teen-age s unmen approached 24-year-old Hass~ Reaael while he was driving his truck through a park and ordered him lo hand over bia money. Razeal refused, then one of the teen-agers shot him, investigators said. The youths fled without ~ taking anything, witnesses told police. t q Laflolt Seeta j LOS ANGELES CAP> -The Los Angeles ~ .J!oard of Education has taken tentative steps to i lay off some 40,000 employees, citing the Jarvis· Gann tax initiative. The seven-member board unanimouslv de-j cided Tuesday to send out termlnatlob notices in I three Weeks tO appfOXimateJy two-thirds of the ~ employees in the Los Angeles Unified School Dis- : trict. 'l'be act.ion was taken because state law re- ~ qulrelf termination notices by March 1 and March • 15 to employees who could be affected by loss of • district revenue. l : · ltfdtle lf"UWraee• c • 'LOS ANGELES '(AP) -Insisting he has "at ~ no time exhibited any bias or prejudice" toward movie l>roducer Roman Polanski, Santa Monica ~ Superior Court Judge Lawrence Rlttenband 'i aevertbeless has removed himself frQm the cue · ••to avoid needless delays and court proceedinas." f Douglas Dalt.on,1attomey for the diminutive, ~ l'ollah·born director of such movies as Manager Named Brown Seeks Re-election SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. planned lo formally announce his candidacy for re-election today. the Democratic Governor's office says. Brown on Tueeday named his ri&ht·baod man for the past three years. executive secretary Gray Davis, to manage his campaign. And be scheduled a news conference today to formally declare his candidacy. BROWN, WHO SQUEAK.ED into office in 1974 in California·s cl06est race for eovernor in half a century, bas no well-known foe in the Democratic primary and is regarded as a heavy favorite in November. The 39-year-old Democrat, who made "lower your expectations" a s logan for bis administration, was expected to take an upbeat tone in his re-election campailn, empbasl:lina job programs and bis support of California space tecbnoloey and alternative energy programs. Brown, who had served as secretary of state for four years, won the govemonbip in 1974 lar1e· Iv on bll fath'er's name. former Gov. Edmund G. .rPat" Brown. HE 18 SEEKING re-election aeainst five Reput>llcan foe! on a record that includes a few personal triumphs and aome powerful symbols, such u hi• refusal to live in the governor'• mlU)Sioo anti bis refusal of a limousine. But that lmaee has been tarnished by growin1 critlciarq, especially in the past year. of bis ·administrative abilities and of ~andals in bis Health and Welfare Agency. Even Democrats have at.art~ criticizing Brown's admtnlstraUve style, in which decisions are often delayed and tables of or1anization Ignored when Brown takea a personal lntereatin a prqeram Qr department. Doetor €leared ' ·. -- SAN DIEGO (AP) -A mu clalminf. to npN1Sent a terrorist "Peop e'a Liberation" or- eanizaUon extorted $75,000 from a Bank of America branch ~ day, tbreatenine to blow up the bank and its manager with re- mote controlled explosive de-vices, police said. Huab Hudson, 54, manager ot the bAAk at 1600 .Hancock St.• said be waa lured into the bank parking lot by a telephone call from a man claimin1 to be "Captain Lear from NYC," the Nay~ Training Center bere. THE CALLE& said be and hi• ·wife had been at the banll earlier and lost a packet of cJa11ified information and coul~ Hudson look for lt? In tbe parking lot. Hudson said. he waa confronted by ~ man with a pistol· who banded hlm a brown vinyl briet case and told him to open it. lnaide, said Hudson, be saw two de. vices, one large and one small. Hudson told police the man then ordered him to put one or the devices into his pocket and he then banded him a stick ot what looked like dynamite, tell- In g the bank manaeer the brle(caae device and ~ one in his pocket were explo.lve. 0 1 WAS TOI.I) that there wt.re other people wt.th other devlBes in the bank," Hudson said. "If I didn't f~ lnstruct.lona, they would b&14;t off .• , He tald the '1UDD•n told }\Im the People's Liberation or- gabilation 'Wtls out to "t•l" banlca beeause they foteclouct loaos and "stole money from the people.'" hudson was ordered to get $7~000 ti'Om tbe bank, drive bis car to Kettner Boulevard and Palm Avenue, where he re- ceived a call at a teltpbone bootb noUIYinl him to 'leave the money ancf the two devices in bis car and take 112i).minute walk.• ' Picnickers Found VENTUJlA (AP) -A Cathqlic priest and four 14-year·old bo)'s were fQUD<\ in 10od cooditioµ Tuesday after they tSecame lost while on a holiday picnic and spent the night in the condor sanctuary of the rugged mountains in the Los Padres· N atJoQal Fore!St. . _,., . . .. - AN F .. J spokeswoman ~d that aft~r ~becking with tbe :united states attorney for ~an Dle10. fe«leral authorities de- cided the case was stricUy ~ Ideal p0lice jurisdiction fdd decllned to invesUeate it. Al the aame time, a po~ spokesman st-id the case was~lun­der joint investigation by police and the FBI. 1{1 U~e confusion, neither agenQy was able to say whether any explosive devices actu*1Jy were recove~ from the bank: ' I AnQaMIY AT U.W BANUUPTCY $95 DIVORCE $95 * .. • Jt .. HE:\'T \ '77 E:\l·.('I Tl\ 1': "O'f'•)H 110'.\lE FHO'I llLHB FHIEIH .\'.\l>LH L\IPOHTS X:!~ ~xxx or :>:ii -7777. '\'l~ tiii7 1-:,t. ~7:1 Uncontat.ed , ... 50 NOTICE .. s..r.t ................ _ c..t 1v111e,..._... ...... HMllMm ........... .., .. tee••• •r•••<tl•• ••• _.,.,........ .. _._ •Hlleea.s. ti ... 9"fl-• .................. IP"P" ..... , ...................... .,.._ ..................... ,... .. --------6dlfy •• _.... I sears I SOUTH COAST PLAZA c • . ; Save $2 on Sky BaJ~. Seamle$ bras! Reg.'B.SQ-$10 All the fit and oomfort Bali'&4 known for. Underwire, seamless ..... 34-38 8,C. Reg. 9.50, 7.50 34-38 D, Reg. $10; $8 Or seamless soft cup, 34-38 B,C. Reg. 8.50. &.50 Sizes 34·38 0, Reg. $9, $7 Both in beige. Bra and Body Fashions Facts often have U'iWay of finding new interpretations whenever un ~lection nears. And there's no better issue in Costa Mesa to be misinterpreted or redefined than the ongoing zoning dispute in North Costa Mesa. . The March 7 vote is almost upon us and the final _voting stand o~ the most cruC'ial party, the homeowners fhemselves, 1s not likelv to be determined until completion of an association meeting tonight (7.30 p.m. <it Bear Street School). B_ut we already know where four of five members of e city council stand on the issue. They are opposing assage of the initiative which would rezone-63.8 acres ear South Coast Plaza for single-family homes only. .. And , of course. the three developers who would be . l_t~ct~d by the rezone are against • passage of the n1tlallve. , They have every right to throw their s upport behind he newly formed Active Taxpayers' Association which as been phoning local residenLc:; to solicit a no vote on arch 7. T However, concerned citizens are less than enchanted v.1lh what they allege is a misrepresentation on the part I the phone callers. Indeed, any references to opposition o the initiative by the Costa Mesa Chamber of 'om merce are not true Chamber officials up lo this time have indicated they ill take no stand on the issue. While a tendency to stack the deck is not unusual in lections, the taxpayers' group would do well to stick to le facts. They already have learned that many citizens are. ore educated on the subject than the callers had agined. chool Closures ~ Newpo;t-Mesa school trustees are moving closer to ~e eventual closure of Bay View Clementary School in Sa nta Ana Heights at the end of this schoot year. ~ The shutdown of Bav View. the district's s mallest ic:·hool. would be another positive step m the district's l~1sing battle against the effects of declining student ~rollment. Still to come before trustees for action is a n.•commendation from district Superintendent John \ icoll not to consider dosure of any other district. schools He fore meetings next October. · While the suggestion to close Bay View originally t•Jme from a district-appointed citizens advisory 1·ommillce. Nicoll has modified the committee's request tor a two-year moratorium on school closures. The problem of declining enrollment is not likely to disappear. By next school year, the district may have lost .i~ many as 2,800 students over a two-year span. Therefore, trustees would put the district in a better position by implementing a plan allowing them to t ake further look at school closures next fall rather than two years dO\\n the road. Conlplaint Seems Valid It sometimes seems that no sooner h as one group o( public employees settled its grievances than another g roup speaks up. Weighing the merits or each can be q>mplex. llowc\cr. the recent complaints of a newly organized group of licensed \'Ocat1onal nurses at Fairview Stale I (ospitnl in Costa Mesa about low wages are, lt would ::-.ccm. quite reasonable. : The LVNs. of whom there are only 25 at Fairview, arc paid significantly less than psychiatric technicians. Yet L.VNs perform the same functions and some ad- ditional ones. : In addition, the state Department of Health recently appro\'cd raises for both technicians and registered nµrses, yet i~nored the already lesser-paid LVNs. : The situation is particularly ironic i_n light of the fact that Fairview is actively seeking t o hire qualified personnel so that it can regain federal certification, lost iri part because of underst.affing. What LYN would go to work at Fairview for far less than private hospitals pay, when tech nicians and RNs there are cnrning salaries comparable to those paid in private institutions? lt 's time the Department of Health stopped sitting around waitin.i:r for e mployees to forcibly bring their claims to the public's attention, and made sure its salary and promotional programs are equitable and up-to-date. • • Opinions expressed ln the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views expre53ed on thia page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642~21. Boyd/Chairmen ByLM.BOYD :More corporate board cHairmen are fired tbese days than are retired. l..lkewise, more corporate pr.esldents. That's not all. Two out of three wbo qult do so or else. It's a fairlY recent lr~nd. For decades untul'low, the cbainnen and prei14ent.s mostly huna 1n there, atmed suUiclerttly weu to fiaht off the attackers. Today, thoU&b, it's all changed. Amons a third of the biggest industrial firms, the bosses weren•t the }>ossea fJVe years ago. Q ... How much ia a pound of pennies?'' A. About $UO. Q. "In the White Houae ta a inacbloe called an Autopen that can duplicate the Prutdent's ai11lature to :in"'• lt look as Ulou1b he'd •lined personally. How xnan1 aucb pbon1 atpatures c•n tbat tbina tum out a d.l)'fh A. About a,.ooo. · Jack Anderson WASHINGTON -In today's world of corporate giants, the man who builds a better mousetrap probably would be told to get lost. This even hap- pened lo a large company which came up with a revolutionary new Ure and tried to peddle it lo the rubber and automotive in- dustries. The Caterpillar Company ha.s been making giant earthmoving machinery tor decades In the 1960S, compa n y engineers de- veloped a s pecial tire for use on its bulldoze rs nnd other h u g e veh icles. It was so successful. they ex · perimented in scaling the tire down for possibl e use on passenger autos and conven- tional Lrucks. By 1973, Caterpillar had perfected a prototype passenger tire and offered it to tbe cl06e- knit clan of tire manufacturers. It had these advantages over conventional tires: -THE CATERelLLAll tire would last for 100,000 miles rat)'ler than the 25,000 to 60,000 miles consumers now get from their tires. In case of a blowout. a driver could safely proceed at a SO-mile-an-hour speed before slopping. A flat Ure could be fixed with a simple plug. -The Caterpillar tire could be mass-produced by automa- tion whereas today's tirea need handcraft labor at some stages of production. Onee a manufac- turer retooled his productJon line, costs would be greatly re- duced. -The 16 tires 0n a monster tractor·trailer could be changed in 30 minutes because or the Caterpillar's new design. A new tread could be filled on like a glove, eliminating the risk of poorly vulcanized retreading. . -Reduced friction would pro- duce a 6 percent energy savings on the highways. There was one acknowledged drawback: the new tire would require a re- designed rim on cars that used it. Caterpillar people proudly ,. Mailbox trolled off · to the major Ure makera with their contribution to American motorlsll. The response was as if they'd dropped a bucket or eels in the punchbowl at a debutante's ball. The tire moguls were horrified by the posslbilitles of the new lire, insiders tell us. TO BEGIN Wl'fH, a tire with a lifetime or 100~000 miles ould drastloall)' rMuce t.belr s ~ or replacemeots. Secondly, the lo· dustry had begun boomtnc radials as the Ure of the .future. and they re{u.sed to awitcb otf • m ultlmilliQJt-dollar promotion campaign. Also, the Caterpillar innova- tion would allow skilled union . Robert N. W.-ct/PutMI~ ThefNt K .. wltl dttor tlremakers lo be replaced by less highly paid labor. and the tire industrialists teared the wrath or the labor bosses. Caterpillar got the same short shrift from Detroit's Big Three a utomakers although General Motors tested the Ure as late as 1976. The tire and ;&uto industries of· fered various explan~Uons Jor why they shied away ltom the. Caterpillar CQJlcept. Ont: Ure spokesman said the new·fan&led tire couldn't be mass-produced economically and c1t ed technological problems. "Ir it was all that good, l'd be down borrowing $100,000 rrom the bank to finance a'ly' own com-, • ... ·. pany to molte it," be com· mented, GM SAID lts studlet failed to prove that the CaterplUar tire had performance advantajes over the radials now being \Bed on its new cars. The rim pro. blem would create complicated assembly line ch anges, he added. Ford and Cbrysl~r listed too many manufacturing psob- \ems as Uie reason for t.heirl&- interest. aut there may still be a h y ending in the offin1. Fed al auto safety czar Joan Claybrfok appealed this summer to tbO',.Jn· dustry to come up with s!e better tire ideas. A few w ks ago, Caterpillar's presi nt showed of! their unwanted tire to Claybrook In Washington. ~ She and an aide roadtestel it al\d were e ntbusiaslfc. Caterpillar bas provided ~re data at her request. Expertt_at the National Highway Tr&P."ic Safety Administration are ~in· trigued by the possibility 01 G percent gasoline savings. n to mention greater safety nd durability of the tire. ! • • . DIRECTIVE 27 -Presidtnt Carter b as taken firm step( to insure that a;ome minor conftpn· tation won't blow up into an,n- ternational incident. St~ct guidelines have gone out r~m the White House reaffirmlngiit.s authority to reverse any govlrn- mel\Jlliition that might causl a forei\ll'Policy nap. } l All agencies have been fn· slructed lo report any nt"t- military incidents to the sw.e Department's Operation Cen which. in tum. will expedi a report lo the White House. ;·s means a flaRrant oil dumping y a foreign tanker or a fi sh g violation by a Russian tra r will have lo be reviewed by Cfle While House before final act¥m can be taken. ~ THE POLICY was set fortb in ·'Presidential Directive-N$C 27." issued on Jan. 19 and m· tended for official eyes only~Jt empowers the White House~o overrule on-Vie-spot governmfbt. officials. ~ < ~ ~ ~ $. Parent Has Message for Market Managers ~ To the Editor: The little quJck·stop markets we sec in our neighborhoods are great conveniences to us. My children like these markets, too, but as th~y enter to buy their goodies and slur-pees. the bar· rage or sexually oriented magazines that m eets their young eyes is appalling. Today I decided to make a lit• Ue survey of my own. I visited seven quick-stop markets , purposely avoiding those stores ad verlised as liquor-grocery stores. The first two stores I vls· ited did not display sexually- oriented magazines al all. Two more stores displayed Playboy, Playgirl, Oui, Penthouse, and similar magazines separate from I.he other magazines; front covers were bidden behind special racks designed to cover all but Ute maguine beadings. One rack was low enough that a five-year-old child could easily see into it. Mos t of the magazines were gone, and those still left had fallen back so that their covers were as exposed as · ii they bad not been covered at all. THE I.AST three markets bad theil' adult magazines dlsp)Qed on the same racks as their other magazines. Intimate and Hlch Society were dlaplayed rtgM. next to Surfing. Sexology was set out in a stand all by itseU at waist level One store bad three full shelves or such m~allnes intermixed with Star Wan and Close Encounters posters and other magazines that appeal to tbe juvenile and teet\·aae market. The name~ the Jt;ores makes no dWerence. It seema to be up to the manaier Of eac:h store u to how be will cUsplay these magazinel or if bo will sell them at all. Mt rltht u • parent. to cbooH the ..._. by whict. "'' cbll4ren "'8 liiril abcMat •~ IS ~.lolt W-. aiey catmot bu)' eQdi arid shai1*ie wtcbout '* int ex~ to pornosrapby. I can ,..., tbeiD out ot adwt book 1torea aDid X·rat..d aad adwt movlet, but l cannot hep them out of 1-11 •tdres ot other qUl~kltop markets. We must. tell t&ete ttore mua1era how we teel and, ii necessary. ezerclae our b\l,Ylna "cJOlit•• lt we wut to Pl'"el'ff U.. mor'1 1lPciata of our ne.lpbottiOOde. EVEJ:.FEB graduating students who have not l~amed to read so it is m- teresting to find at least they are getting "ery familiar with the art or picketing. <Reference the boy coll ol Edwards Cinemas.> So Ms: Mary Forbath is upset at having to pay $3.50 once every week or two to attend Edward& Cinemas. I afso am extremely upset al having to pay $3.67 each day in school t<ixes to keep her and her fellow ptckets in school. My $3.67 each day l.s for a seven- day week and while she has a choice of going or not going to the show but I am not given a choice whether or not J would like to pay my laxes. I WONDER if Mat>' and her fellow picket.s realize that if Edwards Cinemas did not have to pay their huge property taxes to support E stancia and the other Co&ta Mesa schools I.hey could redu~ their ticket prices so we all could bu,y our tickets for $2.50 per person. I also object to my property tax money going to pay a hi&b- salaried student activities in· structor lobbying in private bUfllnesses. U this is how the schools operate nowadays perhaps we would be beller off without them. Well, I can thank Ms. Mary Forbath and her fellow pickets for making op my mind to vote .. yes .. on the J~is lnltlaUve - not ohlY'YOle fOI' lt but campaign for 1t starting tomorTOw. ARTHUR RILEY Deaf Ban I which would add additional traffic now to the overcrowded tramc mess s urrounding the fairgrounds. TAXPAYERS' monies used to promote a 10,000-seat capacity stadium which would promote rock concerts in the heart of a residential aren is irresponsible. When have you ever seen the state get into the motel busi· ness? Well, thes~ are only a few ideas -.vhich have created serious disagreement with the proposed plans. Let's hope that the many protests by civic as- sociations, school district. and our town officials (who, by the way, have consistenUy displayed their concern wllb the plans for commercial buildings without prior bearings or proper zoning hearings) have not fallen on deaf ears. At a time when our slate is contemplating reducing taxes on the one band, the stale Fair Board is considering 1pending mucho dollars (taxpayers') for promoting commercial enterprises. The residents have apoten and documented their protests to the Fair Board, to the local, state. and city r epresentatives. Shall the state represent the tax- payers or does a large bureaucracy continue to formulate plans, adopt plans and force taxpayers to expend funds for unwanted de- velopments? CONRAD TRIGILJO Teen 'TllrilV To the Editor: I hope you wUJ publisb this letter if mly just as a warnlr\i to .others who may be out on the s treet after dark -or at any time for that mattq. To the six teen-aten .. ends· Ing.. in \he B~crest area in their brown and white C!at at about 9:30 p.m. on Saturday nlahl. it may come as a dis- appointment that the dart·like object. that thsy probably a}Jot from what l used lo know as a .. ilp·gun" that lodgecl ln our 10-yeaN>ld son'!J back ctld no in· tern•l damage. Perhaps tbe noxt chlld YoU shoot at tn•Y have an oye put out, ,or wone, be -.truck ln some vital or&an and die. Qultll a thrill. huh? I a4vtae tbele youn1 men (?) lhat the Ne1'J)O.,t poUco are aware or the liicldont. and l only hope tha& Jttber their pannta or nel1hboni MU read this message ... and put two and two togeulr when the six or them finally •· rived home and perhaps DQ.tr, since they may nol have befofje, become more aware of th~r activities and tum them inlo more responsible citizens befote it's too late. '! MERRILL BROVf' llgla' J . .., To the Editor: -: Renovation of the Newplrt Harbor High School audilorifltn will soon be at the progress leiel where interior decoration willk started. Present plaQs made \y .Newport -Mesa oHici•'is responsible for thLc; project ctll for a color scheme of bro'1! oind /or orange (ugh) instead of appropriate Harbor High colqrs with no perceptible plans \o restore I.he school's nauUcal dt-- tor. , I have caned this error to the attention of the school principal, faculty r epresentatives. PT~. district business office and school board. Alumni. paren and students of Harbor Bi also should make appropria calls to school ofricials an especially board members to sure a proper Harbor High i terior for this expensive b worthwhile federal project. .J RICHARD A. ENGLAN~ Teacher. Newport Harbor Hiq lleform1 Notc7 l 1 To the F.ditor: 11JO pleased that I.he '.Pilot ognizes' t.be need for campai 1'ef orm and· that our county n not a wait the reforms being con sldered by our board o 1 upervisors. Thanks to the on ing signature drive ot TIN CUP. our November ballot will have a campaign reform ordinance that will not be vulnerable to ..,eakentng by the supervison. The. initiative w1ll reatrlct a supervisor's voting on issues benefitting those who contribute Sl,000 or more to b1s political election campaign wlthln the previous four years. It will also llm it (to $500 a ~ear) the campaign contrlbuUons or lobbyifta. WENDY J. l.OWE ....... '• ... .. .~ . "' DAILY PILOT A: 1,ife Can Go On After Bea.t Attaek · •1 Da. PETER STEINC&OHN M •ny still believe that after -one hae had 1 heart att•ck "you're finished." Life can never be lhe 11me, lhey think. You may have to give up your business, your social 1cUviUea. The remainder of your lite ls one 1ot lnvalldiam. But look around you at some of your Mends who have had heart attacks. Some have had . .ieart operations: bypass cor-_pnary surgery, replacement or heart valves or other repairs H'ow are they doing? YOU WILL FIND that many have returned lo their former way of life. But there are ex· ceptlons, of course. The ex· cepUons are W1ually those who are unwillmg to drop some bad hablls. I recall two patients who bad heart attacks on the same day. One was a man of 50 who had the seve r est attack of HERE'S VALUE! .• .. •. " ii@.!£? AUTO~OTIVE DEPT. STANDAID OIMOllC . . ..._· _, ---,.,,,., · SAUPllQ .2ou~m$1 • 3. 2~~ MEN'S SIZES 6% TO 12 myocardial infarction (due lo coronary t.brombosls) that I had ever seen with recovery. It was so unusual that I r eported it at the Hartford Medical Society, and later in the Annals of Internal Medicine. During lhe attack his blood P~Hure was prac:Ucally iero and hls pulse barely perceptible. Yet, this man Uved until the age or 70 and died or an illness olher tban heart disease. t ATfJUBtJTE IT to the fact that he lost over 50 pounds by dieting, gave up his former habit' ot 1smok1ne at least two packs a day, exercised moderately, and arrange<l his allaits so there would be a mlnlmum of stress at .the office and 1t home. &NI The other patient was 52 years old at the Um• or hil b art at· tack. It was rnuch less severe than that of the first patient Yet. he died wit.bin two yean. fO 1 attributed this to the ta~ that he coatJnuecl to overeat, \o smoke at least a do~e1' cigars-a day. and continued to work ln an atmosphere char1ed with tension. Your llfellne is definltely ln· fluenced by how you live after your heart attack. ; NOW ONLY ••• VACUUM AIR POT ~ TIPIA TUJISMISSIOM FLUID ...;.. ........... ftC LU 1WO.STAGI MAXlfllTOS UI, 1•, H • U . """ .......... _ .... REG. 9.99 GENUINE UEDE LEATHER CASUAL SHOES s.tt • ......,..,. ................ ,.. .... , ...... _ _, __ ...,... ........ _ ....... _..,.. .................. ~ ............ -.................................. . BOUTIQUE DRIP-DRY PLAS.TIC HANGERS ....................................... .. ...... a........, .......... ,_ !l!~'!!!.!~YJIL., . ...... .............................. ...... REG. 3.99 YOUIOIOICE HANDMADE BRAIDED JUTE PLA'NT HANGERS ..................... , ... ..,... .......... . ........... Jlte,hw • ..W& ..... ..... # oo:n.YOUISBF ASSOmD PAINTING NEEDS ....,..... .......... , .. I ............. ........ """ ....... IAYI OYll 4'% llG. ·1 sth~. IOI coan•cu• POl.YCOID MUD .... ...., ........ . SCOTCH LASSIE COMFOIT TOP INEE·Hl'S .......... c....t, ................. .... ......................... "''""''· .750Ml 25.4 oz. ... CASTLE DIY GIN OR JALTA YODU SPECIAL .... ..,. ... ....,.., ...... ,, • .n _ .. .... ..... ,.._. ................. . sun•3a· PltCI ... '==P.9 ... ... ASSOlllD fllSll NUYll·TOlllC 16 OZ. SNACICUCIRS AMINO SllAMPOO ..... _ ............ ...-...: ....................... ~ ..... Price ............. Prlcii 1°9 .. 169 CUllOl HlllAl NICI 11 WY ISSIMCI SHAMPOO CUllOl ffAllCOlOI , ... ..,.............. ......111-•---.. ..................... ... ............. UUIG IN YOUI CUllOl DISCOUtll COUPONS JOI SAYINGS ON Olma CLAllOl nooucn . .... ,, ':erJFl69 SUPll 27.c PllCI ... YICIS FOIMUU 44 MJlllCIMIX COUGll MlllUll DmClllD & RUFFY . ..... ,......., ....... aw....., ..... . . . -· - ~ ... ~ .. Grant Sought UCI Caneer Cemer Funds A.tked · ··; UC lrviM bu applied tor nurly SB ". 10Wlon ln federal f\lnd1 to create a · cpeclaUzed cancer re&eU'ch center -on campus. Campus officlat. h•ve requested the funds from the NaUonal Cancer ..r:.lnatltuu.. • braoeb of the National. ~: DIUlutes of Health. The bulk of the ~ oney would be ~ed tA> construct a ;e•j>uUdlna and a smaller aum would be ?)lsed to operate the center and r,purcbase addltlonal research • !'~ulpmenL • Dr. St.evea A. Armentrout, as- aoclate profeuor of medicine and chief ol bematoloaY and oncoloa at the UCI Medical Center. ls director of the pro1ram. Dr. Garth L . Nlcolaont . proreasor of bioloalcal sclencea, ui assoctai. director. ' • ' uct offlclals are requettlnc $6,363,000 to construct a 87 ,200· square-foot building at a alte between the Collue of Medicine and the School of Biologic.al Sciences. That sum is 75 percent of the estimated total cost. wblcb is the 1uldellne un- der federal regulations. The remain· ing 2S percent muat be met through fund• from non.governmental sources. Oeltr ............... : UCI RESEARCHERS, many or ·whom are afflllated wlth the • campuswlde Program ln Oncology ' are investigating a number of • cancer-related problems. Research is focused on determining tbe causes ; and m~banlsms of cancer and un· =· derstanding environmental and oc- • cupaUonal forms of cancer. The Program in Oncology includes 30 faculty members, primarily from • the UCI College of Medicine and the School or Biological Sciences. ·Physical science faculty members are involved in related research. ,::Altogether they received about $7.S milllon in cancer research grants last year. TBE EFFORT to raiae the 25 percent matching funds has begun and is chaired by Dennis Devine. SOD of the late actor Andy Devine . The Andy DeVlDe Memorial Cancer Fund was established last year under the trusteeship of the UCI Foundation to receive &ifts for the UCl cancer research center. The actor, who died ~ast year after a lenatby bout with leu.kemla, had ex- pressed a desire to help build the cancer center. PRESIDING JUDGE Altcemarfe Stotler Presi<ling Judge Appointed De.di Not lea Anaheim Man Heads PIB•AMJLY ~0&.0MIAL flUttllAL HOMI 7801 Bolaa Ave. Westminsler 8DW525 ] etDJ' plight Lecture Topic FVMan Honored :Partty t o Yli d Tijuana Boy A benefit party for a Tijuana boy Who t1 un· dergolna plastic surgery to repair dbflcurtn1 facial bums ls scheduled Satunt.y by the Hunt· ington Beach couple wbo found the boy. Ricardo and Vlrginla CasUllo, of 8811 Defiance Drive, will be hostine Ute ~aU party at the home of Mr. and Mra. Wally Davia, 18502 Llncolo Circle, Villa Park, from 8 p.m. to mldniebt. MINIMUM ADMISSION donation• of $10 should be rpade out of lnterplaat, desJcnated for plastic surgery for Tomas Dominguez. The fUad.s will go to the nonprofit organlaatfon at Stanford University Medical Center in Palo Alto. Docmrs wbo belons tA>' tbtt. TtOrldwlde or•. ganluU<m dona.t.e Ume and talent free to make maimed cblldren new and whole again. but tbe cost of hospital care rnmt be paid. INGLE WOMEN ORANGECOUNTY OBfTUARtES 4 ,.cnnous auu•ua , NMl9STAftMILMT • TIM'IOI ...... --II .......... rwss as: C.Al.I FOANIA GEMOl.OGICAL 1.AllORATOAIES 111 So_,.lt ~'"­ S..lte U.,Of'-. CA.~ :......,~ Nial P. l.lielllng PtlO, 1ISI -ceton Orlw, CMta Milw. CA. "26$ • Tllllbllll-11 ~.., ... cllvldual. N 1.i P.1.-lftg Pl>O Tllll .i. ..... t -tiled ..,. _ CO!llttY Cl"11 of Or .... C-. .. Jaflu•rv tt. tm . , • ..... Pullll!Nd ~ a.st ~ty .... 1.1.u.n.mt • ..,..,. ''STYLE'' HAIRSPRAY No Fluonabonl 13oz.17c Reynolds Wrap ALUMINUM FOIL · fi:I·'G'rlf'tlhl • o SAV·ON BRAND THERMOMETER OIAl. Mil I ETAL ScoreaDy MRE ~ u•um ID.19 Sea11111'1 -~':WI WHISKEY 5 rll 751... .., ~:: Vasya I ag IOPF. t.71UTll .. , WHOLE PEELED TOMATOES TAX TIME .... ~~-.~al> AIDS Clasp Envelop11 wltl IAILERI DAIL V fltLOT ..48 ' M~RINA TOILET TISS~E . One Srza U IUAllD TOP I TOE Pll'ftc1 flt tt11 nm ume and ~~--them! NON·STING . SOfT & ORI ~ PIY AM BIRO, Ethiopia (AP) -Children tn •o•entze. cut-off uniforms clutchln1 wooden rtlles . are a common •llht in the bruabflre wan that ptrfodically erupt across Africa. · &L But in the rebellion to end EthJopian control or ... e 01aden Desert and join it to Somalia, tbe drea ne not pla)'iaf IO&cJlet. They are act.lveb' : 1a1ed in comtiat, to aveqe the deat.M of loved ~ ,ones and to bell> ·tam tb• dream of Weatem ~ ,:Bornalla, the rebels' .name for the 01aden, lDto a reality. , • · 1 THREE SUCH YOUNGSl'ERS SEEN here in 'the moµntains and valleys on the rebel aide or tbe Fiya"1biro battlefropt appeared to ~ at that awkward ace between childhood and adolescence. W earin& brown uniforms, they crouched In the bush facing Ethiopian positions on an opposite ridge. Across each boy's back was an AK...t7 ·automatic .rifle about half his size, a weapon the Russians supplied to tbe ( · rw~o /~ ) r e b e l s' backers in WJ"A.R. l"f Somalia before the AFRICA Kre mlin s witched its . support to Ethiopia. .. As is our tradition, they want revenge for the deaths or their parents," .said Mohammed Hassan, a field commander tor 'the West.em Somali Liberation Front. "They have all received military training." HASSAN EXPLAINED THAT THE Ethiopians killed the boys' parents when they re- captured hilltop Fiyambiro temporarily last month and executed persons suspected of working for the Liberation Front. Hassan did not say bow many armed cblldren were under his command. but Indicated there were more in the area. Fiyambiro is in the Amhar mountains, about 110 miles west of the Somali border and 6'1J miles north of the strategic Babile Gap. It is one or two main battlefronts in eastern .Ethiopia, where the Liberation Front guerrillas are battling an Ethiopian army counter-offensive to reclaim the Ogaden. THE PEOPLE OF FIY AMBIBO, like most of the people ln the oaaden, are ethnic Somalis, Moslem .nomads like the people or neighboring Somalia, with no cultural ties to the Chrlatian Ethiopians to whom the 01~ was ceded by the colonial powers in the 19th century. Liberation Front officials here said thousands of the Ogaden's nomads are receiving mlllt.uy training at 40 camps in the "liberated" zone CCIO· 9uered by the rebels since the war erupted in mid· July. They said thou.sands of others have been armed with weapons supplied by Somalia or captured from the Ethiopians. At Jijiga, a former Ethiopian taJtk and radar base in the northern Ogaden, visillnl reporters toured an Ethiopian army camp converted lnto a refugee cent.el'. ABOUT 800 REFUGED FJlOll Ethiopian bpmblngs of Somali villages around Harar, .S miles to the west, were housed in the camp amid • ., ....... REFUGEE BOY PACKS ARMS AT JIJIGA In Ethiopia, They•re Not Ptaytng Soldle; the debris of the balUe foucbt in J Ui&a last September. Women, carrying infants in slings acros.s their bacu. stood in groups wat.chlna their men learn to field-strip rifles. The men ran&ed from adolescents to the elderly. Some wore the tradiUonal bos&unty, a colorful wrapatound skirt. Others bad on a hod1epodge or military attire. Their weapons also were mixed, Soviet Kalashnikov rifles and American weapons captured from the Ethiopians. · "I WALKED FIV~ DAYS from my-vlllate to reach bere and Join the rram,•• aald 8akar f{adal. one of the oldel' men. •"fbey kilJed my famDy~" He aald be came rrom \he vWaie or Aramayo, near Harar, one or the two stron&holdt iD wtdch the Ethiopi.an army wu bealeaed unW it.launcbed its -count.er.offenalve lasl montb. Bakar Wadai said th~ Ethiopian air lortt re· peatedly bombed bis vUlage t.ha month, and the five memben or his famlly were killed in one of the raids. After military instruction, the men and boys at the retueee camp are sent INlck to their home a.reu or dispatched to other fronts to Opt. They appear determined to defend tbeir new freedom from J:tbk>pian rule. NEW ORLEANS <AP) -Linda L. Wood of Jndlanapolls and Esther V. Tomich of San Pedro, were named $25,000 tlrat prize winners in the a.n· nual A.merica's Bqeoff eookln1 eompeUUoa. Mra. W6od , a • seeretary, won Tuesday with her "Chlck·n· BroccoU Pot Pies" dish. Mrs. Tomlch's winner was a ~·Nutty Graham Picnic Cake.'' THI! TUEE SS.QOO winners were Paul Hill of Long Beach, with .. ..,..... PILLSBURY BAKEOFF WINNER Either Tomich Hell• From Sen Pedro "Tomato Cheese Pie"; ------------------Kath I ee n Lee of Arcadia, with "Chocolate Cherry Jubilees," and Reta Eb- blnk ol TorrMce, with .. Maple Cream Coffee Treat." Seven winners or Art Group Slates Craft Workshop '2.000 prizes were Betty The NigUel Art Association will meet Thurs· Engles of Midland, day for a cralt workshop at tbe home of Kathy Mich.; Stella Gilbert.son Beaufort. 29502 Ivy Glenn Drive. of Minneapolis; Mar· Fumiko Gluck will instruct memben in a Jorie B. Hooper of· basket weaving project from 12:30 to 3 p.m. 11\e Lakeland, Fla.; Betty S. junior art group will meet at Nlpel Hilla ,Junior Judy ol Rockville, Md.: Hiah·Sebool Monday ni&bt at 7 • Rebecca LaBrum of For more information, call chairman Mary Palo Alto; Maurine Lou8ri&gsat493·278S. Vaughn of Richmond, Va .. and Maria Wilkins of Tingley, Iowa. •as. WOOD'S recipe waa the rant sbe entered in a conteet. lfer dish ln· eluded broccoli. chicken, shredded cheese I.Pd biscuits. Mn. Tomicb'a recipe included 1raba11> cracker crumbs, un- bkacbed flour. orance jtaJce and chopped iauta. The top priZA9 ID the tGOtat ...,..ored by tbe Plllabury Co. were awarded In separate cate1oriel: ~1'1 pro- ducta and retricerat.ed foods. SA Swap Meet An antique swap meet sponsored by the Santa Aaa Uptown Lions Club ls set for March s from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at Santa Ana College. Japanese Women Fight Night Work TOKYO, Japan (AP) -A women's rights group bas urged restricUoos on nlgbt work by men in Japan, where t.be only women Qfficlally allowed to work after 10 p.m. are public servanta, nuraes and bar hos~. A report submitted to the government by 28 women's orga.nlut.ions says ni&bt work damages the health or both sexes. The law restricting night work by women was aimed originally al protect.tna tbe weUare or mothers and children. ·Tokyo Chief Resigns TOKYO (AP) -Tokyo police chief Kuniyasu Tsuchida, SS, resigned to take responsibility for the alleged rape and murder ol a woman colle1e student last month by a young patrolman. Tsuchida and 11 ranking officen beading the 50,000·st.rong force were offtclally reprimanded afte.r the reJ)OC'Ud rape and Tauchida'a pay wu cut by 10 percent. . ,, - NATION I WORlD Y oune•. • oa.ndldate for the Republlc•n nomination for 10•· ernor, said T\M:sda7 in • letter to GOY. Edmund Brown Jr. thJt co•~ miaslon nalinp a1atmt Sundesert are .. not bJ conlormily with the lD· tent and apirlt" of California law. JN A SEPARATg letter. Youneer 1ave th9' Energ1 CommiHlon permission to hire lta own attorneys. Nocm-1· ly. Younger' I( office acts as Je&al representative of all atate agenciea. Brown said be thought Younger•a iaterpretatipo of the atate•a nuclear safepard laws "la ~ accurate," but that lt la proper for Younger, "when be can't con- sclenUoualy uphold the law . • . to step out af:ld hire other counsel... • · co••1ss10N Chairman Richard Maullln, appointed t;y Brown. said he would not question Younger'a decision and •"would be happy" to hi.re a private firm for nuclear matters. ''Tbele are tblDp om; expects ln an electloa year." Maiamn Aid.. · . . Younger sald Ile. supported tbe de· velopment of nuclev power and said sucb d6- velopmeat la "tbe will of tbe people" because a 197S vote rejected a nuclear Nleguarda IQ. itlaUve. • • I i ·~ere's B1BOWAaot.. RANDY CM•Dlllr ....... Some people have ealled it a .revolving door alfenae. Otben have eald U is an exhausUn1 de- f enae th-.t ~re ates mlatakea apd eauaea turnovers by the oppoalUon. Wbatever the Da,me or the reason, the Saddleback College basketball team baa gained widespread popularity this season and la drawing near capacity crvwdl at bome aames. The Gauchos are averaging 107 .4 points a game for the ·season and .. e hit.ting at a lU.8 clip for 13 coa.fereoce outings go- ing into tonight's Wt with visit· ing Southwestern. Coach Bill! Irish Belt WoHpack !1ve, 70-59 ~ SOtJnt BEND, Ind. -Notre iJ)ame's Dave Batton scored 22 'J)Oints and pUlled down a game- ',higb 12 rebounds Tuesday night as the nlnth·ranked Irish whipped the cold-shooting and· C'oul-plagued WoUpack of North Carolina State. 10-59. in college basketball. Notre Dame, which meets top- ranked Marquette in a national- ly televised game here Sunday, confused North Carolina State with .a switcb.lng man-to-man and zone defense. The Wolfpack, shooting 31 percent from the field in the first half, fell behind 34·2'1 at the in- termission and never caught up. Four straight points by Bill Laim beer and l~yup by Rich Branning pushed the Irish lead to 11 wlth 13 minutes ~emaining. Notre Dame. 18-S, then went into a slowdoJm offense lo force North Carolina out of its zone. Branning. the former Marina High (Huntington Beach ! standout, scored 11 points. I re.au, az. 74 f AUSTIN. Texas -Texas' Ron If Baxter Ignited a second-ball suree with two three-point plays as the 14th-ranked Loneboms ~ept past Southern Methodbt. -14, Tuesday nlgbt for a share I .of the Southwest Conference basketball title and a bye in the post-season tournament. The 6-foot-4 Baxter wcored 30 points, including 20 in the second half as the Longhorns broke a 37 .37 halftime tie. itrlCG ... ., 58-49 FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. Marvin Delph scored 16 points and grabbed seven rebounds to lead fo\Jlh.ranked Arkansas to a 58·49 'Victory over Texas Tech esday, giving the Razorl>acks the· Southwest Conference cd- cham pionshlp with T~u. Sidney Moncrief scored 12 points and Ron Brewer added 10 for the Razorbacks. The Hogs completed the conference season at 14·2 and raised their regular season mark to 26-2. Florida 8~ 7 .. 1% TALLAHASStE.Fla.<AP)- Forward Harry Da~ ted 12th· anke.d Florida State to a 11-'72 ·vtt?tory ewer Georgia Tech Tues- day night as the Semlnol• won the Metro Conference basketball title. Georgia Tech's T{co Brown wu the game's high scorer, with 27 points, but Lt wasn't enough to offset the balanced Seminoles' attack. ........... ...,7:J.84 PROVIDENCE. JU. -Sly Williams scored 17 Jl(>ints and grabbed 12 rebounds. leadlne the ·uruveraity of Rbode Island to a 13-64 upset colleg~ basketball victory over nth· ranked Provldence College Tuesday nlgbt. A tenacious Rhodo Island de- f ente and poor shooting by the 'Friars combined to give the Rams a 25-19 halftlme lead. Mullion. erchitect of the Saddleblclt J'Uf\'18.J\d·gun style. of play. has lOfll" been a proponent of the f• ~alt olfense. At Lona Beach Poly Hi1h, one of bts ~ama tashloued a 32-1 record onti season and this year's Saddlebil:ct outfit ls 27-2. Both losses were by one point. How does Mulll1an feel about the team aruUta·potenlial? ··we have an orgaruzed fast break after every score but that isp't enoueh.'• Mulligan ex- plains. "We also put defe0$lve pressure on our opponents after every buket we make. "In other WQr{is, we set the t empo we want \ilnd with the press and run. ~e other team When can 'talt and boid the ball forthtee or four minutes on us." · Mulligan and his assistants' got together before the season and planned their strategy. •'We decided we were 1otng to try and go as fut and as hard as we coUld and the only way to oo this was to force our opponents to go with us. If somebody want- ed to bold the ball, we would go out after them and force them to shoot. whether it wa.s an euy shot or a lon1er .one." Wl}Y did ,he Jeel this was the ultim·ate in Junior college basketba.U? ••1 ,r(1Ulted to get interest in basketball in South Orange County_ from the spectators and 76-87 Cage W-n , O'Hal,orali SparkS tlai!istrariD Valley By CRAIG SHEFF Of .. Dll'1 PIW SUH Junior Chuck O'Halloran scored 14 poi,pts and had five steals in the . second half in sparltlnaCapiltrano Valley Hi~ to a 16-87 CIF l ·A second round basketball playoff victory over visiting Notre Dem e of Riverside Tuesday night. The win put the Ce>ugars into Friday night's quarterfinals against Valley Christian High of Cerritos, a 75-51 winner over Fillmore. Capo Valley will be the host ;team at a site to be de- termined. O'Halloran was the catalyst. for coach Paul Smith's Capo Valley ftve -espedaUy tb the t~ird ~uaTter wh~n the Cougars b~o}(e open a tiebt. game. , With Clpo 'V~l~y ahead 4.1-40 mid ,_a}' throu1h tbt third perldd, O'llallor.n drove for a layup.· thea after a tnlHed . 0. B11dson's Slaot DAILYPlLOf make tbem want to come to our press on every score with a ione games," he says and ci\e ot.ber Pfelf .aftef'. a free throw and a s parse crowds at·auch gaint)S in m.a preM after .a field aoal. other areas. -"Thia fs int best JC team in 12 ••As you know, tunior colleee years of co~biftg here ud at basketball doesn t draw that RiwrakSe," ¥ullitan aaya, "We well, generally speaking. I felt could wlncl up 29-2 and have to we would have to entet\alD as pla1 ofl tor the No. 1 apot in our well as play winnlng basketblall coQ.feunc!e. We are two polnts and once you get the people aw•Y from an unddea&ed coming to ·Ute B&mes, the)' will se .. on. Bl&t we have been pfetty return. lucky tr\ a couple ·Of other .. Eyeo with a winning t~m. iamu." »eople will stay boQle and watch M ulllean "5e& a 10-men re- television uplesa lt is entertain-volvinl ~--~t.ku\ion with no ine. UCLA proved this years ago letup. . when they bad Gail Goodrich .. The way we (eel, it's ~ood for 4nd those others. They have morale:• he says. "We try to kept tl~elr c~ ever since." substitute tNery three to five The Saddleback theol")' is to See Sadd&eback P•I• Jl·2 ~·· . . . . $portJJ in Brief I .. ~ . Fighter Dies; . Kings . Breeze - MADRID -Spanish middleweight boxer Rubio Melero died today, five days after be was knocked un- conscious in a p,o(eaaional bout In Madrid. Doctors said the 23-year-old fighter. ln a coma alnce beioC knocked out by Spanllb m iddleweigbt champion Francisco Rodrlaue1 last Fri- day. dled of heart failure. Melero, making bis ninth J>l'O- fessional appearance, suffered brain and lung damage in the fight. doctors said. Melero was knocked to the canvas three limes before he fell unconkclous and waa carried from the rtng on a st.retcber. Sportswriters called the fight a mis match aod bl a-med • 14.elero's ma.n.a.1er and the Spantsl'l referee for not stoppin& tbe ftgbt. Rodriguez, a veteran of more than so fights, bunt into tears at the end of the bout. He later said ff b,-had been either the referee or Met~·s manager, be would have thrown in the towel before the final knockdown in the seventh round of the eight·round bout. LANDOVER, Md. -Goalie Rogie Vachon stopped 30 shots Tuesday night to give the Los Angeles Kings e 4·1 National Hockey I,.e~e victory over~ Wa&hiftfbt ~·· Butch Gorint scored bis 28th and 29th co.is of the uason from the slot wJth two perfect passes from behind the net froIQ Randy Manery. Goring's shots in the seeond and third periods left 'the Capitals too far behind to catch up. Glen Goldup started the scor- ing for the Klngs at 1:20 of the first period on a shot from the '-'>P of the right face-off circle. a..or.Ballle• DENVER -Jimmy Connors, forced to !i&ht off set point lour limes during the first-set tiebreaker. rallied to defeat Peter Fleming, 7·6, 6·0 iJi Tue&day's first round hature or a men's teonis tournamenL Earlier. Manuel Orantes out- lasted Dick Crealy, 6-4, 6-7, 6-t, Wojtek Fibak blasted Tom Gullibon, 6·3, 1-5, Tom Leonard bandied Bob Hewitt, 7-6. 6-3, John Lloyd 1itopped Jose Hlgueraa, s.2. 6-4 "d Terry Moor defeated Colin Dibley. 6-7. 7·6,7~. ra:·t'8aela ·~ LA RAMIE. Wyo. -Al Luginbill. bead football coach at Pasadena College, bas been '- selected defensive secondary coach at the University of Wyoming. ~ginbUI. 32, coached the Pasadena U&m to a national JC cba~piGDsbip last season with an 11·1,ecc>rd. Prior to the Pasadena posiUon, Lualnbill was an as- sistant coach at Arizona State under Frank Kush. N..,,....u.m.wi.. 'bSTBOIT -Top.seeded Martina Navratilova won her 26th consecutive match on the women's professional tennis t tour by handily defeating Katja Ebbinghaus, 6·1, 6·2 in a women's tennis tournament Tuesdal(. · Billie Jean King also won her ·match, defeating Kathy Harter 6.-3, 6-4. Hometown favorite Nicole Lorenzetti took a beating at the bands of Newport Beach's Renee Richards. Richards won, 6-1, 6·2. In other matches Mitna J ~uaovec defeated Hana Strachonova. 6-3. 6-4; Brigitte Cuypers defeated Virginia RuU,ci, 4·6, 'l·S. 6·4; Renata Tomanova ~ed Zenda Liess, 6-C, 1-1; G._. Stevena topped Steple Tolleson.. 64, .u. 6-t, and aron Walsh bea.t Ruta Gerul ·lis 1-6. u. 1-6. Vanguards Romp, 89-69. Jef(Welshans scored 26 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead Southern California College (Costa Mesa> to an 89-60 victory over UC San Diego Tuesday night at home In NAIA District 3 Southern Division basketball action. The victory puts erave im· portance on Friday nl&bt's bome encounter against Pt. Loma (San Dleao> in the regular- aeeaon finale. A victory for SoCal would live coach Paul Peak's V6nf\W'd.'J a tie for the conference lead. CorrenUy Pt. Loma ls a game ln front ot SoCal and Asusa- Pactflc with a 7-2 reeorcL SoCal and A1usa are 6-3. .Aulatlnlt. '-"e11kan1 Tuesday niabt wa David Barron who bad lt qalatl while scoring onl7 four polnb, hll loweat aiqle aame total of the MUOD. l ... . .. . . . ........ . . .. . . ... ............. . . . ... ..-.. .... .. . . . . .. . . . . OAILYPILOT BJ llOWAaD L. BANDY Ot .. Oelty ........... ," •. A ditclpllned Loe Aml1oa Hlit\ School (Fountain Valley) basketball team did everythlng It w a1 asked to do and as a re· , ~ult, endecS , the cbamplonablp . ~ aaplratlons of the Corona del Mar High Sea Kln11 Tuesday Al1bt, 87-44. Playing ln the Fountain Valley Hilb School 1ym, the Lobos of Los Amlaoa opened ln front and \ held the lead all the way. UUUalna a U1ht zone defense, a three-quarter court press and a bl1 height advantage, the Lobos had UtUe trouble in lum· ing back the Sea Kings. CdM was unable to penetrate on offense and on a poor •)loot· ln1 nl1ht, was unable to hit with any desree of consistency. As a result, the Sea Kings were eliminated from the cur 3·A playoff& ln the second round. Orlando Ward (6·7) and Clayton Olivier (6·9) were able to control both boards and with 'tony Zuloaga, put a blanket ·around the CdM offensive basket all night. None of the Sea Kings was able to hit in double figurea on a night when the club hit onlv 33.9 from lhe floor. At the line, the Sea Kings canned only 6·0f·l2. Loa Amigos had a hot hand in the third period, hitting 9-of·ll and for the Jame the Lobos canned 56.6 percent of their shots, Ward didn't score with his usual rapiditf but he did make his presence known. He was the point on the pressing defense at the mid court area, hurried back to control the center on defense and did an outstanding job \re· bounding. He also intlmidited -..., .... ,......,, ~ O-O-• Cd M'S SHAWN AHEARN (13). MARK RAINS (21) AND JEFF BURDEN (23) CONTROL REBOUND. . Oilers Downed Verbum Dei Rolls To ?9-47 Triumph By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Of ... lnllf ~ ...... ti COM PTON -Even without its 6·7 All·American center, No. 1 ranked Verbum Del High of Los Angeles had little trouble dispos- ing of Huntington Beach 79-47 Tuesday night in second-round Cl F 4-A bask el ball playoff . action at Compton College. , The Eagles crushed Hunt- ;: mg ton Beach without the use of : . Leonel Marquetti, who sprained : . an ankle during Friday's game. • The kangaroo-jumping senior is Verbum Del's leading scorer i C19.9 points per game) and re-l J>ounder (14 per game>. , :.. But his replacement Tuesday ; night, 6-7 Kenneth Fields, did • more than simply take up the : slack. He was devastating, scot· ; IJlg 27 points, controlling the : t>oards and blocking three shots. : • It was the worst defeat • iuffered by a Huntington Beach : High team since 1966, when the l Oilers lost by 37 points to > fullertonHigb. · ~ • And yet1 no one could have ; .uessed wnat was in store alter t : i BVC <;Iaims . ~ i 49-4 7 Victory i : LOS ANGEL~Jeff Frazer : and Wes Stevener combined for • ~ points and 16 rebounds to lead llfunUn1too Valley Christian <Newport Beach) to a 49-47 victory over Pacitic Christian !{ere Tuesday ln a CIF Jmall ~hoots basketball pt'Yotf tame. ~ ._-The Tktor1 •d•~nces tbe Con· :4uerort to Friday 1 third round '1here \My wtll J>lay Dem Luco • rohlnO), a 46·40 victor Over 'Providence (Burbank). Frner bad 18 polntat n~t re·, ~unds and five blockea 1bote as i-vc ~ped lta aeuon record to 'Pf~. Stevener scored 17 point.a a'nd bad seven nbqUn~• wt\11• Qabe Brown bandof, out MVtn fS~lsta. Buck Jleyneld1 and ,.,.,., ~"4 Nek·~bact bueketa latit the thltd peiiOd to atve HYC a 41 INCi it qvet nliftqullMd. tic:lftc Chri•tilft wt tM lead tQ ttwo polntl •Ith• Mc0ndl1teft in ~low ICOrlnl roUit!t Arter bUt iVC hild GIL the first quarter ended. because Huntington Beach held a Sur· prising 13·12 lead. It was surprising because, even without MarquetU, Verbum Del was an overwhelmln1 favorite to blast the Oil~rs. The Eagles flew in on the wings of a 24·1 record and have won six CIF championships in the past eight seasons. But coach Roy Miller's team wasn't awed. They out-hustled and out-shot Verbum Del in lhe opening minutes and raced to leads of 7-0 and 11·4. The Eagles shot JUSt 38 percent in the first quarter but Huntington Beach's euphoria didn't last lone. With less than a minute gone from the second quarter, the Eagles had surged to a five-p0int lead, and they nevel'looked back. Curt Steinhaus was the only effective scdrer tor HunUlll&on Beacb. tallying 22, but ttie Oilers got some solid alt·around play at both:. erlds of· the c~rt. from Marco Pagnanelli and Rico Thompson. The Oilers' _poor shooting dis· play (they shl>t 29 percent for the first three quarters> was due to Verbum Del's ll&htning- quick. swarming defense, which ~imply refused to allow an lit\· bindered s~t. """~"' .... ,.,. (Jtl v..... Diii """" ....... CAM 0 1 0 t WltMMlll 7 t • 1' T"°"lotit!I 1 I • I ""•Ill • 4 4 S II lteil!Nld I 6 I U f'9lw I 0 4 I ~ 1 0 t 2 SI•-• t t t • v...t.. I I I t ¥tellllns 1 0 t 2 t,400f'llowe • 0 t • ..~ 11 s ' 27 M.ll'e ........ IO 1 ' 0 ¥<0e"'t4• t o 1 t ..... , ... a· Is ... T.telt IT U It '7 T_..ft laf'9 ., 9llarttft ..... , ..... '""' ti .. • ,..... • VwlMH\ll Otl 12 2' 16 ~ BASKETBALL/SOCCER/BASEBALL CdM 1booters by blocking several shots and geltloa bis hands high In the air to prevent others. Despite the pace of the game and the towerina bei1ht advantage of the Lobos, It was cleanly played with few fouls called. There were Qnly three l>onua abooUna aituatlons, two fqr the victors and one for CdM. Warren Ellis, one of the small er players on the Loa Ami1os squad at 6-0, was high point man with 15 while sophomore Olivier hit 1' tor the victors. Each had three baskets in the third period when the Lobos pulled to tbelr bl11est lead at 24 points. c_.. ........ , AllHrn 8wrlltft OsfOOd !taint ·-·ff ll'lckett JoMston Slw!llllNI V•llMl1 -·--Toi.It ...... ( O I I • 1 • t , 0 ' • t s a t 2 0 ' • ' 0 0 t I 0 2 2 ' 0 0 2 • 0 t 0 ' 0 • t ... , ... ('11"91 ....... ....... l'uefttt I t 1 • Wini 51S\I l!lllt 7 1 t IS 1"'"99 •. 1 • OllWltr 7 o t 14 SOl'ow I t t t ... .,., 2 0 ' • 51\ICkl• 1 0 0 2 Crelt t t o • Sltleef!leM 0 0 1 0 Tetalt IO 7 M "1 CIF 3-..4 BaJ1ketball , Estancia Falls , To Blair, 68~60 By ROGER eARLSON OH!!! Diii; ..... 4'*ff PASADENA -Bl~tr 'Hlgb's Vikings connected on nine of their first 10 shot.a from the field to open the second balt Tuetday Dilbt and the feat catapulted the Foothill League cbamplona to a 68-60 CIF 3-A basketball victory over Estancia <Costa ldeaa) Higb'a Eqles. Before a oear full b<>Ule ~ or 1,000 at a sauna labeled the Mqir lfi1lf 1ymna1lum. tbe Blair quintet advanced to tbe quarterfinala .. ainlt the wlaner of tonlibt's duel betwnn Nottb High (Blveralde) ~nd boat Culver City. No Eslal\Cia tea.qi Jiaa ever made it to the quarters in four tries. For a moment, it appeared the Eagles ot coaob Larry Sunderman were coing to sur· vive what had been a strueele in the first half as Mike Camp, John Carrido, Brad Cooper and Bob Braunsdorf Ignited a raJly to pull the Eagles to wlthln 25-23 at the half after lageing, 22-13. Cooper's inside connection off Carrldo's pass with five s~ left appeared to give the Eaales new Ure and momentum golnl into the dressing room. But Blair came out smokln& ln the third oerlod. blllln1 juat about everythln&. lt tried-and when l1 missed there was an easy rebound and a basket anyway. Estancia WJIS 1ullty of nine turnovers ln the tlili'd quarter as Blair outscored the Century League representaUves, 2&·13, and with moment.a spent in the fourth quarter, Blair bad a 17· point lead. .Blair 'ttellt conservative at that poin~ and the tacUc almost backflrecl as SUnderman'• crew battled back at a frantf c pace to try to come back. And although the play or Camp, Jim Price, Doug Jardine, Carrldo and Cooper picked up the pace, the deficit waa too much. The cloeest the Eagles could get was Sf.St. <on Cooper's Up with 1:26 go to) and 63·58 (on Carrtdo's layup wltb 44 seconds left). Both teams hit SO percent from the field, but Blair's quick hands gave the Vikings a 20·15 advantage ln the turnovers de· partmenL . .._..,.., "'' ..... "",."' 3 0 s • .. "'"' ~~ 7 1 ' u c:tUIHll <An\IJ •• ' ........ . .iantl• • 1 t ta .... "" ---.. 1 o 1 a ,_., ~ J I I I "'91 ..... C..,.. t I I ti •lwf .......... t t t t o.IWM ~ t •• , T._ • •tS• T ... • 2 ' 10 •• t,. ' • 2 • •• 2,. 4 I 2 to "t I I I ••• ..... .. Cllllftlh ~ ., u ....., " " • tlo-41 M¥.0Usted; F.dison Vies Tonight ART~IA-Aner onrcomint a 2·0 halftJme deficit and battl· in& through two scoreless over· time periods, Mlaalon Viejo High's soccer team was ellmlnaled from the CIF 3·A playoffs, 3·2 In sudden death, by Artesia Hilb here Tuesday. In 4-A soccer playoff actJon tonlabt (7), Sunset Leaaue k1ni Edison (Huntington Beach) Hlgb meets No1des (La Puente> at HunUnat.on Beach High. Scott Leighton scored on a penalty kick 10 minutes into the second half and then assisted on Pete Kastilahn's go~ with five minutes left in regulation to spark MiHion VieJo'a come· back. But Artesia, held in check • after scoring a couple of quick goals early, scored the came· winner mid way through the third extra five-minute period. "We underestimated their quickness," refiected Dlablos coach Ed Carrillo. "We let up at the beginning but we came on strong. I'm not disappointed. We played a good 1ame.'' M lsalon Viejo goalie Dave MacLJ'an recorded six saves while Artesia got a U-aave performance from its goalie. M Ike White. The Dlablos wound up with a 15-3-3 record. * * * Cl' f'UYOl"l'S ........ a... ... WHI Torrance•. E1-...o D•mle11 l . "9DU<• 2 1-Ume> S.11 G-I, ChlMO PelM ..,.,_ J. T«reno, lo11UIT0tr~••.~o cs-~ .. ._ •. ~, fl lwrtlcle l'oly 2. Gleftdor e o PeclllceJ, .._ lleacft' Actttle J. Ml•loll Vt.lo I Alla Lome 2, -.e1m t U overtl,,,...) Pllm 5Pri1101 I, HH WlltonO "-"mes> Ongais Sizzles In Practice Ron ONTARIO-Danny Ongais of Costa Mesa broke the 200-mile per hour barrier with a 200.31 clocking on the 2.$-mile Ontario Motor Speedway durloc a practice runrecenUy. His speed waa nearly 15 miles per hour over bis qualifjin& speed of lSS.83 last year • Ongata d:rlvea (ar Ted Field of Newport Beach on the championship car circuit SADDLEBACK ••• C.......S From Pace B·l minutes for everybody. There are a couple of guys J really hate to take out but if we are going to aell them on golng bard both on offense and defense, we have to do it. "I thinls our bench has gotten better by playtna more and the ntoHle ls reall1 good among thoee 10 guys. "After the Riverside game, I heard a couple of their players taJkJn1 on the way out of the t1m and one of them said: 'They aren't any better than us but they just keep bringing in fresh g1zya.' "This is also the most un- selfish IJ'OUP. I ever had," the coach says. 'I almost think they don't care how much they score as lone as they play." There are eight players averagin1 in double fli\U'es. 0'And it is helping with our recruiUng. I get calla every day from kids who want to live by the beach and want to play run· and-gun basketball. "I think it is easier td get kids this way because I am getting calls from everywhere." Is this the beat .Junior college team he has coached? "This ls the first team J have had in junior college that I thought could go to the state tournament and wtn It. I'm not saying wa wm Win It, but that we can wtn lt," he explains. "This ia m~ bestjunlorcollegeteam." In Mlsslon Conference play LA Signs Amritraj LOS ANGELES -Vijay Arnrltraj haa signed a mwU· year contract to rejoin the Loa An1eles Sttln&s o( World Team Tennis. the last six seasons (three at Riverside and three at Saddleback), Mulligan's teams have compiled an amazing 82·7 record. This year's team has sewed 145 pqlnts in a single eame, 143 a nd UO and bas bad 18 games in which lt has totalled 100 or more. In eight ot 11 conference outings, the Saddleback seore has aone over 100. It is definitely the hiehest scoring team in Mulligan's coachinc career although bis Rive rslde qutfi t in 1966-67 averaged 101 points a game with the bie&es\J>layer at 6-2. As for bis team's en- tertaiDment value, Saturday night was a prime example. The Gauchos were playing Chaffey, a team that had won only one game prior to that outing, yet 1,500 fans showed up for the action. Mulligan has put bis point across-IN CAPITAL LETTERS. SD State Nips SoCal Nine Southern California Cotlege of Costa Mesa dropped a 6·5 non· conference baseball decl.sion to San Diego State Onlveraity Tuesday afternoon on the loeer'a field when the visiting Mtecs scored three runs in the eigbtb inning. Kent Miyashiro went seven in· ninas for coach Dou1 Adams' SCC Vanguards, then WU re- lieved in lhe eighth when the winning runs scored. It was Miyaahlro's first outin1 of the season and Adams felt be had worked long enough . Stan Thomas bad two ain&les and a double with two rbi for the Vanguards who scored three titnea lh the seventh to overtake the Aztecs, S·3 and lead tor the only tirne in the game. , Butch Plank and Rand~hoGreer opened with bits and T mas 4oubled to cet a run ·~ross. After Dave WUaon walked, Mike Schee~ also walked to fore• in a run ahd Randy Reno drove in anolhec with a sacrlfce fly. --~w eertutt ...... 11.... s ' l ' ~.cf • ' t • Tlll!Me, ,. s t a l WllMO!,. 1 ••• ~( ... ' 'Wellll, rl • • ' • ----· ' • t ' S._..h, It I I t t ........ , t •• M1r•111,..,,e • : • AR"'t.I' t t t •1WMA11.• •••• TN!t •I•' s ._...., ...... r a • ............ ...... ,, Saddleback College's basketball team doesn't fi&ure to have any trouble at all 1etting wln No. 28 tonl1ht (8). The Gauchos host Southwestern College of Chula Vista, a team Saddleback defeated, 143-83, a month ago. In another JC game, Orange Coast visits Santa Ana at 7:30. Saddlel)ack is locked in a tie for the Mission Conference lead with Palomar with two games to go. The Gauchos travel to Riverside CC in the finale Saturday while Palomar is et San Bernardino tonight and hosts San Diego CC Satur-day. If the race ends in a co·championsblp, Saddleback and Palomar would meet in a playoff a week from tonight at Riverside CC to determine the first place team ln the state tOUmamfllt lfarcb 15-18 at the Loni Beach Arena. The loser would play in a contuence tourney to decide the second slate tourney representative. t Saddleback, 27·2 for the seuon, has won nine In a row and 21 ol the last 22. The Gauchos are averaging 107.4 points for tbe sea.son (the hi&he~t in the state) and ll.5.8 in conference action. Southwestern has a 1·25 season mark and is winless in 12 conference games, "We're plllying very: well rilht now," says Bill Mulligan. "Against Chaffey last Saturday <a 145·86 win) most of the starters only played about five minutes In the second half, but we still scored 73 points." SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY Se hablo Espanol WOO[I LO\V, LOW, PRICES 4-Pl Y POL l TUBELESS TIRES 99 PlU5 $1.69 F.E.T. FOi MOST fOID Autolite SPARK PLUGS $ 1'R78·1A $36.99 $2.38 ER78-1A $38.99 $2.47 FR78. J A $39. 99 S2 .65 GR78·1' $42.99 S2.85 GR78·1S $42.99 $2.90 8R78.13PlU5 $2.06 F.ET. 1-• HR78.J4 $44.99 $3.0A WHITEWALL TIR'ES ~-HR7B·1S $45.99 $3.11 30 MONTH • JR78-1S 46.99 S3.27 ~ lR78· 1 S $48. 99 S3.'4 LIMITED WARRANTY* 'ti-.-•, r-~ ( s/i~~=~o METRK RADllU D rOR COMPACTS SUB-COMPACTS & IMPORTS 99 2-FIBERGLASS BELTS 2-FABRIC BODY PLIES 1-STHL BELT 16SR-13 PlU5 Sl.75 F.E.T. ~IZf Wttl1f IUlflfSS 17SR· 13 175R·1' 16SR·IS 185R-U fltfS VW'S rovor.u. MCS. Ol'flS. 560 ~ u 'I J•• P'llCl $32.99 $33.99 $33.99 $35.99 r04t OAfSUNS AHO MAIN 'I' ''" ~ OIH(I IO«EIG/ol CMS ...,_ ___ _. ~ $1799 ~:.',~ '19" 000 • J7 •lUl h ••to-"''• 111tf•\ •u•n•ssi ,, o ... .. •25 •• •LACICWA1.ll I I 1 'I ••••• IRUCKl1 HEAVY DUTY 8LACKWAUS ~~:~~1 ~~~ , ..... t ........ f ...... -----1 ~..?.:: i' ~~:: j '-!: ,.,.. •• P\llt '"" ''* ~"' flO CJtC. , .... ,1.92 S2.0S Sl.98 $2.32 .. ' ., ... , ..... _____ .__.._ .. , HODUCTS 198 TO 3•• ITllRlllG WHllL · .......... COllQRRAG DESIGll . 'lou1c cwp, "'••al ~· c1w-plot · ed. die 01• bat•. ·· 1'' fACH SHELL'S BEST SUPER I si.r • ..._., _,., 10W. 50 ................... 5 .................. ,__""Y· ~ ' ... , .. , .. ,·111 I . I l' • I I • •• L' ~ . Volleyball lllllUT Ta AM " we111er, c1...-1e o.ic1. °'"'• Tfllbilllll, ~llfffll ,__llll, Lori Tl\emPIOfl (Ufll-.ttvl; OenM C.te, Mlc"'ll• LA.Mee IMINIOll Viejo). Al!IV IC Irk, RYllM Klrll, Cl ... y Allelre, ~· Tomtt l<:oreMdll ,,,,_,,, HCIONO Tl.t.M Vivie,. Wellt, I.Hiie Salv•te• OUIM c.lltry, Orece Mc(arley, Ceo\111• Ml-CUfllversllyl; LJfld• • JC~ i,.rlllll IMIHIOll Vl•lell ,._.IKHfl Safi llfl*' ...... •t. Goldeft Wfft TNI, I.YI* 8'.ICll, J-McNelley, 1H, IM, •U, 1S..t. KtllY Hell19M (~ ... MMI, tlMll • lS,000 MUS of protecti°" between changH lOW ·SO All SlASON PROT£CT10tf IARDAHL NO. 1 Fr..,1bdi_"'9 ............... -~ ...,_ llltdgt Oftd cart-. IARDAll. NO. 2 IARDAll. TOP OIL VAL VE LUBRICANT ADD TO YOUI GAS .....,,_, p111lor-. 1r-ttidly wolwt. ....._, .......... .. --.. ___ ....... GIRLS' SPORTS I TENNIS I MISCELLANY Los Alamitos Entriies fWTMtM l'lrwt .... 1:4S ~lflST llACa -0... Ml ... Peet. Clalml"9 llltndk ap. Ml•n tltow.d to percent. PurM U,000. Clalml"I P<lc• '4.~.soo llobt•I J W IMerohnl; Hlllcyon Hentaoe ci.onoo1: .JeftorMll llCP'fl' (Ml•hlll; Ja ... u CT-I; Hllllw Otsltt CTroppl; Sta L IOlll lihttrtn l; Llllolkld CGruod'f l; Ed119w00d Oymli. lllttlllyl. HCOHO llAGll -0.. milt Pece Cltlm lno lland lup. M ••u 10 perCtftl. 4 yeet olcb ts per~t. J year olds SO percent. C.l·llftd. Puue $1,200 Clalml .. lll'k• u.-.s.soo ICI,. Awey COWllOlll; ~. Ster I Holt I, H owd' Spo•I c Otsomerl ; cieulc Ou Ion CM••Ol>,.I; .. _, Ql1lllt Cstlef' .... ); Polllt ,llrCIUt Cl...KOllel; AnclV• Dean tToddl1 em,•,..,,,,..,.,.,,. TMlllO llAC& -0... mlla. Pace. C1elm1119. Marti 20 11erc ... 1. Pu,... U ,600. Cllllrnl"9P<iu110.000 La4yllyrd L 8¥ CKuelllerl: Serl9I Colll' l~I; ThundeutOMI A <Ol....,.,I; Miii.,. Fellecy IAlllllnl; VI< a ht CWhltter)J l!dQe•ood 011lnn IMhUlfl ; ••Y ""'"' IPe l tru n J rl; Stnge L•a le , ... 111,1. ,.ou11nt llAC. -one mile. Pace. Clelml"ll. Ma•ts 20 percent. • y..., olds U percent. Puna SZ,500. Clelm- 1119 P<it.e M.000 Chief L111M...,. CVallendlnVf\eml; WllO Sky ILon90l; NOOle Love (0.-.tl; Mll1t IM .. , (#lslrttfl; ,._., G.,'814\ (WIMlamsl; ~ ... M CLIOlllllllll; Mllltr Oii aeev IG r •e o ry l; Liu Oolltllllll IKatma..,I. "'"'" um -ON m1i.. Pee .. Clt lrnlnt llMllluit. 4 .. .,. .... 2S perceft1. PwM MAOI. Clelmlte ,,.._ SIU•St7,000 Henrn Ortem ff IMtbl,.>; Oouolt 1 wo .. der ICreM); loler ••PrHt CMareflnl; ~lftO 10.Ultenl;· Pe nlt OrNlll ~·~I; P..wwe aa1 IK11tlll8'); Jlll'ltl OeM CLOllQ9); ltepld CMwlY 10....-). IUtTM aACll -OM mile. P- Clelml ... ~ » ,..,_..1. PIH9e Buketball SOUTM•llM CAL eott,.•1taf1C8 c,. .... , W L ,,,, l'A CyOrew t1 I fJt e12 LA $0Utll'°'"' t S IOU "' L•A~ 14•tl6 LOIAlleel•Hll(tlor 6 • 11121101' Glldt" Wd S 1 M fH S."'-Mollica a • at ,., .......... • 1t tol 10:IS TwllAY'• SC-~· n, L.AC:C S1 LA H-71, s.nte ~61' LA 5lllCtMIHt U. Rio HMdo 74 NOTE--Goldlf\ Wftl wlfl pie' LA SoullwtHt "'~ llUMts•e data vet tolltdeW INMll. u.• Cl...,,lltlll'lm t6.000 Prl¥t1t •lend CDlvl'*'I: LllCll'Y Me,.do CAvelftl; AlldYt Cenucll IAMtf'-1; Otlle Ol..ct CV .. tand-lntllam >; My ~Oii CWll .. fer l ; Howler IK~lw>; T•.,. ••r•• COWl!r ... ); llY ON ICr->. sav•MTM ••c• -OM ""''•· Pece. NM-W!l'Mr m.eoo 1'MI. Also tflollll• MtMt-,_., ..,...,. " -wl111Wn lnl• s...,.. f'Wfvu.M. OUttt Ster CVelllntll•m I; Celt....,. CW....,,111; 8lw9llf'ft SvrprlM COrefOrY)/ "" .,,_ H IWllllems l; Arroclltr fttllll<• Goudr .. ul; l"tlllre Cftekatwd>1 l'lt<-'lte CQr1NI), alOMTif llACS -ON..,.... Pace. Cltlll'llno. 4 ye¥ oldt H pen:ont. Pllt9~.-.~,,cc.-- ~ CVlltMdl .,_,:o... .,.., Tnle CWlllflllwllll °"* ...... CGoudr•t11J; l'et N Nledlcln• CWlsllenll; lidlot OcM11 CUptlllH); Golden Jlfft fO'-); ~' ...... cwi-twl;T .. Trya(T_,), "'""" ·~ -°"' """· ..... Clalml"t ti•ndlce•· M•tH 20 ptl'Cent .......... u......-. ...... $4,0llO. Cl ... prlca "~ta.- ·-(A.-.): ............ ,. tGoudroe11I; OOle<r" Clllt'l09t); Trvu GrMOe 1°"°"'8rl; Ullwlltd U dy 1w11n.,.,.1; LAIC.lft;lon Pl'tc CCIII!); P,,...,.. Jim '1.0ftlo); ..., .. lll<llt Way(~). o.11, " .......... "llkMftl ~ DENISE CORKERY (14) SCORES FOR UNIVERSITY AGAINST WESTMINSTER IN CIF F1Ell> HOCKEY PLAYOFFS. 75fft <.)rutllJeltSClll~ wright ~~@~ JC, Pr.ep Uni, ND Girls A.dvanee Dolphins Let your t..e feel the wonctelful difference. Tennis Results JC T•-• SMlll-0 Cll Ill LACC '°""" F t lltrm.-1t< CS> OOi Shevitz 6-1. ~O. 01..., IS> -_,._ U, ... 1. • 1, JOMt CS> a.I Dunn .... M , M ; Ntrt~Oll9 IL> O.f Flnlt y 44, M , •-4; ,.utt•r CS> a.I RoU .. 2. • 1; Kcwft CS) 0.1 Riojas .. 2 .... --~··--""°"" ISi a.I SllevlU· f!llr 6·3, .. ,. 0 1Mt .. Horn CSI def Ounn·H•r•nOtHJ J .. s .... _.; Hamre ... (tar-IS) Otf Rloj•Ar-~. M . Ort-~ C.\ltl Ullt) LA_.. Sl ... a FeOderly 101 oef. H-1-6, .. J. 1 •. W•ll ... ILi oet. -7•S, ... 2; c;...arrul ILi Clml. M9ni. .. ~ W ; M<Doftald CO)-·_..,._ M , •·I; flabO 101 Otf. Utlef 7 ...... 2; Morton 10) Ootf. Mtr1ln w , .. ,. ~ Fedderly •MtDonatd 101 del . 'GuarraU l·Uti.1 •·2, •·1; Smttll· M0r10ft CO) Otf. WtllK••h1Ubtum .... 6--4, •.O • .__He<r11 COi h..:I H<M1'°"-Mer11n .. l. ~1. o--mm ~ si ...... .-euo IGWC> O•I tleromlcll ...... 1. M . 1(. Lynoll CGWCI *'· A0 .9f'IY .. 7 ... 1. •·2; P-m COWCl clel. --11 .. l, • l; ,,_.,,,,_CO> clef. Meek .... 7.s; V'*l• tcnltCI -· _,,,, .. J, 1·S; 6. '-.,..... lGWCI clef. P9nr .. t .... L Demi• PolSO·K. L'llOll fOWC) def. tler-lc ... Lat*o .. ,, W; Mnk·D. t.,nott CGWCI WI. AcQrl.,._._I M , ._..; Men'"~" CGI wt. ParN<n·Vldlttto U. M , ... 2. ~T ..... v...-.., c .. ta Mau cm 1111 ......_ .. ""-'• J . w.mer CCI def. •evlrn M . llrown w . He41• .. 1. Owtm~aln M ; LHl'ly CCI WOii .. 1. W . M , ... 2; Rusi> IC) -.... loll U . U. - .. o. O. w .. ~ CCI WOii M . 1•. ~ • 1 .,.,.... Denise Corkery and Leslie Salvaae scored goals lor the No. 2 seeded University High <Irvine) girls field hockey team as the Trojans defeated Westminster Htgb, 2-0, T\leilday aftern6on in CIF quarterfinal playoff a ction on the winner's field. Newpo.rt Harbor also advanced to the semis with a 1-0 victory over host Colton as Kirsten Berg scored in t.he first minute of play and the Tars made the goal hold up for the win. University scored early when Corkery put it in the net and ad~ the insurance 1narker late in t6e game. Connie Misen, the University goal keeper, bad 11 saves. University will play Tustin Friday in the semis in a home encounter. Tus tin defeated Charter Oak, 2·0, in overtime. N e wport Harbor will play a t Sonora, the No. 1 rated team in the playoffs Friday. Sonor a defeated SA ·valley Tuesday, 3·1. Both aamea :Start at 3:15. Finals in the competition will be played at Lowell <Whittler) High School on March 4 with a third place- game also scheduled on the same date. O'Heal·Penlon CCI \Pill •1111 ~lei~~ f!oclr19 ... r·fl0Stl0 M , .t4, r.t>lll wllll ii: Currte -IMCluoon , ..... 1; Temll• TU<tr.e• CC> lolt ).6.14; loltH,'"7. Yanltr o ... """ (21) (7) ""Amie-Shllll• • Sparh (01 Otf. ~ .. ,. Wt. Tomlin-•>.*'· -MtU ... ,. Clei. Ono .. 1; <:ottlln COi io.t M , -::: t;: ~i = ~r:11 ':~ ~ = SUE WALKER (11 ), FOE MEET WITH BA1.l HIGH IN THE AIR. .. , ... ~...o. --~~~~~~~~~..;......:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ o.Ma M<C•be·L••I• 101 um """ Wet1woo•H0 "91bUry 44 ...... ci.1 w .. 1.J-M , .. I; T-~ co> sptll M, •1. •• 2• ... ,. .,......., For Coast Area • ._ IU) Ctll •.._'9 F•ltllCEd,..:~Snyde.2 ... klstto Wiomen's Nritelolldo .. 1. IMC .. OUM!« .. 7. dtf 8efYH .. ,; ....... IEd) lost 1-4, 2-6, .... .... ... , ~ (EAi) ..,.. .... , ... Athletics -... -W ; 0-' C Edi i.t M . 24,°'6,)lfOll14 .,...... Pllllll••·SllH8' (Ed) clef Pl~ .......... ,. dtf ---Nl<Ml• M. M;~ CEdl IP!llM,..,,_.lt ....... 2. .,....,..,anity ••'-CJM) CMI ••IMCJI """• Olson IEdl .... VII• .. , ..... to lttntl ....... l'IQll¥1f1 .... dtf '-" ... ; Powws ce..1 111c ~'· ,.., -......... ; ... c••>,...~1.w.­ .... M ; OMMll tEd> -1-J, .... S.1.-M.H . .,.,...,. Mlclcel .... Nlll-• (Ed) •t ............... .," ... ,. 6-2, ••• llkMtt•tY•o.m..t. M , M ; Oe..C .. MlcMI-CW JIPllt ~ J.7, -M, ..... H , L11•9f1!1-ti, 8el9e11 '2, W,clMWtld t, Hrllklell t. c:.i-t, a.la... s. ~··•<111-" '· .......,., .. --t2, Motn .. Rut11 •.~t. Hlfftlrne ,._.,..,.ve11..,11-1" ...,...., DI>........,....,. aruney tt. ,,.,,.,. .. Nu11 ... 1•. 6<111 ••t•r t , Weston II, ,...,..., .. ., •. 0141\er '-OIMia •• Glllln1lfl•m I , Heyete t, Wlll'-t t. Htl~M ... 7 • Drown Opponent Jack Graef and Dave Varney each won two e ve nts to lead Dana Hills High's Dolphins to a 102·61 swimming victory over visiting EJ Modena (Orange) Hi1h Tuesday afternoon. Varney won the 100. yard butterfly in S.S fiat and the 200 individual medley in 2: 15.8 wbUe Graef captured the •200 free in 1:56.4 and the 500 free in 5:20. Bill Sabia and Mitch SI.- A. ••• t'/1 to IZ.IJ I ... t te IZ.IJ C ••• I te IJ.ll D ••• 7 1/J te l ~J V..-ylOftM<t flexible, yet with full support up under the foot In where you need It most. In rich brown or black ~rained c,alfskln. ~~=; •L..tj(j~ ._ .......... ~----------11..,..,1 SHOES 99 Fashion Island • ! . Newport Beach ••• 759·9551 Auld turned in lm ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~----~-----------pressive errorts for Ocean View <Huntington Beach ) High on lbe Crosh-soph level or the Moore L e aeue in· vitaUonal. Sabia won the 100 fly in 1:01 .4 and Auld captured the 200 rree in 1:56.2. Venlty OHe Mith lltJl C•O IP...._. 100 mt<ll.., re11y-1. O.ena Hiits LM •. 100 fr-f. G<ltl IOI 1.S6 •; I Doi_, (0) 1.,.... l. ~ '" l:St•. too Ind. medley-I vamey cot 2:U e; 2 ;looh CO> 1:1',t ; J M e.o.,,.,.10 1t:11.A1 SO Ir-I. TWMdlt CO> IU, t .J lletmen CO> 25.A, J. P•-tEr i..e. oi.i,....... PootNlr IOI 111..a . 'I. Mc:~ IEI 101,IJ; l. ~I (OI '°tS Ito 11,-1. v.,,., ID) SS I. I Wa1Ur ,., SI •• l T-•· COi ''°'·' 100 1,..-1. Gar1t IEI SO>. t Otl-1 CO> 5l.J.; > Mli.cit Cbl SSI. 5'I .__.. OrW 101 S:toA. t Sa__., COi S::llU; 1 Pat,__ Ca t l :OLt. 100 IMldl-t. Get1ft CE I SI.ti t 1W1. llaell'\M CO> t:a:n. J Wallltr C8) l!OJ.1, 100 ~ . ...,,. (QI 1 ot.t1 t. . Sofll CU 1:11.0; I. Willlemt 10). f :1'.2 t001roert1..,-f.El~41•.e ......... ona.-.c.OC.1&1......._ 200 .... ....,_,, 0.... •411112:2t.2. IOO 1.-1 ...... tOl 2:SU; J. T,.iand IOI; l. K .... IU. tOt lftd • .....,...,_,, .... , .. ,., 2:se s, 2 -.. co>;,.w ns. SO l•H-1. Lt-CO) 2'.I; 2. Ntlson llU: a. Mt(...,. IOI. 100 fly-No C!Nrlllll"- 100 lrff-1, M•I_, IEI St .t ; 2. Mainer IOI; l. ~I (0> • 100 llll<ll-t. T .. I.,.., 101 f :IA.J: t. N.,,..1.,11--.co>. 100 ~-1. ~ COl 1:2•1-•; t. lltNU COi; IL SeNol.wl CU . tOO trM ,....,_,,El MoW<w 4:51.S, ...... llfll ...... L.Mlm '"""' Pl'oll-CCk-View ...... fleftl 20t IMdlef rel~ Oc.oen VleW t :SS.1. 200 ,,__,. AIH t:SU; 1 Tell' 2:0U. 200IM-4..ltftMft1:2CL4. so f.........n.-au: .. SM!• 24.•. tOO ft.,.....t. Slele t:01A, "'"' -Glf'd.; ... ~ ,, .... teo.,.......A&U st.t; 4. Toll'I' Sol.t • 101 b •Cll-S. J t llMn t :OJ.11, RebertS 1: IO.O. fOO ~-4. MeftMlt fl 14.S. 400 troe 1'91•,-•. O«•n view 1:19,S • ,,........,....., 200 rnM1tY ~ <>c.lfl View 1:0..•. ltt IM-4 .. _t:21A. so .......... L.tftdrY U.7. 100 .. .,...... SOWC. l:t4.f. fOO 1111<1!-& OllebOwltll l:tt.O. 100 ........... 11r_ t:J .... 409 frM rater~ OCHft 'tltw 4:00'- . -BOATING I PEOPLE I NATION ~. Febtuaty 22, 1971 OAILVPll..OT Ring Pinups: Killer Kowalski~ left, profession~l wrestler-turned-photographer, has shot -on film -some of his former colleagues of the ring. The photos are on display in a Boston gallery.· Among those thus brought to fame are Baron Secluna, above left; ''Superstar" Billy Graham; George "The Animal" Steele, upper right; Nickolai Vorkof and Moose Monroe, lower right. "' Charges Hamper Jordan Woman Powerr ' Carter's Chief Aide Target of Questioning From AP Dispatches The book will be published March 30 by John . llam~lton Jordan may be hampered in carry-Wiley & Sons of New York. mg out his duties e1s President Carter's chief aide * as a result of oJlegations that he was in a barroom San Francisco's ragged but proud club of altercation with a young woman, -Carter's l:hief street people lost one of its more colorful members spokesman said. -a good-natured woman known on the sidewalks White House press secretary 'Jody Powell as ''Shopping Cart Annie." faced lengthy quesllorung at the daily White House E st be r Sc b o en news briefing about the alleged incident. The ( ) Antonio, about 55, died Washington Post reported thatJordan, rebuffed in PEOPl .. E after a car struck her as his attempt to strike up a conversation with a _ she pushed her shopping woman in a Washington singles bar, spit his drink --------~ cart across Fifth Street. down the front or her blouse. Police said it was a bit-and-run accident. .Jorden denied the allegation. On Monday, the The kindly woman had spent the final years or White House released 33 pages of statements about her life scooping garbage off streets and hauling It the allegations, including the comments of a a · h rt Sh bartender'who said he had not i.een such an in· way 10 er ca · e saved the good stuff for cident take place. • Robert L. Leggett, D-Calif., a member of the House Armed Services and Budget committees, says he won't seek a ninth term in Congress. LeggeU said be decided not to run again because "garbage and gossip would be rehashed • rather than issues.•' The 51-year-old Democrat was accused of having an affair with Korean-born Suzi Thompson. 45, then an aide to , House Speaker Carl Albert, in a 1976 story published in the LEOOCTT Washington Post. The report also said the Justice Department was investigating if Leggett did favors for South Korea. • Former Budget Director Bert Lance says his news commentaries are so popular, he's decided not to limit them to Atlanta. "The response to my series on Channel 11 in Atlanta has been so favorable and there has been so much interest in other parts or the country. that a wider distribution of the com- mentaries is indicated," Lance said. LA .. CI So the com mentaries, which began two weeks ago on WXIA·TV, will be nationally syndicated by Colbert TV Sales of Los Angeles. • Harry S. Dent, political adviser lo Richard Nixon during Nixon's fi rst tenn as president, says in a book to be published next month, "I never did believe that Nixon ordered the Watergate break-in, and no evidence has been brought forward to this ef· feet. "However, I did have my concerns about the top of our political .operation, and I wondered ... how far up the orders and.or knowledge weni." Dent, now practicing law in "'"o" Columbia, S.C., 1pent 2\111 years writing "The Prodigal SOuth Returns to Power," and revised it after Jlmmy Carter's election in 1976, an election he says provts bis "Southern strategy" ror Nixon was correct. neighborhood indigents. • Gen. George S. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was "recovering satisfactorily" from prostate surgery at the Andrews Air Force Base Hospital In Maryland. Brown, 59, was expected to remain in the hospital for 10 to 14 days. He is due to retire next summer. • Veteran steamship ex -•..ow" eculive and consultant · Laareace J. Butt, "8, bas been named president and chief executive officer of financially troubled Pacific Far East Line. Buser was elected at a speclal session in San Francl.aco to replace Jobn I. Alloto, who resiened the dual posta last week . PFEL has been troubled by severe fmanclal problems and asked a federal bankruptcy court re· cently for additional time to pay debts, although formal bankruptcy has not been declared. • Retired FBI Director Oannee KeUj, who- once was the special agent in charge of the bureau's office ln Birmingham, is returning. Kelley said he will be a part-time instructor during the next school year in the School or Criminology at the University of Alabama. Kelley told a news con· ference he will live in kansas City and will be in Birmingham three orfour days a month .. Hi.s lectures, he saio, will nu.av concern international and national terrorism and hostage incidents. * American pboto1rapher AHel Adams of Carmel. whose works are on display in Moscow, was m ade an honorary member of the city's committee of graphic artists on his 78th birth· day, the Soviet news agency Tass said The official Soviet news agency said more than 80,000 persons had seen Adami' phot.o- lf apbs since they went on dis· play two weeks ago. The exhibit closes Friday. ~ ' . . ~, " ... ,.. ..~ _. Elderly Wo~n Slain ( INSHORT ) Secretary W. Graham Claytor Jr. HYI the United Statea needs another modern aircraft carrier., and be prefers a smaller ahlp in· stead ol a aupereanier. . Adm. James L. Holloway, chief of naval operations, baa favored a fourth giant Nimitz ctau carrier. wltb its higher aircraft capacity, nuclear en•lnea and hlaher coat. Claytor backed the 1maller OVV ca.rrler mall2b' OD(Olt.S•Vinl grounda. SHE'S IN POWER Recer Betty Cook Betty Cook.Top Motor Racer: ~ By ALMON LOCKABEY Diiiy 1"11« llOM.illlt WrlW Betty Cook says she is not a .. women's libber." As a matter of fact s he 1ets along just fine in a sport that has been dominated for 13 years by male chauvinists -the rugged sport of offshore powerboat rac- ing At 52, Betty Cook is a grandmother {though she wishes the media would stop harping on it) and the trim 5-foot 4-inch woman tops the list of macho drivers who risk their lives and fortunes at the helms of tons of powerful machinery blasting t,hrough seas that would "shlvel" the timbers" of many old salts . MRS. COOK' WAS the first woman to have her name en· graved on the coveted Sam GrlfClth Memorial Trophy after sbe drove her 38-fool Scarab hull, Kaama through stormy seas off Key West, Fla., best1n1 17 burly male veterans to &ain the world championship in the sport which the trophy symbolizes. Betty Cook's triumphant year started in Newport Beach last March when she virtually backed into a victory in tho Bushmills Grand Prix. Sbe finished second, easing acnid1i the finish line in a partly dis. abled condition, only-to find that the first place finisher bad been d1:.quaW1ed because of failing t6 round a mark properly. She finished out the season with a string or second and third place finishes and another big. important win -that of the Sao Francisco race in which she led all the 200·mile distance. THE WIN AT San FTanciseo was important because it kept her In contention for a berth on the three-person U.S. team wbo would represent this country at the world championship race at Key West. She solidified her points position at the last race ot the year at Marina del Rey; even though she finished fifth. In winning the world titfe. Bet- ty Cook joins a host of famous names. Jim Wynne won the Sam Griffith Memorial in 1964, the first year a world circuit was or· ganized. StandU.gs· Listed Manzanillo Event Measures Yachts IN 1965 DICK Bertram of sail· ing as well as powerboat faar:d put bis name on the trophy, m 1966 Jim Wynne came back ta capture his second world tiUe. · In 1967 it was Don Aronow. famed for his design of the Cigarette bull. Vicenao Balestrieri of Rome~ Italy, became the first European to . win it in 1968; Aronow brought the trophy back to the U.S. In 1969 and Balestrieri turned th~ tables and returned it to Rome in 1970. Yachting buffs are constantly asking what kind or design of boat did well or poorly in one long-distance race or another. The most recent yardstick is the 1,140-mile San Diego to Manzanillo race which started with 40 boats and wound up with 36 finishers . The starting lineup consisted of various designs from stock boats to the latest ln International Offshore Rule creations to the controversial ul· tra -ligbt displacement speedsters. DURING A Iona-distance race the major interest is in which boat or boats are leadine the pack on elapsed time. But when the boats start arriving at tbelr destination the interest shifts to the corrected time standings - the bottom line in handicap rac- ing. As hu already been noted, the overall corrected time wtnner in the M anzanillo race wa1 a stock Ertcaon·35 designed by Broce King of Newport Beach and pro- duced by Ericsqn yachts. The elapsed time winner wp the 61-foot ULDB Merlin, de- signed, produced and sailed by Bill Lee of Santa Cruz. Merlin and eight other Clau A entries all beat the elap1ed time of ~•1time ln the 1976 race. IT ALSO IS interestlnt to note th•t the fleet bad Virtually every condltion of weather, ran1tne from near dead calms to 1ale force 'Wl.Dds provldin1. every- thi DI fror:n dead beats to weather to cl~e and beam re--a c be a to runnlnc dead downwlad. So how did your favorite yacht .... do? The results of the entire fteet bu been meaaed by the lponaorina &an l>ieeo Yacht Club. So read 'em and weep - Of reJolce -as the ean may be. • Cl.AHA 1, ¥«11" W ft. V'-Del IT 6:•1t•40 -CT 141 M ljel;l'I I, Oflfttr C..ft. Ul.09) •·••JO~Oil-1a617 •· ,...,~ tbaettMSI '· 11:u :a-1n.i. •, 'l'tMillt ICilhllMllt-AI 1. t11'9lD _ ,__. •·~ (~e,sa1111e:121te-1 .. 11 .. " ....... 1Dmc•l4) J117ll1ttt-t'1.71 7. P'1wa .... 1t 11"-••VWfll 1:•.10.M -,., .. l.~CClie'OMJ.••-1-.. ........... ~ ... , .. 1•i»-1-.. ... ow.........,t:t1~·•-w.-. a.Ml• ltlc••> , . .,,.,1 ... 2. Ma"'le <C¥W2tonl 7:20·05:Jt-12S 16 a. Reoarclla$s CTerl•iMll t :OO: 11:02 -1u.n •. MH Al89" (St-lall·•OI 7:22:2':4 - IU.24 S, SMI• Cklwt.-«)) 7:12: 1J: 19 -116.21 •· landldo rTertan-41) 7:21:24·.U -126 5' 7, Wiii_. (CF~ll 1:n :u :.s-1:11.11 I , Vendetta C ... t.sar• .. IOl 7:2J:03:1J-121.!2 f . Seem Lo .. ($w_.,) 7:tl:J7:17-12tU 10. ,.,., ..... (Pwl ......... 117:21•0 :)l-1!1.)7 1 I, Sal SI~ !Sw_.,11 7:71 :JI. JI -12'." 1J.Arcadl•(~l7•2J CIJ'.O -IJflt IJ, Fr"s.wn CMull..Ol l ·01·11·n -1JO.O 14, T-fly (c:.1-19) I . 19;J1 SJ-ISl.N CUSS.C-1 1. RelM!lde (~I 1.05:16:11-117.lf 2, Wiii"'"'' Trtt CYanll-•l 7:U :OI J1 - 11161 ,. ·-v (C'M-lJll:01:1G:»-120 2S •. AIOAd-CYan1<...-1 t ;Ot;OI; U -1t1 U s. TintleyLIQM (Oeltt-J517:23.41: ... -112.21 "eocioni.11ccF-»>1·n :>l:n -1n n 1, Jett.._.. SIMmtl>lp <CF-17) 7•21:4':C2 - 112.Al I. Ve<W CCF47l 7:tJ-C'7: 1'-12' 1S f , P...,_ 0... IF...-Honl l :05·:J1:17 -1H 11 10. Cll•"'P811M (lslander·J6) I : 11:4.S S7 - 141.32 t 1, ICeltl 11C~l1:11:27:57-1 .... GI 12, H~ CHet1Weit \.ton) t: ll:Ol:21 - 1•,M New Yorker Bill Wishnick ad· ded his name in 19n. BobtfJ Rautbord of Miami took it m : 1912. It went back to Italy in 1913 when Carlo Bonomi became the world champion. Bonomi repeat- ed in 1974, becoming the first to win the trophy two years in a row. BRAZIL HAD its s hare of glory in 1974 when Wall Fram took the trophy south, an4 Hawaiian Tom Gentry took the trophy to the islands in 1976. And now it bears the name of Betty Cook of Newport Beach, who just hkes to finish -and usually does -somewhere near or at the top. Whitney Race Set For-25th Series The first of the popular off. shore series raclng gets under way Saturday when the Los Angeles Yacht Club launches the 25th year of its Whitney Series for lntemaUonal Offshore Rule yachts and the IJUle Whitney for yachts 30 feet and under a rated under the · Mtdaet Ocean Racing Association rule based on the IOR. Also at stake will be the Los Angeles Times Trophy, oldest award ln Soutbern California yachting, Ind a new trophy to be known as tbe Hannah Koolman Trophy. . TBE TIJU!'S Trophy was re- dedlcJtecl tbts year for a Performance Handicap s&ries ~Ill ~tly with th.e Whltne7, and th~ Koolman award 'tfaa put up for-a Midiet Ocean lbclAI Fleet (MORI') cl au nc1ni-~ eoaeurrentl1 wtth the Little';Wbltne1. MORJI' rat· tn11 are based on the c~ Club of. America QleuuNDMDt rule. Tb.e nnt nee for all etaues will be the •mUe llidwlDter C&taliu WaD4 raoe. ~ i. slde Los Angeles Harbor and leavlng the island to port;- Trophy for the individual raoe for the IOR yachts is the Brokaw perpetual. TWO OF mE Whitney ,5eries races will dovetail with Newpolt Harbor Yacht Club's Ahmansoo Series wbicb gets under wa) Marcb4. This year's Whitney, Times, Little Whitney and Kooimaa series will be condensed into • alx-week period ending April IS. The second race of the series -wb!ch also ia the st.art of the Ahmanson -will be the 7~ Fathom Bank race March 4. The race covers 24. 7 nautical miles. THE TlllBD race -which also includes the Ahmanson - wlll be the 19.l •mile Newport Harbor race, starUng at ~ AnQeld Harbor and endinl a\ NewPQrt. Other races ln tbe LA YO series will be tbe 81-mile Santa' Barbara Jsland race, April 1; tbt OU Jaland race. 45 miles, Aprll 8; and tho *1:DUe EICle Rock race (to Catallna ls1aD4 iD.d r.•turn) ~ u. \'\ \ A A • ... Af'Wl,_,..... 'BROTHER DOMINIC' MEANS MONEY FOR ACTOR Rigors of 'Mr. Cholesterol' Don't Worry Eagle • By MILTON .MOSKOWITl The tobacco lndustry wu not expec~ to shout burrahs over the abtl·smottnc campaitn mounted by Health, Education and Welfare Secretary ..Joseph Call(•ho. Kowever 1 the vituperation. ot one memoer oC the indttstry wu surprtatns. Raymooa Mulligan, prestdent. of tbe Li1,ett Group, parent company o Ugaett .tr Myers. snapped vicioulfy at Calllano in a talk dellveted lut month to the Chamber of Commerce in Dutham, N.C. "WE NEED TO SEE this man eliminated from a position ot power in our rovernment," aald Mulliaan. Then, noting the re,. venues collected by the eov· ernment from taxes on cigarettes, Mulligan referred to the cabinet secretary as follows: "We're paying for this silly ass todowhathe'sdoing." Continuing bis diatribe. Mulligan stoked the fires of self- interest in the business com· munity of Durham, where Llg- Money Tree ,. 1ett la headquartered and 'Nbere two companies. Lt11ett " Myers and American Tobacco, !Dake ci1arettea ud. where no one ts presumably concerned ebout •moking and health. MULLIGAN' SAID TllAT neltber Liggett & Myers nor American Tobacco bu a large share of the cigarette market, so • they could be hit the hardest if Califano succeeded in 1ett1.ng more_~ple to atop smoking. Mulligan's meagace thu1 came down to: Califano wants to t.alte jobs outofDurbam. No one rose trom the audience to remind Mulliaan what he knows all too well: If the future of Liggett & Myers is pre- carious, it's not because of anytbinf Califano is doing, it's the result of years ot questionable manacement. .LIGGE'IT Ir MYERS once bad one of the top three brands in the cl1are~ business, Cbesferfleld. lta safes have eroded to the point where you need a microscope to tee thtbl. UtM was an early entry in the filter market but Liggett & Myers has been unable to keep Jt in contention. L&M sale.a have beea halved in the put 10 years and the brand Mata in l'lth place -aad that's the beat-selllnc brand LiQett "Jllyers bu. Lark, a clcarette with a charcoal filter. got oft to a 1ood start 14 yean a.10 but then w~t into a slump from which it Def«lfL emeried. Eve, a cigarette designed fol'· women, bas one.filth the sales oC Virginia Slims. THE COMPANY HAS never been able to develop a successful menthol cigarette. It bombed two years ago with Eagle, a discount brand. After. others pioneered with cigarettes Fat's Ugly .But It Pays Well SEATTLE (AP ) -Mr. Cholesterol is paid to stay fot. consumers lo think will happen if they try butler or other margarines. ''PEOPLE ASK HIM what bis father does for a Uvfng and the kid answers: 'He'a a monk'." But actor-comedian Jack Eagle says a requirement in bis contract with Fleischmann Margarine that he weigh about 210 pounds for three years is one of the few drawbacks in a boom- ing career in television com- m er cials. Eagle is also "Brother Dominic" for Xerox, a htlle monk whose abbot gives him a seemingly impossible copying task. A Xerox machine floats down from above, and the abbot looks to the heavens, exclaim- ing, •'ll's a miracle!" In an interview, Eaele said that commercials in the last two years have earned more money for him than all his previous work In show business. THE CONTRACT says Eagle, "who stands 5-foot-4, must stay between 200 and 220 pounds. As "Mr. ·Cholesterol," Eagle con- \'eys what Fleischmann wanti. But that commercial, loo, pre- sents a small problem. "It's a litUe tough on my son. who is 9 )'ea~s old," he said. "Frankly, I never made as much money in my li!e," said Eagle, who is in hls late 40s. EAGLE SAID lllS weight '·worries me, but not desperate- ly. I keep in fairly good shape ... CAPITOLIZE WITH I CAPITOL CAPIT(lllATION MEANS TO ~aMRT C.Af'ITCk. TO CASH lf1•"•-S• OOOtoS'.iO OllO~ond ¥Olf OM\ a honw or Of"-' Qf'OPl!'fft "'""' '°' "' ""I. .... ~·Ot. HOwi U>AH Ottat>ge to UllHIDlll• '°"' OQUlly Into O Cllllt> ~ •II tut -"-Y-- Q) C~pitol Home Loan I ' (Jr,. cl C»l' ~ • L""".'11<-• •-c,11.,...oe.,.,. __ ,., JOUie<! oHoca lcw 1"9 IOCI' We'd .Real~ hke to help COSTA MESA . )130w.tottlM 714/~-412 ANAHEIM . ~IW '--•174 -. n41n&<M50 ·LONG BEACH .. ,. E. °" --..s. F AMC Pl • ezgn am OJi Automaker Alli a nee DETROIT (AP) - American Motors Corp .• the n a tion's fourth largest automaker, will agree to rombine its as· sets with a foreign automaker sometime PREPARATION OF TAXRETURMS ., ......... T•,...... Martin I. Schneyer Attomevat Law ~-Jd'tolleo ""doc~ .... "'llA(l--) ~-c1~1fuai-1 ....,._OITul- -~..,.._-.us Tu Court -US s..or-Co.lft ,AOOOW .. t!Or!yPt~S....220 ~llNol.CA~ ,133·1164 . NEE D A LAWYER? Lowl.egal FH • Divorce • Bankruptcy •Criminal -Wiiis-Probate • I ncorporatJon •Accident-Injury *Eviction 640-2507 thi s ve a r , a top com P!lJlYofficial say~. Gerald Meyers, AMC president, 1ndlcated the agreement probably would include th e eventual manufacture or the other company's vehicles at AMC plants in the United States and sale of those cars through AMC dealers . .. WE WILL make this happen" durlnt 1978, Meyers said. He did not name a company, but industry speculation bas focused oo Peugeot of France and; to a lesser degree, fiatoUt.aly. It was reported from Paris that AMC and Peugeot were discussing the poaibllity oC swap- ptnc equlpment. AMC baa denied that report. ASKED IP THE com- fiany were discussin1 af-iliation wltb Peugeot, AMC said the com- pany's position had not changed since Feb. 1, wben ?tteyers told . explored but none was imminent. Peugeot-Citroen. Europe•s third lar1est automaker, said it. bas been discussing possible Joint production and dis- t r i bu tlon agreements with AMC, but is not in· terested in a merger. A spokesman said the company did not think s ue h an acreement would be reached this year. A Fiat. spokesman said his company was not involved. Dou&las Fraser, pres- ident ol the UnJted Auto Workers. wblch represent.I some 14,000 AMC workers, said of the nport: "I WOULD be all for- that. If they can work som etbinc out, it ob- v 1ous1 y would strengthen AMC and in- crease job security for our members." . .. 21314'21-9333 • ..... ~HA. COHSULTATION-C10 stockholders a foreign agreement was being A foreign agreement would be a ''com-· binatioo, alliance or af- filiation" rather than a merger, Meyers aaid. .. We're talkina about something bi1&er than the 1954 merger of Nash Kelvinator Co. and Hudson Molot' Car Co., which created. American Motors," Meyers iraid. Taxes and Inflation, estimated to be 6-n In 1978, are INklng It harder for people to m..Jn or bulld their as.ets. The IRS hes ~gn:sslvely eBmlnated many taiflncentfves uff!d by Investors In the put. ~with the canst.an& au Jaw teYlsk>ns. there ere 9t8I •pportanltlu .......a. for lnYatOfS to she>tet or de&rr ~la• u ta:r<mt ... ..,... IHome (I.e. salary end commlsslon). lf you pl.\tn your 1978 progn11m now. rathet than wait till year end, you'll have ample time to analy?l8 and property choose'the one'whlch will meet your ob}ectlve. ~rts Talk Due· and I have a good philosophical base. "But eventually I'll have to lose weighL 1 know that.•• He got his start ln show busi- ness at the age or 15 as a trumpet player. "People used to say I was a funny trumpet player. Now they say I play trum petfunny." .. AT THAT TIME the agencies didn't like to send out comics, because people weren't uaing them. But I got a Robert Hall commercial. Did a great job for them. didn't J? They're now at that big pipe rack in the sky,'' he said. Eagle does other commercials -"I was the guy O.J. Simpson jumped over in the Hertz com· mercial, and I was a perfect face for Gillette's Trac II, in ad· dition to the Xerox thing" -but Brother Dominic has the im- pact. Eagle remembers appearing at a hotel in his friar's robes when &0me people arguing at a meeting asked hlm for a few in- spirational wor~. •·I told them 100 years from now nobody would ever know they ever had that meeting. They realized that, thanked me and compromised." O ver T h e Counter HASOUstiftgt • -~ .......... HE'S NOT TO BLAME JoHph CaUfano low in tar and nlcoUne, Liggett & Myers entued the field with Decade. Teo years ago Liggett le Myers bad 8 percent of the cigarette market. Today, it bu 3.3 percent -and it stands dead last in the industry. Fifth.place Lorillard has more sales in JtlS Kent bran d than Llgeett & My6s has in aU of its brands. With that· kind ot record, it'6 no wonder Mullitan is nervous. Liggett & Myers has been doing a pretty good job or self-' destructing even before Califano entered the scene. Bank's Booklet Covers Leasing Leasing equipment. rather than purchasing or renUng it, is the subject of Bank of America's latest small business reporter on lease transactions. Copies are available without charge at Bank of America branches, although a $2 charge is made for postage and bandl· ing lf requested by mail. l/ps-tlD..,.. sw ...... ..,, ,.., lfl Gt 4M S.• s.-lfl '°-SS 11.D Soec1r• F U6 Nl. Sbt··~ COOft p i ... '-• Olw N 4.$1 Lt!S ~ F :LM S.-stF"" Gt S.At NU OCKS I BUSINESS ------- Wedne&day's • Clo1ing Prices NYSE COMPosrm -TRANSACTIO~S ( ~,Febtu.ary22, 117t I •N Myth Persist: 'Pro~ Don't Add. Up •1 .IOBN aJNNU'P ,,, ....... ~ . It WM rweoJo4 qoln la lltlU -·-Gf publle oplaloa; I.be bolW that ---.. prolll. a I .. o .. alll>e-dollarthultNall1-· , 'l'blrt-. lo15-uJd ~·la Ille i,1<4 ,,.,, _ .... I.be "'Ololno V.S:mws:ai)l{orlll llePott. N bad. At Mil one earlier survey. a i ... oteolive ~·m.-tD wttb. »aoi ncure. • ' ' ' T1IJI ftVB PIGV&E, JNSOFA& AS any"""'""" are', reall)' &nae. bl bltweea 5 QCl 5.$ cent.I tor all muutactur. Inc eorporatlon1. accordtn1 to tb• Commerce~ Department'• "BuslaeN OOndlUOna Die•t... --: Tbat, at lout, WU I.be """11 rate ID tlllT. Eu17 ln:ll979~ 1t wu • blt hleber, aDd' ID the finst quartu ol 11'1S tbe ra . fell to under .C pereent. But ln eeneral, tbe i'ate for 2S l>aa-""""'46. .• WhUe tllla ll ao, JOU may be almott certa1n Utat 3 •VY•Y ~ eorporate orottta done lD that time' hU come with a ftpre 11t iea1t double tbat supplied. bi the Wu~1t111ot1 .. tactor10B. It II a myth that tranieenc'I 90Cial and .ecGllOllllc category. & few yean ago so ,ipdependent comultant• polled the .,1ew9 11 1CON1 of aalee ext!C\JUves at a m~ LG llciitnaL ~~pre wuiu ptirceOt. ocsa cent.. Tbe U.&. ,Newti 1urvey, eondPCted by tll• n..... l!utellnc Coa<epta, found litlle ditf~ 1betw~n the belle! ot those wftb executlve..level lbcomes and those on blue collar wages. Those who earned $50,000 OI' more said 13 cents of every sake dollar was profiL 11toSe with inoomea of less \ban 115.000 aaid 1S cents. AGE llADE LITl'LE DIFFERENCE; respoodents un~ der 3S gave the same U-cent amwer u tbole as and over. Liberab and ec>n1ervatlvea alike said 13 ceota. Vnlon memben and non-members almagreed on 13. How do YoU ~plain ttr That would be tho more mean· ingful survey. In ita absence, certain observationa can be made wltb the likelihood that lo :some deeree, great or a:mall, they have some relevance. There ii the size factor. Corporations are enormous; they produce steUaUca that make those of many United Nations memben look like small change. Undentaodably, ~ these companies also produce huae profit •taUstica. · WHEN FO&D O& GENERAL MOTORS or American .. : Telepbooe Is Telegraph produce quarterly earninp that nm 10 digit. long, wit.bout any decimal points, the fac\Or of shell impreued on the awed reader. . Style ls a comlderation. Col'poraUons live well. Their executives often travel first class, ride lo big cars, eat in fancy restaurants. They earn big tncomes. Their children . g() to elite schools. · ·: Cao anyone not associate this comfortable style with -wealth and proflts? Hardly. Not even Ji.DlmJ Carter, pres. · ident ol the United SU.tel, who bu suu-tect aucb ex- ec.11Uve1 are Wlfalrly privileged. Dlstoction must be oonsidered. At bargalnlngUme, Uh· too proposandists can be expeeted lo pr'omote the notion of4. exorbi.Lant. profits. Prior to ao.nu.al meetinp, corporate: propogandlsls crow about their prorata. ~ But then yo11 bave-to wonder about all tbes~. poss.ibillU.. That 1ame U.S. News study found that whil~ Amerieam bave an ftallera\41d aotion of profita, the}' ~ believe buainesa is enUUed to aut:h profits. .. ._ Not just entiUed 1o tbe 5 ffDtl OC' ao that it actually'!. ~ euns, buttbelJ tol5 cent.a tbat.Am.ericanstblnk baw.tnas! ~ ..,,,., ~Technical Upswiiig \AUl.s St.ock Preture • • NEW YORK CAPI -SU>ct prices IM!nncecl llllllrtl,,: today ID a modest technical Upawlni after the martet'A. stead; decliw of ll:te. ~ But the Dow Jones iiverate .of 30 lndustriala, wblcn; had touched 31-monUl Jon in each of the la.st fou~ aeutons. lolt0.21 poln.tll to1tlt.05, ~ AdvanteS outnumbered decllnes by • 4-3 mar&Iit amoa1 New York Stock Escbu.l'e-listed Jasoea. ~ Br<*en aald a 1teady &bowing by the dollar slnc6 Ttlead.,-In forelp ucbaqe helped eocoura1e aom< callUOU1~for 1'baq:aim" in the marteL .,. · But tbeY obO ~ ...U.ulng <oocem over I.be coat atrllteand-k:tlouGlrialqln_.r.,.., ·: Sl-blaTlw• ,,.,.,,••nA.,.,r .. ~f s,,.iu .. , .... "..:.W' ...... ~_..,. __ .. ,.::~ 1:,'1,."*'_., .. 1 ~= :.:' "='· ~ ~. ii:-ll ,_ -1MQ :ID T,_ a.111DUf •t1 -...+ ~Ill _...IW' el -..... •l. !I Utt 10l..1' m.J:I _... ,..,_.._ • Am"""-•••"• ~-.fM --SUt; 1llil.Jl MM-•1.0 MM+ --,........... -·· ,... --._. ................... ,_ =. ........ 211Aim M\11 """' T'M ,. •• ~ .. -••oo••••••oo ,. ._. 1tot.-• ., -.--... 1•• lhUs ....... -............ . ..__ ...... ...;... ~ -,. ;...c":.:"'::.:··:·:·:-:":-::.":.::":":':":·_.:;:.::+ "'Wei Diii!........ ..,,. ..-. + .. -fir'""r.!i .. ·::::: ~~e ;.. ;:n' I.Yd ft... ~ ,,,.. + I'll .,,__ ...... \.Ml... """' . I'll lllW Jftc......... 1a.JDO ti +I 1.11~-......... 1JF;• .a~ •.... lS! .. ,. ....... , •»,10CI II-loll -I-loll f"I... ........ UJ,ltl U 'AI -Ill ........... 1a;JOI --\lo Whal s1 .... 1a Dfd : I .J ... . · Debt Repaid Robert Conrad (left) returns as Pappy Boyington in The Black Sheep Squadron toniaht at 9 on NBC, Channel 4 with J eb Adams, 16, sone of the late actor Nick Adams. Conrad got Jeb the role -just as Jeb's.dad rot Conrad his first role over 30 years aao.. Cr'Ulfty to~ 9 MACNBLI LINER AEPOAT m OOl.1.ECTIVE 8AAaAININa OOE8 TO SCHOOl . Cl) TO TEU. THE TRUTH 1~ II WHEN HAVOC 8TAUCK ··~~Tf91>o Ing the ~'*" Of brldgle. ~ ...... 4 ,000·Y••r·old atone bridge9 to the Goldea Gaf9 8rtdge. II 8HANAHA ~Olon. 8 HEWLYWIDOAME D MATCHGAMeP.M. 0) THE 8AADV 8UNCtf Greg end Illa lootbd ,_, .......... riwl'• m.oot. Oaa1111ef Lbei•g• 1J KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles • KTLA(lnd) Los Angeles D KABC-TV (ABC) L~ Angeles ()) KFMB (C8S) Sa" 04ego 8 KHJ.. lV (Ind ) Loe Angetes (11 KCST (ABC) San Diego ID KTlV (Ind.) Los Angeles CD KCOP·lV (Ind ) Los Angeles fl' KCET· lV (PBS) Los Angeles G KOCE·lV (PBS} t-tunttngton Bea<:h CD N»M-U Mdoy al'ld Reed are ~to•MW•lnan ~1 to cacti car ~~ fl) L.A. INTEACHANQIE ··~Jo· '9 STAABOMO hl'lle Phllnt<lfft Herd· ()) •121.ooo ouanoH «I fAlll/l..Y ~ UO fJ Cl) 088 MOYIE ·~~("­ l•r•) CNnN Durlllng," 11-T--· A WidcNfw, ""'-JI* -• fNCtc • ....., lceepe ... lmolalMI ~ hi• •-oe ~. r~-.OlaMl­ Ully l'tllWded aon In •. •late aallaG. ClJ OAIZZL.Y ADMl8 "TJl8 Al--..(' A ~ (AogarE.~ .... during .. --· In the wldefw ,,,.. • oar- ing ~ "°"' bondllga. .. ~~~ .no ._.... '*" the true ~ol~ 8 WOVIE * ·~ WJmwlat OI The Body 8Nlal••" (19158) • ~n ~. 0.. Wyn._. GIHl pl1.11t1, wf** -.. ..,..,..., df'wln tn ..., ~ ~ ~ Ol9ar-o nla.(1111 .. 30 .... , MARY TYLER MOORE STRUTS ANO FRETS IN TV SPECIAL TONIGHT .• -. Popular ~r Lo••• Battle With Lightweight Matertal .. ... . . Speeial Sluggish .· ••• By IAY SBAllBU'IT .v. L06 ANGELES (AP) -No doubt ·. *arming up for her new music-·:: 1arietJ series next fall, Mary Tyler ·:.\loore Jw ·a CBS 1pedal toniabt :celled "Bow to 6at'fhe the '70s and o:llaybe Even Bump Into Happiness" ,...;at 10 on Channel 2. . ::. Sad to say, it's not so bot. It • ~~enerally lacks the sparkle that • marked her old series. Six writers • lid tonl&bt's show, but their material • •s ao tlUn it'd be marked AWOL 1t tt\ll"Md~. .. · The 11low, co-starring Harv•Y ;.tgorm-. wtlo'll IODll baft bis 01'D : ~BC teri... •ad lobn "Three's ~ Companyt• Jlltter, bas at the fads and ::rolblea of tbi• decade tbrou1b stetcbes, 80DI and dance. Van Dyke, in a crowded elevator. Another ls a bittersweet sinlles bar sketch lrith BW Bizby. The last 1a Iler claia1 renditicn of a · lovely tune, "Listen Here.0 com· posed by jau pianist Dave FriBbberg tor &he show's finale. But the nst -well, let m hope nothing simllar appears in her new CBS series next fall. Miss Moore bas too ml)Ch talent to waste on third· rated material. •O llQHT• IHOUQH "OtMt Ea:peotaUOfte'' T~ ~ dUdllQ an lmportMt Engllll ~ rldDn Ill Ofdlr '° ~ Illa gr9del up '° .. ....,. ~~ • . CWQ.aJllNTT NfO flllllHDI • M0\1'18 *** "Tiie 8~ (1'1S) .-.... WIG~ R\cMtd a.-. AtW • .......... lo.I .. • blW partod di ...... 91\ -..oanWal .. dlcildlll IO "'°"' ~ ~ °"'· (a In.) fD NOVA "The Tn.l Of Denton ~ Tiw right• of s-tlenl8 and doelcn -~In ........ '"""" ...... .....,. Cloe- • MAOIOMINOD Cl' Olt. PMl'IWB "aua.ioi. And AllMtflr, SlllUlll .. Mal='"°" OV!Rf.N1t ~a.....Madc.me.. MOD llUOka&P 8QUADAOH ..,......,.,,.. Fn.ft" ~ ~ ..... rwwly errtviM for-••me • Nu-ar-(OenlM Du8eny), I• 0.fte<al Moore'• deugflter. Meen- ~.,~plot (JeO AdatM) .. about '° be -.It lloflte ~ '* llipe. rlof• dl8ccNal' M i. 9'9 cdf ,,.,_ wt.o can ,_,. dl8. -'-* plane. Dal CMMUIFS AHGEl.8 . .. Uttte Anga19 or ni. · tflQhl'' na ~ .- fftto an _..cl -..to ln~the~ deeUle of two Of the bultd,. Ing'• moat popular 1.....U. a IAON80E ~. lrONlde pro. tel* • ...,_,.~ .,.,_.at)' from deeth .,....._ • tla'I .... ~ c:wta PYtda, 81111 ~ ...... .-...... Oel\HiL • GREAT P8lflOMIAHOE8 The ~ 819)••dlbol11t1rf'IW· ~ ••*did " Sit 0-V 8clftl, perlonna .., .... -~ Sopf9RO I.I.I* .... -'-1\nd IOlollt. G!) AU9TW CITY LMT8 rl MMlcNll ~· ,,. .,...., ._,,. op.-Wiili ~ ........ ,~-. ~ ...... ... ·--.------·- TUBE TOPPERS CBS fJ 8:00 -"Special OJYmplcs.h Ch arles Durning s~ in this TV movie d ram a about mentally retarded · youngsters. KTLA 0 8:00 -"Invasion of Ule BOdy Snatchers." The pods take over Southern California in this science- fietion clusic from 1956 with Kevin McCart.by and Dana wtntet. CBS 8 lt:OO -•'How to Burrive th~ 706 and Maybe Evea Bump Into Happf .. ness." Mary Tyler Moore stars 1n this musical comedy special with Harvey Korman. (See review below). ("O.on1-·a o.dll..,. anct ·~~ ~ tlof'll Ml ,_ LP, ""-'• PIMCll9. .. ..,.,. TWUJWf.,.. Alt.,.,.._,...., ---~a...m. alol~ 10JOO. Cl) IWn'm.M MOON! -.-r.~Tlle"706 And ..... l!IMlt ....., lftto H..,._-A lnUIP QI ......,. .... • .... ~ .... ..,... ~~deO­..................... _, k.-.n. ,,,...,. ... MC:toa.e.. II POLaWOMAN , "l.Wrder WIU• Pretfi.' Peope" flilllp8r, poling .. • ll'Odll, .,.. ~ proe. ....... die...,_ of tlll• outwardly Ol•lftOVf'OCle best .. t -wtd .. llllglt ....... __ ... .,....,. °""* ~ Pnwlalt} Of • boddllg 8Qlll"'I la found ct.d. DD Nl!M Gal 8'MSKY& HUTCH "'lo4utd:i1Mon • Murder One" St.Illy,._ lalow ~ ................. ifl • dwclW• --tor Hindl,Mlo. ....... .. ...... .., ..... ....... dOllr llM'llll .~ and ........ _...far .. .,..... • HOl9NOOl•e ................... '° .......... pool. ....... ................. ciw.. .. oat -.. boe'•geodllda. • 8CUIDITME ........_.._ud 11 IN .Mneal' 10'.tlt·~ ''The Wortd Of Fndlln And ,...,_.. Otwon w .... ..,. ...... ,...._ •.. TONIGHrS LATEST LISTINGS OOHTMl~IUll)eet apatthDpll~--­ • ICA08 hftf. • CAl'110fC) AllO NIM t.tlRNfNO t2lOO. TWUIHTllONI? ••cMMl.,.,ed lartl.tt ~ beglr'4 '° -thllt ,.,....... don't .. him. • acw11 ·**~~ c:ate" (11181) Dffttla O'~ Aaio. l.MI. " ,..... t •• ,.. ....... 11191..,.. an.pt to .... lip. -tlmol'l #o • .., °'" ...._.. (1 bf,. 30"*1.) • MCJW! * *" . .,.. c.ptaJn'• T....-(1890) '*1 ~ .an. ft90gy CUnwl*1a. A _...,.°'.~ "'-'**.._.. ...... al NII Ill Ofder to ...., ... porul04lon pai ... ut. (t lw .. 30 nM.) u:ao. IOlll! '*'* ••Ae¥oft Of Tll• ~ .. (*"> AolllftCf c.r.y, a... Mirta Fefld. elll. A ~ -ui '-"* .............. . groQJ"" ......... . ~Clf81u&.(1hr .. 51511M) talr eO MCMm'IR'I MOW! ..,. WA ....... For A Niglldlpll"' (19TS) ~ ~. ic.1111 autw. Arr °'*9.., .. ..,.._,by the lllddanMd ~ 41pC)W•Mle °'. --..... __ _._~. ' ~-da.f.(A) • ·-~. - U:.40 "8Y a=: a.trayec1·• Da9Cl~.lf..,la Kojlk .............. by the doc*........ 8ttlcl oode of allenc• whe" he ..... to~lhe deatll• of .. ..,.,., longltlol-1. IR> ffJO 8 TOMOMOW .Jad(le Ola8lorl .. ~ 1119-..r. D 18'1't "'TYltdllll Ollghl'" uo• MOW! MORNING tuoe .... .....,.. .,._... ("'7)1Ca. ....... Jeff Qwder. Ttle "'9Mlt ..... .,, .......... .. the --..... .. ,..........._czan..ao-.. AFTERNOON **-,. "~eat, Hetn" (11151) Franle loveloy, • Aldwd Cartlorl. ~ In the KoreM W• rall*t to I-* °" In .,. ,.. Clf 1119 -*"V· (2 tn.) ., MOVIE "TOflighl We &1ig" (1973) Anne lucrott. Onld W9Yn•. Sol Hurok ....,. to~ ti. _..,.. --....... art• -to tM concert t\1111 °' AtMr1l:a. ( 1 ftr .. 30 "*'-1 =1:-NEWS MOVlll * • wrargat Fot ~­(1tee) a...t Orangiw, Ali L.os~ tn 'Conipany' TOo NEW YORK (AP> -''Cbarlle's AnlfeJ&," both "One D417 at a Time,•• is Enough,'' ABC; "Pro· in the Pamlly.'• both CBS' telec.tottbe Feb. 25.1or18.7 milliaa, both CBS: "Honeymooners jeet UFO," NBC; "How CBS; Frid•J' Jloyle 15 fl1ht in wblcb ABC. Special," ABC; "The the West Was Won," .. Three on a Date." ad )(qbammed All klst bis TheoatlOshow: Wattom." cm; "'Elebt ABC; "Alice" and "All "Fa~."botlaABC. heavyweight crown~~~~--~----~--------~--~~~~~~--~~~~~------------------- 1boolt up the week's rat. Inga -but not enough to knock ABC from the top. A.C. Niehen figures show. The fight. wen by~ 1ear-old Leon Spinks, ••• runner-up ln the ratings race to ABC's "Three's Company." The rating for the · Spinks-AU fltbt was M.4, compuoed with 38.t for ''Three'• Company.'' Nielsen aays that means 34.4 percent of tbe homes with TV watched all or part of the box.inc special. ALI'S TITLB fiaht" with Eamie Shavers -aired by NBC the night of Sept. 29 -WU t.opc in r atings for that week. "Lav e rne and Shirley" and "Happy Days," the ABC bits wboee one-two ftnlsh in. the ratings b8S become almoet routine, finished third and fourth the week ending Feb. ta. D ea plte CBS' breakthrough -two otb er CBS 1bows, "M·A·S-H" and "60 MiOutea," Wlel'e lo the Top 10 -ABC ftniabed the wedl wtaa a Z2.2 ra~ ing. : Sometimes you want to leave the car.es of the worid behind and just sit back and enJoy the things llfe has to · offer. The Dally Pilot brings you the information you need to find entertainment -all along the Orange eoast.· Movie and theater ads and reviews, entertainment and restaurant feafures and our new complete TV listf ngs keep you up to date. Entertainment, however, ts only part of our story. Every day the pag~s of the Daily Pilot offer you mucti more: news pf yqur community and world views, m0ney saving advertising and coupons, action s~rtS and a variety Of excluslve features. . . . . ~ . . .. • •• • I • Brent's Hollywood Eong Gone ... ~ GEORGE BRENT NOW ANO IN LA TE 1930$ The Change In Hollywood Is 'Immense' :Chaplin Destroyed ~His First Movie .. • .. ~' NEW YORK <AP) -Charlie Chaplin burned -. \lle ne alive or the first film he produced because ; , he had not acted or directed in ~.. it and was envious of its high · quality. his daughter says. Actress Geraldine Chaplin, In an interview in the March b · sue of McCall's magazine. said she learned from her mother, Oona, that Chaplin, who died last Christmas, had burned his first producing effort. a film "about a sea gull or something 11 like that " Edna Purviance starred in lhe movie, Miss · Chaplin said, but she did not give any other details about the film. Miss Chaplin said her father would not have cared so much about a merely adequate film. "I'm sure that the Purviance ftlm must have been • wonderful, or Daddy would not have burned it," ~he said. ., :· HENRY WINKLER SAUY FIELD ' "Filrdi11g tlw one you o is fi11di11g yours.elf. "Clas sic Eastwood •.. fast, furious and funny " RMt·' ft/f.-tf lt•-C.QO SIXt-frmtu Bv DAN TEDRICK SOLANA BEACH <AP> -When actor George Brent returned to Hollywood recenUy for the fint Ume in 25 years, he couldn't even f1nd bis old Warner Bros. lot. "The change is lmmense,'' Bre1U said af'\er his only son drove him tbe 100 miles from his home ln this quiet San Diego County seaside communi· ty to Los Angeles. He ended up at a motel in the cily and the sludlo picked him up for the quick trip to' its Burbank lot where he made a cameo appearance in "Born Aeatn," a mov· ie about Watergate figure Charles Colson 's religious conversion. A cha~e in the scenery wasn't the only difference Brent noticed about Hollywood. "The tension was fierce . The labor problems, the lack of dis- cipline -nothing uke the old days when a story came down after being worked on for a year or six months and the director look over. If it wasn't quite right, you did it again. "IT WAS VERY social in those days, a ctually ve ry nice. How bea utifully gowned the women used to be." Memories. March 15 is his 74th birthday. A veteran of almos t 100 films. the Irish-bom Brent was a suave, black- ha ire d leading man who left a generation of women envying Greta Garbo, Merle Oberon and his other co-stars. He married five times. first in 1932 lo rilm star Ruth Chatterton, separat- ing in 20 months, and in 1942 to actress Ann Sheridan. divorcing in a year. The movie he is proudest of, "Dark Victory," won an Academy Award for Belle Davis in 1939. After it ap- peared on tele vision last year, a friend ealled up Brent to say that he should have taken home an Oscar, as well. ··wELL, WHAT THE heck," responde d Brent, who made 11 • • • VOIJ'ONI by lew ,,_ • • • , ... "'°" --°"'-......-.. ~ --.. . .., .... -°"' ,,.,_.,.a-" OI -ocound<elt -.. Ill ... -of gr...S. "* -and _,...,...,,,,°""' ---aoetY v,,,,-. ...... _ ,_ ... s .............. --C<ltll""l>O'vtl ... • .._.... ,,,,.._ .... """9 . .....,.11 ..... ""' ncll. .._....... ..... _,.. -&elf•-··· -- "' -·•-OCIOA tHCIAl-•MC••t•W ..... f ----~..._ CMl.llOl'WI ..... ... WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS ·- Including BHt Pfcture • 8e1t Ac1re11 • Ann• Bancroft BHt Actre11 • Shlrley Maclain• 8est Supporting Actor Mikhail 8ary1hnlkov Bell Director Herbert RoH 1\~ !'\••~Ii I ''>...I M '" • •• ~ ...... ' , ...... ----------- HILD OVll "DERSU UZALA" . ..._.... ......... Call 642-5171. Pul • few word• to work for u. Open Doily 12:30 p.m. Call 642-5678. Put a tew words to work for ou. .. The talk around Hollywood Is that our movie may be a heavy favorite for an Academy Award -No kidding, an· Oscar! I may even h.ave to rent a tuxedo!" HENRY WINKLER Sllllll II U ..W II .... u-.. •la-Ille •US.Oii LTHEATRES-ORANGECOUNTY MAMM'$ . "SEMI '.fOUGH" cat SO. COAST PLAZA = .:~---IOllY-C-1 DAILY 6:00-1:00. 10:00 •nu~~ "°'41?f.. ..,~~,,,_,. "SATURDAY NIGHT' FriER" IA) OA"-Y.._1: __ " .. ,,..,.... .... J: ........ ,_ DAILY PILOT WINNER OF 8 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Including Beat.Picture Beat Actor • Richard Dreyfuss Beat Actreaa • Marsha Ma•on 1 • ••• Ned Simbn maKes feeling good legal ... GENE SHALIT. NBC-TV . (PG) A Mi STARK PR000Cn0N Of A HEJl8ERT ROSS F11M NEIL SIMON'S "THE GOODBYE GIRI: RICHARD DREYFUSS· MARSHA MASON l!dwerds ScMclule Dalty 7:15, 1:15 Fri 1:00. 1:00, 10:15' Sat~n 2:00, 4:00, 8:00, 1:00, 10:15 Im ACTOll -fftl IKMAllJ ll.910H 1auus,., ..... .,,..~111$ • ., •• Uf, a '41M.•1100 e ••O e 71 IS & MS .It .. IOllY DllaflllO "'°' '"'~(Mt fMUllSOAT MU IUNO&T i ! f ~ .. ~ [ , ( 1• DAIL 'Y PILOT . A TRUE LOVE STORY. .. For ~nt ioho btlitvtS m hRppy tndings The oonti.nui.ng true story cl Jill Kinmont, a woman with enough courage for ttn litttimet ... and •man with enough Jove to any them both. 4THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN'z PART . "Got.a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. P.at will cut rfd lope, getting the. amwm-s and. action 11ou Med to aolue ~er in government.and buabwu. MaJl )IOUr quut10l\I to P.at Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coast Dmlt1 Pilot, P.O. Bo% 1560, CMta Me1a, CA 92626. Aa "'°'3Y lettera:cu posaible will be ~rfd, but J)hmM!d mqu1ri1a or letten not mcludbtg the reader'• full aam(. addreu. and buaineu hoMri' phone number cannot be con81dered. Thi.I column ~or1 doi- ly e:&eept Sahuvlay1." Do~ BHI 1'fa8 Soelc Credit DEAR PAT: I've been getting bills tor a year from Hosiery Corp. of America for things I never received. Now their collection agency, Retrieval Masters Credit Burt!au Inc. or New York City, is sending me bills and threats I have excellent credit with a number of major companies, but I'm afraid this billing error may spoil It all. Is there any way to get this straightened out? G.D .• Dana Point A YS contacted the credit bureau, and was as· sured this charge wlU be removed from Its rec .. ords. You will receive no more billings, says the credit nrm, but don't be surprised ii you do. It u'iually takes computers a few weeks to deal with correction~. \"~.,.,,.. Sear. Out Spoilage DEAR PAT: Can you find out if it is better to leave meat and pou ltry 1n a vacuum·sealed ~IP!!f!!P.!~~~~,_ •• l!llll!!ll!lllP---.. package for home refri{!erat<fr storage? I should c" A think it would stay fresher, but some of my friends =~~•iti!lll 4 ~~1~" An•: say 1l 's better to rewrap with foil or plastic. Who's c;~iiilllllilillili.~~·~··;w;·~v ... • right'! MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY ANNIE H L OAllYI tS-SAfeSUN/MOM-1t~·•M 16 'WORLDS GREATEST LOVER . (PG) OAILY 11»1000 SAT/SUN~OCMI »tOOO "JULIA" (PG) OAll. v 1 »••&nu• l»4 1~10 :io SATIS~MON-1 »3 *4-1:.-10 30 "HIGH ANXI " (PG) 0411.YI 30-I ~·10 20 SAl'SVN!o'ON 1ocns:..•50-t•W~IO~ WALT 01sNevs ·RUN FOR vouR L1Fe. "CANOLESHOE CHARLIE BROWN" Ct11le>A£NS 7 •50;ULYSATIS(JN-t-oii..7l0 l!l~.OS...T/SU-~!15 Pf\ICES "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER "lR) OM.Ya OCMI 21>10.lO SAl~MON-1 »3~«»4»1030 WAI. "CANDLE SHOE" (G) , "THE BOA TNIKS~ Q<ILC>AEN~ PR1CtS N.S .. C9sta Mesa You art'. A.W. Brant, Extension food l('chnologi'it, \3)'> research shows vacuum packag- ing dela) s bacterial !i.poilage. When exJ¥>Sed lo air, at-roblc bacteria caust> spoilage. Vacudm packag· ing kllls ttds type of bacteria, and stays early spoilage. Sare storage time depends upon the temperature at whh:h meat or Poultry ls kept. Ideal is 28 degrees t'. (just above the freezing point of these foods>. Sugary A d• S aturate f'aUle• DEAR PAT Television food commercials always seem to feature sugary. starchy food. I find this esper1a lly true on childrcn·s programs. How many food commcrC'1als does the average child see in a year. and how many of them feature junk foods'! P.S. Huntington Beach A child who watches a moderate amou.nl of TV can see between 8,500 and 13,000 food and beverage com merclals a year, according to a report from the Senate Seled Committee on Nutrilloa and Human Needs. StudJes also back up your feeling that nutritionally worthless foods are featured. Estimates for the put five years lndJcate that as much as half the money spent oa TV food advertis- ing goes for: products high ln fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, sugar, uJl or alcobol. "WHICH WAY IS UP?" (R) "NORMAN.ISTHArvour Movie to Beui.n ·oH Goo" <PG> e ... "GUMBAll RALLY" ~---.. o-NE_A_No_o_NL-Y-.. <P_a_) ---c: Filming on Isle "WW & THE DIXIE OANC~ KINGS" LOS ANGELES <A P ) -The comedy · "FLESH GORDON adventure .. Escape to Athena" will be&in pro· "TUNNELVISION · duction at the end of February on the Greek island 'THE GROOVE TUBE" (A) of Rhodes The ITC picture stars Roger Moore, Telly "GAUNTLET" (R) Sava las, David Niven, Stefanie Powers, Claudia "TAXI CAB DRIVER.. Cardinale. Richard Roundtree. Sonny Bono .and Elliott Gould AL.I.. DRIV£•1HS DPl:N ~JOP.M.HIGH1\.Y C"lld Under 1 2 I',.. Unle» * l<lcldi. 111'1.1,..,ound edwards CINEMA C£NT£R Hf'. ~'Mt iR Ai lt.{J., ,, • \ T,. 1,..f ...... ""E'>llVfllDECH,Hll 979·11~1 George Cosmatos dire<:t.s from a script by Richard S. Lochte 11, a critic and columnist. and Acad~my Award-winner Edward Anhalt. ' , Piai1ist Wins Loud Cheers They got to their feet and bawled "Bravo!" Saturday night in Santa Ana and they would have been stantllng there and yelling today 1f Argentinian pianist Martha Agench had continued to return to the stage. lt was a richly deserved ovation for the lovely artist's superb and astonishingly forceful rendition or one of the most complex and demanding piano works ln the concert repertoire. Prokofieff's Concerto No. 3 in C. Sbe electrified her Orange County Philharmonic Society audience in the 'Santa Ana High School auditorium with a virtual onslaught on the keyboard in those bold and brilliant opening bars. IT CAME AS NO surprise when a delighted audience halted the work at the end of the first movement and forced Its tribute on her. Not all soloists care for suck an interruption but it clearly pleased the gracious Martha. The Prokofieff is a glittering galaxy of cascad- ing chords that calls for fire and fervor in the keyboard interpreter. In other words, it ls tailor made for the likes of the magnificent Martha Agerich. She had everything going for her Saturday night including an undoubted major asset in the person of guest conductor Erich Leinsdorf. The liaison between piano and podium was flawless but that, or course. is par for the musical course with the vivid Viennese maestro. HE BROUGHT THE BEST out of a top form Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra elsewhere in the program with memorable performances or Moiart's 35lh Symphony and the majestic, often emotional, Brahms' Tblrd. HlS painstaking interpretation of the Brakms was classic Leinsdorf. It is astonishing bow this little man, with complete economy of movement, can extract such inspired renditions Crom or-· chestras Jucky enough to have him on lbe podium. And the amiable Erkh, bless him, can never resist teasin8 his audience with a nash of the ir· repfesalb)e humor that often convulses us during those magic summer nights at the Hollywood Bowl. HE !WOULDN'T ALLOW his audience to hall him with deserved applause between the first and second of Brahms' three Huncarian dances and that impish grin over his shoulder told us only too clearly that the elfin Erich was pullinJt our legs aga10. • Ageracb, Leinsdorf and a Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra that blt the lieiabts In the presence of this gifted pair; it all ad~ up to a pro· gram that m'y prove to be the jewel of this splendid Orange County Phitharmonic Society season. As the pretty girl in the next seat commented: "He"s just great. And she's fantastic. It's hard to believe that anyone could play a piece like that the ""ay she did." Curtis Guests in Pilot LOS ANGELES <AP> -Tony Curtis will be a special guest star in "Vega$," an ABC pilot movie starring Robert Urich as a Las Vecas private eye. AT YOUR SERVICE -MB; BROOKS:_ WINNER OF 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Including Best Picture Beat Special Effects Best Sound Best Director -George Lucas etc. N.wport ,.nhlon ltland Newport Center • Between Mac Arthur a. Jamboree . et Paclllc CoHt Hlghwa,. 644-0760 I INSIDE: •J;eaturlng ••. •Ann Landers : __ •Club calendar •Recipes If you long to travel and your bank account says, "No, No," then let ltaHan imagination and ingenuity br- ing' interesting cuisine to your tabte. It's the next best thing to flying to the Roman countrysidef ·· . Start the dinner with antipasti, those casual appetizers of salted fist:>, meats and olives. Proceed to the pasta, in this case Pesto al Burro, the famous Genoese ·specialty of fresh herbs,.._ nuts and sharp cheese (Parmesan), blended into a paste and tossed with oodles. Chicken is a popular item, especially in th1s style from Northern· Italy's Piedmont region where Swiss cheese and red sauces flourish. Con- trast this with a fresh green salad, ad- ding sliced oranges and crisp onion circles, if desired. A favorite dessert is as good as it's beautiful. It's a giant bowl of fruit accompanied by ea tray of cheeses. Some American. cheeses like sharp Cheddar and· Blue go well with ap- ples, pears and grapes. Crisp, salty Fontina in lovely red-coated wedges and Gorganzola, of Italian origin but American made, are also a good choice for those fruits. Mild, creamy Colby or Monterey Jack in nibblable sticks will appeal to many. Top it off with quaint, colorful Sesame Seed Cookies and Coffee Cappuccino capped with whipped cream and chocolate. You'll feel as though you'd been on a Roman holi- day. PESTO AL BURRO 1 cup snipped fresh Pllrsley 3 tablespoons basil, cm.med 1 tablespoon pignolias ·(or 2 whole blanched almonds) 6 blanched whole almonds 1 clove garlic ·~teaspoon salt 6 tablespoons butter. melted and cooled ~cup grated Parmesan cheese 10 OWlCes spaghetti COQked. rinsed and drained • Place parsley, basU, pignollas. almonds. garlic and salt in blender container. Blend at high speed, scraplng down tngrecllents frequent· ly towards bottom of blender container. with rubber scraper unW all ingre(lients are finely chopped. Add melted butter abd blend at hieh. speed until mixed. Pour mtxture into small mix· ing -bowl and beat in cheese. (Do not refrigerate.) Before serving pesto, add" l tableapooa of bot water in which apagbetti was cooked; mix. well. Place hot 1papetU in warmed contalner; 1~ pesto sauce over .spaJ(bett!; tass with two torts to"coat weJL . Not4': Pignolias are pine JUl1I. Recipe may be made In fQOd processor, ProcesslDi Just until iagreclleuta are fmel.1 cJu>pped. SJ1eelal Diet. By June Roth <!.ttting shit Intake. - CHICKENBREASTS, PIEDM()NTSTYLE Red Sauce 2 tablespoons butter 1-a cup finely chopped onion 2 cloves garlic, crushed - 1 can {.28 oz.) Italian.style tomatoes 1 caa (6ec.)toaato paste 2 teaspeons supr i teaspoon salt · 1" teaspoon white pepper Chicken Bteasts 3 chickm breasts, split, boned and skin r emoved • . . -' ... . ... .......... --· ··-... .... ... .. -..... . .......-·~ -·--..,,,.. - DAILY PILOT J,, cup all-purpose nour 1"'1 teaspoon salt 114 teasp00n white oeooer V. cup(~ stick) butter 1~ pound fresh mushrooms, sliced 1 tablespoon butter 6 slices Swiss cheese (about 1 oz. each) For sauce, melt butter in heavy saucepan; sante onion and carlic until tender but not brown. Coarsely chop tomatoes: add to onion a long with liquid lrom can. Add to[Jlato paste and seasonings. Sitn mer. uncoveretl, 30 minutes. (Yield: 3~ cups). .- Italian menu features antipasto, pasto al burro, chicken breasts, salad, cheese, tray, fruit bowl, cappuccino, sesame cookies. • For chicken, pound chicken breasts between sheets of waxed paper to ~-inch thick· ness. Combine flour, salt and pepper; coat chicken breasts. Melt butt.er in heavy skillet; saute mushrooms lightly in 1 tablespoon butter; arrange on chicken breasts .. Top each breast with a slice o( cheese. Place under broiler; broil just until cheese melts. Spoon a few tablespoons Red Sauce over each chicken breast. Pass re- m aining sauce. Note: Leftover Red Sauce may be frozen. It <See ITA!Y, Page C4) .Greek Holiday I Has your winter menu caught a case of the 1 winter blabs? Why not add a dash of in· ' ternational variety to your next supper with Greek Pastitsio and bring the sun.shine of the 1 MediterrJnean to your table. This traditional Greek pasta dish has beea ' streamlined, so even busy working mothers can find time to prepare ft. Best of an. it is hearty and economical -Jdeal for big appetites and small budgets. . . ' < •' .. . .. \' Pastitsio begins with elbow macaroni and ground meat. Ground beef may be more popular with your family, but for a more authentic navor try ground lamb, a meJLt oiore commonly used in that part of the world. The meat and pasta Ls then seasoned with a .... splcy tomato sauce. Simply combine an envelope of Sloppy Joe Seasoolng Mix and a can of tomatoes for a atuce with a nicely balanced blend of spices. This Mediterranean •~laity would be tn• complete unless.topl>ed with a rich c~am sauce and cheese. To thote unf'amilar with Greek· dishes, the use of cinnamon may come as a sur- prise. However, it lends a characteristic Grecian nuor and a pleaslnc contrast to the tomatoes. • If you're plumlna to serve Pastltalo for a prepared ahead·meal, assemble tbe casserole In advance, complete wit.b cuatard sauce and cheese, then tefrtaerate. Juat before dltlner, you can prepare a typical Greek Salad while th• casserole bakes. The dresslnc, a comblnaUon ol o i1 and le mo n J u i c e spar Ir e d w l th. Worcestershlre sauce, wlll enbHce raw 1plnach leaves or a salad of mixed greens. Crmty bread and lemon aherbet are ab that is necessary to complete a nourlsbln1 meal the wbbte ramny will eQJoy. . PASTITSIO · 2 cupe tmeooted elbow macaroni 1 pound ground bee/ 1 can (l·lb.) tomatoes .. l envelope (1 ~-0&.) SIOPPi 'J~ Se~ . . ·, . , I ~ • ''" .... DM.YPU.OT Jn celebration· of NeUooal NutrlUon Week, March S.11, a nutrition lecture series bu been planned by Four county ll'OUJ)I beginning Wednesday, Marchi. The series, titled Food: Tbt Choice ls Yours, begins with a talk on Dieting-What Do You Have to Lose? Speakers will l>e Herbert : Rettinger, M. D., Barbara Dunn. R. D., and Susan Magrann, J\. D., M. S., all from the staff of Anaheim Memorial Hospital. .. On March 15, Marlene Beno1 R.D .• will talk on the Facta Beblna. the Headlines. Ms. Beno la · a. nutritional counseling coordinator for Memorial Hospital Medical Center, Long Beach. The topic March 29 will be Your Food: What's Left in IU Speuera will be Barbara Gershman, M. A., Patricia· Otting, M. M. A., and· Mildred Powell, M. A., all home economics instructors. The final meeting will be on Food Choices for Healthy Childre n.pres ented by Sunn Strahs, R. D .• M. S., nutrition COO· sultant for Orange County Head Start and the Newport Mesa Unified School District. All lectures will take place from 7:30 to ~:SO p.trt .. WedneadQ' even· lnJ• la the st.udebt c6nter. Orance Co11tCo1J~e.Tfletetsnofee. Sponson are the Oranie Cot.atty Dietetic Asaocl&Uon, Qrange County Nutrition Council, CaUf ornia Home Economies As· 1oclation, Orante Diatrlc:t, and Orange Coast Colle1e. The public also 11 mvlted to the sixth annual Orange County Nutrition Council Symposium Saturday, March 4, lo the Orartge Coast College auditorium from 8:15 a.m. to t:30p.m. . The program includes apeaten on nutrition for the low birth weight in/ant, nutrit.ion for children, the dlet of the Jidolescent and nutrition for the athlete. Speakers •111 be ,Phlllip Sunsblne, M. D .• professor of pediatrics, Stanford Medlaal Center, Pego Ptpea, Ph.D., de- ·partment of home economics, Unlverslty ot Wasbiniton, Marilyn Siaka, Jlutrit.ion consultant for the Dairy Council of California, and Nathan Smith, M. D., professor of pediatrics and sports 01edicine, University of Wasblngton. Tickets are available from Lee Gordon, 544-8888. Cost ls fl .SO. . . " .. ~ .· . . . Appetizers made with ~g substitute. llon't Forget ... ., ~pecial Dieters Party time can be a dtmcult time for those on low·cbolesterol die ts because of all the· cholesterol-rich appewers and hors d'oeuvres usually offered. Most pates an4 spread.a are off. limits to cholesterol-counters, that is. until now. Special party recipes calling for refrtger~ted cbolesterol-fr-ee e.H substitute allow you to put your best foot forward wttb all your 3uests, in· eluding those on prudent diets. TVNA PA'l'E LOAF 'h cup refricerated cbotesterol-freeeeisubslitute , 'h cup skim milk 2 cups soft bread crumbs (6 slices bread> l small onion. quartered -% cup parsley l•ves · 'h leU_poc>Q Nit V.. teaspoon dry mustard 'Al teaspoon pepper V.. teaspoon dried dill weed 4 teaspoon.t lemon juice 2 c•n• (6~ or 7 ounces each) tuna. dtaJned In container of electric blender, combine en substit\11e, aklm milk and bread ~rumb&. Let at.nd 15 minutea. Add onion. .. parsley, sail, dry mustard, • pepper, dJll weed en<l lemon • juJce .. Cover and process at hlth &JH!•d until smooth. Remove cover and ll'adually add tuna, c:onUouil\I to process uaUl. smooth. Pour into oiled 1'4JC3'MI x 2~·lnch loaf p~ft. Bak• in an d e1ree oven 45 minut ... Remove from pan and chill. CUt iAW 1Uces •nd Atve wlttl thlDly 1Uced French bread. YIELD: 11 .,,.user AtVinit. CREESE BALL Mlll08A 1 tablespoon polyuruiaturat· · ed margarine 1 cup refrigerated cbolesterol-lreeeggsubstftute 1 rop irat.ed Jarlsburc or partially skimmed milk •Tilu· cheese ~ CUI> pot cbeese 2 tablespoons chopped· vtmiento <optional> ~ teaapooo Worcestenhlfe sauce V4 teaspoon &&rllc powder h ~poonsalt Dashpeppet In larfe skillet melt margarine; add egg substitute and cook over medium-low beai· until set. .Do'not sUr. Tum out ol pan; cool. Push throuah strainer onto sheet of waited .paper; set aaide. ln medium bOwl mix re- tnalnlng ll)gred)ents; form into ball and roll ln aieved e11 aub- ~tltute until coinpleteJy covered. Garnish "w ith additional pimiento. S.rve with Melba toast or \'lcetable slices. YIELD: About 2 cupa. DEVIUD PARTY DIP • 1 tat>letPGC>Jl polyun11turated marcarttteOt"vegetable.()ll · 1 cu1>'ref tlaeraht cbolesU!rol-tree ea aubslttute 1 cup low-fat cottase dleeee V.. cup parsley leaves 2 tableapoon1 prepare~ mustard 1 teaspoon Jemon Jwce ~ cup chopped onton Melt mar1ar1D• l11 laree alcllet, add •a 1ubetltute Ind cook over low beat untU tet. Do not It.Ir. Tuna out of pea aDd cooJ. Cut lnto w.-pltftlt..nd place In eontalner of e_l~<! blend er. Add resn iSllDt1ln- 1redlenta, cowr and~•· lll •mootb. ~into 181.U ... . cover and chill. Serve wlt9' celery plHH and etier ry• tom atou or o th e~ r a w .vesetabloa. YU.LJ>: 2 CUPI ~ • , SWllT 'M JU1CY Store Hours: 9to9D~~9to : Thurs., Feb. 23 Ht..U Wed., M•. I . rwc"· ....... ...-.. .-- We GIOlly Accept Foo4 S ..... We R•MM'• n. .... To UBt qwwwulltlea ~ A.ad Rm'e Sole To Oeden Alid ~ MILD SPAMSH LOWE·R PRICES I u.S. MO. 1 aus~ MAVELORANG TATRS 1o·c:L0 RIB EYE I BONELESS SPENCER STEAKS -W.· '2'!' ~--­ALIFORNIA GROWN TURKEYS Bdf:CHUCK SEVEN BONE STEAKS ··~ ... MEATY .... .69G ~· I.PM! It" to 12 LIS • 79~ . BARM BONELESS TAVERN HAMS ·27! FOSTa fAl.MS CHICkEH EXTRA LEAN GROUND MEAT T;J.";'~ YIHG CHICKEN C ZACKY or FOSTER FilM. 89. FRANKS WISCOMSIM ' . • MOMTlllY f-; ~ACK CHEESE ' 1~ .HUNTS BEEF ROUND BON~LESS LEGS & THIGHS u.· L\CKY or FOSTER FARM FRYING CHICKEN IE& ROAST RUMP IOUMD IAR M IEEF 17! KNACKWURST 139 DUIU'i"JI MISSISSIPPI u . BACON TOMATOES FOOD, ••.• Diet. "<riiiiah&•i:u don't have to Irritate y<>Ur 1tom1cb Unlar With· excua pepper to do lt. 'l'he trick la to leam to use pung~nt herb1. apieN, onlo.,,, 1arlic, ahallota, lemon vlnegar, and wine to 1lva foocl a flavor punch. Here are several recipeia tb1t use a combinatim ol taste enhancers to make Nit• free cooking an enJ?Y•ble tre1tment. STUFFED BEEF ROUS ""pounds i-r 1op roonc1 JA cup chopped onion 14 cup unsalted butter or mar1&rine 2 cupe soft bread crumbs 2 ~ applesauce 14 teaspoon-thyme ~ cup oll ve oil l cup sliced onioq ¥l cup apple juice Yi teaspoon ginger Have the beef cut in slices about 3x4·inehes. Pound each slice until thin with a meat mallet. Saute chopped onion ln butter unW tender. Add bread crumbs, ~ cup of the app.te"aauce. and thyme. Mix thoroughly. Spread.a little ap- plesauce filling on each meat slice. Roll up Uke a jelly roll and lie each with a string. Brown meat rolls in oil and remove from skillet. Add sliced onion to oil left in the pan and cook until golden brown. Add remaining llii cups ap· plesauee and apple juice; mix well. Add ginger .. Place meat rolls in sauce. Cover and _simmer for 1 hour or until meat is tender, adding more apple juice if needed. Makes 6 servings. SHISll KEBAB 1 finely diced onion 'h finely diced green pepper If.I: teaspoon pepper Vi teaspoon powdered sage 'i.iJ teaspoon dry mustard ~teaspoon oregano '"~cupitryred WUle '.4 cup olive oil 2 pounds la~b cubes -Combine onion, green pepper, pepper, sagt mustard, oregano, wine, and olive oil in a deep bowl . Add lamb and marinate in the rerrigerator, covered, ror al least 6 hours or overnight. Skewer lamb cubes and place on a broiling rack. Heat marinade in a small s aucepan; brush skewered. lamb wilh this hot marinade several limes during broiling. Broil for about 5 minutes, turn, arid broil an ad· ditionaJ 5 minutes. ~rve at once. Makes 6 serv· in gs. BAKED llERBED mlCKEN 2 broiler chickens, quartered '.4 teaspoon pepper ~'i cup unsalted butter or margarine, soften~ I crushed garlic clove I cu p fin e dry bread crumbs l/4 cup chopped pars ley J teaspoon rosemary 'Ill teaspoon dry mustard Preheat oven to 375"F. Sprinkle chicken parts tightly wilh pepper. Combine butter and garlic. On a piece of waxed paper, combine bread crumbs, parsley, rosemary. and dry mustard. Spread chicken quarten on both sides with butter and garlic mixture; dip ln bread crumb mixture and coat weU. Pl.ace on a foil · li ned bakiog pan. Bate for 1 hour or until chicken is tender. Makes 8 aervlngs. Copyr""'· ""'J..-- ____ ........ , ·-·.\ ~ w.df' 11 fly, Fl)bNMy 22, 1911 Brunch Is· Eeqnomic· Enterµiinfug 1 ~ . . 'l'houah Ill exact. Juice, ftaYOt" eubnee·r. orlrilna are obscure; salt andpan1ey. Spoon 2 b'tuncb may have de. table1pooo1 filling onto rived from the tradition each crepe and roll it of a "bunt bteaklaat." up. Place crepes in a Up• at dawn to. ride and· buttered baking dish to~ bunt, Southern and spoon remaining ladle. and. genUemen ot sauce over the.u.. Bate, the 19th ce~ would covered, 20 mlnutea, UD· then return to the "tll sauce bubbles. plantation house for a Makes:µ aervinga. aump&uous mid-momi.ng •To prepare white repast, 1ener&lly ac· sauce: eompanled by coffee In a saucer,an over and glauee of 1trai~t low h~at, me t JA ·cup bourbon.. ' butter or margarine. Brunch ls an increU· SUr lo IAi cup flour and ingly popular way to cook, stirring constantly entertain and with the · for 1 minute. Stir in 2 right recipes it can cups chicken broth, all become an elegant party at once, and cook, sUrr· on a relatively tla:bt lng frequently until budge.t. . • llauce thickens. In a Choose Chicken Liver bowl, beat together t and MU11broom Crepes cup evaporated milk which serve twelve. and 2 egg yolks; stir in They taste ''rich'' Ila cup sauce. Pour egg although the filllna: calls yolk mixture into the re· for only a rund and maining hot sauce stirr· one-half o chicken ing until smooth. livers (a 11upermarket Simmer 5 minutes. bargain). Flavor· •'To prepare crepes: enhancer mellows the ln a blender con· taste of chicken livers taine r, place ~~ c up and blends it with the" water, :Y4 cup milk. 3 flavor s of fresh eggs, ¥J teaspoon salt, ::iushroom and sliced l 'h cups flour and 3 scallions. It also keeps tablespoons butter or flavors at their peak margarine. Blend on even Jf the tilling is high speed l minute. fl'OJ.en for later serving. Refrieerate mixture 2 CHICKEN LIVER AND ho~rs. Place a 6-~nch MUSHROOM CREPES skillet over medium % pound fresh heat. Brush bot.tom and mushrooms, sliced or I can (6 01,1nces). sliced mushrooms, drained If• cup chopped scallions 6 tablespoons butter or margarine, divided 1 Iii pound& chicken livers, rinsed and drained White Sauce• l tablespoon lemon juice 1 teaspoon flavor enhancer I teupoon salt 1 teoi.spoon chopped parsley 24 crepes•• Preheat oven lo 375 degrees F 'i. 1n a skillet over meai•Jm heat, saute mushrooms and scallions in <t tablespoons butter, 10 minutes, atirring oc- casionally. Remove from pan . Brow n c hicken livers in re· mainlng b\ltler: dice and add lo mushroom mixture. SUr in l cu;p of ·white aauce. lemon "SideJ. or •klllet with ·melted butter or margarine. Pour In" 2 tablespoollS batter; lip pan to coat bottom wltb. batter, Cook until top is aet and bottom ii llabtiy browned. With .spatula, tu ro crepe and cook" other 1jde 1 minute. Rerat procedure until al batter ls uaed. Mates: 2' crepes. BAl\'.ED STUFFED TOMATOES 12 medium tomatoes l teaspoon salt l teaspoon flavor enhancer 1 Iii cups soft. bread crumbs IA cup cllopped parsley 1 tablespoon dried leaf basil 3 cloves garlic, crushed If.I: cup butter or margarine, melted Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Cut the tops from each tomato ; scoop out the seeds. Sprinkle insides with salt and rtavor enhancer. In a bowl, mix together bre»d crumbs, parsley, basil, garlic and butter. Fill each tomato with crumb mixture; place in a lightly greased baking dish .. Bake -24 minutes. Mates: 12 servings. Chicken Liver and Mushroom cre,;es· for brunch. '. Best Idea Si11ce Shopping Carts ~" '·,'«l Now you can do a week's shopping f!j~ without forgetting a single .............. ;::r.r ... , --ltl conven-.nc :.::m. ..... .,.ld) Send Today To Be~meA Super Shopper r.----------........... •-•--t1..10•: l -Prlllflnll .... Liii P.0.9o11llO . ., •. ..,.. . ) caou 11\eM, Call!.~ I CNMllR--------------1 I .,, J item! Use pre-printed shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 HPft9l• P'(nted ll•m•, pl8lo addlloMf ..,._.you Aft fUI U'I JCKit..W. 34 .... . :rt Y ... labC9a 14~~ ... kerytt.tft• fli ....... 999. 11 M9at llind ... _. 11 °""..,,. IO 111C111ND.YI .::::: -- .aTMIT-------------. t:; ·------"'-'~ ' ........ -.c-,.~ .... · ______________ .. DAILY Pl lOT on your shopping bill* That'~ right! You "'" receive a 103 rebate on a Clrtful prices ol the participating brands cirded, along wiih PrllOIS of groceries-get back as much as $3.50-by buying an ol purchase and the required certificate. We'll rMij Y<ltl a assortment of 1hese great . products: Crisco Oil, Duncan <hed<for 103 of yOt1r bill! Hines Cake Mix, Duncan Hines Moist & Easy, Jif, Duncan Be sure to look for the •103· cash rebate" display in a Htn8s Brownie Mix, or Pringle's. Simply btlyenough of these participating store. Lim~ one re~ per name or address. p<Oducts 10 accumulate 36 points (see point chart on certif' Huny, offer expires March 26, 1'978. Remember, the more icatf below). Jllen send us your cash register tape with .the . , groceries you buy, the more moneyyOtl get back (up to $3:50). •Maxmum rebate $3.50. Sorry, no rebate on alcohofic beverages, poultry products. tobilCCo. milk or dltiry products. ' . • '} I ' I t f • • l \ ---- <From Pale Cl> fa aceDaover bot eooked puta. ,.. ( SEM•E COOlllBS leap (2 Btlcb) butter 1c:upsuaar 3egp 3~ cupe all·purpose floor 2 tablespoons batlna powder ~teaspoon salt • Sesame Seed ~: Red and sreeo candled cherry halves ' Cream butter; sradataUy add aqar and eream unW ~t and fluff7. But ba eua. Combine flour, powder ad aalL Add to creamed mixture; thoroughly. Chill dough several hours or overnJabt. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Shape doup into l·inch balls; roll in sesame seed. Plac~ on unbuttered cookie •beets; press a candied cherry ball into each. Bake lS to 18 minutes or until lightly browned. e@FFEE CAPPUCCINO 2 cups boiling water 3 tablespoons instant Espresso coffee J><>wder • 3 tablespoons powdered cbocolate fiavOl'o m,rormllk • 2cupemllk lh cup whlppina cream, wblpped Cinnamon . . Combine bolling water, coffee and chocolate. Heat milk just to boiling: ComllUle with coffee-chocolate mixture. Pour Into Mated cups. Top with a dollop ot whlppecl cream: dust with clnnamoo. ... Greek (From Page Cl) 2 cqps sauce (redpe below) 1 cup sbreclded cheddar or American cheese Cook and draln macaniaL Coot Ooand beet in large atillet, sti.ninf to crumble: pour oft ex- cess fat. Stir in tomatoes, eontenta ot seumtnf mix envelope. and water: simmer 10 mlllut.es stirrinf occasionally. Stir ln macaroni. ~ into shallow 2-quart bakinf dish. Prepare aa~ followiag directions below; pour over macaram mixture and sprinkle wttb cheese. Bate 1n 350 deeree oven 20 to ao minutes, UDW babbling bot. 6servinp. SAUCE: Melt 2 tablespoons butter or margarine in saucepan. Combine 2 tableapooas nour. 1 teaspoon salt, and ~ teapooa ground cinnamon. Stir into butter. Add 2 cups milk gradually; coot and ltlr over medium beatunW sauce comes to a boll and thickens.~ beat 2 eggs, stir a little hot sauce Into tbe eus. Ret~m eg' mlzture to hot mixture and heatJUlt to sunmertni. G&BUSALAD ~capoO 2 tableapooas lemon juice 1 tablespoon Worcestersbire Sauce ~ teaspoon celery salt Combine lniredlents; stlr or abate until well blended. Serve as dressing on spinach or other salad greens. Mates about~ cup dress- ing. Fortunately ••• Cit bektU. y~ ls as deltcate and eleaant as a mouae t&8t needs endless preparetiOA and oven Ume. If dedrfid, the squares may be-served with a dollop ot additional frozen whipped toppin&, aid wltla cboeolate sauce drizzled over the top. ••ozEN PEANUT BUTTER MOUSSE SQUARES 2 cupe ll'tlham cracker crumbs 14 cup1qar ~ cup melted butter or margarine ~cup ~ut butter ~ cup apricot preserves ~cupmlllc 1 container (9 ounces) frozen whipped topping, thawed Additicmal whipped toppinr. fud&C? ~auco ID a bowl, mix cnmbs, s"'ar and butter. Relerve \i cup ol the crumbs !or the top. Press remalldnl aumbs firmly and evenly into a 9- inch square pan. In a bowl, mix peanut butter and apricot ~re&ervea until well blended. Gradually stlr m milk. Fold in whlpp&i topping. Spread mixture evenly into crumb-lined pan. Sprinkle top with crumbs. Freeze until barci. Keep covered if stored !or any lenith of time. Cut Into squares to serve. Serve topped with ad· dlUonal whipped topping and a drillle of fudge 11auee. · •..-n---. ·-·-· .. -·~- ,..,&IBID mM POUCf ... ., ................... .... .......................... ......................... .................. ......... ,.._ ... ., . .._. ............... ........ .. _ .................. .. ................ --..-................ -" .... In making beautiful oc- ca1lonal desserts appearance ud taste are equally Important. Add an unusual twist to your beat e.rtorta and then you've pro- duced something really speclal ! ·All Italian cream cake lavishly filled and ruffled wlth frosting is just such a dessert. The surprise inaredlent is sour cream ... a Htll' cream froeUng, that Is. The cake it.self is wonderfully tex- tured and flavored. It's made. wlth only the flne s L in· gred.ients ... creamery butter, buttermilk, flaked coconut . .Because this is a fairly rich cake, sour cream ls the perfect frosUng. Its tangy refreshing navor takes the edge off the sweetness. Tbla is definitely a com bin a lion for g row~ up .tastes. Keep this beauty refrigerated to maintain the frosUng in peak condition. The last perfect detail on the cake is the garnish of candled violets and angelica. Add these just prior to serving. If you've never tried whipping sour cream b efo r e , the dairyland consumer specialists offer the following tips. The ·power or your mixer will de- termine the length of whipping time required. Have sour crea~ very cold before whipping. Al· low 7 to 10 minutes to whip sour cream because it takes lonier than sweet cream. One cup of sour cream will double and yield about 2 cups whipped sour cream. Ve r sa li l e so ur c ream· is a n ind is p e n_s a ble in· gredient to keep on hand. You can always count on its con- sistent high quality. Modern technology insures that so ur cream is cultured and produced under very CiJrefuUy conp-olled dairy con- ditions. Its bilh lactic acid con- tent makes it especially re-· sist ant t o apoilace. Ke pt. refrigerated and covend, aour cream mainlalnJ its fresh ap. pealing flavor up to a week. ITALIAN SOUll CREAM CAKE 1 cup butter 2 cups sugar s eggs, separated l teaspoon pure vanilla ex- tract i.e teaspoon almond extract. 2 cups flour 1 teaspoon bakinf soda •,'z teaspoon salt 1 cup buttermilk 1 cup flaked coconut •, 1 cup finely chopped blanched almonds Sour Cream Frosting Beat tofether butter and sug- ar. Beat in ega yolkJ and flavor· Ines . .Mix flour with baking soda and salt. Stir into batter alterhately with buttermilk. DO NOT overmix. Whip egg whites until stiff but not dry. Fold into batter. Fold in coconut and• almonds. Tum into 2 areased·. and floured 9-inch round la.yer cake pana. Bake in 350 degree· oven 35 minutes or until pick in- serted Into center comes out: dry. Cool 5 minutes then invert onto racks to-· cool. Spllt each layer into 2 Uiln layers. Spread Sour-Cream Frosting between layera lftd on top. Pipe reserved frostln• on top. Garnish with; candled violets and angelica just before serving if desired. Makes 1 C9-inch) cake, 8 to 10 servings. soua CREAM FROSTING: Beat 3 cups (l~ pints) dairy sour crepm with 6 tablespoons sugar and ,,_ teaspoon salt in larce chilled bowl with chilled 1 beaters at hlsh speed in electric mixer unUl atiffened, at least T i;nlnutes • .iCreaQl will thin before it stltfeos'. If decorating as •hown, remove l cup and put in pasta tube for rosettes. Mix ? table-spoons brandy with re- mainder. · Very Fast Appetizers With half a pound of 3 tablespoons oil lean beef, some interest-2 tablespoons soy ing seasonings and a few sauce on hand ingredients, you 1 tablespoon sherry have the makings for 2 teaspoons corii- f ab u l o us bot hors starch d 'o u evre s. Thes e 1 m edi um c love s pecia lties from the garlic. minced California Beef Council ~-11 cup minced green are the kind of party onion, green part only nibbles that go over Sesame seeds well. They're savory, Cut beef into lh-inch appetizing and always cubes. Combine oil, soy appe aling. There i s sauce, sherry, corn·. nothing mysterious here s ta rch and garlic ii\ -the good hearty beef l ·cup glass measure. flavor is readily evident COOK WITH FULL and appreciated b y P 0 W E R I N evct_ryone. Best of all. MICROWAVE OVEN 1 ·beef appelbers are easy MINUTE. Combine with to make and easy to onion and beef in 1-quart serve. glass measure. Cover with waxed paper. Cooking beer "by COOK WITH FULL microwave is one sure POWER 4 MINUTES, way to get hot tidbits in stirrinc twice. Spoon in- minutes. 'lbe Mexican t o small serving dish. flavored kabobs given Sprinkle with sesame. here take a mere 8 seeds. Serve with picks. • minutes of microwave .Makes about 6 dozen ap- o v en time. Thrifty petizers. bottom round cut into MICROWAVE small cubes will be MEXICAN tender and juicy whetr KABOBS cooked just until r are. If.a pound be e f Serve on picks with bottom round stellk, If.a. cherry tomatoes and inch thick chunks of zucchini. A If.a IA cup tom at o pound ot beef makes an catsup amaziog ' dozen ap-If.a teaspoon chili petlzen! powder The thlrd appetizer If.a teaspoon ground idea is a quickie, too. cumin . . ''fake a half pound or Zucchini, cut m \i· tender beef top round. Inch cubes Cut it into small cubes Cherry tomatoes, and brow,n seve ral halved . minutes lo a skillet. Cut beer in \i-1n~~ Make a quick parmesan cubes. Mix catsup, chill cheese sauce with the powder and cumin. Add pan drlppinp. Add the beef and sli! .to coat. beef and mound the bot Place zuccbiru on 12· savory mixture onto i~ch ovenproor glass sesame crackers. What pu.za plate. Cover with delectable mouthluls! Ir waxed 'J>•per. COOK the appetizers cool, WITH FULL POWER simply run under the IN MICROWAVE OVEN broiler 2 or 3 minutes to 4 MINUTES or until warm ,. tender crisp. Thread one : • chunk beef and one Beef .ft a popular and zucchtnl cube or cherry veraatlfe food which tomato on each wooden adapts beautifully to pick. Spread in sin1le pracUcally any. style of layer on pizza plate. cook.Inf. Its rich 11earty COOK UNCOVERED, taste may be enhanced WITH FULL POWER S with a huge variety of to 4 MINUTES or until • s.eaaonlnp and tlavora, heated thrQUgh. Makes ud 1t goes with almost about 4Y.a dozen ap. en)'thinf. However you ~Uzen. , fix It or serve it, top ·pA.lfMf'.sANBEEF quality beef la a most A.rPETIZEJlS valuable protein food to ~ poundf· J>eef op include in a well roundSteak belueed dall1 dlet. _ ~ teaspoon Dlioced MJCaOWAVE B~EF aarUe AftBllZ. 1 tablespoon oil 1 pound beef top ~ cup arated l'OCIJl41teak • parmes~ c~eese 3 tablespoons milk 1 teaspoon f1pur 14 teaspoon rosemary, crumbled 111 teaspoon salt. · ,,_teaspoon pepper 10 large sesame crackers Parsley Cherry tomatoes , Cut beef into ~-inch cubes. Saute beef and garlic in bot oil over medium beat 1 to 2 minutes or unill lightly browned. Remove from skillet.with s lotted spoon. Add cheese, milk, flour, rosemary, salt and pepper to beef jukes in skWet. Cook over low beat, stirring unW cheese melts and mixture thickens. Stir in beef cubes. Mound about 1 tablespoon beef mix- ture on top of each cracker. Garnish with parsley and quartered tomatoes. Serve warm. .Makes 20 appetizers (about 114 cups). · NOTE: U appetizers cool, place on baking sheet and run under broiler 2 to 3 minutes. .• With new lOLLOWBo.AsT-you get a del1o1ous full-flavored coffee taste. Rich body without the bitterness. MELLOW BOAST Coffee and GreJ.n Beverage starts :with three kinds o! rich, roasted co1fees; then blends 1n roasted gra.tn to take awe-the bitter edge so you e.DJoy a.dello1ous full,. :tl&vored ooftee taste. VBT.WW BOAST ts sosmoothyoucanenJoyitcupl ~I after aup all dqlong. New VII.TOW BOAST Grcmnd or .. Instant. --... ~m. Cleneral~oocla. Rich Italian Sour Cream Cake. .. .· , ... -.. ... ._.._ .. Rally ~Round Yo11r Resta1lrant's s ·alad Ban! nttentlon lresb food •·ounce can 1tewed heat. Brown with no fat calories for a flalf-cup W I T H C A B B A G E f al Rally round your tomat"9, well broken added, stirring frequent· ser v ing of rice or WEDGES -Follow f orlte restaurant's up • ty to prevent st!cklne. noodles). preced.ln& dlrecUona. ·•salad Bar". • .that ~cup Julee-packed Add r e maining in-When meat i• tender, over ca~e. Cabbage 1erve1 four, about ~ calaries each. idthecalorlcmorus drained Sii• er and simmer over WITH BRUSSELS clbbage, belnc sure to SAVORY STEAK ~•la ot health food crushed pineapple, un· eredient.s: stir well, cov-SA.VO RY BEEF qil•rter a small head ot cbeeae-aauced, batter· 2 tableapoon1 lemon very low beat until meat SPROUTS -Follow cut eveoly through the SAUCE -Combine in· pped, rum-soaked, Julee or vinesar Gou.-..et ii tender, about l and precedin1 directions. base 80 that leaves re. gredienll tor "Savory ocolate·aauced 2 tableapoona one-ballhours. When meat ls tender, main attached to tbe Beet'' omltUDI 1tew c oleaterol. Worceaterahlre sauce By Bart.ta Gibbons stir in 2 cups fresh or c 0 re. Arr an g e t be m e at. Co v • r and B~loved by restaurant 2 tablespoons ralaina Uncover and raise frozen Brussels aprout.s. qabbage wedges on top 1im mer until thick, o ners and patrons 1 bay leaf beat, simmer until Cover and cook only till of the meat mixture. about one hour. Cool, ike, the "salad bar" Salt and pepper to , sauce is thick. <Serve Brussels sprouts are Cover and simmer onlt 1th8enuc:eret1or~erbrollateed. Usne_~ a ffers bad press in taste with rice or noodles, lf tender (omit rice or till cabbaae ls tender-~ s me quarters, Victim of 1 cup water desired.) Makes four noodlts). Adda leas than crisp but aim brl1ht s t e a k o r l e a n spreadlncput-downby Spray a non-atlck 1pray for no-fat frying. mustardandaddtothe servings, 2•s calories 30caloriesperserving. creen (about 10 bambur1en, llbout 10 s me snobby restaurant skillet wllh cooklna Tou beef cubes with skillet over moder~te each (Jlus about 100 SA V 0 a V BEEF minutes). spoon 1auce calories-per tablapoon. rtviewers who conalder .-----------------------------------.--------. __ ._..; __ ~...:-----.------..i.-- ~'{:!~~~i~ Here's how·to bring home the bacon it's becoming a cllcbe ot re~t:u:~:.::.vi!~·~int and eggs tbat salad bars are the gi-eatest eat-out idea • • • • ~; ~ since sliced bread (better •.. it's less fattening!) We take salads very seriously and don't mind a bit getting up from the table to put together the p•rfect combination. Without salad bars we'd surely suffer from salad deficiency anemia. Even the most obscene. ly lavlsb eateries teod to be paltry wltb salad R,4)rlions: a teacup of lettuce followed with a swim ming pool of soup, e nough meat to feed Cambodia, and a dessert to-put all Detroit in a .. '" .. ·' 1 d!abetic coma. Not to worry! Tbe s•rlbes who bite tbe hand that feeds them s ee m to be the only people who don't Ute s alad bars. The public lo'ves them. We found tttat out by talking with Kathleen Kimmerle of the National Restaurant Association ln Chicago. According to Kathleen, the As- s ociation took a survey in 19TI for its quarter- m illion members and found that 49 percent of the respondents rated the &alad bar as "im· port ant" ••• important e nough to make it a. factor in deciding where to eat. DRESSED TO SUIT -Ready-made salad.a usually arrive drowned ill dressing (and calories!) The do-it· yourself patron can dress his salad as chastely or as lavishly aa he likes. SOMETillNG TO DO -Making salad ls a way to while away the time between the order- inl and arrival of the meal. •. time that might otherwis e be spent buttering bread or downing martinis. EDUCATIONAL-An innovative salad bar with a varlety of seasonal ·ouerln1a ptrmits the cwttomer to smple new and UDUIUal clloices he milbt be re- luctant to order. KEEPS COSTS DOWN -Despite the ebormou1 creatlona s•m e customers ••· sa:> ble. salad ban are a ui_o re ec ono m le a"l aiiernaUve, with less total plate wute and !qJVer senlce eo1t1 ••use tbe patron belpl hblelt. (How? At Lucky's low discount prices, of course.) Something to munch on. Week after week, we've been delving Into little-published facts ebout supermarketing ·· 1· l and how we run our business. But tt wasn't / · until breakfast the other I morning, with those aispy, , crunchy strips sizzling away ln the pan. perfuming the r:-l kitchen, that we realized that *': J bacon, that staple of eveiyone's cuJlnary art, was an Item we hadn't d'9emu d. So here goes ... Tbrougb thick and thin. We cany 101ne bacon that's a fuD 11s· thick. You get about 12 to 14 slices per pound package. Regular cut yields about 15-18 s!lces. Thin cut may come to a many as 30 sltces per 12 oz. pacbge. We cany bacon bits (the real stuff) for taleds and potato topping. Canned bacon which rMeds no Mrtgeratlon (gJeat f~ picnics). Beef bacon for those die-hard beef eaters. Canadlaii bacon, and salt pork (can't you just taste those baked.,..,.?). and bacon enda for soul food seasoning. We cany slab becon which you can sbce any way you like. No matter which you pick. remember pinker ts bettar, fresher ;' I . ... and that we don't carry any MCOnd grade ~. We do carry Jots of . flnt grade labels because dMn are so ~y different flavors. Once you decide which you prefer, you shouJdn't have to go through a dozen packages to find one that's good and lean. Our rtgld quaBty control Inspection makes sure It's~ ••• with not one but two strips or mat running through eacf\ aJJce. Fresh Meats LADY LEE ~~c:?:,_ i2& OSCA.P. MAYER ~~~~~isa F~= ~~tU•G. i 39 MOnYSUCID MCDM ....................... -......... 1.39 MIMJUCIDMCOM .............................. i .~9 ...,_SICIOMCOM ~ •• ~ .. ·····-········-... ~ ~~~~ .. 3.15 Fresh Meat• MMO'WJM)Uf .__ .................. tlCI.• 1.sa • ~.~.~ ........ .a.1.9& FNSHCMTW ...................... ,..40Cll.M i .29 CMIAN46 QAV fllOIDI. ......................... &t. 2.65 COOtCID»W ~ ............................ 3.69 Canned &: Packaged ECHUCKVAGON ~tu~.49 P.LADYLEE o~!~~~.93 I· What more can a mother uk? Everyone remembers to make bacon with eggs for breakfast. But n dinner of bacon •.. with llver and onions ... ls yummy, fest to prepare, and healthy for your fam1ly. Just dip the alk:ed llver In melted butter or margertne, place on a cold broiler grid, and brod just long enough for the liver to loee Hs red color ••• 3 to 6 mln.utes on each &Ide. Fry the bacon In a pan. It only takes 4 or ·5 minutes, so keep an eye on It. Put It aside to drain on a paper towel. Then those onion slices. separaJ· ed Into rings, can brown up In the baCon drippings. Add a fresh vege- table salad to round out the menu. If you chop It up qulckly, dinner's done before the kids get through 'squabbling owz who'll set the table. And then there'• Slnleaa. 50% le&ner than regular bacon, what it ls ••• is all pork. Tender small bits of pork are preaed together tightly and then slic4ld into a meaty basl.s for breakfast (or dinner). If you reaDy like Jean bacon, you gotta try 511.Zleen. Jack Spratt could eat no fat ••• And speaking of lean, our discount prices are something you can lean on ••• or your budget can. As you will quickly aee as you run your eyes over the'pricet In thls ad, high quaBty, brand names, and dJsc:ount prtdng on bacon and everything else (Government controlred Items excepted) are what we're all about. So come In this week. And bring home the bacon. Dairy & Frozen Haith & Beauty Aids A ~~ .......... -..... amo .77 P VASGME lMJIMSM CAAL h io--. -.ua. .. -.. uoLsi.., .47 l~.~ .. or •• 69 Household &: Pet z Uiiti10MA16ua ..... ., ••••••• , •••••• ., •• c:&.CAl9 .65 lUCKY DOUNION •"'-°'°· .. "'°°' .......... Of ... .5.~3 . l ~~ ... -oc.(111 .54 let!~~Wl.59 I LUCKY SCOTCH .. ~ ...................... 5.4' WCKYVODKA · I09'IOOf/ ........................ 3. 99 . . I • I. • i ... .• ~ ' l.ucerne Fresh KALKAN iT31::s1 OVER 25 000 WINNERS TO DATE IN THE SAFEWAY s500.000 . BINGO CASH GAME TED SKRYPEK Bell •1000 winner J.W. O'CONNOR PalmSprlnp •1000 winner JOHN DOBZENSKI lllallo '2000 . wlnnar RANDALL STEPP Sin Bsnanllno •1000 winner . clilE&. PICGlnla •1 000 winner ELSIE SILVA Chino •2000 winner DRY NOODLES ¢!::.°~~'extra 5·90 Wide 18-oz. pq.\ . . . FRESH.BREAD · Mrs.Wright's 4;9~ i~::tw:':,. ~ ti' .,.., • Loaf • ' Prices Effective In l k:en'Md Saleways. When kids want food these daya, they're not In the mood for a long waft They want It RIGHT NOW. Be ready to satisfy those young appetites by stocking your freezer with Safeway's Fast and. Easy foods. BEL·AIR PIZZA So Quick 'N Easy 79#. To Serve Right ~11-oz. ¥ From Your Own~"'· Oven. SHOESTRING POTATOES Scotch Treat Easy to Prepare For 4911a The "MeaJ In A 2.e. ¥ Hurry Day!" "'· 'For De1sert Tonight Approx. ~Pork loin , MONTEREY JACK Safeway $18•' Cheese. •; 1 In Random 1 Welghta IL I BEEF RIB STEAKS· 19 · J .. • ' '• • I Bx DOll<Yl'llY WENCK mah It Miller bl ftber. 0r .... c..cy..._~ Wbat lboeald I add! Seven l,n ten A. There are a homemakers in tbe U.S. ·number of ingredients have tried maklna yeut. you can add to bread to• bread. accordin1 to a increase tbe fiber con- natlonal survey. Are you tent. Some of them are: one of them? And after bran, bran Oakes, wheat you tried it, have you germ, shredded wheat. made more,·or did you whole wheat flour. give up? sesame seeds. raisins, Yeast bread ui.iun1 is dry prunes and figs, and more of a cbaUence than various nuta such as 'most ether baking. and peanuts. walnuts, and for this reason those almonds. .... Q. Which Is dteaper. bomemade or bakery (not supermarket> bread! A. Homemade bread costs about ball as mucb as supermarket bread. ,.,., ..... ··~ Wedneedey, Februtry 22. 1971 so you Would save even more lf you used lt ln· stead of hi&ber priced bakery breaa. However. homemade bread is usually more compact -you 1et f ew,er slices per pound, Also, if you're good at makinc i\. it probably gets eat•n faster than boughten bread. So while you get more food for your money by baiting your own bread. you may not save money if the con· aumptionrategoes up. Q. I leep lllavlDI lD· see& 1Uaek1 la m1 paatry. I elean every· Ullas, dleek all s&ored foods for bap, and Wilk l'•e gotta rid ol tbem. And U-ea a moatb or &wo later &bey're back. la there 10me k1Dd Of la· eeetletde I cotlld ase to wipe them out oace and for all? , A. Usine insecticide in food storage areas is risky. The U.S . Environmental Protection Aaency does not authorize the use of any inMCticide on sur- f a c ea where food is eaten. prepared, or stored. We suieest you continue with your pre- v e n U v e cleantnc methods. belnc sure you do not leave etposed food on shel1es. Place opened packages of food in conttdnera with very tieht fltt!ng lids (such u glasa jars with screw-on Uds). Clean old con- tainers before fillin1 them with fresh food. Do not mix fresh food with FOOD old !OOd because if the old f~ Is laf •ted It will contaminate tbe new. Be carefUI not to buy lood m ~-or damaged packalH. Don't keep food& tMt are likely to be eon· tamlnated -such &I rice. cornmeal. bran, whole wheat flour-too lone. Sten these foods in the freezer U it tak• you a lona time to uae them up. wbo do U. succesafully T-~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- tend to ~ rather aelf-~Uafted Wlt.b their ac-~pUabmst. The two feattares of yeast ~ud balrinc that •~ dlff.-ent from mat-iag Q\lick breads. cates, 4t cpoktes, are: (1) bread dough must be kneaded or ~ughly beaten in or- der to develop the gluten so lt will stretch and form the structure of the bread; (2) the yeast must be allowed to ferment so. the bread will rise. Some yeast breads - mually called batter breads -are made withdUt kneading. The ~~ugh is not as stiff, and I.fie beating is done with ct mixer or spoon. The final product bas a more ~oder, l ess breadlike l-.Xtltf'e because the dougbis notkneaded. Kneading ts not dlfficl1lt -in fact it's en- joy ab I e, even therapeutic, to work the soft, smooth dou@ with your bands. This la pro- 4ably the part of bread making that aficionados Ii.Ire best. When you knead bread, use a well·fioured board or pa.5try canvas. Put your fingers over the back edge of the dough and fold it towards you, then press down gently b1lt !inn.ly with the heel or your hand. With your other hand give the dough a half tum and repeat the folding and pressing. Jt's almost impossible lo overknead bread dough -.the too&er you knead, the more elastic tbe gluten will become. So keep up the kneading until the dough is very smooth and satiny in ap- pearance. I Then comes the rising. This ts the time when tbe yeast -which is actually a large number of one-celled plants - grows, using the sugar in the dough as food. As the yeast cells multiply they give off carbon dioxide gas. Jl's this gas which causes the stretchy dough to ex- pand or rise. Some recipes call for two risings or even three; some just one. The usual method is to allow tbe dough to rise in the bowl. then shape it into loaves or rolls and let it rise aeain. Yeast is fussy about Jts growing conditions. The temperature mu.st be just ri1bt -lukewarm. If it'• too' eold, th~ yeast grows very slowly or not at alr; if it's too warm the yeast is killed. In either case, your bread won't rise. )'east also likes liamidlty. This is why usf.111 a bowl of warm "Water as a s,ource of heat ls good becauie it aJ110 adds moisture to the air.; Most recipes tell you to let the bread rise until it's double in 1be. Jl it rises too llWe, the bread will be compact; if it qsea too much, it may over-stretch the lluten and the dough will col· lapse. Also, an aleobolic odor and flavor develops, if the yeast termenta too 1on1. · Q. J'ft le9 10m• ef tM breiMla belal 1o1• at &~e market ••a& are talielecl "lllP "'9r." I •M•JmT ... "9a4 aM weal4 Ulke &• &rY. I• Here~s · a 9real new•~¥ to save ••• You may *8ady be a manm.1 I \Q.l •.O,-tAll!ifw~ C:..S, 11•1~ • ......_ l)QI .... Dedwiga l'Ol"-*G C9oO li:lr, _,_,,_One~ .. .. -~ IDCll& l)QIOGlll,_a_,.. ~Call. ..... ti GIA ....... Ont Cirll ~ n ... •Hyou ~lbY m.1•= ..... -c:hlck-c:lllNll8 ~ ::::.::..---·-.. --... ----·--,------------------.... --~-----------.... -----, /I'"-=. .... lnlonnallon,.....=:~,_.__.tora ...... _..PlEASEMNT. .fjQ 0 0 (Al CMt• I ... -••-'----...,..,. ---'· o-o" a -1111=::-:-------==------==~-~-L......... '----iiiii------2.--.... ·•-..a ~--------J.(A) __________ _ -~--..... (81 _____________ _ ---........ • ......,..__ --------.... C. IAI ______ .,....,..-------=-----.,=----..,,....,-----~---· ~I ---~--~~----~~-~-~----~~-----_ .... w .... ~-- LW 1•>-----=-...,.--------------------~-----~--------~~-----------~ Golden Premium Meats Pantry Fillers ·::.12 .... 21 ·~-,.14 No duaa'""no initiation feaa •• JUlt loll of great ways to save. That't what you get as• member of the Ralphs Number One Cklb. To take adwmage of the eicdllng prMleget IVllleble IO you, Ill }'OU need Is IO be 18 yea.rt or olds end haw a Ralptll Humber Ont C*d "' a CUfT9l'lt RalphS Check eutq Ctrd. JM fie llouwda d ~ ~. wil be dllccMr1ng the,..... .. bnlllll of Rllptll ~One CU>~ • CONV~IENT CHECK-CASHING• IN.STORE SPECIALS •SPECIAL EVENTS• VACATION SPECIALS •ENTERTAINMENT DISCOUNTS •SUPER SERVICES Nert week's HumlJeP One ClulJ .s.o.ot. 0 Specials ... -7 C • Ralphs Mmptne , • Chlcbn-of·tlll-Sea . TIN •G.£..._.lllas Pick up ,_ aiper ~NOW lhru $mdlJ II Raiptll Ind you can uve 5'o% on'-llftll NEXT WEEK. Humbel' One Clull Special Coupon Offer-tllls aueell... · (~--·--CUii1 I . . .., I ~ -. I : COUfON s...e : : Ralphs Gnndalld . 59c : ! Sugar ~~-. ! t Uml One Item and One Coupon Ptt Cll9tomar I I ' Coupon Elllctlve Feb. 23 lhrv .... 1, 1171 I I TMIC-VlldONLY .... ,,.... .. ..,. ___ OMCMICdJ '--------------------------- Super Deli ~.59 ':.: .44 .200fl Pack Gleam ToolhpaslB 7oz. tube each II II Super Produce 4-?:.&9 ::.29 ::.1S ~.15 Super Bakery "'* .... ~.llrullll'Ch1, 1111 .... ._ ......... ....._ •:.:.69 -:.: 1'' I ,. FOOD Tldukofban•011, and malnln1 in1redlent1; Combine all ln· vii.Iona cl ltealQ7 Latin spoon 1enerou1ly loto 1redlent1 in medium Am • r 1 can Ju ~fn• 1 heated taco lhells. Serve sauceoa'L Beat. •Urrin& cunot be tar d. w l t b Taco Sauce. occasloaaUy until mlx· Central America 11 a YIELD: l2taC!08. ture ii bubbly. Serve .major eaporter of Taeo8aaee with Banana Tacos. blDaaas. Altboqh the 1 can (8 ounces) YIELD:l~c\QIL hult baa become tomatosauce ideilUfled with that 2 tablespoons finely BANANA~~ area. lt ls not a natlve chopped creen ddllea • 8l'Ml ut11.11na1 plant. 1 tablespoon ealad Veaetablo oll for B..._. t!lrlve In bot. on frylnl hamlet r••lona all 1 tab)eapemvtnepr Salt aroUBcl 1be wotlCL It's ~ teupocmaresano Peel banana. Pour believed tbeJ wse flnt Vt tuooen ult enoa1b oil Into heavy • 4 - • skillet or electric frt pan to meuure 1·1Dcb deep. He•t to 350 desr ... Slice bananas dia1onalb-and. paper thin ...ttla 'Hittable · peeler. Drop. directly in· to bot oil. Fry a few at a time untll crltp aqd brown. about 2 td 3 minutel Remove with Slotted lpOCIG; dralJl OD paper towel.I. Sprinkle with 1alt, YIELD: 4 Clq)I. • • DAIL V PILOT el Banana Se.food Salad has a Cflt1tral American Influence. .. broa1bt to tbe New · ·World bf l'rlar Tbomu _.. ... .,. de Berlaqa. who plant· ed a fw roots la Santo Domm,i, In we. Native or IMlt,. tbe banana hu beeome a ataple of Central American eook· inc. Tbt food of tbla re-gion ha evolved from the meetiq ol several different culture.: The South American Indian•, the Spanlah who ~andthe Alrlcana •were lm· ported aa slaves . Seaeonln& nriee from country to eountry. but as in many tropical climates, the cuisine features a combination of spiciness and sweet- ness. And what Is more sootbinalY mellow than a banana? A "Banana Seafood Salad couJd easily be ap- pre ci ate d by the American palate. Plump cooked shrimp are com- bined with luscious banana slices, honeydew melon cubes and celery for an easy luncheon salad. A spicy dreuing of mayonnaise, chili sauce, Worcestershire. hot pepper sauce and lime juice gives it all a nice bite. Tacos are no longer foreign to these shores. but Banana Tacoe Qtuat be. It'• a surprising comb.lnadoo for • main dish or snack: Sliced bananas with tbe usual taco trlmminp and a sharp tomato·chili sauce. Whether North, Central or South, the banana can add an in· tereating tute to any meal. It'• one ol all the Amer.tea•' ta•orite fruits. • 'Iu .. gift of the ; Tropics" ls already just- ly famed a the perfect peel-and-eat mack. and it's the rare aoaclt that's good for you. An unusual Latin-lmplred nrtatlon is Banana Chips. Start with unripe <1reen) bananas, slice with a ve1etable peeler for ex- tra thinness, and fry in hot oil. They're de· licloua! BANANA SEAFOOD SALAD 1 pound shrimp, s helled, develned and cooked 4 bananu. peeled and sliced 2 cups honeydew melonl:U* ~ cup coarsely cbapped ce1er')' ~ cup ma,wanalse ~ eop chlU uuce ¥.a teaspoon Woreestenbire aauce \4 teaapoon hot pe ... -PPV-ume 2 fablapooaa lime Julee . -~ tdlJIOOD Alt Saladsnens Comblne abrlmp, baQana1, melon and celeey ln Iara• bowl. Mis remafnln1 ln· aredlent1, except ireeu, bl amall bowl: pour 098" leafood·frait mbtun. <21111 at leait 1 hoar .. 'to aene, llne platter wltll aireena. Spoon shrimp m1sture onto areena. 6 to a eerv· inp. JIANANATAC08 12 taeo abel1I ,....,: I ca&>• ahredcled lettuee 2 medlmD tomatom. . eoarMIJ c:bUpped ~ c•P. finely tcJlo~~•hredded j Mon~.=,~ 84111.s s.-..CO tM1ll ac-eorcll•I &o pactace . ..... QDll&Mft. I SIA--.~IACll _.,..,..WUWY MIATS AmCWUC- Cll•CK•l'ADR 8ROS.'WDK&T can•••• .... ·~ .,.,....... 1'~ • . 'UMBD· SAllSa'Cll w11111n urmcs ·~·~ .i·i~ PPLES I IXTM'N«:'r•W.......an. , eouiat·~ • 23cu.. '~ ORANGES "{t· .... GOU>• IXTllA,1111/at awof•M .... 19• IA 0 •• .., . ..__ •1• •lllAK ...... _ ...... ........ 'I" 1.-111a ... ~ ... ............. 'I" ••••sn•.-.... ................... ,,, , .......... -.&& ~--·-444 AITICllOIB---··· .. ...- u• ... ·-·-15' I 01110115 __ ..... , .......... _..._. nJNJOR WOllAN'S CLUB: Tb• llantlnston Beach O'OUP will present u antl·Hpe seminar at 7:..30 p.m. ThW'ldayf!:,b. 23, at llurdy Part· Community Center. In atloo concernlDI Mlf delem~~ will be available. I MRP: The N~rt Chapter ot ~meri~an As- •oclation of Retired Persona will m~ Thurs· day, Feb. 23, at the OASIS SenlOI' CltbeD Center in Corona. del Mar. There will be a pot Juclt luncheon at noon an'd memben eie asked to brin1 afavorttedish and tableservic:e.Abusineu meetin&willbebeld atlp.m • .111NJOR EBELL CLUBt The N~ Beach group will meet at 10 a.m. Tburaday, Feb. 23. at the Ebell Clubhouse in Balboa. The dub will alve $1.!iOO to nine pbila.othropiea. ANGEU'IOS DE ORO: The Patronesses of the a~pport P'OUP ot Bil Brothers Q( Orange County· Will be honored Tuesday, Feb. Zl, at a luncheon at the home ot Mn. Donald Wubburn. CALIFOllHU PRESS WOMEN: Changing Styles for Writers will be the topic. ol lecturer Ardytbe G. lDU!hcoct when she addresses the group's m~ beatnnJng at ll:30 a.m. Thurs- day. Feb. 23. The aoeial half-hour will be followed by luncheon In the Garden Room of the Newport Beach Tennis Club. .LAGUNA NIGUEL WOMAN'S CLUB: King Tut's Treasures will be the program at the meeUng 'd the group at 7:30 p.m. Thorsday, Feb. 23, at the Moulton Niguel Water District Building. Speaker will be art appreciation teacher Ralph Bond. LA LECllE LEAGUE: The Huntington Beach group will present Edwin H. Ford, M.D., in a lecture oa Birth Alternatives at 8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 24, at the Burke Elementary School, Hunt· ington Beach. For information. call 963-6676 or 96J.0228. DELTA ZETA LUIPUGll'I'DS: The Southern California, group will present the Flame Fantasy luncheon and couturier fasbicn show tn the ballroom of the Beverly Wilshire Hotel at noon Saturday, Feb. 25. A receptioo will be held at 11: 30 a.m. Costume designer Edith Bead will be com· mentator. Several area Delta Zeta members are oa the sbow'a committees and area Delta ~tas will attend. SIGMA Pm GAMMA: The international sororl· ty will hold a Chi Provence convention at the Registry Hotel, Irvine, Friday through Sunday, Feb. 24 to 26. William G. Bloom will be speaker for Sunday's luncheon. HAPPY HOMEMAKERS: The group will meet Friday, Feb. 24, at the Fountain Valley Civic Center. Cost for program and lunch is $1..50. ,. YU DANTES AUXILIARY: Two Children's Home Society fllms -''Growing Up Toeether" and "I'm Seventeen, I'm Pregnant and I Don't Know What to Do" -will be shown at 7:1S p.m. Friday, Feb. 24, at the Presbyterian Church oL the Master, Mission Viejo. ORANGE COUNTY ADOPl'IVE PilBNTS: The group will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 24, et the Rebabilltation Institute .of Orange County, Orange. Dorothy and Jl.m May, social work era, will speak. FBIENDS or BIG 8JSl'EU: ~ group will hold a cbarlt7 buaar in the Mall of Oruge on Friday and Saturdaf, Feb. 24 and 25, durina re. gular Mall hours. • CHILDREN'S HOME SOCIETY: The Las Brizas del Mar Auxiliary will hold a fundraising event by attending a special performance at the llarlequin Dinner Playhouse, Santa Ana, at 5 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 26. Dinner is at 5:30-p.m.. with curtain on "Never Too Late" at 'l p.m. MAYFLOWER DESCENDANTS: Tbe California Society will meet at 9:30 a.m. Satur- day, Feb. 25, at the Airporter Inn, Irvine. Guest Speaker will be Mrs. Eldred Klute. For re- servaUoos, call B-4213 or 539-7859. KAPPA ALPHA THETA: The El Cemino Real group wiJ,l celebrate the birthday of the or· ganizaUoo with a Founders Day luncheon on Saturday, Feb. 2S. at the Broobide Clubhouse. Paudena. JUNIOR EBELL CLUB OF Ill.VINE: Tbe group will aponscr a public seminar called Woma11 to Woman on Saturday, Feb. 25, at th:Uvenlty mp ScboOI. Irvine. At 9 a.m. Paula Joo• will apeek on alcoholism; at 10 a.m. a s~aker from the Woman's Transitional Living C.Oter will dU4:UIS Batte~ Women; and at n a..m. there wU1 be a speaker ftoom Orange Coun- \J' Women Aga1nst Rape. Fot information, call SSJ.·16'7. AAVW: The lt'OUP wm ho14 a fundraiaer feawr .. tbg the FoUdorico Los.llifeJecu de Santa Crol at a .,.m. Saturday, .Feb. 25, at UC Irvine Villase TbtatN aod Art Muaeum. Co.t ~ .. J>!!l' person. Proceeda .ttll co to the ~hO~ fUVd. A ehaml'MM recepUoll will tallow. Arabian Nights DeMur:l ~osh, l~ft. T. Duncan Stewart and Cynthia Tosh get in the spmt of thmgs for an "Arabian Night." Spc>nsored by the Costa Mesa Women's Club, Orange District CFWC, aoda) bour begins at 7 p.m. followed by dinner and entertatnmem in the clubhouse on Saturday, March 4. Prooeeda go to the Girls Club of the Harbor Area. S~art will be the 14Gmie of the Lamp" and master of ceremonies. Say Cfteese From ~ Mrs. John Einhorn, Mrs. Burl Parkinson and Mrs. Willard 'Wade are among those looking forward to a Festival of Fine Califomia Wine to be hetd from •:ao to 7:38 p.m. Sunday. Feb. 25, at tlle Jaan1oa 891 0$. TM nmt iS spamored by the Las lleinu AmllB•ey of_ Ole MRnuce ~ of Newport Beach. Pneill lls .tli b'8!lftl the CbiJ.dftn's Dental Healfb Center and the Leaiue's C\lild ~Care Center. Roses, Lollipops From left. Katharine Jo Stoner, Paula Bender. Barbara Wieser and Paula Eastman are among those preparing for an auction sponsored by the Harbor Key of Child Guidance Clinic of Orange County. The auction will be held at 12:30 p.m. Sun· day, Feb. 25, with table sales openine at 10 a.m. at Springer and White auctioneers, Costa MesL A preview cocktail party will be held from 5 to 8 p.m. the eVelling before. Tickets are available for the Sunday auction for $2 at the door. Mrs. Jay Reed and daughter, Beth, display the Roses and Lollipop theme of the Cornella Connelly lliah School luncheon and fashion show at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 25, in the Atrium Court of the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel. Pr~ will purchase ndio-visual equipmoot for tbe school. can the school for reservations. the Saddlebll<!k Inn, Santa Ana. Make nt- s e rv ations by calling Jeannette Cudn.lk. · 832·023t. A8:;1STANOE LEAGUE: Hugh Si~, one ol the nation'• top journalists, will appear on the Edward•s Olnema et.age. Newport OeatM, on Monday, Feb. ZT, in the serond 'of a series oC Town Hall lect\IHs spol\IGl'ed by the AaaiBtance Leaeues of Laamia an11 Newport ~eh. TUESDAY a.UB: The group will meet al.11 a.m. Tuesday, Peb. 28, at the Balboa Bay ClUb. Hollie Hanis will give the show "Hap}JUleaa Is ••• ".Brunch cost ia $8. . BADASSAIU The Newport Beach chapter will meet et 12:3& p.m. Monda,, Feb. 27, at the VeraaW• Qubbouse. Shella Sonenlblne, at· tomey, Wl'lll speak. For lnformatloa., call Julia Matcba. 6'13-1403. BEPVBUCAM WOMEN: Tbe Orange Count)' Council will meet at 10:30 a.m. Tuelday. Feb. 28, at the Skyliner Room of the Airt>OrW' Inn, I"ine. Cost o( the luncheon la Sf ud r• 1ervadan deadline Is Feb. 2'. Far ra::et w.UWS, cant.ct your dub preeldeDt or write MN. Jean ~ 3ZO SoUth "A" Street; '1'UltiJi. 82980. . . . w: .... ~ CellMe""" c.; -. I I OLDE TntE C:EILllG FARS .1222 N~ Tutti• • • a..&'t tl ... Tf\e ~ 011t •real l'-•lr ........ ...... ....... .. • '"··· 0 1 ,, Americ&'$No.1 Rectlners . . .. -·--....... -------· . __ ...... _.. ..... ._ __ ~--.... --------------·· ANN LANDERS I FOOD Reader Likes Booklet DEAR ANN LANDERS: This morn· in& I received one of your booklets mailed to me 1n a blank envelope. The name of lt was ·'Straight Dope on Drucs." I dldn 't send for the booklet, but apparently somebody thought I needed it, or they woulnd't have spent lhe Sl plus postage. l was burned up at flrat, because I'm not that much into drugs. I smoke pot some, but I don't get stoned out or my gourd. I tried LSD twice and got scared off by a bad trip. I pop a few pills but would nev~r use a needle, no matter what. Like I said I was burned up at first, but arter I read the booklet I cooled oft and was ~lad somebody cared enough to send it. It's darned good and 1 learned a lot from it. One thing I learned was it's best not to mess around with stuff you aren't sure of. Street dealers sometimes put crazy stuff in the grass to zing it up for .. beginners." Now I know why 1've had a few bummers when I didn't think I bad smoked all that much. l 'd like to say thanks to whoever sent me Ann's booklet. I know where you're coming from , and you're O.K. - I DIG YOU DEAR DIG: I ap· preciate the compUment but I don't recommend sending my booklets anonymously. Most people resent an anonymous maillng. When parents ask me II they should send my booklets on teenage sex to their children, I aay, "NO." Unasked-for advice ls usually reject· ed. I'm glad you 1ot some thing or value out or "Slraighl Dope on Drugs." Thank you for letUng me know. D E A R A N N · LANDERS: During the week of Dec. 4 our newspaper carried a poem in your column from a reader. It was written by a girl who laved in Michigan. She died shortly after. l meant to clip It out but I forgot. When I wenl to look for the paper, 1t had already been thrown out. Wedding and engagement announumenls nm on Sunday m the Daily Pilot. Forms are avai.lat>U at all Dally Pilot 0J11ces or by calling the Fea1ures Depart· ment,642-4321. \. To oOOld disappointment.~·~ bndes art reminded to hove their weddmg storiei, unth a black· ond-tolute glossy of the bnde or of lhe couple, to the FeotUTes Deportment one week before the U>Ndmg. Engagement announcements, With block-and· white glossy of the future bnde or the couple, must M received by the Fttatures 1Hportm.en1 su: week$ Mtor~ the wedding dale. Mr. and Mrs. Max Goodman lOtf1 Anniversary Anne and Max Goodman of Irvine were honored recently at a dinner party celebral· ing their 50th wcddin~ anniversary. The party was given by thl'1r son and daughter- in-law, the Ronald Good mans of Corona dcl Mar. The Goodmans were married in Los Angeles on Feb. 10. 1928. and honeymooned on Catalina Island. They ha\'e a dauJ?hter who lives in Laguna Beach , .eight grandchildren and one great.grandchild. Will you please run the poem again? - SORRY I MISSED IT DEAR MISS: ll would be easier for you to go down to the newspaper balldlng and buy that back Issue thaa for me to run the poem •l•lll. In order to rerun something, I must re· celve a great many re· quests for it -and at least • year muat have pa11ed. Alto, my editor bas to tb1nk It's a good idea. Moral of the atory: When you see sometbiJlg in the column yoa want to keep, make sure the reat or the family baa flnlahed reading the paper-then clip It. I mention t.lae rest of tbe family because many fights have result· ed when someone de· dded to rip something oat on Im palse a od another member of the family flftCb a nice big bole in the paper. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband is an attorney· and I am worried he may kill himself from over work. He brings a briefcase horn e every night and puts in approximately 12 hours a day. This goes on six days a week. He seems to be in good health but I'm afraid he'll keel over one day from a heart attack. What can l do ? - TRYJNG ON WIDOW'S· WEEDS DEAR TRYING: Probably ao&h.lll&. Yoa do•'l melldon Ms wel1ht or lall llabHs (cloea be ftlOIJe and drtak! Doel lae exereltef). Actually, work ae•er killed anybody. U'a worry, booae, d1antl and fat bellies that get 'em. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You must be working too bard to have overlOoked the ob· vious answer when yoµ advised "Wife of Mr. Fat." . She said it was not un· usual for him to eat three doien doughnuts, a bag of potato chips, several pounds of nuts and a couple of salami sa ndwiches in the course of five to eitiht hours of watching TV. How come she baa that much jwik in the house? Sbe must be crazr· Jn our frldfe you 'I find plastic bags with celery and carrot sticks, peppers and cauliflower sections. No candy, no cake, no salami, no doughnuts, no potato chips. If the wife will stock up on nourishing low-cal snacks and have nothing else around, that's what her husband <and children) will eat. - WE FEEL GOOD AT OUR HOUSE DEAR FEEL GOOD~ Any maa who la so hooked oo garbage would andoabteclly pick up the Jank hlmseU, but I agree avaUabillty can make a difference. Fat Man's Wife should follow your saggestlon. It Jut ml&!rt work. ( Dorosf!ope 1 ' Wldneeday. Febru1ty 22. 1978 DAILY PILOT CJ J Creamy mozzarella cheese tDps easy chicken and rice. Chicken-Rice Is Nice . CHICKEN ORIENTAL 5 dried black mushrooms Hot water 5 lh cups water 2 cups rice 2 teaspoons salt 2 teaspoons corn· starch 1 t.easpoon sugar 1 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons soy sauce 2 tablespoons water 2 tablespoons rice wine or dry sherry lh tea spoo n monosodium glutamate, if desired 3 whole chicken breasts, skinned and boned 2 table spoons- vegetable oil 2 t..ablespoons chopped preserved gin&er 1 can (4 ounces> sliced bamboo shoots Soak mushrooms in hot water ror 30 minutes. Jn a large sa ucepan, bring 5.1,<;z cups of water to a boil. Add rice and salL Stir gently. Cover tightly. Cook over low heat for 15 minutes. In a small bowl, combine corn · starch. sugar. salt. soy sauce, 2 tables poons water. rice wine or sherry and monosodium 1.~ teaspoon pepper glutamate, if des ired, 2 cups s hredded stirring we 11 . Cut Mozzarella cheese chicken into l·inch Preheat oven to 325 pieces and place in a degrees. In a 2-quart large bowl. Pour ir.s of oven-proof skillet, heat the marinade over 011. Add chicken thighs chicken, mixing well. and drumsticks. Fry UD· D r a in and c b o p til brown, turning to mushrooms. Jn a wok or brown evenly on all large skillet, heat oil. sides. Remove from Quickly stir in ginger. skillet and keep warm. Add chicken pieces and Drain orr excess fat. saute for 1 minute. Add Drain tomatoes; reserve mushroom pieces and Juice. Combine juice and bamboo shoots, stir wine. Add water to together. Pour remain· make 2·1h cups liquid. ing marinade over mix· Pour hqu1d into skillet. ture. Stir quickly to mix. Add tomatoes, rice, Remove skillet from onlon ·soup mix and heat. Do not overcook. pepper. Stir. Bring to a Put chicken mixture on boi I. Place chicken top or partially cooked pieces on top and cover. rice. Cover, and con· Bake 45 minutes. tinue cooking over very Uncover. Sprinkle Io w heat 1 O to 1 5 cheese over top. Return minutes. Makes 8 to 10 "to oven. Bake, un· servings. covered, until chicken ~s CIDCKEN· tender and cheese 1s MOZZAREUA BAKE m e 1 t e d . a b o u l 1 S 3 table 1 p 0 0 n s minutes. Makes 4 serv· vegetable oil mgs. 4chlckenthlghs ZESTY CHICKEN 'n 4 c h i c k e n RICE drumsticks 3 pounds chicken l can ( 1 pound ) pieces stewed tomatoes o/• cup flour 1 cup dry white wine l e nve lope (0.1 Water ounces) garlic salad l cup rice dressing mix 1 e nvelope dry 2 tablespoons chili onion·soup mix powder ~ .. cup vegetable oil 1 can (10 ounces) tomatoes Water 1 medium onion, chopped 1 green pepper, chopped 1 cup converted rice Salt and pepper to taste . In Zesty Chicken ·n Rice, garlic salad dress- ing mix, flour and chili powder pre·season the chicken. Wash and pat dry chicken. Place flour, salad·dressing mix and chili powder in paper or plastic bag. Add chicken and shake until coated with flour mixture. In a large skillet, beat oil. Add chicken and brown on all sides. Drain tom a toes, reserving juice. Add water to juice and make 2·1h cups li· quid. Add tomatoes, li- quid, onion, green pepper, rice, salt and pepper to chicken. Stir. making certain rice is cover ed with liquid. Bring to a boil. Reduce heal and cover. Cook over low heat until chicken is tender and li· quid is absorbed, about 40 minutes. Makes 4 to 6. servings. Save on Yu With today's automatic drip rnachi~es,. it's easy to make coffee right. But to make it nch, start with Yuban. Yuban<ft Drip Grind is made from 100% Colombian beans ••• some of the world's richest. Use the coupon below to save on any size Ground or Instant Yuban. / Grapefruit 7 5( JUICE :~"' , Treesweet White or Pink 6 oz Tuna wuu PACll •••••• 89e Star Kist. ~oltd white meat -7 oz Golden Corn . . . 25 e Springfield Cream or \V.K ~o :111·1 D • CREDI 89¢ ress1ng COOO£ss ••• S!'Hn Sea~ large JO ounce hollle • Hunt's 29( Tomatoes Solid Pack .. \\'hole . 14 oz can M ff·n PKc Of, 33e u I s OICUSH • • • • Springfield Reg or Sour Dough Soft Margarine 85 e Fl1·i~l'h111a11n \~with rorn oil 1 lb B · s5s9 rl m FREUE otaED • • • • • fn,..tunt Cuffre 111 ~·ounce Jar FACIAL 53( TISSUE Kleenex C'olnr-.. \\'h11e-pkg of 200 Tab or Fresca ... 5129 ('nrtun of '.'-IX I:! ounce can~ Miracle Whip • . 59e Kraft's great dressing! Pint JOr P-Nut Butter •.. 79c Springfield Creamy or Chunky 18 oz Cereal = . . . . . 79e Choice of :1 verieties -16 <JZ pkg APPLE SAUCE l\lott',.. tu•He,.. 110 good! lfi oz jar Tomatoes snwm • • 33e Springfield for value' 16 oz can D s1&9 owny .....•••• Fabric Softener -64 oz (15c effl Tender Vittles • 59e Purina -all varieties -12 oz pkg Ajax Cleanser • . 39c Scour power in 17 oz can (Scoff) PAPER 39 TOWELS ( Springfield-assorted colora-roll ' That's.the Better Way! Choose your menu·making meat valuts for the satisfaction ... the downright goodness you find in each bite •.• and discover for yourself that the Better Way is El Rancho's way! NATURALLY ACED BEEF! For Brochettee! Loin cul- Choice beef . Beef Rib Bones 89\ Meaty! Choice! Bake or barbecue Top $249 Sirloin ::r • Loin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef Top Sirloin Steak 12.5/l Compare the difference ... and chw,..e the Beller Way! Aged beef .. U.S U.A. Choice -Butcher Shop Service! (Leil cut) Chuck Steak . . . 79 e. 0 Bone Roast •. 51 1~ Beef Liver • . . • • 89~ L'.S.D.A' Choice beef for i,ati,..latllon Chuck cut l S.D.A. Choice beef Sliced -frelih and tender and tasty 7 Bone Roast •. s 1°~ Beef Roast ::gss 516t Ground Beef ~rr: 511 ~ Chuck t·ut lJ.S.0.A. Cho1tc beet Shuuli er clod chuck cut -Choice Lean -does not exceed 22' r fat Sp/ii Brai/1r1 ="A" ........... Ill! Meaty fryer:. . . plump and tender and graded L' .~ D A. "A" your assurance of quality! A meaty treat! (1lial cl'etsl Sausage rrAl.Wlsnu • s1 4 ~ We make authentically "old-"orld" Pastrami 1YT11r1a • 514t Read~· to eat! (SUCO P&STUll ... U9 •.l Sliced Bacon ..• s1 3t El Rancho's thicker "ranch style" Bratwurst .,imsru 51 4~ Genuine Milk-Fed Veal Ground Lamb : • 79~ Pork, milk-fed veal and M1al>Vning featured e\'ery day Ill El Han< ho Fresh' . and U.S.D.A. Choice quality log o'Lalilb ~or: .................... 'llll Western gro"'n' .. your assurance of fla\•or -and it':-fresh' Graded t• SD.A. Choice l:<n't that the Better Way to be sure? SMALL LOIN LAMB s3s~ CHOPS IU Wei.tern 11rown -u .::,,J) A. ChoH I BON£1.ESS LOIN LAMB s3a'. CHOPS Wet.tern grown -l J.S.D.A. Choice Super Fresh Produce \ LARGE LOIN LAMB s32~ CHOPS .• Western ,rown -U.S.D.A. Choice Jlnichak11 LARGE! •••••• 41! And fre11h! Compare quality ... compare size ... you'll find our "Compact Globes" offer mol'e value! RHUBARB Eltra fancy frOfll 4 9 ~ Wuhinetoit State -~ hot house crown •• Minneola 3 s 1 Tangelos l Sweet and juicy ... large "ize' CUCUMBERS Lone end crten for 19 '.. . picture pretty '° w, slices! -'" -· ·ALASKAN CRABS EXTRA s 119 l~~ I.ARCE! • Me&ty Dungeness •.. and we'll be glad to clean and crack them! Snapper PACflCllO •• 521t Fre b fillets for fine eating Mahi Mahi .•••• s 129• Enjoy Hawaiian dining at home Halibut STEAK From Northern fish-firm, flavorful · Catfish Fillets •• s 18t Fret.h-water variety ... fresh frozen True Cod FU •••• s24t Fillet•, to offer you more valuo WHOLE! PAaFIC RED Snapper ' Cleaned and headle ~! 2-3 lb. average Wine makes the meal so special! Paul Masson llAGIUI 5379 Ruby Cabernet, French Colombard s499 Whiskey . Sove 1.00 on our label! Quut Walker's •wu •• (1298 Save 1.01 on atraight! 1. 75 liter Cluny's Scotch s1495 There's more value in the 1.75 liter! Vodka or Gin El Rancho's own "Holiday Times" - Qt. • Beer sa ,ACK ••••••• s 1 ~9 Ballantine's ... 12 ounce cans .. Whiskey ....... s499 El Rancho's own label ... Quart Irish Whiskey •• s699 Sure, and il'a Murphy'a! Fiflb Now, that'• real clags! Fifth Frozen Food Prictt1 in d/rct Thur<> Frb. 2.1 throuRh Wrd March I Delicatessen Orange Juice 12 oz : ••• 69< Start the day with 11 glaaa or juice -for health -and make it Sunkist1 Crispers • • • • • • • &9c Ore Ida pot8toeA -20 oz pkg Petite Peas ••• ·• 49c C & W -tiny and tender -10 ot Bread ., WllAT • • • • 59c Pie Shells • • • • • 49c Bridgeford -two 1 lb loaves ()pen doily 9 to 9 Sundnv 10 tn 7 No .talt't1 to dealer.~ Franks FARMBJOHN ............ 89.< Good at lunch -great for dinner ••• (or undwiche., for fun! 16 oi pk( • Dressing .,.CIT . . 79e Sotto Salami ••• s121 Fisherman'• Wharf -8 ounce btle 01eu M.,rr -J2 ot family ahe Cheese tog .... 537t Herkimer'• -Carlie 'n' Chee&e Sauerkraut • ~ • • • 59 Homema~o -· great with franks! 2• f . I u tt ' J ' . ....-~ ........ -··---........................... ..._..._ ---......... _ --... ... ........ . OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON EVERY NEW 1978 VAN CONVERSION 0 • ..-....~EXAMPLE SAVINGS ""'· ~ .. NEW 1978 LEISURE TIME . ' ~ 351 V-8 eng., A/T, pwr. steer .. gauges. hvy. duty batt.. 90 amp alt.. bkt. seats, AM-FM CMltt<ll .... • multiplex 8 track tape, Ice box., roof vent, fmt. carpet. rack and ladder. custom peint, etc. Was priced at s 10,0GO. • IESI DRM FIESTA •SELECno• PRICE SLASH• IHISWEEKmll IN OUR BIG STOCK CHOOSE FROM •LEISURE TIME •ROLL-A-LONG •SIERRA •HOLIDAY WHEELS •VANS UNLIMITED •MESA SPECIALTIES LEASE DRIECT . AND SAVE! W•Jt.ase•_..c.,mdtncb.A* ,..-.,a...n1I hn•c•"°"~ DAILY RENTALS c_..Tnds 1y Day-W ... or Mo.II., Low as $7.00 o.,.r Mlle. .,flllllll1!-.,-"-r;.·,~§,·· .... 76HOMDA . ~. . WHY W~IT UNTIL SUMMER WHEN YOU CAM GET SUMMER BARGAINS LIKE THESE IGIAYI ALL F-ISO's ALL F-250's ALL F-350's ALL STAMDAIU> . COURIERS OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON EVERY NEW 1978 PICKUP TRUCK IN OUR BIG STOCK .. .. , .... OVER FACTORY IMVOICE OM EVERY MEW 1978 CHOOSE FROM • 2 DOOR COUPES •HATCHBACKS •STATION WAGONS PlllO •75 FORD LlDLAteAU V-8. auto. trans .. fllCtory air conditioning, power steering. pow8f' dlao br9ke8. power windows, Power seats. AM/FM radio, heater. whitewall tires. tinted glass. wheel covers. Landau top, luxury Interior. Sharp Car. Lie. f161M(X CM&CYCC...._W .... 76FOID ,_lllV2T•l'lllli; s3970 -...__ '74FORD ... V-8, auto matic trans .. factory air conditioning. power steering, power brakes. radio. heater, vlnyt roof, whitewall tires. tinted glass. heel covers. Lie. f513LPB Stk (104A '2674 •77 FORD n ,,,,.4 V-8. automatic trans .. factory air conditioning. P'M' steering, PoW9f' disc brakes. PoW8f' windows, vinyl roof cover. tilt atffrlng , wheel. radio, heater. Lie. ts5eSWL Stk: tP3279 $5891 '75 FORD ........... Dr.him 4 cyt., 4 speed. AM/FM ttereo redlo with tape, removable roof panet, rallye wheels. ~ow miles. Uc. t494T JH StJc. tP3217 '77 DODGE .... "SpecW ....... st. w ... v.a. auto. trans.. factory air cond •• power 1teerlng, power brakn, AM/FM stereo radio. luggage cam.. deluxe Interior. Lea than 5,000 mil-. Better than new at this price! Lie. f744TOG Stk. tP3249 s5391 '72 FORD C_.,Pkllllp 4 cyl., 4 speed, radio. heater. Lie. t39912U V-8, automattc trans.,' pawer steering. POWf brakH, factory air conditioning, radio, luggage can1er. Lk:. f0.47Ll'r Stk. #P32&4 .. cyl, ' 9PMd. luggeoe .,..., tlf1lld glass, ndo. tieatw. Uc. f033PBY 8tlc. tP322e e cyt .. 3 IS)e8Cf. ,.,lo, heater. Lo. lo ml1ee. You'll like It. Uc. t262HGJ Stk. tseeA T ~ 4 tpeed, ...... Whitewall ti• tinted glMa, ~ covwa. Lele tNn 11.000 mi-. Uc. tlH87337 8Ck. tP3289 . '75DODSE C..JDrl. ..... 4 cyf ., automatic trw.mlssion. f8dory aJr conditioning. vtnyt roof cover, radio, heater. Lie. t308ROH Stk. 1870A 72FORD ........ w .... ' cyl .. automatic tr.namlaion, factOtY air conditioning, luggage canter. tinted glue. radio. healer. Uc. t870FVZ Stk. IP3258 519D 73 POllD PIH I T•PU Super Carrw>er Speclal. v.a. automatic. power tteetlng. power brakes. f8dory air cond., Ranger ~. duel fuel tankl, 2 tone paint. he8VY duty tlr•. ra:lio & heltet. t42443P 4 cyl., 4 ap .. d, radio, tinted glass, whltewalf tires. wheef covers. heater. Uc. • toe4HPO Stk. t37\A 176 PLYMOUTH AMOW HATCHIACll •.T • 4 cyf .• 5 epeed tr.11ernfsslon, aport pactcage, AM/FM ...to. heater, ratlye wheels. l.tc. t477POUStk.~ '76 FORD Mcuwlda 4 Dr. S.... e cyl., automatic tran1m1 .. 1on, Power steering. factory air cond.,· r8dlo. t'tea*, wh•el COY*'I. Uc. t597SYL. Stk. tP3269 '61FORD C:...JDr. 4 cyl., llUtOmltlc trena.. AM ra:lfo, tinted glaaa, Whltewall tlr9S. wheel CCMn. lest than 40,000 mll... Llc. tYCS641 Stk. 1818A • 51159 \@!$1 ,,,.,..., _,., """.......,"" •1111 ._," !If f"•nl VOfm <'• • W.. Din. HOURI• ......,tt:IA.M ... tP.M. a.t: .............. .. II-: to A Ill. ........ . • """'°' • ,Aini. . ~:11. .......... ... f()ileftWtll.M.M9Meft • ,.,_,.. Olllf •• . ....... ,,. u tt ' I ' "'I'd hate to see what he does to people he doesn't like!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN I 5TILL OO~'T 1HINK WE.'R£ JOST CCMIC STRIP OIARAC.~&, CRAZQ ! CASEY MOON MULLINS ·=- GORDO IF YO« QUIT PlANGMIN6 MIM,Ml'O '9r0-..ll'LV l't~PONC) Nicav. by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD SOY! DIDI HAV£A GREAT 11Mf oN 1H£.~f,Y OOnrt! DR . SMOCK MOTLEY'S CREW NO, 1,-'S MASCARA ..• ~·ve eeeN CRYING ----· FtllNlry 22. 1'71 PEANUTS THAT, HO~, NEEO NOT CONCW4 AH/ONE IN 'THI~ Cl.ASSROOM by Charles M. Schulz IF Hf WERE ALIVE 100W, lHffD PROeA81H SE HAVIN6 A 816 P,wti FOl HIM AT MOUNT VERNON by Roger Bradfitkl WHAT IS 1H1S7. .. SHOW AN' TELL? by George Lemont NOW THA"'f HAS GO"T"~ e>e A ReCORP FOR Pl S"T"ANCe "fRAVE:t..1,..S:P e>Y A "feAR! by Templeton and Forman by Gus Arriola TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PVZZLI ACROSS 63 Lara ··-····: UNITED Feal ure Syndleale Etruscan king Tuesdafa Puule Solved: 1 Peru" 5 Flower part 101ncllned roadway 14 Novella\ Victor -· 15 FlaYOr 18MovleVIP -Kazan 67 Tries out again ~~~ •p11IITl4JI ~H (l~lyll=IR 61 Nichols' IN I~ 11 r• '" l&-rfl hefo 62Emphaalze 64 Makaadln 65Make T E ~I~ , ___ , '" '" r I' 17.Ti I~ I ~ 11 lis:'TI I( rr. Iii'" r---r• ,, 1 7 Aftnoyanc• eourca 19H*d amends 68Anlmara Ell A E C:lt A IR N I P 20 Ascertain 67~gers 68Allackad dimensions verbally IF II '"" :p PA S Sii D• E I! lfW IS Ii HI 11 l"'- I C LIA CIEIR ~ f If 'F N I N 1n I J TI N 21 Handcover· 69Expraaaes 1nga In words ' N n AlSl()llll ~ I H ~I ·• 23MotlonleU • 25 ~';1!°'m: ' DOWN 11 Salnng 39 One cubic 26 The nOf1h dntllOl'I meter wind I L~ellng 12 Aapecl • 40 FOCllSed 29 Keeps t.cl( piece 13 Kitchen 43 lneense F in ll"l(ln1Ff11 II IF I 34 Winglike 2 Ptrael'Va uten.ns burners 35 Ending for 3 Tai Mahal 18 Bonllo'a 45 Commands doW Of man aita relative •H Of tile 37 Tutor 4 M0te 22 Bicvaplds fiends 38 Small drink clamorou. 24 Earthquake• 49 Farm crop 39 Appetite lor 5 Eyes 29 01 lua 52 Feminine IOOd searchingly: value name 41 --Caritla: 2 words 27 Popeya'a 53 Remove by N.Amef.WI• eFoodc;on. g.irl cutting tlfCOllfM aumer 28 Swift 54 lnallument 42 Eject 7 Preaaur• 30 Notable 55 Sudanese 44Roman---11nlt:Abtlr. ages money 45 Proofreeder'a 8 Whit 31 Bouq111t 56 Kind of tapir martt 9 ·--holders 58 Sllofa bird 49 Cl\rlat Tomb : 32 Franch 59Trolan War 48 Rackett Moscow school site 50 Nal'I Rifle landmark 33 loalars end 80 Establishes Anoe. 10 Bring back moctHins 63 "What's up 51 Hindu Q\ll!Ar Into uae 38 Lott -?" ·. l tt I} ., • I ~ ..... ir• .... --~ ...... •• .... --.... ..,.. __ ,, ________ ,. . . ... OUHNIE Bv Phtl lnterlandi "Good! Now I can ride down and spend my eveninp at the &odae without a cut on." PUBLIC NOTICE In •t<O<CWll<e •1111 C.lllcwnl• Clvlt COda JOSI •• ,.. hor~. p<operly ot c .. elyn Wlltl-n, •NII be \Old •l Pvl>llc AU<tlon 10 ~''"• • 11.,.ryn,•n'• ll•n '°' <~Ion ol bolrd on or •lier M•r<ll6. 1'71 f'o• lntormallon call '"·7~ Pubfl"*I 0rM'IQt C:.0.ll 0.lly Piiot, February n, "II "'·II P UBLIC NOTICE SUPllRIOll COURT 0' TNI! STATI Of'CAL.,ORNIA FOii TNI CDllNTY 01' OllANG[ Ne.A"'47M NOTICE 01' Nl!All lNG 0 1' P ETITION l'<Mt PltOeATE Of WILL AHO FOii LETTllllS TfSTAMI N T AllY ANO AUTNORllATIOH TO AOMINISTEll U NOIR TNI! INOl,lNOl!NT ADMINISTllATION Of 1!.STATt:S ACT. E•l•le OI JOHN M KNAPP, Dt-<t•\tG • NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN INt MAAGUEAtfE STEWART KNAPP h~\ tlleG hlf•ln • Pft•''°" tot p1m..t f ol •• 11 -tor ....... r. .............. . •nd AuthOf"l~IOn to .otnH'»\ff"' unott tnP '"d~pen°"nt Adm1n1\t,•t•on ot f\l•te\ Atl. ff'ftfHKt lo wl'li<" U m•d• •cw tur'1,., IMl'U(WtM\~ Mwi ltwt tne hm• M'wl CJlf«• Of hl•tHlrO '"" wm"" fW\ bHn '"' tcw -·" u, ""· .ot 10 ~ m , In ttw <.auttroom of 0.Nf"\r?W.it NO Jot ,_.,.,Court. 4t 100 C1w•C Ce"t~r Dfl•• W•\1, jl\ ""' C1ly of !Mini• An•. C•l•tornl.t O•ltd Febn .. ry ,I, 1911 WIUJAM I SC JOMN, eo..myc1 .. 1< MARRY C. COGIEN -Wlllllln 91..0., 61111• 111• L°' Aft .. I ft, C.ltl«'N•*'° AltorlMy lw: ""'111'- Publl•hed Or-Co•"t D••IY Piiot, l'eb 71. n--· '· '"' '"It PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IUSINIESS NAME STATIEMIENT Tne lollowlr>g ~''°"' ••• doing llU., .......... GOGL.ANIAN ENTERPRISES JOU Pl«•fltf• AV9., Ge>le Met•. c.111or111a m11 Ale••-' & M••Y Go91Al\l•n IHUlbaf\d 'Wiit lndlYldual Proprltlonlllp l, <IOI £ .. I ISlh Str ... 1, N-Pol"l t..ch, C.lllornl• •Ml Tllh bu!lMtl\ II <-led bY an In· dlvlduel. Aln_O<W1,.nll1n Ti.II st•l-t ..,M fllfd •Ill! Ille Ce\1111'/ Cltrk ol Ortn119 C011nl'/ on Ftbrllt•'/ •, tt7t. PUBLIC NOTICE SUPl!.•IOlll CDUllT STATI Of' CAl.l'°lllllA COUNTY O~ OllANGI N0.AM7'l 0110111 T05"0W CAUH In •• Ille M.tll., of 11w PwUUon Of EMANUELI.A OONNA HIMBEll. In· di.tdu•llY -on bellalf ... DANIELL STACY HIMBER,• Minor. Wh•reas, EMANUELLA DONNA HIMBER, P•llllontr. ,,., tllltd a ~llllon wlUI Ult Clffl< ol 1111• Court on behalf ot lllnell 8!ld her d-hl.,, DANIELL STACY HIMBER, a Minor, rrque>llnQ •n Ord•• <"•n9 ln9 c-lllloner's name lrcm EMANUELLA DON NA HIMBER 10 DONNA DOMIN IQUE COLIANNI Ind he• d•u9hl•r'• n•m• lrom OANIEl.L STACY WIMBER lo DANIELL STACEY COl..IANNI. Ir IS OROEREO lllat all --.s In· lere\tftf fn tne MICwe ~tter •ooit•r '"tor• '"'' Court •I 11 oo a m • on Aprll •. 1971. lfl l!le CourlrOOfn ot 0.CNrlrne<>t IOo 3 al the Or-C- l y toun-. 5'.opfflor Court. lec• lflCI •1 100 CJ,,.< c.o. ., Orlve w.-1. s-t• Ana, C•ll-•. -S11ow c-. ti <Any •• ,.., ow ~uum tor c1wn9e of <wm• \hOUld nol lie Q<.onlfl<I IT IS FURTHER OROEREO -I 1 <OPY Of lho\ 0.dN lo 5'low C.U~ i. oubl•'""d '" the O•lly Pltot. • nt•\P•P•r ot Qener•I ctru.1f eUOft pr1,,eed trt Ot.,. (.oun1y. St.i• ot C••lfo•nla, once • -for lour 10 ton\.t'Cuh'f'lt weei.., P"i« to 0.. O.C• wt •or '--•"no on Ille Potuu.,,. OATEO· f'-...,Y21. ,,,. Bn.i<e W. S.-r Jucig.of1"9 s._ricwC-rt J • .._ .. II. o. .... Al1ff1MJ.CUW J7M N•,_ 81 ..... ""11J <W• M~. CA ma 11•·~' ,.:i,u,11.=· ?.'.~1~5t Oall'I' .:~~! PUBLIC NOTICE PUBl..IC N<mCS ,.w;n'nCIUt ......... MAMalTAT&MaNT ,... ~ ,__ b ..._,. ..,.. •UH. MllTAl. ,IH15"1NO 11&0 LAI '"''° L'!'WIM ..... laAM,CAft/GS "'" T .. KM\, tlt2 ''""'"' ~ 1tw111i.t1t11 IM<tl. CA.._ Tiii• ~I• ~\ed h Ml OM4Ual. H'9T .. KOl'I Tlllt tlll-wet filed wll" I c-cy c1«1c of o..,,.. c-11 fffurfrY "· .. ,.. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC• 0" tMlllU'"'S U'-11 O" HOMllST.AOIO ,llOPllllT'I' GALVIN A Kl!ENE. •I ... Plal11tltf ------------¥& MAlllA T. SPEIRS, 0.1 ...... 1, No. 20-'?·70 By vim. of tfl eo<llllon 11....0 on AU\)Ust 1. ttn .,., IN S-lor Court. C-ly of ()r.ngt, StM• ol Cellfornl•, -a jlldgmanl .... ,.,.., ,,, , • ....., ., G•lvlfl II. I<-.,.. M1c11a.i A. Dion, jlldQmen\ '""'''°'" --•Ml Me•I• T. Spetf\, ts l~I dtb4or, "'°"'1"9 f Ml Ml""'t of '6 21100 «l ... llY Clue °" H IO I~ on llW NI• of Illa 1 .. s11•nce of ...0 eu<ullon. I ,,..,. l••lflCI 11-all ... •!Ohl. ltll• -lnl.,•I of w lel lllOQ,_,I dtb4cw •nd .,.. <om· .......,.0 by or-of ttw co..n •• Mii lht lollOWlng dH<rl'*' llOmeSIHOO<I ~Oj>efly In .... Counly Of O•an99, S1et• of C.llfornte 1.0I I Of IMOClt 0 of Tra<I Sii H pet m•o recordtd 1n a-11, P-' 3l 10 3', IMIU\lft ol Mt><••.-o.a M-1n IM ofllu ol ttw Counly llKOfClltr ol O••r>Qe Counly, C.lllorn•• Pr-rly 11 commono, k"°"'" •• :IOOO Ea.I OceMI Fronl, B•IDoa, C.lllornll. T-IMr wllft e•I -.,ngu1., 11\e 1-menh f\eredltemeftl\, •no •PPV''•"•"<•' thlf•unto 11t._inv or 1n ""ywl\a .P pe.tatnl1111. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN INI on ThurMSay, Maren 16. '"' .i to oo e.m. •t -Ill Lobby, CourlflouH, 100 Civic Cenler Ori.,. WHI CllY ol S..nl• An•, County or Or•noe, Sl•I• ol Catlforn1a, I w ill \ell •I Public a11<1lan 10 IM 1ll9P1e1ol bidder. for u1h tn l•wlul monay ol , ... United Sl•IM, •II , ... flql\I. 1111• •nd lnllre•I ol '"'d ludQ· men I Oeblor Ill IN AllOve oeS< rl~ Mm•Stt:&Oed prOPf'''--· or M> much th11f"Hf ., m11v tM nti<,.\,\•• v to '4tl\.fv t~ HOme\CNid t••mpt.o"· pit.a h•n' •nd •n,uMC>t.-.tttl •i;. ortNmlMd byi trte COUr1 • .,., ~·d •••tutlon With K truttd lnt ... MI •l\CI CO\h O•l•d •I ~l•An•. C.htornl• Feb<,..ry l, 1'1t BRADGATE\ Sf\efl If Con>ntr 8y R r ...... 1.11, °"""'' l<EINt. &OION AnerM'fllerPl-'"1111 Wl WHI C-tt ltwy , Wiie .. , N-~ la«ll, C..tHer,..• 91~ NOTE Oo not I ... •_,,°' oe•«• • poU•O noU<• o~•o'• tne '''• 01 \•l6'1•c lion 01 ludQmenl Cod• ot C•••I P•o<edvre ~<11on ••l 1000 tcwletll -•Coof-.e<lion~l6 lm1SO.- me.i"°'> PUbll•Pled 0.-c;o.,1 0 •11, P1101 Feb U, '1 --1 .. ,. Sl'I It PUBLIC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE "CTI TI CIUS I USUllH N"'°'a STATU1\UIT The loll-Ing persons are delng bu•lneHM 1•1 SKYV\JE AYOCIATES LTD, lbl EKECUTIVE MOllLE HOMll PAllK. t09'1 Tallle<t A-. SUllA 7, "°""lalfl Vellty. CA 92709 J•mH L. Cl ayton, 11o01 P•MO eonn., 1.00,tJ-llO>, CA wno th•ofl I. w 1111 .... s, 1121' 5-fll• C.<111• Clf<I•. f-1a'n Valley, CA. t210t This b u•INU b conclu<-by • llmlled ...,._lt\lp llyron L. Wllll- Tlllt tt•-1 Wft flied wllh l.,. '°""'Y Clef'tl ol O.~ County on Janvar., 17. """ n..,, Plit>ll>hed Or-C:O.sl D•llY Piiot, F•b. 1, I, IS, 12. 1'11 PUBUC NOTICE CP."1t SUPllllOlll COUtn' O~ Tltl STATE OJI CALl~OllNIA FOii TN I COUNTY 01" OllANOIE " .. ....-NOTICI Of ltlEAlllNO 0' PITITION ~OR PllO.ATI!. O~ WILL ANO POii UTTllll TIHTAMIEN· TAll Y AND AUTNOlllZATION TO ADMINISTlll UNOiR THI INDIPINDl!NT AOMINISTllATIOH 01' llT"TES ACT. EU•le of GEOAGE MARION lllCK FORO, 0• GEORGE M BICK FORD, OK.HM<!. NOTICE IS HEllEllY GIVEN Ill.II MARIAN 8 lllCl(l'ORO, hH Iliad herein • pellllon tor ProbalA of Wilt •ncl tor ~..-. ol t..lter> Test .... ..., l••Y lo ttw "'9ti--iWlll«lt<t• 11on 10 edmlnl\11' tht ~le under the lnoeoon<Mnl _,,,,..,,.,Ion ... E\IAIK A<t. rel~• 10 ~" It,,,,,_ tor furlfler !N'll<utan. -Ill.II OM lime •nd pt•c• of "-tMtnrg trw wme hh l>ffn w t tor M.tr<h 7. 1971. •t 10 00 • "'. '" .,,. (...,.,,_.,al OetN•lmMI No l ol Hid cour1, •t 700 Clvi< C•nlH Orl•e WHt. In ,,_ Cllt al !Mini• An•. C•llfornf• O•l•d Feon..<y 10, 191t WILUAM E. SI JONN, Cou..rJU..k JAMIS t:. WILltl!LM ICINDIL & "NDE•SOH 1'2t HW1~ -..,, .. a 1" ~ftl•AM,c.l ..... ltl•n19t hi: 17141 U.7777 Anw11tf' ,.,. ""'~ Publi•""" Or-Co .. I 0111'1' Piiot F •b IS. 16, 'D. 1911 ~ II PUBLIC NOTICE 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I .L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 . . * DAILY PILOT D3 You Can Sdll It. Find tt, Trade It With a Want Ad Red... Houstt F« U. ············-·········· ···········•·••·····•·• ....... ... s. ........ For~ .............................................. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY .......,..1Motlu: All real estate advertised in th.Ls newspaper is sub· ject lO the Federal Fair Housing Act or 1988 wtucb makes 1t Illegal to adve r llae "any pre· ference. li m1tallon, or d.lscrirrunalion based on G.._., 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HIWl'Oltr MllGHTS Rustic 3 SR, lam·rm. brick frpJc, range & oven. &dshwshr. Sl4t.•so JACOIS REALn 675-6670 C>Pa.HOUSE WED-THOR 1·5' 4107SurreyDrhe CAMIC> HfGfV,.AHDS I 002 Gcaerol I OOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ATTENTION 81.JILDERS Oood Eastaide location. Large level lot. Small 2 bdrm. 2 bath home, sln&le car prage. Let me abow you bow to 9dd on to thls. 3111 E. Costa Mesa Strttt. Price $69,200. Good tenna. ~ -tr FORffER VIEW! 1ST OFFERING OnJy once every 5 yrs or ao does aucb a ma1nlf1- eent, super view home come oo the market. A 1even lron shoa From 'Wiilen edge, overlooking boilts. night ll&hts, on the best Dover Shores loca· UoD. Large Is spacious a.BR's, 3"2·Ba's, ram· rm. formal dlnuig on the view. Land included at $350,000. Truly. one or a kind. Call now for Ctr~\ upportunity to purchase. JACK HOWELL \ .. II A...oflAllS ' race, color, religion, sex, or national origm, or an mt.eotion to make any such preference. llm1ta-Top 0' the hUI with 180 uoo,ordlsrrimmauon." 'degree ocean view. Im· maculate 2 bedroom & den°" 3 bedroom home. Private beach, pre· s ti&ious address . $185,000. VETS 644-1156- Ttus newspaper will not know1nt?IY accept any advertising for real e.t<ile which is m viola· lion of the law. BUlORS: AdYerflsen .... chedltWrods cWy and report ~ ron 1 .... c1attty. TM DA.IL Y PILOT os-• ...., fortt. flnt .. CGfftd iltMrfloa o.ly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE C\o6e U> Westcbrr shop- p111g 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, f a mily room wltlt fireplace, beam ce1ling. etc. Alley enlranre with lols ot RV parking. Ask· 111g $89.900. Call 540-1151 ~~:~ HERITAGE • • REALTORS HUMTIMCiTOM IEACH FOUR UNITS Four luxunous units wrtb spacious owners unit. Alrno5t carn es Owner will trade For profit pro· Jecu on lncludintt lax sheller benef11J. hurry please: call 962·T181 • KE'.Y COLIOPMEWPOIT REALTORS '7S.5SI I LOW MILEAGE 2 BR. Oranae Tree coo· do. Clean as the pro· \-erbiaJ whistle! $64,950 FHJ 833-9781 Hester-Brown "'-UAtrOaS FREE GI 1111 lftfcJ> JJdofHo•• Crtclt WO ' -· Move in Free All Prices Alf Areas IVYCOVEllB» THE FIXER lllCI TUDOR! .ll AC $62,000 Wal.lsott.ygreetcbarm· HOME STORE Just listed! Bae~ Bay Ing cottace la Newport area! Classic sitting Hts! Colonial living rm! (coll 24 hours) pe>tth W/Vtew or COUn· Rieb redwood decor ! trys1de. Cry~tal dining' 3 Pub tavern kitchen 9cA245c Huge bedrooms! Larae w/walk·in pantry. 3 U...-J open lutchen! Room For Large bdnns, 2 deluxe 19.ALIBr kh horses! Needs work !l baths. !\tan size den ! -rg 00 urst Take. advantage !~ French doors t.o private Hunting on Beach Hurry! Call 6'!>-0303 garden patio! Lush -----"-------! grounds w /sparkling waterfalls.! Just listed! Breathtaking value!! Hurry!! Cllll. 645-0300 FORES TE OLSON -....... ,. HEWUSTIMG ) Br 2 Ba, neat, clean. 11100 't last. $61 ,000 TRIP\.EX E COSTA MESA, dlx. urut.s. ea w/2 bdrms., 2 ba , din. area, lndry. & frpl Asking S18S.OOO. Seller motivate d! 752-7110or ~-0434 Bkr. FORESTE OLSON '\IC •1'•1.'U'"' .. IACI IA Y VII 2,000 Sq. ft. 3 BR, bonu!I rm .. Cam. rm. w / wet bar. Swim pool, jac., RV •·~._,.._ area. SU0.000 · fee. Have something you want H&a4 I. DOWD lo aell? Classined ads do b.ALTOR 644.0134 it well. 64.2-5678. SPECIAL SPARKLY 111 Mesa del ldar Many xtra r ea tu ~es Redecor a 1 ed & r e modt"led 4 bdrm home Alnum. paneling. trash compactor et c Open Sunday 12 5 or callJll"'l...,.._,...Wlf'...__.....,...,..~.,. S46 5880 .. ~~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS OPPC>rfUMfTT knocks often when you me result·cetUog Daily Ptlot Clauif1ed Ads lo reach the Oran«e Coast u.rkel. Phone 642.5678 $1.62 per DAY That's ALL you pay fora 30dayad In the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY DO IT NO•t 642-5678 CUFfHAYEM H..llncome Rustie 31iedroom home with handsome rock fireplace PLUS separate 2 bedroom units. Call Jean Ritter for lnforma· Uon on nexible use or lh1a property. Offered al 1190.000. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- '4M.2tl 1·2 MIWPORT HTS Darting bouse, room for 2 ~units. can Cleo at open house every after· noon, 1•6-5398 or •••United Brokers. 646-7414. All~PoolHCMM . $60,000 VA TtnM Tremendous oversized family roorq,, massive brick frplc on gulet secluded i;treet. HURR V 847-3341 WESTWINO PROPERTIES 647-3341 Sltp tlti5 5hmmin1 west ower slum and 111nts or skirts. COntrast tum emphasues Ille ll.ltlerlllf 'flrtjOll h11e. Ctocllet mil~ ~t of z ply medlwn wtit~t syfltlletic ~ YI'"· fttt1111 7403: d11ectiotls Wometl'' Sua 38-4& 111cl. L 1ft · 1ffc • SJ.St tor uch pattein Add v'f '""'-e.i.T .... 3St tacll pittein for l1t'1<lau 11r1Nil 1nd handhnt. 5-4 tt: We Qll this our centle ttnt Allct ~ -nothinc ext1eme about 11. NeddlKr•ft Dept. 1()S 1111t I sott llollllll tine that O"lly Piiot suaests and flatten the body 111113. OW CM.a .SI.I.. lkw be•tll Wt know you wtlt hb 1t y..-, ltY 10011. Prilt II-. Printed PttftfA 91$8· Misses ~ ~~:;; :::c: Sfzts •. 10. 12. 14. ·16. 18. WFT cat•toi: CllooJt trom ~~ \!:IC. 34> tallies 3 Jlld$ m de\i~ 3 htt 111Uda. All S. it 50 ,_ _. ..... cttlt~tl Croclllt. Stftd 7S( AM*',__. _.. llW i'~~~:.1~:= :.~ .......... '1' hft Qultb ..... .$l.2S s.ltU 111' '*'° Qwiltl ..... SlJS 11UtA1 MAml CMNltlllt\~ ..... Sl.00 c:.ct11t1...-. ........ Sl.OO F-attern Dept. '442 • flflr Clll* ............ 1.0I Dally Pilot ~-~ ........... SUI& U% .... ltell~""''"'-... I bit W ........ ,$1.2'$ Ill lOOll, Prilit Ulllt AD-•uli• ............ Sl.00 ~DP, m .. $'M( =t.-.c W ....... Sl.OI CNdliJe ...... ·11u0 LOOll ICH, YOUNG SMAAT ~--.. t.• 1.......1 • .... ..... W ... .IO f 1 vw&etl ~ MW soft ...... ~ ......... .$1 ... !~ 'm, =Ne.ti"..~ ~, ...... ~1.M • ._ JAm~· Co\111.0C I alU ... .Sl.GO n.r. Sllld 7~· rte tU ....... 75' r., ..... ~... ... " ~ ...... 154 . ti ...... ~, ........ ,.... ... t.• -.n ....... lSC =c:-w -... ·• " ............. nc ..... ~ "· { 1h tt· HAaDWOOD R.OOAS great Mesa del Mar location, close to all schools and parks. 4 Bdrm, Island kitchen, good family home! New on the market at $81,950, Cal MW 146--4141 C:ARfREE UYIHG -SLASHID. Lire in a bright and c heerful almost new PATIO HOME with bright and cheery colors. No fuss no bother with professional garden er to m aintain you r PARK like grounds. NOW $80,000. C:• 552·6 I 6 I . SNvrng Costa M esa -Irvine Hu n ta nglo n Beach-Newport Beach MIWPORT IACK IA Y Q...Uty Wit. J ... Lyttle home fNhriig 4 ••• 3 IA. ~OUI r'OOIM, wood tae-d ulllltcJI, wet .._. In cte., _,. • .... a. Thft r. • ,.... ... ..,..Ma --- -utra lar9• lot w /coMpf•t• prl•ocj. $145.000 OLD COROMA DB. MAR n 11 w1l mllata1Md 2 ............ gst. -·· It bftncJ told by the Grip.al OW'Mf'. Prich of oWMnltlp ~ cw '" ltl 1002 GeMr_. 1002 $174.500 ...•..•..•.......... ~ ••.......•......•....•.•• UDO ISLE N ewly remodeled 4 bdrm .. de n. 4 baths, livin~ rm. w cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. s uite. llG CAHYON 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broadmoor Plan 3 w 'patio views from each room. 5325,000 IAYFIOHTS Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slips· BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34 I Boy\11.l1• 011v1· N 8 h 75 · 6161 EMERALD IAY Spectac:lllcr mws frOM tW1 Ctwft Abet dtaf..-d w-4/9att l 1R + fCR. room. or ( g ...... You11 fHf ttw w....th & chana of • _.. retreat, W •lor tt.. tfgftt mid MUlld of the ~ ~eicffic sllrf. $450,000 ..-ORTH LAGUMA ESTATE 2 oc..-s w/oc._ •few,~ IR, ••1z IA + l IR 911"1 "-t, pool. S-cor CJClr09f, pri•ah drlu . Hot•l119 tlu Ilk• this ou. s1 .ooo.ooo 644-7020 ----r 2123 SAM JOAQUIM HIUS IOAD w..-.-... t 002 GeMral I 002 NEWPORT IEACH ..............•........ ·········••·•·•·•······ IOATSUP IRAHDHEW oltached to a single stor> l IR·$65,900! rondo. I hat's only 2 yean. I ts true t A brand new Gt.rot I ooi I G .... al '002 old. Y.1th bwlt m k1hhl'n cu:.tvm built home al on· ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,••••••••••••••••••••• & l1rl'plat·e Te nn1' I> $65,900 Cull pnce Ex ~'OUrt.'>, !>Y.1mmmg poob t ellt·nt lcx:allon oo tree JJt:uu1 & '""" pnn: ot hned street. E6tablished SllYJ,500 Y.111 mJkl' th1' neighborhood. 3Spacious one '"'" fj ~t • t' \LL bedrooms + 2 baths 556 2WO F'urruly room. Trailer ac· • SEL ECT <'e.s Call fast 752-1700 ·; Q • t/' ' "'4 I() •IN t • -!-c:::;:;-[ ~ lfililil PHICt: Rt;DUCt;D $5000 \ acant. put 5 <'an. in the gJrage + workshop, ii lklrm. 2 baths + 20x20 dt•n on big tut. m ~ood nc1i:hborhood. Brin~ )Our pamtbru!>h '<!usl ltdl r,1.,1 for only $64.!KIO OCEAHFROMT REDUCED $15,000 Owner anxious. loY. down. make offer. Pnnc oruy. 541l-7219 or 559--4221 CJll SCOTT REALTY IEACH VALUES 536-7533 5 Bdrm Pen.insula Pt ---------I Steps to beach. 1197.500. $48,000 Newer 0( e an vie w d•plex, Dana Pt . $149.500 UHDA ISU LUXURY Beautiful Mediterranean custom ~ome located on the very tip of the island. Fabulous big bay view with 113 ' waterfront. Finest of construction w /hand carved woods. beaut. stone, tile & marble. '4 BR suites + separate maids room, formal DR, fam rm, den, recreation rm, elevator, sauna. pool. jacuzzi & dock for IJ?e boat. $775.000 Lease or Sl.375.000 Fee. Seller will finance. By appointment only. WESLIY M. TAYLOI CO,. REAL.JOAS 2111 S-J~ Hits Road MEWPOIT Canat. N.I. 644-4910 11lls LS not a mispnnt' It IS a auper 2 Br twnhme. w/pool. clubhous e & 1awia. Pnme end unit location w /p vt patio. doc.c to ~hoppmi: ~li:bdl~::1ds. si~7r ~~oa Gl'Mf"al 1002 G1Mral 1002 b h W• I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• pnvate eac ' or d 1---------1---------W1de Brokers 67J..U45 i-754-7100 -..VI IT OI MOT 1---------·1 A dupln for $102,000 first l'R.IVACY 1lus .i bdrm haven is an ex~utive reward • green halls . blue Pacific. a home lo make ll all wontnrbl-. Corona del block ln I.he 3Crs on "" Ji peninsula clOlie to b«h but Uus 111 • real f1Atr Better hurry on th1~ one However we ha\e many more to choose from FAIULOUS Mar al It's bNt ! 1436 s ix bedroom cuatom Keyvlew. Open dally tall Newport Pier Reolty f\omc. Unda Isle. Over &Old $0!49,000. .. A7S17 5000 sri . ft. with paot. &lZClidlmrmnJllO Jacuzil. sauna & s!lp for Ne= llafboa ltfvd. M' yacht Bch.673·2058 0 HACH STC>aE .p IM _______ , WITH ........ G ..-n.~~ ll \t..lt 1 t\ll1 ?'J I) t Lu~' ... , > , '·' "' JUSTUSTB>! 2 Bdrm house + bachelor unit on corner lot Priced lo sell at Sl:ll.SOO IMCOME!!! BALBOA PENIN 5 Vea~ yowig, duplex. 2 up & 3 down; Ot'ean side of blCd Pradf' ol ownership rroperty, good renta history. 1189.000 lncluchng land• 67).31163 642·22SJl::ves. associated 811 0 1< EllS llElll •O RS l Olt, 'Ill !c•b?n ,11 lt •t .:f.d~] •s PRJC•TOSB.I. Storefront on Newport -. lllllliillilK71E -m=I CDM DUPLEX. E ach Blvd-over 2.000 1q ft., Balboa Island Real()' unit remodded with new + 2 adjacent Iota. Bwkf. -------- ~""'"''""""'_.." pai.ol ln/out. Cpta & drps. Ing Is versatile as to 673-1700 built·ID lcl1.~hen . 2 usage.lols maybepaved Bdrms, lrplcs. Owner for parklna. available on HACH WALIC will carry 2nd. No pay-contract of aale. $325.000 Grow Cherries .... , .... Is perfect descnptlon ror merrt for 1st year. Belter this gorgeous 3 bdrm. 31 ~ hurry! 1171Ji00: ba plu!'I sep. quarters 644-7270 01;er garage E\ en bas own private Jacuzzi. 897-00Zl • so LONELY ..wrc>IT SHOUS S&.9ER A beauUJul immaculate 3 Bdr m, 2 ba, double garage, 2 patios .• et.c. Vacant! f year old, 3 400t,.,.,~ tNlAll' Bdrm, 2 bath home near u ""' 5R:,~l/~z;~.1202 C.Mid'JJ!auw iVant Ads Call 642·5678 Burr W hit~ lll.dl~r 1 I 2'JU1 "-•"""Pf•'' b 1,,t1 p,. E:J • 1.1 I ti 1 '> .\f, )(I NO'llV has 8 rrwt trees and room ror mort'. Plus a 2 bdrm. 2 bath htlle house. S111ale car garage and a great East.side lCK'at1on. Priced to sell at $89.200. 400l11". FOR All ~~~~f C.M&El'b w Winding roadway to ADULTS ONLY BeautlCuJly upgTaded l year old town.home ln a country settln1. Brick Clreplace. air condi· tloned. earth tones. An outstanding value at S76,000. CALL 751-3191. soarln1 2 story retreat! Private groundl protect secluded entry lo lavlah living r oom. Gourmet kitchen overlooks sun· shine courtyard! Wlnd· ing atalrway lead11 to sweeping master bdrm plus chlld'a retr eat! HurTY ! Sellt'T la anxloua. M"l-6010 C:: SELECT t>rrNlll9•1rrw"1ro lj/NfCI• T'PROPERTIES GtMral 1002 Ge11ieNI 1002 I• , I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~......... 11:u1111iy . ltr:\H ;p Have something lo sell? 'I 1 1• Claaailied ads do it well. f002 CieMrol I 002 macnab I Irvine 19alty MONACO Too m a ny ameni ties to list ! Immaculate w /new cpts & drps + decorator .,vallpa pers. Lovely· garden w/Jap•nese Pine &c 'Bonsal trees. $248.500. Lynne Valentine 644·6200. CK·l13) UALLY YOU.HEBCI A J bedroom. 2 bath home in Old Corona del Ma,r that has potential for a lot or fun: Mexican tile floors, stain glass windows, a Ben Franklin fireplace in t he l arge master bedroom, a get-away-from-it -all loft for writing and a secluded sun deck for sunning. This isn't your everyday CdM cottage -this has room! Presented at $163,900. U,_.l()UI: t i()MI:§ REALTORS•, 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde. at 546 5990 Tri .... • 2 Bdtm , 1 bath hom.- witb rear units Sound m vestment In Corona del Mar.1175,000 MOllMS RIAL 1'Y •4t .... 057 • COZY 3br, 2ba + guest house. Frpl, 2 patios, R 2 lot. Phn. only. $157,000 Owner, 640-7030 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DECORATORS Will delight in re· furbillblng this pr1 me golf course area. 4 BR, 3 BA .. Asking $125,000 <Xr1 lt1Vited. 675-4:112. HAL ,IMC:HIH REAL'J'bR MARINA HIGHLAMDS New . Complete landscaping, r edwood dedlng & wood Cencing enhances this sparkling ... WHrrEW ATER VIEW -Htw, 4 ..... ,., J'la .,...... s,.a .. ..,.. hOMt, &....., .................. lot wftll J CW . attoclled ....... WWtewahr .... of s- Cltnttttt• coo1tUH ..... .,,... •••el Ma1hr beclrOOIB has =· 9d ·-tvb. °"*" .......... ... ~ d lnln9 f'OOlft. o .. r 2.100 s.--ffft. Close to tdlool1, aJ.appllag. bHdl. md MariAa...$240.000. LAC:L~\ NIGUU. 495 17:.!ll 493-1112 SOUTH LAGUNA 499·45.Sl LAGUNA BEACH 497-Sl31 ~~ .......... !~~I ~~ .......... !~~~ new 2 story home with 3 Cotto Mtso I 024 lr'YiM I 044 bedrooms (2 wlth ocean •••••••••••• •• •• ••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• \l\ew), 3 baths. \'aulted ceilings, rugged !>lone ('U"eplace & formill dmmg room' Only $91,900. Owner moving over Sl'a' Will :.ac th1!> immac cot tage style Jbr home Many eood frature'I $75,750 For imml•d. sale caJI 751·3tl!.2 or IS7J 3430 A RW BUY!! HARBOR VIEW HOMES Sharp 3 bdrm., 2 bath & formal dining rm .. Mon aco, freshly decorated & landscaped. This splendid home is in move-in condition . $139,500 Includes the land (not leasehold) 759-0811 'Fiuf .,__ 6'eol Wuu ... '8Ug. I 002 GeMNI 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MEWPORT HEIGHTS CHARMER Jllghly upgraded beauty wdots of eye appealine wood paneling. Spacious 3 bdrm. 2 ba, fmly home w1modem kitchen for the ladies dehght Pool size yard w i nn for boat or trailer. New on lhe market. 646·7711 HACH REHEAT $57,900VIEW Sle!lll to pounding surf & crystaJ sand 1 Back yard is bay area playground. Wind i ng wo o den walkways lo secluded en try' Gourmet kitchen. Step.down con\er:.al1on 11rea '+(1 r eplace 1 Suns hine breakfast patio. Pool. Jacuz:r:I & volleyball Gan:leo living at lt.s finest. 847 ·60 I 0 ~'fN /UO • rt f ... ,_,., [~tEAltll •!lll!llQuail ~ liiillPlac• . Prop•ti•• 7S2•1920 1600 QUAil S1. HIWl'O•Y llACH Real F&late New Condos, 2 Br, 212 Ba, 2 frplc 's, ceramic tale lotchens & bnlh. Pool & spa. 67~12 Broker -------- YOU'VE FOUND IT! Thal 3 bd, 2 ba lvly home an pnme Mesa Verde l oca tion Look no further. but call fast. lt •s pnced to sell quickly. M>9491 Real Estate CUSTOM IUILT 4 Bdrm. 2 bath. wood Hot Listing Custom Jocm%i' Gorgeous home Pa neled bonus room. 4 bedroom!>, dining room , fJm1ly room with rireplace Deluxe kalchen. Quality built Cornell College P ark home, Sl 19,900 BKR. call 540 1720 TARBELL .. 111 mCahfornaa .. Dana Point 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spcnsh Mansion Unique Dann Point landmark has been con verted lo 3 units Perferl for owne r occupation plus income. Ocean '1ew. impressive facade $215,000 MORIMS REALTY * 494-8057 * BToro 1032 .........••....•....... 10% DOWN Popular I 04 in t he OAllforma Homes. Ideal· ly located 3 bedroom home with lorrnal dining room. Askin& only Sll.1.500. Sellers will re· t'arpet and paint. BEST H UY IN J RVINE TODAY!' Real EAtate COLLEGE PARK BERKELEY AIAHDOMED GIAMT Owner has moved out & as Cor-red to sell ' ! G 1ant ln•lne 2 story home Spacious livmf room. bnck fireplace Fam1l) room. Bnght cheerful kitchen 4 King sin bdnm Xlnl loutaon All thb for JWit $105,000 Call today 646-7171 ONE ILOCI floors. new walt'r healer. To •E•CH water softner. ropper HoC~HHded Huge 4 BR. 2 story. cor ner lot 2 wet bars. only 6 mo·s old No clos111e cos· ts. Owner w/u .rry con- tract See to appreciate. This large .f bedroom home IS priced al only Sl 12.~ and 1s in one of I rv111e s rmesl de\'elop menlS. It is professional- 1 y I andscaped w1lb wrought iron front rourtyard and central a.ir. Close lo park. pools and~hools. 't•c fl\.9• t '• ''°"" "•'' • [~IRMI •VETS• lMQDoww ZeroCosh Homes in all areas, Bil siz.es. call: Vderan Housing A«t. 541.0100 $69,900 YA or FHA Seller must move a has ~ plumbing Beautiful pool From this dJ'llRhtful with heater & falter. beach retttat dt'corated Many xtras $87.500. w creativity to provide a Roy McC:ard~ homey, ~oodsy feeling J 111 O Mtwporl ltvd. THE HOME STOR( 964-2455 bd. 2 ba w /open beam Costo ..,. __ 5 ... 7729 ceilings & extenuve use i---·----.--· __ 1 ot nurron & panehnR Two bl.Cl patio Jreas. Short walk lo tennts cowt & public park Ju:.t Its led. 646. 7711 SB.LBS.MOVED 4 Bdnna, lots of xtras. M~a Verde home near 11lopping, lransporta· tlon. Xlnt loca tion . Terms to suit your bud«el $8.S.000 546·ZJ13 (ol'fl; 711 ~ • ti \ ll>N I<) ~I ,., t • l~lfiPMI abr. IJe rn~ yd, close to ahopp~. etc. ~.500. AJI terms. JV 631·0900 HwwlfwwJOR leach I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S&S Resale Spec1ahsl:. 3.4 or 5 bdrm model~ ~atJ, soon Properties Lill• C:hidltw Soup ... It couldn 'l hurt to call Chuck Nash about a re· warding career In real estate. Free trammg 1f you qualify. 640·5101. RAHCH REAL rt 551·2000 wooo•tDGE 2 PRESC01TS Largest Woodbridge homes. 2600sq.ft. +3 car gar. 5 or 4 br +den. 3 Ba, atrium, air cond., fully lndsc, highly upgr. Mex- ican Pavers tile. Lge lot. 1---------1 Nr Park & lake. $186,000 --------IEAllTIRILCOHDO & S198.000. Lse 11126/mo. MesadelMar.byowner.4 1 story, 2 bdrm, 2 bath Bkr/Ownr 552·4121. or BR. Pool, xlnl cond. Located in plus!\ adult wkdays8JS.3S3S Owner will carry 2nd. community with 24 hour 193,000. 947 Presidio Dr secunty Only 3 years Deerfield. Aspen; 3 BR. Call anytlme979·22Sl old. Many amen1l1es 2·~ ba ·gas BBQ. end of S66 ooo cul de sac. Open Sal, E /Slde Custom home. I'· · Sun. 12·5. By owner. 2000Sq . rt. . 3 Br. h ui: e f, 596,500 552-~ fam. rm .• 3 car gar .• on 962·4471 r.:: 548·8103 WOODBRIDGE PLACE R·21ot.J\it646-7l7t Special offering. 3-5 •EASTSIDE• 1---------1 bdrm. Contemporary de- ::a~~:.1~~~~ ..... , ..... a 1007 3 Br STEAL! Call us ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • 754-7100 Penlm1tla Polnl Cixer. By owner. 3 brm. 13• ba OCIAMFaOMT mas Pnnc. only ----rusr LISTED' Cute 2 BR cottage + ti.chelor apt, st.eps Crom the t>Jy $130,000. COAST PROPERTIES, 673·5410 3 BR, 2 ba., Crplc. Super DIVORCE I.ached family homes 10 clean! Nexttopark. Be!>t FORCES s•LE open. wood~y design . buy in area, $72,500' ~ Just short walk to lake & STUART FIHE Super Meredith Gardens parks in Village of Wood· RE••JAA, 611•5454 home. 4 Bdrms, family. ~c"!d4g1e01. From $115,000. .,_... ~ Cormal dining, large ....., MESA VERDE 15x36 swimming pool. Hurry & see thlS great IUILDER"S OUt of stale owner must family ho m e at only sell 3 BR. 2 ba.; on cul de $141,500CallS40.lL51 CLOSEOUT sac. SBS.000 IH IRVIHE Channing 2 BR. home, 2 c:.,hlr..o leodt I 018 A. Jotmson Bkr 979·4964 Only 2 patio homes left. car garage. Best swim· ••••••••••••••••••••••• One 2 Br+den. & one 38r ming & fishing area, OCEAN VIEW --------plan, both w/2 baths, gr ea t n e I g h b o r • ! SCARCE I I ( · t-.. · $275,ooo! Quality con1t ructed rp c, re n gera ""' atr • .....__._.._op. duplex .w/lara.e 3 BR, 2 M conditionin~. mirrored --r rT 8 N 4 BDR +POOL wardrobe doors, 2 car IHllon vi~w~n~~P.r1c:n1~ct:~ COLLEGE PARK MEWFHAPROGltAM garw/autoopener ... plus * 675-7060 * bum celllnp. Located UNDER 5% down, only Cull recreation facilities ~~~~~~~~~I In serene settin g lo $89,900. ~!°::av~io'::h~~ce~·r:'~ incld'& 8 lighted tennis BOUGHT ANOTHER C.plslrano Beach Ask· 540.9922 from ~7•000 to $74,500 courts, 2 pools and a pair In& l159,500. ~ with FHA terms. Call for of JacUUIS. All lbis and 3 BrA FR, on huge cul de aac lot. 2250 sq.Ct. & abarper than a double edged raior ! All. 497.3009 Irvine too! On Irvine AMCHOU(Jl ~ossedateS delalls531·5800open eves Center Dr. <Moulton IHYISTMINTS .._ W1 lE Hetworll Prttway> Ju.st east of Jef. ~~~~~~~~~~I Crey. t714t 496-171 I 4 BR, 2 ba, a.oo sq ft. 10 S71.995toS76.995 d Call5SH263days I 002 GtMrel I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• L'AICI & GOLP COUISI VIEW Come see this Rancho San Joaquin townhouse with f antaitl~ view and location. i bedrooma & den. witb upgrs.des Uiroupout, truly a value ei J.119,600 -Fee. EAST SIDE wn pymnt, xlot area. or SSl-134.1 eves. 831·9952 Realtor . Charmer! 2 Bdrm, 2 bath! No common walls ! Fresh Paint! Modern kttcheal Double garace! All Coc only '68.5001 RED CARPET754·1.202 1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOAT DOCK AT YOUR DOOR 38R, 2BA. Crpl, 1800 sq. fl. 2 Sundecks $187,500 Agent, (213) 439-2115 or 4.'IJ.3678. Trade YOW' old stuff Cor JUST USTID ~• odles with a d .u .. ..-8 Harbour Lane 3 Br. 2~ ----•-·...;..._. __ ._ .... __ •_1 ba end unll w/24' boat WOOD•IDGE Broadmoor home7 4 BR .• lam. rm., atrium. pool, apa, decking. lndscl)Ct .. reoced. "The wor ks". Reduced to $12$,000 AGENT 640-5560 GltllHTRH By owner, 2 bnn + fam, 2 dooc'i rrom park " pool. many extras. STt.900. Dya 8U·840S, eves S:Sl.s231 ---------i attp. Super abarpt DO YOU $W.000Call now. RANCHOSAN JOAQUIN Otn:R A SERVICE? PUllC:BJ. aUL ty 2 BR. 2 ba, air COftd, den, L«tbeoubUc tnow .-IU. (114)848-2821 wet bar, fully rurn'd. • ad lD the Dally P llot Former model. Prime s.Nt~ DlreclOr1. lt can '"9e t OtH eott ~ne locaUoo over· eolt yvu M UUJe u fl.IS ••••••••••••••••••••••• lookJ.na lake. Principles ,.. ell)'. Pw more In-DE!!Rnn;o 2 BR a~ only, ~~·500· '1S:·Wl, fwmaU. and eorqplel• ba tWMbte. P'li>lc: dbl after$, TSZ.0761 ...... calleo.at7t. 1.ar, \let')' r\I~. S7UOO(or SELL Idle ltemt wiUl a ql.ick NII• 1'115-Wl Ditty PUat ciaastl1ed Ad. t • t .. t! ti ... .... . . .............._ ....... -. -,........._ . MoWlt ...... .,..... ,_s. ······················· ...................... . ............... H~,_S. Ho.Mt fors.M ttl.,.tlftdi 10'9 r.tca...ille 107' For S. 1100 w.dndday, Febfuart 22 19711 * DAIL V PILOT &!S ········~·· •••••••••••• Loh lor Sde 2200 ........ UnfurWIMd Ho..n u~ ....... . ~······ •...................... ······················· .............................. , .•....•........ ... -............. !044 .............. 1048 ~~ 1052 Slt.500 fn N 8 .. ~kyl1ne. !IOOtq Ct,•••••••••-•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.11~'«>k·:~~~~1: TUD•torutfm CGplstr'CllM•odl 1iae eo.e.Mese lU4 . . ................................................ . OUCH! 1 R "'SE/"""IO.... La11.n1 oo00d -pick up Add on. « build new 2 Bdrm home on duplex lot. So. San t:lemento. rora. S'll.llOO. M to 41p-Locak.'d near waler at ••••••••••••••••"••••• ••••••••••••••••••••-• REDll:m DWTICALLY!! UOWl.OOM . on U.. hro prime R 2 Iota \D th beatt ol 011n1 PO&J1t; ripe for develop roent I AsklllJ $&MOO ~ YY-• " $10.006 dwn NEW ~14le.P.P.~024'1 Uununcton Beach a.Q Sq. rt. 2\1 bath. 3 ~J.Jaftyt.lme. Agt. bdrm. ~•anvtew, new $1'15. Nice 2 br 2 b~ Avail 6'.tper •bUc>. w .. t Nine Newport V\I • BR llom•. condo; l'nd unit; w /polio 6'5-0758 ngbl Oil lbe 10U COUl'lie. __ ......;. ___ _,.£.. __ 11141 .... tt@e"l. ~for w. I 200 -~ dfl)I, ~. mo now. 557--0IGS, ~1720. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t 1' ... OfMri. ---_M_•_l'Y.;;._• ------- $ 1500 per Acre ltelort 2400 3br, 3be ln duplex. Ot-nn 0.. PoMt l2Z6 Wasbt'r, dryer, refrig in· Of'll4 SAT/SUM fZ.5 eluded. Tenn11 & health U:Z39thST. 67$-4160 .altot. nus fabulous DHrf1eld m" Plan 5 Part ttome ;Si, LL~~IPtn features ovl'r 2500 sq ft. ~~~ o( gniclou.s lJVing With 4 4911·2800 club fac111tiea avail. Duplex, by owner. ~ Marvelous opport to hie doors to sand. fully C\ltD. now for S400tmo. & buy _s:i_sa. .... ooo_._67_3-...;.0.;.;LSS..;;,._ __ wtlhin I yr 493 6033 •il· FIRMANDO'S llACH DOLL HOUSt Walle to Riviera Beach. On natural canyon with ocean view. 3 BR, 2 BA with extra lh lot. Never again at only SlZS.000. :.io acres. Seven miles ••••••••••••••••••••••• v,.1ew1• double garage, .:,:::~:·::.:.::••••••••••• ·• from Redlonds Will Colorado RiVtr, Noodles 1rep ace. near school. •uvwi '-"\A'""· 3 br Z ba. trade for other property Calir. PP. has quality bit. $350. 496-8268, I ~·5101 frpl, utll. rm. ear, pool uu.·ludma Hawaii 3 Br 1 Va Ba, 12x65 mobile 54U. 498-145.J Creative lnvt'lltmenls home· 12x_55 .~ov 'd c:or.o .. Mar 3222 Ocean vlew·bome. 3br tri· Call 644·9513 c~ & patio, 4 walls. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• level, beamed ceilings. ------- -6 irtsulation. W/D, cent. 2 BR, 2 bB. bayfronl $1625. 768-1.222 HIDIAWAY 3 Br, lbath house on luge bedrooms. com __ .;.;;.....;;..;;;; _____ 1 J>lctely upfraded and un I IOd.,... VIEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1055 bellevab y priced at Ott.Una sunsets, & city $121,500. SELi.ER IS U&hts by night. 3 brm 2~ ANXIOUS!! SUBMIT b a . B y ow n r . YOUR OFFER NOW! $134,500/otr. 499·4685 LAKE FOREST quiet Peninawa st. ut tlmeon mullet In 17 yn. SPECIALISTS A&t. 00.3339 BERTHA HENRY REALTORS Commtrclal air, atorage, pvt bch, home· h r •-u boat dock min t · 8 are~ie "'1 p. Fom•V.._ 3~3 .. Propetiy I 600 i ' · . 0 Side & front patlo dbl. -1 • -. ·~··••••••••••••••••••• cas nos, also selling gar.$800Mo. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ev~ns. TOO HOT TO HOLD Over 300 homes availa. READYTOMOVEIN ble in Lake Forest for Blulfa, profeuiop.ally sale, leai.e option or European decorating. le&M!. Cull TODAY for StUMlne 3 br, z ba, Cami· That's the story or this &11lSelect1on Jy rm, w/many extras + 21.S Del Mar 492 41:?1 SURFSIDE UVIMG SAN ClEMIEHTE 5 ox l 5 o homes l t e . Agent 673-~364 132$ Room To Grow! Tr a n s re r r e d , ---2BR + 2CarGarage M9dlcallld9 w/sacr1fice. J . Ciaco, 2Br1Ba,fplc,w/yard,no SponishDecoi-(8398P> Sale-LeaseTr•de 714-326-3793 pets. S37 S mo. Coll 7 Rm Dental Suites ,..,, .. of C ~aft 6P M $450 Gourmet Kitchen! 8 Rm MedJcaJ 5ultes -...ty 3 Bdrm + Central A/C slnking contemPorary caaa Pacifica Rlly view. Beal Buy at home of TRl-LEVEL CllU771Ml882 .,65000 The ultimate In Surfside living. Pano.-anuc view from this 2 bedroom, 3 bath COJldo in secunty gated complex. SlSS,000 U.5 Avenue Serra Prap1rty 2550 Lrl 3br, 3ba w/bltns, frplc Stone Ftpk! (99T1P) Jfl'f W Yeah Co. ••••••••••••••••••••~·· & patio. SS85. C.11 Steve Rli:NTIMES 898-0771 RANCH REALTY 551-2000 DESIGN, w detailed ----.. ' ' architecture of slUl'Co MiuioftViefo 1067 PropertyHowse642-3850 4t l-0660 4"·2237 &M~lO,S40-tm ••f's* .. _.. <»240 Partc flloce..Oc•ahslde I _,o. -~ :i n d W E AT H E R E O •••••••••••• •••• • • ••••• ___ or_ss:i_._44_1...;,4 __ _ 2&3BEDROOM 2BR.2ba &2 BR. l ba. Nr ••••••••••••••••••••••• VA-FHA beach & r edecorated. LOVELY 3 BR. 2 Ba A JEFFERSON!! CEDARSHAKl-:S. $67,900!! JUSTRIDECOR.ATED C3 ColdweU Bon~er Cond0tnlni~OWft· GARDENTOWNHO!lfE. $450 & 1375. No pets w/frpl. OW, crpt, kid/pel ~ In beautiful WOOi> BRIDGE ESTATES in this ideally located to-.11home that 1s totally uµgraded and pro fei.stonally landscaped Pnce JUSl REDUCED lo $.109,500 f!j WOODIRIDGE REALTY 551-3000 PRESTIGE AT MODERN PRICE Co1y 3 BDRM floor plan sen 1cetl by I' 2 baths, reature s l1v rm . wt EXPOSED WOOD CEILING & MASSIVE SUPPORT TIMBERS Sl1dmg glass door opens lo ~undc.>ck w /outs land· mg \1EW OF CANYONS & OCEAN BELOW. 10'0 Down 3Br. "F1ag"' Lot. Owner 586-8~2 41R + Open Sun I 5, 24662 San Vmcentt' $145,000 Big 2700 sq rt S•m V JIJrde Model RIC)ht RHtty 979-8533 S l cps a v er k 1 t ch en Must sell Madnd 640. 4br. w 1 breakra~t counter 2t00sqft.beout. loca. lgr features extensive use of lot, cuJ-de·5Bl'. $129,000. ceramic tile, buill·•n Calleves837.,..31S range & oven. dis· Hewportleach--l-0'9 hwas her. disposal & ••••••••••••••••••••••• cabinets galorr , NWPT HEIGHTS (refrigerator & washer1df)er mtluded ) CLASSIC You must see lh1s one lo·' Just hi.led J Bdrm. 2 day orfc.>red for only 1 bath. 2 rrplc 's, rormu I SI 17,500 Fall Price dining room. double dl• It's just "TOO HOT TO lached ~aru~e Cornl•r llOLD" lot. Boat acCCbS posi.1ble &!per nm! 3 BR Chan MISSION REALTY +many more amenities celor m Uni\erally Par!. 98SS. Cst Hwy. LagunJ 54&2313 area It has all the 'lra& Phofte 494-073 I ''"'f'•' 9 • •' ' ., " • '· '· youm1ghtexpect&then [~ -~ l>Ome. lncludrn~ central By owner. 2 BR, 2 ba, ' AIC w ;i1r punrter. Abk frplc. walk to bch & · ' mg$109.000. town. R2. room for add1· ~-========~~-VALLEY 640-9900 tional unit. $139.500 HA.RIOR VIEW'S ~ -'~·767sa~6_&\\knds _ IESTIUY 0 0a\ E~ Thre..! Arch Bay, 3 Br 2 Shows like a model th1i. .......__ Ba. sphl 2 level humc. ttO Monal·o w /low main Outstanding! Executive home to enter tam to your ht'art's con lent• 4 Bdrms . 3 1>a., formal dining & 11\ mi: roollll>. LARGE f3m rm Prof. <l<'roru ll•d & landsc·apcd. t>Lt'S a 6 x8' SPA. Jo:verylhing has already been done. 11 ·s like mo\ln~ into a new home 1n an cslablti.hcd area• IT'SCAUB> LIVIHG!!! lovely li ving room. tenance yrd. Could be 2 kitchen, dining, iirc3 ~3bd.rm-fmly rm.frml w/n1ce ocean views. din rm. 2 baths. vaultt'd Lndly rm, l~c closet:.. c·eihngs -Btn N.B. home about IU yrs old. By '759-1501 owner S279,500 499.3933 1-:-tl'P'l•,.•'!W•• Great View! Thi~ totally rc.>furb1~hed ---- Spa msh charm home 4-Plex. IOOll . from oc~an: awaits your nccupanc) 1248,000 W !land! f:nJOY catahn<i i.unsels & Marshall Rllr. 67S-4600 nty 11,,;hl" by night Now W volvS16-l.SOO . Oceanfront 4 BR Ko/an R'"'' E ''·'''! l11t 900 (;,,.,,,,,. /'f' 5,,,.,., 494 4473 549 0316 · beach house. $335.000 Marshall Rily 67$-4600 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Located m NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL DU>'TRJCT. on huge comer lot with al· Loi:pMO Hils I 050 ll'y arcei.~ & room for ••••• ••••• •••••••••• •• • your boat, thtS '' one of ~ I Newport ·s lowest FEE GoldettY LAND homes• ears Handsomely remodeled 3 Bdr'.'1 · 2 _bath. hilltop with gracerut entry, roclc SUJle m Le1~ure World fireplace. beam CtJ1lin.:'' Drand new wtlh rant.asl1c p R It: E SL AS 11 1-; O view o.r the valley at $l0,000-NOW ON Ly mountains. 185.900. $105 000 HORINS REAL TY ' . _* 494--8057 * •Q• ·=~ i ~~!~ .... !~~.~ Propm!fo•~ 3 BR condo In the Bluffs. housff *°" 1 700 2 car garages. 7141!)2CJ.57ss OK. S40S. 963-4S67 Agent. Plenty ot square footage 3 Monarch Bay Plaza ••••••••••••••••••••••• fy" 1-757-1623 No fee. w/porquel oak noors, Laguna Niguel Condo' JI u n t 1 n gt on I~~~~~~~~~ MOVE 1M-2br --. -2b-a-.-g-a-r,-~-au-.-to-b_c_h custom camel carpeLtng, 496-7222 131..0136 Riviera, 2 BR, H• ba, by 1- IL'led bnck frplc, many ~~~~~~~~~ OWN' 84fHl163 CUSTOM today. 2 Bdrm. home • _ neat as can be. Thick more unique ideas that o..luH/ COMSTIUCTIOM pt h ..,. 3br r make this home an out· (Wts Sale I.I.'> carpet.s, encJos.,., , am rm. Ire maslcr s land i· n n v a I u e at SCll9fa AMI I 010 1100 4-ftl.EX yard, ! car aara&e. Only bdrm. pool, $475 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious 2 bdrm, 2 bath, $4.SOa montll. $139,900. Be CAPTIVATED by this Tl"lplex, Marguenle Ave, fireplace, bltns & dis· 67J.,..400 VA.LLEY 640.9900 $6400 price reduction. Cd\I So. or Hw y. By hwasher. 2 Car garagt!s 4br. poot, o,, mi to ocean. $ll'lS ~ Comtemporarily de· owner.213/373-3583 for each unit. Prestige HARBOR ~ P\Q9!... cor'd, central air, S. Cst ----------r community. Low vacan· "'R¢Q\ Es~ Plua area. S11crifice at hlcOllit Prop.rty 2000 cy area. Low price or 714-646-~. Bob Grar ~ $79,500. Hurry & call: ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1..20,000. Good renu. Call VERN JOHNSON RLTR Nll!MnaORT Geo. Frey, 542·3456 SUPER 4 Bdrm, 2 ba w/lrplc, crpl, fed yrd.' $425. 963-4567 Aeent, no lee. RAMIUNG 540-4646 H .. E..,.l~,..HTS BENHl.NKLER.E.lNC. /\ Oiv1siono• EXECUTIVE w °t-~ ~~ll~11~rb~o~r ~ln~ve~s~tm~e~.n~t~Co~-~I URGENTL y VJ" ..,.._ Sharp 3 Bdrm, z ba, DW. ESTATE DUPLEX ~ty 2600 cr pu,. red yrd. 139~. A homey dwelling of FORCH> Extra sharp 2 BR unit,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cozy Poppy St., Z Br 1 Ba, 963-4567 Agent-No fee charm & beauty. large TO SELL both w /prvt patio:,. Idaho. Beaut 20 ac farm, W/fplc. &rdn paUo. Yrly cozy· :t bdrm 2 ba wuidows let in Oooda of Spacious 4 BR. home de· Owner will help finance 2Dmin from Sun Valley. 3 S47567S.~aft4~ w/cpt, f"d yrd,' 1.·1ds & 0 For i. a I e or t rad e BR l b b B '" "' daylight. quaint & lovely signed for toJormal en $1l9.SOO. • a ome. arn, pets ok. $385. 963'·4567 used bn ck Crplc. A terta.utlng, around a cozy CALL 640.S I I 2 bunkhouse. loaHng shed, Costa Meso 3224 Agent, No fee. retreat from the hub.bub brick frplc. abuodant ete.$92.S00.7141645-8121, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Move in today! Cute 3 Br. or the city. Owner will kitchen shelves w/ ex-208 788·2832 or write helpfmance.Seellnow. quisite hand rubbed R .F .O. 1. Box 90, AT LAS"""-l~Ba w/cpt.s, rocd yd. 540-3666. cabinets. Wears a budget Bellvue, Idaho 83313 price tag. VA terms RedEstm r 1Ud5 & pet.s fine. $395 963-4567 Agt·no fee. E..'J avail. can now. wa...~ Wanted 2900 lfftftait/jil 540-3666 2 DUPLEXES LEFT ..................... .. A Rental Senice Y•C•FHI 1 Bed.room condominium, At~ Wittl pool, tennis super loca· -·---·-Near SC Plaza Bier OWN Property in uon. ~-Ca.11646-4477. WE GUARANTEE 3 Br condo. l lh Ba. D/W, •Widestselectaonposs. lndry fac1I. Slater & •In hc:>ube comput.er sys . Whelan ~7 9710 Inglewood, Hawthorne WALK ~lAl U TAH \'AtF'HA SUBMIT 3 BR. l''l ba, frplc. patio & BBQ. Corner lot . $61,000. Agt, 493·6211 •2TriplnH• Near Lake Park Min lo bc:h 1-4 BR, J ba; 1.3 BR. 212 ba; I 3 BR, 2 ba S garages. frplcs $1KS.OOO ~arh 1709 l713 Alabam.1 . to Weslcllff Plaza from Uus elegant townhome. Proven 2 story floor plan, with 3 car garage & pnvate patio. Call day or rught 645· 722.l BRADFORDPLACt; Hunt. Bch. 536·171 11 Hard·Lo-flnd 2 UR condo Owner_._ tn unit. great toe. SSS.900 7 UMITS C.M Agt. 49J-621l Beautiful brand n~w 4 l hr. Joi\, ( p 3 2 br.11; ba T IOtO lownhoui.e, all bllns. •~••••••••• ••••••• • <'rpls, dfllb Hurry. buy now · lst user deprec. LEMON HEJGHTS Tom Ltt. Rltr. '4.2· 1603. $ZBODOWM FOR YOUR JOOK DREAM HOME!!! A large wooded ii---------· EQUESTRIAN ZONED lot in prestigious area Hu 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, brick lerrace. gas BBQ otr elant rear deck & 2 fireplaces, one in dm· ing area ol floor lo ce1I· lng Pioneer ru.sue bnck. &di-.ln4-Plex Large 3 br owner's unit. Anaheim Pvt cul-de-sac SL Large, spac. units. Must see to apprec Pnced lo sell fa.st• Call Broker now' SS8 3327. Executive 4 Br. plush formal dine rm, 3 Ba. 3 frpl. hi.Ille fam-rm w /fan· wtlc view of Npt. Bay 631-4.560 AllJ.. ror dining br f1reheht' i-i---------HARBORVJEW·CL~S! PRlCED Rt:ot.:CED To,_ ______ _ $173,900 only. for th11 3 Br $~.900 2 Ba, Fam Rm. Om Rm, loft. Interior decor"d. IP. .Quall ~ prof lndscpd, compl Iii Plalc9 prlvacr. & secluded Prwc t ... bnelc cust Jacunl olf -r;;;.1920 mslr bdrm, law~ patio .,.. CIU&ll u. NtW9'0ltl auo. 211G Nearly new. the best & ruCftt 4 Pll'Xel In Hunt ui~oo Buch Asktng on· I> $225,000 ea eh scon I.EAL TY 536-7533 eovtt. +much more tn·i---------• rid. presUcioul Newport SICL ~~~~~~~~~ lkh location. For pre· UDID TriDlex E. SI• l"~to MHa view eall: Properly ESTATE House, Patrick Tenore. '12 Ac Ho. T•tt. i\ll.s.52-4414 Prime area. Foothllls or So. Bay area? WlU. PAY CASH!! Ph. Tom O'Allessandro T.D. PROPSlTIES (213)674-6007 or (714) 546·6201 anytime or (714 )1)46..5221 all. 6pm Want to buy 3 BR home on Udo rrom owner 673-1202 2 J BR. 2 ba, forced air. heat., rrplc. No fixer Ui;>- ptr. •Daily telephone service Newland. 897-0586 •Vacanc1ei. venrie<ldn1ly SHARP 3 Br 2 Ba w/(ple •f\111 staff of cow1ielors D/W, Cncd yard. s.t25'. •Free to aged 65 & over 963-4567 agt. No (ee. •Free renter counseling o()pen7days8;00..8:00 POOL HOME 3 Br 2 Ba, RENTIMES D/W, epts, neat area. $435. 963-4567 agt. no fee. f'orProfeaslonalService 2 Sty, 3 Br, 3 Ba, Radar Call 898-0771 OR STOP BY ra.nge, crpl, df"Plil, 2 car gar. $550. mo. Call 5J6.~. 646-3301 8401 Wfftmluhf' 3 Br 2 Ba, fncd yard, 2 car WANTED TO RENT (2blocksE.ofBeach) gar,bltns,pat.io,$400per w/option to buy 2 or 3Br /\ CaUf. Corp. Sm Fee mo. lr19-8761 home tn Santa Alla Hgts. Best MESA VERDE area. ~. 2 BR, l~ ba, frpk~ s.&.S-051& Oeiuxe 4Br, 2ba, rain rm. nr s hop' g, $350 mo bltns, frplc, new paint & 116.>12't2 ete..tds carpt"l, gardener $545.1---------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 545-3604 Xlnt loc1t, 4br, 2ba, fam Hamff Furnished rm. bltns, lrplc. patio. •••••••••••••••••••• ••• NFrew0!, b!~ coo00. ~~:~~b·rs!?~e· gardener. oo pets. $4.SO G ... ,. '""".. ,.,, mo. 898-2028 eva or a..,.d 3102 $-lOO Kids & pets ok. 493-9431 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-4912 Bkr. 1---------- S2SO You Ask For JU L'llDIAN WELLS. 3 Br, 2 ba, hm. on beaut park BEAUT. exec 4 Br 2 Ba. wtpool. Wk S3SO, Mo $800. w/fam rm, (pie, D/W, Olli 559-6163 or 345-3203. super duper area. $495. L01J111N1 leoch 3 148 963-4.567 agt. No fee. ....................... -1 BR. Pets Welcome WalkToBeach! (597JP>. $350 Prime Location 3 DR + double Garage F'Tull Trees! (SJ96P} RENTIM ES 898-0771 Emerald Bay, walk to beacb. 3 BR. & den. 'til April. $750 Mo. nJRNER ASSOC. 494-1177 @9-4591 BRAHD NEW HOME 3 Br 2 Ba, $4SO mo. We have • cute 2 Br. 1 675-2311 days. Ageat, oo bath home. with a large fee. patio-pool-RV storage. ~~~~~~~~~ S395/mo. Pool serv incl. Blue Lagoon. yr lse. -751·595.9· 1\nd lhe h\m' •~ ea:.y in this special Fordham Model with upgrade" throughout Carpet <o, drapl'~. "allpapcrs, ceramic tile entry Solanurn kitchen floor, lum.tnous cc1hng, lar.l(e lot. ~reenbell . Many other nice amenities. ll can be yours for SIO!l.SOO "00 OOAll St. Hl~ltt tlAC'HI•---------5chool dlslrkt. Custom 4 spacious bdrlJlS, huge 27' livme room. banquet alze dining room. separ ate UOO sq. n. recreation building. giant healed pool. Very unique. $219.000. Immediate passesslon. Call Barbara ~1-4682 2 br owners un1l w / fenced yard Two, 2 br un· 11..S w/pa!Jol.. $159.000Call 6"2·2811or673·3584 Pool/tennis. 3Br. 3ba 4 brm 3 ba. Mesa Verde, . • condo. 499-2986 & 495-4486 ram rm, din rm, 2 car NlCE N' NEW wttb a park red h ill ~ .. .'. 552-7500 CAMALF«OMT Like new townhome w /3 Huge 4 BR .. 2"'1 baths + BR. 212 BA, formal din· rumpus rm. + 6om. rm. ing & wet bar. 2 patios, w1pool table. Steps to private area. $127,500. ocean! SJ55.900 l.ogMna HicJuel RHtty CAYWOOD REALTY 49§..5220 496-24 13 INC. 548·1290 180° OCEANVIEW 493-?494 130.-5050 HARIOR VIEW JUST LISTED ---I Sitting pretty on one or Charrrung new 3 Bedrm + the largest loU 10 this den, 2 bath. fa m -rm. presl1ji!iou~ areas. this A/C, Jo~rench dr!I, pvt IC1\'ely home with Corm.al Fantastic End Unit in front courtyard, Sl23,900 duung room. fireplace, & '"The Terrace"• Call Owner 831-7098 fenced yard is PRICD> now! RED CARPET TO SELL NOW al 754-1202 . Woods Cove 5134.950. By appomtmeot ---------•I Cathedral elgs. in llv1nli! only please. JUST USTED nn.. with French doors I M 1auail ~ OPEN THURS. 1-4 opening to lush ~ool. • Place 14 BETHANY Jacuzzi area. This 3 Pr .rll Verv desirable 3 bdrm., ,bdrm., 2 b~; view. hol n:ie Dp7S2•t9-20 (mil., Pl 1· bl eatures mex. tie in i.ooou.t11lStHIW..ofllHACH a ynn., an in es mstr. suite & much area of Turtlerock. more! $239 000 (ll6) ---57-9-9-0-0--- Dellgbtlul terraced yard, · · • LOWEST PllCE INILUFF 11 12,000 Coodo, "D" plan. 3br. l~ba beautllul rond. Many extras. Close 1.0 sboppinc " pool. Ca II collect, 203/855·7029. Pnn.only. or&I SAT 11·5 18912Stlver Maple Way onMTHUIS 10.2 ITake E. 17th to Hughes, 1601 IUTH LAHE north on Hughes lo Silver Beautiful famlly home In Maple) 832-0020 pre.tlgious Westchfl; 3 FOR.EST E. OLSON, lge. bdrms., spacious INC. deo. frplc. in Uv. rm. & w........... I 091 t1~ ... :,i'°~· 3"'1 BaThlhs" Hu1 ce ••••••••••••••••••••••• a .. ,...., nn. ere a ots more to say, but you'll be 3br Condo. 2~ba, fl'J)lc. &lad ll you come see it for dbl clad ga~. Shows ll~e a )'OW"lelll $170.000 model. Bnght open int. MEWPORT HACH Sell by owner. $78.900. Rlil.TY '7S.1642 r----7722------ °"'9-R ... Ealah ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED: SO to 100 units, Orange Co. Brks or Prins. PaUma Rlty tnc. 5J6.930S 4PUX-IEACH SllS,000 Xtra sharp Covington 4 plex Pn me H B. loca I.Jon. lmmacuJote' 1'eed fast sale. St85,000. 752-1700 or 752.1705 CJ' "'" q . "~ llJll 10111,.,. • ['11111 DUPLEX. fully rented, 2S' swtmrntna pool, 12 man Jacuzzi & sauna, 3,000 sq.fl. warehouse. Ideal for selL employed craftsman. $160,000. Rucker Really 642-4758, 2 BR' I b" on the sand, _,g:....a_r_. S7_00_._SS_7_-M_7_$ ___ view~ Duplex, 2 BR. 2 -. -BA. bm/wht, l child ok. $450 mo, util incl. Thru Frwy & schls. nrby. June. 640-1860 3 BDRM 2 BATH tplc, $375/mo. 962-7787 or Newport ltach 3169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rftl'tabGalon $135. 1 Br nice home $150 ruce I Br share C-Onaumers Gwde, fee. 645-4900 s. c:Meltnte .. 317 6 garage, no pet.a. $42S. 5J6.0907. Avail Apr. 15, 548-4l.35, --------- Evs &S2·083S; 646-6423 3 Br home. heavy shake --roof on I ge comer lot.. IROOICYIEW !rpl in llv rm, bnte 3 BR. 2•; ba. condo. cheerful kitchen, fn!sh Brand new! Nr. So. paintthrouahout. $450. Coa s l PI a z a . Pool. _mo_._848_-3440 _____ _ jacun1. tenms: comes with wshr., dayer, Ukenew2Bdrm,dblgar, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... c: b''--t '--h ·~ refne.. auto. gar. door .. """' ~ "" • no pe..,, opener. $475 Per mo. A.... S36S. Avail now. 964·2283 PANORAMIC VIEW ...... Delux 2 BR. den, 2i;, ba 640-SSOO 3 br, ram rm, l\.!t ba, w /w rondo. Elevator lo beach Eastslde new condo, 3 br 2 fl"Pl• cov. ~tio. drps, · or Just watch I.he surf. ba, 2 car 1ar w/auto rnl'dyrd.S400.&t2-3620 Pool. Spa, sauna. opener, f!"J>I. dtshwasher, llMf'r'oa poolroom. security encl. patio. $375 mo. Dys H :;::" 3242 park'g, $1050 per mo. ~-9387, wknds le eves. ~a .. Agt, 714/498-0500, 644-0522 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645·3'185 H U N T I N G T 0 N inner atrium with JI!./--NEWPORT waterfall. Close to pools .~J.CJ'UU i II! "'CH &lA!nnls.$112,SOOFee. 1. 11 10A HUGE HOME ll00 1_C_M_.~~~~~~ ----------• Nr Bk Bay, split level con· HARBOUR brand new So.Ith LCICJIMa 3186 do, 3 BR, 2 ba. 3·car gar, end UlOI')', 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool, no pets $450. allblAlt-in,jac,pool,etc. 2 BR. l 'h ba, frplc, fan· 548 7933 Privacy. $$50. 846-4408 tastic view. children, S280RareFind2BR! SHARPlrl levelnrbch& ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~T~~Jo JTL ~[.~f:!~~~~i ownership. • AGENT 675-1842 Mable.._. UYIRg . AtthFlllnt HIWPOIT HTS. We have numerous & ....... let1eh I 041 a.og..a leach I 041 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• cae: llDBll 'ILllllS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE. YllW HOME THU! ARClj IAT s.-.. L1 .. 1 Arch.itec\ Designed. Custom Built. 2 Years Young. Magnificent 4 Br. & FR. Home W /A Forever O«an View From Nearly Every Room. A DoUghtfuUy Bright· & C he edu l Con te m porary W/Vaulted CeHlnfs. Exquisite Dec<> Expensive Hoo~y-Beige Carpe~. Splendid Ose Of Glass & W . Priced At SJJ.8,000. 8YOWMH Spaclous Executive home. ~ Bdrm. 4 ~·th w/vlew ln prest11lou11 Dover Shores on Galuy t>r.~ Price Just reduced to bea\ltiful mobile homes S121.000 Ob this J bdrm: " ror aaJe ln established famUy rm. home near pub ln CM. Nwpl Bch, Cliff Dr. lt hu pened Hunt in gt on 8 c I\. oek fin .• shutt.ett It a Laguna. El Toro, Ftn ~rick paUo. V I 7 , An • b e L m ck ji4AllNIRS COVE Westminster. In price qALTY 646-4463 rangu to flt most -=---------1 people'• pocketbooks. • Park Lido condo, splil· $10,000 to $40,000. We are level, %br, 2 ba, ree land. unear as your &>hooe. $85,000. All, 675·6175. CAl.JFORNlA f>ACIFlC HURRYll .cot>ileHomeReaJty 2708 Harbor. Ste 2C8 UDO ISi.i S4().5937 HIDWD R.Ooas 4 •·II br 3 ba ha. Uv rm, SIA SIDI llAUTT Ml Newport Crest r~ndo lV. lot1-t ennl1fbch. ~ · Sea car-&sun.HU,• titn ~~~.~ad:!;._:rn81l; Dd,600.0wnr.67$-G.W famlb' pttradlse. 2Br + library. Side -OCHD· $I 0,000 boriUI rm Ln El MQrre> By view. .Reduced (or Jrn· Br&J'l(l nu Sbr corner lol the Sea, your own pvt med. ule. Owner. home. °"'1ler wlll carry bch, partt ~nt.otily SJ.80. U2t,60Q. U2-l242, bat. of $11.5,000 al $l650 CALL T 0 DA Y ! 8'2-6706 <PK1098) per mo. No quallfyln9 CALtFORNIA PACl P\C, ay OWMr. s br a~ ba MC, vac, rno¥c right tn. MobileHome lkalt.y white wattr view, Im· Guatded1al.e9. 7511 ou i. 270SHarbor, 9tt206 =e~-.~~~::: ~f:: S.0.MiM IOJ••----~-------"'"'-",,.._ S.C. PM only. 871-WS ••••••• •••••• ••••• • • • • • DANA POINT TRI-PLO pets OK. TV, stereo, Hardwood F1oon l-"'•, 3 + 3 + F'P + linens. Now lil ? $700 mo. G .......... Lingo R .E .Cel este, reatl..ocaUnn.. (S482P) lam Rm + grdnr, lge High above marina. 1 & 2 ·brs, cover garaees. $1.35.000. Prin only pis. <n4> 434-1126, art 6PM. Mr. ClaUllOO. Brk .. .,,. ..... 23 °81'. $600. 554-4442 ..,, "" • $395 Brick F\repla{'l9 " 3 BR+ All Builllns! 1"99 3244 <• ....._U.fwAIWcl RentToOwn! <6311Pl ...................... . •••••• ••• •••• •••• • •• • • • RENT! MES 898-0711 1841' ALS GeMraf • 3202 3 BR 2 ba C "d d ts 3 BR. 2 Ba.······ $S2S/S7S s ........ Unlt1 In CIHf Raven. Each w/Crplc. Owner'• un\l- 1600 sq ft. Desire to trade ror house or condo In Newport Beach. Good financing, no Bkrs. Rep· IY Adt 116, Daily Pilot, Box 1560, Costa Meaa. CJ\812846 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · • n ... Y 'crp ' SBR. ba ~ VETS drps, jaccuz1, bltns, BR.2~ba ........ . * * c I t a n . $ 4 1 5 m o , 4 2~ • · • • • • • • You fought for It. own a lsltlast/sec. Avail Mar 4BR,3 Ba .... ·· ..... $74~ ptece of it now, no down. 1 548-8300, 556--06117 2200 ....................... SlllMC915 l&JIVtMG Veteran Housing Ail. 541-0IOO HOMEFINDEBS lllousand.t 0( Rentals All areas all prices Sample: S7S Bach, walk lO beach $!00 2br cottage pets ok S100 3br fncd,Jtldi/pet.a UFETIMESERVlCE 557..0122 'l'b1I beautlf\d 5000 sq. ft . botJSe on 2~ acres. >'an· ~tJc view, owner •"4"t• e.._n .. w ... l '°'*'r BKR, Before )'OU pay som~ (710 816-~717 aaency lor lbe "RUN OR 522·2080 A R 0 U N D ' ' c: a I 1 IU• "'RS Consumers Gulde, sal' n • -on fee, llme, 11.1 n4l"9 many chOI~ Iota, money. 645-4900 llH ~ UOI It up. Prlc.d fi,h&, $clJet I Ub• ......... btdto.Uon oo aom•. La•t ·-••••• .. • .. ••••••••• ~ 1puutaUve market. Sm a br hie. One hse •R. 1"atet. SS50/mo yrlY ... s ('JJ4) m.-1 &1hMO M t • OR 522.~ -.21u East.side 2 br, comer lot. Remodeled & redecorat.. ed. S385. 64$-7221 C&nUIY21 Wntdlff lffllty 944 Con1reas. M2S mo . 3br. Dop, kids OK. Dop SIO xtra. 548·6102- Sl1S. nlee t ltt patJo + $220. tree util ! Ref + Walnut. Squan, a Br 2 Ba, ' $235, l Br kida. pets! (l'dnr, pool, part. Adtts Gt9. nlc•2 Er m111tsce only. $9115.aG-.,. $2804!8'rkld v.acrekd Unlvec"alty Part • Tiie JOOO'smoreavallnow, TetTM:e. Oov• a br 2 •JI areas, all price•, ba. •lnde le~ a;;do, opca '1 daya. Kida. pets Hl&hl>' 1.tpp-adecl. pror no problem. deccrated. Wd. r __,, .... · CONSl1MER$0UJ.Q't Jacunt, ._...._ 64a..tt00 7SJ.Wt. poo • $4U . 3 Br, 2 ba, fanJ nn. frplc, Rancbo Sea J oaquin M•H Vttde. ~ldren/. t~. 2 Bd. dta, 2ba. ~tlcome. '''°· ~View. ~Omo. ·- \ j ) \ ), . I ( 1 .. ' ... I * . ~ ....... Ullfwa. .,......h ""*-"'-h ......... "--~"""'."~--~--...;..---;....----------------........................................ _ ........................... . ~·1un1Ucfw ''•d HwetU.fw" t Af ..,. .. ,. ...... c.-41111*' JUZ. c-e.w.. 3124 .._..._. 314' -.....tosw. 4300 ......_/l•'fett/ Lalt&"-d 5300 .................................................................................................................. ····~·················· ....................... ... .. ,. . ...................... . """' 3144 .... ,.,. .... "" tkzllai--..... ,., 40 l Bll WatlfhooDtApt; 2 brm. ~ted, woodfon l BJl, Nke, ao.. ta. -BES.ELECTIVE ....................... 1AllS or Found. pet! can --.................. _...................... ....................... psomo.;rt)'lae. beam celllnC• ire w/out. 1ara1e. Mltl, no Galnarellable .. k•• Anlnial As1l1tance $..,........ t'J'5.Sala.NPll kitchen. No pet• or ,Rd'•.4tt·591 _J,, roommate.. O,psl lty 5005 ~S!f.a71.oofee. LIA~OPTION ~. br, Iba. all 'IVVWV child~. aeo. 14e·1151 \iaUSllareA-.meJAllt --··--········· ioadffill Quiet SL Nr. "'WMlltfl..... $350LookWhatW•Found after2. L...-..... 3112 ~746SorMf..5658 SANC.EllENTE LoatamJwhtfemYaltese N 3 Hel1ta1e lla.rbor Hllb " leMu FUU~flTV aBRNrUtUeCorona ••••H•-••••••••••••O Groom.In& " Pet Shop &#ritr, tyrs old vie R.,y Park Condominium toUl'ta. Nopcta. 9800. 22\2 c~ w/lam.ily rm. 2v, ba. To Maraaret. !Ml.USl or IJMnlllUWlUes Larp2"0arqe (7525P) Z Br, d rpa, new cpts. ~ RetJrin1 after ? 1ood IChlCM.SU-1934 =ty Ca.ri>ellnt ll Ule 979-TMS MJLETOOCIA.N adults, no pets. 180 E. 3 Bdnn. 2~ ba w/bltn yHra, floe location 6 FOUND· Blt & wbt ni. 0.C..ctwd a C• 1oyt11 Win ....a IZ50 ExquitiU Deai&n ~r. $U9. 8'1~ oven ran1e. Diahwuber cllent!I•. •.soo. aha,gy PQpPY abt 8 wb. 1ar. Never lived an . 810 CANYON 3 Br 2 Ba. mYortrtown Blvd l Bdno + F\ttplace w Br $28011 PlQ. Faml· lrA.lr cond., fUllY carpet. 1 BERntAHMRY vk atlt.h It Nwl)l Blvd ~~~ occupancy =·~.~:d~·~;:; BctacbBlvdatYorlrtown 1:;h{~at,gtmi :.J ly complex, no pets. ;0~ ct:':~oc~~/ o': 132.4134 2Ul>tl~T0~·4Ul N.8.67$-16" • WfttenPectflc 833-3231,renlorl.se. ll6-04l I 2208·Z2l4 Collt1ge Ave, Crown Valley Plt•y. Found YDI fem Whippet ,... ...,._._.. 374' SB>. Ltll 2br, lba, elect C.M.M2-9760Mar. R»n'S375/mo. ~~matawant· TIAYB.AC'ilMCY type, blk/wht 18th ~ operflet 3br, 3ba, z stry luxury ....................... kit, dshwshr, pvt bch •C· 2 Br duplex w/garaae & 3MilesSo.ofS.D. PY,y . to s % bd 2 ba In FRAHCMSI Anaheim.645-8036 131..3904 43'·ll61 condow/Sllpfor35'bo•t LAGUNA B"''CH ,..TR cesa. 487 Morning C8· CaJlM.r.D'Amko pnrne locat. lat & lut lncl'd. $700 mo yrly. INN _,.,..,r& M Id nyon,673-7631 ~Ji~ no pet.a. $285. mo. (714>896-3378 moreotftQ.556-4»70 Start your own Travel Found : lre wht F . Davidsoo Rlty, 64$-7573 · _,,... up. a ....,..,,60 Network a1ency. Be • Cockapoo, in Or Cty ........ IHdt 3241 aerv. color 1V, heated 2Brapt,l~blkstoocean. br tyd t' Mn1pa..t•adl 316t Share' bd bme M.V. part of the arowtna Anim.Shelttt.SM-356l ••••••••••••••••••••••• $350 Near River Jetty! pool. (110 494-Sll!N, 985 Adults. oo pets. $360. mo. 2 • new ~·· $P:61~· •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• atralgbt non·smoker pref travel industry. Start up, --------- Oceanfront, Woods Cove. Double0arage+2BR N.CoaatHwy. 2500 Seavlew, 67S·Zl86. ~~:,.~ia · PA.llCMIWP'OllT G86-329S/831M110 tralnln1. technical 4l FOUND: Red Irish Set· 3 BR, 3 ba., comp. re· Yr Round Rental (6422P) 3 Br, 2 ba. furn . SeeaptNo.l. 1 t t h Bacbelort, 1 or 2 M/J' 2 bdrm, 2 ba sun. merchandl1lna •LU>port ter, in F.altbluff nr E l done;lse.TumerAuoc. l4003BROceanView Redecor.ted. UtiJ. Incl. lBrapt,1pectacularview A mo• new wo u Bedrooma&Townbowlea J ae, Pool, Weig~ room, provided. Total lnveat· Rancho Market. Iden· C.llDoonle 499-4591 WoodBumingFireplace Pvlprkg.Laundryfacll. of harbor" ocean. w /encl. 1ar. $32S. s-P'r~:11'27UO t l NB~9:80-5:00 ;:t7~4=itle.Mr. Wy,1~ Cbannln& 3 Br, 2 bath, DoubleGarage! (64S7P> Avail. now! 5500 mo. yr-Adults, oo pets. l 'r\ 645-Sl216,63'1·5&95 .-~.acwar spa, to a Fem rmmate to sbr FOUND: Irish Setter, atrium. frplc, complete RENTIM ES 898-0771 ly. "97·3493. blocka ocea.o. $360. 2500 $?70. 2 br, mrif, c&l>. I)~ recreatlon program. "f./M/'F, Balboa Island Market, Oceanfront NB. Vic. Lake Forest, AspeD ly remodl'd . Walk t • . Sti.dio & l BR apt.a rum Se•vlew, tee apt no.1. patio. Adlta, no peu. eodalprogram. 7poola,8 dPlx $142 mo l.Bt" last Ownerw/helpfinance. Park. beach&sbops.Availun· Bht1s3BR,2'r\ba.Prime all til . l Ind 'c u' 675-3'86 731·BW.18lh87S.7787 tenniscowta.AtFasMoo ma . . Acent 604758 S81.QIS tit Jwie. l'Uroiture av111l. greenbelt! S6SO u kl!'c • u1 ~r . ,.__._ u~-~•24 Island, Jamboree fl San ---------S.0-702.0 Aaenl 644-11.33 pvt par g, ava P 1, _... ---2 Br w/gl.r, adlta, cpts Joaquin Hilll Road. Resp. rem. shr 2 br 2 ba Low Doww/T...-LOST: lo C.)f. Bladt cat. for perm. residents.~••••••••••••••••••••••• drps. ranae, lncd Y~ 1714J"44-1900 CM apt. $180.tuUI. Jan. PlaDll, allls, lnt.erlors, Jfyouhaveseenafemale FANTASTIC VIEW Cliff Dr. 497.3493 Adult 2 bedroom, super •/patio, wtr pd. 667 .. F.. 6'4-5870, 5'.S-3896 good local., xtnl lse, black cal P!e.ase call 3 BR, 3 ba Pnme Joe. Sana.n.ate 3276 l.alJl-oMMpel 3752 location. No pets Vlct-OriaSt.tee0.218111··1.. 80-0Q37or5»-7165 ~She IS 13 years New $750, no pets.••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2Z5 /month. 568 W. Santa Ana Ave, $270. BACHROR APT. Female to share cozy okl6Dffdamedica\SOO. 7141529-57S5 28r w/frplc, gar .• encl. Scenic views, luxury Wilaon, l.nquireapt. E. 63IM120to5. = ~/=~~6to LM•:a~~m8~~.Co:O~~ Last Fem Blk Yorltie. blk back yard. $350/mo. 219 adult apts, fum & unf. 1 o. uo.~uo. ..... 5 ALLUTILSPD! -• b u •-.. PRIME RENTALS Miramar 492·2134 Near Regional Shopping L-ar::-'"e 2 •-v·3~bel'Urdro 'om MODERN Spac. 2 br. 2 100· from thl ocean. $1800. $24,000. Terms w/ m. ans lo .. ........,.y • ., "' ba, frplc. step dwn llv Se r ished A ·1 673-5741 Vic Finley/36lh. NB. LAGUMAIEACH San_... ~enter.NHeated Ap1ool. garden apts. Dsbwhr, rm,Cpt.s,d.rpll.lgepatlo, no:i.•20r~Ba~aBl:~ Reward 675·9742 ; Pnced from S300 & up Capistr.o 3271 Jacuui. r.comer icaa bltns,encl.gar,gasbbq. gar. laund rm. no.pets. · · Offlcea.tal 4400 RlVERSJDE,CA. 67s..821. per month. Summer ren· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pkwy & Paseo de Valen· Pool Gas pd. 778Scott Pl. $!75. (1) 996-0600. exl 251 ~r:E~ari~ ~~Na~ •••••••••-•••••••••••• Hip volume c•rpel Ir --------- tats avail S300 up per3BdnnDuplex.2bath,l cui.ALICIAPLAZA 642-5073 or(l)499-32!12eves. s.56.7707an~ 1 Rm Dental, 8 Rm fumcleaningshop.BldcLost: Male nuetered week car ga_r+ carport. 2 &VILLAGE Medical. Prol bldg. Ail w/Uvlng quarters also Siain.;se c~t. drk brwn 494-8035 811.9411 ;;m~~oe pools. $375 581-6151 581•6130 Woodland Village ~!.~ ........ ?!!.~ (714>-.o&GOor-.m1. ~~1 os.52so or ~~r,!' rra~~~: :1~c~~: 12S7SCstllwy.LagBch 147 vmsg Sorry,nopets. 04"Paulan'no BEACHYEARLY ---sums 540-2Bl.2or548-4322ifyou "1~·······~ ....., Duplex, spectacular 3 Br. 2 ba duPlex with --. d ·,~I • •• Beaut. Village San Juan Mlwportleach 3769 Beautiful, new. adult oceanvlcw.Newl640sq. oceao view . ..-i5+util. Deluxf) pri~ate oftlce, ~:a::,ie:=.~:=:t'::: i:;: ~:~=u'C:':rtc~~ • 11 1]•llf1JllYJ condo,3br2ba,w/patio, ....................... apts. Great location. 2 ft .2br,2lh ba.S4SO.mo. C811Debble714-636-7871 sunny~ air cond., comewllhapotenUaJof ateringreward. 1 • • t: b ••. ~ ~dYs ~~~-~·a~~";~: poo~~!~:~::Sediately 759-070&. Lwnuy adult% br. Steps to personalized phone c.ov· eamina $1500 mo. afters r-----=~----- ___ ___;.·-1 wknds 581-9316 Open BACHELOR APT 2 BR .• tge. modem apt. bch, ocean view. $425. ~~ • a!~f.'bret a~=: mont.hll of errort. Ideal {.()6t 2~1B Mfem HlflA~~Jan J BR. 2~'2 ba. bltns. crpts. House Sat 2125, 11·4. ALLUTILS PD' • Bachelor S22S·$'245 Brkfst bar. blt.ns: encl. up 55 lS River Ave f ·Bak for couples. 494·5168 alter cat v1c esa ... .,....en. d 1 Bdrm $216$-1275 gar. w s h r I d rye r . 642-2!5ti6 rwy acceu. 666 o cer 6 PM Call 833-1870 dys, 646-12.44 l"JllS. flar. ~·ean/cyn vu, s..taAna 3280 ioo· from the ocean. St, C .M · Nr. · · · evs Reward "7!!..~·dS.S2_:599~Z7°66· Lse ........................ Semi furnished. Avail 28drmS295-S325 ~~~!:.OK SJOO . Ckeanv1ew.yearly.2br.l Airport.979-2lSl Uaa1ytoloalf 5025 •--·------- .:!" ,,.,.,, ys, .. --Avail. now' 3 Br. 2 ba. now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. Rental Office ba duplex. $450. mo. ----.,. •-w .__ .. ••••••••••••••••••••• r.r10Rll1 5350 _.._. -..,.. 1st.__.._ ~-TD'• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lagilna Hiciuef 3252 w/cpts. fncd yd. $395. YrlY S225 per mo. NO Open Daily 9·6 2 Br l Ba. rerng. stove, no 644-6780or&42-3639 ac spa~ tn Newport· • -• -• • Dri kin bl ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-4567Agt-Nofee. FEE Call Sue at TSLM•nagemenl ctuldren. peu. S275 mo. we.-~....,. Alrl)(>rtArea. Rece"'""n, LOANSAVAJLABL£ nAl· 't!'° em . SF.A TERRACE Carden ~7707anyt.ame 754--008lor642-l603 714-833-0821 ; 714-640-07111 ""'~v"' phone cont,._, Cred.itnoproblem. C.JI co !Helpline llome 2 br & den. 2 ba. 4 Br, ~~b;:=mo. VJlaVW. .._..._ coUect. ~=~ l rm. ~a'ecy .;:,edicc~ __ ._ ... __ ,_• 7_S_J._5_to_J_, *a&MIChrsaHda~~.E~S* beach. t~nna!o & pool 751~02 Npt a 2 prof. men seek ..,.... &irf whtw•ter vu. 2 BR. en tatin& " copy machine. Money Available many ~2b2,~ ~ 3 6 4 9 O · Uurd to shr lux hme. lge Brand ~~~e z hr. 2 ba. S350 mo. Avail now. 3 Br, 2 ba. frpk, deck. 2 Ftoml2llO. (714)752-7170 sources, all p;ojects. Outcall Massage ___ 1$225. Sml house with yrd, pool.125S/mo.64CM330 lYJ ba townhouse w /fam 541·921.9,83().191.9 car pr, walk to bcb. Yr· THI ~a.T $.'!OK min. 752-6052 10AM·2AM 7314462 4 BR. POOL. \'JEW water 41a1d. avail now. room. Xlntarea S350 Lrg 2 b• 2 ba. rdng, ly. $500. Submit kids & Siil'T'l"W Barg.tin fornl(ht tenant QX>.2br big fnc. yrd, sgl 2 BR. rully rum. S390 mo. TSLu gmt """"·1603 peta.e7WS70;131~ Al.l'BMATIVE l"'\lllCK C £.SH SpirilllCllReadlr $495 <194 7161 gar, avail 3/1. S57-0863. NopeU. Yrly 67S-OC75 .. ~ ..-.. pal.ao, super cln. S32S mo . ...:...------=----TV A lBlSSo. E.lCamiDoReaJ S40-1720 M 33822 Copper Lantern. 3Br.or2•den.gar,2ba, Mo. to mo. rent incl: SanClemente.fU"ulic. LdliFornt 3255 . ary. 2Br, w/patao. s teps to EISide. bahl. airy 3 Br. 2 O'#ntt. ~7.Z pauo Yearly M15. Re c e Pt . s er v. • lsl & 2nd Trust Deed Forawt.492-729& ••••••••••••••••••••••• South Laguna g216 beech, monthly or week· Ba bltns Ul tnplex. $360. 67s.6670 131-s.550 penooaliud phone cov-loans arra ged for any 1--_;__::..;:;.___..;. _ _;__ .J Br. 2 ba. \'Orner lot, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ty. Sot&-5684 No pets 552·4201 or NEW l • 2 Br apts. Pools, era&e. conf. rm, mall reason. c:edlt 00 pro-RELAXING MASSAGE frplc. A C:. dub & lake '¥1UA PACIRCA S51-~l jacuiz1. ocean vaewi. •NEWPORT ~·· ~N groand prkg blem. Borrow on lbe in· BobJames·Llc Masseur From 1275/mo Adlt.s on OCEANFRONT ... morem ewport. creased value or vnur Outcall~9,494..slll pn\gs $435 871·3889 Bet.hef1rsttooccupythis ADULTCONDO MESAl'IHES Jy.No..-t.s.661·3679 Lr" l BR. -1c, teonis. 1liEEXECUTIVE 1 -1--------- b b ho r I ..-.. •. • .. home. call today forfasl, Me~leach 3269 2 r. 2 a me-w/ rp c 2BR.2ba,)'TIY $425 l Br S285 So me 1 Yrly.642-0CKS SUITE.~S470 courteousinf ti u•55•GE .... ::;:·................ & dJD rm. Ocean vu lot. 2 STEPS TO IUCH w I ga r ages p 0 0 I .Wlagtoa .._. 3140 --"--------____ ..;._____ orma oo. _,.. - car gar, elect opener. JBR,2ba,bayvuS10SO Jacuzzi Adults. no pets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br. 2Ba. sundeck. view. 250sq.f\.deluxeoffice.W. FIGUREMODB.S NO FE£' lloU!>~. t:ondos. $450 per mo. no fee. l BR l Ba I S285 Open daily 2650 Harla SHARP. beach. 2. 3 BR, earage. wshr. dryr. S39S 19th St. C.M. Sl50 mo. /M'YA.l·ax CO ESCORTS duplexes n ~nt a l Wat.ermanRlty lnvest. . ..yry. Ave. C.M. <Mesa Verde frpl. dshwshr, garage. mo. 673·1260 Rieb or Tom.S..0.2200 ""-n~ Rf"'-t1>t1o1LU:W: OUTCo.•• ,.....LY Pa111bon. 675-4912 Bkr. 533-8030 IAYFROMT Dr E. orr llarbor Blvd>. patios. 960-Z358. m.7873 Vicky --vn MEWSUVIEW w~,_ 3298 3BR.2ba.,yrly.$5Se S49-4M47 AIRPORTOFFICES Licensed Home Loan 631-llll on_....,. lllAHDHEW 2 Br lOWnhouse. 1~ ba, 1 & 2 room suit.es. all Brokers serving So.1--------- J Br 2 Ba. pool, tcnnL-s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large 3 Br Townhouse 3 Br apt/rondos. <'onVe· pet.lo. earage. No pets. services. No lease req'd. Calif. for 17 yrg. Call our DANCE OF FUN Jat. $845 yrly. 675 0562_ CUTE 3 Br 2 Ba. w/cpts, with patio, garage + nienl Joe. 5 units avl S400 Nr. Hoag. $300. 5'5-0760 From Sl45. mo. 2082 S. E. near es l office. ah nude girls dance & l'WwportShotts fend yard. kjds & pets pool Quiet complx. up.9&H~.~1151 2 Br Zba R&r pc>o&•spa Bristol. &lite 200, N.B.,_11_4_-837_·:17_44 _____ 1 rap session . lOAM to B ..,_ 1 d 'd OK $395. 963-4567 agent. Adults. no pets. $375. All,uW pd.. N·o c .. ' .. m or' <n4)S57·7010 M"a .. urv 3AM Mon&~ 12PM to J r z .,..,newy ecor . ~ree. .. ... -1or...,,........... LlVENea ..... _n... h' •uu Y"5• 8PMSun """'N "'"··-lid $.S5() 640.29111 UV .....,.._ v•-r ...... ....,ac pets. S445/mo. Call 8llsqfl.Solcaonamonlb Low rates fut approval. Anah~i50 . """" . Ca 1 • 381', ram rm. 9342 Am· "-dMeiw~sa. "·· ~~l .. d Sol 673-36111 ;67S-57216. to monlh for no longer Dependable, honest FREESESSIONW/AD Bag nyon. ownhome. 3 bassador. Vacant. im· Deluxe 2br. 2ba loft" 2 It ~•uUJU A ult Apb lhaosmoot.bs. HrVice. 2nd'1. 3rd'.s, aw· . . ~~·=~~ c:,.~i1r:;,ent Joe. :;oo~pancy 968-2297 den spllt·level.OouFrpl<'. 21°s:::::::U::~.'~B S:~yf~. ~ :e:;h~ 586-9070 inp,968-9988Bob. *SANDY•S• ---------....................... sltyUgbts, deck. nlry t62-U53 lenn.15. ll yaci. club. S7SO No. Costa Mesa, s rm 803 Mort9f1!"" T,..t Out.call Massage WATER1''RONT , 'Nwpt ~gsLo,elyCottage Gmmil 3102 settlng. No children or yrtylse.615-1687 sq . ft. $321 mo. All DMctl 5035 Shores larite 48r, ~"2ba l BR+ All Bwltins ••••••••••••••••••••••• pell. 180 E. 21st. 645-9543 ZBr. duldren welcome. no ground floor, front prkg. •••••••••••••••••••••••' ____ 973-0329 _____ _ Beautifully decorated. Super Area! (8939P) 13'7.ZNev.landSUGarden evea,646-4262days pet.I, slarlin1 •t $24S mo. s-ca...• 317• A/C. prof. bid&. etc. LOWEST ~~. °:!n~~terYr~~~: SZ2.5 f'meLand.<1capmg Grovet> BeJ&uuful 2 bdl rmt MIW5-5'DI 846407 ;·~;:·;·:,:~··~·:,:;:~ _S4Q..2200 _______ _ •SHERI LEE• CertWed Masseuse House Calls· By appL 838-6838 fam S82S/mo ACter6PM Just Remodeled 1 BR+ :e~aht!rb:,.,'d Pnv~te Jbr. 2bad d. TownhousL e. Up· ~ux~~btslde XJ!ha lge Walk to beach, encl gar. ltll1t•d Rates 66-3370 bnck BBQp1l! t9622P > patio view rrom lovely 1ra e . ge patio ....... "-· tns .... whr. fncd yard. $32S. 498-0318 $100/PSMO. t.tT.O:a.Gho RENTIMES 898-07'71 kitchens . enc Is d Cbildttn ok. From $375. Nr. beach. Adlta, no pets. evs with bath & walk to .,__.T.O. • ~ FOXY I £.DY SEAVIEW. J br 2'2 ba. 64S·9543 eves. 646-4262 $250.536-83112. be b.3153rdSt H B -.._. ~ ocean view, pool/tennis c-cic11•l-garages· pool : days. s..t.._ 3110 ac · · · FairestTermsaioce1949 ~M•Mp $1175 mo. 21314»3629 U.fw lli1•1d 3425 clu~ti'~~ pets. s:ns Close to beach. 3 aw. 3 ba, ....................... SCOTT REALTY s.ttlet-Mfoc> Co. 731-3561 ------•·•••••••••••••• .. •••••• mo. 636-7343 frplc. encl. 1ar. Fncd Newly decorated large 536-7533 642-2171 545-061 l i---------- CAMEO SHORES L~~~~~Jis.2~ 1 ~~!:oo~1J.'.:!!> ~:ee! ~~~ =:~~21702 ~.=--~~· PROFESSIONALS Ralredcoui>lehumoney P~~~~~~g& JBr, I.IC comer lot, ocean mo. 96().553Sor774--0914 bedroom. apls, cloee to All utill pd.. CfU· drps, 1 "2 Br •pt.a. newly r e· tolend..1.8t&2ndTD's relerral. Abortion. adop-v1ew. Sl .~mo. 6'73-Zl6' s hopping . Laundry pool, tndry facs. Adults decorat.ed. 2~ blu to 2 Br alUdJo nr Npt Fwy. LIT'STALK Agent,l-837·:1744 lion&keeping. Laurelwood. Z BR coodo, facilities. no chlldren. no over 35. no feta or beach elec & wtr pd A/C. ad Ila $295/mo. 1800 aq ft, 11 small of· APCARE sn-2563 Steps to bch. ~ule 2 Br pvt pat. pool, Tennis. pets. s19515205/month. c hildren. ca t Sue: 897_3173 • 542-l129or<&t4.Q10 ftces,l6parklng1pacn, A umc-..h) h.<.c, 01W. patio, 1'2S yr-$3:.>. MZ-183.5 UUbUes paid. Call Carol 556·7'707 or Henrf; & I •r..tahlted .3 lrg trees. Bwtwn 8-4 ,....,./ ESCORTSERVICE ly.673·54.19or833·611B al"""7...... .. • ., ........ 1 br lba u-r unit, bit-In f = call S81·2800 Ev•s 1 __..& ~ · 631-~ ToName .....,.. ....., ......, • ..,, ,...,.. or16f-l1•1d -s900 67""'"-, ...... _;, ., · -~ ......,., t 4r d"shw•sher -• • .rvvo .,,.........,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AlsoHinng GRUTLOCATIOH ~ 3525 lc6oal.a-d 3106 s ove 1 . ' ••••.:;E••::::.::::.:G••••• B"'"CHTOWNSITE AllllolMct•llh 5100 . . ., 3 Br 212 Ba condo, newly ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br, cpU, d.rpll , stove, ~a~ ~·.~~~cl '" LA'-'••u, ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••Need a 11lailing address. de«lr'd.S495mo.640-2981 HIUl, lingto~ Bcb 3Br. Beaut. Jge. 4 bdrm. kids ok. no pets. $22S. dep.lllli.3211 . PAL.MMISAAPT'S. PaclflcCoaatHwyunltln Gr and Opening or The A confidenti~t fbooe L'DOISLE 1 ~8a. lg Liv~ 6 din w/Crplc.Yearly;t675 MS-2274 MINUTESTONPT marine complex. N.B .. Sliver Touch. Jland ~ce se~ce. Can . . rm. bltns, refng. pool, RumboldRlty 675~22 2Br .. -t tudl ut'Jpcl Zbr2ba.lowerunil.bllln BCH MO sq ft, air cond: nu Crarted J ewelry & Gail5Sl-5681t,834-9236 J br. 2 ba. lge So. paho. btn cond. S32S mo. No ucc uxu o, 1 • stove/dishwasher. crplS Ba h 1ac2BR crpts! util paid! ample M O l S7SO mo. Aft S pm call pet.s,963-0S2S 2 BR, l ba. frpl. Also ,..ill Bltns, crpts. pool. s:ns. Ir drapes. encl. palto, l c ' . park'g. Lease only. acrame. pen og Wanted: AU:rac:tive &irl 1131·3193or~l8 furn. Sf7$/Yrly. 1978 Maple. 548·6118. car a.r. S3SO mo-+ $150 rromSZ20.•uv Marine related business March Isl. 1854 S. Coast w/a lot of fr-ft time to Dllpll'ut.......,. 3600 "&efll fils-48Z2 evea ~ secur-963-32ll Adults. No Pet.a desired. 556.Q540eXl 21& Hwy, Laguna Beach travel. snow & water ska. DESIRAILE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1561 Ml'IJa Or. etc. Reply to Classified 2 Br 2 Ba .,.... mo 988 ud d (S BlkaEastolNewport l'Vfi,..Spa-avail,pvt•n· 1 --"&~ 5300 Ad 1180, Da1·1y P1'lol. Jo:XEC CONDO. Nwpl \JnfumishedDupleit AlESHLYREDEC. u:.:...,...ori;;'" · 3bnn2\-\ball 10 •• en. Bl d. "'""' .... ... ._ ,._ Terr. altr 3 Br 2•2 Ba, !Bdrm, H-zBa. brand Ir PRIVATE 2 Br with ..._._. t9l--0859 frpl, wel·b•r. bll1n1. SC:~ try, 2 suites, reaa. 18Z7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P .O. Box 1$60. Costa encl patio. pool. $490. ctew crpting. drapes, largerooCdeck.$.'WO/mo carpeta&drapes,paUo, Westcliff Dr. NB. Lo&tDobermanPinscher, Mesai.Calit.92627 6.11-1475 refrig. Electric 2 door lse WES11AYTlft.EXES stove/dlshwuher.1 ur LAIGl2U Gl--OllOO male, S5 ,lban,:ars nol Pwurals.rricn536G Lease or rent spacious 3 ~arage. Smoke alarm. l Sabsbury Really COSTA MESA gar. S4SO mo. SlSO secur. MOM $235 MO Pvt olc &lite dntwn HB ~·1~ 1 a .... &290Santa ••••••••••••••••••••••• bedroom. 3 bath con · Block from Laguna 673-4800 NEW38DRKFAKILY 96).3ZU Quiet bkil w/beautltul SllO mo util lncld. call nu.,_, • ...,..;_. 1 Royalty Limousine d · N t Beach. "'$495 per mo APTSFRDM $385 -walkTo""·rfl lndacP1, cov'd •ara1es. 53&-7504. Lost: BUc • .,.,_, ll wht Service. Daily, Hrly, c~t•n::x,m sq. e,~'!:.[h References required. No .....,_,, ..... 3107 Prrvate back ya~ds 2BaDesianer·';'0ec:or adulta. no ~ta. ldeal for fem. cat :i;'hl feel. Weekly rates. Als o. vtcw. Pool. tennis & walk children or pet.s. No lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• garages. 2 chlldJ'en ok: Central Loe (S364PI adutu as or older. ance spaces av!lll. to shr Sliver collu w/beU. Nr specials to Las Vegas or to beach $600/mo. ~u•il required. Available Feb. 1 Br condo, Bayfront. no pets . Near South LEEWARD APTS. with comm. artist group. ReaSchl.645-7006 San Fran. "Be A King Place Properties. Jnc. l 5 · A~" for S a I \'lew, pool, secunty bldg. Coat Plaia. Rental Of· ~Palace Uke 1 BR I FUilerton Ave. l bllr E. o OP en 18em1 t ri v • For A D•Y·" Luxury + m '7SZ.llW6. Ask for Teddy ·eemardineat842·7181 Boal sbp avail. $450 mo.· ficeopend•ilY 10to5. 820 Pl1.11hw/wC8rpeUng Newport Ave, 1 blk s. of S85·$160. S~ypar Cir, Found: Ascot bicycle. our new custom bwlt Mair. capo Beach upper. Sbd. ~:OO·tl03 Baker St, 1 bUc w. ot NrSand/Surf (5547P) Bay.831-0397. ~.~~ce wltb e:x· Ownr Identify by size, L i ncoln town car 3ba, ocean view, bwltins. 2 Br 1 Ba w/oaraae, new en.tot. S57·521S. RENTIMES 898--0771 ._ 4000 color, frame #. date & limousme. 714/523-8331. ~rt eL.-1 d k 25 " " ..... R.tal 4450 Joe. lost. Cell H.8 .P.D., ,....,. ... ,... ~... s un ec . $4 mo . cpt, drps, paint. Yrly New2 Br. D/W, encl gar. Vacant 2 stry. l~ be, ........... : .. ·~: ....... :::;.: ................ 536-5621 Meditation Grp meetings Onlhewater.L&e2swry '944401.494-4011 $400mo.28lhSt.67~ SZ'TO. Avl Mar. 1. 202$ Newly dee. Rec area. Roomw/1utcr..:nett~ evry Thurs. eves. 8 3 Br. den. 3 ba, 2 frplc, h .11 Id Qiarle Apt B. 548·5'163 $350. PhS57-8623 ssoweek lcup, 4 D&UXIOFC"S Found: Hufty bike, ownr p.m.(upstairs> 1809 W. redwood deck. boat dock . ., l1tanh ,.,..,.,..d $100. Nice bac . uti nc , 548-9755 Cont. rm .• 1eat 25, all ldenUfy by sis.e, color le Balboa Ave. NB SBSO/mo. lst &. last + ••••••••••••••••••••••• no pets. Resp adlt.s. 106 z Br townl»e. $300. Bltns, CONDO 2 Br l"" Ba rplc:, paneled, sm. whae in re· frame t, date&: location Sod.&~ 5400 S300 dep. 427 Ca'hal St. lallOoP .... 3707 E.BaySt.Apt.9. pr,lndryfacU.Adltson· newlydecor'd.Nrshopt, Amt>auadorlnolnCosta ar.lor2yr.lease.Lake lost. Call H.B.P.D., S45-8646. .. ..................... COflttrlllMt•Kh 3111 ty.nopel.l.1919Anabeim $350mo.963-t:N2 Meta. 2Z11 Harbor. Cea· Forest area. Kent 536-5821 ...................... . • --------• i•~ Bl .... •ft bch. ..,10/mo. •••••••••••••~••••••••• St. Mgr. 645-5106 traUy located,~ rooms. Harkins. ACTING ANYONE? .... .., .., -Mariner's O:>ve M'ANY wllh kitchen, 714.581.9393 Found: Sml wbt. male l>OC> Amlr Dnmatlc Class 111 Via Udo Hord yrly. Bachelor. Call Upper duplex. ocean vu, New s pacious CONDO. 2 br 2 ba, dbl gar, pool, pboDe fl TV. Swimming die. Call to idenlif7. Free. Now forming Last DRIVE BY and )'ou·11 67).C79. 28r.2Ba 1385/mo, 2Br. 2""Ba· frplc, patio, jacunl " iecur. $39S. poqt, jacuul, and rec. cannery \'illaae cottaae 8'2-7623 Clll for 1burs Eve. Vic see tbe pratise or these Costa Mtso 3724 83l·200I $400mo.6'13-~ 644-LOIM room. OailY • weekl)' toe rent. Found men's preacrip olCM OtllSS&-2791 ~:;~':~: !~pad~r~ ....................... CoiwdelMtr 3122 2 br, New crpts •Doors. t rateaataruni from._ a MMB01o.rS48-4!02.S l)UNS vie Ocean Blv4. I '1y:•• . S700/mo 2 Bdrm+den ....................... dabwshr, ~ld1 ok. No ~::ar:: 2Qb:i·e~ b!d~:,: · ~· 8'So4NO ......,. .. ......, 4500 CdM st.ate bcb. 2112na Pt ip.-allor aod p;aUo. S850/mo. Se4? SSO WEEK & UP peta. Sl75 mo. 645-22'14 t;no. tm-2228; 546-9Cll81 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 873-0719 •-••••••••••••••••••• undaubm1tyourorrers. SUadlo.lbedroom Adults, no pets. 2 br. Beaut rm, pvt bath, C:OSTAMISA Found: BUc Lab! P'lPPY • ...._W.-lilcl. 7075 WtM4froe1"-• ~~~~rtiil1.~. ~ ...... jacwai•pool. ,........,. empl1d matur• lady. ...,.%OHi vie. Oolde.nrod & Crown -· .. --··-•• ........ c.IUl-1400 548 ,97$Sor645-396'7 fl f 64.5-3'98 .......,., 3142 Lite pnv, refs. Laa Bc:t\, Build to aull 5,000 to Dr,CDM.6"-11tD Bab19ttter, cblldrnf 'J...~~c... '"""" N a br 2 ba E· ....................... •'l'W 20,000 Sq. F\. Placentia elderly any hours. SUSCASITAS --~ =uxe :..cl 1·,r Lusurloui carefree v...--.... 4250 Avaue FOUND : A l askan Westdiffareaprel.Also IAYSHOlllS ~lumtsbedlbdnn. GARDENAPTS fk "•rd . ,..., · . twnhme 3BrlBa brand•••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ,WeeleyN.TaylorCo. Elsldmo.llale,8or9yra sec'y work. Mature. 3 Br 2 Ba, fplc, pvt Chned ,ar. 1230, up. CORONA DELMAR rrpw,., . . MW any xtraa 'a SSlS HAWAJI Realtors 644~910 old. Vlc. of Adams & GU'manlady.642·3411 b acbu, ins 1rl7 • Mutts, no peta. auo 2 er· Town~. lrple. TSLM1mt '642-l&«\ Mt' Iott Joan, e4e.13'71~ 38drmaoathewate.rnr sap-11 • orn f::m H.B. 00 zmna. J)nunmer Exp. Play an "2·32118 ~W1l0f'l Blvd. Pool, tennla. SOrne ettan F.utalde la Z br, view 148-&'7 eva ltoc)O. t50da,y. '110-2'M ~ f:'sv: $1 & ~ ryt.hms call aft.. 5 PM 714 UMTALSGALOll ~ 1 br aa-"-n apt. ti C•tallna ~. C~ deck. pr. No clot• or .._.__ _..... lt>'Aark' Cir J rv Lott: Mate Peklneae, &»1493Asktc..Saody . ,....., to F~ Ialaod • •UHJ chUdren.$320.&45-U ~ _..,.., ...... ~ 4>00 ' • Reward. 2/lS CK aw.a. $!SO>nlN2Bthaaref. "rec. All uttl pd. bcach.All01Br.M.t·2811 -················••I! ··········••ti••········ ~ Cllllse&CS.8-2127 Exch. PART TIME C.ooaumtn Outde Adulta. no <!bildrecl, no 2 Br, iar, laWldq toell. '311. UIUQue 1 Br + u · .... Wtl(llted 4600 aervicee for room & bath IU-4900 ~.$215.'IQ>mo. _,._ ..,_,. all» Maple. Adlta, SZSO. .,anded loft. ORANGE Resp. f..n. 1bare2 w ·~••••••••••••••••Ho••• Lost: Diamond en1a1e· NO BOARD by lady ElPllertoMeu ~W11111.to"'"... )lfraptKstl-118$. TREE LAKlt CONDO. Pk Newport ms IM m_eQt rl111. near 23531 freelance party coolt ~ 3 br 2 ba frea ustMapleAv•.C..M. •1lr38al'mrm1 nOOIQft SZ50Larice.Lhin•Al•ea o\lulooka waterfall, uW.f40.41111.. . 'S~~4!n~~!-·s~ra:: ClUeDeLaLoulaa.La1. _&~'16tJ..;...;.._. ____ _ paUH. trple' patkJ, etc. Apt.I Yt\y,I09Acac aMS-?cMa 2SJUBaw/Gar•a• WID. A/C, tennil, pc)Ol, r. t.a I to ba Pnler Na 6t CM. a.raa~ Hlllt. Reward.at.eeol HlrpWmhd 7100 eonuQ.poiol:tenn•,•a SU6 & $20& 1 tir mobile Spffloul 2 Mno, 1 ba, SomeUUllPdt <MSOP> VIU¥\t.833430J 2':!. wdS:pae:mln ~d{/ MM155 l..OST:2/10f'll.Doberman ...................... . • \CJ be•cb. Yrly IM. l"•m. hOmts. Mature adtta on· n • w pl u h co~ o a !llbla • beautlfUJ Wood· $1801m0 ,. \\ u u t: t ·=~-I m. 5 mo. blwn Jbin '* ACCOUNT /IKKPR '7'0.mo.~ ty. No peu. Qul•~· C'llt/drp, pal11t. kltcbe" $3301mprtUlveLuxueyl brldp Ptne 2 br 2 ba MMm 46IO Lake St, l:l.B. Nda med. IJ: Exoer Bl8'h tondo •br, I ba :=;; 1991 N•Pl ll. fioor.:noBrt1b:..~-zJ~ry. a BR on Eaat.alde aJl. W!Ul 1/l5M Yo.. on· --·••••••••••••••••••• aUn.eeo.2'764 ~ rf!~ ~l:~."• hNm ceillnp. Ne•lY de tcaf · ~. ~ef· =i ~~:n~~l~i °1:;1 ~::: OARAOB SALE NI tn Iller 1pa~ for rent. t.c.t fem hub aettu. 8 qrtrl'7 PR ret.ms, T)'po C.'O.fJOOmo.4U4-'300 )looll 11oeu.n,as t. ac' U.DelliJ>iJotbrtaalMIP" WlUboAdl'orlO'wttk. yrs old. Ana to "Red" 50Wpm, &d ph vole . • ' v }, u¥t&t4e Adle. oetr' .~ "NIUka.. To .,a.ce,..,. •· '°'°' knl. Old •lbl'd Coll•1• Prk area. Pwm .-, 4c plm'l a\11'4 pet&. s.51-llU g.,,·, • drawl•• card, pboH .,..-. su:s + ~ tq.ttt3 Reward.. C.ll s.574"$ l'OlllMS'p. Ftiftlo bene~ 1ftmdtl3MIZIDa,. IOllTI...,, .a.t "' Ai!P'Sallncld.17$.1.0. • ' ... ---· .. , t I l ' 1 •t . . --... ~-·-· .._.. ... ~. M>rU!!y 22. 1978 * ~YPllOT ....._..,.,,. C-..t/Co..cr•t• a.ctrical ~••d••llg Nlra.,~lc•• ,......,.,.,.,'-' ._,.., · ....................... ••••••ee..e•••Aee•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• eeeeee••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... eee•eeeeeeeeeaeaee•eee• eeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeaee ~ie butttr oo.Jy ~1.U5, cu.tom. r.modelln1. uni Alt typu concrete, ELECTRICAL SERVICE SKIPLOADF.R Dump N\.trse consult•nt 30 yrl Qu.alU.y PalntinJ. Lowest Roots For Less. All types uxao11 add1Uon lndudea quc & unusual work block work . planters CALLS lL5 hr, le SMALL truck. HAULING, tree TH I SUH SH IM I exp. Pnv. duty w/family rates in town. Free est. l..lc/bond'd, Jnsur. Fl'H a labor and materlala. wficome. U yrs in area. custom bn ck h c & JO~Ma-8233 work. grading, demo etc GIRLS oriented ore. c• 11 Jack675-8338/875-7280 estimate. 894·1M2l or lllua l°"' bank financ PalomboConat.llfi'l-8314 bonded~ 831-1257 Houseclearun" & otra·ee 213/867-t.176 for mforma-p . ff .,. $11~133 f.n1,forfreusUmal.,call l .. llwcl~c . • hon&appt ainung. omes lnlr .. ---------DooMuseyMI 36S4 Carpenter looking for Pacific Concrete. Lo •,; Lic327136 645-6974 H•At9 sf)eclahsts. Spec. on · Exterior Specialty : Tie. wrk, decktng & ovrhang dfly & lull day rotes ••••••••••••••••••••••• apts & RE. work. Serv . .a. Apt.s. Lo rates. G3J-2508 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... met 1-...ir apec. Clean wrk, reh.. "d '"""'7 ELECI'RICIAN·Prl~ OCC Student s. ~. truck. 7 days wk. Bonded, tn· r~fP..,tncJ Oeram·c T1·1~Spe" ••••••••••••:':::••••••• --... "'• ' s u r ed 5 4 o. 11 ~ 2 $ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.._j1t.,W 1 ..-.... in Eves . 675-0982. Bob ,.L.lt...1 C ---right-free estimate on Trash, tree tnm, Randy <an"'•mel P.,...,.ERS P .. ..,.,...lNG ••••••••••••••••••••••• enc.nes •noons, 25yrs ex--_.. laraeoramalljobs. 642.5700,979~9 J-""' "",. per 862-188.1 Master Crartsman . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uceosed 673·0359 ---Expr'd. Reas Rates. VERYNEATPATCH --· -------~pecialty : remodeling, <llUd..:are. housekeeping, k Stmg student, big truck, a..c-Ta Free Est. Call Gene JOBSl&TEXTURE Tr'ft Ser-fie• _..;;._ ________ , ruush, 4 yrs locally. XJnt hv~-m pref. 640.081 9. ·Mel Electric. Ind.. tree cuts, clnup, haul.mg. •••••••••••••~O••••'-• SSZ..0458 Fre6est. 893-1.:19 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rels.499-3106 __ References. comm.res.&ma1nt.svs. 494·76f5&4!M-2129 ,,, PA'IY"UP• ... 'TERING Removals, tr1mmin°, Has rain dama&ec:I your asphalt'! Call 63l·Z440. Bonded, Uc .. msured AftarMy•s& "'911 Senicea ••••••••••••••••••••••• Honest & reliable. Free "wld you pref~r a pf6-All PROFESSIONAL .. .,.n ...,..., • c..,..t Senlct Child care in my home in est. 979-8642. $24.SO 1st hr. Hom'ldemillg f~ional '! 30 yrs. exp. Palnhnlf. lnler I Ext er. A 11 t y Pe s , P r e e pnin}ng. Free est. Lic'd, ....................... CM. call Mary. :>57-0228, Gm-•• ....................... For even. appt 10 yr Reas, work euar642·0386 esumatea. call M0-6825 msrd '42-2636• 497·4131 Clrpet Man INtU lay yours dys &some eves ...... ~ .. , ............. Want a REAlJ..Y CLEAN home, 968-81B2 Paint.in£. Extr/lntr. Ex· P~TERlNG T~ ~[e~~ct.Oo~~~=:~ort Cathodor Prof Japanese Landscap-HOUSE! CaU Gingham I 9ldlc••9 pr'd, honest, neat. reas. Homes, additions. re ............ ~ ......... .. at bigger savtng.s. Free -·•••••••••••••••••••• Ing & iardenlna. Maint. Girl. Freeest~·Sl23 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lic'dll64-1°"5Dave ~~o~ eats, low ~ri~~th!,4::~~~~ est.~3646 RJ.Huffman & Son, Gen incl. mow1.t11. trimming, AUces · Houaecleanldg. LANDSCAP~G. YOUNG MAN. s yrs expr bea. ~ Inter. students SlS·ANY MATTER Contr. Custom AJt & Add, spraying, weedlng. Fl'ee Reas, reliable, refs. Own Reasonablf' pnces in wallcovenng Free Plllllllblllg Victona Lee. ~-0741 Eve&wkndsby appl. Shampoo & ste11m tlean pat i OS, cab i o et s, estimates 545-7072 traos.~7207or8'6-487l 968-87'8SorSC7-584G est.s.64S-857SAndy nu•o••o•ou•uuu .._.~ C~ Default/Divorce $175• Color bnghteneri., wht formica. New const. Res ._ --HOMESAVERS. Plumb-..,..._., __., Collect1ons JO'io• cptslOmlnbleoch.Clean & comm'I. 645-4644 or CLEAN-UPS/HAULING HOUSECl.EANJNGisour Custom Landscape nne Exter. Painting by tng & He11ting. Free est,••••••••••••••••••••••• Drunk drivmg $300 liv, din rm. hall 115 Avg 548-4541. Ltc & bonded Prunll\g-Plantmg bustn ess. Reliable Services. Ken. R. Sinor. St.. lie., ins. Try $10 hr. Hooest & reliable Windows cleaned, re- Cup lotnal) rm $7.50. couch $10. chr ~est. 642-9907 service. Janice's Ra&· 646-37?0 me.836-SSSSUhrs. i.ervtce. BotA. MIC OK. aaonable, businesses. \Jnlwfldetainer·default SS. Guar ellm pct odor. G~n. contractor, new, ad· G_, .. ~ gedyAnn'sat645-1800 ..... , 751·3~or847-0383 bomes&apts.847-4461 lJ.50.00full price Cpt repair. 15 yrs expr. d1t1ons, Tomod • re.s., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prof paint'g & paper _________ , ____ ..;__ ____ _ Simplewills S35.00 Do work myself. Rers ~~ ~;~o:!t. Spiro HANDYMAN:Carpentry. ~l~l~~mMo~~~~~:~: Brickwork. Small jobs. hanging. work guar. Drains & Sewer cleared Trade your o&d stuff for •Cou.rtcostsextra 5310101. ,,. --:._ -----electncal, plumbing & ing Service. 546-2393 re-Newport, Costa Mesa & Free e&l. 536·•780, No charge over SU.50 new 1oodies with a Timothy Lashlee. Atty. CahrilKJ Draperies floors. 847-2787, 557-4504 ferrals lrvme. 675.3175 eves. S36-4:B3 W/C.O. C.M. residential Claas.iCied ad. 642-M78 <714l636-7200taft 7PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~a.... p-1-A Y--cas.11-D~N~e~lson~~ss~7-~J7~8.1~---liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 call <213) 43Hl915 HANDYMAN . Homes & General Housecleaning _......., USl'f -nw n..L:~ 65 17 ----------I BAKERY Do you have Drapery f'abrac Sale apts. Consc1enl1ou1:1 exp. Call alter 4 Ask for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spfciab1111g in residen· ft.WITI7'"_,_ Ctlilrt1tMaldlM) any problems with your 47,000 yds in stock must Craftsman.Call645-0302 Maria543-4926 "Two Men Wiii Move tial homes. mt. & ext. ...................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• balung goods? Wt• still be sold' 70'"" savings m-You" We handle lrg & Please check our re· Refrig. sales & service. For Ad Action Cabinets & shelving for have capacity to prov1dt• ventory reduction guar. Glou YeOldeCharLady sml moves-office & fereoces. Lie lf 32088I Reliable, honest work. gar & ulll. rms. cstm your needs. We offer 1st Quality. Ken Rutcher ••••••••••••••••••••••• HousecleanJngServ1ce. household. Distance & Guar . msrd, free est. Cal1Ernie543-J..585 Calla Daily Pillt AD-VISOR 642-5678 made.640-7154494-9543 qual &serv. 549-491J5 Drapery 1510 E. 'Edinger GLASS ll4CM83() local, a lso packina. Ted. 636.7 ..... " ---------Santa Ana 541-0203 "A"0907 • ,_, D.....a.... c.-..ter Cemtnt/Concrde "·t·""""' '""" Lowest legal rate. ----------·""""l! r-· "" """" Call btwn 7-lOam wkdyi. Rosemane's Houseclean· Lic/•nsrd. "-1 T lll·'u•. c.oast Pamtin,, Cstm ext ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mg. Refs, reason, own Ph84'7-ms....., .,..... lint .. airles;-spraying. ROOFS installed factory Sliver Hammer "'raming Cw.tom dr<ipcs, i.preads, trans.00-1400,645·3439 ---------001-6262 direct: estab 35 yrs. Call Co. Com. Res. Room Quality Cement work. shutters & all window P.....,lewhooeed"""'ple MOVING. HAULJNG •-HaroldG 5492961 dds _.__ h h '"over1ngs al discount -r ..--E I "' PAPERu•""GlNG R unn · a .:!.51-4820 uuue l l' rig l Wjy Ill ~ sbouldalw11yscheckthe xper re 1able, own CLEANUPS. Reason nnn . eas.1---------- Seil idle items Yrs e:tper. Call Jeff pnCC!> Shady DeaJ. 743 Serv1ceD1rectorytnlhe transportation. refs . Free est. Coll. students. Neatworlt.Freeest.Llc. Find what yoi. want in 642-5678 586-4452 BakerSt.C.M.549332.'\ DAJLYPlLO'I' Carmens.56-4192 B&B.673-1166 AlSmltb.751~1 DallyPilolClassineds. I~~~~~~~~~ Hefp W..ted 71 00 H..Cp W Oftted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tWpW..ted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 HetpW.ted 7100 HelpW.ted 7100 HelpW_... 7100 HefpW..ted 7100 HelpW..tect 7100 .......•..........................•.............•....•........................•............. •······················ ·············••&••····· ....•......•.•.•....... ACCOUNT ANTS OVERLOAD Offers lop pay. a vanel> of interesting ass1i.:n menu.. serves the entire Orange County area and needs experienced book keeping and act'Ounllnc personnel at all lt"vels Call today and let us tell .>ou how l() bet'ome a busy, >Aell paid Accoun tants Overload pro- fessional. -547-7631 1065 No Main. Suite IOlti. Santa Ana ~ot a public accounting firm Acctng Bkkpng TIMPORARY RegtSt.er Toda) to >A ork on various accounting & bookkeeping assign ments. Work closl' to your home Figure Clerk~ to Sr Accoun· lants fleeded thruoul OrangcCo Robert Hair"<, Accountempt. SOOS. Main. Ste 501 No. Tower. l:mon S..nk In The City of Orange 714 835-4103 Assembly 20 TRAINEE ~SEMBLERS NEEDED l:'>IMEDIATl';LY TOP PAY!!! All .,hifts, day, l'"lnR & g r J \ c 1 n c.' I u cl e ' weekends. Lon.: & 'lhort term asi.1gnmenl!. lloh day & vacatwn pay Hosp1tal12al1on plan avail 38 48 CC!lllplS Drhe 546-4741 c Across From Orange Co Airport 1 Equal Oppor Emplo) er AIMfllbtJ/Lite Some clencal work 1n volved. tull & ptt1mt• Cl II 770· 2967 --- ASSEMBLERS &c.elettt a....fih Growiftq C°"'PG"Y C•7Sl-7343 Bankmg Cl.SU<. EXPER'D c u s T 0 M E R DRIVERS General Office Housekeeper/babysitl'r- IOYS -GIRLS For busy pun:ha.smg ofc SERVlCE/f'1oor sales TRAIME~ for work'g mother. 2 schl UNION IANK l2·16 years of age. Even Must have purchasing Career opport for cons· Best equip~~ol a~d Elitry level pos. grading age children. Lovely NEWPORT BEACH 1ng work. Obtain new exper Duties Include cientaous ave minded working con •lions 10 exammatioas for nat'I home in CdM. IJve-out HasAnlmmediutc subscriptionsCortheDa1 heavy phone. typiog & person . In depth ~~~t%ie~nudtn~ education firm. Req's pref'd.Refreq'd.9am-5: ()perungForAn lyPllotworkmgw1than cleri cal Type min knowledgeofofcsk.ills. ioarecord.Knowledgeof neathandwrit.mg&bte 8334118,at\5:673-7245 'EXPERIENCED adult supervisor Earn :>Swpm cstmr rdal oc-sales exp lYJ)Ulg. Appb', Nat.wnal H 1 d d COLLECTIONS S2() to SJO per week or Master Spec1all11!s Co quaJ. Please submit res Orange & L.A. counties, Systems Corp, 4361 Birch ousec eaoers nee e · more Cati 12131597·0396 1640Monrov1aAve to Bassett Busmen In helpful.(1)-455 1414. St, N.B. <Nea• OC Mature.ToP$$.Carnec ClERk noon to 5pm 1213) CM 642-2427 EOE t.eriors, 1952 E Edmger. Thurs. Fri or Sat ror ap-Airport) EOE. • I 00.H03or645·3439 &tnkini: e'pcr des1ra 4911.2473 5pm·9pm Call SA ,.._ 927..... pomtment. · bit:. late typing All.rue· Collect • ~. ...., --General Office Housecleanin" ..,....,..nnel, •. f aencal-Gen'I OCc dUlll'S DRIVERS ... .--~ llves;d .,.bene ill. --------DBJVEllYMAN RecepffoNst toSIOO guaranteed hr.s, top Please apply in person ~ Trne S775 Accur. typist. Oppor for F I t •me Neal & Early AM. 3-6 dellve~ lnlluentiaJ importer or-wages. Mustprovade own we McKinney Top financrnl group _adv 5491767 energetic Apply, Beacb LA Times, C.M. & N.B. Cersexceptionalfrontofc lraos.540-9525 610 Newport Ctr Dr i.c•ek.s motivated peri> Stationers. 4020 Campus, $350/ mo Ca II 545·0770 pos. Call Walla. 8:n-2700. Newport Beach 558·~ desirous or mgmt onent Cl.Elli( TYPIST Bob Demus & Dennis Person· Housekeeper, live-in, rm t;qualOpporEmployer ed pos Ctill Jt"ff. Fountain Valley N.B Earnxtra$$$mtbeeven-nelServiceoflrvllle,~ &board+salary,across 833-2700 Denn1i. & Den Chamber of Comm In· Dental Ast TmetoS7800 tng wilhouL exper. Sell 1tt1chelsoo. the s treet from the Bar Maid.pt lime Nocx rusl Personnel Service or Lerv1ew'g fnr 2 clerk Dowwllln.Ma.tll?> Beeline Fashions at in •G--e-n_e_r_a_l _o_f_f_1c_e_._e_x_p_e_r-i. OC2an.Tocarefoc-elder pernec rvine.2UQM1chelson typ1i;t, CETA employ Unhnuted happmeas for homestyleshows. Use of necessary, female. t ype ly father, no children, 847 5411 Cafetena, Mff. full or temp pos. Musi beret> of a delightful mdtv. m a car & phone. Samples al 50 WPM. proficiency 962-l.983Crystal pit Good hrs. itood pay & ~\n \'ly & unemply"d 30 busy est ab. practice. no cost. c.an Coe mtervw. w/figures. lO-key by BEAUTY hent"f1ts Irvine area dyi. Type !>Owpm. J:d Call Cathy, 848·1288. 963-7470. touch. key punch exper. Several Assistant'! Won· Call for appt 975·5.257 w' ph pub II c Ca II for . OennilS It Denn.ls Person· helpful, informal office, Housekeeper /Cbauf f eur Female, Live-In can 646-830• rl~rful oppor to a:.si.st top - - -appt 962 4441 nd Servi~ of tluntlOglon CM. Call Millie all SAM, ha1rcutteri. & f>tyllsts -CANVASSER• Beach. 16168 Beach. Q£CTRICIA~ ~Sil)() Housekeeper. lady an Good solid training pro-~Hr + Bonus S JO 8 30 l'f" ----------1 wheelchair, 5 day wk ~ram R1chJrd Ouellene p m Ca 11 5 8 p m Clerk Dental Ass't, ort.ho. chr, JOURNEYMAN GENERAL OFFICE helo H.B. 714/116'l·S22L Salon. 200 Newport Ctr 8.'!}·2861 UTOTEM NB 4', dya. Ortho exp. & w/some exp. & good typ-Dr. NB ----R D.A. req. 642-21626 NEEDEl> ing akill.s for Npt Bch in· ------Olr Wash cashier. Nwpt c · IMMEDIATELY vestment firm. l'iexible BEAUTY SALON desires & Laguna Area Plea:.e 0nvemence Dental Asst, sch ool Longterm assignment. hrs, 2().30 hrs per week. operators Please call for call 644·4460 M ket t.nuned. no exper nee. Holpilal & vacation p:ay. Good pay plus med. ms, appt 963 0717 days. - -3f •6'5-7SllO • H ·t 1· t . I tlon •· · k J 9686141 eve:> Carwwil\.f/lO'-erl811pp osp1 a1ui ion pan vaea • a1c eave. -----1 ty at Metro Car Wa5h P0111t1ons now a-v:ul. 2nd DE TA I LE RS Ca r avail. call Linda at 645-5141 ---------• 2950 Harbor Blvd . CM & 3rd Shift!. at 1111 our Polishers. detail men. Housekeeper · Older - wnter reefs mature, re ftned penon. IJte duties. hoe home on bay ftts-8067 _!l ...... TapeSOS RUMIQUEIM?I ·Cashier f or retail ~~~~~~~~-·l•• .. -tt_lb._ .. IL_Bl_S ____ , Does t~e thought appeal hardware. full time. will * ACCT'G IKICPR * -~ to you tr 50• consider train Pref mature lad) locauons start S2.6S·S3 prelerable Exper not hr lnt•rv1ews conducted nee Also hand washers, Mon Fri at: mu& be neat m appear. 124421..ampson. 751-1337. VOLT ft '-'1-•CJUAC: .. y h i UVk. ~ h ••c 0 u.Dri•e 546-470 (AcroAFTom OranMe Co. Airport> F.qual Oppor Employer General Office. Prer lumber exper. A/receivable & invoic· ing. Must be good typ11t. Start $650. 540-8MO N.B. U yOU 're ready ro,. a new cballange and a feeling of success call Pat Peck al Red Carpet 754-1202 and learn more about th<· opportwul1es in • r~kJ where you set 7our own hours. TO Sl6.5k ELECTRONIC Joining the prei;tq.pous Call for appt Phil Tnlo..IES & EXP. omres ol Unique Homes 6'2-1133 Garden Grove 5:f7-4840 --------- We promote from within Diamond setter . Ex-Growth opportunlt~ fur 1"'" for a fant.aslu: 1978 AC· --------- Laguna Niguel firm Rapidly growing Irvine ct'lerated commission Chef for pnv country ~eekm~ a l>elf Marler Co. has 1mmed opening) schedule. an house swing club m Or. Cly. Salary Equal Oppor Employer pe.nencedonly. GENERAL OFFIC& F\lll time. Sharp, exper. person. Must be accurate typist 40-00WPA1·BUUng. (213)6»1140; 714-979-6122 with2·3yean.currentex· inlhefollowins: loans. creative sales open Send resume to Codllt.IW...,.._a Dlsbwuber. M/F, Cull or venence through lnal •HandSoldennJ? aids, computtt terminal Box 170, P.O Box 1560, p/LGoodhra,goodpay& HOUSEWIVES WouJd you like to work while your chiklrew are _ in school. Hrs 8:30-1 :30_ Assisting nurses aides w/patient care. Apply Part Lldo Coov. <:enter. 466 flagship Rd, N .B. balance. with multiple •Stuffing PC Board~ & active lruming & ad· Datly Pilot, Cost.ii Meaa. Sdlool beodlt.s. Irv. area. Call ~=csYOU Hl- :;ets of bookb + &ome col· •Wire WrappinJt mtnlSlralloo Be unique ca 926216 Dtly/eve classes. Place-roe-appt9'7$-5257 AftG r &: lege accounttng courM'!>. •Cable & Harnei.!-. lll '78 w1lh Unique Homes ------ment A.ssll. 751·9UM So. lrvtne electronics mf11r. General Office mo 5111-4196 aller 7PM t:xcellent benefits Successful appllranl'I Real )-);tale C-Ont.act Jim CHEF Ca Ii r Cock ta I I Domestic H.elp needed by Is starting p/time Help ""-~-recepliornst want· Ask for order ii4s29 will have good m.inual Wood at 675-4i000 F\111 or p/t1me N B. Waitnues, Irvine. ~=~;_r5 ~g~nka ln _Producllon program ;;;-;; busy R.E. office. ACCOUNT ANTS dexterity & poi.ttiw can· 1---------... restaurant Send rl'9ume C for. Phones. lyp:ng •-general UHL.MOTa.. COLLE TOR Must have trans. I wtll "' "' 11.-do attitude Work hrs to Classified ad no 147. pay mileage. R ef"s aECTROHIC office duties. Beautiful PERSONNEL 8AM·4:30PM Co paid Bkkpr min 3 yrs c/o Daily Pilot. PO Box Salaried positio n In ICyou'renottakingbome SERVICES beneC1ti. Salary open automotive exp. Wages 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca Costa Mesa office. pleased.e. 493-2182· 979-5345 ASSEMI~ location & benefits. Call S200 per week can Me. 63 call I baM!d on exp & ab1Uty ,,.,.,..., F'ted. Loadin & Id f Ms. Griffith for appt. We h a v e es ' ab 54'7-7 1. l<X>S No. Mam orappymperi.on: E.O E 84S-lS66,MrsCole ~ Minimum I year ex· g so enng o (7l4)846-0SO Su!~·~~~~~~a .. ~~!. PROGRAM DATA ----------Ould care needed. part =:n:.;e,;"::C:e1~~: =~~·~h;::,~:~~·11~1': ~i-w~~s~&k~:::! --G-IR_L_FR_ID_A_Y __ -1 ~:r5~~':~a~ ~ .. NC. u--lM uf ct time my home. S.E Call Bill Watkins refs req'd. Reply to color code . read H.B. F\lller Brush Co Acctg Clk S8320 fee1'd "46752 Hale A"enue """ an a urer Hunt Bch. 2 children, 714·S49-4200. E.O.E. <la.sslned ad nu 166, c/o bluepnnt.s. speak" read Banquet Dept. Apply lo 7~L AddAllThePlus<'s ~ lrvme 54!1·0335 OEPT ·H[IO 1»:;30.968-707_1 _ -Daib'Ptlot.POBoxl560, Engllsh.lfyoucanwork Oliver Foster, San--------- You can't mistake the ---------1111 • tit Companion, klnd & un· Costa MeS11, Ca 92626 min. of 20 hrs per week, Clemente Inn 125 Esplao-b.1suranceAgency oppor. for succesi; in Wood/CabNt Shop CLEANING derstanding to care for ---------don't let your skills get _dJ __ an_._S_a_n_C_le_m_. ___ _, Agency needs glrl. ex- great firm ror self Auto mechan1r wonted. Top quality sailboats Japanese speakinll lady my mother. 833-5858, DRAFTSMAN n.isty!Call usTODAY! per. in personal lines. s tarter. Call Lisa, expcnenced pro for top Challenging assign-pref"dfbrldayweeklym 64CMl218 3Yrsnunexper.loelect DECC Girl F'nday, good office ratings&art$900. Rapid 848·1288. AlS-O Fee Johs. job in Mission Vie Jo ment-Fu 11 benefits. NB.Call eves: 144-4326 r---------•I mecb, mechanical, & skills. Harbor Arell. All advancemenL Send re- Dennis & Dennis Person· 499-<4787 m~ical. denl4\I. optical.---------PCB detail & a~mbly ___ 5_4_61-4_7_3_1 ___ company benefits. S600. sumeto: Box 15:t, <.\Dal nelServ1ceoC Huntmgton Call Bob Walshaw. Oerical COOi/DiNNER drawings. MuaL have B.ECTRO ..... IC mo.642-3490. ly Pilot P.O. Box. 1560. Beach.l6168Beach. AUTOPOUSH EncsonYachts.54()..8001 Good shift ~avaH. xlnt good line work & letter-"' GIRLSNEB>B> CostaMesa,Ca9'2626 •F. time-Busy Shop TYPISTS & pay. Apply In person. , Xlnt & be _.,l Eniineers. Technicians Ambitiou.'\ Couple Wanted ··Metro Car Wuh ~ pay n .... l s . & Assembler s. Back· Sandwich deli very, S Insurance-Group Health lo manage a small bu.~i-2950Harbor Bl. CM SECRETARIES ~!:.uia~:.1 M eM~rinD~ E. Scienliftc Drilling around in diglta• & days wk, 4 hrs day. Own a.a.ms Exam.mer. Exp ness p1t1me. Wiii not in· lbat Manufacturer Controls, 4040 Camp11s an a Io g cir cu 1 try . transp. Earn ovr $3.50 at least 1 yr. F/time/P/ terfere w/~ur present ---------1111 .ERJCSONYACHJS Seektemporaryem~IOY·l·~A~v~e~·~Ba~l~Is~ln~d~.~~~~ Dr,N.B.SS7·905laskfor Dlver'Slfiedworkload in hr. Call 8am-tpm, time/Homework Sal i...i.. u Ill KatbyTiemaM. des •· """a""" On.ft "-'nl7"" JVV· n1Ust tN '""to AVON menl where we ma e it till"" lestm(D of in· _.....,...,..... ___ . ______ 1_.-_ •• _ ....... __ 0_•·---- leam. Mr.llall.642·11>.14 Hus the followmg full· worthyourwhllc COOl(,~IMI Dnirftu.1t/D-1--strumentatioo. GU"'RDS lolenor Plant Main . Time on hand'I. tart>d or ti o f T,... JOI M v -"a H • ...,...... ADVANCED KINETICS " A p A R T M E N T me penings or ex. _.. esa e • ..,. nv. osp, s Yr• exper. in PCB & te nance. Mu st have MANAGER-Retired l'OU· ~~~ ~~:m~~n~e~ per'd help. Wages based TOPPAY 661 Cen ter St, CM elec::t·mech design" de-12.:uv=:SC.M. ~~.&N~~~:::~~U~~c:rni::; ltl"Onthorticult:ural bck· pie to manage Costa havA fun. o-come an onex!:ne1n5cHe. You'reYour<>wn Boss 548-S$85. tail. Duties wlll include r R · _ _. k Tel h gmd or comm'I exper: • b 'ldi " CK" nN LIME mech"":caJ deta1·1 •· al· E.O.E. um. etir.:u 0 · cp ""·U time. $3-SO hrs•-... Mesa 10 unit w ng AVON repre!'entative · · ~Q~ office • COOKS ..... .. ---------1 & cal' req'd. Nat'l co. Caru 1 · ..... near all .conveniences. For .more information • -CAlPBfTEaS ""-5 1 sembly drafting. Must F.n&ineer 100~ FREE C:.11833-4SSSam--m. __ 1_494-41.D ______ _ No children , no t>et!I . call 540·7041 ()r Zenll ·C:AllNITSHOP 0 overload A&:.l\perl. neceasC.h af opens . have r~mlllarity W/cur-FACILITY s1200•-------~~ .. --•1n c 1 -........ Plea.secall646-4477. 7-ll59. ....SSEMIUltS PP Y lo e • an rent rrul·specs for PCB Draftln• mechanic HalrDesigner vent nlr to_..... 557..0061 Cl e m ente Inn. 12S dulen. Xlnt J_1ay & Knowledg~ofelectronic~. TI.HairH....,.. TAKESTOCK! ArtHa••Wortl HAIDW.All 3723BlrchSt..N.B. Eapla nd ia n. Sa n benefit..1.EOE.Sc:1entlfic & civil draftlng. 2 Yrs ls nowexceptingapptror Ofnumerousbenoffered Mature resp. adult with Babysitting & lite IMSTAUBlS ~~~~~~~~~!Clemente. DrilUn1 Controls, 4040 collegeolc.Xlntopporfor stylistw/cbentele. to detail minded person u pr. In t1eedlepotnt, housekeeping, Sun·Mon. EHGIMIMAM -Cah'lpu11 Dr. N.D. growth. Call Rita, GREAT in successful corp. can crewel •tnitUJ'lgwanted trans & refs required. F\111 benefits, medical. COUNSELOR 557·9051 u 1'. for Katl\y 540-a5, Coastal Person-OPPOR'fUNlTY Carol, 848-1288. Dennis & for position In Art C&ll wkdys 640-0130 ask dental, optical. Please Clerical nea:ann. nel Agency, 2790 Harbor, 64~3484 Denn Is Person n e I Needlework Specialty for Shella. Wknds &eves. apply In person at Pwrna.nellt poaltJoo. our DAAPERYOPERATORS CM. ServBeaclhc,el6lo68r BeHua~t,_ineton Shop, Some retail expT. 497·3963 Security QCOce ol N ---------1High School student to "''" ui__. ••• "~93 kd ra1cs~ Y"'C .... S Newport • c. 0 exper. ·exper'd. The 9 tauic Exec Women's Council L'l wortc P /Ume eves. Ty~. ---------req n"1 • ......--w ys Bab-itter, ...... lure, for 8 ...... ...,.... ~ "I _ _..._., .... m train to test Draperi•• ....... 81-h St r , ________ _ •9AM "v ""' n.... s .__., •m • --.... · seeking ambllloua M/F ing req'd. 545·1000 art•· •·~ · mo old child. Various 193\1.A!":reAve, .A. interview applicant•. N.B.~1431or759·1648 as p/t mngt trainee 5PM Janltorial , ~SEMBLERS 50 Trainee Assemblers ~Immediately Loni .tr Short Term ~Ian men ta 3 $b1.ft.t Avallable. ~t have own lrantp C411T_., SIM120 ..FNe. T0p ~1.Y-Vee P-.y vw..i .... ,., s.nta. Di•Walterkiddc"Co ms. E. Matot Sie 10 Newp>n Beach <ConWot Brbtol f& ca...,. behlod Carl'sJrl hr$.CdM.673-825S l~~~~~~~~j Mu st have itood boa G...,... • .._nett• Call. --------• THllllOADWAY telephone ability. Notyp. DRIVER sale t parta UU\a ... ""' 1 ,., Babysitter needed, Sat's IOOIOC•a Ina. Salary +com· &atoclrroomtralnee.Sol _552-_a.oo ______ , HOSTESS Let-Mia s:30am-4pm. Occaaa. Restaurant. Exper. lhru million Ir xlnt c:ompen1 cat, 1932 E. Pomooa St, Fl.le C'left, pert lime, lite le Cashier relief. 4 to 5 HuOpeninp For: eves. My home. Own 'T. Bal dealrtd. Appl)t. benel\tl. CaJHouppt. . S.A. (Edln1etexltoflS5) typlna "phone. Mature nllhta. Young. attractive JAHITOtlS trans.631·5263betwn6& VlctorHugotnn.•1ClHf Vld0f'T•%H*Y DIUVERSPtrlmeSc.hciol responsible, exper only. w/eitp. Apply wkdya: P/time • morn1na 8 eves. S.. 'lat Bui Drtwn. Xlnt OPPtf 6"-al'Zl ~· sos 30lb St., C::n;,~:~v,;~ Bab"ltler.houaekecper. C714t 55M120 to beeome part oh rrow-R.O-.. SH-pttmanot1t posllions. Uve-tn or out. CdM atea ---=------l~~~~~~~~~I int orianWiUon ded•cat· •HK """ HOmss 1 child. 645-SSM .......... ~. ed to uansportloa the MAMA~ Exper'd. F /time. Apply AJ>Plr In Penoo CUSTOMERASSlST b-.idlcapped. We traln Salary commensurate to, Obver Foster. Sao ~i lGam·noonor Learn "eeoratlna 4' &et yout0dri\te1mal11th<M>l •lexper Westminster Clemente Inn. US b)'appointment i)Cffort.Smlutcrvwlna buaes-all •utomatlc:. M~al t»ark 11otiat. l!laptandlan SanClem El'nlroRdatS.D.-· .._ MOdlf st.eady part· Ideal for rfotiNd per&QD, •JUl P;xt205. ' ' m 190 ° •' U~r for waUp11per • sluden\i Ii homtmabrs. lbteaa, El Tonto Nd1 .,. ... 4> ~ L ~ m w l n do.,, b Ii n d $. PtnetJ'ee TraNport1Uon Cardie~er, malnt. Mature. day tibstess Mon·,.rl. """tlNll......-Employer Decor.tor oepot, see W. Co. 800 S. Mam St, \Jnlt T•nnis racquet. club. 133-9740 4211 Dolpbln llthST.C.M. ~.Sani&An1.Applytam ~•f\lPM Striker Way. NB <11ear l~~=~~~~~ICustotMr MtVlc-t, uptt. ~3P,:110· ....... ,"6-7• raJ otc 1'0rt, 34 bra _M_a_cA...,...rt_hur_> ___ o;:...1 I· ~epary. Cema)e, Ute .,,..,.. .._ ""''• wMlc, 4 t Wf'd-lo"rf, 1·9 CL.Ill( t11>ln1. proftc.-lency EclUai~Emplyrm/f Wlmda. sat.,, bue!(j on F/ll,.li>Vtftitol'Y~ntrol wtfl1urea 18·ko by Ua~iOOMtblftaJOUwaqC. ap."4-9531> clort. 8:30arn·1Pm. 11M touch, informal Office. aolell'!ctaulr...t ad; dO ~~--.,...---...,.;;.i lbow OH 350 Clinton, OI. Call !lllW• aft. tAM It well -Ca.II NOW. SiiiU thJrtil fast will\ OaUy C.M. ...-00 ..a.-.. 'p(lot Waat Ml • J • 11 tl I \ • ., .,, ....... ' .~ DAIL.YPU..~T * ~.,*'*Y2.2.t01I M.i.W..t.d 7100 .... ._.tN 7100 Hetp~-.+.ct 7100 HllttW..t.4 7100 .... W~ 1100 ,, ~;;r••••••••••••••••••• ••u•••••••u•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ...................... ~w~ 1100 llC..rtOMST .--SECRETARY Ht4pW•t.d 1100 _._.caKn 1010":'--_ .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..... II .,..,....., .....,.. .I ll Ha 11 J I MOTOlt ROUTJ ... ..-ama co. vuuu typ-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• R purtJJ_bJ p119,::1 :c,r31· Th O I& p rHOllllPllSON-1-l.ni. Good puaonalit1 ~ldman, Real Eat•t~ NHd Sharg, P /T Tdt&>bc>ne Solkllun1 ~x· 01SlfWASll£R.\Vhlle Like new Watercloud 1,fr v.t>t'k E~l.IM' not n~~ llv:Uab~ Y 1•1: hu Ph111 LI~ <.'lericel '1.6$ per hr. Call 642-15'3 for adult ce>tnmu.nity, tn secretary rtceflt for p.r1enct'd only Sell sears Ken mo~ portable waler bed w /cat m will train. Call Sally: rout• 1.n ~1,:: vr.J!,0 STAIT$621MO Receptlontat/Sec:'y Lafunll Niguel area f:~i.tea~r~5~~fTuss Orn.nae Cours l~adln1 ~lllxc model Push but pedestal & bdbtd :>4.9 1319 _ __ C.1ta del Soi Aru. t:.rn lnlorcml !nvuocunent weektod.s only. Marine ~~~oJ::O.!!" •·Ii 9AM·l2 · e· hewspa~r at home. your ton cootrohl ror s <')'<'I'" 7~1003, ~5320. HU -about l200 per fftOQt.h for ~U Comp&Qy Ben«til.I l1Pe bualneu. NewJ)Ott """' noon • phone Part mne or full scu..i.ncs Butcher block l\Jtcic~~P '14/P' f/t or aboutanbourotyourar. lnNwptBeta 64S.332l Heach.CaU&U-7100 ~vr H1.aheat eo1nm1u1on t.op.Cinbeconvcrt«'dto4p1~ramllyrmfum,6 ~!uiti. Ir~' ~~.paCay "11· temoon. lo'or detalb call SICllT AlY paid. Call 835-64S3 l-3 PM undercounter. $150.00 mo 1 old. 1490. 8!H·7095 for appl 975 ~i"' 6'2.-i321 and leave name Pl77A' Recept!ooiat, telepbol'l.fs SAtE.5PERSON: Cornm'I Loan Pljtfortn only. CaU 835--0810 after 5.30 aft 6pm fl wknda. and phone. LLR WI~ bkkp'1 " sctc'y P~rmanent pert ti~" Pm Dinette, ~e·a. 5 1wivel --WANTED ""-'d h I _..,.,_ P •· bl " Neatappu1ar. req'd. Ty""' \TEL"'PHONE L:iches l.kr Rm Attend -: ....,.pr e p ....... ay, neco .. a e. Ent h u 4 I u 'tic & 60 wi>m, accur. Sh SO r. • FR(; HT DAMAGED chairs. block & wood 2 or J d11ys pr mo, Ideal MOTOlt ltOUTI malt"'-plua aod on the Mat., neat appearance. ener get l c . Ha e koty Wpm. Sal.+ El<tra Cd 8on1b HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 ualn vinyl, WJ'O&lihl Iron for Sr Cit 1 zen. Prl v. Large Dall)' Pilot route oven. Call 831·3'92 ll'T3-4080 Farll\li, Weiitcurr Pla1:11 call 5pm-8pm 839-2861 w. W11rner nr Harbor, base, pevtr·martop, 17$. 1·o untry c lub. Call =1l\.r~u:;·:;:~::;h p R Es c ff o o L Receptlonlat. Mat. in· 642·0972 ci!lffc1MS-S280 Telephont> Solicitors, 10 Sant•Ann.979-2921 _.536. __ 2898 ______ _ 644Y404forappt. Friday afternoou TEACHER-must be born divldual. Phoots,typing, Salesperaoft . Marine ForAnlntervwAp~t l'leededimm~.pleaaant CASH PAID Mile. ~ebold rumlture LEADED GLASS person Saturday ond Sunday a1ain. Mon-Fri, 8:30 to A/R, A/P. National Co. hardware lmowle<Ste re· UNION IANK everung hours, no exper. f'or Wsbr/Dryra/Refric also rerr11 .• waaher & needed.port & full time. momlngs. Approximate-12:15, H.B.~ Med. benefits. e:3o·5. q'd. FIT. 673-4<8> 6lONewPort Ctr Dr, necessary, wiU train. Hr· ._working or not 957..&ln dryer. 00.2758 · 114.536-656l ly S4:SO per month itross $7800 a yr lo start. Newport Beach lypayt.oS3.75Callafter3 __ - eanunas. $50.00 cu sh de ,,.School Teoe..... 75'-0387. Exp. nee. _ Sales Rep S12,00d kQual Oppor Emplo~er PM. 754· 1601 Riviere convertJble sofa. I .eical Secrt'lary PoS•t rtquired. Phone CerUrtcate or expor. ReceptloniSt/t)lpUt. Will eon.u.lcaffon Eqiiip Ta.UR Washer & Dryer Good condition. $75. l.Jw firm in Newport 642·'321, Uk for cin:ula-12:30to6. ~.80p/hr. be ta1.1&ht bookkeeping l Car + sal .;r bot\aa. of· $~ 1.1 Like nu delux mulH· 5'6-484.3 Center w /busaness lion. Leave oame and ~ &lrlolfc 7~·52112 . fered by major corp. rA-<nE'l1ARY, lebkl'fta. Or previous banking cycle models only . Beautiful King siie clients needs an ex· nurober and make of Pr AD D' . seeking dj!terrnaned shorthand, non·amkr, knowledge. :so. West Completely reblt . re· Spanishst,vlobdrmaet. per1enced legal secy. auto to be used and your essman, exp. . . ack ltECPT/TYl'IST careerist. Call Bill, Real Eat.ate Ofc, Proper. Bank, Laauna Beach, f In ls he d Y ~Mr $400/ofr. 645-ll64 Outstandlnf sk ills & call wall beretumed 360· Top pay, lClnl work· Experienced Te m .. 833-2'100. Dennis & Den· ty Menn, nr Airport, 35 Call JoanC9'7-1771. guarantee. r price only, --------- "horthand required. Ex-· 101 conds. Laguna Hills. porary ~IUon ft6m l-6 nis Personnel Service of hr wffk, Ph: 540-2960, your choice $130 each. Medit. Style Table, 6 side n~llent working cond1 · Nurse Aide, hn 8 :30em lo 830-0891 mo'a. Phooea. typlng, fil. Irvine. 2082 Mlcbelaon. 3400 Irvine, Ste 101, Free delivery. Sale ends &2 anncbaln, $650. Call lloru> Send resume to· 2.~m. $3 Per hr. Must . 11 Newporf Bch. The Reuben M h 3rd Al5 & ~23 M L. Long, PO Box 2540. h11ve car. 6'5-3953. Printing Collatei-, p/l•!fte. Ina. SaJaiy open. 644·1945 sales retail -I arc . o new ---·------Newport Beach Ca 92tl6J. Now acceptlng applica· TIO .. C .... 1!95~1 SECRETARY-TYPIST Ike new ref,.. e • s • ••sofa & c:ttafr l.1ve-1n companion , housekeeper, capable, rt'f111ed woman, able lo dnve. Non smoker, non dnnker 493-4601 NURSES AIDES/ taona ror Mon & Tues '"' .., " " Newport Bueh Design £. lee freezers & ranees at 1 • ORDEllUES night shifts. Apply 9am· R-:t~L Domt Ir C• AND llRDS Firm wilb deliihtful efl· Now Tak an a the cost al South Coast * 645-9100 * 59 Bed Facility. Join .. 4pm, Pennyaaver, 1660 ~led&e req'd. Full & varonment It lrleodly Applications For Appliances, 537.2542 .. Placentia, Costa Men. A pioneer real estate p/t. "'2.M22 people reqUlres an ex· c~ -NIGL.1'9'S G.rw Sale 1055 happy group & enjoy the farm bas moved to new ...... .....,.,..,._, ~a·th g--' ""Vft "1 Washer/Dryer W t -.,.-xlnt '--rt Ba I ,..... -~ ....... ,.. """' ""'·llTi • es ·••••••••••••••••••••••• =ne 1 5· yv ew headquarten in Newport akillJ to help m busy of· ru me anghouse 3 Yrs old $199 Conv. 2055 Tb11nn Ave, Print Shop Beach. SALES ri·ce. 631.1700 ask for Apply ln Penoo . · Ana. Marla Draperies CM ,,..,~ for both 673·5C39 or remnan• cl•arance.' '"4 • ......,.,. PLATEMAKB SaJespersonnelwhowish WE KNOW Yvonne JPMto5PM 833-61111 Sornefullrolls~2Sc&o$1. LOAM NOCESSOR with secy skills for mortgage broker llrm. Loan background pref'd. Nl•ar Fashion Isle HUR SES AIDES nper'd. Some stripping, outs t a n d 1 n g op · 151 E. Coast Hwy photo & layout functions. portunilles in real estate YOU WANT SecretarY for Propert9 Newport .. ach aI-.cJ.s 8020 _caJ_l_546-6 __ 1_17 ___ _ Exper. pref'd. Will train XI t k" d & J RESIDENTIAL Mgmt Co. Seeking strong -r If. d n wor mg cons sa es: , A JOB! book Equal()pporEmployer •••••••••••••••••••••••Estate Sate: Furn & qua 1 •e persons. All "---nts ... Day work ~k. IN C OM E •· COM . keeper typist. Peo-,.._ _____ _. __ ,, 7 ).I 1>44 8824. tufts I /\ t p k ....,..., "' .. .,. I •-NEW&USEDBIKES kitchen items. Feb s avaa . ppy, ar Apply, National MERClALarenowbeing Weu __ ..,_... pe onented. Growing h. Lido Conv. <:enter, 466 S C 361 1 t 1 d ,.__ .. _... Co Salary negotiable Tow Tr·~ .. D . Recond. Buy, sell, trade. 2S/26t 20.502 Montauk LYN -rstems. orp, 4 n erv ewe at 716 You••1.-p~ · · ..... ,. nyers ex· c ri &C .,.a .. N Ci.rel VI 1 da u FlugshipRd,NB. ~~-chrtSt>,ENO.EB .. (NearOC ~Coahllast'HNweayr.MacArthur lrY-~U .. -To .-a1. Send resume to: P .O. per'd. Top pay. Apply, yce o.uooo ewPorl eJ c: n anapo s ,......, .. _ _ ..,. Box 2990, Newport G&WTowing, lOOOlrvine Blvd.C.M.642·7910' &Busnant,HB HURSESAIDES ~ Wehanthe~al Beach.CA92660 Ave,NB642-L2S2 Alum. Sheet 3'x12' .020 1-\Jll and part-time pos1· lions avail. Good salary "' xlnt benefits. 7-3 & 3·1L Exper. prer'd. D D -1&1~ ...__ $12 e cb S w ti ~c:f1~p.M:;: ~~~~1-Prod-·uc-u·on-M·an-aa·e·m-en•t•' fteaft~~.1907 == ~:~;~r:;:1ii :~~a~~~~ ~;;;;~~;;;;;~~~~~ ~~~t,~JJ ax~s4 &yvww"Conv llo!:op 2055Thurin, C.M. 6-1.2-3505 DEPT. HEAD/ (714)759-0422 tobeagreat State certification to will land this post <'y,wellcaredforfemale Jrwetry 1010 acSec$9600FeePaid Wood/CabliHt Shop · chaftcefw carry weapo'n, man w/local firm w/plush kittens, 1blk,1 gray & 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LVH'S Top quality sailboats. ·--------•I sfudeeh.nDOlllgllt...t 1aJary$.1.7Shr.Callbtwn ores . Call Ceclia, gr ay &: wbl. $$'ea. ExploretWwLmtds Ch allenging assiftn · 8-5PMMon·FrlC94-8571 8411·1288. Dennis & Den· 547·3182 WANTED Truly unique opPof for r II b r RESTAURANT &aew.nn .. to rus Personnel Service of I-ult & p1l1me. AM & PM 'hilt:. a\Jll Apply, Park l.1do Conv. Center. 466 l·lJg,h1p Rd. NB adventure seeker ment-u ene ls, So. Calf. toffl'll Secy $9672 Fee Palcf' Huolln .. oo Beach. 16168 DOCJI 1040 TOP CASH DOLLAR w large corp. Worldwide medical, dental, optical. NEW --. L.-• ...._ 'adr & T""eH Beac~.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PA I 0 F 0 R YOUR --- ofrlces. Call Candace, Call Bob Walshaw, RESTAURANT ·--~-z_. ._..good.,_ Adventuresome person OOGTRAlNlN"'' JEWELRY, WATCHES, Encson Yachts, 540-8001 • ._ Tr I A Tr . W "" ART OBJECI'S, GOLD, 848·12.88. Also Fee Jobs. OPENING! ~-._._ _. wi.Ufindtheltdreampos. ave gent amee e YourPlaceorMirl't! SILVER SERVICE. MACHINIST Dennis & Dennis Person----------1 _.__....,.._ W/in('I corv. Call Can• viii t rait1 if necessary. John Martin 548-00.S9 neJServiceofHuntington CARL'S JR. WHATMOlf dace, 84111·1283. Alsd Fee Cood typin( required. FINE FURN " A'N · 1 OOL llOOM MACll Da)s Beach, 16168 Beach. CAN YOU SAT? Jobs. Dennis " Dennis Non smoker, must have AKC Re& Silky Terrier TIQUE.5. 645-2200 PRODUCTION Cooks and counter CALL Personnel Service of air line e~per or travel Puppies. Shots. Male & DI cl t Form & C.:ulll'r Gnndcr for ni~hls Cla-.~ · 1\ •• Onlv OFACE/ CLERICAL personnel, part-time, full IJUOfS Huntington Baeacb, courses. F111l travel Female. 7141963-~9 Po~~~~ eaec~~r v0v'.~ TYPIST lune, days and nighta. 18 16168 Beach. benefits. Cal I 640-6671 Sybenan Husky pup, fem. brilliant white Value $S50 fup pJ)' + oH•rtime lhll>.in lnl· :.!!(>! W Coa~l ll"'y.~H t;OJo: Or over for closing. App-ForAaa.teniew M·F9-SPM Copper/wht. Blue cues. SacS37S.'9t·3409 IBM ly Tues. Feb 21, through _.._..£ 11£.11! Secy $10,800 Fee Paid , Son., J,.eb 216. Please app· 1 -~ ~ n.. Perfect Fit 'fypist 1',ee Paid 213/592-5610 SELECTRIC II ly at the followine Cori's Ubrwf ... l.c Slip mto a proressaonal llwn's Ho En-on~ AK __ C_G_o_l_de_n_R_e-tn_e_i_v-er MKM 1ry 1078 . MACHINIST PART-TIME Experienced accurate Typist needed im · mediately . 70 wpm Jr.restaurant: EqU&.IOppEmplyrmtr pos.w/respectedmfgco. Generous oppor. awaits puppies,6wks,S100.rleld •••••••••••h•••••••••• seeking ~Uable person. selfstarterw/1opco.Call tmd & obedience ba<'k· Colchester 13x2'", lull ;, \ rar~ ex per necessary, w t up, lay out & short run, rd',, li42·734J We need someone to help us through ow-busy or. race day. Some riling, lypmg, calculator work, & possible accounting machine posting. Must have 10 key exper. & pro· ficiency. Hours would be approx. 8 :30am til J·OOprn Monday through Friday. Please ti.ke a moment & drop a resume to: 31852 Del ObisPoSt. San Juan Capistrano, Ca. S"'~ICH SHOP Call Candace, 848-1288. Lisa, 848·1288. Also Fee gmd754·100$ pc Ice • 1. 9 so • "'""'....., Also Fee Jobs. Dennis & Jobs. Dennis & Dennis LeBlood/Collet 14'"x24" --.Ma<·hine opcrJtor . rull llml' & part time. no ei.. pi·r. nl·Ct'":-an . H ll lndus C'tr R!n-1706 (must). . · VACATION RELIEF MUST BE ABLE TO WORK DAY OR NIGHT Girls-Near OC Airport. o en n la p er s 0 nne1 Personnel Service or Fne to You 8045 $1,750. lnt'l Mach Wblslr. Mon·f'ri 10am·3pm. Service or Huntington Huntington Beach, 16168 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (213)961·3434 Restaurant Help Now hir· 5$-0670 for appt. Beach, 16168 Beuch. Beach. Irish Setter puppy, 8 wks, UL.------101'"' · · Sand · hSh W female,ndslovlnrhome --" SHJFTS Excellent Working CooditlOnl Apply in Person ORAHGE COAST DAll.Yrt&.OT 330W. Bay St. mg part·llme help. Apply wic op Service Station Allen· aitrfts & Cook loves kida64G-9095 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• btwn34'5PMdaily. GENERALHELP danl, ellper'd. Day & Applymperson,Stnvro's MAIDS WEHDY"S P/t. Mon-Fri. Call bctwn Eves. Full & p/t.ime. AP· 5930W. Coast Hwy. NB Old Faahion 8-3. 1133-8919 _ ply, Shell SUllon, 17th & free to good home. 10 mo. old male Blk La&, 646-9186 l-'ull t1mc. Good bcnl'f1b. Holiday Inn. Laguna I hlls Contact Personnel. 586-5000 Hamburgers Sandwich Shop, NewPort Irvine. NB lntO Brookburst F . V. --------- Classffled od !\1a1ds & Linen :Men. no. 141 f umc Noexpernc<' Ap c/oft..A..Pllot ply to Rosey, San ._., Clemente Inn. 125 PO •x 1560 Calta Mesa Ask For Paul Ward Eqll&.l Opportunity Employer Esplandian. San Clem. Costa Mesa Co 92626 P/time Eves & Sat.s. Earn Restaurant -Now hiring p/t day help only. Apply betwn J..5pm daily WIHDY"S Old Fashion I lamburae.rs 2640 S. Bria t.ol, SA Beach needs part Ume Servi~ su. Night Attend help. 11:30-2:30 Moo· Fri. 2 Or 5 rutes a wk Apply =ain. Call aft 2PM SbeU, 17th & ~e. NB ' Service Sta. Attendant Sandwich & Salad as-P/tJme. &x~r'd. Neal semblers. SAM·lPM appur. & bandwntmg. Must be neat, clean & Apply, 2S90 Newport :\1,\IDS NEEDE-D-.-e-x-.1---------SS-$7 per hr. taking or· penenced or not. We will Offset Pressman. High ders/deh very. Must train. Starting wage quality instant /com· have dependable car ~ $?. 75 hr Must read, wn le merc1al shop. Ex per on phone. f\lller Brush Co. dexterous. $3.00 Per hr Blvd. Cosu Mesa. Restaurant Management 979-0147 for appt. art TrlWlee (Of' Pina Parlor lOAM. Lon's Kitchen Serv. Sta Help needed am- oc SaJ . mf!d F\all Of' p/t. Apply. area. S800+ Will Seamer, ex~r·d ln sew-990 E Cat Hwy Nwpt & !>peak Engl.ash. Appl) AB Dick &tor Hamada _7SUC7 ___ 1. ______ 1 tra1n. Food exper. nee. in& dacron & nylon aaals. Bctt · ' ~3231 or 752-2771 9am-F/lime. Yr around posa. Spm wkdys tion SaJ nego. Will lead :it 1-141 So. C'lt Hwy, equip necessary. Good REAi.ESTATE StodiroOlft Ca.ril Laguna Beach. 49'1·6S33 opportwuty for the right Professional licensed ---quahty-conscious man or MAJDWANTED woman.540-lJSS sales people wanted non Qwxote Motel Generous comm1&1lons Restaurant, M/F. full or lo Isl seamer pos. pit Good hrs. good pay & Marshall Sails, ~ benefits. Irv. area. Call _u_w_k_dys-=--·----- We have an entry level position 1n our stockroom. Applicant must be able to read. wnte & hold a caur. dnven lie. Must be in- s urable. Employee benerlts package pro- vided. Appl)', 19'l2 Bar· ranca Rd. Irvine. :!loo Newport DI. CM Order Des.le/Receptionist. Advaaced training. ---Accur. typist. Pleasa.nt 642-5062 (Of' appt VFS-52:57 :\la1Lre'd wanted for priv. phone manners. Resp. r.-_. 21 Crodier <'ountry club an Or. Cty. position. 540-1144. ._.....,_' Restaurant bookkeeper. Experienced in income audit and Data payroll. ~G-7000. 4600 Campus Dr. Salary commensurate REALESTATE with expcrienre. Send re Parking Attendants. · ~ume to Box 170, "lo Daily Valet, part time. Eves & I n d e P e n d e n t • "I p o wknds Call 631"'820 f salesperson or broker. Ii ot, · Box 1560, · or Best ofra·ce area of Costa M~a. ea . 92626 _a..o.p"--Jl(_._______ Retail Sales Manogem1nt Business man requires energetic associates who desire to start own dis· tnbutor consulting bus1· ness, s1>nre lime, but lark capital. Opportunt1· ty for th~e eager to earn uni 1m1ted 1n come. Newport Beach. For SALES POSmOHS p ART TIME app't .• call Bud Corbin . NOW OPIH 1fJ9-0226 ~-61'3 EV&elMG MGR. Corbin Anoe., Realtor rFor exciting new store ll1 $175 week. Attractive, ash1on Island, exper out1oiog. enthutiastic 1---------nol required but only eo· personality. Working Real &tat.e lhus1astlc & Interested with youth. Must be over LOAN SICY Ir Tl.HI appbcanls need apply. 2S & have a dependable Due to an expansion, we Ask for David Moore <'ar. Supervislnf adults & are see.ldng an organ1ied _7594185 _______ _ carriers. Available eve. & aggressive sec'y wbo SAJLLOFT ~ __ -------& Saturdays • .642·,821, can handle personal con· . . . Manager Answering ext.250, betweenl·5 PM. tact well. R.E. Lac is re· 'Pat~ Saal °f1gn has 646-7989 SECl!TARY MlJlimum 2 feats uper. Luxurioau Newport Beach real estate office. Bookkeeping & phones Call Cheryt 67~161 SECRETARY OuLstandlnc opportunity for a people oriented person with errlcient secretarlal skllla. Sh pre. ferred. Enjoy excellent company benefit.a. Apply ta m·noon Mon·Fri. Pft'90Mel MAUJOTTHOTB. 900 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal Opp Emplyr m/r Switchboard Opr. Will train. Must be avail wknds & eves. 6'5-8197. Telephone Sales GOT THE INFLATION BLUES? WEDONT! Wente.best Ser v. Mu st have _Ar._k_foc_J_im_____ quired ~ knowledge or amcne · open n fs for supervisory exper. PBX loan processing 1s seamstresses & band~-------- exper. helpful. Must be PART TIME helpful, t>ut we w111 lraln workers. 673-2180 P"-tfob intoWRI mature, hardworking. tMrigbtperaoo. Position S..Oel self starter. Ask for EVENINGS is in our new El Toro •wy Lucille afllpm, 645~197. branch ofc. This Is a 11 you really need a de· -Adults with out.standin•, career oppor. withe Na-cent s>aYinl P time Job M ........ Ori ........ ~ 6 e~S.9pm, we mJy have """ eftTWV attractive penonaliUes lion's t.araest Home what you're looking for. Person who enjoy working with Loan Brokerage Firm. '5+ per hr. 531-0842 To train for a~ounting kids. Start at $3.50 per Please Cell _:_...:....:..:....__.:...._....;.;_.:...._ __ pos. MacGregor Yacht hr. Phone 642·4321, #~. AL MAYNES Salesgirl, Must be able to Corp. 642·6830. between 3:00.5:00 PM. 213/~·7611 work e ny 4 days per AlkfwJhn week 10-6. Apply In MATURE WOM AN · --------'Th p /t i m e to welcome Equal Opportunity ReaJ &tate Sales People ~nm ~~~~mfv0e~ newcomers & contact Employer wanted. Up to 90/10% Bal 111. mercbantJJ. Fiexlble hrs. p A R T • T 1 Jwt E comm. split. Nwpt Bch --------- Need car, lite typing. RECREATION WSI. _63_l_·OllOO _______ l•------... ~- 547·3095. CPR, Senior lifesaving UCEPTIOMIST SALE.5 Mechanically inclitted in· Ttlq\8red. f\lll·Ume sum-Lola ot variety " public =:~':. :~:Jt dJvldual needed for pro· mer644-5404 contact . Lite lypina. Outatandlna opPoftunU.y duc:Uoo spray paint aut. Part Ume alteQdant for li50. ror a people oriente!l &f.2.7343 paralyzed yn1 woman, EllieO".Brien 540-5001 person. Medical Ex per front of. Sat I S u n . 1o·3 P liJ . SneWni &Snellinl of Apply tam-noon 67S.S6SZ N~ Beach AletieY M-Fri ......__,..., face for busy suraeon. ~Campus Drive ..,... • .... ......,..,..., IU!Q\4ra Jlaht \)'plnl ~ PAYIOU. to $f00 It MAUJonHO'fB. ability to bill wuraoce. Thorouib l.ndiv tc>Ulbt Reeept. Oen. Office tOONewportOenteP Dr Applicant should have for imPorlanl pO.. W/lta· Mic Ill.~ Newport Beach pleasa~l peraoualJty. bl• cp. Call Barb, Front ofc pos. lor e~ F.q\14J()ppEmptyrm/f SalatY open. 644-1240 tm-2'7ot. ~ at Den· ferveacent & aim IPdly. • , \ Medical beck om~. ex nll Penonnel Service of Call Cari, 133-2700. Den· SALES perieneted, llailted X· lrvl.ne,208Ulidtdsoo. nil le Damb Penoonel tt-:-:c.....- tl)'. Lie. required. NB -~~ Irv~., 20la a ............. . nn. aeply '° .eoa 153 ~ PBX ..naro•s · . Opporuaa1u ..... u. Dally Pilot P.O. Box Uf"UUI 9' ~ w/lnt'l co. Saki btct· 1.MiO, Cotta M••· CA AU Boardl 11.-,. to $700 crowd pttl'cl Top mamt 9a6ll8 Len& Ir sNlrt term ••· Buay ph)'aJclan aeeka i*lUoni •v-11 durtna Medical office aa'\. Wiii 1l1nmeota. Holiday & ~al pen. for frnt our nat'l fr lnt'l H · train. Lho typlng. 'Ilic pat. HolpUllaatlol\ of~ pot. C•ll Carl, pamBokin. Sfnd ~tame~ SCkniab botpf\ll, Must ~ nlaft avail. IDW70D. Dean1a &. Den. PO I a a, An-1m. - a le to wor~ em • or -. e• ·1 ·.. lfv&ne. • Mlcheltol'. lnter. 1 wbdl.Mlfl.fTTL . ~..-, '·J'!lt ._,. .. Ga Ofc. to $16.000 Employen Pay Ail Fees Lii Reinders A&ency 4tY.!O Birch, Ste UK Newport Beach ~190 C.UforAppt/Qtab '65 SECRITAIY SS$S$SSSSS llGMONEY ........ o..a LGmCJ Dkt. u.. Ha.fyWegn lolm.ts.C...... Ir Mot'I Prodilct Wen Pb': Orf/ 833-8095 TIMl/UF£ Ubnsi•s. hie. Equal Opp Emptyr mtr With high level typing skills "min 60 wpm'' In· lerelled In growing with a young, ag1reulve Orange Co. Based Real Estate Development .F\rm. For salary det~ll le interview contact Lynn SELL ldJe Items with a Boelmu, n.wsr-mo s10 n.tl7 PlJot Claaauted Ad. ttefp W..ted •• f I 00 Help W..ttcl '/ J 00 ................. , ..... ·················~····· • SECRETARY·PERSQIJAL WOOD File cab, s drw ltr S7S. l>ln'g tbl & butch $95. 646-8535 STEWARTROTII ANTIQUES American Oak Dealers 750 E. Dyer Rd. S.A. (at Newport Fwy) 751-8922 ---------Lrg sectional sofa SCRAM4.ETS ANSWERS WHOL~E TOntETRADE NOW OPEN TO PUBl.1£ $150/bst o£r. Trundle bed MO. Chest sao. Desk $20 • Twin bed ~o. 64().()3t5 Italian provincial oorree table i!asa top six le&s sacr.$50."'-7317 Comedy -Plain - Sworn -Cosmos - MONSOON s• g1asa coffee table, 'Ibey ny into ev~ Ure w/Walnut wood, cust some rf,ln must fall. ln rn a d e b y L o w e s my life I lel MONSOON Furniture. Muat sell, due _se_asons __ . _____ _ to move. Glau top ls ---------d&rit In color "~."thick. ________ , CalJ S81·90M a(\ CIPM OPEN'1DAY,:; AWEEKM. .......... Ltd 112tZlohCICWce H.L l114)1tJ.7509 $129..9$. name. pedestal. heater. mau.. liller and bestofrer. AnOque trunka G0-$250. fill tit. Ftoat'N Dream Vlltt"Ola " ~ $80. F.a.rth \Oqe Plai.d chair. 2 WalM"bed.t. 2l\G4 Beach Plat.es SS ea. Dresser 4t fn old. Snuaal)' com· Blvd, HB.-.a. mirTorM<J.16().367( fort.able. Purcbaaed tr~~~~~~~~~ 4_. 1010 lliClan. Fum., m111t aeU ...,...me.. due to move. Best olr. Smhrat.erpwif. $?50. 11ew "•••••••.•••••••••••••• Call581·90etllA6J>M Now h2$ or bat o(f. KmmoreWoaberm. Admiral Air cond •• w/fit ~\t BelboaA•. Bt Guaranteed 1t1&ndard she encag19. Pool Table. l" Slate top. 54641672 mtnt wtn~ow. 110 ~ott. 3'$"XS'2 .. Solid bh ._ •• 1 I ma Penonnet s.rv1c. ol mos « cau nNCMO tor .,...--~M.-....... ------.... ----·::-:.M... ... ~--... -~---.-Ruouonbt/S.c '1 Sal•lady.C.fln.t, pftlmt. M • .;;1 t t ~ .. K =-.. weebqda ool.Y. llarli>a M&tw-e•reU•b1e. 8uao ·~ ... a o....., ,"".... ttPt ~-. New-lntunatlooal, 204f With executive ability to help a busy guy throuab a busy day. You need to like people & to have e pleasant at· tJtude because yoo'll deal with a tlne group of ,.ssodates & atfUiates <oftentime PD my behalf). You will have to have sh & typing experience though JDY dictated corra.l)Ondence ls moderate. And u·s preferable that you •ve had e.xperienep In making travel arrangements. The hours would be from 8:~9m to 5pm Mon: day \hrough Friday. We are located in Fashion Island, Newport Ce1ter •. We have nice people worklnt ln a 1. pleasant Qf'flce; If interested please forward a resume to: Cla11mect ad no. 165, c to l>aiJy Pilo&, PO BoJt "60 •, -' mn, 8T\J'a, xlnt cond. e w I ~ u e • , r a o k • mot old, must Mii ctuc to ball•+watl hao1er. 129$. I•-------• move. Pald ua5wtaacnf -~---..;..;..;...... ____ _ at f180. 0.11 $91.,.. aft 6PM , Gm Mtl'/R.I.; SIOK+ -Btaek. C.llMS-TJOO -~ W•tcUfJ Di', N.B. Attnt/Cml\r Sl.5JC (A~nom _ ~ -;;; ;.;-.,., Semltari• to$l2K Omtl•O»-~rt) llYQU ,] IALISMMI 1~ ~a '1..-::~ FA&aal Oppor £ibplo)tcr biave •~to otrH or ~ POall, ilJnt opp. 1 •· aali.eDI UWCiO ... &eMllt Jlaoe aa M lJ. cOtftctl.laJOa Wla. 1' ....,.... .. --... --,.... Clahtniid Ada .. u bl1 r.-lb 01111 ~PUo& MMl.M -~ •• ~~ ,.._....._ ~ -----J~ma. am.II lleea or ~ a.ctlaii .... 1,, ' ----~Ml • tc-"71 aQFkem..14Ui11.: ~ ,,_.ea~ W•Mlielpf.,..,..IGll'fl ~t.a ~esa, ca. nsae ' -· ~-f ~ .!: ----'----~ ... ·" . --------... - Baby fun\ le cot. Liii• Mlalt ~ll thm for F1at. Call 51i8C'll ~ aftCT a>M new' $5-$00. • t40-4ill4 ~I\ --. 2pm WllllM IOll Children'• J!llaplt ~uuk -··-• .. ••••••••• .. •. ~~~~-~~ badaa;w. .... •tarnt pla\ol 1~ ' -------499-21-1-1.....;·;.._--.:;~.,. -I• , , ., ... Ill. • J ·- ~· ... JO ••• " \' ;N E y Cll . I ... ' • . ' . •. · . • I~ W,./;fl4 9190 ....... .,.rt.ct ........... ,.,, ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .,..... 9720 0 ........... rlH ...... u ... * DAILY PLOT •• Ula IUY rw 1cte1 •11 ..... ,········-······ ···············-····•· .~.. . ............................................ . Q.!HitCW _ ~.,._ f772 a..... t920 Mwcwy t9SO & TIUCKS "7t DeU:un zaot. 3t,<* ml "12 t H. S1.K mi. Air, Ap. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ••••••••••-••••••••••• f'ra Hit Blue •white. All atru. PMt Grp Nu ri•1• -· .. .i........_ .. OAANGSCOUNTY'S .lUI Talteoverbaile.SLSlmo. valv~•. citch, brka'. ~.c..,.,,." MIWIST 3~~Allllr CONllll 54MW7. WeMn. More. "815. VOi.YO • lJNCOUHIERCURY Oubtaen·VJ:Ut'radio ••••••••••••••••••••••• T Datswi 240·Z '75, atr. &.2Jll0 Ela.QSIVELYVOLVO * n.JenhlpllnowOPEN Utzzfl:llt Baittank-deptluou.nder 31' Aintnam. Good con• CH£YIOl.E m•I•· AM /FM , xlnt "76Porach012E immAc ~Vol~~~ ,: IAYR.ADBOE •I 1013 andMucbmore dWoo iwro. By appoUlt 2121RarborBJvd. eond.'6200.Dya,m-0200 lomi,lownercar,many 8~~t&tS£. UNCOLN·M&RCURY -:.••=~•••••no• D-lotlt. I o.lyll ment only $8,900. call ca:TrA MESA or eva. 631·1257 ult for xtrat •. Dy& 834·70H, DIRECT • J.t.11Auto0.otea"Dr. Blmd1 trvm su.s Special Price &46-6006 After. p m. 54 .. I 200 F.d. Evts/wlmdt 770-2239 ~ • SDP'W1·1.ake ll'orest eul =iT . $38 950 T ......... utltty '110 '74 2JGO'l. Loaded, pvt pty, Porsche '68 912 TIJ'lf ,,..,'!its~m : . IBV1N£ -~=-tr~~~~ ~n~1ta HARRisON~S ~ .. ;.::·:~·;~·~~~·;: 18rl'i~~°§~ :_~f~rFts::"°· ::f~r4~~· Xlnt 49L )L : it 75 ~:1::°rt. x tn& ¥onthen.w.f8U995 SEAIAY $UIO. 968-858l orC~SICS ...._. '7H 2025 ~ at at cood., new Urea, FM Office,.. ••• Ir 3101 Coast Hwy, N.B. ---------1 !~ ~8f. ia extra clean •••••••••••••#••••••••• Anaheim 750-2011 ROGER MILLEA SAYS,' r::.o-.:ri'16~aP:95° ........ 1081 Ul·l547 -r.=:_:1;400 IAUMIUICIC TESTDRJVEOUR '7SVolvolME.•-draedan, "SHOPIYPHOMI" i--· -----•••••••••••••••••••••••i---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 292..SHarborBJvd. "LICAR lB,ooo mi's. Xlnt concl. 414-1131 546-tt67 tw-. "tt5% lBlleaecUUvetypewriter vw r1a aUkioda CostaMeaa 979•2500 OFTHEYEAll" loaded w/xtras, $6500. •"•••••••••••••••• ... ••• $160, 1978 P8 CHEAP ' (;ood inventory ln ttoek. P/P, 541Hil65 '88 m V1I Auto, AM/FM 486-IMI? llN-IMOt TOP u .. -. '"'1 .... ltil 1 '72 Volvo l ..... E. 4·dt OusatereoNewradlater ........ ,,.Wm euacy • ... sboclu, valve-job, LllSalle al~ macb. ll0-$100. catl aft. 5PM, 645-6058, Caren SEA RAYS Paddle tires. 2 UWe bros. DOLLAR ruA•~'l!~f. LT ~~~ M,OOO .itemator, tires. tune. $175. z big broa. $.125. 4 PAID -•,-,AU ac. Wbitli v1.ny1 top, btu Exec. cklak: Sl39. Draft.Ina lbl $75. Exec ch rt, s:t0-*8. Wood desks $75 ea. Flles $35 -$85 . F\uorescent lite f1xt11tts. 4' tootera SlO. Work tbls S35-l60. '3l·Z777 S cial Sale mon.ster mudders on 8 FOR CLEAN 21.SOHarbor Blvd. 'T1Volvo2-UPL, sunroof, bod)'.......,_ ~ne lug whll. nr new $400. s '76 280Z. map, air cond, COSTA MES~ O/D, A?.llYM stereo, ~~ Opeo Bow 12xl6.5 Tractiocute on 8 IMPORT CARS aut.o, miat cond, llS400. 645-5700 red/brn, 7500 mi's, $'1500. l _____ ._ __ ~ ·• Kach I , 1 ownr, nu S92"n 228HP t tr lugwhtspkwhls .. $225.4 AU.MODB.S 846-8940 913.a115 trm, ~1 4V. P/S, P/B. (stock.153S&i;;.7) Armstrong Norse nwn's ·10 Wgn , 1 ow or, IGlaloya f75' P/P, Bat olr ovr $1900. 20' Runabout ao wbt spk wbls for mini· Micbelins, opuonal 5·SP, ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Monte Carlo. Mint ~ Hp I truck: 2 F78xl4 & 2 G roof rack. ong pa1·nt. #l DEALER IN U.S.A. cond. 19,000 mi. AU -._-,,.._--V8-----$'9,73S. 2211 • tr r xtru. 640-~ • uu ........ vt. Auto, pony (Stock 15564'1541) 78xl4 $140. 6.11·1028 $USO. ~12:6 ROY 990 I int. Dlac Brakes, A 1r. •Beautiful portable Sl1nature manual typewriter. $SO. 846-8579 eve.. 22' Cuddy $12.366 D&ma&ed •m Mustane, all Dalsu.n '74'h 2'60 z. 26,000 ~ CARVER ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPALA. '72 4-dr, bronu lJlle new $l.l.SO (213) loaded,2211HP,trlr parts for sale. Call after mi. New pol. AM/FM RO'lS'·ROYCE w/tan viny1 top. O>m· SS7-9Jll02 (Stock #SSOlt1549) ,... h 1. LJ GO fort.able &clean. weJl UD· , 22'0vemlgbter SPMS48-f133 tape, new .,.1c e ins, IS.J•nt-.e RACING!~ der book at $1275. 61 H IT Y·&. All pert $13 36 Loaded $5000. 95.s-1795 evs Jeff. ::::' ... ," Lola T-300, '72 model, gd 645-2.383 aft Ui wlmda ecJlld. • Orig ownr. $1500. 228 :W. trlr. ' ~forSde Autw., llntpcried l9712-dr R/H cood, less motor. Trlr in· · 5D-05aor870-3482 Court rePortlng machine. goocLcondJtion $100 firm 8484722 anytime (StO<'k #!'>42 & #543) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good transi>ortaLion ctOSlO SUNDAYS ~-'76 1giT1 cbam/• '72 Moote Olrlo. very c~. :M"Cuddy$13,9'77 Recreaffoaal Genlr.. 9701 $500.496-4278 XLNTBUY ,t' .. ,:!'~tubc c!rmf;d fo~ ~t._.S/,FMPl!:.,.amLlr ~!',.,_· OWll•ble 9955 LOADED. 228 HP. trlr VtNct.. 9530 ........................ ""6' . I run • ~ .--....................... . St k •~ 7) ·-D ts 1600 ...... tr Sharp '66Sllver Sbadow, driverscboolorcomne I ~-...,,..,.. ( oc #654a<l!55 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Maser aU Merak, g ld .., 8 un """' con· white. R.R.-Rl&bt band t l ti 0 n. EZ maintal.n. •~·---~-·--....----1 197' OLDSKOBl L ~ HARRISON'S Coovt. 4 seat street legal w/tan lthr, concour11 vt.Xlotcond. 12200· d XI t conct $14 900 W/mr $4750 t.r d 9930 CUTLASS HARD TOJ> Pets 1087 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·RED-TAILED BOA w/complele uqu;.1riurn $40. 675-C.226 eves Sm:: .a. 11 .a..y dune bucgy. $800. Ca II con d , 13 . 5 o o m I , 552-5433 ~ii Pa~rick, ss2-4t14 · 6.1l-~~ 646-SS:. a e. Cowt•MRf-' COUPE. Leu than 48,00<> ~ -5.29-8486 1Z715276or1·225-9529 Rat 9725 --••••••••••••••••••••••• mUea. very clean, never 3101CoastHwy.N.B. ~---. .... 0,; 9550 -----....................... Toyota 9765 AMC 9905 '73 MK4, b~ wht top, dam a~ed . Original 611·2547 "'.,..._.... •ff ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• allxtraa .640-171t, owner. Factory air, Pianos & n--s 8090 H••••••••••••••••••••• IJfo Rom.o 9705 '74 Flat 12A Sedan. xlnt llfOREYO•L "'""""...,., t ... d -·-rm· cood., lo miles, ""'7·ln·"' c11:1 •youa"' '76 Pacer, 3.spd on flr, .....,_ power a ee .. o g an ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• aft5PMwkdys ~ """ ...-... A/C, AM /FM cass, brakes,. AM/FM radio, Wurlitzer Spinet piano & loats R AMC.JEEP '71 Spider, clean. t...1-...l... TOYOT·.a.., reclin. seats. new tires, Con~ 9932 vinyl roof, good tire~. bench $.575. Gd rond. • e«f/ AM /FM radio, ,,_ 9727 ,,. very clean. 551-5027 aft e ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3,100. M4-0468 ----SJG 9510 •• ~ •••••••• !~.5-~ #I In Calf. oo-1soo ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEE US! PM •CORVmES . '72 Delta 88 2-dr HIT, AT, Spinet Piano, Krakuucr. Sell Calif. boat mem· FREE ~ 9707 BnmdHew '77 MARqUISTOYOTA '67 Rambler Stat ion 1978• AC xtra clean $1100. 30 years old, finis hed berslup m Newport Bch AJrConditlo.er ••••••••••••••••••••••• HO.._.D & Cars MJSSlONVIEJO Wagoo. $2S0.103McFad· NICESELECTJON! Dys556-4467Ev~l9. back, ivory kc)s AP· for 60% off. Cal.if. Boat onnewl9TI&1978Jeeps. '73 Audi lOOLS, AM /FM ""' A lll-211049S.1210 den"K''N.B.548.aJS HOWAIDCheYrolet '""'Olds 'Cutl""I, good praised al $1200. will sell Oub 67c: .,...,., stereo A/C 60 ooo mi u.a.uv .... .... best offer over $900. ' .......,.,... Does not 1n c lud <:> ' ' · •••.v" Md& 9910 DOVE&QUAJLSTS. cond., $500/best. orrer. Phone S2:8-5793 loots. Sall 9060 Wagoneer urruted CJ5 or xlnt cond. $2100. Aft 6 or To Choose Fro.I! 1970 TOYOTA ••••••••••••••••••••••• (Near MacArthur, Jam· Allert . 548,3842 --------••••••••••••••••••••••• CJ7. Offer good only on wknds831·2580 UNIVERSITY COROLLA 1200 '72 Buick Le Sabre. boree&Bnst.ol> IWIUGHTPIAMOS FUJI-YAMAHA factory air equipped '72Aud1100GL.2dr. auto. COUPE. White exterior Collector will seU, elec· NEWPORT BEACH '71 Otd:t. CutJass Stauon OAK.WALNUT, 0~.o.1EB5 ,·eb.Jcles. Offer expires n1r. AM t FM s te reo, Old1111Dblle w/black vinyl top & in· lrlc blue convertible -Wagoo,1mmac.10wner, OTIIERS ~ Feb. 2.8. 1978· needs work, make ofr. Hoada Ccrs • GMC terior. Automatic trans. white top & inter. Im-"'-"'-9935 auto, air, many xtras. PAUL'S PIANO Yacht Brokerage OVERSTOCKED 644-6036 Tncks (WAYG) maculale. 714 /540-7744 :':':?:••••••••••••••••• ~-~~a1t5PM 1e8W ~i?l:i~.1Z7~ L~w'!s-=! WITH JEEPS 1972 Audi 100 LS. Ex· 2850Harbor Blvd. OMLY SI 175 ask for Ralph or Sally For s ale •88 Dodec PiRto 9957 YodltW.S 549-8023 ceUent condition. $2100. Co6taalesa 540-954o "73LeSabre4dr. AUpwr. SUperbee 4 spd. $495. or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hammond Organ. Deluxt• 2Gl6 Newport Blvd. 541M033 week days. 76 Honda Wagon, 1mmac., AJC AM-FM stereo Tilt bestolr. 6.11·12119 '74 Pinto Wagon. Luggage model T-200-2. ~II dual Newport Beach ~HARBOR BLVD. 20M, A/C, sn r(, mag wh1. Split front seat. in rack, mag wbeebo l<eybord:.. rhythm unit. (714)673-9211 COSTAMF.SA '73AudilOOLS,4-dr,auto. whls, rad llres. $39SO. --Vtnyl top. Tinted glass UJ72DodgeDartSw ger, (wide), 8-traclc tape drawba rs, pre-Hts. 74 GMC Jimmy. white air, AM /FM, Xln1 cond, 640-6326 '71 Corona Mark It, mech $1950. gro.1701 or4S4-5420 auto. clean, $17 50. deck/ radlo, auto., wtute ~,eslJe s pkr . xlnt cond New 2 4 • Amer i c a n auto. many xlr<.1 's $5.000. Orig ownr. Nu baUery' runs good. looks ! ? Good &l0-8168 exterior, blue lnterior . _~tBOO aft6P~ Slulboal. Take over pay-PIP 646-s525 art u.JOp brics&paint,$2300/offer. '77 Honda Acord . transp. car. Must sellf 78BuickRcgal.xlntcond. Ford 9940 SOKmiles.$1795.642·3379 0 r g 3 s 0 n 1 ~ 0 r g" n . ments. Has trlr. 4!13·261~ wlcdys. S40-81.90 aft 6 Silvertblk, 2700 miles. $850. offer. 581-2551aft.6 AM/FM, air, landau top, ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 P'"lo . ..,1510,. best, ' • W $5500. Must sell. 548·!1611. $4,600. eves 759-1238 u• -~ Heauliful cond.$300. Hobie 16'. recond. trlr. •73 Jeep Wa"one-:-r IM 9712 Corona Mkll Sta wga ~-Mags, A/C, AM/FM 6<1S-Z7S8 #""" It h tis · d t .. " · ••••••••••••••••••••••• .__ 9710 N t t·--· · St · •'68 Buick Wildcat O>nv., • t · FQPLH~I t.5· · cassette.~ ~. u ' pnce o PS/PB/AC. Exe. cond. ..,_,,._ u pn ' u~, eng. er., alnt in sell.Aft6,837·1504 . $4200.SS2-0568or870-3482 •••••••••••••••••••••••mags. much more. newtop,p ,pwrw · 9960 Used Hammond Piper '64 XKE Rdslr. restore & Sl400/ofr. 581-8092 dows, seat. locks, xlnt ,.,._.... S600 Sailboat w/trlr $100. 2 HP make $$$ S22SO or lrade -:::;-cond. REAL CLASSIC. .. .. ••••••••••••.,.••••• 4M-0413 * 6216"8077 motor $35. 8' aluminum Trucks 9560 f«truck. 646-~ Tn...... 9767 $1600, 643-6233 days, 1974 Ply. Satcllir Sta. ---------1 boat...,"'.,,.,.,0 "'0 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~A.c.2•""e"-. W 9 P/ P/B ....., ........,.,., '6.1 Intern 'I PU. Short box. '72 J XJ6 /t 'l7t.r l.iR ....... ag. pasa., • · ~ G~ 109~ .. ~t k ,,,,_I k b ag · green an, 1975 Triumph Spit-C~ 9915 Air, Gd. tires, trans . ...,-nMCJ --"' 14' Hobie, gd cond w/trlr, """ 5Po ew ...... rg no xlnl run'g cond. lo mi's. Ci re-20, ooo mile s , -~ Cooler , air s hocks. ••••••••••••••••••••••• newjib saillomakeyou bies . 4-cyl eng. Olr. $5300.645-9794pmonly AM/FM stereotape&in ••••••••••••••••••••••• trailer bitch. CB Radio 1CEHOCKEYSKATES \he Cai.test around. $850. 97'9-0l83or7S4--0l46 1978 BMW's ...... l of Both n·i-..,.,. XJ& eitcellent co.ndltaon -locl. Good Coad. $1,900. -Bauer "92", Nvlon ~58}6 DC> ~ ... '' .,..._ ~ 1 ________ '77 Ford PU 150 V-8 HERE HOW! w/'JSO Chev eng & turbo mecharucally, ans1de ~ _....,.,,,. Supreme. size 8, men'i.. Hobie 16 $1500. PS!PB, jumbo ltres. J.SM trans. Not a hot rod, good oot. $),300. Call 548-5163 ~.:..-==--= ,..._ 9965 $10oroffer.64.2·2073 MustseUcallBob mi.642-4097,642-47J6 COMNTI mileag e, great ~&pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nord.ic:i Meteor ski boots. 955-1007 '56 Ford FlOO, Cherry, nu IODY SHOP performance768-l529 VolksWOCJlll 9770 • '71 Tori.no, xlat cood w/ 'Tl Flrebi.rd, xlnt cood. Ju mens ~•re 10, $95. tires. brakes. paint & ...,..WA-.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ c---..•1 time-up. MWltte.IJ. mi'a. A/C, AM /FM 8 trk. 494.2417 l7'Catamaran.$900.Good much, much more. Best ""' _......... VW Bno '71 rebwlt eng. _.......,_ -·r 768-4978 •642-1638• ---rood 871·5000 ext 431 or offer over 12SOO. 968-3520. "--• GWe 97J5 Nu ~L '65 body $850. S.dle Cenhr 731·3966 968-2290 OCaJ.BCT •••••• •••• ••• • ••• • • • • • • Ol 11 $44-5214 • TV.aadio, ETCHELl..S22. SILECTIOHOF 1fll58 Ghia coupe, Nu pnt,1---------ttfi, St.no 1091 30•Ractn1t Sloop '66 'r'• t. Ford P.U. IMW IESAUS eng, clutch. no r ust. WE IUY & SB.L •••••••••••••••••••• ••• 496·2130 Sl200 • 673-1640 We may have your next SlSS. 494•2130 YOLICSWAGEMS 25" RCA Color TV, I yr. 1 'Tl GMC ~too, 4S4, cmp/ car in our inventory. Call Maida 97lt Lare t Selectl warrunty $148. Fo r loah.Sllpa/ ust.oday! ••••••••••••••••••••••• es on t>f'rv1ce also 61 2 5340 Dodls :9070 spec., loaded 131•2040495--4949 lnTbeAttalll "C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 536-192:5 WES'T &BMAM FISHER 220·T 1\M FM ED SLIP lor. new 3(' Chevy 114 ton w/lOW cal>-OAAHGICOUMTY•s IMPOITS s tereo receiver, o steal al saLlboal.:: ~~te over cam per. S2500/bst OLDEST .l9llS Harbor Blvd.. C.111. =~~~:~=Sony T~ Moonng sp~ce for up to ~r~:=9S:31::·bL>d, &· 2150 H.tMw llT4. 714/548-1186 19", wood grain, .$425: 416'boat. $75/mo. · AM /FM, air, xlnl cond. • • C... W... 645--5700 ·~ '.'W, good cond. $700: ~S-132'7 • 673-4220 • $4000. !)46.-0660, 557·6613 or best oUer. Sales-Service-Leasing 95S-3619 aft.. 5 pm. OVER 100 CADILLACS TO CHOOSE FROM AT AU TIMES ·'Nabers Cadillac 2600 H.trhnr Blvc.J. Cos1.1 Mi:sJ 540:9100 DuAt ~7ot tmtbl wtSure 1om. Speed & V..s 9570 Aov Ccr¥er,tac. ~.~~.~ .... !!~~ v .15 type Ill cartndgc. .., 9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rolls ftoyce BMW '74 Dasher. 4 dr. auto. lo i-·---------·~. 642-0UISal\6 ~7•6•San•••••••20•:•0•••••·~·e•• ·n Dodge 8100, under lS40Jamborec 1969 210 SB. emco•n'osm. Y~ ':!3~~. ~~i~ '7Conl ~-dlXlllanct coEnldDo. Mraadkoe ger ay crws r warranty, 4-spd. Call oft Newport Beach 640-6444 If yoo want an xlnl 19GI -"" •• loah &M..-. w/cover & trlr. 455 Olds. 5.30 ... .,,,,...,,, MB from ,,..;.,;.,al owner IMe-1371 days. 846·2597 offer. Must sell as soon ,..,_.. Berttley jet. lo hrs. Mov-· ,......_ which sb;,;:-excellent eves. aspos.sible644-6194 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ing must sell, 642-5794. or '74 Chevy . Nu dsrt tire<1, care f« $5900/firm call G•:al 90 I 0 963-1823. whls, al rm. s n r f . ~lOor&4+-4684 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FM/cass nu pnt, panel. '71 411 Wagon nu brks/ '65 Cad convertjbJe Low radials AM/FM stereo MilesBesto!Cer Sl6S064.2-2978 ' 673-2927 18' Pacific Catamarran Te Fart..._ V-8 eng. mech prfct. "102816L, mint cond. Real '454. ·Xlnt cond, must •••••-•••••••••••••••• $4,.300. &W'r9529 leather upbol. oew eng. vw. Pop.Top Camper. ·197S Eldorado conv. fully sell this week. make or-Cw:::pc;:n. Sde/ Must Sac. '77 blk Chevy &' sr 'llOAOWAY ~ J!. apprec. $12,000. Rbll motor. trans. New loaded, xlnt cond. $7500. fer. 968.a.520, 968-229() ..... 9120 \'an. V-8, lOK mi. "'his. SAMTA AMA ~. brakes $1600. 968-3581 P.P. 54&-8191 u..........1.--••••••••••••••••••••••• A""t /FM ster~ very 77 300D 1 /b boo =:-9030 l960CbevyStep van, con· " ~v. 835·3171 . · vory w am '77 Camper, 7K ml. i4SedandeVllle. low mr, .......... . Xln sharp. S5200. 837 ·3710 ~ ut.r1111•rr olHVINo -~2t .88S}74 '90k0 .d D a Y s . Stereo. $6,500/make or-gd cond. SS,175. 536-6544 •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• verted Ullo camper. l '"' . .. w n s evs ( 581"'957 9611-z:M aft 5 Prem. prices for aml used run'g cond. Nds some '75 Dodce, P/S. stereo. +USED IMW1+ 963-81.24 • ' er. or 4 . =.n2~;~~ ~/B ~U;rk & pamt. $1500. :r>e~:~t& o~'l~~j.~~. • :;:;:::;.::aiti::c; lln5 :MOD, 28K lJlJ, excel. 7~ort!tJ~~:. cond.. '76 Compe• Ville 49.S-1938 '74 2002lll Air023LJR car. 770-1821aft6PM Loml, likenw640-6454 •ah.Power · 9040 Motoriudllres 9140 •n Dodge 8·100. under '752002/\Ser.2236 '93·234l Exquisltewhite&black74 •••••••••• •••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 c..,,,," Allo,,. •"'"PQN ~4 VW DASHER 4 dr "IV.-de Vill 1 d-... I warranty.P/S,P/8,V-8 ~ 1~'""' '76·300D.snrf,AM/FM · """'t"' e,oa.:u,o 3S'CKR1SCRAF7 NewBataveMopedBlack auto, deluxe chairs. '7820024epdSfR220PQD t b t Jli wen . .,,,!-l~cond, must ml,belowBB,586-5540 .... cabin/dual station Low Mlleaie S375. Call '"""'""' ""'1 -".,.,3000 'T1 a:aoiA S/R 177RSK 1 ereo, rwn me 8 c, aell . ....,..,,., .. nn 968--0863 ....,.,.,, .... ,,_or.....,.. CloMd °" S1111dcri Bamboo int, xlnt cond. ' 19'14 Coupe de Ville. beauL TwinChr')'sV8's/2beads ...._W..t.d 9590 ~ $13 ,500. Dys (213) &lV.W.Sqbk.Ndawork. cond., Wht on wbt, with Ha.uled,surveyAl,pntd ~al,.~/ ....................... m BMW 1600, $2.000 or 930·2050, eve. (71() .AsisSSOO/bstofr all the desired extras. •Sl.2.000 AY64G·OOOO 9150 wawna•IUY bestolfer. 962..()976 645-8812 surr car, must sell. ••• ••••• •• • ••• • • • • • • • • • ..,.. ... p .. _ .. _ "l>l ""16 SUZUKJRM370MX·Less YOUIOATSUH 8.'!1·28'77 7SM1rc ... Vaa '73 Bus, 69 K ml, extras, · .w ........ "° .,.., 4UAT than s hrs running time. PAID FOR OR NOT c.t 9715 DleselM00.4119-1011 good cond. S2995 or ofr. '72 Coupe DeVllle, nu FOil Including 1 set or lie TOP DOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mei 97 42 557-9374 tires, brks, ~tereo. tape FISHIN6111 downs, a ramp & a bike FOi TOP CARS '13 Capri. P.P., 41 ,000 ml. ••••••••••••-••••••••• .64 Baja. runs & looks dck, air. Choe br wn 21ft.CHAMPIOM stand. $850.Callaft4PM AM/FPtf can., Good is MGMldget, like new. 1ooct,newpalnt1ob,wide wtbeige top. Xlnt cond. CF5417BB. Flybrldge, _751_·34'7_4_._____ cond,$2000.5$4--0035 Lomiles.&aperl tires, aood int. $750. 8estofr.644'5465aft5 ainfle •erew,-dalley, STEALnllSBlKE! '74 V-8 2800. xlnt cond, 67~148Sor&M--4586 SIN-9'04 '70C<Mlpe de Ville Sharp.! bead, bait tank. eepe 5. "77 Kawuald,650cuatom 1nrf. AM/FM ster~o. n-..1 97~6 '68 a.-. reblteng., nu lnt., Landau top, 63,000 mL Enflne com pletely re-'--•· f tar rea .. ·•-t .,8001 I -.--. "' &l"6 $1600. 631-0960 AM built. Eltdroaie par ln· maa w~. ron r .. ew p ..... • -o l'. ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• pnt, AM/FM cus., swt· . cl. dcptb tinder fl brand dltc brakes. ~ mt. mm1 '14 Opel Manta Lo w roof. Gd cond. $l200, C '111 o 9917 new, unu.ted Z.way FM -111-850--·-~-------W-9720 tnllea1e One own e r Q l-GZS "••••••• .. •••••••••••• radio Is RDF. $68()() or '75 250 Endro Yamaha •••••••••••••~••••••••• '1600.Eves.751.fM '14 VW 4 12 Wa100 . '810unaro_._Freably buill bid otter. Call evu Ir $TOO. After6 P.lf. * DllVI A * AM Inf A/C MW t1rel ae esai. HJ.pelf beads, wtmda.ecs..t3'75 962-d ,_.die '750 $2500,or·otter:s.si.3409 · dual q uad•, o ffy 1i LtnLE;... * •••• .. •••• ... ••-••••••• manifold, headers, 4 19'l'llUE, alloy, alr, lomt. 1'10 Oranae Gbla, .Wpd, speed, Posl rear. new SAVE A LOT SU.ODO. d.>'s 1S2-77S3, en ll004nmmo1cond.,'1800 batteey, starter. water SHOPlsCOMPARE MS-Oll5 Afl5 +wbd&64WT01 pump. AM/Flh asaette. r.AR w•c I( DA T\U~ $2500 OC' best. SM-'1713 ' ' 9'10 R l I I l / ', 4'1 ]. ) j. I~ '68 Falcon. white. Good transport.at.loo. S59--065Z ·m Grand Prix, air, P , B~ P /S, xlnt co.od. $1 295. P /P 968-9'13S '67 Ford Ccnv~rtlble Bet VeCJO 9974 ofr. Mor n 642-7755 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oakwood South Si>' 530 ·a Vega Kammback. anyt.irz» auto, a/c, new tires. Gd '73 LTD Coll)' Sq. Sta. oond. Sl400. 540-ll4il Wgn, lo mt, AM/FM rf i4 Vega Wp. Au.to, air. rk. immae $2400/bst ofr. lug rack, orig owner 644-9788 eves. $1200. <mKHE> 673-0t29 Autos, M•w 9100 Autos.Mew 'Huv . ............................................ . HELPf w. Metcl lcrws for .... ?I VWt IO we'I .-. It .... ,... ... to .... ltAUOUI VOUCSWAGIN Al Modslt & Colon A••rAla } • t I ~. I 1'77 PLYMOUTH VOi.ARE V-8. automatic. air conditioning. pawer steering, power brakes. radio. heater wn1tewalt tires. vlny'I roor (289TEW) · 53495 1973 ·roHnAC GUM AM CPI. v.e. automatic. air conditioning. PoWfl( atwing. pewer brakes, power windows. power Mats. AM/FM stereo radio with tape, hell•. whitewall tlret. vlnyt rt:fJ· crui# control, tilt wheel. (170REK) 51995 ' FOR FLEET SAL1 OR LEASE IMFORMATIOM CALL PAUL DEFAlllS 1972 CHEVY V-8. auromat1c 1 CA,RfCE steering.~ b~r COnd11toning. POWer AM radio hearer akes. POwer Windows root C355NAOl . wh1tewa11 ltres. vtnyi 1977 PLYMOUTH ARROW 2000 4 cyl., 5 speed, power brakes. radio. heater. Lie #573TWO. 53395 ·110 6 cy/lnder. 4 4TSUN 210% AM/FM ster 8'>eec:f. air COnd heater. (31~~ '•dlo With lhon;l')Q, • u",.) cassette, Every lrand New Chrysler aftd P,lymouth, Every Fine Used ·ccr. ·Red Tag Sale Priced with Bonus Savings For You! Check out the Fabulous .. Buys.. now at Atlas CflrYsler Plymouth! 1972 DODGE DEMOH e cylinder. 3 SQeed. air cond1t1onlng, radio. tteeter. Lie. t762FFG $fl95 1974 AMC HOINET 6 CYiinder H4 TCH14Ck . rallye Wheei., t'~lc. radio. heat . mter1or. c0371<MT} er, 51995 73VWWAeOM " cylinder. automatic. air condltlonl,,g, AM/FM atereo radlO. heater. roof rack. (3GfJEP). 51695 1975 PEUG 4 cylinder aur EOr 504 SEDAN r11<110. heaier ~he. 8" COndllionl lie. #677PHY. itewart fires. sunroo"t 1974 PIMTO RUHAIOUT 4 cyhnder. automatic. radio, heater. whitewall tires. (389JSF). f .} .• t VOL. 71, NO. 53,' SECTIONS, '2 PAGES 17 • I By GARV GRANVILLE CM•o.ll'tl'l ... Maft Orange County supervisors agreed Tuesday to go ahead with a straw vote aimed at deciding if county voter s want to pass j-.dement on a farmland b\l)'ing apree that cbuld cost up lo $125 mlllion. Supervisors' endorsement of "(hat will b e known as ProposiUon A on the June 6 ballot came ooa3to2 vote. Dallyl'lleCStllft- £lfVAT£0 TO CHIEF FV's Tom Feler.bend ·Fire Chief Appointed Jn Valley ·i1rvine resident Tom ~eierabend , 45, was named "F.ountain Valley fire cbiel Tues- ! day night. Fountain Valley City Cmmcil • tnembers promoted Feierabend, l a city fire battalion chief since I ibtly. 1971, after flre chier Al Kole resill'\ed Friday. . 'Hole, 57, resigned after just 15 -'ontbs on the job. He has taken 1t higher paying post with 'P.:yrotronics Corporation in ~aheim. ~ Feierabend, a former Garden \irove Fire Department captain and paramedic coordinator, will .be paid an annual salary of $a7.82~ in his new post. . .Fe>untain Valley City Council members also named Jose Jhlad, 34, of Canon, as the new arector of building safety. ~~bile serving as fire chief, . e ·also was buUding safety tttor. ~·:M elad's pro"'ot.ion to de- -artment bead came after he aCI served AS the city•a building • 1peetion supervisor for six onths. . Jdelad will receive a $24,6?.4 ~ual salary. · ·12 .... : . ~ . ·~fill~ IQ Murder • ·.. J £0{ BB Victim . And it may cost more than supervisors realized to poll coun· ty voters on their feelings about the purchase or prime farmland as a means of preserving open space in Orange County. Thal ls becaus e county Registrar of Voters Al Olson saJd that even the straw vote ballot proposition must include pro and con areuments in both Spanish and Eng~sb. That places the price tag on 11 Seek Office lnFV E levm candidates are running /or three stats on the Fountwn Valley City Cmmcu The election "' March 7. Following are brief profile• of three of the candidates and their answers to questions concernmg key iuues in the cit11. Similar re- ports on the remaining candidates will appear m .subseq\lenf edst1on.! of the Doily Pdot. Felix Rocha, 32. of 9867 Sturgeon Ave., is employed as a • federal immigration agent. Rocha, his wife and two children have lived In Fountain Valley for the past three years. He was an unsucceasful candidate for a s•at oa the Fountain Valley <elementary) sthool board last year. W•y do you think you co•ld do a better job on the City Co•ncll tbaa year op· ponenu? "J feel I can efrecttvely represent Fountain VaUey res- idents by listeninR lo them. I will respect individual opinions while working for all Fountain Valley residents." What can the City CoaacU do to improve postal service in Fountain Vallev? Rocha said post office prob· lems should be brought lo the attention of county postal or- (icials first by residents. ''Ir Fountain Valley's branch is too small and incapable of handling the mall delivery on time, we should contact federal offiCJals," be added. Sbo11141 tbe at1 CoucU co.- alder min• ncaat Hltool bedW· lats or lllUlled school sites for comnumlty acUvlUes! Rocha said city aod school of· ficials should worJc together in maintaining abandoned school buildings ffW aome type of future use. •'The cjty ~ould posslb&y use the buildings, but they tnay again be "8ed u seboola if the enrollment ahouW en,r rbe." Wlaat cu tbe O&r CoucO dO aboat d,.I abaae ••••C • Foaatala Valle7'a ,_., Rocha said he btltevea parents must become more ln· volved in combatUng the ctn.c problem among young people. "The city and pol~e can only do so much to fi1bUl. U parents can in1Wl values in youngatera initially, it w~ solve moat ol the problem. Parents ahould always try to know what their kids are dolnt." what tt will cost to see how voters Supervisor Philip Anthony tOOk balloL feel about the prospect of a it a step further •hen he called Schmit \'Olunteered to wrlte bonafide ballot measure on the the straw vote measure ''lt· the ~llot arfQmcnt a:ainlt t.be land purchase plan bein1 put on responsible, conlusin1 a.ad mta· !arm a.ndbUy.Jngprogr m . next Nove mber's general leadins. •• ••rt. goes against everytblnt we eleetlon ballot. ··u la not the kind of thing Ulat ar• trylJig lo do like k::Sinf G\e can be answered wltb a yes or no uat of bousina down a lower· Almost to a man, supervisors vote," Anthony aafd. int property taxes,'' Schmit 11ai~. agreed that lt is highly unlikely He and SUpervisol' La~ But SUpetvlsor Ralph Clark the voters in June will endof$e Schmit voted asalnlt the word· .sald county· residents should be the concept of the county going Ing of ProposlUon A. given the opportunity to decide ii on a land buying spree to pre· Thelr votes, however, wete they waQ.1 to Jieclde on tbe serve up to 10,00P acres of actually dias~t; acttinst ha~ feulbilit¥ ot the land bu)'ina pro-farmland. the meuure put on the June lM)lal. . Huntington Beach police said this car driven br Delia Lopez Madrano, 40, of Santa Ana. bounced down · the cliff off Pacific Coast Highway Tuesday night arter bouncing orr a parked van, two other parked cars and rour parking meters in the Bluf'fs area. The SaJ\ta Ana woman needed 50 stitches to close cuts on her face and leg following the 11 :30 p.m . crash, according to police reports. The two 19·year-old occupants or the viin were shaken but not injured, police sald. Bolifa Challenges Legal Cost_ Report Huntington Beach Cfty At· torney Don Bonla has rebutted what he claimed were "faulty inferences" in a recent report outlh,ing the costs of outside legal services to the city. Bonfa told City Council members that much or the ex· pense wq lneurred over his pro-test. He 1ilid 10me or the costs were for non·legal costs provided by attorne1s. He 1alcl otb'-.r services were routlQely con· tractecl.out for 1pecU1c rnatten. Bonta, who is aeekint re· election in April, responded to earlier statement2' by Councilmen Richard Siebert lbat outside legal coets amouat· ed to $175,000 over tta. a .. t thfte years. "" Stebett at ttiit Ume •aid he wa1 ~ that~ dt1 was aot. beln, kept ebNut W aome Of the COit -.t that l'1 certa1JJ in· stancea tbey exceeded autbon.z.ct Hmits. Sitben Nid t<lday that Bonfa's statements lndJca~ that Bonla has lost perspecUve of what is going on in the city. Bonfa Tuesday night said that the city's deelslon to hire an out- side attorney to handle a police grievance case was taken against his recommendation. "The city attorney's office was perfectly capable of handl· ing the matter," be said. The cost to the city for thls cue was $21.000, according to Bonfa. Bonfa also said that his office s hould have handled re· development matters. Jnatead the job was elven lo a prinle consultant at a cost of $15,000, be said. Bonfa also said that about $35+000 paid to attomey Nicholas Counter was attribut~ lo work in the field Gtl&bor "'lations. Bonra aatd that m. wm at· tempt to put eonsultarrt sel'ViC'tl in penpective ln t.M clty. He said' he ls aalc1ng Otber de· partmem. to provide ce>Sta tbat th•¥ •eent on outalde con· aaltantt. lAnJ, Rezoqbig Denied 1Jy HB'3oun£il Huntington Beach City Council members disposed of an issue that has bounced back and forth between them and the planning com mission since last June Tuesday night. By a 4·3 vote, the councll de· nied a bid by Frank Buccella to rezone 20 acres of industrial land along Talbert Avenue so that he could build apartment houses. 'The request was the last of a aeries of proposed zoning changes along the Gothard Industrial corridor that caused such a furor for much of last year between industr:ial and residenUal interests: Voting lo reject the zoning, as they have done on previous OC· caalons, were Al Coon, Norma Gibbs, Richard Siebert and Harriett Wieder. . Supporting the resldentlal mi· inJ were Mayor Ron Pattinson, Ted Bartlett and 'Ron Shenkman. Pattinson, Ted B._rtlett and • (See REZONE. Pa1e A2) .. There are many people· who aiy weare]>aving Orange Coun· ty over and I think they should have a say in what direction we're golns," Clark said, Supervieor Ralph Dledrieh CQn_ceded that voters .-re not like· 1y to approve plados an in· itiative on the ballot, .. especially when it ls side by aide with the J arvls · ameJldment that ap· par~nUy ls attracting so much enthusiasm ... Visitors 'Visibly Shaken' By TOM BARLEY Of tie Delf't ..... Slllff Jurors in the Superior Court trlal of Dr. William Baxter Waddill of Huntington Harbour visibly winced Tuesday when they were shown color photo- graph• of the baby girl be aJ. legedly strangled to death. The six photographs were taken during an autopsy performed on the dead infant by Dr. Robert Richards of the Oran1e County Coroner's office. And they were used by the prosecution witness to back b1s stated eonvlctloo that the baby that W'4dill, +t, had earlier UD· JIKCfSll\llbt lrie4 to abort WD 1tran'aled ~th in the •Unen' of Weat""'1ster Community Hospital 1aat March 2. A WOIMD juror tume4 her bead away and covered her lace witll ber b.abdJ while Richards pOinled out brulted areas ol. the baby'1 'DeCk which clearly, be said, supported the verdict ol manual strangulation.· Several spectators left the courtroom after Judge James K. Turner warned the court shortly before the pictures were pro. duced that spectators might find the pictures -taken before and during the autopsy -to be dis· turblng. Other sDeetators left after the witness began lo display the photographs. It is alleged that Waddill · strangled the 28·week infant after a saline fluid be injected into the unwed 18-year-old (See DOC'l'Oll, Page AZ)' YOUNG HOBOS' RIDE IL4LTED AUSTELL. Ga. (P) -Two young hobos, riding the rails armed wtlh macbet.es and a BB gun, were ~en oU a Soutbem Railway train headed for Atlanta, police said. The two, a 13·year-old boy and his S.year~ sister. were carry. ing a bag with clolbes and blankets u well as the weapons, police Set. Carlis Bickers said. Tbe children wouldn't say anything except they were nmn· ing away from home. Coast f .. t f: ( ' Ci ( I f I ... I A.f DAILY Ptl.O't HJF e· . 1nng Freeze Thaws A so-called "absolute hiring freeze" invoked by Orange County supervisors two weeks ago ended without fanfare Tues· • day when supervisors a&reed to rm 10 vacant county aovernment jobs. The freeze wu generated on a unanimous vote in anticipation or forced spending cutbacks should the Jarvis-Gann property lax reform initiative be ap- proved June 6 by California voters. Under terms of the freeze in- ' oked by supervisors, vacated county jobs were to remain open unless filled by a transferred worker already on the county payroll. There was no mention of that edict Tuesday, however, when supervisors agreed to fill 10 open 1obs. Unfrozen bv the Board of Supervisors' action were nine lawyer jobs in the public de- fender's office as well as a health department nursing position. In a letter to county supe rvisors, Public Defender Frank Williams said the lawyers are needed to keep pace with an incrcasinji( work load, including that imposed by resurrection of the d<'ath penalty. Williams s aid the office would be a disadvantage m trying such C'ases unless given the attorneys called fonnthis year's budget. F,...PageAI DOCTOR •.• mother failed to abort the child. Prosecution witnesses have testified that he used his hands to end the baby's life after com- menting that the infant must have sustained severe brain damage and would be the sub- Ject or lawsuits that could cost many thousands of dollars. It is alleged that Waddill sug- gested several other ways in which the baby could be killed, including drowning the child in a bucket or water. The defense argues that there 1s no proof that the baby ever lived, in terms or meaningful breathing and heart functions and that Waddill cannot. therefore, be charged with murder. Richards refuted the deferuie theory Tuesday and told the jury he was satisfied that the baby was living, admittedly with difficulty, when it was choked to death. The coroner's officer told the JUry that the equipment used while hospital staff tried to re- vive the baby could not have caused the injuries he pointed out in his photographs. And the physician repeated hi s belief that the baby he examined on the autopsy table was the virtim of manual strangulation - the verdict he wrote on the baby's death certificate. · Typhoid Hits Two on Tour MARBLEHEAD, Mass. <AP> -Two more people have been hospitalized with typhoid fever, apparently contracted on a Mex- ican tour. officials at the Mary A. Alley Hospital said. The hospital did not identify the two, but said Tuesday they were recovering. At least 28 people who were on the trip to Mexico have been hospitalized in Massachusetts for treatment or typhoid, of· flcials said. Suspect Give Up SAN DIEGO <AP)-Nineof26 persons indicted for allegedly smuggling 40 tons or marijuana into the United States duripg a four-year period have volun\ari· ly s urrendered In federal court. O"ANGE COMT HIF DAILY PILOT ,,,~ INDIANA KIDS SHIVER TO CONSERVE COAL Binding Arbitration Sought In Strike Arbitration Asked To E-nd Coal Strike WASHINGTON (AP) -The coal industry today called for voluntary binding arbitration in the coal strike, l:>ut a spokesman for the United Mme Workers said the union was likely to re· ject it. The industry said binding arbitration is "preferable to the loss which the economy is now surfering." It urged UMW members to return to the mines while a thr ee-member arbitration board would try t.o- setUe the record 79-day strlke. Meanwhile, officials said bargainers for the two sides would meet face-to-face later in the day as Labor Secretary Ray Marshall continued efforts to mediate a negotiated settlement. A Carter administration of- ficial close to the talks who declined to be identified said the call for arbitration was "an in· teresting proposal." He said he hoped ~ UMW would consider the l>rot>osal seriously. A union spokesman said the proposal was unlikely to Oleet with UMW approval. The White House announced that Marshall would meet later in the day with U MW negotiators to consider the in· dustry's suggestion for binding arbitration. The joint session will follow, officials said. The industry issued its call in a letter to UMW President Arnold Miller several hours after Marshall met separately with U'(W and industry bargainefs. ''The secretary met with both Jides ... and he has received the positions of the parties and he's asseuing them," said L~bor Department spokesman Jonn Leslie. Privately. officials tndlhted the two sides remained far apart. Tbe talts came as new job layoffs were announted in the nation's industrial heartland and power cutbac~ deepened as a result of reduced coal pro- duction. The White House called the re· sum ption of talks Tuesday "som ewhat encouraging," but presidential press secretary Jody Powell cautioned, "whether it's possibJe thrcJt.llh these discussions to .snake prog- ress remains to be seen." One admln.latration o£flcial, who asked Mt lo be named, sald the. tentative agreement reached Monday between the union and a major independent producer, Pllt.sburib & Midway Coal Min-ing Co., would ''fi&ure in a ma· jor way" in the talks. F,....P ... AJ FJ,EVEN CANDIDATES~ • • postal officials to move the city's post office into a lar1er building, perhaps in the eastslde industrial area. He cited long lines and acule parking problems as reasons for the proposed move. "We keep talking lo postal of· ficials, but more than that needs to be done." Sboald the Clty Coancll consider us-AL.uc:ioM lllg vacant acbool buildlnp or unused school sites ror com· manlty acUvlUes'? Alarcon favors city use of closed school buildings on a lease from I.he Fountain Valley (elementary) School District. School district officials may close some schools due to declin- ing enrollment: 'Alarcon noted. The. empty buildings could be used as senior citizens. centers or culluraf arts facilities, he said. "This would eliminate the need for the clty having lo pay for the construction or a new building.'' Wbat can the City CoancD do about drai abuse amoac Fo~ataln Valley's yoatb? Alarcon said he believes the druc problem is really a national one, but eaid the City Council should work closely with other agencies to fight it. "We should encqurage drug educatioo classes in schools, but be careful not to use scare tactics. Scare tacUcs work in re· Wby do you th1nk you coald do a better job OD the City Coandl than yogr opponenta? "I feel I am qualified because of my record of involvement in the city for the past seven years. My ser vice on the planning commission shows that 1 can work wt,th Individuals and groups. "Because of my activities, I know what people in Fountain Vall~y are lookinl for. ·•A lso, my background In operating a corporation g).ves me qualifications in personnel. management, financial and administrative decision· making." What can the City CoWtdl do to Improve postal service ln Foant.aln Valley! Nielsen said the postal prob-· lems in Fountain Valle)' are a definite issue in thls year's City Council campaign. "We should put pressure on postal officials and keep putting it on until we set better postal service." Nielsen said only part of the problem lies in Fountain Valley's postal building. "Mail box placement on narrow sidewalks Is also an issue." 8boald tJrie City Coucll COD· akter u111D1 vacant ~ balld· 1a11 or aaed school situ for eommtudty acUYl&lelT .. I think we need sbldles of this idea. Yes. I may favor a pJan Uke this." Senior citizens, teenager. and other iJ'OUPI could use the build· tnas to take O\e load QfJ the clty's community center whJch NlelJen said usuallyiaover·booked. But a service char•e "'ay !\ave to be levied to mabltain the proposed~ site facill~. he addcM . Wbat caa Ute Qt7 CoaacU do about ctt•I abHe amoa1 J'OHtalaV~ .. ,...U.f "J would enCO\ll'ege more teen proarama wltb parent parUclpaUon to combat dru1 •buae •monc the 10uria." Nl~1en backs a· propoeal to brln1 to Founttift Vallo, a pro- sr•m that. would offer cub re- ward• ror tntormau.on leadlne to UlH9ftvictlon oC dnl8 dealers. • Panel's Support Five candidates for Hunt· ington Beach city ortices hHe been endorsed by the newly formed Chamber ot Commerce Community Political Action Committee, it WU &llDOUCed to- day, The live contenders In the April 11 municipal elections will be bolstered by the chamber's financial help. Tbe chamber sroup threw its support to incumbents Ted Bartlett and Al Coen and challengers Dr. Frank Hoffman and Don MacAlllster in the city council race. Jerry Bame was endorsed for city attorney over incumbent Don Bonfa and Gall HuUon. Rqbe~ Terry, chairman ot the chamber political committee, said the chamber hopes to rahe $10,000 to $15,000 ln voluntary donations from Its members to be used in the campaign. Terry said thJl funds are ex· peeled to be distributed evenly· among the five candidates, chieOy for political advertising. He said none of the contenders would receive cash donations. He said the five men were chosen after more than 16 hours of interviews and analysis. He said the candidates chosen for chamber backing scored hi&b on knowledge ol1the issues, professional attitudes, management styles and ability to work ba.nnoniously as a team member without sacrificin& in· dependent t.binkiog. Terry added that this criteria also applied to the office ot city attorney. . He said all. five are strong candidates whom the business community could back. Questions covered the Impact of the Jarvis amendment, the future of Bolsa Chica, downtown redevelopment and the ap- praisal or the general business climate ln the city. Terry also announced that a reception honoring the five candidates will be held March 3 at the Seacliff Country Club. An admJsslon or $10 will be cbarced to raise campaign funds, be said. ' ]caz COncBn Set Tonight In Seal, Beach The Chuck Flores Quintet will be featured in a 7 o'clock jazz concert tonight at the J .H. M cG a ugh Intermediate School Auditorium in Seal Beach. The McGaush School Jan Ensemble also wlll play, performing selections from its repertoire to be used at the up- com Ing Reno Jan Festival. Chuck rlores has been a drum mer with Woody ijerman, Stan Kenton, Bud Shank and Laurinda Almeda. · Tickets are $3. Proceeds will help fund the school's jau ensemble travel to Reno. The sc hool is on Seal Beach Boulevard at Bolsa Avenue. Stiekup, Hell 'Fictim' Cl.ol,ben Su.pect A susped apparenUy ~~e wranc small market Co rob, Oran1e police said today. . They said tho suspect, identlfied u Jamu Howard, ie, ot Santa Ana, was arrested Monday ni1ht after the market's owner bad roundly trounced him wlth a ftw well· delivered blows. BOWARD WAS TREATED at UC Jrvlne Medical Center for a bJp injury and booked lnto Orance Count.Y Jail, MlcOC'dinl to Sst. Mllte Pollok. 'J'be Q1'ner baa not been ideotUled at hls own request. "Thia IUY'S been just pushed to the wall," Pollok said of the 49-year-old owner. "He's been burglariied and he's . bad the bell shoplifted out of him." So when a man came in Monday night and, alter mak-ln' a purchase pulled a knife on the owner's wife at the cbeckatand, th~ owner literally took things into his own hands. POU.OK SAID THE OWNEK used only bis fists lo subdue the suspect. When police arrived, tbe suspect re. portedly held out his hands to be handcuffed and pleaded, "Ta~e me." Howard faces charges of armed robbery and assault with a deadly wea~n. The market ~er was not injured, 1>0lice said. But Life End• Lost Poodle Finds ;;· A Decade of Love By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI .. o..M't ...... Slaff Lile, often cruel to stray pups, has ended for a wiAlY little waif who went wandering a decade ago in HWltJngton Beach, but found 10 years of Jove instead of a cage at the county pound. Shar, a tiny black poodJe, also gave 10 years of love. Retired Long Beach builder Alfred P. Dorsey and his wife Bonnie, raised in Newport Beach, wouldn't trade them for anything. . "Almost 10 years ago In Hunt· ington Beach, pur grown son Thomas found a small stray black dog," says Mrs. Dorsey, adding that his efforts to find and reunite her with her family were futile. "Arter a week, he called us to come pick up a gift. You can im- agine what it was. We were ready to retire and the funny little shaggy black pup reaUy didn't have a place in our travel· ing life." The Dorseys. now of Parker, Ari&., made one. Bedrauled and bewildered, Shu wu introduced to a ~Y vei.riaariM, Riven a clean blll of llealtb. and then whisked into a poodle beauty parlor. "What a life." the poodle puppy probably thought. "From that day on, she has been by our side, traveling throu1hout the U.S., Canada. Mexico, and never more than two feet from us," says Mrs. Dorsey. F,..•PageAJ REZONE ••• Ron Shenkman. ' A number or speakers opposed the rezoning. They claimed that industry provided Jobs, tbat there is a need for industrial land and that it ls not good to mix residential and ind11Strial uses. Increasingly grateful to th. son Thomas, now a Laeunl Beach resident and marketing director or a large home-· building firm, the Dorseys even bad a special car seat built for Shar. "Christmas was her speelal· day. Glft.s she could open • . . turkey in her bowl • • • and lot& or love ... " Time paued and poodles don't Ii ve as lonl aa people. "Yesterday, our best little friend had to be put to sleq.'.'. says Mrs. Dorsey, who adds th~t she has a message to share • ...c-.~ "U you were the person wuu Jost a little black dog in ~1 ln1ton Beach 101h years a , rest assured this pup had a , ~ .... fit for a queen," Mrs. Dorst!y · Wl'Ote in a Jetter lo tbe Daily Pilot. • ' "She was loved as a child 8Dll'. will be missed by her lovmg .. ." . parents ... " Once ln a while, Mrs. Do~Y. confesses, she turns around ID~ see if Shar is there, not two led.• a~ay. Then she remembers. · · Shar bas strayed away. 2Men Sought InHBTheft Two Long Beach men are be· ing sought in connection with the attempted theft of two oil rig valves, valued al $1,500. from a Huntington Beach oil field Tues- day night, police reported. The two thieves apparently were scared off by Standard Oil Company employees and police as they ned from the oil field near Golden West Street and Palm Avenue at about 11 p.m. Police identified the two sus- pects when their getaway car was found near the scene. The two men had left their identification inside the 111:1.: pounded vehicle, said Lt. Johr • Foster. ( • f l tb th • ., r ' . "'' Orange Coast Daily Piiot A More Modest Redevelopment The city of Huntington Beach ha.S not had any succe'ss in past efforts to redevelop deteriorating sections of the downtown part or the city. Always before when city officials looked at re· development, it was on a grand scale. _ A large. section of the city-up to 600 acres-was envisioned. There also was a great deal of talk about high rise office and hotel buildings. The most recent attempt ran into a storm or protest ii) 197G and was virtually hooted down by protesting ' csidents. . • • . Perhaps with past opposition in mind, officials are ow sizing up the situation in more moderate terms. ~ The latest proposal for redevelopment takes in only acres and does not include residential areas. But perhaps more important than redevelopment to e area's downtown are two proposals which officials y could spur revitalization of the area. •• They include the construction of 300 apartment units @or senior citizens on property that the city owns at the J>ld civic center site and refurbishment and possible com· ~ercial development at and near lhe city pier. i _ A full-blown redevelopment plan seems to have prob- ~m s, particularly if the Jarvis-Gann Amendment easses m June with its restrictions on property taxes. t!I Thal is why the plan for senior citizen housing and ier improvement should rate a serious study. ~ . te fLoyalty' vs. Crowding ~ ~ Parents of West Orange County high school students ljlve put Huntington Beach Union High School District of. IJcials between a rock and a bard place. :; The parents pressured school board trustees into re· $Cling a: plan to change school attendance area 1$)undaries for the second time in the past 14 months. ~ Officials said the boundary shifts were needed last ~ar and will be needed next year to ease acute over- C!j·owding at at least three district high schools. • But the parents convinced school board members t~at they would rather have overcrowded campuses ~ban S>Vilch schools. : District aides wonder how long this can go on before· ether parents start complaining that their youngsters can't IOa rn in an overcrowded classroom. : The question is: Is it more important for students to rjmain "loyal" to the school they grew up near even tl)ough it is overcrowded, or should youngsters go to the ~st available school? For now, some parents say it's loyalty that counts. But enrollment is expected to decline at some West Orange County high Schools and increase tremendously at others. It appears that parents will not complain until the im- .~lance at the schools is so great it riles lhe entire com- munity. , ~lively Race : An old·f ashloned horse race Is shaping up for the· Huntington Beach city elections April U. j__ Sixteen cand1dates, including incumbents Ted u,artlett and Al Coen, will vie for four open seats. · The city attorney race also figures to be close and ex· citing. J erry Bame and Gall Hutton are issulni stiff challenges lo incumbent Don Bonfa. : There seems to be an abundance of issues. : For example, how would candidates realign the bbdget in the face of property tax limitations posed by tfle Jarvis-Gann Amendment? ~ How do they feel about. Bolsa Chica? Should i~ be Pilrchased and preserved in its wildlife state or should at be -~velopedwithhomesandamarina? Are the candidates themselves in favor of more hous- iJlg in the city or do they want to preserve the city's in· qustrial areas for industrial use? And how do they feel about Meadowlark Airport? I Jow would theY. solve th at long -standing problem? • A series of candidate nights has been scheduled to provide an idea where the candidates stand on these and dther issues. : The first forum will be held a week from today, l'tjarch 1, at the library. , You might drop in to see how your favorites compare. 'these sessions are often lively and more fun than one W'ould expect. • Qplnlons expressed In the space abo'le are thOM of the Dally Pilot. CJther views expressed on this page are thoM of their authors and ~ists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addr ... The Dally Pilot, P.O. ftOX 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92826. Phone (714) 6'2-<6321. ' ' ·: I i ~ Boyd/Ohairmen • ByLM.BOYD :~ore corporate board c~alrmen are fired these ~ys than are retired. ltewise, IJlOre corporate esidet\tl. That's not -.u. o out ol three who quit do or elae. It's a fair& recent t nd. Fordecada WltJl now, US. chairmen and prealdeia&a niottly hunt tn then, armed BOtnciently well to fiaht off (b.e ettacken. Todaf, tboup, .• _,, all chanted. Amoni a . Jl)ird of the bluest lnduatdal, firms, the bo~ weren't the bosses five years aao. Q. ••Do pollce departments ever let male officers body 11ear9b female prboaent" A. Not unless said ofOcen fear for their on· tafety. Llkewlae, female offJee.., are told not to phJli~ aearcb male prisoners unless they fear for their own 'lafoty. It can be doae. t.bbuata, fOt aur• vlval'1sat - Aoe-1 N. w..ct/PubUwr a.rlwar• Krtlblch/Edltort .. PllQt Editor New T ire Strikes R oadblocks WASIUNGTON -tn today'• world ol cor:porate 1ianta, the man who build• a better mousetrap probably would be told to cet lost. Thia even hap. pened to a Jarae company which came up with a revol~Uonary new Ure and tried to peddle it to the rubber an4 automotive in· dustries. Tbe Caterpillar Company baa been makinc liant earthmoving m achlnery for decades. In the 19605, company engineers de· veloped a special tire for use on its bulldozers and other h u g e vehicles. tt was so successful, they ex· perimentecl ln scalini the Ure down for possible use on passenger autos and conven- tional trucks. By 1973, Caterpillar bad perfected a prototype passenger tire and offered it to the cloee· knit clan of lire manufacturers. It bad these advantaaea over convent!ooal Uru: -THE CATDPILLA& tire would last for 100,000 miles ratJier than the 2S,OOO to 60,000 miles consumers now get from their tires. ln case of a blowout, a driver could safely proeffd at a SO·mile-an-hour speed before stopping. A nat Ure could be fixed with a simple plus. -The Caterpillar Ure could be mass-produced by automa· Uon whereas today's Urea need handcraft labor at some ataees of production. Once a manufac- turer retooled his production Une, costs would be greatly re- duced. -The 18 tires 0n a monster tractor-trailer could be changed In 30 minutes becauH of the Caterpillar's new desiJn. A new tread could be fitted OQ like a glove, ellmlnaUne the risk of poorly vulcao.tJed retreadlnc. -Reduced fricUon would ~ duce a 8 percent energy aavtnJ.t on the hlehwaya. There wu one acknowledged drawback; the new Ure wouJd require a r~ designed rim oa cars thal used i1. Caterpillar people proudly Mailbox trotted off to the major tlre makeri witb thelJ' contribution to American motorl1t1. Tbe responl6 WH •• Jf they'd d_ropped a bucket ot eela ln the punchbowl at a debutante'1 ball. The tlre mo«un were bonifled by the posalbillUa of the new Ure, inalders tat ua. TO BEGIN WITH, a Ure wtth • llfeUme of 100,000 mUOI would drastleally Nd.uce their 1a1es of replacements. Secondly, tbe in· duatry had becuo boomiac radial• u tbe tire of tht future, and they refused to 11¥lteb off a multlmlWon-doUar promoUon campalp. ~ Alao, the Caterplllar lanova· Uon would allow lkilled uniao tlrtm aken to be replaced by leas hlChJY paid labor, and tho lire lndtiatriallats feared the wrath of the labor bosaes. CaleJ"pillar 1ot the aame abort thrift from Detroit's Big Three automakers althouah General Moton telted the Ure as late as 1976. The tire and auto industries of- fered various explanation.a for why tbey shied away from the., CaterpUlar concept. One tire apokesmao said the new-fan&led tire couldn't be mau-produced econom1cally and cited teebnolollcal problems. "If it. was all that Jood, I'd be down borrowlnc $100,000 from the bank to nuance my own com· paoy to mako it," he com· mentod. GM SA.ID It.a studies fatted to prove that the Caterpillar tire bad performance advantttes over the rad.ial.S now being used on lt.5 new cars. The rim pro- blem would create complicated assembly line chan1e1, be added. Ford and Chrysler listed too many manufacttlrlnl prg_b- tems u the realOI\ for tbelr ~ interest. : But there may still be a hapj>y ending in the offini. Fede~l· auto safety czar Joan Clayb1'Cf.k appealed this summer to the ~·· dustry to come up with so.die better Ure ideas. A few wedts ago, Caterpillar's pres1d$lt showed oil tbeir unwanted t&re to Claybrook lo Washiqgton. : She and an aide roadtesl~ it a n d w er a en t h u s l as tl:C . Caterpillar has provided mqre data at her requesL Expert.s•at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration are in- trigued by the possibility of ' 6 percent gasoline savings, not!to mention greater safety ahd durability of the tire. . DIRECTIVE 27 -President Carter has taken firm steps :to insure that some minor conftfl· talion won't blow up into an 1n- tern a tiona l incident. StHct. guideUnes have gone out frim the White House reaffirming 1.ts authority to reverse any govern- ment action that might caus4 a foreign policy flap. • All agt}Ocies have been in~ structed to report any n<O\- military incidents to the ~e Department's Operation Cen.r which. in tum, will expedi~,a report to the White House. uus means a flagrant oil dumping lY a foreign tanker or a fishi•g violation by a Russian traw(er will have to be reviewed by tl)e White House before final ac~ can be taken. : THE POLICY was set for1.b.in "Presidential Directi ve-NAC 27. ·' issued on Jan. 19 and In- tended for official eyes ooly.#It • em powers the White House :;to overrule on-the-spot governm*1t omcials. : . Parent Has Message for Market Mana gers ~ ~ •' •' ~ ~ To the Editor: The little quick-stop market.a we see in our ne.ighborhoods are great conveniences to us. My children like these markets, too, but as they enter to buy their &oodles and ahlrPees, the bar· rage of sexually oriented m agazlnes that meets their youn'g eyes ls appalling. Today I dM!ded to make a lit· tie survey of my own. J visited seven quick-stop markets, purposely avoiding those stores advertised as liquor-grocery at.ores. The first two stores I vis· ited did not display sexually· oriented magazines at all. Two more atores dlsplayed Playboy, . Planlrl, Oul, Penthouse, and similar ma111lnes separate from the other maguines; front covers were bidden beblnd special racb deslaned to ce>ver all but the macaiine bead1nas. One rack wu low enouah \bat• five-yt&Mlld child could easily see lnto It. Most of the macazlnes were tone, and those still left had fallen back so that their coven were as expGled ~ if tbey bad not been covered at all. TOE LAST three mart.ta bad thell: adult maguines dl.lplayed Sydney Barris on the aame racks as their other macazlnes. Intimate and High Society were displayed right next to Surfing. Sexology was set out ln a stand all by itaelt at waist level. One store bad three full shelves of such macuines Intermixed with Slar Wars and Close Encounters posters and other magazines that ap~ai to the juvenile and teen-age market. The name or the stores makes no difference. It seems to be up to the manager of each store as to how be will dlaplay these magazines or if he will sell them at all. My richt as a parent to choose the means by which my children will learn about sex Is being loet when they cannot buy candy and alurpees without be- inl exposed to pomoerapby. I can keep ttiem out of adult book stores and X-rated and adult movle1 but I clnnot keep them out o? 1·11 stores or other qutckst.op markets. We must tell these 1tore manaiers how we feel and, If necessary, exercise our bu)'lnl "clout" if we want to preserve the moral 1tandards of our neighborhoods. EVE E. FEE S t udent Pleleei• To the Editor: I continue to bear reports of graduating students who have not teamed to read so it is in· terestlna to find at least they are getting very familiar wJth the art of picketing. <Reference the boycott of Edwards Cinemas.) So Ms. Mary Forbatb is upset at having to pay $3.50 once every week or two to attend Edwards Cinemas. I also am extremely upaet at having to pay $3.67 each day in school taxes to keep her and her fellow pickets In school. My $3.67 each day is for a seven· day week and while sl\e has a choice of going or not going to the show but I am nol given a choice,whet.her or not I would like to pay my taxes. I WONDER tr Mary and her fello'V picket.5 realize that if Edwards Cinemas did not have to pay their huge property taxes to support Estancia and the other Costa Mesa schools they could reduce tbetr Ucket prices 10 we all could buy our tidtets for $3.50 per person. · I also object to •my property tax money going to pay a high· Fans' Spirit LitckS Sportsmanship applJad ~ ttie enemJ team eomsttlts aome m.a error; I feel ~rry for them: I don't Waftt m1 side to win by default, but by rotrlt. heut~eu, or hard-nos~. The cW)' Utln1 about ua that ou1bt to be bard, in my oplnloo, ts our resistance to lnjuslice • Bt1T II' )'Ou are an adamant fan ..abov. all, Justice does not come into conlidtration. What you want. to do 11 '¥iD, by any mtaM DOUAble. JI the O'PPC>llna quarterback breakt hla l•I and muat be carried oft the fte.&d, so mach the better (or your aide. Aaalll, I submit. thit b .. not.bins to do wtth _•port: It S. warfare, where anytblJUJ coea. salaried student activities ;t.r· structor lobbying in priva businesses. If this is bow s chools operate nowadais perhaps we would be better elf without them. :- Well, I can thank Ma. Maf; Forbath and her fellow pick..S for making up my mind to"* •·yes" on the Jarvis initiative~ not only vote for It but campaicb for it starting tomorrow. • ARTHURRILJfl.' . De•erH Prabe ? To the Editor: As a . resident of Hunlingtcft. by·the·Sea Mobile park at 218$1 Newland St., Huntington Beadi, I wish to publicly thank tbe following organiiatlons: The Red Cross, the police d,. • pariment. the fire department, the rescue and salvaee dd· parlment and the clean-up crew of the city. : The quiet efficiency of all w~ aom ething to watch. From ~ first hour after our now faQ)Otf; twister, all of the above·namt!d departments were right with it.: I'm llill jltt.ery, but wtu calrh down ln time. I hope I never see and hear such a thing again. : Again. I say thank you for b job well done. : ROSESIK~ I Reio,... Noao -: TotheEditor: . • I'm pleased that the Pilot rd- ognlzes the need for campaid reform and that our county neecl not awai\ the reforms belD& CO!l- al 4 e t~d by our board oJ supervisors. Thanks to th• 1 lng alanature drive of TIN CU our November ballot will bave campaign reform ordiJ>&nce wili not be vulnerabl• t.t weakenin(t by the aupeniaors. The lrUUat.lve will restrict 1upervlsor'1 voUng on i~et i benefit.Ung those wbo contriWtt $1,000 or m<>H &o his Ulictd election campaip wlttTn u.9 previous four years. J\ 1'111 ~ I limit cto tsoo a 11ar) campal1n contrlbuU001 , lobbyists. . l WENDYJ.LO ' • \ , . ts -~ :h ·e- n· ly •e· P· ·h } tb th CJ r ' ' J · 11 1 ' , t . l ' A More Modest Redevelopment The city of Huntington Beach ha·s not had any success in past efforts to redevelop deteriorating sections of the downtown part of the city. Always before when city officials looked at re- development, it was on a grand scale. _ A large section of the city-up to 600 acres-was envisioned. There also was a great deal of talk about high rise office and hotel buildings. The most recent attempt ran into a storm of protest in 1976 and was virtually hooted down by protesting tesidents. Perhaps with past opposition in mind, officials are ow sizing up the situation in more moderate terms. ~ The latest proposal for redevelopment takes in only r acres and does not include residential areas. _, But perhaps more important than redevelopment to lhe area's downtown are two proposals which officials ay could spur revitalization of the area. They include the construction of 300 apartment units ~r senior citizens on property that the city owns at the d civic center site and refurbishment and poss ible com· ercial development at and near the city pier. i _ A full·blown redevelopment plan seems to have prob· ~ms, particularly if the Jarvis·Gann Amendment '-asses in June with its restrictions on property taxes. ~ That is why the plan tor senior citizen housing and lier i mprovcment should rate a serious study. c; . tLoyalty' vs. Crowding ~ ~ P arents of West Orange County high school students lwe put Huntington Beach Union High School District of. IJci als between a rock and a hard place. :; The parents pressured school board trustees into re· ,$Cting a : plan to change school attendance area lj>undaries for the second time in the past 14 months. ~ Officials said the boundary shifts were needed last ~ar and will be needed next year to ease acute over- <towding at at least three district rugb schools. • But the parents convinced school board members t6at they would rather have overcrowded campuses than S)vitch schools. · : District aides wonder how long this can go on before· c4hcr parents start complaining that their youngsters can't JI) am in an overcrowded classroom. ~ The question is: Is it more important for students to rimain "loyal" to the school they grew up near even t~ough it is overcrowded, or should youngsters go to the ~st available school? -~ For now, some parents s ay it's loyalty that counts. ~ But enrollment is expected to decline at some West Otange County high Schools and increase tremendously at others. It appears that parents will not complain until the im· .balance at the schools is so great it riles the entire com- ~unity. , ~lively Race • ; An old-fashioned horse race is shaping up for the· Huntington Beach city elections April 11. ~ Sixteen candidates, including incumbents Ted ~rtlett and Al Coen, will vie for four open seats. · The city attorney race also figures to be close and ex· cJting. Jerry Bame and Gail Hutton are issuing stiff challenges to incumbent Don Bonfa. : There seems to be an abundance of issues. : F or example, how would candidates realign the bt.id ~ct in the face of property tax limitations posed by tf.e J arvis·Gann Am endment? .: How do they feel about Bolsa Chica?. Should it be t>\lrchased and preserved in itS wildlife state or should it)>e ®ve loped with homes and a marina? : Are the candidates themselves in favor of more hous· ipg in the city or do they want to preserve the city's in· qustrial areas for industrial use? And how do they feel about Meadowlark Airport? Jiow would theY. solve that long-standing problem? . A series of csmildate nlghts has been scheduled to nrovidc an idea where the candidates stand on these and dther issues. ; The first forum will be held a week from today, l\tarch 1, at the library. , You mi~ht drop in to see how your favorites compare. these sessions are often lively and more fun than one \.fould expect. • Qpinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Qther views expressed on this page art those of their authors and IJ1ists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. qox 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71•) 842-4321. . Boyd/Chairmen . " By L.M. BO\'D !More corporate board cJlairmen are !ired these ~~y s lban are retired. 4kewi11e, more corporate pfe&idents. That's not ~ll. ~o out of three who quit do . s• or else. It's a falrl)' recent llfend. For decades until now, Ule chairmen and prealde.n11 rdostly bun& in then, armed aOfflclently well to ftaht ott tho att.actera. Today, lbou1b, ·IC:• all cban1ed. Amons a ~ of the b1Qett J.nduatrlal. firms, the bos~ weren't the bosses five years aeo. Q. ''Do poUce departments ever let male officen body sear~b female prisoners?" A. Not unless said officers rear for their own · safety • Likewise, female of:tJoera are told not to phJ'li~ Marcb male pris()nen unless they fear for their own u.fety. It can be done. thou&b. ror sur• vlval '1 sake. Q. ••rn. Ute White ROU• l• a macb.lrie called an AUtopeo that c•n duplicate tb• Prestcleot•s 1t1oature to mue it look as thouah he'd 1t1ued personally. Ho• maciy sue• phonJ liO)aturil ean that Wna turn o.t a da:t?" .. A. Abouu,ooo. The tnlcal Chlniele ~alnt .. ba bu tWo curloua wrb\lsla: one, an open corner,. t.JreoreUeall1 to let the viewer'• e,e enter, and two, ao unff•l•h•d area, thet'~ to let..,. Yle'rir niillh a. Ji'dure With 'Sm· qlliatm.; WASHINQTON -1n today's worlcl ot ~ate •tanta, the man who 6ulld1 a better mousetrap probably would be told to set Iott. 'lbla even hap- pened to a Iara• company whlcb came up wlth a rovoluUQnary new Ur~ and tried to peddle it to the rubber and automotive ln· duatrlea. Tb• C&terpWar Company bu been maklna &laDt ea.rtbmovini m achlnery for decades. In the 1960s, company engineers d• veloped a s pecial Ure for use on ita bulldouu and other b u g e vehicles. ~t was so succeHful. they ex· perlmented ln acalln1 the Ure down for possible use on passenger autos and conven· Uonal trucka. By 1913, Caterplllar had perfected a prototype passenger Ure and offered lt to the close- knit clan of tire manufacturers. lt bad these advantages over conventloaal tlrel: -THE CATEllPILIAll Ure would last for 100,000 miles raUier than the 2S,OOO to 60,000 mUes consumers now gel from their litts. lo c-.se of a blowout. a driver could aafely proceed at a 50·mlle-an·hour speed before stopping. A fiat tire could be fixed with a simple plus. -The Caterpillar tire could be m US· produced by automa- tion whereas today's tlres need handcraft labor at some 1taiea of production. Once a manufae- turer retooled bis production line, cost.a would be greaUy re- duced. -The 18 tires 0n a monster lrador-traiJer could be changed in 30 minutes because of the Caterpillar's new deslgn. A new tread could be fitted on like a glove, ellmtnaUne the rtsk of poorly vulcaulied retreadlnt. -Reduced frkUon would ~ duce a 8 percent energy aavtnp on the hi&hw~. There was one acknowledged drawback; the new lire would require a re- designed rim on cars that used lL CaterpUlar people proudly Mailbox trotted off to the maJol' Ure makers wltb their COQtributlon to American motorists. The response w11 •• if they'd dropped a bucket of eels ln the punchbowl at a debutante'1 ball. The Ure m01ula were horrified by the poulbWtJes of the nw tlro, lnslders tell us. TO BEGIN WITH, a tire with a UteUme ot 100.000 mU• would druUcall,y reduce thtlr aales ol teplaeemenU. Secondly. the ln· du1try bad beiuo b0omln1 radials u tbe Ure of tho future, and they reluaed to awilch off a multlmllllon·doUar promotion campalp. Also, tho Caterplllar lnnova· lion would allow lkllled unloo tlrem akert to be replaced by less blahb' paid labor, and the Ure lndqstriallsts feared the wrath ol the labor ~aea. Caten>illar 11ot the same short shrift ftom Detroit's Big Th~ automakers allhou1h General Motors telted the tire aa late as 1976. The tire and auto industries of- fered various explanations for wby they shied away from the.. Caterpillar concept. One tire apokesman said the new.fangled tire couldA't be mus-produced economically and cited technological problems. "U it was all tllat good, I'd be down borrowing $100,000 from the bank to flnance my own com· pany to make it," he com· mented. GM SAID lta 1tudle1 failed .to prove that the Caterpillar tire bad performance advanta1es over the radialS now betn1 used on Its new cars. The rlnt ~ blem would create compllea~ assembly line cbancea, be added. Ford and Chrysler listed too' many manufacttirlnl' p~ lems u th& reason for th.tr C¥" interest. : But there may sWl be a hallf~ ending in the offing. Fed~· auto ufety cur Joan ClaJ!:lk appealed. this summer to the · dustry to come up with e better Ure ideas. A tew wedts ago, Caterpillar's presld$t showed olf their unwanted tire to Claybrook in Wasb~gton. : She and an aide roadtestecE it a n d w ere en th u s i a a U,: . Caterpillar has provided mqre data al her request. Expert.s•at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration are in· trigued by the possibility of t 6 percent gasoline savings, not!t.o m entlon greater safely abd durability of the tire. DIRECTIVE 27 -Presld~t Carter has taken firm steps:to insure that some minor co~­tation won't blow up into an n· ternational incident. St t guidelines have gone out frem the While House reaffirming hs authority to reverse any govein- ment action that might caus4 a foreign policy flap. ! . All ag¥cies have been ~· structed to report any n<ti· military incidents to the ~e Department's Operation Cen!Jr which. in turn, will expedite::a report to the While House. T1U.s means a flagrant oil dumping by a foreign tanker or a fisbiig violation by a Russian traw~r will have to be reviewed by U,e While House before final ac~n can be taken. : THE POLICY was set fon.b-in "Presidential Oireclive·Nac 27," issued on Jan. 19 and Ip. tended for official eyes only.#It • em powers the White House :to overrule on-the·spot governm~t oUicials. ~. .. . .. .· ~ Parent Has Message for M&rket Managers ~ -: ... ;. i To the Editor: The little qulck·stop markets we see in our neighborhoods are great conveniences lo us. My children like these markets, too. but aa they enter to buy their toodies and slurpees, the bar· rage of sexually oriented magazines that meets their youn'g eyes ls appalling. Today I dedcled to make a lit· Ue survey of my own. I visited seven quick.stop markets, purposely avoiding those st.or~ advertised as llquor·crocery stm'es. The fll'St two stores I vi~ ited did not display sexually· oriented magazines at all. Two more at.ores displayed Playboy, . Planirl, Out, Penthouse, and similar magasines separate from the other magulnes; front coven were bidden behind special racks designed to CQver all but the ma1ui.ne beadings. One rack was 10w enough that • five-year-old child CQuld euUy see into it, Moat of the ma1ailnes were 1one, and those still Jett had fallen back so that their coven were as exposed ~ if they bad not been covered at. all. TUE L\8T three manetl !tad their adult maguines dlJpl.Ytd Sydney ll8rri8 on the same racks u lheir other magazlnea. Intimate and Hiah Society were displayed right next to Surfing. Sexology was set out ln a stand all by ltaell at waist level. One store had three full shelves of such m agazines inl~rmlxed with Star Wars and Close Encounters posters and other magazines that appeal to the juvenile and teen·age market. The name of the stores makes no difference. It seems to be up to the manaaer of each store as to how be will display these maguines or if be will .sell them at all. My ri&ht as a parent to choose the means by which my children will learn about sex Is being JOit when they cannot buy candy and slurpees without be· lng exposed to porno1raphy. I can keep them out of adult book stores and X-rated and adult movies. but I cannot keep them out of 7·11 stores or other qu1ckstop markets. We must tell these store mana1ers how we feel and, If necessary, exercise our buytn1 "clout" if we want to preserve the moral standards or our neighborhoods . EVEE.FEE St udftat Plc~t• To the Editor: I continue to hear reports of graduating students who have not learned to read so it is In· terestlng to find at least they are getting very ramillar with the art of picketing. <Reference the boycott of Edwards Cinemas.) So Ma. Mary Forbalh Is upset at having to pay $3.50 once every week or two to aUend Edwards Cinemas. I also am extremely upset at having to pay $3.67 each day in school taxes to keep her a nd her fellow pickets Sn school. My $3.67 each day is for a seven· day week and while she has a choice of going or not 1otng to the show but I am not given a choice whether or not I would like to pay my taxes. I WONDER if Mary and her fellow pickets realize that if Edwa~ Cinemas did not have to pay their huge properly taxes to support Estancia and the other Costa Mesa schools they could reduce their ticket prices 110 we all could buy our tlcttets for $2.50 per person. I also object to my property tax money going to pay a hi gh- Fans' Spirit Lacks Sportsnum.ship applaud when the anemy team commlta aome 111>1• error: 1 feel aotry for then>. 1 don't want my stdo to win by default, but by merit. heartedness, or hard·nosedneu. The Oft!)' Wng about ua that ou1ht to be hard, in my oplnlon, is our ruistance to injustice. BUT JI' you are an adamant fall above all, J\JStlce does not. come into com1derat.1on. What you want-to do la 'fin, by any mtan. IJOllible. If the oppoebia quarterback bteaka ~ lei and must be canted off the fteJd, so -much the better ·tor your aide. Ataln, l 1ubmit. this baa oothlna to do with •PQrt: it it warfare. wber• anyt.hina coea. salaried student activities i·· structor lobby ing in private businesses. If this is how tie s chools operate nowadab perhaps we would be better~ without them. ~ Well, I can thank Ma. Mdv Forbath and her felJow pickds for mak.Jng up my mind to"* "yes" on the J arvis initiative~ not only vote for it but campaifi for it starting tomorrow. • ARTHUR RIL!fi • D~•~ Praue ? To the Editor: : As a resident of Huntingtdi- by·the·Sea Mobile park at 2101 Newland St., Huntington Bea~. I wish lo publicly thank tbe following organiiallons: The R ed Cross, the police d•· partment, the fire department, t he rescue a nd salvage d~­ partmenl and the clean-up crew of the city. ; The quiet efficiency of all WlfS something to watch. From tb;e first hour after our now f~ twister, ail of the abov~·namt!ld departments were right with u.: 1'1'(1 still jitc.ery. but will catth down in U me. I hope I never see and hear 5uch a thing again. ! Again, l say thank you for b job well dooe. ; ROSE SI~ • R~lo,... Noao ·= • To the Editor: , : I'm pleased that the Pilot~ oenizes the need for campain reform and that our county neeo not await the re.forms belAt ~ aldere~ by our board 3 supervisors. Thank~ to the on lnl alpatute drive of TIN CU our November ballot will have campaign reform O?'dlnance th wilJ not be vulne1abl•~ weakening by the supenitors. The initlative will ~trict auperviaor'a voting on inti beoefittlnl those who contrl $1,000 or more to bi.I "1ltle41 electton campalan within th• previous four yurs. It wm llmlt (to '500 • 1••r> ua· campat1n eoot.ributlona lobbylat.s. rs -• , a I t I l 1 f } tb t" r < " r J .. Mom Suspect In Slayings l>l'f PRUNEDALE (AP) -A youl\' mother ap. ::•r parenUy sbol her four children and then tutned the l• gun on t\erselt in the bloody climax o( a depression ~u· . caused by marital problem•, authoritJes said. . !· Police said at least 20 shots were fired in the family's house. Officers, rushed tot.be scene after a wounded ~blld managed to summon help, found Ulf the lifeless bodies of two of the children and told of • • the grisly discovery of a seriow;ly wounded baby :·· sprawled in ita blood-stained crib. .,, TWO SONS, AGES 10 AND Z, were killed, .. ~ · while Sue Barber. 28, and a 9-year.old dau_1bter and a six-month-old son were critically wounded •• • when shooting broke out Tuesday. ... "All indications are that Sue Barber was < responible for the shooting and then turned the 1un 1., .on herself," said Bud Cook, assistant Monterey ~ County sheriff. "From the information we bave4 ., she was solely responsible." ; Cook said Mrs. Barber has been despondent 'i•. because or the recent breakup of her marriage to Guy Barber, from whom she was separated. MRS. BARBER WAS NOT charged or arrest· '"• ed and Cook said no legal action was likely until 6he started lo recover from her wounds. . ' . Cook said his deputies had determined that at .,. least 20 shots were fired in the family's fashionable-two-story house in thir rural communi· • ' ty just east of Monterey Bay. .. Authorities learned of the shootings when. · Kathy Barber, 9, fled the home and went to a neighbor's, where she collapsed from her own wounds. DEPUTIES ARRIVED to find bodies littering the house. Cook said. Mrs. Barber was sprawled In a front bedroom. a bullet wound in her stomach end a .25-cahber automatic pistol at her side. Andy Barber, 10, and Christopher Barber, 2, were lying on a bed in a rear bedroom. Both bad suffered gunshot wounds in the chest and were dead on arrival at a local hospital. Sax-month-old Nicholas Barber was tound an his bloodstained bassinet. Hospital orricials late Tuesday listed the Korean-born Mrs . Barber, in critical condition filOng with her son Nicholas. Kathy Barber was in serious condition. . .. ..,..... Refi~erg Explosion A 2.1 milliyn-gaJlon gasoline stOrage tank at Rialto exploded into a massive fireball Tuesday apd caused more than $450,000 in damage a nd iajured a motorist on a nearby street, officials say. The .raging fire, with flames shooting 200 feet into the air and biUowing smoke visible for SO miles, was battled for 10 hours by 200 {irefighters from 15 Southern California -agencies. '· I 'No Contest' in Arson ~ . • ' . SANTA BARBARA (AP) -A Goleta man bas "Rosemary's Baby" and "Chinatown," promptly pleaded no contest to charges of deliberately set· adnounced Tuesday be hoped to be able to ting four major brush fires in Santa Barbara Coun-persuade PolJlDSki tO return from France to the ty last year, including the Cachuma blaze last July court's custody. • 31 which burned close to Seed ... t• C..U..11e ~ 2'~!~!:· Seymore, 19,( ~ATE ) ~ ANOELPJI (AP)-tbe County Board of . C ·entered the plea Tuesday Sup~rvasors, dlscountiof reports that cloud. 11 Jn Superior Court. ---------seedaog operations lntensltled a recent storm that e Authorities dropped devastated parts of Southern California, voted ,,. other arson charges against Seymore. stemming :ruesday to allow the county to continue raJnmat. ' from about a dozen blazes in the county. ing e(fort.s . ... ' ( Another Goleta teen-ager, Robin Mack, 18. a Supervisor Kenneth Hahn offered a motion co-defendant in the case, was scheduled ror that would have voided the county's contract with separate trial on arson charges. a cloud-seedlng company, but tbe move was voted Gun~ 1t'o.,.d Drl~ INGLEWOOD (AP) -A group of )'OUngsten helped themselves to the goodies from an ice cream truck while its wounded driver lay on the ground a few feet away after being shot by would- be robbers, police say. Officers said Tuesday that three teen-age gunmen approached 24-year-old Hassan Rezael while he was driving bis truck through a park and ordered him to hand over his money. Razeal refused, then one of the teen-agers ahot him, investigators said. The youths fled without taking anything, witnesses told police. Lavotts~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Loa Angeles Jloard of Education has taken tentative steps to , lay off some 40,000 employees, citing the Jarvis- Gann tax initiative. ; The seven-member board unanimouslv de-~ cided Tuesday to send out termination notices in .~ ihree weeks to approximately two-thirds of the .employees in the Los Angeles Unified School Dis- iricl. The action was taken because state law re- quires termination notices by March 1 and March U to employees who could be affected by l()S8 of !' district revenue. 'lllldge lt'ftladra..,. ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jnststing be has .. at ~o time exhibited any bias or prejudice" toward jnovle. producer Roman Polanski, Santa Monica I. #)uper1or Court Judge Lawrence BlUenband nevertheless has removed himself ff'Qm ttie cue "lo avoid needless delays and court proceedings." . Douglas Dalton, altol'f\er for the diminutlve J ~oliah·born director o such movie's a~ ( I ~ -Sex-dnlg Trade .• Probat~J;J; ·: Fine Given down. Manager Nametl Brown Seeks Re-election SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. planned lo formally announce bis candidacy for re-election today, the Democratic Governor's office says. Brown on Tue;iday named his ric.bt-hand man for the past three years. executive secretary Gray Davis, to manage his campaign. And be scheduled a news con!ereoce today to formally declare bis candidacy. BROWN, WHO SQUEAKED into office in 1974 in Calilornla's closest race for governor in h~lf a century, bas no well-lmowa foe in tbe Democratic primary and ls re1arded as a heavy favorite in November. · The 39-year-old Democrat, who made "lower your expectations•• a sloc-.n for bis adminiltraUon, was ~peeled to .1alte an upbeat tone in his re-electiott campaign, emphasizing job •programs and his supp0.rt.. Of Caltrornia sgace technolQIY and .itematlve energy programs. Brotm, •bO had served as secretary of s,tate f<Jr fMb. years, woo the 1ovemorship in 1974 lar1e· ly on b18 lathe~"• name, former Gov. £dmund G. ''Pat" Brown .• HE 18 .S£ECJNc; re-election against five Rep&abllcan foes oo • record that includea a few ~,..onal trhmtphs and .some powerful symbols, .such u bls .refusal to live in the governor's mJ.Dslao and his refusal of a limousine. Bat th.at image has been tarnished by growinc c:rit1c11m, especially in the past year, of bi.a ,,· admlJliltraUve abllit.les and of scandals in bis · Health and Welfare Acency. Even Democrats hav& started critlcizin1 Brown's adminl.straUve style, in which declsiona are often delafed and tables -of organization itnored when Brown tak'8 a penonal lntere,t in a J>roirapi otcleflltt.P!nt. Doctor e1eared DAILY Ptl.OT EXploaitJe Dev~ Threatened by Terrorist SAN DIEGO (AP) -A man clalrnin1 to represent a terrorist "'People's Liberation" or· ganlzaUon exto~ $'75,000 from a Bank of America branch Tues· day, threatening to blow up the bank and its mana1er with re· JJ}Ole cQntrolled explosive de· vices, poUcesaid. Rueh Hudson, SC, manager of tbe bank at 1600 Hancock St., said be wu hared into the bank parking lot by a ldephone call froin a man clalmin1 to be "Captain Lear from NYC," the Naval Training Center here . THE CALLER Hid be end his ·•lfe bad been at the bank earlier and lost a packet ol classified information and could Hudson look for it! Jn the parking lot, Hudson Hid. be wa.a confronted by a man with a pistol· who handed t>lm a brown vinyl brief case and told him to open it. Inside, said Hudson, be saw two d~ vices, one large and one small. Hudson told police the man then ordered him to put one of' the devices into his pocket and he then handed him a stick of what looked like dynamite, tell· ing the bank manager the ............... -.... ..... <NI ttrl• ... -_.,.. ~ .... -......... .., ... tect•• •~•••ell•• ••• .._, 1 11 .. -._. e"tleace .. It tae •Hll-• .. .. .nt ......... _ ...... , ..................... .,.._ ...................... ,... .. ~ ....... , .. ...-.. briefcase device and the one in bis pocket were explosive. "I WAS TQL1> that there were other people with other devices in the bank," Hudson said. "If t didn't follow inst.ructions. the)'"" would be set off." He said the gunman told him the People's Liberation or- ganbaUon was out to "1et .. banks because they foreclosed loans and "stole money from the people." Hudson was ordered to get $75,000 from the bank, drive his car to Kettner Boulevard and Palm Avenue, where be re- ceived a call at a telephone booth notifying him to leave the money and the two devices in his car and take a 3>-minute walk. I Picnickers Found VENTUltA (AP) -A Catholic priest and four 14-year-old boys were found in good condition Tuesday after they became lost while on a holiday picnic and spent the night In the condor sanctuary of the rugged mountains in the Los Padres National Forest. SOUTM COAST PLAZA HUDSON SAID •hlle be was in the bank he mana1ed to in- form n wor6'er about what was happening. ~ "I started walking south on Kettner," Hudson said. "I walked 'o Laurel Street and along Pacific Highway bofore headihl back. Then the FBI picked me up." A San Dl~go supervisor for'-~~ FBI, Mike Green, said be ~ never heard of the so-called terrorist group. Green also de- nied a police allegation that the FBI bid slaked out the car and let the terrorist slip throutn their bands. AN FBI spokeswoman s-.id that after checking with the United States attorney for S!ln Diego, federal authorities de- cided the case was strictly undti' local police jurisdiction artd declined to investigate it. At the same tiine, a pol~e spokesman said the case was \bi· der joint investigation by both police and the FBI. In the confusion, neith:er a1ency was able to say whether any explosive devices actually were recovered from the bank, . Save $2 on Sky Bal~. Seamless bras! Reg. 8.SQ-$10 All the fit and oomfort Bali's9 known for. Underwire, seamless ••. 34-38 B,C. Reg. 9.50, 7.50 34-38 D, Reg. $10,· $8 Or seamless soft cup, 34-38 B.C, ·, Reg. 8.50, 6.50 Sizes 34-38 D, Reg. $9, $7 Both in beige. BraandBody Fashions ·- By GARY GRANVILLE Of ... D4111yl'l ... ltaff Orange County supervisors acrt~ed Tuesday to go ahead with a straw vote aimed at deciding if cQunty voters want to pass Judgment on a farmland buying spree that could cost up to $12S million. Supervisors' endorsement of what will ·be known a s Proposition A on the June 6 ballot came on a 3 to 2 vote. Plane . Crash Kills Six BAKERSFIELD (t'\P> -S~ oUfield workers were killed when thelr plane crashed into a junior high school cafeteria in dense fog early today, police seid. No one on the ground was in- jured, and there was no one at the 500-student school when the plane crashed about 6 a.m., authorities said. The plane struck the cafeteria a 1lancing blow, then went between buildings lnlo an open corridor which lore the wings olf the plane, said Don Londquist, principal at Golden Stale Junior High. Part of the plane hit a tree, · and the rest scattered into "pieces all over," he said. The victims, employees of Oilfield Construction Co. of Bakersfield, were burned when the plane burst into flames on impact, said Chuck Thomas, ci-1 ty fire department baUalion chief. j "Grim is probably the beat word I can use,'' Thomas aaid in t describing the erasb 1eene • .. One body wa.s probably SO feet east of the plane, another 20 feet west of the plane and the four bodies were ln the plane. They were not recognizable." A woman wbo lives nearby said she "beard the boom. ' She went outside but "couldn't see my hand in front of my face, the fog was so thick. There was one body over there. ll was smouldering." Another resident of the south Bakersfield neighborhood gave this description: ·'There were bodies scattered all over and bits or the plane scattered around the parkin& Jot. The plane was just broken up into bits. "There was part or a wing and part or a propeller in the street and lots of pieces and bits of brick." Authorities said bricks from the cafeteria wall were hurled JOO feet into the street, and bits of the plane wreckage reported· Jy were scattered .several hundred yards. The six victims were fbttnc to a pipeline project at Oarrant, Nevada., said Police Sit. Jim • Steen. '1bei.r ldenUUes were .not released. but they reportedly were welders who bad returned to their· homes here for· a brief vlatt Tuesday nigh(. They were flylnc a slnlle- englne Cessna Turbo 210 owned by the pUot, a 1ppltesman for Bakersfield Airpark sald. And il may cost more Utan supervisors realized to poll coun- ty voters on their feelings about the purchase of prime farmland as a means of preserving open space in Orange County. That is because county Registrar of Voters'Al Olson said that even the straw vote ballot proposition must Include pro and con arguments in both Spanish and English. That places the price tag on what it will cost to see bow voters feel about the prospect of a bonafide ballot measure on the land purchase pl"1 being put on next November's aeneral election ballot. ~ Almost to a man, supervisors agreed that it is higbly unlikely the voters tn June will endorse the concept of the county soma on a land buyin& spree to pre- serve up to 10,000 acres of farmland. Die Egg and lJCI Can an egg survive the 110-foot drop from the top of UC Irvine's engineering building (above) if properly protect- ed ? UGI engineering students faced that challenge Tues- day with devices ranging from papcom and cornstarch padding to gyroscope retro-rockets. Judging the results were Sle\le Dwyer (below left>, John Girouda (below center> and Scott Rowe. The papcorn and cornstarch de- signed by Dave Adams was declared the winner. Super\llsoT Pbillp Anthony took it a •lei> further wben be cJl.lled the straw vole measure "lr· responalble, ·confusb\g and ml•· leadlne." "It ls not the kind of thine that can b&-anawered with a 1~or no vote," Anthony aald. Be and Supervilor Lawrence Schmit voted •c•lmt the word· ing of Propc>sitlon A. Their votes, however. were actually diPenta aialnst bavtn1 the measure put on the June . . ballot. ... Schmit volunteered to write the ballot arsument again.st the farml•nd buying program, "It goeis against everythina we are trytnr to do like keeping the cost of bowlinl down and lowet· in& property taxes," Schmlt &aid. But Superv\sor Ralph Cfark said cowity residents 1ho\lld be 1lven the opportqnity to decide if they want to dedde on the feasibiUty of the land buying pro- J>Osal. • To•ay; .. Cle lag · N.Y.Stoe~· . . • TEN CENTS "There are many people w9'o aa)' .YJe aro paving ·oraa1e C0tm· ty over and I thi~ they sboUJd• have a say in what dfrectlCMl we 're going," Clark said. Supervl1or Ralph Diedrich conceded that voters are not like- ly to approve placlnc an ln- itiati ve on the ballot, "especially when it is side by side with the · Jarvis amendment that ap- parently is attracting so much enthusiasm." Body Pictured \ Jury Sees Photos of Infant By TOM BARLEY OIU.CMllr,.._.MliH Jurors in the Superior Court t.-lal of Dr. William Baxter Waddill of l{untin&ton Harbour visibly wioced Tuesday when they were shown color photo· graphs of the baby girl be al- ·1egedly strangled to death. The six photographs were taken durin-g an autopsy performed on the dead infant by Dr. Robert tuc'harda of the Orange County Omlller'a office. And tbey -"re used by tbe prosecution witness to back his staled convictlM that the baby that Waddill. '4, had earlier un- • An Jntne maa Ii 1n 'tuidil Commualty lbpttaJ.. UftCler.,.. rett on a charge of d.nmten driv· in1, after a pickup ttuct police say he dto?e plowed tbrougb a fence at Orange County Airport .Tuesday and am•abed tour parked cars. ' David Wilson, 29, of 1819S Mayapple Way, a1ao ls retarded by Irvine police u their best suspect in an au.ct oo an lntne liquor score elm minutes before the accldeat. Wllloa WU ID stable cond:itkln today. recoveriq from 1 broken leg and bead cuta. The California Hig'hway Patrol said none of the smashed cars were occupied. They were parked in the main airport lot. One of lbe can was de· molished. Irvine police saJd Wilson and his truck flt the description given them by a clerk at Spigot (See CHAR.OE, Pa1e A%) successfully tried lo abort was strangled lo death in the nursery of Westmia:>ster Community Hospital last March 2. • A woman juror turned her head away and covered her race with her hands while Richards pointed out bruised areas of the baby's neck which clearly, be said, su~ the verdict of manual stran1ulallon. Several spectators left the courtroom aft.er Judge James K. Turner warned the court sbortly before the pictures were pro- duced that spectators might find the pictures 4aken before and during the autopsy -;-lo be dis- Irvine resident Tom Feierabend, 45, is the new fire chief for the City of Fountain Valley. The former Fountain Valley Fire Department battalion chief was named to the post Tuesday. Happy Hippo Mt#ing Cal.l 'Summoned' By PRIUP ~llAUN °' .. '*"' .......... Bubbles, the fulllive flippopotamus froru Lion Country Satarl who's been samP,linl the creeks' and ponds of the Laguna Hilb for three days, was reported 1l1bttd before dawn today. At leaat, her considerable nostrils were rePorted c:ornlna up for alr1 by p~ ranee~ who apent ""'ll' second dasnp nl1bt look~n for Bubblt11 wbo eaca under C!Over or dark Mon ay momiftf. Rua~ .un. were 1t a Jou. turblng. ., Other spectators left after the witness began to display the photographs. ll is alleged that Waddill s trangled the 28-week infant alter a saline fluid he injected into the unwed 18-year-old mother failed to abort the child. Prosecution witnesses have testified that he used his hands to end the baby's life after com- menting that the infant must have sustained severe brain damage and would be the sub- ject of lawsuits that could cost many thousands of dollars. (See DOCl'OR, Pa•e AZ) 'Dogf ~ther' Sentenced To Prison -th' itttne bust. nn1m1n ~ olllled hfm1ell the .. Dogfather" after bl.a frozen Italian sandwiches, drew a term .of nine lo 10 years in Arizona State Prison Tuesday for his part in a $5.5 million land !raud scheme. At the same lime, trial was set for March 6 for Newport Beacb resident Ken Duffy, the last or 1S defendants in the case. After receiving the stale prison term handed down in P hoenix, Dinnen, 57, appeared in federal c:ourt in Tucson a few hours later. There be drew a five-year term for mail fraud a connection with another Arb:ona land fraud. The two sentences come on top of the 18-month sentence Dinnell received late last year la P hoenix federal court aner con- viction of two counts of income tax evasion. The three sentences are to be served concurrenUy. accordin& to Assistant U.S. At· torney Chris Pickrell of Tucson. Dinnell's son, Anthony. 29, also of Irvine, is currently set'V• ing a one-to-four year term Jn Arizona 1tate prison following his conviction on felony char&.es related to the $5.S million liwd fraud perpetrated by a firm known as Combined Equity As· surance. Both DinneUs, while livin( in the Harbor Area prior to their land fraud convictions operated a bu~lftess known initially as (See TERM, Pap 1\2) Coast Weatlle .. Late night and morning tor alon1 the coast; otherwise falr Thursday. Lows tonJ1ht .cs to so Hjcbs 'lburad•f ll5 to 72. • I I tt u· '( g ( t Ci• ( .\.Z DM.YPILOT ,-.._,__Al CHARGE •.. Liquor, 1804( CUiver Drjve r•PQll'ted btlnc Ml ult.I drunlcen customer. The clerk, 21 , soid the man tried t;O buy beer, but became impatient and abusive when asked lo wall has turn while other customers were helped. The clerk s aid the man became so abusive, and even reached Into lhe cash drawer of the counter re1ister, that he re· fused loaellhlm lhebeer. The man went on a rampage, the clerk reported, throwing b~er cans, botU.es of jam and wine racks at him and around the store. The clerk was struck by several objects, and surcered a spHt lip. The cus tomer finally left, police said, after tearing open a bag or tortilla chips and dump- ln~ them over the clerk's head. Request Rejected WASHINGTON CAP) -The State Department, citing Libyan s upport for inte rn a tiona l terrorism, said Tuesday it has rejected that country's request of s pare parts fo r eight C-130 transports. Delly ............ w ltlcMt'I ~ HIGHWAY PATROLMEN INSPECT ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT PARKING LOT DAMAGE Irvine Man Held After Car Driven Over Fence; Four Cera Sm .. hed Pana.ca Of fkla& Senate Studies :~ 'Drug Charge'';~ WASHINGTON (AP) - Locked in its longest secret sesalon, the Senate today con· tinue d its e"amlnation of classified files on the alleged role of Panamanian officials in drug trafficking, a review that c~ld sway votes on the Panama Canal treaties. The Senate met behind locked and guarded doors for nine hours and 50 minutes Tuesday and the few senators willing to comment indicated their positions were unchanged. Sen. Bob Dole, R·Kan., one of the agreement's staunchest op- ponents, called it "useful" and s aid he thinks it "will have some impact." But Sen. George McGovern, D·S.D., a backer of lhe treaties. termed it "the biggest waste or time" in his 15 years in the Senate.· .,, -Gen. TOl'l'ijos, accorcllnr ti> .. lnrormanlS' elle1atloos. ma)' have totten ••a cut of the prorils. ' The Panamanian leader1. based on rePQrt.s the committee: called ttlJable~ may have khowu..~ governmeiit officials were lnr· volved in dealin1 druis. -He alao knew ot his brother's involvement 1n the alt le1ed operation, but did not. "lake swfictent acUon" to gtosJ- it. F,....PageAJ TERM ••• The Dogfather Originally, a hot dog franchis- ing operation, It became a finp. known as Like-IL Foods, rnark.el- ing frozen Italian sandwiches in a M afla motif. Armed Robber Holds Hostage Charles Percy, R·Ill., another supporter, called the day a "desperation move" by the OP· ponents. Sen. Alan Cranston, D· Calif., said' the secret session turned up "nothing damagine." Another four hours of secret debate were planned today. Dinnell authored a medi• campaign in which be made ap;o.. pearances and granted in- terviews dressed gangster-style. to promote his image as Ute Dogfather. ' That campaign ended in January when Maricopa County Superior Court Judge A. Melvin McDonald jailed the elder Dinnell for violating his bail agreement. SPRING FIELD, Ohio CAP) - An armed bank robber today freed two young brothers he had he ld for 17 'n hours. then drove east with their fathe r still captive m a getaway car pro- vided by the FBI. Police stopped him after about a n hour and re· sumed negotiations for his sur- render Pohce said the suspect and host age Robert Herrmann drove onto Interst ate 70 and sped about 57 miles east to Spring- fi e Id wher e police s topped them on a city street. Police said they were negotiat- ing with the gunman. They had the street blocked at both ends. The gunman. Identified only as Don, released 10-year-old Rob llerrmann and his 6·year-old brother Mike arter receiving as· s urances from police that he would be given . a car and a 4$- minute head !>tart They had been held captive on a rural road in Preble County since late Tuesday. But police resumed pursuit of the getaway car after only about 20 minutes. After agreeing to free the b o ys, the gunma n allowed authorities to talk to the hos tages by citizens band radio for the first time since their or· deal began late Tuesday. Herrma nn, 38, a mailman from West Manchester. Ohio, said his sons were "real good." Th e gunma n's Che vrole t 2Arrested In Smuggling ll'legal Aliens An lrvine police orricer who stopped to help what he thought was a motorist in trouble Tues- day opened the trunk of the dis· abled car to find three men and a woman squeezed ins ide. Th e office r , Laure nce Montgomer y, a rrested the driver and a passenger who was not in the trunk on charges or smuggling aliens. Police said the four Mexicans who hid in the trunk were sweat· Ing heavily and barely conscious because or the heat. They were turned over to the U .S . Border Patrol for de· portatlon. Arrested wer e Barry Ogn- janovic, 28, and George D. Lopez, 43, of Chula Vista. Ogn· janovlc lis ted himself as a student; Lopez is a professional driver, police said. Montgomery said both men claimed to have no idea who lhe Mexicana were, or how they got in the trunk. 01\ANQI COAST DAILY PILOT =-~:,,'.~.·r.:=.:::::::.: C'M<l -"""° ~· S.-•---· =.~"t':..~= . .:..~,~~ ,.," v•on . ''"'""· s-•-• V•U•• -.._ .... ~,,..,.~ C.M A~rwvteM4ffl· ..., •• -•""'4 s.twr<Mn =-=-T"" ;.':! .. ~:-'~"1:.::.~~ ,,. ... "-"·""' "'""""t--J .. a11t .. ..., V'<•~U ..... •~0..~MoMfor "-••-llf'I .. Impala, surrounded by police cars , had ground lo a halt more tha n 12 hours earlier after pursuing officers shot out the four tires. E arlier, the gunman r ejec t e d an o ffer for transportation in exchange for rele ase of the children. The highway was closed to no rmal trarfic for 10 miles around the site. At another point during the siege, the gunman. identified on· ly as Don, told authorities via his CB radio: ''I'm not playinp I'm not going to be taken alive." He had commandeered the automobile after (leeing a bank robbery in Richmond, Jnd., about 5 p.m. Tuesday. but the kids will get cold.'' Authorities asked for the re- lease of one of the boys in ex - change for the gasoline, but the gunman refused. They finally supplied hJm with three gallons of gas to keep the car warm. The incident began in Richmond, when police officer Joseph Edwards, responding to an ularm, surprised two bandits as they ran from a branch of the First National Bank of Richmond. In a flurry of gu.nfire one of the robbers was hit. Both men reached the getaway car and fled, but as they rounded a· corner, the wounded suspect fell out of the car, along wllh most or the stolen money in a briefcase, of· flcials said. The wounded s u s pect, identified as Richard Eugene Baker, 44, of Springfield, Ohio, was listed in fair condition with a neck wound at Reid Memorial Hospital in Richmond. The second suspect abandoned the getaway car a short distance away and ran into another park- ing lot where he commandeered the Herrmann aulo, taking Herrmann and his two sons hostage. Tuesday's debate was the first closed session since July 1, when the Senate discussed the neutron bomb. And its length surpassed the record of five hours, 44 minutes, set during secret de- bate on the anti-ballistic missil~ in 1969. What the senators -up to 70 at one point. Dole s aid, but usually 20 to 25 -heard was a report by its intelligence com- m it tee on allegations that Panamanian leader Omar Torri- jos knew or or had been involved in drug traffi<;king lhroueh his country. McDonald will preside over the trial of Duffy who lists his address as 1870 Park Newport. Apt. 104. He faces four felony counts for his work with Combined Equity Assurance which operated the Concho Lakes /Land development in northeastern Arizona. Prosecutors alleRe the flrm grossly misrepresented the · property and illegally sold some · of the mort(ages. · Shortly before daybreak, the gunman apparently thought he s aw sharpshooters and threatened lo shoot one or the children. "I don't know if there are any sharpshooters here, but If there are I want you lo know I have a cocked, loaded .38 pointed al this kid's head and if I get hit anywhere the kid is dead,•• be said. I 0 Vacancies Filled; Hiring Freeze Ends Sen. Birch Bayh, D·lnd., the chairman, presented the report, a censored version of which was made public. The report, much of which was based on federal drug agency files containing "largely second band" information of "varying reliabilit,y, '' said: -Torrijos' friends and ·rel· atives, includln~ brother .Moises. were tied to an illicit drug trade. Pickrell s aid none of th~ fifteen involved with Combined Equity Assurance, other than the elder Dlnnell, were involved . with the Tucson case he pros- ecuted which involved a finn known as Thunderbird Valley. Ile said Dinnen pleaded guilt,y to one count or mail fraud for selling phony mortgages under the assumed name or Ben Sorice. "We assure you 100 percent there are no sharpshooters in the area,'' an FBI spokesman told him. .. I'm gonna believe you. I hope you're right, but if you're not, look out," the gunman replied. About 9 p.m. Tuesday, the SUS· peel asked for and was 1iven milk. coffee, water and ciearettes. Later , when temperaturAS dropped well below freezing, be requested gasoline for the car. "It's starting to get critical In here," he told police. "I'm not worried, I have on a long coal, A so-called "absolute hlnng fre e ze·· invoked by Oranee County supervi10rs two weeks ago e nded without fanfare Tues· day when supervisors agTeed to fill 10 vacant county government jobs. The frttze was generated on a unanimous vote in anticipation of forced spending cutbacks should the Jarvis-Gann property lax reform initiative be ap· proved June 6 by California voters. Under terms of the freeze in· voked by supervisors, vacated county jobs were to remain open unless filled by a transferred worker already on the county payroll. Fr .. PageAJ WPPO WANDERS. • • . Rangers· had thought they sighted Bubbles several times during their lengthy night search. but feared their eyes were playing tricks under the full moon. ··vou·re lucky to see a few bubbles Oil the surface or the wate r when Bubbles sub· merges," Mrs. Schetter s aid. This week was at least the third time Bubbles wandered afield. The previous two report· ed times s he got out, she was ac· companied by a sightseeing baby hippo, her daughter. Lion Country officials have been reluctant during Initial con· tacts to discuss the escapes, partly because they all occurred within \he span or a week, and partly because the second escape waa followed only hours later b y Bubbles' lalut adventure. The first inklln_p that a hippo mi1ht be on the lam came two weekends aeo. when a couple of people called police to say they thought they'd seen one. Pollce checked 'tt'llh Lion Country, where officials at nm said they were short a hippo or two after counUnc noaea, but later recanted, aaytng the hippos were there all alon1, aub· merged. Police discounted the oallera at the tame sort of people who call to-repOl1 plnk elephants. Jut on ValenUne'a Da1, ,._.,. 14, the calla came acatn. 'ftlis llme thertff'• der,tlea found hippaJl(ltarnu. trac 1 •&on• res· ldenUal 1treet1 near Lelauro World. time. Mrs. Scheller said rangers frankly have no idea how long the hippos were loose. They caught them Sunday. Bubbles and baby were tran-· quilized and driven home again. Within hours, thou&h, the drug worn off, Bubbles was off once more, Monday morning. She clambered over the four· foot gate of a special holding tank-remarkable for a hippo- the n scooled under the same fence that served as her escape hatch theotherUmes. Mrs. Schett.ec defended the ap- parent Inability ot Lion Country to keep an accurate accounting of their hippopotamuses. "It's very difficult to get a nose count on the hippos," she said. ,.,.....P-AJ DOCTOR ••• It la alleged that WaddUl SUI· gested several other ways in which the baby could be killed, includlnC d.rownin& the child ln a bucket~ ...,.ter . The defense utues tbat there is no eroot that the baby ever lived,. bi terms of aaeaniqful brealbinl •tld heart f\anctiobS and that Waddill cannot, therefore, be charged. with murder. lUchards ret\ited the defense theory Tuesday and told U\e jury .be WH •atlafled that tbe !)$by waa Uvlna,, adsntttedly wlth dltflcuJt,Y, wnen lt wu choked to death. The coroner'• ottteer tt>ld the Jury U\at the !tQUtpmftt used while tiolpltal ltlft 'tried to re-- •••• the ·bal;y c:ould""not have cauatd the lnJW'i• be pointed out ha hll PhOtQltapm. And tbe~lft npeat.d Ida ))ellef tbai the na. be .x~IMCS oa tM autopQ telale wu U. Yktlm ClfiftaaUa11~­ t.M Vtraict .. wrate OQ UM btbY·• dealb Certiflca ... There was no mention or that edict Tuesday, however, when supervisors agreed to fill 10 open jobs. Unfrozen by the Board of Supervisors' action were nine lawyer jobs in the public de- f ender's office as well as a health department nursing pos ition. In a l e tt e r to co unty !>Upe rv1sors . Public Defender . Frank Williams said the lawyers are needed to keep pace with an iocre.asin~ work load, including that imposed by resurrection of the death penalty. Williams said the office would be a disadvantage in trying such cases unless given the attorneys called for in this year's budgeL LNG Moritorium? WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal agency urged Congress on Tuesday to impose a moratorium on building Jiq . quefied sas plants in urban areas because they pose too great.a threat to public health. , , . Dog's Safe FufuBwiedfor 11 Days FRANKLIN, Mass. (AP) -Fufu, a six-year-old Pekingese, is restif!g a t home arter apparently being buried for 11 days under eight feet of snow toss ed on him by a town s now plow. The dog, in good condition except for some chest congestion, was uncovered by his owner, Roland Cossette, a snow plow operator. Cossette said the dog was presumed dead aft.er the plow accidentally buried it Feb. 8. Members of the Cossette family dug several hours after the mis· hap without finding Fufu. Later, Cossette thought he heard the dog bark and began to dig again. · •·1 must have hit him with the s now s hovel because he started barking," Cossette said. Fufu was taken to a veterinarian who said the dog's body heat kept him "nice and warm" benea}h the snow. Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919 Tennis Rcqets Wilson-Yontx·~· Dunl~-Prince Racket Stringing Ratquatball Racquets Rac~uetba11s Handballs I Gloves Bcldminton Rockets ' . '• ' \ i t VOL 71, NO. 53, .(SECTIONS, .(2 PAGES ORANGE COUN"rY, CALIFORNI A TEN ceNTS • } ., 0 r 1 I ' , I $ . . County Voters Get Fann-hByiftg. GliOice By GARY GRANVILLE OtllleOelly••tt.Uutt Orange County supervisors agreed Tuesday to go ahead with a straw vote aimed at deciding lf county voters want to pass judgment on a farmland buying ~pree that could cost up to $125 million. Supervisors' endorsement of what will be known as Proposition A on the June 6 ballot came on a 3 to 2 vote. And lt may cost more than supervisors realized to poll coun· · ty voters on their feelings about the purchase of prime farmland as a means of preserving open space in Orange County. That is because county Registrar of Voters Al Olson said that even the straw vote ballot proposition must include pro and con arguments ln both Spanish and English. That places the price tag on what it wlU cost to see bow voters feel about the prospect of a I bonaflde ballot measure on the land purchase plan being put on next November's general election ballot. Almost to a man, supervisors agreed that it is highly unlikely the voters in June will endorse the concept of the county going on a land buying spree to pre· serve up to 10,000 acres of farmland. Stringed Viet0'1f With the aid of ropes, students in La,Una Beach High School's survival class set out to conquer a cliff al Pirate's Cove in Corona del Mar for their final exam Tues- day. Climbers from left to right are Tony Clements. Bill Bartok, John Bowles and Brendan Shea. The students were assisted by lifeguard Bruce Baird and class in- structor John Cunningham. (Related photo A2) Armed Robber Frees 2 Boys, Holds Father SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) - An armed bank robber today freed two young brothers be had held for 17'h hours, then drove east with their father still captive in a getaway car pro- vided by the FBI. Police stopped him after about an hour and re· •urned negotiations for his sur- render. Police said the suspect and hostage Robert Herrmann drove onto Interstate 70 and sped about 57 mites east to Spring- fteld where police slopped them on a d\y street. Poltce saia they were neJoUat- lni wllb the eunman. They had the 1treet blocked at both. ends. The gunman, ldenUfied only JS Don, released 10-year.old Rob Herrmann and his 6-year-old brother Mike after receiving as- surances from police that he would be atven a car and a 45- • (See flOSTAGE, P11e A2) Coas t We a the .- Late nleht and momlng fog along the coast.; otherwise fair Thursday. Lows tonight 45 to 60 •. Highs Thursday 65 to 72. I NSIDE TODAY ' I/ you'd""-to (/0 to Rom• or Greet• bed IPWT checldag GCCOUllt qi ·:no, no," ~ con lpnd an mndfto IMrt "JI dining wn ltotian Oltd ~reelc dllhte1. SH Food, Pagt Cl. Six Die as Plane Rams Into School BAKERSFIELD (AP) -Six oilfield workers were killed when their plane crashed into a junior high school cafeteria in dense fog early today. police said. No one on the ground was in- jured, and there waa no one at the SOO.sludent school when the plane crashed about. 6 a.m., authorities said. 1'be plane struck lbe cafeteria a gla cing blow, then went between buildlnp Into an open corridor wblch Wf! the wtnu off the· plane, 1aid Don Londquist, principal at Golden St.ate Jwuor High. Part o( the plane hit a tree, and the rest scattered into "pieces all over," be said. The vlcUms, employees of Oilfield Construction Co. of Bakersfield, were burned when the plane bunt into names on impact. said Chuck Thomas, ei- ty fire department battallon · chief. "Grim ls probabl)' the best word 1 can me," Thomas Hid in describlnt tbe crash scene. .. One body was probably 50 feet east of the plane. allOC.Mr 20 feet west ol the plane and the four bodles we.re ln the plane. They were not neoantuble. •• A woman wbo Uva nearby aal• •he .. be..-d the boom. • She wentoutslde but "couldn't see ruy hllhd in front of my face, the fol was eo thick. There was one body O'Hl' there. It was 1mouldtrlng... · T he Fed e.ral A vlatlon AdmtniltnUon WU alerted to lnvettt1ate the ei'Ub.. Supervisor Philip Anthony took jt a step turther when he called the atraw vote QJeuure "ir· responsible, confustn& and mil· leadln1." .. It is not the klod ol thing lbat can be answered With a yes ot DO vote," Anthony.aid. He and Supervl• Lawrence Schmit voted aiatnst the wont· ing of Proposition A. Their votes, however, were act11atly dissents aJainst havtna the measure pOt on the June ballot. Schmit volunteered to write the ballot argument against the farmland buying program. "It coes against everythtng we are trylna to do like keeping the ~ost of housing jtown and lower· lng property taxes," Sebmlt said. But Supervisor Ralph C1ark said county resldents should be given the opportunity to decide If tbey want to ~ecide on the feasibility of the Jand buying pro- 1>0sal. "There are many people who say we are pavlng Orange Coun· ty over and J think tbey should have a aay in what direction we're goina." Clark said. Supervisor Ralph Diedricb conceded that voters are not like- ly to approve placing an In· ltlative on the ballot, "especially when it is sl"e by side with the ,Janis amendmet\t th-.t ap· parenUy is attracting so much enthusiasm." BQ"df Pictured " Jury Sees Photos of Infant By TOM BARLEY Ot ... o.11'1' PIMt MMe Jurors in the Superior Court trial of Dr. William Baxter Waddill of Huntington Harbour visibly winced Tuesday when they were shown color photo· graphs of the baby girl he al- legedly strangled to dealb. The six photographs were taken during an autopsy performed on the dead lnfant by Dr. Robert Richards of the Orange County Coroner's office. And they were used by the prosecution witness lo back bls stated conviction that the baby that Waddill, 44, had earlier un· To.Death CLEVELAND (AP) - Richard V. Chambers, vice president ol Maloae College and a distant couain of former President Nixon. was abot to death as he came lo the aid of his wife at an east side inleraecUon, police reported. Chamben, 57, had taken his wife, Eleanore, to Cleveland Clinic fM an examination Tues· day and was dri•lnl wllh her toward Intentate 11 wben he stopped al a traffic signal, police said. Homicide deteeUTe Michael Cummings said two men came up to the side or \he car where Mrs. Chambers was silting, opened the door and "tried to take her out of the car." When Chambers leaned over to protect his wife, one of the men shot him, CUmminp said. The assailants, described by .authorities as being in lbelr 20s, fled on foot. Chamben got out of the car and collapsed. He was pronounced dead at St. Vincent Charity Hospital. Ken Fisher, dean of students at Matone. which is alfiliated with lbe Quakers, said Chambers, who was distantly re- lated to Nixon's mother, Hannah Milhouse, had been in•lted to the White HouM Ol1 one ocusion when Nixon w•in office. s~ccessfUlly tried to abort was strangled to death in the nursery of Westminster Community Hospital tast March 2. A woman juror turnecl her head away and covered her face with her bands while Richards pointed out bruised areas of the baby's neck which clearly, be said, supported the veld.let or manual strangulation. - Several spectators left the courtroom after Judge James K. Turner warned the court shortly before the pictures were pro- . -dllced that spectators might find the pictures --taken before and during the autopsy -to be dis· turbing. Other spectators lert after the witness began to display the photographs. ll is alleged that Waddill strangled the 28-week infant after a saline fluid he injected into the unwed 18-year-old mother failed to abort the child. Prosecution witnesses have testified that he used bis bands to end the baby's life after com· men\lng that the infant must have sustained severe brain damage and would be the s~ ject of lawsuits that could cost many thousands of dollars. <See DOCTOR, Page A%) Clemente to Throw Big Birt"#Wiiy Party c-Ue ¥> •erve !,!500, a .foot eee, a db>et' iJDd a dance will be part of ~an Clement~'s celebration this weekend of Its cltizenJ' vote on Feb. 21, 1928, to incorporate. The city, which became known to the world as the site of the Western While Bouse during the Nixon presidential years, will make national news again Sun· day. when broadcasters and camera crews board buses for a rare tour of the Nixon grounds. San Cleinente Mayor Donna • a Jeeeer to tbe f~ t proposing the tour u part of the city's 50th an- niversary celebration. She said she was surprised, but delight- ed, when she received a positive• respqnse from his staff. Buses will carry visitors through the Nixon grounds in ten-minute lntervals from 9 a.m. to S p.m. No one will be allowed oCf the buses. (See PARTY, Page AZ) DappyDlppo Mating Call 'Summoned' By PIDUP ROSMARIN ot -OMty f'IJll St.llf Bubble-s, the fugitive hippopot.amus from Lion Country Safari who's been sampling the creeks and ponds of the Laguna Hills for three days, was reported sighted before dawn today. At. least, her considerable nostrils were reported coming up for air, by park ranters who spent their second damp night looking for Bubbles, wbo escaped under cover of dark Monday moming. )\angers still were at a loss,. however, about bow to coax the mamma hippopotamus out of the water. If you can make the sound of a handsome male hippo, Uoo Country Safari needs you. Jo Scheller, park publicist, said the rangers probably will have to wait again today until dark, because a hippo in water is a happy hippo and is likely to stay there. Hippopotamuses do abandon their wet security blankets at night to feed, however. The small lake in which (See IDPPO, P•ce AZ) ._......,..._.,..~------ DAil Y PtLOT L Court TO Nix ·Jarvis? SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The California Supreme Court baa been asked to throw the Jarvis: Gann property Lax iniUaUve off the state's J une 6 primary election ballot. Two opponents of lhe lniUatlve asked the court Tuesday to over- turn a ruling by a Sacramento Superl0r Court judge. who last week refused to strike the measure from the ballot. Tbe appeal was flied by Bruce Sumner or Laauna Beach, an Orange County Superior Court judge, and Edward Wallin, a Santa Ana attorney. They con· tend the title and summary or lhe initiative was "fatally false misleading and inaccurate. ' Sacramento Judge Irvine l>erlus had refused to disqualify the measure, disagreelng with contentions that it covers more than one subject. He said it dealt with taxes in general. But Tuesday's petition con- tends the measure Is concerned with all state and local taxes, local government and state legislative power and fails to ad· dress such a broad area in the title. The petition also said the ln· iliative would replace existing taxing powers of local govern- ing bodies with a "virtually pro· hibitive election requirement for imposition or local taxes.'' The initiative, Prop. 13, on the ballot, would cut property taxes by about two-thirds by limiting them lo one percent of market value, and bmahng growth in as - sessments to two percent a year The proposal also would re- quire the Legislature lo approve tax increases by a two-thirds vote rather than the present ma- jority vote. Opponents say the measure would be financially crippling to stale and local governments. Report Due On San Juan Plaza Project The planning consultant ror San Juan Capistrano's Downto~n Plaza and Parking Study will make a presentation regarding findings and rec- ommendations on the old mis- sion business district Thursday al 6 p .m. in City Council chambers. 32400 Paseo Adelanto. Adelanto. The presentation marks the final portion of the study's first phase. Councilmen expect to make a decision about the economic feasibility of downtown changes based on re- s ults of the $15,000 phase one study. T.he presentation is expected to 1.nclude proposed changes in lhc old downtown area to ease parking and pedestrian problems. Ff'091 Page Al DEMANDS. • Clemente. He urged trustees to hold pay increases to six percent, which he said would be in line with the current six percent inflation rate. A second public hearing is scheduled March 6, to allow the public to comment on additions to the initial CUEA proposal. The school board's counter- proposal will also be presented March 6. Contract negotiations are scheduled to begin March 9. A beginning teacher with a bach elor 's degree currenlly ear ns an annual salary of $10,555. An experienced teacher with a master 's degree is paid $23,045. The teachers' propoeal would raJse the salary ran1e to $11,611 a year for be1lnnin1 teachers through $25,212 at the hllb end ol the pay scale. Of'ANOI COAST vsc DAILY PILOT S~udents enrolled in Laguna Beach Jligh School's sur \'tval class found lhe mscl\'cs taking an unusual final ex· am Tuesday -climbing a cliff al Pirale's Cove in Corona del Mar. Instructor J ohn Cunningham boosts from below while lifcgu..1r<l Bruce Baird sur\'ey!. the scene from atop the rocks. Clambers from front to back are Chris Parrish, Mindy Wren and Shari Scott. Fro• Page A l HOSTAGE HELD ... minute head start. They had been hl'ld captive on a rural road in Preble County since late Tuesday. But police resumed pursuit or the getaway car after only about 20 minutes. After agreeing to free the boys, the gunman allowed author ities lo talk to the hostages by citizens band radio for the first time since their or deal began late Tuesday. Herrmann. 38, a mailman Crom West Manchester. Ohio, said his sons were "real eood." The gunman 's Chevrolet Impala, surrounded by police cars, had ground to a halt more than 12 hours earlier after pursuing officers shot out the four tires. Earlier, the gunman rejected an offer for transportation in exchange for release of the children. Tbe highway was closed to normal traffic for 10 miles around the site. At another point during the s iege, the gunman, identified on· ly as Don. told authorities via his CB radio: "I'm not playin~ I'm not going lo be taken alive." He had commandeered the automobile after fleeing a bank robbery in Richmond, Ind , about 5 p.m. Tuesday. Shortly before daybreak. the gunman apparently thought he saw sharpshooters and SU Honored threatened to shoot one of the children "I don't know if there arl' anv !>harpshoolerl> hen:, but 1f there a rc I want you to know I have a cocked, loaded .38 p<>mted at thi!> kid's head and if I get hit anywhere the kid is dead." he l>aid "We ~ssure you 100 perrent there are no sharps hooters m lhl' area," an FBI s pokesman told him. "I'm gonna believe you. I hope you·re right, but 1f you're not, look out," the gunman replied About 9 p.m. Tuesday, the SW.· peel asked for and was given milk . corree. wate r and c igarettes . Later. when tern peratures dropped well below freezing. he requested gasoline (or the car. "It's starting to get critical in here." he told police. "I 'm not worried. 1 have on a long coat, but the kids will get cold." Authorities asked for lhe re· lease of one of the boys in ex · change ror the gasoline. but the gunman refused. They finally supplied him with three gallons of gas to keep the car warm. The incident began in Richmond. when p<>lice officer Joseph Edwards, responding to an alarm, surprised two bandits as they ran from a branch of the First National Bank of Richmond. Laguna Cop Wins Medal of Valor A so-called "absolute · hiring freeze" invoked by Orange County supervisors two weeks aao ended wllhout fanfare Tues· day when supervlsora a1reed to fill 10 vacant county government jobs. The freeze wu generated on a unanimous vote in antJclpation or forced spending ~utbacks should the Jarvis-Gann property lax reform initiative be ap· proved June 6 by Callfornta voters. Under terms of lhe freeze in· voked by supervisors, vacated county jobs were to remain open unless ruled by a transferred worker already on t he county payroll. There was no mention or that edict Tuesday, however, when supervisors agreed to fill 10 open jobs. Unfrozen by the Board of Supervisors' action were nine lawyer jobs in lhe public de· fender's office as well as a health d epartment nuTsing position. In a letter to coun ty supervisors, P abllc Defender Frank WUllams said the lawyers are needed lo keep pace with an increuln~ y.tOrk load, Including that Imposed by resurrection of the death penalty. Williams said the office would be a dlsadvant.age in tryine such cases unless given the attorneys called for in this year's budeet. ,.,... Page AJ filPPO ... Bubbles bas made her last st.and against law and order is snug- g I ed amid the rolllne h llls~ beh ind Lion Count ry Safar i, between Moulton Parkway and Laguna Canyon Road. "If and when she leaves the water," Mrs. Scheller said, "a whole team of people will be needed to circle her llke a wqon train." The rangers plan to fire a tranquUizin& dart Into lhe beast, and have to try to head h'r olf if she makes a break back to the water, where she couJd drown. If the rangers are finally s uccessful, Bubbles will be s cooped into a front-loading earthmover and provided a ride back to Llon Country. Bubbles will be· attorded a highway patrol escort up Laguna Canyon Road. onto the San Diego Freeway to the Moulton Parkway entrance to the animal park Forti.m Slated In San Juan The fourth San J u an Capistrano counci l ma nlc candidates forum wlll take place tonieht at 7:30 p .m . in the Mariners Village Clubhouse, 25615 Mariner Drive. The forum is sponsored by the M arlners Villa1e Homeowners Association . There are 10 candidates runn- ing for three council positions in municipal elections March 7. . . .. " . .......... .. Stleku~, Hell. , . . 'Fictim' CIAJblJen S1111peet A suspect apparently chose the wroni 1mall market to rob, Orange police said today. . They said tbe suspect, ldenuned as Jamea Howard, ze, of Santa Ana, waa arrested Monday nf4Jht after the market's owner bad roundly trounced him ~ith a few well· delivered blows. "BOWARD WAS TREATED at UC Irvine Medical Center for a hip injury and booted lnlo Oranco County Jatl, according to Sgt. Mike Pollok. The owner bas not been identified at his own request. "This guy's been just pushed lo the wall," Pollok said of the 49-year-old owner. "He's been buralartied and be'a . had the hell shoplifted out oflUm." So when a man camo in Monday nlght and, after mak· in' a purchue, pulled a knife on the owner's wife at the checkstand, the owner literally took things into bi.I owo hands. :· . ~ POU.OK SAID THE OWNER used only his flsts lo subdue the suspect. When police arrived, the suspect re- oortedly held out his bands to be handcuffed and pleaded, 1'Take me.'' . Howard faces charges of armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. The market owner was not injured, police said. E,....PflfleAI PARTY ••• The tour ls a sellout, said Alex Goodman, C h am b er of Commerce director. The pro. ceeds will help pay for lbe city's two-day annlveMar y · celebration. A second set of pre-arranged tours planned on Sunday will be or the Casa Romantica, the home of city founder Ole Hanson. The Spanish-style home on a cliff just north of the municipal pier is now a nursing home. Information on tours of Casa Romantica is available cy call- ing owner George Welsh, 492.QU. Mayor Wilkinson will cut the city's annlvers~ry cake at 2 p.m. at the Community Clubhouse, 100 Calle Seville. Guests at the cere m o n y wi ll i n c l ude Congressman Robert Badbam <R-Newport Beach), Fifth Dis- trict county Supervilor Thomas Riley a nd Maj. Gen. Carl Hoffman. commanding general at Camp Pendleton. . A city-sponsored foot race at 9 a.m. Saturday ls expected to draw hundreds of participants, s~id Sle\"e Judd. recreation coordinator. ~ion Set On Canyon Flood Control Laguna Beach councilmen will be bearing from Laguna Canyon residents tonight, some of whom believe the city is dragging Its feet on completion or a flood con· trol channel. On the eve of a disaster as- sistance program in Laguna Beach to help Oood victims, the City Counril will discuss Canyon flood control Improvement plans. A county resolution adopted Nov. 2 appr oves increased channel c'llpacily to ac - commodate a 100-year flood. The councH will discuss the status of this and related matters. Two Laguna Firlll8 Looted 1By Burglars Burglars broke into two Laguna Beach buildings Tues- day, maldn1 off with cash from one and equipment from the second, police said today. Thieves used an open window to enter the second story of the Flowers by the Sea, 998 South Coast Highway. They walked downstairs to an office area, forced open a cabinet and took $221 in cash. aecordlng lo operator Ronald J. Fr a ncesconi. In t h e second bur g lary, th ieves made off with con· structlon equipment including a surveyor, sJdU saw and cords from a house at 982 Santa Ana St. The equjpment, valued at $554>, belonged to Pacific Cal· Construction Company of Santa Ana. Police are seeking a bearded man about 25·30 years of age und weighing 160 pounds j in that. burglary. I Fro.Page A l DOCTOR ••• Jt ls alleged that Waddill sug- gested several other ways in which the baby could be killed, including drownjng the child in._ bucket ol water. The defense argues that there 1s no proof that the baby ever hved, ln terms of meaningful breathing and heart runrtions and that Waddill cannot, therefore, be charged with murder. Richards refuted the defeme theory Tuesday and told the Jury he was satisfied that the baby was living. admittedly with difficulty, when it was choked to death. The coroner's orfieer told the · jury that the equipment used while hospital st.arr tried to re- vive the baby could not have caused the injuries he pointed out in his photographs. Tennis Rocl<ets Wilson-Yonex-Davis Dunlop-Prince Racket Stringing Racquetball Racquets Racquetballs Handballs & Gloves Badminton Rackets I '· Orange Coast Oa1ly Pilot Campaign Tactics Ne~ Close Watch . <;andidatcs have been throwing some pretty hefty polttic~ punches. al ~ach other in the Laguna Beach Ctty Council tace, which lS all well and good. And. although the race by 10 hopefuls for three seats on the Caty Council has been healing up it's all been good. dean, healthy fun thu~ far. But Laguna campaign "alchers should be wary of an y form of 11th hour hatchet job committed on in- dividual candidates To dat~, the verbal barbs and criticisms bave been ected at issues -not personalities. Bu~ some local voters may well recall a bit of ampa1gn character assassinallon two years ago in which was hinted one candidate had a police record. We editonall) lambu~ted that smear campaign then nd would do so aga10 1f such tactics were used in this car's council race. Character assassination has no place in political mpa1gns. It is one thing to assail an opponent's pro- ams, but quite another lo hit below the belt at the end the 15th round. fool Future Weighed ~ t. Pl:l!1s to do away wilh San Clemente's municipal 'lmmmg pool at the Avenida Pico beach club were at- cked last week by citizens who recognized the pool's lue lo area children . , Generations of San Clemente youngsters have lfarned to swim in the pool, dedicated for public use in *8 by city founder Ole Hanson. Movie stars and mpic swim champions also have worked out in the 1 over the years. , Now city consultants. Keisker-Johnson and As· SQcialf'.S, have proposed to the city Parks and Recreation Cpmm1ss1on that the basically sound pool be filled in lo ~a ' c the cost of rC'pairs. which may run as high as Sl00,000. A new pool could be built at another location, <·Onsultants said. : But parents aren't com·fnced another pool would be ail acceptable substitute. The beach club pool has proved tnal it is a fine "teaching" pool, it is centrally located and il;has played a special role in San Clemente's 50-year his· lC!fY. The parks commission h as invited comment& on whether the pool s hould be repaired or abandoped. I .etters can be addressed to the Parks Dept., 100 Calle Seville. ' Disaster Relief L aguna Beach was one of two cities in Orange County 1 hat caught the brunt of the wind a nd rain damage duriog t he most recent storms. Nearly 90 res idential and commercial structures in t own suffered major damage, and several homes were totally destroyed bX f 'l}ling t~ees and flooding. But arnldst a A thdi,atl..tews, there's some potentially good news f'rom President Carter, who has declared eight California counties as majo( disaster areas. : Laguna Beach, in conjunction with the Callfomfa Of· fi de of Emergency Services COES> is setting up a dis· aSter relief assistance program out of city hall Thursday, F~iday and Saturday. : Those affected by the storm may be eligible for as- !'.i$lance in the form of low interest loans (up to ~.000) tern porary hous ing or grants. : Applications s hould be filled out in City Council <:J?mbers bel\.1.cen 8 a.m. and 9 p .m. all three days. • • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Plfot. Olt\er views expressed on this page are those of their authors and af1ists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O .• Bo>< 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Chairmen ByL.M. BOYD More corpor ate board chairmen are fired these .d 1£y s than a r e retir ed. Likewise, more corporate presidents. ,.hat's not -11. Two out of three who qult.do so or else. U's a fairly recent trend. For decades until now, th' chairmen and presid4'nts m9stly hung in there, armed sufficiently well to fight of( thJ attackers. Today, though, it' a ll changed. Among a thit-d or the biggest industrial firms, the bosses weren't the horses five years ago. , -ko other internatlonat· lr4ntier has more sister ('l~es astraddle it than dou t.h,1 border beLweeo Lhe Unit· ed,States arid Mexico with 12 su9h twin towns. If your nose ls 2.18 llichts Jot(g, iL's teucUy the same lel\gth as that of Lhe avera1e ah~line stewardess. .i, baby whale wellbJ ts fnllCh u Cour cara, it• m•bu u much u 23 oant. Q. "'Do police departments ever let male officers body search female prisoners?" A. Not unless said officers rear tor their own safety. Likewi&e, female officers are told not to physically &earch male prisoners unless they fear for their own sarety. It ean be done, though, for IW'• vival's sake. Q. "In.the White Roase is a machine called an Autopen that can duplicate the Pr~sident'a signature to make it look as Lhougb he'd Jigned personally. How many euch phony signatures can that thing turn out a day?" A. About 3,000. Q ... How much ia a pound or pennies?" A. About $1.40. Old ordinances here and there reqaired bouaebolders to fllve their ebhnner• awept, 10 to pre11ent cblmaey lJNI that mlabt spre'ad to ...~&hbor.tqa roofs. Alld In • aome placa where then wu no aweep cSn Wand, it became the mayor's job to clean out th• cblmneyi. For a fee, ror • f ••· As mayors round more h&craUvo metbod.tt to make 1lde money. tho1e lawa faded. WASHINGTON -Jn today's world of corporate gianlst lhe man who build a a better mousetrap probably would be told to get lost. This even hap- pened to a lar1e coMpany which came up with a revolutionary new tire and lrled to peddle it to the rubber and automotive in· dustries. The Caterpillar Company has bffn maltlnc giant earthmoving machinery ror decades. In the 1960s, co mpany engineers de- v e l o p c d a s pecial tire for use on Its bulldoze rs a nd oth e r h u g e vehi c les. It was so suceesaful, tb~y ex· perimented ~ scallng the tire down for p oulble uae on passenger a\Jtos and C()ftven- tional trucks. B"y 1973, Caterpillar had perfected a prototype passenger tire and offered it to the clo&e- knit clan or Ure manufacturers. It had these advantages over conventional tires: -THE CATERPILLAR tire would la.st for 100,000 miles rather than the 25,000 to 60.000 miles consumers now get from their Ures. In case of a blowout, a driver could safely proceed at a SO.mile-an-hour speed before stopping. A nat tire could be fixed with a simple plug. -The CaterplUar Ure could be mass-produced by automa- tion whereas today's tires need handcraft labor at some st.ages or production. Once a manulac· lurer retooled bis production line, costa would be greaUy re- duced. -Tbe 16 Ures 0n a monster tractor-traller could be changed In 30 minutes because of the Caterpillar's new design. A new tread could be fitted on like a glove, eliminating the risk of poorly vulcanized retreading. -Reduced friction woµld pro-• duce a 6 percent energy savings on tbe hlgbwQ1. There was one acknowledged drawback; the new Ure would require a re- deaiped rim on cars that used it. . Caterpillar people proudly Mailbox trotted off to the major tire makers with their contrlbuUon to America!) motorists. The response was as 1f they·d dropped a bucket or eel• in the punchbowl at a debutant'e'a ball. The tire moguls were horrified by the possibilities or the new tire, insiders tell us. TO BEGIN WITH, a tire with a lifetime ol 100,000 miles '*Ould drastically reduc., their sales or replacements. Secondly, Lhe in· dusky bad begun boomlna radlala u the tire of lbe future, and they refused to switch otr a multimilllon·dollar promotion campaign. Also. the Caterpillar innova- tion would allow skilled union Robert N. Wttd/Publl1.Mr ThomH l(•vll/EdUor Barbclra Krelblch/Edltorlat P-oe Editor tiremakers to be replaced by less highly paid labor, and the tire industrialists feared the wrath or the labor bosses. Caterpillar got the same short shrift from Detroit's Big Three automakers although General Motors tCjlted the tire as late as 1976. The tire and aut.o induitries of- fered various explanations for why they shle<t away from the. Caterpillar concept. One tire· spokesman sa1d the n ew-fangled tire couldn't be mass·pr-Oduced economically a nd cited technological problenu. ..If It was all tbat ~ood. i'd be down borrQwing $100,000 from the bank to finance my own com- ' pany lo make ll,'' he com· men led . GM SAID lta studies tailed to prove that the Caterpillar tlr-e had performance advantages over the radials now being used on its new cars. Tbe rlm pro- blem would create complleated assembly line cbanges1 he , added. Ford and Ct\rysler tis~ j r. lems u the reason for their • too many manulacturlnc p~ interest. m • m But there may sUUJ>e a b~"' y >e ending in the orting. Fede Ml auto safety czar Joan Clayb k m appealed th1s summer lo the . le dustry to come up with so"e better Ure ideas. A few w1s \e ago, Caterpillar's presid t it showed off their unwanted e ·- to Claybrook in Washington. : ' She and an aide roadtested:it and were en thu s ia s ti~~ Caterpillar has provided m<te data at her request. Experts ~t the N aUonal Highway TralOc Safety Administration are tn· trigued by the possibUity or ~ 6 percent gasoline savings, not <to m ention greater s afety aid durability of the tire. : • . • DIRECTIVE 27 -Presld~t Carter has taken firm steps to insure that some mlnor confnpt· talion won't blow up into an \n· tern ational Incident. Stri<ct guidelines have gone out cro(n the White House reaffirming ls authority to reverse any gove41- ment action that might causet a foreign policy nap. ) ·: All agencies have been id· s tructed to report any nof: military incidents to the Stal! Department's Operation Cen*" which, in turn, will expeditA: ~ report to the White House. TN;; means a flagrant oil dumpi.n~_ Di>' a foreign tanker or a fis~ violation by a Russian trawltr will have to be reviewed by ~ While House before final acU~ can be taken. THE POLICY was set forth Jn "Presidential Dlrective-N~ 27," issued on Jan. 19 and ~· teoded for oC!iclal eyes only. St empowers the White Houae Jo overrule on-the-spot gov~ officials. "= ) ., , .. •• .. .. •• , f :. .. ~ .• ~ Parent Has Message for Market Managers ( ( To the Editor: The llWe quick-stop markets we see in our neighborhoods are great conveniences to ua. My children like the.se markets, too, but as they enter to buy their goodl~ and slurpees, the bar- rage of sexually oriented magazines that meet1 their youn·g eyes la appalling. Today I decided to make a lit· tle survey of my own. I vialted. seve n quick -stop markets, purposely avoiding those stores advertised as Jiquor•grocery stores. Tbe first two stores I vis- ited did not dlsplay sexually- orienled maga!ines 1lt all.· Two more stores displayed Playboy •. Playgirl, Oui, Penthouse, and similar macazines separate from the other magazines; front covers were hidden behind special racka deslgned to cover all but the magazine beadings. One rack was low enoo&h that a five-year-old child coufd eaaily see i n to lt. Most of tbe maeazlnes were 1ene. and those still Jelt bad fallen back so that their covers were at apoled as' if they had not been co~ered at au. 1'.RE LAST three market. had their a~ult magulnes displayed on the same racks u their other maguines. Intimate and Hltb Society were displayed right next to Suning. Sexolo., was set out In a stand all bJ ltaelf at waist level. One store had three full shelves of such magazines intermixed wllh Star Wars and Close Encounters po1tert and other .in•1•zints u.at ajpeal to the Juvenile all~ tten-aie markeL ~ Tbe name ot the ttoret nilkes no dllference. lt seems to be up to the manapr o1 .. cta non as to bow be •ill diaplay tbeae ma1aztn. or ll be Will 1ell them at all. 111 fll.bt u a parent to ebOOH &be.by whlOh my IV: eoutMltis lolt thQ cannot buy can llDd llUJ:J)eM without M- ini expiieed to pornosrapby. 1 eu ll:Mt thlt'n out or aduk bOok 1tore1 aDd JC..ratt« aJHl adalt movies, bUt 1 c~tmc>t keep them out Of 7·11 atorea or other ~ uebtop m...-.. We muat ~ I elite l1are tftM'q9("S bow .. feel and, ll DeCUaa.ry, ••ei'dle .. , .,"'"'* :''.doUt .. lf .. 'Want to pn11erve OM moral itaftdardl or ocarntt~. EVE PE• '•mer'•.,.. Agriculture Preserve, have been asked by many people how I feel about J>ropo&iUon B. the repeal or Agriculture Preservation. To those people who are new res- i dents of San Juan Capistrano and to mresb the memory or the voters ift the last municipal election, the tallowing is a brief review: I. In 1976 Proposition A, AJriculture PreservaUon, lost by a 2 to J...111argin. In esseace tbe vot'lfS sidd they dldn 't wanL agricultw-e preservatloo if they have to pay for it. 2. The majority or the city council st.ill ~enl ahead on the agriculture issu e. On e councilman said t he voters erred, and the decision should be made by the city council, not by voters. By a vote or 3 to 2 the council P'JSbed throup a general plan amendment creating an •lricultu,re zone and the ac- companying fee ordinance. despite tbe protest of all the pro- perty ownen in tbe proposed ·agrtcultllrepresene. The proper- ty owners said tbey did not want to be down-zoned ond 1ocked tnto perm anent agriculture. 3. In 1977 an inlUaUve petition was circulated to repeal the Agriculture Preserve. Enough vaUd sipatura wete secured to qaallfy for the March munJclpal election; U appears a s Proposition B. WE dAVE been hrm- t n gall our li ves, 23 years of which have betn ln San Juan CQ>lstrano. Tbla la our on11 toqrce of in· eome for out lam.Illes. Our etrlldren were blJilo'D here and are oow attendlor the public ac.hools. Mi lone u It js ~salble, we wm ~ oyr; ~tncl. Wbep we reu!I a Point ~ we can no looter tum for whatever rea- son, we must have th flexiblli· ty io do witb ~ J)tOMf1.1 aa we se' fit. We ,oqlt. .. ·u.a~ we be given the aarne rltbts and prlvil~ces that you u a ho.meo~er .DOtJ' etl,foy, that ls free frtfrn fovernmein reatridlon. Therefore, froM a mora1 ll not a .co_..stftutlonal point of view, I UJilt a 109 _. OD ~IUM B. Today lt'a pur property, tomonow ll may be )'C?Unt SHJG Kl.NOSIJITA " ........ ~ To tbt l!dttclt: I .-ilited oar toeal VttmWinS rann~ tOdQ'. 1 a°': ~ tVb8CT.~cWti: tbe"(act tbal tho f Ulft mart« employ ... are tell- ing customers to vote yes on Proposition B, for the repeal of Lhe agriculture program. Yes on B will change the zon-ing ordinance Crom agrjcvlture back to housing. These houses will bring more people, the need lor more schools, and ·higher taxes lo pay for them! Al a recent candidates forum Marilyn Williams would have you believe farmers' r ights have been taken away. Not true. Farmlands a re zoned ror agriculture. Our homes are also regulated by zoning. We cannot turn our homes into hotels. gas stations or stores. All property is regulated by zoning. Please do not be fooled or listen to dis· tortions. U you want to pre!erve agriculture, open spaces and to keep our rural atmoepbere, vote "no" on Prop. B. BARBARA ADAMS f'aet• oi.corted To the Editor: Tbe Citizens Cor Action Com mtttee ls the very dedicated group in SAD Juan C•»istrano which spearheaded the initiative and ultimate deleat of the Police Departin«:nt issue. This was ac· compllshed by directly brin,ing to the attention of our citizens the true facts behind that pro- gram. Once again we find lhat distorted facts are being voiced to the public on issues &IJd ~andidates in the comi~a election. · It ls evident that we are again faced with a political ma.clUne bent on controlliU our city cov- ernment and determined to go to any length to ltnpose it's rule up.. on the citizens retardless of the voters' dlrection or tbe rights o( the people. We feel a ''no•' vote is called for on Proposition A (S~ven CouncUlftaDlc l>istricts) for the lollowin• 1'MOIU: This gives control to special 1roups within a given area. Lac)( of l"epresentaUon on the dty coundl by a m.Uorlty Ol~a people. ElecOon ever.v four years 1n apedllc dlatrlcll Vi.· election eve17 two yn.n citywide, The ooJ1 pu.rpose th.la C()U)d terve 11nN!d be to tat tbo con- trol ot U. elec:ted city ornctats from the m8'jerl&.y of the publlc. A "yes0 ~e on Propocitlon B CRtpeat of tbe A1rtculturo Preservadon l\mmdment 7'M) :,i~COttUDt!Qded for th ru· The declalon made by the . ... voters in 1976 actually defeatdt the agriculture program but tl6 political boondoggling or uti opinion questions wu uaed • manipulate the vote and palj the ordinance. ~ The existing Agrlcult!i Preservation Amendment 71·1 ln violation of the ConstltuU rights or the property owner. :; The proponents of the o~ dinance expressed their fl" in a statement made by representative to the fact. ' such comple'X Issues invol ' long range planning should be decided by popular vote." • As the present "lee" pl"0P"84 cannot generate enoueb monet to pay for th1s experim,nt d the true facts beblnd tbls scheme and bow many milliod!I of dollars it will cost tbe tax~ payers lo make aJriculture pres! ervaUon a reallt.y are • a "yes" vote to repeal amendment Will Jet the cit know once again that the voted should and do have the rl.lht tq decide sucbiasues at tbe ~llal • GERRY HOltTON • SeultlN I To the Editor: ! Coincidence perhaps. but~ same news~ which co the. tragic losses of homes flooding in Laguna Canyon ~ carried the slate or 0 Villagfi LaguQa" candidates •bo we~ acceptable because they wer~ '"environmentally aware." This same group has con· trolled ~ council by a 4-1 ma- jority for four years and has re-1 peatedly vetoed offers by CountyS Flood Control k> build a Oooct{ control channel at no cllrect ~. to Lagwta. Their re.uon: '11le ' canyon are• is ••envtronmemal· ly sensitive ... You bet 1t ii. Jun ask thole who lost their homes. We elect• new eouncU Mud> 7. Perhaps we aho\lld coutder candidates who are 1enslUv• to both the environment-ana human need1. Pe•ple .are aenslUve~ l • I .. L e , If l ~I \ . ~ . .........--.. ... """ ...... MomSuspeet In Slayings· t•l't' PRUNEDALE <AP) -A young mother ap- !ti: parently shot her four children and then turned the J. &un on beraelf in the bloody climax of a depression ~, eau.aed by marital problems, autboritiea said. . c•· · Police said at least 20 shots were rired in the famUy'a house. Officers, rushed to the scene after a wounded child managed to summon belp, found 0· the lifeless bodies of two of the children and told of 11• the grisly discovery of a seriously wounded baby ~ "Sprawled in its blood-stained crib. --~ ... V. TWO SONS, AGES 10 AND Z, were knted, ~ ' while Sue Barber, 28, and a 9·year-old daughter and a six-month-old son were critically wounded .1 • when shooting broke out Tuesday. •' i. "Al~ indications are that Sue Barber was l ~· responible for the shooting and then turned the aun • • on herself," said Bud Cook, assistaJit Monterey ( -;' County sheriff. "From the information we have, } ' sbe was solely responsible." ' · • Cook said Mrs. Barber has been despondent ~c because of the recent breakup of her marriaae to ~, Guy Barber, from whom she was separated. .. . MRS. BARBER WAS NOT charged or arrest-~ • ed and Cook said no legal action was likely unW she started to recover from her wounds. Cook said Ms deputies had determined that at 1 • leas t 20 shots were fired in tbe famJly's fashionable two-story house in thlr rural communi· ·· ty just east of Monterey Bay. . Authorities learned of the shootings when. ,. Kathy Barber, 9, rted the home and we~t to a neighbor's, where she collapsed from her own ,· wounds. ;,, DEPUTIES ARRIVED to find bodies littering ' the house. Cook said. Mrs. Barber was sprawled in a front bedroom, a bullet wound in her stomach ... and a .ZS·caliber automatic pistol at her slde. • r Andy Barber. 10, and Christopher Barber, 2. were lymg on a bed in a rear bedroom. Both had suffered gunshot wounds m the chest and were dead on arrival al a local hospital Six-month-old Nicholas Barber was tound in •. his bloodstained bassinet. Hospital orficials la te Tuesday liated the Korean-born Mrs. Barber, in critical ooadition .' · along with her son Nicholas. Kathy Barber was in serious condition. A,WI,....... llell~erg E%plosion A 2.1 million-gallon gasoline storage tank at Rialto exploded into a massive fireball Tuesday and caused more than $450,000 in damage and injured a motorist on a nearby street, officials say. The .raging fire, with flames shooting 200 feet into the air and billowing smoke visible for 50 miles, was. battled for 10 hours by 200 firefighters from 15 Southern California Clgencies. '• ( 'No ConteSt' in Arson ~ SANTA BARBARA (AP) -A Goleta man bas • pleaded no contest to charges or deliberately set· ~ ting four major brush fires in Santa Barbara Coun-i t y last year. including the Cachu.ma blaze last July i 31 which burned close to ~ . 2,000 acres. (----------.,) ~ . James Seymore. 19, STA.TE l• ··entered the plea Tuesday in Superior Court.'-~~~~~~~~ Authorities dropped . ·other anon charges against Seymore. atemm.mg from about a dozen blazes in the county. i Another Goleta teen-ager, Robin Mack, 18. a ~ ··co-defendant in the case, was scheduled for a .separate trial on arson charges. ! Gtatme11 wo-d Drf l'er ' INGLEWOOD CAP) -A group of youngsters I• ~~!~~ ~~~s!~f: i~ !~~~~v~::Y: ~: ~ .ground a few feet away after being shot by would· ' .be robbers, police say. ~ Officers said Tuesday that three teen-ase i gunmen approached 24-year-old Hanan Rezael , .while he was driving his truck through a park and • brdered him to h and over his money. ~ . Razeal refused, then one of the teen-agers shot i him. investigators said. The youths fled without I : takine anything, witnesses told a>olice. . I . Lqolt Sena J LOS ANGELES (AP) -The ~ Angeles ' I ·soard or Education has taken tentative steps to .fay off some 40,000 employees, cltillg the Jarvis· Gann tax initiative. ~ -: The seven-member board unanlmouslv de· I cided Tuesda)'. to send out termination nolicea in . three-weeks to approximately twb-thirds or th-e ·etttployees in the Los Anaeles Unified School Dis- trict. 'Ille action was taken because state law re· quires tennlnation notices by March 1 and March .B to employees who could be affected by 1osa o( . district revenue. ~~llllltie MdNlraao• • LOS ANG£LES (AP> -Insistine he bu ''•~~ ·"o time exhibited any bias or prejudice" towara :o>ovte producer 'Roman Polansld, Santa Monie• 'S'uperioJ' Court Judge Lawrence Riltenband ;,evertheless has removed himself trom the cue -.'to avotd needless delays and court proceediftas." Douglas Dalton, attorney for' the dlminuttve. :Polish-born director of sucb movie's as "Rosemary's Baby" and "Chinatown," promptly aobounced Tuesday he hoped to be able to penuade Polmlaki to return from France to the court's cUlltod¥. ~··· c. C..i•11e LOS qGELES (IJ>) -Tb9 CoQrty Board ot. S11perviaors. cliacountlng reporu that cloud. seeding operation.a inte111ified a recent storm that devastated parts or Southern California, voted Tuesday to allow the county to continue rairunak-ing efforts. Supervisor Kenneth Hahn offered a motion that would have voided the county's contract with a cloud-seeding company, but the move w.s voted down. Manager Named Brown Seeks Re-election SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. planned to formally announce bis candidacy tor re~lecUon today, the DemocraUc Governor's office says. Brown oo Tueeday named bis riPt·baad man for the past three years, executive secretary Gray Davit, to manage his cam-paign. AJ>d he scheduled a news conferenc~ today to formally declare his candidacy. Bll()WPif, WHO .sQUJ;AK.ED into O,ffice in 19'74 in California ·s c~est race for gov~ in baU a century, bas no well-btown foe in the Dem~a~c primary and is retarded a a bea'ly lavon~ tn November . The 38-year-old Democnt, who made "lower your expectations" a slogan for bil admhlistratlon, was ex~ted to ~· an upbeat U>ne tn bis re.election campaign; empbasulnc job pro1rams and bis support of Callf omia s6ace technol~ andalternaUve enero proframs. 'JJr6rm, 1tflo had served as secretary of atate lot tour y..,., W'On the 1ovemorship ln 19'14 lvge· ly on hla father's Jfame, former Gov. Edmund G. '".Pat" Brown. l.£ JS SEEKING re-eleetlon against five J\.el)\lbllcan (oes on a record that includes a few personal triumphs and .some powerful aymboll, .such H bis )'efusal to live ln the ·1overnor•1 mansion and his refusal of a limousine. But. thac image bas been tarnlsbed by Crowial crUJciarn, especially In the past year, of hls • admiDistrattve ablllUes and ot scandala ln bia Healµ. end WeJtare A1ency. Even Democrat.a .haV& •tarted crlttc1,1os Brown's adinlnistrallve style, ln which dec~loaa are often de.layWand ta~les 'Of or1anbatloo lgnoreil when Brown tata • ~l'IOD•J lnt.ereat Ip a p~aram (>l'dePJrtlpent. ' t ) / SAN DIEGO <AP) -A man clalmlng to represent a terrorist ''People's Liberation'• or· g•nization extorted $75,000 from a Bank of America branch Tues- day. threatening to blow up the banlt and its manaser with re· mote controlled explosive de-vices, pollcesaid. Huth Hudson. SC, manacer of the bank at 1600 Hancock St.. said he waa lured into UM bank parking 1ot by a telephone call from a man claimin1 to be ..Caplaln Lear from NYC,'' the Naval TrainiDg Center here. THE CALI.Ea said he and his ·wife had been at the bank earlier and lost a packet of classified information and could Hudson look for it? In the parking lot. Hudson said. he was confronted by a man with a platol·who banded htm a brown vinyl brief case and told him to open it. Inside, aald Hudson. he saw two de- vices, one large and one small. Hudson told police the man then ordered him to put one of the devices into his pocket and he then handed him a stick ot what looked like dynamite, teU- i n g the bank manager the .......... , . . • • . . • • • • ~. februwy 22, 1179 DAILYPILOT ·AJS briefcase device and the one 1n bis pocket were exploeive. "'I WAS TOLD that \here were other people with other devices in the bank," Hudson said. "If I didn't foUow inatructiona, they would be &et oft." He said the &unman tolc;I him the People'I Liberation or- ganization was out to "'eet" banks tM!cauae they forecloeed lolUls and "stole money from t.be people." Hudson was ordered to get $75,000 tri>m the bank, drive his car to Ketiner Boulevard and Palm Avenue, where be re· celved a call at a telephone bootb notifying him to leave tbe money and lhe two devices ln his car and take a 20-minut.e walk. Pimickers Found VENTUJ\A (AP) -A Catholic priest and four 14·year-<>ld boys were found in good condition Tuesday after they became lost while on a holiday plcnic and spent the Diehl in the condor s anctuary of the rugaed mountains in the Los Padres National ForesL AN FBI spokeswoman sald that after checking with tile United States attorney £or &an Diego, fedei'al authorities cje- clded the case was strictly undl'r lo ca I police jurisdiction aa<t declined to investigate it. At the same tfme, a pol.lee spokesman aaid the case was on- der joint investigation by both police and the FBI. In tbe confusion, neither agency was able to say whether any explosive devices actually were recovered from the bW ... ••**************************-*********• ATI'OltMIY AT LAW it BMllUPTCY $95 : HE'T .\'ii L:\F('(.'J'l\'E :llOTOH ll0:\1 1·: FHO)I llEHB FHIEl>l..\,Ul:H l'll'OHTS 8:!X ·H~HH or :;:n 7777. ~!•X ·fi777 F\l. :!7:> llYOKES95 : ~ Uncontat.ed •• * • * * *'* * * *** * * **** ***** *** **** ***** ** _,.. ~;;:"~40--~25iioii1 =~ •· HERB FRIEDLANDER IMPORTS ,.. _. -,. • 50 GA•c • "ORANGE • • NOTICE s. ..... ,,..,... "' -.c. ""' ... '"' ,.,. ... --_.._ ,.....,_ .............. tty ... fee••• •r•••ctl•• •-• ,_..,....... .. _._. a,_118HH. If IM .... ,_. .._., ........ , T ... ., ~ .......... ,...,,. ...................... ,... -~----... ........ • ~ • COUNTY'S • .• : OFGAS • IMPORT ! ! : FREE : CAB KING"' ................ ,'-.. -· .. -· ........ ... .. fW"f • It • • •• • • •• • .. ,. . It • • It ,.. : ~o.E-004 : • or . • : FREE : HERB : ! A•?!!;_~<;_~~ • FRIEDLANDER !· • fu&orY fo.r .. 111111 as • l>l MAIUS(; : Y•_.yeucat. it (;R•:AT 1>•;,\1$ •********************* .., • • • 'SIA&lt llOOUCK A!CD CO. • ========~~: ••••••• ******** ******* * SOUTH COAST PLAZA Save $2 on Sky BaJPJ. Seamle$ brasl Reg. 8.SQ-$10 All the fit and oomfort Bali'se known for. Underwire, seamless •.• 34-38 B,C. Reg. 9.50, 7.50 34·38 o, Reg. $10,· $8 Or seamless soft cup, 34-38 B,C, Reg. 8.50, 6.50 Sizes 34-38 D, Reg. $9, $7 Both in beige. Bra and Body Fashions • , I I t I , I ·~ .' • t I .. f Victim's PhiJtos ()is played By TOM BULEY Ol \tit Dlllf Mlet Si.H Jurors in the Superior Court trial of Dr. William Baxter W addJ.Jl of Huntington Harbour visibfy winced Tuesday when they were shown color photo- 1raphs of the baby girl be al- Jegedly strangled to death. ·· The six photographs were taken during an autopsy performed on the dead infant by Dr. Robert Richards of Uie Orange County Coroner's office. And they were used by the prosecution witness to back his stated conviction that the baby that Waddill, 44, had earJler un- successfully tried lo abort was strangled to death in the nursery of Westminster Community Hospital last March 2. A woman juror turned her head away and covered her face with fler hands while Richards pointed out bruised areas of the baby's neck which clearly, he said, supported the verdict of manual strangulation. Several spectators left the courtroom after Judge James K . Turner warned the court shortly before the pictures were pro· duced that spectators might find the pictures -taken before and iiuring the autopsy -to be dis· turbing. Other spectators left after the witness .began to display the photographs. It is alleged that Waddill strangled the 28-week infant after a saline fluia he injected into the unwed 18-year-old mother failed to abort the child. Prosecution witnesses have testified that he used bis hands to ead the babT• life •fter tqm.. menUng that th~ lnfant must have sustained seTere brain damage and would be the auJ>.. ject ot lawsuita that coW4 cost many thousands of cloUara. It is alleged that Waddill sug- gested ~everal other ways in which the baby could be killed.· including drowning the chlld in a bucket of water. The defense argues that there is no proof that the baby ever lived, in terms of meaningful breathing ~nd heart functions and that Waddill cannot, (See DOCTOR, Pa•e A2) Brown Names Irvine Man. I ~?..!.~~~, ~~!~ Laesebrink was appointed to the Harbor Judicial District bench today by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Luesebrink, 38, takes the post recently vacated .by the elevation or Judge Robert c. Todd to the Oranie County SUperior Court. A araduate of UC Bftkeley'a Boalt Rall, ~ebrlnk leaves private practice in Newport Beach to take over his be.ncb dµties. He bu also served as a deputy district attorney in OranH Countv and specialized in consumet fraud inveaUgatlon. Luesebrink will receive' $45,23$ a 7ear ~ a municipal court J1aC11e. He is a member of the State Bar, the Oranae County B•r A11oclatlon and the California Trial Lawyets As· tOdatM>n. Luesebrtnlt• a Democrat. lives In lnlne with IU wJle~ Cbril. lle bu three sona: Terry. 14, E,ric, 10, and M•rk, &. • 'Dae Egg and VCI Ca'! an egg _sur\'ive the 110-foot drop from the top of UC Irvme·s engmeering building (above) if properly protect· ed? UCI engineering students faced that chaUenge Tues- day ~ith devices ranging from popcorn and corns tarch padding to gyroscope rf?lro-rockets. Judging the results were Steve Dwyer (below left), John Girouda <below c~nter> and Scott Rowe. The popcorn and cornstarch de· s1gncd by Dave Adams was declared the winner. Bluff PRCed j • f CalTrans Expects $3-.5 Million By JOANNE aBYNOLD6 Ota.to.lt1 ......... OCCicials at CalTrans have-told Newport Beach city officials that they expect to get at least $3.S million ror the seven-acre bluff top parcel a homeowners' group wants the city to buy for a park. Representatives of the Newport Crest Home<>wnefa AA· sociation appeared before the ci- ty council Feb. 13 asklnc the city to buy the land between West Coast Hicbway and Superior Ave. The property bas been. declared exce.sa by the state agency. Councilmen said they'd look into the price of the parcel and 'Dogf ather' Sentenced To Prison Clyde Dinnell, the Irvine busi· nessman who called himffll the "Doglather" after bia frozen Italian sandwiches, drew a term or nine to 10 years in Arizona State Prison Tuesday for bis part in a $5.5 rDillion land fraud scheme. At the same time, trial was set for March 6 for Newport Beach resident Ken Duffy, the last of U defendants in the case . After receiring ille state prison term II.anded down in Phoenix, Dinnell, S7, appeared in r•al . TUfson a few hours later. ~ ~ • five-year term for mall fraud ln CODJ)ection wl ~er Arilona laud fraud, TM t. run& ~uZme ~­of th• lJ.lb&ltti ce IJtdbel received late la,t year in Phoenix feder-1 court after con· vlction of two counts of inco01e tax evasion. The three sentences are to be served coocurreaUy, . according to As$i5tant U.S. Al· tomey Ouis Pickrell ol Tucson. Dinnell's aon, Anthony, 29, also of Irvine fs currenUy serv- ing a oru!·lb-iour year term in Arizona state prison. followtng his conviction on felony cltar1es related t.o the $S.S million land fraud ;erpetrated by a firm knowo as Combined Equity J.s· surance. Botti Dtnnells, while llVIoi in the Harbor Area.I>rlor to their land fraud convlcUons operated a business known initially as .The Doefather. Originally, a hot dog franchis· Ing operation. it became a flnn known as Llke-lt Foods, market- (See TEAM, Pace AJ) Coast Board Eyes Jarvis Coast Community Colle1e Dis. trict tru1teea are ex.peeled tonight to discuaa the possible ef· fects on the dlstrlct of the J arvi!l-Gann T&ll lnltiaUve. The meetln• will begin at 8 o'clock at 1~'10 Adams Ave .• Costa Mesa. Rlcbard Simon. a apoltesman for the diatrict, said no •ct.ion ta expected at tonicbt's meeting. · He aalcl tnlltees are ex~ to discuss way1 of cuttln1 the budget if the Jarvi& meuure, which would shar]ily reduce ln· come from property taxes, passes JUAe 8. discuss its J)urchase at their next meetlng. which will be held Monday. CalTrans bought the land in 1965 for $S.3 D)illlon, planning t.o use the parcel for the now de- funct Pacific Coast Freeway. In declaring the property sur- plus, the state aeency ~uat first offer it for sf]e to other public agenclet before ft can aell the land to private parties. By law, public agencies must be oven the first opport\IDity to buy aurplus property, but CaJTrans is not obligated to give otber public entitles a discount on what the state agency decides is the fair market price of those properties. Takes New .Jeb City Manaeer Robert Wynn said CalTrans officials told him they estJmate Uie property to be wo.rth abo\lt $S.4 mlJUon and they would not accept less than a $3.5 million bid in a public auction or the land. Wynn sald the value or the property is based on the fact tbat it is currently listed ror res. ldential development lo the city's general plan and does not have ll specific zonlbC des- ignation. Newport Crest residents say they do not want the land de· veloped for housing, since their a re a is one of dense de- velopment. ' Newport Librarian :f o Quit Mtirch 24 .,..., ...... Mlllf ~ QUITS LIBRARY POST Newport Aide Simon Newport Beach's librarian. Bradley Simon, submitted bis reslgnation Tuesday to the City's Ubrary Board of Trustees and City Manager Robert W)'Jlll. Simon, who joined the city staff Jess than a year ago. said he would Jeave March 21 to become librarian of the Qwla Vista city library system. ln his letter of resigoaUon, he explained that the Chula Vista system was based on a central library and satellite branches. unlike Newport Beach's de· centr.u-cl 1)'1tem. Simon, who beaded the Pomona city library from 1i7l unW b~ came to Newport Beach in Mat¥ of last year, is more famlllar with a centnllzed system. Wynn explained. In addition, Simon indJcated he was anxious to pioneel' a computerued checkout sytitem being designed fol' the Chula Vista library . Library trustees accepted his resignation and asked Wynn to prepare a report on their opt.ions for selection of a new librarian. Bappy .mppo Mating Call 'Summoned' BJ PIDLIP ROSMARIN ot•Delll'l'l191ttafl Bubbles, the fugitiv e hlppopotamus from Lion Country Safari who's been umpling ~creeks and ponds of tbe La~a HUis for lbi'ee days. was reported sighted before dawn today. At least, her constduable nostrUs were reparted comlng up for air, by park rangers who spent their second damp night looking for Bubbles, who escaped under cover of dark Monday morning. Rangers sUll were at a Joss, however, about how to coax the mamma hJpPQpotamus out of the water. If you can make the sound of a handsome maJe hippo1 Upn Country Safari needs you. Jo Scheller. park publicist, said the rangel's probably will have to wait again ~ until dark. httause a hippo in water is a happy hippo and is likely to staytMre. Hippopotamwiea do abandon their wet security blankets at night to feed,. however. The small la~e in which Bubbles has made her last stand against law and order is snug· gled amid the rolling hUls behind Llon Country Safari. between Moulton Parkway and Laguna Canyon Road. "If and when she leaves the water," Mrs. Schetter said, "a whole team of people will be needed to circle her like a wacoa train." The rangers plan to fire a tranqullizing dart into the beast, and have lo try to bead her off if she makes a break back to 1he wa~r. where she could drown. If the raneers are finally successful, Bubbles wHl be scooped into a fronl-loadh\g earthmover and provided a ride back t.o Uon Country. Coast Wea tiler Late night and morning fog along the coast: otherwise fair Thursday. Lowa tonight 45 to 50. H19)\J Thursday 6S to 72. ' . ' I ) AZ DAil y PILOT N An Irvine man is In Tustin Cdmmunily Hospital, under ar- rest on a charse or drunken dnv- lng, after a pickup truck pollce say he drove plowed through a fence at Oran1e County Airport Tuesday and smashed lour parked cars. David Wilson, 29, of 18195 Mayapple Way, also is regarded by Jrvine police a.a their best suspect in an attack on an Irvine liquor store clerk minutes before the accident Wilson was m stable condition today, recovering from a broken leg and head cuts. The California Highway Patrol said none of the smashed cars were occupied. They wore parked in the main airport lot. One of the cars was dc-mollshed. Irvine police said Wilson and his truck fit the description given them by a clerk at Spigot Liquor, 18044 Culver Drive, who reported being assaulted by a drunken customer. The clerk, 21, s aid the man tried to buy beer. but became impatient and abusive when asked to wait his turn while oth{'r customl'rs were helped. Tht· clerk said the man hecaml' so :.ibusivc, and even reached into the cash drawer of thl' counter rc~1ster, that he re- fused to sell him the beer. Thl• man w.:nt on a rampage, the clerk re porte4, throwing beer cans, bottles or jam and wane racks at him and around the :.tore. The clerk was slr\lck by several objects, and suffered <i split hp. The customer finally Jeft, police .said. after tearing open a bag of tortilla chips and dump. In.I? them over the clerk's head. County H i ring Freeze ThauJs With l OJobs A so·called ''absolute hiring freeze" invoked by Orange County supervisors Lwo week$ ago ended wtlhoul fanfare Tues· day when supervisors agreed lo rm 10 vacant county government jobs The freeze was generated on a ununimous vote in anticipation of forced s pending cutbacks should the Jurvis-Gann property lax reform initiative be ap· prove d June 6 by California \ oters Under termi. of the rreeze ln· vokcd by supervisors, vacated county jobs ""ere to remain open unless filled by a transferTed worker alrec.idy on the county payroll. There was no mention of that edict Tuesday. however, wben ~upervisors agreed to 01110 open job~. Unfrozen bv the Board of Supervisors' action were nine lawyer jobs in the public de· fender's office as well as a hea 1th depa rtment nursing position. Jn a l e tter to county s upervisors. Public Defender Frank Williams said the lawyers are needed to ktWp pace with an increasing work load, including that imposed by resurrection or the death penalty. Wiiliams said the office would be a disadvantage in trying such cases unless given the atto~ys called for in this year's budget. Shuttle Mission TEL AVIV. Israel (AP> -As- sistant Secretary of Slate Alfred Atherton left ror Cairo today hop- ing to bring brael and Egypt back to the negotiating table. Atherton said his shuttle mi.sslon might last "(or days or possibly even weeks" before direct political talks on a Middle Eaat settlement could reopen. DAILY PILOT Newport-Mesa sehool t.ruatees have authorized lbe formaUoa of a non-profit corporation to market educational materials developed by the district, despite aome objections from Leachen. Tbe corporation was aet up Tuesday lo avoid pouible lawsuit.a by private firms. Also, a manuracturer had agreed to supply an additional computer in return for sharing in the cor· porallon's rights to market materials wbJcb include com· puter frosram1. Pau Jordan. preslde11t of the Newport-Mesa Federation of Teachers, told trustees they were ac:Uni In undue haste. The corporation was approved at a apeclal board meeting al Anderseb School in Newport Beach. Although several questions he raised were answered by legal counsel during the meeting, Jordau said later, "I feel that they acted without fully con· slderlng the possible problems in the proposal." "I was really kind of ap- palled," Jordan said. "The board has never pubUcly dis- cuaaed the merita of the proposal inP.ubllc. 'Also, by dOidg th.is, they've eftecUvely removed the budget for data p,roceuinc from pub1ic acruUny.' Jn re$pon.se, Dr. John Nicoll. Newport-Me•• school TERM ••• _",_,,,,.,._ _.,,..,.,.,,.,.,....C..,dl...,,, ............. ,,.,.. superintendent, pointed out that a member or the school board will be chafrman ot the cor· poration. Also, he aald, '!Tho bud'et for the newly authorlsed cor- riratlon will be surveyed b)' and reported to the board ot education. Do~uments that become part of the recol'd of the board oC education become publlc document.a. I ra.U t.o aee hls concern." a afta motif. Dinnen autbo,.d a media campaign In which he made ap. p~arances and cranted in- terviews dressed aanpttr·•t.Yle to promote bls lmace as t.be Doatat,ber. That campaiatn ended k\ January when Maricopa Cc>unl)r Superior Court Judie A. Melvin McDonald jailed the elder Dinnell for violatln1 bla ball agreement. Mc Donald will pre.side ~" . the trial 0( Duffy wbo U1ta address u lS'lG Parle New 1 :~~ni'!'· t~~ ~~cses .1~';k f~1}"~ j Coal Effort Renewed Several chances were made ln an already revised packet of articles of inc9rporatlon and contracts Tuesday before the corporation wu approved. The most significant was a new name, the Newport-Mesa Instructional Research Institute. Paul TyndalJ, district director of information and computer services, said It was discovered lbat another company hact pro- prietary rights to the earlier proposed name, Newport·Mesa Educational Research Corp. Combined Equiw Auun~ a whlch operated th.r Concho ~ Lakes/Land development bl northeastern Arizona. Prosecutors alle1te the firm grossly misrepresented tbe property and illegally sold some : W ASJllNGTON <AP> -Labor Secretary Ray Marshall called union and management together today as the administration tried once more to produce a ·negotiated settlement in the 79-day coal strike. Marshall arranged the bargaining session after tho United Mlne Workers union gave a cool receptlon to the Bituminous Coal Operators As· sociation's call for binding arbitration and an immediate return to work. Union officials all but ignored the proposal. and the UMW's 39-member bargaining council was expected lo formally reject it during a pre-bargaining session with Marshall. A key district leader of the.?D· MilkrGeu New H eming WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Banking Committee decided today to reopen confirmation h e a r i n g s i n lo 't b e qualifications of Textron Inc. Chairman G. William Miller lo head the Federal Reserve Board. The committee 11cted after receiving new e v i d e n c e o I .. questionable" com - missions paid by BelJ Helicopter lnc., a Textron subsidiary, in connection with a S500 million sale of helicopters t.o Iran. Banking Committee Chairman WilUam Prox- mire, D-Wi&., said some of the evidence developed in a month-long lnvest11aUon by his panel's staff ap- pears to '·'flatly con- ..-otradict'' sworn testimony given by Miller when he appeared before the com· mittee Jan. 24. 2Arrested In Smuggling Illegal Aliem An Irvine police officer who stopped to help what be ~ht was a motorisl ln trouble Tues· day opened the trunJc or the dis- abled car to find three men and a wo.man squeezed inside. The officer, Laurence Montgomery, arrested the driver and a paMenger who was not in the trunk on charges oC sm uggUng aliens. Police said the four Mexicans who hid in the trunk were sweat- ing heavily and barely conscious because of the beat. They were turned over to the U.S. Border Patrol for de- portaUon. Arrested were Barry 01n- Janovic, 28, and George D. Lopez, 43, of Chula Viata. Otn· J'\novlc listed hlmaelC aa a student; Lopez is a professional driver, police said. Montgomery satd both men claimed to have no •du who t.he Mexicans were, or how thty got in the trunk. Profeai.onala Burgle Hoteh v SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A atrins of hotel room bur&Jartes at Nob mu boteb a~an to be. the work of •'ptoleuioull .. »nY· 1u on a convonlipo of U,000 aulo dealers ln San Fruci'Ko. ~lice Mid. Some 3:> to 25 t.beltl ranilM' from $100,000 In Jewtlt to a •ln,10 wrtatwatch Mve been ,... ported ln the paat few days at ,th.• Hyatt Re•enc:)', K ark Ropkh111 St. f'ranclt, Cllrt. ·Huntl~. and several •mailer· bOtell. \ ilt. !)a~ 1f 11tfi Ukt Ute barsl•l't .. were rom1r1l•ttl1 almuu :."P ,;\.bel none ,....,.. fotctl .,,. He added, ·~ know wM\ U.,'te takhlJ •• _.,,,,., GQly tU• tbe tood 1t\lff ... ' ' Jon told reporters that binding arbitration would deny union members their "constitutional right" to vote on a contract pro- posal. Kenneth Dawes, an opponent of U MW President Arnold MIJJer, also said industry ex- ecutives were "pigheaded people who wW not sit down in good faltb and negoUate." · Dawes' statement emphasited the apUt in lhe union a'hd the tenuous grip that Miller 'holds over the membership. Miller bas not commented on the BCOA '11 call for arbitration. Asked about the prospects for a setllement, Marshall told a White Houae briefing, "l hope for it. You can't tell at this point." But presidential press secretary Jody PowelJ, citing the slrlke·s worsening economic Impact, said the aoveroment ''cannol permit the atalernate to continue lndeftnlteJy." · . M eanwhlle, there were reports that a major coal producer was threatening to break fl'om the 130-member BCOA and negotiate settlement with the un- ion If the aaaoclaUon wu unable to quickly negotiate a strike· ending agreernent. A large in- dependent producer, PlttsburJl & Midway Coal Mining Co., rea- ched a tentatlve agreement with the union Monday. The U\reat o( such action by a BCOA member increases the preasure on the or&anizttUon to end the impasse. The Wbit.e Houae has '¥•med ot govemment intervention - possibilities mentioned are the seizure or the mines or a back- to-work court order -to end the slrlke lat.er this week. However, no precise deadline for such action was set aa officials await- ed the outcome of the new round ot negottaUons. "Wb.etber we will be forced to do that (intervene) varies from day to day and hour to hour,'' Powell said. · Eneray SecreLary James R. Schlesinier warned that ''even now condJtions are deteriorat-ing" in the coal-dependent states of the Midwest and Northeast where power .cutbacks are apreading and the threat of masa job layofCs increasin1. He predicted "severe difficulties" by April if the strike isn't aet.tled soon. The joint negotiating session at the Labor Department was the first face·t.o-race meeting ror the two sides in the dispute since talks collapsed Saturday follow- ing union rejection or what the industry said was ils final offer. The board ot directors or the corporation will be appointed by school trustees, possibly aa aoon aa next Tuesday, district Supt. John Nicoll said. The cor· porallon could begin operation within 30 days. The corporation will use Newport-Mesa school facilities and will ha.ndle the district's data processing. Profits from its projected revenues or $1. 7 million in 1978-79 will go for ad· ditional research ·and de· velopment, and into the dis· lricl's general fund , trustees said. An aeiressive markeUn1 pro- gram is planned t.o aain new contracts for various lfst.s, com- puter programs and other educational materials developed by the district. School employees who work in data processing will be given the choice of working for the new corporation or being transferred to equivalent positions in the dis· trict, trustees said. of the morf(ages. Pickrell said none of the fifteen involved with Combined Equity Assurance, other than the elder Dlnnell, were involved with the Tucson case be pros- ecuted which involved a f1nn known as Thunderbird Valley. He said Dinnen pleaded 1uilty to one count of mail fraud for selling phony morteagea under the assumed name of Ben Sorice. f'ro91Page A J DOCTOR •.. therefon. .. be charged with murder. Richards refuted the defense theory Tuesday and told the jury he was satisfied that the baby was living, admittedly with difrlculty, when it was choked to death. The coroner's officer t.old the jury that the equipment used while hospital staff tried t.o ri· vive lbe baby could not have caused the injuries he pointed out in bis photographs. And the physician repeated his belief that the baby he examined on the autopsy table was the victim of manual strangulauon- the verdict he wrote on the baby's ·Senate Unlocks Doors death certifica.t.e. · ·Vandids Hit Uunpus With · Spray Paint W ASHJNGTON (AP) -The Senate unlocked its doors today after meetiq iD aec~t fo r more tban 14 houra lo examine clualfied file$ OQ lbe alleaed role or Panamanian officials in drug lratricklng. When the doors were opened at 11 :13 a.m. PST, Majority Leader Robert Byrd, 0 -W. Va .. declared that the two-day ex- amination of m~ had produced ''no evidence that would st.and up in any United Stat.es court of law" • Jinkin1 Panamanian leader Omar Torrijos to illegal dru1 ttaffick· ine. Byrd, a supporter or ratification of the Panama Canal treaUes, said the fmd1ngs. of an lnveati1aUon by the Senate IntelUgence Committee "are ex- tremely important and should put t.o rest the charges.'' ''These allegations, in- nuendoes and insinuations have Armed ROblJer FreeB 2 Boy1, Holds Father SPRINGFIELD, Ohio <AP) - An armed bank robber today freed two youna brothers he had held tor 17~ hours then drove east with tbeir iather still capUve in a getaway car pro- vided by the FBI. Police stopped him after about an hour and re- sumed negoUatlons for hia sur- render. Pollce said the suspect and bostaae Robert Herrmann drove onto Jnteratate '70 and aped about S1 miles east to Spribg- tield w.bere t>ollce stopped them on a city 1t.reet. Police aaid t.bey were neaotlat- lng with the 1unman. Tbey bad the street blocked at both ebds. The gunman, Identified only as Don, released lll-year-old Rob Her:rmann and bis f·year-old brother Mike after receMnt u - •W'IDce& from police tbat be would be given a car and a 45· minute head start. • They had been held captive on a rural road In Pceble County since J.i..1'0Mda,. Jtat poUOe tetumed pursuit of the 1etaw1Y car atler only about 20 minutes. Afltr apHlbf to ftee Uiet bo11, tb• iunm•n allowed auth or lllH to talk to the boetalet by dU&elll band rad.lo lot tbt ftnt d""' etnc. tbcli ot· deal be1an lat• ~day. HerrmaM, 18, a mallman fro• W•t llancb•i.,.. Ohio, aald bl.I aou were "Mii .oocs." 'rh e 1unman~1 Clievrolet Impel-. &\UTOWlded by ~it• • c•n. bad ~ to a Ull IDCIC'O than 11 ioan ••l'llt r an..- ....... iClllCWi la.at -&bit JOii:·...-............... been, at best, remote issues peripheral to the essential que.Uon: are these treaties in the best interest or the United State•?" Bynt added. · The S•nate met in closed • seulon today for four hours and 13 minutes. On Tuesday, the public and press were barred from the debate for nine hours and SO mlnutes. -Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., one of the agreement's stauncheat. op- -ponenta, caUed it "use(ul" and said be thinks it "will have tome impact." But Sen. George :McGovern, D·S.D .• a backer of the tttaUes, termed it ''the biUeat wast.e of time" lo hi5 15 years Jn the Senate. Charles Perey, R·lD., another supporter, called the day a "desperaUon move" by the op- ponents. Sen.· Alan Cranston, 0- Ca llf .• sald the aecret seQion turned up "nothinc damaeing." Another (our hours oC secret debate were planned today. Tuesday'& debate was the ftrst cloaed HSSion alnce July 1, when tbe Senate dbcussed the neutron· bomb. And its length surpassed the record ot Cive hours, « minutes, set during secret de· bate on the anti-ballistic mlaslle in 1989. What the senators -up t.o 70 at one point. Dole said, but usually 20 to 25 -heard was a report by its intelligence com- m i llee on allegations that Panamanian leader Omar Torri- jos knew of or had been involved in drug lralllcking through his country. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., the chairman, presented the report, a cenaored version of which was made public. Tbe s:eport, much of which WJS based on federal drug agency files containin1 "largely second hand" info\omatfoo of "varying reUabllily," aaid: .. -Torrijos' friends and rel- atives . includin« brother Moises. were tied to an lllic1t drug trade. -Oen. Torrijos, according to informants' allegatlons, may have eotten "a cut of the profit.a." ' Someone with a can of white spray paint and pink wax ~­ cided to do a little decorating at Corona del Mar High School dur· lng the three-day holiday weekend, Newport ~ach police reported today. Betty Townsend,' the scboors "Ice principal, told officers sbe found nearly every window, door and brick planter in the school's quad covered with letteriqg when she got to the school Tues· day morning. She estimated vandals did S300 damage to the campus by writ- ing the phrase "NH QT 77 RULES" around the quad. School omcials and police agreed the NH migbt stand for Newport Harbor High School and the 77 RULES might in· dicate that members or the class or 1977 had done the painting, but all were at a loss to explain what QT means. Tennis Rackets Wilson -Yonex-Davis Dunlop-Prince Racket Stringing Racquetball Racquets Racquetballs Handballs & Gloves Badminton Rackets r•u,:A::. •• offer fot' tn lb ...... lor ,~~ddldr8. .~ .. ~~ .... .,,.-.... ... ~~ ...... llilllj~------~lllil!l---...;,il I I ( - 0 aen a st cou jud1 spr• mil s wb Pr< caa I c J oi w ju di s; j\ tt p a a b c t f J # , Initiative Looks l,ike Moratorillm. Newport Beach residents are facing an initiative campaign which backers say would tie development to traffic capacities. The document, however, reads more like a lhinly- d1sguised building moratorium. Basically, petition backers want the city to limit ap- provnl of projects of more than 10 residential units or 10,000 square feet of commercial or indllStrial space on the basis of tra((ic impact. That sounds reasonable, but the standard set may prove so high as to f reclude any development and the ~~ala collection tor set ing the standard is expected to con- l sumc a full year. No development could be allowed dur-ling that year. The s tandard would be that if a development in· creases traffic by .1 percent on any already congested street within a one-mile radius of the project, it couldn't te approved. The criteria by which a street is judged to be congest· d are currently unclear. Petition backers say that is one Ff the. things they may re·wnte before opening their ampa1gn. They should look again at what they are trying to ac- ~ompLish. If they want to tie building to traffic flow, the l;nitiative needs. extensi vc re-writing. • ~ lf they want a moratorium of nearly indefinite ~uralion. they could leave the proposal as is and merely ~han~e the title. .. ~ 5chool Closures ~ ~ Newport-Mesa school trustees are moving closer to fhe eventual closure of Bay View Elementary School in ~anta Ana Heights at the end of this school year. ~ The shutdown o! Bay View, the district's smaJlest school, would he another positive step in the district's ~sin g battle 41gamst the effects or declit'l'ing student enroll mcnt. WASHINGTON -tn today's world ol corporate giants, the man who builds a better mousetrap probably would be told to 1et lOit. Thia even hap- pened to a large company which came up with a revolutionary new Ure and tried to peddle it to the rubber and automotive in· dustriea. The Caterpillar Company has been makih1 giant earthmoving ro acbinery for decades. In the 1960s, company engineers de· veloped a special tire for use on its bulldozers and other h u g e vehicles. ll was so successful, lhey ex- perimented in scaling tbe tire down for possible use on passenger autos and cobven· tional trucks. &Y 1973, Caterpillar had perfected a prototype passenger tire and offered it to the close· knit clan of Ure manufacturers. It had these advantages over coo ventional tires: -THE CATERPILLAR tire would last for 100,000 miles rather than lhc 25,000 to 60.000 miles consumers now get from their tires. In case of a blowout. a driver could safely proceed at a 50-mile·an-hour speed before slopping. A nat Ure could be fixed with a simple plug. ;. Still to come before trustees for action is a i:ceommendation from distrjct Superintendent John Nicoll not to consider closure Of any other dis\rict a~~s t}cfore meetings next October. • .. : While the suggestion to close Bay View originally ~ame from a district-appointed citizens ~(\vjsory <!Ommittee. Nicoll has m'odified the committee's requeA -The Caterpillar tire could be mass·produced by automa· tion whereas today's tlret need handcraft labor at some it.ages for a two-year moratorium on school closures. • The problem of declining enrollment is not likely to. dbappear. By next school year. the district may hav~ Lost <>s m;iny as 2,800 students.over a two-year span. ThC'rcfort', trustees would put the district m a better position b.v implementing a plan allowing them to take furthrr look at .school closures next fall rather than two vrars down the roJd. Park Purchase " . Monday, Newport Beach city councilmen will be asked to bu:--' a 17-acre ch~k 1>f fbluf'f-top land that Cal- Trans is declario2 SWP.lµs of production. Once a manufac· turer retooled his production line. cost.s would be greatly re· duced. -The 16 tires on a monster • tractor-traUer could be changed " in 30 minutes because of the Caterpillar·s new design. A new tread could be fitted on like a glove, eliminating the risk of poorly vulcanized relreadJng. -Reduced friction would pro- duce a 6 percent ener1y savings on the highways. There was one acknowledged drawback; the new Ure would require a re· designed rim on cars that used it. Caterpillar people proudly M&ilhox trotted oil to the major Ure makers with their contribuUon to American motorists. The response \US as If they'd dropped a bucket of eels In the punchbowl at a debutanw's ball. The tire moguls were horrified by the possibWtles of tbe new tire, insiders tell us. TO BEGIN WITH, a tire with a lifetime of 100,000 miles would drasttcally reduce their ealea of repJacemet>U. Secondly, the ln- d us try had be1un boomfnc radials as the tire of the future, and they ref'"'ed to twitch off a multimillion-dollar promotion campaign. Also, the Caterpillar innova· lion would allow skilled union Robet1 N. ~/Publisher ~ l("vll/!dftot B.lrtMra Kf'!lblcf\/Edltottal Paa-Eelltor tlremakers to be replaced by less highly paid labor, and the tire induslriallsta feared the wrath ol the labor bosses. Caterpillar got tbe same ahort sbritt from Detroit's Blg Three automakers allhougb General Motors tested the Ure u late u 1976. The tire and aulo industries ol· fered various explanaUons for why tMy abled away fl'om the. Caterpillar concept. One tire' spokesman said the new-fangled tire couldn't be mass-produced economically and cited technological problems. "Tl it was all that good, I'd be down borrowing $100,000 from the bank to finance my own com· pany to make u;• be com· mented. GM SAID it.a studies failecS to prove that the Caterpillar tire bad performance advantages over tbe radials now beln' used on ltl new can. The rim pro- blem would create complicated assembly llne cbabges, he adlled. Ford and Cbt')'•ler Ustecl too' many manufacturing ~ le ms as the reuon for their~ intereat. .. · But there may 11Wl be • b~p' endlnc in the offing. Fed~al auto safety czar Joan Clay~ appealed this summer to th •in· dustry to come up with e better tire ideas. I\ rew w ks ago, Caterpillar's presi t showed off their unwanted re to Claybrook in Washington. ~ .. She and an aide roadtestdl tt and were entbuslastac. paterpiUar baa provided nior'e data at her request.. Expert6 at the National Hljhway '(ra#flc Safety Administration are: ln· triaued by the possiblllt,y o~a 6 pe.rcent gasoline savings, DQI-to mention greater urety fnd durability or the tire. : • . DIRECTIVE 27 -President Carter has taken firm stePi to insure that some minor confton· talion won"t blow up into arf in· ternatlonal incldert't. Stfict guidelines have gone out ftom the White House reafflrmtng: its authority to revene any gov~rn­ ment acUon that might ca*-a foreign policy flap. ~ .; All agencies have been :10° structed to report any !;n· mllltary Incidents to the te Department's Operation Ce which, in turn, will expedite a report to the Wbite HoUBe. $" means a flagrant oil dumpin y a foreign tanker or a fis g violation by a Russian lra er will have to be reviewed by fbe White House before final •ctc>n can be taken. '} THE POUCY WU set rarJ.,,, "Presidential DI rec ti ve·!tSC 27... issued on Jan. 19 and~· tended for official eyes o~ It empowers the White ffous~to 'overrule oo-tbe-spot 1overnnpi officials. ~ ~ !t .. · The land now is'lbite<l'l>r resUtential development in the city's general plan. That means CalTrans is going to be expecting a bigger puTehase price than iC the land had Qeen listed as proposed parkland. The hom~owners cannot be disputed when they say their area is one of the most crowded in the city and one !)f the least endowed with park and open space. . J lowe,·C'r, the purchase price !or the property which ->.ill ensure the Xewport Crest residents an adjoining park Parent Has Message for Market Managers I .. and protect the bluff top from construction that wouJd block c;ome of their views -is likely to be high. The land now is listed for residential development ln t.Oc city's general plan. That means CalTrans is go4ig lo be ex pectin(! a bigger purchase price than if the land had been listed as proposed parkland. Further, the city has a "shopping list., of parkland lo be acquired and that parcel isn't on it. To buy the land for ~he Newport Crest homeowners would mean that some parcel elsewhere would be dropped or moved down on the li st or that some other park won't be developed. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71.4) 642·.4321. Boyd/Chairmen If ~our nose. iJ 2.18 inches Jong, it's exactly the same length as that of lhe average flir line stewardess. A baby whale wetgha as lnucb a• foul' cars. its mot(\tr as much 11s 23 cars. graduating students who have not learned to read so tl is in· terestlng lo find al least they are gelling very familiar wlth the art of picketing. <Reference the boy coll of Edwanis Cinemas.) So Ms. Mary Forbath ls upset at having to pay $3.50 once every week or two lo alle,.d Edwards Cinemas. l also am extremely upset at having to pay $3.67 each day ln school taxes to keep her and her fellow picketc; tn school. My $3.67 uch day is for a seven· day week and while she has a choice of going or not going to the show but I am not given a choice whether or not 1 would like to pay my laxes. I WONDER if Mary and her fellow pickets realize that it Edwards Cinemas did not have to pay \heir huge property taxes to su·pport Est~ncla and the other CO!.'ta Mesa schools they l'Ould redut:e"thdr ticket prices so we all could buy our tickets for $2.50 per person. t also object to my property tax money going to pay a bJgh· salariea s1udent activiUes in· structor lobbying In private businesses. U this is how the schools operate nowadays perhaps we '¥-OUld be better off without U.ent. Welt. I cao thank Ms. Mary P'orbatfl and her fellow pickets for maklng'up m) mind to vote "yes" on tb~ Jarvis initiative - not only vote for it but campaign fol' tt starting tomorrow. ARTHUR RILEY ' Teett ''.11H'f ll' "to the Edltor: t hope you will p\)bllah thls lctller if only iust.as a watnlng to otl\ers ..,bo m~. be out on lb• street ld\cr d~k -or al an)' ·time (or tb4t matter. • To the .-ix: ieeit·•I•~ • ~ log" in tht k1ereit' area in U>tir-bro~ -4 white c=ar at about t:30 p.m. on Saturday nl1ht, It inay come u a d1s· a)lll)OlQtmtnl tbat ihe d•rt·l.Ore object tbat ~ )lrobably abot from •hat I used to k1\0W u a "ilP·CUD" that lodged ln our 10-yu.Mlld son's back did no lrt· i.rnal dUt e. Perbat' tht aext child you illhoot at may haw and put lwo and two together when the ~ix of them finally ar- rived home and perhaps now, since they may not have before, become mor~ aware of their activities and turn them into more responsible citizens before It's too late, MERRILL BROWN Bad Enough To the Editor: There has been an increasing chronic problem to the renters Cyur-round) and homeowners In "'Party Time-Zoo Area," Newport ~each, particularly along Seashore Drive, Neptune and River Streets. Homeowners and year-round tenants recenUy met with two poUce officers at our reaidence near "8th and Seashore to dis· cuss and· evaluate these prob- lems. July 4 can be a riot time and a real· nithtmaN for the police as well as these people. Transienb, beer-drinkers, drug users, etc. were in abundance. The total disrespect for aulborl· ty, the illegal use of fireworks on the beach and tn lhe atr~s caused damage and injuries. Thia went on for a week. Adults bought these fireworks and firecrackers and came with ·their children and shot them off on the beaches. It was total chaos -no organualiou and very dangerous. BEER CANS, rocks, and flrecrackert were thrown at patrolmen and police cu1. Althougl\ paddywagons were ln abundanc., tho police could not keep up with tt all, even workln,g 12·hour. sbift.s. Bloody lncldenls occurred, injuries and vendaHsm to t>ropert)' and automoblles were fR<tuent. We, u c:oocernod bomt0wners and te.nau. tnttnd to ctve our full l\lpjat to the Idle. to •tp alleviate the problems. People come from an over to enjoy tho beaches u they 11*lld. But &be nofso, rucfeneu1 •ao .. Uim. nolsy parties anc:i loud ..,.._ are infringements on the ridlS of others. ~ Well, let ft be known, we hire the help or the Newport ~ police and we are going to s1ljld up and be beard. We all wanf;Jo el\loy our beaches, and we wirt the public to be aware we~ longer intend to tolerate ~ abuses and indi.allties. :· MR. andMRS.JACKTERANIO AndCommi~ IJgla! ~ To the Editor: :: Renovation of the Ne~rt Harbor High School audltoi· will sooo be at the progress 1 el where interior decoration w started. Present plans mad~ y New port-Mes a offieii1s responsible !er this project call !Qr a color scheme of b.ro)n! and/or orange (ugb) instead:of appropriate Hatbor Hilb eol9rs with no perceptible plans :to restore the school's nautical •eo cor. : I have called this error to Che attentloo of the school prloe1Pltl, faculty tepresenlatlns., ~ district business office and e school board. Alumni. par and students of Harbor-b also should make approprii calls to school officials a , especially board members to • sure a proper Harbor· m&h terior for this expensive t wortbwhlletederal proJeel. ·1 RICHARD A. ENGLANb, Teather, Newport Harbor Hilb RefonaN.., ·f To the Editor: l I'm pleased that the Pilot~·· ogl\lset the need for camJ)ti ~form and that our county n not await the reforms belni · sldered by our board 1upervi9ors. 'l'tnu\b to the lne signature drive ot TlN CU • our November ballot will b.ave ~am,1>alp reform ordlnan~ wtJI not be vulGenble t weakentni by tbe aupervtsora. Tbe l.NUatJve wU1 rettrid aupervltor's votlD• on ltl · ~neflltina those wbo contd $1,00() 01" more to hi• poUU electlon campaign witblu prevtoua four 1ean. ll wan • Jlmit (to $500 a yen) tb campal1n contrlbut\oaa lobbfllt.!. I f . . . --14 ...... . WWW- Mom Suspect lnSfayings PRUNEDALE <AP) -A younc 01otber ap. r parenUy abot her four children and then tW'Ded tbe sun on herself in the bloody climax of a depreaaion e cauaed by marital problems. authorities aald. ,, PoUce aaJd at least 20 shots wel'e fired ln tbe family's house. Officera, rushed to tM acene after a wounded child managed to summon help, found the Jlf~leu bodies of two or tbe children and told of • the grtaty discovery of a seriously wounded baby Jpra'1tJed In fts blood·stalned crib. ·' TWO SONS, AGES 10 AND 2, were killed, wblle Sue Barber, 28, and a 9·year-o)d daupter and a six-month-old son were critically wounded , • when shooting broke out Tuesday. "All Indications are that Sue Barber was . reaponible for tbe shooting and then turned the cun ~ 1, po herself," said Bud Cook, assistant Monterey ~ . County sheriff. ''From the information we have, ~ she was solely responsible." ' Cook said Mrs. Barber has been despondent ,fl because ol the recent breakup of her marriaae to '" Guy Barber, from whom she was separated. ~"· MRS .. BARBER WAS NOT charged or arrest· L ed and Cook said no legal action was likely until abe started to recover from her wounds. "(' Cook said his deputies had determined that at . ., least 20 shots were fired in the family's fashionable two·story house ln lbir rural communi· ty just east of Monterey Bay. '•" Authorities learned of the shootings when , Kathy Barber, 9, fled the home and went to a neighbor's, where she collapsed from her own wounds. DEPUTI ES ARRIVED to find bodies littering the house, Cook l>aid . Mrs. Barber was sprawled In a front bedroom. a bullet wound in her stomach · and a .25-caliber automatic pistol at her side. Andy Barber. JO. and Chnstopher Barber, 2, were lying on a bed in a rear bedroom. Both had suffered gunshot wounds in lhe chest and were dead on arrival at a local hospital. .' Six·month-old Nicholas Barber was found m his bloodstained bassinet. Hospital officials late Tuesday listed the Korean-born Mrs. Barber, in critical condition ... along with her son Nicholas. Kathy Barber was in serious condition. • ,. .. w ........ RefU.erg E%Jtlosion A 2.1 million.gallon gasoline storage tank at Rialto exploded into a massive fireball Tuesday and caused more than $450,000 in damage and injured a motorist on a nearby street, officials say. The l'aging fire, with flames shooting 200 leet into the air and billowing smoke visible for 50 miles, was battled for 10 hours by 200 firefighters from 15 Southern California -agencies. ... • • • t 'No Contest' in Atson 1 SANTA BARBARA CA P > -A Goleta man has "Rosemary's Baby" and "Chinatown." promptly : pleaded no contest to ~har~es. of deliberately set-announced Tuesday he hoped to be able to • (ting four major brush fires m Santa Barbara Coun· persuade Polanski to return from France to the ! ~ ty last year, including the Cachuma blaze last July court's custody. • . 31 which burned close to See £p9 •• c •• , .. lle I 2,000 acres. (---------..) . James Seymore, 19, Sf ATE entered the plea Tuesday ~ jn Superior Court.'----------J ~ Authorities dropped ' other anon charges against Seymore, stemming , from a.bout a dozen blazes in the county. ~ _ Another Goleta teen-ager, Robin Mack, 18. a l co·defendanl in the case, was scheduled for ~ separate trial on arson charges. ~ Wo.,.d Dri1'n- INGLEWOOD CAP) -A group of youngsters helped themselves lo the goodies from an ice cream truck while its wounded driver lay on the ground a few feet away after being shot t)y would· • be robbers, pollce say. j Officers safd Tuesday that three teen.age ~, gunmen approached 24·year-old Hassan Rezael 1 while be was driving hJs truck through a park and , ordered him to band over his money. Razeal refused, tbeo one of the teen.agers shot ~ llim, investigators said. The youths fied without I taking anything, witnesses told police. ! L.pll Seftt , ..I i t LOS ANGELES CAP> --The Los Angeles Board of Education has taken tentative steps to fay o{f some 40,000 employees, citing the Jarvis- Gann t.ax initiative. The seven-member board unanimouslv de· Clded Tuesday to send out termlnaUon notices in ihree weeks to approximately two-tbitds of the ~mployees in the Los Angeles Unified School Dis· trtct. The action was taken because state law re· ·quires termination notices by March 1 and March ~ 15 to employees who could. be affected by loss of district revenue. _~Wllge Wltlaclra1n ~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Insisting he has "at 110 time exhibited any bias or prejudice" toward 01ovie producer Roman Pola.D5ld, Santa Monica Superior Court Judge Lawrence Rlttenband !\evertbeless bas removed hJmself from the case • to avoid needless delays and court proceedinp." DouaJu Da1ton, attorney for the dimlnuUve, Polish-born director of such movie's as Given LOS ANGELES (AP) -The County Board oL ·Suter-visors, di1c6antitr1 report• that cloud· seedlna operation& intenaified a recent storm .. t devastated parts of Southern Calllomia, ~ Tueaday to allow the county to continue ralnmak· ing efforts. Supervlsor Kenneth Hahn offered a motion that would have voided the county's contract with a cloud·seeding_ company, but the move was voled down. Manager Named Brown Seeks Re-election SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. planned to formally announce bis candidacy for re-election today, the Democratic Governor's office says . Brown on Tuesday named his right·hand man for the past three years. executive secretary Gray Davis, to manage his campaign. And 'be scheduled a news conference today to formally declare his candidacy. BROWN. WHO SQUEAKED Into office in 19'74 in California's closest race for governor in half a century. bas no well·known f0e in the Democratic primary and is regarded as a heavy favorite in November. The 38·year-old Democrat, who made "lower your expectations" a slogan for bh administration, was expected t.o take an upbeat tooe in b.ia re-elecUon campalp, empbasmne job programs and his support. of California apace tecbnolOCY and alternative energy programs. Brown, who had served as secretary of state for four yean. won the eovemorshJp in 1974 larae· ly on bb father's name, former Gov. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown. HE 18 SEEKISG re-election against five Repu~can foes on. a record that includes a few peraodal triumpbs and some pO'ftlful symbols, such as his refa.sal to Uvtt [n the governor•s m.,isfon and bis refusal of a limousine. But that tmage has been tarnished by growin• crltlclsm, especially ln the past year, of bls admirtistrative abUities and of acandall 1n hil Health and Welfare Aaency. Even Democnits have started criticb.ing .Brown's admlnlalratlve style, In which decisions are often delayed and tables of or1aniution ignored When 8rown takes a personal interest in a program.or dol)lrtment. Doetol' Cleared SAN DIEGO (AP) - A mao clalmln1 to rep.resent a terroM "People's Liberation" or· eanlzation extorted $75,000 from a Bank ol ,\merica branch Tues· day, threatening to blow up tbt bank and tts muuaaer with re- mote controlled explosive de-vices, police said. Rugh Hudson. M. man-.er ol the bank at 1600 Hancock St., said be wu lured into the bll.Q parklni lot ~Y a telephone call from a m•n claiming to be "Capt.in Lear Crom NYC, .. the Naval Tr~Oenter here. TBE CALLE& said he and bis ·wife bad beel) at. the banlt earlier and lost a packet or claHlfied informaUon and could Hudson look for it.? In the parking lot, Hudson aaid. be was con.fronted by a man with a piat.ol· who handed him a brown vinyl brief case and told him to open it. Jn.side. sa\d Hudson, be saw two de. vices, one large and one small. Hudson told pollce tbe man then ordered him to put one or the devices into his pocket and be then handed him a stick of what looked like dynamite, tell· Ing the bank manager the brJefcue devlce and ~ one in his pocket were e~ploatv&. ••1 WAS T0tD that there were other people with other devl~s ln the bank.'' Hudson said. ''If I dido 't follow instructions, they would be set off." He •aid the gunman told him the People's Liberation or· ganlzation was out to "get" banks because they forecloeed loans and "stole money from the people." Hudson wu ordered to get $'15,000 from the bank. drive hi5 car to Kettner Boulevard and Palm Avenue. where he re· celved a call at a telephone booth notifying bim to leave the money and the two devices in his car and take a 20-min1.1.te walk. , Picnickers Found • VENTUltA CAP) -A Catholic priest and four 14-year-old boys were found in Cood condition Tuesday after they becalJ)e 106t while on a holiday picnic and spent the nlght in the condor s anctuary of the rueged mountains ln the Los Padres National Forest. ONLYPtl..OT Al RtfD60N SAU> while h• was lo the. bank be managed to in· form a worker about what wu bappUing. ••f started walklnc sO\ltll cm Kettnerlo" Hudson said ... I walked Laurel Street and along PacUic Highway before beading back. Then the FBI picked me up." A San Diego supervisor for tho FBI, Mike Green, said he --~ never beard of the so.called terrorist group. Green also de· nied a police allegation that the FBI had staked out the car a.r\ci let the terrorist slip tbroulh their bands. AN FBI SPokeswoman said that after checking with ttaP United Slates attorney for San Diego, federal authorities de- cided the case was strictly under local police jurisdiction aml declined to investigate lt . At the same time, a Poli~ SPokesll)an said the case was '11\- der joint in~estigation by bo~ police and the FBI. · In the confusion, neither agency was able to say whether any explosive devices actualJy were recovered from the bank. I ••************************************• HE:\T .\ '77 EXE<'l'Tl\"E '.\lOTOH 110'.\lE FHO)J llEHB FHIEUL.\'.';l>EH l .\IPOHTS ~:!H ·~XHX or ;');J7 ·7777, ~(JX .ft777 1-:xl. ~7:> NOTICE .. Searl .. .,,... .......... ,.. CNIUr ..... --c. .... ttw-.......... ... t•c.••• •r•••cth• ••• ~··· ·---....... c.e .. " ........ _. ........ .............. , .. ....._. ......... ,... .. ......................... .. ~·Fl .. _..., .. ....... SOUTH COAST PLAZA Save $2 on Sky Bali®.Seamle$ bras! Reg. 8.SQ-$10 All the fit and bomfort Bali's9 known for. Underwire, seamless ... 34-38 8 ,C. Reg. 9.50, 7.50 34-38 D, ,Reg. $10; $8 Or seamless soft cup, 34-38 8 ,C, Reg. 8.50, 6.50 Sizes 34-38 D. Reg. $9, $7 Both in beige. Bra and Body Fashions • I' l ( • \ ~ • • 7 I' • VOL. 71, NO. 53, 4 SECTIONS, -42 PAGES ·county Voters Get F81-Dt-bn~ing ·Choice . _,.... By GAllY GRANVILLE Ot• Delly PIMIS&aff And it may cost more than supervisors realized to poll COUJI· ty voters on their feelings about the purchase of prime farmland as a means or preserving open Orange County supervisors agreed Tuesday to go ahead with a straw vote aimed at deciding if county voters want to pass judgment on a farmland buying spree that could cost up to $1.25 million. , space in Orange County. what it will cost to see how voters reel ab<>ut the prospect of a bonatlde ballot measure on the land purchase plan beinC put oa next November's general election ballot. Supervisors' endorsement of what will be known as Proposition A on the June 6 ballot came on a 3 to 2 vole. Plane Crash Kills Six · BAKERSFIELD (AP) -Six oilfield workers were killed when their plane crashed into a junior high school cafeteria in dense fog early today, police said. No one on the ground was in· jured, and there was no one al the SOO.student school when the plane crashed about 6 a.m., authorities said. Tbe plane struck the cafeteria a glancing blow, then went between buildings into an open corridor which t.nrP. the wlnirs off the plane, said Don Londquist, principal at Golden Stale Juruor High. . Part of the plane hit a tree, and the rest scattered into "pieces all over," he said. The victims. employees or Oilfield Construction Co. or .Bakersfield, were burned w~ the plaat burst ln~ 11aO'l«S Qn Jmpact, said ('.:buck ~u. c:l· · ty fire departme11t battalion chief. .. Grim ls probablJ fitae bat word 1 can me.'' 'thoRlU laid In describing the crasb scene. "Ooe bod)' was probably SO feet. east of lbe plane, aoother 30 feet west or the plane and the four bodies were in the plane. They were not recophable." A woman w~ lives nearby said she "beard the boom. • She went outside but "couldn't see my hand in rront of mJ face, the foe was so thick. There ~u one body over there. It was •mouldering." Another resident of the aout.h ' ~akersfleld neif(hborhood «iave (See PLANE, Page Ai) .. . .. ,. • . , Armed, Rob'ber .,F-rees 2 Boys, HokU F atMr Tb at is because county Registrar of Voters Al Olson said Lhat even the straw vole ballot proposition must include pro and con arguments in both Spanish a nd English. That places the price tag on , Almost to a man, stlpervisors a.greed that it is hiJh1Y unlikely_ the voters in Jwie )Will endorse the concept of the couqty going on a land buying spree to pre- serve up to-10,000 acre• or farmland. Die Egg aad If Cl Can an egg survive the no.foot drop from the top of UC Irvine's engineering building <above> if properly protect· ed? UCI engineering students raced that challenge Tues- day !'1th devices ranging from popcorn and cornstarch padding to gyroscope retro-rockets. Judging the results were Steve Dwyer (below left ). John Girouda <below center) and Scott Rowe. The popcorn and cornstarch de· signed by Dave Adams was declared the winner. SupervilorPblllpAnthon7took tt a step further when he called the ettaw vote meaaur, "lr· responsible, confualn• an4 ml.s· leadln1." "It ls not the ldbd Of thin• that can be answered With a yu or no vote," Anthony said. He and SUpervlaor Lawrence Scbmlt voted against the word· ing of Proposition A. Their votes, however, were actually dlssents atainst having the measure put on the June ballot. Schmlt volunteeM to write the ballat argument acalnat the farmland buylng program. .. It coea agalost everytb.lng w4t are trying to do like keepinc the cost of housing down and lower· inl property taxes," Schmit said. But SUpervisor Ralph Clark said county residents should be. given the opportunity to decide if · they want lo decide on the feasibility or the land buyln& pro- p0sal. "There are m~y_people wbo HY we are pavlnf Orange Coiin· ty over aiid' I think they aboWd have a say In what direction we're solni." Clark aald. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich eonceded that voters are not like- ly to approve placing an m,. ltiatlve on the ballot, "especially when it is side by side with the Jarvis amendment that •P· parently is attractt.nc ao m\ach enthusiasm." ·Body Pict11red Jury Sees Photos of Infant By TOM BAaLEY .... Olltly,.... ..... Jurors in the superior Court trial of Dr. William Baxter W addlll ol Huntingtoo Harbour visibly winced Tuesday when they were shown color photo- graphs ol the baby cirl be al· lefedly strangled to death. The alx photo1rapha were taken during an autopsy performed on the dead infant by Dr. Robert Richards of tbe Orange County Corooer'a office. And lbey were used by the prosecution witness to back his stated conviction that the baby that Waddill, 44, bad earlier un· Teachers Afld New ~ds New dttn~bi• by l• Caplatra~ Unlned EdueatioD Assoclalloft were aclded to a January contract peoposal 1\aes· daT -a conu.c:hadmlnistraton say would cost the Capistrano Unilled School District $2. 7 ·million. The iniUal teaeber contract proposal tailed for • 10 percent salary increase. more flexible worklnt hours, binding arbitraUoo and fuU health care for de~. • The propoaed aalaty ,.,. creases, if approved by the school board, would coat the dll· trlct $1.8 mUJlon, said Sam Chiea1, assista n t auperintenden\. The propoaed changes in insurance coverage would cost an addition $960,085, Chicas said. <See. DEMANDS, Page A%) successfully tried lo abort was strangled lo death in the nursery of Westminster Community Hospital last March 2. A woman juror turned her head away and covered her face with her hands while Richards pointed out bruised areas of the baby's neck which clearly, he said, supported the verdict of manual strangulation. Several spectators left the courtroom after Judge James K. Turner warned the court shortly before the pictures were pro- duced that spectators might find the pictures -taken before and during the autopsy -to be dis· turblng. Other spectators left after the witness began to display the photographs. It is alleged that Waddill strangled the 28·week infant after a saline fiuid he irtjected into the unwed 18•year-olcl mother failed lo abort the child. Prosecution witnesses have testirled that be used his hands to end the baby's life after com- menUng that the infant must have sustained severe brain damage and would be the sub- ject of lawsuit& that could cost many thousands of dollars. (See DOCJ'OR, Page Ai> Board Critic Asks Frequent Board of SUIM!n1aon critic John Si.mom Of La,unA HilJI stepped forward today to volaanteer his services as interim Orange County ~ corder. But Slll\QDS' bid for the job vacated by retiring county re-corder Wylie Carlyle was re- buffed by the county supervisors he so frequently criticizes. .. You haven't followed pro- cedures," Board of Supervi.sal's Chairman Thomas Riley to14 Simons. "I'm tired or following pro. ced u res that no one un• derstands," the retired Lagt1n4 Hills resldentsaid. B Hey suggested that the Board oC SUpervisors delay ap- pointing an interim recorder a. til tbe nomination period closes oeny ""StMt,..... . tiext month. OFFERS SERVICES That way, Riley said. the CrttJc simon• board could avoid appointing m interim replacement for Carlyle · BappyWppo who would inherit the advantqQ of running for election as an In-cumbent. ~ut Riley's fellow supenisors weren't buying. Mating. Ctdl 'Summoned' Br PIDUP aosMUIN Ol • IMlly ..... tuft Bubbles, the fu&lllve hippopotamus from Llolt Country Safarl who's been sampllnJ the creeks and ponds of the Lquna Hills for three diaya, was reported algbted before dawn t.octQ. · At least, her conaiderable nostrl1' were reported c;omlnc up for .~1_b1 park rancen wt spent IQelJ' aecQnd dame nt t looklni tor Jh&bblea1 w o escaped under cover or dark Monday momln1. Ra.naen 1UU were at a lou,. however, about bow to coax tbe mamma hippopotamus out o£ the water. U you can make the sound of a handsome male hippo, Lion Country Safari needs you. Jo Schetter. -park publicist, said the rancers probably wlll have to wait again today until dark1 because a hippo In water ts a nappy hippo and ls likely to ataythdoe. • · Hippopotamuses do abandon their wet setwit)' blanket& at night to feed, however. The small . lake in \\'blch <See JDPPG, Pace.Ai> They voted to go ahead later today to telect an interim ft.- corder. a move that left Simons standing at the meeting podiam with his volunteer services re. jected. In 1975, then Board of Supervlaors Chairman Ralolt. Diedrich threatened to" have Simons ejected rrom a bud&et meetinc when Simons laid bis wallet and change on the podium and sald, "You're going lo g4lt ft all anyway. You might as well take this money now.'' .... : ~= Lunch Tinae f o r Li:a rd The second major step in a march te> supply domestic and agricultural water to Oranae County's second largest ranch was taken Tuesday by Santa Margarita Water District direct.on. Passed unanimously were resolutions of int.entlon to form fiv e improvement districts for water and sewerage on the sprawling 44,000-acre Rancho Mission Viejo and to adopt a plan or works for those districts. · A public hearing· ts scheduled by the board for Match 20 al its Mission Viejo offices before actual adoption or projects planned to provide water dis- tribution and sewage collection and treatment systems. Scheduled for May 30 is an election to form the iJn· provement districts -plus a separate district to provide \ (k\icatcly C'olorcd Palmatogecko lizard de\·ours its prey, an insect, in a scene trom "The Living Sands of Namib," a Na tion a l Geographic special, to be broadcast on Public Televhion March 6. The special focuses on the wildlife of the J':lamib Desert in sou.thwestern Africa.. water and sewerage for the 3,!500 acres yet to be developed by the Mission Viejo Company. The oaly voters in the bld to form the special districts are property owners, said BUI Knltz, district manager. Ballolln& will Land Fraud Trial Opens be by mall. The O'Nelll family and its bank-held trust are to be major voters in the ranchland districts' formation, while the Mission Viejo Company la scheduled to vote forltadistrict. Missio n Viejo Man Among Five Defendants The first step in establishing a water and sewerage system for the huge, mostly undeveloped SAN DIEGO CAP) -Pretrial motions were heard Tuesday in the federal court triai o( five men, including one Crom Mis~ion V1eJO. on Arii ona land fraud charges m a case once Involving confessed hmd fraud figure Ned Wa rren Sr The trial, expected to last more than a month, was shifted here from Phoenix late last year bee a use of news coverage there. U.S. District Judge Waller Craig, who ordered the change of venue, is presiding. Warren and five others were Fr om P a ge Al HIPPO WANDERS. • • Bubbles has made her last stand against law and order is snug- gled amid the rolling hills lw h1nd Lion Country Safari. lwl ween Moulton Parkway and Laguna Canyon Road . ·'If and when she leaves the wa ler," Mrs. Schetter said, "a whole team of people will be m•eded to circle her like a wagon trJin." T ht• rangers plan to fire a tranq u1himg dart into the beast. and have to try lo head her off 1r sh(• makes a break back to the water. where she could drown. If the rangers are finally s ucces sful. Bubbles will be Lion Country officials have been reluctant during initial con- tacts to discuss the escapes, partly because they all occurred within the span of a week. and partly because the second escape was followed only hours later by Bubbles' latest adventure. The first inklings that a hippo might be on the Jam ca.me two weekends ago, when a c;ouple of people called police lo say they thought. U:iey'd seen ooe. indicted by a federal grand jury south county ranch was the in Phoenix in September on 23 water district's aereemenl last counts of fraud in connection month lo join in the financing of with the operation of Consolldal-the Diemer lnterUe. The pro-• ed Mortgage Co., a Phoenix-posed $60 million pipeline based land firm placed in re-system ls scheduled to brine a ceivership last Aotusl. blend ol Northern California and Warren pleaded guilty to one Colorado River water to count of mall fraud two weeks southern portiooa of the county ago and was sentenced to five in early 1980. years in federal prison. Knitz aaid conslrucUoo of ma- Other charges against him jor water and sewage systems were dismissed at that time. on the ranch · -second in size Prosecutors had. alleged that only to the 77,000-acre Irvine investors were swindled out of Ranch -won't belin until com- $18 million. pletlon or the Diemer lntertie. Defendant.a still to be tried He said the first projecta prot>- here Include Robert Gunnison, ably will be to provide water 35, of Phoenix; Donna Stevens. f o r e x p a o d i n I r a n c h 53, of Whitehall, Ohio; Emanuel agricultural projects. Singer, 52, of Mission Viejo, Knltz said the ranch his- Calif.; Alvin MeCollum 57, or torically has used it.a own well Phoenix, and William Nathan, water for ap'lculture but that 41 , of Houston. the water district provided a Fourteen others, inclu.ding temporary emergency water Warren'• son, Ned Jr., 31, were line to citrus orcbatd1 tut indicted in November on 28 summer because of drought con· counts of fraud involvlng ditions. Consolidated Kortpge. · v Domestic "ter requ1Nd for The h -year-old Warren future bouflq pro)ecta won't be currently ls in Arizona St.ate • ;, scooped into a front-loading · !~ earthmover and provided a ride :!~ back to Lion Country. , Police checked with Lion Country, where officials •l ft.rsl said they were abort a hippo or two after counting noset, but later recanted, saying the hippos were there all alon'• sub- merged.· Prison servtnc a SO to 64-year term after pleading guilty to 20 counts of land fraud and two counts of brlbaby stemming "4' Dubble5 will be accorded a 111 ~ h wa y patrol escort up Laguna Canyon Road, onto the San Diego Freeway to the Moulton Parkway entrance to the animal park. Rangers had thought they ~ighted Bubbles several times during their le ngthy night ~ea rc h, but feared their eyes were playing tricks under the full moon. "You're lucky to see a· few bubbles cm the surface of the wa t e r wh en Bubbles sub- merges," Mrs. Scheller said. This week was at least the third time Bubbles wandered afield. The previous two report- ed times she got out, she was ac- companied by a sightseeing baby hippo, her daughter. Typho id Hits Two o n Tour MARBLEHEAD, Mass. CAP) Two more people have been hos pi tallied with typhoid £ever, apparently contracted on a Mex- ican tour, officials at the Muy A. Alley Hospital said. The hospital did not identify the two, but said Tuesday .they were recovering. Al least 28 people who were on the trip to Mexico bave been hospitalized in Massachusetts for treatment of typhoid. of- ficials said. ~---~--~------ORANO~ COAST SB DAILY PILOT Police discounted the callers as the same sort of people who call to report pink elephants. But on Valentine'• Day, Feb. 14, the calls came agalQ. This time sheriff's deputies found hippopotamus tracks along rel· idential streets near Lelaure World. 'l:his time, with some encouraiement, Lion Counll"y officials conceded that a couple of hippos-Bubbles and child- bad gotten out, and wandered home again on their own. Lion Country did not report the next escape. Bubbles and offspring were at it again in no time. Mrs. Schetter said rangers frankly have no idea how long the hippos were loose. They caught them Sunday. Bubbles and baby were tran- quilized and driven home again. Within hours, though, the dru& worn off, Bubbles was off once more, Monday morning. She clambered over the four- !oot gale or a special holdin& tank-remarkable for a hippo- then scooted under the same fence thai served as her escape hatch theothertlmes .. Mrs. Scheller defended the ap- J>&rent inability of Lion Country to ke~p an accurate accqunttni of their hippopotamuses. ••n·s very difficult to f,et 'a nose count on the hippos, • sbe said. ,.,.._P-AJ DOCTOR •• ... from his involvement with a PLANE firm that sold Amooa land to • • • servicemen stationed in the Far East. Amon& notables who endorsed the land was Sen. Barry Goldwater, R·Ariz. Jn a complicated series or legal maneuvers, Warren has appealed to a federal appeals court seeking an order t.o have him transferred to a federal prison.· The convicted swindler wants out of the state prison, officials said, because he claims a prison gang has threatened his life for refusing to pay protection money. South County Deaths Solved· By Confession Two Orance County murder cases are now considered solved based on the guilty plea Tuesday by confessed murderer Patrick Wayne Kearney to 18 more counts of homlclde. <Related Story Page A3.) Kearney, already serving a life term for three other murders in Riverside County, was sentenced in Los Angeles Municipal Court to another llfe term. Oranee CoUnty Sheriff's Capt. Robert OrifCeth said the murder• of Mark Lawrenee Espy, 15, of Lawndale and Mark Orach, 20, a Canadian transient. are considered cleared up but a third similar murder iD Sunset .Beach it Mt beUeved Unied. Grttre\b aald Elpy's mutilated remains were found Aug. 22, 1976, oU the Ortega Highway. Oracb's simllar ly butchered bodJ 'l(as 1°'94 1.0 LUA two miles .. w.,,Clft Oct. e, !tte. Both bodies were stuffed into truh~ • . Griffeth salcl hi• om ce wtll coa tlnue to lDftlttlate a kllllnl tn Sunatt BHeh •here tbo murderer r ammed a ~ood•n a take mto Ida vlc:Um. He 1ald Kean\ey 11 no lcJDJer conald~red a ~U1P1ct ill that murder qa: ~ m01t identical Ofte •elDC ~at.ed by lrvloe Pollet. .. Grltttuj .. d Uie ttvln• killer ~loll1arl,jitam1Mit a tree bt.nd\ lDtO hli v1~m. this description: · ••There were bodies scattered all over and bit.a of the plane scattered around the parking lot. The plane was Ju.st. broken up into bits. "'There was part of a wing and part or a propeller in the street and lots of pieces and bits of brick." Authorities said bricks from the cafeteria wall were hurled 100 feet into the street, and bits or the plane wreckage reported· ly were scattered several hundred yards. The alx victims were flying to a pipeline project at Currant, Nevada. said Police Sgt. Jim Steen. required, KAlu n1a. until ranch owners begin dev~lOpment. He said "the district doesn't anticlt>ate such use 11for some lime in the future." Santa Margarita Water Dis- trict. currently provides water . Stie-nia, Dell 'Jricti,m' Cioblien SU8peci A suspect apparently chose the wrong s01all market to rob, Orange police said today. They said the suspect, identified as James Howard, 26, of Santa Ana, was arrested Monday night' after the market's owner bad roundly trounced him with a few well· delivered blows. UOWAllD WAS TREATED at UC Irvine Medical Center for a hip injury and booked into Orange County Jail, according to Set. Mike Pollok. The owner bas not. been identified at his own request. •1'bis guy's been Juat pushed to the wall," Pollok said · • of the 49-year-old owner. "He's been burglarized and he's ·had the bell shoplifted out ot him." So when a man came in Monday night and, after mak-ing" a purchase, pulled a knife on the owner's wife at the checkstand, the owner literally took things Into his own hands. · P OLLOK SAID THE OWNER used only his fiats to subdue the swspect. When police arrived, the suspect re- portedly held out his h,ands to be handcuffed and pleaded, "Take me." Howard faces charges or armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. The market owner was not injured, :police said. F ..... Pflfle A J HOSTAGE HELD ••• After agre4!tng to free the boys. the gunman allowed authorities to talk to the hostaees by citizens band radio for the first time since their or- deal began late Tuesday. "I'm gonna believe you. 1 hope )'OU're right, but if you're not. look out," the gunman replled. F roaPage AI Herrmann, 38, a mailman from West r.t.ncbeater. Ohio, said his sons were "real good." ... \ The gunma n 's C hevrolet Impala, •urrounded by police car•. bad ground \0 a halt more than U hours earller after pursuln1 officers shot out the Jour tires. Earliv, the gunman .rejected aD offef loc transportation in excba.nc• ~ release ~ tbe children. 1 Tbt htpway w• oloMa '.ilO nor1nal tnfltc tor 10 miles arowid the site. At another point durtn' the sieae. the aunman, identified Oil· ly as Don, tolcf aulboriUes vla his CB radio: 'Tm not playin~ I'm not 1oing to be taken alive." He bad commandeered the automobile after fieeiDg a bank robbery in Richmond, Ind., abouts p.m. Tuesday. Shortly before daybreak, the eunman apparently thouaht he saw sharpshooters and threatened to shoot one of the children. "I don't know if there are any sharpshooters here. but if there are I want you to know I have a cocked, loaded .38 pointed at thts kid's head and if 1 get hlt anywhere the kid ls dead," he said. .. We assure you 100 percent there are no sharpabooten in the area," an FBI spokesman told him. DEMANDS. • I New contract proposals pre~, sentcd to the school board Tues-· day call for a new salary 1 schedule for school spee(b, , lh~raplats. trrl"roved workinj{ conditions for ~chool nurses a.Der • new eoac:bln& positions for J uolor hi.lfl lntra"mural sports. · . ~ At Tuesd•y•s public hearina ,. on the teachers' proPolal, the-,. only person to apeak was~, No r m an Re a m , or San • Clemente. He urged trustees lg : hold p•y increases to six . percent. whlch he said would be . in line with the current six, percent lnf!ation rate. A second public hearing is scheduled March 6. to allow the public to comment on additions to the initial CUEA proposal . The school board's counter- proposal will also be presented March 6. Contract negotiations are scheduled to begin March 9. A beginning teacher with a bachelor'• degne currently earn s an annual salary of Sl0,555. An experienced teacher with a master's de1ree is paid $23,045. The teachers' proposal · would raise the salary range to $11,611 a year for beginnin& teachers lhroup $25,282 at the high end of the pay scale. Tennis Rackets Wilson-Yonex-Davls Dunlop·Prince Racket Stringing Racquetball Racquets Racquetball5" Handballs It GIOves '. •. Bcidminton Rockets . · .. • .. •, .. ,• .. . • .. •• .. ·l •• •• •• :: .. ~ .. '• .. jl .. .. .. ·: :· l' ~ .. ~ 'I ~ ·: .. ~= ~ i ~ ~ !:' ~ ~ ~ .• ..: ;.. 0.: ~ •• • ;. ~ ~: ~ '. •• :. • Orange County polltlcal benefactor Gene Col\rad'• rap· to-riches story ended abruptly in a Los AneeJes federal courtroom Tuesdq wben Conrad admitted be uaed a telepbone to defraud a loan client. As a eoasequeoce of bls pl1ty plea, Conrad may be sent to federal prilOD for up to 8~ years . However, just how long Orange County's number one 1976 political donor will spend behind bars won't be known un· til April 3 • • STUDENTS BUILD UP SKILLS AT ESPERENZA SCHOOL IN MISSION VIEJO ••n Moore (Left), Kevin Snyder Learn In Atmosphere of SUmulatlon, Encouragement Tb.at is when U.S. District Court Jud&e Robert Firth will sentence the burly ex·pollce in- former on a slnele telephone fraud charae related to an al- .1 e g ed $1.5 mill ton loan brokerage akam. 'Ken' Lights the Way Conrad'• lrvble-baaec1 loan brokerage ftrm, Pmalon ~ of America, purportedly ob- tained about $1.5 million ln advance fees that were not re- turned when the loans went un• placed. ~pe~ Grad Shmm Retartkd Can Live Last May 4, a federai Grand • Jury in Los Anieles indicted Conrad on federal charges re- lated to the alle&ed scheme, in- cluding multiple counts of using , 9>' LAURIE KASPER , Of .. o.ily ...... IUtf Today, the young man -we'll call him Keo -is living in the community and working, able Lo make at least a partial living. Ken can read and write a liWe and do simple math. He knows bow to take the bus when be want& fo go somewhere. And, he's learned bow to act when he's out with other people. Ken is mentally retarded and tbe world for him was a state hospital until five years ago. Then, at age 17, he was moved \o a foster home and taken to Esperanza School in Mission Viejo. At first, he was withdrawn. hesitant and doubtful. He bad Lo be told what Lo do. But before he was graduated, be was working part·lim~ at a nearby fut-food restaurfQt. Now, \be people at Esperanza proudly use Ken to illustrate postu-..e changes. Fewer parents now consider putting their children in in· stitutioiW because more places like Esperanza have opened, said Ruby Edman, principal. The school she said, represents • "new tK>pe and new reason lo lceep their children and work with them." And Ken also is used to ex- 1'lain fulure PoSSlbUiUes. When he was ~oung, the mentally re- tarded were taught only lo care for their basic needs. "People .said it \fas a waste of Ume to do more," Mrs. Edman said. Still, Ken responded weO to the school's academic proeram. Bee a us~ of his aee, the teachers were limited in what they could ,give him. But With Ken's achievements in mind, Mrs. Edman and her teachers look at their younger studentS; who now start at the age of three, and wonder bow far they can go in the school's addemlc proiJ'am. •twe really don't know what th outer llmita will be," the pr cipalsald. - bout 150 1tuc!enta 10 to the sc ool ~om lrvloe, Laguna B ch .. nd the Saddleback V ey. IStUdeQia ~ed three to 21 at nd ~bool throuCb blP 11 I Glu1e1 clorlnt reaulai" ac ool· t>ours. Older. adult st den 1 10 later in the a! rnooQ. l of the atlldenta 'bave boon l a led P-alnable mentally Te- ta ed. • e led to think if we deffne atetory aa narrow a• nable mentally retarded, thf1're .U allke,0 Mn. an aa1d. .. \'It. U we look at tmiedonl.DI. lt'• extnmeb' 4.'• he tormer aohool Pl b~ shoot bet" bead ad • , ·~ more you're worldnl wl thf retarded, the more -qu OOl fOU have about what ia r ded.." me jt Esperama's students to be taulbt the things r ~ters just naturally up from the e.nvtronment d qte~. ,. the telephone to defraud. Federal prosecutor William Graham told Judge Firth that a Jan. 2, JJ117, call from Conrad in Hawaii to bis office In Irvine constituted part of a continuing misrepresentation that be could obtain a $40 mlllloo loan for Whittier oil man Jack Urich. Conrad aareect as be admitted he had never placed a loan for a client durtna Pension Fund's brief buslness llfe. Io his arawnent& before the judae, Graham alle.aed that the •a-year-old paid police lnlormer turned financier spent most of ~ the money advanced Pension Funds on personal needs and luxuries. .,..,,. ,.... """"'"' a1e11a.-"....._ It was durlnc 'tbe ~losing 1ta1es of the 1976 1eneral election campaign tb't Conrad bloa&omed oo tbe <>ranae County political ecene. In the campalp's dosJal ~ Trash Slayer Admits 18 More Killings . EXPLORING THE 'OUTER LIMITS' OF POTENTIAL Instructor Unda Brandon Showa Mixer to Errick May LOS ANGELES (AP) - Confeued .. trash baa" murderer Patrick Wayne Kearney -already J.Ued for life for three murders -bas been sentenced to a concurrent life term for the deaths of 18 other boys and mell. Some don't know bow to chew their food. So, lnncb becomes a lesson. Later, they'll learn about nutritious meals and food preparation. -Students at Esperania also often need to be taught what behavior is appropriate in different $OCial settings. Mrs. Edman doesn't like the words. "lt'sokay, he's retarded." ••As much as possible, we don't want anybody to make an allowance for our kids because they're retarded." she said. She said she often is com- plimented on the behavior of Elperam.a students. And, the principal admit& that she finds the acbool's weekly flag-raising ceremony ••a touchlna ex- perience.' Esperanza students study the same subjects as any other students. Sell care, language, reading, math, health and personal safety, soclal 1tudies, science, music, arta and crafts and pliystcal educallo!l an • part· Of tbelr curriculum. Their athletes also compete ln the Special Olyaipics; muatc a;roape pcfonn publlcq and a marchlba fr'OUP partldpatel In local parades. The students al.so are stnm vocational training in lawn care, car wash and houaekeepln&. New this year is reataurant tralnln•. It's offered at the school through the Coastline Regional Occupational Program for a11 educationally handicapped students in the Huntington Beach, Newport- Mesa, Irvine, Tustin, Laguna Beach, Capistrano and Saddleback school districts. The education and training of these students is expected ta save the state some money by making them more independenL But also, Mrs. Edman said, ooe has to value human life and see- ing potential developed as far as possible. "Otherwise," she asked ... why bother? .. 100 Sled Dogs DWonFUght GODTHAAB, Greenland CAP) -More than 100 sled does suffocated or battered themselves to death ln a crate during a transport fiigbt from Greenl~ to northern Canada last weekend, officials said to- day. The new sentence was handed Tuesday by pnsldlnl Criminal Cou.rta Judge Paul Breckenridge Jr., who said he hoped the 39- year·old former aerospace worker would never be paroled because "be appears to be an in- sult to humanity." Kearney had pleaded guilty in Municipal Court to the 18 murders of males ranetng in age from 5 to 28. Tbe klllln1s oc- curred between February 1973 and July um in Loa Angeles, Orange, San Diego, Riverside and Imperial eoontiea. ·~· Gem Talk The docs, destined to ae• company a Japanese expedition to the North Pole, were put In tba three-tier container for a 400-mlle Paclfte Western Airlines Hercules Transport rugbt from 1bule In northern Greenland to Alert in Canada'• Northwest Territories. Canadian • police said. Only 81 of the 180 H\alkies sur•, vlved tbe rout•hour fiigbt to Alert. on the northern tip of El- lesmere lalaDd, they aald. aw J. c. HVMPmurs ~ , . J)Jase Security Sought d•ys, be pumped ldore than 150,000 into various political camoalol. most of lt into coun· ty Supervllor Philip AJlthOl\Y'I winning campallJl. Those political donations landed Cclorad and his alll• in trouble with the 01'8Dge County Grand Jury when Conrad'• poliUcal generosity failed to ape pear on campal&n disclosure statements. S OM. V PILOT A~ A Grand Jury probe into poUUeal ruumclng by the Conrad set ended last July 1 with six persona, including Conrad. Anthoo.y and County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, Indicted on char•es related to violations ol. state campalp reaulatlons • Four defadanta wbo remain in the cue. including Coor~ are scheduled to stand trial on the char&ea 1n late May. OC l_,ikes Rams Fans' Funda Support M~ Football fans eager to have the Los Angeles Rams move lo Anaheim Stadium have begun sendinl unsollcited money to the. committee formed to encourage the move from tbe Loa Angeles Memorial Collaeum. . One donor sent $100 for use in the campaign to lure the Rams to Orange CoUnty. Buoyed by efforts of the Commit.tee to Relocate the Rams in Orange County, two optimistic fans sent deposits on season tickets. The three checks were just openers. They were among about 2,000 mail responses to full·page newspaper ads the commit.tee s ponsored last week. With mor~ than 1,900 envelopes yet to be opened, com· mittee members expect there will be JDore· unsolicited con· tributlons. The response (to the ads) bas been fantastic," said Orange county Supervisor Ralph Clark. chairman of the committee. "We haven't decided what to do with the money because we certalnly didn't intend for people to send us cbecka. We're likelv to open a trust account,•• Clark added. Coupons that were part of the full·page ads uked fans to in- dicate their support for a 'Ram move to Orange County. It was in envelopes containing those coupons that Clark workers found the three un- solicited checks. Tar1et al the <:ampaign for a Rama move to Orange County is Rams owner Carroll Rosenbloom. Rosenbloom has said he is un- happy with tbe Rams' preseot home, tbe Los Angeles Collaeu.m, and ls considering re- loc a tlng the team when his current lease expires at the end of the 1979 season. Dunataar Eridenee l • ·Passe:qger:lloghes .Or Brothel Reject? LAS VEGAS CAP) -A Nevada brothel known as the Cottontail Ranch bas become a key subject of Melvin Dummar's cross·examinalloo by an at-torney for Howard Hughes' relatives. Dummar, who claims be bad a strange desert encounter with Hughes in 1967, was to be quizzed further today about bis memories of the event . l\t Tuesday's session. Dummar drew a diagram for -jurors of the area near the Cottontail Ranch where he picked up a bruised and shale· ing old man who said be was Hughes. Texas lawyer James Dilworth, in a rambling cross- examlnation, Implied that Dummar's unexpected passenger was actually an oust· ed brothel patron, not the ec· centric multimillionaire. Dummar conceded he flnt thought the man was a bum who bad been beaten and dumped in the desert. .. Ia lt unusual fot someone to get beaten up around these bouaes of ill repute and 1et thrown out?" Dilworth asked. "I don't know." aald Dummar. .. This man_ 7ou picked up didn't say anythlnl a6out having • been at the Cottontail Ranch?'• Dilworth asked. "Not that I recall," Dumtnar said. The 34-year-old Dummar, a former gas station owner who now delivers beer in utab. stands to inherit one-sixteenth of Hughes' fortune if the disputed Mormon Will is found to be authentic. He baa cited the story of the 198'1 desert meeting to e'<Plaln Huebes' possible motivation for such largesae. Attorney Harold Rhoden, representing former Hughes' aide Noah Dietrich, claims Dummar's story is true and the will should be admitted for pro- bate. · Dilworth, who speaks for reJ. atives not named in the will~ says it's a fraud. He sought to poke holes in Dummar's story by noting that. the route Dummar says be took in his 1961 trip was 200 miles longer than an alternate available route from Lu Vegas to hie destination, Los Angeles. Dummar bas not explained bis choice. , .44 DM. V PILOT ~ ~~ Marpbine lion's Share of Hoopla HEAVYWEIGHT HOOPLA: You bave to take off ydui- hat to the people who run our coaatal ..Umal pre.1etve,. known aa Lion Country Safari, out in Laguna HllJS. When it comes to drawing public ink, they are UJl.Surpasaed. In the free pubUcity dep~t. the Lion Count.ft drum beaters make P.T. Barnum look like he was tlacktn1 for a dog and pony show. All this became evident some years Satarl people made a sex atar out of an old beat up circus lion named Frasier. Safari olficlala let the word leak out that Frasier bad a regular harem and despite his ancient age, was propagat. ing his own kind all over the animal park. THE WILY PUBLICITY drum beaters of Lion Country burst into the public prints with this revelation. Frasier became an example of age be· ,us1H ing no deterrent to a real lover. The news went over enormously in Leisure World and oth~ Senior Citizens' •centers. He became a sex symbol for Gray Power. The fact that doddering old Frasier could barely stand on his four paws eluded public scrutiny. It was his other powers that drew attenUon. Alas, Frasier died. No doubt with a srpile on hia lace. But after a suitable period of mourning, the Lion Coun~ publicity department found Itself once again flung into 'tile public prints, despite its efforts to maintain a low prortle. THIS TIME IT was with an ape. This ape had a bad habit ol chewing up lhln1s---$0metimes other apea-and thus required the bluntinc of his molars with oral sur1t1ry. So they put him to sleep and hauled him olf to the dentist. My denttst-one John Robert Thompson of NewPort Beach. Th.is molar manuevering drew worldwide attention, with photographs of the ape silting in my dentiat chair moving across the international wires of The Associated Press. Personally, l bad mixe4 emotions about my dental chair being occupied by a large monkey but Dr. Thompson suggested he couldn't see where there was very much dlUerence. WELL. YOU MIGHT be left with the notfbn that the Lion Country publicity department bad now run oot its string or novel animal antics. But waiU There bas been Jlll escape! · One of Lion Country's animala bu fled the farm and is loose among the populace. But none of the •man-eatlng beasts are free. , Instead, it's a prePosterous hippopotamus named Bubbles. Bubbles has blown captivity. Once again. the Lion Country publicity department is blusbin1 because headlines all across the region are· screaming out the news. FURTIIE&e BUBBLF.S manages to elude capture. They can't fiOCJ bet. She baa vanlsbed, possjblJ lurldnr beneath the surface of the water in some cotstal reservoir.• How in the world do you lose track of the three-ton hippo? It's the equivalent of the Army losing a Sherman tallt. 1Jut. never mind all that. Lion Country Sal~ is bact ~ tbo news aaain. n Jost Jeaves you ~-whit'•~ . U.S. May Protb.ree New Copper Dollar WASHINGTON (AP) -The Treasury Department hopes to get dollars jingling in your pocket, the way that silver dollars clinked and clanked 1n Americans' pockets_ years ago. And the reason is purely economic. Treasury Undersecretary Bette B. Anderson says the gov· ernment wants to produce a smaller and mostly copper version of the silver dollar. It would be the same value to you as the paper dollar -which would be continued -but it would stretch a lot further for the United States Treasury. The proposed coin would cost between two and three cents to produce and would last at least 15 years, Jtjrs. Andersob said in. a Jan. 16 letter to the House coinage subcommittee. The papet dollar, while COit· ing just L 1 centa to produce, loses ita economic beneflt because it wears out mocll quicker. "It is anticipated that. the new dollar coi.n, sized bety.'&eD the quarter and half.<foOar, would be more acceptable to the general public than the present.. dollar coin," Mrs. Anderson said. The coinage subcommittee will consider the proposed change before Congress acta. U the lawmakers approve the new coin this year, the eovernment can produce 250 million of them for disttjbutioo early ln 1979, ac· cording to Terry Marksberry, spceclal projects officer for the Treasury. , ' CAIRO, Egypt CAP> -President Anwer Sadat said toQy he no tonier recognizes Spyros Xyprianoo as PJ'eliclent of Cyprus, a move ta~tamount t.o a complete break ln rela&u tollowtna tbe bloody Larnaea altpOI'\ battle between Epptian commandos and Cypriot tore tis: "There ts no room for us to deal with'dwarfs such aa these, .. Sadat eald tn an emoUonal s~ecb to the commandos, wbo ran tnt.o C)'prlot opposition when they tried to Mize two terrorists boldinJ bostqes oe a plane at tbe atrportSunday. "OUR RECOGNITION of him as preaiden1 of the republic, and he bean me now, is withdrawn as of today," Sadat told troops gathered at the War Ministry after the funeral of lS com· mendQs killed by Cypriot national guardsmen. The Cyprus government declined immediate comment on Sadat's speeeh. The government announced earlier that Kyprianou bad suspended J>epu. ty Police Chief Paylos Stotkos for "con:nxaunica1lna false in· form atlon re1ardinc tbe events at .Larnaca airport and for negligence in the execution of his duties." EARLIER, EGYPT ordered the withdrawal of its diplomatic mtssioo from Cyprus and asked Cypriot diplomats to leave Cairo. . The Egyptian president reject· ed a sugpstion by Kyprianou that they meet. saying he had nothlns to say until "Cyprus hands over the hirelln& tillers and then weaball start talking." The two terrorists killed E1yptlan newspaper editor Youssef el Sebael, a close coo·· fidant of Sadat, ln the lobby of got permflllon to land aod tu· led to a et.op about. 800 yards from the terromta• plane. .. Eveo tboulb we did not take C7pru1• permi11lon," Sadat wet. ·'the C)Jlriota ahoaJd not bave aeted tbe way they did. 0 We contacted Cyprus anct the7 were told tbe plane canted some ot our 1CJnS to help the Cypriot eovemment to face this •llrea.skla and crime." Sadat laid tbe fact h1s com· mandoa were not able to arrest the kl1l«s of Sebaei ••raises the question was there collusion or not!" Actor Cesar Romero is be- ing sued for $10 million by purchasers of lots in .. Cesar Romeros• Chino Valley F.states" saying they were lured into investing in land With .. false promises . ., East Coiist Views Offshore Drilling NEW YORK (AP) -OU spokesmen reacted with enthusiasm Tuesday to news that the U.S. Supreme Court had ended a three· year legal baWe by clearing tbe way for oil and gas drilllng ln the Atlantic Ocean off the East Coast. Within three weeks, drilling rigs are expected to be at work in the Atlantic Ocean for the first time, searching for oil or natural gas within 60 miles of the densely Populated coasUine. "'Oil companies have admitted there will be a considerable quantity of leakage from this kind of operation," said Richard Johnson spokesman for Concerned Citizens of Montaut, an env~tal IJ"OUP which participated in the Sarpreme-Court ap- peal. •"Ibis is a direct and real threat ••• •• But despite the warnings and only an estimated 20 pel'CeDt chance of finding commercial quantities of oil or gas, the oil firms were thrilled. WASHINGTON (AP) ~ ( :Ruaslw bave •tarted d..,~!· their fourth advance4bbillll<1t• baaed mlullo capable of .... }(' t.be United States, U,81 Ul.U telllaeoce IOUl'ffl aald. The SS.1811 the llab~ ... , four new types of SovW ;a.,.,· tercoiaUneotal ba.JJ.lstic nMWr · placed in ft.rtng postUoa--.c·. late 1974. They are nil ' ''a ~f! older and leH ac°'*=tr ~· W'e8Ponlo Tbe most recent U.S ...... ;; · the Minuteman. 1!,a, .. •u. deployed betweell lt10 Defens., Secretary IDqwftJ ' Brown and Pent.aeon r , ' ..,. , chief William Perry saldoNe• •i •• ly that the Ruulans a.re~ ~ ing a still newer gener~ '"' four missiles, with fligh~ .1. expected to begin ••at aQt"tiaiJ o! On the U.S. side,, the•.eualr9:i' adminlltraUon bas slowllll c15,.,:. · velopment ~ Cbe MX ---l new American land·baail llllitt' • tercontinental missile in stehtisf te; h. U.S. diplomata bave ~ • curb development ol!.aeilt. strateatc missiles on bol:IDllid• · by proposin1 curbs on _.,...., :--. But the.re ls no evidend tta.• ' Russians are intereated. So, while a new U.S.&rdlt/. agreement may put a lid tmMal t.. numbers of the atrategieflmts.:~ · sites, it appears that the rae'6lr "" more potent nuclear .......,..., will continue. U.S. Intelligence s pec:bdlsts-;t. have watched for the alafS deployment wltb Im.rest.·. because tbe7 have been..._. . the past tbat it ml-Alll!lt• Rusala's fint land·based • .........,~..:. · on movable launch padazft&Mrx1• than in fixed silo6. the Nlca&ia Hilton Hotel-Satur-----------------------------------_,, ...... day and then, .rter beine pro- vided with a Cypriot Airways DC·8, took 11 Arab diplomats on a flight around the Middle East in search of refuge. Alter no Arab country would accept them, they refueled in the tiny African country of Djibouti and returned to Cyprus about S:4S p.m. Sunda)'. .&N BOUR LATER, an Eppt.lan C.130 transport plane .~ ......... Dedhleste ... U.S. Rep. John Flynt, 63, chairman of the House Ethics Committee in· vestigating Korean in- fluence-peddling case, says his post is so important he won't have time to campaign for re-election and therefore, won't run. 1'bla BeaatUal Repro- clactlcua of an AnU.-e Fnmcla ....... Rack le DOW oa 9alet Wroagbt lion la Black, Old Worlcl • Alltlqae White wltb Solld ..... Trim. ...... 639.00 Sale $575.00 While our selections are still at their peak, take advantage of our Biggest Sale ever. We'll guide you to the best up· holstery buys ••• introduce you to tempting dining room, bedroom end occasional fumltun; specials. There's simply no sale that can touch itl Freeze· llits...,Sun -·Belt save up to 203 ·J ... I I ~ r I " I ' ' ' I ,. ,. I ~ " ' I " " A " A " A " 4. " " Al ,.. ... "' " ,.. " ,. Al ,.. Al "' .... AJ ,., ~' Al "' At At ,.,. At Al ~ I Al "' ... , ,.,. .... "" Al'I "" A" "'' Ar .... Ar "'" ~ = I A\\ Atl ""' A1, AQ "'" lttM ,. ... ""' ""' "'"' "'" ~At Sa Residents in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District have an opportunity they have often asked for and even demanded in the past -a voice in the district's budget. Trustees have established a Community Budget Committee to review the district's financial projections and expenditures and recommend budget cuts. It was formed at the suggestion of Superintendent Richard Welte who predicted the district's dollars will .fiwindle and oerhaos result in the eliminaUon of pro· I" grams which long have been taken for granted. It's a sensitive issue. In the past, when trustees have atte mpted to m ake cuts. large groups of parents have • pl'otested that they made the wrong choice. 3 Presumably. the committee will offer advice that ~could prevent this. But it may be an unrealistic ex- f2pectation. Those who have protested in the past simply •have not come forward to join this committee. ~ Trustees should make-every effort to get these people ~nvolved. Then, residents and parents who ignored the in· ;vitation would just have to realize that they missed their· 1chancc .. ~ $. !Accessible Govermnent ~ Residents of Irvine who object to a planning de- j rnrtment proposal to locate a permanent civic center J'ext to UC Irvine have a stro~argument against build- rg it so far from the main pop {ltion centers. \_ There are enough complain about the alienation of p:>Cal government, without making it physically isolated flS well. ·: The location earmarked by the city general plan. at ~ eff rey and Barranca roads, is appropriately central for OH.' seal of municipa l dominion . • City hall s hould be a place easily reached by anyone ~ho wants to get there; public participation in city af. Eairs s hould not be discouraged by distance : Some proponents of the UCI site tat University Town (.:enter off Campus Drh·e) argue the civic center would be a n irritant lo residential neighborhoods, because of noise. traffic and the like. The. argument m a kes small sense, however, when lt lb recalled that UT C also is supposed to include home de. vclopment. It further ignores a prime responsibility of gov- Prnment, which is to be accessible to the governed. Wise Park Decision Last week, Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Councif members recommended development plans for con· troversial Cordova Park in the community's southeastern secti on. Hesidents of Cordova Homes adjacent to the park site had argued for months lo halt the construction of or- ganized athletic facilities on the site. They were opposed by the community's Youth Athletic Coordinating Council •. which maintained more athletic facilities ~re necessary for bobby sox baseball and soccer. The MAC agreed with Cordova residents and ap- proved plans for a so-called "passive park," which in- ~ludes a wide open grassy field ideal for the acUvities of :.ioun ~ families living in the Cordova tract. The 4.7-acrc park would have been c rowded with or- gani1cd athletics in a neighborhood of children too young l.o part1c1 pate. But, more importantly, the MAC decis ion allows fiex· ibility for the park in the future . Because the MAC plan calls for grading the area to c reate the open field, much of the cost associated with creating athJetic facilities in the luture will be absorbed at th is stage or development. · And that 's something the now-young children of the Cordova a rea can look forward to when they mature. • Opinions expressed tn the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. . Other views expre'ssed on \his page are those of their authort and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. ByL.M.BOYD More corporate board chairmen are fired these d.ays than are retired. Likewise, more corporate. presidents. That's not all. Two out or three wbo quit do si;> or else. It's a fairly recent trend. For decades untll now. tt,e chairmen and presldenll mostly hung in there, armed S\Jfficiently well to fight oft the attackers. Today, tboueb, Ws all changed. Amoni a tliird of the biggest Industrial firms, the bosses weren't the: bbsses five years aeo. . ' No other international ftontler has more sister oltfea astraddle it thaD does the border betw~en tbe Unit- ed States and Medco wllh 12 such twin townt. • · Old ordinances here and there required hous-ebolders to have their chimneys swept, so to preTent chimney fire11 'that miillt spread to neighboring r~!s. And In some p]Jaces wMl'e there was no swee;ron hand, it became the roayor's job to clean out, t.he chimneys. For a fee, fOf .,r a fee.· As rnayors found more lucrative methods to make side mpney, those law.a faded. lf your nose is ~18 inches long, n•s exactlY the same Jen1lh as that of the averase air line stewardess. Q. "H'Qw mueh ls a pouud of ~•ttnlet? '· >..About $UCL · . Roberl N. w..ct/P\ibtlsMr Thomes .c .. vlt/£dltof' • .,.,..,_... Kreibleh/f!dltori .. P9gt E.dftof' . . New Tire Strikes Roadblocks •' WASHl?'JGTON -1n today's world of corporate giants. the man who builds a better mousetrap J)robably would be told to get lost. Tbls even hap- pened to a large company which came up with a revolutionary new tire and tried to peddle it to the rubber and automotive in- dustries. The Caterpillar Company has been making eiant earthmoving machinery for decades. In the 1960s, company engineers de- veloped a special tire for use on its bulldozers and otber h u g e vehicles. ll was so successful, they ex- perimented in scaling the Ure down for possible use on passenger autos and conven- tional trucks. By 1973, Caterpillar bad perfected a prototype passenger tire and offered it to the close- knit clan of tire manufacturers. It had these advantages over conventional tires: -THE ~ATERPILLAR tire would last for 100,000 miles rather than the 25,000 to 60,000 miles consumers now get from their tires. In case ot a blowout. a driver could safely procffd at a SO-mile-an·bour speed before stopping. A flat tire could be fixed with a simple plug.~ -The Caterpillar tire could be mass-produced by automa- tion whereas today's tires need handcraft labor al some stqes of production. Once a manufac- turer retooled his pTOduction line, costs would be greaUy re· duced. -The 16 tires on a mooster tractor-trailer could be cbaneed in 30 minutes be<:ause of the Caterpillar's new design. A new tread could be fitted on like a glove. eliminating the risk of poorly vulcanized retreadine. -Reduced friction would pro- duce a 6 percent energy savings on the highways. There was one acknowledged drawback : the new Ure would require a re- designed rim on cars that used it. Caterpillar people proudly trotted orf to the major tire makers witl;l their contribution to American motorlsta. The response was as if they'd dropped a bucket or eels lo the punchbowl at a debutante's ball. Tbe tire moguls were horrified by the possiblllties of the new Ure, insiders t.ell us . TO BEGIN WITH, a tire with a lifetime cl 100,000 mUes 1'ould drastically reduce their 1ates of replacement.a. Setoodly, the in· dustry bad begun booming radials as fhe tire of Lb• future. and they r~ed to twitch off a m uttimllllon·dollar promoUon campalgn. Also, the Caterpillar innova· lion would allow skilled union # ··. Uremakers to be replaced by less biibly paid labor, and the tire induslriaUsts feared the wralb or the labor bosses. Caterpillar got the same short shrift from Detroit's Big Three automakers although General Motors tested the Ure as late a.s 1976. The tire and auto industries of. fered various explanaUoos for why they shied away from the., Caterpillar eqiicept. One tire spokesman said the new·fan&}ed lire couldn't be "'~·produced economic-ally and cited technological problems. ''If it was all that aood, I'd be down borrowine $l00,000 from the bank to flJUUlce my own com- pany to mate u.. •• be com• mented. / GM SAID Its studies failed to prove that the CaterpUlar tire bad performance advantaces over the radial• now belne used on its new cars. The rtm pro. blem would create complicated assembly line changes, he added. Ford and Chrysler Utt.eel too· many manufactwine pJpb. tems as the reason ror thelrt Interest. But there may still be a h py ending in the offin&~ Fed al· auto safety czar Joan Claybdtok appealed this summer to th4fln· dustry to come up with sine better tire ideas. A few w~ ago, Caterpillar's presic&nt showed off tbeir unwanted Ji.re to Claybrook in Washington. •: She and an aid~ roadtesl~ it and were entbuslas~c. Caterpillar has provided nfore data al her request. Expertt at the National Highway Tritfic Safety Administration are!in• trlgued by the possibility of~ 6 percent gasoline savings, n to mention greater safety nd durability of the tire. ~ • • DIRECTIVE %7 -Presi4tlt Carter has taken firm 11t.epl to insure that some minor con.fton• talion won't blow up into ~in· tern a tional incident. Sttict guidelines have gone out fCPm the Wnite House reamrm.in~its authority to reverse any goythl· ment action that might ca• a foreien policy flap. ~ All agencies have ~en {n. ' structed lo report any fi;n· military incidents to the te Department's Operation C which, in turn. will expedi a report lo the White House. means a flagrant oil dumpin! a foreign tanker or a fis c violation by a Russian tra er will have to be reviewed by tie While House before final acOpn can be taken. !< THE POLICY was set fo~· "Presidential Directive- 27," issued on Jan. 18 and· • tended for official eyes onl It em powers the White Hous • to overrule on-the-spot governntnt officials. ~ • .. ~ . ~ Mailbox . ~- i Parent Has Message for Market Managers~ ~ To the Editor: The UlUe quJck·stop markets we see in our neighborhoods are great conveniences to us. My children like these markets, too, but as they enter to buy lheir goodies and slurpees, lb~ bar· rage or sexually oriented magazines that meets their young eyes is appalllng. Today I decided t.o make a lil· tie survey of my own. I visited ·s e ven quick-stop markets, purposely avoiding those stores advertised as liquor-grocery stores. The first two stores I vis· 1led did not dis play sexually· oriented magatines at all. Two more stores displayed Playboy, Playgirl, Oui, Penthouse, and similar magarJnes sepa~ate from the other magaiines; front covers were hidden behind special racks designed to cover all but the mapdne headings. One rack was low enough tbat a five-year-old cblld could easily see into it. Most of the magazines weTe gone, and thoee still left bad fallen back so that their covers. were as exPQ8ed as if tbey had not ~en civered at all I THE LAST three marJtets bad their adult magazines displayed on the same racb a& their other magalioes. InUmatt and H'.lgh Society were d11playe4 right. next to Surfing. Sexology was set out in a st.and all by itself at. walst level. One store had three full shelves of sucb maguines intermixed With Star Wars and Close Encounters posters and other maiutnes thft appeal to tbe juveaUe and 1tee,n·ace market. The name OI t&e..1t0r~ makes DO dlfferent9. I\ ... ms to be UP to the muqel' or eacb •tore u to how ~ will display theJe macasiditorlfho wUl Mlltbem at au. .a parent to cbooae by wbicb my ddldre abWt tell la a11°'* cimlotbuy tandy iDd 11"'1*1 Without be· ~~to ~&rJ!pbJ. i till keep them out of adult book a10re1 and X·rated and actuJt mo.I•, bUt I cannOt kfep them out ot '7·11 atoNs ol' otbtr Cl\deb10P markttl. We must tell tMse ICA:lft tnan11er1 hOw we feil Hd. ii aecellaty • llltfCllO Olat' b\IJinl::!cloiJ&•• lf we want lOl pn:sene 'tM anoril IMDdaidi ol OUl'D~ * ZVB&. FD graduating students who have not learned to read so it is m· teresting to find at least they are getting very familiar with the art of picketing. (Reference the boy colt 0( Edwards Cinemas.) So Ms. Mary Forbath ls upset al having to pay $3.50 once every week or two t.o attend Edwards Cinemas. I also am utremely upset at having to pay $3.67 eacb day in soooot taxes to keep her and her <l.elfow pickets in school. My S3.67 ~"h day is for a seven- day week and while she has a choice o! going or not going to the show but I am not given a choice whetheT or not I would like to pay my t~xes. I WONDEJl ii Mary and her fellow pickats realize that if Edwards Cinemas did not have to pay Uwlk huge l>roperty taxes to support Estancia and the other Costa Mesa schools they could reduce their ticket prices so we aJf «>uld buy our Uckets tor $2.SO per person. I also object to my property tax money going to pay a high-· salaried $t~deot acUvlUes in· struclot lobbying in private businesses. If this is how the schools operate nowadays perhaps we would be better olf without them. WeU, 1 oan thank Ms. Mary Forbath aqd h'r fellow pickets for making up my mind to vote "yes" oa the Janis initiative - not only vote fer it but campaiJn for it starting tomorrow. ARTl{UR RILEY . MeqttliJ4ferAll To the Edilo1 : The=auon of a comumuni-ty hos ls e compl.x matter and . Polit>' for auch an oper1Uon mlllt never occur ln an lnCotmatio~ \'ac1uam. \ I h.~ bOt ~t}b' bid to spend any t.UD• ,. • patlent Jn a hospital lD my lifct.lme. So, for me. eonalderaUon of holpltal pollQ7 •l tM board of direc:tors ~eeUna• or Saddleback Com· D:)UDUy, oepitat requires re-. search. l1'vestl1ation and d•aJ91a_~,.wjtll thc>s• who are mqwJecSPabl• ot who hne bad tint hand e.xperleocea wlU1 heallb tan l.natllutlont. stockholderS. ll only has good health care and community service to show at its "bottom line." Ther1fore, in a sense, every community member is a "stockholder.'' The board ot directors needs the comments, opmion1 criticisms and sugges-tions 01 the community in order to insure that the hospital 1s meeting lbe desire., and require· men ta of the ~Qmmunity. Saddlebick Community Hospital has been viewed by some in the past as an institution of Leisw:e Wbrld. The fact of the matter is th.at the bQSpital Is at the service or all reaidents of the Saddleback Valley .. It is de· signed, equipped and slalfed lo meet the ~alth care needs of Southern Orange Counlians of all aees. The peopl' or the ~addleback Valley can be grateful for the dedicated efforts of the doctors, nurses, staf( and volunteers or Saddleback ~mmunlty Hospital who have to date conb-ibuted to its Cine repubUon. The continu- ing services 1of tbi>se fine people can be most 1'rfe(!\lve i£ they are guided by a.n ·informed leadership. That guidance role rests with the board of directors, and the responsibility or sup- portive in!otmation rests with the cornmunity. Let there be no mistake that a contribution to the betterment of the Saddleback Valley can be sienllicant U time Is taken to share thoughts with the board or directors of tour hospital. I am sure we want your cotnmenta. I k11ow weneecS them. TRQMAS A. FUENTES Member, Board of Direct.ors Saddleback Oornmunlty H95pttal Ll#f uor Store , ~ "' To the Editor: 'Ji In response to your articl$• banning the liquor store near new Laguna Hills High Sc • the Associated Student B y Council of El Toro High Schill would like to clarify a statem.,t. quoted in the article. '$ The a rticle s aid ... M~lt Kachelein, El Toro's sludit representative at these m • · ings, said Wednesday that e told student council members« these concerns. Alter discussiitg it with other students. be satl= the council decided not to tat~~ stand." We did take a st.and r this issue. . .. Our stand is: We db not support. or oppose the stand~ banning the liquor store. stand we take is that we feel it an infringement or the own s right or free enterprise. We :it. to inform the owners of our • cern over the multitude f students who will be preseit ·during the lunch hour dr anytime when an ASB acUvi~ Is taking place at lbe school. We 4> not feel the article clarlfied «>* stand due to a possible mlt· understanding. ~ ASBCOUN"~ El Toro Hl&h Scbof . llelona Neto •' ·: To the Editor: I I'm pleased that tho Pilot ognizes the need for campaJ reform and that our county n not await the reforms being co sldered by our board supervisors. 1bank1 to the ong 1ng sienature drive of TIN CU our November ballot will have campaign reform ordinance th~ will not be vulnerable tt weakenina by the su.perv1sorM. Tbe bULiaU.ve will restrict aupervisor'a voUng on issue benelitilnt those who «>ntri $1,000 or moro to his politic election campalsn within th previous four JNR. It will llmlt (to 1500 a year) th camealsn contributions o lobbylat.1. t I I \ I r CALIFORNIA . .:~----...... --------~­,. ·: Mom Suspect lnSlayings PRUNEDALE (AP) -A young mother ap· .,, parently shot her four children and then tW'ned the • sun on herself in the bloody climax of a depresalon ~· caused by marital problems, autboriUes said. . ..., Police Hid at least 20 sbot.rwere fired in the '! family's house. Officers. rushed to the scene after a wounded child managed to summon belp, found the lifeless bodies of two of the children and told of the srlely discovery of a seriously wounded baby sprawled in ita blood-stained crib. ~ TWO SONS, AGES 10 AND Z, were kUled, ·•. ,vhile Sue Barber, 28, and a 9-year-oJd daughter ' and a six-month-0ld son were critically wounded • when shooting brt>ke out Tuesday. "' • "All indications are that Sue Barber was · responible for the shooting and then turned the gun • .on herself," said Bud Cook, assistant Monterey ' County sheriff. "From the information we have, • she W&f solely responsible." " CoOk said Mrs. Barber has been despondent ·,:~ because or the recent breakup or her marriage to • Guy Barber, from whom she was separated. MRS. BABBER WAS NOT charged or arrest~ ed and Cook said no legal action was likely until ·she started to recover from her wounds. \. Cook said his deputies had determined that at · least 20 shots were fired in the family 's fashionable two-story house in thir rural communi- lf• ty just east of Monterey Bay. " Authorities learned of the shootings when. c Kathy Barber, 9, fled the home and went to a · neighbor's, where she collapsed from her own wounds. DEPUTIES ARRIVED to find bodies littering ' the house, Cook said. Mrs. Barber was sprawled in a front bedroom, a bullet wound in her stomach and a .ZS.caliber automatic pistol at her side. Andy Barber, JO, and Chnstopher Barber, 2, were lying on a bed in a rear bedroom. Both had · suffered gunshot wounds in the chest and were dead on arrival at a local hospital. Six-month-old Nicholas Barber was tound m • bis bloodstained bassinet. Hospital officials late Tuesday listed the · Korean-born Mrs. Barber, in critical condition along with her son Nicholas. Kathy Barber was in 3erious condition. . ' # A~~ Ret~erg E%JJlodon A 2.1 million.gallon gasoline storage tank at Rialto exploded into a massive fireball Tuesday and caused more Utan $450,000 in damage and injured a motorist on a nearby street, officials say. The caging fire, with flames shooting 200 feet into the air and billow.ing smoke visible for 50 miles, was battled for 10 hours by 200 firefighters from 15 Southern California . .. '3genc1es. f : i ' ' 'No ConteSt' in Arson 1 A G 1 h "Rosemary's Baby" and "Chinatown," promptly ' SANTA BARBARA CAP) -o eta man as ~. pleaded no contest to charges of deliberately set-announced Tuesday be hoped to be able to ting four major brush fires in Santa Barbara Coun-persuade Polanski lo return from France to the ty last year, including the Cachuma blaze last July court's custody. . : '31 which burned close to ____ ' ------See••· t• c .. Rltlle • l 2,000 acres. ( ) ~ James Seymore, 19, STATE f entered the plea Tuesday J .jn Superior Court. j Authorities dropped , other anon charges against Seymore, stemming ' ~m about a dozen blazes in the county. ~ Another Goleta teen-ager, Robin Mack, 18, a co-defendant in the case, was scheduled for separate trial on arson charges. G1ataett Wo-d Drf"n- INGLEWOOD CAP> -A group of youngsters helped themselves to the goodies from an ice cream truck while its wounded driver lay on the eround a few feet away after being shot by would-be robbers, police say. Officers said Tuesday that three teen·age gunmen approached 24-year-0ld Hassan RezaeJ ' ~bile he was driving bis truck through a park and ~ ordered him to hand over his money. 1 Razeal refused, then one o( the teen-agers shot f ,&Im, investigators said. The youths fled without I caking anything, witnesses told police. ~ ~tfSeftt \ LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles ~ Board of Education bas taken tentaUve steps to : lay off some 40,000 employees, citing the Jarvis· • Gann tax iniUatJve. 1 The seven-member board unanimouslv de-.eided Tuesday to send out termination notices in i three weeks to approximately two-thirds of the t employees in the Los Angeles Unified School Dis- • trict. The action was taken because state law re· l quires termination notices by March 1 and March f rs to employees who could be affected by loss of J s:liatrlct revenue. ; :,11111ge lt'ltWra1e• • ' . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Insisting be bas "at ~ oo time exhibited any bias or prejudice" toward • movie producer Roman Polanski, Santa Monica ! Superior Court Judge Lawrence Rlttenband oevertheless has removed himself from the case !'to avoid needless delays and court proceedinas." . Douglas l)alton, attornef for the diminutive, ~ PolisJs·born director o s uch moyie's as LOS ANGELES (AP),_ The County Board of. Supervisors, discounting reports that cloud- seeding operations intensified a re.cent storm that devastated parts of Southern California, voted Tuesday to aJJow the county to contJoue rafnmaJt. ing efforts. Supervisor Kenneth Hahn offered a motJon that would have voided the county's contract with a cloud-seeding company, but the move was voted down. Manager Named Brown Seeks Re-election SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. planned to formally announce h!s candidacy for re-.elecUon today, the Di!mocraUc Governor's office says. Brown on Tuesday named bis rtgbt-band man for the past three years, executive secretary Gray Davis, to manage his campaign. And be scheduled a news conference today to formally declare h.ls candidacy . BROWN, WHO SQUEAKED into office in 19'74 tn California's closest race for governor lo half a century, bas no well-known foe in the Democratic primary and is regarded as a heavy favorite lo November. The 39-year-0Jd Democrat, Who made "lower your expectationa•' a slo1an for bis administration, wu expected to take an upbeat tone in his r~lection campaign, empwlzlng job programa and his support ol Calltornla spue technology and alternative energy programs. Btown, who had served as secretary of state for four years, won the governorship in 1974 lar1e· ly on bis father's name, former Gov. Edmund G. .. Pat" Brown. BE IS SEEKING re-election against five Jlepubllcan foes on a r6cord that includea a few personal triumphs and ~e powerful symbols, such u hts refusal to e in the governor's mansion and his refusal of a mouaine. But that image has been tamJahed by 1rowfnc criticlam, especially in the past year, of hla admlnlatraUve abilities and ot acandala tn hls HealJ,h and Welfare Agency. Even Democrats have started criUcl1ln1 Brown'• adrnlnl1traUve atyle, in which decisions are otten delayed and tables of ortan1zaUoo ipored when Brown takes • personal tnterest in a proiram or department. Doctor €Iearea DAIL y PILOT AS . &qil&ive Device• Threatened by Terrorist SAN J)JEGO (AP) -A man clala>m. to represent a terrorist "Peopfe•a Liberation" or- ganlzatJoo extorted f15,000 from. a Bank of America branch Tues· day, tbreat.enilll to blow ~ the bank and its manager with re- mote controlled exploalve de- vices, police a aid. Huab Hudson. 54, manaaer of the bank at 1600 Hancock St.. said be waa h1red into tk banit parking lot by a telephone call from a man clalmlnt to be "Captain Lear from NYC,'' the Naval ~Cater here. THE CAU.Ell 1ald be and his ·wife bad been at the bank earlier and lost a packet of claasUled information and could. Hudson look for it! In the parking lot, Hudson said, be wu confronted by a man with a pbtol ·who banded him a brown vinyl brief c:ase and told him to open it. Inside, said Hodson, be saw two de. vices, one large and one small. HudlOll told police the man then ordered him to put one or the devices into his pocket and be then banded him a stick of wbat looked like dynamite, tell- ing the bank manaeer the NOTICE .. ....... ..,.... ............ < .... er ...... _ _._ c .................... ..,. feet•• •r•••ctl•it •it• ._, ..... _._ •Hll••cn. ti tM ...U••ce ............... ,_ ........ , .................. .,__ .......................... .. -............ , .. ........ I Sears I briefcaae device and the one in hi& pocket were expJot!vo. ... WAS TOLD that there were other people wttb ot.ber devices in the bank," Hudson said. "If l dldn 't follow in1tl'uctions, they would be aei off." He said the gunman told him the People's Liberation or- gaotzatlon waa out to "get" banks because they foreclosed loans and "stole money from the people." HudlOn wu ordered to get $15,000 from the bank, drive bis car to Kettner Boulevard and PaJm Avenue, where he re- ceived a call at a telephone booth notifytoi him to leave the rnooey and the two devices lo bis car abd take a al-minute walk. I Picnickers Found VEN'nJRA (AP) -A Catholic priest and four 14-year-old boys were found in good condition Tuesday after they became lost while on a holiday picnic and spent the ni&ht in the condor sanctuary ~r the rugged mountains in the Los Padres National Forest. SOUTH COAST PLAZA ' lll1D80N 6AID wblle be ..,as in the bank he m~aaed to in- form a worker a~t what was ha~pening. • I atart.ed walkint south on Kettner,'' Hudson said. ·•1 walked to Laurel Street ~od along Pacific Highway before heading back. Then the PBl picked me up." J A San Die10 supervisor for he FBI, Mike Green, said be .d never beard of the so-calJed terrorist aroup. Green also jie- n1ed a police allegation that ~e FBI had staked out the car and let the terrorist slip thro~ their hands. 1 AN FBI spokeswoman said thal after checking with the United States attorney for San Diego, federal authorities de- cided the case was stricUy under local police jurisdiction and declined to investigate it. ' At the same tjme, a po~e spokesman said the case was \I~ der joint investigation by botJ\ police and the FBI. In the confusion, neilh4:r agency was able to say whether any explosive devices actuatb' were recovered from the b~ Save $2 on Sky Bali®. Seamless bras! Reg. 8.SQ-$10 All the fit and oomfort Ball's9 known for. Underwire, seamless. -. 34-38 B,C. Reg. 9.50, 7.50 34-38 0, Reg. $10; $8 Or seamless soft cup, 34-38 B.C. Reg. 8.50, 6.50 Sizes 34-38 0 , Reg. $9, $7 Both in beige. Bra and Body Fashions l ~AC Sa OrangeCout Daily Pllot Chance to Speak On School Budget Residents in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District have an opportunity they have often asked for and even demanded in the past -a voice in the district's budget. Trustees have established a Community Budget Committee to review the district's financial projections und expenditures and recommend budget cuts. It was formed at the suggestion of Superintendent Hichard Welte who predicted the district's dollars will ~windle and perhaps result in the elimination ot pro. i grams which long have been taken for granted. It's a sensitive issue. In the past, when trustees have attempted to make cuts. large groups of parents have •protes ted that they made the Wt"ong choice. I Presumably. the committee will offer advice that could prevent this. But it may be an unrealistic ex- pectation. Those who have protested in the past simply have not come forward to join this committee. I Trustees should make-every effort to get these people linvolved. Then, residents and parents who ignored the in· ~itation would just have to realize that they missed their" ~chance. • iA.ccessihle Government J Residents of Irvine who object to a planning de· ~artment proposal to locate a permanent civic center ext to UC Irvine have a strong argument against build· git so far from the main population centers. ~ There are enough complaints about the alienation of p:>cal government. without making it physically isolated -.swell. ~ The location earmarked by the city ~eneral plan, at ~effrey and Barranca roads. is appropriately central for Che seat of municipal dominion. • City hall s hould be a place easily reached by anyone ~ho wants to gel there; public participation m city af· tairs should not be discouraged by distance. ; Some propone nts of the UCI s ite <at University Town Center off Campus Drive> argue the civic center would be> an irritant to residential neighborhoods, because of r1uis e. traffic and the like. The. argument makes small sense, however, when it 1~ recalled that UTC also is supposed to include home de· ~elopment. It further ignores a prime responsibility of gov· c rnmenl, which is lo be accessible lo the governed . Wise Park Decision Last week. Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council members recommended development plans for con- troversial Cordo,·a Park in the community's southeastern section. Residents of Cordova Homes adjacent to the park site had argued for months lo halt the construction of or- ganized athletic facilities on the site. They were opposed by the community's Youth Athletic Coordinating Council, which maintained more a thletic facilities were necessary for bobby sox basebaJJ and soccer. The MAC agreed with Cordova residents and ap~ proved plans for a so-called "passive park." which in· ~l udes a wide open grassy field ideal for the activities or ~oun~ fa milies hving in the Cordova tract. The 4.7-acrc park would have been crowded with or- ganized athletics in a neighborhood of children too young to partic:mate. But, more 1mportantly, theltfAC decision allows nex· ibility for the park in the futui-.r. Because the MAC plan calls for grading the area to create the open field. much of the cost associated with creating athletic facilities in the future will be absorbed al this stage or development. And that's something the now-young children of the Cordova area can look forward to when they mature. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. • Other views expreased on this page are those of their iuthort and artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. &x 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Chairmen ByL.M. BOYD More corporate board chairmen are (Ired these d,ays than are retired,· Likewise, more corporata presidents. That's not all. Two out of three wbo quit do s9 or else. It's a rairly recent tl'end. For decades unUI now, tbe chairmen and presidents mostly hung in there, armed sµfficiently well to fight off the attackers. Today, though, i~·s all changed. Arnone a . ttlird or the biggest Industrial firms, th~ bosses weren't. the: ~sses five years aeo. ' No other international ftontler has more sister clUes astraddle U tbau doet the border between the Unit- ed Stat~ and Mextco wllb 12 such twin t.owna. • · Old ordinances here and there required householders to have thetr chimneys swept, so to prevent chimney fires 'that migbl spread 10 neighboring rbofs. And In eom e plactS wbue there was no s•eejroo baod, it became tbe mayor's job to clean <>Qt , the chimneys. For a fee, for .. a fee. As mayors found more tucratlve methods to make side money, those J~w.s faded. IC your nose is 2.18 inches long, n·s exactly the same Jen1tb aa that of the averaee air line atewarde&s. Q. "How much ts a pouncl of ptnnlet? .. A. AbOut. $UO. .., Btrber• K,..lbldt/EdltofW P..-Editor . New Tire Strikes Roadblocks WASHINGTON -to today's •orld of corporate giants, the man who builds a better mousetrap t>robably would be told to 1et lost. Tbls even hap- pened t~ a largo company wbicb came up with a revoluUonary n~w tire and tried to peddle It to the rubber and automotive in· dustries. The Caterpillar Company has been making 1iant earthmoving machinery for decades. In the 1960s, company engineers, de. veloped a special tire for use on its bulldozers and other h u g e vehicles. It • · was so successful, they ex· perimented 1n scaling the u~ down for possible .use on passenger autos and conven- tional trucks. B y 1973, Caterpillar had perfected a prototype passenger tire and offered it to the close- knit clan of tire manufacturers. It bad these advantages over conventional tires: -THE CATERPILLAll tire would last for 100,000 miles rattier than the 25,000 to 60.000 mlles consumers now get from lheir tires. In case of a blowout, a driver could safely proceed at a 50-mile-an·bour speed before stopping. A flat tire could be fixed with a simple plug.i -The Caterpillar Ure could be mass-produced by aulom~· taon whereas today's Urea need handcraft labor at some stales or production. Once a manufac- turer retooled his pl'oducUon line, costa would be greaUy re- duced. -The 16 tires i>n a monster tractor-trailer could be changed in 30 minutes beeause of the Caterpillar's new design. A new tread could be filled on like a glove. eliminating the risk or poorly vulcaniud retreadin&. -Reduced CricUon would pro- duce a 6 percent energy savtnp on the highways. There wu one acknowledged drawback ; the new Ure would require a re· designed rim On cars that 1&Sed it. Caterpillar people proudly trotted off to the major Ure makers with their contribution to American motorists. Tbe response wu 11 if they'd dropped a bucket or eels iD the punchbowl at a debul"4nte's ba.U. Tbe tire mofu.l.s were horrified by the possibillUes of the new tire, insiders tell us. TO BEGIN WITH, a tire with I a UleUme ol 100,000 mu y.'ould drastically nduce their tales of replacemet\ts. Seeondly, the In· dustry bMI be9un boomJnf radials as fhe tire ot the future. and they r«used to twitch off a m ultimillion·doUar promotion campaign. Also, the Caterpillar innova· lion would allow skllled union ... tiremakers to be replaced by less highly paid labor, and the Ure industrialists feared the wrath of the labor bo6ses. Caterpillar got the same short shrift from Detl"Oil 's Big Three automakers although General Motors tested the tire as late as 1976. The Ure and auto industries of- fered various explanat.ions for why they abied away from the. Calerpnlar concept. One tire· spokesman said the new-fangled tire couldn't be mass-produced economically and cited technological problems. "If il was all that eood, I'd be down borrowing $100,000 from the bank to finance my own com· .. pany to make u:· be c6m· men led. GM SA.ID its studies failed to prove that the Caterpillac Ure bad performance advantaces over the radiala now betns used on its new cars. The rtm pro. blem would create complicated assembly line changes, he adc}ed. Ford and Chryalet lifted too many manufactUrtne pjpb. tems as lb~ reason for their pa. Interest. ~ But there may still be a b 1 ending in the offine. Fed al· auto safety czar Joan Clay appealed this summer to lb dustry to come up with better tire ideas. A few w ago, Caterplllar's preai showed off lbelr unwanted re to Claybrook in Wash.inft,on. ~ She and an aide roadtesui it and were entbustasQc • Caterpillar bas provlded ni>re data at her request. Expertl at the National Highway Tr.fie Safety Administration are!in· trigued by lhe possibility oi 6 percent gasoline savings, n to mention greater safety nd durability or the tire. $ ) DIRECTIVE 21 -Preaicfent Carter has t.aken finn stepl to insure that some minor conl(oo· talion won't blow up into ~in· lernational incident. StSct guidelines have gone out {G>m the White Howse reaffirmineu.s authority to reverse any go~· ment action that might ca~ a foreign policy flap. ~~ I All agencies have been structed to report any military incidents to the Department's Operation C which, in tum, will expedi report to lhe White Hows~. · means a flagrant oil dumpln!; a foreign tanker or a fis C violation by a Russian tra er will have to be reviewed by~ While House before final ac~ can be taken. THE l?OUCY was set lo~· •·Presidential Directive- 27," issued on Jan. 19 and. • tended for officiaJ eyes on~ It empowers the White Hous~t.o overrule on-lhe-spot gove~ o((icials. ~ .# ~ Mailbox g i Parent Has Message for Market Managers i ~ To the Editor: The litUe quick-stop markets we aee in our neighborhoods are great conveniences lo us. My children Uke these markets, loo, but as they enter to buy their goodie$ and slurpees, the bar· rage of sexually oriented magazines that meets their young eyes is appalling. Today I decided to make a lil· tie s urvey of my own. J visited seven quick -slop markets, purposely avoiding those stores advertised as liquor-groc:ery stores. The first lwo stores t yis· ited did not display sexually. oriented magazjnes at all. Two more stores displayed Playboy, Playgirl, Oui, Penthouse, and similar maguines separate f1'om the other 1:9agailnes; front covers were hidden behind special racks designed to cover all but the maaaune bee.dings. One rack wu low enough Ulat a five-year-old chlld could eaally see into it. Most of the magazines 1tere gone, and those stilJ len. bad fallen ba~k so that their coven were as exposed as tr they bad 1\0l been c9veted lt all. 'tRE LAST thr~ markets bad their adult magarlnes displa.yed on the same raw as thelf other magatines. Intimate and lllsh Society were di1pla,yecl rieht next to Surfing. Sexoloa was set out in a stand all by itself at walst level. One store had three full shelves of auch maauines lntermlftd ·With Star Wara and Close Encotmtert post.rs and other m•dnes thtt ll'PPUl to tbe juvealle and leen·a1e market. Tbe name d tbi •res male• no diJference. Jt...., to be up to the nuuiqer ol eacb •'°"* aa to bow ._. wtll d.l1pJay these ma1a.dd9 or Ubl will Hll \hem at all. )JI J11bt u a ~rtnl to tbOOH -by whlC?h my did)~ 11'11 atilDUt MX is \ttDJ 1c;et ~ caaot bey candy and aha~• wllhout })e. lD• expoeed to pornocT•P~· I een kMP ~out Of •tt 1;ook 1torq and X-ra~ and adul\ movle11 bUl l cannot kleJ) them out of '1·11 atores o't otber =:stop marbta. We must tell 11Gre mu.,..., bo" we tffl •Dd. lf aeeeNIJ'y. ••trdse °"" bQial~'clou\" it•• want t.o: ,ne' t"bi moral ataDdirdi or ourneJ~ • .,,, &V&S.FD . ..-*·-~~~~~ graduating sludenu who have not Jeamed to read so it is in· teresting to find at least they are gelling very ramiliar with the art of picketing. (Reference lhe boycoltot Edwards Cinemas.) So Mt. Mary Forbath ls upset al having to pay $3.50 once every week or two to attend Edwards Cinemas. I also am extremely upset at having lo pay $.1.67 each day In fohool tbes to keep her and her..tellow pickets in school. )1 y $3.67 ~ath day is for a seven. day week and while she ha.s a choice of going or not going to the show but l am not given a choice whethtt or not I would like to pay my t~xes. I WONJ>ER if Mary and her fellow pickets realize that if Edwards Cinem~ (lid not have to pay t.hdl; h~e property taxes to s\lpport Eatancia and the other Costa M~a schools they could reduce th~ir ticket prices so we alt rould buy our tickets for $2.SO per person. 1 also object to my property tu money going to pay a blgh·· salaried student activlUes in· structor lobbying in private businesses. If this is how the schools operate nowadays perhal)S we wt>uld be better off without them. Well, I ~ thank Ms. Mary Forbath aJ¥l 1a,r fellow pickets for m akJng up my mind to vote "yn" cm the Janis initiative - not only vote for tt but campaiin for it starting tomorrow~ ARTHUR RILEY .·ite.,,Ufll ter All To tbe F4Jt.or: Tho OJ)e!ation of a comuinuni· ty hQSPtlal ls a CO.lllP1ex matter and .aetlUl,( poUey t~ aoch an operaUon mwt bever occW' ln an tnro~tloMJ V&.e\\wu. , 1 "•"• not ;er.o,1111 Ud t4 spend" any Um• N • pat.leo.t 1n a hospttaJ in my llf otlma. So, for me, coosideratJo.a of bospltal poUc1 at U. boa.rd of dlrtctora OJeetlnp of Saddleback Com-nu.\nlt:Y Roa.P\tal Hquires re. aearcn, Jnveitiaation and dlalpaae W}~. thoae who. are kilowJeclpl\114t ot who !lave, had ftut band nptrlenceis wllb hHllh tare ln.atll\i.tlom. s tockholders. lt only has good health care and community service to show al its "bottom line." Therefore, in a sense. every community member tS a "stockholder." The board of directors needs the comments. opinlon, criticisms and 1ugges· lions of the community in order to insure that the hospital is meeting the desires and require· menta of the cqmmumty. Saddleback Community Hospital has been viewed by some in the past as an institution of Leisu~e \\brld. The fact of the matter is that the hospital is at. the service of all reaideot.s of the Saddleback Valley. H is de· signed, equipped and 5laffed to meet the IMalth care needs or Southern Orange Counlians of all aees. The people of the ::;addleback Valley can be grateful for the dedicated efforts of lhe doctors, nurses, stare and volunteers or Saddleback Community Hospital who have to date contributed to its fine reputation. The continu. Ing services of tbose line people can be most 'erreclive if they are guided by a·n informed leadership. That guidance role rests with lhe board or directors, and the responsibility oC sup- portive Wormation rests with the community. Let there be no mistake thal a contribution to the betterment of the Saddleback Valley can be significant ii time Is taken to share thoughts with the board or directors of tour hospital. I am sure we wtnt your comment.. I know we need them. 11lq'MAS A. FUE~ Member. 8<>ardof Directors Saddleback Oom~unlty H98pital -, 1..U,uor St~ ~ To the Editor: ~ In response to your artiile banning the liquor store near e new Laguna Hills High Sc • the Associated Student B Council of El Toro High would like to clarify a statem t quoted in the article. !- The article said, ••Mi Kachelein. El Toro's stud t r epresentative at these m - · ings, said Wednesday that told student council members_!M these concerns. After dlscussl!llc it with other students, be •atC the council decided nol to talc~a stand." We did lake a st.and Jn this issue. •. Our stand is: We do not support or oppose the stand "9f banning the liquor store. ~ stand we take is that we feel lt s an infrtngemeot of the own s right of free enterprise. We wait to inform the owners or our toa· cern over the mullitudoejf students who will be prd t during the lunch hour r anytime when an ASB acUvi~ k taking place at the school~ We 4> not feel the article clarUied o.k- sland due to a possible mif· understanding. ~ ASBCOUN EIToroHigb lkfo,._ No., ~i TotheEditor: I I'm pleased that the Pilot ognizes the need for campai reform and that our couoty Qol await the reronu being sidered by our board supervisors. Thanks to the oat ing sipat.ure drive of TIN our November ballot wUl .have campaign reform Ot'dtnanee th will not be vultierable t weak~ by tbe aupervison. The Initiative will restrtd aupervi.sor's votlnl( on IN benelittlng t.boee who contit $1,000 or more to hls politic election campaign within th previous four ~ ll wUl llmlt Clo $500 a 1ear> th campalen cootributlone o lobbyists. M~li Per.slits .. . . 'Pfo;fi.u Don't -;4dd llp TU DUI: ftGV1lB, INSOl'Aa AS U)" aumbaw V& reaU1 true_ la betwMD 5 ud 5.$ c.m. fell' all muutaclu.f'1 ta• corporatlona, accordtn1 to tb• Commerc~ ~partment'• 0 8-•oea Cond.ltlonl Dlpat. •• Tbat. at lealt. wu tbe proftt rete in tm. t:arV ta 1 tt wu a bit blCber, and in the flrst quart.tr of 1911 the ra tell to _... 4 pe.rcent. But. ln ceoent. tbe rate tor 2S bu been around 5. • Wblle this la .o. you may be aJIDCJllt ~ that ~ 1urve1 ol corporate profltl dooo 1n that time hu eome.~ wlth a ft1ure at Jeaat double that auppUed by U'I Wublnstoo at.atlaUcs factories. It la a myth that transcends eoclll and economlc cateeory. A few yeara aio ap Independent comuJtant polled the V;(ew ot iCOra of aaia eseeut.1"8 •t a meet!Q In lifc:irtnal. Their ~ waa 33 percent, or $3 cents. The U.S. Newt survey, conducted by the firm Markedo1 Concepts, found llUle difference betweett the belief ot those with execuUve·level incomes and thoe• on blue collar wa1ea. Tbole wbo eamed "'°'000 or more said 13 cent.a ot every aala dollar waa profiL Those with locoma of less than $15,000 aaid 15 cents. AGE MADE Ll1TLE DIFFEBENCE: rapcmduts un-der SS 1ave the samo l3·cent answer u tbolo 35 allld over. Libera.ta and conaervaUves alike ea.Id 13 cents. Union memben and non-members also agreed on 13. How do you explain lt? That would be tbe more mean- ingful survey. In ttl absence. certain obaenatlooa can be made With the Wtellbood that to some depee. &re•t or small, they bave aome relevance. There ll the me factor. Corporattons are enormous: they produce atatlltlcs that make those of many United Nations memben Jook Ute small change.Uodentandably, these companies also produce buee profit statistics.· WHEN FORD OR GENERAL MOl'OU or American Telephone & Telegraph produce quart.erly earnings that run 10 digits long, without any declmal pointe, the factor of . size Is impressed on the awed reader. Style is a consideration. Corporations live well. Their executJves orten travel nnt class, ride in big can. eat tit fancy restaurants. They eam blf incomes. 'lbelr children go to elite schools. Can anYone not associate tbi. comfortable style with wealth and profits? Hardly. Not even Jimmy Carter, pres· ideot of the United St.at.es. who bu S\lJJelted aucb ~ ecutlves are unfairly privileged. ~ Distortion must be considered. At bar1alnlng time. Wl~ ioo propagandists can be expeeted to promote the llOtioft of exorbitant profits. Prior to annual meetings. corporate: propof fUldilta crow about their profits. ~ And ln conver11Uons wt&h corporation executives.' eduntJOft alm01t certaJoly would be dlscaaaed aa posalble ccmtrtbutor to the mlalmpnukm about prom.. /I.. ... " TBB EDUCATIONAL SY&n!•, they aometlm~ upe. turna out a product that tnttt•U1 ll blued =~ · private eDterprile after ha~ bMD steeped lD tM , of tbe robber barons aod economic t)'nntL ~ But tbeo yoq have to wonder about all these. poulbWU.. 'Jbat same U.S. News atucb' found that wbll6. Americans have an exagaerated notion ot profits, th97 all4 believe business Js entitled to auch profits. ~ Not Just entitled to the 5 cents or ao that it ·~ earns. but the 13 to ts centa that Americans th.lnlt buslDest earns. t ~are'Drlll Official Ideas ., ., :· ,• ·: •• .. ·: I: •• •• . , To Aid lndustrfi • W AS:m:NGTON' (AP) -Ti.red of trying to peund ii; square peg Into a round hole? T1.ke heart. The govemmen~ has developed a drtll that makes square boles. , The Idea ls to lncrease the naUon•s energy supply. Tb' Inventors are three workers at the Bureau of Mines in Fort: Sne lling, Minn. · ~ THE 8QUABE0HOLE DRILL IS one of thousands ~ 1overnmeot Jdeaa that may bave tndustrtal applicado• Hd that are made available to businesses through the National Technical Information Service 1n Springfield. Va. The drllJ hu a trlanguJar cutting blade that aplns, and the, abaft. on wlUcb the bl ad& iS mounted moves in « patten) ~Ucini a 21At·foot IQU&N boJe witb aUgll rou"ded corners. saya Roaer J . MoneU. ooe of tbe ventors.. Wh7 drt1l a sqaare hole? :iquaro abatts get moro coal out of mines, If .. , .. Current.teehnoloa punches round holes i11to the vein. -DAL y P'llal' \\I IJ'\I· .._IJ \ \ EVENNG --11;cCM! "1111 9'd and Didi VM Patten gi.-lllM •I nw- ra.d ClOCiple lflflo IMOolM ........... °' tlle .......... beWw ,..... tit.,.. ...... "*II. GMCM! ..... ...,. ,...,. fmlt 'rely 8&'4IM, Oll.- BIOnlon. A~ -~ ""' 11'1 °"" tie -. "°',...,ca 11n1.) • lMI 8ftAOV IUNCH Men:ll ~ ow lot WOlnell'lllb. • THlAOOKa A prtelt le l!Ud9r9d Md a nunAlbea-.lna~ ~borhood. • ELEC'TNC COMPAN't • HllTOAY OF MElOCO ··QrMt MllY9ll ~" (fl NltCNl!W8 U08 MOVIE *** .. ....,,... (Plft 2) (1M4) Tippl Hechrl, 6-1\ C«.-y. A-·• oorn-s>IG llfe 1Nd1 her to bacOl'll• a compul1lv• tlllll, ,.... '* hulberld trill to ..... '* "°"' ~ and aaJv1ge tllelr De•tRepaid Robert Conrad (left) returns as Pappy Boyington in The Black Sheep Squadron tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4 with Jeb Adams, 16, sone of the late act.or Nick Adams. Conrad got Jeb the role -just as Jeb's . dad got Conrad bis first role over 20 years ago. ~(1hr.) • tlEWITCHS> cruelty to .-pec:ta. • ADIW-12 . . k Uncle Arthur melcae 9umy multiply in.teed of dlNp- 9 MACNEll./ LaiNiR AEPOflT Manoy Md RHcf .,. 1111191ad lo a MW 1»1 In WI U!*lment to catdt c;.- ~ w.va., ~· tD -OVER EASY au.1: GiMll MICkenzle. \D DIMEN8ION8 IN CULTURE Ii> COU.fCT1VE 8AA<WNINO GOeB TO SCHOOt. fl) U.. NTEACHAHGE (I) TO Tn.l THE TRUTH .. ~ .. ··AtchMOtogy'' ?:30 II YMEN HAVOC smUCK Ci) ITAABOAAO "The PNntom Harer Cl) UNTAMEO~LD •·New f3ulllM'• ®' MERV OAIFFIN Gueeta: Chetile Pt1de, Billy Cry1tll. • 1:00 D N8C NEWS : 0 UAASCLUB 0 ABCHEW8 0) ILOVELUCV ''Bridge CcDapeW' Tnio- lno the de>ielOC>rtWl1t of bridges, ~lnolng IMth A ,ooo-year-old 11ona l>rklgee to IM Golden Gate Bridge. Cl) t128,0000Uf.8TION \ti FANIL Y FE\JO e:OO II ()) C88 MOW! ''Spedll ~pa·• (Prem- ier•) CtlarlM Durning,·· It-TectnM. A llfldoww, 0 8HAHANA WllOW pt> -• ""'* drt"8f' kaepa him laolatad "°"' hi• tffn-age Chlldren, Gu.I: Dion. Lucy vows to tell the truth '"' 24 houri. Cl) AOAM-12 Olflolr A-'~ a fll,. low oltlcef ol un~. 0 NEWl YWB> GAME 0 MATO. GAME P.M. 0) THE 8RADV 8UNCH 01911 and hla tootbd te.ntnel• ., .... rtvel'• IJIUCOL reluc&antly .. o11 Illa -. ld)' rWl#ded aon In -. •1•1e aahocl. II GRIZZLY AbAM8 "The Run-.y"' A llaV9 (Roger E.~~ dUftng hla Wldettllgl In Channel Lbtbtg• fl KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles O K1l.A (Ind.) Los Angeles fJ KASc-TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 8 ~TV (Ind ) Los Angeles (1§l KCST (ABC} San Diego 0) KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles Cl> KCOP-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles fl) KC€T· TV (PBS) Los Angeles '1l> KOCE-TV (PBS) Huntmgilon Beach lhl ~·-aft•. dar· Ing -=-P4I from bofw:lage. la beli ... ldad by Adanl9 '""'° '~ him the tNe ~Of!Nedom. "MOVIE '* *\i ..,,_.,,, OI '7ha Body Snat~ (1'6e). Kevin Moeertliy, Dana Wynter. Giant p1ant1, ~ cm.. an amotbW drain lft their wtctllM, Invade Soudlarn Celltof.. nla. ( 1 lw .. 30 "*'-> MARY TYLER MOORE STRUTS AND FRETS IN TV SPECIAL TONIGHT i: Popular Star Loses Battle With Lightweight M•tert•I ~:= Special Sluggish • ::ff ary Tyler Moore Hm Thin Material • ~~ ByJAYSHARBUTr .. • LOS ANGELES CAP) -No doubt ~ Karming up for her new music- • 1ariety series next fall, Mary Tyler : \loore bas· a CBS special tonight ! . called "How to Survive the '70s and •:Maybe Even Bump Into Happiness" ; : :it 10 on Channel 2. :, Sad to say, it's not so hot. It (, ~enerally lacks the spa rkle that J: 111arted her old series. Six writers •'lid toDlgbt's show, but their material ; , s so thin it'd be marked AWOL if '' turned sideways. t• The show, co-starring Harvey . !!Korman, who'll soon bave bis own ~;~BC teriest and John .. Three's ~~Company" Ritter, bas at the fads and l foibles of tbla decade through ~sketches, song and dance. .. . ·~ ;1 TOPICS INCLUDE clothing, jog. • pag, tennis IUld singtes ban, the • ;atetci.. pegaecl on thofie bow-to-t:eope, ~1umve man11ala that ;;now occupy what used to be the ,;m&mor MCtlon of many booat stores. · ~ tr1 good tb see ellorts to avoid the 411llUU unrelated joke·SODf·JOke ormat ot vadit:Yhoura. But M'111'1 crivelilna crew doesn't Item to ... ow how best to 1bowcaH her ;uleotl I~ comedy! tonf udd.lric:e. ThtJ \Aal.lj rnue ber an eqer-to- !'»leaae ••tf, whether ln a sroup ~PY. skit or In • routine 1n •b.lcb orman, cast as an ~~!'>'~ ag. ~,,...uatn taiDll pli1er, ls Pli* .t.lb. ialNkeGal. Van Dyke, in a crowded elevator. Another is a bittersweet singles bar sketch with Bill Bixby. The last Js her class1 rendition ol a · loveJy tune, "Listen Here;• com- pos ed by Jan pianist Dave Frishberg for the show's finale. But the rest -well, let us hope nothing similar appears in her new CBS series next fall. Miss Moore bas too much talent to waste on third· rated material. '* CULTUBAL NOTE: Feisty Robert Conrad. wbo saved "Baa Baa Blade Sheep'" frobl a planned uJq by NBC this season, flies back to war tonight at 9 on Channel 4 in the pfe- miere ol IWI revamped aerie.. CoDt'ad, wbo plays Marine ace Pappy Boyfqtoa in the abow (Dow called •'Black Sheep Squaidrala''), seems aware that hi• Wednledl.Y night onntlldtloa ia ABC's 1op-ratecl ··~rii8~1els ... So he b eolna that three-ttcly teriell one better. Ills show, set on • Padftc lale in World War 11, noy bu four stunniac damsels -one i• bl• daughter. Nancy -u replara oa thoi•le. · TRIY Pl.&Y NAVY·u.~. ,...... • . TUBE TOPPERS CBS fJ 8 :00 -"Speclal Olymplcs.h Charles Dumlng stars in this TV movie drama about mentally retarded · youngsters. . K'll..A g 8:00 -0 Invasion of uie B<kly Snatehent." The pods take over Southern California in tbit acleoce- fictton classic from 1956 with Kevin McCartb..Y and Dana Wlnter. CB.St) 10:00 -"How to Survive the '70s and Maybe Even Bump Into Happl· ness." Mary Tyler Moore stars ln this musical comedy special with Harvey Korman. (See review below). f'GWCIMno'• CedlllO'" ... "OoMllo ~ ... "°"' .... i... "' ''t.Gnw'•fJWwdile. .. t:ao• TWU»f1%0NI! An aged ..... Wdaa "' Mrhonlla ....... ~ al "' d9ath. 10:00 8 Cl) WNW TYLllt MOOM ••How To 8llM\le '7ha 7°' And Maybe ~ ....., tnto lfllppiw" A ..,...... .............. .......... CUl'Mt ~~ciao­...... ~ ........ WV~,,._,.., andOllWa. 8 POUCIWOIMN ''Murder Wfftl Pretty ....... ~.po91g­........ .., ~ ,,,.. .,._ ... ..-- of th• outwardly g1amovroua but "----Wllltd of high tllhlan .... the ~ OIWIW (Ami ~) af a bOOk#IQ aoaner • folMld c:taad. I D NEWS a:t 8TAIB(Y& HUTQ4 "Hutc:fllllaon • Murder One'' Stanllly -...,. omo..-"..---- ln. -... ..,.tar Hutcll, ..__.,.,,...... *" It left lllm ... ~ dollW ~ diamond and • murder --lot his .,.,.. • HONMilOONEM ,..,.. .• e.. ... fin '° '-di Nin pool, and ~ ............. Illa a.-to oat on u. bom'9 good aide. • 80UIQITAOE ......_MMctHll& /N ...,_,.. 1U)·~ "TM WOttd Of ,,........ And ~.. Onion .• w ........ foal ..... TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS ~...,.. ...... .,,.. .......... a l<AOI front. • CAl'l'OtlDMO ... -.t>RNlNG 1ll00. TWrt.IGHT'!OfM 8&6-t~ad 1a111att Arlatlll¥ ...... --Olllt ,,...._ dcllt't .. him. -~ ••• "Ollolleo 8~ cata.. (1tH) DeAala ~ Abba lMla. A ~ eooountanl l'Nlkta • ~~'° ..... up .... *°" dOI-• .. Cl1ma natwMt. (1 ..... 30n*\.) .Mawr **~ "Ttta CaptalA'a Table .. (1980) .,JoM Glr'lg. -· PIOCl1 Q.wM1IM. A ,_ ~ ol • 11.uuy .,_,,..........,In. trio .. Nft "' Ofdlr to U9P .... POlllOtion S--• II. (t Ir,. IOIMI.) 12:t0• NOVI! "II* "Revolt Of Tiie a. ....... (ltM) Rollfld car... GIUa MMe F.-. anL A Ro!ftlll CIOIMlld ...,. ... the IMdar of • 9"0Up ol ,.,... .. the. Oowrnot al O&iL (1 ..... 85mln.) 1t:11 • Q MO MV8TERY MOVl8 **""A Mlghtmsa ~A Hlghfjllgllll .. (1878) SUiin Flannery, l<elllt 8axW; An opera ...... II "-'tad by the IUddertMd ~ ~·-of. --l'flfL-~-.J.. . ~-eta.I.CR) .. • .. ..r. • ....,' t2*tB Cl> Ko.w< Da•Clme lf•"'-"&y ~ ....... ~ .. ,_.,...., ~ tM ~ .. ooda o• •ll•nca when ha attampt9 to "-ttoat-Iha death• ot 1evaral biglhOl•1•L (A) 1•DTOMOMOW .1adlla OlaMol\ wm d.._ .. _.... ....... "TUl\iltl ~ ,.. MOVJi • MORNlHB u:eom•••·.-..· ~(1"7)1Qm..,.. ,,., Chandler. The ... ... .... cmlald .,, ..... .. the,_...._ .. NCOlnad. C2 ..... ...., NTERHOOH t2lOO ••• -or....ar..ot Wyom/lttg" (1941) ,,.., °"""'*11, Owtaa Callunt. n. nv.lr/ tlalwlM • **Ml "R4Jtnat, H.UI" (1151) Frank ~owjoy. ' flcfwd ~ 8ddllr9 111tt1e~w • ....-nnctiwmlda.......,., tro«lng. botMe OOlllpfloe cat.. a young olrt'• to "-* off In the ,_ of the~-(2 hrl.) eMOVE "T°"""* We ,,,,_. {1973) Alina a-oft. Oevld Wayne. 801 H11rok llttamp1Jt to bl1rlo' "* -'ii'• mo.I fllmoo'9 lllt• ....totM~hallacl AtMrtoa. ( 1 lw ., 30 INn.) 1:908 N£W8 2:0011~ ** "T~ Fot kWlng" (188e) 81-811 Orarigar. "'"""°8. (1 "' .. -~ ~Ill * "'ThaNttto Zonlblaa'" (tN7) ,,.,. Cerndlna, w..... em. I. city II ttw 11 tu 1 f llJ tiunmtllaql ...... ....___ (t hr,. 30..., ..... ~ .. -........ (1894) !Ml..,..,, ... --~,. ....... ... lc*l8 ......... romancea aia ownra da9*r.(111r .. '° .... Ali L_oses t:o 'Conipany' Too . . NEW YORK <AP> -••CJlarlie's.Angels."' botb "One Day at a Time," is Enough, .. ABC; "Pfc>. 10 the Family," bot.II CBS' tdecutoftbe Feb. 25.1 or J.8.7 m.illloo, botb CBS; ••Honeymooners ject UFO," NBC; "How CBS; Friday Moyle lS fi1bt In wbicb ABC. Special," ABC; .. The the West Was Won:• .. TbreeooaDate, ..... Muhammad All lost bis ThenextJDabows: Waltoas," CBS; .. Eight ABC; "Alice" and "All .,Fam~,"bothA.BC. • heavyweight crowo~~~~~~~ ........ ----~--~~------------~~~------~--------------------1book up the week's rat- ings -but not enough to knock ABC from the top, A.C. Nielsen figures show. The fight. woo by 24- 7ear-old Leon Spinks. was runner-up in the ratings race to ABC's •'Three's Company." The rating I-Or the Spinka-Ali fi1ht was 34.4, compared wtt.b 36.l for "~'s Company." Nielsen says that means 34.4 percent of the homes with TV watA:bed au or part of the boxin& apecial. ALI'S TITLE fight' with Earnie Shavers - aired by NBC the night of SepL 29 -WU tops in ratings for that week • .. Laverne and Shirley" and "Happy Days," the ABC bits whose one-two fmiab in the ratings has become almost routine, finished third and fourth the week ending Feb. 19 . Despite CBS" breakthrough -two other CBS shows • .. M·A·S-H" and •160 Minutes," were 1D the Top 10 -ABC fin:tsbed the week with a 22.J rat.. ing. · CBS WAS second ln the most recent poll with a 19.9 ratirig, NBC third at 11.s. ABC'• rating means in an averaee prime time minute, 22.a ·perc:eq& of the bomes ln tbe country with· TV were Uaned to the network. Ranked tut of the 6' J>fOIJ'UDI cbected WU an episode ol CBS" new "'Shlel4' and Yarnell'' aeries. Sometimes you want to leave the car.es of the worid behind and just sit back and enjoy the things life has to · offer. The Dally Pilot brings you the information you need to find entertainment -all along the Orange Coast.· Movie and theater ads and reviews, entertainment and restaurant fea~res and our new complete TV flstlngs keep you up to date. Entertainment, however, Is only part of our story. Every day the pagfts of the Dally Piiot offer you much more: news pf your community and world views, mbney saving advertising and coupons, action' sports ~nd a variety of excluslve features.