HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-01-09 - Orange Coast Pilot01'er San Diego
Blind, :Huntington Philip Anthony
M·an .Gullty New Chairman
Of Shooting Of Supervisors
eac ers' • _tn e
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 9, 1979
I YO"-n. "°· •. , SEcnotlS, • rAOH
Arwi,..... FORMER LOVERS WILL BE REUNITED IN COURT TODAY
Lee Marvin, Mlchelte Trtol• Shown In 1984 Photo
Lee Marvin's ~Love
Trial' Opens Today
LOS ANGELES <APl -Eight years after they called it quits,
Oscar-winnlng actor Lee Marvin
and his former lover, Michelle
Triola Marvin, met ln court today
for a lanrmark trial tnvoMng
love , money and lb~ changing
morality of American couples.
Jury selection was to begin to·
l day In the suit filed by Miss
Marvin, who legally changed
her name while she lived with
• Marvin. She Is suing for lbe
• same compensation a wife
would get in a divorce -haJC the
property accumulated during
~ their 1ix years together -or $1
• million. Thty were never married and
services he provided during
their relationship. ·
"I was like a wife to Ia," she
bu said. " . . . l took a care of
Lee like he was a baby chicken." ·
The case, whJch has already
created legal precedents on ap-
peal, is expected to have a na·
tlonal impact. Many others ln·
volved in non-marital reJa. Uonabips have riled similar suits
alle=in they are entitled to eve from peas&op rights to al mony.
"You could say it affects ev·
(See MA&VIN, Pap Ai>
• .owm
Tax Cat Posed
State Budget
To Slash Jobs
SACRAMENTO <APl -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr., will propose
a $19.8 billion budget that
eliminates 5,140 state jobs and
abolishes 15 licensing boards.
the Sacramento Union reported today.
H1D1tington
Man Guilty
In Shooting
LOS ANGELES CAP l -A
blind Huntington Beach man
was convicted Monday of
charges stemming from the
shooting of a U.S. lmmigr~Uon
Service official last summer.
Robert Corbett, 42, was or-
dered to return Jan. 29 for sen-
tencing after he was found guilty
of a1t1ault with Intent to commit
murder and assault with a dead·
ly weapon. The verdict, which
was reached and sealed by the
nlne-man, three-woman Jury on
Friday, ·WU opened ¥onday In
the presence of Superior Court
Judge Frances RothschUd.
Corbett, of Ul832 Providence
Lane, remained in custody U.
lieu of $100,000 bail.
Corbett was accl&Md of empty.
Ing a .~aUber revolver a\l act·
Ing Immitratlon and Naturaliza.
lion Service Director Omer
Sewell last July 14.
The newspaper a lso detailed a
Sl.2 billion state income tax cut
Brown mentioned In his In-
augural address Monday, quot-
ing figures it said came from an
advance copy of the budget.
The Democratic governor's
staff re!used comment until lhe
budget is submitted to the stale
Legislature on Wednesday.
The account quotes Brown ns
saying in an int,roduction to th~
budget that the spending plan is
a blueprint for "leaner govern-
ment" and is "substantially
below all proposed constitutional
spending limits. But it keeps
faith with the vision and con·
science Of California·· by build-
ing for the future in the areas of
arts, affirmative action, urban
parks. apprenticeship training,
enforcement or labor laws and
housing, it said.
AmonJ budget highlights in
the preVlew or the budget: -State personaJ Income tax
credits would be increased to
$125 for individuals and $250 for
couples, for a total savings to
taxpayers of $915 million on 1979
taxes. 'n>08e tax credits would
be received on returns riled in
early 198>.
The permanent level of the
credits, which taxpayers deduct
from their total tax bills before
sending in checks or filing for
refunda, ls $2'7 for lndividuals
and $54 ror couples. But the
credits on 1978 returns were ln· creased to SlOO and $200 in a one-
<See BUDGET, Page A2)
I Marvin It contettlnl the right to
uae hJs name. 'Animal Honse' Prank Marlin and hil attorneys were expected to argue that the mere (Iii
tact that Marvin never martied
Miu Marvin ahoWI he wanted to
avoid the respooslbilltiea and ob-
U1at1ons of marriage.
Marvin bu filed a counterauit H~lnJ tl million from Mlss
Marvin ror compen.saUon for the
compenlonahlp and other
Five USC Strulsnts Jailed in Newport
Man Shot, Killed
POMONA <AP> -Police Mld. • man wu lbot and killed Mon·
dn •fief ~n1 • purtutna otftcer tine cm.1 foUowiq an ,
arm9d robbery ai a mat.tNM
f,Allctory. n.t dead mao; betntG
25 IJld • yean old1 wu not Im· mecUa~ MlenUfloa.
rtve memben of a Unlverllty ot Southel'b CaUfomla fraternity
round lMmHlvH .lD Newport
Be.ch Jan th.la week rollowlnc a prank oolice usert may have
been fnsplred by the mm
"Animal Houle."
The rum depicts the antics of members ot a rene1acle fraternl~
ty at 1 mythlca! university.
Rele.t.Md on tbeir own r•·
coenJauce followtne their •r·
rest on 1uaplclaa of bur1lary
were Terrenc. Patrick Molone}',
·19, of Palo1 Verdes, Jefrrey •
Geor .. Rb, 19, of Loa Angelel,
David Jelfrey Crowell, 18, of Loi
Anceles, Randall Keith Pittman,
20 of Loi Angelet and Charlea wlmam Hayden, 20. of Lo•
Anceles.
Set. Bob GateWood said the
five we..-arreeced ebq\.at 7 p.m.
Sunday 1\ Oakwood Apart·
menu. HOP Street at ltvtnt
Avenue ln N"'PC>rt Beach, after
a tenant ~ a burclary In
pro1re11 at in apartment
c\ubbOUH.
He aald the suapects allegedly
were drtvtnc a rented truck in
wblch POI.lee found chalrs and a
U.S. Ffq belonglq to the apart·
ment complex. Allo found In the
truck were• garden hoH and a
state freeway 1l1n. Gatewood
llld.
He Hld a 1poke1man for
Sl(ma AJpU EpeUon fr•tendt1
et USC aald tbey bbe h•d prob-
1 •"11 • wlth prank• ever
1ince "Aalm1d Houn" wu re-;
')eued.
..
o.Hy~"'",_
l\lell) Oaa1 ......
Philip Anthony was elected
today by his colleagues on
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors to serve a s
c h airman of the five-
member board for the com-
ing year. Anthony, of
Westminster. is the 1st Dis-
trict's representative on the
county board.
727 Jetliner
In Near Miss
With Cessna
SAN DIEGO IAP > -"My
heart was in my stomach." sayg
an airline pilot after his m
jetliner narrowly missed collid·
ing wlth a single-engine Cessna
pver San Diego.
Laat September. a Cessna and
a , com~\al jetliner coll\ded
as they were-approaching
Lindbergh Field, killing 144 peo.
pie in the worst air disaster ln
U.S. history.
A spokesman for Continental
Airlines said the Boeing 727 was
on final landing approach Mon-
day when Its pilot saw the small .
plane coming straight at It.
In the final seconds . the
Jetliner \urned, mlasln1 the
€et1n1 by lMI &.han 500 feet, the
compa01 sPOkesman said.
Controllen at Llnd'bergh
Jl'teld Hid the Ceana WH nylng
tt\rouch the buay airspace
without radio contact with the
Llndberlh tower or with lbe
n11rby r9dar alr tramc control
raclU&y • Miramar Naval Alr Station.
The COntinefttal jet waa ta~·
<Bee 1rr. Pqe .u•
ay
Mediator
Message
Awaited
By RAYMOND ESTRADA Jll. Ol IM O..ly l"I ... Slaft
The Huntington Beach Union
High School District teacher strike entered its fifth day today
with no end in sight to the cur-
rent contract dis pute.
District ofCiclals reported 507
teachers either on strike or ill
Monday as substJtute teachers
manned classes where 28 per·
cent of the school district 's
20.900 students were absent.
Teacher and di s tri c t
negotiators are awaiting word
from a state-appointed mediator on possible renewal or contract
talks that broke ore three weeks
ago.
Teacher leaders say they are
still demandjng a five percent
pay boost for the 1978-79 school
year, a similar salary r aise for
1979·80 if the state ruh..>s it is
legal and binding arbitrallon·in
grievances. '
But ~~ar 1
members are refu sin to ud on their posi·
lion th t t state-imposed
salary .e must be lifted
before a five percent raise is
granted.
Trus tees say they a r e
<See Sl'RIKE, Page A?I
Coast
Weather
Chance or rain decreas
ing to near 10 percent
tonight and Wednesday.
Fog night and early morn·
lng hours. Uttle t e m ·
perature changes with
lows torught 46 to 52, highs
Wednesday 57 to 63.
~
INSIDE TODAY
An Orange Counly buslneas
ereeut1ve WOI pafd SI, 121,000
in 1977. tilt mosi of any o/ lhe
nation'• bulmeu leaden''", ~d. For Ida. "'4rs.1Ut/ and
otMrdetalU,,,e.Poge BS.
•
\ I
J
...
•
J\J DAIL V PILOT s Tueec11x. Janyf!Y t. 1m
Brown 'W elcotned'
GOP_ ·Happy at Co~ervaiive Speech
SACRAMENTO (A P > -
Republican leaden are 1leel\&lly wfl~mlnl Gov. Edmund 8~-n
Jr lo t.belr party 1f'ler hb hi·
augurat 1peech, and om dis
aruntled Dtmocratlc Uber1l1 ap
parently lh1nlc be IM'lonfa UMl'e
"Jt WU awful. 1 do not U\lnk
poor l)e(Jlllle hould bt-left out in
the cold )Jy • '° rnor or •
denl " mbly llealt.b om·
* * *
I',... P.,,., A J
BUDGET •••
time relief provl~lon of u lax t'Ut
signed lnto luw by Brown tut
year
An additional $210 mllhon
would be earmarked for extra
t ux benefits ror renters. who
were lef\ out of the Proposition
13 tax cut bonanza last year
The homeowner 's tax ex
emplhm would be replaced by a
new tax credit, a s hift thal
would raise property t.ax bills
slightly and reduce homeowner
income tax bills by a compara·
ble amount. It would save $10
million in administrative costs
-Medl·CaJ rate Increases for
doctors and others would be
limited to 6 percent. and the
total budget would grow 12.1
percent to $4.07 billion.
-The 19·campus s tate uni·
ve r sit y and college syst em
would lose about 800 employees
for a combined savings of $14.6
million.
F.ifteen licensing boards in
the Department of q,nsumer Af.
fairs wouJd be eliminated, in·
eluding the cemetery, landscape
architects. structuraJ pest COD·
trol and other boards which
regulate 78,000 professionals.
.-Licens ing of real estate
s a1e$persons would be
abolished, eliminating 350 jobs
costing $14.5 million.
-Some 280 positions in the
Health and Welfare Agency and
198 in the Department or Motor
Vehicles would be eliminated. -The Californi a Highway
Patrol would gain 59 dispatchers
but lose 400 persons In the school
crossing guard program.
-·Another 106 positions would
be added to the State Water
Project, including stair for plan·
ning of a 1,000.megawatt coal·
powered ruel plant a nd three
55.megawatt geothermal plants.
-Fifty.five toll bridge collec·
tors would be eliminated. ending
toll collections on some bridges
between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m
HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Among
the scores or famlllar names
that cropped up In the Ust of
nominees for the recording in·
dustry's 21.st Annual Grammy
Awards was one who would prob·
ablv nrefer to have most of his
recordings forgotten, Cormt:r
President Nixon.
Nominated Monday in the
"Be11t Spoken Word Recordinl("
cutegory wu "The Nixon In·
wrvicwa With David Frost "
The five.part soritis or Nll<On·
Frotl t.elevlslon lntcrvlew3 WWI
broadcut In Hr>rlng of 1977, und
th.. phonoRruph record or lhf'
aoulonH wo11 produced and rts
ll'oaed la11t yoar hy Polydor
<Other Gr ummy nomincca on
P1t&t: D8 I
....
lindbergh Field
Radar Upgraded
SAN DIEGO CAP > F~odcral
Aviation Admlni11trutlon technl·
clans ore Installing an Improved
radar system a t l.lndbtlrl(h
f'ield. ordered urter the S<ip·
tembcr midair collision In San
Diego.
They expect to throw the
switch to start it up on Jan. 22, of·
ficials said.
..
DAILY PILOT
,,..O._c-1o.i1,1'11te.•1tfl,...l<1•1\c-
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,..."'· -IMtfl, .. "" ............ ..,,_ t•lftY•l .. y Ir.-..,..._11 .. (fl"""tft(_,i A ....... ,~ ... """'''"''""._ ........... _ ~ ........ "'(_.....,.....,. .......... QI
W.11 l•r ~-C...u_.C_IW•t-
ll-'111 .... ~ ,.,..._11ta11ttl'llbll-
J•dl c-w. v"'""'-"'_.._.,._ .,,,.,.. ... -L•ll ..
~ .. ........... ""' ......... ....
o.n..11~ .._, ....
'"""•111 "N ..... lf .. ~·-
T~e(1141~
CIHIMfled Ad¥ef1l .... Maoll7t
,. ......... c-
-.-0
'"""'.....ftOt-C:-yO--.• .... ,220 er.-.. ,. Or-c. .. ~.MM °"'"" ' '-• ..,... ~-· l!Mlleti...t; ••~ 11•1 ., -=~ .... "" ...... f\ fll•t " ===-_, .. ,._, .•
.... .,. t1•u "'ltf: H•• 11 '°',. Mn• (ellta11111 \u••rt "".., .., .. ,.,., u \t -ftllllf. 91 111e11 ,.. M -tltly 1111111.,, M ..... l_Q tt-tlllr •
mltteot Cb&lrman Art Tor'l'IM, D· Some Democrata did praise
l..oe A , 11ld after •Utnd· , the &one of tbe »minute 1.-ech
tna tbt lel vtatd addre11 i nd MV'tll"al RepubUcana qun.
Oftda1 llAaht. UOtMd Brown'• 1lncerity as a
•'Ht .to nf'd tho Republican • bud1 t cutw.
Part)' and " ·~ dt-llthted 1l'1 "Until a bill 11 signed Into law,
lbe mott (!()ft.$('rvallv •P"Ch I btlt.w notblnc." aald Sena~
1lv1n ia acrameeto •l•o .RfpubUun Caucua Chairman
Roaald Reaa&o ld't." cbortlld H.L.: JU~ ol Arcadia. He
S..-ate GOP I •Hr William MW~ wu "on u prnldon·
Campbcll d Whlltlt'f'. Ual WHdmtll."
French Racer
GOSJt=R. Ou•deloupe
1APl A tier foot Pre I
dent Carter 1pent the flaal
day or a caribbean vaca·
tlon tod">' saJlina •board •
60-toot French trimaran
racer.
Carter and his 11-year·
old daugbt,er Amy boarded
the three·hulled Seiko of
yachting publlaher Alal.b
Glickm an at a m a rina
near the clifftop villa
where the Carters have
been staying since last
week's summit with the
leaders o( France, Britain
and West Germany.
Tbe sailboat bas no
e ngine and bad to be
towed lnto the harbor. Her--
sails filled with a gentle
breeze within a few
minutes and she sailed off
on a westerly course.
Trash Truck
Driver Still
Hosp italized
The driver of an Qrange Coun·
ty trash truck that overturned
Monday in Newport Beach was
in serious condition today at
Costa Mesa Hos pital after suf·
fering broken bones and other
inJuries.
Police said Gary Thiesen. 38,
of Garden Grove. was injured
after a car driven by Thelma
Torres, 66, of 212 Princeton
Drive. Costa Mesa, allegedly
pulled out in front of him oear
the Harbor Municipal
Courthouse on Jamboree Road.
Police said the TotTeS car wu
on Birch Street and the trash
truck wu southbound on Jam·
boree Road. Mrs. Torres wu
taken to Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital but was not admitted.
The accident spilled garbqe
onto Jamboree Road and
blocked traffic for several
houn, police said.
Sailors Suit Out
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A federal
judge bas dismissed a $10
million d.lscrtmlnatJon suit flied
against the Navy by five black
saUora, aaying they failed to ex·
haust adnlinfatratlve remedies
available within the service.
IranEd f~t
B\,\l mott ol the reaction cen·
tered oa Brown'• etrcss on flacal
l 1ue1 a. propoec;d St billion
tax cut, morw verbal embrace of
the PropoelUon 13 tax revolt,
and a constltutlonal ban on
ftderaJ deficit aoeacltng -alld
the scant attentlon he paid to
11oclal probJema.
·'I wu dJsappolnted that there
waa no more aUentJon gtven to
human needs." sald Sen. Alan
SJeroty. ().Los Anaeles.
Cam~. noting that Brown
called Propo6itlon 13 "a can Of
worms" before last June's elec·
lion. observed. "A can of worms
is now a gourmet meal.·'
St.ate AFL-CIO leade r Jobn
HeMin1, usually a Brown s up-
GOVERNOR URGES
TAX CUT -Page AS
porter. call ed the s peech
··warmed -over H erbert
Hoovec,"
California Slate Employees
AasociaUoo President William
Craib said Brown's proposal to
eliminate s.oee slate Jobs
"scapegoats the people who
work for government."
The Democratic leaders or lhe
Legislature's two houses, Senate
President Pro Tern James Mills
of San Diego and Assembly
Speaker Leo McCarthy. praised
the speech, though McCarthy
bad some reservations.
McCarthy said he thought
there would be "broad agree·
ment" on a $1 billion tax cut,
which he proposed earlier in lhe
day with support from Brown.
But McCarthy said he would ,
h ave given more stress to such
problems as e mployment and
mental health. And though he
endorsed a ban on federal deficit
spending, he cautioned that
California could expect to lose S6
billion in federal aid under the
proposal, a nd added that he
didn't see the need for the na·
tlonal constitutional convention
endorsed by Brown.
Assembly Speaker Pro Tem.
John Knox, D·Richmond, said
Brown's endorsement of a ban
on job discrimination agaJnst
homosexuals was "courageous."
But Knox and Torres warned
that a national constitutlooal
convention could turn into an al·
tack on the Bill or Rights.
However, a legislative sponsor
of a resolution calling for the
convenUoo, Sen. Jerry Smith, 0.
Saratoga, insisted that it could
be conrtned to a balanced·budget
pr?poSal.
Smith said 2S s tates have
already paued such a resolu·
tion. IC nine more states pass
one. Congress will have to call a
conatltutional convention, the
first since the United States was
rounded. "'.
Transfer of Royal
Property Ordered
TEHRAN, Iran IAP> Shih
Mo hamme d Reu Pahlavi
dccretld today that all pcraonal
properly of the lranlon roy•I
fumll)' bu turned over to 1.1
Nown-11ponwrcd foundation Md
ordercct tho releuc of 26ff
prisoners convicted by military
trlbunuls.
lran'11 1tntc radio 11uld the
proptirt.y e11tlrnoted to bo valuod
ut hundreds or mllllon11 of
dollara. w48 belnl( transferred t.o
the Pahlovl roundatlon "for th
use of reU1tou1. educational.
social and wel/are or1aolzaUoN1
organl~ by the people and run
by them ."
Palace aources said the divest·
ed property lnchJded the 1bah's
vlllt domestic holdlnes ln com·
pany atocks, banks. factories
and t~nd.
Ttie moves were announced as
the nation awaited word on when
the sblh lnt.elld5 to go abroad .on
an extended vacation to lake op-
position pressure ort the new
clvlllan 1ovemment of Shahpout
BakhUar.
. The neUonal Pan news a1en·
cy aald lbe 2IG6 priloner-.. bad
been held at Tehran '1 cebtral
police department prison •·for
various olren1e1" and had been
pardoned by the 1hah. Pan a\·
trlbuted lh announcement to
the tmpertal lranlan armed
force. tribunal.
Tbe announcement also said
the pa~ ot O\her prtaonera
WH belftl 1tudted. The IOVtrn•
ment previously aaJd tMre were
•bout 200 pertOftl In prilOll con·
v1cted of no1Hapital political ol·
f ensea, but tod1y'1 annouoce·-
ment d1d not apeclfy whett1•r tM
pardoned SJ'OU.P Included these
political prllOflera.
The dlvetilllure was seen u
another 1tep aimed nt rcmovlntt
the taint or corruption from thtJ
royal funlly, M or who1u1 mem
bera have gone abroud 11lnce
political turmoil mountod here
lu11t lall.
Thia follow11 a prevloua royal
docreo latued laal ~plember in
which the shah prohJblted mem· oora of hla fl.lmlly from having
bual noaa deallniia with tho aov·
ernment or from controlling
ctiarltablo or1an1zatlons.
The SI billion Pahlavl Foun·
d atlon wu created 18 yura •10
Wllh a l)CflOOOl aranl Of $13.'l
mlUlon ot the shah'• wealth for
use by charttable oraanlaaUona,
orph1na1ea and hlaber educa·
lion.
While snow·covered Tehran
was experiencing one or Its
quietest days ln two months.
there were report. of at leaat six
death• In anU·ahah violence in
the provinces. ,,,....._ ... ,
JET •••
l n1 from Denver. Arter the
ntaht, the crew CUN a neaMniaa ~ore leaviq.
Allhou&b iM pllot wun't Iden·
Wied, he wN quoted u aaylq hla
ev11lve actton waa au that Pft·
\>ented acolll.alonoverSan DtetJ'>. •
l.lndber&b controUera have
tomplalned tor JHrt about
1maU pa.. nytn1 tbrouah the
&lnpace '9ed by alrllnera. ·
Stricter rupt procedurea have
been ordered by the Ftdenl
A vl1t1on Admlnlatrauon.
AP..,..
F,...P 11pAJ
MARVIN •••
eryone who hu a diato." nys
Marvin Mltchelaon. Mtaa'
Marvin's attorney, who hu been
Involved in the case durinf seven
yHraoflltJgaUon.
Matchellon, who begins ar&U·
In• pretrial motions today, aeeks
to prove to a jury that an oral,
non·marltal a1roement ia as•
blndlna N • marr\age Jlcense
when it comes to splitting asset.a
acquired together.
''People are living together all
OV..!.L th ls (ountry,'' says
Ml~llon. "You ti1Ve lo deal
wtth 1traf:U
In 1978, the Californi a
Supreme Court dealt with just
th1t lasue In a declalon that UP·
beld Mltchelson'a contentions
and set a precedut for division
ol property between unmarried
cohabitants.
Tbe court overruled two lower
court dedelom ln the case and
sent It back to Superior Court for
retrial.
··During lbe past 1$· years,
there haa been a s~betantial in·
crease in the number of couples
llvlnJ together without marry.
Ing.· safd the court's opinion.
"Such nonmarital relationships
lead to legal controversy when
one partner dies or the couple
separates.
" . . . We take this opportuni· ty to resolve that controversy
and to declare the principles
which shouJd govern dlstributioa
of property acquired in a nol\·
marital relationship."
CHAD GREEN PLAYS OUTSIDE MASSACHUSETTS COURT
Beat Wa y to Treat Boy'• lAukeml1 Oebn.d
The court then outlined a com·
plex set of laws under which
non-married couples could seek
financial relief upon separation.
Since the decision, many suits
have been filed under ··Marvin
vs. Marvin," including cases In.
vo1vtn1 OCher celebritJes -Nick
Nolte. Alice Coooer . R od Stewart and Britt Ecklund. None
baa come Lot.rial.
•
IJfe 'Risked'
Doctor. Urges ChBmoihBrqpy Appropriately, the case that
sett.be prececkGt will be the nrst
to be decklecl by a Jury.
llarvin, i>t, and Miss Marvin,
46, met in l9&t during the fiJm·
ing of "Ship of Fools" ln wblch
they both had parts. Soon, they
were livinc together -although
Marvll\ wu not divorced from
hll ettraneed wife until 1.917.
PLYMOUTH. Mass. CAP > -A
Mexican doctor who used
Laetrile to treat cancer patients
says the life of 3·year·old
Leukemia victim Chad Green
could be endangered if his
chem otherapy treatments are
stopped.
"We cannot risk the lire of the
bo y b y w ithd raw i ng the
ch e motherapy," said Dr.
Ernesto Contreras, who runs a
clinic In Tijuana. Mexico.
He t estified for C had's
pa r ents. Diana and ~erald
Green of Scituate. in their effort
to win the right to d~ide how
Chad's illness shouJd be treated.
"I stated very clearly that
chemotherapy should continue
Penny Ante
Jfillionaire
UTICA. N.Y. IAP> -
Edwin Rommel, a SO-year·
old forema n. deposited
one million pennies al the
bank. the result of 20
years of collecting. AC·
lerward, Rommel said, "I
don't want to see another
penny."
The 20.000 rolls or pen·
nies, whlch had been in
eight metal footlockers at
Rommel's home. filled up
200 $S0 bags and weighed
a n estimated 31,i; tons.
"I don't know why f
started saving them,"
Ro mmel said Monday. "I
didn't start out saving. I
got up to obout 13 or 14
dollars and I aald I 'II Rhoot
tor a new cnr, and when I
hud cOOU&h for u car, I
sold , 'Oh, hell. I'll shoot
for a mUUon '."
H the balk ireatment with
metabolic therapy. including the
, uM .9" 1'aetrile, to Improve the
q.,..rl.ty qi the boy's life and.
po11lbly. prolonl'ln« bis re·
mlUio,a. •• Cotlt rer11 said in
dffcrlbtill bis tatimony Mon·
day before a do1ed coort bear·
ing. Judge Guy Volterra or
Plymouth Superior Court ts re·
viewing hls April 18 order re·
quiring the chemotherapy and
m aking Chad a temporary ward
or the state for purposes of treat·
ment. During the treatment. he
is still living with his parents.
The Greem are trying to re-
gain legal custody of Chad in an
effort to decide his treatment
themselves. ·
The couple opposed
chemotherapy ror their son ln
earller court (ights and argued
he should be treated onJy with
Laetrile and a apeclal diet. Bat
now they ind.Jcat.e they might
permit the chemotherapy to COD·
tlnue.
Laetrile is a trademark for a
substance extracted from peach
or apricot pits. Although ad·
vocates claim It can cure cancer.
the U.S. Food and Drug Ad·
ministration has banned lt from
interstate commerce, clalmlnj
there is oo proof or Its efrecuve·
ness or safet_y.
Top Judge Slain
MADRID. Spain (APl -Two
gunmen bellevf?d to be Basque
t.errorls~ assassinated Supreme
Coort Judge Miguel Cruz Cuen·
ca today by stepping from a bus
stop crowd and f1r1ng four
bullets into him as he ap·
proached his offlclal car to go to
<'OUrt. police said . The judge, a
67·year-old father of five. died
instantly.
Miss Marnn says she gradual·
• ly gave up ber career to concen-
trate on his and to "render full
Ume services aa a homemaker
in return for his promise to sup·
port her."
I',.... P age Al
STRIKE •••
staunchly opposed to binding
arbitration s&nce ll might erode
local control of schools.
No major strike violence bas
been reported b14t district of.
ficlals have decided to bus some
of lhe subetitute teachers Into
the seven West Orange County
high schools as a precaution.
Police patrols have watched
substitute teachers board buses
since last week when a rock was
thrown at one of the vehkles. No
one was hurt and no damage
was reported. .
Meanwhile, attorneys for the
striking teachers are waiting for
Citizens Legal Defense Alliance
members to file legal papers ror
an anticipated court order
aimed at halting the strike.
Bill Bianchi. spokes man for
the district's 867 teachers, said
teacher associa tion officials
have not officlaJly received any
legal notices concerning the
strike.
Members of the Los Angeles·
based citizens alliance say they
plan lo seek a temporary
restraining order from Orange
County Superior Court this after·
noon to stop the walkout.
School officials said toaay
teacher pickets marched In front
of the district's seven campu!le3
despite drizzling rain .
flicko11 fcarms · tJF ONIO
Gm YOUR GET·TOCHTHB
TOGETHB ••• WITH
CHEDDAR
Now's the lime or year to have aome tun! II you're
backpacking. boating. cros.country 1k1ing bowt Otme
watching or Just enjoYlng an •~ning together your
get-together y.;11 be really memorable w.th the temotlno taete of Htetcoty Farms of Ohlo9 Cheddw W.re fMtun"9
.Wx of Y04J1 flYOrites now .. and. ci.st of all. YoU can SAV£
., 00 ~ the coupon below. Let HlcilOy Fwma of ONo9
~I )'Our get~logether together with Cheddw1
~ • •
J
17
-r
.
\
. -
l
:!
I Orange Coas-.:
EDI T ION
Tod•y' . Cleshlg
N.Y. Sioek8
VOL. 72, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1979 N TEN CENTS
·me C:los.e in San • Ie
727 Qui.
·City . ~ttorney~
Rebuts Claim
Newport Beach City Attorney
Dennis O'Neil told Monday re·
ports that 727s are as quaet as
other jets using Orange County
Airport may be invalid because
the noise·abatement takeoff pro-
cedures appear to be unsafe.
O'Neil said at a City Council
s tudy session that the Federal
Avia tion Adminis tration had
declared a power cutback prior
to 1.000 feet of altitude is unsare.
yet the controvers ial Hughes
Alrwest 727s are now cutting
back at 500 under 500 feet
Council membe rs said they
in the matt.er and a ruply IS eX
peeled by next week.
He said a consultant hired by
the city has 1tlso told him con
tinued operation or 7278 would
require very expernuve re1>aving
of runways al Orange County
Airport.
1'His opinion is that the cx1i.t
Ing runway cannot ha ndle the
greater load of the heavicr
airplanes." O'Neil said
Condo Plan
a r e concerne d tha t if lhe
airplanes. now flown on an ex ~pr.oved perimenlal basis. win approval, -• ~
the airlines wilJ declare the cur-
rent procedure unsafe a nd l 1'.T r;~atly increase the noise prob-n 1 ~ eivpo rt
"It would appear they're try
ing to fool people." said Mayor
Paul Ryckoff.
Council members said they
are also concerned about the
possibility of an accident.
O'l'lleil, who gave an informs·
tional report. on the city's re·
1 search into the 727 project, sajd
. 1 the FAA has been asked lo rule
t
Eatery Fire
· Damages ·Set
At $IOOIJOOO
A two-alarm Cire reported at
8·-t3 a.m. toda)I did an estimated 1 $100,000 damage to Delaney's
Kettle of Fish in El Toro, a
spokesman for the resta urant
, said.
Orange County firemen spent
21 minutes controlllng the blaze
in the two-story wood structure
also known as Delaney's Sally
· Sam. 23702 El Toro Road.
County fire officials said a
faulty oven caused the blaze
which be~an in the structure's
farst·floor kitchen area.
Employee Heidi Kamczynsk'l.
' 18. of San Juan Capis trano
turned on an oven at 8 a.m.
whe n she a rrived for work.
fi reman said. She went to an up.
stairs office to do paperwork,
they said, and herad a popping
noise
She rushed downst airs, dis·
covered the fire. nod the build-
ing a nd cal.led flr~fighlers from
a business next dbor in the Sad·
dleback Plaza. o(ficials said.
A proposed 132-unit con
dominium project won a pproval
by the NeWJ>Ort Beach City Coun·
cil Monday after the operator or
an adjacent country club said tll'
would prefer the project lo the
skunks who live on the site at
present.
A subdivision map for Sea
Is land. on J a mbor ee Road
across from the Newporter Inn,
was approved 4·1. Mayor Paul
Ryckoff abst ained . saying he
had mixed r~llngs ; Councilman
Donald Strauss was a bsent. and
CouncUman Pa ul Hummel dis·
sented. saying he opposes grad-
ing Ula\ will raise th~ height of
one segment or the comple~ by
18 feet.
Hummel said be believes the
grading proposed by project ap·
plicant Mel.am Enterprises will
block the \'iews of golCers at the
Irvine Coast Country Club, and
will unnecessarily alter the
skyline.
However Forest S m i th ,
operator of the country club.
told the council that the· s ite "is
now known as Skunk Hollow.
"That's whe re the s kunks
come out al night. ll is a dump·
ing place for mattresses and
other things peopl e don't want. l
would much ra ther see this
Cproject>."
Se a Island was o riginally
planned as a 226-unit apartment
projert but. was redesigned after
the City Council in May ordered
the density reduced.
Smith alao told the council the
golf course's 14th hole will be' re·
aligned so that golfe rs will still
have their excellent view of
Promontory Point.
Supervisors otid Friend
500 Feet
Separates
Aircraft
SAN DtEGO CAPl -A Con·
tinental 727 pilot is reported to
have considered evasive action
lo avoid a single-engine Cessna
which was said to have come
within 500 feet of the jet as the
jetliner approached Lindbergh
ror a landing.
But a Federa l Aviation Ad·
ministration olfi cial sa id today
the incident Involving the com-
mercial Jetliner and the small
plane near Lindbergh Field is
not being officiaJJy classified as a near·miss.
J ack Gregory. a Continental
spokesman in Los Angeles. said
no evasive action was ta ken by
the unidentified pilot of flight 81
and no official complaint was
filed about the incident.
Norm Bell Sterling. an FAA
oUiclal here. said he talked with
the Continental pilot during lhe
incident. which occurred about
noon.
Fifth Distric t Supervisor Thomas Riley
lakes to the podium after being s worn in
Monday for a new ter m on the Orange
County Board of Supervisors. Mrs. Ha r·
rielt Wieder. t h e ncw 2nd District
supl'rvisor and the county's first woman
supervisor. holds her gr anddaughter .
Samora Tauber . 2. on her lap as she
lis tens lo Riley. F o r details on Monday's
cer emonies , see a dditional stor ies and
photos, Pages A3 and A9.
According to Sterling. the pilot
said "in his opjnion. the Cessna
was too close. he told us 500
feel."
"We asked him if he wanted to
file a mid ·air report but he
'. didn'!." s aid Sterling. "lnsteadt
h e f iled with the Na1ionaf
Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration a generalized com·
plaint."
Anthony Chi:iirs Board
Sept 25, a Pacifi c Southwest
Airlines 727 jet approaching
Lindbergh for a landing collided
wit h a Cessna . ki l\ing 144
persons in the worst air disaster
in U .$. hJstory.
No finaJ cause for that dii:.·
aster has been announced by
federal Investigators, but the
FAA has ordered ~1ricter flight
procedures at busy Lindbergh
f'iefd .
D•ily Pot"' SW I PtlMo
TO CHAIR SUPERVISORS
Firs t District's Anthony
Phihp Anthony of the First
Di4trtet w• U1MUJhnoual1 elect· ed chairman of the Orange
County Board of Supervisors to-
day .
Anthony replaces Fifth Dis·
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley
who has been the board 's presid·
ing officer for the past two
years .
Supervisor Ralph Clark was
e l ec t e d vic e c hairma n .
Laure nce Schmit, who lost his
seat to Harriett Wieder , was
vice chairman in 1978.
Anthony, who has been a
member or the bourd for two
years, assumes his new post un-
der a legal cloud.
On July l , 1977. Anthony and a
fe llo w Supe r v i s or R a lph
Diedrich were inaicled by the
Ora nge County Grand Jury on
a llegations of campaig n la w
violations.
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person
by a grand jury. It does not
establish guilt or innocence.
Last March Orange County ~upe rior Court Judge Philip
Schwab dismissed all but one
count in the indictments on the
grounds that onJy eight mem·
hers of the grand jury heard a ll
the testimony in the case.
Members of the stale Attorney
General's s taff a re appealing
the dismissal.
Anthony did not discuss the
pending appeal when he took
over his duties today.•
According to Gregory. '1'he
tower advised everyone in the
a rea about a s mgle en~i ne
Cessna in the !{eneral a rea Mon-
day. All our captain did wa~
stay at his altitude a moment
and check it on his radar . Our
ground station said no evasive
action was wken "
Airlines' Landing
Charges Doubled
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol IM o.llY Pllol SWI
passage or Proposition 13.
The current rec was expected
to bring in $340.000 in 1979 The
new fee will ad<t about $380.000 _
Firemen of Orange County
Station 22. nrst to respond, were
only temporarily confused ~Y re·
ports of a blaze at Delaney's
Restaurant another company
facility at. 24035 El Toro Road,
adjacent to the fife station.
Project Delnyed Again
Comme rcial airlin es using
Orange County Airport will pay
fees tot a ling a n estimated
$720,000 this year because coun
t y s upe r visor s m o re t ha n
doubled the airlines' l anding
fees today.
Under the plan unanimously
adopted by the board, landing
fees will jump from 23 cents per
1.000 pounds of each aircraft
landing at the airport, lo 50
or the total. about 6() percent
will be paid by Air California. 33
percent by Hughes Airwest and
seven percent by Golden West
Airlines
<See FEES, Page .\2 l
Restaurant
Owner Bitten;
Trio Arrested
.
·'They drove to the restaurant,
circled the block and headed tor
the Kettle of Fish acro815 the
freeway " an official nid.
Coast
Weather
Chance or raln decre3S·
mg to near 10 pe rcent
tonight and Wednesda)'
Fog night and early morn
ing hours. Little tern ·
c e rature changes with
ows tonight. 46 ~ 52, highs
t. Wednesday 57 63. •
INSIDE TOD~ Y . l
' An Ore~ Countu b1Ufneu ~ er ecutl1;t. woi paid $1 , 12 I .000
tn 1917, t moat of any o/ tM t notion'• bulnwu kCIMr1 sur·
0011ed. F'or ~ "1entitt1 and
other detoila, tu Page 85.
../ ••••• •
t At V-~ Al l.._lltl..._ ... anM...,.._ Cl AMWMlrl a
t...M ..... "-a:r:t I' • .,...
t ---· 9t -c.Mlt9'111• ............... M
o.Mfl4' Q.tt ~~ .. ~ ·&;,.,.,, .. .~ M ....
l === ~ ==""' = •=.:... I :ti=: • ....
.......... Q"-f41 .... ~
\
Despite protests from a de·
veloper that his project has
already been delayed 18 months,
Newport Beach City Council
members said Monday they
need more time to decide what
"reasonableness" is.
The issue, which stirr\~ h~al·
ed council comment, arose as
the resWt of council action in Oc-
tober stating that five major de·
velopments planned In the city
must provide traffic Improve-
ment plans for 70 percent or
their projects.
That action stated the projects
-Emkay Newpo~ Place, Koll
Center Newport, Aeronutronic
Ford, North Ford and Corporate
Plaza -would not be brought
uMer the city's Trlltftc Phasing
Ordinance but would be subject·
ed to "a test of reasonableness."
A counclJ majority said Mon·
day that Planning CommlQlon
suggested guldellnes on •·rea·
sonablene11" left tbent con·
fused. They asked city staff
m._embem to elaborate on the. e:::une.. Pre>vtde exam pier and tbe.iu_ue back Feb. 12.
That action was approvat 4·2
after comment• from several
councU members. Coundlman
Donald Strauas was absent, and
Counc\l members Don Mcinnis
-and .Ian.le Heather dissented.
TM council beard a plea from aa. ftby denloper who W
plianed to aubmlt a tramc pb ... Ina plan to thl Plannln1 Com·
mlNioa thll snoa&b but wm now
be delayed again. He cited an
18·month' delay already and ris·
ing costs. _
Responded Councilman Paul
Hummel, '"Nobody's going to
sta mpede me. Whether or not
they're ready to build it now or
18 years from now is of no in·
terest to me."
Sn a pped back Counc ilman
Mc innis. "I haven't seen any
sta mpeding ... Let's call this
whol it is a mor1ttorium ton
build in$(>."
'Animal Bouse?'
Prankster.s Jailed
In Newport Ant~c
,.. ~ '
Five members•ot a University
of Southefll California fraternity
found themselves in Newport
Beach jaJJ this week following a
prank police assert may have
been Ins pire d by lbe film
"Animal Rouse."
The film depicts the antics ot memberalPt.,a renetiade f rotemi· lI..11.A mY!t«cal um v~rsit v.
Sgt. Bob Gatewood said the
flve were arrested about 1"1>.m.
S\lnday at Oakwood Ap.rt·
ments 16th Street at frvlne
A venue in Newport Beach, after
a tenant .reported a burglacy ln
prpgreas at an apartment
clubhouse.
He said the suspects att~y
were driving a rented truck In
. which police found chains and a
-1tetened-ri)n U\~ e U.S .. Flag belonctnlJ to the apart.
cognizance following their ar---ment'~ptex. Aleo fowacUn ... Lbe
rcat on •uapicion of burglary truck were a garden hoM IUld a
were Terietlce Patrick Moloney, • •tale free.vay '''"· Gaa.wood 19, or PatM Verdes, •Jeffrey s aid.
Oeor1 Rll, 19. of Lot Angelea, He uld a spokeam1n for
David Jettrey Crowell, 18, ofJM Sl8m• Alpha E1>1Uon ttatemlt.)' ~itllet, Randall Keith Pittman. al P.! tbeJ ha" h~ prob-
20 of Loi Anp ..,d Cll•r:Mlh , I • It II pr a n k 1 t v • r Whliam Hayden, 20, of Los aln ''Animal ltoute" wu ,... ,An•••· leased.
-• 111\r• • ·-
cents per l,000 pounds . .
The fee was last set in 1969.
The chan ge was s ought by
a irport o ffi c ial s wh e n
supervisors insisted lhe airport.
should be self.supporting after
Stanford Taps
Dowhower as
Grid Coach
SAN FRANCISCO t AP l Bill
Walsh. who took Stanford
Unive rsity to two bowl ga mes In
two years. has resigned as the
Cardinals' coach and is expected
to be named head coact. of the
San Francisco 49ers later today.
Walsh, 48, resigned from hfs
Stanford Job Monday, school
Athletic Director Andy Gelger
said today. OeJger said Walsh
qult to accept a hebd coaching
job in the National Football
League. <Earlier story Page 82•
The 49ers (lred Coach Fred
O'Connor and General Manager
7oe T1'omu on Monday. rt was
almost certain that Walsh woul<l
be named to succeed O'CoMOf
lat.er today .
Stanford named aaslstant
coach ~ Dowhower. M. to sue·
cffd Wal*. Dowhower bad betin
Watah'• chief 1ul•tant both
.)'ears Walsh wa1' at Stanford.
Three penniless visitors to
Newport Beac~ went ·loo fa r
Monday when they slopped for a
bite to cat and one of them al·
legedly bit the restaurant owner .
police reported today.
In custody today in lieu of $250
b ai l wa s Dani e l Arthur
Ra ms pe rger, 22. of Ontario,
Canada, who faces an assault
c ha rge. Facing c ha r ges of
defrauding an Innkeeper are his
two companions, Robert Russell
Nesbitt. 23, also of Ontario, and
Kerry Michael Pratt, 25, or New
Hampshire.
They were also still in custody
today on $250 ball each.
Police said the iAcident oc-
curred at 5:30 a.m. Monday at
P aciC\c Coast Diner-. 450t W.
Coast Highway. Newport Beach,
after a waitress became sus·
pic lous tha t the three men
planned to leave without paying.
Pollce said that, according lo
restaurant owner David L. Flsh.
30, the men left 1lie premiHS.
When Flah tonlronted them.,.."and
demanded payment. a scuffie
ensued In which Fish was bitten
on the upper right arm.
Po11ce. summo ne d b)' the
walh·eas. arret1ted the three aus.-
-pecll and said tb y found they
had no money.
The rettaurant tab came to .
S18.80, )ollco said .
t
,
•
.4.2 DAil. Y PtlOT Ii
Governor
IACRAM ftNTO <AP >
R.epubllcan I aden aH 11Hf\llb
welcomlna Oov Edmund Brown
Jr. to tbelr party attn hl '"'
au1ural h. and 1omo • · 1renUtd mocratJo Ubetall •P
pare"ijy tWnk M ~-.. \heft,
DUUllv UY* ... heMeD UKn. flleratfC11t.orr Pa o A3 •
.. It wu e-.fUJ J do nm th nk
poor oeos>M ahould bC! ltft OU\ In
lh• cold by • 90vtmor °' '"'' dt!n\," mbly Jftallb COi'i·
O<>vaNOR UROll
TAXCUT -P• AS
tn\tteo dtalnn•n Art Torret. D
Lo An&el , a jd aRer ll •nd Ina th• televhed addret g
Mood.,-~.
"H• Jolntd th• Ropubllcan
Party and we'r<! dcllahted. ll's
the most con11crvatlvo 1peecl\
atv~n ln Sacramento •\nee
Ronald RH1an left," chortled
Senate GOP leader WtlUam
Campbell ol Whlltler.
Some Democrats did pr1l10
tbe tone ot the 20-mlnute speech
and several Republlcana ques·
ttoned Brown's slncortty as a
bud1et.cutter.
''Untll a blU ls sl~ned lnto law,
I bell eve nothin&, • said Senate
Republ\can Caucus Chairman
8 .L. Richardson of Arcadia. He said Brown was "on a preslden·
lial treadmill." But most of the reaction cen· ter~d on Brown •a stress on flecaJ
lnues -a proposed •t bllliQn
tax cut, more verbal embrace of
the Prol)Otllllon 13 tax revolt,
and a conaUlutional ban on
recteral deticlt apeodlng -and
·the 1cant attention he paid to
eoctal problems. .. , was diaappointed that there
was no more attention given to
human needs," said Sen. Alan
Sleroty. J>.Loll Angeles.
Campbell, noting that Brown
called Proposition 13 "a can of
worms,. before last June's elec·
lion, observed, ''A can or worms
is now a gourmet meal."
State AFL·CIO leader John
Henning, usually a Brown sup·
porter. ca lled the speech
•·wa rme d -over Herbert
Hoover."
California State E mployeea
Assoclallon President Wllllam
Craio said Brown's proposal to
e liminat e 5,000 s tate Jobs
··acapegoats the people who
work for government.''
Fog E q1eeted
TlH'lAI'. Iran TAP) -Shih
Molla.-•ed ~ ... Pahlnl
dtcrffd today lhal all penonal pN>.,.rtr ()/ lh ltanlan roya.1
f•mtly be turot!d over to a
trown IPONC>red f ound1Uon and
ordered tht relean or u
pritontn' convicted by military
lrtbunali. '• aa redlo H d \he
property. esumated to be valued
at hundred• of mllllona of
doll•n. wu bdna lraoaf rrc4 w lh Pah)avl foundation "for the
u11 of r.U1lou•. ducatlonal,
toelal ud ..-uart oraanlaat~
or .. nllfd by lhl PIOPI• and nan
by them."
Pataee IOW'~ ttld the dlvtat•
MaREacea
Trial on
~Counts
A Newport Beach man w11 or· der d Monday to stand trlal ln
Oran1e County SuJ)t)rlor Court
on ch1rat1 or c:hlld moleatatloo
and 1exual pervenlon lnvolvln1
a $·ytar--old 1lrl.
The San Bernardino c:hlld, who
h11 1lnco turned e, accused John
Howard Algle, 41. ot 206 COiton
St., In Harbor Municipal Court
durlpt a prtUmlnary hearine
that ended Monday. Judae Calvin Schmidt directed
authorltloe to arraign AJgie, who
has pleade d Innocent, ln
auper{or court J®. 18.
Alale was arrested at hla
home by Irvine poUco last Nov.
6. He is free on ball.
The six-foot-three. 210-pound
s ales m a n or r e cre ational
vehicles, was charged with fore-·
ing various sexual acts upon the
gran~dauahter of a cystomer.
Pollce sa\d a San Bernardino
wom a n, accompanied by the
child. was shopping for a motor
home Sept. 9. when the crimes
allegedly took place.
Police saJd the child didn't tell
her grandmother of the incident
until several days later . The
woman became physically Ill al
the newt and was hoapltaUzed
for week.I before ahe was able to
tell police, according to in·
vestigators.
No More Rain Due
For Coast Region
Today's rain. the tail end of a
tardy storm, was expected to
dissipate thia afternoon. making
way ror pockets of dense fog Wedne~•Y morrung along the
coast, a National Weathe r
Service spokesman aaid.
More than a 10th of an Inch or
rain was recorded in most parts
of Orange Countv today by 8 ·a.m .. with the ortly mador prob·
lem a San Die&o Freeway traffic.
snarl. No addltlonal sUppases
were reported In the landslide
areas of southern coastal Orange
Count)'. Cahfomla Hlah-.yay Patrol of· flcers said a seml·truck skidded
near Westminster Avenue when
the driver braked too quickly on
wet pavement, jacknlftng the rig
and blocking slow-lane traf(1c.
Commuters to the Los An&•les
area were alowed to a near hall
for nearly two hours. officials
said
L aguna Beach po\ice were
keeping a cTose watch on
Bluebird Canyon &his morning
where • neld or pllstic covered
a gaping hole in Oriole Drive
after Friday'• mud elide
GeologJau expect no further
11tppage from today's atorm but
DAILY PILOT
•••. cw-. Viet~-................
""r.11:--"'
'=t.;.1"::'
~:.i~-:.~
OtlMt °""-.!trn&tzli:.. ~~.c~~, • -
would not predict the result of
another Pacific storm expected
Thurtdaf.
Ju1t to the south. orrtclala in
San Clemente said no additional
s lippage was noticed at
Shorecliffa Mobile Country Club
where a 900·foot·long fissure opened last month, threatening
a half-dozen mobile homes.
"There's a cbance of more
ltgbl raln from a Paclltc storm
by Thursd~," a s pokesman
aald, "but then agaln, it may
take longer to get here "
Today'• storm. predlcted to arrive Monday, dropped .12 of
an inch ln the Costa Mesa and Newport Beach area by a a .m. The season's total reached 9.06
1lnco July 1. compared to 7.48
Inches by the eame date lu t
ye_ar.
· Hunlln.cton Beach mea1urod
.12 of an inch, Laguna Nt1uel
reached only .03 ot on Inch and
Santa An• measured · .11 or an
inch.
No Solutio n
Seen to H 8 1
School Strike
· The Huntington Beach Union
lllgh School Dlatrlct teacher strike entered its fifth day today
w_ltb no end ln 1l1J\t to the cur·
1'6nt contract dlapute.
Dl1tt1ct oftlcl•ls reported 907 t4achen etther on strike or m
Monday N 1ublt1tut• t4achera
manntld cla.... where 28 per· cent of the 1chool dla\rlet's
20,900 1tudent1 w•re abtent. Te•cbtr and d41trlct
"'1ot.laton are awattlq word from a ttate.appo~ mediator on p0etlbl• renewal of contract
talka tbat brokt otl thrff weekl
110.
Tea,her leaden say they are
atnl demaadlnl a flv. J)trttnt
pay ~ for tM 1'78-79 achool
year, a llmllar 1alary ralae tor
'191t·80 if the atate rulae it la
11111 IDd b6114bl8 arbltraUon In
1rlevancea. ht lcbaol boerd membtn are
refullnt to bad&Lon tbelr Poll· Uon tllat tbt-ftate·l•tc>J'4 Hfary freeH mutt be Ufted bdo,. a tlve percent ralae ls arantect.
td property h>chadfd the 1hah'1 vHt dometUe hoktlna1 In com·
p1n1 ai.ocu. bank• f 1ct.orlt1
and land. Th mov were announced a
the naU. 1w11led word on when
th abab intend 4o .io abroad on
an 1~l4mlled vacation lo t1ko op·
poalllon pre111\Jre off \he new ~i¥tllen .-overnment ot 8'\•bllOW' lJakbUar".'"--,
Th .nrll.lmial Pan 11ews uen·
cy aald the 366 prlAonera had
be n held at Tehran'• central
poUOt department prtlOft Pfor
varlOUI altlnMI .. and had been
pardoned by the ahah. Para at·
trlbuted th• announcement to
the Imperial Iranian armtd
forcea tribunal.
g1Tht announetment also aald
The pardon ot other prlaonera
wH beln& 1tudled. The 1ovem·
rnent prevloualy aald there were
llbout 200 Pfrtons In priaon con·
vlcted of non~apltal pciuucai ot.
tenses, but today'• Jtn,ounc•·
ment did lM»t specify whet.her the
e._udoned group Included tMH
pontfcil p . ---
The dl\teatlture was seen as
another ltep aJmed at removtng
the taint or corruptlon from the
royal family, 14 of whole mem· bera havo cone abroad 1lnce
pollUcal turmoll mounted here
last fall.
Thia followt a prevlou royal
decree lasued last September ln
which the ahah prohlbtted mern·
ben of blJ famlly from h1vtn1 business dea1lngs with the gov·
ernment or from controlllng
charitable organlaaUons.
The $1 bllUon -Pahlavi Foun·
daUon waa created 18 ~ara •llO with a personal grant of '133
mllllon of the shah's wealth tor
u:ae by dtarttable-organiiationl.
orpbanaaes and higher educa·
lion.
While snow.covered Tehran
was experiencing one of Its
quietest days In two months,
there were reports or al least six
dealha in anU·sbah vlolenc• in
the proviJtcea.
CarterSaih
French Racer
GOS1ER, Quad loupe
(AP > A barefoot p,..1.
dent Carter SPfl\t th final
day or a Carlbbeeo vaca·
tlon today HIUn1 aboa rd a
OO·foot, t'reoch trtmaran
racer.
Carter and hia Jl.year· old daughter Amy boarded
the three-huJled. Seiko of yachting pubU1her Alaln
Ollckrnan at • marlna f\ear the cUtrtop vl Ua
wbtre the Carters have
been ataytng since last
week'• summit with tho
leadirs of France. Britain
and West Germany.
The saUboa~ has no
engine and had to be·
towed Into the harbor. Ker
sails filled with a gentle
breeze withln a tew
minutoa aod 1hl salled off oo a wetterly course.
(;opter :fraeks Three Reside nts·
To Appeal 1tro )fe n, Women Sei~d in Break-in Attempt '
A woman and two beavUy tat· tooed men were tn Newport
Beach Jill today after a police b1llco1Mr crew apotted tw~ men
Trio Arr ested
In Newport
Burglary Raps
A burl\ar alarm .. t off at the
WarehO\ISe Reataurant, 8450 Via
Oporto in Newport Beach, led
police lo arrest two men and a
boy on suaplclon of commercial
burglary, police said today.
In jai) today in lieu o( 15,000
ball was Boyd Oerald Condley,
36, of 1801 Whittier Ave .• Costa
Meaa. Released on hlis own re~
cognizance was Rlch11rd Dale Throm, 19, ol 1922 Meyer St. in
Costa Mesa.,
A third suspect, a 17-year-old Newport Beach boy whose name
was not released because of his
age, was in Juvenile Hall, police
s aid.
Police said a burglar alarm
set off about 7 a.ro. Sunday at
the rntaurarit led them to ln·
vestigate a car found drivi ng
slowly around the area.
In the car, police sald t)ley
found the three auapect• along with burglary tools, CB radios
and walkie talkies. The door of
the reataurant had been un·
locked but nothing appeared to
be mlsalnf, poUee aald.
F ..... P -.AJ
FEES •••
Only one airHne spokesman
testified at today's hearing on
the r ate increase. Robert Flores. repre1enting
Alrwest, said the airline object·
ed to the increase since the
money is belnl raised in part to
help pay for lmplementatlon of a :
master plan that is currently un-
der debate.
He said he thought use of the
landing fees for operating •x· pensH wu Inappropriate slnce
the fees couldn't be considered a
1table revenue source.
But hls views were disputed
by Aasistant Airport Manager
Barbara Fox who de1cribed the
ute or the feet as a sound finan·
clal plan.
Ms . Fox earlier warned
supervisors that'SOme of the car·
rlers -she didn't specity which
ones -had objected to the In·
crease claiming the money was
being raised to ••pre-fund Htlga·
lion."
She dented that alle«atlon
while acknowJedglne that the lawsuits ftled over airport noise
have cost the airport and the
county "hundreds or thousands
of dollars."
Penny Ante
Millionaire
UTICA, N.Y. <AP> -
Edwin Rommel, a SO.year·
old forem4n, d ePosited • 6ne 'million pennitl at tht
bank, tbt r11ult ot 20 yoau of collecttna . Ar·
terward, Rommel 1ald, •·1
don't want to'" 1nother
penny."
• The ~.000 rolls of pen·
niee, whJch had been In
•laht IMtll footlock•ra at
'Rommel'• bosn_e1 filled up
aoo '50 ball ana welahtd
ao •llmeted •~ t.ona. "I don't know wb1 I • started 11vln1 them,"
Rommel uid Mond•Y. "l
dldn 't start out 1avlng,. I
tot up '° about 13 or 1' _clollara end I Wd l'P tboot for a new car, aad wtMn I 9'.d eqpulll rcw a car, l
Hid, 'Ob, hell, J'll lboc>l
fOf. mUlJOft ' •" I'
all•ttdlY MtD tr')'lt\I to break
lnto a home. Held on $10,000 ball were
Sutan Jean YouniJ. 24, of 1800 Coriander Drive, U>ata Men;
Rick Lee Role, 2:1, of Ora~e.
and John WUUam Stlnaon, 3', of
282 Cecil Place, Colt.a Me1a. All
thrff face charlft of reaidenUal
burtlary.
Police aald tbe Incident OC· curred at about io p.m. Sunday
when nel_,.bon reported '"'na two men cUll\btnl a fence to the
home or Howard and ·Anne
JohnlOft at 122'1 Somenet Lane.
Newport Beach.
The Police heUeopler t1'8cked
two men to a car and directed a
police car to lntercept tbem. The
two men were reportedly found
in the car wtth the woman driv·
to1.
· Police 1aJd the door knob had
been forced open on the Johnson
door but that no Items we,.. re·
ported m.laalna.
Rose was described as having
flowers, a skull, a aoose, a
peacock and mountaJns tattooed
on bJa upper riaht arm; nowers
and tbe name "Jason" on hJs
wrist; a head, a person and a
snake tattooed on his "'5)per left
arm and a butterfly, a bead and
a snake tattooed on hls lower left
arm.
. Stinson wu described ln Ute
police report as having mulUple
tattoos over hls arms and entire
body,
Co11ncil Action
ln action Monday night, the Newport Beach City Coun·
cil:
-<X>NOOMINl\JM PROJECT: Approved plans for
Sea Island, a 132-unlt condominium project on Jamboree
Road across from the Newport.er Inn.
-CAMPAIGN CONTRIBlmONS: Asked city aides to
rework and resubmit on Feb. 12 an ordinance eittendlng
campaltn tund regortlng requirements to include city
ballot prol)OSltlons. Council members said they would Uke
to see a clause requiring wrttten penpln!on before on·
dorsements could be used.
-&IAIONABLENEl8: Eicpreued confusion on plan· nlna conunlllloll fUldeUnes aa to what "reasonableness" mean1 In requlrtna tramc phasing plans for certain de·
velopmentl and aaked city ortlcials to provide examples
for conalderaUon Feb. 12.
-OTY POIJCY: Adopted unanimously a policy denn·
Ins the "ottlclal" city poaiUon as that taken by the City
Council.
-REZONING: Directed the Planning Commission to
lnlllate reionlna on a Callfornia Department of
Tran•J.'C)rtatlon parcdl weal of Superior Avenue, despite a
Jetter from CalTrana contending that rezoning it to open
apace rnlaht arnouPt to Inverse condemnation of property.
·Trash Truck ·Driver Hurt
The driver of an Oran1e Coun·
ty traah tnack that overturned
Monday In Newport Beach was In aorloua condltton today at
Costa Mesa Hospital after aul·
ferlng broken bone1 and other
lnjurie1.
PoUce aatd Gary Thie1en. 38,
or Garden Grove. WU Injured
after a car driven by Thelma
Torres, 66, or 212 ~inceton
Drive, Costa Mesa, alle1edly
pulled out In front of him near
the Harbo r Municipal
Courthouse on Jambor.e Road.
Police aaid the Torres car was
on Birch Street and the trMh
truck was southbound on Jam·
boree Road. Mn. Tol'f'es was
taken to Cocita Mesa Memorial
Ho1 pltal but was not admitted.
· The accident spilled garbage
onto Jamboree Road a nd
blocked traffic for several
hours, police said.
Ber Ruling
A fij(ht 11 brewing In Santa
Ana Helgbu over the hours of
operallon ot a re1taurant and
bar that hlian't been built yet. II onday. angry homeowners
who lost their case in a 3·2 vote
oC the Oranae County Plaoning
Commiaalon, vowed to appeal
the matter to the County Boa.rd
oC Supervisor1.
Commialoners Earl Wooden.
Charles Bennett and Rex Gaede
sided with lbe Spiller Develop-
men t Company oC Newport
Beach which brouaht the pro·
posaJ \0 the commlasion.
The firm was granted a
variance for Ule restaurant, cur· renlly under construction on
Irvine Avenue at Mesa Drive.
Th e variance e xte nde d the operaUng hours from a 10:30
p.m. cloelng to a 2 a.rn. closing.
Residents or the area. wbo
presented commissioners with
petitions in opl)Olltlon to the late
closing time, said they felt sue~ a late hour& are Inappropriate to
the 1urrounding residentia l
properties.
One resident alAo noted that
another existing restaurant on
Irvine Avenue has the s ame
operating hours, but has had
three owners in the past six
months. The resident claimed
the ch8»1Je of ownerahips was an
indicatio n of the lack of
restaurant busines s in the
nelJhborhood.
Health Board
Eyes Newport
Center P lan
A proposal to bu1ld an outpa-
tient surgical center In Newport Center witl come before the
Orange County Health Planning •
Council Wednesday In Newport
Beach. Surgicare Aasoclateil. Inc.
wants to build a Sl mtlllon tuc1h·
ty . Spokesman Raymond &r5e
aays he believe• the racillty could lower costs of minor sur· aery by up to 60 percent.
However, the count'll start has
recommended denying the re·
quest on the basis that il would
duplicate exiatinr out-patient
facillliea at a number of area
hoapitals, including Hoag
Memor:lal.
The hearinai will begin al 7:30
p.m. in City Council Chambers.
3300 Newport Btvd .. Newport Beach.
.
CllTI YOUi <iET·TOCHnta
TO.ITHEI ••• WITH
CHEDDAR
Now't the tlmt of year to have eome fun! If you re
bec:f<gacf(lng, boating. croaa.country lkllng. bowl g~
¥tatchfng or Just ~eying Ill tvenlllQ t~tl'ler ••. your
get·t09ether will be really metnQrabfe wittt th• temotlno
l•t• 6f Mid«>fY Farms of Oh101' ~. We're featuring
el• of V04lf ta11ot1• now . . and. bet1 ol all. you can SAVE
11.00 wttn tt,t cou~ below. let Hlctcorv F11ma ot Onioe ~t your get·togettler tog•ther with °'9ddarl
.. )
•
'
,
Riley Praises Coping With p;~p. i~3
Coplna wtlb the firsl year'a 1tat~ of the county report noted
nnandal lmpac& ot Proposition tha& al'tttr puaace ot u.. p~r-
13 w.4tbout lo1ln1 eueotlal ty tu redu~tlon lnltlatlv1
HrvlcH WH rat d Otant• IU.,.rvllon adopted. • lt'71 '19
Count)' covernmenl '1 top 1c budael chopped by m .1 million
tompllahmentfor 1m today from county •ov tnment '1
Out1ol n1 Super v l1ora lm·11tJudcet.
Chairman 'l'bomu Riiey, ln h 1 At Lbe same Um , h• wd,
rount.r N«>V rnrncnt w11 abl to
exttnd 1l'rv1ct•11to41.000 new res·
ld•nt1 added to the county
population hi.al yeur und absorb
l<'Vl'n J)fr<'cnt lnOaUon raclor.
"SllU. Jt w 1 not ea y." Riley
said. ''In fact it wa1 very dlf·
ftcult
a ,wyer Claims
'
Council Denied
BACK ON TH! BENCH
Newpot't Judge Oold1teln
,______-/
Ousted
Judge Gets
New Post
By KAnlY CLANCY
Of tlle o.llr ~1114 St.ff
Leonard Goldstein of Newport
Beach. ousted Orange County
Superior Court judge. was un·
employed less than 24 houri,
Mon day when the governor put
him back on the bench. •
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. ap·
Pointed Goldstein to the North
Orange County Municipal Court
on the same day that former
Deputy District Attorney Orella
Tbe new atlorn y for Oranie
Co unty Supervhor Ralph
Diedrich Mood•)' uked a Judge
to diamlaa lbe bribery indict·
meot a1alnst hia c)Jent on the 1roundl that he had been denled
dlectlvt11 use of couMel.
James P . Cantillon. of
Newport Beach, Dledricb's new
lawyer tn the ease after the res·
tgnatlCln of Marshall Morgan.
charged the District Attorney's
Office knew for more than a year
that Morgan would be a chief pr<n
secution witness aga1nst his own
client but faJled to notify Diedrich
or Morgan.
San Diego County Superior
Court Judge F. V. Lopardo set a
hearing on the motion, along
with a move to grant Diedrich
and co-defendant LeRoy Rose.
a preliminary hearing, for next
Monday.
Assistant District Attorney
Mi<'hael Capizzi argued thut
everyone knew Morgan was a
potential witness because he
was subpoened to testify before
the Orange County Grand Jury
that indicted Diedrich.
Diedrich and architect Rose
face a Feb. 5 trial in Lopardo's
Vista court on charges they con·
spired to receive money from
Anaheim Hills Inc. in 1973 in re-
turn for a Board of Supervisors
vote to remove 2,200 acres from
Sears took ~>ver the s uperior Hotlines Set court seat she won from Gold·
stein lnthe JUP.eelection.
'I am thrilled to be able to
<'Ontmue serving the community
m a judicial capacity," Gold·
stean said late Monday, "and I
mus t say J admire the governor
for his sincerity and boldness."
When asked about published
reparts that the governor plans
to elevate him t.o a spot on the
district court or appeal later.
Goldstein said he'd heard
nothingofsuch a plan.
• "l'he governor doe5n 't consult
me about his appe>intments,"
Goldstein said. "If he has
something in mind he hasn't
s hared that with me "
Goldstein, 47 will be paid
S47 .497 for his new municipal
c•ourt post. about $4.000 less than
he earnt.'<i as a superior court
judge
Superior Court Judge Robert
Green also expressed pleasure
at Goldstein's appointment, say
i,ng it drew "tremendous sup-
port·· from both attorneys and
JUd~es
Green said he and Goldst.eln
had been in private practice
together in Santa Ana in the
1960's. He called Goldstein "ex·
tremely well respected" while
he served on the superior court
bench
Goldstein's last day on the
ForWeHare
Fraud Report
Establishment of four
telephooe "boUines" for anyone
wishing to re1>0rt suspicion of
welfa re fraud was announced
Monday by oUicials of the
Orange County District Al·
tomey's Office.
Those calling the numbers
834-7872, 834-7873, 834·7874 and
834·7875 -may speak directly to
. an investigator.
The names of those calling
will be kept confidential If re·
quested, officials said.
At the same time. officials an·
nounced that 29 people were ar·
rested in December on charges
of welfare fraud representing a
suspected loss or $66,429 in over·
payments.
Two other persons were
charged during the month with
probation violations on earlier
wel!are fra_ud charge~.
Holiday Blood
Shortage Ended
bench was Friday and he begins LOS ANGELE.5 <AP) -The
duties rn the Fullerton municipal blood shortage emergency in
court today. Los Angeles and Orange coun·
Goldstein. a former deputy at· ties that developed during the
torney general and sta le ad-Christmas and New Year's holi·
ministrative law judge, said he day period has ended, a Red
had been planning to go into Cross official said Monday.
private practice after leavlng "I think we can say the threat
Superior Court. f He explained his tics with the o serious shortage is past,
Brown administration stretch thanks to public response, .. said Norman Kear, regional ad· back to the governor's first term ministrator of Red Cross Blood
nn aancultural preserve.
Mor gun withdrew from the
Diedrich case las t month after
c1llng a possible conflict of in·
tercst centenng on his possible
role as a witness in what is ex·
peeled to be a six to· eight.week
trial
The trial was transferred to
San Diego County in October by
Orange County Superior Court
Judge John Flynn.
New Brown
Budget
Revealed
SACRAMENTO CAP l -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr .. will propose
a $19.8 billion budget thal
eliminates 5,140 state jobs and
abolishes 15 licensing boards.
the Sacramento Union reported
today.
The newspaper also detailed a
$1.2 billion state income tax cut
. Brown mentioned in his in-
augural address Monday. quot-
ing figures it said came from an
advance copy of the budget.
The Democratic governor's
staff refused comment until the
budget is submitted to the stale
Legislature on Wednesday.
The account quotes Brown as
saying in an introduction t.G the
budget that the spending plan is
a blueprint for "leaner govern·
ment" and is "substantially
below all proposed constitutional
spending limits . But it keeps
faith with the vision and con-
science of California" by build·
ing for the future in the areas of
arts. affirmative action, urban
parks. apprenticeship training.
enforcement of labor laws and
housing. it said.
Among budget highlights in
the preview of the budget:
-State personal income tax
credits would be increased to
Sl25 for individuals and $250 for
couples. for a total savings to
taxpayers of $915 million on 1979
taxes. Those tax credits would
be received on returns filed in
early 1980.
The permanent level of the
credits. which taxpayers deduct
from their total tax bills before
sendinf? in checks or fiHng for
refunds. 1s $27 for individuals
and $54 for couples. But the
credits on 1978 returns were tn·
creased to $100 and S200 irra one-
time relief provision of a tax cut
signed into law by Brown lasl
year.
-An additional $210 million
would be earmarked for extra
lax benefits for renters. who
were left out of the Proposition
13 tax cul bonanza last year
Sick Teachers
Face Dock
In Salaries
when Gol<btein was with state Services. government and was able "to be ~---......... =------------Of(icials in the Westminster
of ;;ome aasistance to the new, School <elementary) District
administration.•· say from now on teachers who
He was first appointed to claim to be ill will have to prove
North Orange County Municipal 1l or they may haxe their pay
Court by Brown in 1976 then docked. elevated by Brown to superior T his emergency procedure
court In urn. was instituted Monday because
G9ldstein talked Monday of a s trike threat by teachers
about his June election defeat over wages. fringe benefits. the
but wished his former opponent length of the teaching day and
well. olher issues
Of bis defeat, 241,014 for Sears D i strl ct spokeswoman
to 190,224 for the Incumbent, Barbara Winars said the district
Goldstein said, "I thJnk it was a took the action after what she
combination of Proposition 13 termed a wildcat strike took
und a law and order campaign pl.lace at Johnson Intermediate
which was never justified for me S8'1ool Monday.
since I hadn't had a crtmlnaJ She claimed that 21 of the
case. school's 30 teachers were absent
"And l think the title deputy and that 20 substitute teachers
district attorney was very ap-were hi.red at $80 per day.
peallng . in the last election," Goldstein continued. The district doesn't normally
He Hid what he learned from require proof of illness until
the defeat was that judges need after five days or absenleeism.
to gel out among the people and M lss Winar~ said the district
lrt them know what they are do-also took the tougher position
ing. .,. after a l e tte r from the
Goldate,n's J une upset and St-1'I d Westmin.,ter Teachers Associa·
that of three other tncumbent ... -... Oii •W tlon was distributed to some
'"""IUJ)ertor nd 1mmlelpal court ., Rawl .L. Rea•jadQ • .J4 -c.ur· campusci .
judgea waa caned one or Ute t I r' • h • ~ '.r. 1-r -most apectacular u aetl 1 Joe 1 ren Y mana1er o t e 1 ne<ic:ltcr said substituter-a
political history ~ inco':nt>e~t Frnno AirpoJ;t, takes over prolon1tna the "~trlke" and ac-
J ud•ea had be~n opposed tn Jan. 15 as Orange County's cused them of being "sc#>s."
Oranse County for ye1n and it new airport inana1er. He or Bar Kaelter, asaisuantairector
W81 the nrat Ume OdO bad been replaces Robert Bresnahan, ~ ~.~.:~~:.'1~h~t!r U:!!;
.defeated a)nce 1H>. who resigned last year. 8 mistake.
"Overall, l fffl that the ppt
year's bud&cl was the board's
11\0Jor nccompllahment." the
Newport Beuch supervisor said.
"Next year'• budaet to1ether
with those dect1tons ,..quired by
fi1cal conatrainta will doubtles11
be th e board 's rnaJor
Up to the Job
challenge." "
Rlley said medJan ramUy In-
come ln Orange County for 1978
stood al $22,000, and new jobs
wer4t .Cfeated at double the
state.~ growth rate.
Riley noted the county un·
employment rate stood at 3.7
Lucin~a J acobs. 4. had to borrow a stool.Monday to hold
the Bible for her father. Bradley. when he was sworn in
as Orange County Assessor by Superior Court Judge
Harmon Scoville. Other county officeholders were sworn
in Monday. too. To find out how "the coronation" went.
turn to Page A9.
Striking Teachers
Call Mass Ra~ly
Aided by 20 professional strike
workers and teachers from
throughout Orange County, Run·
tinglon Beach-area high school
teachers have called for a mass
rally torughi prior to what they
claim wiJJ be a showdown before
the school board.
School board members have
scheduled a 7 o'clock public
meeting in the Huntington
Beach High School auditorium.
1905 Main St.
Iss ues surroundin~ the current
strike by nearly half of the dis·
trict's 867 teachers arc not
sc heduled to be di scussed
tonight.
But teachers say they have
other plans.
"I don't know if teachers are
going to allow the board not to
discuss the strik e.·• said
s pokesman Bill Rianchl. ex·
ecutive director of West Orange
County United Teachers
"It could get a little hostile."
Bianchi srud.
An estimated 1.000 teachers
and their supporters plan to
meet at 6 p.m. at Lake Park in
downtown Huntington Beach.
"I've never stepped back from
a fight yet." said School Board
President Zita W~ssa.
Selecting a blrthslone 01tt
this month-., Chances are. you
can give tile birthday person
h11 or her favorite color. Gamet. the January birthstone.
OOttWs In all color1 except blue. How la this possible?
Gem9tones are cluslfied ac·
OOfding to crystal struclure and chemlcal compo11t1on
Although all gamets have the
satre Cl)'ltal atructur» and are
similar and I nterrelated
~ly. a different alement
It r.apontlbla tor each varta-
tlon of eolof'. For example. th• P'eHnc• of chromium pro-duce8 a grwn color
Mrs . Wessa sajd she expects
trustees to stand firm on their
refusal to grant pay and binding
arbitration demands issued by
teacher leaders.
Teachers have been working
without a contract since July l.
Nine months of <'o llective
bargaining have not brOUfi:ht a
contract for the district ·s
teachers.
"This is not just a right ror
Huntington Beach Union High
School District teachers-it's a
fight for all the teachers in the
state." said Ira Toi bin. pres•·
dent of the 750-member Oistrlct
Educators Association. the
group spearheading the strike.
The DEA is a California
Teachers Association affiliate.
CTA officials have hired pro·
fessional strike .. coordinator
Mike Ford to lead the west
·Orange Courity teachers on the
picket line. Ford refused to be
interviewed Monday.
Striking west county tea<'hers
~ay th~y have received backm~
an their efforts from teacher::.
associations in NeWPort Beach.
Cos ta Mes a , Irv i n e .
Westminster. Sa n Juan
Capistrano. Saddleback Valley.
Fountain Va lley. Brea and
Anaheim.
@
EiEMWISE
percent for November and 5 5
percent for the year as a whole.
the lowest rate not on ly an
Cantornla but for the naUon as •
well.
PeraonaJ lncome in Orange
County was $17.3 bUllon. be said.
up almost 12 percent rrom a
year earlier.
Jn addition. retail sales or
nearly $10 billion stood ~
alatewlde only to Los An&eles
County_
Aa for Ute dollar value of all
1ooda and services produced.
the outgoing chairman said. the
1978 1 r oss county product
reached GO billlon.
''Looking to the future. it wiU
be the private sector continuing
as the primary means. in our
free economic system. lo satisfy
the needs and wants of people
ror goods and se,.vices and to
create opportunities (or working
and living," Riley said.
·'There ls also a critical role
here for government." Riley
continued. "to create a climate
for economic growth and to pro-
vide the necessary foundation o(
public services.··
On the subject of affordable
housing. Riley said supervisors
on Wednesday wm be offered a
new set of policies aimed at lower
ing housing prices. .
The new ho~fog element of
the county general plan, be said.
includes strategies for county
government to ~isl private de-
ve lo pers "to take more
responsibility for providing af.
fordable housing.··
In today's message Riley also
touched on county government
efforts to provide more parks
and open space in county areas.
including the recent $2.S million
acquisition agreement for a
beach park neighboring Doben)'
State Beach.
He also mentioned efforts to
assist in preservation of both the
Laguna Greenbelt and the Bolsa
Chica marsh.
The second·term supervisor
also referred to the county's er-
fort.'I to supervise county ~overn·
ment political campaigns and
creation or a new Fair Cam·
pa\gn Practices Commission
which he said resulted in "more
res pons ible t'ampaigns in
general."
Looking toward the future,
Riley also said he is hopeful
county government can develop
a Washington tobbylst program.
"The main concerns are that
all sorts of administrative laws
are made that arfe<:t the coun·
ty:• he said.
And whHe rederal grants exist
lo help fmance many of the pro-
gr a ms resulting from thos~
raws. Riley said, county c1ttzens
have been paying more in
federal truces than is returned to
them in services.
"Illustrating the situation is
information that Orange County
was 54th of the 58 California
counties in receipt of grant
funds," Riley' said. "Effective
Washington representation can
do much to redress the ineq.
uily."
Surgery Slate d
For Carpente r
Mel Carpenter, executivt•
director or the South Co~~t
Regional Commission. said Mon -
day he will undergo surgery for
a cataract on his eye Wednes-
day.
Carpenter said he hoped to be
back in his chair when the com· mis~ion holds its next meeting 1r
Huntington Beach Coun<'d
Chambers.
tsavorite. The translucent
specimen s ol ~peen
groeaulante are ollen uM<I as Jade .wstitutea.
Speeurt1te garnet oocu~ In
yellow to yerlow-brown and
dartt or~orown· Uvarov1te occurs in chrome green. re-
~emerald. is very ac.rce
~found only In tiny s1zea.
One type of garnet has no
color what50eYef Na1ure·s sup·
ply 01 tiles tolally clear colorless
garnol •S being rnmed 1n gem·
nch Tanzania
Andf~te ge11ie1 occurs •I'
green. yellow and black. Greeo
Andradtte is called OemantOld.
Its neme comes from a Dutch
word mean,ng diamond
beca.a of 111 high luster af\d
depe'91on Spessat11te garner
occurs '" yellow ro yellow-btO'Nn and datl< orttng .. brown. ~ I have nwde a collection or
There tr• actually tile
~les of garnet. Th• rno11
ftmlNar of these are elmandlta, pyrope and rhodolite which oc-
cur In reda and red·vlolet1. fl'lrooe aonwtlnws I• found In a rtid that approachea tt"t ot tine nbi. but llll• le quite rare. Groll4.llartte garnet occurs In green. yellow-brown, wlllte,
COl«lt9a. llQllt rad·vlolet and ~· Ff8MOnlte le a 1ub-"8tl~ of gro1tularft• an<' 11 a
IMfy Ofan~orown lhlda. It It ~ In Ion. lt•IV and
Ollifomla whlla anunla 11 tile Pffnw 10uro. of the remarks· bl&. lf•n1p1rent or••n gro11,ulai'1te garnet called
CllARLES H. BARR
the nany colora of garnet In
ln'all, looN. IH'NI 1tones. II 15
on exhibit In our window ,..,;~
weelC. Aleo on d1tp1ay era aome
..cttlng pi.cet ot jewelry Mf
wfttl tni. many huea gem.
JlntJary s child actue11¥ has l'f'l1'e c:N>lc. ,,,.,, menv ~t'
reauze Tile var••IY '"ar garl'et
oHer", opem; up a vmoitt new
worlQ 01 co1or e11c11~r1
Ac~ ....
L ..... ;
~sy. J•numy t; t11't
ting
• •
ON no: ROM a RBAlt'l'll • T: Or•• Coubty
1uperV\lon are 1ebechded tomorrow to atatt 1r•nUA&
with new J)C'OPC)Mla U~y ho w\I\ brlat "alfordabl.-houl·
Ina" to ow realon. This may abape up u • C'ODl~r1blo battle. •
We UHd to <'Ill thoso pl1ee1 ''k>W·cott" houae ; Now
the word a. attordabl Wb l ver lb.al m ans
Savut.. ot OW' C'OUnly rnment e.Um1te lhat tho
av~ra1e price of a si~w hom In Ora.nae County lJ now
$l13,000
There was somewhat ot a \)teYitw on how lhe affordable houstna queallon
may twi debltf!d lot rupht at a BWld.lnt
tndu1try AlaotlaUon o OrartRtt County
meetln&outallheAlrport Inn tn lrvloe . .
CO\JNTY SUPEavasoa Phil An·
thony showed up and trued bnefly for
the home builders th~ atepa county sov-
ernmeo~ may be takina toward en
couraging construcllon of affordable
housing. ANTIM*Y
He suraested oow is the ume tor action. "The lJme for
bralnstonning is over,'' ~e new board chairman eald.
You might be able to gauge the builders' reaction to
Anthony's remarks in that he waa Interrupted by applause
only once. That was when the supervisor sald, "The best
thing we can do lo help you build affordable housing ls to get out or your way... .
P'•ES~•Y
After Anthony. the home builders
got to hear their own advocate speak from the.podium. He is Randal) E.
Pres'ley of the Presley Companies,
N~rtBeach.
PRE.5LEYISFAJRLYwellqualified
to speak for the people who acluarlly put
up the walls and hang on the roof. His
compa nies' h omebuilding rev·
enues were projected at more thanSL50 million for fiscal 1978.
He began bullding homes in L951 and has now completed 150
residential communities.
Clearly. Presley sees the piling on of new government
requirements, coupled with the dlctums of Proposition 13,
as inflationary factors in the rising costs or a new house.
On a government requirement that he bu11d a public
road at one or his projects in our region. Presley recalled,
"before we were done. that road cost us S4 million."
He didn't have to tell us how that $4 million cost was
passed on.
PRESLEY EXPRESSED FEARS on how the govern·
ment may attempt to s low down the inflationary economy.
"I'm afraJd they'll do it in housing." he said.
The Newport Beach bui Ider did envision ··a softening·' In
the housing market but lhen he added. "By January of 1980.
buyers will be out in for ce. particularly in California."
lie said a downturn might help stabilize prices.
''H9perutly. this year will be a sufficient downturn.··
But then he added, "I still see the price or housing going
up bee a use or Proposition 13 and the cost ofland ...
ALAS, PREDICTUVG what the housing market will do
sounds like the problem ot a weaUlerman even when he's
convinced that it's going to rain.
That's when the weather guy says. "We 're going to
have some rain. Maybe not too much rain. Some rain,
though . •
Execution Sought
In Mass Murders
r
CHICAGO IAP > -The electric chair will be sought for John
Wayne Gacy, indicted on charges or murdering seven young men
and boys whose bodies were buried al his suburban Chicago home
or thrown into a nearby river , authorities say.
Bernard Carey. Cook County states attorney. said Monday he
would ask ·for Gacy's execution. Ile said there was "more than one
reason" why prosecutors could ask for the death penalty, but he
rerused to elaborate.
Gacy, 36. was indicted Monday by a Cook County grand jury
for the seven murders.
\ •
China Offers
Taiwan Choice
Pt:KlNG <AP> Talwan will be allowed to malntaln lls security
Core and weapons after reunlncatlon with the mainland. Vice
PNmltt Tq Halao·plng, chief of tafr of China's armed forces, said
today · Tbe offer waa mad• lturtna a two-hour meetina with a Senate taak rorce on Pacific mll~tary mat·
tera headed by Sen. Sam Nunb. tM NaUonallst Chinese govern· 0·0• . who called It "very tm· ment on Taiwan rejected the
portant" •nd Hid otflclala of the overture. as they have all other
U.S. Llllilon Office totd him il overtures from the Communl!Sts
waa a considerable a dvance since Washington estat;lished
beyond anytblna 1ald before. diplomatic relaUoM with Pekil)g
Ttng told the senators he Jan. l and broke ties with
alrua.v had sent what he Taisan.
deacrtbed as several reasonable Teng reafOrmed today China's
meaaages to Taiwanese leaders policy "to seek a peaceful re·
but dld not say if he had re· unification or Taiwan and
celved a reply. The Pekin& cov-China." Nunn said. But the
e rnment offered earlier to possibility of the use or force
negotiate a reunlficaUon agree· was not renounced on grounds
ment with Taiwan that would that it .. wo uld rt;duce the
preeerve the b land's social a.nd prospects (or Taiwan entering ln·
econC?mlc way of lite. lo ser ious negotiations.·· .
IVT PRESIDENT Chiang
Cblna-kuo and other officials or
Navy MQ,kes
•
TENG SAI D THE ci r ·
cumstances where force might
be used included an indefinite re·
fusal to enter into negotiations
and an attempt by the Soviet
Union to interfere in Taiwanese
a rrairs .
Inst Push
For Carrier
WASHJNGTON IA P > -The
Navy ls making an J llh·hour er.
tort to c h ange Pres ident
· earter's mind on the kind of
aircraft earner tie will recom-
mend to Congress. administra-
tion sources report.
With Carter's fiscal 1980 de·
rense budget just about ready
for Congress, the Navy effort
has reached all lhe way to the
Caribbean Island or Guadeloupe.
where lbe president flew last
week for meetings with French.
British and German leaders
CARTER IS SAID to have de·
cided to propose construction or
a new type of oil-burning carrier
called the CVV. which would
cost about $143 million less than
the bigger ship lhe Navy favors.
Backed by Pentagon leaders.
the Navy earlier recommended
construction of an a dditional
Kennedy-class carrier , which 1t
claims would be more "combat
capable" than the CVV because
J t carries more warplanes and a
greater variety of them.
A KENNEDY ·CLASS ~arrier
would cost about $1. 7 billion and
its backers contend it is worth
what one official called its
.. slightly additional cost" over
the CVV.
• Although virtually all final de·
cislons have been made by the
president on hls new defense
budget. administration sources
said a last-ditch memo from
Adm. Thomas Hayward. chief of
naval operatiom. was forwarded
to Carter on Guadeloupe over
the weekend urging a change to
the Kennedy-class vessel.
N unn said "l h\s latter
possibility was r egarded as
highly unlikely."
Nunn added that the senators
got the Impression that China's
overriding desire is to settle the
Taiwan problem peacefully and
that force was something re·
mote to their tttinklng for some
lime to come.
HE SAID TENG emphasized
t h a t people-to-people a nd
economic relations between
Taiwan. Japan. the Un ited
States and other countries be
continued.
Teng also r eiterated that
Taiwan could retain full
autonomy within China for as
long as th~ people or Taiwan
wished and. In the future, the
Taiwan authorities would possess
t he same powers they now
wield.
The comparisons Teng made
were to Macao and Hong Kong,
the Portuguese and Britis h
possessions that continue to be
independent but maintain close
economic ties with the
mainland.
TENG WAS QUOTED as say·
ing the Chinese perhaps should
curtail military maneuvers off
Taiwan as a sign or good will.
Teng said the Chinese govern·
ment also favors an expanded
U .S . naval presence in the
Westei:-n Paclnc, strengthening
or J apan's defense forces and
defense cooperation by mem·
bers of the .Association of
Southeast Asian nations to help
counter growing Soviet military
strength in the Far East.
NATION /WORLD
OailHng Situation
A stone lion carved on a building at the University or
Kansas has had his roar turned to ice by the cuJ:.(_ent cold
s n ap. The lion. which usually spews forth water as a faun
tain. is given a grotesque countenance by the icicle hang·
ing from its j aws.
Oil W orkers Delay
Nationwide Strike
DENVER <API -The nation's 60.000 oil refinery workers con·
tinued to delay their threatened nationwide strike, as union of·
(iclals awaited Carter Administration reaction to a possible 73·
cent-per-hour raise. The contract dispute is the first major union showdown over
President Carter's voluntary wage-price guidelines. which allow
ror a 7 percent increase in wages and benefits over the life of ~
contract.
A.F. GROSPIRON, president or the Oil. Chemical and Atomic
Worke-ni International Uniorr. confirmed Monday that he had been
in touch wilh officials or Carter's anti-inflation pro~ram. He said
he sought "an interpretation or how t.he wage guidelines would be
a pplled to contract selUemeots' wtUtln the oil industry."
Some of the oCficials. who Grospiron did not·identify, were to
meet with Grospiron today in Denver. the union president said.
WRITE HOUSE SPOKESMAN Mark Henderson said he did
not know or any such meetlng.
The union leader said Monday the possibility of a nationwide
walkout remained "very real " But he said there would be no im·
mediate strike despite the expiration of contracts Sunday night. •
Most workers were on the job Monday, although oil workers stayed
out at Gull and ARCO re(ineries in Port Arthur. Texas.
The strike was delayed by an offer from Amoco calling Cor a
73-cent-pcr·hour raise in the first year and a wage reopener clause
the second year.
NEITHER OF THE choices
now under consideration would
be as expensive as the nuclear·
powered carrier that was the
Navy's original preference.
Congress voted ror the nuclear
carrier last year but Carter ob·
jected to its potential $2.4 billion
cost and vetoed the legislation.
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CALIFORNIA • DAILY PILOT A•
Tax, Joh Cuts Proposed ·
IJrOwn 's Inaugural p eech Lashes Spending
SACR,MENTO CA P> Gov,
Edmund Brown Jr • e•~ndanc ht Pr'OOOllUon i.s cruaade hwto a
fie-re war on aovernment
1pendlq. l• propoalna a tl
t Ullon tax cut and 1Jaun1tJc)n of
),800 ... Jobe.
The somber 40 ·Y••r·old Demot'rat attuhd what he dtactibed u ··lbe raise proplwb
. of •Pft'dlnl'' and tndoned a conalltutSonaf am ndrneat to
outlaw ffdfral ckftcil •~odlna
tn til1 tei.va tnau,ural acf dre11 Monday nl8ht.
The speech wa an unttlent· Ina . an-out attack on the 1odal
pto•r•ms tbat •bavo bftn the
heart ol lbe Oem~rallc plat
form for 40 years, and many
llbtrab cl arly dldn't lllce It
"EACH YEAa w spend more
money Ol\ i wer stud nu. Each
year we dramuticully lncreilsc
the amount pent on medical
·care. Are we better governed!
Ace we better educated! Are we
healthler? Perhaps, bul not
commensur1te with the addl·
tlonal dollars. and taxes spent on
each," Brown said.
State AFL·ClO cb ler Jack
Henning described the address as "warmed over Herbert
Hoover," and Assemblyman
Art Torres, D·Los Angeles.
called it "awful."
Except to criticize Inefficien-
cies, Brown made no mention of
education, child care, mental
h ea lth and other libe ral -
supported programs in a speech
devoted almoet entirely to a con·
demnation of inflation. federal
deficits and government spend·
ing
"YOU STOLE my rhetoric ...
the Republican noor leader of
the s tate Senate, Wi Iii a m
Campbell of Hacienda Heights,
joked with Brow!" after the
speech
,.,. . .,......
•PPEALS TO COURT
Governor Brown
The emphusis on m1t1onal ls·
sues sueh us inflation and
federal deficits was unusual for
a n ina u gura l address.
Republican critics descr ibed it
as the beginning of a 1980 cam·
palgn for pre8ident.
Brown. who-has not fl atly
ruled out such a 1980 bid, also
promised to cut state taxes back
lo 1975 levels .
"TIDS REQUIRES a $1 billion
tax cul. Such a reduction should,
on a percentage basis, give the
greatest benefit' lo renters and
those at the lower and middle in·
come level of the income scale."
In a budget message for re
lease Wednesday, Brown details
a $1.2 bllUon state income tax
cut
About 400 lealalalora, aup.
port u and aides lnl~rrupted
th 2() minute 11 ch with ap.
plauu only throe times aa
Brown t mbraecd l'ropo1IUon 13
tu revolt rehtorlc H bta own
and bltmed public dl11lluaton· m nt with aovernmcnL on exc·
ce11lve apc_ndlrl&.
"THE OR DINA& V citlien
knows lhut aiovernmcnt con-
lrtbut 1 to lnrtatlon and that
runaway mflutJon la aa destruc·
Uve to our 11oclaJ wellbeing as an
invading army," Drown sald.
"Pluin working people, the
poor, tht• dcJerly, tho e on fixed
lncorn<-a, those who cannot keep
up with eoch new round of infla:
t1on or protect themselves from
each subsequent round or re·
cession these are the people
who are crying out ror relief,"
h{' l'ontlnued.
·'But in their name and ln the
name of misfortune of every
kind, false prophets have risen
to advocate more and more gov·
ernmentspendingasthecure.
"THESE FALSE prophets, 1 tell you. can no longer dis ·
tmguish the white horse of vie·
tory from the pale horse of
Qe!lth ."
On eliminating state jobs.
Brown sald most of the 5.000
could be cul from the state's
force of 120,000 c1 :ii service
workers through attrition,
rather than massive layoffs.
Brown embraced a concept
dear lo conservatives in bis en·
dorsement of a national conslitu·
Uonal convention.
"A constitutional convention
to propose an amendment lo
balance the budget is un·
precedented. but so is the
paralys is that preve nts
n~cessary action," Brown said.
TWENTY-TWO o r the so
Action on Gun Law Delayed
S ACRAMENTO f AP ) -
Despite pressure from law-and·
otd e r groups, the Assembly's
legal commlttee won't act for at
least two weeks on bills to
restore the "Use a gun, go to
prison" law weakened by the
state Supreme Court.
Members of the Assembly
Criminal JusUce Committee•
questioned Monday whether
judges should be allowed some
discretion in granting probation
in extreme cases. They worried
whether a bill should address
more than a do~en oOler laws
with mandatory aspects.
The slate Supreme Court ruled
Dec. 22 on the t975 law that re·
o·uired a prison term for anyone
Officials Hit
State Action
On Church
PASADENA CAPl -Armed
off-duty policemen stood guard
Monday al the executive offices
or the WorldWide Church of God,
while officers of the congrega-
tion alleged the c hurch was
threatened by slate intervention
into spiritual matters.
Stanly R. Rader , personal ad-
viser to church founder Herbert
W. Armstrong told reporters the
offi cers' presence In the head-
quarters and other actions by
the state attorney general's of·
flee are "an almost s uccessful
coup d 'etat" against the church. ··n is unfortunate that the
state has gotten involved in the
c hurch's spiritual matters,"
Rader said.
Rader and the 86-year-old
Armstrong have been accused in
a civil suit of looting the
church's $8() million coffers and
selling church-owned property
at prlcea well below market
value. The suit was filed by the
attorney general and church dis·
s1dents.
A court-appointed temporary
receiver ordered the round·the·
clock armed guards, who took
up their stations Saturday.
A full hearing on the suit is
scheduled Wednesday.
conv icted or using a gun during
certain felonies.
The court majority opinion
said tbe Legj~lature did not specifically remove the court's
power, under an 1872 law, to
grant probation. That lert the
law mostly intact, but would al·
low judges to use djscretion lo
sentencing
The bills being considered
Monday -AB 163 by Speaker
Leo McCarthy, D-San Fran·
ciRco, and AH 201 by freshman
Assemblyman Robert Naylor.
R-Menlo Park -would amend
that 1872 law and r estrict a
judge's power to ,grant proba·
ti on. McCarthy's bill would list five
laws wifh mandatory sentenc·
ing: The gun law, and those re·
quiring prison sentences for sale
of heroln, prior felony convic·
tions. fe lony on parole, and
violent crimes against the aged
and handicapped.
N aylor•s bill would use
broader terms to attempt to ex·
empt any laws passed by the
Legislature with mandatory sec·
lions. ·
1V Producer Wins
$475,000 Lawsuit
SAN FRANCISCO <AP\ A television film producer who
claimed he was Ubeled by Pacific Gas & Electric Co. will receive
$475,000 in an out·of·court settlement that a law professor says
may be a re<:<>nt.
"1 think it's the largest libel settlement ever for an in·
dividual." said Laurence Eldredge, a Hastings Law School pro·
Cessor speciaUzing in defamation cases. "There have been some
very large verdicts, but they've b®n knocked down."
The amount, given to Southern California film producer Don
Wident:r, ended litigation over a film called "Powers That Be,"
which PG&E had criticized publicly as unfair· and malicious.
BROADCAST BY LOS ANGELES station KNBC-TV in May
1971, the Olm purported to show the dangers of nuclear power
plants. lt dealt, in part. with PG&E's Humboldt Bay nuclear power
plant.
Jn one part or the 60-minute film, Widener interviewed J .C
Carroll, a PG&E nuclear engineer.
Carroll later claimed Widener simply filmed the Interview and
later dubbed in a sound track of an earlier off-the·record dis·
cussion.
AFTER THE FILM was broadcast, Carroll wrote KNBC of·
ficials and said Widener's documentary was "maliciously and ir·
responsibly written and produced" to be unfair to the utility.
Later, some U.S. senators and the utility sent copies of Car·
roll's letter lo the Federal Communications Commission.
"After t hose letters went out, I couldn't sell anything to
television, not even a non-controversial Marlon Brando film about
the South Seas," Widener testified at the trial.
THE nJllY AWARDED Widener $7.75 million in damages, but
a judge reversed the award ancl the case slowly wound its way
through the appelJate courts, one of which ordered a new trial.
Widener's ~ttomey, David Pcsonen. said that alter a week of
pre-trial moUona, PG&E and Widener agreed to the settlement.
"I couldn't see going on for another five years," Widener said
Monday. "I think. it's a victory fot journalism."
Attorney Edwin Heafey Jr., who represented PG&E, said the
utility "ls pleued that seven years of Utigatlon have ended. "
LIFE ENHANCEMENT TRAINING
A• 11•••• "°"-which teaches you
how to experience an cptlmum of happiness
by helping you minimize your Irrational, self~feltlng emotions. Illy t. • ........
the program helps you minimize deprpsak>n.
anxiety, anger etc. Helps Improve
assertiveness and ellmlnate low setf.ateem.
No poet program dependence. no mystical
double talk. The methods learned are
aupport"'8 and aelkelnforcing.
1'lh -., ~-Miii Pl.00 (through Feb. only). of A and Master Charge
accepted. Created by KTH Cllnlct, a lellder
In behavior Intervention programs. For
achedufe and more tnformatlon caH:
714·558-8040... 1341 E. Chapman Ave .•
Orange. Catlf. 92ee&
s tattt have. requested such a
convention, 12 abort of the
number required. A rallflcatlon
measure &1 pending in the
California Legislature. wf\ere
Democrat.a blocked a samUat
resolution last year.
Paul Priolo or Malibu ,
Republican leader of lhe atate
Auembly, said Brown's en·
doraement of the constitullontJ
convention was the only new
thins in his speech.
"I have to th.Ink that includlng
that in an inaugural s peech
would indicate he has his eye
more oo the presidency than on
hjs term as governor," Priolo
said.
BROWN repeatedly blamed
in!lation as a root cause or the
nation's most serious ills in
terms that sounded like com·
ments of Proposition 13 author
Howard Jarvis or former Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
"People know that something
is wrong when the federal gov·
ernment stimulates inllallon and
intlation raises the face value of
prices. income and property, so
that the taxes on eacn grow nigher
andblgher."
·'This perverse government
money machine has created a
fiscal dividend for local. state
and federal govemment and al·
lowed au three to expand faster
than inflation and raster than re ·
al economic growth. These un-
authorized dividends are now be·
ing cancelled. The tax revolt is
being herad." Brown said.
Brown blamed those rorces for
the $6 bllllon budget surplus
which accumulated in his fi rst
term, contributing lo passage of
Proposition 13. which Brown OP·
posed until its enactment last
June.
21raninns.
Ouugedin
IA Riots
BEVERLY HILLS <APl
Two Iranians have been charged
with assault with a deadly
weapon on a peace officer dur·
ing a riot at the home of the
shah of Iran's sister last week.
Taghi Mobarez. 29, and Ali
Mouhmad. 18. were the third
and fourth men to have been
formally charged in the violence
that led to the shah's 00-year-old
mother and his sister Princess
Cba ms leaving the Los Angeles
area.
SINCE LAST Wednesday the
wome n have been living in
Rancho Mirage, 135 miles east
of Los Ange les n ear Palm
Springs. under tight security at·
the sprawling desert estate or
Walter Annenberg, former U.S.
ambassadortoGreal Britain.
Mobarez identified himself as
a student al Cal State Universi-
ty. Los Angeles, although the
school said it had no listing of
his name.
After charges were filed by
the dis trict attorney's office
Monday, Mobarcz was freed on
$5,000 bail. Mouhmad, who gave
no address and sa)d he was un·
emrloyed, was free on $2,000
bal .
Itlllk Replacement
Harry C. Britt. a 40-year-old homosexual auditor . was to
be sowrn-in Wednesday as a San Francisco supervisor.
Britt was named by Mayor Dianne Feinste in. right. to
replace Harvey Milk , who was shot and killed Nov . 27
ulong with Mayor George Moscone.
Slave.ry Comment
Brings . Resignation.
SACRAMENTO (APl -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s appointee
who enraged San Diego black leaders by saying slavery "made
America great" has resigned from a state advisory commission.
Brown's office says. Ray Hufrman. a San Diego developer, quit the California Hous·
ing Task Force at the governor's request . Brown·s press secretary.
Bobbie Metzger. said Monday
Hufrman. whose statement in a private newsletter caused a
------------.... furor in San Diego's black
( )
community two weeks ago. SJ' ATE insisted later that he had bee"'
misunderstood and he does not
favors lavery.
Brown appointed Huffman last spring lo the housing ~ask
force. a group of• business. labor and consumer representat1vt:s
formed to advise the Democratic governor on housing construc-
tion.
W01Ran Co""lete d '" D e ad• of A Ue"•
SAN DIEGO I AP > -"If you kill or maim an alien. the message has to go out that you're going to s uffer the consequences," a judgl'
has told a woman ~onvicled in a smuggling incident in which two El
Salvaciormendie:Q.
U.S. District Judge Leland C. Nielsen imposed a five-year
prison term followed by five years' probation Ff\onday on Man a
Aurora Sandoval-Oros. 25. noting that when an alien dies in a
s muggling venture. the smuggler "is going to pay the price." The
woman had been convicted of smuggling aliens. conspiracy and
transporting aliens. Two of the aJ1ens died of asphyxiation.
E~telte• l'lre. 'l'altftltl A,,.rt~d
LOS ANGELES IAP I -A Western Airlines jet carrying 12J
people safely aborted a takeoff at rnternaUonal Airport after an
engine caught fire halfway down the runway, authorities said.
The incident Monday caused no injuries and only slight fire
damage lo the Boeing 727's tail engine, airline s pokesmen said
Flight 20 was bound for Utah, Montana and Canada.
Ollldrftl ol Dead Culd•t• I'll# Sedt
LOS ANGELES <AP I -A $10 million damage SUit WU!'> filed IO
Superior Court Monday by five children of a couple who died dur·
ing the Peoples Temple mass murders and suicides last Nov . t8.
Carl G. Hall and hls wife Heloise were among more than 900
who died at the temple's jungle settlement in Guyana. Listed a:-.
defendants in the suit are the Califomia-based temple and the
estate of the temple's founder, the Rev. Jim Jones, who also d1et1
at Jones~wn.
8-loot Pla"k Rips Tlarouglt W' orke r
NORWALK CAP> -A factory worker, Jose Olmos. 42. was in
fair condition today arter surgery to remove an eight-foot-long
wooden board that ripped through his chest and out his back ,
authorities said.
Olmos had fed a piece of wood into a ripsaw when the machine
s pit the plank backwards. driving it into his left chest and out h1 !>
right back. s he riff's deputies said. Olmos is employed by
Silvercresl Industries.
Class Set
On Patents
Orange Coast College
will offer a four·hour
semlnar. lilied "Patents
and Trademarks," on
Saturday, Jan. 20.
Ci11aca11iolE
The seminar will run
from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. In OCC's Fine Arts
Hall 119 ln Costa Mesa.
Registration is $5.
Semtnar lecture r ts
Orange County attorney
Gilbert A. Thomas who
practices in the areas of
civil law, ,patents.
trade marks. copyrights,
and International law.
JANUARY SPECIAL
OF THE MONTH
l .. IVCD 24 HOU"I DAILY
GUACAMOLE
OMELETTE $1.~ I
3 eggs with two slices of American cheese forded
lnakte. Topped with zesty guacamole. Served with
hashed brown potatoes end toast.
GUACAMOLE
BURGER $1.49
Almost 1/3 pound of grllled beef on tOHted our·
dough brMd. Crowned with luscl0\11 gu1c1mole
..
• 111111 Ano • Tonance <21
•1'111&tlll
(
s ..
J • )-
n •• D
'" 8
f/ ag
ry
te
)e
1g
of
l S
st
·al
on
•:t_ ·" .,
ir~
.w
1a·
be
he
ce
Permit Process
Needs, Revision
The county 's R\'aronmental Manaa ment A1ency b
rndenrnindobly put out b~ delay ln obtalrun1 the 1tate
>ermits th I ore rcquart'd before the Job of cJeanln.s out
·logged noo<J control channels can be undertak n
Sand nd debri d poaited In th channel aRer lut
vtntcr 's heavy ruins ' till around and doubtleu will be
au_gm<'nled by anore runoftthla winter
But efforts to obtuin dttdl nc permit from the state
"ish and Garn Ocpurlment and the Coastal Comm slon
1avc b en ~nnrlud in red t p , EMA Poketmen -om plain.
Now thl~ Oonrd or pervlsora has authorb.ed lhe
1r pnrohon of u bill lo be tnlroduced '" the stat
.egl lulure UlOl would rcmovo lh nffd for ~rmlt.s to
·t>store damuK !d pubbc works project to thelr ortglnal
· poctty.
Th Sl)(.'ci!ic proJect.s <-lled •~the Santa An R1\'er
·banncl, wher u ~rmat w d layed i n order to a\•oid
Usturbini: tht! nestmR areo of the least tern. t.M San
)iego Creek. whcN al was cl 1med dredging of heavy
i1llat1on \\.OUld t•nd ungcr u \\tldhfo habitat. an'a the San
lu'1n CN'<'k. whll'h h.i~ bt>t>n reduced to half its caapac1ty
lY the.• pile up of sttnd las t wantttr
Obviously tht're :,hould be no blanket exemption of all
1ublic works projel·ts rrom the state permit pr()('edure
fhis could undt-rmine the whole 1ntent Of the CoastaJ
Conscrvataon Act
But at th~ ~umc tim~ the slate agencies have taken
an unrealis tic ~U.11lcc 1n blocking the c learance of
essential flood control channels.
The Legislature would be we)) advised to examine the
issue and correct a n over-correction that threatens the
well-being of the public.
Send Thelll a line
This month the 1979-80 slate Legislature a nd the 96th
Congress begin their two.year sessions. In both bodies
there are ma ny carry-over members and a few new ones.
Those who represent the readers of this newspaper.
a long with tge addresses or their district. state and
federal offices. are listed elsewhere on this page, under
the heading, "Write Your Lawmakers." .
We hope you will clip out the list and do just that.
Surprisingly fe w Americans ever have direct contact
with their elected representatives either in penon or by
mail. Vet this contact is the best prescription for
obtainin~ the kind of representation and lawmaking the
electorate wants.
And it s hould be more than the barrage of form
letters sJ)Onsored by pressure groups. These doubtless
carry weig ht. but personal m ail from individual
<:onslituent.s is the most helpful type of communication.
Most stale legislators manage to spend at least ont!
business day in the local offices each week. Members of
Congress are here Jess frequently, but their offices are
staffed year-round to handle complaints, suggestions or
requests for help.
Invest in a few stamps and put your thoughts on
paper. as briefly and constructively as possible. Send the
letters to the local offices or directly to Sacramento or
Washington D.C. while the Legislature a nd Congress are
in session.
Government is u two-way street a nd you live on one
end of 1t.
Airline Solution?
The Civil A<•ronautics Board now h as decided that
a1rhnl's should segregate cigar and pipe smokers from all
otht:·r passenger s . instead of just lumping the m in
~moking sections along with cigarette puffers.
It will he up to the airlines, says the CAB, to figure
out how to keep the pipe and cigar fumes away from the
noses of those in nonsmok ing sections.
Perhaps the eventual solution will be to divide airline
mtc nors mto little compartments like European trains.
This coul<.l solve many of the hazards. apart from
othC'r people's s moke. that threaten air travelers.
For example. there are the babies that wail and the
little kids that run up and down the aisle.
And there arc the seatmates who use too much exotic
perfume or too little deodorant soap.
And th~c who steady their nerves with too much
liquid refreshment a nd insist on recounting their life
stories to the businessman who·s trying to work his
calculator or prepare the s peech he has to deliver at the
convention.
Clearly the advantages of compartmentalized aitlinc
mtenors are multitude. Above all, lh.ey would cope in
advance wi th the next batch of CAB passenger comfort
regulations
• Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their aulhC>tS and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Bo>e 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-.4321
Boyd/ Irish Fashion
By L.M. BOYD
No nationals are less in·
terested in clothing than arc
the Iris h, it's said. So you
can't judge an Irishman by
his clothes. Thls is not to Im·
ply the Irish have little taste
or talent . On the contrary.
Ireland abounds wlth gifted
thinkers. What's fashionable
in clot.lung simply 1s too In·
consequeotial lo take up the
time of the typical Irishm an.
t
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
My wile of 3-4 hasn't
put on her makeup or
combed her heir aln(C
reading that the women
most admired by men
nrt all In lbtlr mlddJe
or late 40s. •
F .J .M.
co1 .. 1111r o.. c--· ...,. : ...
"'lllt4 •r •He.ft •fie 4• fl•t ......... ·-···-·· :-=.~-=.~-.....
..
So respected are the arts
there. in fact, that since 1969,
no Iris h write r , painter .
sculptor or composer has
been required to pay ·any in·
come tax.
Was none other than Mae
West who said. "When I'm
good , l 'm very good, but
when I'm bad, I'm better ."
Am told the students or
reptiles can't x·ray a snake
without killing it.
Q. "How do y ou account
for the fact that moat
Chlnese·Amertcana prefer
tht Cantonese style ol
Chinese cooking?"
A. Clearly because most or
the ir ancestors carne from
that southem coutat prot· ince. Fact thal Chop Suey s ttri<!t.,.._"J\L..~·:l.. ~ dish UD·
hurd o! 1n*Centoo has been
reported. It's alao true that
many ot the so-called Can·
toneae dishes are better
known In UM United States than In China, ,.....
The De8d Sea, pie .. note,
la not a tea but a lake. p
Robert N Weedl Publls11vr
8arMre Krt'lblch/EdllOfl•I P~ Editor
Jack And non •
World 'Nuclear Club' Expands
W ASIUNOTON With effh
p111 DI yur. a haunUn8 fear ia lllrnln~ Into an omlnou rcamy. tho ' nurloar cJub" that ex·
<'lu11ivc IOClt>ty of oaUons whb
at~mtc •'-trials -11 cixpancUng
dtRlt'l'OUJlly
OftlplJll ~UmalOI warn that
IOm t' 40 counttte theoretically
C'Ould produce
nu a l ear
bom b1 by
1100 . T h e
main ron<'em
II OVl"r cou.n•
trlea lik e
6raz1l ,
£aypl, Iran,
larael. Ubya.
P~k1 tan .
South Afr1co
and South Korea nations that
for one reuon or unother might
feel compelled to unleash a
nu c l ear war t o protect them1~lves .
For other nations. lt is a mat·
ler of naUooal pride to possess
nuclear weaponry. Sllll others
feel the need lo maintain
balances of power in local dis pules.
. THE VMTED STATES, as the
charter member of the nuclear
club, is thus faced with this
dilemma: How to p romote the
peaceful uses of nuclear energy
w ithout giving our military
technology to irresponsible gov··
Earl Waters
ernmtnta that mlaht Ig nite an
atomic holocaust.
There la evldent'e that Jimmy
Carter hu had no better luck with thJ1 dUflcult problem than
hl1 predecelsors had. Indeed. an
unre leased s tudy b_y thf'
Con1rt"11lonal Research ~rvice
lndlcata that the president's de·
termfnatlon to slow down the
spread o( nuclear technology
hu put him at serious odds with
our European allies.
The Nuclear Noo·Proliferatfon
Treaty of 1'188 barred countnes
without nuclear capability from
acquiring the world·threa terung
weapons. At the same time.
these naUona were guaranteed
access to t'he technology for
peaceful nuclear uses on a non·
-discriminatory basis.
TO DATE, only six countries
-the United States. the Soviet
Union. Great Britain, France.
India and Communist Chins -
are known to have nuclear
weapons. It is assumed that
Israel has some. too. or at least
has the tec:hnological capability
to produce them.
The congresaional study, com·
piled Cor Sen. J oseph Blden. D· Del., points out the basic prob-
lem Carter faces: America's
European allies believe strongly
that proliferation o f nucleur
weaponry is bad. But they feel
the United States. with tts
greater non-nuclear ruet re·
aourcet, 11 t>eJna unreasonably
strict ln eontro11Jn1 the now ol
nuclear knowled&e to oll·•tarved
natioru. which see atomic power pl ants u their only hope of
becoming independent of the
Arab oil sheik.!.
After the Arab oil embargo or
1973. "many European stale.I'
round &hem.selves without any
rossll fuel resources of thelr own
to speak of." the congressional
report notes. "At this time many
European states began to view
nuclear enef''Y as an important
part of their future electric
power generation ne~s."
France. for example. hopes to
• be producing SS.000 megawatts
of electricity from its nOctear
power plants by 1985.
THE REPORT adds: "Euro-
pean publics. when faced with
the apparent choice of a strong
likelihood of economic s tagna·
tion or lhe almos t infinitesimal
chance of reactor catastrophe,
seemed inclined by early 1978 to
continue their nuclear power
programs,"
After the March. 1978 non·
proliferation act and President
Carter's recent policy state·
ments on the subject. "many
Europeans simply shook their
heads in bewilderment," the re-
port says ... They asked
th-em.selves if the new U.S
policies were not slmJ)ly os-
\r\chllka and whether by pursu·
Ina th m the United $tatu
might not tn ract isolate ltaell
rro m the m a ins trea m o f
peaceful nuclear development.
a nd ln doing so lose its ability to
contribute to internatJonaJ pro-
liferation policy."
The new, comple" controls
and Carter's interpretation of
them m~y be self·dereating. the
anlyau warn. "It is so de mand·
ing on potential U.S. nuclear fuel
and technology that they <the
h ave· not nations l may take their
business elsewhere. thus escap-
ing most or all or U.S. regula· lion ..
ror eumple. France is cur-
ren t I y n egotiuting with
mainland ChJna for the sale of
an Amen can·built Westinghouse
nuclear reactor. The· Chinese
don't want to buy it directly
from the United States because
they would be restricted by U.S.
fuel.purchase regulations.
THE PROBLEM is that giving
o country the technology to har-
ness nuclear energy for electric
power may also give It the abili·
ty to produce nuclear weapons.
The technique of uranium
r e process in g a t l eas t
t h eor et ical ly impl ies the
capabl1 1t y o f produci np
plutonium. a key ingredient in
nuclear bombs.
Because or this plutonium
risk. the U S position is that
r-:processing plants be banned in
non-nuclear s tates . And th£
United States spelled out 1t~
pos1t1on even more strongly m
the Nurlear Non-Proliferation
Act of 1978 This requires any
country wanting U.S. nuclear
technology or ru el to accept not
only the safeguards and inspec
tions set up by the United Na-
t io ns Inte rnation a l Ato mH.'
Energy Agency. but lo comply
with the strict.er U.S. controls as
we ll
ff President Carter persisLc; in
his ha rd·llne stance for tight
con I rols, nations despcrnte for
nuclear energy may .sidestep the
United States entirely a nd we
would have no control over the·
spread or atomic power. Yet the
relaxallon of controls can be j ust
as dangerous.
Footnote: The con~ressional
re!.earch report was submitted
lo Btden last Jone. The senator.
who 1s chrurman of a European
affairs subcommittee, hasn't
had time to anaJyze it. his aides
told our 8.SS<Xiat.e Tony Capac·
CIO.
legislators Welcome Budget Advice
Tbey didn't run an ad for help
wanted but there Is small doubt the state's la wmakers and the
governor will welcome all the
help they can get. Even dis·
countin& the rhetoric it is clear
that the public demand for re-
ductioru; in government spend-
ing bu fmally registered with
ever y elected official LP state
government.
Certainly during the brief or-
1anbation session or the 1979
Legi s lature
h e ld l ast month the
s rir it o f s a s hing
sp e nd i ng
f ermeate d
b e a t ·
m osphere
from the gov-
ernor's office
right down to
the newest elected legislator.
R epublicans and Democrats
alike were busily scrambling to
see who could come up with the
best proposals for cut.s.
THAT, of course, is the rub!
What ls best? Honest men may
dirf er as to the wtseat course.
Elected olficials will keep a
wary eye on the reaction bf. the
votera. And the pressures wllJ be
tremendous against those cuts
which 1ore speclflc lntereat.s ..
Pun~la
Already · the school people
have started staging their dem·
onatrations for more money.
generating a parade of propc>-
nents for expanding the least de·
fensible program of all, adult
education, during the lwo days
the lawmakers were in town.
That is nothing to the heal
which will be generated by the
cities and countJes and other
local entities as they fight for
state funds whether needed or
not.
Governor Jerry Brown has
pledged h.im.aelf to a 10 percent
overall budget reduction Even
this has caused confusion for the current debate is whether he
meant a cut or m erely holding
the budget to a 10 percent in·
crease WI related to inflation.
Brown now says he intends to
kee p the increase below 10 per.
cent which is not the same as a
10 percent cut.
THE GOVERNOR can be
credited with retraining from an
edict lo the stale agenc\es for an
acr oss the board s lash. a
&rievoua mistake attempted by
Ronald Reagan when he first
took office in 1967. But the fact re m ains that
judicious trimming can achieve
an overall 10 percenL reduction
in a bud&et. which has climbed more than $8 billion to reach a
-
~"' ....... t> '-A.~b~
"Thtre'• 5,000 8Cl'M of arab.le land with Euzabethan renmouee Ind 00~ but tt'• well t>ek>W your
monumental Sl8 billion in the
four short years Brown has been
in oflice. And it can be done
even -whlle improving benefits
for those on welfare and other
slate aid programs. tt can even
be done while adjusting state
employee pay where justified.
THERE ARE many programs
in operat ion which can bt:
curta iled or eliminated. Within
the operations of state govern·
me nt there are countless ac·
t1v1taes and practices whic h also
can be cut back or cut out. The
problem is that no matter how
sincere the governor and the
legislators are about wanting to
cut, few h a ve any actual
knowledge to enable them to be
"eallstic in such matters.
It is here they need the
he lp of all citizens and especial·
Jy that of the dedicated state
workers Who know better than anyone else where savings can
be m ade wtlhout damaging good
programs. But the state workers
are often fearful. and with good
cause. of being mistreated by
their superiors for advancing
such suggestJons
Still, those with ideas for budget cuts should send them to
eith er Sen a t or Al Rodda.
chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee. or Assemblyman
Dan Boatwright. chairman or
the Ways and Means Commit·
tee. Both can be uddressed
si mpl y, St at e Ca p itol .
Sacramento. Both have assured
they will treat any communka·
lion in complete confidence if the writer requests it.
Write Your Lawmakers
U.S. SENATORS
Cranston, Ala11 CD >. 11000
Wilshire Blvd .. Los Angeles.
90024 (213) 824·7641
Hayakawa, S.I. CR> 312 N
Spring St.. Los Angeles 90012
(213) 688-01
During Congressional sessions·
New Senate Office Bldg .
Wasblngton. D.C. 20501 1202J
224.3121
U.S. REPRESENTATIVES
(Oru1e Couty)
Badbam. Robert (40th Dis·
trict·R> 1649 Weslcllrf Drive.
Newport Beac h. 92663 (7141
631·0040 .
Patterton, l erry <38th 0 15·
trict·OI 34 C&vtc:, Center Plua,
Santa Ana. 92701 <714) W-3811
L•afrea, O.. (34t.h Dlstrlct·R
1.20 tnden Avenue.,Lon1 Beach
90802 <213) '35·5631
Durtn1 Congressional HHIOl\S:
Badham, 1108 Longworth Hou.'le
Offlce Blda .. Wasbln1ton: Pal·
teraon. 50'1 Cannon House Office
Bl<tg : t.unaren. 315 Cannon
ttoGse Office Bldg .. Washlr •Oil. o.c 20515
STATE SENATO&S
(On.ate Conly I
Scllmlta. Jolul (38th Olstctct·R I.
4800 Campus Dr . Nhport
Stach. taeo '79-9870
Carpenter, Paul R. (37th Dts·
trlct.O), 1600 North Broadway,
Suite 550, Santa Ana, 9270ti
547·9401
During legi!>l3tive sessions :
State Capitol. Sacramento, 9581(
(916) 44.S-5581
STAT E AMEMBLVMEN
cOranie County>
Ber seson, Marian, (74 th Dis
trlct· R> 833 Dover Drive. 17,
Newport Beach 92663 631·3t74 -
M1n1ers, Dennis (73rd Dis
tr1ct· 0 > 16371 Beach Blvd . Suitt
.. G . Huntington Beach . 9264i
848-1168
Jolln10D, llou (69Lh District-RI
1501 North Ha rbo r . '201
Fullt 1"t9!.19263.S 738·!1853
Wny, Cite& (7lat Distrlct·D)
12777 Valley View. Suite 161
Garden Grove. 92.64S 836·4691
Nestande, Bruce (70th Dis
trlct· R l 920 Town ac Country
0ranae .. 9.216M 542-4775
RoblHOD., Rltlaard, (70th Dill
trict·D> 1231 Chapman, Oardea
Grovc.92640530-7200
OllANGt: t'OtJNTl'
BOARD or VP ERVlSORS:
Antlloay. ,..JW9 A. -Ut Dis
trtct
prtc.r
Brlsu . .lo.h v. C35th DI•·
lrict-1\)..-1 .. J N. -Harbor Blvd .•
.. Fullerton, 12183$119-2345
Wieder, Rurtett -2nd District
Oledr:tcla, llalpll -3rd Dlslrict
Clark, llalplt 8. -4th Dlslrict
alleJ, 'ftomu F. -5lh DL"\r1ct ~ddres1: 10 Civlc Center Drive
S1nta Ana, 91'1'10\ 834·3100
' f J ..
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it
I
It
r.
18 r,
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.ed
or·
~al
.he .-e-
lon
.es,
In
599 in
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pro-
the
won
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.Ung
troy
the
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-tag
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moa
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ortl· 'llew
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col
Co&
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out
hit
tbO tyg yo! • ••
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AT YOUR SERVICE/ NATION DAIL V PILOT A f
0 0.C 0 ~lllt I flt II ~nit I• /'ol Dltllll f'ul ll/ilJ rvr r« U. ~tta.11 I~ •WH w _..,. 111"11-'
lo tolt"ll Nql<UI,. 111 gol'-IM!ll _, ilwlll<PU Moll
~' 4w .. ..-10 flul '"'•" At y.,., .,,,... • ~
(oe.I Dllil!I NGI I' fl lilot I* (.'Mio MtN CA
ftfl Al ....., lotfltt• u.e f!NllNf 1dU ~ "~"'-~ ,..., ~ .....,,,.. ~ ,,,,.,.""' ~ ... ,,.,
631 Bodies Unmoved
rffldn •/WI'°"" lttv.., ~ ... '-'• l"'°"" lllil'llMt.wM fwo&:tl!Uld.rrfll Tlliu 011t11111.,..1t111N
Remains of Cultists Pose Proble1118
,........_..,~
DEAR PAT: l'v heard lbal nioT
c-lUiens can &tt Ct'd fi h na U
ln CahJornia. If ao, what ls requlted
for ooa to qu&llfy•
G.H .• Ooet. M a
II 1•• nulv• aid It•• t~•
caUf•nl• S.ppl••uta1 Pnsn•
for l'• ~ ant -.. au a an °''• •ltd "9Y. 1i1Hti a Calllonla J"tll.
dHt for ftvt YHr!. /•wr ftlllalq UceatNt wttt M ,..,....._ .. )'M hee.
ftl• ~ .. feod &kroe"8u& *
atate fot' all t)pet ol 1am~ n.11.
.......... Lor.Hf~
DEAR PAT. l order~ lacbb\111.
·pray1n1 manllll IUld atten lact'win&~
to ke p my JMrd •n bua free They're
dol n& a &ood job nd stlck-'nl& around
my garden A ntlghbor told me he'd
read In your eolumn that there's a
product on the market that en·
counges these aood bl.liJ to increase
and mulUply. Cao you repe11t lhL9 ln·
rormaUon for me?
8.L., Corona del Mar
Wlleact, a cbHse maauJactu:rtnc
bY·Prodract, laas been ued ttaeceata.I· b' tor feeding 1reea lacewtqa and
encour1'1ftl them to maltlply. ac-
cordllll to aunerlu con&atted by
A. YS. Tile ladybu11 and pra)'lng
mantis may ge& tlae ldea and partake
of lbls prodac& too. If you can't set It
from your nursery. contact lllocoa
lnsedaries, Oakland, Calli. 93021.
Oftmff Pottu .. .,,,.
DEAR READERS: The Food and
Drug .tdm'lnlstraUoo waros &bal
potassium chloride, a substance
' oftn sold ln health food atore as a
diet aopplement, 11 poten&lally
dan1eroas and ovenue can be fatal.
Accidental overuse of potaalum
chloride -sometimes called
potuslam salt -Is known to have
caused deatb11 of otherwise healthy
indlvlduals, and potassium chloride
supplements and other produds
labeled as "salt substltatea" which
contain potassium should not be used.
by people with cer'tlln medical cond.l·
tlons.
Overuse of potuslam chloride sup·
· plements by healthy l.Ddlvtdaals can
I# nu,C lllllnlfl~• •
"'' '•J) fo ~r l·..U.414 baby a1 · a re•l!dJ ftt "colk." T1M ..a.er waa ,........_ U.. advice ti a book b)'
.... l•&e .wen. Devit e.tkled ..........
Ha·,. lleal&ll~ CWWre•.'' TM clalld
4lW ...... mMteal effona to re·
11KeW1pMa ........... .
PDA taY. ~at M .e .-W ue ,........ .._,, ..... , .. , .... ,
•Mkll ~·,,.. ~ .. partJt.aut14u1enu&OdtWna.
At pr'W'at, potauham ~•.....,. ,.._
ple•e ... ud sail a.abeU&IAet are Mt
rq•INCI &o c:arry waralaa label•
abHt po&emtla1 haltlt ha11rd•. Ho•eter, FDA plau .. 1ropoee lb&
all Heh pl'M&1ct1 be nqaJrt'd to
can, a wamh11 Ota& tlley lliloa&d be
UMd only uodtr mt41cal 11pervbloa. .. ,.. .. .,..,,," .., ......
DEAR PAT After many years as u punctual payer of my Department
of Motor Vehiclu reglstratlon fees up-
on receipt of the matl·in appUcaUon,
I dido't get the uaulll notice lb.ls year.
The Costa Mesa OMV advised me to
bring ln my past year's registrations.
which 1 did. Since my due dates were
Dec. 18 and Dec. 18. I had to pay $20
In penalty fees for . my two cars on
Dec. 29.
DMV told me that mallln1 of
noUcea was a courtesy. but that the
registrant had the responsibility of
keeping track of the specific dates In·
volved in case the notice was not re-
celved. This is OK. but I do feel that
any change in basic policy by OMV
on malling or nol mailing notlC',18
should be well publicized. I wonder
how many other people will be
penalized like 1 was.
E .C.M .• Newport Beach
A Costa Mesa DMV spokeswoman
HY• tJaere bas bee• no change In the
aaual malllag of regls&ratloa Doti~.
but yoan appare11&ly was loct In &be
maU. It baa always been Ute poUcy of
DMV &bat It's up to &be car owner to
keep tabs on bl• reglstrat.loo due
date, and lt w11 stressed that the
malllng ls not required.
sta••e'• BW..Dftl11ec1•1e
POVU. Del. <AP> -The
bodln ol 131. persona who died lo
the J>eoplea Temple ma11
murder·IUlclde are at.eked ln
. aovemment-purchued coffins tn
an 11ln1. freeilns airl)lane
. han1ar. thelr llnal reallng
placea Ul)Certain.
The federal government ap-
p1rentl1 hu no plans to move from Dewer A.Jr Force 8aae the
vletJm1 of the Nov. 18 lnctdent at
the Junite colony in Jonestown,
Pe¥pGrftf
·~...,..,..... J
FBI Director
Wi 11 iam Webster
says normalization
of U.S.-Chinese rela· tions will probably bring an influx of
com munist in · telligcnce agents but the FBI is ready.
R.ape Case
Warrant
Sought
Gu1an1. ~ >'
"IT LOOKS LIKE no one
wants to do anythlng,~_.!aid
Charles Wyman. a State ueyart·
ment attorney assigned here. "1
was told ln no uncertain terms
that the government has neither
the authority nor the funds to re·
lease the bodies."
Wyman said many relatives
have told the State Department
they cannot afford to transport
and bury or cremate the bodies.
Many relaUvet apparently are
waiUng ror the government or
some charitable group to pay
the costs, be said.
Next ol kin have been noUfied
of the deaths of 635 positively
Identified cultlsta, but 353 or
those bodies remained un·
claimed at the base. There also
were 278 unidentified bodies.
"I DON'T KNOW what tbe
solution is going to be." Wyman
TRAVERSE CITY· said. "Obviously there's going to
Mich. <AP> -A pro-be a solution. We can't leave
secutor in a gang rape them there in the hangar."
case is seeking a search Wyman said .Air Force
warrant to determine pathologists in Washington are
whether a defendant is stlll trying to name the uniden·
clrcumclzed. tUied corpses, but the pace has
Michael Haley, assis· slowed considerably. Only two
tant prosecutor ror bodies have been Identified since
Grand Traverse County. Dec. 19.
said Monday he also All 913 of the decomposed
filed a motion lo have bodies were fingerprinted before the defendant produce being placed In hermetically
blood, hair and saliva sealed coffins. but Wyman said
samples. The defense the Air Force has bad trouble
does not oppose the lat· locating fingerprint records for
ter motion. many victims. partic ularly
Two Kent County chilcb'en.
women charged that
members of a Detroit-THE U.S. MIUTARY flew the
area motorcycle club bodies here from Jonesto.wn. Ac·
raped them In August cording to Wyman. the govern·
1978 at a campsite out· ment bad to get lhe bodies out of
side Fife Lake. One vie· Guyana to pacify local officiali.
But bnn,tng tbe bodln ti.re upset tome Delaware offlclall.
Oov. Pierre S. du Pont IV
aaked President Carter last
month ~ have-the mllltaey fly
the bodies to San Franct.co.
where the Rov. Jim Jones' cult
began and where ma.a)' ot the re·
Younger Adds
Name to Firm
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
Former st•U, Attorney General
Evelle J . Younger Joined a Loe
Angeles legal firm on the day hi,s
1uccessor wu swoma.c> office.
Younger sought a1ftt won the
Republican nomination for gov·
ernor instead of seekin~ reelec-
tion as attorney general. but was
defeated Nov . 7 by incumbent
Democrat Gov. Edmund G .
Brown Jr.
Youncer became a partner ln
the firm of B\lchalter. Nemer.
Field• and Christie. and bis
name will be added to that of the
firm, which deals in general busi·
ness law.
Roaches
Ride Bmes·
MILWAUKEE CAP > -
Cockroaches have been
hitching rid es on
Milwaukee County's urban
buses . apparently finding
them a nice sl)Ot for a ban-
quet. ·
Couoly Supervisors
Daniel Cupertino and
Thomas Kujawa are seek·
ing regulations against lit·
tering on buses. They say
a crackdown on litter
would cut ofJ the rood sup-
ply for the cockroaches.
"We've had a lot of com-
pJainl3 from riders about
people smoking, eating
and drinking on the
buses." Kujawa said.
latlvH llve. Carter bas not
rnponded. 11ld du Pont news
HCret.ary Frederick &em.
BOTH bl.I PGNT AND Dover
Mayor Charles A. Legates Jr.
have ln1l1ted tbat no mass
burial be mad• near Dover.
They fur the lite would become
a 1brioeJo culu.ts.
Rep. Thomas Evans, R·D .•
met wtth State Department of,
flclalt two weeks ago t.o pre$1 tor qulck dlapoeal of tb.e bodies,
but Wyman denied Evans' con·
tenUon that the department pro-
mised a decision by Feb. 1.
·'That date was sort of seized
on and maen1fled out of Pl'OPor·
lion by Evans,'' be said.
Delaware has allowed local
morticians lo transport the
bodies out of state but has pre.
vented local burial or cremation
by requiring death certificates,
which had to be issued to
Guyana.
WYMAN SAID THE flrat 519
death certificates arrived in
Washington Thursday, but Bat-
tle R. Robinson , assistant
counsel to du Pont. sald other
Delaware laws still could pro-
hibit a mass cremation of the
bodies here.
For lruitance, Mrs. Robinson
said. Delaware requires a
cremation certificate signed by.
a physician or coroner stating
there is no reason not to destroy·
a particular body. She said the
Jonestown bodies may stlJI be
needed~ecause of lingering
quesliorS. about the cause of
death.
The body of Jones was
cremated in New J ersey last
month to avoid Delaware's legal
problems, but Thomas Cannon
of the New Jersey attorn"~
general's office said Jon~ .. '
cremation apparently was il·
legal because Delaware morti·
clans cannot work in New
Jersey.
Cannon said no other crema-
tlons ot Jonestown bodies will be
allowed in New Jersey unUI the
s tate Board or Mortuary Science
meets t.o discuss the situation.
· caute byperkalemla (e11cesslvely
blgh levels of po&asstum Jn tbe
blood), a potentially fatal condJUoa.
In a rec-ent case tbat received na·
&tonal -J>Ubllclty, a mother ad·
ministered large amounts of
potassium chloride Cl,800 mllUJrams
one day aad 1.500 mlWgram1 Cbe
DEAR PAT: My ·husband had
open-heart surgery in September
1977 and died In December. I have just now paid off the last hospital and
doctor bills. Are these deductible oa
my single tax return for 1978?
B.E., Costa Mesa
Um said one of the there.
rapists was not circum-,--------------------------------------clsed.
,•
1as says yes. Expeue1 pald for
a deceased spouse by the lllJ'Vlvtnc
spouse are deductible ln tbe year paid.
C•ll 642-5878.
Put• few word• to work for ou.
Free ideas
for future growth.
'
Today's as good -a time as any to start
things growing. So stop by any Allstate
Saving!? office and we'U give you a copy of
Better Homes and Garden's, ••C.Ontainer
Plants'.' You won't have to fork out any green,
either. (It's free .)
This 96-page booklet is fUled with
color pictures and rules of green thumb for
growing portable plants, indoors or out.
Learn how to start a water garden, a rose
garden, a rooftop garden, even a vegetable
garden, an in &>otted containers.
To get your free book, write your
J1Clrtle and address in the coupon below.
Then bring it down to Allstate Savings.
While you're at it, ask us about the many
ways we can make your money grow, too.
Our interest rates are higher than any
bank's.
We're Allstate Savings aqd Loan, with
86 offices statewide to serve you. Drop by
1 one today and take advanta~e of all the
capital ideas we've got growing for you.
And if you want to see how
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we're having spedal plant
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with containers courtesy of
Allstate
r 'F;'°a ~copy~ ~;i-~ ~~.;-,
: bring this in to Allstate Savinrs. :
I Name I
Gt~
..
SAVI NOS
ACapital Idea. .,--
NEWPORT BEACH •
One (.orporate Plata
I I I AddrcM t
I Clty Zip-I L-------------J
-
•
I •
You can lose weight.
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Call (714) 975-0700
8 AM to 10 PM, 7 days a week.
SATJBFACTION GUARANTEED
uala. Our pl 18 DOI. to control ,.oo. b\n
to help you rootrol yo~lr.
You are unique, 111 iDcll.W.aL
Advanc9d Health Center'• control JrO'
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d1111ign • penon.al progr•m t.o ~Ip .1~
b\llld tJw MW ha.bi~ o( •lf-oon~ eacJ.nr. YCN11 be on your wa.y to main· t.lnlnf permnent control of YOllr
heel th. It'•...,, It wo.rbl It wtU e~ YoW' w. ... ror ~.Call Advucied _.,_ .. L. 1 Healtb Cat.er for an •pl>OtntmeDt Free ebl&d ..,. le av .. .., .. whl • 10ll
t.oda.Y ... and take coatnilf Call <'71•> ~t.J ha aQJ ot our 1tll-coowt ~CMtfOOoo~ I procrama.
Advanced Health Center roA !Tia OOMnOL 011 9lllOJQNO. Otlll«lNO, R!Otn', AlifD RTUl:ll
• "
l.IOO~ll1'Ul'l'HOlml, NKWPORTDEACH.~ "*>
. . ' .
I I
•
I•
"He slurped up alt my t0up, and now
_ ·he wonts my coffM I "
SUPERHEROES
SHOE
MOON MULLINS
_ HIM WALKING
/N1UE
SOMMER.
PUNKY WINkl Rll AN
1 ~ CAE oowt HPAE 1> ~'fl'OPE~~
1
r ,
I
MISS NACH
I
' I
l
by Pasko, Tuska & Colletta
• by Jeff MacNelty
GORDO
, JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
I set: ,Y-rnf LITTLE: M6 HE:"S CAlfR'(IN6-1HAT J.OlSA
UJCK'S Off ON HIS ANNUAL. "TRIP 10 l..AS \/E:6AS.
~~~
NANCY
AUNT
FR ITZl·-
A LL THE
LIGHTS
WENT
OUT
~\\ ~~
..
r.
NANCY··· I
HEAR YOU
WALKING···
WHERE
ARE ~OU
GOING?
-~ .
'
by Tom Bltluk
by Mtfl
AGATHA CRUMM
DR. SMOCK
~Y Gus Arriota
by Harold Le Doux
SAM ~&Y WOULOftr APPROVE OF MY
J OOIHG THJS ... &UT rM GOING TO flNO OtlT
1 WHEAE HOHTEA'S GOIHG TONIGHT!
by Tom K. Ryan
··~· b.Y Emit Busttmttftr
COMICS/CROSSWORD
PEANUTS
e
t
f ~'t ~ ..........
.. J.------"" ,_.,
by 8111 Hoest
... ANO MAt' 'TO WALK
THI &NTl~E
61'1CMI~!
by George Letnoftt
WHE!N 'TH9 Y' GAV E! M e AN e!i.-ec·n~rc. -rRA IN Ato.4 P 1"We!t...Ve .Ml&.,eS O F S "T'RAleH-r
'"T'RACK .'
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE I
ACROSS SJ Gluttons
1 Suett 2 word s
5 Endute 57 Nervo
9 Spanish Prelix
man's name 5ll Swedish
14 Befaertt llland
15 Pfaa'a river 59 Po<tal
18 -Zola 11 Ending for
t 7 Minute theat81'
18 On the briny 82 -out: Lave
19 Dence 63 Preposition
20 Spry 64 Concerning:
22 Supporter• 2 words
24 ~ 65 Wise ones
26 Recofds 1111 Over
17 Moon valley J7 Persians,
29 Eviscerate e g.
30 -and wide DOWN
33 Hymn: 1 l ethal
3 words 1 Friend: Sp
37 Foot part J Gin and -
38 Wading bird 4 FrOllcklng
39 Bon-one
«> -pigeon 5 Bleat
41 Winglike I Gae11e
42 l.Aldy -: 7 Concerning
Lawrence I Hlghw1y•
cflaraete< men:
44 Winnipeg'• 2 words
nickname 9 Deplore
45 Pronoun 10 Collect .a Brtstle 11 Length unit
47 Fish t2 Swan genus
4t Sayings 13 Cotton fiber
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Monde('I PuuJe Solved
knots tflfead
21 Poet T S. -42 Gab
23 Musical 43 Pro -
work 45 Hues
~ Dwarf 47 Peroelve
28 Agi1atod: C8 Iceland c:oln
7 words 50 SodH>flne
30 Ass depe>eil
31 Agave 51 In ptaln 'tlew
32 Depend 52 letlonl
33 Harvest 63 Lancelot's
34 Se1rt look uncle
35 Cliff 54 Pelvic bone1
38 Gazelle 55 ()ew
37 Part ol SAC 58 To.apots
40 Surgical eo "Hooey!"
-
l
I r
.
' l .. :
!j
' t
(
ORANGE COUNTY ~. Jenulf'Y t . 1979 DAILY PILOT A•
SOmething for Everyone
RALPH CLARK
Achlevemeftt Noted
Gaede New
IT WAI a recent back
lpjury ud d0ctor'1 ap·
• p_olntment that ke pt
lbertff 8nd Gatel a way from 1upervh or1'
ceremaa,,
Planners'
Chairman
Former Brea Mayor
Rex Gaede was selected
chairman or the Orange
County Planning Com·
mission at the panel's
organizational meeting
Monday.
Gaede, 47, who was
appointed to the co m·
m ission last June by
Su p e r v i s or Ralph
Diedrl<'h , repla ces
William MacDougall as
com mission chairman.
MacDOUGALL was
chosen b) fellow com·
mi ss io n e r s as th e
panel's vice chairman.
Gaede, executi ve
director or the Child
Guidance Cente r o f
Orange County, r e·
signed his city council
post last summar lo join
t h e p lanning co m ·
mission
A LIEUTENANT col·
onel in the Air Force
Reser ve, Gaede was
~rowly defeated last
Ju11e for the Republican
nomination in the north
county's 69th assembly
district.
He also has served a s
trustee and past presl·
del'lt ot the Brea.Olinda
Unified School District.
Greenpeace
Film Set
A lecture and film
sponsored by Oran1e
Cout Colle&•'• SEA for
a,ee...,.ace Club will be
pre1ented on Fr iday,
Jan. 19, at 7:30 p.m. la
OCC'a Science Lecture
Hall 1 In Colta M ....
Admluion ll free.
HOMI:: UWNlH~
Oat .. already had opt·
td to fcnao a 1weartn1· in for bl• own 8lecond tour·.J••r term to
"I pend the day ln the of·
rtct."
But he did take time out for the doctor'• •P· POlntment ·brou1ht on
when be Injured hi•
back over the hollclay1
mtxln1 cement. at hie
San Juan Cap l1tr ano home.
GATES said he's re·
cove r ing a nd q uipped,
"They can't keep a cow.
boy down."
About his new four·
year term, Gates said .
"We 're just happy to be
back and have the peo.
pie decide to keep us In
four more years."
Oth e r t h an th e
s upervisors. Assessor
Bradley J acobs was the
only elected omcial to
be formally sworn·ln
Monday.
Ja co b s' m ode s t
cerem o n y, on th e
ground noor of the coun·
t) Fina nce Building.
featured parts for his
wife and each or the
couple's four children.
Superior Court Judge
Ha rmon Scoville ad·
ministered J acobs' oath
before a crowd or about
100 county omclals, as·
sessor employees a nd
frie nds as 4-year ·old
Lucinda J acobs held the
Bible for he r rather .
VIC HE IM count)'
audltor-controher, was
s worn-in FrldaJ wllea
he walked cws to ntlr•
In g co unt: lf_rll Wlllla m a J 'I om~
and took t.be a a
John'a llltdaY ln °'""· Joininl Hllm ud, St John at tlaat ,....,....&a
waa Supervteor Tlloliau
Rll•>' and an aide.
...
••Al lut year wu ln iettlnc tbt
Rarq1 football &et• to mov, to
A1111etm '" t•. ••aut art• YllltrW llullday,l I'm • 10 1yre you're neb a 1 reat
ltlder." ll~jolltd. · Mu1lc fOr the ev..& wu pro.
O(fer Expires Junuray 31. 1979 •
~ .... c.at Plaza Neal-die <:arouMl
oatt.l'lf'lti..I. ,_~call: 540-1811
MGoN MULLINS
..
•
• Here are ballots. for two members of your fam.ily • • •
............... "----------------------------·---···············••t•• ··------------------------.Mr PIVE (I) FAVOfUTE COMICS ARE: Ii .MY PIVI (I) F~VORITI COMICS ARE: I
I ' 1 ............••••.•....•••
I
I 3 .......... • • • · · • • • • • t • • • •
2 ...............•••••••.• ; '· •••••••••••.•............ . I. , ' ..................... .
MY LEAST FAVORITE COMICS ARE: MY LEAST FAVOAITI COMICS ARE:
1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 ......................... . 1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . • . . 4 •.........................
la. 2. . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . 1 •••........•........ ' .. • ... 2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. ' •.......................
a. . . . . . . . . .............. . 3 .......................... . ...
MY AGI IS: MV AQI II:
U~11 "lJ. .. 2Q. il ~14 UN~11 1r;1 2Q. R il
Mall to: !dttot, Orange Coeet Delly Not . .
P.O. Box 1580, 330 W. Bay 8'rHt
eo.t•Me•a CAmH
1, l .
' _/ . .
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SUPIR VAiUIS
\, A special magazine coming
January 24 ~nd 25 in Coast. Li FE and th~
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'INSIDE: •Stocks .-.--.~___.. ........ ..._.~~~~·~··m..__0~~-~T~SP-OrU
Tile A:goay of oe1ea•
-~-, ......... For every jubilant
winner there is a de-
jected loser and the
players in these pie-
-tures demonstrate
that _graphic all)'. For
three of them, the
loss included injury
as well as insult. In
the top photo Houston
Oiler Mike Barber
Anteaters Out
Of Doldrums-·
Until Th-Ursda)_
By ERNIE CASTILLO Of .. Del..,~ .....
From the first day of practice, UC lrvtne basketball coach Thr
Tilt •~d it would take patience and a lot of hard work to mold th4
Anteaters into a team that would be competitive in the tougt
Pacific Coast Athletic Assn.
Two months and 10 pre-season games later. the two returnln1
starters. four letterman reserves. three junior colteee transfer: 1Jti two freshman recruits are finally at the point Tift wantt them.
Well. almost.
"WE'RE AS CLOSE AS WE'VE
been ." says Tift whose team opens
PCAA play Thursday night at Long Beach
State. "We'd like lo have a few more wins
and be further along but it's here." .
As ~ntly as one week ago, even Tift
had.doubts that the Anteaters would arrive
in time. UCI had j ust dropped Jlio.palr of
games in the Santa Barbara tourflament t.o
wind up a 1·5 road trip and Tift felt the en·
tire season. could hinge on how the team
performed against a pair of small oppo.
nents at Crawford Hal),.
True to form, \:.l~I responded with a
107·57 rout of Mac Murray College, a
Division III school. and a solid 63·!H vie
tory over a rebuilding Portland Stale TIFT
quintet. Granted. neither is what you
would call a powerhouse but the pair of wans seemed to snap the An·
teatersoutofthedoldrums.
.. For .confidence. those were extremely important games:·
s ays Tift. currently in his 12th season as UCI head coach. "Just
knowing how lo win and playing well worked wonders. It was
much more valuable than just practicing "
,· , holds his knee after
being hit by Pit-
tsburgh 's Mike
Wagner. Below that,
Ram running back
John Cappelletti com-
es up with a shoulder
separation against
Dallas. Another vital
blow to the Rams
below left, came
when quarterback
Pat Haden s uffered a
compound fracture of
his right thumb
Below right,
Houston's Dan
Pastorini glumly ac-
cepts defeat at the
hands of the Steelers.
TIM IS THE FIRST TO ADMIT that UCI isn't in the elks of
Long Beach State, which had won eight straight games before fall·
ing a point short against Duke last week, fl would certainly take a
near perfect game just to stay close lo the 49ers but Tift reels the
Anteaters can play respectable basketball If they continue to im·
prove as they have recently.
\
• • t ;
"We have to try to minimize the number or easy baskets they
get. those scored from close range. off fast breaks and from of..!
rensive reboW1ds." Tift says. "Beyond that. we have lo play solid
defense to try and restrict their very good players. Lastly. we have
to operate a very--stable offense and shoot the high percentage
s hots."
UCI hasn 't had loo many problems defensively. The Anteaters
See ANTEATERS. Page 84
Bruins Survive
UCU Gets Scare From Oregon
From AP DlaDatdaes
LOS ANGELES -Oregon
t ried to win one for j)an
Hartshorne Monday night. 1be
Ducks failed. but not by much.
And Hartshome. playing with
a heavy heart. did a ll he
possibly could to engineer what
was nearly a major upset .
Hartshorne scgred a career·
high 23 points are' pulled down a
game·leading JO rebounds. but
the Ducks dropped a 74.71
Pacific·lO Conference basketball
decision to s ixth-ranked UCLA
at Pauley Pavilion. The game
was even closer than the final
score indicates.
HARTSHORNE played all 40
minutes despite the death of his
father Saturday morning.
"We wanted this ball game so
much tonight. but especially for
Danny Harts h orn e ... said
Oregon Coach Jim Haney. "We
wanted to be able to give the
game ball lo Danny's family.
but it just wasn't meant to be.
although Danny came up with
what has to rank as an inspired
effort.
"I can't tell you how proud his
teammates and his coaches are
of him:·
Hartshorne 1s a Junior from
M lssion Hills. which Is lo<:ated
JUS t outside of Lo5 Angeles.
THE BRUINS, who trailed by
as m any as eight points early in
the second half. came on s trong
in the end to overtake the DucKs.
Oregon led 52·46 with 14:05 re·
maining. but the Bruins out·
scored the Ducks 14·3 during the
next five minutes to go ahead for
good. Oregon closed the gap to
one point on fi ve different oc·
caslons after that but could
never regain the lead.
The Ducks drew to within one
point for the final time on a tip
In by Felton Sealey with l l
seconds remaining.
Oregon had a c hance to ~rt.
the game-when Roy Hamil~
dropped the ball out or boun"as
with nine seconds lo go, but CTle
Ducks had a pair or shots
blocked in the late going.
VCLA'S BRAD HOLLAND
was rouled as the game . ended
a nd made a pair of free throws
lo give the Bruins their three-
pdint margin or victory.
··1 was very pleased with the
win tonight." said UCLA Coach
Gory Cunninghatn ... Our con·
rerence is very well·balanced as
is evidenced by the close games,
We had a breakdown tonigpt
which involved turnovers, loss or
poise and missed free throws.
but I'm proud that the tea m
didn't panic and came back
after losing the lead."
David Greenwood led the
Bruins with 21 points and rune
rebounds. UCLA now has a 3· l
Pac· 10 record and a 10·2 overall
mark. Oregon 1s 0.3 and 5·7.
··our team ·doesn't look like
we did I a s t ye a r . · · s afa
Greenwood ... We aren't doing
the things that we did. I'm just
kind of disappointed right now
because I think we're a much
better ball club and a much
s m a rter ball club than we've
shown.
..w e ·re just going lo have to
rome out and play "
The victory set up a first place
ronfrontation i n the Pac· 10
Saturday night. when the Bruins
face Southern California. 4-0. at ·
the Sports Arena.
0,.....1111
SUlty 511\ell
H•rl.notM
Murr•y
CIO\t
(ldfk
8•'r"C'' 8 W•lhtr
,, tt ., .... " 4 0-0 R 10 ll u
l I 1 I )' I I II
0 CM) 0 1 CM) •
0 CM) 0
·Orgill: ·a R ·ay of HOpe for Orltnge,Coast
~ ~
.. . ,
BJ JORN 8EVANO 1901)0Ulld backcourt ace who leads h1a good as Gary," said Ray. soun<Jj~ a$ If And this season. the {>ira~a are off to
When ~:'&':.~Tege takes the teammates with a 14.6 scorin1 average. some people expected too much. • I was their greatest start ever with a 13·3
court Wednetday nl«bt In Its Soatb surprised when I was b,._ht up to m ark. Coaat Conference basketball opener at "BUT EVE& SINCE the third grade I varsity M a sophomore. I hti" my back "Ray Is ,definitely one of t~ qulck~st
Mt. San Antoolo it wlll be looking for was kind or short and chunky. and my and didn't play my Junior year. My players Ive ever coached. comPll·
lt9 fint conference tttle since the l98'MS8 favorite sport was football, so I thought senior year proved to be m y only good ment1 his coach. "He's very versatlle. season that'• What I'd be playing." season." . handles the ball well and has the ability
KtJCe OF THE PIRATES' hopes for . Orglll soon outgrew hls chunklneas1 Gary went on lo play at Golden West to get the shot off inside despite hla size.
a 1uceelllul campa1in wlll be rettlni and bls feelings toward being arouna and later Cal Poly <San LUia Obispo I. "He's much better lhan last year, and
on a f.O blond·baired. sophomore IU*rd his brother were rekindled. Ray meanwhile, decided not to follow he's a lot better defensively. I think he's
out of kiiiiiCia High who up unW bla "I felt llke l wanted to prove hls brother's foot.steps and enrolled at a major college auard." bil h acbool day9 was 10 pudty be something," Or1lll sald. "I wanted to Orange C.OUt. Orgill would like to play at the major
thOqllt hll only extracurricular actlvt· prove I could be as good as m y "M y defense was terrible and 1 college level, but presently he's only
ty mllbt be ln football. brother." thouaht if J was golne to play college thlnklna about the season at hand.
Reeeady, Ray Oralll reflected on bis It took Ray a UUle 10nter then expect· ball, nobody could teach me how~ plliy ''THIS IS THE BEST team I've ever
youtb ..-what lnlplred him to become ed to demomtrate hi• eXS*:taUonl. derenH better than Tandy Gillis <OGC's played on," says Qrgill. "We're work·
a ba1atb9ll player. GA&Y OMIMJATSD from Estancia .. coach>." • • ln1 hard toge&her and I thlnlll we ..can
"I Ud an older bfother <Gary, 25, u one ol the 1ehoOl'1 premier flayers. Both Orlill and Gillis appear lo have win our con!~rence and also have a
wbo played at Golden West rrom Ray followed but hit hJ•h achoo career benefited (rom the dedslon good shot at the state crown.
, lt71·'11) *'alway& wanted to be Sood wun't u pro.peroua. LAST YEAR was the Pirates' first "Al for the future. I'd like lo play ma·
enousb to play wt~ hlP1." Hid tbe "Everybody ex~ted m e to be ai wlrulln& MUQn •in four yean U7·1·U. • See.OBOIU.. Pace 82 ...... .~ • • ,.
• I I " -
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:i ..
:i :t ••
t .. ....! •
ir:I DAILY PILOT
49er Staff H ads Roll;
h Wal8h New· Coach?
PromAP ..... ka...
SAN FRANCISCO Stanlord he.cl football llJ
Coach BW Walib aya ho'• ''lr1lnl 10 cnak ~ •
·eome dff kJN, •· but h 1cMol la catted • new1 tod renc f r today lbt rt1>0rUd11 will
'pave Uw way l<w bl hirtna by the ~leaau n'd San Fran·
claco• ra
Walth. 48. la ex~ted to~ aa~ lo N.'Pl•c• fired
"9el'1 CoitC'h Fred O'Connor O'Connor k>lt bl• Job Monday.
alona wtth General Mana r Joe Thomas. an.er ..,,..
owner Edd1 J . DeDartolo Jr announted h w11 unhappy
with "OW' total operation ·•
Contacted at his home anl'r OeBartolo'1 lon1.e~
announct"ment, Walsh wouldn't comment on reportl he'd
bffo lapped to mum to pro football aa new ht'Ad coach ot
the 49ers. ''I'm In a 1JOS1llon ~bert' I'm ~lnl to make some d~·
clslon It's a rulh~r sensitive Um~,' Wal»h suid.
But minute hater. Stanford AU\letk Otrector Andy
" Gelger called a news confettnce, reportedly lo anrwunce
that Walah bu ~n ~lt>ased from hJ1 contract with th
university. The .-en posted a plUful 2· 14 record. the team's
worst, ln the past Natlonol Football League season.
On the other hand, Stanford rans up • 11·7 record In
two years under Walsh, Including a Sun Bowl victory o~er
LSU in urn and a Bluebonnet Bowl victory over Georgia
New Year's Eve. " ' Stanford rcceiven coach Rod Dowhower. 35, was re·
portedly in line to replace Walsh as the Cardinals' coach.
.. . Dowhower bas been with Stanford for two years. ... ..
-·'
•
----flMete•I tile• .. ·-----.
Anaheim Oranges General Manager Dennla Hall,
in a comment dated Nov. 3: "We are all looking
forward to next season and are confident the Oranges
will have an even more exci~. competitive team.
than a year ago." Less than two months later, the
Oranges folded.
Mlclafgalt St. R~tabu No. J Ratl•g
The Top Twenty teams in The Associated Press col·
Jege basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses
and season records.
1. Michigan St. 138> 9.1
2. Notre Dame 18 > 6-1
3. North Carolina Cl > 10-1
4. Illinois <5> 14-0
5. Louisiana St. <6> 10·0
6. UCLA 9·2
7. Duke 9·2
8. N. Carolina St. <l> 11·2
9. Indiana St. 11·0
10. Arkansas 9-0
11 . Texas A&M
12. Louisville
13. Marquette
14. Georgetown
15. Kansas
16. Michigan
17. Kentucky
18. Temple
19. Long Beach St.
20. Syracuse
t1·2
10-3
10·1
10-2 -
8-3
7-3
5-4
11·0
8·2
9·2
Pitt•llurgla T•ree-polat Fal'Orit~
Harrah's Reno Race and Sports Book listed EiJ Pittsburgh as a three·polnt. favorite over Dallas •II•
to win Super Bowl XIII in Miami Jan. 21 .•.
Darryl Rogera, who guided Michigan State's
Spart.ans to a co-cbampiooahip in the Blg-10 bu been
named collegiate football coach of the year by the Sporting .
News ... Former Florida football Coach Doal Dickey re-
portedly was conferring with University of Colorado of-
ficials about a job as an assistant coach
. Dallas monster man Randy Wblte
suffered a broken thumb in Sunday's
victory over the Rams ... Terry
Bradabaw, who quarterbacked the
Pitt.burgh Steelers to the National Foot·
ball League's best record during the re·
gular season and into the Super Bowl. was
named The Associated Press' most
valuable player ... Houston Oiler tight
end M lke Barber says he will complain lo
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle con·
1toous c e r n i n g w b a t h e c a I 1 e d a
c heap shot by Pittsburgh's Mike Wagner in Sun·
day's AFC title game ... The names or Washington's Oon
James and SMU 's Ron Meyer are among those mentioned
most rorthe Ohio Slate football coaching job.
.1or.1 .... Scores 38, BllC!lu Wla
Marques Johnson poured in 21 of his 36 m points in the second ball and Brtao Whiters
added 27 points. leading the Milwaukee Bucks
lo a 116-104 victory over the Houston Rockets In
National Basketball Assn. action Monday. Center Moses
Malone led Houston with 27 points but had little help un·
demeath as the Rockets failed lo grab an ofrensive re·
bound untll the third quarter
l.Adlftw Eztftlds Stttak to 2 J
Marlo Tremblay scored the wiMing goal Iii
with 1:57 left in the second period and Guy ' ·
Lanear extended his scoring streak to 21 games
Monday night as the Montreal Canadiens re·
corded a 3-1 NaUonal Hockey League victory over the Min·
nesola North Stars .... Don Lever scored two goals and
Harold Snepata added two assists as the Vancouver
Canucks concluded a six-game road trip with a 5·1 triumph
over the slumping Toronto Maple Lears.
lllttt laks ~~ar Pact
American League most valuable player Jim Iii
Rice bas agreed to a multhnllllon-dollar, seven·
year contract with the Boston Red Sox, binding
him to the team through the 1985 season and
making him one of the richest players in baseball. No
financial figures were announced, however. .Slugger
Rico Carty rejoined the Toronto Blue Jays by signing a
long.term contract .•. Danny O'Brien won't say why he
quit as the eeneral manager of the Texas Rangers but be ad·
mils his role with the team diminished in recent
years ... 'lbe AUanta Braves announced that Manager Bob·
by Cox'• contract bas been extended through the 1980
season.
~ .....
Following are the major aports events on television
tonight. Ratings are: ' ' ' ' excellent; " .r 1 worth watchl1i9; I 1 fair; I forget It.
8 p.m., Channel 9 ./ ./ ./
NBA BASKETBALL: Lakersat New York Knlcks.
Announcers: Ollck Heam, Pat Riiey.
~ The ue>-and-down Lakers will be playing t .. fourth
of eight straight ro.td gaMH tonight.
Kareem Abdul..Jabbar paces the Lakers whlle Bob
• McAdoo Is the leader of the Knlcks.
RADIO
Hockey -Kings •t New York I standers, 5:50 p.m .,
KRLA <1110). Bob Miiier, Peter Weber report. BeSktt·
ball -The Lakers et New York Knlcks, KLAC (570),
simulcast. •
I •
Fiullerton
Favored;
OCC2nd?
By JOHN: EV ANO .-.... ---. ........... It '1 the f •ature race of tho Jun or coai.ce buketbaU seuon.
Never bu the South Co11t ConleNQCe ben up for ant»
like t~uoa. Any of three tHma walk away wlth the
t I tit-W\Ua IUCC'l9I oa the road be-In~ Uae clltermlntnt laelOr.
Fullerton. Oraqo Cout and
Santi Anl would be Uke chOOI·
Ing belwelll Seeretal'tat, Man 0 '
War &nd Whlrlawa}' with dartc
hor• .. Visors <Nt . S.n Antonio)
and Mr'. KellO <Cen1totl wall·
tnii In the ~-Fulltttoo, altbouab lt bu a
toush ualgnmeot in Ila opener
at Santa Ana, would •ppear to
have a allpl ed•e-but in lh1a
race DOlhlrll la certaln. Oran~e CoUt ls off to lhe best
start ln the achool'1 history
"<t3·3>. but many are woodert111
lt the Pirates un continue tbelr
aucceas throu&bout the aeuao.
Santa Ana, the pre·race
favorite, has bad 1 touab Ume
adJusUq oo the road. tbe race starts on Saturday
with post time at 7:30 p.m.
It ou~t to be a photo flnlsb.
Here s bow the Dally Pilot
handicaps the South Coast Con·
rerence race:
... ._T_ ~0-.
I 1'1.1llet1Gft(1'-4I LotaohM!,kldl •S
I Or~C:-t OHi SMfplnclrltl\ 7.S
l. s.tnta ~ ltt41 C!Wlro-. 111 ""'ell .. s
4 Ml.SenAntoftloUHIF~ ......... +I ~ Cerrl!o'l ll-41 F .. leel ., •-II• "I •. S.n DMel>Mew 111 .. 1~ WIM••-JO.I
1 Gr°'-19-71 15tllf'l\t>le0 ., brNi 100.t
CdMFaces
Dana Hills
Corona del Mar H1fb'a Sea
Kings, Orange County s No. 1
ra nked prep basketball team,
return to the fires tool~~! with a trek to upstart Dana , which
has compiled the best start CS.2>
and loftiest ranking Uotb to
Orange CouotY> ln the school's
history. It st.aria at 7.
The Sea Kings (9-1> escaped
Newport Harbor's potential am-
bush Frlda~gbt (4&-41> and will be se · the usual llneu
of heavies, w ch lncludes ~
CIF guard Dave Koehler, fluid
6-4 Cbrls Johnston and steady
Shawn Abeam.
Awaiting the Sea Kings ls a
team led b,Y M Mike Samuels,
who bas Deen the leadl~
and rebounder.
Samuels leads the Dolphins in scortu U.3..4) and ls aided by 6-5
Chris Mathieu and 6-8 Doug An·
drews (12.0). Too, Dana Wlls has a ,...reputa·
lion for playing well against
Corona deJ Mar. The test: Dana
Hills• r ebounding against
Corona del Mar's pressure de·
fense. Elsewhere, Laguna Beach in·
vades Ocean Vl~w at 8 and
Katella ls at Newport Harbor at
7.
Ocean View boasts the No. 5
ratlng in Orange County with
continuing improvement and
Newport Harbor faces a Katella
quintet which ls coming off a
56·53 victory over Fountain
Valley.
Francis Rests
After Accident
HONOLULU CAP> -Russ
Francis, the New England
Patriots' All-pro light end, was
listed ln satisfactory condition
here Monday after a motorcycle
accldent.
Francia wu injured when the
motorcycle be was driving col·
tided wllb an automobile Sunday
in Walmanalo, a rural area of
the island of Oahu. He aufCered a
broken left arm and ankle and a
possible concussion, accordlng
to a report ln the Honolulu Ad·
vertiser.
Francis, who lives here in lhe
ortseasoo, did the radio color
commentary for tut Saturday's
Hula Bowl.
His passenger on the motorcy-
cle, Jennifer Scbafe, 18, was list·
ed ln satisfactory condition wtth
possible head injuries alter the
noontime accident.
The Patriots, in Foxboro,
Maas .. said Francis' left hand
and ankle were placed in a cast
by Dr. Robert Nemec:hek at Cas·
tie Hos&!~ in Hawaii. · The • with a broken mJd·
die finger, will be in a cast for
three tb four weeks. The ankle,
wltb a break in the deltoid Uga.
ment, will be in a cut for four to
slx weeks, the team reported.
Surf Picks Dahl
NEW YORK-The CallromJa
Surf selected what team otllcials
call ·'the best centtr·half in the
countrv" In the Nortf\ American
' • t .ea~ue draft berc Mon·
''hJ , a defender from
t •&tty of San Francisco,
wi. .. 1 •• \l'd on the aecond round
by the Surf. Which acquired the
choice by tradln1 a almllar 1981
plck to the New York Colmos.
Dahl, a nat!ve of Norway, \I a
6·3, 210·poond defender who ta a
two·tlme All·Am1rlcan.
.,. •. ...,....
Crashing Through l,t'itla Glee .
• Houston's Moses Malone (24) crashes into
Milwaukee's Ernie Grunfeld (2()) as he
drives for the basket Monday night in
Milwaukee . Watching the action is
Milwaukee's Kent Benson <54 l . The Bucks
won, 116-104.
ERNIE €ASTILLO
>
Avoiding
The Rush
For as long as anybody would like to remember. the
Rams' motto has been: "Choke Early. Avoid the last·
minute rush." Thus, in keeping with Carroll Rosenbloom 's promise
for innovation, they changed their ways and saved the
worst for last Sunday.
With an offense that indeed was offensive, the Rams
chalked up a string or goose eggs as long as a Howard
Cosell eulogy. To conserve energy, Coliseum officials
should have turned orr the Rams' half or the scoreboard.
They had no points. no poise, no playoff party. Heck, they
had more no's than a Jimmy Durante look-alike contest.
THE RAMS HAD MORE or a retreat. than an attack.
The way lhey looked against the Cowboys. they should
have tried a swift kick occasionally. Like on first down, for
-instance. Ray Malavasi should have left the-defense on lbe
field the entire game. At least that way, we'd still be tuned
to Channel 2 watc,bing the 118tb sudden-death overtime
session. · Tbe runmng game was more or a crawling one; the
:>nee-famous "three rards and a cloud ol dust" more liJce
three feet and a clod o sod. On fourth-and· a foot they came up
lwo feet short. They ran every which way but through &md
around the Dallas Une. The reason was obvious: they had
plenty of Mr. Insides but no Mr. Outsid~ to go with them.
PAT HADEN USUALLY FIRES bullets but lhis time
they were blanks. His favorite receive r was Charlie
Waters who happens to be a Cowboy. Monte Hall never
had bigger giveaways.
Haden's replacement, Vince Ferragamo. not only
couldn't tell blue from white. he couldn't tell Cliff Harris
from Waters. He can be forgiven for failing to deliver a
miracle comeback but not for cancelling every longshot
bet from here lo Vegas.
What were the Rams trying to do. anyway? Make Tom
Henderson a prophet? Make LA the target of all the choke
jokes that used to belong to Philadelphia? M~ke Ram fans
lhe most abused minority since the Polish? t
ONCE AGAIN, TUE BEST MOVES were by the
cheerleaders. the most excitement came from the peanut
vendors and the safest bet is anybo<Jy against the Rams in an NFC title game.
You'd think by now the networks would make the
Rams change their script. Oh, there have been minor ad·
justments tn characters: Malavasi for Allen for Knox ;
Haden for Harris for Hadl for Gabriel. But the Jina!
chapter. ln which lhe Rams become goats. has had more
reruns than I Love Lucy.
And it's one show, I'm sure. Los Angeles fans are glad
has only one more season to run.
Top Gymnasts Compete
The seventh aMual Kips In·
vttallonal women's gymnastics meet at Cal State Fullerton , the
largest of its klnd In the United
States, will be he ld Saturday
reaturlng the tof three teams in America as wet as many of the
top women individuals In the
United States.
Among the entrants are DoMa
Turnbow. 197"1 national cham·
pion and 1978 U.S. gymnast or
the year and Kips teammate
Sharon Shapir~.
Also. Can a di a n K aren
Kellsall, Merilyn Chapman and
Leslie Pyfer. members of the
U.S. World Games team, U.S.
National team members Gigi
Ambando and Sandy Wirth and such top collegiate gymnasts as
Carilyn Burdick. Shari Smith
and Carol Johnson.
Competition times are 10.noon and 2 p.m. with individual finals
beginning at 7:30 p:m. Tickets
for the mo'ming session are $'2
for adults and Sl for children.
Pitcher
NEW YORK <APl -The New
York Mets made Neal Heaton. a
left-handed pitcher from Lake
Ronkonkoma. N.Y .. the first
pick today in major league
basebalrs 14th annual winter
draft or free-agent amateur
talent. •
Orange Coast College pitcher
Jim Campbell was selected by
the New York Yankees 1n
today's draft. Campbell, a 6·2,
175-pound right·handed pitcher.
was the la.st player picked in the
opening round.
Campbell, who prepped at
Estancia High, is a sophomore
at Orange Coast. He pitched on a ·
limited basis last season. com·
piling a 1·2 record with a 3.90
ERA in ro innings.
Tooa,·, Sete<1lons·
NPW ...... ~ ~·\~·· Hulon, Ptl(l\er, Lalct
Ronllonll.-. NV
S••lll• -Da•1d Hoo<I. <•teller, GrMnv11te.
M IU. AUenle-Mlkhell Faulk. pl1<her. Wl\arton
Iha.I JC. Toron~I Pallerioll, Pilther, Heddonh11d.
HJ St l~l5-'1-., F~rtS, lb,~. Arlr JC.
Oellleftd-t.emmoe M•llt•. of, S.nl• BMb<tr• JC .
H~$10n-~f"Y OeclfftOn. pOcr>er. WHl LA JC Cle .. la~rM>Cll A._, Ptl<lwr, Vale<t<ta,
Fla. JC. MonlrHI~ R-, .-Utop, COi...,..
IMa Slel• ITO<Wll JC. Ctutaoo Wl>•t• So• -eruc. Cpope1, pllcho!r.
Broward IFl&.I JC
Cltt<aoo CllbS -Marl! w11~1ns, Pil<her, L••0t11•.
Mklt.
Mlnnesoca -Jowllft *C...rtfly, of, 5em•r>0e.
I Fla.I JC.
San OllliO ·JOlln Stt..,n>On, 1nllelder, LA
Vat .. y JC.
OetroH-M1c1t .. 1 C•mP. p1tc11er. E••lv,.
Olltaltomt JC.
Pllt5tlu'911-Wlll!Mtt NIU, pllcller, Col•-of
Sovl...,.n ldehO
Celllorn••-0.nnl' l•y, 01 lb, s.n Jo.ciu1n
Dell.a JC.
5.efl FranctKO-fCpvon Joiwuon. of. LOS .Anot·..,,
CC \ TeaH -Clayton wei,1noer, P•lcller, A"O"••ne
CTe• I JC. ""11-lpNe-ONn 8autllt. of· lb, 81.1tle JC 8e111more-<>er...n Ollk•, pHclwr, Cltelluv JC
Clnclnneu -t(evln W•tte<. of..lb, Sen Ote90 (C.
ICanse• C•IY -Mlclt••I B•••••· PtlChtr,
F00t1tlll JC. Loa Al'IOtlft-4'_. Sllleenl, Jb-U, San M<llllO
JC.
Mltw•1.1-• -Oevlel T'ltomal, P•l<ller. Lel•,.-llr'
llnCI I.
8o"lon-Kevtn •-· pHclMff, CwM• JC New VCW'lt .,. __ ,_J•mei c.tmpOotll, P•itl'lt:r.
0r•f'l99 CNll JC,
Front Page BJ
ORGILL •.•
jor college ball but basketbulJ
isn't as importanl to me now as
when I was In high school."
Maybe all Ray needs is to
have his brother come out of re-
tirement and provide an Im·
petus. Do the two stUl play now?
"Yes. and I beat him all the
lime." Ray says with a smile.
..It ·s a piece or cake."
.. .. -
" • ) I
,.
ll
!
:· .. ., :1 ,,
rt :· ' .. . , .. .. ,.
11 :1
I • ; I
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BASKETBA.tt/ HORSE RACING
Fr DOW
At Resorts
A II tM Soutbem C&UfOm.la Kt
attu fat fTab 1now ov r the
we.tend and, l\lrprilll\lly, ~ tot-ala ~ri ~ mon. ol an
lmproveQ)ent in their akJ <.'CftC11.
tlona tban did I.be Sierra a.reu,
whkh didn't cet u mucb punch
from the •torm
Today Snow Vall y ln the San
Bernardino ranee, with Jta
anowmakina macblDC!ry, hu a
ba or up to eo lnch • wblle
Mammoth la 1eu1na by whh
t42·lnchbue.
lfere are the condiUoos; .............. , .. ""_ .. ~..,..
HOM,_...,, i...cheln ... Hliflt.
....... , ..... -•1neh ......... four -· -·tl ... kl liNfi• 1•11 IMll .. Of .,._.., -
INKli.ed ~. two ,.._ - -,._,. 10w oPe••ll"lt
NI\. ...., lt-l4 lflCfln of ......-r -,_ ..
Wtlh 01' .. Cr..trt otiet'<ltlft9
•r•llllAI It-.... ltlc:llH of ~ -P«kH ~w•U.-c~°"'•llnO
Mt. We...._ i..40 ln<hH Of ~ -
SMt<kH ~ wlUI two c:Mlrt oPe<"•HnQ
S-11..... 4f..o ~ Of POW01tr -IN<lH IMJ'llllfiff, 11 ... c:11111rs-•t1<19.
S..W s-wiil 24--0 IMMI Of beM -~ -
WtfK• llO'Mllw, fl ... ~ ~lrt --<II*'
'""'' Q9eflltlng. o.i. ...... -lO Inches of beCll -· •nc:I Mitfec;e PO-r, lwOCNinaper'lltl"9-
Los Alamitos
"M"r 0<9111 O.rrlly
CMrlOo
Tlnwno1" Nl(:Cor ml<k
Poirt#
hit
ll•n HQfn
Wiii~
All.Ill
Prlu .......,..,n
Race Entries
00&.DeNWlllT
OltANO• COAST
T....-sCIWflttMM lllllrift CC.l'doul; Five Olla t~rl.
""' P'llti: l:U s .. Hemp CLIPIWtml; Fore A ,,.. l'l•ST ltAC£ -l50 ywels. $ yeer IBr-11; Ufelly .. C ... rnerl; Trua.
olch. Purw $2,100. Cleinllno "'"-IOfl R1,..ri. CCler15MI; F1'9M f Two '3,SOO. ITre •t ur•I; Top G•l11 Pruett Rani CIOlld Cc.rdoial; MHnl To CTorresl. Be 18•rd) • Sound Th• Ch•ro-SIXrH ~-810 Y•dl. l yMr c LIPh•m I; He11rye1tH Roell el olds & \IP. Plirw U,.000. O.elt'lll119 ICre•.v.,>; Dl•mondt So11 pr1ce$10,000.
ITrH1u,.I; Petite Ft•lr CMylHI; Out S-(Cieri-I; The TulM Olet Pe9SI CClerluel, lcMho W•y Kkl (Sumpter); 8o H.io IHllf'tl; Lii·
IMllchelll, Lucky ... u ... <W•rd). II• Go ...... (~I;,,_ P-ve
GoRed1rn111Go(Pemerl. Ster 18roollsl; St. All Arou11c1
S«COND RAC• -'70 y.,dS. l l ... rMrl; Brlahl Polley ICMclotel;
ye., olclt & UP. Pur1e U~ 0.lm-S.v.,.11411\ 0.. lime I.Arel!.
1"9 price '3,000. SllYllNnt ltACa · l50 Y•di. J
Peppu ~ ~ CH..tl; e.r SI YHr Old llllleL AlklwMIC•. Pvrw
Ho (8rool<ll; Bud's UC,I lflOUQlll. M..200.
Prize Mluy (~I, SUV.r l...oef Hui• Slllrt CT,_..I; ~Cre .. lPwrt1erl1 Oon'I Go Mell <C..-i•I; R..,id ltec:hel IMyi.tl. (llMdl Flrel!Ohl UdY (Clerlu.I; c-try
TMlltD 1tACE • 350 ,-_ l.,.., Coolllfl <~I; Fii<~ Y-81< olds & up. PwM tz.100 QelmlllQ IMelrl; NloMY!lle (~I; 811 A
prl<• $3,500. Bel my CWlfltersl; Plos IP9rner I;
Sh•CUSl\.ene (f'wrMr I; 5"1M•• P•rtY Time Doll IW.._..). ~rlcom CL.l~I; 5..,.-P-AIOttT'll-aACa.. -»O Yercb, 3
Pefltlt., CTo..,u); Oupe1 O.arve yeer Oldt & up. A!~•· Purw
•C.rclot•I; Wiii 8 SIMr <W•rd); "~· -I/ell <MytetJ; Ml. 8o O\er'99 FIMI Ai.rt fl.IPNml; MeNllsl 1Clert1MI; Nortll Country (HerO; CRoughl; Mlll•'s Jel <Clerluel; • Mr. Deck s.a.. CT,_..); LolM CllM9l119 Bird <CM~IDal; Hoity fu
FOiiy (~I. (Ard); MN.tfn Presldelll IH11111;
flOUltnt ltACa -G y..OS. 3 Jeb'I Jet cn--1; VllllllQ A,_ Ytt•r old ~ CAI~ Purw <Ad.elrl; Ruff9m <Ml~O.
U.00.0elt'nlnolWICeP,509. • NINnt ltACll • 250 Y.-dL J ,_
Over Ind Above IHartl; VlklllQ oldS & up. ~ Purw U.IOO.
BIHi IClerl•MI; itubblllt Men Glelmlfltfll'tu~
18'-lleldl: OIWll-. 1--.1; Cool Sot-·s WOrld C8eftltt); D•I
Aft991 ISumr*o'I; H.e14 TM Q\et't9r 8om ,.__ (llluill; ltocll.el Roy.tty
1c;.erc1ou1; Wenlor Rllft <c.trol; llutMI; a...ti. ll«tutt CT.,..,...I;
Go ltore•i.Oo Ca.rd). Dupet L.o Ml1mo IPerm•r I:
''"" 1tACS CI0.,..._3"9' T.uclHptHI I~); Allot~ oldS & yp .. Pune M.SOO. Cl.elmlft9 defl <Myle1); D•11dys St•r Pr~u ,1.500. · <C lerln•Ji Time .end AV•ln B•r F.ce Kkl IH¥tl; Fickle C-1 (Ll,,,..ml·..., .... ....., ((M'doui).
Alamitos Race Results
FerfMMeY mtllot_.,,,......_..,,
°""'"'"" ... r '"' r.tc• Here Joltll <Rou9hl s 80. 3 20. 2.AO; lnjUll 8HU IH•rtl
• 00, 2 80. Senor Muy Me,ho l~rnerl HO. U eU<t. 17 .. ) IWltd
i 10.80. SKoncl rece T~ll IC .. rlu.I
6 •O, 3 60. 3 00, MS N•9•1u0 1 Perner I 6.ao, •.OO. Whll• We•
C.IOU<le l8rCIOlsl U O.
Third rKe A~ ,,. ... CIO&•I
• 20. 4.00. J.OO; Duke o.ctc1y cw .. d l 17 60, 7.60; c:.td'MI Oo ,,..,.~,, ~ • .a.
U u.cl• CHI peid '1Jl.00. Fourth rKe Lucky El Cl•-•
1Sump1trl 15.00. lt.20, 11.00, Tr11tln
I Tre•surel .. 00, 4.lO; Mh6 LO ... Note ,,..,,,.,,,70.
H llh rKe·llffrs 18erdl 10.20.
>.tO. J ,.O, Whlslll"9 Ret> IMltchellJ
s Ml. 3.40, ""' Liii .. Lu Lu (Mylffl
3.80. \SeHClll CS.IOlpeld$1"-SO.
Sulh f'.U Tumblin Tumble-
CC.rdOial 1.IJIJ. 3 10, 2.60; Ju-Go
IH41rll 3 40, 2.60, l&IV A Jet l ........ r)
310.
Sevenlh• ••Ct G•tew•y Cll y CTre•wrel 21.40, 1.20, $.00; R-1tec·
llOfll (CMclaul 1.20, 2.AO; My OoMI
ICre••I 2.40. \S •utl.e 1~1) IMtiCI $15'.00.
E1911111 r__.,..lt 0.0.. IAU!rl
11.60. S.40. 1'0; Ml Meydl<k (llMdl 1.l>O. 4.20; Clll IN Goll• ITrNsu•el
l.20.
~111111 ••c•-S•¥•J111•h 0011y <Acl•lrl 13.40, S.00, 1.IJIJ; Trl!IM Chirp
<Cre.verl LAO. •• 60; Miu FlamlnQ .kl CB~I L2Q. \S eucle CJ..7l 1Nkl
'311.SO.
All~ -5,21.._
Moreen Picked
Edison High product
Ken Moreen and Foun· tain~'Yalley grad Dave
Morrison were selected
in Monday's draft or col-
legiate players by the I
North American Soccer
League.
SP,ORT••ACATION
RECREATIONAL
VEHICLE SHOW
uwr•-• Deily t «llO 10 OOp rn
Fndtylt 2:00 lO 10 30 p Ill.
~ NoonlO 10-..3Qp.M
~ Noon IOl'OOp.111
. .. " .... 11 • ' •• 11 I.I ti IU
ti M H 0
II IW MIU Ml H t4 0 ID tl 1 j J 11Jt11 17 tt 11 ,. ,, 4l 11 u
II IU ii ... """''4 "a.1111 II U l 4J
11 • ' .,
... " 41'19 u 91 •111' •• llJ 2S 11t
11'11•11• " ....... 11 IS la I0.1 ., .. .u ...
U IS 10 I•
II IO • 1 4 I• JI t l J
9 '" " •vv. 1• '' s1 w.• 11 ' 11 23 lllOJJI
.. '3 • IO.l 12 l4 22 IS
IJ "' • 34 1• lO 14 S.l 1& l4 11 S I
14 21 " ... ...... 11.0
14 21 ' lt
" 7S "ll;A
RANDY WHIE.OON
DantJ y to Rejoin
I akers Tonight?
NEW YORK (AP> -Fol'Ward
Adrian DanUey, who has mlssed
the last 15 games. may play for
Los Angeles tonight when the
Lakers l ace the New York
Knlc ks at Madison Square
Garden <Channel 9, 6o'clock1.
DanUey, who is averaging 21.6
point.a per game. suffered a
hyper-ext.end~ knee last month.
DanUey worked out with the
Lakers Monday but Coach Jerry
West said he would wait until
after this morning's shooting
practice to decide whether to re-
move the former Notre Dame
standout from the injured re·
serve list.
"We want to see if he gets
fluid on his knee after he runs,"
said West.
•• f
DAIL V PILOT fla
Ba~ Knight for 49ers·j
• t
f#yola Clip• Long ~""11; ND Rolla• I
,..... AP l*p1&elaet durtn1 a game-endtn1 tM scoring College I EVANSTON, JU. -Fol'Ward Larry run as 17th·ranked Kentucky broke .,.,.wur ~ lk'Ol'td Sl polnta as Loyoh1 of open a ctcee same and defeated Ml1-ucLA 1•. ~ 11 Clalt110 hlndtd ltth·tanked Long sisslppl 90-64. 1e1•110 St.11. °*" ... k"
Beach State tu lb.ltd JtraJpt lou, a The Rebels, who trailed by as ~~~l'!w~:.a.~•"'"' ... eetbatlc. 1n noci-eonlerence col· many as 19 polnta In lbe first hair, s .ut4lft ... CMG.M1Mteo ,
.... lfalbtbell acUon llOllday nilht. had drawn to within IM~• with 6: 56 to ~eoof'I Tec1t':As~' Moult! .. ""· ~·· ~q~l_bt scored 19 points and If on four straight baskets b~ John l',,.,,,a1,te•PM1en J
ll'aDDed IO reboundl In the first half roud To w rd El to O\llllllft!W n . .-. ''-''· P•.,, I :r tM Ramblinracedtoa~le-.d andTlmn:m.:. a, a n umer :t~~:!c..,. ,
'8 ..,......, LoJo!a lDcNUed Its The Rebels trailed just 6HO with :·.::!.~:'~·:.°"•' matfln. to 17 points early ln the 4:19 remalninl after Ward& unk a s ,rec:u•t0a.A1nw1CM1PJ ..-ct Ult, then beld OD u the 49ers 22·foot jump ss6ot, but Kentuck11 then IOUTM l"'M .... • Al~ 13, Oeorvl• 11 ..__:.._••-,a.•, cut tbe lead mounted it.a decisive rally. c.eiwmw..,,.IA.._.,_.o / _., -111 6. KeflluO'f•l,Ml4dle f-.11
to pollltl several times but Te11•• AlsM. 77.fU :.!~~~: ..... 55 I never eame ~. LOu,, .. ,. .. 111, MMVM111 .. Michael Wiley paced the 49ers with COLLEGE STATION, Texas M<H-SC.7',WIL·f'-llOJU 23~,nts. lfyrone Ladson and Vernon Smith M, .. , .. _. St. n. T--u
b ned II I d h .. _Or.._ a. o-wi. St. .. evln Sprewer hJt for 19 polnta, com l 1Qr 3S points to ea llt · .. w Lou1si-eo. ~,, ~ Le St _._ added 15 and D ranked Texas A&M to a 77-64 Hot,.O-H o. .. ldlofl ~ '
B:;; baiJa';;J;C:, the Ramblers. w~ Southwest Conference victory over 11~",:,J:::r•51 •1
1 ed thel d t d B¥Jlor. 111111CM•Sl."'"· re .... 11 eo mproy; r recor o 5-7 an he A:rJ-bad a balanced scorina LfYol• u11.>ts.loflt8Melts. ... • avenaed an 84-73 defeat at the bands ~ • 0re1 R-.m'1.A'*'1'11u • of Long Beach State earlier this attack th five players 11corlng.ln .:J "~· Gomi•••W44111'1 ,_. c-1Me11i
season. double figures. Sniith bad 18 points souTwwu7 • and Ladson 17 to lead the Aggie acor-Arun ... st:ao.o-....,,... c11v,, ~ Netre •--e. ls-.3 ina effort. L•m.•"·P.,..Alntl'1<..iu i 1t ltlu 71, 5MU 16 ,
CHARLOTTE. N .C. -Guard
Bruce Flowers acored lS points and
Stan Wilcox added 14 as No. 2 Notre
Dame rolled over Davidson 95-& .
Forwards Tracy Jackson and
Orlando Woolridge added 13 apiece
as the FlghUng Irish boosted their
season record to 7·1.
Davidson's John Gerdy. bit fOl' 26
point.a and Todd Haynes added 18 in
the Wlldcata' losing effort. Davidson
is now 4-9.
Ke11t11elqf, 9 .. 8f
LEXINGTON, Ky. -Freshman
Dwight Anderson scored seven points
B~l:J:::r layed without last~ear's Tues1s,Hous10t1S7 , Swc 1 d VI -1 J TeusAl.Mn,a.,ior.. ~ s ea er. nwe n, Te.us Tem "· TCU 1s '
who was attending his mother '!.i Fw
18
.• Tuh_ .. 1est.rn .sL.111
8
1n01
0
u,dJ funeral ln New York City .
\1-derWlt, ,,._,,7
NASHVILLE. Te nn. -Mike
Rhodes scored 24 points to lead Van·
'derbilt to an 88-87 Southeastern Con-
ference upset basketball victory over
fifth ranked Louisiana State.
Vanderbilt's regionally televised
victory, coupled with Tennessee's
loss to Mississippi State. gives Van-
derbilt the lead in the conference
race with a 3-0 SEC record.
Joe F1aber, coach o
the highly successfu
Costa Mesa HiJh Schoo
program, baa beef)
named cross countrY:
coach of the year on tbEC
prep level by th ~
California Coaches'
Asn. t . •
. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' ' • , • I , • ' '·
Someday, all
the hullabaloo
about fares and
seating will settle
down. And then
you 'II wonder
what happened
' to the service you
· used to get. Con-
tinental hasn't for-
gotten. We built
our reputation on
personal service;
after all we have
l to compete with
! far larger airlines,
so we have to
do better.
I You might say that service is an attitude. But
at Continental we say it's also the key to our survival.
, · -So in these days
I of confusion
over fares and
flights, Conti-
nental is sticking
to the kind of
service that built
our reputation.
For information
and reservations
call your travel
agent, company travel department or Continental.
To Chicago: 9:15 am, 11:35am. 2:25 pm, 7:0Qpm, J2:20am.
To Denver: 7:05 am, 12:00 noon, 2:35 pm, 5:00 pm, .
9:45 pm. 2:45 am . To Houston: 7:30 am. 11:00 am, 3:00 pm,
5:10 pm, 12:05 am.
( .
,
..
$
'' u
>I i I ,
• ' ,
1
"
'I ~l
" :J
(
.
•I .. .. ..
•
Our reputation for service was built on delivery,
not promises. We have one of the most modem fleets
in the busine~. DC-lO's and ?Tl's. So theres always
plenty of room to relax, store things overhead, or JUSt
move around. And we plan our schedules around the
times you like to fly, not just when we want to fly.
But we don't stop there, we cover the little
touches like free stereo on all flights. We pour only pre-
:1 .. . , •• .
Jt ~j
:1
mium liquor. The kind we
know you 'II like. And as a
pleasant sight for your eyes, we've added
handsome new uniforms. We really move our tail for you.
CONTINENTAL AIRLINES. ~---.---Tbe Proud Bird with the Odden 'llil. '
Los Angeles: m-6CXX> •Beverly HUis and SJn Fernando Valll!yi..9tf6.1<XX> •Burbank. Olendale and Pasadena, ~7181
Long Beach: 537-4400 •Ontario and Pomona: 988-6.5i4t • Oranae County: S37·3l t4 •Riverside and San BerMtdino Toll F~ at {800) 222-2810 · Sa.n Oabriol Valley. 579-421'0 • Santa Monica and South Bay: 646-2230
• ..
~
f
GOif Roantlap
Pro Tours Stay
•
Rooted in West
ByROWAJlOLBANDY ........... iiiilf
Wben lbe men·a POA tour mow. out of tbe Wal ln la
P'ebNU')', the LPGA wUl tak~ °""'for lbe moatb of March
and Hrb April ~lb 0 t.tratibl .... ol \cM.lrftamcnt play ln and aroundSout.bem C1Ufornt..
OM ol the m.;or bJahlllhta ~ the LPGA \OW' will be
th• SU0.000 Women'• Kemper Opell at Ilea. Verde Cowl·
try Club. March !9 t.hroqb Aprill.
T1IE nan EV NT WlU • lbo &wlar Golf
Cluaic •l Rancho rark Golt Course 111 Loi A.nl •
former aate ol the m~n·1 Los Mlel Open. Thi. one wtll
be from Marctl I th.roUCh u . fl\ve place. f01r wom n
• aa\at~W'I ln l.be UftS\at Clauic wue picked up ln an
LOPEZ
18-~ q_uafilyloa trial recetl)' •t
Roo(lbo Part. Canclidata bacl to
have baad!c:apa of flv or leu to be
e Ua•ble fa.' qu.alltytng.
Tbe hY to wcceu ol any or
all of theH toum-.nenia hu to be
th preN.nC• ol the •en11Uoo1I
Nancy &..opn. Lopea has stated
that she will defend her UUe lD tbe
Sunatar 8ul ahe \1 not committed
to tbe otMn at lbe moment even
thouah 1he h expected to
partlclpate la most ot them lead·
lna up to lbe Co&gate-Dinab Shor~
tourney ln Palm Sl>rinl• the week
after lhe Women's 'Kemper Open. • * • One ot the early events on the 1979 PGA calendar is the
90-hole Bob Hope ne.ert Ciassic, wbJch opeaa Wednelday on
lour courses in and around PalmSprinas.
Jack Nicklaus. heralded as the world's premier golfer,
makes a rare appearance In lbe Hope Clasalc, and lt could be
bis only West Coaat compeUUon tb1I year.
Nicltlaus. who pushed bis total ot major litJea to 15 with a
victory at the British Open last year, plaol to play ln only
about a dozen events thla season.
"I haven't played in the Hope in a couple of years or
more and I felt it was time I put it on my schedule,··
Nicklaus says.
~ Most of the game's top attrecUons will kick off their
seasons in the Hope marathon, including Tom Watson.
sometimes regarded as the heir-apparent to Nicklaus' title
as the world's best.
.... *
CBEVaOLET WILL SPONSOR a closest-to-the-pin
contett during 17 tournaments which will be televised by
CBS during W19 with tbe winner of each cont.ett recetving
the use or a Chevrolet for one year plM a Sl,000
scholanhlp to be awarded to the college ot the player's
choice in hia nain-e. ••• SE\'EIUANO MLLESTE&08 bas declined an invita·
lion to jolntbe.PGA tour but inteDda to def end his lille in the
Greensbory Open and expects to play ln the Doral-Eastern
Open. t.beTournament PlayersCbampionshlpand tbeAtlan·
ta Golf Classic in 1979. Otherwise, he will remain on the European tourna-
ment players circuit.
•••
MINNESOTA VDDNG ftGBT END Bob Tucker Will
be trying for his third Amertcan Airlines Golf Clauic vlc·
tory in four years. but doo't loolc for him to try tbe pro golf
tour when he fiaiabes bis football Dla.Ying daya.
When he won witb Grahi Nettles of the New York Yankees as his partner in uns, the duo bad a substantial
lead but last season, playing with Bobby Mu.rcer of tbe
Chicago Cubs, he fell the pressure on tbe final day.
"When r made the wlnnine two-foot putt on t.be last
hole. the hole looked like a dime to me and it was &ettipg
smaller all the time."
~••AreaC..nn
LAGUNA BEACB -Low net tournament at Casta Del
Sol Golf Course: A Flight-L Harvey Miller, 54; 2. William
Quinn, 58; 3. <tie) Charles Kaufman. Stanley Brown
William Hillbom, Paul Carey, 59. '
B Flight-1. (tie) Jack Lund, Allord' Petenoa. 54; a.
(lie) Harold Dunn, Sidney Newcomb, ss. C Flight,..1. Carl
Be<:kland, 48; 2. Alex Jrving, 53; 3. (tie) Lynn Cathcart,
Lew Minkel, Ralph Johns, 54. f;> Fligbt-1. _Harry Green. 45; 2. Garrett Fqan, 47; L.
H. Pint, 48. E Flight-I. Bill Lowry, 48; 2. Al Sctiweaig 50
3. David Tautnm, 52. ' '
F ..... P,,.-81
ANTEATERS' OUTLOOK • •
have allowed Jwrt 8.19 polnt.a In 10 aom , Oflly two in whJch oppo·
nent.a have M:Ored over 70 polJJta Tho maiqueatlon m1rtc hu
been the offense, whk b had been (eoer.a . only Ol.5 polnt.t en
outing bcfon• lullt week'• out.buntt rat.Md Muon averai• to 73.0.
"IT'S F.VIOF.NT Wt!'&E NOT. bit toam,'' .. ,. 'nit who wm
Kt.3rt M aenlor Yhll Jl<>ld n It cent.er. '"We're not• .,-eat rebound·
>nR team and th•t '" (Coins to butt ua and we've al.lo bad ttouble
f(cttlng the ball m 1 de tmd taJdn& tt to the bubt."
On the plUA Kidc, tne lrnprov•menta are many.
"We're betu•r offensive!)' •nd we're pl1)'1nc wttb more eon-hd.-.ncc." saya ntt. "I tblnk we're pf1ylq a acruuur pme too.
We're cuttlng down on tM wmovera hlttlna tbe open man, helplftg
ourselves defenslvely. We'rCJ doing thOM UW. tblftp lbal are belp.
lng us more than carller." ·
A big key ln the two victorit.'I lut 1"elf waa lhe pl1y ot IUald
Lester Jones, who 1cored 18 POtnta lo both out.lop and Memt to be
fully rerovered from the «rofn injury tb1t 1ldellned him Juat before
the 11easoo opcm4'r. Tilt haa allo,IOUA!n ocellent play out ot Lou.la
Uremond, a treshman who, Ullo J'Onel, 11 1n hl1 lint year with UCI.
BOLDEN RU BEEN 'ftl2 8COlllNG and ttboundln• leader
for UCJ, which w1ll also «O with Steve McOulre al forward. Both
are lettermen. 1be other 1tortlng berth ta up ror ~ruba between
Steve Rodgen, questionable wtth kne~ problomJ, Vic Conyera and
Quentin Brown.
Rodgers and Drown were wtth the club laat y ar when the Ant-
eaters went l-12 lo their Initial PCM campaian and flnllhed last.
Thia year. tbe team baa tet a 1oal ol movlna up at leaal oine notch.
""We're looklDt t.o lmprove our finl1h:-'' ••ra_ 'nl't. "We'd Uko
to be in the best ponlble poUtJon when tbe PCM tournam.ut
c.omes around and th.at'• ou.r objective. II we ftnllb ~here frosn
f1raltoseventb.llwillbe1nlmPfYVementoverlaatyev. •
•
One.Ram
Selected
All-pro
NEW YORK tAP>-Tbe Pitts· bura~ Sleelera and Dallas
Cowboys, who meet to decide
the N aUonal Football Le~ue
ch1mptoo8hlp on Jan. 21, pfaced a tot.al ol a!x playen on Tbe As-sociated Press AU-pro leam for
1878. Only one player from the NFC
runner.up Los Angeles Rams -
defensive end Jae& Youngblood
-was deemed worthy or the
All-pro fU"St team.
The American Football Con-
ference champion Steelers led
all teams by placing four
players -wide receiver Lynn
Swann, center Mike Webster,
quarterback Terry Bradshaw
and outside linebacker Jack Ham
-on the2S-playerteam.
FREE SAFE'l'Y Cliff Harris
and tackle Randy White
represent the National Con-
f ere nee champion Cowboys on
tbe team seleded U.Ough vOUng
by a national panel or sports
writ.en and broadcaaten.
Pittsburgh's placing
represented lhe trend in the
first-team selections, as 18 AFC
players and seven from '4e NFC
were cboeen.
Bradlbaw quarterbacked the
Steelers to 16 victories in the l8
regular season and pOstseuon
games played on the way to
their Super Bowl XIU meedng
witb the Cowboys at Mlami. He
finished the regular season as
the leading passer in the AFC
and had 2B touchdown passes -
many o( them to Swann, whose
61 receptioaa placed him third
among AFC pus catcben.
Running baa Earl Campbell
of tbe Houston OUen and de-
fensive end Al Baker of lhe
Detroit Lions -two p~ers who enjoyed sensatJonal e cam-
paigns Jn 1978 -a so w_:r.e
named to the first team. •
* * *
U£1 Fof.eeaSt 7th hi ft.£4
BJ DNIE CASTILLO
CMIMOl6ty ...... M.tff
There are three dl1Unct.
classes of baaketball t.eaan1 tn
tbe PaclOc Coat Athletic A.sin.
th11 year: the haves who will be
ftgbUng to Ila)' on top the have·
raota who -.yill be flgbttna to 1t•Y out of the bottom and the 'n-
)ehveen1 who need no uplana~ Uon.
Tbe first lfOUP includes Lona
Beach State, which used to win
the PCAA every year; Cal State
Fullerton. ~ Chld reUa team
whlch helped out the cont•~ on tbe utJon.a1 butwtball map:
aad Utab Sf.a~. the MW kid On
the blodl which bu an the tOOll
to make It an lotentllnl race.
Hl1tory and four returnlna
starura stve Long Beach the
ed1e.
Tb• b1ve-not1 lJ\clud• UC
lrvtoe, which lack• btl-"l and
C!ltpertence, and San .10M State.
wbkh b., 1et to nhlbtt a de-renae.
Tbt in·belweena-UC Santa
Barbara, Fresno Stale and
Paetflc-havo too much talent to
tall ln'° tlM cellar but not
enou1b to wlQ con•lsteniy
eoau1b on the road to challe.rutc
for th• crown.
Here'a how the Dally Pllot hao·
dlcaps the race:
..... ,...._ ~a..
1.1.Me•..ai .... aw1 c .......... ,., 11 t.C.tlt .... ,111 ....... Ct>I) ....... ....,... 14 ~Ultflll*lt-11 IOI,.,~ M
4,lltt-..... IMl l.lltt\tioolllf'K. ~I
s.uc~•k••($.•1 Com111tOO'titfQllO '°'' • Ptcltk 14"11 O.Ctlvl119 "tCOfd ti-I
t UC:l•vlMC441 Ullt.,0\<11 '°'' 1.ltlt~.._.,(>fl Hot•l'r•.,.r .. ,
GOLF'/ FOOTBALL I BUSINESS
Demand Outstrips Cost
Desire for Bigger Homes, Tax Breaks Noted
NEW YORK tAP > -Tb
av•••• l!rlc:e ot a new ho'" la almoet tf0.000 ~ then at the
ltart ol lat year •hd tbe c:e>m·
billed lncreue ln both price and mort1• rate. eoWd mean a dllf•rnce ol almoet flOO in tbe mODthly 1110111a1e paymen.ta.
De;tptte that, nearly 2 m11llon
new boulfnl unlta wen bullt lut year, a new reeord. That baa Md
many ecoaomlltl to revlle their
ldeu about tttndll In home bu.Y· tna.
WHILE BOlJSJNG con.slrUC·
Uon ls expected to slow in the
race or doubJe.dJglt mortgage
ra~es. the combination of tbe
wider awareness or a hous~ as
an inflation hedge and tM con·
tinued ava.llabillty of money to
finance mortgages tor most or
tbt! year led to s'ITT)rising hous-
ing 1trengt.h in 1978.
The Federal Home Loan Bank
Board reported last week lhal
by December, lbe average eo&t
ol a new home bad risen to
$6'1,600 and the average effective
mortgage rate was a record
10.02 percent.
The average cost was $58,000
in January 1978 and the
01ortgage rate was nearly one
percentage point lower at 9.lS
percent. Calculations on the
monthly payment aasume a 20
(
.-.----------tbe more ~t can be deduct·
i"rl'ltJI:!• ruER J elf on federal and atate tax "-"'' ""t.J m form1. Property taxea alto can be deducted."
-----------Auumlna a cont.lnuous rate or
percent down payment on a 30-
year mortgage.
TftE DIFPERENCE In
rnonthlypaymenta -$97 a month.
or about•.ooooverthellfeofthe
loan -are ooly l"OUlh Jul.des to a
typical experl~ce since rates
vary widely from region to region
and to do down paymeQt terms.
But they poin1 up the rapid in
create in housing costs due ln
p~ to a demand. not only for
more homes, but for bigger and
better homes by those in a posi·
Uon to trade up from one house
lO another.
In the process. new homes
have increasingly included more
baths. larger garages. larger
Iota aod such other extras as
central alr conditioning or built-
in appliances.
IN A STUDY last year. E.
Scolt Maynes, chairman of the
Department of Consumer
Economics and Hous ing at
Cornell University,. pointed to
one key reason that some people
have been able to trade up:
"Inflation favors debtors, as
does the income tax system. The
larger the mortgage payment
inflation at & percent and asaum·
Ing the buycr·a income keeps
pace with that, Maynea projects
the mortg~e dollar wlll lake on·
ly hall u much ot famlly ln·
come in 12 yeara u it did ~t the
s tart aod only one.quarter &5
much25yea.ralnlbefuture.
BVT, HE NOl'Jl!S, in pracUce.
the system allo provides bluer
breaks in the higher tu
bracketa.
"A family with an income of
SlS,000 saves ~ percent or each
dollar deducted, a $30,000 family
saves 4S percent and a ~.000
family saves 60 perces».1 ''
because of the effect of aciled
tax brackets. he wrote ln a study
published a year ago.
But the current' levels or
prices and Interest ra~ are
already malting It dirticult for
some people to come up with
payments or convlncing others
to d e lay home purchases ln
hopes or lower interest rates
later .
INDUSTRY organizations
have been forttasllng a d~llne
<Stt HOUSING, Pa1e 85>
Beef Priees to Rise
WASmNGTON (AP) -The average retail
price of beef. 23 percent higher tban a year
earlier. may rise 14 percent more lhls year. the
Agriculture Departme nt says.
Preliminary figures. based on a blended all-
cut basis. put December's average retail price at
$1.92 a pound, up 23 percent from Sl.56 in
December 1J117, the department sa.kl.
SHAJlPLY IDGREB llAUE'I' prices for live
cattle, ~ch rose about 30 percent in 1978, were
res&10nsJble, the department said.
Consumers can expect retail beet prices over·
all to rise 10 percent to 14 pereent. this year, de-
partment expert.a say, adding that pork prices
U.S. Panel Seeks
LNG Comment
By Capl&ol News~
Comments on proposed California liquefied
natural gas terminal facilities will be received in a
public hearin~ on Jan. 16 in Santa Barbara.
.Samuel z . uordon, Federal Energy
Regulatory Commlssk>n administraUve law judge.
has scheduled the meeting in the Santa Barbara
County administration bulldl.ng, beginning at 9:30
a .m .
THE SAFETY, &EUABIUTY and environ-
mental effects of constnlction and operation of an
LNG terminal are among the issues to be con·
sldered at the hearing.
The facilities would be used to r~ive, s tore
and regasify LNG received from Indonesia and
southern Alaska. The gas would be used in'
CaWomia.
Pacific Indonesia LNO Co. bas been condi-
tionally authorized by the Department or Energy
to import LNG from Indonesia. Its affiliate.
Pacific Alaska LNG Co., hits pending an applica-
·lion to receive LNG from southern Alaska.
PERSONS WISHING TO s peak at the hearing
must submit written statements to be received no
later than Wednesday to David Huard, Com·
mission Starr Counsel. 82S N. Capitol St. N.E ..
Wublncton. O.C. 200!6.
may average 2 percent to 5 percent higher than In
1978.
Increases in hamburger prices are expected to
be among the steepest this year because few rel·
atively lean cattle, from Which ground ~er
comes, are being ~laugbtered. Many cattle pro-
ducers have slashed their herds and it wm take al
least twoorthree years to rebuild them.
DECEMBER'S RETAIL PRICE average was
up 2.2 percent from the average $1.88 a month
earlier. The figures were for U.S. Choice beef.
which comes from grain-fed animals and not from
the cattle that wind up as hamburger.
December's average retail pork price dipped a
fraction of a cent to Just under Sl.SO a pound. But
prices were up L5 percent from Sl.31 a pound in
December 1J117.
Retail pork prices this year may top 1975's rtt-
ord of $1.!i8, depending on hog production and
conaumerdemand.
HAVE
YOU BEEN
LOOKING
FOR ./
HER? We ore pleoaed to
announce that Joanne
Hunter hos been
appointed our new
Escrow ()fftcer.
Many of .11ou knew he when she hod o SJmilor
po.itlon 01 another local bonk. so we are sure
you wllt agrtt that she ia one of t/Nt real
&crow expeTts m Orange County# Now she
IS ready to handle your escrow progroms In her
usual friendly and ejfnnt &UOV
While her offfce is located a l our Fountain Volley
branch al 10760 Womer Auenue, slw will also be
rolcrng core of the escrows lhol originate at our main
o/ftce m COSllJ Me.so. Her new office phone
number I• (714} 963-3324. She will be pleased to
heor from you. and Is ready to serve you' • SOUTH COAST NATIONAL BANK
849 Sunflown Streel, Costa Mao, Co. 92626
10760 Womer Avenua, Fountain Volley, Co. 9'1708
Statements should include name, address.
quallflcatlonaw-natu.re of iaterett In the matter. a
brtef atAU!ment of the views to be presented, and
an lndJcaUon whether t.he ~ will be under
oath. .. .............................. ...
CASH
FAST
Homeowners:
Loan• arranged for any reeeon. Credit,
no problem .
Borrow on your
equity. Call now for
courteous, fast
Information.
C7 I 41 547·7 I SI AMlllCAH
MorfgllgtCo.
.. "
OUR lllVESIMaTGIOWlll
I HISl'THAD
JUSrUPS.
C...tooUrsen'r•_. find_,•
o M.U.1JOlllS1 And out why N~ Equity
Funds is the leading second 10
14
10
•
b
trust deed Investment firm 1n
Orange C.OUnty.
And out why more and more
people are making their first choice
1n Investments a second trust deed.
And out why that in our
10 yea.rs In business not one of our
Investors has ever failed to eam
at least 10% on his money.
And out ~Y NeuJpOrt Equity
funds Is e leader in. investment
11 -,., .,,, trust deeds In Orange County.
We'll hew \Mne and cheese end & team of lnvestJ1ient prof~
to answer ell your quesdons. I l Attending our semlrw Phonel.10-5700 Ouue:ralwwOI be:
Plaoes you under absolutely , Wednetda.v. January lO. 4-&:IO P.~M
obi "-Marriot Hotel-tOO NeWl!Ort CenleT Drive. no lgauvn. j Sak!O "1:"-Newoort Bea~b
But ~ 1s Umlted. so I Wednada:J. JaJMW7 11. 4-5:IO P.11.
please call for a reseivatfon. I Red Onk>o--31711 ~I T~i1~
'Newport f.quify 'Tunds ·Inc.
.......... I IUfl ....... lllPlrfJJ
Offk:" I"~ lm<ll. kum•ln \ltlMy. U.11t Hdk.,.....,,,.... end a.. Dlolp.
,.,, H'~Ont<.UTYllN1", n,..,.~.....,,.,,_,,_.,.......,.. lit tiUa.11 """
....
I I l .
I
I
I
I I I I •
.
~:-
• ..
I
!l f
l
Ii
•
~.Jenuwyt.1t79 OAA.Y'"-OT
StallDitY., Money Mark Leaders
NEW YORK CAP• -K1'1
married. Pf'Ob&bl1 ln hit eo..
and probably mak.t1 more tlum
'200.000 • fUf'.
Cbant'fll .,.. he bu at le an
underlf*dwite de11" and be
haa •l*'l bi.a enure WOt'klftl Ufi
with ono nnn.
THAT'S 11l£ profile, drawn from two NOlftt 11.LtVey1, of a
· typical eNd elCM'UU ot of
Amttlca'a blHe•t lnduttrlal
companlee.
The, IW"YIYI W condU4:ted
by Kw-"'rey lntem10on1I. •
Los Aft'eles baa d xec:utl"o rtcruiUQa nrm. and lb Coa·
fcrt!Dco Board. a New York·
b1Hd blllloeu r search or·
llMHUOn
Kom·F't'ny 11t red lnfortn•·
lion laat mootb oa ~blef •xttutlva of top 25 rim> n
rortune maautne'a u l of lhe
nation"• 500 larc-t lnduslti&ls
TD (\I • ARE paid
baod~ly for l.Mlr effort.a Ac
cordioa b> a Conl~n e Board
poll of olar1 at about 1.eoo
major U.S. componleta. the
av ra111 ~hie! exec1.1ttv at a
lar1e manulactunna firm re·
cetved *341.000 In salary nd
ot.ber (OmpensaUon tn 1m. the mo t· r ctl\t year for wtuch
Telefile . Computer
Reorganizes Staff
Teletile Computer Corp .. lrvln • has announced u company re·
organizaUon 11ppointment or a new pN'sident and ~n 1nf10x of or·
®rs thal the company 11ys should help offset rJ11cal yeur 1978
l01&es.
The Jut flacal year, which ended on Sept. 30. was expected t.o
show a loss In excess of $4 million, compared wttb a net profit or
Sl.126,867 the prevtoos year. according to S.V. Edens, chairman.
Though In default of bank covenants, Teleflle has been
negotJallng wlth its prtme lender to modify its lending arrange.
ments. It bas no assw-ance that the negotiations can be concluded
on an acceptable bash1. Edens said.
. The organiiallonal c,hanges include the setting up or a
separate operation to accelerate the development and production
of oew computers.
flarold E. Eden has been named president or the computer
operation ..
Assuming the pogltlon of president and chief executive officer
of Telente ~mputer Product.a Inc. was Dav1d T. Scott, formL·r pre.
sident of ltrterstate Electronics Corp .• Anaheim.
Scott has responsibility for day-to-day operations. including.
marketing, engineering, manutactbring and support activitie~
f'roaPage84
HOUSING DEMAND. • •
fllUret available. kom·l'lny found that none of
the cbW. y,.u under ~ years ol
•••· wbiM U -or 52 J)Cltceat -were between eo •nd M. El~
of ti•• ctuef• ~re botwcen IO and» ud one wu ln tbe f.5.or·
over dMI. Nam• were not d.ll·
cloted ln tither 1urvey.
ALL ti aoEn are mate and
•re married, althou•b tbe Korn·
ferry 1urvey did not Poll the ex·
e(Utlv• to flod lf any bad been
married mort1 than once.
"There are obvfou.s treftds ot
ataiblllty" ln the 1roup, aald lbe
tlrm ·, vice prealdent of re·
aearch, John Susaman
Elah~n of the executives
never woried Cor not.her com·
pan y, the aurvey uld. The
chida have ~n with their cur·
r nt emoloyef'j Crom ts to 40 yeaan. wlth an average stay ot
30 92 yean.
J . &OBERT FLlJOa.
c hairman of Irvine's Fluor
Corp .• an eniineerlng and con·
:st ructlon company, received
$1 ,121.000 in 1977 to lead the
chlef executives' salary list.
The salary leader among in·
dustrlal firms Is 274th.ranked
G.D. Searle & Co. 's president.
Donald H. Rumsfcld.
A cco rding to Forbes
magailne's aMual salary sur·
vey. the drug firm's chief re·
ceived $1 , 113,000 in salary,
bonuses and other compensation
in 1977. He is not an example or
an executive who stayed at one
company, ha ving served as
secr etary or defense and as
former President Ford's chief or
staff. among other government
JObs.
THOMAS A . Murphy ,
chairman of General Motors
Corp .. the naUon's largest in·
dustrlal firm, recel vcd $996,000
The c hief executives in
o f U percent to 25 percent in
new houslDg starts this year
from nearly 2 million ln · 1978. ·
They also anticipate mortgage
interest rates that may peak al
. . general are as well educated as
Milton Hudson. a senior vice they are well paid. Only four or
president at Morgan Guaranty the 2S checked lo the Korn-Ferry
"Trust·Co:; ·noted:thal ·~re .th.an .... sur.vey. have_.no. C::QJ.l~g~ degrees,
40 million Amenc~ns will reach while 21 have undergr'a<luafo
the primehome·buyingngeof30 d egrees and 13 completed
11. S percent.
But the trend over the longer
run is likely to be continued de·
mand for homes. That Is likely
t.o squeeze young home buyers.
in the 1980s as the post· war graduate school. ·
babies growolder. or those going to graduate
"TRANSLATING need into ef· school, five had master or busi·
fecLive demand will involve ness admlnistration degrees,
I recent remarks before the
ate Commlttee on Banking,
ousing and Urban Affairs,
overcoming some formidable with three or the five M._B.A. ·.s
hurdles if serious inflation coming from Harvard Umvers1·
persists. especialJy for the first· ty. Five bad degrees as masters
time home buyers... or science.
Free ideas
for future gl'O\Vth.
Today's as good a time as any to start
things growing. So stop by any Allstate
Savings office and we1l give you a copy of
Better Homes and Garden's, ''Container
Plants'.' You won't have to fork out any green,
either. <It's free.)
This 96-page booklet is filled with
color pictures and rules of green thomb for
growing portable plants, indoors or out.
Learn how to start a wa ter garden, a rose
garden, a rooftop garden, even a vegetable
garden, all in potted c:Ontainers.
To get your free book, write your
name and address in the coupon below.
Then bring it down to Allstate Savings.
While you're at it, ask us about the many
ways we can make your money grow, too.
Our interest rates are higher than any
ba'nk's.
We're Allstate Savings and Loan, with
80 offices statewide l-0 serve you. Drop by
one today and take ndvantage of all the
capital ideas we've got growing for you. l f o;-o fre; ooJ;y"";;f :-c;;.-M-; flnnll" -1
I brlnR this in to Alletate S.vlflil. I
I N11rnc I
And if you want to see how
good your garden could grow,
we're having special plant
displays at all the branches,
with containers court y ot Gtuw« SAVI NOS I I I Address I
I C11y • Zip_ I
NE!WPORT BEACH
One Corporate Plaza
..
..
~ - - ------. -.. -..... - - J
. l
$1,121,000 IN 1977
Fluor: HftMtt Paid
.... ,,.,._.
INDUSTRY 'S LEADER
Aumsfeld: S1 ,113,000
,. ... ,......
AT LARGEST FIRM
OM't Murphy: 1998,000
Consumer Suits Mulle~
WASHINGTON IAP1 -The
U.S. Supreme Court has agreed
to decide whether consumers
may sue when forced to pay
higher prices because or alleged
antitrust law violations.
Facing an issue carry ing
enormous Impact for consumers
and business alike. the court will
review a ruling that onJy corn·
mercial entitles. and not private
consumers. have a right t.o sue
in such cases.
AME RICAN consumers spent
an estimated Sl.2 trillion for
personal. nonbusiness needs last
year.
The justices were urged by
Justice Department lawyers and
officials from 41 states t.o strike
down the lower court's ruling in
making the dedsion announced
Monday.
The test case came from Min·
nesota. where Kathleen Reiter
sued five hearing aid manufac·
turers in 1975. Essentially , her
laws uit charged that the
manufacturers illegally placed
anti·compelitive restraints on
distribution and saJe of hearing
aids.
THOSE O..LEGAL restraints
hiked t.be prices consumers were
forced to pay. said the s uit.
which was filed on behalf of
hearing·aid buyers.
Lawyers for the manurac·
turers -Sonotone. Be ltone
Electrics. Dahlberg Electronics.
Textron and Radioea r
challenge Ms. Reiler's righ~ to .
sue under a section of the
Clayton Act, a major · antlt~
law.
The section says that persolt$
injured In their "business or
property" may sue for triple
damages under the law. Tfle
manufacturers interpreted that
wording as meanJng that only
persona alleging that their bUft·
ness or commercial interests
were injured mav sue. .:
NOTING THAT the U.S.
Supreme Court gnve forei'1l
countries the right to sue for lti·
ple damage last year under UJe
Clayton Act, her appeal said: •
". . .Such governments a~
now guaranteed continued
standing while Ame rican cod·
sumers are t.o be denied access
to the courts of this nation. Such
a result is lncredible.
----------------------------------------------~. •
. "
Ove r The Counter
MASO u.....,.
""' 14''> ~.,, 23
)>1. lip• a11d Do.,.. l
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MUTUAL FUNDS
..
I
' ,.
I,
' • I
I!
1!
• I • CWLV~OT
NYSE ' COMPOSITE
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Toligh '79 Due ;
Benefits Eyed
By SYLVIA PORTE&
What will 19'19 mean In terms of your pocketbook. job
stturlty. COil of U vln& and other vital money aspect.a?
It will bo the toughest year alnce tho slump of the mtd-19709 and that waa the most Revere bu.sJnes21
downturn of the ent!N post.World Wur ll era.
YET, IF YOO RANDLE IT riaht on your own. and 1r
tbe Whlle Houe remains determined to work walh an
equally determiMd CQDares., to tackle tho funqamental
challenge ot lnllaUon, It could tum out to be a rewflrdlng
year. too.
Tbe question ls not whet.her 1979 will be a t.oua,b year
It wUl.
It will be blotched by a rate of lnflation averagtne 8 per
cent or more. It will be threatened by un upsurge In Job-
lessness and bankruptcies .as th • p~cc of bwslntiiss turnis
downward. It wlll be made even more difficult by unan-
ticipated shortages of
euentlal goods and servlc~. It wtU be an
economy laboring un·
• der the triple burden Of
an aged expansion, re-
cord lnteTeSt rates and
steep lnllaUon.
Money's
Wol'th
The only questions: --How grim wlll we permit these adverse forc~s to
become?
To what extent wnt we make progress in coopcral· mg with other industrial nations In curbing inflation and
stabilizing the monetary srst.em so the system can support
an ever·growing volume o world trad~?
-Wlll President Carter have the guts to refuse to be
lobbied b)I-big-time labor and business into caving in on an
anti-inflation program ?
In the immediate future, here arc pocketbook certain-
ties and probabilities:
(l) mE COST OF LIVING WILL continue oppressive
ly high and it's more than possible that with price pres-
isures •building in food, energy and other basic raw
materials, we'll move back to double·dtUlt inflallon rates
before any easing or inflation begins.
You can beat it by obeying the fundamental rules for
buying food. clot.bing.~heller. other essentials . Shop the
food specials, subslilut\? and switch lo Jess expensive but
equally nutritious foods, take advantage of seasonal sales .
look for bargains in discount stores. s tock up on bas ic
styles in clothing during clearances.
<2 l Unless you're in a recession-proor field or art.'
uniquely protected. your job wUl be less secure than in years.
Honestly appraise your"job security. your value to your eom
panx. If you'r e vulnt1rable, start to r educe your
vulnerability.
(3) IF YOU'RE TRYING TO SELL a house in a sub-
urb, you'll find this more difficult. because of tbc sonening
of the economy, the s tiff cost and rising scarcity of
mortgage credit. and the climbing costs of transportation
The same applies if you're trying to sell land or to build
ne w ho uses.
But if you're on the buying side and have the funds to
offset the adverse factors, you may rind 1979 the best
period In a long time.
{4) Borrowin~ money will be hard and costly, with
high interest rates and the Federal Reserve System intent
on clamping down on credit to brake inflation.
But saving money will bring you the highest returns in
year s, with record or near-record rates. What hurt!> tht' -
borrower, in short, he lps the saver -a perfect illus trulion
of the two sides of the meaning of 1979's economy.
Stock Market Rally
Starts to Roll Aga in
I
NEW YORK IAP) -The stock market rallied toduy,
reviving its 1979 rally a rter a modest setback Monday
The Dow Jones averai.te or 30 industrials . ofr 2 59
points Monday,plcked up3.29to831.43today. Alone paint the
Dow index was8poiots ahead.
Gainers outpaced losers by more than a 2·1 margin
amon" New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
SlfH"lu ;,. Tlw
!ipolllgltl
I • •
PU Up 1U Up 11.1
Up ••.s Up IU Up IU Up II.I
8g l!0·J Up I .I Up .It Up 9,$ Ug :l
Up a 1
UP iJ 8: u
UI> t·' ug ·• u~ ' 8., 1.4 Up 1 J Up 1t
"-1.0
NCW VOAI< IAPI
Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appear in the Daily Piiot.
WHAT .tMl:.IC 010
NEW '1'0111< IA"'I
Nl!!W VORK IAPI T .... Nt w Yoo·"'°'.
EHIWll\llr f-ll'O IM11" Odd IOI lr•n\M
UOfu I>~ prl~ij>el <H~,.r• tor Mo<Kl•Y
Pure"•"'• "' 141.7), ~ .... , .... "''~' OI UI~) '"°"" of'Cl..oinQ 1,lll W..r•• M>IO "'°"
Gold Q .. t atlo "•
. ' ..
'
I
• TON•GHT·s LATEST LISTINGS Television T-., ..... , ••• .,. D•IL• PILOT .i. .:..:::..:~~~~~~~-------=----------_;.---------------------------~~----~=.:..:~-=..!.~, ,---------------~~----------------------------------------------------------.· ! I I '>I ) \\
IVINtNO ... , .. __.
Ml-tcn'Otm
..... ·-laM • ,...,.. ---~---°' ~ ............... ·NM~ l.OI ~~\It.
.._Yon Knld<e
• T'4I IMDYIMMCM ...... *--W.t\al· .,.,....""'""° ...... to .,. """' lnNf•ted .,,
NeeUlfwl .....
• l~ttO'IAH ;fMCllOO OY9'1A8\'
O"'"t e~ I'• •nllle l-.
• ::awe> WtQ*O
".\1'14110!YIY"
C99Nl'Wtl
Aec~
*ID I l.OW WC'V LI.ICY Qllltl io.o 'Ill' _..,
wt'8I' 1t1e tr• 10 t-c> out ,,.. Meta
1=..~
nMOUOH THI .MTI
.. ~~In
A f'OM'a VIiion" (J)NBA~
..... Or~ .lat.I ~ San
C>itoo~
Pa11lc T l t1t e
111 ~ OllfflN
Oue111 Victor eoroe.
l tnd .. y W ef>llet, "on ..,,_.._
Sle\.\-ardes Kurcn Black <nght> und
crew member hrit> Norris attempt to
brtnJ: In n crlppled jumbo Jet in
"Airport 1975," to be shown tonilfht at 9
on NBC. Channel 4.
hJO I :l~ GAME
MCNEcW9
WOAl...DHUNGP
~
"Cry Of A Hunlng WOfld·
'I'm HUngty. " (Contlnuee
untl 12:30 • m.)
O acuan rl List ings
8 KNl<T (CBS) Los Angeles 8 KN8C (NBC) Los An941lei>
I KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles
KABC-lV(ABC} Loa Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego Cl KHJ.1V (Ind.) Loa Angeles «I KCST (ABC) San Diogo
I KTlV (Ind.) Los Angeles
KCOP· lV (Ind.} Los Angeles
• KCET-lV (PBS) Lo& Angeles
• KOCE·lV (PBS) Huntington Beach
• di HOU.YWOOO
eQUAN.I
I ADAM-ti
28TOHIOHT
HEW8CHEQ(
l:OO 8 PAHA CHASE
Pr4Hnfdt•m jltten ·lead
one of IM I .... atlldenll 10
'*• a '"'°' M>d obtMn old l<lt!Oatleld Pam ~lion.. Ci) GAAHDPA 000 TO
WA9"1NOTON
A Clear lrlenCI (Au•
MeClanahen) ot Sen,
Keiley' a la at'r911e<I fOf
1n1.nenng w1111 an Ofl-duty
pollce Offlcer 8 MOVIE
• • "The T rampler1"
( 191515) Oordon Sco11.
JOMl)I\ Collon A IOldiet
'9tUtna lo hla father'•
~ atlw the Clllll We1,
eeuaino problem• ent1no
trom the lather's patrt&r·
cny (2 hrs)
A Toueh of Cla~
'Chase' Rate d Low But Suroives
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD fAP > -The
erudite, distingui s h e d John
Houseman, 75, seems the most un·
IJkeJy of people to be starring in a
television series. But then, "The
Paper Chase" is not your ordinary
series.
It has no gelatinous chests, no
chases Cexccpt arter Jaw college
grades>. oo gun/ights, no leering sex.
Predictably, it also has no ratings.
Yet it proved the TV season's mira·
c le by being extended to a full
season. This despite ratings usually
accorded documentaries about the
energy ctisls.
Somebody up there at CBS head·
quarters must like it. So does a small
legion of Paper Chasers who find the
show's wit, intelligence and humani·
ty an o asis in the t e levis ion
wasteland.
HOUSEMAN CREATED the role
of Prof. Charles W. Kingsfield Jr. in
the 1973 movtc, winning the Oscar for
supporting act.or in his acting debut
al 70. He continues to play the stern
but fair·minded law professor weekly
when the series isn't pre-empted
by spedals aimed at pumping up
CBS ratings .
"The numbers arc a ppalling,"
Houseman admitted. "But I think It
is deplorable that
the newspape rs
play up the rat·
ings as if the ract
that Show A beat
Show B was the
only important
thing.
··Ever ything
has become a con-
les t. People are
more interested in
l ea rning h o w
HOUHMAN many mlllions a
paperback sold than in r eading the
book. Success in numbers is becom-
ing dangerous ,.
"THE PAPER Chase" seemed
bt"aded up suicide alley from the
beginning, scheduled ai;iainst the
ABC monoliths "Happy Days" and
"Laverne and Shirley.'' As Milton
Berle ls inclined to say, "I wouldn't
give that spot to a leopard.·•
"Historically, that time slot is a
graveyard," said Houseman. "But l
thought we could succeed if we could
secure and keep a n aud ience of those who probably wouldn't tum on their
sets it we weren·t on.
"I was not s urprised when the
show was extended for a full se~son.
All indications were that it wouJd be.
The reviews were the best of any
series this season, nnd CBS took ads
with the message: 'Who says there is no quality in televis ion?' The
network could scarcely have can·
celed the show after that.."
HOUSEMAN WAS able to conduct
his own rating service during a re·
cent trip to New York. He reported
that dozens of people stopped him in
the Manhatta n streets to thank him
for the show and express their hope
that it wouJd continue. A recurring
comment: "I learn something from it every week."
"The great problem or the show is
in k eeping the quality up,"
Houseman added. "My reeling Is that
if you do go down, go down with good
shows."
"The Paper Chase" was originally
based on the novel by John Ray
Osborn Jr. The movie was written
and directed by J ames Bridges, who
had the brilliant idea of casting his
friend Houseman. Bridges also wrote
the pilot script for the series.
HOUSEMAN HAS had a long and
distinguished career as a producer,
ranging rrom the Me rcury Theater
with Orson We lles to such Cilms as
"The Bad and the Beautiful." "Lust
for Life," "Executive Suite" and
"Julius Caesar.·• He was asked if he
didn't succumb to his producer in·
stincts during the course of the TV
series.
"Only at the beginning," he ad·
milted. "I fell that the scripts for the
first nine shows had gone wrong. The
writers were injecting melodrama
and televiaion plots where they <Udn 't
lelong. Jim Bridges agreed , and we
were able to turn back to what the
movie and the pilot had been, a
strange blend of comedy and serious·
nesa."
Grace Cuts Kids' Record
MONACO <AP) -Princess Grace o( Monaco
hu cut a children's record entitled ''The Blrd of
the North and the Bird or the Sun" which will be
released ln the next few days in the United Stat.ea
and Europe. One silfe or the record la tn Frencb ·
and the other in Engll•h.
Proceeds from ~ales of the record wUl so t.o a . _
children's organization not yet dM>een by tho prin·
ceas, a palace spokesman said.
, .
•O HNlrtOAYI JoelW ~ ~ w dale
..... ~ lltnh<l.V
C*1Y It running eround
wttll anothel Qlf1 (Al
• W0N.0 MUNGll'
~IOOHT'OI
• WVlt
• 11 • "e cr•t•ol• Air
CofMIMd" (tete) ~ 9,_.,,, J\#19 ~ ""
un1*"61it "'°'** injury ,_,ttl In tM doWnlall OI •
~¥IOll'nln'~lf f0tee
end llMebll ~· 11
1111) • ,AU. Of tMM.fl
"Indian ~ OI An
(l'l'llMrOf" AQlnQ , flfll
JOe9I ~ .,. --"'
n111on of hll h•lr.
ArCflOUll• '• OINl>d. II 8¥.-0 • LDTHIWINO
~•AP'~• Of
faith "' the ..,.. of llve p.oote .,, ~I.cl.
UO. aJ LAVINtE & ..-..v
L_... l.ita Medfy In low
wllh • ~but ""4• SN<...,-• hto1p to 9111 • date
wrtllllle~
I JOt<Efl W'lD
CUt"PE' M:VtlW
t:tO (I) C88 ~ • • "Alo ~.. ( 19101
John W1yne, "-"nll*f
O'Neil. A totmer CM4 WAI
offlC« .-. ~ on
lhe lrellOfl wno e4klMd
the dMth ot hlt friend
8 NllC MOVIE
• • "Airport 1975" (197')
C11WnOt1 HettOtl. Karen
8iaci1 A 11-WdNa It
10<C4'ld to tMle CYVe< the
control• of a )umbO let
tlt&f the p!ane't pilot II
Cflllcally lnju(ed In • mid·
llrc~.(R) 8 111 ~8
COMPANY
J-1 goes Imo • raoe
when the find• Jec:ll In lhe
same bed as hef volltlno
younger ti at et I Al 0 TIC T~ OOUGH 9 P88MOVIE
• • • "Volceno An
Inquiry lnlo The Lile And
Oeeth Of Malcolm Lowry"
I 197&) Documenl•ry
Excerpla lrom Lowry't
"Undef The Volc6no" are
~led by int..-.lewl
wltn tamlly membef• anCI
cloee eequainlances
l.Anentan ·
John Wayne stars as
a s h e riff b a ttling
co rru pt carpC't ·
ba gger s in t h e
movie "Rio Lobo."
airing tonight at 9 on
CBS, Channel 2.
Star Signed
HOLLYWOOD CAP>
-Anne Archer will sta r
as Btlly Elkhorn In the
CBS minJ series based on Judith Krantz' best
seller . "Scruples." Miss
Archer recently starred
tn "Paradise Alley" and
"The Pirate."
TUBE TOPPERS
KlU 0 6:00 -NBA Basketball. The
Lakcrs viSlt the New York Knlcks.
ABC D U : 30 -.. Forty Carats." Uv
Ullman pfoys a fortytsh divorcee who
~els involved with a 22-year-old man
1 Edward Albert> in this 1973 comedy.
KTLA 8 12:30 -"Patt.ems." Rod
Serling's fumed t'eleplay is recreate<i in
this 195fl movie with Van Heflin and Ed
Begley.
GD MMTERPllCI
THIATM
' Tiie ~ Of Oullt
StrMt: A Mtllet Of~"
l.OulH '1 pl1n1 tor a
OOCJl'mel'I dellghl relUCt In
an unptauanl IC4lndlll. ,,.,, 12 of 16)
t-.30 8 Ill TAXI
The eabb!M hit•• "worll·
Ing girt" to m.,-,y L.attie
end .. .,. him from deC>or·
tatlof\. (A) 10:00 1~ di STAAIKY &
HVTCff
A plll)'lul hlde-end-14* o•tne bet_,, Staralty
aod Hu1dl beconltll • Ill•
enc:l-dMlh MarCh wtllfl
Stantcy leema Hutell NI
contracted Dolullsm
pollOfllno. IAl
• WOAlD HUNGER CAUSADE(COHT'ot
• NIGHT OAU.IAY
A men '*"' a woman wtlo
a.im. 10 hltwt -llPC)M·
111on1 ot her former
emp6oyer".
I NEW8CffECt<
10-.30 8) NEWS
YC>'T£A°8 PtPEUNE
"fl8°"Andluuet"
f1:0018 e CIJ ®I NEWS UAASCLUB
• MOVIE ,
... 'h "Th• PerfeCI
f vrtougto.. ( 19&9) Tony
CunlS, Janet LAlgh. An
Army~ll~
nlOCI by a female p1ydlolo-
0111 wtW!n he ac>end• •
..... In Pane With a moY1e
llaf 12 In)
• WOM..D HUttOl:1' ~(O()HrO)
I n.IOOOOIU
~CAVETT au.t Leuren Bec:el. (P_.,
2 of?.!
1 t:IO. (I) MRHAeY JOHQ
8•rnaby 1111 •ec:ond
tlloughll about th•
llUlhentlClt)' of 'the tvt-
Clefice ht uMd to clelf a
man of mutdtt c:Ntoe&-
(A)
G lf.8T Of CANON
Hott. Johnny C>reon.
GuM11· LOia F.iana, DIMd
' SrelnbtrQ. Mummen·
ldletv, Erice Jong (Al
• TWIUGHT~
Luther DinG'* le fht unlflt•
1y candldale of an Allen
experiment with hu!nane. 8 111 A8C MOYIE *'*'II "Forty Cerela"
( 19731 Liv Ullmann.
Edw•d Albert. A torty.
yeer-old dlvoreee veea-
llOning In Europe ,.... In
low wllh • 22-year-old ,,,.,,
I OITIMART CAfTIONED A8C
NEW8
MOR HING
12:00 8 TWIUGHTZOHE
Ubren.n Aomney W~
wOr1'I le COl.,MllCf to
deettl b C~IOe.
8) OITSMARf fD TiiE PRISONER
"Many HIC>l>Y !'14Kurna"
'Baised in Anger'
,,.. '"'°"* eacepee Wld
MIOtedl In OlftlnQ b-*
to L.onOon
1a.ao • MOVll * * * "PtUemt" ( 19681
Van "*""· ro ~ .
E•tcut111•1 ruthltuly ••*"Pt 10 ellrnb '° ... top °' ltltlr ~ COfl>Of-.. tlon (I ,,, . ' 56 mW\.)
• MO'llf • • * "Hltiory 11 Meda Al Night" ( 19'1) C1111C.1 eo,.... ~ Althut A ""°""" 001e lo Pette leell•
lnQ • dl¥of'Cll trom ,..,
jMIOue hwband and llnO•
bOtll ~ lf\CI dlllj)pOlrlt•
ment (2 tn.) ·~ • • 'h "llltgtl Entry"
( tt491 Howerd °""· .......
T ortn A IOf!Mf pilot
uncov.r1 • •muo9t1no ~··· ( 1 .,.. • 30 Nt.) 1~ •(I) OM LATI MOYll
• • "S..r9)"fd" 11"4)
Ctett! o.ble. lM\a Tumet
The leaOer of I Wond WW
II tellelenct fnOYlmlnt
IMm• ttlel ()119 Of his
Ol'OU9 11 IMd4"Q 1n1onna-
11<1t110 lflt ~
1:00 I TOMOAAOW LOVE EXPPT8
1:30 Nf!W9
WANTED: Of.AD OA
ALIVE
2:001 =
t • "Thal L.aOy from
Peking" I 197 t) Ntncy
Kwan, ca.1 Belz. A '9Pc>ft·
er helpl a RUMian CllPIO-
mal eec:ac>e 1n ••ohllnQe
tor his dietv. but tM men'•
' Otlth nee•11llate1 e
tengtlly tN.rCll tor tj)e
ll>ooll~~
2:21 NEW8
2:iO MOYIE
• •'A "Tiii We Moel
~·· (1944) Ray Miiiand.
8.trl>are Britton. A nun
po.-... pHot'• Wife In .,,
en.mpt to help him Olll of
tne country during the .,., •
-ht~) •••A "NeY$r Trust A
0 1mbter.. ( 19511 Dane
Ctar11. Cathy O'Dotlntll, A
gtmblef. tleewlg lhe ~
f, AnCllCO polloe, loo«• UC>
h11 lormer wile. (I II( , 30
min) ., tEW8
t::ael NIWI •• lltOYm • *-.. ''TN Voung Strang.
.,.. ( 1ta7) Ja11111
Mac.Arthur, Klm HUO'tler A
1-.nag«I ooy, ~ed
by .. mcMe produett
..... pte lntO ~
With • !Metr• ININIDt' f 1
tir • 40 ,,., )
l :N I HIWI ~ MOVia
• t ''The Man In Bid"
C 1t&O) VMntiM Oy911, &.!·
ty Arin o.vtea. A yogi Ill~·
.,. .,,._,..... • ONlfMIM'
., ... 10 lrtp,. unt.milul
wife (itn) G MOYIE
... • "88" °""""tlo.
U>ndon" ( "'43) Wall.,
flllOltlld. Aobtl1 8M11y.
Aitlllng ,,.... ........ group
ot coureoeoue ,,., llllt>·
dUe ,..,,_ on • bumlnO
~ ..,.,, Ihle>. (2
In.)
• MOYtE • '* .. Mlallcn OYtr Korea ..
( 1953) """" Ho<llak. John
Derek. Tiie pHotA of Atl'fty
cub ~ -Mnl on dar!ger~ m!Uions wNle
in Kor .. (1hr ,30 mln I
Wedne•da11'•
Dayal111e Mo .,le•
AFTERNOON
12:00 Cl • '* '* ••fou< Olf1s In
Town" (1951) Oeoro•
Ned«". .Mil Adema Glr"
trom erCMld the world
fk>Ctl lo H°'lywood In
hope. of IMdlnO • IWrlng
role In a Ml'# movie
J)foduc110n. (1hr .. 30 min.) • ••°" "Buglee In The Allemoon.. (t962), A~
M*and, Hllana Certet. A
C.V*f ofllclr. ttffpC>ed ot
,.. ,.,.. IO' --'ling •
lellOw ome,r. trlMlll w..t
wtler9 he prow. hit WOfth,
( 1 hr .• 50 min,)
. '
Child Beaters Examined'
PITTSBURGH CAP> -"I had had it and
didn't want to hurt her because she was a child
. . .So it was either kill ·myself tha( day when I
brought the gun· up to my head or reach out to so·
meone. I reached out."
Pat, a Maryland woman in her ~arly 30s, is one o( a growing number of othenvtse loving
pare nts who have abused their children,
some times fatally.
She. along with stx other parents, ~rlbes
her history of chJld abuae In an hour-long special
to be aired Thursday evening at 8 on KCET. Chan·
nel 28. and at 9on KOCE. Channel so.
"RAISED IN ANGER," produced by WQED
in Pittsburgh, with Emmy award·winner Edward
Asner as host, introduces 1979 as the International
Year of the Child, a designation made by the Unit· ed Nations.
Unlike most previous examinaUons of child ·
abuse. this one focuses on the anguish and help·
lessness of the abusive parent, rather than the
child's suffering, and a ttempts to help those
parents identify their child·ralsing problems.
"It is not a question or bow parents reel toward
their children alone that brings on abuse. It's how
they handle such feelings," says James Seguin,
the show's producer.
BERNIE. CONVlCTED OF manslaughter and
sentenced to 10 years in jail after the death or his
child, says, .. , felt totally helpless when I was
abusing David. I was very much angty at my help·
lessness so, in retaliation. I abused hlm more ...
I felt juslified"bccause I felt a sense or power doing
ml. I didn't feel hell!less anymore.··
' "RAISED IN ANGER" includes footage from
a session at a meeting of Parents Anonymous, 'a
national child abuse organization, as well as a see·
ment filmed al Pitl.sburgh·s Parental Stress
Center. a treatment facility for abused or
threatened infants.
The final Portion of the ptogram offers abusive
or potentially abusive parents information on how
to obtain help.
The broadcast is roordinated with the openins
by lbe U.S. Department ol Health, Education and
Welfare of 10 reeionaJ centers for chlld abuse and
neglect throughout the country, says Lynn
Rubenson, promotion manager of national projects
forWQED.
The station also intends to launch a national
"outreach" c_ampaign to get in touch with abusive
parents through the efforts or local PBS stations
and national organizations that deal with child abuse.
'Elvis ' TV Movie
Set for February
HOLLYWOOD <AP I Kurt RusselJ plays
Elvis Presley 1n the three-hour ABC movie
"Elvis!" on Sunday, Feb. 11
The movie traces Elvis' rise from a poor
school boy in Memphis to one of the most endurim~
entertainers of our time.
It also. stars Shel.Icy Winters. Season Hubley,
and Pat Hingle. Kurt s fat.her , Bing Russell play~ Elvis' father, Vernon Presley. · One rrulli()n parents used knives or guns to
threaten or injure their child in 1979, the program
states. An estimated 2,000·5,000 children die each --------------------
year as a direct result or child abuse.
The program, which relates the personal ex.
perlences. ranging from mild to severe. of the six
parents. as well as describing their recovery, is in·
terspersed with commentary from pediatricians,
child psychologists and representatives of helping
organizations. such as Parents Anonymous.
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"OUYa'S STO«Y" INJ ?tie& .. ,.
.,,,~ ......... »,,,..,,,.
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--------~ ~--~-
Tueaday, January o. tt79 ENTERTAINMENT / INTERMISSION I MUSIC
"MOMENT BY MOMENT~
"HEROES" (R)
Play Well Construct~d
Intermission
Tom Titus
Britl1h contcmporarl~•· utlUzes
the Enallilh "caate 1y1tem" of
upper and lower classes to
create A altuataon as real11Uc us •
the conatructloo aolng on outside
the re~rtory company's new
Fourth Step 'Jbeater The J(ruft.
blckertns worlrmen put up lhe
blJ tent and wssemble the out·
door pavlllon bit by bit while
lhelr wealthy employer lwho's
11hln1 u weddlne r eception
there> and his ramlly drop by
now and again to watch the pro·
areaa and olfer Inane commenll.
ThroUlh Storey's Ught but deft
brush ltrokes. we come to know
Napiel'Ala ., a Lee afarvtniah
troubl•maker and Rona ld
Boussom u 11 st.ammertns Idiot.
Also very ef!ective are John Ell·
lngton u Napierala'~ fun.Jovlng
buddy and Don Tuche as a
mood.v loner. an outcast amon1
outcastt.
Napierala. makin~ hla debut
with SCR, ts one of those superb
actors who may convince you be la Indeed a construction worker
brought In of( the 11win( '11hlft to
lend atmosphere-to the::::pt'Gduc--
ll on. Boussom, a n}aster of
churacterlzatlon, delivers yet
another in a long line ot bravura
performances as the pltlable
helper and grinnin1 butt of his
fellow workers' prank1.
Murcott, another new Cac&; Is
splendid as the tough employer
with a tender heart, balancing
these aspects of his character
delicately . Another well·
constructed performance is
KI ng · s senile grandfather. for
, whom progress and modemiza.
lion are arch-villians to the true
artisa"'
auine tho ataalnM or "The Con·
lratlOr" o""'r lhc orl.clnally u.&·
1l1ntd director had dcp•rted.
And In Wh•t mu11t runk H some
1ort of minor mlril<'IC, lhe
flniahed DC'Odutt la a glowing ex·
''MAGIC" 11mpto o( 1-.10 cral\11munshlp.
"EMBRYO" (RI 1 Exhauallng ptm1lcal actton tis
• the contractor <Derek Murcottl,
his wile <Alison Evuna >. his son
1&nd dauahtcr <Howard Sba.ngra
ftnd Lee ShaJlut >. his elderly
parent• <Scotty King and
Pauline H ague 1 and the
dauahtcr'a flance 'John· David
Keller>. All are. to varying
dearees. Innocuous but likeable people.
The meaty roles are those of
the laborers a rowdy collec:·
tlon of misfits and transients
who would find It difficult to
gain employment els ewhere.
Wayne Grace as the foreman, a
paroled e mbezzler with a
taciturn manner. rides herd on
them in a beautifully understat·
ed performance.
THE ACTUAL butlding and
unbuilding process.~ completed
Crom first step to last on stage,
is a staggering accomplishment.
and its smooth transition is a
credit to Benson's directorial
acumt?n. Yet it never upstages
the play it.sell or the individual
performances.
~-----------------c: Incorporated wllh the r ich ··up IN SMOKEff dlolo1uo ot Oovld Storey's re·
"SLACK SUNOAv·· (~J ullatlc (lrumo wtlh surprising (i.
ALL OtUV&·IN$ O~t:N 6:J0P..M.MteHT\f
Cflll4 Uf\Oer f 1 ~,-Vft .. U e i<i.a1e "'•Ye•e11"e '~--...................................... .,
neuc. 1dven the brief P\lriod ot
llm In wh.lch the project wu
mounted. Character interpret&·
lion Is oot11tundlng, particularly
In the CMC or the motley crew of --------------------luborel'I wblch accomplishes the
"The Contractor" is a good
night ·s work. an evening or
theater to savor. It continues
nightly except Mondays through
Feb. 4 at the Fourth Step
Theater. 6S5 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa.
-~~.1
.,.., "'-"' ,... ri-r
KJNO 0. THI OYH•l 11!
'"" '·"'·'·'"'
Ml .=) :.~:;~·ff
.,....,..,..,.,_... .. <&Ml .~a~ J: ::*==:::
3\11 ;ala I '"'-:lt::AZ•L ~,
... ,,~~ \ .. ' . "
..
tent ce>nalr'U(Uon.
tJTOREY, U KE many or his
T W O OF THEM are
particularly memorable -John
Bee Gees Eye Gra1nmies
Picked in Six Categories After Oscar Snub
BEVERLY HILLS <AP> -The Bee Gees.
whose mlJwilcal contribution to the blockbuster film
"Saturday Night Fever" was never acknowledged
by the motion picture industry. were named in six
categories Monday as the 21st annuaJ Grammy
Awards nominees were announced by the National
Aca(temyof Recording Arts and Sciences.
The Bee Gees weren't nominated in any of the
music categories al last year's Oscars.
"HOWEVER, THEIR "SATURDAY Night
Fever" soundtrack was nominated today for top
album of the year and their single "Stayin' Alive"
from that album was included ln the record of the
year and song or . the year categories. The Bee
Gees were also listed in nominations for best pop
vocal performance by a group, best arrangement
for voices and best producer of the year.
Pop trumpet artist Chuck Mangione and Cana·
dian songat:ress Anne Murray were each nominal·
ed in four categories. Mangione's "Feels So Good"
was nominated for record of the year, his album
"Children of Sanchez" was included in the best
pop instrumental category and for besl album
. package and his "Consuelo's lA>ve Theme,·· was
nominated for best instrumental composition.
Miss Murray 's "You Needed Me" was
nominated for record of the year, song of the year
and best female pop vocal performance. Ano(lier
single, "Walk Right Back" was nominated tor best
country vocal performance by a female.
OTHER RECORD OF the year nominees in·
eluded "Baker Street" by Gerry Rafferty and
"Just tiw: Way You Are" by Billy Joel. Other
album of the year nominees are "Even Now" by
Barry ManUow.
•'Grease" by John Travolta and Olivia
Newton.John and others, "Running on Empty" by
Jackson Browne, and "Some Girls" by the Rolling
Stones.
Joel's ··Just the Way You Are," "Three Times
A Lady." by Lionel fUchie of the-Commodores and
"You Don't Bring Me FJowers" by Neil Diamond.
Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman rounded out
the song ot the year nominees.
THOSE NOMl~ATED FOR best new artist of
NOW PLAYING
"I JUST LOVED THIS MOVIE!" ...
'"BEST
FOREIGN FILM
OFTHEYEARI"
-AICl\tf Wm11en Ny Poll
-Judith Crist
the year endmg Sept 30, 1978. were the Cars. Elvis
Costello. Chris Rea. A Taste of Honey, and Toto.
Altogether there were 301 nominations in 52
categories. The winners will be announced Feb. 15
with about a dozen Grammies presented in person
during a live te.lecast on CBS
Nominations and awards are determined by
balloting among 4,700 members of the academy
nationwide.
a.ti Oflt•n•I S<o .. Wrm.., lor
• IMlleft P'ktu .. Of A hlevlJIM Spe<lal
t "8eltlf\tar ~le<llc•·· Siu PnllllP\. JOl\o T •rt"Qlie, !we Collin•. Olen
L.or\on, c-Ar\ tMCAI
1 · Clo\<t En<ovn1tr• OI Tl'•• Thoro Kina JOlln w111,.m1. c~
!Arl\1<11
l l101ouu>I rt.. Story of IP>e F•m••• Woon·· Mo<ton Govia,<-!HCA HedS-..1
• "Mldl'llQlll EllP<M•·· Gloro.o MOrOOH, ,_, IC.Ul>l4ft<•I
~-'"Re•enoe OI Tiie Pink Pantlw!r ", Henry Mell< 1n1, com-r. a. L•"•• Brl<usw. IVrlC\ IUnltt<IArlllhl
atARLUTHE iiillllA
TlliNllE
UllO ON TNl IOOK
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CIHIMALANO, AMNlm QS.1'01
VAL&.EY Vlt:W, Clttden Grove 1'4-SSJI PAR~Dt•, Ung .. llcft 421-M17
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OROYl. Cltrdeft °'"9 m .eeoo
ORANGE MALL,~ 13?.os40 OHLY---~llYMiua~mo
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STER£0 SOUNDS OF THE HAR~OR
•• • •llDM fashion laland Newport Be:ich
1 .~ " . .. .. .
......,..., ... .
... , .. ., ... 1 .. . .. ,._.,.
Rlls IN£M W£ T .==:. 192--4493 l-----.-.. -.. -.,-."il .... .-....... "-' ...... .. -.. . ;::;:~.. ·,ii
flotl llAVAl«*I ,
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INSIDE: •Erma Bombeck •Ann Landers OM.V~LOf Featuring ....... _ ..... _. ___ €.
•Horoscope--•Com
n-s.y, Jenuary 9, 1979
Sex ual Abuse
We think of the dirty old derelict on the corner and
that's it. We never think it can happen in our home,'
said family therapist Fredrick_ Capaldi at a recent
seminar on sexual abuse of children. _,. .
81 CHERYL &OllO Of• o.11r ,........,
The typical sexual abuser of children is not
the "dirty old derelict" on the street comer who
offers candy and tries to entice youngsters lnto
his car.
He ls, surprisingly. most apt to be a pro-
resslonal man between the ages of 35 and 50
with a college degree. He has probably held his
job ror at least 10 years and is earning upwards
or $35,000 per year.
The man owns his own home. is active in
church and civic affairs, has a wife and three
children, is self-centered and usually is con·
sidered a "strict disciplinarian."
This person, according to statistics availa-
ble through the Orange CoUnty Child Abuse
Registry, begins sexually abusing his own
daughters when they are between the ages or 8
and 14 cthe youngest recorded is an 18-month·
old child >.
That was the consensus presented by
licensed professionals specializing in the field of
child abuse and neglect. education and family
therapy, during a day-Ion~ seminar held Satur·
day at Golden West College.
MORE mAN 450 persons beard guest
speakers Fredrick Capaldi, M.S .. family
the rapist at Newport Psychology Center in
Tustin: Paul Wood, M.D .• a psychiatrist with
the Orange County Mental Health Department;
Ellen Davis. R.N .. Ph.D .. associate clinical pro-
fessor in the Department or Psychiatry at UCI
and the Orange County Mental Health Depart·
ment; and Muriel Silvertooth, R.N .. P.N.P . a
health specialist with the Garden Grove Unified
School District.
During the first session. Capaldi said at
least 75 percent of all reported sexual abuse OC·
curs in the home. In addition to natural lathers.
the abusers include grandfathers. stepf at.bers,
motbera' boyfriends and other cioee friends of
lbe family.
One percent are mothen abusing their own
sons. "Only in the past 17 years or so have we
recognized this was a problem," said Capaldi.
··w e think or the dirty old derelict on the corner
and that's it. We never think it can happen In our
home."
The effed on the children ts devastating, he
said. 1be yqungsters feel confusion instead of
anger towant the offending parent -and even
toward the other pa~ent for not doing something
to keep the abuse from happening in the first
place.
"You can see the battered child because he
comes in wllh black eyes or bruises or
whatever," he said. ··But you can't see the sex·
uall~ abused child.·•
This child, said Capaldi, feels a damaged
sense of self-worth leading lo depression and
often the abuse ol drugs and alcohol. The child
may also turn to prostitution or run away Crom
home.
In addition, the child often does poorly in
school and is withdrawn. "Kids don't find oul
what incest is until they grow up and tin the
meantime I they don't relate to other kids
because they are on a different level,·· he said.
IN ANOTHER SESSION, Dr. Paul Wood
said recent studies indicate every fourth woman
has experienced some form of sexuat' abuse as a
child; one survey concluded 26 percent of all
women have had a sexual experience with an
adult prior to the age of 13.
.,19----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------.......
The reason. he explained, is because people
who live in close proximity have a much
greater chane& of sexual contact, and if the
parent is immature and unsure of his role, tne
instances or abuse are increased.
.
.
:
~ .
.
'
. . •
Help For the Parent Who Batters Her ·child "Most sexual abuse of children is at home
with people you love; 100 percent or the
responsibility for defining limits ls the adult's
responsibility. M~rofeulonals agree that the majori·
ty of c abusen were abused as children
and repeat &.be only pattern they know.
ThOQ&h most child sexual abusers are
male, many physical abusers are female. A
coaaty.fanded program called Vohmteers in
Child Assistance <VlCA) ls aimed at assist·
Ing potential child abusers by sending volun·
teers into the bome to counsel and relieve the
burden ol the parent.
Currently there are 33 volunteers In the
program. whJcb ls under tbe dJrec:Uon of the
Department of ~Jal Services. Voluteers.
after being referred by a cowaty social
worker, an aent Into a home to help eue the
burden ol a parent by formlq a l>'nlOllal
bond -perhaps driving her to the doctor or
the market, or fmding her a sitter or acting
lo that capacity .
By taking a llUle of the load off the poten·
tial abuser, "the child wlU have a much bet·
ter chance of survival," said Volunteer Pro·
gram Supervl80r Sharon Esterley .
The parent who physically abusH and
batters the child usually lbves the child but
bas unrealistic expectations of what the cbUd
Is capable of. Ms. Esterley explained.
When the child fails to Uve up to such ex· pedatlons. t.be parent can't cope and lubes
nL -
Often a VICA volunteer viewlnl a crtsis
R eading for MS
Seven youngsters won prizes ranging from
10-speed bikes to a television set in the recent
Multiple Sclerosis Society of Orange County's
READ·a·thon.
They received their prizes ln ceremonies al
Allergan Pharmaceuticals Company, Irvine.
Making the presentations was Richard P.
Hausman. chairman of the board of the MS
Society of Orange County.
The winners were Jamie TbomH, lleglna
Scbadllch, Andre a DeSimone, Kevin Leon,
"Geanette Wlnkleman, Shawn Botbum and Lori
'Morgan.
Prizes are based on the number of books
~ompleted and the amount of funds raised for
MS by pledges for each book
Luncheon
Knott's Berl") Farm will host its first
annual celebrity concert series soon and part or
the proceeds will benefit Children's Hospital of
Orange County.
The event was saluted with a luncheon in
the home of Vlrglnla KooU Bender. Newport
Beach.
People Peering
A Mission Viejo Branch mts been approved
by the American Associatibn of Universil)
Women. Temporary officers are Kay Osborne,
Lynn Kagey, Ralmonda Kontrimas and Mary
Rupertus .•. Robert Steraenbach is new
commander of USCG Auxiliary Flotilla 29 of
( Happenings )
Dana Point. Vice Commander is Van Ttlburg.
The command was passed lo Slerzenbach by
Burt Clemons during the auxiliary's annual
change of command and awards dinner at the
San Clemente Inn. Outstanding auxillarist of the
year award was given to Robert Clark and
outstanding new auxiliarisl of the year is
Stanley Van Dyke. Also honored for service to
the group were Timothy Birkeland and Bette
Clark.
Mr. aod Mrs. C. W. Mauerban or Corona del
Mar r ece ntl y retu rn e d from a
55-day.around-South America cruise aboard the
Royal Viking Star ... Richard DotW, a former
Corona del Mar resident and retired executive
vice president of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
Company, received the American Hearl
Association's Gold Heart Award al the 1978
a nnual meeting in Dallas. Dotts, who headed
the board of directors or the AHA's national
office for three years. was cited for his
visionary leadership, financial acumen and
organizational ability.
Jody Ro~ne r, Newpor t Beach, has
received her Ph.D. an governm ent from
Claremont College, Pomona. Mrs. Rosener Is a
membe r of the Cal ifornia Coasta l
Commission ... Rhea Deszcz, Mission Viejo,
will appear on the cover or the February issue
of Teen Magazine.
situation will take the chJJd out of the home.
with the parent's permlssk>n, for a "coollng
off " period.
H the youngster bas been abased, or ls
saapected ol having been abuaed, law en·
forcement and soclal service penorutel wlll
be contaded.
. Because of budget cutbacks, there Is a
· need for additional volunteers -particularly
for persons wbo are bl·UnguJ and persoDB
residing lD West Orange County -for tbe
VICA Program.
For information about the VICA Pro-
gram. contact the Department of Social
Services at834-4703.
"If you don't set the limits," he warned.
"the children will pass it on to the next genera-
tion. We do to our kids what was done to us."
This was the theme carried throughout the
seminar -that children who are abused or
come from homes where sexual abuse was
practiced will become abusers. Women, In this
case. will look the other way when th~ abuse oc·
curs to their own children.
The two most common characteristics of
the child sexual abuser are a "lack of Impulse
control" (although the men may be c:onaldered
"high actuevers" and appear to have good con·
(See SEXUAL ABUSE, Page C%>
George Plimpton will try anything once, and now he's into backgammon.
George Plimpton
Backgammon is 'a gogd balance between luck and
skill,' ·says George Plimpton, who has added the
game to his repertoire.
By JUDITH OLSON
OftlltD.ity ...... twl
George PUmpton, the best-selling aut.hor
who's wilUng to try almost anything once, ls
now fnto backgammon.
And he's doggone good at It, for an
amateur.
Pllmpton challenged seven comers during a
· two· hour demonstration at The May Co .• South
Coast Plaza. and beat tour of the seven.
Second. the game is never over until the
end. Plimpton, behind several tames by what
looked like Impossible circumstances. managed
to pull out a win.
HE PLAYED alternate men and women
with a large magnetic board and orfered help to
his opponent.a as t.he games progresA!d.
Between matches Pllmpton talked about the
game. "It's an ancient game, 3,000 years old.
It's a good balance between luck and skJU. It's a Since il was a backgammon promotion,
Plimpton Jreely shared his knowledge of the
game and 1ame surprtslng things emerged from
the novice. First. you can still eventually win
the game even though some of your men are len.
in rour opponent's lnner board. Though things
look bleak, it· can be done .... rl&ht rolls of
war game. · ,
.. Good play\rs always lQ' to establish poet· ~-lion," he noted. Our"ln& the game you pounce."
From let, Lori Morgan, Shawn Bot/Jum,' Kevin Leon, Richard P. Hau1man
ld1a/rm8n), AlffJce~ DeSlmone, Jeanette Wlnk,1-man and Regina Schuplich.
•
dice. •
A crowd watched all afternoon. often
coaching PUmpton's o*Mn\a. ··Someone told
<See GEORGE PLIMPTON, P• CU
"
J •
Q DAIL V PILOT ruetday, January t . llTt
•• • ual 1'.buse
( "'°"' ..... (ii.
trol an oth r rcu l und a •·tack I deftnlUon of
role," aald Dr Wood
·'Th moat de. true-th•• part ahou\ fflCUal
abuH of cl\Hdren doean't h v to do wilh 111."
h aald.~'lt hu to do with lhe bctr yal of ~l s
ln lht fami1y " Jlt wurnod that 111t r on tlw r blld wlll vlcw the'"~ N"laUon11h1p ••a rn<IMI ••for 11 lovlna
rololloru h1p1 from then on ·•
Or Wood ft't"l pnvt1tf' t"()lm1Htfln111 ol famil y
mcmtwni. l41thout tht' IC'\~raat" or lt'gal I nc
Hon, "on't atop th abuM "l~t on • Ntabll"'h bttom • com
pulalon and °"' child t I her onl)' wort.h It H1C
ual ttractlon It ,. .t lot mor prevalent than
we be-ln to ,.eu ... end • lot more common ·
Men an sut•h t'" l'~. '"'d lhe profri.'llOn•I .
ol•vatt tht'lr dPU"htan 1nt(I an adult
JC\rllr&tnd/v. 1re role and. lrcmlully. once thr
1bu1 11 brou1ht Into the npoo th moth r or thl'
rhlld wUI ot\ n "''° to Mhe\·e what ha!> hap
vened or ~111 urrw.e thl' l(lrl or l)lflll
"IT DO N'T \\'ORK to ~ humanl' with
thti.l' ml·n." uld l>r W()()(t , 1ndlNttlnt there Is a
90 pt-rcent ch nrf' of l\Utcessful r.-habtlllatlon of
tht> child und the r.-&t of tht• family If the law ln
tervt.'ne,i,.
In onothtr st-. i.lon, Franc("tl Latimore suad
tht seicual abuse or chlldrt!n 111 1 cultural di~
ordttr and in eight Yl'U!i ot pro('tlce she hus
never come acros!i an ahu'ed child who didn't
uy, "I told my mama but !lhe didn't hear mt: ·
Cornmon tn3n11 to look ror 1n abused
Weight Lifted
Off Shoulders
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: It happens
to almOlt evervone. A person we love-a rel-
ative or dear friend, a
caauat acquaintance or
s omeone at work -
com mi la suicide. We are
shocked. Often we feel
guilty, wondering if
perh&PI we might have
done something to pre-
vent the tragedy. Maybe
if we had reached out -
given just a little more
lime or affection, we
Erllia
... 11tt1c
One Appliance
Does It All
One th Ing ab o u l on the ceiling of any
-Amerlcaru;. They turn darkened room in Jarae
every adversity into an digital numerals.
a11el There's an electric
Take the energy gun that looks like a slx·
criala. Please. shooter that flrea out
When we were told to hors d 'oeuvres, cookies
cut back on the use of and canapes. There are
big appliances for small e lectric salad spinners
baking and healing JDbs, to rid your greens of
there were no leas than moisture, an electric
500 1mall applloncea knife, and an electric
that flooded the market ahurpener to sharpef\
The°l"e'1 a deep fat your electric knire.
Dr. Paul Wood. left, and Fredrick
CIJtJa)dl were among speakers at sex-
ual abuse semmsr. • ch1ldrfn •re dtthnquent behavior, runnang away
from bom • fln:11ettin1. abU11vl' behavior to Olh{'r~. wilhdrewul. low Hit cat~m. chronic lY·
1na •nd eith r obe11ity or undernourishment
Dr. EJJcn D•vlli reported the Orunge County
Child Abw.u Rt>gu;try and1cattt1 thure are ut
least a8 11exual child ubu11u ca 09 reported each
month and th" rutu 111 r1stna. Moat youn11ters
are abused orally and the man may be under
the lnfl~nceor alcohol.
Sbe said the "rnyth or the dirty old man 11 a
nire one but 87 percent of the children know thflr
might have saved a Ure.
I am going through a
traumatic p eri od
becauae or 1uch an Inci-
dent. A man I worked
with and played tennis
with, and considered a
close friend. took his life
two weeks a~o. Ills sud·
den and unexplained
death made a terrific Im·
pact on me. I somehow
felt personally responsi-
ble for not "saving " hJm.
Then someone sent me
a poem In the mail that
brought great comfort.
It w as written by
Edwin Arlington
Robinson and poants out
how utterly Impossible It
is to know what goes on
m someone else's life.
When I read that
poem it was as If a 10-
ton weight had been lift.
ed from r.iy shoulders
May I share il with you
as a token of my ap·
preclaUon for the count·
less Umea you have
helped me feel better
about myself? • J .H.E.
OF CHICAGO
Wheneve" Richard
Cory wentdowntown,
We people on the
pavement looked at hlm,
He waa a 1entleman
rrom soul to.crown,
Clean favored and
imperially alim. And he always was
quietly arrayed.
And he was human
when he talked;
But still h~ fluttered
pulses when he said,
"Oood morning.
and he glistened when
he walked.
And he was rich
yea, richer than a king.
And admirably
schooled in every grace;
In fact we thought
he had everything.
To make us wish
that we were In his
place • We wor1'ed and
waited for the light.
And went without
meat. and cursed the
lack of bread
And Richard Cory.
one calm summer mght,
Went home and put
a bullet through his
head.
DEAR J .H.E.: I re·
me mber that poem from
my bl&h·tehool d ay• It
made a t remendoua lm·
pact on me then, and I
thank you for brtngln• it
back Into my Ufe -Hd
Into ttie lives of othen.
ERMA BOMB ECK I ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE I
( Horoscope )
1bu11r." The child u1ually tells a counaelor.
achool nune or loacher al achool who In turn la
m1nd1t.edtoreport It tootflcl1l1.
''When the child blow• th wtl11tle." ahe
Hld. •'the wnlh or 1oclety come• down. In our
society the bt,.eat taboo l1 lnce1t. ·•
NO ONE THERAPIST ran handle the
problem ot H)Wal 1bu111 tn a ramaly, 1he said She
recommendl the child be token out of the home tor
1 period of Ume and that each of the patrents see
thtlr own theraol1t1 "until Mom urt tell
Dau.ht.er, 'I know you told tho truth.' And a low
percent.at•ot mother• can do that. . . "It &a so prevalent and wo pretend lt doesn't
1xl1t."
renonnel In the school 1y1tem have to
know what to look for and be alert to po1tlble
caaea of abule.. uld Muriel S lvertooth In a talk
tntltled "Abuaed Children, the Schoola and
Nurses."
Mott often. the 1&id, the abuser haa told the
chlld, ''Thia la our secret," and the youngster
hH been physically threatened or haB a raise
aenae of keeplnlJ the family toaether · or
doesn't want to hurt her mother. Therefore. achool personnel must be alert to
"the cluet these klds alve them" which may In·
elude a sudden drop In 1rade11, frequent absences.
shyneu. nervouane11. abusive behavior and dif ·
flculty aotna to the bathroom. she said.
She aald there are approximately 200.000 to
300.000 n1Uon11ly reported caaea or child sexual
abuH each year and. "It can set to be a big ctr·
cle where no one doea anything about it."
Guitar Study
Popular
CHICAGO IAPI -The guitar has Joined the
band and the chorus as a cornerstone of school
music programming, and is proving to be an ef·
fective means of reaching student.a who do not
normally participate in music.
Accord.In• to a recent survey co-sponsot#<l
by the Guitar and Accessory Manufacturers As·
soclaUon and the American String Teachers. As
soclation. an estimated 25 percent of American
junior and senior high schools now of~er in·
class gwtar as part or the regular music cur·
riculum. And 90 percent or these programs have
been established since 1971
"IN LARGE PART, the rapid gr~wth ~r
1uitar in school music programming ~urmg th.is
decade is a di,.ect result of stu<,lent interest in
the instrument:· said GAMA president Richard
Della Bernarda. "Ounng the 1960s. the dominance of t~e
guitar In popular music created a dramatic
surge or Interest in the instrument among young
people.
"Jn-class guitar was first offered as a
means to tap that anterest, amd has become a
popular alternative to band and chorus in many
schools." ~ According to the survey. 69 percent or the
schools with aultar reported that the programs
In their schools allract primarily students who
would otherwise graduate with no formal music
training.
WEDNESDAY • .JAN. 10
By IYDNEY OMAaa
ARIES tMarch 21·
April 101 : Accent on ~hort joumey1, crowda,
confu1ion. trap1. un·
orthodolC method11, ec:
centric relatives .
Cancer. Caoricorn ~ersons t1gure prom·
could be parl or
acenarlo. P11c 1 fl1urea prominent!)'. See places.
people In re1ll1tlc lla&ht.
Do not ••'~ youuel(
1hort. LIBIA tStpt. t3·0ct.
221 : Oet tun. materhal
ln order: brin1 priorities
Into tocu1. Capricorn. Cancer -and th e number 8-rlgure prom·
nently. You re1ul n
senite of direction -and
security. What apJM!arl'd
to be lost makes "reap·
pearance." •
TAtJRU8 <April 20·
May 201 : Spatllehl on
finance1. collectlons,
paymenl1. expandlna
• horlJona Humor, ac·
celerated social activity
alao command attention.
You'll be more popular,
more demand• will be
made on your time Be
Oexible without scatter·
Ing your forces. Gemini.
Sa a;i ttarlu1 tiaure
promlnenUy.
GEMINI IMay 21·
June 201 : Hiahllaht new
starts, Independence.
getting second wind ,
surveying situation for
purpose of improve-
ment. You need not take
back seat Y.ou 're mov·
Ing a}l e ad , goi n ~
forward Cancer 1n
divldual could open door
to &olld profit op·
portunlty.
CANCER CJune 21 ·
July 221 : You get
chance to examine
areas previously closed,
restricted. Chanae oc-
curs which m i1ht mean
additional travel. Read·
in& material proves of
considerable aid. Know
1t and act accordingly.
Cooperate with Cem101
LEO 1July 23 -Aug .
22 1: Yo u rind what
you've been seeking.
Key Is te> know good
ro'rtune when you en·
co unte r It . Taurus,
Libra, Scorpio figure In
scenario. Accent on
home base. ttalnfl from
buslnellli enterprise. You
actually are handed
somethin~ or value on
proverbial s il ver plat·
ter.
VIRGO I Au~. 23-Sept.
22 l : You learn where
you stand and how to
stand taller Promotion,
added responalb1llty.
preali@_e and money
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSnlY
nently.' 1'ake Iona
ranae vlew · upreu
feelln11. present find·
ln11. You 1 t reaulu. A
"v err Important
person· L• all eart.
SCORPIO 10ct. 23·
Nov. 211: Delve beneath
11Uperflclal layers you
are on brink of achieve·
ment . Aries, Libra
peraoni. r1~ure prom
1nently. Fin1i.h what
y()U 1tart funding m3y
depend upon your 14•111.
lngneaa t.o display stuy
Ina power
SAOITl'ARIUS INov
22-D ec . 2 1 1. Study
Scorpio mull8ge for
valuable hints. At·cen•
on making the most or
recent discoveries. con
tacts . Legal documenf
could figure prominent
ly . You can obtain
ravorable "settlement'·
by pur11wn8 a new path.
CA.PRICOR N I Dec
22-Jan. 19 1: Low key ap·
proach worka bost •
collect data, Improve
ser vi ce . You'll find
opening for advance·
ment. Cancer lndlvid1.1al
could play key role. Co
worker. one who shares
Interest.a could become
valuable ally.
AQUARIUS 1Jan
20-Feb. 18 1· Laugh at
your own foibles anti your popularity will
soar Know 11, act ac
cordingly. Accent on
creativity. children. af
fair of heart, cmot1onal
responses to "h;.ird
news." Energetic as
sociate talks of s ml•lltnl!
th e flowers. poetry ,
love. ·
PISCES 1 Feb. 19
March 201: Stack to fac·
tual data -you'll loclJll'
hidden clause or escaJ><.'
hatch. Accent on securi·
ty. property, removing
safety hazards rrorn
abode. Take special
care In connection with
w1rin11. electr1c11y .
''WHEN WE decided to add In-class guitar
in 1969." said Duane Burr. band director at an
Ariiona junior high school. ··1 was warned, ·oo
It, and your band pro~ram wit) be dead.' '.f'oday.
if we had to make a cutback in any curnculum
area it wouldn 't be In guitar. Guitar helps the whol~ music program. and has resulted in a 10
percent increase in band crtrollmcnt in area
high schools."
wt..Y•W..t ........
1 tU Hlrilior lt•4.
ColfeMne-141-02H
fryer for two shrimp. A When you cut down on
grill for one hamburger. your energy by bringing
A Teflon top for one egg. In a pizza. there's an
There 1 a mini-oven for electric healing element
baking two biscuits at a to heat up your pizza if it
time An excuse-the· has turned cold
expression two-holer to Do you have 'to spend ••• George Pll1npton
bake twodouahnuu time away from your
There are crocka to appliances? No. There's
accommodate an enUre a new unit for you that
meal. a skillet for cook-plugs Into the cigarette
inc one-dhh main lighter or your car.
m eal• and Woke If camper. van, or boat.
you're ieeling Oriental. You can make stews in
There are popcorn it, bake cookies. toast
poppers, waffle grilla aa nd wiches, or heal
a n d · m I n I a t u r e soups
percolatoni for one cup And don't forget the
of coffee. There are hot electric plant turner to
beverage makers, bean auure your favorite
pola, chill pota and elec-blo11oms that they will
trlc unit.a to keep your always be turned toward
Pola hot alter you've un· the light.
pluued them. A mer i cans h ave
There are electric rallled 10 well to the
1 o c k a , b I a n k e t s , challenge of having to
ha nd warmers a n d cut back that J am reluc·
here's a mu5t ... a unit tant to tell them about
that will heat your golf my new discovery of an
ball• to Insure you a appliance that cooks
more utlstying "hit" In several meals at a time,
cold weather . Where you heats up the kltctien,
plus in the unit ls your keeps food warm, cook•
challenge. it, baket It, haa a see·
There are electric throuah 1lqa, cleans
cloeka that wtll not only Itself. heat.a golf balls
awaken you by radio, and tells lime.
but wlll project lhe lime I call It ... an oven.
<From Pa1e Cl>
me It waa a boring game," one spectator
marveled.
WRY DOES PLIMPTON the writer go to
such lenllhs • often humiliating himself -to
learn about new topics, such as pro football,
backgammon, hoekey and orchestras"
"lt'a a device that's been used by other
writers," he saJd after the matches.
Pllmpton'a experiences are the basis ror his
be1t-1ellln1 books auch as ··out or My League,"
"Paper Uon" and "Shadow Box."
He haa, to date, played a tennis match with
Pancho Gonzalez, Che won the first two points 1.
opposed 0twa1c:1 Jacoby ln bridge. bOxed three
round• wUh Archie Moore, played percussion
wlth the New York Philharmonic and pitched
po1t·1ea1on In an all·atar aame In Yankee
Stadium.
He also attended the Detroit Lions summer
camp aa a third-string quarterback, wa6 a
hockey goalie and performed aa a trapeze artist
wlth tho Clyde Beatty-Cole Brothers Circus tor
11x months.
Plimpton wl)o was editor of the "Harvard
Lampoon" when he was an undoraraduate~ also
founded "The Paris Review" durina an Easter
vacation viall to Paris when he wa1 attending
Cambridge.
HE UMITS HIS present Involvements an
new fields to lhe sports and a rt worlds because
there Is a confrontation 1n these two areas that
he considers essential.
"In both there a re vas t audiences. It's very
theatrical." ,#auk¢ "OPI•'"" ............ '°"' '°"'"'""'" l"Ht •• , ... •"'"" ~"1--· 111•
Plimpton 1&ys iUs the people he enjoys
mo1t when he Is o football player or hockey
aoalle for a tame.
'The moat fun is listening to the storks
they tell you. They tell you things they might
not otherwise. It you were just interviewing on a
one -to-one basis," he s aid.
25°/o OFF
ALL CUSTOM
READY TO WEAR
·-· .. .,.,ft.Wt_,..""....,. Pofl'• lr..,.119111 .._ ~ WtOt \lvl ;t"\
S••I ""Htw 'IUI wllft • llft '°"'
C... l~V IOI 4 pe<>OIWI '""'''""-"" pt09' ... dt-ttOll It !ht te'.llOOl llf¥nl YOOI
Plimpton doesn't go into his ventures w1lh
the idea of winninft, though he concedes 1t would
be nice occas1onally
His foray Into backgammon has been no ex·
ception. He recenlly ployed a game with .Paul
Maariel, the former math professor and highly
rompetenl player who 1s known as "X-22 the
computer."
Maanel played blindfolded but Plimpton
still lost. He said after the defeat. "This was the
most frif{lenlng of all. The1e seemed to be an
excuse tor not being a better athlete, but none
for not being able to think better."
o..·~ A -lllAllT TO WlAll
··--c .. --. ·-.c;..-o.....-. -· -0,....'40. IJ ...
..... 4pJA. C4ll
646-4144
411L17th St., C.M.
Coniw.,......& 17MI
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
S42•H'td
ORANGE COUNTY
3 TOWN & COUNTRY
ORANGE
(714) 547-8228
A Slender New You in '79
II'• January, In moal •very woman 1 m11'1d that me1n1 keeo1ng vcur reso1ut1on to lmorove yoor figure
whether you need to lose many Pound• or 1u11 firm uo Al Lillian Bellard 1. 1t takH IO 11111e 11me end ellort
ltllV P1lmer .
gr1ndmoff'« ot 7, tu.st
24"' 1nehe' and 19~ l)Ounds -• ,.
n.c ... .et..t
11 111 b901ne with a orofe111on1I figure an11ya11 we II 11e10 You
eet your goala. check ycur figure t1ult1. Potture al'ld bone
structure. then determine your fullest beauty Poten1111 ,....,, ....
You'll be given. al no charge. a re101no hour• 1rea1mln1
dealgned 1uet for you u11no exc1u11ve firming and toning
technlQuea on OQulpment th1t does the work for You There •
no ahot1, 11arva11on dlell or 1trenuou1 ll!Ung
You re invited to $tenderize with Oancerciie. a bonu• melhOd
10 1noreaee c1rou11t1on and give you a more you1h tul.
11tr1ellve appearance. n.a...tt ...
begin• when you do You can tOH one dre11 altt by next month Tell u1 the size
vou wont to b4t. we II 1tll vou how long 1t will take end the coet
Involved ........... Mtll"HlelfTe ... WeSIMpe
IPICIA\. INTIODUCTOIT ,.0..AM
7 treatments S 16.00
~ ..... eftwi
CA.LL MOW Ul-1444 -&!iuin~.tbwt
H<WR& COHTOWUHO SAi.OH
U9 hJt 17!fl ..._.., M-.;M I e"' ·I ,. a S . • e.111.~ ,...,
Ju11e MafJon st
lnChl' Ind 9 Poundt 1n 30 days
-·-
LOS ANGELES 1A~•
C'barltN Mlogu • 5ti.
J llU ('OffipOl'f'r uod ••
promml•nt JUU ba · 1st.
d h'd l''rtllay M IO!'ll'>
"ho 11la)t.>d "Ith Louis
Dftltlt •t•~·
l•OWH
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Ce>~••Mtw
IRAHOT
'ti\111. AM CHARl.l~ bR/.NOI rr
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nvton 8f'tl<P't Mortu.tr. s .. , ... h ,.na
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JACO•S
OEREK COSBY ,/IC.O!IS Allornt1y
JI l•w R•''°'"'' ol C.0-.1• ..... ~. (Ao
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lllur\O•Y J"" 11 "~.ti l PM 41 ll'M'
f .,,, Unit~ ,,,. IN.if'1\\ {nUf"Cn (O\fA
• 1l"1fl''1!&. c... ()tfK.1 .. ~nt ., R fl'1r (thtrh.•'
( 1ara. Pr 1Vith1 int11-n'f\hf'U to ~ ""•Id
• (Joe<ted b't' twtt bta.dWor MO'h.i14rV ._Ml 91~
..
McCO•MICK MOI TUAllES
Lc19una Beach
494.94 '5
.lillguna Hills
766-0933
San Juan Cao1strano
495·1776
IALTl•HtlGUOH
FUHHAlHOMI
646-2424
Costa Mesa
673-9450
H UllOAOWAY
MOttTUAU
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
SMITWfUTMtu..&.AMI
MOITUAU
WlSTC\Jff CHAPIL
Crerretory • Flower Shoo
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-4888
"EICE .. OTMllS
SMITH'S MOtlTUAlY
627 Main St
Hunt1n9ton Beach
536-6539
ll'IB f t.MIL Y •
Cot.OHIAL F\IMllAL
HOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
f'ACIAC Yltw
MtiitOtllAI. f'AIK
Cemetery Mortuart
Chapel
3500 Pac11ic View Drive
Newoort Beach
644·2700 I
VETERANS
Rt•e rtlde Hatlonel
CeM•tery h Mow
OpH. HO CHA•fil for ....... lo ..... _
YttH_li.,..... .. ,,. .
Ctl fw .. hwa:AI•
Arm tron11 und l.hlftl•I
ll m p t 0 n d I t• d I II
l'ueorn.a\tu:J ~h·\Hu.
.... he rt ht• hjJ .:mll' ror
t r 1.• 3 t m \' 11 t 11 f I. 11 u
(i~·hntc <l1...,•aM'
\S ii\ I LLI-: I !:'on
•i\P 1 San arter , 81
lht> la.st nwmt)t'r uf lht•
OrJKllH•I (.'nrfrr l'.tr11ll)'
u roup l'n'ihH•d "1th
being amon~ thti flr~l t.o
1tmK <.'t•u.ntry m us1l' C*i. at
1 toda>. dll'd MondJ> al
her hornl' In Lodi. C<Jl1f
Tht• Carter t'amily,
w ho"le .-;on~'> 111dudl'd
"Will lht• <.:11 l'lt' ~t· Un
broken" and "i\ma11r\g
Grae<' · wa!> nanwd to
the Country Music 11.tll of
fo'amt' in 1970 by I hd 'oun
try M U!uc A~M>C1at1on
HOME tAP1 Pler
Lulgl Nervi, 87 one of
the world s leading
archikets whose IAOrk s
rang<'d from cathedrals
to sports palaces, died
to cl ~1y lie des igned
Roml' I\ Sports Palace.
t hl' hcadquartl•r s or
t:N ESCO 1n Paris. the
San Franc:1 s1.o
Ca thedral a nd th t'
Vat1<'an's mod1.·1·n1stic
audience hall
\~ A L N l ' T C R E: E K
I AP I Alfred Wahn
Gorman, 85. an '"'est
m ent brok<'r . died Satur·
day Gorman. a m ember
of the New York and
Pacific stock exch~mges .
direclL'<i the investment
firm of Gorman and
Kaysl•r
PUBLJC NOTlCE ----fllCTITIOta •USIHUS
HAME STATEMENT
t nt tQllOWtUQ per'\Of\\ .. ,. OOlf\Q
OU\\nf''\ ., HAl~ M0UN(l>IN MININC,
VENTURE, ... oo ltVIN Avt. ~ .. II(
104 ....... !)Ort S.-¥ ~ '" 91..0 Eugf',,... P Cott~'""'" ~ v,.111 v Or . Sm.,nt1e1<1, rv,.\\ l&l!lO
E uowne Paul Collrrm ... n 80•0
v.11,.y O• Smitlllttld To,., 11o1ao
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oec .Otm, W"Of"!1r1 f\Mr n11CMith• •'"-'' u~ •u\\ "ullhttttt<lf16f Ot1\ 'Kil•(lf'
0.1..0 J-r•• 1 .. ,.
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( 19<.UIHf Of Int _.110
Of t""ttl)r)YWO.Offiocl
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Utt M••-.. .._,\vii• l .. P•U Olll<t low l .. t
C..SI • M•..-. CA t2U6
hi w. .....
Attt•Mn tor luculrt•
l>ubll\h+'O Ot1.koQI' Cva•• CJ<11lv P1101
Jon • ••. 1l. JO 1919 118 1•
UAfl .. llfO,WlfMHAll'.A~ ""°""''"'" .. UH,, Otte UT I NO llNOl a
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ft •ti f-. \l't MlntJtW\•U ...-..-, fHf'4.1 on
Met I 1'1\ lfl tlWo ~If .t O< •.q ,.,,.M
l.Jit111M, "'"•f" lltillh\...0 Or ~ (~\I 0.•IY Piiot
Je" • '' U • I•"' \6'11 II .. auc NOTICE
PIC'flTIOUl auilHO\
HAM STATIMINI'
I~· IOHO•WIO .. r "°"l .... ""'no ""'""' ...... Hlwf'Ollt fl\I '·°''till PtK ltc
C-•I 14~~ Nh<uQtl ""• ~ (o1 ., .. J
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1-1wn1t11QIOt1 ~ "A. """1"..i1on 11~.""
C• fr.1\ f)U\Jn. \'tt \ 1 Q>f"dUt l••l Or •
".,..,., IM•l-""D ~Utlem J 81• .. "'"" fhh \Wlft"'nt w.ti t1lt"IJ #llh .,_.
CCHi~h Cr•t' of 0, ,n.,.. ( ~otv c;n
J•-rt. ,.,. Fl07 ....
Pvl>l•\1-O.li!lQI' '"'"' Y••ly P11111 J•" t, i.. U, .IO_!.Y7v U I•
Pl1BUC NOTICE
NOTICl TO CllCOtTOlt~
SU,.llllOlt COUllT OF THI
STAT( MCAl.IFOAHIA 1'011
fHll Q)UHT'I' 01' OllAHOE
1 Ne. A • .,,..
(tt•tt OI AN,.,4 ( l<lAIJI .• ~ .. AN
NA lllZAllf IH81.AIR DN••...0
NOT I CF'" HE Rt UY C.llllN to 1n ..
( rf'Ctltot\ Of tt'W "~~ ftfU~ \Wh Wtit
INt .aH 0rr~ t\AVfnQ <•·••HI •O-oO\t
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ttwtm. wllb ""' t"t(f\'-MY VUul , •• , • tu
ln• utHj .. ,"QMO ., 1118 A p,., di(
(O•\t Htuft..,•¥ M1t1l"ttHQtCM" Ht . .en
CA. wnt\.h '" f~ piw.r ut IN''"""' of
•M: vnCktf\tQnil"CJ in •II ""4tfh '' ..,.. 't.tto
"'0 10 IM ·~\Al~ nl \Mid ONVO<·nt
wl1P11" lour f110f"lt'' ~""' uw tit\I OU-bit( •• fOft Of fht\, n()f I(. t
o.1ca ~ ......... Iler" ,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE ooRr NC m••E-R
- - -E~t<UllU Of,,,_ 'ti\1111
CP-tlll ol !~ •OOrt na""'°
HOTICE TOCREOITOllS Clf'(~>flf SUPUtlOR COURT OF THE JOHN GUElllH
STATE 0, CALIFORNIA FOii 1111 A Pll<lll< CO.ll Hlflhw•y THE COIJHf'l'OFOllAHGt HlltUllltf..,a.Kll,CAO ...
Ho. A-ttUj AttorfteytotE.ucwtt
e .. 01~ ol H,t,ZEl A 'tlll[NTWORTH. Publ"Md O<oooe '°"" O.otly "•IOI Oecu.1:11 Jan •.1•.1l.JO. 197' 11•/t NOi ICE IS _.E.RE8v C.IVEN lo Ille -< t..0110<\ 01 ,,,.. .wiow ,..,,_ oe<~I
tr-(.tit ..-11 Pt' r\Ofi'4 n.11•no ctAmh ~fln\t
,,..~ .. .,.a (kc .. a• 'll ,.,,, rfl"Qu•~ tom~ _
thtm w ttn ttwt tv•tn,....,.,.v ~ouc.htH\, 10
PUBIJC NOTICE
ll ... 1n. ot••q ot tt• 1,,n. t1t tn.. acovv"'
I 1111 d Ot.1H. trl fl" pt ""°nt tf'W-m . .,_,flh
U'I~ r\t't , .. j\,ctrv v .JU'"'''' to thf' un
dH\•<11•"0 o11 '"" '""" 11lltc,. Of KIGl-H l>NO ~UT TON tt<I., JM• lonq B~<t<ll
8cx.ilt·w.H•l ~u1rf' A '(J'lQ t!wdl'ft. CA
\f0ti01 Nhu h ••tr-Jj'f'', 01 bt..1~1n-.·\\ oe
Ult· unrter\;QnoMJ tn au m.11t~'" Otlrt•IO
mo to trlf' t-\tdh· of -. wl O<t(~1nt,
w11n1n •our month i'ih r tn+ t1r't
publlldhOfl of 1"4'.» llOl1\ I
0,_tMt JanlJ.jlllfV 1 1•1•
EAi~ M ._+lhnJn
AOmH''4 ,trd\t)f' w 1tn N tll
'-nrw"(t\J ot lnt' ,.i ... tt-01
t~ •bo"" nmnttJ \kt.t-Oont l(IGHT ANOSUTTOH,INC ,
Jt.C• LOft9 llff<h 111¥<1., S11tlt A
... ,,. .. .ic .. ,CA-r.1 l>UI ~
41lor,,eyt 10f Ad"""'~'r"or CTA Puotl~ °' •'Gt' Cou•• Oa11y 1>1101, ,.,, • ,. t l JO 191'<
PUBLJC NOTICE
WIST Oil.ANGE JUOICIAL
DISTRICT t If I 111'11 Str-
W•lnl-r, CA ttw:i
'UMMONS ~lf~SI ...
Pl•lnllll. BAKER PROTECTIVE
SERVICES, I NC: db.a WEI.LS FARGO
AL.ARNI SERV(C£5
Otftnd'enl J(RllE Al.I.EN
JEW1!1.ERS, JERRE Al.I.EH. DOES
r i:,~1~xv!~<~~"...,. '""· "r ...
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,t,YISOI u...-tu ...... --. l!I T ................ c,WW ~ro u-.
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dell .........
I. TO THE OEFENOAHT A clvll ~ ""' -tll<IO by Ille platn 111u.-1nsi you Iliff IOQlnot•' 1
• II '(Oii w1•fl to O..lwna th11 la-uu,
\'Oii ""'5l, ""111ln lO d41Y• •fler 11111
_.._ b Mf'IOCI on you •••• ••Ill 1111, court • •r1tttt\ o•••01n9 1n
PUBUC NOTICE
llHrrldl ... ~· NOt1(t Ii UlllC:ev OIYaH
1t11ft111Ant .. IHI'°"• 10,t eN 10'1 et
t111 <I ~II C•Ot •I '"' \lilt ol
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'•l"I Ct •ttl'I, ti IO OI AM 911
Je"11ory U, lt1' l~I follewlllt -~ r leed ""::::T It-wll I C..ffl<O bl, 11.,q NO Cl'
• 014 AT '1" .,.,, No ~uun, ltl\Qlll ou-.
hid \<t!A 1. '°' '"" ..,,.,. .. Of tailt ''•no 11•11 o1 IM Glldt"IQllfd to< _, ·tot-1111r.-lol\lff ttlfl4 ., ,,. ton11-•el• Of u 00 ..,, 0.1 '"'" o.t•,,..., '9. 1•n "'-'"'r with CO\I\ <ii oMllltr11tll\Q •"4 UGenMl Of ....
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Jtn • '"" t•1•
PlJBUC NOTl CE
HOflCl tHVITINO llOi
110 ITEM NO flt
NOllCC I\ 111:RE!IY C.lllf'N '""' '-t"'"° pr~t\ w1U l)t rH•t¥t0 b•
lflt Cotv Of C.,1,, Mt.a 10 wll rtw CJ
11 C.O..n<tl. ~· 0 uo~ '*· (O'!l• M.w. (•itlorn.~ ori or bo<lun ~ hour ol
11 00 • m , an -lfWY, J•n...Wy 2•,
ly/'f 81flt Wiii "" jJUIMu t Y Olk',_ .,.. '•"a "'c>ud •• ti 00 4 m., Of ., '°°" lf•·rUltt• '" pttKllCaoft, on W010t1•n1 CUY, l•n ..... ., 24. i•tt. In llW Goun<ll
( ... l'lt:ltl\ Cltv Hell 11 "'•Ir Ottw
Co••• M•'•· C.•t•to1n1• to r ~"•
lur"""'"ll of BROOMS. c;vnER. lo• I~~""~"',..._' Add1t1on41 wts ot lhir \Pt'( 1••c ->t1on\
•fo41 l)fO OOlatll'G "1 IM Qftl(t QI llW
PutelloolnQ Aooent. 17 F•I• Orovt
lo\I• M•M. C;tlltOrnt• 81d\ \l>Ollld b" r.ti;rneo to Ult fllOflltOn ot 1111' City
'•"· '" • \MteO ttlYl'IQpt\ 10..nut~a on Ille ouhlOt wtlh lllt' fl•O l••m
,.,,mb@r Ond '""' Ocltl\tnQ 0•1• £•ch bid •NII SP«lh 11•ch ano •v~ry U•m ., ••• fott" en tn..,
Wttlll<•llOltS A/tv -all fA<•'ClltOt,.
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df\'; ,, .. m, '"TN \Ot"'(OltdtH)f'I\ \n.th Ott
yruvnO'lo tor rt1e< ttOt' Of tf'le tHO
['"<II Diel,,...,'""" 11\t lull...,.,.,
•~o •e•lcwnc.-01 "" ~r\01\.~ .no p..rl•t~ •nttrl"e\U .. ~ In thf) OH>CIO~··~ a\
11r.n"""'~ ln<.•""OI <0<110t.r1tons. In
(.hide tru tk)mt \ of trw Prw:,10.nt
Y• relary r....wr..-and Mb/-•
1 ti• c.iv U>u"'•I o• 1n .. Ctty 01 con•
Mt \tl f; .. , Wfl\ thr , •c1hl 10 ,,. fe! t .,,y
,, ~Hb1Ch
o .. i. 0 Junu.Jiry ) '''"'
Pullll•.,,..., 0.""1111 c.o.l\I °"''' PtlOI
PVBUC NOTICE
lllPI•• COVH 01' THI nATI! CW CM.ll'OUllA '0111
THI COUNf\' OffotlANOI '"·~ N O fH.I Of HE"R INO OJ
,fllTIOH FOii PfllOti.AT& 0, WILi.
llHO LattlHSlUfAMI N TAllY
E•l•t• Of u~uu. SAWCHUK, 0.C:e-0
HOTICI '' H(llf8Y CUVtN 11\otl !CATHI lttNe \AWCHUIC 11•• 11114 lltrtir> I tltlllion l0t ftrOO.te 04 Wiii
etid '""•"'• Ill k•11tt• fftt-nt8ry
te tlll P<tt•t-"""''-• to ""''<h "
-· IOt I~ Nrttc.,Y,'-Mf\11 llNI
''*time -111 .. Of llM•lnO """"""' ht• _,, .-i tor J~ I•, tt 1'. ti 10 oo
• m , tn Ow t-.1CIOM of O..otnmtnl NO , 04 ...0 {-1. el 1(IO O•t< C...,ter
O•lvt' W"I "' lflo Ctty et ...... AIM
c:.tlto•f'I•, 0.ltd Oft z .. ..,,
WILLIM4 I . •t.10t4N. C-IY~
llOe lttM.. HUatlHl',t,"l..llt
ltTt ... ,.., """· SoNtt 114 c.Mlt ...... Ce.,.,.
fet· Mt-JMI Actwwley i.r· ....,._
flll"t>ll\IMICI Or41119t Co..t O<!•IY P1lot •
Jen •· • •~. "'¥ 14 I~
PUBLIC NO'l'ICE
MOUl.TOH-NIGUll.
WATe• OISTllllC'T
NOTICI UIVITIHGSl/ll.&O 110$
FOil THE CONSY'llUCTICIH 01'
•ANCttO •UrllYOlll
ftUWl!fOUATION llMO Tll~lSION ""'IN
COHTltllC'T NO. MO
Tll• eoerd 01 01,.ctor• ot Ill•
MOllllOn Ni-I W•lt r Otll•ICI fl
0r6119<' '°""''" C.lllOnll•, htrelNlt .. In M>Mt IMl<trlcei 14tftt"'° lo ii\ "Oo\
trlct. 6o Nf9IW 1nv11e w1'4!d bi01 to. u-e tollOWlllll dH<rtbed llUbll< _...
f ~ C.on~ll'IKI-of ll•nUIO R_.._r
rumplnQ Sllttlon t!>O fr4lfl•mlutO"
Mein. Contrecl Ho I 10 IOQelMr with •" _,,_.. _.. """'' .,~ '" .. ,.,, ..... deK•lllted ... ,,,. ~
proltlU, drewln91, H<llOtU, ... o ~Cltlc•llons Oii Ille '" 11'11 olfk~ 01 Boyle E~lnQ C&wPOtilllOll, UOI
011•11 Street, Ht •port 8••t ll
Olltorn1•, wNcll doc..,,,...,11 •re Dy
'"'~ r~l~rttnc• 1ncorpor•lPd N!re1n
FOf ~lion•, •nd \Oe<itlultoni fOf ti..
•IJOYt IHKti'*I ltnP<-4tntltlt0
C.onltol<I [))("""'"" <>nd ConltrW< lton Sc>eclltullon• eno C.on~truclton
PtoM '°' 1116 COt)~tru<llon of "R•n<no
Reur vol• Pump11>g S1111on •no
Tr•n1m1u•on M••n. Co•ll•<a<I No
1.70 • S•lcl 01..,.. •nd -·tlutlon•
mo ~ ...,,.,,..,_o •t tilt otfl<• ot
Bovlt' E1'1Qtllffrl119 CotPOfillon for
11000 ~t M( a.ci. rtlllSI lie .....
p.1y•Dlt lo IN llllOulton-H•-' Wiltr
01\trlcr
Jdf•u•r V ¥ IV/~
PUBLIC NOTICE
Purwont to Ille 1.-C-ot Ille
!>t••• ol c.trtorlll•. ltw MOullOft.NIQ<WI
W•ter oi.1ric1 ,,., AKtrto11'90 '"" prtVt•lll'IQ rate 01 ~r ooem w"9f\ or
1• ,. Ille 1oullly It> """ltl 1n1s "'°'-1s lo bP ~rlormeo lo tw •• oetelH!d 111 ltw
Sollllletn CA•llornt• MHl4tt l•Do<
A9tnment 111!'0 In '"" Offt<t Of Ille A~
\D<••l•O ~nt'ritl C.onlfector. or
-----------A,,..r1u,Solllhef'llC.l1tom1•~U CP--J
SUPIRIOll COUllT OF THI;
H J!,TE OF C.ALIFOtlNl,t, f'OA
THE C4UNT'l'OFOA1'HGE
Ht A·•&Hl HOrtCE Of llEAlllHG 01' PETITION I OR PllOllATE OP' WILi.
AHO "011 1.ETTEll!> TESTAMEH·
T,t,RY AHO AUTHOlllZATION TO AOMINISTEll UNOEll THE llf0EPfH0£1fT AOMIHl5TllATIOH
Oft-E~TATUACT
E:\l<1le Of MAA'f H. NllCHALKO.
Oec••...O NOTICE IS 11ERE8Y C.IV[H '""' PAUi. MIOfALKO. HI , ""~ llttd ""r•ln a .,.11uon '°' Prooet• of Will trio tor ,,. IWl<e ol l•lllWl Te\!.,,...
tt•Y •nO .... tnor11•1-to .c1m1nlsttt
under Ille .~1 AOt'nfnl\lratlon Of Esi.tes Acl rete•*fl<• 10 wnl(h 11 .....,,. •or lutther P¥11<111en ~ uwt
'"" 1•1111 -,,.. .... """'1119 lhe Sll-,..~ ll"•n wl tOt' J""""'" :JO, tm. 01
10 00 <1,ITI • In tne ro..rtroom Of Oepar1
"'~"' No J ol -..10 courl, •I /00 Clvlt
U"l\t r °''"' W.\I "'IN C•IY DI S..All An41 C.cthh,_.-n.&
OJ Itel Jdnwr y ~. •~IQ
WIU.IAM E. SI JOHN
l<Nn'• <•-tk JalTIOE W•-m
(Ol)lt\ of tlw ~lll P't!V•lllnQ r••• ot oor c11em w1911~ as Clele•m•~ct by
l'W 01\tro<I d~ on Ille <'II ti\ l)ttll<llMI
o•.t<• oi ~nt\\. 10 w11 u~ u P•1
R041<1 L#JuN Niqut'I Cal•lomtd A\
r~uoroo bV Se<.tlOf' llll r>f lht t.•OOt
(Ocie, the C.ontr«IO< to Wf\Om '"'-' ton
lrnl i.eref0< " dwotrOfd '""" PO\I • tOPY thereo! .it elCll jOO\•le
I l $NII De ......OOlory -illY (.on
1ract0t lo wnom • cOlllr«l •• aw•roeo
allO llPQn ef\Y WOl onlr <IA. tor undet 111"'
to IMY not·~· !Mn'"" W•d ~·lltcl ••tel ID <HI I~. wor1<ftMft, -rne<n•n•" ~oYta oy lllem lft •~
••t<ut1on ot lftl! conlt«I T-•t• '°' ••llure IO <Ofl'l!llY ~r•wlltl •• d• -tfklO tn ~hon lllS DI ltw LabO<
COde.
Tiie Contrattor .r1•ll IMV tr,,.,.I -
sub.,\tot><~ D<tYmenls lo *.Ch
wo,...m4lfl """'*' 10 ut<ute Ille -•·
•• Su<ll tr•,... .i'll \umt,Wfl<e INY .... nl\ •re tltlllll!CI •II Ille .,pjK.Oi.
COllt<llve IWltQlllllr>Q ao<"fftnenl\ lllecl with 111e Otoen-nt Ol lndullro••
Rtl•llOl\S In ll<<~ w11n 5e<llon
111' a 011ne uttor cooe
SU Pf:ltlOll COOllT OF THE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOii THE COUHTY OF OllANGE ~ri:·o,.:~. ·:.:. ~~rn.·:~11~111": ot I( IHO&I. i AHOl!llSOH
1010H. llro.od, 8oalH "-"ll At>f, CA UlCIJ
Attention " dlre<.tra 10 llltl pro
vl•lon\ •n 5«1.-1117.S -1111 • ot 1t1• l.ebo• Gooe tonurnH>Q 11\t
employ,,_ Of ~enl"" 111'1 llM Con
tr•ctor or eny tuOConlreclor u-• "•m. No """'"' NOTI C E O F "lAlllHG OF Pl!TITIOH l'Oll ftltOllAT& 01' WILi.
l<HO COOICll. ANO 1.ETTlR$
Tl!STAMlHTAAY 1'011
AUT"ORIUITIOH TO Al>MINISTER
UNOl!ll THE IH0l"EHOEN'f AO-MIHISTRATIOH OF ESTATE!> ACT
Eoete or lMMI> " rr<..l!R"
~ ... ,..o
~ • Wftlla11 pitecllnQ or """'9 en orll ti..olno to be •nl•,..., tn llM
d10t11111) unHts.,.,., oo ao, '°"" Oef•ull ""'Ile-·""" upon •llPl•"'''°ll Of I .... DIMrtlltf, ..... lf>ll COll'1 mey 4tlll0t a 1......--"'st JOU fOf U.. rtllel de -In 1M (.....,lalnt, wlltcll c.o"ld rtlllll In .-rllfll\r'l'ltnl ol -9fl. t<1ktng
ot ~yor pr-r1•or otl'llr rtll•I r.-~In tilt t.0mot•1nt
II. It '" ..... It lHtl IM MVIU of .. .....,.,.., lfl tMs -ner . .,.w tl>ewM .... """""'' .. , .... ,...r "'""-"
,....,.., ti .. .,.-· -"'" ... 11 .... o.t.cl Oct •• tt7t. AIO..nl J W¥k
Otrtl
By C.ro1 t<u110.
1110 ss.11n
AllOfMY fer: P.U.io-t Publt•n.o Ot.JnQr C.0.\1 O.otv Piiot
Jdn 9. 10, 16, 19,.
Stc:llon 11p >.ti~.-~" rne Co111tet1or or sub<ont••cl•• employing tr~ 11'1...., ~
lit Hbl• O(C-ll'on 40 •OPIY to '"'
",. '"'"' •PP""""""" col'!m~ -------M¥HI I .. llle of tl\t ..,.I< -111 PUBUC NOTICE 11<ole<1 .no Wiiien d!ltMton 11w -prenllce~P proOflm In -lf41d4t IOr
• c@rtllocal• ol •11orov•I.-Tll•
cullllc•le wl" '''°Ii• lht ,.,io of •c> ortntlot lo IOllt*ymen tf\al wlll De
Cl'IOM
SUl'~lllOR GOU RT OF THE ST,t, Tl 0" CALIFOllNIA 1'011 rHE COIJNfY OFOllAHOE Ne. A...S.M
u~ld tn 1111 '""'°'"*'" oi lllt con tr•<.t ff\t «1110 of <11111rtntl&0•• to ,.,.,,.,..men 111 well c.,_., >llelt -Iii' teu 1114111 one to fl•• ••<flll
f"1\ ttdfM•• nt WO\ ft1"1 #•ff\ lr.f
C.oun1y ere.-OI Or.inQt• lOunrv on
NOTICE IS "fll£BY C.tVfN INI
<:.4THERtNE I. Pl>RIAI\ ~"' lth-0
htllttin .. ptotHtCMI to• Probtltfl at Wut
•nd (OdiCH\twid Lf"UPf\ l• ''" .. '' nt.uy •no tor •1.nnoru1.thon 1c. ~tni.tt • u1· oe' 1ne •notO-"f°IOtfn ..ctrntn .,,,,,ti~ of e \hllU' Ac.• tf't"(('I" ,. 10 whit" ....
mctdt tor tur-ftlPf 06•t•CUl.Jt\ -'nd tr\ot
tllt tunt. 4'lO ~-.. o1 n.-.-r1nQ tht: wrne
II.I\ Offl\ .,., lor JM .... r ( I] 19]q o)t
10 00 u m. '" tntJ tourtfoom 01 OfcMrt
mt'nl No 3 of ""'" tourt 4'1 /i., ,,..,,, Centn Or-•w-Wft\t. 1n thl C11v of ~ntA
An,), C•lttor"'•
o-wrt.':'.t1
... 'MW.,.. •1w., ht1• -.. -'Y "lll•, CA "211
HOTICIE 01' HEAltlNG 01' ftlEYlflOH FOii PllOllATC OF Will
ANO "OR 1.l!TTEllS TESTAMlN· URY A"'O AUTHORIZATION TO
A 0 MI H tsi£ A U H 0 l!ll TH IE
IWOE PCHOEHT ,t,OMIHISTRATION
OF ESTATES ACT
A 'tlllllen unemplovm•,...-;;;-'"• aru 01 cover-bY ttw tollll •llPf•,.
IK••lllll tll<nm411tt ,,., f'•t-0 Ml
.... ,~ ot IS '" -90 o.,s rwoor IO 1111 req11ts1 lo< c•rt•ltutt or January 8 101• •
1'101 ... 7
.. ~ol•\l>eO °'-(Da\l IM•IY PtlOI J•n 9 16, :t~ JO, 1919 40 19
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSIHl!SS
NAME STATEMENT
T n1 olh:1w 1no Pt'''°" '' 004"9 bY •
N!'\\ a ..
WINOMt1.1. FlOl'l•'>I, HHI
Mt ,nlyt• St . La<IV"" Hiii• (d YJOJ
0on•td J R••"""''"" 2-~S. V Id
(ntrii, Mh•\•tan v.._ tQ4 t•
Hu\ °",.,,.......,I\ Cund\l(IM by ttl\ •"'
OIY•dUal
Oot"nfd RA"""''"•·n
Tn1\ \l.t1Hlll"nt <N4~\ t h \I w •I" th•
Countv Cl\•,k ot o,,.,,~ County OIP't
Jrmuttf't e. 1019
FIOl'°'I
PUl)IO\""O °'"""' '"""" Odtly P110t J<1n q It il, lO. 1'14 ~ N
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT T11~ lollowil'IQ 1><1r~M ere do1n9
buStM\\ .,
HOl T INC , JJOJ Horbor llvd ,
Suite O·S, C~la Mu, Cl> '1fl16
'till C.. HOit Int . a C~lll0tnl~ <Or por.u1on. lJQ3 l'l•rbOr e1vo Sun• O J, Co•I• M4'w, C.A .,.,.
This b<Xlnft> " bf•no C-u<l4t0 DY
• torPOr&tlon 'tlllllli-G HOii
T111• \l;Jl-1 W6\ fllfld Wtfll '"" County Cltrl. Ol 0r•"9" County on
Qeum1Htr21, "11 , tOOS.
DOHALO MAOOIH
46JeV..,l(-
H4tWllOf1 8-11, CA ttMO PuDll~neo Orange '°"" Dau, Piiot ~· rt/I, Jen 7. ~. ••. "~ ~·
PUBLIC NOTICE
--,lcTifj'"'outtUsiN-esi-
NAME ITAfEMCHf
Tiit foll-•l'IQ ~oon\ ••• 0011111
butlnOt d' C:. P f'UNOIHG, U• !>""' MtQll••I 0r1 ..... )Utlr 100 Nl'Wl)O'I llt'<ltll CA
~ P•vt r Fru<,_.,, •Ill (OflWICI
Coron• ckl M•r. CA OJll1S
Gfor11• C Ho••nN, HI l
Gn.tl""I A...-""" 0.M>QP. CA '164>1
Tll" l>"\ln<l\\ 1\ con<luct..i "' A ~r•I p.lrtflllf'\lllp. GPf'lll'!ltNJ
P ..... F fJrvcNrom __ , .. __
Tiii\ •llOl""*'I we• lll<ICI ,.1111 I""
CWtllY CIHk ~ OfM\119 Covnty Oii Jin j, ,.,. ;
Mr.llte .. ttL.""'•
$tr NI..,._ Y~C.-& 11•111
P.O.lea7"9 ... -..n-..ao'*-,.,,,. ..
PvOlt.i.rd 0...nQoo C.ot.i 0.11' Pllll ~ '· ... tl,JO ... .,. .. 7t
PUBIJC NOTICE
0Alfl0 J-ry .. 191"
WILLIAM E. SI JOHN,
Co.irllyC~rl<
Wll.l.IAM II. FAOEllEllO
H'4J cam1110 a. E11-.11a
Capltlr•M llH<ll, CA '7'24
T•I ... <4111
Atl~llO IW "91tt-
Publt\""° Ot-C.o.t\t Od•IY P•IDI
J4tn 9, HI, I•. IY/Y U-19
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSI NEU HAME STATEMIHT
f "~ toliO-•tl'W1 cwr-.ant. ,.., ,. OV1ru.1
ou:ii..n,.u •'•
l'<ANCHO )AN OtCGO 11111.AC.l'
A!>SOC 11> ff S. 1901 Oov• '>tt ••I
N,..wQOrl tt.•" h. Caf1tom•• 92660
P•l•<•n '"-•nd Company c o
Oon~tll M 1<011. l>O'I Vt_. Lt!IO ~.
Newoon 8t di h (Alll.,,nl• 42..0
0 P fJh(ldl~m.>\, It Hdtl Moon
B•v Orivt COt"on.. Otl Mdr l.dlUorn1c1
~1b1S
Cvoren Oa•tt, 111 1141! M~H
Oro•• ,...,.,,.,., 8tdt1' (.et•lornl•
•1~
T 111\0llly l Slr·•O•to 100 Porl AIDtn,, Newpofl Bv•C". C•ltlOrnto} ,,...,
~t~nto F flroono11 ) "°"'' !>ur o ..... N~wl>Orl ll~<lf n Ca It torn••
9'6l>O
9 E FIPO, '118 .... ~ .. Valley
Cou•I. L• JOll•, C..llf0<n••~10Jl
Orrin 'till Mlllwr llJT S•nt•
Mad,.,• Court, Sot•na 8eltcl't,
C•lltornta t?01S
1' I: l>rOll"'ll4'\, int t o A4tln<1
l..•1• ln•llf-t' CornP<Onv. Rur f\ldlt 1nvntm~n1 Oe1><1rtn,.n1 ~ C.1••<
C4'nle• f>la1A, Harth>ro. Conn<lctl<ul
0.143
W\'\ICDt Vtnlu<n. J))O Hor1h C.n
tt11t Avt~nw. Sf11t"'n1h f k>of, Pnotntx,
AttlonO 8SOtt
l hh bu~'""'' I'\ (VflOuthld Dy •
ltntl l<HI 0;)(1""""'°
T 1tnn1n, I. Sir-•
Tnl\ \1•1•"""11 wo 11""1 wllll Ille
Cnunly Cltr• ol Or•nll" Co11nty,
C..worn;•. on ,..,,.,..r, I. tv/t """4S Publtillt1I Or-U>loil Da1ly Piiot
J.1" •. ''· n, JO, "" a.-19
PUBLIC NOTICE ------------
Ttl: um w.e101 _., ..... ,., .... 1111
•The word 'compt•1nt 1f\cl~•\ ~•nt, ''PIAtnlill I"' lucje\
c.rou.conipl•ln.Jnt, "oetencla"I ' tn·
CllllllK crou-del~nclllnt, s1n(lijltr 1n
:-Int otur•I dllO maM11ltnt '"
"-fem><1one allO MUltf' • -111rn pit~ ln<IUdtnQ •n .,.swer O..m~r
rt!f', l!lc., rnu\I DI In ltw lo<I!\ r-lred ll't' IN c.t"Offll• Rule\ of Co..n Yo"r
«f91MI plHdtllQ f'llu<I bto lllecl tn 11\o\
C-1 '#1111 rwoper tlllllQ ltts •"" 11•oot
'""' • eopy tl\tnlOI -· ........ o on .. c.11 plelntlff'' eltorne' •llO on Hcil p!al"
Utt ,... r•""'-by 8tl ettorney
Thf llme -• SulTll'llOM ,. detmtO ~on • 1111rly l'NIY •ary lleP4tndlnQ on tr. me11'C>O of Mr••<•. I-or """m .. -ccP~IJ IOllW'0\19" 41) '° Pl.ell~ Or.-g• Co.ut 0.1ly Pl tot,
tit< 1•, 1971, J4lfl 1, • I•, ,.,,
P UBLIC NOTJCE
HOTIGE TO CR&OITOllS
No.,,.....,.
SUPElll()llt COU•T 0, T11E
STAT£ OF CAl.IFO•NIA. FOii
Tl!E COUHTVOI' OllApjOE
t n lllt MeUP• ot l!W lht,.te or
lOW•E'Y R HURl(Y, ..... 1.owAEY
RA'l'MONOHURLfY OH'PAWO
"'0TICE IS HERF'.8Y GIVEN lo
crl'Clllor• ""•lflCI < latm• .... '"" '"" wKI Ot<t'dtnt lo flt~ .,.,o c l•1m• tft 11\t
oll 1u ot 1i. <1er11 Of "'" •tonwKI
court or to e>rMelll lllem to '"" un tlttrllQ~"O al '"" Olll<• or OSBURN &
OSBURN, ~ Pt'tMm Avl'<ltw lo\
Ano-tes CA 'I0071 wt11<11 111111•1 Ollk•
h '"" Pl<t<• Of bu\lllfU QI I"" un clet\IQ,..0 In ell m .. ttet\ Ot!ltetnlna lo
\Aid f'JlOIP Suen <'•'"'' wHll th• necn~ry VO<ltlle" mu<.I ~ '''"' Of protnl"' "' •I01• .. IC! within 111111
montM •llur tilt-ltr\I 11Ulll•<•1ton 01
lllt1110ltte Oet"'Ot<~•. me. •
MINNA MARIA SNYO(ll
Adminl\lr~trlt of tnt """'p Ol '910 e1e<-.i1 With
'tlllllfAl\fte)l'fd
OH UlllH ANOOSIUllH
,t,tter11tywt.1..aw
JOM,.•ltllf!l,t,.,.
Le1 ..,,...le\, CA •n
Publl\lltl«I Orana-Coest O.lly PllO\
Ct< "· J6, ltl8. J(lfl 7. ··~~·
P VBIJC NOTICE
(\tall ol RUIH l>URE.ll• RYAN,
Dtu.~~ .. c.·a NOTIC ( IS HEREBY C.IVEN tlldl
Mii ClREcO OPMSIW 114< lllf'CI Mttlt>
• fl"IOllOfl le.< PtOOlllC"' Wiii ""° fOf
1uu,1n<•• o4 Lt"lftlf\ Tt>\t~mentary •no
du1noru .. tFw1 tn <t(tM.in1 .. ttr the IJ\t6te
~1nd\:r tr-. tr'IOf prndt'1tl .AOm•n1str~h<>f'
O'f E'>tiJh' Act rdC rente to wtuth ''
m.~~ IOI l"'lllN P•JrtlcUl!lr>. <Ind lhAI
t ht t mft Jno P'Mf' ot l"Nt•no the w""" h•\ o-en \et I« J...wry JO. Hl'I o>I
10 ()(j <1 •n '"I~ cOllrtroom ot 0.'!Mrt·
"'""' No l Of ... ud tourt, JI 100 (!VIC (•~"· On~ Wc•I In Ille (Uy ot S..nloll
""" C<11tlorn14
0dlt d J&o ... ,. s. "" • 'tllllLl.IANI l":~t JO~N,
C.Ounty C.tur ~
ThOITIU I. Loni
SU ti• 201 II
1U11 Pot<I de V•tencl•
u9unA Htllt, CA tl•U
(llf) Sll·J.M
... 11 ...... ., lot. ~1-
P11bl1>1M!O cw .... oor c.o..i oa••• P11o1
8, Wiien 11"' n11m00tr of .tl)tlf..-
l•c.•• In lr."nlnQ 111111t Mt:• t "'e•O• •
r•llD Ol one IO""''·°'
( Wiien 1M tr41de <Ml "'°"' 1"'1 ti
IS rtpleclno •I lt'lm , • of 1111 -b1•r•>1•lrrttlr'OuQll tlj)C)r..,lltft/llP lrltl"
ltlQ on "" ...,_, biO~I \talt'frtcM or
""•"' t>r ·o 'tlllheft '"' Conl•~'°' ,,...,..._
.... oence llWI• "" er1111toy• reo1tte•eo •PP<enlltn on ell of 111. tonlre<ts on en A""llel ot~r-ot nol l<tU 111.tn one
apprtnllu to •IQll4 ~"
Tll<I Contrlcto< 1$ '9qliireO lo me•• c~ to tuna• tst&bllshl-0 tor
lllt .Otn•NSll .. lon of _. ... lttH"'P
P<D9••m• 11 llt employs f'e9hlet4tCI
ill>C)Anllces °' tovmermen 1n •nv"" prentlcuble lrOOt> on well conlr<1ct'
•llO II Diiie< ""111 «tor\ on I""' puC)lt<
_,ks ••It .r• ~ •u<ll Lontr11111
ttons.
Tl'\O Gontr~or •nd ..,Y tUO<ontrot<
lor uncle• lllm t.IWlll comply wllh '"" '' qu1reme111• Of St<llon 1177 s-1111 •
In Ille M!pfoymtn\ Ol <!~lkM Jal\ •. 10, II>, Jql'# l8·I lntormetlon rt l•ll•I' 10 •11Prtn
lluYllP sloll1dllrd• w •QO! >el\e<llllM\ •nd oll\ct• •-1rel'TIHlt' may DC ob ••IMO trom,,,. 0.rt'CIOt oi ,,..,.., .....
Rtlellons. ,, ot11<t0 lhl-4CIM1n1slr•t0< P tJBLIC NOTICE
IUllU of Apprflnllt~lllP. !>41n n•nt1Ho
tO'flCE M Ta UHl•'I M L• Clt1tlor111.t. 04 lrom llltl OtvtSM>!I ot Ap'
T.S ,... n..11 P<tntko"'P ~ -•IS llt.tn<ll
On ~y IS, 1'7'. et It~ A.M., Olll<e• Tiiie 1..--e efld Trust Golnl*IY, NOTICE IS HEAE&Y GIVEN lllOI
• OUly ....,... ... Trust ....... •nd ltlt Moult-Hi~ WalH OtJtrlt. I ... 111
Oll'Wlfll '° °"" of lrl.llt ... Qll'OM rtU!IYt \ffltd llocb ti ,,,. Olllct OI
Jl#lt 2, 1ffl, •• !Mt. No ..... Ill llol>lt Boyle EllQiMertllO CorPOt.tllon, tSOt
IZZM, 119111 17, Of Otlkl•I litecor~ II\ Ou•ll Streel. N••POrl Btlfh.
tllt altkt of tlw Cour\4y ~*' Of c:.t11to•nt• liP to 11\t llOUf 01 1 p"' "" 0r.,.. c:-'f, C.lll9r'rlle, Jeno;e1y 12 ,~,.. et -II II~ •""
WILi. SELL AT PU8LIC AUCTIOtil PIKt lheY ... 11 bt9 llUOlt<ly -IW'd •flll
TO ~41Gt4EST llOOEll fi>R CASH rHO S..td >ff..0 lllclo ~fl I» !Of Ill(! ~· el 11,.,. OI Hll In laWfltl dolllQ Ot lt'lt public -It tlft'elnoefof'e ..-y ot trlt Uf!IMcl $\Mttl et tlw Otwrlbed -Ofd9r'ed"' tllt 'Ntld re-~ ff'Ofll elll•...cAI to tN Old 0.lllOI IOMlon, '°""'' CAIUt'IMllM localecl I" IN toO Et<.11 Dill or "'-"' \Mii I» mede INtll ot W"' 5'Wlt<t AIW &o.11ewrd 011t •net 1ubmmlld on it form to DI OO·
!omllrfy W.., '111 lltttt, Serota An•, t.IMCI al lllt afttce ot Boyle El'IQll\Ht
Cllltoml• •" r\OM, 1111• .,.. lrtterttl 1n9 Coroor.tton, UOI OW•• <;treet ~ to Mid now ll<llCI 11¥ II \lftdtw N••POrl 81«11. OlllOt'I'•• t.c:n D;d
...id DMd ol Trldt 111 Ille proPf11y or Pf'OllO\al mu•l be .C<.Ol'nllanleo by ~ tKIMIWO Ill Hid Coli~1' IM Slalt t•\l\1er'1cflo(k0t cl'!Klt c~r111t..O DY• dttlC•._ .. : l'ffllOnllblt.,.,... or• -s Mnf lor
Lob ~' end n et '"1'1 .... Clh of en amoun1 not lh• 1N11 '""'" Of 111e """"'°" lte<n, .. "'°"" 1111•1'114111,.. •moynt Ol 1111 !>Id or oi tl'lt 101er
,.,..... lfl boo!I ,.. .... " .. """ ·-· "°" wf\1(11 ll'lty ,i;Jlf e«tlll • ~ ....... ~.~ .. 41ttl<t et lllt <OflVKI ...0 -Pfl'f .. IO 11\t Of ~.,~_. _ _..,. ,.. er an Ult ,,_ of dw Mwt""' ... ..,..... ....... °' ~ -11 HIOUel wee.r OfWICl [ec,11 w<ll 6iCI •itMllon .... llle!I lllf"I ....... tl'lt or,,_ .. , wtl DI M8HCI ~ lllfd el
in.Mt· Y.li IN'( ....... *9C'I'-.. IM Offkt Of t1'1t 0.~1.-1 •tor O.IOft .. ..,..n, 11¥ ~!flt • Wfl-..... .i!Nft ,. deyt .,.,.,. ... ,.,.. tllt "~ In""~ flOtk• '""""'"'
NOTICl TO ClleOITOll,J ~IOllef tlllt nolt<» IO, T-M .00... ,_,.i.l'tecl CllWll or ~ .... A .. 161• a.Ill Of -...rt. c/0 llM9ts, l(eft· \NII ot gt1"W\ n 9'1H.,,C .. thttl 11\f , _ _,; DIOOH wlll ...,.. Wtw I <OfllrKI II
SUl'&•IOlt C:OU•T 01' THI 41t!I ' Horr .. ,......, •m MllCNll\\lf -rdH '"' ........ .ol'CI ""'". Cl.tifMd $TAT£Ol"CAl..lfl .. HIAl'Oll llvd,, ~ .. IKll C.llt, Altll ttllQ11~HCM1tN9HlllMt11<<•Mlltl
" U t1£ COUHTY Ol'OltllHGI ~~"":ill w n\flM, Out w4tt!M lillctOtr rtfuw lo llflllf '"le 111<1 con
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Ot< • ,., tt1ti , ... "'· ''" ..IW ,,. .,...,. ,...,. ~~l~~
he Bigg st MarketplcJ( 1 On The Oran9tCoast
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
......... ....w. ....................... ···•••······•·•········ c. ... ,.. 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
a.e>U! A~erti..,.. IACKIAY
..... dleck .. _. l«e4 br + f~ nn ln de· ......._ .... _.. ~ sirable Beck .. )' Ueit.
_, ' ......... • Only a yn okt • ~•·aac
,.... I •••fw. 11Mt loullon. Zoaed for DAILY PILOT ..... , ~. Htee rear yl'd • Wllllty for tM flnt • room for flOOI:. Seller will _ _.. IM lffi _... «JDldder trade for o.ntu -..--.. .__,. or I.and! Pnced to Hll ......... ,...
••••••••••••••••••••••• G_,.. . 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
VETERANS
SPECIAL
(all!Mf.1'711
c:::= Walk1:r 1; l r.e
GIANT AXER
Abandoned ! Needs
.n1 lk32' awimming
pool I Located on quiet
cul.de-He. VA terms! "-'>'I Call: M5-0303
f ORt:::ST E
OLS ON . .
New bar1aln for VA buyers. -Lar ge welt
planned Costa Meu
Home. featurea 1pacious family room w Ith fireplace, lge kitchen
and g ra r lo us 11 vtn & L--•..;._".;;.;'---------:....:.e;..;;.;~·---room 3 Bdrm. 2 bath double garage, all tor on· LA~ a MAl•tl
ly $'71.900 Just lltted, 1bae two bombabells
don'tdelaycaUS40-1lSJ are 3 bedroom.I, 2 bath
~HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
bargains. T b• asking pri~ are $89.500. and
l77 ,900. reepectl vely.
Laverne ls l ocated
across the street from Ii
part and Margie has a HAllOI VIEW wet oar & a cathedral
RARE SPLIT LEVEL. ceiling. You've got to
Double doors open lnto check out these two
thh love lr 4 bedrm sweethearts . CALL
home Formal dining ~21180
room & living rm wtfplc • SELECT Family room acUoi.ntn&
fully buill-ln afl elec PROPERTIES ldt.cben. 3 Bedr ma up , with master s uite & •-------'----
added on bonus rm on
private lower lt>vel
Spectacular Vll'W or
ocean. harbor & 01te
tit,....~ O/'f tJ hi ·~ • '9 I f ( ,.., I~ f j •H I
!~Ntlffl
HILLVIEW
R.EGINCY
tlVM•ltOVES
Exc.lualve guarded area.
3 bedroom, 2~.bath, air
condltionin~. Simply
beautiful, looks like a
model. UnderSJ00.000
645-9161
. OPEN HOUSE
RlALTY
/ OHL Y $65,500!
Spac. 2 br condo. located ~~~~~~~~~~
on 14 acres of bldp & beaut . laod sc pd
grounds. EnJOY all or th111
plus putting green. pool. clubhouse Close to all
shopping. Phone today'
54>9491
31R-AXll
FORICLOSURE!
TRUE! 3 Bedrm Clxer
upper. will go into
foreclosure shortly!
9ank has nollfied owner
d it's intent. Good loca-
tion. 67Xla7 Lot siie. Fu II
Real El;tale price Just $65,000! Take advantage. call 752-1700
4BR-$74,500! ~~ ... · .. ~'''lll'•, f~ttr!ti~:~~:~~ [® 181111
ftam bowie! ALL NEW Ll~-~~·-~-~-~-~··~-!l!i-~~
PAINT fNSIDE AND -
OUT! NEW PLUSH
C A B P ETl"'G 'llf'RUOUT! ALL NEW
ROOF! An incredible
oargaln-super location
too! Take advaatq.e.call
752• 1700 t.odaY 1
O"ffV ''' ~ • I~ H.,,., tt>N l'lil'C t l ~NMtl
JUST USTID!!
COSTA MESA
Attention, realtors. in
vestors . everyone!
Large R·2 lot with cute 2
bdrm home oo rear, on·
ly$85,000'
lcAoa loy Prop.
RHltors
• 675-7060.
OCEAHAOHT
'84'THOUSE
No Lag. lkh's fmcst loc.
wt ocean vu. 3000 Sq.Jt
ol luxury, 2 patio decb.
pvt elevator As king s:m.ooo.
JACOIS RIAL TY
675-6670
EXECUTIVE
SPECIAL
In a neighborhood or 1m
posing homes. 1'h1s J
bdrm S tu rdavenl
WestchH home 1s u
barJ(nm. pri<'cd for )uu
at $1.W.000 There'!-old
rastuoned quabty tn th•~
modem bornt!. Start 1h1•
new year nRht in the
Newport High School
Olslrlct. To see th1ii m
staotly appealinR homt'
call ws al 540-1151
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
HORSE PROPERTY
By owner. Onnge l'rk
Acres. t,.<i + ac H•H~"
faol outstandm.:. hom ..
charming. 1111 ofrs c1111
sidered Court c:iy to
agts. $149,000 2015t
H i iis id e. Oranl(t'
1141633-84.90
AWIHHY
Great n~ghborhood Sharp 3 bdrm Sum
meffield me wt l11e rrn
ly rm & ml din rm
Almost ne w crpts &
custm drps. Move in con
druon. Better hurry' On
lyS95,9SO. S45·9491
MISAWOOOS
llAUTY
Lvly 4 bdrcn. 2 11tory home w/lge bonus rm
(mly rm & frml dm rm Pool llud lot. Cathedrnl Cfiliftll, Lowttt priced ;
l:lory lo Mesa Wood1. Al
only SUUOO, It wlll ~o
fMt156-Ml
l&AXINYOUR
OWMPOOL
4 bdrmL Meta Verde
bom . ~per., all n~w
kltch. It tile floor. 2 frpfe11 , RV •CttA1'. A»
PVMW. k>eD at 8 ~·~ f 1'b.al can't lutl Call tu ~1 141-Ntl
..
I
}
OMWA,...,.,MT
" S•l.NO
K1ccepUon•I ~•ft · .., doalidwo oa U. w atv
~ unoa.u.t.ed \'1 ·w
cl ~ 9l'ttvtly and
l\lpt llabt.. Buvt.IMl.r
dfforated I bdroom wtu. the nn.t amMl.ltin ~~l(tin1 •tth • add.Nu fM be ex e cutive. A Olamoroua home 10 "ve11 way. lneludee .. ~
WAlUUflQHT
tl~Mr:
Re.AL ESTA.TC 631-1400
IACHaolPAD
Ideal condo for auc-
c.afuJ man <or womao), on the move. Prlme loca· tloo io t he orl1lna l
811.tfa, oear 1wlmmln1 pool. Sharp z bdrm. encl
unlt, with beamed cell·
mp & ('OtY frplc : an
ilnt value, too at 1144.7$.0
'7M400
HARBOR
A 01v1,100 or
llurbor lnvt•,tmrnt C"o
.WDUPLD
MMISCOMDOS
Dehm IVI• a BR, a ba &
• 2 8R, 2 ba, built for
conver11on. Take lat
owi. rtabt olt, then con· vert. Eaahlde Costa
Mesa. .
r:;;~AM
INVESTMENTS
I. E~TSIDE COSTA
MESA; 2 unlta, 2 BR, 1
ba. each; alao enclosed
IAYNOMT Scvual fine bayfront hom
wilh pter & allp
AVALON
Well constructed, 3 BR. 1 ba. oak
floor. partial buement. concrete
foundatJon. f'lats are . Sl20,000-F .
BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR
' ' '~ ' ' • I I ' . ' -...
~COATS & WALLACE
~REAL ESTATE . INC .
i I Ill 1\11' II~ NI u COMl'l\N¥ \I HVlllL
Ill! ,0111H 1or.-..1 AHi/i '.INl'I l'ltd
STAIT THI M1W YIAI ... Hr -Here's
your ~ bdrm with formal dining + a
separate bonus room in North Costa
Mesa. Clean and neat. Room for the
kids. Only $91,000. C .. 54'"4141
~->t·r v111q C<i'>lct Ml·-.:1 lr11ir1•·
Hllnl1n,Jfqri Bi-.H.h N•·Wp(Jrf B• .11 Ii
SPYGLASS SPECIALISTS
LOWEST PRICE SPY~LASS
3 bedroom. f amlly room. dining room .
professionally landscaped, sprinkJers.
ocean view. Owner motivated, asking
$347,500.
NEWPORT CENTER REALTY
640-1812
SOUTHIRM IBll
We move this beautiful Colonial home
ri ght off the Plantation just for you.
This home has 5 bedrooms, 3 baths,
formal dining room, playroom with
pool table and beautiful pool. Luxury
at it's best at only $132,500.
540-3666
'NIJela11
Real Estate Inc .
llG CANYON FOil OM. Y S 145,000
You read rigbt! A spiffy 2 bedroom. 2
bath townhome within a country-like
environment, loaded with extras for just $14.5,000 ..... and this is unique
because of its single story floor plan.
two patios. plantation shutters and
tasteful wallpapers not to mention the
guarded gate entry: community pool.
Jacuzzi and tennis. You a sked for
1t. ••. and at just $145.000.
U ,_. l()U I: li()MI:§
REALTORSJ, 675·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546·5990
,llG CANYON CUSTOM-4775,000
Beautiful 1-story custom home with
great golf course view. Inviting entry
with lush tropical landsc aping.
Private enclosed pool, 4 BedrooplS
<including glamorous master su1tc
w /firepla ce>. formal dining rm.
fa mily rm with wet bar plus a lge
billiard room. 3 baths + luxurious
pwd rm. Lovely quiet cul-de-sac
s treet. Sec. guarded country club
area . See any time! Call now 644·4910
~~HERITAGE
REALTORS
~~HERITAGE
. REALTORS
&ksa Verde 4 bdrm. 2 ba. new c:rpU, R.V. parking.
2 pst.lal, large yard. Nice
area. Fina nce rle x. 7$1.-Sby Appt.
GolfCOWMH.-
Huse 5 BR, 3 ba, avail
2/1.Sl99,.500.546-ll41
Lingo
Rul&TAn:
A PERFECT FAMILY HOME
TM ...... Is ntDff•.ted Oftd w .... .,, .. ..U
W. 4 be*°°"' hw with •w c__,. ..cl
,.W fw (Ult $90,000. The view I• • •t, so._, weft, MW• oflir ..w.
495-1720
LOYll.YUDO
home on a apack>u 56'
lot. A roomy single atary
3Bdrm, lam rm home. ~~~~~~~~I charmin&I)' decorated with country French
kitchen. oak fl oors . fireside formal dlnlng
wttb stained and leaded
glug windows and warm
natural wood tones thru ·
out
1050
Laguna Niguel
Realty ._.
PLUS
A large pool size south
paUo.$29S,OOO
for appt. to see
ul644-7ZI I
/Jn Nlr1E L
GAIL.LY &.
A<JSUCll\l ES
CUSTOM NOME
' LASTOF7
4 Br. 3 &.•master bdrm retreat. 2 frplcs, formal
WAY AIOVE p AR dming. 3 car 1arage, ap· READY AND 2 bdrm upper condo. ~:CiaJC>g:11~~.ftsiir.~a Fronts El Niguel golf WAITING crse. Va ulted r eil'g ~~~~k~·4894 :
Largest Deerfield Park w/skyhles Bltn k1t cb. --------
home in appe aling Pvt community, pool 4r W.ENDL«rambome3 +
b jacuz:d $89,000 P1m2on R290' bulldablc
eart tones. Freeform 49l-t4t4 495-5220 ..... 128SM.7101Seashore. pool and spa. Perfect for 'Y'-eolert.ainlni. Owner will 49~24 J 3 130-5050 owner. Will cons ider
help finance. An invest --~-----Ccndotrade.6'>8410 :fl!~ SW.000. Call for Jlllt !:~chel
~. nr. PoSl om ce,
WESUY M. TA YLOlt CO .. ltt.AI. TOIS
2111 s-J .... Hllh Ito.cl
NEWPOIT CINTB. NI 644-4910
......... ,arty
Great homes, rteJC --------
flnanclna. beat areas. ORANGETREE
from thla very prtvate
cheerful, 3 Br 2 • house In Laguna Ntguel. NeaUy
laodacaped It back.a on permanent 1reenbelt. Roees. trees, I& churrn.
By owner. 831-9627 .
S83.000
llSTIUY IH TOWM
TRIPLEX + pat Grut
Smr/Wntr Rent.al
Ooaeto Beach It Bay
ec>.OOO-Make Offer ............
6114210 garage ror each unit . Lot ::::::::::========!
bankl 4c auper markei.. --------1 546-U41 CONDOS -·~~~~~~~~ CINT'lALNIWPOIT 2br tba ale d/w trig spat--------•· $129,CXX>
2 Pl'OCH N' PUTT · to
the ocean in Newport
·Beach; apacious dupleJC, 4 bdrma. & 2 bdrms.,
w\th 4 baths & garages +
parkln1. F1exible flnanc· lnA ~ven aales con·
tract. llB7.500
DWUX-CdM
3 Bdnm and 2 Bdrms. ' car gara1e plua laW)dry and extra storage.
Private patlos and
WbJna. $11M.500.
3. EXCEPTIONALLY PETE
SHARP duplex, only 1· R
door from the beach in &42-5200 Newport. a Bdrma. Ir 2 baths each unit; +Uledl _______ _
shower outalde for beachl--------
batben. '2'15,000
BAY& BEACH
450 NEWPORT CTR. R. 76!!11
$HaPS
Must~~ JO da. Owner paya l>Uyer a Cb&ta. Bil 4
br, 8 )'Tl new. Attractfve
fam. nei1hborhood.
1102.500. Call DOW! HALrtMCMIM
REALTORS 61M3t2
tile~~
TOUGH TO IE.AT
Four bedrooms, new carpets and
drapes, wallpaper throughout, new
kitchen appliances. large lot and.
complete security system. Matching'
furniture can also be purchased.
$145,000
Authentic Spanish 2 For Sale By Owner 4 Br 2 REPOSSF.sSlON vacant pool tennis balcony etc. )) $1~ Down bdrm.,lbathd0Uho111e; BaBuenaParkhome.nu NEAT 3 br. 159,500. Agent, ~,900hurry !494~ block to beach. Owner carpet & kitchen, (rplc. 546-7139: 673·5602 TIL112.a leaving a tale ; aaking b IUY F«OM OWNH vrr Sl25,000 _ re,.!!1Y21~movein. SAT/SUNltoS SBRor4+bonta.2Yi ba , 5 8r3Ba,expandedliv-
673-386.1 675-17 ... ., _•_•u,_._...,. __ ... ____ NEST 2CXM Calvert Ing rm, lg lutchen, den. -M·'-eoffer ,.,.,. 5757 cpt Uuu-Out, lrplc, s un· -----f 1 0 I MAGNIFICENT -...... declt j ~ rp c, wn e r w1 I
COUNTRY • ac. ~105,000. Ph DRUM HOUSE rmance. No qualifying.
4 ....... ~ 714/.._l.989 San Diego FRENCH MANSION DINivum alngle story. LIASf./OPTION Lovely 4 bedroom ram1ly $217,000. Owner. 64(}.7778
AJmo11t 7000 aq. ft. of Bmlt around a beautiful tllOOO/down " 1700 mo. Beautiful Upgraded room home w/Span1sh claul c e 1e8 an c e atrium. A.lklDf S114,900. 38R Condo with pool and Greenbriar: Woodbridge ceramic We entry. fam1 Prhaht Party metlculoualy detailed TllltolledC.,.t Jacuui.$U•llOO Place. Aaaum. 1138,500 I}' room and kitchen Gr e at hom es , (lex
wllb lavhh uae or Weu.t.l 754-l202 • · Owner/ Agent eves. Col)' fireplace. view of rinanclng, best a reu .
maaonry, Imported ".,.__Rfflffor 51411'7 city lights, mountains 546-1141 CUllMOUSI ceramic tile, band· 645-IUI and valleys New pamt. __ 11.;_A_c:H __ D_U_r _LD __ _
OH 1-2 LOT rubbed oak cablneta & l lmlOOM WOOOllJDGE MW carpel.I. new d tS·
F.ut.aide, eo.~ Mesa. a trim, opulent crystal IAIHAllOI sars Townhous e . hw&lber. Sll0,500. Thu 1-llk. to ocean; newly bedrm enarmer. Formal chandeliers. Mammolb Wi&h view 1D charmlna a ... or howe Is a tttat to see. renovated. Sl.55,0®. llv\111..nn w/real wood mmter bedroom suite, ptedSeavlew. -TSIDI Driftwood Pla n . 3 COUOFHIWPORT. NIWPOITIEACH
bumJ.na flNplace. Love-Ph• a other bedrooms, 6 ZlC71YachtGrayUn1 Co~y cotta1e. 2 BR. bedrooms· family room · RIAi.TORS llALTY 675-1642
ly remodefed kitchen balbrooma all featuring $279,900 hardwoo d fl oors • large paUo . up1raded 675-5511 w/cuatom cabinets ar Sherle Wagner hand· f\replace, double aaraae ~ · custom drapes RARE BLUFFS CONDO
paaa t.bru window to din· ~ted porcela1n bowls •ea....._c_._ 91&.. treatn!!tc 1.a1w:'~~~~ ~o..~~~ .. ~~~~~ 1 story' bdrm. on green·
1n1area.Addedoofam1· it matching bra•• -F-' --·Rl'IT mirrored wardrobe uJOWDer onarcbSum-belt,ovedook.mg park.
lynn.Converi.ctga.raie faucets. 4 superb S41-772t dooraandaveryaUrac· mil 2 fs den condo. c lose t o s hopp in1 .
may be uaed for II• flreplaciM, large u.i:lder· ________ _,
1
Uve prt.ce. Call today for !,!.l~OO. 495· 1407 or Qinm. • pool. Principals
game tm. All thla al an ground wine cellar re-ddalla. __,. limy,
affordab&eorice. 67D-8550 llched by a wlnding anU· --------SLASH(OI SJ.86.500 581·6678 ON""'"'''Hv"'"'~'~1<1· que brick tunnel. The ..... ltlmd 1006 Mu:,..,tlta 106t [. I ldtcb•n la a culinary ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• OHTHECANAI. ~11~1jll't master's dell1ht. ~40 4 duphr, lncludln1 bay Now only t79.SOO. Brtgbt Lge. 4 BR, 2~ ba., new ,, ., • Uvlna room • huae tnmt to be ncb. down ln & cheery llllcben. Very UDO ISLE lotcben; 2 frpJcs., sun·
• ·~ 4 formal dinlna room. apkg.21.3/1184·3200 low down! Don't miss! liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil deck; POOls&tennls . You Located high up tn the ..... ,,.,... 1007 Call now!! 646·7.U. Spadoua Ital.Ian Villa. 12 own the land. $246,000. 1Wt.b:l HllJa wltb sweep. Century 21 Oold Star I f . nt rooms. Ooen beams, tile 1o3 Down • OW C . BEACH ~~ew• o1 tree tope, ....................... HBE'S nves me1 noon. 'I'he rineat home Owner/agt. 648·1290
COTTAGE ~f:d 1~:-iaan~~~1:' ~ta~~.:; library" A9UICICll Conscious? ';'t:.:·r.=..
Balboa Penlnaula 2 Catalina. Sl,200,000 .. KanhallRealty 87M800 Wan:n, roxy, comforta· Htte ti-a 1reat buy in 645-ISJI
bedroom cottage. Older OWMr' wlll "3ance wltb C•ld.-le-L 10I1 ble. Nlee1t In area. 4BR, Deerfield Town homes. 3 home. lmmaculate con· reuo bl -2bahome. Bdrms .. family room. --------• dlUon. R·2 lot too l oa e own pay· •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 1o..A1uu•.a.•1o..1 2~ ba. end unit, liood oc••~VllW ,.._ ment. Exchangea COD· DO YOU W .a.~ _.._" ti ""'°" ....... cm. lidlred.. Prtnclpale only . "'"' a..yi.,aster loca on and AJR ON-tilTIUTES
associated
Bfl ( ) .. f k" M. I\ I f 1 lj.I .,
J.. 11' 'ltt f(,J. ' • , •
0 pleaH. Ownn·Broker, 4uallty, a preat11lou1 7S4-7IOO 'DmONED.OnlyS85,'°° .
IUdrAlderett.. '731-5115. netabborhood. aome --------• ACOUJWILLIAl'«PCO. •----ocean view and a MUSTSILL
844·9060 ~-., · ·~Br,t~~°t,~~ SSOOODOWN CGeta Condo? Call to
t111UMJOo\GUlltt•U.tUlO. da)'-4Dn'tdelay. •478. Auume balance o f · IN~CUTP Balboa ...... Rlrahy u,,..,....... SH0.000 at $1380 mo. P--~~~;;~~~~~i~iii~~~~~·m~~~-~~~~~~~J -·••• ~t••100 ~~~4~2• Ir H-;..,,.=='=-:::::-::--,.---::::':":+1extai,eciiuiiti;v~•i0ho~m,;eei Pool, C.-.. Mw IOJJ ,~ ..... ""::":"":~,..,.,..,MJI~-t=~~~:.....-1
llDlll -ILlllS . c·a.
OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE
SUPHI DUPLD
On Capistrano Beach. Each Unit
Has 3 BR +JU;ep1ace. Wonderful
Location With Seclusion And
Leis ure ·on The Sand Mldway
Between L.A. And San Diego. Come
Inspect ThJa GorReous Smot-Free &
Temperate Locale. $750,000. ,, • RQ·
·macnab I lrvlne
realty
THI UVIH4t IS IASY •••
At Rancho .San Jooquln I
Condomlnlum ownership will set
you FREE rorm cutting grass,
painting lhe house, etc! a BR + den
home on fantasti c location
w/VIEWI Sn9:300. L&flJIO Sharkany
752-1414. <M·l02) •
·-•
....................... ;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;J
FHA-VA
$61,500
~-__,,..-~--.,,....,-1 . ~ .. \ .. ~~ ..... ~~.~
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<a bedrooms. large yard,
qtiet cul d4t UC.
645-tl 6 I
~ OPfN 11011~1
, ~ \_ Rf Al IY
/
\ •DWLD• Oeeu aide of hwy. level lot, easy acceu to beach.
Ntedl ~t. mlnor re· oeln; Ideal for homo It
1 Income. Hurry . only 1159,IOO I M1ailoo Rutty 494.qra1
C Y CLUI Cote<>
Li vo r t(l t on the golf ifOUrse. 3 IL iUB. COUNTltY CLUI
Dd rm , Hat h condomil'\)um .
Move.in onclttlon Walk t~oWttry
club. S96. l. , ..
ACOLDWIU .....
496-7222 831·0836
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T..--. Jenuary t. 1119
SHORECLIFFS
VIEW
PAMOaAMIC VllW
fn.n Nwport Day lo Mt Ba1c1Y. xqlUlle bom. at hr IU81drd 1at.e. 3.HR. diln. lam nn. 2 frplca.
Jacuw. taM.500 Call
~ay• ••• ens. ev ... 87~11 ---•WM-i"
Matter bt'droom
downst.a.lra ln this 4 Br
boma rm bomt' oo c~te
gteenbelt Offered Mt
SU..,500.
OAtL V PtlOT
I .._...,.,....._., .._..u ........ ~ ..._...,..... h• Af tw•r.itn.a•&t Afalw .. •........_ Af*•••••.,.,_.., ..........................................................................................................................................
c..MMIM 1224 ....... • U .44 ... .,.... .. _. JHt ~Niia 3710 c:o.teMHe 3'24 c.e.MeM ll24 .........•........•.... ··················••··· ............................................................................ , ...•••.....•••.
ms/PITS ()t( ·--..... llACH LIVIM6 l bdr. be .. &•r. lovtly N-1 I Br untum apt, & s.m. Beaut. new l br &oft ....,. ' -prden villa •pt .u eoU lidr C.M. or Npt tfta for 11.Yle aJ>(, frplc, patio. all &ASTSmE. l Bil AZS la 2 88. 2~ ba .• · · • a./475 "9w U.J • tt-s en. muat be over 52, tnJllllo1ed reapon moU\er blim. I hR UH. UI HlO, 3 Bill" be •.•.... $450 W/d//tft, L.R .• fem rm. Tl'Ml40. w/2 ·teena altendln& Npt TSL M1mi ea.um
...... 3188R.R.12'~b·a· •.•• WO~ ~ •1t. pet, frpBo~·.•.: t"•~t•-L _,, ~btlU. Noto~rs=. Heaut. brand new adult r...c Ide N • t l '" · • · • · · .._. -. l&N>Pentr • 11 · · -., A'1t needed by eod ol b i;::'.c;·~ 1•rrJ&· 3BR.3ba.. . . ..Im prof .. k>nally deeorat· ...................... Ja.n. Plaphlf.S.'115leva apt1. Spac. 1 It 2 r
Pvt fn cd 'Id <'"Pt•• 48R.2"4t ba ..... $e50/~ ~.MOO' '109. Call · w t townh•• •t1,1e .
iltpt ms 0t0 Ml Xll •BR, I"" ba. SlOOO N8 M.aNoe at 811·3444 or IA YflttOMT 11AMD MIW Scheduled move.-ln eb. ~. Condo. 2 BR, 2 ba .• yur· I bt, 2 ba, all electric. l. l Bedroom~
ly,lf15mo. Covered parkln1. $47$ 2 Bedroomft~
Brand ••• ov•rahed Ut.c<X>l.A Hom• LD nc-w
Beautill.d deoof' 5 Bdrm
home on LIDO with
llnut a m1 n lt l••.
$1500/ mo leue.
Col'-M•a 1,ub dM1lon. ON WATER. channln1 2
I bdrm J ba. lJv rm. bednlom 2 bath w/boat
fam. rm trstlc, 2 ur ~23CAMPU5Dl•IRVifl .Up.mo/mo. ,.,..,. -tlU ,.r mo..
1
________ __., W.a.rfTOlllHomea
7SM'm•Mi-4Zll Uen\q9 Park. lrvme. 3 631·1400 l.....,Jl•TH bt. 2Vt ba. fem rm. OR .I _______ _
1iftdoubl~1r111e. new. pool. up1raded. Cb I ,.,,_ f l SDllOmo.~148. arm DI vo;ean ron
~HT mo eoo W. Hamlll.On. TSLllf .... t "2-IS03
2 8Rt~.pty. WO •2911 orl42-Z1M •-
S TO HACH FOUR SEASONS APTS 2 8r 1 Ba, lndrY facll. no
3BR..2bll. wnt.r. k2$ Spec. %bttownbouM, l...., ~· S2IO mo. 271E.16th 3BR,2ba,yrly.N75 ba, pvt patio. pool. _._644_-0m _____ _
2 BR. 1 ba. )'1'1y. $435 Adulta m>. 735 JoaM 3 bdrm. T~ Apt. SBR. Lba.yrly.$465 9l.&M-&83eveii. MuJta 1....., ba. ~ per rAIJC UDO mo. Ou paid, 6'2-5073 2 BR. 2 ba, frpl. Pool. MISAl'tMIS Adulta.'386 1. Bil 1315. 2 8Jl '380. Twnble 2 lg. Br. I...., ba
associated
Pool. Jacu.ui, 1ar. avail. pr. encl Jld. crpt: dl'P6.
Adults. no peta. 21SO Cul·de·Sac , school Harl.a Ave. 549-a..47. S325.87W71J
Pl • r~ Y• Many 3BR. den. dlnlnl rm. ~$375. 2 br, 1 I,\ ba Larae 1 Bdnn $26$. Qwtt
OoMt IC.r. Nit ntru ~veeythln& JW1t Uruv Parle Terr. 2 Br. 2 frp&c, yrty. 8Ts-919 twahM. OariJderplc, paUo. Wldin1 with beautiful
• .a..a. .. , 1IM new.~ mo. itue bla f 1 l l Id I f 64--. t, 548·1'29 •• ,· c.rpc'a.,,119:a'2~1r8. ~or. Udolale. 3 BR. 21,\ ba. = IOOd loc. £. . landttaplng. ea or
ttn1,_. r "' "• "· • 1,.1·,
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~ ., .,,. rv 'ISLMamt "2-11103 adulta over~. No JM'lll. 76UMITS 2 bdr Iba.lam.rm all bu 561·~. Via llh•c•. UOO. l Br yearly. Next to LEEWARD APTS. a® ••••••••••••••••••o••• b&Mm. trplc. Sii.S1mo ~.._. 3241 MS-01.5l,846-l243 beach. atol'ft. call aft Beaut 2 BR, 2 ba, Mesa f'tllerton Ave, Obi.II: eut lyOWNll oodllftd&93br.l'°'biawl laundr)'rm&31·21Jl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-beeforreolinNewport 8Pln.675-4490. Drive, nr S.A. Cntry Newport Ave,• lblk Low f't'Dt . Talle over wHbcr, dryer. Open Oub. Pvt fncd yard. 2 90Ulhof Bay) 831-0397 ~ 1oen. No o caot1H Jl•tlo HOO Hi·lH". Clean 2 br w/aara,e. I Br uruque qwet ....., ac. Beach. 3 br. 2 ba .. lrg. 2 Bedroom. avail Im· carport w/ttora1e. USS · · ~1 tocated at too ~ Adl.lltl. 00 pc\I. 7'3 w. Frpk , k1d1/,p els ok . ~00·~1·1'l~7~rLDcld. r:ned jately. No pets. mo.87Ml.39 .. 63H816. 2 bdr. 1 ba, au blt·lns.
Wat2bdSt Rtalto.--·-wu.oa S2'75 548-9'17. Jbeh.$4$0.49!M!286. •• ........... -·· Newport Helgbt1 . 8 d laundry rm .. lrplc, CAll i.42-361' .... ,., t.eclt 11'9 1276 Mf.8706, l r. crp~s. rapes, $350/mo.&11·293'7 ,or ,_,,0 '"'-w·l-m• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ""..,..IC M0¥1 IM 3 Br. 2 ba. 2 car gar. rncd s.ca..• C&JllOrt, kids OK, S2401---------""'1 ....... ~ ~" ,.. ...._ yd, ocean vu. AvalL Feb. ••-••••••••••••••••••• BEACH FRONT mo. Nodoc5. 979-0136. l Br apt avail. now, pnme • w-• t~~ ae: .. 2 .~rd. 1....,Hba 1 S62S 49'7-1051 2 bdr .. 2 ba. condo 1&r.. Winter rental. 2 Br 2 Ba. ..-.. R-. ... -East.side. Call 646-7175. cauMMY 4 PL.IX
1.r1~estor·s dell&bl All 2
Br 1appU New pa.Int lo
e&rpeU Pl1ced n&bt at sao.ooo.
..,..,_ w1uae .,...1 ... 1 "· as _, .......... vu • ....,..,/,..o 2 car a·-•• •• ..,. mo .,_...,, _'4Jr,.,, Kathy-Vivi• .. 38R28a • . . . . . $475 everythl.na + llOO tq fl or New 3 bdrm. 2...., ba. 83'M720_,, ......, .,. . 675-45.13 ... ,. ... ......, . 18drm ctr loft $320. Poo1, 1---'-"'-----·---
3.8R Ocf.anh'onl . ~ II.WU)' 11Vln&. Only $.395 aarqe. frplc. + xtras. Jacu=l. dosed aaraaes. Near new townbse. 2 br. 28R Bayview . . $650 rno. S left! Drive by 2548 Ocean view. Close to s.la AM 3210 Ga ctr wtr pd. Adults, no I...., ba, 1ar, fncd pat .. ~a.otroni . . . $9?S Orange Ave. Theo call shops Iii beach. No small ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOTAL peU. 393 Hamilton. C.M. ~ .. ~· 645-4655 PM & * YIAl1. Y • 6'2-0282. lods/ DO peta. Avail. Jan. 3 Br, 1...., ba condo. nu ~ ...... ....,. €HIG€ lBROcunlronl ... $450 2 Br. 1 ba refrii, rncd lStb. S70049'~0 crpta, floors. Nr. So. Cst --------_,._.~HOM€' Oceanfront ...... $650 yard. ciosed gar. lBR.VJEWHOME Plaza, encl. aar age. LIVING Beaut. 1rounds, nice & UtU .lncluded 1 ~r $195. -t---~-n l ~unfroot $1000 Pool kids play area No q!Set. AduJts no·pet&. 3 Patio. AduJta, quiet. 1828 . .. · · .. · • chlklttnok. nopeu. $345. Avail Jan 15. $350/mo. • 1 · Br bu .. gato' w. Pool, "F" Placeoua. hrs 12.-4 3333W Coastllwy,NB 58RL.idolsl~ ...... 1eoo ~.682Joano "B". .-..3I03eves. pet.a. "'50. Aval. Jan. 6. Apartmeo.... .. U S.6646 8'2-asM am or6'73-9521 . .. jacuui & bbq area · AIS-O 1--~-.,_ ,_. 3226 ~HI• l250 Entertainment. 2 br townbouff. lnq 177 ~C:Oi:.-~ae~o~~l.S 3 tncl t!'J~rt~x:; exch.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••··~···· ~1~.';~Y:~~ D~~ Recreation... E. 22ndSt .. no. ~2498 DUPUX
bdrm & den'homt-oi:i a down 10 a pk a •BR.FamRm.DinRm,3 NEW4Br.3Ba,lgfamrm, hwasber. dbl gar. Yours-365 Brand new 2 BR. I...., ba Plush studio, newly rt!
comer lot witbln walklng 213/Ql4..3200 yn old. Owner lived. Lo nr sd\ls, abope & fwy, St2S+dep. 340·A Car· d I Townhome, pvt patio, modeled, Fr. townhouse
distaoce of the WestclJ(f ----mai.nt.$500.496-lleeva :OOm~o~;~:Z-0925 ~~ Call Renata aya a yea:r fplc, encl gar, S375 . styhftg, 2 Br + 20xl0
ahopa. Vacant " ready IEACH FtXEA a·-3131 ,,_., IVI • hcrutiful Slnqr.. 6'2-~. bonus rm. 2 Ba fully tiled
for a bapp~ family. W1u $I l5 000 Houaes......,.Wd '""'-6 6 Must ·-th'·' 3 br 2 ba I & Z a.Groom & wallpapered carpels, genbonlrut.ra 67S.6l60 • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• c ~ · ... ,. d Ci • SolllltLoglllCI l216 Fumiah.ct& drapes , blt·in1. au ' San Clemente Tn Plex, lal»al.a.d 3206 3 Brand new !l Br 2 Ba. ~lc,pauo, nc Y ,gar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• U-'-·-'_ .. _. meatiBJIB ~age w/washer &
Pn--' •-sell '""" ft b •-•· Kids & peta ok. $445. Agt. nnu__. New beaut1·rul 0 arden .. ....._ doo CUSTOM "Wdi'1ocaied 2·1·1. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ION sq • nr sc 00~ "' Noree. 1164-2566 ; 973-2971 Walk lo beach. Coiy Apcatm-ta .. r ,..,.,..up, auto r
BERTIIA HENRY 4BR 3ba, den, dining rm. shopping. Aliso Woods. 1-.a-...1 3152 adobe l br house. frplc. All UtilitiMPaid a;partmenbe'--la, pool&s~~5 opener, priv. patio, com· features galore make REALTORS ~aUo wit.as bbq. New $5.S0.~39. 770-5116 --r-•-r""" .. beam celling. secluded, • ..,. -· pl. gardenln1 service
this fine WESTCLIFF 215 Del Mar m .4121 tile. very clean. $775. Fa'•t• V.._ 3234 ....................... pvt. yard & paUo. Avail. •No 1--Requii.d '315 151 Tulip Ln. corne r
home special. Soann.ii----------,675-1442 •••••••••;;::! ••••••••• NIGUEL SHORES : now.41M-2883 •Swimmi1>9,f--. 2 $340 Tl.&lip/Elden.$4.95mo.No ;:~!:!-~!ms ;:~1::~: 1 UNITS.C.M. . ec.ntr..o leacla 3218 Beaut. view 4 Br + den, Spacloos 4 bdrm, 2~ ba. 2 Br. A real charmer. !Ubar• ~~&:::i~ay pets. 548-87S4
(amily room. Hide-away Beaut. new buildi.ng ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21h bll, fam rm, din rm, ~~51':0 .~~~~62~~°!:~ Walk to 9th St beach. •Actl'fitlMOV-~ lat Newport Blvd) Lante 3 bdrm 2 ba. Kid!\
den. Wi.ndjng tree lined Fireplaces, xlnt location Avail 1·10 2br house. frplc, dshwbr, ·gardener 831•1.:;:J $450. ~3872 ,., .. 5ww1ay 646-68l6or 540-9626 OK. No Peta. S375 ~r
stree\. Close to school. TSL lnvmts M2•1603 Reing. Newly carpeted. & water pd. Many ex· • Heoilh ~ Joc,,.m mo. 84CM72'
SUB.500.64>7221 •111u111y-... Walk to bch. 34648 Via tras. Kids olt, no pets. Nlguel Shores 4 br, 2 ba, W ...... tw 3291 Pl.USMUCHMOREI SUPaMICE -lr-.. --h-bl--vt--•_,..~ ~ ~ C t 1· "44 6"36 r $650 . A 0 t. No lee. Sea Terrace, Plan Jon ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Lockedgar.w/lgstor. g ..... c • tns,p pa,_.. 150/o DOWM . a:~~ srzs. o1 • ~ or 964-2566; man. IJe lol. Newly painted. 3 Br. avail. 2/1/79. water Oakwood •D/W~Uo. lndry rm. etc. No children or ~ts.
4-Plex & Sngl Family. ,.... __ 'ng ex""'utive 2 •ty Frplc. fam rm. , tennis. pd, extras. Lst/last. $475. Garden Apartments •Special cabinet space ~31971110 Vlrt-0ria, call 21 Assume. Seller will Capistrano Palis ades ~BR."den, poo~ I, room" in pool, j~cuzzt & beach. Ms Shafer. 213/924·9051. *Gas beat. gas coolung, 1_.....,. ___ . ----..---
carry paper. Mngml townhouse for lease. gar .. best schools, $600. 6'7s.6882.5Sl·2338. 213/374-M:>l Newportleacb/Noctb gubotwaterallrree. Lge 1 br, gar. lndry.
8 avail. Agent. Gary D Coastline view. cs\m U---F -i ... d 880 lml\• •Adults.no pets. refrig, many closets. 4. lbsler btalt for owner. 2 Br 2 1h 545-4157. 3 Br. 2~ ba, 2 frplcs • .._ 9NM or fat t6tbl 1 Bdrm S280 1 , t Wntclffleaffy -·-or"'""'2498 ea. roomy w/mafty CX· T h ............ 3300 c11•154• .. ~... Montb•A'monl.h p ex. nice s.ree • nr _..._. ,,,_. .. Hwtltt•leach 3240 sarage. own ouse . .. .,..., ,,., ..,, Newport81vd.&18thlnt.
Principals onJy IJ'aS.661·2871, 496-3897 •••••':7.••••••••••••••• Yard. $560. mo. 497.2292 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach/South Z'l:23 Elden Ave, C.M. pd on dep. Non smkni. 000 ON MOP•YME:HTS Cormadel Mer 3222 New-elegant·2 bedroom Patio hm nr the sea, on MOllLIHOMI 1700 !6th 51 642-7605 No dogs. $265. Refs.
After purchase we pay ••••••••••••••••••••••• $5.SO, or 2 bedroom + den Mooa.rchSummll. 2 Br. 2 l~TIOM '~ ... ~~~~> $390 3 Br Eaatside, 2 _642-_2l_42 ______ _
G4 Bdrm. 2 bath b-0:,e all costa ror 6 mos. Close 2 BR. 1 ~bath home. 2 car ~75. Cedar & window ba, & lanai. Jae & pool. Rent, option to buy tnfo, ch&ldren OK. 186 21.at St. O..,.. 3126
w/pool, Jae. fam rm, lo ocean. $140,000. garage & deck. $450/mo. home. Five blocks to All adJl comm. $495/mo. repo's, loan uaumption Adul1a only,nope11 ~days. ·-••••••••••••••••••••
completely remodeled. (714)960-~. Waterfront Homes g::~~~· PFrlvlalte m2·aclar Call830-8895. aft4pm. etc. Easy finance 0 .A.C. M~laopen do1ly 101 Newtydeeorat.ed3br. 2ba 2 Br Twn hu, 2 car
Big lot-much more. lfG4Pln 63l·HOO ~ e. u Y ~· Ldie"°""t 3255 9offices. townhouse. Spacious, p.rage,frpk,denpvtyd,
Owner will finance. No Asking only $115.500. 2Brbome,adults,nopets, pets. tr!i~e ~~·~ ....................... Moltlle~Store loc:Mlor$200. firei>l,ace It pool. Quiet !..r'w°'!' bld1. Ul.5. mo. ~z.c!l~c:~~k ~~5·~ Muatsell raet. Prine. 00. garage gardener. $425 Street. <1l•)960-633l llO'onthewater! 3bdrm. Anaheim 956-1011 Alent6Sl..c990 area. Adult.s. no pets. ""-
Olemow96f.2'5S lySoottRealty536-7533 mo.67~72S8 · · 2lia.witbprivatedock.2 SanlaAna 554-7070 $400.64>3381 :675-5949 New condo. 3 Br 2"'1r Ba
frplc, ocean view. aecu r
pa.ricing, pool, jac. Adllli.
no pets. $650. 499-2113
=.:.::.:..=:....:...:..:..:.~:..::.._---1--'---C--.... -E---Cozy28rcottage, nr. bch. 3 Br 2 Ba, h,.-tam-rm, years new. $650 per mo. East.Anaheim 956-4500 ..._ I ... 28dnn.1YJ ba. pauo, sml SeallNdl 1014 -frpl , beam cell 'g . frplc, 2 gar .. nr prk. Avail. now. 24306 W.Anahe\m 76l·J442 T,Lfl•'*d hildN S32S -·•••••••••••••••••••• TRAHSPLAHT ocean. $525. 645·1223, Poochartrain7S4·7900 Westminster 848-1895 - -docolt. noc ren. . $415/mo.640-7963. 536-128& • ••••••••••••••••••••••• per mo. 6•5·9100 or NEEDEDNOWl.ntlxE. Mhela.Vlefo 32'7 Q ~ 3102 5C9-0m -l!tl11sm POOL ........ r~ta M-a bA ...... ~beams" spacious 3 .,. .. , __ H s b b •• C·1•a11iJ•1 _,_ --------2 bdrm 2 ba. Condo. Oen r.ATY• """"' """"' "'"' "'"'"' ~ l:A.WiU() • • 4 r. 2 a; •••••••••••••••• ••••••·111·"-•-· ••••••••••••••••••••••• vw. over cliffs above ln upf.aded area near bt. 2 ba & frplc. $690 pat.lo, fncd yd. gar. Kids Ready to move in. 3 br 2 FwRl•d 3400 •EattskleaduJl2 Br. den.
schoo •· shopping, & yearly. Call 554-4840. & peta ok. $4.SS. Al!l. No ba. frplc. dahwbr, pat.lo. -••••••••••••••••••••• t255c•--~~Jgc2ublr-'eVseryac 2 Ba condo, pool, dbl gar, Marina. S49S mo. 499-4663 =:rs•&~:.:: tf:~~ ::r!ro:nly B~.~ Available late February. fee. 964·2566, 973-2971 ~ lf4s~a~:.~: e. ~1~~~ 2q ~ref8~ etu1_,7 ~·7· "'s-wcu""m.
8
NI ~nts.: s.zs. ~;o~ FZ, ~d f;, ~~:!t :~
Qe&f otd Ranch Country each! All for $195,000 Lovely 3 br · 2 ba on cor· 2 story family bome near 964-~: 973-2971 1 c t I I l .. '" L · .......i j · Club-Seal Beach. By (mustbesoldtogeth~r> ner w/lge yard. Lease: beach. 3 br, 2 ba. ram c ean. en ra oc 0 Anaheim. Mar . #4. 2 Br. l Ba. pool. S'Z75. NS,.....,., acu:m, sauna
.owner. •20,000 under ' QUAIL $~57514mo . 838 ·3232 , rm.frplc,dshwbr,patJo, Ml.-.1 .. ach 3269 busses&fwy.SJC.$350. 991·3U6. ~10amt:o7pm. $425 mo. 24096 Paseo • ... ·r--493-8877 Corona. No smoking, no market for Immediate fncd )'d. gar. Kiua & pets ....................... ....,.,, ••• 3807 New2Br,k.idsok. garage, PH 83 28
sale. Family room. PL .._CE JASMINE CREIEtc ok. $495. Agt. No ree. a.CH $650/MO Yrly C_.11111 .. 1 ....................... fd, wash/dry hookup petS. · l· 16
bonus room. 21h ba. A Moslimpressive 2 BR in 964-2S66;973-297l. Uffltlnr.W .... fwRl"-d 3425 Newer 2BR 2ba. yrly. $400. mo 2521 Orange &Toro 3132 :~~~:el~u~:!~ PllOPERTIES"' earthtone colors. Pvt ExecutJve home, 2 mlles Large 2 story home. big ••••••••••••••••••••••• $400/mo yrly. AduJts/no Ave. S52-12199 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•150000 1~ TII 110 f'M 1 • comm, pool. Jae. tennis. to beach. 3 br. 2 ba. ram rooms. vaulted/beams. 2 Adults over .0. 3 br un· pets. Eves213/257·9792 2 Br 1 b· ,.,....!.$ d,.... no Plush new apts, else lo
• 213· ......... : .. · ~~w. ea11 uss-0497• ~;.~~~a~:;~r·1 ~~0r ~~f;. d~t~0p~~o,~~!s ~·u~~t~recrea· 3 Bdrm. 2~ ba. ~ pr dogs' as29s. c~n;orl s~~C~s3:5°.11 1::~94~~: -.d~~~~~.!:~~·-:U~do~l ... ~=lo~y~,fro~Oftt~-gardener. Many extras. BBQ, D/W, refrig. Encl mo. yrly. Worklng girls ~136. 49<1-8611 Like Ne w Broad m oor Kids Ok. No pets. $745. ~work space. laund Newly decor J BR w/all pref 313 Alvarado Pl. Su firushed 2 BR ---------Rare Tnplex. isl time on Sea view home. View. 1 llild ls xt.ras, or S. Cst Plaza. 631-0234 or67S..3600. per, JUSl · • l ... IMJon leach 3840 ••••••••••••••••••••••• market. Own/Agt wall ser unty and privacy. :.JfM~~ fee. 964·2566; Greai~e.9fio .. ~ . Adlts.$350mo.lnclgas & t \.'J ba. apt..; bltns. lg.••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Hon.1 fanance.S6SO,OOO. $950/mo Owner9'19-8430 wtr.846-J:i6.1eva/wknd $190 Nice bachelor._ Resp latch.. pvt. laundry rm . SHARP, beach 1,2&3 Hit.
ForSale 1100 Ph 645-5044 Clean 3 br. 2 ba. dabwhr. 40' Boat dock. 3 br, 2'~ ba adult. No pets/ut1I pd. garage, sundeck. Adults. fii>lc clishwshr gara11c ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coda Mesa 3224 patio, rncd yd, gar. Close 1.'0ndo. 2 story. frplc, blln Bayfmt. Belmonl Shore 2 L06 E. Bay Ave. Apt 9. $.375. 644·2343 &paUos. 900-2358 ~ .. .,HOME T I HB Pride of B•••••d••••••••3•b•••;~~·· to beach. KJds&petsok. kitchen. Yrly $800. ~~d:. bWe~".d:. i~she;i CoronodelMcr 3122 3BR,2Y.t ba .. newduplex; Townhouse, lovely. s,m :-.....,.,~ npex, · ran new r. a , $425 . Agl. No fee . 6'7s.6775 dryer, adulls only.••••••••••••••••••••••• garage, patao, D/W , & bome·Uke 2 br with ~ATIOH ownenhip. Walk to !rplc .. Dbl (!arg, pool & 964-2566; 973-2971 •UDO ISLE, 3 BR 2 Ba. S600/mo. Boat slip avail. LOVaY 21R u-children & pets O.K. $475 pvt. gat.ed entranre + 2 o-t pti ·-b ' beach $Ull.OOO. 536-4383 JDCUZZJ. 5 mm to bcb. Yr· rr-· .... _ 2168 M'-c:c7 4c79 ...::11 ,0 on..., uy in o, ly lease No pets $525 3Br28a.dishwasher .dbl kwe lge. patio. $750 mo. 213'434-9603.~9797-off. Frplc, private patio. mu 10cr ...... • ~ patios. Some with all
repo'1, loan assumption COM TRIPLEX 3·2 BR, se.m7/8JS.954l · · encl. gar .. fenced yrd, :;,s&.6588; 645-6822 Deluxe Hime. (60l Ltdo) F.ncl gar. No or Coast Altractive 2br duplex. garage. Sw1mmm1t pool etc. Easy fioance 0 .A C. prlnc only. $195.000 · c:htld/pet OK. $450 mo. 2 Bdr, 2'iAJ ba, ask lo Hw y . No p els or Frplc $375. Call 645-nl&. Jacuzzi. Tennis courts. I Voffices. Subj. to 10/31 exchange. 3 bdrm. 2 ba. Large yard. 962-3170 children. U2Sl mo. Call 62l.Jl41 blk to Huntington shop· MobieHCMM Store Ca 11 6 7 3 · 1 • l 8 No pets. Avail Jan. 10 <keanlronta .... SS00/575 Rita,673-1020,752-5710. Linda 675·2311 or aft 5, eves. puigcentermall. Adults
W.Anaheim 761·1442 eves/wlcnds. Call aft 4 $550 968-~ 3 Br. 2 ba, lrg fn cd yard 3BRUdoSands ·· ·· $625 To ... Hle 641H>457 EASTSIDE I IR No pets. From $435
Westrrunster 848·8895 ,. _RY U .... DER 2199 Meye r . Near Cbildrn/pels ok. $490. 3Bachelors Available ......,.. L d 3525 loft ded Seawind Village, 15555
Anahe'tm 9«>.1011 _.~ " Harbor/ Victoria Call 960-2065. Call for more iolorma.IM Deluxe Upper 2 bdrm. 2 Large apt, upgra Huntin"'on Village Lane, ~· ·-••••••••••••••••••• ba. Den lndry. deck. ~hout. Country set· ,... Santa Ana 554-7070 CONSTRUCTION ed d Br l rd S Uon LAKE FOREST 3 Bdrm. ~age :..1ew Walk to ti.... aUo 180 E 21~t St. H.B. (710898-9961. E. Anaheim 956-4500 Deluxe town.home units 3 bdrm. lrg. renc yar . •2 • ge ya • tove. JOMES • ......._ I -v ._, .. ---------1 with 3 bdrms, 3 baths & Drive by 2039 Nallonal $325. All ulll paid. No ._,,, nc. 2\.'J Ba. microwave. com· ch. ·AduJts'. No pet.<1. No children, no pets. 2 Br. children welcome. ---------1 fireplaces. First class $395 per .. mo. 1s t . l>(.1.S.833-3974. 673-6210 ing ~·Landscape aerv. References. $600673 2060 s:m. mo. Days 646-4262: no peU Starting al $270
$16,900 blaldings with tile roofs, last+SlOO ChJldren pets 2 Br 2 Ba condo on the ~rep1ace.d 2.000 ,sq .rt. c..-ft~ 2 BR 2 b ... ~ t eves~~. mo.846-GM>1. S~To 11r.'"'CH b I · I d OKCall8339305 -...ubhouse ues me · SS7 .,......., · a ....... a -0p c--YWOODS u:roa -8 contes.1 he nc ose · sand. Adults only. No 3 Br 2~ Ba townhouse, mo. Eva. Dave, 545-7 garage. O/W, sundeck, VV'I"""' VilaPaclflca Dbl wide '61 lrailerama garages w l 11tora,e New 2&3 bdrm. frplc. pets.SOOS. 644-6604 Big Canyon w/spec· N#.. frplc. Radio garage Eastalde 3 br, den & H•w <DN5186) 3 pvt bch & rooms. ceramic ti e bllnS 2 car garage $450 tacular Vlew, pool. Jae.. opener. Blk to ocean. study Skylight, frpk, .,.._.Oc.-f':°&~bi~et~~:~~~:~: ~~t~ :i~lf:·kh~h~e.,~ &up.'M>S637. . 3:!i. l:'ic~~~l~!~c:! ~~p~~SOOO .. lwllhr.nMshed ~mo.6?USlO ~k,S:.UN'oxt~~i1Ci:::! ~~ Jcmior J BR, l BR & 2
DK>l Pacific Coast Hwy. F\rst user tax benefits. 3 BDRM 2v2 BATHS U\. $475. 548·1258 or aftt· :.:=:_•:•1:.~··•••37•••0•6• ~e l br, fr'{>lc. pool .. l pets $485. Days~; BR, 2 BA Security pro·
Lag. Bch. Offered by Jl'ordelailsca.11751·3191 lwnhse. s. Cat Plant noons892-TillX552,LJz. Newport Crest Condo. 2,3 - -empl'd ao,ult. non· evefl645-9543. videdbypvtkey·carden R I M P or 4 bdrm• $625/up ••••••••••••••••••••••• smoker. no pel. $375. 1st, try . 8 It n kit ch ena ssance . . .SELECT area. refrig, W/0, alr. Maulll-'CMt ll . d . and h 8 Ba • n-3 br 2 b I II . I Pl h 71._..31116. gar o por. $550 mo H'_.:z._ 3242 !~!.-Imme . Agl Isl c arm, 2 r l • last+dep.~999 ..... 11.. • a, ow~r. w ununous c gs us PROPERTIES 536-4976 831 2386dya --.....,......., patio 1arden, utU lncl. cpC.s. drps. No peta. Nr. cafl)et. lge pvt patio oi: l ·BR -+.fully recond. Pvt. evs · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• No pet.a.~. •94·3223 °'*et 1mm!lc· 2 Br ~pper. OCC. $325. 751·31196. b al con I es w I x t r :i beach Is dock. Lido hie. $.Dl2 Br E-slde, gar. fncd StudJ-0 condo, wltb view Dellghllul Sbr, fam rm beam ceilings, hv rm storage. Pool. spa, light
$2.9,500.Agt.67W170 LatsforSale 2200 patio. Adults onJy, 0 0 Pool Ir Jae, acrost from home in Hrbr Vu HJlls. C:C.-.. W. 3722 (rplc. refrig, range, StwWrig lrg 2 BR. 2 ba cd tennis court. lndry
••••••••••••• .. •••••••• pets. 646-l07S beach. $375. 847.4525 On lovely St. Pvt yd. Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• carpets/drape s. Refs garden apt, pool , $295. facil. l..lmited preview
NewportBeachonLldo. WlU trade 3 sub-dMded 1Cbls,S875.~ Oceanlrootwinurrental. please. Yrly S425 mo. 710W.l8lbSt. rentals. From S290 per
2 Br. '34.000. JaU, Lu Vegas for cash, •2br COQdo. POOi. Jacuzzi. Townhouse 2BR. 2\AJ ba, condo hool 3 br, 2 ba, h1.11e sundeck, AduJtsl DO peta. ~7610 2 Br. 2 ba, like new mo. Models open daily
673-lm.6 tal.lboal,car.diamondt, NrS.C.tPlua$375.No pool, Jae, sauna.tennis. 3 Br •or. sc ' right o n sand on orS41·3122 twnhse.E·side.$375 mo. lOAM to dus k . 21 5
20X5l Gulfslttam 2 bdr. 2 etc. 67~7687 pe.ts 833-8974 k50/mo. 8'2·3167 =· 1 Ya Ba. 5475· Newport's beat beach. lsl. lut + SlOO. ~-Wichita Ave ( a L
ba, adult park Hunt· Will trade 2~ resort acres Lg 3 8 r 2 I,\ 8 a Beach condo. 1 BR&: loft, er. "°"°192· rwt'u.rrirbedd& 1;ady 22~r21::·~u:i~!. Yorktown> Ste. 409M .
ingl()n Beach. ror sale by on lake in Elco Nevada lownhomes. frplc1 wet 2 patJoe, ocean & bay Bluffs, leate/optlon; 3 o en oye . ays A&ent67S.5930 2 Bdrm apts, unfutn, _n_4'_536..44SS ______ _
owne:r, 982.307L for cash, sallbOat, car, bar, fam rm. garoener, view, racU. $400. 846-2073 BR. 2...., ba. Greenbelt. 7S2-7UO: eves 838-2l8&. ~~mfp':~: '6,fi:~e Near beach, 2 br. 2 ba up ~tori* UOO diamonds. gold, etc. M2S-M50. 207 Knox St '""-3244 S650Mo.Agenl844-llll3 c:o.teMete 3724 Uwer 28R. 2ba, suodJt. Ave,842.9760. per, encl. garaae. No -<.....-..:~~~~~~~~~ .,. .. from Lar11e ....................... fplc. beam ce1I. delux. water bed.a! Adulu only
••••••••••••••••••••••• --1.•-•or(\)7 ~ ~·~ ~ ~~,,~~~~~·~~~~/~c~~~l!~O~c~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J~lht~~2~---~ l•CllS ....._..._/ .... -. Woodbridae 3Br 1v. bA. 3 · 2...., Pii. Newp6ff ~-: 6'7ii'fi7 " · "•
under the "Old Oak Trtrllrtca 2300 New 2 br, l'iA.I ba condo, new!NearLake&parka. er.tQindoHome.2 car ~ "tmaU l bdrm, 71•1 at .
TrM".Loadedwtthemo-••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl gange & f/p.P{)peln Nopets.'4!50,833-8600 !.8!8~1r•c· patiomed' ~· ~'!.cu.1•-'arn.0S2pe45l1"2u1p10' CottoW... 3124 I.ion. tbil lovely tenUe E'orSafe MobUe Home. '73 beam cellln~•· oo • ·-·.....,.,et~ -· ""' .... · ....... •••••••••••••••• 1-----.------bdr .. 1 ba., frplc .. 1ar .. rolUoa view properl1 Brtlbton Manoc' 34x60, 2 Jacu:.ul ... ~" ut. $475. •Coler. Park, 281 r. lt,\ ba, ~· per cno. Newport Bl.W-4188. $315. 2 br, H4 ba. patio, Clean 2 BR 1 Ba, lte pvt lndry rm .. $350 960-$376
n.tw&IUniroryourn w bdrma, 2 ba, fml1 rm. 5 mo.642--. mm poo • new! no • ......., ... _.. l740 lndtyrm,adultt,nopets. petJo. refrig incl. Adltll, or~Oagt . bome.~ttermil. SUr Park $39,000/ bat Eut•lde 2 br frplc. =:eooBrk patio $395, Newport Crest Condo. 4 •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• TSLM1mt 642·1603 noJ)eU.1325mo.971M410 i--H-A_R_P_/_N_E....;;....W_2_b_d_r_m.
PAl.O I.I. ofr. C1H> 84.2-SW beamed ceil'p , lncd yrd. br, fam rm, formal dlo· Roval Sulfel LA MAHCHA APTS l 8r ~ c&D. refrig. -+den. frplc, 1arage. No
1Jm.srt1ort/6Z3-4462 7122~MeeTootrlr In Patio. $375. 6•6·6789 Woodbrtdce2Br +den,21!;f:=;,'°;o!.°~"~d~~I Ss-EiouaSti.J1ol4't L&rie l ,HsS bedroom Adults. 00 pet.a. 72' c c:hlldrerl. ns mo
C 1 rcW park.' ult aft 6pm, 59-eOll Ba. Incl 1ardener. mot at S700. AIL lBedlWmSult., aardtn apt•. Adu.lt11 . Ja.mes.673-778'1. llG-7'188ukforMack
Prlp1rty 1600 -.ms. 2Ulsaarage,nlcelanl. fa8tr"~f:c,.:5$oU:~r l3MM30. CompleteKltcbent Dlh'Wbr.blt.nt,e.nc:l.1ar. Eutalde2brlsdeosplit· ER l br pool. gar. -·••u••u•••••••••• U •• DeMrt no pelt, no chit ren. · · Beaut. Patlo/~ool au bbQ. Poo1._ Gas Pd. ~I. frpk, skylight, all f I trees $:r7s Adults NJ:WSHOPPINO ~~ • 2400 marrtedc:pl,548.(M()l Canyon View. New 2 Br. 2 be condo near MUds.tvlce TV mScotlPl.6425013 extra• •• 20. mo. No al~ 642~1· •
C....,,...,.R --. t-.. o .. ·e 2RR 2be beach. Refrilfi,W/O. 2 1 Mllet.o ,.,.ean .. • · · ....... a:. •••• • •••••• •• VWUD .... . . . •• 1 m v--""wn al 2 Br. l .. _. all""""'· Brand .......... _ or ....... o ..... I---------~ Beach Area. • ••• • •••• • Jmmac. 2 BR, 1...., bA . f le, pool, S450/mo. carenc. tar. "'• poo • ... ~..., ... .... ... '" ''"Nn>l' ,__.... '" b
Trtple net ieua. First bdrm. Condo , Ironwood townhouM ln dellghtlul ~21.M HUH, Jae. $550 mo. Beach Blvd new. 117 E. 18th St. Q75. IMMa2: eves-.s 9543 2~ ~~=~4:.t'*. 2
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feat'I rem 1u.aranteed. Country Club, Palm wooded are•j Incl. pool. 87!MJ410;tu-tsa6 nM41 I w mo.Aa\541·5002 New28rapt,nopeta,klda w/luxueyfeatu.res.Small
Prtmebi&btnirnccount. Oelert. Reri111for CHI-~ul111la. $47 Mo. Alt\ ~new ~do. tl sr, • -Ma-2000 W ..... ¥..... OK . UH. 557·69U, petot.
U.000 SQ. feet rtOtablt cupancy Afr 1979. ....,. 1 Pl on ....... am, tno s, Beautiful brand lie• &11-422S Gemini Realty ~ ~ f110QOO. Sl'°,000 C.1 evenln11 A NDO So &)001. adults, no pell. OCEANFRONT .... S57S a..-.._. J741 p I 1--------••••t ...... c.. '7 14 ·I 4 4 ·I 2 I 5 or "·t 1 ft n~adr · Eva; 473-~. ~ 2 Becb•lon Ave liable· .. •••••••••••••• .. ••••• ldult •~o pct.a. 00 • t •2 BR. bllnl. OIW, encl Defwi beac aptt. frplc. 6Jf.uoo... 71~ -uU:·pd~ by cn:n~;.: Deerfield paUohocne. 2 br c~n fO' mor. lftform•· &..AOUHA BEACH MTR jJc:un1955W.~~~ 1ar. patio. US·H.S'I ; encl I~ pat101. ~~~~~7~11~~·~ --~. Canron. ~Id.... Wt tream ac,dtip or 3,br. Submlt ~ UA&.T:Y Ille rNN. m.i.w~ •up Maid Bec,h. s:w.aes 5'l-429l 1.Pell>'--=~·-----~rea. J 8r saou.. ·~· .-• ~. ·-• ewv .• ~... · r 1Brtz90..$306 Larlelbdrnupt. Delwura bd., 2.JM. nt 5 SEU. kUo itetlJa wtlh a Ba. whd1 or •kly. S.1m& •more. 5 mo. l. Ordftr lnct. '6ZS '7MJIO DOOl. Wt (714J 28. rSAH350 TnJamesSt.C.M. ru. D/W, 1a~ patlo o.ll1PlbClaulJWAd. -.19'1.-.UIOI 117·-ID!_~.f7~ tmH.c..iHwy. Matnt "2·180.1 l2501UO. $DDllo,NoPN.•'m4
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................ Afa tu.e........ ..... .· hh11 ...... 44IO &.It&..... u oo .W.Wlllhd 7100 ' 0 DAILY PILOT Tuetd1y,J1nu1ryt, tm ,.., •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• f9r-...e 4JIO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••T••••••••••••••••••• .!..... t' ,,.._.._. 1140 C' ... •7' ....................... I Vaunc H do._11\ol!Wn Loet 111 It\ hair Kil ACCOUNTIMe .... W..W 71 tw,W..t.d 71 00 Help W.ahcl 7100 ... _!;;.•••••••••••• ....................... Ooubl• aar•i•. JU\h • H•lnllon llatll 2CO Wiii. LI w't1 •~mot. call NtwPOrt center llnan· ••••••••••••••••• ............. •••••••••••••••• ...................... ~ ... ClfWOODArn XCLU81VK OCrJAN Olive, 111. HO. Alto M•ln I\. 1111"1 mall Ml WI CM area da1 ftnn bu ao lmmed Au&omot.lvt 8abyt1t\er, Oay1,.J:ur c.felevte"-4
ltm ll•poti• I Br, 2 r~NT l fl a bdrm. •balM. HIM ., .. t» 1118 ;:;;d .... , cnale black ~ '°' .., account M TAU.MS E:· hr tnlant u r I l enke Alt I •••t .__ l Br, l le-•fl•· avail, SeeiarUy _.., ....... •too Doberman Uth 41 bUr cltn Bink rtcon N.LTIMI w/ -otlllti1 motber · • ._ •>"~•. •levat.or, dlalli .. B · clilatloa 'exp. b•lpful' -··-••s p .. d•1Mnd1ble with ror P1reparatton Is ....,, dbl~••· P•· -=~r:;,.irea~ .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 0rlQPll W~O Xlnl W'Oftiol tOftdJUont ....,._, ,_ nt. Pfloneevea 8'7"'778 ttrv ee No a it p
2 •. l be. k.lda welcome, U... wllh trp~ • prv. ~.1 ... 1 ..:,,,,. Ot laa\a OW LltASINO Offlee LC11t 3'bC'OWn C.lm Ter • t"OmpeQ1 beoe(ltl of ... ,.IO:nutYS IAIYSfTTB ~~1~:a'!·,:.1t ~-::1~ .._.. I Pobl\I, IZU. let ~ ,,._, IDS up. ,.... "~ •• llHI W......_.. Xlot lof. on 2 ritn I malt 1 fem1le ftred. App(y ln peraon or ~, ' n•.,... •t 7!11 COM· .... .-• 1m Locll Up Dana• 201 ~fl'W)'llnAn.helm Spntau Hiil ar•a cau A&ITOSWPl.Y Ollld cue. My home or ---..ta. C.Jl for appl.
tnoCkn. u , SOrry. no 2u-.1m Cao.to Damo.d 811 1 ... an ~1e1.ft nu11oe.!!._ ~llld.1448053 _ · ADP STOii ::nm:~t~~!~!~~~7'M113;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
pe&a ~ mo. m..mt.nHYM lat. Sml blk rem C.t. ......510.._. £xceUeottlattln1Hl1ry 81113-230511W'!l.8ch l 111' llllfW1' a bli from •mt UA<Ra--.avllJO• .,.....,. " forSdayweek Exe l~l1---~----..... bndl ' 1 lal1ll nr Ho.1 •.....-Y Wat, wbl colla!1 part ~ CClndt\ioOI 11nd BABYSITTER 'peeded -~~tilldrcn or 1 .....,..___ ~ ;;;-"lallt 1au1e 'in Npt Ptlme !Mallon •~\able SiamtM. ana. to Mandy SERVICES CJPPC)ftunltlet for advan· fu11 time IOI' 3 ~1111, mv --·-·-m' ~--. • . 0..ft.llU. tor comm'I or lnd'I UM vre. Falrvit-w/Falr ,
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l ...:z-lbr•pt Pauo, Clement• uoo. PW a...,.rw...-. b0a1 ear f\N, lOOampp0wer Cell " emplo~e btnetlt1 1n SS.-7aJ\6PM .... ~ '* AvaJI oow. -.... or ... _.,. ...-.,. ..... <114 )521 4154 d•"•; FOUND: Male German Cini D cludt taUuUon in
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r-• •• - -, ... ,..-- -and white ApProx 2~ to ._..... l!loor and pemion fWMJ. Apply Banldnc • • """1 81• quaet, ~ -. ........................ 0...-..... 4400 ......-wlllhd 4600 >tnOft. old. Call M$-.&SOI MN. n lnpenon 'Alf TIMI
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Pb lam·Uam, ipm·3Pm, Nat.iooal Education. 4401
Birch st .. Newson Beach. (Neu .c .
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portl.tftlty Employer.
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I Ill.; I la. bk.a. 'O/W, m &a ft omre l,at• to Rt•poHtblt, workin1 _Rewa.rd ___ Lol_l_lm-aU_w_bi-te 644-4360 SANTA Al'IA To work Frld•,r• •
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""-'.._•TtlJ. 1 .. 1 mo ..... rt \M -•IO Oirnnadel Mer or Cotta tooth left. U2·82U EOE PAnTIME ,.__..,F••r ..
Sb ~ rrwwa1 • .._ mootb. M.-a Q\tttnett etatn· 8»?2l -LOC _...
•'1> I BR hOUH, nr ... ·=""....... AYMJ.llOW --tiaJ Waft. CluaJllCld Ad ___ o ______ , 7.P10./t S.ril .. &Lo. ~~~~~ •~It•. no 4_......_.u:• ,,.o Oeluu mtdltal suit•. 'eo* 1~..'JIY ,.~!lot.t • MPeOa• lat: German lbepherd, 2700Karbor Blvd ----........................ a'°"9d n C d I a .-,, ~ a blk With blnd pa wt, dis· Ateountiol AUTO SWPI. Y ~Call Mr. Waener ~ 4 bdnn, NHr Mar. Rca~m~~· immqrc•ll675-ae2 Und broken baclt leg. STOii ~2300 E.O.E.
ileaett. WIUJ room addl M091.I HOWI ' mnoo , .....,needlpnv. rm al$25 IMther ~ w/bl.k apace -••TW'11 Immediate openinu. ---------Uoft._,mo _, 1_._.. Tl-... -h 84.5-4199 eves. M2·8422 accoun[eft1B. Good salary and worltfng n---;,.'-•'-. Canvu Penoo · Ro•t cov-_ .......... """ Do---H 1 "'l w/1om• kite en ~.ll1•·· V vii,~. 17th St.CM di• .. I I u.UIUIJ S I b •b&(tl i ~d. doH to A.tot. OlltDI t.o bQ)' Ullo, 8P:o;:o~ ~~n°ll~'2 Pftvlle&ei 741 0179 In SMdow • ~~Joni . ,.pp Y 0 Bl&ICID ~:.•t,:.rtA23_•• 1 Y
:;:"· bttu, w11ara1e ~t_. ~ usu~, otflcea available Oot _Lqma_ Itta --PnMll.Y A'Mouoces Oul! 29.e BRISTOL S.1 T8 I MS CARRO_W_S_' --
?D>. eomca 1 naacci ' " tnn SUO. one a.rm sno. Need :t Br aet. un.fum ror 1::'. ~d Mca~f11s:~~~~ Move to Larger Offices. caiTA MESA s..... Coat R~fAURANT
ADUlT ·""ullT ...._..._$..... •Ui59__ employed, reapon Me u wood s, CM . Vlalt Us At Our New Automolive ............. SAN CLP.MENTE, bas
TY matbtr w/Z ltell.I In Npt R d Local.Ion · f 288, I~ b&, blllftl, pew W..s.ml.ostM !Mlf ~CIMTM Hrbr HS an1a. pref E· ewar . S56·4689 aft COL · L 8 SALIS AnlndependeotBank po11 tion open or
t'1)Wdrpa. lncl ti•r Pvt E..AA.lbclm *-~ 10,000tqft aideC.M.orN~Htaarea 4PM ~&LDIN~NKER ML TIMI ~SunflowetC.M . Wait.er. Waitress, Coolu
patio Nr bcb, park, W.Al\ahejm 78114'2 t.u.wioUJ P•neled of ...... ov•r•-p•n-AA....a -aLoe•L " 640-5300 iiUtilltyperM>nnel.Xlnt h b $" '11 .... __ .. ~ ........ o ._ ... .-.... • ~ Lost: Vic. 17th Sl/Tustln. SUITE200 ~ "" beadlta. paid vacation • opa, u• .,4 mo ..._m .....,.1 ll flc:et w/apecial extru ~end of Jan, phone CM, blk Fem Toy Poo· 2333NBROADWAV -10YS BAR GIRL Beer & wine •--1y 1"/llt. •tnt Santa Ana !54·'1070 C o o f e r e n c e --1 .. vs. .,._. nf'l' ·--'""'--"'-----die. ans. to Sabrina. SANTAANA •UTos•-y Full or p/t1me. Call 620Aven1d1Plro .__.__ ~••• r m I b a l b r o o m · ·-o~ard Call"•" 311., ft ""' .,....,.., ................ S Cl •a ~ -.... ahower/ltit h Coo new • .,.... ., a We have an lncreaalng S?Oltl .._.......,.. an emen..., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'nlEEJCCITING 1_ .. __ n,_._c1.en t1ad ~i........-1111Yest/ 8PM. demand throuahout ••• .... """ES• ·-......_u.l,ll ~ .. Immediate oienlnos BARTENDER e1er:r for CA.5HlER. pt-tune for Rancho S•n Joaqu10 2 .,._,.. """"'"'~ 0()0 ..,,.RATEREALTY ~ Or•n11e County for ex " ~a..-•11 c M d I .......... --.-TO"'PTBCll nrv l'PDIU 1£TS -... · GoodsaJary an working '-VU'..., ounge. n .. photodrive-up . b rm condo w view ........ v•c.o> ,.. 975-0111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ perienced ac~tlng & conditions. Apply 1n Call64&-2823.Aft6PM 759·1140 loaded w/e.xtraa. reuy. Bach, 1"2 BR ........ bookkeeping peraoonel. pel"llOll ~ fromS2S5&up. 126·500 sq. ft. offices. Oftpcrtmlty 1005 •~£RS Callorviaituat.oday-we 29"8BR1STOLST
Adulta. No pets From MS. Incl. uUI . 779 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ftftol>n are looking rorward t.o COSTA MESA
BeautJctall · Part or full •-------•
2~: 11:,,~~~~~1~: <sS:i!'!~N!wport W· l9lhSU40-2200. ICICll.AM ~~-T~~:r:.=-sr-tin& you in our new AW>moti $.i'l~ +. No IUds, pets. Blvd> AJRPORTOFFICES BETI'ER *a,tton71_.. ll11 .. 103 Mi'CHAMtC ~ · 9am·Spm 5'6 9860 1 to 3 room suites, all P.AILOI I think I'm (lolng t.o take ,., r ..
time for fashionable children/ adult sa Ion .
lmmed xlot earnings
w/beneflt.ll for mollvaled stylist. 7fi8.880l Mission
Vie JO. -1 9-R-ad-ult rondo. close to •-.. 000 &ef'Vlca. No leue req'd. Se.Ulng price 1ftcludes all a vacaUoo In Las Ve111. FREE PARKING ~LOCTIMt -.. "'-m •1a.n. mo lmmed flxtures le Inventory. You've heard of Lasl•--------1 '"""" AL pool, teMi.s & JaCUZIJ. ••••••••••••••••••••••• nv • ..,..,, . . &TOH income sso.ooo. llAUTY CARIB Onlv S300, call Voael-0<.·cupancy. 2082 S E. Se"-will con.aider re· Vegas, the BETTER --------•I PIPIOYS Pa <n •• ,. .,161 Bristol. Suite 200, N.B IK'l atieuo. •""'"A..1...,..t..U'lt. AUTO SUPrl y Top management po111 a c..-.. • ...._ ..... ""'* (11.4)M7·7010. asonable orfer. Ask for -""""~ lions & distnbutorsh1ps ...,..._.. 3141 -Lovetyganiens·Brook1 JOIA!'l~l~n ~ ~ ~ Found: Retriever.? PUP· Cl.BK STORE avaJI. 1nnew&upcom1ng
••••••••••••••••••••••• wtr. (all No. Costa Mesa, 700 sq. ft. py, nr San Juan School. Excellent opportunity Excellent starting salary 008met.1r company. Aloe
CASHIER
CASHl&-SALIS
Unique retail nurserr
has full & part ume pos1.
bon..1 available for sales
orienleG applicants. Ex·
celleot opi>ortun1ty for
head cashier. Please ap
ply ln penon.
<.:LJFF DRIVE VIEW •KltchenFac1l.avall. ~/mo. Ground noor. BA~ & Call-.s685 («a reliable person t.o from SU5to 1294 for 5 Vera Products No ex·
CONDO. No Laf.un•. 2 •JacUUJ,heat.edpool Tom,640-2200. FOUND: Vic Hamilton/ Join our Accounting day week depending on p e r ie n ce n eeded llOGEISGAlDEHS
d un.• d ·i 'd Dept. Typin& 4' addlne qualifications . Mu st 962-7657 ~ISanJoaqwn Br. I ~ Ba, frp . erk, *1V"'iuyor 81 Y ma1
1 •1rv ,._.bealtf•• BE AiCH Newland. Blk & wht rmaclllne as well as AI R ~ve brake. rronl-iind & ---------Hilla Road :•!· t; laX>/mo. yrly. 613-SOID • & phone avaiab e Suites ft abaUYdott. 1/4. 646-5386 exper pref'd. Enjoy xlnt llme·up el'perience Ex· BEER BAR MAIO.' Even· Cdm 92625
1 bdrm ·~ blk t.o be h Allow en S63 Wk Pri te 't.e Ith FOUND G Sb c:obeneflta lncluding free cellent working cond•· mgs full ume Reliable ~--------
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• ....,. • TII ac 2Z77 Harbor 1 va •. 11w w rec,ep1· 450 NEWPORT CTR. OR. : erman ep. meal. Apply Mon/' Fri. lions and opportunities Capo Bch. 496·9033 or 1--------_,., per mo. ColltaMet1a &45-4840 ton a< •ccretar a 7ca1M111 tan&blk,thlnblkcollar. 9am·Noon.Persoonel. for advance ment . $6476 Oilldcare~edfor3rd
494·3253 service, conferencl' ~ ~1036. Vic Warner, or u•••tOTTHOTB. Libera I e mpl oyee grade ~irl. cant School room, all facilities. 20e21--------· Graham -d 1 Br utiJ utcl. $325. 2 br Roomw/kitchennettc Mi h 1 1 . llOONewportCenter Dr bener1ts 1nclu e 11 ... DER area, from 7:45 to 8:15 "50. Ulll incl. Thornton SOOwe'ek&up. c e son, r vi n e . nted Hairdressers! Ex· Found: Handsome brown N~rtBeach ho&pita.Uutionlnsurance " Y AM 546-t450af\5.
fUty&3l·0300 """'.97cc • 752-0234 cellenlJ/'iportunity part· male Labrador. Leather Equal ppor Emplyr andpens1onfund Apply TRAJMEE
'"" o>.> / u /f t' f ed """'"BRISTOL Childcar e : Working MEWPORT lltVIME me 1me, re om, collar. Mesa Verde . mlf ~COSTA MESA Collate and pac~agc Mother, 2 school BRI!
()ie blk t.o Mam Bch & Vocafio9tltfllfat1 4250 ExecutJveolllcewit.h independent, no time ~1459 ed_ucal1onal motenals Children, l:30 to S:OO,
shops. 2 bdrm. 2 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• reception phone ans. schedule. <714)552-0240 Will reqwre lifting or Mon lhru Fri. lrvinl' <ke1u~llview. 768·9451 or Condo for rent Palm conl. rm&more. 1325 P.llOMll1 5350 Acet'g; Jr. Accountant or AUTOMOTIVE heavy boxes. W1l1Jng lo area S59-6712
4!H..(l6 Desert. Be a utifu I 968-6789 ••••••••••••••••••••••• full charge bookkeeper UsedC•DMV tram to operate forkHrt.1---· ------
1 Br inc. uul $350. Walk to Ironwood. 2 Br, 2 ba, no WELL ESTABLISHED RELAXING MASSAGE for CPA in tdM. Typing & COlltrod Ca.rt& Excellent work mg condt· CLERICAL
town & beach, view + pets. Call 556-3131 betwn EXECUTIVE TROPHY SHOP ll>bJames-Lic Maueur req'd. Call 615-2070 Excellent opportunity & tJons and benefrts Apply Ne:r°rt Center f1nan Xlnt San Clemente loca· Outcall 9·9, 494·Sl 11 benefits Hours are 8 to 5 .._. 8 d f k deck . .S.-3672 8&5. SUITES . N ln & ADMIN ASSlSTANT .,.,.ween am-llam, an c1a irm see ing
Feb 20th, lrg 2 BR, 2 blks ..... to S..... 4300 wi~urious pnv1 atte1 orrh1ces ~':pn!:'t. ~~~ry PREGNANT! Caring. Part time position with ~~~iu ~ aatlea ~ll ~ o e~: ~:~~m 44<1~ :.~~sf'. ~=~n::~~!nd;!~t~~~s
from beach. No Laauna, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •. u• peur_sooa etep one M IEACH RLTRS ccnfidential couruieling & growing professional perience. Please ca 11 Newport Beach ( Near En~ level pos1t1ons now MSO/waterpd.494-0361 Rmmate to s hare 2 .. ex.ecu vcsecre ary •t•2100 ref'en-al. Abortion, adop· firm in Newport Beach. Bemieat OC E o · bl rr· Conference Room .. .,. Lion&keeping. Good te_lepbone techn1· •.a.UER MOTORS Airport> qual P· ava1 a e, o ice expt>r ... .,... leach 3169 bdrm/2 ba apt. Sl42: Xerox· Telex APCARE S'7·2:663 que, lypmg & reporting. ~ portunily Employer helpful. Xlnt working •••~••••••••••••••••••• $142.~/mo +, utll,Jnobn· Nr. So. Coast Plaza, C~all Ma. Johnson at 979-2500 rond1t1ons & t'ompany smo .. er on y 0 n Mwtig1g1t.Tn11t c ..... .--yl!!...1RL benefits Pleaseappty8 5 PAllC MEWPOltT fM&.8154/971 8705: airport & freeways. Dtidi .IOlS VVl"'ll I" w Sldtpr .. full charge w lth or contact personnel; .
Bachelors. l or 2 BAKER CENTER •••n•••••••••••••••••• *ESCORTS* Answerin~Serv1 ce AIJ1'!!!'1'l!.I1;!1D ..... Y" typing skills. Laguna ADP Bedroom.s&Townbou11es C..,dow11 979·2161 Telephone rator for ~"" "" Beachof'f1ce ror R.E. in·
From$349.50 UYIRgl:xp .. ws! SUB-LET newly opened LOWEST :Mhrl 957-lM74 llpm·Tlm shl\. Must be needed to wash & det.a1l 1_v_eet.men __ t_ro_.836_-_797_1 _ PENSION
Spectacular spa, total Sharea h<>meor aptment prestige omce space orr w.n.t ..... C..WNGl lt.ader over 3S yra old. 228 new & uaed cars. includ· Bluellne operator Exp SERVICES re~reatlon p rogram , Qousc-OJAru lJt.iuMJTT.D 17th St.1 C.M. Telephone ..,.... Foreat Ave .. Laguna Ing lot supervision Like Nee. c M. Blueprint sqcsaJ program. 7 pools, 8 answenng, typing, ac· ht T.D.'t, 9ho l81SSo. El Camino Real Beach to work around cars? M8·:>57l l.80Newport Cente Dr
tenrus COW"lS. At Fashion Uk 'f~ ~ ~>ot counting services avail. WT.D. Lo.ts. San Clemente: Fully Uc. This will please you• 1---------2nd li1oor, NewprtBch
Island, Jamboree & San c-,, ~~l6M4" ~"'.,'Mt\ $195 per desk. 645-8651 FIUl"elt Terms 11lnce 1949 For appt. 492·7296 Appliance st.ore needs 4 Ideal for sem •·rel• red IOA T IUILDB 644-4300 ext 263
Joitqwn Hills Road. 832-4134Since 1971 Sattler UtA Co -XX-D-... -....,.....;;...;..R_OF--FU-... -X-X )'()Ung aggressive men to sel!·st.art.er. Salary open. Working foreman needed Eq 1 Op E 1 (7141 644.1900 Sl.80 Up. Orfice-store, 480 '42-Z I 7 I ... S.s.o6 i 1 ~ " start Immediately. Will roE. See Pierce. to superv1Se COMtrU('Uon ua por mp oyer
Bachelor unit i,.; block
rroni beach. All uUI pd.
No ltids, no pets. 201 E.
Balboa Blvd. 12!>0 per
mo -+ security dep. Call
Sue~77<r7
ROOMMATES f\, AIC. 17301 Beach Bl, Beautiful nude girls. train. Must have Ai®.. HOW.AID CMYroMt & assembly of 26. diesel Q.ERICAL
H.B. LE~E 842·2834 WANTED ... r,ooo. for 2nd dance at exhibition & rap ~3107 Mr . Lindsey Dove& Quail Sts. fiberglass fash&ng boat. Newport Center fin an 511m-,.....Sa•• -.. 1esalons. 9AM to 4AM 81 ~ p O.._.THE TD.Preferpvt.ply.Gd. every day. 2060 So. APJ'MGRcoupleage40 __ N_EW_._PO_R_T_B_E_A_CH __ 1_54_l-4_1_63 ______ cia firm seekin l(
more. ay less! " credit, refs & collateral. Euclid, Anaheim, excit· +to manage well main· BOOKKEEPER rull cha reaporunble 1nd1vidual11 Aaes& Llfetstyles . W A-TER! "-11 ·. 71• ••<> ,,.,...,. lained 37 +adult units in " for accountina <'lerk weC6eckReferences A .... .........,........, Ing 24 hr recording Oran "-·-t XI t AUTOPARTS Multiple set of books. re· position. Acc~unt•n" ,._ s•L ·212 DIC sums SU-1422 ge ....,..., y. nt e· . al estate bkgrnd. helpful .., -,._ · Allt:.c••f'h/ nants. Salary + bonus. It New ofc 111 Irv complex background, 10 key ab1li
DelWl 4 BR. 2 ba, gari_no 3 bdrbse .. close to beach. 350to1'7SOsq. ft. p fMtlllt/ . MICHELLE'S (714)621'8541 8 :30 to .5 Alt, Gett. Hldr SaJ comm w/exp. Send ty, light typmg helpfui
pets, steps to bch. »75 ,......,. + ~ uU. Reliable FcmtaaHc Vt.w1 L:t&~' A..&--pm. Expet. Perm. Top pay. resume to: p 0 Box Xlnt workmg cond1t1on11 yrty 03 •wu Wet Bara •~• Medi<' a II h osp 1 n s 7250 N Bch 92663 & company benefits or ~-644·11 · _ pnn.841HJ556_.____ UdoMoriH ha·:;;1•;;:::0 •5••1•0•0• tlAM·2AM 83S·3749 ARMED SECURITY OF· Pension profit plan. call· 71'::979.83-0o bt:~ fered. Apply m person or
M7S. 3 br, 2 ba, balcony, Female to share sunny v111--. -·-"'"' FICER Exper. F IT . 3621 W. lltStrHt p u •· PM call
1 11 bl ......,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• UMDA & VICtU nites J ·30·12pm. perm e_..._ •--3 ..... .s ADP me · garage. A tns, 3broo Bal ls. ~lly furn, N......,.... 675-8662 -......al .... _:T.; position. Call 549·3281 ~""'"' blkt.obeach. Vrly. $1T7.61J.3414eves. ~"''".. ...NY ~ ...... E.C fboklceepi.ng, r11Jng. ac
TSLM1mt 642·160 MOVE your marine· f"U. Forl'MMof tl .O.E. --------rounts receivable PENSION
S Female. LfJ 2 bdrm, 2 ba onent«I bualnea• NOW !! PINCHER Serving all Orange Co ARTIST for reproduction Al!I'OMOTIVE Mature · ~ood. w •th llACHB.OR UMIT condo. Irvine. 634-8050 or HisWric Cannery Vlllage 835-7313 · art. Must be a pro & love SBVICE JOISI telephone & handling SERVICES
SZ25+cMposft. 9M-0789.0all. location orrers conv ADS It. Also know how to •t. Heavy-duty line pubhc. Full lime. soml' 180 Newport 201 l. ......_Ml. M/F welcome to abare 2 pa.r1lina• shops•tele ans Sta mo. offered for Balboa purchase printing & mechanic. expenenced. evenings & weekends Cal ...... 556-7707 bdr m condo n r II. s v c • r e c e p yard for med. sz .ibow direct photograplly. n. Li_&ht mechanical 15A Compensation discussed e-ntar Dr. --------i H b 1200/ t lonlst•aecrclary• ONLY ft doc,673-256laft7PM. PRJCE ADVERTISING. lectwuc1an,expenenced at int erview t'1 ne ._.. ..
All Adwta no peta, 2 bdrm S.:.~ u r • m 0 · photocopy•bookkeeping• fl' *ESCORTS* ~1414 Pleasant working cond•· jewelry st.ore, So. Coast 2 ft d . f I 0 0 r , 2 be from $330, Jae, pool, · accounting. Manne Ex· t.lons in Orange County Pluta. C11ll for appt
clubhouse. Shown by F t.o share 2 br. house chanae Uuildlng. 430 Sell any item or com· t7Z.llJI Airport <'ompl ex .1_549-_1424_______ Newr::Bch.
appta.only.549·3965. w/aame. CdM, near 32nd St, NB. 6'13·3601. ~~n~~= ~l~t~n:,1 ~n~; ASSIMILIRS Permanent, vaned. ln· BOOKEEPER. FC. thru 64 4360
·-y••1tLY beaches . $212 mo. _From __ S350______ Pincher Ad. 3 lines for 2 Date & Modeling. Prof. A miniumum of six teresling. Exe. pay, T B l'Ons tr c>x per
V'l"W", SA 7S&-94101ateeve. Prime otnce apace, N'pt. consec-uuve daya. Each escorta & modelB. Day or =~b\hy1 e!peac~:~~e ar!: benefits Opp for advnn Salary commensurate ext. 263 I BR. den, nr bch · · · · $425 c 1 1 addJtlom1I line Is 60' ror evening. By appt only· cement. See Mark. w/exper. Send resume 2 BR, J ba., Lldo .... S500 FEM. rmmte wanted to en.ter : secretar a l.he2dlys Charge •t' Visa/MC. 661-6732 qLired. AppllcaUons be· HOWARD CIMYroMt to· Class1rled Ad #39, EOE SHOltT TBM FUltM lhr 3 br home 3 bllls aervlces, con!. room, all No commercial 11da lna take ror all abifta. Dove Ii Quail St.s Orall Pll«K PO Bo 560 Sliehtly higher 'rates If from ocean, H: B. $133 other amenities. Pleaae NEWPORT BEACH O>st! Mesi. Ca ~ • 'a.--E-R-IC_AL _____ _
only 1 month rental mo. Eves: 960-371.5 D1ay1 : call Dan at 644~ f'or more inform11tlun , Weher Lock Co. Coastal PenotwMI
J BR. l ba., fum .... '350 833-761'1 CdM dl.Jt suites, util pd. and topl1reyourad call SSH McflacWttt A n AlITO PARTS lbok.keeper. rull charge. Agtttc:J
2 BR, Iba house .... $475 A UNJQUESERVJCE AC, ampl pkg. Ft $250. 642-5678 Scftoola & I ... "9• leach bfr.~~P~~:,s l~~~i~: Has lots ol }obis available ~~t·;..~~w0~0~~'. Ld.1.11 help cut your rent dl'.Nol&ereqd. 675-0000 ....,_.._ 7005 EqualOpportun.lty COUMTH SALES ports, computer payroll, wtlh many fine, super IALIOA~EWf191tT In half. We carefully 420 eq fl ore. S205 per mo. i---------••-••••••••••••••••••• Em loi er Exper. Perm. Top pay. Jen'I ledger thru work commies and they're
UALTY 6754170 ~e!>ra~u1~:".t~~~s Heatincld. 823 w 16th St, Bingo, Tues. nltet, 8·10. REAL EST ATE , ____ .... ___ ... ~~ ;:~,ri0fr:n. Ins . begn:fU~1. bs~r:~:· o~':' aJJ F ~~O..,oss --------t checked. · NB. 645-362S. Ceplstrano Valley H 1 LICENSE Athletic Asst. to coach 3621 W I• Strfft S c n d r e s u m e t o CoaW P~ EASTBLUFF. Beaut. apt, SHARE RENTALS Elc ant offi t 760 School. c111b ptlaea alrla baakelball Davis tt-&-Oasslfted Ad '107. Dally
beaut. bay view! 2 br, 2 A.5SN 11\ ~ up o Bl 8»1187 SCHOOL Mi1 _....Alta Pilot. p 0 Box 1560, AfeKJ ~:""\\'~~':3u1f:.u~o ,l~N. Tu!IU? Bl . Or. ~-~lu~:C~3 ... Ctr--,.-.... -----5-,-5-0 ~l~J:~~· .!.Rr:~· --------Costa Mea11, Calif 92626. Z7t0 Hart.or. CM
pets $S3S 721 Amigos SteJ 639-llOOO, 639·9003 •n•••••••••••••••••••• OFFERS High School Diploma It Babysitter· 2 children ALL JOBS FREE Wa1. Sb . b Shr ""· Ba I 3 EXECtfJ'IVE SUITES Van pool needs driver e~ Call 556-3U> school age. Mon. Tues. Bookkeeper asst ror i---------ay. own Y appt. r um. 2 Br 1 n Newport Beach. Con· _...__ N' LA ....._ · •----·-------1 ""'" .... afternoon ll.B. mitaurant 5 days J)l'r ~ beach area. M/ F. Reta. I e r e n c e r o o m . t;::.· ~ · · r • ee Gwtt Ledwe Frff 111'"' 0 wk. Inc Ids week-ends O.ERJCAL
Stesa to beach. 2 br frplc Oreg. 776-f.047 Secretary/Xerox/ Phone •---·------Anan'IOH tJl52.8:MO So. Oran&e Co $4.00 per F.amexlra money!
bU'/ldlcben. $375.' Vrly'. Rf.Ip "'°" wanted to anawenng avail. Call a..t&Fomd SlOO itCraahCouraeavallable JIOrOnr Babysitter .El Toro area. hr. Call for appt TYPISTS IQ.,_ lhr ·4 ~r 2y; 811 COM Peter Wendell 751-453() •n•••••••••••••••••••• dla~ala provided. Mo..,.,,, Mecns Mature woman. starting 714 897-0JM ask for Pam NX
home. Pool. tennl1, lndry for Info. IAttor found a pet? Call •Small clauea for U YoU att ocw to Cotta Jan 2nd. wt.days 7 am lo IOOIUCHPB CCT CUl11S
Eaatbluff 1 Br. pool, facll. locl. $300 mo. 54»1200 aq. f\. Hwy vis· Aolmal Assl1tance penonallzed lo1lructlon. Mesa, temp0rar1ly dis· 4:30. Care for Infant. PAAT·TIME. Need 11hrt A "
=87DCI peta. $320. mo. 6M-54&4 lbUity, new crpt, drps, & Leque. $37-2213, no fee. ==-~st&-day c:oolln~ng your edll('a· BRef• b. y;i·t768t e.7r44~ •tu re term belp w/bkkpg proJ m:sOPIR
Roommate t.o shr 3 Br paint, underground IAtt: lge. male Bluepoint •Pl•c.ment-up Lo 80% t.loo. ~Uy dilcharaed " l.. Wiii train or exp'd
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•
No. Launa. from I.be strvtce, or for womant.o alt tOmo ch1kl. GG-f!830. Mut=h•ve bone &relia-
SOwn!"barp/•gtl ._!~~·_4'15 . prd.S1as+uiJ1.aH375 S.. Edwardl/Edloger. HD, · dyei-.J=000==KK=E;::E:;:Po==R=·=P=e=rm=•·~·t.. · .........,,,..... ..... ~----1 ,,, -..-....,.,, ... ,... o-ard ..... ,.,...... n...-a Week poraey orcaree.remploy-mo. Rel......, Call •n I 7 term ua snmenta. Holl· 2 roomma\es wut ed llAUTIFUL ___ ,_.., ,,...._..., s.u;Tr•lnln•. roeot. comJder thi. uni-Pd,eror'K.";.ren. 9G0-481.2 ne11l $4 .60/hr. ex day • v1callQJ'l pay.
RE·L ISTJNG: 2 BR, Fem. to abr Dover SUITIS I.alt .ii black Shep/Lab ~ queopportu.nlty. or536-2M7 perlence rijqul r~d Ho1pltall11UMD plan ~.attractive patlo, Shote& borne tl6S mo 800to2900Sq. Ft. n:Umale. Vic. BearSU' Ill~':" 4'3..0442 Y•C...,,. Westm.898·3533. available.
f<l'Callf.livln1.M2·226'f 642-J.50lmomJevea. ' ~:·~·1ervlced Sunllower, C.M. Jan, Kat.ella _O_a_ut_fi_ed_A_,ct. __ su_S67_8 &.. Boy, lunche3 Apply
Patil Newport aub leue 2 A Oreat Place t.o Liver "'-'-re•'.'!'.... ~ m..n. ~al !ll\ateScbool m person. Le Btarriu '14 ~:z2ba.,..,../M0All. Udo Ill•. Furn., N.8 .• ..., .. .,.,.. _.., .REWA.ROLolUlalelrhb llmCaminoC.plttrano SZl6Plt"Wll N Newport Blvd. N.8 .
w •M0-2110 home. 1h1re w /prof, ............. 4410 SttterH11collar•chaln SaoJuanCapis\raoo MM700 "'
.. ' ,_.......... M/F, your ehare '22.!S, ·-... • .. •••••••••••••• Rlver1lde/ PCH area C d BUS ORJVERS for Chris· r• l•281aR1!!. -,, •-CaJI lmmed for detallt. --•-•Jlftlo.lll M).1SD8nwno ontemporary 1tyle 8ued on your pTI>dUC· Uan School. Apply 1683S Qioioe , ..... w rp"', 87Uaa. ,_. -"' v-.. piano lessont In your Uvit,y commlNiofl, plWI Brook hunt. nn Vly ut9-cellln11. water 17•& Newport aa.4. to.\: Pomeranl1n type flome. Call Victor ia ~ .. Ir extra prortt 11113-7831. vt.w. Reta. req. tlOO/mo Roomma\e: Male to !lletellMre\all•bop alter..:I M. Do1·Zorro. 4M-58115. · ~bocuaa.
or U JOO/mo. furn . ~ aecludod, 2 bdr. approx.l50aq.ft. Vic. Newland/Adami . .,.._W811M. 7075 Thewocnen and men we
8'75-94 tio.e. Fine place. View, UPermo Bkt8'7MTOO •5819ort75"8980 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.. looldnl tot" mlY. be S2lf/mo. h\ Ir lit. · Ured (II typtn1. foldln1 Be a u t . 2 8 r a p \ ••u. NewDQrt Ma.rtner'• Mlle. L 0 S T R e d M a I e Pree. nune. p/l. Colona s-pen, w~ jobt w/muniftctftt view, eu ~ soa 1q ft nore Doberman ;..mo old. ~c1e1 Mar, t..quna Beech and woririn(_~or a Umlted Udoas-n0r.11a.3303 Room for Rftlt S30/wk. 2 e 3 o cc> Avon · Ea rt C ropped. Vic onl)'.Nl1,t75-J.. lncomc . ~ork wHh
.1. P'eaWe lcol~lt •Wdent 21MT'M001 Ma1nolla ft A\lana. ~W-...... 7100 ~ '*"e. Rapl.d ad· Vtul)'. New 2Dr wl\h or emp oyed womao. Reward.. .. ·lor7. --vueelMftt -a.u.19. It
h , ...
......
·~·
,• .. f~: mr~d7:lh•$~L~ =l~t:u:i~~ .W~ ~11'\'!:t~I ;::r~ LOST~~ )'r old, F Ctftm ._ •• , ............... =..r.,.IJ a~~~t'j .. ~~
~21~~!!-~~::d.:-:--:-YMI. lncJuded, 541-4111 Pjrtdna, loedlol dock! drd auwc:at. Bllt on ~QllJlf""l•PI ~•e .. m-.ed. letely, I:". I I aft«SPM.-ICfMJ clOwll \On, Retal emw, tMt Ir tMJ. •W "e>~... -• -a. lba, • 0.11• tar. -locaUao opw. oa. atJd Mt lei· Vic. menl oppty for "" ?.tt rurn. ms,1110, 1'rede 10W' okt ahlff for BERnlAHl:NR~ .-o or.1111•· CM. m maunUM ......_ ram
Onlr .. Dellr ..... ,..., .... ,eu ..._.,. _ 111...,r tootl
0-~····-~*'t
Wat e rf ront bomu n•'* 1oodlu. wl\h a REAJ..TORS Reward. 7S·4'90 alt .•~---_
..... tiuatCleded 642~711 2UDtlMar tlHlJl 'IPM. --------WutAdl iitjiij@i , ...
r
•
:
J ,
. •
CLmtlCAL
Work •al temp0rar,y .... .,......,.. 0,.ntoall *Wit
C.UForAn ~tnwnt rroday UTOOl1
~o~ o ffice •
~OJ overload
Em )'e1'
a.rl. 1.11 .. Patt Ueno tl\-t
Sal U 1"h to Tam. '3 00
llr. 17S Paulutnn
Clerlr. Newport nneb l..-ur&nc'8 Co Dftdl rat
lnl • l'Oltiq t '-\ A p-
Ulude for m1UI II detail
wor'tl. Oood llandwtit· liq. 1urum11 tJpln1r -.>mo.~
a.tm. P\IUQ'le Alt• -.orll, weebnd1. No llPM
Ill.IC. s.op 'N Oo. 1U No Loera . Anah eim n•m10
12.EllS
UTOTEM
Optntnp Now Ava1Jablo for full or pJt.lmc-tl&rk.r. on 2nd ., 3rd 1h!ns. N<>
t!aper neccuar y we
train Start S3 per hr Aa
st mane~n lo t3 60 hr Manaaen to SS.50 hr Ad vaancement. opportu.nttie~
to UVJM who quality l"or
information 10 to our ~ m1rllet or con
ta<t I.he personnel o1r1ce
at
1l442 Lampson St
Garden Grove 537-4840 Eqwd Op r Em loyer
-·~---~--~· Clerk Typ111l, full lime.
80wpm, $4 .00 hr +
benefits. 714 1979·2270. MwSiros
MICROWAVE
COOKING CLASSIS
IASJC MICIOWAJI COOll ... -ceoecn.-cou.n fie. AU;
MICIOWAVI ow.es
LMnHewtoU..Y_.Mlw
cwt .............
Now takln~ N.'s rv Ilion for elttbb
l>N1inmna J unui.ry 23rd. Limited
eatlnA.
l 'or Enrollmenl lnformouon
C .. 76t.IOl 1
MICROWA VI MA6tc ..
COOtctNG SCHOOLS
O,IHIMGS NOW IN IDEAL
DAY-LONG STIUCTUIED
CHILDlllM•S IENVllONMEMT
MOfthstorf Pre-School
and AMI Elemetttary ClosMS
Opett 7AMto 6PM
INTERNATIONAL
MONTESSORI SCHOOL
20221 Cypret• Dr., New,.t 1Hc19
979-9241
T~. Janu•ry 9. 1111 DAILY PILOT €7
Schools and
Instruction
This varietY of fine schools
could introduce
• '•r ••rthr l•f•r•otlH ret•r~ ....................... 0..,. ~ ................. 01r .... , •
Call 642-5678 you to a new tomorrow
Ext. 321
REGISTER NOW
FOIACAl-IN
~~~~C~OSW,....__ITOJ.QAY~
AT
RICHARD'S
IEAUTY COLLEGES
C1sta Mesa Huntiftttln Bacb
Mn's BelltJ ·
Ceileles Feature:
A. Jhlrmaick Educational Programs
B. National Aocred1ta11on
C School Olatnct Contracted Programs
ANO
O A progl'8m that will allow vou 30
college credits toward vour A A
·~~~Mt COA§Ti.INE COMMUNITY
APPLY NOW .. You may be eligible lor a
Federal Educahonal Grant ol a Schoot District
Program lo cover the coat of schooling
Phone our Reg11trar !Oday at.
645-3150
462-C I 71• St.
CotNW...
962-1131
190601t~at
.......... eac:ll
BEA
TRAVEL
AGENT
Bay & N ioht Classes For
Men & Women
PACIAC TU VIL SCNOOL
6 I 0 IM I 7t111 Stre.t, '-'•A-. C. '270 I
CAU 17141 10·94'5
Established 1963
F1nanc1a1 Aid Proorams •
A ccred11ed By The AccreJ111ng Comm1ss1on ol
The Nat1onat Assoc1a11on ol ffade 6 Tecnn1ca1
Schools
Yo.M CHOtCI OP JOISI
Hundreds of eMoer OC>P<>rtun1ll• tn well paying excd1ng environments are yoyra
for the aslung . 11 vou nave OFFICf
SKILLS' In a snort ti~. you WILL BE
n1t-conf1(j«lt and pr0duct1ve1 Career
1re1n now tor
-. llCUT.d'Y fMMa. ~ w..t.t
• ACCOUNfNff.IOOtCICllrll
• 61HMA&. OfRCI .AHIST ANT
• llC.noMST
Typ.ng & Shorthand Brutn.Vp
DAY NC> IV ..... CUHIS
CtlllM"O..._ .. ................
Irvine .w..._ ...... . ....._. College of s........_..
BuaineH •"-. .....,.
.---~Newport F~ at Oyer Road ---~
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES ITS OPENING FOR
FALL ENROUMENT
Cl.ASSIS OfNUD Alli:
• Beg1nn1ng, lntermediare and Advanced Ballet. Toe.
Pas de Deux and Variations • Beginning and Advanced
Tap • Jazz • All Popular Disco
AU. AGES ACCIPTED
MocArfllr~
4211 Mc tlMja, Wte G ........ c... .... a..-•
Directors: Bonnie Wilcox and Johr·Morell ....,.,. ...... Ctllf. 92"0
Cocktail Waitress · "-----------------Pnute Club. One day 4
Ill· I 395 644-12'5
rugbta. Call for appt. Help W..ted 7100 Help W..t.d 7100 Help W..tecl 7100 Help W..tH· 7 I 00 _~5000ext.520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~-~·::! ..... !!~~,~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~!!~ ..... !!.~~
CoddailWoitf'•H CUstomerOrderOesk Delivery fr atock work, Driver for Blueprints. FIHTOTRAVEL
School Ole exp. w/order pro· remale & male appli· attb. supplies, apply in National Fashion GIHMALOFC
Earn up to $300 per wk. cessing preferred but not cants welcome. Xlnl op· penon only. Repo 2 ~ Publi.sben Sterling Inc. Clerk typist needed at
U1W tullJon. Placement re q . M r r o f I n · portunlly to train in auto Newport Center Dr1 ve have openings for 10 peo our Coela Mesa local.Jon ~. 751·9194 du s t n a I / A 1 r c r a rt puts sales: apply 1522 N.B. ple to travel U.S. High Variety or dull~ mclud· -----•Hydraulic hose a s Newport Blvd .. Costa ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; earnings,nodoorlodoor ing filing & typing 45
sembly. lrv111e Industrial Mesa, or 10080 Adams, DRIVERS' sales. See Mr. McLane, wpm. Some expenence
COLLA TOR Q>mplex. • H u n t . B e a c h Jade Palace Motel l l.231 in general office work & PACKllt 540-7639 E 0 E AutomotlveSupply Men or women 25 yrs or Beach Blvd, Stant.on AP· a good figure apl.Jtude older. Know the coast .J • N ho helpful. Excellent work W11lin~ to train an .in· CYTOLOGY AIDE Delivery p/~lme AM , LA dUes. Net 8180 a week or .,.y m pen;on. o P ne ingcond.11.Jona & benefits. dustr1ous career 1n · nmes dehv. SlOO per more. Orange Coast callsplease. · ~~~~!~a\0 nfa~~~!fse r:m~7°:! f~-l~m: ~Iii ~0~ Laguna Beach. Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt. GiMral ot_flc• ~~y I& ~:~v::.,e..;: :~;;
ExceUenl working cundi· John Fronko for appt ------------Herrmann. Fountain To band le inventory National Education. 4401
lions and bent1f1ts 40 640-0140 DEL IV ERY MAN . ~!~:l'n W:w0~0~1!t~& tranaf.stockcheck.etc Birc h S t. Newgort
Hourweek.ApplyNorth DATAENTRY Responsible P,erson Euclid) t1wnthebranchesofthe Beach . <Near C .
Ame rl can Ser v i ce Rapidly expanding com . needed full time flilr local --------· ·worlds lrgst electronic Ai rport) E~ u a I 0 P ·
HOTEL
"MARRIOTT IS PEOPLE"
CUAIEMT OPDUMGS EXIST FOR:
• Front Desk Clerk
• Door Attendant <Full & Part time l
• Host/ Hostess < P /T >
• CC:1sh1er <P /T l
• PBX Ope rator
Enjoy excellent working cond1t1ons &
compan y benefits. Apply 9am-Noon .
Mon·Fr• Personnel. Center, 1339 E. Warner. p&QYoeedsfulltimedalJI area. Beach Staftoners, dilltrb. Apply Avnet, 350 l•port.uni--t•y•E•mlip•o•y•e•r -•
Santa Ana Equal Op· entry operator. If you 4020Campus Dr .. N.8. DRIVER Mc<:«mick. CM. or ph MARRIOTT HOTS.
•port-•unJt_.y•E•mlllillplolllillye•r•.-111 havelO.keywewllltrain. Delivery & General 754-«l&l. GB4"LWARB40USE j 900Ne port Center Drive
Housewives. Need ex l r a money ? Earn S200 wkly
showlng framed ong1nal
oil pai ntings from SIY t.hru Partyplan. No in-
vestm e n t. T erry
63l·at01
HSK PR/CHJLD CAR E Mature Uve·m lo help t>u,,y parents & 2 yr old.
Spa Eng. Pleue 64(). t 100
daya,644-5891 eves.
H,gCPR Uve In. Pvt. Rm
Ba. T.V 3 children Nr
CdM Bch. P.O. ·eox 561
CdM9262S
INDUSTRIAL Sewing.
Kot Au Ba noons. w 111
train. Ca I l 642·3S45. ---Great salary, xlnl Helper Freeway Auto wurrm GENERAL OFFICE · P/t.ime. S3.2:5 hr. Hours ~ w • COMPANION ~ts & good working 26242 Avery Pukway', Ml TYPI ST. accurate flexible. Shipping. l't'-N wport Be<.sch E.0 .E. lnsuranee • uve in ror elderly lady. envtronment. For appt. MV t'IWft&V ONLY .owpm 549-3942 ceivin& I& order process·,._ ________________ Costa Mesa Agency
Peraooul care needed. call Mary, 549-8043 · '1UftVAI lng.1~1-394+ ,. needs experienced gal.
Thuneve thru Suneve.i---------Delivery Driver. good To deliver DAILY GeMralOfflc• H H It . Dutles includeallphases 8»9181 cmvina record,.nut ap· PILOT bundles to cu· Accur typing req, U ltk· GIRl.AtlOAY GUARDS otel· ouse eepmg of property·casually
-DATA IMTilY pearance. Costa Mesa rters in Newport Beach 1tpg, noa-a mkr pref. F\ill Ume. Must be\-1ood Po~er 4P~ to llpm ocieraUon.. Ideal work COMPANION Nurse. Senioroperalorforawell Blueprint, 1550Superior, area. Requires van or A1rport area. Sal open. typist w/c:ommon sense. SECURITY Union benefits. Call for ifl8 condlt.looa. Toi;> P3[ Lave-ln for elderly in· eslabllahed growing C.M. 548·5571 large ataUon .wa1on & a se.:MOO. Construct.ion & R.E. ex· apptM5-SOOO ext S20 for qualified ind1v1du11 .
vMlid. Cal1673-6787. Orange Co. corp. Xlnt . goOd driving record. pr. helpful but not nee 6'2-6500or546·3205. work~ng conditions & DelivMeryOONLlmanGH.TERS call: Localed in Newport Due to our recent ex· HOTEL Co ..... Operator benefits. Min 3 yrs of 64Z..432 I GENERAL Beach. Salary open pansioo program. Wells Insurance Person ex-Leadin1 Orange County keypunch reqd. IBM Prr. early AM home de· •-L .&-.-IKS-3050 Fargo Guard Services is POOL penenced In personal Service Burea u bas 37U/3742 helpfulorwe Uvery of LAThnes.Con· -..---LABORERS --------hiring Security Guards lines wanted for in· opening-tor 1·2 yrs exp will tram. Pay will com-tact Carr, HB a rea, 'Do.Wlllmttor GIRLFttlDAY ror: A'nEND i;uranceagency.646-6432_
operator w/working mensura~ w/exf)er. Ap· IM2-822:5,or839-209l H.,y SeeMy "TDAINE£ Sharp ga 1 n eed ed frriM/Newport leoc" Weare seeking a relfable INSURANCE
knowledge.or DOS/VS or~ In person, Mon thru Dental front office lqt1ol CS,portunlty lft Hil(hsd:IOOI grad as gal SalNAIMt/AnohelM person with current Typisl40-<4SWPM .maJor
OS: POWER VS. JCL & ...!_am=~· ... ·--aanager wanted in Npl k'I°"" rrtilay in law oCCice. Call r;-•rttnmi•--p--water safety certalicate self·lnsur ance a d . JECL. IBM 370·148 ,_ " HK ' lt'SEMBLERS aft7 m 6'41818 " """Y-,.... toaueodourhotel swim· w/-munJ'callons. Xlnt Bc h. Salary com · All P • · ,._._Mne&TM -•-.o pool ..... 8 A1:~f. rrunislrator. New office """' 17042G Llette/\ve mensurate wrth com·1---------~~ "'"'" ... ~ 111 lrv. Room for growth ~J~ ~~rt~E1f r;~ (7117i1~g_,l :m.ca~~g~ ~:~~fA~·. ~.';'1,.;RONICS Mus t PM!E'~li ab I e G:~~~*1it elrfi~ "~ ArM Si~=~~ . ~ =~~~:~~ pq,r~ I
interview a ppl. EOE ~5602 ~ UUI I tramp. & phone Long & w1llin1 to learn new I M M E D I A T E 900Newporl Center Dr 549--4700 ask for Janet Al·
lnlegratedDutuCorp Denta l Assista nt , TECHNICIAN aborttermass1g!1ments skills for super office OP'EMIMGS for NewportBeach len.E.O.E _____ _
2Z83FalrviewRd.CM OataEntry chairslde, short week, Holiday&vacat1onpay. position.Typing&lO.key Hp•r•hory le•el EquaJ()ppor Employer lNVENTORY CONTROL
S4&-6080 TRAINEES friendly office. Ex· . Ho~plhllzation plan cxper. 11 must. Please s.c.tty Officers wt. a.ERK. Min 1 yr exper. perlence preferred . l.mmedlate.operun1s and available. call for appointment ...tTOft PAY, ..... • ---------•Ordering, setting Limi ts. C o n s l r u c l i o n Tustin 832-5891> opportun1lles in an 549-2922 d__. ffous«leanen. lo work for Must be good w/hgurei.
Warehouseman, Irvine DATA ENTRY . established company Ul --------rnpe wu co ... my. Jaruce's Raggedy Ann & the ability lo compile
area. l'\alllime. S24·1014 OPERATORS Dental Office, eitceptlC?nal .the Orange County ~;~·al; • GtRLFttlDAY $900 Tues-Pr1.S.3.64s-1800 reports. Irvine. 54<>·763!1
Cook, e 1 pe ri en ced , opportunlty for the ngbt airport balreaboot. AppUc:a~l.I 1 _ -· ill.-Xlnt. oppty. w/NB Cirm EAJtH SJ.GO TO Sl.85 UA1N!ll!M1U1:aaA/M.-1d E.O.E. knowledge or Hallan Newport Beach Area penon. Call6'4-0683 to trou es • rtpatr,' T II for outgoing career girl ra HOUa nvv-m-~ '11111 aod teal electroni c , ...,.. rf•• Xlnloppty. for advance rlO OTIC>til PIT1me o r Live 1n Janitors. pl·t1me eve:-.
_foods_ -~·:B56, 6"S.06Sl Gre11l Jobs Now Open Dental Aast .: Highly systems. Recent analog 546.4741 menl. Must be ramlliar C .~ p•y Emerald Bay residence over 21. couples prcf'd
motivated, energetic, ex· and digital experience (Across From w/ all secty. & off rune ,,_" ,,_ Call 67-2261 Irvine area. 533-4881
COOK
Expanding rellt aurant
chain with over 50 units.
Fanuly-0wned organiza.
taon offers pleasan
working conditions .
Good opportunities for
advancement. Excellent company benefits. Ex·
ptinenced desire(!. Apply
hlpenon
11. ·"·." _,,
._.mu Dato .. .,., perienced. asst. for GP preferred. Call SS7-0479, Or~eCo. Airport) lions. Mu st be self. T0$4.2S PER HOUR
Optt.tors,tr•eff or o trlce. Great at · lllkforBuach. EquaJOpportEmployer motivated. inlellgnt . =e:ro~f~ •\r;"E JANITORIAL
••P•f'le•c•d, type ~~50~~-~0~a . -, -have fast. accurate typ. Apply Ul persbn Monday Bayview Convalescent Part ti me eves. Newpor1
4MS W'M. We .,.. Factory Trainee. good ~~~1!."J~~al s!rn~! ao:d to Friday, SAM to 5PM Hosp. 2055 Thurin St. Be a ch a r e a . Ex ·
...... • ....... DENTAL-Orthodonllc A.a· pey, xlnt future in fast GB BAL OllffCE the ability to work in· at. CM. 6'2-l:iOS perienced adults. $4 00
....w.--t.....a...-u.._ sl. Exp pref'd. Call pvwlnJpluticadhesive .,.,..1 ... H dependent!~. Xlnl. co WELLS ---------1 hr or sub contract. wmw.,..-• .,r-w ...,_. 0.-1417. co. im Monrovia Ave, '"""" F Housekeeper, Uve ·in, 5"2 2l3-927.0115. •-we bocl&cJro-d NB. Call Mon-Fri, Entry l evel position benefils. on. · ri FARGO day wk. No cooklng,1---------
h.'pf•I Co•pl•t• Deak Clerks: af ply 4n s..sm uading exams. Various 8:30-5PM . Please call chi.Id care, ref's Enf. or • person. The nn Al aetalled duties. Light _EJe __ ano_r_a_t_7:_52_-7_59_1 ___ , GUARD S p a n s pk . pr 'd Keypunch
bbe11w.•111flfltst1 ptiek• I• Laeuna, 211 N. Coast FACI'ORYWORKER t ypi ng and n eal Gluier, exper. custom SERVICES 846-6107. DATA.ENTRY dldMJ Meclc•. o .... Hwy., Laguna. Fema l e ma chi n e handwrttlng requJr~d. mirror man. top pay. Senlotoperat.or for well hll ..d Life lttwwe, Dial A RJde operatcr. No experience Wepromotetrom within. good benefits. 643-l23l 1532 w HO,USEKEEPER/LlVE· established g row in~ ,.. nceletft wCM'tdllg nee. Will train. Xlnt co. Apply between Sam· ---------1 C:O-oaweafftt IN BEAUTIFUL NB =e Co Corp. Xlnt
cowClltlou. If yo• Operate °!'C:.~ equip. benefitt.Ca1l545-04p3. :.JC:,U, ~~e:i~:0•3~~: G-R·E-A·T Fullerton. CA ~~ENWNJ!~~EJ[; dJtio~~ "M7,,°r~inygr5c0~r ~lOOH__.,___,,,.d ........ to be COit-ment" door lo door ,_......-.... eSchool ~ .. ,, s•L•s JOI .... ow OR Cll/(Or.,N.8.92600 kevpuncb reqd. JBM 6 -• sWw9d fer tWs po.a. iAnsp. Calif. driven lie FACTORY. Auem , ei';;h'St . New'p-;;l ,,_ s OHM " ':11'11 37~ helpful~ •--C•osta-•~-.a--111...._ ..a.-..c.a: req'd. No j)rior exper Wareboule. Little or no Beach. <Near 0 C 00 Monday, Tuellday, Wed· tto.n.1P1r/Sltt..-will train. Pay will com· -.--nee. Good driving rec a experience, work day or Airport). Equal Op GOOD PAY· G D neaday. Thu rad a Y. Part lime frorrl 3 to 7, mensurate w/exper. AP·
COOK. for coov hospital. Ormuat. NoCSu4ayy j~rk. nlgbtc...~! fee. Weekllly portunlty Employer. ~~¥~~ NOS~oi ~iNv ~~r!r "· CLOSED days v·a rled , II ght p1y in person, Mon thru
f'ree beallb Insurance Pa.SC>tilHIL aoge OH e ow pay._... .. now, no wa · 1•-------·1 FRINGE BENEFITS 3 WW houlekeeping, care of 10 ™·8am,5pm.
after probationsry Cab, 11300 Mt . Her· mg. FASI' CROWING COM· 2 0 WMf' yr. old. 846-7824 before n.Jo1¥Rogerl1te
period. Every other '7S-772l rmann, F. Vly. U.-fl GENERAL PANV p ROM OT ES llM2l7 Darnall. 7pm. l7042GllletteAve
wkod off. Apply 1445 975-7724 DIETARY AIDES al "'"' FROM WI'tiflN TRAIN $..taAM,CA Housekeeper wanted; Irvine
S..per1or.NB conv. hosp. Day It PM TemporaryServkea OfRC( F O R T 0 P State Uc. No C~ Mature, must dnve,..._-•<•71•4•1546-033--•l--
Cookie shop needs 1 baker COMTIMIMT AL abi!t•. Stable emrloy. IWN07l EOE M A N A 0 E M t: N T ~ C:po~"fFty EngUah preferred. full 1-,.--------
& 1 counter girt. No e"· men t . APP l Y 44 5 ,_________ (Tem s T A R T s " I M . _ _._elliiirmer____ ume help ror 3 boys Ul ii--------· ~rlen ce ne ceasary .1 -~~·~~·~~MCll~-~~~;~~M~,;N;B~.~~~~~F~~~~~;ood~,~~~~ta~M~e~s~a~~~~~~~ MEDIATEL Y ·· lovely Malibu home. ~~H ~~-........ -'!!L'rt:Mll~-~ 2~ ' • Prr. Good workln1 con· Pilot Clutlfied Depart· EXP E R I ENC Manicurists wante -~WIPl-.~l.Jll--OOOKS-Experienc:ed part 4141 MacArthur Blvd. ~·000 ••~· Apply dltionl. ~ Alk for meot has opening for HELPFUL. Wt: HAVE w/exper It following. HOUS8CEIPIR Part tune. 1·2 Years ex·
Ume days fu II ll me Newport Beach ~~!_"'~··._ , .. ulllE, 2980
17... Paul. temp0rary person, 40 OUR OWN TRAINING Xlnt workinll conditions. Lady to. live-in. Prtvale llerience. day tsblft, Jn ~-12 .... AMpp.l)'AbeMEtwLeenlA'S9 E.O.E. -~ M/F :..."".,e11""'."" • • -· "11·,-.-.. -A-L_E_F_a _"_t _o_r_y hour week ror 4 to 6 PROGRAM PUT ON BY New, well·eslablls hed. room, balh & TV . $400 house compu era. i:.x· • "' .,., .r. .. ..a. DutieJ 11\clude 10 nn: CO~Y'S TOP elite beauty s hop In mo.844.-19. cellenl working condl·. ~. 3300 PacUic Co. DRIVER 21 M over ror wonm. IUO Pit'. br to key adder. filing and 0 R G A N S A L ~ S Orona 1leJ Mar . Toni's --------tiolMI and beocfitl. Apply ~· N.B. ,....,.,....,......,......,.,..._..~ .... flower dellvory. Call start. Merit raises. some typlnlJ. Salary PEOPLE. CALL AT Place Hair 0ea11rns ror Houseplant knowledge•· between8am·llam. tpm·
IYVWl'C WANTED ..... U ,,. ~~!:• *''"K MWlle5 or556-?8'10. ~s.mN.:i...1"7 Monrovia l'OClllnenlutale with t•· O N c E F 0 R Men "women. 2600 E. blepeople. P/T, for rhoute Jpm, National Educa·
VUV""1 cu ......... tuJAA,.la ... o ,..~ as perle nce. •·uu lime INTERVIEW. ORGAN Coast Hwy. '759-0808 maintenance. Must ave tlon. -.01 Birch St .• p/Ume all thlR1. Call R«eptlTYPiat. 9900+ Driver . Stock Clerk. __ Jl'IL_E_CL_E_R_K __ permanent position EXCHANGE, STAN ~liable lranspo~aUon. Newport Beacjl .. CNeur
8'2·11881. The Grinder P\nandafSf.cy $JK Chance tor advance· CNSUR"'"'CE lbl t th d f g NUNN7l41588-7302 Ho• t es a / pt · t I me 75l-4780 O.C. A.lrportl. Equal Op Reetaurant can For An Appl __, m• .. t k..,.... O C • "'"' pou~ e : el en lo . Bartender, Cull time. Call ----------uni J!:m Lover. · ltvinePenoanelAaency ,_...,P -tnJ"'iu ·i.: Beabuwn11'0\forrt1bt Me••· .. ~r ntervew. Ground• Keeper. Sad· mominp548·74l8 Howiewtvoa.Couple1.de·tii11-•••-'--• C~ Hll.P • E 17\h Cotta Meta area. ac. 5f Pv ' ptnOD, p&euut workinl pleMe caU · dlebaek Colle1e. Mltaton -----------slriAg supplemental ln· 1----------F/T AJ>Pb' 1J:1 pel"llOn: SWteDt ' M!-1470 21l7S.H.1Ulaway, · «mdl,CJPPtyfortralnlnl ~Office Viejo. Salary Ut9 lo HOSTISSIS come 10 spare lime. LAIAIDI
Guy's Dell, 3309 E. Cat DRJVn,autoputu tore • tldY~ment. 3'7~ br 804321·~~£4 UOU per mo. Call ~ • o.taht poa Apply •7m To work ln N.8. Mu11t
Hwy, Cd.If. Dell Help, fu ll lime, jmc:ffa.1~3443, Tom, ~ ::OnooUkiof:t~~: ~ aST 831-9700 ext. 302 or 303 btwn apm,5pm, Ancient fbMwatta 6 clftwarea have venl~uncture ex·
OOUNTERWOMAN weekendl. over 18, ex· . drea&O.E. DAILY belween81r5. ~'~!a' 2601 W Cal W. clerk. expenencc ~ ~l40argaret for
TQwritec:ontractslnren· per. reca11l red, rera. •DllY•• •--------m>W. BllySt GoUAIDS ' · ~·d. FuUiline. i-1...;vr~·---....---
t.l ceam. Ku1t be avail ~5119 · bpeocHnt co. loolclni l'LOR:'L DESIO NER, v-~Opt.a=M":.Utv f<\111 Ir p/Ume. All areas. Hotel front desk clerk t.ecal Secretary
weekends. ApJ>17 1910 DELIVERY fw peopft wlllln1 to a;per·d.. fl'.!! ;,g1t.1me. ..,.. •m ftr , Uniform• furnished. ~~!~ll\J Ir a fternoon ~Jl.I hr:1ardwn•re ea~ud Some experience d~
NewportBl•d.C.111. .,._.wortrocShmton Wlft.*9t-rv:•r.Good ~or-. •---""----------Nltl21orover.Retlred ........ Expenence pre C:oa•' ex e ce req . sired Salary o pen. • ..... .., H I M ............. -.. ver 18 Co -.. •• •-'-O.,..L ore WORK-a.. -'-"-"'. No txpe ... ,0 .... rerred but \Will train Fu 1 l m e . R I 0 N -"•01 ~ beto.r.art time, Newport Cite · Ult be .... _ ,..,... ' ' *tt• I •-•* c.n " _,,.,,v ... "' l U 1 '' .. j c.olltje student dealra· HARDWAR E, 1024 1-_... __ "' ___ __._ __ _
• Mon.~ lflolo :/~~lln, =~~·~':.••ca~ ~~.~·~:f lri~ J..".:Cht:!. :J11~·ap~ g;hn, ~~~::u:.~; ~~~ Lrv'fC:.e~ ~-~a·~~l Mr. J . l!..",1,~ .. eu~rvoerP' ~·11N . 8. • pllnlOD. 11 Or 1-.. _ w/pu~uc. s•.a hr. W OilhStreet. Santa An• • ......,. ,_._.,., -~ .. ·n ·
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-fl J~}.., , ,. _ aaltn~PPIY w • f-lGDal 1ala peop.t.. u • -........ -.,. 12 ' BlYQ, aw. _..-,.,.---...,. ,..._... 6 /0r tHvel Mon thna Thur. M . ~ ,......, • r Whether you· re t>uytna or II 10U'tt not readJns th
' front -.is, cnorninll on• IDdutlU backaround •7711. HMor\thru Pl'I fflllna. Classlfitd 11d liUla ads in. Chi~slrled, •---------
-COUDtM H•IP lOpJn to ·ty. PleMe 40 oot pMtMI. b'1friA. lfr Boyd vett11fn1 will set your YoU'rt mltstna a lot or Mab your 1hopplni;
.._ WlltdMtU. Donut., a. llac:Arthur 8lvd a\ --!WU._ fut trtlh Dally F\od *hat you 1'·an( In masast to tho rl•hl ~ newsy tnformeuon 11 easier by Ullloa the Datl.y JDE.l7lh8t.C.M. llrdL :i; NGlWaotAda.; ~RUotClf~alltcd1 ple Ol111'oday'542~ W'etlauomc11r t\bu)' PllolCI 1fledAds.
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.. t Aui/T•' .... c.,.e~ c...t/c.cnte 9"trtc4 It 11• ' 1 t1•mrw Ptl ll &IP....... ,,.._,...., ....................................................... , .................................................................................................................... , ..•................ ~ .. 1.••········· Qtmwark.~-lcN .,...... • .._.claan l"OulldllUona nt•lnio1 ILICTIACl.AM Prat traululon1 •ROBIN'S HOUSE• anctwon. Small Jobi. Profpetea1n1 Ext6tnt. ~tcbes•Lextura
MrillilA•a W Oout Q)lol' bri~. wbl walla. bJffkt, patlu. a..Comnfl.lad.Ranbl En1/Spu/Fr•'ncb. O..f.AlfJNO SlftVICf!. Nw,..._c.t. .... 6 I.ow r&&.11. &eft Pree ... IST. H J.143'
ftwy,NB.:ie.a11 cpla)Om1ftb&eu-h C1eu Uc' 50JJ.5"9~ •)'nupcr 1Jc.Z'JI04l fAlpnlaMz.t&UCl:JO.a) ~-!.~,lily ~an trvta..f7Wl75ev•. .....,.. ,511-4313 PATalPLASTERING ~ ..... 1 :.;,~•:s'·ba~W.~1: c t water CALL•4MIH ~· ~· ·--_..,_, BSoc1i•t1um111tonewa11.1. fW bl#. PalnUna by Alt type1 . Fr ee
-•-................. 15 (J; eGm pet odor -H••0•••••0 •u••u P•r... • ............... ••••• W6alallJ!:ALLY<l.EAN planten. drlvewaya. R.Sinor.St.Uc.,iDa.Try tlti,ma&.ea.Cillll54CMS825 Y•lil.Oft.,. Ceil .....ir. u 1R ell@" Remodel, repair. t•n ....................... v~.~ bom• repair. HOUSE? Call G~m ...,..,G1.a591 a..a..W53tlln. .. t lr Dn~·Partun1 lot Do W'Clfk m~ Ref Ul}Jentry, old t 1ne I(. 6 B Wood Yencln1. f!al.f'lt.tr:r" Jobi . Free Girt Fteeest.14$.$ ~~anten. etc. EXCELLENT PAINT· ........ ! ............. .
•R99&1n •SHlt-o8lSD 1.0181 Cflllla&ftlllldip teyrs ln ~aa.•feo(.,.epalr ffaDDineN, booaty, Job New-RtQ. EtL ING. ~ble tala. ~rep91r. Spec. ln
•l.•c. NB, CM 6 SW1U. V ~ .,.., Ue'cl Mr. Pakwn MO-ao.6'4461 H 2 1 we8~C.llTbeMop. ~ Fr.eClllimate..541-Z70I ·~r re-~ ~ lAl•~,_,~:~ bo~' ....... .. ..................... oeta C1e~~Servlce........ WMl.PAPB.... l)ipe. . prleee.~_!op
iMt ~·· dnt. Elfl'1 o.o 'PiliiiiiiJ&oii ......... ,. ............. OOC$&.uden&..1Tootruck. J~--._ ........ ._..,...... a.t.aodered.E' HalP1umbio1.D7·3..-
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. _................. ~.= rlanlal. Re1111od1Ua11ddAUoa.. Clun up1 , lhullo&. Truh, trea trim. Roa Comp. houaecleanln1. llovflll •Haulio1. Slarv· a1.a.s,115-"6~ • -INdlPlt tllf ~" o.a Le .. t Tn1n1. ,.,., • nn. fte 557.ast Ue'dl!!!__ l.andacap~ lmmed 6G5'1U).M2·~ Apts, condos . Fut, tncCoUoceStudeau. Ex· I =· water beatcr'I.
• Dl\'Of'ftl 6 ~{4 .._. ~ Setvl P'\oe&t work a v~llable. _!"'Vlrlnl ll80'1 CHEAPEST haulln1 In dlindbl. S6.00 br. 552-0105 -. 7~HTlll Save Ulla lnl. ut. Mrrinl ~• or.,_7 , ....... ru 2' hrs _.._ -~it ( -~ ..,.,_ "'-U !:".:..-_ yra Prol qual wora • .,_, • · t;;)'_,.,. ~ . ~mitt.. Ml a Bell Oardenlnic. Clean·upa, town. n ee ... mates. THEC.EANINGLADY ............. Reitdt A'pta/Comm: Cheal)eat n town . ---Cut {& tn 'I Coiuraet or U.trimmlnti frMal. 6C-2ll85,M$-1!90.. Effkieotbaeclo'", relit· ·MOVING6STORAGE· Reu.Dave.588-8425MMI ~....;.__m_. ____ _
Esper Ne'' cto.-tn1n1. -~•••••••••••••• fU Hit afl I . Lie. Reu.nt..~~ • -~ 6 malbnl fnun tlllm Lite hauhna·movlna. ~~.:~ rata. in· SPECIALISTLOC,.. ,;AT· Knowlel Palntl•I· Int ~ Plumbtn1, water
:.........c..: om-Ac-·n•• ,.•·n•••• Gudtnlftl. clean·U"" & Gara1e·Yard cleanm1. ....~ ....,.......,. '"-"> _. __ .. bl • .... t htn fUmaff. dlapOsals ... .., --~ .... ---• Wood f\am repaJ room .... Reas nte. M2-0'105 Prcteulonal pt1eldn1. /e,... ....., aa.. ...x n-eeeat 131·9282 · d&Jndl.~ Pnlf-*'.&b avallablo llCkta rooi ,..,.{:• 1 landacapln& Gcorae · HolllecleaDlDi. Reuona· l.DftJltrata7d•Y&· coat1n1. Comm/Ru.---·------
-~~alra. "-· tn1elc. Terry. m,~' ll:ubl. MS-7012 Han P /U will haul b I e . 0 w o tr an•. \llsaltlluterCbarae 138-tUO laa ... ~~~;f.~t~':t' a;_--;-°"• _,c;:: •c:lftait QaarwlSw'Yk" ~.~Cbuput Referw..979-7658 P.u .c .n .123431 Paiotiq: qua!. work, 30 ...................... . ~t..dpitclDl m.tflt CONTACT ....................... ....................... e t u,•11 AMERICANTI•/~7002 yra exper. Honest, R.EPAIRli:REJU>OF All
"=,.sbr Wes«IUf It l' .-4--~c •Ml. FIXIT• ~!~~oa.1 at~=:denedtl.Ttrraesbe ....................... '* tlutfr .. rt.t dllll/~1:: .. ~w,,e_•_t L"~~ trocy peb•ak· !shcionmlpol etasr· - -~•uft lllllllr"IOfn c i l _... .. L,M.S.-Roto .. Sod or •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• I.Jc,..,_. ....... _._. u " · · · .. •••••••••••••••••••• "I eeouttcie U 3271316'5-•74 arpen,er, pant ng. ha ~"""7 ~"""21.29 See d ed Lawn a PETERSP'"~G ........__ Freeeat.5'1·5930 Cupcater. Free QL Any W Westcllrt.St.e20I R.eU. rate.. 1!i yn in ...... ,..,.. 1u.1uan ~
lliJe jot)9. Call Allan 0 ~Beach ELF.CTRICIAN·Pric.c! aru.541-1152 .._,..,._., Sjlrinklel"'S, Planting: Expr'd. Reaa Rates .• _ .................... Newrool&~palr.Sbake,
Tor\Y-.... m.-io W ·tll8 riiht rree oallmate oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· Lie. •~lJ. Ex· Free Eat. Call Gene Woodeo GaNten struc· comp. Guaranteed. _____ .,. _________ a..oramalljobe. IDOITALL AMWAY Cosmetics. cellmtRefs.6?5-?633 !5&0t58 ture1, patio covers. BrianStS-0512
CUSTOM Wbl!n you call Clualfied UcinMd f1lM>358 ~ Nutrition, Housewares, European Landacaper. Painting. Extt/lntr. Ex· stain. Wd db. gazebos. Trws.r.ke
lolen«Ca11JeDtty toplaeeanad,you'reu· Your friend • aod Home care• Comm'l. Top work. Fair price. pr'd. honest. neat, reaa. Rda. Ranbl rat.ea. Free••-••••••••••••••••••• __ b"""y_J_ay..__. •_._IOtlOe ____ aund or a rrlendly neighbors u.e Classified Looking tor a home or &Gl834 M&int. Refs . 64f.47l Uc'dtM-lCMSDeve eat. Curtis Stanton .,__.._... C tion E
Bargain shoppers rea welcome and he lp In w be n t bey h a 9 e your own? You'll rind ttya/ew:a m.8' ~"Pt! rea • x the utUe ads lo Clau1r1 wonllq your ad for heft aomethlng to seU They'll maQY homes adverttsed Sell with EASE! · Have aomething you want pert abaping, thlnmna.
retululy. And they fm !! .. •ponae. Call Now ! tell you how well lt for sale 10 Cla11lfled It's a BREEZE SELL idle Items with a to aeU? Clusified ads do WANT ACTION? IWmP removal. 675-?.82l.
what tbey're look log for. .,_.5678 warted Cor them! every day. Classified Ads 64Z·567f. Dally Pilot Cl~ified Ad. it ~u. M2·5878. Quailed Adi 642-S678 ._1ns_. ----------
HllpW-.cl 7100 tWpWmhd 7100 tWpW_....· 71 00 tWpW..e.d 7100 HtflpW..ted 71~ tWpW_.. 7100 tWpWmhd 7100HlfpW..e.d 7100 NefpW..e.d 1100 ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... .•.•....•.............. .......••.........•.... . ................................................................... .
· LEGAL SIC'Y Jlaldacturtn1 MOV•PllM PBX · RECPT. National REAL.ESTATE sue.a SAUSTRAIMll SICUTUY
Experienced. Newport St.ock!Receivl.o1 Clerlr 5aS 1200 IXTaAS chain restaurant con· SALESPEOPLE ReaUuranTt -.. Display Jewelry . Part Ume days. Good ,__.,Peno.el
Center Salary open Expenence necessary. CUtlnl now for major trtorBneeds depend•· We91.eyN.'Pulor.Co.isa FAS rvOD AillumepoaiUooava1la· S1195S-2274 W~~lnltl'I baa an ~12· · Know:::f!e of lumber & "ilm comedy, ur·gently e P X ope1ratGoodor/· 33-year old f1"i'r"""wbolly COUMIBHELP ble for r esponsible · · 1 _ ___,, · band helpful. Call 11
11 recept. starts 2 1. owned & operated by lt.s (Housewives ApplY) person in exclusive Lido Sales mu_,.ate vacancy for a
LeaaJ Secretary, H.B. HEADSUPlNC. needa males w s hort fringebenefils,pleuant rotmder. We are not a & • Vil!a1e atore •. Ex· Well established sbarpenergelicindiv.to
gen'I practice, recent (714)548-8903 E.0 .E. bair.~npretty,fat& worldng atmosphere. subsldlary. braneh or COOK penence _in Jewelry, Newport Beach textile fill the dual position or
CAUi exper & xlnl sk.illa. ualy • doctor " nurse Hours 9 to6. Call 7~·1730 franchise • headquarters Expanding restaurant ceystal. china aaJes pre· fll'M lovolved in sailing, penonoel/payroll & pro-
Non·smoker, F /Ume. ~~~~~l~~P ~rePuooalclll'eeropp· PHONE I'NTER · with around·the-clock cbainwithover50un1ts. fenTed.673-9334 backpaclWlalc ski wear ductioo sec:try. SH not
MB-1.00. desired. not req. Will ty for those wishing to VlEWERS for Mkt'g acceu to management Famlly--0wned oreanha· s•• 11r.~-industries is looking for req, butiftr~':l~eitpb,tfd ...... Sec'yT,.... trala. Must pass Co. break iato t he movie Research Co. No sales. for usiatance at any lion offers pleasant ~ an mslde salesperson. eyping s · e 8 1 ty
Growina d)'Damlc buai· Pb)'slcal incld'g back x. business. S20·S200 per Pff. Will train, Tustin. time. Our in·house video working cond I lions . Elegant fine jewelry This starting positlOC'I re· ~ .:!r Ts d=~~~
ness llllgatJon firm in Ray. Irvine. 540·7839 day + r e 8 id u a I 731·7991Kathy. tape llsting&sales train· Good opportunities for salon baa interesting pos quires aninteJlige~ ~m· Expr. in PersoDDel de· b ru E.O.E. possibilities. (714) ~a _proJram by Tom advancemeoLExceUent for mature. respon bitiousiodlvidual.iruais ~ ~ter 1 as u . 7 61 ·124 4 . v IDE o PiZZ4 Man, experienced. Hoplcinl ta the finest real company benefits. Ex· woman w /sales exp. a career opportunity sirable. Salary based up. t me open ng '?r an Mechanic for school CASTING SERVJCE URGENT estatetra.lningavallable. perience dellred. Apply Gemological knldg with excellent benefit& & on expr. Please call ror ~~~getl,c tr& ~Htcl5e1nHl buses. Private school. now in our 3rd year ' S49-1511 We have an opening for 2 in penoo belpful. N.B. m-.734. advancement. For in· !_!97•P11P.t, Jane Ask an
.__sec>' aanee. 188S5 Brookhunt, FV. · salespersons with en· IM' formationcaJlMS-1066. _,.. & dlctaJ>hone. Xlnt typ. 963-7831 Newport Beach family or Presdlool Teacher, exper thuslaam, character & R ~ skilla a must. call •dealre a Uve·in maid to only. Ask for Patti , integrity to match our • ~ Secretary/Gen'! office,
te,M<Ml960. Medical Receptionist for petform domestic duties ~6-6:30pm. hiah standards. Your ., .... Ji\ill and part time posi· ~ ~u~'J:~cL~d~·
Uve in Companion with busy doctor's office. & babysit for 2 children. Prill~{___ own private desk and no .... lions available for sales
lilbt housekeeping for Salary open. BeneCits. Li private qua rters PRE5SMAN part·time salespeople. orieutedapplkants. SECRETARY/TRAINEE wldow. Non smoker , lh9:30-6:30.557-6300 w/prtv entry lo guarded Commission split up to 16 ,_WDRl.a.d We are seeking a sales c.onstrucuon firm look· English preferred. Must commun.ity. Salary com· Letter Pressman for 70%. Interview by ap· penoo with direct sales ing for bright seU start·
drive. Pleasant private MBHCALASSIST. mensura l e with Mle h l e Vertical. pointmentonly. Me,.....leodl SALISPIRSOHS experience who 15 look· inci:ndv.Musthavexlnt.
suite. Call 644·7468 aft AUer1ista back office. qualifications . English Heidleberg Plateo, also WESLEY TAYLOR CO. CASHl•·SACIS inc for an opportunity to capability in handlrng
7pm. Will train. Call Brenda at speaking preferred. Ref. hand & macb typeset· Realtors 644-4910 HEAD CASHIB operate lndependenUy in phooea & all around or.
----------• ~ 758--0909 days, 631·2284 ting. SS.so to $6.50 per hr. lllC a.aK a fu.Uy protected area. ficeduties. Call 83S-8'717
MACHINIST ews for qual pers. Call RESTAURANT MED. Recpl.-Npt Bch . Woody,751·2688. RF.lCEIVING cuaac.AL-SAW Mus_t be mature , SF.cRETARY· 4 Doy 40 Hr W ffk p / T • 5 d a y w k . Nurse Aide, J.11, exper creative, stable and a de· PART TIME
Gent machine work on Knowledge of insurance pref'd. Country Club llECEIVIMG HELP WANTED u you like plants & peo· pendable professional 9 AM to 1 PM. $5.00 per quality aerospace com· billing helpful. Call: Coov.Hoep.5'9-3061 PltODUCTIOM a.aK pie. this ls your op· ~ho wants income bour.Shorthand&typUlg
pooenta ~ aaaemblers. 64.>3800 &tc.INHll portimltY to work in a un· !firedly related to efrort.s req. Western Realco. Must be able to work Nurse • LVN -7--J. •11·7• Rapldly expanding o.c. Appllcation1 eurrently aque retail nursery. applied. Better than 833-2235
from detailed planning MED TECH ~~~ 4~bed306'f1v · firm is looking for a ~~q~:u r~f!1~ npo~t~~ =re~: !!~11::::1~ Please •pPiy an person. avwage, secure. stable 11:_8 _. RY P/T sbeeU,blueprinu.Apply To work lo N.B. Must ·-.,. · · · · Production Eneineer. ..-. inoomewtU reauJt. Good --·A inpenon7am·5pm,Mon have Calif. Ile. Call NURSES AJOES needed 'This individual will be available. Please apply All shifts available. llOGllSfiARDIHS commissionandbonuain Small, pleasa nt
thraThur-._ Mar1aret for appt, to aive tender lovln& responsible for lnperaoo. ~f::c':u~at 2301SanJoaquin additionCoexcellentna· ~gotrice. Mon·
-.-. MM>l40 care to the elderly P•· documenting assembly IOGBS GAIU>IMS Hills Roed tbJ&I companf benefit& fti: 1·5Pm. Mwn be good IMDUSTllllS IMC. U ea ta. W i 11 trai n procedure•. designing JACK lnHI IOX Oho 92625 wttb t.ectmica s upport typist. ~5234
2101 Dove Street. NB Members~ i P Sa 1 es qua I. Uled pen onne I. tooling, training & pro-2301 San Joa~uin and backing by Luxor •------.---Mature Bustness Person Earn while you learn. All vidirut technical support Hilla Roa l7lh &Tustin 1.i«bHac Proclucu, Inc. --------mt Nee 4 e ~ B >' Ne w shifts avail. Apply 1«5 for fhe assembly or Cdm 92625 <Fairview & Baker> s../Hwdw_.. cau Mr. Eebt SECRETARY/ Machinist Orgam:zalion lo Hunt· Superior NB special compasses & COSTA MESA Fff poe in retail st.ore, no Ul3J31M415 MODEL SHOP ~ Beach Only Com· • . cameras. Requirements, Receptionist, typist 60 Equal Opptl Emplyr SUn or eves. See Mike or STENO MACHINIST JOOCootactFMr.Bud Nu:rsesA1des,7am·3pm & 4 years col l ege, WPM.CofttaMesa m l Stv,H.W.WrightCo,126 ~uaJ~~ty
Immediate opening in At 847·224' or la· 3pm·llpm . Exper mechanical engineering 751-0831 RocbesterSt.,C.M. m yer
our R&D lab.' for jn. terview. $3.~$4 hr. Trainees ac· or industrial technology RN's le LVN's. F\all & Pl· Sa1e1_
dividual experienced inl---------1 cepted. Mesa Ve rde work expe rience not Receptiooist time. Newport Conv. llickory Farms Sandwich Shop Take-out
the ti.aiding or prototype MFG IHGINHll OJnv. Hosp., 661 Center necessary. Offer ex· AtlMAL HOSPITAL Center, 1555 Superior Discover the wonderful Mon· Fr i, 10am·2pm,
equipment & lo the de· Ral>idlY ex anding O.C. St.,C.M. cellent medical & dental F\all Ume including Sat Ave, NB. world of cheese & 12pm·5:30pm. 556-0670
velopment or lbe new firm is l~g for Mfg Nl.ll'lllnl benefits. Please send re· &/or Sun. N.B./Irvine gourmet foods while forappt.
products. Mu.st be ablet En"loeer This In -•515 •IDES sume to: W. Wright, area.844-5463. ROlllE-S RAG -"''"a ... •a money PIT .,-___ d.;..;:...' -h--S-l_d __
;
ate basic machine . 0 • • ~ A Scientific Drilling Con· & MOP ----. ..... · O>AIJ W1C & a a As·
t.cds (lathes, mills, :~;1 ~:e!;~':~: State cert only, ~ hr. s trol, 4040 Campus Dr., RICB'T10MIST Women needed now. :fiesic Takinf,. appl at semblen, full Ume. 5am·
graders), read sembly procedures, de· PdboUda)'lyr.S1ckpay. Newport Beach, C LawFirm.Sboursdaily. Good pay. Good hrs .. c .ory arm s. lpm.Muatbeneat,clean
blueprints & work from si-'ft .. toolino, tralnln~ Bayview Convalscent, •9318>--. ------ContactJanice.644·7800 548-07S7 Westcliff Plua,6'2·09'72, & dexterous. $3.2.5 p/hr. -.ri----'ft kt bea 6""'.16 .. 2055 Tb l C M Faahlonlsland640-6030. 979.0747 for appt a ft ~~· Ulg I e c . & providing tecbnica u r p. . • ---------Recept.ioni!t/Typbl on& u l«t Ki h We provide an ejtcellen support for lbe assembly &G~. PROGRAM AJDE, CETA Full lime. Sail Loft . Full time posi· Sales·Mature person part __.. 's tc en.
benefits package ol apecial compasses & NURSING position, must be un· 846-8886 Uon. Women welcome. tame hourly eves & Sat. Sandwich & Salad As·
salary commensurat camerae. Requirement 4 Nunsea Aides employed for 15 wks and ~°!!-'ewlng Involved 1beColfeeBean549-1766 se mblers, part·tlme
with experience. Apply Ye a r • co 11 e g e. Orderlies Fountain Valley resl· ~OHIST/htft. ...,..._,, .,_, __ 0 •-Repair Dept 5am·9:30am. Must be 9aDH~~:1VlyO. IT mer:!;"_!.~alen~g LVN'SorRN'S deoL Poeition w/growth for tennis club in Co.ta Sailmaken, Pattiaoo Sall M.~:-uiht watch & neat.. clean & dexterous.
.........-or ..,,u, tectmo ogy Above averafe wages & dub, FV/HB 40 hrs wk . Mesa. Call Gordon at Dll!slgn bas lmmed open· jewelry repair Must be S.1-25 p/hr. 979-0747 for ao1s. Harbor work experience not bealth bene its. Apply Coot.act Linda Goodrich, 642-2000forintervtew. lop lor uU c:utt.en &/or over 21 vr. old. No exp. appt aft lOAM, Lon's
Stilled in dictation. typ.
l.Dg composition or cor·
respondence &
knowledge or general or· lice procedurea. Ex·
cellent opportunity in
sales department for sell
motivated individual.
CObtact Mrs. White
For Interview Appt.
Paul Dosier
Associates_,_ Inc.
COST A M t;:;A
556-7075 S.A. E.O.E. nece11ary. Offer ex· NEWPORT CONY . 54M344or5'9-71.29 baDdworkers.673-2180 nec.Wlltratn.5'5-!M8S. Kit.cben --------~ =:.~;:~ ~e'!~n~~ FJR~t55 Superior -------•• ~~~~~? ~~~ 1---------S_e _a _m_s_t_r_e_s_s_._S_a_i_l_s Equal Oppor Employer
1ume to W. Wright, ve., pt ·· ·~c Oemer ·Ftoatofficeap. SALES *SALES seam1trus needed ,, ________ _ ~OOLt ROOM Scientific Drilling Con· Office Promotions SaJ S8m to $986 per mo. 2 pearance a must. heavy GIA'SHOP some ex per des1red.1·--------
trol. 4040 Campus Dr.. 9 People needed for pt. Yn exp w/koldg of stat phones. lite typinf· MAlllOTTHOTB. MAHA<iEMBCT _m_2180 __ .______ ttr.-ta • s$$ MACHINIST Newport Beach, Ca time temporary offke rec keeping desirable. growth potentla . Ex-lien• opportunity 'lbeClotheeTlme tt ~18 08
Do """' ... -ve 3 or more 92680. ~motion work for Apfil'4 New~ort·Mesa 64().$C'70, ""' • 3Newlocations S RETARY. part ume. J~ ... u f d s I n· t for an efficient, """"Pie Exp'd. To handle real G.0 ./Legal/Recept yrs aper-in t.oob. jogs & at.on Newport Hot.el. n e c oo as • ---------rt --D a n a Po In t , Sa n estate management of· Too Many Too wt SISK fixt~res ? Are y~uMlU Jeadman waot.ed to $3-$6perhour. Noexper OMou.ns/IWfiededp/Tersonnhur ~_IOfFrci Reatauraat Mana~er· r10:~v::r~~·\:::: Clemeote.lrvine. . fice2-3daysperweek.10 Employers Pay All Fees
familiar w/compress~on ~ for .,,....-HA .. "Om· nee. Hours avaJI: 9-1, 1·5 "' Rapidly growing P zza av a I I., 10 c1 ud1 n 0 Immediate openings. Key, poeUng, $S. per hr. U% Reinders Asency &UQecllon mold repatn _... .._ .. ..,." & 5·9. Ask for Miss 9am·l2 noon, Tues cbain. New restaurant weekeocla. Apply 9am~ Mu.sthaveexp.lcover20 Noo•moker.675-9516 4020BirchSt..Slet04 for rubber or plastic? panriy . M~!t ~~~~ .. e~: Layton, front desk, l·~m, 1801 16th St, Npt uM8 1ebr eonaEtructio11n in r.r-Mon/Fri Penon· )Tl.oki. NewportBeach,833-8l90
Are YoU capable of set-pe ence "' rw.wu.i .. "' mcrnlngsonly. Pleasedo Bcll.E.O.E. • oa. xce ent ,_,... 1"71·2384A.skforDawn Secretarial position CaJfForAppt/~tab '64 ting up Ii nmninf trace set.up '?' mW mac~es. a o t phone . 4 5 4 5 growth oppor. pay & nel. available Needed 1wr1----.. ----l at hes & m llln Supervisory expenence MacArthur Blvd at bendlb.Call551·~for llOONewport~nterDr SUeapenoa on new pro-It . A bookk in
machine•? It 50, w needed . Good co. Blrcb. READINGAIDE apptorsend reaume lo Newport Beach ductlinetocallonbusi· ~ce in cO::&vc~ Secreta.riaJ wou.ldUlleto.talk to you. benerd.I. ApplY 3123 W. Training,grovided. 3pm· OUaified Ad #373, Dally F.qual Emplr m/f nma leeden/quallty re· lion office. Call 846-3334. ADMIM
<>u.company offers MacArthur.Santa Ana. ClftceManager·Sales ':!':' :: . ..ri:/a~:!J·1:: Pilot, P.O. Box 15601 _________ 1 tall outlell. Potential Al\5.~2372 ASSISTANT
steady employment & Modela, fem. Sharp, ~~~r~f:~ Game, 1420N. Bristol St, c.c.taMeaa,Ca. 92626 &.lea $2000/mo. with raise Fee paid. Aasiat•n' to
good l'Ompany paid fr. figure only Sl!i per hr' Ste2'0,NptBcb.955-llOS ANEWCAREER after3mos. Age no bar· seatlTARY/Leoal Reglooal Sales M.-·er, ~~~'!!!!~•·Apply 6C-&182,-3520Bob. · experience necessary. AWAITSYOU rler. Mr . O'Keere Expr'd lqal secrelary. run the o ff ice, ~..._.,,. . =r ~ ~ >'!'!aY~~ :O Real ElltateSales Reftaurant Experience the rewards S.0.2200. Shorthand It domestic secretarial skills, lovely AMF VOIT Models Saturdays. 557•0824 or •attu 1nW._ BOB'S of a pro1re11lve co. --SALISPll----5-0H---Conni. Top aalary. cau area. Terrine fnendly
39018.Hi.rbor ~=wi:: 1[::S :! 77,.8090. 1525 Mesa -=--.-3 W••ks Oevelope self eon· 1_a1t_1_pm. __ "4-_18_J1___ boN. $11.000. Also cee
S.A. E.O.E. bea model caJl ua now. Verde #208, Costa Mesa. ~ HOM! OF THE rielence, prof. Income ~ ~=~ SICltlTAIY /leq,t. Jobe. Call Audrey Verne,
NewYortWestMoclels. TRAINING HIOY =~~·· O..lgnerClotbea. Good gp~st & office ~l.Snelling&rSnell· ..... _5 _ Gl·SIOO. PARTTUIE Hewe....,. Im.med openloia in our, ____ .-----• Expr.Required Milla TyplD& 50 w ln1 or Newport Beach
-1be Profesalonala (3) 4 br daytime ablAa to family restaurant at Sales: Auentloo Ca acer· Pull. time. 18001 !~: Aaency, 4340Carnpus.
Experleoced, full tlme,1--------chooH Crom In ea. of Mtw rro.,.rtty nearby locatlona. We re· Capricorn call 1'uea thru Friday C S E E l 1 --------alaoput time.142-3030. ~? aevera.1 O.C. looalion1. •Absolutely no .,rlor CNl.renoprevlous exper. ALOIVBA ForAppt.5*Z2l3 540.774i ng neer ng.
Maida• ywan ·t:;:::;~~~!!.~====~NOT~~A~SAL~~ES~·~JiO~B~.~N~o~tr~a~l~nl~o~g~o~r~eix~pe;n~e~n~c;e~J~oio;;;our~~h'i;end;::~ly~te~a~m~ .• ~R~a~p~l~d~l~y_;e:x~p:a~a~d~i~o4l--se~ ed.10JP ,. ... paid. Tbel~·Botel •Penooallted lnstrUC· ~ .. ~ :::!!~~!!::~~=:t lm at Lacuna, 211 N. Wiii traln·front des... lion ...,..._.. ..... pm, )'OU are positive minded C t H L ,. Waltera..L Waitresses .. ---....... _ ....... SaJ-111---•SAUS ~~-OH wy., agun• Pawonable,tullUmt. •---------• •ProfeaaiOoal on the Job COOllTrainees&r .... _ .. _VI, .... _ "" ~
8Ncb ....... du ... p1••1 TIME tra.lnin.. C.th.len • mpt -we train. can MEN and WOMEN • ........ -~" "" •lJJ>to~comml.sslon. 2116ZAvenldadels for interview , Mu. J 1 l Maintenance ~1lUoo, -'lil'Cbotce or top ornce c.r1otta. Laiuna Hilla Grooem-0489. ~r [.~ ~": J:itT~':8~ Job, r:'Du~ ~:red• S:" · Moc.el.ffottl EVENINGS locaUona. · 7311 Edl.oter Ave, H B SaAei Ulla couJd be you_r optlClrtui»ty to
• t t + f 't . BeUef alCht audit.or '200 a.a..'*-wU.b out.a•·-.. 1-1 Be YoW' own hoe.I with • Cooll Trainees BRID • • SHOP J~n one of the mOllt 111tteaf\ll • r r n Ce expert Pftf · ,_,.... .. rov.m • topnotch proteaaional or· """ benefit.. ApplJ ac 1 ..r •. 1 ••• r ._ attractive persoa.aliUoa ... .:...i .... tloO. "501 Qunpu.a Dr. lrvlM HllJOy ~t WOl'k.lol automobUecorporaUCna In the Uni\~
I Qill 8'2·S678
SECURITY
MAUJOnHOTa
a.ve seek Ina~ celiAhjL.. ~
pttSOn to work Oexib e
bouts. Law enforcement or security experience
bdpfuJ. ErUoY Jood co beaefita. Apply oo./ Fri, aam.Noon, Personoel.
IOCJNewport Center Dr Newport Beach
DllnaDr. ..---···· wboenloY workin1 with -1(--af I R ..llu JS4E.1TU>Sl..C.M.. cocid.-tTeltt e.xp. lft re· States. ~•..-..•~I MMMO JddL 8iaJt at N.50 per I G e~ .. J tall clotb.illc aalea. CO.ta
Equal Opptr Emplyr • m l llPlll99Ci HOT ..:BIMY _______ _... ... __ _,.,_._ j;;---==--;;1 bour.PboneMMIZlE~ ........ al ...... Eque10pgrEmrwM/F ~-8!98· l<C.tl-SW'llYISoa ZIO,BETW11:EN4:0C»:OO 131·7211 _..._. --
• 1 qua.I. maln&eunee MOTOR PM. I
man In bldJ . trade. RotrtE A* fw Ja. Real mttate
&a,.niaor muat be Equal()pportwslty 1HJ .. llG ~'!.1tf .. ~O elect rt cal, Tbe Dail)t PUot bu a Employer Andbebi1wtt1u ludlnt n;-:; • ea.rpeat17, larp l'OUl.e l.D Newport Rtalbtat.eCO.Xlntpay
ticm fc::rmi ~· BHcb Al'H, Moaday .,..._._., penon. art ap. plan. m1Woo dollar loca·
• • ce or · tlll'U = aftemooat tkude ~tln• work. ~ fllll Uane man11er. ~~-= r: ealty nJJ,,rtd ~n· f.10 hft. Wk $S.00 b; ~Pa ~~ell-= ,:~·:o~:
btwn IAM • 'ePM , pras. M ~ ,::·da~ lltalt.f'1t..,_ fideatla& Interview. ~ « MDCI JW\lme SmlU bond required. )\p. PBX •9'71.
to. rGpel ~ Com· prmimat.e ~ tlOO A DI we rl n.1 u r v I c • f":=""lltlllllllll••" .. •a munit1 AHOC. H•H eet' mont.b. Muat bave ~{I PIT, . fol11'Bll::•u·~11il Nlluel Sbcllw Dr •• Uc. (lependabl• auto and --1 -... ~ ... ---u ---
Sales clerk, full tlme1 needed tor prmet rooo TACO BELL =~~M·•· ror
Job~av•ll•· SALISCL .. ble. Apply In penon. Needed ror hardware
15551 B1oollburet St. diltribatol'. Marin• ex·
W..untnaw. Mutt be 11. Dl!d.ee wt1aary. c.11 a>!. MMrll lot appolntmenl 6dUUI. ~Coater ~P· llOE If /F/H
1rYtDe Clubhouse. Good SA&.11/DILIY•Y -J .!Int •«tlnl coad.. u 10" need. deceal ~1:
' ................. . -Hiib School UueaUon -PoalUve AWtude -Well Oroomed -Good Driving Record
-Ablli\Y to treat people like Pf"OPle, wtth a alnc'ere lnterat ln cllltomcr sattaracOon. and •bove all, ln1.e1rtty.
NPal.ar7 PdclrtVtQf~. PBXOPEltATOR RtelDt.a
,. llaaa ser for women• PleaiMappqln ~ Co Arprt .,.., R .. l &1tate Salu.
=•1ty tbo~ l.D So. 311 W, ""'°° later buaf n1tcllbrd, 11\aUfpt.tJ-.. Llc/uftllc
Pl.Ua. 19.•b1 • .., PIT la Prr daJ thltta. Earn •till• you ~'""
W/naudubpc1nlill•· 1q P/'t Job to~
ladl 75'·7500 eva. ~. J-Gllll.
1lta Help needed Im· ~ Jl\all or pi t. Appl)t
•E.c.tHw1.H.8 .
~~ ~ .cma • c.e....... £.0.E. Man, 1Mtneflta. Farm t\ ranch brOker . · Qt ,._ h1 eccordia to exp. Call for awt. 11$-2301. rr
WaatMa..lta IU-5'11 ...-.m. DO .... calra1aln.
•
' I
~IC..;.. M•k• 1our ehupplnc
P\llJ • ""' Ume. lunch eallcr by \»11\1 ~ Dally hoar. Cllll "7..-_ Ptlot Claulfled Ada.
-I t.
Ftectnc 1 Cl..rn.ct ad la
• ... y ~ 41allnt your dale. Olvt us a call.
"•'Udolberett.. 9'2·5e1A
•
STOCK
Cl.Ell
TACO BELL C°'POrate HeadQuartera
17JIU Rea HUI Ave.
ln1ne, CA 93714
DAILY PILOf
' ...
l (lHHEI I •
CHHROLt !
' ,_ It r ! • .r ,
·,• /
•, 4 ~ I J 110
tno .......................
'.l)rp. 81.k oa bllt, loaded w/everylbla11 drtveo oaly 21,000 m1
with care. J'uat a beaut)'. UA ,..., llu.t Mil for
t'IUOO wttn 111.IOO..t••· swnable bu.It loan. r .P.
Daya 549.11n i. ••es ~
ftn 2101 '88 Tar1a 912, reblt •1. &IJoys, 5speed. muataell. a+ 2 smoo. -.2145
8 ho w r o o m c o n d . '5 Ponlche 912 suatoor aantoof, velour. AM·FM · ' I I CMleUAt w/ • spkrs .. air ~'::r Meli cu oua y
cond . s un screen . 536.788Bl~588t
Weater n M•l•·i---------MlcbeU"'· tlnttrlpea. '12 911 T Cpe. orig thru tZO \1 ZAI Ar~•oua out. Sep1a bm./alloJI 5 =oHtr/ nde . spd S38-7M8.
j!!!!!!~~~~~~ 197'1 9US. ai':l leaU.er. sunroof. p/w. vNLY 8000 M 9725 MILES blll8.000taes ....................... ,_64G-3208 ___ . -----aaaa '78 lat. Lolded. 8400 m1
&zy or A11wne leue. -.1211. .
'66912. Mas. $3500.
Mu.tSell
558o-4096 aft 6.
7611oci&Oll .....
PondM~ Sunroor. air cond., .S·
track stereo, alloys .
Xln 't cond. Lo miles.
(01917)
Cllickl•et"IOlt
VW•PORSCHE-AUDI 445 E. Coast Hlwe~
at Ha)'!lide Drive
Newport Beach 67l-0900
*
7
V ear Beme tewa
Dally Newsp a p er
VOL 72, NO. 9, 3 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ~t fORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1979 TEN CENTS
0
J!untingt.on Stftlled . on Council Seat
., llOllEaT BAU a
Ol•O.W .........
Efforts by th• Huntlastoo
• S.ach Clty Council to 1ppolnt a
seventh m m~r to lt.t tn>uP
ended' ln • 3 to 3 dndlocll lion· day nlabt.
Alter eeven ballot.a and a 1reat
deal ol elff rtna. the coun
ell couldn't doctde bt-t n Ruth
Finley and IUJpb Ba r
llra. Finley, cha1rm n or Uk-
Plaonln1 Commtn1on. waa b*dt'd by Richard bort. Mutb
Ball•_y and Bob MandJf. Mayor Ron rautn.aon, Don
MacAlllltet-and Joh.n Thomu
w r• ju l at aolldly b hind
Bauer, a fonn r ~idc n.L or lht•
llunlington·1'e ch Union lllah
School board *ho ill a cbt>mil'al
eotine•r wllh the Uni o n
Oltmlcal Company
Both M.-. Flnley and Uau•·r
aad today they ~ould bt.• plt!11M.-d
Showdown Sclwduled?
to ene out the r maanJng tum
of Ron Shlonkman who re 1antd
frum lhe councll Dec. l8.
Shenkman's ter:,m expires In
AS>rtl of lM
'P•tllrion said the counrll will
try to bn)ak tht d sdl()('k agall\
Saturd1y wh •n city leaders hOld
on all day retreat at caty hall
Council members indicated
lhty would start lhe election
process over rrom scratch and
put rnore names into the hopper.
Striking Teachers
Plan Rally Tonight
Aided by 20 professional strike
workers and teachers from
throughout Orange County. Hun -
tington Beach-area hagh school
teachers have called for a mass
rally tonight pnor to what they
* * *
claim will be a showdown before
the school board.
School board members have
scheduled a 7 q'clock public
meeting. in the Huntington
. Beach High School aud1lonum.
l No End
• i In Teaclwrs ,
'
f Strike Seen
I By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
Of .. o.lly ...... ''"' ~ t..
' ~
The HWltington Beach Union
High School District teacher
strike entered Its fifth day today
with no eod in si1bt to the cur-rent contract disP\lte.
District officials reported 507
teachers either on strike or Ill
Monday u aubstttute teachers
manned classes where 28 per-cent of lhe school district's
20.900 students were absent.
Teacher and dhtrlct
negotiators are awaiting word
from a state·appointed mediator
on possible renewal of contract
talks thal broke off three weeks
ago.
Teacher leaders say they are
still demanding a five percent
pay boost ror lhe 1978-79 school
year. a similar salary raise for
1979·80 if lhe state rules It is
legal and binding arbitration in
grievances.
But school board members are
refusing to budge on their posi·
lion that the state-imposed
s~lary freeze must be lifted
~(ore a five percent raise is
granted.
Trustees say they are
staunchly opposed to binding
arbitration since It might erode
local control of schools.
No major strike vlolence has
been reported but district of-
ficials have decided to bus some
<See STRIKE, Page AZ>
o.11, ...... 5Uff .......
TO CHAIR SUPERVISORS
First Dtltrtct'a Anthony
Phil Anthoµy
Chairman of
Supervisors
Philip Anthony of the First
District was unanimously elect:
ed chairman of the Orange
County Board of Supervisors lo·
day.
Anthony replaces Fifth Dis-
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley
who has been the board's presid·
ing officer for the past two
years.
<See ANTHONY, Page t\2)
. Super1'Uor Steortt In ..
Huntington Beach 'a Harriett Wieder
<right> takes oath of office u new 2nd
Dist rict representative on the Orange
County Board of Supervisors from Superior Court Jud~e Betty Lou
WIDOHBU. Mn. Wieder& husband. Irv,
1905 Main St. .
Issues surrounding the current
strike by nearly half of the dis-
trict's 867 teachers are not
scheduled to be discussed
tonight.
But teachers say they have
other plans.
"l don't know if teachers are
going to allow the board not t-0
discuss the strike." said
spokes man Bill Bianchi. ex·
eculive director of West Orange
County United Teachers.
··it could get a little hostile."
Bianchi said.
An estimated 1,000 teachers
and their supporters plan to
meet at 8 p.m. at Lake Park in
downtown Huntington Beach.
"I've never stepped back from
a fight yet," said School Board
President Zita Wessa.
Mrs. W~a sald she expects
trustee. to stand firm on their
refusal to grant pay and binding
arbitration demands issued by
teacher leaders.
Teachers have been work.lag
without a contract since July 1.
Nine months of collective
bargaining have not brought a
contract for the district's
teachers.
"This is not just a fight for
Huntington Beach Union High
School District teachers-it's a
fight for all the teachers in the
state," said Ira Toibin, presi-
dent of the 750-member District
Educators Association, the
group spearheading the strike.
The DEA is a California
Teachers Association afCiliate.
CTA officials ha\'e hired pro-
fessional strike coordinator
Mike Ford to lead the west
Orange County teachers on the
picket Une. Ford refused to be
interviewed Monday.
Striking west county teachers
say they have received backing
in their efforts from teacher's
associations an Newport Beach.
Costa Me s a, Irvin e.
West m i ns ter , San Juan
Capistrano, Saddleback Valley,
Fountain Vulley. Bre a and
Anaheim.
, .
M ra. Finley and Bauer
emerted Monday n.lgbt ., the
flnallata over .even other can·
didata that included Al Coen.
Ted Bartlett. M1rk Porter.
Frank Hoffman. Prim Shea. Ron
Brindle and John O'Connor.
Both aldes campalgned
persistently but politely for their
favorites.
M1'1i. Bailey said voters ln the
last election Indicated they
wanted a cban"e and that Mrs.
Finley would ni the bill because ot her knowledge and willlni·
neaa to devote time to t" lull.
MacAJllater ·countered that
Bauer also ls a "new face" but
hu a great deaJ of ~i>erieoce
on various organizations and
with the acbool board.
Mrs. Balley offered still
another areument for her can-
didate. She Cttetiously said she
wanted Mrs. Finley appointed
Snow Fun in Huntington
.. so that thete would be someone
to go to the restroom with."
She explained later she
believes her male colleagues
might be caucusing during
restroom break& "and I have no
way of knowing what ls happeo-
'me."
The council has until Feb. 16
to make an appointment. tr
there ls no decision by then, a
s peclal election will be
scheduled.
C>.tll, ,., ... 5Ulf P'Nto
Mrs. Jan Stepbenson ls the target for
snowballs burled by four and five-year-
olds at the South Huntington Beach Com-
munity Nursery School. Officials at the
cooperative preschool brought in a half-ton
of snow Monday so the youngsters. many
of whom bad never played in the white
stuff. could discover for themselves what it
is. According to Mrs. Stephenson. the
youngsters quickly learned what snow is-
good for.
Family Newspaper
Sold in Huntington
The Huntington Beach News.
a weekly newspaper that has
been published by the Farquhar
family for more than half a cen-
tury, has been sold, Publisher
George Farquhar has an ·
nounced.
Farquhar, the 65-year-old son
of James Farquhar. who bought
the paper in 1927. said the local
publication has been purchased
by the American Publis hing
Company of Tujunga.
Farquhar. who has been the
paper's managing editor since
1937. says he will continue in
that role for at least two more
years to help the new owners get
acquainted wath the local scene.
He says he has been consider-
ing selling out for more than five
years.
.. But I've been stalling," he
s aid. "I have enjoyed It too
much. It's the only thing I have
ever done and It is a family
tradition."
Farquhar says he was pushed
over the edge by the Huntington
Beach City Council when it de·
cided to shift its legaJ advertis-
ing from the Huntington Beach
News to the Huntington Beach
Independent wtuch Is published
in Long Beach.
"I 've had It when our own
leaders can't support their local
newspaper. That's when I called
my broker to make the deal."
Farquhar says he bolds no bit·
terness.
But he declares that he 'N1ll n!-
ruse to accept a commendation
that the city is preparing for the
publishJpg of legal advertlslng
over the years.
"l won't accept It. I'm not a
hypocrite and I'm not a poUlici&l'.'
either.''
Farquhar says he broke Into
the newspaper game at 13 when
his tatber uked him If he want· ed to tre the obituary editor.
·1 tald, 'thanks a lot, but what
lail'?" -9
Farquhar says he 1acep\ed
the job and hu always 'been
1lad that be did.
"Wntlng up people's deaths
taught me a lot-bow to aet
names, aats. su rvivors and
services. r bad to set UM ln-
rormalloO and I had to 1et. lt
right." .Ill'
o.11, ...... It.tit ,.,....
ANNOUNCES SALE
Huntington's Farquhar
He recalls that his busiest
limes as obituary editor came
after the March 10. 1933. earth-
quake.
·'Nobody was killed In the
earthquake but they didn't want
to go back to their beds.
"They stayed In their cars or
at vacant lots and many of the
older residents died of exposure.
I stayed busy until April."
Farquhar said the sale ln-
-c~usiness. In-
cluding equipment and the build·
in& at 206-208 Main St.
· He has been publisher and co-
owner of the business along with
his stepbrother Tom Wyllfe and
stepsister Florence Wyllie.
Jeffrey L. Horwith. the new
general manager of the
newepaper. said Monday there
will be some changes but
woulsfn't elabora~e "because
thl~B• a.re still ln . the planning
staJe." · ·
Re deClined to comment on
terms'9fthe purchase. '
Horwttlfo sald the American
Publlabint Company owns 18
oth r weekly newspllpen, all ln
Lot An1elea County.
Farquhar aaid t.M circulation
of th paper ls listed at S,SOO
"but we be a lot."
."f
Blind Man
Guilty in
Shooting
LOS ANOELES !AP> -A
blind Huntington Beach man
was convicled Mond ay of
charges stemming from the
shooting <1f a U.S Immigration
Service official last summer.
Robert Corbett. 42, was or·
dered lo return Jan. 29 for sen-
tencing after he was found guilty
of assault with intent to commit
murder and assault with a dead·
ly weapon. The verdict. which
was reached and sealed by the
nine.man. three-woman jury on
Friday. was opened Monday in
the presence of Superior Court
Judge Frances Rothschild.
Corbett. or 19832 Providence
Lane. remained in custody in
lieu of $100.000 bait.
Corbett was accused of empty-
ing a .22-caliber revolver at act-
ing Immigration and Naturaliza-
tion Service Director Omer
Sewell last July 14.
Coast
Weather
Chance of rain decreas·
ang to near 10 percent
tonight and Wednesday.
Fog night and early mom-
i n g houra. Little te m -
perature changes with
lows tonJght 46 to 52, highs
Wednesday 57 to 63.
INSIDE TODAY
An 0tanQe County buliM11
ettcutive WOI paid $1,121 ,000
in "77. 11* mo.ti o/ any o/ t~
noUon•a buafntu leaden""~
ve11td. For lu. ideniity and
other Mtalll, lff Page 85. ..... .. a ·~
l
A4 ... .. .... .. ., ., ..
A4 M
' I •
Today'• rain. the tall •nd ol a
tardy storm. wu fll ted to
dJulpate thla attemoon. maldna
way rcir PoCbta ol dMM rot
Wedneeda1 monalu alofta the coast, a NaUoaal We ather ~rvlce 1PCllktsmao aald.. Mo~ lhan a 10th of an Inch al
ra D WU NC.'OllMd lO mo.l parU
of Or up Ccwit y todJY by a •· m.. a tb tbe only mador prob-
lem a Su DMeo ~way tral'rl~
snarl. No add!Uocal 1Uppa1
wert ft'POl'ted lo lbe landlllde
areu ollOUlhem couta.I Ora.nae County.
Ca.lllomla Wpwl)' ~at.roi ot-
fictra said a Mmi truck 1Jtldded
near Weatmlnater Aven\AO -.hen t~ drlvtr braked too qulcltly on
wet pavement. Jacknlrtnc ltie ria
ud blockloa alow lane traffic.
Commuters to tM Los Angele
area were •lowed to a n ar ball
for nearly two boun, olliciala
aald.
Jetliner,
l:essna in
Near Miss
SAN DIEGO fAP> -"My
heart waa In my stomach," says
an airline pilot alter hJs 727
jetliner narrowly mined colUd·
ina with a aingle-enaine Cessna over San Diego. 1
Last September, a Cessna and
a commercial jetliner collldea
a s they were a ppr. oacbina Lindbergh Field, killing 144 peo-
ple 1D t6e worst air disuter ln U.S. history. •
A spokesman for Continent.al
Airlines sald the Boeing m was
on final landing approach Mon-
day when its pilot saw the small
plane coming straight at it.
In· the final seconds, the
jetliner turned, missing the
Cessna by less than 500 feet, the
company al>Okesman said.
Controllers at Lindbergh
Field said the Cessna was flying
through the busy a irspace
without radio contact with the
Lindbergh tower or with the
nearby radar air traffic control
facility at Miramar Naval Air
Station.
The Continental jet WU land·
ing from Denver. After the
night, the crew filed a near-miss
report before leaving.
Although the pilot wasn't iden-
tified, he was quoted as saying his
evasive action was all that pre·
vented a collision over San Diego.
Lindbergh controllers have
complained for years about
small planes flying through the
airspace used by airliners Stricte~ rught procedures have
been ordered by the Federal
A vaatlon Administration.
,
Penny Ame
·Millionaire
UTICA, N.Y. <APl -
Edwin Rommel. a 50·year-
old foreman, deposited
one million pennies al the
bank, the result of 20
years of collecting. Af.
terward. Rommel said, "I
don't want to see another
penny."·
The 20,000 rolls or pen-nle~. Which had been in
eig'IU metal footlockers at
Rommel's home, filled up
200 $50 bags and weighed
an estimated 3~ tons.
"I don't know why I
started savlnic them ,"
Rommel said Monday. "I
didn't start out saving. I
got up to about 13 or 14
doll ars and I said I'll shoot
for a new car, and when I
had enough ror a car, I
•aid, 'Oh, heU, I'll shoot
for a million'."
DAILY PILOT
•
Laauna Beach police were
11.eepln' a close watch on Bluebird Canyon thia momlna
wlMn a new ol pluttt e6vend a 1a~ .. bDM lft Oriol• Drive att.r-l'rlila1'a mud allele.
O.a""1&1 Pld no CurtMr •tls>e•I• from today's 1torm but
would not pred.ict t.ho rnwt o1
another Pactnc ltonn expedtd
Tbund.ly. •.
Jutt to the IOUtb, ofnclalJ tn
San ~ taid DO addJUonaJ
11tppa1e ... noticed 11
f"tt'lilfa Mobt .. Country Club
where a toO·foot·lona t11111re
opened lut monua , threatenl.q
• balf·doaen mobile homes. "Tbere'• a chance of more
Utht rain from a PacUic atonn
by Tbunday," a 1pokeaman
uSd, "bul then qatn. tt may
lake l~er to aet her ..
Today • storm, predicted to
arrive Monday, dropped .12 ol
H Inch in tM Oolta. Mesa and
Newport Beach area by I a.m.
Tbe aeuon'1 total reached t .06
since July 1, compared to 7.41
Inches by the aame dat.e last
year.
Huntlnaton Beach measured
.12 of an inch, Lacuna Ni1uel
reached only .o.1 of an inch and
Santa Ana measured .11 of an
lntb.
Santa Ana'• rainfall for the
Muon reached 7.46 lnches, com·
pared to .even inches on this
date lut season. 'The aver11e
for the talny aeuoa by this date
la recorded u 4. 72 for a normal
year, an Orance County Flood
Control Dlatrlct spokesman said. Jnconvenlence1 caused by today's rain could be over-
ahado~ by the 1ood it ta dolng
county aariculture, a county
apokeamanaald thla morning.
Lettuce, cabbage, broccoli:
atra wherries. citrus ano
avocados are benefitting, said a
spokesman for the Orange Coun·
ly Agriculture Commiaaioner's
office.
Harvesting or cawllJower and
celery will be clolayed
somewhat, though, he said,
because ol muddy fields.
Fee Hikes
OK'dfor
Beach Use
Tbe cost or gotng to the beach
in Huntington Beach 14 going up
after fees at city parking and
camping facilities were in-creased recently.
New fees Include:
-Day use al the parking
facility from Sl.50 to $2. The In·
c rease will be in effect two
weeks before Easter vacation
and until Sept. 30. The fees re·
turn to $1.50 Oct. 1 for the winter.
-Annual parking passes for
Huntington Beach residents go
from $10 to $15 per year. The
levy goes from $20 to $25 for non-
residenta.
-Bua fees climb from $S to $7 per day.
-Camper fees go from $3 to $4
per day for residents. For out-or-
town residents. the fees go rrom
$4 to $S per day. Those using an
automobile and trailer for camp-
ing wUl pay $1 extra.
The annual parking pass for
senior citizens aged 62 or over
remains at $10.
Parking meter fees along
Pacific Cout Highway will re-
main at 25 cents per hour.
Vince Moorhouse, director or
Harbon and Beaches, said the
increases are neceasary to offset Cott.a.
He said about $160,000 in addi·
Uonal money wfll be raised by
the new increases.
Moose Lodge
Aids Charity
In Huntington
A phoneathon for arthritis re-
search will be held this weekend
at the Huntington Beach Moose
Lodge.
Gene Maher, chairman of the
drive, aa)'1J those wish1ns to con-
tribute may call in their pledges
at 848-0017.
He 11Jd representaUves from
Moon lodge. ~bout Orange
County will o.,erate the
telephones from 8 p.m. Friday to
2 a .m. Saturday; 8 a.m. Satur-
day to 2 a.m. Sunday and from 8 l .m. tolp.m. Sunday.
Maher aald money rll.Md in
Huntincton Beach will be donat·
ed to artbrtU. re1earch at a
teletboa Jan. 2'1·21.
TH HuatlqtoD Beach Moose
Loda• II located at 74Sl Lorie
Circle. ·
Coaerete Barte 3
LOS ANGELES <APl -
Chuab ol a Co.tNte ud wfre
meab ornamental facaiM wht~
ftll off -\mOCcup&ed, t1'0-ttoi'y ~~ln~ ·pec111 au, .. ....
,,,.,,,..,,
This areat homed owl was plenty mad after accidental·
ly wandering into a trap for
scientlfic study of bot>cats
near Lakeside, north of San
Diego. The owl who doesn't
give ·a hoot fOf' cages, was
freed unharmed.
New Brown
Budget
Revealed
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., will propose
a $19.8 billion budget that
eliminates 5,140 state Jobi and
abollabea 15 Ileen.Ing boanla,
the Sacramento Union reported today.
The newspaper aao detailed a
$1.2 blWon state lncome tax cut
Brow• mentioned ln his in-
au1ural addresa Monday, quot-
ing rt1ures it said came rrom an
advance copy of the budget.
The Democratic governor's
staff refused comment unW the
budget ii submitted to the state
Leglalature on Wednesday.
The account quotes Brown as
saying ln an introduction to the
budget that the spending plan ls
a blueprint for "leaner govern-
me nt" and Is "substantially
below all proposed constitutional
spend.Jog limits. But it keeps
fa\th with the vision and con-
sc ence of California" by build-ing for the future in the areas of
arta, affirmative .action, urban
parks, apprenticeship training.
enforcement of labor laws and housing, it said.
Amon~ budget highlights in
the prevtew of the budget:
-State personal income tax
credits would be increased to
$125 for individuals and $250 for
couples, for a total savings to
taxpayers o( $915 million on 1979
taxes. Those tax credits would
be received on returns filed in early 1980.
The permanent level or the
credits, which taxpayers deduct
from their total tax bills before
sending in checks or filing for
refunds. is $27 for Individuals
and $54 for couples. But the
credits on 1978 returns were in-
creased to $100 and $200 In a one·
time relief provision or a tax cut
sianed into law by Brown last
year.
~ ..... PageAJ
ANTHONY. •
Supervisor Ralph Clark was
elected vice chairman.
Laurence Schmit, who lost his
seat to Harriett Wieder, was
vice chairman in 1978.
Anthony, who has been a
member of the board ror two
years, assumes his new post un· der a legal cloud.
On July l , lm, Anthony and a
fellow Suoervtsor Ralph
Diedrich were indicted by the
Orange County Grand J ury on
allegaUona of campaign law
Violations.
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person
by a grand Jury. It does not
establish IUilt or lnnoceoce.
Last March Orange County
Superior Court Jud1fe PbiUP: Schwab cUsmiJsed al but one
count in the indictment.a on the
1rounda that only eight mem·
ben of the grand jury beard all
the tesUmony ln the case.
Members of the state Attorney
General's $taff are appealing
the dlam111al.
· Antholu' did not dtlcuaa the
pending appeal when he took
over h1a dutlea today.
In a brief speecb he aatd the
county'• moet Important prob-
lems will be in provldSnc ar.
for Ible boualq, ·p1yla1 for In·
dl1 l health care. aolvina prob.
le • at the al rport and
cont county bullneu un·
der ''the MW flac•I rules we were 1iven alter Propoaltlon
13." '
AalboQy alao ..Sd tm wlU be
1ear in ~ch he workl for "a
fair retura Gf the tDOMY Oraqe
ODu.UllW Hiid' to the state tlllt year."
•
T~hers
Otnclall ln the Westmlnater
School <elementary, Dlatrtet
Hy trom now t>n teachers wbo
claim to ~ ll1 wUI have to prove
It or they may have their pay dock4'(1.
Thia tm•r1eney procedure
w11 lnatltuted' Monday because
of -a strike threat by teachers
over wages. fringe benefita, the
l•nstb ol the teachinC day and otberl11Ue1.
Diatrlc t 1poke1woman
Barbara Wlnan aald the district
took the actloo a fter what lbe
termed a wildcat strllre took
place at Jobmoa Intermediate
School Monday./ .
Sbe claimed' that 21 of the
1cbool '1 30 teacben were ablent and that 20 aua.titute teachers
were hired at S80 per day.
• The district doesn't normally
require proof of illness until
after live days of absenteeism.
Miss Winars said t.M district
also took the tougher position
after a letter fro m the
Westminster Teachers Auocia·
lion was distributed to some
campuses. ,
The letter said substitutes are
prolonglnc the "strike" and ac·
cuaed them of beina "acaba."
Bar Kaelter. assistant director
of the West Orange County Unit-
ed teachers, said the letter was a mistake.
.. We had the m prepared in
cue of a ltrlke and diatribu~
them to faculty repreaen-
taUves." hlt said today.
"Somebody made a mistake
and released some of them."
Both teacher attendance at all schools includJoa Johnson in-
termediate and aludent enroll·
ment were reported to be
·normal at the diatricl'1 20 cam: puses today.
Kaelter said pickets were ac-
tive at most school sites ln this
morning's drizzle but that the
stri ke , which haa been
authorized, is on a day-to-day
basis.
* * *
E'Nm PIJfle A J \
STRIKE •••
of the substitute teachers Into
the seven West Orange County
high scboolt as a precaution.
Police patrola have watched
substitute teachers board buses
slnce last week when a rock was
thrown at one of the vehicles. No one wu hurt and no damage was reported.
Meanwhile. attorneys f th
striking teachers are wal ng fo
Ciltzens Legal Defense AlUanc
members to file legal papers Co
an anticipated court order
aimed at halting the strike.
Bill Bianchi, spokesman for
the district's 867 teachers, said
teacher association orrtcials
have not omcially received any
leg a I notices concerning the
strike.
Members or the Los Angeles-
based citizens alliance say they
p lan to seek a temporary
restraining order from Orange
Coun{y Superior Court this after-
noon to stop the walkout.
School officials said today
teacher pickets marched in front
or the district's seven campuses despite drizzling rain.
Tests Conducted
WASHINGTON CA P l
Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland has been hospitalized
for tests of a palnlul back condi-
tion sutfered over the holidays,
an aide says.
-~~ FORM!R LOVERS WILL BE AEUNIT!D IN COURT TODAY
LH Marvin, Michell• Triola Shown In 1814 Pf\oto
Ue Marvin's 'Love
Trial' Opens Today
LOS ANGELES CAPl -Eight
years after they called it quit.a,
Oscar·wfnnlng actor Lee Marvin
anr d his former lover, Michelle · rlola Marvin. met in court today
for a lancmark trial involving
love. money and the changina
morality of American couples.
Jury telecUoo was to begin to-
day io the suit filed by Mila
Marvin. who legally changed
her name while she Uved with Marvin. She Is "Suing for the
s ame compensation. a wlfe
would get in a divorce -half the
property accumulated during
their ~ears togetber -or $1 million.
They never married and
Marvln ls contesting the rtght to use bis name.
Marvin and his attorneys were
expected to araue that the mere fact that Marvin never married
Mias Marvin shows be wanted to
avoid the responaibiUtiea and ob-
ligations of manit1e.
Marvin has filed a countersu.it
asking $1 mlllion from Miss
Marvin ror compensation for the
companions h ip and other
services be provided during
their relatlonahip. "I was like a wife to Lee," she
has said. • • . . . I took a care or
Lee llke he was a baby chicken."
The cue, which has already
created 1eaa1 precedent. on ap-
peal, ls expected to have a na-
tional impact . Many others In·
volved in non-marital rela·
tionsbips have filed similar suits
allegil?S they are entitled to
everr.thlq from pension rights to al mony.
"You could say it affect.a ev-
eryone who has a date,•• says
Marvin Mitchel son . Mi ss· Marvin's attQmey, who has been
involved ln the case during seven
years oftitigation.
Matchelson, who begins argu-
ing pretrial motions today. seeks
to prove to a jury that an oral.
non-marital agreement is as·
binding as a marriage license
when it comes to splitting assets
acquired together.
"People are living together all
over th ls count ry,·' says
Mitchelson. "You have to deal
with that."
lh 1976. the Californi a
Supreme Court dealt with just
that issue in a decision that up-
held Mltchelson 's contentions
and set a precedent for division
· or property between unmarried
cohabitants.
The court overruled two lower
court decisions in tbe case and
sent it back to Superior Court for
retrial.
"During the past 15 years. ,,
there has been a substantial in-
crease in the number of couples !lvi~~ lOJelher without marry. ang, said the court's opinion. ·
"Such nonmarttal re lationshipa
lead to legal controversy when one partner dies or tbe couple separates.
" . . . We take this opportuni·
ty to resolve that controversy
a nd to declare tM principles
which abould govern dlstrlbutlort
of property acquired In a non-marital relationship."
The court then ouUlned a com· plex set of laws under wtuch
non-married couples could seek fina ncial relief upon separation.
Since the decision. many suits.
have been filed under "Marvin
vs. Marvin," including cases in-
volving other celebrities -Nick
Nolte. Alice Cooper. Rod Stewart and Britt Ecklund. Non&
has come to trtal.
Appropriately, the case that
set the precedent will be the first
to be decided by a jury.
Marvin, 54, and Miss Marvin
-46, met in l9&l during the fllm:
Ing of "Ship of Fools" In which
they both had parts. Soon, lhey
were living together -although
Marvin was not divorced from
his estranged wife unlil 1967.
Miss Marvin says she grad~al
ly gave up her career to concen-
trate on rus and to "render full
time services as a homemakt!r
in return for his promise to sup-port her."
Thugs· Wound
Four in Rome
ROME fAP1 -Neo-Fascist
terrorists raided a leftist radio
station during a birth control
program today and wounded
rour housewives in a shooting
spree heard by dozens or
listeners. The assailants also
hurled a firebomb <ind a fifth
woman suffered bums .
"Help! Help! They are killing
all of us!" a terrorized woman's
voice s hri eked i nto th e
microphone or Radio Citta
Futura -Future City Radio -a
private radJo station run by a
left-wins extremisL group.
Police said they received
telephone calls from dozens or
listeners reportln9 they heard
the woman's voice drowned out
by shot.a and an explosion.
ff ickor7 f•rms· ()I ONIO
MTS YOUI Ml'·TOGITHR
TO.ITHR ••• WITH
CHEDDAR
Now·a the time of Y4t8" ro have tome tun! If you're
beckpadang, boating. c~try 8'<ling. bowl game
w1tef'ling °' k* enj()ylng 1n evening t()Oeth« . yoor oet·tooether will be really memolebloe With the tempting
taste or Hk:kwy Farms of Ohio-CNdder. We're featunno
.,. 01 ~ teYoritel now . and. belll ot Ill. You can SAVE
11 .00 wtttt the coupen below. let Hidtory Farms of Ofliol'
get voor gec-cogeth..-together wlft'I Cheddlt1
11"". ---------------------------Clp,... ~ .. Y-• ., ••••
ff fclcorJ fGnnsk o
. W~lff Plaaii • FasMa11 lllmd • M• lacr'1 Vllap
S I 00 nt ,_ti 11t ,,,ece of I •·or...,.
OFF ......................... cMddart
llG IAIM APPLE PIE
. ~ NIW YOU WHm . M'PGET SHAR,
. MEW YORI COLORED SMOKEY IAI
Ofter..,,,,._ JanuatV31. 1970 • ltrnlt txle OOUOOC' '* tamoy p1ee19
•
• ·•
\
Yeur Hometowa
Dally New paper
VOL:. 72, NO. 9, :t SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1979 . TEN CENTS
.JurJL J!aived in Suit on Lee 1'far1'iia
LOS ANGEL <AP > ..: ID a -
aurprt .. move, lM allonMy for
MlC'he lf' Triola Marvln an
nounced today i.he WO\lld wal
a Jury ln the trial of ber
landmurk au.it a,wntt actot' lM
Marvin a ca lnvolvlftl aove,
money and lho chana na moraH·
ty or Amerlran eoupl4' a
Attorney Marvtn M1tchelsoo
made the move after conferrtna
in chamben wtth Soperior Court
JUdfe ArthUl' Ma:nhell A lorneya (or the Oscar·
wbuuq Ktur a rttd l maltff
could be1t be Jud1ed by
lhnflaJI. • Wot ran family court
Judtt con&ldtted 1 K holar ln
th fleld ol domHt Ir rf'lauom.
The chanae clea~ the woy
for t thnony to 1ln H c-arly
aa Th~ in Ml a M1rvin'11
11u t for SI mUllon Th \ former
wlnat-r, who ch nat.-d her name
whllo 1be Uvl"d with the actor.
eka the 1.ame compuoaat on u
wife would &el In a divorce -
holf th4r proptlrty uccumulated
dur1n1 their a.ix yeors logethor.
Th<' judge ruled on one t~chnlcul motl<>n Involving Uw
At"parauon of fanunclal und fuel
questlon1 In the lrlul. but lhl:l rul·
Ina mJde no 8lcn1rtcant dlr
ferenct-
M•m1hall t.atd a last pretrial
mot on would ~taken uP Thun•
day moml:ng Then tesUmony Is
expected to start.
The white·halred Marvin and
his former lover appeared In
court. but dJd not speak to each
other. He was accompanied by
the wife he married when he left
Miss Marvin eight years ago.
Miss Marvin has said she wut
tell all during the trial about her
living arrangement with the ac-
tor.
Mlaa Marvin has said , "I was
like a wtfe to Lee • . . I took
care of Lee like he was a baby
chicken."
Mitchelson seeks to prove that
an oral, non·marital agreement
is as binding as a marriage
license when it comes to s pilt·
tlnf up assets acquired together.
· People are liVlng together all
o ver th is country," says
Mltchelaon. "You have to deal
wllh1hat.••
In 1976, the Cali forn ia
Supreme Court. dealt with just
that issue \n a decision that up-
held Mltchelson 's contentions
a nd set a precedent for division
of properly between unmarried
cohabitants.
The court overruled-two lower
court decisions in the case and <See MARVIN, Page A2>
Planes Come ·close in San Diego
AP Wl..,._o
500 Feet
Separates
Aircraft
SAN DI EGO <AP> -A Con·
tinental 7Z7 pilot is reported to
have <:.s>nsiaered evasive action
to avoid a sjpgle·engine Cessna
which was said to have come
within 500 feel of the jet as the
jetliner approached Lindbergh
for a landing.
But a Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration official said today
the incident involving the com·
mercial jetliner and the small
plane near Lindbergh Fit!ld b
not being officially classified as
a near-miss.
Jack Gregory, a ContinenlaJ
spokesman In Los Angeles. said
no evasive action was taken by
the unidentified pilot or flight 81
and no ofricial compla int was
riled about the Incident.
Norm Bell Sterling, an FAA
official here, said he talked with
the Continental pilot during the
Incident, which occurred about
noon.
According to Sterling. the pUot
said "in his opinion, lhc Cessna
was too close; bo told us 500
feel."
"We asked him if be wanted to
file a mid-air report but he
dido 't ," saJd Sterling. "Instead,
he filed with the National
Ae ronautics a nd Space Ad-
m inistration a generalized com·
plaint."
CHAD GREEN PLAYS OUTSIDE MASSACHUSETTS COURT
Beat Way to Trnt Boy's t.ukeml• O.beted
Sept. 25, a Pacific Southwest
Airlines 727• Jet approaching
Lindbergh for a landing collided
with a Cess na . killing 144
persons in the worst air disaster
in U.S. history.
Boy's Li/ e Periled
If Laetrile Out?
PLYMOUTH, Mass. <AP> -A
Mexican doc tor who used
Laetrile to treat cancer patients
says the life of 3-year-old
Leukemia victim Chad Green
could be endanger ed if his
chemotherapy treatments are
!'>lopped. • ··we cannot risk the life of the
boy by withdrawing the
c h e m othe rapy ," said Dr.
Ernesto Contreras. who runs a
clinic in Tijuana, Mexico.
H e testified f o r Chad's
parents. Diana and Gerald
Coast
Weather
Chance of rain decreas-
1 ng to near JO pe r cent
tonight a nd Wednesday.
Fog night and early morn·
Ing hours . Little t e m-
perature changes with
lows tonight 46 to 52, highs
Wednesday 57 to 63.
An <mmge Counl11 btumeu
uecutiw waa paid 11.m,000
in 1917. the moat oJ on11 o/ the
notion'• bulineu ~,.. 1t.1r-
v.yed. For hU klenllt11 and other detaJla, tee Pogt BS. .....
Green of Scituate. ln their effort
to win the ri~ht to decide bow
Chad 's illness should be treated.
··1 stated very clearly that
chemotherapy should continue
a s the basic treatment with
metabollc therapy. including the
use of Laetrile. to improve the
quality or the boy's life and,
possibly, prolonJ(in1t his re ·
mission." Contreras said ln
describing bis testimony Mon-
day before a closed court hear-
ing . Judge Guy Volterra of
Plymouth Superior Court is re·
viewing his April 18 order re·
quiring the chemotherapy and
making Chad a temporary ward
or the st.ate for purposes of treat-
ment. During the treatment. he
is still living with his parents.
The Greens are trying to re·
gain legal custody of Chad in an
effort. to decide his treatmenL
themselves.
The co uple opposed
chemotherapy for their son In
earlier court rights and argued
he should be treated only with
Laetrile and a special diet. But
now they Indicate they might
permit the chemotherapy lo con·
Unue.
Laetrile \s a trademark for a
substance extracted from ~ ch
or apricot pits. Although -ad·-
vocatea claim lt can cure cancer,
the lhS. Food and Drug Ad-
ministraUon hu banned It from
interstate commerce; clahnlng
there la no proof of ill effective·
nus or ute{.y.
No final cause (or that dis-
aster ha!> been announced by
federal investigators, but the
FAA has ordered stricter light
procedures at busy Lindbergh
Field.
According to Gregory. "The
tower advised everyone in the
area about a single engine
Cessna in the general area Mon·
day. All our captain did was
stay at his altitude a moment
and check It on his radar. Our
ground station said no evasive
action was taken."
Trial Slated
Inlrvine
Murder Case
An Irvine attorney accused of
murdering his wlle as she was
moving out on h1m was ordered
Monday to answer the charge in
SuperiorCourt.onJan.18.
At a preliminary hearing at
Harbor Municipal Court, Judge
Calvin Schmidt decided there
was evidence enough to warrant
a trial in the case against Gary
Wayne Patton. 34. o f 14
Esplanade.
Patton has said he Is Innocent
or murder.
His wife, Katherine Leigh Pat·
ton, 23, was shot three times In
the head Nov. 18 as she was
moving p~raonal belongings
from the couple's Rancho San
Joaquin apartment.
Irvine po!ice said her husband
Wllrftill ft-the scene when they
arrived. The)C-bad been alerted
by a telephone call from a man
they said Identified himself as
Patton and exclaimed. "I Just
murdered my wtfe ...
Patton ls free on $100,000 ball
Tanker~ Blast, Fire Probed
8ANTJ\Y, Ireland <AP) -,
Gulf OU lnvestlgatora be1an In·
vest1iatln& iQ.day into tire eM·
ploalon.t and fire that lcllled SO
people on th' Pren tanker
Betel .....
Earb' thetfries centered on
fumes fi'i empty atMt partly emp·
ty oll compartments. a cause or
several previous tanker di•·
81tera. But evidence on the
blackened) half·1unktn Bete&I-... WU ~Ut)',
Supervisors and Frietad
Fiflh District Supervisor Thomas Riley
lakes to the podium after being sworn in
Monday for a new term on the Or ange
County Board of Supervisors. Mrs. Har-
ri e lt Wi ede r , l he n e w 2nd Dis t rict
supervisor and the county 's first woman
s upe rvisor, holds her granddaug hter.
Samora Tauber. 2, o n her lap a s she
listens to Riley. For details on Monday·s
ceremonies. see a dditional stories and
photos, Pages A3 and A9.
S:npervisors Elect
Anthony Chairman
Philip Anthony of the First
District was una nimously elect·
ed chairman of the Or ange
County Board or Supe rvisors lo·
day. (
Anthony replaces Firth Dis-
trict Supervisor Thorllas Riley
who has been the board's presid-
ing officer for the past two
years .
Supervisor Ralph Clar~ was
e l e cted vice c h ai rm a n .
Laurence Schmit. who lost his
seat to Harriett Wieder , was
vice chairman in 1978.
Anthony. who has been a
me mber of the board for two
years. assumes his new post un·
der a legal cloud.
On July 1. 1977, Anthony and a
f e llow S upe rviso r R a lph
Diedrich were Indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on
allegations of campaign law
violations
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person
by a grand jury. It does not
establish guilt or Innocence.
Last March Orange County
~uperlor Court Judfe Philip
Schwab dis missed al but one
count In the indictments on the
grounds that only eight mem-
bers of the grand jury heard all
the testimony tn lJ!e case.
0.lly Plle4 SI.Ill ,......
TO CHAIR SUPERVISORS
Flrat Dlatrfct's Anthony
Me mbers of the state Attorney
General's staff a re appealing
th,:? dismissal.
<See ANTHONY. Page A2>
$100~080 Damage
Wmnwrcial
Airlines Fees
Will Double
By JOANNE R EYNOLDS Of tlle O.lly PtlOf SI.Ill
Commercial airlines using
Orange County Airport will pay
fees totaling a n estimated
$720.000 this year because coun·
t y s upe rvis o r s more than
doubled the airlines' landing
fees today
Under the plan unanimously
adopted by the board. landm~
fees will jump from 23 cents per
1.000 pounds of each aircraft
la nding at the airport, to 50
cents per 1.000 pounds
The fee was last set in 1969
The change was soug ht by
airport o ffi cia l s wh e n
supervisors msist<.>d the airport
should be self.supporting after
passage of Proposition 13.
The current fee was expected
to bring in $340,000 In 1979. The
new fee wi ll add about $380,000.
Of the total, about flO percent
will be paid by Air California. 33
percent by Hughes Airwesl and
seven percent by Golden West
Airlines.
Only one airline spokesman
testified at today's hearing on
the rate increase.
Robert Flores. rcprcsenllni:t
Aarwcst, said lhe airline object·
<See FEES, Page A2>
.,El ·TOro Eate,ry Burns
A two.alarm Ore reported at
8:43 a.m. today did an estimated
$100.000 damage lo Delaney's
Kettle of Fish In El Toro. n
s pokesman tor the restaurant
said.
Orance County fi remen spent · n nUnut• cont.raUln& t.he blue
,.In the twc).story wood atructure
a lso known u Delaney's Salty
Sam. 23102 El Toro Road.
County fire ofllclala aald a
fa ulty ov n caund tbe blaze.,
f • I ( •
..
which be~n in the structure's
flrst-noork1tchen area.
Employee Heidi Komczynski.
18. of San Juan Capistrano
turned on an oven at 8 a.m.
whe n s he arr l\'ed for work,
fireman said. She went to an UP·
stairs otnce to do paperwork.
they t a.id, and herad a popping
noise.
She rushed down.•talrs, dis·
covered the fir~. Ocd the build· inl and cala.,d nreflahten from ,, ~
I •
...
a business next door in the Sad·
dleback Plaza. officials said.
Firemen or Orange County
Station 22, nnt to respond. were
only temporarily confused by re·
port11 of a blate at Delaney's
Restaurant -another company
facility at 24035 El Toro Road.
adjacent tot.be Ore 1t0Uon.
"They drove to the re11tauran1,
circled the block and headed for
the Kettle of Fish across the
fr way," an offlclal aaid.
( ' f
r
I
s -
~
I
i
i
f I
' .
[ Piiot LOgbOOk J
Smile, Office ,
You're 'Pooned'. ·
., v 11111Clla.&. .................
WHO WOllLD aausvs IT, a ~ t"OunteTeutture pul>lh~allon Jabblnai the pollce ~tabB.ahmtl\t. Poon IS ll
out
FWl ol berbl, heavy humor a1'Cl formerly unpubllahed
cpl1od lnvotnq La1un1'• n . tho thard uncs.tp-ou_nd
editton ot "LI&•• Lampoon" ll mak n1 the rouodl at the
poUce '· dn Ill sutr1W1 and &r1mac wllh
ever1 rudiri.I
~
t
~t
' ... , •
ll ~ma oo one reaUy knowa who
the publaahen of lb "lnalder" aaUre
ah .t art Al leesl no ono 'a talJUnl. But
lt 'a for •uro tbal aomo bll)HaUJnc,
and eome not·IO-blal\·ranklnl omcen
would U-e to nm out For lbe pees of the Poon pubUahera 6pare no one, and rank apparently
ho no prlvllea
lnskte tM tateat rour·p•1e cdiUon
MnCM&LL aro anff , rumoMJ , quotable quotea
und motal•·bOOIU°' mt •1• intended to keop the troope
-al leut part of lbem -in hiah aplrita
THE LAMPOON STAFP Is stralahtforward In outUn·
inl lta purpose Right off the bat the mlmeoaraphed
periodical states, "It 'is not our Intention lo cause any un·
necessary embarraesment or humiliation to anyone.
"For this reason, only necessary embarrassment and
humUiallon will be included .....
For example, under a section entitled "Traffic
Corner." tbla anecdote unfolds:
• •omcer -leave• hia <patrol> unit runnln• ror three
hours .... took alJ ol hla aear out like a 1ood trooper. b~
ror1ol lo abut the motor off. Good work - . omcer -
On ally shut.a It orr at OSOO hou.ra." .
BVT IT APPEA&S evfn members ot the detecUve
bureau have occulonal lapses ol memory:
"It bu come to the Poon's attention that a member ot
our elite detective bureau, while respondlq with the
normal contJ.naency ot mana1ement personnel to <a recent
crime scene>, parked an unmarked detective unit on lbe
street, performed hJa bualneu at the crtme acene, rode
back to the PD wtth aomeone elle and left the unit at the
scene ror a peJ1od of not less than ftve worklnl daya.
"The routine operatlon ol lbe PD and our exceptJoaal
system ol lasuiq and controlling orficJal Police Equip-
ment dld not reveal tho mlaalnl unit," tbe Poon conUnues.
adding that a "sharp.eyed" detec:Uve finally noticed lbo
car at the scene.
LAGUNA BEACH OFf1CEllS have been mlnfUn1 with the geologists out In Bluebird Canyon ror the paa rew
months, so lt'a only natural lhat they would pick up aomo
of the lurf termlnology. Poon #3 outlines this In a aecUon
called . "Speclallzed Law Enforcement," and offers a re·
ward to the officer who can define auch word.a as "Dip
slope, slide gllde, head scarp, sraben, slide plane and re-
activated SOB." .
Bul blttemeas creeps Into the camaraderie as the Poon
llata changes in the department slnce Proposition 13.
"Only lesally required equipment on police unlta wlll
be ke l)t in good repair," the Uat begins. "No overtime for
anythlng less than a disaster," lt conUnuea. "All denta. u long aa they don't rub against the Ure. will not be nxed."
"Coal of living raises have been 10·22ed. <Police radio
code for canceled.) ..
Toda1·1 rain, Lhe t.aU end of a
lardy alonn, w.. expected to dl11l~t.t tb1a atternoon.·maklna
WI)' fot pofttU Of denH fot w dMICll)' monU.Di alGnl tKt_
coatl, a National We ather -Service apokeaman eaid.
More than a loth of an inch or
rain wu NCOrded ln moat PJJU
or Oranae Co~ tod.11 by 8 a.m .. 1 Lh the mador prob·
Itta a Sen Ottto f eeway traffic
lriarl. No llddltional allppaces
were reported la the Jandlllcle
areaa ol eouthem coanal Oranae County.
Callfomla HJ&hway Patrol of.
rtcen aald a temJ -trvck ltidded
Man FtJCes
Trial on.
Sex Counts
A Newport Beach map waa or· ffred Monday to stand trial In
Oran1e County Superior Court
on chara-ot cblld moleatat.lon
and aexual perversion lnvolvtna
a a.year-old atrl.
The San Beraardlno chlld. who
hu since turned &. accused John
Howard Allie, 41. ol aoe Colton
St.. In Harl>or Munlclpal Court
durln• a preUmlnary heartq
tbal ended Monday.
Jud•• Calvin Schmldl dlreet.e4
autbonU. to arralp Alale. wbo
hH pleaded Innocen t . in
auperior court Jaa. 18.
Al1l• waa arreated at his
home by Irvine poUce laat Nov.
&. He 11 tree on ball.
Tbe alx·foot·lbree, 210.pound
uleaman or recreation al
vehlclea, waa char1ed wltb fore· ·
in& varfoul sexual -ell u_pon the
1randd1u1htor of a customer. ·
Police aald a San Bernardino
woman. accompanied by the
child, wu ahoppinc for a motor
home Sept. 9, when lbe crimes
aUe1ed1Y took place.
Police laid the chUd dldn 't tell
her ar andmother of lhe lncldent
untll aeveral dafs later. The
woman became pbyllcaUy lll at
the news and waa hoapitallJed
for ween before she waa able to
toll police. accordln1 to ln·
veaUgators.
Iran Ediet
1
near WeatmJD1ter Avenue when
the driver braked too quickly on
wel pavemen~\ Jacknifln1 the rt1 and block.Jq llOW·lane traffte.
Co.mmutera to t.be Los Anpltl area were slowed to a near halt
for nearly two hours, officials
laid.
L11una Beach police were
keepln1 a cloee watch on
Bluebird Canyon thia mominl
where a fteldl of plasUc covered a 1aplq ho e in Oriole Drive
after Friday's mud allde.
Geologlata expect DO rwther
1Uppa1e rrom today'• atorm but
would not predict the reault or
another Pacific alorm expected
Thunday. Just to the south, officials in
San Clemente said no additional
s lippage waa noticed at
Shorecliffs Mobile Country Club
where a 900-foot·lona l111ure
opened laat month, tbreatenlq
a half-doien mobile homes.
·'There's a chance or more
light rain from a Pacific storm
by Thursday.·' a spokesman
said, "but then agaln, lt may
t.ake l~r to get here."
Today a storm. predicted lo
arrive Monday. dropped .12 or
an Inch In the Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach area by 8 a.m.
The aeqon'a total reached 9.06
since July l, compared lo 7.48
inches by the same date last
year.
HuntlnJ{ton Beach meaaured .12 of an Inch. Laguna Niguel
reached only .03 or an ln~h and
Santa Ana measured .11 of an
inch.
Santa Ana's ralnlall for the
season reached 7 '8 lnchea, com·
pared to seven Inches on this
date laal aeaaon. The average tor the rainy season by thJa date
is recorded as 4.72 for a normal
year. an Oran1e County Flood
Control Dislrlcl apokeaman said.
Inconveniences caused by
today's rain could be over·
shadowed by the good ll is doing
county agriculture. a county
spokesman said this morning.
Lettuce, cabbase, broccoli.
strawberries, citrus and
avocados are benefittlns, said a
spokesman for the Oran,ge Coun·
ty Agriculture Commiuioner's
ofllce. Harvau.., of caullflower ani;I
celery will be delayed
somewhat. though. he said,
because of muddy fields.
AP .........
FORMER LOVERS REUNITED IN COURT TODAY
Lee Mervin, Miehe lie Trtola Shown In 1984 Photo
I',.... P age Al
MARVI N •••
sent It back lo Superior Court for
retrial.
"During the past 15 years.
there has been a substa ntial in·
crease in the number of couples
llvln' together without marry· Ing,' said the court's oplnion.
"Such nonmarital relatlo,iships
lead to legal controversy when
one partner dies or the couple
separates.
• • . . . We t.ite thJs opportuni-
ty lo resolve that controversy
and to d9(:lare the . prlnclplea
whlctuhould govern diatrtbuifon
or property acquired in a non·
marital relationship."
The court lben ouUlned a com·
plex set ot laws under which
non.marrted couples could seek
financial relief upon aeparaUon.
Slnce the decislon.-.many suill
have been filed und~r "Marvin
vs. Marvin," Including caaea in·
volvlng other celebrities · -Nick
Nolte. Alice CoQper. Rod Stewart and Britt Ecklund. Nooe
has come to trial.
AJ>propriately. the caae that
set the precedent will be the first
to be decided by a jury.
M arvln, 54, and Mias Marvin,
46, met in 1964 during the film·
Jng or "Ship of Fools" ln which
lbey both hid parts. Soon, they
were Uvtng togeLher -altbouan
Marvin wu not divorced from
hia estranged wife untn 1967.
· ,,.....P-Al
FEES •••
Brown Talk
Delights
GOPCmnp
SACRAMENTO CAP> -
Republican leaders are gleefully
welcoming Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. to their party after his in·
augural speech, and some dis·
grunUed Democratic liberals ap-
parently think he belongs there.
<Relatedatories Pases A3, AS l
"ll wu awful. I do not think
poor people should be left out In
the cold by a governor or presi·
dent," Aaaembly Health Com·
GOVERNOR URGES
TAX CUT -P•ge A5
mltlee Chairman Art Torres, D·
Loa Anseles, aaid after attend·
Ing the televised address Monday night.
"He Jotned the Republican
Party and we're dell1hted. It's
the most conservative speech
given In Sacramento since
Ronald Reagan left," chortled
Senate GOP leader William
Campbell of Whittier.
Some Democr•ts did praist'!
the lone or the 20-mlnute speech
and several RepubUcans ques·
Uoned Brown's sincerity a~ a
budget·cutter.
REACTION TO the clandestine publication has been
mixed, police spokesmen say. "Sure. there's some sour
grapes -especially by some o( the officers named In the
Poon ... one ocncer said. "But morale's really been lousy
lately. and thfs really can't do anything but help."
So the next time you see a Laguna Beach patrolman ln
his car, and he's smiling. he probably just read the lat.eat
edition of the Laguna Lampoon.
Trans/er of Royal
Property Ordered
ed to the increase since the
money is being raised In part to
help pay for implementaUon of a
master plan that is currently un·
der debate.
He said he thought use of the
1\ndtns fees for operating ex·
penses was Inappropriate since
the fees couldn't be considered a
stable revenue source.
1bree Facing
Court Ac tion
In Air Blasts
Three persons who Irvine
police allege launched explodim~
alr balloons In Lhe palb or smal ~
aircraft landln~ at Orange Coun·
ty Airport are scheduled to
stand trial on the charges on
Feb. 13. Seal Beach Man TEHRAN, Iran CAPl -Shah
---Mohammed Rua Pahlavi
decreed today Lhat au personal
property of the Iranian royal
ramlly be turped over to a
crowo·apooaored foundation and
ord e red the release or 266
t
May Be Deported
LOS ANGELES <AP l -A
79·year-old Seal Beach man. ac
cused or being an official of a
Nail government ln Yugoslavia.
baa been 'ordered by a federal
judge to submit to up lo four
hours or dally questionlna by
government attorneys In prep-
aration fordepartation hearings.
Andrija Artukovlc's attorney,
Ronald Bonaperte, had aought..lo
limit questioning of his client to
one hour per day. citing a doc·
tor's opinion that his cUenl Is ln
poor health. But U.S. District
Judge Irving HJll cited another
doctor's opinion Monday that
Artukovic Is well enough to
answer questions for s hort
periods or lime.
Artukovic, who fl ed to the
United States In 1948 after lhe
Communists came to power, has
been accused-by the Yugosla·
vlan government of ordering
1750,000 Serbs and 20,000 Jewa put
OftANM COAST
DAILY PILOT
TlteOt ..... ~tO.ll•l't ... ,.U~wlliOt\~ ---~-··-·-tw• .. Or-CH\I l'Ullll\NftO'-'t "9Mrll• .. I-.... ...... _,, -.,.. "''°""' ,,,,,_, ... CMI• -· .._ ...... -fl ....... _..,_ ..... .,, ................ "--"''""'(.'-..
•"'9•••-l"'110nt•tMMtt-s.4 ....... -~ .. n. ...... --.............. ,, .. llO WullOY-Ce .. a-.., C•lll .. nl•·-
11-N WNf ~Hk:tlttl •...S P\Ml\Nir
J1d. """"' Yl(•f'~n11nd0t-•~ ,
,._ •• 11 ..... 1
lelllor
~ .. .......... ...... 1 ........ .
~ ...... ._ ........
... l\l .... Me....U..14li!ln
ct1111f!M ~ ....... ...,.,. _._c_ ....
to death when be served as
security minister or the Nul·
controlled Republic of CroaUa
durln1 World War II.
Judie Hlll said Artukovlc, a
resident ol Seal Beach 'a Surfaldc
Colony. must give depoelUona to
attorneys for the U.S. lmmlCJ'a·
tlon and Naturalization Service.
The INS '-lso 1ou1ht lo have Artukovic Cleported ln t.be 19508.
but a cowt ordered a at.ay of de·
portaUon In 1959.
The .covemment has claimed
it bas obtained new evidence
about the cue. Bonaparte said
auch evidence has not been
made available to him and told
reporters, "All they want to do
ta harass the man until he dles."
Health Board
Ey~Newport
Center Plan
A proposal to build an outpa·
llent surgical center In Newport
Center will come before the
Orange County Health Planning
Council Wednesday in Newport
Beach. Sur1tcare Aasoclates, Inc.
wants to buUd a $1 million faclll ·
ty. Spokesman Raymond Berl
says he believes the f actllly
could lo\Ver costs or minor sur~
gery by up f.o 60 percent.
However. the council staff ha.s
rffOmmended clenylnc the re-
quest on the balll thal It would
dupllcate existing out·patlenl
facilities at a number of area
hoapltala. tncludln1 Hoas
M"emor1al. '
The hear11\1 wtll be1ln at 1:80
p.m . ln City Council Chambers,
3$00 Newport Blvd.. Newport
Beach.
Jewels Stolen
NEW YORK <Al»
llilllonalre Johns. Samuel& m
reported 1llver alld Jewelry
worth lll00,000 ltolta rrom h.11
Jlanbaltu townbouae. pollc• 11Jd Mond.ay.
prisoners convicted by military
tribunals.
Iran's state radio said the
properly, estimated to be valued
at hundreds of millions o(
dollars, was being transferred to
the Pahlavi foundation "for the
uae of rell1ious, educational,
social and welfare organi.zations
organb.ed by the people and run
by them."
Palace sources said the divest·
ed property Included the sbab's
vaat domestic boldin11 In com-
pany stocks, banks. factories
and land.
The moves were announced as
the nation awaited word on when
the ahah intends to go abroad on
an extended vacation to take OP·
poaitlon pressure oft the new
clvlU•n IJOvemment of Shahpour
Bakhtiar.
The national Pars news agen·
cy aaid the 286 prisoners had
been held at Tehran's central
police department prtson "ror
various o(fenses" and had been
pardoned by the ahah. Pars at·
trlbuted the announcement to
the tmperlal Iranian armed
forces tribunal.
The announcement also said
the pardon of oU,er prlsooers
was belq atudled. The covem·
ment prevtously said there were
about 200 persona in pf1son ~n·
I
F ,....P ... A J . . . ..
ANTHONY. •
1Anthc>Qy did not dJaeu.ss the
pendln1 appeal when be took
over hla dutlea today.
In a brter 1peech he aaid the
coual)' 'a rnoai lmPortanl prob-
lem• wUI be tn provldln1 al
fordable bouatnl. paylq for In·
dlaent health care. eoJvtns prob-
1 em a at the airport and
contlnuJftf counly bualnes1 un·
der ''the new flaeal rulet we were stv.n after Propo1llion 18."
Antltoel1 a1lo aat(t mt will be ,.., In wlaleb be worb tbr "a ratr rttum ol the IDOM1 Orans• . CountlalJI Mnd tot.be atate Wa
r-ar."
-
vlcted of non·capital pollllcal ot ·
renses, but today's announce·
ment did not specify whether the
pardoned group included these
political prisoners.
The divestiture was seen as
another step aimed at removlng
the taint of corruption from lhe
royal ramily, 64 of whose mem·
bers have gone abroad since
political turmoil mounted here
laal fall.
This follows a previous royal
decree issued last September in
whlcb Lhe shah prohibited mem-
. bers of bis ramUy from having
business dealings with the gov·
ernment or from controlling
charitable organizations.
But his views were disputed
by Assistant Airport Manager
Barbara Fox who described the
use of the fees as a sound finan· cial plan. ·
Ms. Fox ea rlier warned
supervisors that some or the car·
riers -she didn't specify which
ones -had objected to the in·
crease claiming the money was
being raised lo "pre.fund litiga·
lion."
She denied that allegation
while acknowledging that the
lawsuits filed over airport noi se
have cost the airport and the
county ·'hundreds of thousands
of dollars.'•
The trial, on misdemeanor
·charges. wtll be held in Harbor
M unicipaJ Court.
Last week police arrested
Timothy J oseph Ropchan, 26, of
Orange, and Terry Hurr. 26, of
Costa Mesa. The last suspect.
Da wn Francisco. 24, or Costa
Mesa. surrendered herself to the court Monday.
All were employees of Control
Co mponents, 2567 Main St..
Irvine, Crom where police say
the ba lloons we re launched
Thouah the balloons created
several spectacular fireball ex·
ploaions, no alrplanes were af.
reeled, police said. •
ff ickor7 .fclrms· 01 01(10
Gm YOUR GET·TOGITHR
. TOGETHER ••• WITH
CHEDDAR
111ow'a the time of yeer to have tOme funl If you're
baekpecidng, boating, crosM:OUntrv atcling. boWt game
wttchlno ~ Juet enjoying an 9119nlno together your
get-together wm be reelly rrwtmonible with t~ temi:>tlng
\Ute of Hickor\I Farms of Ohio CheekW We're r.atunno
she or vour ftvO<ltes now and. be9' of ell. vou can SAVE
S 1.00 with the OOUpOn below t...l Hld«>ry FM~<>f Ohio&
get vour oet·toQether together with~ "
---------------------~----all' 1Na C..,.. _. T• II Te ••• ff fclcorJ ,.._i~,.
Wetlclff PIG•· Fashloe l.a.d. M .......... , Ylllap
·$100 OFF .::::=~:.:~:.: II& IAIH APPL! Pl!
MEW YOU WHITI MIDGET SHARP.
• . ~ H~ YOU COLOI• SMOUY IM
31, 1979 • Umlt one eoupon pnr family pl P!ll!M.-.. ..
7
r r ~
it •'\' 1 11'1 \. I I I I I ' : : : ' • \ I · ' I ;
Laguna/South Coast
' ..
Your Hometo wn
D ally Newsp a p er
VOL. 72, NO. 9, 3 SECTtONS, 21 PAGES-~-----ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
-------------------------------------------------
TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1979 TEN CENTS
• U.S. Lim.its Aid to · Slide V .. 1ctims
a1 'MITCll~--='t•r•I ttuctioo aid •ould
Ot • ...., ...... ,... not be fottMom
Th f ral sovernmenl ba£ Tbe ne · ram 1 n fiU1'J>ri'lt'I
dbappointed vld m of lh Oct. ao .atat .and city offlrlula who
2 I nd.a1lde ln ttlu b&rd Can>-on •en courillnl on appro"lmately who h one day to be abl to 12 mlllk>n trom the fed ral aov
r build thetr hom 1 on th ahde unment to-tv fllually r pair
torn land In La una ach. atr ta and anatall \ltllll lfl
Ollachlls from tho Federal Dl11 Rlueblrd KnoJIJ IO hClm 1 muy
aster A I tance Admlni trallon once •aaln tM! built on th~ land
contacted stat~ o m r1t'ncy Th clt,y allrmptt<I to llnlc th<>
services dtrertor Alex Cun October sbde to tht> heav) rom
~ ninaham Monday to t ll him rail the prcvlou winter To aup·
port thal contention, lb4! city
ubmltted can tfMtepth 1 lottcal
rtport th t howa the rains or
Junuury and f<'ebruary caused
th .Bluebird Cunyon slideii.
Thertfore. the city reasoned.
the Bl~rd di. aster ls linked to
th dlsuter ~lared by P"c:esl·
d~nt Carter e•rly last year.
The La1una land11llde was also
declared a dlswsler by the pres!
dent, but a1d wus limited to
omurgency work. with the state
and city char.Med wfth penna·
nent repairs to &he 3.5 acre site.
But City M1tn11er Fred
Solomon aald today the qlty tatn·
not pttk up the 40 percent cost Lo
the city for restoration.
"It '1 Impossible... he said.
addina that budaet constraints
under Proposition 13 make re-
construction of Blueblrd Knolls at
s tat e and city expense
"r&diclllous to even con·
template."
Federal aid, according to the
latest ne om the Ft>AA. as
limited to emergency bullres.'>·
ing of the slide area. expect°"-to
cost around $500,000.
Approval for the first stage or
that work was received verbally
from the federal agency only
last week.
But state-and city officials st y
they are not about to d rop the 1s-su~. Cunningham. director of the
s tate's Ofrlce or EmerJ'ency
Services, fired orr e letter to the
FDAA asDJllng that agency's
denial of reconstruction funds.
·'The State or California takes
exception to F()AA's J1::11idi a .. ~
we reel the city, as well as its
citizens, is being dealt a great
anJustice ... Cunningham wrote
in appealing the decision.
··vour letter In no way speuks
to the facts presented by the city
or the geologist report. In ract, it
<See SIJDE, Page AZ>
Planes Come Cl~se in San Diego
PipeUne Pers pe«!ti1'e
Construction creWS1)Uttlng a 3.5 mile-sewer line .through
Laguna Beach hope this black cat doesn't brinJl them
bad luck. They've got enough of it with thi,s month's
rains. which have slowed work on the Aliso Water
Management Agency project that will link Laguna's
sewer lines to the Aliso Beach outfall in about three
years. Pipelines along Glenneyre Street create interest-
ing perspective for motorists forced into two lanes on
the busy Le:tgu na Beach thoroughfare.
In Dana Point
Improvement-O~'d
For Coast Highway
South Coast Regional Com·
' mission members have ap-~· proved a $32,300 faceurt for r: Pacific Coast Highway through
r.
Dana Point to lmprove traffic
safety. ·
, Ttie project will include ~ ellm'tnalioo of on-street parking
on both sides of the street from
Street of the Green Lant.em Lo r De l Obispo Street. Left tum
lanes will be added.
Commi11Sioners spent llltle
, tlme Monday debating a need
r for the street Improvements,
\
based on a count of 76 accidents
on \he stretch Involved In the
firallO months ot last year.
CalTrJnS omt'lalJ In Jolnln&
the county ln recommendtn1 the
re-striptna noted 55 of \hose col·
lltlona could be attributed t.o
haiardous left tum actions.
No tt0n0mlc tmpact la llkely
to r esult which would hurt
downtown rcbanta lf the 125
...
1Coast Highway ..on-street park·
Ing spaces are eliminated, com·
missioners were t.old. •
Many are currently unused,
the commission stare said , and
most commercial deve lopment
in the area Is new and was· re·
quired IO provide ore-street park·
101.
Most hazardous locations on
Coaat Highway for left tuma at
the present time include Street
of the Silver Lantern; Street of
the Blue Lant.em, and Malaga
Drive tl was noted.
Hortr.ontal and vertical curves
ln Cout Hll)lway at those loca·
tlont severely restrlct visual
1l1ht of oncoming traffic for moaortsu trying t.o make left
tum a.
Left turn Pockets were In·
atalled at the highway's ln·
teraectJON with Street of the
Golden Lantern and Street o( the
Violet Lantern, markedly
dffreaalna collt.tona.
~ ' ,_..
+
' .
500 F e et
Separates
Aircraft
SAN DIEGO <AP > -A Con-
tinental 727 pilot is reported t.o
have cons1dert>d evasive action
to avoid a single-engine Cessna
which was said to have come
within 500 feet of the Jet as the
Jetliner approached Lindbergh
for a landing. ·
But a Federal Aviation Ad
ministration official said today
the incident involvmg the com·
mercial jetliner and the s mall
plane near Lindbergh Field is
not being officially classified as
a near-miss.
Jack Gregory. a.. Continental
spokesman in Los Angeles. said
no evasive action was taken by
the urfidentlf1ed pilot of flight 81
and no official complaint was
tiled about the incident.
Norm Bell Sterling, an FAA
official here. satd he taUced with
the Continental pilot during the
incident, which occurred about
noon.
Acconling to Sterling, the pilot
aaid "in his oplruon, the Cessna
was too close; he told us 500
reet. ..
"We asked him if he wanted to
file a (llid·a i r r eport but he
didn"t." said Sterling. "Instead.
he Cited with the National
Aer onautics and Spuce Ad -
ministration a generalized com·
plaint."
Sept. 25. a Pacific Southwest
Airlines 727 jet approaching
Lindbergh for a landing collided
with a Cessna, killing 144
persons in the worst air disaster
in U.S. history.
No final cause for lhal dis
aster has been announced by
federal investigators. but the
FAA has ordered stricter night
procedures at busy Lindbergh
Field.
According to Gregory, "The
lower advised everyone in the
area about a single e ngine
Cessna in the general area Mon·
day. All our captain did was
stay al hi s e1titude a moment
and check it on hi s radar. Our
ground statlon said no evasive
action was taken."
State Budget
~opos8.I Seen
Cutting Jobs
· &,ACRAMENTO <A Pl -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr .. wlll propose
a $19.8 blJllo n budget that
elimlnptes 5,140 state Jobs and
abolisfles 15 licensing boards,
the Sacrament.o Union rcp0rted
today.
The newspaper also detailed a
$1 .2 billion stale income tax cut
Brown m entioned in his In•
augural address Monday, quot·
Ing figures it said came rrom an
advance copy of the budget.
T he Democratic 1overnor'"
s tart rerused commefll until the
b4dget Is submitted to the state
Legislature on Wednesday.
The account quotes Brown as
saying in an Introduction t.o the
budget that the spending plan ls
a blueprint for "leaner govern·
ment" and Is "substantially
below all proposed constltuUonal
1peflding limits. But It keepa
faith with the vision and con·
sclente or California" by buJld·
Ing ror the ruture In the areas of
arta, affirmative action, urban
parks, •w~mticeshlp tralntn1,
enforcement of labor laws and
housing. it 1aJd.
Amona budaet highlights In
the preview of the budget.
-State personal Income tax
<See BUOOIET, Pate A2>
S~l•or• and Friend
Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Riley
takes to the podium after being sworn , in
Monday for a new term on the Orange
County Board of Supervisors. Mrs. Har·
riett Wieder. the new 2nd Di str ict
s upervisor and the county's first woman
supervisor . holds her g randdaughter,
Samora Tauber, 2. on her lap as she
listens to Riley. For details on Monday's
ccremonws. see additional stories and
photos, Pages A3 and /\9.
Supervisors Elect
Anthony Chairman
Philip Apthony or the First
District wa~rtimously ele<:t·
ed chairman or the Orange
County Board or Supervisors to-
day ,
Anthony replaces Firth Dis-
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley
who has been the board's presld·
mg officer for the past two
years.
Supervisor Ralph Cla rk was
elected vice cha irman .
Laurence Schmit. who lost his
seat to Harriett Wieder, was
vice chairman in 1978. •
Anthony. who has been ·a
member of the board ror two
years. assumes hls new post un·
der a legal cloud.
On July 1, 1977. Anthony and a
fe ll o w Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich were indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on
allegations or campaign law
violations.
An lndictmen( is a formal
charge made against a person
by a grand jury. It does not
establish guilt or innocence.
Last March Orange County
<See ANTHONY, Page A2> .
o.llJ 1'1"4 Staff .....
TO CHAIR SUPERVISORS
First District'• Anthony
Love Trial
Actor, Ex-lover Me et in Court .
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Ei&ht
years after lhey called It -quits,
Oscar-winnlng act.or Lee Marvin
and his former lover. Michelle
Triola Marvin, met in court today
for a landmark trial Involving
love. money and the changilli
morality or American couple8.
Jury aelecUon was Lo begin to-
day in the auit flied by MlJS
Marvin, who legally chanaed
her name while dbe llved with
Manto. She ls suing for the
Utne eompenu\lon a wife
would 1et In a divorce -half the
property acwmulatcd durln1
their slx years tc18elhcr -or $1
million.
They were never married and ... \ ,. . ' ,
Marvin Is contesting the right to
use his name. .
Marvin and his attorneys were
expected to argue that the mere
ract that Marvin never man1ed
Miss Marvin shows he wanted to
avoid the respon.slb1llties and ob-
ligallorus of ma rriage.
Marvin has filed a countensuit
asking $1 million from Miss
Marvin ror compensation for the
compan ions hip a nd other
services he provided during
their relationship.
"I w11 like o wife to Lee." she
has aald " . . l took a care of
Lee like h e was a boby
chicken ··
(Sff MA~VlN, faae AJ)
life of Boy
• Perikd if
laetrile Cut?
PLYMOUTH, Mass. <AP > -/\
Mexican doctor who used
Laetrile to treat cancer patients
s ays the lire or 3-ycar-o ld
Leukemia v1ct1m Chad Green
cou ld be endangered Ir has
chemotherapy treatments arc
stopped.
··w e cannot n sk the lire of the
boy by wit hdrawing lh e
che motherapy,·· said Dr.
Ernesto Contreras, who runs a
clinic m TiJuana. Mexico
He testified for Chad"s
parents. Diana a nd Gerald
Green of Scituate, in their effort
to win the ruzht to decade how
tSee LAETRILE, Page A2)
Coast
Weath er
Chance of rain decreas-
ing to near 10 percent
tonight and Wednesday.
Fog night and early morn·
ing hours . Little tern·
perature c hanges with
lows tonight 46 to 52, highs
Wednesday 57 to 63.
INSIDE TODA 't'
An~ Count11 bauineu
• executive itm paid $1,dl,000
rn 1977. t~ most of any of the
nahon'a busineu leodtta .ur-
wyed. fi'or ht. identit!J and
otMr detail.t, 1H POQfl BS.
•• ., .. ••-4 .. ., ., .. ... ....
, I
• l ~
AJ DAtLY PILOT USC
Feg C'o•l•fl J
•
Today'1 rain, th tall tmd ol a
tardy alorm, wa1 xpecled to
di 1lp1tt lh1I an moon. maktna
way for PoC"tll of d•llM fOI
WednHday mornll\I •lona lht
cout, a Natlon•l Weeth•
Serv'" qoti man Id.
-Mor tl\in-a 1oth ot an lnl'h ol
rain wail"f'COrded In mo.l part&
or Oranrt CoWltV today by 8 a.m., 1th the only madot prob
lt1m a San Diqo Jil"eeway lralfk
anarl. No additional allppq
• re reponfd ln th landslide
areaa of 90ulh m coutal Orana
County.
&own Talk .
Oelights
OOPCBJDp
SACRAMENTO <AP l -
Republican leaders are gleefully
welcoming Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. to their party after his in -
augural speech, and some dis·
gruntled DemocraUc liberals •P·
parently think be belOflll there.
"It WU awful. I do not think
poor people should be left out In
the cold by a governor or pres!·
dent," A5sembly Health Com·
mlttee Chairman Art Torrea, ().
Los Angeles, said af\er attend·
Ing the televised address
Monday night
"He Joined the Republican
Party and we're dellahted. It's
GOVERNOR URGES
TAX CUT -P•ge A5
the moat conservative speech
given in Sacramento since
Ronald Reagan left," chortled
Senate GOP leader Wllllam
Campbell of Whittier. Some Democrats did praise
the tone of the 20-mlnute speech
and several Republicans ques·
Uoned Brown's sincerity as a
budget-cutter.
··until a bill ls signed Into law,
I believe nothing," said Senate
Republican Caucus Chairman
H.L. Richardson of Arcadia. He
said Brown was "on a pre~lden·
tf al treadmill. n
But most of the reaction cen·
le red on Brown '1 stress on fiacal
Issues -a propoeed Sl billion
tax cut. more verbal embrace or
the Proposition 13 tax revolt,
and a constitutional ban on
federal1 deficit spending -and
the scant attention he paid to
social problems.
·'I was disappointed that there
was no more attention given to
human needs," sold Sen. Alan
Sieroty, D-Los Angeles.
Campbell, noting that Brown
called Proposition 13 "a can of
worms" before last June's elec·
• tion . observed, "A can of worms
is now a gourmet meal."
Fro.P,..-AJ
BUDGET •••
credits would be lncreased to
Sl25 ror individuals and $250 for
couples, for a total savings lo
taxpayers or $915 mllllon on 1979
taxes. 'Those tax credits would
be received on returns filed ln
early 1980.
The permanent level of the
credits, which taxpayers deduct
from their total lax bills before
sending in checks or filing for
refunds. Is $27 for individuals
and S54 for couples. But the
credits on 1978 returns were In·
creased t.o $100 and $200 In a one-
time relief provision of a tax cut
signed into law by Brown laal
year.
-An additional $210 million
would be earmarked for extra
tax benefits for renten1, who
were left out of the Proposition 13 tax cut bonanza last year.
DAILY PILOT
T"° 0. ..... C:-1 o.ily l'llOI, •ff~ ... '<~ l\r-l>'_ltMl ..._~I, _1_ .. , ... 0f_ c--.......~ ........... ,_ .. . ...... _ ~ ""°""' ,,....,, .., c .. ...
~ .. ..._, llMctl ............... '"'"'"-' IAl!ftVtltty,tMM.~lffefl/to.lll>c-1 A
.................... 11 ••••• .-.-... ~~·· Ti. prlfteo"°' ,...,.......,. ,._ ""' • -· .. , """'·c.··-· c .. ....,,. •• ,.,.. .....,'=i'.:. =-, ... " °"""' Vkl ............ l-~t1""'-
THM41•1l-,,,.,.,
n::-..:.~ ... ~
CIWltt... .... llldllM "· ... .,.,.,,,..,.Me,...1"'t"'"'"
I I
Caltromia Hiabway Pa~ Of·
llrtr• 1 d a aemHruck akldded
near W.-tmlnatAtr AvftlU• when
U.. dn~ btutd too quJckly on
wet pa\'elnc'ftt1 Jacknlrlnc the ri1
Ud bWlr1nc amw lane tratnc. ---m"'" C,ommut.era to &he Lo& An.1 l
are e a lriJ
for nearly t"'o houn, otndala
uld.
L•auna Beach police were
kttt>ptna a ctoae watch on
Blu bird Can¥on t.hta momln1
wht~ a n~ld of pluUc c:overtd
a t•Plnl hole In Oriole Drtv
after Prfday'1 mud alldt.
Orljfy,..... ..... ,...
..
~e Capt1trano-La1una Beach
Regional Occupational Program
1overnlng board will be asked
tonl1ht to dllCOflUnue a portion
of ill~ training pro1ram ·
whlch not qualify for stat
nnanclll Nlmburtement.
Tonllhl'• ftOP board meetint
la scheduled to begln at 7 o'clock~
In tbe Laauna Beach Unified
School Dlatrlct board room,
located at district offices, 550
8lu_111Qllt St
HOP admlnlturatlve con·
aultant Dr. Donald Wheeler said
be will reeommend tonleht that
the board cut It.a Cooperative
Vocational Educational Pro·
aram. ln which MS students are
currenUyenrolled. Geo~ expect no fUrtMr
1Uppap from today'• &torm bul
would not prtdlct the re.ult ol
another Pactnc 1torm expected
Thunday .
PUITIC 9HHT8 COVIR SECTION Ofl 8LUE,UU~ CANYON LAN08LIO! IN LAGUNA ll!ACH
Hopea for RebuHdlng Shatter.cl by Ae)ectlon F~ Federal Government
~~~~~~~~~~~
Ir Wheeler's recommendation
Is foltowed, ROP students will
. no longer be able to work for Pl>'
whlle they recelve school credits
for Improving their Job skills. Just to the south, officlall in
Saa Clemente aald no addlUon.al
sli ppage was noticed Ill
Sborecliffs Mobile Country Club
where a 900-loot·loni flNUff
opened lut mont.h, tbrtatenina
a half-dozen mobt1e homes.
f',....PageAJ Seniors Seek
Building Use
In .Clemente
Still to continue would be the
major portion of the ROP
· counes, which provide an on the
SUDE AID ••. {ob uns*d 1ntemsblp, in addi·
Ion to clalllroom Instruction, fot1
high school studenta and adults. "There's a chance of more.
light rain from a Pacific storm
by Thuraday, · · a spokoaman said, "but then again, it may
take lonaer t.o get here.•'
Today's 1torm, predicted to
arrive Monday, dropped .12 of
an Inch ln the Cotta Meaa and
Newport Beach area by 8 a.m.
The seuon'a total reached 9.08
.since July l, compa~ to 7A8
inches by the same 'aate last
year.
Huntiniton Beach meaaured
.12 of an lnch, Laauna Nlcuel
reached only .03 of an Inch and
Santa Ana measured .11 of an
inch.
Santa Ana's rainfall for the
season reached 7.46 Inches, com·
pared to seven inches on thll
date last season. The averaae
for the rainy season by thl1 date
is recorded as 4. 72 for a normal
year, an Orange County Flood
Control District spokesman said
Ignores the question entirely. If
you did not propose to take the
.ceologlat's report under;. con·
slderatlon. why. then. did you
intlat upon It. in the be81nning?"
Cunnlnitaam asked.
And Clty Councll members
hao been In contact wlth
re41>re1entatlves from
Con1reuman Robert Badham 's
office in an effort to aet him ln·.
volved in the controversy.
Councilwoman Sally Bellerue
aald today that ahe and Mayor
Jack McDowell have talked with
Bad ham '1 office.
"We need to hold f\lrtber talks
to elicit help from blm," Mrs.
Bellet\Ml Old, addlng the council
wlll alao contact U.S. Senators
S .J. Hayakawa and Alan
Cranaton.
She aaid clty officials will be
speaktnc with a federal
aeololilt expected· to visit . the
land1Hde area today
( Pilot Logbook J ..
Smile, Officer;
You're 'Pooned'
By STEVE MITCllEl,L
Of llle o.lty ...... SUtt
WHO WOULD BELIEVE IT, a CtiQ counterculture
publication jabbing the police establishm~nl. Poon #3 is
out
Full of barbs. heavy humor and formerly unpublished
episodes involving Laguha 's finest, the third undersround
edition of "Laguna Lampoon" ls makin1 the rounds at the
police department. drawing guffaws and grimaces with
every reading.
It seems no one really knows who
the publishers of the "Insider" satire
sheet are. At least no one's talking. But
It's for sure that some high-ranking,
and some not-so-high-ranking olficers
would llke t.o find out.
For the pena or the Poon publishers
spare no one, and rank -apparently -
has no privileges.
Inside the latest four-pa1e edition
MITatau. are anecdotes. rumors, quotable quotes
and moraJe-oooeUnc measages lntended to keep the troo~
-at least part of them -In high spirits.
THE LAMPOON STAFF is straightlorward in ouUin·
Ing it.a purpoee. Rl&hl off the bat the mlmeoaraphed
periodical states, "ll 11 not our Intention to cause any un-
necessary embarraaament or humiliation to anyone.
"For this reason. only necessary embarraument and
humiliation wtU be included ... "
For example, under a section entitled "Traffic
Comer," this anecdote unfolds: •
••Officer -leaves his 1~troll unit runnlng for three
hours. He took all or hla 1ear out like a cood trooper, but
forgot to shut the motor off. Good work - . Officer -
finally shuts It off at 0300 hours.•'
BUT IT APPEARS even members of the detective
bureau have occa1lonal lapses or memory:
"It has come to the Poon'• attention that a member of
our elite detective bureau, while responding with the
normal contingency of management personnel to <a recent
crime scenel, parked an unmarked detecUve unit on the
street, performed hla bu.lness at the crime scene, rode
back to the PD with someone else, and left the unit at the
scene for a period of not le.a than nve workln1 days.
"The routine operaUon of the PD and our eicceptlonal
system of issuing and controlling otticlal Police EquJp·
menl did not reveal the missin1 unit," the Poon continues,
addln& \bat a "•harp.eyed" detective finally notJeecl the
car at \be scene.
LAGUNA BEACH OFFICERS have been mingling
with the aeolollata out ln Bluebird Canyoa tor the past few
months, ao lt'1 only natural that they would plck up some
of the turf terminology. Poon JS outlines this ln a section
called "Soec:laliied Law Enforcement," and offen a re·
ward to the ol'flcer who can define 1uch words as "Dip sto-pe~ slide att<». head scarp, tr•ben. sUde plane and re·
acUyat.ed SOB." .
But blttemeu Cl'ffPI lnto the camataderte u tbe Poon
Uata chq11 In the department 1lnct Propoaltion 13.
"Only le1ally req"lred equipment on p0Uce units wilt
be kept 1n 1ood repalr," the Uat belina. "No overtime tor
1n)'thln1 lt11 than a1d11a1ter, '' it ec>nttnuea. "All dtnLl1 as
lon1 aa tMy don't rub aaalnst the tlre, wm not be ftxed. •
"Coat ol Uvi~ ral•H have been 10·22ed. ( Polic. radlo
code for canceled.)"
REACTION TO t.ht clandeltln. pubUcaUon baa bHn
mlxed, police sook•m•n aay. '1klN there'• 10me aour
arapes -eepecfally by aom• ot the Olftc.n named In the
Poon." oot otflc.r aald. ''But morale'• really bttn y
lattl7, and t.h1a rt•ll1 ean 't do ~ but btlp."
So the next ume rou ... a 1 •IUD• Bffch p.trolmua 1n
hla car, and bt'a amlllq, he probablt J&llt 1'Mc1 U.. lat.tit
edition ol the Lapna Lampoon.
"JC we can get some move·
ment out of him. then fine." she
said. "But we're still going to
get in touch with our represen·
tatlves."
Meanwhile. Laguna City
Manager Fred Solomon said he
is following up Cunningham's
letter to the federal ·~encv. "They made only a .Passing
reference to our geology.Niport."
Solomon said. "That's wbars so
frustraUn3.
·'They led ua to believe they
would reconsider It on the find·
lngs of our geologist. They even
held off on a decision until we sub·
milted the results of those find·
lbgs. Why request those tlndings
lt you're not going to use them:·
he said.
But former homeowners in
Bl\!~ Knolls face an extra ' bur n as a result of Monday's
news trom the federal govern·
ment. ,
If the slide was tied ortlcially
to last winter's rains. as the city
had hoped, those homeowners
would be cllglblo for lower 13
percent l loans from the Small
Business Administration.
But President Carter placed
an Oct. 1 deadllne on those low
interest loans-just one day
before the landslide. SBA loans
are now tabbed at more than 7
percent. which will doubtless cause a hardship to many of the
22 famlliet1 who lost their homes
and land to the slide.
Rep. Bldham promlaed tut
year to initiate a bill In Conaress
seeking lower SBA loans.
Congress reconvenes next Mon-
day, but Badham was not
available to comment on his
plans to aid Bluebird victims.
A spokesman in Badham's
• Washington office s aid the
Congress man ls en route to
California today.
f',....Pa,,JAJ
MARVIN •••
The case. which has already
created legal precedents on ap·
peal, is expected to have a na·
tlonal Impact. Many others in-
vo I ved In non-marital rela-
tlonshll)I have flied similar suits
alleging they are e ntitled . to
everything from pension rights
to alimony. "You could aay It ailed.a ev·
eryone who has a date,'' says
Marvtn Milchelaon, Miss
Marvin's attorney, who has been
Involved in the case during seven
yea rs ofUtiaatlon.
San Clemente parks com·
missioners wtll be asked toniaht
to sup~rt a San Clemente
Seniors propoeal t.o use two un· occupied city,-owned Avenlda del
Mar buildings for expanded ac·
tivltles for elderly city residents.
The commission meeting Is
scheduled to begin ·at 7 :30 p.m.
• tn the Ole Hanson Room at the
San Clemente Community
Center. too N. Calle Seville.
The two bu11dlngs which the
seniors organization has t1r<>-posed to use are localed just
north of the community center.
where activities are currenUy
scheduled ·dally for people over
55. blxhe city, purchased the prop-
erty where the buildings are
tocatled for a proposed county
branch library. But passage of
Proposition 13 has postponed con·
structionorthe library.
Alao on tonight's parks com·
mission agenda ls a report on a
school and park site proposed for
the RanchO San Clemente de·
velopment on the 2.000 acre Vis·
beek Ranch.
f rot11 Page Al
ANTHONY. •
j uperlor Court Judge Philip
Schwab dismissed all but one
count in the indictments on the
grounds that only ei&hl mem·
bers of the grand jury heard all
the testimony in the case.
Pd embers of the state Attorney
General's staff are appealing
the dismissal.
Anthony did not discuss the
pending appeal when he took
over his duties today.
In a briet speech he said the
count).' 's most Important prob-
lems will be In providing af·
fordable houslng, paying for In·
dlgent health care. solving prob·
lems at the airport and
continuing county business un·
der ·'the new tiscal rules we were given after Proposition
13 ..•
Anthony also said 1979 wlll be
year In ft.hich he works for "a
fair return or the money Orange
Countlans send to the state thls
year."
Wheeler said h·e did not know
today how mu'ch of the pro·
gram '5 expense will be borne by
local taxpayers. But he said thal ~5 1tudent11 enrolled In the
cooperative work program will
receive credit for their work,
even If the board discontinued
u,e procram. ,. ...........
LAETRILE. •
Chad's Utneas should be treated.
"I stated very clearly that
chemotherapy should continue
aa the baalc treatment with
metabolic therapy. Including the
use ol Laetrile, to improve the
quality of the boy's life and.
poulbly, prolonlilina his re·
m ission," Contreras said in
describing his testimony Mon·
day before a closed court hear·
ing. Judge Guy Volterra of
Plymouth Superior Court is re·
viewing his April 18 order re·
qulrlng the chemotherapy and
making Chad a temporary ward
or the state lor purposes of treat·
ment. During the treatment, he
is still living with his parents.
~
The Greens are trying to re-
gain legal custody of Chad in an
effort to decide his treatment •
themselves.
The couple o~posed chemotherapy for their son in
earlier court fights and argued
he should be treated only with
Laetrl1e and a special diet. But
now they Indicate they might
permit the chemotherapy to con·
tinue.
Driver OK
Mter Crash
A 33-year-old San Juan
Capistrano man esc1&ped serious
injury when his car careened out
of control and smashed into a
brld1e pllln& Monday on the
Camino Capistrano onramp ot
the San Diego Freeway in San
Juan.
A Califomla Highway Patrol
spokeaman said Jay Clauber ap-
parently drove too fut on the
lrffway onramp and lost con·
trol, 1t.rildng the cement piling.
He was treated and released
at San Clemente General
ffoapltaJ following the 7:30 p.m.
accident.
fliclco17 fcarms · Of ONIO
GETS YOUI GET-TOÐB
TOGITHR .•• WITH
CHEDDAR
Now·1 me tlm9 of year to have tome fun! If YoU re
backpacking. boating. croM-<lOUntry lkllng, bowl game watcn1no 0t lust enlOYlno •n evening together . . YoU'
Ott-together wilt be really mtmorllble with the temotlng
ttstt ol HidlofV Farins of Ohk>A °'9ddef. we·re fettunng
1b1 ol Yo1Jr fl\'Oft'-now •nd. best of all. YoU can SAVE
11 oo with the couoon t>etow. Ltt Hl<*OtY Fvma ol OhiOll
get your get-together together wttfl Cheddar!
---------------------------~nih~ ... , •• , ••••
ff fckorJ fGnnsi~,o
Weetdff Plaa-F_..• llliiiMI-Ma ....... 1 .....
$100
.,. ............ , .... _.
OFF ........................ .
/] ... IAIH ~ APPLI Ptl
MIW YOll WHIU MMIT SHAIP.
MIW YOU COLOfB SMOllY llAI
--!Iii
T'9d!y. January 9, 1979 s OAJLY P1LOT t\3
Riley .Praises Coping With Prop. 13
Copl"' wtlb the flnt year'•
flnandal lmpact ot Propcd.ioa
lS w.Jthout lo1ln1 e11enU1I
Hrvleea waa rated Oraace Cou;:~rnment '• top ac· c:om t for 1178 today.
Outaolna Supervtaou
eh1lnnan Tbomu Rlle)'. ln Ida
BACK OH THE BENCH
• Newport Judge Ookt9tefn
Ousted
Judge Gets
New Post
By KATHY CLANCY Ol IM 0..ly ~lleC $\<lff
Leanard Golds tein of Newport
Beach. ousted Orange County
Superior Court judge, was un-
e mployed less than 24 .1ours
Monday when the governor put
him back on the bench.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. ap-
pointed Goldstein to the North
Orange County Municipal Court
on the same day that ronner
Deputy District Attorney Oretta
Sears took over the superior
court sea• she won from Gold·
stein in theJuneelection. 'h..
"I am thrilled to be ao1e lo
continue serving the community
in a judiciaJ capacity,.. Gold·
stein said late Monday, "and I
must say l admire the governor
for ttis sincerity and boldness."
When asked about publl.shed
reports that the governor plans
t.o elevate him t.o a spot on the
district court of appeal later.
Goldstein said he'd heard
nothing of such a plan.
"The governor doesn't consult
me about his appointme nts ,'·
Goldstein said. "H he has
something in mind he hasn't
shared that with me."
Goldstein, 47, will be paid
$47.497 for his new municipal
court posl. about $4.000 less than
he earned as a superior court
JUdge.
Superior Court Judge Robert
Green also expressed pleasure
at Goldstein's appointment, say-
in~ it drew "tremendous sup-
port" from both attorneys and
judges.
Green said he and Goldstein
had been in private practice
to~ether in Santa Ana in the
1960's. He called Goldstein "ex-
tremely well respected" while
he served on the superior court
bench
Goldstein's last day on the
bench was Friday and he begins
duties in.the Fullerton municipal
court today.
Goldstein, a former deputy al·
torney general and s~ ad·
ministralive law judge, saicf1M?
had been planning to go inlo
private practice after leaving
Superior Court.
He explained his ties with the
Brown adminisl~tion stretch
back to the governor's first term
when Goldstein was with state
government and was able "to be
of some assistance to the new
administration."
He was first a ppointed to
North Orange County Municipal
Court by Brown in 1976 then
~levated by Brown to superior
court in urn.
Goldstein talked Monday
about his June election defeat
but wished his former oppooent
well.
or his defeat. 241,014 for Sears
to 190,224 for the incumbent,
Goldstein said, "I think it was a
com bi nation or Proposition 13
and a law and order campaign
which was never justified for me
since I hadn't bad a-criminal
• case.
"And 1 think the ,title d~y
district &ttomey waa very ap-
pea lin1 In the last election,"
Goldstein conUnued.
He said what be learned ftom
the defeat was that judges need
to get out among the people and
let tb m know whot they H• do·
lng.
Gold11teln'1 June u pset and
that or three other lncumbent
au~rlor and mwUclpal court
Jud1es wu called one of the
moat apectacular UPtets in local
pouucal blator)'. No incumbent
Judcea had been opposed In
Or1n1e County for yean and lt
wa1 the first Ume one bad beeft
. 4efeated 11Dce 1940.
•t•te o1 the coumy report, noted
that after pMUI• otta.. pt"Oper·
ty t11 red-.ctlo1t laltlatlv•.
aupervborl adolMd a lm.7t
1M1c11tt ~ a., m .1 mtWon
from rount)' covernmeat '•
1m. 11 budi«-
At the AIM Umt. be Nkt,
county covemm nt waa able to toxtend rvtCM to<tl,000 n w •
1d1nt1 added to tbe county
populallon laat Yt!kr and ablorb
a 1evi n pttttnl lnll1Uon ractor .. Ill lt WU not tuy," Rlley
said. ..tt; ract It wo.a ven dil·
flrull.
Lawter Claims
COuncil Dent ed
Tbe aew ahar'l'K"y ror Oranae
Coont)' Supervi•or Ralph
Diedrich Moadjy aaked a Jua,e
to dJ1mlu the bribery lndlet·
meat aaaJftll h1a cllent on the
1n>unda th.at he '*d been denled dfeetlve u.e ol COUDMl. James P . Cantlllon, of
Newport Beach. Diedrich '• new
lawyer ln the cue after the res·
t1natlon of Marshall Mor1an.
charged the District Attorney 's
Office knew for more than a year
tbal Morgan woWd be a chief pro-
uculion wttneaa aaaloal his own
client bul failed to noUfy Diedrich
or Morgan.
San Diego County Superior
Court Judge F V. Lopardo set a
hearing on the motion. along
wath a move to 1ranl Diedrich
and co-defendant LeRoy Rose.
a preliminary hearing, for next
Monday
an 11ricultural preserve.
Mortion withdrew Crom t.he
Diedrich case last month after
clUn1 a possible conmct or in·
terett centel'tng on his possible
role as a witness in what Is ex
peeled lo be a six lo· eight-wfflc
traal
The trlaJ was transferred to
San Diego County ln October by
Orange County Superior Court
Jud~e John Flynn.
Insanity
Pka Made
BySU$pect
A 26-year-old former Hunt·
lngton Beach man pleaded IMo-
cent by reason of insanity Mon·
day to suspicion or murder and
"Overall. l feel thal lhe put
year'• bud•et wu the bOard'•
major accompll1hment," the
Newport Beach s upervlaor 1ald.
"Next year'• budaet toptber
with thole declllonl required by
flacal conatralnta wtll doubtless
be tbe bo a rd '• m1Jor
challenie."
RUey sald medJan famlly ln·
come In Oranee County ror 197'8
11lood at 922,000, and new Jobi
were created at double the
statewide cJ"OWlh rate.
Riley noted the county un·
employment rate 1tood al 3.7
Assistant District Attorney
Michael Capizzi argued that
everyone knew Morgan was a
potential witness because he
was subpoened to testify before
the Orange County Grand Jury
that indicted Diedrich.
Diedrich and architect Rose
race a Feb. 5 trial in Lopardo's
Vista court on charges they con·
spired to receive money rrom
Anaheim Hills Inc. in 1973 in re-
turn for a Board of Supervisors
vote to remove 2,200 acres from
atte mpted murder charges (}p t L .-• fJ
stemming from two separate -t o •a.e •O
1978 a ll eged knifings in.
Hotlines Set
ForWe Hare
Fraud R e port
Establishment of four
telephone "hoUines" for anyone
wlshinl to report suspicion of
welfare fraud was announced
Monday by officials of the
Orange County District At·
toroey's Office.
Those calling the numbers -
834·7872, 834-7873. 834-7874 and
834·7875 -may speak directly lo
an investigator.
The names of those calling
will be kept confidenllal if re-
q uesled, officials said.
At the same time, orricials an·
nounced that 29 people were ar·
rested in December on charges
or welfare fraud representing a
suspected loss or $66,429 in over·
payments. Two other persons were
charged during the month with
probation violations on earlier
welfare fraud charges.
Holiday Blood
Shortage End ed
LOS ANGEL~ <AP> -The
blood shortage eme r gency in
Los Angeles and Orange coun·
ties that developed during lhtr
Christmas and New Year's holi·
day period has ended, a Red
Cross official said Monday.
"I think we can say the threat
of serious shortage Is past .
thanks to public response," said
Norman Kear , regional ad·
minlstrator of Red Cross Blood
Services.
downtown barrooms. \
Robert Leslie "Bobby" Jones
was arraigned in West Orange
County Judicial District court on
murder charges from the Sept. 8
stabbing death or Huntington
Beach motorcyclist Gary Allen
.. Mad Dog" Fero, 41. al the
Main Street Saloon, 117 Main St.
Jones also is charged wlth at-
tempted murder in the alleged
slashing of Delbert Ray Calvin,
41. of Fountain Valley, on March
5 in the Capri Cocktail Lounge,
406 Pacific Coast Highway.
Police arrested Jones Thurs·
day ln Concord, near Oakland,
on warrants issued by Hunt·
ington Beach police.
Jones was in Orange County
JaU today in lieu of $250.000 bail.
f.. Jan. 19 preliminary hearing
has been scheduled in West
County Court to determine if
Jones will stand trial.
It is alleged ,that Jones and
Fero were involved in a 1 :30
a.m. fight over a woman. Fero
died a rew hours later at Hunt·
ington lntercommunity Hospital
from a stab wound in the back.
Police Sgt. Luis Ochoa said
several other suspects are being
sought for questioning in connec-
tion with Fero's death
Police arres t ed former
barmaid Mary J\f agaline Davis,
25, on Sept. 8 ~nd Dec. 21 and
charged her with sus picion of
murder in Fero's death. But
Miss Davis was released both
limes due lo lack or evidence,
police said.
Calvin, the victim of the al·
leged assault in March, told
police he fou ght with Jones arter
an argument over a woman
Wps Baffled
By Hammer
Assaul,t Case
Santa Ana police said today
they remain barned by the at·
tack on one of their officers
Monday morning that ended
with the fatal s hooting of the
policeman's hammer-wielding
assailant.
Rudy Ra'.y Martin, 30. was shot
in the head and chest by Officer
Robert Fernandez, 35, who had
been summoned to Marlin's
apartment to take a burglary re·
port.
Fe rnandez r eported that
Martin met him at the door of
the apartment at 827 N. French
St. and invited the officer in.
As the patrolman walked into
the apartment. Martin hit him
on the head from behind with a
claw hammer. Fernandez was
struck Ove tJmes before he shot
Martin, police said.
,J'he five·year police veteran
was able ~summon help oq his
hand radio berore lapsing Into
unconsciousness.
Lt. Ted Weatherly said today
that Fernandez was nol serious·
ly Injured in the attack and was
to be released rrom the hospital
today.
Lucinda Jacobs. 4. had to borrow a stool Monday to hold
the Bible for her father. Bradley. when he was sworn in
as · Orange County Assessor by Superior Court Judge
Harmon Scoville. Other county officeholders were sworn
m Monday. too. To find out how "the coronation" went.
turn to Page A9.
Seal Beach Man
?
May .Be Deported
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A
79-year-old Seal Beach man. ac·
~used of belne an official pf_ a
azi government ln Ydgosftvta.
as been ordered by a federal judge to submit tq. up to four
hours of daily questioning by
government attorneys in prep-
a ration for deportation heariJUlS.
Andrija Artukovic's attorney,
Ronald Bonaparte. had sought lo
Young Skier
Found Safe
SONORA. Calif. <APl -A
13-year-old skier who spent the
night In a mountain snowstorm
has been found unharmed after
a ski resort employee saw a
giant "SOS" the youngster had
stamped in the snow.
Douglas Grismore or Palo Alto
said he became lost skiing down
the back side of a mountain at a
resort 30 miles east or here. He
said he panicked briefl y when
darkness fell Sunday. but re-
gained his composure and spent
the night walking and stamping
out the "SOS."
Selecting a blrthatone gift
thla rronth? Chencee 11e. you can give the birthday person
hia or her revorlt• color. o.m.t. the January bkthstone,
con'9t In all colon except blue.
How It this possib le?
Qemetones .,. Clesalfled K ·
cording to etyatal atructure end
chemlcal compoeltlon .
Although all g.,.neta have the ..,.. etyatlll structure and are
slmller end l nterreleted c:hemleelly, • dlfftfent et.mint
Is r8'00Nlbl9 for each vari•
tlon of eofOf. For example, the
preeence of chromium pro-
~.green color.
limit questioning of hls client to
one hour per day. citing a doc·
tor's opinion that bis client is in
poor health. But U.S. District Judge Irving Hill cited another
doctor·s opinion Monday thal
Artukovic is we ll enough to
a ns we r questions for s hort
periods of time.
Artukovic. who ned lo the
United States in 1948 after the
Communists came to power. has
been accused by the Yugosla·
vian government of orderingio
750,000 Serbs and 20,000 Jews put
to death when he served as
security minister of the Nazi.
controlled Republic or Croatia
dunng World War JI .
Judge Hill said Artukovic, a
resident or Seal Beach ·s Surfside
Colony. must give depositions to
attorneys for the U.S. lmmigra·
lion a nd Naturalization Service.
The INS also sought to have
Artukovic deported in the 1950s,
but a court ordered a stay or de·
portation In 1959.
The ~ovemment has claimed
it has obtained new evidence
about the case. Bonaparte said
suc h evidence has not been
made available to him and told
reporters. "All they want to do
is harass the man until he dies."
@
&EMWllE
Mery Barr c.t11fled Gemol00•$1
percent ror November and a~
percent for the year as 1 whole,
the lowest rate not only lo
California but (or tbe natloo u
well.
Pertonal Income tn Oran1e
County wu $17.3 bilUon, be aald,
up allDOflt 12 percent from a
year earlier.
In addition, retail sales or
nearly $10 bllllon 1tood second
st.atewide only to Los Angeles
County.
A• for the dollar value ol all cood• and 1ervkea produ~.
the outcoml chairman said, the
1978 1ro111 county product
reacbed$20bUlion .
.. Looking to the future. it will
be the private sector cooUnuing
·as the primary means, in our
free economic system, to satisfy
the needl and wants of people
for goods and services and to
create opportunities for working·
and living," Riley said.
.. There ls alao ._.crmc,l _n>Je
here for government," alley
continued. "lo create a climate
for economic growth and to pro·
vide the necessary fouDdaUon or
public services."
On the subject or affordable
housing, Riley said supervisors
on Wednesday will be offered a
new setolpolldesalmed atlower-
ing housing prices:
The new housing element of
the county general plan, he said.
Includes strategies for county
government to assist private de·
v e lo p ers "t o take m o r e
responsibility for providing af·
fordable housing.··
Jn today's message Riley also
touched on county government
efforts to provide more parks
a nd open space in county areas,
including the recent $2.5 million
acquisition agreement for a
beach park neighboring Doheny
State Beach. ,
He also mentioned efforts to
assist in preservation or both the
Laguna Greenbelt and the Bolsa
Chica marsh.
The second-term s upervisor
also referred to the county's er.
forts to supervise county govern·
ment political campaigns and
creation of a new Fair Cam·
paign Practices Commission
which he sajd resulted In "more
responsible ca mpaign s in
general."
Looking toward the future.
Riley also said he is hoperul
county government can develop
a Washington lobbyist program.
·'The main concern$ are that
all sorts of administrative laws
are made that affect the coun-
ty," he said.
And while federaJ grants exist
to help finance many of the pro-
grams res ulting from those
laws. RJley sa1d. county citizens
have been paying m ore in
(ederal taxes than is retumed to
them in services.
..Illustrating the situation is
information that Orange County
was 54lh of the 58 California
counties in receipt of grant
runds," RHey said. "Effective
Washington representation can
do much lo redress the ineq·
uity."
Surgery Slated
For Carpenter
Me l Carpenter . executive
director of the South Coast
Regional Commission, said Mon·
day he wtll undergo surgery ror
a cataract on his eye Wednes· dav.
Carpenter said he hoped to be
back in his chair when the com·
mission holds its next meeting in
Hunting ton Beach Council
Chambers.
ts1Wor1te. The translucent
speci me n s of green
gre>eeulllf'lte are often uaed as i. subatltutes. 8pe9eartlte garnet occurs In
yellow to yeOow-brown and
dattt orange-brown. UvlllOVlte occutt In chroma green. re-
~emerald, is 'tle<'f acaree
Ind found onfy In tiny alzea.
One type of garnet haa no
color whatsoever. Nature's sup-
ply of th11 totally clear colorless
' oarnet IS being mmed IO gem-
rich Tanzania.
Andradlte garnet occurs In
gr .. n. yelloW and blactt. Green
Andrad1te Is called Oemen101d.
tta ,,.,,. comt• from a Outctt
word meaning diamond
beCa-. of lta high lustet and ~ Spesaertite garnet
\ occura In yellow =o ellow-brown Md dart< or• own.
1 h.a made :t c ieetlon of
the "'"Y ooto<S of garnet in
....i1. toote. unaet atones. It Is
on eichlblt In our window this
--. Aleo on dtap4~= aome .citing pleoe8 Of ,., Mt
Stana 1'f .. .,,.• The offi cer sutrered several
scalp lacerations but didn't have
a conc~alon. Weatherly said,
There are •ctuelly the ~ of gam.t. The ~It
flmiN• ot tt'988.,. almanCliM.
~ modolile Which oc-cur In red.-... and red•vlolets.
Pyrope 101111tfrn1111 found In•
nid thtit ~that of fine nbi. but this I• quite rare.
Groelulttite garnet occura In gr.an, yellow-brown. white,
coklrlw, llOht red·violet and ~· Reuonlte 11 a aut>-Ofgrouulttite and la a
io..ly ~ lhade. It la found In n, Italy and CHARLES H. BA RR With thfa many hued gem. .-nu.y•1 c:tllld ec:tuelly has
IT'Dfe ChOlce than many people
realize. The variety lhat garnet
off•~. opens up a whole MW
world ot c:otot excltemenl
Raul L. Reealado, 34 cur·
rently manager oi the
Fresno Airport, takes over
Jan. IS as Orance County's
new airport ft)ana1er. He
replaces Robert Bresnahan,
who resigned lut year .
He 1ald Investigators ar try·
lng to find out what motlvated
the 1ttack. "We just don't know
why be did ll," Weatherly sa1d,
addlng ·thiel MarUn had no
record of "problems that would
lndtca.teaomethlntl1kethJ1."
-.. -•
Olllfomla whlle an.uni• Is lh• Ot1n eourc. of the temerka-
b le. tran1paran1 g reen
groaaululte garnet celled
._ ' ~
.... ......,
....... ~ ...
u•1 ••• ,
.. ,, . .
•
. ,I
A.. DAILY PILOT Tu..day. Janu11Y I , 1171
.....
Te• MU'plllae
Affordabl ? Well. • • .
ON '111£ HOM •a HEAant a AT: Oranc Col.mty
aupu:·vllorw are ad~ulfd tomcwc"" to •~ ar•PP~ wlth new propo9ab they •ill hrfnt ·•1fto"9abl• hOUI·
ln1" lo OW' ttlkm. Thia may bipe up u 1 oomlcMr1bM
battle. We UHd lo call thol p1a "tow·tolt" bousca. Now
lb word la affordable. Whatever that mean
avao · ol our count)' aovff'ft.ment e.Umal lbat the
anrase price of a n w bom in Orana Count)' ii DOW
. 1113,000
T h re wu tom whal of a prev ew
on bow the affordable houslna queallon
mly ~ ~bated r1 l nl,hl It I Bulldlftl
lnduatry Alaoc 1tk>n o Orarut COUoty
meelloaoutat the Airport lnn an lmne.
COUNTY UPE&Vl80R Phil An·
thony howed up and trac~ br1 ny for
the horoo build ra the atepa t<>UnlY aov·
ernment may .bll taklnR toward en·
cour11lng con1trucuon of 1rfordable
houalna . .. AM'TMOHY
u e swzl!esteo now 111 the um~ tor 1cUon. "The time for brainstorming 11 over,·• the new board chairman aald.
You might be able to gauge the bulldera' reacUon to
Anthony's remarks In that he was interrupted by applause
only once. Thul was when the supervisor. said, "The best
thing we can do to help you build affordable housing Is lo
gel out of your way."
After Anthony. the home builders
got lo hear their own advocate srak
from the podium. He is Randal E .
Presley of the Presley Companies.
Newport Beach.
PRESLEY IS F AJRLY well qualified
lo speak for the people who actuarlly put
up the walls and hang on the roof. His
companies' h omebuildin g r ev·
PltlSLIY enues were projected al more thanSlSO million for fiscal 1978.
He began building homes in 1951 and has now completed 150
residential communities. "
Clearly. Presley sees the piling on or new government
requirements. coupled with the dictums or Proposltlo_n 13,
as Inflationary factors in the rising costs or a new house.
On a governme nt requirement that he build a public
road at one or his projects in our region. Presley recalled,
"before we were done, that road cost us $4 million."
He didn't have to tell us how that $4 million cost was
passed on.
PRESLEY EXPRESSED FEARS on how the govern-
ment may attempt to slow down the inflationary economy.
"l•'m afraldthey'lldo it In housing, "he said.
The Newport Beach builder did envision "a softening" in
the housin~ market but then he added. "By J anuary of 1980,
buyers will be out in force. particularly in California.··
He said a downturn might help slablliie prices.
··Hopefully, this year wi 11 be a sufficient downturn.'·
But then he added. "I still see the price of housing going
up because or Proposition 13 andlhe costofland."
ALAS, PRE DICTING what the housing market will do
sounds bke the problem or a weatherman even when he's
convinced that it's going to rain.
That's when the weather guy says, "We're going to
have some rain. Maybe not Loo much rain. Some rain.
though . ·
Execution Sought
In Mass Murde~
CHICAGO <AP l -The electric chair will be sought for John
Wayne Gacy, indicted on.charges or murdering seven young men
and boys whose bodies were buried at hls suburban Chicago home
or thrown into a neurby river . authorities say.
Bernard Carey, Cook County states attorney, said Monday he
would ask for Gacy's execution. He said there was "more than one
reason" why prosecutors could ask for the death penalty, but he
refu.sed to elaborate.
Gacy, 36, was indicted Monday by a Cook County gr and jury
for the seven murders.
China Offers
Taiwan Choice
P!!KlNO <AP> Taiwan wlU be allowed to malntaln tu aeeurtty
fort and weapons after reunification with the m1lnland. Vice
Premler Ttna 11111o·pln1. chief of stoft'or China's armed forces, satd
tod1y • The otter wu made dutin1 a two-hour meeting with a Senate task
fore• on Pacific rn111tary mat·
ltl'I headed by n. Sam Nunn.
O·Oa , who callfd lt "very lm·
portant" and Mild ofricials or the
U S UaJaon Otflce told Mm It wu a eon1lderable advance
beyond anythlng aald before.
Ten1 told the senators he
already h d atnt what he
deacrlbed several reasonable
m Hll lO Talwaoese leaders
but did not say if he had re·
c lved a reply The Peking gov.
rnment orrered earlier to
ne1ot1ute a reunification aaree· m~nt with Taiwan that would
preserve the h1land's social and
economic way or file.
BUT PRESIDENT Chlang
Ch1n1·kuo and other otticials of
Navy Makes
Last Push
For Carrier
WASlilNGTON <AP > -The
Navy Is malting an l lth·hour ef·
fort to c hange Presiden t
·Carter's mind on the kind or
aircraft carrier he will recom-
mend to Congress. administra·
lion sources report.
With Carter's fiscal 1980 de-
fense budget just about ready
for Congress. the Navy effort
has reached all the way to the
Caribbean island of Guadeloupe.
where the president flew last
week for meetings with French.
British and German leaders
CARTER IS SAID lo have de·
clded to propose construction or
a new type or oil·buming carrier
called the CVV , wh ich would
cost about $143 million less than
the bigger s hip the Navy favors .
Backed by Pentagon leaders,
the Navy earlier recommended
construction of an additional
Kennedy·class carrier. which it
claims would be more "combat
capable" than the CVV because
it carries more warplanes and a
greater variety or them.
A KENNEDY·CLASS carrier
would cost about $1.7 billion and
its backers contend it is worth
what one official called its
"slightly additional cost'' over
the CVV.
Although virtually all final de·
c1sions have been made by the
president on his new defense
budget. administration sources
said a last-ditch memo from
Adm. 'Mlomas Hayward, chief of
naval operations, was forwarded
lo Carter on Guadeloupe over
the weekend urging a change to
the KeMedy·class vessel.
the N aUonallst Chinese govern·
ment on Taiwan rejected the
overture. as they have all other
overtures rrom the CommunJsta
since Washington establis hed
diplomatic relations with Peking
Jan. 1 and broke tte1 with
Talsan.
Tena reaft1rmed today China's
policy "to seek a peaceful re·
uniCic,_,uon or Ttlwan and
Chm a,· Nunn said. But the
possibiUty of the use of force
was not renounced on grounds
that it "would reduce the
prospects for Taiwan entering In·
to serious negotiations.··
TENG SA ID THE cir·
cumstances where rorce might
be used included an Indefinite re·
rusal to enter into negotJatlons
and an attempt by the Soviet
Union to Interfere in Taiwanese
a ffairs.
N unn s aid "this latter
possibility was regarde d ps
blghly unlikely.··
Nunn added that the senators
got the impression that China's
overriding desire Is to settle the
Taiwan problem peacefully and
that force was something re ·
mote to their thipklng for some
time lo come.
HE SAID TENG emphasized
that people·t o -people a nd
economic relations between
Taiwan. Japan. the United
States and other countries be
continued.
Teng also reiter at ed that
Taiwan could r e tain full
autonomy within China ror as
long as the people of Taiwan
wished and. In the future, the
Taiwan authorities would possess
t he same powers they now
wield. ' The comparisons Teng made
were to Macao and Hong Kong.
the Portuguese a nd British
possessions that continue to be
indep~ndenl but maintain close
econ omic ti es with the
m ainland.
TENG WAS QUOTED as say·
ing the Chinese perhaps s hould
curtail military ma neuvers off
Taiwan as a sign of good will. .
Teng said the Chinese govern-
ment also favors un expanded
U.S naval presence in \he
Western Pacifir. strengthening
or Japan's defense forces and
defense cooperation by mem·
ber s of the Association of
Southeast Asian nations to help
counter growing Soviet military
strength in the Jt~ar East.
NATION /WORLD
OdlHng Situation
A stone lion carved on a building at the Uni versity of
Kansas has had his roar turned to.ice by the current cold
snap. The Uon. which usually spews forth water as a foun·
tain, is given a grotesque countenance by the icicle hang·
ing from its jaws. ·
Oil Workers Delay
Nationwide Strike
DENVER <AP I -The nation's 60,000 oil refinery workers con·
Unued to delay their threatened nationwide strike, as union of·
ficials awaited Carter Administration reaction to a possible 73·
cent·per·hour raise. . The contract dispute is the first major union showdown over
President Carter's voluntary wuge.price guidelines. which allow
for a 7 percent increase in wages and benefits over lhe life of a
contract.
A.F. GROSPlllON. president or the Oil. Chemical and Atomic
Workers International Union. confirmed Monday that he had been
in touch with officials of Carter's antl-inOatlon program. He said
he sought "an inte rpretation of how the wage guidelines would be
applied to contract settlements within the oil industry ...
Some of the officials, who Grospiron did not identify. were to.
m eet with Grospiron today In Denver, the union president said.
WIDTE HOUSE SPOKESMAN Mark Henderson said he did
not know of any such meeting.
The union leader said Monday the possibility or a nationwide
walkout remained "very real. .. But he said there would be no im·
mediate strike despite the expiration of contracts Sunday night.
Most workers were on the job Monday, although 011 workers stayed
out al Gulf and ARCO refineries In Port Arthur. Texas.
The strike was delayed by an offer from Amoco calling for a
73-cent·per·hour raise in the fi rst year and a wage reopener clause
the second year.
NEITHER OF THE choices
now under consideration would
be as expensive as the nuclear·
powered carrier that was the
Navy's original preference.
Congress voted for the nuclear
carrier last year but Carter OD·
jected to Its potential $2.4 billion
cost and vetoed the legislation.
THISCOUPOI
Fair Weather Spreads
GOOD FOR IO% to 14%* INTEREST
ON YOUR SAVINGS.
If you're not earning at least
10% interest on your money. you
should send for our free brochure.
Altwny
•Hbu'QU9
Amarillo
A\M•lll•
Allenla
AU•nllC CIV
O•IUmort
Ill""•"~ 8 1\M•<lll
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rtO(ll•d Southern Cellforn••.
fort<Hltn YIO. T'My IWld out '"" thonct of mote ;..,n Thu ... cl•v. "Th.,O will be po<kOIS•OI 1ero.
YISlbllllV IOO \IM'lll'Q lo effect '°""' portlona of Soultwrn Celltorn••
tomorrow morn1n11 ... N•llon••
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Aualln •.id T,,.,.., •llO • t hMX• of more lftnt rain lrom • P<K11t<
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m•v take 1ongitr to get hefe. ··
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MOncl•v, ~ ti MuC.h as '"'" lncM1 l11 lllt Sell Frtl\(tsco a., ••••
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7
Orange Coas-
. EDITION
VOL. 72, NO. 9, 3 S CTIONS, 21 PAGES
87 IOCHA P • Clflillo.MY .......
A plan to xt.nd WllllOft rwt
ff ro.1 the &Itta Ana RI v r Co
·HunUncton 8 ach dr w llltl
aupport rrocn Colta .. • Clly
Councll mtm rs Mond1y.
However, a pJanntna part.
ment requ t tor a buUdlnc rreei .ion1 t propoeod n&ht·
ol·way fOl" the "'° l 1tde alttet ext 01.k>n moy d lay a rlnal ~
clalon f Of' an u~ rmJned U •
J ust houri att.r th .council
b Id a publlc atudy 1lon on
tbe br ld ae. p lannln1 <'Om
mlul n; \'<Md to dt"lay until
t~ b 13 • dttillon on con
domlnlum project that could
block ltwP path of the brld~f'
City planner Paul Dudlcy aald
today the plaMlna d pa rtment
will IP ~ council nut Mday
to adopt Ill • "em uccn<'y or
dln1nCf''0 that would f reere ~
velopment. until the a u taon or
the nefd for lt'.l4t rteht-of·W•Y Is
anaw~red Roy K ndall. a partner in
Mcu 81ulf1 Oevefopmcnt Com·
pany. wd today he hopes lbe
council wiU rt'Jeet the request
for "a moratorium "
K odall and has partner. Jack
Tho mpaon, want the city to
ealh r buy their parti!l or let
them 10 ahead with an a<J4i·
taooal 15 condominiums on their
land a t 22'3 Pacm c Ave.
They would prefer to complete
the project. and have 1enerated
s upport from well alde
horoeownen who don't want ._
wider <tour· lane I 1treet and
brtdce link to Huntlnaton Beach
running throu1h their
neiJhborhOod.
A number of petitions signed
by opponents of tbe brtdge were
presented to City Clerk Eileen
Phinney as council members sat
down Monday afternoon for t.beir
,
Yoar Hemet•••
Dally Ne• pap r
TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1979 c TEN CENTS
the Air
dl1cu11lon of the bridge, and
poulble alternat.ivet .
The Wilson Street extension
that would tie Into Atlanta.
Avenue Is one or three possible
bridges 1tlll on city and county
master plans.
The othen are extensions of
Gls ler Avenue and 19th StreeL
Council membe rs Norma
Hertzog and Dom Raciti spoke
out against extending eithe r
Gisler or.Wilson because of what
they said would be the negative.
Impact• added tramc would
have on residenUal areas.
The extension of 19th Street,
which has drawn no prote11ts
from reeidents or councat mem-
bers . i1 a priority project .
Pu bile Services Di rec tor
Bruce Mattern said construction
on 19th Street is budgeted for
1981·82.
• The Wilson Street Bridge
<See WILSON, Page AZ>
I
Planes Come Close in San Dieg()
,.,. •. ..,....
500 Feet
Separates
Aircraft
SAN DIEGO CAPl -A Con·
linentat 727 pllol ls reported to
have COMidered evasive action
to a void a sin,le-engine Cessna
which was said Lo have come
within 500 feet of the jet as the
Jetliner approached Lindbergh
for a landing.
But a Federal A vialion Ad·
ministration official sa id today
the incident Involving the com·
mercial jetliner and the small
plane near Lindbergh Field is
not being officially elas·sified as
a near-miss.
J ack Gregory, a Continental
spokesman in Los Angeles. said
no evasive action was taken by
the unidentified pilot of flight 81
and no official complaint was
liled about the lncident.
Norm Bell Sterllng, an FAA
official here, said he t.a._ed with
the COl'.lllneotal pi~ during the
incident. which occWTed about
noon.
According to Sterling, the pilot
said "In his opinion, the Cessna
was too close: he told us SOO
feet."
"We asked him if he wanted to
file a mid-air report but he
dldn 't," said Sterling. "Instead,
h e filed with the Na tional
Aerona utics and Space Ad·
ministration a generalized com·
plaint."
CHAD GREef.f PLAYS OUTSIDE MASSACHUSETTS COURT
Beat Way to Treat Boy'• Leukemia Debated
Sept. 25, a Pacific Southwest
Airlines 727 jet approaching
Lindbergh for a landing collided with a Cessna, killing 144
persons in the worst air disaster
In U.S. history. Boy's Life Periled
If Laetrile Out?
No final cause for that dis·
a ste r has been announced by
federal investigators. but the
FAA has ordered stricte r flight
procedures al busy Lindbergh
Field.
PLYMOUTH, Mass. IAPl -A
Me xican doctor who use d
Laetrile to treat cancer patientJ.
says t he li fe of 3-year·old
Leukemia victim Chad Green
co u Id be enda n gere d If his
chemotherapy treatments are
stopped.
"We cannot risk the lire or the
b oy b y withdrawing the
c h e mothera py," said Dr
Ernesto Contreras, who runs a
clinic In Tijuana, Mexico.
He testifie d fo r Chad's
pa rents. Diana and Gerald
Coast
Weather
Chance of rain decreas·
Ing to near 10 percent
to night a nd Wednesday.
Fog night and early morn·
101 hours. Little t e m ·
pe r ature changes with
lows tonight 46 to 52, hiabs
W edneadoy 57 to 63.
IN81DE TODAY
An Orange Cotmt11 bll.aiMu
t.r1c1dioe um paid 11,121 ,000
'" 1971, ,,._mott o/ onu o/ tM
naUon '• buafntu l~r• tur· ~Jl~d. ror hU ldenttt11 and
otMr detoill, ~e Poae 85. .... ...
Green of Scituate, in their effort
to win the rimt to decide how
-Ch~d 's illness should be treated
City Attorney
Raps Finding
On 727 Noise
"I staled very clearly that
c hemotherapy should continue
as the basic treatment with
metabolic therapy, including the
use o( Laetrile, to improve the
quallty or the boy's life and, Newport Beach City Attorney
poaslbly, proton"lo" his re· Dennis O'Neil said Monday re·
mluion," Contreras said in ports that ms are as quJet as
describing bis testimony Mon· other jets using Orange County
day before a closed court hear· Airport may be Invalid because
Ing. Judge Guy Volterra of the nolse·abatement takeoff pro·
Ply.mouth Superior Court ls re· cedures appear to be unaaf e.
viewing his April 18 order re· O'Neil aaid at a City Council
quirlna the chemotherapy and study session that the Federal
making Chad a temporary ward Aviation Admlnlatrallon had
of the state for purposes of treat· declared a power. cutback prior
ment. During the treatment, he ' to 1,000 feet of altitude ta unsafe.
is still living with his parents. yet. the controversial Hughes
The Greens are trying to re· Airwe1t 727s a(e now cutting
gain legal custody or Chad In an back at 500 under 500 feet.
effort to decide hls treatment Council members said they
themseJves. are concerned that lf the
T h e c o u p J e o p po 1 e d airplanes. now flown on an ex·
chemotherapy ror their aoh in pertmental bull, win approval,
ear11er court fights and argued the airlines will declare the cur·
he shouJd be treated only with rent procedure unsafe and
Laetrile and a special diet. But sreatly lDCreue the noise prob·
now they lndlcate they might lem. •
permit the chemotherapy to con· "It would appear they're lr)'·
tJnue. ln1 to tool people," said Mayor
Laetrile ts a trademarlc fOr a Paul R7'koff.
substance extrllct.ecf tro1n peach CouncU members Hid they
or apricot plts. Although ad· are allO conc~rned about the
vocates claim it can cure cancer, po11lblllty ol an accident.
the U.S. Food and Drug Ad· O'Neil, who gave an inform•·
mtnistrallon has banned lt from llonal report on the city's ,...
interstate commerce. clalmlna search Into the 727 project, aatd
there ls no proof ol lta effecUve· the FAA haa been asked to .rule
neasoraate\,)'. In the matter and a reply it ex·
· • peeled by next week.
land for Sale
CL l:VELAN D <-AP >
Cleveland'• clty council •treed
Monday nllbt to aell city proper·
ty worth '5.2 million In an at·
He Hid a consultant hired by
the city baa allo told h1 m con·
Unued operaUotr of m 1 wwld requlre Wl'Y expemlve repavtnR
or runwa)'I at Oraqe County
Airport.
"Uta opinloa" that the nilt·
ln1 runway cannot handle the
1rHttr load of tbe bdvler .,.... •• 01111111111.: ---~
~~-_,L .. P••
Supe;,,&orsandFrfend
Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Riley
takes to the podium after being sworn in
Monday for a new term on the Orange
County Board of Supervisors. Mrs. Har·
rie tt Wie der, the ne w 2nd Di strict
supervisor and the C'ounty"s first woman
supervisor. holds her' grandda ughter .
Samora Ta uber . 2, on he r lap as she
listens to Riley. For details on Monday's
cer e monies. see add itiona l ston es and
photos, Pages A3 and A9.
Supervisors Elect
Anthony Chairman
Philip Anthony or the First
Dlatrict was wianimoualy elect·
e d chairman or the Orange
County Board of Supervisors lo·
day.
Anthony replaces Fifth Dis·
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley
who has been the board's presld·
1ng om cer tor the past two
years.
Su~rvtsor Ralph Clark was
e lected v ice c hairman .
Laurence Schmit, who lost his
seat to Harriett Wieder, was
vice chalnnan in 1978.
Anthony, who has been a
member or the board for two
years, assumes his new post un·
·der n legal cloud.
On July l , um Anthony and a
re tlow Supe rvisor Ralph
Diedrich were Indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury on
alle gations or campaign law
violations.
An indictment is n format
charge made agajnst a person
by a grJUKI jury. It does not
H tabllah aullt or innocence.
<See ANTHONY, Page AZl
o.tlf ,.._SUH ,.....
TO CHAIR SUPERVISORS
Flr8t Ollttlct'a Anthony
Stanford Taps
Dowhower as
Grid Coach
SAN FRANCISCO I AP 1 -8111
Wals h , who took St a nford
University to two bowl games in
two years. has resigned as,the
Cardinals' coach and as expected
to be named bead coach of the
San Francisco 49ers later Loda}'
Walsh, 48, resigned from tu~
Stanford job Monday. school
Athletic Oire<-tor Andy Geiger
said today Gelger suid Walsh
quit to accept a head coaching
job in the National Footba ll
League. (Earlier s tory Page 821
The 49ers fired Coach Fred
O'Co nnor and General Manager
J oe Thomas on Monday. It was
almoet certain that Walsh would
be named to twcceed O'Connor
tater today.
Sta nfor d named assis tan t
coach Rod Dowhower , 35, to suc·
ceed Walsh. Dowhower had been
Wa ls h's chief assist ant both
years Wolsh was al Stanford
The team won 17 games and lost
eight.
.
. Jary Trial ~alved
Actor Lee Marvin's Lover·Changes Plans
LOS ANGELES <AP> -ln 1
surprise move, the attorney fnr
Michele Triola Marvin an·
nounced today the would waive
a Jury ln the trial or her
landmark awl a1ainat act.or Lee
M•rvtn·-a cue lnvolvlnt love,
money and t.be chaqln1 morall·
ty or American couplet.
Attorney Manin Mltchelton ·•
made tht move after conferrtnl
In chembens wtth !Superior Court.
Juda• Arthur Mar1hall.
Attorne)'a for the Ot car·
w1nnlD1 lldoc' aal'Md u,. mau.er
c ould but be JJldt•d by
Marahall. • ¥Nr• ramU~ court :Juidp-.... ~ ~
I
the field ol domestic relatlom.
The chance cleared 1the way
tor testimony to begin as early
11 Thunday ln Mi11 Marvin's
suit for Sl million. The former
singer. who changed her name
while lhe lived with th actor ..
aeeka the same compeMaUon a
wife would 1et In a divorce -
half the property accumulated
durina their tlx yeart to1ether.
The Judae ruled on one
&Mbnlcal motion lnvolvlnt ~
1epai:1Uon of ftnanclal and fact
questlom ln tbe tr1al, but the ruJ.
int made no 111.AWcanl dlf • rt ... ~~ -
...... 111'41 •• ·-preltlaJ
I f ' I •
motion wouJd be taken up Thun·
day momlng. Then testimony is
expected to 1l4rt.
The white-hatred Marvin and
his former lover appeared in
court, but did not speak Co each
other. He waa accompanied by
the wlfe tie married when be ten
MiH Marvin etaht years a.co.
Ml 1 Marvin has said she will
tell all durlna the trial about her
llvlna arranccment with the •c·
tor.
Miii Marvln hat said, "I WU
Uke a wU to Lft ... ~ I tqok
,.. V. ttb~ne W• • baby
cblcliftL"
f
• • 4 . . . .
c
Thousands of Ca
aANQ&OK. TUllud CAP> -C•mbocu1·1 new Communlll
IOVtrlllnfint Nported lOday th l
Lbouaanda ol ple were OO<'k·
ln1 back lo t.Mlr oath vlll~
nortb ol Phnom Ptf\b f0Uowl111
the "_...... ol the Cotllm~
re1lm1 wttlcb lotted tb ·m Into communal fanm
WH ltm an11·1•t.e la nelpbor
rn1 Thlllal'ld eatd UMN wa m
tl1eht1nc. .n nortbwnt Cambodia
dttd v 1clnamtM air altikn had
dovolcd to almotit 100 1 day In
mopping up oporaUon in lbtt cul
and wttt ,
SPK. the o<nrtal newa 11eney of the PfOVilloaal ,ovtmmeat
"'*' V\e&Dlm .. arm1 tn-
1\..._. li pt •• ·-· .... ,,. ............... .....
anll-. ..... ,, .. a..
ProYiftC'e, ~ ot buffalo
tart• lOldlit wttll chJldNG Ud
Nlo•cln•• w•r• takle1 Cb•
vlll1cers home
TM report. bmadcut from
Phnom J>fth. a.a d a unit of lbe
reb•I tnavemeM '• mllll.ary t~ ..... d l•lll"d lo be.Ip th
retum.N.
f OUOV.tr\g tht' C.ommunlat Vic•
tor)' over the U S backed Lon
O) IOVerntn t ln J.t'71. lhe llOV•
tmm nl trn.,u.d lbe dUet and
Y1ll•1e1 and forced mott of th
,.pul•&n Jato ~om•aanal
..... 111 .......... *M& ... .,. ............ ..... ca.•··-......... II'. di~ ol huai-r, eahaUl&lon and
dlHIH "ror U.. lirtt Um• la maft7
)'Hrl, youn1 men and women Hn~ h•o•llY aa they barv.tt· t-d.' uld Chi orttciat report.
.. l'Jrta tll•lft warmed &he
kltctunt ln <ho hou1 1
a lOftl Hl&hway 7, now rettored
to t1ml111il .'
An1lyat.e ln 8an1kok said Pol
Pol Ind hll aaaoelat who fled
Phnom Ptnh wtre tryln1 lo
make • 1tand ln tlM nortbwett
Fog Eq.eeted Trio Jailed
No More Rain Due In Newport,
For Coast Region Theft Try ,
A woman and two heavily tat-
tooed men were in Newport
Beach Jail today after a poUce
heltcoptcr crew spotted two men
aJleiedly seen frying to break
into a home.
Today'• rain, the tall •nd of a
tard) storm, wu expected to
dissipate this •rtemoon. maldng
way for pockets o( dense fog
Wednesday morning along the
coast. a Nationa l· Weather
Service apokeaman Hid.
More than a lotb or an inch of
raln wu recorded in mott PIN ot Orage County today by 8 a.m., with the only mador prob-
lem a San Dle10 Freeway traffic.
· snarl. No additional allppaaea
W4Jrt reported ln the 11nclallde
areu ot aoutbem coutal Oranae
County.
CalllomJ• Highway Patrol of·
firers said a .eml·truck •kidded
near Westmln.lter Avenue when
the driver braked too quickly on
wet pavement, Jaclm1tlng the rig
and blockt111 slow·l&ne tramc
Health Board
Eyes Newport
~nter Plan
A proposal to bulld an outpa
tlent surgical center In Newport
Center wlll come before the
Orange c.ounty Health Planning
Council Wednesday ln Newport
Beach. Surglcare Auoclatea~ Inc.
wants to build a $1 mllllon t•clU·
ty. Spokesman Raymond Berl
aaya he bellevea the facility
could lower cost.s or mlno .. sur-
gery by up lo eo percent.
However, the council staff bas
recommended denying the re·
quest on the basis that It would
duplicate exlstina out·pallent
racilitJes at a number of area
h ospitals, including Hoag
Memorial.
The hearing will begin at 7:30
p.m. in City Council Chambers,
3300 Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach
Synanon Chief
'-Depressed'
KINGMAN, Ariz. (AP>
Syn a non fou nder~h ar les
Dederich weept uncopt~llably
and seeks co mfo..IJ.,. from a
whiskey bottle, ~rdlng to a
psychiatric pro(ile Introduced at
a hearing here.
"I 'm depressed," the docu·
ment quotes the 65·ynr-old
Dederich as sayina. ··It's
ridictrlous. I 'm a man who
bowled other people over all my
life, a man who yelled a lot. And
here I am silting with my head
1down, not moving, not thinking
about anything, juat snotting
and enivelinar ...
The report waa filed by Or. M.
8 Ruland . d i re c t or or
Klngman's Mohave Mental
Health Clinic, who first ex-
amined Dederich Nov. 30i Just
alt'r hit arreat on a CaU ornla
warrant charalng conspiracy
and aollcltaUon to murder a Los
Angeles attorney, uslne a rat-
tlesnake. An extradition hearing
ln that case ls a scheduled next Monday.
Of'ANOI COMT c
DAILY PILOT
f,_Or-C..IOiNlf"'tet --llltc--· ... --•,••-1-... 1.._0t_ c .. " ............. c-. ""-•'•""•-~• -fl·-_.., .......... ,,...,, ,.. , .. ,. Mow N.-t 1M<11 _....,.,. .. ocl'l-
1 .... 11.uw.1rwo..~ .... "'-'-" ·-·----,. ..... "'"'.....,Myt--·--n.,,......~ .................. . ...... ,, 1.1.-.c-. ....,tot_ ... ,..
•""'111 ..... _., __ ,.,...._
, ..... c--.
lllt• ............... 0--....... -... .... ....... ._ .... ~ --~· ... 0.....M.~ ~~ -"""' .............. •4tlart
Commutera to tbe Lo• Angel
area ~re slowed to a near halt
for nearly two houn. oflicluJs
said.
Laguna Beach police wore
keeeing a c lose wutch on
BluebJrd Canyon U\la morning
where a field of plastic covered
a 1aptna hole ln Ortol'e Drive
after Friday's mud allde.
Geol081Jta expect no further
1Uppa1e from today'• 1torm but
would not precHct the result of
another Paclflc 1torm expected nurlday.
Ju1t to the IOUth, offlclals ln
San Clemente said no addlUonal
11ippa1e wu noticed at
SborecU/f1 Mobtle Country Club
where a-eo<l·foot:lona rtaaure
opened tut month, thre1tentnc
a halt-dozen mobile homes.
"There's a chance or more
lllht rain !rom a Paclflc storm
by Thursday," a spokesman
sald, "but then again, lt may
take lor11er to get here."
• Today's storm, predicted to
arrive Monday, dropped .12 of
an lncb ln the Cotta Mesa and
Newport Beach area by 8 a.m.
The se830n's total re1ched 9.06
since JuJy 1, compared to 7.48
inches by the same date Jut
year.
Huntln~n Beach measured
.12 of an lnch, Laguna Niguel
reached only .03 of an Inch ind
Santa Ana meuured . u of an
lnch.
Santa Ana's rainfall for the
season reached 7.'8 lnchea. com·
pared to seven inches on this
date last sea.son. The average
for the rainy season by tttll date
is recorded as 4. 72 for a normal
year. an Orange Co unty Flood
Control District spokesman said.
Inconveniences caused by today's rain could be over·
sh1dowed by lbe good It Is doing
county agriculture, a county
spokesmansaJdthismomlng.
Lettuce. cabbage, broccoli,
s trawbe rries. citrus and
avocados are benefitting, saJd a
spokesman for the Orange Coun·
ty Agriculture Commissioner's
office.
Harvesting of cauliflower and
ce lery will b e delayed
somewhat, though. he said,
because of muddy !lelds.
1hree Jailed
In Burglary
A burglar alarm set otf at the
\Vatehoule Restaurant, 3450Vla
Oporto in Newport Beach. led
police to arrest two men and a
boy on suspicion or commercial
burglary, police said todar.
In jail today In lleu o $$ 000
ball wu Boyd Ger1Jd Condiey,
36, of 1801 Whittler Ave., Coeta
M e11. Released on his own re·
co1nlzance was Richard Dale
Throm, 19, of 1922 Meyer St. In
Costa Mesa. ,
A third suspect, a J,7.year-<>ld
Newport Beach boy whoee name
was not releued becauH or his age, wu in Juvenile Hall, polke
Hid.
Police aaJd a burtl1r alarm
aet ort about 7 a .m . Sunday ul
the restaurant led them to ln·
veatlgate a car found drlvtng
slowly around the area.
Jn the car, police lllJd th y
found the three suapects along
with burglary tools, CB radios
and walkle talklef. The door of
the restaurant liad been un·
1ocked but nolhin1 appearod lo
bt mlsal~, Police aatd. ..
Maiket Heist
' Suspect Held
A man Police 1Ue1e may be
re1poulbfe tor a SS.1 armed
robbery of a Cotta MeH mutcet
ln October ii fn cUltodY lOd~ at
city Jatr ·
lnv..Ucator Gerry Thompeon
11ld 25-year-old Emery Royal
Parkerio.°' T\aatln alao may bt
linked w otber armed robberlH
In Hunt1n1ton Beach and ruum.oa. \ ,,..... Nl4 • robb9r uMd
I plttol·to 1add •p''dae! PUD7 " Mar~tt at Baller lttfft I.Ad
P.U.iew Roed ta c.o.t.a 11 .. on Oct ••• AJd Tboml)tOll.
Pa,.._ ,. la CUltod1 bl U.U ol
$2:5,000 ball, police WCI.
I
Held on $10,000 ball were
Suaan Jean Young, 24, of 1600
Coriander Drtve, Cotta M•a;
Rick Loe Rott, 22, of Orqe,
and John \Vllllam SUnaon, 24, oC
M2 Cecil Place, Cotta Me11. All
three face char1ea of re1idenUa1
burctary.
Polle~ 11ld the incident OC·
curred at about 10 p.m. Sunday
wbtn netpbora reported eeet.oi
two men cUrnblni a fence lo the
home of Howard and Anne
Jobnaon at 1221 Somenet Lane,
NtwportBeach.
The poUce helicopter tracked
two men to a car and dJreeted a
poUce car to intercept them. The
two men were reporwdly found
in the car wtth the woman drtv·
int.
Police said the door knob had
been forced open on the Johnson
door but that no items were re·
ported miAlnl. .
Rose waa described as havint
flowers, a skull, a goose, a'
peacock and mountains tattooed
on hl1 upper n1ht arm; flowers
and the name "Jason" on bis
wrl1t ; a head, a peraon and a
snake tattooed on hla upper left
arm and a butterfl.v, a head and
a snake tattooed on h1a lower left
arm.
Stlnt0n WH deacrlbed ln the
police report u having multiple
tattoos over his arms and entire
body.
p,..,.. Page A J
Wll.SON •••
would follow In perhaps five or
10 years, Mattern added.
He said that a county
tr1n1portation committee sup·
porta ''protection'' of the three
bridge crossings because of pro-
jected three ~cent Increases in
traffic volume each year.
One proposed bridge extension
that la no longer on the county's
m ast er plan wo uld have
punched Sunflower Avenue
across jhe river for a connection
with J!!llJB Avenue tn Fount.tin
Valley, Mattem said.
That proposal was opposed by
Fountain Valley and removed
from the county master plan or
highways.
Costa Mesa, as the "lead
agency." must act on the need
for n ew bridge crossings.
However. if Huntington Beach
or the county opposes the re·
moval ol a bridse crossing from
city plans, Mattern satd lhe
clty'a supply of matching funds
for any new road work couJd be
endangered.
Althouah one homeowner said
this wu "Just a threat," City
Man ager Fred Sonabal claimed
that L11runa Beach is one
Oranae Coast city that baa loet
road fundint becaUJe of It. re·
fuaal to maJntaJn a county SUP·
ported road on Its city meat.er
plan.
Penny Ante
Milllonaire
UTICA, N.Y. <AP l -Edwin Rommel, a 50·year·
old foreman, deposited
one million pennJea at the
bank, the rt1ult of 20
years of co1tectlna. Ar·
terwar4, Rommel ,.id, "l
don't want to see another
penny." nt;.~c :'td': :~11 ~r~'
ei1ht metal footlocken 4f
Rommel'• ~~1 fllltcl up
IOO '50 ~ ano ~l1hed
en "tlma1ed SYl1.onl. "I don't know why 1
atarted 1avln1 them,"
Rommel laid lloada1. "I
ctide't IUrt out NftDa, I '°' up ao .,.. II or 14 ............ ININl'U..._
for a new car:~~ wHll I
bad noutll PW • car 1 I
aald, 'Oii, heU, l 'U tboot tor a m1Waa'."
-,..., ... , .... -
rt of t.be . ...-r ....,., ... ,,..,,., the a~
Call =· CldlM --to 1upport the effort ''Nlolut.ly" in a "pro-
tracted war ol Nliltance."
Cambodi•'• 1eotraDhJc llola·
tlon from ChlJla fndlcated
ChhMM support for the ousted
cov•r1t1nt nC.. would be motU)'
vub&l.
The Peking People'• Dally,
the Chinese Communlet Party
newapape r 1 said the f1tt of
Phnom P M on Sunday to the
Vletnamese lnvadert and the r~bel COmmunlet movement waa a "landmark ol doom ·· for Hanoi
Prop. 13 Jlo1'e
and lt.1 lowMt Meir.,. becaUM It
WH the ICart, llOt the end, of ft-"t• Ing.
A Thal military apoke1man
aald China bad evacuated more
than 600 dlc:;rata and 1dvlter1
from Cam a to Thailand by
tea and alr, and that others
were belltvtd to have been
tv1cuattd directly to China. But
many of the estimated 20,000
CblntH actvfsers attll are
believed ln Cambodia.
Diplomats from North Korea.
Romania, Egypt, Yugoslavia
and Burma also arrlved ln the
Thal border town or Aranya
Prathet, the spokesman 11ld.
•
Carter Saila
French Racer
OOSJ£R, Guadeloupe CAPI -A .....,oot J>Nitl·
dent Ca~r 11penl th f1n1I
day of a Cart~an vaca·
lion tOO.r saJUnc aboard a
60·foot Freoch trimaran
racer.
Carter and his ll·year·
old dauahW-Amy boarded
'the three-hulled Seiko or
yachtll\I publlaber AJain
Olfckman at a m arina
near the cJlCClop vlrra
where the Carters have
been staying s ince last
week's summit with the
lHder• of France. Britain and West Germany.
Airline8' Landing.
Charges Doubled
The utlboat h11 no
enalne and had lo be
towed lnto the harbor. He.r
11111 fUled wtth a sent.le
bre t•e within a few
mlnutea and 1be aalled off
on a westerly CO\lrte.
Residents
To Appeal
Bar Ruling
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 111t OMly Pi ... ,...,
Commercial alrllnea using
Orange County Airport wUJ pay
fees totaling an estimated
$720,000 this year because coun.
ty aupervison more than
doubled the -airlines' landing lees today.
Under the plan unanlmouelY
adopted by the board, landlns
fees will jump from 23 cent.s per
1,000 pounds or each aircrafl
landing at the airport, to 50
cents per 1,000 pc>unds.
The fee wu lut set In 199.
The change was so.uaht by
airport offlclah when
aupervilon Insisted the airport
should be Hlf ·•uPPortln1 alter
paaaa1e ol Proposlt.lon 13.
The current fee waa expected
lo bring ln PI0.000 in 1979. The
new fee wUl 1dd about $380,000.
Of the total. about eo per~nt
will be paid by Air California, 33
percent by Hughes Alrwest and
seven percent by Golden West
Alrllnes.
Only one airline spokesman
testified at today's hearing on
the rate increase.
Robert Flores, r epresenting
Alrwest. said the alrllne object·
ed to the increase since the
money is being raised in part to
help pay for Implementation of a
master plan that ts currently un·
der debate.
lie aald he tboucht uae ot the
landlnt fees for operatln1 ex·
penses w11 Inappropriate since
the fees couldn't be considered a
stable revenuesource.
But hf.a views were dilputed
by AuiJtant Airport Maaa1er
Barbara Fox who deacribed I.be use or the tees 11 a IOWld flnan ••
clal plan.
Ma. -hx earlier warned .
1upervison that some of the cat·
r lera -she didn't specify which
ones -had objected lo the ln·
crease claiming the mone)' wu
being raised to "pre-rund UU1a·
tion."
She denied that allegatton
whlle acknowledgln1 that the
lawsuits filed over airport nolae
have CO&t the airport and the
county "hundreds of thousands
of dollars."
A fight Is brewing in Santa
Ana Heights over the hours of
operation of a restaurant and
b1r that bun't been bulll yet.
Monday, angry homeowners
who Iott their e1se ln a 3·2 vote
of the Orance County Plann.ln1
Commi11lon. vowed to appeal
the matter to the County Board of Supervbon.
CommlJalonera Earl Wooden,
Charles 8eMeU and Rex Oaede
aided wtth the SpUler Develop·
ment Company of Newport
Beach which brought the pro.
po11l lo the commwlon.
The firm was aranted a vartan~ tor the restaurant. cur·
rently under conalructlon on
Irvine Avenue at Meaa Drive.
The variance extended the
operatlna hours from a 10:30
p.m. cloelna lo a 2 a .m. closlng.
Teachers' Walkout
Now in Fifth Day
Resldentt of the area. who
pretented commlsatoners with
petitions ln qpposltlon to the late
closin1 tJme, said they tell such
a latA! houn are Inappropriate to
the 1urroundin1 residential
properties.
One resident also noted that
1nother exJIUng restaurant on
Irvine Avenue baa the same
operatlna hours. ba.tt has had
three owners in the put six
month•. The resident claimed
the chance oC ownenbips waa an
lndlcatlon of the lack of
restaurant buslnesa In the
neltb bor1>ood.
By RA VllOND EBnADA .Ill. -6'-.. O.tr..,.. ......
The Huntington Beach Union
Hl1h SChool Dlttrtct teacher
strike entered ita fifth da)' today
wltb no end in sight to lbe cur· rent contract dispute.
District officiala reported 507
teachers either on 1trike or ill
Monday u •ubttitute te1cbers
manned clutea where 28 per·
cent of the achoo! district's
20,900 student.I were abtent.
Teacher and district
negotiators are awaltln1 word
from a state-appointed mediator
on poulble renewal of contract
talks that broke oCf three w~ks
ago.
Teacher leaders HY they are
still demandini a five percent
pay boolt !or the 1978-79 school
year, a tlrnllar sa.lary raise for
1979-80 1f ~ state rules it Is
legal and blndlna arbitration in
grievances.
But school board memben are
refu sing to budge on their posi·
tion t6at the state·lmpoaed-
aalary freeze must be lifted before a nve percent raise is
graftled. I
Trltsteet s a y , they are
staunchly opposed to blndJng
arbltraUon •Ince lt mt1ht erode
local control ot..choola. ·
No m~ atrike violence bu been-reported but district of.
ficlala have decided to bua some
of the subst.Jtu~ teachers into
the 1even West Oran1e County
high 1chools N a precaution.
Police patrols have watebed.
substitute teachers board ~
since last week when a rock waa
t.hrown at one of the vehicles. No
one was hurt and no damage
was reported.
Meanwhile. aUorneys for the striking teachers are waiting for
Citizens Legal Deferue Alliance
members to file legal papers for
an a nticipated court order
aimed at halting the strike.
Bill Bianchi, spokesman for
the district's 867 teachers. said
teacher association officials
have not officially received any
legal notices concerning the
strike.
Members of the Los Angeles·
based clt.izens alliance say they
plan to seek a temporary restraining order f'rom Orange
County Superior Court this after· noon lo st.op the walkout.
F,....PageAJ
ANTHONY.·.
Last· Much Orange County
:;uperlor Court Judfe Philip
Schwab dismissed al but one
count ln the lndlctmenta on the
grounds that only eight mem-
bers ot tbe grand Jury heard all
the tesUmony In the case.
Members of the state Attorney
Generars staff are appealing
the dismissal.
Anthony did not discuss the
pending appeal when he took
over his duties today.
In a brief speech he saJd Uie
county's moet Important prob·
lems wtll be Jn provldJn1 at. f~rdable housing. paying for in-
digent heaJlh car~. aolvin1 prob-
J em s at t he airport ~nd'
continulni county buaineaa un·
der ·'the new liscal rules we
were riven after. Proposition 13."
ff fckol'1 f'•rms· Of. ONIO
em YOUI 4ifT·TOfN'f'Ha
TCKHTHElt ••• WITH
CHEDDAR
Now't tf'4t time of year to hew 10mt funf If vou·,.
blckPd.fng, bc>atlng. crote-country 11<11ng. bOwt game
watching 0t lust et\foyfng an .wnlng tco-thef ... vour
oef""<>oether wfll be really tNmOr.t>le wlttt the ttm1ptfng
tMt• ot Hldo'Y Farms of Ol'ltoe ~. w•'l't fttturi"9
ti• of ~ tavot'I ... now ... ~nd. beet of all. vou can SAVE
$LOO wtth the~ below Let Hfckof')' Farms of Ohl09
get your glC•tOgetMr togother with~
I '
I
~
•
)
" · Blldtaess TWldl!r,.....,., t. 1'11 OM. y PILOT ..
r ·stahlllty, MOaey Ma~k ~ad"rs
,.
NEW YOU <API -He's
married. probably ln bis IOI,
and probebly mak more than
'200,000 a year.
Chane.a are ho hu at leut an
underfraduatt de1,.. and be
ha1 apeait enU worttlftl W
wllb ODe JlnD.
TKAM 111 protll • dra .. 11
from two l"K'90t a.Ul'W)'I, ot a
• typical chief H"UU\' ol ODO ol
America's bl11eat indu trial
companl .
The aurveya '* rt-roadutted by Kom-l"erry lntemaUonaJ. a
Loa An1eles·bu1ed executlv
reeru1Uq nnn. and lb Coo·
rerence Board. Now Vol't·
b11td bulln .. 1 r 1 arch or· 1anluUon.
om rey 11t.henxt Inform.· Uon tut month on cblor
f'XffUU\'9 ol lht top ~ firm lo
Fortune maa '• tl1l of the a•Uon·a aoo la.rs t lnduatrlab.
TW CHI .n A8 E paid
t..~ ror thejr •ffotU. Ac · ~DC LO a ConlerencC! Bovd
pOll ot Nlartee at about UOO
major U.S. companl 1. the
averas• chief x utln at • lar1~ ma.nu/acturin1 firm r4)o t"elved 12-41 .000 In .. iary and
otbeT comprnaa.Uou tn 1977, the
most r~tnt year ror which
Telefile Computer
Reorganizes Staff
Telefile Computer Corp., lmne, has AMOUnced a company re·
organiiallon appointment or a oew preslde{lt and an influx of or-
ders tbat the company uys should help Oflaet fiscal year 1978 losses.
The Jut fiscal year. which ended on Sept. 30. was expected LO
show a I06s In exceaa of 5' mllllon. compared with a net profit of
Sl.126,867 the previous year, according to S.V. J:dens. chairman.
Though In default or bank covenants. Teleflle bas been
negotiating with its prime lender to modify lu lending arrange·
ment.s. It has no assurance t.tiati the neaoUaUons can be concluded on an acceptable basis, Edens said.
The organizational changes Include the setting up of a
separate operation to accelerate the development and production or new computers.
Harold E. Eden has been named president or the computer operation:
Assuming the position or president and chJer executive omcer
. of Telefile Co.mputer Product.a Inc. was David T. Scott, former pre·
sldent ol Jrat.entate Electronics Corp .. Anaheim.
Scott has responsibllily for day.to.day operations. Including
marlteting, engineering, manufacturing ond support activities ,..,....r,...a4
HOUSING DEMAND. • •
of 15 percent lo 25 percent In
new housing starts this year
rrom nearly 2 milllon in 1978.
They also anticipate mortgage
Interest rates that may peak at
11.5 percent.
But the trend over the longer
run is likely to be continued de·
mand for homes. That Is likely
to squeeze young home buyers.
In r~nt remarks before the
Senate Conuruttee on Banking,
Housing and Urban Affairs,
Milton Hudson, a senior vice president at Morgan Guaranty
Trust Co .. noted that more than
40 million Americans will reach
the prime home-buying age of 30
in the 1980s as the posl·war
bables growolder.
"TRANSLATING need into ef·
fective demand will involve
overcoming some formidable
hurdles if serious inflation
persists, especially ror the first·
time home buyers."
Free ideas
for future
nau,... Wlt"9 available.
Xorn-f'eny found that none ol
the tbMll WU under 50 yMrl ol
ace. wlllle Lt -or 51 ~ttent -
wtre blttwte11 00 and 84. gJeven
ol the ddet1 were between IO
and JI aid OM WU ln tbl &$«•
ovtr cl111. Namee were not di•·
clOlid In tlt.bor IW'V•Y·
ALL • allln an male and
ere married. aJt.bou&h the Korn· Peny eurwy dld not poll the e.x·
ecuUv• Lo 11.nd lf any bad been
mani.t mott than one..
·'Th re are obvious trends of
at.abUlty" ln U>e aroup. aald the
firm 'a vice preeld nl of re· search, Jobn SuNman.
£l1hteen of the execu~lvea
never worked for another com·
pan)'. the survey aald. The
chlefa have been w1th their cur·
rent emOloYera from l5 to 40
years, wlth · an average ai.y of
30.92 yeara.
.J . &OBERT FLVOa.
chairman of Irvlne'a Fluor
Corp .. an entlneerlnc and con·
structlon company. received
Sl,121,000 In um to lead the
chief executives' salary list.
The salary leader among in·
dustrial firms ls 274th·ranked
G.D. Searle & Co.'s president.
. Donald H. Rumsfeld.
According to Forbes
magazine's aMual salary sur-
vey, the drug firm's chief re·
eel ved $1.113,000 in salary,
bonuses and other compensation
ln 1m. He ls not an example of
an executive wbo stayed at one
company, having ser ved as
secretary of defense and as
former President Ford's chief ol
staff, aJDQll& other government
jobs.
TH OMAS A. Murphy .
chairman or General Motors
Corp., the natton's largest In·
dustrlal firm, received $996,000
The chief executives ln
general are as well educated as
they are well pald. Only lour of
the~ checked lo the Kom·Ferry survey have no college degrees,
while 21 have undergraduate
degrees and 13 completed
graduate school. or those going to graduate
school, five had master or busi·
ness administration degrees.
with three of the five M.B.A.'s
coming from Harvard Universl·
ty. Five had degrees as masters
or science.
d Garde:o&• Better Homes an •
..
Container
Plant s
Today's as good a time as any to start
things growing. So stop by any Allstate
Savings office and we'll give you a copy of
Better H<m1cs and Gardens, "Container
Plants'.' You won't have to fork out any green,
either. Ot's free.)
This 96-page booklet is filled with
color pictures and rules of green thumb for
growing portable plants, indoors or out.
Learn how to start a water garden, a rose
garden, a rooftop garden, even a vegetable
garden, all in potted containers.
Port M>4e p1ent1 far ')'Oii to
To get your free book, write your
name and address in the coupon below.
Then bring it down to Allstate Savings.
While you're at it, ask us about the many
ways we can make your money grow, too.
Our interest rates are higher than any
bank's.
We're Allstate Savings and Loan, with
86 offices statewide to save you. Drop by
one today and take advan~e of all the
capital ide.as we've got growmg for you.
r t:;. T; ~Y~ 7con~nc-; ~.tt ::-1
I bring tllia in to Alla11tc S.vinp, I I I
I N:imt I
And if you want to see how
good your garden could grow,
we're havini special plant
displays at all the bmnches,
with containers courtesy of ~
I I
I Add~ -· J l •
I Cit,y Zip I IAVINOS
..
NEWPORT B!ACH
One Corporate Plaza
L--------------J
•
$1,121 ,000 IN 1977
Fluor: Hlgheat P•kt
,.,. . ......,._
INDUSTRY•SJLEAO!A
Aumsfekt: S1', 113,000
,.,._,......
AT LARGEST FIRM •
OM'• Murphy: SIM,000
Consumer Suits Mulletf,
WASHING TON I AP > -The
U.S. Supreme Court has agreed
lo decide whether consumers
may sue when forced to pay
hjgber prices because of alleged
antitrust law violations.
Facing an issue carrying
enormous impact for cormumers
and business alike. the court will
review a ruling that only com·
mercial entitles. and not pr1vate
consumers. have a right lO sue
in such cases.
AM ~RICAN consumers spent
an estimated $1.2 trillion for
personal, nonbusiness needs last
·year.
The justices were urged by
Justice Department lawyers and
officials from 41 states to strike
down the lower court's ruling in
making the decision announced
Monday. Clayton Act~ a major antittust law.
The test case came from Min·
nesota, where Ka~leen Reiter
sued five hearing aid manufac·
turers in 1975. Essentially. her
lawsuit charged that the '
manufacturer$ illegally placed
anti·competitlve restraints on distribution and sale or hearing
aids.
The section says that persons injured in their "business or
property" may sue for trtple
damages under the law. The
manufacturers interpreted Chat
wording as meaning that Qllly
persons alleging that their bttsi·
ness or commercial interests
were injured mav sue. •
THOSE ILLEGAL restraints
hiked the prices consumers were
forced to pay. s aid the suit.
which was filed on behalf or
hearing·aid buyers.
N OT I NG THAT the U.S.
Supreme Court gave foreign
countries the righfto sue for'.tri·
pie damage last year under .the
Clayton Act. her appeal said:·
Lawyers for the manurac·
turers -Sonotone. Bellone
Electrics. Dahlberg Electronics.
Textron and Radioear -
challenge Ms. Reiter's right to .
sue under a section of the
· ·. . .Such governments Jlre
now guaranteed continued
standing while American ~n·
sumers are to be denied access
to the courts or thls nation. SUch
a result is incredible. • . . " ·
O ver T he Counte r
HASDUIMcJs
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STOCKS I BUSINtsS
Iii I• Feree .. t
, Toggh '79 Due;
Benefits Eyed
By SYLVIA POllTEa WIM!t wtU im mean in terma of your pocketbvok, Job
seeurlty, tOtt ol livtnc and other vital money upecta?
It will be the tou..,_t year tioee the s lump of tbe
mid·1'70I -•ad that wu the most aevere bualneas do'Wntumot~ ent.Lre po1t.-Worid Warn era.
YET1 IF YOO BANDLE n right on your own, and lf ttii '"Willie 1louM rernalDI determtned to wortr -witb an
eqully dttermined Conan-to tackle the fundamental"
chalkmfe o( lnflation, lt could tum out to be a rewardlna
year too. The question ls not wbtther um will be a tough year. ltwUJ.
lt will be blotched by a rate ol ln.OaUon averafing 8 per·
cent or more. l\ will be tbreat.ened by an upeurge in job-
leune. and bankruptcies as the pace of buslness turns
downward. It will be made even more difficult by unan. Uclpcated shortages of
euenUal 1ood1 and servlces. It will be an
economy laboring .,n. Money's
der the trtpJe burden of Worth an •led expans1on, re. cord Interest rates and ,
steep lnflatk>n. The only questions:
-How grim will we permJt Uaese adverse forces to
become?
....
-To what extent will we make pro~ in cooperat·
ing with other industrial nations in curbing inflation and
atabutztag the monetary srstem so the system can support an ever-growing volume o world trade?
-Will Preiident Carter have the guts to refuse t.o be lobbied by big-time labor and business lnt.o caving in on an
anti-inflation program?
In the immediate future, here are pocketbook certain·
Uea and probabilities:
""" <I) 1HE COST OF UVING WILL continue oppreasi ve-
ly high and it's more than possible that with price pres-
aurea build.log in food, energy and other basic raw
materials, we'll move back t.o double-dig1t 1nfJat.Jon rates
before any easing of infiaUon begins ..
You can beat it by obeying the fundamental rules for
buying food, clothing, shelter, other essentials. Shop the
food specials, substitute and switch to less expensive but
equally nutritious foods, take advantage of seasonal sales.
look for bargains in discount stores. stock up on basic
styles in clothing during clearances. -
(2) Unless you're in a recession.proof field or are
unJquely prot.ect.ed, your job will be less secure than in years.
· Honestly appraise your job security, your value to your com.
pany. Ir you're vulnerable, start to reduce your
vulnerabUtty.
<J> IF YOU'RE TRYING TO SEU a house in a sub-
urb, you'll find this more difficult, because or the softening
of the economy, the stiff c()6l and rising scarcity of
mortgage credit, and the climbing costs of transportation.
The same applies if you're trying to sell land or to build
new boUles.
But ii you're on the buying side and have the funds to
offset the adverse factors, you may find 1979 the best
period in a Jong time.
<4> Borrowing money will be bard and costly, with
bigb interest rates and the Federal Reserve System intent
on clamping down on credit t.o brake inflation.
But saving money wlll bring you the highest returns in (,!::!· with record or near·record rates. What hurts the wer. in abort, helps the saver -a perfect lllustratioa
of the two aides of the meaning of 1979's economy.
Bank: Demand
Remains Strong
High mortgage rates are having a braking effect on
real eataeactivity lnCaWom.ia, but these ratesqhould begin to decline b)'tbeend of this summer.
However. strong underlying demand for all types of
Calllomla real estate continues, according to Paul J.
O'Brien, semor vice president and administrator of Seeuri·
ty Paclfie National Bank's real estate finance department.
"DEllAND FOR NEW BASIC family housing is still
good 8Ad while the resale market ls slow at present, it should
improve~thelatterhalfofUr79,"hesald .
California home prices are continuing t.o rise gradual-ly becauae of continued increases in baslc building costs.
be takl. although the rate of increase bas slowed from the
overheated pace of the last two years.
Higher loan cotls, coupled with more expensive basic
home pnces1 have pl'iced. some potential b~ers Oij\ of the
present mancet, O'Brien said.
But tbe trend toward two·income families has made
the purchase or a first
home more affordable
( TAKING ) __ STOC_K __
for many families. he
said.
.. Rates are at 9r
near tbeir peak ~d
should begin to decUne
by tbe end of this sum.
mer, he said.
THE BaT AVAILABLE interest rate for single·
(amity borne tlnancing should go down to the 9 percent to
9~ percent range, high by historical standards but below
the psychological barrier at which consumers begin to poetpc>ne botbe purchases.
New commercial constnaction will lead the state's non· res5dential Met.or in urn and 1980, he said. In particular. he cited projected ~a1na ln office building and lnduatriaJ conatructloD.
Alllelllng overall prospects for California's building
induatry, O'Brien sees the first hallo! 1979 as more dlf·
ficult for builders tban 1977 or 1971. "'Fortunately,
Callfornla'a buUden are much more liquid than they were
durin1 the 1974 crunch and are better able to wlthstand the carrylna coets," be aald.
IN 1'llE SECOND IJALF of the year, lte foresees con-
c:UUon• improviq somewhat for builders. He believes 1980
will be a bitter. year ._ tbe coutruc:Uon industry than mt.
He llftd(cted 1tcon1 eoutruc:don &rowth, both reslden-Ual and DOa·NlideatlaJ, ln San Bernardino and Rlversldc
countJes and la San Joaquin Valley.
as--. •• •••• Pl••llH
SAN Dl!lGO <AP> -Mayor Pete Wilson planned to
8JUIOUDCe -aoeement today to bWkt two major hotels
near a SIOO .imon t-onventlcm center propoaed In dowatowa San Dleto.
Tbe bottll, wltb a total of l~ room1, b1Ve been
drawn up bJ llyatt Corp, and HoUdl.>' Inna Inc., with
popibly ~ 500 room• each to be added.
No ll*lfte altes have been pfchd for t.ot.l1 or other
butllMIMI la a 1 .. blocll ~t proJ*ct nortb of Broadw..,.
Then ill aptCted to be an ~ In tbt dt1'1 bot.el room tax to nauc. UM oon~ cecur.
TCM'llm ~t u .............. blWoa to san Dteao ;, lqt ,ur. tGIDPlrM WQ .. mUJloa la 1172.
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