Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-03-01 - Orange Coast Pilot1 -1 I i ... Ne~ Ev.idenc" Sn~f Suspeet:-·~ ··.no Fetus Baeks Thrill Se~king AutOpsy Report. 7 Or ~arnage Lost ,.. Rangers .Call Truce, .. Let Bubbles Relax WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 1, 1978 VOL. 11, MO .... 4 S•CTIO..S, 42 f'AO•I .. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * • m s it oast Fetus ~utopsy Backed By TOM BAllLEY Oftllllo.llyPtllitl!Mt I An Orange County Coroner's officer, wbo testified earlier that the infant allegedly murdered by Dr. William Baxter Waddill dled or manual strangulation, went back on the witness stand Tuesday to offer new evidence for the prosecution. Dr. Robert Richards testified in his second appearance before a Superior Court jury that be bad returned to bis laboratory to examine tissue slides that he baa not used during his first ap- pearance ln court. · Richards caJDe under heavy fire from two def enae la•yers, particularly Dr. Malbour Watson,-during that flnt session and was accused by \hem of sub- mitting incompetent evidence. He told .the jury on that oc· casion that be confirmed bis autopsy ·verdict of mana·a1 strangulation but ·conceded un· der intenllve defense questioning that be eould not determine tbe proceas of death that led to atrangulaUon. Richards testified Tuesday, however, that tbe new slides be brought io court with him clear· ly disclosed damage to the fetus'• windpipe, )IU')'DX and two main arteries. And he claimed bis ne,r evid9nce amply confirms hla tlte-dl'y tbat trauma from J1b71lcal force and· not lack of 0•1Pn or upbyxtation from 101D• medical sc:>urce led to the deatll ol tbe 3l·Wtt4'k f etua. P~ R.ob"ert Chatterton •atd-:.\he new evidence by . RlchU. lhowd ffn•lnee the JCll'J tW Weddlll. "4. atrauled the tetu1 to deatb ln ltie Weatmlna,ler Community JJotpl'8l llUl'l«J Int March a Proeeeutlon wttnes•4'!1 ha~ tettlflecl that Waddlll, after fall· ma to abort tbe feta ... the m. (lee DOCI'()' P-.p Aa> r. w . . . Kid'• E11e Viele Michelle Smith, 5, of Taylor, Mich., gets a c!Qse look at a Cecropia moth which landed on her nose alter trytng out its new wings. Michelle found the moth In its· larva stage last summer and, after keeping it through the fall and winter, watch~ it develop. J~ors w~~. F&ie, OE 'S1:1DfF ~nSpect . .torture-murder picture laklq session almply "to satisfy his lust for human carnage.'' Those cont.rad•eU.nl •P· pralaala ot th& 5'·Jt~ld deo f eadant•a daancter eehoine in their ean, the ala wom• Md six IMD Jlaiil'S ._,. bel*D de- c:ldlnl ~· f.te. T~ ~ 11 .. '*1tltar..\e" finisher 1i ctbaraed 1*h Hlldl; , Babbles Bests Damage, Slides ' Safari Rangers Call Truce By PIDLIP &OSMAIUN Of • ...., ........ Exhausted Uoa Country Safari rangers are waiting out the first day of a 48.hour ~ce they unilaterally called with Bubbles the peripatetic hippopotamus. Bubbles, the oolY..bown hlpf)o protected agaLDsr harm by a superior court order. and also "'e oaJy known hippo to appear on a Walter Cronkite news broadcast, slipped from her pond Tuesd.ay to feed OD Oats, bay and grass <set out by the rangers themselves. For the fint time in nine days, slnce ber escape from Lion Country Feb. 20, the hippo was unmolested in her DlghUy forage from a pxad off Laguna C.Uyon Road. .. We're not going to 'ttempt DC-IO Crash IriUKills 2, Hurts25 anything for the next 48 hours." Lion , Country publicist Jo Sch~ter said Tuesday. "We're going to give her some rest and Reported lake food out there. • ''We'll see if we can calm her By JACKIE HYMAN' °' .. Daily Pltet s~ down by not trying to dart her-More than two inches of rain, (with a tranquilizer) or accompanied by gale-for ce anything." winds gusting up to 68 miles per Lion Country rangers, aner hour at Newport Harbor, pelted more than a week's beating the the Orange Coast Tuesday night bush for the ,three-ton Bu~bles, and early today but caused only conc~e they ve been outwitted, . relatively minor damage com· outflanked and outlasted by a · par~d to the s torm oC three hip~. , wee""'19 ago. he; ey don t know how lo catch However, falling trees and Forber part, Bubbles, rangers t e)ephone poles _d ama,ed rear, may be getting 8 little sev~ral ~uses, as dtd flooding. paranoid-and consequently No injunes were rePorted. dangerous-by 'ber experienc~ Scattered power outages !'C-in the free world. cur r~d ~ls~, a long with It was getting to where a mudshdes m Silvera~o Canyon. hippopotamus couldn't stiok her Newport Beach. foothill canyons head out of the water without a and ln ~ Clemente. ranger loosing a tranquilizer The ratns .also have ~et a dart at her or some tourisb opo-record, according to John Gietzen plng a(lasbbulbinberface. or Orange Co~ty F_lood q>Dtrol Bubbles, the rangers said, bas Dlstrict.Hesaidtbisl9t!1ehigbest had it. The last time a ranger season·to-date ~all m most~ thought he'd finally tranquilized Oran.geCo\Dltysmcel909. • her, Tuesday morning Bubbles Ra1ofall tor the 24·bour penod stoodupandbellowedathim. ending this morning was re- Sbe never yelled at them corded at 1.6 inches in Bunt· before. <See RAIN, P•ge AZ) Rangers blame a lot of Bubbles' Irritability on the crowds of up to 50 people who have stopped their cars on Laauna cariyon Road to gawk at the hippo, or rather' at her pond, since Bubbles stays submerged durbig tbedaytlme, So worried about what might happen if Bubbles came out and endangered the throng, the ran1el"I announced Monday that they mi1bt havet t.o Jclll the hlppo. Lion Country officials tater aatd the rem arks by ran¥el"I bad been mislnt.erpret~ edb)tb&~ Sl.,ore th• rangers• self· lmpot'ecl $Miine came Tuesday mornhlf, a eourt order was handed down by Superior Judge Robert Green, who got out of • ('e.e ari'O, .... A.I) Chance of rain lncreas· fng to 60 percent late tonight and Thursday. Lows tooigbt ln sos. Bl&hS Thursd-.y 60 to 65. · INSIDE T8DAY ' ., ' .. A! DAILY PILOT 6 Wednesday Mdrc11 1, 1978 One Killed in Storm Trees Downed; Roads Closed LOS ANGELES <AP> -A wind-whipped Pacific rainstorm thundered across an already 3oggy Southern California today, causing one death, downing trtres arid l>owcr lines, cl06ing roads, damaging houses and forcing the evacuation of at least a dozen persons. ~ut the subtropical storm, wbach was expected to taper to showers later in the day, dJdn't live up to fears that it might duplicite the disastrous flooding of three weeks ago. Officials were c losely watching the s aturated res- idential canyon areas around the city, where most of last month's fioodlng occurre~. Los Angeles Police reported three hillside bouses in the ex- 'Short People' Bi,ll Doesn't Measure Up . ANNAPOLIS, Md . CA P > ndbill to ban the play. mg ?f the. htt song "Short 1>~" on Maryland radio stati~ns Just doesn't meas ure up to constitutional scrutiny. sa.ys Attorney General Francis B. Burch.. BurC'h , ~ a letter to the bill's sponsor, Isiah Dix· on Jr., saad the First Amendment "empowers mut;c lemen to. kick verbal sand in the faces of the s hort and skinny, as well as Davids to · aim hard words at towering Goliaths.'' lie also said the federal government has pre- cm plcd the regulation. ef radio and television stationts ~:which would lead "~ \ower cour'-'to shortcir u this short-liyed proposal m short order." An ~ rch told Dixon theft "for such a bill to square · e Equal Protection Clause is a tall or- der." .... . . f. Fro.PageAl TORTURE TRIAL. • • They arrested the alleged ~nuH film magnate befote what the prosecution alleged was to be a deadty film making session began. If convktcd of the solkitation .and attempted murder charges. Douglas could spend. up to eight years in state prison. That ·would be tine with pros- ecutor Morriseey. In his parting remarks to the jury, Morrissey said Douglas had grown tired of filming Pl'ople simulating sex acts, in· eluding sex-torture scenes. "Simulated acts no longer :sa tisfied him. Ile wanted the real thing. He wanted human carnage," Ute prosecutor said as he argued for a guilty verdict. But defense attorney Giles in- s isted the only pe rsons who believe that version of Dou&}as' :.hort-Jived (aim making career are Morrissey and the Garden Grove police. "Even his -his so-called models considered ham to be a harmless, kinky old fat guy," G 1 les told the jury. lie pointed out that Dou~las was fant.asazing , for example. when he boasted that he planned to film a $55,000 Porno epic at the Yucca Valley hideaway. When push came to shove, Giles said. movie magnate Douglas showed up for his film session with only a $29 Polaroid camera and a few rolls of out. dated black and white film. Giles waved a handful of porno photos Douglas admitted shooting during the 2~ years before his Ill-fated journey to the desert with lbe two Policewomen. · The young defense lawyer said the photos' quality "clearly dem- onstrate" that Douglas lacks skill as both a photographer and casting direct.or. He said a cache or knives, cleavers, Ice picks and other paraphernalia uncovered by police tn the desert were either film props or gear for a desert · outing. As for the prosecutlon wit· neues, Giles carefully excluded the two Policewomen when be referred to them as "rather tlaky individuals." Included among those wit· nesses were: -Pamala Sue Williams, an ex-prostitute and admitted former heroin addict who }(lunched the police invesUaaUon of Douglas when she reported he had solicited her servlcH in bis alleged torture.murder plot. -A former Douglas beer bar employee who first deni~ and th~ admitted she had starred in one of bis p1cture·takiag sessions. -Another former Dou1las starlet who purportedly told an attorney she planned to cash In on the experience by writing a book titled. "The Last Living Victim of Fred Berre Douglas." "No ." Giles s aid , "that testimony and all the evidence you've seen doesn't prove Mr. Douglas had a murderous heart." Wearing white double-knit slacks and a blue blazer, the de· fend ant sat aJertJy on the edae of his chair throughout the day- long debate between the two lawyers. During his testimony at the trial. Douglas readily admitted talk and picture taking of sexual misadventures "haa alwaya hffn of interest to me. It's that simple.'' But when asked if he planned to harm the two undercover policewomen, he said, "No, no . no. N~vtt." Today, the jury that heard that testimony In Judge Muon Fen_ton's 'courtroom ls deciding whether the desert journey Jut July 20 was simply another Douglas fantasy or, as Morrissey insisted, "a diabolical plot" t.o torture and murder two women. 'lhree MeaU, ... 153 to Go; Tab$223.82 HOMESTEAD, i'la. <AP) -A 350-pound man walked Into the restaurant and told nlghl manager Cathy McCullouch: "I'm rich and I want everything on the menu." Mrs. McCullouah, 34, said 1he thought the man, who ldentlfied himself aa March Banks Whiteman, was kidding until be nasbed a roll of $100 bills. A cook worked for nearly two houu preparing breakfast. lunches and desserts for Whiteman and two companions while c urious cu1tomers watched: Ttre men ate the first three meal•, then Whiteman astced that the remaining 153 dinners be packaged for c_arryout. At 5 a.m. Sunday, Mrl. DAILY PILOT • McCUIJou8h rani up Whiteman•• bill:'223A He Deeled four *100 bUts from his roll. leaving a $100 Up for the cook and tbe rett for hl1 waltna. Whiteman wb9 Mra. McCullqu1b .. la wu In hi• mi4"30I, t.ben loaded tbe box• into bfa luxury car and left.. ... umeo. ~. elusive Encino section or 'be San Fernando Valley were sllppina into adjacent backyards. The residents were evacuated and there were no injuries. In lb~ Sunland-Tujunga area, hard hit la.st month, "Things are running real smooth," $&id policeman Gary Wachtlet. Pre~utionary evacuations were advised, however:i. in nearby Schwartz Canyon, ~bey Canyon near Pacoima and other hilly areas in the vicinity as some of the 35 county fiood con· trol debris. basins reached the emergency level. Los Angeles city fire officials s aid at least one home was damaged by a mudslide in the La Tuna Canyon area of Sun Valley. Occupants or the home and several nearby residences were evacuated. There were no injuries. About.15 miles to the east in La Crescenta, where dozens of homes were flooded Feb. 10, "everything's fine,'' s aid sheriff's deputy John Lofthus. The city received almost three inches of rain in the storm and more than four inches fell in s ome parts or Southern California. The latest storm brought the seasonal total to almost 24 inches, compared t.o 7.38 inches during the drought last year. The normal rainfall for this time or year is 10.43incbes. While the storm rolled east. forecasters said another Pacific· spawned s torm will pass through by Friday, dropping even more rain. Mudslides closed or partially blocked at least 17 roads, includ· ing all but one Jane of the heavi- ly used Pacific Coast Hi&t>way and two southbound lanes of lnteratate 5, the main artery bet ween Los Angeles and 'Northern Calllornla, Travelers warnines were issued for mbuntaln and canyon roads due l o} high winds . s1i"ppery pavementandp5orvisibility. A motorist blinded by a hea\•y blast of rain collided with a young motorcyclist in the City of Industry, killing 17·year-old ··Stephen Mulherin. The motorist was not injured. A apokeaman for Southern California Ediaon estimated that power outages due to more than JOO downed or storm-dama&ed Jines aHected up lo 100.000 customers by dawn. Hardest h.it areas were in Long Beach, Palos Verdes, Carson and Del Amo, he added. Flash flood watches were is· sued for Lo9 Angeles, Orange. San Dteco. Imperial, Riverside, Sa.a Bernardino, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. In ad· dHlon, the National · Weather Service laaued a special "severe thunderstorm watch'• for a JO -mile wide section from north west Burbank to southeast San Diego. In severaJ marinas along the Los Angeles C-ounty coastline, boats were torn from their moorings by high winds ·and heavy seas. On the Palos Verdes Peninsula north of Los Angeles Harbor. two expensive homes that slipped from their: found"ations by laat month's rains. were teetering on the brink ot collapse with the new rain. Oae home belongs to the famUy o! tennis star Tracy Austin. _ Evacuation centers were set up in Sun Valley and La Crescent& ln the Los Angeles area. But many residents ap- peared not to be heeding the evac uation warnings. The centers were empty Tuesday night although Red Cross workers were standing by. .Rain Hampers Plane Search SANTA BARBARA (AP> Rain has hampered a e,round search lor a prbofter transport plane loet over the Los Padres National Forest V..fth seven peraona aboard. · But authorlUes were to con- tinue looldnJ today ror the twin· enalne eraft carrying four priaoners. ,....Pflfl'J.AI · -DOCTOR ••• Frolfl Page Al RAIN DRENCHES ORANGE COAST • • • ington Beach, 2.18 inches in Costa Mesa, 2.30 inches in Laguna Niguel, 2.43 inches in Santa Ana and 3.5 inches on Santiago Peak of Saddleback Mountain. Season-to-date totals, com· pared to last year al this time. were: Huntington Beach, 19.98 inches compared lo 9.47 inches; Costa Mesa. 21.31 inches com· pared to 7 13 inches; Laguna Niguel, 22.24 compared to 6.6; Santa Ana. 21 15 compared to 7.51; and Santiago Peak, S0.3 compared to 16 3. And there's more rain on the way. The National Weather Service forecasts a 60 percent chance of rain tonight and Thursday, with more rain on Friday and Saturday of un- known intensity. Orange County fire men were rechanneling a flooded creek in SilveradoCanyon today and were standing by an caseof mudslides. mudshdes. A mudslide on Pac1f1c Coast Highway between Camino Capistrano and Doheney Park Road caused the road to be · closed th.ls morning while Back Bay Road ln Newport Beach was closed by several mudsudes. In addition. Bayside Drive ~between El J Pa seo and ' Carnation Avenue was also closed due to mud and Portions o r East Coast Haahway m Corona del Mar were blanketed with mud. However, city crews were able to kHp the road opeo. Valencay ... dining furniture in the Louis XV style f. by Henredon ... Corona de l Mar Elementary School was closed due to flood· ing. Flooding was reported along the Jasmine Gulch and in a hair· dozen waterfront homes on Bayside Drive. Parts of Laguna Canyo" Road also flooded but the road re· mained open. Winds blew about 200 feet or · roof off a home at 600 Vista Lane early today, sending the un· identified occupants scurrying for cover. Firemen put up a pro- tective covering to protect con· tents. A 43-vear-old eucalyptus tree reportedly crashed down about 1:30 a .m. onto the second story o r a home owned by Mrs. Cornelia Tonkin of 594 Brooks St .. Laguna Beach., Mrs . Tonkin escaped unharmc~ . Her neighbor, Carl Klass, of 598 Brooks St .. said he has asked city officials three times in .the last six months to trim the huge tree, which he said is on city property. Sur( was choppy a nd high, breaking up lo 15 feet in Newport Beach and 18 feet in Huntington Bea c h . Minor damage was reported to both pie rs. All cities reported flooding i'l the us \lal low-lying streets and intersections. Minor damage was reported in Newport Harbor, where the Orange County Harbor Patrol repor~ed that about a dozen reflects uncommon respect for boats broke loose. Dingh.ies were also reported blown off docks in Sunset Aquatic fark. Ground slippage was reported threatening the Elks Club in Fullerton. The club site sits on a kno.ll at the intersection of Harbor and Brea boulevards. Pacific Telephone rePorted no serious problems along the Orange Coast, although a flooded manhole in Fullerton s hut ore service to about 2,700 customers between 4 and 10:30 p.m . Tuesday. San Diego Gas and Eledric noted a blackout shortly before 1:22 a.m. in south San Clemente, affecting about 1,000 customers for 44 minutes. The cause was unknown. Scattered homeJ were blacked out in other parts of.the coast as well , the Southern California Edison Company iaid. A s pokesman said several a reas experienced blackouts between about 1:30 a .m . and 3 a .m .. when the storm was the most fierce. The areas were the Corona del Mar-Newport Center region; Newport Heights and part of Costa Mesa south of 22nd Street between NewPort Boulevard and Irvine f"'.enue ; and near the Five Pomts Area of Huntington Beach. In addition. a power pole retl • on a house on Charle Street in Costa Mesa, blacking out about 10,000 customers fop about an hour and a half. . the artistry of the 18th Century French cabinetmaker, and an understanding of ~~- modern dining needs. Finely crafted In solid J --.,..,~ .... ~ • • mahogany and walnut veneer, _ ··~·~~'·'~ " ~ each design is ~nriched by delicate ~-~.:~~ • J : carving. Gteceful oval and rectangular . ...::"'~'-<> ·~.-... ...-~_:... -'".'"' .. ._..~ tables heve glowing parquetry tops and extend J with ~eaves •.. china cabinets with interior lights and adjustable glass shelves offer impressive display/ storage of special possessions. See how Henredon's Valeneay a m add elegance to compact as well as spacious dining environments. Chendler'1 Dec:QfatJveC~un Marllyn Bruce Today Tor Detalls. .. --- 1514 rtORIH MA1r4 SANTA~· 541-4391 • I ' I .. I ' ( ! ~OL. 71, NO. '60, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES 4' . . . .. _ ... ·--- Today's Closiag N.Y.Stoeks - . .. f C TEN:CENTS "" ; New Storm ~-ashes . Brarig_e ··Coast 17 , < ' ROOF FALLS IN -A 40-foot section of roof, apparently '' ca kl"ned hy the we ight of standing rain water, col- laps e d early today at Trivex computer firm, 3180 Red llill Ave .. Costa Mesa . Falling roof ruptured a water line , dumping still more water into the building. ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . . Wimls 68 M~ Off Neivpt>rt Beach By JACKIB HYMAN Ol .. ~ ...... St.n More than two inches of rain, accompanied by gale-force winds gustinJ up to 68 miles per hour al Ne~rt Harbor, ~ted the Orange CoastTuesaay mght and early today but caused ooly relatively minor damage com- pared to the storm of three weeks ago. However, falling trees and telephone poles damaged several houses, as did ·floodin&. No injuries were reported. Scattered power outages oc- curred also, along with mudslides in Silverado Canyon, Newport Beach, foothill canyons and in San Clemente. The rains also have set a record, according to John Gietz.en of Orange County Flood Control Di.stricL He said this is the highest season-to-date rainfall in most of Orange County since 1909. R..aiAf all for the 24-hour period ending this morning was re-cord~ at 1.6 inches in Hunt- ington Beach, 2.18 inches in Costa Mesa. 2.30 inches in Laiuna Nia:uel. 2.43'.Jn~ Jn Santa Ana and 3.5 inches on Santiago Peak of Saddlebact MountJt,in. · Season-to-date totals, com- pared to last year al this time, were: Huntingtop BeaoJi. 19.98 inches compared to 9.41 ihches; Costa Mesa, 21.31 inches com- pared to 7.13 inches; Laguna Niguel, 22.24 compared to 6.6; Santa Ana, 21.15 compared ·to 7.51 ; and Santiago Peak, 50.3 com pared to 16.3. And there's more rain on the way. The National Weather Service forecasts a 60 percent chance or rain tonight and Thursday, with more· rain on Friday and Saturday or un- known intensitJ. Orange County firemen were rechannellng a fiooded creek in SilveradoCanYoD today and.were standingby in case of mudslide$. A mudslide on Pacific Coast Highway between Camino Capistrano and Doheney Park Road caused the road to be clos<:d this morning while Back Bay Road in Newport Be&cb was closed 11Y 1e-veral mudslides. Io acJdition. Bayside Drive between El Pas eo and Carnation Avenue was also closed due to mud and portions of East Coast Highway in Corona del Mar were blanketed with mud. However, city crews were able to keep lhe road open. Corona del Mar Elementary Scnool was closed due to flood- ing. Flooding was reported. along the Jasmine Gulch and in a half• ' dozen waterfront homes «»o Bayside Drive. Parts of Lag\llla Canyon Road also flooded but the road re- m ained open. Winds blew about 200 feet or roof off a home at 600Vis.ta1..aJle early today. ·sending tbe ~­ identified occupants scurrymg for cover. Firemen put bp a pro- tecti ve covering to protect~ tents. A 43-vear-old eucalyptus tree reportedly crashed down about 1.:30 a.m . onto the second story or a home owned by Mrs. Cornelia Tonkin of 594 Brooks St., Laguna Beach. Mrs. Tonkin escaped unharmed. Her neighbor, Carl Klass, of 598 Brooks St .• said he has asked city officials three times in the las t six months to trim the huge tree, wbkh he said Ts on city <See RAIN, Page AZ) . ·cM to Block Cycle Races? City to .Ask Right to Regulate Fairgrounds By MICHAEL PA.SOVICH Of .. o.1ty ~SUH Motorcycle races . wi)f" eo ahead as scheduled this Friday night at the Orance County Fair- ttrounda, but Costa Mesa city of- ficials are preparing to-go to court to block future meets. City Attorney Robert Campagna confirmed today that a lawsuit will=R t.e stop the races and to i!le cit~. right to rqula ~ at t.e . state-run fairgrounds. "Tair-offioials contend Utat the city cannot regulate fair events and that pa.st requests for city perm its have been a courtesy rather than a necessity. Friday nigbt 's races are planned in defiance-of the City Council's rejection ot a business permit ttquested by race pro- motef Harry ~. ~tm\~~t~-:s:~ "international meet" after he .already had advertis ed the event. says the races will )>e run with new.mufflers and public ad- dress system designed to reduce noise, The council was offended 'by Oxley's late request last week and vot.ed 4-1 no( to grant him t b ~ 1.~usin es~ perm i;U. ....Co•U>d mao Ed KcFar&uwl c1•f1UB • Cne "test NC e ~ 10al Oxlir ~d have a chance to try out the new sound equipment. However, homeowners in the adjacent Mesa del Mar tratt say' they've had enough and don't want any more raees at the fair- groun~s. according to Mayor Norma Hertzog. t City officials have said they wilt take no action to stop this Friday night~ meet.~>Ut that the suit wlll be filed in time to block the second half of the meet scheduled for March 10. N-M Truste~s Cite Declin!ng Enroll~nt Newport-Mesa school trustees h a ve reluctantly ordered dis- missal notices sent by March 15 to about 60 of the district 's 1,160 teachers because of declining enrollment, saying they really have little say in the JD8lter because of stale laws. . The law requir~ that teachers be dis missed under a seniority .· system known as "last hired, first fired" wiUiout regard to In- -dividual competence or special field of expertise. . "It tears me up to give people notices like this when you cao't determine their competence, you have to go by numben," Trustee Donald Smallwo6d said Tuesday. ·, Jurors Weigh Fate Of ~Snufr Suspect By GARY GRANVILLE OI ,,_ Dellr 11'1 ... Matt _{' Defense lawyer Terry GUes conceded Tuesday that would-be pornographic movie producer Fred Berre Douglas "might be a • kinky thrill seeker ••• who 1 needs psychological help.'' "But Mr. Doualaa does not ; bave a ipurdetous heart,•• Giles . intoned as he closed his defense , of Douglas in Orange County Superior Court. Prosecutor William Morrissey wasn't nearly so kind in his as- ' •essment of Douglas' character, bow ever. , Morrissey told the jury that '. pouglas last July hat.ched "a Coast ' diabQlical plot" for a macabre ·torture-murder picture taking session simply "to satisfy his lust for human carnage." Thos.e contradicting ap· praisals of the 54-year~td de- fendant•a character echoing in their ears, the six women .and six men jurors today betan de· cidin.5' ·Douglas'Jate. A bout 20 teachers attended the meeting, as did lbe presidents of the district's ttio teachers \Dl· ions. Don Kimble. _president or tbe lar1er group. tlte NeWJ>C)rt·Mesa Education AsibelatJofl, urged lre.atirig the endangered leacbers as i•dlvidu•ls and asked .,tiy a group of special education teacben is exempted from dlsmlssal. Trulttees said that such specialties as speech therapy can't be taken over by other teachers because several ad- ditional years of school is re.. quired. State law mandates pl'O- v l d l n g education for the handicapped. Placement assistance will be offered to laid-off teachers, said trustees, who expressed frustratioo at being unable to use more discretion in the dis- miasala. "Some of my kids. teachers are in there, people who have done an outstanding job," said Tnuftee Betty J. Bailey. "It's hard to reafbe" that we don't r eally have a lot of say in thls, that the state bu madd•ted it." Some of the teachers listed. wlth dates ot blring begi:nninl ln 1974, may be rehired when the district. knows how many other teacben are ~ or reflln· in1, trustees aaid. Tenure is n.o protectioo agaiQIUayoffs. - Concern W8' VGlcectbY. several teachen ln tbe .aoclience alMiat temporary fnatruCton; ~ lo fill vacancles crea\ed by lea"MS of absence. Temporary (8ee~Pa1eA2) I Ai-WI,.,.._ CONTINENTAL AIRL1t¥S OC-10 RESTS ON RUNWAY AFTER CRASH ON TAKEOFF Two People Killed, Malty Injured In Lot Angeles Airport Tragedy . . "' ,\. ' I . ~ LA ·]et: Crash Kil& 2 crash, said the plane's left fuselage was engulfed in flames. • .. People -.re jumping o~ ol the right side and out the. back, .... Lom b.ardl said. '!Arter a couple of minlRlsl. IOme flte engines arrived and. started pouring water -or someUUng on the Oames. 'About three minutes later there w~ som°"ldnd of explosion-" The aircraft never 1ot oft "the tround. A spo~esman for Continental said the pilot bad • 1 aborted his takeotf, because ol a blown tire whlch caused the land.Ina aear to collapse. When he tried to turn left ort the ruJlWA)'. tho plane tipped Oft!". and the left wing cau1bt fire. A ftw the fire was ex4 tiu61hecJ, the right mid-secllotl ,...... of the plane near the wiq wu lnatd a deep bro1'tl and the plane lea:ned on Its left aide. the WlDJ bellt ~Ward. : A2 OAIL Y PILOT Storm hasM . s State c _LOS ~NGELES <AP) _ A wmd-whJpped Pacific rainstorm thundered across an already !mggy Southern California today, causing one death, downing trees and power lines, closing roads , damaging houses and forcing the evacuation of at least a dozen persons. ~ut the subtropical s torm, which was expected to taper to s_howers later in the day, didn't lave up to fears that it might duplicate the disastrous flooding of three weeks ago. Officials were closely watching the saturated res- idential canyon areas around the city, where most' of last month's Ooodin~ occurred. Los Angeles ·pol Ice reported three hillside houses in the ex- c,l.usive Encino section of the San Ii'ernando Valley were slipping ir1to adjacent backyards. The residents were evacuated and there were no injuries. In the Sunland-Tujunga area. hard hit last month, ''Things are running real smooth." said policeman Gary Wa,htler. Precautionary evacuations were advised, however. in nearby Schwartz Canyon. Ebey Canyon near Pacoima and other hilly areas in the vicinity as some of the 35 county flood con- trol debris basins reached the emergency level. Los Angeles city fire officials said at least one home was damaged by u mudslide in the La Tuna Canyon area of Sun Vallev. Occuoanl<: or lhP homP and several nearby residences were evacuated. There were no injuries. Abou~ 15 miles tol the e~5t in La. Crescenta, where dozens of homes 'A Cre flooded Feb. 10, · ·everylhing's-""ine," said she ri H's deputy John Lofthus. The city received almost three inches of rain in the storm and more than four inches fell in so me parts or Southern California. The lal~t storm brought the seasonal total to almost 24 in ches, compared to 7.38 inches during the drought last year. The norm al rainfall for allis time of year is 10.43 inches. While the storm rolled east, forecasters said another Pacific· s pawned storm will pass through by Friday, dropping even more rain. Mudslides clostd e>r PUUlllY blocked at least 11 road.I, taeW ing all but one lane of the heavi- ly used Pacific Coast Highway and two southbound lanes of Interstate 5, the main artery between Los Angeles and Northern California. Travelers warnings were issued for mountain and canyon roads due to high winds, slippery pavement and poor visibility. TONIGIR' "AN EVENING WITH ELVIS'' -In concert, Pete Wilcox, OCC Auditorium, 8 p.m. Adm. $4, Students $3.SO ''VOLPONE" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday· Sunday through Aprll 23, 8 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Survey of Par apsychology," Fine Arts 119, 7:30 p.m . THURSDAY, MAJlCH Z B-ALLET LECTURE DEMONSJ'.R.ATJON -Hartlord Ballet Com pan y, OCC Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. occ LECTURES -"Ia. .00 outs of Boat Buying," Fine Arts 119, 7 :30 p.m. "Human Se1uall· ty," Scienc:e Lectwe 2, 2:30 p.m. Of'ANO« COMT ' DAILY PILOT ~"",.__...,..., __ LOND<»f <AP> -The value of the dollar dropped below two West German marks on the Frank~l lor,.i1n -ex· ,change for the tln1t time today in very nervous and hectic trading. As the fall of the dollar ~ontinue.d throuebout Westem Europe. the price of gold soare4 to a three· year high in London, $184 an ounce. The U.S . currency bought onb' 1.9930 marks in morning trac:tmi' on the Frankf\ut ex.change. down frolD 2.0!5 marks Tues- day. F,....P-eeAJ DISMISS ••• By TOM BARLEY °' t• o.ur l'li.t ""' An Orange County Coroner's officer, who testified earlier that the Infant. allegedly murdered by Dr. William Baxter Waddill died of manual" strangulation. went back on the witness stand Tuesday to offer new evidence for the prosecution. Dr. Robert Richards teslifted in his second appearance before a Superior Court juey-that be had returned to his laboratory to examine tissue slides that be hlld not used during bis first ap- pearance in court. Richards came under heavy fire from two defense lawyers, particularly Dr. Malbour "'Wat.ton, during that first session and was accused by them ohub- STORM SURF ~ATTERS ITS WAY THROUQH NEWPORT PIER PILINGS On the Orange Coaat, the Rain Falls, the Wind Blows and the Sea Rage• t~achers, some with the district milling incom~tent evidence. for as long as three years, are --.!I~ told the Jury o!' that oc,· not even 00 the list from which caS'tell.,.that be c:!onf1rmed bts teachers will be rehired. a utopsy _verdict or manual Bubbles Rests Safari Rangers Call Truce By PIUUP ROSMARIN hippopotamus couldn't stick her °'.._~, "'••UUff head out of the water without a Exhausted Lion Co~n~ry Safari ranger loosing a tranquilizer rangers are waiting out dart at her or sometounshopo- the first. day of a 48-hour ~ce pin_g a flashbulb in herfa~e. t~y umlaterally ca~led w1~tr -8ul>61~. the rangers said, has B_u bbles the peripatetic had il. The last time a ranger hippopotamus. . thought he'd f_.Jly tranquiliJ&d Bubbles, the only known hippo her, Tuesdaf morning. Bubbles prote~ted against harm by a stood up and bellowed ath1m. supenor court qrder, and also S he oever yelled at them the only known hippo to appear before. on a Walter. Cronkite news Rangers blame a lot of broadcast, slipped from her Bubbles' irrltabihty on the pond Tuesday to feed on oats. crowds of up to SO peoR)e v.ho hay and grass set out by the ha\'e stopped their car s on rangers th~mse~ves-, . • Laguna Canyon Road to gawk at . For the first lim~ m rune days, the biPPO. or rather at her pond, since her escape fr~m Lion since Bubbles stays submerged Country Feb. 20, the hippo was duringthedaytime unmolested in her nightly foraae So worried abo~t what might from a pond off Laguna <;anyon happen ii Bubbles came out and . Road. e ndangered t he throng, lhr ·"We're not going lo aftempt rangers annoµnced Monday that anything for the next 48 hours." the1 might have to kill the Lion Country publicist Jo hippo. Lion Country orficials Scheller said Tuesday. "We're later s aio trie remarks by going to give her some rest and rangers had ~n misinterpret· lake food out there. ~ by the presa. "We'll see if we can calm her Before the rangers' self· down by not trying to dart her imposed deadline came Tuesday <with a tranquilizer) or morning. a court order "@l anything." handed down by Superior J~ Lion Country rangers. alter Robert Green. who got out ol m ore than a week's beating the bed al 4 a.m. to sign it. bush for the lhree-ton Bubbles, The order forbids them from coneede they've bttn outW1lted. harming lhe hippo. A full hear· outllanked and outlasted by a lns I• ~wed for Mti'Ch 10. if hippo. Bubbles ,.malna loou. They don't know how to catch Rain kept the curious away her. last night and this m orning. For her part, Bubbles, rancers Soaked Lion country raneers fear, may be gelling a little watched from hiding places in paranoid-and, consequently, tbe reeds while Bubbles general· dangerous-by her experiences ly enjoyed herself. in the free world. "That's hippo weather," said It was getting to .wbere a Mrs. Scheller. ~ Hills Blaze Hits Fire Station • ( the charred roof UUI momlu. "' Fire ln1pector -Gr•I Chambers said the men ln lbe station reacted the same WU as anyaoe who discovered a fl.re in hia home. He added, "lilmt people don't think it'• 1oin1 to happen to them and we'n the same way." Turbeville said fires in fire stations are not uncommon. He said they read about slmillar oc-currences in their journals every year. He said the only other such fire be remembers in the county was in 1965 when a lumber yard burned and caught the adjacent Cypreas fire ataUon on fire. · A County Nixes Plan on Farm Preserve Vote Plans for a straw vote to see lf Ora nee County residents wan\ to preserve the county's farm land at • ~t to the public of up to $100 million were ecuttled 'l'uff. ·.day by the county Board or Supef'Vilon. Fro• P..,,e A J RAIN ••• property. Surf was 'choppy .and high, breakin~ up lo 15 feet in ~ewport Beach and 18 feet in Huntington Beach. Minor damage was ttported to both piers. All cities reported flooding in the usual low-lytng streets and mte~lioos. .• M indf damage a:. reported l'h Newport liar: o . w~re the Orange Co y H r Patrol reported al abou a doien boats broke loose. Dinibi~ were also repored blown off docb in Sunset Aquatic Park Ground shppagl' was reported threatenmg tbe Elks Club 1n Fullerton. The club site sits oo a knoll at the intersection of Harbor and Orea boulevards. ~ Padnc Telephone reported no s erious problems along the Orange Coast. although a flooded manhole in Fullerton shut off service to about 2.700 customers between 4 and 10:30 pm. Tuesda} San Diego Gas and Electric noted a blackout shortly before 1. Z2 a .m in south San Clemente. affecU~ about 1.000 customers for 44 mLDutes. The cause was unknown S4?~tlend honl4S were blacked out In other part.a of the cout as well. the Southern CaJifom1a Edison Company said Valencay ... # dining furniture in !he Lou is XV style by Henredon ... .. '• Trustees again said they have stra.ngula!Jon but conceded un· . no cboic.e by, state law bu~ to dis· der antenstve defense ques~oning miss temPQXJU'Y employees ftrsj.:-lhat he could not determ~e the "We may have . vocationa l process of death that led to openlng.s which no one in the dis-strangulation. trict can fill," said Trustee Smallwood, noting that other special subjects mighl also be Cd'•I H;t left with no one to t.eacb them. Jr..I ~ "ll does present a terrible human problem, not only for the teacher but for the students." The dismissal notices are be- iog sen{ so early in the year because stale law requires that teachers be notified by March 15. ---~ - School. Superintendent John Nicoll noted that the dismissals are being sent because of declln· ing enrollment, not because of the possible passage o f the Jarvis-Gann tax initiative. He said he believes it would be counterproductive and possibly illegal to send.dismissal notices, as Los Angeles schools are d~ ing, lo a large nJ,tmber of teachers based on SJ)eculaUon that the initiative wlll be ap- proved. The in.itiative would cu~chool revenues from property taxes sharply. Anti-Semitism? NEWARK, N.J. (AP> Com plaints that anti-Semltic notes are being slipped Into packages or non-prescription drugs at superm ark ets in Monmouth County are beinf ln- v es1.iia ted by tbe Anti- Dcfamation League of B'nai B'rtth, two state agencies and a police department. By .Sli~s, . Floodi . # ' ng Jasmine Creek in Ne\l@Ort Beach normally ls nothing more than a drainage d itch that carries just a trickle of water. Early this morning, fed by the downpour tha\ pummeled the hUls· above Corona del Mar, the sm all stream becaue a raging torrent of waiit.-high water that floated cars-and poured into a half-dozen homes. , Today angry homecSwners lri the 700 block or Iris }lhd J asmine .avenues were digging out their . m ud-coated garages and res- idences and pl'&nning legal ·action against lhe·c1ty. "This wouldn't have happened if the city had kept the storm drains clear," said one resident, Romona H09t. who said she and other homeowners have been fighting with the city over t.be drains for five years. But Jake Mynderse, director • of General Services for Newport Beach, said this morning there was no problem with clogged storm drains. -~ reflects uncommon respect for the artistry of the 18th Century French · • cabinetmaker, and an understanding of ... , '~~~ modern dining needs. Finely crafted in solid --...~\:: -~~ ~~ mahogany and walnut veneer, · .,~ -:~ ,. .,,. each design is enrlch.ed by delicate ~-~~ ~ ~ ::.;--= ..... .,.,. \ ~ carving. Graceful oval and rectangular • ..::-~'-., • "--·-,.>- l8b1es have glowing parquetry tops and extend ,. with leaves ... china cabinets with interior lights and adJu~table glass shelves offer Impressive display/ storage of special wssessions. See liow Henredon's Valencay can aqd e)egance to compact as well as spacious dining environments. . 0 ._ 1- • Wedn~day, MJrch I 19/tl DAIL'( f'IL01'-113 Selections Ordei-ed Waned tn a report of an dl.St-i~g aborta,ge of airport space for hgbt aircraft that will become more acute, Orange ,County supervilon 'l'u4:sday ord~ a search begun for two new airport lites. . Sim ul~aneoualy, supervisors would not rule out possible ·civilian use of Los Alamitos ~val Air Station as a candidate for possible site selecUon. * * * FM.Sees Tenninat Necessity LOS ANGELES (AP) -A ma- Jor new alr terminal will prob- a b 1 y have to be built in Southern Calilornia to handle the expected doubling of passengers by 1990, the Federal Aviation Administration said Tuesday. Mary M. Anderson. FAA as- sociate administrator. told · a seminar at the University of Southern California that the agency was not recommending that a new airport be built, but added, "The FAA judges the forecast indicates a need for one." . She s aid the FAA pr~ the number or airline passengers will hit 35 mtllion in 1990, up from 15 million in 1975. The fi gure includes traffic at 49 _.irports in Los Angeles, Oran1te. Riverside, San Bernardino and Ventura counties. ·'The inc reased passenger load could, in fact, be served by expanding existing airports," s h e s aid , "but that would become more costly than build· ing a n entire ne w regional facility ." She said the FAA also projects an increase m gene ral aviation aircr aft -small planes used by pr ivate p ilot s -from fi ve million aircra ft in 1975 to nine million in 1990. ''These pr<>J e cti o ns are certainly m ore than can be bandied with present facilities,·· .she said. WANT SEX? SIGN ON DO'ITED U NE OKLAHOMA CITY (AP> -A worn an legis lator fighting a ~tale abortion bill introduced an amendment that would have re-quir~ males to secure written t>erm1S$ion from females before engagin~· sexual intercourse. : R e p. leta Deatherage rn a in ta in that. her amendment was no mo e frivolous than the t>ill , under which a woma'n )YOuld have to sien a consent form stating she was aware of lhe condi400 of the fetus du.rtng l.-arious stages of pregnancy and that an abortion could reault in the mother suffering several tnedical and emotional com- J>llcat.fons, including death and fevere mtiatal disturbances. The county General Services Agency (GSA) report out.linlna the shortage of airport baqar and tie down apae•a for lightweight aircraft aaid two acS. ditional general avl.tion ~il"J>Qrj.s_a~ P~ed to~ Orange County's. ant-lclpated needs. Such airports eater to priv{lte, propeller cµiven ·air<:raft rather than mill~ and commercial planes. THAT'S N~T CLARK GABLE-GUT HE'D LIKE ;;,-:= James Frisbie of Petaluma Wants to Pley Rhett Butler Gable Double Pet~uma Man Eyes ·Movie PETALUMA <AP > -When the 1939 movie epic "Gone With the Wind" was s hown on television less than two years ago. James W. Frisbie sat in his Northern California home and sized up Clark Gable with a slight drawl. "Why, he looks just like me." And frankly. he 's right. Frisbie. 47, who has only seen two Gable movies, wants to portray the late actor in Hollywood's proposed sequel to the blockbuster mm. 4 . "PEOPLE TELL ME I HA VE the s ame lines on my face, lhe same voice, the s ame expressions," he said in an interview. his voice tinge4 with a s ubUe gravelly tone. . Frisbie said be has been mistaken for·tbe actor, who di 1960, all of hj.s life and has retained a Santa. Rosa business a and a talent agency to help promote a career based on hisJooks. Jn addition to the proposed film, be saJd be would lU{e to do · commercials and make personal appearances that "woukt 'ftOl. be demeaning to Gable or myself." v F RISBIE SAID HE ALWAYS has enjoyed the attention he gets from being mistaken for Gable. "Jt picks me up and makes me feel good," he said. "I really like people and enjoy meeting them. lf I didn't look like Gable, there are a lot of people I wouldn't have met. "People are always asking me to pose for pictures and to sign autographs," be continued. "They. seem disappointed and upset when I sign it with my own name so I sign Gable's nam.e, by Jim Frisbie ... PRODUCER DA VlD BROWN SAID in Hollywood that there ~ill be no.casting until a script is completed later in the year. Frisbie. a .real estate investor. said he became interested in an acting career when people startt!d telling him that be should go to Hollywood. He said his wife and his three grown children also support his new caner. Jlritain's Turnaround · ·Envoy Sees Prosperity increases to millions of British workers. "Certainly, we ·now have the North Sea oil," Jay said. "But we are more concerned with air plying those profits to our search for n ew sources of energy than we are in just sit· "tine back and counUng our oil money." Jay said a booming British iJl. duatry ii now in fu.ll stride to the polnt that exports to the U.S. •ere up by neat-Jy ts percent Jut year "in the face of intense intern•tlonal com petition for wol'ld mar1cN.•' ON NOaTREaN mEIAND: Ja1 •a.kl. .. Excellent pro~ tow•rd telt eovernm.at and • de- finite reduction ol violence .. But we will never reallaet>ur alm until the._,~ (Prostetanta) ftilal- lY ••tee to • •lt down with the mlaorft7 (Catbol.lcs) and create t be 1iructare of aelf fOY· emm.-at.'• dwindled to just nve. Encroacblnc residential de· velopment was blamed for the site l.hrinkqe. upervisol's lodlcated they aeree with the study finding that the areas of need are in the -souili ana wesCportlons of Orange County. That ls where 'ISe of the Los Alamitos station comes in, an already existing airfield limited to military use Supervisor Laurence Schmit Said that ls the way Jt should be. that reatdenta in the area are op- posed to added use of u.e navel airfield. But Sctun.it.'s..1ellow s upervi'Sors refused to rule Los Alamib>s out of the hunt ordefed by the board. Also to be inspected by the GSA hunt team are two south c()unty sites, San Juall Ct and Prima Descbeca. -. The San Juan Creet 1it.• ts located one mile north of OJ'Wla Canyon near Bell Canyon. I Prima J)escheca abuts an ~' •su.ne county refuge dump fo11r miles east of San Juao C api s trano near Ortes~ Highway. I ( ·Donations ,Limited Supervisors ED.act· Reform· Ordinance By GARY GRANVILLE Of tlll Da.lty Piiie SQH Candidates for elected county offices will be subject in 30 days to provis ions of a sweeping campaign r eform ordinance enacted Tuesduy by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The board's 4-1 vote of ap· proval ended four DlOnths Of wrangling and debate over a re-- form measure aimed at limiting lbe a mount individual donors c an give to a c andidate ·~ campaign T~ law will limit 1nd1\>idual don~ to $1,000 per election. This• "1Jll)'t apply, however, to the thr~ incumbent supervisors in tbeir June r e -election campa1gns. Like their non-officeholder election rivals, the countdown to the Sl.000 limitation for the three incumbents won't begin until the ordinance goes into effect March 30. . That means donations already received by Supervisors Thomas Riley, Ralph Clark and Laurence Schmit won't be aP. plied to t..he limit ~tablished by the new ordinance. All.three Incumbents held ma- jor fund raising events during the four.m<>nt.hs the new political reform measure was being de · bated: A week ago, Supervisor Ralph Diedrich said be woold not YOte for the ordinance lf money already received by tbe in- cumbents wasn't counted toward the $1,000 limitation. B u t D l e d r l c b q u i c k I y· capitulated Tuesday and Joined Riley. SchmiC ana Supervlsol' Philip Anthony in endorsing the easure. Supervisor Ralph Clark cast the Jone diasenUng vote. Clark said he opposed the re· orm ordinance because tt re- q es candidates for county ele ted olfices tp list all dona '°"5 oq,.dlsclosure forms. He argued that the bookkeep- ing chore for candidates re- quired to list donatJons of $50 and less was uncalled for. . Clark also complained that a fair political practices com- mission established by the or- dinance "has no real clout." And, he argued, the Sl.000 in· dividual donor limitation can e asily be circumvented simply by having large donors con- tribute under various individual and corporate names. .. We won't have true campaign reConn until we place a lid on· campaign s pending," Clarlc said. His words fell on deaf ears. however. a s his fellow .G em T alk BJ/ J.C. HUMPHRIES GfWMMogaat AQUAMARINE Ttt. Morc1' Birfhlton~ s uperviso r s endorse d th e measW'e. In addition to the $1,000 an election individual donation limitation, the campaign reform ordinance: -Establishes the political fl~anStgle pr~ctices commission e mpowered to review candidates' political literature. -Gives each of tbe five supervisors appointment rights to one of the five-man com- mission seiils. µ~le Boy Learns -: Of ·Love, Pancakes By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM Dail' l'iltlC Sw" Tomas Dominguez. the Ti· juana shantytown child brought to the U.S. for plastic surgery to reoair a face terribly disfigured by fire, is learning about America. He is learning that a Jot more people than his sponsors. Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Castillo, of Huntington Beach, care about him and his future. Tomas is also learning about hamburgers and trench Cried potatoes, which he bad only pre- viously seen in TV commercials . He is learning bow good raw carrots , apples and oranges taste. He is a devoted pancake addict now and be bas learned Joyfully bow to climb trees. "He is just like any litUe boy," s ays Mrs. Castillo, of 6811 Defiance Drive , whose campaign to hejp Tomas bas raised nearly $."5,000 to date. She says the first of fol.II' to five required operations, done Feb. 18 at Sta.,ford University Medical Center Children's Hospital~' has now been declared 100 percent successful. The operation done by sur- geons affiliated with lnterplast, an international or ganization which donates cosmetic surgery free to severely mutilated youngsters, involved eye repair. Tomas can now close hJs eyes to sJeep at night in the home o~ his foster family, the Elwood Mills of Gilroy. He couldn't close them for a year. And, ~rs. Castillo says, in ad· dition to Tomas' prospects for a better future, there is a possibili- ty of a job for bis father Ignacio at Gilroy. so the family can be together. Fundraising events are being stued regularly to h~p defray the little boy's hospital care costs. which m ust be paid, TOMAS DOMINGUEZ Before He Was .Burned although the slrllled surgery is being donated free. . · During the periods between hospital visi~ Tomas will live as another member of the MiUs family as the new face that wilt ultim atcly cost $15,000 is shaped and molded by doctors. One of his sad times· of the day, says Mrs. Mills, wife of the dire ctor o( Santa Clara Unive rsity's audio-visual de-' partment, is mornings when her . youngsters leave for school. One of his saddest moments upon arrival in Huntington Be ach in early February oc- curred at the Castillo home · when Mrs. Castillo's back was turned brieOy. Tom as· stole a glance at himself in a mirror and saw bow he looks t.o a world in which people have shuddered at ~ lace and shunned him. Jewelry of another era tleed not look out Qf pl1ce today. let our sl<llled artisans or~te a now1 look for your fine gems. Stop in soon end He us- for exctusive'eketches •{'d a cost ostima-. 'YoU will be pleauntly surprised. \ i i •• t -\ A.f DAIL v Pn.OT Wednesday, Match 1, 1971 2 ... <;)· Miners 1 e.. ·. Just :::::'~:~;.~oasting f ·:= •. •ithp Tom ~Vf'('~\' Marphine ,., Peruse Contract · Disease Beats ·cure? THE JARVIS JAZZ: Recently, upon separate oc- cassions, I've had the privilege of chatting briefly with two or our Orange Coast's top cops. Let me hastily add this was strictly unofficial. Following a recent newspaper seminar, I bad the pleasure or being seated at IWlcb next to Huntington Beach Police Chier Earl Robitaille. When. the conversation turned lo politics, the chief expressed considerable concern over the so.called Jarvis tax amendment. If adopted by the voters on the June ballot, the chief feared be. mlght be in for some hefty reductions in his police force. TUEN ONLY YESTERDAY, I bumped into Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth at a local coffee shop. In this case, the conversation didn 'l need \o take any turns. aoe1TA1u.• "How are things going," I inquired. ''Well, l may be looking at a time when I'll be forced to lay orf some policemen," the chief replied rather grim- ly . Neth, like Robitaille, was thinking of the consequences to law enforcement should the Jarvis Amendment become law. The thinking of both police chiefs is clearly similar. They understand that the taxpayers are in a dark mood. They generally concede they can understand why. But from the Jaw enfor~ement s tandpoint, they fear the Jarvis Cure may be WOl'Mt than t..lle disease. .Th .. ~ see it more like tax surgery with a meat ax rather than a scalpel in skilled hands. THERE ABE A COUPLE of real problems with the Jarvis Amendment, which will appear on the June ballot as Proposition 13. The first is getting the voters to un- derstand it. Generally, .. the proposal is to limit property taxes to 1 percent of the market value of that property. For most property taxpayers, this probably means their property taxes will be cut about in half. This also means that revenues available to our public scboola and dty and county govern.men ts will •be cut in· half. Current polls suggest that the clllienry is still confused on the pros and coos of the Jarvis plan. Asked in the polls if the~ favor cutting property taxes. more say yea than nay. But asked if they want to whack revenues in haU for schools and local gov.-.mments, people are more cautious. Fewer are in the Ye.a column. PROBABLY THE MOST shtnifiCCU!l factor. however. is the number of people still on the ~ce. One poll to· day showed 26 percent •1undedded" and a whopping 44 percent who hacl never beard of the Jarvis Amendment. In addilklo to the problem of awareness, the second vexation may be what happens if the tax cut does get. adopted. · Theo. our groggy, snoring state Legislature will likely awaken from it.a slumben and start flailing about, adopt- ing new tuea 1D a fruUc efiort to produce revenue to lake . op the sladc; - - A.Del Ulm Indeed. the cure may be worse tban the dis· ~ase. , ··"'----------------------------:------- By 1be Astoelated Preis Thousands o coal miners are getting their t look at a pro- posed contra today at leaders of the United lne Workers pre- sent details o the pact at mass coalfield rallies d on radio and televis~on. But opposition to the pact con- tinued to crop up. ABOUT 400 representatives of union locals in Virginia's Dis- trict 28 heard top district of- fi cials say late Tuesday they would not vote for the settlement to end the coal strike, now in its 86th day. · ··A lot of it is old language identical to the 1974 contract," District 28 president Ray Marshall said. Earlier in the week, local pres- idents in District 6 voted 30-0 int an informal poll to recommend against ratification. Sixteen local presidents were absent for that vote. THE PACT, which covers 160,000 miners. provides for a 37 percent boost in wages over three years. ll also would allow penalties for leaders of wildcat strikes and revamp the union's health beneftts--plan by Jl'e~r-in& miners to pay up to $700 in medical bills. Until the middle of last year, the union took care of all health bills. UNDER THE union's con- stitution, district officials must take the contract to the coalfields and explain it to the membership. Three important explanatory meetings were scheduled today. Local union leaders from south West Virginia's districts 17 and 29 -the two biggest in the union -scheduled meetings, as did ~istrict 6, which covers Ohio and a portion of northern West Virginia. Two top officials in District l / said they would urge ratification of the pact. Defense Vowed . CAIRO, Egypt <AP > President Anwar Sadat renewed his verbal attack on Cyprus to- day and said Eopt's armed forces will go anywhere in the world to defend Egyptians. Can8l Debate Heats Up WASIUNOTON (AP) -Sen. Thomas J. Mcintyre, undecided until now ln the Panama Canal debate, said today be will vote to- ratify the treaties despite threats of polttlcal retribution involving what be called "coarse and brutish" tactics. The New Hampshire Democrat's announcement was accompanied by a banb de- n unclatlon of aome con· servatives, whom be said leek not to com~ honorably but on- ly to "annihilate tboee they aee as •eneptlee'." lldNTY•E'S deelston brings the number of pro.treaty senaton to 48 ln a runnlng eou!lt kept by The Allociated Press. Ratification of tbe treaties would ~uire approval by two. thirds of tboee present and vot- ing. or ff1 lf all 100 MDators vote. The AP tally shows 25 senators oppoeed. Twent.y·alne are undeddecl. Ot tbele, U have said they are le•"'n1 in favor of ratification and aeven tbat tbey are leanlnl qalmt. Mcintyre bad Dot ~ted before t.odAJ tbat be wa?lUlltn, eitherwq. BE BAS BBBN CCIUl1ed b7 the .. Wblte Bou•• to •ote foe railficatkla. ~tam Carter campaiiDed Ila Nft' Bampddre ID mld·l'elraar7 for llclDtJN, TmnceHita - Spectat,on who is up for re-election this year. But he al&o has been under • preaaure by conservative or- ganizations, particularly the Conservative Caucus, to oppose the treaties. Howard Phillips, naUonal director of the-caucus, has threatened some senators voting for the treaties with ••potential political retribution." JN A SPEECH prepared for delivery on the Senate floor, Mcintyre ac.cu~ed the Conservative Caucus and other ''new right'' elements of using "coarse and brutish" means to impose their views on others. Fer Frate1•11i:ing West POint Cadet Facing Dismiss~ NEW YORK (AP) -A male cadet lt(:1Us final semester at West Potnt faces dllmlasal from the U.S. Mllltary Academy for "serious fraternization" by walking, talking and eating with a female fint- year cadet. • West Point prohibits fratemlzatlc:n betWffO freabmen, or plebes, and uppe:rcl11&S1Den, rt-ga""<'l•s of aex. AcUon by the Honor Board agal.nat the cadet bas been de· layecl by a federal judge's order demanding that the academy show .. what bearing these queaUom have on the young man'abonor." 11.S. DIS'l'lllcr Judge Charles Sl.fton said Tuesday be bad ••aevere queailoos whether anyone ·U10Ciated with the Unit· eel States government can aim· plJ co about and ask people questlom and, lf they life, J>l'OI· ecutetbeUJ.•• • . Bo was referring to ac-eusatloal that tbe cadet, Kevin Downe~ Wm Babylon, .N.Y•t. ~· wltb a plebe ancl cwm 't reveal t.be depth ot b1a f~P 'or bla female collMlue when qu.Uooed by Weat POlnt authortU... forts by Downey to talk ber out of it. He was slapped with 70 de- merits and 60 disciplinary tours for telephonlnl Miss Blanca's parents to in1brm them of ber declslon to leave the academy. One tour ls a one-hour march around a courtyard wUh a rifle. Downey met Mlss Bianca after a post.aame football party last year. The two bad con- versatiom ID public and be was seen escorting ber tbroup a campus recreaUooal bulldlnl, accord.lna to the transcript ln the cue. The rtlld:bonor code bas come under flre ln recent yeara1 notably after a cheatin& acanclai became public ln 1978. More than 130 cadets were dJamlsled at the tlme, but the Ariny later .,reed to Jet moat of them re- enter t.be academy. \ .. .. .I NATIONA~ ,i; Opera soprano Beverly Sills sang .. The Merry Widow .. as President Carter waltzed her around the East Room ' of the White House Tuesday night following a dinner. The President and Mrs. · Carter were entertaining governors in Washington for their winter meeting. Polittcal Actveni*'*1t FOR A BEi IER ••• NOT BIGGER ••• COSTA MESA CHRISTOPHER ••••• '""'Iii. --·-__.. ... ...,.. --.. .. STIEL CITY COUNCIL • MARCH 7 . . CHRIS, ONE HONEST VOICE FOR: • COUHCILMAHIC DISTRICTS-CITYWIDE ELECTIOMS So .ac:n area can h.ve ·eaual" accountable representation • ITHICS CODE FOR ALL OFFICIALS To eliminate "Buddy" System of special Interest v • FREEWAY .... G DITCtr COMPLETION I'll put direct preM(We on Gov. Brown I .. VOWMT ARY .. COMMUNITY TRUST FUND To finance 10C1al sefVlces • STllCTBl CONTROLS OM TAXATIOMJSPEHDIMG PRO JARVIS -. To keep oomeowners aolvent-To pressure leglslature for fiecal reform n. ~alllled Pa,....tt(" c_...H _.. opp1Md to J.-.ls. comc.....,c clstrtch •., ...tllod of fr•"• ca ,11tiom ...ta strmg ..WC. code. F,. • ~----...,. _ _,°'IA. <»e..--l>llrrf. CHRIS -A CHOICE FOR A CHANGE! Nilad1p•:t ltc•il .... ~•c ........... • COUllAGI • COMVICTIOM • COMMON setSE Paid For By. CMsfepher Magee Stee4. 1~&nge A~ Costa Mesa ... Thank you for your patience and understanding of electric service interruptions during the recent wind, lightning and rain storm which was the worst in the memory of our company. Electric service interruptions ranged from half a minute to many hours, and most interruptions were caused by wind damage to our facilities, falling trees and flooding. Over one·third of our 2,900,000 customers experienced interruptions of varying duration during the stonn. We called into service "all available personnel and moved · .. crews and equipment through- out our 50,QOO.sq~mile sefvice territory. Jn addi- tion, we hired all availab1e outside electric contractors and tree tiimmers. Our people worked around the clock-:-- some more than 48 houis- without a break-to help restore your electric service. The oost resulting from storm damage to the Edison system will be more than $3,000,000. We take pride in the. unselfish dedication and the long hours of hard work of our employees. We also want to thank you, our valued aistomers, for your co- operation and understanding during this trying period. JACK K HORTON Chainnan of the Board Southam Callfotnla Edison Company / .. . -.~ . '• t ·~ I .. ... ·: .. -.... .. ~ , •• r f • CALl~ORNIA Wedne.day, March 1. 1978 DAIL y PILOT A5 {I ' Opinion IJaf o.-..ed Atltllor Bopeftd • • • It Poll Studies Jarvis Issue J , SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Caillomia voters ...,.t ·confused by the Jarvis-Gano pi:operty tax in· , i alive and can be easily swayed by a strong pitch m either side, according to the California Poll ~leased today. ~ "Publlc opinion at thls st.age is still relatively 10,lformed and what has formed is quite unstable," JIPllater Mervin D. Field reported after surveyinC ~cross-cul of 1,217 voters in mid-February. • The tax.cutting initiative will be put lo voters ¥Proposition 13 on the state's June 6 ballot. ~ IT WOULD UMIT property taxes to one.percent ,, market value of Ute property, but would exempt \Des for pre-existing bonded indebtedness. Experts ~Y the effect would be to cul most property tax bills ty about two-thirds. Critics say the reduced tax in-RofJ~• 1'icti• ff>m45 would deprive cities, counties and school dis· ~· fl trictsofabout$7blllion. Harold Bronstrup talks on phone after he ~as shot during a . Only 56 percent of those polled by Pield in-robbery of his jewelry store in San Bernardino; The ballet was ~1ca~ they had heard of the widely publicized tax deflected by Bronstrup's eyedasses causing the wound to be minor. mitiative. And of that slim majority, 26 percent re-' Atleft,isa paramedic. mained Wldeclded oo the issue. __ :.__:_ _ _:_ __________ ~--=----------- Some 20 percent of those who had beard or it said they favored the measure. Ten percent were opposed. a Suspect Hearings Set Fl~LD RESEARCHERS pooed the irilnative issue lo its subjects in two forms. The first listed the tax cul 's effects in a general manner; the second LOS ANGELES CAI!) -A former onetime teen idol, was stabbed to pizza deliveryman accused ol ldlling de4th. .outside bis West Hollywood ·actor Sal Mineo is to return to court for. apartment Feb.12, 1976. ps more explicit. l:s Forty-eight percent thought the Jarvis-Gann itiative was a good idea when the pollsters pre- nted its effects in general form. Thirty-three trcenl were opposed. more pretrial hearings after a • A murder complaint had originally Superior Court judge refused to drop. been filed against Williams by the murderchargesagainslbim. district atlol"l)ey, but the cue was -· Judge William L. Rilzi TU86day or· later taken to the crand jury. •! But with a more explicit explanation, only 40 ~rcent supported the initiative and 47 percent wre opposed. dered 2.1-year-<>ld Lionel R. Williams to return to court March 14, despite 'When an l:ndlctment is returned arguments by Williams' attorney by a grand l~. there is DO pre. ~ THE POLLTAKERS then posed four specific Bguments to the survey subjects: Two spoke in (Jvor or the in\tiative; two were against it. that an indictment should be set )lmJDary bearing at which the pros.. aside on grounds that few cases in . ~ presellU evidence ed wit.- the county go before the rrandjury. nesses in an effort to convince a ~ W i l Ha ms w a a indicted -in--judge that..a d-l!endut ahauld s1aDd ' After hearing both sides, 4S pe.rCl'.nl of those ·- lied said they would vote in favor of Proposition . Some 39 percent said they would vote "no." • In results released Monday, a statewide poll· Mineo's murder in January. Mineo, a trial. · " cinducted for the McClatchy newspapers l'loted Har attitudes among voters. The newspaper's 11 or 712 voters found 3·t<>-1 suppo~or the in- tive. ~vie Functions f. Eureka AU-male Club •• j \ ~To OK Women Guests :~ . ~ACRAMENTO (AP> -Female ( -• ) #ests ba\'e w~o the right to enter a~ C"r1 ,.TE ~-male club in Eureka for any bust· ~in rwss, civic or political runctiOQ, the $1.te attorney g~eral 's office says. •:Jfbe office reported Tuesday that ! out-<>f-<X>Url settlement between attorney general's office and the ~gomar Club, which uses lbe ~mous Victorian-style Carson nsion, was appr-0ved by the m boldt County Superior Court. .eAtlomey General EveUe Yoanger fled the suit in 1974, uk.lng the court ti· block the dlsorimination in guest policy. That policy bad prohibited women from entering the club except on Sundays. Four Suspects Jaile~ Face Robbery Charge SAN DIEGO CAP> -Four robbery suspect$ are in jail after a b1&1Hpeed chase on the Coronado ~ay Bridge with a police detective recently re- instated after a 3().day suspension for off-duty pubUc drunkenness, officials say. Now Detective Louis RodJ1guez, who r.eturned lo duly Feb. 16, may be in for a medal. Police Chief Bill Ko lender said Tuesday. · ... ,.. ...... ,deft LOS ANG E.LF.S CAP) -Six repat. ed OTganbed crime figures have been indicted on federal cons~acy and racketeering coants that ude the murder of Frank ••Tbe Bomp" Bompensien>, a mobsW Wbo turned informant. Named in Tuesday's s~-eount in- dictment were Dominick PhlWp Brooklier, 63; Samuel Orlando Sciortino, 58;, Louis Tom Drapa. SJ; Mlcbael Rlzzltello, ~o: Jack LoCicero, 65, and Thoma.a Rleciardi, 45. SUllClaert s.,..rt LOS ANGELES (AP) -An amended committee report that supports exemption of the con- troversial Sundeaert nuclear power plant from state nuclear safeguard laws baa been approved by the City Council. The minority report of the coundl's State, County and Federal ~ Affaln Committee was amended to )term it the council to withdraw it.I support if legislation ls introduced tha1 would speed development of alternative energy sources to satisfy city needs: Toll Ctd A•lced State Panel OKs Tax Bill • • • It It • SACRAMENTO (AP> -Tbls year•a top blll to • cut property taxes. stripped of a controversial • home-sales tax, eould elear the Lelialature 1hia • week. the measure's author aaya. lt !.:!!:::::::=...!~=:.::==::;..i The prediction by Sen. Pet.er Behr, R-Ttburon, • HERB : came Tuesday after the Assembly Waya and • FRIEDLASDER « Means Committee accepted Bebr's aaiendment to • IS MAKING 41 scrap a 5 percent tax on profits from tbe sale of • GREAT DEALS ·~ most aingle-f amily homes. • Tbe move cleared the way for a commit~ • FREE \'Ote today on the $1.4 billion measw:.e. Approval * .., would send it to the Assembly floor for a vote ! §9-'GA~ : Tbund.ay. • OFGAS 1' BED SAID Tll.E SENATE could give the it.i..i»o..i• i-"'-r•--• amentfed bill its fmal Je'"•lative anroval the ?t' 111' 011. OIASGES • .-.... .._.. ......... ~-. aameday. ·~• Supporttts bad contended the profita tax was • ~,. needed to help provide bomeownen with at least a • .... .,._..,.., ,. 40 percent cut in CUIT'ent property tax billa. • uMm w , , ~ But the tax drew strong opposiUon from re-Jt.* * * * * * * * * * * •: alton who feared it would burt home sales, and.-MG-TRIUMPH « Aalem bly leaden coneluded the bill could ndt win • • the two-thirds majority need for paaage if it con-• ,, a~,..,, a -tt tai.ned u.e 1evy. • FIAT ·~'"'u. ,. .. . ................. ~ UJ·n1'1 • 1 -.en '7" WmtOUT THE &\LF.s tax, the bill would cut -. * * * * * * * * * * *• "°meowner property taxes at least 30 percent, it ,. boolt the rent.en' tu credit to $715 and provide ad· Jt .-a amau..., • dit:lonal aid for elderb' bomeownen and renters, .Jt a....._ .,, ...... -tt among ether thlnp. · •* * * * * *.* * * * * *tt The amendments also cut the bill's ftnt-year ~ MOTORHOME tc price tag from $1.9 billlaD to SU bWloa. SALFli & RENTALB • Behr'• plan laqulalled lo committee last year RESERVE NOW -tt while lawmaken fOQSht over other tax bills, :nut it 537.7771 Ext.500' ! won Senate •cal in January and beg lo ..... * * * * * * * * * * ... emerge as the lature's answer to the Jarvia ;;;.;..._..;..... _ _....,__ __ _ initiative. That measure. Proposition 13 on the June ballot. would cut tues about C50 percent on all tax- able property. But cri. tics claim it would ;;:ple local governmmts "Or -toree sharp. lnerc -tu• other levies . Cell 8'2-5678. ltutatewworda to work for u. I \" . ~· ' . RODRIGUEZ spotted what looked like an armed robbery at Galloway's Pharmacy and eave chase, calling for help on bia police radio, a de- partment spokesman said. The sus· pectl fired two shots at Rodriguez as they weaved up the brid1e. SAN RAFAEL CAP) -San Francisco would open lts Golden Gate Bridge to commuters for just 50 cents if Matin County Supervtson win their attempt to temporarily slash the span's toll in half. The board Tuesday unanimously asked for a 50 cent reduction in the $1 toll lo reimburse bridge crossers for what a judge baa deemed an illegal increase. · / Double )Otlr·money for goals. • About two dozen officers met the fleeing car at the San Diego end of the long curvtn« structure and a uniformed policeman fired alx sbots at the vehicle before it swerved out or controL ALL ntJB suspects were arneted at 1uneomt. · Wlnnooia Alfred, 19, and wunam Bennett, 20, ol Pomona,i:ld Wlllard Farrow, 28, and .Johnny lnlM. 22, of Los Anaeles, were booked into county Jail for lnveatt1atton of armed robber)', us a ult with •deadly weapon and assault with intent to kill, poUee Mid. Ll Afr 'lt'ont' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Angeles bad the wont air quality of any in tbe nation 1n 1975, tbe Pre 1 id en t • s Co u n e ii on Environmental ~ty said Tbes, day. The White Home O'OUP be9ed Its findings on tbfee.year-old statlstlcs because they were tbe most recent available, the Loe An1elea Tlmes re- ·ported. With tho oest ol a oaUtp ~ doultllq over tile .,.n ten years, \dat will it oost tor your children? Wbat.eVer tile amount, San Diep> Federal can Wp yoa attain it. Yea, the llltomt your savings cam at San Diogo Poderal can Mdle your Initial deposit in as little 81 nine yeanl The aut &hows how fut savizi&s double in various San Diego Fedcnl aaYinp .ccou.ata. So, adect tbe com'"1latiod of aocoants that 1'est fits your needs: a Cat/fe4N9 account for loapr-tcrm p1s ••• and a~ book or Po.martl9 aOOOUDt that allows you to add and withdraw savinp at your convenience.. <>pm your l&fcty-insurocLla¥blp acceunca with the d•Uble· ~11(1 people at San Diego Poderal Savinp ••• where t.h-s interest In your future. .... 7H ·=-•i.oao-&OP 12,171• ,,... ..... 7u ~ •1JJ77• 7:/91 12.111° .. ~,.. ..... 6" •:,;-S1.o&9" 6.91' •J.96J'l .,... ..... 614', '"rJ:' •1,0&7n 6.72S •J,916~ UJlll!I 5H ·-11,05911 ~ •l)Tl• ..... "" u,.. ·-5'A' ~-•]Jm• ~ •ueo-.. ,. ..... .:r.:·-----........... =.-......... , ......... ~·-_ ................. -.. -. = ..... ---.= ~ ...................... :=. ......... -...... to ...... __ .............. I ---................ _ R.,,,,,.,, S..,. "1•"" II/ t"! l°'" oftlrf mortth ffJln/ront tht bt. ... • ' B.sanlieg~~~ 9lltC11nMiiAla (~Fal1, 197f) ,. NelilfPOl't ..... (Opening *'"'mer• 1971) . . . . ' ~ I , ' ~ I .. . ;Ae c ... 1£' .... it_........f I .. · Robert N. w..d/Publlsher TholNs Keevll/EdltOf oranoecoast Daity Pilot ~--U-r•G .-'!!fJ.,•e•••••••w•ec1•nesday••'•M•arc•h•1•.1•9•1a••••lllliiilllilll••ea•r•b.l•r•••K•re•1b•1c•h•'E•d•'•tor•1a•1 •Paoe••e•d•'t•Of'•- .. :-...Dice for Mesa Co11ncil Election " . C<>&ta Mesa ~oters next Tuesday will elect two 'lnembers fpr its five-member City Council. They will be selected from a field of 10 CC\_ndidates appearing on the hfllot for the four.year terms. ~ter analyzing qualifications of all candidates, ob- rv1ng their campaigns, attending meet-the-candidate ·s ssions and weighing their qualifications wjth the in· cumbent City Council members, the Daily Pilot r ec· ;<>mmends: ~· -Arlene Schafer, city planning commissioner and a ong-time activist in many city affairs. -Norma Hertzog, now finishing her first four-year term on the council and currently serving as mayor. ~ The governmental experience of these two candidates considerably overshadows that of their opponents. Since Jwo of the three iocumbent councilmen were elected only •. t\YO years ago, this experience is doubly important. Mrs. Hertzog has been a Costa Mesan for 19 years, has contributed to a variety of civic endeavors and has grown in poise and'judgment in dealing with city affairs during her term in office. The Daily Pilot believes she de- serves re-election. Arlene Schafer, a 17-year Costa Mesan, has served on the city's Housing and· Community Development Committee, has been a director for the Chamber of Commerce and bas shown a fair and firm hand as a m ember and vice chairman of the Planning Commission. Criticism may come from some quarters that the election of Mrs. Schafer and Mrs. Hertzog would con· stitute a 3-2 fem ale majority on the council -and certainly that is true. However, the Daily Pilot does not believe that is a consequential argument since both of them -and incumbent councilwoman Mary Smallwood -h ave performed admirably in public office. In short, we do not believe sex -unless exploited -has any bear- ing on qualifications for oftice. Among the other eight candidates, Don Bull and Paul Raver have shown the strongest promise and could be considered for appointive roles in city government or be considered as good candidates in future council elections. But in the lineup facing Mesa voters next Tuesday, the Daily Pilot believes the best candidates for the over- all interest of the community are Norma Hertzog and Arlene Schafer. The Rezone Initiative , Costa Mesa voters face another decision on Tuesday's ballot. They must decide whether to :vote yes or no on a proposal to restrict 63.8 northside acres for single-family homes exclusively. The' Daily Pilot r ecommends a no vote on the in· itiative. / · The question itself is terribly complex in its legal and politi~al ramifications. Basically, existing homeowner~ in the area west of Bear Street and north of the San Diego Freeway are fighting to preserve the residential integrity • of their properties. In so doinr, however, tbey have presented a ballot measure so sweeping that its liabilities far outnumber its potential assets. It is too restrictive a measure to be im· posed on the atea.. There ls evide~ that the development program which sparked the controversy leading to the initiative will be modified even if the measure fails. We would far rather rely on this possibility than impose a harsh and overly demanding zoning requirement on this acreage. T he homeo~ers supporting the measure have many valid points in opposing the original project submitted for a portion of the acreage. However. they overshot the m ark in setting forth the specifics of the measure as it appears on the ballot. ~ In the· interest of good government, the Daily Pilot· suggests that voters from throughout the city reject this initia tive. Vote no. -• Opinio ns expressed in the apace above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other view• expreaeed on this page are those of ~r authora and artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Coata Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 6'2-43~1. Boyd/Acronyms ByL.M.BOYD Q. "What's the dlff•ence between radar and sonar?" A. Radar, an acroQYm of "Radio DetecUng llnd Rang. ing," uses radio waves In the air. Sonar, an acrobym of .. Sound Navigation Rang- Sng," uses sound waves un- derwater. Get it right, please: The Smiths outnumber the .John.sons in this country by tat least half a million. Q. ''Didn't the· poet Carl Sandburg go to We$t Polot?" A. For a Ume. He fiwated out in Englilh. The dltference belween ,a ufopdoodle'' and a ''.fotlktA," aay1 our Lanaual• tDM, il·a ••ropdoodle'' la in o~a.ry everydq nmoiu.emlll fool while a "fonldn" Ii a Uttle fool wltb that tbiQ& callecl C?barm. No twO pec;pJe ever "° OX• actly tho Ame rainbow. Q. "Did Dr. Frankenstein have a first name?" • A. He did. Victor. Q. ••ffow 'frequently is a new book published ln this country?" A. Every 13 minutes. '· Was none tber than JflJlmY tbe G~, tbat whiz of a prognosticator, who five years ago said the odds were two to five that Edmund Muskie would win the Democratic nomination for the presidential race.. Not • b)ld. But he also said the • ~ odtls were five to one that former Attorney General John Mi~ would not be convicted of anythlnJ, and 200 to one that Richard Nixon woul<J notreslan. Thia lan't to mock Mr. Jimmy's tueuwort:not at all. Moetly, k• does dandily, don't he thouaht It'• Just to un· derscore that uclent axiom: Never can tell. Not only do third buemen tend to nve lon,ei than other major 1 • .,.., -player1, but they play longer ienerally th-an do -other major loao«s. l?m nowtolcl. Nicholas Von Hoffman Haldeman! Smart But Narrow . Several years ago, I s~ot two days in the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel in Los Angeles talkinl to Bob Haldeman about collaborat· ing with him on his airthen un· written book. The publisher Who h a d brought m e out there couldn't get together with Haldeman on money. The .difficulty was that while Haldeman bad a useful and i~ portant story to t ell about Richard Nix· on, it wasn't a sensational or a sexy one so that without a great deal of mis leadin g hype, it would never earn back the huge cash advances Haldema n wanted. Evidentty-he got the big buck from The New York Times, which has g~ne on to make the big buck back by giving us a yet bigger hype. However, if H.R. Haldeman knows something a bout Watergate we didn't already know, be didn't put it in his book. After my two days with Haldeman. I wu convinced that President Nixon's major domo just doesn't know very much a bout Watergate. Evi4e.ntly, b~ck in the earl~. ofotlths er 1911, the principal actors I i\ the dram a had no earthly idea that they were involved in Wate rgate. Legally. many of them ended up in conspiracy to obstruct justice, but that's a very different thing from taking part 1n a classical plot. NO GROUP OF plotters came together in the midnight hour · and convenanted to lake actions in concert which they un· deratood would destroy them lf ever discov~ed. The evidence all pointJI to a serle!Ulf discreet, ad.hoc acts. many of them done thou ghUessly. After the fad.. all these acts com milted by a large as· sortment of different people, many of whom had ne~er met each other, were gathered up and put in one container one menta l cons truct cal led Watergate. It is a gap in perception betwee n the Watergate perpetrators and the Watergate prosecutors, Juridical and. journalistic, which may account for the trouble Nixon, Haldeman and some others have had in making sufficiently satiafying confessions. They're not quite sure what it is they are to con· less to. THE HALDEMAN I met at the Beverly-Wilshire was not a man well equipped to dope out the meanings of what he had done and had done to him. He bas, or be had, charm and . ' likeabnity, but a r emarkably sballo~ background 1n history, , literature,J p6lltical philosophy or any other ~ea of study which might have erovided him with sorQe gµt(le'or measure. Ke save the impression of be· ing a smart man, and an ethical one. bu( so ignarant. so without knowledge that he was without prudence oc judgment. One o( the things he insisted 9n in our conversation was his self·d.efinition as a "non- political'' person, someone who concerned h1mselr with what he called "process." By way of il· lustralion he recalled the dis· A\R fOR<£1 ~..If * ~ °"J fa,,d A wo.y to ci_rAmAiize ihe fuczl <risis .. ! cussions between Nb<on, Kiss• inger a nd others about the ~e­ cision to recommence bombmg Hanoi. He recall~imself being indifferent as to w ich way the decision went but i patient they mi!ke it so he could start the englne of governQJen,t to carry it out. As Haldeman saw himself, once he had made his act of faith in the Republican Party, in a Richard Nixon or a John Connal· ly-he is a great admirer of Nix· on's old secr etary of the Treasury -once he had made his inner personal commitment, he was absolved from doing any thinking about t h e issues himself. A Nixon or a Connally wer e great "conservatives" and that was all he needed to know. HE SEEMED to have been imprinted with conservatism at an early age, the way a ·baby duck can be imprinted with the jdea that a three-ton elephant is its mother and follow it every· where. At some early point, inost likely in his college years, the imprinting took place. He stopped asking questions and followed his elephant right to the jail house dpor. A man who can play a major role in election after election. who can be the president of the United Stales' alter ego and still • think Qf. biroW! as non-:90litical -19" -a mlfh ·who would have no difficulty playing a major role in the Watergate drama without knowing it. Which is not to say Haldeman is stupid. He is a smart man but a narrow one and one so without intellectual curiosity it never occurred to him to look around"him and see where he was. Haldeman is a tough man too. but no tougher than his old 'boss. At one point he said he'd recent• ly talked to Nix.on, who bad asked how Haldeman was going to vote in an upcoming California election. Haldeman said he replied by reminding the exile of San Clemente, "I'm a convicted felon, in case you've forgotten, and we can't vote." After tHa~ he~ reported. there was a pause on the other end of the line and then Nixon said, .. Well, in that case I'll vote twice:: \. .............................. lmll!I ...................................................................... , M8ilh0x t. • This Time the Taxpayer'Is the Boss To the F.dilor: It ia amusing to hear the laments of the politicians and bureaucrats concerning the Jarvis-Gann amendment. Forecaau of the consequences of its pusage encompass every eventuality but Armageddon. 1 Where things-are run wltb at least a modicum of efftclency, as in business, when the cblef kicks the budget proposal back for revie1t (that mean1 re- duction>, "one goes to w«k. to pare expenses here and to do without there. One m~ aroan a liWe, but the job is done. IN TIDS ease, the boss, tbe taxpayer, is kicking the budpt back for review. Between now and refereadum time, there are ample bows and spleoclld op. portuniUea to review and reduce budget.. If the politicos do this and come up with results, I'll belp vote the amend.ISlent down. U not, I'll vote for the amenclment. I would suggest Gthen do tbe same. ~.W.REID The profiles ln ~e Daily Pilot 'have been full of ontradictions. Many candidates re ruse lo make themselves clear on the North Costa Mesa Hom eowners Initiative and the Ja rvis Initlathe. I !eel that if a ca~idate has no opinion or is not· lliar with Uiese issues he or s e baa no right running for office. For sure as anything you will see a city ruled by in- competents. i urge ail candidates to make their vlews kn'own ... You are either for an iSsue or you are against an Issue. There is no room for indecision. You owe the citbena a at.and, one way or the other. I would also like to remind those who are plannin~ to vote for tbe "lesser or two evils.'' that you are still voting tor evil JOOEPH G. PALLO • ..,,.ased To the Editor: Thia is one of those "my f"m;t time to write a letter to the editor" missives. · 1 just returned from the Costa Mesa Poat Office on Adams and, u always, I was impressed by the quick. efficient, personal and most pleasant service • We bear and read Si:> many complalntl about our postal system that 1 decided it was b1&h time I realatered kudos for them. lnctdentally, J am not employed by the u.s.· Post Of. ficesyatem. GLENN L. SMITH ... It is time that the citizens should start reacting against dictatorship of courts. LENETLESKI Saf etg l..es•on To the Editor: A jttry in Orange County re· cenlly awarded $3.5 million lo compensate for injuries and death caused by a defective automobile. ln addition, the jury expressed its outrage against the Ford Motor Company's callous disregard of public sale- t y by awarding punitive d a mages in the sum of $125 million. Punitive damages are awarded when the defendant's conduct is deemed by th6 jury to be unconscionable. Of course, the award is not yet final; motions for new trial and appeals are yet to be beard and decided. However, we hope that your readers will understand that the jury which heard this case over a period of about siit months was expressing the same outrage that each of us would have !elt bad we been silt· ing as jurors. W~ are informed that the two victims were riding in a Pinto which was struck in the rear by ~nother vehicle traveling about 35 miles per hour. Although the people in the Pinto were not in· jured by the impact itself, .the location and construction of the Pinto's gas tank was aucb that it turned the vehicle into a kind ot firebonb. One victim died and the other suffered honible bums over 90 percent of bis body. PLAINTIFJl'S produced evidence that Ford knew before it put the car on tho market that the Pinto was defeetJft ln this regard. It was established to tbe satisfaction of the jury that the. .. eve r occurred arising out of an expft>ding gas tank properly localed in relation to the rear axle. We predict that this verdict will result in the pro- duction of safer automobiles in the future. RALPH D. DRAYTON President, Cali!orni.a Trial Lawyers Assoc. To the Editor: It's rather ironic to me that people are so upset about a local doctor allegedly strangling an infant to death. They wouJd have accepted the death if the baby had died inside the mother in· stead of at the doctor's hands. The point is that killing a baby is murder, whether inside the worn b of a mother or death when born. We call ourselves a "Christian nation .. and allow unborn children to be murdered. We worry about the rights of gays and criminals and go out of our way to see that their rights are not violated,. yet an unborn child has no right to be born. One of the Ten Command-. ments Ls ••Thou Shalt Not Kill." Exodus 20:13. However, man seems to ignore this com- m and ment along with many others. II man continues to ignore God's laws aDdcommandments,I fear that this nation will be in a worse mess than it alreaclyis. KAREN ALLEN lo 'Ai..IH.,;..ted To the F.dltor: ti I read your Feb. Mailbox and one letter really me! I, too. am ~ disgust. eG with the trashy magazines displayed la the sman markets. and some drug stores for eblldten to look at so easily~ . I neYer buy from.a store when I see adult magazines .,._... klcls ean read them, ~t wblt etse can be done about thla? TheM managers ean just u eaally ~ tbe lblff behind the counter • -. , .. c......,... .. ~--;.;.;...,.._·~_:_~...:..~.u..-..~::.A::c;:;ii-=a,..::.!!O'f~r~~~~:z:i;;::c:;~~~-- • NATIONAL I AT YOUR SERVICE ' wednesday, March 1, 1978 DAILY PtLdT ----..... ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ' I ( f r t I J f T H~.,.Fi LY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane "Got .a problem? Then wnte to Pat Dunn. P.at will cul red tape, gt?ttmg the.~a.ond.action you nred to solve meqwties m government.and buainess. Mail your qtiestWns to P.at Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coa.~t Dally Pilot, P.O. Bo*S60, Costa Me1a, CA 92626. As many letters.as po "ble unll be.~. but phoned inquines or Lett :.s..not including the reader's fuJl name. address and bus?M1s hours' phone number cannot be considered. 'Fh&&columrroppear•doi· · ly ezcept Saturdays.•· .~o Limit (}11less Specified . DEAR PAT: C~n a store advertise ~bargain price for an item and then' post a "limit of purchase'' sign without telling lhe customer in the ad that only a limited amount can be purchased? This has happened to me several times-, and I've a lways wondered 1f it's legal. C.J.., Laguna Beach Section 17500.5 or the Business and Proleulou Code states that advertisers can't refase lo Id.I you a dvertised items in any qua.nUty &My laave available unless the ad mentions a Dmlt .on Ute number that they will sell to a single castomer. U this occurs, you can go to court and sue to re~er a ny money you lost, plus $50, IRS Pays Some lnterr•t DEAR PAT:· Is 1l true that. the Internal Revenue Service has to pay interest on a person's tax refund if the refund is late? If this is true, when docs interest begm? I I R.P .• Costa Mesa • The IRS is required to mall a ~fand check DO , later than 45 days beyond the doe date of the re· turn. Jf this malling deadline is not met, interest at the rate of seven percent per year, computed from the 46th day beyond tbe due date of tbe laJtlal check, is included in a tax refaDd. An l&S spokesman emphasized that this reqairemeat to pay interest does not applt If tbe delay· 1s ne to taxpayer error. A.dd.Woaal bl&erNt al8o la 9e& ..W on checks which are andellverable, lose or aolea. When a replacement check ls 1sned la ndl cuea, it, is for the same amount.as the Ortpul dleck. Iodine Cure tor Seraie-.1 DEAR PAT: Is it true that iodine can~ used to hide a scratch on furniture that has-either a varn1shed or lacquered finish? Will it harm the finish or the ~? C.D., Newport Beaeh ll is true and it won'\ bann &.be flal1ll. However, iodine driea to a dark color alld •&J be as conspicuous as the scra&ch If ased • ~ with a llght finish. To be certain It will do &.be job, the Iodine should be applied fint to a part of Ute furniture that cannot easily be seen. Theta. If tltere is a m atcb, use it oa tbe actaa.l acrateh. M'hera Does It Pa11 to Coolc'! DEAR PAT: Please settle a minor domestic dispute at our house. My husband maintains that .• all convenience foods are more expensive than dish· es made Crom "scratch." I know he'~ wrong, but 1 can't prove it. . F.R., Mission Viejo TeU your husband tbt a recent comparlsoD of conve nience and home-prepared foods by Ute USDA 's Agricultural and Economic Reaearela Services, showed that more than ooe-tlllrd of Uae convenience foods were cheaper. The comparison rates tbe cost of eoavealellee versus home-prepared foods using almUar la· gre4ients. For vegetables, 16 of tbe caaaed or frozen convenience forms were lesa expensive than fresh ones. Frozen concentrated oru&e juke cost less than any fresh or fabricated eoaaterpart. The beef, poultry and chicken 1kille& mala d1llaa . were more expensive tba.n comparable lloaae- ,prepared dinners, with convenience ellleken dlaltn : costing up to 60 percent more than tbe bome- prepared version. Cheese pizzas alao were lea •expensive per serving whea prepared at boaae. Baked goods, deuerta and candy are lean ez. pensive when m•de wl&ll a eomple&e mlx Ulat Ha• 'talns all bvt milk, water alld DavorlDp. :DedlM!t Mobile B...e E~ir.. · D~AR PAT: I've been tbloking about b1lytaa a mobile home,-~ baft..heard that a numbllr of things, such as landscaping and furniture. can be deducted at the time oC purchaH to Mlp l"M11ee the gross sales price. This, of couree, would cut 4own.-on the amo\fnt of use tax I ~have to pay. Cart you firtd out exactly what ca.n be da· dueled? Diet.Soda Benefits Weighed WASHINGTON (AP) -You waqted to stQP aabaiDI weight. IO you drank diet soda. T¥o the government told yeu the soda's artlficlal sweetener, saccharin, may cause cancer. So wbat do you do! Fis ff~ DR. 1'AJlNAD L. COHEN. 8' Univenlty of Ptttabur'lh physicist, says lf diet soda keeps your wet1bt down, the long.term risk (rom 11cc:barln is far leas than the risk of obesity. • Experts have associated exceu weight with increased risk ot heart and blood ftSSel cliseaae, strokes, blgh blood pressure and diabetes. Cohen said in an interview bis conclusion is based on the limited information available on the saccbarln-bladdel' cancer relationabip. ~~~~-f,~':•ndoc ~i.' served with hot soup or crisp salad. lrenc•l.99: fries, tartar sauce. roll and~0~uer. A complete meal at a special low price •'TJIE CONCLUSION ALSO depends upon the extent to which saccharin helps preveot caloric intake," Cohen said. "If you have a diet drink instead of a piece of pie, then there is a benefit. If you use the diet drink as an excuse to eat the pie, then you lose the benefit." d~lng Mareh.smii COSTA MESA IRVINE & I .3125 H.arbOr Blvd. MacArthur Blvd. at S.O'. Fwy. · ' In the current issue of .Science magaliDe, Cohen says one who drinks a diet soda dally during a lifetime cuta life expectancy by nine seconds per 12-ounce serving. ( ART HOPPE But he adds a 4S·year·old man, 10 percent overweight., bas a decreased life expectancy o.f 29 days for each excess pound. WE PAY YOU MORE ON INSURED SAVINGS THAN AN¥ BANK- SAVINOS tN9UMO TOMI.GOO ~l~dallyon alleccounta. ll!ull~nQ annual yie4(1 to emounta •hOwn ""-balance remalno 10< -Yftf Funds recer...o by I O!h ol monlft..,.,.. !tom 1a1-hal010 ~·-Note.ByF-.1 -,Mtty ... -.-1aonc..,1l>C111a llNI bonus ec<:O<llU are aubfect IO.,..tanllal .,letffl palla!U.1. 7 79% annual rt•ld on 7 so<!~ • MinlmumS1,000,4yeara. • '0 6 98% annual yleld on 6 750-0 • Mfnlmum$t,000.30inonths. • 6 72% annual yield on 6 SQ\ • Minimum S Ul00, 12 months. • ECTRA IONUS ACCOUNT! ..,_ _.. nlll 5 92% annual yield on 5 75% • Mlnlmum.St,000,90daYL • FUDOIU P•llM>C* M:ICOUNrr _.,. _.. gq 5 39% annual yield on S 25% • Deposit or wlthdfllW 6!'Y time. • Eam <Uiy.in to dey-ou~ lntereSt. No penalties. STATDllHT IAYINOS.. Vou receive detailed monthly saatements when transactions It have occurred, ptua regular quarterly s&atement. Savings Card 1t1rvea as your pas&book for ail depoelta, withdrawal a ilnd serllcet. .WE GIVE YOU MORE THAN ANY BANK -~ ~ .. ~ Dum11mpo~t ~ li1U111Clal •t:rDte@ll ------·---~-----• SOQIAL. SEOURlTY DIRECT ~T e&~VICE -----Wllht1000"*"-..... -----• SAFE DEPOSIT pox • Pij()fOCOPYIN(,l OF • AMEAlCAN EXPRESS ; IMPORTANT DOCUMENT TRAVELERS OHECl<S ·••AM~ ExPRESS (wepey fee) ' MOl'ft!V'OACERS . (Wltp-r1") . • TRUST DE!D NOTE co&UOTIONS -~~=,=-~ ............. , ................. ci....., 'loo ...... ....,_~ p ~~PLAN. l ohilcu , • ~"84)0 Whome'fft' 91\a~. . • • YOUR IDLE BANK CHECKING FUNDS EARN DAILY INTEREST WITH GIBR~LTAR'S FREE ~~PH'"' . TRANSFER SER~CE - 24 liours a day 7 dagt1 a week. " No need to go to your bank. Once your account Is establlshed,'pJek up the phone to lranefer money lrom your bank checking account- which earns no Interest-to your Gibraltar Telephone Transfer savings account-which earns SY•% compounded daily. Funds also returned to your bank by phone. Call toll~free anytime, day or night, from nny part ol the State. This time-saving. money· earning service is free when you maintain a minimum S 1000 balance in your Telephone Transfer account. Minimum transfer amoun~$100. For more Wormatwn--------- ORrorsrABtiSM ~c:7'E :;;.:1r;;e {800} 252-0194 OR VISIT YOUR NEAJIEST GIBl!AlTAR OFFICE. ------------- EXTENDED.HOU~S . Mo1Ulau-Thur11day 9:00 '° 5:30 Fridag . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 9:00 '° 6:00 ' . SATiJBDAY ....... 9:30'°4:00 *Sl!NBAY ........ : . 11:00 TO 4:00 •l . . . - , , ______ ,..... _____ "-...... ~ .,... ....... -............ ~---&..-.----~ 48 DAILY PILOT s Wednesday. March l . 1978 · FOR THE RECORD J BOATING I NATfONAL ·QUEENIE Bv Phil lnterlandi IN()RA Organized (• U.S., Mexic_o Join in Yachting Group By ALMON LOCK.ABEY DllllY l'I ... ..._ .,,..,. A new set of letters has been added . to yachting's alphabet soup. J:ii ORA at•nd1 for-International 0-cean Racing Aasociation and was organized to weld the corinthian yaching interests of the United States and Mexico. The 20-member board or directors includes yachtsmen from Mexico and Southern California. several from Newport Beach. Flag officers are Alberto Alvarez Morphy Jr., Mexico City; Arthur DeFever, San Diego and Newport Beach; Alfredo Giovanel,li, Guadala- jara, ¥exico, and Ted Hinshaw,. Newport Beach. , 011.,.,.__,. ....... -.~l'ldft_..... 3-1 ALTHOU~H TUE primary • purpose of the organization was to ~·."You have a meeting at eleven, a racquet ball game at coordinate yacht races between tbe :=~.and you're due to be chewed out at fciur." .. . For the Record Singlehanded Race to, Kauai· Set for June Blrtlt• A self-defense workshop for women will be taught March 11 at 12:30 p.m. in the Women's Cen-ter of Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. Marcella Moller of the Orange County marshal's department will lead the three·hovr session. Participants in the workshop are advised to wear Joose clothing for the demonstration. Survival Explored Surviving in the wild while backpacking is tbe subject ~~ a lecture series at'l p.m. March 3, H>, and 17 at Golden West College in Forum 1. . I Equipment, map read· ibg and survival tech.ni· ques will be taught by rbountaineer Fred . Owens during the series at the Huntlngt.oo Beach school. The classes are open to.the public. .. Sea Life Examined A singlehanded sailing race from San Francisco to Kauai, Hawaii, ll being planned for June by a group known u the singfebanded Sailing Society oi Oakland. The event ls open to mooohyU ilail· i~HD'~t_asels W!tl.! !l_w~ter~~. !en(t!l of _ 18 tee or over. Distance of the race is 2,196 nautical miles. There will be two st.arts. The flnt will be June 15 for boata 20 to 30 feet length overall, and the second start will be June 22 for boats 30 feet and up. ONE OF THE early entries in the race is Jim Carson of Newport Beach who plans to race a new Crealock de· sign. Other early entries indicate that the solo race will be a significanUy mixed field of boats and skippers. .....,..,., 7• 1"' Initial entrants include everything ~~n·sr;:i,. M~!;..~~~=':i.'!3~'. Crom· an ultra-light dlsplace111ent boy Moore·U Flyer, skippered by Santa ~1~ .. ~ni"'~..!;oi;:"~=Y~'. Cruz yacht deliverer Btll Cannon Jo bov Joshua H, a nearly stock new ~~"o~'.j':i;!, ~.;"'~ R•~. mn Columbia 8.7 sailed by Harold lpham Mr. •MM"-K.._111 eo111,.s. 1om of San Francisco who has had two c.ud1,..1 """·· ~1n v1n...-. virr heart bypass-. Mr. •ncl Mn.. E...-~le. II» .,.., ,.~un, Costa~ 114,, As the entry list grows, jt appears ~~1~':' ... ~~.i~v~:·;~ '40 there will be seriously competitive Mr. 1nc1 """-Ju11us lk>9N•. Sr.,' entries in seven racing divisions. !~-::'~ ~:.~ot.a. a4so--Entry deadline.is May.J.. Hollow Broolll Clr., Co5ta Mew, Qlf'I Mr. '"" /INS. Ml<-1 Relnlg. 1...aJ C.lle Cntor. Hungllngton llNcll, bot ,..._., .. ",. Ml. •net Mrs. ,_.ter Chen, Ullt ~•AW..,1~1Wr914' Ml. •nd Mn. Gwy A~s. Stl MarlOOld. c.o.-o.I ,,,..,. 9111 Mr. encl IWs. Ml<l\e91 ~It!\. 2U92 Velperho. Ml•ioft Vlelo. glr1 Mr. And llN$. Parvlt Je,,..,glrl, 2 or....,.111, lrvlne. bo1 • •n4 Mrs. Scott Jo,.u, 601 Ma rite Ave .• Cofone Del ,,_.r, boy Mr. e Mrs. 8'1"' O'Mewe. 111 JoAnn #A, Costa Mew, boy Mr. Mid Mn. UOyd Mest.s, 2 Shast.t, lrvl PM, QI,, ~'·'"' Mr. •nd Mn. ~Mn 811911,'"' Mllbro St., Cmt.Y MeN, 11o¥ · "''·end~ a..ri.s !>wry, 25Z2 vi. ta o~ .. .,_. 8Nch. boy Mr. '"" Mn. ~rcelo c.ntro. 10821 WoodlM UM, Huntlnqton Be~ boy F*-Y 11, 1m Mr. a"d "'"· Loy Gllll•m. 2791 FrAncls l.Mle, Cost<o ~a. Qirl ... llNaryH,1'11 Mr. •nd M,.. John Blut, 1n1c EU<lld ti C, F ..... taln Valley. boy Mr. and Mrs. Jo""' Woolworll\. llCM Rlc19eCrest, Costa Mesa. boy Mr. and Mr~ JOI! Hlnll-, UTV. E. 21st St., Costa Mew, girl Mr. encl Mn. o-vt Owwr, 2m Elden # S, Costa Mew. boy Mr. and Mn. Wllllem MaMI, tt12 Holld41y A-. Newport &Mell, boy ~12."71 Mr. end Mn. Oenlel GHllert, n.. FOK TRADmON there's Harvey Bereer's Newporter-40 ketch Glol>ft~otter. also sailing out ol Newport '"Beach, and a 1948' PCC, Gossip , sailed by Mel Richards, Alameda. Southern California minister David Thomas is outfitting a Columbia·24. ~orton Smith from Northern California will campaign a new Bill Lee-designed Santa Cruz.ZZ. Largesl-.,early entry was Karl Burton's Columbia-ST with a hailing port of Hollywood. TROPllIF.S WILL go to.line honors and hapdicap winners in each division. Yachts are rated and measured under the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet (PHRF> formula. · Entry fee for the race is $250, or $200 for members of the Singlehanded Sailing Society. For in- formation and entry forms contact the society at 1 Fifth Ave.1 Oakland, 94606 or call (415) 485-7932. United States and Mexico -includ· lnl the Newport to Ensenada race, a new international match race series was founded at Ute board's meeting in M amaniHo fol-lowin11--~au.. Diego to Manzanillo race. The meet· ing was held at the Las Hadas Hotel. Manianillo headquarters of the race. The new match race will be known as the t1.S.·Mexico Challenge and will be held in different parts of Mex· ico or tbe United St.ates 1tartln2 in 1980. \ ""\ Several Mexico cities made formal bids for the first series -including La Paz and Acapulco, but it was de- cided t-0 hold the first series in Manzarullo immedi~tely following the 1980 race from San Diego. A-BEAUTIFUL silver cup bas been dedicated as a perpetual trophy for the event. 1~lli'tl1411 'tlae Wag Morphy, who is also chairman of the Mexican Ocean Racing Conference <MEXORC), said the match race se~ would be sailed ·over a 10.20-mile course in the waters of the defender. The cup would be held no moh Wlan twice in succession in either country. The challenge series would be con- d.ucted along the lines of a com· bination of the San Diego Upton Challenge and tbe America's Cup. in the case of Reid Shelton, who plays ·Daddy Warbucks in the Broadway show "Annie;• a shave and a haircut are the same thing. But despite that, the whole pate·polishing operation by barber Joe Dispinseri ran more than two bits. That's the price of playing a millionaire. LJK E THE LIPTO·N Cup, a challenge would have to be made by a club 120 dQs prior to lhe date o1 the 1eriel. The defender would then FTC Studies select a defender ratin1 witbln five K • d percent of the challenger. ~ J "4 -c'balmtges cootd be made-wtt&n ·-· , -· Pitches days of the race. But Wee tbe America's Cup, the series would consiat of only two boats -one from each cou.ntry. Tbls means that eacb country would boJd an elimination or aalloff t.o determine the ~ontenders. Chairman of the 1980 race will be Xavier Velasquez of Mexico. Vice chairman will be John Robinson, BalbOa"'Yacht Club. Newport Beach. Robinson also is president of this year's Newport to Ensenada race. WASHINGTON <AP) -The Federal Trade Commlaicm baa 4'Rlded lo bold public bearings on whether to order a curtailment of television ads dfi'ected at eblldren. ·- The commission ordered tbe bearings Tuesday because Of the FTC staff's concern that the ads, such as those featuring Tony the Tiger and Cap'n Crunch. lead to poor nulri~ion and dental cavities. ALTHOUGH FTC CHAIRll.AN Michael Pertschuk strongly supported a co~issioners ex- press~ reservations about.such a regulation. Commissioners Paul Rand Dixon, David A. Clanton and Eijzabeth • 1 Hanford Dole said x;nany L • .L.L-Boss [ co~SUMER) questions will have to be ig1U1u.1UJ1e · 1" answered at the bearin~s , befote any regulation is N D p .. . rrrade ellective. 0W UQS a tece ~ Dixon said the hearings present an opportunity to "obtain the views of a broad cross-segment of 01 he R k industry and consumer representatives and seel< t OC more d~. mitive answers to the quesf.ions th~t 'have been raised." . !-. ·tJ.w TILLAMOOK, Ore. <AP) -Ever since he was a boy Max Sbillock Jr. has admlred the deaerted, 99-year· old ll•hthouae periibed on Tillamook Rock a~ inne off the Ore1on Coast. So he bought both the lighthouse and the rock ror $27,000. The lighthouse took over a year to build, beginning in 1879. The light went into operation in 1881 and served mariners until it was ex- tinguished at midnight. Sept.1, 195'7. The light. which told sailor& how far up or down the coast tbey were as well as warning or tbe roek, gave way to electronic navigation systems, radar and automatic direction finding. TR& CO~IO?lr STDT. Na prop05il made public last week, bas recommended a ban on all TV advertisemen~ directed at very young Children. ( I Some ads directed at children wider the age of 1% -also would be b&flned under -the FTC staff pro· posal. Those ads sell sugared products Uiat the staff sald are most likely lo cause tooth decay. For permi~ ads of other sugared pcy:>ducts, the staff proposal would require that the ads be balanced by separa~ dental and nutritional messages. Spending Gains MEXICO CITY <AP) -_Tourists funneled $32.7 mil.lion into Mexico's trea5ury last year -up $280,000 from 1976, Banco de Mexico, the national bank, announced . Yamaha Cyt;_les . ..- Recal:Led SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -About 36,000 Yam aha motorcycles have been recalled because of a defect tbe company says could cause the rear wheel to lock up. Russ Jura, a member of the Yamaha Motor Corp. legal department. said four models of the XS750 have defects which "would lead to vehicle crash without. warning." Notices mailed to owners say the defect in- volve, a stopper bolt. that could allow tbe gear s.hifting drum to move laterally and lock up J.be rear wbeeJ. Owners or the tnotorcycles bate been told to take their bites to dealers to have them installed with a .new de- sign of loek tab ·at no cost to the owner. Jura said the installations will cost Yamaha $500,000. Jura said be had beard of three accidents caused by the defect, with one of the victims injured. Yamaha paid the medical bills, he said. George Hupman, a Milford. Conn . executive with 'General Electric. said he sold the ro<:k, less than an acre in size, because he was unable to spend much time there. Shillock, who lives in Portland. says he has ... responsibility to the people or the state-of Oregon to pre· serve to the best of my abWty the historic landmark." CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF ANOTHER KIND Orange County llblrine life will be ex- amined during a lecture at Orange Coaat Colleee ob.March 11 at 8 p.m. P1tell1<•~~:." Trio& at N~d...ort, RI Mr. •"d ..-rs. Nell Snyder, U .:;9&1.P Another kind, altogether. As. when you get together with your dentist. Could you get closer than that to Or. Arnold Flanzer? Well. he doesn't like to let money keep people apart. So You could get pretty close. For a lot less than you might suppooe. .-1\ichard Murphy, an underwater photograper and marine biologist, w;UI lead the discussion in. the OCC auditorium in Cost.a Mesa. . Tickets are $1.50 and are available through tbe school's Ucket office or at the door. Semilar Scludded .A day.JOnl eenilllar on t>•rsonal, lamlly and community prepared· nes1 to meet einergenclel will be held at. GoJcJe:n Wett Ooll•I• 011 Saturday bepnnl.a.1 a.t t a.m. in U., pavilion cf the HunUqtoo Beacb act.Got. The pro!!~ will f~ture a 1•7-of emeratnCY clee u4 e1tulp..-t. from Joeal aaeneill. · .. Tb ......... ll~&o the public tr•• of char a .. M«lpos•. lntlne, glr1 Mr. el!d ~ O.vld Bell. 17M "A" St., Hlllltl...,.. BMd\, bOv ....._.,14,1'71 Mr. •lld II/In. NldlolaS 8M11att, 2151 P.-c:lllC #2058, Costa Mesa, 91r1 Mr. and Mrs. St-art Van 0yM, Olympic Site Chosen ~~~ Wrllll1tWDOd. Hunt111910n llM<h, NEWPORT, R.I. (AP> -'Ibis city w . od Mn. o .. " eoedV. mt by the sea, which has played host to 0«11ero o.-.• ,,c. *1• Ma Heights, America's Cup racing since 1930, bas girt "''· •11• to\re • .1oa111u been selected for the 1980 Olympic • MertlllottM•. lb-e. ti• s.., c.o.-. sailing trials. MeM, llOr ,_,_. ,., "" Robert B. CoMer, president of the Mr .• ,.. Mn. V•t"" """'· 129 Narragansett Bay Yachting As-.. .,.. ... -...or ........... e..ci.. l.-&l --'d b 1-1 ..... of 111r1 soc .. won. DG.11 e was ,uuorm- Mr. •nd Mr't.. ,...,.. SmJlt\. mat , t&e;!tecu .. -f{, Diet Steans Croner'"·· Huftll...., ~.boy I h ·.a.. .0\ ~ ~ i y ch..i...: '..; Mr. ud Mrs. Cher,_ Oeftr, j • C L U1 ~ ya.up C 8 uug c•eenw•taf\ 1rwtne.'t1111· • • Comm • "''· and Ml"-SelllUel Mc~. JON •had be Corel Av.., •A. Cott.e Mesa,"" Newport en considered ror the trials along with Cleveland, Ohio, and Rocbeeter. N.Y. "WHEN THE selection committee was .here, tbey said Newport wu the only place that wu able to provide a wtitten proposal for this event," Cooner said. .. We also proml,ed to manhaJ people and resources from the area yaebt elulle to supenise the races," he added. Th~ att.e aelectloa committee. Conner said, COGlldmMl •plittJu-vp th• ah different elaaees but decilded to concentrate all Olympic trials In Newport. "~E TOLP ~M that WQU!d put u th a m\leli strOager 1)0Sitian from the point ot vtew of fund ralling and froro the organl1atloul polnt of view,•• the NBYA spokesman added. conner. a member of the New York Yecbt Club who helped run the 197'l Ameiica"•~ra~. Mldbeex· pecta about 300 ·competltors ln Newl>Ql't for U'8 1880 OIJm~c tltals. .. 'II .. also euect. about aoo. plus otbe• bopetula.-to 'be h lD 1919 when we have tuneups for the fin at trials," he tald. 0 Tbe "19 eveit could eoncelvably be much larger than the finals ... ALTBOOOB DATES hue not of•. llcially been set, Conner &&lcl he ex· peeled the trials to. start for about M81 28 eaeb year with tuneups and mea1urina to befiD ln earlY Mu. The trfata1 ta. said. lbould lalt aeve.n to 10 OIY9o Wlnnm ID the .tit cl111a w1ll represent the Unlted Statea et the U80 OLYmptca ID tbe Gull of Fln1and nepr 'taWim, Rmaia. .... Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer ·370 E. 17th St. ., Costa Mesa 642-0112 ... .. -. ,...,.. • . l ~· -..: t ' • • • • ... • 1• .. •' .~liEAtTH weanescsay. Maren 1, 197b DAIL y PILOT A 9 . Increased Coffee Habit SpeUs 'Addiction' By Dr. Peter stelnerohD -~ Dear Dr. Stemerobn: What ls ~ IJ\eant by "addlctlon?" My -. tlusband and l disagree. I take a ~l!lteeplng pill about once in two .. 'Weeks and he says I'm addicted to drugs. I know I can get along • .:very1well without the plll, but :jalte t only when I'm too tired to .:111eep. I've never taken as many •a two sleeping pllls in one week. ·• On the other hand, I tell rn'y ~uaband that he's addicted. Not ~ pills but to coffee. He never • 0 .. •.. ·. . . ,, I .IEG. 3. 99 TO 9. 99 NOW 319107 99 Many styles including sculptured fromes ovals rectangles-full length. Enhance ony room. took coffee until about six months ago. He would be satisf~ with ~.cup or two dur- ing the day. Then be gradually increased it to a half dozen cups. Now be tqes as many as 12 to JS cups daily. I wouldn't mind except that he has bee n complaining of heartburn and heart skips late· . ly. He is nervous and doesn't s leep well. Wouldn't you say he is addicted to coffee? I've even kept it out of the house tor a few days, but he would get so upset <and get his coffee out.side) that -. .,-. .,, .... I had to !r'g it back agaln. -r Mn. W. DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE COMMENT: I don't suppose 1'11 be· able to settle a family feud, but I'm willing to make a ruling in the case. I pronounce you not .guilty of the addiction, and your husband guilty. People who are addicted to any medication (and caffeine In coffee is a medication ) have an overpowering desire to take the drug and take any means to ob· talh it. There's also a his tory of increasing the dose -as your ~ ~ husband has done with his in· take of coffee. There is this emotional and psychic depe ndence upon the drug. (It's likely your husband is unmanageable In the morning until he has had his cup of coffee.) And lastly, people who are addicted, take enough of a drug to suffe r physical and , ... __ MftW.ft.vT ,....,_ ......... , ~-WA.LL l'flTUIU REG. 31.99 32 f ine nproductions de· p1ct rnlf lifes. 1ond. sco;>4tS, variety of sub· 1ects. sizes to choose. Accent o den. turn o spore r~m into o l1brory 1 Sturdy wall units ore in popular pecan f1n1sh os ~•mble eo11ly stand 71 1 • Hx9", Ox25 W El. UNIT SIS" YOUR CHOICE nervous symptoms (In your husband's instance: heartburn and palRitatlon and i~omnla)~ FORGETTING FOK a moment who's right ot wrong in your controversy, I believe that it is important for your husband to take bis "coffee habit" seriously and try to eliminate it by seeking help in some form of psychotherapy. Taking IS cups ol coffee every day is enought to whip a person into trouble eventually. / --#•• - llG. 3.69 TO 7.99 NOW --2 9~o639 G ive the worm accent of oreo r1:9s 1 Plush Hi-low or multi -level shags. ........ 11111 7 ·PC. STAINLESS STEEL COOKWARE SET FRAMED.MINIATURE MIRROR GRAPHICS , SAlE PRICI WITH BAKELITE KNOBS & HANDLES Set Includes 1 & 2 qt. soucepons, 1011 ... open skillet, 51/, qt. dutch oven & covers. Slll-SCRUNID MIRROR SCENES Brighten ony room with coforlul scene$ with gold or silver tone frames. =··· PLAHTllS DIY IOASTm PWtun 16 ot. No Iott Ot oll\ addtid. VINYL CUSHIONE~ TOILRSEAl Decorator colors. Save' =•1· GLOlliTfA PIAllllVES ttt.oa .. lft ~ •rf'IJ· M2DICALE'M'£S AC1le is a ~tubborn .disease which tries the courage of bo'tb child and parents, and also tbe patience of the doctor. But it is an important condition aod s h ould not' be underrated because it ls so widespread apd causes so much unhappiness, says Dr. Steincrohn in hla booklet, ''Acne: A Family Problem." For a copy write him at this paper enclosing SO cents tn coin and a stamped, self· addressed envelope. All '"!' quality towels In colorful prints , solids, stripes. jacquards. Save! AUOlnD SHAPE-SIZES CLEAR"'GLAS-BAKE" BAKEWARE .c~ ~ ~!~ \"°9 ,1 .~-J~ra~ e..~ .. ~ ;,. -""'r/1 ~ UG. 1.29 TO 3.39 NOW Handy covered cos- s e roles. p ie pons •. dishes & more. Corning· wore not included, . . .. . A' 0 CAIL y PILOT Wednesday March I. 1978 CALIFORNIA . . 'We're Still Married,' Alioto's Ex-Wife 111 SAN FRANCISCO <APJ - Angelina Alioto, who bitterly contested ex-Mayor Joseph Alioto's divorce suit, says the pair are still married in the eyes of the church despite his re- marriage over the weekend. SIMP&..Y ADORE ESklMO f UR. •· fi. Roman Catholic Church of- fic 1al 9l New York. where Alioto married on Saturda.y, said that . the ceremony was performed by an ex-priest "'who.goes through the form of Catholic marriages." The marriage was legal, however, hesald. Hi~DRI ·TOWELS WHITE & COLORS SINGLE 39c RO LL . ~ ~LONGER -LAStlNG-·WOODEN-- . . ·~olAl'' Deodorant SOAP Salad BOWLS ATIRACTIVE WAY TO SERVE SALAD '·· ,. .1. 5 OZ. ~O .. SIZE 6 .. SIZE · 4i 1.00 2:s1 4:s1 POND'S Light FOR YOUR SKIN ~ Whipped Cold Cream GREASELESS . -;:250Z. ggc Whippall Moisturizer GREASELESS For younger looking akin. ··oeECIAN· FORMULA 16" Gradually chan9eS gray to natural looltl ng color. 2 OZ. TUBE or ·~ .. 4 OZ. IOTTlE .. .. ·u.2.49 LADY GRECIAN FORMULA Gets rid of =. the gray. 4GL2.49 DESK ACC8S$orlas MELWOOD-TitE lUXURYlooK OF HAND CARVED WOOD ggc But Angelina Alioto Monsienor Eugene Clark of the New York Archdiocese agreed with Mrs. Alioto that the marriage cer~monies were not Catholic. He said O'Rourke "was asked to leave the Jesuits ed and bad dropped out of si,ih~ to take a tour of California's missions. said : "As long as Joe Alioto and Angelina Alioto live, they are husband and wife before God and man and cannot be re- m arr led under any cirt!'lmstances. until one. or tbe other dies." .9 few.years ago." --. mayor or San Francisco Crom 1966 to 1974, and made an un- successful run for governor in 1974. His bride is a member of Boston School Com~ittee. Her father, William Sullivart is ewn-er-ot the ?'few Tngfand Patriots of the National Football League. THElll RELATIONSRIP de-t~riouted after that. and -they- separated twice before tbe divorce was granted Aug. 30. A Hoto, 62, and Kathleen Sullivan, 33, were married by the Rev. Joseph O'Rourke. described by church officials as a former Jesuit pdest. The newlyweds were reported honeymooning in Italy. ASSORTED FlAVOAa .. 11-rn ro 71c 1a.~ oz ... IAGS "FATHER O'ROURKE &oes through the form Of Catholic marriages and frequently de- cei vea the~ par'ties," be 11aid. "We're concerned most of all about the deception and mis- apprehension of the couples." Alioto. a lawyer. served as It was during his 1974 gubernatorial campaign that Alioto announced Angelina had been, missing for 18 days. Mrs. Alioto called home two days later saying she had fell neglect- "I threw him out of the home and I'd do it again," she said. ·'So many good Cat.ho.lies in • this city are grievinr because Joe anJI I were once the epitome of the Catholic couple:• Angelina Alioto said.. C.H.8~ ~ TOIVIATO CHICKEN OF THE SEA CATSUP 320L 99c DRUG STORES Place To Ship! GREAT SOUO WHITE ALBACORE TU NA IN WATER .70?. 79c ·"FISHER'S ASSORTED . - PEANUTS · ~ •ORY ROASTED • 2 lb. 8 oz. •BLANCHED 2 lb. 10 oz. ' •REDSKINS ~ 2 lb. 10 oz. . . •SPANISH 2 99 ~ 2 lb.12 oz. YOUR CHOICE Ii " EA Look I.or SPECIAL COLGATE SAVINGS DISPLAY NOmMA MEDICATED SKll. CREAM . •·COLGATE g7c · TOOTHPASTE. 1oz. • ULTRA BRITE ggo TOOTHPASTE 1.e oz. • RAPIDtSHAVE-. ASS'T ~QRANCES . 11 Gt • WILKINSON I · 5 ...... dfl&~I ggo e WILKINSON •NU • PAKOF5wD1 FE -. U. PREPARATION It OINTMENT 50 FT. GARDEN HOSE wit• " .. BORE . - ' .. .. f . CALIFORNIA Wednesday. March 1. 1178 DAILY PILOT A~J OWNER.JAILED, HElllDES'DOC JERUSALEM CAP> -For . Zeke the German shepherd, man Actor's Trial Fails Agftin · • truly is a dog's beat friend. His master sat in Jall Tuesday rather than hand the do1 over· for a rabies test, a aeries of painful injections. 1 Zeke bit a man and a woman · who entered the courtyard of hi4 owner's home in Jerusalem. Sblomo Baum refused to sur" render the dog to the municipal · .ve~erinarian, claiming the city 1 poisons impounded dogs. Baum bid Zeke with friends, and a Jerusalem magistrate sent him to prison unW be bands over the animal. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor Chad Everett and the parties in a patemlty 1uit aaalnat him have failed for tbe eighth time to set a trial date for the ~V!:Jeat· old case. LPS Angeles_ Supe.rlor Court judge 1Uchard Schauer aareed t9 postpone the case again because one of Everett's lawyers had a schedule conlUct. Schauer ordered all part.lea to appear again Friday. AT ISSUE IS TUE claim by actress Sheila Scott that Everett MRS. BUTIERWORTH'S ·. . . . -· ~~~~~~ SYRUP Thick, Rich Taste 360Z. )~39 BOX OF60 3.-" SIZE OF SAVINGS /' Ass't I I F 01111Ulas c l.S oz. ' VITAl:IS w1111 Y7 GrOOlllS hair without cruse. ULTRA BAN D EXCEDRIN or -ANTI-PBLWlllANT BUFFERIN ~~f.2i"$ ~~.49 "FESCO'' PLASTIC POLYPROPYLENE . Household Needs LETTER FILE . •. . e~ FOR 9ERYDAY USE ls the fatber ot 1'er son. Dale A.Qdro Lee Everett. 4. Miss Scott mec1 suit tn ms againat Everett. with whom she worked as an extra on the "Medical Center .. series. After a fivi!·day trlal, tbe ~as• waa settled out of eoUl't with Miss Scott getting $5,000 plus $27,500 for att.omey'a fees and $275 a month IOI' the child's support. I The current caae, filed in July 1974 by tbe boy's court guardian. attorney Caryl Warne!\ names ·Miss Scott and Everett as de- "OUCHLESS" fend ants and seeks only . to declare the act.or as the boy's father. WARNER CONTENDS Everett and Mlaa Scott acted in collusion to keep secret the identity'Of the boy!t father. Everett has admitted he spent time at Ml.sa Scott's apartment in the nine months before the boy's birth in May 1973, but he denied being the father. Miss Scott, who contended throughout the trial that Everett. SHAMPOO-IN HAIR COLOR LOTION 2A9 was the father, aaid that she ts interested in the aec:ond suit a a way to establish the Identity ol tbe chllcrs father to alve the boy stability. . Everett had no commenL . lliriDg ~ilfair~ DETROIT (AP) -The police department's affirmative action program under which blacks were promoted over quallOed whites baa been struck down by a federal judge as raclaUy dLs· crlm inatory. . CASE SHELVED AGAIN : Actor Ch•d Everett "HEAD" FOR CARE OE . YOUR HAIR . . Ad't Formulas SHAMPOO CONDITIONER 16 oz. 16 oz . 1.89 2.39 KooAK ··The Handle" _ .. ~~~l R~_th" · lffS'fANT &AMERA -~'" ---wuGGms-or · HERSHEfS lioeolate BA . ~~=:::;natic 28 88 '4Buttarflnger" eJectronlc shutter. IEK2 • CHIPS --~~ ~ • WITlf ALMONDS • SPEClAL DARK • MR. GOODBAR SOUt(DESIGN .. STEREO" RECORD " ~A~E 2 ~R s1 SIZE PLAYER with COVER =---.. ..... " .With two matchlnc speakers and diamohd 69 95 needle. 16024-51. • SOUNDESIGN "4-BAND" Portable RADIO ~::.~/PIM': 31 88 _, We:alhlr. #2458 • UMR. COFFEF' !:Ji .. ~ DRIP COFFEE MAKER IMC·IA Deslcned '°' the ultimate 19 99 cup of coffee. Brews from l to lU cups! • FILTERS PAK OF 100 66° SALTON ''YOGURT" MAKER Makes 1 OT. af Creamy 8 88 light yogurt. #GM-5 • PRo~1~e~ Steam/Dry lr~n ~ DISHWASHER SPONGE ON HANDLE Protects your hands 5 9 " from soat>Y .dish· y water. ' JUMBO ~.~E69~ absorbent ··eucket of SPONGES" Plastic Pall fllled with 12 g g C lrrtgUlar ctttulose 'Pongtll. ~-1178 10. 88 Ptewuhed with dftftnnt trimmings on the pockets. PLACE MATS M & M'S CANDY BARS FARBERWARE 12 INCH FRYING 1 OUART STAINLE SS STEEL with ALUMINUM -Clad Bottom SAUCE PAN WITH COVER PAN WITH COVER 17.99 "EGYPTIAN TYPE" ·STATUES • PHARAOH • BUST OF PHARAOH • SPHINX • SCARAB~BOX Handsome treasures for the Pharaoh In your home! YOUR CHOICE 1111 6.99 ENVIRONMENTALLY SAFE . '.;STYLE" HAIR SPRAY . _,, I . . ' ! . • A 12 DAILY PILOT • Wednesday. March 1, 1978 Save to see the places you've always dreamed pf Start their tomorrows off rlght ••. by saving. Save for your family's changing needs • . Your pJaCe in the SlDl ••• inHomeFederaICowi . . Once you know what you want out of Uf e, all you need. is determination and solid financial planning ~ pcll ymir goals. At Home Federal, we'll work wit}l you now to· nun your dreams into ~ty. W,e offer one plan that guaontte~ your money will double in~ than nine years, when you ~ve your in~t on deposit And \vith a·Savercaid aa:ount, you~ safety alld high~ &big with the fiexibility you need today. When your Savetcard·travtl& with yd~ you're entitled to Prestige emergency cash at locations all over the country. And to make your investment even more valuable, become a. member of the Investor Oub by simply maintain- ing any account of $2,SOO or more. Then discover all the financial and travel benefits membership offers. lJrina yourself closer tC> that special goal1 Plan now by-investing in a high interestsa~~atHomeFederal ... and togetli~ we'!hnak~ thin~ happen! l ------~-., .... INSIDE: •Stocks· •Business •Movies •Television • . . ' •• ft , Wednesday.March1.1978 .. OAILYPILOT S;no,._tS t . ~s II , ' 0 ' 3 1 Van Breda. Ko~f Still Knows HoW te Win NE.W ORLEANS (AP) -Conference tourvament losses were by one point apiece invitatlont.otbeNIT." school. a piekup 1ame. high Much-traveled-coach Butch van champlonsh.lplastwee.fend. aaalnat Nortb CaroUoa· His Princeton team made it to ~hool, college or pro -It all . Breda Kolff alt.a anxtouaty by the The Sun Belt does not get an Charlotte, the S\m Belt's fell-· the semUlnala or the NCAA and feels cood to win. telephone, waitma to find out automatic NCAA playotrbid~ 80' ular-seuon champion aod a lost to Michigan. He went. h'om ''There are only two reasons l whether his first season ldck in Butch and his ~am await eltl1er linal-Cour finisher in last yur'a Princeton to Los Angeles of the why anyone would want to be in ~ college buk~J>all ls ovej\ an at-large bid or a call from the' NCAA tournament. .. National Ba.sketball ·Associatlon, coacbmg -being with 'the kids I ~ Van Breda Kolff'a 27-year National InvitaUon Tournament •1s ure, rd like t.ooao to• IM>'l· where the Boston Celt.ic111 and winniag." , t eoachjqg career JSpaas atopa at in New York. NC.\A inyj.tationa !e.aaon t.ouma.mam ~~~US!lct daahed hia championship hopes. Followlnr laat Sunday's con· T La(afette, Hofstra •. Prlnce~lfNO out. ~day. r the kids. Thet're the onea w DlJeT Yinning ll conference m~--...h&alnioJWlip_ iame. f and five pro teams. He was fired .. I cant see any reason wbr. earned it. It's no bi& deal for championship tournament feel van Breda Koll! cave his team a. by the New Orleans Jan -his e ishouldn't get. an invitation. • me," Van Breda Kalftsaid. as aood as winning an NBA day otr and speot Monday at his I. last pro team -26 ••es into id van Ureda Koltf. ..The He bas sweated out invitaUons division crown? Gulf Coat hideaway in Mis-r the 1976-17 season. players radked 'Up 13 straight before and he• had it go both "Heck, yes," van Breda Kolff • siuippi. i He slaned aa athleUc director victories after those tough ways. "One year w~iWere 23·1 at said. "Easily as good. His team was scheduled to ~ ' and coach at the University of losses." Hofstra. and nobody invited us," "Any better? No. You can't practice Ute rest of the week. I 1 New Orleans la.st spring and bis New Orleans finished the he aaid ... Anothu year we were rate that sort of thing. I don't preparing for a game they might i 1 team won the Sun Bf;l•t • season 21·6 but two of those 23-2 at.Lafayet.teandwegotan care whet.her it's in grade notgettoplay: I ii·Trade Is Big Break, Says Clyde ti POMPANO BE~~.Fla . (AP) -David Clyde. credited w.ith helping save the Texas Rangers baseball franchise as a~ 18-year-old pitcher straight 'out of high school in 1973, figures the team returned the favor. oddly enough, by trading him. "This is a great break for me,'' Clyde. now 22, said Tuesday after he and vetera o des - ignated bitter Willie Horton were traded to Cleveland for righthander Tom Jjuskey and outfielder J ohn Lowenstein. "Of course, I hate to leave Wumers: 2 for 58 Cauthen Sl~ps At s ·anta Anita. ARCADIA (AP) -Steve Cauthen, the teen-age wonder of thoroughbred horse racing ·in 1977, is sufterlng through a 2'1Um p at Santa Anita. The 17-year old. whose mounts won more thaq $6 million last. year. has piloted just one winner in his last 31 rides and two in the last SS. Texas. I h~te-to leave the ..... ~ Rangers. But I really didn't · ~ .., have much of a chance of male· t. .· ing this team this spring. In He's dropped from first to a third -place tie with Bill Shoemaker in the jockey stand· ings for this meeting behind Dlrrrel Ml!Hargve -and Laffir Plncay. Shoemaker and Cauthen have 38 winners. I '4 J ( I I q1eve1a nd u·s· a different .s1tuation. This is a very tftg op-' port unity for me ." Clyde, a highly touted leflhand- er from Houston Westchester !¥gh School. walked out of his htgh school graduation robe and irtto Arlington Stadium on June 21. 1973, filing it to capacity - sdmethlng that had never been done before. But Clyde had a disappointing 3-9 season in 1974 and spent the last three months languishing on. the bench. In 1975, the Rangers sent Clyde to their AA Pittsfield team in the Eastern League and in 1976 he had surgery on his LOOSE BALL-Darne ll Valentine <leftl of Kansas watches the loose ball which bounced orr the shoulder of Colorado's Emmitt Lewis <righU Kansas defeated -~~ Colorado Tuesday night in the Bi~ Eight bask etball playoff. 82-66. in the Kansas gym. pitching arm, burling only five ~ games for th.e Ran1ers' AAA , minor league team. ~-*o Qi d (;.!L-rt, ~ Last MUOO be wu plaeuect by ·' .._,,,.,,. aa 'J1l1e . ~lf,I •, wildness. bsuine 119 •alks in , 128 innings en route to posting a ~ 5.7 record and a 5.84 for Texas' B I H It~ c· Til~ ; ~~~~~/?.:?.~:~:~ .. ::: . raw a s . age ... i..' ~enlable •whe n Texas ~igned , _ t:-~ l' • i"fee,gent slugger Richie Zisk GREENCASTLE. Ind. -straight match Tuesda~ • Diego Chargers1n 1977 to their a nd traded for outfielder Al Coach Elmer McCall's final the opening round of.a1w best finish in years, •as r~Une Oliver during the offseason. game at DePauw University tennis tournament. ~ I comfortably at his hom.,. Tues· l ''I'm shOcked. Oh, man, I'm ended 10 minutes early amid a NaVTatllova defeated ona : day after undergoing surcery J disappointed," said Horton, who flurry of elbows," fists and Guerr•nt, 6.-4. 6-1. -:. .f 1 • Feb. 21 to relieve con1estion.-<>f finished with 15 home runs, 75 te~~rsrTUesdaefereeysnl11hatl.ted the In other matches BilliefSean · his-urinary.tract. runs batted in and a .289 batting b h t. 11 K i n g t r o u n c e d D i a n n e The 56·year-old head coach of average ·1ast year after coming asketball game ~et.ween Fromholtz, 6-2, 6-2 and Vireinia tile National Foot.ball League to the Raneers from Detroit. D.ePauw and St. Josephs after a Wade defeated Greer Stevena, club returned here last. Sunday , h •giant brawl among players on 7-5. 6-2. • from St. John:t, Hospital in • I can't. say anyt Ing bad the noor escalated out of con· Earlier Renee Richards won a Santa Monie$. He said'he sougbt about the Texas organization, trol. hard.fought three·set match to keep the surgery a iSfivate but I don't understand." "Conditions were sucl\ that we from Ruta Gerulaitis. matter "bttause when you 8Q to. Rudi Healthy, Joins Ang~ls HOLTVILLE (AP) -Joe Rudi, one of several California Angels bedeviled by injuries in 1977, took batting practice Tues· day for the first time slnce he suffered a broken band last June ~ .. ''The hand felt fine. I don't think I'll have any problems with it,., Rudi said. Rudi missed the first. two days of spring drllla by the American League baseball tearn so he could be examined in Loa Angeles by a band speclallst. Dr. Julio TalelsnJ.k. Rudi got a clean bill or health from the doctor. who removed a bone fragment and cleansed the Wrist Jolnt laat Sept. 2. Manager l>av•G•r~la ordered extra batting pracUce for the. 31-year-old outfielder. But the schechaled three· hour ·workout was cut to twe> by rain. Wlt.b Kudl'• nrival, the Angela now have 41 players in camp. Team doct.on completed physical examinations Tuesday. could not continue the game." the hospital for an operation. said referee Bob Showalter. Ka ... as, 82-88 everybody thinks you're dying." "Which players would you allow to continue?" McCall, who is retiring after 20 years as DePauw coach, stood by helplessly, not believ- ing what be was seeing. The incident, involving up to eight of the 10 players on the floor and at least eight more try- ing_ to break up the brawling, began after a missed DePauw shot and a scramble for the loose ball. As one player would grab for the ball, it. would bounce loose and someone else would dive for It. Elbows started flying, then fists. Showalter and referee Eric Harmon, who also work Big Ten and Mid·Ame~can Conference games, iaid the fight was ap- parently spontaneoua and they could not fix the blame on either .team. St. ·Joseph's wa leadln1. '71-60 at the time, bl.tt th& referees ruled the game "no coilt4?st ••• N•railr..,a Rella KANSAS CITY. Mo. Martin• Navratttov~. ~ho bas w <> n 1 l x c·o'n a e e u t·t v e tootnaments. captured her 3J.at LAWRENCE. Kan. Clint Johnson scored 16 points and Paul Mokeski added 12 points and 16 rebounds Tuesday night to pace fiflh·ranked Kansas to an easy 82·66 victory over Oolorado in the first round of the Big Eight post-season basketball tournament. Eva~Hle Coa~la EV ANSVULE, Ind. -Dick Watters of DuPage Junior College was selected basketball coach at the Univer,.sity or Ev ansvllle Tuesday, replacing Bob Wat.son who was kllled with the entire Evansville team in g plane crash in December. Prothro Olea" SAN DIEGO -Tommy Prothro, who coached the San Saints Tab Coach Tom Melis. an assistant football coach at Santa Ana Va ll~y Hlgb the past two seuons. bas been selected to succeed Bob Larson as bead football coach at Santa Ana High School. Gf.,.tsGetl~ CASA GRANDE, Ariz. -Th' San Francisco Giants have ac- quired infielder Mike Ivie, who coltee\ed more ttt.n 100 bits ln each of the last two seasons for the San Diego Padres. In exchange for Ivie, 25 and in his fourth uutjor lea.sue season, the Giant8 sent infielder Derrel · Thomas. Z'T, to the Padres. Sandy Hawley sta'nds next with 35. everi though he's had jwit 171 mounts compared to Caulhen!s 292 •• T hose bettors who back the youngster. named Athlete of the Year by The Associated Press for 1977, would be down $233.60 if they placed a ~win -bet. on each of his mounts. Other jockeys were asked what the trouble might be for Cauthen, who has n't. been talkati\Te these days. . ..There's nothing -.wrong with 1Steve:• answered McHareue, who lta~ 7 5 winner s . "Remember, he's tied up with Laz Barrera's New York stable out here and that costs him plen· ty of Jive mounts with other out· fits •• Trait\ers know I'm here to stay for Santa Anlt.a and HQttywood Park. "They know Steve is going back to New York this ~pring and D\allY oc-tbem woutd rather tide a >ocket who is ltOing to stick~d." Frank Olivares said, "The truth is that Mcffa~ue would have won a few more races with the same material Stevie gets. lt"s no~that there is anytblng wrong with Steve. He's only 17 and.. he simply ~oesn't havo the expefiente .;J>r •Sltength of somebody like 'McHargue. who is six years older. · "I improve every year riding against the jockeys we have here in .California and Darrel has probat>IY' improved more than anyone in the past two years. "Steve has to go through some of that same period of gaining experience and maturing as a rider. The Jreat. thing is that he's as good as he is so soon." One writer noted, "lf you check the racing charts, you'll notice that Angel Cordero. Marco Castaneda and the Shoe have beaten him at least two out of three photos when it's close. That's where experience r iding against the best Is going to help hlDl in the future." Shoemaker, 46, comment "He band rides well and see to know what he's doing in race. Fact is. he's awfull mature for a teen-age kid whips as well as most althou he can improve some there with experience." • Cordero commented. "He siQ;; a horse perfectly and remin~ •• me of Braulio Baeza and Jo~ -Velasquez the way be rides. B he still has a few things to le . al>out ~hipping and finishing. BUt how mucJa can J'OU ask of ~ boy in one year?" Lutz Ousts Tennis Foe . ' i MEMPHIS -Jimmy Conno advanced to the liecond round the U.S. National Indoor tenn championshil>s Tuesday nig when his first·round opponen . Dick Stockton, retired from th e second set with a back injury. Stockton had won the first set . 7-6. Earlier in the day Marty Riessen beat Vitas Gerulaitts,· 7·6, 6·4. In another night match Cliff Drysdale de£eated Dean Martin Jr., 6-3, 6 2. · Other first-round winners in· eluded Sandy Mayer who beat Geoff Masters, 7-5, 6-2; Bob Lutz of San Clemente over Balazs .Taroczy, 7-6, 7·5; Jose Higueras who beat Frew McMillan 6-0. 6·3, and Phil Dent, who defeated Ray Moore, 6-4, 3-6, 7·6. "' ....... ., DAILY PILOT Wednesday, March 1, 1978 I I , . .,.. ~.-....... . . . BASKETBALL €apo Cagers· Staggered .By Marin ~rs' Ace, 80-77 By ROGER CAR~ON 0t .. DllllY ...... t4otft Hts crede'otlals were somewhat bard to swallow as gameUme approached, but St. Monica Hi&h's Leon Wood made believers out of a lot of people Tuesday nJgbt as he led bis Mariners teammates to an 80-TT victory in the CIF l·A basketball semifinals. -Before a Saddleback College crowd of 1,775, the 6·3 15-year- old junior scored 44 points in a .classic effort that would equal any 4-A performance. Wood coMected on 18 of 30 from the field (60 percent) and made all eight of his free throw attempts to stymie the Cougars of Capistrano Valley, who time and again appeared to be on their way to Long Beach Arena Saturday afternoon for the championship game. But in the end, Wood was just 0too much to handle. A lethal shooter from outside, ~ood also had a couple of assists, led bis Two Key Games JC Play off P icture To Be Unraveled · The JC basketball playofr picture, a bit confusil)g, figures to be unraveled some tonight when Saddleback duels Palomar and Cerritos taJtes on Santa Ana. The Saddleback-Pa&Qmar tilt (at Riversld~ CC> will settle the Mission Conference's No. 1 entry into the state tourney while the Cerritos-SAC game may decide the South Coast champ-if Santa. Anaw~·. . -A Ce · victory would force another ga e between the teams, regardless of the fact the Falcons wotild have beaten Santa Ana twice. A Cerritos victory would also delay the South Coasl wild card tourney (featuring the second through fifth place teams) until a week frorfl tonight. Ir Santa Ana wins tonight, the wild card -CRAIG SHEFF tourney begms Saturday. Meanwhile, Orange Coast needs a victory tonight at ML San Antonio to tie the Mounties (or fourth place. An OCC win would match the Pirates against Fullerton in the opening wild card playoH gam e . A loss tonight by Coast would mean a ,game against Santa Ana or Cerritos. . And if Saddleback loses tonight, the Gauchos would host San Diego CC Saturday night in the first round of the Mission wild card system. H Saddleback wins tonight, it would face the South Coast runnerup in the opening round of -the state tourney, Wednesday, M arcti 15 at Long Beach Arena. That's a 7:45 p.m. game. . Here's the' lime schedule ro~ the state tourney: • • :• T~ ••ACICIET ~::.· ....... -Metre .... t c•at.rsll .. 11) .... •O.W .... I. L-' ~.M,-6Mfllffll CM He. 1 (CYl'"SS) YS. ~--N.-,.-l. .~4:1S ... ~.-Me. 2 n. s-11t CNll He."""' .......... c.m ... 1. LOWE• 8•ACKET ' 7:0 ,,lft.-Mlul ... H•. I ISd•l ... dl H ~rurl n.s.lllc.stHe.I. ::~~::t:.-~=.~·s1'a-:!' ~ ~ 81tr1Mtrah1. Y...., .... I. '1l1• '-""~" C.I .... l (LA SMlllw9lt LACCI ft, c-IM.....,. No. I . , ·Marty Blackstone has r e- gned as Rio Hondo College's &otball coach, confirming an fem in this column two months tiigo. Blackstone was one of the IJielter JC coaches around, win· IOng five SoCal Conference titles lo eight yeara. He had a 52-25-1 re- cord. c Blackstone's successor win come from bis stafr, which in· eludes Al Prukop. Bill Douelus alJd Clint South. a oo lierldatb. a former Golden West Collese pUcMna standout, tossed a three-hitter Monday In leadlng Oral Roberts U . to a 5· l seasoo-'bpenlng boelpall win over Southern MetbOdlst. Meridith, who was 10-1 at ORU Jast seuoo., struck out six and did not allow an earned run. Tbe &.-0. 175-pound senior lefty prepped at Bolsa Grande HJgb In Gardea G.towe. tJNBELI EVA-BLE STAT DEPT.: Saddleback had 40 more s hots than Riverside {106-66) Saturday rught in RCC's 112·111 overtime upset b asketb all victory. The Gauchos connected on 45 of them (42 P.ercent) while RCC hit 38 (SS percent>. Riverside won it at the free throw line, 36·21. SKIPPIN' AROUND: UCJ freshman .basketball player Rick Jurk is. the son of Don Jurk. an assistant footbal> coach at El ~mlno College ... rormer Golden West standout Doug Moll is the No. 1 pitcher at. UC Sula Barbara. Moll recently defeated the University of Arizona, firing a two-hitter ... Long ·Beach CC quarterback Samoa Samoa. a lefty, will tran s fer t o Washington State. Rio Hoodo College finished the basketball season with a 3-20 re· cord , losing its final 18 games. Rio's last victory was a 65-64 de· cision over Orange Coast. . . In co n trast, OCC defeated · Pasadena CC (68-65), a team with a 24-6 record ... Southern California JC teams have won the s tate basketball title lh" last 14 years and 21 out of 26. Mat Tourney In limbo SAN DIEGO-Lack of a liat>iU- ty insurance policy may cause cancellation of the California Staie CIF wrestline champions.hips at San Diego State University Friday and Saturday. The existing polic)&.,.was terminated r~ently , leaving the wrestling championships in much the same situation as a year ago when a last-minute Wl· derwriter was found to cover the meet. As of Tuesday aft.emoon, no new carrier bad been found to handle this year's meet and Bob Stewart. an administrative as- sistant· for the state CIF office, says the -~~Hnay be cancelled. The deadlittf for such a decision is today. . The U.S. wresUing federation and the company that handles· major auto racing events, are being contacted to find an un- derwriter in order to stage the championships. Nitte Orange Coast area wrestlers are involved lo the tournament thal..ls scheduled for Friday at San Diego State. Rustlers Bombed Jn Oie first half, as LA Southwest rolled up a S..38 advaotace, the winners made 28 of 83 attempts from the field for ,. atanerinl ft.a percent ac· cUJ'acy. • fte=-B.U.. lolt the tebomMf. ln• tatne, 54-32, and cop~lude tbe ••a.tan with an over'IJ re·' cord of lJ.17. • L~ Southwest ~ovea on to tho aecond rounct of tho pl1yoff1 wlth a 21.a ncord. ~ ...... tt11> ....... ...... tfttal .... '. ,,. ~ 't '" C'illftllef t I t 6 .,..... 61111 Melt t 1 It ........ t1 .... team In rebofuiding (11)' and jumped and controlled the center tips. In the racehorse tilt it was a gam, of streaks as Capistrano Valley trailed, 8-0, led 24·16, trailed 44-41, led 53-46, trailed 68·63 and took 'its la.st lead at 69-68 with 2:56 left. That was on an 18-foot shot by Bob Charles, the Cougars' standout who connected for 31 points. But St. Monica's zone took ats toll in the next few moments u the Cougars' out· side game went sour and quickly, behind Cwho· else?) Wood, St. Monica jumped to a 74·69 advantage. Bob Cbarlet bit from outside again, but with 1:22 left Wood made a pair of free throws with fre,hman Cam Bryant on the Capo bench with his filth foul. Bryant had 18 points, and com- bined with Bob Charles, offset Wood. Charles made 14 of 28 from the field, Bryant9of ts. The last gasp was with 12 secon<ts left as coach Paul Smith's Cougars, trailing by a 78-75 count, sent Bob Charles hurdling inside with hopes of a three-point play. He collided six feet from the bucket, the shot ·was off-target and the refs ruled it an offensive foul. Charles left the game with his right knee ban~ed up and the verdict was Bealed. Despite the losa, the. Co~a~ went out in a blaze of glory. Capo made 35 of 75 from the field (46.7 percent), while SL Monica hit 33 of 68 (48.5 percent). Chuck O'Halloran bad 12 clutch points, Bill Skiles added eight points. and a couple of steals to ignite a brief rally and Robin Charles played an all- round game. Mike Dunivin 's de--· fense limit.ea St. Monica-•s ef- fectiveness inside, too. St.~lal ""'""' Wood II I J 4' NHI 2 I 0 S Wrobll<lly 3 0 0 6 RkMt. • 2 2 10 Oreoovlo. J o I • Brendon 3 3 1 • Merq1M1 0 0 J 0 Tolela JJ 14 II IO ' C7rlC...Valley .. It ..... R.O..rltt 1 0 0 t 8. Cl\erltt H l l JI Fene1t9a 0 0 J 0 O'Hl llOfAO S 2 0 11 Dunlvln l 0 • 4 BryM!I • 0 S 11 S .. llH ) l J I Totals 35 1 11 11 ken .., Qllet11tft S1.M<>nlc1 \~l>'"r•no V111t1 •• 2' n ,~ " n n 11-n JEFF FRAZER (32). BUCK REYNOLDS (22) BATTLE FOR BALL FOR HVC. BVC QUiDtet Eliminated Hunlingtorl" Valley Christian's 1977-78 basketball campaign came to a close Tuesday night at Anaheim's Canyon High where Lutheran (Orange) High dealt · the Conquerors a ()0·54 defeat. The victory sends Lutheran in- to Saturday's ClF s mall schools cha m plonship finals agaipst Pasadena Poly while HVC ends the season with an '9-6 record. · Coach Bob Lindstrom's HVC <Newport Beach) quintet had a shot at winning late in the fourth quarter, traHmg 55-54. But a mis- sed attempt at the free throw line gave Lutheran the edge and ~e winners connected at the gratis stripe to make it 56-54, then re- gained possession after a missed shot by HVC an<t went to a stall. The tactic worked as HVC was forced to foul and and twice Lutheran connected on both ends of one-and-one situations at, the free throw line. J eH Frazer led all scorers with 20 points, but Lutheran's balance in scoring and r ebound- ing was the difference. F'f azer added 10 rebounds and Kevin King and Buck ReynoldS each contributed 6 assists Wayne Stark was th~atalyst of the Lutheran attac~tb his dunk shot at the end of the third quarter and three-poil\t play mom en ts later keying a lead - Lutheran was not to lose.' H VC IJ4 I (60 I LlllMr• .. fl,.. .. fl ..... Kl"9 7 0 2 1' HIQM 1 J I 11 SltvoMr 2 2 • 6 Laft9ftwl'9. S ! :I 11 Frutr 10 O • 10 H41nMn J 3 0 t R~ynolds s o 3 10 B•o.-courlan l o I 4 Brown 1 0 I • 1.eon1rd 1 I I > Totelt ,. 2 14 ~ $1•-5 a l ll TolllS 24 U t t0 Sce,....,OArt.n HuntlnqtonVel.O>r. 11 u \6 n~ Lult>eran <Orenoitl t II lt ts-40 Gauclws, Palo~r In Showdown Bllttle RIVERSIDE -Arter failing to decide an outright Mission Conference basketball champion in t wo prev ious meetings, Saddleback Jind Palomar Colleges square off again tonight with something more important at stake. \' The winner of the 8 o'clock game at neutral Riverside CC advances to the state junior col- lege tournament as the No, 1 conference team while the loser will have to survive a four-team playoff to enlet1he state tourney as the No. 2 Mi ssio n repr esentative. Ironically, Riverside is the site. or the ambush that kept Saddleback from avoiding such o situation. The Gauchos were upset here, 112-111, in overtime Saturday which forced them to settle for a co-championship. Riverside is also the school that Gauchos coach Bil l Mulligan left a ft er nine su ccessful years to revamp Saddleback's fortunes. In three vears tmder his directioni the G~uchos have posted a 75-2u rec- Qrd, Including a 28·3 mark this season. Overall on the junior col· lege level, Mulllgan is 274·108. His Mission record the past six years is 82·8. Andy Gilmour has likewisa been workin g miracles at Palomar. After losing two of their first three games, the Comets won 22 of their next 23 before fal1ing at Saddleback. 86·66, 2'AI weeks ago. But like the Gauchos, the Comets were also upset victims during the final week of con- renmce play, falltng at San Bernardino, 68-58, last Wednes· day. Co-chamJ>ions in 1977 and again this year, Palomar and Saddleback have spilt their last six meetings. Saddleback's 95-94 overtime defeat in this year's• first meeting was the second of three one-point IQ1ses for the Gauchos. Craig Stahl, Tim Knight, Arti~ Green, Tim Shaw and Rich ('¥1 c E 1 i'a th w i 11 s t a rt for . Saddleback, the state's highest scoring te:im with a 107 .4 average. All five starters, in ad- dition to three reserves, average in double figures. Pirates Duel Mt. SAC Five WALNUT--Orange Coast College's basketball g ame against Mt. San Antonio College here tonight (7 :30) isn't a do-or- dic situation. The Pirates. despite three straight los~es. have already clinched a spot in the South Coast Conference's wild card playoffs. But lt's s till an important game ror Tandy Gillis' crew. A win would leave Orange Coast in a fourth place tie with Mt. SAC, meaning the Pirates would open Saturday's playoffs at third place Fullerton, a team tbey have beaten once this year. A defeat sends OCC to either Santa Ana or Cerritos, teams the · P irates have yet to beat. The wild card play offs will de- termine the conference's No. Z team for the state tournamen~ HVC'S BUCK RIYNOU>8 (22), GABE BROWN (11 ) VIE. Thus, while Saddleback ls coming off a loss, Palomar has won only two of its last four. In addition, a win wout4 ensure Orange Coast of its first winning campaign in four years. The Piritles are 15-13 on the sHson and 5-6 in conference piny. .Goorjian's ·49 N~t Enough recordboob u lbe all·ttme •co~ for GoorJtan as Ver bum Dfl Ing leader In one aeason for any (Loa Angeles) High steamrolled .high school athlete ln Caltfomla. to an Impressive 91.a& victtory The 6-2 aenaatlon scored 49 be.bind a hounding defense-and p&,fnu to erase Elk Grove High'• outstanding ability in every Bill Cartwrllbt from the books direction. wltb a totaf aeaaon output of V.erbum Det Jumped to leads 1,259 point.I In 29 camee lot an of JO-O and J.&.3 Wore Cresctntaa avera1e ot 4$;4 Points a 1ame. Valley made one fuWe 1estu.re. Ooodtan anaPl*I 0.. rword cutttna tbe deficit to 22-15. ....... ~.:IB~~"="' .. nnt 1talf--~h•"ft'Ond .. -"'But f.bal..wu the lut bope u potnu In the lint two periods V:erbum Del, bebln~ Cliff uif lor &bl pme be mlide 11 ot Pr•ttt•a 29 potat1, took tb• '1 fteld ioal attempts and bit 11 Falcons apart. tn the flnt halt ot l1 '~the free tbnw u.... lite wtnnen lbot a ~t lronJ But it 1n1 a flwU'atiq nlCht the field. .. .... -- The 3-A semtflnata Uff found Channel lllands High (Ventura) capturing a 63-62 declsien over Canyon High (Saugus). Channel Islands never trailed and Jed 31:20 ~n the second quarter. yet barely escaped as Canyon narrowly mlued a shot at the buzzer • Score by Qaarten Verbum o.t 22 ~ 2S 22-a Crea. VallQ: 1' 11 11 ~ Channel Is. Canyon • 16 18 14 1$-CI 12 13 ic n~ • ) " . . . HARNESS RACJNG /GIRLS' SPORTS I MISCELLANY THAT'S FAR ENOUGH -Kevin Kin£ (15) drives for a short shot during Huntington DMIP f'llM ....... bJ f'a1rlcll 0'0-11 small schools playoff against Lutheran High of Orange. King scored 14. See story. Page B-2. Valley Christian High's CIF semifi11als Versatile Dand11ran Key In GWC's Title Hopes By DAVE CUNNINGHAM OI IM OMlp l'lleil StMI One word keeps popping up when you talk with people about Golden West College track star Dennis Danduran-guts. He showed exactly what they mean last year in the conference 400 intermediate hurdles pre- lims. Danduran took a terrible spill on t.Be last hurdle and fractured his right arm, but dusted himself ore and later that . Jialtioa Club . . Pl&mEvent The ~ Sid Ohlb afternoon ran a leg of the mile relay, helping Golden West qualify for the championship finals. "I carried the baton in my left hand," Danduran explain~. "That night I went to the hospital for x·rays and th~y said 1 had broken the arm. I thought it was just a bad sprain." Undaunted, be returned with a cast on bis arm two weeks later and ran the 110 high hurdles in the conference finals, clocking 15.S. It WQn admiration from teammates and opponents alike. but didn't win the coveted con- ference !Championship. .. My goal is to win both hurdles events in this year 's con- ference fuia!!:-·: ~anduran says "Jeff Boyd from LA Southwest won the. dou.ble IJ~t year. but I beat him in the dual meet and I think I can do it again." Danduran's bests are 14.8 for the 110-meter higha and 55.5 for the 400-meter intermediates. His 14.8 ranks as ~e third best time ever for a GoTden West athlete. But Danduran isn't a born sprinter. He bas become one of his conference's most versatile athletes by making use of a quality sometimes called in- tesUnal fortitude. · "He's the guts of our team," s ays coach Tom Noon. "He works so bard that everyone around him doe:; the same thing. He's what e•ery coach hopes their kids can be." A graduat.e of HuntingtQn Beach High, Danduran was earning similar praise then. He was voted the schoors most Jn· spirational athlelt! as a senior. Concentrating on hurdles and relays his entire <.1thletic career. Danduran was chosen Hunt · inJ!ton Beach H1gh 's track captain as a junior and MVP as a senior. Last year at Golden West he was voted the team's most improved athlete. "l really didn't have a lot of pure ability when I started." Danduran admits . "But mv speed has improved a lot ovc'r the past few years. l\t y attitude 1s that you go fuU-oul all the time, even in practice." Danduran usually starts the mile relay and anchors the 440 relay. in addition to running both hurdles for Golden West. His coach also believes he could run lM 100 -and 400 well. 1f he.- were needed there. "I prefer the hurdles because il's a gutsy race," Danduran says. using that word again. "It offers a challenge different from regular sprinting." But it was in a different gutsy race -the 440 relay-that Danduran provided Golden West with its biggest victory of the season so far. --;. The Rustlers were locked up with.Los Angeles CC in a crucial meet, and the 440 relay was seen as a key event. - Dandunm ran the final leg. taking the baton a full two yards behind his opponent. Bearing down, be managed to beat the LACC runner at the tape, and Golden West went on to capture the meet. Rain Postpones Events Rain forced the cancellation of nearly every athletic event s~htduled outdoora in the Orange Coast area Tuesday, and m~e rain forecast for today was ex ected to produce similar re. SU ls. ' Most ol the schools postponing track ~ field. baseball and ten~ ~petltiqn reported that new dates for tllo events would be anAounced when the weather . picture beeomes clearer. L&l\ID& Beach Hilb. howeveri bu •lreadt moved its buebal game (at La Quinta of Westminlter) to March 9, and on that date it wlll also play T\Jesday'a rained-out tennl1 match <La Quinta at Laguna Beach). Mater Dei High (Santa Ana> switched its track meet at Roll- ing Hills High to April 10; and baseball games in the Tustin and Newport Eilts tournaments will be played on the earliest date that weather pei-mits. San Clemente's track meet against Saddlehack High, which was being held al Santa Ana coneee's all-weather track, was cancelled after tbl'ee ev~s because of the wet weatJler. Saddleback had swept the 330 low hurdles, woo the 440 relay and went 1·3 ln the 880 before calling the meet. CIFSOO~s Dale FUckinger, c:oacb of UJe Orange· County Volleyball ~b girlt teams fbr Ille past aeveral years, wtll succeed Chuck Erbe as lteact women'• volleyball 0!..'::.u , coach llt t.&e Unlvar&lt.y • Vff'Wffti °" .. ~· Vjllflllt or Southern Callf~a . ............. Cll•nnel l•l•l\Cll •la C111~e11 0,....161 .............. QA=., ......... . ~ .. c.i ........... , 11 Wednesday, March 1. 1978 DAIL V PILOT 83 . Almnitos Alamitos Race Results Racing ·Entries NrTMlfM ""'~1:0 ,.IUT aACI -ON mile P..:e. Cla1m 1no. ~rH 20 Pt•unt Purw Jl.00. (:lttmlnci ll'~e P100 Bold L•-r IToddl; Ph•m Rum PHnuh (LMQO); V•llev Jim IL• Colle), 8Mco franlc IConMllyl, Mornln9 Edition IAlld•rUl\I, Jtflarton Exprt\\ IMISkalll; Mldnlolll Byrd (RltChlt), Wiiii• T KnlgM (GouclrNul SECOND llACI -One mlla P.ca. Stalllon1 a. gald4nQS. S 'l'far olot a. un oer, non·wl,,,,.r ol WOO fir" money QtlU. PurM POOO "•v•n Olracl (Rllcllh I : WalkUano (K...Ol•I. Angry Wave CWllllam\), Annllt'.,.lte (LIQllthllll Mac Dauber !Amos!; l'aclllc Oaut>e• CLa<kayl; Andyl e>.11 IToddl, F.,.., Grand« (Bennett>. THl•D ••c• -Dov mil•. P..:• Cal-lired s v•ars a. u"°er, ,,.,n. -T..UY Aal11, Traci! ~' f'IAST AACI -Or.e mile P..ca. C1 ... ln9 AJI 699• Pur'M \1,.00 l.•\•t'I Lover IP.JI tr Mn Jrl 4 20 l 00 160 Mru •ell e.autr <Crane I MO 7 60 an •v• ... u ""'-4tol 3 IO Time -t 1441\ AIM> re<td R91>larry, Easy Cal, Car•leu RoOnay, My~.,y George, r .. 011 Time S<ratched -Plum Rum Pe•riuh, Jeller\On E•P'Ol U Euct.1 1·L.ltlft Lawr a. •·Miu " ........ T. .... ~·· saCOND "ACE -One mll• lrOt. Clalmlr19 handicap. Pur_te 52,200 wrono K•1 '\I (Goudreau) 6.40 • 60 3.20 C•ndy Lant (Jolmton) U . .O 6.IO Varn Sl•r 14Mowr (WISl\ardl S.40 Time -2.ltl/S Alr.o rated -Myrtery Trio, Reno E•PftlU, ., ...... 0 PrlH, Earl Oa<t, EOgewOOd HanOora No KralehW\ For Area THl"D •ACI -Ont mtl• Pac• Olndlt-All -t C..I O<ed Pur .. U .200 Ka1 .. nu (0.IO'!l•rl L•~l>te ll.OnQo l lllO SlO 110 • 00 110 hO Star Shooter IM.r••etll Timi -l.11 Aho raced ""°Y' Amy, S•n """r•n . Tout" Of Time S<ratched -Exact.a Marv. Cll•lllo f'OU"TH lb.Cl! On1 mite. PIKe. Ctalmln9 !\-leap. All a9111. PurH ,2.200 ' Al Jen 111tty 10.somer I ti 40 6 60 ) 00 Lumber Press (Slavln I 7.to 3 70 JJ's Patton IOoudrtaul 2.IO Time -7162/j AIM> '~ -MY Dough, Peoiuu\ Abbey, A4mbll119 .Hflray, Jum•I Ser ate--Cle lilt• $S ... , .. l •AI Jay1 81tly A I· Lum"' ,.,. •• f'eH Silt.to ,. f'TH •AC« -Ont mile. Pace. Conditioned ICO-tl. S .-ar Old' a. IHI· cler. Purw '2.olOO Wat Mon.ni IC.Ouoruul JJ 00 I -'Cl •IO B C Adoo• tGrundy • ~ l 00 H•t1•• Mtco•o ILIQtllNll I _.,, J 60 Tlrne l ,., S Al•o r•<•d Smooge Oen1 • Armbro Trlco Foa HO<.lld, APl>I~• AHo¥er Sera tc lled A .. opaho, SpHd Str .. m, K•no 1(•"9 SIXTH AACI -One mil•. Pace Clalmo"Q handl«•" All age1, Purse SJ,500 S11trat011 N (Ll(llllhllll 0.ltaOlrect IVallandlnQNlml True Baron (GoudrHUI Tlme-l 17JIS "''° rac•d -ICam.tll, Wiid Sky, Flower Gardon. Sly One S<ratclWKI -El Torenlo, WllllOft FOftl' Two. No«>I• t..o"" U I H<1a 1·Slltre10ft N & ).Dtlt.I Direct, P•lj•~ SEVaNTH AACE -Ont mill'. Pace. Con<llllOl'I ICD·Sf, AH •Cit• Pur .. U,llOO New Water COtM>merl 20 20 6.40 3..0 AdlOS Royal• N ,_, ... , 3.M> 2 40 Hel\Over Oon (Sprl119') a.20 Time -2.18 AIM> raced -9.,._, Ramona. winner of MOO ""' MOMy twice. Mares. l rk.s, purle \2'00. Miu Scoot CCraM), Nurport Flower IBlayloclll, Biiiy II F .. 1 CParryl, Sawmlll Salli. ll.acostal. King King ISuccarottel; Boro10 (Longo); OuoooY Anna (hylaul Monlerey ~ IRatchford) Girls' Sports Klno Jey A, "'-o, CAvallw N !'lo Kratt,., I IOHTH "ACE -Onl mile. P•"· Cl aiming All -c!ff, P\or .. s>.600 Sen11a Colby ~OUaTK aACE -Onl mlle Pa<• Clalmlng handlC•P Maro lO ~rcen1 Purw "°°" Cl•lmlno prlcu lllOOIHSOO. Javelon Mollaw• IL.a Clalr Jrl. Auburn Tioer (Andaf\Ofll; Slane (8la<11,man). R~ JW (MaroMI; Mary B•r Rhond• tOUnMIMICk I: HalCyOl'I Htr1tage ILonoot: At•lla AdlO\ IDaiOmed, J• Beau ITOddl FIFTH aACE -One milt trOI Cl•lmlng llandlC8P Pur~ \•loo Cl•lm•no pr1<es \ll,000 IS,000 Franch Sno*dOll IRatclllordl, Bold Strull ILo~I : Dire Need IGrundyl; Fla.II IV•llandl"911aml. Dulle PeQHu\ IH•rper); M .. ler P•loma tRlcnmoncll. J M Eddi• 18eltllchl; thppp E•Pr•u IWllllam•I. SIXTH •ACE -Onl mllt. Pace. i year old\ I. under WIMffS of OM llUI not mor" INn l ractl 11i. for MOO f1r\I money, ,....,."# 4 tac.ft* purM \3000 B•lboa Hanover IAub1nl; Pub IRatcnlordl ; Bye BY• Victor (Stlortl: J111u1na Bell• IOunntbeell I; Albertallof' IVall.,ttlon<Jhaml; Sp«lal E....,t 10..ltt Jrl. P¥t*• Bay IK ... blarl, KB King ILIQlllll•lll SEVENTH "ACE -0... mu .. Pue Cl a1m1no n.tndl,ap Pu•" '-'SOO c1a1m1no "'"" \IS.~1•.000 Boo Ttmt IAub•nl C••IQ•ncy IOnomed: GYJ>\y S.... (Wi\hafdl. S.nqa BucyrloS lllfflbyl, NIN Ca•411 IAncu"onl, Cookie Mon•ler !P.,rrYI. DouQjtWc>nder ICratWl EIOHTK AACE -Ontmlle Pa<• C•••mtn9 h1ndrc•o M•ff'\ 10 i»•c~n•. Pune \3000 c1a1m11'1Q 1><1<•• "°°° •soo Tuudo W1<11 (Ptrryl, Pat N M•CI•< in• fW1,n1ro J. €Helt H•~ fC,oudr••ul,. Out•\t9nt M•ro•• \l(ufbl•fl. Luc•y HONG IAub1nl, Andvs Raur (Lo~I. Goulburn Adoos 'L•clalr Jrl, Golde" Jim lCr•Ml NINTH AACI! -()lw mtl~ P..:" Cl•om•no h•ndlcao Pune '3>00 p 11m1no P<•<tl \~•soo EdQ•wOOCI OutM (Ml\•tlll; Uri< Monb•• IGouoruul, Lisbon L•d IOt\Om•rl. Spill Pea ((1111 1. YnQ•"-Y IGr-yl H•llr•POC>Pln A '"""bltd, Sia< O..c~ IKUCo•l. (;eo•c;Pan Bay (Lacoste I Coast Area Sports Calendar .. ·-y(~ll 8••-•lball-()<-C.0.\1 Coll- Al Ml San MHWO COllf'Q" Cl .>II.I; \-•Odl•b•<• CoU•9• '" P•tom•,. ColleQe •t Rlv•"•O. Ctty Coll-111 VOll•Yball-E\tenua .11 University Ill. S•n Bernardi"" Valley College ••Orange c;.p.11 Coll-(T:JO) Glrls bUl(e1ba11-0r•noa Co.nt Coll-at SM D•aQO ~a 16 p m. I GlllLS aASttET8ALL SUNSn LeAGUI Vanltf MarlN WI !al l'\OL Vlll..., Fovnlaln Ve11ay-Jody Bouin IS, Jiii Blnln 1, Lonof••-7, Be•oen •. WyclnowSll.I 11, Ball., S, WOOd •. Marln•-tlrawey f , GHl••r u. Nulltr 2. Schhietar 6, WHton 20, Gibbs l. Hayata 1•. Hall11ma: AMrlna, •1•. Hte. ••acll (116) (11) .... mlMI., HuntlnQ1on Beacll KOfl"O -ooy1e H. Burrow! 22, Locll.ll•rt 11, T-n~...s n. C.Oy 12, Wutmlnstar -J. Ondlcs ll. O. ()nd IC s 6, $.aftden I. Helf time: Hi.-ollnoton Bea<ll, 58-1. •• ._ IOI IJtl Newport .._PClr1-C.lllCar1 2, EcMarMch I. Span91w 1, WOiie 4, Horn u. Rusell 2, Heul\2. Edison-"-' I. Sanctvllltf'I 2, ,,_.Y., "· ver1 .. 1an 12. Ellnl 1. Hlllllme '"-11~23. ~lerVar~p Mari..a t•I 14tl "'a. V•lley Ftn. Valt.,.._..,.,,. •. DHIOft 11, ,.,.., verwn 'l. "'"'•· Marl11a-6erry 11. Bohm to, Burri• l, Fwrlllo«. Ve-7, ......,..., t. HOU9" 7. H11111me· _,,.., 21-20 ••i-Utl WI H--1 Newport·Her'ldree I. Parker l , StanlOfl l ,·Mc:Gn.11 •. T.Snyt»r 1, Mc Graven•. McGrall 2 Edlw~ler'--2. Cavall•o 2, Carrol I . Bt-rt l, VOl'I Lut.tOW 7, ~llllm•n l, Rict>a•Clr.on 6. McDaN•d • H•ltllme Edison 1• IJ CENTURY LEAGUE IE1t.1Mla OU IJ41 ,_11111 Eua11cl1-F,.ancr •. Hymu •. ThOmpson 11. J.,,,;,.,.. 10, Oon1941n 2. M<NamM •• McF•rl-• Helftom•· ~1121·"· JwolwVanlty lllMClll WI lal ~..Wit E 1tanc11-~ncllay IS, 811ytu 9, Slmpwn •· Mark ll, t.on9flefd 2, Camtton 2 Halftime: ~11111, 17·1'. ACADEMY LEAGUE Vutlty Wllit. Cll. C.SI IUI H .. t. V•llep Cl!. Ow•"-Hunt•n9tOl'I va11rv Cllrhll•n- Potlm•n •. H..vtc~ 21, Wnl II Halltlme. WNttltr, 10-17. Aeou•ahon '1-41 S-lwt..e ..... Vanity Matw Doti 1a 1 IUI c:-,...1, M.._ !>to-ell U, Bautnaft 13, Gate 9, APO 4'u1 6, Uranacll U. Mf!Mar 11. Wilmot 10, Dauer 6. t-11v-8rodPflc.-c. M eo.,.,.. s. Fiiiet 4, F-U, J. Sc""'ot 2, Wall6 Halltf .... ; M.ttw ~' ., IS . ,,.....,. Varlltv MatwOotl , .. , <•c:-ni .._ ...... VanllJ t.ullltt.,. (Or.I (4') 1111 lrvlne Irvin~ Ybarre 2. Oudman u. Patchell 2 H•lftlmt• LUTfltr.,, 77 ... JIMIW Vanity LwtN ran IUI 1 .... 1,.. ti lrYIM-GI~ •• Nonn•n •• Wright 7, Swenson I Hallllm•. Lutlltran. 12·7. SOUTH COAST LIAOUE VA"SITY T....,.,.y (-cll JI Minion 1 .. 1 1441 GOlta Mau B•!UllWlll-<:IF 3-A ...... 111na11" C:01taMMa--OtVOen1,And••son2. Loflg Beacll Arena INarlh of Krlllorl•n I. l<..,,,,.dy IS, Olelz~ s. Rtver•ldt '"Ugland at 1; ~ne.na v• Doyle 2, lletd l, Wallace 2. Covina at 1.01., • • Mlu\on-+4trshbef9•r 26, Salmon Sw1mm1"Q-Ghallay al SadCllebaek '· B••uorey 71, C..rrOll 6, Roton1<0 •· 11 pm I; PCM <IWmplonsnl~ at Hallllma: Mlulon l~1'. Belmont Plau. Girls ba"e11>.t11-conin. 091 Mar 11 L-euna Be.en, MlulOn Viejo at San Clemente, unlw~ty at D..,• Hiiis, El Toro •t GOltll MeM, E•I-. at F.,...t4Mn va11..,. WestmlnS1ar •I Newl)orl Harbor, HuntlnqlOfl Beach al MerllWI tall .. 11; Golden w..t co11999 at Fwlttt1on lnvllallOO'•I; Estancia at El Modin• O :lOl; floury el Wtw o.i (71; LllMrtr Crtrlsllan lit &ethe! Olrfftlan U >CH; Hunllnoton Vall-v Cllrlsllan al HerltaQe U;JOI; Ger°"' GtOW at Ocean vi.w C4:l0). GlflS 91'-lln-T\ltflfl et lfunt• l"OIOl'I BNdl QI; Menne et o.roen Grove Ill. Glrls swlmmlna-cr.ellay et 5addlaf>e<k Collevt ltl. Volley~ll-N•Wt>Of"t Narbor et Unlv.,•111' (7). ,.,..., (MlorcltJ) Wrt11tllno-5tate pr'fP meat al S... Ole90S111e. Soccer-Cl,. 4-A end >A llMls. Swlmmln9-Sar1 Clemente at Monie 1/111• 1nv1tallonel lln•h (J: IS); HUnllnglon Buch •t I.a Oulnl• (l:ISI; Ceplstr-Valley vs Elsinore II M••ouarl" Center U :1s1;•oowpev at Cost• Mts• U: UI; OcMll Vi.w and II-P•k al Rancho AlamltM <l: !Sil LB WllSOl'I et EA111111n U: 1Sl; San Diego Meta at Orange CO..! CoH41911 ll:)OI, PCAA at lklmonl Plau. ear .... •t Mar (67) 1111 El Tera Coron• d•• Mar-Geo11g•I 21, Torr•• 16. Ro ... 11 11, Esooslto 1, ~ t, °""""""""I, Hellloln 7. El Toro-&atn 1•, Onls I. L.akff 6, Y°""I 1, R~ 2. Halltlme: Corona».-. S.e Q......-00 (tJ) Uflfwnltr Unlwnlty-Unlerllalter S, E. C-r >. Gor-.1. .. 11.er 1. San CIHntnt.-0.kM 8, Johnson •. Uribe u. kl1111 2, R-•mp s. 0Hlclson2. Hel"lme: SlnClame!M, l:M, L...-aMCllOCICJllO..Hllls Dana Hiiis-Miiier 11, Petterson 11, Nlebla 2. Fe~ 21. 8er9!1rom 1. L•oune Baecll-Mlnllln 1, RoberllOl'I 7, PMlllOn 2. Hin-6, Erlekson 12, Hadley•· H•lttlma: 0.-.. Hiiis, ,c.11. Baseball JV BeMINtl Newpwt Ill CS> Ill MedMa Ntwpbrt-J onu 2b, •·1·1·0; Wulcott 11, •·0-2·2; Johnson P. A·O-t-1 ! Selvy lb. 2-0. H>; Kutnn P<, ~I Hullbllnl lb, ..O.l.O; Sterr ct, 4.0-3-41 Holchltl• rf, !+<Ml; Smllll p, O.M-0; AtfnMn pl\, 1~; Slerttman It, C>-1-0.0; Btr ..... y c, 2~; Culwr c, •·0-0-0. Basketball -El MOdena Newp0rt r II • 003 200 0-S 4 I 100 002 0-3 11 l JUHIOltVA"SI TY IOoudru u I 9.«I 3.00 ? .•0 Cetta Mau WI 11., MIMielo Cost• Mew-Lux l. B911sc~ I. M<O.,.•n IRatclltordl 2.40 J 20 Bay FllQlll IPeterwn Jr> l llO t 1m .. -2.1n1s U*ll f , CralQ 17, NI_. f MIHlon-Cat• l, Larkin 1, S.nchu f, Rud<Nlr 2 Hallllme; Costa Mesa ll~. Al\O rK«I -Tlllt1...,s Ba1t. SenQ<t L••I•, Mhter Fallacy, Try•• Gr•ndt , AOdles Boy c:.r-~l Utl El Tart Corone-Slov911ton 11, Spinn 6, 'Thomf)10n •. Blalcenore •. O•vl• •. OQcton •. !>cratched -Good and True, HelluPC>PPin A U l:Ucta J-~9a Cell•f & •· McQufftl, f'alfUllUI El Toro-111ey I , Clpollll a. NINTH aACIE -One mllt. Pao. GonzalH 6. l!hly •. Arrovo J, Sliva l . HellUme: Corona 22-17. Clelmlng handicap. Pu••• M.000 Elev•nt SIM" Saft c1-• 111> 1171 Unlwnlly u111na llMcJo (Ml (12) Dav Hlllt Dan• Hllls-Fo•'Hlllf' 10, Goode 6, IMerohn I 11 20 8.60 1.00 AMOUll<er (Aubin) 5.20 6.40 Royal RICk\W.y (Kuebl ... ) 5.IO Tlme -1.17f/S Tutlle6. Lagun• Baacll-Robert\on •, Taylor 6, Welllk 6, Olvorak s. Jof\nlOft 1', HI-3, Reclwllt 2, Forbf!s 2. Al\o raced -Kahlua Adlos, Thunderstorm A, ~awlat, "'"'"'' Scratched -Windy Way, L11W1rated !Ady, Prudanl Jim SJ E aana 1·El..-M MM' A & •· Halltlma: ~Beach, tMl. • ..... ...,..,,,...,us.• Zirbel Honor.ed Todd Zirbel, Golden West College's leading scoret and rebounder this basketball season, was selected to the All-Southern California Conference first team by the circuit's coaches. A 6-5 sophomore, Zirbel was third in the con - ference in scor ing (20.1) and sixth in rebounding (9.5). He tanks seventh on Golden West's career scoring ladder (800) and fifth in total rebounds (382). Most valuable player· honors went to Santa Monica's Matt Jordan, who averaged 25.4 points in conference play. First Team · Player, College Todd Zirbel, Golden West Matt Jordan, Santa Monica Rory Lovell, Cypress Ray Beer. Cypress Chris Thomas, LA Harbor Lorenzo Gordon, LA Southwest Second Team Lee Emanuel. LA Southwest Chris Adams, Los Angeles CC Ron Taylor. Los Angeles CC Bernard Sampson, Los Angeles CC Daryl Theus, LA Harbor Robert White, Cypress LliSI DlllCT Ht. 6-5 6-6 6-8 6-7 6-5 6-6 6-0 &-3 5-6 6-6 6·1 6-2 ~~= 1978 FIAT LliSI SPICIAL LliSI A 121 2 Dr. C-.. / ;~~:.·J!.~~A=::r ... ~ $6954 Total of P'("'"" 11&03 4f Tolal On MO '34111. • OVER 200 FIATS in Stock when buying a home ~ ~ thJtfJ flfJYlP/ t/wt; nteefJ f11R!P)j& ... • WHAT YOU NEED IS 16assurance'' Yr. So. So. So. So. Fr. Fr. So So. So. So. Fr. So. "HOME ·\the ASSURANCE GO~ ....... euvms~-----­. • INSPECTION/ Jt709 S. c-t tfWlMY ~~ So.Ugim.C1mT7 114/83700 ~----75tlt t.Atttlllle/tSOJty ----......... BALLY OF SWITZERLAND The finest (eattiier and craftamanehlp. Kiltie allp-on with raleed moo t~. f!4appa Cllf. TM N~. or SOne. N 8 to 11'-~3 "'"~to 12-13 OM..YPU.OT Bert ea AchieveS ~ecord ., Bertea.. CorporaUon of .,.,_~e said it achleved • Tt1COrd operattitc l'ellWls• kfd 1977. • • Salell and eamlnga in the fourth quarter of '1~'77 also ~ere the, qnlhest for any ~uarter in the company s his· tory. ' For the year ended Dec. 31. sales increased ·81 percent to $46.239,000. •'Net income rose 34 'percent to $2,361,000, equal to 88 cents ·per share, compared with $1,1~1,000 or 65 cents a share in the prior year. : ' I . ' . In the fourth quarter. net income Increased to $8&1,000, equal to 31 cents per share, from $655,000. CAP.ITOLIZE WITH CAPITOL CAPITCX.IZATIOO MEANS TO ~OOV£RT CAPITCl TO OOH ., "°" -SUIDD 10 SS0.000 ca.I\. ano ~ own a ""-0t 01-p-1;' l»cl '"' °' r>OL ... C""1TOI. HC>Wl l.OAN • ..,..noe to cao11ot1<• y...., equity lnlo a .-..,.. - -and "*'OIY-- .. e C~pitol Home Loan One OI c.J,f 't l61Qe'll L°""Jl<ot.0<eo-flf- C •" on• ot o"'.........,. e"'"'"""'"''' IOCllllCI Olf>Cft !Of ltl41 I.CU, We'd Really like to help COSTA MESA lllOHwbor 81..i 7 1415<4~12 ANAHEIM 23:11 W uncotn 112C 714177~50 LONG BEACH 5474 E. Diii ""° 8MS. ~ ... 213/42-1·9333 _... .. .... "' Wed~. Mtlrch 1, 1978 . . Business· 'Your Plaee' Young Adults Get Mag Petition Filings Listed ~ . Requieill for. a To;Wn · · Mining Firm DemolUhing Lark, Utah II NEW YORK CAP) -.. Your Place." a new ma,uine' for men and women in their 20s, bit tbe ne-wsstands Tuesday.' It la published by McCall's Publlshinl Company. . LAU. Utah (AP) -Wltbx.mecott Copper's The foUowbafpetitlooa alas b .. IJS loomina in tbe a.cQround, a wldO-tt in than what she has been PUSDI for foul' in· ter~onnec:t.ed unit.I In ber motel·llb •~ JdcCalra..aaid •!Your Place" wu aimed at both sexes, because the •'toualJ questions youag adults face are for the first tlm-.r111&. same for both sexes." , for bankruptcy have lier Jate IOI watdMld u a bu1kJomr aboDd..away been flled lo federal the tat tnces of a small aputment building court lo Sota.ADA: aot'091 tlMt road trom ber home. It wu tbe first Ao BT~ar-old man who llves-near bu- vowed to stay tn Lark "'no m.uer wtaat.•• Ute womaneaid. The ft.nt i.elue includes articles oo hand!· {og job stress, the differences between the sexes in athletics, a woodworking manual, bow to meet people and the tax costs of marriage. • oec. tt blow ill tlal dlmCllltlcm ol Lark. .......... ~CMeot Eclwl11 ............ "11 PwbiW-11, H1111tl119te11 aHcll, llH llthtl lllllllHtt.e f//I -.zn Mel a.eta of Iii .... "Your Place" is published bimonthly, but McCall's said the maguine would go monthly as soon as~. -TllOMH Corpe11t1r, UU6 Soretil110, L..-HUii. Ml lttt.d llollllltl" Of llt.-. ... _.. of ...... -ltlcllord IC. Nowll1111, , .. 01 Fl ....... i-, ~ 8eed\,. Ml I ..... 11111111._ ol lda,M .... Mllltaof ...... . ~'1 -W'llllernJ. ei.o-Sr~~ dolno ----~ &ledrk: Sell ~ UI LO ~ $M Clffl'lente, Ml llst.ed ll*llU.. of $1>.251 .......... wu.tL -... ,... .. .._... ~·-· 2AOS1 Western Sets S.I.,_ lMll,. MmlDe VleJo. .._ llst· Reduced Fare lld lfallfn .... ~ ........ "' J'fO, JAN. II -Jolwl F,..,.11,. S.0U., 1t01 Wyom. 1119 • .t.PI. 7, Wn1m1Mter, Mil 11$tlldl lfellllltln of •.n• aed oHets of MIAMI (AP) -Western Airlines baa 1.DDOUDced a "no strings" fare that would reduce ticket prices ~tween Miami-Fort Lauderdale and Los Anaeles 35 to 48 percent over regular coach costs. "·°'°· -ltlc:Nrd ~ "-Y• 1721 Ootwlo Ori ... , H!Mtl"OfOft ... Cl!, "" llrted lltillll ..... $1$,27' Wl4 •'-MU of 12,UD. -SMron LA<we Emory, UGI 011,,.. The Los Angeles airline said that it asked the SI •• .t.pt. C. Hufttlngloft BMctl, llH llstff 11Mlt11lel o1SS,17' 8lld ~of $2,6.SI. Marketing Se . . ~ AtOCC A semfna-rtbat" ex· amines modern con· cepts and practices in marketing will be pre· sented Saturday at Orange Coast· College, Costa Mesa. The seminar runs from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in Fine Arts Hall 119. Pre-registration fee o f $10 indudes a luncheon. Registration at the door is $12.50. Checks payable lo Orange Coast College may be sent to Business Management Develo}>ment Center. OCC, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa 92626. Registration at the door will be on a space· available basis only. Seminar lecturer 1s John J. Simpson, owner and presitlent or the Simpson Co., a market· ing /management con· $Ultation linn. . Civil Aeronautics Board to approve the fare, which would offer a round-trip discount or $212 and a "no strings" one·way coach fare or Sl.33, effective April 13. One-way coach now is $204. Miami-based National Airhft es, which' com· petes with Western on the route, said it pro· bably would match the fares. Western's proposed· fare, which would carry DO res trictions, af.lo would apply lo first class and night coach. Those one-way prices would drop 'to $217 and $106, respectively. The special round·trip discount would apply on· ly if the passenger goes west on the day night and returns to South Florida on the night night. Scale. Adopted OAKLAND <AP > A lam eda Co un t y supervisors have adopt· ed a sliding ree scale for Highland and Fairmont hospitals that bases rees on abihty to pay. -Qlrts.,... Paul Kl.NI, l'*M AIQOflQVlft SC., Hvnll"lltOft ~I\, llH tilled ll~lllltt ol $16,1'6 and •n•I• Of $),110 • -Ketlly A.-Kvnll, wme ed· dl',u, Mt listed n.bllltlft of '''·'114 . end ........ S:t,910 • JAN.• -Oenltl ~ O.v1s, 1110 1W• SI., AoL l.-11 ... ~ 8eKll, ,,., "''" l!Mllltle ... .,,..., _ ....u ol vs. JIU6.,. -GJ1De!r1 Y....-r Qdl.IJf741 c::..n-. na Wey, w.,ttnh•st.,., i..s ""flll lleDl lltlu al 111,210 Md -ts Of $111>. -How.rd Art!Mr Pemle, 1'2 Yorillown '--• Cll&Le M9M,, Mil lilt· eel llablUllll ol...., -el9b Of SS,410. ...,._IS -Lonn1 Re1 Peftdleton, SH H•mll tOfl, c:-1.-Mew, IUIS lllt~O 1teDllttift .. G..111Md-U9' '23' Hiit.. H -JOM C. w....-, Uol T .... llft. Apt, 17·0, Co«e #eM, M$ htte<I tlabllltln ol '5.»t.Mll -..... , or $21,150. "l:a." -Ai.ft U. o.rMY, '*161 V-PO•nt L-. Aot. 1'1. Hwrt""'°" 11Mc11. !\<ll 11\teO Heobtllliee o1 .,....., _et • MholM.OIS .. '-R•'tfftOftd Owl• ~. 6101 B•nnod•. WntmlMt•r. Mt """<I ll•bllltiel • t!0-'10 -....U ot u.100. -Petrkl• ,.._.,, ..CO J.-1iw, F-tetn Veit.,, l\n tl«N llaeo4lllt4P\ ol ... ,,,._ .. _olSZ,1». ).... "' .. u -110~ L ~. •IM-" ~· BOO ~ Shell, ~" Cor°""L Or lff, M l-Vi.to. -lilt*! ftO .. , MheftllnotiMlitlhn. -Goft>!*Mr £$<,_ WWl<ft, In<, SU) WM,_, -~~II. N \ h•t.O no.~,-no lleolllllK. -Georoe YHuo Ul'llere, tJO I T-o St • _.,,..,.,..., -llM..o t1•0••1tlnof'1.•1,Mdl'O-~ -Marl• A.~. IUI .Autlin it (0\10 MHe, -hsle41 t-111 ... el l•.l>'• ... -•ofi1,:!c» . Mutual'& bringing in ' ·H&R BLOC~ THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE Now you can have your tax return• prepared free of charge by the nation'• largeet tax aervlce. We'll arrange for H & R Block to prepare your Federal and California income tax return• FREE If you open a certltkiate account for $5,000 OR If you are a MUtuat eaver With an account of $5,000 and n.. MWr used the te,x service OR If ~ htMt prvwtouely used the tax ae~lce and your eavhtga balance has increased by 82.ISOO al nee last Aprll 15, 19n. Tax preparation I• alaopalleble for a modest fiae If you open or malrltaln an eceount in • the amount of $3.000. And the aervlce Includes the "peolal schedulee tor hMnized deduat1on1. 1)9nllon ' Income, aafe of property, lntereet and dMdend Income, lnoome averaging and much more. All backed by H&R Block's fam®8 guatantM. f04' more lnf~on, call your nMtUt Mutual s.vtnga offla.. • Tax Servtce from H&R Bioele. It'• Juat one ot \he many rNeOnt Why your~ lhould be at Mutual S.vlnQf and La&n Meoolatfon • • *'WW you bury ua lf we daa't move out?" the widow, who did not want ber name used. asked a mine ~tive Tu..U, u she hung out her laundry tlae crisp mornln1 air. KENNllOO'IT, tJTAB'S LARGEST industrial -empk>yer. tb1s week be1an teartq down tbe tint U bu.lldblal in this town of 400 people to make more room for illl open pit mine. the largest in the world. Moat wbo live here bave been mlnen or had husbendl work in tbe mine. Ten days before Cbriatmu, the company an- nounced pl.ana to demoliab Lark by the end of A\lluat. Tbe bulldlnp that were torn down Tues· TUE TOWN BAS'OPPDED TO move bomes owned by rnldenta to comp&Qy prope~ in another mininl commUDity not far away, or to bu:y homes for thelr appralaed value. .. I didn't tb.lDk I'd ever live loog enoqh to see Lark go," remarked the 1'fclow. whole miner husband died in 1974. .. 1 guess it la difficult, lVben you're part ot tbe town," Bowen aaid. Replied the widow: .. I guess I'm justaomeone wbo doesn't like to aee cbanae." day -all motel-like apartmems with tbne or four ------------------ units each -bad been abandoned for more than a Pu h year. nc HE SAID MANY RESIDEMrs complained about the abandoned buildings, pointing out pro· blems with vandalism and s-l_ety hazards to children wbo 1Ull llve in Lark. Kennecott says that residents can stay until Aug. 31 in the apartments or frame bouaea that dot the streets of this town, but that demolition may begin sooner on any vfcated dwellin15. Bowen aaid Kennecott wants to make the de- molition ol tbe town "fint claal." He. said tbe grc>lind would be leveled where the" buildings slbod, and sand would be smoothed over the site "to make it lOok like t.be original topography" of this hilly, sagebrush community in so.uthwestem Salt Lake Valley. BOWEN SAID 95 PERCE~r the residents are understandina about Kennecott's decision to demolWl the community so the mine can expand. The widow, who has lived in Lark 18 y~rs , •• , , . said she is looking for another house to rent m a Hes having a working breakfast, a working lu~ nearby town. But she said rents are much higher and a wortllng dinner ••• in between he's playing golf." . ~ Over The Counter MASI> ListiacJs MUTUAL FUNDS • STOCKS I BUSINESS ' ·NYSE eoMPOSfl'E $<lit\ .... Pt~10-C~ ' . \. TRANSACTIONS Wednesday. Milreh 1. 1978 l/N . OAll,..Y Pit.OT B:S ' :Bid by 'Kodak Helps Polaroid ' ls . By MILTON MOSKOWITL Eastman Kodak didn't hlve to challenge Polaroid 1n the instant camera market. But lt did, perhaps for reuoht .Qf pride moro than anrthlng else. The result is a picture not a.tall to Kodak's liltln#. Kodak began marketing inst.ant cameras !n.A,pril 1916. So 1977 wu tha first full year in which tbe two titans Of photography confronted each other across sales eow:aters wllh compeUUve products. THE MAIN BOUT PITTE D KODAK'S Handle against Polaroid's OneStep, eactt liating for $39.95. These tW9 modela account for 75 percent of instant camera sales. The sales figures for 1977 are tn and tbey sbow the OOP· test wasn't even close. OneStep slaughtered the Handle. Polaroid overwhelmed Kodak by a margio of two-to-ene. Kodak's entry into this segment of the pbotocrapJUc mantet proved to be a shot in the arm for instant camera sales, which had been static f<>r several years. In 19'17, 'O.S. sales of instant cameras escalated by 68 percent. Meanwhile, sales of conventional cameras, which don't give instant prints, declined by 4 percent. The result was to yield instant cameras their highest market Money Tree share in history: 40 percent. , In short: the market segment dominated by Polaroid is moving into·· clearer focus; the market segment dominated by Kodak is fading. ~ POLAROID'S SALES CR~ED the $1 billion ma~ last year for the first time. Its profits, approaching $111> million. were also at a record peak. Eastman Kodak has managed to balloon its annuld sales to an all·time high of $6 billion, but it's a profitlea growth. • Back in 1973, Kodak earned '653 million on sales of ti billion. Now that its sales are $2 billion greater, what is lt earning? $643 million. That's equivalent to increasing yot.r sala~y by 50 percent and having less take·home pay. THANKS TO KODAK'S TROUBLES, 1978 ts' shapin& up as a year in which you should be able.o t some goo,} bargains on cameras. A couple of week ·· odak ~ nounced that it was: ' · -Knocking down the suggested ce of the Handle to $34.95. · ··< ,, " -Introducing two new instant cameras, tb.e Cotorburst 100 and the Colorblirsl 200, priced at $44.95 aQd $54.95, to replace its two original instant cameras, the El« and EK6, which were priced at '53.50 and $69.SO. -:-Bringing out fqur new pocket cameras, the Ektra series, with prices beginning at $19.95, to replace thie Tri.mute and Tele-lnstamati~ models, which begin at $22.95. -cutting the price of its X·l5F lnstamalic camera from $19.SOto $14.75. As far as Wall Street goes, it's a .. plague on both your houses." Kodak and Polaroid both sold in the $1SO·a·shalt range in 19'1'2. Polaroid was recently selling for $25, Kodal for $45. . · -Blue Chips Rally, Some Stocks Mixed . • • .. . .. NEW YOJtK <AP> -Blue.chip issues recouped a am all part or their recent losse&-in a mixed stock marjret session today. ~ Analysts sald1 the Dow Jones industrial average's decline-to-a three-year low Tuesday attracted some b~ers looking for bargains despite a generally ne~ new&·•· bacl<grouod. The Dow averaj(e of 30 blue chips, oft 14.12 in two trad- ing days, wasupl.2lpoints7..:J.33. - But losers held a slight overall edge on gainers among New York stock Exchange-listed issues. Trading was moderately acti_ve. Some chart-watching investors seemed to feel that tbe Dow had reached a "support level" at around 740. But analysts noted that the market was still restrained by weakness in the dollar. Sl~blnTla• Spo1l19la1 NEW YORK <AP)· Selat. .. p.m. price end Ml <llitnO* of Ille flllMn mos\ e<llvt N-YIW1t Stoc.k E11c:Nnge -· ltffl"'J "lll-lly al more tNn $1. BeftQuet 8....... 456,500 a~ + \41 S!lftv. GolJ>... ..... laJ.900 ZY, -~ Jeff-PHOt........ nll,100 27\lo -14 Ptr4Mot ........ 221,100 4 ........ . Dot1JlonnAr•P'ftP• HP11' YOrtr<APl FlNt OoOINeMlewr-.if STOCtcS Ooen Hlol\ ~ 0... ~ 30 Ind ,,. ... 141.n 73US 7Cl.JJ+ 1.1 lO Trn 101.)1 102.71 l".41 101.11- IS Ull 10U.S 103.tl l«U1 IO:US• ~s.::-.. ~~.~~~-~:~.,.1·\~· ~~~ ~-::::::::::::::::::::: ~-6.S SCI! • • • • • .. ... .. • • .. • • ... • • 2.Mt,119 Mk1$0uUl .. .. . .. 210,200 1•14 + V. 8rlt Pet.......... 101,100 1:n. -Vo ,...---------------AmTT •• .. •• ... l~ jt1' -:i. 8-1"9 • • • • • • • • . • tto,100 3'Hlt + "" ~t~w':\·::::: I~~ rs~ :!:. ~ S:::Ttllofl .... • OS,400 2tV. ..... ""' ::;,o,,.u:.~·::::.. m::: :~ + ~ :C~~~1;c::. ~:= '~:: : :: NEW YORI( (AP)·'S.'", .. p.m. price •ftd ,... <Mnae of Ille, lflll most e<tlw A~rlcan Slack Eac""'9* l»U«t., ~NIM llM'-Mlly at mote VIM SI. ovOITM .. • ... • • ma v~ + ~ YftlH ... • . • '2,100 ~ + ~ y • .. .. "·'°° ,..... + ~ :f"Pair....... Sl,700 11\lo + '1o ~e o:.... 31,toO "'"' +3fti Cel~mP. .. .. .. .. l6.000 4\lo + ~ Otll<:I» Am...... JUOO t + °" Bodin APP....... auoo s + Vt .S.4'\nette n..... 2•;100 uv. +1111 Tecll Sym......... •22,IGO ,_., + " Whal St~b Did NEW YORK <Al"l Allv•nced Oecllnect Un~ll~ Tot.i Issue "-111911, Hew low' SALES • Tl>ffyl w ... 1 114 ••«> 1 II I 1(11 1 I ..,. '· .... ,.,. ............ ... \ • • ~ ~ : • l . . . . .... . . . .. DAILVPILOT ... TeleVision TONIGHT'S LATES1 LISTINGS' ''I· l>\.t·:st>A' EVENING uoli:StEWa EMERGEHCY ONE1 ' 0 GAMBIT «D TH& BRADY BUNCH The Brll0Y9 atart their wicatlon, .., TH9 ROOQ58 "n ••-ClOnvlct m...,. mlnda ......,.. well uecut- ed f'OObel'lea Ullng ~ ~ looklllg '°' ~ "'*"· m ELE01'RIC OO..l'HV tm) HISTORY OF MEOOO .. DeYtlopnient Of Natlon/S.te. Speir\ .. <II A8CNEW8 UD8 MOVIE *** "The Ww Lord" I (Part 2) (1965) CMt1ton H•ton, Richard Boone. A knight moves to the Nonn s .. .._. end MUIClllMs a town. ( 1 fir.) 0 COHCalTAATION • BEWITCHED Terrorized Darrin It lreed lrom his llQ,l~ eoell end Qe1'9 his old )ob back. I& OllEREASY Gue.ta: cllr9Ctor John c....-......~aena RovltendL Ci) DIMEHSKJNS IN CULTURE Pamela Franklin guests as a teacher terrorized by a student "death squad" on Police Woman, tonight at 10 on NBC, Chan11el 4. "Primate Behavior' CJ) UHTAMEOWORLO "A lgllenistan" ~ MERV GRIFFlN 7:00 C) M8C NEWS 0 UARSCLU8 0 AQCNEWS 0 e0wuNGFOR DOLLARS tD ILOVELUCY Lucy trlee to crash Rlctly'a mghtcll.lb ec:1 With a )lmw- bug danoe. a> "DAM-12 fD MACNEJL / LEHRER REPORT Ci) CREATIVE STITCHERY "Preview" ()) TOTEL.L THE TRUTH \ 7:30 tJ WHeH HAVOC ' STRUCK ''TN Cillftdren Of Aberfan" The atoty OI Iha lllllege of Abertln, a ll1INng town thal euffenld one of th8 ""°''* ll'llnllng dlMlters of alt uma, and It all hap-'**' abo"9 ground. CJ SHANANA GuMlr. Martha RINMIS and the Vlllldeltu. 0 NEWLYWED GAME 0 MATCH GAME P .M. 0 .JOKER'S WILD tD Tl1E BRADY BUNCH Jan conaldera '1eraelf • loser. a> ADAM-12 Malloy and Reed 111a h0$!1 to Iha ,,_ polo<;e commis- sooner on night waleh patrol fl)L..A.l~E Channel Lblhafl• e KNXT (CBS) Los Ang~s I . 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Ange s U KTLA (Ind) Los Ange s 0 KABC-TV (ABC) Los ngeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Die~ 0 KH.J-TV (tnd) Los Anget,_es ®l KCST (ABC) San Diego tD l(ITV (lnd.j Los Anileles Cb KCOP-TV(lnd) Los Angeles fD KCET-TV (PBS) Los Angeles '1:> KOCE·TV(PBSJ Huntm9'on Beach ·The tnlrd part ol a mini· • aeries on taxation I• Pf"9«1led. m STARBOARD "Tha Mika Pattaraon Bend" CD $128.0000UESTION @) FAMILYFEUO 8:00 f) (I) O<X.DIE Goldi. Hawn plays hoaleM to such vu-ta • George Burna, Iha Hartani Gtobettot1en, Shaun C.S- aldy eno John Ritter ~ an hour of mu9lc and oomedy. CJ ORIZZLY ADAMS "The Greet Burro Race" Mad .l.ac le duped OUt'OI his pat donkey by• long- llma friend (Jaclc Elllm) and nanieala. 0 MOW: * * * "HorM Feathers" C 1832) Tha Marx Brotharl. Groumo takee ~ u ~t of • college. (1 hr., 30mln.) U l!Dl EJOHTIS EHOUGH "Long Nlght'I Journey Into Day" Mambers or the Bflldford lamlty are lorced to taka ·Shilts to keep Abbey awalca for 24 hours alter the ldl and IUffen a · concu11lon • ..; Mlchaal Thomas, J.ck MclCulloch ~star. CJ MOVIE *** "Th• Hor•• Sotelltn" (1t&t) John w~. WlllMI Holden. Union Cal. Ottenon clrtvee .. 09Wllry unit thrOUgh T~ to LoullleNI., erl8blllO UnlOn "*' to read\ lllfety. (2 In.) • OAAOl. llURNaTT AH0nu&!N08 g) MOVE •••~ "Cheyertne Autumn" (196-4). Jamee Stewwt, Richen! Wldmaltt. A tribe ot ~ lnch-ane in)grete trom ltlalr t>w- ren reeerv.tlon to thllr hOme ground. ~Iva.) GD NOVA ··n. Oteet Wine Revellr tlon'' The _.... of the ll"IP' wtl6cfl have bllftled Wlnenlllk... and dMI! .. lor thoulands of ~" at• unl<>Oked. ~ AHD BABY MAKES TWO The p<oblefne f*led by unwed teenagera wtio we pregMnt and th8 poeelble eoultlorte to their pllgtrt -exemlrted. 8:30 m. CAOSS-WITS G OVEREASY Gue111: director Jolln C-wt-, eotr-Gerta Rowlllnda. 9:00 f) (I) C88 MOVIE "A Deeth In Canaan" (Premiere) Paul Clemans, Stalanle Pawera. ~­ lcut f0WflllP90Ple riM to the det9l.e of • ~ accuMd of murdering hit mother. D BUCK SHEEP SOUADROH "Fighting Angela" Pawf, the Bi.ell Sheep and even the nureee mu.i man the gur. a llwaOlng enemy COITVftel ICICie edvanoe on the compound. 0 Ill CHARUE'S AHGEl.8 "The Jede T,.p .. Charlie u-the Angel• plua hi• own Pflceleas COl*:llon of lade to trip ue> an ICl'obetlc i--thief end klller. Berry Boatwtd(. Lui'-Tul11d, Dirk 9enedlc:t ~ ,,.,_ tD MERV GRIFRN f:El GREAT PEAFOAMANCE8 "Count Dracula" }'olt., ... Ying London. Jornllharl Hark« encounters Count OrllOUle In a cutla on St. G~·a Eve. Louis Jor- den portrlY9 the Infamous count (Pert 1 of 3) 6l) AU8T1H CITY LIMITS .. s,_ Goodman" Good· men performs aonoa trom his MW album, .. well 111 PMlhltl. She's 'No Joan of ·Arc' t' • . Writer Philosophic About 'Canaan' Cutting By TOM JORY • N EW YO RK CAP> -They left • lot of Joan Barthel on the cutt-ing room floor when they filmed hec book, "Death in Canaan," /or television. But the woman :whose reporting made a cause telebre of what might have been . •n obscure murder case says lfiat's fine .. nth her. ' ~ "I never wanted to be a Joan er Arc in this thing," says Mrs. Barthel, Who insists it was a s mall group or people in Ca naan , Conn. -and not herself - who 'saved young Peter Reilly from yea rs in prison. Mrs. Barthel's article in New l imes magazine in February >f 1974, detailing Reilly's engUly interrogation after the >rutal killing or bis mother, his !onfused confession and almost mmediate aUempt to withdraw t, certainly brought national at- ention to the case. "BUT THOSE people, they always were the real story, they Ner e terrific," says Mrs. Barthel or the families and in- ii viduals who spe~t-Mng hours at Reilly's :iide -and raising money for his defense. .. And of course, there was Peter's story." says Mrs. Barthel, talking now of the made-for-TV movie. "Death in Canaan.·• to be aired tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. "T he third angle was me. And in the edit-. ing, they found they were trying to say too much, tell too many stories, and it was mine that was expendable." Actress Stephanie Powers worked hard, Mrs. Barthel says, playing Joan Barthel, only to see much of the part cut from the final version. Paul Clemens, himseU not long out or high school, is Peter Reilly. BARBARA GIBBONS had been dead near~ five months and her 18-year-old son was fac- ing trial for murder when the case, almost by chance, caught Mrs. Barthel's attention. Over the next several weeks, the writer spoke with dozens of thosr! involved in the case, listened t1J1 hours of tape record- ing and spent days on end in the courtroom. "None Qf us ever thought he would be convicted," she re- calls, .. and I actually enjoyed covering the trial. And when be was convicted. it was ju.st such a blow •• ·.it had just gone on so long, we we.re all so weary. n But Reilly's co1tviction for. manslaughter.opened a new phase of the case. Because of a judge's gag order, Mrs. Barthel and others who covered the case were teluctant to discuss it in , print beyond what went on in the courtroom. BUT THEY concentrated their errorts in another direction - bringing into the case people li}<e playwright Arthur Miller, film director Mike Nichols, writer William Styron. A new at· torney was hired, n ew evidence uncovered and. eventually, a new trial ""8s ordered . In November er ·1976, Mrs. Barthel's book on the case was published. The film version was completed last Nov. 8, and two weeks later, charges against Peter Reilly were dismissed. Mrs . Barthel went to California in October 1976 as a consultant for the film - Tom my Thompson·, like Mrs. Barthel a former Life magazine writer . and Spence# Eastman. wrote the screenplay. "THERE WAS no reluctance for me for making a movie o( this,'' Mrs. Barthel says, ·'because of the people who were involved. I knew about the pro- ducers. Bob Christiansen and Rick Rosenberg, who bad done 'The· Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman,' and that was great. ... Mrs. BWel, who put so much of herself -and her family - into .. A Death in Canaan," laughs about ·her relatively minor role in the film. "What I learned was that a film is always the director's. I liked what the director did. but if I didn't, it wouldn't have made any difference." AN EVENING WITH ELVIS-TONIGHT ON ST.AGE IN CONCERT PETE WILCOX .•• "INcoMPARABLE::• .••• "LIKE AN tNCAEOIBLli AEINCAAN~TION . . OF 'THE l(INQ' " . TONl&HT ONLY 4r WED. MAR. 1 st 8:00 P.M TUBE TOPPERS ton."'* • pienllt'• hande .,. rnutltlll9d In en accl- denl, a ooetor 11enaj)lfonlt , .. handt of another !Mn ~to Illa wrlat&. (1 ttt~ 30 min.) 0.. "'*'...,,. ..... al. ~ dM1h ,..,... wMli en ex.Nut.• womM """"·~-...... ~~In VenlOt. CBS fj 8:00 -Goldie Hawn Special. The former Laugh-In comedienne re• turQ.s to her TV roots for a special with George Burns, Shaun Cassidy and the Harlem Globetrotters. g) MoVIE * * "The 8eor'IC Of TM Purplll Relf" (1INIO) .Jeff (1 Iv .. 66 min.) 2:608 MOVll CBS fJ 9 :00 -"A Death in Canaan." The dramatization of a true story in which a group of townspeople rise to the defense of a t~nager accused <>f murdering his mothu. (Se6 .story below.> · Rlc:harda, M#Olt Dean. Two brotflerl .-Ch the Ce<lbt>Mn lllanCll tor the outprlt wtlo IUnlc Ulek' talNr'a atllp. ( 1 hr~ ~ min.) ~-MOVIE * * * ''The Boal" (1944) • ·~ .. ,.enolad. (1Mi) Jwlette 8oott. OiMt' ..... A Y°'llllO ~ becoft'99 the oO)eQt ot ., e\111 ploC. lnvoMng her brothet -eunt.. ( 1 "'~ 35 min.) •• 3:001 NeWS 3c30 9IOVle •••lt.~~ And The &Ady'· (1taol ~· KCET@ 9:00 -··count Dra~Ma." Tfte first episode of A new three-part series about the cJassic pain in the neck. ,... (See review below.) John P~ Doe Avedon. A rutllleN and ambltlou• pollticMln jolfl8 k>rOM with recbl..,. to g8'n oontrol of St. Louie. (1hf .. 56 mlrt.) Robert Stack. Ollberi' Roland. A Bf'OldWay ~ duow decll.o. to ~ ' 9:aO "· &bf OF GAOUCHO • 10:00 CJ P0UCt WOMAN "Bettered Teachlfe" P~ Iler and ~ .,.. }'ard· preeeed to gather ttlll neo. --.y evtdence to con*' jU'WWllle Oeilnqu9lta temw- lzJng high ldlool ieectlerl 'untll e young t..attar (Paniela Frlll\klln) .. beetert and Mttuelty molelted. BU NEWS 0 8TAA8KY& HUTc+4 "FOJCY Lady-St.,..i<y end Hulen become targata of panlo·strlcken tl'tl1v111 wllan the larc:enow ~y they befrtand ...... a svllCAM Ml of banlt rob- bery money Ill Star9ky'• apartm«1t. Pncllla earn.. guee11tare. G) HONEYMOONEM Tn. l<r..00-and the NortOllS dllC0\181' that ta4e- vlsk>n, ll\lleed ol kHllng converNtton, ltlmulat• 11. ED SPECIAL "Horowitz Al The White HOUM" Prealdem cat1ar wlM ll'ltrOduce 7~-otd Vllldlmlr HOf'owttz. who C411ebr•IM the 60th 9r1nl· varsary of his Amwk:an d9but by playing wortcs by Chop in, Mozart and Schumann for eome 250 guMll ~bled In tha Eut Room of the Wlllll HouM. m 80UNOSTAOE "Graham P8'11« and Iha RUITl<Mlr: RCO All Stars: Paul Bu11ertteld, Or. John. Steve Crower. Lavon Helm" 10'.30 tD 41) NEWS 11:00 0 D 9 NEWS 8 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE OMO~ * *'h "Che10'1 , Land" (1972) Charles 8'onaon, PLA VS SUSPECT Paul Clemens Jeck Paienoe. Members of • blood·thtraty poue. llalklng • half-breed kttler. 11811 kllllng one anou..12 Iv's.) •TH1!000COWU Blenctle. Oloaf'I 811-wtft, ialll him Ille plalw to r~. Inviting boUI him and Felix to the weddlrtg. 41) LET'& MAl<E A DeAL fD DICK CAVETT OU.t: Eat1ha Kitt. '11) MACNEK. / LEHR!R REPORT 11:308 at CJ) NEWS D TONIGHT , Hoel: Johnny Caraon. OU... ~ Ladd, Ooo Rldllee. F*"8ndo LMIU. 8 LOVE, AMERICAN 8TV\.E "Love And The Return or Raymond" H0rtaymo0ner1 find a •tranoe dog In their motel room. "Love And The Pottal Meeter" LeroY lie& to hll '*' pe1. Flor- ance. fJ 9 POUCESTORY "Death On Cfaellt" Sgt. Rici! cetv.lll ~· under· cover In order to crecik a pl!Ony credit card ring that plays dangatousty. JOhn Saxon, Howard Ovtt guest atat.{RI ti) OET8MART f1l) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS MOANING 12:00 fJ CD HAWAII AVE-0 A cunning COiiege prolas- sor (Buddy !?been), 8lorlg with an llnderwortd pan. nar. de\l9lopl an elaborate schema to casn $750,000 111 travelen ctiect<s lhrough • tegltlmate travel ctub. (R) 8 TWILIGHT ZONE Gt MOVIE * *'h "Hand• or A Strangar" C 1982) Paul l\lltattiar. James Si.pi. 12:37 U G1l MC MV8T'EAY MOVIE ** "Sleepwalker'' (1975) Derleen Carr, Mtchaal Kltctien. White vlalllng London, • gltl with • c:ronlc nigtltmate and ~­ Ing problem ~ • murder and ~ If It -•dreem.(R) 1:00 D 1'.0M(>RROW OUMIJ: Mater Sergeant Bertren T. Beagle, 85. dlacu11-hie mllltary car~ Bllot TepGU. let· tarology epan; Vance MUM, found« of "Worry Warts." 0 ISPY "CNaode To Limbo·· 1:10f)(I) Ko.,AK "Dead Again" Koju die· covers a connaollon be'-! a bomber/ ei<tor- ttonlst and the death of 11 girl who aakf she wn • belnO threatened by a d .. dman.(R) 1:30 tD MOVIE *'*' "Son Of Goch1tla" {1989)' Godi.11111, Tadao Takath4ma. Godzlle llNQ· g._ to .. ,,. 1\11 aon and • r .... rch 1Nm from deeth. (2 hr1.) QJ MOVIE * * *' "The Phenix City Story" ( 19SS) R1ct\ard Kiiey, John Mcintire. Returning lrom Iha sarvlce~ a young lawyer 11 appallac:t at Iha corruption In his hometown. ( 1 111' •• 30 min.) 2:001)0 NEWS 0 MOVIE •.•·~ "Subterfuoa" (111681 G-Betry, Joen CoHIM. An American agent In Lon- don becomes Involved ln a shaky marriage hiang_1'1 r with International compll- callons. {2 hra.) 2::20 1) NEWS 2:25 0 NEWS 2:30 8 MOVIE • * "Redhead" (1968) Bloody Good Sh.ow bumlghttng In order to -- lact ttlOl ldeea. (1 hr. 30 "*'·> 4:00!l*~At~" (1971) George Morttgoni. ery. DMna M8rtlrt. A farm f"""Y, belWy ~.,. blttw Boer W11, II 19n'Or- lz*2 by ""-~ . ~ lroni the anu.t( Army.(t hr •• 30mln.) 4:258 NEWI 4':308 MOVIE * * .. Jeckpc>r (1"2) WI- iiem Harnell, Betty McOowll. After ~ a tangttly ptteorl term, • - vict dlocMlfa hll wife doee not went to rtitum to him. C1 hr .. 30 min.) Tla•r•d•_,• Daytl..e Mo"lea MORNING 11::30 •••• "My Gll1 Tlla" (1948) Liii Palmer. 8en WlllUllTIAkw. An illlmlgrant girl. dealrlng to bring her lather to~ eeta out to ralM the~ money. (2 hrl.. 20 min.> AFTERNOON 12:00 0 **'A "Wetua"(1959) Ge«ge Montgomery, Tat- na Elg. The eon of a llllTIOUa eiq>lofar cornee 10 Africa to rHume hla father'• qUMt tor the a.g.. endary diamond min. Of Sotomon. (1 llr., 30 "*1.) 3:00~ ***"The Young Stranger" ( 1957) Jarnet MacArthur, J-Dely. A boy l• neglected by hit father, Wflo ntMr tak_. time 011 rroni his buey schedule to try and under· ltand his aon. ( \ hr~ 30 min.I 3:30 0 **'h "Hany-0" (1973) Davlct J11n11en. Martin S'-1. A lormw pollOemaQ. accaptl • JoO protM;tlng the man r•spon~o '°' maltlng him give up tits badge. l 1 ' hr., 30 min.) 'Dracula' Revived ·On Special Tonight By JAY SRARBUTT LOS ANGELES (AP) -It'll make your blood run cold, but no matter. Public TV is offering a great new show about Dracula. the ever-thirsty Transylvania Necker, and you've gdt to see it. It's "Count Dracula." a classy BBC version of Bram Stoker's classic horror tale. It comes in three parts, tonight at 9 on KCET. Channel 28, on March 8 and on March 15 . .,No, Bela Lugosi isn't in it. a house in England to a Count Dracula. As the lad.learns dur- ing a coach ride through Transylvania, the locals wouldn't touch his client with a 10-foot stake. DEPOSITED AT Castle l>racula near midnight, with a cold wind blowing and wolves howling, Harker seems a mite uneasy even thougfl given the big hello from the count in this manner: "Welcome to m y house, Mr .. 'Jeff~rsons' Actress Dead Louis J ourdan. the· matinee idol, now plays the caped chap who leaves the coffin comer at night to bat around and general- ly dismay all types of folks - types A, B, AB and 0 . Harker. Come freely; go safely a nd leave something of the happiness you bring." But at dawn. while shaving, Harker suspects something is' amiss when (a) Dracula's image doesn't reflect in a mirror and (b) the count gets downright weird' when he sees blood caused by a shaving nick. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Zara Cully Brown, who played Mother Jefferson on the CBS show ''The Jeffersons, ••died early Tuesday at Cedars.Sinai Medical Center. She was86. She was admitted to the hospital last Saturd'ty. The cause of death was not dis- closed. Mrs. Brown. whose stage name was Zara Cully, was one or the oJdest performers active " in television. She played George Jefferson's doting mother in the series, about an upwardly mobile black family in a Manhattan high rise apartment. It was a spinoff from "AllintheFamlly ... UNLIKE LUGOSI, whose Dracula gave legions of rubber· lipped comics a fresh chance at laughs, Jourdan does the count as a restrained, exquisitely mannered, quietly m enacing carotid taster. By miderplaying, be greatly increases the chill, chill, chill or the evening, which commences with Chapter One tonight. It starts normally enough with young English l~wy~r J onathan Ha rker (Bosco Hogan> bidding adi e u to his fia nce (Judi Bowker) and promising to write from Transylvania. wh.ere he 's bound on business. He carries documents deeding WELL, THE LAD knows he really is in for a hard time wbeA h e finds himself a veritable prisoner 8.J)d espies Dracula that night flapping. bat·like down a castle wall to make bis rounds. "Am I going mad?" cries lawyer Harker. No, but he may become a bit drained. I know I was as the pro;. gram slowly increased its horror level bit.,!>.Y bit, drop by drop. TOGETHER ONLY AT EDWARDS \ I l J ENTERTAINMENT /MOVIES weonesoay. Maren l , 1978 • DAILY PILOT 87 ~ . l 'Coma' Medical Western . ·s . · ~ N~W YORK (AP) -• opthalmologlst and In· P I C ,!t S I 0 S • Whale he says the structor at Harvard • LI : m a c a b re events in M e d i c a l S c h o o 1. HE p BLIC : "Coma" are not likely to Cricbton. a graduate of OPEN TO T U • bappen in any hospital, Harvard, dec~ed not to • : Crichton hopes the sus-became a writer instead : director Ml ch a e 1 complete inte rnship and I HAPPY HOURS 4 fO 8 I • pense thriller will pro-of going into practice. ': Hon er ........ : voke serioua thought as He has written 15 books, 1.. ____ .. .!;.._ ____________ ,J_ : well as ent.ertaio. i n c 1 u d i n g ' ' T h e D • T th SCtt • "In the near future, Andromeda Strain" and ClflClnCI Ue. ru • ·before the end of the "The Terminal Man." OPEN 4 Pf&.2 AM • SAT 8 PM-2AM : century, there will be a Dress Code Fri. & Sat. : problem about finding HE SAID doctors who •an adequate source of have seen "Coma" find : o r g a n s f o r It authentic. "They find : tra nsplantation. People a tone, a quality to the • will be dying for the lack r i 1 m w h i c h i s ' o f or g a o s, • ' says identifiable, which they • Crichton, who has a sen sed to be correct, • degree in medicine. ~ even though the picture ! He"""has directed one is fiction.'' , o t h e r m o v i e , Asked why the film • .. Westworld " and sees does not seem to be as : "Coma" a~ a medical critical of surgeons as . Western r ather than a the book, which harps on : "message mm... the excesses or the "sur- BUT IN AN interview he talked about the pro- blem of transplants, one · or many nuclear areas : fn medicine and law. He . described it as a social rather than technical : problem that will have . to be solved in the near future by "social con- sensus.'' There will be the . capability to transplant. · The capability to keep p eople alive will be . there, the patients will be there, the organs will not be there. · "There are serious questions in medicine now. The presence of the movie in a sense is a re- cognition that there are those questions." IN "COMA," a doctor --played by Genevieve Bujold, --slng'lellanded- ly tries to find out why young, healthy patients are being turned into human vegetables dur- ing minor, routine sur- ·g ery involving t otal anesthesia. She suspects a conspiracy, but no one, even her 41Jl>tor-l ove r -pl ayed by Mich ael Douglas - believes her. BE SUGGESTED that the laws in moet states be changed ao that or- 1ans wW automatically be taken for transplantation after d eath unless someone speciftcally refmea. to have tho oraans donated. Because ••coma" f eed s on people's paranoi a about .. , .. ,..,... .. GENEVIEVE BUJOLD STARS IN «COMA' Director Calls It a 'Medical Western' gical personality," Crichton said : "This is a movie about doctors, and e ve ryone i s a doctor. The good guys a re doctors, the bad guys are doctors. In that respect it's like a Western m which every- one is a cowboy . hospitals. some critics and MGM's publicity material put the film in the same category as the hit thriller "J aws." which deals with primal fear or the water. Other critics have i>aid that aside from its medical shock value -in a pathology lab we see a .............. "'TUASUat ~ TNls.IUA~- 11:10..., "'1llY LilGO" 6:15& 10:25 \~ !"t'i~'f "'V " ....... . .. . -·· -----~ br ain being dissected hke baloney on a de- 1 i ca tessen s licer - "Coma " is standard melodrama and t oo antiseptic. Crichton whose name rhymes with "frighten" wrote the screenplay from a novel by Dr. Robin Cook, a n ··And you don't go to a Western to see if the movie takes a po.'lilivc or negative view of the life or a cowboy. That's given, that 's what goes on." " 'LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR' IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTION PICTURES EVER MADE-AND ONE 0 F THE BEST! '~tu s,,,111a. s .... ror• 0ai11 "'"d [LOOKING FOR MR.~ ~DlANEKEATONI TUESDAY WELD WllJ.JAM ATHERTON RJCHARDKILEY RICHARD GERE .;...,.fR£00l£ FIELDS -.... -.. JOOtTH ROSSHCR. _,,..,,,_ ... ~,. RIOW!D 8ROOll.S Dilly was a kid who got pushed around ... •.. then he found the POWER in Private lactkgCllllMOft RoMll 630 Newport Cewter Driv• NEWPORT BEACH 640-471 I HENRY WINKLER FIEID ~ 'Fi1'1di11g the one you v i!> fi 11di11g yours.cit: loel9 MOOlll Al JAMii --IPT WMO LOYU Ml<NI """ IMOICIT & THI IANDfT "'°~ ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION FOR BEST SCREENPLAY ADAPTATION ...,/ George Burnir John Denver NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS Including Best Picture- Best Actor -Richard Dreyfuss . Best Actress -Marsha Mason '' .. ~Nell Simon makes feeling good legal ... GENE SHALIT.°NBC· TV : (PG) A RAY SmRK ~CF A HERBERT ROSS f1l..M NEll.. SIMON'S "THE GOODBYE GIRL . RICHARD DREYAJSS ·MARSHA MA50N EdWardl SchedUle Dally 7:15, t :15 Fri 8:00, 8:00. 10:15 Sat,Sun 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10: 15 . .. A TRUE LOVE STORY. .. For everyone who believes in happy ~ndings The oontinuing true story <>(Jill Kinmont, a woman with en()ugh courage for ten lifetimes ... and a~ with enough love to carry them~· 'THE ' OTHER SIDE , OF THE Mi~IN' PART ••. . . .. }~ • . • • • ~ ~ 4 I I ' \ . ,• . . . ' Wednesday. M!llch 1, 1978 ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC BOX I HY GARDNER ; MEL BROOKS /:r.,,o Weekend Concerts m:!:~~!.~~Conducts M~~~!.:~,~M~ 4t, arle ~· the past to the role played in the TOM BARLEY his Orange Coast' College · ~ CALIFORNIA'S MOST UC lrvln.e orchestra by that gift-•ualc Box co m mun i t y s y m p b 0 n y ELEGANT DINNER THEATRE ed musletan,Aml Pnrat. .,. Orchestra will be in the OCC Ami will be on the podium f?r auditorium at 4 p.m. Sunday for NOW PLAYING two concerts at UCI this . anothe/ of their popula r con weekend and this might be as has made his biggest mark. at cer ts. • Tl\ru March l9t~ good a time as any to "'relay to U.CJ where he has been lectunng • music lo~rs -jual what-this -m -nausic for some time. And -Ouest artist Lasilo LJak wall be campus workhorse Ls achieving now, we understand, he and at the keyboard for the ~aint, with the 31>-member ensemble. Cassuto will share the conduct· Saens Concerto 'No. 2 for piano The public is better informed ing chores at the two concerts to and orchestra. Also on the pro- on the status of Alvaro Cassuto, be staged each quarter. gram works by Beethoven, the spl e ndid Portuguese Ocbussy and Georges Enesco. maestro who is director of the AMI WILL BE on the podium UC I g roup and the man FridayandSaturdayat8p.m.in responsible for a concert hall re.: the Fine Arts Concert Hall and vival that lilted his ensemble his conducting prowess will sure· from the statuS of an average ly be tested by the program campus orchestra to that of a selected: Poulenc's "Le Bal proud new musical force in our Masque", Mozact's "Serenade county. for Strings'' And Samuel Barber's ''Adagio for Strings" are among the offerings. -41 HEARTY congratulations to Ballet Pacifica of Laguna Beach, the happy recipients of a SI S,000 grant made available by the Northrop Corp. ll means, we understand, that the company will now quallly to apply for a resident company gra nt next year from the National Endowment for the Arts. May their coffers flow over. Uve 911 Stage with · Belle Elllg • Robert Curtin • Phylla Ward foJt Art Kou.1ti1' • Ted Raymond • Aan1beUe Quigley Opens Tuesday, March21 George Axelrod' s "Goodbye Charlie" • 3503 S. HARBOR BLVD.SANTAANA half mile north of San O.cget t:W>'· behind Downey SeYlngs, betwttn SunfloWer £, MacMhur • .. NO ONE HAS done more in the freque nt departures of glob e lrotting Cassuto to maintain that standard of ex· cellence than the amiable Ami. who lists the piano, bass and cello among th'e tools of his musical trade. Baritone Mark Saltzman. tenor Al Morris and sophomor~ pianist llye Yong Hung will be among the soloists. And we have it on good authority that the very lovely Mrs. Porat will be making an appearance some time between 8 and 10 p.m. Li la Zali and her splendid dancers richly deserve this kind of s upport; they have danced on a shoestring for far too long down in the Art Colony. AROE BY PHONE AU. MAJOR CREDIT CARDS But it is wi th the baton that he Bronson Out of Mines I Q: f s it true that Charles snm.soa, the blghest- pa id movie actor in the world, was once a coal miner? And stlll carries a union card? -D. Beedle, Scranton, Pa. A: Yes. Bronson's father died from the dreaded miner's disease, "black lung," when the lad was only 10. Charles, whose famil y name was Buchinsky (as his credits read in bis first ele\·en films), never went back into the mines after serving in the U.S. Army during World War II. Evidently he welcomed being drafted into the Army. "U was a revelation to me," he 'Glad You Asked That' ·. by Mcrilya .ct Hy GardMr Group Sales-Ask for ADDY Boie Office CJ Telephone Reservations Opm Deily 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. (714) 979-5511 --------------------.said during the fi lming of "Telefon" w!1h Lee Remick. a Pearl Bailey album, .. Echoes of an Era ... <Footnote: Your question gave us a happy nush of nostalgia. Prior to going into the Army after Pearl Harbor, we bad offices at the Astor, columnlng for the Brooklyn Eagle and working closely with Bob Christenberry and Tommy Dorsey. Frequently we'd be asked, "Did sbe really lose it at the Astor?'' To which we bad a pal retort: "No .•• abe didn't Jose it there -she just misplaced it!") Q : Johnny Carson recently blnted around about Anita ·Bryant and her antJ.gay camP&tln. One l,tlg lao~b be got was wbea be uked: "Wltere. ls Anita Bryant's hairdresser tonight!" la ber hairdresser gay! -Mr. and Mrs. G. Smith. Jersey· City, N.J. flllH'S ~·---'.-SO. COAST flfil "SATURDAY NIGHT c.w.,, _,. FEVE.A" (A) >t• lnlWI .-0 r.u• OAll.Y •-»7=-«19 •mt 'LlTJIM-4 .... • ~ AWAllO llOllllNAm MAO'S "CLOSl~1 THR SO. COAST PWA.,;;;;.;...._._ .,,~,,._. ... , lU *"'-soen .... .,,_. $4J-llU MO P&ids l•l~l .. Mlool•tt MANN'S tlNEMAUNO UM S. M.itMI Aullne m 1 .. 1 MANN'S CIMEMAUMD 14M St.llanef ...,. lJS.1111 MANN'S tlMEMAldO l4MSt ... Mr Wk•• US-1111 "'LASB 11.A5r INI N&IUl.S.U,... ......... • "'IN) °',,. wou.o~ 9.A&,,~­UT/MIM ,,.._._7:1 .. 19:1i w~...,... ""'1'S NAGOtr 161 .... , ........ ,,... ............. .. ..,_ M llMIHf WAftr """'',...~ ... "OHGOD" IPGI M&Ttl)t IAT..-e:-i• ••1•M -suMM ••eon· .... , ........... ,,...~, ... "For the first time 10 m y life I u · had· my own clean clothes instead of lland·me- downs.'' M anied to actress Jill Ireland -the Bronsons have six children, r anging in age from 5 to 18. Wh en not making movies abroad, the family lives in Bel rur>, Cal. Before he played the role of "Valachi," his wife, looking for a home in Ver._mont.. chose a cozy little place which, Charles m a antalJls, turned out to be the Laurence Rockefeller retreat. A: 11 Rebecca Flaber, that attractive yoaac coantry &i.oger beta• ffmpared to UDda Roaltadt vocally and physically, Edd.le f'1~• daapter! -Craig O'Donnell, Jlempbls. A: No. Eddie's daughter is Carrie Fisher (whom you recently saw in .. "Star Wars"). Her mother is Debbie Reynolds. Rebeeca Fish• is the wife or Arnie Fisher, a somewhat look-alike lpr Joe lUtnMll. 'attGtdtnl1o Phoenix frtends. Q: When dJd Bobby Duta die! And from wlaa&t -Mn. aldMd M. Smit.II, West Seneca, N.Y. A: Bobby left us Dec. 20, 1973, at age 37. The res wt ol a slx.-hour operation-to repl~ ~of two artificial valves pl aced In his heart two years earlier. Doctors at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles explained: "Darin was just too weak to recover.'' Bobby's heart had been weakened by A: On the contrary, be is mucho macho. We cornered Tom Sobeck, Anita's hairdresser, in a street-level shop where he's been running the North .Miami Beauty School and Salon for some six years ... IJd you bear tbi& comical Carson crack the other night?" we asked. "No, I didn't hear it but it seems everybody else 1 know did!" be laughed. 0 You can tell Johnny I thank blm for making people wonder who I am. Also tell him where I was that night -at home w~tii.my wile, Elaine, and lur three boys and three Cirls, aies 8 to20. "Back ill 1950 I was the U.S . Army's h~vywetcht champioo of Europe with 46 fights under my belt. Back·lnto civvies again I foupt as aft amateur, tbea u a aemJ.pro flgbting tour .and six-round preliminaries lo small, smoky c!lubs in New Haven, New Rochelle, Long Island, etc. After dislocating a shoulder I decided making a livlnl as a bairdre:tser would be a lot easier tban..taking punch~s. ~ ''So I answered an ad and got a job as a hair ·stylist and instructor at Clairol for a couple of years. Then I started this beauty business." On the way out. Sobeck proudly showed US' a battery or booths. the walls of which were a ~t With rheumatic fever at aie 8. He was cluttered with tacked-up 8xlO glossies or some marrted twice. First t<! ac~ess Sandra Dee. They famous and not-so-famous folks he'd taken care of had a aop, Dodd, now tn his teens. At the tlrne or personally. Pointing to one or Al Pacino, he ex- bis death Darin was separated from bis bride or _.plained they'd met when he styled his hair on some •ix months, Aqdrea Yeafer, a legal "Godfatherll." secretary. "These are all great people, the Pacinos and Q: Beck la Ute late 'Jta a dmbl&ea&eMre IOa& the-Anita Bryants," he glowed ... Without taking waa played oa the Jake boxes .... prammably, sides I must say that the image of hairdressers ls pabllalted bl llllee& mHic. •4Sbe Bad &o Ge.a .. Lose pretty bl~. Most I know are as straJght as guys It Al the Alter.'• Bow mlglll I MUla • cop7f ADd in '8ny business -not necessarily monkey busi· wbo wl'O&e the aoalf -Lowell Parker, Phoenix, ness ! " Arla. Send your QUe$hOn& to Hy Gardner, "Glad You A: Words and music by l>Qll n.ye and Hugh • Aaked Tbdt," care oJ this .newspaper, P.O. Boz 11741, Prince; publiahed lD 1939; copyrighted by I..eeds Chicago, JU . ll>6ll. MarllJ/fl.and Hy Gardner will.onstoeT Music, now at 445 Pal"lt Ave., New Yark. The song M mony quafions.m they con in fMfr column. but t1ae ls still available ()I) the Roulette lable, included in oolume o/ mail maku peraOtJGl replin impo.uibl~. 10 NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS lnctudtng fjtli m "LAZER 81.ASr• plu• -~--------m.J~~ci~ I ~ INSIDE: • Comics • Features • ClubCalendar .... Ann Landers Specio l Diets By June Roth Dietary Preeaution High cholesterol blood levels are thought to be a result of a diet that is rich in saturated fats, &Uch as the animal fats found in meat, eggs. butter, whole milk. cheese, and rich desserts. Cholesterol buildup can clog the a~teries. of the body, sometimes cutting off circulation and often causine a premature heart attack. Many doctors feel that this condition of cholesterol buildup, called a therosclerosis coul~ be avoided through proper dietary pre: cautions. They suggest that it would be wise to increase the use -of fruits, vegetables, nuts, ~ereals, and to substitute polyunsaturated oils m place of animal fats for cooking. T here are many other ways to avoid eating s~turated fats. Use an unsaturated vegetable 011-based spread of oleomargarine in place of butter. Drink and cook with skim milk instead of whole mil,k. Use low-fat cottage cheese and make your own yogurt with a starter and skim milk. Avoid using dairy sour cream substitut· ing skim milk yogurt wherever po;sible. Buy the least expensive ice cream as it will have the least amount of butterfat content. Try to limit eating eggs to two or three a week, or learn how to make omelets with only the egg whites and discard the yolks. Trl!Jl fat from all meats before and after cooking. Trim skin away before eating chicken. Chill soups and stews after cooking to remove the block of fat that rises to the top of the con· tainer . Learn to whip nonfat dairy solids in place or fat-rich heavy cream for use on desserts. Use saturated oil and vinegar on salads, rather than rich mayonnaise or creamy dressings. HERBEDCJUCKEN AND BANANA SKILLET 2 tablespoons vegetable oil margarine 2 whole chickeo breasts, boned, skinned, cut into l 1h-inch chunks 14 cup chopped onion ·~· teaspoon saJt 1 ·, teaspoon dried tarragon 1 8 teaspoon pepper 1" cup orange juice 2 bananas ."; Mell margarine in a large skillet. Add chicken chunks and cook over moderately high heat until chicken turns white. Stir CrequenUy. Add onion aiid cook 1 mloute. Add salt, tarragon, and pepper. Stir in orange juite. Cov· er and cook 1S minutes. Stir occasionally. Peel and slice bananaa: add to chicken and beat' through. lftakes 4 servings. BAKED BADDOClt 1 pound baddoct rweu ~ onion. diced l clove garlic, mlnced floe iublapooov~etabl&Oilmarprlm 1 can (8-ounce) tomatoes ·a,~ teaspoon sugar 1,1,. teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon lemon juice V. teaspoon crushed dried basil Preheat oven to 400 dell"ftS. Arrance rlSb In a baking pan that has been greased with margarine. In a small skillet.. saut.e onion and garlic in marg¢ne. Meanwhile, pour tomatoes into an electric blender and blend smooth; add sugar. salt, lemon juice, and basil. Blend aaain. Pour mixture into skillet with onions; stir and cook for 2 minutes. Pour over fish. Bake for 20. minutes, or until fish flakes easily. Makes 2 to 3 ser vings. VEAL AND PEPPER STEW 1 pound sweet green peppers 2 tablespoons corn oil • 1 sliced onion 1 crushed garlic clove 'h cup sauterne wine 3 tomatoes cut in small wedges 2 pounds veal cubes ~ teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon oregano ~ teaspoon pepper Cooked rice (optional) • Bemove stems, seeds, and membranes of the green peppers and cut up into cubes. Heat oil in a heavy skillet. Add peppers. onloo, and garlic; saute until lin'lp. Stir in the wine. Add tom,atoes. veal, salt, oregano, and pepper. Cov· er and simmer for 2S mll)utes. stirring oc· caalonally, until veal ls tender. Serve ovtt cooked rice. if deSlred. Makes 6 to 8 servlnp. ~......... . With Lemon Wedl'\Mday, March 1. 1978 .. Making meals spectacular doesn't have to be a major undertaking. lt often juat takes a little planning and the right ingredients. For in-- stance, fn:>Een fish from the North Atlantic, available in the frocen food secUon of your supermarket under a variety of labels, and fresh lemons fJ"ODl California and Ariiona, are both abunda.M. lo make even everyday meals spectacular. This Poecbed Fish OU Vm with Lemony Popovers is 110 special you can serve lt to com· pany_ .and family alike. The Lemony Popovers are easy to prepare and are just as gttat for brupch as they are with this delicately navored fish. 'The popovers can be made ahead and frozen. · Poached F\ah au Vln bas a s mooth, almost foolproof sauce, flavored wit\\ wine and fresh lemon. Served with Lemony Popovers, broccoli and a fresh salad, it'll be a menu to be re· membered -and served often .. Here's a tip to gtve )'OW' salads a perky, fresher flavor. Instead of •inegar and oil, make a lemon and oil dressing. Two or three lemon wedges squeezed on a salad. with or without oil, ~ive salads a new hft without the acidic tartness of vinegar. ·' POACHED FISH AtJ VIN wrrB LEMONY POPOVE&S .. cup water (See LEMON. Pate C4) OAILY PILOT F ood-• . C · • \ 1 l ' t ' , .. • {' W • h ~} .. ~~f:·: '.~ i-~ Jt ~:~~: ~~ Sauce · 1~~ Legions of working cooks troop home eaeb ~ ~1 sundown only to confront the -stove and realize , ~ that they are fresh out of ideas for interesting ~ '"'-N'"'""·'···· meals. All too often the main dishes that arrive > .., k o~ .the table are, well,~epetitious or even in· • ~ s1p1d. • ~ There is a way to ke the creative juices nowine at 5 p.m ., though. Armed with a few sim pie but elegant basic sauces. you 'U have a d_ storehouse of exciting recipes that can be ready to eat before 7 p.m. Have you beard the terms ••Becbamel," "Morn.Y.'' or "Veloute .. ? They are classic sauces essential to ftne cuisine. But don't be in· timidated by their fancy names. They are all versions of the basic while sauce. Master its simple technique, and you have the elements ol • many an easy and enticing meal. Our Seasoned Wbjle Sauce is prepared ln the time-honored manne r. Mm a roux by mix· ing together melted butter and flour, it1r in · milk and continue stirring while the sauce thickens. The navor of this sauce, however. bas added ve~ supplied by a touch of pepper sauce. ~ · Sumptious Baked Fis h is one fast, winning dish that relies on our Seasoned White Sauce for its appe.al. To the basic sauce recipe, add lemon juice , din weed and an extra sprinkle of <See SAUCE, Pap Cll) Poached Fish au Vin with Lemony PopovetS.. • • . l . With 'Taters ' ". .. -. U UAIL1111Ll..1 Tomato Seafood Aspic. Individual Cups 'I Of Tomato Aspic Tomato ~catooa Aspic. gelled in rn - dividuaJ 1,~·cup molds, 1s an appea l ing and different s alad ac- companiment. Keep in mind the importance of color and texture 1n making meals more ap· petizing. The red-toned t.1Sp1c goes well with an cntrce such as cheese :murnc or roas t chicken. The salad is easy to prepare with unflavored ~clatinc. bottled clam :rnd to mato flavored JU1cc. canned clams. and canned or fresh ~hrimp. By using un· flavored gelatine, all the good flavors o( the shellfish and seasonings com e through perfectly, naturally. And the only poured Ullo small metal molds or glass custard cups. Unmolding is easy when you know how, and here's how: Dip the con· tamer into warm (not hot l waler to the depth of the gelatine contents for about 5 seconds. Car efully loosen gel from side of container with lip of shaq> knife: till or shake container gently to loosen gel. Invert serving dish on top of container. Hold both firmly together and turn over (to right side up ). Shake gently until ~clatine slips from con· tamer onto serving dash. If gel doesn't come loose ea:,lly, repeat process. coolung mvolved are the TOMATO SEAFOOD few minutes required to ASPIC dissolve the gelatine. 2 envelopes un- When the gel mixture flavored gelatine has thickened slightly. ~ cup cold water and the c lams and 2 cupsClamatojulce s hrimp folded in, it 1s v .. cup chili sauce Date 'Pecsn Custard. 3 tablespoons lemon juice 1 tables poon pre· pared horseradish I can <8 ounces) minced clams, drained 1/4 cup chopped cooked shirimp In mediu~ saucepan, sprin~le unflavored gelatine over water; let stand until gelatine is moistened. Place over low heat; stir constantly until gelaUne· d~olves, about 5 minutes. Remove from eat and stir in Clam ato juice, chili sauce, lemon juice and horseradish. Chill, stirring oc- casionany. until mixture is consis tency of un- beaten egg whale; fold in clams and shrimp. Tum into Individual ~-cup molds; chill until firm. Unmold and garnish with whole shrimp and sprigs of dill or parsley. Makes about 6 servings. ·. A~ Super Custard. Be nice to yourself and ybur famUy -after I -.'\~ • . .. Beware of Salmonella at Home By JEFFREY MILLS WASHINGTON (AP) -Most consumers do not realize food poison· Ing can r esult from practices in their own kitchens, a national se.min_ar on _salmonella was told today. Dorothy Teater, a con- s umer consultant in Columbus, Ohio, said, "We will have to change th e behavior or the public if we want to r e· duce the salmonella problem." . Salmonella are ba~· teria In food that cause about 2.5 million cases of food poisoning a year, the federal Communica- ble Disc.de Center says. ·'The average con - sumer knows little about IOU. s almonella . He jus t knows that be doesn't want to get sick," she told the seminar at the Agriculture Depart· ment. She said that many people do not connect their stomach illnesses w I th food poisoning. "They say, 'It's what ls going around now,• o r , 'It must b e the nu.' .. But she said tttat 63 percent or households in one survey were found to have major risks or food contaminatiop. The most wiilespread violation or good foOd preparation practices was letting cooked foods stand at. room temper- ture for more than two CB.LOIAG BEEF LOIN T-BOllE STEAKS ut'! BAR M NEBRASKA FED hours. "If this. Were fatal. except m tnfanta. changed, it would pre-but is a major cause of vent a lot of illness,.. food poisoning. Mrs. Teatersaid. Salmonella bacteria . Dr . Eugene J. five as parasites in ~angarosa. a center of-poultry eggs, meat and ficial, told a two-dal(_ ~ seminar that concludes ....--H-IG-H~-P-R_O_if_E_l_N_ dai r y products . Salmonellosis in!ectio11 usuall y results in s tomach pain, vomiting and diarrhea that lasts / several days. · today that 23,300 cases were reported to the center in 1976, about the same m1mber as when th e federal program began in the early 1960s. And Dr. Gangarosa s aid his agency believes there are actually about 100 times as many cases as are reported to the center. He ~aid he thinks many go without inedi~iU attention or are not r eported by public health authorities. The infection is rarely .LOW CALORIE. LOWER PRICES I LARGE 'M JUICY GRAPEFRUIT 8LLh CB.LO IAG •. '· ,• FRESH POPRK SHOULDER ROAST CHEDDAR CHEESE.139 Without Coupon SUI •c...._c-LL ....... ~ ._,..._, ·aAR·M SMOKm HAM WHOLE -HALF I~ BouA•uquECOcou~v M~•o.8ftu.c •o•s-u•GE ,, oz. 99c r" 71 BLU CHEESE Ores.Mg EA. ~=DIR HAM '~i.°if 79! cm:c-...CAiiii·~::39c SPRINGFIELD .OLEO f I ~ , ... - ·~ Wednesday, March 1, 1978 DAfl. Y PfLOT CJ Color is lmporta_.t in Acceptance of Food · 8)' DOR&l'UY WENCK o......-c.wty .._ a..i- lmagine what your world would be ~ike if you suddeply lost your ability to see colors. Everything would be white. blaclt, or shades of gray. What a drab place it would be. Consider just one aspect of color in your life: the color of food. Would you enjoy it as much if it had no color? Probably in time yo"' would learn to judge the food's appetite appeal by. its odor, shape, tex- ture. But at first, you woulct find it hard to ad- just to food without color. Studies show that col-or ts a very important actor in our acceptance food. Before we ever ste food we make up r mind whether we're ing to like it or not :om its appearance - s pecially from its olor. In one experiment. ste testers were given ree colors of sherbet sample -orange, ellow, and green. All ree sherbets were the ame flavor -orange, t the tasters weren't old this. The results ? The ~asters identified the flavor or the orange ~herbet as orange, the ~I a vor of the yellow ~~ herbet as lemon, and e flavor of the green herbet as lime. • Why? Because ex· ~erienc e had taught hem that these were the la vors to expect when ~herbels were colored e>range, yellow, amt ~reen. Their eyes, not )heir tastebuds, gave lhem a flavor message t inaccurate in thi~ tro:ase .. t We did a similar ex· ~eriment with a group of O homemakers who ere attending a meet- ng here. ' W c prepared a pitcher f reconstituted nonfat ry milk, followinf:! ircctions carefully, and hilled it thoroughly. hen we divided it in aJC and added a tiny bU. f blue food coloring to. ne half and a tin y mount of yellow food oloring to the other n1r. . We served it to our ste testers. not lelling :hem what kind of milk l was or what we had ~one to it. We asked hem to rate the two ilks for fitter and in· iiicale which one they ~referred. L The results: two of the. '° women guessed that ihe two milks were alike find that they were Jn ade from reconstituted fOnfat dry milk. About 11 of the women aid they preferred the lue colored milk. They •ere used to drinking onfat milk, preferred , and guessed from the lue color that this was onfat milk while the ellow milk, th ey bought, was whole milk nd "too rich." t fl'hc· rest of the women 17 -said they pre- rred the yellow milk, hich they described as cher, creamier, better sting. Were they judging the f ilk's fiavor wlth their ense of taste or with eir eyes? · There's a lesson to be arned here. lf you 'tant to help people •arn to like nonfat milk, f dd a drop of yellow ~od coloring and l et •hem think they're 4rinking whole milk. Or llerve nonfat mill( in a ;ilellow glass. Q. Wbea my 0oo1r1 creea v ( J vlt<hnin c and the n . Q&A. vltamin, thiamin. Soda ' also causes an un- pleasant softening of the cellulose so the ----------------' vegetable may becom~ to acid, tile acid causes the chlorophyll (green color) to change to olive drab il the vegetable is cooked too long. To avoid tlrls, start cook1ng the vegetable in bolling water, leave the cover off during the firs t minute or two of cooking to allow the volatile acids to escape, then cook just until crispy. tender -avoid over· ~ooklng. Q. I enjoy the Oavoror okra bat my family doean 't ll.ke It beca ... It gets so sllmy wlaen It's cooked. le there aome way to e ook ·u so U doesn't get .UmJ'T Q. i have some egp that have been In the refdgerator for nearly a month. When I put them Jn water to boll them they fl oated. My n~lgbbor told me that if eggs noat In water it means they're bad. ls that true! have an enlarged air cell which causes them to OoaL Egp that are very fresh have hardly anY air cell at all and won't float. As eggs age, the air cell srowa in size (making them easier to peel when bard cooked). Eggs will keep under reffigeraUon for a long time before they apoiL Spoiled eggs will have a bad odor that tells JOU not to use them. she bas thll little trick of baking soda helps to re- addlag jusL a pinch of tain the bright green col- ·baklng soda M> &he eook· or of vegetables •hen Ing water. She says it · they• re cooked. helps bep the bright However we don't rec- green color. la &his true? om mend doing this because the baking soda A. Yes, it's true that! will cause a loss of mushy. The reason why bak. ing soda helps to retain. green color in vegetables ts that it counteracts the natural- acidity of the cooking water. When green vegetables are exposed A. Okra contains a natural get-like thicken- ing agent that oozes out and causes the slimi· ness. To avoid tbls, cook the okra pods whole, rather than sliced, until just tender. A. No, eggs that float in water are not necessarily spoiled. It simply means that they Ralphs ••• ~r Number .One Club savillgs l and · .&lWtiliiiWimll'g- IDIBLE QUJM P•4"..enr ln•S COllPM olOtlq Wiii lf'J OM rnat\ul.ictuf .. S ·c. ., "" C• " n I"(! ~ oouv.. Ille ,....""J>o. Nol to ~ < ~ 1~1 "' ttoo CCIUPO"lo OI ••tceo rtie value ol tne ''""'· 1447 IDB.ECO.. ,. • ........,, "'OS couoon aiono #(ti •"Yone ~Y I• or; on couiion at><!~ -ll"C S<IY'~ Nol fO • •• ,..-., O<'ltM "'41ll(ll\SOl-~•.Jl""'cl p,_,.,. _. ill0f'9""' .,,,,one ,,,___s • <.entS olf' COUfl')n incl 91' OOuote f!tt ~s. Nol 10 ""°""" ttl.lolel °' "flee coupons or el.CGl!O u.. ·-cl Utt""" =~•-a.-unn11! ~~ --• Alff • ....um.. -uuu : IWllf~ :+ nu-.1 -. --. . • • ---·-= .................... t:::-:--~-. p,_.. "9 ca..ipaft llOf'9 .... ,,,,, one"'"""'"'''"'' I ·«"'" tK --VI' "°'°* ll'1e -..gs Not ro "'•,_.,...,.or ~ COllpClllS or -* Ille villue cl 1111!- UlllO..C...,. ... Mr*rt ... ~ • LMlll I a.. c-... e--. c..-.......... t""' •· .. tt?I. Humber One Club members only... · rhls aieefl•s spedaf offer r----+-mii'' r---.. -~;! Plus Nert 111eefl's. 5 d ltf •RE l'ftllllftal ~: nn1m11: l'ftllllnal : super coupon_ a d onal ~.... '}I ~Pr-I ~ --·•·ngwi~an• -~ .... ma•"l~""tu•et• : sauings DOUB££ COUPONS ~=I~~~ ii;"'C:,~';! ~;;:~~"to' 1 cents ~i;' ~·;-o 9ei a';; 1bl; ;-,;; uv1~s-Nu1 10' I • •"'1voe -, ...... , °' ''" couPQ<'la 0< ••'"" ""' I ltlCluda .,..,..,.. Ot ·11ee coo..pons 0< •AGe«J Iha I Ctub member& can redeem up to 10 manutacturer5' coupcns witn Double Coupon Sawigs. Jua b(lng In tnese fMI ad~ "Double Couwna" 8nd your Number One Card. ~ ,, IMf Chuck-111.cfe Cut ClllCk . Roast S:.11 69 Beef Alb-Lifter A.mowed Rib Steak per lb. Golden Premium Meats ,-so.? .... c ... .~ •. ~ 7-Bone ROllt .................. ~~o~ Top ROI.Ill Steak luiOAl ... ~ ........ ~ClodROllt ---iflJ CUbeslllka .... Ctlllll ~ FllnlijJn R .. .. . riM o1 tr.. , .. ,.. I ·-o1 !he 11em. I • Lllllll 0.. C..... '-............ c:...,. I U... 0.. C..... ,_ ~· C...., t ft e ..... 10 c>.-. C....,. ,_ C:... ......... t .... • .... tilt 0...... e..,._ "-c:Mll ....... I e._...u... .... a .... -.1.t.n. C..-...... llW.l ...,llllr.1.1171. I I ,_~--·----... --a-.c.-I I 'noe~--,---------a..~ I '~----------~------.._ _ __,_ _ _, '---.... -----~-..---------------' lhrtmp. C1'id!M. Treaswaet-Plnk ~ or...,Onlon Cup 0 Noodles Grapelndt Flotr ScqlMlx Juice 5lb. II 2~oz.11 48oz. II bf9 pkg. can -1I OL ... -Dr $ Rrstal .. smon .1 s Off,.. .• ..,. ,luortde Sbawbentls Colgate =r.c-2 Pltlleno..._ Dental Cran to dMllfw. 7 0L II 2=:.z. for 120%.11 tube .bMket Pantry Fillers Super Deli Super Produce ;_~: .59 ~ ~ Grapeftul 3!~.55 ~w*Nt11P1n ': 1•• ~AhJ:b .... .._ & .. •1• -: .29 ~· .49 ~· ~15 Super Baker y := .89 D 8';, Onions ~.49 ::t .89 ~.79 . ....... .,_...,.. ---·-·· ........ -..--= ..._,,_ _ _ .., ____ _ ..... ,. ............ 0 -· • \ .. C4 DAILY PILOT W.dneaday, Match t. 1978 Cookies That KidS I• "" Here's a pair or cooldea the youngsters will love; in fact, these goodies will probably be eaten up beror~ they ever get into the cookie jar. One recipe is for Oranfe-Cocoa Sugar Cook es. These are simple butter cookles lightly flavored with orange juice and grated orange rind, for a de- Ii ghtful citrus flavor. What's new is the ad- dition of cocoa to give them a luscious chocolate flavor and color. luscious butter cookies diameter. Place on bak- soon, and serve them Ing sheets; bake In a • with cold milk for a preheated 375 degree refresbingsnack. oven for 10-~ minutes. ORANGE-COCOA . Remove from baking SUGAR COOK.JES sheet onto wire rack to 1 cup (2 sticks) cooL To prepare icing: butter In a .Amall mixing bowl v .. ~ cups ffrmly ybeat together sugar. packed light brown. orange rind and juice, sugar corn syrup and butter 1 egg until smooth. Dip cool 2 ta~lespoons grated ..cookie in frosting and orange rmd then in ~ans. Yield: 1 tablespoon orange Abouts dozen cookies. juice Dairy sour cream goes right into the cookie dough for extra moistness, and there's a touch of nutmeg for spicy goodness. After baking, frost the cookies by dipping .them into orange icing and then In· to chopped nuts. The frosting is quick and easy, made with con- fe~lioners sugar, orange rind and juice, butter and corn syrup. Real butter gives its fresh natural flavor to both these delicious cookies. To show how different basic butter cookies can be, the second is a thin, cris p Swiss Cinnamon Cooky. Fragrant with cinnamon, it's left un- frosted but decorated with a sprinkling or cinnamon and su11?ar. Both these cookie rec· ipes are quick a nd s imple, though the Orange-Cocoa S ugar Cookies may take a little longer becaus e the dough is chilled awhile for eas ier handling. Bake up a batch of · 3 'h cups sifted reg- ular all-purpose flour i,,a cup unsweetened cocoa 1 teaspoon baking powder t,2 teaspoon baking soda •,, teaspooQ. salt \4 teaspoon nutmeg Y.a cup dairy sour cream ORANGE ICING l l,'l cups con- fectioners sugar 2 teaspoons grated orange rind 3 teaspoons light orange juice 2 te'Bspoons light com syrup 2 teaspoons butter, softened ~ cup chopped pecans In large mixing bowl cream together butter and sugar. Add egg; beat thoroughly. Add orange rind and juice. Sift together flour. cocoa. baking powder, bakmg soda, salt and • nutmeg. Add to creamed mixture alternately with s our cream beginning and ending with dry in- gredients. Chill for ease in handling. Shape into balls lH -inc~es in •••• Lemon. <From Page Cl) ; .. cup Chab1is of other dry white wine Juice of 1 fresh lemon 1 teaspoon salt 11, teaspoon pepper 1 bay leal 1 pound frozen Cod . Sole or Haddock 1 2 pound fresh mushrooms. sliced 2 tablespoons sliced green onion v, cup butter or margarine, melted 3 tablespoons flour 'h cup half & half Grated peel of 'h fresh lemon \4 teaspoon ground nutmeg Lemony Popovers In 10-inch sklllet, combine water. wine, "" lemon juice, salt, pepper and bay leaf; bring to boil. Add frozen fish; slmmer, covered, for 20 minutes or until fish flakes easily with fork. Remove fish from skillet; reserve poaching li- quid. Discard bay leaf. Cut fish into bite-size pieces. In skillet, saute rpuhrooms and green onion in butter until just tender. Remove from heat; stir in flour. Gradually blend in poaching liquid. Cook over medium heat, stirring until thickened. Blend In half & half, fish, lemon peel and nutmeg; heal. Serve over Lemony Popovers. Sprinkle with additional green onion if des ired. Makes 4 servings (4 cups ). LEMONY POPOVERS 1 egg, slightly beaten Y.a cup milk 2 teaspoons fresh grated lemon peel 1 teaspoon salad oil \.-a teaspoon salt 1hcupfiour lo bowl, beat egg, milk, lemon peel, oil and salt; add flour. beating until smooth. Pour baller equally into 4 well-buttered (6-ounce) custard cups; place on baking sheet. Bake at 450 degrees for 15 minutes; lower temperature to ~so degrees and bake 20 minutes longer or un- til popovers are firm an(i well browned. Remove from custard cups; cool on wire rack. Makes 4 large popovers. y .. AN lw""4 • iloltt O.r .............. .,.,.,Ce ...... a. .... r • ...,.,, JC.,,,.,. ... r...-,. Jfaela 7, Bon .ro.-.... Stuffed Artk:hoka.__SJufied~ Sour Dough Roi-Ups -T•..-,, •arda Jf, F,.... Coq au Vin. Crepes Stuffed with Souff1e r......,.~ ... ,..,,.... Apple Strudel. Varlous Appeliztls SWISS CINNAMON COOKIES 1 cup (2 sticks) butter II.I cup firmly packed light brown sugar Y.a cup sugar 1 egg 1 tablespoon milk 2'h cups sifted re- gular all-purpose flour 1 tablespoon cinnamon 112 teaspoon sail Love TOPPING 2 tablespoonssugar- 1 teaspoon cin- namon In a mixing bowl cream together butter and sugars until light and fluffy. Add egg and milk; beat tho!'oughly.· Sift together llour, cinnamon and salt ; gradually add to creamed mixture. Chill for ease in handling. In a small bowl combine ~u r and cinnamon. Sh pe cookies into balJs out l-inch in diameter. Place on bak· ing sheets; flatten to a bout Y\·inch thickness with the bottom or a glass dipped in .. flour. Sprinkl e cookies generouiilY with cinnamon-sugar mix- ture. Bake in a preheat· ed 375 degree oven for 10 minutes. Remove to wire rack to cool. Yield : About 4 dozen cookies. .: . r Orange-Cocoa Sugar Cookies , . FOOD CACH or IHES£ AOV£RTIS£0 llrMS IS REQUIR£0 10 jj[ A\'AILABL[ roR SAl.E IN EACH MARKll l!AS~Cl SIOR(. lXCH'T AS SPlClflCALLY NOHO Ill !HIS A!J IF W[ RUN 001 Of AN ADV£RllSED lllM Wl Will OFJIR Y(JU YOUR tHOIC[ or A t(JMl'ARABL! lllM. Wli[N AYAllA6lE. RlFLECllNC IHl YI Ml SAVINGS OR A RAI~ CH£CK WHICH WIU lNlllLE YOU 10 PUR~l IHl AIJVlRllS[O PRICE WllHIN JO DAYS .... l .. n 1cu lff(CTIVI WP .• .... I TlllU TUU,, MAI. 7, l t77 , ,...ru ... H s1• STEAK ••• " _ "' .. • I I • I I , • ' ' • I j . . . . "' HASH BROWN ~. MARIGOLD ~OTATOES TISS·UE Farmer Boy Frozen 2 -lb. Pkg. c ~~g:u~~4 $1 Paok 12_0z. Cans Get Readj' for Spring With Safeway's PATIO SET • 4 Pa dded Chairs • 1 Steel Table • 1 Table Cover • 1 Ad1ustable Umbrella HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF OUR BIG WINNERS! •ANITA PEREZ Santa Paula •2,000 wtnner •VIRGINIA EVANOFF Taft •1,000 Winner •MARIA CHACON LosAnaetes '100Wlmer . •LYNDA COULTER Costa Mesa •1oow1nner •CARLCOYNE Granada Hiiis 'lOOWlnner • RUBEN KAMRATH Bakersfield . '1,000 Winner • MARY TAYLOR Sun City '1,000 Winner • FRANCIS VILLA Carpinteria •1oow1nner •JESSIE WIUIAMS LosAngeles · '100Wlnner • MICHAEL DEES Los Angeles '100Wlnner •ALBERT SCHORN Los Angeles 11,000 Winner • LESTER DERING Manhattan Beach •1,000 Winner •VIOLA GHOLSTON Los Angeles 1100 Winner •KATHRYN SMITH Van Nuys '100Wlnner • POLLY HUNTLEY Los Angeles •1 oow1nner SERIES Sl-22 ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE ftBRUARY 19, 1978 Promotion available at Sateway Stores loceted In Calllorn1a counties OOGI .. al TOTAL 1 Yll.UI ..ms T1CUT 12.000 13 1,213,.412 11.000 134 125,481 1100 431 39,014 110 2.122 1.m ....... ~s.-4.!02 ... 141,157 113 TOTllS 15'288 10I ooos 13 ncans 99.498 1.653 3,002 810 331 1.7 1.3 OODI 2t TICQTI 49.741 4,127 1.501 305 lH 4.4 4.2 "'Of' Loi Angeles, Ventura. Sin 8er- nardlno, Riverside. San Luis Obispo, Inyo, Or1nge. Santa B1r- bara. Kern and Mono ( 167) and In Clark County, Nevada (13). Beginning January 18 and scheduled to end Aprtl 18, 1978 or When all tickets are d 1str1buted. Promotion termination will be an- nounced. Updated odds wlll be potted In all participating atorea and any newspaper ads. TANGELOS Sweef and Juicy. c · ~ Br.tilldast Prunes ..................... 2 .... ,_ 99° lrapefrUlt ?f!l 8 ~89° Rid Potatoes " IL 19° r~ Cherry ..... 39° ar.n Cebb.Oe lb. 19° . 'OiATOES ..-:=., I ' l; ... I . ••• GARDEN SIDE TOMATOES Wednesday March 1 1979 DAIL V PILOT C5 PETUNA CAT FOOD - Your Cat Wiii Love It! S • CRAGMONT SODA POP Stock-Up Now! .8 0 8'h-oz. Cans o::n Quart lottlea '-----------------REFRIED BEANS More Good Safeway Buys! Town House , ..... ~~ Rosarita 59C ~Dry Spaghetti t;'"'~ 30-oz. -7i:'u;; IVORY E-) Nu-M• Mayonnaise 32-oz.770 Pkg. 32-oz. 99c Jar Detergent For Dishes ~22-oz. ~Bottle 79C ~Piedmont Shortening p:r~ose ~!~· •1 1• Mild Cheddar Cheese sateway 11~· •1 2• LARGE ''AA" EGGS Lucerne 75C Fresh 1-dOZfll carton oldbrook 39c Cubes 1-lb. C.-ton ~~'!;·~;;~~!!. . \-""'\Seagram's ~!Blended Whlskey $549 80-Proof 7 1r. ' 750. u..c ... > .... -r . '• I 'i. •Extra Absorbent, 48-ct. T ... ly F11· e·Dlapers • Daytime, eo-ct. •3•• 'I Iii •Toddler, 40-ct. Each Sllced SlraWberrilS scitrco~!~eat • 1~ 390 PA ~~,,U.S.D.A. Choice Beef -~ Boneless " .. ROUND \FEAK F.ull Center Cut 29 . :.'. 8PeCIAL lb. Pork Picnic D c -:i~::.1.~~ .......... , .. ~.t~39C. -~~!~~=: ..... ~ .... na. $149 ~!~~!!~!· ........ 2~$279 USDA BEEF Sllced Bacon $128 CHOICE ASSURES YOU Smok·A·Rome •••••.•. ~~ TENDERNESS ?~"t~ ........• ~.f1 49 anil FLAVOR! Top Round steak ·s111 Every Beet Steak and usoA Choice seet ....... lb. Beef Roast We Cut ~:~~~.~~~-~ .... s1a• IS ... USDA CHOICE eclals In your store!· '. • IOI LC:. ......... S.. a ...... ' . • ..... • M1•11r a. Ha: ...... IHdl • 14417 C•w Dr ... 'Wlllllt1 ~ ·-- ~ ' ~ . I ' , • t T . . Q DAILY PILOT Wednesday March I . 1978 1. } . FOOD Mushroom Steak· Duo \ A lucky twosome 1 can feast on these mvshrooms·sauced beef cubed steaks . .... STAnll-. MEAToaBEEf WIEllERS iUiiiTM:~":.:~ ............. ,#.394 ~ ~~1 ~· 1;;;;;.n.nacs .u..49•l iiUn~s .......... l .. 49cj OSCAll llAYBl•IYAllOffU•SltcfD 79• ~"' ~1 llV•llOUND•_.., •1 ••. llV•CMUCl(•fOl ... -·.-.CUT ••• BOLOGNA ~ .. a. ....... -...... 1#. . '----::--------r -·--... ..., • a•M .. ,._... c•u-s-~ STAlOl911()1..•USOllT1D 894 ------....... U.. ............. a.a...-,.--..... U.. ~~v~~:: ..... l#.$ •Of JU F.l.U .... ET ..................... IJ $41~: j~::!i~•T.{ ... ")''"u..: '1 :: ?:~E· HAST ... L.L: 1': ~~~~ ........... l .. : ', :: 80 ~ll"lla. ............ u . t , ................ u.. 11'111W ~~ ........ u.. HUI• S'n&K .... u.. ~ • .._. •. L .. DeCNlllAYtll•_,_Oll ' • $1f9 ~ZBl•ICCL-.: • s1s• .. •lllAU.1'9 • ·."' •$1ff au•--..US . sis• llV•llllAUEM> ~ 79 ~.~m ,..._,.o .......... #. 494 lllS~fllOlVIO'FSIHWTRIMP ................ l • $ Tt ·-~~ ...... ~ t 1 •• ~~.!u~-... la. $I 59 !!~~~ ............ l .. •$1179 POllUE -.oz. .. ,111 ............ u. u.. -~~ •• ..-----71-s-·-.____________ ... .......... . ·. . ¥''"'' . ------~· .. LI. .. ·-............ l8. ' ., .. . · .. ·~ ....... CRISCO OIL ..OL SJ.89 \. 1180WIRFS :s1.~s fCAKEMIX ' J. .. . ' , FOOD • Chicken in Rum Sauce wfth Curried Rice .Chicken 'n' Rum I Delicate si.tces of~ . MeH-remaining tablesppon 1 breast and asparagus tips and butter or margarine in skillet. t pieces in rum cream sauce add A d d g r e e n o n i on s a n d a light touch to elegant dining. mushrooms and cook briefly. ~ Dark rum flavors the sauce Sprinkle with rum. Add cream l which Is set off with curried and cook: down over high heat rice. The rice can be baking about five minutes. Add salt and while the chicken is being pre-pepper to taste. Add uparagus pared. lips and pieces and chicken; . CHICKEN IN ~UM SAUCE heat gently. Serve with curried 1 ~z pounds skmless, boneless rice. Serves 4 to 6. chicken breasts salt and pepper 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons finely chopped green onions , l/, pound mu s hrooms , quartered 3 tablespoons dark rum (80 proof) J '2 cups heavy cream 1 15-ounce can asparagus tips and pieces CURRIED lllCE 3'h tablespoons butter or margarine 'h cup onion, minced l cl9ve,carllc, minced 1 cup uncooked rice 1 tablespoon curry powder 1~ teaspoon ground cor- iander l 1n cups chicken broth Preheat oven to 400-degrees. Wednesday, March 1, 1978 . J ~) OALY Pa.Or -t:7 Your Child Will LoveDessert s Getttni cllildren to eat loaf pan. Stir together desserts never seems flour, baking powder, to be a problem. But cinnamon, salt. baking 11DcUn1 deSserta you feel . soda and cloves. In as aoocl about serving, large bowl stir together ae your kid.a feel about applesauce, peanut -eatliic, aomellmes-can · butter, honey, egg and stymie even· the most ~ater until well mixed. creative cook. Peanut Stir in flout mixture and butter is both a child-raisins just untll mixed. pleaser and a nutrition-Turn into prepared pan. conscious adult-pleaser. Bake in 350 degrees And it can be in. oven 1 hour or until cake corporated into more tester inserted 1n center t han the all·t-lme comes out clean. favorite peanut butter Remove from pan; cool sandwich. completely on wire Two new dessert. rack. Store ' ·g~tly ideas use a new product wrapped . ove.rn1ght now appearing in before cutting. Makes 1 s u p e r m a r k e t s loaf. throughout the area. APPLESAUCE PEANUT BUTTER LOAF 1 ~ cups unsifted !lour 2 teaspoons baking powder · 1 teaspoon cinnamon ·• 1h teaspooo salt V.. teaspoon baking soda \.iJ teaspoon ground cloves ~ cup applesauce ir.. cup old fashioned creamy or super chunk peanut butter ir.. cup honey 1 egg 14 cup water 1 cup raisins Grease 8'hx41hx2-inch PEANUT. BUTTER PUDDING >I.a cup firmly packed brown sugar 14 cup com starch 1til teaspoon salt. Jo/.& cups milk 'h cup old fashioned creamy or super chunk peanut butter 1 teaspoon vanilla In medium saucepan stir together sugar, corn starc h and sa l t. Gradually stir in milk. Stirring constantl y, bring to boil over medium heat and boil 1 minute. Remove from heat. Add peanut butter and vanilla, stir until s mooth. Tum into bowl or individual serving dis- hes. Reftigerate. Makes 8 ( 1,2 cup) servings. '' Apptesaur:e Peanut Butter t.oaf. 1 ' I : ' ~ ~ Cut each chicken breast into seven or eight strips. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Heat 2 tablespoons butter or margarine in skillet until hot. Add chicken and cook over high beat, stirring constantly, about four minutes or until raw look is gone. Remove ch1cken pieces and set M~t two tablespoons butter or margarine in ovenproof dish. S t~ocaion. -and garlic until or. ll is. ·tt-ansl,ucent. Add the rice and stir to coat all the ·grains with butter. Sprinkle with curry powder and coriander and s tir to blend. Stir in broth. Cover with closefiWng Jid and bake ex- actly 11 minuta. Add remalnlnc butler or margarine. Serves 4. ,_ aside. - .-, Best Idea Since Shopping Carts J-4..-......... ' . • ··"?-,Now you can do aw ek's shopping ~ without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed shopping llsts prepar_1d for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 aepatate P'fnted Item• •. plus llddltional IPllCH you can flU In youl'9eff. 34 Stepl•• 21 Vegetabl•• 14 Frult9 I llllcetyltema 6 .... .,.,.a 11 Meat end ftlh en"9 .. 11 .,.,., ltefM 20 Ml9Ce418"ec>UI u .. == ..... I •, l lo u1et DeligJlt® ' 111111-..----:--------------------~-~ . .. . - . 15~,. 15~ff on any Diet Delight•p!Qduct. 1 red--1 mutt be~ I i' upon f9'1UC Coupon may ··hot b. a9"gned or Iran•· fetffd. \.bid where HI UM Is I prohibited toxed' or n· 1 strlcted by )aw. Your CUI• I :='~u:r:i/~~ one cent. R.so.m on~ 0#..~°'f~~ I •~ 52732. Vol4 •fter I July3l.191& • • ' ' I I j ~ , I ' ' . ~ , l ,, 150 . -----:--_._...._~·~4-~;J;;.l-,11~ . . \. CB DAIL V PILOT Wednei.day. M.llt h 1. 1978 FOOD tit's Hopplepoppel After a super busy day cook). Drain potatoes; ::.aucepan heat together of work or play fix a cut into ~·inch thick soup, milk and onion. warming, hunger slices; set aside. In a Cook and stir untll hot; utisfying meal-in-a-pan large skillet melt butter. pour over potato · from staples on hand. Add re s erved mu s hroom mixture. All you need are eggs, mushrooms; saute tor 3 Sprinkle. with cheese potatoes and onions for m'in11tes. In a buttered and paprika. Bake, un· a d e 1 i c i o u s J • ~ quart s h a 11 0 w covered in a preheated Hopplepoppel. casserole, a rrange a hot oven (400 f'.·h until Hopplep oppel is a .}ayer of potatoes, then a hot and bubbly, .a«>ul 14 ·generous, h earty l ayer of mushrooms. minutes. Reheat re -Ge~man meal. It's real-Repeal layering once served mushrooms. Ar· ly Jtlst another version more, saving some or range over c asserole m :of scrambled eggs. This the mushrooms for later a ny desir~d pa ttern. HopplepopPel: A 1unny1fsme but a great dish. • ,. dish is an_ anytime of u 5 e. In a medium Yield: 6 portions. day favorite in many --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;:~~==::::~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::.:;~:=!~~~~~~~~~~ corner taverns of Germany. You can ::;e rv e this' meal in minutes to your hungry crew. This German version of scrambled eggs adds potatoes for ribstickers. Try scrambled eggs w ith you own favorite "extras" -c heese m e at. vegetable o;. a lmos t any l eftover . Scrambled eggs, no matter bow they are prepared, are the original skillet supper. So when you're tired but everyone is hungry make Hopplepoppel. ,-he name is silly but eas~ to remember and so is the recipe. HOPPLEPOPPEL 4 medium potatoes, cooked and sliced (about 3 cups slices> 1 medium onion, sliced 1.~ cup butter 1 tablespoon snipped p3rs le y or p a r s ley flakes 12 teaspoon paprika 8 eggs 1.:! cup milk 1 teaspoon salt 1 ~ teaspoon pepper In large skillet over medium-high heat, m elt butter. Add potatoes, onion, parsl e y and paprika. and cook, stirJ ring occasionally, until potatoes begin to brown and onion is tender, about 5 lo 7 minutes. Reduce heat to medium. Meanwhile, beat eggs, m ilk, salt and pepper with a fork. Pour egg mixture over pota to mixture. As eggs begin to set, gently draw pancake turner com· pletely across bottom a.nd sides of skillet. forming large soft curds. Continue until eggs are thickened, but do not stir constantly. Cook until eggs are thickened throughout but still moist. One delightful way to var y vegetables is b y l e a ming them with mushrooms. Buttered peas and s auteed mus hrooms a r e a • famous combination. Or ~reen beans, chopped onion, sauteed mushrooms and a pinch of oregano. Add whole small mushrooms to the creamed white onions . . Tomatoes and sauteed ; .. JJIUShrooms are perfect with beer or seafood, especially if they are 5cattered with herbed croutons just at serving time. This just starts a list of mus broom ·Pl us vegetables. Here is a re• cipe for a Mushroom and Potato Casser ole combining sliced mushrooms and cooked s li ced potatoes in a chicken soup sauce into . which cheese has been ' atirred. · Using mushrooms to fan ON up vegetables is a comparatively inex· pensive treat, for there are about five cups of sliced mushrooms per pound and tbese delicate vegetables have such distinct flavor that a few handfuls of mushrooms go ~ long •ay. MUSll&OOM AND POJ'ATO CASSEROLE l pound fresh mushrooms or 2 cans (6 . to 8 oz. each) allceclt mu1hroom1 ' I '!¥.a pounds pnCatoes t 3 tablespoona butter • maraartne • · • J..+e"'an (10.'6 oz.) . ·c:cum of ddckm soup ~ cupmllk M cu.ia,...flael~ dq)pecl on1fla . ¥1 CDP thre•d•cl Cleddarcbeeso ~ ~ teupooD J)llpdka ~ lllue, pa\ df7 and allco trtlb ·tnaallrootn• <mates about ftve CGPI) or 4raln caDned ................ c.t ....... {n )dH .. Nltecf:nts' UDW Jut' t•cl•r (clo not onr· When you have ~ lot of hands to feed, look for the.Magna Pak hand. ~ Save an additional 5c a pound on our larger : , ~~ize ·packages of meat. Good things come In large packages. Take a good look into our meat case. Not only will you see a .huge selection of all your favorite cuts, but you'll also find outstanding quality and ~-c..:....wi/ value in each and e very package. And for even r---"~~ greater meat value, there's Magna Pak, our larger size packages of selected meat Items designed to save you money. You get the same hlgh qualJty you've come to -expect with Lucky's Bonded Beef, only we price It five r-.lll_,...,.· ~ , cents a pound below our already low discount price. \~~~~~~~-:;~: ~~... Let the bright red Magna Pak hand p oint your t" . . . . ·--: meat budget in the right direction. ~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~=~--~~--~~·~ ~save ... andyoudot~!Wh~nwe package meat in larger size quantities, it enables us to save on the add,ed expense of packaging. • ~\, These additional savings are then passed directly on to you so your budget can enjoy even more savings. With Magna Pak you ~·;:·· can stock up the freezer and save mo ney at the same time. Magna Pak, it's your helping hand to extra meat savings. , ~ •'' Every nickel counts. It's nice to know that buyi ng Magna Pak will save you an additional five cents a pound off our already · ·-·~.; §\\• l low discount price. At first it may not seem like much, but when you stop to think about it, a nickel here and a nickel there -5 .t~ .. ~ can really start to add up to some pretty bis savings on your overall meat budget. In fact, you'll find Magna Pak ts a great way to h~lp reduce your entire food bill. Look for the bright red Magna Pak hand on selected cuts of meat •.. every time you shop. At DLADECUT ~~~;~~~.~LO. e 88 ..... MAGMAPAK8"l --PRICE .... ll).. V Fresh Meats T·DONESTEAK DOMOCOO(UlOI0.1 ............... IA. 1. 98 TOP SIP.LOIN STEAK OCM«Ul6IOOUDO(lll.Qlll ........ II. 2.18 POl\T£RHOUSE STEAK llOOCllOKtllOOt .............. ~ 2.08 DOTTOM l\OUHD STEAK flOtC)(OO([l ..................... \A 1.68 LARGE END 1\10 ROAST JIO'CllD oru ..................... 1.1. 1 .48 DONEUSS l\UMP ROAST 110t<OU> OW M»10 S1N.Ot11 CUI., •• Ul 1 • 4 8 Cl\OSS 1\10 l\OAST ii 1101C1D llOoCll.O '°' c.M:K. . .. .. 1.1. -. • 4 6 OOHEliSS STEWING OEEF IQtC)(D OU1 ........ . .•.••• IA 1 .5 8 Gl\OUHD OEEf' PAmES 000 NOU:JICfll> JO\. 1,0 .... .)ll.114 2 • 66 CUDAHY OOHEL£S.S HAM ~WA~AllOll> ...... IO 'f • 98 CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS OA IMIGHS l'llWIG ••• ., •• .,, ........ ta • 96 Lenten Selections Fill.ET OF OOVE.P. SOLE fllDH ....... • .. ......... 1.11. 2.59 MAHl·MAHI FIUET rllOZOI....... .. . . .. .. . ... 1.11. 1 . 2 9 COOKED SH"IMP ANO'ttllO Ml'OllMtl1• ••••• , •••• &a. 3.69 CATTl.SH STEAKS "'°10!......... . .. UI • 98 - . lucky, saving money on meat ls just one more example of what discount ts all about. LARGE END ~~~T~~ ....... to. i 5 8 .... MAGNAPAK153 --PRICE ...... LO. Canned & Packaged e ;: CLING PEACHES 39 S!..ICU> Of\ HAL V(~ HAIMST 0AY2QOZ.CANe }'HEINZ -. b ~~~~~1 Oil. e 7 9 .!: CHUCK WAGON DREAD 49 HAAVUf OAV ....... 2,0 Z.tOAF e .!: GREEN GIANT COP.N G0l0£N. """'°'-EIW\HQ. 2 7 0 1\Cl\EAMSt\'lE ... : •••• 170 Z.CAH e DONELESS 88 TIP STEAK ~ OONfUS~OEHl\OUJO .. l O. -. .... MAGMAPAK..iif&3 --PRICE.. .... to.'I -================-Canned & Packaged L ~1.~.~:1.~.~ .......... 0Z.OOll .81 L ~~~~~~~~~~~~OZ.DI\. .89 !' nP.BID£ COOKIES 0 WIG Cl\Mi!JYAIU .... , ,,Ol.~ .89 ! ~~.~~~-~~~.~~'-OZ.CAN .. 35 L ~'!-c!.~~~~?!~,. .59 L ~CJ~~-~ ... :1001.CNt .54 I H~~~.~~~~~~~oi.C:.49 b ~~~~~~~ ....... 070Z.N .93 L ~l~~~.~~!~~!CAIO .65 Household & Pet 7-DONE ~~~~.~LD. e 98 ..... MAGNAPAK93 - -PRICE .... to .• Delicatessen WAGON MASTER b MEATS ~~~rt .• 39 I ~~~~~ .. ~~CAM .43 FAAMEIUOHN F1WW .. ..... ., • ., ...... 1M.,.l&OC.IKG. 1.06 l ~~~ .. ~ .. •OZ.MO. .59 l ~~~~~ .. •OZ.M .41 lUR.KlY DOt.OGMA . I Ol.'llNMA. IUCID .......... •tOZ.flllG. .83 L ~Yd;~~~~ ..• 2otw.o. .89 Dairy & Frozen TOP ROUND STEAK ~7 8 ootm m OONt>ED orrr. LA. -. -..._ MAGNAPAK..iif73 --PRICE. ..... to. 'I Liquor I' SEAGRAM'S V.O. WHISKY 0 CNWlWI &66111\. ..... 7!.0MlO!l. 7.49 I' CROWN P.USSEVODKA b llOMC>Qf,.,. .. .... t .1$1.IU!L. 8. 99 ! ~~~~.~~.~-.~---3.99 u.-................ _LtQt..et°'11'. Health & Beauty Aids P D£S01H LOTION b NGWAOllDMl'lllCH,. ''Ol 01\. .1.49 P.OOITUSSIH DM COUllH,,_,,, ............ OLO•l. 1.74. !~.·.~~.~~ 1.77 L ~tr~~~-~~ .89 l TAME a.EM£ P.IHSE 99 llnlaAll011CX111A 000\' ••••• aoz. a • Produce P.USSET POTATOES U.S.NQ.t.......,"11 .............. , •• &I. .19 WIM.ESAP APPLn rX!Mfllill(Y ................. IUAca&O .89 HA WAllAN l'tMADIU -..-llA~INIGI ........ a. .69 AS50"TID flW(T$ •• ti() .................................. ee ... wbat discount is all about. • • Reduce Your Total food BW By Uslng Manulacture:r•s Coupons Manw~• coupons mt an -.v ~ ccmcn1ent--i 1o NdUCie ~ tnllN·food bll. Lucky u.111 g~ly Ndeem them '°' Vo'U· ....,.ITU • WI lftlfli .,.. • .... WU111Ut&1UAY&Nua 11011 eHlMOOAIA in'UT • 1 J • • ,. I~ .. ..COMICS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by Brad Andersqn "He must really like you . He only does that to me when I eat an ice cream cone!" FUNKY WINKER BEAN Fight, fight, fight , CASEY t MOON MULLINS ~ I Into the night, night, night, NCYf MJNf. ! I WOOLC>N1T BE~G~T ON~· GERIATRIX • E - UOOerthe . lights, ]jghts ..• ; by Tom Batiuk by t:.nt and Tom Johnson GORDO JUDGE PA~KER . TUMBLEWEEDS . , .>' b~ Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson tiU6o ~WAY" kJD l'i.t.. GO M1Ne ! DOOLEY'S WORLD DR.SMOCK MOTLEY'S CREW 00 AU.. ~US51ANG Qftlt-0' 1\41€1 HE>. YJ ALo&-1ME 11~ rt. by Harold Le Doux W.Onesday, March I, 1978 PE ANUTS I/ES. 51~, M~.PRINCIPAL ... · Ml( TEACHER SENT ME TO SEE '(OU BECAUSE l'VE SEEN FALUN6 ASLEEP IN CLASS A6AtN ... DAILY PILOT Cl by Charles M. Schull JUST A LITTLE~ THERE,SIR, TO KEEP ~OU ON 'iOUR roes.,, I • i $ by Roger Bradfield ' by George Lemont · ~ N O -r' HIS PRINKIN6 WA-reR, YOO NITWl"f'.1 TODAY'S iaaSSIDBD · PUZZLI At;:ROSS so Turmon UNITED FMture Syndicate 1 SUica 5Expreu gratitude to 10Plece 14 Toward •helter 15Woody Aallin plant 18Cullure medium 17 Artlflclal •hoe IMleflat 19Bonlto'a relative 20Ask ear- neatly 21 Sculptor Jaoob 51 Reverie 5! lalam actMNnte: V11. 5 7 Sl'loOPfng .,,... e 1 Egg.ehaped 62POOf'Clt• rlligr. 2 WOfdl 64 Stiff hair 66Have-- 1boutone 66Lemb pseudonym 87 Solid preclp. 68 TakH care of 69 Closing nolae neu WOtds 23 Moved in a 12 Ra.It'• wffe 45 Marnea , . ' . I " curve OOWj# 13 Pa ... o-; egaln 25 U h I Abbr. 47 Fight "'1 ta naive t81nthlsplece 49Shellecin-·f~'\ 26 -· poat 1 Prtc:e waT 22 Greelt walk• p9dlenta 29 Gave an ac-result 24 Confounded 52 ~ 34 E:~~nded 2 ~:~~:... 26 Artfl:tal 53 Playwright '' 3!5 Lengthy, In 3 Adroll 27 ~br for -Hart time 'Take away horn or 54 Stove cham-• 37 Old 5 Medicinal stock ber • 38 Mineral COll'll)OUnds 29 PlaU1nt11 55 Elsak~ -: ~ • al)(lng 6 Bret--: Jao-neee • 39 Afr. flies U.S. author 30 g;r..,.lle premier a : 4 t Ten 7 Pierre's 31 Shin 56 Mentally decibels frleM 32 T ... -heattht 42 ChOlr mein. 8 Basebal 33 r;!.':r' 58 0..deft 44 ~part 9 ~~-With 36 Sleep Q An.at Silk• 45 Staple lood the Jone1es ~=· worm 46 lntermlaalon; 10 R91l'•Mntall'fe 43 Ul'Mf1Uen 60 awt.c. ~ word4 . aafJ11)1e ~ •=--48 Cloth folcta t1 M1tarl1I m> daflc•: i nick~ ' ·-~ .. c10 DAILYPILor Wednesday, Mwch 1, 1978 . Club Calendar INSURANCE WOMEN: Carlyle ntenalet. general counsel for the Assembly Committee on finance, Insurance and com- merce in Sacramento will address the croup Wednesday, March~ durlJll a dinner meeting in the Revere House, Tustin. Reservations are available from Dyanne EWa. Allstate Insurance Co., Brea. JUNIOR LEAGUE: The Newport -Harbor" gro\lp will apotllibt current projects during a 1 p.m. meeting Tburada)', March 2. at Vnlverslty lli&h School. lrvtDo. WOllAN'S a.ua OF LAGUNA BEA.CB: Vocal artiste Grace-Lynne Martbr and Ken Remo will present the program Friday, March 3, following a 12:30 p.m. luncheon in the clubhouse. Pl BETA Pm: Dr. Lawrence J. Peter, author of ••Tbe Peter Principia,.. "Peter's Quotatiom-Ideaa for Our Tlme.. and other books, wUl speak for the South.coast Alumnae Club'• Celebrity Boot Review Fr'IQy, March 3, at 10:30 Lm. at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. . Tickets may be obtailled from Mrs. Virginia Bollman ol BalboL ALPHA DELTA KAPPA: Members of Marina District will gather at the South Coast Plaza Hotel Saturday, March 4. at 9 a.m. for a diatrict meeting. Dix.le Zimmer of Long Beach will be the luncheon speaker. ADK Is a teachers' bollorar)' aoclety • . AAUW: Assemblyman Roa Cordova will address the Laguna Beach Branch at 9:30 a.m. ·Saturday. March 4. at tho First Baptist Church of Laguna IWls. ~ ALPHA XI DELTA: Orange County Alumnae will bear a talk on foot care when they meet at 7:30 p.m .• Monday, March 6. iD the home ot Mrs. Philip Hanson, Santa Ana. Dr. Roger Crawford, podiatrist, will speak on health • care and reventive treatm~ . "" _LA-OUN& B.&ACIL.Ea&L-1.. CUL&;.. --Members and guests will enjoy a performance of .. The Ugly Ductllng" at 1 p.m. Monday, March 6, in the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. I The performance wilt be given by the • Traveling Youth Repertory Theater, beaded by · Lisa Surette, director of Laguna Moulton Youth Tb eater. ALPHA GAMMA DELTA: Oranee County Alumnae have scheduled a talk by Betty Gilliland, graphologist, at their 7:30 p.m. Mon- day. March 6, meeting, at the home ot Mrs. Velma Bush, Fullerton. SPYGLASS BILL PHILHARMONIC COMMITl'EE: Harpist Harriet Wood will pre- sent a program at 11 a .m. Tuesday. March 7, at the Corona del Mar home of Mrs. John T. Forte. l The occasion ls a salad luncheon ho®ring as· sociate members. 'J'OPS llAllBOR LIGHTERS: The weight loss group will meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Much 7. iD the Baptist Cburcb. 650 Hamilton St.. Costa Meaa. D.Ur a.re Beloll ~ wut"meet a&. 7:15 p.m. Tueada)'. Jl9'Cb 1, in the Mercury Savlnp buUdt•&: B•m....,_ ~ BRANDEIS WOMEN'S co••rrrEE: Sylvia eoc-, teeturer iD parent education. sex education and gerontology. will speak for the Orange County group's fiftb birthd.ay membenhip brunch at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, March 8 ln the Newport Beach home of Carol Berg. Mra. Bogen'a topic will be Your Sex· uality. BETA SIGMA Pm: Newport Harbor Area CouncU wW ldct off ltJ b1oocl 6ank program at 8 p.m. Monday, March 6. in the Glendale Federal bulldlng, Newport Beach. A representative of tb&Red Cross and Mn. €arol Pollack of Sa!lta Ana wW epeak. N••• • plfaee to Sk•P~ ... ~lV?'\."'~" The Al ates n que w w1l he from noon until 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, March 3 and 4, and from noon until 6 p.m. on Sunday, March 5 a t the Laguna Beach Museum or Art. Twenty-eev~n California dealers will be displaying. Sbowb wttb ottques are llary Ja~b. )efl and Marien Q)vi,Q, president. Ad°*8too IS $1.25. oruJon~.cmmroru ( MODA f.10RENf.INI "" . . ~ .. Th~ HunUn on Beach AAUW will hold a f''cast for the Gods at noon oo Saturday, March 11 . at Murdy Park, Huntington Beac-b. Reservations must be made bY. March 3. Contact the AAUW at P.O. Box 2312, 921f47, or the Huntington Beach ~tral LUwary re. fereoce desk. Pictured are Marie Wallace, pre- sident and Shirley Kerins, who will &jve the program. PLEAD Luncheon From left. Eunice Alder, Helen Tracy Deir and Waukeen M11rtin, plan the centerpieces of the PLEAD fa$h-lon Juncheon to be held Saturday, March 4. a1 the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach. Cocktail hour is 11 a.m. and luncheon is at noon. For reservations call 6 44·4557 in Newport Beach, 494-2664 in Laguna, or 492-6267 in San Clemente. Andrea and Erin Kennedy model clothes whicb will be shown at the Pi Beta Phi Alumnae Club ' of Central Orange County Legacy Luncheon on Saturda.y, .March .C, at the Sheraton Newport j lHoteL Proceeds benefit Cerebral Palsy As- sociation ~national pbilanlbroples. Cynthia Vogel, Jeft. and Sharron Ohl~ are gearing up for a S-day ''Celebrate Every Body" program s sponsored by the Orange County Council Aux. iliaries of Children's Home. Society in con- junction with BulJock's Wilshire. The event de· butes Monday, March 6. Tickets for each day's events are $10 and are available by calling the Children's Home Society in Santa Ana. Eaco morning begins with a lecture al 9 a.m. and is followed by an expert speaking at 9:30 a.m. FRANCI~-ORR fire statialery corona del mar •&.a.a ...... The chaint U\at break th••r l>K.ksfot~ .. .w ....... , ......_, The recllnln~ Sofas .. University professor Dewey Chambers has returned to the elementary classroom. Professor in School lJy JEANIE ESAJIAN STOCKTON CAP) -Dewey Chambers told his new colleagues at Tulley Knoles School here last fall to "stop that Dr. Chambers stuff" and offer him no special treatment. Thus-bege.n--an -~unusual lea»e Tor tne University of the Pacific professor as a n elementary school teacher. Chambers, 48, applied for the one- semester faculty development leave to learn if the training he provides as an elementary education professor is relevant to elementary teachers today. "I wanted to do something that would benefit me," Chambers said. ''It was a whole refresher course in my field." Chambets, author of seven books on language and learning, visits the school { __ u_o_r_o_s_c_~_p_e __ } each year with hi6 college students, telling stories to the youngsters so his students, can see their reaction. "Then toward the end of the year he brings rus students over and they tell our students stories.'' says ,Principal Maynard Strong. __,. __ . -· ------ - -Chambers, who last taught elementary school 15 years ago, handled just about 'every subject in every grade from kindergarten through sixth during bis semester at '.fully Knoles. "We conquered Peru in the sixth grade and they loved that," he recalled ... And we got the Pilgrims safely to Plymouth Rock in the fifth grade. That's very exciting stuff if done correctly.·· · Chambers gave regular teachers the option of stayil)g in the classroom to watch or using the free period for class pre- pa&:a tion. "The majority of them were so in- trigued by his methods, they stayed in the. classroom," Strong said. What Chambers found a fter three months was that UOP is providing relevant education to budding teachers and that good education is taking place at Tully Knoles. But he does plan some revision and changes in emphasis for his students. ··I, think I have to talk to my student teachers about greater organization of the classroom and the overuse of mass media," he said. Pack Rats Curable? . DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently you printed a letter by a gir l who was so ·ashamed of her home she would never lnvlt'e A•• Landen :. . Wednesday, March 1, 1978 DAILY P1LOT '1U ••• sauce <From Pace Cl) pepperaauce. -· '-suM~OVS BAKED FISH 1h cup thJnly sliced onion SA. cup thinly sliced celery 14 cup thinly sliced carrot 1 tablespoon chopped panley 1 clove earllc, peeled and flnely chopped SA. teaspoon salt, divided SA. ~upoon dried dill wee, divlded 1 striped bass (about 4 pounds) draaed 2 tablespoons butter $)r mar1artne. melted ~ cup dry sherry wine 1 recipe Seasoned White Sauce 2 tablespoons lemon Juice 'tit tea.spoon pepper sauce In an 8 x 12 x 2-inch bakin1 dlab, combine onion. celery, carrot, parsley. garlic, V. teaspoon aalt and v. teaspoon dlll weed. Sprinkle flab, la.side and out. with remaining~ teupoon aalt; place flab on top of vegetables. Pour melted butter and wine over all.• Cover with aluminum foil. Bake in a 350 degree oven 20 minutes. Uncover, baste with liquid in bottom of pan and bake 10 minutes longer. Meanwblle; make Seaaoned White Sauce. Stir in lemon jui6e, remainlQg V. teupoon dill weed and ~teaspoon extra pepper sauce. When fish is baked, remQve to heated platter; spoon vecetables over fish. Meuure ~ cup liquid ,from ~ diab, add to white aauce. Heat sauce thoroughly: serve over f'isb. Yield : 4 serv· inca. You alao m~ aea trout, haddock, red ---·--- snapper Or flounder. · SAVOaYSlJPPEBSAUCE 'blktnl~toel . 1 recipe Seasoned White Sauce 2 ta~leapoona milk • 2 tttilet~ s.rated Grwere cb"'e 2 tables»OOQJ crated Parmesan cheeee II. teas~ Tabasco pepper aauce • ' Pinch of ground cloves ' bard-cooked eus. peeled and cut in chunks · • JAt pound cooked bani. diced l large apple. peeled, cored, diced ' Scrub potatoes, dry and prick with a fork. • Bake in a 425 deJ(ree oven 65 lo 65 minutes, amil · soft. Make White Sauce recipe. SUr in ad· diUonal 2 tablespoons milk, cbeesd, '4 teupoon extra· pepper sauce and -t~lovet. Heat unW ~ cheese is melted; add ens, ham and apPle; , cook 1 minute. To serve, cut an "X" in the top· : of each potato. Push some of the potato up wt~ ' slight pressure of the flngen. Spoon ham mh- ture over potato. Yield: 4 servings. ' ' SEASONED WRITE SAUCE 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons flour v. teaspoon salt ~ lea.9poon pepper aauee 1 cup milk J Melt butter ln saucepan over J()W beat. ' Blend in flour, salt and peppet' sauce. Gradually ' stir in milk. Cook over medium beat, aUrring constantly, until saiice thickens and come.a to a boil. S1mmer fOl' 1 minute, continuing to stir. Yield: Aboutl cup. ·,, .. ' . • • ~ J • ' ! I 'J ~ ,. I • ) I : ( . I .. ' .. APPLE 23e SAUCE Sprinefield for value! No. 303 can -: ~:tressing rrAUU •••• 39c • ' Bernstein's flattera greenaf 16 oz , d: : Tortilla Chips •• ·• 49c . Pinata Plain, Taco, Nacho -5 oz · Zee Napkins • • • • 25 c Packaee of 60 in aasorted colors . - . · Springfield J 9( Tomatoes Bir value in big No. 2 YJ can Syrup Loe CA8ll ••••• s1 19 1\laple-y goodness 30 o~ bonus pack Horseradish SAUCE • 49c Kraft to go with the roast! 9 oz · Minute Rice • • • • 79c ·Cooks the woy you want it to! 14 oz . VIVA 55 TOWELS e F11.'!>ta, Assorted or Decorated! roll Apple Juice. • • • • 79c Drink a glassofhcalth! Mott's-40oz. I' · Catsup • • • • • • • • • 29c Springfield for value! 14 oz btle. ~. Flour PWlllrS ••••• ~ 79c . . Rerular or Unbleached ••• 6 lb bag : Glorietta 39c · : ltec1clies _ . : Halves or Sliced Elberta-No 303 ,.,11--------~ Tomato Juice :. &9c ·~ •. Libby's carton ohiI 6~ oz cans . Puppy Chow •••• s1 49 Purina -'til he's full grown! 5 lb ,~Comet Cleanser 37c •' · In the decorat.or 17 oz ctn (tc off) J,. FACIAL ' :·· TISSUE 49c . I ·. • Scotties Colors or White· ctn ol200 . : ~: Formula 409 •... $1 59 '·•' Household cleaner that w0rka! 64 t>z. ;; fr· :~: Tide ommr •••••.• ~449 , B ig 10 lb family aize (lie. 40e off) '' ... G • s139 a ID ll1DICDIT .............. ~ .. Giant 48 ounce pkg (me Ho tfl) ' . . . .. . ,_ . . --~·~ FRESH FllDS to savor all the goodness of the "King of Roasts''!.... PACllC 1111 $219 ~.....___ ____ s~ .... 18hle.. Beef Short Ribs s1 1t Lean -IKJael-1 Rlb cut of Choice beef -Ranchero s ·189 STEAK • S.lect an all end Choice beef rib . - SD.ECT SMALL END Beef 1t it's belt! Nlbntf IC9d t• offer M ........,. lieaty coodntu yo1 ''"' ••• trimH to ciwt,. .n coed t1tinc hr,_ food ... • • • W.A. a.ice qu1ity! Al this. l9d .W.fashiaae4 lutcW sa.op Senicel ~'IM lttter WIJ! Beef Rib. Bones • 99~· Meaty -IU'lft Ch•ice! Bake or barbecue LONDC»N s2~ 09, BROIL • Rib cut of US D.A. Choice beef Ground· Beef ~-sl 2i Lean -doea not exceed 22% Cat Salisbury 39c STEAK .. ReJdy for cooking! Net wt 5 oz ea. 8p11nc11r 8i11ak U.S.D.A. 9 IJ nn CHOICf..... '£.ili11t Fin up th& ~la or the broiler ••• ad be prepared for hearty satWaction! Rib cut of U.S.D.A. Choioe beef 7 -Bone Roast ••• s1°! 0-Bone Roast ••• s1 1~ Chili Beef •••••• s 1°! Chuck cutofU.S.D.A. Choice beef Ct.iaycutofU.S.D.A. Choice beef Coenefy pound for• hearty dish CHIKK . STEAK 89~ U.S.D.A. Choice beef, to beaure! BGllllSS iOASi s1s~ Chuok Wt 1houlder ci.l -Choice! = SJ4~ Oftn ready! Made with Creeh eggal sruFFED · · re . A ... ~I 'II ,, FOR ROASTING •••••••••••• ~ • • • .. • • • • • • • • Ii Extra larae od Meaty! Orade "A" fryers, reedy for the OV9n al'td tM! !rind of old-fuhioned Sunday dinnn you remember Sliced Bacon ••• s 13t El Rancho'• thicker "ranch 1tyle" We feature Milk-Fed Veal The real thin&, for · satisfaction SPARE RIBS Fresh! Lean arwl 8*lty Eaitnn pork Pet Food a..,'S •• 39t Chicken bacu, necu, Beef trim, fat, liver. BRATWURST. ~~ s14' w no llftritu • Super Fresh Produce · ,,! Grapllfruii_ =~ ......... 1"11 '/ The famoua Tena Ru~y R..d5! Snee. jlrit"Y del~lttful navor t'-'" wtl<'C1tned any time! • · Fresh · 39c .. Broccoli ' Br!~ 2 21!c . Cherry 4• Oti1ons ... a Tomatoes 7 ; Fillet of Sole •• ~21t Fresh! Mild flavored Eq11ab tole. Scallops ••••••• s39t Luse ahe, from Alaabn watn -~' Stuffed 4 SJ Clams i MaU.w'a ••• Nt. wt. 2 MIDCe8 MCh flalibut Steak •• s3st Firm, flavorful-from Northern fJab - Snapper :1:' .. s1 29• Cleaned'and headlea. Average 2 to3 lbs. Smoked SJ59 Halibut • Delicious taste treat-by the piece. Yntak tt please ,.W. ,.a.ta! Gallo Win1S u 11r. • s329 French Colombard or Cbenin Blanc c ................. ..., Cabernet ..... s299 Italian Swiu Colooy, in the m•gnam smc Itel'? ••• ""' ._ IMritls Almaden 511 ••••• s325 Pinot Cbardonay, Cabernet s.uviPoa ·' • .,"Ji. -The belt of Spirits!· 0. RllalO'S =key $798 Still 86 proo{-and smooth! l .76 ltr 7 Crown wneo ••• s54~ Seagram'a blended whiakey-fiflb Old Bushmill ••• sg35 Sure and~ it's Irish! fift.b SAVE 70c ON • S1RAIGllT SJ99 Whiskey · El Rancho 86 prooC~ yr old! fifth Lord Calvert •••. ~-69' Fine Canedian whiskey ••• qumt Vodka cum ••• ··• sg9a Pour a bnnd you trust! L'15 tiaa- BOT1l£D. I SC01llm . o. RANCHO. • s74a Scotch · U.S • .NO~ 1 qulib' ••• all purpose Bed l'ipe little pant 12 os bekt There IUJl.y ts a diff'eNDC9! Qaat ~ De iootessen · Cheddar wi~1 ••••••••• ate LenaU' &t ci..e ••• and your chq!oe ot Lonabom, Co~ or Jtekt 9 os · . ' . HorSeradiSh sm. 69C Desserts amt•~ •• 4.Sl r~·. Wharf ••• 8 ounce size , : Bob's Dressing. s1o9 • Blue Ch ... • tM nal thtnat 16 ~ • .. . ~ Dinners .......... &sc Beet. C-... !!lldUJada Of Conr.bol 12 OI . Mo ~H $139 zzar~·• ..... , . · I .. .. . " . . r; l' I ,l ~ ~ ~ . ~ (. ~ . ~ £ t , i ' ~ • :y \ ; \ , '- r. ·I ~ ~ ,· f ·' " '· ~ .. LOCAL I NATIONAL I WEATHER W~nesday, March 1, 1978 * DAILY PILOT • J « ] I . o.lfyP'i ............. THE OLD GIRL ISN'T WHAT SHE USED ro BE, SAYS HUNTINGTON B!ACH AIDE OF THE CITY'S PIER BUILT IN 1914, BUT, WITH REPAIRS, THERE'S A L<>T OF LIFE IN HER YET City Council Orders Engineering Study ~of Munlclpal Landmark That la Showing Signs of Age and the Ravag•• of Dally Bettering by the Elements ·-. . Huntington PierSlwws Wear, Tear 'IAnadon t o Texa s Braniff Cancels Inaugural Flight 1.agunao& I $6,000 Ta1! By ROBERT BARKER OI ... o.lly f'tl« St.ft The 64-year -old Huntington Beach Pier is~t what she used to be. The old girl is showing her age and her underpinning isn't so hot e ither. SHE'S NOT ABOUT to fall in· to the ocean, but Vin cent Moorhouse, the city's director of harbors an~ beacbt?S", Sa)'$ she needs attention. Moorhouse said that pilings supporting the structure have been battered by waves and that steel inner cores are being ex- posed to sea water a nd the threat or rusting and cracking. He also noted that s upport structures for the wooden deck a re deteriorating a nd n eed work. MOORHOUSE TOLD City Council members Monday night th-at , if deterioration is allowed lo accumulate over too Jong a period, the cost or repairs could J be "astronomical." Council members voted lfnan· imously to explore bids for a structural analysis of the facility at a projected cost of $35,000. Moorhouse said that the pier entertains more than 10,000 vis- itors daily in summer months. He is in favor of adding two new restaurants al the pier and improving the two existing ones. MOORHOUSE SAID that lease payments could yield up to $250,000 annuaJty to the city. He said the city presently receives about $4(),tv:'<> per annum for the two current restaurants. "The pier is one or the city's major assets.'' he said. "ll could be a catalyst for downtown re- development-and we own it," he said. Moorhouse ·sa.id the 1,830-fool Jong pier was built in 1914 at a cost of $78,000. He said its value is qow between $2.5 milllon and $3 million and going up. He said that, with r e- habilitAtion, it could endure for another 100 years. MARRUGE . A.GE UPPED NEW DELHI, India (AP) -The lower house of lhe Indian parliament has passed a bill raising ·· the minimum agE! for marriage from 15 to 18 for women and 18 lo 21: for men. LONDON (AP> -Branill ln.ternational's inaugural flight from London to Dallas-Fort Worth was canceled today as the United States and Britain squabbled over cheap trans-Atlantic rares. Braniff was to use an orange Boeing 747 to begin a daily service betwee,n London's Gatwick Airport and Dallas-Fort Worth. Officials said the jumbo jet will remain at Gatwick at least until Friday. The U.S. Civil Aeronautics Board and the British Department of Trade have been unable to agree OD the price or the tickets. Britain has refused lo accept the tow fares agreed to between Braniff and the CA B, and the CAB has r efused to allow Braniff to charge1he higher lareS""Whfch Bntainwants.~ ~ ·--~ -· ...... Somet• Wa rned on A lrfra WASHJNGTON CAP> -President Carter's cbier national security adviser warned the Soviet Union today that intensified Russian involvement in Africa could jeopardize reaching a new strategic arms agreement. ( J Zbigniew Brzezinski was I N SHOR T asked whether the re is .. llnkage" between Soviet aid -------------to Ethiopia in that country's conflict with Somalia and the likelihood of new limitations on U.S. and Sovjet strategic weapons. ··we are not imposing any linkages," he ~plied, "but linkages may be imposed by unwarranted ex ploitation of local conflict for larger international purposes." Oaloria e Clea n up Co atlnue• YOUNGSTOWN. Fla. CAP) -Nearly 3,SOO Florida Panhandle residents remained uprooted. today as state, federal and loclll of· fi cials cleaned up a freight train derailment that resulted in a chlorine gas leak and eight deaths. Disaster troubleshooters succeeded Tuesday In neutralizing the remaining chlorine in a tank car that ruptured in Sunday's de· railmenL The chlorine residue was emptied into a speclany constructed pit and mixed with caustic soda, whJch was pumped from ~"eral cars of the 12-car Atlanta and St. Andrews Bay Railroadfreii.hl train. 5 Cai'e Explorer•~ WATERLOO, lit. CAP) -Five youthful cave explorers, trapped by underground water that rose to 10 feet in some places. were 12 hours from almost-certain death when rescuers found them, a doctor says . Sodden, filthy and exhausted, the spelunkers were carried from Old Schoolhouse Cave Tuesday, two days arter they em b'arked oo what was to have been a six-hour excursion. "JI they were exposed 12 boon loneer, I doubt that they would have survived," said Dr. Robert E. Schettler, who examilled the explorers at St. Clement Hospi~ lJl nearby Red Bud. But John Kloeckner, 18, Lisa Albrizzl, 18, Greg Berry, 22, Tony Nenninger, 20, and Michael Thompson, whose age is unknown, all or Sl. Louis, were in good shape. 1t'oma• Ra .. 1t'Jafte Bo•e Gate WASlllNGTON (AP> -A 6'7-year-old California woman rammed her car into a White House gate Tuesday night but failed to get onto the executive grounds as President Caqer hosted the nation's governors, the Secret Service said. The eight·foot high reinforced st.eel south gate was closed at the time and sustained only minor damage while the rig.ht front of the woman's car was considerably damaged, ~aid Secret Service spokesman Jim Holt. Holt identified the woman as Jane Ashman or La Jolla. He s"aid she was alone at the time and was not hurt. He added that he did not know what her motive was. MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) -President Anastasio Somoza's foes called for a new general strike today to proteat aJleged brutalities by the National Guard in quelling anti-Somoza demoMtratlons. Snow Covers Midsection Arizona Warned of Flooding Danger . , l'emperatewa l . ; For Ce nter · AP Wire,._.. TINY TIM TAKES ANOTHER STAB AT COMEBACK Entertainer Sings More Nostalgia Tunes Tiny Tim Tiptoes Through Nostalgia LOS ANGELES (A P > -Tiny Tim, the stringy-haired, falsetto- . voiced. ukelele-strumming entertainer of "Tiptoe Through the Tulips" fame, is making a stab at a comeback. Tim, who made a name for himself with · such novelty performances as singing both parts of a Nelson Eddy.Jeanelle Mac Donald duet, says thal.;Uter his t.Jptoeing days of 1967-68, he .. fell into a slump." He ma~e appearances at small.supper clubs and nightclubs, but nothing big. • "WHATEVER I DO IS TOP Ten," sayi Tiny, ''except that it was Top Ten about 60 or 70 years ago.'' In December 1969. he and 17-year-old Victoria Buddinger - "'Miss Vicki" -were married on the "Tonight" show. They separated some 21,:i years later and were divorced several months ago. Tim bills his new image as "King of Nostaglia" and he has changed bis acl to include more nostalgia tunes and an occasional female dancer. ..I FEEL THAT IT'S about to break again for me -it's just a m alter or when and how,·' he says. • But Tim's new act didn't quite hit it off in a January ap- pearance at the Comedy Store in Hollywood . "She <Comedy Store owner Mitzi Shore) said they weren't coming in," Tim explained. But he doesn't agree: "Believe it or not I have more people coming in now than when 'Tiptoe_Throueh the Tulips' was hot." IN ADDmON TO CHANGF.S IN his act, Tim says his agent "has feelers out" for "Barella" and "Kojak" episodes. He said he planned lo record a couple of country and western tunes. but the recording company folded before production was complete~ . But be says the thing that really excites him is a passlble role in a horror movie. What part would he play? "Definitely SOfl\..e kind of vampire .•. I've been wanting to do something like this for years." TIM SAYS HE DATES .. ONLY once in a rare while" and, despite his divorce from Miss Vicki, ''I'm married till death do us part. I believe thJt marriage is a sacred institution. I cannot marry again . "I haven't spoken wltb her for about a month. I'm not enemies with her, but I only call her when it's necessary. It's like the old song, •After I've Called You Sweetheart, How Can I Call You Friend?'" ~Best Beal . Property Upkeep a Battle • W ASBINGTON CAP) -lt's not the usual job for a covernment lawyv, but C. William Lengacher 11 dealin1 with a vandalbed •wl~mln& PoOl. a, sunken houseboat and a topless 10-10 bar that could lOH Ua llqu.qr license. . L~aaeber is the department lawyer in cbar1e of recoverini 11$6,000 embeuled from the aov. ernment hat year by a AS A RESULT. department Tra)laportaUon Department attorneys have filed an in· •cl•rk who went on a bu)'ine sUl'ance claim While 'trylq to aprM. sell the houseboat, which wu "PSil".tlally sunk In a winter storm. Arld they're batWnJ to nve the liquor Ucenae for tbe Lone Star Beef Bouie, whee"• bare, breaated .omen dance fot tho· entertalnmen\ of bU1.lneucnen aod 1ov.mnent workers.~ Other Hein• wm be IOlcJ at •uctloll next montb., Leqacber Jald. • L a gun a Be a ch c 'i t y councilmen have approved an advance of more than $6,000 to get the new Veterans Memorial Community Center oft l11e ground, and tonight they'll be looking at another $50,000 ex- penditure for the facilities. Last month the council bad voted unanimously to approve a mas ter lease program that means communitv "roups~. will -<me-er at-me-Afu~cali. -U-eion-- Post 222 'building on Legion and Catalina Streets. THE CITY bas been seeking a community center for many' years and has abandoned a h aJf dozen plans for one reason or anolherS Last month's accord calls for a $500 rental 1'ee to ·be paia· by the city to the Legion posL ln ex.- change. the city will pick IP the rental fees from groups already using the two-level structure. Last week , the council ap- proved a request for $6,€*> Jor .four months' rent, custodial services, utilities and tues on ttie building. ~ GEORGE FOWLER, direc:tor t>f human affairs, said the city s hould recoup $4,107 or that amount in rental or the bW.Iding to other groups, Council or Agin~ rent and the Legion's share of the taxes. But Fowler will be back before the panel tonight seeking $50,000 for repairs ana adOiuons f.o the old structure. Plans catt for repairs to the lighting, heat- ing, plumbing, roof repairs, and the addition of three new offices. a storage and conference room. parking and landscaping. Councilmen told Fowler last week they will seek matching funds ($25,000) from the county. Laguna Slates , TakntMatch ForMarchl7 The Laguna Beach Exchange -C lub is again s ponsoring a Search for Talent contesL ·al Lagun a Beach High S~~oot March 17. But talented youngsters mml s u b m i t a pp t i c at i o ns 1 o oarticipate in lhe eveat b:v March 10, according to club talent ch-airntan Charles Thompson. Categories for the 7 p.m . shaw include instrumental, vocal, dance and novelty with each category divided into three aae divisions including 6 to 9 years. 10 to 14 and 15 to 18 year olds. Trophies and savings bonds will be awarded winners. For ih· formation, call '94·8775. Nigue l Panel Eleetion Setf : Applicants · are being s~ for election lo the Laauna ltl\let Community Association board Of directors. The is.member p_anel ~ of representatives from etcli of- ten districts in Laguna Nipel. plus five at-large members. The· elections will be held in APril, ac cbrdlng to assoclatlo• spokeswoman Suan RinJr. .. • For informaU~ caJ1 ber at 493-0014, or~ Gloria Llnb1 ct '9&-6096. ~. . Nevada Hit . . On·ERAStao LOS ANGELES (AP) -Qt.t Co"'ncn members crlUcal or ' 'Nevada'I failure to ratify Olli"' 0 EGUl,Jlltllll Amoacl:i r~~ to approptlat. l taO' • Mild two Lot ti· Polff .... Wlllt...._ .. , ~ day cem.,..eu CC11Dm c:oGl.,.. a LU vecu ~· .._.,.... .... ... l . I l ~ l • . t. . ~ l I f I t 02 OAIL Y PILOT * weoneaday Maicn 1. 1978 PEOPLE / OBITUARIES ~av;d~ostAi•ds ~Tix• on ~-·~~~o~~~~~c~M~N~~~L~.-~~E-~~~,~:~:~~~1~~~c~N-~~o-,.~~-=-.-~---•-:-~-,-"-~-.-~-~-~-... -:-E--~-~~~~~:~!~:~c~;~.~~~,1~:~~~~--!i!J .., .L1"' 1 1 , j f'aale*ALl"tlC>nHYTO ITATaOf'cAu~NIAl'Olt MAMaSTA'nM•NT NAMllTATllMENT MIOtfHT atDOtllt TN a COUNl'Y~OttANea Tiie ~ PlflOI\ la dol"U ll<ul-lll• tollowl119 per'°"' Ill• do1ny -·Names Same, hut Aide's a Copy Editor From AP Dllpatcbea David Frost ls help.lnc bdlud Nlxoa on bit memoirs but it's not THE Davtd Frocst. The quest.loo of wblcb Davtd Froet b belpinf Nixon with his1:upcominc book aroae when The Trib -New York'• new mornlnc neW1paper -re- ported that David Frost, the British entertainer, .was helping Nixon revise h1I book as a result ot the 11ublication of ''The Enda ot Power0 by former White House aide H.B. Haldemaa. . But the publisher of Nlxoa'a memoirs aaid th~ l)avid Frost who is worktna on tbe former pre· sident's·book ls a long-time copy editor with the firm, oot the television peraooallty. * . The candidate for student body president at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln says he's ready to live the voters just wbat they want -nothing. Lyle George is a member of a party called ARF, which stands for "A Real Farce." Oeorge said i( be is elected. he would do the least amount of work possible and would "represent people who think the whole universi· ty is a farce." ( ) Apathy will be a OPLE platform for another par· .P~ ty, known as "Pour One .... _________ _.,_ Down the Hatch for the Regents." The party's presidential candidate, Jim Bachman, would auction the student regents' 10 free football tickets and ·'throw a big party for the university." * Once again, CBS Sports is hiring a beauty queen for sportscasting. Miss Indiana Pageant or. ficials said that the reigning Miss Indiana, Barbara Mougln, has been hired by CBS as a $ ~~rts analyst and interviewer. ~1th the Belmont Stake,.5 and :Wational Basketball Association j>layofrs to be among her first assignments. v:J' ... But a CBS spokesman in New York said Miss .Mo.ugin . ~ ' .. , had no television experience . and that the specific role she would have with CBS Sports had not been decided. Miss Mougin, 23, of Bremen, will join former Miss America Phyllis George as a sportscaster. * First it was a "deathmobile" and now it's a "life mobile." 'fhat's the city-owned 1974 Chrysler sedan that New York City Mayor Ed Koch says he will use to cary out bis duties. "We no longer refer to it as 'the death trap,"' Koch said a bout the Chrysler which slam rved into a snowbank last month after its brakes froze on a bridge overpass. The car is a leftover from the administration of Koch's predecessor, Abe Beame. An informal survey of New Yorkers found 36S cilizens favored the Cadillac. while 451 were ,against it. * Joan Mondale, the new honorary chairman of tl1e Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities says the group will try to im· prove existing programs and study new pr,ojects to enable more Am ericans to participate in the arts. ."Mo r e and more Americans want to be part of the best that our culture has to offer," the vice president's wife said after the White House an· nounced her appointment. The council was established M .~O~Lll b.Y Congress in 1965, but ha9'never been active in itS assigned task of coordinating federal cultural jfforts. ':.../. MONTEREY (AP) Co n sta nt in V. Semcbevsky, 83, who s aid he was once the PIH FAMtlY ~ COl.OHIAL PUMlll.L WOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 PACIFIC YllW MIMOllAL PAii Cemelery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific VieW"Or1ve Newport, Califomla S-.4~2700 McCOIMIClf MOITUUIH Laguna Beach 494-9-415 Laguna Hills 798-0933 Sen Juan CaplstTaoo 495-1716 IALTZ-111 ... 0M Ml•ALHOMI Coron• det Mar 673-9460 m:..o;JOT-,..a M-. 846-2424 llU.llOAOWAY MOITUAIY 11 O Broadway Cott1 M•t1 &42·9150 -IMl'IN-MNL&,.&ANI WU1'CWf CHAP& •Z1 E. 17th St. Costa.Mesa • &4M888 Sltlt&Ana CNpel 618 N. 8f'Oldwav. Sant.a.Ana• 547-'131 -, Pmel..,,._I ·~NOtlTUM'f ; 827 Mlln St. Hunclrigtotl a.acn ~ personal page to Ctar Nicholas lI of Russia. ·died Tuesday after a brief illness at Monterey Peninsula Community Hospital. CHARLOTTE. N.C. CAP) -Betty Feeaor, 53, whose hom e economics show was televised daily by WBTV for 20 years and who later wrote a weekly col· umn for The Charlotte Observer which chronicled her feelings and experiences as a cancer victim, died Tuesday. Death Notl~ AFL-CIO Preatdent Georse Meany aay1 ht was aurprlaed to reffive a cordial telegram from an unlikely so u rce - Republican Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas. "Very tnteresting," muaed Meany. . He aald be r.ee•lvW the wire during ·the midwinter meeting of the AFL·CIO Ex· ecutive Council ln Miami Beach. Dole b not known aa an oou enthusiastic supporter of or· ganized labor. But be bas been reported to be ail· ing up the possibility of s~king the 1980 GOP pre- sidential nomination. • Act.or Cuar Romero tesUOed he was paid $1,000 a "Jlontb by an Arizona land firm wh06e of· Heers ~e on trial in federal court in San Diego on charges of real estate fraud. Romero told a jury of four women and ~ight men that he had no management or financia l interests in Consolidated Mortgage Corp., or Phoenix. The movie and television star said he signed a contract with the company permitting only the use of bis name for advertising. The trial. with U.S. District Judge WlWam Copple presiding. was moved from Phoenix because of extensive pretrial news coverage. • Attorney Ellis Rabin asked a federal court in Miami to overturn the murder conviction of 15· year~old Ronny Zamora, who claimed he was driven to kill by watching television violence. Zamora was sentenced to life imprisonment. Rubin's 52-pase-briet said the trial judge never allowed him to argue whether Zamora was capable of separating reality fr om television fantasy. Jurors rejected Rubin's a rgument that the boy was IAMCHIA driven to kill an 83-year·old woman because television crime shows had blurred his ability tc tell right from Wl"Ong. • Dr. Mason Hohl of Beverly Hills has been elected president of the Amencan Academy ol Orthopaedic Surgeons. The election came during the closlnR ceremonies at the academy's 4Sth annual m·eeung 'in Dallas. Dr. Hohl Is a clinical professor or sur· geryorthoJtacdi.cs at the UCLA Medical School * The ex-wife of an illegitimate son of Pablo Picasso filed suit in New York seeking possession of five works by the artist valued at $:500,000. Sara Lee Rata·Plcasao contends the son. Claade Pierre Rab·Pkauo, proml$ed to give her three Picasso paintings, a silver medallion and a sculpture as part of lbeir divorce settlement, but she never received them. She did not contest the d1 vortc in 1973. aner rour years or marriage. She received a lump sum payment of $2.500 instead or aHmony. She is an actress and lives in Greenwich Village . * President Joslp Bros Tito accepted an in· vi tat ion to visit Britain in March. " Tito. 85, will meet with Queen EUubelb JI and Prime Minister James Callaghan. Sci Fiers Set UCI Lectures A l ecture series featuring science fiction writers will be offered at UC Irvine March 3-13. "Science Fiction; Fantasy, Terror and Soul," hosted by Dr. Gregory Benford. will be held at 7 p.m. in room 220 or the Social Science Tower. Speakers wlll be George Clayto n Johnson, author of "Logan's Run:• on Fri· day; T.J . Bass, author of "HaU Past Human,'' March 6; Theodore Sturgeon, authored of ''E Plurtbus Unicorn," March 10; and Robert Bloch, aut hor of "Psycho,'' March 13. Tickets are $2.50 and are available at the. door, from the aaaociat· ed students ticket office in Gateway Commons, or by mail. Olecki CB be M!lll 10 the UCJ Committee on ucturea, UC Irvine. Q: Information may be ob· tahed by calling 833·5588. Probation Meeting Set Orientation meellnl's for prospective pro· batlon volunteers ar e scheduled for 6 p.m . March 9 and 10 a.m. March 23 at the Orange County Probation Department, 301 City Drive, Orange. Additional in · formation on op · portunitities for volunteers Is available by calling 834-7260. PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUtautfHIU NAM&5TATIMINT TM f .. IOWlnt .,.,_ IS dolnQ bull· _ .. ! INTalllORS IV MAllTI, M41 Dor~tt Of.. H\lrltlnetOfl Beed\, CA ,... Marti fl!Uftll•' 01~<••. "" Donel! ~., Hwltlf\8t0ft .. Kii. C.A ,... Tiii• ~ ia--.. r, an 111. dlvlWal. MdOettla Tlllt , ... ...._ -flied wltll '"' (Oljnt'f Cl~ ot Orantt c:.tHMy 011 P'M>rllary )4. ""' .,,.. ~lshed or.,. Ollltt Ollly Pllet Mar. I, t, IS, 22, "11 t.._1' PUBLIC NOTICE N•lk• fl ._Ntrf QI~~ Mtr-oet• .... ._..,., Ml' .. : bu"""' •• tdt1hbttlNbereul-SfOfM1ealM NOTICI OfJ NIAal1tO 0" l.ll'l!UYl.I! 1.ANOSCAPE, ,., ZOOM MAINTEN ... NCE COM llltfte•I ~ .. h ,_Mlwf,.. 11Md ... TITIOH fJOte f'ltOeATE OfJ WIU. A""nlM Conloll9.ANMilft.CAfll01 P"'NV, l)A J-"'•L •A. C.Oll• "Ii~ """Ch Nit bMfl deet-A H D " 0 It L I T T I 8 I ttotltrt M•fCUl Wor•en, tn M•ll·•• Cetltromle tl671 •11rptui to ,,,. ftfffl of tllt CNll TllTAMINTAll'f, Awnld<I ~ • ....,..,"'·CA '2901 8t11 Zoombom CllO, 7~ Jeni" C-111\lftlty CIMI ... Dl•ll'~l Rllllt OI ttOel!ltT H. ATHl!RTOH. Tiils l>uil-It UWIOUCltd tly.., In. Str .. 1, • ~ Co1te Me•-. C.lltorn•• FonUttTr11c111 T-OI'. Oe<oltd. •lvtoual. .,.,, Senal•"'°" NOTICE 1$ H••eav OIVIN tllet "*"~Worcltll . llll• bu•l""41•«iind11Ct .. DY•n tl'I• S.l•llldtwtlttlit•n'4'"411pWll<ly Lowell 5Pl'lt1W hat llled her,in • Tiiis ·~ w• flled wit.II Ille dlvldu•I. read atow 1111r ...,~ iW"ll a llA Ptllll• tor "'*"'"' Wiii -tor 1.-c.vntv c~ "' 0r-. C-ty on zoom 1. ~ "Oii tfM ___...,,,,It lt:GO t.m., lllln<• of Leewt T•~ • ..., ~fr~ t Tiii\ 11411-t was lllold wllfl ll>P Tll\lrallar, Merell "• tt11 111 tl>e ..._. •• """'"' It "*99 tw fllrtN< • ~ C'.o;inty Clent of ON-.. <;ounlY on Conte re11u "-ef tl'4t Olllrlc Mftk •len, 81141 ttlat tM 11 .... IM ~. ttMG c>-. CMlt n.tly Piiot l'ebnMiry 7, "11 tt•O Mrnlftlttrlltlell aulllllft& ,. ,,,. ,. ........ , .. -"-..... wt ,..,29 #« ' • " 1'11 ~ 9 A.,._,., <llllta ...._ ~ fiW Merell 14, t1I, .. 10 aJ'l\v 111 !-. .. ' ' ' ' '42-7' Pllbll\lltd 0r....-Coe.I Oe1tyP1101, ..a.,_,• .. ,_..,, .... ettlcll <*Ht,...,. .. ""'*11•..," tto. a .. Mid ~ 1, u. ~..._.,,me IN ~ ~ .. b-.W Clllln~ at 10t a-.tc CIMfW Otlve WMI. -nd•~c NIVW'WCE *"' ii* '9 .. tllM 19' tor t11e ~ lft Ifie City tf SMta Ana, c.atllonll&. _...., ...._. v a a Int a M ellflillle ,_ -lclloratlon. 0.t.ecl "'*-V 21, 1'7t Pr......i t-.1 lfld comp .. t• 111-WIUJAM IL k .IOMN, Utuctlvns m.r tie OCICellMd at the c.o..nlyOerk P11r<lla\lt19 Olot. of lrw Olttrkt et tllt J0tl~N It. DAVI$ allovt -..... ~ •MIUOMI In• l7't M~ ...... fwl'lllttGn or "-ti.rt e"9111a-t, hlw UJ u11 Mr. ROllert c.. Moore 171•1 c..u,.....~nu. SS.-S>S4. • ........, ... : ""*- llhh ttllnt tie KCMIPM\led &y a l'ul:llllMO Qr ... CDnl Dally ~llot, Cerllrtecl or ~~·· O.Cll "'.,. l'ell. n, 2:J ..., Mar. t. 1'11 ffN• P• rat11e to the C.O.U c..nmlHllt'I' ------------Coll ... District, OI' C1111, 111111 e..-t not Ins _, 10% "' tfle total Old. P UBLIC NOTICE ........ I clle<'U .., ... ._,......_, ------------0.-'lil of lllC'Ut&flll ~ ., .... eppu.-to 111e purcheM once. 0t11e< dt-'1 cMckS _,_ c.Mll Wiii ... , .. llH'ned WllNn tlf"'lfl O.~ 1111« t,.. ~ Of Trvd..-eccepe~e Of lllQll bid, wllk ll Will bt on~" 12. 1t1t. All Hl*'ISft Of Clor19Qe and r-el er• ,,.. ~IOotllr ol Pura.-. t"° Hl_.t41C Wiii lie ·-IO ell •mounts ..,...,., velld reu11 wiH tali permit <•rd «<-IM bid Tiie 80<1rd ,_, h rleM IO , .. le<t .,., /or •II bub or to ....... any Ir· eaul•rity of llllormelll1 111 11w W. Ing. All m.!Wltfl end -'111'-.t are wld In .,. ·•• Ii~ k " -.tlUon. TM C:0<11I ~ty Coll-Olttrk1 m•kli "° OUAl'MtM wrtthm or '""'" pll..s, •• 10 l"9 Qlndltlon Of eny llwn. P•rm-In 11a11.....,1 lie,,..-wltllln llve worllll'Q .. .,~ •Ile!' noll<• ol •••rd; -Ult t'9m ,,_, .. ,..........., from IM Coltegt ~ M tlrM "' full P4I y ,.,.,.,_ Tiiis nouce I! In ace-wllll SKllon 16401 Of ti."°'"°""• EdWC.atlcNI C-. Sl.,,.O NOAMl<HE.WATSON Sec,._.ery, lloerCloC T,,._ Coest °""""""'' COi '-Olstr 1Ct Open' M¥C11 1', 1'71 -tl.00 a.m. 8 1dS.le· 1U PvblllNd Or-. C.0.\1 o.lly PllOC. Ma<cn 1. I.,.,, Ill-It -·· PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITICIUI •llSINllU NII.Ml ITATIMa,.T The fol~...,_ ...... lllu\I• ,. ..... COUNSELOR PROPaRlleS. 2110 Main 51,..t, Suite ue, M\ll'ltlr19lon 8Ncll, Cetlfornl• ,._. COUNSEL.OR REAL. TV, INC, • C•lllornla corpcwetton, S06 llln Sir HI. H uni lllQIOft lle.ee.ll, C. lllc><n1 • '16-41 Tiiis ~-II~ by• co,. poretlon. Cout\Dlor Realty, tn<. RO<Wld D Elli•, Pr~ICll'nl Thi• •l•leme<1l Wil\ llled w•l'I th• Counly Clull ot Or•nae c;o....1., on Febn141ry '· 1911. ....... P11llll\Md 0r41nQe c-st 0.11'1' Piiot Feb. U, 22. Alld MAr. 1;a; "71 St~le P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SU PERI~ COURT OF T"f n .. TE 0,. CALI FORNI .. FOii THE COUNTY OF ORANC.£ t PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSINUS HAMI STATUlllNf Tiie tollow1119 per'°"' .,. doino IHitl""u". iTATUlDTOl'AIA .. DONMlltT 01' UH 01' t'ICTITIOUS IU~INHI 1tAM• Tiie tottowlne -'°" ,... ,.,..., ... GOGLANIAH EN fE APRISl:S 70U Pl•ce1111a Avt , (0>1e Mue C•lllornle ,,.,, ' Ille u .. OI .,,. llctotloo.$ i..11 .... , .,._ C"OUSTILLE 8AK.INO CO. et Jlt Ctdtr Strul, Newport leecll C:.lllornla '2t40. ' Al•••ryft,£ & Mery Go9l1nl1n 1Hu•ban4 i Wit• 11101•1dual Pr0e>rl•tonlllpl, 001 L••I ISlll Str .. t, Ntwl)Ort 8Mc11, C.lllorn1e tMJ Tnl• bullneu la COllCN<lto 11., '" ln-dovlCllHll. Tiit ll<tltl-b<l•lneu """• re· •• .,td to •bow ... llled In eow.1, ... NowmwH. tm. Altx•noer ~lenlal'I Tllll st•l-1 "''' llllkl wllll the County Clerk ot Oran1111 Co•mly °" f-allrU.ry •. 197&. Coelt Gr0ue>. lncorp.,rated, tit Cada r Street, Hew port eeaclt Calllornle t2M.> • Tiiis butlnest we.t ~ 11y A corp0re11on. SIGM<I Xa•ler Kollen ... ,.,, PullllaMcl 0r4MIQe Coe1t Oally Pilot, Feb. e. IS, 22 -l'Mr. 1, 19/t Tiiis 11.Cemtnt .,.., fil..i wltlt 1119 Coun1., c•-of Otet1oe eo..intr CHI Ftbr1Mry 17, 1'7'. PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICt; FICTITIOUS IUSINEU NANIE STAflMENf Th• lollowlnq P••M>ns ••• dOl"9 buS•MU •i .e1 INVESTMENT COMPANY 11 '""It~ p.lrtrwnnopl J\q !>.II> MoOO<'I 0, '"'~ N•wport 8f"•cn. C•f•tornt• '11...0 RiChArd N 01<1il. llr!Ol V1ro1n•• R~a. S...n Marino. C.1itcw-n1• •1 tOI • T"'' tt"1t•M"\; '' conovct.o by • ltmJtwid p.trtnt""'" R1<hilrON O•t~ c;. f'tf>fdl p,.,,,..., l ,..,.., \litt..,.,_,,,, ,.. '' f1lt'd •itn 1~ County Cl•r" nt O'•"~ County on f.•bru•ry U 19/b "*SS Publl\""<I °''""O" e,.,.,, D••tv J11101 M•r I, 8, II n 1911 '811·/I PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' INTENT TO MAKE l lJll( TlllANSl'Elll IAND ClllEATE A SECUllllTY IHTERHTI IS.CS. 6101-41'7 U C C I NOii<• ,, """•DY C)!Yttt'I, pUr~uant to t11Y1 MOii of ""' lJnlforro C.omnwretll c-ol '"' Statt of C•l•IOfnt•. ,,.., ,,,. unGerSloneio. W"'°"9' tMl\IM'\\ n..mt •\ CITY AUTO PAATS ...., who•• ou" ,.S.\ Mtdre'\111 )QM. Pl«ent1• A~ut Cos.I• MH4~ C.lfforn1•. •l'fd wtio\~ bvs1nen I• '"'' of • R.,•11 Auto Paro 'S•I•'· Intend\. •• •ren\l•ror to tr-fer 10 8anlt Of ,._,.,. N•l- Tr..U •ncl .s.,.,_ ~---buun•i~ eOdrti' t\ Ql'W'f"n h~rr1n ti.low ~s ttilt\\,Prf'f • W<ut'1tit ,,.. ttr•sl In GH1.i•n 1>'1)(1tny ot wri1cn t QeMrat ~IPUO'l •\••104~ All 11'etv1nq turnlttw~ .-id ••~tu,., ln<IU<11114 llul not llmol.O 10""' IOllOW •nQ I R C All'" CA•n llf'Q•\ler t R C Allf't"I r'(Mwrtt!llr I Undtriii•ooo OH111ett1 '111• C.alrul•UW , AOdonq MA<htrW\ II R•"'•noton Rene! 1 SMCI V•ttor Automollt Col<ul•l0< 1 Clory C.l<ulalor 1 Apeco Eleoctro Stat Copl~r "'''" T<tblP 1 UPrillhl lorQP ,.,, 8urolar Alarm Snl•m Mloc:elt-1 at>IM!~ rBCn lJll'll7 W P"HH. ....., PubllsllM Ore11119 eo.st Oeltr Piiot Feb. 22. -Mer, I. I. U. lt11 ttJ•lt PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING 910$ 110 I Tl!M NO, JIS NOTICE IS HERE8V GIVEN li..t M•ltO Pt_.1\ Woll be tK•IW<I Dy Ille C.•tv of Costa Mn41, to ••I. Tiie O · ly Counc11. Post Office 8ox 1100, of tN C•tr ol C.0.1• ~• C..llfOf'nl•. on or llelore lhe llOur 11 00 •·m , °" Friday, M•rch 11, 1911 II Sh•ll bP th• ruoon•ll>lllly ot ..,. 11'-lo O.llwr '"' b•<I to tho Clly Clerk's Olflc.e b't -proo.r announcoo II,,,., Bkti wlll tw oubtocly OP<!"fll •"" ,...., •loud •t t t 00 • m., or a\ toOn thtrf'•n:er ., P..•ctlubteo<1 Frio..v. ~reh 11. 1'71. '" Ill• Cout><ll O>a_.., Coty Hall, 11 F•11 Oro ... C...ta ~. C.lllornl•, !of lh• FURNISHING OF JANITOIUAL '>ERVICE5 IN THE CITY HALL.. 71 f•or Orlv•. ANO THE POLICE F'ACILITV, .. Falr l)r1w,Costa ¥He, C..lllornla "2-.la l'cldtllONI Soth Of "'9 -lf•<•loon• ..... cw -··-., -OfflQ of -Pu-cna••nq A9fnl at 11 Fa1r Drlw Co\ la Mtt• c.at•IO<""'•· 8°"" V>ould. •tlur"*<! lo n. •tt-1C1n of ti. C.lv (lprk, .... w-.,.,...._, _,,..., on lht ouhide ••Ill tne Bid llefft Hu"'~' -U. Oclenln<! O.Ce. Eacn l>ld OMll -•fr -..ch • ..., ewery It-• .. -._..,.., In f~ ~lfoUC°""' Al'ly -•II eK..,Cleoo1 to t,,. •PK ~flc.atoom mvst l!t cJa91 w U•l.O In ~ bid, Mtd 1.111\lf'e to wt loru. _., ••-·~ '"' ~..,,. •"•" be 9'-for re1ectt0n of ,,. bod Eull b<d .n.11 wt forth ,,. full ,..,,,., and rni<ltncH of 611 perMiM .,,., PMlotj lnt....-stfCI '"Ow P..CICIOWI d\ pt"1nC1P4tfS In C•M of <CW'POt'•tllOM. Inc•-Ow ........ of Ille "'"-'· S.cr~••r,, TrM.......,, ~ M.an•91'r, r,,. c uv t.ounc 11 of 111e en, ot t:.K1'l M.sa """'" .... •illllt lo ••tKI .. ., or all bid•. OATEO· F-.v11, 1m Put>ll•MO or-C.O.st Delly Pilot, Maren t , 1971 n•1a PUBUC NOTICE w'o<h pro~rt., I• loc•t•d al 106• ------------Ptec;entoa Avenu•. Co11a Meu, •·1'456 Colllornla, endlNIHldlr•n1k!rwlllbo SUl'li"IO" COUlllT 01' CAUl"O•lllA COll\u"'"'•lfCI •I I/WI Vort>oa Linde off let COUNTY 01' ORANGE oflret1\le,...,t_,1Ml11 Str•t. Yortlll I• CIVIC c.ENTtr• O•IVI! WEST Uncl&, CelllonWo, on Of afllr 1he Utll SANTA ANA, CAUFOllNIA '260 Clayot Merci\. 1971 CASE NUMBE• 0.1).,.12 So tar u I• U>own to 111<' tr..,.•IPf'H, SUMMONS 1¥Alll•IAGE I tlVtr•Mltn>r,,.1notusadanybustneu •~ r• Ille ......,,.,._ of "-111-r: n•mt or •ddr._s other than Int_,,.. CATHERINE J. I.OWE -~ durl119 IM ltw• yean lest past. u c-01 Oenl CLARENCE E LOWE. CllyA11toP.,,1 NOTICEI Y• ..... -MM. T1M BenkofA,..,lc• <Mrt "'"'-.Cl*...,_,.... wltltlMt N•llon•ITr.,.t...., .,..,r ... ,,.. _, _.... \fM ,....,.. S..vi"G\o'•-ialtOn within • .. .,.... AMII tlile I....._... 81H-e, Ml-. Anl•lent~ AVISOI """""" .,.. ........ _. ~ L -llH El trlll-..1 _.. lllKIO <-ot U.. OorOllly K MD.Utt •I" ltHllM<le a,,_ -U4. ,_ Transteror1 cla deftlN ••.in_ Lea 1a ....,._ IANI( 01< AMEllllCA cl ... CIU• ,,....., lfalfenal T,.,,. -1. To 11>e Res~ Snl1tt11 Auac&.t.... a Tiie pellU-Plili flied • oetl· Yer1141 I.I..,... •405 11on <onG~l"9 "°'" ""'""9e. You i-.o .ln• '""Y tile• wrntei'I -wltl>ln • Tork LI.,.., C.111•"'• tt... d•v• et the delt 11\at tNs summons Is Published Or-GM\I O•lly Piiot. s.rveCI on"°"" M•rc" 1, 1971 '23-71 b. If vou fall to fllCI e · "''"'.,. PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,POl'I,. wtt11i11 such time, "°"' e11-teu11 m.ay lie enttr«I end Ille coun ""'Y •nllr • lllOOment "'""9tnlno In- NOTICE 0 .. AVAILAlll..ITY IUft<llvt or other ot<ltf'I CC1n<Mnl1>9 o .. ANNUAi. "'"°"'' d1Yhlon Pl prGl)ffty, qll)l811 IUjlOOrt, Pursuent to S«tlon •ti>' (di of th• tlllld cu11oc1y,c111td-1. •t-y•s lnlernal ••v•nu. Codt, noll<e Is IMS, co.ts, and auch Olhtr rellef es 11ereby v1 ... n 11\at u.e ennuet rtpOf't tor ....,., bt tr.,t«I Irr ·ti. court. wt11<11 the C•lendef yeer 1977, of llrl995 could result In 1119 oarnisttment of Gunnl"9ham Automotive M-m ts w•ges, takl'IOof"-Yotpr..,_.,,., •••lleblt fo. pwblle 1n..-c:llen by eny 01,,., rtll9f. Intern led c.ttfltn WllO ~t\ II et c · II .,.., Wllfl '911" 11119 eftla .. tile foundation'• prlnclpet ofllu local· •11 •"""'9V • t111s "'8!tlr, YM....,. ed •I 111 8tl!M $1-1. Colle MltM, MM~• tr.et fWr WY'lllft C.llfo'l)l•t2627,be91Mlnton March I, '"-•·If..,,,_,.,...._ • ...., 1971 and '°' 1IO CNV9 1Nreel'9r dur1119 O•tecl ~ •• 1m .....,1er butlntM 110Un from 1:00 e.m. ~~AM L It JOHN, ..,l:OOp.m. 8 ·-·• The ,. • .,.. of 111e Prine~ Meft'9tl' Y ........ &. Olfts1ant, of tlle fo1111jlellon I• &rl19• Cun· OtiPlllY n"llam. !SEAL) Tiie tit .. of.._ "'Inell*~ of MU•lllAV i-AUTI the tovnoetlon" Pnllldetll 01'-'I«· • ...,.., ... Ww DAVIO A. w••t•LOW, Ct'A f .. I ltectl ......... t! ,., ........... -,._ •••lmlHtw, CA ..... .......... Clttler'll•'11tt , .. : 0141 ~ T .. i Cl~ _, .... ......_. ----"~an.ea QiullWJ.y" l'ublllllld 0r8lljlt_Q!llt0Mtt ~~I-- Mardi t. tm 11:a, 1'.o.r,u.ztanct~. '·"" _,. PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y • p I L 0 T c L A. s s I F I E D ·~ Wednesday, March 1. 1978 * DAILY PILOT ··3 HouM1 For Sde Houses For S. HoGe• For Sc* Hou.a For ScM • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ······················-Gwnl 1002 ¢, .. ,.. 100 Ge•rel 1002 G ... r... . 002 ..................... ....................... ...................... ...................... . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EOOAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ,... ........ Motlc•: Ge•d . IOOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• CAPECQD SSJ:909/$Z, '50\ TOTALbOWNl Winding roadway to soaring 2 story retreat! Prtva~ grounds protect aecluded entry~ hlvish living room. Gourmet kitchen overlookll sun· shine courtyari\! Wand· ing stairway leads to sweepiJle master bdrm plus child's retreat! Hurry! Seller is anxious. 847~10 OPfN Iii 9." s IUN ro81 Nl(f. [Mll&IHI $51 .900 Well maintained Wwnhome In convenient This newspaper will not location. Btfl growids w I knowingly accept any mature trees & shrubs. 3 advertising for real bd, 2 ba w/ clubhouse, pool & sauna. Owner estate which i5 in vioJa. transferred. Must sell All real estate advertised ln th.la newspaper is sub. ject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it IUegal to advertise "anr pre· ference1 llmitat1on. or di&crirmnaUon based on race, color, reUgion, sex, or national origm, or ao Intention to make aoy such preference, limita· ucn, or dlscnmination." _u_·on_ol_th_e _la_w_. ____ 1 NOW! 646-Till ERRORS: AdYlf'ffffn lho.ld chedl their ads daily and r-,ort "" rors """-dlotety. The DAILY PILOT assumes UabiHty fOf' the first in- cornct IMertfOll only. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• INVESTOR'S SrECIAL $46,000 Guarded gateway pro- tects lavlSh grounds with pool. Secluded entry to executive livmg room. Sunshine gourmet kitc hen overlooks private ('Ourtyard . Sweepmg master bdrm & <'hild's retreat. Owner is anxious. Submit any offer! 847-1>010 >1tfJ1llY·' 1vnin1ttr. ,. l®_ll~tdtd NESTIGI HEIGHIORHOOD Mt:Sa Verde 4 Bdrm. 2 balh with pool Jacuz:u. family room w/dark·rm. Sta,ned glass and skylight. Call for appt. 546-5880 ... ~.HERITAGE ~ Walker & lee Real Estate WARM& 1£AUTIFUL 3 Bdrm. 2 bath Westclirr hOme. Huge living room. elegant formal dining area, gourmet kitchen Spectacular shimmering pool with waterfall A rare opportunity 1f you have been looking for something al a realistic price in the West<'hff area. Hurry on this one• 646-7171 OPfN lot 9 •II S ll)N fOKI N I• [lfld!Hil OCEANYIEW $96,500 Hard lo find one story condo w/2 bdrm + den. 2 ba w comm pool. Jacu1.z1 & sauna. Walk tu bl'Jl'h Our cxcluswe. F1r~l llmt> oo market. 646· 771 1 Real Estate EASTSIDE PUSTIGtOUS LINDA ISU Stately stone & wood custom home on l 13' bayfront ~ tip of island ~th big bay view. Fmest of construction witlfout regard to cost. 4 BR suites + mds qts, 2 pwd rms, fm rm,.den, billiard rm, elevator, sauna, unique pool, jacuzzi & boat dock. $775,000. Lease or $1,375,000 Fee. SeUer will finance. By appt. only. WISUJ N. TAYLOR CO .. RIALTOIS 2111 S-J ... HlhRood NEWPORT CIHTEI, M.I. 644-49 IO CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX One of the largest & nicest duplexes in Corona del Mar. 3 Lge. Bdrms .. 2 baths & enclosed garage for each unit. Close to stores. bus & restaurants. Priced low at $179,500. 759-0811 450 NEWl',Olll <.IN 11: ~ OHi VE 759o;;1 1 1002 GeMrof 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAUOA PENINSULA .I UST 1\1 A R V EL 0 US Cape Cod. 2 Story. 1 bedroom. Owner "'ill finance and is flexible. Al must "on the bcuch .. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 67S.55 I I HA.RIOR VIEW LUSK This home has many custom features. L::irge rourtyard, beautiful ohve tree and many rose bushes . Bu1lt -1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE Close to Westcliff shop· ping 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. family room with fireplace. beam ceiling, etc. Alley entrance with lots of RV parking. Ask· ing $89.900. Call 540-llSI ~ ... HERITAGE .-. REALTORS Raise your ram in Fallbrook . Sell your home. buy our 6 acre avoeado grove, 2 stry Tudor, 4br, 3f/p home. Library. pool, chickens. XJ.nt schls. Pre-Listing price $329,000. By ownr, 1·728-2252 bookshelves, formal din·•----------'"~ room. paneled family 1----------room w1parquet floor, ONLY 4 LEFT huge pool Luxurious condos near ~ 11-.1-.•fll\l" ' beach. 3 huge bedrooms. 212 baths. Would you believe your own pvt yard! Open SatlSun 11-5. ... OH, IT'S SO NICE! " Charming tile-roofed Lido Isle ho~ with a spacious tiouth facing patio. huge sunny living room, a courtyaii;t entry, large s un-deck, 3 bedrooms and the potential for enlarging. There '1$ even copper plumbing throughou't! It's so-o nice! Presented at an allractive $215,000. U~l()UI: tiVMl:S REAL TORS: 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona def Maf .. also in Mesa Verde. at 546·599C> ~ :~~!'! .•.....•.. ~?~~,~~ .......... ~~~ llG CAHYOM 4 BR. Cam. rm., 3 baths. BeautituU.Y decorated faQlily home with patfo views from each room. ~.000 ... LIDO ISLE . Newly ... r emodeled 4 bdrm .• den, ~ . baths. living rm. w /cathedral ceiling.. Lge. master bdrm. suite. IAYFRONT " Several fine bayfront home9 with pier & slips ~( BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\1d .. Drivt· NS 675 · 6161 1002 GeMl'Cll 16112 ......•...•.•.••............•... , ............ . IEACH VALUES 5 Bdrm Peninsula Pf. Steps to beach. $197 ,500. Ne~er Ocean view d4Plex, Dana Pl. .$149,SOO. 5 Bdrm , Corona Highlands $167 .500 . private beach/ World Wide Brokers 673·4515 FABULOUS siit bedroom custom home. Linda fsle. Over 5000 sq. fl. With pool. jacuzzi. sauna & slip for 55'yacht. 3 IR +fan11._ _ ·: $72,500 • Paint & save dollars. Located near Goldenwest Colle"4re Very desirable S&S Mime. Priced below markeL Take over ~·1 monthly payments..~ •• quahty1.11g. No loao ~· <Hurry! Call 963·676'1 f)Pfl/ 111 9• II S IUN 1011( Real Estate , . • REALTORS CUSTOM Perfect home for the .Ir executhe on the mo' e Beautifully decor;ill'd thruoul. J S pattoui. bdrms. Lge modern kitchen. Fantastic famt· ly room & entertainment <.'eflter w /fireplace & wt'l bar. Huge R-2 lol. Diil to day, the pnce will sur· pri.~ you. 646-7171 ~. ~ · ~J~' "ta r :c·c:·a !t MM 2283 Canyon. Costa I•---------Mesa. 2 STottY, 4 IORM +poof+e..ad ·· beautifully decorate.a Zt upgNlded surfsi-ih.- J?arden home. $69.900 Gourmet kitchen. large h\'ing room with crat-kl mg flreplace & sechxled s undeck . Windi\)-g i.taircase to master swle. Ocean view .. T,iil(e ovt>r S!26 monlhly poy- NEW HOME Eastside c. M. Bwlder JUSt completed Uus 2 story 4 bdrm home. Features include; vault· ed ceilings. 3 car garage & RV storage. Hurry. <'hooee your own carpets. Call 546-5880. •:-:vr,. HERITAGE • • REALTORS VA NO DOWN Charming rountry set- ting. Tile entry. Gourmet kitchen. lluite living room + dining area. 3 Spacious bdrms, office too! Terraced backyard. No down to qualified VA buyers. Call fast! '7S2·1700 OPfN "' 9 . II s fl.JH ro p• N,r" ['111Ud BUILDERS »'IN •1, Q •of~ 'VN 10~( f/o(f • L~e1m1 EARLY BLUFFS 4 BR. 3 ba. end umt beau ty. Nr. pool. 2200 Sq. ft View! .$165.000 H. Dowd Bkr 644 0134 Classified Ads sell big items, small items or any it.em. 642-5678. ~ ,,,,,,_ ~ ~ """" Good Eastside location. ,_. Large level lot. Small 2 bdrm , 2 bath home, ~ sinale car garage. Let me show you bow to add oo to this. 381 E. Costa .. Mesa Street. P r ice r ~ 900,200. Good terms. ~ t:_tll" * ... ~. ""'!"11111111 <'~'> .. -1s a QOOd day . TIRED? to advertise in the Daily Pilot of loflated Oranie C9un· ,... __ 1f1~ Section. ty prices. Many 2, 3 & 4 'WtCllRM """ bdrm homes to choose tmm in South Bay area. No dWlJ or low dwn. FHA Ir Gf. Priced ~nounct '50,000. Ca-U Jme (213> ~OAtt. Newport Pier Reafty szit:a.1m1mi'11M11 2 005 Balboa Blvd. PRIVATE KINGDOM Newport Bch.673·2058 EnJOY this capttvaling retreat' Stately teak en· lry! 4 Oven.tied bdrms. Sofl t•arpets' Log burn· in..: fq>lc! 1-'ormal dm· I·---------1nA' Family room "' hadt•·a·wuy play room. ~uc h. much more!! Owner nnx1f1us! ! Just re· durf."<l ! Call &1~·0303 FORESTE OLSON .... '"'"''""'· VACAHTlr READY FOR YOU We have bunches of va- <.'ant houses in F . V . ll B .. G.G .. et<'. Call ror proressional assistance. 968-3371 JUSTUSTED! 2 Rdrm . house + bachelor 1U1it; on corner lol. Priced to sell at $139.SOO INCOME!!! BALBOA PENIN. S Years young; duplex, 2 up & 3 down; ocean side of blfd. Pride of ownership property. ~ood rental history. $189,000 Including land! 673.3003 642·22S3Eves. associated MESA DELMAR Popular 4 Bedroom, 2 bath model with a separate master suite & kitchen with more cabinet space then you will ever use. Lavish use or ceramic tile in entry, kitchen & master bath. f\Jll pricl' S!ll.900. CALL SSS· 26till. C:SELECT I PROPERTIES RR ') k ( R ~ •H /\ l T C R :, ' I 01 '/\ ' Jlt • • j ,_ b OCEANFRONT ~~~~~~~~I By owner, priced to seU, make offer. T1W wuta . Want Ad Help? MZ-5171 ~ttltor 559-4221 ... _ -... OCEANFRONT Ch:tnmng 2 BR. home-, ~ car garage. Best swim· rnin~ & f1 shini: area, ~rca t neighbors! $275,000! 8al»ocl Bay Prop. RHlton • 67$.7060. ments. No qullifying . .t-io LOW MILEAGE loan rosts. Call 963·676'7' 2 BR Orange Tree con· OIY"' ••19·11s•vN1oe1 M(l'o\ ~:;.~\·.::i.~~, ~.~"' [~:lffiMl1I HI) 833-9781 II] Hester-Brown llE A, TORS •VETS• Zero Down Zero Costs Homes in all areas, WI Si7CS. Call: Veteran Housing Agt.._' 541-0800 I • IRAMDNEW 3 IR·S65,900! Its true! A brand new custom built home at on- ly $f>6.900 full price. Ex· ccllent location on tree lined street. Established neighborhood. 3 Spacious bedrooms + 2 baths. Family room. Trailer ac· cess. Call fast 752·1700. $1.62 per DAY t That's~:oupay : ~day ad I I lntbe t DAILY PILOT ;. i • SERVICE \ ~ DIRECTORY ~ i DO ft "°"1 11 " OfJf N flt ~ • JI S Fl/f'I IO 8f NIC'f t l•IBlll '42-567• •ooi .............................................. macnab I Irvine raalty • D....,_C .. IMUI Front 2 Ba w /beam ceilings, tile kitchen &i bath. Rtar ta.race a~· w 12 BR.s. 2 stnsle ~es. Patio. Walt ta market. & school. Terms negotiable.. Barbara Wrilb\ 64+6200.. <M·l16) • • > • . ' . 1 . t t l ' : • ~ . r ~ .; • t ~ / . , .. , IN D~L.YPILOT •* .Mwoh1,1978 ~!!!.~~·.~ ....... ~!.~~ ....... !~~!!!!.~~ ....... ~··tt anPw,. Ho.tlei'6r MMHtPorS• Hwlfffof'S. CodaMHG 1024 ........ o.hodt l040 Im. 1044 .._...,_.5. HcMIMtPor S. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• .. ••••••• .. •••• ••••••••••••••••••••'•• •••••••••,•••••••a••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••~••••••••••••••• ~ .... .,,.. 100 Gwrill l .. M• 1022 °detMcr 9022 . THE l.epllatlls 1050 &.ogunaHil• 1050 ;-;~ .... •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• .. ••••••••••' •t••••••••••••••••••••• Coun~ l>l\'C>ltC:E ••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ' Club s tf FORCISSAU RACQUET GLUB i." '. JlB.l LINEUP Aerass fM! M!::1erde ~per Meredith Gardens FEATURES Oll•IMA&: HAUOR YllW ~ V•EW Counu·y Club. Executive hofl\!. 4 IJdrms, family, f rolly b . home with 4 bedrooms. formal dining, large A W MBLETON Spacious 4.Bdrtp, • rm ome 1D fatnily room. formal din· 15xS6 swimmln1 pool I ·' original Harbor View with formal ill&. 2 fireplacet. Lush .Hurry & aeo \h¥ rreat dining, pool, ja~Uni -'AND -decor, proresstonally family horne •t...only 1bis elegant 5 bedroom • '' I Lingo Rul&TA'Tt Gorgeous ocean, harbor, island & landscaped. U14,900, 1141,500C•,U~o-1151 home with pool aod apa ... night light view. Reduced to $259,500. BKR,MO-l7~ is in move in condition · · · • Pr oi e-s s ion a 11 y , ' . ..... . CAME<> HIGHLANDS SOUTH OF HIGHWAY COnAG.I An absolutely charming 2 Bdrm cottage with gleamiQg hardwood floors and TWO separate 2 car garages. Reduced to only $134,500. • TARBB1 ~~~~~~~~~I land9caped and vacani. OWNER MOTIVATED. FAMILY HOME -Spadom 2 stot;y hw lcllal•for f...Uy . SUBMIT YOUR OF· •"*..I In Calffontla" FER!! ---~------: 4 BR, 2 ba, 2400 sq n., lo '\ .!t ... ,~. Tiii• ......... 3 ... 2 •• + ...... ., .... ··~ fOl'llllll dlAlllg ...... .... 1-ilt ,..... ..... t.ricl& fin ..... Deck Off Malhr , , ,.... for~ llllt 11 Ylf'Y. ..... pYt ........ ,: .• Oaly $169,tOO. .. -EXCHANGE ANYONE? Thia • .,.., ftic. CCWGH .. Mm-dllplex w 't:.O:..;"d iaunl wo•ld co111ldu HC for .......... , C:..... del Mar to o .. PoW. 2 mNI 3 11 lllib w /I IA ~ ~ eaclL Priced low at SI 19,500. .. .). EMERALD IAY .... Spec .............. of .. ...-Mty. onrlooldeg EIHrold lay. TWt 11 the .-. ptrfect ._, ...... for .... ~ to -, ilY• Ill fllil great p.t. COG mltf. 4 II. .. IA.dn,..... .. ,.. .... ..., ........ $495,000. NC>RTH LAGUNA ESTATE , ..... Two ect"9S w/oc ... •lew, 6 II. 41/J IA+ ;:-: 3 IR 4)lllSt lllome, pOof, 5 c• .-.... ,.t. • .-tu. tWhlng eke IR area Ike this OM! s1.oao,ooo. •; • 644-7020 ,,....2123 SAM JC>A9UIN HILLS ROAD .; NEWPORT llEACH 1002 ~ARKUHG -Fireplace in the family room in this beautiful ·3 bdrm 2 bath home in Mesa Woods. Close to South Coast Plaza and Freeway access. Spanish tile roof., new on the market :-at $98,000. Cal 546-4141. -,OUll LOWEST PRICED USTIHG -Lite . m a bright and cheerful almost new PA TIO HOME with bright and cheery . col ors. No fuss no bother with -~ i>rofessional gardener to maintain your PARK like grounds. NOW $80,000 C .. 55Ut61 Serving Costa M rsa lrvinf' Huntington Beach-N e wport [!nac h Cal 644-7211 ffir p.raits /Jn NIGfL GAILEY & ASSOCIATES /Jn NICJLL BAILEY & ASSLJCI ATES --- dwn pyaqnt, xlnt area, 831·99.'iOR~tor. CC>U.EGIPAIK Just list.cl! 4 BR-$69,950 llt'MCH REAL TY S51·2000 ........ COltY ..... r9W ,.tio: btaffflll yard wlfll 9reet le11dscop· lilt ... $116, too. LAGUNA NIGUEL 495-1720 493.1112 SOUTH LAOUNA 499·4551 LAGUNA BEACH 49'7·333J. Our beat buy today!! Quiet nel&hborbood ! :;POlless • bdrm hm ! Custom dininf area. Red btick mallt ed frplc ! Covettd outdoor party Two full baths. lee tiv1ng rm, w/brick fplc. couh· try kltch for family din· mg. Lge rear yard. One year warranty. Brkr 964·2-m G1•ral 1002 CostaMfla 1024 pavlllion! Sparkling ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool! Owner say's JR.EXECCONDO WOODBRIDGE ESTATES JUST REDUCED South of HICJhway Newty remodelid. Spfit level, 4 bdrms, 3 baths. Oveniud Jot with poten· tial to build l&r1e adda· llooal urut.a wit.b swim· ming pool to boot ! $167,500. 644-7270 E/SID!TOWHHOME "5ell .. ! $82,361. Better 3 BrCortl ... FBIRaEP+ LsAboCwEer. L' od 1 1 k act Cast.!! Call 645-0303 .. ,. r ormer m e . over oo · c.-overed patio. Rec facll 11"¥1M' I 044 LGCJUllG hoch I 048 ····••·•···•··••···•··· ..•........ , .••.•...... $5,000DOWH NEW 2Br, view. $125,500 m~ waterfall & stream. Antique f,plc, cover'd OPEN HOUS~SUN 1·5 19880 Claremont 5 Bedroom U.t!lopt1on.4~·7~ patio & side yard. Greet ~.750 A&ent 957-0701 ror do& run or garden. 3 Fam. rm. and 2~ ba. ATIENTIOM! HR + 3 BA + den. HwntlftqtOft Priced below market for ~~-~-~~~~-~~'-~~~ Harbolr 1042 A beautirul Jefferson Model. Totally upgraded and pr'ofesstonally landscaped. This most attractive 3 bedroom townbome has Just been reduced to $109,500. for fast sale. Just right for your active Check us for all tbe latei.t family. Separatt: mast. Laguna Beach area suite, formal din. rm. multiple listings. a fast sale. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• and O\P'~ Close t o "4ti# SHtidc ~ REALTORS IAYSHOUS Garden home . re · modeled 3 bdrm .. 2 baths. decorator pelliec· tlon. Quiet Inside lo<'a· t1on , u s ed' bC11 c k t'ourtyard entry; low leasehold. $165.000 C. F. Colesworthv REALTORS 640.00iO HEATED POOL 4BEDROOM 754-7800 6 ASTRll ~ llcol hlul~ In<. FRESH HEW LISTIH<i MESA VERDE Fantastic 4 bdrm fmly home. New roof. Bate y;,ard, cm ror pool. Quiel c ul de sa<' ~lreel MOll\alt!d ownt!r :.ays s ubmit your offer. Pnct.-d for quick :.ale at only SSl,500. flurry ! 54.5-9491 $77, 900 Real £.state Spacious entry way or New Condos, 2 Br, 21-a Ba. rormer mod~l home 2 rrplc's. ccramk tjt leads to lar11e luxurious kitchens & bath. Poof & living room flmshed with :.pa. 675-4912 Broker premium grade wall and --- floor coverings. Nalural 1---------wood burning fireplace. Ub Chide.,.~ profe!i,sional landscape It couldn't hurt to call Owner needs fast llale , Chuck Nash about a re· hurf'y call Mack 962·7788. warding c<1reer in real At:li. K€Y estate Free training 1f VI P.E:ALTOP.S ii l~you~q~ua~l~lfy~·~S4~0~·5~10~1~. ~ ..... ,.... 1006 CUSTOM IUILT ~1r•c Mose! Shnst1ana Bay. 3 br 217 Looking for houses Is like ba twnhse w/boat dock. sampling perfumes, By ,owner. $149,000. schoola. parks, poolb and ~.r-1-.""""" ahoppin&. A good buy at $ after awhile you can't1_846-_34_1_'1 _____ _ tell one from anothcf."' $121,900 0 u r c o m p u t e r tr.iM I 044 eleminatl!s confusion. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rf j 1050 selecting only properties that meet rour needs. cau and put our com- puter lo work for you, no charge or obligation. 754.7800 ·aUFFAUA a br 2 ba, din rm, den w/wet bar. Bit-ins, heated/filtered pool, 2 car attac. gar. Secluded area of view homp $9f.soo. Bier. 536 8836 EAST SIDE Charmer ! 2 bdrm . 2 bath! No common wall!i! Fre!.h paint! Modl'rn lotchcn! Double Aaraae! All for.only $68,500' REOCARPET i5-i·1202 REDUCED DRMTICALLY!! Happy GotdeftYffl"I This fabulous Plan S WOOOIRfDGE Park Home an beallliCul REAL TY 3 Bdrm., 2 bath, hilltop swle in Leasure World . Brand new with fantastic view or the valley & mountains. $85.900. Deerfield rcatures over 2500 SQ ft of &f8CIOU.S liv-1 ____ 5_5_1·_3_0_00 __ _ 1 n c w i t b 4 I a r g e WOOOltllDGE HORIMS REALTY 1048 * 494-8057 * bedrooms: Completely upgraded and unbeheva· 1 PRESCOTT 5 500 ble. priced at $128.SOO Lar£est Woodbrid&e 5 llDROOM + $7 • ·············•··•······ 1--------- ER IS ANXIOUS!! model 2600sq.Ct. +3 car SPAllCLIHG POOL 3 br ltn ba, Crpl, country UBMlT YOUR OF· gar. Sor-4 br+deo. 3 Ba, Only 2 yrs new, this 5 style kitchen. bit-ins. FER!' atnum. air cond., fully bdrm executive home. pa!\o. spnnklers. owner lndsc, highly uper. ~lu· Al l or the amenities • very anxious to sell. ican Pavers tUe. Lge lot. microwave oven, 3 Grubbs Realty 527.5173 Nr Park & lake. $186.000. baths¢3 car gar41).IC, lrg INVESTORS·J b<lrrn Con· Bkr/Ownr ~2-4121 or fmly rm. big (rplc. Love. do air view xlnl cond , wkdaysSJS..3535 ly pool & Jacuzzi. In lhl• H~tar~d le~ant s. As· WOODBRIDGE Pi.ACE hills or Laguna Beach ~ume, will take 2nd. Special o fCering. 3.5 7S9-l50l $b'7,500. 768-0060 aft. 6p~ RAHC • -:a.TY bdrm. Contemporary de· (Qsi\11rjj!\Aifl(£1 LOCJlllMI Hi~ I 052 . ·u . a . tached ramily homes in " --·-···' ----••••••••••••••••••••••• opert, woodsy design. R.e l "'· t le ·.-Just abort .walk l~ lake & ----11-~-5-8---i--~------Redu(ed fdr-Quiclk S'1e parks in Village ol Wpod· G.tRDEH HOME Gremtree • $101.900 bridge. From $115,000. The Olde with J BR. dell & 2 BA in Upgrade d Hampton SSZ4101 pnvate rommunily near model, 4 br, den. J ba. ---------Gray Mare beach. Excellent value am~t locatioa 9wner. BUILDER'S "SHE AIN"T WHAT SHE al S149.500. SS9.QWO CLC>SEC>UT USED TO BE" and LogynaHiqlllllleoalty 4 Bdrm. 2 bath, wood 0.... Point I 026 neither 111 Lhts BETIER 495.5220 496-2413 UtUe Islaod Charmer. ~ noon. new water heater. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Woodbridge Sycamo~. 2 IM lllYIHE N PT ....................... ol a Jot, 2 atry. lrg front water sortner. copper Spc.i ... M..&0.t stry hM' Owner l/r, d /r, Only 2 patio homes left. QUALITY DA A · 493-9494 130-5050 yd. Seller wall he lp plumbing Beaut1ru1pool . D p t up11rades , lndry. tut . One28r+den,&one3Br DUPLEX rirtaoce. $131,250. Call with heater & filter .. t;lando1q uek han~--o1n fam , auto gar opnr , plan, both w /2 baths. Bill 67"' .....,.,........ mar Al> ~n con· 1 d d "1 •t s ell Thespac1ousowner's un-Charrrungnew3Bedrm + • .r-"6' Many xtras. S87.!i00. ,.-cd to 3 unals P•rfect Rn H P b'1' u .. f 27. Crplc, refriaerated air ---------a 11 M C_..u-'"''' " eat on a e o r . d I . d It has 3 BDRMS. It 2 den, 2 bath, fam-rm. 007 "°' C --for owner oc<'upat1on c:--parrow $$1-CJZ31 con atoning. m arrore BATHS, HUGE" LIV. A/C, French dr~. pvt lcAoaPtt 'n da 1 lltOHew-rtlt•cl. plus income Ocean --~ ' wardrobe doors. 2 car 0 u . w 1 s TONE frontoowtyard,$123,900. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·r--I l ~ ~ .. Steps to beach. 7 unJt.a, 6 21~~c.h~~~Mfte~~S~41~~·7~7~~~9 \1~. ampre!lslve facade. Univ. Park Towdome, r~ ~e:~e~l~=f1~iul1: FIR~PLACE. WelJ de· Owner 83'1·'7098 ..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .__ ba h a......1 ..... cn 000 S2l5.000 3.Br. !Ba, rormat dtmng, h _,. signed, bill-In kitchen ; ui' 1 c · rwo. --· · HORIMS REAL TY .,.et bar. \•aew. 2200SQ.ft. lncld'g 8 h~lin.i tennis Ther• as an additional IRAHD MEW lt·-nl 1002 Ge .. nnf 1002 Term:sopen.645--072l Mesadel Mar. byowner.4 * ... , .... 057 * 1 Yr old . Sl2S..S~. cowts. 2 poo and a paidr G U EST R O o M 2 IB>ROOM HOME ... ..,. BR. Pool. xlnt cond. ~ .... u .. i. ..... E Ownr/Bkr ol jacuzzis. All this an W/f1REPL~CE & HAS located I Alu L k '1~•••••••••••-•••••-••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'·--11 2 d --------..........,.,., ves. -Irvine too' On Irvine ' an °"'"" a e ::WHEN SUIF&TURF COf'OllCI .. ..._. 1022 vwn"e"r w1 carry n . FomtaiftV..._. 1034._ ________ I Center Dr (Moulton SE p AR AT t-: f; N Park This Foit GIO\e Bl.000 947 Presidio Dr -r TRANCt: model orrers light ~ A magnificent 5 acre tfomesite known ror hones and with an ocean view! Located on a gent· ty sloping hillside in bis· t orlc San Juan Capistrano. $350,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 979 2251 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WHY Prkway) just east of Jef· · an)ctim~ · airey roo-~ & pnvac'.·~ T...1...a..1 ----W •STE TIML. fre~· ..... "r-"' " Thr lower level contJins 599.500. 2 Bdrm .• t batht\ome E /Slde Custom homf' driving around and S7l,995toS75.995 r BDRM APT & 4 -f.say pretty, I mean 't> e a u t i f u 1 • S h a r p 1'ewporl Townbome fAistled in a lush green valley. Large bedrms, lovely flrepl. S81,900. with rurunits. Sound In· 2000Sq.ft .. JBr . hui?e loolung. Let our agent.:. caUSSl·l26.1days PROVIDES GOOD REN· ANCHORAGE vestment ip Corona dcl ram rm .. 3 <'ar ..:ar .. on show you tbLS Chancellor __ o_r_SS_ii_-_134_1 e_v_es_. _ TA L INCOME. The IMftSTMENTS Mar. 1175,000. R-2lot. Agt 646-7171 Plan U in Unlver11lty WOODIRIDGE larger unit is vacant & 17141 4t6-77t I HORINS ltE.AL TY -u.:c. • V&DDE Park. It '6 a separ ate BR tCf'lants hove treated 1l L.-=======-...... ,,......,.. '"" homethatltat ...... BR.· Broadmoorhome.4 " .. UNKINDLY". It's in * 494-8057 * Out ol it.ate owner must 2~ BA, famUy klt.cbM fam. rm., atrium. pool, need or PAINT, CLt:AN 1------------------1 bell 3 BA. 3 ba., on cul de dining area and low spa, decking. lndscpd., UP & MINOR REPAIRS. IH THE SHORES ·Owner axnious, call no\¥! 645-7221 NEWLY REMODELED sac. 185.000 maintenance yard. renced. "The works". With a LITTLE PAINT & TOWNHOUSE 3BR.S.OFHWY A.JohnsonBltr 979-4964 Walking distance lo ReducedtoS125,000 ELBOW GREASt:. you '2 Bedrooms, l'; baths. ··~ 675-7931 shoppin1 and traoaporta· AGENT 640·556( will have a "Horse of a \'ery pm•ate. and sunny * t6 UNITS* lion. Near tennis and RANCHO SAN JOAQUlN dlrfcrent color".·ocrcred patios with wood deck· A Division of Harbor Investment Co. cozy 3br. 2ba + guest house. Frpl. 2 paUoe. R-2 lot. Prin. only. $157 ,000 --------•1 Owner. 640-7030 Wntclff Reaffy -I . 109ACRES TRI PLEX .fwUn1 orchard with ~OOOtrees, each with drip No Qualirying! Gremat irrigation. Include1 ·Area! Only $15,000 ranch house. garage, Down! Owner Will Coay cueat house. 1 person, oopeta. ~. Util rum. 640-7030. DUPLEX Ea. 2Br, lBa, lower unit has frplc, brand new 2nd unit. bu vieW', deck. open beam ceUJnp, 3 car garap. $150,000. 497-3516 ~lb6()new metal building l'mance! ~ nece11ary farm REDCARPET '1S.H.202_ J•SM1.,.•c1•~ ~t\ldpment. 4 Lakes, • . "" "'" ~ water well. Metro water OWNER Elegant Elle Home .act electricity on pro-w/dramatlc catbeclral ,ReJty. Adjacent to pro-entry. R&l'e Moon'rest 'iitised golf course. ANXIOUS· =i~'i~!'~;'~ ~~!::.diO::r ::::;i.~ng toca. nr club. pool, teo· . e~•·,o~aorRlckard. WUl pay over $3000 In nls. $247,500 .,)' Owner. ,,.,. ...,. l)C)i.rUI Low Dowbt VA" Prtn only. 640-1125 . .~ BARRETT ti' HA Te r m • ! 31----'---.....,....,~ "':1Ttm• 19 ' Bedroomal 181,000l Call ColleMIM 102.f .... ·.• • --REAL.T'Y-No.ti ..................... .. REJ>CARPE'l'75'-1202 2 FOi THI PllCIOP l ~:!I~~~~~~ 11111 t41t Hema ecz..51'11 Ea.ltlde locatloo. Each -... ,.. . '1002 .... ,.. 1002 .itbu 2 bdrml. ~ .. I.)' ....... ----······· ................. ·-··· paldted CIQ &be ~w.. .. ! • ~ced to tell qblckly ,_.. M,OOO.C.ll548-~13 OlfH m • • rn irt.w '°If NIC'J' ."..J 142·5290 6 MONTHS NEW' II'-HOME !> w i mm in g. Ask Ing .... BR 2 b · d d at mg .Move-in condition in PULLY OCCUPIED w $113.500 &; • a . air con . en, £..11 ,; Under MO.OOO per unit LAllGE LOT wel bar. folly furn 'd. S 115,000""" P ce-.,. gate guarded com· Former model. PriJne MISSION REALTY mun1ty. Only S94.-4SO STUART FIME Extra spacious 4 bdrm. 1 golf course location over· 98SS. CstHwy, Laguna UALTOlt 631-5454 story home in a quiet looking lake. Principles -........_ 49 ... 0731 F . V. neighborhood. 752121 r--"' GRHNIROOK Sparkling' earth tone de· only, $129.!iOO • 1' ---------J ~tonorcb Bay Plaz.a tig Cold well _Bon~r 4 L. .. ....JL. 2 ba. Extremely <"Or, gas bltns. cozy frplc. ~~~~~~~~~I -af_te_r _5.:....; '7_52_-_07_68 ____ Beaut. ocean view. 3 br 2 1JUCU1 (!J"eat noor plan. Perlectl~ ba, lrg din rm, country Laguna Niguel pop11lar CAMELOT mdl. fort.he youns or growing D&aFfaD WIUOWS ktcha. Mexican •t.i1e 496-7222 131-0136 This lovely home located ra..,.;l.y. Call 'or prtc" & b u.. b 4631LocJthavenCircle thruout. tended glas!>. ~~~~~~~~~ on a cul-de-sac within .... '' " Aspen 4 r 2,..,. a, &Su ~ •a~•. c:'"·"'"""open eves -500 ..._. only By ()pen P'rl.10·2 n. 2·S. new crpt, super area euy walking distance lo ~ ..... ~ --· • r1 .n · 4 BR. 2 ba. hor11e. located Sl82 500 P P 494 9672 So. Coaal Plu~a. theatree ... , u Metwortc owner. 4M·3438 . . . . -Affordable! •• " 2 blks. to Heritage Park &restaurants. Manyoul· ~~~~~~~~~I G._,.,..H & Irvine High; supert--------- stending features in· Hullil... heclt 1040 area for children; walk w 'T'rulv immaculate patio home. 2 Bedrooms. qu1et location ner ocean & shopping Pnl'e just te· duced. Now selling ro~ S75.500 (46) elude.• ..... 3 bt 2 ba. AJC, $87.500 h d VIE · to all sc ool!\. Cul e •ac•. D . ····,·a···()··L··H··a··M··E····· :~~~.!nly. By owner -., Custom rapenes .__ Asking SH.000. Calf Covered patio , ......... 7S2·7710 or 552·04""' l:'~ln th. w 11 3 Br. 3ba, frm• din.ing "'"' = .... ""'V"Y e ocean, moun· ~~~g~ou':apers rm ram rm. RV stOl'age. DEERFIELD, immac 2 Agt. tain & city lights from outdoor IU BBQ 6 blks lo beach. Open Br. den, 2 Ba twn.hse. --'---------~--• high atop this mystic Auto.'(iarageDr, sat/Sun l ·S at 9102 WOOd deck patio, mlr· hlllB aene. Pool 11ize lot. Opener Mahalo. , rored wardrobes. elec newly repainted, new Skyliaht in Fam. Rm.. SHAFER & ALLEN gardpnr, $83,500. Owner. kitchen appliances. Mov- etc. Realty.tnc 675-6141 559-S713 AM, 640-10'12 PM e-in ready! ' BY OWNER 979-8123 • A ORIFTW. 000 PJin, QQ)y $109,floO. ~ --' THE Hf.AL ESTATf.RS -- ' Th.I• beauUful SilS home f eature• a l•r1e bedroom•. la fully ~ M.-.halEstate 640-5357 4 ~~~ose to beach. 3 car gar. Two beaut. brick patios, gas BBQ. frplc. bltns, By owner $'98,500 ~ LtlllM IMdl I 041 &...,.. leoclt . 1041 .............................................. . CE 110111 ILlllS aa. OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE VIEW HOMI THiii AltCH IA Y South Laguna. Architect Designed. Custocq Built. 2 Years YoWlg. M•triiftcent4 Br. & FR. Home 9//A Forever Ocean View From Nevty Ever1~ Room. A Delightfully Brilht • C.beer(ul Conte mporary W /Vautted Ccilin&s. Exqulslte Decor, Expend ve Roney-Betae Carl>etinl: Spleridld Use Ol Glus & :W~',;Prlced.At sns,ooo. - I r • -i ' . .... • • , . ' f ~-·_..... ........... ·- Othet-RMI htof• ....._ Unfwmlthff H.sta Unfwnllhed 'wednesday. March 1 1978 * DAILY PILOT Houses For Sde ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---Preperty 2000 lcilloe la&.d 3206 Costa Me.. 3224 Ho.Ht u.furftthed Houses u .. hnllt.Md .,.. ................ ... ················•······ ···········••··•••··••· ••····••···•··•·•······ .....................•......................•. ··················~···· Mias10ft VleJo I 061 Newport l eoch I 069 MobUe HCMM1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• faaSale 1100 FIX 4 UMITS, Sm 3 br hse. One hse ofl • •3BLOOR, 1K8A• • ~••••••••• •••• ??~~ Newport h och 3269 ~~ ••••• ??~ Ca:.lllle 2 bly eJCec home, 5 •--cm t Owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR, 3 ba, dt·o, tam rm, -r OM TH! IUCH ER UPPER water. lWl/mo yrly 9·S R•~ •LS ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 'Best c .. ta Mesa area. 832.J&W Aft 5 & wknd:. S400 PER MONTH ...... I A 1 DR apts. rurn. all uUI in· Never vacant. $119.000, 499-271S l!>t+last+s.:c•urity 3Bft,2Ba ......... SS25 II\' llomc11. Carmel; 3 rl, lndry {:sell, pvt formal dm'g rm. Air Ivon Wells home. 11n '· •ed ...,..., 'I> •·u Un Sea caps & sunsets, a blfl w/hum. Custm cov'd pat, umi. ...,.;i;. · lu l!li. • ""-Fncd yurd, ~ar, }Ht pty J llR, 2• 2 ba.. .. . • SS2S bdrm:. . i b11 $1i00 terms. v .. uer. &48·4t tO 3br, H~ba older bse on 835·3700 Iv 1mii 4 BR, 2\2 ba Stl50 \)lent Wt 7383 park'g a val April 1• for h I l b I family paradise. 2Br + fabulous vu, 1h m1 to lake e ev a e s av ingi;, ...,88 ooo 4br 3ba J""'I bonus rm in El Morro By & rec cntr. 2h yrs old. ..,.. · · • • ""~ Loh for w. 2200 ---pel'm ~es1dents. 250 Cliff canaJ.~;._.,..,19 $42c, 3 <•n, '"am r-, 4 UR,JBa. ..$7-15 llOME,2l"l'IHt,1•1BJ.:! Ur.4!17·3493 ••••••• ee. e e. e ••••• e. e e V"9V ~ .,, U I" 'II t:"f ---;:._;:._.:._ ___ _ z.iso sq rt s.ul-4413 1817 the Sea, your own pvt Ownr, $128,500. 830·3079 Commodo~e · bch, park rent only $160. Hewpori .. a ch 1069 <>A LL T 0 DA y t recrcat 'I facll, Back sty, 2 l'ar dra\'C"J). dl>I -SHIMG IS COf'OftCI def Mer 3222 Bay. 642 OJ28 gar. 2 blks bcal'l1. Shut 2 BK, 2 ba. pat, ocean vu. ~ .. ._._.~u.111.............. h'rs. fpll'. D/W, t!ll'l' blk to dwntwn. Walk to •••••••••••••••••••• ••• BLUFFS (PK1096> 'I1lis beautiful 6009 sq. ft. 2'eu Ba, fl>lc, w/yard. no E/Slde, good loc .• almo:.t •ence. w ID area. ~so bd': ~ yrly. AdlL'I 00 house o~ 2~ acres. Fan· pets. $375 mo . Call new. 2Br. H'llBa condo, mo. A\'a al. Mar. 1 pets,586-8460 EW 3 Bdrm Bonita Plan. All I CALll''ORNlA PACIFIC H PORT Level, nu cpls, flooring & Mobile Home Realty tasUc view, owntir anx-S40-4S29 aft SPM frplc, fncd yd, dbl gar., 1 673-3909 aft SPM ___ lacpa 9'4icpl 37 52 HEIGHTS s hutte l's . $145,000. 2706Harbor,Ste208 Located in NEWPORT 0wnl'/Agt Dys 833-8551 ~5937 ious.~~1~)676-5'7\7 2 BR, 1 ba. Corner loc. ~~l/dm~4~84~0 pets. l Br home, Igo fncd yd, 2 ••••••••••••••••••"'••• lt A R 8 0 R II I G II lul-L.u -H U t SCHOOL DISTRICT, on ESTCLIFF by owner . ...._.., 01M ., llCJ ORc ..... 2080 F I t' cargar.$325. Scenic views, luxury ~ rp e ., pa io. garage . ....,._.an .. och 3240 "•2 57?.,2 adult apts, furn & u.nr. $395.644-7220; 549-8765 ...... 1 U't IUILDERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 't5 3 CAMPUS Da· IRVIME Near Regional Shopping huge comer lot with ul· Cw.t. bit ranch style. 4br. At Its Rn.st ley acc&i; &. room for 2~2ba, dm'g & Cam rms We have numerous & your boat, this J~ one of w /lrg pool. $lll!l,5oo . beautiful mobile homes Newport's lowest Jo'EI'; &t2·9l94• &15-2850 for sale in establis hed L A N D h o m <' s ! ~---------4 parks in CM, Nwpt Bch, llave manycholcelots, Cbarming3Bt,2B~:So.ofLOVELY 3 BR, 2 Ba $~V1ewTheSunset! Center. Healed pool. ulso .._..acres & up. Hwy . 610 Acacia. No w/frpl.DW.cr pt,kid/l)t!t University Park . Tht.> JBRW/BeamedCeilincs Jacuz.z1.Nr.corner Alil-ia Priceil right. Seller sub· pet.ll. $525/mo. 673·21.38 OK. $$05. 963-4567 Ag~ot Terrace. Dover. 3 br , 2 Huge Game Rm! (675-IP) Pkwy & Paseo de Valt.>n· ordlnauon on some. Last Noftt. ba. single level condo. cia. llandsomel~ remodeled CONDO Hunting to A lJ ch , wilh graceful <>ntry. r°'-" Laguna, El Toro, Ftn of s~ulative market. Hlghly upgraded. prof. $22SCute Beach Cottage ALICIA PLAZA BKR. 2br. 2ba, gar, ~ ma lo bch decorated. Wd . paneled. l BR W /Encl06ed Yard' & Vlu.AGE (714)677-5691 Sl96 JacuLZi, pool. $475. Great Location (6758P) 581·6151 581-61:10 fireplace, beam ct-aim~\! W /BOA. T SLIP · V I y , An a he i m & PR I CE SLASH 1-: n Pror. decorated 3 Br Westminster. In price SJ0,000-NOW O:\ L \ Townhome in waterfront ranges l o fit most OR 522-0530 7S2-28S1. RENTIMES INC. Sorry, no pets. 3br, ram rm. lrg master 80771 631·455S Sl<i.5 000 prOJecl. Owner Anxious people's pocketbooks, ' · S159.SOO Sl0,000 to $W.OOO. We are OFFICE ILDG SITE Huntington Beach 27,000 sq. ft. lot near Pacifica Hospital. 5 Points Shop. Cntr & Ct \'ic bdrm. pool. $'75 ... Shor Mewporthoch 3769 LEASE/OPTION wport •• ••••••••••••••••• -. •••• MIFTY,MEAT Q U A 1 L m Waterlront Homes as near as your phone. .s t..A CH: CALIFORNIA PACfflC Ir NICE Exceptionally nice 2 BR, 2 balh newly refurbished fro nl duplex w /ll·I kitchen. Near shopping & ocean. s.175/ Mo. ( M 1 ll) 4br. pool, 1 2 m1 to ocean, $625 New J B<1rm Heritage 3 Hr 2 Ba, newly decor'd. Npt B. 2 prof, men seek Park Condom1n1um ~.640-29Sl tlurdtoshrluxhme,lge w1fa.miJy rm, 2:'·2 ba. Top SEA VIEW, 3 llr popular pool. $255/mo. 6404330 quahty carpeting & tile Bar Harbor prameocn vu1-.-------.-- PROP~RT1 EB. CaH 6 31-1400 Mobile Home Realty --752-1920 '"'' 2706H bo S 208 i14-846·5666, Bob Graf --- l400 OUAll.. ST NfWPOlff KACH ar r, te S40-5937 Center. $115,000. David Bourke Rltr SUPER 4 Bdrm. 2 ba w/frplc, crpt, fcri yrd. $425. 963-4567 Agt!nl, no noonng. Detached 2 car ssso. S47-71»4 , 333.3215 1• b CAHALFROHT ~Huge 4 Ort., 21 l baths -+ rumpu:. rm. + fam. rm w/pool tahlc'. Stl'p!> ti) ocean! $155,900 C'AYWOOORF.ALTY l NC. 5411·12'JO BY OWNER Npt lits pool home>. 3 Or, fam.rm. tomplctcly up· i:radcd & n• mdl 'd . lmmed occup;inc y. 1-'rplc, ext use of rol·ks ;.iround pool & frpll· Won't l;i:-.t Sl-15.000 Call ror appt , n15-2519 or 5-1-0 3666 a1:t. f'rank BY OWNER :-.pat·1ous E l\ccut" l' home. 5 Udrm. 4 huth w/\ 1cw 1n prest1 g 1ou., DoH•r Shore:. on Gala:\y Dr &16 2332 REDUCED l"ewport Cn·:.t Condo 11.Jghly upgraded, hrd\\d llrs, 2 HR. 212 ba. dN1, wrkrm & library. Suk - Ol'eanv1ew llcdul'l>el tor 1mmed !>alt'. OwrH'r . S128.!15U. lil 2·12 12. ~2 f,706 By Owner :J hr 21 ~ ha white water view, im· mac, Nwpt Crc~t nmdo Own<'r ll•a\ 1n g ~tali.' Sac. Pnn only 6i3 5:ll3 & b7J 3027 e\ l'~ fERNANDo·s HIDEAWAY :1 Br, !bath house on qwet Peninsula St l~l tame on markl•t m 17 \ r ... /\gt &12 :i..1.'.18 OCEAN AIR DUPLEX T'>'•1 UI), two cfown, holh unit!> Tcdonl', new t' .i r p c t s . e t 1· 1 m · maculale. SN·ond to the breakers. Good rental. Lease hold. Sl80,000. Burr Whit~ R~alt~r OWNER MUST SELL 546·9%0 JO'x40', remodeled, xtra Moufttain, D~Hri. clean, 1 br, $7800. Furn. RHGri 2400 Across from K-Mart ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shop Ctr. 2191 llurbor Bl Colorado !liver, Needles ;;3.i, CM Adults only. Calif. PP. has quality bit. &16-6918 J Br 1112 Ba, 12x65 mobile -------home. 12x55 cov 'd HUNT. IEACH carport & patio. 4" walls, PERFECnY CHARMING For bachelor or career gal who wants privacy, C'omfort & charm. Just completed, spacious & elegant .. guest house" w /cozy fireplace $3.501.Mo. (Ml18) Belle Chase Lee 644-6200 2901 Newport Blvd N.B (714) 675-4630 Beautiful 2 Br. Cozy Cot-ti" 111.'>ulation, W JD. cent. tage for two in pvt. ;ur, storage, pvt bch. garden like selling 5• boat dock. min t o ---------· Adult Park complete ca:.1nos. also selling w/pool, tennis els , & 50xl50 h omesile . HARBORVIEWHOMF. mu c h much mo r e. Tran s ferred . :rnr !or 2 + den l, 2lia, tJY1228). Sl8,000 w/sacrifice. J . Cisco, charm1n)!I~ decorated, C.\LIF'ORNIA PACIFIC 714·9'73·1606or 1·326·3793 parqul•l t•nl. C'orner lot, Mobile Home Realty - St:i9.i50. l~y owner. Prm 2706 Harbor, Ste 208 •Cozy. weekend mountain onb 644-i 11>3 or ~O.J.f-10 ~0-5937 cabin. Well built & furn. -----Lge u s eable lot. Sl'lhng at a loss Cemetery Loh/ Beaut1tul \'1ew deck $10,00000WN CtyptJ 1500 $29..000 By owner Bra ml nu 3br corner lot ••••••••• ••••• •••••••• • 968-0416 aner 7 PM home 0\1ncr will carry 2 lots Pac. View Mem. h:il of S215.ll00 at Slt.iSO Prk, ocean view, middle p..r mo ~'\o qualif) mg s~'t1on. 644·2977 llt'l', \ 3(', mo\'l' right In. Guurdt."d ~utes 75.'t-0448 c=: 1600 II :\ H B 0 H V I E '"' •••••••• ••••• • • • •••• •• • MO;"l;i\CO, :J HH. 2 lw. MEDICAL BLDG 1·ntry k1ll'h , nr po{ll & !>l'hl. $1 3.5,500. 6-10· 1-140 ---,.--,- BELOW MARKET Ownrr needs a quick sale nn th1::. Easlbluff homl' l'r1 l·t•d "''" helo w m arket. Call llow for de- tu1l::. (Dnlwn San Clemente) Sale-Lease· Trade ·'T'Rm Dental Suites 8 Rm Medical Suites Jay W. Yeats Co 498-0660 499-2237 50x213 Ft. lot on Coast Hwy , N.B. Wt l-175 sq. rt retail store + garage & apt. or offi ce + 2500 sq. rt val·ant pl..g.-area. Sl95.000 Out of County Properly 25 50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pn Plac...0Cee1115ide 2&3BEDROOM VA -FHA GARDEN TOWNHO~IE. 2 car garages. f.n 1·757-1623 INCOME PROPERTY Utilize your creative painting talents & get started w/lhis low priced duplex, currently rented. Only $27,500. Call George Frey. 542-3456, Ben HmkleR.E. Real Estat• CostaMHG 3224 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AT LAST A R...tal 5-nict YOU CCIR ffft JU Home With WE GUARANTEE •Widest selection poss •In house computer i..ys. •Daily telephone ser\'ICe •Vacancies verified daily •Full st arr or counselors •Free lo aged 6.'i & over •Free rental counseling •Open 7 days 8:00·8·00 RENT I MES ,f'or Proressiooal Sernce Call 898-0771 ORSTOPBY 840 I Westminster 12 blocks E. or Beach l A Ca tar. Corp. Sm Fcl.' EASTSIDE sparkling nr new 2br. pvt. patio. gar. & C'ar space. Adults, no pets $265. 189 Sta Isabel Ph. 673-0231 to inspect Proft:s;, bldi:. a cross bchanc)e -2800 from :--1.B.P.O. t!IOO Sq. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Best ~IESA VERDE area Marten Real Estate rt L;,e S!IOO m o. sell Trade 2':r acres in Calif. Deluxe4Br.2ba.ramrm. gar. Never lived IO ADULTCOHD ___ l mmed occupan cy lbr, 3bu pool home 2BR.2ba,yrly.$425 r~ COZY 3 bdrm, 2 ba. ~5/mo. • Gardening, pool serv m· STEPS TO IE.A.CH w/cpt, fed yrd, kicls & WHtem Pacific cl'd. $800. 549·0055___ JBR. 2ba, bay vu $1050 pets ok. SJ85. 963-4567 Properties Coontry Cha;; in Harbor 1 BR, l Ba., yrly. $285 Agent,Norce. 731 ·1522 493-2260 Vu. 4 Br. 30,., ba. sepr IAYFROMT 1 Bedroom condominium. ~~~~~~~~~~! playrm. $785 per mo lse. 3 BR,2ba., yrly.~S<t pool, tennis super loca· Woodbndge new 2 & den, incl gardnr/~tr. 673·8112 tion. S250. t:all 6464.177 2· ba houst.>. Lake, pools, BIG CANYON new 2 story parks, no pets. Lease townhome. 2 br. 2' :i ba, 3 Br condo. 112 Ba. D/W. $17S. mo. &IO-S228 aft. 3 & den/bar, sep. dinan~ rm, associated lnd¥y rac11. Slater & wkncb beaut. upgraded crptg & Newland. H97·0S86 window treatment. Lux- BROKERS-llEAl TCPS lOH W Balboa &71 >bbl SHARP J Br 2 Ba. wirplc. University Park 4. Hr. 21'l unous Ho mun tub in D 'W. fm·d \'a rd. $425 baths. fam rm. Newly mstr bath Loads or m1r· ----------9fl3·.ci6'7 agl i'<o fl.'(' decorated. SSSO/mo or rored wardrobe space. PROMONTORY f'r l~ctopl. 752· i239 eves Spectacular view. Swim· Exciting 1 BR & loft. POOL HOME J Br 2 Ba. &!0-0166 rrung, tennis & MORE! w /v1cw of Newpor t. U W, cpts, ne.it area ~ hoc:h 3248 For further 1nfor . o r $750/month winter or'an- s.tl5 963·-ISbi ag_l_. n_o_ree_:_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 ppt. &W-0509 _____ nu6~s-5626 ~ l.lkenew2Bdrm.dblgar. RENTALS Super 4 bdrm Nwpt Hts.~~~~~~~~~ 5 blk:. to ht·h, no peb. LAGUNA BEACH F/PI, cpts. yd. gar. S475.1- SJ65 Avail now 964 2283 Priced from S300 & up 5.'M>Westmmstcr642-7745 I BDR, furn. u .. il •• lh \I S260 month. 642-r Lo\'ely 4 bdrm .. La pe r mon . ' so summer t-CI _. 3276 , Cuc.•t :i" home '"/elcc. rcntuls anul at $30() up ~ ememe 642-6578eves. ~ ~ -" ...................... . bltns . l>/W & frplc . per \\!!Ck Ouhtandlni:-are~ nr 494-8035 831-9411 beach Lea:se SSS<> Call 1257 S Cst Hwy Lag Dch C-0ab & \\'all acc. ~ti·41-l 1 Rl-:.\L Fl:"D .i Hr :! Bu. !pk. qH:.. fnC'd yard. S.3.5. 963-4561 aicent. no BONO REALTY ft'(' ------3 BR. 21, ba, bltns. cr'pf9, :I b r I '• ha n ca r drps, gar . ocn/cyn vu, no Brookhurst & Garfield, pets, S525. Lse. 759-5807 St2.'i. S-i0·6 l 7 I dys. 642-8907', 499-2766 Clean, Jbr. l \2ba. ·l mm 2Br. frplc, rncd yd, 2 blks dm·<' to bch, $400 mo to l><:h & dwntn. $395/mo. Call il1962i788 ask for Refs 497-1996 EJho_t ______ LOCJIM NiCJIMf 3252 5260 Ranch Stylt 2 BR ••••••••••• •••••••• ••• • All Built ins + Garai.:e ' SF.A TF.RRACE Garden Some Ctll Pd l lJ81PJ llome 2 l>r & den, 2 ba. bej\ch. tennis & pool. S5 2 5 193 6 490 ; 2Br w/frplc, ~ar , encl. 'ub-let Promonto back yard. $350/mo. 219 \'11la. 2 Br, 2 ba, Ir Miramar 492-2134 Btn ocn vu. S800. 67 · Br w /pat10, ste~ tn Sein Juan beach. Monlhly or week- Capi1trano 3 278 ly. 546·56Mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrm Duplex 2 balh 1 l BR. avail Mar 15-June car gar+ c~rport.'2 15.S220.\qtilpd.adll.son- swimm1ng pools. $350 ly. no pets. 675-6039 . 979·1473 lv msc PROMONTORY PT Spectacular oceao/bay 3280 \'1ew. 1 BR. fum apt. l\o ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets , no children . · •WILLOWOOD• s.ss<.l/month. Avail Apn( Duplex l1v1ng at its l~t. Agl, 833·0200 ol" fmest. Located near So. 675·5206. Coast Pla:z.a a t ----------- MacArthur & Greenville. Lido Isle 1 br, ut1l & &!l.r 5.57·9710 meld. S245 mo yrly, l~t ----------• only. 6i3.Q8.'J7 ~ WntrNMtff 3298 RAMBLING EXECUTIVE 640-5357 $125,000. Agl. 6-16·241 I Vallev. FOR 19·.24· in-bltns. frplc. new paint & 1---~--~~~~~I ----board/outboard boat rarpel. gardener SSSO 1 Duplexes/al... llOO About $3500 value. s.i5-J©t S390 Large Paneled Oen JBR + 2Ua Nr 1::61i;on lh f'rwt Tree:. (5541 P > 12131~5077 REMTIMES INC. SHOR1':S GARDEN H0~1E 2Br. + den. pvt area, 3 Br 2 Ba. bltns . fncd courts. bch & pool, $.SSO .- Capli\'ating Cottai::e Unfumis~ ·7 ESTA.TE ,\ homey d\\cllini: 111 l'harm & beaul~'. l.ffi;?•' ~indows let 1n 1 IOO<b ol daylight, quaint & lovely used brick frplc A t cl'r<>at from the hub·hub of the city. Owner will help hnanl'e. Sci.' it now. 540-3666 Wltela11 RfAl fStATt SZERODOWH FOR YOUR 2001< DRUM HOME!!! Executive 4 Br, plush formal dine rm, 3 Ba, 3 frpl, hug~ fam·rm W/fan- tastiC view of Npl. Bay 631-4560 Agt. HARBOR VIEW-CLASS' St73,900only. for this 3 Br 2 Ba, Fam Rm, Dan Rm. loft, interior d ecor'd , prof lndscpd. compl privacy, & secluded brick cust jac uzzi orr mstr bdrm, lattice patio cover. + much more m· cld. pre!ltigious Newport Bch location. For pre· view call ; Property House. Patrick Tenore, Agt. 5.52·4414 Toµ Linl' Ocean View. ONts Sc .. ------S12ll.~ Fe<' Spacious ••••••••••••••••••••••• 49-1.0039 __ ~ew2brcondo Pool.spa 8!~-07il 631·1555 1 BR + llui::e Yard $185. ••••••••••••••••••._.~ .ibr, Jha, sunken hv. rm :-;"early new spac. l.{iplex RHll &tat• From $400. Also 3 br hse " high vaulted ce1hng. in xlnt area $16"1,SOO W-.d 2900 S.ioo. Kids & pets ok Pl.'ts&K.idsOK! (89:11P) GeMrat 380! ........................ form din rm Y,owest 6"'0-711-1 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• fii5-4912Bkr. yard, s.100 per mo. :: car mo. 499·2682 ___ _ gar, 979·6_76_1 _____ Mission Viejo 326 7 S275 Country ~1tchen :?BR Wt Enclosed Yu rd ! 13742 Ne"·land St. <G~<>n Grove) Beautiful 2 ~m apts in x tn 1 neighborhood. Pn•alC' pallo view from lo,•e~· kitchens; encl-i>d g a r a J: e s ; p o o-t : dubhouse; no pets. SJL'> mo. Call Carol 636·7~ _ pnce in area ' 11urry! 2-3 BR. :? ba, forced air. 2 br. l ba duplex, pvt gar. ~I u s t s e 11 'm m e d · Income Property 2000 heat., frplc. No r1xer up· patio, laundry. Adlts on· Li.: 2 br cluplex. P\'t yd. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ) r old No pets. l child Hilltop hse close to lake ok S265. 8122 Michael Dr. 3Br, immac. Owner pays liwlt-ans' ISJ15P) H4:! 1010. The l\endall <.:o. •••••••f••••••••••••••• per ly, no pets. $310. 540-7532; &16-830 l IHG-4171\ REMTIMES INC. 898·077 l 631 4555 2NDHOME Minium care, summer or w ar around. 2 BR. 1 BA Szti.500. Call 675-4392 HALPIHCHl9'4 lll':ALTOR San Chtmente 1076 ........................ BEACH DOLL HOUSE Walk to Riviera Beach. On natural canyon with ocean \'1ew. 3 BR. 2 BA with extra 17 lot. Never again at only $125.000. BERTI IA HENRY REALTORS 215 Del Mar 492-4121 Smtta Ana I 080 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TRI-LEVEL High.ly upgraded 2 BR, 2 BA. tr1-level condo, prime South Coast Plaza area. Must sell fast. Of. Jered at $64,500. 540-3666 7UNITSC.M. Beautiful brand new 4· 1 br, loft. f/p. 3-2 br, l'!i ba townhouse, all bltns, crpts, drps. llurry. buy now • lst user deprec. Tom Lee. Rltr. 642-1603. ----------BEAtrr. exec 4 Br 2 Ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/(am rm, fplc. D/W, Houses Furni-1.-.. super duper urcu. $495. -""' 963-4567 agt. No fee ••••••••••• •••• •• • • • . • . -----=------ 536 3638 eves, 847·3541 water. Refs. a must. J br .. fncd bk yd. Vacant. days 493-0t.34 Good urea. 968-2297 or 1-----'-'---3 BR, Surf!'ide. Walk to Newport leach 3269 96.H.ltl67 Aitt_. __ och & shops. $375 mo. ••••••••• •••• •••••••••• HcMlses Funti1tt.d or 536-l L5311ft,5. Avail 313, NO FEE! Housei;. condos. OftfumisMd 3300 Me---' hach 3169 $175, nice 1 Br patio + d 1 u 1 , 1 ... ,.... ' 3 Br 2 Bu. luxury adlt, u P ex e 5 • "en '-a ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• • •• • • • • •• • •• • • • $220. free util ! Ref + p · 1· 675 4912 °k (over 40) Landmark Con. av1 ton, · u r. Orunge. Country living. Rtntaill Galore S23S. 1 Br kids, pets' T •tJ:leX ~•9 · 2 E t do. in Guard aate comm. .._.EW 5E•V1EW Equestrian activities. M $135, l Br nice home """' •nice r mus i;ee " " -N d I f ...__ 2 Br kids •L acre fed Sngl sty. nr new. end un· 3 Br 2 Ba. pool, tenn1•, • cw u P ex• urn.• E. Side ost• Meaa $150 nice 1 Br share ._,., .,.,. " be 3 b 2 b f I I looo'smoreava1'lnow it. D/W. W/D. l'p,.rd ,·ac,nu5yrly'.675·0S62 aut. r a, rp, rg 2 br owners unit w I Consumers Guide, fee. 11 11 • cpts, cust drps, wctbar. """" rncd yni. $690. Owner. •IRANDHEW• Cherry Creek Ad\a)~ Apts, I & 2 Br, fplc's, 'ftle have hikes. sa11o e . JACUz.zi, & pool. Loc&le<t at 2701 S. Fairview. J u"t S. of Warner, N. or S.D. Fwy. 556-1991. No pets. renced yard Two, 2 br un-· 645-4900 a areas, a prices. 997 5612 open 7 days. Kids, pets nt'w paint. Xtra storage. SEAVIEW, 3 br 21h ba, __ . ________ 1 1tsw/patios. S159.000Call UDO ISLE, 3 BR, den, noproblem. Lge rec ctr. w/pool, jac. ocean ,~iew, pool/tennis Duplex.s Uttfunt 3600 12621 Flower Str t:el 642·2811 or673·3584 wet bar, patio. Y2 blk to CONSUMERS GUIDE tennis. wood shop + S950mo. 213/430-3629 ••••••••••••••••••••••• <Ganien Grove) Large 1 bch Y h'ld OK 6 .. r. .. 900 oOler facil. Close to bch. bedroom, af'tS, close.~ DANA POINT . oungc l ren . ...,.... ""pets.~Aan...,.rmo.Call WATERFRONT, Nwpt Costa Mes a-2Br, l Ba, shopping. Laundry Neal family home, $900 ·rv _.,.., .. ~ frplc new pa t & cpts TRl-PLEX rm. Avall4/l yrly. Leave 3 Br. 2 ba. lge yard, 362 536-5789 wkdys /evs . Shores large 4Br, 2Y:iba. • m • fac1htJes, no children, tao 842-01"" wknds. l 772·2695 Beautifully decorated. 8J9..3l87 an 6PM /wknds pets. Sl95/S205/montll. High above manna. 1 & 2 message w / l . P .R. Hamilton. S395. 1st, last "" . brs . cover garages. 675-0520 &dep. 8J3.930S wkdays. Patio on w~ter. Comm. llt1hties paid. Call Carol pools, tenrus. Yrly lse, at63S-7J.l3 ~~)~:W.r: ~~~Y6J>~· 3 Br. z Ba yrly. 1 ''J Blks to 3 Br, 2 ba. 2410 College Beaut 2 br 2 ba dbl gar ram. $825/mo. After6PM ------- M Cl Bk • bch. S475/m o. 1st, Ave, College P ark. Close condo. Pool. Jac, frpl, 645-3370 lalboolslancl 3706 • .. r. auson, r last+cln'g673-6948 toschools&shops.$475. secunty.53ti·9949afl5. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lalboolsland 311W. 2 •-__,_ 4 .. mo. 548-7638 DESUlAILE Dix 2 Br gar yrly """'""' 'l'Y' -ur-_,-. ..,..,ex Oceanfront, avail until ----------Super Condo, n~ beach, 2 · EXEC CONDO Nwpt Ad Its '1 Pho • .,.o111. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Side by side in great June 15, '78. 3 Br 2 Ba, New 3Br, 2Y:iba, duplex, ~R. 2 ~a. tennis, sauna. Terr. atlr 3 Br 2'h ~ ~ .. ~l~vei;/:t~ds Beaut. lge. 4 bdr~ Fullerton location. New adlts o nly. $500 m o. lgebackyard,2cargar. Jacuzz.1. Secured i:ate encl patio, pool. '490.1----------1 w/frpk.Yearly;$675, ~ roofs, beaut. wood 213-927-SS41;714·642-0553 556.e393 $370 mo. 493 -9797, 631.1475 RumboldRlty 67~ shingle & ~k fencing. ---------1 496-3758 Only $125,000. Call now! SartClelntnte 3176 $28)QuietNeighborhood ---------1 Broker. 553.3327 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR+ Giant Yd, Gar. .-Condo. Lrg 2 Wltelc~11 LOWEST 2·4 Plexes $148,ooo ea. I .... ILUFf Comparable units hove PANORAMIC VIEW Delux 2 BR, den, 2"11 ba condo. Elevator to beach or juat watcl} the surf. Lndry Rm Too! (5482P) newly decor. Adlts. S.t mo. Aft6:30pm, 962-3566 Al Al lSTATl " sold for $155,000. Agl Sl 07. 000 0 rlg. .BI u rr · South Laguna I 0•6 1_645-~11_03 _____ ~ Plaza, "D" plan. 3br. • • l '~ba beautiful cond. •••••••••••••• •••• ••• PALM SPtUNGS Many extras. Call col· THREE ARCH •A Y 21 unlt5. Xlnl locaUoo. led, 203/655-7029. Prm~ 3 br 2 ba. n~co v\ew. M.ay trade for other pro- only. about 2100 11q t. 10 yrs perty. Prtn only. 1'~ull ----------old, Priv party. 499-3933. WESTCUFF BeaollM family home In _prestJJfous Weatcllff; 3 Jse. bdrms., "spacious den. frpk. in liv. rm. & fam. nn.3~ Baths. Huge laundry·rm. 11\ere's Iota more to ••Y. but you 'I I be clad If you come aee it for younelll $170,000 MIWPOllT IUCH UALTY 67S.l 642 3Br, 2~& TwnhH, mtny ul)lradet, lncludlna cpta & wood firt, Xlot rH facll, NtwPOrt Terrace, o w·o flr 6C5·5882 ~,.bids SIAVllW New ai,dtord alklnn + den, fam:rm, panoramic view. Redur:cd for tm- r6td. aale.1DIJ,'81. Ownr .sn-1558 Must sell. 644-9$13 1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BY OWNEB·Foo t blll COSTAMISA 5~_0 TYPIUHITS SSOWEBC&UP Studio, 1 bedroom •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• 3 Br , 2 Ba, Fam Rm Hunt'g Hrbr condo. AvaU Maid ~rvice, pool GtMu• 3202 wJCplc, pV\ back yard, ba, 2376NewportBl,C.~f. • $IOO mo. 7$2-0617, aeent ---------•, __ 548-_97_ss_o_r_645-__ 396_1_-1 SUSCASITAS Nkely tumi!bed J bdnn. Closed gar. $230. up. Adults, no pets. 2110 Newport Blvd. Sl90 bach, resp. adl~ pee.a, lltil. Pcl.uaiL Ul6 E. Bay, apL 9. eoro.delMm-.................. / • L • , . I i ' j ,. t _.,._ - Dfi DAIL V PILOT * WodnH<Jay. March I 1978 .,_......,. .. Unfw1'. Offlc• Rftlfal 4400 Money to loCM 5 025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• W t d 7100 t-taipW..t.d 7IOO ........... _ •-1 .... &..•L-L-IP-ct-......... 317'-THEEFFIC'lb..IT tt•-&JrdTD '· PertGeall 5350Help •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........... ,._,_ ......-... ---............. . ... " ' . -. . . . .............................................. ·---------•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOANSAVAJLABLE .l II CGriM dt4 Mar 3122 Costa Mffo 3824 .............. acll 3140 2 BR, lge deck lie \>1cw Al TERHATIVI CMilt no problem DANCI!; OF FUN •••-•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••n•••••••••••• Wulk to beach, encl ~ar. Mo. lo mo. rent incl lroker,752-5903 OUl nude guls dance & AtcounUne CONTROLLER Condo. 2BR, l~ ba. Frplc, fncd yard. $32.5. •~·03111 It e c e pt . s er v ., ----------1 rap 1eulon. lOAM to Dlx 3 Br, 2~2 both, lrplc. Adult 2 bedroom, super newly decor'd. Nr shops evs personalized phone cov 3.AM Mon-Sal, l2PM to garage, laundry, Nr location No pets S350mo.963·1242 · erage, conf. rm. mall MONEY 8PM Sun. 62.5 N. Euclid, Supervise acctng fum· beach. 673·7l27 $:!2:S / mont.h . 568 W • $3-U 2 Bdrm. 2 bn, fBtn· serv .. underground prkg Low rates Cut •P.proval. Anah. 559-6150 tions for 2 N c w port ____ _;_:...._ ____ , Wilaorl, mqwfe apt. E. \ br lba upper unit, blt-in rm. hv·rm, dm·rm, frplc. &mol'&lnNewport. De pendable, honest FREE SESSION W/AD Beach div i11ions of Corona del Mar rental • •M• .... cH• ...... 5 stove & dishwasher. mnewduplex.661·0936 THE EXECUTIVE service. 2nd 's. 3rd's, 8w. AMEX listed co's. Ap ~pec1alist. Apt/hou:ies, '""" "'" "'~..-, crpt.& & dru~s. patio, 1 SUITE,6"0-5470 ings,968-99868ob. *SANDY'S* prox S9M In sales. Rl't(b $400up.C:il1Carolat Laq,e 2&3 be droorn <'argar S275 + $15011ec. Santa.Ana 3880 _ __;::...:....:...:...:...:....:..:..:._ ___ , CPAwL2.3YrtinU1i:11 + Boyd Really 6'75-5930 garden apts. Dshwh r, deP.963·3211 •••••••ou•••••••••••• 250SQ.ft.deluxeoffice,W. ~WMfed 5030 OUtcallMusage 2 yrs in corporalC' bltns, encl. l:al', gas bbq. . -_._ -2 Br 11tud10 nr Npt F'Wy. 19th St, C.M. $150 mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ____ 97_3-_0329 ____ --t manageme nt. Salary $350. Watch the Boat:;! l BR On The Harbor Lux...Decorl l67S3Pl .sJSO Minutes To Beach 2 BR W /Enc. Gar11.gu Sunken Liv Rm! (7S2SP) REHTIMES IMC. 898-0771 63 HSSS 2 BR, 21; ba. View of ocean! 2 Blk:.. to beach. SS50 Mo. Agl. Chuck Hoyler ~5·3331 PoolGaspd.778ScottPI. 2br2ba:lowerunit,bllin A/C, adlt11 $295/mo. Tom,540·2200 10% return, secured by •SHERILEE• range$20Kto$23K+xlnt 642·5073 stove/d1shwi.1hcr, <'rpts &l2·1129or 4!)4.6JlO prime O.C. comm'I In· Certilled Masseuse co. benefits. Mail resume & drapes. encl. pal10, l AJRPORTOF~CES duslrlal prope rtie11 . to Personnel Director, Woodland Vl'llage car gar. $350 mo + $150 Tusffft 3890 1 & . 2 room suites. ~II St.zoo,ooo Interim loan Home Calls· By appt. PO Box 2820, Newport . sec·ur 963·32ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• services. No lease rcq ~· req'd, all due in 2 yr~. 838-6838 Beach, Ca 92663 . 845 Paulanno 2 Br. 2 ba. frplc, was?ler & .From $145. mo. 2082 S. E. S59-4893 y Beautiful, new, adult 3 brm 2,,.. ba studio, ~en, ·dryer $325 mo. + dep. Bristol. Suite 200, N.B • ....:....:..;.__;.__ ______ , FOXY LAD apt.s. Great location. 2 lrpl, wet-bar, blllns, !W0430.af!6pm., <n4)5S7-7010 "=-rt T t O.tcalMcntage pool!!, 2jacuzzi8. carpets & drapes, palJo, ,_ i 11Jll. "" 61 Move in immediately stove/dishwasher, 1 car 811 sq rt. Soles on a month De+M 5035 1 ____ 7_3_1_·3_5 ___ ....._. gar. $450 mo. $150 secur. -L.....~ to month for no.lonaer ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bachelor S22S·S245 1 Bdrm $265-$275 2 Bdrm $295-$325 Brand new 1 br, JIB ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-3211 ~ lnwntl Fumlanwu than 5 months. -~ 3900 586-9070 LOWEST PREGNANT? Caring. confidential counseling & referral. Abort.ion, adop· ACCOUNTS PAYAILE CLERK Landmark condo. Rel' THE t;XCJTlNG lion & keeping. We currently ha vc a full Rental Office fac1t & sec 1:uarded. PALM Ml!SA Ans. ~!~~•••••••?~!~ 0penDaily9-6 Adlts.$375mo.SJ6.-19J4. l\IJNlJTESTONPT , • TSL Manageme.n! 2 Br1,2 Ba. fplc,new cpt~ BCll No. Costa Mesa, 5 rm 80:! sq. fl. $321 mo. All ground floor. front prkg A/C, prof. bldg, etc 5-1().2200 ........... at .. I st T .D. '1, also 1.ftd T.D. Loan. APCARE 547-2563 time te mporary opentni: .....:.:.......:..--------1 for a 6 month period with Physical Mas-sage By the poss1b11ity of becom 1berapist. Appc>lntment iagpermanent.j\l lea:it I ~. New 3 br, 2 ba, f. is.1·0081 or&a.2·1603 & drps. 6 blks to beach Bach, 1&2 BR. '>Ide, deluxe, encl. gar, . . B 536-Ul-4 . 536 3835 from $220. & up Office Space avail, pvt e n· frplc, ~ ard. E1SJde. light, airy 3 r, 2 :..:·~------Adults. No Pet:. try. 2 sulles, reas. 1827 TSL Mgmt 642-1603 Ba, bltru. in triplex. $360. 2 Br. 2 ba. encl. gara11r, 1561 Mesa Dr. West c I i ff Dr. NB . Retired couple bas money Fairest T~rms slnce 1949 Sotfftt-Mt.). Co. 642-2171 5'45-06 1 I 3 Br 2 Ba apt. Quiel area. bltns, cpts, drps, no J>1!ls. Sl25. 557 ·42.38 No pets. 552·4201 or 2l702 Brookhursl. $325. <SBlksEaslofNewport 631-0900 t.olend.lst&2ndTD's 551-1241 mo. 962-0778 Blvd. l Agent, 1-837·3744 _:_:_:.:.:..::.:.:._:_ ______ I 546·9860 Prestlge Npt Plaia sin11te Only. Steve, 548·2817 yea r varied a ccount'> N.B. payable experience with _...:.._ _______ -!some exposure to com .t\!>:.embly 20 TRAINEE ASSEMBLERS NEBO ED IMMEDIATELY TOP PAY!!! AJl shifts, day, swing & .:rav e in c l udes weekend~. Long & iihort term 11si.1gnments. 11011· day & vnc atlQn pay. H~~t -.;otion plan 3848 Campus Drtn 546-4741 (Acr~.From Oran(.:e <Jr>. Alrporl) Equal Oppor Employer ASSIST\NT MANAGER n eeded. Exp t:r necessary. Apply in person btwn 2&4P~I. Mon-f'r1. at the B1c Yellow H ou~c Hei1taurant, JOJO Ht1rbor Bl\d, t:.~1. Ask for Larry Curt1~. MESA PINES $235 Walk To Pll.'r' -----ofc, garden set'g, r<.'cept 1-'lrst Trust Oeeda tor sale 1 Br $285. 2 Br. S.350 ~l..i~h.'r Suite 1UR1 LARGE 2 BR area, ore svs avail. Prrr (4). Easts1de lg 2 br, view Some wtgarages. Pool. Enc.Garage! 15:H71') fROMS235MO tax man. $175 /mo 714·536·11832 tlet'k, gar. No dogs or Jacuz1i-1 Adults. no pt•ts Quiet bldg w /beautiful 752-8123. Need a mailing address? putenzed sy!>tems. Wi ll A confidential phone match vendors imo1t'l'!'! message service? Call against purc h3&C or· _G_' a_i_l 55_1_·5669 __ :_834 __ ·923_6 __ 1 de rs / rece1 \' ini.: n.•vurts. Tall handso me pro-verify extcni.ions. pre· Auto ~k<:h<iruc,own tools. or It!! pare and monitor in--Ill N . Coast H wy, ~·h1ldren. $320. 6'15·75:!2 Open dally. 265o Harla ~ \'lt'W Catalina 1 lndsrpg, cov'd gar11.ges, - 0 -=e..:.....:.I u_x_e_o_f _f_i _c_e_s--& Speculate~. Invest-Ors & 'FOURSEASONSAPTS AH:.CM .<MesaVerd~ 2BH+llcatcdPool! ndulls,nopcts.Jdealfor warhhous•· s pa ce. owners 11hrt t e rm SS Spacaous4!br twnhs1.', l 'r'J Dr Koff Harbor Blvd) Sundeck! (53&1P) a dults 35 or o lder . 1400 .3 700 iiQ" ft Full avail fast. 8111 Daven· tia, pool, pvt 1>at10. 5"~·24-17 RENTIM&s IHC. LEEWARD AM'S, 2020 t 64.2 4463 or ..:po_rt_S4_9-_9803 _____ _ """'077 "'~1 tSSS L'·11~rton Ave, 1 blk E. of ~~ .. r 7u:,,i, Y • · \!\dulls. No pets. $275. 735 Large 3 fir 1'o\\nhouse .,.,.,.. I .,., . cu " • f '"'" .,.,.. •----..:'.:-..&...; Joann St. 646-6483 with p atio, garuc + 2 nr, 8 blocks fr ocean, 1'.l Newport Ave, 1 blk s. 0 ----------.....-,~1 ·• P<>ol Quiet com pl x . blk stores & transp $285 Bay. 6Jl·0397 _ 1 --t & "-~-~ Sl70. 2 br, refrig, C&D, P\'l -OC Airport Ana --nN11U polio. Adlt!t, no pet~ !\duh-.. no pet.; S3i5 mo. :'\opcts. 536-1286 __ :i BR. Fun Zone area o n MacArthur Blvd. 7JJ.B W.18th673·7787 545·l38lor 675·5949 ~s;-~-326 13th St. $275-SJOO incl ulll. No Prestige office space, Lost&Found 5300 Brand Hew E-Si~ Good loc. J blks to beach peLS OO·JS..:..:l!:_I ____ 420'.l sq.ft. Attractive 1m · ••••••••••••••••••i•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br w 'gar, adlt!'. t'pts. <lrps. ranJ?c, Inc<! ~ti " patio, wtr pd. b67 "F" \ t('tona St, $260 :!61!1 "I" Sanl.i .\na AH. S2i0 1\.10 ll:!Otu.) ~ fir 2 ha nl.'a r ... dmul &. -.hops s:?'i!i mu 11'11.! Oh.'>'I 111<.'al for t.1.1y ... 1ecp1•r, 1'.d:>t1-ldt' 2 flit. I ha. pool . no pets. Children ok sr.-s 5-18·0!111-o L~ I Bdrm \4 Ol'W l'Pt I! &. dt•('k s,i;i:, mo. A\'.ttl 3 l 't>-1!>-~:> :· fir. bu11t111~ "' w qll & ti r p ., ~ :1 I 5 1 m " :\ o 'lttfclrl'tl or pt·l!>. Ph !,;,; l~l!l ~ De4Jxe2br.2baloft&2& 960-4982 R-4000 provements, Broker. LolltorFoundapct'.'Call d It I J Frplc -·-714-558-1701 Animal Assistance en :.p 1 · eve · r · ..,;, 'E.\H BE \Cll Endosed •••••••••••••••••••••••1·~~~~~~~~~~ f sk,h":its deck Count ) Le_ague-537-2273_. n~ • -5' · · · gar '4 apt entry Frpk. Room w 1 kitchenette .!tellmf! No child.ren or 2br, 2•:rba, dis posal. $SO\l>eck &up Pvtofficeswte. new bldg, Found. Nice orange male ~'1" Jiii.! F: -~Isl .645-9543 d~hwc:hr. 2 balcon1c~ 543-9755 .i blks ocean. downtown cat. altered \'1c: In· '-''~i::,6-16-l262~3>s __ Wkdys6.'J4·~.AJ,'l __ -----H.B. $210. mo. Cul. UlCI. d1anapol1s & Magnolia, \mbassudor Inn m Costa !)36 7505 llB 2 17 962·2218 NEW E-SIOE . 2br. P'1 put10. nr Beach & ~tesa, 2277 Harbor. Cen· Jbr. 2bJ. Townhou~e l P· Warner Child OK. i821 troll) locatt"<I, 235 rooms. lusiMss Rental 4450 Found fem Tttn er/ml'k ~radt'd LgC' 9 atio Sq:amorc S2i5mo ~li\NY with kitchen. ••••••••••••••••••••••• poodle-v1c Wilson & Vt c· Ctulfln·n ok Yrom ~:175 -·-----CM T M0-4413 6 •262 f' d ti plex ., br phone & TV Swimmm~ 4 OaUXE OFC'S _ton_a_. _ _:_ uea. 6 1ii 95 13 cH~s. 64 ... ,ran m·w u · .. pool, Jacuzz:1, and rec d l'-z ba. SJSS 3 br 21'.I ba Conf. rm .. seat 25. all FOUND: Young male ny:o1 S-115 Beach \'orkto\\n. room. D;nly & \\eckly paneled, sm whi;e in re-adult Golden Retrien~r. LA CASA ILANCA Boch, I 9,..Avl How All utllt-pd . cpls, drp:.. pool , lndry foe's. Adult~ over 35, no pet!> or r hilJren Call Sue , 556 7i07 or Henry, IM2 !ll37 536-CIS·ii. ~c. gar rate~ ~tarting from $411 a ar l or 2 yr lease. Lakt• Wll'>OO & Placentia. C:\I Wl.'1!k. Forest area . Kt•nt 631-056laft6PM Super clean 1 pn\'ate yaro, bch, S23S mo. ~-0500 BR. lri: dose to 645 4&10 Jlarkms. ------ 536 7330. Room & locrd 4050 7 l-l·S8l !1393 Found Peninsula \'icm1ty ---' ------Brown mixed lemale -Superdt•an 1 BH. I varanry ror <'lderly Pvt walk to heh. S2211 mo room, J hot me31~ & IO \'· sr ·L BEACH 5;ll) 73.'lO 1 n g ca re. L 1 re n s e d (.ft Shepherd. 9 months. ~. ---- ----=-4!'2 ;s;o ~Br,:! ba. all bltns, frplc, ---------!_ , __ l.ach 3848 -MALL ~'lld i;::.trJ l-!l', 1JJl10, lndry ,,,_._,..... y ~-._.._. 4250 rm. S.'l:W 2 Br dt•luxe !;tud10, ut1I pd. ••••••••••••• •••••••••• oc....-.-. """''1;115 OLD TOWN f" 0 u n d · M a 1 e b r n Found· Camera, NB nr p1l.'r 3t Thanksgiv1ne. 213 '45l 3272 to identify. TSL :i.ti.:mt Iii:! u;oJ lJllru., t-rpt!>. P<Xll. ~;;,, '.!Br. I h;.i frpk. i-undt•ck ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 11 Malit St.,store Dachshund . v I c lfli!l ~IJple. 541:1-0118. \ll, S..50 mo )rly Opt'n Bil.BEAR CARIN Adam!>, Bushard .'\EWL\'DECOH1\TEl1 e\l•i:s.t55647 S<it Sun 9b7So.C:.tHw) 2 Dr,fplc.slp-.8. spac• of 270 sq ft to qf\J22'i:! t I -,,,....,....,, v.eekor v.knd.i54-63-tt J6A01qft WJUdivide ------:!hr . nt'\\ n pl. \\ r IX • un::sn •y r ·RIPL""'ES ''"""""" ------" . • ~-., I' 1•1 '"1; "' ~ ............... f -• FOt.1'00 ~tale lnsh .:><:t ~.·,u :!l'•~ ' at·ent1a C'OST \ M FA~A \·t-n "ipt.>c1al 2 BH"' dt>ck Ski Condo. P J rk C1l) 1-or appal"¥t, re--lt'r. brown <'Ollar"' studs ~.1}1~t v.n 1 5 .\I ·~ ,...EW3BDR:'>lt'A~IJLY &1)cean,·1cw :onOn•.in l'tah I Rr. ~lrC'ps 4· ~·c.~et",bookl, & red rihbon . Vic . ----\P'Th FRO:'>t $395 Way :'\och1ldren or JX'l!' Rt!a.'i ~ 3i4b, D42·5l.5l_ photo. ·n , sho.1, SUnflower, C.)1. 549-l0l5 Pr1\alc back )ard s. Portl•r Rt•alt)4tl7!1ti8_or RentaktoShcre 4300 toys.spa. -~ hr '.! h.1 to" nhou-.c. n r f'111n II'\\ & Jl,1k<'r ;\11 pct1-~1.'i 1>111:! Alrno"t new 2 hr. 2 ba ../.wnh~t· \\ C'lltl i..:.r S:l25 l).15·:S l.2ti; li:l7 :)1:1'.J~I SJfl(ICentral \1r Conrl :.: HR+ 2 RR Tov.nhouse P11t111 + c;a1 ill-:C tS.15.."iP J J:iir:ll:C'" 2 children ok. Hcrt:.i Andcr~n l!J, 15, I ••••••••••••••••••••••• lllgh lrafftt i;:oocl loc f"ound older male Doxie: no p l'I'> '\l'ar South BF:SELECTIVF. CootactOv.n<'r.d~<'nl \IC Bu,hard & Adams. l'oast Plaza Rl.'ntal of· 1-.,utmji! apt, I hr "' 0 •• 1 bl · 846·5502 llunt J\t.-at•h Y68-3fall lire open Wed thru Sun. t••Jn 'IC\\. mod h1~h Gama n• 1..i e ---------• 12 4 82lJ Baker st. 1 hlk beam ce1hnji!!> ~ lot" or • roommat<' --- 4500 LOST :? Sl'Oll1sh Ter- .,.. n( Hmtol. 557·52t5 li!I ;1-.~ I.Cu.SC .i ' J II l.1~1.~~~~~o"r'}!>!°~~~\pt lftdustrial Rftlfal ners, female•. l brmdle- l!li tXli '";, 1 '"'' _ .... _ .. ~:::!"--• ••••••••••• ••• ••• • • • • • 1 blk. \ 1c Goldenwe:H & l'\ew 2 Br. O w. end l(ar. ------~EEO A ROOMMATI-~" IUILD TO SUIT Slater, II B. 99-1 m _6 __ ~O. ;\\I !\tar. 1. 202.) l Br. util pd. do~c in •. no ( I 5.000-20,000 St•. ft (.'harle Apt B. 548·5763 pet1-. J du 1 t ~, re r 1-Call The Pro e1mona s • IA'il. Wht shorthdtr Ca.I -----$3IO-S330" s:;ir 491 5380 you'"c seen & ht'ar of! Placentia"'<' C :\1. \\ :o.llght limp \'le Kln£s sz.y, You Ask f or It I 2 Br townhse. s:ioo., B llns. ;:-""'--1 -&-I -t un rlnn Radio TV Re\a~·lctso·lresy !'i Ta) l~-~~910 Rd Ch(( Dr ~-5i18 J::asL'>lfll' :! OR+ 2 lli\ t(ar. lndry facll Ad l!I on-"''~' .,, as . ..,,., .. Tlmr \1a~a 11ne Pr€'ss t--me Ulll J·d • <fi4WP) Iv. nu pell!. 1919 Anaheim 11'-p Ifai;.·h apt. Oc~o11 hou. ... cmatei. 1 hne lllg S.__ 4550 1..-0st, sm grey Cock all el ~ " 2 blk be· th Cull , ... -r w vellow head. Vic. U.8 . REHTIMES IMC. St ~ll!r fl.15·5106 \lcw, ·s a . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• arc.a . Re·'·a_. ""'"l""l .. r.· ---4.94·9692btwn1&6pm Suct>StdullySmcel971 ,... "'...,... -898 OTil 631·455.J 2 br. New npts & floors. ------832 .4134 .&<J' AJI steel -sem1lrniler \'IFW ~F OC FAN & 1 d~hwshr. Kids ok. Nu 2Dr .2Baapt$400.mo. ----Mobil Stora~c. 646·4993. Lost blk fem Persian. crrv 2 b~. 2 b~. f0rpl~. pel.s. S2ti0mo.b45-~27_4_ Oc:e·~~~~~w ~mr::k'~e~i:~.2~~i O.S.32'l5 ______ z~:nJ:r~~v1~!~~~~~. heam l'cal. J llf'U??t. Adults. no pets . 2 br · u1Nnit1es 759-0044 dys \\'antoo :encl~edstorage Rt•ward.&«~ . ).!.1ra~E'. S:~ h·l5 R2~i or J:tC'uu.i & pool · B.Jth. apt $225 mo. 1 blk '" 9i9-2!i00 · • i.pc. JOX28 or lrger. Pat, 9i9-J:l'i6 f>t5.249R \'1 c tor1a bch. Call -' -fi.Jl-Oeil .8.Ji}-49-12 Lolltsmlbllt /whtToyTt:r· _____ .:..:..:. ____ , 637·0185arter6 PM J's Company-Penthsc ner rem, wearing t'an· 1-~y;·l(~~.Erp7:_a;n~{;ar~ Dana Point 3826 ~Ml~-J l52 1200 sq ~t.. fplc, pool. """'"'/Invest/ ,.as tags. v1c Edinger & ;nail Mar. 1. S325 per ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sauna. Jac ., n /sm kr. ~ . Bushard.531·3611 Ow I gt 673 1181 0 5-1().lm'T ••••••••••••••••••••••• • -t doo, lrg male, blk mo nr a · · Duplex. ~p•t acular COHO uuo • I N"c• 1640 bl Roo t d M lusinn1 Lab. w1ch-Oke chain, vie Nice l Br. pool. adults. no ocean" cw. cw sq 3 Bdrm. 2''\ ba w t tn mm ate wanke 'sJC. Opport.ffy 5005 East~lde CM. Reward. petS. $250. s .12.5251 days. ft. 2 br. 2~~ ba. $450. m o. O\'en range. Dishwasher mature, nn-sm r. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 648-472J ~3798 after 6pm.__ 759·0706 & Air <'ond .. fully t'arpet· condo 4~9 SAN CLEMENTE ' ..:..;.:..__ ______ _ ed & draped. Ready to •. p ShO Found:Tool box.. So. Hunt. 2 Br, kids ok, pool $250 2 BR . lge modern apt mo\'e in. L ocated on Respon rem to share ne1'' Grooming "' et p. Bch. ldenllly. 960 . 5095 mo l.Jrkfst bar. bltns; encl. Crown \'alley Pkwy 2 SR, 2 ba apt. HB nr Retiring after 7 good ~1;; 808l gar . w sh r I d rye r . REST$375/mo bch. $175 mo + 1'2 util. years. fine location & ....:ev_..;.es_..;. _______ 1 --Children OK. $300. 3 ~lilesSo of S o f"wy 84&-4S96eves MonlFr1 cUentele.$88,500. F 0 U N D : M 11 le ~IC'l' 2 BR. gar frplc. 498·0318e\•e Call Mr. D'Amico ed BERTHA HENRY dshw .. r. balcon). No Pcm roommate want to REALTORS els. s295 mo. l786 ~EWl&2Brapts._Pool. <714>898·3376 share 2 BR. den. 2 ba, 21SOelMar 492-4121 ~ n ah e 1 m st. o y s Jocuzz1, ocean views. Newport leach 3869 Laguna Hills condo, SlSO .=.:::..:::.::..=.::::_ ______ .:...:.;:~:;.:;..~-----l i!'>ol·0833, Eves 642· 1906 From $275/mo. Adlts on· ••••••••••••••••••••••• m 0 + \.'! u t i I . -ly. No pets. Corner Selva PA;RK NEWPORT 2131372·0977, 213/62s.t24S Bachelor loft, re fri g, &Granada.661·3679 Ba c.helors, 1 or 2 Bob. sto\'c, pool, adults, no ...=:.:..;. ________ !~~~~~~~---1::=:..::.:-_=~::::-:::::=I S2S5 646 2001 Lrg 2 ba 2 ba, refrig. Bedroom!! &Townhouses Resp. female to share lge -pets~-·· · · pallo. super cln, $325 mo. From $279.50 home In Hunt. Harbour . MESA VERDI·:. lge quiet. 33822 .Copper Lantern. Spectacular spa, total Walk to beach, many ex· 2 Br 2 Ba, adlts, no pets. owner. 900.5742 recr eation p rogram, tras. (213)592·21662 SZ75 mo. 3129 Cinnamon. . social program. 7 pools.8 g?Q.1658 2Brl"'Ba,lgepat10.encl tennlscourt.5.AlFashion Young female wants · aar, kids OK. $3~0 . Island, Jamboree&San sametoahltreebraptat Barhelorapt.2 rms +ba. 673-7204; 7SM400 Mrs. JoaqulnHIUsRoad. beach In Newport. Call (JUI paid. $185. 645·5126. M.a.'IOO ,714, 644-1900 Debi eves. 673·4411 or 637-5895 ...:d:.:a:::...y..:.76:.:1.....:·~...:.._3 ____ _ ..,tlltgtOR IHCh 3840 d ll2 br Steps to •••••••••••••••••••• • • • Luxury 8 u i · $42.5 F to 11hare 2 bdr. apt. on SHARP.: beach. l, 2 & 3 ~~· ~~~n Rl ::r Ave 8.1. No smoker $175. incl. BR. r r p I. d s b w s h r, 642.3566 ....:util:.:;;:;·:...:fI7..:.W058;.....:;;.;~-----• pr age. patios, 960-2358. WA THFROMT Share home. rem. Udo, ftM40..W-UDO ISU =c>pu ';,t9711 3 Br "Pt/condos. conve-~Aaenl nient Joe. 5 UJ\lt.a a vl. $400 ~ . up. 964-1507, 84o.1751 3 Br. 2 b1, frplc, deck, 2 for-.... 4JSO car gar. walk lO bch. Yr· ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIVE Near The Beach! c .... w BeauUlul Adult Apts Ga.s & Water Pald. 21861 Brookhurn ,l lB 9'24Hl sperous pr . man see put/output docum('nt~. young beautiful girl for a prepare chN·ks and de> Laguna Bt•at·~~91·i93:,. _ bwimcss & pleasure trip some filing. Ability to ----------t o the worlds most beautifu l tropi cal operatea!Okcyamust paradise. All expenses Please apply in person paid. Please reply im· med. includ. phone ll Box ~J..34 Daily Pilot P.O. Box 156-0 Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Bltgay male under 21 pref. 01!>creet. sincere fnends. Pos!>1ble share home. John 536·2282 OUTCAU MASSAGE •731-0931 * LINDA & VICKI TREHDATA CORP. Standard MemoriH Divislott An Applied l\1 agnetics Co 3400 W. Segerstrom Santa Ana, CA 0271).f '114/~0-3605, ext 213 Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Outcal Mcnsoge Act1.ng Bkkpng For the F. of it! -rEM,ORARY Sen mg all Oranie C-0. Regjster Today to work ~1l11 onvarious 1tCl'OUnllnf' & ESCORTSERVICB bookkccp1nJ( <1 si.1i.;n· 8"&8·9560 ments. Work close t o AlsoHmng you r ho m1>. Fq~urc __ ___.:..:.:.:;. __ _;:;;_ ___ , Clerks to Sr. Al·rc>un· Penonal Senlc.s 5360 tant:. needed thruuut ••••••••• ••••• •••• • •• • • Orang<' Co. G-OLF. Teaching pro, 4 Robert llalf's lessons in the privacy of Accountemp!! ''our backvard, then to SOOS. Main. Ste 5'11 dr1vin11 r"ange & golf No. Tower, Union llilnk COUl"'e. 581·9648 dys/evs Jn The City of Orani:~ 714 111..1.'>-410:1 MASSEUSE For top classr--------.,.•I le1ut. massage. Salar Y. + ------ Bonus Plans+ 100 ..... r up ADMIH. ASSIST. Will train those without Office skills. oppor. to expene~ t>i5-i501 __ learn real est & pubhl Trcrv.. 5450 rel Rapid r:.11M.'S. Tu ••••••••••••••··~···••• ~lr.~O'Bnen 5405001 Sailing to Ha wait. Need Snellmg & Snelhns: of ad,·enturous female •NewportBeacn A11ency stup~cs.631~ 4~0 Campu!I Drl\f' &tdofment& tt,.P.atfon ••••••••••••••••••••••• .I* Wanted, 7075 Adnrtiliftq S~cy Beauhtul ofc ;o.;1rf' bm.,, Eitc1t1111! bu .. m1· .. ~ 1 'JI tn~ & ltte :-.h ~50 l I' ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOE. ElhcO'Anl.'n 5-IO·fl<IO I AVON T1m(' on hands. t ired of .. taymg al home'! ~let·l J>l'Ople. make mon<'Y & ha\'l' fun Hen1me an ,\VON re pre.,t-ntat 1 vr. For more information 1·,111 540·7041 or Zenith j 1:1.">9 Baby ... ltlCT luvmi: & ex- 1wr d for 6 mo's baby i.:1rl :\lond<t\ thru Thur ... 2 I.) to ti 30pm. Lal! :\1.: .irl'•' mw.t ha\e trdn:-.. MJt r111J ----B.ib) ::;1ttcr-hou1-eket•pcr. II\<' m or £1ut Cd!\l are.!. I chi Id "45 5118!_5_~-- Ba hvi.itlt'r nt-edPd aft<'~ school. 2 da's a wef>k an cJ lnr 4'nlte<; t; :Jt).JO :Jo lla rhor \ 1cw School arc a. l\I \I 1;H 184 l Bahvsll l<'r 2 tla~·s pf>r \\ k. N.11. Mr Jl•IOll l!:S.l·2!ll•t1 1la'h &.U-fil 11 uft fi Babyi.1lt<'r. full time until Jum·. :111 hr.., pr w l\ tht'rl'afl1·r :! '~ ~ L 11ltl ~trl ) ' N 8 llOllll' 1.1t8(1_11_...~--- B.1kt'rY· rC' \\ omdn, F 11m•· rtE'rl t1ulle:-. Will Ir.Jin Start S2 i5 hr . \pµly 1n per ... on , f'n·m·h ·~ I' J '-lr), 11 lu W. &ker St. C~l ____ _ llunJcfnJ? TElLE« BJnk t-:,pt>r Hl'QUtrt•d IRVINE NATIONAL BANK BABYSITTING -My SnelllnJ?&Sncllm~of home. Reasonable. rehu-Newport Beach ,\Gl'll<'Y C'ont.irt Shirl<'Y Saw~ e~ ble. any hours or age. 4340Campus Enn_·_ ~t1.:n110 F: 0 F:. Call Julie. 548-76-l.J t\mb1tiou.s Couple Want<'d Rank mi: Full charge bookkeeper lo manaf(e a 11mall bu!>1 TELLER P /TIME w/4 yrs. current pubhl' ness p/t1me. Will not 111 W r a r l' s l' (' k 1 n ll A acct'!(, wants 1m. accts. tt'rfere w /your ,111'('~l'lll 1•u..,tomcr oriented ind". to work on al hme. job. Must be w11lm)! to lnr r t1mr trller P'l'111nn Marlene Montgom ery learn. Mr H all. Ii-I:!· tti:ll II\. our lloe\I> port Heal h 962-1~ ore Rt•rt•nl l<•lh•r :•r Alarm C'ompany nd~ l'll!>h1i•ru1i: e'per. pre( rl service p~rson . Top " lite l)p111.:. Xl 11t wages & good workini:: s.il arv & ... orion~ t'onch . cond . Ask for Florence. Appl~ ,11 :'\!annrrs Sav· 22i Forest Ave. Lag. m1is. J.»15 We~tt'hff Dr. Young female college :.tu· den~ seeks 1oom in ex· change for services. Clencal, housek~eping, driving, care of green house, e t c. Cathy 494-7487. . Nurse's Aid, care for elderly -0r invalid. nites. Depend .• refs. 540-0722 Sch. N R EOE ____ _ Boat Manuiacturer DEPT. ~EAD Wood/CatMNt Slw>p Top quality sailboats. Challl.'n&lni assign - ment-Full benefits , medical. dental. optical. Call Bob Walshev.. Ertcson Y1cbt,, ~\. . • .. • . • ~ . . • l I .. ; . l ~' ... .. --·--""'·-·, Af'•lmceaepolr c.,.,..... CoMl'act• 8edft al ~'--lncomt Ta. PaWtncJ/P •CJ c ·~ ••• • • • •• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ···················-··· ••..•..................•.••••.•.•••.•.•.•••.............••...•...•............ ~............. . .....••........ Wshr. dryr, dshwshr re-CUrpenter & tablnet wrk R.J.Huftman & Son, Gen K-Met-Electric lbd occ Student.~~ T. truck Tax prep a ration b y ~~VJN~u f!S'U~ING &!Quality Palntrng . Lowe~< R~~ !~~!t,11:Y~~~!(i palra..,,lleas. Ui-~4 Jo"ree estimates aml Jobs Coolr CuatomAll&Add comm ret1 &malnl sv~· Trash. tree tnm, Randy form,r l RS agent Fr A Coll ~:.on rutl'tl In town. ~rec eal HeroldGunnS49-2961 QYUme & repairs, eu. 673-5125 pa ti.o s' ea bin et': Honest & ~ellable .. Frff &l.2·5703, 979-6489 7~•H272 B :'8 e~3.1166· 6t ents. Jack87~-8336/tl75-7280 .Alplullt Repaln Alvin formlca. New const. Rea Ml. 9'19-85f.2. $24.60 lat hr. Slmg student, big trurk, Wouldn't you rather have -. Painting. Homes lntr & Roofs For Less. All ty~s. •••••••••••••••••••••• C 11 r pent e r . Fr ee & comm'l. 645-4644 or FeftdncJ tree cuts, clnup, hauling a certified public accoun ~ Sef'•lu1 Exterior . S pecrn 1 ty : Llc/bond'd. Insur. ree Has rain damuitud your ~l1mates, Any sh:e jobs. s.i8-454l. Uc & bonded. ••••••••••••••n••••••• 494 7669 &494-2129 lant prepare your in-••••••••••••••••••••••• Apts Lo rates o:JJ 2508 estimate. 894·0421 or ~sphall7 . Call 631·~.0 Tony.~~ Gen. eontraMr, ~.ad-WOOD FENCES come lax return? l"or an Nurse consultant 30 yrs 53'1:__-4_133:..._ _____ _ Bonded. ti ed HouMdeaiWng app1 In your home call eKp. Pnv. duty w/fam1ly '.a.Int.inf, lnt.r/Ext.r. 2.Srns Tu c.,IJ18\Jr • r-.a ~Ice dilions, r emod., re11., Bullt, re built, gates ••••••••••••••••••••••• 003-8182 oriented care. Call In Harbor area. St Lie • A~t Ir ;;:.'::; ............ •••• comm. Free est. Spiro hung. 642-3073 tives. 183281, 642-2356 •••••••••••• •••••• • •••• 548-8250· 547-0204 Want a REALLY CLEAl'J Lcinchc-1-213/867·6776 for inCorma· Ceramic THe-Spec. 10 ~ Ices <.:urpet Man will lay yours • Gcrdlnilin HOUSE? Call Gingham ..,.. .. "7 lion & appt. • •• · R · & ·"7 GIJ'. I. Ft t ,,.c.5123 •••••••••• ••••••••••••• • HOME & ~ARDEMS entries & noors, ZS yrs ex-•••• ••••••••••••••• or m ine. epa1ra ~n. contractor: Fouoda· ••••••••••••••••••••••• eees ....., Li'NDSCAPING P...1-"-/Pa-Rn """ 1883 $1.S-ANY MATfER cle1.1ning too' Guar work t . ddl I • " -"""JI r-· ... "7 Cstm painting 12 yr ep. per . .._. • • . 10011! 8 t ons, re-Prof Japane~e Landscap-HOUSECLEANING 1s our Reasonable pr1ct•!I. •••••••••••••••••••••• NB CM a ea 673 3433 aft ...:......---------Eve&wknd.s by appt. ut bigger savm&s. Free modefuig,blockwork.. ing & garderung. Maint. business. Re li abl e 968-8783or547 ... o.6 ' r · · TrftSet'vlc~ Default/Divorce $175• ett, 64S-3i46 556-8241 lncl. mowing trimming ...,.. PETERS PAINTING 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Collections 30%• .,,_ ed. ln F · service. Janice's Rag-Expr'd. Reas Rates . .,_...._/R-..il T . . . n-._ ..... .,, ... _g Shampoo & steam clean. DiaflLs&Dn'-spra, ... g, we g. ree gedyAnn's at64S.l800 Custom Landscape Free Est. Call Gene ,.._,"" .,.-r ree tr1mm1ng, repair, u•UU& uanw "'-I b ... h .. , ..,. estimates 545-7072 Ser\'l<'e:.. Ken c.c-'.'"S8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• removal, over 24 yrs. (uptotnall ""'or r1&1aeners; w t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----·------• ...,.. \M \Jnlwn detainer-dehluk ~pl.'> 10 mill bleach. Clean Building design/dratting. CLEAN·UPS/llAULING l~alle ~emA~o~~tfso~~!~~: 646.3770 A 11 PROF ES s ION AL Vy~rit&E./'l/{'uTi: combined expe~ 979~ $150.00full pnce hv, din rm. ball $15. Avg Exp. designer. Quality Prurung-Planting mg Service. 540-2393 re-Malnt...anc:• p,11 nung. lnter/Exter . F'reeesl. 393.1439 Removals, tr1mm~n.g, Simple wills $35. rm S7.50. couch SlO. chr plans+ perrruts. Homes, Free est. 642-9907 ferrals ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rt>a.s, work guar 642-038S pruning. free est. Lied, •Court costs extra SS. Guar el.Jm pet odor. apts, add.it.ions, patios. St.orm & rain damace re-PATCH PLASTERING msrd. 642-21624, '97-413t .TlmothyLashlee,Atly. Cpl repaar. ISyr!expr. Increase value or in-Exp.gardener&eleanup pa1r.,·treer, r oo f s, Painting Extr/lntr. Ex· All typ•s Fr ee ----------t714)6JG.7~/art 7PM l.)o work mysel.. Refs come. Fred. 549-3325 Trimming. pruning. THE SUMS HIME lt>ncl..,, !'>tnm1;~, ero'ion. pr'd. honest. neat. reas "' · Window CleaMnc) call (213) '34-8915 S31-CHOl • eves 1'Tee est. &i&-5401. Pedro " " l..lc'd 96-1-1045 Da \ e estimates. Call 540·682S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ________ __.Ccihri GIRLS spnnk..!_er!> etc 962 0302._ PLASTERING Windows cleaned, r e- ~wniegs ng DraperiH Gardener, ten yrs exp. Housecleaning & office Masonry YOl'NG MAN. 5 yrs t>x pr llomh. add1t1ons, r e asonable, businesses. •••••••-•••••••••••••• ••••••••••"-••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Handyman ct>ok, bch s pecialists. Spec. on ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n wa llcover1n~. Free stucco. Cree ests, low homes&apts.847~61 A & E Systems. Aut. roU BAJCERY. Do you have Custom drape3, spreads, ar ea. llome or apts. apts, & R.E. work. ~rv Brt<'k"ork. Small JObs l'lllS b45·8576Andy rates.586-4892 up awrungs for the •ot uny problems with your shutters & all ~rndow 754-1189 7 days wk. Bonded, m· Newport, Co!>ta Me~a & _____ ...._ __ -tThe rut.eat. draw in the home & travel trlr. Al ~~gagoodsit ?toWpeos~d1~ C'overings at d iscount GlllMlal r-lcH s u r ~ d ·> 5 4 O · 9 5 2 5 Irvine tiiS Jl75evc~. FlnneS Exte5r. pl aintingThy .......,fMJ Weal. •. a Daily Pilot rolors & sizes. Im med. nove c pac . Y r vi '<' pnces. Shady Deal, HJ __......,. lanytime ---· t11or. t. ic .. ms. ry •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Classified Ad. Phone free home installation y our needs. We offer BakerSt,C.M 549·3325 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------• '.\1a sonry ." con<'retc, me.S.11>·55552Hrs llOMESAVERS. Plumb· 6t2-S678. 8-lOAM &5-iPM qual. Ccserv 549-4995 HANDYMAN: Carpenlry, I nd s<' p e. w a I!~• Pr'bf paint 'g & paper Ing & Healing. Free est.•----------~2l3)592 S020 Cen.nt/COftCl'et Electrical eh .• -ctrical, plumbing & CarpetCleaning.STF:AM w. alkway!>, patios ha nntn". work "uar. SlOhr.lloncst&reliablel•--------- ----· ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• floors. 847-2787, 557-45<>4 or SHAMPOO. Also floor "'" 6""" "' " "' s ce Bof' l\1 /C OK Calpetilet ....................... ELECTRJCAL SEHVICE -------~ & window care. 97 1-11:>4 '"'-ovuv Free e~l. !>36-4780, ervt · '" •••••••••••••••••••••••'\II types concrete, CALLS'$1Shr,&SMALL HANDYMAN. Homes & _p~chMamtenant·e Mo'tlftl) 5J6 . .tJ83 751·3l50or847-Q383 Custom. r emodeltng, uni lJ loc kwork •. planter:; JOBSS42-8233 apts. (;onsc1entious ••••••••••••••••••••••• p int Y C H RefriC)et'otiOft que & ~nu sua l work ~·sdt~ .. m,,,~~!;,k lac & u....1..L.~IC.1--a...t Craftsman.Call645·030<! Woman , ex p e r ., "Two Men Wtll l'll O\.C 0 our 01 e ••••••••••••••••••••••• -welcome. 12 yrs w arcu. "'".2. ~ .,......_.....,..._____ ~ -"'n•C Grodift4 housecleaning. Ill-Cs. You" We handll' !rs & Spectalmng in res1den· Rerrig. sales & service Palombo Const. 962.g3u Padftl" Concrete. l .o •..; ,Llc327136 645·6974 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·2556 'ml move:. off1t·o & tJPalelahsoemcehs.ec,.knt.ou&r erxet: Reliable. hone!>t work. d & r II d t p O hou~ehold. Di:.!ance & Call Erme 543-1585 ~las t er C rafts man . ~"J'JS7 u ay ra es. ELECTRICIAN-Priced SKI L ADl::R . Dump Henry kleenz. anything local. 31so pack1n ~. f~rences. Li<' # 320&H Spl'cialty. remodeling right-free estimate on ~ck. HAULING, tree dirty. Patrick Henry. Lowcbl l egal r atl'. Guar. 1nsrd. Cree est. Remodef&Repair hru~h. 4 y r!' locally . .JClnt Don't drop the ball! Get a large or small jobs. rk, gradma. demo etc B.A. 530-1793 Lic lmsrrl Cal T 111 944 _T_ed __ 636_-7_085 ______ ••••••••••••••••••••••• T fs 499 3105 Licensed 673-0359 831-1257 -Pho.-, 72-,o e · job wilh a low-cost Daily 2 Ladies will clean ) our ,,.. n For Ad ActiOIT can a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 Claastfied Ads P iiot Cl as~11fied Ad. flnd what you want in Sell thl.np fut with Dally large home exp aft. 4 642-5678 Pbone 642-5678. Daily Pilot Clasaifieds. Pl.lot W&nt Ads. Ask for Mana 543-4926 Want Ads Coai.t Pamtmg. Cstm ext Servke & repairs. Eler, int . a1rlc~!> spra) mg, carpentry, cabinets & Call642·S678 ti6J.ti262 form1ca 631·2251. 1---------· ·---------- Help Wanted 7100 Help WClllt.d 7100 Help Wanhd 7100 Help Want.ct 7100 Help Want.cl 7100 Http Wanftod 7100 Heo1p W.ted 7100 Hetp Wmtt.d 7160 Help WClllt.d 7100 .............................................. ············~······ ......................................... _.. ...•........•...................•.......................................•...................... Bookket'per, full charge.•---------1 construction e~p. nee thru T /B. Resume M I. Plumbing. 1171 No Blut• <;um. Anaheim GJ0.26:>1 <lfiOOKKEEPER/RECP'r. ·Part ume needed for yng rapid growing ('o t-:'{p.'r 1)referred. $.I (Kl fir hr ,,loo· Fri. 8· 12. o:ll Oi2.1 •JI 6iJ.435ti ---- (;li:nral SR. TYPIST • 01claphone <Mnt • r lRM Exerot1v~ <11Wpro .tTeclm1cal ~EEDED OIM EDl.\Tl::LY Loni-? & Short Turm As· 'tJ.:nmcnt.s. lloltday & vac ation pa y. llo~p1tall zat1on plan ;J\'ail Clencal ,. COUNTER HELP T o p wa 1:es. City TYPISTS & Cleaners, 494-1538 Cust.odian needed. part-SECRET ARIES time, bea<'h area. Call ~ temporary emploV· 673-HMI& eves. 675--033 ment where we m ukt! 1t _-U_a..:.y_s_. ------- v.orth your while. Customer Svc to SJ0.400 TOP JOI "PEOPLES CHOICE" TOP PAY Loads of client contact 1s You 're Your Own Boss perfect for personable in· ~o~ office • div. Xlnt f irm. Call Cathy, K43-1288. Denn1S & 0 overload Dennis Personnel ~ervice of lluntinglOn 557-0061 Beach, 1616A Beach. ENGINEER '.\[ E • BS M £ or me<:hanical designer c~- ~;JI Frida.) p t for '.\!Cr of mJth educ machtne!> 1n Lug Bch 497·3600 --~------1 Housekeept'r, IJ ,.e an or out. 2 adults. Refs. Ex· per"d. :\ewporl Beach. S600 mo 644·9716 per. m ~mall electronic Gardener . r'ltable & ha\ e H-·--" , 'd components. Some draft· u" n cq u1 p.. 1 mm ed. """""'eeper·ru • exper . ingreq'd.Goodadvlth<'t" opening.a<>mo.1~U _pm•. rm_Lba._cho1ce men t. F 1nanc1,. JI y ---Laguna Tocat1on. 4M--S003 secured Po~llion a\'atl Gardener. exp'd, for .'>5 before8 PM x.lnt benefits . .M1!1"1on uni! apt comple\ m C ;\I HO_U_S_E_K_E_E_P_E_R __ _ dt:ll~ 38.''ll . . part· \'1ejo area Call Ltl ltan _ lime. s Days. Calt after Sl!l-3830. <Graduated Gl::r.:ERALUFFICE 5::.>.675-5334 Engineers Acceptable). rnu~t enJOY phone rnn- ESCROW MAMAGER t a c t . w o r k 1 n g Housekeeper, live in/out. ".customers & dl•ta1I Refs Referen<'cs Base+ percentuge. itood work. Paid vacation . ---~1~675·9388 work ing cond, fnn1:c k f h benefits. :-;tr pay. pro its anng & Housekeeper . pi t. Stu· BOOKKEEPER/MGR. Full cha rite t hru T I B Fast w /r:llrulator , ', <;1iu.d t\ p1;.t {;rowing mff;:. CO • ...Nl•Wport. llc:h. M5·2--l·l·I BOYS· GIRLS 1~~3723~~B~i r~c~h~S~t~, N~·~n~.~~I Cw.tomer SCT\'tcc. ex per 1. necessary. female, late KAT ELLA REAL TY' lwalth insurance. Apply dents OK. $3 hr. ;:9 Sun· Mon.Fri , llA:'.\1·12P \l. dance Dr.~8.642-1225 IMC. Barden 's P'sl Control. 12-16 year.; of age ~ven­ rng work. Obtain n~w :-ubscnpllons for the Uat h • Piiot workmg with an <1dult supervisor. Earn S!.O to S30 4)('r wPek -0r 3848 Campus Ori•• 546-4741 (,\cross From Or..1nge Co. Airport) Equal Oppor Employer more. Call (213) S!li 03!16,_ _________ I •. noon to Spm . (213) 4!Wl 2-1n . .'ipm !>pm. <'.ill Coiled .clerical SECRETARIES With &i wWlout 1h. TYPISTS Mln4.5wpm. We ba" IMQ)' Jong & 1bor1. term ... lpunenta avail. hOW. Tempo otfen v•c:atioo pq ti referral bom.alel. Ni.VER A fEE ATTBMPO, Clerk ACCOUNTING 'CLERK JadyMartm '714) 546-8030 CLERK TYPIST Sewport Ctr f1nanclal firm seeks accurate typist. Some stat typing r eq 'd . Ex p e r . w/transC'rlber helpful. Knowledge of grammar & sentt>nce structure a must. 65 WP'.\1. Xlnl <'O b e nefits. CP I. IH O :"lie"port Center Dnve. N.B. &w-4Jfi0 Clerk t yping, proficien cy w/figure• 10-key b) touch, inform.al offtcf'. CM. Call Milite aft 9A~1 ~5800 Clill Glenn Burchell 696 Randolph. C ~I Infant Line Manufacturer 1714) 774-4384 5oM)5SiO Ill M1ss1on V area needs --------------------·• stuppmg help & power Escrow Ofer-Jr. '.\lanagement potent Xlnt co. benefits. Contact J . Andrews. Irvine Sav- ings & Loan, 752·6456 DELIVERY ~AN -for early AM Roote. N C.M & H.B. Must h11ve depen dablecar.~l E.'{per d bus-bo~·. week end" onl~ Pn Club Call for Manon 673·3515 f ltJme pos. av .. tl for m atur e I u d y. A m . Expe1"d waitress. Wt"t"k· ba~sado r I nn . 2277 ends only. Pn Club Call DESK CLERK Harbor Blvd, C.M. for ~1 anon 673·3515 ASSEMBLERS PACKAGERS & LABORERS Many Needed Now! No exper. neccss. Earn top s~s. All 3 sh1rt c; & weekend jobs available. Tempo offers vacation pay & referTal bonuse'>. Sign up today & c;tart work tomorrow 'A --~ TEMl'!HlMlY H[LP lr"tiM 540-4455 17802Sky Park Cr, Ste 101 S.J.C. 661·121 I 32122 camino Ca pi.Strano Equal Oppor Employer General Ocr1ce Pref ~ew1n1: machine oprs. I u m b f' r c <t P e r 83.J.1102 A re<',1vable & '10\ 01c- mg. Must be itood typist. Start SC150 ~ N B Legal Secy $8-100 TUIMEE SPOT!! Career dreams come true m e~tab practice for sharp & outgoing in· div! Call Cathy, 848·1288. Denrus & Oennis l>erson· net Service of Huntington Beat•h, 16168 Beach. LEGAL SECRETARY Part.time two days a wk. exper only need 1pply. Bu.~y hut plea!.ant 11 .H. office SS hr Call JaC'que 847-6041 MACHINIST Class A n eeded for Bndgeport·Mill & Lathe. Preci!>ton work. Exper. req'd. Phone for appt ~7-~1 & ask for Ron Adamn. Top Be.neflts. Sc1ent1f1c Drilling Con- trols. 4040 Campus Dr. ~ 8 . MAID WANTED Don Quixme '.\1otel 2100 Newport Bl. O f \ ·~ ~ ~ :~ 'S ..... ·~ =--~ ~~ -. .-. . . 1 •• ltJ.:.\ ":. ! . • , • • • • ' , l ' l ..... ~~ D8 OAIL'fPILOT it WednHday.MarCl'l1,1978 ~~!.~!'.~·:.~ ..... ?!.~~.._.,w...:. 11 00 AppliCMC" 8010 ' Http W..ted 7100 W•ffd 1100 Metp W•tH 7 100 SECRET ARY p /Thne ~:·;·;;:;~··;;,'v:·r~·::~· •:••••••••••••••••••••• Fumftur-. tOSO Mochf.....y 1071 Mite....,._. IOllO ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3. 4 hrs d a' I} . r 0 t prt!-f'd ov~r :!1 yr~ 'ToJ> Kt~nmore \V8bh'r m c E ••••••••••••••• •••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ............................ . MOTOR ROUTE RIALiSTATE (~murl'rl'pre~l·ntall\l' JJay + t•omm & bener1t~ Wil:.her swss <iuaran-M . Al n Latht• ld~lond II ' "I • ,.h D I P h Sa.lei. (fflOd tq)l!>t, tran!>rrthing tl"t.'<1M6&i72 • O\'ln!:. mos t e 1tt $1 """" .l l'I I 7' e a1 Y a lot 1111 Professional licensed Immediate E m'plo.' m,·nl du·t.aphone. phone l'Oll AC Auto Serv., San Cl . dmetle, oak . form tp. '1 O<N A"• om I ,;10 1vaalable u s mall auto l>.11.les peoplo wante d Opportun1t v For t&l'I 11:1rl ore 557·5311!1 192 380S 16 mu old, 21 cu ft., SS.SO lthr <.:apl. l'hrs. pd $.5()() s~ 000 (. o I 1· h I.'' I l' I route Ill Ml1>1>1un VieJb, (1tneroui. coml\'ll::.bloo::. M"" .... /WO.ME.._. S-E RET 1 llntpo1nt ltefrh:. $275. i.I St75. Upbol. 11w1vel chr Ii ·x.;11 · ~I ouu Int 1 Cai.ta dl.'I Sol Area Earn Advanredtrammg. "" " C ARY I ·row Trurk. Dri\a:. "' Elt'l. ran¥e & uven. $00. &i ottoman c!>lm mude ~fol·h \\hvle:.Jll•r:. 12 1.1 1 about $200 per month for 642-5062 L::.e To £arn1n11:. Challenging pus1tmn. Job J>Cr'd Top pay. Appl). '1Uol 91191 S125 ~0·57-l.2 !ltil J4;j.j aboutanhourofyourat _c...._.21 Crocker •SIOHr. hai.vanety1111·luJ1n~htl' G&WTo~mc. IOOOlnmt· ----w 1 1 h h 1 Lernoon. For dt•t .. 111:. cull •• ,,_ r SJ1t.>i>Clai.i.t1!> peri.nnnt-1 wl1?k :-\h KO. "'.!·.:"'IB_M2·1~2 l lcyct.s 1020 Cherrywood gateleg tbl. ooc .al t' w /c •M·' t>\24.321 &nd lea\e name R--A r...tate StJrt&ivn t) 1Hn1t lill ~i-111 appt ••••••••••••••••••••••• beaut cond , Bassett S::.JOO Tai) & tool M't w d h '""'... 5-1 7l>J9 ~·oi: TRAJNF.E for counter & NEW&: USKD BlKl'.:S walnut buffet. xlnt cond. rn:.t• $.)(J ,\II 111 m 3171, _an P one. Sal•smen ~ ~I AN •\ (IE ~If: NT 0 • ··• Ille offH'e 1n u1rl'rafl R JO" combo sa(e1r1 ~ab . Rochl'sll'r l''.\1 TH,\l ~EES ·SALKS parts & supply 11tore al econd ljuy. sell. trade '" V ~ MOTORROUTE expcr 1n area. T o p RJ::PS SECRET"'RY Cyd e &Co.2488Newt'Of't "ti acton.an tapes try. T.arse Daily Pilot route callbertojoinsurcess (ul SJ::HVICEPld\~ONNe:t. "" _ocriv>~lr!.'f0~7·5~.e.utup~llr. ~vd CM.642:7910,~ __ Sac Ma\c~ofr 556·7562 Misc.II-• 8080 10 South Lag 1 firm m Newport Beach. · Comm'I Loa n Platform _ .. , u .,., .,.. --·--.., una .a6'unu Cdl\I Submit resumf' Ill l-'1111 Or Part Time Neat apPl.!dr req'd Trvc ' , ---Two i:1rl's 3·!lpec<.I bikes Beaut. bdrm set, 1920's. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Niguel. Monday through ronf1denre to Ad. No. 29. (':111 M1> Adam~ 60 ~prn, accu1 . Sh HO r.11cW·GeHn ~Tf~S .._.EWfiC'7e Pd xl11t ,·ond. Will.sar rafire Hdbrd & flbrd, 2 lrg WA.._.TED • Fr iday afte rnoon s, •IH:!8-t332411rs . "' "· rm $40 7~.9~9 dressers. vanity & cane f"'lll Saturday lfnd Sunday Dally Pilot, P.O. llo" wpm. F'•rld out w /this i,uper stool.Xlntrond.642.9309 TOP CASll DOI.LAii morn1118s Approximate 1560. Coi.la Mesa. Ca , PA I D F 0 R YO ll H ly u50 ,..;.r month ~ross: lr~ SJle!>l.tJy for Jt:W~l ry Call 7141558·52811 hX'al ro. seeking eager Sofa & to'ves·e"'t $100. J.,.",L'I RY \V/\TC'flL'S "" .. ~ l>lllrt:' Jn Co:.t..i M1.•11a. ~·areeni.t for h11?hly ad· .. r,n "· • • r .. • I )(lublt> garage d1i0r, ~5. t173·!173:7 'lit Sol ..i. dlluble sofa bed H1•.a,,011Jble or offer. l>l:!IUU l'huto1·op11•r, r oll-fed . topws from book. ett· Ind \di :.pp-p lt ~6 4' marehing i.tands:-f>oughC l yr ai::o at $2795. Still h,l\C warr .. sacr ifir<' ~ Ml !i. 962·1713 Pl't Pl) AMF ,~ Table 7 ' SI i!i • 75-1 1842 earnings. ~.00 cui. de-Real Estate Sale:. Pt:'opll.' 5-18 3-103 Fur . .\n lntcnw Appl 'a1wahle po!ool. Call Can lulldincJ Mattriab 8025 Stereo $100. Ch' n a S~RI l1.'\,C~~il~ to~.CTS I·~ VC:l~~·!.?·. •posit required. Pho ne "'anted. Up to 90110,, --UNION BAHi< tlace 84S·l~. Abo l't>e ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1·abinet SlOO. Dinette, 6 "·' ·" '-,. .,,. &t2432l. ask for c1rc·ula " I ... 6W'lle~portC:tr0r. Job:. ,..,.,nnis & Dl'nn1:. \!"ant"d Cl .. an r1·11 dirt. cha1rs$100.842190_1 __ Fl:--;E 1:-'UHN & AN ;o )tis brown s hag cpl tion. Leave nume and comm. sp il. nwpl Bch Salc:.l:ld\, t''l.PCr lot' "'" • '" " TIQlJES 6-15 :.!:!UO S~ 511 ~d Caloric gas number and make nf 631-0900 munct"IO;, po!->1twn with :'\e~p<)rt lkalh pllt'rstongtne l BSe·r·'h1 r1e.,1!~~ 1~. G·i 8Wl':.tmFini.teroodA\e& Englis h Victorian Hall O\en. hltn, S25. BB'' " " Ec1ual Oprv1r Emnlo~ l'r un in on ea{ " uo < t n ~ uutotobeusedandyour Motherhood MJlt•rn1t1 ... .. Hearh • ,:.(t Bwn5;~ R tree. $400 4 Paneled. LUGGAGETAGS Oru·nta l type. S2!>. call wall be returned. Heal Estate 11hop i59-!1951 • -~a us · • ,es car\ed screen from ln· from }Our busine:-.s c~•rd !'>57 ~io _ __ LOAM SECY & TRME S.cr~toryjTypist TYPIST/OPERATOR i61·2077 ---d1a $1100 575.4903 St-nd IJl'le card for eal:h c;araoc door opener NURSERYMEN Full tame, mature male O\'Cr 21 6 Days lnl·I Sat /Sun . Wqrk with plants. trees Ii dehven. Exper. pref. SJ. hr up. Laguna Hills Nursery, Inc. El Toro 830·5653 Due to an expansion. we SAU.:S~I ~:N ~et•ded For Siron~ t) Pini! & -,h .. \pp. FOR XEROX 800 Dogs 804 0 tai; pill'> one !>pare. \\e " Lt<.: l t I\. 10 p•·r ... on lo \It ••••••••••••••••••••••• Boysbdrmset,6 nrs.xJnt l ti .,,,,> are :.eekmg an organtted •. 1 t· on:. rm· nm · ~ · · E L E C T R 0 M I C • c'Ond $300. Yello~~ 6' sofa re urn Pl'f m J 0 c n ~ ..,.,. · & aggressive !>er'y "ho Firm C.111 g;JHY.HS Ful•ntei'>, Robert De111, DOG TRAI Nl~G ~ealed 11ttra1•t1\.c taJ( & Ca11~ onl~_557·~ -· h di I W1lh.11n Fro!ool & A~1>11l' • SYSTEM 'our Pl:lcc or Mme SISO. Call eves, 552-0616. :.tr ap, mt•t•tini.: a1rllnl' NURSES AIDES/ ORDERLIES !>9 lk·d Facahty. J oin .i happy group & l'nJoy the xlnl bt!neflts. Bayview Conv., 2055 Thurm J\\.c, • C~l 64.2·3505_. ___ _ ct'·d~t anll eRpeErsol na con-SAl.F~"i 1 IOI ()u:ul St. :'.J B WILL TRAIN I D re<iu1remcntl'> Pre· ac we· · · aci:.re· Tt-:X\SOIL C0:\11'\~\' CALL75 1-7 34 3 John \IJrtm 5~0059 RICllMA'-1 \1.'nllo!--,&thefl' l''orJ qwred & knowledge of net.od~ matun• p,:r:.o~ 0fur !'>i·t•rt>tJr~ Lt•gal trainee A"C Golden Relnt-1H·r f'UR;-.;JTURE person.ihn•d tai.: t•ncloM~ loan pr oc~si.ing 15 11hort trip,, "urround1ng po;.ition. lur consl•nial RE9UESTTAPESOI pupp1l'S,tiWk!>.SlOO fll'ld wallpapt>r, fJbr1c or helpful, but "e w1ll t:a111 ln·al·h ;ire a Contact 'l;wprt Bch law firm <24 Hours Per Day I trod & obedience ba1:k QUIJSI ~he nghtperson.Pos1t ion cu,.tomt•r,. Wt• !1111n J>rl.'ler6 mos expl'r . top ,,_....._ _ _._,tar toSIOOO "md 75-l 109S • .. DCJy Glo" JJiiper & wt• 11> m our new f;=l Toro Wnte 0 L'. Diek, Prt>s: :.lull:. required. Salary """'""'"""'n,. "' will bul'k & trim ~ou1 branch ofc. This as a .s 0 u t h w l' b t e r n eommeni.urate w/exper. 100<~. Frel' Beaut yrl Lab PUP". 5 R · d f lag,. Or try twu t·anh .. curcl"roppor. withe Na· f't•troleum Ft Worth C'ontatl Maggae G46-4466 Top to i'>l'e ks t>'<()Cl,.d wks. S50 (;;ill Ryan . emam er 0 ' baddoback t1on ·s L:.t r gel'>t Home Tt•\J'> . ·----------1 p ersona l lint•i. Ull 979-5340 orrr 5-15·699ti NEW l'HIO.:S Loan Brokerage Firm dcrwritl'r w:m ob1l1• homl' S2ea()r:J SS Plcai>eCull Sandwich Shop SECURITY OF FICERS home background. Gro~ ~Sta.:,. Sl.lxlt'a. AL MAYNl::S Girls nl.'l'(kd. Nrur oc IMMEDIATE mto product mi.:r Gn•at Silk\' T,•rm·r. malt'. 21 ~ fi 9lu,it~Sl 50l•J 213 9:.!.4·76ll Airport. Mon Fri IOam OPENINGS l>Utent & out:.tand1ni.: <'11 ) t:'~r., old, bC':-l offer FURNITURE lOur more• SI 40 e<• :'.Jursrs Aides, all shifts· I••--------l)('rl~. Call Sall\'. ~o li055, i5:! 119(; SJlt•.., Ta-.; Jndu1.kd will train. Lido Convalcs 2_Pm:_S~>ti7U for .tppt Anaheim & t'oa;.tal Pl'ri.onnl·I .\gen M 0 V E D T 0 :'\O C/\RU ' rent Center. 1 55 5 RE. APT SALES. well St-um:.trells wanted fur Costa Mesa Q '. 2790 Harbor. C'.\I Sprmi;cr Spanicb, AKC RE p OS SES SI OM Draw }our own or ~l'n<I Superio r A ve., r-;.B. established arr nds 2 lie sail mJker • . .\JISh1rt~A\atlahll· -----champ hne;., llverlwht. naml', Jddr<''"· phone & 1>16-7764. & hi g hl y m otiv ated C..ill5-lll·J lli7 ·~oWcapons Veterinary l'\1i:ht .\llrn 7 "~.11hoh,t>-U>:;f)86 CENTER AT 619 E. \\c·11 makl' one card per sale~persons. Will train. ----•Ex rt1llt•nt Starting danl Livi.' 111 !:'>ome Free to You. 8045 4TH ST. SANTA AMA tag.Add25'ral.'h P1Tok Bkr. 556·6171. Salar) Ja111tonal "od,. Hl'h ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPEN 11-5. Send check or money or· Ofc S7200 Fl'e Paid SECRET ARY TRME \'anl't)· & t•hallen!le for R. e c e P t 1 o n 1 1> l A-1 md1v. oHered bv \•erY Con~rei.:.man :'\lark llun Secretary !ll.i0-41~1 der to. TJkl· th1 ... 61'\portuml \' to ----Beaut 9 mo!> old blark Warehouse r-~~~·!~~~a.!f.:~o~ ;,~~ naRr~ep'sot/r:~cl::.:,ilJ!ll Purchasing W Clf·t--/W""'tr .......... s Per,1an kitten t>-16 97-17 PILOT PRINTING l>l•t·omt• In\ uh t'll "Ith Jn .., ~ ... "'u "' or 6iS 5855 I'() Box 1560 up .ind 1trow1ni: COOi· :'\lu:.t be Pt"Qple onentl•d Loadert C~td '.\lei.a . Ca . 9262(; pdll) Wt' 'l)ronde tull S4 hr \ 1tl'. !oolt'k d1ty~. In 10 mo old B'l ad, Lab. l'Omp.an\ beneflll'>. un· ;.urbt.'nl'fit;. t>-14·5-lt).I nel'd!> ,:nod home, all •Quality Furniture• Fee J obs Oenn1.i> & Den ....... ~ •"' -r ms Pe~nnel s ervite of 30 hr \\k. S3.35 hr. + Secretary 1111rm:. m ... urance. huh· ..__, "'"91°" •Youc•A'"--""• W.\ITrn:ss. hreakf..t ... ! &. 11""'s .... v no • -..,:_ St~oclC da1 l.. \ arat1on pa) ----Q'f'l"lnl' lluntmgton Beach, Uil68 benefits. Typing SOWP'.\I. Beach. transc·nbing d1ctaphone 1 girl oft1t·e ;it Day Treat· Want a ch\Jl~nging l~TER\.IF.W:--lum h. ci.pt·r·J B<·n Ltttlt1 ~hit<' Sroll• pon. !I llrown's Ht.',taurant. month' old, diiril<' Drastic ally $129 95, Frame, pedestat. heater, matt. ltn<'r and r.11 I.it Float'N !)rea m Watcrlx'ds. 21164 Beach BIHi. HH 960 320? OFACE TllAINEE \'ane\y + Late, acrur typing. Friendly ofr Great spot: To $650. Ellie O'Bri<'n 5-.10-~I Snelhng & Snelhng of !'lt1wport Beuch Al::ency .i340Cumpu!. On,·c 3 1106 Coa:.t JI~). !'lo _:".t-ed.., l?d home 1;.io 1;1; Reduced L1~una . -J.. Map...Modern ------'" llrown Gc1rman Shorthair Waitr~. ,\ppti.· 10 pcr;.on 3 't r-. Spa~t'tJ t-0 J(ood MeditetTCllMClft · Sid·s Blue ~t. 107 :!l11t homt· ss; mlll k&p.cial#rice l'I. ~B afl_:J~m _ _ Ota Housriul FACTORY DIRECT Ueaut Gc•rm. Sht•P mill t .... EE DELIVERY "' I hdt-·a·bc<l" Slfi5 T" 10 ~ r male. nds gt! hm ment Center Child d p 'b l • b I! ~"5 OOMonthru Fn Guidance of Oran~e an r~s onsa e 1° ~ C'ount)-646-7733. Call work i lfCJ for o AMERICAN ~on-Thur9·-1. dtvtt"tH~d technical BUILDING -----•company located in MAINTENANCE Recept ion1st1Sec · )-l .... DUS..-elES weekends only. !\tarine ~ County? We " '" type business. Newport offer a secretarial <:!IJl .537-:!ii 1 WATCHMAKER h I :!:!Oil \\' Artt·-.ia. l (;l'nt lt•, i:tl ~t chd~ Repossession matlrl'!'oi'> & boxspn11~:. 1;;5.!).11 ; s.m !IS Full mallrc•!lsP::.. & War,house boxi.pnnj!:-s.s.'>. Ileac . Cal 645-7100 positio n, w ithin our 1 'o Ii~' 1 s l 1• n g 111 c· er <"om'pton 1 1 C>ffll'e help, fold, collate & RECPT/SWITCHBRD Procure~nt D'"'part io trthl".ll rrl'"" "\.' " de\ l' opm<'11t ol ',. i1eI 1 '' l' r l' art t 1 m c. "' • '~ u hcatc prel·•~c rn~t ru rrll'n J..uguna Hills. 830·0891. lmmed. openlng for an .-.wt, to an indi•idual al t'l'lllral 1 etJt1on for oil f1t•hl Goo<l ex per ·d pen.on w / &ood wfto has approxlmat•ly Equal Op port unity work 1 n g <' o 1111' . <" u At 619 L 4th St. B & J Mattrtu lla'e 1 !\mg Tut ticket:. for )1.1reh JS at lOA'.\l. Will trade for the bt 11.(•t'ki. of ,\pr1l or Ma} Alter 5PM 84ti·3558 ---- L.uidsl'JJX'r Spei;1al. am lt•a\ mi:: Slates. must sel• land~c;1pmg equip. Aho ~ctounts, perfect for :-.t arter bus iness. Call ~nke. 494 ·t>!19_J ___ _ llide-A·Ucd. lg Gerni. w.111 unit. elec. equip . TV's, radios. CB':-, !>lt'reo!>, '1deotape r~­ cordcr 556·6128 808f ••••••••••••••••••••••• Radial Ann Saw 494-9891 Office hmiture & EquiptMnt 8015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exe~. desk Sll9. Dranin,i: tbl S75. Exec c hr<;. m $m. Wood desks Si'P ea. Files S35-S8:->. 1'luorescent late fixture~. 1 • footers SlO Work t bb S3S $60. 631·2777 11n1 Sclcrtnc II 10/l2. nearly nu Dual head:.. Sl\50 675 7150anyt1me . Royal Elec tYPf~ nler. ne\er u::.ed due to death In family. Cost s656. Will !'l:ll' $250. g.17.9360 Painter, apprentice houl'>e painter, no exper nl'C. (.;;jlJ 631·0769 art 6pm. Telex, s witchboard. & 2 y •ars c urr e nt i-. ... ".:m_p.ln•y•t'•r•!\•1•P--•l llt'ncf11!'1&tnppa' EOE typing ~kills, a pleasant 1• Sc1 .. nuf1c I >nlhnc personality, & who r an se~re ta ri al e x -<:ontnib,'\1•"ponlkh Silk,· Tcrnt-r ft'malt•. u~t:' :! yrs. w pap..rs. to 11 \mg homr ••I~ 11:11;.1 8050 Santa Ana 4 547'572 I 838 E. I st St. SA Open 9:30-6 Sun 11·5 .. --•5•4•7···5•6•3•6--•I Cup~· mact\me, 'x-ompa(·t for light usag_e. 1 yr new Parl·T1me Reerc at1on. work w 1a min of ~ence, can ty,. 60 SEC'Y AD DEPT. l'hnnc55i!"l5t supen·1!>1on for a grow-wpm. take shorlttand \,I. lor Hun l.11t11' WSJ. CPR. Sr. 1trc:.a11ng req'd. F/timc .Summer. mg ·.e. pharmaceutical «" s~writi..n at 80 TOUCH OF CLASS "*'·~. C'O For appt call 642 7511 ,.........-""7 'I our 1·J rr1•r '\t.1rt~ hl'rt' ___ ask for Pam· wpm. and b. able to :'\.11·1 Cu "''"k" 'kill<; PBX f 11 t t ---------1 wortl _,.,. pressure ~ µ.•rl'>on.1lll' T o SI 1110 • • • u ... or p~r im~ Ret·ep11on1stlSt'c·y for di I C:ill 7~1 lli.11 .,hlft' ft ork a bui.} alrcraft.dealer. Act·urale and han ~ ar9 e s w it c hboard. E O E t~pist ror transcribing volupw. h•a vy worlc LEE WARD ~16-33J3 d1rlaphone. ;-.;eat ap-load: P~ Ag~ncy ---------•I pearance & ab1hty tu dl"· 17>!01 '.\lJm Stn•l'I PBX OPERATORS al with public-. Apply m Our company is a fNO-~1ull' IJ In 1"ne p e r s o n )I 1 "' s 1 o n pie ori...t~d firm of· ~ AJJBoards Beechcraa/t.':\Or; Cl~ feri..n an o..-....-ity ~~c > Bkkpr. Heal Long & s hort term ui .. ~·rpo~\ 1 41 · ~irport for ··hd 'd.A'::[""' ·-~ ~~l t·on .. 1 t.>'Cp n·q '.\1.:111 s1gnments. Jlolid::ay & _a_y_._._______ "' gro n .... um1· to ~t!\ I:: Cv..i:.t 'ac pay. llospitahzation llecr-eatioft Director and d«elopment, a 11'4}. C<.1~1 9:?62:> -o dMHrrful wortd-en en ice ta 1vn , en \\11m1•11 \\:tnlt"d lull ltmt• 111r hou,edt•antni: c l\111 t1a11.,p01tJt1nn ;,1xn-;;,-; Word Proc~uor T} p1:.t. :.l.'crl'tJr~ Mroni.: ~II 6. t~ pini:: rl''J°d \pph m pc~1111 to '.\Ir h u-nlt•, Holwrt Ul-111 , W11l1,1m Fro.;t ,\ \.,wl· 1~111 \Ju.ill St 'pl lhh ---- \'.\CllT S.\LESI' EH:-.<l'\ E'P nut nt•1•1•,:-an 6:JI 500() ············•···•··•··· .......•...•..•..•..•.. 51, rt lonit cu~tom padded pnrtablt• har "1 t h mult1pl<''< tunc•r. II tra(·k & tumtabll.' all Jre built '"'plus t\\O 1·u,,tom "TfKll!ht iron bur :.toot... !:'>hJrp· 5111 H -16 **I BUY** Good used fo'urnu ure ll \pphan(·e~--OR I "Ill 't·ll or SELL for You MASTERS AUCTION 646-8686 & 133-9625 C'.\Sll P.\lD For s:d u11t'd furn . anti qucc; & drT\'·!I, 95Hi133 1!1.1ok type. s.aso. 6-15· 72'.? • Queen·i.z mattress. box SS Sq. yards dark green :-pnng. frame $150 9. carpet w/pad. !oo.urr.c1t'nt Pianos & <;>rcJans 8090 drwr wht dresser S35 for three 1lx15 room:.. • ......... ~••••••••••••• Buth xlnt rond G-iO·n.15 Elet· ranJ:e ss7 52211 __ Gulhranc;en R1alt0' -~ r\nt1que sora & chair • i;ood rond1t1on. &12·9677 -----Jew~ry 8070 ..........•.•..•.....•. WANTED TOP CASH DOLLAll l'\10 F O R \'Ol.:ll JEWELRY. WATCHES. \HT OBJl::C.VfS. \.OLD. S I I.\' ER S E R \' I C: E. Fl:-.E F U R='f & ,\:-... TlQL'F~c;. 645·2200 T1H1nv·,,. Gluh \lt•m-Le~betonccabmcts.l'.)-r bt'r'\htp S25fl 'llc•wport ~arrantv 548-02iti. Bl'arh CAii 832 r.:..•0~1 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS llomal?e ~la•rl!t' Bnbf> 1-:"·1tt• llA \IMO~D CJ ~ LESLI!-: )15~or Bl"st Offer • 536--1263 . l'r ply ~•rnts Stein"a~ t.rnnd "B .. mdl. (.Ju1ck CJ.'h 6i3·09ti0 -----;\IOTlll-;I( \ u 1 n m .1 t 1 n n \ 'SportinCJ Goods 809~ l!anavaal. Must be .. ··people lo\.·in." prof~ui o n al and S 5 t \tt- ~' l ~ . person. ~ome artistic . ""7 • dant. e'prr'd DJ}' & - _ • -· ' ability. WSI & CPR re· v1ronment, ouhtandln9 E1e:. Full & p 11mt• ,\11 Mi' Q _g_'d Sal open. &«-5404 frin<Je IMMflts ond is ply. Shl'll Stutmn, 171h & Antiques 8005 !\kd1t. St\lt' Table. r. !11de ••••••••••••••••• ••• ••• t't. 2 armC.hJ1rs. S650 Ca II I f"c'hnnlo~1cJ I pt O<'<'"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• th.tl p1•rfnrmo; 1111 th•• ~k1 boot.5, all i>1zcs. !'ianty ~ork ~hllc• ~c· ju:-.l i'>ll 5111·1006 da):., ti-4~-GJ:il then•. Whrn "'' "en· l'\e<.,. Diamond approx 21, Ct; kids. th•:-prort'"" wa.. ------- 3848 Campus Orin RM or LVM connniently located 1~1>. NB ____ _ --M·u·s·1c-a·o·x·E·s-·1 &1!>-w-ll _____ _ t'nf!ai.tement rang, he~l 04:ullt'CI '.\TOTllEU You don't need a gun to ofr or trade for 11,tC' "draw fast" when yo~ 546-4741 Full-time o r P /time off th• San Di•go Scn1r:e St:1. N11~ht Attend (Acr~s From 7-3:30. Pleasant workmj? Freeway. If qualified 2 Or 5 nttrs u wk. Appl}. OrangeCo./\irporll ronds w/good benefits. and lntenst•d In this Shell.lith&lrnnc,NB CLOC"'S :'\lahoi.t Stereo cabinet. 1r " " clrs & shrlH'11 SlOO model Cadillac or '! !? L::.cd and unt1qu1• turn lnr place an ad in the Dady Prm only please. Dr . s ail• Indian Jl'\\l'lr), Plloc.WantAds!Call oow Equal Oppor Employer Apply. Park Lido Conv. nn...itian you may call -- Bernard 997-9421 rt•fndi.tc ~52 ll2Xli 642-5678. Slot :'\lachinc~. Nit·kt•lo ;\lake ofr Aft 5, 6~5·7S.11 clco ns. phonograph ~.1 .. """"~~--------------------------------.i....-----------------------------. ..... ·---------• Center. 4e6 Flagship Rd, ...--· ' Service Station employee. ----------1 N.B.642·8044. ahle to work days. Apply p E T J T I ON E R S Judy Mariln at 1:;922 Pacir1<' Coast l'u ll/part time. Good pay RN 88 Therapist 17141 546-1030 llwy, II. B. 213 592·1571 _dal_l..,.Y_._536_·7_7_l_1 ____ 1 in m ultidisciplinary· SC-.-r-v-1r _e _s_·tation Attend. PHYSICAL T HERAPIST team. Children 6-12. Orappyin~ F /t1me eves. Light F'ull or Part lime. xlnl s h o r t term group ffi@ mech·I knowledge. Neat oppty for an aggressive therapy. Regular 40 hr :Jt: apfX'ar & handwritmj?. PT. Rapid salary advan-w k • k now 1.e d g e Apply. 2590 Newport ce m e nt + bon us. psyr~o~herapy include Blvd.CM LA/Orange Co a reas. tam 1.l1e_s. l\t~sters BRUNSWICK s ala ry commensurate psych1aU11c nunmg pre-3en• Sta Helf needed am- w/abtht y. Call Vick i fered, not. req~ired: med. Full or pt. Apply, McFarland, 714.957.1071 Res ume: Ctuldren s Day CQRPORAJl.ON !9l E. Csl llwy, Nwpt ----------1 Center. 17175 Brookhurst Bch Physical Therapy DIRECTOR Ph.ysical TMropy Senlc• St., Suite E., Fountain DeffftH Dh•lsion Valley, ca. 92708 Allen : Scwmg marh. operator.s. Clinical Directors. (714.) 3333 Harbor ll•d Full or PIT. $3 hr to 962-8550 Call noon to Costa Mffa Ca. 92626 start 642·9697 4 P M. Ca ndidates 7·11 STOR E. F ull & 268-Bed Acute Gen 'I notified re inter views-Equal opportunity P1time. Mature & resp. H08p1tal on the beach in please include phone #. employer M /F clerk for night shift, App· Lagu na. S upe r v Is e Sales i•---------1 ly in person 28933 Crown physical therapy staff, Employment CCIUltfflor ------··--Valley Prkwy, Leguna participate In teaching If you have the ability & ·--------_Ni...;.'.;;;gu_e_I_. ------ program. Sala ry com· the desire lo work w /peo. SECRETARY Swltchboard/Recpt me ns urate w /exp e r . pie & have had sales & Busy phones. m ust have World 's f~rgest scll?t lion Al ~o Jti f t s, furniturt', a n tiqu e's Amencan lntcrnahonal. 1802 Kettering. lrvme i34-1777. Open Wed.-Sat STEWART ROTH ANTIQUES Amcncan Oak Dealers 750 E. Dyer Rd.SA. I.at Newport Fwy) 751-8922 WHOLESALE TO THE TRADE NOW OPEN TO PUBLIC OPEN7 DAYS AWE EK 96 Sundown AnHqNs ltd 15292 lolsa Chica H.l.17 I 4t 893-7509 X 1 n l b e n e f 1 t ~ ·. A phone ex per. we will (2) Openings curre ntly good tele voice & fml ofc cbaldlenam~ p os1ation train you. We are the na· exist, an administrative a p p e a r w I e x t 6c.h Annul}!· Antique show ~un~l~:.t i on a o p · t1ow:i's largest w/over 500 & a general secretary. switchboard exp. Call & sale. nt.ar . 3rd. 4th & Calli. license req'd. Ex· offices coast to coast. We are seeklng people-i"'iiiUiilaii.ii833.iii2900iiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 5th. Fri & Sal 12-9PM. per. as director or assis-Please rail J ack Barrie oriented. conscientious 1• Sun 12-6 PM. Lagun a Lant director in an acute 540-5001. . p e 0 p I e w i t h g 0 0 d Telephone Sales Beach Muse um of Art. care hospital Physical NSoellinrtgBe&SnhelAhng of secreta rial skills. Enjoy TIMELIFE ~/thiC'.sUrardo. 2Scr. Adda'smco·uSnlt.SO .. Therapy Dept. pref'd. ewpo ac !{ency e xc e II e n l com Pa n Y Ll111 "'RIES 1 __ 4340_;.;.._C_•_m...;.p_us_D_n_v_e __ , benefits. ~ Collector Plates Wanted. Please Contact Penonoel Office S...C...t C1 aty w • ., .... 31172 COut Hwy 59. LaluU '114/499-U U ,.f'.qual Oppor Ecnployer · Plumbers DRAIMMIM . Wltl train. Mutt have own trvdt or \tan. Apply m7 So. BrittOl. P RE SCHOOL TMCHRK-muet bt boril a•• Mon·FU, 8:30 &o 12:1&.llB ...... Apply9am-noon IMC. deGrazia. Rufflnetc. · SALES Mon·Fn.Personoel Ha5"tf'OI P.P .M7-3362 -s 5:S ts--MlRRJOTT =w~d';f!: .................. !!.'.~ FHUM&1'HE W..Peo,M. PINCH? HOTEL w.y + boMt FRGHT DAMA G F.D HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 W. Warner nr Harbor, Santa Ana. 979-2921 nmellfe Boob has .J)tlrt• 900 Newport Ctr Or + COftllft. t i me j o b s i I\ o u r NNport Be1ch tll-eOtl telephone sald ocnce. 3 Equal Opp Emplyr m1r 1 n.-. £ 1 /f Shlhs available. 8:30·1. ~~~~~~~~~~~E~~~ua~v~.,.,~m~p~y~r~m~ CASHPAJD 1-~ & S·9. Sa lary + 1 1_-________ 4 comm. + bonus e s ... For W•hr/Dryni/Rerni work.lng or not 95'7-8133 .c-..~ .. ft.;..1'\4-TtltpbM •.apt. 1._ ______ _ Permaneni. For •ppt. call 83M095 1"4ualOpp EmJ)lytm/r ~, ...._ ...,,_ Small manuf t\.rm. Great 1• to S 16,000 ~neflta. Somo typing. w--.. & Dry•r SmployersPayAll P'ffs ~epot.9800-Like nu .dclux mulU· Li1RelndenA1encr EllatO'Brten 540-$001 cyclo .m o d o l t only . 4020Blrcb,,Ste 104 SnelUnt & Snelllft1 of Comfletely reblt • re· NewJ)OC't Beach W-8190 Newport Beach Ac ency , t t n • b • d • Y • • r e.n fOr Awt!PJ8tab'V 4340Campua Dt1ve IU1lflntee. 1 prtco onty, •--------11--;...;.;...;..;........:.--:-. ---your chotct auo ea ch. •TEL'EPHONE• FfM dell very. Salo oda SICRITAaY SaJ.+ExtraGd JfOou. M..arch 3rd. Allo llilW & U.?~~:;;:.:;..i!:J:,;;~~-1 Newport Harbor Y acbt cau Sptn-lpm 9»286 t 11 k e n o w r •fr I 1 '•. Clu.b ndds ~tcy W/lood _ -/FtU...._ ~rt & ranc .. at '°' typ"' 4t sb alrlll.a. CalJ • -~ I.he co.at at South Cout Mra. Acbrmart Wed ~ mlrt't co. in Appllan~.m.~ :.....-------'----l t. •I \l n a N l I u a L 1:===~~== 1-ponslbmu .. wlll be hu\r)' telu 4 ore. truna. Pnor ap both an• a • Mii)Uat. SOme Uta nc)'t'I u IUJ.lo. Sala.r)' tom• meHural• w /axp/· quallflcallon. (714 ) U1-1MO ,.,. Kiara or MnJWJawe. I ... --~. Coming In ~arch llot; pot;pourrl That's pot-pour-r i: a confused collection, a m iscellaneous m ixture, cl hodgepodge. Ptlot Potpourri Is our way of observing INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISIN G WEEK by extending_ savings of up to 50 percent. It's a good tfme to clean out and spruce up . MAR. 22 (Wed.) thru MAR. 25 <Sat.) • Have a GARAGE SALE! • Sell your extra PLANTS & GREENERY! • Get your neighbors together & have your own SWAP MEET! I I Ada ~re limited to miscellaneous merchendlH for H ie o nly! ! (No Real Estate) Write 1 word each apaca, minimum al~• ad la 3 lines. THERE IS PLENTY OF T~ME TO GET IT ALL TOGETHER ! Fiil In the Handy order blank below -DO IT TODAY! r ! ! NO. 0, 4 DAYS WOADS 5.00 6 :00 7.00 8 .00 9.00 36 11.00 40 $12.0C> If you need more room fOf your meH age just print or type 4 word s per llne and add S1.00 extra for each additional !In•. ---·----~,.__._ ___________ ..... _ .... _____ ,_~-~--------.... ·----:a PIHM Khtdul• my Piiot Potpourri 9d to run March 22 (Wed.I thru March 25 CSal.) wrth no c h•ng.e of copy. No rebata for ••rly c.a ncellatlon. EncloHd I• my check or motley orded or . . . • . • • • • . Or pte•w tN'" the~: 9.lntcAmenterd, VI~ No ......................... E•plru ........ . M•ttarChlrve No .•••••••.•...••••.. : .................................... E.-prr•1 •••••••••••• • Addre.11 ...................... , ••••••••••••••••••.••••••.••••••••••.••• Cttv ................ .. Mall to: Orange Coaat Dally Pltot Cla't•tited Ada, P.O. Box 1580, 330 w. Bay at., Com Meu, Cdf. 12121. • DAILY PILOT . ·~ ... . l ' ( J978 SEA RAY 30' s~ Fish•r Outriggers-VHF radio U:ul tank·depth sounder and :\luch more Demo Boat. I Only!! Special Price $38,950. HARRISON'S SE.A RAY · 3101 Coast Hwy, N.B. 631-2547 19' Bell·Boy, 1/0. Many r was. $1500 or besl ofr. I' 673-57U F'OR RENT 20' Mtr Home 23' Formula. Many xtras completely equWfp 'd , :\II fbrgh, Inbrd mtr. _v_e_ry_c_lea_n_._673--_5_W __ _ O:-.rCO/D. 213/592·1042 '75 Vogue 29' fully ~wpped w -c1ras. 23,000 mi. s:!J.500 957.0727 or &I&-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• PeonYan 22' full inboard. vw u kind 1 fully equipped. MUST parta, • 11, ow S£LL! 213/431·6835 prices. &94·940' Boats.Rent/ Chcriet' 90 so Autos for Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sell Calif. boat mem-~/ hership m Newport Bch OiMICs 9520 tor ~ off. callf. Boat ••••••••••••••••••••••• Club; Dys: 675-9111, 1950 DeSoto 5S 000 ort1 Nites: 67!>-1337 miles, tiuui. coOd. $1500. Boat.. Soil 9060 _7_52_·2384 _____ _,. ....................... Recreat, ... ~ FUJI· YAMAHA VeWdet 9130 WE BUY CUAHCAIS &TRUCkS CONNELL CHMOLET TOP DOLLAR PAID POR CLEAN IMPORT CARS ALLMODB.S rr'\_~ :~·1 ~~-· ''' I' [i[ ,\ t"-'4 ! I V \I '. ',~' .,, • l ',.,. I 1 t /. .j DEALE.RS ••••••••• •••••••••••••• -------"T"-- ,., Yacht Brokerage Convt ' aeat alteet le1al •. • ... ~ l l. LisUnss Wanted! dune bugiy. '800. Call Southwestern -~---------• Yacht Sale12s1s 73 Cl.wtom av, ode com· Newport Blvd. plet.loo and mot« repair. Newport Beach Mate otlu . ~1 all <714) 673-9211 7pm . · ....;.---~~~-~· ....... -... - BARWICI( DATSUN ..... I ' j .... 11 ti• I 8 Jl-IJ7~493-3l7S l"W71tAn~ All models &colon. ...... di. Del•..-y Today! Last chance for fantastic :.a"1nJS oo all remaln111g 'Tl ~ls an stock. COSTA MESA DATSUN Wedne'\day M~rch I 1!l78 OAILV PILOT iB Chevelle wht on wht ' HELPf We Meed..,... for• .... ?avw ............. __. ,.. ...... ...., .. HillOUI VOUSWAGEH u Modeh a c...,... ........ sp. fact. air, dlx lnt. & 1•--'-"-- ext. orig. owner. 47M Looks & drives fine $1975 P .P. '94· 7801 '89 Malibu 2 dr. New paint. Xl nt cond. $1200/.bsl. ~-6768 D . . .,.. ~ • • ·' ~ • .. • ' ' ! ' l ' I .. t ~ j I t .... ( ,, FOR FLEET SALE ~- IMFORMA TIOM CALL · PAUL DEFAlllS 546-1934 . 'Every Brand Mew Chrysler and Plymouth. Every Fine --Used Car, -·Red -. TCICJ Sale Priced with Bonus Savin9s For You! Check out .the Fabulous 11Buys11 now at A.Has drysler·Plymoulh! . ... ...... - . -• ~ •I l I Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley "EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 60, 4 SECTIONS, .C2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALtFORNIA - . . Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks Gale-force Winds,~ Rain Batter Coast By JACKIE HYMAN Ot .. Dally """, .... More than two inches of rain, accompanied by gale.force winds gusting up to 68 miles per hour at Newport Harbor, pelted the Orange Coast Tuesday night and early today but caused only relatively minor damage com- pared to the storm of three weeks ago. However. falling trees and telephone poles damaged several housea, as did fiooding. No injuries were reported. Scattered power outages oc· curred also, along with mudslides in Silverado Canyon, Newport Beach, foothill canyons and in San Clemente. The rain9 also have set a record, according to John Gietzen of Orange County Flood Control District. He said tbis is the b.ighest season·to-date ralnf all in most of Orange County since 1909. Rainfall for t.be 24·hour period ending thls mornine was re- corded at 1.6 inches in Hunt· ington Beach, 2.18 inches in Costa Mesa , 2.30 inches in Lag~a Niguel. 2._43 inches in -Santa Ana and 3.5 inches on Santiago Peak ol Saddleback Mountain. Season-to-date totals, com- pared to last year at this time,·- were: Huntington Beach, 19.98 Plane Skid,s on Takeoff inches compared to 9.47 inches; Costa Mesa, 21.31 incbe! com-. pared to 7.13 inches; Laguna Niguel. 22.24 compared to 6.6; Santa Ana, 21.15 compaa;ed to 7.51; and Santiago Peak. S0.3 compared to 16.3. And there's more rain on the way. The National Weather Service forecasts a 60 percent c hanee ol rain tonight and Thursday, with more. rain on Friday and Saturday of un. k11owninte.nsity. between El Paseo an4 Orange County firemen were Carnation Avenue was al~o rechaAAeling a flooded creek in closed due to mud and porti~ SilveradoCanyon today and were of East Coast Highway in stan.d~~by.mcaseofm\tdslides. *'Corona del Mar ~ere blanketed A mUdslide on Pacific Coast with mud. However. city ere& Highway between Camino were able to keep the roadopea. Caputrano and Doheney Park Corona del Mar Elementary Road C8U$ed the road to be School was closed due to ~ closed this morning while Back ing. · ~ Bay Road in Newport Beach was Flooding was reported a1olC closed by several mudslides. . the Jasmine Gulch and in a half~ In addi.tion. Bayside Drive (See BAIN, Page AZ) '' ~ • . . --~--.et~-- 17 I l 'Flagrant AfJuse' Bonfa ·Blasted . By Opponent Huntington Beach City At- torney Don Bonla was accu.5ed of "flagrant political abuse" in his campaign for re·election by a political opponent Tuesday. " Challenger Gail Hutton ac- cused Bonfa of electioneering by Job Loss Fac~d by Principal By RODERT BAUER Of ... Detty ..... Sleft A Huntington Beach school principal, previously caught up In • skirm~ with a teachers un-ion, bas given noUce that she faces the possible loss of ber job, it was teamed Tuesday. Tla• decision that ls ·~ to lead to tbe ~usignmeDt ol Dwyer School Principal Dr. Frances Bennie wu taken In a secret aeuion last Tuesday by member• of tbe Hantl= Beach 0'¥ (elementU')') District.. It also wa1 learned that Robert Landi, who bas been aening as an Interim ualstant superintendent for educatlooal aervlces, will i;e reassigned to a princlt>al's piost. Sue_erfn~endent S.A. Moffett said ~1he actfoa eoaee&"D-o tnc Landi .m Dr. Bennie was taken In ltgbt ~ the d.lltdct'• deellnlnl enroUment. • Moffet& said Ule deeftloft en Landi'I ...adgnm91\l WQ beed on Lanell'• own recommead1'tlon that the' lllill\ would ane tax- payer IDCIOef_. • Moffett arso announced that ab •ice plndpala at the ,us. trtct'a three middle acboola (atttll Uiroueb el•btb 1radel) wtr• to receive notices today (le&JOll, Pap AZ) .,..,, ..... ~., 0.,., ~ STORM SURF BATTERS ITS WAY THROUGH NEWPORT PIER PILINGS On ah• Orange Coast. the Rain Falls, the Wind Blows and the Sea Rages , New Storm Hits State LOS ANGELES <AP> -A wind-whipped PacUlc rainstorm tbunderecr across aft already soggy Southern California today, causing one death, downing trees • power lines, closing ro3',ds. damaging houses and forcln1 the evacwa\ion of at least a doun persons. But the subtropi~al storm, which was expected to taper to showers la~r ln the day. didn't live up to I~ that it mlpt duplleaw the disatrous flooding ~ihree·weeb qO: Otfleldji were clo•e•y walehllll. tbe-JSaturat.ed re.- ldentlal canyon areas around the city. where most of last month•• f1eodini occurred. Ula Angeles poll~ rej>ortfd three bll1lidl houses in the ex· Trilt!e ••••red · 25 Hurt In .Fiery Accident ~ , . LOS ANGELES CAP) -A Contine nta l Airlines DC·lO jetliner skidded off a runway while preparing to take off in a: stor m from Los .Angeles· International Airport today. 1 An airport spokesman said at least two passengers were tilledi and 25 injured. }· It was not immediately known" how many were aboard Flight: 603 bound for Honolulu. . A spokesman at Marina Mercy Hospital in Marina det Rey said two passenJers were admittecl there with iQJwies. ' .PaU41118ers were evacuated throuab escape ehptes-aad K · J" least 10 ambulances were sent to the scene. "It didn't look good. I saw the tail a nd saw the flames on runway 24 east," said Ethel Patterson. a spokeswoman f<>Cl the airport. Joe Daley, a Continental spokesman, said the plane ~ moving doWn the airport's main~ runway wben two tires blew and. a nose wheel and part of ~ main landing gear collapsed. Canal Treaty Support Lags NEW YORK CAP) -Puhlia opposition to amended Pananua Canal treaties has grown in re-. cent weeks as the Senate mo~ slowly toward a d~i.sion on the ·pacts, a new Associated Pftss",. NBC News poll shows. (Related Story A4). Despite the Increase on a broad front in oppo$itiOll to the agreements. a majority ot Americans still express suppatt. for tbe treaties if they are amended as suggested by tbe Senate leadership. Forty percent of those. fammar wttb the treattes oppose rauticatioo by the Senate, even if the pacts ara amm.ded lo guarantee U.S. defense rilMs and the riaht to speedy pa•19& tbroagh th& walerwa) in time ot crtsls after the year 2000, ..._ Panama would control e; canaL ~ i • • ~ " '· .. t , 1 \ . DAILY PILOT H F Fetus Autopsy Backed By TOM BARLEY Of tM o.!ly PllM Si.ti " An Orange County Coroner's ()fflcer, who testified earlier tbat the Infant allecedty murdered by Dr. William Baxter Waddill died or manual strangulation, • went back on the witness stand Tuesday to off er new evidence for the prosecution. Dr. Robert Richards tesWied in bis second appearance before a Superior Court jury that he had returned to his laboratory to examine tissue s lides that he had not used during his first ap- pearance in court. Richards came under heavy fire from two defense lawyers, particularly Dr. Malbour Watson, during that first session and was accused by them of sub- mitting incompetent evidence. He told the jury on that oc- casion that he confirmed his autopsy verdict of manual strangulation but ~onceded un- de r intensive defense questioning that he could not determine the process of death that led to strangulation. Richards testified Tuesday, however, that the new s lides he brought to court with him clear- 1 y disclosed damage to the fetus's windpipe, larynx and two main arteries. And he claimed his new "t>Villeilce a m pry ·confirms hTs theory that trauma frqm physical force and not lack of oxygen or asphyxiation from som e medical source led to tht· death of the 31-week fetus. Prosecutor Robert ChaUerton s aid the new evidence by Richards should convin~ the jury that Waddill, 4-4, strangled the fetus to death in the Westminster Community . Hospital nursery last March 2. , Prosecution witnesses have testified that Waddill, after fail- ing to abort the fetus via the in- jection o,r saline intO the .unwed, 18-year-old mother, repeatedly expressed his intenUon of killing the infant. The prosecution alleges that he suggested four ways in which this could be accomplished before he throtUed the' ailing fetus in its crib. 61chards, attacked by the de- fens e during his earlier testimony for discussing the case with a prosecution aide in the presence of a juror, ia ex- pected to face a gruelllaf ciou examination. 'LJttw Women' Opens Friday The play "Little Women" will open at the Fountain Valley Recreation Center, 16400 Brookhurst St., Friday at 7;30 p.m . . . "Little Women." based on the Louisa May Alcott novel, will also be presented Saturday at 2:30 p.m., March 10, 11, 12, 17, 18 and 19 by the Fountain Valley Community Theater players. All Friday performances begin at 7:30 p .m . Saturday curtain limes are 2:30 p.m. For reservations, c all Christine Smith at 838-0173. Donation for the pl~ is $\.50. Edison Vies In Quiz Boivl Edison High School studenta ln Hunlinaton Beach will compete March 28 in the state finals of the Kiwanis Bowl int.erscbolaatJc quiz eame to be held in Anaheinl. The F.cliaon High team defeat. ed Fowitaln Valley and Dana Hills high schools Feb. 21 ln Fountain Valley to advance in the competition. Edison quiz team starting members includ~: Robert Hartmann, Jim Hollinpbead, William Orton, Shauna Strauas and Randall Wam ler. Seela C r oten Karla Hewitt, Mtss Huntington Beach"' -rs · amr <>t so-- Southern California girls who will be competing later this month for the California Citrus Queen title at San Bernardino's annual Orange Show. The 17-year·old Fountain Valley High School coed is being sponsored by the Women's Division of the Huntington Beach Chamber Of Commerce. Fro.PageAJ ffiPPO . ~. stood up and bellowed at him. She never yelled at them before. Rangers blame a lot of Bubbles• irritability on the crowds of up to SO people who have stopped their cars on Laguna Canyon Road to gawk at the hippo, or rather at her pond, since Bubbles stays submerged during1he (fa,U!Jle. So worried about what might happen if Bubbles came out and. endangered the throng, the rangers announced Mondll)' that they might have to kill the hippo. Lion Country officials Jater said the remarks by rangers had been misinterpret· ed by the press. Before the rangers • self. imposed deadline came Tuesday morning, a court order was handed down by Superior .Judge Robert Green, who got out of bed at 4 a.m. to sign it. The order forbids them from harming the hippo. A full hear- ing is scheduled for March 10, if Bubbles remains loose. Crash Victim Mark Mussell Funeral Held A funeral service followed by cremation and scattering of the victim 's as hes at sea was scheduled today for a Hunt- ington Beaeh youth killed about m Id night Saturday when thrown from a rolling car. Rites for Mark Mussell, 16, of 16151 Warren Lane, were set for 10 a.m. at Mottell's Mortuary in Long Beach. He was fatally injured when his friend's auto went out of con- trol ma.king a tum at Graham Street and Bolsa Avnen\e, hit a curb and overturned, craahl.ng young Mussell beneath IL Survivors include his father Harry Mussell. of the Warren Lane add.rea; his mother Jean, also a-Huntington Beach res- td en t ; s isters Merri Strass Michelle Mussell ; a brother Mlcbael; hla grandparenta, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Williams. and his grandmother, Mrs. Dorothy Daly. Jurors W eigh Fate Of 'S n uff' Susp ect By GARY GRANVILLE Ol ... DellY .......... Defense lawyer Terry Giles conceded Tuesday that would-be pornographic movie producer Fred Berre Douglas "might be a kinky thrill seeker . . . who needs paychological help." "But Mr. Douglas does not have a murderous heart," Giles intoned u be closed his defense of Douglas in Orange County Superior Court. Prosecutor William Morrissey wasn•t nearly so klnd in hla as· sesament ot Douglas' character, bowever. Morrtasey told the jury that DollJIB' tan 'J'wy batcllea "a diabOlical-pJot" for a macabre torture-1Durder picture taking session limply "to aaUsfy bis lust for human cam age." Tho•• contradlct101 •P· . prataaJa ~. the 54-year-old de- !enclant's ~~r ecbotnt In tbel.r ea.rs, the slx \\'Omen -1\d atx men Jurors today belan de· cJdlb1 Doagtaa· fate. The CcJIMa Met• fumtture "'° flnJaber is cha.reed with 10Uctt· ~. Candidatei' Foram ing the real Ute murder and dis· membennent of two models be lured to the desert for a lesbian bondage film. Douglas is also accused .of at- tempting to murder his nvo X· ratea starleta who, in reality, were undercover Policewomen. FrontPageAJ JOB •••. --- Fire · By LAURIE KASPER Of .... .,...., ...... tt.ff Firemen are repeatina today what ~Y say in fire prevention lectures -''It can b•ppen to &l'Yone." Fire caused an estimated $20,000 damage to the county fire station at 24001 Paseo de Valencia, La1una Hille, this mornine. Capt. Bruce Turbev11le, ln- form atlon officer, said damage was confined to the roof and at- tic of the atatiOd. He 1ald the fir.e apparently WH caused by a malfunctioning heater. Although seven firemen were sleeping in barracks below the smoking attic, there were no in· juries. Capt. Terry Carson and a crew of firemen discovered the blaze at about 4:3> a.m. when they returned from another call. When they drove up to the station a nd s aw the smoke billowing into the dark, rainy, windy sl}_r, one of the fire fighters s aid, I hope that's steam." But as they pulled around to the back of the station, they caught the distinctive smell of fire and set to work. Turbeville said these men attacked the blaze, rousted their sleeping as- _sat:Jates 1rom !be-barracks and informed their headquarters. Although the station is equipped with smoke detectors, they issued no warning to the firemen. Turbeville said this was because the smoke was be- ing sucked out through the top of the building. Ahoul..-.0 ANFfi1bten oe six engines/ two trucks and one paralDedic unit fought the stubborn fire as winds whipped about at 40 mUes an hour and heavy rain contlnued. · Turbeville said It took a UWe more than an hour to brin1 the fire under control. Although the celling in a shower and locker room had to be pulled down, he said, there was'no burn damage below the ceiling line. The fire officer said the station is "fully operational." Plastic tarps were thrown over the charred roof this morning. .Ft re Jnspe~to r Greg -Chamben said the men in the station reacted the same way as anyone who discovered a fire ln hia home. It's " kind of scary," be admitted. He added ... llf ost people don't think it's going to happen to them and we're the same wav." Valencay ... ... F,.._l'ageAJ RAIN ••• dOHD ••tertront bOftltl Oil Bayside Drive. Parts of Laguna Canyon Roacl also flooded but the road re· m ained open. Winds blew about 200 feet of roof off a home at 600 Vista Lane euty today, senCfing the un· identified oc~pants scurrying for cover. Firemen put up a pro- tective covering to protect con- tents. . .A 43.yeat-old eucalyptus tree reported1y crashed down about 1 :30 a.m. onto the second storY of a home owned by Mrs . Cornella Tonkin of S94 Brooks St., Lacuna Beach. Mra. Tonkin escaped unharmed. Her neighbor, Carl Klua, of 598 Brooks St., said be bu asked city officlala three times in the last six months to trim the huge tree. which be s&id is on city property. Surf was choppy and high, breaking up to 15 feet in Newport Beach and 18 feet in Huntington Beach. Minor damage was reported to both piers. All cities reported Oooding in the usual low-lying streets and intersections. Minor damage was reported in Newport Harbor, where the Orange County Harbor Patrol reported that about a dozen boats broke loose. Dinghies were also reported blown off docks in Sunset Aquatic Park. Ground slippage was reported threatening the Elks Club in Fullerton. The club site sits on a .k.n-0U at. .th~ i.nt~rHetion ~! Harbor and Brea boulevards. Pacific.Telephone reported no serious problems al o~ the Orange Coast, although-a flooded manhole in Fullerton _shut off service to about.;z,700 customers between 4 and 10:30 p.m. Tuesday. ....... ..... F,.._PageAJ STORM ••• Los · Angeles County coastline, boats were torn Cro m their moorings by high winds and heavy seas. On the Palos Verdes Peninsula north o! Los Angeles Hatbor, (wo ·expensive homes that slipped from their foundations by last month's rains, were teetering on the brink of collapse with the new rain. One home belongs to the family of teoD1s star Tracy Austin. Eva~uatlon centers were set up 'ilf Sun Valley and La Creacenta in the Loa Antoles area. But many residents ap- peared not to be heeding the evacuation warnings. The centers were empty Tuesday. night although Red Cross workers were standing by. School Closure·· Rej~ct~d Dwindling enrollment in Hunt· ing to n Beach's Ocean View School District won't threaten closure of any more campuses in the near future. school otfipals predict. And an effort will soon be made to puL about 100 students back into classes closer to thelr homes to eliminate one busing program. However, districl Supt. Dale Coogan said the question of e campus closures may have to be re·ey aluated in two to three yens. "At this point, we don't see any schools in serious trouble over the next two years,'' he said. A year ago this May, the dis- tric t phased out its Rancho View School because of insufficient en- rollment. It is currently in the process of transforming the campus into administration of· fices. ,,.-~ Next Monday night, the Ocean View school board wilt submit ~ nominations of citizens to serve on a seven to 11-member com- mittee to decide how best to dis- pose of the existing bead· · quarters. The land, formerly the old Ocean View School, at Beach Boulevard and Warner Avenue -nea r-t+te-~ite ~-.\h-e -0~w • administration complex, is ex- pected to be sold eventually for commercial development. And study will still 1>e r e- quired to make plans for anticipated enrollment shifts in the dis trict's 24 operating campuse.. Pr. Coogan ex-plained. "We will probably call in a consultant who bas some ex· pertlse in these matters. This thing has l ong range im- plications and we want an out- side opinion," he said. Bloodmobile Sets Huntington Visit Blood donations for Orange County leukemia, h emophilia and cancer victims will be taken at a Red Cross bloodmobile unit s lated to visit Marilla High School in Huntington Beach Thursday. The bloodmobile will visit tbe .. school, near the corner of Springdale Street and Edinger Avenue, from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Thursday only. ' 1514 NORl'H MAm SNITA MA· 541-4391 · •• --~~- • '\ . • t • Orange Coast Daily Pilot Edi.to.Jal ........ ~ _______________ R_obert_N_._W·eed·/·Pu·b-lllhe-r -T·homa-s·K·"-".'".E.dlt.or ·ra ..-:u . .:;;;. Wedneed~. March 1. 1978 Barbara Kr-tlblch/Edltorl•I P~ Editor - i Fou:Otain Valley ·,:, ~ Council Choice $,• ~ ~ "' ~ Fountain Valley residents will go to the polls Tuesday to e lect three city councilmen to fo ur-year terms out of a field of 11 candidates. There are several well-qualified candidates, but after ~ reviewing qualifications, backgrounds and contributions ~ to the city, the Daily Pilot recommends: .... -Al Holllnden ~-' -Roger Stanton :~ -Ben Nielsen . (The city of Huntington Beach is ti charter city and t-won't hold elections until Ak pril 11.} h. d . · ' Hollinden, who is see ing hist 1r consecutive term, f\ has experience and has shown level-headedness on the $ council. ~ He is independent, nearly impossible to stampede >~ and is fair. His involvement in countywide activities also is a plus for the city. Stanton, who has been mayor for the last year, has demonstrated leadership and judgment during his four years in office. He has a capacity for listening and responding to citizen concerns. He does his homework well and operates in a climate of openness. Nielsen is youthful, bright and has served a long ap- prenticeship to the city. He is the vice chairman of the Planning Commission and also has been involved in youth work. He loo' expresses a desire for open and candid dis· cuss ions of city business. Another strong candidate is Carlos Galindo, an ex· ecutive assistant to the LOng Beach City Council and mayor. He has experience in dealing with federal and county officials and is well qualified for office. for general, all around balance, however , the Daily - Pilot recommends Al Hollinden, Roger Stanton, and Ben Nielsen. McFadden Pri~rities The western pqrtion of McFadden Avenue has been the source of a controversy a mong Huntington Beach residents for several :9ears. City leaders have been c·aughi' in the middle. Some residents along McFadden who want the street closed to through traffic are at one end of the dispute. They are concerned about safety, particularly for their children who have to cross the busy street to get to Robinwood School. T hey also suy t hat traffic, which includes the rumble of a number of trucks, is a noise nuisance. Oh the opposite side are residents in adjoining neighborhoods who want the s treet kept open for con· vcnience to.their homes and for emergency access. T he problem has been intens ified because the res- idential neighborhoods are located next to an industrial park. Many workers use M.cFadden as the most direct ac- cess to their jobs. The city has t a ken several steps .to impro.Ye the situation by narrowing the thoroughfare and by reducing s peed limits, but without success. The city previously embarked on steps to close the s treet to through traffic but backed down when protesters threatened legal action. City Council officials indicate they are again leaning toward closure of the street. That probably will turn out to be the right decision. when the issue comes up for action later this month. The possible peril to human life. particularly to children, is more important than keeping the street open. Post Office Victory Fountain Valley r esidents Kave won at least a partial victory in their six-year struggle for a new, larger post office. They now ftnow they're going to get one -they j ust don't know where or when. P ostal authorities did not even take the time to tell anyone in city hall that a study was under way to find a site for the new facility. This is typical of the slow-moving red tape that has caused the fender bumping in the present post office parking lot to go on these many years. Maybe the letter to the city about the study got lost in the mail. At any rate, Fountain Valley's experience with the postal bureaucracy shows that constant pressure by letter writing and contact with federal representatives may finp.lly produce results. The slow postal service action shows a lack of foresight by postal plaMing officials in maintaining serv•ce fop fast-growing areas like Fountain Valley. The diminutive Fountain Valley post office was con· structed 11 years ago when the city had only half its current population. A battle for community improvement has been won. But the war is not over. Fountain Valley residents and officials must continue to press for a good site and not 'let up nntil a new post office is constructed. • Opl"ions expressed In the apace above are those of the Dally Piiot Other views expreued on this page are thoH of their authors and artists. A~der comment la Invited. Address, The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Pho~e (714) 642-4321. Boyd/A.~ronyms · B1L.M.BOYD Q. • 'Wbat'I the cllf!erence betwe«i radar and sonar?" A. Radar, an acronym or "Radio Detectlng and Rani· Gloomy G inf," uses radio waves ln the air. Sonat an acronym oC ••s'bund NavlcaUon Rang. ln1," uses sound waves un- derwater. Get It riaht, _pleue: The Smith• outnumb.r lht Johntons 1n tb14 country by at i .. at half• mWlon. .. Nicholas Von Hoffman Hftldeln.an: Smart But Narrow Several years ~go, I spent two days in the Beverly.Wilshire Hotel in Los Angeles talking to Bob Haldeman about collaborat- ing with him on his as-then un· written book . The publisher who had brought m e out there couldn't get together with Haldeman on money .. The d1fficulty was that while Haldeman had a useful and im· portant story to tell about Richard Nlx· on, it wasn't a sensational or a sexy one so that without a great deal of mi s l eading hype, it would n ever earn back the huge cash a dvances Haldeman wanted. Evidently he got the big buck from The New York Times, which has gone on to make the big buck back by giving us a yet bigger hype. However, if H.R. Haldeman knows something. about Wate r gate we didn't already know, he didn't put it in his book. Aft.er m y two days with Haldeman, I was convinced that President Nixon's major domo jus\.-doesn't know very much about Wat.ergat.e.. E-lLi.d~tlYr back in the early months of 197!, the principal actors in the dram a had no earthly idea that they were in vo lved in Wate rgate. Legally'. many of them ended up in conspiracy to obstruct justice, but that's a very different thing from taking part an a classical plot. NO GROUP OF plotters came together in the midnight hour and cQnvenanted to take acUons in concert which they un- derstood would destroy them if ever discovered. The evidence all pointa to a series or discreet, ad hoc acts, many of them done thoughUessly. Arter the fact, all these acts c om mitled by a large as- sortment of different people, many or whom had never mel each other, were gathered up and put in one container, one men tat construct called Watergate. Mailbox It is a gap in perception b et w een the Watergate perpetrators and the Watergate prosecutors, juridical · and journalistic, which may account for the trouble Nixon. Haldeman and some others have h ad in m a'king sufficiently satisfying confessions. They're not quite sure what it is they are to con· fess to. THE HALDEMAN J met at the Beverly-Wilshire was not u man well equipped to dope out the meanings of what he had done and had done lo ham . He has, or he had, charm and likeability, but a remar kably shallow background in history, literature, political philosophy or any other area oC study which might ha've\ provided him with :some guide or measure. He gave the impression or be- ing a smart man, and an ethical one. but so ignorant, so without knowledge that he was without prudence or judgment.• One of the things he insiste<.~ on in our conver~ation was his ~c l f -definition as a "n on- pol1llcal" person, someone who concerned himself with what he called "process." By way or il - lu stration he recalled the dis- cussions between Nix• •. Kiss· inger and others about the de- cision to recommence bombing Hanoi. He recalled himselC being indifferent as to which way the decision went but impatien~ they make it so he could start the engine of government to carry it out. As H aldeman saw himself, once he had made his acl of faith in the Republican Party, in a Richard Nixon or a John Connal- ly-he is a great admirer of Nix- on's old secret ar y or the Treasury -once he had made bis inner personal commitment. he was absolved from doing an) thinking about the issues himself. A Nixon or a Connally were great "conservatives" and that was all he needed to know. ff E SEEMED to have been imprinted with conserv~tjsm at an early age, the way a baby duck can be imprinted with the idea that a three-ton elephant is its mother a nd follow it every- where. Al some early point. inosl likely in his college years.- the imprinting took place. He stopped asking questions and followed his elephant right to the jail house door. A man who can play a major role in election after election. who can be the president of the United Stater-alter ego an<tstnt think of himself as non-political is a man who would have no dirficulty pl aying a major role in the Watergate dr ama without knowing it. Which is not to say Haldeman i~'f;tupid. He is a smart man but a narrow one and one so without inte llectual curiosity il never occurred to him lo look arQUnd him and se~ where he was. Haldeman is a tough man too, but no tougher than his old boss. Al one point he said he'd recent- ly talked to Nixon, who had asked how Haldema9 was, going to vote in an upcoming California election. Haldeman sa id he replied by reminding the exile of San Clemente. "I'm a convicted felon, in case you've forgoUen. and we can't vote." After that, he reported, there was a pause on the other end or the line and then Nixon said, "Well, in that case I 'll vote twice." This Tjme the Taxpayer ls the Boss To the Editor: It ls amusing to hear the laments of the politicians and bureaucrats concerning the Jarvis-Gann amendment. Forecasts ot the consequences· of i~ passage encompass every eventuality but Armagecldoll. Where things are run with at least a modicum of efficiency, as in business, when the chief kicks the budget proposal back for review (lbat means re- duction), one goes to work to pare expenses here and to do wit.bout there. One may groan a little, but tbe job is done. IN 11DS case, the boss, the taxpayer, is kicking the budget back for review. Between now and referendum time, there are ample hours and splendid op- portunities to review and reduce budgets. It the pollUcos do this and come up with results, I'll help vote the amendment down. If not, 1 '11 vote for the amendment. I would suggest others do the same. J .W. REID ,. • ., .... Jleadotelarlc To the Editor: I would like to 10 on record as one person who is in favor of keeping Meadowlark Airport. I have mainly three reasons for taking this position: 1. To throw out the whole ~ airport because ol thls one small accident ls ridiculous~ The atrpon•s safety r~corct ts tt· cellent. and the acciden' that trtuered all this latest ruckus appean to m6 to be just an ex- cuse for property owners to rid t-hemselves of what tbey eon· aider a nuisance. 2. Tbe airport was beu Joni before the residents aurroundlng It. Whoever built hC>mes or purchased surround.ins property did 10 with full knowledae ot &be airpc>rt'• exlltenee. The airport baa not ebanpd tta etatua apw preclably ln Cts man~. an ol operaUoQ. It la 1Ull o ~ to amaU alrtnft aacl bat •· pnded to lnelucle DJ HWuJecl wvamc. a. ws QD alrpoN tor me-tr. A• a meta* of a "OYina famU1.'' lam aware ol the ftd that s~ pllDI do oe .. culo1l.ally' fall ,and muat come . down. U MeadoWlark Altport 11 dosed and. \be ~ HbR-: queoUy 1lled fOfctOmetblnl tlM. there Will be no ~o,.. I« tbe 1111...-c1 l oi ·amtll •lrerall·m.it ili&':..IM& AlrpOrl. lo Oran;e A.liPQit:. Op; .... .. ,,. ponenls of the airport say that in this long stretch between these two m~·n airports. there are beaches and freeways open for emerge y landing of small aircraft, ut isn't It far more dangerous for a failing aircraft. to land on a public beach or busy freeway than at a s mall airport? ll appears ~ me that this latest accldent at Meadowlark has just been a covel'ap fol' ad;. jacent property owners. Tbey have seen an opportunity lo get rid of lbe airport and thereby raise the value of their proper- ty; they are not really con- cerned wilh the public good at all. EVE E. FEE Po.,n-t11 Lll'es On To the Editor: · A recent newspaper feature showed tbe deplorable plight o{ the street dwellers of India. Millions of people so poor, they live on the sidewalks of the city streets. They live ln lllth, clothes · in rags and their meager earn· ings barely enough for one pitiful meal a day. Disease is rampant and exacts a heavy toll amonethem. I saw these conditions back in the thirties when I was a radio operator Jn the merchant. marine. Evidently conditions have not changed mucb since then . We saw these same ~­ dit1ons in other ports of the Far Eut. Namely Shanghai, Cblna. WE HEAR and read now tbat thin&• are vutly different in malnland China. People are warmly clothed, adequately fed and dlseale brought under con- trol. Can we seriously tell these people they made a bla mis- take? That they were better of( under their previous conditions? 1..tve again like the people in India are living now? Why did it have to take a red revolution to bring about much 11eedecl reform? Wbere hu the democnUc proc:esa falled? Wlll lndla be next on the Marxilt time table? And If their mllllons are added to the mUUona of China, where ,nn that lea\'e u. tr~e world? • SAMHAKAM ' ...... IU)NJf!t .... ' To the F.dltoc: WowJ lleaclowlark Al~rt. just. puaed lta ••era-mowtnC' ln1p.ct1on by CalTtans. Now, doun't that Just warm the eoctles 0( >'OUr heart? Sarl "'-C.alTr no"" down from S1cremento I , .. • twice for thi s ''weed in- spection." The fi rst time the airfield flun ked. Tucker told the city that he did not even give the airport ad vance warning this second time. To pass with only two inspections c~rlainly goes a long \vay to dispel the fears of those living under takeoff. Some of the residents proved un- gratelul by asking, "What has weed cutUng aot to do with the three plane Clrashes and wire cuttings, etc. happening al our front door?" This is the first time I have seen green weeds used as a red herring. TUCKER'S so-called in- spections have nothing lo do with the dangerous 3,000 feet from takeoff where the planes are crashing. Tucker jus~ smi.les a nd s ays, "The DOA has nothing to do with local zoning; it is the city's fault, MJ?adowlark is under a grandfather clause." If it is the city's fault, why do our city coun-ciimen turn their heads? Why does our city allow an airport to endanger residents· when said airport is on res· idential zoned land? Our city now has about 900 people living and working under takeoff within the critical 3,000· foot danger1 zone. This is th crit i cal crash area. The airport's fire and rescue com· mittee <ALPA> calls it the "ex· tended runwiy danger area." They say, "'l'his is where the action is." Boy, do we kn"owit. J . COLLINS Nlgftt Sellool Fara To the Editor: The adult education night classes ht Edison High School ue spending our tax dollars well and l Sftlute our cJaSU'OOm #222. On Thursday night, Feb. $, 1 sat in one of the adult night classes. Not the rain, nor the GO mph winds ~uld dlscouraie this gyoup or 29 adult& betWeen the ages or 18 and approxtinat.ely 60 would penntt the tn'strlrc1X>.r to dismiss the class early. · THE TOTAL clue loudly .... jected the teacher'• eomblents abcMrt havifta tbe class thorteaed du• to inclern•t weather. lf '°" recall. that'• the niaht that the mobllo bomu wer• blown to IPlUlletS riibt off Newland and Coast Hll}lway. We Wtte hntna earlle?' clasaes onl.J approJl- lmately one half mlle.-w11, dUr-mr the uclltr part of tbit even-• ln . f 'wu dellabUd and somewhat alll&lld to atesucb. a v&r1e.t,t i1l delflrmined .1Ddl.YWaals.. lllried lor knowledce and the need for more education. We have men and women or a ll races. The col- ors were: White, beige, brown. yellow. Such a splendid variety. Personally, I'm 50-plus and very excited about once again bcing a blc lo return to classes to learn more about what I truly enjoy doing. I've raised my family and always paJd my taxes -I think I'll enjoy it for a while. FRANGETLER lru11lr To the Editor: It 's rather irontc to me that people are so upset about a local doctor allegedly strangling an infant to death. They would have accepted the death if the baby had (1ied inside the mother in- stead of at the doctor's bands. T he point is lhal killing a baby is murder, whether inside the womb of a mother or death when born. We call ourselves a "Christian nation" and a llow unborn children to be murdered. We worry a bout the ri~hts of gays and criminals and go out of our way to see that their rights are not violated, yet an unborn child has no right to be born. One of the Ten Command- ments is '1Thou Shalt Not Kill." Exodus 20:13. However, man ·seem s to ignore this com- m andmenl along wilh many others. If man continues to ignore God's laws and commandments, I fear that this nation-will be in a. worse mess than it already is. KAREN ALLEN AbeDbg .. ted To the Editor: I read your Feb. 22 Mailboit and one letttt really got me! t, too, am thorouehly disgust- ed wlth the trashy magaiines displayed in the small markets und some drug s tores for cblldrtln to look al ao easily. .. .. • I never buy from a store when J:' sec adul\ macailnea where -• klda 'Can read tbem, but wbat elac can bo done about lhls? 'rbese managers oao just as easily put tho stuff behind tho counter. KAREN GIBSON .. - t - • • CALIFORNIA Opinion llnf or111ed POii Studies JarVis Issue SAN F RANCISCO (A P> -Calilornia voters are confused by the Jarvis-Gann property tax in· ;tialive and cah be ea$i\y swayed by a &trong pitch from eitl\er side, according to the California Poll released today. "Public opinion at this stage is still relatively unformed and what has formed is quite unstable," pollster Mervin D. Field reported after surveyinK a cross-cut of 1,217 voters in mid· February. The tax-cutting initiative will be put to voters :is Proposition 13 on the state's June 6 ballot. IT WOULD LIMIT property taxes to one 'percent of market value or the property, but would exemp! taxes for pre-existing bonded indebtedness. Experts say the effed would be to cut most property tax bills rt e by about two-thirds. Critics say the reduced tax in· ftolJ......._• l'ictiM come would deprive cities, counties and school dis· ....::.• :I -.. ~ ·- trictsofabout$7billio n. H arold Bronstrup talks on phone after he was shot during a Only 56 percent of ,those polled by Field in· robbery of his jewelry store in San Bernardino. The bullet was dicated they had heard of the widely publicized tax deflected by Bronstrup's eyeglasses causing the wound to be minor. = -5 ....-...!U .. • • Wednesday, March 1. 1978 Autlaor BOJ1eftd State Panel OKs Tax Bill ... • • • • • • • ... • • SACRAMENTO (AP) -This year's top bill to • - DAIL y PILOT As cut property \aXes, stripped of a eootrovereial • home-sales tax, could clear th~ Legislature this • •rw:•~•• • week, the measure's author says. • • The prediction by Sen. Peter Behr, R·Tiburon, • HE B : came Tuesday after the Assembly Ways and • FRIEDLASDER Means Committee accepted Bebr's amendment to • • « scrap a s percent tax on profits Crom the sale or • IS MAKING ! most &ingle-family homes. • GREAT DEALS The move cleared the way for a committee _. FREE ' \lote t.oday on the $1.4 billion measure. Approval ,.. • would send it to the Assembly fl<>?r ror a vote ! 50 GALS : Thursday. • • OF GAS • BEHR SAID THE SENATE could give the :·.._,.,.. ..... u .... ,,....,.,., __ = .. ·• ~ amended bill its final legislative approval the . or OJ I. CllASG ES • d • .. <et•••..-.")' \M lederJ ... same ay. . ·~• Supporters bad contended the profits tax was • ~ ._ needed to help provide homeowners with at least a Jt am••u•••.. ~ 40 percent cul in current property tu bills. • an.nn ....-....,,, ._ initiative. And of that slim majority, 26 percent re-' Atleft, is a paramedic. mained unde<:ided on the issue. _____ .......:. _____________ ,__;. _________ _ But the ~" drew strong opposition from re. •* * * "ff * * * * * * * '*• altor'-.wbo reared l t would hurt home sales, and • MG·TRIUMPR • Asseafbly leaders concluded the biU could not win • • Some 20 percent of those who had heard of it said they favored the measure. Ten percent were opposed. FIELD RESEARCHERS posed the initiative issue to its subjects in two forms. The first listed the tax cut's effects in a general manner: the second was more explicit. the two-thirds majority need for passage if it con· • IAT LA..._1'.CIA • S t B • Set tainedlhelevy. • F · ~, .., ··~nee eannns . 111eu11s1•at•••C. • ~ _r • -e • WITBOVT THE SALES tax, the blll would cut ...... -:·;1~ :~-:;-',; * =-="•• bed to homeowner property ta~s at least 30 percent, it • LOS ANGELES (Al» -A former onetime teen ldol, was stab boost the renters' tax credit to $'IS and provide ad· • ,.1G..,..c;m.e1wc. • pizza dllliveryman accu.sed4of killing death_ .outside his ~est Hollywood ditional aid tor elderly homeowners and renters, Jt c:;..,G,_e UJ,u.c • Forty-eight percent thou°gbt· the Jarvis-Gann Initiative was a good idea when the pollst.ers pre. sented its effects m general form. Thirty-three percent were opposed. ·actor Sal Mineo is to return to court for. apa rtment Feb.12, 197o. among other things. · • ,. * * * * * * .* * * * **tr more pretrial hearings arter a A murder complaint bad originally The amendments a1ao cut the bill's first-year~ MOTORHOME • Superior Court judge refused to drop. been filed against Williams by the price tag from $1..9 billion to $1.4 billion. SALES & RENTALS~ rourderchargesagainsthim_ district attorney, but lbe case was Behr's plan languished in committee last ye~r RESERVE NOW • But with a more explicit explanation, only 40 percent supported the initiative and 47 percent were opposed. Judge William L. Ritzi Tuesday or· later taken to the grand Jury. while lawmakers fought over other tax bills, but 1t 537•7777 Ext. 500 • dered 21-year-old Lionel R. Williams won Senate appro~al in January and began ~o ..... * * * * * * * * * * .~ to return to court March 14, despite 'When an indictment is returned emerge as the Legislature's answer to the Jarvis;..:-----------arguments by Williams' attorney 'by a grand jury, there is no pre--initiative. · THE POLLTAKERS then posed four specific arguments to the survey subjects: Two spoke in favor of the initiative; two were against it. that an indictment should be set '1minary bearing at which tqe pros-That measure, Ptoposit.loo 13 on the June aside on grounds that few cases in . 1!CUUon presents evidence aDa wit· ballot, would cut taxes about 60 percent on aH tax. the county go before t~e grand jury. ~Hes in an efCort to convince a able property. But critlcs claim tl would cripple c.n 642-5678. After hearing both sides, 45 percent of those polled said they 9.'ould vote in favor of Proposition ta. Some 39 percent said they would vote "no." Put a few words to work tor ou. w i 11 i ams w as indicted in judge that a defendant should stand local governments or force sharp. increases in Mineo'sJDurderinJanu~a~ry~.~M~in~eo~·!a-~t:ri:a:L:__ __________ r __ ~o~lb~e~r~Jevi:!!es~.----------------~-------- In results released Monday, a statewide poll· conducted for the McClatchy newspapers rioted siin ilar attitudes among voters. The newspaper's poll of 712 voters found 3-to-l support for the in- itiative. Civic ·Fanetions Eureka Alt.male Club To OK Wonien Guests SACRAMENTO (AP)' -Female gu ests have won the right to enter an all-male club in Eureka for any busi· ness, civic or political function, the state attorney general's office s ays. The office reported Tuesday that an out-of-court setUement between the attorney general's omce and the lngomar Club. which uses t he fa mous Victorian-style Carson Mansion, was approved by the Humboldt County Superior Court. Attorney General Evelle Younger ffied the suit in 1974. asking the court to block the discrimination in guest policy. That policy had prohibited women Crom entering the club except on Sunday::>. Four Suspects . Jailed, Face Robbery Charge SAN DIEGO (AP) -Four robbery suspects are in Jail after a blgh-speed ~base on the Coronado Bay Bridge with a police detective r ecenUy re· instated after a 30-day suspension for off-duty public drunkenness, officials say. Now Detective Louis Rodriguez, who r.eturned to duty Feb. 16, may be in for a medal, Police Chief Bill Kolendersaid Tuesday. . RODRIGUEZ spotted what looked like al armed robbery at Galloway's Pharmacy and gave chase, calling for help on his police radio, a de-- partm ent spokesman said. The sus· peels fired two shots at Rodriguez as they weaved up the bridge. About two dozen officers met the fleeing car at the San Diego end or the lone curving structure and a unlf ormed policeman fired six abots at tibe vehicle before lt swerved out of 'control. ALL FOua suspects were arrested at gunpoint. · Wlnnoni~ Allr«I, 19; and Wllliam Bennett, 20, of Pomona, and Willard Farrow, 26, and Johnny Robinson, 22, of Los Angeles, were booked into County Jail for lnveatication of armed robbery, 'assault with a deadly weapon and .aaault with intent to klll, police said. ( -· STATE J Mo6 E' ..... n l11dlded LOS ANGELES CAP) -Six reput. ed organized crime figures have been indicted on federal conspiracy and racketeering counts lhal include the murder of Frank "The Bomp" Bompenslero, a mobster who turned informant. Named in Tuesday's six.count in· dictment were Dominick Phillip Brooklier. 63; Samuel Orlando Sciortino, 58; Louis Tom Dragna, 57; Michael Rizzitello, 50; Jack LoCicero, 65, and Thomas Ricciardi, 45. ~S ... port LOS ANGELES (AP ) An amended committee report that supports exemption of the con- troversial Sundesert nuclear power plant from slate nuclear safeguard laws has been approved by the City Council. The minority report or the council's State, County and Federal Affairs Committee was amended to permit the council to withdraw lta support if legislation is introduced that would speed development of alternative energy sourl:es to satisfy city needs. Toll C'ld Adced SAN RAFAEL CAP> -San Francisco would open its Golden Gate Bridge to commuters for just 50 cents if' Marin County Supervisors win their attempt to temporarily slash the span's toll ln half. The board Tuesday unanimously asked for a 50 cent reduction in the $1 toll to reimburse bridge crossers for what a jucf3e has deemed an ille&al increase. · IA Al'r 'Wont~ LOS ANGELES CAP) -Los Angel~ had the worst air quality of any i n the nation in 1975, the .Pre&ldent's Council on Environmental Quality said Tues· day. The White Hocae group based its findin11 on tbrff-year-old statistics because they were the most reeent available, the Los An1eles Tima re-'ported. Double your·rnoney for tomorrows goats. With the cost of a college education doubling over the past ten years, what will it cost for your children? Whatever the amount, San Diego Federal can help you attain iL Yes. the interest your savings earn at San Diego Federal can doublt! your initial deposit in as little as nine years I The cha.rt a.ho,,,,. how fast savings double in various San Dieg<> Federal savings aocounl&. So, select the combination of accounts that best fits your needs: a Certiftcard• account for looger•tenn goals •• , and a pass- book « P(J3.$card• aoc:ount that allows you to add and withd~aw savings at your convenietlc.e. Open your 14f ety·imured savings 14X:Ounta with the double- your-mon~ people at San Diego Federal Savings ••• where there's interest in your future. .. llClll('f .... TtMll ·~ "o,-::;:r oonus• MTCOf •111111 Ofll,IOO AlllllJM ws~ lll1tmT MlMIC( lnUMYUI m.D IFlll'lfJITUIS en Ill Ill Ill .. ll) .,... 7u '":t=' '1,080" &.06~ 12,171• ...... J .... 7'1tl .. ~u=-'1,077• 7J9'1 •2,111~ re,... ...... '"~ N-~ SI 'l,069" 6.91" IJ,96311 11,.... ..... 6~~. ·~~ $1,06711 6.7~ •1,91e• u,..,. I ..... SH ,_,._ ... s1.osga 5.92' 11,m• u,.. ·-5"~ ,.-,:-11,053"' -~ '1.690" L " ___________ .. _..,.. _____ ":' ........ a. __ ...., __ _. ......... __ ,.,. ___ ..... _ t. ==-::.-:-..,._,_. _____ ,.. ......... __ , ........ _... .. ~·---··-.._-..... ---...... _ ............. Sen Clement. (Opening Fet~ 1878) Ne~hllch {Opening ~ITltnff', 1978) .· l&'!ZI . .. l J J ~ I \ . . i \ . t ' . ' ) l Orange Coast Daily Pilot E 1 .. • t • I .. RObttt N. Weed/Publisher ~s Keevll/Edltor ~~ ~~~ ~~.~ ............... w.ed .. ~ ..... •M•M•c•h•1.•1•9•7a ................... e•a•rt>a .. r•a•K•r•el•b•lc•h•/E•d•l•tor .. la•l•P•age ... E.dl•to•r .. .. B/F I ~Fountain Valley ·~ Council Choice §I ~ ~· ,.. ' ~ ·. . ... ·: . ~ ~ f ~. ),. Fountain Valley residents will go to the polls Tuesday to elect three city councilmen to four-year terms out of a field of 11 candidates. There are several well-qualified candidates, but after reviewing qualifications, backgrounds and contributions to the city, the Daily Pilot recommends: -Al Holllnden -Roger Stanton -Ben Nielsen (The city of Huntington Beach is a charter city and won't hold elections until April 11.) Hollinden, who is seeking his third consecutive term, has experience and has shown level-headedness on the council. He is independent, nearly impossible to stampede a nd is fair. His involvement in countywide activities also is a plus for the city. Stanton, who has been mayor for the last year, has de monstrated leadership and judgment during hls four year s in office. He has a capacity for listening and responding to c itizen concerns. He does his homework well and operates in a climate of openness. Nieisen is youthful, bright and has served a long ap- prenticeship to the city. He is the vice chairman of the Planning Commission and also h as been involved in youth work. He too· expresses a desire for open and candid dis· cussions of city business. Another strong candidate is Carlos Galindo, a n ex- ecutive assistant to the Long Beach City Council and mayor. He has experience in dealing with federal and county 6fficials and is well qualified for office. For general, a ll around balance, however, the Daily Pilot r ecommends Al Hollinden, Roger Stanton, and Ben Nielsen. McFadden Priorities ,, The western portion of McFadden Avenue-hCJS'"'beeirthe source of a controversy among Huntington Beach residents for several years. City leaders have been caught Jn the middle. Some residents along McFadden who want the street closed lo through trftffic are at one end of the dispute. They are concerned about safety, particularly for their children who have to .cross the busy street to get to Robinwood School. They also say that traffic. which includes the rumble of a number of trucks, is a noise nuisance. On the opposite side are residents in adjoining neighborhoods V.·ho want the street kept open for con- venience to their homes and for emergency access. T he problem has been intensified because the res· ide'ntial neighborhoods are located next to an industrial park. Many workers use McFadden as the most direct ac- cess to their jobs. The city has t aken several steps to improve the situation by narrowing the thoroughfare and by reducing speed limits, but without s uccess; The city previously embarked on steps to close the street to through tra ffic but backed down when protesters threatened legal action. City Council officials indicate they are again leaning toward closure of the street . That proba bly will turn out to be the right decision. when the issue comes up for action later this month. The possible peril to human life, particularly to children, is more important than keeping the street open . Post Office Victory Fountain Valley residents have won at least a partial victory in their six-year struggle for a new, larger post office. They now know they're going to get one -they just don't know where or when. Postal authorities did not even take the time to tell anyone in city hall that a study was under way to find a site for the new facility. This is typical of the slow-moving red tape that has caused the fender bumping in the present post office parking lot to go on these many years. Maybe the letter to the city about the study got lost in the mail. At any r ate. Fountain Valley's experience with the • postal bureaucracy shows that constant pressure by letter writing and contact with federal representatives may fillftllY produce results. · The slow postal service action shows a lack of foresight by postal planning officials in maintaining service for fast-growing areas like Fountain Valley. The diminutive Fountain Valley post office was con· structed 11 years ago when the city had only half its current population. , . ,A battle for community improvement has been won. But the war is not over. Fountain Valley residents and officials must continue to press for a good site and not let up until a n ew post office is constructed. • Opinions expressed In the apace above are thGH of the Oal1y Pltot. Other views expressed on this page are tho .. of their authors and artlsts. RtAd« (\omment It Invited. ~chlfeta, The Dally Piiot. P.O. 8o)( 1580. Costa Mesa. CA 9262yhone (714) 842-4321. Boyd/Acronyms B1L.M.BOD Q. ••What's the dlff erence between radal' and tonar? .. A. Radar. an acronym or "Radio Detectlns and Rang- Dear Gloomy c. "1tch may· come ill . Ute a lion. •and lel'• bop• lti doea do•n w,uu H1lll wu-1* llke a blppopotamua. J.c.v. ma. u tlMI radio ..... '" the alr. Sonar. an acroar_m ot .. Sound Navigation R•n1· Ing • ., usee aouDd wnea un. derwater. Nicholas Von Hoffman Haldeman: Smart But Narrow Several years ago, I spent two days in the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel in Los Angelea talking to Bob Haldeman a bout co!Jaborat· ing with him on his as-then un- written book. The publisher who h a d brought me out there ...-ouldn't get together with Haldeman on money .. The difficulty was that while Haldeman had a useful and im· . portant story to t ell about Richard 'Nix· on, it wasn•t a sensational or a sexy one so that without a great deal or mis l eading hype, it would never earn back the huge cash advances Hald em an wanted. Evidently he got the big buck from The New York Times, which has gone on to make the big buck back by giving us a yet bigger hype. However, if H.R. Haldeman knows something. about Watergate we didn't already know, be didn't put it in his book. Aft.er my two days with Haldeman, I was convinced that President Nixon's ·major domo just doesn't know very much about Watergate. Evidently, back in the early months of 197!, the principal actors in the drama had no earthly idea tbal they were in vol ve d in Watergate. Legally, many o( them ended up in conspiracy to obstruct justice, but that's a ~ 4UferenUhing Crom &.aking part in a classical plot. NO GROUP OF plotters came together in the midnight hour and convenanted to take actions in concert which they un- derstood wauld destroy them if ever discovered. The evidence all points to a series of discreet. ad hoc acts. many of them done thoughUesaly. Arter the fact, all these acts com milled by a !urge as· sortment of different people. many of whom had never met each other, were gathered up and put in one container, one mental construct called Watergate. Mailbox 1l is a gnp in percegtion between th e Wa tergate perpetrators and the Watergate prosecutors, Juridical and journalistic, which m ay account for the trouble Nixon. Haldeman and some others have had in making sufficiently satisfying confessions. They're not quite sure what it is they are to con- fess lo. THE HALDEMAN I met at the Beverly-Wilshire was not a man well equipped to dope out the meanings of what he had done and had done to him. He has, or he had, ch arm and likeability, but a remarkably shallow background in history, literature, political philosophy or any other area of study which might have1 provided him with some guide or measure. He gave the impression of be· ing a smart man, and an ethical one. but so ignorant. so without knowledge that he was without prud~nre or judgment. One or the things he insisted on in our conver!ation was his :;cl{-definition as a "non· political" person, someone who t'Oncernod himself with what he c·Jlled ·•proct!ss." By way of ii· luslration he recalled the dis· ~..If wo ,oJd ot'7 f Md 4 WAY to cf r6"1Aiize ihe f &l(ZI <ri1is .. ! cussions between Nixon. Kiss· Inger and others about the de· c1sion to recommence bombing Hanoi. He recalled himself bemg indifferent as to which way the decision we'll but impatien~ the) make it so he could start the engine of government to carry it out. As Haldeman saw· himself. once he had made his act of fatlh in the Republican Party, in a Richard Nixon or a John Connal· ly-he is a great admirer of Nix· on's ol d sec retary of the Treasury -once he had made his inner personal commitment, he was absolved Crom doing any thinking about the issu es hi mself. A Nixon or a Connally were great "conserv,ativ.es" and that was all he needed to know. HE SEEMED to have been imprinted with conservatism at an early age, the way a baby duck can be imprinted with the idea that a Utree-ton elephant is its mother and follow it every- where. At some early point, most likely in his college years, the imprinting took place. He stopped asking questions and followed his elephant right to the jail house door. A man who can play a major role in election after election. who can be the president of the United Slates' alter ego and still think ~f himself as non-political is a ~ who would have no difficultyplaying a major role in the Watergate drama without knowing it. Which is not to say Haldeman is stupid. He 1s a. smart man but a narrow one and one so without intellectual curiosity it never occurred io him to look around him and see where he was. Haldeman is a tough man too, but no tougher than his old boss. At one point he said he'd recent· ly talked, to Nixon, who had asked how Haldeman was going t o vote in an upc om in g California election. Haldeman !'\aid he replied by reminding the exile of San Clemente. "I'm a convicted felon, in case ) ou·,·e forgotten. and we can't vote." After that, he reported, there was a pause on the other end of the line and then Nixon said. "Well. in that case I'll vote twice." This Time the Taxpayer Is the Bo'ss I To the Edit.or: U is amusing to hear the lamenta of the politicians and burea~crats concernJng the Jar•ia-Gann amendment. Porecuta ol tba eooaequences of its pauage encompass every eventuality but Annaseddoo. Where things are run With at least a modicum of efficiency, as in business, when the chief kicks the budget proposal back ror review (that means re- duction), one goes to work to pare expenses here and to do without there. One may groan a little, but the job is done. IN THIS case, the boss, the taxpayer, is kicking the budget back for review. Between now and referendum time. there are ample hours and splendid op. portunft.tea to review and reduce budget&. If tbe politicos do thla and come up with raults. I'll help vote the amendment down. U not, I'll vote for the amendment. I would s uggest others do the same. J'.W. REID ,. • .,.,.. Meadolelarlc To the Editor: 1 would like to go on rttord ~ one person who is in favor of keeping Meadowlark Airport. I have mainly three reasons for taking this poslUon: 1. To throw out the whole atrport because of th.is one small accident ls ridlculoua. Tl'ie airport's safety record ls ex- cellent, and the acclden\ that tr111erecl all this latest ruekus appears to me to be just an ex· C\JH for property owners to rld themselves of what they con· aider a nulaarfce. t. Tbe airport was bere Joni before the residents surrounding It. Whoever bulll homes or purcbued surrounding propert.y did IO 'frith full knowledge of the alrport.'1 alat,tnce. Tbe airport hu llOt c.baqod lta 1talus ap. J>r'ffla~ ill 111 maDY=•n or opir&UoQ. It Ii tUU o 'Onb' to m.llelsaek, ... U. ex· == ...... ~..W.Wed ~ -. ponents or the airport say t'l\at in ·this long stretch between these two main a irports. there are beaches and freeways open for emergency landing of small aircraft. but isn't it far more dangerous for a failing aircraft to land on a public beach or busy heewaythan at a smaJl airport? It appears to me that Otis latest accident at Meedowlark has just been a cover--up for ad- jacent property owners. They have seen an opportunity \p get rid or the airport a nd thereby raise the value or their proper- ty; they are not really con- cerned with the public good at all. EVEE. FEE Peeert• LI~• Ott To the 'Editor: · A recent newspaper feature showed the deplorable plight o( the street dwellers of India. Millions of people so poor, they live on the sidewalks of the city streets. They live in filth, clothes · in rags and their meager earn. in gs barely enough for one pitiful meal a day. Disease is rampant and exacts a heavy toll amonethem. I saw these conditions back ln the thirties when l was a radio operator In the merchant marine. Evidently conditions have not changed much since then. We saw these same eon- dltions in othtt port.9 or the Far East. Namely Shanghai, China. WE BEAR and read now that things are vasUy different in mainland China. People are warmly clot.bed. adequately fed and dlseue brought under con- trol Can we seriously tell iMse peopfe they made a bf g mls- tak•? That they were better off under ~ previous conditions? Ltvo again llkc the people in India are llvlns now7 Wby cUd It have to take a rC!d revoJuUoft to bring about much needed t'efonnT Where bas the demoenUc procua failedt Wut lnclla bo next on the Marxist Ume table? And It their mUJJons are added to ~ho mUUoa1 or Cblrta. wbeN will that leave the freewadd? SAM HA.KAM •~ 1.upeeCforeP To the Ed.IC«: Wowl Meadowlark Airport j11!>l puaed lta "grass mowin1f' inspection by CalTrans. Now, doesn't that iust wa rm the co(klea ot your h~art? Earl TUcker of CaJTrans hu flown doWf\ from Sacramento · ....... "..... '~ ~ • l ? , twice for this ''weed in- !ipection." T he first time the &11rfield flunked. Tucker told the city that he did not even give the airport advance warning this second lime. To pass with onl y two inspections certainly goes a long way to dispel the fears of those living under takeoff. Some of the residents proved un-grateful by asking, "What has weed C\ltUng aot S.O do with the three plane crashes and wire cuttings, etc. happening at our front door'?" This is the first time I have seen green weeds used as a red herring. TUCKER'S so-called jn. s pections have nothing to do with the dangerous 3,000 feet from takeof£ where the planes are crashing. Tucker just ~miles and s ays. "The DOA has nothing lo do with local zoning; it is the city's fault, M~adowlark is under a grandfather clause." rr it is the city's fault, why do our city councilmen turn their beads? Why does our city allow an airport to endanger residents· when said -airport is on res· idential zoned land.? Our city now has about 900 people living and working under takeoff within the critical 3,000· foot danger zone. This is th c ritic a l crash a rea: The airport's fire and rescue com· mittee CALPA) calls it the ''ex· tended runway danger area." They say, .. This ts where the action ls." Boy,dowek:tiowit. J . COLLrNS Nlglat Selaeol F•tt To the Editor: . The adult education night classes ht Edison High School are spending our tax dollars ~u and I salute our claaaroom #222. On Thursday biJbt. fcb, a. I ut in one of the adult D1'ht classes. Not the rain. nor the 50 mph wlnds could dlscouraee this group of 29 adults between tbe ates of 18 ahd Qpro:d,g>aliely 60 would piennlt tho ln'ltructor to dlsmiH the clus ea.tty. more education. We have men a nd women of all races. The col· ors were: White, beige, brown. yellow. Such a splendid variet~-. Personally, I'm 50-plus and very excited about once again being able to return to classes to learn more about what I truly elljoy doing. I've r4aised my famUy and· always paid my taxes -I think I'll enjoy itfor a while. FRAN GETLER lro1dc To the Editor: It's rather ironic to me that people are so upset about a local doctor allegedly strangling an infant to death. They would have accepted the death if the baby had died inside the mother in· stead ot at the doctor's bands. The point is that killing a baby is murder, whether inside the worn b of a mother or death when born. W c call ourselves a "Christian n a l io n" and a llow unborn children to be murdered. We worry about the rights or gays and criminals and go out of our way to see that their rights are not violated, yet an unborn child has no right to be born. One of the Ten Command- ments is "Thou Shalt Not Kill ... Exodus 20: 13. However, man ·seem s to ignore this com - mandment a long with many others. II man continues to ignore God's laws andcommandments. l fear that this nation will be in a worse mess than it already is. KAREN ALLEN Abo 1Hs91Ut~d To the Editor: I r ead your Feb. 22 Mailbox and one Jetter really got me! I, too, am thoroughly disgust ed with the trashy maga1Jnes displayed in the small markets a nd some drug s tores for children &o look al eo easily. l nev«' buy from 1 store when l aee adull maaannes where k'ftk. oaQ rud them, bot Wht. else can be done about this? These manaaert can Just as eaalty pd\ the atutt behlnd the counter. · KAREN GIBSON TRE 'rol'AL dau loudly rew jected the te11cber'1 eomtnents about bavt.nc tbe cl.us aboNDed due to tncJem•t weather. It ,ou recall, that's tho ntibt that the mobile homa YtU. blown to spl\ilt~l"I right off N.wlancl end • Coast Hlahway. We were bavlng 1..11:Ur1 front rt<Mhu are wirlcom• . earlfer claue~ onl1 .appro1· 2'7w ~ to ~ ldtaa to Jil lmatcly on haJf mlle awa,y, dur--..-. or t~iltott Hbd '8 ttlm>fd. mt tho earlier part of that even· Lcfttn of JOO 100rdr ,,.. b IDIU be lna. ffta tweff'lft«.· AU lcttnl mut a.. l was dcU•ht~ and somewhat dlde ,,,_.,.,.. cmd =oddNu amaHd to lee'tuch a v-arJety ~ '*' _,,.., MOM bt tott Oft ,.. • dfJtermlnecl lnc1lvktuall sWVed 41d tJ _,/tt:Nfd ,_,.ta~ (or lcnowtedao and the need fo( .Podrf\oill not be P"~ ., ....... -·-·-· -··· • . .... J7 .Irvine EOlTIO.N .. -· T o day's Clo sing "N..Y.,..Mtoe~· VOL. 71, NO. 60, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . . . WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1978 Plane Skids on Takeoff et o.lty l'lllC _.,. W 0.f A-- ffAl N RUNOFF RUSHES PAST SAN DIEGO CREEK SIGN In lrvJne, Mother Nature .Pays No Heed to Man's Intentions Storm, 1 Gale Winds Lash Orange Coast ' By .JACKIE HYMAN OI ... ~ly l'li.t S\41tf More than two inches of rain, accompani ed by gale-force winds gusting up to 68 miles per hour at Newport Harbor, pelted the Orange Coast Tuesday night and early today but caused only re1atively minor damage com- pared to ·the stoTm of-·thTee weeks ago. However, falling trees and t e le phone poles damaged several houses, as did flooding. No injuries were reported. S<:attered power outages OC· curred also, along with I mudslides in Silverado Canyon, Newport'Beacb, foothill canyons a nd in San Clemente. The rains also have set a i record, according to John Gietzen t of Orange County Flood Control District. He said this is the highest season-to-date rainfall 1n most o( Orange County since 1909. Rainfall for the 24-hour period ending this morning was re- corded at 1.6 inches In HlUll· ington Be ach, 2.18 inches In Costa Mesa, 2.30 lncbes in Laguna Niguel, 2.43 inches in Santa Ana and 3.5 Inches on Santiago Peak of Saddleback· Mountain. S eason -to-date totals, com· pared to last year at this time, were: Huntington Beach, 19,98 I inches compared to 9.47 inches; f Cost a Mesa, 21.31 inches com· pared to 7.13 inches; LagWla And there's more rain on the wa'. The Naltonal Weather Service forecasts a 60 percent chance or rain tonight and Thursday, with more rain on F rid ay and Saturday of un - known intensity. Orange County firemen were re,c hanndiiag. a flooded creek in · Silv~ad<>Canyon.today and were standing by in case of mudslides. A mudslide on Pacific Coast JI i gh way between Ca mino- Capistrano and Doheney Park Road caused the road to be closl:d this morning while Back Bay Road in Nl?wport Beach was closed by several mudslides. ( In addition, Bayside Drive between El Paseo and Carnation Avenue was also closed due to mud and portions of East Coast Highway in Corona del Mar were blanketed with mud. However, city crews were able to keep the road open. Co.r6na del Mar Elementary 'School was closed due to flood· jng. Flooding was reported along the Jasmine Gulch and io a half· dozeo wa terfront homes on Bayside Drive. Parts of Laguna Canyon Road also flooded but the road re- mained open. Winds blew about 200 feet of roof off a home at 600 Vista Lane early today, sending the un· identified occupants scurrying for cover. Firemen put up a pro- <See RAIN, Page AZ) * * * Storm Lashes State ~ LOS ANGELES CAP> -A wind.whipped Pacific rainstorm thundered across an a lready soggy Southern California today, causing one death, downing trees and power lines, closing roads, damaging houses and forcing the evacuation of al least a dozen persons. Rut t he subtropical storm, which was expected to taper to showers later m the day. d1dn 't Ii ve up to fears that it mi~hl duplicate the disastrous flooding of three weeks ago. O ffi c ials were c l osely watching the s aturated res- idential canyon areas around the city. where most or last month's floodin~ occurred. Los Angeles -po~ reported three hillside houses in the ex· elusive Encino section of the San Fernando Valley were slipping into adjacent backyards. The residents were evacuated and there were no Injuries. In the Sunland-Tujunga area. hard hit last month, "Things are · running real smooth ," said policeman Gary W•chUer: Precautlonart evacuations were advised, however. in nearby Schwarti c,ny()fl, Ebey Canyon near Pacolroa and other hilly areas in tho vicinity as som e of the 35 county nood con- trol debris basins reached the emergenty leTel. Los Angeles city fire officials said at least one home was damaged by a mudslide in the La Tuna Canyon area of Sun Valley. Occupants of the hotne and several nearby residences were evacuated. There were no injuries. About 15 mil~he east ln La Crescents, where dozens. of homes were flooded F eb. 10, "everyt.hin g 's Fine," said sherif.'sdeputy John Lofthus. The city received almost three inches of rain in the storm and more than four inches f'ell in so me parts or Southern California. The latest storm brought the seasonal total to a lmost 24 inches, compared to 7.38 inches during the drought last year. The normal rainfall for this time of year is 10.43inches. While the storm rolled east, forecasters said another Pacific· spawned s torm will paas through by Frjday, dropping even more rain. Mudslides closed or partially blocked at least 17 roads, includ· ing all but one lane or the heavi- ly used Paclflc Coast Highway a nd two southbound Janes of Interstate 5, the main artery between Los Angeles and Northern California. Travelers warnings we r e issued for mountain and Cflllyon roads due t o high winds, slippery pavementandpoorvlsibilily. A motorist blinded by a hea\'y blast of rain collided with a young motorcyclist in the City of Industry, killing 17-year-old Stephen Mulherin. The motorist was not injured. * * *' ./ s 2 25 Hurt In .Fiery Accident LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Contine ntal Airline DC·lO jetliner crashed and burn~ at Los Angeles International• Airport today, killing at least two people during an aborted takeoU in a rainstorm. Airport spokeswoman Virginia Black s aid the re we re two known dead.· She didn't know who they were. At leas( 25 p eople were h os pitalized. An ai rport s pokesman said "There are lots of s urvivors." At l east 10 a mbulances were called to the scene and began rushing bum victims to a nearby hospital. ~ The plane, flight 603 to Honolulu with at least 193 people aboard, was taking off from the west, a direction used onJy dur- ing s torms when the wind goes in the opposite direction. Two landing wheel tires burst nnd a landing gear collapsed, said: Continental spokesman Robert Sterling. o.tty'Ptlel .._.., ttldlarot " ....... FIREMEN BATTLE BLAZE ON FIRESTATION ROOF Malfunctioning Heeter BJ•med, No Inj uries Witnesses said the plane tipped over a mid sparks and flames as the pilot tried to abort the takeoff a nd turn oH the runway. Dick Lombardi, who drove by the airport shortly after the crash said the plane's left fuselage was enguUed in flames. ' T ' 4 ~ \ I . Laguna Hills Blaze ''People were jumping out of the rigbt side and out the back," Lombardi said. Hits Fire Station "After a couple of minutes some fire engine$ arrived and sla rted pouring waler or something on the flames. About three minutes later tbere was some kind of explosion." By LAURI E KASPER OI • Dlo6l'f -Swtt Firemen are repeating today what they say In fire prevention lectures -"It can happen to anyone." Fire caused an estimated $.20,000 damage to the county fire station ut. 24001 Paseo de Valencia, Laguna Hills, this morning. Capt . Bruce Turbeville, in- formation officer, said damage Rapists Grab / Woman Near Irvine Eate r y A 24-year-old North Hollywood saleswomBfl was dragged from he r car outs ide Gullive.r's restaur~t in lf'vlne Tuesday. thrown into the back of a van and raped by two men, police said. . The woman, who reported the crime to Los Angeles police, said she bad just finished dinner with friends and was getting into her car when she was grabbed. One of the men covered her eyes with his hand. She said the . men, who spoke Spanish, were laughing as they raped her in turn. She was toesed from the. back of the van to the ground and the men drove away fast, she re- ported. was confined to the roof and at· tic of the station. He said the fire apparently was caused by a mll'lfunctioning heater . Although seven firemen were s leeping in barracks below the smoking attic, there were no in· j uries. Capt. Terry Carson and a crew of firemen discovered the blaze at about 4 :30 a.m. when they returned from another call. Wh en they drove up to the s tation and saw Ute s m'oke billowing into the dark, rainy, windy sky, one of the tire fighters said, I hope that's steam." · But as they pulled around to the back of the station, they caught the distinctive smell of ~fire and set to worllc. Turbeville said these men attacked the blaze, rousted their sleeping as· sociates from ~ b~~acks and <See FIRE, Page A2) The aircraft never got off the g roun~. A spok esm a n for Continental s aid the pilot bad aborted his takeoff because of a blown tire which caused the landing gear to collapse. When he tried to turn left off the runway, the plaAe tipped over and the Jell wing caught lire. <See CRASH, Pa1e AZ) ·Hoskie Enters·· . Guilty Plea A University of Washington football player accused on &r· rest of burglary the day after bis te am won the Rose Bowl has pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of trespassing. A s pokeswoman for the l .... ~ne Bae'·-Orange County District At· • v" ft:3 tomey's office said tho a~y for Michael H. Ogilvie entered a '1-c~ plea of.guilty. IA''lle es,• . He was sentenced in Harbor Municipal Court to a $200 ftne ff plus ·p-enalty assessments 81\cl a 'Llt.rses Due? year's informal probation, she " • · said. Ogilvie was arrested by two Irvine police officers Jan. J in the gift shop of the Registry Hotel when it was closed. Coast Niiuel, 2'2.24 compared to 8.6; Santa Ana, 21.15 compared to 1.51; and Santiago Peak, 50.3 corppared to 16.3. Storm Slams San-l)ie@O We athe r Chance of rain lncreas· ing to 60 percent late tonight and Thursday • .Lows tonight in,,505. Highs Thursday 60 to GS. .. • Mgh Wuuls Down Tree., Knock Out P~r . takln,I bart in maneuvers at Red Beach about daybreak. A military truck carrier ov~r. turned, 1njurin1 one man slight· ly, 'Sp()l(t!Smen sald. None <it th& airlifted Marines I I NSIDE TODA 'Y l ~ ' , .; A2 DAIL y Pl1.0T By PfDLIP ROSMARIN Of ti. o.ur f'ilet $~11 .Exhausted Lion Country Satan rangers are waiting out \he first day of a 48-hour truce lhey unilaterally called with Bubbles th e p eri patetic hippopotamus . Bubbles, the only known hipep protected against harm by a supe rior court order. and also the only known hippo to appear on a Walter Cronkite news broadcast. slipped from her pond Tuesday to feed on oats, hay and grass set out by the rangers themselves. For the first time in nine days, since her escape from Lion Country Feb. 20, the hippo was unmolested in her nfghtly forage from a pond off Laguna Canyon !load . "We're not going to attempt anything for the next 48 hours," Lion Country publicis t Jo .S<'hctter said Tuesday. "We 're going to give her some rest and take food out there. ··we'll see if({; can calm ber down by not t ng to dart her (with a tra quilizer) or anvthin,::." Lion Country rangers. after more than a week's beating the bus h for the three-ton Bubbles, concede they've been outwitted, outrlan~cd ap<t-outlasted by a hippo. They don't know how to catch her. F or her part, Bubbles, rangers fca r, may be getting a little paranoid-and . consequently, dangerous by her experiences in the free world. It w as getting to where a High Court Backs Ousting Of Studem WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court today ruled against a young woman dis- missed from the University of Missouri medical school only five days before graduation because of complaints about her <Jirty finge~ils and her bedside manner. The justices, in an opinion written by Justice William H. Rehnquist, said universities and colleges do not have to provide students with hearings before expelling them for academic rather than disciplin a r y reasons. "Under s uch circumstances, we decline to ignore the historic judgment or educators and thereby formalize the academic dismissal process by requiring a hearing," Rehnquist said in overturning an order by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that Charlotte Horowit.z be re- instated as a student. The court's vote was 6·3, but the three dissenters -Justices William J . Brennan Jr., Thurgood Marshall a nd Harry A. Blackmun -voted to strike the lower court's order and send the case back to )t for further study. Miss Horowitz, now a Washington, D.C., resident was dis missed from the medical 111:hool in 19'73 even th~gh she was among her class leaders in academic performance. She s ued school officials soon thereafter. FroMPageAJ FIRE ..• informed their headquarters. Although the station is equipped with smoke detectors, they Issued no warning to the firemen. Turbeville said thls was because the smoke was be- ing s ucked out through the top of the building. About .W fire fighters on aix engines, two trucks and one paramedic unit fought t he stubborn flre as winds whipped about at 40 miles a n hour and heav rain continued. , O,.ANOECOMT DAILY PILOT hippopotamus couldn't s lick her head out or the water without a r anger loosing a tra~ilizer dart at her or some tounsh opo- ping a Oashbulbin her face. Bubbles, the rangers said, has had 1t. The last time a ranger thought he'd finally tranquilhed her, Tuesday morning, Bubbles stood up and bellowed at him. Sh e never yelled at them before. Rangers blame a lot of Bubbles' irritability on the crowds of up lo SO people who have stopped their cars on Laguna Canyon Roa d to gawk at the hippo\ or rather at her pond, si nce Bubbles stays submerged during the daytime. So worried aboul what might happen if Bubbles came out and· endangered the throng, the rangers announced Monday that. they might have to kill the hlf po. Lion Country officials . la e r sa1cl the remarks by rangers had been misinterpret· ed by the press. Before the rangers' self· imposed deadline came Tuesday morning, a court order was handed down by Superior Judge Robert Green, who got out or bed at 4 a.m. to sign it. The order forbids them from harming the hippo. A full hear- ing is scheduled for March 10, lf Bubbles remains loose. -.. ~ .. ....,..,. CONTINENTAL AIRLINES OC-10 RESTS ON RUNWAY AFTER CRASH ON TAKEOFF Two People Kiiied, Many Injured In Los Angeles Airport Tragedy ~~~~~~~~~~~ Frtn11 Page Al County Nixes Plan on Farm Preserve Vote CRASH AT LA AIRPORT. • • After t h e fire was ex- tinguished, the right mid-sectioa of the plane near the wing was singed a deep brown and U\e plane was leaning on its left s ide, the wing bent upward. One survivor, whose identity was not immediately known, said. 'Tm fine." Asked what happened. s he said. ''l don't know." ''It looked like a can of gasoline had been spilled and lit Plans for a straw vote to see lf with a match." said Deborah Orange County residents want to Garvey, 22, of Hawaii, a s ur-preserve the county's farm land vivor. . at a cost to the public of u~ to Speaking from Marina Mercy $100 million were scuttled Tues· Hospital near L_os Angeles day by the county Board or International Airport, Mrs. Supervisors. Garvey said the first indication When supervisors approved Homeowners Irate Fetus WUtbpSy' Backed RyTOM BARLEY Of U. CMM, ~ ..... An Orange County Coroner's officer, who testified earlier that the infant allegedly murde~ by Dr. William Baxter Waddill died or manual strangulation, went back on the witness stand Tuesday to offer new evidence for the prosecution. Dr. Robert Richards testified in his second appeararu:e before a Superior Court jury that he had returned to his laboratory lo examine tissue slides that he had nol used during his first ap· pearance in court. Richards came under heavy fire from two defense lawyers. particularly Dr. Malbour Watson, during that first session and was accused by them of sub· mitting incompetent evidence. He told the jury on that OC· casion that he confirmed bis autopsy verd ict or manual slrangulation but conced~ un- der intensive defense questioning that he could not determine the process of death that led lo str angulation. Richards testified Tuesday, however, that the new slides he brought lo court with him clear- ly disclosed damage to the fetus's windpipe, larynx and two main arteries. o f trouble was that tht! placing Proposition A on the CdM ~o~. S Soaked continental Airlines DC-10 "hit a June election ballot three weeks big bump" as it was m oving ago, they believed it would cost down the runway, and "little no more than a few hundred N J • c k . f ~~cc\~:!.~~e ceiling started ~all· :~~~~~~. "to sample the public And he claimed his new evidence amply confirms his theory that trauma from physical force and not Jack or oxygen or asphyxiation from som e medical source led to the death of the 31-week fetus. as m •ne r.ee " ' ' I h ea rd one of the But they learned last week the ear . 11 • ~ stewardesses say 'fasten your ballot exercise in measuring seatbelts tightly, put your head public opinion about buying ~rotet Page A I ZONES ••• By JOANNE REYNOLDS calls for help to the city went un· down and grab your ankle&," she farm land for. permani!nt open Of1i.o.11,'11eut.ff answeredfornearly90minutes. said. • sale might cost as much as alon, the north side of Campus Jasmine Creek in New}>Ort "Once they got out here and "Then the steward said to un· $37,000. Drive, just west of the San Diego Beach normally is nothing more opened up those drains, the fasten seatbelts and gel out. We That figure surfaced after Creek, in marshland that was than a drainage ditch that whole place drained in about 20 got out the right side ahd as l Count y Counsel Adrlan Kuyper designated for eventual de- carrles just a trickle of water. minutes," said Donna Jalbert. walked down the aisle I co(lld s aid the straw vote ballot velopment as a golf course. Early um morning, 1ed""brtM~--nmrrni Jalbert was one or-see Tiames"lllfOUgl\lnc wm<rows me"3sure:Wourtt""blrsutrtect: to the Tl\e gol( course designalion downpour that pummeled the about four homeowners whose on the left side. but they didn't same eled.ion1regulatlons as if it was swapped with another is.. hills above Corona del Mar, the home was invaded by flood come into the plane. were a bhtding initiative. acre parcel that is located along s mall stream beeaue a raging waters. "l slid down the chute and saw Kuyper said , for example. the south side of Michelson torrent of waist-high water that She stood amid the remains of that.one chute had broken. You pa m p h I e t s containing Drive, east of Carlson. noated cars and poured into a the flood chaos today and bitter-could see a trail of flames arguments for and against the Other planning amendments half-dozen homes. ly observed: "This whole thin_g behind the plane about 200 feet farm land buying plan would approved included: Today angry homeowners in would have been prevented 1f long. It looked like a can of have to be prepared. -A change from residential to the 700 block of Iris and Jasmine they'd had a man out here to gasoline had been spilled and lit And, the county counsel said. commercial of 2.2 acres in the avenues were digging out their· check tho5e drains." with a match." those arguments would have to Northwood area, at Trabuco and mud-coated garages and res-Miss Jaibert's home, like the Ms . Garvey said people "in-be printed an both EngHsh and Yale avenue&. iden ces a nd planning legal home belonging lo Lisa and Don stanlly obeyed the orders of the Spanish. -A change from Institutional • action agam st the city. · Grigsby is on the same level flight crew and there was no The $37,000 price tag up-to residential, ons acres on the · "This wouldn't have happened with the alley. Most of the rest screaming. A few people were pcrmosl an th e ir minds, south side of Irvine Center if the city had kept \he storm are larger residences that are ver y. very s tunned. I feel s upervisors beat a hasty retreat Drive. The parcel was to have drains clear.'' said one resident, built with garages level to the stunned. It wlll be u while before Tuesday and rescinded their or· been part of a Saddlebaclt Romona Host, who said she and alley and homes hung off the I really feel it." der for the ballot straw vote. Coll<'~e campus. other homeo~ers have be~ embankment thal rises up to ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ righting with the city over the street level. drains for five years. The homes and garages today But Jake Mynderse, director all bear the scar$ of l he flood of General Services for Newport -d\rty brown water marks re· Beach, said this morning there main three feel up the walls and was no problem with cloned furniture, cars and appliances storm drains. are strewn about. He said the flooding was Miss Jalbert said the city caused by the fact that the asked residents of the area to downpour produced more runoff evacuate three weeks ago dur- th an the storm drains could ing a similar storm and because handle. the drains were checked at that Jasmine Creek goes under-time. there we! no flooding. ground through two storm Standing on an inch of mud drains in the alley separating that covers her carpets, she lrls Ave nue from Jasmine s ighed : "Last time this A venue. happened, in 1974, we had lots of Early this morning, residents help from neighbors. claim, the water began risin1 in "This time J don't know where that alleyway becau11e the the help ls going to come from. I drains were clogged and the haven't got the money to fix this flooding occurred because their place up again." Most of the neighbors were in Fl"OtltPageAJ RAIN .•. tective coverint to · protect con- tents. A 43-vear-otd eucalyptus tree reportedly crashed down about 1:30 a.m. onto the second story of a home owned by Mrs. Cornella Tonkin of 594 Brooks St., Laguna Beach. Mrs-. Tonkin :, escaped unharmed. Her nelghbo,, Carl Klau, or 598 BJ'OOb St., said he hu asked city offlcialJ three times In the last aill months to trim the huae tree, which he said is on city property. Surf was choppy and hilh. breaking up to 15 feet in Newport Beach and 18 feet In Huntington Beach. Minor damage was reported to both pl~rs. All cities reeorted t1oodJni In the usual k>w-Iylns at.reels and lntersect.Jon.s. Mlnor.da.ml(• wu reported In Newport Kerpor, tfbere the Oranc• CountJ Harbor Patrol report*1 th•t about • do1u boataoroke Jooie. Dlnchkll were alao reported blown blf dock• lo Sun1et Aquatic Park. GroWMt lllPPICt ... rel*ied threateata1 tbe Bln cf,b" ln l'uU1n.,; 11'ia .iua. llw •"-on a knou;:~•C tb• lnter .. cuoo ot ffarb9ran4Bi.~.,..· the alley today, comparing damage and helping where they could. Mias Jalbert was offered a couple of places to stay and there was concern for-another neighbor who had to crawl out a window with her 10-year-old son. "There's just no reason this had to happen," commented Mrs. Host, looking at her mud covered car. Board Delays Caspers Park Erosion Suit Valencay .. dining furniture in the Lbuis XV style by Henredon .. I I renects uncommon re~ect for j the artistry of the 18th Century French ~~·I cabinetmaker, and zm understanding of , ~-....~ ~~ - modern dining needs. Finely crafted in solid ~--...-.:..;s~,}...1 ' mohogany ~nd walnut vene~r. ... '"" ~ ':~.:.rt,t.. .. '.._ • > each design is enriched by delicate . , ....... ··:. l J.>..... -· . .X., carvtng. Graceful oval and rectangular · .... ~ L tables have glowing parquetry tops and extend with leaves ... china cabinets with Interior lights ·and adjustable-·9lass shelves offer Impressive display/ storage of special possessions. See how Henredon's Valencay can add elegance to compact as well as spacious .dining environments. Chendler's [)e(oratlYe Coutse Call Marilyn~ Today for Ot'talls. --:-.. .. .. l 17 Laguna/South Coast * * * -..-.._ ----------- Afternoon N.Y. Stocks VOL. 71, NO. 60, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY~ ~ALlFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1978 T~N CENTS Gale-force Winds., Rain Batter Coast By JACKIE HYMAN Of Die o.111 rllet 5l•ll More than two inches of rain, accompanied by gale-force winds gusting up to 68 miles per hour al Newport Harbor, pelted the Orange Coast Tuesday night and early today but caused only r elatively minor damage com- pared to the storm of three weeks ago. However, falling trees and telephone poles dafll-flged several houses, as did flooding. No injuries were reported. Scattered power outages oc- curred also, along with mudslides in SUverado Canyon, Newport Beach, foothill canyons and in San Clemente. The rains also have set a record, according to John Gietzen or Orang~ County Flood Control District. He said this is the highest season-to-date rainfall in most of Orange County sjnce 1909. Rainfall for the 2•-bour period ending this morning was re- corded at 1.6 inches in Hunt- ington Beach, 2.18 inches in Costa Mesa, 2.30 inches in Laguna Niguel, 2.43 inches in Santa Ana and 3.5 inches on Santiago Peak of Saddleback Mountain. Season-to-date totals, com- pared to last year at this time, were: Huntington Beach, 19.98 Plane Skids on Takeoff inches compared to 9.47 inches; Costa Mesa, 21.31 inches com- pared to 7.13 inches: Laguna Niguel, 22.24 compared to 6.6; Santa Ana, 21.15 compared to 7.51 ; and Santiago Peak, 50.3 cd!npared to 16.3. And there's more rain on the way. The National Weather Service forecasts a 60 percent chance o( rain tonight and Thursday, with more r ain on Friday and Saturday of un- .. ICnown intensity. Orange County firemen were rechanneling a flooded creek in Silver ado Canyon today and were standing by in case or mudslides. A• mudslide on Pacific Coast Highway between Camil\O Capistrano and Doheney Park Road caused the road to be closed this morning while Back Bay Road in Newport Beach was closed by several mudslides. In addition, Bayside Drive between El Paseo and Carnation Avenue was also closed due to mud and portions of East Coast Highway in Corona del Mar were bl,anketed with mud. However, city wews were able to keep the road open. Corona del Mar Elementary School was closed due to flood- ing. ~oding was reported along the Jasmine Gulch and in a half- <See RAIN, Page A2> 't LA raJi s 2 Trustees .OK65 !<Jmters I Trustees voled unaniR>ously l Tuesday night to send dismissal , notices to 65 teachers and specialists in the Laguna Beach Unified School District. The vole cam e after a 15- minute closed-door session at district offices where names or the 65 employees were released to trustees by District Superintendent Robert Sanctm. Ttie dismissals will become a reality next (school) year should the Jarvis initiative be approved by voters and no alternative form of funding materialize to finance district programs, Sanchis told an audience of three Tuesday night. District officials say the five- school district stands to lose nearly half its revenues should Jarvis be approved by voters. The board resolution also in- cludes possible reassignment of nine district administrators next year iC the J arvls Amendment passes. · Those administrators could re- ceive additional assessments or be returned to classroom duties, Sanchis said. Business manager Clyde Lovelady is not affected by Tuesday's action because be is a classified employee and re- quires only 30 days notice before ' dismissal or reassignment. The board took dismissal action Tuesday night OD the eve of a state-mandated deadline for , notifying administrators they might be terminated next year. Districts have until March 15 to 1 notify instructors and specialists, but chose to an- 1 nounce all potential dismissals • and reassignments at the same time. Sanchls said terminating 6S 1 employees (by seniority) would tut $1.3 million· from the dis- 1 trict's $6.4 million budget. Other l cuts would come from possible 1 1 layoffs ot clusHied employees and cuts in supplies and repair pf equipment, he said. \ . I l Assault Charged VERNON CAI?) -An ap· parently disgrunUed Mobil Oil Corp. truck driver, Eddie Davenport, 38, of Los Angeles, rammed two tractors and bis I van Into company offices, caus- ing $8,000 worth of damage before being stopPe«J; authorities l said. f ~Gold Soon; I Dollar Dips ,- Conditions \! oted .SC Controls Ranch Project Control led growth and mandatory school site ded- ication itained a t04!hold in San Clem ente Tuesday when city planning commissioners plac~ One Death Caused by ' NewStonn LOS ANGELES <AP) -A wind-whipped Pacific rainstorm thundered across an already soggy Southern California today, causing one death, downing trees and power lines, closing roads, damaging houses and forcing the evacuation of at least a dozen persons. But the subtropical storm, which was expected to taper to showers Jater in the day, didn't live up to fears that it might duplicate the disastrous flooding of three weeks ago. 0 Hicials were c\osely watching the saturated res- idential canyon areas around the city, where most of last month's flooding occurred. Los Angeles police reported three hillside houses in tbe ex- ,:luslve Encino section of the San Fernando Valley were slipping into adjacent backyards. The residents were evacuated and. there were no injuries. In the Sunland-Tujunga area, hard bit last month, .. Things are running real smooth," said policeman Gary WacbUer. Precautionary evacuations were advised, however, in nearby Schwaru·can,yon, Ebey Canyon qear Pacoima and oij>er billy areas In the viclnJty as some of the 3S county fiood con- trol debris basins reached the emergency level. ronditions on their approval of a Forster Ranch use permit. The ~rmit was approved 4-0, with Commissioner James Cha se abstaining, due to possible conflict of Interest. The required phasing of de- velopment, one of lS conditioos proposed by Conua!a&ioner Cll.ft Gellatly, would requlre de· velopers o( Estrella Properties to phase building on the 1,T70 atr~ proposed for reaidenUal, commerdal and industrial de- velopment. New development would have to follow a Acbedule In order not to overburden public facilities. "The planning comit}isslon may find it necessary to delay additional development if it Is determined that a continuation would result in a degradation 1n the quality. ol public facilities within the c:ommW\lty," the con. dition specilled. Another condition, which would require the dnelo~r to dedicate two improved elementary and junior high school sites to the school district without charge, was amended at the request of Leo Fib:slmoo, Estrella Properties agent. Fitzshnon told the commission that the Capistrano Unified School District is satisfied wtth one-. not two, graded school sites, so the condition was restricted to one site. It also would requrfre the de. veloper to comply with r~t state leeblation (SBZOl), provld· ing temporary housing for new student.a the project generates. Commissioner Gellatly said the purpose ~ the school site _.dedication cacdltion was to as· 'lure that residents of the 2,900 new homes Jn the development will help pay for schools for their children. Tbe developer will pass along a portion el the expense of (See FOBSTE&, Page A2) Oellr,...........,..., •l<M,.. et.-er FlREMEN BATTLE BLAZE ON FIRESTATION ROOF Malfunctlonlng Heater Blamed, No Injuries Laguna Hills Blaze Hits Fire Station By LAURIE 'KASPER CW .. Dally ,. ... Staff FirellH!ll are repeating today what they say in fire prevention lectures -"It can happen to anyone.0 Fire caused an estimated $20,000 damage to the county · fire station at 24001 Paseo de Valencia, Liguna Hills, this morning. Capt. Bruce Turbevllle, in· formation officer, said damage was confined to tbe root and at- tic of the station. He said UW rare apparently was caused by a malfunctioning heater. Although seven firemen were sleeping in barracks below the smoking attic, there were no in· juries. Capt. Terry Carsoh and a crew of firemen discovered the blaze at about 4:30 a.m. when they returned from another call. When they drove up to the station a nd saw the s moke billowing into the dark, rainy, windy sky, one ot the fire fighters said, I hope that's steam." SC's Candidates Speak But as they pulled around to the back of the sta\ion, they caught the distinctive smell of fire-and set to-work. Turbeville said these men attacked the blaze, rousted their sleeping as· sociates.lrom the barracks and Informed tJieir headquarters. By ANNE COOPEll ~ .. -. .......... -- San Clemente voters will select three city councilmen from amooc 13 candidates Tues- day, popibl.Y creatlnt a new majority on the five-member Ci- ty Council Councilman Thomas O'Keet• and Pauick Lane are retlrtna. Tony I>lGtoYannl i. aetklnf re- 'lecUon after OH fQur·year term. M~ Doua WUldMOG and Councilman William Walter, elected .tn W781 have two years remainlna or tbelr terms. To &11llt ~. the Dal~ Pilot hai asked_ candlclates nve ques ions. The candida~· responses, ac· companied by brief profiles. are prea~nted in two parts. Six candidates are presented today; seven eandldatea were present· ed OD TuetQ,y • . Clla .... MUdell, 47, lives at 102 P8.lll0 clel Cristobal with bi1 lfife •. Sue, Ull Ul.ltrtw<>-feaf.Otd dau1bter. A UC Rlverslde araduate, Mitchell worked 10 )'Uri for the State of Call'°:~L l~ 1178 be re1l,ned as an admlnlltrator !.or the Califomla Department. of RehabllitaUon for Riverside and Imperial Counties. He now operates an in· s urance bus iness In San Clemente, where he has lived for nine years. Reward Mullett, 50, of 4117 Calle Blenveotdo, has lived, in San Clemente 25 )'ears. He and his wife, M1t1rlel, have four dau1bter1, the youngest a teen•••· llutbelt retired f'rom tbe U.S. M_.me Corps ln 196$, .atter aer\'lni as a State Departbl• fonlp service of· fleer. He curreoUy operates his .. <8" ~£, Pa1e AS) Although the station i s equipped with smoke detectors, they issued no ~arning to the firemen. Turbeville said this was bCML~~ smoke was be-ing su~.~ugb the top of the building. About 40 fire fighters on si~ etglnea, two trucks and one p ramedic unit foueht the J bborn ,.,. u "1inds whipped about at 40 miles an hour and heavy rain continued. Turbevllle said It took • little more than an hour to brhlg the fire under control. AJthou~ celUng in a 1hower and r rC>Qm bad to be pulled down. be 11ld, there was no bum damage below the cellinJl UM. The fire officer utd the atatlon b "fully operational.'' l'lastic tarps were thro•~ over the charred roof this mornlna. Flre In1pec:t.or Orea Chambers said the men In tbe 1taUon ructed the same way u anyone who dlsC<>"Vered a ftt'e 1.n -hlthome. <See FIU, Pqe Al) - 25 Hurt In Fiery .t\.ccident LOS ANGELES ,(AP) -A Continental Airline DC -10 jetliner crashed and burned at Los Ange les International Airport today, killing at least two • people during an aborted takeoff in a rainstorm. Airport spokeswoman Virginia Black said there were two known dead. She didn't know who they were. .. At least 25 people were ho spitalized. An airport spokesman said "There are lots of survivors." Al least 10 ambulances were called to the • scene and' beian rusbjng burn victlms to a nearby hospital. The plane, flight 603 to Honolulu with at least 193 people aboard, was taking off from the west, a direction used only dur- ing storms when the wind goes in the opposite direction. Two 181'1ding wheel tires burst and a landing gear collapsed.~ said Continental spokesman Robert Sterling. Witnesses said the plane tipped over amid sparks and flames as the pilot tried to abort the takeoff and turn off the runway. Dick Lombardi, who drove by the airport shortly after the crash s aid lbe plane's left fuselage was engulfed io names. ..People were jumping .>ut of · the right side and out the bac~ '' Lorn barcli said. "After a couple or minutes some fire engines arrived and started pouring water or something on the flames. About three minutes later there was some kind or explosion." The aircraft never got off the ground. A spokesman for Continental said the pilot had aborted his takeoff because of a blown tire which caused the landing gear to collapse. When he tried to turn left off the runway, the plane tipped over and the left wing caught fire. After the fire was ex· tinguished, the right mid-section of the plane near the wing was singed a deep brown and the plane was leaning on its left side, the wing.bent upward. One aurvtvor, whose identity was not immediat~ly known, said, ''I'm fine." Coast th er Chance of in incn!as· tng to 60 perc t late tonight and Thursday Lows tonight in...SOs. High~ Thursday 60 to '5. INSIDE TODAY T11• farnJliar Hsmtiagton Beach plitr drmos . att...uon but. ollo ""' Met! ot u. stOTJ1, photo, DI. la•ex AtY-"""-A1 4MW-. C1t '-llll....,. M .... M tr.=. "1t ~I, , AJ .. ~ "21; ·:: ~~-ii --~~ ~~ ;-• A• ·~,·-... ...... ., ........ ~,, ~ .... .. ;::-... ~·''": ~~.-Ot .., ..... ·----'~°' ......... Q\ .·12 DAIL y PILOT use Border Region Hard Hit SAN DIEGO (AP> -Gale· force winds swept the southwest corner of California early today as one-half to an Inch or ram fell, swamping rural roads. ln the central mountains of San Diego County. the new storm dropped more lhao two inches of rain. The U.S. Wj!ather Service said there was an unofficial clocking or wind at 84 mph in the Lake Murray area near the northwest edge or San Diego. Trees were knocked down in s cattered areas. Power outages also were re- ported, schools in J amul were closed , and a motorist was trappe d t empora rily by a mudslide in Mi ssion Valley whe r e a ccess r oads were flooded. The sandbags which Fallbrook residenLc; used in a similar wind and rainstorm , two weeks ago wer(' supplemented by others provided by Marines from Camp P e ndleton. Beca use of high stream s, many resid e nts sandbagged doorways. A Coetst Guard helicopter pilot airlifted five Marines to the Naval Regional Medical Center at Camp Pendleton after almost 3 0 m e n were stranded t<'mporarily by flooding. At the time, the Marines were takinl( part 1n maneuvers at Red Be ach about da y break. A military truck carrier over · turned, injuring one man s Ught· ly. s pokesmen said. -. None or the airlined Marines was repqrted badly hurt. Later, the s ame helicopter pilot rescued a man from a tree which. .he nad c limbed in FallbroolC lo flee a swollen river The wind s wept several private boats orr their moorings in San Diego and other coastal inlets. Two motorists escaped serious injury when their car pl4flied over an embankment· into the San Diego Ri ver at the west end of Interstate 8 in San Diego. Dally P'llet Meff ....... ROBERT EAKIN'S POTTERY SMASHED BY W(NO, RAIN Winter Storm Disrupts Laguna Beach's Winter Festlval From Page J\ J RAIN DAMAGE •.. dozen waterfront homes on Bayside Drive. Parts of Laguna Canyon Road also flooded but the road re· mained open. Winds blew about 200 f ei!t. of roof off a home al 600 Vista Lane early today. sending the un· identified occupants scurrying for cover. Firemen put up a pro- tective covering to protect con- tents. A 43·vear-old eucalyptus tree reportedJy crashed down about 1 :30 a.m. onto the second story o f a home owned by Mrs. E'ro• Po~ AJ Cornelia Tonkin of 594 Brooks St., Laguna Beach. Mrs. Tonkin escaped unharmed. Her neighbor, Carl Klass, of 598 Brooks St., said be has asked city officials three times in the las t six months to trim lhe huge tree. which he said is on city property. Surf was choppy and high, breaking up to 15 feet in Newport Beach and 18 feet In Huntington Beach. Mino r damage was reported to both piers. SAN CLEMENTE CANDIDATES SPEAK. • • own water consulting firm in San Clemente. For the past two years, he has been president of the San Clemente Homeowners Association. Albert hplk, SS, Uvea at t1S Calle Dominguez with bis wUe, Pamela, and their two children. A graduate of Perin State University, with a degree in administrative justice, Popik served nine years with the U.S. Marine Corps and worked six years for lhe Secret Service. Since 1975 he has operated a SaD Clemente service station. He hM lived in the city 15 years. ltobert Chester Rusln, 40, lives at 247 Ave. del Mar with his two son~. A graduate ot the Illinois Institute of Technology, Rusin worked for a Chicago printing firm until recently, when he left. the company to work full time organizing an alternative political party, called the Resurrection Party. He has li~ed in San Clemente just ove.! a year. Myrtis Wagaer, 56, lives at 3910 Calle Andalusia with her husband, Bill. The Wagners have a grown son. They own a clock manufacturing buslness with headquarters in San Juan Capistrano, where Mrs. Wagner has worked as designer, salesman and manager. She bas lived in San Clemente four years. Allan Walleck, SI, bas two grown children and baa llved in San Clemff\to 14 years. He ls a general contractor and hu been on the dty planntn1 comnillli.oo since May. After stud.ytbc build· ing tecbnolo«Y at Purdue University, Wulfect served In the U.S. Navy. He volunteered OttANOI COAST UM: DA!LY PILOT his services as contractor to the South Coast Boys Club for the club's new gym, which was com· pleted last fall ••• If the Jarvis initiative passes in June. where would you cut the city budget? -Mitchell: No cuts In police, fire and building code enforcement. Otherwise, I'd look to develop revenue from other sources and shin costs where possible. -Mubett: Eliminatine pier· bowl redevelopment would save millions of dollars. I'd also cut consultants' and attorneys' fees. With proper manage ment, I don't believe passage of the in- iliati ve need affect city services. -Popik: Any c uts would follow t.J\orough, serious study. I 'd also look for dternate sources of city revenue. -Rmin: By eliminating Il- logical costs in government, like s uperfluous paper shuffling. I don't want anyone to lose bis job because of the initiative. -Waper: Police and fire are essential services and should not be cuL I'd cut out consultants and delay the new library. Beyond that. I'd require a de- partmental review. -Wallffk: You'd have to dis- tribute lhe cuts, but I wouldn•t cut public safety. The cuts only amount to 11 percent. I think I could halldle that. ••• Do tlO"' think present city con- trols on development a., 1ufftoient to assure city rervices wiU keep pace with population growth as Sa.n Clemente's open ranch land u built out? -atltdlell: No. LOok at the proble01s people are having already, wlth1their houses allp· P1nl on th& foundations and' with Inadequate sewers. -M.abett: No, lhl1 1B at the base of the t' million sewer bond i11ue. With lhe variance• we preaen'1Y allow, tbe clty or· ' dlnance1 provide cltJ c)fficlals wtth an ~able levera1e. -,._.: Gro*lb should be. controllect to •H\are dty eervie• bep pace. . -.... : I doO't know that .. w• tQY mClN i*JPle ta ~ q*"4ot. u.+r tho p~t drcumltw.. -Waper; Ablolutely not. We need better coat.roll to aJaun developm,.,t doean•t overload d'7HnicM. -w•.n:Y•. proved it, I wouldn't object. But I'd prefer to see a park and landscaped parking. -Mushett: No. We should im- prove and upgrade the com· mercial operations there now . rather than condemn private property for private profit. We could have a really beautiful park. -Popik: No. I'm highly op- posed. -Rosia: I'd like to see a moratorium until we study the whole thing. -Wagner: Nope. -Walleck. l>'d like to come up with my own plan for mixed commercial, residential and park use, kei!ping the character of the bowl area. ••• Should the City Council de· velop incentives or restrictions which would encourage low or moderately pnced housing in San Clemente? -Mitchell : I think speculators make it impossible. This is such a great place to live -it shouldn't be turned lnto an ~anthill. We shouldn't allow any more developers to build and run. -Mushett: We ~ou1d have moderately priced housing by updating our building code in compliance with the city's General Plan. -Popik: Yes . -Raaln: Yes. the City Council should develop in· centives, using an intellectual, creative approach. -Wagner: I'd like to see it, but it will be very difficult lo im· plement be<: a use or the l:)igb toils or construction and land. -· W.itect: This la a very complex issue. It's hyPoCritical to let people think we could do something when we can't. San Clemente already bas some of the lowest priced housing in Orange County. ••• f'ro• Page Al FORSTER. • acbool site dedication to each new home buyer, he said. The alternative would be to have the expense of the site purchase dis· tribution among all district tax- payers. Other conditions would limit densM.)' and commercial use and assure the project meets city or- dinances. Fitzsimon. representing the developer, said today he is not satisfied with the conditions. but will have no comment until he has had time to study them. The proposed Forster Ranch development is loSJlted just in· land or the San Diego Freeway, south of the Sborecliffs de· velopment. E'ro• Page AJ FIRE ... It 's " kind of scary, .. ~e ad milted. He added, "Most people don't thin k il·s going to happen to th4if!l a;id we're the same way." T~eville said fires in fire stations arc not uncommon. He said they read about similiar OC· currences in their journals every. year. He said the only other such fire he remembers in the county was in 1965 when a lumber yard burned and caught the adjacent Cypress fire stalJon on fire. Commercial I.nres Eyed By San Juan San Ju a n Capistrano's Co mm e r c ial /Industrial Incentives Committee will make recommendations to councilmen tonight regarding a cit}'...e_ro· gram to encourage businesses to locate in the Mission City. The committee was formed la!ll year to examine ways .in which San Juan CQuld encourage business de velopment in the city's zoned commercial and in· dustrial areas. Councilmen will also hear rec- 0 mm end at 1 on s from the Downtown Plaza and Parking Study Steering Committee re· garding the consultant's Phase I report. The committee also will rec· ommend -whether to continue the three-phase s tudy o r do.wntown proble m s and potential solutions. The meeting will begin at 7 p.m . in counci l chambers, 32400 Paseo Adelanto. Valencay ... • dining furniture in the Louis XV style by Henredon ... Comacllman Sag• Jarvis ·Solution 'Up to Cities' By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. o.11" ...... IUft Councilman Jack McDowell came away from a two-day con- ference in Sacramento with the feeling Laguna Beach and other Cali(orftia cities are on their own as far as solvin& problems relat· ed to the Jarvis tax initiative. •·1 came away with the reeUn~ that it's up to us to aolve our problems," McDowell s aid. Mc Dowell and City Manager Al Thea I ret u rne.d from Sacramento this week after at· tending a conference on proper- ty tax reform and local gov- crn ment. The two-(fay confab was s ponsored by the County S upe rviso rs Ass ociation of Ca lifornia, The League of Ca lifornia C ities and the California T ax Reform As- sociation. McDowell said the guest speaker list read like a Who's Who in state politics, with more than 500 legislatod, -supervisors and city council members al· tending the conference. "It was an analysis or the Jarvis problem and a picture of what the state legislators po sition is at the state legislators position is at the moment reizard1ng property tax relief." McDowell said. The councilman said the one thing legislators seem to be pinning their hopes on is Sen. Peter Behr of Marin County and Rapists Grab Woman Near Irvine Eatery A 24·year-old. North Hollywood saleswoman was dragged from her car outside Gulliver's restaurant in Irvine Tuesday, thrown into the back of a van and raped by two m en, police said. The woman. who reported the crime to Los Angeles-.police, said she had jl,ISl finished dinner • with friends and was getting into her car when she was grabbed. One of the men covered her eyes with his hand. She said the me.n, who spoke Spanish, were laughing as they raped her in turn. She was tossed from the back of the van lo the ground and the men drove away fast , she re· • ported. his tax reform bill which would provide reUc!torenters as well as property owners. "But his bill kee ps being blocked and chopped to pieces." Mc Dowell said. ''I got the feel- ing the legislature might not ever gel together on any mean- ing f u I properly tax relief measure.'' He said Senator Behr admit- ted seeing some good in the Jarvis initiative. "Behr says Jarvis picked up' two -b y-four and hit the· legislature. city and county gov- ernments m the head and said, 'You better listen to the tax-payer',·· McDowell said. "I assume we're going to have tax re-form in one form or another that will cut lhe city's income s ubs tantlally," the councilman said. "We've got l-0 sit down as a council and find legitimate ways to finance city operations without taking it from the taxpayers. "That's our assignment, the way I read the legislators." Rangers Call Tuv-day Truce; Bubb/,es ResiS By PIUUP ROSM.UUN OfU. O.Uy ...... Sa.ff Exhausted Lion Country Safari rangers are waiting out the first day of a 48·hour ~ce they unilaterally called with Bubbles the p e ripate tic hippopotamus. Bubbles. the only known hippo protected against harm by a superi(>r court order, and also the only known hippo to appear on a Walter Cronkite news broadcast. slipped from her pond Tuesday· to feed on oats, h ay and grass set out by the rangers themselves. For the first time in njne days, s ince her escape from Lion Country Feb. 20, the hippo was unmolested in her nightly forage from a pond off Laguna Canyon Road. "We're not going to attempt anything for the next 48 hours," Lion Country publicis t Jo Scheller said Tuesday. "We 're going to give her some rest and take food out there. reflects uncommon respect for I the artistry of the 18lh Century French ..! modem dining needs. Finely crafted In solM • .,.~,..:i~ ~ ,. cabinetmaker, and an understanding of ~:--: ~.ag~ mahogany and walnut veneer, ..... ~~ r.-~ _...,-. . -- each design ls enriched by delicate ... ~·,.;~ .~ ~,.... ·# .-~~: carving. Graceful oval and rectangular · •·· ~ ~ .. " ·--. ...__ ~· . ' Ullbles have glowing parquetry tops and extend - with 1eaves ... china cabinets with interior lights and adjustable glass shelves offer Impressive dlsplay/ storage of special possessions. See how Henredon's Valencay can odd elegance to compact as well as spado1.is dJning environments. • ,. t.,, , ,,,, .. Pnfe11looal tNator DalGft ~ OHll"on Comlonable p .... ~~ -• • • "')! • 1514 rfORllt MAI.rt SANTA NIA· 541"439l ' ........ ... . "'--· . l CALIFORNIA Opinion Vnlo .-..ed Poll Studies Jarvis I ssue ~ Civic Functi ons Eureka All-male. Club To OK Women Guests SACRAMENTO CAP)·-Female pests have won the right to enter an aJl·male club in Eureka for any busi· ness, civic or political function, the state attorney general's omce says. The office reported Tuesday that an out-of-court settlement between the attorney general's offi ce and the JDgo m ar Club, which uses the fam ou s Vict orian·st y le Carson Mansion, was appr oved by the Humboldt County Superior Court. Attorney General E velle Younger filed the suit in J.9'74, asking the court to block the discrimination in guest poHcy. That policy had pr:ohibited women from entering the c lub except on Sundays. Four Suspect s Jailed , Face Robbery Charge SAN DIEGO (AP) -Four robbery suspects are in jail after a high-speed chase on the Coronado Bay Bridge with a police detective recently re- instated after a 30-day suspension for off·duty Pfbllc drUQkenness, officials say. Now Detective Louis Rodriguez, who re turned to duty Feb. 18, may be in for a medal, Police Chief Bill Kolender said Tuesday. · llODRJGUEZ spotted what looked like an armed robbecy at Galloway's Pharmacy and gave chase, calling for help on his police radio, a de- partment spokesman said. The sus-pects fired two shots at Rodriguez as they weaved up the bridee. About two dozen officers met the neelng car at the San Diego end of the long carving structure and a unlfonn«I policeman fired 1lx shots at Ute nhlc1e before it swerved out of 'tontroL ALL POUll 1uspects were arrested at gunpoint. · Wlnnonla Alfred, 19, and William Bennett, 20, of Pomona, and Willard Yarrow,~ and Jobnny Roblnson, 22, of Los Angeles, were booted into County Jail for investigation of armed robber)', assault with a deadly weapon and assault with intent to kill, police aa1d. ( 0 Sl'ATE J LOS ANGEL~ (AP> -Six reput- ed organized crime figures have been indicted on federal conspiracy and racketeering counts that include the murder of Frank "The Bomp" Bompensiero, a mobster wbo turned informant . Named in Tuesday's six·count in· dictment were Dominick Phillip BrooMter, 63; Samuel Orlando Sciortino, 58; Louis Tom Dugna , 57; Mic hae l Riuile llo, 50; Jac k LoCicero, 6S, and Thomas Ric lardi, 45. Statdesert S upport LOS ANGELES (AP) An amended committee report that s upports exemption of the con- troversial SW\desert. nuclear power plant from stale nuclear safeguard laws bas been approved by the City Council. The minority report of the council's Slate, County and Federal Affairs Committee was amended to permit the council to withdraw lts support lf legislation is introduced that would speed development of alternative energy sources to satisfy city need&. Toll Cid Adled SAN RAFAEL (AP ) -San Francisco would open its Golden Gate Bridge to commuters for just 50 cents if Marin County Supervisors win their attempt to temporarily slash the span's toll in half. The board Tuesday unanimously asked for a 50 cent reduction i1' the $1 toll to reimburse bridge cr063ers for what a judge bas deemed an illegal increase. LA M r 'Wont' LOS ANGELES CAP} -Los Angeles had the wont air quality of a~y in the nation in 1975, the Pre s ident 's Council on Environmental Quality aaid Tues- day. The White House group baaed its fmdlngs on three-year-old stailatics because they were the most r~ent available, the Los Anteles Times re- 'ported. • Wednesday, Match\, 1978 CAIL y PILOT AS •-'••········· Autlaar BopeftlJ State Panel OKs Tax Bill .. • • • • • • ' :1 Call 642-5678. Put • few word• to work for ou. Double your·.mo~ for tomorrow~ goals. With the cost ota oollege education dou~ling over the past ten years, what will it cost for your children? Whatever the amount. San Diego Federal can help you attain it. Yes. the interest your savings earn at San Diego Federal can doublt your initial deposi t in as little as nine years t The chart shows how fast savings double in various San Diego Federal savings aooounts. So, select the combination of aoeounu that best fits Your needs: a Cutificard• account for longer-term goals, •• and a pass- book or Passcard• acrount that allows you lo add and withdraw savings at your convenience. Open your u.fety·imured aavin~ accounts with the double- your-monq people at San Diego Federal Saving • • • where there'a interest in your fbture. IOll[Y MMIAt 111111 •ACCDnT •.-r DOllLD• . ., -d~m1 _.. ••'-"' ws:-""F .... ftllt ...10Y91S Ill C1I • 111 .,... 7W.'I ·ru:-51,080'° 8.06~ sz111• ,,... . ..... 1Vi'* ·~::r 't,on• 7.79'1 '2,111° 1•~ ...... 6' .. w-.=-'1,()6911 6,98S '1,963" 11,.. ...... 6*'· •·ru:r 11,06721 6.721 s1,91&• u,... SH ..... ,.. •1,osgia 5.9~ s1m• .... ... u,... . .... 5'i4S ~-i.-SJ,()539' ~ SJ,69QJ' t •--::r.:· ...... --............ ...J, ___ ...,,. .. _,... 1. ·-_ ............... --...... ---..- ....... ____ _ i. .............. --.... -.................... ,, ...... .... ~ ............. -............. _ ....... _ .... .................... ltem""6r. ~ dqolllerl 61 tAI l Otft of IM ,,_luam/rt#n IM lit. t lanC'-nente (Opening Fa\I, 1978) Newport 8Mch (Opening Surnmer, 1878) :: I ~ . t ., 1 • 1 .48 use Orange Coast Dally Pilot Editorial ~~~ ..................................... Ro•~•rt·N···W·eed .. /Pu .. bl.lsM .. r .. T·he>ma--·S·K·M·v·ll/·E·dl .. tor ~ :u . .:;;, Wedneeday, Mwch 1, 1978 Barba;a Krelblch/Edltorlal P-oe Editor .( · flaguna Council ~Recommendations Laguna Beach voters will go to the poJls March 7 to Teet three council members. The Daily Pilot, In an at· ~empt to help Lagunans with these choices, has covered 1111 Jlumerous candidates' forums and presented interviews ¥"With the nine hopefuls. ~ After careful consideration and much debate. we :. ·recommend: ~ -Howard Dawson \~, -Diana Dike ~ -Wayne Baglin .< Dawson, 59, has the' financial savvy to read a budget. '.t lle is an 18-year Laguna resident and a financial adviser. : Mrs. Dike, a lO·year Lagunan, has experience on the :~.city's design and review board and is currently chairman ;: of the plaqning com mission. She is well versed on zoning ::.matters, la~d use and the geperal plan. <~ Candidate Baglin caus~d concern with his early campaign recommendation that Sycamore Hills be de· 'annexed, but appears .to have done f encemending on that position. He would be his own man on the City Council and has gained useful experience serving on the Laguna Beach County Water District Board. These three candidates, combined with the remain· ing two councilmen, should present a balanced city council for Laguna B~ach. San Juan Choice San Juan Capistrano voters next Tuesday will select three cily council members from a field of 10 candidates. That could mean a new city council majority. After interviewing the 10 candidates. weighing their backgrounds and political promise, and considering their potential contributions of working with incumbents, the Daily Pilot recommends: -James Thorpe, a Saddleback College math pro· fessor. -John Sweeney, a n incumbent and college administrator . ' -Gary Hausdorfer, a local business executive. Each of these three has demonstrated his ability lo work together for the good of San Juan residents through other civic activities. Two of them have council experience; Sweeney is presently serving and Thorpe served from 1970 to 1974. ' Hausdorfer has served on the city's traffic commission and is currently a city planning commissioner. • The Daily Pilot also recommend~ the following vote on l wo ballot measures facing city voters: -Noon Proposition A, councilmanic districts. yes on Proposition B, repeal of the agricultural preserve. ~ ProposiNon A, if approved, would only divide the city into factions and reduce the amount of voter influence on .. the city council. Under its plan, residents would only be ·· allowed to vote once every four years for a single councilman. · We do, however, encourage a Yes vote on Proposition B. While we support the concept of agricultural pres- ervation, we have some grave misgivings about the pres- ent city program·. Basically, there is no provision under : the present program to purchase the lan-ds the city has designated as permanent agriculture. : We believe city purchase of lands is a necessary ' element of any fair and worthwhile preservation plan. . • .. ... • ' .. .. . San Cle01ente Ballot San Clemenie voters have a chance Tuesday to elect a new City Codhcil majority. They will fill three of the council's five seats from among 13 candidates. The Daily Pilot, in an attempt to help voters make their choices, has covered four San Clemente candidates forums and talked with candidates individually. We recommend: -Charles Mitchell, who has the imagination and maturity to lead the city in its inevitable transition from , town to city. -Myrtis Wagner, whose election would assure c lose scrutiny of the city's ranch land development. -Tony DiGiovanni, incumbent, who has shown con· cern for San Clemente's young and elderly, as well as for its prosperity. On other San Clemente ballot measures we ~~mm~d: ' -Yes on paramedic service for San Clemente. -Yes on the S4.2 million sewer revenue bond issue. -No on required dedication of park land by formula in San Clemente. • • · Op1nion_s expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other v1Aws expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/ Acronyms I ByL.M.BOYD Q. "What's the difference between radar and sonar?" A. Radar, an acronym of .. Radfo Detect1ng and Rang. ing," uses radio waves in the air. Sonar, an acronym or "Sound Navigation Rang- ing," uses sound waves un- derwater. Get i~ right, pleese: The Smiths outnumber the Johnsons in this country by at least half a million. Dear Gloqmy ~U8 M attb may come in . like a lion, and let's Jlope It does do•n LaJUltl 'Hl1ll •'1 -not like a blppopat.amus. J.C.V. C.IMl'IY ow ,..,..... ,,. W41o ="" ..... ,. ....... ,. ..c. .,..., .. """" .. ... .a.'1::,'1:it"' ..... . In the 1947 motion picture "Caesar and Cleopalra," it W{lS not enough in one scene simply to show the moonlit ,sky behind the Sphinx. The technical advisors insisted on accuracy. So the set was de- signed wherein the hundreds of visible stars were in exact· ly the same heavenly positions of the Ume -the year4SB.C. Not 'only do third basemen tend to live longer than other mljor leaaue players, but th4)y pl•Y lon8er fenttally tb an do othe.r m aJor lu1aen, l'm uow &old.. Nicholas Von Hoffman Haldeman: Smart But Narrow Several years ago, 1 spent two d.ay.s io the Be-verl}hWilshtre Hotel in Los Angeles talking to Bob Haldeman.oabout collaboral· ing with him on his as-then un· written book. The pubUsber who had brought me ouf there couldn't get together with Haldeman on money. Th~ difficulty was that while Haldeman had a useful and lm· portan{ story to tell about Richard Nix· on, it wasn't a sensational or a sexy one so that without a great deal of mis leading hype, it would never earn back the huge _tas h advances Haldeman wanted. Evidently he got the big buck from The New York Times, which has gone on to make the big buck back by giving us a yet bigger hype. However, if H.R. Haldeman knows something about Watergate we didn't already know, he didn't pul it in his book. After my two days with Haldeman, I was convinced that President Nixon's major domo just doesn't know very much about W.atergate. Evidently, back in the early months of 1972, the principal actors in the drama h ad no earthly idea that they w ere involved in Watergate. Legally, many of them ended up in conspiracy to obstruct justice, but that's a very different thing from taking part in a classical plot. NO GROUP OF plotters came together in the midnight hour and convenanted lo take actions 'in concert which they un· derstood would destroy them if e\•er discovered. The evidence · all points lo a series of discreet, ad hoc acts, many of them done thou ghUessly. After the fact, all these acts committed by a large as- sortment of different. people, many or whom had never met each other, were gathered up and put in one container, one mental construct called Watergate. Mailbox • It is a gap in perception b ei. w e en t h e W a t er g-a t e perpetrators and the Watergate prosecutors, jur~l and journalistic, which may account for the lrouble Nixon, Haldeman and some others have had in making sutriciently satisfying confessions. They're not quite sure what it ls they are to con- fess to. THE HALDEMAN I met at the Beverly-Wilshire was not a man well equipped to dope out the meanings of what he had done and had done to him. lie has, or he had. charm and likeability, 'but a r emarkably shallow background in history. literature, palitical philosophy or any other area of study which might have provided him with some guide or measure. He gave the impression or be· ing a smart man, and an ethical one, but so ignorant, so without knowledge that he was without prudence or judgment. One of the things he insisted on in our conversation was his ~e lf-def1nit1on as a "non· political" person. someone who l'1>11<·erned himself with what he called .. process ·• R~· way of ii· lu:.tration he rccc.illcd the dis· cuss ions bet ween Nixon, l{is&· inger and others about the de· c1sion to recommence bombing Hanoi. He recalled himself being indifferent as to which way the decision went but impatient they make It so he could start the engine or government to carry it out. As Haldeman saw himself. once he had made his act of faith in the Republican Party, in a Richard Nixon or a John Connat· ly-he is a great admirer of Nix· on's old secr etary of the Treasury -once he bad made his inner personal commitment, he was absolved from doing any thinking about th e issue:. himself. A Nixon or a Connally were great "conservatives" and that was all he needed to know. HE SEEMED to have been imprinted with conservatism at an early age, the way a baby duck can be imprinted with the idea that a three-ton elephant is its mother and follow it every- where. At some early point, most likely in his college years. the imprinting took place. He stopped asking questions and followed his elephant right to the jail house door. A man who can play a major role in election a ft er election. who can be the president of the United States' alter ego and still think of himself as non·politicaJ 1s a man who would have no difficulty playing a major role in the Watergate drama without knowing it. Which is not to say Haldeman is stupid. He is a smart man but a narrtfw one and one so without intellec tual curiosity it never occurred to him to look around him and see. where he was. ' Haldeman is a tou gh man too, hut no tougher than ti1s old bo:-.)t. Al one paint he !-iaid he'd recent- ly talked to Nixon, who had asked how Haldeman was going t o vole in an up com in g California clc°ction . Haldeman said he replied by re~1nding the exile of San Clemente, "I'm a t'onvicled felon, in case you·,·e forgotten, and we can't vote." After that; he reported, there was a pause on the other end of the line and then Nixon said, .. Well . in that case I 'll vote twice." Thi~ Time the Taxpayer Is the Boss To the Editor: ll is amusing lo hear the laments of the. politicians and bureaucrats concerning the Jarvis-Gann amendment. Forecasts of the consequences of its passage encompass every eventuality but Armageddon. Where things are run with at least a modicum or efficiency. as in business. when the chief kicks the budget proposal back for review Uhal means re· duction), one goes lo work to pare expenses here and to do without there. One may groan a littl{, but the job is done. IN TIOS case, the boss, the taxpayer, is kicking the budget back for review. Between now and referendum time, there are ample hours and splendid op· portunities to review and reduce budgets. tr the politicos do this and come up with results, I 'll help vote the amendment down. If not, I'll vote for the ·amendment. I would suggest others do the sam e. J .W. REID "l'n'Oll 8 To the Editor: For the record I like open space, believe in controll~ growth for San Juan Capistrano and I !!,$Jieve that Cree enterprise has made our country great. I also believe ln the Golden Rule -Do unto others ~ you would want them to do to you. San Juan Caplslrano lost its image of the "unique small village-like atmosphere" when the present newcomers invaded our town and absorbe<l our ''agricultural land" purchastni our land tor their homes tod,a,y. The San Juan Civic As· soelaUon evidently wanu l\O "Plit of the Golden Rule but stron,ty appeals to pre.Judtcea to 1et vota to oppose Propo.lt.lon B. repeated!)' alludlog to outalden (whlob \bey were only reeetly) n belns unholy 1ubd1Yfdwn,, bull~en, ~ aa the CJG1t on• advoc:a~g ~tfon B. acres into an unprofitable agricultural preser ve"! ls this freeze necessary? .Let us hoPe that the voters can correct lh1s by·voting yes on Propasition B C.C. McCAllY •No, an B To the Editor: What are we talking about with San Juan Capislrano's agriculture preservation pro- gram" First. on properly rights. we're not talking about takin~ away property rights. We're talking about zoning! Zoning restricts everyone's property rights. As a hom eowner or tenant you can't open a pizza s hop in your garage. Your neighbor can't raise horses in his front yard. The guy down the street can't tear down his hou!>e and put up a l2·unit apartment. Why '! Because. of zoniog restrictions. On compensation, we ·re not talkit1g about laking properly. We're talking again about zon· ing property so it's used in the future for what its now being used for -for farming! These lands have be.en farmed for over 50 years. They are productive, and profitable, and with the city's agricuUture preserve pro- gram. can be much more profita_ble. THE FARMERS have said publicly time after time that they want to stay in farming, and that they want their proper· ty taxes reduced to reflect farm· Ing value, not development value of their land. Then why are they opposed to the city' agriculture preserve which will help them achieve this tax re· ductlon7 . Flrst. they are like everyone ets·e, they don't welcome restrictions. Second, developers are backing farmers wholeheartedly and 0JlferJn4 much rooral and flnat\cla~ sl.lpport ln order to s" op4 -postUon to 1he city's agrlcwture preaerve proaram. To achieve the benefit of keep. ing those producUve farmlands zoned for farmlng you must vole DO"On 8 . LEN DYSlNOER ltd arcte ,, .. TQ the Edit.or: , Tuelday Mai;ch 7, ft an lm· PQrlant date. All voten ll•mc 1lil Capistrano t1Dilled School l)b.. lrlct abou.ld mark that date wlth a Ills red drcl• OG tbo f1mU1 calendar. A .critical bond election will be put before the voters for consideration and the Castille School PTA urges a yes vote. The housing demands of the immediate future make a vote in favor or the bonds the on· ly logical choice. CONSIDER: 1. The tax rate will not be raised as s tate law will not permit any greater tax rate than currently applies 2. When thl' bonds are ap· provt•d the total amount cannot and will not be used unless the growth contmucs. 3. Should the bonds be defeat· ed the need for im m e'diate action will still exist, pl}rticular· ly in Mission VieJo. Other less desirable choices will have to be made. <ic. tents, double sessions, etc.) With the projected arrival of 8,000 new children who will be in our schools within the next five years. W<' really have only one <.•hoice; vole yes for school bonds on March 7. KAREN LIMBAUGH, President Castille PTA Executive Board Bufne•• Concern To the Editor: Many people have asked me why the president of one of the largest industrial businesses in the area has taken a strong pers onal position on the candidates and issues in the up· coming election in San Juan Capistrano. The answer is simple and . straightforward. We moved our plant to San Juan Capistrano from Pasadena l our years ago to avoid the urban congestion. smog, crowded schools and tramc prob- lems in that area. We were at· trac~ to the small town rural atmosphere an4 the pleasant un· crowded environment in San Juan Capistrano. • IF TRE dovelopment..ortental candidates become· thl! mQjority on the city council. I'm afraid all the re:iildenta of San Juan wiU t>e raced with the problems we left behind us in Pasadena four )'OU~ 8'0. We ate fort\lnato that we have o •table altcrnaUvo. Tho San Juan Clvlc A88ocJation hu lakcn a strong sl•nd on the 'candidate• and luues and aupport1 the arowt.b manapment ordinance. I rre au of Ula concemcd ,... ldenta ~at want to teee Sao Juan out olthet>ath ot rampant • uar 1t.tlcttd.. cfovclopmenl to ' s upport the recommendations of the San Juan Civic Association with their votes on March 7 . JOHN T. SAUNDERS Treasurer, San Juan Civic Association •Fa~t•' Deplored To the Editor· Todtiy's m<11l hrou,::ht me a newsletter entitled ··!<·acts."' ob- viously printed and dispersed to cliscrcd1l t\\-O of Laguna·s city councilwomen. one of whom is up for re-eled1on on March 7. As a 20·vear resident and a dose follo"•er of our city council activities. I cleplore receiving character assassinations ,in the mail, especially as I believe both of these women arc performing their civic duties in an outstanding manner. I HAVE listened to all of the candidate hopefuls for the c1lv council and I shurtdcr to think what could happen to our \illage atmosphere should. and I quote from "Facts." the ··Magpies" <our councilwomen) be replaced by "Gentlemen." If these genUemen disdain our preference for a smaJl town im· ~ge, why do they not move on to the fasL-growing cities in Orange County where they, as ci- ty councilmen, would have more people and larger coffers with which to enact their grandiose schemes? MARY 0 . MOORE Abo 0,..,.CH To the Editor: I read your Feb. 22 Mailbox and one letter reaJly got me! I. too, ttm thoroughly disgust,. ed with the trashy mag•zin• displayed in the smwl market.a and some drug stores for children to look at so easily. l never buy fro1nt a store when I see adult magaslnct wblh kids can rnd tbe:m, but wbal ~lat can be done •1*1t tlila! These managers can Just as ~uUy JN\ the stuff behind lbc counter. KAREN GIBSON I . I I 17 ' . ~ ' "' ; I; .. . t t a n c 1 a p ti tl di ' • ~ NATIONAL I AT YOUR SERVICE Wednesday, Match 1, 1978 DAILVPll..OT --... ._.._. ______ ._. __________________________________________________________________________ ~--~~~~------------------. TJIE F AMJL Y CIRCUS. By Bil Keane "I'm not finished reading it yet." "Got .a problmn? Then write to Pot Dunn. P.at will cut red tape, getting ~he.an.swers.and.oction JIOU Med to solve ineqlli&,Jes in government.and bwinu&. Mail your questions to Pot Dunn, At Your Seroice, Orange Coo.st Datly Pilot, P .O. Boz 1560, Costa Meaa, CA 92626. As many letters.as posStble will be.answered, but phoned mquines or letters not including the reader's full name. address and business hours' phone number cannot be considered.. Thtscolumnappearsdai· ly except Saturdays ,~o 1...imit UialeN11 Sp~cil~d DEAit l',\T Can a store advertise a bargain price for an 1tl'rn and then post a "limit of purchase" sign without telling the customer in the ad that only a limited amount can be purchased? This has happened to me several times, and I've always wondered if it's legal. C.J., Laguna Beach Section 17500.S of lhe Business and Prolesaloes Code statt'i. that advertisers ca.n~t refase to Hit you advertised items in any qaantlty tliey 'ne available unless the ad menUoos a Umit oa &be number that tht>y will sell to a singJe customer. If this occurs, you can go to court and sue to recover any money you loi.t, plus $50. 1 IRS Pay11 Some lntere•l DEAR PAT· Is il true that the Internal Revenue Scrvil·e has to pay interest on a person's tax refund if the refund is late? II this is true, when docs interest begin'' R.P., Costa Mesa ~ The IRS~ required to mall a refund cbeck no late r than 45 days beyond tbe doe da&e Clf &.be re. ~ turn. If lb.is mailing deadline la no& met. l.D&erest al r the rate of seven percent per year, compa&ed from ~ the -46th day beyond the due da&e of Lite lalUaJ • c:beck, is included in a tu refaad. Aa ms 1• spokesman emphasized &.bat Udl req1dremea& &o pay interest does aot •PPIJ If * delaJ ls 4l9e tD ' taxpayer error. AddiUoaal bderel& alao ls Mt peld t on checks which are ancleU~ Ion or Ital•. r When a replacement check ls lsaed bl PCJa cua. · it is for the same amoUllt u tbe orlglaal daffk. Iodine Cure for Scrat~'! DEAR PAT: ls it true uiat iodine can be used to hide a scratch on furniture that hu either a varnished or lacquered finish? Will it harm the finish or the wood? C.D .• NeWPOrt Beach J t Is true and it won'& barm· the flaJab. - r However, Iodine dries to a dark color aBd may be as conspicuous as the scratcb.Jf used oo fUl'lllt~ · wit" a light finish. To be certain it will do the job, the iodine should be applied first &o a part of the . furniture that cannot easily be seen. Theo, if there is a match, use it on.the actual scratch. ·When Doe• It Pay to Cook"! DEAR PAT: Please settle a minor domestic dispute at our house. My husband maiptains that I a ll convenience foods are more expensive than dish· es made from ''scratch." I know he's wrons, but ' I can't prove it. • . .· . ~. 'F.R., Mission VieJo Tell yoar husband tbat a rettt1t cemparlMe of convenience and hom~pnpared foods by the J USDA 's Agricultural and Economic Re1earcb Services, showed that more than ooe·thlrd of &.be convenience foods were cheaper. l The comparison rates the cost of convenience versus home-prepared foods uslng 1lmllar In· gredlen&s. For vegetables, 16 of the caued or • frozen convenience forms were less expensive 1 than fresh ones. Frozen concentrated orange Juice cost less than any fresh or fabricated counterpart. The beef, poultry and chicken skillet main cllabes were more expensive than comparable home· prepared dlnners, with convenience chicken dishes costing up to 60 percent more than the home· prepared version. Cheese pizzas also were leas expensive per serving when prepared at bome. Baked goods, desserts and candy are leaat.ex- pen1lve when made with a complete mix that COD• taln• aU bot milk, water and flavortap. ·Deduct Mobile Bame E1ttr1U DEAR PAT: l'\le been thinking about b\IYinc a mobile home, and have beara that a number of things, such as landscafing and furniture, can be deducted at the time o purchase to help reduce ·the gross sales price. This, of course, would cut : down on the amount of use tax I would have to pay. Can you filtd t>ut exacUy what can be de- ducted" C.E., Costa Mesa J I Tiie Board of Eq•allHUoa bas ruled the 1 followinj l&em1 are deduc:Uble from &Ille aroa saln 1 pdce o a mobile home: awatac1: lllUU.11; \carport; poTcb and raWA1: patio lad..., c:e••t .alabs; cabua•: 1W•.; ~~ _. • ...., worl; laadac•.Plnl aad Ila.,...; .......,.. .. *7er· drapes; throw ta11; lluglac_plc:-.re1 aal mlnon; llUUaelH!a ol' fNHh ...... farldt1ln: HP•rat.IJ a&a&ecl mdvbl1 u~ aad locadlll ~ ~yal•ea. .. . . . ·Diet· Soda Benefits Weighed .WASHINGTON (AP) -You wanted to stop galltln& weight, do you drank diet soda. Then the government told you the soda's artificial sweetener, saccharin, may cause cancer. So what do you do? 'DR. BARNARD L. COHEN, a University of Pittsburgh physicist, says if diet soda keeps your weight down, the long-term risk troll\ saccharin is far less than the risk of obesity. Experts have associated excess weight with increased risk of heart .and blood vessel disease, strokes, blgb blood pressure and diabetes. Cohen said in an •nterview bis conclusion is based on the limited information available on the saccharin-bladder cancer relationship. ~Ch~ps . . . ·. MARCHSPECIAl • .., .. _.Ad Tasty deep·lned leetandlc Cod served with hol soup or cri sp salad, Irene~ ,&"91-:'I ~j fnes, tartar sauce. roll and butter, A complete meal at a special low poce durtng March. SERftD 24 HOURS .. THE CONCLUSION A~ depends upon the extent to which saccharin helps prevent caloric intake," Cohen said . .. If you have a diet drink instead of a piece or pie, then there is a benefit. If you use the diet drink as an excuse to eat the pie, then you lose the benefit.'' lo the current issue or Science magazine, Cohen says one who drinks a diet soda daily during a lifetime cuts lile ~xpectancy by nine seconds per 12-ounce serving. But he adds a 45-year-old man, 10 percent overweight, bas a decreased life expectancy of 29 days for each excess pound. WE PAY YOU MORE ON INSURED ~ SAVINGS THAN ANY BANK - 5 UY*O• INSUREO T0.-.000 IM-tc~~on •11 •ccounta. tllUs •1>Ct•h•1><1 annual y>eld to""'°""'*.-... ~ belenc41 rQfNlns lof OM 7 79% annual yl•ld on 7.SQ?o • MlnlmumSl,000.4years. ~· Flll'Cll racatvad by tOlh oC "'ont11...,. from I 11 wt>en held to qu......-etnd Nol• ByF..,.,,... ..... aMty--eonceftlllc:ata ano bonus acxount• ••• aul>jact I01Ub911tn"'91 lrllefest .,...itin. 6 98% annual yl•fd on 6 7 5ou • M1n1mum $1,000,30 months. • 6 72% annual yl•ld on 6 5Q!'ci • Minimum S l ,000. 12 monlti1. • En'M llONIJS ACCOUNT: m'l9t _, rat 5 92% annual yl•ld Q_n 5 75% • MlnlmumS1,000,90days. • FLIDIJ9\.a ,AIUOOIC ACCOUNT: ..... ..i.t nrte 5 39% annual yield on 5 2S% • OepositOl'Wlthdniwanytime. • Eam day . ..Jn to day-out lnterNL No penalties. STATEMENT SAVINGS. You receive detailed monthly statements when transactions have occurred, plus regular quarterly statemenl Savings Card serves as your passbook for all deposits, withdrawals and services. .WE GIVE YOU MORE THAN ANY BANK c:::;' ~ ~ FREE! Important linaiwial 8er,,U!e8 -----Wiil! SI mlnlftwlft~------- • SOCIAL SECURITY DIRECT DEPOSIT SERVICE -------'Wllfl S10001Nnlmwll '*------ •SAFE OEPOSl't BOX a PHOTOCOPV1NG OF •AMERICAN EXPRESS IMPORTANT DOCUMENT TRAVELERS CHEQ<S • AMERICAN EXPRESS (we pay fee) MON~ ORDERS · (wepevfee) •TRUST DEED NOTE CQLLECTIONS ________ , .................... ~-~---- .CHECKING ACCOUNT throuiQh ma!Orbanlc. ........ ,...,lftdudee ........ dledia. I ____ __. __ llOOO.......,....._ ____ _ • CHE~NTH Pl.AN. Monthtylnl9Nl1~ 1 melltd to whofMveryou de.lgniM. 1 ' 5 COSTA MESA IRVINE 3125 Harbor Blvd. MacArthur Blvd. at S 0. Fwy. •> YOUR IDLE BANK CHECKING FUNDS , EARN DAILY INTEREST WITH GIBRALTAR'S FREE TELEPHONE TRANSFER SERVICE :4"l l1ours a day ? days a 11Jeel~. No need to go to your bank. Once your account is established, pick up the phone to transfer money from your bank checking account- which earns no interest-to your Gibraltar Telephone Transfer savings account-which earns SY•% compounded dally. Funds also returned to your bank by phone. Call toll-free anytime, day or night, from any part of the State. This lime-saving, money- earning service is free when you maintain a minimum $1000 balance in your Telephone Transfer account. Minimum transfer amount $100. For more inlorniatlon---------- oR TO £STABUSH YOUR TEUf'HOHE TRAHSfCR ACCOUNT ( 8 0 0) 2 5 2 • 0194 Call toll-free ORVISITYOUR NEAREST GIBRALTAR OFFICE. -------------- EXTENDED HOURS Mondau-T11ur11da119:00T~5:30 Frida11 .•.....••.•. 9:00106:00 SATlIIUJAY ....... 9:30104:00 *SVNDAY .......... 11:00To4:00 THUil 7·DAYS.A·WHK OllFICIS OPEN SUNDAYS: •TOAU1CEo.1A1noFos111on91111.,. *SHEllllAN OAKS ~--. 0'9INIOHTll:~10-,..; ~1'1GHTl,-...ftL10-.. ; .......... .... ....... •CARSON iUU......,.., Sein *WOCIDUllD HIUS OPC)olHeF ........ ==~,.._~ 11-... ....._.,_ ... l:JO:M tel: a.. 1:»4. IVHDAYIPVte&•tW••I~...._....,_ ·*~ .. CM """'"'°'°" c..i"' Of'IN.......,~10 .... ,.. ............... ~ .. '· • l ,, .·l 8 DAILY PILOT L/SC Wednesday. March 1, 1978--OBITUARIES QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi "You have a meeting at eleven, a racquet ball aame at one, and you're due to be chewed out at four." For the Record · Film Producer Arraigned in Grand Theft LOS ANGELES <AP) -A film producer who allegedly bilked 400 .in· veators out of mlllfons of dollars for movies be never intended to produce has s urrendered after the Los Angeles County Grand Jury indicted him on charges of grand theft. The producer, Verland T. Whipple, 48, was arraigned before Superior Court Judge Paul G. Breckenridge Jr. and released on $25,000 bail. Many of Whipple's victims in· eluded Federal Aviation Agency employees at the Palmdale ~rport, CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF ANOTHER KIND Another kind, altogether. As. when you get together with your dentist. Could you get closer than that to Or. Arnold ~lanzer? Well. he doesli't like to let money keep people apart. So you could get pretty close. For a lot less than you might suppose. according tQ Deputy District Al· torney Robert Youngdahl. "There also was a group of denlisls, one of whom got taken for $50,000, among those victimized," he said. Richard Tachtman, head of the d.lt- trict attorney's m~or fraud unit. said it was dls~overed dw1n1 a three. ye ar investi1atlon of Whipple's activities that he solicited monet for 30 movies, with the average beinC about $?50,000 a picture. • ~~ ~· ~: f,1' c 4'1;···:·~ l=b ·~:~ . . :· ~ • /4 S4T111 ON SDUAL ATTITUDIS • .. ~ ·' • ........ ar••1c1M11M~COUTIO!M ....... tMU.w.w.L ~ ATAU ...... ATIOIM....a.ue~COll\d' ~ f fflUffng WAAREH 0. ROeERTS, PKO. ~ ~ 41o.. PUHDlinaflOI '~ . .. U.CUST PSYCHOl.OCNCAl C..,... OP 0RAMH COUKY'Y. I~ ~ ~ (a_...,...,,..,,_, "' . . _ .... ~~,. DOMATtc>M! SS.00 per,_.....,,.. Att.cW C-... ~._°"~ OHi SHOW IACH ... HT ~----COlllOH.--..,, Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer ~~-c 1:>•c.w. 1.oooiioa2wuD11M1S1 370 E. 17th St. fri119r, • w.., .._... I ,,:"_. .. :°"'~:. I ANTHONY'S I .. _ I Costa Mesa SPAGHETI'I HOUSE I SEX..=~MI I . •os s.... ...._. '-""" ·sue~• .u..-1 1 SPA~ HOUSI I 642·011 Z s.t•AM. c._.. .....,..,......,.. .... ._ .. ~.:.:.:. ....... ""'· el\CI Mn. JoM woo'-"· n04 17141 llf·Z21 I I ._._~ I Birt It• t40AO MIMOIUAL MOS .. ITAL Plll.S8YTllllAN Al•uut.C.O.te.Mew.lley '!!~~~~======================~~====!...2~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-~-~-~-~!?.~1~·~.,..i:!:~=~·-~-===~ ~1.1'11 . Mr end M rl. P•ul Ptl,.,, 10U2 81\mtrk Or., Huntl"910ft 8'e<ll, bOY Mr. and Mr\. Thom•s C.rl...,, 1' lllue J• Y, I rvorw, 9orl -..._r, 1, 1'71 Mr. e..cl Mn J•rNi O•vil, nJl2 llluebtrry UM, EI Toro, 9orl fll,r. •nd M". Oixon O•Jtr, 21MS C,vu11• La,,., El Toto, boy -,. •nd Mrs. MicllHI l••1t, JO ... eodland. Irvine, twon 9irl1 Mr. and Mr\ • .ffflerwn Event, 110 Oentv• Aw., H..,11,....,.. S.•cll, bo'I' "6· •..0 Mn. JoM 8uo., IOOZ2 Tr- Clllll L•ne. H-inllon '""'· Olt1 • • ,.__., J, '"' "'· end Mr1o. n.tne• Mefllft, llot ~Place. C.g,,.... wt Mr •• ,,.. Mn. EU99M v.,_, toe IClng.l PleGe, New-1 9Mdl,....., ,.,, ..... """" H41rry 1(-. 5412 HendrlOs.en Ot .. Hunllnvton 8e•cll, bOV Mr. end Mr. Jolln Porter, 700 lMktpur. CAw'oN 0.1 /'Mr, 9orl Mr. and Mn. ll<ttrY Riiier•, 21 .. I 9'•t1I• Cir., H~lnqtoft llH<ll, bOY Mr •nd Mr\. C..ry 0.vld'°"• 7JO J_.nn SI :: l. CO.IA Mtw, 9orl Mr •nd Mn .. Jolin T1011er, ll>JIO 11..,u, Or , We\lmw.t•r. 91rf Mr •nd Mn Robert M<lu<oil. ,. .. "'""•I Or , Hun11rt91on Buch. bOY ,_._rf C, Ult Mr •nd Mn. JO'Mlln Lttulk•. a.n Mester• Or., HunllnqtOll B.e<ll, 9irl Mr. and Mr\, Paul Gll,,M1v, !SHI Qurrtn~Dorouign. Wh tm1n\lt-r, 91rl ......... y s, "" *• •nd Mrs. ll<trry SlmMOn>, H)4 "'Or~ ll<VP • C...IA _,.., Qtrl NV. •no Mrs w1111am HP-I. tlll'I P~ Or , H..,...1119\on 8e~h. 9orl Mt. •nd M" WolllMn P•ltoro 710T 5'hli•90 Or • Newpon But,,. gorl "' ........ " '· 1'71 Mr. •nd Mrs Jonn r orb<'s, S611 Slt tr• Clt to. frtl"'I', girl Mr. and Mrs. 0.... Sllrlt, :Mil L• SfrtM "C, 0.... Pol ... , 9lrl Mt. ano Mrs R-11 w 11 ...... letel Los LPonM, F.,...IAll' V•lfey, boy Mr. •nd Mr.. Ev•n H•rvf•, ..,., S"emroc1<, Founl•on V•llo. lwln olrll Ftibnl.try 1, 1'11 ~.•no Mr\. M<t•"" srr.uwn. 10111 J .,,n•on L•""· Huf!Clr>OIClft 9e•c.ll, """ Mr, And Mri. Ron<tld P\ll!WY, 16T61 Vl-po1n1 L•"'· Huntlnqton &Hen, !My Mr. •no Mr\. Difinftl' RtChmM'. 101' s4ron. lf'VIM , bo1 Mr •• ,.d Mrs. Ke,.,,.,111 Corn~. 10213 C.rdln•• Ave , Founldln V•lleY. 9orl Mt. •nd Mn. EU9P,,. L~lle, IUS llvslln, C.0-.Uo ~~•. o<rl Mtr. eno IW\ t rlhuf' Co1l•llo. UlO !>ltltln ll<n., FO\ltllaln Vall..,, 9irl Mr. •no Mrs'. JUllus BoQNr, Sr., ' 8 ..Utrnul ~. ,,..,,.., bO'J Mr. And Mn TI1C1me. FbsJ, ~SO H~IOw Broole Cir, C.OSt. llMW, glrl Mr. end Mrs. Mlc'-1 Aelnl9, 1Mll1 CAii• C.stor, Hunollngton IM.Kto, tooy ~•.1.rt Mr, end Mrt. Pettr Clltn, 1'121 Nor..,•n<1le 11 .... , trvlrw, girl Mr. •nd Mn . G.,.., Aoo•rs, Sii Ma1l9otd, C.O.one ~ ~r, 9lrl M.r. •nd Mr> MfUtHI Smotf\ 2'S'2 V•lpero\O, Mon o°" Vot)o, qlrl Mr. •nd Mrs Pervfr Jtt\Mlglrl. 2 Dreqonflv. INIM, boy Mr. • .. a M"· Scott Jones, 601 Meroutroto Avw., c.cw .... Del M•r, l>a'f Mr. •nd Mrs. 8rfM1 O'MeMa, 711 . JoAM ti A, ColUI MtW. pOy Mr. eno Mrs. Lloyd Met.In, 1 Sh••••. fr"1,.., glrl ..........,., .... ,. Mr, •"" Mt\. JonallWll\ 8~11, ~ MllPro SI., Coste-. bOY Mr. ellCI Mr\. 0..r~ '9rry, Un Vis. t• ~ .• Ntwpot1 8HCPt, bOy Mr. •nd Mrs. M41rcalo CA•'"'· 70l11 Woodl .. UIW, HuMlnoton BeKll, boy F..,_., te, 1'11 Mr, .,.d Mrt. Lor Giiiiam, 21tl ~ r~ci' L•ne. COiie Me~. 9irl ... .,_., 11, "" Mr, •"d Mrt Jolln 8 l•1e, 11llC Euc;lld ::c, Pounl•ln V•lltY. boy Niguel Man Graduates Mr •• ..., Mn. Jon HIMt~. 1l7\.'i e, .• 21•1 !ti., ~w MH.a,9r1 Mr. •"" IW'-George 0..wr, UJ'1 Elden • S, Coste Mtu. boy Mr. a..O Mn. w1111.,,, Menn, nu Hollltey llMCI, ....._, flfftl', boy l'~ry1t,tt1t Mr and Mr~ 0 .. ,,111 Glllltrl, Jl)4 Pa<1fl' II 8, C.te Mete. 9lrl "9WwrY u. "" Mr, end Mr t , Neol Snyd•r, H M•rlPO••. lrvlrw, Qlrl Mr, end Mrt. 0 ... 1 ... II, 17W "A" St,. H~nt~ IMtlt, '°' ~1•,1m Mr. al'Ct Mrs. NldlOlet llMli.tt, 2151 P•<lllc •1058, Olllte ~. Qlrl Mr. e"d Mn. 51-•rl V•n Oyne, ll"2 Wrl.,._.,, HynUnQIOfl a.~ ... fl~1• end Mr\. h•n llOOCI), 2U2 O<'<ll•rd Or.·•C. ~I• M• Hel(lllll, 9irl '""· •nd Mr1, Jo ,.elll•n M•r<lllorl•lll, 1U £. 2\~I 5' .. Co\l• Mn., boy ...........,,,·"" Mr and Mr\ V•IOe" tiUr\I, •n H•r"°' Ill.,.., Or , _ _, &u<.11. ll"I Mr. •no Mrs ~t•OhHI Smltl'I. \7511 CroMr Ctr. H""tl"'11°" 8e6<11. boy I/Ir •"d Mrl Cll•rlo Oever. ) Cre.,w.ftr. ltVH'tr# 9fr1 Mr. •nd Mn . s,,....,.1 M<C.llff, lOt4 Cor•I Ave., ~II. Ctnt• Me>•, 9orl Marriage LfcftUn LAS VEGAS -Marrl~ 1.ce .... s l»ueCI .... re lr>C lwdt; ~-" HALE·HEIBLl"'G -Wllll•m Edwerd, Jl, -Roo.<u WrlOhl. l6, bo(ll 01 L-BN<.11. MOAAIS-BRAOLEY -Brue• Henry, 1', -Mery 5w, l6, boUI ol '"''"'· RllF11<£ L·611<NllWll -0.,,llo M ., 16, 411 fryt..._ -Yu<• c .. It, o1 T•yo, Je~ -11 AllLBERG-GARONEA -Oen Jr .. "· ol G•dtft G-• ....s Peulille 0.«•, 67, of Huncl"91on 8-Kll. MOPE AG£E -Fr.ln<~ c. Sr., n. and G1or1• J • SI, 1>0111 of WutmlMlor /Jlfll.E A·VALENTINE -All.,. OM, n . of GerOlft ~. -CMy AM, 16. or Hu,.tlnot°" 8 .. ch. JO ... ES..OOWNING -8-f...,d M., 6l, of G•rcMn Gro,,., •net L•YO<t 11<r1e11e. ss, GI Wnlm;Mtw, E l.LIS·WAKE LfNG -J •mu ~ .. Jr •• Q , -~,.., Mey, JO,"'" f/fWHtmlMler. L&t!•RfCHAROSOH -K•'lfltlll Fr•Alllln, 2', -Alt• Jun, It, tM>UI of Wnlml,...,, IC EENE·TAYLOR -Jeck 14•Yden. 32, ol Wutmlnsler, e nd O•yle C..lldll, lO. of Tvs!ln. PON IEWAZ·TROIA -RobHI Fr.,.o<h, 16, -CMol Ann, l2, bolll of Cott•~ SCHUL fl·HUOG ENS -Timothy Rollert, ~. -K•lllY G . U, b011' o1 Wutmlnslor. PREPARATION OF TAX RETURNS • ,_ . ...., T•~ M.-tln I. Schneye< Attorney at \.ew ~iall: Marine Second Lt. c~~ Michael C. Howard , son ..._att.At"-"""' ~olT•l..M of Mrs. Barbara 8 . · L~bMlnUSra•o-t H,o w a rd o I 2 3 8 3 1 MldutS..-eo..1 Salvador Bay, Laguna ~~~.·~:= Niguel, was graduated l>l•l 164 frpm the Basic School at ~====~~~~ t~e' Marine Co rps D~ v e 1 o pm e n t a n d ECsuc.ation Command in Q~antico, Va. it is designed to pre·' pare newly-co m - m-lasioned oUlcers fo( assignment to .the Fleet Marine Force:• ' lie ls a 1977 graduate of St. Oil! Collefe, Northfield. Minn., be joined the Marine Corp. io J\me. • .HEED A LAWYER? LowlAfel,.. •Divorce • Bankrusttcy • Crlmfnat * Wiiis-Probate • Incorporation • Accident-Injury •Eviction • CollectlQM ... , Pood Poli1icol Advertisement .. fastest-growing district in califomia. Supporting it is no easy job. With a bursting-at-the-seams student enrollment of over 16,000 now, and a projected enrollment of 7r300 more by 1982, we've been driven to our knees. And with bu i Id i ng costs soaring out of sight at over 1 % per mon1" increase, the situation can only get" worse. We need Pleasege March 7. ur help. Despetatefy. ut and vote YES on the School Bond It may be our last chance ever.to raise the community's standards. ' Without raising the community's tax rate • • • J 1 •• 17 -.. .. I Orange Coast EDITION .. . -. ~. . --. . -·- Today's Clos ing , N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 60, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE QOUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1978 N TEN CENT~~ N e'Y Storm -Lashes .Orange· Coast o.11, ...... ~'"' 0.... ....... MUD COATS ALLEY BETWEEN 700 BLOCKS OF IRIS (LEFT) AND JASMINE In Corona del Mar, Wa~st Deep Water Between 1 :30 and 3 a.m. 60 Teachers Lose Jobs N-M Trustees C.ite Declining Enrollmem NcwPort-Mcsa school lrusl~s"' have reluctantly ordered dis· missal notices sent by March 15 to about 60 oC the district's 1,160 teachers because of declining enroJlment, saying they really have little say in the matter • because of stale laws. The Jaw requires that teachers be dismissed under a s~niority 25 Others Burt system known as "la!>t hired. first hred" without re~:.ird tom· dividual competence or special ,field of expertise. "It tears me up to give people holices Uke this when you can't d etermine their competence. you have lo go by numbers." Trustee Donald Smallwood said Tuesday. Plane Crashes; 2 Die at LA Airport LOS ANGELES CAP) -A Continental Airlines DC·lO jetliner crashed and burned at Los Angeles International Airport today, ·killin g two passengers and injuring 2S others during an aborted takeort in a rainstorm. A fire department spokesman said the two passengers-among 184 passengers and 13 crew members -were killed trying to escape the burning plane after a n esca p e chute malfunctioned. One· of the 25 injured was in critical condition. "There are lots of aurvivors. That's the good news ," said airport spokeswoman Ethel Pattison. · T he plane, flight 603 to Honolulu. was taking off from the west, a direction used only during storms when the wlDd goes in the opposite direction. Two landing wheel tires burst and a landing gear collapsed, ' said · Continental spokesm an Robert Sterling. Witnesses said the plane tipped over amid sparks and niimes as ihe pilot tried to abort the takeoff and turn off the runway. One survivor. Deborah Garvey, 22, of Hawaii, said she felt a big bump as the plane approached takeoff. c. "Lillie pieces of the ceiling panel started coming down . 1 heard the stewardess say, 'fasten your seat belts tightly, put your head down and grab your ankles'." . Moments later, she said the pllot told everyone to get out. "I could see flames through the windows on the left side." she said. " : .• I slid down the chute and I saw that one chute had broken. You could see a trail ot name behind the plane about 200 feet long. It looked like a can of gasoline hid been spilled and lit ~th a match. "Then I saw smoke pouring under the belly of the plane." · An other survi vor, Irene <See CRASH, Page A%) A bout 20 teachers attended the mcctin~. as did the presidents of the district's two teachers un· ions. Don Kimble. president of the larger group. the Newport-Mesa Education AssoQJation, urged lreatina t he endange red t e achers as in81vlduals and asked why a group of special education teachns is exempted Crom dismissal. Trustees s aid that s uch specialties as speech therapy can't be taken over by other t eachers because several ad· d1tional years of school is re- quired. State law mandates pro· v1d1ng edu c ation ro r the handicapped. Placement assistance will be offered to laid-off teachers, said trustees, who expressed frustration at being unable to use more discretion in the dis-- missals. • "Some of my kids' teachers are in there, people who have done an outstanding job," said Trustee Betty J .. Bailey. "It's hard to realize· that we qon't really have a lot of say in this, lhat the state has mandated it." Some or the teachers listed, with dates of hiring beginning in 1974~ay be rehired when the distri knows bow many other teac rs are retiring or resign· ing, trustees said. Tenure is no protection againSt lay.offs. Concern was voiced by several teachers in the audience about temporary instructors, hired to fill vacancies created by leaves of absence. Temporary teachers, some with the district for as long' as three years, are not even orr the list from which teacb,ers wU1 be rehired. Trustees again said they have no choice by state law but to dis· <See DISM~. Page_A2) • By JACKIE RYMAN Of h Delly ...... SUH More than two inches ot rain, accompanied by gale -force winds gusting up to 68 miles per hour at Newport Harbor, pelted the Orange Coast Tuesday night and early today but caused only relatively minor damage com: pared to the storm of three weeks ago. However, f alllng trees and telephone poles damaged several houses. as did flooding. No injuries were reported. Scattered power outages OC· curred also, along with -mudslides lo Sllverado Canyon, Newport Beach, foothill canyons a nd in San Clemente. ,.. The rains ~lso have set a record , according lo John Gietzen of Orange County Flood Control District. He said this is the highest season· to-date rainfall in most of Orange County since 1909. Rainfall for the 24-hour period ending this morning was re· corded at 1.6 inches in Hunt· ington Beach, 2.18 inches in Cos ta Mesa, 2.30 inches in Lag1ma Niguel, 2.43 inches in Santa Ana and 3.S inches on Sao.tia~o .Peak or Sadd.leback Mountain. Season -lo-date totals, com- pared to last year at this time, were: Huntington Beach, 19.98 inches compared to 9.47 mches; Costa Mesa, 21.31 inches com- pared lo 7.13 inches; Laguna Niguel, 22.24 compared to 6.6; Santa Ana, 21.15 compared to 7 .51; and Santiago Peak, S0.3 com pared to 16.3. Aod there's more rain on the way. The National Weather Servi~e forecasts a 60 percent ~bance o r rain tonight and Thursday, with more rain on Friday a nd Saturday of un- known lntensity. Orange County firemen were rechanneling a flooded creek in Sliver ado Canyon today and were standing by in cue of m udslldes. A mudslide on Pacific Coast Highway between Camino Capistrano and Doheney Park Road caused the road lo be close:d this morning while Back Bay Road in Newport Beach was closed by several mudslides. In addition. Bayside Drive betw ee n El Paseo and Carn ation Avenue was also closed due to mud and portions of East Coast Highway in Coron~ del Mar were blao.keted with mud. However, city crrews were able to keep the road open. Deity """ SQft ..... DONNA JALBERT PONDERS MESS LEFT BY FLOOO 700 Block of Corona del Mer'a lrts Avenue Became • River CdM Home_s Soaked Near ]asmi~-Cr~ek Corona del Mar E lementary School was closed due to flood· ing. Flooding was reported along the Jasmine Gulch and in a half· dozen waterfront homes· on Bayside Drive. Parts of Laguna Canyon Road also flooded but the road re· mained open. Winds blew about 200 feet of roof off a home at 600 Vista Lane early· today, senditig the ~· identified occupants scurrytng for cover. Fireme·n put up a pro- tective covering to protect coo•· tents. A 43-year-old eucalyptus tree reportedly crashed down about 1 :30 a .m. onto the second story of a home owned by Mrs. Cornelia Tonkin of S94 B~ Sl., Laguna Beach. Mrs. To~ escaped unharmed. • lier neighbor, Carl Klass, of 598 Brooks St., said he bas askM city officials three limes in the last six months to trim the h~e tree, which he said is on city property. Surf was choppy a nd high, b r eaking up to 15 feet in Newport Beach and 18 feet in Hun tin gton Beach. Minor damage was reported to both (See RAIN. Page A2) * * * CdM Hit ~y Slides, Flooding This morning's downpour •. wbicb brou&hl more than two inches of rain to Newport Beach. caused these problems: .Jatnplne Galch:' At leaitt s~ homes and as many garages hit b)'/thr1c;·f9ot flood I.II t.ltli 700 ~ of J ris umtoe aveoutt. There w nanaj-or -mud a d waler damage, but no injuries were re- ported. -Bayside Drive: Four homes between Carnation Avenue and the 2100 block of Bayside were flooded. Bayside Drive is closed between Carnation and El Paseo while city crews clean up m\.!(I. Corona deJ Mar Elementary School: Closed for the day because of flooding. Parents. faculty, other staff member$ and firemen worked through tho morning to dry out classrooms wh ich collect ed about four inches 0£ water. Classes are scheduled to resume Thursd., morning. Corona Del Mar mgh Sehoo1: Scott McAdam reported major, damage to his car parked in th~ Mar Vista parking lot when a tree toppled over on it this morn- ing. . In addition, 1S classrooms, the student store and the media center were reported flooded when storm drains in interior atriu ms backed up. School re- m ained open today while school employees worked to clean out the water •. "" DahUa Avenue: Some Oooaing was reported. 11\e home at as Dahlla Ave. had to be evacuated because of flooding early thi.S morning. Bae k Bay Drive: Closed because or mud slides. City of· ficiala aaid the entire road was closed anCi would remain so~or a few days because clearing it lnot a high priority item. Or.ange Coast Weather Chance of rain inc...,... i ng to 60 perce~t late tonl1bt a nd T hursd a y. Lows t.onlgbt in.SOS. Hlahs Tbuncby 60 to 65. I~ IDETODAY T 1 /amiliar Ntmtfngf~ Bfach JMr draw .~ ~ allO II bl --of ft. sto,.. • photo, DJ. .. l .12 DAIL V PILOT Stonn Lashes State N LOS ANGELES CAP) -A wind-whipped Pacific rainstorm thundered across an already soggy Southern California today, c ausing one death, downing trees and power lines, closing roads , damaging houses and forcing the evacuation of al least a dozen persons. But the s ubtropical storm , which was expected to taper to showers later in the day, didn't live up to fears that it might duplicate the disastrous flooding of three weeks ago. Officials were closel y watching the s aturated res- idential canyon areas around the city, wher'e most or last month's flooding occurred. ----------- Fro.t Page AJ CRASH .•• M c:f hilijps ol 8r~eQton. l'la.. said she and her husband were part or a tour group arranged by the American Association or Retired Persons. She said tour members made up a small part or the-passenger group. Dick Lombardi, who dr9ve past the airport shortly aften the cr ash , said the plane's left fuselage was engulfed.in flames. "People were jumping out or the ri1ht side and out tl)e back," Lorn bardi said. "Arter a couple of minutes some fire engines arrived and s tarted pouring water or something on the names. About three minutes later there was some kind oC explosion." Fetus 2\Iut()psy Backed By TOM BARLEY OI IM o.lty l"tlet ltaff An Orange County Coroner's officer, who t.esJ.iiied earlier that the infant alleeedly murdered by Dr. William Baxter Waddill died or manual strangulation, went back on the witness stand Tuesday to offer new evidence for the prosecution. Dr. Robert Richards tesUfied in his aeeond appearance before a Superior Court jury that he had returned to his laboratory to examine tissue slides that be had not uaed durioe bis first ap. pearance in court. Los Angeles police reported three hillside houses in the ex.· elusive Encino section or the San Fernando Valley were slipping into adjacent backyards. The residents were evacuated and there were no injuries. Deity,..... ...... .., 0.., ·--STORM SURF BATI"ERS ITS WAY THROUGH NEWPORT PIER PILINGS . The aircraft never eot oft the ground. A spokesman for Continental said the pilot bad aborted his takeoff because of a blown tire which caused the landing gear to collapse. When he tried to turn left off the runway, the plane tipped over and the left wing caught. fire. Richards came under heavy fire from two defense lawyers, particularly Dr. Malbour Watson, during that ftrst session and was accused by them or sub- mitting incompetent evidence. On the Orange Coast. the Rain Falls. the Wind Blows and the Sea Ragea Arter the fire was ex· tiuisbed, the right mid·aection of the plane near the wing was singed a deep brown and the plane leaned on its left side, the wlng bent upward. He told the jury on that oc· casion that he confirmed bis autopsy verdict of manual strangulation but conceded un- der intensive defense questioning that he could not determine the process or death that led to strangulation. In the Swlland·Tujunga area, hard hit last month, "Things are running real s mooth," said policeman Gary Wa~tler. Precautionary evacuations were advised , ho wever, in nearby SChwartz Canyon. Ebey Canyon near Pacoima and other hilly areas in the vicinity as some of the 35 county flood con- trol debris basins reached the emergency level. Laguna Hills Blaze Hits Fire Station Los Angeles city fire officials said a t least one home was damaged by a mudslide in the La Tuna Canyon area of SWl Valley. Occupants of the home and several nearby residences were evacuated. There were no injuries. About 15 miles lo the east in La Crescenta. where dozens of hom es were flooded Feb. 10, •·everything's fine," s aid sheriff's deputy John LQfthus. The city received almost three inches of rain in the storm and more than four inches fell in s o m e parts of Southern California. The lat.est storm brought the seasonal total to a lmost 24 tnches, compared lo 7 .38 inches during the drought last year. The normal rainfall for this time of year is J0.43inches. While the storm rolled east, forecasters said another Pacific· $pawned s torm will pass through by Friday, d.i'opping even more rain. ~iudslidea cloald or ~ blocked ,i,Jeast 17 roadi, · ing all bat one tau of the •~ Jy used Pacific Coast Jngbway and two so1,1thbound lanes of Interstate 5, the main artery bet ween Los Angeles and Northem California. Travelet"S warnings were issued for mountain and canyon roach due t o h i g h w I n d s • s Ii p p e r)' pavementandpoorvislblllty. F..-PageAJ DISMISS ••• By LAURIE KASPER Of -~ly ...... 'UH Firemen are repeating today what they say in fire prevention lectures -"It can happen to anyone." Fire caused . a n estimated $20,000 damage to the county fire station at 24001 Paseo de Valencia, Laguna Hills, this morning. Capt. Bruce Turbeville, in· formation officer. said damage was confined to the roof am! al· tic of the lttatioo. He said lbe flte apparenUy was caused by a 'County Nixes Plan on Farm Preserve Vote Plans for a straw vote to see tf Orange County residents want to preserve the county's farm land at a cost to the public or up to $100 million were scuttled Tues· day by the county Poard or Supervisors. When supervisors approved placing Propoal\.lon A on the June electiop ballot three weeks ago, they believed U would cost no more th.tn a few hundred dollars "to sample the public pulse." But they learned last week the ballot exercise in measuring public opinion about buying farm land for permanent open ~ale migbt cost as much as $37,000. That figure surf aced after County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said the straw vote ballot measure would be subject to the same election relUlation.s as if it miss temporary employees first. were a bindine Initiative. "We may have vocational Kuyper said, for example, openings which no one In the dis· p a m p h 1 e t s c o n t a l n i n g t ri ct can fill," said Trustee argumeota fOT and aealnst the Smallwood, noting that other farm land buyin,1 plan would special subjecta might also be . have to be prepared. left with no one to teach them. And, the county counsel said, "It does present a terrible those argumenta would have to human problem, not onJ.y for the be printed lo both Enallsb and teacher but for the atudenta." Spanish. The dismissal notices are be· . ing sent so early in the year The $37 ,000 pri~e ta' up· bec;luse state Jaw reqqlres that perm~st in their minds. teachers be notified by Mwch . supervisors beat a hasty retreat 15 "--' Tuesday and rescinded their or· School Superintendent John der for the ballot straw vote. Nicoll noted that the dismissals are belng sent because of declln· Truee Honored ing enrollment, not because or matrunction.ing heater. Although seven firemen were sleeping in barracks below the s moking attic, there were no in· Juries. Capt. Terry Carson and a crew of fi remen discovered the blaze at about 4 :30 a.m . when they returned from another calJ . When they drove up to the station and saw the s moke billowing into the dark, rainy, wmdy ~ky . one of the fire fighters-saiCi, I hope that's steam." But as they pulled around to the back of the station, they caught the distinctive smell of fire and set to work. Turbeville said these men attacked the blaze, roll,'Sted their sleeping as· soclates from the barracks and informed their headquarters. Although. the station ls equipped with smoke detectors, they lssued no warning to the firemen. Turbeville said this was because the smoke was be· Ing sucked out through the top of the building. About 40 ~re fighters on six engines, two trucks and one paramedic unit fought the stubborn fire as winds whipped about at «> miles an hour and heavy rain cootinued. · Turbeville said It took a lltUe more than an hour to brina the fire under control. Although the celllng In a shower and locker room had to be pulled down, he said, there waa no bum damage below the celling line. The fire officer said the station ls "fully operational." Plastic tarps were thrown over the charred roar this momin~. FI re Inspect.or Greg Chambers said the men in the &talion reacted the aame way as anyone who discovered a fire in his home. . It's " kind or scary," l\_e ad milled. He added, "Most people don't think it'a _aolng to happen to them and we're the same way." Turbeville said fires in fire stations are not uncommon. He said they read abput similiar oc- currences in their journals every :;ear. He said the only other such fire be remembers in the county was in 1965 when a lumber yard burned and caught the adjacent Cypress fire station on fire. the possible passage of the Jarvis-Gann tax inlUaUve. He sald he believes it would be counterproducUve and possibly illegal to send d.lamlasal noUces, as Los Angeles schools are do- i n g, to a large number of teachers baaed on speculation that the lnlUatlve wm be ap- proved. 48-hour Reprieve Won by Bubbles The lnltlaUve would cut schot-1 revenues from property tues sharply. DAILY PILOT Via~~""=::.,~ ..,...... .... ·~-TJ..~"rt CMrtet•·"-.......... AMI....,. MINfM9 Mltft .. From Page Al RAIN •.• piers. All cities reported flooding in the usual low-lying streets and intersections. · r.1 inor damage was reported in N~wport Harbor. where the Orange County Harbor Patrol reported that about a dozen boats broke loose. Dinghies were also reported blown off docks in Sunset Aquatic Park. Ground slippage was reported threatening the Elks Cl ub 10 Fullerton. The club site sits on a knoll al the intersedion of Harbor and Bren boulevards. Paciflc Telephone reported no .s e rio us problems alon g the Orange Coast, a lt ho ug h a flooded manhole in Fullerton shut off service to about 2.700 customers between 4 and 10.30 p.m. Tuesday. San Diego Gas and Elecln c noted a blackout shortly before 1 :22 a:m. in south San Clemente, a ffectmg about 1.000 customers for 44 minutes. The cause was unknown. Scattered homes were blacked out in other parts of the coast as well, the Southern California Edison Compan)' said. A spokesman said several areas experien ced blackouts between about 1:30 a.m. and 3 a. m.. when the storm was the most fierce. Valencay ... dining furniture in J the Louis XV style by Henredon . . . Rick Dare, service manager for a car rental firm that was in the path of the oncoming plane. said the pilot turned ocr the runway instead or crashing lnto the building. ' "It was the pilot's skill that put them there. He saved a lot or fives. He held right on to the last minute." Fro•PageAI JASMINE ••• the drains were checked at that time, there was no flooding. Standing on an inch of mud that covers her carpets, s he sigh e d : ''L"ast ttme thi s happened, in 1974, we had lots or help from neighbors. ''This time I don't know where the help is goi ng to come trom. I haven't got the money to fix this place up again." Most or the neighbors were in the alley today, comparing damage and helping where they could. Miss Jalbert was offered a COw>le of places to Stay and there ~as concern for another neighbor who had to crawl out a window with her l~year-old son. "There's just no reason this·· had to happen," commented Mrs. Host. looking at her mud covered car. Richards testified Tuesday, however, that the new slides he brought lo court with him clear- ly disclosed damage to the fetus's windpipe, larynx and two main a rteries. And h e claimed his new evidetlce a mply confirms bis theory that trauma from physical force and not Jack of oxygen or asphyxiation from som e medical source led to the death of the 31-week fetus. Gold Soars; Dollar Dips LONDON <AP) -The value o f th e doll a r dropped below two West Germ a n m arks o n the F rankfurt foreign ex- change for the fi rst time today in very nervous and hectic trading. As the Call of the dollar conti~ued throughout Western Europe, the pric~ of gold soared to a three- year high in London, $184 an ounce. The U.S. currency bought only 1.9930 marks In morning trading on the Frankfurt ex.change, down from 2.0326 marks Tues· day. -~ reflects uncommon respect for the artistry of the 18th Century French , -j cabinetmaker, and an und.erstanding of ~'"':J•I modem dlning needs. finely crafted in solid · ~~-...~~~~......... - mahogany and walnut veneer. . ., --~-~ .' , ...... ,:;. each design is enriched by delicate ~ ~-.,;; ... Df.~t.i!'.. ~' ...... carving. Graceful oval and tectangular • ..... ~ .. ·•· tables hav'= glowtng parquetry tops and extend ---= with leaves ••• china cabinets with interior lights nd edjustable glass shelves offer Impressive display/ storage of special ~ssesslons. See how Renredon's Velencay can add elegence to compact as well as apadous dining envfron~ents. We~llie In planes for yourt-.om.. -- 1514 ftOR1H MAlrt MJ'(TA MA.• 541~ J l t I ; J ' •• t ! I • • I CALIFORNIA Opinion Vnfonaed Poll Studies Jarvis Issue SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Callfomia voters are confused by the Jarvts·Gann property tax in· itlative and can be easily swayed by • strong pitch from either side, .according to the California Poll released today. "Public oplnlon at thls stage ls still relatively tptformed and what has formed is quite unstable," Pollster Mervin D. Field reported after surveying a cross-cul of 1,217 voters in mld·February. The lax·cutUng initiative will be put to voters as Proposition 13 on the state's June 6 ballot . • · IT WOULD UM1T property taxes to one percent of market value of the property, but would exempt taxes for pre-existing bonded indebtedness. Experts say the effect would be lo cut most property tax bills by about two-thirds. Critics say the reduced tax in· come would deprive cities, counties and school dis· tricts of about $7 billion. Only 56 percent of those polled by Field in· dicated they had heard of the widely publicized tax initiative. And of that slim majority, 26 percent re-' mained undecided on the issue. Some 20 percent or those who had heard or it said they favored the measure. Ten percent were Qpposed. FIELD RESEARCHERS posed the initiJtive ilsue to its subject.a in two forms. The first listed tile tax cut's effects in a general manner; the second yas moreexplicit. · ~ Forty-eight percent thought the Ja.rvis·Gann l)litf ative was a good idea when the pollsters pre· iented its effects in general form. Tbirty·tbree 1'ercent were opposed. • But with a more explicit explanation, only 40 fercent supported ~ initiative and 47 percent ~ere opposed. - RofJIJery l'icti• ----·~-·--·----. Harold Bronstrup talks on phone after he .was shot during a robbery of his jewelry store in San Bernardino; The bullet was deflected by Bronstrup's eyeglasses causing the wound to be minor. At left, is a paramedic. ---· ~.Mareh1.1978 . Atltllor Bopeftd State Panel OKs Tax Bill • • • • • • • It • • • SACRAMENTO (AP) -This year's top bill to • • DAIL v PILOT AS cut -property taxes, stripped of a controversial • home-salea tax, could clear the Legislature this • ~Mil'I week, the measure's author says. • L;.:.:=.::.- The prediction by Sen. Peter Behr, R·Tiburon, it HERB ! came Tuesday after the Assembly Ways and : FRIEDLASDER • Means Committee accepted Behr's amendment to • IS MAKING • scrap as percent tax on profit.a from the sale or GREAT DEALS • ix>ost single-family homes. • « The move cleared the W«lY for a committee • FREE \rote today on the $1.4 billion measure. Approval • ¥ would send it to the Asseml)ly floor for a vote ! 50 GALS • Thursday. • OF GAS : BEii& SAID THE SENATE could give the :·•~0••• ... •111-*1-·:-••"•: ... • amended bill its final legislative approval the . or oia. CllA~GES • ................ ..,~,_,. ... same day. • iiiifiDiiiilll... .. -.... Supporters had contended the profits t?x was • • needed to help provide homeowners with ~t least a • w•u·-•"" : 40 percent cut in current property tax bills. .,.. m.nn _....,,_ . ~ But tbe tax drew strong opposition from re-.. * * * * * * * * * * *! altors who feared it would hurt home·sales, and• MG-TRIUMPH • Assembly leaders concluded the bill could not win • •. the t,,.thirds m...;ortty need for passage if it con· • • S t B • Set tainedthelevy. ' • FIAT-LANCIA • US:nec eanng.s . Df·"~-~ ..... .wm. '.r WJTROVT THE SALES tax, the blll would cut ... * * * * *· * * * * * *« onetime teen Idol, was stabbed to Lomeowner property taxes at leaat 30 percent, • • LOS ANGELES (AP> -Aiformer t H 11._......,. boost the renters' tax credit to $75 and provide ad· • •••Gar•lil'9"•t._ • pizza deliveryman accused of killing death outside his Wes 0 1,1,,...._ diUonal ald for elderly homeowners and renters, .it G••*"C'"• "'·'"' • actor Sal Mineo is to return to court for. apartment Feb. 12, 1976. among other things. . •* * * * * *.* * * * * ~ more pretrial hearings after a A murder complaint had originally The amendments also cut the blll's first-year ~ 1'10TORHOME • Superior Court judge refused to drop been filed against Williams by the price tag from $1.9 billion to $1.4 bllllob. SALES & RENTALS• murder charges against him. distrlct attorney, but the case was Behr's plan languished in committee last year RESERVE NOW • · Judge William L. Ritzi Tuesday or· later taken to the grand Jury. · while lawmakers fought over other tax bills, but it <-.,7_7777 E ·t 500 • dered 21-year-old Llonel R. Williams won Senate approval in January and began to ~ x · • to return to court March 14, despite "When · an indictment is returned emerge as the Legislature's answer to the Jarvis _. * * * * * * * * * * '*· ,. THE POLLTAKERS then posed four specific '4!1umeots to the survey subjects: Two spoke in .vor of the initiative; l wo were against it. ... After bearing both sides, 45 percent of those tfolled said they would vole in favor of Proposition 13. Some 39 percent said they would vote "no." argument& by Williams' attorney by a lrand jury, there is no pre· initiative. that an indictment should be set Jimlnary bearing at which the proa-That measure. Proposition 13 on the June aside on grounds that few cases in . iec:utlon presents evidence and wit.-ballot, would cut taxes about 60 percent on all tax- the county go before the grand jury. nesses in an effort to cooviDCe' a able property. But ctlUcs claim it would cripple Call 642-5678. Pul a few words to work for ou. .. W i 11 i ams was indicted in judge that a defendant should stand local government.a or force sharp. increases in Mineo's murder in J anu~a!..:ry~ . ..!M~in~eo,~a!...__tri::.::· aL==----------"-_,.:otb~er~J:;::e:.:.vt:::' es::;... ----------------------- • Jn results released Monday, a statewide poll• ~nducted for the McClatchy newspapers 'lOted dJmilar attitudes among voters. The newspaper's P.oll of 712 voters found 3·to-1 support for the in- itiative. . -• Ovie Functions ~ Eureka Alt.male Club :·To OK Women Guests I SACRAMENTO (AP) -Female _.ests have woo the right to enler an all·m ale club in Eureka for any busi· riess, civic or poltucal function, the 8'ate attorney general's office says . • The office reported Tuesday that mi out-of-court seUlement between the attorney general's office and the Jagomar~Tl~b, which uses the famous c orian·style Carson llansion, was approved by the Humboldt~ Superior Court. • Attorney General Evelle Younger ftled the suit in J974, asking the court to block the discrimination in guest policy. That policy had prohibited women from entering the club except on Sundays. Four Suspects Jailed, Face Robbery Charge SAN DIEGO (AP) -Four robbery suspects are in jail after a higb-4speed chase oo the Coronado Bay Bridge with a police detective recently re· instated after a 30-day suspension for off-duty public drunkenness, officials say. Now Detective Louis Rodriguez, who returned to duty Fd>. 16, may be in for a medal, Police Chief Bill Ko lender said Tuesday. . RODRIGUEZ spotted what looked like an armed robbery at Galloway's Pharmacy and gave chase, calling for help on bla police radio, a de- partment spokesman said. 'fhe sus- pect.a fired two shot.a at Rodriluez as they weaved up the bridge. About two dozen officers met the fleeing car at the San Diego end of the long curving structure and a unifoTIQed poUc~man fired aix shots at tbe vehicle before it swerved out of 'Control. ALL FOUB sutpeetl were arrested at •unpolnt. · Winnonla Alfred, 19, and WUliam Benne\t. ~ .. of Pomona, and Willard Farrow, a. and fohnny Robinson, 22, of Los Angeles, were booted into County Jail for inveatleation of armed robber)', uuult wUh a deadly wea~ and uaault with intent to kill, Police said. · ( STATE J ,,,.., l1pres ltldlded LOS ANG~ (AP> -Six reput- ed organized crim~ figuree have been indicted oo federal conspiracy and racketeering counts that include the murder of Frank "The Bomp" Bompensiero, a mobster who turned informant. Named in Tuesday's six·count in· dictment were Dominick Phlllip Brookller, 63; Samuel Orlando Sciortino, 58; Louis Tom Dragna, 57: Michael Rizzitello, 50; Jack LoCicero, GS, and Thomas Rictjy<ii. 45. ~8.port ~s ANGELES (AP) -An amended committee report that supports exemption of the con· troversial Sundesert nuclear power plant from stale nuclear safeguard laws bas been approved by the Ctty Council. The minority report of the council's State, County and Federal Affairs Committee waa amended to permit the council to withdraw it.a support If legislatioo is introduced that would &peed development of allernatlve ~rgy sources to satisfy city needs. Toll Cllt Asked SAN RAFAEL (AP) -San Francisco would open its Golden Gate Bridge to commuters for just !50 cents it Marin County Supervisors win their attempt to temporarily slash the span's toll in ball. The board Tuesday unanimously asked for a 50 cent reduction in the $1 toll to reimburse bridge crossers for what a Judie has deemed an illegal increase. IA Afr 'Werst' I LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Angeles had the wont air quality of any in the nation ln 1975, the President's Council on Environmental Quality aald Tuee- day. The White House group belled lta findings oo three-year-old etatisUca because tbey were the most receot available, the Los Anieloa T1mea re-'ported. .. Double your·.rQOneY for tomo~ goals. With the QlK..Q{.a oollego education doubling OYW the put ten years, what will it cost tor y0ut child.rm? WhlteYer the amoun~ San Diego FedenJ can help you attain it. Yes, the interest your savings wn at San Diego ~ederal can tloubk your illidal deposit in as little as nine yeml Tho cban ahOWI bow fuuavinp double in various San Diego Federal savings accounts. So. select the combination of aocoun~ that belt fltl your needs: a Certifa4rd• accowit for longer-term goals ••• and a pass· book or paucarrJ• accoant that allowa yoo to add and withdraw savmgs at yC1U1 oonvenience. o~ your l&fety·J.mwed •vin&t ICCOWlll with the d~ee ~people at SaJf Dlego Federal Savings ••• where &hero'1 lntercst in your fUture. ~. LID:-.,... .,.. ..... ...... ..... .. ,.. ..... u ... ..... = = ""F 7n 7H 6"• 6-K, 5n ,5H mm• -..... • ·=-.. :Jr a:,;- "I.I:' ---~,. ... ._.., ·-wi::-.... ··~ RI tut T .. ,.nm • •1,oso-.. 8.06" 12,171• •1J)77• 7.791 '2,111° '1,069" ~ 11,963" '1,D67" 6.72' 11,916~ •1,059• 5.92" •i.m• •um• s.. Sl,690J' ' I ~ ~ j .. •• p • A8 N Jr:t..:.i • e I .. RobertN. Weed/Publisher ThofNs K•v11/E~tor orange Coast Daily Piiot ~--tOftft _.--~••••••••w•e•d•ne•sda•"•' •M•ar•c•~•'·· 1.e.1a••••••••••ea•rt>a•r•a•1<•re•1b•1c•h•1•e•d•ltor•1a•1•P•~••E•d•lt•or•- ardline Stance No· Help to City It 5hould come as no surprise to anyone, least of all he moratorium backers, that Newport Beach city · ouncilmen once agfti refused to enact a building ~alt: ' • Monday's vote was identical to three previous de- tt';ions on the· same s ubject in th& past year. We agree ~MU\ the councilmen who view an ordinance to ~alt con- ~struction as obstructionist and counterproductive. li. We'0lso believe, along with Councilman Don Mcinnis, ~that the best way to go about solving the city'& de- ~-velopment-related problems is to get everyone involved to sit down together and listen to one another. We said-it ! before. and like the rejection of the moratorium , it needs :7to be repeated: [ The best interest s aj)the entire city are not going to ~be served by the hardlme position assumed by the small • ~roup of moratorium backers. . :.; The public negotiating sessions which begin Tuesday m-e going to provide a forum for reaching a compromise on the issue of furth~r growth. To borrow a phrase from Mcinnis, we fervently hope that anti-growth people come in with open minds and that developers do the same. There will be more construction in Newport Beach, of that there can be no doubt. Likewise, there can be no doubt there will be Jess than is planned for under the current general plan. It's time to stop spouting pfopaganda and sit down together and work out a plan that serves both points of view. huiovative Plan Newport-Mesa school trustees have approved the formation of a new corporation to market educational materials such as computer programs developed by the district. A corporation was needed, trustees were told, to pre· vent private industrie'S from suing and charging taxpayer funds were being used for competitive marketing. Directors of the new corporation, the Newport-Mesa Instructional Reseat"Ch Institute, will be appointed by trustees. If all works out as planned, the corporation could raise millions of dollars in revenue for the district's general fund, easing the effects of inflation. new state restrictions on school taxes and the Jarvis-Gann tax in- itiative. if it passes. However, teachers in the district have said they ' beli eve the corporation was adopted too nastily and that trustees did not fully discuss the pros and cons of the is· sue. Granted, there was a need for some haste because of contracts the district has already entered into. And such a corporation can be dissolved if undue problems arise. But trustees s hould be careful to monitor the cor· poration. Even i! it succeeds as planned, they should not take that as license to rush through other major plans. It may be time-consuming, but the airing of all sides of proposed c()\lrses of action is ultimately in the best in- terest of all corlcernecl ' Pay Precedent? Almost everyone involved Monday night appeared to be s atisfied with the precedent·setting police pay decision reached by the Newport Beach City Council. Councilmen approved a policy which mandates that the pay and fringe benefit package given to patrolmen must .be comparable to the top three packages paid in the county's 25 police agenices. Policemen, who have been lobbying hard for the policy, say they believe it will aid the department in attracting and retaining the very best officers available. The one voice of dissent was sounded by Councilman Paul Ryckoff who voiced a concern worth cohsidering. He warned that such a policy for police employees is likely to produce identical demands from the city's five other employee groups. • Councilmen who passed the policy were right in saying that if ~ewport Bea~h taxpayers want the best in police protection they ought to be willing to pay for it. But councilmen are going to be seeing similar pleas and will have to decide if taxpayers are also willing to pay for the best in clerical help, planners, maintenance workers, lifeguards and firemen. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of '"' Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authOra and artists. Reader comment i• invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Acronyms ByL.M.BOYD Q. "What's the difference between radar and sonar?" A. Radar, an acronym of "Radio Detecting and Rang- ing," uses radio waves in the air. Sonar, an acronym of "Sound Navigation Rang- ing," uses sound waves un- derwater. Get it right, pleue: Tbe Smiths outnumber the Jobnsons in this counU"y by at least half a million, Q. "Didn't the poet C~l Sandbura·toto Welt Potnt7 .. A. For a t.lme. Re 1lunked oat ln Enat'•b. - Dear Q. "What's the.'S.I.' stand for in the name or California Senator S.J. Hayakawa?" A. Samuel Icbeye. In the 1947 motJon picture "Caesar and Cleopatra," it was not enaup in one scene simply to show the moonlit sky behind the Sphinx. The technical advisors insisted on 8CCUl"ley. So the set WU de· sl(ned wherein the hundreds of vllible stars were in exact· ly the 1ame heavenly posit.ions of~ tlQJe -tho 'Jle&r fS B.C. Not onlY dO ~ butmen tend to lift klqertban olber ma.tor leque ptayen. but they play looser ieoerally tba~ do olber major Jel(uers. rm now told. -.... 1 • -.• Nicholas Von Hoffman Haldeman: Smart But Narrow Several years ago, I spent two days in the Beverly-Wilshire Hotel in Lo5 Angeles talkiDl\to Bob Haldeman about collaborat- ing with ·him on his as·then un- written book. The publisher who had brought me out there couldn't get together with Haldeman on money. The ditrlculty was that while Haldeman bad a useful aJ\d im· portant story to tell about Richard Nix· on, it wasn't a sensational or a sexy one so that without a great deal or misleading hype, it would never earn back the huge , cash advances Haldeman wanted. Evidently he got the big buck from The New York Timei, which has gone on to make the big b\Jck back by giving us a yet bigger hype. However , if H.R. Haldeman knows something about Watergate we didn't alreidy know, he didn't put it in his book. After my two days with ·11aldeman, I was convin~d that President Nixon's major domo just doesn't know very much about Water~ate. Evidently, back in the early months of 1972. the principal actors in the drama had no earthly idea that they were involved in Watergate. Legally, many or them ended. up in conspiracy to obstruct justice, but that's a very different thing from taking part in a classical plot. NO GROUP OF plotters came together in the midnight hour and convenanted to take actions in concert which they un· deratood would destroy them ir ever discovered. The evidence all points to·a series or discreet, ad hoc acts, many or them done thoughtlessly. After the fact, all these acts committed b y• a large as- sortment or different people. many or whom had never met each other, were gathered up and put in one· container, ooe men lal construct called Watergate. Mailbox It is a gap in perception between the Watergate perpetrators and ~e Watergate prosecutors, jorldical and journalistic, which may a~ount for the trouble Nixon, Haldeman and aome others have had In ma~ing sufficiently satisfying confessions. They're not qulte sure what it is they pre to con· fess to. THE HALDEMAN J met at the ,peverly·Wilshire was not a man well equipped to dope out the meanings of what he had done and had done to him. He has, or he had, charm and . likeability, but a remarkably shallow, background in history, literature, ~ilical philosophy or any other atea of study which might h'a.vei provided him with some guide or measure. He gave the lmpression or t>e.. ing a sp>art man, and an ethical one. but so' ignorant, so without knowledg~ that he was without prudence or judgment. One or the things he insisted on in our conversation was his !>e lC·definition as a "non- political" person, someone who concerned himself with what he called "process." By way or il· lustration he recalled the dis- ~Jf w. <°"'4 on~ fu..d A wo.y fo ~rAmAtaze ihe f.,cd <risis .. .' ~ cussions between Nixon. Kiss- inger and others about the de- cision to recommence bombing Hanoi. He recalled himself being indifferent as to which way the decision went but impatient they make it so be could start the engine of government to carry it out. As Haldeman saw himself, once he had made his act of faith in the Republican Party, in a Richard Nixon or a John Connal· ly-he is a great admirer of Nix· on's old secretary of th e Treasury -once he had made his inner personal commitment, he was absolved from doing any thinking about the..Jssues himself. A Nixon or a Connally were great "conservaliv.es" and that was all be needed to know. HE SEEMED to ha've been imprinted with conservatism at an early age, the way a baby duck can be imprinted with the idea that a tbree·lon elephant 1s its mother and follow it every- where. At some earJy point, most likely in his college years. the imprinting took place. He stopped asking questions and followed his elephant right to the Jail house door. A man who can play a major role in election after election. who can be the president of the United States' alter ego and still think or himself as non·political Is a man who would have no difficulty playing a major role ill the Watergate drama without. knowing it. Which is not to say Haldeman is stupid. He is a s mart man but a narrow one and one so without intellectual curiosity it never occurred to him to look around him and see where he was. Haldeman is a tough man too, but no tougher than his old boss. At one point he said he'd recent- ly talked to Nixon, who had asked how Haldeman was going to vote in an upcoming California election. Haldeman said he replied by reminding tho exile of San Clemente. "I'm a convicted felon, in case you've forgotten, and we can't vote." . After that, be reported. there was a pause on the other end qC the· line and then Nixon said. .. Well, in that case I'll voto twice:• 'Dlls Time the Taxpayer Is the Boss To the FA.itor: It is amusing to hear the laments of the politicians and bureauCTats concerning the Jarvis-Gann amendment. Forecasts of the consequences of its paasage encompass every eventuality but Armageddon. Where things are run with at least a modicum of efficiency, as in business, when the cbiel kicks the budiet proposal back for review (that means re- duction), one goes to work to pare expenses here and to do without there. One may groan a little, but the job is done. IN TtOS case, the boss, the taxpayer, is kicking the budget back for review. Between now and rererendµm time, there are ample hours and splendid op- portunities to review and reduce budgets. Ir the pelitJcos do tb1s and come up with result.a, I'll help vote the amendment down. Ir not, I'll vote for the amendmenL I would suggest othen do the same. J .W. REID was completed. The financial ·district began to grow. Promontory Point went op. The citizens fought again. and won again. They voted down a new city haJl in Newport Center. But the old City Hall acted as if nothina had happened. Design Plaza went up. The Marriott Hotel went up. Commercial in· tensity went up. The plan con- tinued on its way just as if the freeways were lhere. The freeways are not there. By preteriding that they are, City Hall is strangling Newport Beach. We are still angry and we are still ready to fight. That is .whatthe initlative is about. Why should we have to fight our own government? Can't City Hall set that people are tired of corruption at all levels. not just ·in Washington? The real question the moratorium vote wili answer is wbeUler or not. City Hall ia at last ready for re- form. ALLAN BEEK ~rattle Ordl11anee To the Editor: Re: YOW" article or Thursday, Feb. 16, "Backers Still Pushing N.B. 'Growth Control'." The article was a gross mis- representation. I am supporting the traffic ordinance because it Is a respqnsible approach fo pb,aalng developmen\ to the capacity or our street systems to accbmmodate tbe development. All development is not even part or said lrJlffic ordinance - only large commercial or il\- dllatrial projects and residential projects involvine 10 or more uni ta. .Not all-st.reets are part of the traffic ordinance and to talk or netghborhood Btreels with 2,00() cau a qy ia as ridiculous • you would have the read..lQ& puWlc-bellev ... gest s ingle problem, yet we con- tinue to approve large mass de-- velopmenl. Newport Center alone not even including other large developments. has more than six million additional square feet of floor area to be bu ill and more than 500 ad- ditional dwelling units pro~ and that's just NewpO"rt Center. I believe we must work for solutions to our present traffic pr-0blems before we allow the developments that generate traffic we cannot accommodate. MARGOT SKILLING Poverty I.Ive• On To the Editor: A recent newspaper feature showed the deplorable plight or the street dwellers of India. Millions of people so poor, they Jive on the sidewalks of the city streets. They live in rilth, clothes in rags and their meager earn· ings barely enough for one pitiful meal a day. Disease is rampant and exacts a heavy t "'ll among them. I saw these conditJons back in the thirties when I was a radio operator in the merchant marine. Evidently conditions · have not changed much since then. We saw these same con· ditfons in other ports of the Far East. Namely Shanghai, China. WE HEAR and 'k'ead now that things are vastly different in mainland China. People 81'e warmly clothed, adequately fed and disease brought under con- trol. Can we seriously tell these people they made a big mis- take? That they were better off under their previous cpodltioos'! Live again like the people in lndla are Jiving now? Why did it .have to take a red revolution to bring about much needed reform? Where has the democratic process failed? Will India ,be next on the Marxist time. table? And If their millions are added to the million~ of China, where will that leave the free world? SAMHAKAM lro11lc To the Editor: 4 It's rather ironic to me that people are so upset about a local doctor allegedly strangling an infant to death. They would have accepted the death if the babv had died inside the mother in· . stead or at the doctor's hands. The point is that kilhng a baby 1s murder, whether inside the worn b of a mother or death when born. We call ourselves a ''Christian nation" and allow unborn children to be murdered. We worry about the rights of gays and criminals and go out of our way to see that their rights are not violated, yel an unborn child has no right to be born. One of the Ten Command· ments is "Thou Shalt Not Kill.·· Exodus 20 :13. However. man seems to ignore this com- mandment along with many others. IC man continues to ignore God's laws and commandments, I fear that this nation will be in a worse mess than it already is. KAREN ALLEN AboDbgatftf To the Editor: I read your Feb. 22 Mailbox. and one letter really got me! J, too, am thoroughly disgust. od with Che trashy magasine.'l displayed fn the small markets and some drug slores ror ctJUdren to look al so easily. I never buy from-a store when I see adult magazines where' ktds can read them, but what else caaa be done about this? These manaaers can Just as ea1U.Y pu\ the stuff behind the count~ • .KAREN Gl8SON ·. • ' • .. ' . ~ . •' ~ 17 .Saddieti&ek • ED Ii& 0 N l . . " . .. , ~fternoon : N.Y. Stoeks j VOL 71, 'NO. 60, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1978 TEN CENTS '.Plane Skid,s on Takeoff • • ___......ras s 2 25 Hurt Storm Lashes ' State ·In Fiery Accident .. Delly P'llllt SUH ......_ JOHN TUCKER. OF EL TORO SMILES THROUGH ADVERSITY His Car Ran Out of Gas In the Middle of Rain Runoff 'RIV.r' • • .... " • ..,. 11"1 ~ ... .,.. •• Storm, Gale Winds Lash Orange -Coast By .JACKIE HYMAN Ol tlle O.lty ,.. ... Staff More than two inches of rain, a c companied by gale-force ,winds gusting up to 68 miles per ·hour at Newport Harbor, pelted the Orange Coast Tuesday night and early today but caused only re latively minor damage com- pared to the storm of three weeks ago. However, falling tr~es and t e lepho ne poles dama~ed several houses, as dfd floodin,. No injuries were reported. • Scattered power outages OC· s ourre d a lso. a lo n g with f muds .. lides in Silverado Canyon, S Newport Beach, foothill canyons ' and in San Clemente. Rainfall for the 24-bour period ending this morning was re· cord ed at 1.6 inches in Hunt· ington Beach, 2.18 Inches in Costa Mesa. 2.30 inches in Laguna Niguel, 2.43 inches in Santa Ana and 3.S inches on Santiago Peak or Saddleback Mountain. Season·to·date totals, com· pared to last year at this time, were: Huntington Beach, 19.98 inches compared to 9.47 inches; Costa Mesa. 21.31 inches com· pa red to 7 .13 inches; Laguna Niguel, 22.24 compared to 6.6; Santa Ana, 21.15 compared to 7.51 ; and Santiago Peak, S0.3 compared lo 16.3. . And there's more rain on the way. The National We ather Service forecasts a 60 percent ch a nce of rain toniabt and <See RAIN, Page A!) * * * LOS ANGELES <AP> -A wind-whipped Pacific rainstorm thundered across an alr eady soggy Southern California today, caus ing one death, downing trees and power lines, c losing roads, damaging houses a nd forcing the evacuation of at least a dozen persons. But the subtropical storm, which was expected to taper to s howers later in the day, didn't Ii ve up to fears that it might duplicate the disastrous flooding of three weeks ago. Offi~als were closely watchiQ the saturated res- idential canyon areas around the city, where most or last month's flooding occurred. Los Angeles police reported three hillside houses in the ex- clusive Encino section of the San Fernando Valley were slipplng into adjacent backyards. The res idents were evacuated and there were no injuries. In the Sunland-Tujunga area. hard hat last month, "Things are running real smooth," said policeman Gary Wachtler. Precautionary evacuations we r e advised , however, in nearby Schwartz Canyoq._ Ebey Canyon near PaClGlhaa ana other hilly areas in the viclnJty as some o< the 3S county Oood con· trol debris basins re•ched the em ergency level. Los Angeles city nre officials said at least one bome was damaged by a mudslide in the La Tuna Canyon area of Sun Valley. Occupants of the home and several nearby residences, were evacuated. There were no injuries. About l5 miles to the east in La Crescenta, where dozens of homes were flooded Feb. 10, "eve r ything's fin e," said sheriff's deputy John Lofthus. The city received almost three. inches of rain in the stormJn<f more than four inches fen" in s o m e parts o f Southern Calirorrua. The lat.est storm brought the seasonal total to almost 24 inches, compared to 7 .38 inches during the drought last year. The normal rainfall for t~s time of year is 10.43lnches. While the storm rolled east, forecasters said anotb,er Pacific· spawned storm will pass through by Friday, dropping even more rain. Mudslides closed or partially blocked at least 17 roads, includ· ing all but one lane of the heavi· ly used Paciftt Coast Highway· and two southbound lanes of Interstate 5, the main artery betw-:en Los Angeles and Northern Califorrua. Travelers warnings were issued for mountain and canyon roads due to h lgh winds, s lippery pavementandpoorvisibillty. A motortst blinded by a heavy blast of rain collided with a young motorcyclist in the City of Jndustry, killing 17·year·old • Stephen Mulherin. The motorist was not injured. A spokesman for Southern <See 8TOllM, Page Al) * * * Clelly "" .. ,..... .., •l<Mnll It...._ FIREMEN BATTLE BLAZE OM FIRESTATION ROOF Malfvnctlonlng Heater B'amed, No lnjufles tagwui 'llilt1 1»laz~.t Hits ·Fire Station By LAVRIE KASPER GI .. Delly ~ l4aff • Firemen are repeating today what they say in fire prevention lectures -"It can happen to anyone." Fire caused an estimated $20,000 ~amage to the county fire station at 24001 Paseo de Valencia, Laguna Hills, this morning. Capt. Bruce Turbeville, in· formation officer, said damage Rapists Grab Woman Near . Irvine Eatery . A ~year-old North Hollywood saleswoman was dragged from her car outside Gulliver's restaurant in Irvine Tuesday, thrown into the back of a van . and raped by two men, police said. The woma.n, who reported the crime to Los Angeles police, s aid she had Just finished dinner with friends and was getting into her car when sbe was grabbed. One of the men• covered her eyes with his hand. She said the men, who spoke Spanish, were laughing as they raped her in turn, She was tossed from the back of the van to the ground aQd the men drove away fast, she re-ported. was confined to the roof and at· tic or the station. He said the fire apparently wa s caused by a malfunctioning heater. Although seven firemen were sleeping in bartacks below the sm ok\ng attic, lhere were no in· juries. Capt. Terry Carson and a crew of firemen discovered the blaze at· about 4:30 a.m. when they returned from another call. When they drove up lo the station and saw the smoke billowing into the dark, rainy, windy sky, one of the fire fi g hters said, i' hope that's steam." · But as they pulled around to 1.he back of the station, they caught the distinctive smell Of fire and set to work. Turbeville said these men attacked the blaze, rousted their sleeping as· socia.tes from the barracks and infor med their headquarters. Although the s tation Is equipped with smoke detectors, they issued no warnil'\f to the firemen. Turbeville said this was because the smoke was be· ing sucked out through.the top of the building. About 40 fire fighters on six engines; two trucks and one paramedic unit fought the stubborn fire as winds whipped about al 40 miles an hour and heavy rain continued. Turbeville sald·ll took a litUe more than an hour to bring the fire under control. Although the ceiling in a shower .and IOc.ker room had to be pulled down, be <See FIRE, Page A.2) Ttie rains also have set a record, according to John Gietzen ol Orange County .Flood Control (District. He said this is the highest f season-to-date rainfall in most of l Orange County s;nce 1909. f Storm Sia~ S~n .Diego MAC to Study Changes in . £ ' • ' • • • • • l ,# lligh Winda Doion T~ Knock Oiil l'ower ' . tr"41pped t~mpourlly by • muclallde in Ml11lon Valley where acceaa roads were fioodtd. The aandbap which Fallbrook realdenta used In a slmllar wind and rainstorm two week.I aio ~ I . , Viejo P.lan The Mls~lon Vl~jo Munlcipe.1 Advisory eotm~n will conduct -. ·stud)" se~$\Gd tonl1ht on ~ amendment to the .Mission VleJP planned commumty text. The text la almUar to a general plan fbr the toQ)muntt1. Cban.cea in.J~e ddcuarent ~ bei~g propos"° by the Mission YteJo Company, developeta .~ Uie:PI._... eo1Dmwal\y. Tbe __., wdl·..et'~ approval for the cUrileJ follow· h'f 'recoau•ndltlou. bY the M T~nf,:tr:'~~'::loft wU! -.in at 1:,1r;l)';Q., ln llAC 'of· ncu, Z70'Zl .ca Pu Ro~, Suit.e 21(. 1 LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Continental Airline DC·lO jetliner crashed and burned at Los Angeles Inte rn ational Airport today, killing at least two people during an aborted' takeoff in a rainstorm. Airport spokeswoman Virginia &lack said there were two known dead. She didn't know who they were. At least 25 people were hospitalized. An airport spokesman s aid "There a re lots of s urvivors'." At least 10 ambulances were called to the scene and began rushing burn victims to a nearby hospital. The plaoe, flight 603 to Honolulu with al least 193 people aboard, was taking off from the west. a direction used only dur· ing storms when the wind goes in the opposite direction. Two landing wheel tires burst and a landing l,?ear collapsed, said Continental spokesman Robert Sterling. Witness es said the plane . tipped over amid sparks and flames as the pilot tried to abort the takeofC and turn off the runway. Dick Lombardi, who drove by the .airport shortly a fter the crash said the plane's left fuselage was engulted in flames. • "People wei-e jumping out of the right side and out the back," Lombardi aaid. .. After a couple or minutes some fire engines arrived and' s.larte.d pourin& wate r or som ething on the flames: About three minutes later there was some kind of explosion.'' The aircraft never got off the g r ound. A spokesman for Continental said the pilot had aborted his takeoff because or a blown tire which caused the landing gear to 'collapse. When he tried to turn left. orr the runway, the plane tipped over and the lefrwing caught fire. Afler the fire was ex- tinguished, the right mid-section of the plane near the wing was singed a deep brown and the "I. plane was leaning on its Jett side, the wing bent upward. One survivor, whose identity was not immediately known. said, "I'm fine." $687inLoot I Taken in Toro An intruder who kicked down the front door to g_ain entry took property valued at $687 from an El Toro home. Orange County sherirr's of- ficers said the break·in at the hom e of Officer Roger C. Osborne, 34, of 24961 Valley Rim Terrace, occurred while be was away. He Jost cameras, a clock radio, a television set, an adding machine and cash with a total value of $687. Coast Weather Chance ot rain increas· ing to 60 percent Jato tonlg}\t and Thursday. Low!i"'tonjght in.SOS. Highs Thu!.sday ~!o S.S. INSIDE TODA "l' ,:J'he familiar H1mtlngton Beach ~ draw . ottef'&tion but. alao u ill Med 0/ u. StOTJI, photo, D1. •••ex .. , .,_...,.. Af ............. c:u = MW... M • .... ......... b ...... .. ..... 914 e........ .... ......... !II C..W.• a,.._.,_.. " = . 0 ..... t-. M.Dt ...... • ....... lt.J ........... » ............. "' .......................... --Ctl-(1 T«...W. .. Ct""·" ,...,_ .,~ • .._ M ....-.W Ot :::.~ ~ _,.,.._ M,IM . r 'I :t2 DAILY PILOT SB . . By PIOLIP ROSMARIN oc , .. o.u, 114..;t si:.tt Exhausted Uon Country Safari rangers arc waiting out the first day of a 48-hour truce they unilaterally called with . Bubbles the pe'\"ipatetic · hippopotamus. For the first time in nine days, since her escape from Uon Country Feb. 20, the hippo was unmolested in her nightly forage from a pond orf Laguna Canyon Road . "We're not going to attempt anything for the" next 48 hours," Lion Country publicist Jo Schetter said Tuesday. "We're going to give her some rest and lake food out there. ,, Bubbles, the only known hippo protected al!ainst harm by a superior court order, and also the only known hippo to appear on a Walter Cronkite news broadcast, slipped from her pond Tuesday to feed OR oats, hay and grass set out by the. rangers themselves. •·we'll see if we can calm her down by not trying to dart her {with a tranquilizer) or anything." ~short People' Bill Doesn't Measure Up ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -A bill to ban the play- in g of the hit song "Short People" on Maryland radio stations just doesn 't measure up to constitutional scrutiny, says Attorney General Francis B. Burch. Burch, in a letter to the bill's sponsor, Isiah Dix- on Jr., said the First Amendment ''empowers musclcmen to kick verbal sand in the faces of the short and skinny, as well as Davids to aim hard words at towering Goliaths." He also said the federal government has pre· e mpted the regulation of radio and television st ations, which wouJd lead "a lower court to shortcircuit this short-lived proposal in short order." And, Burch told Dixon that "for such a bill to square with the Equal Protection Clause is a tall or- der." , FrotRPageAI RAIN DAMAGE. • • Thursday, with more rain on Friday and Saturday or UD· known intensity. Orange County firemen were rechanneling a flooded creek in SilveradoCanyon today and were standing by in case of mudslides. A mudslide on Pacific Coast Highway b e twee n Camino' Capistrano and Doheney Park Road caused the road to be clos<:d this morning while Back Bay Road in Newport Beach was closed by several mudslides. In addition, Bayside Drive between El Paseo and Carnation Avenue was also closed due lo mud and portions of East C<tast Highway in Corona del Mar were blanketed with mud. However, city uews were able to keep the road open. Corona del Mar Elementary School was closed due to flood· ing. Flooding was reported along the Jasmin!? Gulch and in a half. dozen waterfront homes on Bayside Drive. Parts of Laguna Canyon Road also flooded but the road re- mained open. Winds blew about 200 feet or roof off a home at 600 Vista Lane· e arly today, sending the un- identified occupants scurrying for cover. Firemen put up a pro- tective covering to protect con- tents. A 43-vear-old eucalyptus tree repor~y crashed down about I :30 a.m. onto the second story of a home owned by Mrs. Cornelia Tonkin of 594 Brooks St., Laguna Beach. Mrs. Tonkin escaped unharmed. Her neighbor. Carl Klass, of' 598 Brooks St., said he bas asked dly officials three times In the last six months to trim the huge tree, which he said is on city property. Surf was choppy and high, breaking up to 15 feet in Newport Beach and 18 feet in Huntington Beach. Minor damage was reported to both piers. AU ciUes reported flo<>ding in the usual low.lying street& and Jntersections. Minor damage was reported ln Newport Harbor, where the Orange County Harbor Patrol reported that ebout a dozen boats broke loose. Dinghies were aJso reported ORANOI COAST se DAILY PILOT blown off docks in Sunset Aquat.ic Park. Ground slippage was reported threatening the Elks Club in Fullerton. The club site sits on a knoll at the intersection of Harbor and Brea boulevards. Pacific Telephone reported no serious problems alOllg the Orange Coast, although a flooded manhole in Fullerton shut off service to about 2,700 customers between t and 10:30 p.m. Tuesday. San Diego Gas and Eltt\rlc noted a b~ackout shortly before 1: 22 a.m . m south San Clemente, affecting about 1,000 i:USlomers for 44 minutes. The cause was unknoWn. Scattered homes were blacked out in other parts or the coast as well. the Southern California Edison Company said. A spokesman said several areas experienced blackouts between about 1:30 a.m. and 3 a.m ., when the storm was the most fierce. The areas were the Corona del Mar-Newport Center region; Newport Heights and part or Costa Mesa south of 22nd Street between Newport Boulevard and Irvine Avenue; and near the Five Points Area of Huntinit.on Beach. In addition, a power pole fell on a house on Charle Street in Costa· Mesa, blacking out about 10,000 customers for about an hour and a half. + * EroaePageAI STORM ••• California Edison estimated that power outages due tD more than 100 downed or storm-damaged Jines affected up to 100,000 customers by dawn. Hardest bit areas were in Long Beach, Pal08 Verdes, Carson and Del Amo, be added. Flash flood watch~s were is- sued for Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, Imperial, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. In ad- dition, the National Weather Service Issued a special .. severe thunderstorm· watch" ror a 30·mile wide section from northwest Burb~ to aoutheut San Die10. Jn several marinas along the Los Angeles County coaaWne, boats were torn from their moorings by high winds and beavyseas. On the. Palos Verdes Pen.l.nsu.la north ol Los An11les Harbor, two expensive homes that slipped from their foundations by last month's ralDI, were teetering on the brink ot collapse wllh the new rain. One bomt belongs to U.. famlly '>f tenma 1tar Tracy Austin. Ev8C\Ydon centen were Ht up ln !fun Valley and La Crucenta, la. &Ile Lois An•elet area. »ut muy r•ldeota ap. peared bOt to be beedinl the a,.vaouaUoo watnlnt_t. Tbe ceni•r• ~•r• e1Dpty 'f u••~ niaht althou1b Red Cro11 WOfk.,. w.e tCancllnl by. Lion Country rangers, alter more than a week's "allng the bush (or the three-ton Bubbles, concede they've been outwitted, outllankod and outlasted by a hippo. They don't know how to catch her. For her part, Bubbles, rangers fear, may be getting a little paranoid-and, consequently, dangerous-by her experiences in the free world. ll was getting t o where a hippopotamus couldn't stick her head out or the water without a range r loosing a tranquilizer dart at her or some tourish opo· ping a flashbulb in her face. Bubbles, the rangers said, has had it. The last time a ranger thought he'd finally tranquilized her, Tuesday morning, Bubbles stood up and bellowed atbim. She never yelled at them before. Rangers blame a lot of Bubbles' irritability on the crowds or up to 50 people who have stopped. their cars on Laguna Canyon Road to gawk· at the hippo. or rather ·at her pond, since Bubbles stays submerged during the~a.Ytl!'fle. So worried about what might happen if Bubbles came out and· endangered the throng, the rangers announced Monday that they might have to kill the hippo. Lion Country officials later satd the remarks by rangers had been misinterpret- ed by the press. Before the rangers' self· imposed deadline came Tuesday morning, a court order was handed down by Superior Judge Robert Green, who got out of bed at 4 a .m. to sign it. The order forbids them from harming the hippo. A full hear- ing is scheduled for March 10, if Bubbles remains loose. Jurors Told Stw/f Pwt 'Diabolical' \ Mty,.._..._..,..... Fetus NUiQPsY Backed By TOM BARLEY °' , .. o.lly l"li.t I .... An Orange County Coroner's officer, who testified earlier that • the infant 1allegedly murdered by Or. William Baxter Waddill died of manual strangulation, went back on the witness stand Tuesday to offer new evidence for the prosecution. Dr. l\ot>ert Ricnards testified in bis second appearance before a Superior Court jury that he had returned to his laboratory to exam iqe tissue s lides that he had nol used during his first ap- pearance in court. 'Richards came under heavy fire from two defense lawyers. parlicularly Dr. Malbour Watson, during that first session and was accused by them of sub- mitting incompetent evidence. He told the jury on that OC· casion that he confirmed his autopsy verdict of manual strangulation but conceded un- der intensive defense questioning that he could not determine the process of death that led to strangulation. FIREMEN PROBE CEILING OF LAGUNA HILLS STATION Blaze Caus~s $20,000 Damage to County FacUtty &ardDelays Ctupers Park Erosion Suit Mr. McAdam Rites Today G ra veside services wer e scheduled today at Pacific View Memorial Park, Newport Beach, for El Toro businessman Alex- ander F. McAdam, 52. wbO' w ed Sunday. Born i n Los An geles. Mr. McAdam was a member of the Merchant Marine in World War JI and was vice president of A.C.L. Filco for the past several years. .J. Surving Mr. McAdam is his wife Adeline, two daughters Michaela and Pilar, or El Toro, and a sister, Mrs. Jean Chalfant of Coulterville. Fro.Page Al FIRE .•. said, there was no bum damage below the ceiling line. The fire officer said the station is "fully operational." Plastic tarps were thrown over the charred roof this morning. Orange County s upervisors agreed Tuesday to delay filing a iawsuit against the sand and gravel company allegedly responsible for recent massive creek bed erosion m <.:apsers Regional Park. Supervisors approved the four-week delay after Conrock Co. officials indicated the com- pany's willingness lo take steps lo correct the erosion problem as well as to repair damage already done. Qne preventative m easure re- JYOrtedly already taken was movin~ the sand and gravel mining operation in San Juan Creek 2,000 feet from the park's southern border. · Contributions to the American By GARY GRANVILLE Heart Association are suggested Conrock officials also indicat- ed their own work crews and equipment might be used to re- pair some of tbe er~sion damage, including replacing a washed out park access road. Of "'9 0.11, ~ ... Slaff Defense lawyer Terry Giles by the family. conceded Tuesday that would-be • • Id u· d pornographic movie producer V1ctun ent 1e f .red Be~ Douglas "might be a • SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A Officials of the firm also said lhe four-week lawsuJl slay wiU give them time to confer with engineering firms and county of- ficials to seek a lasting solution to the erosion problem. kinky thrill s~eker._. .. ; who 21.year-old Walnut Creek man n~ds psychological h~lp. who authorities said j umped to But Mr. Douglas does not his death from the Golden Gate ~ave a murderous heart," Giles Bridge has been identified as intoned ash~ closed his defense James Wagenis. of Douglas m Orange County =~:.::....:..:..::.=~:..--------------------------------­ . Superior Court. Prosecutor Willlam M<>l'rissey wasn't nearly so kind in his as· sessment of Douglas' chara.cter, however. Morrissey told the jury that Douglas last July hatched "a dlabOlical plot" for a macabre torture-murder picture taking session simply "to satisfy his lust for human carnage." Those contradicting ap- pr,atsals or the 54-year-old de- fendant's character echoing in their ears. the six wom·en and six men Jurors today beean de- ciding Douglas' rate. The Costa Mesa furniture re- finisber is charged with solicit· ir.g the real life murder and dis· memberment or two modeU; he lured to the desert for a lesbian bondage mm. Douglas Is also accused of at- tempting to m\Jrder his two X· rated starlets who. in reality, were undercover policewomen. Valencay ... JI dining furniture in the Louis XV style by Henredon ... reflects uncommon respect for the artistry of the t 8th Century French , _ ... cabinetmaker, and an understanding of -~:"-.?°'-,+• modern dining needs. Finely crafted in solid ~:-'i~:\.~~ .. 1 -- mahogany and walnut veneer, "" ·{~'1-~~ . each.design is enriched by delicate .. ~.._,·"';·,:.~""-::.,-x ,, carving. Greceful ovaJ and rectangular ... · "".., .. --.... , tables have glowing parquetry tops and extend -,. with leaves ... china cabinets wltl'l interior lights and adjustable glass shelves offer impressive display/ storage of special possessions. See how Henredon's Valencay can add elegance to compact as well as spacious dining environments. Chandler's Decorative C:oum: Call Marilyn Bruce Today for Oetall'l. We~allz~ In plents fOf your home. 1514 NORRI MAIN 8Afl'TA-ANA· 541-4391 Tuu .. ~Thurs. end Sat.: 900 to ':JO Mon..i 12 to9 • fri.19UOto9ro • CNndlet'I fHt\UU the finest lrom OrtllC~ Henteg ' Henredon, untuty, Bblctr, Weiman. Sherrill. St..-on-~. Woodrnartt, ~ c..on, A.lteloom Btdd1ng. S1itn.. ~lt>fo. O\ondlcr Custom Ot~t t.. Carp.ting •~ well n other famous ~s. , • CALIFORNIA OpinionVnfo~ I Poll Studies ' • f Jarvis Issue : SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -California voters •e confused by the Jarvis-Gann property tax in· itlaUve and can be easily swayed by a strong pitch ft'om either side. according to the California Poll J'jeleased today. • "Public opinion at this stage is still relatively iinf ormed and what has formed is quite unstable." llOllster Mervin D. Field reported after surveying ~cross-cut or 1,217 voters in mid-February. The tax-cutting initiative will be put to voters as Proposition 13 on the state's June 6 ballot. .• . .. Wednaday, March 1. 1978 Atdlaor Bopeftd • • • It • • .. • • OAILY PILOT AS State Panel OK~ ·Tax Bill .. ~iW~H>.· .. ~ SACRAMENTO (AP) -Tb.la year's top bill to • cut property taxes, stripped of a controversial • home·sales tax, could clear the Legislature this .•~r.ri.::;'f!: week, the measure's author says. It ._.~.-;;;;;;;:;;;......__...,;;o.,;;;;..;;;;..., The predletlon bySen. Peter Behr, R..iriburon, it HERB « came Tuesday alter the Assembly Ways and • FRIEDLASDER • Means Committee accepted Behr's amendmef\t to • IS l'tAKiNG : scrap ~ s perce~t tax on profits from the s ale of • GREAT DEALS • most single-farruly homes. • The move cleared the way for a committee • FREE • \tote today on the $1.4 billion measure. Approval * ¥ would send it to the Assembly floor tor a vote : 50 CALS : Thursday. • OF GAS • : IT WOULD LIMIT property taxes to one percent ~f market value of the property, but would exempt '8xes for pre-existing bonded indebtedness. Experts •ay the effect would be to cut most property tax bills ~Y about two-thirds. Critics say the reduced tax ln· fto'fl~• \'ieti• come would deprive cities, counties and school dis-~· II BEHR SA.JD THE SENATE could g1ve the • .. 11~'.,..""•111"'""'""""'~~··~~ .... amended bill its final legislative approval the ~ or OJ f. CtlASG ES • ~ .. rff •• .-.. , ... ,......,,,., • same day. ·~ Supporters had contended the profits tax was ,. ~ « trict.sofabout$7billion. ' H a rold Brons trup talks on phone after he was shot during a Only 56 percent of those polled by Field in-robbery of his jewelry store in San Bernardino. The bullet was needed to help provide homeowners with a t least a ,. w.11 ...... .,.-. : 40 percent cut in current property tax bills. ,. ur.rm "--.mJ dicated they had heard of the widely publicized tax deflected by Bronstrup's eyeglasses causing the wound to be minor. initiative. And of that slim majority, 26 percent re-' At left, is a paramedic. mained undecided on the issue . ------------------------------ But the tax drew strong opposition from re· •* * * * * * * * 1t * * •: altars who feared it would hurt home sales, and Jt MG-TRIUMPH • Assembly leaders .concluded the bill coul~ n~t win ,.. • Some 20 percent of those who had heard of it said they favored the measure. Ten percent were opposed. FIELD RESEARCHERS posed the initiative issue to its subjects in two forms. The first listed t.be tax cut's effects in a general manner; the second se the two-thirds ma.Jority need for passage if it con· • « S t B • t tainedthelevy. ,.. FIAT-LANCIA • usnec eannus . ,. sn-n~~ .. ·~=.:.=Bl•:..m • r . ~I wrmour THE SALES tax, the bill would cut ... * * * * * * * * * * •• Wei to Jiomeowner property taxes at least 30 percent, it • LOS ANGELES <AP) -A former onetime teen idol, was stab boost the tenters' tax credit to $75 and provide ad· * ,.,c. ... c.......~11,d. -tc •as more explicit. . Forty-eight percent thought the Jarvis-Gann e.iitlative was a good idea when the pollsters pre. tented its effects in general form. Thirty-three pizza deliveryman accused of kitllng death outside his West Hollywood. ditional aid for elderly homeowners and renters, Jt c"'*9crm uHo• • actorSalMineois loreturntocourtfor apartmentFeb.12,1976. among other things. •* * * * * * * * * * * ~ tpercent were opposed. ;· But with a mOt'e explicit explanation, only 4-0 aercent supported the initiative and 47 percent more pretrial hearings after a A murder complaint bad originally The amendmenta also cut the bill's first-year ~ l\tOTORllOME tr Superior Court judge refused to drol) been flied against Williams by the price tag from $1.9 billion to $1.4 billion. S ~LES & RENTALS• murderchargesagainsthim. district attorney, but the case was Bebr's plan languished in committee last year ·RFSERVF l\OW • -Judge William L. Ritzi Tuesday o~ later tat.en to the grand jury. wbJle lawmakers foudl~ over other tax bills, but it 537•.7777 E ' t 500 • dered 21-year-old Lionel R. Williams won Senate approv8' in January a.nd began to x • • 'frere opposed. . lo return to court March 14, despite 'When an indictment is returned emerge as the Legislature's answer to Uie Jarvis•******* * * * * *· arguments by Williams' attorney by a grand ·jury, there is DO pre-initiative. : THE POLLTAKERS then posed four specific •guments to the survey subjects: Two spoke in •vor of the lnltlative; two were against it. • that an indictment should be set )iminary hearing at which the pros-That measure, Proposition 13 on the June aside on grounds that few cases in . ~ulion presents evidence and wit· ballot, would cut taxes about 60 percent on all tax· the county go before the grand jury. nesses in an effort to convince a able property~ But critics claim it would cripple Celt 642-5678. Put a few words to work tor ou. " After hearing both sides, 4S percent or those Polled said they would vote in favor of Ptvposition s.1. Some 39 percent said they would vote "no." : In results released Monday, a statewide poll· W i 11 i ams was indicted in judge that a defendant should at.and local govemmenta or force sharp. increases in Mmeo's murder in Janu-:;ary:.!.:.·..:M:::in=:::eo:::.:·~a:..__t.::r.:::ia=l~. ___________ .....;oth~:::,er~le;;.:vi;:.es~. ----------------------- donducted for the McClatchy newspapers l'\Oled similar attitudes among voters. The newspaper's P.ll of 712 voters found l ·lo-1 support for the in· iSjiative. (Avie Funetions ~Eureka Al£.male Club .. To OK Women Guests SACRAMENTO (AP) -Femal' guests have won the right to enter an all-male club in Eureka for an~usi· ness, civic or political function, the state attomex general's office says. Tbe office reported Tuesday -dtat an out-of-court settlement between Ule attorney general's office and the 1.ngomar Club, which uses the famous Victori•a-style Carson Mansion. was approved by tbe- Bum boldt County Superior Court. Attorney General Evelle ¥oun2er filed the suit in 1974, asking the court to block the discrimination in guest policy. That policy bad prohibited women Crom entering the club except on Sundays. Four Suspects . Jailed, Face Robbery Charge ( .. SI'ATE ) Moll lfp1 n f rtdleted LOS ANGELES CAP) -Six reput· ed organized crime figures have been indicted oo federal ""conspiracy and racketeering counts that include the murder of Frank ••The Bomp" Bompensiero, a mobster who turned informant. Named m Tuesday's s ix-count in· dictment were Dominick Phillip Brooklier, 63; Samuel Orlando Sciortino, SS; Loui& Tom Dragna, 57; Michael Rizzltello, SO; Jack LoCicero, 65, and Thomas Ricciardi, 45. Saatdesert Support LOS ANGELES (AP) An amended committee report that supports exemption of the con- troversial S\Dldesert nuclear power plant from state nuclear safeguard SAN DIEGO (AP> -Four robbery laws ~as been approved by the City suspects are in jail after a high-speed• Council. . , chase on the Coronado Bay Bridge The mtnonty report of the council s with a police detective recently re-State, .County and Federal Affair;s instated after a 30-day suspension for Committee was amendc:d to permit oU-duty public drunkenness officials the council to withdraw its support ii aay. ' legislation is introduced that would Now Detective Louis Rodriguez, speed development of ~ltemative who r.eturned lo duty Feb. 16, may be energy sources to satisfy city needs. in for a medal, Police Chief Bill Kolendersald1.'uesday. . RODRIGUEZ spotted what looked like an armed robbeey at Galloway's Pharmacy and gave chase, calling for help on his police radio, a de· partment spokesman said. The sus· pecta fired two shots at Rodriguez as they weaved up tbe bridge. • About two doun officers met the fleeing car at the San Diego end of the long curving structure and a unUormed policeman fired slx shots at the vehicle before it swerved out of 'control. ALL l'OU& suspects were arrested at aunvc>lnt. · Wlnnoola Alfred, 19, and William Bennett. 20, of Pomona, and Willard· Farrow, 28, and Johnny Robinson, 22, of Los Angeles, were booked into County .ran for lnveatl1atlon of armed robbery, uaault with a deadly weapon and auault with intent to kill. police said. SAN RAFAEL <AP> -San Francisco would open its Golden Gate Bridge to commuters for just 50 cents if Marin County Supervisors win their attempt lo temporarily slasb the span's toll ln balf. The board Tuesday unanimously asked for a 50 cent reduction in the $1 toll to reimburse bridge cro&sers for what a judg49 bas deemed an illegal increase. · LA Afr 'Went' LOS ANGELES CAP) -Los Angeles had the worst au quality Of any in the nation In 1975, the President's Council on Environmental Quality said Tues- .day. The White House group based its findinp cm three-year-old atatlaties because they were the most reeent available, the Lo8 Angeles Times re-'parted. With the cost of a college education doubting over tho past ten yea.rs, what will it cost for your children? Whatever the amount, Sao Diego Federal can help you attain iL Yes, the interest your savings earn at San Diego Federal can doub/4 your initial deposit in as little u nine years l The chart shows how fast aavings double in various San Diego Federal savings accounts. So, seJcct the combination of aQOOUJltJ that bolt fits your needs: a Cettljicard• account for )9ngeNcnn goals ••• and a pass· book or PassetUd• accou:nt that allows you to add and withdraw savin~ at your convenience. Open your aafcty·insurcd savings accounts with the double- J<>UNnOnty people at San Diego Federal Savinp • • • where there's interest in your futur~ • .... ..... TOMI •ACCOlllT ·~ OOlllUJ• MltOI ....... OfSIAOI ..... orsi.m I.OS:-lf1tllST UINICI lf'lll Oii( ml T lflll 1U 1UIS QI Ill Ill 111 .,.... 7"' ·ru:-'1,080" l06' 12,171• .,... ..... 7HS "l'J:' •1,on,. 7.791, sz,1170 ...... ,, . ~~ IJ,D691l 6.98' S},963'1 ~ .... .,... ...... 6~'. s.ru:-11,06711 6.72' S},916~ u .... z .... 5u ,_,.,. ,. •t,()59• 5.9ZS s1.m• .. ,.., , ..... 5"" ~-i:-'1,o53• 5.39' Sl,690D ....... _____ .... _ .... _ .. _____ ...... .,_ .............. _ .. ..,. _______ ............... ....... ......................... , ...................... _..._ ......................... ... 4 ............ .,. ..................... ___ ...................... .. B.Smt~egoFedei!tt~ ) . s.nc-.n.nte (~Fall, 1978) New1)0rl BMch (\:>penlng Surnmet, 1978) . .. : - ~· 88 E ' .. it ri I .. .. .RObert fi, Weed/Publlsher ThOmas Keevll/EdltOf' Orange Coast Daily Pilot u 0 a ag.e ________ W_ed·,,···sda-y,·M·at-C:h-1 .• l.~.78---------·B·a·r·~-r~-K.re·l·b·lc·h·/·E·d·ltor-l•.'.P·aoe-·E·d·lt·O·'·• ~ I ! I I slrvine Co1lncil . 1:Recommendations : . There is good material on the ballot before Irvine t voters in next Tuesday's City Council election. Seven f ~andidates are seeking the two open positions and most of \'.the seven hold good credentials to fill the two four-year ~ terms. f In weighing all of the qualifications, however, and in considering the campaigning tactics, the backgrounds ~ and the talents of those seeking office, The Dally Pilot recommends: · l. -Arthur Anthony, former Irvine mayor who is again ; seeking an elected position of civic responsibility. < -Larry Agran, a young attorney who appears to •,have a particularly incisive view of Irvine's problems ~. and how to cope with them. t Anthony proved his ability during an especially ~turbulent period in Irvine's history and as mayor showed t 'he could deal with the issues with responsibility and > authority. He is well versed in all aspects of Irvine city government. Agran has involved hiJnself in numerous public in· ~ terest projects. Although a newcomer to city politics. he has demonstrated brightness at the candidates' open forums. Together, these two candidates -whose visions of Irvine's future differ s ubsta(atively -will help .achieve a balance of opinion, of view, that Irvine needs to have a full airing of local issues -with the best chance for strik· ing decisions that will imprqve the city. Of the remaining candidates, Vivian Hall is our next choice to maintain that stability of governing Irvine needs. MAC Candidates Quiet As an unincorporated community: Mission Viejo has no city council. It does, however, have a five-member Municipal Advisory Council <MAC> with a recommending capacity that carries considerable weight with county government. Next Tuesday. Mission Viejo voters will elect three new l\JAC directors -a majority of those working on this vital community board. Unfortunately for Mission VieJo residents, none of the eight candidates has run a clearly delineated campaign, nor has any offered outstanding qualifications or reasons, in the Daily Pilot's eyes, for warranting recommendation or endorsement. No meet-the.candidate sessions have been held. That is unfortunate in itself. With the multitude of issues fac- ing the community -park development, adequate police protection, traffic circulation, safety problems -· we .. would have hoped one or all of those seeking office would have expressed themselves on some of these issues. J_,acking exposure to their beliefs and qualifications, the Daily Pilot is making QO recommendations in this election. ~Jarvis School hnpact S4iddleback Valley Unified School District trustees are taking a wait and see attitude toward the Jarvis· Gann Initiative. The initiative, which is aimed at cutting property tax- es, would reduce the district's income by-about $24 miJlion, or 75 percent of its current budget. if it is approved by California voters June6. · · The loss of this money could result in the elimination of a lmos t a)l s upport services, including bus transportation, food service and recreation, as well as all elective classes at the secondary level. Un(ier normal circumstances. trustees would soon have to inform administrators and teachers whose jobs may be in jeopardy because of this. But since it is doubtful that state legislators will aUo~uch drastic cuts in public education, Saddleback trustees are not getting ' panicky. Instead, they are asking the state to make up ''any and all" income they may lose if the measure passes. It's a good move but they may ·be asking a bit too much. Whether or not the initiative is successful, it should be considered as a demand for cuts at all gov· ernmental levels. Considering this, trustees should continue to look closely at their budget and all possible reductions. • Opinions expressed in the spaee above are those of the Dally Piiot. , Other viewt expressed on this page are those of thel[_ authon and artists. Rea~ comment is invited. Address The 9a""' Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Acro~yms ByL.M.BOVD · r--"i Q. "What's the dirterence between radar and sonar?" Q . "What's the 'SJ.' stand for in the name of Cal1Cornia Senator S.I. Hayakawa?•• A. Samuel lcheye: /.. Radar, an acronym or "Radio Detecting and Rang. ing:• -u:sesndio waves ln the air. Sonar, an acrooym or · "Sound Navigation Rang. ing," uses sound waves un· derwater. ' Get it risht, pleue: The Smiths outnumber the Johnsons in thh1 country by at least hall a million. Q. ..Didn't the POet Carl Sandbur1 IO to Weal Pomt?" A. For a time. He fiunted oat ln F.naJh!b. Dear Gloomy cm Jn the 1947 motion picture "Caesar and Cleopatra," it was not enough in one scene simply to show the moonlit sk¥ t>ehind the Sphinx. The technical advisors tnslsted on accuracy. So the set was de· sianed wherein the hundreds of vJsible star& were in exact· ly the same heavenly postUons of the ttme -the year'58.C. Not only do tMnt bafflnea tend to llv• Jooaer U\an other m aJor le.,ue players, but they play longer aenerally than do otb,er major leaguers. I'm now told. Nicholas Von Hoffman Haldeman: Smart But Nan·o.w ·Several years a10. I srent twoV lt is a g·ap in perception days in the Beverly-Wilshire between tbe Watergate Hotel in Los Angeles talking ~o perpetrators and the Watergate Bob Haldeman about coUabOfal· prosecutors, juridical and ing with him on his as.then un· journalistic, which may accoont written book . The publisher who for the trouble Nixon, Haldeman had brought me out there and some others have had In couldn't get together with making sufficiently salisfying H~eman on money. confessions. They're not quite e difficulty was that while sure what it is they are to COO· Ha deman had a useful and lm· fess to. portant story · to tell about Richard Nix· on, it wasn't a sensational or a sexy one so that without a great deal or misleading hype, itw~ never ea,._ back the huge cash advances Haldeman wanted. Evidently he got the big buck from The New York Times, which has gone on to make the big buck back by giving us a yet bigger hype. However., if H.R. Haldeman knows somethi!\g about Watergate we didn t already know, he didn't put it in his book. After my two days with Haldeman, I was convinced that President Nixon's major domo just doesn't know very much about Watergate. Evidently, back m lhe early months o(,1972. the principal actors in' the drama had no earthly idea that they w ere invo lv e d in Watergate. Legally, many of them ended up in conspiracy to obstruct justice, but that's a very different thing (fom taking part in a classical plot. NO GROUP OF plotters came together in the midnight hour and coovenanted to take actions in concert wbfch they un- derstood would destroy them if ever discovered. ·The evidence 4lll points to a series or discreet, ad hoc act.s, many of them done thoughUe8sly. After the fact, all these acts committed 'by . a large as- sot(roent of different people, many or whom had never met each other, were gathered up a nd put in one container, one menta l construct called Watergate. Mailbo~ 'fHE HALDEMAN I met at the Beverly-Wilshire was not a man well equipped to dope out \he meanings of what he had done and had done to him. He has, or he had, charm and likeability, but a remarkably shallow backaround in history, · liter ature'-~itical .Philosophy or any otfie~ area of study which might hav~ ~rovided him with some guide or' measure. He gav~ ihe impression of be· ing a smart man, and ~n ethical one, but so ignorant. so without knowledge J.hat he was without prudence or judgment. One of the things he insisted on in our conversation was his self-de.fioiUon a s a "non- poliUcal" person, someone who concerned himself with what he ca1led "process." By way of iJ. luslration he recalled the dis· cussjoru; between Nixon, Kiss· inger and others about the de· cision to recommence bQmbint Hanoi. He recaJled himselC being indifferent as to which way the decision went but impatient they· make it so he could start the engine of government io carry it out. As Haldeman saw himself, .once he had made his act or faith in the Republican Party, in a Richard Nixon or a John Connal· Jy-he is a great admirer of Nix· on's old secret ar¥ of the Treasury -once he had made his inner personal commitment, he was absolved Crom doing any thinking about th e issues himselC. A Nixon or a Connally were great "conservativ.es" and that was all he needed to know. , HE SEEMED to have been imprinted with conservatism at an early age, lhe way a baby duck can be imprinted with the Idea that a three·ton elephant is its mother and follow it ev~Y· wher e. At some early potnt. most likely in his college years, the imprinting took place. He slopped asking questions and followed his elephant right to the jail house door. A m an who can play a major role in election after election, who can be lhe president of the United States' alter ego and stW think of himself as non-political is a man who would have no difficulty playing a major role in the Watergale drama without knowing it. Which is not to say Haldeman is stupid. He is a smart man but a narrow one and one so wilhoul intellectual curiosity it never occurred to him to look around him and see where he was. Haldeman is a tough man too, but no tougher than his old boss. At one point he said he'd recent· ly talked to Nixon, who had asked how Haldeman was going to vote in an up coming California election. Haldeman said he replied by reminding the exile of San Clem ente. "l'm a convicted felon, in case you"ve forgotten, and we can't vote." After that, he reported, there was a pause on the other end of the line and then Ntxon said, "Well , in that case I'll vote twice." This Time the Taxpayer 'Is the Boss To the Edltor: It ls amusing to hear the laments ol the politicians and bureaucrats concerning the Jarvis-Gann amendment. Forecasts or the consequences or its passage encompass every eventuality but Armageddon. Where things are rW) with at least a modicum of efficiency, as in business, when the chief kicks the budget proposal back for review (that means re· duction), one goes to work to pare expenses here and to do without there. One may groan a little, but the job iB done. JN THIS case, t.be boss, the taxpayer, is kicking the budget back for review. Between now and referendum tiooe, there are am pie hours and splendid op- portunities to review and reduce budgets. H the poliUeos do tbls and coz:ne up with results, 1'11 belp vote the amendment down. U not, I'll vote for the ,,amendment. I would auaeat others do the same. J.VI. REID Se1toe1 .. ee..er To the Editor: At its Feb. 8 meeting, the Board or EducaUon of the lrvipe Vnified School District Jtpproved a pollc:v govemlq tr"eedom of ex pressjon by students. Unfortunately. the approv~d policy contains • contradiction which ettecUvely denies atudenta that which the policy purports to irant them. The second parasrapb of the poU~1 irants to students, II\ laquaee that II quite dev, tbat which it never wu the board'a to give: 0 T8£ DlVDfE Unlfted 8oal'd of :Education uphold• and encouraau tre.dom of the pna and freedom of upr ... ton as guaranteed by the Ft rat Amend,meat ~ Uae ColptltuUon or the United States. Jt ret· oanhea tbat student ptab• llcatlou may not be .-~ •~tor reatTala.J~or f;. •• respo:== == that orderly operation of tile 1ebo0t (tic> not be lmpaJred u required lri WI~·" Tb•MhC~~>~ of Ute A1W pialiq, la tbat J1 un~ablr e&Ur, ettabliabel tbl pnndpaj of ..-ch lelliool • CtlllOC': ''Sboialct u. ~lpaJ decide tlli1t u UUde or jOrUo8 ftf • utJCla ~-) .......... be/itila IDa1 pn¥tat JNbUOMAOa pending appeal to the superintendent or to the board as «nsor ... " It seems to m e the board should amend the policy and make it consistent by removing the words identifying lhc censors and their duties: Let the Constitution reign supreme On our schools too! ROBERT M. GORDON Rftf Clrcl~ Da11 To the Editor: Tuesday March 7. is an im· port.ant date. All voters living in Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict should mark that date with a big red circle on the family calendar. A critical bond election will be put before the voters for consideration and the Castille School PT A urges a yes vote. The housing demands or the immediate future make a vote in favor or the bonds the on- ly logical choice. CONSIDER: 1. The tax rate will not be raised as state law will not pefmit any greater tax rate than clJrrently apJ>lies. 2. When the bonds are ap· proved the total amount cannot and will not be used unless the growth contintres. 3. ShouJd the bonds be defeat- ed the need for immediate action will still exist, particular· ly in Mlssion Viejo. Other less desirable choices will have to be made. (le. tents, double sessions, etc.) With the projected arrival of 8,000 new children who wm be in our schools within the next five years, we really have only one cboice: vote yea for school bonds 9nKarch7. KAR.EN LIMBAUGH, Pnsldent CuWle PTA Executive Board your readers will unde rstand that lhe jury which heard this case over a period or about six months was expressing the same outrage that each o( us would have (ell had'wc been silt- ing as jurors. We are informed that the two victims were riding in a Pinto which was struck in the rear by another vehicle traveUng about 35 miles per hour. Although the people in the Pinto were not in- jured by the impact itself, the location and construction or the Pinto's gas tank was such thal it turned the vehicle into a kind of firebonb. One victim died and the other suffered horrible burns over 90 percent o( his body. PLAINTIFFS produce d evidence that Ford knew before it put the car on the market that the Pinto was defective in this regard. It was establllshed to the satisfaction or the jury lhat the cost of manufacturing the vehicle in a safe condition would have added only $10 each to the cost of producing Pintos. Ap- parently Ford intentionally chose to expose drivers and passe·ngers to the risk or death or injury wheh it callously calculated that the claims for compensation or the injuries and qeaths the defect was likely lo produce would be substantially less than the cost of making the car safe. Is il any wonder that the jury was outraged? Ford's net in- come after taxes in tho last Cis· cal year was $988 million and its net: worth is f7.7 billion. Is not the jury's award of punili~e damages now understandable? A study conducted Jn Europe has shown that oo death bas ... ever occurred arising out of an exploding gas tank properly located in relation to the rear axle. We predict that this verdict will r esult in the pro- duction of safer automobiles jn the future. RALPH D. DRAYTON President. California Trial Lawy.ers Assoc. Ironic To the Editor: It's rather ironic to me that people are so upset about a locaJ doctor allegedly strangling an infant to death. They would have accepted the dealh if the baby had died inside the mother in- stead of at lhe doctor's hands. The point is that killing a baby is murder, wheth er inside the worn b of a mother or death when born. We call ourselves a "Christian nation" and allow unborn children to be murdered. We worry about the rights of gays an,d criminals and go out of our way to see that their rights are not violated, yet a n unborn child.has no right lo be born. Ofle or the Ten Command·, ments is "Thou Shalt Not Kill." Exodus 20:13. However, man seems to ignore this com· ma'ndment along with many others. U man continues to ignore God's laws and commandments, r rear· that this nation will be in a worse mess than it already is. KAREN ALLEN Abollbguted To the F.d.ilor: 1 read yoor Feb. 22 Mailbox and one letter realJy got me! . J, too. am thoroughly d.isgustA ed with the tra.shy magatines displayed In the small m.rkets and some drug stoTeS' Cot childreD lo look al so easily. I never buy from-a store when. I see adult maf(a&ines wbere kida can read t.bcm, but .U else can 6e don6 about this'? These managers can just as ually put the stuff behind th~ counter. KAR EN G tBSON STOCKS I BUSINESS Wedu .. ttduy's NYSE COMPOSITE 2 p.m. (EDT) Prices · I Ir • TRANSACTIONS Wedneacs.y, March t. t978 s DAILY PILOT 8"J 2-to-l Victory Bidhy Kodak . Helps Polaroid. By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Ea.stman Kodak didn't have to challenge Polaroid in the in~tant camera market. But it did, perhaps for reasOQS of pride more than 'nything else. The result la a plcture not at all to Kodak's liking. Kodak began marketing instant cameras in April 1978. So 1971'-waa the first full year in which the two titans of photography"'confronted each other across aales counters with competitive products. THE MAIN BOUT Pl'M'ED KODAK'S Handle against Polaroilt's OneStep, each listing for $39.9S. These t"° model& account for 75 percent of instant camera sales. The sales figures tor 1977 are in and they show the con· teat wasn't even close. OneStep slaughtered the Handle. Polaroid overwhelmed Kodak by a margin of two·to-one . Kodak's entry into this segment of the photographlc market proved to be a shot in the arm for i.nstan\ camera sales, which had been static for several years. In 1977, U.S. sales of instant cameras escalated by 68 percent. Meanwhile, sales or conventional cameras, which don't give instant prints, declined by 4 percent. The result was to yield instant cameras Money Tree their highest market ~ share in hi.story: 40 percent. ~ ·Jn short: the market segment dominated by 'Polaro~ is moving into clearer focus; the market segmelt dominated by KQdak is fading. ~ '( POLAROID'S SALES CROSSED the $1 billion marl: last year for the first time. Its profits, approaching $1\¥) million, were atso at a record peak. , Eastman Kodak has managed to balloon ita annu~ sales to an aJl-tlme high of $6 billion, but ifs a profiU~ growth. . Back in 1973, Kodak earned S653 million on sales of p billion. Now that its sales are $2 billion greater, what is p, earning? $643 million. That's equivalent to increasing yo~ salary by so percent and having less take· home pay. 1 THANKS TO KODAK'S TROUBLES, 1978 ls sbaJSJM up as a year in wn1ch you should be able to get some g<>OO bargains on cameras. A couple of weeks ago Kodak ~· nounced that it was : .. -Knockjng down the suggested list price o! tM Handle to S:W.95. :· -:---Introducing two new instant cameras, t~~ Colorburst 100 and the ColorbUrsl 200, priced at $44.95 ariei $54.95. to replace its two original instant cameras, the El(.tC and EK6, which wer.e priced at $'53.50 and $69.SO. ~i -::..Bringing out four new pocket cameras, the Ektm series, with prices beginning al $1.9.95, to replace tbh Trim lite and Tele·lnstamatic models, which begin CJ. $22.95. t -Cutting the price of its X·l5F Instamatic camet'fi from $19.50 to $14. 75. 1 As far as Wal) Street goes, it's a "plague OD both YO\,\J' houses." Kodak and Polaroid both sold in the $150-a-sha'l range in 19'72. Polaroid was recently selling for $'25, Kod~ for $45. 1977 Earnings Up For Orange Firtn ~ . " ! i • Santa Fe International Corp. of Orange has announced 197'1 earnings of $3.98 per share, compared with $2.44 in 1976. Fully diluted earnings were $3.88, compared with $2.27. an lncrease or '11 percent. THE lt77 FIGURES INCLUDE $1.32 per share, or $1.29 full diluted, from the sele in the s~nd quarter or one-fourth of the company's int~rest in Thistle oil field in the North Sea. Net income for the year was $80,714,000, including $26,856,000 from the Thistle sale, -eompared with $46,$11,000 in 1976. ReV'enues of $580,938,000 were up nearly 34 percent from $434, 758,000 in 1976. Per·share figures are based on an average of 20,273,91'1 shares outstanding in 1971 and 19,200,798 in 1976, reflectini the December stock split in the form or 100 percent stocl dividend. 'E. L. SHANNON JR., SANTA Fe president, said the Ui percent gain in net income, excluding the Thistle sale, was due to almost full employment of land drilling equipment an~ a , record level of work in near.shore and lan~ canst.ruction ~tivities. These more than offset such factors as the relatively low demand for offshore drilling equipment, a decline ib profltabillt.y of offshore construction work, higher dry bole a nd administrative expenses and an increase in the ef· fective tax rate from 36 percent to 39 percent, be said. Net income in the fourth quarter amounted tp $8,392,000, compared with $9,840,000 in 1976. Per share earnings were 38 cents, compared With 46 cents fully dilut- ed in 1976. THE FOU"TH QUARTER DECLIN"E" was at. tributable to a currency translation loss mulling from the declining value of the dollar against the French franc, writeorr or foreilnl oil and gas investments, principally ~ Egypt, and higher net interest expense, general ~f administrative expenses and dry hole costs, Shannon said., Desert Valencias Marketed Early Special co tlWDaDY Pilot SHERMAN OAKS -Consume.rs can expect to nn4 California·Arizona daert valencia oran1ea In tbelt supermarkets a little earlier this ye1r. ' Desert valenciaa are maturing early u a result ol weather condiUoos, and tho flnt ahipmenu which be1an ~ early February indicate an ext4jllent Cl'OP foT 1978, aceo Ing to field offlclala at Sunk.bi Growers, Inc. WHILE MOST 01' TllE WESTEaN .. autes wer vlc:tJmlr.ed until recetly .by the d.roulbt. rainfall in th Calllornla·Ad-._cllMrt '""'1n• are;u WU normal a water 1upplle1 for lrrt.16oo remained adequate. This combloecf '"°'a lack ol frealnc weather, helped mwen to proclQce a qu1Uty valencla crop, eald John M \'an Hom. vice Pftlktent of neJd HrVtees for Sunlda\. "Fndt 1b.1P,ped ln late-February bad tbo nme Jm content and o•enll ••Uni quality as fruit nonn 11dppe4 la Aprll," Van Rom 11id. ''Prolt damaa• ln th uua bu been ~1aall1 nonemt.ent. ao we a:nUdp.a\e tha moet Of tbi crop WU1 be m&rtet.ed." \ t • \ • Bfl DAILY P1LOT · TeleVision TONIGHT'S LATES1 LISTINGS. .- ~-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- / ~ING 8:00 8 Cl) C88 NEW1 88 NEW8 I EMERGENCY ONEJ GAMBIT • THE IAADY BUNCH TM 8rldya etatt lhelr V11Catlon. «& ntE AOOt<IEI An n.conYlct Q'llltef'. mind• _., W9ll execut· eel robbetlet ualng young boy• loc*lng tor Qdt .. ment. fD ELECTRIC COMPANY ~ HISTORY OF MEXICO "Development 01 Nation/Stale, Spjjn" tml ABCNEWS 8.301) MOVIE *** "The WI/ Lord" I (Part 2) (19651 Ch•tton He1100, Richard Boone. A knlght movea 10 the North See ahor• and eetabllllles • lown. ( 1 llr.J Q CONCENTRATION Q) BEWn'CfiEO Terrori%ed Darrin Is treed fr0<11 his agr-ble spell and gell ht$ olct Job beck. ftl OVEAEASY Guests: director John Cassavetes, actress Gena Rowland a. • DIMENSIONS IN LT\JRE Pamela Franklin guests as a teacher terrorized by a student "death squad" on Police Woman, tonight at 10 on NBC, Channel 4. ~·· e.heVlor" UNTAMED WORLD ' Algnanlstan" ~ MERV GRIFFIN 7:00 0 NBC NEWS Q UARSCLU8 0 ASCNEWS 0 BOWLING FOR "DOLLARS ID ILOVELUCY Lucy lrleS to 01as11 Ricley s n.gntclub &Gt W1lh a 1i11ar- bog danca Q) ADAM.12 tL) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT il!) CREATIVE STITCHERY ·Pre•lew • (8) TO TELL THE TRI/TH 7-30 f) WHEN HAVOC STRUCK "The Cllltdren Of Ab«lan" The 1t0fy of the VIiiage of Aberlan. a mining town that eulfared one ot t~ w~t mllllng dlae.atera of alt time, and It elf hap- pened above ground. 0 SHANANA G~a: Martha R .. vff and the V enci.ttu. 1 0 NEWL YWS> GAME 0 MATCHGAMEP.M. 0 JOKER'S WILD G) THE BRADY BUNCH Jen~ herMlf a k>Sat. Q) ADAM·12 Malloy lllld Read are llolta 10 the -police commla- slOnar on night watch patrol. tl?J LA. IHT'EACf1AHoE Channel I.brings 8 KNXT 1CBSI Los Angeles 'Cl KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles U KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 0 KABC· TV I ABC) Los Angeles 1U KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KH.>-TV I Ind I Los Anqeles "!~ KCST <ABC1 San Otego· (D KTIV (Ind ) Los Angeles Q) KCOP TV I Ind ) Los Angeles fD KCET·TV tPBS) Los Angeles il!> KOCE·TV 1PBS) Huntington Beach The third par1 of a mint· aarl•• on taxation Is C>r-ted. m STAAeOAAo "Th• Mike Patterson Band" Cl) 1128,000 QUESTION ®f FAMILY FEUD 8.-00 8 Cl) OOl.OIE Goldie Hawn playa hoatess to llUCh ~· u George Burns, the Harlem GIObetrolten, Stllll.WI ca.. aidY and John Rill• lo an hour of mutlc and comedy. D OAIZZl.Y ADAMS "The Great Burro Race" Mad Jac:Jc II duped out ol h~ pet donkey by. long- llm• tr1-nd (Jltdt Elem) !Ind narnetis. 0 MOVIE * * * "Hone Feathers" ( t932) The Marx Brothe<t. Orouetio tu.. over u p<Mident ot a COiiege. ( 1 hr .. 30mlnJ D 9 EIGHTl8 EHOUOH "U>ng Night'• Journey Into Day" Mern~• of the Br.clford lamlly are lorced to tall• ~ to keep Ab~ llwek• tor 24 hours after SM falls end autter. a concuulon. • Mlcnael TllQmu, Jaclt McCulloch g~•tar. IJ MOVll! ••• "Th• Hor,. 30lclleft" (1H9) John w~ Wlllllm ~. Utllon Cot. Grletwon drMe fllt "*"*" unit thfough Tan.-to L.oultlana, lfltblV1Q Union mon to r..ati ~. (2 Iva.) • CAAOl. 8UAHETT AMOFAIENOS • MOVIE * • • ~ "Ch•Ytnnt Autumn" (19114). Jwnee Siewert, Alchard Wldmlwtf. Atrtbeol~~ 11119,,.. from their bar· ren ~uon to their home ground. (2 h,..) fJll "NOVA "The Gteat Wine Aevolu.- Uon" TM aecnll of the grac>e, Which llave baffled wtnemall•• and drlnl<•• 10< ~of~•. are unlocked. '1!) AHO BABY MAKES TWO The ~ faced by unwed IMNlgerl Wtlo are pregnant and the ~ble aoultlont to their pllgl'lt ate examined 8:30 GI C~WIT8 '1!) OVER EASY Gu.,ta: dlrKtor John CUUllet•. aclrna Gena Rowtanoa. 11:00 8 Cl) C88 MOVIE "A Death In Canaan" (Premiere) Paul Clemens, Stefanie Power•. Conn«t· leut 1~ rite 10 the detanae of e taeoagar accused of murdering his mother D Bl.ACK 8"EEP SOUAOAOH "Rghtlng Angels" Pappy, the 81ecl! Sheep •nd even the nur-muat man Ille Qlll'l8 u lrlWOtng "*"Y convnandoa adVllnCe on Ille com9000d. 0 9 CHAAUE'8 ANGELS ''The Jada Trap" Charlie uaas the Angels plus hos own ~ c.ollecllon Of fade to t<"lp up an acrobatle jewel thief and klllar. 8aNy 8ollWlck, Lur-Tuttle. Dlrll. Benedict guest star. (I) MERV GRIFJ'lN fJll GREAT PEJU'ORMANCES "Count Dracula" Aller leaving London, .~onalf\an Harker encounters Count Oreoula In a castle on St. Geof ge' 1 Eve Louis Jo<· dan portrayt the tntarnous count. (Patt 1 ot 3) m AUSTIN CITY LIM ITS ··sw.,,.. Ooqdman" Good· man perlorm1 aongs from his new album. u"""" Pas:I htts She's· 'No Joan of Arc' - Writer Philosophic About 'Canaan' Cutting Ry TOM JORY -"-;EW YORK <AP) -They left a lot of Joan Harthcl on the cult· ing room floor when they filmed h er hook. "Death in Canaan." fo r tC'IC'vision But the woman ~'hos(' reporting made a cause ndd>rl' of what might have been made-for-TV movie, ''Death in Canaan," to be aired tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. "The third angle was me. And. in the edit- ing, they found they were trying to say too much, tell too many stories. and it was mine that was expendable." BUT THEY concentrated their eCforts in another direction bringing into the case people like pl~ywright Arthur Miller, film ... director Mike Nichols. writer William Styron. A new at- torney was hired, new evidence uncovered and, eventually. u new trial was ordered . • m obscure murder case says th:1f 's 'fine "1ith her · I never wanted to be a Joan of Arc in this lhmf{, .. s.ays Mrs. Barthel. who insists il was a small group of people in Canaan, Conn. -and not herseU - who s aved young Peter Hei lly from yea rs in prison. Mrs. Barthel's article in New rimes magazine in February )r 1974 , detailing Reilly's lengthy interrogation after the brutal killing of his mother. his confused confession and almost immediate attempt to withdraw 1t, certainly brought national at· tention to the case. "BUT THOSE people, they always were the real story, they were te rrific." says Mrs. Barthel of the families and in- dividuals who spent long hours at Rellly's side -and raising money for bis defense. "And of course, there was P eter's story, "1 says Mrs. Barthel, talking now of the Actress Stephanie Powers worked hard, Mrs. Barthel says, playing Joan Barthel. only to see much of the part cut from the final version. Paul Clemens. himself not Jong out of high schooJ, is Peter Reilly. BAllBAllA GIBBONS had been dead nearly five months and her IS-year-old son was fac. ing trial for murder when the case, almost by chance, caught Mrs. Barthel's attention. Over the next several weeks, the writer spoke with dozens of those involved.I in the case. listened to hours or tape record- ing and spent days on end in the courtroom. "None of us ever thought he would be convicted," she re- calls, "and I actually enjoyed covering the trial. And when he was convicted, lt was just such a blow ... it bad just gone 09 so long, we were all so weary." But Reilly's conviction for manslaughter opened a new phase of the case. Because of a judge's gag order, Mrs. Barthel and others who covered lbe case were reluctant to discuss it in print beyond what went on in the courtroom. In November of 1976, Mp Barthei's book on the case was published. The film version was completed las t Nov. 8. and two weeks later, charges against Peter Reilly were dismissed. Mr s. Barthel went t o California in October 1976 as a consultant for the film - Tom my Thompson, like Mrs. Barthel a former LHe magazine writer. and Spencer Eastman. wrote the screenplay. "THERE vf AS no reluctance for me for making a movie of this," Mrs . Barthel says, "because of the people who were involved. I knew about the pro· ducers, Bob Christiansen and Rick Rosenberg, who had done "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman,' and that was great. Mrs. Barthel. who put so much or herself -and her family - into "A Death in Can aan." laughs about h er relatively minor role in the film. "What I learned was that a film is always the dlrector's. I liked what the director did, but if I didn·t. it wouldn't have made any difference.•· AN EVENING WITH EL VIS-TONIGHT ON STAGE IN CONCERT PETE WILCOX • , _..INCOMPARABLE;" ..... LIKE AN INCR!Df8LElmNCARNATION OF 'THE l(JNG' " Jaoll Palllnoe. Members of 10:00 Q POUCE WOMAN a blood-lhlraty po11a, "Sallared TNCl'lerl" p.,,_ 1tallclng a Mlf-.bfMd ltlller, s-eno Crowley tt• hard-11111 killlng one anon-. (2 pteaeed to gelher t"9 ~ "'11.) 9M11Y evidence 10 oonvlct Q) THE ODO COlJP\..E Juvenile d«lnquentt terrOf· BW!che. Oacar'a ex-wttt. lllng high IChOOI tNCl'tera 1e1i. him ati. pMlna 10 'unllf a young 1aecher rMIMr'(, lmlltlng both llfm (Pamela Franklin) Is beaten and Fellx lo the wa.ddlng ~ and Mxually moleated. Cl) LET'S MAKE A OEAt. 0 0 NEWS fl> OIQC CAVETT fl <IJ STARSKY & G~: Eartha Kitt. HVTCH ~ MACNEJL I ~RER "Foty Lady" Star1ky and AEPOAT Hutch becQl'Oe taroeta of 11:30 8. Cl) NEWS panlc•1tricken th1evH D TONIGHT • when the i.roenoua beauty Hoat: Johnny Carson. tti.y befriend at.altlea 1 aue.t9: ~ Ladd, Don suit~ lull ol banll rot>-Aldd•. F«nando Lam•t. t>ery money In Sta...ky'a G LOVE. AMEAICAN apat1ment. Pricilla BarnM 8TYlE ~· ttara. "L0\19 And The *Wlum Of W HONEVMOOHEA8 Raymond" Honeymooners 'The Krllmdan1 lllld t ha tlnd • ltranga d0{1 11'1 their Nor1on1dl1COY91'11\at ,.,._ motel room. "Love And vllllon, lnStaad of klOlng The Postal Meetw" Leroy con-tlon, 1tlmulatas fl. , ... l.O his pen P91. Flor· ' 8l) 8PEOAL enc. ''Horowiu Al The Wfllte 0 9 POUCESTORY Houae" Preeident Cenw • 0..th On ~edit" Sgt. Wiii Introduce 7.._>'Nf-old Rk:tl Cal\lelll worll1 under· Vladlmlr Horowlu. WhO cover in order to creek a cat.brat .. Ille 60th anni· pnony uedll card flng 111a1 "9rUfY of hie American plays dangerously JOhn debut by p1ay1ng w«!r• by SMori. ~d Dutt guesl Chopin, Mourt and II•. IRl Schumann for eoma 280 Cl> GET SMAftT guea1a ..-nblad In Ille a;) CAPTIONED ABC Eut Room of the White NEWS J HOUM MORNING m SOONDSTAGE 12:00 e Cl) HAWAII FIVE-0 "Grllham~ar w and the A cunning COiiage prolae- Aumour; R. All St1t1. _. (BWcty El>MnJ. along Paul Butt . Or John wllh an undenOlof1d parl· Sieve Croppaf, Levo~ nar. dell9IOpa .,, •t>orete Helm" ICheme lo catfl $750.000 10:30 Q) Q) NEWS II\ It.,,.._. d!eclla through 11:00 D 0 ®l NEWS a 1agt1ma1e tr11Y91 dull (RI e LOVE. AMERICAN a TWILIGHT ZOHE SlYLE Q) MOVIE 0 MOVIE ••'A .. Hana a 01 A • * '• "Ottato'a Land · Stranger" ( 111621 Paul (111721 Ch8tles B<onson., Lutcather. J-SIAlple- ton. AfMr a ,,..,,..t'• !Wlllda .... mutllatecS '" 1111 ~ d9nt, • Oclclor lrenlpltnta tn. henOI Of tl\OtMr men 10 tMI wn.ta. (1 hr. 30 min.) Q) MoVIE * * ''Th9 a.cret Ct 'tile FVpfe Reef" ( 19GO) Jfif Riatwcta, Mwgle o..n. Two b<OC,_. IMfCh Ille Ce!lbbMn lllendt tor tile cuf Prtt wno eunk their fetfltf'• ehlp. ( 1 "' • 30 l'ftfn.) 12:.S0 8 MOYIE *** .,,,. BoM'' (1~) John Payne, Doe AY8don. 1' ruthleu 91\d ambUlou• polltlcltn )cine IOl'Cet wMll red!....,. to gain control of St. Lout&. ( 1 hr .. 56 min.) 1~7 8 9 N!IC MYSTERY MOVll! **"Sleepwalker" (1975) OulHn Carr, MichHI Kitchen. While vlllllng London •• gift with • cronlc l'ttghtmar• lllld lleepWjlk· Ing Pfol:llem wltneaet a murdet and wonder• If It Wiii a dream. (R) 1:00 D TOMORROW GUll91a.: Mut• Satgtent Benran T. Beagle, 85. dtscuun his military car-: liliot T ec>tllz, tel· terOIO{lY expert; Vance MUN, tound4it of ''WOfry Watte " 0 ISPV "Cru..O. To limbo" 1:10 8 Cl) KOJAK "Deed Agtln'' Kofak di• .. cover• a connection between a bomber/ extor· uonftt lllld the deeth Of a girl wllO Mid •he wa• , t>elnQ tl\reatened by a deedmen.(R) t:30 Q) MOVIE * • "Son 01 Gocmlla" ( t969Y Oodzllla. Tadeo TWluhlma Oocnllla 11rug· glel 10 -hta son and a r-ch tum from death. (2 hra) Cl) MOVIE '* * • "The Phenix Ctty Story" ( 11155) Rlchtrd Kttay. John Mcintire. Returning lrorn the ..,.,,tee, e yaung lawyer Is appallecl et ltl9 comipt!On" In his nometowo (1 hr .• 30 min) 2.'00 D 0 NEWS 0 MOVIE • ·~ "Subtl!f1uge" ( 1968) Gene Barry. Joan COiiin•, An American agent In lon- dOt> ~In~ tn e ~aky marriage tr1ano1e a.trh ln1erna11one1 cornpli· cauona (2 hrs ) 2:208 HEWS 2:28 0 NEWS 2:300 MOVIE * * "Ra<ltM!llld" ( 19881 Bloody Good Show Otrt ,.~ AoalMo 8fU. zt. &lddtn dllat!t ,.,. wtiM an ex..filal, a W01M11 With • atMldy peat .ct • ~meetlnV..._ (1Iv.,65 min.) a:ao e uowr **'A "Paranoiac" l1IU) Jtnttt.1 Scott. °""" Aetct • A ~ woman becocnat Che obfeCt of .,, ~ plot tnvo!Ylng her l>fothllt and 84.lnt. (1 hr •• 35 min.) 3:001 HE'W8 a:ao MOVIE •••Yt "The~ Attd Th9 Lady' ( 18a0) Robert 8ttck, Gllwt Rc>WtG. A B<a.c!way pro- ducer deCldea to JNrn oollflg.htlng In order to cd- lect ai.ga IOMI. (1 Iv., 30 mtn.) 4:008 MOVIE * • "Stranger At Sunttte" (1971) 0-ge Monlgom- ery, Deana Mll11n. A flnn I~. barely -vMno the bltt• Boer Wei, la terror. izecj by three murdarlng deatrt .. from 11141 8r1ttalf Army. (f hr., 30 min.) 4:25 • f:IEW8 4:30 0 t.tOVIE • * "Jlldlpot" (1962) Wfl. flam Harnel'i, Setty Meoaw.n. Af\er .-Vlng a lenglhy prleon term, a oon- 111ct dicoYar• hie wife doea not want 10 retAKn to him. (I hf •• 30mln) Tl111rsda11'• .Daflti•e lflo"I~• MORNING 11:30Q) ***"My01r1Tlu" (11148) Ulll Pllmer, $an W11namaker. An Immigrant girt, dealrtng to b<ing l'l9r lather to America, set• out to raise the needed money. (2 hr•., 20 min.) AFTE.RNOON 12:00 0 **'n "Watull" (195e) O«>rge Montgomery, Till· na Elg. The son Of a lamout explorw oon1" to Africa to raaume hla 11111er·a ~t for Ille ieg.. endaty diamond mtMt of Solomon.( I tw .. 30 min.) 3:00@) * * * "The Young Strenger'' (19Sn Jamet MllCArtfll.lr, J-Oely. A bOy Is Mglaeled by Ilia tether, WhO ~ takes time off tr0<11 hl1 busy IOhedula to tty an<I under· a111nd his aon. (\ hr., 30 nun.) 3:30 0 '* * ·~ "Harry-0" C 19731 Oav1ct JanaMn, Marlin S"-!. A former POltcaman accepts a job protecting 1ne man rasponatble tor making him QM! up hla badge. ( 1 hr ,30mln) 'Dracula' Revived PLAYS SUSPECT Paul Clemens 'Jeffersons' Actress Dead LOS ANGELES CAP) -Zara Cully Brown, who played Mother Jefferson on the CBS show "The Jeffersons," died early Tuesday at Cedars·Sinai Medical Center. She was 86. She was admitted to the hospital last Saturday. The cau se of death was not dis- closed. Mrs. Brown, whose stage name was Zara Cully, was one of the oldest performers acUve " in television. She played George JeCferson's doting mother in the series, about an upwardly mobile black family in a Manhattan high rise apartment. lt was a spinqff from "AllintheFamily." On Spe~ial Tonight By JA V SHARBUTT LOS ANGELES <AP) It'll make yoor blood run cold, but no matter. Public TV is offering a great new show about Dracula, the ever·thirsty Transylvania Necker. and you've got to see 1t. It ·s "Count Dracula.'' a classy BBC version of Bram Stoker's classic horror talc. lt comes in three parts . tonight at 9 on KCET. Channel 28. on March 8 a nd on March 15. No. Bela Lugosi isn't in il. Louis Jourdan. the matinee idol, now plays the caped chap who leaves the coffin corner at night to bat around and general· ly dismay aJI types of folks - types A. B. AB and 0 . UNLIKE L UGOSI , whose Dracula ga\'e legions of rubber· lipped comics a fresh chance at laughs. Jourdan does the count as a restrained, exq ui sltely manne red, quietly menacing carotid taster. By underplaying, he greatly increases the chill, chill, chill or the e vening, which commences with Chapter One tonight. It starts normally enough with young English lawyer Jonathan Harker <Bosco Hogan> bidding adie u to his fiance (Judi Bowker} and promising to write from Transylvania, where he's .. bound on business. He carries documents deeding a house in England to a Coant Dracula. As the lad learns dur- ing a coach ride through Tran sylvania, the locals wouldn't touch his client with a lO·foot stake. DEPOSITED AT Castle Dracula near midnight, with a cold wind blowing and wolves howUng, Harker seems a mite uneasy even though given the big hello from the coilnt in this manner: "Welcome to my house, Mr. Harker. Come freely, go safely and leave something of the happiness you bring." But al dawn, while shaving, Harker suspe~ts something is amiss when <a> Dracula's image doesn't reflect in a mirror and I b) lbe count gels downright weird when he sees blood caused by a shaving nick. WELL. THE LAD knows be really is in for a hard time when he finds himself a veritable prisoner and espies Dracula that night flapping bat-like down a castle waJl to make his rounds. .. Am I going mad?" cries lawyer Harker. No, but he may berome a bit drained. I know I was a s the pro- gram slowly increased its horror level bit by bit, drop by drop.