HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-23 - Orange Coast Pilot7
1
Bobbles ·Breaks.
Rangers' Chanee
For Capt11re
.
Barriers
THU RSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 23, 1978
VO\.. 71, .O. M, 4 S•CTIONS, • "MMS
'No, No, No'
. .
Denies Plul
By GAllY GRANVILLE °' .. Dellf ...... Sutt
Accused snuff sex film maker
Pred Berre Douglas denied to-
day that be planned the actual
t~rture, murder a nd dis·
memberment of two women he
l\lred to a remote desert area
last July.
"No, no, no," Douglas replied
when defense attorney Terry
Giles asked lf he really intended to slaughter wbal in reality were
2 Heists Net
Gems V al,ued
.At $575,000
'
.
While folks back. East stug their way
throuah mountainops snowdrifts and
shiver thrOugh a coal strlke, Orange Coast
residents are piloting the ir saitboats
(aboy.e) through s ummer weather.
lteachiaers-also are tJlking advantage of ~mpcratmes as high as 80 this week,
with bdach tt'laffj<:' jams· approaching
surntner qroportions. . .
0 \1
~1 . ,
Jewish
¥illttge
Stunned
I
'
CHICAGO °(AP) -A federal
judge struck down three or·
dlnanus enacted by the pre.
dominantly Jewish suburb of
Skokie today in an attempt to
prohtblt a group of Nazis from
marching there.
The decision by U.S. District
COurt Judge Bernard M . Deeter uned another legal obstacle to
the pla ns of title National
Socialist Party of America and ·
Its leader, Frank Collin, to
· marcb ln the village of 10,000,
home of numerous surviVOl'S ot
World War II Nazi death campS
and the relatives of others wbo lost their lives there.
The march has been tentative-
ly scheduled April 20, the 8lth
anniversary of the birth of Adolf
Hiller. Decker d ec lared un•
constitutional ordinances which
would have (1) banbed the wear-
ing of Nazi uniforms, (2)
forbidden the distribution ol "of•
fens Ive material," such as Nazi
banners and leaflets, and (3) re-
quired heavy insurance lo cover
any damage resulting from a
rally or demonstration.
Decker acted on a suit brougt&
by the American Civil Liberties
(See NAZIS, Page AZ)
Late nl1ht and earl,y
·mornina fog alona tile coast, otherwise ~unny •
Friday. Lows tonight 48 tQ
SS. Htgbs Friday 68 to 75.
,
- ----------
>12 DAILY PILOT S Thul'!day, Febtuary 23, 1971
w ASHINGTON CAP) -and five Rouse members to
President Carter summoned meet with him. Accord~g to an
congressional leaders to the aide to Gov. Julian Carroll of
White House today for a meetlni 'Kentucky, Carter also lovtted
on the coal strike as power ·the fovemors of West VirstnJa2 cutbacks from the 80·day work 'Ken ucky, Pennsylvania ana
s toppage triggered the first ma-Ohio to a later sessian at the
jor layoff in the auto industry. White House. .
The meeting was announced Carter aides acknowledled
amid speculation the president that some governors were com-
was plannlnl to intervene more ing but made no immedla~ an·
forcefully to aUempt to end the nouncement about that meetlnf.
lleaan wu arreated I.st July
tbet Mlu Pudleton came
forward With her stoey. GUe1 med her teaUmony in &n•
attempt to prove tlHat to lbe aix·
woQ)an. a1Jt·man Jury women
who Journeyed to the desert with
bis client lot porno pbo&O taking
1e11loos maoagect to aurvlve the
misadventure. To bolster that clalrn, he sub-
mitted numerous Polaroid PQmO
photo• purportedly taken by
Dou81&s at lb• remote cletert
area ud elsewhere:
For a man lio alle1od1Y
boa1ted of plannlnf to produce,
dlrect and film a SSS,000 X-r•ted
movie epic, Doul\al waa not
much of a hand with a Polaroid umera and black and white
.film. .. strike. The p:se of the Wblte _ earter askect•-. anatM_...9"118, m d ~mm: ..
although one possibility was that
the president was seeking to in-
crease public pressure on both
sides in the dispute to reach a
Th Pictures Giles sbowed Ute
jury were streaked and bl~
with other photo-taking
shortcomings. 1Tuv Forfeit
·Land After
~Pot Charge
settlement. •
The White Hous• bas prepared
leghlation to impoae a
settlement in the United Mine
Workers slrike but has made
clear its preference that both
sides in the dispute reach a
neRotiated aelUement •.
The senators iJlvlted to the SAN DIEGO (AP) :_ Two White House were Robert C.
men, one from Orange County. Byrd, W.Va., Alan Cranston, D·
have pleaded guilty in federal Calif., .Howard H. Baker, R-
court to possessing marijuana Tenn., Ted Stevens, R-Alaska,
resulting in government seizure Jennings Randolph, D·W.Va.,
·of real estate belonging to one Jacob K. Javits, R·N.Y., and
valued at $175,000. H..-rison Williams, D·N.J.
David C. Christian, 411, of The House blembers were
Downey and August Palmeri, 47,. Speaker Thomu P. O'Neill, D·
of Orange pleaded guilty lo Mass., Frank Thompson, D·
possession of large amounts of' N.J ~ob» ~-Obk>.
the uuctt we«t"'ift T flemitnt "'" John r.iu,oaes; 1'f·Arb., and
before U.S. District Judge James Wright, D-Tex.
William Enright. The strike's latest snag d~·
After the Wednesday session. veloped when the coal industry Enright set senlenctng for both rejected the UMW's "bottom-
men for March 27. line" contract proposal as unfit
U.S. Attorney Michael Walsh for a nationwide agreement.
sa 1d the action was the first The Bit um in o us C o a,J
property seizure here under the Operators A.nociation said early
Racketeering Influence and today it remained ready to re·
CorruptOrganizationstatute. sume talks with the union. but
In a plea bargain agreement. declared that in view of the
Christian admitted using !!'!Oney U M W's bargaining position,
derived from the marijuana more negotiations "hardly
venture to purchase the Orange seemed fruiUuJ."
County re~l estate now forfeited. The main industry bargaining
Palmeri. who was charged group Issued its s tatement
with aiding Christian in procur· severai hours before Labor
ing and s i:nuggling marijuana Secretary Ray Marshall and
from Mexico by. boat to the While House officials beean ~atUe area, forfeited $75,000 in meeting this morning "to de·
fmes to the government as part termine a future course of
or h~s guilty pica. action."
D1spos1.taon of four other de· The administration has been
fendanl'i in the case 1s pending. laying the groundwork for "def·
Much,.delayed
Vegas Nuclear
Testing Held
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -A
much-delayed nuclear test took
place today in the desert north
of here.
The lest, originally scheduled
Feb. 10, was repeatedly delayed
b y inclement weather. A further
postponement occurred Monday
night when a worker fell to his
death down an l ,170 foot shaft at
the site of a future atomic test 20
miles from where today's blast
took place.
The bod y of Randall
Chambers, 22, of Las Veeas was
removed from the s haO late
Wednesday after two days of re-
covery efforts wltb remote
equipment.
Dave Miller, a spokesman for
the Department of EnerCY, said
today's explosion had a yield
equivalent to between 20,000 and iso.ooo tons or TNT. It was the
first announced nuclear teal this
year, he said.
The tes t . code-named
Reblocbon, took place about 90
miles north of here.
.,,...PflfleAl
WPPO •••
pack her back In a . sr.eclal animal crate, hippo frelgb . ·
"I'm pretty sure we're gonna
get her tonight," Clark said,
then thought about It. "Actually
J 'm not sure of anything."
t
DAILY PILOT
initive" action to e nd the
walkout before it causes aerlous
economic damace. '
Wednesday nlaht,
administration officlal1 aald
privately the ouUoolc for tbe
talks was not promislna.
Meanwhile, Sinate Mai<>rlly
Leader Robert C. Byrd, D·
W.Va., today appealed•to the
coal operators to accept 1..be
greement already reached by
the independent PiUaburgb and
Midway Coal Mining Company,
as the basis fO&' an lnduatrywide
settlement.
"I understand the union has
iodkated a wlDlnines& to ac-
cept," said Byrd.
Byrd repeatedly referred to
the T~Hartley Act as ••a Jut
resort."
3,tioo Swarm.. . .
To&achea
On w edileaday
' Lif eguardl at "West county
beaches aereed toda1 that
educaUooal inatltuUons aloag
the Orange Coast could have-
sent half their faculties to the
bellfch Wednesday to be ef-
fective. .
The other half would have had
to suffer in stuffy classrooms
along with the very dedicated
seekers of higher leamlnl.
"Nobody went to school," ob-
served one Seal Beach lifeguard,:
noting it was smoagy wltb 7:>
degree temperatures and waves
were runoing two to three r,.t.
He eaUnia~ attendance at
the relatively small 1 beach'
sheltered by two jeltya al J,000,
a tremendous uumber for
February.
Lifeguards •t Huntington
Stale Beach; Botsa Cblc1 State
Beach. and Huntinston Beach•s
city beach sald waves bajl
dropped somewhat today.
Giles attempted to minimbe
the adverae jmpact of Mias
Pendleton's ether-soaked story
on the jury.
Derailllltmt i• Dlinois
. '
First, an attorney testified
that when Douglas was first ar-
rested the woman told him she
planned to \\lrite a book aboQt
the misadventure. Thirty-thr~ cari of a aoutt\'t><mnd Illinois
Central Gulf freight train Ue •strewn about
the right-of-way at Dongo1a:.ni., after the
train derailed Wednesday. No one was in-
jured in the accident, w~ich r~s.ult<:<f in
the evacuation of the business d1str1ct.
It WM to ti.e Utled ·"11\e Last
Uvln1 Victim of Fred Berre
Douglu.'
U.S. FmJds to Aid
Eu Immubizatiou?
FroaPcageAl
NAZIS •••
Union, which claimed the or-
dinances violated guarantees of.
U.•peeda.
The ACLU, because of its de-
fense of the Nazi group, has lost
tbou ... a4• of member .......tbe~_.:.·,..; >:~~..a':ialll!i~ • n. ftllialj 'Salftine ~ dedMli 1~.bicb ()verturned • Clrc"'-t :u. rt inj(inction banniqg the
In addition to establishing a
possible moneymaking motive,
Giles had Douglas explain hls
relationship with the woman.
The burly defendant told Uie
jury Miu Pendleton had once
worked for him as a barmaid
and was fired for allegedly t.ak-
in • moaey from tile cash register.
WASHINGTON CAP) -HEW
Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr.
proposed a $15 million federal
program today to :telp states set
up an11ual flu immunization pro-
grams aimed at the chronically
ill and elderly.
The eoaJ will be to at least
double the number of persons in
this bigh·risk group who receive
nu shots each year. Only 8.4
million of the· 40 million
Americans said lo be in the
high·risk category receiV4; an-
nua l flu shots from private
physicians, Califaao saRt.
The federally backed pro·
gram. scheduled to start next
fall, will employ a trivalent, or
three·part, vaccine that will pro-
tect against the Russian flu as
well as the A· Victoria and A·
Texas strains, the secretary of
health, education and welfare
said.
The reJaUvely mlld R\lssian flu already has appeared in
parts ol the country this year,
and experts expect it to re-
appear next winter. Persons
o~r aee 2S are considered to
have some immunity ~calnst
lb15 nu, and it ls not a serious
threat to normally healthy
persons.
Calllano sald, ''Those with the
1reatest risk of serious com·
pllcation or dealb from the
Russian influenza are persons
under 2S with chronic illnesses
and without natural immunity to
the Russian virus; persons
above 25 with chronic illnes,,;
and persons who are over 65."
He said only 15 states have
any flu program ''and most of
those are extremely small."
Callf ano said the Pto&ram will
not be run Ulce the 1overnment's
ill-fated, $135 million mass in-
oc11latJon proiram atainat swine
flu in Jt7S. which was baited after alqrt SOC> el the 44 million
peraol\9 wbo were inoculated
' w..-e bit by a rare paralyzing •
dlaeaae. About SS died. ~be swine Ou epidemic never
oceurm and the iovemment is
F ..... PageAJ
GEMS.~.
Eighteen Carat Shop, .was
robbed shortly before closing
Ume Wednesday.
·Saleswoman Lisa Forrette
told the same officers that two
men grabbed her as she took out
the trash. Ont 1110 gra~bed her
halt, she laid, and.told tfte'C>tber man: "Look for th~ •old In the
drawers and the tlbmounted
diamonds." •He etQJltled the dra•ers lnto a.,
black vinyl bag, 1«nortn1 the
dhplay c~aos and &bow
window, she said.
Th.ere wu QO lndlcation either man canted a weapon.
being s ued for hundreds or
millions of dollars by persons or
survivors of persons who were
paralyzed by the Guillain·BaJTe
Syndrome.
:N J ~Ch. Dl;NNY <AP > -A wild
ootout ln "l rural mountain
Califano said HEW will ask
Congress for $15 million ln extra
funds this year and about $15
million to $20 mUllon for each of
the next two years. The de-
partment expects to pay about
two-thirds of the states' costs of
··Re~· re~ In nortbern California left •••..a ad a thll'd person erWe.UV w.uaded 'Witb multiple bQl)W ....,...., the Trtnlty Coun~ . buying vaccine and inoculating
people during the firat two years
of the program and approx·
imately half or the eosts
thereafter.
~ .(AP)-A YolQ C•~~t.,eri« Cou~ Jude~ · ·~•~the d'Y ot Dam ~..ucec1 tewefH dit«'11ni .. aUOD I• lti 1 'method of narr6wfng,cfown a list
of job applicants.
t1 Peril Mid lod•1·
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VOL. 71, NO. 54, .. SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA C TEN:CENTS
N .1\'lesans· Vote .ColJlPronrlse on Rezon~
By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH
OI ... o.lly '1111 SMff
• Members of the North Costa
Mesa Homeowners Association
voted Wednesday night to accept
a compromise proposal for a
professional office complex on
land set for a March 7 rezone:
vote.
The homeowners' acceptance
sets the stage for a Monday
night hearing oo the com·
promise before the Costa Mesa
City Council, which previously
apRroved one developer's plans
to build several hundred apartmentS on a segment of the
properly. Howev~r. councilmen have
ah:,eady said they will not com-
ment on the compromise al the
5:30 p.m. meeting because of
possible legal ramifications.
But bomeowner.s say an af·
firmative reaction t.o lhe plan by
the council Is essential If the as·
soclatlon ls to back away from ,
the initiative it generated in
response to council approval of
the apartments.
With the exception of
Councilman Dom Raciti, the
council has adopted a stand
against the lnltiaUve which, if
passed, would force the rezoning
of 63.8 acres near South Coast
Plaza for single.family homes only.
Homeowners s ay thev will
I ' • Delly ........ ""941 .....
WHERE OH WHERE HAS MY HIPPOPOTAtilUS GONE, WHERE OH WHERE CAN SHE BE?
Lion Country Ranger Steve Clark Hunt• flloatril• From Old Flahlng Shack
·Costa Mesa
Candidates
Tell Views
Nine of Costa Mesa's 10 city
council candidates appeared
before an audience of about 30
people Wednesday to discuss
their views on city government.
Most of the discussion during
the forum 1poa10Ted by the
' Orange Coast Leasue of Women
· Voters centered on the zoning
1 controve1isy1 in nort-b ~Costa
I Mesa.
The only candidate to miss the
meeting was incumbent Norma
I~ Hertzog, who, meeting or·
ganizers said, was aUendlne to
eity business.
Here's some of what the
candidates had to say:
I Godfrey Sandeen: Describing
himself as a candidate un·
aligned with any power base in
the city, be pledged himself to
work for balance in the city's
growth. ··.
He said he is against the North
Costa Mesa rezone initiative. He
aa.id he believes some hith
density residential is needed to
provide housing for young
people and senior clU.zel\I.
Carl Mertie: He aald be is
"not quite for blgb density" In
Costa Mesa, but eaid be wlll vole
aiatnst the rezone initiative.
At the same time, he said he
stea construction of apartments
In north ~ta Mesa as a traffic
hazard, parUcularly on Bear
Street.
Den· Ball: One of the orl,UW
' clrculatOra of the rezone In·
• 1tiatlve petltlon1 be satd the
• Problem arose because the City
Council .. aklrted'ttt dutyJ,. •
l{e Aid be belmes only siqle
famur, .._.. lhcMl1d ht allowed ID CMla Mesa lo the fU\ure.
Hippo Hides
By PJDUP aOSMARIN OI .. ...., ...... ,....
Somewhere tn the La1una
Hills, a hippopotamus stUI b'-5
bubbles at the forces of law
enforcement.
Bubbles, posrlbly the only
animal in hippodom with a
chance at celebrity, lay happily
submerged today in a pond a
stone's heave from Laiuna
Ca~o.n. .Road, .bei: .j\l9gle IU!ar
what people call Leisure World.
The three-ton mama hippo
escaped ff'Om L~n Country
Safari on Monday.
"We had a chance to eet her
last night," said sleepy senior
ranger Steve Clark. "She
managed to elude us."
The hippo reportedly hulked
from the security or the pond at
about 8 p.m. for her nightly feed·
ing; four rangers closed in, trao·
quilizer dart guns at the ready.
"We got a tranquilizer into
her," Clark said, "but.she didn't
get the full dose. It bounced off
her bide."
In Costa Mesa
Ten Coda Meaau .ar• nAl9lilg
fur two optri mtU Oil fM fiw·
member City Counc•l. Tha
municipal election ia Mcreh 1.
FollotoJn.o. are pro/Uft of t"'9t of
the candidalei together totUa lhrir
• an.t10er1 to q1.1utiolil eO*.,_
keM uiue1 bl the citJI. 'Proft .. • of thrH i0ther 'CC1>dtd4te1, a,,,..,.,,ilft Wednudo~'• Dail11 Pilot.
lnjor1na&n .about the r~ C4114J4al•• tDiU . appear m nbu· ~~•of the. '*1o$paper.
Bubbles galloped t.be length of
two football fields back to the
pond, ramming a ranger jeep ln
the process, dentine it, It was re-
lated.
"Tonight we're gonna make
our big move," said Clark.
"We 're gonna have (our or nve
jeeps out t.Mte so we can cut her
off from U..t lake.
"She wants to get back to Uon
Cotllftry (as sbe did on a pre·
vious brief unescorted excursion
from the park). Sbe's trying to
eet back.
"But we don't want to let her
go back by herself, for fear
she'll detour through Leisure
World."
The ranien plan to dart her
ctnd either .ride Bubbles back in
the scoop ol an earth mover or
pack bet' back ·in a special
animal crate, hippo freiibt.
"I'm pretty sure we're gonna
get her tonight," Clark said.
then thought about il. ••Actually
I 'm not sure of anything."
turn a1alnst their lnltiaUve,
generated in re.1pon10 to council
approval ot 539 apartments on
one of the parcels, if tbe council
agrees to at least look at the new
plan after the election.
North Co1ta Me sa
Homeowners Assochtion President Jon Paradis has
set Monday as the deadline for
developers to provide a "sitned,
sealed and delivered" contract
binding them to the homeowner
approved compromise plan.
Homeowners are expected to
meet following Monday's council
session to take a fornral stand on their lniUative.
About 40 persons turned out at
tbe Wedn es day nieht
homeowners meeting at Bear
Street School to reconsider the
SO·C•lled "Wilson Plan." This
refei:s to new deveJopment pro-
vislons offered by former mayor
Robert Wilson after tbe de·
ve lo pers and 'bom eowner
representatives already bad
struck a 14-polnt compromise.
The Arne! Developmedt
Company will develop tbe
laraest parcel, 46 acres near
Bear Street and the San Diego
Freeway and company officials
said they couldn't live with
Wilson's plan.
Wilson Wednesday withdrew
bis plan that would have sliced.
(See LAND, Page A2)
Mistrial Sought
Waddill Juror Heard Comment?
By TOM BARLEY
OI .. Dally ~ MMt
Lawyers for Dr. William
Baxter Waddill asked the jodie
in bis Orange County Superior
Court murder trial today to
declare a mistrial on the basis of
a lleged misconduct by two
county orficials involved in the
trial.
Judge James K. Turner was
told during a hearlng conducted
outside the presence of the jury
that at least one juror beard
comments prejudicial to the
defen se after the dose of
Wednesday's court session.
Defense attorney ¥albour
Watson said bis wife. Sidney, is
prepared to testify that s he
heard part of a conversation
between Dr. Robert Richard anll
District Attorney's investigator
Don Burton.
Watson said his wife will testify that she was wailing for
an elevator with at least one
juror In the .group around her
when Richards and Burton
engaged in a conversation
prejudicial to the defense.
Dr. Richards is the coroner's
officer who conducted an
autopsy on the ZS.wee~ ..,ID\
allececllF ~ WJllldUJ
alter he (al.Jed to 8lilDr1. the cbild
last March ~ tn Westminster
Communlt.Y lfctspital.
Richards' verdict that the
. baby died as a result of manual
strangulation is being stronaJy
cballenied by tbedefense.
Watson, who is also a
physician, and fellow defense
attorney Charles Wedman,
argued today that Richards'
testimony is worthless since be
has not adequately proved the
true cause of death.
Judge Turner denied that
motion and told both lawyers
tbal their argument s
challenging the coroner's ruling
Inmate Eecapes
SAN QUENTIN (AP) -A
Santa Clara 01an. John Has·
seniahl, 29, unprisoned for re·
ceiving stolen property and writ·
Ing bad checks, walked away
from a minimum security area
at San Quentin prison,
authorities said today.
work together. ~d high-density
development remains something
that should be taken on a case-
by-case basis. We bave mixed
needs."
Wiiy a.e yoa quaWJe4 fet lbe
city cqudlT
"I can brtng a «ood expertise
to the council with my lona·
ranae planning abUtty," said
M'ra. Schafer. Sbe also cited her
)VOrk )'i!tb dvic lfOUpa abd hei:,
knowlectp of the clty u criteria
for bet elecUon.
would be better addressed to the
jury at the end of the trial.
But the judge assured both
defense lawyers today that he
will bold a full. inquiry Into the
incident reported by Mrs.
Watson and two other incidents
brought to his attention by the
defense.
Watson told the judge that a
juror talked to Dr. Richards at
length during a· recess in court
action Wednesday and that the
juror straightened the witnesses'
tie while they talked.
And he accused Richards of
making comments that could be
construed as derogatory to the
defense in the presence of the
court reporter during another
break in the trial.
Judge Turner said he will call
Mrs. Watson to lhe witness
stand to report the conversation
she allegedly ~erheard and will question the jurors involved in
the misconduct cited by the
defense.
'Nf. Mesa Charges'
Transient Charged
In Newport Robbery
~he FBI announced today that
a mustachioed man believed
responsible for four Costa Mesa
bank robt>el'ies in a two-week
span has been charged with only
one count o( J'Obbery stehl'DJnlM froln a M. 0 bank ebl 111
Newport kacli.
William l>rvllle Cudd, a 31·
year·old transient was ap·
prehended Monday by Santa
Ana oollce and FBI agents at a.
Snuff Suspect
Denies< Plot
For Torture
By GARY GRANVILLE
CM• o.ilf ...... SUH
Santa Ana motel.
He was brought before a U.S.
magistrate in Santa Ana and or-
dered held in lieu or $50,000 bail. •
FBI agent Laroy Cornett said
Cudd has been transferred to
Los Angeles County Jail where
ha awaits a March 2 preliminary
hearing b e fore a federal
ma1istrate.
Cornett said he will seek
further indictments against
Cudd for the Costa Mesa bank
robberies, and possibly for an
e arlier robbery in Huntington
Beach.
"We think it's the s ame guy,
but he's only been charged with
the robbery in Newport Beach,"
said aient Cornett.
Cornett said Cudd appatently
acted alone in the aJleged bank
jobs. In each instance a man
with a large handl e bar
mustache entered banks and
presented a note and a paper Accused snuff sex mm maker
Fred Berre Douglas denied to-
day that he planned the actual
torJure, murder and dis-
mem bennent or two women be
lured to a remote desert area
last July.
· bag to a female teller, urging
them to quickly fill the bag with
cash.
"No, no, no," Douglas replied
when defense attorney Terry
Giles asked if he really intended
to slaughter· what in reality were
two undercover policewomen
posing as porno models.
Douglas took the witness stand
in bis own defense as his trial on
soliciting murder and attempted
murder charges entered its final
phase in Orange County
Superior Court.
The prosecution alleges that
the 54-year-old Costa Mesa man
recruited the two attractive un·
dercQver policewomen to take
part in lesbian bondage photo
taking sessions in Yucca Valley.
Giles is attempttrig to prove
that htls client was simply a big
talker and little doer when it
came to carrying oul bis film
making boasts .
As part of that effort the de·
fense lawyer Wednesday· called
23·year-old Vicki Pendleton to
the wltnesa stand.
M Isa Pendleton tesUfied U..t
in October of 1976, she had been
lured to the desert by Doualu on the pretext be wantA14 to take
1om e bikini-clad ~heesecake
photos. •
Instead, the wooian tesUfled,
Douclaa forced ber lnto helpless·
neas by smotbertnc her with an
ether-drenched ra1.
When she awoke, Miu
Pendleton eild1 1be bad been
stripped of tier clothing and was ·
bound.
<8"TOaTUaE. P11e Al)
The bandit, who displayed no
weapon, then escaped, apparent·
ly on foot.
'lbe four Costa Mesa robberies
all occurred in the early
afternoon between Jan. 24 and
Feb. 6, netting the quick movhfg
bandit more than $4,600.
On Feb. 10, a man matching
the same description robbed the
Bank of America branch in West
Cliff Plaza in Newport Beach,
taking about $1,200.
Agent Cornett said Cudd
caught the attention of a Santa
Ana police officer who notified
the FBI after the officer saw
survelllance photographs taken
at one or the banks.
Coast
Weather
. Late night and early
morning fog aloq the
coast, otherwise sunny·
Friday. Lows tonight 48 to .ss. Highs Friday 68 to 75.
INSIDE TODAY
Ht'• Mr. Whteln·Deolcr,
tM car ICJlesman wlto'U Uand
on Ilia Mod to make.a deal.
. Cal w orthingtott talb. about
Ilia lift. Sft Feat~,. hQe Cl.
TOR!fURE •.
force r to perform ae•uil rltea wlth him.
The woman laid ahe dld not.
report the desert mlaadveoture
to police becauae Douclas to!d
btr ht wu linked with the Mafia
and sbe feared reprisal.
For a man who allegedly
boasted of planning to produce,
direct and film a $551000 X-raltd
movie eplc, Dou1laa was not
much ot a bt.nd with a Polaroid
camera and black and white film.
The plcturea Gilea showed the
Jury were It.reeked and blesaed
with other photo-tat io1 shortcomlnp. au.. attempted lo minimize
the adverse impact of Mtaa
Pendleton's ether-soaked story
on the {W'Y· Firs , an attorney testilled
that when Douglas waa first ar-
re•ted the woman told him ahe
planned to write a book about the misadventure.
It was to be titled "The Last
Living Victim of Fred Berre Douglas."
In addition to establishing a
posaible moneymaking motive.
Giles had Douetaa explain his
relationship with the woman.
The burly defendant told the
jury Miss Pendleton had once
worked for him as a barmaid
and was fired for allegedly tak·
in I money from the cash
register.
It was after the burly Costa
Mesan was arrested last July
that Mias Pendleton came
forward with her story.
Giles used her testimony In an
attempt to prove that to the six·
woman, six-man jury women
who journeyed to the desert with
his client for porno photo taking
sessions managed to survive the
miaadventure.
To bolster that claim, he sub-
mitted numerous Polaroid porno
photos purportedly taken by
Douglas al lhe remote desert
ai:-ea and elsewhere.
HEW to Prol>e
Welfare Roll.s
WASWNGTON (AP) -HEW
Secretary Joseph A Califano Jr
said Wednesday that a computer
search has round 7,074 military
personnel on welfare rolls in 24
states and the District or
Columbia.
A followup investigation will
be made to determine lf these
persons are eligible for welfare
or If fraud is involved, the
secretary or health, education
and welfare said.
The 7.074 were among more
than two million military
personnel on active duty
throughout the world whose
Social Security numbers were
ch ecked against the Social
Security numbers or welfare re-
cipients.
.,..,, ................
F<?rmcr Costa Mesa mayors Robert
W_1lson (cente r , dark g lasses> Alvin
Pmklcy (foreground. s triped tie), Claire
NelsQn (right of Pinkley) and John Smith
<hidden behind Pinkley) carry the casket
of anothe r former mayor. Arthur Meyers,
from St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church
following funeral services Wednesday
afternoon. Other paJlbearers were Ellis
Porter and Harold Norton. Bob Hayes of
Bell Broadway Mortuary is at front in
light suit.
Fro•P..-AJ
COUNCIL HOPEFULS PUSH CAMPAIGNS.
area ..
How will you vote on the Nortb
Costa MeH rezone lniUatlve?
.. I would have to say I'm
a gainst It because I 'm for
balanced government," be said.
"lnitiaUvea have a place when
elected officials fail to respond,
but I'm just not sure what it will
do lo our long.range de
velopment plan.."
Besides completJon of the
Costa Mesa Freeway, do you
have any apeclfic ldeaa lo lessen
city &ralfk problems!
·'I think we need lo encourage
more freeway use and control
ingress and egress into in-
dustrial areas lhat are used
heavily," Sandeen said. He also
suggests added police patrols to
hold down tramc accidents on
Adams Avenue and Victoria
Street.
What u your atand on the
Jania tax lAiUaUve!
"My feel.mg is that it favors
business, but homeowners need
tax relief and I think it sbouJd be
a signal to legisl&lol"$. At leaat
leg11lators are respondin1. U it
comes down to the wire I may
vote for it."
Wbat oUaer key laaaea are fac-
ing tile city'!
"High density is a concern and
balanced dev e loptnent la
needed. Uvln1 units for lower
income persona is a responsiblll·
ty for all the area."
Sandeen also supports more
recreational facilities such as an
Olympie-sized community
swimming pool.
Why are you quaUfled for &Jae
city councU?
··1 think it's important for
everyone to become involved in
the community and 1 think I
would be well-suited for this
position because of my ex-
perience. I've taken a hard loot
at city governments •·
Cbrlstopber M. Steel, 36,
operates his own cosmetics dia·
tribution outlet and bas been a
resident of Costa Measa at 1$43
Orange Ave. for the past six
years.
A native of Pittsburah. Pa.,
Steel has attended colleges In
the East and
ha s taken
classes at
Golden West
Coll•ae and
UC Uvtne
Steel, un·
married, hu
served on the
Newport
Mesa Unllied
ITHL • School Dl1-
acroaa the Santa Ana River. We
should put 17th Street under·
1round at Newport Boulevard
and 19t.b Street should be the
aa me under Newport and
Harbor boulevards. ll abowd
have been done lon1 a10."
Wlla& 11 7ottr t&aad om t'8
Jarv .. tu laldaUvet
"l slped lt and circulated it
and I'm more ln favor of it now
than ever before. U cuts off re·
venue which will cut down 1ov·
ernment spendln1.
Wlaat edaet te1 IQtlel are fac·
IDI ~dtyT
,,... PflflC! A J
LAND REZONE. • •
waa aot awa
agreem~ot w
Kawamura
chanie.
that Amel's lease
landowner Gene
prevented the
;. buildings would
barrier.
"The bla issue ta that
noted former mayor Wilson. The homeowner• have alao
wilhdrawn a plan to block street
access from South Coast Drive
onto the two properties to the
nor\h to be developed by Henry
Se1eratrotn and Henry Roberts.
Roberta sa.Jd Wednesday nllht
that the access wa• easentJal,
but said developers would agree
to move the entrance closer to
Bear Street in order to leaaen
noile in the adjacent
Greenbrook tract.
Developers alao have aareed
not to put any restaurants weal
of a 400-foot strip alon1 Bear
Street, but Roberta ••Id
restaurant parkln& may extend
past t.hli area.
The proposed compromise
points call ror a "aarden type•·
office complex to be1in al the
San Die10 Freeway and extend
north to Sunflower Avenue.
Developers have agreed lo ex-
t en a Ive landacaptna and
aetbackJ from existing homes
and Amel's 1Z1 homes to be buUl
on the westerly portion of its
acrease on both aides of South Coast Drive. ·
A two-sto'l belaht Umit would
be impose near homes and
three-1tory offices would be
limited to the acreate rronUn1
Bear Street under the plan.
Aroel would be allowed to
buJld rour·atory unlta alon1 the
• •
Steel aaJd he la a1aln1t any
more bllb density developments
becauae there t. 10 Utile land
left to develof. He aho
advocates counc lmaolc di•·
trtcta in the tuturt and a code of
ethics for elected offlcials.
Wlay an yoa quURed fort.be
dty cotmd.IT .
"I feel that I'm qualified
becau1e of my frame of re·
rerence t.hat la not currenUy on
the council. I'm independent and
not Into the buddy-buddy system."
No piedical faciUUes ~ould be allowed and restaurant& would
have to be "of Reuben'• quaUW
or better."
Developel'I 111 the ofrlce com· rl•x would generate more
raffle than alnale-famUy
homes, but point lo a "counte~
flow" situation in whkb office
employees would be arriving
and leavln1 In th• opposite
direction ol homeowners.
Only two of the tort)' people ln
attendance voted a1aln1t the
compromise pl._n.
A rnel partners Georee
Araryros and Harry Rinker did
not attend the meetlng. Another
developer involved, He11ry
Segerstrom, was there, but d.ld
not comment.
Roberta, one-lime mayor of Cypress, did .the talking for de-
velopers.
Panel Slate•
I
:Navy Inquiry
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The
commandln1 olflcer of tbe navy
Recruit Tralnln1 Command U.
scheduled to tnUfy next week
before a con1re11lonal eom-
mittee on alle&ed recruit abuH
and reoruillnl malpracUce, says
an alde to Rep. T.boma• J .
Downey, D-N.Y.
However, Capt. Ro1er D.
Munson aaid Wedneaday he
knows nothlng of bi.a scheduled
March 1 appearance In
Washin1ton, D.C. before the
House Armed Services
Com mlttee. He aa{d be bu no
plana to be lo Wa1bJn1ton not
week. nor bu he been advlled to
10 there.
"Mun.IOn will appear u a wtt-
neas before t.he committee. uld
Rlcb Dtsalvo, a spokesman for
Downey, Who called fOf the In·
veatlaaUon into alleaaUou ot
recruit abuse and harutment
and the death of two )'ount
trainees.
Fr .. rapAJ
t r 1 ct C1t1aen1 Advuory
Com mattee and the Orange
Cou nty Repubhcan Central
Com mittee He is a member of
the Chamber of Commerce and
the Costa MeH Historical Soc:ie-
ly. MESA CANDIDATES. • •
Comm isslon, she suggested
some problems could be solved
before reaching the proportions
of the north Costa Mesa dispute
by formation ot an advisory
council representing all of the
city's homeowner groups.
She noted that abe was one of two commissioners to oppose the
developer's plan in north Costa
Mesa when it was before them for
approval.
Tbomu Keefer: Noting that
people in Costa Mesa are seek-
ing a "hi1ber quality of Ufe," he
said he prefers construction of
single family homes to the hllh
density types of hou1in1.
He declined comment on the
north Coata Mesa rezone con·
troversy "because I'm not
famtuar with it."
Darry OUver: She aald she ls
looking forward lo aeelnt a com-
promise plan that ls to be pre-
sented Monday evenin1. but she
said she will closely eumine the
lnl•nt ot the develo~ra in pro-
poslng the compromlae.
OAANOSCOAIT ' DAILY PILOT
She aaid a new ronin& des·
JgnaUon which would allow for
sinjle family homes in medium density may provide a solution
to the need for more hieh densi-
ty projects and the problems
those r.roject.a cause.
Clar 1 Steel: Noting that he
believes a "better Costa Mesa Is
not a bigaer C~ta Meaa:· he
charaed that lack ot council
leadenhip led to the reaone in·
ltiatlve which he aald he tavon.
ffe •aid, aa a councilman, he
would not approve any R..c proj.
ects and would only vote for R-3
projects "if they are or high
quality." He said he has res-
ervationa about a lot or R·2froj·
eels but ls "all l.n favor o R-1
bulld1n1."
Paul Raver: Said he ia hopeful
that the compromiu to be un·
veiled Monday will allow both
sldea in the rezone controveny
to work toward a reasonable
settlement. Ii• sald l\e believes there is
atlll a need for apartment con-
struction in Costa Mesa, but the
\ocatlon "peedJ to be thoufbt
through more careful y,
particularly in ll&hl or the city
aervlcea these type of projects
need."
Mlcbaei Elll•t He char1ed that North C~ta Mesa and the
developments of the ~gerstrom
family havt§ at~acted a dis·
propbrtlonate amount of <?ity
fundlnf and services and that
North Costa Mesa has more
PQllllcal power fn the clty thaui
other •re••·
While favortna a balance
betweep slnalo famUy J>rojecta
and apartments, he said It la un• rtalbllc to expect that ma~1
more ain&I• famlly projecta wW
be buJlL becJUH of Ila• hl•h cost
of land llJ1d the ldlh demand for
bousin& in Coeta Meaa.
How will yoa Yot.e on tile Nortll
Coa&a Meu ftSOIM llllUatlveT
"I'll v<U for the homeowners'
stand," aald Steel, who views
that pro.initiative position "as
the lesser of two evils.''
·-rm not happy with the
rationale, but 1 think the whole
thing could ba\te been avoided lf
the council bad shown some
roreal1bt."
Bealdes com.,letloa of U1e
Coat a Mesa Freeway. do 1oa .
have aay apecUk Ideas to leuea
c1t1 trallk problemtT
"We should extend 19th Slreft
Carter Holds
Action in
Coal Strike
WASHIN.GTON (AP>
President Carter has decided
not to Intervene at tbla point to
end the 80·day-old coal strike,
con1resslon1l leaders said to·
day. ·
After Republican and
Democratic leaders met wtth
Carter at the White House to re-
view the strike, they said the
president is conlinu\n1 to review
aeveral poulblUtJes, but that he
intends to bold off further before
-tntervenlnt to lmpoae a
settlement.
Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn.,
said Carter apparently Will de-
cide what action lo take after
the weekend. ,.1 think he wanta to ke.p his
optJons optn," Baker IJld.
The Senate Republican lead r
also wat'ned thet lt could be hate
April or Max before COn1rua
~ould bt •* to act on any a~lal lt&llladoo th• preakltnt
rnlaht aeek:"'° '"41 the 1trlk•. Such lqll)aUOft would ~ effdtd
U CHltr ~ere lo bave tbt ft4ltral ;'."-""'m~t take ~ lb• JDIMl:;OI'_, requlr. blnd.lnJ
arbttraUali. •r Ultft. laker ••14, theft oouUI b• N percent power cn1U1ack1 ln 1omt ar .. a and. mtlUou ti.~ out Ot wort.
H• 1&14 lnvott.1 tb• T1ft-ffahl1, Act WOali bt a ~ ftnt Jtep ftw earttr to a.lit ln
tbe meilltlme.
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Dmlty ............. ~ ......
lfead!I for the Ra~
Galen Wollenberg of South Laguna may only be a year
and a half old, but he demonstrated Wednesday in South
Laguna Park that he's not afraid of controversy. Heap·
pears to be boosting the effort to draw the Rams to
Orange County, while also making a J>C?i~nant plea for
clothing optional beaches. Keep on truckin • Galen.
U.S. F11nds to Aid
Flu· IDJmunlzation?
WASlllNGTON <AP) -HEW
Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr.
proposed a $1S million federal
program today to help stat.es set
up annual Ou immunization pro-
grams aimed at the cbronlcally
ill and elderly. 'l:be goal will be to at least
doUhle the number of persons in
this high-risk group who receive
flu shots each year. Only 8.4
million of the 40 mllllon
Americans sald to be in the
hi&h·risk category receive an-nual flu shots from private
pbys!clans, Callfano said.
The federa\ly backed pro·
.
Vandals Shoot
Collnty Cars
More than 300 cars parked in
the Cowan Heiehts area of Orange County had their
windows shot out Wednesday
nteht by unknown vandals,
allerifrs omcera said.
Deputies sald the suspects ap-
pa re n tl y drove tbroueb •
number of streets in 'the res-
idential area, peppering the
parked vehlc1es with pellets
from a BB gun. ·
Officers eatlmated the
damaee at more than $15,000.
gram, acbeduled to start next
fall, will employ a trivalent. or
three-part, vaccine that will pro-
tect againat the Ru.utan nu u
well as the A-Victoria and A·
Texas strains, the secretary ol
health, education and wellare
said.
Tb• relaUvel.1 mild 1lmatan
fl• already bas appeared lo
parts of the country um year,
and experts expect it to re·
appear next winter. Persona
over qe 25 are considered to
have some immunity •&•inst
thil nu, and it is not a serious
threat to normally healthy
persons.
Califano uid, ''Tboee wtt.b tbe
greatest rlJk of seriOUI com-
plication or death from \be
Russian lnfluenza are penOn.s
under 25 with chronic illnesses
and without natural Immunity to
the Ru11ia11 virua; persons
above 25 with chronic illness;
and persons who are over 65~
He sald only 1S states 4tve
any nu program "and most of
these are extremely small."
Califano said the program will
not be nm lite the government's
Ill-fated. $13S million mau in-
oculation program againlt •wine
nu in 1974, WblCb WU halted
after about 500 of the 48 million
persons who were inoc:ulated
were bit by a rare paralyz.lna
di.lease. About 5S dled.
Branch Appointed
County RecOrder
Assistant county recorder Lee
Branch wu appointed by the
Orange County Board of
8'aperviaorl Wednesday to serve
tbe ~ term of reUrins COunty Recorder Wfl.\e Carlyle.
B1 GABY GRANVILLE
OlllllOMtr .........
Support for a proposed county
ipollt[cal reform ordinance
withered Wednesday when two
Orance County 1upervisora
withdrew their bacldni.
The much talked abOut reform
measure acheduled to be enact-
ed be1an the day 1upported by
all flv' county supervtson.
However, at the close of
Wednelday'a ..PUblic bea.riJlC, it
was shuffled back to tht Count)'
Counsel for more rewotkina and
had only 3-2 backing by the five-
man Board of Supervisors.
First to yank b1s support from
the proposed ordinance was
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich.
He said the reform measure
would give an unfair campaign
fund raising advantage ln the
upcoming June primary election
to incumbent county of·
ficebolders.
t
Diedrich based his view on the
fact the proposed ordinance
would limit the amount
candidates for county office can
accept from incllvidual donors to
$1,000 an election.
o.lty ..............
ST!PPINO DOWN
County Cle~ St John
TuoOCMen
· lndi.cted /or
Buanapping
Two men accused of hijacking
a bus that was carrying a party
of tourists from the Disneyland
Hotel to the Los Aneeles
International Airport were ln· dieted Wednesday on kldnaping
and robbery charges by the
Orange County Grand Jury.
Named in the lndlctment with
them is a tb1rd man who al·
leaedly Joined the pair ln three
armed robberies commlUed in a
seven-day period.
The indictment identifies the
busnappers as Bradley John
Hess, 19, and John Warren Ellis,
18, both of Anaheim. Both men are
held in the county jail with ball~
atfl00,000 ..
The third indlctee ls Bert Chris Banner, 20, of Anaheim,
who is held in jail with bail set
at $50,000. All three men will be
arraigned in Superior Court
March 13.
Police said Ress and Ellis are
accused of seven ltidnappinas
and seven robberies lo con·
nection with the holdup of the
Disneyland bus Jan. U.
/, Counlf Derk
'Will Not Run'"·
Oranee County.Clerk William t. St John announced today that
be will not seek re-elecUon in
Jude. .
St John's decision, taken after
bis earlier announcement that
be would be cainpaignlni aaaln
in June, came aa a shock to
many county sources 'Vbo bad
predicted bia overwbelmiJlC re-
election.
St John explained that bla de·
cislon is based on bis belief that
an Aasembly blll which bu
sought to place employees of the
county clerk's office under the
control of the Superior Court, "ls
now doom'ed."
"That was the only reason I
decided to run again," St John
said. ''I think the independence
of the county clerk's office is
now assured and 1 can go to re.
tirement with an easy mind."
St John. 58, flled for a seat on
the Orange County Republican
Central Committee today.
"It will keep me bu.ay one day
a week and that's all I want
right now," he said. "With that
and my helping in my wife'•
business, I think I will be pretty
fully occupied."
The declsloD by the veteran
county clerk appears to leave·
the field clear for a member of
his staff, Superior Court Clerlt
M arsball Norris, who at this
point was St John's only op-
ponenL · Norris, an unsuccessful
candidate for the office of
Orange County Sheriff in recent
years, expressed delight at the
news of St John's retirement de-
cision.
"Best thing I've heard this
year," be said. "And it comes at
a time when my own campaign
for the office is catching fire."
~ark to Testify
SEOUL, South Korea (AP> -
Indicted South Korean lobbyist
Tongsun Park left for
Washington today to teaUfy
about bis alleged Capitol mu ln·
nuence-buyin1 on behalf of the
Seoul 1ovemment.
St John. however. feels that
Norri• baa little chance of
election. "I know of at least three top
night people who will be HMln&
my olfice,0 he aald. "And I firm~ belleve that one of them
will win the election by a sub-'
atantial number of wt.I over '
anytbm. that Nonia can put
toeether.••
Thieves Get '
$575,000
InJewe"ls
LONG BEi.CH (AP) -Nearly
$S75,000 in dlalDonds and other
jewelry wat taken in two
separate incidents along this
port city's "Jeweler's row,"
police aa14 today.
In one lnltailce. $.1U,275 worth
of uncut dlamonds in a briefcase
wu taken Wedndday while the '
owner made a call from a
telephone booth, leaving the
briefcase co the around out.side.
In a robbery ftve hours later, a
jewelry store clerk was roughed
up by two bandits in s.ki masks
who ransacked the store for
$227 ,000 worth of uncut
diamonds, gold cubes and
custom rings, officers sald.
Richard Wolf, 28. of the Loi
Angeles Jewelry ftrm of Charles
Wolf and Sons, said be kept an
eye on hls briefcue while mak·
lnc a '5-mlnute call to New Yott
·from a phone boqtb on Pine
Avenue.
But tbe Ude! sn~ aw11 un-
seen wit.b the brlefcaae, he tcld .
officers Robert Van der Meer
and Stuart Gordon.
Wolf said that before be m..te ..
his call. be had been showtna hla ·
diamonds to several of tie
jewelry finna which. line Pine
Avenue.
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COLOa 11D1 G&EEN ! ll'1 difficult to uodent.and wby
our Orl!Df• ~ty Supervllor R&lpb cw•'• real name. iall't O'an.n, O'Toole or Murphy. He clearly haa the Luck o• t.ht lrtab rldJn( oa his •boulder ..
· Clark, u Anaheim's lift to our county aovemment, could take a praUall into a mud puddle and find a diamond
tn the murky watera. I( he ever discovers a discarded Irish
Sweepslalrea ticket In a wastebasket, it will tu.m out to be
the $100;000 winner.
TIDS MAN OOULD FIND bonanzas
In bramble buahes. He must carry
abamrocka in his wallet.
Clatk, you see, ls curreotl)r heading
·an outfit called the Committee to
"Relocate.the Rams 1n Orange County.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AJ>) -· · No one wu more •wt>rised than·
the poUce when. hostaee Robert
Herrm6nn subbed h1s weary
•bcluctor•s 1un and ended a SO.
hour ordeal with a bank robberY
SWlpect.
"We had no tdea he •as eoing to do that," Springfield Police
Lt. Roeet Evans said In descrlb·
lne bow Herrmann went for the
. 38·caliber pis\ol Wednesday.
THt GUNJWAN RAD freed
lterrmann's two youn1 sons
several hours earlier ob a rural
highway near the Jodl~a line ln
exchange for tbe cetaway car
provided by the FBI •
·~~Jied miM our J>IAlll t.bAt lfwe-.&M~ty I was to.
10 M U.. WMIQl and the acent
WU ... to~ far tbo IU&pect, u
Ev .. wet. 'Wblea tb8 IMPltac• arabbed tbe cun m 1ari It to
u, it wu evea bieier ttian our plan.a •• ,
The abductor •u identlfled N
Byroti R. Ball, 40, a prison
esc•pee wanted tor bank
robberi• lD New Jersey and
nortbem Oblo. He was cbaraed today with kldnappiAC and bait
was denied.
F.or the benefit of non.football fans,
it should be noted that the Rams ate
members of a professional gridiron
::. eroup wbo currenUy play their games cu••
• •, in an aging claptrap of a stadium called the Los Angeles
Procedural Cti,114l .
Vote Gives No Tips
EV ANS SAID BALL bad put
the weQOD down on the seat to
lieht a ciiarette wben
Herrmann, a 38-year-old postal
worker !rom West Manchester,
Ohio. made bis move • S;~ · Memorial Coliseum.
.• /.-: The word "Memorial" is in the name because that's W ASJllNGTON CAP) -Tbe outcome of the Senate's flnt pto-
cedural vote on the Panama Canal treaties 1ives no sure lndlcation
whether th• pacts eventually will be approved or rejected.
"Tbe boltage took the run and
gave it to me and the agent
erabbed (Ball) and that was
about the extent ol it.~·
.
·::: ..... ··: . ~·"
about all the place bas left. Just memories. And the Ram
contract to play in the old joint runs out after the 1979
season.
Thus it is that Clark got going on this committee effort
to lure the Rams out of Smogsville and get them to start
playing football at Anaheim Stadium.
· ALL OF TUIS'toucbed off enormous gales of giggling
AAd thigh-slapping up in Los Angeles. "Ha! The hayseeds
from Oranae Cou9ty think they can get our Rams. Next they'll try for the I:ondon Symphony!"
Clark clearly had placed had himself out front where
be could become the brunt of all kinds of ghastly ridicule.
To make his position even more sensitive, Clark is up
for re-election th.ls year, seeking his third term on the
board. But he pushed ahead anyway on the Ram
campaign. The committee took out full-page newspaper
ads with poor Ralph's name signed on them larger than John Hancock's on the Constitution.
By a vote of 67-30, the Senate agreed to llick to its plan of consider-
ing the treaty to ensure the waterway's neutrality before dealing
with the proposal to actuaJly
hand the Canal Zone over to Panama.
Ball was "surptised and
sbocked, too.'' Evans said. "He ·
The vote Wednesday came on
a proposal by Sen. James Allen,
D-Ala., a leader of the treaty
foes, to reverse th~t order.
bad been relaxed and I'm pretty ponents, said ·the vote "in· sure he wee-fatigued because he
dica.tes, above. all else, that had been up numeJ'Ous hours. I
we'vegot•t1e>1:serate." don't think he bad been asleep
Lead«!!'.'Jbh> of both parties op. since this whole thing began." ~sed Allen's move.
More debate is expect~ to fill EV ANS SAID BALL, who tOld
the rest ot this week, with no him t.bat "he couldn't give up ALTHOUGH BOTH sides vote.s pJanned uotil next w~k. because of his past life,'' offered
scanned the roll call for in-when efforts to amend the no reslltance. One officer
dicattons the vote might sbow treaties will begin. described bim as "very manner-how undecided senators would ly and cool" as he was talten to
eventually vote on tbe treaties SEPARATE VOTES wlll be jail.
themselves, there seemed to be required 1or the tw-0 treaties, Herrmann was taken to a
few if any dues. ou of ·whtcb ·would turn the hospital aod then to the
Sens. Wendell Ford, D·Ky., canal over to Panama by the Spriocfield police station, where THEN mE COMMl1TEE made an enormous error. ·and Richard Schweiker, R·Pa.. year 2000. The second eommits h~wasreuiiit~withhiswife.
They asked people to clip out a coupon in the ad pl~gl.ng s aid their votes for Allen's both countries to mtlntaiaing Re told reporters al a news
support to the Rams, buy a stamp, put it in an envelope motion should not be taken as a the waterway's neutrality. Both conference that be was treated
and mail it ln to Ralph. You just know people aren't golng · sign they will support the treaty mu~t ~ ratified' by two-~ "OK" by his abuductor. "My
to all that trouble. oppponents in the flnal voting. maJon~es. createst ~ern was Jut night
But wait! Clark's mail bas started coming in. So far, "In no way should my vote be The bipartisan leadership has with U>e boys.'' b~ said, relerr· ,
more than 2,000 coupons. And get th.is, people are sendin1 taken as anything more than lined up overwhelmin1 support ing to the first 171h hours of the
money. The ad didn't ask for MONEY. One man sent a supporting Sen. Allen's motion," for amending the neutrality pact ordeal when his sons -Rob, 10,
check for $SOO for Ram season tickets. Another Oranae said Ford, one of the undecide4s. to includ~ guarantees ol the and Mike, 7 -·aiso were held.
Countian sent $100 just to support the campaign. •'I will continue considering United St.ates' ritlbt to intervene He said be talked veey lttUe
You have to wonder if they're still giggling up there ln e very amendment to tbese militarily to keep lbe cam•I open with bis captor. "There were so
Los Angeles. treaties, vote by vote." while aJso speUin1 out pfioi'ity many things on my mind of And our hero Ralph Clark must be hearing voic~s from SEN. PAUL LAXALT, R-passage for U.S, warships in what I &~Id or sbouJdn't do,"
NATION I WORLO
on high bumming, "When Irish Eyes Are Smilln' ". · · Nev .. another leader of the op. time o( emergency. he explain~ . -=======-_:._~~~~-=--~....:..:..~~~_..::.._:...-:-;--;-;,...--~~~---:-~~;-:--;:;-7;7-:;:-:-~~~~~ t Alnue Deferue
GUNMAN CAPTURED
Byron ~. Ball
·~~~~~~~~~~~~-:1~-Wif e Sentenced
,·
WAUPACA, Wis. CAP) -Jennller Patri, a
former PTA president who said she killed her < husband after years of taking mental and physical
.::· abuse, stood in tears as a judge sentenced her to
·:: up to 10 years in prison on a manslaughter con-:
'• viction.
Last December, her lawyer hailecf as a victory
the reduction of the charge against her from
:: murder to manslaughter. Feminist lfOUPS dis-agreed.
• "NO ONE WILL GMN a thing from my coing_
:• to prison, least of aJl my cblldren," ldrs. Patri, the
mother of two, told Wood County Judee Frederick
• Fink before he sentenced ber Wednesday.
Mrs. Patri, 32, WU found guilty Dec. 15 d
manslaughter by a Waupaca County jury titer•
nine·day trial.
! :· She said 1be had been the victim of years of
1.F physical and mental abuae from her husband,
•· Robert, '34, and shot blm ln •ell defens!.1 : • 41f KNOW 1'HAT 1 DID was a very bad thing,
and l can't really explain why it happened," Mn. -
Patrl said as she pleaded for leniarey Wednesday.
"But anythlne that la done to me will not brine
• Bob back."
•• She broke into tean u sbe related that when
she was a child her mother baa served a prison
.• term, .
. ~ "When my mother was in prison, it was tbe
worst thing that ever happened in my life," added
Mrs. Patrl, whose dauehters are 12 and 13 years
old. -
"AIL I EVER WANTED was to have a good
:.· ..... "' family life," she-said. "It didn't happen. Now all
r" I have left is Lori and Dawn."
Fink rejected U)e lde._ of placing Mrs. Patri on
probation, nylng such action "would unduly
• depreciate tbe seriousness of this crime." ~ • However, Undtr her indeterminate sentence, she is
: ' ell1ible lmmedlatel)" for parole. <: 1 Fink aJao rejected a request to allow her to re-
• main free pending an appeal. Defense attorney ~ Alan Eisenberg said be wouJd appeal on grounds .,. that Fink comrnited more than 100 legal errors in
, the trial, and that the prosecution also made er-• rors.
' Still peqdinf la a charge of arson, stemming
trom a fire at the Patrt home alt.er the shooting.
Mn. Patri bal pleaded innocent by reason of
mental defect to th.at charge. and Aaslstanl Dis·
trict Attorney PbWp Kirk said be planned to de·
clde tn four to 11Jt weeb whether to continue the
arson cue.
STORE HOURS;
W .. kdaya, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday: 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Open Sunday 12 to 5 p.m.
' (
Doubts
Caston
Tax Bill
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Realtors are caaun1 doubt on
tbe tutµre of thi1 year's leadin1 FOJ>•~ tu relief bib. HYI As.
tembly Speaker Leo McCarthy.
McCarthy told a newa con-
ference Wednuday that
supporters of the bill might have
to drop lt and cet behind a
backup meuure.
GROUPS OF realtors massed.
ln the halls of the Capitol
Wednesday talklnl a1ainst SB 1, ~bkh baa been passed by the Senate and ls awalUna a vote in
the Assembly Ways and Means
Committee.
They said they oppose the
bill's 5 rrcent profits tax on the
sale o most sin&le family
homes. They said such a tax
may hurt home sales, and it
would be better to cut property
taxes less than to impose any new levies.
But supporters of SB 1 say the
tax la needed to provide enough
of a cut in property taxes to
weaken voter support for the
Jarvis initiative, to be on the
June ballot.
McCARTHY SAID the realtors
were ••softening" borderline
votes for SB 1, making It unlike-
ly that backers could mwiter the
two-thlrcb majority needed for
approval.
The backup measure is SBlx,
which the Senate Revenue and
Taxation Committee sent to the
Finance Committee on a S.3 vote
Wednesday.
Both bills, introduced by Sen.
Peter Behr, R ·Tiburon, are
nearly the same except SBlx
needs only a simple majority ap-
proval because its funding would
be in the slate budget, not the
bill.
* * *
P a rk F u ror
A San Francisco city supervisor says he is appalled that
two Nazi groups are usmg Stern Grove, a public park .
clubhouse for meetings from which non-whites and Jews
are barred. But a city attorney says the groups can legal·
ly keep out whomever they wish.
·2 Held in Scheme
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Two men identified by authorities as pros-
pective members of the Hell'• Angels motorc~cle club have been
booked into County Jail for lnve1U1ation of aUempted murder and conspiracy, authortUes say.
William L. Peters. 28, or Santee and Robert M. Johnson, 32, of
Ocean Beach were arrested Wednesday as they aat in a car
watching the Poway home of a district attorney'• office in-
vestigator. said Deputy District Attorney Brian Michaels.
He refused to detail the arrests, saying pretrial publicity could
hurt the district attorney's case against several members of the Hell's Angels club pending in Superior Court, _ '-...
Jail records indicated baU for Peters was set at ~000. while
Johnson was being held without bond.
LWVOpposes Minnes·ota
Picnic Set Jarvis Issue
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The League of
Women Voters ls opposing the Jarvis tax in·
itiative on grounds it would treat taxpayers unfair-
ly and "could make a shambles of local gov-
ernment."
Jarvis "is a bitter pill. with side effects much
more damaging than the illness its proponents claim it will cure," said the league's California
president. Joan Rieb of Atascadero, at a news con-
ference Wednesday.
THE INITIATIVE, TO BE Proposition 13 on
the June 6 ballot, would limit property taxes to 1 1
• percent of market value. Tb.Ls would cut the rev-
enue to local governments by nearly two-thirds or
a bout $7 billion. It contain• no provision to restore
local government revenue.
A picnic for former re·
aidents of Minnesota ls
scheduled from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. March 4 al the
Long Beach Recreation
Park, Long Beach.
The picnic, sponsored
by the Minnesota State
Society or Southern
California, will include
music, a hos pitality
center and a quilt raffle.
For more information
call (213)722~1.
EARL'S
l"\.U-ING MaATING
AlaCQtlO
smr<e Tf.:;_ ~I:~~-O-
now
3"
Curved Caw
HAMMER
'
·-
~. ,.UllY 23, 1978 DAILY ~LOT AS
Fire De.troys 'Prreelea' Collection
.SAN DIEGO ~P> -One of America's finest collecUon.s of
flying machines -from the
earlieat planes to the latest
space capsules -was in ruins
today, destroyed by a fl re that
swept throuch its bulldin1.
Flrt111en eaUmated the 1011 at $4 mlwon, but a 1pokt1man for
the San Ditto Atro·Space
Museum Hid it would coat
"several Umes that'• to replace
the planes inside.
Arson lnvestl1ators walked
tbrou.:h the rubble of the
Spanl1h·baroque Electric Build·
ins which housed tho muaeum but sald they were uncertain o!
the fire's cause.
THE FLAMF.S at the Balboa
Park structure ruined what
museum president Mike Starr
called a "priceless'' record of
man's procress in fll&ht.
One of the planes destroyed
was an exact replica of the
"Spirit of St. Louts." the San
Diego-built plane which carried
Charles Lindbergh in his historic
first solo fll1bt across the
Atlantic.
A Mercury space capsule and
copies of Gemini and Apollo
capsules also were burned as
were planes wlth gunfire scars
from both world wars. •
A MU~EUM spoke.man, Jack
Broward, called the collection
one of the four finest in the
world.
Col. Edwin F. Carey, a retired
Air Force oMcer and president
emeritus of the International
Aerospace ljaU pf Fame, said
tbe W~1day niaht fire
destroyed about $200,000 ln ir-
r e p I a cable exhibits and
mementos.
NII
I I/a"'...., hr ....... .._ SKI L
CORDLESS
DRILL
2002 3/8"
Both the Aere>Spac. lrfuaeum
and Hall of Fame weN houled
in tbe SS.year-old Electric Bulkl·
ing, built as a temporary
structure ln 1915 for the
Panama-California ExPoSlUOO.
CAREY AND 8TA8ft said
what they had feared most ln the
rickety building waa fire. In
1969, Carey was q~oted as HY·
ing, "Fire could wlpe out our
whole collection Just llke that."
"It'• trontc, .. Carey said after
the flre. ''We were scheduled to
move ln Oetober to the nearby
Ford Bulldin1."
About~ ail'crafl were lost, ln-
cludin& a Japanese Zero, World
War I bl planes, a.nd th4' replica
of the Splrit of St. Louts, which
carried Lindbergh on bis his-
tor I c solo flight across the
Atlantic to !»aria in 1927.
Lindberlh visited the muaeum
in 1971 before bis death.
SPACECltAn displays in-
cluded scale models of Gemini
and Apollo spaceships, the
Lunar Module, communications
satellltes and other research
spacecraft and equipment.
More than 40 fire units and
nearly 100 firefighters fought to
save the displays. But they were
forced to pull back from the
structure as the inferno in-
creased. The front wall and the
roof collaP6ed around 10 p.m .•
firemen said.
During the blaze, six mutned
·explosions rumbled through the
, building. Officials believe they
were cauaed by flames reaching
magnesium engines ln some of
the display aircraft.
THE FIBE reportedly started
in a pillar supportin1 an
archway that ran alonl tM front
of the building. lniUal reports
were that two children were ln
th• area just. before the fire
erupted.
There wen no reported tJ>.o
Juriu, altbOlllh a Santa
Barbara man whom Starr Hid
aom etlmes worked In the
museum library and tpent the
ntcM in the bulldlo1, wu un ..
accounted for.
, ..... JU ... , ......
Announcing their
catididacies are, top, left to
rlght, Gov. Edmund G.
Brown for re-election;
William A. Burkett, Pebble
Beach banker, for state
treasurer; below, left to
rig ht, Superintendent
Wilson Riles, for re-election,
and Mike Curb, Hollywood
recording executive, for
lieutenant governor.
•Ot4GA.
• Operat .. forward and r..,.,.. to dtfve
and rerncwe ICTeWS • Ac;cepts acc::esiori ..
with 1haNla up to 3/8~ • Includes chuck
key and t t 5 volt recharge unit • Recharges
hundr9dl of times
14-lnch
PIPE WRENCH
M1. Rich alao attacked a provision that would
roll back property auesamenta to the un~ 76 level
and limit increases to 2 percent a year, except
when the property 11 sold. It could then be re-
assessed at the sale price.
Death (;lalnas
IC.11 si-. ........ 1 V_ A, .. I
'osTa.-.sa642·1753 ,.~ ......
MISStON YllJ049s.o4C)1 »nl~ c:..hlr-1'-~~ . .,.,._., ,....,,,
Perfect for home. work1hop or Job.
Orop-f0f'V9d tempered t &-oz. head with POiished t.ce. c:heefCS and claw. Odaoonal
handle. 24 .. Fully hlfdened drop-forged alloy ateef Jaws. Replaceable lower Jaws. Precision
mllled teeth llT' a rugged design houllng.
514
Suits Total
$22 Million
. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The deaths of three
men in police custody have led to $22 million in
claims filed against local governments and
prompted police to consider changing their met.hods
ofsubdulngviolentsua~cts.
NEED A LAWYER?
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'Ibe family of Alvin Whitehead bu filed com-
plaints totaling $10.5 million against the city, it
was learned Wednesday. Whitehead, :rr, died of
neck fractures in County Jail Feb. 1. shortly after
he w u arrested for in-
YIHR. CONIULTATIOH-t10
vestigation of unruly ( l
behavior. ST.' ~TE Another man , ,..
Ferdinand Bell, 21, died •
of aspbyxta in a Los . •
Angeles County-USC Medical Center jall ward •
Jan. 9, according to the coroner's office. Bell's •
family has filed a $3 million wrongful death claim
against the county.
The family of Mark Peterson, 23, of Victorville
has filed a $9 million claim against San
Bernardino County for wrongful death and
violation of civil rights in the death of their son.
AeeerBeld
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor Ned York,
cleared after three daya of questioning in the
Hlllllde Stran•ler alutnp, bu bffn citecl for po1ae111~ of marijuana.
York; 3T1 Tiii cited W~esda1 because
authorlU11 teazed lesa than oae OUJM!e of the weed
while NUchiDI b1I Hollywood Hilla home duria1
the three daya be wu in cuatody after lmplicaUni
hlm1elf bl tM 1laylni1. York facea a maximum
line of $100 U convicted. a•••t••._.,..,...,,,.
BAK.EBSnELD (AP) -A female atudtnt
SAT-1(.BUB
llAT IN'I'ERlOR LA 1Fl .
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• %•
It has been more than two years slnce one-time
:J:>Olitical bigwig Dt·. Louis Cella was indicted by the
; Orange County Grand Jury on charges related to
:·embezzling funds from two county hospitals.
Celle's trial on those charges isn't s cheduled to get
· ~nder way until next month.
. .: Five persons, county Supervisors Philip Anthony and
;·Ralph Diedrich among them, were charged with violating
' state political campaign regulations in Grand Jury in-
dictments handed down last July 1.
They won't stand trial until late May at the earliest.
•; Those are just two examples of how long it can take ~to bring accused persons to trial il the accused are of a
~ rplnd to delay proceedings and have the pocketbook
:•needed to do so.
: Defendants in criminal lawsuits do and should have
•:fhe right to exhaust their legal remedies in pre-trial, trial ::and post-trial motions. There can be no argument on that
!:point.
.• Simultaneously, however, the public has an interest
, in seeing that criminal lawsuits are resolved in a
•,reasonable period of time, especially when public officials
are accused of wrongdoing.
· When it takes one and two years to bring accused
persons to trial. that interest may not be properly served.
•, And we wonder if defendants who waive their right to
··a speedy trial before being given long delays in the
judicial process aren't, in effect. jeopardizing a public in-
terest in seeing criminal matters decided with reasonable
dispatch.
Strange Omission
Last November the Irvine Co., the city of Irvine,
seven Irvine residents and the Orange County Fair Hous-
ing Couucil amicably settled a lawsuit over low-cost hous-
ing opportunities for employees of an industrial complex
the Irvine Co. pl ans. A major element of the preferred agreement was
that about 1,400 apartments be built on land which the
Irvine Co. \\Ould buy from UC Irvine.
If the preferred settlement falls through there's a
backup agreement for the Irvine Co . to provide sites for
725 apartments on its own land.
It develops now there was a small hitch to the pre-
f erred agreement. According to officials •t UCI, no one
representing any of the parties lo the lawsuit ever ap-
proached the uni versity about the settlement terms.
In short. an agreement was made by one group of
people ove r the use of land owned by somebody else.
The obvious question is, why? None of the parties to
the lawsuit seems to have a good answer.
It seems like a peculiar approach to solving the.i~sue.
~:Happy Marriage?
Judging from official and public response to full-pQge
newspaper ads urging the Los Angeles Rams professional
football team to relocate in Anaheim Stadium, Orange
County is agog with the prospect of the Rams coming
here.
Now that it's been mentioned, it would be nice to
~ bave the Rams here. .
While high school and community college football
programs in the county are among the strongest in the
nation, there are no major college or professional teams
to quench local fans' thirst for a big-time football at·
traction.
Certainly the Rams can fill that need.
They would also bring to Orange County the sideline
benefits associated with a major league operation such as -
added jobs and more dollars spent with local businesses. ~ We're not convinced that Ram owner Carroll
~ Rosenbloom isn't simply using the prospect of a move to
.• Orange County to get what he w•nts from balky
' operators of the Los Angeles Coliseum.
Rosenbloom could do a lot worse, though, than lo
~ take a hard look at what Orange County has to off er a
sound football franchise.
The Rams and Orange Coonty would, without
question, be a happy marriage.
• • Opinions expressed in the space above are.those of the Oalty Piiot.
Other views expressed on this 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) 642-4321. i ~ ,, ,
~
f Boyd/Poets
~ ByL.M.BOYD
• Hatmakera ln South. i Vietnam's old c•pltal city of > Hue inscribe p0ems on fine ~ paper and .aandwicb sanie
L between the two bamboo
~ layers of their hats. To reJd
i,' those poems rou have to hold Che bats up to the sun. Thus
' do the artlsana q,.stst upon
chelr sipatures. It's all
J ' ri1bt~ It's fine.
: .r. When a U.S. senator wants w delete aomethint in the
• ,Senate Journal. the word ls
, .. expun1e." When a U.S. . hpreaentative wants to de·
• lete aomethlng 1n the Houae
:Journal, the word la "re-
cl1lon... They're jealous of
~ Uaetr Una<>, tbonrucala.
;.
What was the ori1inal end
cry in the game of "Hl4e and
Seek"? Ally ally all ln free?
Ally ally outs ln'free? Or the
one I recall as a lad amona
displaced Scandlnaviana:
"0Ue Olie Olson fr~'?
---··--94 • ., •
Ro~f"l N. Wffd/Publlsher Thomn K"vlll~llttr
Thurld-v. Pebruary 23. 1971 Barbar• Krelblch/EdltOf'lel P~ !dltor
Nick Thimmesch
The Irony of Mideast Jet Sales
W ASRINGTON -The most
senseless move in lhls town in
recent weeks was the decision to
aell 200 highly sophisticated
military jets -cosUng .from $S
to $11 million each -to Egypt,
Saudl Arabia and Israel.
For what earthly or deathly
reason do these Middle Eastern
nations need
nearly $5
billion In jet
flghters and
bombers ?
Aren't we at
a moment in
t-he long
agony of the
Middle East
dispute where
the begin-
nings or peace can be ac-
complished by simply saying
''no" to demands for more
milltary hardware?
All through his 1976 pres-
lT! S'lt>Pf rlSTEN-~tGHrlN 1f1J~ r:CT: D111-!IS t_E~;u
VIOLE'NCE. ...
Jack Anderson
ldentlal campaign, Jimmy
Carter sharply criticized U.S.
arms sales, particularly those to
the Middle East. The
admlnlstraliol\ still claims its
goal .Ls to restrain sales and
transfer of weapons around the
world. ·
But with his announcement
that the Administratton would
approve this $4.8 billion m will
reach $S billion when the extras
are thrown in) sale In order to
maintain a military balance and
promote peace In the Middle
East, it seems to me that the
President is talkina nonsense.
WE ARE already In a no·
sense situation in the Ethioplan-
Som ali confiict where the So-
viets and the Israelis are backing-
the Ethiopians, and the U.S.,
through Iran and Arab nations,
is unofficially backing Somalia.
The Israelis are reportedly US·
ini Amerlcan·made partt to
keep Eth1opian ti&hter planea In
the air to wait w1u· on
Som a Hans boar1DC American
and Sovtet.uiade weaPoftS.
There should be rumbles or
dlsapprovol not juat over this
strange situation, bttt over the
Carter plan to aeU tboae 200 bot
planes. Congress waa out of
town last week but now it's back
the debate should begin.
ISRAEL, by e~ery objective
military analysts. bas plenty of
weapons, and could easily
handle any given Arab op ..
ponent, or a combination Qt OP·
ponent.a, if a war were to t#eak
out. The U.S. has generodS1.Y re·
supplied Israel wifh larae
·quantities of the most
sophisticated weapons, since
that "draw down" of the 1973
war. Egypt, whose per-capita in·
Wf:. CAN'T GO CN U~ 1'HIS! WHERE. W/U, rr AW..~
come ls under ~"a year, Ls
suffering a des~ economic
situation, and one would think
that Its leaders would be pushing
for ecooomlc aid -not SO F-5E
1'Tl1er" jets costins from $S to
$8 million each.
Even if Ute oll-rlch Saudis are .
paylng for those "Tiger" Jets, other U.S. military equipment
and French Mirages as well,
Egypt is better served to tend to
its people's needs in food, hous-
ing, medical cate and clothing.
AS FOR Saudi Arabia, and the
60 F ·l:S "Eagle" jet fighters ($17
million each). what is the need
here, and who are the Saudis
capable of flying this highly
sophisticated plane? Saudi Air
Force pilots are not much
beyond the ability to fly
transports and simple fighter
planes. Does this mean that the
Saudls are aoing to hire
mercenaries to fly their bot
planes, and who will they fly
them against?
This proposed sale seems to
contradict both the rational
analysis of what Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and Israel need by way
of weapons and the spirit or the
Carter administration's policy
on piling weapons into tense re-
gions. What the Middle East
needs is peace, not $17 milllon
planes which can go poof, in a
cloud of lethal smoke, showering
their waste on poor villages
where $17 million would ease
life's struggle.
THERE MUST be a wry
solution. Why not sell those hot
$11 million F·15's to Egypt, not
Israel, and then have the
Egyptians trade them lo Israel
for all those bulldozers which
are building controversial
settlements in the Sinai
peninsula?
Israel could play games with
the $17 million airplanes, and
the Egyptians could clear out
urban decay, further clean up
the Suez Canal, and improve lite
a little bit for its millions of im:
poverished people.
Me ntal Patients Left Out in the COid
WASHINGTON Over the
lut few years, many state gov-
ern ment1 have been quietly
emptying their mental in·
stitutions. In a slow but steady
exodus, thousands or former
mental patients have been
turned out in the cold and now
live in garages, condemned
buildings, flop houses and even
chicken coops.
This wholesale purge of
mental hospitals has created
·'psychiatric
ghettos" in
maru major
cltles. Some
15,000 mental
patients from
Illinois
boapitala, foe
example, live
ln an area
'c a 1 1 e d
"Uptown" in
Chicaao.
Unfortunately, many patients
are beln1 released for economic
rather than humanitarian ff&.
sons. Eacb patient in a state
m,nJal Institution now costs the
taxpayers an averaae of ;is,ooo
a year. The price-per-patient at
the federally supported St.
C3liarles McCabe
Elizabeth's Mental Hospital out·
side Washington, D.C .• has
soared to an astounding $28,000 a
year
. HABD·PRESSED state of-
ficials bave found that they
shave their expenses by booting
patients into the street. The
federal welfare system then as-
sumes the burden of supporting
· these unfortunates. State mental
hospitals have therefore cut
their rolls by 60 percent in re-
cent years, from about 428,000 in
1969 to UM,000 in 1975.
Many ot these patients have
been Indiscriminately dis-
charged with virtually no
screeoinl by officials. In fact,
some hospitals have required
social workers to meet quotas by
releasing a certain number of
patients each month, regardless
of their condition.
Aa a result, a growing number
of patients who are unable to
care for themselves has been
thrust into the naUon's cities.
Many have been In·
stilutlonalized all their adult
lives. Some are picked up by
police and returned to the
hospital, only to be released
again. There are patients who
have been through this
psychiatric revolving door al
least 20 times in the past five
yeara.
BETWEEN 1963 and 1974, as
part of former Gov. Ronald
Reagan's economy program,
California reduced its mental
hospital population from 34,955
to 6,476. The policy continued un-
questioned until Investigators
determined that 72 murders or
suicides bad been committed in.
two years by former patients
and those turned away by
screening centers.
One ex-patient killed bis wife,
three children and himself.
Another, a man who had been in
and out of state i\_~ylums since
he was :s years ola, commllted
two murders, two rapes and
several kidnappings before be-
ing arrested.
Most of the patients' released
are simply given bus fare and
wind up in boarding homes,
which are little more than
storage sheds. converted
tenements or old hotels.
Each patient receives $157 a
month in welfare money to buy
"room and board in these
facilities. Although the gov-
ernment is picking up the tab,
most of the boa.rding homu are
neither licensed nor required to
meet any federal standards .
.Some owners therefore try to
fatten their profits by cutting cor-
ners.
ONE BOARDING home
operator in Illinois, for in-
stance, got $400,000 in federal
funds for housing 180 former
mental patients. He managed to
keep 46 percent of it as profit.
He accomplished th~s feat by
spending only 54 cents a day to
feed each patient. Another group
· pocketed 30 percent of the more
than $1 miJlion it received from
the government to care for ex·
·mental patients.
"Many of the states have
made a concerted effort to re-
duce mental health
populations," a spokesman for
the National Institute of Mental
Health told our reporter Bill
Halamandaris. "They have been
overanxious in releasing
patients when alternative care
facilities did not exisL"
Billy's Exploitation of Pi;esidei;acy ~s Too F~
name it, he'll do it, if~ price is
right.
..
President, Billy Carter slped
an exclusive agreement with a
Nashville promoter named
Tandy Rice. "If Billy Carter's
not a celebrity, there's not a
George Plimpton and BilUe Jean
Kins he iB also singin1 the
praises ol Sun-We Insurance.
Revell toys is planning a Billy
Carter toy.
I SEEM to recall a terrible 1
hullabaloo over the fact that one
·peanut In Georgja,'' sald Tandy.
BILLY~ FIRST Bay Area ap.
pearance was the night before
the opening of the 1971 Oakland
A's baseball season, at a gather-
ing of 1easo'n ticktt holders. Carter Gilmore, a black man
who wu nmning for a seat on
the Oakl-4 City Council, a•ked BUJy why they were not related
•Ince they bore the aame name.
"l bate to IA)' tbia," 1ald 1'llly,
"bat we an left • ntuer 1n tM
wooctplle aomeplact. '' Btlly
threw out the first ~ U.e next
ctay.
81117 Boy bM rlddla lri • hot-
-balloon ov.-' ~ield, ru .• Wblte Nrtaa wbl .. tixtdo arid top bat. He has tut ribbons,
JudseCI beauty conW.tt, 80DI oa
talk abcrin. IPd beJblJOoped tDto a awlmmiftl pe;oa. ·aa U.. Mike
Douc1u allow h4I _..... ·~ u d vett made out OI ~ w
tabl froM ahunlnumMir-... He ll 8dlvel¥~"(8 =·~-.:;:;.~~-:;~
Moncr11 maeuine estimates
that he made $500,000 last year
from personal appearances and
that he accepts only one in every
20 requests for hla services. "If
people 8"' crazy enough to pay
money to bear .me speak, I'm
Cl'asy ~gh to do it,"· be told
the maiui.ne last August.
BUly Beer will doubtleu be
followed by Billy Tampa.
Panatellu, and· Bllly Mouth
Deodonnt; and Billy SbHlng
Cream and, concelnbly, even
Buty Dlaphra1m1. Tbere 11
teemlnlb' no limit to the man•1
Ci'Md • to hla veuality. You
of Tricky Dick's brothers bad
accected a loan hom Howard Hug es. That brother, too,
wouldn't have had a fried egg -
from the late Hughes if HIS
brother hadn't been in the White
House.
This lastele$5 exploitation ol •
tfie o(fice of the Presidency
should be broulbt,to an end. if
only in the name or decency. The
President hlmsett seems unable
to cope with hia own brother,
whlch in itself rais~ interesting
questions. Perhaps the sainted
Obtrles Kirbo, Mr. Carter's
senior adviser, mlabt be able to
put the kibolh on some or Billy
Boy'• more 01iatra1eous
hqcksteriog etfom.
I •hall be accUHd In some
quarters of lacJdD1 a sense Of
tiumor lor writ1ftc,tbeae words.
Tbat J can live wltb. What re~
worrlet me la that BIU1 Ca.rt. work• fqr a prolJ'loter who bu Clft
Jail dealt the motto: "1'htre la tto
Umlt to whit cu be done 1f tt
ao .. Q't mattv wbo sew ~ uedtt. •
•
. •
•Aftn be w11 no lon1er a ri1bt and hl&h and low finally S>olltlca l threat, Hubtrt1 cau1ed tbe "Happy warrior" l#umfl,U:ey received an outpour-U.1 o ldmlnt:Jon and aff ecUoo, himself to call a halt:
.. I've had enoueh epitaphs,"
aaid Humphrey, "for a hundred The trlbut.tt ranaed from the.
President'• "treatelt American men!"
o f our time•• to the Vlce AtllBADY we see the fll'lt Preaidtnt'1 "he taupt ua bow to bouquet on the "grave" of live and bow to die" to the atant Richard Nixon. bear hue from Sen. Barry Qe>ldwater. Raymond Price was chief
speecbWriter for President Nix-These accolades from left and ~n. Price has written a book,
Art Hoppe
In Praise of
A Nice Phrase
I rise today in defense of the much-maligned
ph rase of farewell, "Have a nice day," which bas
come under vitriolic attack from coast to coast by
Intellectuals, Harvard men and various other
aesthetes.
First of all, ."Have a nice day" expresses a
logical, pleasant and friendly thought lo a
&ram maUcally accepta'ble
manner. And it is certainly pre·
·fe.rable to the trite and slrupy
.. Good-bye," which, as you prob·
at>ly know, stems 'from the
Cbaucerian English, "Gooden
Urolle in sonne and bye
b luebirde lcummen," or,
literally, "May you walk with
the sunshine shining and a
bluebird in every tree."
Granted, there are times
'When even such an inoffensive phrase as "Have a
nice day" should be avoided, such as when your
favorite uncle is being led off to the gas tbamber.
Here, a simple "Vaya con Dios" would be more
appropriate.
GENERALLY speaking, however, "Have .a
nice day" ranks far and above most forelin phrases employed on parting.
Take German. Many Germans favor
"Geshundheit!" (May the force be with you!"} But
you say, "Bella, bella" or even "Wunderbar."
However, "Bei mir bist du scboen" means "Kiss
me again; I think you're grand" and is often a hit
with the opposite sex.
The French, on the other .hand, usually stick
with "Au revolr," meaning, "The check is in the
mail." (This should not be confused with the ·
American slang, "Check you later," which means precisely the opposite.)
Speaking parenthetically about: confused
Americans, rrlany Americana on th eir first
trip to Japan tend to confuse "Sayonara'' ("Next
time buy a Volkswagen") with ''Tora! Tora!
Tora" (which can be translated, depending on
the circumstances, as either "Hello" or "Duck!")
THIS DUAL' quality is a similar to that
em bodied by the Polish word of farewell,
"Pulanski." This means either "HI, there" or ln
some cases, usually felonies, "See you in Pari~. ''
"With. Nixon," which focuses not
bh the mess Nixon created but
on the mess be cleaned up.
Most of Mr. Nixon's time in of.
flee, Mr. Price recalls, was
spent extricating us from a war
be had inherited. ·
.. At home there was inflation,
the rlslng crime rate -and
most of all the nation's people
were divided more bitterly (by
Vietnam) than they had been in
at least a generation." ..
Admittedly, some foreign phrases have a pi·
quant flavor that delights the tongue. The Ru.saian
"Da troika na samovar" ("If you sit on an Easter
"'"· rnay it be hard-bolled") is in this cateeory u is the Italian ".ffuta la pasta el pesto {"May
t.6eaaucebewitbyou.")
17 CU. FT. REFRIGERA
Another cup of tea, bo~ever, b \be tiaiO\LS
British phrase, "Keep a stiff upper Ilp." As we jol-
ly well know, that means, "Don't smile or they
may take us for bloody Americans."
.SO WE SEE that phrues of bail and farewell
in every languaee are not necessarily lopcal,
pleasant, erammatical or even friendly.
Why intellectuals pick on poor, little, logical;
pleasant, grammatical and friendly "Have a nice
day" is beyond me.
To them, I can only say, '"So Jone" -whicb, of 1 CO\lrse, ls a contnn:Uon of the Brooklyn 'ewisb,
"So long as 1 Uve ~hould I ever see you cor:oinf
again, God forbid, I will pa.1Jft a moustache under
my nose and pretend I am my neighbor, lrlrs. Goldb~rg."
SAYE •40
'S
WASHER·1>RYER 1----SAYE s70 ____, ..
ON PAIR
BUILT-IN
DISHWASHER
~'SAii ~20
DAILY Ptl.OT
As Mr. Price now Hes Ude stated rhetorically, .. We must temporarlet to such PresJdenta yeart of the early sevenUes, ~ ask ourselves if we would have as Herbert Hoover and Harry, national security abuses that been •s tenaciou lf the Truman, Jt ts reasonable to ex-took place under Nixon were President bad been anyone other pect that Mr. Nixon will find in· leas flagrant than the similar than Richard Nixon." creasl_.ni favor with the Passini abuses of h1a predeceason. Now that ls behlrid us. years. Mr. Nixon, iQ self-imposed ex-Somtday, when the cloud bu HE BECAU.S that the mutual ile, b usually mentioned by the dissl~ated, we will remember distrust of Mr. Nb(on and· h1a media only when his wile la W or that e waa a Joyal husband, a critics became overt, more his daughter ts tn.f anUclpatin1. eood father, and, in war and personal than professional. peace, be cave our country snore W ashlncton Post publlaher ASSUREL~astbeblstorians of blmselt than most of UI ever Katherine Oraba~ recently have been tinder than have con· will.
di, DUR1NGPRES8;>EN1'.'s WEEWif"'
TAKE HOME·TJE unoN MICROWAW
oyEN WITH SOMETHING EX~.
Memoryayttc-4'0mk:rownl!
oven no.. And take.__.
IJUoa 3 fit. Sbnma: Pot.n•
MJc:ro.8rownae 'Grill and U&i'ar,.
of Cookbaob-an extra valur
worth $59.85 ••
lELITTON ~Coaldnl
1l1
·~ . .
I• •
I
. ~ •.
• OBITUARIES I NATIONAL
.. •* :.
Widow Awanled.$15,000 '~PUBl!IG ~
ATLANTA (AP) - A federal neanint In tbe death of Scott. a he was u11der treatment ~f AUCTION ~ • •' .. jury baa awarded the widow of a Blrm am, Ala., postman who McDonald. "'
cancer victim $1.S,000 in her $6 d.led o ~cancer in m• . ~ ~
...... ""' -----
"My wUe, our marrta1e countelor, and the whole board
of dlrecton doo't undentaod me." ....
Deaf.It Notlen
MANION f'911SOUH
tnUUon malpractice ault •ta~ Tb• famlly claimed they were ·· BUNTE• ALLEN, AN at·
Rep. Larry Mc.Donald, D-Ga., a responsible becaua«' McDonald torney for McDonald, aaid, "Jt
onet.lme pncticln1 ~byaiolan treated tbe paUent with Laetrile, beata $6 million." ·
who bad treated b1m with 8 cont.toveflial aubatance de· The chief attorf}ey for the
Laetrile. rived from bitter almond.a or plaintiffs, Burke Lewis, who was
However, the jury Wednesday peach or apricot pita The family asked lf be was utisfied with ~~';!:~.~o~:~~ai1nD~~;! claimed tbe Laetrile.was uaeleaa ~=t 'f~r::5~· said, "I can't aay _,.... and may have kept Scott from other V..:u""ctl, and chose not to aeeklna treatment that could McDonald bad returned to· award JIWl,ltlve damaces. have aaved h1a life. Waahlncton and was ne>l in the courtroom when the j"'ry re·
THE FAMILY OF John L. The Jury's verdict provided turned Its verdicts.
Scott aued McDonald and the the tlS,000 aa compenaation for The case bad been seen as an
hoapltal claimio1 they were Scott's Olediaal expenaes while lm portant test for Laetrile.
.
MILK WHITE IS ·IN
Fashion & Exercise
.Feb.24-25-26 '
SOUTH COAS.T PLAZA(~
U.S. CUSTOMS STOPP•
HAtieMADI OlllMl'AL •
CAIPITSA ... S
ehlprMnt entry #7&.139071, 27 blll" dar. of'>.,,fl\t
12/1/77 ttOPped bV U.S. Cuat0f'f\91)~~d., •tctlo..,. .304.t.A. mnln;t and 11UA• flOI on 1 /1 817111. Wt Wiii ~ tht above lhl~ of fine woott t tl~
& othttJ to recover vwtout c:hltVM I~ due If
long delay In cteennQ$.
AUCTION WIU. 'l'All l\Aet
SUMDAY, NL 26 AT !:Ol P.M.
NEWPORTER INM
EMPIRllOOM
1107 Ja*•r•M ·~c:c..'' ... .,.... .....
...,,,,._ J H_.PrierTeS-.
~ .. Aa1n...., Wiit..., ........ HtENNINO H.llNSON, r•IMnt OI Vll0.11 MAIUE FRE5QUIZ, rH•
...... port llM<l'I, ca ...... OWi'( Oft •~ t .... I ----~~ Ca. ,. .. Md ____ .::::!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ f'ebniary U, 1'11 al Ille ... Of I). N • -n "" __,,__ _,,
ran9tmen11 ••• penflltll et Smltll •w•1 on Sundly Ftbtwry It, 1'7t •t
Tillhlll L•mb Cott• Morhiary Ml11lon Commu1111., Ho1plt1._,
llllt'9<tora. -Survived by Mr l'lutbal\d Wlllllfll USL•• f>arriSll, ton_,_ 'tVltl....., f'anlll\,
O.llNlllL o. LE$Lll!, Jr, palMlll ltlh ... e ... ,., ... I, mot ... r o.w..
owar on February 21 1'71 LOVI"" Fr•Jquaa, 1-'"*" OetlWOll Ln • ' .... Frnquaa, Ctnltll1 F,..,.._ Jtl\Mll hu.it•ncl of Ell&ellelh C. Ulllt, l•I..., l't9IQutr. LAOOllM Fr_ .. ._ oll lram
ol Mra. Diana e. .. r. Mr-. ltot1ert1 La9uni llt«I' ea. Vhltltloft wlll lie
Mo,. lier. Mrs. Sharon llflOIMnMn, held all day F;IOlr. Fwwral •rv"~
11r0ftdfot..., ol ~ -.i.s ... 141\ wlll " helCI °" F<INy ....,,,..,., U , ol Mrs. e..110,. L.Hlle. btotller 01 1'7' 11 J lO P.M. al SNl'fer _,...,., J•-· ~$111, MrL Mil• OvlfO!her, L•11un• Ch1pel. With lrolh., Mrs. 8orberl o.mmlns, Mn. IWbellt .llChl l tnda Item hlf·ttlllHllOn SclMoler. S.rvicn will be held Thut1· F•llOWJhlp ufliclet ..... SN~r uquN
day Februery 21, 1'71 at 7:l0 P.M. •I IMch "'°'""'"dlr9C1orL o•eon,.., L.aoun-Hiii• Mort ... ,.,. 1n llLL
lleu ol flowers lamlly p.'olers ALEXANDER 8ELL, r"'"°"' of
J ...,.ti_ to the HeMt FUNI. 0 Connor Balboa 111-. ca. Pau .O aw1r Ofl LAvun1 Hiiis Mor....,, Olr.CIML l'tbrllar 11 1'79. Solnlwd lty two
COUNTRYMAN aona, e!.iie 'ino Akk lell. FuMt1I .llVIS P'.COONTRYMAN,r .. ldentot Mrvlces will be hlld at 1:00 PM. on
, L111un1 Hlll1, ~. Passacl away Ofl ,rider Fwuetl' 24, tt71 at ,.Klfk , February 21, lt71. Su•vlve4 by VI .. Mort\Wl'
• •)'ult>-lrvlno. ""' Don C.ountrvm.,. ·,,,.1™
: :Ar NHr~t 9uch. Ca . d•u11Mor GEORG'£ SMITH, Mtllll ~ Now , :.5111111 Oevl1 .,, ~lvor•ldt, C•., 6 JtrMr, resldltrit _. .....,_, INICll, • .@"'"*"II-. 8yrG01. Jim. 1>ol\ Sue ca. PHMd -•r °" ....,,uarv to, 1m
C-lrytnM, l>DMld, D•vll -Mary II 1110 1111 of SI. S"'vlw• fly 1111
#<N•UOlltOft8"11 lhl., Eunl'9 lAtrol cllllclre11 -ry lt•Y l1ttllt• ol OI•..,, llllnol>. Wv•<" will be held Pennaylv.;,.1., "-lmll\ 94 "'"' TlllWIClay, F_......, U. IUt at ) 00 ~ carv 5"11111 ol l..M v ... ..........
P.M. ll ,..ClllC Vlt • Chapel, UOO al..; iurvlwd ll'f "''Mt ....... Md tia-
PoClllc Vlftf Dr Now"°'I Buell, ~. lors II~ Smith Of Newpwt .. aclt
Olllcl1ll119, Dr. Phillip Murray. ca. •W•llor ltnllh ol l'lOrlda, CllH~
Interment PaClll< Vi ow Memorlal Smith of .......,1 Dor-l'Mnl., Ull
•irk. P1cll1c Vlow Mort11ary v..-i. Nevacll.'alM J """'°"'*-.
dlrKton. Mr. Smith -0 ~,., tM cat
llllOHMAN ToloviSIOll ~ tw II,._ NM
: •• ... CHARD A.. ><ROHMAN. rMlcltnt I Chit! IOUnd ll1111lnaer •1111 '""
• ; "' So. L-. c. PHMd awar Oii T.v.v.u . TtlMllOft He--'" Ult , l'tbruarv 11. 197'. S.lovtd hu•bend of Vt9H Nev.-~) .,..f"L Grefl\OllM
: • ,,_.ry, Iovino 1a11>er uf RlcNlr4 and ancl ...;,111 It .. <9'Mlucted fly lmltfl
, RoDorl, ton<! brolhtr ol 8at.b•rt TU1hlll ~ c.i. Mft.I ~
Krontn•"· Me>l'T'IO't•I 1«vt<ff win be •
,,_Id al I • PM Friday l'el>Nery 24, ....-. N•IDMAM tt7' at M-ch O.y ha<ll Club. So. I Cl lnlleuolflowertl .. ,_ .. , cwo• !OWARO CUllTll ,!!~::; M;,.,,.,.lll c.onlrlbutlOfll to the NE! DH Moll, nallw ot CAllllor,.la.
lomerlc•n 1*¥1 Auoclallon 10< r• Former rttldilrlt uf C.O.t1 Mfta, CL
h r ~rdlo-myopellly Paclllc PHM<I _., on ,....,_,, '°· 1'7' •t r.urc o • U.. •Ill of .. In PWadlM, ~ $urvl-VlewMortlM'y':;:"~:;'" • by hit wllt 1llt111or Needham,
WILLIS J REED ulcltnt or c141119fol., Palrlela I.Ill of P9rOOIM, ca. • • r alto tunrl....i 1>r -vandehlld Mii La9u111 Hiiis, C.. PHMCI eway Oft eight trtat ........ lllldrtn. Mlllt•ry
FobNOry it, 1'171. Lovl"t --.0 of 9t1veJldt t«VI'" wlll be held M
D«othy M. Rted, 1-r rl Mn. Opal $1t11td.., ,.__., U, "11 al El Tore
McLell111d a114 Mrt. "•lrlcl1 C.motwv. !IT•-.~. SmiU. Tutlllll ~chroeder, 1110 aurvlvtd fly J ymb Colt•-~l' Olre<WW. greftd<hl-. Gnwtlde -VIUll wlll .,.._
~oohe:.: ~~l~r ~c.~·~~ :: . •ORD
Toro, Cl. O'Connor \.1911n1 Hlll1 RUSSELL ERWIN FOllO, ........
Mort ... ry *'9<1""-•way on Ftbr\llrf 21, 1'11 a1 the Costa
l(,fJfE MOI• M....-ial HMcoilal. A r.,..dentof
WILLI-0 . KANE, rnldtnt of Newport a.ach, ~. I« ,,_ past 2S
COii• .,. .... C•. Pou.od 1wey Oii ., • ., •. Ht h 1urvl"9d by hit •II•
·.
·:c..' "1 ,\ ',, l'e~ry 20, 1'11. Survived bl' his wlfo Vll"glnlo Ford. • ~ Gary Fonl of VllYL AS8ESTOS 11!1 nnD TILE
Htlell, two -eruce ..... ~ M1111&11111on eucll, Co. ..... .... --r~ m-ECT.ICULAR W'•I I COVERlllGS K•""· d~r It•,.., K-ell of •11111lller Jull• ,..,,. .. Ntw~rt DU WEARJ ft ~Hll M•M, Cl .• Drolher H-ltd lucll, ca . .lllN """'""' .. , -• DURABLE PATI'En,. TAKES HEAVY CAREFREE CERAMIC WA11 TILE •r
• ~ .... •1 0111co1""· °" ... 1erv1c" .,.,..._ ,,_ • .,.. , .. "'.u.n .J't • WIDE CHOICE OF EXCmNG DESIGNS ,• 'Wiii be -°" Fridlr ,....._., 2A c11111er •"4 Wllll• P'ord .,.," Of e POPULAR COLORS! (J .
:· • ;..~r,!'1:~·c~~~1~' o~!.~~~~ ::.~="'~~ ~ =.·~~ • EASY CLEAN SMOOTH 1 3 e . IN MANY UVEL y COLORS I 79 • GLAZE FINISH LASTS A LIFETIME -
woN•t SCRATCH, MARJ WHITE .
'Charin o. 0 .. 11 of .... llt Ullltecl N••Ptfl 8Mdllc..-........ ,..,,... _._ 3 &I ~·oy PASTED AND e • •MelhOdlll Church. IHll lrNdWoy me"'baraftl• II Wllslllro·O•rfltl4' ~URfACE-RESISTS e ~ ~: ,_i...,.,1111,_~•n ~C::Z..~!::::.:.== 1CUFFI, STAIN , DIRTI 4-IQ. TRIMMED!• WASHABLE!
I • MA .. Y •• HEITZ, ............ ., ... Otl4 Coast lllrlM Clllfl, .. _,.,. 1"°"' ~ '?tt>ru.ry 20 1911 Iovino mother o1 H•rbel'·Cotla -8olf'd If "4•llert 2 S/R
1 : _,....,, J • .._j11 .,..j ll•yrnond Holtz ot 1114 The Senti AM <:a...,.rt CIU-.. 1 " 112" · fT. ,
: • L09VM '"'"· ~ .• Mrt. M1>ry D. F-t•I 1MVl<M Wiii be Nlf 9ll"""'" i; 'ulhll OI Co1t1 M .... Cl., ... ., •• b .... ry n . 1'71. ,,, • .,,,. ..
•CLEAN SHINY LOOK 69JjA · ~ FOR COUNTERS, WALLS! '9
0 . 'll.. ,,so:. 4Y•' x4W'· lf}#"'J
: , 9'~~ o1 6, olstor at Mn. Tlllle '.clllc V--.-W CJletlll, Ill.._., ~ , •. o. ~ledtft Oild Mn. Elli• R. ~·~of of ·~ .. 1119 '""11" pref.,............ ,.~ co1 •T ~ : ol,9uhvlllt, 1(91\Ml<y. "~ Wiii bt tonlrlbuflons 10 the 'Sf>r1 .. Crl-M ~ :-.
/ • Te<lltcl on Tll\lrld8v i=.twuary u . ,.71 Cllll11re11s ~tat. Los .llnoelfl. ca.1~----~
' ... 1:00 P.M. a1 o ·eon,,.,.. L"9una H1111 P«Uk v1ew _.,....., --1 lellCll 1 &TEX fU"'
t MOm.ary. ~ of Chri•ll"" 9U<lal dirtcter1-r..AI II i .,...., lntor-wlll be In t.oulsvllla, Ml .II MILLI!•
I Kontucl&y O'ConMr Laguna Hllll CH !L J. MIU.IA, ... •• ..... I ' ldtnl of Loi ""9fl ... CL -..er of
I ~ .... ,.,director>. C,_ LOI .MOii• Ptllca 0eHt1IMllt. I IOMM!ll .' P'RtED llOMMEll, l'ftl.,.llt of Colli Died Ftbr11er1 tl , I~" In 111
'• Mew ca f>OIMd away Ofl "•bruary •lltomobHt I« lclolll. SU<>I ved Ill' 1111 • • • rno!Mr Maly I( Miiier of .....,11"91on ! 10, 197t. 1'lnl!Wd by two tan1 Voryl lucll, Ce. ~11., Melinda Mlli.r of ~ :::i:-, '!, ·~~==~•~tid ~. °";:;'0 Newport Smh, Ca. and brot,..,. • • ·• Airman hi CIMol .wffrey Mlll•r Ofl • claughi.rt Olorlls 51\a'll of ArlrON •nd toeve from Ille U.S. ,.Ir Feret In Hunt·
) J•rc• °'°"1Mr• of Cost• Me••· ca .. 111111on ltaeh ~ -T°llOf'nls Miiier 1
: ~~~r ~'~!:"~ °'c.i;oni~:i· ~·=·:.:=~~..:~.': II-•· I ......,.. .. ., and ) o<tat. •
9r111c1c111....._ 5erYket wtll be ...,.. Mr. Mllltr wn • .,-... W L-..
ThlW...., -nl"ll •I •.00 P.M. It .. " •••ell St•t• C•lltt• Ill "•Ilea ~wn Olis-! Offld•ll"t wtll lie A-mlnlltr1llo11 •11111 11•111 ._.,. o · . meMber ., tN LOs AllfelH f'otlq Aev. Cl\t,,_ D. Olrl< uf ltl9 let Ulllt..:1 Oop1rtmtt1t fw t ... pat I • yeert. Mathodltt (Jluf"Cll, Golla Me... ca. ,., 0 tntal'fl'Ollt Ill u. ,. ... '«* Gtm.t...., ao1tr'f •Ill • r.clttcl at tf'U • • .... ,"-" !ftlllN' ......_, ... TllW-. : at e1.,111e, C•. ee11 lroa•w•r M.,,._,_.,u,1m 1u 1•,..M.-
• Mortuary dlr9<ton. JJa'OH of Owrlll .. lunat Wiii lie .. ICI
: , .,. Friday ,,__., 2•, ff7t el 11:00
, A.M. at 5t. II,,_ t. J-calflelk Owrch. lnl-wUI lie,..... .. Meo
• ~ :· • ~
~
! ~
I ' • i • ~·
---------...... ~Y ltpulclltr CtMet,rr. P'lerce ~Montas le......,.~,_...,,.~
IMITHS' MOtl'TUAlY
827 Main St.
•. Huntington Beach
63&-6539
........... y
I C:Ol.OMtAL llU...-w,
NOMI 780t eo1 .. Ave.
W"tmlneter
893-3526
PAClfltC ¥11W
~llAL PAlllC
c.met*Y Mortuary
Chapel ssoo PacifJO View or1 ...
Newport,
CallfomJ1
04 .. 2700
INCLINE VILLAGE • Nev. (AP) -The bqdy
of a part-tlme act~r,
Jobn Ron,ld Helmer 26,
who apparenUy ~ad
been mlulnt four montb9, wu found near
bere. Helmer wu the
aon o f 1creenwrlter
Greaor Heimer of
Beverly Hllll.
SAN J'RANCISCO
Koracorp Industries lne.
announced the d~tth of
co-founder 8$eplaale
&oret. Mn. Kont and
her huaband, Joseph Koret, •tatted Kant of Callfomia, pnch_ctllOI' li!l!t191!!
to ltoracorp lft4'*"*'1a Inc., d~ val lD ha rrano1"o. -WASHINGTON (AP)
-1e1ua M8iM MoaHJ Jr., M, ~ valet·tO the late PrutdeQt Dwl1~\ &l1talio••r• dlellOf~-..a;.
• MANY COLORS!
• 30-MIN . DRYI
•EASY CWJIUPI
o.M59o!
•HARD OW.El
• PRE·MOUNTEDI
• · um• llAZE
QUARRY TILE
• BRILLIANT COLORS!
• IOLD TOUCH FOR
HEARTH OR FLOOR!
WXURIAIT SHAG
CARPET SQUARES
•DENSE NYLON PILEl
MAKES SEAMS VANISHl
• CUSHION BACICH
• SElf·STICKt.a·a~
(JJl.t sr
@nl•.tr<•nq
VIVID Ol.EFll~
I CARPET TILE
• SPARKLJNO
WALL ACCEWTI
•ADDS DEPTBf.
•. . • ;. • . . . .
~ ...
.... ~
UNIDENTIFIED PATRON DANCES ON SARSFIELD'S BAA
Rod Heyden Serves Drfnk at Popular Wetering Hole
Anything Goes
'In' Watering Hole Drau:M Elite
WASHINGTON (AP)
'rhe American
AutomobUe AssociatiQn
reports that it costs less
to drive a car this year
than it did ln 197'7.
Tbe cost or owning
and operatlna an
average, lntermedlate
sized 1978 auto was aet
at 19.6 cents par mile.
By comparison the
1977 neure waa 20.2
cents per mile, AAA
said.
Leading the decrease,
AAA safd, was a droP. of
S.4 percent in gasOllJle
and oil costs .
The Laguna Beach
'Panbellentc Association
wlll m4eet at l p.m .
March 1 in the upatalra
community room or the
Laauna Federal Savings
Bank, 24301 Paseo de
A family
of popular
cocktail mixes
tor home
·entertainment
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sarsfield's SJ one of the Carter crowd's favorite
~atering holes -or at least it used
to be -because it's a place where
W~sbington's young power elite can ~.really let loose."
The figures are
broken down in detail ln
AAA's booklet "Your
Driving Costs" which is
available free from
most AAA omc.1s or by
sending a self-addressed
envelope to the
American Automobile
Association, Public 33-page refutation. On Tuesday. pre-R I · D sideotial press secretary Jody Powell e ations epartment,
denied a rumor that the FBI was in· 8111 Gatehouse Road,
vestigating the incident at White :F~a~ll~s~C~h~ur~c=:h~, ~V~a~. 2204~~2::_. _J _ _!~!!~~~------~--------=~=~=--~~~~~~~---
House request. .
"They don't have to worry about
preserving an image that they have
to maintain during office hburs,"
said Rod Hayden, who was serving
drinks from behind an oak bar
jammed with noisy patrons on a re-
cent weekday nighL
.. THEY CAN COME in here and let
~heit hair down and act like regular
guys," Hayden said. "It's good to be
able to slide back into that ex-jock,
ex-fraternity attitude now and then
Cod have a good time."
Sarsfield's is the place where one
regular, ehief Carter aide Hamilton
Jordan, allegedly spit his drink down
the blouse of a young woman during
ll recent altercation.
Jordan has denied lhe aecount,
published in The Washington Post.
~d t.be White House has released a
=Phone Firms'
:Plan R ejected
On J11nk Call.8
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
state Public Utilities has asked 29
telephone companies to resubmit, in
more specific language, proposea
regulations banning automatic dial·
!Pg devices for sales pitches.
In rejecting U\e first draft or the
J'roposed rules, filed in respe>nse to a
Jan. 10 PUC request. the agency said
Wednesday it wants clearer, uniform
~egulations. , .
THE PUC Al.SO ordered two in-
vestigations into "junk telephone
calls."
· T he commission also said op-
ponents should be permitted to show
why 1ucb rules shouldn't be adc>pted.
TH E aEVISED proposals are to be
filed by March 6 for a June 1 er-
$fctive date. Public hearings on the
tariff wlll start March 22 in Los ;Angeles.
·• Issues to be investigated include a
customer's ri~bt to privacy from
"automated .. juhk" telephone calls, ·
t.be PUC's ri•ht lo con~rol or I?an suc}J equipment, and whetber'any ex-
cepti~ns shoUld be made.
SARSFIELD'S GAINED a re-
putation soon after Carter's election
as a place where Georgians could get
together and, as political consultant
Terry O'Connell put it, "really gel
down and get crazy."
Just off Pennsylvania Avenue,
about 1line blocks fro01 the While
House and close to fashionable
Georgetown, Sarsfield's is frequent·
ed by sophisticated-looking young
men and women who mingle in a re·
!axed setting imitative or an English
pub.
The owner, Carter advance man
Richard Evans, catered a cut-rate
party for member.s or the new
administration in December 1976,
and Carter aides, like appointments
secretary Tim Kraft, pollster Pat
Caddell and special projects director
Greg Schneiders. kept returning.
CHIP CAllTER, THE president's
son , used to drop by for some chug-a -
1 ugg ing, a\nd one nigJH a feisty
Jordan jokl'ngly took over the·job as
doorman
"We would go le Sar6'1eld's every
night because you ... would see
people you knew and bave a good
lime •nd not be bothered," said
Mark Welner. who works in the
scheduling office of the White House
When the "oldies but goodies"
beirin to play. there are ex-eited
shrieks of recognition of a Beach
Boys' hit, and the casual crowd
begins to dance, first in the crowde<t
aisles and Ulen atop the bar
''DANCING ON THE bar ts ln
keeping with the free flow of the
place," said bartender Hayden.
"We love to dance al all those
places where it is inappropriate.''
said Schneiders.
Ip the last few months. though, the
Carter crowd has been in Sarsfield's
less and Jess.
"We've been in Washington longer
and know about more places now."
said Weiner.
. BUT OWNEa EVANS figures it's
because "once a place gets a re-
putation as an 'iP.' place, then the
people who made tt 'in' don't want to
go there anymore."
"These people like to have fun," he
said. "They're supposed to be on
pedestals like some 1ort of gods but
thcty're just human. Now they don't
like to be \talched by other people."
Pt0ptrty of prominent I.allure World rnidents
t~ther with property of oth.W. . ~ ~ fncluda fine .c:Ut c:ryN1, porcellln f9erfMSt china sets,
: o~faf rup, bro~es. oils. furniture, clocks. fUr C08tl, etc. Af so, ~ iw.ns of Jine antique end modern jeMlry lnclUding large
~limp/#
:;TRI GREAT R KIDS .•. _. IS ON!
WWy w..._. ".,.II ........ ._..,..
4"-e.t ..... -St..t ........ '99' ....... -
SAT.
MARCH
4th
......... nwdw .................. ..
... ~ ........ ....,,m..1s• .. ~• 12·3 , ......
'KING TUT
HAS ARRIVED
Now you too can en1oy the Egyptian relics
of the past These 1martly.styled T-$h1rts
lets vou wear ancient Egyptian art. Choose
from a seteet1on of colon and designs in
both men & women Stzes.
M&rS IOYS' WOMEH'S
..... 3.tt 4.tt
3rd ANNUAL BASS JAMBOREE
o-4\t:.c,\ ~.,,~~ ~ 0. Mwch llllt w ""' Woolworitl ~ '$/
Coad PlaH wAI ltold it's W A-.1 hN
' ....... ,,... wAI .... ...., .............
~~ ................ r--.. ••· r•t•:::.a llteu f lslll •CJ eHwered . llty ...,,.. •ff tr.. G.-cle Cwp., a.....,
'-"· SlryllH lloch, Twlst.r Wet. .._._
LIH, Sebre locls, lebco, let.el, ProUae,
Wtshnt 8-s .ct Wnhnt o.tdaar Mews. We
llop• to He yo• "•r• . . . • • . . . •d ................... '"'
METAL SANYO BLA(]( &
FOOROCKER . WHITE TV
~ 109fl . 6999
Great for atonng many and most
ltemar PlllWOOd box f,..me with
rugged handle. Assorted colors
&-TRACK
Olt
Quick start picture
tube. 12 inch. No. ·
21T63.
CASSETTE CASE
LIBBEY'S ,
24 PC GE STEAM A Gi.ASSWA~E & DRY IRON •
~;59? . . 8~8 .
Yellow Gingham
dealgn. Includes 8· rock• glanea. a
beverage glasea. t\
qoolergl.-e.
Switches fft>m steam to
dry et a puSh of• button.
25 tteam ..m. fof' evel\ tt.at. Model no. F.Q.
.. .
. .
.
~
o.ny ................
ABOARD PAINT, WILLIAMS PREPARES FOR PATROL
He'll Be San Juan'• Fe1tJvel Sheriff
~t'emUp
:: 'Sheriffs' Rarin' kJ Go
• Folks may think "Howdy, podner" has gone the way of orange ·~roves and caUle herds in south Orange County, bul for San Juan
:Capistrano resident Wes Williams, it's just a matter of time.
;: And that time will be coming up again soon. It won't be a
::Cattle rancher uprising, however. It will be San J11an's particular
:l>rand of .annual insanity known as the Fiesta of the Swallows
:ltetum. .· ~: THAT'S WHEN WES WILLIAMS, local truck firm operator,
!)Viti become Sberilf Williams, mister to those who aren't familiar · ::with that 100-year-old six-shooter he's totin'. :· "We jus' go 'roWld the town an on hoosegow day we arrest
~people who aren't dressed Western or have a beard," the soon-to·
1>e·sheriff explains. "We jus' put 'em in jail for a while and they ;~an pay to git ouL" ~ -
!· "Lota a times people's eager to git in there (jail)," Williams
:recalls from bll stint as last year's fiesta sberitf. "A lot a times
:)>eople come by and uk to be put in jail." •,
: THAT'S BECAUSE THE LAW allows prisoners to mellow out
:With a tall cool one or a whole six-pack while they're awaiUn'
dustice behind bars. • The fund-raising jail sentences will be meted March 17. Last ~ear, the sentences netted the Fiesta Committee $250, but Williams ?5 hop,ing for a larger take this year.
.• ' Last. year we arrested a cook in the Franciscan who was
;!warin' short.," be drawls. ''Tb.ls.year we goln' to atart out at Von's
~~nd work around the town."
~
!rights Case
Senten<'~
Slated
J ~rry Lero1 OPIOD, • COD· feaaed eb.ild molestu who fled
the ·uarbor Area thl.I au.aimer
before he eould be sent to jail, ,,,-m be 1htenced Friday in
Colorado tn·conn.ttton wtth tbe
aexull UIMllt of a J.J.yeaflOld 111'1: Opecm wu convlctec\ Jan. 2S ln
Arapahoe County Superior Court
"" of sexual usault on a cblld. Be facea a ftve-to 4().year priton
term for the Colorado offense.
according to prosecutor Skip_
Hilton ol the Arapahoe County
Dlatrict Attorney's office.. ·
OPSON WAS arrested ln
September In Uttleton, a suburb
of Den•er, after the one ffX'Qll.
auault and tbe attempted
molestation ot another 12·year-.
old 1trl from the aame
11el1hborbood.
At that time be was being
sou&ht on • $50,000 warrant is.
1ued by Orange County lawmen
after he failed to show \lP for aenten~ ln connection with a
Harbor Area child molestation
charge to which he had pleaded
guilty.
That case dates back to last spring when there was a aeries
of child molestaUons reported in
La1una Beach, Newport Beach
and C$>1ta Mesa.
TBE VICTIMS, all girls
between the a1es of 7 and 9, told police the man involved said he
was a photographer-and wanted
to lake their pictures:
When be waa arrested In
April, he was charged with four
counts of hlony cblld
molestalkln. In coUrl be pleaded
guilty to one count of mis•
demeanor child annoying.
He was released on bond pend·
ing sentencing, but fled the area
before sentence could be pro-
nounced.
AT THE 1111E. tourt oiftcials
said tbey were prepared to.
sentence him to three months in
county jail and lhtte ;years ol
pro bat.ion.
Hilton said the $50,000 warrant
haa been received by Arapahoe
County court officials, but it will
not be acted upon unUl Opson la
sentenced Friday.
Opson, 47, then faces tbe
possibility of being returned to
Orange County for trlai.
STUA&T Gil.ANT, the pro-
secutor who band1ed the case
when it was in the Harbor
Judicial District Court in
Newport Beach. aaid no decision
has been made about Pres&ine
for lhe est.rad.Won of Opson.
He said official~ in the Orange
County District Attorney's office
will co1Wder whether to try him
under California law. which al·
lows a maximum priaoo t.erm ot
five years for conviction of"
felony child molHlatlon, or
leave him in Colorado atat.e
prbon.
·BUILDINGS REST TEMPORARILY BEHIND CHAJN-l.JNK FENCING
p.,...Mftt ttmtop Home Due lomedaJ; o.&ayed br CompUclltJona
History Still Uprooted ..
Old El Toro School, Church Wait.for Home\
By JERRY CLAUSEN Ol .. Dllty ..........
A pair of historical El Toro
.bulldlno. uprooted from tbelr
original" foundations u modem
development cr;.:•ed around them, remain ud dry on
temporary wood "foundat.lona ..
despite county plans to Clve
them a pm:nGMDt hilltop bome.
Lut J>ecember, the orl&lnal
J'J Toro Scbool buildina, built ln
UIS, and St. George's ~PWcoPal
Miasion. constructed In 1891,
blqcked traffic for hours wben
moved to Herit.ge Hill in El
Toro.
THE COUNTY Environmental
)f anagemeat Agency sald the
structures would remaln beblnd
a hastily erected cbain-llnk
fence wrtil permanent buildinl
pads were constructed in June
1917.
The blstorlc structures are
still behind fencing, and, aald
Steve Loufek , EMA de ·
velopment division landse&JM!
architect. they won•t be placecf
on permanent foundatlom until
late this )'Mr.
"The reaaoa 1t•1 so slow in
commc,•' be aald, "la that lt'a
aort of a compllca~R:!ect.0
Loufek Aid the b1 .. an4
the h.latol"lc Serrano Adobe with
wbich they wtll be grouped ln an
historic aeWng are cllfftcult to
brinl up to IJui.lcllnc code re.
quiremeata.
.. WB dB ADJllNIBTDING
a deai1n contract for pre·
paratioo of v.:orklng drawings
for the first pbaae of the
(Serrano Community) part." be
said.
The !Int pbaH includes °"' three·buildinC DOUDiu, picnic
areas ... sen.no brlve in
Lake Forest ancl reatrooma.
County aupenbon approved a
preliminary dellgn for the park
in Af rll 1978. proJecUn1 possible tota cotll for completion at
nearly *2 milllon.
Louf elt aatcl bl(fs for con·
atrucUon of the ft.nt pbue are
expected bJ July 1. It Is expect.
ed to eo1t about $850,000 and
abould see the bulldln11 set on
foundatioaa by &be encl of thla
year.
PSOPOSED IN TBE park
flan'• MCCJDd. phase are auca
tems aa tennl• coarta..:
volleyball and basketball .areq-
and, pcmlbl)', b1ndbell oourtl,'
Loutek said.
Land for the lJl'OPOMd petc-wu donated to the county by ()c.
cklental Land and Developmmt Company, denloper of Lake
Forest. which plans to build a
commercial complex next to the
park, at Lake Forest aa.4
Serrano Drives. ·
The 111.year·olcl Serrano
Adobe was one of ft.e adobes
loeated oo the coant;J"• biat«llt
Rancho de Im Al1aoa and one4
bJ Don Jose Serrano. Durtna It*
early years, the adobe was th&-
center of rancho feativltiea
wblch included bear and bd11"
figbta, barbecues, and llestu. '·
i Marine Discharge
~ Set as Pt1nishment
f.. From AP OOpatches
'CAMP PENDLETON -A Marine military policeman wboHtrialon
•en charges led to disclos11re or civil rights violations by MP ln·
t esligators will be discharged from the service with no further
~nisbment, a Marine spokesmanaaya.
'New' Auxiliary
Officers Plan
lmtalJation
1_The Camp Pendleton spokesman said Tuesday that Sgt. ·Robert
"""'troveclty bu been reduced in · ~nk to corporal and will be d1I-MPs, indlJdini u oftlcer, about
«iargedfromtbeMaPllesonFrl· the manner ln wblch tbey
+Y. His regular enl.lltment was questioned suspects ID a case in· ~etoendSunday,the1pokesman ·volving dru&.use by members ot
9Jd. the bue'a 189-member MP
;'-OSTROVECKY bad faced a battalion.
'
• cial cou.rt..mart1al on charees· Under oath, the MPs testifted
taking a $6 radio from a th~t under orders from super1or
ilian During b11 trial de-officers, they violated the sus-
lU · were taken from otber pee ts' -constitutional rldits by • om browbeating them, denying
I, them counatl durln~ ~n· l~s ~O* tertontion and by attemp~~ to
' .l '1l • "makelhemr~emaggota. • ,.
~ . k, · THE MPs teltifled that the or-elllt af tlJt! der to conduct questioning in ~ • such a manner came from Col.
f,• William F. Saunders Jt •• Caulp au.eiJ, Death .~~ndleton'• p~vost manbaL
. The Marine Corps said that a
f·po1'al dled at Camp
dleton ot pneumonia -and
a beart .U.ck as announced
T(hlle a•altin1 trial on two
nta of mitrder. · .Tbt dHth of Lance Cpl.
mandc> C. Vasquez, 20, of El
.t10. ~tirat, was c!11clo1ed
u••d•J· lie wa• under
atment for two bullet wounds
fferecl after be al\e1edb' ran
raedt 1n Naval Hospital, k1lUni
o patiilita !1lth aclaaora .
Attlie>Uth Che death wal Ont
trtbuted to a beart attack..-an oPllildileJOHd tJ!at ValflUU tua 1 dlicr of maul~• c pneumonia. ·
Ht WM bl U'8.base ~lbr
atmint ot iJQ\ll'Mli'.i ISl trac~ accldtc>t wMD tla• 1\Ab-
n• taJQHlf \Ookpld'Ja. iO.
The Maitntl' 1~um&P., u.
arl• Ow•nu said mlUt&r'Y llcemn 1bot v~un twtceM
Uet ...... Mir b'9 heart 1ad. rem....a ID Nrioul c:ondltloD .=ar.= •onday, .. v.-ca~ .... loped •..
•
~
( .,
\
OBANQE COUNTY I POLITtCS ~
·eminar tO ReView
OC Campaign Refor:fu
BJ O.C. ll11STDIGI .. ~ ................
: A Procram OD caui~ practices
ad reform in Oran1e Oount1, in·
(tind9d Jlrimartly fOC' candldat.e~
be beld Saaarday at Orea• Collea., Calta Meta.
:: Tbe ltnDinar ls ICbedultd from 8 ._m. to 12:30 p.m. bl OCC'a Sclence
liecture Rall. Advanee nllttratlon ll la.IO, 1'ttb adm•pton $3.!0 at tbe floor. ·
·• Scheduled speakers ·are As·
(.enibl.yman Roo Cordova, D-El Toro;
30bert Nellon of Robert Nellon &
-'11oelate1, political conaultanta:
Q6puty Orange County Dlatrtct At·
torney Mike Capizzl; William
Butcher of the Butcher -Forde
oempaip management firm; Tult1n
~totney Ken Kukuda, and Donald
Weddle of Opinion Research of
taWomia.
Topics will include bow candidatea
can stay out o( trouble with the Jaw.
· .llore infocmation ls available at
~-6880.
***
A CONFERENCE on the increaa.
ing political power of ethnic aroups
will be held from 9 a .m. to 6 p.m.
Area 8ehool Case
Saturday It UC Inlne •
.. Callforala,t Nh llajortty: i\e
Emustol &tbldc Group&. 0 wlll bt
tb• topic ftr tbe contennce in tb• Fine Aria Concert Hall. It ta tJIOD.IOl'ed by Lt. Gov. Mwvyo M.
:01mally, th4' c.ouncu Oft JAterll'Oul>
Relatlona and tbe .PubUo Alfatra
Center .t UCI.
8peaken will include DymaUy,
publlc opJnlon pollatAlr Mtl'VUl D.
Field; Mario G. Obledo, secretary of
the state Health and Welfare A1ency.
and Daniel B. Leviile, dlrector ot tile
U .s. Bureau of tbe Oen.sWI.
•••
NORBISA POULSON BRANDT,
RepubUcan candidate for Ca.11tomia
tecretary of atate in the June e
·primary, will speak to the
Saddleback Republican Assembly
tont1ht.
The meeUna ls set for 8 p.m. at
Peoples Fedenl Savln1s in the
Saddleback Valley Plaza, El Toro. ,
Mrs. Brandt, Irvine, ls a trustee tJl
Saddleback Collete. She was Irvine's
first city clerk and i.s the daughter ol
Norris Poul.Ion, former mayor ol Loi
An1elea and Republican con-gressman.
Court Effect Eyed
BJ TOmt A llASSETJ' 0t•o.11,,........,
A recent U.S. Supreme Court
acreement to decide whether the
federal government may force
parochial schools to bargain with
teacher unions will have "an over-
whelming impact" on a similar local
case, according to Brother Dominic
B e rardelll, superintendent of
Catholic schools in Orange County.
The National Labor Relations
Soard brought the appeal to the
Supreme Court regarding Roman
Catholic schools in Cbicaao and Fort
Wayne, Ind.
"ALTBOtJGB OU. CA.SB bu not
been acbeduled for appeal yet, the
outcome of the Supreme Court case
will have a direct relationahlp to
ours," Berardelli said. "The decision ·
the Supreme Court makea will be lliehlY influential and difficult to la·
nore."
Lay teachers in 28 Los Angeles and
Orange County Catholic secondary
achoola voted in 1975 to request an
elecUoo from the NLRB to choose a
bargaining union. The Los Anaeles
·Diocese ref~ to recognise the UD· ion and rejected the commands ..by
the NLRB to do ao.
The diocese contend.a the church is
constitutionally Hpanle from the
state and thus exempt from its
jurl1dlctlon in aueb mattera.
BerardelU nid.
TWO 8ECONDA&Y achools in
Orange County, :Mater Del in Santa
Ana and Rosary 1n Fullerton, are in-
volved in the cue. Both are part of
the Ora.age County Diocese, formed
1n 1976.
"We definitely recognize the right
of the teachers to organize and form
unions, but when the NLRB comes in
and tella us to do it and how to do it.
.we feel the separation between
church and state has been voided " Ber!rdelll said. '
Canoe Teacher
C.Ourse Planned
By Red Cross
The Orange County chapter of the
American Red Croas la 1poaaorinl a
ctanoeJng instructor courae from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. March 11 and 12 at
Santa Ana College, W. 17th St. at
Brlltol. Santa Ana.
People enroWn1mustbe17 years
old, able to swim and have a basic
canoeing certificate or equivalent
stlll1. Those wbo aatialactorily com-
plete the conrae will receive
certlftcaUon as a Red Cross canoetnc
inatructar.
WH~CAN PUT TflE
®UOO~@
.. /< .. ~-INTO ¥OUR SA.ViNGS?
C'tltfonU C8nedlln hnk can •• , with .even lnr\ovative Sunshine Savlnga
Pfana .•. to make your flnanelal future a lltUe brighter.
We offer apeclal lncentlV9a to htlp rou 1&"9 money 1Uccesafully. For
•xample, a Cettlncate of Oepoalt tha pays you Instant fntere1t In c11h
~ In advance. Take your ln1tant tnter .. t hbme with you or put It back
In the bank to eam more lntere1t on your lnttrett.
When You open a Head Start Savtnge ~nt for $100 or mo,.,, we'll put
the flrat $8.00 In your 1ooount <Unitttd to ts per cu1t°"'9fl·
Why not CorM In today and visit our Sun.hln• 8avlng1 Center for complete
dellllll. W.'JI otve yau a 1'" pe~llnd ootf• cup Ju•t tot oomlng In
.-rid~ .... _....._..•.,..,.,,.. ... ....,_
.. ·• ... . . -
I
• ~. FebnMty m, 1978
..,_,_., .. ,, ................................ , •• c.c..,....,,. ..
by AIC c:.loft T•vtsl-. ..... •le le.A.,._ yem-... ,...,.. CA d ..... yw ~
cit.ell ••• *9ct. TW clrect,....... ..... 1111 •-....-ty acm.p yWl Mlfoy wfttl ._
Xtelld111Jfedlwls .... tllll .. a.il-toa..,1cAt .
FREE D&IYllY ...
SIT.uP ,, ..
.... .oMAL ... ........
19" DIAGONAL XL I 00
FU,,... XIM>ID UFI CHASSIS
• Bechonlc
T ..... .......
T• • Mite Ccll9r' .....
•AP?
• lhld&MlllrlxT•
• A ... CtMI' 6 TW ................
hr. Wt UHF & VHF
cmcln.t
• AFT
.....
ABC's LOW.PRICE + $20.00 FROM RCA
" . .
RCA COLOR TRAK REMOTES
19" DIAGONAL ... _ ~
----...
'
•.
.-......
Pllltwa HUllYITOAIC
,.,
PHONE .
B-3329
FOi
LOW
.LOW
PRICES!
21• DIAfiOMAL XL-100 --sncw.s ..
25" DIAGONAL
COLORTUK ,
2S.-DIASOMAL SIGNAL SEMSOI . .
s7500 .
·REIATE-
.DIRECT
.FROM
VII YOUl • TAX ...... -... ......... . .:.:.
T.
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XL-Wilt
B1clr•c n.ll9g
SUPER
SETI
SUPER
PRICE! ..,.,
UMIT9 SUPPLY
RILL FEATUllD COMTEMPOIAIY snuMG
$6500 IBATI
....... CA ...
AIC"a Ta Cle•mc•
Price YWcla. s.,.-v ..
FULL FEATURED
MEDJTIUAMIAM STYUM6 .
RCA
M Fealwed C-.. Tnk
D"DIAGOMAL
COLOl·TIAK HMOTE
FUU. :
FIA1U19
lCA.
RCA SELECTA·
VISIOM
\
apparently exhaUsted Juron reported
tbey, wer• dftdl~rtMt 'ftf"{tlailt
further deliberaUon.s would be u.se-
lesa. The jury bad been &t7iftl to
reach a verdictfOl'nearly 14 bounover
three days.
THE SILENT, •·MILUMETEll
films , "Juicy Groups," "PM
Playmat& 11," "Campus Virgin,"
and "Rituals,0 and the brochures
were mailed to post office boxes in
Somerville and MUlln1ton, both near Memphis.
Bratcher, 32, was char1ed in a six·
count indictment wlth maWns four
sex flbns and ad\tertlsln1 brochures
to the Memphis area in• 1973, The
government contended the films
violated 1973 obscenity standards.
Big reduCtioils on four of
our"mostwanted"products
TAPE-PHONO-RADIO
HOME MUSIC CENTER
by Realistic~
SAVE•&o
The complete entertainment system at
a super-saving 23% off! AM·FM stereo.
Stereo ca ssette recorder deck. Two 2-
way speaker systems. 3-speed chang-
er, dust cover.
95
Ctal1Mtte-98
1J-Ull
SMOKE ALARM BARGAIN ~----
by Archer•
·sAVE
40°/o
Protect your family and property. Racft0
Shack's top quality smoke alarm continu-
ously stands guard. No AC required. aper·
ates on included battery up to a year. CHARGE rr (MOST STORES)
OUR BEST MOBILE CB
• \I • • • •
·' .;
savings throughout the store on selected
clearance items! quantities, colors and sizes limited ·
to stock on hand, so· shop early for best selection!
these items available in our
Huntington Beach Store
women's sportswear
NOW
30800YSUrTS ......................•..••. 3.98
2HISSYPANTTOPS ...................... 3.98
3211SSYTEES ............................ 3.98
IOJUNIOA TEES ..........................• 2.98
•JUHIOA TEES ........................... 3.11
40SWEATStlATS ......................... 3 ..
30SW£ATEAVESTS ....................... 2.98
20LONG SLEEVE TEES .................... 4.98
45 IUSY PULLOVERS ..................... 5.98
11 llSSYCARDIGAN ....................... S.98
IOJUNIOA CARDIGANS ............•...•... 5.91
1IFULLRGUAETOPS .................... 4.•
35 •ASTERISKS" VESTS . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. .. .98
30•ASTER1SKS" JACKETS .................•• 98
40SHIRTS ..............................•.. 6.91'.
IOAOYALPAAKJACKETS ................ 8.98
20Dl'TTOJEANS .......................... 7.98
20 CORDUROY JEAHS . . .................. 6.98
24.IUMPSUfTS •.•.....................•.. 9.88
dresses, pantsuits
tON
23JADRESSES ......................... 9.98
20JR LONGS ANDJUMPSUfTS .............. 9.98
33.11 DRESSES. .. . . . .................. 14.98
22WOM£NS PMfTSUITS .................. 14.98
21 WOMENS DRESSES . .. ................ 11.98
women's coats
NOW
11 FRENCHRABBrTTRIMMEOCOATS ...... 39.98
7SHOAT All WEA THEA COATS ............ 9.98
lingerie, loungewear
• tlow
1t7 BASIC llONIS .......................... 28c ·
3IOFASMON81KlflS .......•............... 68c a HALFSLPS .•..........•................. 68c
12UNFOAllPANTSUrTS ................... 5.98
31 UtlfORM DRESSES ..................... 2.98
.aUNIFORllSEPARATES .................. 1.9a
242ASST'O BRAS ..................•.....••. 98c
120IADLES ..••.........................•. 2.98
22 Pl.A Y BRAS .............................. 28c
25SWEATSHIRTROBES ................... 8.88
'7DUSTERS .............................. 2.98
448HORTQULTROBES ................... 8.91
SO LONOFLEECE ROBES ...........•....... 8.91
74LONOQUILTAOBE8 .................... 8.98
77HOSTESSWEAR •.••................•.•• 3. ..
41HOSTESSWEAR ..•.•..•..........•.••.. 8.98
27 STRIPED TERRY ROBES .............•••. 8.91
81 BABY DOLLS .....••..•••.•.•....••.•••• 2.98
JSIHORTSl.EEPWEAR ..•...........•..... 1.88
'7&.0,.o NYLON GOWNS ..•..........•..•.• 3.98
•LONGNYLONGOWNS .••....•.......•.... 98c
31JA.SLEEPWEAR ..••...••.....•....•...• 3.98 , . wome n s a c cessones
NOW
11ClJP~ ...............•.•.•.•...• 41c
t10NECl<L.ACal ...•••.••.....••••••••.•••• lie
IOAllTDIRACIL!Tl, .... S ............. .ac
100'IEAC:IDW ...... I •••• " ••••••• 98c
40 VICYL HAfll)8AOS ....•• : •.•...•.•••••.• 2.11
M VltYLHAND8AOS ...•••.......•..••••.• 4 ..
savings for girls
NOW
SO DtTTO TEES .••....••.••••••••••....••••• 98c
254-tX Pl!ASANTSKIRT8 •••••••••••••.•••• 1.91
551·14PEASANTSKIRTS ...•...•...•....•• 1.98
35 4-IX DRESSES ................•..•...•.• 5.98
401·1•DRESSES ...................•.....• 5.91
44 7·14JUMPSUITS/OVERALLS •.••.•....•• 5.98
314-IX JUMPSUrTS .•..........••......•..• 4.98
204-fXPAHTSUITS .•.. , .......•.......•..• 4.98
33.....XPAHTS ••.••....••••........••..•••• 1.-
fl07·14PAHTS •....•......•.•••••••••.••••• t.91
357·14JEANS ............................. 3.98
savings for boys
NOW o IOVS '.J.'S ........................... 2.98
33 BRIEFS .............................••. 3lc
200L.SLVSPORTSHIRTS .......• : ........ 98c
40 WOOi.SHiRTS .....................•.. 3.91
15 3-PCsurTS ••....•.•..........•..•••• 12.11
IOSWEATEAS ..............•........•... 3 ••
I JACKETS ........................•••••• 3 ..
190SSLVKNITS ................•.••.•••• 1.41
33JUVI SWEATERS ....................•• 2.91
10088&.VCREWHECKKNITS .••••••...••• 2.11
200PQLY/COTTONJEANS4-7 ......•••.•• 3.91
46 SHIRT/SWEATER SETS ••.•.••••••••••• 7 _.
IO ICNrT CAPS ...............• ··-••.....• ~ ~
savings for men
NOW
82SSLV'DRESSSHIRTS ............. 1.98
48 PAJAMAS ...............•......... 2.98
25 WOOL SHIRTS ................•••• 3.•
33 CPO SHIRlS ............•......... 3.98
100FLANNELSHIATS ....•........... 2.98
20SPORTCOATS ......•........... 29.98
46 LEISURE JACKETS .....••........ 4.98
55 LEISURE PANTS .........•.•....•. 4.98 '
54 KNIT SLACKS ..................... 3.98
&8 WALKING SHORTS ...•... -•......• 4.98
110YOUNGMENSKNITS .............. 1.98
80 VESTS . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . • • • . . . ~98
100lSLVKNf1S .................... 4.98·
85 L SL V KNIT& .. • . . . . . . . . . • .. . . 98c
savings on shoes
NW •
71CHILDRENS LEA. SHOES •••••.• 12.97
44 BOYS CASUAL BOOTS .•••...••••• L97
24MENSSPORTSHOES ••.•••....••• ~97
52WOMENSLAYEAEOSHOES •.•••. 4!11
infants and toddlers
NOW
451NFANTDIAPERSETS ............. 2.11
151NFANTDAESSES ................ 3.98
25SCREENPRTTEE·TODDLEA ....... 91c
savings for the home
NOW
IOOISHCLOTHS ...................... 41c
200 F!L T CALENDARS •••.......••••• 41c
30 DRAPES ..•.•...••.•..••...••...... t•
80TOS8 PK.LOWS •.....••.••••••••.• 2.11
212 WASH CLOTttS • • • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • 21e
.... O TOWELS ................... 41e
D»IATHTC>WEL.S
'81WIN SHEETS
11 Al.I.: SHEETS
4'QU!Etf SHEETS
14 KING 8HE£TS
311T'DCARS
28KINOCAIE9
saving s on toys
\
l
~u.lm Fines ·Halos.;
fit's ·Unfair~· HeVzog
l KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -
1
• ln~ependent , Press·Telegram,
I Kensas City manager Whitey bad speculated last Sept. 28 on
Herzog says a $5,000 fine ap-the pouibillty of Henoe becom·
parenUy usessed against the inf manager of the California
California Aneels by baseball team, and The Associated Presa
commissioner Bowie Kuhn is quoted him. ••very111lfair." A u try w as quoted 1 n
The fine, which neither Kuhn Rlngolsby's story as saying if
nor the Angels would verify Heno1 was looklng for a Job, the
:Wednesday, was slapped .on the Angels owner bad one for him.
eam .for tampering with Herzog called that statement
Herzog. · harmless.
Herzog told the Associated Reached in Long Beach
Press Wednesday in a telephone Wednesday, Ringolsby said that
1tnterview from Florida that he his copy desk bad cut out a para-
ionen had talked with Angels 1raph which quoted Autry as wner Gene Autry when the' saying, "I don't want to get in-
oyals were in Anaheim. But he volved in tampering, but I
enied that Autry had ever of-certainly would consider Whitey
ered him a job. • • . lf be were available and
.. ,I think the flne is very unfair came t.o us I would certainly
d I don't thlrtk Gene Autry is listen."
tY, or anyone in the Angels Burke said he received a call
ganizatton ts guilty,.. said from the commissioner's' office
rzog, in Miami for a golf after Ringolsby's story ap-
mament. "As far as I'm con· WHITEY HERZOG peared, but he said be made it
rned. they never tampered clear that the Royals were not
·th me." concerned and had no interest in
A spokesman for Kuhn con· declared: •·rm not guilty of a making a protest.
ed that a decision bad been thing." "l guess if I said l was in·
ached OI\ the matter, but said J,oe Burke, Kansas City terested in Tom Seaver U he was
y information would have to general manager1 aaid he was available, technically I could be
6 frOm the Angels. aware of reports last year that accused Qf tampering,'' H~,&
E .J. "Buzzle" Bavasi, ex-Herzog migbt,go t.o the Angellj. s aid. "I think maybe ·they're
ti•e vice president of the but he said the Royals had not <commissioner's offlce) just be-
gels, said the team would filed a complaint with the com-ing too cautious.
e no offtcial eomment unW it missioner's office. "He and I are good friends.
ived a reply10 its protest of Ti:acy Rlngolsby, baseball but we never dlsc~ssed the
·decision. However, Autry writer for the· LoQg Beach managerial job," said Herzog.
** * *** ** * 11hn Opposition Mounts
Bloc of lhawn W anl.8 Commissioner Out
NEW YORK (AP) -A bloc of
baseball owners is working slow-
ly behind the scenes to send
Commissioner Bowie leubn back
inU>.tbe full-time practice of law. An. Associated Press survey
tn41cates that nlne of the 26
ewners tocbty woa1d vote in a
secret ballot to fire Kuhn. wbo baa five years remaining on a ae!1year term. But one owner w was Identified as belng
Ill Kulm aald bi.s~eam was
• dlng flrmly in 1.he com· Jnlssioner's comer. 'l''8 printe lo~ ~ K~bam't reached tbe roll call at ;Jet. bot owper Brad
Co , of TeMS is bcnm to
ha approached several of his
co eagues about dumptn1 the
co .,mlssioner. betthadKuhn•s bead in bis
· years aco ln a meet·
Ing ukee when the com·
m i.clper's contract. came up
for ljhl_ewal. The Jlan1era•
owr,r-.. one of four-American Le gue. executives aligned
ag inst Kuhn at the tlme.
enQ\lgb ogposltlon to make him
on~erm Bowle.
• B~t in an 11th-boar ••mblt. Los Angele1 owner Walter
O'M-alley c:ame flytn& in from
the •West Coast to convince
Corbett and New York Yankees
owner George Stem.~rellller . to
change their votes. · ·
The other nay-saters in 197S
were American Leaeuers
Charlie Finley of Oakland and
.J er r·otd Hoffberger of
BaltiJDore. Ray Kroc of San
Diego was adamant~ his op-
pqsltion. bat ••• co•xed to
change bis Nat:IOnal Le.ague vote
at the last mlnote for the sake of
unanimity.
Contact• with several
ownership sowces have pro-
vided a Bet of at least nine
ownen who are opposed to Kuhn
today. Tbey ar. Ftnley. Cor~
. Hoffbel'ler. &.lnbrenner aad 14oc ~~Mme oners in op-
poalUon ln 1975 -plus four
more: Gene Autry of California.
Bill Veock ol the Cbicaeo White
• ~ Ttd Tumer Of Atlanta and.
• Jlob BoWlam ot Clnchmati.
.However, the New York • Yankee• eal4 tbey ••were
MtoUllded, that tbelr name was ~udecl m a l?OUP nported.ly
1 9"~& aQ ouster•• of Kuhn.
Georgfti Ste1nbnnner, prindpal
O¥er of tbe Yankees,
vetiemently denied the report
and said the world champions
would have .. absolutety no part"
in any such plan and that the
Yankees stand fl.rmly in. the
commisaioner•s comer.
There is dlsaareement over flQw many tDOre ~cative votes would be neecle4 to send the
former NL atton)ey back to his
law boob.
Some owners say five more
anti-Kubo owners would produce
a simple majoc1t.,y ol H <out o(
is clubs)., ti~ tbe bel•nce
•Caln.st tbe eominlulooer. Since thr.:.e no procedure fer dlt-m 'however. other owners eontend that the rules for reney ..
inf the commiaalOller's·contract
must apply.
Thoae rules, in force lo
Milwaukee in 197S, mandate th~t
the commissioner receive
positive-votes from at leaat
three-quarters of the owners in
each of the two lea1Ues.
Kuhn. throu1h office spokesman Art Berke, yas
aated to answer aeveral
questlons. The commissioner
declined to respond to tbe
queatlons and refused to eom-
ment on the matter.
Cor~ the chief antl·KubA
lobbyist, did not return tbe calla
of The AP. But earlier ln the
week. Corbett was q~ bl tbe
Dallas Times-Benld as aavhur;
·"We're pna &et him atuhii>.T•
· Kroc said Corbett' approached
blm about ~I out tbe re.
malning ftve years on Kulm'a
contract.
Bruins,
Beavers
Tangle
CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP)
Ore1on State'• youn1 basketball
teabl puts its post-season playoff
hopes m the line toniaht ln a
Pacifle-8 Coof erence basketball
1bowdown a1alilat third-ranked
UCLA.·
OSU coach Ralph Miller, ln
hls 27th year as a major colle1e
coach, not only bu the Bruins t.o
worry a~ he's 1ot. the flu bug
flutterlne around his team's
practice sesa1ons as ft'ell.
No fewer than ei1ht Oregon
State players have been bit by
the nu this week, Miller said,
but be expects most lf not all of
them to be able to play tonight.
41J'Ve beenaitiln' on this bench
O.TVl'e• ... t
O..•HIS•t8
for a Jong time," Miller said,
"and I've never had so many
kids co down IO quickly."
FcJrtunately, Miller said, the ..
players who became W Monday
were able to practice some
Tuesday.
Miller said players who have
had the flu include starters
Rickey Lee, Brian Hilliard,
l.t'.irlt lbdford and. Alonzo.
Campbell along with olten·used
reaerve Ray BIUm~. ..I'm sore they1l be able to
pla¥.'" Miller ·said, .. but what
condition they'll be in is
questionable!'
The game-looms as the biggest
of the1seuon for the surprising
Beavers! With seven. freshmen
on: tb& vanity roster, Oregon
State was picked t.o finish in tbe
Pact8 ·cellar' prior to the start of
the se&SoG. lhlt Oreto• State is
alone in secoad place in the con-
fereae-e with an 8-3 record.
UCLA, unbeaten in 11 con-
ference gatna and 20-2 for the
· season.,eould clinch its 12th con-
. seoutive Pac-8 tiUe by beating
the Beavers. .
Miller ~ a victory over
the Bruins could propel Oregon
Stale into either the NCAA
playoffs or the National
Invt.tatioa Tournament.
••eerta1n1y tt would enhance
our chances," Miller said.
"Alter all, our record after tbe
first of Januaty looks pretty
food and they<tbeBnaln&) arewi-doubted.ly one of the finest teams in the country.••
Smee Jan. 1. Oreron State is
8•3.
. ••uCLA is apln the most ex·
perlenced team in the con·
ference." Mlller said.
.
HOOKING ONE ·-Gus Bailey of the New Orleans Jazz
goes for layup against Phil Smith of the Golden State
Warriors in an NBA game at•New Orleans Wednesday
night. Bailey scored 12 a& the Jazz stopped the Warriors,
'116·91. .
Sports ·in Brief
I
BODdS Arrested; .
.Kings: Bow, 4-1~
RIVERSIDE -ChJcago White
Sox outfielder Bobby l)onds was
arrested Tuesday night on a
charge ol drUnk driving after his
car j:OJlided wlth another
'vehicle, police said.
The accident was not the fault
of the 31-year-old Bonds, accord-
ing to police.
Bonds, who was arrested on
similar charges twice when be
was a member of the San
Francisco Giants, was booked
Into Riverside County Jail and
released early Wednesday
morning without postin~ bail
Police said a car driven by
Paul E. Cousin, 19, of Riverside,
made an illegal left turn which
caused the acddent. Cousin was
cited for makine an illegal turn.
During the inve&tigation of the
accident Bonds was observed t.o
be under the influence of alcohol
and was arrested at the scene,
police said.
K• .. Cn••le
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. -A
dazzling goal by 27-year-old
Swedish rookie Per-Olav Brasar
trinered a 3-gQal third period
tlurry and powered the
Minnesota North Stars t.o a '4-1
National Hockey Leaeue victory
over the Los An1eles Kings
Wednesday night. Braaar took the puck across
the blue line down the left wing,.
cut sharply t.o his rl1ht between
defensemen Dave Hutchison and
ltandy · Manery ·and then broke
down the slot to beat Bogle
V•cbon..
~v...-
» f;NVER -Tom Leonatd scored ilD upset 1-6, 7·S victory
over Marit Cox ln a men'• tennis
tournament Wedn~11Clay night,
In other acUon Wednesday.
Nick Saviano defeated Heinz
G"ntbart. 6·3. J.s. l·S: Cllff
Drysdale took a 2·6, S-2, 6-3
"Ylotory over .Jan Norback and .
Stan Scnith downed .Jobn Lloyd • &-2,M.
OiMi. AdWlllW
D&TROIT -1'01emary
Cuale beat Leslie Runt. 7-5, 6-3
WedDeadat ill the aecGDCl U, of
a women's professional tennls-
toumament.
In the biuest upset of the da)' ~ Caroline Stoll defeated Sae
Barker after leading the rll'St 3't
S·3 When Barker became iU aid
retired.
. Mona Guerrant overcame
Francoise Durr, 0-6, 6 ·0, S.1.
Wendy Turnbull ousted Regina
M arsikova, 4-6, 6-1. 6-3; Kerey
Reid defeated Janet Newbe
6·4, 6-0; and Dianne Froinbol
beat Yvonne Vennaak, f>..3. 6·1. •
Virginia Wade defeat •
Marita Redondo, 6-3, 6·2, whDe
Evonne Goolagong downe
Mlcbele Tyler, M, 6-1.
. lffe&er.e F.,,.
OCEAN CITY, Md. -Balas
Tarocey upset John McEnroe
3·6, 1-6, 6·3, Wednesday in th6
openine round of the Ocean City
International tennis tournament.
Taroczy will m ee t Sa
Clemente's Bob Lutz in tonight's
quarterfinals.
Roscoe Tanner overcame
Eliot Telts cber. a UCLA!
freshman, 6-3, 7-6, while
Moore eliminated Jay Lapidus.
• 6-4, 6_., and Zeljko Franulovic
turned back Matt. Mitchell,, M.
8-1.
Takers Dealt ,. . .
l27-l22 Loss
InOvertbne
OM.VN.OT
.
:Balance
~
~ ClllUtrroB-Vallq CbrlltSa !b ., CruAdera turnlJb the op.
ltioD for Capiltrano Vall~ 1b •1 Cou1ar1 tn Frld'Y 1
.(f.:10) CU' l·A baaketball t1uartarftnall utt at SaddMback
~ ...
· But wblle Valley Cbrlattan r:ctt"~ :1ao=~
bowlea leM Ulan 500 1tudenta. lt
11 not an oppaneat lackinC talent ud aperimoe.
Tb• Cruaadera of coach 11arold DIBle. delplte •tartlna
th• IUIOll with DO returning 1tarten, ue 23-3 for the aeuon
and the ldaool'• b.lltory tncludea
10 playoff tournament.I in the
lut 13 campelans.
.. I tbou8bt we bad • ahot at the
playoffs and bad a 1ood chance
to win 18 sam•.'• aaya DeBle. "But we've done better than ex·
pected. laraeJy due to our ablllty to play well aa a unit. The key
bu been a u,hUy-knit unit and
Ule team la umelfiJb ...
. The (naadera are led ln the
scorlna column by 8-0 junior
1uard Michael Smith, who
averages 18 polnta per game.
The real of the istarting unit, in-
cluding the fl.rat player off the
bench, Rusty Campbell. are ex·
tremely balanced.
The front line constata ol 8-3
Jeff Brouwer and Jack Kimm at
the forwards and 6-a center Jobn
Vermeer.
Vermeer averages 11 point.I
per game, while Kimm baJ
averaged 10.5 per iaaue. Jerry
Roelofson, a 5-10 aenlor guard, is
the noorleader with 10 assists per
game.
The front line 11 conal.steot
with each player averaging 6-8
rebounds a game, as doea
Campbell, a 6-2 sophomore.
How good is Valley Christian
and it s 22 ·3 record?
s:;omparative scorea reveal these
<:Om mon denominaton:
The Crusaders stopped
iJ(ontclair Prep (62-48) and
: ~tario Christian twice (~51 !·~ d 68-58). Capo Valley,
• :iihanwbile, destroyed Ontario
: ~ristian (84-51) and Montclair
: :Ptep (81-59).
:·:·:~nother view: Irvine High, a
: ' m t.boroughly beat.en by Capo
· ~f lle y three timea, ed1ed !~~ittier Christian. 47·46, i· tlJlich fell to Valley Christian,
--~~ and S'l-42.
ti=· * * * • o# • :~~· .-... •.•4. IEac•t•Gf' M .. W"tenoOlr, 46 '{jJ· eo.co T9dl " 41 .,..._ n :\! M-clelr"'"" • S4 LA 9-!Jt '°' .1~ • £99•• Aodt .. •I LA Lull'ltt'an Sl
'• S.v•Ma .o .. 0ntllf'190lr. SI ; ' Po<ft-50 t0 WKlenoOw', )4 ,~ ""'Kl• n sr w111n1waw. a "~ j4 Sante Fe S.f S7 ,,._ 41 ·~ Hen.or-56 10 LA hclUtl 51 hit.Jeff Al fl lelhl.if n
; LA Lw1Nr911 " Ctft ~ • °"' ... °". 51 " •'9f'ltMIDd $) : ' 'WhllllerOlr. .a 7S Fiii..-• ~7 •' .~. ;~fy Sports Tonight
:~: 8 p .m. (5) -COLLEGE
• ·>~sKETBALL -The UCLA :-;~ruins meet the Oregon State ~ 'Jeavers at Corvallls.
: , 10 p.m. (13) -COLLEGE :~ASKETBAU. -The USC Tro-
; [1-ns meet the Oregon Ducks in a
:/Jame played earlier t.oni&ht at ~: ~ugene, Ore. .. ~
. ' OCC Falls, 2·1
•
..., .... P111191W....., .,....._
EDISON'S CHRIS CRATER fCENTEA). CN1EY METKOVICH BATTLE FOR BALL.
Edison Tops Nogales, ~·O
Goalie Ste.e Hellmich re1-
lstered his lltb &hut.out of thei
season to lead Edison <Hunt-
io gtoo Beach) Hi$h's soccer team to a 4·0 victory over
Nogales (La Puente) Wednes·
day night in a CIF 4-A playoff
game at Huntington Beach High.
The victory advances the
Chargers, now 19-2-2, to Frida>:'s
quarterfinals where they will
meet Palos Verdes, a 3-2 victor
over Torrance. The game will be
al Palos Verdes. Both teams will have reven&e
as a motive for Friday's clash.
It was Palos Verdes that
knocked F.dison oat of the um
playoffs in tbe quarterfinal
round. Edison banded P alos
Verdes a 1-0 defeat in a DOO·
conference eame early this
season.
The Chargers bad a touah
time in a acorefesa first half
against Noaalea. But Casey
M etkovicb broke tbe lee with a
goal early in the second half and
Brad Webster, Herb Boehm and
Chris Crater chipped in with
&oats to keep F.di.soo in front.
However, it was defense that
. coach Dave MacLeish said de·
cided things. In addition to . '
El Toro Nine Tied;
CdM, Irvine Lose
Wednesday marked the
begtnning of the prep baseball
season but El Toro, Corona del
Mar and Irvine ~en·t e:r.actly
rejoicing .
That's because all three
squandered late leads in their
openers to come away without a
victory.
El Toro bad to settle for an 8-8
tte at Brea in a slx-tnnlni game
called because of darkness. The
Chargers blew a 7-1 lead in the
fifth.
leading ~3 through fin tnnlnp.
Six errors aided Verbum Dei,
which rallied for four runs in the
sixth inninJ, two of which were
un~arned.
Gary Jones of Irvine stuaed a
double, the only extra base blt of
the game, and John Malloy
clron in two runs w1th • peir ol
1in11el ... tbe v~ ouWUt
Verbum Del, T-4.
El Toro qw lta chance for
vtctort fade •heD Brea nllled with a two-out. two-nm bomer In
the •Dth lnJllDI after Clarkaeu
tiad beaun to 1et ln.
Hellmich's performance in the
net, the Cbargen receiYed out·
standing defensive play from
Robert LoD1, Mike DiGloYonni
·and Boehm.
It's the third time in four
years F.dison bas reached the
•quarte.rfmala.
The Chargers have won thetr
last 12 games.
SOCCER/BASKETB~t/BAS~Al;L
Palomar Upaet
Gauchos Close
·To Mission Title
• By CllAIO 8017 ••Dll•, ..... ~ Saddleback College needs only
one more victory to claim the
uncU1puted lliuloa eontennce
baaketball · cbamplon1hlp -tbannln p.n ~ su Benalrd1nO
Valley Coll.... . .
WblJe tbe Gaucbot ••re hammerln1 •llttlna Bouthweltem. 85-38, Wedneaday
nltbt San Berdoo WU~ l>rnloua co-leader Palomar,
Gl-58.
Th\ll, Saddleback needs oaly
to win Saturday nl1ht at
RIHnide CC to um a trip to
·tbe March ~18'state JC tourney
at Lons Beach ArenL Wedne1day nl1bt.
Southweltel'D bit 81 percent of
lta 1botl trom tbt fteJd -but
1Ull I01t by S'I point..
Sound un.W'l Well It wu.
Southweltern. whlcb came ln-to tbe pme with a 1·25 eeuon
record. attempted on1J 21 1bots
in the game, elec:tlnc to use four·
corner delay tactics. .
In the opening half the
Apaches tried only ei&ht shots
(hitting flve). Ana shot No. 1
didn't come unW nearly eeven
mtnutes had elapsed. Wben the
Apaches' ftnt field coal try was
attempted, Saddleback had a
commanding u.o lead.
It wu a aooct same r.tan -•· cept the Apaches dldn t ba•e the
personnel to pull lt off. And, ap-
parently to keep the acore OOwn.
Southwestern coach John
J ackaon elected to staJ with the
maneuver all the way -despite
beiDg down by 40--50 polat.8 most
of the aecood half.
Southwestern attempted on1.1
layups and shots from in clo6e -
much to the dismay of the
partisan Saddleback crowd -
many of whom were booiq the
Apaches at game's end.
"It'• a good eame plan U a
t.am ts ahead. !Jut thq WtN
never ahead. It just wasn't good
basketball,•• said Saddleback
coach Bill Mullican.
WlUi 5:58· to 10 In the tint
h•lf, Saddlebaok betd only • 23·~ 1184. But tba dra&N ended ID the remalnlDI 1Dinuta ot tho
half ae t.be G.ucbol acored Ule
ftnal 22 points to bold a com.
m andin1 "·12 bulae at ln•
termlasioo. Jn that lut 5:58. SouthweMerll
took only one ehot and aJao
turned it over eight times.
The HCODd ball wau't &ll1
dif.fereot aa tbo APacbea refuMd to come out ol {be delay. But
poot Southwestern ~ and alert detenalve play by tho
Gauchos allowed Saddlebeck to
build tbe lead.
Saddleback playe4 without
p_laymaker cuard Jtlch
?tfcEtratb. who wu atdelhled
wltb an ankle 1praln -but
Mulllgan probably could have
won tbla aamo wttla bis tllird
team.
A1 usual the Gncbos Ud
plenty of balanoe wltb Artie
Green (18 poi.nta) and Rodney
Miller (17) leadl.oc_ ~~. wq.
Tom Llay ud Ttm KBl&lll both
blt 13.
Saddleback ftNcbed with a SS
percent 1bootJ.D1 mart. bitting
42 of '18 field goal at*empta.
Southwellem b1t 1• ol 21.
Tbe Gaudm, ta wtmdne their
28th aame ln 30 oudap, wppecl
their lllulm c.onfenaco IUl'k
to 12·L
II 8 1 • Oil ..... 9 1
Wortll """'"' 2 0 , ' Helm ....... •2 2 t •
Taylot a ' • • ........ 'e I a "°" 4 1 I t = • t 4 U · ......... l 0 I 4 ., ..
$1'111111 s , s , $taM I 2 1 •
VM<• 1 0 1 2 Welts 2 o I 6
Mcw!Wolt 0 4 I ' ._ 2 0 4 I
~'(. • ' 2 u 7 I 2 t7 f'IM•--1 0 I 2
TcMAI ... .,.,. Totlb ClhMIS
........ tss_ .. , .............
Corona del Mar was leading
5-2 after four and a half innlngs
at Westminster but gave up
eight runs in the boUom ball of
the fifth to go down to a 10·5 de-
feat. The game was called after
five lnnings because ol dark·
ness.
Brea, held ln check "1 plteher
Mark Kachetetn for four timlno.
erupted for ftve nma ln the t1ltJi
on two llnales, three waJb and an error. . .......... CASEY METKOYICH (2) cOwDD,WITH NOGAI El GOALIE BRIAN STAKI! (RIGHT).
Irvine lost its first •arslty
game ever, 7-S to •lslttng
Verbum Dei (Los Angeles) after
.,..,.. •IGIJ',rt Ott ....... .... .......... ..,.
~-4010 *II,• 4eOO • ~d 4tft C• "tt• tete w.i--. c 4 " t ZJncMc .. I' 10 o • ..._,. 4111 • T.... 11111 ..........
• II • ........ , ...... , .
South Coatlt Baaeball
Chaffey Steals It .. ,...
.. , .... ic..r.• •••• ...,...,,. •tt• ~Cf .. 00
Oole.ltt 4110 ....,__. 1110 ~ ..... ,.. ... tt ~.-1111 HIMMl--11 •• 1 0 ....... '\. • ' t t
Wide Qpen ·Scramble
•
Steire Leahi a JuDlar wbo was
lmpreeatve ln 11111UD• ~e ptar, and 1enlor1 Cbrll 1.z-
rua1a aad Barry Stearn. Woolard and Ricky Frlck. tt'8
Panthen came back In tlle
bottom of the Inning to steal the
winntng run. With two away and
a runner at second, steals of
third and home accounted for
the winning marker.
Orl ... Clestlll QI~ .. , '"" ...... Smith, ti • O O O ,,.,,..., .. I e 1 0
9erMll, 211 4 0 I 0 1'19' ... It .. I I 0 'W'l,.>411 . I 1 I O Felll\alMf, tlllll I 1 0
1to0lta11.a 4 o t Or ....,,., c a o o 0
Hetto111c 4 o 1 o 1,twlt, )ti t t 1 t l'rlctt.lf I 0 t 1 ......_. It• 0,
Oot1811, "'"' ' • • • ~,.,.. .. d • • 0 0 Pe""" d 4 O O 0 &e'ffrl'I, lb I 0 t O ........ t 0 • 0 tt......-.rt• 1 2 • ~lb l • • 0 111m11. rt • • f 0 Mel'afes.1111 1 •• 0 Pltrct.. 0 •• 0 T.Uta a t 6 1 'r .... , • t 0 0
ec-.. ...... ,. II • tot flO tot--4 0 I •OOt Mll-ttO
....._. ltlt onia.c ttat .... r,, UU T .... I aUI ............ . ...
::..~ t:=u
CiJM m. ,. • ~ , , ......., ....
MIMIM... t1 " :=.." .. u . i~~ .. :::: =·· u:: Q....._,lfOOto Ht tit I IMtllflit• .,,. ~-.,.,
• "'"~ ,. • ••• ..., ........ , t ,.._,._, a I O e e flkMI*. tf I f t I .......... . ... ~... . ... ~-.... ~ .. ''" ()lie,; rf t 11 I IC,_., t · l 11 I .........,., ................... .
INnMll.O I UI ""91.• ,. ••• ~' eou wm-.. • ••• ·=· :::: .,... . ... ....,.... . ...
C.... ... Mllr '" .... , s. WtilMllllW 100 ...... ' •
Tracer 1111 he IDA1 be .art.. tns an all·JanJ.or tnftelcl-Jlm Sbollln at f1nt. John Mel~ at ~nd. Jim Hall at tb1ril and Lulle at lbolt whea be Jlll't
pltchlnt.
Other Jnftelclsl who flpn to
He actlola are c.rt EJunann. a aophomore 1hort1top. Clark
Ha1e1, a ••Dior aecond bueman, aD4 Skip Allen at ftnt..
Jeff Col• coulct alao find
hlmNlf at ant bue wbim bi's
• ..ntu • •m C9tellilr. Tb• ou6ilc1 llldad• a tl10 at MD.Ion frolD tbe >.m lV ....,_
Crall JCJIWtA)n Sn 1~ !larches 1n center ud Mm Wlltle to
~~ Brea mn Utnafer C!trts
Johmtaa wbo tilat ftnl•bed the
bHketbaU IONO:t.:11$ also npre bl Traaet'• .. CMC••-.
coacbee tbl'OQ&!liaut
tb ~Cotta .....
on• of UU. c:ontadera IDd co.ch Jba Omar lm't blushlne at the compliment uou natenttal ,, definitely
ptarott,f·-·omaP .. , •• "l'tn
~~timlltlc, but c:aattoU1l1 10.
1 •• .. a lot ol ~~ fMlDI fall flat GD tbll.r face."
Tb• lhlt•• ...... m ntum-tni ttuwa. bid11idbia m fftlW
Jta• pttdael'L Lef\hader Dale Boucller
(proDMHd BOot .. r) II CIOft•
llderW .. of tbe leap ... -
IDOOD4 ptolpetta Del' itibt.)r
\
\
SWIMMING I BASEBALL I TENNIS
DENNIS NESPOR
Dana Hiiis
TOM TRAGER
Corona del Mar MARSHALL ADAIR
San Clemente
South Coast Baseball •••
Continued From Pa"e B-2
lttitchell, Ken Stout and Dave
Ehlow.
Catcher Mike Britt will pro·
bably be the starter when the
league season starts, but now
he's recovering from fractures
to the collarbone a nd right
ankle, injuries he sustained in
an automobile collision.
The backup catchers who will
see action in his absence are
Tim Gallagher and J ohn Hunn,
the latter also earmarked for
time at third base.
Greg Burns loom s as the
primary fir s t ba se m an
candidate, backed by Syd
Harriman and Mike Lowry. At
second base is senior Wayne
Johnson, one of the team's best
power hitters.
Hunn will have to beat out
Pete Strong and Dick J effers to
get the third base job, and both
h ave been impressive in
practice
The prime outfield candidates
are Ed Kearns, Mike Smith,
Craig W1nninghorr and Dirk
rebuilding year for the Diablos.
Lettermen Ed Mccann and
Jeff Newton will alternate on the
mound and play shortstop and
third base, while junior Paul La-
joie returns for his second
season as a starter in the out-
field.
Lajoie hit .305 as a sophomore
but the Diablos don't have a
solid power hitter in the lineup.
Helping Mccann and Newton
on the mound are Dave Clouse,
Gary Arnold 31ld Phil Caruso.
Arnold is a southpaw who could
see some service as a designat-
ed hitter, also.
Three players are still fighting
for the catcher's job-seniors
Kenny Hofrichter and Bruce
McCardie, and junior Brian
Okazaki.
First base chores will be
handled by Mike Roberts, a
junior, while second base is up
for grabs between juniors Clouse
and Vito Hite, and sophomore
Dave Teske.
wer e one of the best hittint
teams in Orange County last
season, our hitting this year is a
question mark."
El Toro has seven lettermen
back from a team that finished
7.7 in league after injuries
crippled the pitching staff.
This year Reins has five varsi-
ty pitchers to choose from-
M ark Kachelein, J e ff
Huddleston, Carl Binder, Rick
Sianez and Wayne Glisson.
K achelein is a two-year
letterma n who hit .342 last
season, and will alternate in
right field with Huddleston when
not on the mound.
Steve Key returns to third
base, a position he bas handled
for two seasons, and Bobby
Craig is back for his second year
at second base.
Draper, all seniors. · V••~"•
University High (Irvine) has a
new head coach, former UCI
catcher Carl Peternell, but not
much else about this year's
team is new. The entire starting
unit returns intact from las t
year.
Shortstop Mike lnglehart is
another letterman, giving the
Chargers experience all around
the infield. Pele Changala, a
senior with good speed, bolds the
cent.er field spot for his second
straight year.
Sa11 ~te La9ut1aB~~•
Like nearly every other team
in the pitching-rich league,
Laguna Beach has two good pro·
specls with varsity experience
on the mound-Todd Weaver
anflo..li m Richardson.
The Artists also have a sound
defensive team, but the question
remains will Laguna Beach be
able to put runs on the board?
Two who might help answer
th at question are Steve Kessler
and I a n Cald erwood, both
power-hilling lefthande rs who
can take advantage of the
Artists' short right field fen~.
They'll be platooned at first
base.
Kevin Kiesselbach is another
returning standout who'll play
shortstop this season if Bill
Gompf takes away his third base
;ob.
Gompf started at the hot cor·
ner as a sophomore, but sat out
his j unior season while recover·
ing from a Lbumb injury.
Coa ch Hal Hensler is also
counting on three juniors to
come through-catcher Paul
Corey, outfielder Alex Bacon
and utility man Stefan Lipson,
who can pitch or play just about
any other position.
Letterman Terry Haught Is
penciled in at second base while
the outfield list includes Bacon,
Mitch Kruger, Dave Nichols and
Pennsylvania tra nsfe r Ken
Jaussi.
Ml••fe• ¥le.l o
First-year coac!h Ron Drake
has experience on the mound
and on the left side of the field,
buL other than that, il may be a
CIF Playoff
Sites
Cll' ........ I ... yettlltff ...
irr1Ay1111MatM9llellft CM........, CHter
7-Verbum Del n GomPlon l:~S-l(altlla vs~ VallW
SMunlllY .. it AllllMlm ~Ol!ICttltar
7-Pa ...... "9 Momlnoslde t :U -L.8 Po11 n Servllt or
Vtfllllra
Coaches throughout the league
fi gure University to be a con·
tender, lf only because or Joe
Mull, a hard-throwing two-year
varsity starting pitcher.
"Mutt's our franchise, but if
our second pitche r (Andy
Murasbko) can come throueh
we'll be pretty good," Petemell
says. "We've got a lot of team
speed and a solid defense up the
middle. You Might call ws a
dark horse in the league race."
T om Hughes can also play
catcher, and power-hitting Steve
Tilles returns at first base.
Se cond base is up for grabs
between Dave Gentile and Terey
Lee, while Mike Shaw wlll
handle shortstop on an alternat-
ing basis with pitcher Murashk.o.
A similar situation exists at
third base, where Mutt will play
when not on the mound. His
backup is Steve DuPauw.
In the outfield the candidates
are John Riess, Dave Evans,'
Jeff Scheets, Joe Parker and
Todd Waterson.
El Toro
Coach Tim Reins has more
pitching depth than he's ever
seen before, good team speed
and a solid defense. Together,
they spell a tiUe-contending
season for the Chargers.
"Let's just say we have the
potential to be a contender,"
Reins says, trying to downplay
his enthusiasm. "AlthouJ{h we
San Clemente might have
been a runaway favorite to win
the league crown if the Trilons
weren't stricken by the opening
or nearby Capistrano Valley
High.
The new school took away two
potential starters and the team's
outlook was dimmed further
when one of last year's starting
pitchers was ruled scholastically
ineligible for this season.
But San Clemente still has 6-6
J ohn Carson, who could emerge
as the South Coast League's best
pitcher, and two other hurlers
who are untried but show
potential-j unior rigbthander
Dou g M o ore and senior
southpaw David Law.
Four lettermen who return are
Carson, senior outfielder Fred
Merrill a nd senior infielders
Wes Welch and Chris Russick.
The team ls young and inex-
perienced on the whole, with
sophomore Richard Gray a pro-
bable starter al catcher, junior
Jerry ·Duchesne (pronounced
Du-shane) s plitting time with
Gray behind the plate, and
junior Steve Squire earmarked
for a starting berth at shortstop
or third base.
The pitc hers will probably
alternate playing first base,
while Welch has the second base
job na iled down and Russick will
play third base if Squire is at
short. Junior Scott Lich provides
backup at any of the infield ·
positions.
Outfielders are M e rrill,
Duchesne, Gray and junior Mike
Lewis. Frank Masongsong can
pitch as well as play outfield.
For CotUt Area
Tennis Summaries
. . . -.. . . . .. .... --......
,
Only one victory separates ijle top three swim
teams in the South Coast League but the title
picture should clear up next week when undefeat-
ed El Toro hosts once-beaten Dana HUis before
traveling to three·Ume ClF champion Mission Vie-
jo to end the camP.aign.
El Toro ran its season record to 8·0 by. sto~
pil!_g vlsiUn.1 Costa Mesa, 104-65, despite -
superlative double by Bob Dolan ln the distance
events.
Dana Jlllls, behind double victories by Dave Var'ney and Jack Graef, rolled by host Lal\lOa.
Beach, 87-64, while Mission Viejo had little trouble
in wlnnin& at Corona del Mar, 100-47. In the other
league meet. San Clemente beat visiting Universi-
ty High (Irvine) 100-66.
Dolan won the 200 free in 1;43.1 and the 500
free in 4:46.3 while Varney posted his second ~
flat effort in the 100 butterfly in two days.
Phil Ohle of Estancia <Costa Mesa) Hieb also
had a sizzling double, winning the SO free in 22.3
and the 100 free in 49.9 as the Eagles lost at Villa.
Park, 109-58, in Century League action.
In the Sunset League, Edison (Huntington
Beach) stayed in first by trouncing host Fountain
Valley 105-6S, Newport Harbor won as expected at
Huntington Beach, 101·63, and Marina triumphed
over visiting Westminster, 92·69.
* * * * * * V ..... tr (HI l :Of.56.
DaN Hiib 1171 l'4)......... 100 l1n ....... Cl'• (H) l:OUS; 1. 200mecllaYrtl~una 1:41.0. Taylor IHI 1:ot.n ; J. Elli-IHI 200 fr'ff-1. Gr_, IOI l:St.O; 2. 1:°'.S4.
w 11 .. 10) l:,U; .J.thoal (LI 2:01.0. 400 ., .. ,..,..,......, Hliwport H•rbor
200 IM-1. vomey IOI 2:°'.I : 2. J:U.tt.
Woooa IOI 1:14.2; 3. LAM IL) 2:1U .-....vanety
SO lrH-1. Houla ILi 2•.3; 2. Mtl. llectl 1111 Itel "-..rt
Tweodl• (0) 24.J; >.Stolt IL) 2A.6. 2ot "'"'*"' retay-1. Ntwporl
100 fly-1. v ... ,.., IOI SS.a; 1 •• H•rtlOr 2:00.tl. 200 1.--1. ~ ...
Twoecll• (0) l :Oll.4; i. Maa-• (LI IN I 2:0S.St. JOO lllCI. 111edtey-1,
1:04 O. • CarltOfl (NI 2:21 .... SO frff-1. 100 lrM-1. HC'UI• (LI St I, 2. L.avman IN) JI.St. 100 fly-I. 0.IMMy (0) SU; l. Sloll (LI Sl 0 L.ay..,.,. (H) l:OU7. 1• .,..__,, H.
SOO lreo-1. Gr_, IOI "° Ume; OVlft•ner 00 51.11. 100 bocll-1.
2. Slloal U.I ; 3. Ma.c-U ILi · Eedle IN I N time. 10 breut-1. 100 bKll--1. lleemen IOI 1:012; 2. H19bv IHI 1:10.Gll. Maxwell CU 1:01.4; l. II~ IL) ,., • 1•11
I 06 4. Mt .. lleodl l6fl 1691 __,
ICIO bfeast-1. ~ U>) LOS.7; 1. 200 111edley relay-I. HOWPfft ~•lono IL.I LCl6.I; J. Fr...U. IL.I H•-1:03.'2.
1.106 20t lrM-1. Olma CNI 2:06.27; t. .OU lrff rel-I. Oona HlllaJ; ... .A. 8a111f1 (H);l. ~IHI.
l' ..... $411111 100 Ind. medey-1. It. ""9e1ln (Ml
0-Hlllo 1911 CJ71 ~ 1''7,4';1. W1"9M lN); l. AJuo 00. 200 modley reley-0.fte Hlllf 51 treo-1. W"9M CHI ll.l.1; Z.
2:os t . GlttOfd (Hl;J.Zv111rauo.
200 lr-1. ~IOI 2:07.J; l . so fly-I. ltluo (NI JO 01; l r
L.Oft9fleld !LI; l. T991-IOI ~llfl IHI; :La. a..i-()4).
200 1-1 . .__ (01 2:n .s; z. 100 lr-1. L..wlt (HI SS.I; t.. 0.pfyfler U.I; J. W.U.. IOI. Wrltflt (HI; l. 0..r1h• lNI.
SO frff-t. L.aone lDI U I ; 2. SO back-I.~ CH) no time;'
Treuell IL.I; l. °""""°(LI. L la ..... IHI; J. N Ollrd.
100 lly-1. ~ IOI 1:100; t. SO tw-1-1, Glftarcl IHI JJ.J3; Z.
0,..w•I-IOI; J. ... _, U.I. Wf'9ftt IHI; J. ,.._..IHI.
100 tr-1. ~ IOI Sl.t ; 1 200 frH relay~1 • ...,nllnoton TrH.sall IL); J. Clllda<o (LI. ...<II 1:~.0. 100 bKll-1 -...,. IOI 1·111, t. ~
L.ongilelcl (Ll;J. T991-IOI. Vlllahlllll .. 11111• .. -te
100 bfoest-t. ~ IOI 1:112. t. 200 medl9Y reloy-1. VIII• Pan Frenen.,.1 IOI; I. R'"'°" IOI '°° lrff relav-i!r'* Hiii• '.14,I v.,,..
•1 T-(110 C .. rc:au "'-aa
200 mecltw relav-El Toro 1:)0 I.
200 f,_1, Dolen ICI 1· ... 1; 1. o-oq ... -.. (~1 1:!0.0; 1 Plcll.tt
ICI l:S7.1.
200 IM-1. Niie 11!1 1:ot.J; 1.
Ma""911 CEI 2: 14.J; 1. Ernest CCI 1:U S.
)0 1,__1, ~ ICI n .2; l.
Rltclll• IEI IJ.6; J Smltll (f.12• 1
OMng-1. Delltlo (El, 2. a.,... IE l:J ~(l'I.
lotftY-t.,...... ltl J1.2; t. .. _
..,._ Cl!I l:GU.; J. c;,_.... CCI
l:IU ..
100 I__,, C. T..._e U!I 51.J; t.
W!l!Unaro (Cl ... ; l. 1'.-t (Cl
Q.t .
Jtt ~-1. Dot•ICI 4:-..J; t . Cll•~lltlluan'• ll!l 4:J7.I ; a. ,,_.,._ !Cl S IU..
1• NO-I ~(Cl 1:00•; 2. Tutllo l EI l:tt.O; J. Fwrtnet-llE) 1:11,).
tOO --C. Talata (IE) l:IU; 2. MMll\all 11!11:11.6, J. a..co., CCI
1:00 J.
-IYM relOf-El T'-3·17.1, _v....,
El Tore_.,ftrfelt.
CeotA Mete ~:e: .. 11 v.nl" Mtl • ._..WI IMO""'-'
100 -l•Y retey-1. Newport
... c,.l:Sl.U. 200 tr .. -1. Pett..,.nt IHI 1·Sl 02;
I. D. lu"'9tlft (Ml l:S4.'2;J. .... _
CH I 1;s1.n.
JOO Ind. medley-I, Orlar (HI
2:12.tl; 2. Penl• IHI J :H .U ; 3.
0.Vrlff IN) 2:21.7'. so lreo-1. OW..-CM) 21'6; 2.
McHerney (H) tUI; >. Wallaco 00 ,. ...
Olvl1>9-I. 011t (HI; t. P'IM• IHI;
t. Tobin IHI.
100 lly-1. l(-11ty !NI 1:02.t; t.
Grier (H) 1:03.10; S. Pol-I IHI
1:04.U.
100 lreo-f. 0.VrlH CM I SJ M; 2.
F11lts IHI $101; J. llKkl.., IHI S4 '1.
SCIO •r-1. -11 .. IHI no llme; t.
Go<men IHI, J. ~-IHI.
100 IMl<ll-1. w.s.-1 IHI l•OIM;
t. s1 • ..,.... 110 1.G7..n; s.. ... veton
JC Swim
Results
1:*-4 too t.-....t, ..._, .. CV> t1kl; 2. l.4fltr.av IVI titu: a. ~ (VI t:S6.. •
IOO lfl#-.t. IClmMll CV) 1:M.6; I. i..to1t (VI J 10M; I. OenMll (8),
1:11.0.
to ff'te-1. QNo Cll n. tui 2. KIKOfta (V) JU; ~ OHM I. Wy41tt C•l tU. 100 fl,,_.. 0.-y CVI tUt t. Malll.• cv1 tcoa.1; a • ...,_. ,., 1:07.0. 100 ,,_,, 0111• (I') .... , l.
RUCO<ln (If) SI.$; l. MUI IVI SU.
ftO lree--4. AMII .. M S:t2.01 t. Horwlu (V) S1tl.I; •. ~ (V)
S:2A.t.
100 llKll-4.. llCMatll CVI .... ; 2.
Hentl'Ulll (1'11 :M.t; a. OMNey CVI 1:04.6.
100 ~.~CVl1:0UI
2. WWtt 181 1 io..J; a. Wll9ttlloff , ..
1:10.2.
... ,,.. .. .,.....,. hliln<le IJIJ ...
,,_,,.. Vanity
VIHa ,..._ 17*1 f'91..._le 200 rM4119Y relay-I, VIiia I'm
l :OS.O; 10I ir-1. llAICIN !VI 2: ... ; 200 ,,..._,, a1y1,_ (VI 2:M.S; 90
trM-1. Alclldlao CVI H.2; too lty-1. l!nos (V) 1:-.S; 1GO 1,....1, lwlJI 11'1 $U; SOO .,..._,, llodtw IVI S:SU;
100 NU-I. IN'f\lla CVl l:IU; 100
wout-1 • ...._CV> 1:20..S; a fNO relay-I. Vllla Pllftl •:Oii.i. ......
VIiia ,_,. CIU OJI htMCla
200 froe-1. OWlatlM IV) 1:1U; 2.
OfemM IV); I."""" (VI.
200 llMio-t. n.-(V) 2117.J; 2. Horcm CVl;l.""""4alll.
tOO fly.-1. TllemM IV) 1:U.I; 2.
Hol"'" IVI; 119 tlllnl. 100 ,,...._,, Mtrt>ineit CVI ... I; 1.
Hwley Cl!I. a. lllllCIDllll llll. '
100 INKll-1. OlrllllM (V) 1:11.$; 2.
VIKovlfll.., CVI; 2. PoWh 11!1. 110 bfNSl-1. Hlrtdlt (V) 1116.1; 2.
lnacloMI 151; a..,_ (VI.
400 freo rMllr-t. VU la P"1I .. :19.L ,,.,...,
SH ClafMilta Clot) CM) IMlwonlf'f
2tO midi.., '81•y-1. Unlwralty 1:•.1
200 tr......e. ltallft (SI 1:51.S; 2.
~l. Y Ptl.OT ~
~ tsl t:•t; a. w.il ... CUI ""·°' 2tO lnci.-t • .,._ CUI a:•,tJ 1.
W.tMf' CS> J:tU: a. ....,... Cll
t:U.$. ~ M fr-1. GAMM (I.I) :· 2. CanlpMll CUI M.0; I. Ml.M ISi • OM119-t. RomMlol .. CS> 1-.,S:
I . 1(11111• CUI tlllU; S. """"' W> 1ot.'5. 100 llY-1· f'Wtt ($) 11.1: L RflllliW
(U) SU; a."-($) 1:1M. •
100 f,..._1, Ortlflam IUI st.t; IL
C.111pbefl IUI Sl.t; S. "'-'' CSI 91.t.
$00 freo-1. ICllM IS> .,:St.I; t.
araun CUI S:Ot.t; J. lliuett CSI 5:21.1.
100 Mcll-t. WwftW ($) 1114.J; i.
Ri.l .. y CUI 1:°"'~ a. ....... CSJ 1:04.a.
100 -..-e-1 . ......._ ISi t;ep;
t ...... ($) 1:0LS; a. ~ '" 1:as. 400 lroe ..,...._,.SM ~ >:ns. ~~ ... a--. OSI '411 ""'"""*'1> 20D mWMy,...,,_1, SM~ t:•.a. 200 ,,__,, MurlM CSI l !IU; L
....... CUI; J. ~<SI.
200 ,,...._,, GraH CSI J:DJ)J. 2.
S.Ola CUI;"° 11\ln:L
SO f,__1, Mww'OO ISi 1'-t; 2. ......
1M CSI;). Harl• CUI.
100 11 y-t. s.tlMI <U I 1: 11.4; t . P'avcll ISi; Mthlr'CI.
100 lr..-4. Mwvw (SI s.s.f;. l a.r1119 ts1; i. ,...,... cu1. • too bacll-t. lloo tSI t:HA; t . Graff ISi; I. 8ramtotta ISi.
lot .,,_-1, l(r-ISi 1:17.A; t. C.mpt,ell (UI; 1 HMly (U). • soo froe felo.-1. SM o.m.a.
3:5'.6.
vartlty .._, .... ,,...., 1611 fl.., ......
200 lllodley retar-1. Edltall t:SOA.
20D lr-t. l!klw (Fl 1:52.t; -1
Sl>M lh (8) 1:51.J; I. ~ IF)
1:5'.7. 100 1-.... Meer_., CIU 2:ot.4,
t. Kid 10 ce1 l:OU; .. TUdlM IF) 2:11.S.
SO Ire-I. $-lll CEI t•.1; 2
HellOfl II') 2A,IJ I. Nl<Mls (Fl 1f.t.
See Swim. Page ~•
College Basketb8:1J
ant BostCWI Oii 1' ~ 7f, OT Canlllustl,S-C F al rflold 72.. LIU 5'
Georotown. o.c. 7 1, Goo Wall\l ... laft 11,0T
L.alay•tt••. Bur:Mofl e 1111 ... 11.u.,.1m. ~ft
irutt.__n.. ~u ,..,._.It. VIII-a 71, OT
St. 8--tura M9, I.AS.lie ts
Seton Hall rt. SI. ~I 7J
5\1rK11te'IO, Nl ... re .. Yale 7~ • .,_ J1 ..... Duke 71, o.m... '3
E CArOllN 71, !tic-53
MMyl-91, Wau For-HI It S C.rollN 67, WUll-I.,,._., 5'
Virginia ti, Tul-10 Va Commonwoalll• fl, Old
bomln/on71 w VlrolNalt, Vlrol.u. Tedi• • ,,.,_
0.P'eUI Sf. Air F«ce 0
Oelrolt '21, SL Francis. Pa It
Leyola, 111~ •• °"'-M Miami. Olllo 11. c>'IC MJcH9M 1•
Hew Ori-"· oata. City U '2
Ot al ltobarta 10, ""5tln ,..., "· OT
Toi-w. Kant SI " Tulw 17. New Meltko St n
W Mlclll-•• OllloU 12. OT Xnl*f', ONo W. Mier 60 ..,...
I! Mont-tS, W--19
uverne M, ,...,_.PiUor"
Portland St 14, Seotllo Pacific '2
9'edlands M, ~"""'* 19
Wllllllor 100, Cal Teelt C2
•
\
.......,1 ... ,.,
... Ul•!i.•11-Ct I' jlleyolf s
CC..,1,1r-ve11.., H..,. "' Vellrr ce.r1u 1 ... Hltll •t hddl•b•cll. c.11 ... , 7:at1 Hllllll~IOft Vtltey
Olf'lltl ... """"' Del\ .... """ tl ~View HIOll, 1:•11 ""'"'Lome at ...... II Cellfornlt Coll ... Cl),
S.ccer -CIP ... Clt.llrftrflMI•
•8dlll9"11"91MVerdell. 11'•111111-l!dlMn et Cotti MtH, Letu,,. .. ICll et lltencle, COrone ~ Mer et a.....ny Hllll, Ulll.,.rtitY
•I L,e OUlnle, El Toro •I Tusllll Cell et :t:UI: Ci91•tr-Vllley 111 Ml .. 1on
vi.10 tt:ao11 0r.,. c.o.st C011eoe 11
Mlr•Coste ltl; UC lrvtne 11 Sen
l>HIOO Clenlc; "e.m.1.
SwlmmlnO-L•1111"1 8Hch et
l'wnt•ln Vellty, Sen O•m•nt• ti Mofttl Vht1, l!dlM>n, ttllno 111d
Ceolllr•no Vell•Y el Merow.rite
Swim Centw, lrvlne Ill WHtmlMter
(ell et ~:ISi; LACC M Ootdeft Wett
Coll ... 131; ""'-.. Seddl-k COiiege 121.
TrtCk-N-pewt H•rlbor •l LB Mllll-•n, OerdM Grove et MerlM
Founteln Valley eftd Ett11nc1e ei
Coste Mete l•ll et >·IJI; LACC •I ~ W•t CAMI-121; S.ddleN<k
Colle90 •t Sen a.rnerdlno V•lley
eot1 ... m.
8u .... l~Cllscin VI C:0.11 Mew at
T•Wlnklt "-"' (11; --1 He.-"' El Moelene •I Hert Memortel Plr11 !7:JOI; Ceptstr-V111ey et Coron.
del M•r ll IS); Meter 0.1 el Sen
Clemente ():UI; Valley OVl1llen et
l.•0111,. lleecl'I (). ISi; Ceplttreno
vau.., ~1'11en et Celvery BaPlhl U : U l ; Seddltbeck Colleoe •I i1u~er,con (2::1111; Loyal•" UC lrvlM
Olrll llllllelbell-4JC irvlne el Aruse.,.eclflc tounu1ment; Meler
Ool et St. JoMpb 13:30); Oce.., View
.. t Rancho AlernllDS 14·301. Golden
WHI Coll• .. El Gernlno Coll-l4:30).
Glrl1 tllflftl~ el Golden
Well College (21; Cel St•te (Los
An .. l•l et Orenge C:O..tt Coll-
()).
Olrls •wlmmlng-Pelomer et
S.ddlet>eck c.o11eoe m.
Gtrls toltbell-EI Cemlno el
Or•"90 Coe$1College 121. Olrls lfKk-LACC et Golden WHI Coll-UI,
JC Cage
Standings
' GIRLS' SPORTS I HORSE RACING I MISCELLANY
Coatlooe4 From 8 ·3
OM .. -1 MillCk (llJ.; i. ll-
IRl, 1. II-(111.
1M fly-1. lllWclle (£) it t ; J.
Sl>le"'s (l!) ... S;l . T ..... i IPI t.-. * "-'· McCl-y 11!111 'f t . U'l'Otc-• (ti II.I; L ....... 0) CPI S2 4 soo lr...-1 Eldl!r Clll s·M.I: 2. lll<klerd 11!1 J;07.J; >. IClull II>
Ut.2 ,. .... ~--·· Mitt"'" (f:) ,, .... ; '· T1ul11 <al 1:1S.S; a . .._._ lf'I
1·ou
IOO bte¥1-1 • ..,.,..._ IE) ltOU; t. Httll't ll'l t: .... ; a. EINf't (II
1:10.1. .00 fret , ... .,...,. "-lllft Velley
aiti.t. ,,_..Varsity
,.,._t.t111 ..,., Otl 1111 ltll-
too. meclllY rellY-1, PV, 1:5'.4; too frM-1, WOoCltll (£) 2:90.1; 200
lnd•-1. W•r1el (E) 1:11.0; 50 fr-I. Hwnm 110 IU; 100 fly-t.
wooden IU 1:02.S; 100 frff-t .
Hamm I El S1A1 JOO ,...._t, seMorft
CE> s:n .•: IOo lle<k-1. SH1M1n le> l t01.4; 100 ltrMSl-1 • .JOMSlon IFI
': 10.e: ..oo ''" rel•v-1. Edl1011 >·SSS.
tu Ii' I a Iott COUlllT Ofl CAa.JjlOtUfl •t(Tt110Ut MIMNC9'
,. IM<k-1 ,.,.., IMI , . .,,,. Athl COUNfYOflOMllio• j MAMIRATIMIMT
J. Or• (WI l.ctJ J lwrke cwl . eti·c 1tl0*..:-~--~~1':°''"""',...._ .. ..,....,,
1:16 1· c...-. .... 14 WOOOY'I CAIH'IT IUtVICC,
1• _..._, Jor\-., IWI t 01 •:I t"ll4M091a CMUUl-ll'UePOH> t•lot Ctllt Al-Mt, C.fUtttM ,.._,.,, <Wlt.•C2,a.e1iu-1M1 Pta111111t1 JtM1eo.~n ltff<tl CA.nu.
1:1r.a. R DI 'o.t.,...,.1 Lii MQWl9'V, 11111.1 w l1111 O••• w.... ,._ ~II•
... ll'ff ~ ""':".,::·•.J. es ts MOWl!•V, ~ 11111 wtt.1 DOii AllMIWI, Glfl•t-e.cll. CA. ftll.M MMl111CttU14tl............, .......,... X. lftdultwt. Tiiie t\IM'*'8 II~-, .. i...
200 mMley , • ..,-MM! ... t:sr ti MOTIC" v ............ -.iy .......
too fr-McOl;M IMI t :IS I; 200 WQ-'SWSTlllNIS = = = :!::\':... Tlitt :.:~=-~ .. ,U., •• tht IM-Meretltll (M) l:IQ.t; JO frw-...--.ca ltl <ti Mt. S. ,....... ..... I • .._ .... -~--ill CWlllY Cleril flf ()'.,... ~ 911
"" IMI tu; '°' fly--f4119tn1 (Ml ..... ...... Mftutry .,, '"" .............
l :OS.t ; 100 ,,...... Ille) MellO'I, "" K•••lll (•.) .. , Blue 6-2, •• ,,• AVllOI ·~ ........... -...... • _, IMI SJ.6J ... fr•-Mc:OI-(Ml - -_,, ~--JiU a; 100 IMtck-MeiltO'I (Ml 110..11 LUllltkt 151 .... , ... r ....... 1. H: •1 TnMNI ,... 49<'* ~· P11'41.W or-. CMlt OlllY"""' 100 b,.Ht-Moflbllo (Ml t :OU; .eoo H•fllP\ Ill ell I Slllll .. I, ._1; C...llOrs Mii etMll-lt e -_. UC. I'• 1, t, 1', ~ 1~
tm"91iy-Mwlfte4:tll.A. II> def < •mecllt •·2, 6°0 ; .. ~,. .. I ....... le I , •11 flNlllMM GoltenllOtw <SI dlf S.llenN<k 6·1, cltll ..-..._
M1r1N 1111 041 ~tw M ; Thom"" IS)dlfT.tov.eW ... 1. 1. TO THB 01,l!HDAHTI A clYI
IM-1. 100 Butklllllll IMI t:1U; t. DlllM• . tompltlftt hM ..... ftl,. b'I' tll9 11111 Watton (W), WellH.esl111kl (SI def S1eni.1t1 ... r1 llff .. tlntt 'fOll, (llH tootioo1e•1
SO frH-I. M. Hiii (Ml JU; 2, .... 1°6; Kerwl11-Connon ISi def a. If Y°" wllll IO dlftlle tlllt llWIUll, fMHO
S.ftflllDO IMl1tl.S4ewwt (WI. •••••• T. to., •• ·O ••• 0; 'l'Oll mU1t,wllhhltci. ... ett ... 11111wm 1u•11ua.cou11TCWTMI
100 fr-I. S...flllpo IMI 1.04.0; 2. 'f.01e'n1~k~!.9~:!'..°.."::,• .. ont. (SI def lllOll_! 1•.!j"<'H ell ~ flt. •1111 1111 ITATB °" ~l'OtlNIA l"CNI $l"91r 1Wt;3.Well0n cw>. ... ..... -·--..... ~ ....... tltllpleWl119l11'""'".. TM•-... --·-· 1t1e comr..mt· Uf • Jldtlce ,.__ -..::. .=...--so ... ck-1. llKknllll CM) M.t; 2. WOMBWllOn···. I ..... _...... --·-11...-r IWI. ........ 11111.1 II 8 ... tll Ille c-i • wrll •oTICI 01' MaAat•O 01'
SO brmt-1. lloll1 (WI JU. = ~=~ ~!o; :-:::.:-,:;:-..::: 1111H•lnt li'ITITION frotl ...,..,. OP Wl&.L Venltt llr1el, If J>1-4M; Cnlsl, 31» J+t.O; '"41111" A M D • 0 a L a T T 8 a I Ml1t ... V!eteCt11i 101eer.e Wlftkel1tledt, 1tt •1-1•; Glll199ft, lb lllt complellll, wlllllft Ille llmt TSITAMl .. TAttY ANO •Oil
100 mffll'I f'llt,-M!Mloft Viele 1•1·1; Y°""8. c +2-1.0; Mecleo'll, :lb :'"led .W.., UllltU .,ell Cle M, yow AUYMOUIATIOM TO ADMtMtlTla
PVBUC NOTICB
PUBLIC NOTICE
.Gmls' PUBUCNOftCB PUBLIC' NMICB PV8UC NOTICS • •
..,..~ 1:0 .t. 2+1•; 1e-. u .>t-1-1; v.,.,..,,., rf. I 111111 wlll • """'":::': Nflllt• UHOllt THI INDa"lllOIMT PtlltVel ... lM) ( .. 111•aa 200 lrM-1. ltycjer (Ml 1.•7.0; 2. ~M·!; M ........ lll+l-!. I on of ltw plalfltllf,-1<-llt\ey ADMINllTltATIOM 01' al1'A1'aS NOTIC9 INVITlllO llDS
200 medley rel•y-1. Fou11teln Chomun ICI 1:".o· J. H•ll IMI o c enter • ,...,.,_,. ...,,... -lltr 11\t ACT Notice It lltreby ,,,..., lh•I tlle
PUBLIC NOTICE
V~y,:~~·. WOodtn (El 2 ts.I; 2 1.~S.IM-1 ....... IMI 2 11.J; 2. ·~~~~:.~~:~:?.r~~~~ ~~~~:=:,'~ft :rn~=n~ -~·~~~:o~T=LA.:~~s~· ~~IHI~~ ~".!::c!.:~': ~=
G-nlMI' CEI; a. ~y IFI. Novotny IMI 1: tJ,I; J . Piper CQ Otll....-r, :lb s.o+o; WellK", rf w~s. IM!lng of_., or..,_.., or PLATH, Ne 0 .11. pUTH, ~. COunly, c.llfornle, wlll recel~ -t--------------100 lndo-1. Jo.,,_ IFI 1:07.0; 2, 2.11 •• 2 lMM; Wel!IW, lit l....O; ~Ii, lb other rellet r-tM In lllt Cini• HOTICll IS HEllEIY GIVEN tMt .,.._ .. to 11:00 e.m., TUHOay. Merell PUBUC NOTICE Sutton CE); S. Deml>MY IFI. 90 fr-I ltey (Ml U 4; t. Metatr t+H Hutiw plelf!I. ltOOlllt JOll"" P'\ATH 119 flied M ltl'I, M tM Pllrdleltng oe,t. of so ••-1. ~-... !El 2'.S; (Cl t>.4, s. ~'""'' tMl21.4. 2-o+o'. ... M ·l.O; u,..i, p b. II"" ..... , ...... -llf'l'ke., lllrtlll ......... .., ........ of WIH .·w l(heej ....,Id leCeled Ill imi--------------
0.mon CFJ; 3. CasllmM CEI. 100 fly-I. v. VeMllO IMI s..1. 2. laft't....... ... ......... "' .. _..,, ---.,,. ,., IUlllllCt •• L•ll•H A••m• AVlllU•, Ctstt M•u. "-11411
$0 111-1. Orelwlm <El J0.6; 2. It.al..-IMI tU; a. Jenlllnt CCI r e. 0 .. M '"':""' M IMt .,_ wri"'"' T"llllllflCAlt\'lrldlotAutllorlutloeto Calltor11le,1twtlkhtfmueklbla•lll IUPa1ttOllC:OUllTOPTHR Merono CFl;J.~<EI. Sf4 Ool_w... ... 001 , ..... t2 0 ... _. ellY._ .. , ....... 11 .......... lnhw """',,.. ....... deft! be"'bllCIY....,__,....,
100 fr-I ~<El ll.A; 2. 100 free-t lley IMI so I; 2. 0r•"l'eo.l OGO OOI 0-I 2 4 OetedO.C.IJ,lt17. Adnllllhlr•lloft f1f l!flete Ad, ref· WOltO PllOCl!SSIHG ANO ITATIOflCAUl'OttNIAl'Olt
0..-.1 ... (El;,_ Su\lon (El. ICOfttt1Mll I.Ml SU. s. Welker CCI WILLIAMl.StJQHH,Clortl ~ to -"'di ,, Medi tor f\;r'lllet' PlfOTOTVPUaTTIHG l!OUIPMl!NT TM• COUNTY Ol'OtlAMGI
M b•"•-l. ~ CFI JU; 2. J.l,I WOMIM'SMSKaTMLL MM\'O.~Oltlll(y INl1IQll"', -lllM Ult II-tfld A N 0 S 0 P T W A R I! -..._......, Oemon (Fl;J.Helgl(FI. 3001•-l.V.Vewllo (MIS:Os.t; ~w.tOllCMllelMAN <SEAL> ~tfhHrlf!CtlM __ ...,, ... LEASS/PURCHASe •v AS• MOTICI 01' ......... 011 '° b<eest-1. Slewen IEI )t,•; 2. 2 Hell !Ml .S:07.7; J 1 .. hk IMI Golden WHt-tl-l l, Burr-• 7, 'The -d "c-9tl11t" llKllldH let Mtf<ll 7, lt1I, II tO:OO t.M., In tM SIOHMENT "SYITI~ "ltOCIATS 011 WIU.
CNMY (Fl; 3. Helton IFI. .s:oa.J. Moore •• Er1dltOll •• ~ •• Bl-C-H•mpleillt, "pl• nlllf~ lftcl""91 -1rMm .. ~-He. a ..... d ~I bldl _ .... Ill ecaw-Wltll A .. D , 0 " L • T T •• 5 JOOfrMrelrr-1. Edl!Mlfl 11•7.I. 100 betk-1 BerftK (Ml St.S, 2. U, Bort 11, ~ J, OIQll 1J, lte-r cron-cotn91e4-t, "dtfeftd.,,I" ,,,_ teut1, •l HO am GIMM Otlw w.-. tlle lnstnottlonl ....i Conoillttefll 8"" TBST AMI NTA It V All D POii ..,...,._ M•U•r (Cl I 01.•. 3. Hwoer (Ml 1. cludH cro • .-1-1, .,...,.., lft• 111 .. 01., ............. Celllwftl•. Sllecfflc•I'-WlllCft .,. -... Ill• AUTMOltlZATIOH TO ADMINllTllt
ouuvlewlM>IMILllA..W,.. 1;17.7. Heltumo:Ooldenw..t,'1·2l. elude• t11t plunf -mMCullfte In-D•ledPI0.1',tt1t. IMmevi.-..illltNofflceOfltw UNOllt TN• 11101 .. e11oaNT
200 .-edl•1 r•l•Y-OC.•11 View 100 .,.. .. 11-1. hrtier CMl 1'07.7,' CllOdel ,..,.. ..... -_..,.,A .Wiii WILLIAMS.IUOMN, llw<lllS"'9 "°9111 of Mid~ c11 .. :::ultlSTltATION OP llTATES
2:11.1 Novolny (Ml 1·111, 3. a.re-tCI l.•11tlM<llOlllnlOr111t11Cust PIMdlflO. lncli.llngen-,...r,demur• ~Oetll Vld •
200 tr .. -1. Soule IOI 2:17.6; 2. 1.11.4. Orenge Coell-Semunun I rer, ltC., "-'be In IN lotm ,...,im IUaT IAaNSTT RKll aldllltf millt tllbmlt wltll 1111 I! 111 le o I I! 0 WA It D A . 8HI Ill; J. Ckllrlrl• COi. 01v1110-1. HerK-1111' CMI 10 2 Cerneglek J, Bendel •• Cl......, .. .,.j by the Cell!Wnie Rult9 of'-'· v-IU .... _ ............ tll bid • cellller't "'9dl. c;ertlflecl chick, t;HORNHl!ltRV. 0.C..MCI.
100 IM-l. Hedy 1011: 10.1; 1. Welch! 400 ,, •• reley-MIHlon Viejo 17. orlgl11•I pleedl1111 ,,...,., OI fllM In 1111• .......... CA... or bidclff'l llond midi IMIYMll .. ""' NOTICE IS HllREBY GIVEN lhet
(Ll,).l!lllotlol. 3:)1.1. ,r-~..... Hellllrne-ung llH<ll3'-l5. <-9 wllll P"CICIW fNlngton end '1'M4 A*'MY fwl ,.._ onler Of INCoettOommlHlllV College MAltlOff l!OWAROTHORHSBl!ltltY,
SO fr .. -1. Sickler ILi 27.0; 7. -lheleCOl)yllllreofw11MrwdM-ll li'11IMl"*'Or ..... ~Oelly"1kll, OlttTlct Boerd of TrustMI In e11 CAROLYN T, CHEl!IC heve
Fr•nll <OI; l. Wellec• IOI. Ml..,.,, <nl (Ml e.r.... 01n1 -..et11e11 ple4nttlf'1 etlorrwy en4I °" eecll lll•h~ '"' U, 1', Mwcllt, "" emou111 not less lllwl flw peroent IS%) llled her•ln • petition for Probet•
50 11y-t. Soul• 101 30.5; 2. Wood 200 medleY rttev-<orone del Mar V1nlty tiff "°' •-led 11'1 en enorne.,. ...,. 01 IN tum bid••.,....,., .. !Nt Ille of Wiii •nd tor 11wence of Lelle~ CL>;3 SlllelOI. 1:su. l1t-lelMIU7llrvl11e Thetlmo-•..,.....,...,.ls--..11---------...... ---bidder wlll entw Imo the prOPOMCI T"t•men11r1-forA11111or11atloftto
100 Ir-I. Heclt IOI 1 :00.l; 2. 700 lrM-I. IC. WaP.o IMI 2:0U; I rvlne-Oudmen ll, Orevon 4, ,.,..don• ,..n., mey v.,y dltjlllftdlnt PVBUC NOTICE CMtrect If llM Mme It •••rdld to Admlnl1ter 1111der 11\t lllOIPMC!lnt JenklM (Ll; 1. Coiner Ill. I. Huger IMI; S. It...,... ICI. White 4, Petcllell I, 1."?. on lhe ,.,.lllod Of -lllce. '-... "'" 111111. In Ille ewfll al felluro lo enter In-Administration of E1tetes Act re·
30 .,.ck-I. l(reuw (0) 32.0; z. 200 IM-1. Plt19r ICI 2:11 ••• 2. M. 1!1t111cle-Frency 4, H.,...H S, pie, Me CCP41l.10lhroutll 415.40. 1-------------to IUc;ll -red, 1119 Pl'OCHdl of 11'11 I-Me to Whleh 11 ,,,_tor hirtller
-Ill; J. !teller ILi. W•sko; > -'-IM CCI. TtlompM>n 6, Jemhon u , Oofl'91n io, Publlst>ecl Or._ C.0.JI Dell~ Piiot, IUPlltlOlt CIOUllT OPnta Cheek •Ill be l'erfelled, or In the c"' 1>1rtlc11len, -I.Mt the 11-end
50 brHSl-1. llerer (LI JU. 2. 50 lrH-1 .... k., CMI U .t; 2. McH•ne• ......... , ...... Cerrldo 7, Fe!>' 1• 2:1,-..ct12 1'11 ITATWOllCAUl'OUIA ., ........... full tUm llllreof wlll be piece Of'-'"' the .......... bHl\ Wl
Wallace COi; 3. G<llllrle IOI. M<GOverft ICI: S. Oetvelle CCI. Feely 4. M<Ftn...., '· BldW9h 2. • ' ' • ' .$2>7_1 COUNTY Of' oaMGa lotfellH to Mid KNol dlllrld. for Merell 7, "''et 10:00 •.m., In ttw
700 Ire• retet-OCten view 1 St.9. 100 tly-1. Eby IM) M.J; 2 • .Mnldlll H•lfllme-Esltn<I• 21-14. NO. AO,..,.. Ho !bidder,,..., Wlltlclr .. hi• ttld ,.,.. courtroom of Oepert-Ho. 3 Of llid Jwl4or v~ <Cl; We""-111111. .,..,. VlnftY PUBLIC NOTICE CITATIGM • Pitied Of ..,..,.fl,.. <m deY5 etter court, •t 700 Ovfc c...w Orlw w.st, Oc••• V1ftl 1111 "7> L.91•""-" 100 Ir-•. M. w.-o (Ml IOJ.2; J lat_ .. 16411291 ,,.,... '" tlll MICW .. llUZA.lirTH ANN ""' ..... Mtfortfll-lngtftlfMf. In tM Clttd"8nleANI, Ollllornl•.
700 ,,.edley rel•y-OCon View Oelvelle (C);J.MCOovorn lCI. lrvln•-Gibb• 1, Harper•, 1--------------4111.MOltE-MEILSON,AMlnot. TllllMnlOfTruHlnr_....ltw Otted~l4,1911.
J oo 4. too I~ COi 2·00 2. 100 bKll-t Hiiey tMI 1:Q.I '· 2. Norm en 4. Ellis 2, SwlAlon I. PICTITIOUS IUSl .. 111 TO: KATlillltlltl! ELMOlll! ..-M .... ef l'9f«tlftg eny encl ell bids WILUAM I •• JOHN,
100 IM-Sabl• «>> 2.30.6; so lroe-Mo'tlr (Ml, a.. .. (Cl. Este11cl•_,..,,.ley 14. 8lly0 ... NAM9 ITATl .. NT "LIEASI! TAKt!. NOTICE tllel ot te wet.,,. -l'"Olll•llMt., ,,,_ c-tcya.rtt Moere (l) 2LI; 100 ll'(-Auld IOI 100 tw .. "-1 Pitier ICI 1:0..2: 1. Slm11ton It._,. 4, For-10, Tiie tell-1"9 penMI •rt 11o1-. AUIUltH SIMEOH ICATTR .. GELL formelllleslft...,bldorlnttw"'41111fl9. MCJll!NNAaPlnlNO
1 OJI; 100 ~Is ll.I S7.I; soo lllrklr (Ml;J.Wlll-IMI. Cemeron4,H-4. blislMtt1$. -CAllOL J.,,... ltATTEllGEi.L. HC>flMAHILWA-nc>M A"-YtatU.. fr.e-Mo-(01 S . ..._.; 100 ... o.-•OO free nley-Ml1tlo11 Vle)o Helfllme-1!.i.Kle»-e. BABER IENOIHEllltlHO, 1"71 ...... fU9d_...,epe11"°"-kiftg.. s.ct-f.1MrdlfTrv1t-MUWll.llllrellt.-..,-"'-Seble COi 1: 11 J; 100 -.11--• J.0 .7. Chemlc•I L..11\e, ......Un;t.M lffc.ll, Mve ltLllAIUH ANH El.MORE· Pvblltlted Or ..... Coat D.tily Pl .. I.el-......, Cllllter'llAe_,. ILi l .U .O; 400 ,, .. reley-Lo• .,....,..,.,...., VarwtY CA.~ Nl!ILIOff •• ...._, .,._ ,.._ .. ,..UMllMlf'dtZ,1'11 Tat: 12111-..UI
MISSIONCON,•1t111c1 Aml-J;SU c--.. ~ CX..¥"-'611Ull .. Klfk• ltMet1t.IWl1&-..IMSJ-,.,_,,_of_....,..,....., .,. AIMr•ntw:~ w I. .. II ... v.nlty ~ .... vi.w~en 4, LelbSl'eHI ml"" Bird ..... _....,, IN<ll. l(ATHERIHll llLMOR6, ,., ,,.. , _______ __,_______ Pllblllhedar.,.. OIMt Oltlly Piiot.
s.ddlel>A<k 12 1 ,.14 1100 MlriM 011 "" ~1., t•. Morcvne t, H. Mervin 14, IC. CA..,.., ~~~Mill ...i-fer .. rm• •·c NOTICE F ... 11,14.-.i. 1m . ~78
Pal...,•r ti 2 1071 ..,, w Men1ll•I, Mor•l, .._.ht. Leole 811111'9 9-, 1•2 """'" _.._,.., ~-• .-".._,
Ctlru> I s 11JI IN =rr~'.'°'~'·t:r:':"si't:' ~· omen's GoH HellU~Vl....... ml"O lllnt LMW. _..._.., ...... YOU AllE HUEBV ClTEO to•·-:--------------
Riverside 7 • 1030 1007 Wtlsun_...,. (M) l :SlA; l. Meire .-.., V.,...r CA.'2Mt '9•• M~U. 1971,9tt:OO•.m~or ~n~IOQO 1 • m• um IWl2 0'1.7. UNCHOIAN.H>AQUINOC o:.~~~~V:,.,1. Tl\lt IM;~ ..... I• c..-.Cted •Y. :::.ui:-::~m::~r
C " erNnslno • 1 lOSO 1011 200 IM-1. Winfrey lMI 2·U.A; 1. M•l<h .,,, ,.., Tourneme11t "' WelmlM ......... ._. J. Holll-1. ... -.. __..,.,,.. -";,, llW --··~ ,,._~ ~ ,..lley I 12 IOO. U41 Cro1ter (Wl 2.12.1. a. MlnMtl (WI "'11111-1 lllol Eiieen Yrecet>urn, _...., Leolllllel,.~ __ .,_ !.out11we1tern o 13 ... llt< 2 19 '· Hellll~fka 1 .. 11. Tlllt at.t-wn llled -Ille .,. ~ In IN Otv of Seftta M•rlon Mciretl'I, minus Ofte, J ""• c t o s W-'('t k-SO I I R~· (~) 22 Glftrt'( ST a •0, mln"S three. B County Cltr11 of Or-C-tv °" · 0'""' o r.,,90, l•I• of ~addt~--· -. •-···-•~n ~ r•e-. .,...k -.•; 2. a • y_... F Celllornl•, - -~.If -~ • ........ ~ ...,....,~~ -S.nlke (Ml 2U; 1. Hvtt (Wl U.I. FllgM-1 Sytlll ......... "''""' -C •• .~ ... ,., t.. ll1' he .... f1eti .... -• •-S.n Ol-127, 0oattey U OlvlrtQ-1. 1.UbCMnk• (Ml. 2. FllgM-1.BettySel-..,rnl...,._; 0-0..WT_, p ...... j.:"' \ ---Citrus '2. Rlwnlde ti CoO G•upl\ler <Ml; aum-CWI. 2. Olel Lou Wiiiey, S.ny V-"9n, MIWC~,!'l•~_!I~'... PublltMd 0r.,.. CNll Oolly flllot, or:--IF.;. • .,H""' I S.n Bernerdlno M, Patpmer !I 11 I ._ -.-~ -Feewwry t. 16. ».~a. 1'11 " """" '""' 1 ~ -te s.t-r't Gal"'°' C l~O l'Wilia.~•;t~ C~1 ~10:; 2. ~ ~"' three. 0 Fll11.,t-1. 110.. Maler Doi-Grams IO, Rell '· )t._71 Mid pe1111on forfurtllet' IN'tlwlert.
Seddlebackel Rlver\lde ro Hr : · · 1 0 n...,,, ....... Be11m•" t. Gloe 2, un11lcll 13, -----------;......--"t OATED. ,__.,, .,,, ~~·~:!r~no"::e~:;, s.~:.'~::,-s!:e:R;':!i,~~~,50u~i. 2
• F1~~1~~1.cG=~=~ J~f~1.~ ,,.~~~~..!-' ~;;: PUBUC NOTICE =~ !!, JOMW,
Sen Olegoet Pelomer jOO fr-t. GM.et IWI );09.t; 2. Yrecet>urn. .. ; 1. Ctl•I DwlJ Eetl, C*11 of ... s.citrl« Collrt Wtl-befWtr <M) S: I .... ; I. SllUI' l(.etlly l"ffry, '1. PICTIT10US IUMN•ll of .. Stet• of c.ltf«llie,
SOUTH COAST COH,B•BHt• IM) S:Ct.4. II l'Ugllt-1. Ullle Mollde, '7; 2. II· NAMll STATIMlllT In-lot Ille
w L ,,. "A ''" Mc1t1,....,, 10; '· 01.1 a..1111 JC Volleyball T11e '°'._."' ...,...,, b doing.,.,.,_ ~ot0r.,.. S•nt• Ane t t .. 1 7M Foll.,., .... "'41em, n. ,..., '"' SWen L. llwllt•,
Cerrllot I 1 Ill n' D--1-tba1l C: "IQM-t. 0.. HolM, N; LI.Alli IEACHCOMBEll BILLS, MOI DetlulY
Fullerton • 3 .,. -.s>a.aAe Wiiiey, .. ; .. Al-O'MM•. n ; •. .... •• Velt~I ...... Ill A-. Bulldlng 4, Slllte IOl, LnrOfflu 0t-enoe c.o.11 s s n • m eetNr• ~ n. eew. Mese. c:.i...,,,.. n.• "0•01 o.. aoe1 irn
Mt. Sen Antonio 5 5 121 7112 0 Pli.M-1. 111•1 Tr.-iy ._, Ore111• CMtt -· Gofdlfo Wfft StepMft 1. .. ut, Mt1 ltedblll A , ...... 1., .. ~
:nOletot.Wu I 10 703 IS? gp~.....,.,,. "°""Mll-.a.ttylll9IMlllltw,1t. IJ.12,+U,•U.IS.IO.IS.U. ·-· ......... '·Wt.~ ca •c..._.o..-r.,,. ...
roumonl o to Ste 112 Vtfttwe1t,.Serolttlt4t IMM,041..,....taa ......,.9Mdl.~,...
S.nle ~. o:~c::,,. >A DM11-. Tllk llllM-II CMdlllc'Md Illy., Tat:--. ..... -~ C -••-~-1 ... -.. divlcNel. -..-..,.., ............. Fullerl<ln 7S. GroMrnont.. •11·-· __.., ... ~-· '° ....._ ~ "'*~or .... c.nt Oelly ,.. .... C«rr11M91.S... OleeDMe'WI 7l UNor111 CIUwnldtl 112, Coilwt' Ct!'( Tllh .. ....,_ -ftled .... h FM.t, l .. D-Mlr.2, tt11 te.rrito::.~~ =-u DftlWe C-IV Clertl of Or .... C-ty en
Ml.9aftAn1-llPllll-~eir7l,~tll :=.ia".:... -----------....:-
_-G-"°-'' ____ 11_s.n_1_._,.,.. ______ Seil __ M_ertno __ 11._WN __ niw __ .. _________ =-==================::::..-.J .. ltOPSSSIOMM.CIOtt"DUTtOM Pl1llLIC NO'nCB
SHEIL SELF SERVICE
....... -..c.. ........ -.... .._._ ClltlnN PICTtT1out mutHfUI
""""1 MMl& ITATllM&llT ............. e>r.,.. CiMst Delly Pl'°' T"9 t.llowC119 lllfMM ,,.. dolfttl
Fet>noery t, I .. U.-IMtO 2, "11 _._II! SIS.71 l'AllCAR RHCMNEl!ltlNO. INC., ,_ ____ ...., __ _.....__.._! tlM-0 Alrwey A-, c.t. Mtu.
Cllllfwllle ...
l'ei.cer 11-.1 .... rl1>9, Inc., •
i---::--==::-=~~==-,,_.,-..J Celff•llle c.rpwMJoll. )IM-4 Alrw.., PICTIT10UI BUSIMISI A-. eo.te ..... CllllflWll!a ma
~UC NOTICE
llAMll STATUlllNT Tiiis ~II~ Illy e c.-
TM tel-Int ,,..._ .. ere "91111 -•llM.
'""'-111 PABCAJtl! ............ lllC..
T H II It 0 0 T It AC I( 0.YldJ.IClym.
SATUltH/VltAHUS. 4'1 Rell 11111 ,........
Mrwl, Col&CI-.-. CA. ..V Tlll1 , .. ..,,,... -fli.s wttll tM
Cr•lt Lee Hiii, Ht Ott,,,,_, c:... c:o.my Ci..tt .. Or .... c-ty M
MtM, CA. ta27 ,...._., 6. 1'71. ltotien llt\Q .,_, 111• Alttft, CAP•STZaMcOONALD.
,_.. Ane, CA. tl10S IY I -'-T. Cl9Nb, ....
Oofteld Allle Ollede, 1U71 t .. JMecAr91W..,,.,,•.4rt .._..,,., ~ °'"9, CA fllMI lfWM,Cell.._.,ef'l7tJ
,..,._ ~ ....... .,, .. t1•J
lltrmucle, Hunllntton leecll, CA. .,...
Thll """'-• 11 CoMIKW h e
11-•lpertlwnNp, ~------------Cr16tH•K
T1'b ......... -,. wlUI lM Pl1BUC NOTICE
~ftty CMnl of Or ..... c:-t.i ... -----~ .. :'",,~t~-,,.-----
,..., .. ,,, ... .,., IU ... tttOttCIDUllTW 1"*4'-~ ...__ ~ ""*' TMa STATIWCAU..ottNIA ..._ --..... CMlt ~• ......_ l'OltntaCOUMTYOll'OllAMOa l'-.Wry t , 't.. 21. Merc.h I. lt11 111 CIVIC c:aWNa NIVB '
'12·1I IANTAAM.CAU l'OlllltA
PUBUC NOTJCB ,1.AINTIPP: MCOEVC:O, INC., a
Cellt•'"'• c•rll'•r•t1011, "'· Oal'&HOANT: S.curlty "•cillc
PICft"OUS 8USl•I• Hetieftel .... e lllllteNI IMllltlftt '" 11.MM ITATSJIUINT IK!lli.tl. TM ... _.... ,.._ II ..... lllM-t~ll~: lecwlt'f li'ldfk
MUii' Ntl ..... I ..... ,I ftelltlftet --illtQ
A I. I T T L a I I T 0 P HM<letlell, VI, C,.t .. 0.JetlNnll
•VlltYT .. IHO. 4U '°'" s1 ... r • ., ..... t P. Dey,°"" I ..... x. ,,.. H .. PCH1 INdl, CA. '*1 <11111.,,.,
L.orel\AI M. MCC:....11, m C-1 ~Deel
$(net, .. _. IMd\ CA. ""' Ott
Hllil" L. M<ON!nell, tu CM4ll CAii ••In* street, H-' IMcll, CA. 9*a MOTICal 't•...,,. ......... ftt
Tiii• """'*' la t..-.cled bf"' lfl. _, !MY --........ .,... ..... CllvldUll. ,_ ................. ,... .......
~M.~ ..................... ...
Thi• tllt ......... -111• wttll tM ...... • C:OU11ty Clerk of Orllltle c:.wM1 °" AVllOI ~ M .............. . Je11111ry 21, 1911. II Tr.._.I ......... C411111'e U..
....., 1111 ••'1MClt e •eMI 11•• '"· li'llllMllllM ar-. CNtt DlllV P11e1, ,......, ..... • ...... ""11 i. ~ .•. '·"'a, 1'1' ....,,_ ..... ...... ---.-------.Ai:IMlf t. TO THa Otll'SNO-'"Tt A c;MI um11l•lnl 1111 \ff11 tllM Illy tllt PUBUC NO'nCB .. . ,ie1111tlf .,..,., "" cs.. t•Mte">
•• If .,01t wllll t• cttfene Wt
-.. CT~I • Olll IV••··~ -··· '-"· ""ftMt, wtlNdtllilyUftlf
..
''
•Tl ..... , lllh wm.-. I• aetWd Oii l'Oll, Ille ., ...... wltll 11111 ourt • wrtttlft 111 ... 111 111 .!:'~·!.~1111 ,..,._1 ••• t1e1111 rt11•11•• to tht umPlelllt. ()f •
HUNYINOTOM CCNTatt CAlt J11tllct CMlr\. WW 1111.t flle Wltll llM
WAJH ''°'' ........_ .. ,.... ., Cllllrt • "'""" 111""1119 er c:el6M "' • _, ..,_, nUllCI._,, trll tte'4tlll t• lie eM~ 111 Ille kWI, CA. tlM1 •11~ L.twlt, lllC ... Ctlltiwllle Mll.•U. U .... ¥111 .... vwr•tllll\
"-•I'-... 1n ._. I •Ill OI ~ utOfl lllllllcet'9o of the _....., • ..., ... -""'·• llllte !lllflltlff, ..i Wt c.wt mey 1111« • 111, HIHlll,..... IMcJI, CA. ""1 I~ ... ,,_. ... tw Ille relief_. w...i1 P. TMtlllll, Jr., "'"2 IMtl"'4I 111 h amtllllllt. llllfllell c..U =-· L.ene, ~'-II. CA. ,.svlt 111 eeml""""" .......... t.111119
Tiii• tvs!MM It c~tM 111., • .. _,,~ • ..._,.,..,,.. ..,..,•l lll"Wnllla. .-ltd Iii Ille °""""llC •
......... Lewla, '"'" • " ................. ~ .. . ,,............ .. ..................... ..... ........... .. . ,......., ..... ,,.. """"'
Tiii• .......... -flllll wt.ii tlle ........ " ............... .......
c-ty CltA Of °'""" c.un.., en QA TSO; OC1tt>llr 11, 1"1 . ~6'nrM. WIWAMLSJ ........ ...., c""-~....,.er...,. CMlC '*1y l'IJet, =-.. -. ~'-M.D.Mwdllol"' .......... ~ ..... _______ .;.;...~.,....;:·~· .:· 11 ,., .... .... ........ ............ e...... .... .....----.-...--~.....;~;..,i ~.........._
.,... ..,... "tellltlllAllt°' ....... •-Cltfl'CI .... """"'""' 111c1-. ctlll·<•f'ltlelNM, ... .._.. .. 111-tlut .. ,,.....,., ............... In· , ..... "" ............... .... ,, ..................... ,. ......
........... fflllWllllt Ill.,.....,, ...
_..,, ~ ---Ill .. Wm,.. ..,,, ... ., =.:.~::1--.... .. c....v... ............ .. ....... -........... ..... ...... ,,., ...... ... ----= .. ·-..... llf -~-..... .. , ..... ~~·~-=~-as:
P UBLIC NOTICE
li'ICTIT10US BUSINIUI NAME ITATllMIENT PICTITIOUS IUSINHS
TN IGl._lng --b doing !Ml». llAMll STATIMIMT
-HI TM fOl-1111 --It •nt buli-CA T HV'S COURIERS, 2'1 A MUel
c:Mlt St.. NNport Beech, CA tu6l FUNG FU SAN SOO, 2106 Ha.-
Cathy ..... Smllll, 211 A Ceder st., llv• .. S111t1 20•. COSI• M•u, .._llOf't llMcll, CA tMJ CellfOrnle m»
Tiiis busl-11 ~-by"' lft. Gllft LOUii C...ele, ISS5 Me"'-ctlvlduel Verde Orl..e E9't, Apt. 56<. ~t.
CetltY lM Smith Motl, Celllomte t26» Tlllt &let-wa llled Wllh tl'll Thl1 tiou.lrwn It c~ed l>'f 91 fn.
C°""ty Clerk Of Otl"99 Collnt~ on dMdu1I. Fell. 6, 1'71 Olen L..oul• Cenele
, ... J4 Tiiis ttetement WM llled with UM-
Pvblllllld Or-eo.tt O.lly Piiot. c-tt c1n al o.-.. County"" Feb,
Fell. t, tt.,2J,Mlr<h2.1'71 10, 1911.
4J.t.71 Nt74f -------------! Pul>llthld Or-C:O..tl Delly PllOt.
PUBUC NOTICE
IUPaa10tt COUltT OP Tiii
IT A Tl Oii CAU l"OllM IA POtl
TM a COUNTY OP Ohlffll
Ne.A-MHI
NOTICS Ofl NEAa1M• 0,
PaTITIOtt Pott Ptt0BAT11 OP WILL
AMO POtt LaTTllll
TaSTAMS•TAttY AND
A\JTMOttlU.TIOll TO ADMl•llTl!t
\JNOalt TNS IMOl .. aMOINT AOMINllTltATIO .. 011 alTATll
AK:T • 1!1ttt• •f JOHN M. ICHA~P. o.c.-.·
HOTICI! IS Hl!UllY GIVGH tN11
MAROUEltlTI! STEWAAT KNA .. P
11111 flied ...,.... • petition tor ... -. Of will .,.. ,.,.. Letwr Tn--ery
-AlllMrlutl• \0-lnlst..,. _
llM l11depeftdt11\ Admlnlslretlon ot
Estel• Ac\, ~· to wlll<h 11
"'"" ,., ""'""' tlrflcul--Viet a.. ti"'• encl piece°' lleerlnt llw-11111 Melt ... ,., Merc;ll 14. lt1', .. 10
Lm., lft .. ceurw.m of~
Ho. J Of teld oourt, et 100 Ovfc Cefll~
Drive Welt. Ill .. Clt'f of Senti An-. c;ellfomle. 0•1ed ,...,._,ti,,.,.
WIW-'¥1.MJOMN,
CeulJtY °"" MAaav C. CIOOBN ... w .............. ..... "" "--' ....... ~ .... • ........ ,..,! .... ..._ .
"111bll1Md Or-c.o.st Delly PllOt, fl• H, 23 end MM. 1, 1'11 .. ,.
FH.1',U-Milr.2,t,1911 "'-1r
PUBUC NOTICE
M.Ctnc. ·:T•""'••l ... I•""' =---·-·
-, f'..J
PUIDJC NOTICE
~ NOTIC90f'~W SUl'l•IGaCOUll"TCMITMI
1\1 Peat°" CIOU'" Ofl TMI ··~ P9Gl'llWTT &t IT A Te CN' CAIJ '°tUllA 110. ST A Tl W CAU l'OllNIA ...,_ .. lllYAT9 IAl..a TM I CIMINT't OI" qtlMllOe
TM• CIDUWTY CHIOlllAleOI .... ._,_ .... ..-.a .... ...,_ lltTMllUNato.citu•TOf' MOTICI 011 MIAlt•• 011
"OTICI Oii M•A•tNO 01' TNllTAftOf'CAU;oot11t1Al'Oa l'ITITIOlf..0-l"ttOaAHOttWILL
•ITITIClll l'Oll NOeAff Ott WILL TH a COUNTY Ott OllAHOIE A It 0 ' 0 • L I T T I a I
A M D tt O • L I T T I 11 I In Ille Mttltt Of IN Et .. te of LIO TllE~',:i~:N~:.y~ H. •THI..,._.', TllTAMINTA•Y AND l .W .. ONll\.OKM-. • "' '" ,.,.,...
AVTMO•IZATH* TO AD¥1N1'1'1• N•IC• 11 ..,.., ti-ttwt h ..,. Oecuucl. V•D•a Tl .. INOl .. INOIMT •rtltllM ,;Ill Mii et ~lvele Mlle, to NOTICE IS HlllelY 01\llH lMI
AOMINllT•ATIOM 01' ISTATIS the hl{llle1t -lllMI blddlf, Nl~t to Lowell SHf\9ler hes fllecl llet-'11 • .\CT. conllrm•tlln of Nici S.-ler OMd1. 11ttlllo<1 1or "'°6Ale tf Wiii tflf for,,.
lht•I• •• ll#-'MA •• JEHSIH, on or ............ Illy tf Merch, 1'71 ,''!. •• "A':, °'t• ~'!" •• T~~f-1111·.!!", 11ec...... •t the otflC* of w1111..,. o. -Y. •· ·~ ........ .._ -.....
NOTICe IS Hll!IU!IV GIVl:N tNI too SouUt llNCh a1vo., Suite H, Le pertk11lu1, ~ ,_ the llllW _,,. ~LAIHI! J. SAKI"-.... ftlecl herein e H•"'•• C-ty Of Or~, State of l>lt<• ti ...... ,,."'° -Mt llMfl M4 P9\lti.tl t. l"rolMlte of Wiii -fW 1 .. CelllOt'll• toul, ell .. r19'1, tMI• -lot MW<h I•, 1911, I& to • ftl,. IA Ille ~U...ce of L.etlen T~t-t.ry to the lntlrHt of .. 111 Cl9(MMCI of ow Ume of couttroe111 of a.-tnw<lt ..._ t of Hid
P1t1t1011•r end euthorhell•n 10 clHlll•nd•llt,..tllJl>l,1111•-lnt ... esl courl,al IOOCl'lllc Otnw Oflw WHI.
•dml11lll•r , ... ff te l• under the !Nit Ill• Htllt of .. Id dil<lN'" lie• a(· In the Clt1 of Slillta Me, Celltorf\I•.
,_,.,.._. Acln>lnlllroflon of Ea•t .. caulreo t>y _ .. _ ol •-ot-rwl• D•lecl """*" 21, 1•H
Act, 1'91-\9 Wllklt Is medlt tor otlte' 111;"1or111 -ltlcwl w 1NI of .. 111 WIWAM IE. M JOMN, PVBUC NOTICE
f\lftlllr .,.nk\11..., and 1,,.1 .,,. 11-oeco1ed,ttt11etlmeofo .. th,ln-10 JOSll'"";'."'~~ ~plect of hNlrlng the..,.,,. lies ~~lt~c•rt~n~ro"'-rty&sltu.,,•oc1 1n, trttlf ..... 11..... IU .. •IUOltCIOUltTOttTMI
-" Ml .... ~h 14, 1'71, •t 10:00 • o un Y c ran9e, a 1 o Svllt JU STAT& Oft CAUl'OttNIA 1'011 .. Ill., In IW mw1roontef ~_.,1 Qlllotnl•. S>Wtlcul.,ly ""''-•• TM•,....'NTYO .. OltANOI Ho. J of Mid <lllWt. et 100 Clvk Cenlet follows, lo-wit CMl.I Mete, Clllltenil•,.. --;.., ...,....
0.lve WHl.111 IM fllY of SMiie AM, P•,<el I. Tiit -'"'Y ~ l .. t el At=!'..:'0r':...~tl O.lly Piiot, NOTICI OP NIAlllNO 011
C•lllornle. Loi. ol Tree! NO."' In Ille ())linty ol l'tb n. n--· '· lt11 •t2·1• l'•T•TION "°" ""QaAT• 01' WILL. Deleel F.t.n.ary t7, 1t71 Or•noe, Slit• ol Celllornla, H thowrt ANO Lln&llSTUTAMINTAllY
WILUAM a . MJOHN, °" • Nl•P therMf recorded In lloOit 11. Estate of 81Hll: DA KOVICH,
c:.o.ny Clerk ~ 24 of Ml-!Mwou$ ~ 1" the PUBLIC NOTICE -··· •OWIM W. OtAll.... Office ol tht CDunty Rec«Cler of wld HOTICI IS HOllY Gl\ll!N lhet HtA ... I•~ county. ------------1 1 ... o. hi 141 P•,<tl 1. "" .......... t IOr lnoareu l'ICTmOU$ au11NaU MILDRID Pl~ULA .... flltcl i.t• n .
5e• ~·-· Qlltw ... 9»72 •NI "11••u own ... northerly u .... of NAM• ST ATl:Ml:NT lltllllOll lor ~1• Of Wiii •nd ·~ Ti•". --·>-•ltt lOI I~ Tr-~ -•s s~n ~ • 1 II 111•1><• of Lettff'I THYmenlery, , .. .., ,., .... ,. --· ._ ..... ·--· flt lo owl119 pe,..,,.. ••• 1101119 llr*"<• i. _,,.ell 1~ -!or IU<tller ""-'fer: ,......_ m•P !Mr"' l'tot.,_ Ill 8ooll 17 • P•9't 1>u,1,,.u.. pertlculen, end llWll Ille Ume •"d Publlthecl Or-. Coelt Delly Pllol, 1• ol MIKel..,_ "'-In IN Oflke OCEAN SllOlllTS LTO, 1..-. Bolu PIK• of -"It ttoe __ .....,MC
Feb. D, 14 MCIMM. l, "" 11 .. 11 of the County llKMCler of wlo county, Cit Ice, Hunilngton8ffc11.CA.'2-tor Nl•r<ll 1, me, .. lO·OO .. m., In 1119 UCIPI t ....... ,..,,.,. any portion "'""'" AnOr•w Ciltnell Moll, ,..., V•ll•Y <Ollrlroom of ~I Ho. 'of Mid
P•r<tl 1 •tiove, more co,..monly Cl rel~. Huntington llffcll, CA. '2~ court, •t 111Q 0¥1< Qtnter Qnve WHI,
___ P_U_BU __ C_N_OT--IC-E---1~;,~~-m1 -.tev1st.,uH•t>r•, a.nc~r:y"~,~:::·~ .. ~~:.!i~~·~ tn111ec1iyefSente"";7c.1wor111•
Tum• ol .... <•Ill In tewtul moNy 92.el 0.lecl ~y t , t I -------------1 oft~ Unit~ St .... -canll-•tlo'I ol T • WILLIAM a . ti JOttM,
"ICTITIOUI aUllNHI HI:." Ten ;;, t•nt oi~rnoune'i.ic1 to be o•..:;!1 ~;:;:::,,1~. con<Ntled t>y • OlllANT c:""'~ett
Tiie IOI'::!=~::.,.. bl.u. 11e:;i;!': ":~~o be In wrltlno -Tiii\ ~=· ::• lli.t wlllt the Ull •nffwlY
Ml.I es. wlll IM reolvell et IN elor ... ld ofll<• Coun11 Clffk Of Orenve County on SMt• MMlu. CA. -
Al LIED TOOL, UO Termlnel el eny """ ...... the llrfl lllUOllCellon J•11u.,y 21, 1t1e Tel: llUI ::-;.::.._
Wey, Colt• MtM. Cellfernl••1'71 hereof •nll1MI01'1det1ol sele. "'*' •i:,-:iy~ Or c.o. 1 0.11 Pllol Jerry Hell Eillle....,., 904 w. 19th O•ltO this IH• O.y ol l'ebl'uerY. t911 Publhht<I Orenve eo.11 Delly Pilot, F .,'; 1 t• 7~1911 ' Y ' StrMl,CMteNIHe,C.lllotnl•n6?1 JOHNA HIBBLE l't·t>l.9.1'.U.1911 e u.ry -.I .-
This l>vll-ll 'ondUclecl by.,, ,,.. Eucll!Or of Irle Wiii
~
\ivldllel. of Yid DK-
J•rrv Eshlemen WILLIAM 0.MAHONIEY Tlll1 •••-t w• filed wllll Ille M Soutft aeecll al'fcl., County Cltrk of OrM99 County ,.,. Suite H.
l'et>ruer1'7,lflt t..• M•l•H,c.ti..,.._,1
Put>tl&llecl <>r...,. C-11 0.lly Piiot, .Put>l"hod Or-C.0.st D•llY Piiot,
9'e1>. 7~•1\d MM. t, t, 14. 191' 101.71 l'et> n . t•-~r. 2. 1t71 n~11
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICa TO CllllOITOllll SUl'lllllOlt C:OUlllT 0' TNIE
STAT£ ~CALll'OlllNIA 11'0111
fH!i COUNTY 01' OlllANOll
....... ttl11J
Ell•I• '11 LUCIE .-.P<NA DILLMAN.
•-• LUCIE .-.HHA OILLMANN, •~•
PUBUC NOTICE .. ,,...
N011CI TO CllllOITOllS ...._ __
SUl'l:llllOll COUlllT Ol'T"I
STATI M CAUll'OlllNIA 4'0111
TNI COUNTY 01' OlllAHOI
In Ille MeltMof the l!lt.ateol OORIS
N WESTALt..l>KlfMd
•tCTITIOllS aUllNIU
"AMI STATIEMINT ------------I LUCILLE A Dill.MAH, •k• Notice 11 ~ 91_, to crtoltor1
lleVl"9 clel1n1 "9114Mt IM -de< .. dent to Ill• selcl cl.elm• In h oil•<• of
Ille e1 .. 11 ot the alore .. ICI c.our1 or 10
pro .. nl 11-.,.. to 1h4t uncll"l{lneo •I lhe
office ot Sl•nl•1 Weln1l•l n,
WEINSTEIN. SHElLEY & PllOC·
TOR, t 10. S. o.rti.ICI A .... , Al ... mor•.
C•llfornl• .,.,,, whl<h l•ttt< olllc• II
the piece ol lluslneu ol Ill• un·
det1l9....0 "' ell ,,,.11•• pert•lnl1111 to
t.•ld f'\l•l• Slleh ct 1tm1 w•l" lM
N<etury wuther'\ '""'' "" flied or prestnl•O •~ •farftaid wtl~ln 'OU'r month\ ellr Ille 11 .. 1 P<illllutlon Of
11\h no1'Ct
Th• 1011-11>9 per\Ont ere Oolno busl .... IM;
IRVINE HOME LOANS. USU
MacArthur Blvd, Suite 41S, llvlM.
Gelllornle 927tS
Jemts T . C•prt!t. llSU
lo\ecArlhur 81"", Suite OS, trvhw, Callforn1•n1u
Wllllwn L Tuell.. 117 Town """ Country RoeG, oren9e. C•lllorn•• ~ ...
Tnls t>ustneu I• <Onllu<ted by ., ln-
dllfkl<l•I
Wlll1wnt...TuOff
Tiiis Sl•t-1 wai flied wlln the
County Clerk of o,.nve Coun11 on F11>ruery 11, 1'11.
CAl'llllTZANOMcOONALO
-..... u.. ay: J.tmft T. ~i, £141. tun M•<Al1_ II.,,. .. aos
trvt ... , car.....,.. mu
'"'n Pul>ll\hod Or-Co.u'1 0•11• Piiot
F4IO. 1l -,.,.., , • .. "" n• ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF INTENTION TO
IENGAGI IN T"E SALE Of
.IALCOHOLIC •EVllllAGIS
1 II II
To wnom It MJoy ton<orn
"OTICI TO ClllEOITOlllS
.... A-tt!Ht SUl'llllOlt COUlllTOI' THE
STATE OI' CAUl'OlllNIA ,0111
THI COUNTY 01' 0111.ANOI
In 1ne M•lt•r of Ille E\l•lt of
HELEN £ &ARMAN •k• HEl EN
BARM"-N ell• HElEN ELVERA
8ARM"-N, 0.U...O
Notto ts he,.t>y 91,,.,, to crtc11tors
1t•vl119 cl.ims -•nst ,,.. W•d de·
<•dlelll 10 file 14110 cl .. 1111 lft 11\e olfke
of Ille cfork o11ne •IM ... ld court or to
PA .. nt tnem to Ille -rVQMO et IM
ofl1U of .loM w lrpeldl .... A I.AW
COl'PO ... tlan. 11'41 s... Vlc .... t• 111,,., •• Los A"Qel .. , c..tflfoMI• tOl)oe. -lcl!
1•11" O!lict 11 tne piece of "'"',...'of I,.. unoersl_.i In ell ,,,.Hers -teln·
•"9 to w •G HIM• S..Cn <lolm• with Ille
necen•rt W«Chen """' oe lllto ., pt'tltntwo •-' •'••,••d w1Uun four
monlM •It°' the lint l)YOllu11.., ol
U"ll\ l\OliCt .
O•ltO Fol>rWry 71, 1'11
Gff•IOO,... e.,,,_ 1Cne1 .. 1er
E-ut°' of tM W•ll
of ... 110.Cedent
JOHN W ERl'Ol.OING
AltNMT .. "-
A Le• C..--
11 .. 1 s.11~9IM .
Let A .... la,~1-•
Tel: IJUI -ms
Pvbll\n.d ~Mt(. CCN\t D~•· Pilot.
Fet> n •"" -, t. '' "" n1 "
Subt.c.t to 1u1.Wnc.e of 1ne IKenw •P-i-------------
PUBUC NOTICE
lUClllE />.. DILLNIANN, •U LUCIA
A DlllMAN. •l<o LUCIA "-·
DILL"""-NN. DKused NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the
CfHiton °' trwr MJO•• nam.tl Ol<eeltftt
, ....... "'"""' .... ,1111 ct.imt eoetntt tho u1d <ll'<e.i.nt are '"uirecl to lilt
lhtm wllh IN M<~sery "°''""'"· In II .. ofli<t Of I ... C IUI< '1# ltw ObOW
enuueo <-ourt Of \o Pf"t'"Ant them, wt th
tn. f'llCfU6r1 wouchers to the \If\
dtr11on10 •t 6.0 N••Port Cenl•r
Ortvt., Sullt t5SS, Nttwport B••tl',,
C•l1fortu• "'60. Wf\1Cf\ ''Ow p41<e of
1»us1ne-1i of 1r. uncHr\lene-cl I" •tt
m•Utrs perta;n;nv to 1"9 ttl41tt of Wtd
-ecle111. ~tnln tour mon~ •fter tho
""' publkatlon Of INS l>Oll<t.
0•1•11: ""'' ... '• •• ... ,. Robert R Hurw•ll
En<vt°' ol ""' WllJ of
trw -.. ,..,,_ Ot<tOtnl NUlllWITZ, llllMllll, -OONALO,
MIAOa -llOHNWALO
Al'rem-~.a11 ...
WO New-1 Ceftlw Ori ....
S.Ofl• "" """'"'rt-· eel-•·-Tel 11101-11•
A-Mn lw lmc:"'er PubhsM<I <>-Coast O•tl¥ PllOI
Ftl> •• U Mlll-r 1 t 1t1t •I• It
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IU$1HI$$
NAMe JTATSMl'NT
l h• tollow•nio "';"°"' .,. ocM.,.
Detell F~y 1. lt1'
Hertle<tG (1-, .... Jr •U
H Gotc11>n Cl•UOl111, Jr &
Vlf'Vlnl• C. Tr-t)(ld(le
E •t<ut°'• ol tho Wiii ofseldDt<-
STANLEY WEINSTIEIN WIEIN$TllN,MC•LL.l:Y A l'llOCTOlll att. .. .,..ac.uw
1114 S. Gert-Aw.,
........... Call ...... •t1•1
Tei um-.nu
Pul>ll~ Or-C.0.tl 0•11• P•lot
Feo • it nenc1 -· 7 1tN iu II
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATIMINT 01' WITHD•AWAL
l'lllOM
PAlllTNIRSHll' Ol'lllATINO
UNOElll
"CTITIOUS eintNISI NAMI
,,. , .. ,~ .. pill!r9' MW wHhdf'ewt\ tlllecl '°". not Ke ~ --01 ........ , the unot,\19ned propo\•\ to t •11 .. 1co11011c .,.,,..~ et tile P<'•m1 .. ,
....,.Krlbed .. follows In tne -U Pf'O ------------·! W t!N>\\ •\ PINTAIL HOMES, tOOl1 0.rli.111 • • .,..,., H..,tiN!lon BeKlt, Cill..,...
•• • ttner•• P•""•' from th• pert,.rtnlp -reltftll -Ow It<
lllloua t><nlfltu -ol Oc..,, Spor!l llll •I ,,.... ..,,.. 011ce, Hu••ll"9{on
a .. <h.C•-
.... -....... 1\10 W B•k•r, Cott• ,_.., ••
Celltoml• PurwMlt to sucll lnlH!llon, tne un·
"fenloned I• •pplylng to I ll•
6-P•rtmtnt ol "-l~Ol!Oltc h w,•99
'Gollltol for •.....nee Of .,. ••~k
CleYllUO• IK:tNe tor thna ...-m1w. ••
lollo•• "41"'
On S.le Beer ~ Wine
UloNt Filk
Publ•c Eetln(I Pl.col
""""' & Jeck Y •nll ICtnny Y Luu
Publl'hod ~ Co.u•I O.ally Piiot, l'eb,u•rt u . ,,,, n .. ,.
•TATIMl:HTOI' AaAHDONl'tllNT
OPllHOI'
PICTITIOUI allllNIE:SS NAME
T"• to11ow11tt 01rso"' tteYf' •l>•nclon•d ,,.. UM of the flcttllou•
bu•lnen ,......, I
SOUTHERN CALIFORNl"-
SURFllOARD MFG~ 11n Plectntl•
A .. ..,.,.. ColQ......,. ~ tav
The Fic11ti0ul lkal-"•"" , ...
lffrM to •-••• lllecl In Or-C.-11 on J.,...ry s. 1'7'.
Wiii'-> l.M><.e ColllM, Ml W 11111 s""'· c-u -c:.i11 ...... nu1 Guy Pete r Guuer•o. UO
Oonc ester. H"fttlft9tot1 l••cn, C•lll°""'•.,,._ Thia 4'uloMit WH ~anMlecl l>y e _,.,_,,.,.,,,,..
1..-..CotllM VUBLIC NOTICE Tiiis ,,_._ ... t11tc1 ••ll• tM ------------·! Co.,.,ty Cl.r-of Orenve County on
Cl40'U fet>rue•v tt, ttl'L
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS N1'M
MAMIE STATIMENT P11bllshed Or-C.O.sl Deify P1lol,
T ,,. IOllOWl"9 pu>Ons .... Ooln9 Fol> 11--,. '· ... "" tcl·lt
bullnen as
PUBLIC NOTICE llOLlAllO·s SURFSIDE
SANDWICH SHOPPE. 211 •1n<1 Slr .. t.
Newoort !leech. C..lllorn .. tlMO
M•rv G V•ll•ro. 711U Huron FICTITIOUS autlNIU
Len•, El Toro. Olltornle t»JO NA#I! STATIMINT
Bren<M A. Votl.,o. 711U Kuran Tiie loll~ Plf""' Is dOl"I llUM· \.•ne, El Toro. Celllornl• t1'JO ,.,., H
TlllsbusJneu4sconauctedl>y.,,ln· NtAllSHAlL LEASING. HOI
dlvtllU•I COrtnthl.,, 'W•y, Swll• D, ....._,
Mere G Yollll(O 8M<h. C..IH_.,_ e....-A \IOll¥0 Wltlt-fllll -r\l\ell, 611 Hotth
Tiii• tt•l-t •H lllecl wtlh I/le Jenu Wey,,.,._,,,,, C..llloml• t190S
County Cl.,ll ol Orenge County IHI Thia 11"""91S '' c-.CltO l>y an tn-
"J'•-•Y 16, 1'11. dlvl*'•I, ~·ova• HClllOWCOllll'OlllATION WllflamE.111•-""'" 111s.lft~111"-'• Tiits si.t-1 ... lilecl w11n the
M.1"'4111, Cellhnll• tms Counly Cltrll ol Oranoe C011nly .,,,
a11e'ew lte. tt....,_.111 Fet>ruary 11, 1911 ,._ ,_
Pubtllllecl Or'-C.0.\1 o.41' Pllol. Pul>!l.,._., Or-Coe•I Delly Pilot,
l'tt> n •Ml -,, t. n , 1911 n>-11 Fell. u --a. t, "· ttlt n1.11
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Phlhp H M<Ne.._ 11$1 s.....,
On,.. Co•t.a -.. CA. nt»
O•to St,..,.,..o. 1411 SM!t-11• Ttt
re<t. Corone dtl -'·CA 926U
Thh bu''""" " ccmducted by • lllT\tS.ct p.,.,,., \.Np
PflUl•O H Mc:Hamee
Ttite ft<hhCIU\ .....,,...., n.eme tt.tt•
me'" tor ,,.. P9"""""1ft•lt •M hl«S on
Oclol>., •· ltll In the Ceun11 ol
Or•no• ,utl " __ .....,..., .. ,...,...,
Wl-••"'9 l•ry D -., .,,.,_, Tito '1•-1 -WM '""" the Co<#lly C•.n o• Ot•ft9t Counl¥ Oft J•11v••• 11. "11 l'UJ4t ,na» '""'"'"'cl Or-~· DIMiy l'llot,
.f'WOllSMO Or-c.A>t 0.-ly Piie! Fell 2. t, °'6 JS. 1911
Feb. 1 t. 1•. U ••1' lM-71
'PUBUC NOTICE
IU PlllllOlll CO«llllt Of' TNI
STAT• 04' CALl~NIA FOii
TMI COUNTY 01' oa&NO• ..... -NOTICIE O' "IAlllNG 0' l'ITITION POil PlllOaATI OP WIU.
AND L1En1111s TllTAM•NTA•Y,
1'0111 AUTMOlllltATION TO AO
MtNtSTllll UNDllll INI
INQll'IEMOIEHT ADMINtn•ATION
01' ISTATllACT ht•le of "-lEXANOIR OE GllAW,
O.C.•~cl
NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVEN th.at
l'lllEOElllCK oe GRAW l\H 111.0
ht•••n A ...illlon '°' ..._te of Wiii -1n...,,.,.., Letltn T•~•rv.
Mid tor •••tt>Orltet-to edmlt1111e< .,...
Ott t ......... .,.._ _,,ntUtMl<WI el
f!tttlH Act, r•f~enc:• IO which II
,,,... tor f"'11wt l*'llcullll's, -tl\et
llw llme -lllec:t ol Narl"ll lht M-... , .,...., •I lot _.,,, I, tt71, .. tO 00
• m , In ,_,_,._,, of~
Ho l ol MIO court, •t 100 Ci\11< C.ftlH
Otlve W"I· In t,.. City ol ""'• ..,.., Ctlllornl•
0•1•0 ,..._, 14, "" WIUtAM IE. M J<Ntlt,
C"""'yCl<!r•
AlllTMU• O. OUY
"' l'h• ·-· ~ 1111 u..--.c:.a. ... Tef: UUl.,,_1 Aa .... ,, ... , ""'iu-
Pu1>11s1WC1 0r.,. C.O.tt O.llr Pli.t.
l'ebr ... ,., "· 11, n. l'79
PVJlUC NOTICE
..ICTITIOUS eUllNHS
NA.WISTATIMaNY
JIHI
Tiie 1e11-1no ~·-• ••• oo<nv l>USlnes1 H
J & IC PllOP£11TIES I. CURTIS C
l AASON f6111 HOY9t A .... lrvu,.,
CA .,114
W•lla<e A l(nut 7•F7 Napoll W•y,
Coll•,,. .... CA. '2to11
Rlchud J JOMIOll, '" Mn• Ori ... CMl.a Mele. CA n.27
'"""' c. ~ 1m """""'"""· NewillOtl 8H<~. CA 91*
Tnll lloniMn 11 <011,..<1" by • ""'' ..•. ,.....,,.~ WelleceA.K""' 0-rel Pert,_
Tllll ,........,. ... lllecl witll tne
C_t, Cltf11 of Or•t199 C:-tv on
J •nuery 11. rm. ,._,,
Pul>lllllld 0r.,,.. Con1 o.ry Pilot.
Fell. 2. 9, 16, 11. 1'11
PtJBUC NOTICE
NOTIC& TOCllllOITOllll
IUl'l.IOI COUltT Ott TME STATI ~ CALll'OlllNIA l'Olll
TMI COUNTYOl'OlllANOE
.... A·eQM
&:ftete ol lllHODA LINCOLN
ACKE• eh lllHODA LINCOLN
PIUCI, o.c....d.
NOTICI: IS HER&aY GIVEN Ito,._ ue111-. ...... ,,.,_ __
tllel ell --,,...,,,.. <l•lrns ll•lnlt -----------WT-·1-i• Ute Wtlll dKtdenl -required lo Ille lhtm, •• .,, ""__., _._., '"" .the office Of IM c-of Ille..,.. -tlUed ~-1. w lo pr...m tllem, w1111 PUBUC NOO'ICE
I ..
tlM "'~ _.....,.. .... -*'""'" .. ,...,,._ M. '--'· .... lorMY et Law, >Mt .. 11111 Cont
Hltlltf•y, L.-... llMctl, Clllfwftle "'51, Wlllcll 11 .. ,.._ ttf MIMU Of Ille __ ,..,.,... ..... , mMt«'a lllf1eltto
1"11 le Ille ttt1t1 Of Ml41 ~.
wlttllll fOlll' ~ efl•r tM flrlt lll*IC9'1Mf/I tltls IWl!fL o.t" J_., 23,"" MkMelJ. l'l'tclt
A4mhtlttr .. w Of lie Will ..... _._.Mmed ~ .,. ................ .. ....... , .. .._ ....... °""' ......... ~ ..... C.4 ... t nit CJMI 411M7" ~ ............. l'WlllNcl 0>11111 CNA Oell• l'lttt. ,....,..ry i." ..... ""
I ;
_.....1".,.....,,....,~ • .,.~,,_...-.~ ....... -•...,..,..•.,..w•"""'--...,.._.,..,..~ .... ~•.,.,...,_,~
Thursday, February 23, 1978
Proposed Donar.
The United States dollar, which bas been
shrinking in value for about 30 years, may
s hrink in another way if Congress
approves a Treasury Department request
for a new, mostly copper $1 coin, shown in
the center above. Smaller than the half '
dollar on its right, it would be larger than ..
the quarter on its left. Pattern is the
liberty bead with the Pbrygian ·cap, an
ancient symbol of freedom.
Banks We'lcomed Storui·
But Will Electronic Transfer Use Continue?
By JOHN CUNNIFF A,..,_....,,.
While industry was halted in
vasi areas of the nation by
snows and rains and howling
gales, and sometimes crashing
tides as well, some aspt?ct.s of
business were enjoying a boom
or sorts.
Among them : downtown
hotels, sellers of galoshes, travel
agents and
t h o s e
electronic
funds transfer
srstems out·
side of banks
·that can be
used to obtain
cash, pay
bills, make
loans and ac·
cept deposits CUNNlll'I'
"T HI S WINTER 'S
snowstorms may have done
more tn a few days to promote
acceptance of EFT than the
banking industry ha:. been able
to do in fi ve years." said one
representative of a group or
banks
During the January whiteout
in Columbus. Ohio, the City
Notional Bank said. its 45
automatic tellers totaled 15.000
transactions m two days, a 300
percent increase over normal
volume
In the Boston area, the Bay
Banks repe>rted more than a 100
percent rise ln the use or 1t.s 30
automatic tellers, each of which
1t says normally makes about
1,000 transactions a week.
THE TIMES. OF course, were
abnormal. aod in many in-
stances the banJts were closed.
forcing customers to use the
electronic devices Whether
customers "Ill continue to use
them 1sn·t certain
Nevertheless, bank officials
are happy. They hope that
c ustomcr s. forced by the
emergency to learn the newer
method of transacting business.
might find it just as comfortable
as the old system
/\ spot survey by a newly
formed honking group, whos~
purpose admittedly Is to spur
the use or EFT, sho'f'ed the in·
creases throughout the blizzard
areas were not limited to just a.
few banks.
THE PROVIDENT National
Bank of Philadelphia said Us
point of sale terminals in 12 con-
venience stores ree:Istered a 30
percent increase. .
In addition to permitting
customers to pay for 1oods
electronically -transferring
funds from a customer's bank,
account to the store's account -
customers also can obtain $25
cash from the store without a
purchase.
Citibank irt New York reported
business up about 20 percent at
Its 400 terminals in almost 200
sites in the metropolitan area. It
said business also rose 20
percent during the big January
storm here.
AT LONG ISLAND'S
Hempstead Bank, officials sajd
2,500 EFT customeni made 12
perct-nt more transactions -
mainly payments of utility and
local store bills -while the
bank was closed during the
February storm.
At Lou1sv11le. Ky., customer
traCCic also was r eported to be
h1ghei: as a result of the storm,
which at its height closed all SO
branches of the First National
Bank or Louisville, the state's
largest
At least one problem, making
cash easily available, wasn't
~olved entirely by the automatic
tellers . In Louisville, the First
National attempted to keep the.
machines supplied by maldnf ~
rounds in four-wheel-drlve.
vehicles.
IN SOME OTHEa areas, -.
however, th1s wasn't possible.
Highways in the Boston~
Providence area were closed tor
nearly a week, making ·
replenishment difficult. Some
New York sites closed down.
The banking industry would'
Jove to have the public accept lt.s
automatic tellers for a number
of reasons, and so it undoubtedly
seized upon the storm ex-.
perience to promote their usaae. •
Automatic tellers reduce the
need for clerks and bookkeepers
and are said to be more ac·
curate as well. And because of
their automatic bill-paying abili-
ty, they hold the promise of lock··. ·
ing in the business of retailers ;
and others. •
.· BUT ALL 1108 depends on
convincing people to use the
automatic devices, and whether
these customers will continue to
view them only a& emergency
devices remains to be seen.
Critics observe that when
power fails people take to using
kerosene lamps, but that when
power is returned tbey in·
variably revert to thelr old habit
of turning on the electric lights.
Chicago Daily News
TO Stop on March 4 .:
CHICAGO CAP). -The Chicago Dally News, the city's only
afternoon new~paper, will stop publication pt?rmanently March 4, its
publisher has announced.
~ • f In a statement, the management of tl\e newspaper, which bas re.
ported losses of $11 mllUon in the last year, said Wednesday:
·'The board or diredctors of
.< • \I ..
Field Enterprises, Inc., with
deep regret, voted today to cease
permanently the publication of
the Chicago Daily News effective
with the last edition Saturday,
Macch4,1978."
PUBLISREJl MARSHALL
Field had announced Feb. 3 that
he was "contemplating" an end
to publication or the paper.
But he said then that a formal
' .. ..
decis ion would be postponed to :
notify unions representing the !
paper's employees and give -;
them an oppe>rtunity to devise a ~
plan to save the paper. ~
Field said that since 1974 the •:
paper lost $21.7 million, with tbe ~
deficit growing from $3.5 million ~
in 1975 to $11millionin1977. t
Circulation fell during that t
pt?rlod from 8f11.588to121,0"I&.
DON'T TRADE
MEDICINES
IT COULD BE
DANGEROUS
OJntinental MatkV-~ •• .. ~· .,.,
What is food ror one
person can be poison ror
another is an old axiom. Therefore, do not ever take any prescrl ptlon
prescribed for a trlend
who thinks you could fl~Q
benefit.
Modern prescription
druaa are 10 potent that
·they 1hou1d not be taken
without a physician's
approval. If you take
·some one e l se'• pteacriptlon you are
eamblln1 with YO\lr
health.
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US wben you
need a medicine. Pick up
your ptHorlpUon lf. •bof plnl nearby, ot we wtl deliver promptly
wttbout 4'1(tt'a dlarae. A· irut QI.HJ pupJa
entraat 111 wtth Oitlr
prescrlpUons. Kay "• compound~? ,
'A"lt'l.IDO ~Oy -"= ;:."'::: ... .. ~.._ ... , ..
\
THE MARK OF SUCCESS.
More people Qyy this luxury car;
more people lease this luxury car
than any comparable American
luxury car in California today)
Why follow the leaderwtlen you C(lll driVe It your9eff? WhdW )'QI bW or teeee the magnif lceot Continental Marte V. you wtll enJoy the dlstinCtlori d dtMng one of the most successful luxury C8l'I built In America.
Tradltlonall)4 as evidence of thefr ~ming POPUiarity, our Mlrll8 hlNe
retvrned more of thelr original ~price than Cadflleo EJdor8do OOupe.
Here In lhe Golden 6iat9; the Continental Matte V 11"8 ~ leadet Jn It$ letd of Amet~made berlOna1 IUXLlfY cars. 1!!1.-t on R. L Folk registration data. more Cellfomlare buy and teae the Continental Mark v thin other oompnble Arnertclli1 h.DciJrY en.~ ...
good reaeona for such popol•:!tv· Nowtwe wUI ._be more ObYiOUS thai dUrll'IQ. perlOl'l81 teat-drwe It the~ arr v.
Liit '9 .-ninge It for you 9t ~--COIWW !CA.
I
...... ..
\
Budness
~ToughLNG
Site Rules
Requested
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
panel of ontcialJ from populous
coastal states bas urged Coa1ress to set. touah naUonal
standards for lique!Iect natural ~ saa tanker terminala.
The officlala -all from states
'where tanker terminals or ma-
jor LNG storage plants eithe.r
exlat or are planned, also said
Wednesday that Coogt'eas must
give states a major say on
where such fa.cilit.ies are to be
located.
CLAIMING THAT EACH LNG
tanker packs the energy
equivalent of a one-megaton
nuclear weapon, a California
• legislator told a House panel
that terminals should be barred
from populated areas.
· · Terry Goggin, chairman of the
, permanent subcommittee on
energy of the California State
Assembly, testified that
"Congress should enact uniform
siting criteria . . . but these
should be minimum, not max-
im um, stand ants.••
AMONG THE VICTIMS -Donald Kendall, above right,
chairman of Pepsico, joined such celebrities as Jack
Benny, Barbra Streisand and Walter Matthau in invest·
ing in Home-Stake.
. .
He said states should not be
prohibited from setting even
tougher rules to protect the
public against the possibility of
tanker collisions and potentially
explosive LNG spills.
OFF I CIALS FROM
Massachusetts, New York and
New Jersey gave similar
testimony at the hearing by the
House Commerce s ubcommittee
on energy and power, which is
considering legislation lo
strengthen federal regulation of
LNG imports, transportation
and storage.
CAPITOLIZE
WITH
CAPITOL
CAPITCllZATION MEANS TO
COOERT CAPIHl TO CASH
Economic ExpansWn
Hope Called Bright
If \'Ou.-St 000 10 SSO 000 cnh •Ad
WQ,t OWft 6 tofnl Of Ot• P'OC:»ff
po.d lot O< nol. i.t r.APIT Ol >IQV E
LOAN an•no• •o CAC"l«M•t• )"OUI
eQUlly Into • ,_, --,.., """ -ly-...-
Capitol
Home Loan
0-...0lc.t>f •~
t.o.'l 8''*-•eue ''''"'
C•l1 on. ot our~ cOl"l"Wl"Nemlr toce\Mott~ tor uwtact'
We'd
Really hke to help
COSTA MESA
3130---
7141540-4412
ANAHEIM
2S11 W Ur1ao1n ft N
114ln8-34SO
LONG BEACH ~76 E. °"'--213/ .. 21-9333
WASHINGTON <AP J Prospects
for continued economic expansion
are good. despite the unfavorable im-
pact of the coal strike, cold weather
and weak auto sales, lhe
administration's top economist says
"Consumer spending rose
vigorously in the final three months
of last year, clearing the shelves of
excess inventories," said Charles L .
Schulu.e, chairman of the Council of
Economic Advisers.
"Production for restocking as now
under way and .should impart con·
siderable momentum lo growth dur·
ing the first few months of this
year." he told the Congress of
American Industry.
lob• Prograaa S ollfJht
WASHINGTON (AP) -President
Carter bas asked Congress to
authorize an $11.4 billion program he
said would "provide jobs and train·
ing opportunities for over four
million Americans."
The money earmarked for the 1979
fiscal year that begins next Oct. 1,
would represent an increase of $1.8 ·
billion over current spending for such
activities.
S tora Drop Bid
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Carter
Hawley Hale Stores, Inc., bas an·
( TAKING )
__ ST_O_C_K __
nounced it has withdrawn its pro-
posed exchange offer to acqwre the
common stock of the Chicago-based
Marshall Field & Co.
President Philip M . Hawley said
Wednesday that bis firm belJev~ the
expansion program announced by
Marshall Field this month has crut.
ed doubt about the company's eam-
an gs. lie said his (arm 's offer
therefore is no longer In the best in·
terest of Carter Hawley Hale
shareholders
S olar Eaerg Pr••••ted
LOS ANGELES (AP> -It won't be
long before new homes will be solar
homes. a solar energy group bu an·
nounced, saying it will bring together
solar experts from around the nation
to overcome governmental obstacles
to such developments.
Called Project Start, the campaign
is sponsored by an association of in·
dustry and consumer representatives
and is designed lo show that solar
energy is already cost~ffective ln
many cases.
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION
Oeoen1>ef 3 t. 19 77
(Unaudrted)
ASSETS
Cash, U.S. GoV"t Obligatlons
.and other Securllies........ . . • . • • S 15,516,345
loans on Ffeal Estate.......... . • • 189,2n,607
Contracts on Sale
of Real Estate . . . . ... . . • ••• . • .. • • J 08,384
Loans to Facilltate Sale pUleaJ Estate • .. . • . ......... .
Real Estate Owned (Net) ••••
Real Estate Purchased for lovestment. .................... . 8,652,633
Federal HOl'T\• Loan aank ' Stoctc ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1,055,400
LIABILITIES
CAPITAL
AND
~ESERVES
SavmgsAccounts .•.•...••...•••• S_17t ,167,71 5
Advances from Federal
)iome Leen Bank •.•.••
~otea Payable -Bank ••••••••.••
Other Llabllltles •..•.....••••....•
10.120.000
None
22,747,724
fOTAL LWllLITlES •• ··-··..... 204,735,439
A>EF&RRED INCOME ••••••••••••
CAPITALANDRESERVES
Regutatory A•rvea .. , ..•.•.•...
Guarantee Stock. Reserves
~rd St.lrplue •••••••••••••••••••••
1,181,674
,.S0,000
Tax Scheme Bilked .Rich
·Fund fo r D estitutes May ·R~ain Untouch e d
By MILTON 1108KOWITZ
In "Stealing from tbe Rieb," a
book published last November
by M. Evana & Co., Wall Street
Journal reporter Davld
.McCllntick told the incredible
atory of the Home-Stake oU
swindle.
McCllntit:k now baa lbe op-
portunity to update bla story
with an eodin1 rich in irony.
ROME-STAKE WAS the tax
shelter scheme or«aniud in 1955
by a Tuba lawyer, Robert S.
Trippet. Over the next 18 years
it collected some $140 million
from movie stars, top business
executives and lawyers who
wanted to avoid paying taxes on
their high incomes.
Trippet promised the in·
vestora a healthy return on their
money from oil drilling. But
because it qualified under
Internal Revenue Service rules
as a tax shelter program, the in·
vestors knew that even if the
drilling led only to dry boles,
they would still be able to use
this investment to reduce their
taxes.
As it turned out, Home-Stake
did very little drilling. What it
did do was to continue, every
year, to selJ more investors on
the plan. Then, with the money
received from the new investors,
they would pay some returns to
the previous investors.
IN SHORT, A classic Ponzi
scheme, the biggest one of
modern times. Of the $140
m Ill ion collected, only $50
million, at the most, went back
to investors.
Home.Stake was an especially
delicious hoax because Trippel
succeeded in enticing luminaries
from the entertainment and
business worlds. It was a case of
the grapevine working, one rich
guy whisperh1g to another,
"Say, have you beard about
Home.stake Oil?"
Jack Benny, Barbra
Money
Tree
Stre{Jand, Bob Dylan, Barbara
Walters and Walter Matthau
were among the show bwrlness
investors. From the world of
business checkbooks at the
ready, came Walter Wriston,
head of New York's giant
Citibank; Donal d Kendall,
chairman of Pepsico; David
Mahoney, chairman of Norton
Simon; and 24 top executives of
General Electric, all following,
like sheep, the lead or their boss,
chairman Fred Borcb. Another
name on the '"sucker list" was
George J . W. Goodman, better
known under his author's
pseudonym, Adam Smith.
WHEN THE SCHEME came
apart, Trippel was brought lo
trial on conspiracy and mail
fraud charges. Jn 1976, Judge Al·
len E. Barrow of federal district
court ln Oklahoma sentenced
him to one day ln jail and fined
him $19,000. .
Judge Barrow explained in
court that he couldn't work up
much sympathy for the fat cats
who had been bilked by Trippet.
They should have known better,
said the judge.
On the other hand, in the event there were some people who had
been left destitute by Home.
Stake investment, Judge Barrow
ordered Trippet lo set up a
$100,000 fund for their benefit.
Specifically excluded from ap-
plying for such rehef were "the
s o p h i s t i ·c a t e d a n d
knowledgeable investors, beads
of corporations, investors who
bad the advice of investment
counselors, CPAs of
sloe k brokers.··
Over T h e Counter
MASO Listin«JS
FEB. t WAS the last day ap-
plicants could file for these
baJ'dahip pa.yment.&. Six did, ·but
tbel( were deemed to ·be m.
ellgi"ble.
A bearing b set for March 19
ln Tulsa, at which time lt seema
likely that Trippet will cet bis
$100 000 back. McCUntick's book
was' accurately tilled. Trippet
fooled a lot of people but nooe
was poor.
Firm Reports
Plan Canceled
Computer Automation, Inc.,
Irvine, says neeotiations for lbe
acquisition of General Computer
Systems, Inc., of Addison, Tex-
as, have been broken off.
Both firms bad previously an-
nounced the execution of a letter
of intent for Computer
Automation lo acquire the busi-
ness of General Computer
Systems, but the parties b_ave
been unable to reach a definilive
agreement on the terms of the
proposed acquisition, D. H.
Methvin, Computer Automation
president, said Wednesday.
General Computer Systems is
a manufacturer of computer
data entry systems based in Ad-
dision, a suburb of Dallas.
AUCTION GE'lS
AN011IER ROLLS
For the fourth consecutive
year, Roy Carver Rolls
Royce/BMW, Newport Beach.
has donated a one-year lease on
a Rolls Royce to KCET's
Auction '78. The lease will be up
for bid at the auction between.
May 5 and 13, 6 p.m. to midnight
on Channel 28. • . _
Carver bas donated a closed-
end lease on a new, four-door.
Rolls Royce Silver Shadow. lI
sedan. It is valued at $17,500.
MUTUA L FUN DS
i •
, . •
' r
l
I
I
STOcKS I BUSINESS ~
. . . ..., .... .. .. . . ,
NYSE COMPOSITE 'FIMNSACTIONS
_l
rnurtaay. l'ebruaty 23. 1979 QAJLY PILOT 87
1
·Benefit mu.es
Plan Would Aid Many
111 SYLVIA POSTEil
Buried deep In the Carter edlllin.lltratloc's tu n--
docUon-reform package la a propotal that can bdetit
mllllom of workers covered by private J)8Dlioft plans.
Jt woUld eo a Joni w11 ioward uaw1.ng that Ill
p.articlpanb Jn pension plane would receive retlremmt
beiienta. . .
UNDD cvaaENT LAW, EMPLOYElt8 can set UJ>
retirement plea that pay eooct beneftta to relatively "Well·
paid employees and little or nnehina to tboae eanaio1
1alarlei equal to or leu tb8D the Social Sec:u:rtty wace
base. b •4..t..-.,_.,.. r Ernptoyen may set up such plans y --•· •""'• o taking creclit for certain Social Security taxes when com·
putlnr the benellll tbelr employees will draw lrom penaion pa.ans.
Money's
Worth
As retirement
clrawa near, many
wor1<era repd their
1ummary penaion plan
booklet.I and compute
the benefits. Only then
do tbey discover that in·
tegratlon will mean
tbey wW receive little or no more than thelr SS beneflta.
Integration ls not uncommon, especially for
participant.a in plans covering fewer.than 26 ~orkers.
Jn 1974 the Copcressional Research Servtce found that
60 percent' of tax:ciualifietf. pension pllll'l.I, lnvolvµia 25 to
30 percent of participants In the private penaJoo 1yatem,
were lntel!'ated with Social Security.
CONGaESS RECOGNIZED THAT a system that
enables or even encoutages employers to pay retirement
benefits to highly salaried worken while paying nothing to
lower·pald penona ls unfair. It bu pJa~ aevere limits on
the use of tnteeration in plans designed for rank-and·tlle
workers, aucb u employee 1tock awnenhlp plam.
A temporary (reue was put on fUrther lntegraUon dur-
ing the debate over the 1974 pension law. wblle Congress
completed a two-year study of its effect.a. Last-minute
lobbying perauaded Conrr~ to rescind the freeze. Tbe
study ls unfinished ; Integration goes on.
Integration ls defended by many employers wbo say
that, wit.bout it, pension plan costs would be excessive,
tbat benefits should reward executives who account for
profits , that higher deferred benefits would reduce wa1es
lower-paid people receive.
THE CARTER ADM1Nl.STllA110N ARGUES that, in
effect, the tax laws have been designed lo encourage firms
to set up pension plana for all workers. lnt.el!'alion Wl·
dermines um roal. Only the worst aspects of the present system of lnle·
gration would be eliminated by the Carter proposal. for il
would aubltantially affect only plans that tend to dla-
cri m inate heavily in favor of well-paid employees by
virtuallyexcludin1tberank-and-file.
But modest u th1a reform measure ls, some plan con-
sultant.a aod actuaries are already working to defeat lt.
Their view i.& that those who would gain most f~m lls
passage wW rind tbe proposal too obscure and complicated
lo pay much attention. .
They s hrug off the posaibillty of a letter-writing
campaign that might stress to aenaton and conpaamm
that the public wants this measure. .
The "integration" propoeal, along wttb the entire tax
package, is before the House Ways and Means Coi:nmlttee,
chaired by Rep. Al Ullman. D..Ore. If you care, wnte.
Dow Index Rallies
,Jn Late Trading
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices showed a small gain
In quiet trading today, despite the news of Josaes at
Chrysler Corp.
The Dow Jones averaae of ~ industrials, which bad
lost itround in each of the out nine sesslo!'S and cloeed Wednesday at a 34·month low, was up 1.90 pomta to 750.".
Chrysler reported a $49.'l million loss for the fourth
quarter of last year, end said it expected to show a loss for
lhe current quarter as well.
But the market rallied in late trading.
St~k• In Tiie Do..,.Jo•e•A rerafl'•
Spotllglti
NIW YORK tAPI· Salft, 4 p.m. -'1<:e lftd Ml CNl"91t of Irle llf•n motl lKll ..
Ntw Yorll Slocll Exclleflee •-· .,..,,,.. n•11-11, ti mort tlleil r· °"'sf" . . . . . .. . "'· l!!! m -t ... Cltt,orp . . . . . • lfl'.2:.-hi ,. + 1 Mersll ,lt4d. • • 111 + \to ""'''°',.., . . . . . m -... AmT'T • • • • • • • • • I ,300 .... + ~ Ooo#C!Mm • . . . . • lUAOO -,..,.1co . •• • • • • • 111,900 "" • • • • • HOl!tllnd ••...•• 1$4::: = •··ij ~lit= i.:1)':·::: m:ooo 44\lo ::S\li ,.,.., ........ '1'·= m: :.:·v. "It-• •. • • IU, 27111 .... lfttTt lTt ll\. .• • . . m.: .. + _.. ~ .. llA!Eq . . . • • '1~'too u-. : .... lffW•-J-...... -·
New Y-(AP) 1'11114 Dew-.-.~
$T0Cltl HI Uw Clow 0o
31) Ind OJ:'. 7~fl 7CU I 7JO H+ UO 20 Tr11 10).40 704.11 10U.J 70).7'-0.05 U VII 101.SO ICIJ ... ICIPl.20 101.'4 + 0.10 HllStll 36110 JU.-MO.IS "'*'°' + t «I '""",ri} •• .. ·•• •• ·••. •. • • •. • • • I~ •• ~ T " ........................ ·aao._,,.
Vt IS ·······•••••••········ 41f.tlll t.S Mii ....................... UI .109
M'laat Stork• Did
NEW YORK <AP) -ri~ ~
607 •II 507 4tl ,.. la7
10 " .. 1S
SALES
NI W YORIC (AP) ~y SIKti NMt .. ,... .. l~t .• . • •. • • . . • • . .. • • • .. ?JO.• p,. .. ,.,, dloy • • • • .. .. • • • • .. • • • ••AJO.• Wttlt •OO • •.• . . . . . • •• .... ... • • tl,00,D Monti\ t90 • .• • . •. .... . • . •• • • , ...... v .. , •90 .. • •. . • ....... •• . • . tt,no,aoo Two ye.rs -• . . . .• •• . . •• . •• J4,Jll.'41
J .., I lo de'lt ••• • • • ••• • •• • • • l'J4,ft0,GOll 1'11 te ... ,. • ••••.. .• . .• • •• . •• 144.'9l,Olll ,.,. to dMa ............. • 1,u 1,s.Q.m
wMAf AMI• 010
NEW YORK IAPl
I ..
"Daddy, your sideburns are nice and neat, but
your backburn is getting long."
"Got .q problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need
to aolve inequities an go~mment and business. Mall
your quahoru to Pat Dunn, At Your Service, Orange
Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo:t 1560, Costa Mesa, CA
92626. As many letters.as possible will be answered,
but ~ inquines or letters not including the
reader'• fulL name. address and business hours' phone
number cannot be cons1dered. This column appears dat·
ly except Saturdays.''
Oteck on It• Way ••• Again
DEAR PAT: I've received my Social Security
checks on lime for 16 years with one exception-
my November 1977 check. I called the Social
Security office and filled out a Corm they sent to
m e. 1 then received a notice saymg that the check
• would be received "tn a few days " It didn't come,
so I called several times and finally went to the
.Costa Mesa orflce where the computer was
checked and I was assured my check would arrive
soon. l now have four Social Security forms from
Chicago and Los Angeles telling me again that the
check will come "in a few days," but it hasn't.
G.S .. Costa Mesa
Bob Sutton or the Costa Mesa Social Security
orflce says your cheek issuance must have been re·
-..... •• jected ror some unknown reason by the computer.
A separate check will be provided to you Im-
• mediately due to the unusual delay . .
: Dlgnt Dfd Shrinking Act
I DEAR PAT: Hope you can help! I sent a Sl2.95
check last July 18 to Readers Digest Fund for the
Blind. This was for a year's subscription to a large
print Readers Digest for a 91-year-old lady with
poor vision. The first copies arrived in large print.
but starting in November, small print copies were
sent to her. I've written to Readers Digest. asking
that the incorrect copies be replaced with the large
print ones. but I haven't bad any answer.
M .M.M., Newport Beach
Your complaint ls being bandied by Magadne
Action Line, a rree service of Publishers Clearing
House. Other readers with magulne subKripllon
,..oblems are urged to contact MAL dlrecUy by
writing to Publishers Clearing House, MagadJ:le
Action Une, 382 Channel Drive, Port Washington,
N.Y. 11050. MAL does ask the consumer to Lry to
settle the problem first with the company where
the order was placed. IC that rails, send a Dote to
~1AL.
Air Drying Pa•phlet Offnoed
DEAR PAT: Do you know where I can get
some easy-to-understand instructi9ns for. home
drying of food ? M.K ., Costa Mesa
Order the federal publication. "Drying Foods
at Home (0%4F)," by sending 50 eents to Consumer
lnformaUon Center, Pueblo, Colo. 81009. This ZO.
page booklet tells about preparation, equipment
needed, and metbocls ror drying rrutt. vegetables
and meats.
Insurance I• Otm1er'• ProMeml
DEAR PAT: When a person rents a plane, who
provides the insurance -the renter or the owner!
T .M., Costa Mesa
State law requires the owner of a rental
•lrplaoe to provide certified information oa in·
surance coverage or the aircraft to any penon who
rents the plane.
~atter •I Feet Eqeta.aee
DEAR PAT: I found the recent article in the
''Featuring" section about couples who choose not
to have children very interesting. One other aspect
of ma king this decision could well be the financial
obligation involved in raising a child. I would be
very interested to see some facts and figures on
just how much it now costs to raise a child .
N.P ., Irvine
ID lHO and 1111, chlld-reartnc co1t1 at
dlfrerent llYinl level• were estimated by USDA
&ta&t1tlclaa1. Exten1lo1t. coasumer economist
1te1moiacl Joli)' recently updated tMle ftpres for
dae arbu Weal Hlal die Marcll lt71 Coa.nmer
'11ce IDdex. Says Dr. Jolly, ID un dollars, It eo1W
dote &o •• &o ralM a cblld tmoap a1e 11 at 6e lo•·cOtt .UDdard of Dvt.1. At dae moderate-cost 1&aDdu:'d, &be ft_pn la almost tM,tM-$18, ...
s.ore. JI ,.a ..-Id llke a table. wltlda alllowa UM
t;eakdOwll Of _.. fer dlllclm of dlttereat lfet,
aiaCI '~for Hrlou famllJ expead.l&vel. .e•d a •tam~, 1elf·1ddre11ed eanlo,. to Home ~iliOI', UM S. Harbor Blvd., Aiaabeha. caUt. ~A* I• 'Qlld .&earlq Colts."
.. , , . " . .. .. .. . .
GARDENING
(12) Redwood Planters -Rtg. Z.25 ......................................... 1.00
(50) Ceramic Pots -Reg. 5.49 ................................................... 3.00
(44) Redwood Plant Holders-Rel· 4.95 .................... ................ . 2.50
( 10) Plant Stands -!let. 11.98 . ... ...... .. .. .. . .. .. ............................... • 8.00
(34) Pill Kill -!let. 1.25 .................................................................... 70'
(14) Terrarium -Rtv. 59' .......................................... ··· ··· ... .. .. 30'
(8) Spot Onp -liq. 19.95 .. . .... ...... .... ...... .... .. ...... .. .. .. .. .. .. . ...... . 10.00
( 19) Energizer -Rtv. 3.39 . ......... ... .. .. .. .. .. .... .. ....... .... .. ... .. .. . . .. ... 1. 70
(4) 10 Ft. Electro Duct -hi· 35.99 ............................................ 25.00
(5) 5 Ft. Electro Ouc1 -Reg. 2U9 ....................... ..... ...... . .. . ... 15.00
CLOCKS
(3) Capella _..,. 7.tl.. ....... .... .... .... .. .... ... .............. . ................. 4.00
(1) Hutch -llll. 7.99 ............................................................ 4.00
( 1) Coffee Pot -.... 7.99 .. ....... . ... . ... ...... ..... . ........................ 4.00
(2) Sconce -flet. 7.98 ............................................................. 4.00
(2) Cherry Crock -llt. 16.95 ....................................................... 1.00
(2) Cheese Crock -1111· US.ts ........................................................ 8.00
(3) Jr. Grandfather -Ill· 11.99 ............................. • . ••• .. .. ......... 8.00
(3) Antique Clock -llel. 16.95 ... . ...... ..... ...... .. .. . .. . . .. . . . . . . 8.50
(12) Orchard Clock -""· 19.95 .. ...... ........ ... .. .. . ...... 10.00
(2) Lark Clock -1111. 16.95 .......................................................... 5.00
(2) Lemon Slice Clock-lleg.17.95 ............................. . . ............. 9.00
(5) Miik Can Clock -1111· 19.95 .................................................. 10.00
(1) Sussex Clock -1111· 39.15 ..................................................... 20.00
(,. PLUMBING
(2) Union 39 Bath Faucet -""· 10.99. ............................................ 8.00
(3) lndtana Brass 440 Faucet -.... 10.95 ................ ............. .... . .. .. 8.00
(3) lndlana Brass w/pop-up Faucet-.... 10.95 ................................ 6.00
(7) tndlana eraas w/pop-up Faucet. #631...QRS -1111. 18.95 ................. 8.00
(2) Gerber Faucet. #9_..3-330 -.... 21.95 ...................................... 11.00
(2) Union Wall Mount Kitchen Faucet. #40·A -""· 2U5 ... . ............ 12.00
(1) Chicago Kitchen Faucet. 1445 -.... 4U5 ............................... 20.00
(3) Sayco Laundry Faucet -.... 11.95 ............................................ 1.00
(1) Sayco Kitchen Faucet -1111· 19.49 ............................................ 10.00
'It" PVC Pipe ..................................... · · . · · · · · 19•--10' length
. -..
o~
tt <>.
~ ::
~·· ...
•
. . . " ... . .
BBQ AND PATIO
-~
(10) Portal be BBQ -llel. 4.95 ....................................................... 1.oO
(4) Structo Gas BBQ, #7995 -.... 99.95 ....................................... 50.00
(4) Structo Charcoal BBQ, #7875 ..... 1111· 64.95 ............................... 35.00
( 1) Mecko Charcoal BBQ; #22 -Ill· 29.95 ..................................... 15.00
(5) 1000F1rescreens -liq. 39.95 ............................................... 25.00
(3) F1resets, #393. #402 -Reg. 54.95.. ......................................... 27.00
(4) F1rescreens, #155 -liq. 24.95 ............................................... 20.00
(1) Smoke-'N·Pit BBQ, (Blk)-llq. 54.95 ...................................... 27.00
(48) Trash Cans, Insecticide 7 Oeodorant-ltg. U9 ............................ 50t
HARDWARE
Jack Rabbit Pump -1111· 9.95 ............... : ...................................... 3.00
Artie Jackets -.. .. .. .. . .. . . ........................................................ 14.18
(24) Stop Mist-.... 1.50 ................................................................ 75•
(24) Bennington Ar:nerican Flag -Ill. 15.95 ..................................... 7.00
Asstd. Cabinet Knobs (limited supply) -......................................... 10'
(30) Homelite Woodcutters Kit -let. 14.99 ..................................... 10.00
(30) Humming Bird Feeder -ftet. 99' ............................................... S0-
(20) Oelux Humming Bird Feeder -Reg. 2.98 .......................... 1.50
HOUSEWARES
(7) Shag Rack, #400 -llel. 5.49 ................................................... 2.80
(2) Elect Shoe Polishe.r-!let. 51.95 ................................... , ......... 25.00
(7) Mirro Pizzarla -R11. 19.95 ............................................ 15.00
Key Rings (Munchy)-............................. ~ .................................... SO-
Decorat1ve Traverse Rods. 7' & 4' -... ....................... . ............ 111 Off
(5-0) Roast Racks -lllf. 3.91 .......................................................... 2.00
(28) Mixing Forks -!let· 1.29 ......................................................... &Cr
(10) Juicer -Rel. 8.88 ............................................................ _ ..... 4.DO
(3) Turkey Platters-"". 9.50 ........................................................ 5.00
(5) Slimline Water Pik -Ret. 32.95 ................................................ 17.00
(6) Ebelskiver Iron -Rq. 4.49 ...................................................... 2.20
(50) Alumlnum Foll Roasting Pans-""· 49' ...................................... 2CJO
(36) Misters (Brass Plated) -lllf. 2.29 ............................................. 1.00
(8) 3 Pc. Stainless Mixing Bowl Set-llet. 9.95 ..... : ............ : .•..••.•••••••• 5.50
(14) Ohio Outdoor Thermometer-Rel. 8.95 ..................................... 4.50
(24) Basters-Reg. 98• .................................................................... 50t
(1) Farberware Turbo Oven -let. 159.95 ...................................... 100.00
(1) Hanson Nursery Scale-Rq.15.98 ............................................ 11.00
(4) Hoover Crepe Makers-Rel. 29.99 .......................................... 20.00
(43) Sunbeam Popcorn Makers -liq. 22.95 ................................... 18.95
(28) H.B. Fry·All -ftet.17.99 ........................................................ 14.81
(88) H.B. Donut Maker-.... 24.95 ............................................... 17.88
(38) H.B. Double Mac -let· 21.89 ................................................ 18.00
(15) R!val 5 qt. Crock Pot, #3550-1111· 32.§ ................................. 20:QO
(62) H.B. Little Mac-.... 11.99 ................... -.. -........................... 12.00
(52) Giiiette Super Max, #HD7 -flll. Zl.96 ..................................... 15.8&
(55) Giiiette Super Curt, #SW2 --· 11.99 ..................................... 14.88 ·
(29) Mu Hair Blower, #H0--4 -1111· 7.19 .......................................... 4,00
(240) Taylor Thermometers, 15136-.... It' ...................... -............. 50-
(24) T•ytor Room Thermometers. #5178--t.• ...... -... -................ .....
(75) Name Badges--W ........................... -....................... -..... 10'
Maorttd Table Cloths-............................. -........ _ .............. t}, Off
I
t
~
I
l t
l
Just about everyone has seen Cal Worthington on late-
night television. He's the car dealer standing on his head.
B)' DENNIS McLEl..LAN
OI .. D.tllf l"li.t Mllf'I
He was introduced as having mor~ macho
than the kid from Wilson's House of Suede; b&-
ing more homespun than Lee's Bars and Stools
and certainly having a better line of chatter than the guy from Zachary AIL
There is. of course. only·one man who fits
that description: Cat Worthington.
Known as the world's biggest car dealer, he
is familiar to millions of late night television.
viewers as the man wbo will stand on his head to beat au deals.
The unusual introduction was for
Worthington's appearance at the California As-
sociation of Chambers of Commerce Ex-
ecutives' convention at the Mariott Hotel in Newport Beach.
While he declined to defy gravi.ty for the
chamber executives. Worthington certainly
gave them a square deal as guest speaker.
THE SELF-MADE WHEELER-DEALER,
who dropped out of school in the seventh gra,de
to go to · work, charmed the socks off his
audience with a discourse on business op-
portunities that was laced with his folksy brand of humor. ·
Wearing a Western-style jacket, the 56-
year-old Ford-Dodge dealer approached the
speaker's stand. With a flourish, be pulled out
his wide-brimmed white cowboy hat and placed
it at a char~cteristic .angle on the back of his head.
It was an action guaranteed to produce
laughter and applause. Except for the absence
of his dog Spot, the familiar picture was com-plete.
"The local Oldsmobile dealer was going to
come down and introduce me," drawled
Worthington, "but he coul<ln't •get his car started ... "
Worthington, whose advertising budget
alone is a reported $1.5 million a year, noted
that it is sad that profit is a "dirty word" today.
"IT'S TOO BAD because that's what this
country was built upon," he said.
He believes the average American has the opportunity to go out and become a success.
That belief is best illustrated by bis own colorful life story.
It began on an Oklahoma Indian reservation
where he was born. He was one of nine children
ffrowinc up dwinl the Depression, a Ume when ·we weren't just poor, we were poverty
stricken. We didn't know where our next meal
was comln1 from." .
Livin1 with the "1ut-wrenobinl fear that we
would starve to death," be quit 1'cbool in the
seventh grade and went to work, determined he
was going to make something of himself.
He worked as a cowboy, mule skinner and
water boy on a road gang for $9 a week. At 1S he
joined tho Civilian Conservation Corps.
In the meantime he read everything he could get hia band.son, he said.
Wml A DREAM of becoming a pilot, he
tried to join the Army Air Force when World
War II broke out. He was told that two years or
college was requited. But he took a college
-equivalency test and, having become self-taught.
through his reading, he passed it with ease.
He flew bombers over Germany during the
war, but hJs ambition to continue flying after
the war was shot down by the airlines when
they discovered his lack of formal education.
Out of work and desperate, be met a man
who was selling an independent gas station in
Texas on what was promised to be a "strategic
location."
To come up wilh the $500 purchase price,
the broke Army veteran parked his car in front
of the post office, put up a "for sale" sign and
tried to enlist a buyer from the parade or passersby.
His on-the-spot hucksterism, a portent of
things to come, paid off and he bought the gas
station.
BUT AFTER A disastrous back-breaking, money-losing two months, he sold the far.from
-strategic location to a Navy veteran, who even
more raJ_>idly unloaded it onto a Marine.
Out of work again, Worthington re-
membered his success in front of the post office ·
and bought a Hudson for $300. He equippped it
with new Sears and Roebuck seat covus and
parked in front of the post office. He made a $65
profit. · Then he bought another car and sold it. "I
thought I had died and gone to heaven,'' he re-
called with a grin. •'That was the easiest money I saw in my life."
<See CAL, Page CZ) ca/ Worthington: 'Find that one thing you can do well, then do it to everyone.'
Solo .
By Cheryl Romo
The Way
To a Man's
Heart •••
Every lime my grandmother calls I feel
guilty.
She always asks me how so-and-so and J are
doing, whether we have made any plans for the
future, and how often we are seeing eaeh other.
Each time I hold my breath and say I have
nothing new to report (so-and-so and I have
been on the skids for a while).
My family has never been able to accept
that I am not married and safely tucked awiut 1 with a husband to take care of me. And they re-
fuse to believe that maybe, just maybe, a
woman alone can survive.
But there is one area where I don't survive
very well. People are always asking me, so i
might as well come right out and admtt it: I'm a lousy cook .
Why people think I look like J should be abTe
to do well in a kitchen, I'll never understand.
Maybe it's my peasant frame or my motber~7
smile -but men are always looking at me with
a gleam in their eye and saying: .. I bet-you're 4
great cook."
I'm probably one of the only single women
in the world who invites a man to her apartmerl
for a bomecooked meal -from. McDonald's
And the first two questions I ask when I become
interested 1n a man, are: ''Are you married?"
and "Can you cook?"
If number one is yes, and number two is no,
we're in tl'Quble. ~
Personally, I'm one of those people wbo
could survive very well on c~ed tuna fish ancl
yogurt. But both or my children, oul ol self.
defense perhaps, are now enrolled ln c<>Okint
classes'at their school&. ,
My son, bless bis soul, has mastered the~
of making quesadillas and we afe now havi~ •
quesadillas ror breakfast, lunch and dinnet. ~
daughter is only inteMsted in baking -so ~
bet,,een Mexican food we have bu,rnt peanut
butter coOkies and cakes with red and ~
tto&Ung. •
A friend of mine, who I assume ls probabl.i
a gourmet cook, gave me a boo1t entlUed: "::t · to Leave Home and Survive." It's a coot
for singles and it tells you how to do relllly
elementary tMngs like how much ls a pbl'Cb,
how to boil an egg, pour a glass o1 wine ancl
tnake a tuna casserole.
It was written by a mother tor her
son because abe couldn't afford bia colleet
telephone calls ukln1 her bow to coolr ·
every night.
l took a look at it -and save it to m1
year old. It's not that l haven't tried to leatn.
can't Mlp 1t U my omele~tes always break
my.; apaghetU sauce burna -theft's Just
cu11nary talent ln these tlngers. l!U nevwtora
the time 1 aened a man black e1p:a (4 ·breakfast (I had hied them in o&cL baCOii .,_..
• and lie-.... Out or the room. I woo't ft
.Jlo&W.N..,..
, ••• ~•etflJlad I bilid a date U4 CQle bom
~·IOLO,~Q) ,.__,,.._.,...,
I
\
. . . . ... . . . . .
Jlj BOB DVOaCBAK think tbat'• valuable. I
HARRISBURG, Pa •. e ncoura1e (be a yine
(AP> -Joy Ufema'1 paUent to take control
work requires a thick over the remainder of
akin and a IOft heart. bis life. I tbint It'• im-
~ helps terminally W portant to finish lhines
paUenta d1e tbelr own hls way," she added.
'waJ "My sreateat asset I.I .A 0rellstered nune at simply belnl real. I'll Uarrlsbur• Ho1pital1 tell a dytoi patient I'm
Ml• U1ten1 to their uncomfortable belna
thoq1bt1, inake1 sure here. I don't want to !>i' tb~ 1et tbe best of care here, but I am. And I m eve1'-u it means bendina scared. I'm not comlna eame rules and protects in here with. clipboard ~ rtabta. and a lab coat. l don't · ~·1 found the bailc. wear a tQck cape and 'P~lae is there are no come In U)'lna, "You're
trail human beings. I . dylnf. You're d)'lq,'"
tb1Dk there's an iDDate Mlaa Ufeina aald.
quallty in us that human "Part ot It la that I
beings can handle' have a 1enuine concern
anythl.ng, •• said Mlsa about their conditioo at
l:Jfema, now in ber flf\h thia Ume. And part of it
:yearaaadeatbanddyiog ls .also saying I have no 11~ • idea what you're going . ~ believe in being ex-through. rm not gom1
p)Jc1t1y bone6t and real to tell an empatbetlc lie
)f JOU choose not to and have them aay to
retPc>nd to that because me, 'Oh, yeah? When you can't take it. then, d 1 d you d le of
that's your choice. I leukemia''l"abeadded.
promise not to make any One of her ~i}fentl value judgments on bow waa Edward A. er. a you hUdlo tt," lbe ad· 32-year-old lawyer who
ded. worked for the state. He
uyou deflnltel)' ean died recentl)' of lung
c1aoosedenlal. You can be. cancer. angry and scream and An antique art col·
shout. What's important lector, be was able to
is that the patient calla rationalile bil fate.
the shots all the way." "I'm not upset about Joy, SS. bas aounseled dying. It's the brew.
50me 400 patients. She You .can't do anything
had been in aural.DI for about it. You can't
about a year when ahe blame anyone. You
asked her superior If she can't do anything to pre.
could set up _a prosram vent It. I don't think it
to help the d71D1. take a courage to die. Her wort was impl.red Everybod)' dle_s," be
by Dr. EJubetb Kubler· said tn an lDterview last It o s s • a S w 1 a • month. psychiatrist wbo baa He was a unique done extensive studies patient in that be
on death and clyina. But already accepted bis
Joy's work ls unique death before meeting
beeause few hospltala Joy. But bis relatiooabip
have almllar prosrams. with the death and dying
Alld death ls a topic nunemeantalottohim.
generally treated as .. Joy's tntelllgenL She
taboo. understands what I'm .. I'm having a great going through. She's in·
deal of difficulty un-terest ed. Such com-
de rstanding why we municatio ns are a
don't discuss death in means of building up
our society. It's the one one• 1 own sense of
thing we all have In worth," be said.
common," 1aid .14111 "There are som e
·Ufema. people I can't talk to Joy pays • mit to a about death. It would be
patient after a pllysidan too tough for them, or
breab the D8W'I abo'4 a tbey would not un·
termtnalll1Del9. derstand. It'a always
'"l ask •= lf be nice to have another feels like with friend like JVJ. someaoe me what It'• like to be who cares about you.
prlousl7 llL And that "And lbe doel a lot of contest is that I know. little tbiDg:s, lite making
and he knows," Ml.la 1ure the nurHS are
Ufema said. il'ound and I'm being
''Dying metDS a Jou taken care ot.. U 700're
• of control over We. So it treated like a ID.mp of ~!tie has aome control, I flesh, you begin to f~ .
• "l;m reaitv amazed
that only one treatment
removed the nnes I •
. hated eo much. . I can,Dtt. for my
next treatment!"
·wttA T 18 YOUR SKIN
• PROBLEM?· ..
•ACN•DRYSKJN
'•OILY SKIN • WRINKL~·
•LINES• BL~MISHES 1
. ... . . ' . . ........... -
..... . . . ...
ANN LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECK
~....-.---76th~q---......
. . .
OWUSJOlllDM
In step wlh todBY'a high tastnon mood. Bone Oft Orm'G9
Kid. Both with Copper' Metal Heel.
I ~
i • l :
l
1 ·
TAAVll VIA ...... -....... T._.~ c-.. ..... . ....,_, ....
. /\. ~ .... L-.. 11' \ 1213)~ u. ........
~lndudes:
1-&10
3-5x7's
15-Wollets
4-ColO< Portrait O\Orms
The pecfect Colo< Portrait ~~~~~~r' Pockoge f0< the entire
family ot o supet Kmon
price. ond In o vOttety of
poses and bockgrounds.
One sitting pet subject.
No oddltlonol chotge for
groups. Poses 04X selec·
don. Sodsfoaion dways °'
depo5i ~18.nded. ..
THESE DAYS ONLY
FIBAUARY 22, 23,
24,25,26
10AM ·8PM
10AM • SPM
2200 Harbor Boulevard
Costa Meta
15440 Beech Boulevard
Westminster
19101 Magnolia Street
ttuntlngton Beach
Bot!oscope
FIJDAY • PE&. Jt
By SYDNEY OMAU
AllJES (March 21·April 19): Define terms
-clear away em.Uonal and other cltbris. Clean
lines now are more lroportant than usual. Check
ways to improve tecbn.lques. Work, health,
performing basic services -these are on
agenda. Pisces, Virgo fl cure promlnenUy.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Accenl on in·
volvement, change, variety, sensuality. Noth.inc
is halfway-there ls pressure, responsibility,
tallln1 madly ln and out of love. Capricorn,
Cancer tn'dividual! tigu.re prominently -and so
does the number 8. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Tbls is con-
clusion time -no more beating about the bush.
Arrive at declslon, stick to It. Finlah what you
start.. Lon1t·ranJ(e reactions occur, based on
what you do now. Aries, Libra figure prom-
inently. One who is strong is on your side.
Know it and be confident.
CANCEll (June 21-July 22): Ideas click -
you get response to innovative plans, actions.
Aries, Leo and Aquarius figure prominently.
Relatives and close neighbors mate· known
their desires, intentions. Yes. the message and
short trip blend and are necessary.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis on col·
lections, learning directions, becoming familiar·
with Instructions. Aquarian is in picture -re-
lationship is tested. You discover where bappi·
ness and intrigue lie -you make a choice. The
two simply wm not go together. The choice is
your own.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Get going, be a
self-starter, exude confidence. Popularity
swells -you sway people. Know it and go
ahead full-steam. Wear bright colors, make
personal appearances. One who attempted to
make you afrald will appear -hat in hand.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ot. 22): Be meticulous
about details. Study fine print -read between
the lines. Be direct, avoid evasions whlcli result
in delay and loss. You are provided a backstage
glimpse -make the most of iL
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasize im·
ages -perceive potential. Yoor scope is high,
wide -the sky I.a the limit. Analyze, create, put
thoughts together -your works can sparkle.
Know it and proceed accordingly. Gemini,
Virgo and Sagittarius figure prominenUy -so
does the number 5. • SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You get
suppart necessary to reach goal. Key now is to
be diplomatic without deserting principles.
Taurus, Libra and Scorpio could figure prom·
inently. Remodel, improve safety measures in
connection with home base. Those in pogitions
of authority Intend to support you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You gain
insights through unusual, unorthodox sources.
You are backstage, viewing the strings beging
pulled, manipulated. Pisces, Virgo figure prom·
inently. Keep lines of communication clear-
plan for joumey, publishing or reading pro-
gr am.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis on
leases, rentals, taxes, finances in relation to
partner, mate. Spotlight also is on hidden
matters, fascination with the occult.
RelatioMhlp is "involved." Nothipg is halfway
and there is a price to pay.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You're able to
break free from some restrictions. Legal affairs
are part ol scenario. A relationship is put to
test. There will be an end -or a new beginning.
II Feb. %4 11 your blrtladay, you are
dramaUc, magnetic, "sexy," expressive and
you have an unusual voice. You can act, teach,
brine an audience to its feet. You may change
residence this year
. . .
lhnday, Februwy 23. 1978
to a chorus of kids (we always have vi.allons)
aa.yin• = .. We had a family dlMer without you."
My reacUona were mix.eel l was SO!'l'Y I
d1dn't stay home because my date foreot to buy me din.Der, and I was proud ol my children tor
becomlnc ao aelt-sufflcient. .
The next night l tried to make It up to the
kids by stoppl.na on the way home tor "Macho
Combo BurritDs." Even that didn't work out
very well ; they said there wu too much bot
sauce on them. So, my son made a quesadllla,
my dauahter made cookies and the dog ate the
burritos.
I try. Remember that old saying, "The way·
to a man's heart is tbroueh his stomach?" I've
finally decided that any man who becomes in·
terested in me had best drink Maalox. In ad-
ditlon to that, be should be warned: I don't iron,
do windows, or scrub floors.
My grandmother wlll'never foraive me.
SOLO/ZING
SINGLEI ONLY: "Falling in Love" will be the topic of this week's singles discussion group
at the Huntington Beach Community Clinic. The
cost is $3 per person and the session begins at 7
p.m., Friday. For directions, call the clinic at
536-8333.
WE CAllE: A non-sectariap support and
social group for separated, divorced and
widowed persons. Meetings are held at 7 :30
o.m. Sundavs at the Newoort Harbor Lutheran
Church, corner of Dover and 16th Street,
Newport Beach.
DISPLACED HOMEMAKERS '
PROGRAM: Orange Coast College's Women's
Center is offering a program called "100 Hours
-A Program tor Those Suddenly on Their
Own." For inform2'tion, contact the center at
556-5557.
SIERRA CLUB SINGLES: Potluck dinner;
backpacking and ski equipment swap meet
beginning at 6:30 p.m . Monday, March 6, at the
Tustin Community Building, Centennial Way
and Main Street in Tustin.
ORANGE COAST SINGLES: A trip to the
date festival in Indio. Tbe group will meet at
7:30 a .m. Saturday, in the Safeway Store park·
ing lot at the Newport Freeway and Lincoln in
Anaheim and car pool to Indio.
A game night will be held on Saturday,
March 4. For information call Mary Argo at
549-3682.
. GROWING THROUGH DIVORCE : Jim
Smoke will conduct a divorce recovery
workshop on Saturday, March 4. Pre·
registraUon through Coastline College is re-
quired by Feb. 24. Call 963-0811 for information.
CREATIVE AGGRESSION FOil SINGLES:·
Dr. Herb GOidberg, author of ''The Hazards of
Being Male." will lead an all-dav seminar at 9
a . m . Saturday. March 11. Pre-registration
through Coastline College is required by March
3. Call 963-0811 for information.
Solmzmg /or Smgle1 coJendar nau UJCh Thun·
da11 1n t~ DoU,, Pilot and conlcwu noticea of oc-
tioit~• /qr migU• for tM /olkMmg tDHk -Friday
thrm.gh T1rtlndaJI. Send notJCU to Chnyl Romo.
DailJI PtJo(, P.O. Boz 1560, Co.ta Mna, mlf. Be aure
to mclude your aanw, addreu Giid phoM num~.
Notu:ei mu.d be m our ha!VU two tDHka in odVC111«.
Eileen Anderson: Summing it all up. ~.;
t• ..
A Woman /:
In Budget
By HOLLY KURTZ
HONOLULU (AP) -Eileen Anderson WQ
a bit embarrassed when she overdrew her
family's checking account. She also has u.·
responsibility of trying to balance Hawaii's
state budget.
Her household overdraft was a rare ~ ,
currence, and in the past three years as state
budget director, she's earned a reputation fOt-
being knowledgeable and strong-willed wben Jt
comes to money.
Mrs. Anderson, 48, is one of two women in
the cabinet of Gov. George Ariyos~, and one bf ,1 two women state budget directors m the United
States.
As director of the Department of Bu~ ..
and Finance, she's in charge of managing the
state's budget and accounts. . ·
Preparation of the budget often leads to
bitter fights with the legislature, which fr•
quently wants to spend more than planned bf .
the executive branch.
She accepts this as part of the job. ..You.
must get angry sometimes to be effective,•• s~ ·
Mrs. Anderson, who has degrees in psycholoo
and government. . •! •
"Some legislators tended to be softer oa
me, at least at the befinnini," she said. "A!
time goes by, they learn I can take care Of.
myself, and they treat me as good or bad as ucr
other cabinet officer." '
Sen. Richard Wong, chairman of the Ways
and Means Committee, agreed. "They wt!lll
pretty light on the first go-round. Now we ·
say, 'You got the job; you're ,ioing to a.et til4t · headaches and tongue-lashing. She handled :it'
Uke the others. They get thick-skinned." WQDI
said. •
960-4322 FINE MEATS
ALWAYS -
OP-QUALi
AT
OMPETITI '
PRICES!! Cheeses-Wines-Beer ,
FEATURING--16-0-5 •-1-abca-•aa_·_HWlff_IMJl_on_aeac_h ______ ..
I the finest meats obtainable!!
Only U.S.D..A. PRIME and CHOICE. All personally selected.
Our.batchers win be happy to assist you in any way .. Our
Deli wil delight you. Imagine having your meats, cheeses,
bacon etc., cut YOUR WAY ••• not pre-packaged-
PROGRESSO
SPAGHETTI SAUCES
1,
-MEAT SAUCE
MUSHROOM S~UCE
MARIANA SAUCE
J2..o7-.... ss
• '\
99c ·
••
l
1 ·
..
.• ...
King Bugs
Bugs Bunny stars in the animated
special "A Connecticut Rabbit ih King
Arthur's Court" tonight at 8:30 on CBS,
Channel 2.
---An~~hWpe
c:Mdl. killer.
• MACHEll.. I l.EHNR
AEPORT
eJ) HOME GAADEHER
'"SOii PH'" «! TO TEU THE TAUTH ~ G t 100,000 NA.Id THAT
TIN! 9 NEWI. VWID GAMe 0 THE OOHG SHOW tD THE BAAOY BUHCH
The 8rlldy8 mix ~
with~
• ADAM-12
h"• Mallo(• blt1hday -and
• -prollld9a the per19Ct
~ • t.A INTIRCHAHQE
'"NeldExlt'"
-~ Toploal ...__~I·
ed on, about and from
Oaaaael Listing•
IJ KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles AJ KNBC (NBC)' Los Angetes a KTlA (Ind.) Los Angeles
..., KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
l rti) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 1f!!4i1 KtU-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles
f~T (ABC) San Diego ~ ~(Ind.) Los Angeles
~ KCOP·lV (Ind.) Los Angeles
-KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles 0 KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntiogton Beach
Of8"91Couftty.
()) 1H 8EAfOi OF-
.. Anlltalll" 9 MATOtf OAME P.M. eJlo fJ ()) WHA TA
NIGHTMARE. CtiAAUE
MOWN
Al Snoopy trlM to ..._,
off hll --r._•bed· time mNI of Jut* food, tie
1Wddenty llndl hlmMlf
pulll\g a lied througll
-.lngly endllel ~
w•tlllnd along wllh I
team of fwocious hueklee
wllO •t r-,,_t and lap water"°"' a holet. D CHIPS
••Craaft ~ .. Jon and
Pond! hive p<otllem9 wllh
the UCLA glrta voffeyblll
team. 1 runhl9y INC:tl
loaded with explOlllvee: a
dW1 ttv-on the tr-
wey, Ind • er Uh dllc.
• C<>U.IO£ BASKET8AU.
~ State 8Nwr9 w
UCLABtUlnl 0 9 MLCOME BACK.
KOTTER -.. ~ And Macllme
. x·· The uaua1y 11"¥ Arnold HonNicll ..-prtaea ,,.. ,.
iow s-ltlogl -.i he __ .... hm~ln
iow with an older-.. G JOKER'S WlLD
•CA*>LMmt ANO,,.,,.,.
• MOVll TUBE TOPPERS *** .. Ice Plllillt'' 11MO> NcMlfd IM'toll, "°'*' . "JM. A loftO-ctandlng ' '
MCI~ two AIMllan
ffonllarlmln ltflllly -to an and ..,_ tNlt'
erandGllllOr.n mike a
mow towlrd ~ (2 ..,...,
KCET @ 8 : (JO -Reach tor
Tomorrow. This documentary traces the
first 13 years in the lite of a thalJdomld~ •
"baby as the parents try to mak' tHeir
son's deformed arms and hands !unction
usefully.
• INCIAL
·"AMclh ~ Tomomiw''
The llt9I Wrtean ~ In 111e•01·~
baby, .... parentl try
C~ fJ 9:00 RI. Grammy Awardl.
Top recording stars· are honored in this
20th annual pr6duction, host~ by John
·Denver. Guests include Cab Calloway, ...... "'1 '° ,,.... tMlr' -··~--and hlrldl ~ WAMy. Shaun Cassidy abdNatalie Cole. r l'!. G ANYOHaPOA
ilNtMIOHt
"The GIOrioUI Aomantlcl -,_ dltlctl\l9 -.,, ~
-PW1 H: John K91tl"' LAlgll tlW young-·
Hunt recalll hll d19C0\19fY 9 ~
Of JoM KNtl, u .. growth lfonlide mlldlet will with
of hll poetic; car.-and Illa a~ ...... tlllel.
trlglC o.att\. • WON OIWAN ,._~
t:aO 8 <I> 8UOl 9tJNNV 1' au.ti: lllt1Y Wl1't9 ano
"A Conneo11c:trt Rabbit Ill Allen Ludden. 8rel'd8
!(Ing Althur'I OOurt"" Bug9, ~ and Robert l<llin,
mlltaan tot a ~h· Shltley and Jefry Van
Int dragon "1 Sir EJmer of Dyke.
FUdd, II brought to c.m... • TH& ADVOCATQ
lot Where he llllk• ovw ~The United SllfM l<Jnt Arhll'I (~ Dllcit) 6'c>P<w1 'e.lf 0etet11••
klngdOm. tlelft' For TM P.......,. a o,... tnA~P-
.. " Shouldtl"t H~ To A Seluar-t?'"
Dog"" Fllh"• Ill-humor lflll' ID THI ADAMI
reading • ~·· OMOMCt.D obituary of him cai.-the •'JoM Mimi: Aevolullon·
c:Hldtan to hide • ltray ., rt'
dog ttiey ,_ brOughl t:JO. 9 CAJntft
home. • • CXIUNTin' G CONCSfTMTION '"Roy P• Hie T-"
Q) ~ OA ~ Roy pana ..,_,, he
CON8lOUl!NOE8 ClleccNoww he hM .,.,...,ed Cl OV8' fASY for apeedlng the IRS man
~t: Ole* c....n.. who " Mligned to audit e.-ooe (I) GNtllM't 1111 ,._
AWAMll 10;00 ea N1wt
JoM 0.-'-ta thll 8 9 MMTTA
20th .,,,,_... WWdl ltlOW ·-n. Stone Conapncy''
hon«tng the ~· top Tony II \IMap9y lbout
r_.clng lta"I and their being loaned out to tn.
hftl. Among the ~ti VIC. equild, flpaelally
and SW-*' -cab ...... .... dlloowws hill CelowaY. Ettdl LAlnlCSorf, pertnw II on IN l.lk&.
An<ty Wlftlam1, Sl'llun a> cou.aGI
c.aalcty, st-Martin, 8A8ICETMLL
M111nie Pew1 and Nl1Mil ~ VL USC Ii.el
Cole. -~ G a.MS CW '15 TMfATRI
"Mr. Potentlel" A ltudent ••NfN. ~·· VrO!Wly
(Richard Hatch) who lbwldonl Klt1Y ~ ol -'*' d91tlMd lof IUC·1 hll w.tuallon with Anna
~ during hlgll ed'lool, Lewin -.... ._ Of
, ... to toeow tM obvlou• Kitty, .... l<Jtty ,....
path to "'9twllil -bedridden. fPwt 3 Of 10)
expected o1 111m.. Maggie G aooc:a. MADI! ..
Wellman, Erin Blunt. Jaok OEMIANY
Ging ~t..., In thi. two-1, NIW8
ttour ...,0.. 11 0. <I> Ill NEWS 8 111 aMNIY MIU.EA • LOVI. ~
'"Wojo"I Protllem" WNle l'1'Y\.l
WofO ....... wtttl 1111 ·~Aird The8-I Y-
118Qolno '°"" .... a..ney II Weir' ~·1 hulblftd
puzzJad by the arr1ve1. of • Ml bean mi9llng for ~
:
I'!!
' ~. lllmmt. "~ And.
The 8ecret Spoua9" Davtd
and JaM don't want their ·---°"'oft. D MOW! ···~ "Tll9' Qr,,t &cape" ,,,.,, 1) ( 1M3)
J 1llle1 Garner. 8tave
~. lltltllh. Ameri-
can and c:.n.dlan POWt.
plan • 11'111811¥9 lnakout
from a NllZI camp.
18 THI! OOOOOUPLI
Felbc ~ coadl of"" -·· '°°"*' '-" to be doalr to him. • oec.t CAVITT
o.-t: Joelpl\ L. M#lk-
i.wlaz. (P.,, 2)
I!> ~' L.EHAE.R "90RT
11:ao•(J) C88LATE~ *•'A "Super Cop•"'
(1874) Ron LAlbfnln. David
Selby. Two ftew Vottt City
,.. pollean\an. kJ10W!1 tor their
oflbHt m1thod1 of
~llhendlflll orlmll\lll,
fll out•w11taout ~t
badllnt to lldde the nar-
OOb ~. (R)
0 TONQHT
Holt: John11y Careon .•
Guailts: Nolwd BlnJlmln,
~~
8 LOY£, MIENCAN
l'TYU!
'"Lc"'9 And ,..... PulitNr
Prize BlbV"' A ~ lllt,
whO-tl 10 ..... the'*'"
feet baby. trlM to gel 1
Pullt%ll' Prtie Wf!Wr to be
thefllt,., .
•9 STARSKY&
HUTQ4
MA Collln Few Stanky '
Sterllcy. ln)lded with I
rnysaarioue poilon, wW die
In 24 hour• unleA the
WO&llcM>e klllw .. lound
llnd fOfced to ~ the
....., drug (R)
I THATQA ~Al/IC
NEWS
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
MORNING
12:00 • TWIUQHT ... l 'f'"9 Mlronmill !Md On
wt1at .,,.,_. 10 M a
6-'ted ..twolll, 8114
lllwe llttte --""-I~. ••• '"The Ilg 811oW'
(1H1) &ttlw WllllaMI, •
CM~ .. TIW~d
• dmle O'lllMf.,.. ~
ealftobe~for ,.....,,-..11.., .. ao
min.)
1t:ao 8 MOVIE * '"Viking Wom911 And
The .... S«penl"' (1ff7)
Abby dallon, l111a11
Ca.bot. Viking wor!llrl -
Mdnapped ,.._ °" an
~~-""* millln9 ma• (1 lw,. 21
min.)
• MO'M .... ·-nn. 8tl1pal Ill
TM lkln" (196$) AldO R8y,
Ptlll ~. A U S. olftoar di"-Na ~ on Vlf J~ after tal""9 In
loY9 with • git! Mio work•
In an orph .. l908-(1 111 .. ao
12:37 eB TOMA '"Pound Of,,,_,,., Toma"1
wife ""'-9 to,...,... lnlor-,.,."°" abOut ...... ~
boyfriend. Mio .. lnYONed
In • INQdown o,erttloft.
• Ray Danton. Hiidy BrOOka
~atar.(R)
1:00D TOMOMOW
Ol*tl: Anl\a ~t. Bob a-;•e1SPV
· • "Return.To Glory'' 1::ao1 NIW8 MOVlli ··~ "That l.adY' 1"'55l ()Ma de Hadland, Giibert
Aotaod.'The lo"9 ~ • pme... and • oo-n-"*" oflldal 11 eiwtalioered
by die king'• lo"9 '°' ....... ~=1(11w=~)
~ NEWS . MOW! .
***~ ""°°'" At The Top" 11858) Laurance'
Hanoeiy, Simone 8lgrlorlt.
A )'OllllO man plalW to
.ovanoa hlmMlf In • -town by romancing ~
daughtw of a ~thy
lnduSlri..llt. (2 "'' • 25
min.) 1J MOVIE •'A ''Min On The ~
Trapen" I 1996) Wayde
Preston, tMI08 SUmmer· '*'· Two C I.A. ao-nta .,.
Mm • to irw.tlO• the
murder ol an ""*"*'
aoant whO -on the -oe or cbcovwlng a trai-
tor. (2 ,,,..,
• fllCMI •• ,. .. ~ .. 11•
liMd"D Miid ~. fthonda filM*ll. A .,_.,, and WI
attractive ,...letlnarl"' ...............
AMoe .,.., .. ~ ... .....................
.......ioo-.cttn.>
1:1111 • MOVla •• ''T ... .,. •• (19'1)
Tony Youno, Den ~
....., on lo°'* "'""*""' "'°""· & llWI ....... 1111
• rounQ ~ wtlO Mntsto
••entl ltte p1r~ta' .. ~ ......... ,. -1 aftWSI#,.,,,. <tGD MCMI
I '*** "Th• 01111 Mountlirn" (1153) v .....
M C---. Tllo Oobtll. A YG'll'O _.,..., ....,.,
by tN "-lllng legend ol.
11111 wi-tlPlltt -In
" ltladowl of • ,,_. ""'· wrt• • al0089IM .... 12tvs.) .MOYE * • "It Cam• From •
een-th The .... (1Mf)
Flltll~,~
Tobey. A gin oolopue .,,.. .., F'*'°'800 Har-bor.,.., belrlg ~by
"" tt-bomb. Cl "'9.) «Ill NIWI 4:JO MOYIS '** "Nlvy 8om .. (1.,
Clair• Oodd, William
Ougan. A Navy pllOt'
~ rfW"I prob-
.......... 119 daCllldaa to
..... • or1*M. (1tr .. 30 ,.,.,_,
Erld••'•
DayClme 1'10.,~•
AfTERHOOH
1 i:aD ••• ·~"The l!Nltlalll·
~~~ Two lrthappy ... In
low "°'*'9 to .,.,..,.
lonalNa. (2 ao !Ml..)
12:0011 ***",,,..._°" . Th* To." (1162) ,,__
C>*I. ~ Hunlllr. The
Ollbt'llttl f8nlly mrl'lea on
In Iha hdtlan ol tflW
fMIOU8 llllhar, ( 1 fir.. 30
min.)
~ Ill ..... "Planet Eanh"
( 1874) Jam a-. Ollf'8
...,_, A 20th eanby
men • IUll*ldecf In IM
22nd --.y. (1 hr.. 30
min.) t:308 .............. r
(1N1) Bvla Pr~. Joan
lladlman. "9b.tr1*tg from
tll• Army, a 1oldler-
ernbalil8 on • --ol Illa
-dloollng. .,... the ...... cl .. ,.... (1
"' .. 30 "*'-l
~ ~J:8sh's Movie Another 'Marty' .. .
Cowboys'
Bowl Win . --
.. . llyJERRYBUCK .( 'IVDE'In~ J
LOS ANGELES <AP ) n»P'•~W
• "thaddeua Rose and Eddie," starr-
ing Johrmy Cash and Bo Hopkins, is
about two no-accounts who are
forever chasing women and pipe
dreams.
~ ............. TopSlww
Don't miss it. This CBS movie, by a
first-time screenwriter from Austin,
Texas, named William D. Wittliff, is
a diamond in lhe rough. If will re-
mind you of "Marty,'' brought up to
date and set down on lhe Texas
prairie. ll airs Prid~y at 9 on
Cbannel2.
It 11 a bittersweet romance
beblleen two Ufel~ pala u well u
between lhem and their women. The
film hu great comical insight& as
Thaddeus "Sledge" Rose and
Edw.ard Haskell, played lo perfection
.bY Cash and Hopkins, come to realize
there's more to life than a pickup
truck and a Saturday night date.
THE MOVIE, FILMED entirely in
Floresville and Harlin1en, Texas,
also stan Diane Ladd, June Carter
Cash, James Hampton and Noble
Willingham: The latter is a sputter-
ing justice of the peace who figures
the best place for Sledge and F.ddie is
behind .bars.
WlWiff's script had been turned
down by everyone in Hollywood unW
a young agent brought it to producers
Rod SbeldoD and Dan Paulson.
.. It wasn't written in the correct
script form. Tbe story wu a little
clwnay, 1ivt it wu warm and charm·
IDS," aald Sheldon. "I said, 'Holy
mackerel, we have a rare talent
here/ and hopped 'C>ft the next plane
toAuatin."
THEY JVOJlKED .TO bring the
lfCrlpt to perf ectioa • .Sheldon laid be
to.naidered WiWiff, who lJ Jn his
mid408 and "the. owner Qf a book
publishing compaQJ, to be th• most
ilDJ)(>rtant new writer to come out of
the rural Southwest since Larry•
MeM~. Bo Hopkl.ns said, "A lot ol ttmes
when the writer is on the •et the
actora are aptllbt. The writer wants . to make nre the acton ,.., tbei.r
linea u UMY're wriU.O. uuut 11111 Wlttllff was cordial and
helped Johnny and me when we bad
little pfobleaaa. I didn't eh1n1e
anythln• without aakJn1 b1m. ff•
kHw what he WJ.S talldDI about."
Texas" in the area, selected a local
bar for an early scene.
"When 1 walked into thal bar I
almost turned around and left.•• said
Starretl, a bearded native of Texas.·
"It was packed with locals, all ball-
bagged."
Hopkin1 said, ''Johnny kept evef'Y·
body in a 1ood mood. Be picked up
his guitar and ·sang to entertain the
people there. It was goioi to be a
long night."
The eeene was crucial. It is at the
bar that Cub gels into a ficht over a
girl, accidentally clobbers the JP and
wiods Ul> in jail. He's bailed out by
Hampton, playing a smooth-talking
real est.ate man who talks htm into
swapping his ranch for a citrus farm
ln the Rio Grande Valley. That
breaks the pattern of their lives and ,,,,. L.;..... ~;;.;..-.,,,;,J sets the story on the road to its .a IDO-..vur -~ ..... -
climax. Richard Hatch stars wUh Erin Blunt in a
NEW YORK (AP) -
Super Bowl Xll was lhe
most-watched ~evision
show of all time. accord-
in& to revised Neilsen
ratin1s.
Neilsen, wblch
originally estimated a
viewln1 audience of 86
mllllon, now figun=s. lN
million people watebed
the Jan. 15 game
between Dallas and·
Denver. The revised·
. fifures pull Super Bowr
XII ahead of the final
segment of "Roots,••
which drew an estimat-
ed audience of 98 million people.
THE aOLB IS one of the rare eood · special two-hour episode «>f "What Really
guy appearances for H9pklns, a Happened to the Class of '65" tonight at 9 on
nativt ot Greenville, S.C •• wbo got NBC Channel 4
his start as CrUY. Lee in "~ WUd ----''------·-~-~---------Bunch." "I've baid to pU11j a lOt or ·
However, Super Bowl
XII was a three-hour
show, compared to two
hours of "Roots."
heavies j)ecause •hen you do. euest· R kf ~· o~~;.o.;ts apotonTVthey'veaJreadygotthegood ()C OEU-~
guts," he said. "Butl won't play tUcts 'J . •
oc billbillies. I atopped \hat five years a'.~i·m sure people thlnt ~keep .New Police Series
BruceDemandmeloekeduponanut LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fted Silverman hfr:1a-.:S~.~ us outon11 lon1 enough to doesn't become presi•nt of NBC until June, but
On bis riCht 'Wrist IM wore • piece already the network is adopting his auccessful
of string, which he explained was for practice of "croas-pollinatl(l&" series.
good luck. He has worn string • Novice detective l\lcble Broekelman, played
bracelets throuab 10 movie roles. bv Dennia DuJ(an, will team with James Garner in
./l two-hour "Rockford Piles" show Friday. .. WHEN J DO a heavy I always
find aomethlng about blm JOU can lleaiJmini on Tbursd•r.· MarCh 16, Duaan •ill like," he said. "Wallace Beery, no star in a five-part min ·seriea called "Richie
matter how bad be was, always Broekelman, Private Eye." Silverman lrequfl\tly
made you like him." 1ave new series a boost by having the atar u a
You mt'1tt say it was reform l\lest~n anestabUabed show.. . , •
school that got Hopkins into the mov--------------....... ---~-~
let. When be was a teenacer he bMl
his choice ot &oing b•ck to reform
aehool or 1otng into the Army. He
chose the service, settled down anct
dllc:overed acting.
What was he in reform 1cbool for?
lie tUd, "I called it borlinf around, but tho law toot it Mriouaq. • .
HE BM BBl'N tn such rums as
"White Ughlnlng," "The Man Wbo
Loved Cat Dancing.'' .. Culpeppet
Cattle~. "JU~ &Ute" Ull
'1Ameriean Oraff\U.'' 1
The change in the
figures was caused by
an underestimation by
•Neilsen of the nq_mber of
people. watching each
television set. Tbe lfM
mUllon figure, howevel'.
does not include people
watchin& in bars or
clubs.
• • •
.. • • . ' . ---• ..... • .... ···r ..... . . . "'" ~ P4i.c'\1': DI. . •
ENT!RfAtNMENT / INTERMISSION I HY GARONER· . ~ '*'-Y 23, tt7t
'J'be cause of community tbeatcf lo
tbe Saddleback Valley WH not
advanced too far last weekend with
the production bf three one.act plays
by the fled1lln1 Mission Viejo
R.pertoty Theater.
The pfayleta -Edward Albee's
acttn1 ·exercise "A Zoo Story,"
Artbur Koplt'a absurdist comedy
"Ob Dad. Poor Dad, Mama'a Hun1
YOU ln the Closet and I'm F~llnf So
Sad." and an original ea led
.. Manhole" by Brian HarniUaux -
proved a mixed bag. The Albee
opener struck some dramatic sparks,
but the other two were less than
tatlaf)ttnc 1n concept and execution.
KEN TOMLl~SON as the de·
ranged intruder of "Zoo Story"
turned in an often-riveting
performance with admirably &us-tained intensity, though his move-·
meots and mannerisms frequently
appeared forced. Roland Dion as the
pa11ln beocb lounger wu quite
believable. and hia reactions ot dis-taste and discomfort were well done.
tntermiasion
Tom Titus·
I
the unauumiq hospital handyman.
Beyond them. the level of talent dJ.s.
sipatect.
.. Oh, Dad, .. Kopit's scandalous
st.ory of the SlxtJes, ~eema only silly
these days even scissored t.o fit a
one·act siot. Stephen Hibberl's
direction was the moat ima8iJiatJve
of the even1n1, but lt also was the
most overdone, often poslllonlng
actors below the proscenium -out of
both the stage lighting and most of
the audience's view.
JOHN THOMPSON gave a tlne
performance as the superintroverted
mama's boy, but Barbara Covinston
seemed one·dlmensional as h is
Medusa-like mother, as well as too
young for the role. Alyssa Vila er-
f ec ti vely stole her scenes as a
hyperactive bellhop.
,.,, .. ,......
SUES PRODUCERS
Du1tJn Hoffman
Producers
Face Suit
By Actor ..
Q: I llear .l~aeuu lllalllit a; .. ., u...
fraakest of tM aovle •l•ot' .... WUl an ....
of 01e candid tlllll11 11te 1a11t -C. IA•b. Pltlladelplda.
A: 'l'al.ldnt wttb feature wriw Bob Lardlne,
for years a Judge on the M111 Unlttd 6tat11 btaUty panel with us, Jackie aaucll)'
said, "I was so beavy in the
hips and rear end that I used to
w a 1 k around wlth a 1001
cardigan to cover up my fiaw-e.
My father uaed to tell m~: 'You're just wasUnf. your
time' <belng a model). You'll
never lose those blpa. They
were made for chlld·bear.lnt' "
Her comment.I on a1lni:
"It's sad and und.lpJ.fied to see .. ~.
a lovely woman srow old. Quite pathetic, too. It
shouldn't be, but that's part ol the unfalme11 ol be-
ing a woman. The physical thina I mean • • . But
there are those treat broadl who set uety and
somehow remain terrific. TIM1 are the oaee who
prepared themselves for the eventuality of old age." ·
Footnote: Portraytn1 the orllinal Jackie 0. in
"The Greek Tycoon," a story about a woman
widowed when ber husband, the President, is shot,
Bisset said, when sbe si01ed to do the film : "I've
never met Jackie Onaaal.a .•• nor do I Intend to
study her lifestyle or behaviol' pattern. People aay
we look alike, but so far u I'm eonc:eroed, any
similarity that shows up on the 1Creen will be purely coincidental.'•
'Glad You Asked That'
lay M•itp -Ny G• .. r
coatrad to make feu Colambla ntera a T'
W a1e l•! -Amo11 c .• NolfGa. Va.
A: Yes. The fiat.Y ccmduc:tor al,ned
contract when he was N yean old. Ho died a
later at age 95,
Q: la Mltkey Rooney reUrin" -•· •
. . •
Hermoea Beacb, Cal.
A: From what? Movles? TV1 Stage pl ?
Marrlages? Mlckey never was the retlrih or
bashful type. Hatter of fact, ln addition f multl·activltles in all fields, he's now workin out
a pilot for a TV comedy series starring R Y
Youngman. It's set ln a dell hangout for thea cat
hams, such as the famous N. Y. St ge
Delicatessen. Habitues have enou.ch atoriea a ~
the dell's proprietor, the late Mu A.mu, to '+fte, ....
pro1rams for the fln\ lS weeka -&om mGJlfOrY
yet. t Q: We have an arpmeat iotnf .. re ae ~
wbetber that tall lean eowboy ID tbe 8cbUta ll&ht
beer ads 15 James C.oba.rn or a loak·allke· -'tck
P. Moore, Lu Ve1aa. l A: "We are pleased t.o advise you u..t,the
spokesman In our commercials ls the ~ed
and talented ect.or. James Coburn,'• res~
Wesley E. Parma, manaaer in cbar&e of adve
ing. for Schllts .
However. the drama -a sklllfuJJy
written treatise on the lack ot com·
munlcaUon in modern society -
seemed to fiazle at the point of
climactic impact due to the inability
of the actors. or director Lee
Erickson. to elevate the tension t-0 a
level of stark terror.
THE ORIGINAL "Manhole,"
which followed , suffers from an
ldet,1tity crisis. Playwright
Harnltiaux never really decided
whether h1s story is comedy, drama
or satire, and neither dld the Mis·
sion Viejo cast under Kay Murrin's direction.
Hopefully, the Mission Viejo
Repertory Theater will move from
the ridiculous to the sublime for its
next production, as yet unscheduled.
An original musical from prolific
playwright Jack Sharkey is planned
Cor a summer staging,
LOS ANGELES (AP}
-Actor Dustin Hoffman
has charg~ that a pro·
duction company which
he helped found violated
his contract by taking
over two films in which
he starred.
Q: J remember way way baek wlHlll a t•1ear·
old boy appeared on Ute 914.• Qaestloe." won l&
and went on tlae "914,toO Cltallea1e, .. eTetaQaa.U7
wlnllJnf.a total of around $1M,•. MJ q11esdoa la
where he now and ls aay ol daa& mMe7 left! ------------------~~ Mn. Anele D., St. Lou.la. '
Send JIOU ~ to H11 Gardner, ~·aw !Yow
A11"d Thal.'' core o/ tldl.~ •. P.O. Bo;r 111411,
Chicago, JU. 60811. MarU~ond H11GardMr1DtU.Gll4Wd °' many quutionl. a.t IMy can bl thar column, ,,... the
wl&lme o/ maU malcel pertoaal,.,,.,.. ~. ' ·
The standout of the company was
Don Thompson in the central role of
the dying industrialist dispensing hi&
estate in a rather unorthodox
manner. Jay Rayl also impressed as .
• CALLBOARD -Interviews for
roles in the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse's next two productions,
"Goodbye Charlie" and "Don't Drink
the Water," will be held Monday by
director Harvey Levine ... Equity
members will be interviewed from 9
to 11 :30 a.m. and non·professionals
from 1 to 4 p.m. at the dinner
theater, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., JUSt
northofCoslisMesa .....
Ringo~
On Special
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Ringo Starr will
perform in his first
entertainment special
for television for NBC,
with another former
Beatle, George
Harrison, as his guest.
The show, "Ringo,"
will be telecast on
Wednesday, April 26. It
will be loosely based on
Mark Twain's "The
Prince and the Pauper."
He filed suit in
Superior Court Tuesday
seeking $158 million in
damages and payment
for alleged breach of
contract from First
Artists Production com-
pany, formed by
Hoffman and actors
Sidney Poitier, Paul
Newman, Steve
M cQueen and Barbara
Streisand.
HOFFMAN SAID he
had signed a n
agreement with First
Artists in 1972, whereby
be would star in two
films without charge but
retain creative and
artistic control over
both. He planned to
make money from the
films through his own
production company·s
percentage of the pro-
fits. Hoffman now owns
Sweet Wall Productions
Inc.
The agreement al·
lowed First Artists lo in-
tervene and take over
SF Theater both fllm1 if it appeared
Hoffman was unable to
handle budget and Plans Tour deadlineproblems. But HoCfman said
SAN FRANCISCO First Artists' takeover
(AP) -Tbi5 cltys re-or the films, "Straight
pertory theater group, Time" and "Agatha,"
t h e A m e r i c a n was not done in good
Conservatory Theater, faith and he argued it
will perform for two represented a breach of
weeks io Tokyo. contract.
· A: Plenty! Leonard Ross• parent.I put the
minor's money in trust until be turned 21. Only re-
cently celebrity bunter Richard Lamparski traced
Ross to San Franci.aco and reporta the bachelor la
now commissioner of public utilities for the atate
of California at a salary of $37,212 a year. When
Ross wu 4ldit.or of the Yale Law Review (be
graduated from Yale Law School a year later) one
of bis classmates wu Jerry Brown. son of the 1ov· emor ol California. Years later be worked for
Jerry Brown's own election as pernor in 1'14.
Q: I WU nrprbed to MU WUllam Couad,
the detedb'e wllo starred l.D &Ille ''Camlea0 aerta,
sing on a TV show. Baa lie laad ••la ezperleace!
-M.O., Dea.er.
A: Some. That's the way Con.rad worked bls
way through acUng school. By singing at weddings and Bar Mitzvahs.
Q .. la ll tme I.Ila& Jlmm18'ewart elated OUTla
de Bavillaad! -Forrest L.. Plu.fleld. Mau.
A: Yes. but only for a abort time. •'I bad to
stop eolng with Olivia," Stewart remembers,
"because I never could say her name rilbt wben I had to introduce her! ..
Q: ••au.de Barna ol •-n. GGai ._ .. u bll
• DDl Orf·s&a•e ... , -1.N., ...... Dam, Wit.
A: Some friends refer to blm u .. Mr.
Perpetual Ernotlon. •• But we tblU that be prett;r
much summed up the kind ot mind be bu when
Mike Doualas asked fOT b1a ks.a ot tbe ultimate
game show ... , Uled to kid about t.bll,•• Chuck
replied. "Playtna a Ruuian roulette 1ame or
somethlna where a person•a life would Uterall1 be
at stake. I think that's scary and ridiculoua, but I
thlok it would get an audience!"
Q : Aay Idea ti llow aada ol a ro1aJ&1 Paal
Aaka •u colleded alue u _,.,.. .. IOllllUlJ'I
Tlaeme.. for ~e Toa11•t Sltowt -.1-41 L ••
Baltimore.
A: Varies with the ye an. Paul'• deal called
for ~foe every show that'a aired. Sioce 1t•1 been
runniili for aome 1S tears, t.bt .Umated take
could total more than ball a million dollars for tbe
"Anka man of mutic. ••
Q: Did Leepo&d 8lrolo..at rean, oae. Illa a
llPACTOI ......
a t -llOtAl9 IUl(l'Olt
Thegroufwillpresentliiiiiiiiiii"°"iiii!iii.=-r====::;::~~::;::;;=::;::=:;:::;::=;~~;=;;;===::::=r Tad Mose's "All tbe WINNER 11 ACADEMY
•"'-IQUU1191
414-1$14 MOM..nttu.nt.-7111 & ....
.__ _ __. &AT.&IUM.-2ft0e&.Ue11U&MI
IOllY DllllH\DtNt
THI Sfl,INt Cl'tN TMUllMT rMlU ..,.,
Way Home" and Eugene AWARD NOMINATIONS O'Neill's "Ah, Wilder·
Desi" in its first tour of Including Best Picture
the orient. f.~~~~'-~!!il
: .. !'\tl~'f
'"'>.../ " • " ... ., ........ .
HUOYB . ,.'DERSU
UZALA" / Jr..-• w.tMtt.I
BOGART "l:'illtDng~mt RETROSPECTIVE ll
EACH WED A THURS
I ,MALTESE FALCO I 7:00 A 10:25
PETRIFIED FORES} I 1:50 . . -I
.Q ! f I ~---
11111 W. SUN,\.OWlA
W. 0' IRISTO~C.M...MOal
''WOil.D'S .. IATIST ~ -
LOVlrlNt
.,,_ ONI 6 ONLY-· ,,,.,
c1nename 6 s cRe e n
63U'2551 comPLEX
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY .
' • . •
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Speakers
•ddressin1 a propoeal to elimmate
motorbed boats on the Colorado
Rtver in Grand Canyon National
Park were pretty evenly divlded for
and acalnat the plan, a park aervlce
spokesman said.
Larry Quist, spokesman, for the
National Park Service, said abc>ut 8S
people turned out Tuesday niabt at,
the fifth in a ¥ries of six public·
meetings held to gather public
opinion on a draft management pro-
posal for the river.
,.~..,...,....
De clares c -di daq
J a mes Browning, former U.S.
attorney who s uccessfully pro-
secuted PaJricia Hearst at her
1976 bank robbery trial , has
d eclared his candicacy for at-
torney general of California.
HE SAID COMMENT from ~g
speakers at the four·bour meetlnl
was "pretty evenly balanced" tor
and a1ainst the m* controversial Here are 1kiing con-
aapect of the plan -the pbaslnc out dltions in Southern
of motoriied boat.I on the river over a California mountaln9 as
three-year period. reported by t be
Quist said public lnterest tn the C a 11 f o r n i a S t a t e
matter has been so 1reat that a Automobile Association:
leVeDth meeUnf has been achedule<I 8 19 ·--Or .. llfU •"· wllll • in Washinct.on D.C. on Marcb 23. =-!cs~"• 1-,_ ._,
Also, the record for public comment ... ~~.;~'~0i:e.·~'!.l
will remain open until May 1 for .-1194 "°"'*'· those who want to submit written re· ,.,...,. o.c -M•r Ollfll, •'"' • .,. .. Of ,_ ,. ·-t..C, pock .. marks. -"'·
''There were people wh aid they He re are SI err a
didn't agree with elimina ·on of Nevada skiing con-
motorized trips and those whO ...... ~-.. · ons as reported
that elimination would lengthen the' Wedn day by the as.
average trips," he said. "We also sociatl n:
heard from many people "who said ""-•-" _ 12•1oot 11e ... they weren't pleased with the al· Peoeci. 1 cllolr.
f i 1 ho 'r.' .. ' -u -toot base. toe a tlon o com mere a versus :.:i~~~i!M. •''"" tondlllon•. "ull private usage." s ... , ._._,~._._.. P..:Ud
THE Pl.AN PROPOSES to phase
out motorized boats and rafts on the
river over a three.year period and
seeks to spread out the annual raft.
ing season from 31f.I months to six
months, permitting "longer trips and
increased usage while reducing
crowding."
ln addition. the draft plan would
sharply reduce the permitted ratio of
commercial to private river-running
from 92 perc~nt commercial and 8
percent private to 70 percent com-
. mercial and 30 percent private.
THE DRAFT PLAN has been dis-cussed at a series of public m~ings
held in Arizona, Colorado and. Utah
as well as California. The final meet-
jng of the first seri.es was scheduled
We4~sday night in San Francisco.
Superintendent Merle E. Stitt of
the National Park Service said the
public meetings were held to in-
crease public involvement in
formuJation of the plan, which was
the subject of litigation three times in
the past two years.
POWCltr. firm IM'(kecS. S d1olrt. 1 tr~;... 0...., -7•to0t ...... ~rm
pe<11.110, '""''no to11. 2 CIOUl>I• c ... ,,,.
1 aurlec•. Nortll Star -Moot botO. H.,.d
PO<ktCI, IOl1W'lng. """ -roflOI', AIJIM ~ -!Moot 11.tw. PKllecl ~. sprlfll COlldilfoM. I ,,..,,._ 2 tutiect.
M•m•wtM -•toot btw. "'"" PO<...,, "'""l'llMft. Futl-roUOfl. ._,... v....., -1,100 01..-ackwl. 13
fool l>Ht. Po<llecl "°wdtr. SP!'fllll <-lllons U ~. dWlrs. I ~• car. I gOftclOla 6,200 eltvellon. ~foot
base. Pt<lled P<JWWr. SIWl"9 COi,. 0111ons. 7 0owllle c/Ylrs. t swf.ce ........ ,, v.w1.., -I-foot but.
Pooed p0-r. !iflrtno <ondltlons. u
<heirs • M#fo<t end t lrotn
Sii I l1t<llat -t .foot l>Ut. PoO.tCI paw"'· llrm encl •Pf'i"9 <-ttlons. Full -r•lton. M..,,.t It--I-fool b4M. ~hint groomed. UQM llf•""I.,, 3 tlfb.
sterro sar •--9-toot -· Powder -flrrn ~tuMI. S llfts.
"'"'"'"' ,..._ -14-foot -· Pt<lltcl ~Flrrnpeclltcl. tllfl~. --v .. ..,...... .... -lo.toot I>•••· Puked PG•Otr a11d firm .,.<11..i. 4 "'°'*• Cl\elrs. 0-.. ...... -114-tNtt. W•"9 <Of'IClltfon\. •<"'-In 2 r.-1-s. ~ ~Ml -•toot botO. Poc:ktd PoW<Mr 4 tlftL Ma11u11_.ll M..,111•1• -12·1001
MM. Pt<llad -*'· FUil -otlOll, J••• 1111....ul• -10-1001 base. Puked po-Mier Md powOtr. Full _ .. ,..,,
ClllM ,.._ -10-foot ...... Flrrn
peeked. lumlno 50IL 2 <"4lrs. 4 ,..,.
IKt lflll
The Flsher·Prlce
DAREDEVIL
SKYDIVER.
..... ,. .. 2.88 '"
CALIFORNIA
.,
___ AL
IENb OF MONTH SALE)
HARDWARE & PAINT
3 &ly 9" Table Sow ............ ~ 1&4.00 ff.Of
·10 only Auort9d'Swoc) l.icjil fu!IH\. -~ iq,95 t.11
I 0 only 60 pc. Tool Set SAE 0r metnc Orig. 49.Slt 22.11
200 only Ccbinel Knobs, Handles.
Hin9M . .ic. ••••••••••..••.••••••..•.. 150/o off'
30 only Sabe Sow • , . . . . . • .•.. Q;q. 22.W f .II
100 only SyMno Blue Oot ~
8ub100w ...................... 0ng.1...o .sf
4 only Aiiess Pant Spray• •....... Q;q. 99.W 69.11
SO only OiK. Wdlpaper Oodile Roi •• Oig. 9.99 2. ff
40 only Interior-Exterior PaWit. gal. • . • • . . . . • . . 2.11
SO only &terior.L:it-. I coot ....•••. Q;q. 9.9'1 4. 99
30 only ~ Cooring. 5 gal ••••. Q;q. 9.99 4. tt -
APPLIANCES & TV
I only 25" Maple Color TV •..•.••• 0,g. 699.95 49f .18 ·
SO only NJ. Portable ~ • . • . . . . . . . . . . • . • 2.50 ·
10 only 5pec*_, • • •• • • . • . . . . . .. Ong. 24.W 6.11
3 only 40 Chc:niel CB Bose ........ Q;g. 249.95 179 .00
4 on1y Miao.cMt Ovens • . • • • • .. • . . • • • • • . • I 51.00
6 only 2 sp. 8 cylce 18-b. Woshet • Qq. :m.95 259.11
8 only Upncft Voc-m
ottochments .• . . . . •...• 0ng. 7995 St.It
4 only 19" Port. Cob TV ""'th
Auto Cob ................... Ong. 529.95 35t.lf
3 only Frost!Ms 18 cu. ft. Top
Mount Fefet. .. . . . . . . . . .. Qi9. 449 95 Jlt .IC
I 0 only Shag Rug Comb
(fits Voci.un) • .. • .. • .. • .•.•.• (),q. 12.95 2.11 .
BLDG. MATERIALS DEPT.
250 only~ Ant. Shapes
& Cobs .. . .. .. . . . . ... Oiq. U» I. 95-.50
20 only Iron Wrrdow Guord!. . . . . . .. 500/o off*
10 only M.n0t Sc~.. . Oig. 15.95 '·''
2S only Sob X Sun Cor>trol lor W~ ...• 250/o off•
10 only )M) Foldnq Doorl. ~· P"-. l .9t.
7 only Ftt Oonoged Woi., Heoten ••• 500/o off•
4 only 35.COJ BTU Woll Furnace~. Ong. 14900 9t.00
SPORTING GOODS
75 only 4 h Po/yesfet ~
Sleepn<} Bog • . .• 0ng. 29 99-. I I .II
30 only 3 b. f\cryf•c Fill
Sleeponq 8oq. . . .Oiq. 13.W 6.11
5 ooly 2 mon Pi4> Tent . Q;g. 29 ~ I 7 .II
2°"1y 12'Poly(onoe • 0ig. 169.W 9t.ll
2 only 8' Poly °'"'i'Y . Q,q. 199.9Cl 99.00
3 only Tote-ette fo1e1 . .Q;g. 99W 57.11
30 Of\ly Somson.te LuqQOQll. Silhouette 25 to 330/o off•
) only Sornsonite Sotl6TI n Tote\ •... Q,q. 30.00 14.11
I only O.e Wfii<F.t Bench .....•• Q,q. &4 99 24.11
10 only CO'MJS Tenm Shoes.. ..... Q;q. IS.00 7.11
15 only TerryOorii ~ ~t .••• , ••• OiQ. 34.97 lt.97
I only Bob Mllplly Golf Oub Set •••• Oriq. W.00 4t .II
2 only W.F. 20 gauge P~ Shotcpi•Oig. 139.99 7f.fJ
8 only 10 ~Racer 8i\e, unosmb. OiQ. 119.W ft.00
GARDEN DEPT.
200 only
All Sae Root in Stodi
Roses. Trees. etc.
50°/o off
20 only 10 <JOI. ~ Kit • • • • • • • .. • .. • • • • II .II
I SO only I <JOI. outdoor Plants . • .. • •. Q;g. 1.49 • 99
6 only 31/, I., Rotay lOWY1 Moweo.......... .• 99.11
• • on1y 3''1 t., R.ar Dixhaqe •..... OiQ. 192.95 I 59 .II
SO only Selected Pottery ..••••.••.•.•••••• 750/o off*
SQ) only Ant. 1-bM ~ . • • • 200/o to 500/o off•
IOonly IO'e St.el StorOC)e ~ •• Oig. 249.9S '''···
5 only Aut. Plant~ Units 25% to 5°"° ofr
WOMEN'S DEP T.
10 on!J l.Dnq Coots .............. Q;q. 30JX1
20 misses <rd 'h pant Suitt •••••••• Q;q. 2S.00
32 only lcng CWsset ..••••• : ••.••. Oig. 24.a:!
30 dnly Msses <rd 'lz Site
. Dreitet . . • . . . . . • • . . • . . • . . ; .•••• OiQ. 20.00
JR. DEPT.
15.00
1.00 t.oo·
10.00
so only~. SweClt8" .•••....•••• Q;g. 15.00· ....
Sel6cted ;. <rd Mines Pant Suits
ond Oreues ................. Oig. 25.00 s~ otr
WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR
35 only llbises . . . . . ••• -• . .••••• -Orig. 14.00
15 only Palazzo P°"s ••••••.••••• Oig. 11.00
20 only Miues Pens •••..••• : •.••. Oig. &.00
. 30 only Miss. Sweeten •••..•••.• Qq. I 5.00
MEN'S DEPT.
7.00
7.00
4.00-
. 4.00
180 only Aut. Men' 1 Sweoten • • • • . • • • . • • SOC'Yo ofr
96 only Tees .•••••..••.•.•• '. •••••. Orie). 7.SO 3.99
250 only Rav* SIWts •••••••••••••• Oig. S. 'i9 l.11
200 only CM of potloge Dress Shirt~ • . • • • • • 500/o ofr
40 001~ Men s Suits.. .. . • . . . • • • • • • • . . • • • SOC'Yo off• :
IS only Men'' Suits.. • • • • • ... • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • Jt .II
iq only Men's Polyester Jackel\ •••••• Oiq. 40.00" 24.11
I 9 only Men'' Surcoots •.•••..••••. Oig. 45.00 29 .II
21 only Oenm Jackets ..•...••••••• Oig. 13.00 7 .II
18 only S.,.,,_ Rocinq .locket ••.••••• Oig. 25.00 14.11
37 only Fbvlel 9-!s .............. Q;q. s.,.q s .11
LINGERE DEPT.
15 only Brushed Gown" ••.•••..•.•. Oig. 19-99-
15 only Brushed Gowns • -.......... Oig. 8. qq
I 0 only long BrWed Robes •.•••••• Oftc} 13. 99
SHOE DEPT.
•. 24 only Selected Womfllfl's
• & Children's Sho4n •..•••••••• Q,q. l.99-9.W'
bO only Boys' & Men's~ ............... .
CHILDREN'S DEPT.
S.4t
4.4t
'·''
2.00
5.00 -
30 only 8n.c5hed Slffi:>ers •••••••••••• Qq. l. ~ I ...
10 orJy Gls' Oreues ..••••••.••••• Oic). 10.00. 4.00
30 only !!<¥' & Grf,'
Sweote<s • . • • • .. . .. .. • • • • • ••••• Qi9-!>.99-J.00
Selected CJ.10.en's Ploy Wt0 •.••••.•••• 5.,,_ olf-
Boys· ond Gns' Knit Shins . • .. . • • • • • • • • • • • • 4/5-00
Girls' Knit Top & Pain. Sizes 7.14 •••••••••• Lff·Z.H
YARDAGE & LINEN DEPT.
I S only Polye\ter Blcriets
Twin ond FtJl • • • • . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • J ...
30 only Vinyl Ploce Mats
Solid ond pattans -• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2 /I .DO
bO only Polyester fiberfl P'Jlow • • • • • • .. • • • • • • 2 /J.00
Ant. of Sheered Flaa Both
Towels, Hc7d Towels & Wosh Clot~ • • • • • • • SOCYo off•
600 o0ly 4 pl Acryk y~ •.........•. Oi9-.79 .J•
DRAPERY DEPT.
Mir.i SGnds <rd Cus1omer Ret\.m Drapes
Bnnq in ycu ~ size ~ we'U ouisl you • SOCYo off*
MISC. DEPTS.
~· s FormJo & Bonnie Bel COU1'1Mics 50% ofr
Ant. Women's Hatd:iog ...... Oig. 15.00.20.00.. 7.00
20 AddinQ Mochine\ •.• -•••••.•••. QMJ #R,99-_ .,. "
HOUSEWARES
36 only Motjc. Kole Ncm.kk ~illet . .. .. .. .. • • • . .. •••••••• OiQ. 20.00 f .4f
36 Oflly ~ HorntuQ8' I
M<Xer ........................ Qq. n99 I l .4t
3 ~!yC~Set •..•..•.•••••• ~29.~ l~.U
JEWELRY DEPT.
20 only I "4< So5d IS" Ned:
Chains • . .. • • • • . •.••.••••••••• Orig. 37 .SO
I 6 only Mt.I's L<D Wench. ••••••••••••••••
• 18 only LED Wcildtes •••••.•••••••••• , •••••
18 only Sport Wr;;dwts •••••••••••• Orig. 34.W
14.11
''·'' t.17
''·'' •Off1...-rr1c.
USE YOUR WARDS CHARC,.ALL CREDIT ACCOUNT FOR CONVENIENT SHOPPING
lllST .
KEEPS I•
POR yf)tJJl
SMALL
TRIJCK
NEEDS
CAMPER SHEtl
. . . .. . . . .... "
SHORT BEDS
~ONG BEDS
WITMTHE
PURCHASE OF
ANY MEW
TRUCK IM
OUR HUGE
STOCK THIS
WEEK~EMO-· ..
NEW '71 IGYOfA
LONG BED PICKUP S SPEED
$19619:
Total cash Price Including fax I llcense 14838.52. Def.rT.d
payment price ii $5897.12 lnciuding tax & hcense .net all cartYinQ
charges for 48 months on approval of your flood cndit. Annual
Ser. IRN28-129501 DM. percentagerate 11.&4%. sa•
THURS.-FRl.-SAl.-51 f
·CELICAS -
'77 VOLVO
264SIA
Automatic. air ronditioning, pin stripe,
leather. sunroof. Power steering. power
brakes. Ser.1tvC26465H1-046505
WAS $I 0,450-
.;jKE'S SALE P.RICE
'8878
'75HOHDA
5 speed. AM radio, this
week only. (207NJL).
'76TRIUMPH 5"'TAU
4 soeed, overdrive, stereo
radio. heater. Under 20.000
miles with both soft too. hardtop & tonneau.
(383ROG). $3899 ,
·'71 VOLVO
l411mAM
Auto. trans.. air oondlflon-
lng, AM/FM radio, heater.
leather. Nice. nlc• car.
(631KEM). '
s2999 .
'74MGI
CST&
' speed. AM/FM radio. Just rlgnt for the beach.
(998KZT).
$3999
•16HONDA cmc
' speed, air conditioning,
AM/FM radio, heater.
(&,.liPKH).
s3999
'69VOLVO
, t4lS.AM
4 speed, AM/FM radio,
heater. Nicest one In town.
(030AGO).
'77 VOLVO
264GLA
Auto .• P/S. P/B. A /C. blue metamc
Beauty!VC26465H1-040791
'74DATSUN
IJllFASTIACK
Auto. trans .. AM radio.
heater. lo miles. s .. It tp-
dayl (903MJM)
52499
WAS $10,290
IKE'S SALE PRICE
'7JVW s .... 181\.1
AM/FM stereo radio,
heater. A rare one!
(&K'2HXX).
'72VW
IAllM4*eHIA
Radio. heater. Nice. nice
car. Lo miles. (817EXM).
53199
'77 VOL!VO
264GLA
Custom T~top, sunroof. P/S, P/8, auto .•
A /C. VC26465H1-046091
WAS $10,6'0
IKE'S SALE PRICE
s9779
'67VOLVO
144 SIDAM
4 speed, AM radio with 8
track. One or a kind. See It!
48.000 actual mites.
(UQU914l.
SEE ITt··
'72 VOLVO
WAM>H
4 speed. AM radio, heeter.
You'll like it. (852EMZ~
52999
'75 VOLVO
l41WAGOM
Auto. trans.. power steer-
ing, pawer brakes. AM/FM
r•dlo.,heater. (367M><ll,
•72 VOLVO.
WA.oM
4 speed. •r condition!~ ••
AM radio With tlP9:heater,
luggage rack. (878EYP).
53199
'74 VOLVQ
141 WA4IOK-
Auto. trans., lir oondillon-
in g, AM radio. tugga~ft rack. (899WO). ·
'74TOYOTA c&JCA
Auto. trans .. AM/FM ~lo. vinyl roor. (488.IPP).
7
"What makes you think It's for me?"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
LOOK, IF l,.lOO OCJN'T llHNK W€1~£ (l)MIC STRIP ~R~
'rnE.N E.XPL.AI~ 1l-l05E LARGE
PuFi:t.> "THING& OUER OOR
HEAD6 !
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
BUT You SPENT'$1D
ON ONe l.IKS' THIS
J.A5 T MONTH!
~J~~
GERIATRIX
BOOMIR
MISSPEACH .
' ArtTHLAl2-
A~ 'w&~S
f -nu • e.-re.~~AL-
1 Q~sno~s
•
UGHT'NINGI
GORDO
JUDGE PA~KER
by Tom Batluk
SURE I TMAT'&
C.OHAT I A1.AJACJ6
1J()U6HT I
I I
.....
by Wm. F. Brown 1nd M•I CHIOn
oN A
Durr I ,,,,
1MN'U LUC~Y. A1' L~A?T ~ev' MAv'6
!;OM~Pl.ACE: t~---TO GO!
l ,J
by Mell
~0&\9l.V NOT,
&I.Air 1"HINK r 'AN
HTT..Eft~OF
iH! C&.Aff 1'0 LAV C#F. ·~
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
HA HA..1 YOU ReA~Y eet.-1 eve 'YOLJ'Re
GOL.-Dl L.-OCKS ~ HA HA.' OH, "'T'HAi" IS RICH .'
MOTLEY'S CREW
by GUI Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom IC. Ry1n
VH11 f.t)f'S ~ t.mte. ..
2 ON A tt>RSe'L.L~
St.OW L)S t'OWNl
COMICS I CROSSWORD
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schutz
()
I
I
f
f
{( WOODSTOCK 15Ni
MUCH FOR DOING
AN'(THING RIGHT
by Roger Bradfield
I J ;
f
•
1
j
s
by George Lemont
SAY, WHO
8ROUcSH-r YOU DOWN HeRe,
ANYWAY?! HA HA.'
by Templeton and Forman
TODAY'S CIOSSWDID PUZZLE
ACROSS •8 Not found UNITED Feature Syndlc:lt.
1 Fen llllUTllly Wednesday's Puuie 8orv.d:
6 Dry •kl" 49 Wheel
1c1le1 •Pokes
11 ..... aesslon 50 Free of blH
14 Ovel 52 Animal's den 15 Cltdlnat 156 Oty.
18 ~"'::v·a 67 Equipment
"PNMnr uok••P
11 Mtmori.I eo The 1ona O:
F Mu11o 19 are 8 1 Marble 20 N. Amer. In-62 Feminine
dlan name 21 CtrHI 63 Snoop
22 f~;~ 84 Obaarvta
24 Sup1><>r1 carefully
26 Climbing 85 Anlmal tlon lion
vlntt t 3 Looka fur-<41 Superlntendlat
21 Seaman DOWN lively lnlormal. 2
~& A ti II IP
·~ I ~ I RR IT 1i N 1ul II --lj l :S IV -~
E M .. u ~
N IA T ~
IP •wl< :~ N • s
A I r il,. R \ 0
Ill II A :r I' ~ E s LA Ii A
30 Al19r 18 RUOI I*· WOfdl
32 fonMf U.S. 1 Thomae eon •2 Boy
vtc.-preal-·-: E119. 23 Fragment 44 Fall behind
dent st1tesman 25 Brawl 45 Female
33 F1c1 2 Oecl1re 26 Rtal estate horae
34 Mme. 3 Branches 27 Coerae 48 Seize fWmfy
equivalent 4 Tall lodrs hominy 47 Nolle
37 ....... beat 5 Garment 28 Otlatfn abfoad
friend edge aubltllllle •e Colna of
311 Evn aplrlt 6 Long narrow 29 Bllmaleasly small value
39 Act of lklll 1trlp 30 Approving 50 Sanc11on
40 Affirmative 7 Conv8'M11on eound 51 Before·
vole 8 Aah 31 Posterior Comb. lonn
41 Cycled recept1clea 33 Small ehllct. 53 • -
42 Sudden 8 Cuh ule Var. Karenina ..
movement ellp: Abbr. SS Ire ~ Decora111
43 FQf1ge pl1nt 10 Furnlalllng 36 Sllvlf mart-caket
45 Vesael's nutrition ing: Abbr. 55 Reooee c1ptaln 11 Subtlety In 38-Iron: 58 Oone by
46 Smear With reasoning Mu hie 59 Grab: Sling
ltrd 12 Place ol ao-39 'Plan .. •c·
Pomposity
•
Prfftl119 r•t11 c•ll-Ill I~ M._..., __ .,,. ,,.,..,. relp
tlleM ..... In I-• efld MrlMrft Mlt .. .,..1, tcMltfM ll'OW flutrlll
........ "'"lclaWllCONff\.
C.Ulorttla '""; .,. --"*' • ., 911• lllltCltlt It CMll-over 5ou1Mrn
CAI"""'' •Ill f'rllt9y, marred ll'llY ~., ....... tow c .... In ,.. .... ~""· • """' ... lft Ult -IY ..-.Miit.
,
OAK HARBOR. Wash •
(AP) -A small plane
travellng through haze
OD a flight from Alaska
to Seattle crashed in a
wooded area. klllint
Hvtn people, three of
tbtm cblldren.
authoritJee aald.
Washin1too State
Patrol ottlcer• at tbe
.....
1ceoe utd th• Piper ,.---------Cherokee plane was PUBUC NOl'JCB
1m aebed to bill but dld
not burn alter the crash '~~=t:~':::' three mlla nort.b of UU. Tiit ... 1<1w1111 ,.,_ --.. .. lllnl_ .. , Wbldbey Island town souTHUH u1.1Pou1• Wedn~ay ni&bt. , ?t ~:.':::>nMf"O,. "" l'l-.11~
• -Wiiii-L.llu Cllll"'-1111 W. 1Mt
( I IV SH 0 R 7' J :;.-;' ••, c. .. ....., c.11..,"1•
Tt,,•IM MM c:.lllfle, 1111 W. IMI
-------..,.... , St'ff\ •t. CiteUi Mtn. c..tlfWINe "*' The plane was bound n11 1tu11ne11 11 coMuct• -Y •
from Ketchikan, AJaska. ..,,.,., r.:..~C:.1111 to Seattle·Tacom 1 Tiii• ~ .. --111M w1111""
International Airport. =:,.,~..:_er.... c.-ty •
Identities were not fm. • "'''* medi •• ,., -11-bl ""411!.,,. a-.... c::.st o.lly ...... a-., av.,,.. e. .it.1>.thflfl!W.i.t,M,1.,. ..n
JJ.JB ..... PUBLIC NOTICE
WASHINGTON (AP) NOTICI OP' INTINTIOM TO, -President Carter 1No••• '" TM• u1.1 op finally bas Conaresa' •1.coHoucMv1AAM1 ,.~,. perm laalon to halt pro-To_..,. 1t 1MV Cioflc.r11:
ductio f th B 1 SuOl1<1•l-flf11Wllce11M•~ n o e · p111c1 tor, no11ce 11 htf'eov 9,...., '""'
Self destr .. •P*O ==t~~!·e:i:rlf::~~ =~===·=1~ • ........._.,.,,., manned bomber era. .,.....,_
Tbe House reversed °".::W,W:· ""' Sl1"t. Cott.a -..
on W edn81day lt.I earlier ~· 1o ...-.,........,, .. -
Liar's Poker High on ~riters' Agenda
refusal to give up the d•ra11n•• 1• .. ,1,1111 tt ""
last two B-ta scbedule<I g:.=;r:~cei:'!.. ':=..~
for production and gave _,... "-... .,. .. ..,_.... ..
flnal approval by a vote 111••: "4"
By RUGH A. MUWGAN ,.,.._I .. cw...,......
SARASOTA, Fla. -Like the Al1onquin
Roundtable reincarnated and 1one South for the
winter, the Writer'• Group of Sarasota meeta
every Friday to self-destruct pomposity and in-
voke the Muae over a little Llar's Poker.
"Tbe rule ot thumb around here i1 that If you
can't say something inaultin1 about aomeone it's
better not to uy anything at all," confided
mystery writer John D. MacDonald, a foundin1
member or the lJt.erary salo11 that bu been meet· Inc weekly down bere since ~.
ABOUT A DOZEN WITS were auembled on
the Friday we were invited to break bread with the
Oower of Florida culture.
The proceedings got under
wal with a toast to the memory of ealie McP'arlane, an endur-
1 n g figure in American
literature who wrote the endur·
in& Hardy Boys mystery book•
that are havini still another
comeback as a TV series.
MeFarlane'a memory ls
alwaya touted because he pro-
vides the wherewtthall for the
lout. The Canadian-born
autbor, who died last July, put a codicil In bj1 wlll
leavln1 • behest to aet up the first round ot drillkJ
at the IJl'OUp'1 weekly luncheop.
~"fin ,#-ri::-~ wll~~HJ :~c!/'1: l!'' ~ie ) toned Phtup van Doren
--------Stern. the Civil War hi•·
torlan, knocking back the Im mortal U batlon.
''Malice Is my business." obeerved Mao·
Donald, wbo has authored more than '70 thrtllers, ·
including the best 1eller "Condorninium" and the
Travis McGee 1erle1, "Leave us oot knock it."
. Payment of the second round ot drinks, and all
ensuln1 rounds, depended on the outcome of bands
of Liar's Poker, a 1ame played with the aerial
numbera on dollar bllla, which next to malicious
converaaUon about fellow members Is the chlet
Item on the luncheon agenda.
E.\CR JANUARY THE YEAJt'8 wont Uar,
the 1roup member who bou1ht the moet rounds of
drinks in t.be previous 12 months, 1et.a hla name en·
graved on a plaque. Van Doren Stem waa the
lat.est addition lo a roster that Included MaclOnlay
Kantor, Carl Carmer, Borden Deal and Nlc:k
Kenny.
MenUon of Kenny's name evoked repetition of
an anecdote that is typical or the scoft\n1 re1ard In
which the Group's re1ulars bold each o\her.
Kenny was the columnist and poet laureai. of
the long defunct New York Mirror, who amon1 hil
coJlected verse penned the immortal line. ''Snow ls
(I od. s dandruff..,
IT SEEMS THAT KENNY -ONCE gave a
volume ol bis potms to novoU1t Borden Deal and
waa toUcitoua that it be cU1pJayed con1picuou1ly
Oil Deal'• bookahtlvt1. Tbt noveU.t had a little
wooden display cue built with a gl111 door, a tiny
hammer banging from a chain and •sign ''break
1n case of emeraency."
Fresh from this assault on the memory or a
dear departed. the Group went to work on a live
one: Wlll Yolen, the emincot authority on kite fly.
ln1, who was ln attendance aa • l\lesl.
Yolen was ln Sarasota for the annual Ben
Franklin Kite Flying Contest, which h• bad
loitered and promoted, but apparently the wind
had gone out of h1I sailt if not out of hi• rhetoric
and he failed in bis attempt lo fly a huge kite trall·
Ing a couple of champagne bottles u tailt. The
Evel Knievel of the pre-achool aet found no mercy
among the cathered literati. ·
YOLEN LAMENTED THAT JN add.itloo lo his
kite flyln1 problems. Putnam had manqed to lole
the m anuacript for hia latest book.
"Fortunately," allowed MacDonald, "he did
not have a carbon copy."
Calvin Hoffman, the utl-Sbakeapearean
1cholar, announced to pronounced yawn& from lbe
roundtable that he wu once
again embarked on opening the
tomb of Slr Thomas W alaingbam
in Chi.lelhurt, England, to prove-
once and for all that Christopher
Marlowe had written the Bard's
entire output.
Hottman 11ld he bad trted a
number of years a10 to open th ..
lead·llDed cof'fln of Marlow•'•
patron but was blocked ln b1I
endeavors by the archbishop of
Canterbury.
YO..NIOVT
"WHAT MAKES YOU TBJNK you'll find
anyth.lnc but a bunch of booes after all lbese
yeara T •· tcolfed Ted Irwin, 1 crtme specialist.
"He'• a jogger," 1n1wtred literary 11ent Max
Wilkinson before Hoffman could mount his.own de·
fense. "Josetng looien1 the brain, which is a well
known medical {act. It.eornes looee and noata ln a
sea of 1elaUn.''
Hoffman mumbled aomttblni about Wals·
ingbam bavt111 been buried with hla hand•
clutchlni a tiny bos or cuk4't tbat could contain
copiea of Hamlet, Macbeth and Otbtllo bylined by
Marlowe ln1tead of Sbatespeare. butt.be convene·
lion already had turned to tM one subject that
always •rlpa sertoua writers and aeparat.ell the
profeaaionala from th• amateurs. Money.
WILKINSON. THE AGENT roa Kurt Yon·
neiut, John MacDonald and othen, revealed lbat
the fint press run for the paperback ecliUon of
"Condominium" would b4t two million copiea.
Deep shock 1et in amon1 tbt otheT diners.
MacDonald told of renewed TV interest in hll'
story line ror a propoaed adventure seriu about a
1roup of young envlronmentaliata and deep aea
dlvera.
''They fthned me lut week doilll tht lntroduc·
lion. l wu suppoeed to walk along a beach and
chat about the series. 1 nnd It's vet)' dlfftcuU io
wilk along a beach and talk at the Hint Umt. I
got paid scale for the attempt. SJ.81.50."
Bit &AID TllBY BAD l'OUND a Canadian •c·
treaa to play the inaenue tnvlrOllmentaliat.
"Great thighs tor t.be dlvtng 1cene1," the
author allowed.
And on that ele11anUy oblerved artl1Uo detail,
the Saruota Writen Group adjourned for anotbtr
WMk. ·
of 234·1.82 to Carter's re-0n1ete1Mr&w1ne CPulllk: PnmlW.) quest not to &pend '462 Mk:tlMI •.-.cJ: miUion to build them. ""*'.,,.., 0r.,.. 1>111y ~ ,.,.,,.,.,.., u. "" n .. ,.
l....it'OIC~ PUJSUC NO'l'ICE NICOSIA , Cyprus
(A p ) -Pre1ident NOTICI OP IMTUTION TO
Spyro1 Kyprianou aatd !~~'c~~u• 0
today he unde1'$lo0d the w1-11
' • j u st if i a b 1 • r·:~=.:::~11c_..,
p1ycholo1lcal 1tate.. ,.._ tw • ...i'9 1e .._ ""'"' 111e1
that led tbe pretldent ol ::..:i:-~·:i::-~1:!! EIYPt to aever ... ,_.,... • .......,..., ... "*.,_
diplomattc relations ~it'':.'..,,,..._ "c.1e MeM,
with Cyprus alter c.e1"°""'
th L I t Pvrsu..,C '9 -............. -e anaca a rpor c1er1len•ct 11 •••••1111 •• "" S h 0 0 t 0 U t b et W e e D Ooert,,...,I Of AIC_ll, .. ,..,_.,.
Cypriot force• and c-t...i 1°' 1-.,"" Pk4Nllt
--"· 1a-tw 1MM ,,_u.. EgypUan command05. 1e1i.w1: v -td "'41-~yprianou s.. in a on5e1e._ • .._
statement he wilbed to , ..... ,..
"overlook the tnaulUna .. ".:::=::.-:~ and abusive lansua1e" ~,.,... 0r.,.. CMsa Oe11., Poot, used against him by PtW11eryn.1..,. ,,..,.
Prealdent Anwar Sadat
because lt wasn't proper PUIWC N<n'ICE
for beads of state lo ex· teancao.
h g · 1 t I d PISIOLUTION W PM'Tlt ..... lfl' c an e lDIU an PU81.IC NOTICI: 15 He•E•V abuse. 9lve11 tllat WILLIAM LANCS _, __ _..at•-~ COi.i.iNS enlt GUY OUZlA•DO
'~..,_..--,..,...,. ~,...... dlll"ll e...IMM _., n..
fl'tllletll firm NIM ..,. ft1 .. et WASHINGTON (AP) IOUHU•H CAl.U'OllNIA -President Carter b"• 1u1t,.•0•1t0Mt<0. ... ,,.,,"~"'1• -A-. COl\9 MIM, c.Mi..n.11 ta11 rejected an 1mblUoua c-1v 11 0r.,., si ... "' c.i11orn1e.
N Y l t b Ud .......... TllifUM!I .... J-r a v p an o u a 1m. 0., ,,,... ... , ~ __ ,,.. -
v a s t u n d e r I r o u n d ,..,., ...,,.,.""'• .,. "'""'INU ,,..,,
antenna a)'llem to com· "~':"'-.:.:':':~.:-'....:;;. •"' " munlcate wtth mt.all•· <4111Mtld ov wi111 .... La,_ C•lllll•
i I P I 1. Od Miii Terrel• INil CllllN. WllO wllt carry n o ar a ,., _. .,..,..,., "' 1 ... 1" .. "" Trident aubmartnn. an -..t• et ,,,. "'""' 9"' recetvt •"
administration source ~w~J:v,:'~01~ ,, .. tlwlt
said today. •11· u~c1 ... 19neo wlll nu b•
As an altematlve, the •-.-•1111•. ''°"' t111.• •v .... tw ....
source iald, the prH· :::~= ..:=r;.-: .. ~·~1':,' ~
ldent favor• a scaled· fir,.., Dllecl •I Colte Mela, CllllMrnl•, thl• down antenna project ... ,._.., oav °' ~. tm.
that would require only Publl= ~=-C:.. DtllY ,....,. 5 percent aa much t<.ww,.,u,ttn ,.,.
burled cable aa the
Navy had originally pro· PUBLIC Nat'ICE
poled. IUf'HIOllCIOUllTOflTNI 1t'eap8U (itee91 ITAHWCAUPOt!NIAf!Ott TN& CCM.lfff'Y CW otlAHe
BELFAST, Northern ,.0r1u~P~A•rn•• OP
Ireland <AP) -Roman PUITION "°" f'HeAH Of' w11.1.
Cathollc guerrlllas in ;.:r!Ml.J,.:,.. L. • T T • • •
Northern Ireland have E~•··· ol •ICHAllO o. AXTON
received new weapons ~~~~ii., HlllHV GIYIN ,,.1 from the Palestine e. WAI.LACE 01uG11MN 11u '""' Liberation Organisation, ._,."' • "'"'"°",.,. l'rebM•"' w111
an authoritative aecurlty• ;=:..:,~~~· .. ~~:'1: tource says. -... ,., ""'1• ""1]Qil•1..,.. ,.._,
A th ........ end llJl«e .. lleerlfl9 u. -m ong e weapons ,.., -" we ._ ~ u. ,.,,, 111 10 are half a doaen a.m2 111111t~efo.,.rtmt11t
& t U' .-'-'-..._ • ef Miit ClOllr1. .t 1'0 c;lvlc Centw ~mer Cln .... ._ maCuwl Orlw Wet\ Iii 1111 City ef lellta Me
. IUDS and exploelvec, th• c..i.._. •.
source told Tb• A•· o.-i~~:~~ ...
sociated Preu. c.umyc..,.
WASHINGTON CAP)
Pl.AIA & WUllM 1111 WMtdfl Or., ..... ,,, .....,._......,C#._
Tel: en• 1 .,,_.,.,
AtMl'MY• twt........, "'*'"'" °'"'°' CillNt Dlllf ltiltt .... !Ji MW MM. t. tm no.ti -Rep. Daniel Flood
,beeamt lnteruted in
State Department con·
tracts granted to a PUBUCNOTICE
Stoot ·Heart
Youth Draws
Jail Term in
·foundation head •ho al· c...., ~edlk pald Flood NoT1c:wTocuo1TOu
000 Ot 1.1-1-1t,..., .. ,.,. Of' MIU< Tll....,.llt • ua 11111-.-, cs.ca. ....... ,. u.c.c.,
ll e w l y r e l e a s e. d Nellu 11 11.,.,, 11ve11 t• "'"
Bar Ttib Tom Up at 94
NEW YORK <AP>-Oenov ... Camlin, wbo made It to bet
nel1bborho0d ba:r 4urlnl a blluard wben even ~e Poatal
Service couldn't 1et thtrt, wUJ ~lebrat.e btr Mlb blrthtt..y
Saturd11 b1 watchln1 her '10,000 LlrrooQ) t•b ••t tm\ up. Ml11 CamHn b .. bten vlaittn1 tht No-Name Mr ia GrMnwlcb
Vlllal• nfW1 da1 for 10 )'ean. Each day she bu a bottle of
Gwaa• lloUt'IDd put.a it oo t.hl tab.
document. abow. crMlwt Of OUNfHlflt HCKl~f
rn...; D · Po rm er Plood aide :!:ri::::,~~et~~ ~~.
':I. raf fic ea th Ste\)hen B. Elko bu·lold.. fi::"! ~~~ -:.::.":"~ ftdtr•l Proteeµtora in lfltd• " 011, Pt11111,. t11• ,,..,,
A man who admitted Wn~ an alfldavlt that '""""' •· s. "t" UJ.H·tt~ beblnd the w'-•-1 Of a car .... b t •e:7 d 191~ Trlll•..,.., ...._ -*• 11 171~ 'I~ -0 .,.en ,,.. 1 an ... &.II P'r•llC'-..... Clly .. f-1•1'1 struck and kllled a blcycllat bl the foundetlon head paid Y•H.Y. Cevnty .. er ..... , .. ,. °' lrvlnt Oct. 2l bu beeo •-b Fl Ctllfwnle. ___. m,000 au CU lo ood, Tiie ~ • be It..,_, It senteft"-.. lo one Y•tr ln Oraq• e,ooo to Elko and· .. ""'" ........... All""" Ill County JaU. ,000 to former Ren ttMI, 11111-., ..,..,._ ""' .-eu_,tlior Court J~1e MllGD Otto Pa111nan, D·La: :.U:.: .:'L~'1.!::~·. J'tD~ ~ tbe Jail term for raood. P111m11l and "'A ¥.,illu.,.,..,., Cltf .... tllee
Refael Andr•d• Barbo1a, 11,, Head bavt den.led the ~~:-V., °'.,..• Met.t.,
atter M Pleeded puty to mil-u ~ Tiit "'" "-'" w111 .. c-4 t mt aaol' manslau1hler ace 1 ~;;~!1ir:t-:.~o':.:!:: ebar111 related to the dealb ot .a.;a-. ....... , ,.,.,...,. l.ull# WVk .... ._.
Geralcl L. lAl&btnnan. 31, of .--., :=:-:~:=T.-,.,....,
hat.~. • WAIJIINGTON (AP> .. ••t .. 11 U••" •• •• ~·t~~~-..~ •,•t,kn1oc!~ L Arter month• of. ·::::::-.: ... ~ uvm .,.._. lalf\I ltauy ftJ hoatllit.y towar4 wbli. ... ,..""9*" ........
H he Pe4altd lo work alonf RhodHl•'• efforu to D•ltf• ....,_..,""" #i.la S&rNt 1'M ear tbat bi& ft.nd u bMmal aolutlon t:.,':..'r,.
po1tc1 about a nail• 1wa1, • U .... ltat. la.tdl· ,,:.\:1~:.11••••1. Hca•
wreell'td ad 1'8~ tlOMr -. ~cepUn1 ::.."::.=....-: ..
DISlll THI llST -For the
dlscrtminat1ni fam.U.,y that wants the
best in quaUty p\ease call and uk
about newly listed home. Adult
occupied 3 bdrm, overlooldng
SHIMMERING POOL. $141,500. C411
64Ml•t.
AT $71,fOO 4 Bedrm, 2 baths, l8xll
lamtly room. Move·ln condltlon
thruout. Wallrto sehooll, grades K·12.
An~tous seller. Ctl 14Mt41
Scr111nq Cost.i Me s a -lr1111H?
Huntingt1111 lh:.11 11 t•• v1 11011 Beac h
••• ,.. 1002
••••••t••····· .. •••••••
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
,... ....... Motke:
All real eetate advertised
SPICW SPAiii M
lrt .... de1 Mar. Many xtr• fe1tures. Redecorated and re·
modeled ' bdrm home. Atrium, paneling, trash :.:ct or, et.c. Ca 11
. ~-.. HERITAGE
' • Rt::AlTOHS
in th.II newspaper is sub·J~~~~~~~~~ je<t to the Federal J'air
Ho111ln1 Ad of lHI COIOMADIL
which makea it lll•l•I to MAl&-
advertlae "any pre 3 BR. 3 BA. den " dine
ference, llmltaUon, or r-... ~ra. vowa•, all dlMlimtnetton bued oa -• 1'r1' 1 ••
race. color, religion, aex, ~~=k!n':.9!1 .. bd~i or naUonal oriibl, OC' an -r -. inteniloa to make any or.av• ~-ft.
1111Cb pref•ence, Dmtt. $15'.IOO
U..,ordi.atnwuatlosl." JACOIS llALTY
'Tb1a llCIWSpaper will notL __ 6_7_M __ 6_7ft __
koowintlY accept any au. .... y ~IL
adnrUalng for real r--"""""" .. ellate wblcb 11 la viola Gra& ne,hbarbood for dooottbelaw. lbat 1rowlnt famllY-Jlule muter bdrm, J.ow-.._.....,14e malntance yard. Really
••••••••••••••••••••-• sharp, we wW include G 111rll IQOZ relt1prat«, ..-bel' It
••••••••••••••••••••••• dr1er. Nutone food cente'. ODb' f71.900. can
141-2111
O#rlllt •• ". ~ '°" Hf(f' FIXER UPPER
&rsa1n bUDter aee tb1I · dll~r. 4 Bdrm, 1~
batb. needs paint and
TLC. lt'a • mooe1 ma~ ...;_......;.-.-.--= .... ---
(?:S:f THE REAi i ~11 ESTAT!R~
a-..OO. CallMl-mlD
~.,,,,HERITAGE
. . RlAlTORS
MllTll81T
OffOlrf'UMITY
Mls.YaDe
1UUX l~~~~iiiiiiiii~ Xlat locaUao ID Co1ta Ii -.·. man instUtoos -. Walt to Po-t olftee. FuiOI, Reubens • all
1boppln1. Nr 1chools.
Ea. unit has 1eparate 1auDdr1 nu It private-
peUoa. Don't mlN this
one! Pbone &oda1:
5GM1
* IOuvaYllWf
18'1'0P'l'StING
<>nlr oace rlfll1 I 11'9 '° cloee aucb • snacUt· eeat. auper view 6ome
~ Walker li lee
come an tbe market. A 1nen Iron 1bot from
w.tera edge1.overlooklnl ~.&..nllfi. lllht1, on the Beal !)late i.t uover Sliorea loe•· tlalt. Larae Ir apaciout LOW MIUAGE
3-Bll'•, S~Ba'•, ram 2 BB. Ormp Tree COD· ~ format d1nln1 011 th do. Cleaa 11 tb• pro-
VU!W. Land included. • vtl'bial .-biltlal S6'.950
Sl:I0,000. 'l'ruly, one of• nf'-I d ~yn:~~ lij)wift.ll
JACK HOWELL .
Al'lll 4llCXIATU
• 644-1156
FIXR
.JI AC 161.000
J111t lilted! Back B11
areal Claulc 1lttln1
pcnh w/\'iW or coun·
ttyalde. Crystal dlnlntt I
Hut~ bedrooma I Larf
osien kltcheDI Room for hon .. I Nelda work 11 Take advantaiell
Hurry! Call 645-0303
FOREST•~
OLSON .... . . .
GOLF COURSE HOMI
Spac. S BJl. tam-rm. s
BA. 3 car garage, 3000
aq. ft. Lrg. patio ar deck
w /forever vie w !
~ed to1elll Open 1.$ amday.
1IZJ Tanaier Dr, C.M'.
PAJW.
WALKER
87§.4144 IBaw1a1
Jl'\nd what you want ln
DaUy Pilot Classifieds. ---·-___..... •• ,.. 1002 .......................
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
~ OCWROfcrDWlll
·watch the Catalina aunset .-th~
surfers from this apactoua 5·•
bedroom duplex • .May amenities
include two wood burntn1 flre~=-· builtAln bar, off 8*Net par . ~ fumllbed .-.ooo,
l'lcn wu latlil". found ~ lnlM ~tu ricilal problems, ,.......,_
Barbolaello~ed:lllltJto rlm• Mln\1ter Jan ....,. .... ,... .. ~ ~-:;'~,$= W~'°'1D Ub't plan.. ~'" ~C:--o.ltr • t_;~!J!l!l!!li!BBii!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-
t
Lingo
RIAl &Tm
~llty .. ...._ L,..e. ..._ feita~ 4
TltMSAMYOMl7
~r Bllifl 4 bdrm. W>-
ll, cloae to N•wrort Beach Tennia C ub.
Reduced ror quick saJet
$1!8,500, Fee 1lmplt.
••• 3 .......... row. ........... ~
cefU... "" ... Ill ........ 111 l•L ·,~~~~~~~~! n1. rs • ""' ............ ._. • • ~~
u tr• l•r9• lot w/co.,tet• prlucy. 9UALITY
$141.000 WISTCLlff
l l shows lhrouihoul In OLD CORONA DB. MAR \hiahandsome 3bedrm.2
n 11 ""' ••••••d 2 11 '"•• ,... pt. mit 11 w..g MW i.r tt. ~ OWMf",
PrfCS. of ow•nMp 1ln•dl; ~ '" ttl
$174.500
baUl home. TradltJonaJ
feellne with 1lained
glass, wainscoted formal
dining room, lovely
wallpapers. Gardens and
patios metJculously
THI l l ST l'YE SEIH-
ln all or Seaview this one stands out.
For its view, floor plan, decor and
price. It's a Port Royal floor plan with
several upgrades and a fabulous,
unobstructed view. Don't forget the
many amenities or Seaview or that
this is a lowest price of $255,000.
U ,_. ICJU I: li()M l:S
REAL TORS•: 675-6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
<ilso in Mes~ Verde, at 546 5990
OPEN HOUSE-TODAY
OCEAN VIEW!!
Marvelous for executive living &
entertaining; automatic elevator from
the 3 car qarage to tbe upper two
living levels of tbe finest custom built
home in Corona del Mar. Huge raised
f orma1 dining rm. & sunken, large
family rm. or billiard rm. with wet
bar & frplc. In between, to serve each
area, a complete double kitchen. 3
Bdrms .. 3 baths & the most beautiful
paneling. Open Thurs., Fri. & Sat. 12
to 5. 2t4 Poppy. Park at Hazel
entrance.
759-0811
Fiut """ Go.ol W ulwt BUg.
t:ingo
RUlfs1aJ'l
FAMILY HOMI
-J l1•11•..._•._..W.c1 tldeff ..... .-. .........................
ec ... fkilJ. lrtck ffrlf!fH I wttll fll ...
........ Aftpl•cet II llJldlm wffll .....
caH 1111 d•• .. I o•-. ... ....,. ....
•r• w••tll•r 1tr1,,e d ••d ••••d
c o•dltl•••d. Two c•r •tf•c lled
... • ._SfJ,500.
LAGUNA
NJ GUEL
495-1720
4tJ-1112
SOUTH
LAGUNA
499-4551
LAO UNA
BEACH
417-3331
cared for. $195,000. ~Mff-I 002 ~al I 002 4b0 ~EWPOHT CENH:R OHIVE 759 081' 20MALOT
•EASTSIDE•
LIVE IN ONE-RENT
THE OTHER! Rare
find! Completely
atparate Jiving io a
charming uperaded 2
bedroom, bom' AND a 3
bedroom home -
• EMERALD IAY
SpectociHr •'"'-tro.. tlU Cllri1 Abet
CS.aif)Md wood/t;as l II +fa& rOOM,
or 4 .. ...._ Y•'I .._. .... ,,._.. & c-. of ....... ,...,.., .... ...., ...
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642-SZOO
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den. 4
baths, livin~ rm. w /cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite.
c;, .. ,.. 1002.Ga•r:at ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
aigltt ..t somc1 of th pci •Iii I lttldflc
swf. $450,000 , HOUSE + INCOME llG C AHYOH
4 BR. fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broad moor Plan 3 w /patio
views from each room. $325,000
t.lboal.a.d I 006 enclosed garages too!
NORTH LAGUNA ESTATE
2 ecrft w/oc.-•lew, 6 II. 41/i IA+ l
IR CJUtSI -... poof. 5-c• .-.. prhah
drh•. HCfthhtg elu llh tltl1 OH;
Sl ,000,000
644-7020
2 123 SAM JOA(i)UIM HIU.S IOAD
NEWPORT IEACH
1002
•••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
TRA.UJl PARK OMLY4LEFT 19 Spaces. 2 houses &: a
Luxurious condos near swunming pool on a 2"'•
beach, 3 huge bedrooms, acre site with lols of
212 baths. Would you trees & landscaping.
believe your own pvt Room for expansion & of·
yard! ()pen Sal/Sun 11·5. fered al $135,000 wilb
2283 Canyon, Costa very favorable financ-
Mesa. mg. CALL 751-3191.
Newport Pier Reahy C: SELECT
• T'PROPERTIE S .2rA:a:111Jdii1ll\I@ nuux
2005 Balboa Blvd. E. COSTA MEsA. dlx.
Newport Bc:h.673·2058 units, 1!3. w/2 bdrms .. 2
~~~~~~~~ ba., din. area. lndry. & .--------i frpl. Asking $185,000.
TOW&IMG
AITISTIC
$265.000
Fabulous VIEW from
"this 3·story wood and
glass masterpiece. "One
ol a Kind" 3 bdrm home
just steps from Bay &
Oceanfront. Bnoe the
ours in with "movable
skylight"
Seller motivated!
752-7710or5S2·0434 Bkr.
EASTSIDI
Close to Westcliff abop-
flna. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath.
aml ly room wit b fi.replace, beam celling,
etc. Alley entrance with lots of RV parlting, Mlt·
ln••·~· Ca1154G-ll51
-~s• HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
1·2MEWPOITHTS -------~ Darlina house. room for A TT94110H 2 more units. Call Cleo at
IUILDBS open house every after·
noon, 848-5398 or
•••United Brolten,
~7414.
Good East.side location.
Large level lot. Small
bdrm. 2 bath home, sing!
car garage. Let me sho All•+ •1dPocia ...
you bow to add on lo this. $60,000 YA T.,..
381 .E. Costa Mesa Street Tremendous oversized
Price $69,200. Good famllr fOOm, ·maaalve
terms. . brick frple on quiet
400lll" ,,;~ ~-·HURRY
c.Mjft; -• ~ . . . IS WESTWIND PROP£ATIES
Have aomelhing you 1no ~ 147·3341
Modern ho'me in front
with 2 deluxe units ln re·
.ar. For sale by owner.
$207.SOO. Open for ln1pec·
lion Sal/Sun btwn
11-SPM. 2409 F1orida St ..
HB."6·~7
BOAT
IAYFllOHTS
Several fine bayfroot homes
with pier & slips
Bl LL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3·1 · B"v\rck D11v•· N B 075' biol
llG CYH MEW TOWHHOMI $140,000
Beautiful "Oakcrest" model w/large
Ii ving rm & formal dining. 2 Bdrnis, 2
baths & bright sunny kitchen. Pool,
jacuzzi & tennis cts. Sec. gate.
WESUY M.. TAYLOR CO .. UALTOIS
21 1 I S-Ju~mk ... lloed
••••••••••••••••••••••• 111&750each.'
Little Island Charmer. ~ I I 'Quail~ ol a lot. 2 stry, lri front • p•---yd. Seller will h elp ~
finance .. $131,250. Call Prap..-l•a '
Bill 675 3859 A"' 752-1920 ' • •• 1400 QUAil ST. NlW I~
....;;-,, .... ,... r007 New Coodoe, 2 Br, 2~ Ba.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 frplc'1, ceramic tile
Peninsula Polnt fixer. By kitchens & bath. Pool & spa. 675-4912 Broker owner. 3 brm, l:V.. ba. 1-"-------
673-&8 Prine. only .MISSING!
3 Bedroom, 2 bath! VA & G • • r.. I 002 GtMral I 002
FHA lerml t Room lor ....... •• • • •• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• ••• • •••
CUSTOM IUILT JUstUSTED! 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, wood MEWPOlrT Can&. H.L 644-49 I 0
Boat or RV. Call Now!
REDCARPET7S4-1202
IVYCOVIR•
IRICK TUDOI!
Cute 2 BR collage + floors, new water heater. IACK IA Y VU badlelor apl. steps from water aortner. copper
NIVACY 2.000 Sq. ft. 3 BR, bonus _,....,... 1002 ....... al 1002 lhePRObaPyER$1TlES30,000.6.7C3~~10T plumblne. BeaulifuJ pool
This 4 bdrm haven is an rm., fam. rm. W/ wet ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------'"--i With beater & filter . executive reward · green b S--' -..i • RV I 022 M y _._as ..., """ ar .•• m....,....1ac.. -------• ·-coo c--.. Mcr an .... __ • ..,.,... b.1111, blue Pacific, a ~-· ........ 000. Fee. 7 1 C,.,-m;; •--Mc,._..._ home to make 1l all ... ..-. -IE UHlfi>UE IH 50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._., -
worthwhile. Corona del tBB4 I . DOWD Does lhe t.bou&t:t appeal $SJ, toCUSZ , I TrtpWX 1110 He wpotf llYcl
Mar at It's best! 1436 RW.TOll '44-0I14 to you! Ir ao, consider TOTAL l>OWH! 2 Bdrm.. l balh home Coato Meta 541.7729
Xeyview. Open daily till 3br. 11 .. fncd yd, c.l-e ,_ joining the prestieiou1 Windloc roadway lo with rear units. Sound In·~~~~~~~~
__ ... .., .. 0 000 "' "" "' olfices ol U-'-ue Homes ll08ri.og 2 story retreat! tmenl in Corona del I-...... _, . shopping,etc.$\'iill,SOO.All for a rant.utk 1978. Ac-Private grounds protect ~e:r $175000 MesadelMar,byowner,4
...:terms.:.:.___:· JV_63_1_·0900 ___ ...,. celeraled commission secluded entry to lavish ~ • ..:.51· e..a. L TY BR. Poo!. :ltlnt cond scbedwe, ln·bouse swing UvinJ room. Gourmet ""ftl" 5A Owner Wlll carry 2nd,
llAHDHIW loans. creative sales kitchen overlooks sun· * 494-1057 * '93,000. 947 Pres.idio Dr. l 11-$65, tOO! aids, computer terminal shine courtyard! Wind· Call anytime 979-'2251
lts tnie! A brand new • a<tlve lraming & ad· Ing stairway leads to NEWLY REMODELED
~
11-..1-.•1<1\lf' ..
c\I) f Cu.~ ... (0•3•i ~' M•·
Walls ol ivy a.reel charm·
ing cottage in Newport
Hts! Colonial Uvlna rm!
Rieb redwood decor!
Pub tavern kitchen
w /walk-in pantry. 3
Larie bdnns, 2 deluxe
baths. Man size ·den!
French doors lo private
garden pallo ! Lush
grounds w /sparkling
waterfalls.! Just listed!--------custom built home at on-ministration. Be unlque sweeping master bdrm 3 BR. S. OF HWY E/Sade Custom home·
ly S65.900 full price. Ex· In '78 with Unique Homes ~s child's retreat! 675-7931 2000Sq. fl .. 3Br • huge Breathtaking value!!
Hurry !! Call.~
FO~EST E
OLSON
~' ......... .
VETS
FREE
<ii ......
UstofH1•11
Cncltlllfo
Move in Free
·a11 Prices
All Areas
THE
HOME STORE
(coll 2~ hours)
964-2455
5C...lllG•ap
PRJCE REDUCED $5000
Vacant, put 5 cans in lbe
garage + workshop, 4
Bdrm, 2 baths + 20x20
den on b11 lot. in good
neighborhood. Bring
your palnlbrusb. Mu1t
sell rut ror only $164,900.
c:aU:
SCOTT llEAL TY
SU.7533
$41,000
This is not a misprint! ll
as a super 2 Br twohme,
w /pool, clubhouse le
sauna. Prime end unit
location w /pvt patio.
cto.e to shopping.
754-7100
FAIULOUS
cellenl locallon on tree Real Estate. Contact Jim Hurry! Seller is anxious. fam. rm., 3 car gar., on
lined street. Etltabllshed Wood at &75-6000. Jackie 847~10 COZV 3br, 2ba + guest R-2 lot. Agt 646·7171
neighborhood. 3 Spacious Handleman at S46-5990 Ol'IN "' 9. ,, \ fl)N IONI 1•'<1' house. Frpl. 2 patios. R-2 sr·RTER
bedrooms + 2 baths. r•· I lot. Prln. only. $157 ,000. "" ~gr.r~t i~~:~:i.ac· --•VETS* . .~ll~lillj} Owner,640-
7000
Ho ~~ty~~E W
Ol'fN l11 '1·,•~1L . .1t·iro1tN~1 Z.ODOWlt . ' ----··--~ STAITIMG0"17 PROPERTY in Oran4t? I. l~~!·111~1 Z:..OCoth ~._~TSIDER-2 .. or slowing down? This County! On large bh1f
· f_ 0 •, ::. ,. ___ an
11
: all areas. all ~ neat, 11weet 2 bdrm. kot· I~ wilh room to eiq>and.
-·--11c:::111::1••-.... With charming 2 bdrm lage will meet your lhis3bedroom,fnierup·
YeteranHooslngAgt. home bringing income needs; remodeled last per wilh Palos Verdes
OCEAMFRONT
REDUCB) ·
SI 5,000
Owner anxious. low
down, make offer. Pnnc
only. 548-7219 or SSS-4221
IEACH VALUES
5 Bdrm Peninsula Pt
~ to beach. $197 .500.
Newer Ocean view
duplex. Dana Pl
11'9.500.
~ Bdrm , Co rona
Highlands $167 ,500.
private beach/ World
Wide 8.rokers 67a..M$
whil e you d evelop year with many, many PeninsulJI view bas ler· 541-0100 another unit. Close to extras.1bere'1 a mom or lific apprecuatioo poten-
altopping & transport•· teenager's studio una1, tiaJ! 0o1y a1so.
JUSTUSTID! tion. Better take a look. too! Below Coast Hwy. & 1£ ·Q~~ 2 B d r m . b o u 1 e + 646-TIU only SlSS,000 , Plac9 ;:tct.tric':i\~0s~I:~ (~1Wm3§1$1Jj ~ou>na dJ ulfatt Pr~ U.. $1:19.~HCOMI!!! Real btate -~tU'eJ. MOO ou~J-"20 1U01
BALBOA PENIN. 5 llACHUTllEAT Gl.J-849~ MISAVBOE
Years young. duplex, 2 $57,900 VIEW 1435 E. Coaat Hwy .. CdM Out ol state owner must
up & 3 down; ocean aide Steiis to pounding surf & aell 3 BR, 2 ba.; on cul de
of b Ir d . Pr Ide of crystal sand! Back yard sac. SBS.000 ownership property, is b 1 d ColtaMfte 1024 A JobnsooBkr 979-4964 good rental history. ay area P aygroun · ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·-------
.. 1111.000 lncluding laod! W 1nd 10 g w 0 0 den Owner moving over seas. ... walkways to secluded en· UC 500 Will this · t 673-83 M2-2253Eves. try! Gourmet kitchen. °""'' a sac. immac. co .
Step-down conversation IC..o..al."' lage style 3br home.
area +fireplace! .-w..--n1 Many goo~ features .
Sunshine breakfast p • ted $75,750. For ammed. sale
patio. Pool, Jacuzzi & Gift call 751·3082or 673-3430 associated alx bedroom custom
home. Linda Isle. Over
SOOO IQ. Cl. wllb pool , Jaeuui. sauna 4c slip ror _______ .,.
SS' yacht. Use the Dally Pilot
IHI<" 1 11 ., 11 r 11 l T ri 11 s
J 1 ' l/'t foll 1 ,., ' '&A!
volleyball. Garden Uvlng Popular balcony model
al its fmesL 847~10 t.ownhome. 2 bedrooms,
"Fast Result" service
directory. Your
service 1s our
specially. ean 642-5678 ext. 322
Ol'IN "' 9. 11s11.-•.ro "' "'" • d In in g are a, I a r g e
I master suite. Deluxe :~~~cq:.~·: tvtl lHl!I: ~~~·~,:.i:·"··m
abarper than a double
e daed ruor ! Agt. tPf ICH COMDO
to sell? CJasslfled ads
lt well. 642-5671. Sell idle iums
1002Ge•NI
19461 BrookhUC"st
M2·56'18 1-tlsltinqon Beach
t 002 ----=-----·--------
497
•
3009 OML Y $12,500
RACH STOii Bright & cheerfuJ end un·
WITHPAUIMG It. Btll. tllghly upgraded MISAVBDE
Upgraded 4 Bdrm. ram.
nn .. separate dining rm.
l97 ,500. 546-437 31 or
..............................................
cm ·
110111 ILlllS · CD.
OVER 50 YEAAS OF SERVICE
CORONA DB. MAR
SPECIAL
Charming i'am. Home -One Story
Colonial W /3 Br . 2. Ba. Liv. Room
With F .P. Lrge. Bright Kitchen.
Attractively Decorated Thru·Out. 2
Sunny Patios. Well Landscaped
"Yard. Near Ten nis & Shops.
lJ.57,500.
CHOICE
POOLHOMI
Top quality 3 bedroom. 2
bath with no-wax kitchen noar. ded ca.rpetlna • draperies+ much much
more. Add a sparkling
swimming pool It a low
price or 989,900 " you have a real eood bll)'.
CALL~21660.
C:SELECT
T' PROPERT IES 1-•0C-IAH-•FaO-MT--
MEWUSTIMG
3 Be' 2 Ba, neat, clean, won'tlut.
$41,000
Olannlne 2 BR. borne. 2
car garaie. Best awlm· mini It fishing area,
1reat neighbors!
$Z7S,OOO! ..... ..,,...,. ......
•615-7060 .
Storefront on Newpo 2 bdrm, 2 bath w/comm.
Blvd-over 2,000 sq.ft., pool used by only 12
+2adjacentlota.Bulld owners! Close to
lo& ii versatile ira l Westcliff Plua & "Doc·
usqe, loll may be t•v tor's Row ". 64&-7711 ~=~.j~~~~-(~1wt113a1mma
Kurr Wh1I\ ~-:.il ru
]9111 Nt'WJ1<> 1 lllvt.l N 0
, ~ 1 ' f . ' it.JP
Real &late
SB.LBS MOVB>"
4 Bdnm, lots of xtras.
Mesa Verde home n.ear
r ~-POOL shopping. transporta-
4 •llRROOM tion. Xlnt location. ..., Terms to suit your $11, 900 budget. $85,000. M6-2313
Spacious entry way or .. ?."'N ·~ 9. 11Sfl/N10 Ill Nl('f' ~~~,~~~~ !~IUftlld pre~um ar•de wall and ~f~~~'~ .. 1~:!-~-~-~=~·~-=-~-~=~ floor coverings. Natural
wood buminl flreplace, a.tAM HA.UTY
proieulonal landscape. OHL Y $62.5001
Owner needs fast 1ale, FHA/VA term too I
bWT)' call M 1ck 962· 7788. Sharp 3 bd home on a . -IQ. K€Y -qwetstreet. Submit )'our
YJ RE:ALTORSh ~e:~ ~Ye::ct~~
FHA. w /krlter Plalta \he tlnl few years. Call now
lor deUlla. 545-N91
I
547-7066 By owner /Agi 1 ___ ReaJ __ Es_ta_u __ _
•EASTSIDE•
3 BR, 2 ba .. frplc. Super
clean I Next to park. Best
buy ln area, $72,500!
STUAl'T FIHE
UALTOI '11·5454
EAST
SIDE
Charmer! 2 Bdrm, 2
balh! No common walls! COLLIG! PAIK Fresh Paint! Modern
Jn 1uperb location, an kitchen! Double garage!
Immaculate, beautifully All for only $168.SOO! RED
maintained 3 bedroom, 2 CARPET7S4-1202 bath home with alone ....;.;.~------
fireplace & fenced yard I
PRICED FOR QUICK D.GP.. 102'
SALE. HURRY. $73,500. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1£1ft •• -&a Decorator's Model. Must ....,._Pl tee. 3 br, l:V.. ba, !rpk,
.... 1uatded comm. Pool, Pr••• H•• Jtcuzd. tennis, condo. 752•"20 SH,500. By owner.
!400 QUAl\St NI NAOI ~
SCC~4llA-4£~s·
Tfiat l nf1l9uin9 W Ol't1 Gome witlr a Cllr1d:I•
-----....,~QA\' .. ,..... ____ _
• ._... ........ el .. ._ ......... _. .... ._lo,.,,. fow ...... -.ft.
'U NT EI I' I I' I I
M 0 T P E
l I I ·I'
r • !
•
... -I
....... ~~ ... •••• ~.~!':'!!.••••••• ~.':':..~••••••• ~•~•':'!!.•••••·• ~' ..... .. ....... '-".. lh~, lll'etrytrl tJ, 10T8 OM,Y p!!LOT •I ......... ••1 .,..... td4 .,,.. .,... .. • • ............................... ~······ .... -............... " ................... ~ .............................. ~ .... !~!~ ~.~.~ ... !!!? ~~~ ~ '''' "-'",... s-. Ollilerl... ... . Oller .... ...... "I k• ....... ..... DEJ::artd.l> J Ill "' . • .......................................................... •••••••••••••••••••••••
Value Daaa Poh•t HIAU.Y ,....,m b& twoahle. l'rl>le' :bl VllWlv•w• •c~YOH ~aoavtEW..ct.A111 s..cs. .. .n 101 .......,.,.,, .. !! 1400 ..._.....,.,tir ,ooo -....rlt ua becft coo· iar vet)' lllct f1I eOo f 14194n( si:IDO::'ft Cot tb.1.1 S Ir •••• .. •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •••••• •n•••••••••••• ••••••• --&o•utu. Ptlfect POil HOME 91.tC.aale ... al ~ ~:i:.: ~;(!U~~~~ ONLY tllt,IOO ron. f:t'!'n m,fia R~. Vnmt•Cola~.i Wul( to b\.\1 up tb l •~re. • ..... Mu.Its ~cr;.,•1::~.::~u~:~:~ · •' dla1q area • convena· ::f."tn~ ~-:' ~ra2~~ proi lnd1cO:d, 'c~~:I ZS.Sant. l BJ\ lllf l~ all ~1 Ol'Y i:~.t hs CUff Jlaveo, Eadf 9" ~ 1 cad w P1u \oe lo th• •ED Ucin ana. Dramatic day .... • "' privacy, 111 aecludtd Sweeotnr ocean vu•· 2 14 ~ w/frpk. Oner'• uoit: eJdD; " " e. a.urorma Hom .. •itb .t.oilbhltw. 1111.i.OOO. bath•, Nor pool 4 brlelc ouat Jacuul off decb, bl·be•Dl oel.Unp. eaa/ wpt arH. Or JatQll. Dtillr•&otrado .....Mi.al••• heated aod tllt....ct pool, Mll'JICALLYit ~ ....... .., Jalluul. teonlt " aoll · mw bclnn, latOce Datlo Styltah lnveatmeot. tr~~· tor property In (or hOul4 or eolSdo lo """""'" ...-.Ln endoNdent.ry•ltblront URN •• ff .. Mll 4ta.IUO eo,.nt. u~-.decl ever· cover.+ mucb more ln· Sl18,(Kk).4n-77ts ,...,brook or Norwalk. Newport Beach. Good * 4t4"101 * t~v•;fm~·1n~11J~ !b1a tabuJou• Dfftflold 4tM4t4 HO.IOIO ~traa= Jl:. ':i :it. Pf:~tf::':O..nr~ OcMtVJ•• c7"~.:·14Mm 0"tftfi~/J:·Jte:,
IYOWMll and out. end newly Plan 5 Park Home ~Wr:S w/ba.Jeony. vi•w call; Property t Jtr l\t Ba trl (~I/el ,.~:Ifft 1600 t. 1$50, Calta Meta. ~~f\&l, ""' I ttory draped, Ask lo& oaly t .. tW'• over 2$00 eq. fl. O>armJAI ftftl Oedrni + t11 *· '1581501 Ibale, Patrick T~, &owahtDi•· f>creeened •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• CA1121Mf
-ft. bom .. 4br, a~ •·llO. ti araotoua IMn1 with' du, a baU., tam-rm. Af·W·4'lf ,.UOWC>011_.f1• ... 500v· •~ SM4CL ... ..,. ----------'*. llv. rm .• fam. rm., lar1e bedroom•, COil)· AIC, l'uncb dn pvt "C ....,, •• • .. ....._ Z ..... 4-llex
IP9fJ&r.,J.cecul·dHac believab Y priced at Owoor 1"1·10lll' ' . Real !lit.ate ith W. llPsraded bome ln pre· Salo-Leue-Trade ~location. New
b'n:l. dln. ftD,, 'U'fr kJt.. I pletet,y Ullfraded and un· front courtyard siJ3 900 A 40' IOAT SUP 2 Br 1" Ba, dtd, bi1b(yl C --w Side by aide lo peat
__,,-..rt ANXJOUSl I SUBMIT NOaTHYllW ... lioow i&i:f'oceaot .. _-•over_..,, eludu wa1bn, dryer, aw:a-.\A.6~ thln&l• •rock tencllJg. •l•w lot. fUo,ooo. ~ SlU 500. SELLER ts · •P1n tool\ t ~~ .~~-aU1e aru. PJ'lce Jn-17!'!!.'~,t~,Sutta rooh, buut. wood
Oma Point ns .. upper YOUROF.FERNOWI TWOSTOIY Marshall~tr. 67~ ::::~r:.!:1~~~ mlcJ"OWave ovn. &tQb w"veaue...... Only sm,ooo. cau DOW!
1l*lt. UntorMl .. ~t l.AMCHUALTY ·•• 2~ ba, 11• tom . rm., ~cb=~~BR. ,, ·~all ltlldta. 4tl-CN60 4H.JJJ7 LohfwW. ZiOO
ffl,IOO Orea& tnveat· ~ F<ll'a'1ebyowner,18r, W 0 \oacbooltl cm.pU',calli10wl J.yWY .... C.. Broker.5'Nm
• ... W/doa run. Many UP· ace ""' rm, Palo• Verde• aq. • ,.... ,, _., 1E1-•ooo w/frplc. L1e tnod yd ManhallJUty 87MeOO • I ~ o Br 21tti Ba, formal dlo· «>'xllD•t.otwtthtoo ft •••••••••••• .......... .
•T.. IOJ --.. ..-UT .. TI srad•I S12.5,000, Prine. C~MT ._...t:lea , f\>lo,laecomertotw/ce· b81d1. MNOGthly ln:_ome. ...................... -An• "' ·only . .c9S-581M u.... 8 2 ..-• -r'jjoj.\H D*llbadmintoacourt u1y ewport .alvd. IBJI~ MOOIL ...... e 4 R., "-,bat.bl + Uoo ow.iut· .... c:o., H AQ4 VIEW am .6L'PY. ~auon .... 500. Tb1I buutltul IOOO 14.. ft.
10% DOWN OM&.Y$12',iOO WSE/O"IOM z=r:ib1: ::.;.r~ ~ ,, JI j~all ~ boulleoaz1ttiacm.Fan·
Waahln•ton model . ~H llALTY ~~r ab~. w .. t Nlne ocean I SW.800 HUGE •rm n().055.'I • I taatlc view, OWDU a.ox· Me~Ml .. d eouldbelorO>dnn,den, Hl-2000 coDdo; endwdt; w/paUo CAYWOODREALTY ~--ac• loul.BKJ\. Ille•' BA, I atory, cor bll fmly tto, 1undock right on the golf courH. INC. $CB·l290 HOME Ctfhfr.o 1071 l'rapmt,!'110 ('I01'R
4>!!,,.S.!!,J.t nerlot.2-.tbars,only added to matr bdrm. LOW 70'I Wuber, drytr, re!rig in· ....................... l4000UAA4ti·._&W~tuac ----~------
mo'a okL No clc.ing co. P r o t e • • t o n a 1 l y cl~ed. Tennll 'i health IY OWHH --.... 1 ...._ .._ t.s.Ownerw/carry ron landacapedw/briclcdeck G«ldvaluefora1tarter club racilltlH uail. NptHtapoolbome 3 8 ,., AGENT l1S.lM2 MIWOMSSf COllllOMIRl-•/T•w" .• •-.._.u,...,.s lfld.S..toapprecia~. & open llrepit. Newb home In lovely Irvine. 3 Mlt'Yelou.s opport w Jae fam·rm, compt.tely up· OCIAH YllW ........... 1100 Loca~ beat' w•ter at lllted. '159-1501 Bdrma., 2 ba., family now fOt' $'00/mo. A buy gradea ._ U ·mdl 'd. MIWPOIT HTI. f thl 5 BR h H••••••••••••••••••••• JJu11t101ton Beach. THE HOME STORE ;:::,·11~~~~!!U.~~.Y wilhin1)>r.49~ast. Immed occupancy. Price JU1t. reduced w l:=ed o! priva~ 1::'.! Condo, Huo.tiocton ~tJU1ime.J.&t. ft~J l)J
55
Easy Uv~! Fr'plc, ext UH of rocb $1Jl.(Kk)on thll a bdrm .' pr•• tl 1lou1 A It 0 RJvtora, z BR, 1\4 ba, by IUURS i'API"~• ... aro1uid pool If ftplo. familY 111\, bome near Capl.attano. Watch the OWDT. ~SS Have many ch<Jtce lot.a,
lW!f• ...... 104 ...... . ............ .
DUSTtCALLY •uc:• SIH,000
I 8tCl'f u.cuUve home.
Wood P•lf•d floort, llqe laml y kitchen,
formal dlnel FaatuUc brmua room too. C\lstom
covered p atio. Spec
tacular family home
J>rleed to Hill Call 753-1'100
Ol'fN llt f • IT'S Ml 10 8l NIC'( r
ft~~'.~~jJ THE REAL l ~;a ESTA.I EHS J ---
CHAIMl9'4G COHDO
Real !lltate Oreal fenced y with Won't w' $.1'5,000. CaU CU-ff 'Dr. It hu peHed boat• ull Into Dana .,......, allo-~ acres • up.
covered pat.lo, a BA'•·· for appt, 645·2549 or otlt fln,.1 ahutten • a Harbor. 1195.000. IWts Ide 1100 Pnced rilllt. Seller tub·
hp\c. "more. Super cor-~3G6eact. Frank. brtdr pauo. AMCHORA•I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ordinatica ~tome. Laat
ner lot altordl Hturtty, $7f,fOO MAllMllSCOYI ..---...~s ~ex, Marot••rlte Ave, ol 1pec:ulaUve IQU'UL privacy II Ideal enter-_.,,.TY 1.11.1."11.46~ ..,.,,-,.,.~, ·-mat ~ment. '85,900 (40) HIWPO T -••-• 17 ... , . So. or Hwy • .By • ('71')m 588\ I •Park Udo condo, apllt· 1"" 4t6-JJl I owner.2U/17S..llU OR~
A. Driftwood Uat le ra U.Y t llAC:H level, 2br, 2 ba, fee land. s.tG AM I OIO Mcom ,...,.,., 2000 ~ •• DtMrt
landacaped, cas BBQ, Beat priced condo In SIS.000. Alt, &71-1775. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •~~ • ea.11.00
d ood d
area.3Br2Ba,meadow-HURRY!! ... ~... --. .,.
TODAY'S
BEST VALUE!!
re w eckan1 and--------Ulle aettloc. Prldo of Be CAPTIVATED by thi. ,.. ...... r-v"• ••••••••••H•••••••••••
fowUain in yard. Interior --------ownership. UDO ISU IB400 price reduction. HEIGHTS Colorado RJver, Neec!lea hat ures a I a r ge HIWISN'T 4 x·' .. br1 ba "'• liv rm Cornlttnporarlly de-DU-•v Calli. PP.bu quality bit, bedtoonu, UJe balhl and .. l ..... • cOl''dt central air, S. Cst r-t.llA 3 Br l'L Ba • .._... b'l
wet bar. IMMEDfATE ALWAYS HST Nleuel Shores com--1~ Ota•tennls/bcb. P\ua area. Sacrtrtce at Extra aharp 2 BR Wlita, bom;: 12~5;' :':/.:
MOVE IN Av A IL· 11'1a beauWul Plan 43 in munity·privat.e beacb ac· SMB• Ownt. l1a.8261 f19,SOO. liurry ~call: both w /prvt pat.loa. c8l}IOrt& patio,4'' walls. ABLEI I Alk1na $91,500. ~ =•:x~mc;t~:c;,rg~1; , ~· lu~:d j!;~~l.3~er~.· $10 000 VERN JOHNSON RLTI\ Owner will help financo. 6" wul&tiOCI, w /D, c.nl. ~ BR
... • oo'wN 540-4646 !:~ . ..,!.•lo or trade atr. 11wra1e, pvt bcb,
• 2 °"home la com· 2&. Stone frplc, upgrd -..,., boat dock, min to
I
pletely insulated, has a kit., & carpeu, ceramic _____ .;;...;...;;.._ __ 1 Druid nu Jbr corner lot URCilNTLY CAU. 640-5112 CHinot, alto 111110&
wtap-aroundpaho,areat tile. Hlgh-beam cell. IYOWHB home. Ownertrtll carry FOi.CiD 50xUO homealt e.
locaticn near park and Below market. MUST Spacloui ExecutJ ve baJ. ot flLS.000 at $1650 TO sa 1 T r a n • t e r r • d • pool. quality drapes and SELL. P.P. •118,000. .._ __ ,. n.a-b Lb per tno. No qualilyin& ..., w/tacriflce. J . Claco, carpeting. Priced ai an ~ ......... " .....-m, ' • 1..w 1n Spacioua 4 BR, home de-'11447i-lll06or1·3Z&-1791 OMLY$62,000
Bttll1 u.piraded w /loads or :mu. Shows llktJ a WOODQIDGI
model. : bic bdrma. l.IALTY
al!otdable$88,500 •...a.-a-.t w/view lo proatt1iou1 =·1:'~~7~ · lianed for Informal en· ._ ~ I 055 Dover Shol'et on Galaiy tertainln1, around a coiy 2 + HOUSI o.t ef~ •••-•••••••••••••••••• _Dr_.a.a. __ ?.aaa __ --... __ --------•I brick frplc, abundant P'roperiy 2150 LAKE FOREST UDUCm UDO ldtdwn abelvca w I ex· COSTA MISA •••••••-.•••• .. •••••••• red hill~: .. Spice for boat or trailer. 55 I ·1000 SPECIALISTS N;f;rt Crest. Condo. qultlte hand rubbed Ownec's unitinrearwllh Hi ~a--'....c, brdwd Qin,iure up tbou&hl• of cablneta. Wur1a budget bufe fire pl ace io Wbat a lifestyle. Only 4 --------
fflold. 758-~1 55 2-7500 ~~~~~~~~~! Over aoo homes avail•· ,,....;. aA......., the let.surely life on Lldo prtco ug, VA terms beautilul family room!
c::3 Walkt:r 1: I ct!
Real Elltate
S&5 Raalo Specialist..
3,• or 5. bdrm models
avail, tome w /pools.
~
Ptnninllon Propertl"
COLUMBIA
NOW AVAILABLE!
ble in Lake F ......... for uni, a ll • a~ ba, den, IaJe awayfJ'Om the buatle avail. Call now. SHcUn•Jlaas door to BY OWNER-Collefe v ..... ~ wrlam & library. Side· ,, ,. Park. "Yale" model. ule, leaH option or ocunview. Reduced for It ti...ue ol busy •treeta. 540.3666 pool! Ra Y landscaped.
Move ln cood. Many un. lease. Call TODAY tor immed. aale. Owner. See tt\ls beautltully Sl.J1,500. ... But Selection seclwl.ed retreat • auc-
Colleio Park offera tb!J arldetl. Patio "•undeck. s1u,soo. 60·12'2, cumb to lta charma. Call __ J[l~~~~-1 I' 'Quall~· fabulous and ideally Call foe appt. Sat" SWt. Ca.•c.fia1~~Rlty 642·6706 now I PICIC9
b:ateci 2600 aq. n. home s.si.a56 --------1 8Y Owner. a br a~ b• a---&.I
y wner r 2 a wQlt.e water view, m· VA/FHASUBMIT 1n 1910 large arowlnr family c lhed I JI • I ' Mia'"-Vl.fo I 067 mac. Nwpt c....i coodo. ,., 3 BR. lVa ba, frplc, paUo uoo OUAIU;NIW HACM
Pn Plec..OC..Slde
2 & 3 BEDROOll
VA·FH.A
GARDENTOWNHOllE.
2 car garaaes. ev .. a.1s1.1u1
CUSTOM
COHSTIUCTIOM for the eueuUve with a B o 3b b ··"-' I Ontu r..-vpwr-• ••
NOW~KlNG$H4,500. · c!untr~a k~t~ ~":'~r:f ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner leavina •late. ~·r-21™ " BBQ. Corner lot, Mldlr -•y•ouu--•L•o•v•1•1T-t-1 freab P>t inude/out. Cul· 4 ll + Sac. Prin only. f7J..Ql3 151.soo. A.11. '93-1211 do..-out I . · de .. ac loca nr comm Open Sun. 15, 24662 San 2DUPLEXESLEFr BeauUIW 3 bedroom, 2~ park & pool. &tuat ice Vincente. 1.145,000 B•I NEWPORT BAY FRONT Mlait. a..I ..... BRADFORD PLACE Near S.C. Plan Bkr
<M'LIX
Spacious 2 bdrm, 2 bath,
fireplace, bluaa & dis-
hwasher. 1 Ca.r 1arages
bath with 30:itZI family before seller list.I w/agt. 2700 ~ft. San Valarde 2.Br, 2Ba Condo, new 640-1311 Hatd·to-find a BR condo 557·9110
l"OODl. all new carpet and •.ID>. Call ?63-lS2S or Modal ciu. f\1.11 MCW1l1 bide, l~~~~~~~~!I in unit, ireal loc, ~.900. --------no wax tll•. Brl1bt, ~12:l7I •~a~ boat .Up, 1111.000. Pnnl· A&\,493-6211 •2Trf•Xff*
'°' each unit. PNsUge coromunlty. Low vaun-
~ and 1uper clean. · -...... ,.._., only. ~eve/wlmdl IAYSHOllS Near Lake Park. Mln. to Gf'Nl HuntJnctoa Beach &.,...... leeclt I 04' '79 .. 133 T.tfn I 090 bch. 1-i BR, 3 ba; 1"3 BR,
cy area. Low price of'
Sl..20,(Kk). Good renta. Call
Geo. Frey. 50-3'Se -
location. -a,500, Will •••••••••••••••••••••• OUCHl R.cenl.l)' redecoratod. S ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2•,~ ba·, 1·'" BR, ~ ba. 5 _.. • Nult Mil 111-~nd •-'". 4br, ~ ..... .__ • pie"' 0.. bdrm 2 b ~ d ~ "' CIGDliderVAbl.l1er. RA.MCHUALTY 1•~TIUY ... '"" __... .. .. ., •· ar en BY OWNER-Foothtll caragea. frp\cs. $185,000
BEN HINKLE R.E. INC
551·1000 _. ~ ~~ .• ~•ut.loca,l1r $10, 00 dwn NEW home. s .. uU/u l)' •P· hlJh, Very 1harp 4Br-, each..11~·1113A.labama, A..&ofCJL..&-.
-·---::---WOODlllD~I wtthltaowruondfbeacb Ca ~•8'7415 ~• at yearspricel stlituous park·llke ~. • · ...... ty 2600 IJ -441611' -1.U;: "'"OC~OMT Call"""" ac. tLD,800. Newport vu 4 BR home. ==~ t.bruout. 3~•Ba, home on pre· Hunt Bcb 536 1718 -.......,.
2 PRESCOTTS In i..1una Beach. Of· · C f CallSWl.t~I 1treet, w/wrougbt lron1----------•••••••••••••••••••••
Larieit WoodbrldCt fered at '310,000. . ..,..,,.. le•tl I 06' Of'IM SA~ 12·1 • , UI I Ulfi fncd 11 heated pool, 1 UHITS C.M. Idaho, Beau.tzO ae farm •
• --------homa. 2600lq.f\.+3 Cat IJl-f41 I ··~OJS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ft.. 1 mb ST. 5 llALTOll 640.00 0 dreaaln1nna"11 pat.lo, brBt~~u,1 brandbnew ... 1 20BRmlnlfrbom~V~,3 gar.5ar4br+den.1Ba, 12JSTICttRw La Bell LOWIST .vup ex, '1 ·ownel'. new cent.raJ AC. 1unken ..... ~. IP.i·2 r,l~ba • a "" ... e . ..-rn, U. Clllctl• S.., tri ir ('OOd f 1 doon to und, tu1lJ furn. OCIANRONT liv rm, PV 1tone frplc in townbouae, all bllns, bunkboule, loatlnC shed,
... It couldn't hurt to call fncts~~t\i~y upv'. Mu;; PRICE JN NEWPORT 11.51.(Kk). i'Tl~UI Surf at your frnt dr, fam rm. R-19 Ln1ul. As· crpg, drpe. Hurry. buy etc.$82,500.714/~121.
Chuck N'aab about a re· lean Pa\lfl'S tile. Lae lot. 2 BR. l BA, dbl. wide c rcat fam bm, _, Br. a u m a b 1 e 9 '4 % now • lJt uaer deprec. 208/788·2832 or write
wvdl.na career ln real NrPark•lake. $1.M,OOO ···~~ moblle adult park. FBMAHDO'S empltl'J upird'd . loan·$41,000. Seller must TocnLee,Rltr,842·1~. R.11'.D . 11 Box 90,
eetate. P'ree tra.ln!n111 •S19S.OOO. Lae ts21/mo. !! Jll,ae>O.C.IJ87~. NDIAWAY suo,ooo. OOAST net 160,000. Homo 11 Bellvue,ldano1311.S •>'W~~qu~all~ty~·~6'0-~5l~Ol~·~~I Bkr/Owtlr 551.6121 or PAMTASTtC VmW NAl.PtMCHtM 1 Br, lbatb bouu on PROt'ERmS,913-5'11>. worth SU.5,(Kk). Mual aell J lln.. ....... _ wkdayalS$-3535 The most. provocative REALTOR . Immediately. 13621 ..,. ~~ 2900 l1ll al.nee the apple, 1t -----'----<Pet Peninsula It.· lit 3Br. 2~Ba Twnhse, many Malena Dr. Appt Plea1e Nearly new, the beat & .,.... __ thla beautilul Cruu Abel Kl.: COMOO time OD ~rt.t 11117 yn. upsradea, lncludlnc cpta 839-5787. Qlceet 4-Plexa tn Hun tr •"••••••••••••••••••••
DIYOIC:I WOODBRlDGE PLACE deaisned , bdnu., 3 ~ JUSTIB>UCID Ast.Ma-8331 " wood n .... alnt rec Wesllll .... IOtl lntlon Beach. A.akingon-2.s BR, 2 ba, forced a ir,
l'OICIS IA.LI Specl•l orterlo1. 3-5 baUJ home overlooltln1 •L _,,_ •~ ...... acb. Btll ...... ""YTO"ov•~ faci.l, Newport Ten'ace, • ly $?2.5.000each. heat.., (rp\c. lCo filler up. bdnn. Coot.tmpor•-de-... It •-.. _ b c ,.. ~ .... .,... .._.... • 51 an o w n e r a 4 5 ... 1 a 2 •••••••••••••••••••••• • .,.O_. ll ... LTY ....... ~r Meredltb Oardtnt · t.cbad tam.Uy bomM ln ;u.·-~-~ ,;;~:~a;.,,:1000° l'Ondo profeaionalb' de-Bluff•. profeulonall1 eves/wlmds "' 3bt' O>ndo. z~ba. f11>lc, -5~:_75-3~ ,... &46-8301
hoine, 4 .Bdnna, family, open, woodey dt1ian. --""""' "'"• corated. l bii bdrma, a ~ropean decoraUn1. . dbl clad 1ar. Show• Uko a .... •
formal dloln1, lar1• JUlt abortwalk&olalte'i .___ baths • clo.e to pool, lbmnlnllbr,lbll1faml· SEAYllW model. Bri1ht open Int. WANTED TO RENT w /opUon to buy I or 38r
home in Santa Ana lfMU. ~
15JIM awhnmfna pool. = 1D wi.,e of Wood· sauna. Is J•cuui or walk t7 rm."~"' uuaa + New Btd.ford aBdnn + Sell by owner. $'19,800. = "b~:.~ i:;r; ~;;_From s111,ooo. ~'llillllii' ~.~~f:_Uo~h. Only $i1~~.P:::ckBT'!!or!.t ~~·~r:~~·~~ _•_'7722 _______ , HEWPOIT
HEIGHTS
Call --------1 !:~~~-=:.:..:=::'._! Property Haute 56M41' med. •al• .... 500. Ownr Other ..... .... IUILDll'S llOdetr" YllW OC'642·'9$0 49T·ts..'IS ...................... .
DUPLEX
())sy & cute, Z bedroom, ....._
CLOSIOUT Calallaa •unteta, "city Real!lltate JUSTIUDICOIATID 19liatat0.......
•M IRVIMI llehta by nllht. a brrn 2~ --------• b a • B y o w n ,. . I._ ",.llU...,4 _ .. _ Ivan ella home, needs
'Oftly 2 patio born .. left. tll,,500/ofr. 09·4585 ~ ".., 3 BR QllJUU ln the Blul!1. WOl"k. Unbelievable eav--------...i ODeaBr+dea,laontlBr event OICUTIVE l'l&t.7otaquarefoot.1• lnp, SlJ8,000. 4~~1 Jba, MIWAtAPIO•UM plan, both w/! bat.hi, · w/parquet oak floors. pool. ,.50 aq ft. :148"'413.
\ UNDER Ao down, only tr,lol rehi1erated alr By ownet", z BR, 2 ba, UT A Tl CU1tOm camel carpetlna. 1117 Commodore am down ca teo,000. cond tloning, mirr~red frplc, wallr tD bcb & A ... h_!..mty ~welllnl of ~ ~~ .... frDdlce'u'°;',!'aYt ._.,...__._ 1076 WebavelOcbole.bom• wardrobe doora, 2 car toW\'I. JU, room for addi· c .... a.u • -•1.1w. laqe ....... v uu'"'I..., 1• u:i ---from *57,000 to '1'-1 au w/auto opeocr ... plua llonal unit. 1139,SOO. windows let in llooda of make thla home an out· ••••••••••••••••••••••• wtt.hJ'HAt.nna. Qah tor fUU recreation (acillUff $.7875atlU, wknda. daylight. quaint It lovely etandln I value at .$19,100
deWAlmaoc>opea.._ lncld~I 1 ll btecl teJm1I ueed brick frplc . A ilily$138,to0. t4Aft0" ~-on. «m,!>uloldn dnuepwl._; W1 U Mltw•k eowt.e, 2 und a pair 'n1ree Atth BaJ, 3 Br 2 retre&Hrom the hub·bllb . -~ _ut ho .. _ ~~!!!!~~~~~!t ol j AU tbla and Ba, 1pll~ 2 level home, ol the atty. Owner wlll Jot..6o.&anClemente. ::: I"ln• tool On Irvine lovely living r oom, btlpfinaDce.Seeltoow. 1f
f Bll.1 bet ltOO aq ft, lo Center I>r. (Moulton ldtoben, dlnlna, area 140.3666 ' (714) •rdol'I
bn P7lllDt. s1D& area, PrkwJ1) Justeut oC Jet· w /nice ocean views. '1M160
111..UR.ealtor. trey. Lnd:ry no, l&e closets, •
f71.,llmtof181"5 1bo1.1t 10 yu old. By ..,,~_, ..
t(fJll ,.,, ... ,, Call5'HJ11h1131 O'flOW. $TI1,500. 4"-aBSS
orSSl·IUlevn. ---------
WOOOlllD•I
Jlroedmoc.-born•, 4 Bl\.,
tam. no., atriu~_ pool1 apa, deddntt, h\atcDd., fenced. "The worb",
Redl.llOtd to ~.ooo AGJCNT MO-IMO ......... WALK to We1tellft Plaia lrotn
thll e.ltlant tmmbome. ~~~~
IMCHDOLL HOUSI
Walk to Rlviera Beach. ~natural canyon with
«*an .tew. S BR, I BA .tth extra ~ tot. Never a&aln al only '121,000.
BERTHA HENRY
Jt&ALTORS m Pei lier Ul-'121
& llNlf +1ASTE
A A ! I l A 0 N A D C S A T A P M H S 0 T R P O'S U 0 U T I P M l H T S L 0
M!tAOCAlRWTRIDGU tQ
l ERL Y k CI WY K'C'I WR H t ~
M Q 8 0 G W Q H L f P S J D T Z A P U 0 M T A T S Y X A S P C H H 0 R S Y I E U G R k R A S 1 A H R 0 U T P T P T
U L 0 H N I R 0 T V E A Y S 1 I I H T£iL10UCNXSMlTCL l[ ALS8AOHAPHW8KLLLLLD E N R ft S V G E M I Q L P M U T I H P
T 1 T 1 M W P T C E I £ t D S U 8·E c
~ C A 0 " l 1 K E T H L L U J H R l M C"PQTOVtCGL?Ml,lL~A
S Y ~ E $ V 8 l M t A L R S C Y S N I
completely redone PLUS •••••••••••••:_••-••••
daullng new S bedroom ....... Pw.W..d I IOO STUDlO. Two b•th1 ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• ....................... each, Clrtplaco and GuM4 JIOZ
....,._HoMtU."'9 dre•am kitchen• I .. •••••••••••••••• .. •••
At Its PfMlt $185,<XX>. INDIAN ~. a Br, z w,,. have numerous • ba, run. on beaut park
beautiful mobile homu 11 'Quall~ w/poot Wk $3.W, llo llCJO. tar aale ln establlahed • Place Olll5SM163otMWllll. r;rtc. tn CM, Nwpt Bab, Prapertl-. ' ..-.001.a.d 11oa;,.
L u n t l n 1 t oTn B cF~ , 712 .. 1,20 ••••••••••••••••••••••• aiuna, El oro, n 1400 ouann HIW atACH .. _., N J 1 ......... V \y. An ab o l m ar '"' ...... C1'ff· uoe •w.-r, w .. tmln•ter. I " price Tri~X . 2Ba. frplc. Cb•pl ranees to fit most I. a.. Calll'fS.S271
people'• p9cltetbooka, ..,_ M ... ~.._.. 314&
510,(Kk) to 5'0,000. We are 12 ~ o~~eTwn unlbl w I ••••••••••••••••••••••• unoaraayOUTphone en~y .. v. o,ll run ... 8.. . .. _ ... _
CAUFORNIAPAClFIC ttaw/peti01. SlS9,000Call • • .., 1 ~.Oil._ aud. MobileKomeReal~ 842-:1111orl13-3614 J:e ':;_~incl. Thru 2106Harbor, siezoe __ ._.....;... ___ _
M0-$937 WANTID:-Mlwpee t .._. J "' *• .. ••ot 1 ... ·-,.,.1 SO to 100 unltl, Ora111e ••••••••••••••••••••••• -aw -•• •" Co. Brks or Prins. I.tab ...
Sta eapa "•~. • ~n Pallma .IUtJ Inc. ~930CS $135, 1 Br nJoe bome
famUy paradlat. 31Jr + 11. .. -..... C.. SllOnlcel Brahare bonu. rm ln El Morro By ., ,._ -,.__ __ ,,_ ...
the Su. )'OW' own pvt $111,000 ....,....u~de, 1"·
bc:b, pvk rent Oll1y sieo. Xtra aharp Covlnfton --------CALL T 0 DAY I 4-pl.u, Prtme H.B. loca· s.a..... ·317'
(PK.lOM) Uoo. Immaculate! Need •••••••••••••• ........ .
CALU'OANIAPACJnc fut sale. S185,000.
Mobil•Home Ru.I~ "1Sa-1700or752·1~ PAN'OllAIOOVIEW J708Hltt>or,St.M °""'"'''"H~ro tMCr• Delwr 1 BR. den,•~ ba
640-IUT cc.do. Eleutllr to beach
0 -~•ST a&11 or Just watcb the amf. ...... ._ ... v -Pool, Spa. 1au11a. lO'MO', relQOd.i.cJ, atr• poolroom, ucurlty
clean, 1 br, $7IO!), l\an-. puk'J. SJ.O.!IO per mo AeroH from K·lbrl DVPLEX. fully renttd1 All 7 U /fH·OIOO . SllOP Ctr.1111 Harbor Bl 2S' 1wiminln1 pool. 11 ~ • •ac. Cll Adulta 0Al7. man Jacuul • fa\lDa, ..all 1,000 lq,ft, WvtboUe Seillta~ J 116 ...;;.;....;.;,...;.. ______ , Ide.al rot ..U ems*>Yed ............ _. ..... .
Ill N.B., Sllyllite .• IOO 141 A, crattaman. •1to,ooo. I BR. Ut b&. frpte, fu·
bealA dtcc:lr, ntw crptl" Jbltbr Realty '°""·· tHUO vl•• olUJdHD. 41lt,frp )t•lbdrJ,mlr-CM. peta OK. Tv ate:NO, rortd~7,IOO, .--to •f" llner1S NowUd t'fOOmo J"'flC:lallf. P.P.NH.MT DAMA POINT LillC~ a.•.C•l••le:
MOllo9 HOM1 'f'ti.PUX or.-. ~ tf.., Mooa Rllh above mar4na, 1•a1_;.-.;.__; ____ _
JIU. M-.n be °''";! bn, covn 1ara1••· ...._..._._ 'ti 1• lrotn ~rt. J!ac•llHt •toeo. Pltn Ol\11 pit. .." .................. .
COlllL fS500. <'7UJ '34-ll»..t_~ 8'11, • JI I II llOZ ..._, Mr. Clauson, ID'll _ ................... ~
1t1l J'lettwood, up· GA&\09 a.u.m •ct. ln •Ym• . ,....... ~ Mult"' dleDell.YPUotbrtQb•P. You toiG& filt-. an a ,.,... !Aw.,._.-&.-., ., nnJta. To pi.~ )'OUf' ..... etll ... -..... oww, ......... UM uawi~ tard, pboot v ...... ~AIL
cr...-.oi M:Wm!odq. 141 ... 00
I
-s.
K
~y
n•
r lt
oy
of
31>'
grf
ror ...
tnd our
I-SJ :led
MO lhin •
yer -
l•~l So
• i '
nt
n i~ :lee.
· ea-eom-li>(ul.
'd1u ..... -. slot
ll"IOO.
In Q (arine -
,T:i • 125.
S•~
--
New2brcondo. Pool, spa.
From $400. Also 3 br hse
'$400. K ids 8' pels oil.
675-4912 Bkr.
...,.. __ _
~. F*'-r i:t. 1971
......
• t
.....
Add lt. .. Bulld IL.Diaper it ... Hammer It ... Carpet SERVICE it ... Cem nt It ... Wire lt. .. Hoe lt ... Clean lt. .. Move ·
IL.Press IL.Paint lt...Nall IL.Plaster lt...Flx It ... DIRECTORY
'"'•1•~ c., ... QQC*e hi ••tliel . th••de · I --.Ta NRflNtJf'•rMo .....,.ya.,. "'"s.ntu .................................... .-' ...•...........•.....••.•••..... ····•·•·•······•••····· .•..•.•.....•.............•.......•.. , ............................................................. ~················ w.-. dnr, dabwi.hr ro· Maaler Crart1bun. OIUd-car.,bouMk plnl, ProtJa~LaMttap-AllCe1 Housecleaning. Would you prt(et a prO-PET&RSPAINTING VUYNEATPATCH Tree trimmlnJ, repair,
palra. keaa. 141·5841 S~dalty: nmodellna, liv•·ln pref. 6'0·0811. iDI • 1ardenla1. Maiftt. ~.reliable. rer1. Own fesa1«11J ? 30 Yrt exp Expr'd. Rua Rates. JOB.S•TE.XTURE remov1l, over i4 yrs.
IUl1time fl.nb.h, 4 yn local1¥. xtnt Befercne.. lod. rnowbl1, trimmlnc, trana."2-1'207or~7l Fbr even. appl 1n yr Free Est. CaU Geoe Free eat. 183-1'39 oombtnedex~m.83WJ
..... ........ reta.ao.3105 • "' Oalld Cate in my bO!he it\ :::m~ =· ~ee HOUSECLEANING ls oUt bome,9fil-8l82 MZ·~ PATCHrLAS?ERINO Removals, trlmmlng, •-• .. ••••o•••••o••n c.,.tS..-.lce Cll.CllJIMary,557-cm.8, . bu1lneu. Reliable Lm•C1f6119 ·• All PROFESSIONAL All type1 , Free prun.inJ. Freeest.Uc'd.
Haa rain dama1ed your ••••0•0••••H•••••••• cbs•tomeev•. x a.EAN·UPS/HAULINO aervice. Janice's Rag ........................ PaJntln&. Inter/Eder. estlml•.C.U~ lllsrd M!-~.d7-4l3l
upbalt! CaJI 631·2440. OllpetMaowllllatyoun Ct•«t• '. .Pnmi.ni·Plantin& c«lYAnn'sat64S-1800 ~~~Pl~G Reas,'WOtkgua.rM2-0386 PLAS?ERING T ..... ~.Uc.,lnaured. or mine. Repaln " .... ; .............. 1.6. Freeest. 6'2·990'7 Have time for younelf, ~or5;~=6 Pa.t.ntiA Eltr/lntr Ex· Hom~. addltlo111, re· ...................... . ~'s & cl~ ~lv~uar work R.J HlifmaD & Sob C:en G •n ~ call the MoppetlB Clean· --pr'd. ~est neat 'reu 1tucco. free etla, low Cocrt~aey style piano ..._,_..Ices !!t.J:l~• p . Free c:Mtr.CuatomAJttkAdd, ••••••••••••••••••••h• inc Service. 546-23113 re· Custom Landscape Uc'd964-tlMSDav~ · rates.-...2 leuonlblyourbomefor ••••••••••••••••••••u • patios cabinets HANDYa4AN·Carpentry ferrals Servlcea.Ken. ,.=u bee. • lnter. studenta. ""·-•-•A l ,. ' n ' lectri t '1 mbuin & &ia-3770 YOUNG MAN 5 yn expr • .. -m I Vidoria Lee. 5S1-<l7U SU-ANYMA'ITER ~wuqPOQ.,. s ... am e ean, 1«mlca. New conat. es • ca• P um g Gel\eral Housecleaning ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• _......;........;.. ____ _
Evel&wkndabyappt. Color brighteners; wbl I& comm'~· 645-4644 ot lloon.847·2717,557-4.504 exp. Call after' A.sk for Maloftry ln waJlcov;~· Free HOMESAVERS. Plumb-Willdowa..fltt
Default/Divorce $175• c~ 10 min bleach. Clean $48-'5tl. Lie & bOnded. HANDYMAN. Hom ea & Maria 543-4926 ... ....................... est.s. 64S-&57 Y in& "HeaUog. Free ellt, ...................... • ~~ :SO%• ~ :~mc!c~ ~o ~t~ Gen. C()htractor new ad· apta. Coneclentloua ,,.~!OldeCharLady 8~=k'c Sma~ Job~ Fine Exter. Paintins by $1.0 hr. Hooest le relllble Windows cJeaned. rt:• ~up tot~ ss. Guu elim pet ~or. dltlons, re mod., res.. Crattaman. Call 6'5..o30'A .uuuaecleaning Service. Jrvtne. tris.l~~aeve:Sa R. Sinor. St Uc., ins. Try aervice. BoCA. M/C t>K. aitonable, bu1Lneues,
Unlwfldetalner-default Cpt repair. 15 yrs expr. comm. Free eat. Spiro Glass 840-4830 • me.836-MSS24hrs. 751·3150or847--0383 homesl&ape.a.847·"61 ,
1150.00fullprlce Do·worlt myaeU. Refs 541~;547-0204 _ •••••••••'"........... Maaonry, ~oncrete, Prof paint'g & paper Drains & Sewer cleared You doo't need a IUD to Sl~:tllll ,_ $35.00 531-0101. ........ " ot.A.5s TH 1 5 UMSH 1 M E !:a~:!~; s. wp ~ ~ l ~ ~ hanging, work guar. No charge over $15.50 "draw fut" when you • cosuex .. a Cd•'= ....................... 640-0807 &U-8608 Free est. 536-4780,. W/C.O. C.M. ret1idenllal place an ad in the Daily 1l~~~~J:-:~~· ••••••~•••••••••••••• C-:~tm dr!~s1,1 sprleadds, Call btwn 7-lGam wkdy1. Housecl.:!u~ & office 536-4383 D. NeJaon 557-3783 ~~~Adi ! Call no...
calJ(213)434-391S BAKERY. Do you have • u ers '"'a wn ow G.1611 specialists. Spec. on Mm1MJ ' · p-1-..1.YourCattle ltafrtgeratloll 6517 i-...:.::;..:..:~-----
C41LatMakiltg ~~=?w~~ Ys°Ju ~=n::a:; ~~~~~~ ....................... aJ)b. le R.E. work. Serv. ~.~~: .. ~·:=·;:.;·~·::; ~zing in resldeo· ...................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• have capacity to provide BakerSt,C.M .~9-3325 SKIPLOAD£R. Dum~ 7 days wk. Bonded, ln· You'' We handle lrg & Wal homes. inL & ext. Retrig. sale. & 1ervlce. cabinets & abelvin.g for your needs. We offer tr~k. HAULING, tree sured . 5 4 O• 9 5 2 5 aml moves-or!ice & Pleue check our re· ReUable. honest work.
gar & ~ill. rms, calm qual. & serv. 5494995 Bedrlail work, grading, demo etc (anytime) household. DlSlance & ferences. Lie I 320881 Call Ernie 5'3-158$
made 640-71.54494-9Ma .......... i'h .......... 831-12$7 4 • local , also packing. Guar .. insrd, free est. llooft.J
. C-.t/eo.cr.te ELECTRJCAL SERVICE ...... Rosemarie'• Houseclean· Lowest legal rate. Ted. 636-7085 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• CALLS $15 hr, &: SMALL ••••••••••••••••••••••• ing. Be!s, reason. own UcJIDllrd. Cal T lll-IM4. Coast Painting. Cstm ext ROOFS installed factory
JOBS842.8233 occ Stud-t . ..,_ T. ·-~k. trans.642·1'103,645-3439 PhS4T-72'7I /int.. airless spraying, direct; estab 3S yrs. C.11 Silver Hammer Framing Quality Cement work, ..... ~ """ Harold G 549 2981 Co. Com. Res. Room done lbe right way. 18 ....._...Bedric Traah, l~ trim, Randy Exper reliable, own MOVING . HAULING & 681-6.2162 . unn .
adds. Ml-4820 Yrs exper. Call Jere Lie 327136 .,.., ""'74 842-5703. 979-0489 lnn1portation. ref1. CLEANUPS. Reason. Quality Painting. Lowest Roofs For Leu. All ty--. '""""""' Carmen 556-4192 Free est. Coll. students. ..-CUstom. remodellos. uni· 58&-4'52 ELECTRICIAN-Priced Strn1 student, big truck, B& 8 . 6'73-1Ul6 rates in town. Free est. Uc/bond'd Insur. Free
que & unusual work All types concrete' right-free estimate on tree cuts. clnup, hauling. Personalized Houseclean· Jack675-3336/67S.-7280 estimate. 894-0421 or
welcome.12 yrs ln area. blockworlt. planters largeorsmalljobl. 494-7~&494-2129 Ing own transportation . .......,Ser-tic ff Painting. Homea Jntr & _S37_-4_m ______ _
'Palombo Const. 962-8314 custom brick lie & Licensed 673-0359 M-..-11....._.__ CaUJ.W.674-3610 ••••••••••••n••••••••• Exterior. Specialty: bonded.642-6894 ·-----. ---------Nurse coosullaot 30 yrs Apll.Lorates.631·2508 &
Carpenter looking for ---------•K·Mel Electric. Ind., ••••••••••••••••••.-••• People who need people exp. Pnv. duty w/fam1ly •••••••••••••••••••••••
$1.62 per DAY
Tbat'I ALL you pay
rora
30dayad
int.he
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
oorr"owi..
64Z.5'71 writ, decking & ovrbang Pacific Concrete. Lo int comm, res, & mnint. svs. Want a REALLY CLEAN should alwayscbeclt the oriented ca r e. Ca I I SELL Idle items with a Ceramic Tile-Spec. In
spec. Clean writ, rera. day & full day rates. Honest & reliable. Free HOUSE? Call Gingham Service Directory in the 213/867-6776 for lllforma· Daily Pilot Classified Ad. enlries &J]oors, 2Syra ex-
Eves. 67~. Bob. MS-3257 est. 9'/9-8542. $24 .50 Isl hr. Girl. Free est 645·5123 DAIL y PILOT tion & appt. 642.:;678. per. 962·1883 I:=======~
HAPPY
llTllDAY
BECKY
REID
~ • I• ••
A.Ss1uaas
B.ECTIOMIC
TRMES&UP.
Rapidly growing lrvlnt
C.O hi! immed openings
in the r ol lowrng
•Kand Soldennf(
•Stuff utg PC Boards
•Wire Wrapping
<able &i Harness
SucC'easrul 1ppllcanls
will have &ood manual
dextA?nly It poa1llve can·
do attitude. Work hrs
IAM-4 :JOPM . Co. p11d
Banking
UMIOMIAMK
NEWPORT BEACll
Has An Immediate
()penina For An
DPa.t&ICB>
COUICTIOMS
CLBlK
Banking ex~r. desira·
ble, lite lypmg. Altrac·
uvesaJ •benefits. Plea.se apply in person
toC. McKinney. 610 Newport Ctr Dr
Newport Beach 558-52.80
Equal Oppor Employer
benefits. Salary open. BAR GIRL, neigbhorhood can"' apply U\ person: bar. full " pa.rt time,
PROGRAM DATA Salary +. 646-5.S44
IMC.
ATLAS CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH
Open Dally & Sunday
'Ul lOPM
2929 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
546-1934
IOOICkHPH
Restaurant. Eltper. thru
T. Ba .. desired. Apply,
Victor Hugo Inn, 361 Cliff
Dr, Laguna Beach.
494-9477 Apply, Mon thru
Frt,3-Spm.
Cai cal
TYPISTS l
SECRET ARIES
Seek temporary em.ploy.
merrt where we make it
wortbyourwbUe.
TOPJOS
TOP PAY
You're Your Own Boss
~o~ office •
~O., overload
557..0061
3723BirchSt, N.B.
loddruptr /Clerk Duties Include posting to ._ _______ _
ledgers, lite typing le
percentage computa-
tions. lO·Ke31 a must.
Xlnt Joe & benefits .
644~
IOOKKHPEtt
Exper'd. F/time. A/Pay,
invoicins. filing. typinc.
Beaut. pleaaanlofc. APP· ly in person to Mr.
F\leat~s. Robert Bein,
William Frost & Assoc, 1401 Qwlil St, N. D.
Bookkeeper, restaurant.
Experienced In Income
audlt & Data payroll.
540·7000. 4600 Campus
Dr-
IOYS • 4'1lLS 12-16 years of age. Even·
iag work. Obtain new
1ubscriptions rortbe Dai-
ly Pilot working with an
adult supervisor. Earn
Clerical
SR. TYPIST
.,tt>ictapboae
ISt.at
{JBM Executlve
IRepro
l'l'echnical
NE EDE~
IMMEDIATELY
Long " Short Term· A.I· 1lenmenla. Holiday &
v•eatloA pa7 .
Hospitalisation plan
.vail.
VOLT
't ......... , ... """ .......... .
3141 c ' Drii• 54M74t
(Across From
Orange<». Airport)
Equal Oppor Employer
$20 to SJO per week or Cerlcal-Gen'I Ole duties.
more. Call <.213) 59'7·0396 Accur. lyplst. Oppor for
noon lo Spm. (213) adv.549-1767.
498-2473, 5pm·9pm. CalJ
Collect.
IUSPEASOM
lmmed. Opening
Part-time Mon·Frl
Apply ln Person
IUFFUMS
1 Fashion Ialand, NB
Equal Oppor Employer
cun.
F /time inventory ~lrol
clerk. 8:30am-5pm. The
Show Off 350 Clinton,
C.M.
CLERIC TYPIST
Fou ntain V alley
Chamber ol O>mm ln·
terview'g for 2 cler k
typist, CETA employ temp pos. Must be l"eS of
F\n Vly " unempty'd JD' dys. Type SO.pm. gd
w/pb public. Call ror
appt 962-#U.
.
'
. ~
l I
I .,•
I • !'\ " .t!• DALY"LOT. "'uradily·'~a .. 1f71 .....,w-.... p 1100 HefpW..tH ~1100 w.a.;.w~ 1100 tw.w-.4 noo tW.w..tM 1100 W•cn •010 ~--~ -~ ...... ••••-•-••••• ... ._••••••••••••••••••• ~d.••••••• .. ••••••••• eHJ" ...... -••••••••••• 9t.•T••••••••••••••••••• ............ ._•••••••• ~W.-t • 7ftc .-.w_... 1100twpW..W 7100 • ~Et.~ . -1'* Truct Driven d· WHher/Dr7er, Wt•t· .. r-~ .•• , ... , •• , ................................................ ll&tdle-1 _,.. taw 61. •• ..,.,..tiE =;· .. ~ ... ft ....... 1 *--..-... e..Ofc. l*'d. Top .... ., .4PPlt lnOo'•M. l\'nold. '1tt :•-• fl-. t• b&&a7 ~ £Ml lllllll .. "~ -_ 1: .-r.. a.1 ,,_. ' tor botb. Hl·HU tr ;:·. ™1,-lllR 81 flLOWll IHOP HOUllWIYU BIGultw u.-'Y'PIDI 6 rvnulltls c. 7D . te 116.000 Avi "n'utaCllJOln1H -.cua "'----_ MAMA.. Would )'Oil llP to work ablfity to bUl SMl.l.t'aQft. "'"""" , UCPT/JYPllT EmpaoyenPqAUr• e. ..:.:.:Km.mch..;.;;.;;;.:.__w_-.--~-
......_. ~lHoa, 01u Salary commeoHrfte ~ 10W' tblktmt are Appli~ut •bo\114 bavt AduJi.I wtUt out11tandh'1 taperlf.DA~ T•m· LlllWDdWt~t"cy Tra9* A.a Train .. We Ouaranteed
.. -.. -_ ~ olt.' No aper w~:tlt w .. twH er bl aehool. R-1 a:»l:IO. preaunt peraonam1. attractlvt ~alitlt~ '°"" DQIJUOb Hoal M =GD!litt• h.&em~·-will tnla. ll ~••fl'· , ....._, , wU.ltralatot.I\, ai paft l'lariat Aaalatlnt nun• atde1 8aJaryopcn.MHJ40 who .UOY-~~ 't.PiaaDM.ttplq ftl rt a.ch ,~ Good typm1 reqwrtd.
tatttv w applleaata .am UIOS. • w/paUeul care. Apply Meclli al back om •~· Jddl. a.art at ttl0'"1 :.l&luy_. ,.._ltU f<*APlll/JIJltab V NcJa 1moker, must have Apt site eledrio rDI•·
II u • t b • v • 1 o o d Park Lido CGnv. Oanw, 1e d llmJ c:i x ht PboiM tGml tf'O. • a1r llllf qper OC' tzavel retrtt ts portablt Clll· t.clGbont1btll\,J.Not)'~ ........... Ala. t8U1agahlpRd.N.B. I rr et.it: • utr!t. NB betwemiS:ON:OOPll. I ............ Lft11.1111..-.a.1y courHI. Yull trn•l bwuher m pod OODill.
.tat. 81lary +eoot .1 'ttMlwlt lf>"OU'Nnottall:inlbotoA i::ReP1Y't'BoxlTl~ Ml&wJlm . Mbltll9•"Pt0Plt~f ~~•A benefita. Call MQ-M11 SeaatMSll11D0111Sa1 =~~~:~~ OD..C.U Buia. l-1~ brt raao per weeis C.11 Ille. Dally ellot P .O. Boll Equal OpportuDltY peHon."' IMnt tle ()th!tpdfn. opponu,oity M·J'NPll anl;y. .
Vlctw Tt"' II W f J1*!f' d.a1.1:;10 P« hr. AP-W • b a v e u u b , 1560, Cott& Mch, CA Empk)ycr • ; abWt~ til • ft. for • P'Oft~• of~e~ted TYPIST
1 ..,...,-'~::, ~i~r;.0~1°1:~~~ ~R waJt.lna!~~t ~ 8allll ... I Part·Ttme Recrdti611, CJ'd. open.~_• ~~!W:.~C hrl'tlmf with nu1c1toat......., 1011
f714UIMIJO JUta.t Ave, lfviu. (114) iia"""l'\luC:-~ 0:: Medical oltlc• ua't. Will wst, CPR, Sr. lllea•Yinl f-"ld. EDJo1 eso t tninJuper.•W5 •••••••••••"• .. •••••-~~~~~~~ ~. ~1. i train. Lite tfluln~ ::M/tllU a&m~w. imrrAURANT ooaipeQfblnefttl. TlftsTJCL•IC
• COUMTIR.., "Equal Opper EmDloYtl' l'ftNllet Needecl tot c~ = =u:i:... ua~/or • " ' .. • ... ~U!. . th.. JI~ at witn. io Key belpf\al PUBLtO J'UJUm'VtlB
P/Ume Hu U·I "'Oardener, rnalnt. M•ture. Stereo. Muatbavoexper. wtcnda.SC8·7T11 _ Put time attend&Dt fOl' _,_.. KAMT _,. nv•a. tcr•'lato•AIP•Y.,· *AIETIOlf* t:80-I:~. J>ol)Mdablo. Tennl1 racquel tlub. Pay aceardlnl to eaper. ,,.... paralysed 1Df wo~n. Of'941"4tl kle>NewPortOtftterJ>r •11tant. Xlnt loo II APABTMJ!:l'ft'
•• 645-21'1S. awma.IUPM J OwQ tool.I pref. but not MOTOllOu•• Sat/Sun. O·IPll. CAIL'SJL NftfQrt.Beacb hmlfl&I • ....-. (X)NSlGNllENTSorlB
c U S T O M E R Oeoeral ofc workJ..M bra =tot~Pi>' at 3Ta1 S: '!~~~~ll! ii!~t :u~! 87~ __ --... l:Qua!OppEmplyr.n/f W ... /W_tl/tNNM BTOCKlJmATJ
S!lRVIOE/J"l l week. •·t Wed·nl, H ' · • rotria in Mlsal VI J ~ Cooltl and co11nUr llulttwpeopleorlonted, MAST• AUCTION
• Career opport oc;~, •:,:: wkndl. Salaey baled OA Insurance AaenC)' CA.11.a del Sol ~a. 1:::.; ~ertl e amlGaDt1. ~Um .. f\111 , ~i'~hr~.~V~a~c,~1~ldl~ daya~['~ID~· ~~~~N~·!·~· pcll~rt~Bl!'~U;·~~; clentloua 1va minded up."4·8530 Agen~y needa itrl. U · abollt.-x>permonthfor Gen id ::,1'-: Ume,dariUdnlaJis,a.18 SICllTAl't' ' ~urbeoeflll.~
t:,'on. In d eptb GENERAL OFFICE per. 1n penonal lines, aboutanbollr ofyouraf· SecreUui• toSlJ,K OroverfordOlhlJ.APs>-1fitb blih leYel typln1 WAITRESS. brukl .. c 6
ledge of otc lklll•, must enJoJ' phone coP· ratings start $900. Rapid ternooa. For detaill call IrvinePenonnflAieucy IY-ru.a. Feb 21. tllrou«b IUW.ll ''mlD eo wpm" in· luncb, Hper'd. Ben •-e 1020 • estmr relat or utea Clllp t • c t , w o r It i n I advancement. ~d ret 642-4321 and leave name • IH7th CCllta M•• 6m.., l'eb a Pl4laH •Pt ts...e.d l.D srowtnl With Brown'• Rutaurant, _,
-· ql&al. Pleuo 1ubmtt reo1 vt /custornera • detail &W1lc to: Box as. ~Dal• aod phone. ... ... aitteZM Nl·UfO Yr.=.m~ "-:11 • a JOllDI, .,,rH•Rl_!_~ anoe eout Hwy. So. ··:,.;::.·•us"ii>·m••
to 8uMtt BualneN Jn. WON. Pald vacation, Jy Pilot P.O. Box UGO. M---m ~ .......... .....,... Clru&1t Co. Baled ... LaiuDa ''""" teriors, 1952 E Edinger, alckpay,profihharloi.ai 0.t&Mesa,Ca921129 "'"""v E1tale De•elepauent ....;.;;.:.-=--·----.-_,.• Reaood.BU)',..U.U..S.. SA.-C..921~. boalth tnaurance. Apply 0 H ltb !.arce Daily PUot rou\6 lllDDelObllpoSt. J'lrm. J'crular7 deta1la Waitraa, exper. wan~ CYcl•ACo.a.MN~ Mon·Frl, 8AM·l2PM, lnlurance-ro~p ea In South Laruna·La1wia SuJU&DC.platruo, &~Cl>QtaCUJJlD ta.: Brown B~u11er Reet. Blvd.C.M.&U-1910
D&JYIAYMAM Barden'a Pest Coatrol Claims Eu.mm~. Exp Nlpl. Mooday thrOUCh PBX o--·toRS Ca. Bodmer ru.m-moxio -E 11th II ao F/tlme. Nea t & 696 Randol h CM'. a~leutlyr.F/lime/P/· Prlday afternoona, f"UlA' from~'1. • • crJ9_!. IOJtJ energetic. ~y, Beach 5*5.570 p ' time/Homework. Sal Saturday aod Sunday AllBoardt SECRET'.A..RY r--"• · St.atiooen, Campua, ope.n.549-1767. mcrnlnga. Approximate· l.oftl 6 abort Ul"ln .,. ~BelpNO'l'bJi"-A Waltresaes, Prvt yacht ••••••••"'""""'"•
N.B. General Office. Pref l)'$&50permonlh1roa1 1i1amenta. H0Uda1 fs ~t18;.~ Need •llarp, P /T club,pt·Ume,day•niteKUiol&.a 6RT·101,, J'l.T ~ 1 u m b e r e x p e r . JANITOR earninp. sso.oo cub d• vac ~ lbpttalludoD WIMOY-S aecretarr recept for smWoPa avail. Call fOf" 11111. ~ Vlvltar JP
DETAILER S C a r 1'/recelvable & involc· \ti O.ya, permanen\ Job, poelt required. Phone ,.~· . Ofd •·· .. '-p_a1tor. llual tJSN 55 lntarvtew, '73-7'730 Oaah, $50, accea11 avail. _ Pollahen. detail men. tne1. "•Ult .. -_..... t.,..lat. -.1 mature pettOQ, min ... ., ~-i, .. f 1-ul .__.. WPM. call 6'W1l1 Tut-GAR l60 XL &u,.r I ~ preferable Exper "DOI St:rt""IL'IO-~N~B. ;;,. to atart. Call ~Le!:: :!~;'" .:d Y ~;• Hain!>urlert" FrttAll·lJDOIPQ. Wanted Woman '° ca.re 1ound camera •110 nee. Allo band washers, 643-fnOCall btwn ~S. number and make or ¥41 : Yt 1TINOBrookbW"lt 1'.V. ' I /elderly lady. Uve 1n It: &7623 •
. . 'lm5ust}~. neat In appear. GEHYAL OFftCI J . l t om auto to be uaed and your -• --·--Re.ttaurant·Now blrtDI ~• .. .._ ,IY '~~ writ, Ref, ncz. ""'~ IOK ._, F\Jll Ume. Sharp, exper. anltona : ~ te we• all i·ua..... tt" ... _.. ~ ,. __ .. _I onl •-1v ~·~ _. --------1 person. Must be accurate c1Nnin1. lrvioe. No ln· c VI ... r -··-· p/t ~ ..... P ~ '""""' Onnm'l Loan Platform. WATCHM •KE a ••••••• .. ••••••••-•••• .Diamond aetter. Ex· . dowaorfioora. $&Hrfor H AIDIS 54 741 beCwnU{lmd1y Nmappear.nq'd.Tne ~ " KJ'lTENS:DarUnJ boun· periencedonly. t.YJ>llt 40-00WPM·BiWne. p/Ume belp. Only •ln· URHS I <AaoMJ'rom Wlte eo wpm acow. Sb 80 To asaiat enrlncer -.wellca.redtorlemale 'IH·m-tl.12 213/63().1H0;714/S8l-4796 cere, depend., exper'd OllDMUIS OranteOD.Airport) otdhlhloo ., ~ • w/d"velopment of de· klltenl, l blk, l fl'af 6 z
after'IPM adulta need apply, No 59 Bed Facility. Join a ~ual()pporEmployer ffamburlen llc~t.eprecisolnltrumeo· r ray • wht. ti ...
·Dishwasher, M /F, 'full ~~ GIRL NIDAY losers. 979-39'13. happy group 4t enjoy tbe RS. Briafol. SA .,. • 0.U n•/558-528& tation roe oil field. Good M7·318Z · p/t.Ooodhra, good P•Y• xlnt benef1t1. Bayview PorAnlaterTwApPt worltlnt cond1, co,1...;.-...--------
beneftt.a. Jrv. area. Call Banquet Dept. Apply to .Jewelrypollaher, Conv., ~ Tlnuta Ave, PIZZA a.t.aunurt Kanqemcmt 1.alOMl.._HK heoeft~".toppa_y. EOE. fflmalayanSealPolntttl· 'forappt975·5257 Oliver Foater, San experlencedooly. CM6'2-3505. Tl"alneefarPinaParlor. ...,. ~ Sc1entificDrillloj ten, female, 4~ mot.
Domestic Couple, 11t" ~::.-s:ire:.s F.aplan· 71'·979-612a MUISIS AIOIS WANTED: ~pr'c! be.1p OO area. Sal '900+. WW 11DJ!"1IOC'ti:':• CaDtrola,~ewport ell Shots " papenr fH,
• -hs.kpig, chauffeur Uc ·,; Kitchen help M/F fft or · maldnc pma and on t.be tnda. J'ood eirper. MO. ewporC ac Pbo11e~·OOM *1·3733
ref• req'd. Reply te Girl Friday, cooct oWce p/t.Ooodhnl,goodpay• =i!T'~t~~~~t.i oten.CaUQL.3581 .~:mtam· Equl()pporEmployer Alkf~RooLlltJe ..;Dop;.;..;....~;....--.-.-.-0-4-0
Classified ad no. 166. c /o 1kllll, Harbor Area. All beftttta. Irv. area. Call sbi.fU avail. Apply, Parlt ,,.Sd9eetT....... WU\doW" Waahlllir Alat, ....... .,.. ............ ,.
Daily PUot. PO Box 1560, company benefl.U. $800. forappt975-52S7 Lido Conv. Cent.et, 466 Certificate or eapn Baltaurult. M/W, tul1 or • S!'JCRETABY; fUll Ume. naup nacesa. DOGTllAJNlNO •
Qist.a Mesa,Caa26 mo.642-MaO. LadleaLkrRmAtteod. FlapbJpRd,NB. l2::M>to~·=/hr· ' c~blt,podpa~ Senior 1:rtu of NwptBcharea.6'5-1392 . Youf Plaoaorlllne
DRAPERY OPERATORS -GllU.S t-lllDID 2 Of' s days pr mo, Ideal MUHIS AIDIS fonppt~ .,..., r.:~rm, a~~ier~ W..t............ .Job1 )lartiD ~
-exper'd. The Classic Sandwich delivery, 5 for Sr. Cltben. Priv. ?.J"~ll. Exper.pref'd. Preaman,exp.A.B.Dict c Nwnt Oeuter ttetdl ex· ~aecntary.Strong AKC Rel SUky Terrier
Draperiea, 3851 Blrch St. days wk, 4 hn day. Own country club. Call Will train. Meea Verde 980. Top p.y, a1ot work· Jlesta~anm ~--~· pet.'"cl ieaeluY w/aint sHt;ypingreq'd. App1y lo Pupplee. !bota~ Male le
N.B.546-1431or75&·16'1 tramp. Earn ovr sa.ao 6'4-MOtforappt. Conv u-p ... Center •-• eonda. Y ·--· HWa. ... _...e •ldll1, i.nteW1tnce, fa· penon to l4r Fuent.ea, F·-·•·n"~ hr. Call aam·lpm, • "'"nE0 ..,,. ""S pe-· ._ 'VU4 ~,_.-1 --Did.a pe'1'Qll. ltlatl ve • ambition, Robert Belo, William .. ..._... .. ,,,__ DRIVER 11le boat parts .,. .. ,._,. ~ "'..,.., • ....,... et.CM .....,.._ 000 .. ....,.. C •---------&stock room lralJlee. Sol """"°"""'· .needed,part "full Ume. M0-1 • -amp&aa cepabl• of workln& Frost"Auoc.MOlQuall Syberian~, fem.
•• cat, 1m E. Pomona St, iaUA.lDS '114-~l HURSISAIDI ~C:·f~':· Dr. ~b: ~t &.NptBcb. ~SS:· ue qes.
S.A.(Edl.ngerexltoft55> F\all&p/thne.Allareu. ~ALTRAIHEE Jhl:SO.mt.o2:aor>m Uoot for Kon" T~ SAn.LOrr t.-apar~';°leuant Mwdr# •
DRIVERS Urulorma fUl"IJ. Asu 21 S) Per Hour. Must· ~ ahifta. Appty tads· p.w.c. Ball Deltp hu off lo• esivironment. ••• .. •••••••••-••••••• AXC Ooldett RetrfetYer-
or oVT. Retired welcomt. For Newport ~ Law Have Car. ~ 4pm, Penn.ya aver, lteO lmmed. opeahap tor SA1ar)J bued ca upu " .W• 11 1005 PUPIJles, e wa, $100. ftdd
Best equipme nt and 1'PP1Y tJruvenal Protec· F\rm. ~wpm mm typ· Placentla,eo.t.aK... aeamatreaa" fs band abWty. s.111 quallf1oa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• in.id & obedience back·
working cond1lions in uan Service, 1228 W. 5th ing.T»-001. worbn.IQ.DID Uam to: 500 &. Main St. amd754-1.CJ95. ~ ~!:~~ ~t:ie~nu~tn1: St, Santa Ana. Intern,. Llve·in--co mpanlon, GfRCf/ Prod\lctloaMua&e~a:at , .. 11 M••r aute JDll, Oraqe, Or... MUSICIOXIS ~ Bun Mastiffs AJCC, i
"all record. K.nowtedre ot hrs 9--!2 "' H Mon-Fri. bouaekeeper, capable, If YoU ..ii, Mid a de--Q.OCKS • Reedy to breed. Male • '
· i.Ofan1e & L.A. ~ounUes, GUARDS refindri edNwom.11~ .. ~~1i:,0t0o CLERICAL IJEPT. HEAD/ ccllt PQ1n1 p/tlm• job m=RETARY·TYP~ Slot Machln.es1 Nickel<>-fem. Bil otr~. San·
11elpf u1.0)·45S·1414. FulllcP/time.Wortsny ve. en am .... ,'"' Weed/C• .. et511e9 evesS-tpm.-weruybave Newporf Besch Dellp deons, pbono1raph1 . ...:d;.::.y..;.494-6525~..:;..;....;.-----
lburs, Fri or Sat for 3P· 1hlft. N.B. area. Uniform dQ.nker. ~l PAAT·llMI Top quallt1 aallboaC.. WbM you•re looldn& fo.c. 1lrm wWI deli&btlut en· tWlorld'a Ata1rcest ,•efltec· f\-ff to Y-. 1041 j
pointment. rum. Reili'edok. Telepb LOA.MPIOCISSOll CballenalnC a11l1n· as+psbr.Ul-OMI vironment II' frteadly f 00.; 10 tJl ue9
9 • •••-•••••••••••••••••• la car req'd Nal'l ~ f Weneedaomeoeetohelp nt-lull ~enefit1 -i-_ .. ,.. an ex· urna.ure, an q · · DRIVBS · · •lth aecy aklll• or UI tbrou&h our buly of· :!neat dent.al oet1cat' Sal•lacb'·GUu, P/tllDt. p;--~with lood American International; Freot.ogoodhomt..,
Early AM, u delivery <:all833-4m39am.2pm. mortgage broker nr?'. fie• day. Some fdin1, Call Bob Walabaw · liblwefrrelll abse,.B:'o,~ altui. to help tn busy of· l8QZ Ketterin1; lrvtno. 10mo.~f:sB11t •
.LA Tim•. C.M. & N.B. HairO.ltnar Loan beck~prel d. typing. calculator work. EriCll09Yacbta,6tCM001' lnter.-at oaa • • ~ flee. 1Sl·l700 aak for '7M-17T1.0penWect.·Sat.
$3SO/mo. Call 5U·0710 n.tHmrN•••n Near Fuh1on hie. Jt po11lble a ccountlnc WestcWIDr,N.11. y~ lO'ltlO'. Metal ::=:
'Bob l snowexcepUn1 applfor ~·~· machine -postin1. Must S&lealady for jewelry . B'l'EWABTROTB You haUI away Earn xtra 1$$ ln the even· styllst w/cUeoteTtle. , LoanProteslor have 10 key e~per. •pro-P/Ume Evea •Sata. l:anl ato,.. la Cotta Keaa. SecretarT for J»roperty ANTIQUES Z91SJrviMA•, N.B.
OREA 5al.0Al'4 • fidaocy. Hounwould be SH? per br. t.akina «· 59-ld llcmtCo.Seeldncstrone •-~canouDeaJers ing without exper. Sell OPPORTUNJTY epprox. I : IOaOl tll den/deliver~. llUlt bookUepo typlat. Peo-.-u_.• 2BtDJ'OUlllcata tol~ t!°:tyr:::::,::. ~~e1~j MU4M • Prog=~'!!:s " 3.00pm MOQday thtouah have dependab • cu • s•• "MAM pie oriented. Orowtnc ~fN~~t =·.J ~~:.~o.! ~ .car & phone. ""Samplea at ~ loan baa lm.med opeoln1 Friday. PleaM take a pbane. Fuller Bruab Co. N9wpol't Poob, xlnt opp. Co. Salary ne&~ble. vu.am call~ tt. deac:dp.
i:C05t. 'Call ror intervw. a-•~~ wcrk,, Ute fer penoa w/2-3 yn up moment"dropar•ume 7S4-4C7l. ty, commlNlon baaia. t9:: ;:,~m•N~;,pPo~t lloa • t
•7470. ....vn. Study lo procmalna. lluat b:ave to; llAI. ISTATI M44lM n---... c• ...:..-' .,__ ______ -t duties. Pin hn. Apply, b I b dl Ca.it.rd•• ... t!Ul ,__ WHOL!SALE c.t•"-Te--'-v a. mal•-RJWrd Oue11ett.e Salon, a I lty 1.o •0 • IC'e-~ Prore11lo11al llcenHd Saleamen needed for lite '°" I!: .,,_T ...... ~ ...
•,-------• 200NewportCtrDr.NB. ri.naoce. c.om•1 pmceu· M.141 salea peopl-waoled. ClOQltructJonl\nn. ~rvlc• Stat!o1> Atten· TOTHETRAD needs family, blebrb.
r 1:1 ECJRICIAN ing exp dulnd. Muat c/o~ra.t Generous commlulon.s. 131415 danl, nir.r d. D•1 & NOW OPEN' 8'15-9117crS7Ml41 ~ ua.a.art Farms poueaa gd com., altllla " '° loll • 560 Advanced tral.nlD1 . Ev•. ~ "p/Ume. A" U>vable 4 yr old femal• .IQURNEYMAN ~ tYlliNr aloll.a. Xlnt aal & C:...Met41C '2'26 642'-5062 . SALIS:Mlllw'e ply, SbeU StaUoa, 17th TO PUBLJC cat, a~ aboU, boa
J ttup/tlm aalesoppor. ='~>=~i: · • Cal yll~ Rsp.f:'::waotedfM lrvine.NB. OPEN7DAVIJ · trained .. Good bom• u.i3~Pli·1hv 1~ey~1VAi~ ~ a':t·~~~= Mutual ~vtnp at Loan, -----M• itir ••••UT'•ll ~·1 ~ ~.:: k"fi2 0r'!'-~ Na1::: =.,0 A WEEKM. ..;MU139~:..::.;;------' J...aqtermaaalpment. into sellui'r in a·pleaaa.ot 4001 MacArthur Bl, Npt. ~ ~-·~ -._ ftxt\&Nlbowrooml llut " ... _. • i.NJJ"' 5 rd1n1111 ...... Lhl z Femal• doll.• mootbs Hospltal&vacallon pay Interesting Hl«:kory Bcb.Ca.eec>. fem l:":'d, ml.II :!;e ~ n d •Pen db kt• be able to wor~'sau. SbeU,l'lthlllrvioe, 15292 ..... CNc• old. Poodle'l'errlullix.
Hoapltallutlon plan '"Farmt awre. See Mr. exp t>kkp'1 & w ~al•eaa•~ficeOl'ar: •:; lome decor;aUol b~~;Sen.StaHelpneedMl~ H.Ll71411tJ.710f OIUaA5pm9a-lmO
}avail. Thompson, So. Coast 1.VN bowtotype.G31·2Z25 N " t 8 h ff ll"CIUNl pref d .• ut wur med. Full or p/t. Apply, old
P!ua,t-owerJdaU. Palnter·AppreoUce bouae a~:.Ua!j~;btn or ;..~~U-=ly. SllO E. Cat Hwy, Nwpt F::O~b.~::r~ X.0:: .'fffff. •] -fUll and pan,Ume posl· painter'· wanted. Call 7 ""41'1 -0 •· • Deb. Antique truDk8 ~. ldda. 97M8l4 ... Hi&h School 11tudent t.o Oona avaH. Oood aalary Gl-O?•a.f'Upm. OorbtnAleoe.,Jlealt.or Stocllrooftlc:lerk . Victrola• recoMa-_,_r...:;=:......:.......;..__..;.. __ _
ll41C..-Drt••
I 546-4741
(Acroea From
<>rans• Co. Airport> • Equal ()ppor Employer
~ ~d.m~rool~~~ w/Xlntbeneftu. .f'AMTIYCHlf a.al Elltat. Sat.a Peopl.t &aJ•man, Real £"At.ate W• lulve an enlr)' level =:o~~:'er & f\lwftae • IOIO SPM &yvlrtr CcnY. Ro.p l'!spa'. 4es1red but not wam..cl u to IO/l~ for adult c:ommwilly, ln p 0. It 1 0 Q l D 0 u r ............. -...... .
2055'Iburlo, C.M. neceury. Apply hi CICllDID. 1~ f'lwpl Bela L•suna Nlfuel area. 1tockroom . ~ppUcant DttlNAed oak roll·top Bardrock1 Cannonball HOSTESS 4142-l:505 _ penon Moa·Tuet·Wed Ir "'14IOO .. Btwn t0-80 yrs of a1•. mmt be able to read, desk, $n5. 611""48 dA¥t maple hdnrd, kSnl llae
L ...... 'S Fri aal The Victor Huso C.UbtwnlOAIM2oooa write & bold a Calif. creves. mait4'frame.Sl'J$. & CastU.r relief. -t to 5 ... •~pr ..,_ .n •1 -......., dri II M ln JUahti. Young. aUractlve Full lrp/time. AM 6 Pll Inn. 151 Cllff Dr., Lq. R-.... lOn~'"lJ ...,en -··• . ven er. ust be ..... .US 10 I 0 M3-1742
tlectroolct w /exp. Apply wltd)'t: shift.a avall. Aps>ly, Park lkh ~~~~~me. ~:J>t~e . a~kp!oy:O~ ••••••••••••~•• .. •••••• 'peces famlJ1rm turn.I
1
+DIYOU HI.. Mlbr<l5la, ~30th 5\., ~-~.!;. ~ter • ..-PANTRY 4' HOSTESS, 8ALESPEUON: vided. Ap~ :, lar. DISHWASHER·Wblte mo'• old, S490 .... ,_ ~ r-1 NB a_ .. p .-, exper. apply In person, llCIPllOMST Permanent part tJme. rancaRd.lrvlne. _ SearaKe11more.Lportable a1Upmlcwlmda.
.bvine. eleet.ronlca mf1r. -MACHIMIST lltwn WP~, Mon, Tuea, Llt• typin&. Moo unia B 11 t b u • l a a t l c • deluie model. Yu.Sh but-~. •-•--a• ..._. U ,ii startinl ,p/Ume Help HOmSS TOOL ROOM llACB Wed. Frt. ~o callii. Vlc· fti, t to s. Call for appt. eaortetlc. Hickory Swttcbboard Opr. Wl11 ton coatrob fore cycle "'"'"ft~-~ ... ~~ ..... In Product.Ion pro1rain E.Jiper'd. f'JUme. ~pply D · tor HUIO llltl, 351 C1IH Attrorvtm..llD-JUI ~ Wtlklllf Plua. train. Must be avail tetdno. Butcbn block ~-~•TVnl..::=·~~ for~ .,......·OHi'" to. Oliver Potter, Sin Vorm .. :....!!!..Grl ... d•r Dr. Laiun• Beach. .....,. wtudalseves.64$-8197. top. can be converted to ~~-.~~ ~'" ~ Clemente Inn, 125 ~, ............ .. .. ~ST undercouuter. $150.00. ,_ ___ ---w·-•srl!.LollLERS E&plandlan,SanCltm. rornl~. Par1tln1 Attendanu, JU' amall co. Good t1'P-IALISPIRIOM ~ Soliclton a-Call 8Z4U.Q a4er' s·ao er, Brld:st table' cJWn. -~ CLw ".A 'On11. ' Valet. part Ume. Ev• 6 lq. Good ~ooeU~y. 6Crd demamtl'at.or at perlence4 only, Seti p.m. ' Step table, ~aun mone
Loadtq tt aoWering or Hoeteu, El Torlto :'idt Top pey +overtime wlmdl. Call Ul-4820 tor Sll5 hr C.UMl-J.IN Rua Craft«a 8o. Oout <>rant• Cout'a leading -IOUD4 projed.ar, Vllul.1 PCboank,wlriq&wire .day hosteu Mon-Frl. Roaanlnc.2t01"W.Cout appt.. Ptr ' VUl•I•· lluat H •I newspepuatbome,)'Ollr 'l'RGHT DAMAGED JJl'Ojed.or', ilocr lamp• hamessial-Muat Juiow 133-11740, 4'221 Do1pbin Hwy, NB. EOE RecepUonl1t/Sec')' ~w • 1u. ortnt-phone. Part time or fu.11. H<YI'POINT IALg. 3308 table lamps • mlao.
colof code1 l'ead ~:U.W•r· NB (Dear Machin• 0 ,.rator foll PAITTIMI weekendl only. llartoe id.Preler20JTIOl'Oldv. !fl1he1t· coaiunlulon W. Wanter nr Harbor, iteml.a.168cu•,hbM
blueprint;/speu4'read ur &Jme•partt.lme,noa. 9¥84IMC5M8L type buainess. Newport aolhpwwk.54HNO. pald.Oall~l-3PM SalQ Ana.9'J9.aU •25~ 1oam...Jpsn; ltll
.English. rou can work HOT& per neo.aary HBlDdua $171 WHk. Attrattln. .Beacb. Calll6$.nOO S 1 II l ool)'. Redwood Ave, CK. .~.~~\ <fet20y~ ~1i!e:!i Exper. full Um• nl&ht ar:WT·l708 • out101n1, •nthualHtlc Receptlonltt, tel•~ ~·::;.,,,.:;. :: TILIPHOHI SALIS W ..... & Dtyef ~" i.eo·a. e m"1
niatylCalluaTODAYI •_uditM. Topwaf"·~PP. MAIDS ,JlfEEDBD ex· peraonallt~ Working w/IJ1t0/A bkQ'I II 1eo'1 .q4.Pr~.f7MOIO 'l\Ndottberoutlne? Like nu delwr. multi· cbairs1_~1aek •wood
DICC .'Im~"::=~~·~~ pertt l~tOl'rr· -~-m ~~~~. =~b~~ ~:....~·.=c:::..~ .ntall ~A°t'I!'N':~~ ~~,-=~d:~:1,0!11:.: ~=.!:.=~ 546-4711 HarborBlvd .. C.M. ran. ar DI w~e car.&JpervilinJadults& tr1HUllU TIOPICAl."IN alMOfS £inhhecl • year ~ •. 75 hr. Jrluat r .. d. w le carrion. Available eve. ....-111DS ' · l\W'UlWe 1 prlco onlf, _:;;..;...;....... _____ _ &ICTIOMIC RouHcleaner11 needed. Ii speak En(Uah. ~ly ., 8atuntaya, HI.fall, Rcc:opt101tl1t. Mat. ID· U ~UleLlbrarles your cbot~ $180 .. ch.· ltSvlera conftltlhle _,_, Jlllf:b Tffhnlclana Mature. Top.,_ Car nee. at 14'\ Bo. Cat wy, ext. 250, be\weco 1·5 PM. dltJ.vldual.~ A/~. Natt!. tnlo~•·. P~ledat req,'cl. l'U 6 _ r,qua1 Opp E!nf1Yr rn/f Free delivery. Sale ends Good coocliUon. frL
• ..m l.r •• Bao ... 842-1403oc~ r---aBeach.04-Bm "•'-f J' .-....aill ,,..IQ.l&22 -M b ..... ..,__ A. ..... -... " -.-• """or am • bel\efltt. l :IO· • ICHSMftar "l'KLmPHONE-arc .-..u. ~new _._
s.ouftd In dltil•l • Houleeleantni ~•I, MAIDWANTED vc...t whit ~ wan\ bl rraoo • 1 r to atart. ~ .... ....,. 8al.+J:1tr&OdBonus like n ew relrl1'•, Beautiful Kini •la• ~c~cul t r1. 1uaranteed Iara. top I>mQ\alsoleKCJC.el 'JillypnotClUllfleda. 'lu.01117.Sap.nee. Ohia-NUI' 00 ~. Ct.lltpm.apm UNlet freezers & raoi11 •t. M Spaoilbl1.)'lebdnDML
ll load In wa1n. ll\lttp110VldeOWD 2100N'"e1fPOJ' 811C)( .Moa•J'rl 10&1D•Jpsq1 ~ SoU..u lO the cost at South Cout. tAJYJ/atr. Ml-UM
design• t.1ttn1 °' in· tnn1.~ • twipW..ted 7100 MlllllW_... ' 7100 .-rolornDt. ... -\lnort, Al>Jlllancet,5JT"'5G ·
1Uvmerrt1UoD. Mattr.'4 want.11 fOt prtv. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ~"*•••••"••• .. ••••••• lmmed.., pMaa&nt lledlt. Style~ t llde AD~~~~~ca ir=:ai::::~c:., =:c::.~:~:!fe ~ ~--HELP ~~=PH;: =.cbaln. .... ~ ':."J.~ 11 :!?:.n~ti!:lr!rt::'.J:r~ :::::::~;;;~~ SICREJARJ·PERSONAL rf".::i,i-rt.c.uMtwq ~.r.J:1~Ilicatl'1WS ~~=-~• llabolS..Oeablllt.I' ~ 1°"' neE lJ laUicr, l\O _ tbUdNQ, Pilot, P.O. Bolt lHO, llDd-in! .. 'T.:'rt -I -~ readlntpublk. tr/dn • •bel .... S1JS.
........ -•llOO 901Mla,ttal eoetaM1N.C..ma1
1
E ___._ ·-~ Makeotl'.AftS.Ml-11n ~ • • • WI -DM Or PH•loue banklnl Dail.J Pilot Drdttns rnechulo. ~~~·w Maoa1•r·An1,.-erln a th executive abW~to help I bulJ UtlN! Moo-l'ri. nowleds•· ao. WH\. Cl~MN178 Bab1 f\lnl • cct. Ute r~IOftfelect!'Olllcs Ftmal: ....... :--Sery~ Muat Juve guythroughabusydpy. Younee4to tnla.QJJlaAIPM Bank. IApaa BeaJb1 .. PDW''5'~•..,_aft
• dyU dr~ •• Yrt Call i1 ~ ....... PBX like people le to have ,. pleaaani at7, ..... OllU'OP.,,-lTJl. IPID =~~m~~-·~~c';J'!~,· :?:;.,~4:!!:t0';. Utudebecauaeyou'll~talwtthaftlie •u&twtcb •Salad ... " -Adl•1il1 f ' .·eoos 1••• 1001 ~-OoutalPtrtoa· nu.s.n• su, .-., aelf 1c.rter. A•k for 1roup 41 uaoclates Ii amllat• ••mblere. aAlf!.!¥· .~, ,.._ 1_....._1 ............. -....... -, ........ ,,,,,,_ ... . l~ttMlU ... Nlr... WcWHfUpm,t4.M191. Coftont.tmo cm my behalf), You will =...;..~.·~. "."t: I •• ...... r---~~1!!11!1-n---, iOlli·H••"l c• u...-_., ~.~. Hoo••IJetP.tl' • Older N.\NAG.WKNT·nm,_ havetobavethlstypJnaUl)ldmce. .,._.,.11.-tM• an t lei 3 ~ ...... °""~· .!i ll=-::o:..r:r~ ~~~, ,•: thou1h my dictated oorreepoadmoe 1MILlAd'9Der-. ' MowTak1ni I 0
......... t = flH ""'" ... ,u~. ~~.1r'c011 ~o':.~~·=:.r::i:.:g . ~irS§· -~cat;'!~ •• AL" MERCH OISE ·1 ir.':.I!:, 'Y.tn. ,..., f!f~L:~ ~ ·-'~-~at.iv• =te, fQr trnvel ~an1ement1, :TM .hou T ·-Ii 1-·i.-J~. ,J2,:!t':!r::?..=. ··oll•N a:~,i=~~!°~1:4 ~ii~ .. ,,. .. ~ .. I .TO BIER OF THIS AD, i::~--= ~ . a Mil! ~I p /tltn• t• ,,loom• in F•ahloO Jaland, Newport ceter. ......._ "'f~,~ .• ... :: '!!. &c..1t,. ·=' I 's =•n••uas .., uw.. .,..... :1111 • ~ ~·c::!r~ =:.m:,·,,~\1:~ Wa have Dice l*>Plt wortdne ID a ~ "' pw 11 ~-~ I ;;i:..=li:!!' ..... _...t.aUll N"4 • .,. J.l~_.tlPJaf· 11 Pl••tantolftce1 I(ln~;(' -~ ....... Aat't.' ~' .......... I e32ZGiirdeiiJ•ro••lml I ·~ , .. • ..,,. ~E -iifOIR_.'!" la;•·= en.-.., l, 'r'• J ir forward a NSw.lt to: M '"::::;::."':':= __ ~-~_.,',;•_: 1·~ -h I Gqnlila e.rc.Ye 6Jl.;3013 I ··~··='""•-,,~, T~r.:.d'oi1r r'iiot 1"'t1o.lllll~Dall1J'llG!i..O JllO.-....,,_":"" , .~ .,,:: "° "21 . ..,..,...._,.., ~~~-A'••r:·•:'..-~ ~~=.t:'l~~I, eoeaa .~~~-~1:( ~~~,~ i·, .A.ot~= ,,1 .~MN11L~_7' ••-~-.~--·--.-~
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J
I
,_. e IOIO kupS. t11 M1c1l•1•11 IOIO Sft t(M-... 1094 ...... W to60 .......,.._/,
...... ••••••••••••••••• ............. •••••••••• ~··••••••••••••••••••• .......... ••••••••••••• ....... •••••••••••••••• S111Wt-.... tll O ~tt.loUcmtocap ded t:.t•t• Sale: hra • W'"-~ JC~BOC&EYSKATU Hobie 16', rtce>Ad. U1r, ·-•• .. ••••• .. •• .. ••• •-..alrfffl tll O ...._lltl,1r'lel ~ .... W' 11ort.ab1e bar wltb kllcbea ltem1. Feb 1 TOP ~';'t>~LAR Bauer "ta", Nylon tm, It ln&lll, prt<*l t~ SUZUIOJUll'TOMX-J.th •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ....................... •••" ........ lo .. ~ tuw, I trulc 15/28tb. 20601 ll•Latlk PAl.J )'OR YOUR ~ alte I. mu'•· Mll.Aft8,13'7·150C . tllalbla~iirQe. COSTAJiillSA 9 t 4 9101 IMW .tJnlAba. .. n antl>ulll· Circle, Vle: lild.lan•~ ll:WELRY. WATCKES. ~arcifter.G4U0'73 t 'Hoble,-'-cond It TAchldte1 1 Hl or tat ·~ .... , ....... """' ..... ~
hu-plua. lwo cuitom lsBu&bard,RB ARTOBl.ECTS, GOLD, Nardk&MetecirtklbooU, ~ewjlba.:i'toma:~~ ,~•ir..QJP.~f>lh ~.....-=~~~ a\001.I. Gar••• Sale: Sit/~11 SILVER SERVICS, meinuilelO • .S. Uiefasteeta.round. •. m.anra Ctll WM #1 laCllf.
• Blket, rum, freeur. anU· FINE 1'URN. • AN· 4'·ati1 ~ · FREE **I IUY quea. ioczt Sallnu '11QUES."5-ZIOO ~wuald, ~C\liltom * * River, F .V. (Green· ........ HoblelUl.500. wbeek, fronl rear AlrC1n•IHer Afha-41 f70I 'Good llaed Furniture brook.) l.UGGA&ITA•S TYlw ....__ aot• Vuatllell~Bob dilc brake•. llOO ml. oooewll'T7fs1'11Jeeps .•••••••••••••••••••••••
Appliancet--OR 1 will hom10W'bmiD .. eal'd .._....__ 165-1-· StUO MCMIZIM Dou not Include "t1soider ie
..UorSJU.LrorYou IRVlNE CHURCH RUii· SeQd ant I ob ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• . W limited CJ5 AJd/F1ic an, MASTBtSAUCTIOM MAGE. SALE. Sat, Feb tac p1": !. ,s:.~~. 25" RCA O>lor TV, 1 yr. B~tlfill ~~0:h '1S 250 Endto Yamaha CJ~ iooct only: ~~adlo,
64' 1616A133-9621 &i llA~·4fr!fn 1J'f2 return permaneaUy warranty $141. For t ·SOPM-=:. 541-a&I an. f100. After a P.M. factory air equipped _ver • e n v. IH1«l auractlve tat • Hrvlce alto 8'2·53'0 6:311 py 962-422 vehicles. Offer exp.lrea ._. 9107
CASH PAID Uruled Methodill •trap, meetlt)1 alrllAe C.M. . '811 Triumph 650 New (bl> Feb. 28, l!n'I. •••••••••••••••••••••••
For Id uaed f~ anti· LD. requlrementa. Pre-Brand new 19'/I Solly TV 11•catamaran, $900. Good eod•tock $115() ~ OVERSTOClm "73 Al.Mil lOOLS. AM/FM
ques &clrTV'a, IQ7-8U3 Garqe " :Movtnc Sale. vent Jou • theft! }'or a 19", wood eratn, $425'. cood.. 871-5000 ext Ul or Aftec7 PM • WITH .195' Jtorec>. A/C eo,ooo mi,
7'Sofa, eood cond. $175.' 2 Sat/SI.In .. Almost ever· pet'IOQallzed taf enclose f1$.U27 731.ae& 11nt coocf.. snoo, Aft 6 or
Nauphyde c:lub chairs, ythlng goes. Furniture,. ~allp~e.~, fabric or ETCHELI.s.ZZ "15 Honda MR nS Dirt 549-8023 wkndsl31·2580"
liUnew.$1.00ea.6'5-0244 moped, .antiques, aad · ~'ba ~ f"frl' & we DualCS70Urntbl w/Su~ 30'Racitn1SlooP Bille1Jkenew$&50. mHARBOR BLVD. "73Audl100LS 4-clr,auto. lots more. 5' to $500. 900 . c m your V-15 type Ill cartridge. 496-2130 NO-JM9 COSTA MESA air, AM/FM,'Xlnt cotid,
J.IMOblondmah.bdrmaet, Sea Lane (The Shores) tap. Or try two cards S2Q0.6d-OUll5afU . ....._..._ "1lltll . 0Jt1 ownr. Nu battu1.
lrt mirror, nu Beauty Apt41,CdM. Ph640-5685 backto~~CES· ................ O'Day 25' Sa1IBoat ._./SI•.;. tl60 Trsb 9HO brkU,palnt~ $2300/oll et. ~m:~~~~~rr;i~nwtl~ tzeaor3/$5 • ., ,, tllt Blekstay adj. s~ •;.~ -............................................ 540-llll0aft6.
w/locu & tilt mirror NEWPORT Hts. Home 4/5\ap$l.80ea. •••••••"•• .. •··~"'.· .. ~~~J8e6n'. Bent• 1911 Ezcutive FBaUAIY · $1.75.~9602 Furn. Sale. French 8/9tap$l.50ea. Gnu• 9010 tainect'bead ~/dedtdla· Motorbome or Mlnl· QIAIAMCl IMW 9712 .......,_ al-Pine, b·-'lt doors, couches, pictures, lOormore$1.COea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• charge double llfe lines IDOCOrhome from Herb on all· GMC true.Its & •••••••••••••••••••••••
a ..... -w desks, oak tbl, flat bed SalesTaxlncluded 11' Pacific Catamarran bowrail,stemrau,1lill FdecHander.C&Uuyof vaaal We're over·
• bed with 3 larce draw steel cnstrcted, ullty NO CARD? "54, Xlnt cond, must under factory warr. aft. 5 tbeeenu.mben ttockedl 1 ! AU modeb
uoderoeatb, & bead-trailer, rcking chr, baby Draw your own or send sell th1s week. make of. 631-366C 191-6771
board bookcase $175. rolltop, .u El Modena name, addreaa, phone 6 fer. 981-&Sl!O, SMl8-2290 5n_.7771
41M-Mt7 Ave. NB 6'2·9055 Sat s.2 ~uMtz: :c'~ard per ~ w.rw
903
1:: ;~e!~e J:,i1~: IZM ...
'C>inette: Woodgrain ....SU01~2 Sendcbecllormoneyor· ....,.,.... 0 $1.750.6'5-1870or643-5380 llOI'OJlHOllES farmica table, 2 leaves, derto; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~--...;,_----1
bl-a cit vinyl padded EST ATE SALE rlLOT PalMTIMG Prem. pri'* for aml used Cal 2'>, x.l.ot cood. 4 Bagi, From =!~G-OIZ2 ~bains $75.11 Ft. couch, EveryUilnggoes.l'eb. 25 no Bo ·~ Jobnaoo·Eviorude 0 /B co~pass, bead. All __ _..;.. ______ •
eartbtones, <laded $60. & 26.-'20341 So. W . eas~·Meaa x~ 92826 moton. 2J3/'22·555S eq .. p. $3:)00. Days (l) T,._.. ,,.. .. Call "552-3475 eves Cypress Santa Ana Hgts. • · 52'1·2061, Eves 964·23'16. ·-" ................. . ~ {NrOCA.i.rport) Npt Bch Tennis Club IMts.Power 9040 , 31' Airstream Good cod •
L
•g s-t\onal "oCa membenhip,.Super d,e· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 23Formula.Manyxtru.dlticm1'70 By a....ru .. «•~~~·~~~~~~I
• ~
0
all 3S'CHB.lSCRAFT All lbrJls, lnbrd mtr. · rr-·I·
$150/bst.ofr. Trundle ~ 4070 al.C 6"-6800wkdysor Aftcabin/dualst.ation OMCO/D.213/59!-1042 ~~,llOO. Call 'Glntem1PU.Sborlbo:a,
$40. -<:best .$30. t:>esk ~. ••• ••• ••• • •• • • • • • •• • • • • i>44-'1328 evs. Twin Chrya VS't /2 beads p. m. Wbl a poke wbla, l.rg knob-
Twin bed SZo. 640.031S .-UIA~TED WANTED: Jacks to lake Hauled survey Al pold loafs. S,./ lrilllo s.ntc.. ,_.. bles, 4-c~l ene. Ofr.
"5' gluss coffee ~able ......-T " Camperoffplck-up. Will •$12.000 AY6*9000 Docks 9070 &Acce1i11rie• 9400 m-0183or M.Ol
46
' T OP CASH DOLLAR .paycasb.11611-1611 •••••••••••••••••••••••, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-Ford PU 150 V -8.
--w/Walnut wood,-<:usl PAID F.OR YOUR NEEDSLIP f 34 " ma~ e b y Lowes ":JEWELRY, "WATCHES, ICEHOCKEYSKATES. 1978 . , or new VWparts, all kinda, PS/PB, jumbotires.1.5M Furruture.Muslsell,d~e ART-OBJECTS:GOLD, Bauer ••92" Nylon sailboat.~:e CHEAP mi.642--4097,642-4736
to m_ove. Glass ,,to~ is SILVER SER VICE,. &ipreme, size 8' men's . AfA gv 89j-9404 "'" ..__. .,..00 ,,.._ · -'··-k m ~1or •-"'· th1c'-oa .J 1 I ~.......:-, • to "" "'\SlA "'-'" • vvcJTY • nu "'" '"" .,..,. ""· FINE FURN & AN· $'!0or er.6'2-2073 ~ ... g space ~or up Pllddletirel.2lltUebros. lira, brakea, paint & ~~o~~·.9060 art ~PM TIQU~.'645-2200 ,aQ' ~Fisher 36 boat, $7S/mo. Sl76. 2 'Iii broe. sm. C much, mucb mote. Beat _.. Ou~eta-VHF radio * 6'13-4220 * momter mudden on 8 ofter over ~. . -.&520,
Earth tone plaJd chair, 2 O iamond earrings $129..95, Frame,.,....estal, Bait -deptbllOWlder 11a.....i..-. ls a slip for my ii.IC wbb, nr ne1! $t00. 5 •2290 Id ~ 1 ~int .. 25 each. VV.S beater. matt, tiner and endMuchmore 28~ Pl all 12xlJ.5 Tract,lcmile on 8 --------r::i:t1e". -~u:'cti's~~; Sa~~.-::~ue S.SSO ~.:~~~~ o=: 0.. lo.t. I <Wyl! 615-~. er. ease c l~~wNblaon·e· ~maa··'1 "6' !~ !!'41 .. ~.:"·
Bigears, F\a m., must sell Blvd, 1IB 960.s202 c-·a1 D • "".._ .. ,..... -., v1..-o.Y' due to move. Best ofr. 14sc._ -'8010 · -r-1 r'r1ce on wbt apt wbls ror mini·
Calj58 """"aft PM $38:950 T1 I liftefto. truck: 2 F78xl4 & 2 G '77GMC.,.ton,454,cmp/
1·"""'1 6 ···············-······ loaded ;:=:::-:-;:-:-=--=:-~~·i--------·Sml water purif. S250. new • • ••••••••••••••f•••••••• 78JC14 $1'6. 631·1028 spec., ·~d~r~s~e~~~,~~ CACJORY DIRECT . ~~!125 or 1>st --0rr. HAIRISOM'5 c:;.::r:a. 599/ 9120 p.ma&ed '89 Mualalll, all , S36-l.92S •
1978BMVf'•
HEREMOWf
COMft.111
IOOYSHOP
MOWOPIH
lltCILLIHT saac110MOf
IMWUS~U5
We tmJ have y<iur lat
car.in oor Inventory. ~11 wtoda)'t Ut·Z040 4tMt4f
Ol.AMel COUNTY'S OLDIS1' ·$:~.
ment window. uo volt, T1 SEA li Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• perts roe 1aJe. Call after Chevy~ too w/10'11 cal7·
max,BTU's.xlnlcond.6 '1Das4'nly1 PoolTable.'1".Satetop, '31.0lO>astHwy,N.B. 1980CbevyStepVan,coa· 5PM~ over camper. l2:500/bet
mosold,mustselldueto .L U • 3'Ci"X6'2" Solid t>lt 631·2547 ves1ediotocamper,Xlnt otr.544-0449aftlPll. yourolditufffor
as••• -lt1ll.OCS
c 1peed wlth tuDNOI.
(2111100).
1974200
• speed, &Ir co1MI. 6
1terto c••••tl•. (1dl0C).
lt7410S.
Autoaqadc. all' <'ClDI. • llQDfOOf. QlllllCLI').
lt743.fCM
Aut.omatlc, SUIU'oof • ltatber iQterlo r.
(-.zin') • .. ,. ....
' 1petd -witls .UlltoOI ~ D). I jo cbo9ei
lt77UOI
~ll io
lt17J2CI
" .,..s. Becero ..... ~caaeeU.elsJ:UCJ.
(01llSZK).
131-2040' 491-4N9
move. Patd$32Sw/sacnr Hide·•· $165. Xwin w / c ueis , ra c k., run'g cood. N~ some Allto.WS. .,., Toyotl SR5 tongbed new goodies with a
cit $180. ~II 581~ Aft mattress & boxsprings balls+waJJ banger. $295. body work• paint, $1SOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMI~!. 5 xlnt cond'. Cas6ified ad. 8'2·56711
6PM $49.95. f\lll mattresses&. 673-0538 ~T 482-11811 ltitcnllt1ul l"J00.~.557.an.3 Selling an~ with. I~~~~~~~~
•..tsof.•cWr bou~~s:Sattnu Must sell rims for Flat. FOR MolOltsaclU... 9140 V.wdn '530 '7SUN Mikado AM/FM DailyPUotCW.lfiedAd 89 BJIW 1800, ~.000 ot * 645-9100 * ~JI L I it St. ~A Call sse-mi Eves alter FISHIMG!!! ••••••-••••••••••••••• ••••••-••••••••••••••• cau, new um, sbelt ia a aimple matter • • • btltaft•. ~"'7·56~6 6PM 28Ft. CHAMPION New Batave Moped Black Cmvt 4 sat atreel legal boot, lo ml, white wbls. justcallMZ-5678. 831·2BT'7
Geroge Sale 11>55 ~~ ~ Redwood comnn.t $10. per CFS417BB. Flybridge, ~ ~i.lea&e $.T15. Call ~~.._.. buuy. '80CJ. Call snoo. bst ofr. 979-1976 .. .--, u--..a · U--..a
••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,... sinSI\' screw, galley, -_._, __. ..,.. ....._ -ESTATESALE ·ALLAN . . tM1p·~!l.,<!eliveryFree. head,balttank.Seeps5. 4 __ _..._. 9550 ·-9570 •••••••••••••••••••••••~••••9•••"111111•••-· TI~UES. Pressed lllass, ~~eloped.la Bnttamca "" .....,..........,. Englne completely re· 7JCa• IMo 34' -----"" ....................... .
China, Ceramics, Sil ver. .. · ~14-892
5070
bllt naugabyde arm Wit. Electronic gear ln· UJtenuccmd. Db cuatom ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7C Cbevy ·Nu dart tires,
Some furn. Sat & Sun, · cbrs, $35 ea. Gold cl. depth finder & brand inter 7, bead.room main 1' GMC Jimmy. white whls . al rm, sn rf,
Feb 25 &. ~. Crom Sam. Private tennis club mem· crushed '1elvet rocker new, wiused 2-way FM aaloO. diesel allXJ, auto auto, many xt.ra's $'5,000. FM/cass nu pnt, panel, ~402 Waterfront Dr .. berahip -in central Hunt· $&5. Swag lamp $10. 4 Tadio & RDF. $6800 or pilot, dingy, furl jib, ex· f /P 846-8525 aft 6:30p V·8 eog. mech prfct.
H.B .. (Nr Bus hard & ington "Beach. S36·6473 used Polyglu Good Year best offer. Call eves & tras. Sac 128,500. PP. Ph wkdys. $&.300. 646-9529 Hanulton) "8ft.5 tires, size 175-13, make wknds.645-9378 (n4)531-353S '73 Jeep Wa1oneer. Must Sac. '77 blk Chevy
ofr.Aft6&wlmd840-02TI '11 Glautron l7'. 170bp Malarcydn/ PS/PB/AC. Exe. cond. van, V-8, lOK mJ, whla,
'Volvo eng. 270 IB/08. Sculen: ti SO '4200. 552-0581ocl70-MSZ AM/FM stereo, very
IOI I Very gd cond. $3000. ••••-••••••••••••••••• Jeep 197S Cl5, V-8. lo mi, sharp. $5200. 83'7-3'710
••••••••••••••••••••••• e73-7529 '75 HONDA 250 ~duro. lot.I al atru. Xlnt run-'75 Dodge, P JS, stereo,
Private tJar ty wan t a dirt " It. 100 ml, 1ood nlll1 coacl. Call eva, i-nel'd & crpt'd, $3400.
camplnc sear. Low ,978 abape.$500.552-8075 m..-or bes l ofr.673-2180,
beacb chairs, canvaa e.iu. • tarp!, etc.4f7S-OBT7 alter ......, Used Amllll. UMd ___;_~-----II
• 5:3>pm. SEA RAYS ············-········· ············-········ "77 Dodce B-100 undel' . . --• • 'ftrT'lUllb'. PIS. P/8, V-8
~l~~rspistol ~s. .M aR Q DIS :.::::51l~~~:r~~-
..... ~nBow (l ~W..W 95901\.:~~~~~ Wu-• eOll •..m.228HP..1.trlr _ ..................... ,.
. -·.-•••-•••••••••••• stock 1J WE WIU IUY ~~~ ~;~~: MDT D R I! p=~~~~
...a&t7 ~155S&t5'l) ... TOPDOILAR 22'o.tdYS12.-VOLVO &TOYOT -y--•_. Fender-Rhodes~ Suit· .,oeded,m~trlr . A ~ --'-""'~
case electric piano. "3 ~k #550 I: w549) BAR W ICK DATSUN
Moatbl new. 412.allS 22'0vemlgbter
OHlceFMwit••• ~~liP~~~· SPECIAL TY CARS
.......... 1015 -cstoct t542•t5'.1) ......................... -:K'Cudd)'$1.3,11'17
mM executive typewriter WADED, 228 HP, trlr
•lJ,50. <Stocll 116&" 1567)
'4M-2411 HARllSOM'S
Exec. desk $139. 0raruna SIA IA Y
'bl $75. Exec chu, 31010>astlbJY,N.B. $10-JB. Wood desu 175 .a.31 ·111r47
ea. Fllea $35-$85. ~~~·~~-~~~~I Fluorescent lite flxtw'el, ::.
4' toctera $10. Wock tbla 19' Bell-Boy, 1/0 . Many ·~·· 631-rT77 :d:ru. $l500or best otr. 81W7'1 BeautUul portable--------Slgna tu re ma nu a I 19'10 13Y.' BostaD Whaler
typewriter. $50. 8'6-8579 elec llarter, Wied VerJ
evet. llttle, $1275. 873-0581,
2 ateel deska $40. ea. l Wkdays98'1-5S51
walnut exec. tletll 36JC72 But boat.11•, 4 bra on nu + •wivel dlaJr ~·Sat «lbp Chry tnotoc, $'U()O.
Dilly 1805 Tuat1n CM 545-3173 aft 5 • wlaada
1971 vw s9uAJtaAc:a
1971DATSUM
HIOCOUPI
A u t o m a t • c 4 speed transmission &
transmission & radio. A M / F M r a d I o .
(156KEM). (025NLB).
51495· ~2395·
1974 FORD 1974 MG
P1M1'0 WAeoM .-..r
4 speed transmission&. 4 apeed tfWllmlllSion &
radio. (849KMP). atereo radio. (002LIN) •.
~1895' $2495
CcJu.rt reporttn1 machine, 18'Wbaler,bullfiberclasa ----------+--------m good cood1lioa $100 firm. over Marine plywood. 197.3 TOYoTA I
COIOU.A C0UN •.f'122 anytime. *90, 6'13-0132 aft 6PM
P9tl 1017 3'' Areucraft Wftrlr, 10,
••••••••••-••••• .. •••• 210 OMC, xlnt cond.
RED-TAlLEDBOA Depth finder , RDF,
w /complete aquarium bead, Is moN. Sips c,
St(). 67$4226 evea '1 ,ooo. 162-0'r.IO evs
1976 DATSUN
1210COUPI
4 1peed transmission I
LQw . low mil••·
{t38PHE').
lt7SVOLVO
Z42DLCOWI
4 cyt,, automatic trant.;
ilr cond. l AMIFM.
(4S9PNN).
.... ,r 11, 1•11 'I '1,111
831-I J 7S 4<1 .l-JJ7S
WE BUY
Q.EAMCARS..
&TRUCK$
CONNRL
CHEVROLET
2828J:larbor Blvd.
CXJSrAMESA
546-120'0
WEPAYTOPDOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
FOREIGN, DOMF.Sl'IC
orCLASSlCS U your caria es;t.ra dean
neuaftnL , • 1Aua1u1ac
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Meta 979-2500
TOP DOLLAR
PAID roRa..EAN
IMPORTCAIS
ALLMOOILS
~~.'\
• I i I /,I ~ t t \i
H I,. r ' .... I • T n fo.J H l :... l .. ~
~ j a • • f~ , • • l () I) \ .\,
'7 3CHlr(~O·Sf'QP $ 2995 ~~~-~~~·=~ .
~~·=-:·~·== '74 DODGI DAIT $·2595
. • ......,.-~ OHL'f .
'7 ~~(,'a._. .. ,=$ 3895.
'7.6·~~; ·· -~~~s4595
.,
. :-
t . ::
I• .. =~ ·.1 ... ... :.1
·~ ..
ilw ARD YOUUELF
PREVIOUSLY OWNED·
MERCEDES BENZ
167 200 D ............ ~ •••••••• $4291
White Ind ...... (8819)
'76 240 D ••••••••••• ······.SI 1.100 llflOk wtth Rid lnter1or, (OS09)
171210 Seel• • ; •• ·•· ••••••• SI 0,100 Deep~ (0427)
. 173 Zia SI 4.5 • ~. •·; •••••••• Sl,&00
IYOtY wtlh llmtloo 1nttt1or.<e150) ·
173 410 SI ................. SI 0,900
loon Oolt$.-Ct1a4l
'76 450 SL ••••••••••• ~ •••••• $18,950
._lld whtl In.ck lnttttor. (8331) .
'74 410 SIL • ·-• •• .' ••••••••• S 13,100 e.ta• Mftlltlo Ceoe8)
'73 210 Seckll ................ $7,999
lb OrMR. (0447) •
41 Mot l'ln~lng •
AIOl'lg31dt
The Sant• Ant
Freewav
Find the wheel• you want or 1ell the ones
you don't. Rely on the automotive
claaalfleds In th• DAILY PILOT
942·5878
.JOHNSON a SON
SALE
COSTA MESA
OAT~UM
••• 1977 i ALL MODELSI
TAKE YOUR CHOICE
LlllCOLll·MERCURY . .
C•GAR·MOllARCH
COMET-BOBCAT
SALE NOW IN PROGRESS
••• ENDS Fil. 28th
OUR LOWIST rRJCIS O' THE 'EAR
OH EYERYCAI IM STOCKI . __....__.
I ~ •• AND, OUI Hl9MllT TIADNCI OF THI YIAll
Nabers
Cadillac
Laa, ............. ,,._,, ,,, ____ .....
t
(
'
17
· •=D· 1978 GMC
V2 TON PICKUP
(TC0148Z510«9l
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
$
3:73 axle. lock. d1ff .• 400 va. turbo hydro. 31 $ gal. tank. pwr. steering, H 0 batt.. chrome
bumper.. r9n'IOVable hardloP. gauges. vinyl ,,,_
terior, folding , .. seat, ttnteed glna & much
morel TKR188Z512218
1MMEDIA TE DELIVERY
•=D 19788'(
I Ton Cab & Chassis L.W .B.
Mlrrort, H.O. shocka, frt. ttablliiw main & aux. R.R. aprlnge, H.D. power
brakes. 350 vs. auto. trans.. aux. tank, power steering, dual ,..r
wheels. H.O. batt .•. radio, trans. oil cooler. full depth Mat gauges &
7.150ic16 inc. spare. TCL338Z513918
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
. IRAND NEW 1'71 IA\( .
% Ton Shortle Vans-
Power steering. aux. seat. rear dOQr gins, gauges.
Shortled $
3.73 ute. H.D. epnngs I shOcks, lock. dlff .•
400 ve. turtx> hydto. •lcld Plata aux. tank.
pwr. s1Mtlng, tilt -...1. '9dlo. Steel bumper,
gauges. Sierra Gr~. cu.tQfn lnt.Oor. tru trees & 10" chrome tPOk ... TKR148Z608144
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
I pa ... Mating, tinted glae. ltl6nleel mirrors, lfr cones.. mldg&, H.D.
thocka, ttll>HIW, '400 VI, autornetlc. tilt wtiffl, WheeL trtm, fN/r. lteer-
lng, AM-FM '9dlo. elec. Clock. 2 tOM paint, gauges. hi-back ... ,. &
much morel TGR268U508802
. •=D 1978 IMC . ._.
11/2 TON CA~& CHASSIS
I
' t I t
' ,
\
•sug9estec1 Retan Price •••• $9539
• Dl1c0Uflt •••••••••••••••• S 1200 . 2 Sale Price •••••••••• $8339
-., Ser. t2069K8X1.28827 .
IMMEDIATE DEUYERY · .
•• 1978 Grand Prix
51000
DISCOUNT
•s.gg.sted Retail Price •••• SUtt
DlscOlmlt •••••••••••••••• SI 000
Sale Price •••••••••• $78H
Ser. #2H37U8P553879
IMMEDIATE DE~ERY
._ 1978 Pl10enlx Sedan
~
5800
DISCOlm
•s.gguhd Refal Price •••• $7351
Dl1C0911 •••••••••••••••••• S IOO s• Price •••••••••• S65s 1
Ser. t2Z80L8W108349
IMMEDIATE DEUYERY
/.
·11ew 19J8 Grand AM
51100
DISCOUNT
•SllCJ9ftfed Retail Price •••• $78'9
Dlsc:CMMt •••••••••••••••• $1100
Sale Price •••••••••• $6769 Ser. #~G27U8P539022
IMMEDIATE DEUYERY
flew 1978 Flreblnl Fonnula
5950
DISCOUllT
•5t1ggeded Retall?rke •• :.s1nt
DlscCMllll ••••••••••••••••• ,s tso
Sale Price •••••••••• $6829
Ser. #2U87K8L 115872 •
IMMEDIATE DEUYERY •w 1978 S.lllnl 2 Door
•
5500
DISCOUNT
•s.gg.stect Retall Price •••• SS25t
Discount •••••••••••••••••• S 500
Sale Price •••••••••• $4759
Ser. #2E2718U6~2622
IMMEDIAD •LIVERY
t ,
1977 VENTURA 1977 GRAND PRIX
•t~
1977 VENTURA
•LY
$
• automatic trans
• V-S
• factory air conditioning
• power steering
• auto"'8llc trans.
• rallye wheels
• '869RCW
• automatic trans.
• V-8 • rac110
• factory air conditioning. • rallye wheels
• power steering • 838T JB
• rallye wheels
• 868REW
·' •l
17
7
,,
I yoL 11, NO. s.1, •SECTIONS, 38 PAGE,S
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol U. o.ilf l"tlet S~tf Trustees or the Huntinetol\.
Beach C~y <elementary) School
District have reached a decision
lo terminate seven teachers next
September because of forecasts
or declining enrollment.
There were unconfirmed
reports that the cutbacks also
would hit the ranks of principals
and members of tbe
odm inistration.
No formal action bas been
taken in these areas, however.
The termination notices wlll
be sent out March 15 to the
seven teachers who were last
hired by~ district.
Superintendent S.A. Moffett
said today that the action ls
necessary because the student
population ia expected to decline
by more than 500 next
September.
The total enrollment at the
distrtct'a 1B schools la projected
to be 7 ,20o& next fall.
At tbe tame tlme, it was
repotted that Robert La~. an
ioterlm ass(tta1Jt superintendent
for educational services, bad
recommended that bis position
be eliminated at a aecrett
executive session o( the boaro
Tuesday.
.Neither' Landi or Moffett
~
would confirm OT deny tbls
report.
Landi sald that be is assessin1
bla department because of the
sharp dropo(f in enrollment. Ke
said other departments are
doing the same thing.
"I am denyln& that the boa.rd has taken any action on the
di mi.nation of my position,•• be
said. "1 am obllcat.ed to keep
confidential the discuaslo.nl 1a
executive sea$lOns.... ...
Landi compUed the report t.Nt
lorecaat the decline.
His department oversees
at>ectal education, fec1halty
funded progranu, Early
Cbtldboocl ltducatton, the
Rbrary, bUiafual 1ludies and th
mentall~ t.4ned minor procram.
Ile eafd that more flrt,n
recommeridatlops Will be
dmcuased at the boafd'• next
Wad • L8W'7ers
RITES SCHEDULED
Police Officer Miiier
Final Rites
Slatetf,f,or
Mr. Miller
Catholic rites are set today
and Friday for Los Angeles
1>0liceman and longtime Hunt·
ington Beach resident, Michael
Miller, who was killed Tuesday
while avoiding taking the life ol
another man.
Patrolman Miller, 28, died in
bia small foreign car when be
swerved to keep rrom hitting a
downed motorcyclist. His auto
o verturned and was tben
rammed by another car.
The former Huntington Beach
Bigh School track star was en
't~ute home from _plainclothes
Cluty about 2 a.m. when the fatal
>I accident occurred on the San Diego Freeway in West Los
<See MILLER, Page AZ)
'366GetAid t .\ i4t Huntington
~ Stonn Celder
Eleven
Seeking
Co11ncil
Elet>ftl ccndidate• .are n1nning
/or lhree .wou on the Fmmtain Val~11 City Cocmcll. The el.ecUon u
MaTch Y.
Following .are twwf profilu of
three of the candidate. together
with theiT.OMWeTa to qtlelUom <:On.•
cernmg iuuea in the cit11. Similar
report• on thrff othn candidale•
were pubh1hed an Wedneaday'a
Daily Pilot. Report& 01t the remain· mg candidate• will appear in aubae·
quent IU!Ae& of the ~apapn-.
Walt HammOllif, 47, or 16300
Mt. Baden-Powell St., , and his
family bave li"4 In Fountain
Valley for; 12 yean.
Hammond u 1 a real est.ate
ag Hels t!i .. ~.,
a PoiiitllD
Yaney ~
ia1 com• .........
Hammond
ls seco nd
vlcepreaideot
o I t b e
Fountain
Vtlley
Chamber at
HAMMOMo C~m meree:
He also b8I been attl•e on lbl
cily"s Han':i':ftp~cl CiU1ena Advisory Co tt:ee andl with
the ocal Exchan1e Club.
Wiiy .. Yotl WU YCMI ~d do
a ........ ~ • Ule CM7 c-cu u. •• , ... .,, ..... ,
"l feel my proressional back·
IJ"C>Wld 11 an architect, engineer
and real estate man quality me
for tbt City Council.
"I also fffl my years in tbe cl·
ty and involvement in numerous
civic activities provide me~
a knowledge o( the residents."
Wlllat cu die City Coaacll do
to Improve postal service ID
Foantala ValleyT
•'The parking and window
service for patrons at our post
omce is definitely not adequate.
"We bave no direct control
over this matter, but we can ex·
ert some pressure."
HamDIOOd said be would back
a plan for a larger post office
tiilildb)g in the future.
~ die city couell COil·
tldei' ulac vacut aellool baBd·
.. ,. -..uect ICJlool sltea '°' com malty act:IYIUHT •
Hasnmood said be favors city, "'
acqulaitloo of a JNll'UoD Ot a 10-
acre unmed acbdM ... Deac' tile CO~Del' of Elli• Av.nu. .......
Bushard .street. 'fti roull&llaa
Valley (elementa17.) setaiool Dlf"..
trict is ~lderinl a ,.. w iell
the proJ>e*1y. :v-::.:
Ham,StJoad aald. ttie lW-......
Che EL£VEN, iliMJ
While folks b~c!k East slug their way
lhr-0ugh mountainou.s snowdrifts and
shiver through a coal Strilte, Orange Coast
residents are piloting their sailboats
Ca.bove ) through summer weather.
' Beachgoers also are taking advantage of
temperatures as high as 80 this week,
with beach traffic iams approaching
summer proportions.
$575,900 in Gems
U,eported Stolen .
LONG BEACH CAP) -Nearly
"1~.000 ln diamonds and other jewelry· waa taken in two
sepal'ate incidents along this
port clty's "jeweler's row."
police pid todav.
KUJ.Create
'Ena:1unters'
ANTIOCH (AP) -Antioch
police say a strange, orange
light seen over the East Bay
may have been caused by im·
aglnative Y,oun1sters trying to
create the illusion of a UFO .
Patrolman Rich McEachln was one ol five officers who saw
the Ught after police received a
call from a curious citizen
Wednesday.
Mc:E1tchln sald all his in·
,.. veat11atloft bad turned up was a
rut11or that 0 a couple of kids
toOt •di'J cleaners bas, filled it
wftb heli\a\n and attached some ~~lea tO It:"
In one Instance. $346,275 worth
of uncut diamonds In a briefcase
was taken Wednesday while the
owner made a call from a
telephone booth, leaving the
briefcase on~ ground outside.
In a robbery five hours later, a
jewelry store clerk was rouched
up by two bandits ln ski masts
who raosacked the store for
$221,000 worth of unc ut
diamonds, gold cubes and
custom rings, officers said.
Richard Wolf, 28, of the Los
Abgeles jewelry firm of Charles
Woll and Sons, said be kept an
eye on his briefcase while mak-
ing a 45-minute call to New York
from a phone booth o'n Pin't
Avenue.
But the thief sneaked away'un·
seen with the briefcase, he told
officers Robert Van der Meer
and Stuart Gordon.
Woll said that before he made
hlf call, be bad been abowin1 hl.s
diamondt-t~ sever~l of the jewelry firms which line Pine
Avenue.
ValJey SClwol
Board Weighs
Revamp Plan
Fountain Valley
elementary School Dis.lrict
trustees will eye the costs tonJght
of proposals that could bring
~bout the cloaure of three scbools
and the establlsbment of a jUl)ior
hlib school.
The ~bool board will meet at
7:30 p.rn. in the ~ct offices
near the corner of Newland
Street and Talbert Avenue.
Deputy St.ij)erintendent Glenn
Hardy said loday the plan
recommended by district aides
would cost at>o.,lt $1,038,144 plus
the f~ needed to renovate
the burned out eight-classroom
wing at Harper Elementary
School.
Hardy said there are no fimn es Um a tea on the cost ot
restoring tbe buildlnf gutted by
fire last year.
School board President ltaren
Ackley said ttus\ffs are still
cQnsldertb2 co8t options.
The cos{ oPl.lons range from
$470.157 for building one junior hltlr school to construction
projects 1.h.roulhout 'Ute dlstttct
totatlin& about tt.'1 ntllllOD.
meetinfMarch7.
Moffett said that the s"8ven
teachers will be pared in order
to maintain the current ratio ot
one teacher per 28 pupils.
ff e said that a bout 12
additional teachers are expected
to be Jost through normal
attrition. There are currenUy
about 3SO teachers employed in
the district.
Comment .
Heard by
Juror? l
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. o.lly Pl• SUH
Lawyers for Dr. William
Baxter Waddill asked the Judge
in bis Orange County Superior
Court murder trial today to!
declare a mistrial on the basis or•
alleged misconduct by twol
county officials involved in the
trial.
Judge James K . Turner was
told during a hearing conducted
outside the presence of the j ury
that at least one juror heard
comments prejudicial lo the
defense after the close of
Wednesday's court session.
Defense attorney Malbour
Watson said bis wife, Sidney, is
prepared to testify that she
beard part of a conversation
between Dr. Robert Richard and
District Attorney's investigator
Don Burton.
Watson said his wife will tesWy that she was wailing for
an ele•ater with at least one
ju.ror in the ITOUP 1U'OUnd her when Richards and Burton
enaaged in a ~onversation
prejudicial to the defense.
Dr. Rlcbards is the coroner's
offlcel' who conducte d an
autopsy on the 28·week infant
allegedly strangled by Waddill
after he failed to abort the cbil<l
last March 2 in Westminsle•
Commw1ity Hospital.
Richards• verdict that the
baby died as a result of manual
strangulation is being strongly
challenged by the defense.
Watson, who js also a
physician, and fellow defense
attorney Charles Wedman.
argued today that Richards'
. testimony is worthless since he
has not adequately proved the
true cause of death.
Judge Turner denied that
motlon and told both lawyers
that their arguments
challenging the coroner's ruling
would be better addressed to the
jury at the end of the trial.
But the judge assured both
defense lawyers today that be
will bold a Cull inquiry into the
incident reported by Mrs.
Watson and two other incidents
brought to bis attention by the
defense.
'.Other Coverage
Additional Huntington Beadl
coverage appears today on Page
AlO.
Coast
Late niebt and early
·morning fog alone the
coast. otherwis& sunn~
Friday. Lows toni&bt 48 to
55. Highs Friday 68 to 75.
INSIDE TODAY .
Ht!'• Mr. Whultr·Dcaln.
the car «>UmJCm 101'o'll ataftd
Oil hia Mod lo roalce.o dcol.
·Cal W~on ta.lka .atlola
h" U/t. Sn Featuri"11,.PQQe
Cl.
'
•t .
AZ DAILY PILOT H/F
,..._P~AJ
MII .. IER •.•
art .
todey at P ierce Brothers·
Smith's Mortuary, followed by
Mass of Christian Burial at 11
a.m . Friday in Sts. Simon &
Jude Catholic Church, Hunt·
inaton Beach.
Motorcyclist Mike Kvammen.
26, of Pasadena, walked away
uninjured after hi1 machine
crashed. accordin& LO California
Hiahway Patrol.
Davina Firestone. 26, driver of
the car which struck officer
Miller's overturned auto, was
treated at a nearby hospital and
released.
"He died saving someone
.else's life ...• " says Mrs.
Mary K . Miller of her son, who
received several citations for
valor and dedication in his three
years on the LAPD force.
Copies of personnel evaluation
sheets in the family scrapbook
show him rated outs~nding in
ever y category lisle<! and he was
about to begin duty with a new
special detective detail.
He was assigned al the time of
his death to a Crime Repres·
s ion Unit (CRU ) a s a
plainclothesman and occasional·
ly worked with the Hillside
S trangle r Task Force, his
mother says.
Officer Miller was in line for
two citations which hadn't even
bee~ typed yet, for two burglary
arrests made in the past two
weeks.
Fellow officers today were
'J)reparing to honor the 14-year
Huntington Beach resident, who
moved from Seal Beach to West
Los Angeles three weeks ago to
be nearer his job.
Patrolman Miller was a 1969
graduate of Huntington Beach
High School : a 1971 graduate of
Golden West College and, in
1974, obtained his bachelor's
degree in police administration
from Cal State Long Beach.
An avid surfer, be made an
annual trip to Hawaii and al.so
was active in snow skiing.
Before joining the LAPD, Of·
ficer Miller worked while in col·
lcge at popular seafood
restaurants in Huntington Beach
and later was a department
s tore security officer und u
Huntington Beach police cadet.
Survivors include his mother,
)!rs. Mary Miller; two brothers,
Airman l /C Jeffrey Miller of the
U .S. Air Force a nd Thomas
Miller, a .Huntington Beach High
School freshman livlng at home;
a sister, Melinda Miller of
Newport Beach : hi s
g randmother, Mrs. Marie
Kearney of Michigan, and
several aunts and uncles.
Burial will be al Ho ly
Sepulcher Cemetery in Orange.
F,....PopAl
TORTURE ••
the adverse impact of Miss
Pendleton's ether-soaked story
on the jury.
First. an attorney testified
that when Douglas was first ar·
rested the woman told him she
planned to write a book about
the misadventure.
It was lo be titled "The Last
Living Victim of Fred Berre
Douglas."
In addition lo establlshlng a
possible moneymaking motive,
Giles had Douglas explain bis
relationship with the woman.
The burly defendant told lhe
jury Miss Pendleton had once
worked for him as a barmaid
and was fired for allegedly lak·
ing money from the c ash
register.
Family Feud
Kills2 Men
DENNY CAP) -A wild
s hootout in a rural mountain
area in northern CallromJa left
two men dead and a lblrd person
critically wounded with multiple
bullet wounds, the Trinity Coun-
ty sherUf said today.
"It was a Jonf·standing feud
that involved a couple of
families:• said Sherlrf Tom ' Kelley.
DAILY PILO T
Solons' Meet ,. "' • . .
WASHINGTON CAP} -P1ta14ent Carter 1,ummoned
con•re11ional leaders to the
White House today ror a meeting
on the coal strike as power
cutbacks from the 80-day work
stoppage triggered the first rna·
jor l~off ln the auto lndustry.
The meetina was announced
amid apeculaUcm the president
waa plannln1 to Intervene more
forcefully lo attempt to end the
strike.
aide• ln the dispute to reach ~
settlement. ·
The White Houae baa prepare!
legislation to Impose a
settlement in the United M~
Workers strike but has made
clear its preference tbat ~
sides in the dis pute reach ~
negotiated aetUement. .
The strlke's latest• snag ~
veloped when the coal lnduat.tr
rejected the UMW's "bottom·
Une" contract proposal as unflt
!or a nationwide aareement.
Jarviil Bill .. ·.;
o.llY '"" ...... " LM "-YM WHERE OH WHERE HAS MY HIPPOPOTAMUS GONE, WHERE OH WHERE CAN SHE BE?
Carter asked seven senators
and five House memben to
meet wllb him. According to an
aide to Gov. Julian Cartoll of
Kentucky, Carter also invited
the govemors of West Virginia.
Kentucky, Pennsylvania and
Ohio t.o a later session al tbe
While House.
c arter aides acknowledted
that some govemo~ were com·
Ing but made no immediate an·
nouncement about that meeting.
~To Cost CCCD
$13 Million? ::
Lion Country R•nger Steve Clerk Hunts NoatrUt From Old Ftshlng Shec;k I( the Jarvis-Gann tax relii:f
initiative passes, the Coatt
Community College District wl.U
lose about $13.4 million neKt
year, or 46 percent of ita reV•
e nues, trustees were told
Wednesday. ·
I
Night Capture Foiled ..
The purpose of the White
House meetings was unknown,
although one possiblllly was that
the president was seeking to in·
crease public pressure on both
Truatees In turn asked
Correllan Thompson, executiri
vlce chancellor for business a(.
fairs, t.o prepare two budgets, a
regular one and one that would
accommod'ate the drop in rev-
enues If the J arvis measure is
adopted by voters June 6.
Hippo The~ Song: 'Don't Fence Me In' Crime/ighlen
Cancel Dinner By PIUUP ROSMARIN
Of CM o.lty ...... SI.ti
Somewhere in the Laguna
Hills. a hippopotamus still blows
bubbles at the forces or law
enforcemenL
Bubbles, possibly the only
anim al in hippodom with a
chance al celebrity, lay happily
submerged today in a pond a
stone's heave from Laguna
Canyon Road, her Jungle near
what people call Leisure Wo~ld.
The three-ton mama hippo
escaped from Lion Country
Safari on Monday.
··we had a chance to get her
last night," said sleepy senior
ra nger Steve Clark . ''She
managed lo elude us."
The hippo reportedly hulked
from the security or the pond at
about 8 p.m . for her nightly feed·
Ing; four r angers closed in, tran·
quilizer dart guns at the ready.
"We got a tranquilizer into
her," Clark said, "but she didn't
gel the full dose. It bounced off
her hide."
. Bubbles flalloped the length or
two football fields back to the
pond. rammin& a 'ranger jeep in
the process, denting it, it was re-
lated.
"Tonight we're gonna make
our big move." said Clark.
"We're gonna have four or five
jeeps out there so we can cut her
Assad Goes ~ome
MOSCOW CAP > -President
Hafez As sad of Syria le ft
Moscow today artcr a three-day
visit and talks with President
Leonid I. Brezhnev on Middle
East developments and bilateral
r e lations , th e Soviet news
agency Tass reported.
Fre•P-.AJ
ELEVEN SEEK SEATS. • •
the land could come from de·
velopers' fee& in lieu or provid·
ing other park land in an :ld·
Jacent neighborhood. Holh.nden
said
"We should lake a hard look
al m ainlaining closed school
buildings (for city us e>. but the
dollars to do It aren't there now
It would cost about $75.000 to
maintain one school building for
one year."
Wllat cu tbe City Coa11d do
about drug abuse among
Fountain Valley's yoath'!
"Fountain Valley ls not unique
h e re nor does it have an
especially bad drug problem. I
would l'ncourage improvement
or existing anti-drug programs."
Bart Shlgemara, 18, of 10151
Stilbite Ave., is a USC student
who lives with his parents In
Fountain Valley.
Shigemura said he bas been
active In West Oranae County as
a p art·tlme
aide to As·
s em blyman
Dennla
Mantters, but
isn 't now
e mployed in
that capacity.
He bas also
been active ln
registering
v o l e r I i n s..toaMu••
Fountain Valley by walkln&
through neighborhoods.
Why do you lhlnk you could do
a better Job on the City Council
than yOCIJ' opponenta! "I feel I am qualified because ·
I nm able to have more In··
teracUon with the community.
''I would conUnue t.o walk pre-
cincts and al$0 h ave ·more open
office houri to help consUtuenta
and better serve them•'.
What can tbe City Council do
to Improve postal service ha
Foantabl Valleyf
"The only thine we can do ls
work cl01er ltllb fed~ral of.
nclals. This ls not something the
City eouncU can directly take
action on We should make them
awaro of ihe problem."
Slaoulcl UM City CoaDfU con-
tWet .-. vu.at aclaool "11d· tat• or ilRMcl school al~ for
•••md&7 atUvt&la' "I thtnk \bit matter shoWd bt
left up to tbt vat.rt to declde In
an 11.cuon. They 1bould decide
lf tax "'°"'¥ abould be spent on
thil 9r0Ject ' .,..,_ C --*• ...... ftlt ta• tie "RI CMhn;u -a1-oat •r•JF ••Ht ••,••I ro••tala Yllle1'• 100Utt
,, 111t•1 Do' aa blt at tome
candldai. have made it out to
tie. Thin it • '1f111 problem 1ri
ntrY ttty tn on.a:&• Coun\J a l'OQt.Ul Valli)t ii no exceiJ(km. ·~w. MW '° won wt~ 1M 1ebo0l board and ,ouce d•· ........ to~•Nll· JMJ llteU.we \M CltJ Cowadl ba ..... ...., Wbid to \be ~ ........
l
off from that take.
·'She wants to aet batck to Uon
Co'untry (as she did on a p~e
v1ous brier unescorted excursion
from the park). She's. trying to
get back.
"But we don't want lo let her
go back by herself, for fear
she 'II detour through Leisure
World.··
The rangers plan to dart her
and either ride Bubbles back ln
the scoop of an earth mover or
pack her back In • apectal
animal crate, hippo frelihl:
"I'm pretty 1ure we're gonna
get her tonlchl.~ Clark said,
then thought about it. •·Actually
I'm not sure or anything."
MOOEL3060
JM/AMr MW TV CAMTTI
Pl.A YH ltlCO«De
A banquet in honor of the third
anniversary of Huntington
Beacb's Neighborhood Watch
cri m e fi g hling program
scbeduled for Feb. 28 has been
cancelled because not enough
people wanted lo gel involved.
Ken Wh i t e. of the
co-sponsorina Huntington Beach
Exchange Club, said today that
350 tickets were expected to be
sold. but only 75 bad been
purchased to date.
The $10-per·person ticket price
paid by those who have a lready
obtained them will be refunded,
White said.
MODEL RC-515
"The Impact or the Jarvis
a mendment would be such that
nearly so percent or our operat-
ing budget would have to be c\lt
and that means elimination ot
many progra ms and a large
number or personnel." said
Chancellor Norman E. Walson.
Richard Simon, spokesman
for the c:Uatrict. said community
colle&e dlslricta are prohibited
by law from charging tuiUon.
He saJd trustees will continue
to discuss possible program cuts
and other ways or trimming th~
budget at their next meeJ,i.D&. dt
March8. •
JMJMW /SWI fSW1.ftG ....... 1-0
IADIO CASMnl llCOlDU
THI SUPll 111' Wmf NA TUHS
GALOll . • Big 6VI" Dual-Cone Speaker pro111des robust
1.8-watt potput power. • 5-band tuner permits
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I
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17
___ _..........._ , ..... . -. .... .,
•
Tnur.cj•y. FebruillY 23. 1978 LOCAL I CALIFORNIA-
I
"'••oh, Miss! Does your sphere of service extend to
• · my area of reoeptlon?"
.eld as Adult
1 Youth Jailed
: 4/ter Escape
A youth who passed his 18th birthday in
Orange County Juvenile Hall, charged with shoot·
irtg a Huntington Beach policeman 16 days ago, is
j~iled as an adult today, following a brief escape
Tuesday.
"' Timothy Scott, 18, a transient originally from
1be Garden Grove·Santa Ana area, bolted from a
juvenile officer escort at UCI Medical Center and
<t9vc through a second story rest room window.
· His grandfather surrendered him later. ;,
HE HAD BEEN taken to the UCI facility for
t11lnor surgery to remove a shotgun pellet lodged if bis chin as a result of the Feb. 6 gun battle with
pOlice in the Five Points area of Huntmgton
»each.
':;. Today Scott is held in the juvenale detention
~cilily of Orange County Jail, based on a court or·
&r issued by Superior Court Judge William S.
-urray shortly ufter his escape.
:· Sheriff's Lt. Thomas Harrison said the order
10ade possible an arrest warrant, citing the violent
ttndencies involved in the shooting of which young
~ott is accused . .
; THE SUSPECT was five days short of hi s 18th
b}rthday when apprehended.
He is charged with assault with intent to com·
ntit murder on a police officer; burglary and
' possession of stolen property.
Huntington Beach Patrolman Jerry
Fuhrmann, 36, was wounded in the left hand by a
shot from a stolen .9 mm Smith and Wesson
alitom atic pistol in the confrontation in the 1800
block of Carnaby Lane.
THE SHOT SEVERED tendons, but
fllp okesmen at Huntington Intercommunity
Hospital said the officer's wound was not serious.
Scott was hit by three shotgun pellets fired by
ope of several offi cers who surrounded a nearby
)qm ber yard at 7600 Redondo Circle where the flee·
ing suspect took cover.
Following a day-long manhunt centering on
Scott's previous known hangouts Tuesday follow·
1*g his dive for freedom, the suspect was brought
t~ juvenile hall.
•. BE IS NOT, therefore, charged additionally ~ltb escape, ..according to Lt. Harrison, of the ~erifrs warrant detail.
.~ It has yet to be determined if the sllgbtly·built,
~ancut youth will now be tried as a juvenile or an
adult, according to authorities.
1 \ i I l \
:: Officer Fuhrmann was shot at almost point· ~nk range when he slipped through the rearyard
lf~te of a Carnaby Lane borne and met the
blirglary suspect he was seeking face to face.
I '
,
IRONICALLY, THE automatic pistol used in
t1Se shooting had just been stolen from the nearby
hOme of a policeman who works for another de-
p~rtment.
' "" Inve5tigation led to the subsequent arrests of f 13 other burglary suspects at the Huntington
! :Qeacb home where Scott was reportedly living.
t
-Police radio traffic during the hunt for him
TtJes<tay indicated be was believed headed back
• tllere. • . ,
l t
SCORE Workshop
~ Executives .
~ Set Clinics·
,•
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Strengthen a 1"Clk
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1 77 5 OZ. TUBE
2 27 12 OZ. CABTRIDGE
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And the 11lotor and th• table lnMl't. ball
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depth of cut. (And a .little eo1Mthlng off
the price too.)
. ~ Seal out w.ather and water. staya flexible, =·· y-penetrate•. apply ln any temperature, woo•t
Save that bike, outdoor furniture, '• ~ equipment. sand castle. paat.raml
atand.. portrait of Dorian Grey, •
MASONITE
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·=
UNIDENTIFIED PATRON DANCES ON SARSFIELD'S BAR
Rod Hayden ServH Ortnk at Popular Watering Hole
:~ :· . .. Anything Goes
'In' Watering Hok Dra'l.m Elite
WASHINGTON CAP) -Sars rield's ·!~s one of the Carter crowd's favorite
. watering holes -or at least it used
:to be -because It's a place where·
•• Washington's young power elite can
: ··really Jet loose ·· ··~ .. They don't haH~ to worry about
preserving an image thilt they have
-to mamlam during office hours."
said Rod Ha}dcn. "'ho W:.tl> ~er\'lng
drinks from behind an oak bar
Jam med walh noisy patrons on a re-
cent weekday nighL
"TllEY CAN C01'1E in here and let
their hair down and act like regular
guys," Hayden said. "It's good to be
able to slide back mto that ex-jock,
ex-fraternity attitude now and then
.::and have a good lime ...
Sarsfield's is the place where one
tegular, chief Carter aide Hamilton
Jordan, aJlegedly spi t his dnnk down
the blouse of a young wormin during
a recent altercation
· Jordan has denied the account.
;.published in The Washington Post.
and the While llousl' hiis releast!d a
~~Phone Firms'
.:·Plan Rejected
On Junk Calls
SAN FRANCISCO IAP> The
state Public Utillues has asked 29
telephone companies to resubmit. an
more specific language. proposed
regulations banning automatic dial-
ing devices ror sales pitches.
In rCJCCting the first draft or the
proposed rules, filed in response lo a
Jan 10 PUC re<1uest, the agency said
Wednesday it wants clearer. uniform
•• ;regulations
SARSFIELD'S GAI NED a re
putation soon after Carter's election
as a place where Georilans could get
together and. as political consultant
Terry O'Connell put it. "really get
down and get crazy "
Just off Pennsylvania Avenue,
about nine blocks from the White
House and close to fashionable
Georgetown, Sarsfield's is frequent·
ed by sophisticated-looking young
men and women who mingle in a re-
laxed setting imitative of an English
pub.
The owner, Carter advance man
Richard Evans, catered a cut-rate
party ror members or the new
administration in December 1976,
and Carter aides. hke appointments
secretary Tim Krafl. pollster Pat
Caddell and special projects director
C rl'g Schneiders, kept returning
CHIP CARTER, THE president's
son. ui.ed to drop by ror some chug-a-
I ugg 1ng. and one ntght 11 feisty
Jordan jokingly took over the job as
doorman
··we would go to Sursfield's every
night becaus e you would see
people you knew and h1n c a good
time and not be bothered." s aid
Mark Weiner. who 1.1.ork., in the
scheduling orftce of the While I louse
When lhe "oldies but goodies "
begin to play, there are excited
shrieks of recognition or a Beach
Boys' hit. a nd the cas ua l c rowd
begins to dance. fir.;t in the crowded
aisles and then atop the bar
"DANCING ON THE bar 1~ 10
keeping with the free now or the
place," said bartender Hayden
WASHINGTON <AP)
-T he A m e r le a n
Automobile Association
reports that it costs less
to drive a car this year
than It did in 1977.
The cost of owotng
and operating an
a veraee. intermediate
sized 1978 auto was set
at 19.6 cents per mile.
By comparison the
1977 figure was 20.2
cents per mile. AAA
said.
Leading the decrease,
AAA said, was a drop of
5.4 percent in gasoline
and oil costs
. ... "We love to dance at all those
places where tt is inappropriate," .
said Schneiders .
11'1\nday, Februwy 23. 1978 DAILY PILOT A8
P~ellenics to Meet March 1
Tbt i.aaunl.l Beach ~anhe~enic ~sociaUon
will meet at l ,.m.
March 1 In the upstairs
community room of the
Laauna Federal Savlncs
Bank, 24301 Paseo de ..
THIS
STRAWBl:RRV
MARGARITA A family
of popular
cocktail mixes
for home
ente rtainment ·MIX
KING.TUT
HAS ARRIVED
Now you too can en1oY the Egyphan relics
of the past Thes. smwtly-styted T-shirts
lets you wear ancient Egyptian att Choose
from a selection or COiors and designs 1n
bOth men & women sizes
MEN'S IOTS'
4.tt 3.tt
-~
METAL
FOOilOCKER
JQ99
KIDS .•. _
SAT.
MARCH
4th
3rd ANNUAL BASS JAMBOREE
o ... \t.S'· .O~/~ ~ On March 11th and 19tft Wootworitl S.th ~f
Coast> Plcna will hold It's 3rd .._. lms
J 111l one. n.r. wll IM a ...., of llres. rddl.
,...... ...... .., ..... tta.eyam-.......
ngerctl•9 ban .fltllf•9 •Hwer•d lty
,..,..sc.tell•H froM Gcrclca Corp., legt.y
UNI, SllylM .... '" ...... '-"· MflXhM LiH, Sal>r• lods, Zebco, lelMI.~ Proll••·
Wuhnl ._ .ct W•hn Ollldaar Hews. We
hopt to H• '°" Mitr• . . . • • . . . ..d
re...._ to keep a tHJ1tt llMI
SANYO
BLACX&
WHITE TV
·: THE PUC ALSO ordered two in-
:;v estigations inlo "Junk telephone
~ calls ."
The commission also s aid op-
ponents should be permitted to show
why such rules shouldn't be adopted.
In the last few months, though, the
Carter crowd has been an Sarsfield's
less and less.
Great '°' 11or1ng many and most
items! Plywood box frame with
rugged handle Assorted colors
6999
Quick start picture
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THE REVISED proposals are to be
·filed by March 6 for a June 1 er-
:lective date. Public hearings on the
, tariff will start March 22 In Los
:.·:Angeles.
;!:· Issues to be investigated include a
·:.~ustomer's right to privacy from
·automated "junk" telept)one calls. ·
" the PUC's right to control or tjan
.. such equipment. and whether any ex-
~eptions should be made.
"We've been in Washington longer
and kf}OW aboul more places now,"
said Weiner.
BUT OWNER EVANS figures it's
becauff "once a place geLs a re-
putation as an 'in' place. then the
people who made it 'In' don't want to
go there anymore.''
"These people like to have run." he
said. "They're supposed lo be on
pedestals like some sort of aods but.
they're just human. Now they don't
li&e to be watched by other people.'•
Property ot promi"8nt L.lsure Wotld r'esi~ntt
together with property of others.
Property inc•ud• fine ~t crystal, poroitllln figurines, china •tJ,
oriental Ngs, bronzes, oils. furniture, o9ock-. fur ~ts. etc. Also,
many itams of fine •ntique and mod1tt1 jewelry incJudlng large
d ia. tolitalres, clult9r dia. rings, dia..neokl-=es, Md teYeret import·
tnt die.. pins. Other miscellaneous i18ms "nclude gQld chains,
·,WftQti•, d iamond stud earrings, etc.
8-TRACK
OI
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25 steam vents for evel\
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15
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PLAYMATE
.COOLER
PAPER
TOWELS ...... ~ ........
44¢
85SQ. "·
(
f ..
' •
17
17
. -~. -.. ,., ' 11::.'4 • ... -.. .... 11---.... --:
Irvine
EDITION.
·Afternoon
Today's Closing
N.Y. Stoe~s
VOL. 71 , NO. 54, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1978 TEN CENTS
.. Jarvis Would Cut
The Irvine Unified School Dis·
trlct budget must be slashed 38
percent if the Jarvis-Gann
propert y tax initiative is
approved by voters in June,
district trustees were told
Wednesday.
If such a cut had been applied
to this year's $25.8 million
bud~et, the district would have
lost $9.8 million in revenues, ac·
cording to calculations by the
Cou nty Department o f
Education.
Trustees are faced with decid·
ing what to do if the initiative
becomes law.
Notices to teachers that they
might not be rehired next year
have lo be made by March 15.
The board did little Wednes·
day other than express col·
lective s hock and direct admlni4trators to prepare a list
or alternatives for their March 8
meeting.
Tuesday the Los Angeles
Unified School District notified
40,000 teachers they might not
be rehired, because of the
Jarvis-Gann measure.
Gene Hartline, Irvine as·
sistant superintendent, said the
°'"""~--"Lae~ .... WHERE OH WHERE HAS MY HIPPOPOTAMUS GONE, WHERE <>H WHERE CAN SHE BE?
Uon Country Anger Steve C .. rk Hunte Noatrtla From Old Flahlng Shack
Hippo· Hides
Bubbles Elrula Capture
By PIDUP ROSMA&IN °' -Ditty """ ~ Somewhere in the Laguna
Hills, a hippopotamus still blows
bubbles at the forces or law
enforcement.
Bubbles, possibly the only
11nim al in bippodom with a
chance at celebrity. lay happily
sµbmerged today in a pond a
stone's heave from Laguna
Canyon Road, her jungle near
what people call Leisure World.
The three-ton mama hippo
ciscaped from Lion Country
Safari on Monday.
"We had o chance to get her
1Jst night," said sleepy senior
range r Steve Clark. "She
managed to elude us."
The hippo reportedly hulked
from the security of the pond at
about 8 p.m. for her niehUy reed·
ing; four rangers closed in, tr an·
quilizer dart guns at the ready.
: "We got a tranquilizer into
' ber," Clark said, "bul abe didn't
' aet the full dose. It bounced off
• ber bide."
from the park). She's trying lo
get back.
"But we don't want to let her
go back by herself, for fear
she'll detour tbrou1h Lelaure
World."
The rangers plan lo dart her
and either ride Bubbles back ln
the scoop of an earth mover or
pack her back in a s pecial
animal crate. hippo frei~ht.
"I'm pretty sure we're aonna
get her tonight," Clark said,
then thought about It. "Actually
I'm not sure of anything." ·
Irvine School c:
Board Seeks
Flood Relief
Rainstorm damages estimat·
ed at $120.000 prompted the
Irvine school board Wednesday
to apply for federal disaster re· uer.
Snuff Susl".:'ct
~Denies Plot
By GAJlY GRANVILLE OI -.,..,, ..... , .....
Accuted snurr sex film maker
Fred ~re Douglas denied · to-
d1t Y that he planned the actual
tdrtute, murder and dis·
membennent or two women he
lured lo a remote desert area
htst July.
"No, no, no," Douglas replied
when defeose attorney Terry
Giles asked U he really intended
to slauehter what in reality were
two ·undercover policewomen
posln& as porno models.
Doullas took the witness stand
in his own defense as bis trial on
soliciting murder and attempted
murder charges entered its final
phase in Orange Count y
Superior Court.
The prosecution alleges that
the 54·year-old Costa Mesa man .
recruited the two attractive un·
dercover policewomen to take
part in lesbian bondage photo
taking sessions in Yucca Valley.
<See TORTURE, Page AZ)
e Schools38% •
district would find It bard to
send such notice! to its teachers
because, he said, it would dis·
mantle the educational system.
Another d ist rict
administrator, Jack Parham,
comme nt ed in apparent
rrwstration today. "How can we
plan? Where do you cut $10
million?
··vou can't save your life by
cutting your lells oft rrom the
waist . It's crisis planning, more
than it is reasonable planning.
"What do you do whe n
somebody drops a bomb on your
bead?"
Hartline told the board that
the Jarvis-Gann initiative would
bring such chaos to scbool dis·
tricts that the Legislature would
be compelled to act to prevent
damace lo the educational
system.
Last week, al a satellite com·
m un lcalions conf erence
sponsored by the district, state
S uperintendent of Schools
Wilson Riles said districts
statewide would average 37
percent cutbacks in revenues as
a result or the properly tax in·
itiallve's passage.
Mistrial Sought
Waddill Juror Heard Comm~nt?
By TOM BARLEY
OI -o.llr ,...,. Stiff
Lawyers for Dr. Willia m
Baxter Waddill asked the judge
in his Orange County Superior
Court murder trial toda)' to
declare a mistrial on the basis or
alleged m isconduct by two
county officials involved in the
trial.
Judge James K. Turner was
told during a hearing conducted
o~:tside the presence of the jury
that at least one j uror beard
comments prejudicial to the
defense after the close or
Wednesday's court session.
Action
Held Off •
On Strike
WAS HI NGTON (AP)
P resident Carter bas decided
not to intervene •t this point to
end the 80-day-old coal stnke,
congreulonal leaden said to-
day.
A.Her Bepu.blican and
Democratic leaders met with
Carter at the Whtte ftouse to re·
view the strike, they said the
president is continuing to review
several possibUities, but that be
intends to hold orr rurther before
interven i ng lo Impose a
settlement.
Sen. Howard Baker, R·Tenn.,
said Carter apparently will de-
cide what nction to take after
the weekend.
"I think he wants to keep his
options open." Baker said.
The Senate Republican leader·
also warned that it could be late
April or May before Congress
would be able to act on any
special legislation the president
might seek to end the strike.
Such legislation would be needed
If Carter were to have the
federal government take over
the mines or require binding
arbitration.
By then, Baker said, there
could be 90 percent power
cutbacks in some areas and
millions or people out of work.
<See STRIKE, Page A2>
Oef~nse attorney Malbour
Watson said rus wife, Sidney, is
prepared to testify that she
heard part or a conversation
between Dr. Robert Richard and
District Attorney's investigator
Don Burt.on.
Watson said hi s wire will testify that she was waiting for
an elevator with at least one
juror in the group around her
· when Richards and Burton
engaged in a conversation
prejudicial to the defense.
Dr. Richards is the coroner·s
officer who conducted an
autopsy on tt~e 28-week infant
,
allegedly strangled by Waddill
after he railed to abort the child
last March 2 in Westminster
Com mwtlty Hospital.
Richards' verdict that. the
baby died as a result of manual
!tlranguJation is being strongly
challenged by the defense.
Watson , wh o is also <t
physician, and fellow defense
attorney Charles Wedman.
argued today that Richards·
testimony is worthless since he
has not adequately proved the
true cause of death.
J udgc Turner denied that
(See DOCTOR, Page AZ)
'Sex Symbol'
NY Mayor Most Desi~able
NEW YORK (AP) -"I am the sex symbol,"
said Mayor Edward Koch after learning that 84
percent of the New York women questioned by
Forum magazine consider him the most desirable
male in the Big Apple.
"It restores my ego somewhat." he said, in
responding to the poll that found single women feel
the mayor should have a wife to share his Gracie
Mansion home and bis bachelor pad.
"Mary Lindsay said I am not sexy and to ha\·e
84 percent of the eligible women refute that restores
my confidence," Koch said Wednesday.
Mary Lindsay's husband, J ohn, had been voted
the "sexiest man" in a British newspaper poll when
he occupied Koch's City llall seat.
Judge Dumps Laws
Banning Nazi March
CHICAGO (AP) -A federal
judge struck down three or·
dinances enacted by the pre·
dominantly Jewish suburb of
Skokie today in an attempt to
prohibjt a group or Nazis from
marching there.
The decision by U.S. District
Court Judge Bernard M. Decker
lifted another legal obstacle to
the plans of the National
Socialist Party or America and
its leader, Frank Collln. to
m arch in the \rillage of 70,000.
home of numerous survivors of
World War II Nazi death camps
and the relatives of others who
lost their lives lhere.
The march bas been tentative-
ly scheduled April 20, the 89th
anniversary of the birth or Adolf
Hitler.
Bubbles galloped the length of
two foot.bell fields back to the
pond, ramming 4 ranger jeep in
the proceaa. denting lt, it w~ re•
lated.
''.Tonight we're gonna make
our big move," aald Clar~.
"We're gonna have four or ftve
Jeeps out there ao we can cut her
off rrom that lake.
Tbe board voted 5-0 to seek
funds to pay costs of debris re·
moval, tree replacement and
flood control meas ures al
several district schools.
B .izarre ~1ning Blamed
Decker declared un -
constitutJonal ordinances which
would have ( l) banned the wear·
ing of Nazi uniforms, (2)
forbidden the distribution or "of·
fensive material." s uch as Nazi
banners and leaflets, and (3) re·
quired heavy insurance to cover
any damage resulting from a
rally or demonstration.
"She want.a to •et back to Lion
Country (u she did on a pre·
vioua brief unesdorted excuralon
Coast
Weather
Late ntiht and early
"mor1Unf fo1 alon1 the
coaat, otherwlae auntty1
Friday. Lowa toalibt 41 to
A. Hltha Friday el to 75. •
District spolcesman Jack
Parham said 29 trees were up·
rooted by the burricane·loree
wlnd!I of the Feb. 9-10 storm.
Flooding occurred ln some
buildings at IrviM fft1h SClllOol,
and at four elelDt'Dtai'Y. tcbOOlt.
Water, Gun, Too Many Cal-s Come Together
from the wife or mctiard King,
83, of 27416 Loe Banos, Mission
Viejo. She reported a family
argument .. and deputies re·
portedly learned her husband
had a gun.
Four sheriff's units were dis·
patched to the King home. That
was at 2:30 p.m . ·
At approximately 2:45 p.m. a
Santa Marearlta Water Dis·
trlct main was ripped open with
a b•ckhoe used in electrical ex·
cavalion work at.-a conslnlction
site on Loe Allsos Boulevard Just
east or Trabuco Road. dlatrlct
employees reported.
Sheriff's deputy lra Essoe Jr.,
responding to the gun complaint
with red lights flasbtn1 and
siren screaming, slowed at the
Los Alisos·Tra buco intersection
at a bout 2:50 p.m ., then ac·
celerated, continuing east on
Los Alisos.
Essoe told California Highway
Patrolmen that his car hit
hubcap-deep water, hydroplaned
and turned a comph!te circle,
s mashing into the rear of an
auto driven b y Constance
(See All.RF.ST. Page A2>
Decker acted on a suit br~
by the American Civil Liberties
Union, which claimed the or·
dinances violated guarantees of
free speech.
The ACLU . ~cause or its de·
fense of the Nazi group, bas ~t
thousa nds o r m e mbers
throuahout the nation.
Today's rulioJ follows an fl.
linois Supreme Coort decision
which overturned a Circ\lit
Court injunction banning the
Nazi march. '
that John Burton, the other
councilman wbo•a retiring.
favors his candidacy, ••be sar.i
does Ma'yor Bill Varctoull& -
who alao back Anthony -and
David Silla. Other revclaUona of Tutsday's
rorum:
-Moore 1l11Jtd the Jarvi•·
Gann properly tax lnitlalivt.
because, ho uld, "h1t's better
than tbe 1ituaUon we ave now."
-Several of the ca.ndidaw
bavt rtctlved mum •l·
lowable donaUopii.., -.. th from ck~ b\lt *K tlloie
( JOSU•, ..... Al)
\
DAILY PllOT
'Heir'
~mn~·
Lying
LAS VEGAS (AP) -Melvin
Dummar admits he wove an in-
tricate fabric or Ilea to cover bis
involvement with delivery of a
disputed Howard Huthea wW.
"l was trapped," he told
jurors at the Mormon Wiii trial
Wednesday. "l lold everybody a
lie that l hadn't seen It or had
anything to do with ll and I
dldn 'l know how to slop it.'•
In a probing cross-
examination, attorney Paul
Freese explored the conflicting
stories Dummer invented lo the
months after the will was found
naming him as heir to one-
sixteenth or Hughes' fortune.
The attorney cited the most
damaging evidence y~t in the ef-
fort to d1scn-dit Dummar
Thal Dummar'l> wife liked
to spell their name "DuMar,"
the same spelhng used in the
Will
That Dummar's aunt who
worked for "Milli onaire
Magazine" would have known
much about Hughes.
-Thal Oummar's aunt and
cousin pounced on his newfound
fame and offered to start a busi·
ness to sell Melvin Dummar pro-
motional items. "1 never was crazy about get-
.~!!}g into aryy business with ll1Y
relatives promoting what I'd
gotten," Dummar declared.
Freese also e ntered in
evidence the book "Hoax."
which Dummar admits reading
after the will was found. Freese
sought to show he read it long
before that.
Oummar <1dmilled that he de-
nied ever touching the will for
many months although he was
really the mysterious delivery
man.
· · 1 knew from the very first
day thut the truth had lo come
out eventually," Dummar said.
Out under f'rcesl•'s question·
in g, Dummar conceded he dad
not tell his current story until
after attorne\' Harold Rhoden
told him :i previous scenario
··w:.isn't going lo ny ..
Ile reiterated that his current
story is the truth that the will
was brought to his Utah gas
station by a stranger, that he
slc:.imed it open. read it, re-
sealed it and delivered il to the
Mormom church
F,....P11geAJ
ARREST •..
Renek, 3-l. of 22791 Via Santiago,
Mission Viejo
Deputies in two other patrol
units arrived at the King home
shortly after the accident. King,
deputies reported. had run from
the house to a connecled garage
and called for ;.1 shootout
But rast·talking deputies con·
vinced the man to give up his
gun and come out. Ile was ar·
rested and booked on charges or
assault with a deadly weapon on
police officers.
While deputies al the King
home were allcmpling to sort
out the family argument that re-
portedly triggered the gun in-
cide nt, accident victim Miss
Renek and her passenger, Jodi
Cheslcigh, lG, of Ms. Renek's ad-
dress were rushed to M isslon
Community Hospital, Mission
Viejo
Both ,·ictams were treated In
the emergency room and re·
leased. a hospital spokesm an sh id.
Deputy Essoe was not Injured
io the accident.
In lhe Interim, Don Boe of
BOE Elec tric Company.
Westminster, puzzled over plot
and street plans of lhoe accident
area where, water district of-
ri c i a Is said. a Southern
California Edison Company
crew had ruptured the water
main.
''That line wasn 't even
supposed to be there," said Boe,
pointing lo a diagram which ap-
parently showed the line stop-
ping atcurbelde.
ORANQI COAST
DAILY PILOT
~
Derailment in Illinois
Nb:on, Fa•Utf
WASJUNGTON CAP> -A six-
month searel\ has failed lo tum
up any indication that former
Pre1ldent Nhcon or bll family
kept val~ble foreign girt.a that
belong to the government, NBC
News reports.
NBC correspondent Carl Stern
said Wednesday a report to lhat
effect ill nearly ready to be sent
to the State Department which
asked for an accounting of the
gifta.
James B . Rhoad s, the
archivist of lhe United States,
refused to confirm the account.
but said his agency's report will
be sent to the Stale Department
soon.
·'
searched the Nixon's seaaldo
estate at San Clemente "at our
req ue.st."
The search was launched lasl
Auauat at the request or Evan
Dobelle. the Stale Department·~
chief of protocol.
"There are various allegations
t hat some ot those al.It.I may bo
m IHlng," Dobelle sald then ... l~
ls my reaponsiblllty •.. lo the'
public trust to make sure lbey.
are not." ,
NBC said archivists concluded
only one major item was miss-:
ing -an orient.al rug sent by the
Shah of Iran in 1969. The rug
waa not at San Clemente.
Thirty-three Ci..lrS of a southbound Illinois
Central Gulf fre ight train lie strewn al>out
the right-of-way al Dongola, Ill., after the
train derailed Wednesday. No one was in-
1u r ed in the accident, which resulted in
·the e,·acuation of the business 'district.
But the NBC report said lhc•
arcblvlst.a apparently uncovered
one s urprise: that a lot of miss-
ing Items of nominal value were
taken by members of thti Nixon
staff as they went throu1h the
White House, lookln1 fol'
1ouvenlrs. ~r hia departure.
Jack Brennan, Nixon's top
aide, aald lhat arc:hivlats even
Dobelle requested Lhe account'
ing nrter a Washlnelon Post.
story saJd that some "ml.11Jne'~
Ile m s included a carpel,:
watches, antiquities, an oil:
painting, a sUver box, a sold.
necklace and bracelet and,
several other braceletl. :
Accordlnl lo one report, •
necklace described at mlsl~
was In the fl rat box opene4
among the crates left behind ln.
Waahlnston and held under court·
order when Nixon realaned. County Man
Indicted en
Rape Charges
A man accused of breaking in-
to three Fountain Valley homes
and raping the women oc-
c upants was indicted on 11
felony counts Wednesday by the
Orange County Grand Jury.
The Superior Court ar
raignment of Frank William
Johnson. 19, of Garden Grove.
has been scheduled for March l
He is held in the county J1:11l with
bail set at $250.000.
Johnson was arrested Jan 11
shortly after he allegedly raped
a 29 -year -old v 1ct1m Jl
knifcpomt whale her 9·) ear old
son s lept in a nearby bedroom
· The victim told the grand jury
that she earlier had heard a sus-
picious noise in her home and
telephoned a cousin who prom·
ised the victim that he would be
right over .
She testified that immediately
after she made the phone call.
Johnson grabbed her and
warned her that if she did not
get rid of her cousin when he ar-
rived he would use the knife on
her. She was then raped.
Police said the cousin was
persuaded to leave but he
became suspicious and called of
racers.
Frot1t Page A J
TORTURE .•
Giles is attempting to prove
that his client was simply a big
talker and little doer when it
came to carrying out his mm
making boasts.
As part of that effort the de-
fense lawyer Wednesday called
23-year·old Vicki Pendleton to
the witness stand.
Miss Pendleton testified that
In October of 1976. she had been
lured to the desert by Douglas
on the pretext he wanted to take
some bikini-clad cheesecake
photos.
Instead, the woman testified.
Douglas forced her into helpless-
ness by smothering her with an
ether-drenched rag
Wh en s h e awoke. Mis s
Pendleton said, she had been
s tripped or her clothlni and was
bound.
Douglas allegedly held a pistol
at the woman's head while he
forced her to perform sexual
r iles with hlm.
The woman said she did not
report the desert misadventure
to police because Douglas told
her he was Hoked with the Malia
and she feared reprisal.
Strike Blamed
Frot1tP~AJ
DOCTOR •.•
mo~ion and told both lawyers
t h a 't l h e I r a r g u m e n l s
challenging the coroner's ruling
would be better addressed lo the
Jury at the end of the trial.
But the judge assured both
defense lawyers today that he
will hold a full inquiry into the
incident reported by Mrs.
Watson and two other incidents
brought lo llis attention by the
defense.
Fro• Page Al
STRIKE •.•
He ~aid invoking the Taft
llartley Act would be a good
first step for Carter to take in
lht• m eantime.
The governors of Kentucky,
West Virginia and Pennsylvania
arrived at the White House this
a(ternoon after being summoned
Cor their mecling with Carter.
Deputy press seeretary Rex
Granum said they were selected
because they represent three of
the four top coal-producing
Mates He said Ohio Gov . John
Rhodes. anothe r leading coal·
producing state, conferred by
telephone with Jack H Watson
Jr . Carter 's assistant for in·
tergovernmental affairs, and
that Rhodes and Watson agreed
that the governor would not
mukc the trap.
Sen Jacob K. Javats. R-N Y .•
!>aad Curter 1s considering three
posslb11itics, all of which could
he ordered al the same time: in-
voking the strike-halting Taft.
Hartley Act, requesting
legislation that would Impose
arbitration on the two parties
while providing for temporary
federal seizure of the mines, and
declllring a bargaining impasse,
leaving union locals free to
bargain with individual com·
panics.
Both Baker and Javits ~aid
they support Carter 's approach.
While Baker said the Senate
might be slow in acting on any
special legislation. House Ma-
JOrity Leader J ames Wright said
he believed the House could
move promptly.
Carter's earlier meeting was
with Sens. Robert C. Byrd, D-
W. Va., Alan Cranston, 0 -Calif.
Howard H. Baker, R-Tenn .. Ted
Stevens. R-Alaska. Jennings
Randolph, D·W.Va .. Javits and
Harrison Williams, D-N.J .
Also: House Speaker Thomas
P . O'Nelll, D-Mass .. Reps.
Frank Thompson, D-N.J ., John
M. Ashbrook, R·Ohlo, John J .
Rhodes, R -Arli .• and James
Wright, 0 -Tex.
* * *
Auto Layoffs Begin;
More Cuts Likely
By The Assodated PteA
The llO-day coal Jtrtke brou1ht announcement of the fU'St ma·
jor layoCfs ln the auto industry today, alonaalde warnings of
thousands more to come in slates where utilltles rely heavily on
coal to Pl'.'Oduce electrlotty. In KStomo, Jnd., General Motors' Delco ElectroMcs plant an-
nounced lt wtn lay orr 8,000 of its 1,800 hourly worken for oni day
Frtday because of power cutbacks forced by tl\e coal strike.
INDL\NA HAS BEIN THE HA.RD&ST hJ\ atale, wttb S,400
ener11·related layoff• reported Wtdnt1d&)'. · NaUonaJ Guardsmen c&M'>'inl unloaded M·19 rtnes and ·~·
munition stood ,uard today at key intenectton1 to ensure the aaft
movement of coal convoy& to utWUes.
" Donald J. Atwood, 1ene.u1 manacer of the Deloo plant, aald ~· la)IOfla are needed Lo meet 1 )S percent curtailment of •lectrlcal ua, lmpoaecl by hbllo Serv,ct Indiana, lbe 1t1te'11 lar1eat Utility,
aEGtJUa P&ODt1Cl'ION WILL rtlUIDt Korida1. AtWOod
1ald, but .:OOU.et one.day la)iorf m11 be necwary Much I lf \be
coal a_hO~• conUn ,
Diving Bird
In the Coop
LAUREL. Md. <AP) -
An overly friendly plaeon
accused of "dlve bomb-
ing" local realdents bas
been puL In the slan'imer
by the Howard Co\lnty
animal warden.
Howard 0 . Wood ,
manaaer ol the Valencia
Motel, alleaed that lhe
plaeon, Sea Breeae,
swooped on four
employees in "sneak at-
tacks." Wood said the bird
"slaps" people on the
head with lt.a winas.
Bul 14 -year-old Terri
Sowers dispute d the
charge, saying her pigeon
•·actually isn't trying lo
slap anyone.
MODEL3060
™/AMT l&W TY CAHTTI
f'\.A Yll RICOUM
,,,.... • .,,..41
F()RUM •••
people have rights, too.
Agron said he'• accepted no
1uch contrlbutioM, but didn't In-
dicate whether any had been of-
fered.
Ellen Freund reported two de-
veloper donations -"one builds
in the north, and one buUds in
the south -that'll tell you
somethln1." ·
-The candidates who com·.
mented-Hoffman, Moore and
Anthony4>ppoae locaUon ol a
perm anent clty hall next to UC
Irvine, a aile the current council
is c:onaidering but won't decide
till arter the elecUon. •
They favor the site listed In
the city general plan, centrally
located at Jeffrey and Barranca
roads.
MODEL RC-515
Band BooBten
OpenCanU~l
The University Hl&b School
Boosters' annual carnival to
s upport the Irvine school's
athletic pro1ram opens Friday ·
!or a three-day run.
The carnival, with ride., food
and 1ame booths, la held In the
parkln1 lot of the school, at
Cam pus and Culver drives.
Thia la the sixth year the event
will be held.
Carnival hours are: Friday, 6
p .m . to midnleht; Saturday,
noon to midnight; and Sunday.
noon to 8 p. m.
FM/MW JSW:C,V:2/MI IM.tA• '-" UIHO CAS • HCOlDB
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•
17
VOL. 71, NO. 54, .C SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, F-EBRUARY 23, 1978 TEN CENTS
SC Council Candidate 'Self-radical'
By ANNE COOPER
Ol 1,_ DAiiy l'ilet It.ff
"I'm a radical. I 'm a
revolutionary. I want to turn the
system upside down," San
Clemente City Council candidate
Robert Chester Rusin told an
audience of about 75 people Wednesday.
Rusin was one ot 13 City Council
candidates to speak at the city's
second candidates forum. this one
sponsored by the Presidential
lieights Community Association.
A founder of the Resurrection
Party, which he described as a
third political force organized to
challenge the two major
political parties, Rusin said he
hopes to act as an inspirational
force to the citizens of San
Clemente.
Other candidates also
appeared eager to inspire
voters. Carlo Bocci, retired
businessman, said be bas filed a
statement of promises and
<'Om m ltments with the city
clerk. He said he took this step,
''so If I am elected. I will not
have amnesia."
Candidate Jaok Brown, a
rellred purchasing agent,
proposed Installation of
turnstlles along city beaches. A
10 to 25-(ent fee for using the
beach would help defray the
$500,000, which beach
maintenance annually costs city
°""" .......... ...,~~ WHERE OH WHERE HAS MY HIPPOPOTAMUS GONE, WHERE OH WHERE CAN SHE BE?
Lion Country Ranger Steve Clark Hunte Noatrtla From Old Fishing Sh•ck
Wppomdes
Bubb"les El~s Capture
By PWUP ROSMARlN "She wants to get baek to Lion
OI -O<llly ,.. ... S!Mf C t ( b d'..a Somewhere m the Laguna oun ry as s e ... on a pre·
Hills, a tuppopotamus still blows vious brief unescorted excursion
bubbles at the forces of law from the park). Sile's trylnJ to
enforcement. get back.
Bubbles, possihly lhe only "But we don't want to let her
animal in hippodom with 8 go back by herself, for fear
chance al celebrity, lay happily she'll detour through Leisure World." submerged today in a pond a stone's heave from Laguna The rangers plan to dart her
Canyon Road, her jungle near and either ride Bubbles back ln
what people call Leisure World. the scoop of an earth mover or
The three-ton mama hippo pack her back in a s pecial
escaped from Lion Country , animal crate, hippo freiRht.
Safari on Monday. 1 "I'm pretty sure we're gonna
"We had a chance to get her get her 'tonight," Clark said,
Jasl night," said sleepy senior then thought about it. "Actually
ranger Steve Clark. "She I'm not sure of anything."
I managed to elude us."
I The hippo reportedly hulked
from the security or the pond at
about 8 p.m. for her nightly fe(!d.
ing; four rangers closed in, tran·
quilizer dart guns at the ready. l "We got a tranquilizer into
1 her," Clark said, "but she didn't
get the full fiose. It bounced off
t ber hide."
Bubbles galloped the length of
two football fields back to the
pond, ramming a ranger jeep 1n
the process, denting St, it was re.
lated.
"Tonight we're gonna make
our big move," said Clark.
"We're gonna have four or flve
jeeps out there so we can cut her
off from that lake.
Coast
Weath e r
Late nigbt and early
morning fog alone the
coaat, otherwise sunny
Friday. Lows tonight 48 to
55. Highs Friday a to 75.
~
INSIDE TODAY
2 Heist,s Net
Gems Valued
At $575,000
WASHINGTON CAPl
President Carter summoned
con1resslonal leaders to the
White House today for a meeting
on the coal strike as power
cutbacks from tbe 80-day work
stoppaee lrigered the first ma·
jor layoff in the auto industry.
The meeting was announced amid speculation the president
was .planning to intervene more
forcefully to attempt to end the
strike.
Cartel" asked seven senators
and fi'(>e House members to
meet with him. According to an
aide to Gov. J\lllan Carroll of
Kentucky. Carter also invited
the governors of West Virginia,
Kentutky, Pennsylvanilf and
Ohio to a later session at the ·
White House.
Carter aides acknowledged
that some governor~ were com-
ing but made no immediate an-
nouncement about that meeting.
The purpose of lhe White
House meetings was unknown,
althoui}l one possibility was that
the president was seeking to In-
crease public pressure on botb
sides In the dispute to reach a
settlement.
The White House has prepared
legis lation to impose a
settlement in the United Mine
Workers strike but has made
Clear l\S preferente that both
sldea ln the dispute reach a
negotiated settlement.
taxpayers, he said.
City purchase of one or two
parking lots along A venlda del
Mar was proposed by candidate
Ed Dieden, a retired news
broadcaster. Parking meters
would help offset the expense or
lot purchase and maintenance,
he said.
A tax break for San Clemente
residents was proposed by
candidate Charles Fox, a
formerly appointed councilman,
who chose not to run for election in 1976, when hls expired.
Since the city provides fire
and rescue service to the San
Onofre nuclear plant, the city
should take steps to create a
special district incorporating
San Onofre, Fox said.
"San Onofre has a tax base
five times that of San
Clemente," he said, "The tax
savings would be obvious."
The Jarvis·Gann tax
limltaUon initiative which will
appear on the June ballot
received attention from seven
candidates. Four supported the
initiative and three opposed it.
"I'm ln favor of Jarvis," said
candidate Myrtis Wagner, a •
clock manufacturer. "We have
to save money -why shouldn't
government?"
Candidate David Dodson, a
buyer and college student,
(See FOBUM, P a&e AZ)
Laguna Backs
Flood Project
Laguna Beach city
cou ncilmen unanimous ly
endorsed a flood control plan for
Laguna Canyon Wednesday
night that is contrary to one
backed by the county Board of
Supervisors in November.
The 'rote came after a two·
and·a-half hour meetmg with a
chamber full or angry canyon
residents who urged city. county
and CalTrans officials to get
moving on improvements to
flood channels along the 5.6 mile
roadway
Disputed
Project
App,..d ,
By GARY G&ANVILLE Ol_D.-y .........
Protests from La&una
Greenbelt otnclals were brushed
aside Wednesday when the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors, in effect, approved
development or a 533-unit
condominium project In Laguna
Hills.
The Supervisors' 5·0 vote
upheld unanimous county
Planning Commission approval
of the use permit needed by
Rossmoor Corp. to &et the
57-acre developivent under way.
The development site Is a
portion of a 248·acre parcel west
of El Toro Road and Calle Corta.
According to Laguna
Greenbelt spokesmen, the
project site Iles within the
designated greenbelt area as
well as within .an area shown in
the conservation element of the
county general plan.
County Environmental
M.anagement Agency (EMA>
officials said, however, there
are no precise boundaries for
lbe greenbelt.
Moreover, tbe EMA officials
added. land shown to be in a
cooservauon area is nonetheless,
e!igible for development.
Laguna Greenbelt president
Tom Alexander said he's not
certain he agrees with the EMA
stands.
At tbe close of a two-hour
public bearing, Alexander said
greenbelt attorneys will review
the designations issues.
Should the lawyers uphold bis
opinion, Laguna Greenbelt will
seek a court order hailing the ·
(See CONDOS, Page AZ)
The council selected the
second of eight alternatives pre-
pared by the Orange County
Flood Control District -an
alternative that would cost $9.S
million at today's prices.
But a spokesman from
Supervisor Tom Riley's office
said this morning completion of
the flood control project will
take years under the best of
circumstances.
··Even if the city bad gone
along with the supervisors'
(r\ov. 2) proposal, which would
have cost $2 million, it would
have surely taken two years of
budgeting to provide," said
Riley aide Peter Herma~.
"But a project such as the one
recommended last night, figured
al $9 million -which is old
figures -would take many1 many years."
Herman said the capital im-
provement budget of the flood!
control district is only about $11
million per year, "and even the
$2 million fi~urc (for the
<See FLOOD, Page A2>
'Sex Symbol"
NY Mayor Most Desirab'le
W YOR~ <AP> -"I am the sex symbol,"
sotd ayol Ecfward l\och after learning that 84
percent ot the New York women questioned by
Forum magazine consider him the most desirable
male in the Big Apple.
"It restores my ~o somewhat,•• he said, in
responding to the poll that found slngJe women feel
the mayor should have a wife to share his Gracie
~tan sion home and his bachelor pad.
"Mary Lindsay said I am not sexy and to ha\'c
84 percent of the eligible women refute that restores
my confidence,'' Koch said Wednesday.
Mary Lindsay's husband, John, had been voted
the "sexiest man" in a British newspaper poll when
· he occupied Koch's City Hall seat.
Candidates Debate
GroWth of San Juan
San Juan Capistrano's growth
limitation policies sparked de-
bate Wednesday at a council
candidates' forum.
Members of the Mariners Village Homeowners As -
sociation heard nine or 10
council candidates alternately
laud and criticize city policies
that limit residential growth to
400 units per year. Erwin E.
"Jerry" Drake was the only
council hopeful absent.
Much of the growth limitation
debate centered around lhe
question or its impact on city
taxes.
''Slow growth will lower laxes
if it's plaMed well," candidate
James Thorpe said, defendlng
growth restrictions. "That
planning requires a projection o~
what a reasonable number or
homes per year Is."
Thorpe, onetime mayor or the
city, said the 400-unit per year
restriction was based on bow
much additional housing the city
could afford annually without
substantially raising taxes.
"Servicing housing is ex·
pensive," candidate Marilyn
Williams agreed. "In a slow
growth situation it's extremely
important that you develop a
commercial/industrial base to
balance out residential."
The retired businesswoman
criticized the city for failing to
encourage more commercial
and industrial development
"that ofrsets the burden on lax·
payers."
Candidate Al Arps, a retired
teach er, criticized limit~d
gr.owth.
(See GROWl'll, Page A2)
Rabies Clinic
Set in Laguna
The second and final low cost
rabies clink for dogs will. be
beld Saturday from 10 a.111. to
noon at the Maio Buch Fire
Station in Laguna ~acb.
Cost to pet owners Is #.
Laauna Beach and dog li~
personnel wm be on band.
Pet Responsibility Committee
otflcials w~ doc bwners tha\
there will be a penalty added tO •
the cost ol clt..y do licenses after
Feb. 28.
l 1l.Z DAii. Y PILOT
•
gABRIELSQ
nd 01 • lad o Vut L•1una• en don m ent of
Sweeney, Dike and Blshop.
Despite surprise expressed by
6evera1 of the candidates al
Gabrlels' withdrawal, the re-
maining eight hopefuls outlined
what they believe Lo be tbe
greatest problems facing
Laguna Beach. Only candidate
Jim Bishop failed to make the
televised Corum. He reportedly
was to take a stat&.• bar ex·
amination Wed.nesd1y.
Candidate Wayne Baglin
charged the current City Council
wlth approving a $7 .9 million
budget last year ''that was
$40,000 more than the de-
partments even put on their
wish lists."
That comment was later de-
nied by Councilwoman Sweeney
who is seeking re-election. She
said the city does not have a fat
budget.
Baglin also said the city
s hould be able to gel by with 160
employees (one per every 100 re-
s idenl.S), charging the city with
"spending us into bankruptcy."
Housewife Maggie Meggs told
League members Laguna faces
an intrusion of 60,000 more
people and 20,000 more homes if
Aliso Viejo's plans outside
Laguna Beach are approved.
"We'd better be alert to that
fact," she suid adding that lhe
new council should be tough.
:·All we can do is harass them (big business and d evelopers)
a nd put up roadblocks every
step of the wag."
Stockbroker Dawson urged
co'ntinued negotiations over
Sycamore llills , saying th.:t
"through negotiations and joint
planning we can accomplish
much more than downzoning Ca
portion of it) and getting our·
selves into a lawsuit.
"Today we have 100 percent or
nothing except a $37 million
suit."
He said he opposes any large
subdivisions in the Art Colony,
saying the constraints should be
measured by the capacity of the
streets. Dawson ulso said he
believes he can cut the city
budget by 20 percent without
hurting police, fire and :-treet
maintenance services.
Graphic arllsl Adena Gay said
:o.hc would like to see the rights
of the property owners upheld in
La guna n eac h, "not just
s poradic d~cis1ons on single
family homes."
She said she would support
multi-unit developments, "only
with a tradeoff or open space by
the developer ..
Delly ...... , .. " -
QUITS THE RACE
Ex-candidate Gabrtela
Councilwoman Sweeney srud
the city might survive the Jarvis
lax initiative if it is passed by
the voters June 6, "because
Laguna Beach has a healthy re·
serve fund that might help the
city survive."
She said city services will be
threatened by an estimated $1.6
million cut, but said police, fire
and other essential services
could not be eliminated .
Diana Dike. who is the current
chairman of the city's planning
com mission. said the San Joa-
quin Corridor proposed for the
southern end of Orange County,
"is not a given (certainty). Let's
continue to question the need for
its existence."
She said she is opposed to a
four-lane expansion of Laguna
Canyon Road, vying for a
divided two lane route from El
Toro Road to the San Diego
Freeway."
Businessman Kelly Boyd
supports a four-lane route Crom
El Toro Road out to the freeway,
if possible, "but if not, then at
least a divided road." He said
passing lanes "are too scary,"
citi ng the possibility of in
creased head-on collisions.
Boyd said he is not pro-high
rise or mass development. "I
am pro people and the current
City Council is not responsive In
the protection of home, safety and
life.
"You need a council that "ill
not put public communication
the last thing on the council
agenda."
I',.... Page Al
GROW'I'H DEBATED. • •
"Slo\\ and controll ed growth
will raise the taxes you pay." be
maintained. "When the cost or a
house goci, up, your taxes are
going to increase."
Arps said limited housing
availability drives the cost or
homes up, particularly if they're
in demand.
Candidate Jim Larsen. a
traHlc engineer for the city of
Newport Beach, insisted that
San Juan city couldn't attract ln·
dustry to the area with slow
growth policies.
"Industry will not come here
with slow growth," be
maintained. "They won't come
because lhey won't have housing
available for their employees."
Several audience members ~omplained that their tax bills
had gone up regardless of cuts in
• the city's tax rate.
"That 's because or
tremendous growth in the coun·
t,y that has raised Uae assessed
valuations," candidate Oary
Hausdorfer countered. "The cily
itself is doing everything it can
to provide some form of stability
in taxes."
Hausdorfer. a business ex-
ecutive, insisted that slow
growth will keep city taxes at a
low level.
But candidate Susan Cumm-
\ngs, a housewife. disagreed.
"Assessments are going to be
bigher if the housing isn't
av.ail able," she maintained.
"People are roing to be riced
OftA .. Q. C0MT UK
DAILY PILOT
out of the bousini market an San
Juan."
"Unrestricted growth will
raise your taxes," sbol back
candidate Phillip Schwartze, cit-
ing an increased demand on city
services th.at could drive the tax
rate up.
''Slow growth will lower your
city tax rate but it may not
lower taxes overall because the
values are going up,'• said
Scliwartze. a planner for the
City or Anaheim.
"Slow growth won't lower tax-
es," countered incumbent John
Sweeney.
"It's the law of supply and de-
mand." Sweeney insisted. "If
you lower the (housing) supply
and the demand goes up, the
cost or the house will also go
up."
Candidate Charles Ward point·
ed out that "taxes are based on
the value of a home."
"As long as a disinterested
person (the county assessor>
raises your assessed valuation,
your taxes are going to go up,"
Ward maintained.
There are 10 candidates run-
ning for three City Council
positions open in March 7
municipal elections.
The next candidate forum will
lake place Monday at 7:30 p.m.
at San Juan Elementary School,
31642 El Camino Real.
Sewer Chief
Daniel Leslie
Rites Tonight
Memorial services will be held
tonl•bt for ton1tUme Laiuna
Beach city sewer superintendent
Daniel Lesl.le, who died Tuesday
attheaeeot:iO.
Leslie, "Who hid a hletoey of
heart problems, worked tor the
City of Llcuna .. each for more
than ao yean. ffe bee1mo act.lna
1uperlntendent for the •-.::er divlalon ln 00, and ,ru ·na
1uperlnt.endt11t lit« Ulat .. me
~tar.
Ho. llvod wi\b bil wlfe,
EUaabtth, at Uie famlly bOtn• •t
34092 Aleuar Drivel D1n1
l»o\ft\. Ke allo la "'" •id bY dautbta, lhatOft, a;Mrta U4
l>taao: Ida _...; u.r.t •la· tenoanda..,.....
The hundred or ao Laguna
Canyon residents who Jammed
city hall Wednesday night dld
not want to bear all the details
obout conduits, bydroloiy or
'* * *
-
100-year floods.·
They turned out to end what
one resident called "20 years of
talk, talk, (alk."
And they didn't seem to c.pre
* * *
which agency had dropped the
flood control cl\annol bill. 'Ibey
wanted aeUon.
.. _.. ... -·
F,....r~AJ
CONDOS •••
project, Alexander 1Ud.
The differences between
Ro ssmoor aad Laguna
Greenbelt as well as Laauna
Beach area residents went
deeper than boundary lines and
land designaUons. however.
Roaamoor apokesman Ken
Dykes successtully defended the
proposed development on other
fronts.
E,....P.,,eAJ
Councilmen and dtizens heard
Environmental Management
Aeency apokesman Carl Nelaon
explain Uie problems involved lo
s w ltchln1 flood control
proposals. \fhlch the City
Councn was considering.
He denied alle!allona that the
site Ues ln the tght approach
pattern to El To Marine Corps
Air Station or anywhere near a
project jet noise lmpocted area. FLOOD PROJECT. • •
"If the (council) proposed
resolution differs from the one
approved by the supervisors."
Nelton said, "then there will be
delays."
Dyke• a.lso pointed out that the
projected population in the
development corner of Leisure
World is aboul half of what was
,predicted In 1970.
·supe rvisor 's recommended
project) would have been a large
chunk forone partorthecounty."
The plan approved . by the
council Wednesday ni1ht for im-
p'rovement.s to the canyon in-
clude:
-Seven check dams in the
side canyons on the west side of
Laguna Canyon Road between
Forest A venue and the Laguna
Lakes. These earthen dams
would measure about 20 to SO
feet high and 100 to 200 feet long ,
depending on the siz~ or the
f',....PageAJ
FORUM .••
' called the inillattve "a meal ax
approach," which would bike
state Income taxes by 150
percent. double the slate sales
lax and send more California
dollars Lo Washington, D.C.
Another high interest issue
among the candidates appeared
to be redevelopment of the city's
pier-bowl area, directly inland
of the municipal pier The City
Council has approved moderate
commercial redevelopment of
th e area, funded by tax
increment and bond sale.
'"The p1er·bowl redevelopment
will be an outsandlng project.
said incumbent candidate Tony
01G 1ovanni. a businessman.
"And 1t will be accomplished
without costing city taxpayers a
dame. "I don't believe in the tooth
fairy," said candidate Charles
M 1tchell, an insurance agent. ''If
government money is Involved
in the pier-bowl redevelopment,
I b.eheve somehow, someway it's
com inJ( out or our pockets."
Candidate Howard Mushett,
1.1 water consultant and San
C l e m e nte H o meowners
Association president, faulted
the City Councll for refusing to
put the redevelopment project
on the bailot.
"Taking away private
properly for private profit
violates every human right I can
think of." Mushett said. He has
said that condemning private
property for public use -lixe a
park -is a legitimate city
·action . Condemning the
property to profit new
businesses is another matter. he
said.
''The redevelopment project
was presented inltlally as 'open
window the the sea' concept."
said candidate Albert Popik, a
bu1lness man11er. "The City
Council has Imposed a pre·
posterous plan on the city. IC elect·
ed. I would work to place the re-
development issue on the June ballot."
Another area addressed by
City CouncU candidates was city
growth. Mrs. Wagner charged
that with contractors, builders
and realt.ors In city government,
the c ity ls a vlclim or
"runaway" &fOWlh.
··1•m a general contractor,
and I'm damn proud or it."
r esponded candidate Allan
Wulfeck, a builder and city
planning commissioner. He said
his business contacts are an
advantage to him in conducting
city business.
"Talking over a beer can get
more done than goln1 through
the bureaucracy," be said.
Candidate Roy Hamm,
manager or the San Clemente
Sears store and put president of
the Chamber of Commerce, uid
the city can continue to grow,
without sacrifice of beauty or
safely.
"We must 80 forward With a
U1ht tndUJtrial park, including
accom modaUons for corporate
offices," he said. Hamm said be
aho aupports improvin1
conditions In tbe city for
lncru1ed retail and tourist
trade.
Niguel The. t
Yields Dollar
Burilara broke out 1n
overhead-door panel .. r1y ua roornln1 to eQtef Don Blair's
Gulf OU staUoo, 25991 Forbes· ~oad. t.1111p1 Nlauel, but
••caped wltb onb' '1 ln cpb,
ll1lreald.
SbtrUf'a depullet not!ced tM
lJroat•" Panet dlll'tna • tw\&Dt patrol,
Blatr 18'4 Ul.11 momta1 that
Ute bur1lut rantteked ti•• .._lloa a dMt.l'Ojiilcl a toot • '*' ·~ took iMlt.blnC ~ lb• cton.r.·, . .,
canyons.
-A dam at El Toro Road up-
stream of lhe juncUon ot El Toro
and Lagun1 Canyon Roads.
-A bypua double barrel un-
derground channel from tbe
beach to Canyon Acres Drive.
-An extension of the existing
. channel from the Bil Bend area
to El Toro Road.
-A gated pipe controlling the
level of waler in the Laguna
Lakes.
-Relocation of a portion ol El.
Toro Road.
Construction costs for that
alternative are estimated at $4.2
mlllion, according to the county
figures, with rilht-of-way ac-
quisition set at $4.3 million and
road relocation estimated at
about $1 million.
IQ addition, the City Council
askM the county to consider re-
quiring future developers in the
watershed to restrict their
runoff to less than the existing
runoff and to widen La1una
Canyon Road to Include two
travel lanes and a traveralble
lane from south of tbe bit bend
to El Toro Road.
A flood control program for
tbe Big Bend area was beeun u far back as 1954, according to
Mayor Jon Brand, wbo showed
canyon residents a thick
document of that proposal.
· In 1956 voters approved a $4e
million bond issue for flood con·
trol projects. but the money was
used up befor@ all the Laguna
<lood channel Improvements
could be done. Brand said.
.. I don't know tt Laguna Beach
got its share or not,'' he
shru11ed.
MOOEL3080
JM/AMT l&Wl'Y CASITTI.
PU YH llCOIOB
Mayor J on Brand asked if
there was any action the county
could do now, perhaps an
interim project that would be
adequate tor a 10-year flood.
Nelson said that was a
posaibilily, "But if you want (an
interim) project that would be
adequate for a 10-year nooct. and
then you have a 100-year flood in
the meantime, we face charges
ol having wasted money."
Councilman Jack McDowell
suggested the city needs to take
two steps before adopting a
resolutlon, sugges ting the
council meet with Supervisor
Thomas Riley and the EMA and
that the canyon residents meet
separately with EMA officials to
reflne their requests.
Those comments drew shouts
or anger from the audience and
a rebuttal from Councilwoman
Phyllls Sweeney who said,
"That canyon bas been studied
to death. We bad a Joint meeting
witb the EMA back in 1975 and
the thing is still going back and
forth. Tonight we can pass a
resoluUoo and continue to lollow
it up.••
But McDowell grumbled, "I
don't want another bum
decision."
Dr . Rose Ekeberg. a
veterinarian who operates a
kennel In the canyon, told
councilmen they should seek
emergency funds to finance tbe
rtood control channel and
sucgested that Supervisor Rile)'
could be convinced to seek them .
"It's an election lrear for him
. . ,"she said,
MODEL RC-515
He noted there would be no
impact on schools because of
residents' advanced aae.
The Rossmoor s pokesman
denied development of the site
would cause a heavy runoff of
sediment throug h Laguna
Canyon.
To back hts claim. Dykes
pointed to county lnspe<:Uons of
company sedementatlon bulns
during the heavy rains.
Those basins caught the waste
they were desl&ned to catch.
Dykes said.
His word• may not hate
convinced those who appealed
the ea rlier Planning
Commission decision.
But they swept county
supervisors to a · quick
unanimous decision after tbe
two-hour public hearine ended.
Supervisor Thomas Rlley
paced the board's action when
he said, "I do support the
greenbelt and will continue to do
so when fair and appropriate.
"However," Riley said, "I
think the developer here has
come up with a good plan and I
am going to move that we
approve it."
The Newport Beach
supervisor tacked two conditions
onto the board's upholding
commission approval or the use
permit.
First, Riley stipulated' that
"plans minimltlng the runoff of
sedentary materials" must be
submitted before grading
permits are issued.
fM/MW /SWt JSWJ/MI ( ........ a.dJ
Ul>IO CASYTTI ltlCOIDB
•
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When vou want a TV. a radio and a cassetf• pl1yeN9CIOfder. but Just havv room lor one, tllkr
.JVCa 3oeo and get them all Great tor the oflice. the game, the &hap"! wherever vou'r• going.
MOOELKD-35
THlo JYC ID·U I• speclflcally dH1gned for
newly·lnltlated home recordist. II 1'111 flnlt-class
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•
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EOITION
Oeltr ,..... "-'9 ~ LH l'•r,..
WHERE OH WHERE HAS MY HIPPOPOTAMUS GONE, WHERE OH WHERE CAN SHE BE?
lion Country Ranger Steve Clerk Hunts Nostril• Froin Old Fishing Shack
Action
·Held Off
On Strike
WASHINGTON CAP) -
President Carter has decided
not to intervene at this point to
end the 80·day-0ld coal strike,
congressional leaders said to-qay.
Art e r Re publican a nd
Democratic leaders met with
Carter at the White House to re·
view the strike, they said the
president is continuing to review
several possibilities, but that he
·Jntends to bold off further before
i n tervening to impose a
settlement.
Sen. Howard Balcer, R-Tenn.,
said Carter apparently will de·
cide what action to lake after
the weekend.
"I think he wants to keep his
options open," Baker said.
The Senate Republican leader
also warned that il could be late
April or May before Congress
would be able to act on any
special legislation the president
might seek to end the strike.
Such legislation would be needed
if Carter were to have the
federal government take over
t he mines or require binding
arbitration.
By then, Baker s aid, there
could be 90 percent power
cutbacks in some areas and
millions of people out of work.
He said invoking the Tan-
' Hartley Act would be a good
first step for Carter to take in
the m eantime.
Tht: governors of Kentucky,
West Virginia and Pennsylvania
~rrived at the White House th1s
afternoon after being summoned
for their meeting with Carter.
Deputy press secretary Rex
Granum said they were selected
because they represent three of
the four top coal-producin1
states. He said Ohio Gov. Jobn
)Jhodes. another leadln1 coal-
producing state, conferred by
telephone with Jack H. Watson
Jr.. Carter's assistant for ln-
tergovernmental affaJra, and
that Rhodes and Watson agreed
th at the governl>r would not
make the trip.
Coast
Weathe r
• Lat e night and early
mor nln• foe a lon1 the
coast, otherwise 1unny1
Friday. Lows tcmtght 48 to ~· liilba Friday 88 to 75.
INSIDE TODAY
Hippo Hides
Bubbks Eludes-Capture
By PIULIP ROSMARIN
Ol -DMIJ ...... S._..
Som ewhert! in the Laguna
Hills, a hippopotamus still blows
bubbles at the rorces of law
enrorcement.
Bubbles, possibly the only
a nimal in hippodom with a
chance at celebrity, lay happily
s ubmerged today in a pond a
stone's heave from Laguna
Canyon Road, her jungle near
what people call Leisure World.
The three-ton mama hippo
escaped from Lion Country
Safari on Monday.
"We had a chance to get her
la at ni~" said sleepy senior
rattier Steve Clark. usbe
mua1ed to elude us."
The hippo reportedly hulked
lrom lhe security of the pond at
about 8 p.m. for her ni1b.Uy feed-
ing; four rangerii closed in, tran-
quilizer dart guns at the ready.
••We got a tranquilizer into
her:· Clark said, "but ahe didn't
get the full dose. It bounced off
her hide."
Bubbles galloped the length or
two football fields back to the
pond, ramming a ranger jeep in
the process, denting It, it was re-
lated.
"Tonight we're gonna make
our big move," said Clark.
"We're gonna have four or five
jeeps out there so we can cut her
otf from that lake.
.. She wants to get back to Lion
Country (as she did on a pre-
vious brief'Unescorted excursion from the park). Sbe•s trying to
get back.
"But we don't want to let her
go back by herself, for f eu
she'll detour Uwoup Lelsut~
World."'
The rangers P1• to dart her
.md either ride Bubbles back In
the scoop of an earth mover or
pack her back in a special
animal crate, hippo freiabt:
"I'm pretty sure we're gonna
get her tonight," Clark said,
then thought about it. ••Actually
I'm notaureo!anything."
Judge Dumps Laws
Banning Nazi March
CHICAGO .(AP) -A federal
judge struck down tt)ree or·
dinances enacted by lhe pre-
dominantly J ewish s uburb of
Skokie today in an attempt to
prohibit a group or Nazis from
marching there.
The decision by U.S. District
Court Judge Bernard M . De«ker
lifted another legal obstacle to
the plans of lhe National
Socialist Party of America and
its leader, Frank Collin, to
mar~b in the village of 70,000,
home of numerous survivors of
World War II Nazi death camps
and the relatives or olhlrs who
lost their lives there.
The march bas been tentative-
ly scheduled April 20, the 89th
anniversary of the birth of AdoU
Hiller.
De c ker declared un:
constitutional ordinances which
would have (1) banned the wear-
ing of Nazi uniforms, (2)
forbidden the distribution or "of-
fensive material.'' such as Nazi·
banners and leaflets, and (3) re-
quired heavy insurance to cover
any damage resulting from a
rally or demonstration.
Decker acted on a suit brought
by the American Civil Liberties
Union, which claimed the or·
dinances violated guarantees or
lree speech.
The ACLU, because of its de-
fense of the Nazi group, bas lost
thousands of m e mbers
throughout the nation.
Today's ruling follows an Il-
linois Supreme Court decision
which overturned a Circuit
Court Injunction banning the
Nan march.
Mi~trial ·Sought
Waddill Juror Heard Comment?
By TOM BARLEY
Ot -o.llJ l'IN411Mf
Lawyers for Dr. William
Baxter Waddill asked the judge
in his Orange County Superior
Court murder trial today to
declare a mistrial on the basis or
alleged misconduct by two
county officials involved in the
trial.
Judge James K. Turner was
told during a hearing conducted
outside the presence of the jury
that at least one juror heard
comments preJudicial to t he
defense after the close or
Wednesday's court session.
Defense attorney M a lbour
Watson said his wtfe, Sidney, is
prepared to testify that she
heard part of a conversation
between Dr. Robert Richard and
District Attorney's investigator
Don Burton.
Watson said his wife will
testify that she was waiting for
an elevator with at least one
juror in the group around her
when Richards and Burton
engaged in a conversation
prejudicial to the defense.
Dr. Richards is the coroner's
officer who conducted an
autopsy on the 28-week infant
all egedly strangled by Waddill
after he failed to abort the child
las t March 2 in Westminster
Com munity Hospital.
Richards' verdict that the
baby died as a result or manual
strangulation is being strongly
challenged by the defense.
Watson, wh o is a lso a
physician. and fellow defense
attorney Charles Wedman,
ar gued today t h at Richards'
testimony is worthless since he
has not adequately proved the
true cause of death.
Judge Turner denied that
Much,.delayed
Nevada Nuke
Testing Held
. LAS VEGAS, Nev. CAP) -A
much-delayed nuclear test took
place today in tbe desert north
of here.
The test, originally scheduled
Feb. 10, was repeatedly delayed
by inclement weather. A further
postponement occurred Monday
night when a worker fell to his
death down an 1,170 foot shaft at
the site of a future atomic test 20
miles from where today's blast
took place.
The body o f Randall
Cha mbers, 22, of Las Vegas was
removed from the s haft late
Wednesday after two days of re-
cover y e rrorts with remote
equipment.
Dave Miller , a spokesman for
the Department of Energy, said
today's explosion bad a yield
equivalent to betweeQ 20,000 and
150,000 tons of TNT. It was the
first announced nuclear test this
year, he said.
The t est. code-named
Reblochon, took place about 90
miles north of here.
motion and told both lawyers
that their arguments
challenging the coroner 's ruling
would be better addresS'ed to the
jury at the end or the trial.
But the judge assured both
·defense lawyers today that he
wLll hold a full inquiry into the
incident r e ported b y Mrs.
Watson and two other incidents
brought to his attention by the
defense.
Watson told the judge that a
Juror talked to Dr. Richards at
length during a recess in court
action Wednesday and that the
Juror straightened the witnesses'
tie while they talked.
And he accused Richards of .
making comments that could be
construed as derogatory to the
defense in the presence of the
court reporter during another
break in the trial.
Judee 'Furner said he will call
Mrs. Watson t o the witness
stand to report the conversation
she allegedly overheard and will
question the jurors involved in
the misconduct cited by the
defense.
It h as been alleged in the
prosecution case that is now <See DOCTOR, Page AZ)
'No M esa Charge s'
Transient Charged
In Newport Robbery
The FBI announced today that
a mustachioed man believed
responsible for four Costa Mesa
bank robberies in a two-week
span has been charged with only
one count of robbery stemming
from a Feb. 10 bank heist in
Newport Beach
William Orville Cudd, a 31·
year-old tran s ie nt was ap-
prehended Monday by Santa
Ana police and FBI agents at a
Santa Ana motel.
He was brought before a U.S.
magistrate an Santa Ana and or·
dcred held in heu or $50,000 bail.
FBI agent Laroy Cornett said
Cudd has been transferred to
Los Angeles County Jail where
he awaits a March 2 preliminary
h earin g before a fe deral
magistrate.
Cornett aaJd be wiU s"~ furthe(' indictments 1lgainst
Cudd for the Costa Mesa bank
robberies, and possibly for an
earlier robbery in Huntington
Beach.
"We think it's the same guy,
but he's only been charged with
the robbery in Newport Beach,"
said agent Cornett.
Cornett said Cudd apparently
acted alone in the alleged bank
Jobs. In each instanc:!e a man
with a l arge h a ndl ebar
mustache entered banks and
presented a note and a paper
bag to a female teller, urging
them to quickly fill the bag with
cash.
The bandit. who displayed no
weapon, then escaped, appar"nt-
ly on foot.
The four Costa Mesa robberies
•
.Synanon Sets Sale
SANTA MONICA <AP) -
Synanon, the drug rehabilitation
center founded here 19 years
ago, is selling almost all its
Santa Monica property, includ·
ing its large bcachside Del Mar
Club, a spokesman s aid Wednes·
day ..
all occurred in the early
afternoon between Jan. 24 and
Feb. 6, netting the quick moving l
bandil more than $4,600.
On Feb. 10, a man matching
the same description robbed the
Bank of America branch in West 1
Cliff Plaza in Newport Beach,
taking about $1,200.
Agent Cornett said Cudd
caught the attention of a Sdllt.a
Ana police officer who notified
the FBI after the orricer saw
surveillance photographs taken
at one of the banks.
Jarvis Bill
To Cost CCCD ..
$13 M~llion?
IC lhe Jarvis-Gann tax re!Jef
initiative passes, the Coast
Community College District will
lose about Sl3.4 million next year. or 46 percent of its rev-
enu es, t rus tees were told
Wednesday.
Trustees in turn asked
Correllan Thompson, executive
vice chancellor for business af-
fa irs. to prepare two budgets, a
regular one and one that would
accommodate tbe drop in re\'·
enues if the J arvis measure is
adopted by voters June 6.
"The impact of the J arvis
amendment would be such that
· nearly 50 percent of our operat-
ing budget would have to be cut
and that means elimination of
many programs and a large
number of pe rsonnel," said
Chancellor Norman E. Watson.
Richard Simon, s pokes man
for the district, said community
college districts are prohibited
by law from charging tuition.
lie said trustees will continue
to discuss possible program cuts
and other ways or trimming the
budget al their next meeting on
March 8.
Spygws lllll Road and El Capitan Drive.
' As to the little critter, well, somehow a
dtmetrOdon just seems to . m with the
roullh·lookina h1ndscape.
f
• l
l •
I
I
:" 2 DAILY PILOT N
'Heir'
Lying
LAS VEGAS <AP) Melvin
Dummar admits he wove an In·
tricate fabric or lies lo cover his
involvement wllh delivery of a
disputed Howard Hughes will.
"l waa trapped," he told
JUrora at the Mormon Wiii trial
Wednesday. "I told everybody a
lie that I hadn't seen it or had
'-lnything to do with Jt and I
didn't know how to stop il."
In a problna cross-
examination, attorney Paul
Freese explored the connictlng
stories Dummar invented in the
months after the will was round
namln& him as heir to one·
sixteenth of Hughes' fortune.
The attorney cited the most
damaaing evidence yet In the ef·
fort to discredit Dummar:
-That Dummar's wife liked
to spell their name "DuMar,"
the same spelllng used in the
will.
-That Dummar's aunt who
worked for "Mi llionai r e
Magazine" would have known
much about Hughes.
-Thal Dummar's aunt and
cousin pounced on his newfound
fame and offered to start a busi·
ness to sell Melvin Oum mar pro-
motional items.
''I never was crazy about 11et-
.!!~g into Ul)Y business with fllY
1·e latives promoting what I'd
gotten," Dummar declared. .
Freese a ls o entered in
evidence the book "Hoax."
which Dummar admits reading
after the will was found. Freese
!!ought to show he read it long
before thal
Dummar admitted that he de-
nied ever touching the will for
many months although he was
really the mysterious delivery
man.
"I knew from the very first
day that the truth had to come
out eventually," Dummar said.
But Wlder Freese's question-
ing, Dummar conceded he did
not tell his current story unUI
after attorney Harold Rhoden
told him a previous scenario
"wasn't going to fly.''
He reiterated that his current
story Is the truth -that the will
was brought to his Utah ias
station hy a i.tranger, that he
~teamed it open, read 1t. re
sea led it and dell vcrcd it to the
Mormom church.
"l know l didn't write it or
have anything to do with writing
it." he testified.
Freese, representing Hughes'
relaUves not named in the will,
seeks to expose the document as
a fraud.
Auto Dealer
Mr. Kronman
Rites Friday
Memorial services are
pl a nned Friday for Richard
Kronman of Mona rch Bay,
general manager of the Chick
Ive r son car dealers hip in
Newport Beach. He died Tues·
day at South Coast Community
Hos pital. He was 61.
Friday's ser vices wUI bealn at
1 p.m . at the Monarch Bay
Beach Club In Laa\lna Beach.
Pastor Baird Cofrln of St. Jl.1ary'a
Episcopal Church wilt ortlciat.e.
Private burial Is planned in
Palm Springs.
Before joining the Chick
Iverson flrm , Mr. Kronman
owned Aero Volkswagen, a Los
Angeles dealership. He was a
native of Illinois.
He is survived by his wife,
Mary, of the couple's Monarch
Bay homt; by two son&, Richard
Kronman of Santa Monica and
Robert Kronman of Paudena;
and by a slJlter.
The tamlly requests that
memorial donallona be made to
the American Heart AHoclaUon
for re•earchin1 oardiaJ myopalhy.
OflANOI COMT -··' "
DAllV PILOT
Salling in the Sun•et
.·
. ..
Denies Plot •. ·~
BJ O.UY OltANVILLI oe•..,.,,....,_
Accused enurr aex fUm maJcer
rred Berr• Dou••·· denied to-
day that be planned th• actual
torture, murder and dll·
memberment or two women he
lured to a Rmote du~tt area
laat July.
"No, no. oo," Doualu repUed
when deftnae attorney Terey
Gllea alked lf ht rtalty lntended
to •lauatiter what ln reaUly wen
two underoover pollcewomt4
po1ln• aa porno modela.
Ooullaa took the wltnt11 atand
In hla own defen1e u hla trial on
eollclCtn1 murder and attempted
murder char&et entered ltl llnal
phase In Oranre County
Superior CO\art.
..
to Police tiecaUM DO\i1lu tol4'
htr he wu linked 'With the MUia
and aha fe..-.d reprlaal.
For a man who alt.,edly
bo11ted ol pJannlf'.IJ to prochtc.
dlrtct llDd ntm a NS.000 X·rat;d .
movie epic, Dou,111 w11 not!
muoh of a band wltb a Polarold
camera end black •nd whlt• fllm.
The PlcturM OlJea ahowed UM. Jurr ••re streaked and bl .. ed wt h other pboto-takln1 lhortcomln111.
OUea attempted to mlntmile
the adver1t Impact of Mi11
Pendleton'• ether-101ked atory
on the jury.
Flrat, an attorney ttaUfied
that when Douclu wo flr1t ar-
reated tht woman told hlm abe
planned to write a boolt about
the misadventure.
While folks back East slug the ir way
through mountuinous snowdrifts and
shiver through u coal strike , Orange Coast
res idents ure piloting their sailboats
<above) through s ummer weather.
Beachgoers also are taking advantage of
temperatures as high as 80 this week,
with beach t r affic jams approaching
summer proportions.
Tbe ptoMCutlon 1Ue1ea that
the ~·year-old Colt• MHa man
recruited the two attractive un-
dercover policewomen to take
part in lesbian bondaa• pboto
takin1 aes1lona {n Yucca Valley.
Giles ii attempUn• to prove
that hla ellent wu 1lmply a b11
talker and little doer when It
came to carryln1 ou\ hll tum
maktn1 bouts.
It w11 to be UUed ''The Lut
LJvln1 Victim of Fred Berre.
Douiraa." • •
In addition to eatabli•blnt 1 •
eo11lbt1 moneymakln• moUve1 Ollta had Dou1lu eicplaln b1a
rtlatJonahlp with the wom•n·
'No Gifts Were Kept' A• part of that effort t.bt de·
fense lawyer Wednesday calltd
23-year-<>ld Vlckl Pendleton to
the witness stand.
Miss Pendleton testified that
In October of 1978, she had been
Tl\e bUriy def end ant told the
Jury Mla1 Pendleton had once •
worked f9r him u a barmaid
and Wit fired for atle11dly tak·
Jn1 money from ihe cash
register.
Searches .Show Nixon Family Took Nothing ' lured to the de.ert by Dourlu
on the pretext he wanted lo take
some bikini-clad cheesecake
photos.
l'N9' P.,,e Al
DOCTOR ••• WASHINGTON <AP>~ A six-
month search has failed to turn
up any indication that former
President Nixon or his family
kept valuable foreign gllls that
belong to the government, NBC
News reports.
NBC correspondent Cul Stern
said Wednesday a report to that
effect is nearly ready to be !>ent
to the State Department which
asked for an accounting or the
gift&.
James B. Rhoads , the
archivist of the United States.
refused to confirm the account
but said his agency's report will
be sent lo the Slate Dep1itrlment
soon.
But the NBC repor t said the
archi vists apparently uncovered
Man Forfeits
Property on
Pot Charges
SAN DIEGO CA P ) -Two
men, one from Oran((e County,
have pleaded guilty in federal
court to possessing marijuana
resulting In government seizure
of real estate belonging to one
valued at $175,000.
Da vid C . Christian. 48, of
Downey and August Palmeri, 47,
of Orange fleaded guilty to
possession o large amounts or
the illicit weed in a hearing
before U .S. Dis trict Judge
Wllllam Enrtaht.
Aner the Wednesday session.
Enright set sentencing for both
men for March 27.
U.S. Attorney Mic hael Walsh
said lhe action was the first
property seizure here under the
Racketeering Influence and
CorruptOrganbation statute.
In a plea bargain a1reement.
Christian admitted uslna money
derived from the marijuana
venture to purchase lhe Orange
County real estate now forfeited.
Palmeri. who was charaed
with aiding Christian in procur-
ing and smuggllng marij uana
from Mexico by boat to the
Seattle area, forfeited '75,000 In
Clnea to the government as part
of his guilty plea.
Dlapoeitlon of lour other de·
fendant.s in the case ls pendln1.
Candidates
Plan Three
NBForwm
Newport Beach's U ctty
C!ouncU cand.ldatn wilt be mlk•
In• thr" l>Ubllc 1ppearancet to
1 • •tr tbelr \llew1 tn for1.1m1 durtnt
I.be n.xt two weeb.
Tutlday, the candldalea will
•ppear at a lorum hoated by the
Newport Htlabu Homeownt"
Aaaoclauon. The mfftin1 1eu under way •l 1:10 p.m . at
N•wpon lftllht• Elementary
Sc:b0ol, Cla1 Strfft and Sinta
Ana A vtmae. On Mlrch a. th• candidates
wUJ appear at the OASJS CentfJ'
at l'lf\b Ul4 Mar1Uerlte aven1.111
ln Cotoda dil Mar. Sponeortd by
tbt 11nt0r clUMlll een\fJ'. Ult
meeti"-will aiart at 1a:30 p.m.
On Marcil 8, tbe Newport
one surprise: that a lot of miss·
ing Items or nominal value were
taken by members of the Nixon
staff as they went through the
White House., looking for
souvenirs , after his departure.
Jack Brennun, Nixon's top
aide. said that archivists even
searched the Nixon's seaside
estate at S1tn Clemente ·•at our
request "
The search was launched last
August at the request of Evan
Dobelle, the State Department's
chief of protocol
"The re are various allegations
that some of those jlfts may be
missing," Dobelle i.aid then "It
1s my responsibility to the
public trust to make sure they
arc not "
NBC.: Mud arrh1v1sL'> concluded
onl} on<' major 1lem was miss
ing -an oriental rug sent by the
Shah of Iran In 1969. The rug
F ..... r-.Al
ARREST •••
shortly after the accident. King.
deputies reported, had run from
the house to o connected garage
and called for a shootout.
But fast-talking deputies con·
vl nced the man lo &Ive up his
gun and come out He was ar-
rested and booked on charges of
assault with a deadly weapon on
police officers.
While deputie1 at the Kin1
home were attemptlne to sort
out the family ar&,ument that re-
portedly triggered the gun in·
cldc nt, accident victim Miss
Renek and her passenger. Jodi
Che11 lelgh, 16, of Ms. Renek's ad-
dress were rushed to Mission
Community Hospital, Mission
VleJO
Both vicUms were treated In
the emerrency room and re·
leased, a hos pital spokesman
said .
Deputy Essoe was not Injured
in the accident.
In the interim. Don Boe of
BOE .Electric Co mpany ,
Westminster. puzzled over plot
and street plans of the accideRt
area where, waler district of.
flclals saJd, a Southern
California Edison Company
crew had ruptured the water
main.
''Thal lin e waan't even
suppo1ed to be there," said Boe,
pointing to a dlaaram whJch ap.
parently ahowed the line atop.
ping at curbside.
4Seminars
For Newport
Senior.A Set
Four 1tmln&r1 on divorce, floe
art&, lnaplraUonal readlna and
preventative medlcln• are
achtduled In March by tbe
Newport Beach 11ntor clt11ena
center.
Dr. Prank Verete wlU apeu
on prevtntaUve rnecllelne Marob
1at1:aop.m . Ptvorct and lti ttfec:t on f aml·
lY aDd arandpahnta wul be CU•·
eu11td ·by Geraldine Saador at
noo.nMattb8.
Fine art.I ln the Newport •1'•
1• tb• topic ot a •emlnar M ereb
10 by ll'fl\•ll De!Mlnbera at 10
a.m.
Frank EuUDan, hHd of the
M1rlntr1 Ubra.ry, will preeent
an aat«tment ot intplratJonal boon 1t11:10 p.m. March a .
was not at San Clemente
Dobelle requc:.ted the acc:ounl-
i ng after 1t Washln1ton Post
s tory said that some "m issing"
item !> included a carpel,
v. atche!>, anl1quit1es, an 011
painting. a silver box, a 10Jd
nec k lace and bracelet and
several other bracelets.
According to one report. a
necklace described as missine
was in the first box opened
umon~ the crates len behind In
Washington and held under court
order when Nixon res11ned.
MOOEL3080
ft4/AMJ" l&W Tf CA~
rUYHHCOID•
Instead, the woman testified.
Douglu lotced her lnto helpless-
ness by smothering her with an
ether -drenched rag.
W-h e n s he awoke, Miss
Pendleton said, she had been
stripped of her clothing and was
bound.
Douglaa allegedly held a pistol
a l the woman's head while be
forced her to perform sexual
rites with him.
The ·woman said ahe did not
repor~ the. desert mlsadventW'e
MOOEL RC-6t5
nearing its concluelon tbat
Waddill, 44. administered a
salin e fluid to an unwed
18 -year-old mother and then
i>trangled the Infant when it was
found to be alive on delivery.
Prosecution witnesses have
testified that the Huntin(ton
Harbour physician augiested
four other ways ln which the
baby could be eliminated before
uslna his hands to end its lire.
alter he ordered the hospital
staff out of the nursery.
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Independent ass and treble lone controls
When you wanl a TV. a radio and a casHtle
player·reoorder. but Just have room tor one. like
JVCs 3060 and get them 111. Great f01 tl'le ofllce. the
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MODEL KD-3&
THI J¥C ID·U le 1oeclflc111y designed tor
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Harbor Aroa Chamber of
Commerce and tb• Newport
ff 1rbOr·CMta Mell Board ,of
ltHltori wUl bolt the eandlctatM
at • bNUIUt m..un1 at the boerd •11•Utorl11m, 401 N.
• NewpOt't Blvd. ln1kfut ..U
s1. Tit• mlietlnc •Ill IW1 at TclO
AU Of UM pl'Oll'am• will be et
the ctnttt', a Mar•Uerlt• Ave.,
Corona ct.I liar.
I
' \
I \
17
r • ..
Saftdletiaek: :A.f teraoon
.Y. Stoeks
I
I l
VOL. 71, NO. 54, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, F.EBRUARY 23, 1978 TEN CENTS
'Titni,.g' Leads to Crash . iU Viejo
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of ... Diii' ...... ''-"
"It was a matter of tlmlng," a
sheriff's sergeant commented
this morning.
That was one way of describ-
ing the Wednesday Interlace of
circumstances resulting in the
arrest of a man barricaded in his garage with a shotg911; a
ruptured water main and an
auto accident that damaged a
sheriff's unit and injured a
woman and her passenger.
In the early afternoon, dep-
uties received a telephone call
from the wife of Richard King,
33, of 27416 Los Banos, Mission
Viejo. She reported a family
argument and ·deputies re-
portedly learned her husband
had a gun.
Four sheriff's units were dis·
patched to the King home. That
was at 2:90 p.m.
At approximately 2:45 p.m. a
Santa Margarita Water Dis-
trict main was ripped open with
a backhoe used in electrical ex-
cavation work at a Cifnatruction
site on Los AUsos Boulevard just
east of Trabuco Road. district
employees reported.
Sherifrs deputy Ira Essoe Jr.,
responding to the gun complaint
with red lights flashing and
.,.. .. ,. ........ .., .... ~
WHERE OH WHERE HAS MY HIPPOPOTAMUS GONE, WHERE OH WHERE CAN SHE BE?
Lion Country Ranger Steve Clark Huntt Noatrtla Prom Old Flahlng Shack
BiRDPIDdes .
Bubble. Eluds• Capture
By PIUUP ROSMUIN
OfU.Oellr,...IUft
Somewhere In the Laguna
Hills, a hippopotamus still blows
bubbles at the forces of law
enforcement.
Bubbles, possibly the only
animal in hippodom witb'a
chance at celebrity, lay happily
submerged today in a pond a
stone's heave from Laguna
Canyo{I Road, her jungle near
what people call Leisure World.
The three-ton mama hippo
escaped from Lion Country Safari on Monday.
"We had a chance to gel her
last night," said sleepy senior
ranger Steve Clark. "She
managed to elude us."
The hippo reportedly hulked
from the security or the pond at
about 8 p.m. for her nightly feed·
lng; four rangers closed in, tran·
quilizerdart guns at the ready.
"We got a tranquilizer into
her," Clark said, "but she didn't
get the full dose. It bounced off her hide."
Bubbles galloped the lenstb of
two football fields back to the
pond, rammlna a ranger jeep in
the process, denting it, it wu re-
lated.
"Tonight we're gonna make
our big move," said Clark.
"We're goMa have four or five
jeeps out there so we can cut her
off from that lake.
Coast
"She wanta to &et back to Uon
Country <as abe dfcJ on a pre-
vious brief unescorted excunion
from the park). She'a lryiflC to
get back.
"But we don't want to let ber
go back by herself, for fear
she '11 detour through Leisure World."
The rangers plan to dart her
and either ride Bubbles back ln
the scoop of an earth mover or
pack her back in a special
animal crate, hippo frei.zht.
"I'm pretty sure we're gonna
get her tonight," Clark said,
then thought about it. "Actually
I'm not sure of anything."
Trust,ees A.k
State'• Help
With Income
LONG BEACH <AP) -Nearly
$575,000 in diamonds and other
jewelry was taken in two
separate incidents along this
port city's "jeweler's row,"
pollce Jald lodav.
Jn one instance, $346,275 worth
of uncut diamonds ln a briefcase
was taken Wednesday while the
owner. made a call from a
telephone booth, leaving the
brie(cue on the eround outside.
In a robbery five hours later, a
jewelry at.ore clerk was roughed
up by two bandits in ski masks
who r-nsacked the store for
$227 .ooo worth or uncut
diamonds, gold cubes and
custom rings, officers said.
Richard Wolf, 21, of the Los
An1eles jewelry firm or Charles
Wolf and Sons, said he kept an
eye on bis briefcase while mak·
Ing a 4S-mlnute call to New York
from a phone booth on Pine
Avenue.
But the thief sneaked away un-
seen with the briefcase, be told
officers Robert Van der Me«
and Stuart Gordon.
Wolf said that before he made
his call, he bad been showing his
diamonds to several ,or the
Jewelry flnns which line Pine
Avenue.
oo'e ot thoae stores, the
El1bteen Carat Shop, was
robbed shortly before closing
Ume Wednetday.
Saleswoman Liu Forrette
to&d UM aame officers that two
men grabbed her es IM took oUt.
the tralb. One man it'abbed her
... ir, •he said, and told the other mal): .. Look for the 101._ ln the
dra•en and the un"'ounted
diamODda."
'
siren screamlni, slowed at the
Los Allsoe-Trabuco intersection
at about 2:50 p.m., then ac·
celera\ed, continuing east on
Los Alisos.
Essoe told California Highway
Patrolmen that hls car hit
hubcap-deep water, hydroplaned
and turned a complete circle,
smashine Into the rear of an
auto driven by Constance
R~nek, 34, of 22791 Via SanUaeo,
Mission Viejo.
Deputies in two other patrol
units arrived at the King borne
shortly after the accident. King,
deputies. reported, bad run Crom
the house to a connected garage
and called fdr a shoot.out.
But fut-talking depuUes con·
vlnced the man to give up bis gun and come ouL He was ar-
rested and booked on charees of
assault with a deadly weapon on
police orrlcers.
Whtie deputies at the King
home were attempting to sort
out the family argument that re-
portedly trigeered the gun in-
cident, accident victim Miss
Renek and her passenger, Jodi
Cbeslef&h, 16, of Ms. Renek's ad-
dress were rushed to Mission
Com munity Hospital, Mission
Viejo.
<See ARREST, Page AZ>
Mistrial Sought
Waddill Juror Heard Comment?
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ille o.llr l"ttel SuH
Lawyers for Or. William
Baxter Waddill asked the judge
in his Orange County Superior
Court murder trial today lo
declare a mistrial on the basis of
alleged misconduct by two
county officials involved in the
1rial.
Judge James K. Turner was
told during a bearing conducted
outside the presence or the jury
that at least one juror heard
comments prejudicial to the
d efe nse after the close or
Wednesday's court session.
Coal Talks
To Involve
Congress
WASHINGTON CAP> -
President Carter summoned
congressional leaders to the
White House today for a meeting
on the coal strike as power
cutbacks from the 80-day work
stoppage triggered the f1~t ma-
jor layoff in the auto industry.
The meeting was announced
amid speculaUoo tbe president
.was planning to intervene more
forcefully to attempt to end the
strike.
Carter asked seven senators
and rive House members to
meet with him. According to an
aide to Gov. Julian Carroll of
Kentucky, Carter also invited
tbe governors of West Virginia,
Kentucky, Pennsylvania ~nd
Ohio to a later session at the
White House.
Carter aides acknowledged
that some governors were com-
ing but made no immediate an·
nouncement about that meeting.
The purpose of the White
House meetings was unknown,
although one possibility was that
the president was seeking to In·
crease public pressure on both
sides in the dispute to reach a
settlement.
The White House bu prepared
legislation to impose a
settlement in the United Mine
Workers strike bul has made
clear its preference that both
sides in the dispute reach a
negotiated settlement.
The senators invited lo tht..
White House were Robert C.
Byrd, W.Va., Alan Cranston, D·
Calif., Howard H. Baker, R-
Tenn., Ted StevtM, R·Alaska,
Jennings Randolph, D-W.Va.,
Jacob K. Javlts, R-N.Y., and
Harrison Williams, D-N.J .
The House members were
Speaker Thomas P. O'Nelll, D·
Mass., Frank Thompson, D·
N.J ., John M. Ashbrook, R-Ohio,
John J . Rhodes, R-Arlz., and
James Wright, D-Tex .
The strtk•'• latest snag de·
veloped wbeo the coal industry
rejected the UMW's "bottom-(SeeSTRJK~. Pa1e A!)
Defense attorney Malbour
Watson said his wife, Sidney, is
prepared to testify that she
heard part of a conversation
between Dr. Robert Richard and
District Attorney's investigator
Don Burton.
Watson said his wife will
testify that she was waiting for
an elevator with at least one
juror in the group around her
when Richards and Burton
engaged in a conversation
prejudicial to the defense.
Or. Richards is the coroner's
orricer who conducted an
autopsy on uie 28-week infant
o.11, ~ .... ''-" -STEPPING DOWN
County Clerk St John .
Judge Clears
Way for Nazi
Street March
CHICAGO CAP} -A federal
judge struck down three or-
dinances enacted by the pre·
dominantly J ewish suburb of
Skokie today in an attempt to
prohibit a group or Nuis from
marching there.
The decision by U.S. District
Court Judge Bernard M. Decker
lifted another legaJ obstacle to
the plans of the National
Socialist Party of Al?Hlrica and
its leader, Frank Collin, to
march in the village of 70,000,
home of numerous survivors of
World War II Nazi death camps
and the relatives of others who lost their lives there.
The march has been tentative-
ly scheduled April 20, the 89th
anniversary of the birth or Adolf
Hiller .
D e c k e r d e c 1 a· r e d u n ·
constitulior\al ordinances which
would have (1) banned the wear-
ing of Nazi uniforms, (2)
forbidden the distribution of ••or.
tensive material," such as Nazi
banners and leaflets, and (3) re-
quired heavy insurance to cover
any damage resulting from a
rally or demonstration.
Decker acted on a suit brought
by the American Civil Libertles
Union, which claimed the or-
dinances violated guarantees of free speech.
·The ACLU, beta\,lSe of lts de-
fense of the Nazi aroup, has lost
thousands of members throull:K>ut the ntUon. ~ey•s tuUne follows an JI.
llnol• StsPreJfte Court decision
which overturned • Ctrcult
Court lnJunctlon bannln1 the Naalm~b.
allegedly strangled by Waddill
after he failed to abort the child
last March 2 in Westminster
Community Hospital.
Richards' verdict that the
baby died as a result of manual
strangulation is being strongly
challenged by the defense.
Watson, who is also a
physician, and fellow defense
attorney Charles Wedman,
argued today that Richards'
testimony is worthless since he
has not adequately proved the
true cause or death.
Judge Turner denied that
(See DOCTOR, Page A2)
'Easy Mind'
Frees Clerk
FroinRace ....
Orange County Clerk William
E . St John announced today that
he will not seek re-election in
June.
St John's decision, taken after
his earlier announcement that
be wo1.1ld be campa.lgning again
in June, came as a shock to
many county sources who had
predicted his overwhelming re-
election.
St John explained that his de-
cision is based on his belief that
an Assembly bill which has
sought t.o place employees of the
county clerk's office under the
control of the Superior Court, "is
now doomed."
"That was the only reason I
decided to run again," St John
said. ·•r thJnk the independence
of the county clerk's office is
now assured and I can go to re-
tirement with an easy mind."
St John, 58, filed for a seat on
the Orange County Republican
Central Committee today.
"It will keep me busy one day
a week and that's all I want
right now," he said. "With that
and my helping in my wife's
business, I think I will be pretty
fully occupied."
The decision by the veteran
county clerk appears to leave
the field clear for a member of
his staff, Superior Court Clerk
Mars hall Norris, who at this
point was St J ohn's only op-
ponent.
Norris. an uns uccessful
candidate for the office of
Orange County Sheriff in recent
years, expressed delight at the
news of St John's retirement de-
cision".
"Best thing I've heard this
year," he said. ''And it comes at
a time when my own campaign
for the office is catching fire."
St John, however, feels that
Norris has little chance of
election.
"1 know or at least three top
night people who will be seeking
my office," he said. "And I
firmly believe that one of them
will win the election by a sub-
stantial number of votes over
anything that Norris can put
together."
Saddleback Music
Festival Tonight
Slx bundr~ intermediate and
high school students will
perform t,oni1ht in the
Saddleback Valley Unified
School Dlatrlct's All·Dlsttlct
Secondary Cbor'al Music
Feativ1J.
The concert, <'Onducted by Dr.
Jester: Halnton, will bealn at
'7:30 p.sn. ln the Mlaalon Viejo
)Uah School 1ymn .. 1um. ~lcbeta rn_, be purchued •l tho
doorror$1.
DAIL V PILOT SB
Condos
B)' GUY GRANVILLE Ot .. o.1., ,...., .....
Protests from Laguna
Greenbelt officials were bruahed
aside Wednesday when the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors, In effect, approved
development o f a 533-unit
condominium project in Laguna Hills.
The Supervisors' 5·0 vote
upheld u nanim ous ce>unty
Planning Commission approval
of the use permit needed by
Rossmoor Corp. to get the
57-acre development under way.
The development site is a
portion of a 248-acre parcel west
of El Toro Road and Calle Corta.
A c c or d 1 n g l o L a g lt n a
Greenbelt spokesmen, the
project s ite lies within the
designated greenbelt area as
well as within an area shown in
the conservation element of the
county gener al plan.
County Environmental
Management Agency-(EMA )
officials s aid, however, there
are no precise boundaries for
the greenbelt.
Moreover, the EMA officials
added, land shown to be in a
conservation area is nonetheless,
t'ligible for development. .
Lagunu Greenbelt J>resldent
Tom Alexander said he's not
certain he agrees with the EMA
:.lands.
At the close of a two-hour
public hearing, Alexander said
greenbelt attorneys will review
J.he designations issues.
Should the lawyers uphold his
opinion, Laguna Greenbelt Wiil
seek a court order halting the
project, Alexander said.
The differences between
Ro s smoor and Laguna
Greenbelt as well as Laguna
Beach area residents we nt
deeper than boundary lines and
land designations, however.
Rossmoor !>pokes m an Ken
Dykes successfully defended the
proposed devclopmenl on other
fronts.
lie dented allegations that the
site lies in the fli ght approach
pattern lo El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station or anywhere near a
project jet noise impacted area.
Dykes also pointed out that the
projected population In the
development corner of Leisure
World is about half of what was
predicted in 1970.
He noted there would be no
impact on schools because or
res idents' advanced age.
The Rossmoor s pokesman
denied development of the site
would cause a heavy runoff of
sediment th rough Laguna
Canyon.
To back his claim, Dykes
pointed lo county inspecUons or
company scdementation basins
during the heavy rains
fi'.-..PageAJ
DOCTOR •.•
motion and told both lawyers
that their areume n t s
challenging the coroner's ruling
would be better addressed to the
jury at the end of the trial.
But the judge assured both
defense lawyers today that he
will hold a full inquiry into the
incident reported by Mrs.
Watson and two other incidents
brought to his attention by the
defense.
Family F erul,
Kilh2 Men
DENNY CAP) -A wild
shootout in a rural mountain
area in northern California left
two men dead and a third person
critically wounded with multiple
bullet wounds, the Trlnity·Coun·
ty sherilf said today.
"It was a long-standing feud
t h at Involved a couple of
families," s aid Sherif( Tom
Kelley.
0..ANOICOAIT se
DAILY PILOT
D .. ly_Maff ......
Denies Plot
By GAltl' GRANVILLE
Of .. Mir""" Slaff
Accused anutt 11ex film mJker
Fred Berre Douglaa denled to.
day that he planned. the actual
torture , murder and dis·
mem berment of two women he
lured to a remote deaert area
last July.
"No, no, no," Douglas replied
when defense attorney Terry
Giles asked ll be really intended
to slaughter what in reality were
two undercover policewomen
posing as porno models.
Douglas took the witness stand
in his own defense as bis trial on
soliciting murder and attempted
murder charges entered Its final
phas e in Orange County
Superior Court.
came lo carrylng out bis film
makin1 boasts.
A• part of that effort lbe de·
feruie lawyer Wednesday called
2S·year-old Vlckl Pendleton to
the witness stand.
Miss Pendleton tesUfted that
in October of 1976, she had been
lured to the desert by Douglu
on the pretext be wanted to ta.1$e
som o bikini-clad cheesecake
photos.
Instead, the woman testified.
Douglas forced her into helple~
neas by smothering her with ao
ether-drenched rag. ·
Wh en s he awoke, Mis4
Pendleton said. she had been
stripped of her clothing and wa.5
bound. ·
EL TORO HtGH SCHOOL'S 'CHESS NUTS' THIRD BEST IN THE WEST AFTER TOURNEY
From Left, Mitch Nfnomlya, Jim McClure, Scott Runyon and Captain Steve HughH
The prosecution alleges that
the 54-year-old Costa Mesa man
recruited the two attractive un·
dercover policewomen to take
part in lesbian bondaae photo
takin1 sessions in Yucca Valley.
Douglas allegedly held a pistol
at t he woman's bead while be
forced her to perform sexual
rites with him.
Toro Chess
Tean1Third
In Tourney
El Toro High School's chess
team took third place in the
Weste rn Unite d State s
Interscholasti c High School
Chess Team Championships in
Tucson last weekend.
Team members Steve Hughe!'>,
Jim McClure, Milch Ninomiya,
Scott Runyon and Dennis Hegyi
also are first in the Orange
County Chess League with 1tn
undefeated record.
Members of the team. which is
in its second year at the high
i.chool. paid their own way to the
competition and almost gave up
when four of them came down
with Mids.
"But we decided we should
stay, concentrate harder, endure
longer, lake more aspirin and
Alka Seltzer a nd just play as
tactic ally as we knew how,'·
said Mark Neibel, team adviser
He said hls team performed
"remarkably well."
In the competition, Hughes,
the team's captain, also earned
a trophy as the sixth best player
In the Western U.S.
f',....P.,,eAI
STRIKE ..•
lui e" contract proposal as unfit'
for a nationwide agreement.
Th e Bituminous Coal
Operators Association said early
toduy lt remained ready to re·
sume talks with the union. but
declared that in view of the
UM W's bargaining position.
m o re ne gotiations ''h ardly
seemed fruitful."
The main industry bargaining
group issued its statement
:.eve r al hours before Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall and
White House officials began
meeting Uus morning "to de·
le rm I ne a future course of
action."
The administration has been
laying the groundwork for "def-
1n1t1 ve" ac tion to end the
wa lkout before it causes serious
economic damage.
Wedne s d ay night .
administration orriclals said
privately the outlook for lhe
talks was not promising.
Me anwhile, Senate Majority
Leader Robe rt C. Byrd, D-
W. Va ., today appealed to the coal operators to accept the
~ree ment already reached by
the independent Pitts burgh and
Midway Coal Mining Company,
as the basis for an lndustrywide
settlement.
* * * Strike Blamed
Auto Layoffs Begin;
More Cuts Likely
(
By The Associated Presa
The 80·day coal strike brought announcement of the first ma·
jor layoffs in the auto industry today, alongside warnings of
thousands more to come in states where utilities rely heavily on
coal to produce electricity.
In Kokomo, Ind., General Motors' Delco Electronics plant an·
nounced It will lay orr 6,000 of ils 8,600 hourly workers for one day
Friday because of power cutbacks forced by the coal strike
INDIANA HAS BEEN THE HARDEST rut state, with 3,400
energy-related layoffs reported Wednesday
National Guardsmen carrying unloaded M-16 rifles and am·
munition stood guard today at key lntenecllons to ensure the safe
movement of coal convoys to utiliUes.
Donald J . Atwood, general muaeer of the Delco plant. said
the layoffs are needed to meet a 25 percent curtailment of
electrical use Imposed by Public Service Indiana, the state's
largest utility.
R EGULAR PRODUCMON WILL resume Monday, Atwood
said, but another one-day layoff may be nece&sary March 3 if the
coal shortage continues.
The Delco plant is the primary source of supply or automotive
electrical components. including radios, speakers and air·
conditioning controls, for General Motors' 25 auto assembly plants
across the country.
Here is a look at the situation in some key states:
Indiana & Michigan Electric Company, the state's second
largest utility wtlh 3Sl,OOO customers, said it would reach a 40-day
coal reserve on Friday. That's the point at which mandatory
curtailments, ordered by the state, go into effect.
Youths Eyed
ForAnmud
Tal,ent Search
Saddleback Valley youn1aters
have unW March 3 to Join the
Exchange Club's eighth annual
Search for Talent Contest.
Durinc the cont.eJt, which will
be1ln at 7 p.m. on M'arc:h U In
Loa AUJOS Intermediate School,
younc people wtU compete for
trophies and the chance to joln a
1tate·w1de contest.
The cont.eat la broken down to
three a1e cate.aortes, ran1ln1 from 6 to J8, and cover• dancing,
vooalJat, l1Wtrument.aJ and nov·
elty acta,
All contoJtant.1 mu1~ be
enrolled In ti school In tb•
Saddleback Valley Unified
Schoo\. District.. They alJo must
not hav~ been under contract for
parUclPMln.I ln tH field ol IMU-t.lnt.
ApplltalklM m~ be obWNd
from tb• 1choola bJ uU1a1
Jla:s EW., c:balrmu. at~.
\
,.....,p_,,eAJ
TRUSTEES ••.
He aaJd this plan would in·
elude the r eassignm ent or
ellminaUon of all management
personnel ; a 60 percent re·
duclion o( all cla11trled
employHS after May 29, and a
25 percent salary reduction fol'
aJ.1 remaining classified
personnel.
It would alao lnvol•e the
elimlnaUon of maintenance a.nd
ope ration ttrvlce1 1 bua
tran1portatlon and food,
recreation, p11cholo1lcel,
coun1eUn1, 1poech and language
and nurwlnt aervkea.
Addltlon&Uy, all eleettves at
the intermediate and hllh
1chool1 and lb' hl1h acboola\
1lxlh peliodwouldbecut,btaal4.
Dr. Welte 1ald tho thli'cl Ol)Uon
would be to reduce aalarlta1 lil· ere ... claa1 1111 aiMt cut • any
and all procrasa1" at ~ dll•
creUon ol U"UlllMI, He 11ld Udl
would be la .. cUt&OD ol toll·
trada Wit.II emploJ .. aad....,. proJ~ Gt u.-.a. Zftc..._ Code,
Pianist SetA
Noon Concert
At Sadilleback
Concert pianist Sandy Welas
will be featured Friday during a
noon•hour concert in Saddleback
College's Fine Arts Complex.
Mrs. Weiss, a professional
performer since 1927, will
perform Rachmaninoff's
Prelude in C·Sharp Minor in
Fine Arts Room 103.
Admissloo ls free and no res-
ervations are required.
A resident of San Clemente,
Mrs. Weiss began playluc piano
at the age of 7 and. in 1919,
entered the Hans SchMider
Piano School in Rbode Island.
where she received two de1reea.
She performed on the East
Coast until h er move lo
California. Now. she Is a student
of Nakyona ChaJ at the colleize.
MOOEL3oeo
FM/AMJ'" l&WlY CASITTI
"-A, .. ucoua
Gtlea la attempting to prove
that hla client was simply a big
talker and Utile doer when 1t
F,.....P.,,eAJ
ARREST ...
Both victims were treated In
the e mergeocy room and re-
leased, a hospital spokesman
said.
Deputy Essoe was not injured
in the accident.
In the fnterim, Don Boe of
BOE Electric Compan y,
Westminster, puziled over plot
and street pl&n1 of the accident
area where, water district of.
flcials said, a Southern
California Edison Company
crew had ruptured the water
main.
.. That line wasn 't even
1uppoaed to be there," said Boe,
~antin& to a diagram which ap·
parenUy showed the line stop-
ping at curbside.
MODEL RC-515
The woman said she did noc.
report the desert mlsadventun,
to police because Dou1lu told
her he was llnked with the Maflj
and 1he feared reprisal. :
It was after the burly Costa
M esan was arrested lut Ju.!$
that Miss Pendleton came
forward with her story.
Glles used her testimony ln a11
attempt to prove that to Ute slx·
woman, six-mart jury women
who Journeyed to the desert with
his client for porno photo taking
sessions managed to survive the misadventure.
To bolster that claim, be sub-
m itted numerous Polaroid porno
photos purportedly taken by
Douglas at the remote desert
area and elsewhere:
Back Classes Set
The Saddleback VaUey YMCA
la conducting mwicle relaxing
clasaea designed to relieve back
pain and stress. The 1lx·week
.. healthy back" classes are
scheduled lor Mondays and
Wednesdays, beginning Monda~
from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. at 23131
Or ange Ave., El Toro.
FM/MW JSWl/SWZfMl IMwf•• I.di
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Delly ..... """'~ ............ Jleadfl tor t'lae Ra~
Galen Wollehberg of South Laguna may only be a year
and a half old, but he demonstrated Wednesday in South
Laguna Park that he's not afraid of controversy. Heap-
pears to be boosting the effort to draw the Rams to
Orange County, while also making a poignant plea for
clothing optional beaches. Keep on truckin', Galen.
Branch Appointed
~ounty RecOrder
Supenlsor Tbomu lliley ln·
iUally suggested tbe Interim ap-
pointment be held up unW after
March 15 when candidate
nom inatlon papers mat be tiled.
IJ'hat wa.y. Riley said, DO l!IJ»-pe!Uve candJdate for the~ •
corder's post would be given an
incumbent's advantaee.
Riley's fellow supervltor1,
howner, said they could find no
&ood reason tor delayin1 the ap-
pointment and bad alraady
personally interviewed pro•·
pectivecandidatesfor ~Job.
The cloeest St lohn 1ot to the
post WU •hen Supervlso1' Ralph
Clark nominated 6.lm fO!' the Job,
Clark's nominaUon dlect when
there was no aec:ond.inl moUon,
bow ever.
That paved the way for a un-
animous vote on Branch, the
·U·year-old assistant recorder
with 21 years experience in the
recorder's office.
Branch, a Santa Ana resident,
beean bis career In the re·
corder's office In 1956 as a clerk.
By· 1972 he was named
Carlyle's chief aul.stant.
When appointing Branch in·
terim recorder, the Board of
Superviaon agreed to Increase
hi• pay s percent to roughly
$28,500 a year.
By GUY GllANVlLLE ot._o.u,,..._...,,
Support for a proposed county
polltlcal reform ordinance
witb•red Wednesday when two
Oran1e County supervisors withdre~ their backini.
The much talked aq0ut reform
measure scheduled lo be enact··
ed becan the day supported by
all five county supervisors.
However, at the close of
Wednesday's _public hearing, it
was sbutned back to the County
Counsel for more reworking and
bad only 3-2 backing by the five-
man Board ol Supervisors.
First to yank hia support from
the proposed ordinance was
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich.
He said t.be reform measure
would give an unfair campaign
fund ralstng advantage In the
upcoming June primary election
to Incumbent county of.
ficeholders.
Diving Bird
In the Coop
LAUREL. Md1 (AP> -
An overly friendly pigeon
accused of "dive bomb-. ing" local residents bas
been put in the slamtner
by the Howard County
animal warden.
Howard G. Wood,
manager of the Valencia
Motel, alleged that the·
pigeon, Sea Breeze,
swooped on four
employees In "sneak at-
tacks." Wood said the bird
"Jlaps" people on lbe
head wlth ita wings.
But !•·year-old Terri
Sowers disputed the
charge, saylne her pigeon
"actually isn't tryine to
slap aoyone. He tries to
land on your shoulder,"
she explained.
County Man
Report Say;s
No . Gifts Kept
W ASIUNGTON (AP) -A sbt·
month eeafCb baa failed to turn
up any lndlcatioft that former
President Nlxon or bis family
kept valuable foreign glfts that
belong to th& ,-ov,mmeot, NBC
N ew1 reports.
NBC conwpondent Carl Stem
said Wedn-4ay a report to that
effect ii nearly ready to be seat
to the State Department wb.lth
asked for an accountine of the
gifts.
James B . Rhoads, the
archivist of the United States.
refused to confirm the account
but said his aeency's report will
be sent to the State Department
soon.
But the NBC report said the
archivists apparently uncovered
public trust io make aure they
are not."
NBC said areblvlsts concluded only one major item wu miaa-
ina -an oriental rue sent by the
Sbab of tran 1D 1989. Tho ru&
waa not at San Clemente.
DobeUe requested the account·
Inr after a Wa11bln1ton Poat
story •aid that aome ••missm,••
items included a carpet,
watches, anttqulUes, an oil
paJntlnc, a silver box, a gold
necklace and bracelet and
several other braceleta.
Indi d one surprise: that a lot of mlaa-Cle on ing items ot nominal value were
Accordinr to one report. a
neckla~e described as missing
was ln the first box opened
among the crates left behind In
Wublnaton and held under court order wbenNWiareliped.
taken by ?Qembers of the NJxon "\av. OC 'al
C staff as they went throu1b the ... ""' .irien Rape ·barges White House, 1ookio1 for
• souvenirs, after bis departure. W_J.! -ted, I.
I A mr.n accused of breakin& in· Jack Brennan, Nixon's top .,.IL&IA; JOT
Diedrich based bis view on the k.o three Fountain Valley homes aide, said that archivists even
fact the proposed ordinance and raping the women oc-searched the Nixon's seaside ~pmg•
would limit the amount ~upants was indicted on 11 estate at San Clemente .. at our
did f ff elony cowits Wednesday by the requesl" can ates or county o ice can b b 1 h-~ 1 t Two m-8 -----of a.i:8 .. 1.t ... Pt ,_ indi · d"al dono to range C.Ounty Grand Jury. T e searc was aunc 'lll\.I as -.. ~~ ~ ~ •1 ooo anelA-"on. · The Superior Court ar· Augus at e request o Evan .. u.,.... ,._ • ..,. acce uum Vl """ rs t th f a bus that wu c-......i~.. a,,. .. ~
.,., · ~ ~aignment of Frank William Dobelle, the State Department's of tourists from the neyland . Three of Diedrich'• fellow ohnson, 1.9, of Garden Grove, chief of protocol. Hotel to the Lo• Angeles
supervisors already bave col-as been scheduled for March l. "There are various allegations JntemaUonal Airport were ill•
lected $1,000 or more from in-e is held in the county jail with that some of those gift& may be dieted Wednesday on kidnapi.Qg
divtdual and corporate backers pail set at $250,000. missing," Dobelle said then. "It and robbery char1es by tbe for use In their campaigns for J Johnson was arrested Jan. 11 15 my responsibility ••• to the OrangeCountyGrandJury.
re·election in the June 6 primary ,;borUy after he allegedly raped . • Named in the lndlctment with
election. la 2 9 • ye a r . o Id v I c li m a t them i.s a third man who al· And in Died.rtcb's opinion, t.bat bil b Id ,, d I Sh r legedly joined the pair in three means they should not be able to ~nifepoint w e er 9·year-0 T aD 8 8 00 armed robberies committed in a
accept additional contributions pon slept in a nearby bedroom. seven-day period.
from those donors who have The victim told the grand jury Co C The lndlctm•·t fd-""'es the ihat she earlier had beard a SUS· unty ars ...., "••'-"' already hit the $1,000 con-picious noise in her home and busnappers as Bradley John tribution level. Hess, 19, and John Warren Ellis. . 'If we're 1oing to have telephoned a cousin who prom· More than 300 cars parked in 18, botbof Anahelm.Bothmenare
campalp reform: let's make It lsed the vicUm that he would be the Cowan Heights area of beldlntbecou.nt;yjallwitbballlet
equal for all. And if we're not flghtover. ed d' t 1 Orange County had their aUl00,000.. • going to have true reform, then She testili that imme ia e Y windows shot out Wednesday The third indictee l1 Bert b b th d li g an 0 i!lrter she made the phone call, night by u11known vandals, Chr' B A _.._._ w Y 0 er a op n r· ~ohn so:i grabbed her and h ·er ft 15 anner, 20, of n-. dinance that simply favf)J'll in· :warned her lhat if she did not s en s of cera said. who ls bdd ln Jail with ball Rt
cumbenta who have already col-get rid or her cousin when hear-P.1!.C:~tl~ ~-:.C:,!'!e :~~gha~ at $50,000. All three men will be
Jectea t.betr money?" Diedrich n·ved he would use the knife on ,, arraigned in Superior Court asked. .number of streets in the res· March 13. S P I Or. Thoma. Ru~ her. She wu then raped. Iden ti al a•ea1 pepfierin• the p u aid H d EJ"-u erv 1 ' Police said the cousin was k • 11t • 0 co a _, an .... are ' Laurence Sebmlt and ?bl p par ed veblc ea w th pellets accused of seven kldnappinss Anthonydldn'tasree. persuaded to leave but he from 8 BB gun. and seven robberies iD COD•
They.Mid::! already~ becamesusplciousandcalledof-Officers estimated the necUon with the holdup of the
Jected for u1 tJae Juue ficers. damaae at more than SU,000. DUneyland bus Jan. 12.
primary 1hould c6Wlt.ed ------------------------------------towards the Sl,000 limit.
"All of i. have been pretty
active In the fundralsln1 buai·
ne11,'' Rlley conceded as be
supported exemptin& donatioo.s already accepUd from the Sl,000
an election limit.
••well, then," Diedrich
responded, ••1 can't support this
meuure because lt applies ooe
wa1 for some and another way
for others."
Second supervisor to jurqp
ship. on the reform isau• wu
Supervisor Ralph Clark who in
past meetings bad expressed
displeasure with the ordinance
but never opposed It.
He said a provision calling for
candidates to identify those who
donate $50 or less to campaigns
is not needed.
Clark also insisted a county
fair political campaign practices·
commlaslon proposed in the or-
dinance would be "JitUe more
than a pap,er tiger with no real
authorib'. ' ,
''I don't think this ordinance is
ready to be voted on today,"
Clark said as he became the
second d.liSenter.
Riley disqned.
But inltod of callint for an enactment vote, he aaked for a
board vote on suggested changes
In the piopoaed ordinance.
Foremou amon1 those
alteraUons was reducing Ume
candld•tes for county office ba~e for 1ubmJWn1 copies of campaign Uteralure to the reg.
Ut.i'ar Of Wtera from U hours to three houn.
Tb•t •hc>~"ed Ume would-he ls> •llmtnate laat-mtnute
C!llDPallO •m•m. ACCOl'cllng to thoe• wbo arped (or nductna tbeUme. , Dleclrteti u4 C1ai'1c apl'elM4
tlletr ~ure with the entire
reform olrdlnance by cuUn1 111.Y
votu on~allot that sent I~
back to y CcManse.l Adrian
Kuyper,.., l'fWorldn1. •
After the meetln4r both Clark
and Diedrich nlcl tneY wW not
vote ffr the ordiaance when It com• beck ta ~ board next ' w .. lt.
B•t lebmlt, lUley ancl
.AntbODJJ H.Pl'ftUt th• three
•Pt• "'" to enact tb•
LASTS
DAYS
E~~~~i~~~w~e~~a~r&~a~r~s~o~·~o:f:fe:.,::.;;~
·generous savings on other
:Jeather sofas and chsltS ·
· -30 pieces on display to
choose from,
..
OAIL.Y PU.OT NATION I WORLD
30-hour Or-deal JlndS ·lUI ~Unman· Lowen Guard.
,.
j It
.,
• f.
~· .
• .~ ..
COt.O& 11D1GaEEN:1t'1 dUflcwl to undtrttand why
our Ora.nee Cowtty Supervllo.r Ralph Clatlt's nal name.
isn't O'Brien, O'Toole or Murphy. He clearl)t hu the Luck
o' the Irish ridln~ on his •boulder ..
. Clark, u Anaheim's gift to our county government,
could take a praUall into a mud puddle and fine) a diamond
in tho murky waters. If he ever &coveJ'I a discarded Irish
Sweepstakes tlcket in a wutebaakd, it will tum out tq be
the $100,000 winner.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohlo (AP> -· nlJbt wbll& E\'l'DI and an FBI J ~· W made ear plant that No one was more surprised thJn • a1ent sat in the back Hat ~ the U we •UM °"""'8alt)' I wu to.
the police when hostaae Robert . bostaae ell' J'legotJaU.,1 ~ the IO e.:.a. Riud the aaent
Herrmann grabbed his weary gunman, who was itl tbe ~t wt.._ tie tM aua~"
abductor's 1un and ended a 00· seat. ~-~Mid. U.. boetqe
hour ordeal with a bank ro.bbery · . iRbbecl tbe _. ud 1ave it to suspe~t. THt GUNMAM BAJ> llreed u1. lt wu .._ ..._. than our
"We had no tdea he was going lierrm•nn's two you1g aon4 plans. •
to do that,•• Sprinifield Police several hours earlier oh a rural The abdudor wu ldentlfled u
Lt. Roger Evans said in descrtb-}\ighway ne~ the Indiana line in 9yron R. Ball, 40, a prison
in1 bow Herrmann went for the exchange for tbe 1etaway car escapee wanled for bank
TIDS MAN COULD FIND bonanzas .38·caliber pistol Wednesday. provided by the FBI, robberies tn New Jersey and in bramble bushes. He must carry northern Oblo. U. was charced
shamrocks in bis wallet. · d l c ·z today wltb~dbapPing and bail Clark, you see, is currently beading Dp~~e u .. a a·na \Vas unled. -
·an outfit called the Committee to r •. ~ • I • ~ANS SAID JlALL had put .
.. Relocate the Rams in Orange County. the weapon down on the seat to
For the benefit of non.football fans, I l g h t a c l 1 are t t e w be n
1t should be noted that the Rams are I' 7 t G • ' ~T ,..,, • Herrmann, a 38·.r~ar-old postal
members or a professional gridiron r 0 e zves L ~"o i ins worltel\from West Manchester, group who currently play their games CL.AH r Obio, made b1s move. in an aging claptrap of a stadium called the Los Angeles "The hostage took the gun and
Memoriat Coliseum. WASHINGTON CAP) -The outcome of the Senate's flrsl Pr'o· gave it to me and the agent The word "Memorial" is in the name because that's cedural vote on the Panama Canal treaties gives no sure indication grabbed (Ball) aqd that was
·about all the place has left. Just memories. And the Ram whether the pacts eventually will be approved or rejected. about the extent of it."
contract to play in the old joint runs out after the 1979 By a vote of 67·30, the Senate agreed to stick to its plan of consider· Ball was "surprised and
season. . ing the treaty to ensure the waterway's neutrality before dealing ~hocked, too," Evans said. "He
· Thus it is that Clark got going on lhis committee effort with the proposal to actually ____ .._, --------bad been relaxed and I'm pretty
to lure the Rams out or Smogsville and get them to start hand the Canal Zone over to ponents, said · the vote "in· sure be was fatiped because be
playing football at Anaheim Stadium. Panama. die ates, above all else, that had been up numerous hours. I
ALL OF TIUS touched off enormous gales or glggling The vote Wednesday came on we'veaotahorserace." don't think he bad been asleep
and lbi"""-slapping up in Los Angeles. "Ha ! The hayseeds a proposal by Sen. James Allen, Leadership of both parties oo-since Ulinvbole thine began." ..,.. D·Ala .. a leader of tqe treaty posed Allen's move. from Orange County think they can get our Rams. Next foes, to reverse that order. More debate is expected to fill EVANS SAID BA.LL, who told they'll try for the London Symphony!" hl lb t ..... _ ld 't l Clark clearly had placed had himself out front where lhe rest of lhis week. with no m a: •~ cou n g ve up he coukf become the brunt of all kinds of ghastly ridicule. · A LTROU9H BOTH sides votes planned until next week. because of his past llle," offered
· scanned the roll call for in · when efforts to amend the no resistance. One officer To make his position even more sensitive, Clark ts up d' t' th t 1 ht .. _ . .11 be descr·ibed him as ·•very manner· I · lhi k" h' th' rd t th 1ca ions e vo e m g SitvW treaties w1 gm for re-e ection s year. see mg ts 1 erm on e how undecided senators would ly and cool" aa he was taken to
board. But he pushed aheakd an~~f Y on the Ram eventually vote on the treaties SEPARATE VOTES will be Jail.
campaign. The committee too out u -page newspaper themselves, there seemed to be required for the two ~aties. Herrmann was taken to a
ads wilh poor Ralph's name signed on them larger than few if any clues. one of which would turn the hospital and then to the Jonn Hancock's on the Constitution. S w d 11 F d 0 K b ... _ Sp..:.-ofieJd pol'-"e stat'"n, w .. __ ens. en e or • - y.. canal over to Panama y we •UJ.,. .... ,,., ~oe THEN THE COMMl'ITEE made an enormous error. and Richard Schweiker. R-Pa.. year 2000. The second commits t\ewasreunitedwlthhiswife.
They asked people to clip out a coupon in the ad pledging said their votes for Allen's both countries to maintaining He told reporters at a news •
support to the Rams, buy a stamp, put It in an envelope motion should not be taken as a the waterway's neutrality. Both conference that be was treated
and mail it in to Ralph. You just know people aren't going · sign they will support the treaty must be ratified by two.thirds · "OK" by his abuductor. "My
to all that trouble. oppponents in the final voting. majorities. greatest concern ~as la.st night
But wait! Clark's mail has started coming in. So far. "In no way should my vote be The bipartisan leadensbip has with the boys," he said, referr-
more than 2,000 coupons. And get this, people are sending taken as anything more than lined up overwhelming support ing to the first 17'h hours of the
money. The ad didn't ask for MONEY. One man sent a ' supporting Sen. Allen's motion." for amelldlng the neutrality pact ordeal when his sons -Rot>. 10,
check for $500 for Ram season tickets. Another Orange said Ford, one of the undecideds. to include guarantees of the and Mike, 7 -also were held.
Cou ntian sent $100 just to support the campaign. "J will continue cons idering United States' right to intervene He said he talked very little
You have to wonder if they're still giggling up there in every a mendment to these militarily to keep the canal open with his captor. "There were so
Los Angeles. treaties, vote by vote." while also spelling out. priority rnany things on my mind of AndourheroRalpb Clarkmustbehearingvoic~s from SEN. PAUL LAXALT, R· passage for U.S. warships in what I should or shouldn't do,"
> A~Wl1 ;PI
FOILED ABDUCTOR
• Robert Hemn•nn ·
GUNMAN CAPTURED
Byron R. Ball ~-=~ .;
on hjgh humming, "When Irish Eyes Are Smilin' ". . Nev . another leader of the op-time of emergency. he explained. =======-_:_~_:.....:~...:__...:........:. ____ __: ________ _:__::._ __________ ~--~~~-;-:-::-:-~-----------:--::-:~-:--
.:.. Abuse Def ease
I Wile Sentenced ~
~1'1n Man's Death
~ WAUPACA, Wis . (AP) -Jennifer Patri, a
:', former PI'A president who said she killed her ~~ husband after years of takinl mental and physical
~ abuse, stood in ~ll'S as a Judge sentenced her to ~ up to 10 years io'prison oh a manslaughter con· \.c' :-, viction.
}• Last. December, her Jawyer hailed as a victory
$~ the reduction or the charge against her from
•· murder to manslaughter. Feminist frOUPS di&-
•
':T.? agreed.
_ "NO ONE WILL GAIN a thin& from my going_
~! to prison, least of all my cbildren, "?drs. Patri, the
~· mother of two, told Wood County Judge Frederick
.• Fink before be sentenced her Wednesday. ~. Mrs. Patr). 32, was found guilty Dec. 15 1>1
~ manslaughter by a Waupaca County jury afl« a
• nine·day trial. :~ She said she bad been the victim of years of v:; physical and mental abuse from her h\lSband, ~""'· Robert, 34, and shot him lo self ddense.
"I KNOW WHAT 1 DID was a very bad thing,
and I can't really explain Wby it happened," Mrs. -
Patri said as she pleaded for leniency Wednesday.
"But anything that is done to me will not bring
Bob back." She broke into tears as sbe related that when
she was a child her mother ba4 served a prison ~ terme
'i "When my mother was in prison, it was the
., worst thing that ever happened in my life," added
Mrs. Patri, whose daughters are 12 and 13 years
old.
"AU.. I EVER WANTED was to have a good
family life," shesaid. "It didn't happen. Now all
1 have left is Lori and Dawn."
Fink rejected t.be idea of placing Mrs. Patri on
probation, saylng such action "would unduly
~ deprecialJi the seriousness or this crime."
: ·However, under herindet~r!Jlinate sentence, she is
,.. eligible immediately tor parole.
Fink also rejected a request to allow her to re·
• main free pending an appeal. Deten.se attorney
!· Alan Eisenberg said he would appeal on grounds .1, that Fink commJted more than 100 legal errors in
the trial, and that the prosecution also tnade er·
i rors. ~ Still pending is a charge of arson, stemmlnr
~ trom a fire at the Patri home after the sbooti,a1.
,. Mrs. Patri has pleaded innocent by reason of
mental defect to that charge, and Assistant J>it.
trict Attorney Philip Kirk said be plaoned to de·
oide in four to six weeks wbetber to continue t,he
STO~E HOURS~ /
Weekdays, 9 e.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday: 9 •·"'·to 5:30 p.m.
Open Sunday 12 to 5 ~.m.
' •• ...... •• • .... .
·.
..
. •
• •
\
By SYLVIA POITER
Burted deep ln the Carter admlnistraUon'• tax re·
ductlon·reform p.cka1e lJ a J)tOposal that can bendit
anilliona or work rs covered by private pension plans.
lt would ID a Jone wl.'f toward asawills that all
partlclpant& to: pemloa plaos would receive rellremlllt
benetit.s. . I . •
UNDP.R CUaR2NT LAW EMPl.OY BS can tet \II)
retirement plans Lbat pa)' JOOd benellts to rtlaUvely well·
paid emplQYeta and UtUe or nothi.GC to those eamlna salaries equal to or less than t.be Soelal Security waae
base. •
Emplo1en may set up such plans by "lnte1raunc" OI'
taking credlt tor certaln Social Security taxes when com-
puting the beneClts their employees wlll draw from pension plans.
As retirement
draws near, many
workers read their
summary i>enslon plan
booklets and compute
the benefits. Only then
do they discover that in·
tegratlon will mean
M°"8y's
Worth
they will receive little or no more than their SS benefits.
Integration ls not uncommon, especially f or
participants in plans covering fewer than 26 workers.
In 1974, the Congressional Research Service found that
60 percent of tax~ualifiec:l pension plans. involvJn• 2S lo
30 percent ol participants in the private pension •yatem,
were integrated with Social Security.
CONGRESS RECOGNIZED TSAT a system tbat
enables or even encourages employers to pay retirement
benefits to highly salaried workers while pa)'ine notblnc to
lower·paid persons is unfair. It bas placed severe llmJta on
the use of intecratlon in plans designed for ranlr.-ud·file
workers, such as employee stock ownership plans. .
A temporary freeze was put on fwt}\er lntegraUon dur·
ing the debate over the 1974 pension law, whUe Congress
completed a two-year study of its effects. Last·mlnute
lobbying persuaded Congress to rescind the free&e. Tbe
study is unfinished; integration goes on.
Integration is defended by many employers who say
that, without it. pension plan costs wouJd be excessive,
that benefits should reward executives who account for
profits, th.al higher deferred benefits would reduce wages
lower-paid people receive.
THE CARTER ADMINl.STBA110 N ARGUES that, in
etrect, the tax laws have been designed to encourage firms
to set up pension plans for all workers. Integration un·
dermines this goal. .
Only the worst aspects of the present system of inte-
gration would be eliminated by the Carter proposal, for it
would substantially alfect only plans that tend to dis·
criminale heavily in favor of well-paid employees by
virtually excluding the rank ·and.file.
But modest as tbls reform measure ts. some plan con·
sultants and actuaries are already working lo defeat it .
Their view is that those who would gain most from its
passage will find the proposal too obscu.re and complicated
to pay much attention .
They shrug ott the possibility of a letter·writing
campaign that might stress to senators and congressmen.
that the public wants this measur~.
Tbe "integratlol\" proposal.. along with the entire tait
package, is before Lbe House Ways and Means Committee.
chaired by Rep. Al Ullman, D-Ore. U you care. wrtte..
Utility Asks Call
·IJef ore Digging
Negligent diggings at excavation sites have caused
more-than $1.2 mllllon damage to buried facilities oC
General Telephone Co. of California during the past six
years. .
Since 1972, more than 3,000 dig.ups bave disrupted
local and toll service in courtUess communities, the utility
says.
DESPITE MEASURES TO alleviate the problem, un-
derground cables are b'equently uprooted at excavation
sites.
Wilb more than 3.5 mlllloo telephones and more than
10,000 miles of underground cables, General says it.a con·
cern is service interruptions.
•'This is a situation that most people forget when they
excavate without concern of what lies below.'' said Joe
Suhayda, a coordinator for General's efforts to alert coo·
tractors and the general public of underground facilities.
IN ABOUT 80 PERCENT ol instances reported since
1974, excavators neglected to check with General before
digging and were held liable tor repair costs, the company
said.
Suhayda said that a phone call could help prevtnt
most of the dining mishaps. •·we have made It as eau as
possible for contractors to call and obtain the Jocatloos o{
our underground !acllities," he said. "And we will even
mark the routes or our cables to prevenL communlcaUon
blackouts."
. General has operated a "call before you di&" in·
formation program since 1970, and last year received a rec-
ord 10.~ calls for cable location. The company is a
founding member or the underground service alert, • one-
call noUflcaUon system set up in 197& by utillUes to serve
contractors excavQUng In Orange County.
THROUGH rrs OWN P ROGRAM. General eatimllles
it bas reduced dig.ups by approximately 30 percent. ·
AlQKJu•h int.ended primarily. ror eontractora, both GeneTal'a and the overall pl'OIJ'ams are available free to
•ubcontractnn, beaUng and plumbing llrms, •wimmlng pool builders and anyone else planning to excavate.
Th0&0 usin1 such aervlcu should caU at least two
wor'kinc_ days before d111ina; General can, howe-1er. u\
more quickly if becesaary.
To reach General. contractors l'lhould call collMt
(213)357·2257. This telephone number applies to General
underground lactlitlea In Southern Calif ornta except Oranp'
County, whlcb b aerved by~ o~rall service. Tb6 toll·
free number for lbat aerv1co lJ 14WJ0~'4W. General'•
etble locaUn1 acrvlco l1 open anen d•)'I a hek. M bourl
a day. 'lbe all·ullllty aavlce ii opea on bualMU day1 ooly.
..
,.
-DNlYPIU>l
:'Daddy, your sideburns ore nice and neat, but
your bockburn is getting long."
• &~ W@M(( ~-1 ~ c ~li!em? The~~!! E~~
cut red tape, getting the. answers and. action you need
to solve inequahes m government and bu.nness. Mail
your questlOM to P.at Dunn, At Your Service, Orange
Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 156ll, Costa Mesa, CA
92626. As many letters cu possible will be answered,
but phoned mquines or letters not including the
reader's full name. address and business hours' phone
number cannot be ccmsadered This column appears daa·
ly e:rcept Saturdays ''
~ck on It• Wa11 ••• Again
DEAR PAT: I've received my Social Security
checks on time for 16 year!) with one exception
my November 1977 check. I called the Social
Security office and fi lled out a form they sent to
me. I then received a notice saying that the check
• would be received "in a few days." It djdn't come,
so I called several limes and finall y went to the
<A>sta Mesa office where the computer was
checked and I was assured my check would arrive
soon. I now have four Social Security forms from
Chicago <ind Los Angeles telling me again that the
check \\Ill come ''in a few days," but it hasn't.
G.S .. Costa Mesa
Bob Sutton of the Costa Mesa Social Security
omce says your check issuance must have ~n re-
~cted for some unknown reason by the computer.
A.1 separate check will be provided to you Im·
Jn ediately due to the unusual delay.
l)igat Did Shrink•nt1 A~t
DEAR Pl\T: Hope you can help! I sent a Sl2.9S
eheck last July 18 to Readers Digest Fund for the
9lind. This was for a year's subscription to a large
~int Readers Digest for a 9l·year-old lady with
poor vision. The first copies arrived in large print,
but s tarling in November , small print copies were
sent lo her. I've written to Readers Digest, asking
that t he incorrect copses be replaced with the large
print ones, but I haven't had any answer.
~ M.M.M ., Newport Beach
\'our complaint is being bandied by Magazine
Action Line, a free service of PubUsbers Clearing
Jlouse. Other readers with maguine subscription
problems are urged to contact MAL directly by
writing to Publishers Clearing House, Matazlne
Action Line, 382 Channel Drive, Port Washington,
N.Y . 11050. MAL does ask the consumer to try to
seUle the problem first wlth the comp~ny wJlere
the order was placed. If that faiJA, send a note to
MAL.
Air 0,.,,1,.,, Pa•ph~t Ottered
DEAR PAT: Do you know where I can get
some easy-to-understand instructions for home
drying or food?
M.K., Costa Mesa
Order lbe federal publlcalloD. "Drying Foods a' Home (024F),., by sending 50 cents to Consumer
J1tformaUon Center, Pueblo, Colo. 81oot. This ZO-
page booklet tells about preparation, equipment
needed, and methods for drying frult, vegetables
and meats.
l...urance I• OaDner'• Problea
DEAR PAT: When a person rents a plane, who
provides the insurance -the renter or the owner?
T.M., Costa Mesa
State law requires the owner of a rental
airplane to provide cert1fled information 011 ln·
surance coverage of I.be aircraft to any person who
Jents the plane.
Patter of Feet Ezl'ftUI~
DEAR PAT: I found the recent article in the
"Featuring" section about couples who choose not
to have children very interesting. One other aspect
or making this decisjoo could well be the fmanclal
obligation involved in raising a child. I would be
ve ry interested to see some facts and figures on
just how much it now costs to raise a child .
N.P., Irvine
In 1960 and 1971, eblld-rearhlg costs at
dlfrerent llvlnJ levels were esUmated b7 USDA
lriatl1Uclan1. ExteHlon coHamer eeoaomlst
Deamoad Jolty recentJ1 updated Uaeae R1ure1 for
tare urban Wes& usl•g tile Marcb 11'17 Couamer
Price Index. Says Dr. Solly, ln l9T1 dollars, l& ~ dose to $38,800 to ralle a dlllcl ..,_,.. a1e l7 as t._e low-coet standard of Uvlal. At tile m4Mlerate· nat ltudard, tbe ~are a. afaaost ...... 18, ...
more. If JOG woald like a table, whlda .._. the
b(eatdon of CGCts for clilldren o( dltterent ages, a.td for various famUy apeadlhlret, tend a
II•• ped, 1elf·addre11ed ea.elope to Heme
AIY...., Jt• s. Harbor Blvd., A.adelm, caur.
9*5. A.a for 0 Qalld Rearla1 COl&I... •
GARDENING
(12) Redwood Planters -R19. 2.25 ......................................... 1.00
(50) Ceramic Pots -Ret. 5.49 ....................................................... 3,00
( 44) Redwood Plant Holders -Ket. 4.95 ................................... , ..... 2.50
(10) Plant Stands -Reg. ll.91 ........................................ . . . ..... 6.00
(34) Piii Kiii-Rq. 1.25 ............................. : ...................................... 7CJt
(14) Terrarium -"'9· 59' ... ~........................................... ... . ....... W
(8) Spot Drip -Rq. 19.95 ........................................................ 10.00
(19) Energizer -fttl. 3.-39 . .................................... . ................ 1.70
(4) 10 Fl. Electro Duct -Rel. 35.99 .. ............... ....•••. . •..•... 25.00
(5) 5 Fl. Electro Duct-fltt. 24.99 .............................................. 15.00
CLOCKS
(J) Capella-Rel. 7.98 ............................................................... 4.00
(1) Hutch-.... 7.99 ..................................................................... 4.00
( 1) Coffee Pot -Rq. 7.99 .................................... , ..................... 4.00
(2) Sconce -.... 7.91 ............................................................. ,.00
(2) Cherry Crock -Rlf.16.95 .............. : ......................................... 8.00
(2) Cheese Crock -1'11· 16.95 . .. . ........ .. .... ......... •.. .... ....... .. . ..... 8.00
(3) Jr. Grandfather -Bet. 11.99 ... ..•.•.••••. •..•...•.•.•••....• • • •..•.••..• 8.00
(3) Antique Clock -ttq. 18.95 .............. .. .. ........... .... . .••.... 8.50
(12) Orchard Clock -1111.19.95 . . •....•.. ........•.. ..... .. .. .. 10.00
(2) Lark Clock -fttt.16.95......... . ...... ................... . .......... 5.00
(2) Lemon Slice Clock -Ret.17.95 ...................... ...... • ...... : .... 9.00
(5) Milk Can Clock -Ret. 1,.95 .. . ... . .. .... ........ . . . . . • •.. ... .• . . 10.00
(1) Sussex Clock -llq. 39.95 .. . .. .. . .. ... ... .. ........ ............. . ...... 20.00
PLUMBING
(2) Union 39 Bath Faucet -Ree. 10.99 ............................................. 8.00
(3) Indiana Brass 440 Faucet -"91. 10.95 •...•... ... . .. .. . . •. . . . . ••. . .. .. 8.00
(3) Indiana Brass w/pop-up Faucet-Ret. 1D.95 ................................ 8.00
(7) Indiana Bras• w/pop-up Faucet. #631-GAS -Bet. 16.95 ................ 8.00
(2) Gerber Faucet. #9-43-330 -.... 21.95 ...................................... 11.00
(2) Union Wall Mount Kitchen Faucet. #40-A -lltt. 23.95 .................. 12.00
(1) Chicago Kitchen Faucet. #«5-flll. 44.95 ............................. 20.00
(3) Sayco Laundry Faucet--. 11.95 ............................................ !5.00
(1) Sayco Kitchen Faucet -.... 19.49 ........................................... 10.00
1~" PVC Pipe ......•..••••.•...•.•.........•......•. ·····• 19'-10' length
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BBQ AND PATIO
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(10) Portalbe BBO -lllf.4.95 .................• : ..................................... 1.00
(4) Structo Gas BBQ, #7995 -1111. 99.95 ....................................... 50.00
(4) Structo Charcoal BBQ, #7875 -!lat· 64.95 ................................ 35.00
(1) Mecko Charcoal BBO; #22 -1111· 29.95 .. .. .. . ............................ 15.00
(5) 1000Firescreens -flet. 311.95 ................................................ 25,00
(3) Firesets. #393, #402 -flet. 54.95 . . ......................................... 27 .00
(4) Frrescreens, #155 -Reg. 24.95 ................................................ 20.00
(1) Smoke-·N-P1t BBQ, (Blk)-llet. 5U5.. . . ............................. 27.00
(48) Trash Cans. lnsect1c1de 7 Deodorant -Alf, 1.49 ............................ Sfr
HARDWARE
Jkk Rabbit Pump-lltt. 9.95 ................ ~ ....................................... 3.00
ArtJC Jac:kets -.. . . . . .. ............................................................. 14.81
(24) Stop Mist -.... 1.50 ................................ ~ .............................. 75'
(24) Bennington American Flag -lltt. 15.95 ..................................... 7.00
Asstd. Cabinet Knobs (limited supply) -......................................... 1•
(301 Homelite Woodcutters Kit-liq. 14.99 ..................................... 10.00
(30) Humming Bird feeder -Ret. 994 ................................................ 509
(20) Delux Humming Bird Feeder -Reg. 2.98 .......................... 1.50
HOUSEWARES
(7) Shag Rack, #400 -1111. 5.49 .................................................... 2.80
(2) Elect Shoe Polisher -Ree. 51.95 .................................. , ......... 25.00
(7) Mirro Piuaria-Rtt. 19.95 ...........................................• 15.00
Key Rings (Munchy)-.................................................................. 50'
Decorative Traverse Rods, 7' & 4" -........................................ 'fl OFF
(50) Roast Racks -Ree. 3.98 .......................................................... 2.00
(28) Mixing Forks -!let· 1.29 ........................................................... W
(10) Juicer -flet. a.ae ............................................................... 4.00
(3) Turkey Platters -lllf. 9.50 ........................................................ 5.00
(5) Slimline Water Plk -Ree. 32.95 ................................................ 17.00
(6) Ebelsklver Iron -1111. U9 ...................................................... 2.20
(50) Aluminum Foil Roasting Pans-Rat. 49' ••........ : ........................... ZO.
(36) Misters (Brass Plated)-llfl. 2.29 ...........•........•...........•........•. 1.00
(8) 3 Pc. Stainless Mixing Bowl Set -Jltt. 9.95 .................• : ............... 5.50
(14) Ohio Outdoor Thermometer -Rq. US .................................... 4.50
(24) Basters-11'9. 98' .................................................................... 50'
(1) Farberware Turbo Oven -Ref. 159.95 ...................................... 100.00
(1) Hanson Nursery Scale -Alf. 15.98 •.... ... .. . . .. ..... . .•.......•.••••....•. 11.00
(4) Hoover Crepe Makera-1111. 29.99 .............•.....•...................... 20.00
(43) Sunbeam f?opcorn Makers -!let. 22.95 •...........•.......•.•••.••••....• 18.15
(28) H.B. Fry-All -"'9.17.99 ........................................... ···-·····•··· 14.18
(88) H.B. Donut Maker -lltf, ZU5 ............................................... 17 .81
(38) H.B. Double Mac-ft'I. 28.89 ................................................ 18.00
(l5) R!val 5 qt. Crock Pot, #3550 -fltt. 32.95 ................................. 20.00
(62) H.B. LIUI• Mac -""· "·" ••···••·•··•···••• ··•··· ............................ 12.00
(52) Giiiette Super Max, MHD7 -flel. 21.95 ..................................... 15.88
(55) Gillette Super Curl, #SW2 -lttf. fl.99 ..................................... 14.18
(29) Max Hair Blower, #HD-4 -fltt. 7.99 .......................................... 4.00
(2-40) Taylor Thermometers, #5136 -.... 194 ..................................... &C)t
(24) Taylor Room Thermometers, #5178 -R ... 1.69 ............................. 80'
(75) Name Badges -lltt. 50' ........................................................... 10-
Assorte<S Table Cloths -•.••••••••. ......................................... ... 'It OFF
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