Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-02-06 - Orange Coast Piloti . -=i\:H 1 · Huntington . . TUESDAY AFTERNOON. FEBRUARY 6, 1979 CoUncil Face 'Recall VO.. ft lllO •,a HC'ftOMt. '9 ,...., l .. • Presley Case Suspeet .Jalled · • Marvin Bad Drinking Problem? • Farmers Sty1nled In DC • Bhutto Death Sentenee· Upheld Body in Closet Police Corral Farmers WASHINGTON <AP > -Police kept a tight corral around the tractors of thousands of militant farmers today as Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland charged that some of the pro· testers were ''driven by just old fashioned greed." Bergland declared that the disruptive tactics of the farmers were "an unmitigated disaster. from a publir r elations point of .view The display tends "lo discredit all of agriculture and does not reflect the majority" of thost> who till the soil. he said. Despite isolated reports of rock-throwing and slashing of police car tires. authorities stymied the traffic-snarling lac· llcs with which the farmers had tied the capital in knots a day earlier, when 19 protesters were arrested Police halt answered the motonzed protest Monday with their own vehicular show or force. They surrounded the main armada of tractors and trucks with squad cars and other gov· <See FAJlMEaS, Page .U> ' Extortion Suspect Re-arrested . A suspect in the attempted ex· tortion of $250,000 from Newport Beach builder Randall Presley was re-arrested Mon day by Newport Beach police on two war· rants calling for bail totaling $280.000. Detecbve Lee Roberts said tbe suspect, Phillip Edward Fausnet, 31, of Hawaiian Gardens, was arrested •n Downey Municipal Court, where he was facln, a malicious mis~ chier charge n connection with a pellet l'un ahootlna at. the home of a Downey policeman. Roberti said tbe policeman. who had been worltin8 w1tb Newport poUce on the Pretley case, wqn't the only penor1 tn· volved in the lnvest.lgatlon to be the targ-et or violence. He laid the Loi An1eies home of a key witness ln the case was burned down recenUy and that Af'~ SHE'S MISS CALIFORNIA Fullerton •s Fogarty Fullerton Coed Named Mus Ctdifomia LA MIRADA <AP> -Linda Marie Fogarty, an 18·year-0ld coed from Fullerton, won the Mlsa Callfornla·Universe titJe lo competition Monday night at the La Mirada Civic Theater. By winning the title, Miss Fogarty earned the right to represent CalUomJa at the 1979 Miss US'A pageant to be held at BUoxl, Miss., April 30. The new Miss USA will represent this country in the Miss Universe pageant at Perth, Australia next JuJy. Fint namer-up in the Mila CaltCornla·Univerae pageant was Sheri Covinaton, 21, of Baja California. Second runner·@ was Kelly Jane Bailey, 22, or Alameda County. Rounding out the fJve fln1Jists were Renee Rolle, 20, of Richmond, who finished third runner-up and Lona Miller, 20, of Cbunel lalands, fourth ND· ner·up. Tbe new Miu California· Unlverae recelvl!d cash awards anct clothing. She ls a sophomore at Mass Rectill In Huntington? By ROBERT BARKER Of .... o.tly Heit,..., All seven members or the Hun· tington Beach City CouncU now have been named oflicially as targets of recall drives. The four council official! who were not named when the first recall wave hit in December were served written notices at Monday night's Cily Council session Two residents of north Hunt· ington Beach, Donald W. Rehl· Ing and Lonnie Marlon, served papers on Richard Siebert. Bob Mandie, Ruth Bailey and Don MacAJlister. Rehling and Marion wouldn't go into specific charges, but Rehling declared that "the city has gotten off the track and maybe we can help get it back in the right direction." Mayor Ron Pattinson, City Al· tomey Gall Hutton and Coun· cilmen John Thomas and Ron • Shenkman were designated as recall targets in December. Shenkman resigned before the papers were served. Steve Schumacher. a leader of the first recall group, said the gathering of signatures should b e g i n a.g a i n s t P a tt I n son • Thomas and Mrs. Hutton next week. days to gather about .2.000 signatures of registered voters after their papers are certified. "I've bten a r.esident of Hunt· ington Beach since 1945,.. Reh· ling told r e porters, "and I wouldn't want to live anywhere else. But all this bickering really hurts. "I wouldn't say for a minute that I could do a better job than anyone up there. but even if-we aren't s~cessful, we might get them to pay attention and do the jobs they were elected to do." Both Rehling a machitdsl ln Costa Mesa. and Marion, a car salesman, cited stormy council relationships in recent months. the resignation of a mayor and the failure to appoint his suc· cessor as reasons for their ac· lion. They also criticized the pro- longed salary dispute with police officers and said both policemen and firemen should be given salary increases Rehling said the group ls not connected with any special ln· terest group, but indicated that up to about 200 citizens who have gripes against city hall may be involved in the movement. Allegations listed on the recall notices accused each of the rour COUJICil members with incom· Recall proponents have 160 <See RECALL, Page .U> . Marv.in' s Dririk.ing f A Habits Face Probe LO~ ANGELES <AP> -The agent who testified that actor Lee Marvin "had a drinkint pro· blem" was called back to the stand as the property rights trial of M arvln vs. Marvin entered its fourth week today. Meyer Mishkin, Marvin's agent for 21 years, seid before the ®W"l ·a weekend recess that bts tllent "bad a drlnki n1 problem, but DOt '8 relation to h1a worlll.'' "If • lctor can tnow bis lines and repnrt U> work every day. he dou not have a drinktna problem ln relation to bi1 wrk," IU1hklntestlfted. Uve·ln lover, Michelle Triola Marvin, 46, iJ suine for hall his aaaet.s durtna the tlme they were lovers. lllsbkin was called Friday as a bo1Ule witness for Mias Marvin. He conceded Marvin, 54, had problems with Uquor. Mllbldn remember.cl refflv· int a leUer from lllu Manin when the couple traveled abroed on a movie location. She wrote that Marvin wa1 drinkinl and appeared to be on the veree of a mental breakdown. .,..,.,.,..... FACING DEATH? Ex-PremJer Bhutto Pakistan Rules Death For Bhutto RAWALPINDI. Pakistan <AP) -Pakistan's Supreme Court in a split decision upheld Firemen Blame 1VShort Forty-five-year·Old Gwen V Mawson died in her rented Hunt· ington Beach home Monday af· ternoon when a television set shorted out while she was nap· ping and she was overcome by heat and smoke, authorities said tOday. Her body was discovere d buried unde r c lothes ln a bedroom closet a...oul an hour after fireme n a rrived at the burning house at 7631 Yukon Drive. "Everyone including some neighbors thought she was at work when the fire began," said police arson Detective Bob RusseU. f{untihgton Beach fire Capt. Ro~r Hosmer said the inferno apparently began al about 2:40 p.m . while the woman was nap. ping in a bedroom with the television set on in the living room. Awakened by the fire, the woma n ls believed to have opened her bedroom door. but was driven back Into the <See FIRE, Page AZ) today the death sent.ence given ------------.. deposed Prime Minister Zulflkar Ali Bhutto, Pakistan's dominant political figure from 1971 to 1977. The court assured Bhutto's lawyer the former prime minister will not be hanged for al least a week because he is al· lowed that much time to petition for clemency. The decision prompteo pleas for clemency on the tormer leader .. s behatr from several countries and organizations, in· eluding the London·based human nghts group, Amnesty · International. The court rejected an oral re· quest by the lawyer for a 30-day stay or execution while it carried out a final judicial review ol lhe case. It advised the attorney to Ille a formal request for more time and the Judicial review. The Lahore HJ1h Oourt con· \llcted Bhutto and others laet March of complrine In 1974 to murder Ahmed Rasa Kusari, a co·touncl@r ol the People's Party who later attused BhuUo of pro- volt inc_ the lt'll conrtict wtth E11t Pakistan that led to the w1r with India, the breakup or Pakistan and the creation of Bangladesh. ; \leather Sunny through Wednes· day with not much tem perature change. Highs Wednesday, 64 to 72 Low s tonight in 40s ' INSIDE TODA "t' The c hairman o/ Cali/omao·s Proposihon 13 Commtuion says a state t0% fncreaae u "al.most mevita· ble." Sn Page A7. .. \ <See PRESLEY, Page "2) t Fulltrton College. t, ln the SI million 1andmart court battle, Marv1n•1 f~mer The a1ent said he called the mm producer and asked 'if Lff•1 drtnktna affected produc· tton of tbt ftlm. And they said lt didn 1. affect It at all~ ht re. called. f1'.· K11urt survived an ambush on Nov. 11. 1974. but bl5 father was C8ee BBtJ'M'O. f'a1e AJ> ' I l - ' .. 1 ., DAii. Y PILOT Man Held in Attack 4 .Jaileil In Plot On Briggs hate Gla8• Used in NB ABsault A Oana Point man ••• arniat t'd Mooday an v.ll()n ~ cl> on char lbal he aU..tbd • 1&- H r old boy v. 1th bro..,tn 1-ll c\Od ro11f'r "lkal • i>ohce n-port t-d todl) In dd1tmn, thrl' of ha' com· panmn v. r•. •u;r \ b n they repnrtl'dl creat«'d a dJ . turll nee .it the pohn~ t.auon b\'t• UM.' f)Olll't• rt•ru~t>d to i;{IV•' them b1<-k th~ rqll r 1k1\ 1, poll .aa•d In ..-v.purt S.ach Crt)' Jail lo· day in hcu ol $10,000 ball wa11 o~vld Wiiiiam Le1t h , 20. or 1 SI"' t of th 1 Golden Lan t•rn H rac 1 char~c of u ault ~uh 111 d •di)' weapon, poUt aJd t Polle" &¥Id Tum Lar~on Warnt', 20. or 211 Corul Ave . Iranian Copters, Jets Buzz Tehran TEtlltAN. l run !At> lra· mun Jet fightt.>rl!> .rnd helicopter":> buzzed seettons of Tehran today in a show or government force as tens of thousands of defiant m archers chanted support for Ayatollah Kuhollah Khomeinl'i> * * * U.S. Believes Iran Diplomat Will Be Fired WASRINGTON <AP) The Sta te Department said today tha t Ambassad or Ardeshir Zahedi is still Iran's diplomatic rep resentali ve in t he United States but t.h at it had "no reason to doubt·' press reports from Tehran that he is being fired by 1 he new government. "We have had no ofCicial con· f irmation " of Z a h e di 's termination , d e part ment spokeswoman Jill Schuker said. "He is still the ambassador." The status of Zahedi, a former son-In-Jaw and close confidante of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, has been unclear since the shah was forced lo leave Iran and a power confrontation developed between Prime M1n1 sler Shapour Bakhtiar and Ayatollah Ruhollab f<homeini. The official Ira nian news agency Pa rs quoted Foreign Mini s t er Ahm e d Nir · Fendereskei as saying in an in· terview that "the periods of service of some ambassadors. such as that of Zahedi, have been terminated. and the United States has been inrormed or this." An I ranian Embassy ~pokesman here later denied t.he report. "lie will be leaving in a month or two. but the prime minister I Bak htiar > confirmed in the last lwo or three days that Am· bassador Zahedi is still a m· bassador." said spoke!. man Ali Tabatabai. "It's a question or how one wants lo interpret the situation." At the Slate Department sources said it was apparent that Zahcdi was being removed from the post in which he became a leading member or the Washinf!ton diplomatic com· munity and one or its most lavish party g1vt:rs f ,rottt Page A I FIRE ... bedroom by heut and smoke She then hid in a closet where she died. Hosmer theorized. Russell said investigators have r uled out the possibility of arson as the cause or the fare. Fire omcials said the lack of a smoke detector an the home was a key factor in the inability of lhc s le<!ping woman lo safely escape t.he blaze. ·'She also had no apparent pre fire planning that would have allo wed her to escape through the bedroom window in· s tead of opening the door," said Hosmer ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT f~ Ot/t1'U-(Ott"' 0 11t•ht P1H)• w ttl'\wh1rh1\tflm l!•N ftN W""°'f>tr •~t•WC>ft..,.,dttt'f,..-()r~ I ru..t p~~·~•niQC~• ~,., .. ""''"""'M" 11t10H\l\f'~ Mof"/d.U tMOVOf\ (ndn f&f '°''" ""'"" """"°"' 8"<h ....... "'91 ... o. .. ~ ·-t•·""•lt•• trv..-l~ft-Mf'I '9\ftf'l( .. ·t A 1~lf' ,. .. ,.,.~, f'Ot•tOfl hpubtt~~turcti,,.,,_,., \v.,0 .. 'llil f.,.,,. OfH'W tf)M t)\tt)ltY'\t,._ ot_.,t 1~ _., ,.. ...,.,,9,,_~,,_ , .. ,.-C•h'°"'•••i.i. ..... '1M.-.._ PTci'\10tnt af'lid P~bhO.·• , ... _ .. c.,. ... Vitt> Ptflil'\•Oef'lt Mid Geftrl',,. Ml~ , ........ ,._ r .. wr '':.w.:::....,"',"'J:,"' °"""'" ~ ~~ ..... A\\1\toMt• M9MQ1ftQIA1t'W\o nominee to head u provtslonal revolutionary regime. . The exodus of foreigners con· tinued with about 400 more Americans a nd 70 Canadlau leaving m American milltary transport planes. An Amel'1c an E mbassy s po kesman said a bout 5,000 Ame ricans remain in Iran out of an estimated so.ooo when the turmoil started • year aio. In other developmentA: Andrew Young . the American ambassador la' the United Nations. ts quoted in the West German news magazine Der Spiegel as saying the United States failed to forecast events in Iran because "it didn't want to see them " -Ame rican sources in Tehran confirmed that Gen. Robert C. Huyser. deputy com- m ander of American forces in Europe, has left Iran aner more than a month. Sources said be was in Iran urging the Iranian' military to s upport Prime. Minister Shahpour Bakf\tiar. · Khomeini 's backers said Huyser 's presence there was another example of American inte rference. Bakhliar told the lower house or Parliament he would remain i n office "even ir all t he parliamentary deputies resign," and until he conducts the next general election, d espite de - mands by Khomeini that he re· sign immediutely. "I have nothing to do with governments that exist in the imagination of peop_le and are m ore or a joke.·· Bakhllar said of Khomeini 's designation of Mehdi Bazargan a s i nterim prime minister. .. But if they start taking ac- tion, I will respond accord· ingly." The state radio reported that Parliament approved dissolving the dreaded SA VAK secret police and speeding up the cor· ruptlon trials of former officials. The Oy -0ver by nine F-14 jet fighters and about 100 Chinook and Huey helicopters was the second s uch show of force ln a week. The planes a nd choppers passed over the marchers in formations The jets made about six passes over t he volatile unjversity district. and each time the crowd shouted "Allah Akhbar <God is great).'' ,,,.... Pflfle AJ FARMERS. • ernment vehicles after lhe farm vehicles had been parked on the Mall, a grassy strip between the • C at>Hol and t h e Lin coln Memorial. A utbo rlties and protes t leaders met without success to· day in what police caJled ar) ef. fort to work out a compromise under which the farmers could resume their d emons trations without violence or major dis· ruptlons of traffic. But Tom Kersey. head of a protest C'Onlinge nt from Georgia. said the police present· ed several dem ands "and we d1dn 't agree to any of lbem." · Thus the staodorr continued. with the farmers determined to drive their tractor'& and the police firmly blocking the way. Police said they asked for commitments that the tract.on would remain off expressways, not travel on city streeta before 9 a.m . or after 5 p.m .• that drivers would obey routine traf· fie rules and that "wagon· masters'' would maintain con· lrol over caravan routes. Several farmers said those condillons were unacceptable because they should have the sa me right to drive their 1~ vehicles whenever and wherever they choose as a re1ular motorlat drtvlna a car. Ber1land, meaowhlle, aald t hal deaplte their claims of financial hardshlp. the pro. testers have yet, to preHnt cobe1lve proposaJ1 for ~~ ins tbe lot ol the far•er, "and untU they do, I m not 101.nc to respond to their lndlvklual de· mud&." JD the first of MVeral public a ppearances lo wbleb be N · Iterated a lou1b Carter ad· mllliltndoD llDe, &be MC....., tald many ot tbe , • .,..,. .., p.rUdpated ID UM Amertun Agliculture movement proe.t were "1enerally ,..,,...... .. wb1t •• de1crlb• aa loeal probleml.'1 ... • Newport Beacb, wa& t.al&en to Orante County Jall on a ebarae of failure to dlapene. He faces aoo t>a 1. Wayde Torrey NeJson, 11. of 3U Dlamond Ave.. Newport Beach, wM.ll released on $500 bail on the Jame charge, poUce said. A th.ird compank>f1. 1 IS.year. old Newport Beach girl, was transported to Juvenile Hall. they said. Ponce Hid tbe locldent re· portedly began about 9:30 p.m. Monday behind 600 E. Ocean Front. Balboa, u 11-year-o&d Scott Nathan Stinett and a friend were about to enter the bWJdina wbereStlnettllvea. Witnesses reportedly told poUce that the boys were con· fronted by Leitch and Cour com· panions and lhat Leitch, aUeeed· ly without provocaUon. smaabed a liquor bottle on the pavement. . LOS ANGELES (AP\ -A Superior Court judge has im· posed a three-year sentence on four reputed me mbers or the rev- o I u t ion a r y We athe r Unde r · 1round who pl~aded guilty lo conspiracy to blow up the office of state Sen. John Briggs. Sentenced Monday by Judge Julius Leetham were Judith' Emily Bissell, 34, T h oma s Michael Justesen. 28. Leslie Ann Mullin, 34. and Mar c Curlis Perry, 30. De puty Dis trict Attorney Robert Jorgensen said the four will serve only about nine addi· tiona~ months because of credit for lime a lread y s pent in custody and good behavior . Leetham meted out three-yellr terms despite a probation de· partment recommendation that they receive nine-year ler~. FBI agents said the four were arrested Nov . 19. t977 just hours before they reportedly planned to set off a bomb outside the or· rice o( the Republican senator It \s aU~ed that Leitch then knocked Stinett down. slammed his face into the broken glass. pulled out some or bis hair and kicked at his hands and face with roller skates until Leitcb's companion.a pleaded with him to stop. • from Fullerton. Leitch was arrested a short time later after Officer Russ Sutter spotted him leav"' from the fe rry on Balboa Island, police said. P olice said Stinett suffered deep gashes over his eyes and numerous cuts and bruises on ·-his face and hands. Stinett re· portedly told police be would seek medical treatment on bis own. About a n hour later, police said five people came to tbe po lice st ation and demanded that they be given the roller ska tes. When told the skates were evidence and couldn't be re· leased. several or (he people al· legedly began cursing and kick· ing the glass front door, police said. Ice Age .in Oli~ago These ice-covered pilings~ which form the breakwater for Chicago's North Avenue. Beach. are a result of Mon- day's record low 17 below zero temperature. More than 74 inches of snow have Callen on the Windy City so far this year. Cops Kill Gunman; 10 Hostages Freed PONTIAC. Mich . <API --A 28-year-old worker al a General Motors Corp. p la nt shot a woman and took eight to 10 plant e mployees hostage before police shot h.im to death. authorities said. r~r.,,eAJ None of t.he hostages sou.ght hospital treatment. a lthough one was reportedly grazed on the arm by a bullet. PRESLEY CASE ••• Police ide ntified the dead man as Fredrick William Wunnen· berg. of Pontiac. an e mployee at the GM Truck a nd Coach Division Assembly plant, where the Mooday night shooting oc: curred. the Los Angeles S heriff's Department determined the fire to be arson. Roberts s aid Faus net had been arrested lasl. fall in the Presley case but was released for . lack of evidence. However, he said further investigation in· volving another s uspect in the case led to Fausnet's re-arrest Monday on two Oranae County Harbor Municipal Court war. rants One $250,000 warrant char"es l',.._PflfleAI conspiracy to commit extortion and a $10,000 warrant charges parole violation. Roberts said. Fausnet remained in city jail to· day. Roberts said two other SUS· peels also have been arrested in the case. GM Spokesman Frank Cronin said that shortly after 9 p.m .• a woman who worked for Canteen Corp., the plant concessionaire. was wounded in the leg while walking in the plant parkin" lot. He said Jess Patrick Romo. 29. of Downey, was arrested J an. 31 on suspicion or con· spiracy to commit extortion but has been released on bail re· The woman. hospltaliied· with duced from SI00,000 lo $10.000. a leg wound. was believed to be Roberts said the third suspect, Wunnenberg's estranged wife, Edward Dempsey. 26. of P ara· police said. mount. is in Orange County J a il awaiting sentencing arte r plead· Wunnenberg. carrying a .22· RECALL ing 1uilty to extortion charges in caliber rille. then stormed Into • • • the cue. the plant lobby and fired several . . . . The case began last May when times into the ceiling. Cronin .,etence, fa.acal trTeSponsi~~ Pr~sJey~eceived threatening said. failure to respond lo ~e~e calls demanding needs. involvement in practices $250 ooo. Pistol shots were fired They pleaded guilty Dec. 19 lo five counts. including conspiring to blow up Briggs· "office and possessing a bomb. the ingre· dients to make the explosive, dynamite and other ammuni· ti on. as well as possessing a bomb with the intent to injure people. In addition to lhe plot to bomb Briggs' office, prosecutors said the defendants pl anned to kill police officers and bomb the car driven by a judge who was pre· siding over the trial of two Ame rican Indian activists later acquitted or murder charges. A fifth defendant in the case. Clayton Van Lydegra r. 63. pleaded Innocent and was schedu.led to appear in court Tuesday for a·pre·lrial hearing ,,....rage Al BHUTIO ••. killed. President Mohammed Zia ul · Haq 's military government tried to head off demonstrations in support of the nation 's best· known politician. Schools were closed in three provinces. Bhutto's politically active wife was put under house arrest and most r the leaders and workers of his eople's Par· ty were in jail. The judges who dis on Bhutto's verdict favored acquit· tal. and his lotwyer. former l\t· torney General Yahya Khan, told reporters this provided "sound grounds .. for a judicial review. Zia. the army chief who over· threw Bhutto in J977 after na· tionwide demonstrations char~· ing the political leader with rig· gi n h is r e -e lectio n . said previously he would not change .the Supreme Court's ruling. But be i.s believed to be under pressure from the United States. China. Saudi Arabia and other allies who reportedly believe Bhutto's execution would result in a period of extreme instabiJity in Pakistan. which appear to be deceitful to into'hiaUdolslebome. The s\pokes m a n said the voters, conflict of interest and Presley ls believed to have employees were herded together d conduct unbecoming an elected come to the attention of extor-and held at gunpoint before Pon-Autol'Mily Performe official. tioniall after a financial news t\ac police officers. firing r~ Rehling said the charges were story listed bis Newport Beach through the lobby's glass doors. RE o BLU Ff' <A p 1 _ An copied from forms s ubmitted by firm aa one of the top too in hit the man twice in the chest a utopsy was being performed in the earlier recall group. Southern California. police said. and once in the neck. Redding today on the body of an Mayor Pro Tempore Richard Roberts said $250,000 in play unidentified man found along Siebert said today thal charges m o ney w as s ubseque ntl y How a rd Thro w e r . ad · Highway 36W about 30 miles are vague and unfounded. "I dropped at a pre-arranged spot ministrative assistant at Pontiac west or Red Bluff. Tehama have no coo!Uct of interest and I In Anaheim and Dem psey was Osteopathic Hospital. said the County sheriff's orficers said the am proud of my record," Siebert arrested a Cler he allegedly gunman was pronounced dead at victim, 20 to 30 years of age. had said. picked ll up. the hospital at 10:05 p.m. been shot in the head . Siebert was elected in 1916. -------------------------------------Mandie, MacAlliseter and Mrs. Bailey were elected last April. Sentence Declined NEW ORLEANS CAP> -A federal 1ppeals court has re· fused to r e sentence three Houat.on policemen who beat up a priaoner and threw him into a bayou , where he drowned, although It said the judge acted UlegaUy in placln1 the men on probation. The court declined to order 'reaente nclng for Terry Wayne Denson, Stephen Orlando and Joseph ·James Janish. con. victed Feb. 8, 1978 or beating Joe Campos Torres and throwing him mto tbe Buffalo Bayou. C4R .4D BROlJGHT 50 PHONE C4ILS "I received, 50 calla nllbt and day -even durtng the hoUdays. "The people said they aJwaya read the Dally Ptlot, Hd they bou1hl my car without hearina the enpne.'' Tbat'a the adverlillnl •~ story of the Coeta M•• man wbo pl.eed UUt ad ln the Dally Pilot: 'f4 VW MUlt Sell. Good ••. ae.. Cit ~ ~ectrlcal work. ux. llXXll JI fOU laa¥e a car to ..u. ltt tbe Dallr Piiot make your ~ rtaf. A rrtead1y ld·ftler Will bf write an ad at......_ • Choose fJom our famous selection of neckwear. , t I r. , • 1 I t VOL. 7'1., NO. 37, 3 SECTION~, H P~9ES f ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNtA N a o TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6 .. 1979 T TEN CENTS Agent Testifi~s ltf a~~ Sought SPiit: LOS ANGJ:l.ES IAP> -Lt> •hrvln '1 Hollywood Ut'nl tntJfled Wday th1t th actor, ffklna to end ht• lovt' llf•1r )Nith Mt<'ht>ll• Trtula M arvtn, onct' earnt" to him and kt"d "Howdol elr1dofthi bro d"' · Mey r M1 hkm. k t1fyinM ai. the landmurk tn I enl rl'd 1b fourth we ~. Hid he waa 1n favor of Marvin's brt'oking up with th(> former ho" turl who bad becom ht li ve ·1n 'So There!' 1arlf riend.. ··r told him It w&tt his prob 1,m," Mi hldnHld "Bull did tell htm on one OC'<'I ion that If U WM!J t.iptome, I wouldQ trJdofht-r " Thr aent, tr-atify1na lts t.1 hostile> wlt.nes uod r quet.Uoing by Mi. Marvin's attoro\'y, ud milled that h sometime" 1n tl"Odu«"d the clor·~ g1rlfr1end a.:s "Mrtt Marvm" or "Michelle Murvm.·· But he said he did 1t only because he thought it would pleuse her1 On one occasion wh~n they were traveling in 1'okyo, ht' said, Miss Marvin a•ked htm to introduce her as "Mrs Marvin " MIH Murvin's aUoroey at- templtd ul\successfully to ques. lion the agent about remarks he has made out.side court that the acrimoruous property settlement trial ha brought Marvin valua- ble publicity for his career. He "cited comments by Mish· kin that "Lee Marvin stands to make millions because of this trial, and scripts keep pouring in." However. Superior Court Judge Arthur Marshall ruled the comments were irrelevant to the case. The 48-year-old Miss Marvin, who changed her name legally. is seeking $1 million. or half of the assets the actor acqµired duri~g the six years they lived together. The trial was in recess Mon· day so that the judge could at· tend to other matters. In the $1 million landmark court battle, Marvin's former live-in lover: is suing for half his assets during the time they were lovers. Mishkin was called Friday as a hostile witness for Miss Marvin. He conceded Marvin, 54, had problems with llq,uor. Mishkin remembered reeeiv· ing a letter from Miss Marvin when the couple traveled abroad on a movie location. She wrote that Marvin ·was drinking and appeared to be on the verge of a mental breakdown. The agent said he called the mm producer and asked "if Lee"s drinking affected produc· tlon or lbe filtn. In Presley Case Extortion Suspect .FaceSNewCharges A suspect in the attempted ex· Roberts said the policeman. he said furthe r investigation in· tortion or $250,000 from Newport who bad been working with volving anothe r suspect in the Beach builder Randall Presley Newport police on the Presley case led to Fausnet's re.arrest was re -arrested Monday by case. wasn't the only person in· Monday on two Orange County NewportBeachpoliceonlwowar-volved in the investigation to be Harbor Municipal Court war· rants calling ror bail totaling the target or violence. bo rants. $260,000. He said the Los Angeles me One $250,000 warrant char~es Detective Lee Roberts said the or a key witness in the case was coosplracy to commit extortloo s us pect , Phi II i p Edward burned down recently and. that and a $10.000 warrant charges F a u s n et, 31, of Hawaiian the Los Angeles. Shenf~'s parole violation. Roberts said. Gardens , was arrest ed in Department determmed the r1re f:'ausnet remained in city jail to. Downey Municipal Co urt, where tu be arson. day. he was facing a ma1lcious mis· Roberts said Fausnet bad Roberts said two other sus· chief charge in connection with been arrested last fall in the peels also have been arrested tn a pellet gun shooting at the Presley case but was released the case. home of a Downey policeman. for lack or evidence. However, (See PRESLEY, Page A2> Entire HB C.ouncil in Recall Try 81 aOBEllT MaKER Of• DMfy "'"IWf AU seven members of the Hun· tington Beach City Council now have been named oCficlally as targets or recall drives. Tbe four councU officials who were not named when the fi rst recall wave bit in December were served written notices at Monday night's City Council session. Exe~ption Needed Airline Seeks Use Of. County Airport Or...,.e County officiaJs said today they plan no cbanaes at Orange County Airport to make room for Frontier Airline, the latest airline to file a route ap- plication for the county airport. De.D.-er via Lu Vegas. He ex· plained that the exemption would e nable the airlle to use the route pending the outcome of a legal maneuver aimed at sbortucUung the existing CAB route applica- tion process. Two residents of north Hunt· ington Beach, Donald W. Rehl· ing and Lonnie Marion, served , oa oers on Richard Siebert. Bob • Mandie, Ruth Bailey and Don MacAllister. Bob Schulman. a spokesman for th~ Denver-based airline, said the application was flied in Washington with the Civil Aeronautics Board CCAB > Mon· day. He said the airline is seeking an exemption to fly two roUnd· trips on Boeing 737s daily from "We know there will be prob- lems," Schulma n added. "But we're sure we can work uungs out, otherwise we wouldn't have , bothered to file an application." But county officials were con· siderably less optimistic about the airline's chances of getting space at the airport. APWI ........ Supervisor Thomas Riley said he will take the a pplication to the board of supervisors for comment, probably next week. Striker Larry Childress leaves no doubt where his sentiments lie as he issues a Bronx cheer a t the fro nt gate of the Newport News Shipbuilding Company in Virginia . More than 1,000 members of the str.iking UnHed Steelworkers Union staged a show of strength at the shipyard. Rehling and Marion wouldn't go into specific charges, but Rehling decla red that ''the city has gotten off the track and maybe we can help gel it back in the right direction." Mayor Ron Pattinson, City Al· tomey Gail Hutton nod Coun· cilmeo J ohn Thomas and Ron Shenkman were designated as recall targets in December. John Wayne's Release Date Indefinite "If the board is consistent - and I have no reason to think they'd be otherwise -then there will be no changes. There is no room attheairport,''hesaid. Skates Used in Attack A Dana Point man was arrest- ed Monday in Jltewport Beach on charges that he attacked a 16· year-old boy with broken glass and roller skates, police report- ed today ln addition. three of Ms com- panions were arrested when they reportedly created a . dis· turbance al the polJcd' station because police refused to give them back the roller skates, police said. In Newport Beach City Jail to- day in lieu of $10,oOO bail was David William Leitch, 20, of 33801 Street ot the Golden Lan· tern. He faces a charge of as· sault with a deadly weapon, Police said. Police said Tom Larson Warne, 20, of 21} Coral Ave., Newport Beach, was taken to Orange County Jail on a charge of failure to disperse. He faces $500 bail. Wayde Torrey Nelson, 19, of 215 Diamond Ave., Newport Beach, was released on $500 bail on the same charge, police said. A third companion, a 16-year· old Newport Beach girl, was transported to Juvenile Hall, Water Making Big Stink in Newport The d ark and foul-smellin1 liquid pouring into Newport Bay near the BaJboa Pavilion isn'traw sewage, Newport Bea~~b 's utJlitiesdirectoraaldtoday. Joe Devlin aaJd that the UquJd being pumped tbrouah storm drains, which has stirred numerous complalnta from local residents and merchant.a, ls ground waler. It ls being pumped out so that clty workers can repair a col· lapsed. sewaae maln in the area, Devlin said. He sald the sewage ltaelf is being rerouted lhrouah temporary plplna . Devlin noted that because of tht l\igb water table on the Balboa Peninsula, water has to be pumped out or manholes before work can take place. He said the water, which he de1cribed as "swampy," con· talns decomwsing vegetation and hydrogen sulfide. Does it smeJJ bad? "Boy, I'll say," Devlin com· mented. "That's the rot~n e11 1me1l." He said a sewage maln col· lapsed ln the area three weeks before Christmas , but construe· CS.. SEWAGE, Pa•e AZ> they said. Police said the incident re- portedly began about 9:30 p.m. Monday behind 600 E. Ocean Front. Balboa. as 16-year -old Scott Nathan Stinett and a friend were about to enter the building where Stinett lives. Wit nesses reportedly told pollce that the boys were con- fronted by Leitch and four com· panions and that Leitch. alleged- ly without provocation. smashed a liquor bottle on the pavement. It is alJe~ed that Leitch then knocked Stinett down, slammed his face into the broken glass, pulled out some or hi~ hair and ·kicked at his bands and face with rolJer skates until Leitcb's companions pleaded with him to stop. Leitch was arrested a short time later after Officer Russ Sutter spotted him leaving from the ferry on Balboa Island police said. ' Police said Stinett suffered deep gashes over his eyes and numerous cuts and bruises on his face and hands . Stinett re· portedly told• police he would seek medical treatment on his own. 1 About an hour later, police said five people came to Ule pollce station and de manded• that tbey be elven the roller skates. When told the skates were evidence and couldo 't be re· leased, aeveral or the people al· legedly began cursing and kick· lng the glau front door poUce saJd. ' Shenkman resigned before the papers were served. Steve Schumacher, a leader of the first recall group. said the gathering of signatures should begin against Pattinson, Thomas and Mrs. Hutton next week. Re'call proponents have 160 days to gathe r about 12,000 signatures of registered voters after their papers are certmed. "I've been a resident of Hunt· ington Beach since 1945, •' Reh· ling told r e porte rs. "and I wouldn't want to live anywhere else. But all this bickering really hu~. "I wouJdn't say for a minute that I could do a better job than anyone up there, but even if we aren't successful, we might get them to pay attention and do the jobs they were elected to do." CAR AD BROUGHT 50 PHONE C4LLS "I received 50 calls niabt and day -even during the holidays. "The people said they always read the Daily Pilot, and they bought my car without beariq the enpoe." That's the advertising success story of the Costa Meaa man who placed. this ad in the Dally Pilot: '14 VW MWlt Sell, Good ene. Clean car. Needs Eeclrlcal work. XU· lllUCll II )'OU ban a car to tell, I« the Dally Pilot make your phone rtnc. A f'rtendl)' ad·viaer will help write an ad at '42·M78. LOS ANGELES CAP) -Of· ficials at UC14 Medical Center said today, they have stopped of· rering predictions on the re- lease or John Wayne. recovering from a cancer operation three weeks ago. ''We know that he's leaving but there's no definit word on when he will be going home.·· medical center spokesman Al Hicks said. Shortly after the film star's ope ration J an. 12, a cancer specialist called his recovery "miracuJous and exceptional." Hospital SJ)Okesmen regularly predicted Wayne would go home "in a week or 10 days." Hicks said today that Wayne • was "progressing satisfactori· ly," but would not further com· qient on the condition of the ·11-year-<>ldbox~Uiceking. Blast Rips Pickup Truck In Newport A damaged tail pipe and mul· ner were blamed today ror an explosion that turned a pickup truck into a "ball or fire" In Newport Beach Monday and cracked windows lo a nearby house. A Fire O e partment spokeswoman said no lnjuries were reported. She said the de· partment has no record of tbe names of the truck's occupants. Newport Beach Police S«t. Dan'yl YouJe said he spotted t1Mt Clre at about 5:40 p.m. 1n froat ol M07LakeSL. He said two men jumped from <See TRUCK, Pa&e Al~ Last year, North Central Airlines was denied a route certiCicate for Orange County by the CAB because of the refusal or county officials to grant the airline space in the terminal. Swim Classes Set Swim classes for all ages from three months up will commence Feb. 19 at the dome·enclosed pool at the Orange Coast YMCA, 2300 Univers ity Drive, Newport Beach. Inte rested applicants should enroll now,' the YMCA· said. Coas t Weather Sunny through Wednes· day with not much Lem· perature change. Highs Wednesday, 64 to 12. Lows tonight in 40s. INSIDE TODA V Th tt c hairman of CoU/onrio'• PTOJ>O•Uion 13 Commitlion 1a.,a a 1tate tm: blcmJte ta "olmoat melrito· tM." See l'Qflt A1. l•llex At Y-llrfk• At Allll L"'"9 a .,_ ......_ .. Cl ""'"'--M l..M,..,. M _........_..,.$ ....... u.s ...... ., .. C.......... At ___.P-* M ~ Cil-" .............. M ~ .............. M CUN a• .. a.wtl at.J .... ....._a.-. ........ as ............ *,......,.. ., ..... ii 1 ' .,.. """"" ., .. ......... Ct·t ...._ A4 ......... Ct,..,.. ..... M ...... , 3 • ..\" ~ \ 1. I, .. - ~ ..... ,..,_ SUCCUMBS AT 100 Mts. MtnnJe Morrf1 Pioneer Di • ID l OOth Year Harbor area pioneer Mmme Morris of Costa Mesa died Mon dlty night after several ycurs of declining health. M f's. Morris. who received birthday greetingR trom f>resl· dent Cart.er when she turned 100 tn December. settled in the Harbor area in about 1885 after leaving Moorehead, Minn. She and her hus band. Ed, opened a small bot dog stand ~nd family restaurant across from the Balboa Pavilion ln Newport Beach in 1923, accord· 1ng to relatives. The "Coney J sland " restaurant wa.s used by various Hollywood companies as the location for several films during the 1920s, relatives reported, and remained open until the height or the depression in 1933. The Morrises moved north and later took defense plant jobs during World War IJ. Eventually they purchased a bome in Cam- bria, where Mrs. Morris lived alone after her husband's de1tth nint! years ago. Mrs. Morris is survived by 16 m·phcws and nieces. including Mr. and Mrs. Grant Langseth of Costa Mesa who cared for her for several years until she en· lcrcd Port Mesa Convalescent I lome, Costa Mesa, four years d gO Funeral serv i ce s are ~cheduJed for 3 p.m. Wednesday al the Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel, no Broadway, Costa Mesa. Burial will follow at Pa c ifi c Vie w Cemetery, Newport Beach. lroine Firm Offers A id To Churches The Irvine Company nas un· nounced a lease purchase plan Intended to assist Irvine church groups to rmance church owld· in gs. Richard Cannon, a company vice president, said that under the plan, a church would lease its preferred· site for three •years. paying nine percent of the price which is agreed upon in the initial lease arrangement each year. The lease ·payments would be applied toward the purchase. After the third yeur, the church would have to pay the remaining purchase price, or its lease would expire , Ca nnon said the arrangement St•ves churches the lime needed to ruise money through dona- tions to buy a site. I rvtne congregations have complained that the high price of land has made it difficult for fledgling nocks lo organize' a church. OAANOECOAST H DAILY PILOT '"" Or•l"liQr(OIMot 0.H\I PUot.w1ff\•htCft~tom 111 ... <1 \lie-"'"" '' .... '-I>• lhoOt- , .... Pultlk/MflqC-y -·!•Ml•-··· •~O••·~ a ~., '~ ~r•t IOf CoM• Mr~• NeWOUf't a..tt, Huftt~Oft 8-•f'l'FOUft •••nV•ll•Y 1,...,,,. l-.a. .. 11 S,..lnC .. <1" •f'Ol••-""'llllfl••P<llMiMtooS..111,..n•"" \ol'IOt r• Tllo ll'flltllWll pc.tbfllllfnq "'"''If •I JJ0 We\\ I•• !tlrwt, eo.11 M<tu. Ctll!Ofnle 11'1' .... '1 ... -"''"°'"' -"""''- -.... ~ ~·­"'""#14 Wflet!ft!lld\Of\ T...,...,,. C7f41~ c ........ A4Y•'*'"IMM11'1 FonneT P.rime Minister's Sentence Uphel,d RAWALPINDI , Pakl1l1n •AP, Pait•tan '1 upr me Cour\ In a pill d c Ion upheld t.uday Uwl death 1cmlcnc alvtn ~Poffd rrimt1 Mltlf•ttr Zulllhr AH 1Hbutkt, Paloat•n'" dominant polltlul n urc from 1971 to am The\ r6Urt auured 8hulto'1 lawy r lht former prime minister wiJI not be han1t'<I tor Ill 1 ... t • "" •k lx•CQUliC he lti al lowed that m~h time to pet.it.loft tor t'lemeney The ckcl Ion prompt.ed pleas for cl mc.-ncy on the rormer luder'a b4'h It from several counlril' and or1u1nluations, in· cludln6' the London bused human r1ahlll aroup. Amnesty lnternaUonal Tbe court rejected an oral re· f&ucst by the lawyer for 11 JO.day 1t1y of execution while It carried out 1 tlnal Judicial review or the caae. It advised the attorney to me a formal request ror more time and the judJciaJ review. The Lahore High Court con· vlcted Bhutto and others last March. of con.spiring Jn 197-4 to murder Ahmed Raza Kusuri. a co*rounder of the People's Party who later accused Bhutto of pro· Force Shown in Iran Jeu Biuz Tlwwanth of f(Jwnwini Follmvers TEHRAN. lrnn tA P > Ira· ntan Jel lighter~ and h llcoptcrs buait'd section1 of Tehran today in a 11how of 1overnment force uli lens of thousandi. of defiant marchers chanted support for Ayatollah RubolJuh KhomelJ\l's oommee lo head a provisional revolutionary regime. The exodus of foreigners con- tinued with about -400 more Americans and 70 Canadians leaving in American military transport. planes. An American Embassy * * * apokcsmao said about s.ooo Americans remain in Jrao out or an estimated 50,000 when the turmoil started a year ago. lo other developments: Andrew Young . th e American ambassador to the United Nations. is quot~d in the West German news magazine Der Spiegel as saying the United States railed to forecast events in Iran because "it didn't want to see them." -American s ources in Tehran confirmed that Gen. ·• * * Iran's Ambassador To U.S. Dismissed? States has been informed or this." An Iranian Embass y spokesman here later denied the report. Robert C. Huyser. deputy com· mander of American forces in Europe, has left Iran after more than a month. Sources said he was in Iran urging the Iranian' military to s upport Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar. · Khomeini's backe r s said Huyser's presence there was another example of American interference. Bakhtiar told the lower house of Parliament he would re main in office "even if a ll the parliamentary deputies resign," and until he conducts the next general election. despite de· mends by Khomeini that he re· sign immediately. ··1 have nothing to do with governments that exist in the imagination or people and are more of a joke." Bakbtiar said or Khomeini's designation or Mehdi Bazargan as interim prime minister. "But if they start laking ac· tion, I will respond accord· ingly ... voklng the 1971 conflict wllh East Pakjatan that led to the war with India, the breakup of Pakistan and lhe creation of Bangladesh. Kasuri sur~ved an ambush on Nov. 11. 1974. but his father was kllJed. President Mohammed Zia ul· Haq's military government tried to head otr demonstrations In support or the nation's best. known poUUclan. Schools were closed In three provinces, Bhutto's politically active wife was put unde r house arrest and most of the leaders and worken of his People's Par-ty were in jail. The judges who dissented on Bhutto's verdict favored acquit· lal. and his lawyer, former At,. torney General Yahya Khan, told reporters this provided "sound grounds''forajudicial review. Zia. the army chic( who over· threw Bhutto in 1977 after na· tion~ demonstrations charg· ing the political leader with rig· gin his re ·el ection , said previously he would not change the Supreme Court's rullnif. Building Codes Topic Of CdMMeet The Corona del Mar Civic As· sociation will meet Wednesday to discuss proposed stricter de- velopment standards for old Corona deJ Mar. T he meeting. open to the public, will be held at 7 :30 p.m. al t he OASIS Senior Citizen WASlllNGTON <AP > -The State Department said today that Ambassador Ardeshir Zahedi is still lran's diplomatic representative in the United States but that it had "no reason to doubt" press reports from Tehran that he is being fired by the new government. Fanners Hemmed In By Washington Cops • Center on the comer o erite and Fifth avenues. City officials will be present to answer questions. "We have bad no offJcial con- firm a lion " or Zahedi 's termination . dep a rlment spokeswom(ln Jill Schuker said. "He is still the ambassador." The status of Zahedi. a forme r son-in· law and close confidante of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. has been unclear s ince the shah was forced to leave Iran and a powe r confrontation developed b et wee n Prime Mini s t e r Shapour Bakbtiar and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The official Iranian news agency Pars quoted Foreign Minister ·Ahmed Nir - Fendereskei as saying in an in· terview that "the periods of service of some ambassadors. such as that or Zahedl, have been terminated. and the United . ,. . .,.,.... SHE'S MISS CALIFORNIA Fullerton'• Fogarty Frakrton Coed Named Mus CtUifomia LA MIRAO A CAP> -Linda Marie Fogarty, an 18-year-old coed from Fullerton, won the Miss California.Universe Litle In competition Monday night at the La Mirada Civic Theater. By winning the title, Miss Fogarty earned the right to represent California at the 1979 Miss USA pageant to be held at Biloxi. Miss .. AprlJ 30. The new Miss USA will represent this country In the Miss Universe pageant at Perth. Australia next July. First runner·UP in the Miss Calffornla-Unlverse pageant was Sheri Covl.ngton, 21. or Baja Calltomia. Second runner·up was Kelly Jane Bailey, 22, of Alam eda County. Rounding out the rive ltn1U1ts were Renee Rolle , 20. or, Richmond, who finJ1hed third runner·up and Lona Mltler, 20, ot Channel f1J1nd1, fourth run· ner-up. The new Miu California· Universe received ca1b awards and clothlnf. WASHINGTON (AP> -Police kept a Ught corral around the tractors or thousands of militant farmers today as Ag riculture Secreta ry Bob Bergland charged that some or the pro· testers were "driven by just old - fasbioned greed." Bergland declared that tbe disruptive tactics of the farmers were "an unmitigated disaster. from a public relations point of view." The display tends "lo discredit an of agriculture and does not reflect the majority" of those who till the soil, he said. Despite isolated reports or rock-throwing and slashing or police car tires. authorities stymied the traffic.snarling tac· tics with which the farmers had lied the capital in knots a day earlier. when 19 protesters were a~rested. Police had answered the motorized protest Monday with their own vehicular s how of force. They surrounded the main ar mada of tractors and trucks wilb squad cars and other gov· Older Adults Get Activities A whale.watching trip and classes in art, music, writing and other topics will be offered this month at the Older Adults Social, Information and Service Center <OASIS> in Corona del Mar . Classes beginning this week also include organic gardening. physical fitness, duplicate bridge and dance lessons. Legal aid and lax assistance a re also offered. The whale.watching trip is scheduled ror Feb. 17 and costs $5 per person. Additional Information 111 available by calling 759·9471 OASIS is located at Fifth and Marguerite avenues. ,,.... Pflfle A l TRUCK ••• the truck after passersby yelled that it was on fire. Moments later, an explosion ripped through the truck, followed by a second explosion· as ti a mes reached a second gas tank. Firemen approaching the scene reported seeing a "ball of nre." It was later learned that the truck bad Just been filled with 3S gallons of gas. Damage to the truck was tstlmated at $5,000. In addition, blistered paint and cr acked win· dowa at 3807 Lake St., whoae oc· cupants weren't home at the time, resulted In a dama1ee eatlmateortlOO,sheaald. Tbe driver of the truck report· ed that the taJJ p1pe and mufner needed repalr and were drai1tn1 on the cround. Firemen speculated the f rlcUon ml1bt have Ht up 1p1..U and Lrtcc•red the oploe~. ernment vehicles after the farm vehicles bad been parked on the Mall, a grassy strip between the Capitol a nd the Lincoln Memorial. Authorities a nd protest leaders met without success to-- day in what police called an er. fort to work out a compromise under which the farmers could resume their d emonstrations wlthoul violence or major dis· ruplions of traffic. But Tom Kersey. head of a protest conti n ge nt from Georgia. said the police present· ed several demands "and we didn't agree to any of them." Thus the standoff conUnued, with the farmers determined lo drive their tractors a nd the police firmJy blocking the way. Police said they asked for commitments that the tractors would remain off expressways, not lrave1 on city streets before 9 a.m. or aft.er 5 p.m .. that drivers would obey routine traf. fie rules and that ··wagon· masters" would maintain con· trol over caravan routes. Several farmers said those conditions were unacceptable because they shouJd have the same right to drive their 1,350 vehicles whenever and wherever they choose a~ a regular motorist driving a car. t Choose from our famous selection of neckwear. The proposed standards would reduce the average height or new construction from 24 feet to 20 feel. reduce the allowable floor area and provide other. stricter limitations. The issue was raised last month by the Friends of lnsplra- tion Point, who complained in a letter to city officials that builders are purchasing old homes on large double lots, tear· ing them down and building up to the limit of codes, thus chang- 1 n g the character of neighborhoods. The ~tter said that. because the codes were established when Corona del Mar was a summer home type of community. they are less stringent than they should be. At the request of the Newport Beach Planning Commission, the civic association is holding the Wednesday meeting to dis- cuss the proposed changes and develop an opinion questionnaire to circulate in the community. F.-... PGffe A l SEWAGE ••. lion work interfered with Christmas shoppers so, at the request or some me rchants, the work was delayed untll alter the holidays. Hig h tides have further de· layed the work. he said. Repairs -and the pumping out of the fouJ.smelllng water - are expected to be completed this week. Devlin said. Dmlty,. ......... -CHUACH FOUNDER DEAD Rev. Claude E. Thurmond Oergyrnan Thllnnond Rites Set Funeral se rvices ar e scheduled Thursday for the Rev. Claude E. Thurmond. 87. rounder of Costa Mesa's Harbor Assembly of God Church. Rev. Thurmond died Sunday of a heart attac)c at Royale Con- valescent Center , Santa Ana. A minister from 1924 until 1959 when be retired, Rev. Thurmond founded 23 churches during his lifetime His ministry began in Nebraska and moved lo South Dakota. Idaho and Iowa before Rev. Thurmond arrived in California's Mojave region in .1949. He was pastor of the Harbor Assembly or God Church. which he founded in 1954. until 1959. He resided in Costa Mesa until 1976 when he moved to Lancaster. re· turninf. lo Orange County only recent y. P.ev. Thurmond is survived by bis widow. Clara ; sons Delbert of Costa Mesa and Frank of u. linois ; daughters . Vanita Winchester or Mountain Home. Idaho. and Ruth Williams of Lancaster: sisters. Alma Fox and Thelma Willcox. both of Benton. Ill.; 11 grandchildren; 19 great.grandchildren and five great.great.grandchildren. Funeral services are set for Thursday at 2 p.m . in the Harbor Assembly of God Church, 740 W. Wilson St.. Costa Mesa. with Rev. V.L. Hertweck olficiating. Visita tion i s sched-Uled between 4 and 8:30 p.m. today and Wedn esd ay at B e lJ Broadway Mortu a ry , 110 Broadway. Costa Meaa. p,.._ P-.,e A l PRESLEY ••. He said Jess Patrick Romo. 29. of Downey, was arrested Jan. 31 on !·.:spic!~n l)f f'on - spiracy to commit extortion but ~as been released on bail re· duced from $100,000 to $10,000. Roberts said the third suspect. Edward Dempsey, 26, or Para. mount, is in Orange County Jail awaiting sentencing after plead- ing guilty lo extortfon charges in the case. The case began last May when Presley received threatening telephone calls dema nding $250..000. Pistol shots were fired into his Lido Isle home. · Presley Is believed to have come to the attention of extor· tionists after a financial news story listed his Newport Beach firm as one of the top 100 in So~them California. police said. " . I PASADENA (AP> C•llfonna, nittronomer.s 1111y ~Y b•v found f'Yid n(I Of myatel'ious pr~es. ('!l -PQMlbl)' • bluk hole t the t' n~ r ot our alax). Pokttman '"' tM Callrorn1 ln ltlut~ or Ti bnology ay .Utt0n0m ni t alt h H Obaorvatori • aid •n un· pr l'tdt'l'\l~d picture or lb~ cot.et oq.ht\ M Uky Wa~ ~ lata nao production of radio •av Otl\C'r CRlt C'h a tronomers Bo•lngF .. fl aaid lbetr aludlea of that ~n~rc<1t1r p lncttC' <'me .. In· d cate. surprl lnaly. that al li uniformly l " The are <"Ov•rs ttboul three lithl yeant, n erJy 18 tr1ll1on mll a. ind seem to C'Ontaln m lllona ot 1tar1, th 1clenUa aa•d. Vet. vldence lndlulM at rontah11 no hlth tt-mperaturt> al.art, «>mmon l whcrt In Ow aatny • 'Whll the evidence we'v found for a unlfOf'ml)' t"OOI lf•l•c lie cmter hint th1t a lo.lit• County Gets More Grants Congressm n Jerry Patterson. D·Santa Ana. has announcf'd that Orange County will receive an additional SJ.35 m1ll on m federal housing grants T he announcement, made Monday. has yet lo be confirmed by orfficials in the federal Hous- ing and Urban Development Ragtime Leads Boat Race By ALMON LOCKABEY Dally ................ The two light displacement Class A yachts in the Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta yacht race were seUing a torrid pace down the Baja California coast today with the 65-foot Ragtime taking over the elapsed time lea d from the 69·foot Drifter Arter failure to r eport on Moo- d a y, Ragtime came up on today's roll call claiming a 267-mile day's run in the pre- vious24hours Her position placed her north of Point Lazaro with 528 miles to go in the 1,125-mile race. The race started Saturday at 1 p.m. from Marina del Rey Drifter logged a 244-mile day's run and was about 23 miles bebjnd Ragtime with 551 miles to go. Ragt.Jme's average speed since the start has been nine knots to 8.6 knots for Drifter. At those speeds both yachlS have a chance to erase the elapsed time record of six.. days, three hours and 39 minutes. Handicap leaders at today's 8 a.m . roll call were Dakar, GTeen Hungarian and Secret Love in that~r er Win of 12 knots from the norl ast were reported from the cort vessel Pioneer Support Told SACRAMENTO (AP> -With apparently strong Democratic s up p,ort , Assemb l y Speaker Leo McCarthy is mov- ing lo strip the constitutional convention from Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. ·s proposal to balance the federal budget. McCarthy is supporting an alternativt' measure that would 'Urge Congress to pass a constitu· tional a mendment requiring a balanced budJ?el and a federal spending limit but without a con- vention, spokeswoman Carol Benham said Monday. Department, from whtch the funds would rome. But one HUD spokesman ln Los Angeles said he has re- te1ved verbal notification of the allotment. ··t JUSt haven't received anything in wr1tlug and so l 'd hale to comment at this point," said Herbert Roberts. The money came from Hous- ing and Community Develop- ment grants turned down by the cities o( Orange and Newport Beach. It is expected to be made available for the cities and the county by Jate spring. HUD officials say they will take the money available on a competitive basis, giving grants to agencies that have worthy projects and that are ready to spend the funds. Last week, county supervisors allocated $4.6 miJlion in HCD grants in the fifth year o( the program. TJle money is to be used for a vafiety or projects to uegrade housing or lo provide housiog for th~ county's low and moderate income families. One possible use o( the addi- tional $1.3 million would be to provide housing for low and moderate ancome families from Bluebird Canyon who lost their homes in the Laguna Beach landslide Two Vic tims Of Collision Identified Two people burned beyond recognition in a blazing head-on traffic crash Saturday in the Yorba Linda area have been identified as Michael Gould o( Orange and Darren Lefevre of Anaheim. Orange County coroner's dep- uties said today the two 18- year -old traffic victims were ide ntified through a check of dental records. A third victim or the crash, 17 -year-old Darlene Doyle of Yorba Linda. died Sunday, 5)eputiessaid. The crash occur.red when a pickup truck collided head-on with a car on Imperial Highway west of Orangethorpe Avenue. officials said , causing the auto to burst into flames. The driver of the pickup truck, 18-year-old Craig Burrow of Cer· ritos. was hospitalized for treat- ment of what were describd as major iltjuries. SculHa Dieer iii Tre•file maHIVtl,. obJt"ct such os a black Some aatronomen have aug- hole <'OUld ~ r~span lbl for the ge11ted tho po1u1lblllty of a super· ~ncrgy t"nlfs111ona seen, the massive black hole at the center ev dtmce ror a black hol" la Ull • or this and other galaxies. only lndtr ct," ,.aid Tbomaa A black hole theoreUcally Gebatl · would exist when matter is com· In othrr words. proceHes pressed to Incredible density. IC known to produce o much the earth were withJn a black eneray WO\lld normally be In hole. 4ll 1ts mass would fit lnto a credibly hot table tennis ball. A ma111ve b lack bole. Scientists s uggest that if howevt!r, m &ht account for the enough mass is crammed Into a ener&Y by explo \'ely consum-small enough area, nothing Ina mattc-r that lnll1 Into the cos-could escai)e its gravitational mlC' lb)'ll. pull, not even Jiichl The hole. ~Mrelore, would be a black spot an space. · None has be n positively iden- Utled but a growing number of aatronomers accept the theory. The MUky Way is a spiraled disc ln space that contains about 100 billion stars. The greatest concentration of stars are near its center. Our star, the sun, is near an outer edge. H a le astronomer s Eric Becklin &ld Gerry Neugebauer produced the first picture or the galactic core with a one.meter Dalty ...... SUtf ,..... FIREMEN ENTER SMOKE-FILLED HOME ON YUKON DRIVE WHERE WOMAN DIED Electrtcal Short In Televlslon Set Blamed tor Fatal Fire In Huntington Beach 'Myth Movies Screened for Class at VCI A series of films exploring clas~ical myths, screened in conjunction with a course on Classical Myth and the Cinema at UC Irvine, is open to the general public. The fllms are shown on Tues-day and Wednesday afternoons, 4 to 6, in Humanities Hall 178 on campus. There is no admission chargt. Jules Dassln's "Phaedra" is scheduled Wednesday. Other films in the series and their dates of scree ning are: Michael Cacoyannis's "The Tro- jan Women," Feb. 13 and 14; Ma rio Camerini's "Ulysses." Feb. 20 and 21 ; Cacoyannis's "Electra'"," Feb. 27 and 28; Marce l Ca mus' .. Black Orpheus," March 6 and 7; and Jean-Luc Godard's "Le Mepris," Marcbl3and14. Nixon School Hit by F ir e Orange County firemen are in· vestigating the explosion and flre that burne d out one classroom of the Richard M. Nixon Elementary School in Yorba Linda Monday night. A spokesman for the fire de· partment said the blast occurred at about 10:30 p.m. at the desert· ed school at 1801l E . Yorba Lin- da Blvd. Damage was estimated at $76.000. Huntington Woman P e rishes in Fire Forty-five-year .old Gwen V. Mawson died in her rented Hunt· ington Beach home Monday af. terooon when a television set shorted out while she was nap· ping and she was overcome by beat and smoke. authorities said today. Her body was discovered burled under c lothes in a bedroom closet about an hour after firemen a rrived at the burning house at 7631 Yukon Drive. :·Everyone . including som e neighbors thought she was at work when the fire began,'' said police arson Detective Bob Russell. Huntington Beach fire Capt. Roger Hosmer said the inferno apparently began at about 2:40 p.m . while the woman was nap- ping In a bedroom with the television set on in the living room. Awakened by the fire. the woman is believed to have opened her bedroom door, but was driven back into the bedroom by heal and smoke: She then hid in a closet where she died, Hosmer theorized. Russell said investigators have ruled out the possibility of arson as the cause of the fire . Fire officials said the lack of a smoke detector in the home was Bomb Threat H oax SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A telephoned bomb threat drove Mayor Dianne Feinstein briefly from her office Monday. a key factor in the inability of the sleeping woman to safely escape the blaze. "She also had no apparent pre-fire planning that would h ave allowed he r to escape through the bedroom window in· stead er opening the door," said Hosmer. Disneyland Fall Victim Recovering A criticaJly injured 4-year-old Oregon boy is progressing after falling 30 feet from a slow· mov.ing ride at Disneyland, but doctors have oot decided when to release him, a hospital spokesman in Anaheim said. Jason Hansen of Terrebone, Ore .• suffered a skull fracture in the J an. ZT fall from the People Mover , an elevated train ride that travels at approximately two mpb. The boy was listed in crilicaJ condition at Palm Harbor GeneraJ Hospital shortly after the accident. On Mo nday, h ospital s pokesman Mike Windes said the child was "do- ing much better. "He seems to be doing much beUer now:· he said. "He's no longer in the intensive care unit, but he's still under oservatioo." The boy's condition was listed as stable, he added. @ Ordinarily two hou~ is plen· ty of tirne to allow to get from home to LAX. but 1t rained the morning I left for New York and I barely made my flight. My luggage d1dnl and I had to wait for 11 to catch up to me at JFK I should have reoognized that as an omen o f lhlngs to come. The trip seemed 10 be full of close calls and minor In- &EMWISI! conveniences The weather was one o f the contributing factors. It was cold. really cold. Now I grew up In Mlnnesota and enjoy the . cnsp freshness of winter air bul even I don't get much en- JOY1T9nt out of ff weather. It snowed .... freshly fallen sno w Is so baautllul ... but enough 1s enough' The large quantities o f that lovely white stuff - clcsed the ail"POf1 and delayed part of ~ tourney for an extra day. Mohammed All was on that flight too and charmed everyone as we all waited around in as gOOd humor as pOSSible On the '"'t night In New York City I went 10 a dinner dance at the St Regis Rool where Peter Duchin Played and lhe Concord Watch Com- pany was the host. They tOOlc Firemen. lifeeuards and county munity Hospital in Mission Viejo. A paramedics admlnlster first aid to Garden helicopter transported the diver to the Grove scuba diver Dave Hanna, 30, who USC decompression chamber on Catalina was pulled from about 10 feet or water orr this morning where doctors said they Diver's Cove in La~una Beach Monday af· were working on the diver in the ternoon by friend Dan Dries, also or emeq~ency room. A report on Hanna's Garden Grove. ·Hanna was rushed to condition was due la ter today. USC South Coast Medical Center, where be was spokesmen said. tt111 opportunity to Introduce •~•CHARL ES H BA RR tf'lelr new super-thin quartz • watch .. less than 2MM lh1ck The oroductlOn will be hm1ted ao they couldn't pr~ mlse When we wlll have the ....._ flf watch In the store to show you. AlllllricM .._Seel.tr Saturday was the annual 24 t<arat CIUb dinner Ind Pettie• Ac~ G...i that •IWIYI follow II'• a won-"' .. a...,, derful ttme to vlllt with old • treated and transported to Mission Com· , itele1co_J?e at.r Hale's Las C•m· panas Obeervatory ih Chile. 1"9e photograph wu taken ln the • frared w-velengths, wbtch are invisible to the eye. Geballe, worklne with John Lacy and Charles Townes of the University of California at Berkeley. and Fred Baas or. Leiden University In The Netherlands , identified the unexpectedly cool core. which contains enough mass to make eight milllooa.qm. 4Jailed In Plot On Briggs LOS ANGELES IAP > -A Superior Court judge has im- pased a three-year sentence on four.reputed members of the rev- olutionary Weather Under- ground who pleaded guUty to conspiracy to blow up the office of state Sen. John Briggs. Sentenced Monday by Judge Julius Leetham we r e Judith Emily Bissell, 34. Thomas Michael Justaen, 28, Leslie Ann Mullin, 34. and Marc Curti& Perry, 30. Deputy District Attorney Robert Jorgensen said the four will serve only about njne addi- tional months because of credit for time already s pe nt in custody and good behavior. Leetham meted out three-year terms despite a probation de- partment recommendation that they receive nine-year terms. FBI agents said the four were arrested Nov. 19, 1977, just hours before they reportedly planned to set off a bomb outside the of- fice of the Republican senator from Fullerton. They pleaded guilty Dec. 19 lo five counts, including conspiring to blow up Briggs• office and possessing a bomb, the ingre· dients to make the explosive. dynamite and other a mmuni- tion . as well as possessing a bomb with the intent to injure people. In addition lo the plot lo bomb Briggs' office, prosecutors said tht-defendants planned to kill police officers and bomb the car driven by a judge who was pre- s iding over the trial of two _ American Indian activists lat.er acq ujtted or murder charges. A fifth de(endant in the case,' Clayton Van Lydegrar, 63, pleaded innocent and was scheduled to appear in court Tuesday for a pre-trial bearing. By George, 'Du4's Funny Ralph Clark, chairma n . of the board of the Orange County Trans it District. a dmits it doesn't make much sense. Bot Monday he a n - nounced n change in the dale or the next directors' meeting: "The meeting will be he ld on Feb. 22. That's a Thursday We have to move it from Feb. 19 on which we cele bra t e Was hington's birthday . Instead, we 'II be meeting on Washington 's actual birthday," Clark said. friends in ttlG .iewelrY 1ndu t had a chance to visit with the Kaptans and am happy to re- port that the wonderful old gentleman. Lazare Kaplan. is sflll going strong . a truly amazing gentleman . auite univeraallY recognized as the dean of diamond cutters. The Rolex Watch people put on their traditlOnal bnJnch on Sunday. This time it was at the United Nations Plaza Hotel and featured a tennis clink: on the penthouse courts. When they seMld brunch I shared a tabl e with friends from Savannah. Green Bay and Kansas City. Ille Nastasi was there too and showll'lQ off his "'nasty" Image. Tuesday r saw a fantestk: privat e co llectlon o f gemstones that is being of-fered for sale by a Boston family. One of the moet oot· standing pie<:e$ was a natural Alexandrlte with a beautiful color chanof. They are asking half a million for 1t. That sounds like a terrible price but 1t is really a v"f rare gem. Also shOwn were some bllCI< opals and blue a tar saphlres .... truly lovely and my favorites of the COllec- t 10 n . No. I didn't buy any .... but maybe 111 be able to 9how the collection to you If the owners bring It to the West Coat later rtila year. a.a they .,. thlnkil'lQ they will. In the meantime oome and see my coll~lon. I have 1 lot ot beautiM too. and you might see something you can't live Without .... or th1t your Valentine would love to hive. > Escape Brief for Would-be Ford Killer Your tamp ? WBOf • oaa·n-vou ba~ no reuon today to fret O\~r t.M threat or 1a1ohn ration l'\I Ne"er mind I\ It WQD 't happen Tbt reason it •on 't b~ i1 bouuH th 1ovemmeol 1ell•~1·ou al •'Oft 't. · TU1•1 why t.beJ prlnled up thole piOUne raUonln& tampe back In l974 durln1 the phon1 toerp cr1Jl1. 'l'be l''t"dtrflb didn t hevt anyUuna elJe to do with lhelr rnntlna preu Ulal •· k bevin& alrtady run out o paper money IO they Ju.st print~ up lbese r1Uonlnf stamps. TH '\' P 't CJ:OllGE W hlnaton on th m . Uosmlllna '914 Ga.a Rohonmg Stomp tLe/tJ: World War II fright> George. He is looking out at you from the stamp as it he's saying, "You aren't cheating and bootlegging th.ls stamo, are you?" That's better than the Federals did during World War II. Gas rationing was real then. So was bootle11lnJ. The early stamps duril'lg the Great War just had Plain old numbers on them. These were easy to copy. A grade school kid could do it. Counterfeiting presses roared in basements and back garages all across the land. Later, the Federals caught on to this. The Office of Price Administration COPA > t.hen began issuing gas stamps with complicated, etched watermarked back· grounds behlnd the etched senal numbers and code iden- tifications for A, B or C coupons. THE NEW GAS rationing stamps that were"prtnted up in 1974 look pretty complicated too. But you could probably liCt George's picture from one dollar bills and tum them in· to gas stamps. The dollar bill isn't worth much by it.self. anyway. Besides that, don 't worry about gasoline rationing. 'fhe economic boys in Washington say it's "unlikely in the near future.·' Whatever that mea~ .. And anyway, the government people say they won't be ready with a coupon rationing plan unhl next falJ. And besides that, we won't need it unles:; the Iranian disruption cuts our oil supply by at least 10 percent. so. YOV'VE HEARD the government tell you that the Iranian disruption will probably only be good for four to six percent and anyway, they won 't be geared up for coupon rationing until the fall. Don't fret about 1t. Just think, you got all summer to drive around burning gasoline willy·niUy if you can afford 1t. I wonder what I ever did with those old gas stamps I got stuck with when the war rationing ended? ' Answers Sought To End Smoking WASHINGTON IAP > -In another 15 years. the government hopes it can tell people how lo avoid getting hooked on smoking in the first place. For now~ it admits, it still doesn 't know what works. a I though there seem to be some clues "THERE HAVE BEEN a number or improv em ents, particularly with the introduc· tion of behavioral techniques." ·s aid Dr. Ovide Pomerleau, one o r the authors of the latest Surgeon General's Report on Smoking and Health. Among those techniques, he cited one in which smokers in· hale a puff every six seconds, keeping it up until they can't take any more. But that idea bas drawbacks for some smokers - such as heart patients -and doesn't always work anyway. Researchers haven't found anything close to a final answer, Pomerleau said. The report, just released, said, ··rt is hoped that In another 15 years we will not have to say, ·we still don 't know what works!'" " THE PROBLEM, AS set out b y H ealth, Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr. ln his forward to the new report. is that despite au ef· forts. more young people are taking up smoking now than before. ALDERSON, W.Va. <APl - 1ra Jane Moore, aervtn1 a life • nte~ (or trylns to klll Preli· dont Ford, scaled a U·foot priaon fence and cot her n.nt t .. te ol freedom In thrff )'Hl'I. IL lasted a few boun. Prltoo otnclall Hld she would be put back lnto a phased-out. maxlm~·MCwily buJldlnl abe once called a "comer of bell." U.S. Attorney Robert Klng ·said today lbat "lf tM facts bear out what tbe newt report.a say, l would ~template prOleeutinl Sara Jane Moore and her cohort to lhe fWJett. There's no use be· io1 coy about lt." Tbe decwon whether to pros· ecute on escape cbarces will pro- bably come within a few days, Kln11ald. MS. MOORE was serving a life sentence for the 1915 as· saasination attempt. She and Marlene Martino, 47, of Brick Town, N.J ., made their way out ol the Federal Correc· Uonal Jnstltution bere someUme between 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Mon· day, said Jack Fevurly, an 88· sociate warden. The two women were picked up by police while hitcbbik.lng GAO~~ogram Aims at Check On lnfl~tion WASffiNGTON <AP>-Tbe General Accounting Office, con· eluding that President Cart.er has no authority to withhoklgov- emmenrcontracts to force com.· pliance with his anti·inflation campaign, is preparing legisla· tJon to give him that power. But even if such authority is , granted, GAO says, that element or Carter's fight against infla. lion is expected to have little im· pact. Despite the laudable inten- tions behind the program, said Je rome H. Stolarow or GAO, the proposal ·'is primarily a psychological device lo rocus at· tention on the wage and price spiral." WHILE THE congressional auditing agency was raising doubts Monday about one part of the president's effort against ln· nation, another portion of the program was winnlng a major endorsement. The 650,000·member Com- munications Workers of America announced its approval or Carter 's wage-insurance tax credit, proposed a.s an incentive for workers to hold their 1979 pay.raise demands to 7 percent or less. Glenn E. Watts, president of the union. said Monday the ex- ecutive board voted last week to support the plan, which is being Considered by the House Ways and Means Committee. THE communications workers union, which represents many employees of the American Telephone and telegraph Co., was the second major union to endorse the tax credit. The Unit· ed Auto Workers gave its en- dorsement last week. The na· lion's biggest labor organlza· lion. the AFL-ClO, opposed the plan. Storm Brings Mixture Allie"" Allene.. Atte11tk O ty BaltlmotW llOI• llo$1oft Bufteto O>ar'lettOfl, w. v Clllcaoo c l<Kfl!Mtl Clew lend Columblil> O•llH Fort Wot1" o.nwr <>@troll Oulut" ·~Is teanusCllY LHVegM Lltn.ltodl LOlllSVllle -·· Mllw~ Ml-.ol19-$4. p..,1 Nestwlli. N-Votll Oll~Clty omeM Pllll ... ltttlle PlttlllWclfl Reno Rkll!MM St.~t along U.S. eo, about 20 miles rrom the prison, Just before mid· niaht, aaid Capt. 8 .H. Cassell of the state police. The two escapees got a Utt from an 18-year-old New Yorker 1nd hired a cab for their getaway. David Shelton Ross called police art.er realizint that two women be drove from Aldenon lo Lewisburg -about 19 mlles -were the escapees. •tit really shocked me to find out who they were and it's just that tbey didn't seem more nervous than they did," be sald. "If I'd just escaped from a penitentiary, l would have been acttna a lot differently.•' Ross said Ms. Moore and Ms. Martino bad sought help at Hospitality Rouse, a charitable instltutlon for visUors to the prison. "One of them was cut and she was anxious to get cleaned up and get her coat cleaned up," Rois said. "The other one was talking about how ber car had broken down and they were in a rush to get to the bus sta· Uon before 9:40. At that time it was about lOof nine." A CAB driver who later took APWI ........ CelutlS •••• ,, ... ,. Manuel D. Plotkin has an· nounced he will quit as di rector of the Census Bureau to a void any ap· pearance of conflict of in· terest in connection with a Sears, Roebuck & Co. lawsuit in which he is named as defendant. APWI ....... TAXI RIDER Sara Jane Moore the women from Lewisburg to White Sulphur Springs said he was paid with $7 in quarters - the medium of exchange at the prison. The driver, who uked not lo be identified, satd be wu tipped 75 cents -all in quarters. Prllon Q(Octall said a reeort guard In White Sulphur Spria&I reco'ntz.ed the two women and called police, leadlnc to their . capture. The maximum securJty unJt al Alderson -Davls Hall -was shut down Jan. 1, but offtctall said Ms. Moore and Ms. Martlno would be housed there after the escape. Ms . Moore, an activist at the prison here, once called Davis Hall a "corner of bell.·' Sbe fre· quently complained about condl· lions there during her months in the maximum security unit. Ms. Moore, 48, was sentenced to life in prison in January 1976 on her guilty plea to a charge or trying to assassinate Ford on Sept. 22. 1~5, ln San Francisco. Ms. Martino was serving a life seot.ence ror conspiracy to com· mil murder on a government reservation in the contract slay· iogo(aFortBragg,N.C.aoldier. Ms. Moore was seen by prison staff members at about 7: 15 p.m. The two women failed to report during a count of inmates about 9:20 p.m. Cults Prolled? • Tax Exemptiom Questioned WASIDNGTON CAP) -Congress may look Into the financial status of the Unification Church and other groups claiming re- ligious tax exemptions to determine whether tax laws are being ~iolated. say two U.S. legislators. Sen. Bob Dole. R·Kan., who co-chaired an unofficial hearing Monday into the growing cult movement in America, said al· terwards, "We wtll be asking serious questions of the tax exempt status of Mr. Moon 's wealth." The Rev. Sun Myung Moon is the founder of the UnUicaUon Church, which has vast holdings ln real estate, banks, and other businesses, including a New York·based newspaper. "News World." REP.~RD O'M'INGER, D-N.Y., the other co-ch.airman of the hea · g, agreed ttiat Congress must get "into the fine lines" of what is d what 1s not a bona hoe tax-exemptrell(ious g!Ou~. For instance. he said, one can write to an address in Modesto, Calif .. and get mail order credentials as a minister or the so-calJed "Universal Life Church.·• These papers, Ottinger said, are used by some people to evade paying proper taxes. Dole. ranking Republican oo the Senate Finance C4?mmittee, is urging the chatrman. Russell B. Long, D·La .. to delve mto the tax· exempt status of some controversial organizations which claim tax exemptions on religious grounds. . AT mE HEARING MONDAY, several church leaders asked Congress to be cautious when stepping into matters or religious beliefs and church affairs. "Congress must resist errorts to restrict the non~riminal acts or new religious groups or so-called culls," said the Rev. Barry W. Lynn, legislative counsel for the United Church or Christ. ~eatt~ of CLove r This Valentine's Day send your love a greeting all the world can share with a Daily Pilot Heart of Love. It's easy, compose your personalized greeting and we 'll set your message in type to fit the border of your choice or your hand wri tten though ts may appear in the border you select. Borders come in the 3 sizes as shown below: $15, $10 and a special child's size for $2. (You must be under 12 to qualify for the littlest greeting.) ,,,.-...... .,,. ---.. , " ,,. ----.. ', ~:,,,,,, .. -.......... , " .. .. -,..., ' ... '*' -... ' I , ~, ... ~·"' ' \ / , ·' ' ' I , I \ \ , ' I I I t ~ I I I , \ <c.. , I \ . c)-~/ I • ' , ... I \ ,, ~'l.., ' ' , , I ' , , \ \ ,, I \ ' , ' , ' ,v..~,' , ' .. \ .. ... ... ~'f:j , ' ... .. ,, ' ... ... , ' / ' :I.~ , ' ·' ~\ / .... ~,:_.,, ... .... / .... , ... , ..... , .. Mail to : ' ' \ \ \ ' I ' I I I I ~ Daily P1lot.Classthed Department. Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626 If you wish to create your own decorated greeting, use a black pen and draw your desfgn to f It one of the dotted line "hearts" shown below. For help with your ad. just -call 642-5678 and a friendly Valentine ad-vlser will be happy to assist you. And, if II ke, you can you charge your Heart of Love or use your Master Charge BankAmeri card. or DAILY PILOT CAUFORNlA lleagan:'s €numW Woming LOS A GEl.ES <APl Sup porlt!rt of rormtr Gov. Roni.Id Re•can Will lllO()unct tormauon ol an o1nc1a1 prnld nUal cam · paiaa or,anlutton March t. altho~h ~•aan' not H ctl"d to offtclaJly ui hu bat 1ato the tlq unU1 tas.r. IM i.o. Anc J Tim reported coda) It wouht be-K uan ' tt\lrd ac. tempt lo captun.' lb on~1denc Tht-ahfornla Rt pubhcan. ~ho hu-ned toda)'. has df' l•yed hl olticlal df'cl arallon becaUH M 1.1 curttntJy m 1t1n1 '300,000 nnuaJly from radio broaduat,, n wspaper t'olumn1J l lld paid •CK-«h s and onet' ht' ~nrne a candJdate mo t o! lhe ln~rn wou Id ~ cut off, lhl' paper.Mid. LA JOLLA (AP l If d Down in a Puff of S•oke The centl!r lift t;pan of the 52.year·old An· lmch bridge ovt•r Utt• San Joaquin River. which links Antioch \\.1th Sacramento via highway 160 , dro ps an the nver following demolition Monday. The old s pan. hit nume rous Limes b y s hips. has been replaced by a modern concrete and steel arch. T'*CSay, Februwy 8. 1979 OAJL y .PILOT A5 S25,000 Reward POiice Hunting Kilkr· of Three By Tbe i\uoelated Pren Police 10 San Mateo have received numerous telephone tips they hope wiil lead them lo the methodical, gun-wielding slaytr of three young drug store employees who escaped with up to $20,000 in store receipts. And the ~tore management offered a $25,000 reward for in· formation In tl\e slayings. POUCE CLEllK Katherine M. MlUer. who took information ft;()m the tipstens Monday night. said severf l appeared promi•ing. "They involve people seeing people in the store and around the store and cars and things that could be of some value," she said. The spree or bloodshed began Sunday night, alter the San Mateo store closed for the night at 7 p.m. The gruesome scene was discovered a few hours later when a i:egular cleaning crew opened the locked store for Its nightly chores, police said.. POLICE THEORIZE the gunman hid ln the store, then fotced the store's merchandise manager, Michael Ray Olson, and a stock clerk. Wilham D. Baumgartner, to lead him to the locked safe. He then shot the pair in the back of the head, causing almost immediate death. Their bodies were found in a second·floor count· ing room legltlmale bat'ker .,. i1J foot the blll . Scrlpps Inst ltuhon ur r·ooc··;~;~· .... "") Test Tube Baby 'Ethical' English Medical Pioneer in San Francisco OLSON, 2.1, OF FREMONT, was married. Baumgartner. 17. of San Mateo. was a high school senior. Third victim. Tracy J . Anderson, 16 or Fosler City, was round moaning on the main floor of the store, but was dead on arrival at a local hospital. A high school junior, he was also shot in the head. cent sure it can find lhe sunken luxury liner Titanic in 10 dayl> at a costoC$S>O.OOO. Two groups interested in film \ng tbe wreck of the 882-foot Titanic have been courting Dr. Fred N. Speias, associate direc· tor of Scripps and bead of its Marine Physical Laboratpry, seeking bis aid for tbe project. Speiss s aid research has nar· rowed the location or the wreck to a 20-mile circle about 95 miles south of Newfoundland. B ..... S~alu LOS ANGELES <AP) Say- ing Americans want to know "whether the country is being sold out from under their feet.·· Tom Hayden today called for disclosure. of foreign real estate investments in California . Hayden. former antiwar ac· tivist who now h eads tbe California Camp aign for Economic Democracy. con· demned foreign millionaires "seeking quick profit and tax she lters" in California re al estatt> ~A•bd LOS ANGELES CAP > There's no reason why President Carter should not commute the sentence or the remaining jailed member or the Wilmington 10. now that Patricia Hearst has been granted early pnson release, as· serts the Southern Christian LeadersnipConference-WesL "For the president to continue to run around the world and con· tinue to t alk about human rights is such a glaring contradiction or what's going on right here in the United Slates," Rev. C. Garnett Henning, president of SCLC· West. told a press conference Monday. The Wilmington 10 nine black men and one white woman were convicted of arson and conspiracy in connection with the burning of a grocery store during a week or racial violence in Wilmingt.On. N.C., in 1971. Girl, 8, Murdered FRESNO CAP ) The nude body of an 8-year- o ld Fresno girl was . found in a plowed field with her head battered, authQrities reported to- day. Victoria Ann OeSan· tia~o had been the ob· Ject of an intense search for more tban t wo days since she was kidnapped while returning home from a conve n ience store Saturday. Her body was found late Monday night east of the city about 10 miles' from the spot where she was abducted, police said. The girl apparently died from massive head injuries caused by blows from a blunt instrument, the coroner's offlce re· ported. She had been raped, a deputy added. SAN FRANCISCO I APl Dr. P atrick Ste ptoe. the English gynecologist whose scienltfic ad· vances produced the world's first test tube baby, says his con· trovc rsial work involves no legitimate ethical problems. "We have been answering that question of ethics for the last 10 years. 1 see no ethical problem at alt in doing this," be told a news conference Monday. STEPTOE SAID couples who unde rgo the new procedure -in which a woman's egg is sur· gically removed, fertilized ln a laboratory dish and retur ned to the womb for a normal gestation and birth -desperately want chlldren and "they're going to love that child." ·•A couple come 1n with a problem and a doctor has a duty to do his best to solve tbat problem." he said. "There is no dlfflculty about medical ethics.'' Steptoe and Robert Edwards, a ·Cam bridge Uni verslly phys iologist, have developed a procedure that Jed to the birth last July 25 of Louise Brown. The baby girl co ll ect e d headlines around the world as the first test-tube baby THE TEAM, working at Oldha m Hospital in Lancashire. Eng land. re pe ated th e a c - complishment with the birth about three weeks ago of a boy who was conce ived in the laboratory. In both cases. the egg was taken from the mothe r and fe rtilized by t he hus band's sperm. Aft.er about two days , the fertillzed' egg was returned lo the mother's womb to develop naturalJy. St eptoe s aid both children are completely normal and healthy. HE SAID TWO other test tube pregnancies ended in accidental abortion. Fertilized eggs were relmplanted in 28 other women since November 1977, he said. vealed details last month in Lon· but did not produce pregnancy don. The doctor described the pro· He said the procedure has cedure at the openinf! session of gone beyond the experimental an American Ferllht.y Socit:!ty stager. but some details must LESS TRAN EIGHT HOURS after the two teen-agers and Olson died. at 3 a.m. Monday. police 6S miles to the east found two men shot several times in the head at a service station near Tracy: The men were identified as Bill Proctor, 59, of Tracy, the sta· lion's night manager . and Russell Drew, 22. of Sacra mento, a de· livery worker waiting for a truck to arrive. conference here. J!e first re ... • s ti ll be perfected .. ~~~~---~~~~...:...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Brown Needs Opponent in 1V Debate LOS ANGELES <AP I -Gov. Edmund G . .Brown Jr. was sc h e dule d to app e ar o n television to night to debate whether a constitutional conven- tion should be called to limit federal spending, but it was not known if he would have flR oppo. nent. In what turned oat to be more of a harmonious discussion than a heated debate Monday night. Brown a n d tax rerorme r Howard Jarvis disputed the is- sue in tbe first of a four-part se r ies broadcas t live on a KABC·TV News program. BUT SPOKESMEN for both Brown and KABC said they had no idea if anyone would debate t.he governor because several prominent political figures have declined to discuss the issue on a live television program. KABC anchorma n J e r ry Dunphy introduced Monday's forum by saying invitations to debate had been extended to state Assembly speaker Leo McCarthy, D-San Francisco; As · semblyman Willie Brown, D·San Francisco. and U.S. Senator Alan Cranston. D-Calif. Dunphy srud all had refused to appear on television. IN THE FIRST debate. Brown said he was so sure the people wanted a balanced budget "that they're prepared to give it con- stitutional stature.·· .. - • Every se at on our 7 a. m. nonstop from On tario to Sacramento is now on sale. Save 20% t!::Si:I: BEEF STICK SAT~ off our re gular fare. Price isn't the onLy sweet deal on this ( uc an) 'Ill' Buy tlw ''hull• ,, ,d,, "1th lh\• ll'll:t l <J1,n1unt 20C OFF 40C OFF fli ght either. Bre akfast pastries, ho t coffee I juice and a t-~. pound prin· ~t:I{. Jliiu11d Jlri\'\' SW EET-HOT MUSTARD SAVE toe ~:::~ newspaper are all free on board·. Early boarding is available too. Coming h ome the same day? Our 6: 10 p. m. return flight is also on sale. Both sale flights take off Monday through Thursday, now through March 14. All IMPORTED BULK Buy one pound llR e CALIFlllllA INSURANCE NOWIN NEWPORT IEACH . ·- AUTO ·HOMI Llfll·IUIMSS 27• W. C.-Hwy. W..JIO ............... 645-8220 . CANDY at the regular price or 11.n GET ONE POUND SALE FREE fli,lcor1 fe1rm1 · or OH IO WESTCLIFF FASWON PLAZA ISLAND nth 6 lrvlne, N.8. 142·0972 Newport Beach MO·IOaO ·WW Tc Th Ii f tll t; at lll t : 8an tll 5 M·•· tll t : 't tll I ; Sun tt-1 Call your Travel Agent o r Air Califo rnia Reservations m Ontario. (71 4) 983-2743; Colton . (7\4) 825-6900: El Monte. (213) 444-450 I: Los Angeles. (2 13) 627-5401 ; Palm Springs. (7 14) 327-8556: R1vers1de!San Bernardino. (7 14) 825-6900. ,, \ 0-SACIONT·8 Editoria l Poge-==ru~ .. d~•y Febru1ry e. t979 ROb(~rt N Weed Publl~h•r Barbara Kr 1b1(h Echtor1a1 P• Edit ., r • n t 1o n L.ns t TllUr d y, d1su l r 81 rurk Or n c: County Fortunull'lY th\• OOC> Pt'OPI • who dll'd and thr. .10.000 who wcrt! h\)un.>tl 'H'n' m~ m}'thiul a th di\ !ilt>r Its •U u11 r.arthquakt.' und flood. Tiw. puml of th m ak · U vt• ul mlty wo to ttt t th ('()\Ult ':-da a tc r ptnn und r "hk h county u cnclt•s \\OUld opt'r I an lhci.e\:~nl of lh ~RI thlllR Ttw lt':-.t "'.i run to lrv out M>m ch TI.I(<' that hud bt· n mnd4' in tht> pl tn 11ln lb lo'llt diH"tM drall W1l5 h Id ttbout •• Yl'ar ond " hair AO ll'ft llkt•I\', 1ft I lht•\ onu l)le lht• l'Wfl'I l~. county offar1 I ~tll "'uni lo fun • otn>r lht• plan md Ui<'n stufl•' another dlso tt•1 10 t t tho c modlf acnttor\'. · n unJortunutc ospet'l ol 'I Jlun,du) • \\orkout \\a lhi.' (act that 'o fow local OJ.ll'O<'ll' c.ho e to purll<'IJJ.Jl\ 'llOnJr! with lhe t•ount' With lhl• dl'-.truct1on t•n\%onl'd ln thi.! drill, 1t \\OUl<I huH• bet.•n J .:,uod tmw for <'1l1 •1; und pt'rlul tl lstnl'l<t tu kJ <•on1..·ur1 t•11t ,.,t>fCL"l'!) Tht• uni> aa n<'il''» thdt dau ere thl• l'll~ of 1-'ount.un \' Ile) Jlong with llll' Wl''' nangc l'cmnty fir n ~t llunllnRto n Bt'ach, 1-'ounhun ullcy .. \\'l•!)tmmstt•r nJ St>.il Oc•.1<.·h and the c·ounl\ • onnatton Oblrwh "ht ch ~luRcd J mock rirc• rncl •hlor1nL· f,!a :i INtk .it the• 'IC\.\U~l' lrt•utrnt•nt plnnt 1n till' ih -All 26 l'ltic•:-, m the county had ampll· nutu.'l' ul hur~uy'!) drtll and they probubl coulct hnn• pu1r1tt•d m p:Jrt1 c1p...iting l\torv should Join in thl• nt.>xl lime ltw bunty wunts to tc-,t 1t t•mcrg~ncy plan ;.t It \\OUld bt.• bt•tlc•r to do It \\ht>n tht• d1s11~ll·r '' on t aµer anct not m our b:Jt·k~ unt o H Ip t o tud nt Dtscussaon or steadily dcclinln~ !)COr t'S m ('Oll<'Jtl' entrance e xams usually ~els around to the cur10us fot·I lh~l the studC'nt:, 1:c .. ttmg lower and lower test cores haw ulso been J!Ctlmg h1J:hc r and hig her grud1..• · In th •ir high !)r hool s tudies. The answer to the puztlc• of <.~ourse. is the dtst'nsc of ~rude inflaliol\ that seem s to be e pidemic in our ~l·condary schools. The lat('st s urvey of entering college freshmen test scores do wn again -reveals that not much 11; being doneJ9-.s urb the disea se. . Obe m four of the 1978 freshmen <23.3 percent > had carried an A average in high school. This compared with 19. 7 percent of 1977 fres hmen a nd with an A a\'erage a nd only 12.5 percent of those who entered t•ollege in 1969. Al the other e nd of the scale. only 17.6 percent of the -,tudents s urveyed h ad C averages in high school. <:ompared with 31.5 percent in 1969. The unfortuna te thing about a ll this is that it literally doom s many students to disappointment in college. For t>xa mple. 41 percent of the entering freshmen said they t.•xpected to achieve at least a B average in college. In 1971only23 pt>rcent were that optimistic. One miJ?hl understand the kindly teacher who likes to .... end students off lo college with a good high s chool record o r pe rhaps those who get some sort of an ego boost by turning out quantities of A students. But the ultimate victim of the practice musl be the student wnose notion of his own worth is destined to be painfully <.kfl ated, whe n he finds himself basically unpre pared for <·ollege Briggs vs. 55 ~en. John \'. Briggs, R-Fulle rton, has m ade another grub for the limelig ht by introducing a bill to r e peal California 's 55 mph speed limit, following the recent 1.•xa mple of the state or Wyoming. Such a hollow gesture would have the effect, among other things. of c utting off $450 million in federal highway funds. payable o nly if the slate recognizes the federal 55 mph speed limit. Briggs righteous ly says that tht> state isn 'l properly t•nforcing the 55-mile limit and therefore it is "ethically wrong" to accept the rederal money. Briggs' views on ethics aside. it's hardly logical to compare a populous a nd heavily urbanized state like . California with rural Wyoming with its population of 322.000 a nd sparse highway network. It may be true that the 55-mile limit is not rigidly enforced a nd that traffic, outside commuting hours. is more likely to trave l at 60 or 65 miles an hour. But it's equally true that whe n the speed limit was 65, speeds of 75 or 80 miles a n hour were not uncommon, vastly increasing the ris k of fatalities andsetiousinjuries. Regar'dless of their persona} views of the speed limit ~nd the sanctity of states' rigtits, the legislators aren't hkcly to let that $450 million slip through their fingers . But the debate will bring Briggs back into the news after his post-election lull. Unfortunately it still costs taxpayer money to process even a foredoomed bill. • Op1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views e xpressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Addr~ss The Dally Pilot. P.O Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boy d/Mom's Helpers ByL. M. BOYD Tbe typical South Sea island mother doesn't look out for her own youngest child. Her older youngsters. even though they're only O..ur Gloomy Gu ' For tbe Information of N.O.W. <Cus, J on. 29L The word "boycott .. de· rives from a certain Capt.. Boycott of England who. while liv- ing lo Ireland, locked out bis tenant farmers who were Irish. Not 1exlst at all, dum-dum. S.Y (ltMm• C.V• ~MlllMAI\ •re ..... mltte411 IJY •t•Nn •11• •• 11e1 NK•"""'' te1iec1.., ••••~ e1 tlM .._..,,."'. t.M ~ IN\ ,.. ... '""'""' ~ o.lly l'llet. slightly older, are charged with that chore. Or if none- s uch be . other young relatives are assigned the job. Down there, the birth or her children, curiously, frees a mo-tber from the responsibilities she'd handled as a little girl. And ir she's sud- denly required to take care or her own children in some emergency. she's likely ,to work herself up into a nervous fren:l)'. Wby do you suppose Lht city fathers or Oxlord Ohio once passed an ordinance that prohibited ony woman there from undressing In front ot a photograph of a man? In the lobby or the Con· Unental Hotel In the strict Moslem city of Dacca ls lbls sign : "Ladies ln shorts 11nd mlnJsklrta may be atoned." Napoleon wore cashmere underwear. • Gulag Prisoner Tells Betrayal WA S lllNG1'0N •Th number l00$ 3 Is burned lnto lbc m«irnllry of Abr1ham Kalinski. ll wu the only d ntlf lulion be h ll dunna th IS yuns b was buried 1n th Sovlfl Unton' r.ri•on sy ttm, tht notorious ·Guluat. Arch1pe1aao " The 63 >.'t•ar olJ former PoUsh 1irmy <'HVt m l!I oow rebuildlna ht~ Mtl w a l'h emtc•I 'ntc 1 11~\lr tn (~rutl Ill• ~hll\\ .. (\•W 1>h>••lcul 1acn• ot th,• 1nh•al h n lu rt'd from Mu\I UHi. tu <h•lolwr 11)60 Bui l\alan ""° 1 '11 (.11·1• htt "" Mrlm and h15 f1:sli. t lt>n<'h u'I hf' r<'r41ll!'C lht' horrors of "'" rnwru;onmtint on trums>M up I hut { , llOd lt'll .. or th Olhl'r hnph• " 'h'litn'\ ltt• mt'l an Sovlcl VI l~Clll'I I 11 u tluy lnnJC inll'rv l('W with 1u1 u "snr1al<' S.tm l''OJU. Kulinski Jlrtl\'ldt•d o fa cjnotlnl( til'I of lh<' J>N1plf' who, for Olll' 1 f'l\'lo11 n1 unnlh<'r or no N>A"on at ult """' n1u1tht 10 tht• dNtdl' toil" 11r 1111' Sovh•t M•cn·t pol i l'l' ,\MONG TIO: ' ll\•lng dead .. e1H.•01mll'rt'd by Kullm1kl were tt l\wrdlRh dl11lt1111 i1t who vunlRhed und w:111 dt·l·lurl'd by the SovictR lo bl' dt'od . :1 bewildered. mt'rl<.'An born 18 ~ear-old' the husband of Stalin !I son's mu;- 1 rt•sii . th<• t'd1tor-ln chief of thl' wN•kly mu~atanc. Bolshevik. tlw Commurm1t Party se('rctary o f l.t>ning rad . pu rEted Old Hol!i h<-vak and Politburo membe r Nikolai Bukharin's onl'l1me rai;tht·hnnd man: the v1Cl'·minist cr of the Soviet rn1lroad system ; a correspon- dent for the J ewish Telegraph Agency. and a British journabsL named Turner who worked for lht' old London Daily lferald. One of the cruelest cases was that of a young Austt'ian woman who was kidnapped from her Vienna aoartment on her wed· ding day and spirited away to Moscow. Only then did Soviet nuthorilies discover they had the wrong person;• the woman they wanted lived in a nother apart- ment on the same floor. The bride-to-be was t·hrown inlo prison anyway THE STORY of Kahnski's own a rrest. though it happened near ly 35 years ago. is as fresh al> today's headlines. His agony ~ Paul Harvey began when he learned or Soviet per ecuUon of Jews and tried to do something about It. A particularly flhamerul facet ot K4linaki'a tory Is lb role played by a n American Em bauy offic1ol. who not only falled to follow up on Kallnskf's confidential rf'part, but betrayed him lo the Soviet autboritle:s. Kalln kJ had been a member of the Polish exile army based m London atter the rail of Poland 1m the 1939 Nail bllt.ikrieg. He was sent on a liaJson mission to Mo cow where he met and mar- ried a Russhtn woman. Told that hls wife could not le:tv<' the country with him. Kolinski remained und Joined a S<\v1el ·sponsored Polish milllary u01t But on Muy 6. 1944, he was 1&iven documeuled evidence thal Che udvandna Red Army wH mistrtaUng Jew in Poland. • KALINSXJ took the story to o lop American emb1&sy ofOclal who lived acrou tbe halJ In the Metropole Hotel. hopln1 the diplomat would puss the in- formaUoo aJoog to Ambatltlldor Averell Harriman. At the American 's urginJ.. KalinBki pulb.is charges.in-writ 1ng. Three days Jate r . the dreuded knock of the ecret polic~ aounded on his door. and he was hauled off to Lubianlca prison. Still trustlnJ hls American friend. KaUnska managed to slip o note to his wife during u prison visit. for delivery to the em· bassy offidul. Ills wife was ar· res ted s hortly thereafter. tShe Wm.wig Mexica.1 p-Wte ~t poHfical adMMr. R)p. Joh., Rwl lI ~oleo of ... "The~~of the Rn-'' (Newsltem) ''His Holiness is right. Anyl7ody who tnjoys poverty is simplt!' lutur committed s uicide in prison.) DURING his lntcrroaaUOM. Kebnakl said, tho pollce used de- tnlls from his conversallona with thf' American. from the report he had gtven him and from lb4' note he gave to his wife. "The ontr way tMy ~~uld fiuve f0tlt1o tha informution was from my Ame rican fri.ind.'' Kalinski aid. K nllnski was never brought to trial., but was simply sentenced to s ix years on f~p1onaac r harges. &-for • the end or bis ~~~~d rgr"~~~~te~0rla~~~~ was Footnote: The State Depart· mt'nt con!irm'Od that the U.S. of· Cicial Kalinski identified as an informer did indeed work in th Most'ow embassy al the time. Howeverd because the man Is now dea a nd caM ol resPond to Kalin6ki's charges. we are withholding his na'!'c· RELUCTANT REBELS : Lcuders or the Tax Protest Movcml'nl like to daim that their followers number in the millions . But th•• Internal Revenue Service tells us that when it comes to acllng out their protest by submitting income tux forms withoul the required 10formation, the tax rebel army numbers only u handful. A preliminary analysis of 1977 return shows that only 3 000 protest forms have been Iden· tified out of more than 85 million returns submitted AMONG THF. legal jus\lrica· uons attempted for withholdinR tax in!ormaUon -many taugh1 a t seminars held by the various tax -protest organizations these are some or the most com· mon : -A claim that tax lnforma- t 1 on i s a form or se lf -rnc nm1nation, forbidden by the Fifth Amendment. The Supreme Court shot down this hoary dodge in l927. The "due process" clause ol the Fifth Amendment is violated by IRS regulations because cer· tarn deductions are allowed to some taxpayers but not to others. The courts rejected this argument in 1963. Income in the form of cash and c hecks is no t taxable because the United States is on neither the gold nor silver stand· Cjrd and therefore lbc money 1s worthless. The courts have ruled th1:, logic "clearly frivolous." Carter Style Compared to Eisenhower No Pr es id e nt si n ce Eisenhower has so depolarized partisan s as has Preside nt Carter. · HistoricaJJy. characteristical· ly. Democrats have been the party or "tax and s pend ... Republicans h ave been ex· peeled to espouse fiscal frugali- ty. balanced budget. that sort of thing. H ere w e h a v e a D e mocr at President de- 1 iv er in g s peeche s which could h ave b ee n written by Bob Taft. Jn 1953 the United States was suffering runaway inOation. Over the preceding four years our dollar h8d shrunk 10 Mailbox cents. Black market prices were masked by price controls and the inflation rate was much worse than that. PRESI DENT Eisenhower. less than one month m office. courageously slashed the federal budget Where the previous Truman budget bad called Cor spending S78.6 billion with a $9.9 billion deficit, Eisenhower's budget re- duced expenditures to $67.5 billion witb a deficit of $3 billion . Eighteen months later. in August of 1954, the price inde.it stabilized; our dollars s topped shrinking and economic activity resumed its progress. President Carter. fully aware or the opposition within his own party. is similarly determined to contain inflation by curtailing federal government spending. The President we nt to the Democrats' mid-term conven- tion in Memphis and confronted his critics h ead-on by re- enunciating his plans to reduce federal spending. IN THAT Memphis convention nearly 40 percent of the Presi· dent's own party voted against him on the curtailment of social programs. but he did not back down. And President Carter turns his back on an angry George Meany, insisting that wage in· creases must be limited. It can be argued that Carter is only reflecting the sen!le of the electorate: that he is merely responding to citizen uprisings against taxes . Nonetheless, it is politically precarious for the President to say there are some social programs which we can no longer afford. Every public opinion survey shows that Americans are most concerned about inflation, and they recognize that cuts in ~ federal budget must be the first step in slowing it down. Yet it is one thing t.o sound off on such a subject and quill' another for an elected official to begin the withdrawal. INEVITABLY. with the wean· ing there is a lot or screaming. Pragmatically, President Carter has to know that the ma· ior threat to his POiiticai life is from the liberal left, specifically from Sen. Ted Kennedy. Vet this President Is dem- onstrating no dis position to disarm his party's liberals. Instead. like Eisenhower, he is wilUng philosophically to bridge party lines. Jimmy Carter may be a SOUTHERN Democrat after all. Teac h er 's Tenure No Protection Against Firing To the Editor: Your editorial Qf Jan. 29 on t.ac her str1kes stated that teachers have "job guarantee by righl or tenure." The Daily Pilot further implies that a teacher is protected by tenure from being "replaced or removed ... if changed conditions elJminate a need for their services.'· Nothing couJd be rurther from the truth. On Jan. 22, 1979, the Buena Park Elementary School Board voted to reduce industrial arts and home economics in the Intermediate schools by 50 per- cent. That's right. one-half! THE llESVLT: After si x years or teaching in that district, my services and those of six others will oo longer be required as or June, 1979. The tenure sy~tcm may have been developed as compensauon for lower wagea but the simple fact is that teachers have the low wages and nothing else. · It seems to me that the Callfomja Legf!llature needs to wake up. There are 150.000 tuchcrs in this !!late who are darn tired or being under.paid. second-class public 4'.lmploy~. I ausp cl that unless somelhiD1 is done soon the profession will soon consist of under-paid. second·class teachers. Those who can work as well as teach will be leaving by the thousands to seek employment in private industry. 8y the way, how much does an editor make at the Dally pilot'> JON ANDERSON BUI Needed . To the Editor: . Cone rning your Jon. 2S editorial about striking teachers and 11 bill to penalize them, I say. the sooner a bill to that elfei:t is passed the better. l am a student at Marlna High and f attended school during the s trike. Yes . the t e achinp was extremely poor. but that was due to our own regular teachers walking orr and taking gr ade boo k s and planning guides. Those substitulc11 that art' re· ceivlng so much criticism at lrasl cored enou~h . or had responalbllJly ·nough, to try to help uJ hove a w ek thol wasn't a total loss. A bill pcnalliln1 trlklng teachers may make them tl)lnk l.'1 twice before taking a step that Opera S11ppert affects us so greatly. BETU TALMAGk Tol~eEditor: A RecenUy we visited Newport nd Laguna to a tte nd lhe f'l9•t S•elc~ _.. Orange Di.strict auditions of the To the E<Utor: • Metropolllan Upera NaUonal I read Tom Titus' rolumn CouncU. from lime to time but nothing I would like to express our has pleased me more than his deep appredation to these com- piece in tbe Jan. 26 Weekender munilies for their interest aDd s crlion of the Daily Pilot m generous support of the talented which he spoke of the callous youngsingersinOranaeCounty. disrl'gard on the purl of s mokers Especially do we recognize the for the God-given right to be talents and warmth of the two a ble to breathe smoke-free a1r district directors, Mr. Nul\llo when we go to th'e dinne r· Crisci of South Laguna and Mrs. theater Edw11rd Schumacher of Like himself I am a non· Newport. They make Orange s moker a nd am a llergic to Countyagrealplacctollve. tobacco s moke. For several M.R. Wt:RMEJ\ years I bnUlcd tl\e "powers that Co-Chairman, Western Region, be" in the U.S. POl'tal Service, Metropolitan Opera trying to get a s moke·free en-National Council vironment In t he workplace where I spend near ly half of my working duy. but I finally had to retire to get uway from the polluted air. r congratulate T1tu for t~k1na a public stand on the l u or clean aJr and I hope lh people who operate the dinner theattirs wlll heed hJs advice. T.S. RITTER f WASlONOTON <AP I Top Army omctab say that res~rv • "com pt~ely Inadequate" to fll'ht \he fl r1t 30 dayt or a war and thue are aevere DE PITE THE 1horta1ee. Alex· andtr u ld, the aJl·volunt r Army la atlll workJn1t ht Hid he 11 conl1dant lh manpower nt> d c1n be met. DAIL y PU.OT A 7 ~~~Rutgers Women Get Unnsual Calling Cards • hortq tn ntantry and armor un· n1. Sf.cretary or the Army ClJttord L. He utd the Army 11 11kln1 Coner to approve a *3,000 bonu.a, -~---...,\,..,.....;.b...!..._ the mHlmum, to •et volunt.eerw lnto th• armor ualla. NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. <APl - Police planned to dl1trtbute unusual .. calllq Cardi" th.la wffk to female bltcbbfker1 and women atrolllnc alone at nlaht on the Rutaers University campus bere. 0Ulcer1 and horsemen pall'OI the campuaea here ancUn Piscataway at niaht,a:ffr uniformed police offlctrs are b na out the amall. printed cards , said Rutge r• Police Capt. Tbomu ThomptOn. Alexa*' COAnnntd thee-. art tnfan· try and annor hort.a ~·after• ton· ar Iman &td ht v. a told In I t"<'r l br1eoflna they are 50 pt-r('ent or bl1ta.r "'I WO t.O Y the Army b al nifl<'antly . hort now nr 1nran tryrnt>n a nd armor p r onntl u well," Al t under told th llow.e Armed Servi C-0mm1llff on Mon· duy G~n Bem rd W Ro.icrs, Army cbler~pr 1wr. told lbe coni~~m n tbat l'I Uona1 Guard 1od reserve un· its lft' 3UPJ10H d lo be a blt" LO JOln re· gul1~ to fight th first 30 days of 1 war Ht> said their "manpower 1s completely tnadequute" to do that but gave nod tails U.S. _·JOB FACT CENTERS CLOSINC SAN FRANCISCO IAP I Federal Job information centers tn Cali£ornia, Arizona and Nevada will be closed by Sept. 30, tbe Office of Personnel Management bas disclosed. "In effect.. we have been building fa lse expectations by t he wide availability of job information," said OPM Director Alan Campbell on Monday. Rep Rob'.n L. Beard. R·Tenn., aald he wH ahockeod wh n ho hoard ficures on th 1horta1~1 durlni a ff<'rt>t-br1rlin1 iaat month "THEY LITEaALLl' cast ~reat doubt on our ability to respond In <'a of war ." Be-a rd aid Beard aald the lnl»ntry'a moat op.· tlmlaUc Umate la tbal it could fill 50 ~rttnl or lu slots within 90 days after a warbrok~out. Beard u ked it th~ aame esUmate for a rmor per11onnel "is less than 40 percent" but Aleunder refused to answer on ground the figures are t'I tl!IS ifled ALEXANDER SAID hls call in the last few weeks for renewal or draft registraUon to meet Pentagon cont- mgency needs fo r a long war is an of- ficial Army position, but not. a Carter administration position. Alexander and several other Pen· tagon officials say the only way lo meet the contingency requirement for supplying 100,000 draftees in two months an~ 650,000 In six months is to have young people registered in advance. ' But he noted that Secretary or Defense Harold Brown has testified that improvements of the present standby Selective Service System might enable it to meet that require· ment without renewing registration. ·Tax lncreaSe 'Inevitable' -Af'..,....... RICHARD TERRY DISPLAYS CARO "If I Were a Rapist You Would Be In Trouble." ILLITEIUTER4TE EXCLUDED By The Astoclated Pttss The House Adm inistration Committee recently agreed lo supply its members with written copies or proposed amendments. When the quesUon. of cost came up, chai'rman Frank Thompson, D·N.J ., suggested that distribution be limited to "one for each member who can read." ·•tr I were a raplat, you would be ln trouble," tbe carda warn. "WE'aC COMMITl'ED to apend Ume and eftort on this heinous crime," Hid Middlesex County Prosecutor Richard S. Rebeck, wbo ' ~oordlnated the prevention Pl'Oll'tm with Rutgen Univenlty police. The program, which be1an Mon· day, was created after six rapes were reported during the past two school yea.rs, Rebeck said. Although student guards, security "WE ROPE NO one ts 1hocked by It," be u.td. "Hopefully they won't ever put themaelvea in a daqerou.s or vulnerable poeiUon again." The security officlala allo are dis- trl butlng Uterature, olfertna rape prenouon seminars a nd using POiice decoys on campus to cut doWn the chances of rape. The key to rape prevention is to make women aware that they can become victims by failing to like the proper precautJona, Re beck said. 1n1urence Business, Commercial Fire, Condos and Apartments BOB PALEY NOITHOC-S46-3205 & ASSOC, INC. sountoc -642-6500 -" SACRAMENTO IAP > --A state tax increase is "a lmost inevitable'' as more welfare. health and education costs are shifted from local to state gov· ernment, according to the chairman of Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr.'s Proposition 13 commission. Commission chairman A. Alan Post predicted pressures will build in four lo fi ve years ror a "modest" stale tax increase as a result of Proposi· lion l3's property tax cuts. 'WE'RE 100 "YEARS tlBEHIND dJ11E "TIMES POST, FORMER STATE legislative a nalyst, made bis comments Monday at a news conference presenting the 14·member Commission on Govern- ment Reform 's final report. The report goes next to the Legislature and governor . The report said the Legislature and governor should consider a tax Increase only as a last re· sort. But Post said such a situation is probably un· avoidable because the combined errect of all the other recommendations w9uld create a situation jn which state spending over the long run would e x-ceed revenues. ' f "ll will be very difficult to avoid a slate tax in· crease." Post said. "l don't see bow the s hUt in coats to the state tax base can be m et without s o m e f uture adjust m e nt. Some modest increase in state taxes down the road is almost inevita· ble." Commission recom· mendations include : -S HIFTING mos t loca l health , welfare and court costs to the state. • Tightening con· -Af'w1,.,...t•t r o ls o n Me di -Cal A. ALAN POST services. Giving a bigger share of the sales ta>t lo local governments. -CONSOLIDATING PUBLIC employee pensions into a unHorm system. with benefits for future e mployees trimmed lo a common standard that eli minates special benefits for law enfor ce· ment personnel. -Granting future state school aid on an "equalization" basis, r ather Ulan substituting for lost local property tax revenues. Post said the recommendations add up to potential savings in local and state programs of about $1 billion annually, which compares with the S7 billion property tax cut granted by Proposition 13. POST SAID THE COMMISSION proposals would shift about S4 billion ln costs from local gov· ernments to the state, but that the Jong-range forecast for the state shows an ongoing annual sur· plus of only about S3 billion. Post said the three taxes the state relies upon for any significant Increase In revenues are the sales. income and business taxes. "They're all unpopular. It 's going lo take a two-thirds vote <or the Legislature>. Maybe it will never happen. Maybe it wm be all three ." THE COMMISSION, WHICH included out· spoken advocates of both liberal and conservative philosophies, was deeply divided during Its pro· ceedings, and that showed ln the final report. Eleven of the 14 commission members filed dissents from commission conclusions. Sharpest dissent came from Caspar Wein- berger. finance director under former Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan, who said the commlsaion failed to heed the message of voten in ProposiUon 13·lo cut government, and instead concentrated on fi nding new financing. On the othe r side, liberal activist Tom Hayden's Campaign fo r Economic Democracy, which did not have representaUon on the com· misslon, condemned the commission for rejecUng proposals lo reimpose tbe $' billion in tax cuts that ProposiUon 13 provided to business. Vectors Elect Tho board or trustees or the Ora nge County Vector Control Dt1trict h11 eleded omcen . Daniel O. Coll\J\s, a repr .. eftta(lve of La Palma, bu been eleded president and Fran~is L. Engelhardt of La1un• Beach vice president of the board. Mayor Ralph Welsh Jr. of Tuatln will serve •• Hc:retar)'. 0 "BRING "IHE 1'1AAIILY 4'0 OUR "HOUSE. Our building hints of the old-fashioned treats inside. Take a sentimental journey home. SMALL-FRIES GBT OUR "FAMOUS "FRIED 'FOR LESS. Children are charged according to their weight on our old-fashioned scale. "FEAST tlJN 'ANTIQUE SPLENDOR. Our dining room is a muse urnful of Tiffany lamps and rare engravings and old oak tables and chairs- reminiscent of the gracious, turn-of-the·century era. CALL oVOU CAN "EAT 'AT 'fl "PRICE "FROM "THE -PAST. Start with crackers.a nd cheese. T hen homemade soup. Garden fresh salad. Fried chicken plus a second meat entree (whfch changes daily; call ~head). Vegetables; potatoes and gravy; hot cornbread and honeybutter. All for j ust $4.95 per person , for as much as you care to eat. orJlE ti/JIG "YELLOW "HOUSE liR.ESTAURANT GREAT '1JIBRICAN COOKING -IN WN OLD--P'ASHIONBD ¥ANOR Cocktalla available. Master Charge and VISA welcome. Banquet·fadlltia available. 1639 E. Jm~rial Highway, Brea • (714) 529-1891•3010 Harbor Blvd ., Costa Mesa • (714J 549·0319 Dinner: Mon.-Thurs. S-9, Fri. 5-10, Sat. 4-JO, Sun. 12-9. Costa Mesa is open for lunch Mon.-Frl. 11:30-2:00. • . .. E agle Booked Af'W .......... Captain Hook ,· a golden eagle. resembles htS namesake after he was filled with an artificial leg after losing a limb to a baited coyote trap in Wenatchee. Wash. EmA Eml EDll The S6.88 TOP SIRLOIN OR PRIME RIB DINNER Special Offer npires fel28, 1979 To the residents of the Newport Beach, Irvine and Corona Del Mar areas. The Automobile C1ub of Southern California IS pleaSed to announce the opening of a new distr1ct office In Newport Beach. effective Monday, F'8bruary s. IOcated at 3880 Birch Street. comer of Quail Street The telephone number is (714) 975-1088. The loyal support of CU> men lbet's has enabled us to open this new office. bringing the C1ub's membership and community serW:el light Into the New- port, Irvine and Corona Del Mar areas. Our highly skilled, trained personnel can help members with trafftc citations. vehicle licensing and insurance clalms. maP,8 and tour books. accommodations reservations, rec:reation lnfonnation. tnp plaMing and wortd travel services. For members who qualify, we also offer Insurance programs for you, your family, yoor car. boat and l9a8ational Yehlcle. Stop In. let us welcome you personally to your Club~ Newport MneighbOrhood" office. tP~~ Otto E. Schroeder. Manager Newport Oistricl Office ' NATION I LOCAL t Will WWII Polieg Pag? ANN ARBOR. Mich. (AP) -An eld rly Michl11n couple tlnally have tound an ex·Martnc to corroborate lbelr claim that thelr ton had GI life In· uranc when he w1 killed du.ring the World War JI lnv111on or.GuadaJcanaJ. For 30 yeara. Clayton and Ula Hutr or WHhtenaw County ha~ been trying to tollect on a 110,000 National Service Life lo.aurance policy on their son. Robert, who wu 19 when he was cut down by machine JUD fire lD the UM2 batU . ..... TBE ELDEa HtJFF ls especially In· censed about an effort In Congress to pay GI insurance to the widow oC Pvt. Eddle Slovik, the Detroit soldier who was executed Cor desertion ln 1'-..rance durine World War 11. ·'In lbe Slovik case, they are willing to pay Cora coward," HUCCsaid. "The letter we r eceived rrom my son's commanding officer said Bob dled with his rifle in his bands, that be died a hero. that he showed great couraae and loyally during combat. .. BAL SAID RE remembered two other Marines in the squad -he could Iden· tiCy them only as PFCt Lovalee and Frledburger -who also signed up for Insurance and were killed on Guadalcanal. "I suppose their families didn't get the insurance either," be wrote. t'EDEIAI.. AtrrROKITIES say they can find no record ot the pollcy. Now Eqgene Bal or Riverslde; N.J .. who r<>Ulht alongside Huff In the same Marine squad, says he ls sure bis buddy 1i1ned up for the insurance, Ute the others, but the records were lost when a transport was sunk. Polish 'Joke' Backfires In Massachusetts Town Huct's rather, 83, lives in Scio DEERFIELD. Mass. (AP> -A tem· Township just out.side Ann Arbor and pest over an alleged ethnic slur bas led WALTER DZENIS, A SC-year-old re- tired stale police officer, used the rally to announce bis candidacy for the $10,SOO·a -year job as town clerk. treasurer and tax collector. cares for bis bedridden wile. A retired to the resignation of tbe police chief or engineer whose main source or income this rural town, an apology from the 11 Soci a l Secur.ity .payments, ~e chairman of the finance board and a esUmat~ t.!>at with interest , the ID· vow that Polisb·Americans will get re· surance policy would be worth about venge at the voting booth. $:7~5,000. The furor erupted J an. 15 when Police Dzenis said he is seeking to recruit a local Polish-American to run for selectman in the March 5 town elec· tions. A~ut 48 percent of the town's ·U.~ REP. ROBERT Carr, D-Ait~. Chief John Skroski asked the town s 1DJO!'e<i a-bttJ &IL yeat..Jhat tJQfd·.A..._,.... ~~ .~ for a_ P.~Y, raise to.match' .. '4:300 reside'nts are Polish-American, but none bolds a significant public of· rice. have wded ramUies like the Ruffs. but it the" salary o( the local supervisor of died with little progr.ess. Carr hu ·pro· public works. an Irish-American. mised to bring it up again. Thomas Scanlon, chairman of the Bal said he recently saw a story Finance Board, reportedly com· "We can solve a lot of OUT problems by marking the right box on the ballot," said I>zenis. seeking his first public of· fice . about the Huffs in a newspaper and te· mented: cognized his Marine Corps pal from a photograph. He immediately wrote to Graydon E . Caldwell of Minneapolis, president of the Guadalcanal Campaign Veterans Association. .. YOU DON'T EXPECT a Polak to make as much as an lrishman, do you?" SCANLON. AN accountant, says be is sorry. but it was intended as a joke that was misquoted. He claims to have said; "I was in Robert Huff's squad," Bal wrote. "I knew him. We all signed the insurance papers. A Cpl. Lieberman was the company clerk who signed us up." Skroski resigned, saying. "The re· mark was the last straw." ·'This ts like ~ soap opera. Will the Polish chief of police ever make as much as the Irish superintendent of roads?" More than 100 local Polish-Americans in this small western Massachusetts town gathered last weekend at a r ally to express their outrage at the remark. Says Skroski. "It was no joke to me.'' Bit Too Wild Martin Album Banned TROY, Mich. <AP> -"A Wild and Crazy Guy." the latest recording by popular comedian Steve Martin, is being banned for sale by K-mart Corp. because it contains offensive language ac· cording to a K-mark spokeswoman. "We took it out or our store because a number or our customers complained about the language," Ann Wolff. spokeswoman for the nation's No. 2 re· tailer, sald Monday. SHE COULD NOT GlYE a specific number of complaints and was unable to say if K-mart. which operates 1,396 stores in the United States, had ever done such a thing before. The ban bas been in effect for "two or three weeks," she said. In a random check of several K-mart stores in the Detroit area, however, some managers report· ed the record still was a vailable. UCI Life Syste~ , Saves Newbo17lS An artificial life-support system developed by s urgeons at UC Irvine's College cf Medicine is aJ. lowing doctors to ·save b~bies born with respiratory ailments that olberwtSe would be fatal. Called Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygena· tion. the system takes over the function or lungs and heart while doetors lreal damaged lungs. UCI OFFICI ALS SAID the UCI Medical Center is the only location in the world us~g the method, originaJly conceived to treat respiratory failure in adults. But Dr. Robert H. Bartlett, a UC I professor of surgery who helped develop ECMO. said the treat· menl tool may be most effective in infants because of their greater potential for survival. Lung damage is often irreparable in adults. Bartlett said, but ~ usually reversible with newborn babies. StiA OVER THE PAST FIVE years, 2'7 babies have been treated with ECMO at UCI. Thirteen sur- vived. including the last seven patients. Bartlett said the rate is good because babies are given over to ECMO only as a last resort and are in extremely poor condition. Bartlett said about 15,000 babies die of lung problems in the United States each year. Surgeons from other parts of the country have become inter ested in the ECMO heart·lung machine technique, and there are plans to start other centers. Five Airlines Get Ro~e Approvals • WASHINGTON CAP l -The CivU Aeronautics Board bas awarded five airlines authority to serve 13 routes that bad been dropped by other carriers. The authority was granted on Monday under provisions of the new airline deregulation act that permits caniers to bid ror so-called dormant markets. APOLW AlllUNES gained six or the routes, with all but one of the cities located in California. They are between Oakland and Santa Maria and bet ween Santa Barbara and these cities: Las Vegas. Nev., Oakland. San Jose, Sacramento and income tax: no work, no worry, no math, no charge. Join the Los Angeles Federal Family of Savers and turn the job over to a Tax Specialist. This year, spare yourself the drudgery of filling out personal income tax forms. Do as thousands of Los Angeles Federal Savers do: let a specialist figure your de- ductions, do the math, fill out the forms for both Federal and California State regular personal income tax returns. There's no charge for this service with a deposit of $5,000 or more in a high-interest Savings Account, or $iO,OOO in a higher-interest Investment Certificate. This also entitles you to a sate deposit box, Travelers Checks, Money Orders, docu- ment duplication and more. And you'll re- ceive higher interest than any commercial bank pays, compounded daily. Your sav- ings are insured by a Federal Agency. So make an appointment now to have your income tax returns prepared at a time con- venient for you. The sooner you file, the faster your refund can be malled. Savings 1nsureo to S40.000 LOS ANGELES 1 t ' I , Santa Maria. Altair Airlines was awarded Phlladelpbla· Allentown, Pa., Pbiladelpbia·Bingbamton, N.Y., and Washington, D.C.·Rlchmood, Va. FEDERAL SAVINGS ~s Automobile Club . ~-· of Southern California 3880 BSroh Street. Newport Beadi, CA (714) 975-1088. Imperial Airlines received El Centro, Calif .. Phoenix and Tucson-Yuma, Ariz. North Central gained Minneapolis-St. Paul~San Diego, and United was awarded Las Vegas· Pittsburgh. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 842•M18 s • HOMIOWMaS • AUTOlft..-.c• JP TOU QUALIPY • l NEWPORT BEACH 320 1 Newport Blvd .• across from C11y Hall • 675-4500 OPEN Mon. through Thura, 9 AM·5 PM; Fri. 9 AM·I PM Prematurtily withdrawn Ccr1tl1nt1• 1\ccounl!; earn 1nterC!>I JI 1h1.: Passbook 1a1£• for lhe term of tnves1monf fess 90 days H"ad 0111c1> Lo·, AngetH ft·dcr.at S w•noa arid Loori Assoc•at1on On W•h nut• lo An9oiea !XJ()l 7 • O!ht r 011co•1111011(1l!Out 1rw or'"' •• - -/ AT YOUR SERVICE I CAUfOANlA---------------------,._--~----T\mdly. ftt>ruerye, 1979 DAILY PILOT A• ut AssaileU ACRAMENTO <APt A &HCUn& tu cut being oon ad rtd by the Brown admlnultiation to dry up a tlOO mllUon bJ1hway fund 11u'"P.lu.s would retult lft "f•ls rono my . • accordln1 to tb stale &>n t 's I ad•r S•nat~ Pre d nl Pro Tf'm Jam MUia h\d Mooda.y he w "aurpmf'd, dl appomtcd and dlirt~s ('(f'' by r porta lh• adrruntstratlon b comidf'rlnc,an un lil)f'C ned &a ta cut, callln.a lM J>l'O· po al "a polltlcal 11me •• MILi.& TH L I TUa ' lead· ma u.d\'OC&itG or m tr Dill, d the Rlcburd l&•rmun wu not immediate· b •v&Uabt ror comment Ile wu quot- d latt ~ecik H uyin1 that the tu cut was one of •v r•J t>pUoni belnl con lldMtd ,. California h11 u 7·c nt per-a•llon 1asollne x Anoth r ' cent.a la levled by th feck'r~• aovtirnmcnt. TH • llM MILUON WAS reported· 11 s fl('rated by Po t-Propc>ilUoo 13 blr- anc f and bud.et cubl Mllls 1ald •t could be u~ed In • v•rlety of Wl}'S, in· r ludini: • -Helplne pay ror extending the Bay Area Rapid Transit District line from Daly City to San t'ranclaco Airport or from Fttmont to Warm Springs. -Extending the San Ole10 Metropolitan Transit Development Board's transit line from downtown Su Oleao to La Mesa and El Cljon. -P&OVIDING L08 Ange~ County with all of the rail transit funds It ls en· titled to over the next five yean. Cur- rently. the state only plans to provide about 52 percent ol authorized fundl.n« .• SlOO mJUlon could bf> bttt r UHd for on Or moro Of Yt>r J tun 11 and rtU~ft)' Pl'OJ «I ~ p od•r\I th mon y now. the San t>u~ao Dt>mocrat . •id, would s vc llve • cut traffic ronge.U n and sav• money by voadln• intlataonary CO$l.I in '1 an ahud ··1 f. ume. 1iven ttme, they wlU be built. ' be i&ld ot lb projec,UI Federal Bearing Asked On Homosexual's-Suit "It' W D£l Y ACTIO upon tht>m , inf1alion la 11mply goanp to Increase the co t lt 's very de initely ratae ecooomy." He pl'fdictrd the Legislature would block any attempt to cut the gasoline tait, and said he was attempt.mg to rocus administration attention on what pro- jects could be funded. LOS ANGELES <AP> -Western Afrline.t has asked that a $.10 million damage suit filed by a lonner comp.ny eicecutave .who claims he was fired tor being a homosexual be beard ln federal court rather than Superior Court. West.em spokeswoman Unda Dozier t-onfirmed Monday that a peUUon seek- ing the transfer was filed FridfU'. .. Arte r a political game is played and after· they say we've got all this money and we should give al back lo the public. thf n it's time lo sat down and thlnk what should be done,'' he said A SPOKESWOMAN FOR the Depart- ment of Transportation, Ann Grant said the gas tax cul was suggested by the Department or Finance and that her de partment had plans to spend the money ATl'ORNEY JOSEPH Gellman said that bis client, Sheldon Omansoo, was fired as sales manager in charge or Westem 's Florida operations on May 25, 1977. Finance D e partment direct or At the time, Gellman said, the Dade County ordinance barring discrimina- Uon agaJnst homosexuals was in force. The ordinance was subsequently re- pealed in a well-publicized campaign led by Anita Bryant. The suit was filed in Los Angeles "Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need to solve tnPquihes m government.and bustness. Mall your questions to Pat Dunn, At~Your Service. Orange Coast Dculy Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa CA 92626 A.f many letters as possible will be a~ed but phoned mqumes or letters not mcludJng th~ reader's full name. address and business hours' phone number cannot becoMtdered. Tluscolumnappearsdm- ly except Salurdays." Beat Elemnet StfU M.U'I' DEAR PAT: We have a Westinghouse electric roaster that needs a heating element replaced. It's about 10 years old, and the dealers we've contac- ted say that parts for this modeJ have been dis- continued. Are we out of Juck? H.G., Costa Mesa CaUlornJa Electric Service lac., 117 s. Brts&ol, Santa Alla, probably caa tde care ol W. repair for you. Pbone 54%-511 I and provide &be model number of your roa1ter &o make sue. Tiie reaaon yoa can't get replacement parts la Uaat West· · lngboase bas a&opped manllfacCUrlac small •P· pllances. Ott1 Attontetf Telce• Ce•plal•t DEAR PAT: ls there any official in a city's government who would accept a complaint about a firm in the city that does false advertising on what appears t.o be a regular basis? K.R., Santa Ana Complalo to the city atcorney. A state false ad· venlslng law, SB 11'3, aaUtorbel any city at· t.orney, In addition &o tbe dlredor of c:ouamer If· fairs, the aUOmey general or any district attorney, ' becauae that was where Omanson's con· tract with Western originated, Gellman said. However, he added, the Dade County ordinance was cited in the ac· Uon. since at the time of his firing OmaDIOO lived in that county. OMANSON FILED BIS Superior CQurt suit Aug. 29. In addition to claim- i ng a violation of his civil rights, Omaason also accused Western of breach of contract, malicious discharge and Invasion of privacy. The last charge stems from an investigation Western aJ. legedly conducted into Oman.son's sex· ual preferences. Gellman said Omanson, who returned to the Los Angeles area aft.er he was discharged, had worked for Western since 1965 and had been responsible for initiating the carrier's operations in both Hawaii and Florida. • &o request evidence of facts upon wbJcb advertls· Ing clalma are based comparing a product'• efftt· tivenns or safety with tbat of ano&ber product, and &o seek lmmedlate terminaUen or modlfkatlon of Cite claim ti Ute advertber falls &o respoed witllln a reasonable time or ti tbere la reason to believe &be claim la false. To celebrate our newest _ Orient route to Taipei, Taiwan, Fried f'lsla f'IU•-otd f'attle• DEAR PAT: Can you find out lf fishburgen are better ror you (less caloric> than take-out ham- burgers? C.M .. Costa Mesa Flab la good brain food ud yHr tlllakin1 t. correct. Deep frylag loles IAle baWe for llsla. Regular-size, take-oat laambarger or clleeaebargers generally llave fewer calories "•n fi.sbbargera. A McDonaJd•a fUet of fi.sll aaadwlcb baa 411 calorie• compared wttla IAle cbala'a regalar bambarger, wtCJa Zit calories , or tbe 31.Z·calorte cbeesebarger. Tbla elt•I•'• qaarter poaader sandwld ties with tbe flab olfedq •t '11 calortes, ud IAle Blg Mae t. a diet dlau&er at 5t& calortea. C.YLIJl9 ....... •t-d ea tile If a9 DEAR PAT: I aent a SIO check' to Smith River Grove campground Jn Crescent City, Calli., last June 30 for a Labor Day weekend reservatJon. The cbeck was cashed July ll, but I didn't hear anything. I phoned July 20 and wu told they bad no reservations but would "get back to me." They didn't, so I called again Aug. 1 and uked for a re- fund. I've also written requestins my $10 to be re-· turned, but I don't get any reply. · L.B., Huntington Beach A Y8 CGllbded die ca•,.,._.. ud 101lf re· faad Is betac procesaed. A apekenomaa 1a71 re· laad1 -are llla1uUed bJ tllelr aeeeaatHta aad appareatlT 10GI' req11eat waa OTeriooked. -... •eete• a.e.,. .... -~ DEAR PAT: I really enjoy cbocolate-navored lnatant coffee, but it 'a '° expenalve. Ia there any recipe for homemade version? E.B., Fountain Valley we're putting the same kind of exotic Golden Dragoil~rvice on our nonstop flights to Chicago and Houston, starting February 1st. So now you don't have to fly to the mysterious East to enjoy it. Our boarding gates and flight attendants are dressed Oriental style. And once you 're aboard one of our wide-bodied DC· !O's, or com- fortable 727's, we're prepared to .cater to your · every whim, no matter how inscrutable. There's a choice of American or Oriental cuisine. And chopsticks are av~il­ able, so you can partake of all the Chinese delicacies without losing face. You can also enjoy Taiwanese beer or Wan Fu wine. Since the soul needs nourishment as 10 Going on 30? • TEMPE, Arb. CAPl -Ten-year-old Brbaton Smith plays the cello and conducts aclenUfto ex- periments when he's not attenUng clusa at Arizona State University. "Being at ASU doesn't make such a b1-dlf· ferenc. to ""'·" says Brinton, who also is a atlb· grader at Broadmore Elementary school tn Tempe, tbebomeof ASU. '"l'RE PEOPLE ABE FRIENDLY and I really don't feel out of place. "Anrone ~Uh a hJgb IQ is going to be teued, and lt'e not always fun," Brinton said. ••But it'a really great to be smart, whether people tease you or not." THE YOUNGSTER SAYS be can tum b1s ldgh intelligence ore when he wants to act "regular." . .. ., .......... COLI.EOE klD Brinton Smith, 10 Asked by an Instructor when he was goinc to act more like kids bis own age, Brinton replied. "When I grow up." ==· • Ill --• c -· 100 MEN WHO LOVE TO SINll The Santa. Ana Chapter of The Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America will provide entertainment and conduct auditions for new chorus members at the First Methodist Church. corner 6th and French. Santa Ana. Knowtedge of music not necessary. Be sure to join us! · 7:45. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 7 6th & French Sts. in Santa Ana , .., , t> * I l I ES RWAY / well as the body, Continental offers free stereo, including Oriental musi<.~, plus films on the Far East on all DC-lO's. And if that's not enough, we even have fortune cookies that could win you a ''fortune" in prizes. You can enjoy ContinentaJ 's Golden Dragon Service on any lunch or dinner non- stop for the same fare you Cl pay for everyday service on other airlines. But it's a limited time program, so call your travel agent, company travel department or Continental now. And make reservations for a Far Eastern experience on your way to Chicago or Houston. TO CHICAGO: 12:20 am, 9:15 am, 11:35 am~ 2:25 pm~ 7:00pm~ TO HOUSTON: 12:05 am, 7:30 ain. 11 :00 am~ 3:00 pm~ 5: 10 pm~ 'ftere II a baale moeb eo«ee mbtare, aH It'• e...allerably leu eipelllln &lau t'9e '""· re4 PrMlld. C.0.bl• OM Hp of ......_, eltoeelae. We really move our tail ror you. CONTINENTAL AIRLINES. ftavored lab <can be ••de tro. llo•emade •b· &are> ..... uueap...._~ ....... ee.. , ...,ef'H -=-llDer aDd ae &we.._ ... fer eaci. np •nlq. The Proud Bird with the Oolden 1111. Los Angeles: 'n2·6000 • Beverly Hills and Son Fernando Velley: 966-1000 • Burbank, Olen&.lc and Pa~dcna: ~-7181 Lotig ~ch: 537.4400 . Onwio and Pomona: 988·6541 • Oranae County: 5.17·3114 • RiversJde and San Bernardino Toll Freo atJ.800) 222·2810 San Ciabrld Vallev: 579·4210 • Santa Monica and South Bay: 646-22.JO . - f ·--AT YOUA SERVICE I CALIJ;OANIA SACRAME 0 f"PI A llllOlln tax <'tit bclna con idered by the Brown admm1 lr<1lloo to df') up a $100 mUUoo bJah"'ny fund urpJu would ~ult to "false ('Onomy, · Mctordan1 to th st ate Sc-rulle 's luadtir ~nale Prt> ldenl Pro T~rn Jame Mill ...gu1d Monday hfl _,_ "1urprut'd, dl1'lppomtt'd 11nd di t t'd .. by rf'PQrU the dmln111:tr lion t. l'Onsidcn"' an un i>Pt'CUled au ta ""'· callln1 the pro po r ·•a poljttcal um " H tcbunt Silbc•rm1111 "'a~ not 1mnwth ute ly available tor rommcnt He was quot ed I st wt•ck a• •Uflntl Uuat th tax cut wo1 ol vf'ral opUon' beina con 11<tt"rtd. C•llfornlu haa u 7·cfnl per ·aallon 1a ollne tux Ano\h •r 4 cents 1• levied by tb fedl'r l aov~rom nt. TUt; $100 MU.LION W tl•port«t ly tit n rated by po. t Pro~llton 13 hlr· ma fr zc;1 Md budget cutB Mills Hld ll could be u.st.'(.f ln u variety of w•y&, ln· t'ludlo!I Helping pay for extending the Bay Area Rapid Tt anslt District li ne from Oaly Clty to San Francis~ Airport or from i')oemont to Warm Springs. E xte nd i n g th e S an O ie10 Metropolita n Transl\ D velopmenl Board's transit line from downtown Sao Diego to La Men and El Cajon. -PaOVIDtNG LOS Angeles County with au or the raJI transit funds it ts en· titled to over the next five years. Cur· rently, the state only plans to provide about 52 percent or authorized fundJlul .. MIUB, TH LE cJt: TVa 'S lead m.i .tdVl)('Rll' of m i1 tral\Slt, .aid th<· $100 million rould bf' hf'Ut'r ~ for on or ntOI'\' oC 1.1v\•ral lran 1\ and railway Pl'OJ\'<'l.~ Spend1na Cb monf')' now. tht' San 01t't:o Dt•1r1ocr 1t ~••d \Ir OU Id .,.,. \ ~ h\''lj· \'ul trllffk <'Onf:C" t1on and :..ave mon~y b)' ll\'01dula lJill twnary ~c.. Ul yean. '1h~ d "I p~uruc, gh'eo tlmt, they wlll be built ." oo i. ,Id oC th\.' proJttts Federal Hearing Asked On Homosexual's Suit ''IF WE Ot:LA V CTION upe>n th<!m. 1oflahon ls simply goine to ancreal>t' the cost ll 's \'e r y df'frnlte ly (alae economy .. I.OS ~NCE'Ll':S <AP > Western lie prW.icted the Legislature woultJ block any atte m pt to cut the gasoline tax. and u1d he was attempting to foc us adm1rustrahon attention on what pro J~<'ts could be funded. A1rlln~ has asked that a $10 million tlamage suit llled by a former ~mpany t-xecutive who claims he was fired for being a homosexual be heard in federal court rather than Superior Court. Western spokeswoman Linda DotJer conhrmed Monday that a petition seek· 1ng the transfer was filed Friday. "Arter a pohtieal game is played and .ifl ~r they say "'e 've got all Uus money und we should gjve it back to the public, then 1t•s Ume to Sit down and think what. s hould be done," he said A POKF..SWOMAN FOR the Depart. ment or Tra nsportation, Ann Grant said the gas tax c ul was s uggested by the Department of Finance and that her de partment had plans to spend the money ATl'ORNEY JOSEPH Gellman said that his client, Sheldon Omanson. was r1red as sales manager in charge of Westem's Florida operations on May 25. 1977 Fina n ce Department d i r ector At the time. Gellman said, the Dade County ordinance barring discrimina· lion against homosexuals was in force. T he ordinance was subsequently re· pealed in a well·publicized campaign led by Anita Bryant. 'J:he suit was filed in Los Angeles "Got a problem? Then w rite to Pa1 Dunn Pat wall cut red tape. getti ng the answers and action you need to solve l11l'qurtres rn government and business. Mrul your queshcms to Pal Dunn. At Your Service. Orarige Coast Dmly Pil-01 , P.O Box IS«J, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 As many letters as possible wlll be ariswered but phoned mqu1ries or letters not mcludzng th~ reader's full name. address and business hours' phone number cannot be considered ThiscolumnappearsdaJ. ly except Salurdoys." Beat E~t StlU /tlau?' DEAR PAT: We have a WE15tinghouse electric roaster that needs a healing eJement replaced. It's about 10 years old, and the dealers we've contac· ted say that parts for this model have been dis· continued. Are we out of luck? H.G., Costa Mesa CalllomJa Eledric Service Inc., 117 S. Bristol, S.uta AAa, probably can take care of Ws repair for you. Phone 54%·5'1 l and provide UM model ournber or your roaster lo make sure. The reason you can•t get replacement parts la ti.at West· lngboase bas stopped manufachuing small ap. pliaoces. Otg Attornq Tab• c .. p lal11t DEAR PAT: Is there any official in a city's government who would accept a complaint about a firm in the city that does false advertising on what appears to be a regular basis? , K.R .. Santa Ana ' beeause that was where Omanson's con· tract with Western originated. Gellman said. However, he added, the Dade County ordinance was cited in the ac· Uon, aince at the time of his firing Omaaaon lived in that county. OMANSON FILED BIS Superior Court suit Aug. 29. In addition to claim· Ing a violation or his civil rights, Omanson also accused Western o( breach of oontract, malicious discharge and invasion of privacy. The last charge stems from an investigation Western al· legedly conducted into Oman.son's sex· ual preferences . Gellman said Omanson, who returned to the Los Angeles area after he was discharged, had worked for Western since 1965 and had been responsible for initiating the carrier's operations in both Hawaii and Florida. Complain to the city attorney. A state false ad· venlaing law, SB 11'3, aathorh.ea any city at· loroey, in addltion lo tbe director of consumer af. fairs, the aUomey general or any district attorney, lo request evidence of facu upon wbJcb advertis· Ing claims are based comparlog a product•• etrec:· liveness or safety with that of anotber product, and to seek lmmedlate termination or modlftcatloa or the claim if the advertiser falls lo respond within a reasonable time or U there la reason to believe tbe claim la false. To celebrate our newest Ori ent route to Taipei, Taiwan, Fried""'" Flu ...... FaUle• DEAR PAT: Can you find out if fisbburgers are better for you <less caloric> than take-out ham· burgers? C.M., Costa Mesa Flsb ls good brain food and yoar thlnkln1 la correct. Deep trying loses tbe baWe for fish. Regular.she, take -oat hambarger or clteeaebargen generally have fewer calories than flsbbargers. A McDonald'• met of flU aandwlcb baa 411 calories compared wtdl &lie cbaln'a regalar hamburger, with 2tt calories , or tbe SIZ·calorte cbeesebarger. Thia cltala'a qaarter poaader sandwich des with tbe fish olfertni at 411 calories, and tile 8'g Mac ls a diet dlauaer at 54f caJortea. Ca•pgrellllCI Ret -• •• tu"•• DEAR PAT: I sent a $10 cbeck'to Smith River Grove campground in Crescent City, Calif., last June 30 for a Labor Day weekend reservation. The check was cashed July 11, but I didn't hear anything. I phoned July 20 and was told they bad no reservations but would "get back to me." They didn ;t, so I called again Aug. l and asked for a re· fund. I've also written requestinc my $10 to be re-· turned, but I ~n·t get any reply. L.B .• Huntington Beach A YS CGetKted lite ea•Nl'ODCI a8d JCMlr n · f and 11 belDg processed. A apokeswoman aaya re· • faada are ltaadled by Ulelr uceaataata Hd apparea&ly yoar reqaest waa owrlookecl. ,.,_ !fledua OJetsp .. •• Bw DEAR PAT: I really eQ)oy cbocolate-navored instant coffee. but it's so expensive. Ia then ~ recipe for homemade versJoo? E.8.~ Fountain Valley we're putting the same kind of exotic Golden DragonMService on our nonstop fli ghts to Chicago and Houston, starting February 1st. So now you don't have to fl y to the mysterious East to enjoy it. Our boarding gates and flight attendants are dressed Oriental style. And once you're aboard one of our wide-bodied DC-la's, or com· fortable 727's, we ~re prepared to cater to your every whim, no matter how inscrutable. There's a choice of American or Oriental cuisine. And chopsticks are avail- abl e, so you can partake of all the Chinese delicacies without losing face. You can also enjoy Taiwanese beer or Wan Fu wine. Since the soul needs nourishment as 'Tu.edly, Februaty 6. f979 DAILY PILOT it9- 10 Going on 30? • TEMPE, Ariz. <AP> -Ten.year-old Brinton Smith playa the cello and conducU. sclenUflo ex· perlment.s when he's not attenUng classes at Ariiona State Untverslty. "Being at ASU doesn't make such a big dif· ference to me." says Brinton, who also is a llfth· grader at Broadmore Ele mentary school in Tempe. the home of ASU. • '"TllE PEOPLE ARE FRIENDLY and I really don't feel out of pJace. "Anyone with 1 high IQ ls going to be teased. and It's not always fun!' Brinton said. "But it's really •real to be smart. whether people tease you or not." ·~-· ......... C<>U.EGEKIO THE YOUNGSTER SA VS he can tum his bigh intelligence off when he wants to act "regular.'' Asked by an instructor when he was goin1 to act more like kids his own ag e, Brinton replied, "When I grow up." Brinton Smtth, 10 ==· a Ill 111111 • ; 100 ME• WHO LOVE 10 Sl•ll The Santa Ana Chapter of The Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America will provide entertainment and conduct auditions for new chorus members at the First Methodist Church. comer 6th and French. Santa Ana. Knowledge of music not necessary. Be sure to join us! 7:45 WEDNESDAY, FEB. 7 6th & French Sts. in Santa Ana . i I l ES RWAY · well as the body, Continental offers free stereo, including Oriental music, plus films on the Far East on all DC-lO's. And if thats not enough, we even have fortune cookies that could win you a "fortune'' in prizes. You can enjoy Continentafs Golden Dragon Service on any lunch or dinner non- stop for the same fare you 'd pay for everyday service on other airlines. But it's a limited time program, so call your travel agent, company travel department or Continental now. And make reservations for a Far Eastern experience on your way to Chicago or Houston. TO CHICAGO: 12:20 am. 9: 15 am, 11 :35 am~ 2:25 pm~ 7:00 pm~ TO HOUSTON: 12:05 am, 7:30 am. 11 :00 am~ 3:00 pm~ 5: IO pm~ \ 'ftere la a basic ·~ coffee •lxtue aad It'• comlderaM, tea espe•ve .... tire =nd We really move our tail for you. CONTINENTAL AIRLINES. prod.a. Comblae He c., of ....... , c a&e· navored mix (cu M raade from iaomemacle •b· tan) .... ODe·lliaU Hp ....... eoftee, 8t9fe .. atY• ered eomlaJaer aod ae hro eU11alM for eaclt c., Mrvlq, f - The Proud Bird whh 1hc Golden Tull. Los Angeles: 'n2·6000 • Beverly Hills and San F.cmando Volley: 966· IOOO • Burbenk. Olcnd3le ond Pnsadcna: 246·7181 Long Bctlch~.537·4400 • Ontario and Pomona: 988·6541 • Oronge County: 537·3114 • Riverside nnd Son Bernardino Toti Free nt (800) 222·2810 ---s.n Gabriel Vall~v~ S79·42IO • Santa Monica uhd South Bay: 646--2230 ' i ' • • .. " ~ ' .. .. n ICI in .. "' II • ~ Trarisit Rewrt Flaieif Robin Vouna. the lone woman OD t.be Oran& County Tra&Jt 'Daalrlct board, H~•t th only dlaaentlq vote Monday wtM-n dlrector1 approved tbt di•· lrict'• alf"U'1D Uve actJon plan. Th plan. reqwred by lb federal acency that paya ball a.he dJltricta' COila, •bo•• how Fnany worn ft and mem~n ot racial rru.nonti are mpk>)'ed by th dillri<"t It alllo lnclud a a i n raUlt'd atatem nt about bow thc d.1~· trkt wUl cont.mu tu hire ~ mlnorit and mov Ulem into maoagem nt rMolu. BUT M . YO NG, a La Ha bra c ity <"o unc alwo n--n JI' olunteers Applmuled Volunteers who have contnbuted 10,670 hours of tbear Ume to Goodwill Industries' rehabllltallon and evaluat1on center an Santa Ana wall be feted by Goodwill Feb. 14 on ''Volunteers Appreciation Day." Goodwill said the 2·30 p.m . cere1J1ony will honor 562 vt\hmteers who gave their time and efforts to the handicapped in 1978. Fullerton Schools Seek $900,000 Fullerton Union High School District officials say they need a $900,000 state loan to install earthquake proof buildings ror livestock and poultry on the dis· trict 's farm. The loan was requested in Sacramento by Sen. John Briggs, R-Fullerton, and co· sponsored by other Orange County legislators. The district s ays the new buildings are reqwred to meet state statutes which require every school building used by a student to be earthquake resis· tant. Cf'1t died the docu1Mnt-;-notJni · that lbe st.aUttica tl used w ro 'Pff t and aayina it lacked any con· er te pl&Dol action. He,. pt"Otfft. sot no aupport rrom the four maJ1 board mem · bera Oo , Pblllp Anthony, who alao .,. ctaaarman ol &.be Orana• County ·Board oC Supervtaors, df'fenckod the dlatricl'a hlrtn1 prac~ N better than othu comparabJ aicenciea. "trwly. r don't app~ial th fa klnd or critlcl1m," h added. ·-nus ISN'T exactly news to you." Ma . Voun1 retorted, "•Ince w duscuued it lo our .. com mittec> meeting and: Jn r1et, you had I obJectJOn to the erilk m at that lime." SM caled u an example of lb questionable statistics one that chAimed only 4.S percent of th ttat 's work force consists or women eligible for manage· d1 nt positions in the dtslrict. But atatr members <fefendecf the numbers aaylog they come from state agencies and the 1910 federal census. Following a 4·1 vote to accept the plan, directors asked staff members to review all job ap. . pl1caUons filed in the past year to see ar there are substantial differences from the statistics an th plan. Transit Ad Boost Rejected by Board Orange County Transit Dis· trict directors have rejected an offer to lncr~ase by $.50,000 a year income from ad space sold ln district buses. · Instead, they voted to extend for four years the contract of the firm that has been selling the ad space for the past three years. Monday's action was ratifica· lion of the contract with Transit Ads, Inc. The contract calls for payment to the district ol a minimum of $930,500 by the end or 1982. THAT FIGURE represents 51 percent of the firm's estimated gross inoome from the ad sales. The current contract calls for a 50 percent payment to the dis· trict. Officials from Metro Transit Advertising, a division of Metromedia, Inc. protested the awarding of the contract without seeking bids. However , Deputy County Counsel Keo Smart ruJed that district directon didn't have to seek bids and could ignore Metro's offer. DIRECTOR PHILIP An· thony, who is also chairman of th e county Board or Supervisors, recommended the extension of the Transit Ads contract noting, "I don't thiilk a last minute claim should have much bearing on what has been a long, careful process." Ross Barrett. speaking for Metro, noted that the $50,000-a· year dilference in the two con· tracts could balloon to a $660,000 difference over the life of the contract, taking into ac- count matching federal and state funds attracted by district revenues. His remarks were dismissed by Anthony, who said, "talk is cheap.'' Women Sought For.Panel Women interested in serving on a proposed Orange County Senior Women Advisory Com· miltee are being urged to COD· tact commission coordinatQr Karen Klammer at834-6880. Proposed by the county's Com mission on the Status of Women, the committee is de- aigned to organize workshops and provide speakers and re-• source people. ORANGE COUNTY .. LET YOUR HOUSE REMODEL YOUR HOML With the high cost of buying a nw home today, it's often much better to stay right where you are and remodel. Redo the kitchen or bathroom. Add a room or a pool. Make your valuable home even more valuable. And the equity you already have in your house may provide the cash you need. without affect- ing your first mortgage in any way. You see, equity is the differ- ence between what you oo.1e on your first mortgage and how much your home is presently worth. Which could be thousands. Our loan professionals will be happy to give you all the facts and figures about borrowing on your equity. For more infonnation, just call 963-8233 and ask for John Hall. He's a specialist in second trust deed loans. And Newport Equity Funds is a leader in Orange County home equity financing. Together, we can tum your place into a showplace. Newport Equity Tunds ·Inc loans on good homes for any good reason. FOUNTAIN VALI..EY. 171 H S.oollhu~I 17141 lln.\ S:! \I NEWPORT BEACH. 620 N""''POfl Cen1cr Drive "u''" 211 171411>14 h/<24 LAGUNA HIU.S • .!:,;?hi C.ibnt Rn.id '">u1tl' 107 171414% Zill~ 0 197'9 NEWPORT EQUTTY FUNDS LICC/llSW BROKER SINCE 1969 ( THE BOOKMAN ) REVIEWS in the DAILY PILOT If you're too bµsy to take advantage of our long distance morning rates, - • evening rates. Our low, low. low rates are kfore 8 a.m. You get five minutes 'O(Iong distance for just 85¢, plus ta><. (That's the most it cancostyou.) But we also have a low, low evening rate. Call after 5 p.m., and you can talk for five minutes bjust $1.35, plus tax. (Thats .lhe most it can cost you.) So if you can't call mornings, call evenings. Call without using an operator;" and you can call any- where in the United Stares (except Alaska and Hawaii), and talk for five minutes, for just $1.35. Five minutes for $1.35. And ' you don't have to get up with the birdies to get it. ' ·Oper110< handling rates apply on all coin, collect and credit card cells, calls billed to another number; code b1lllng special b11Ung numberl), calls lrom holel/motel room phones. per.on-to-person calls and t1me-enckharge1 calls. I .. ~ • • ~ flt ~ • .. ti ' "' • • ... ,. t I I 1 I J J •Business •Televlslon l •Stocks •Comlcs T~. f'ebruary 6, 1919 DAii. Y PILOT •1 Girls Take Their Basketball Seriously Beavers Outlast Trojans Area T e ams Play for Keeps Orange Coast area girls take their basketball serious ly as shown in this series of photos. Above IJeft 1. Newport Harbor's Jeanne Wolf <25> shoots over Mariann Be lgen <22> and Courtney Dillon of Fountain Valley, while in the middle photo, Fountain Valley's Dillon, Debbie Coleman <20> and an uniden- tified Newport player battle for a re- bound. At upper right. Ocean View's Chris Olsen I 11 ) gets by Cypress· Desiree Johnson to score. In the right photo, Estancia's Barbara Jamison (25) s hoots over Costa Mesa's Carol Krikorian C25 l with Michele Dryden closing in. And below, Marina's Kim Nutter <left> twists for a rebound as Edison 's Lis a Sandviken 130> and Marina teammates Debbie Schlueter t30>. Jill Cunningham <33> and Suzy Brazney < 11 l watch. Dally Pilot Photos by Lee Payne, Patrtck O'Donnell Surf Sche.dule Set An attractive ex htbitlon schedule that includes games wltb the Moscow Dynamo, Brighton <England) and the North American Soccer League, champion New York Cosmos , along with 30 NASL games bas bee n announced by the CaUfomla Surf. .......... 0-.. l"rl., l<.O. u-Mn<OW ()ynemo 0 :301 $1111 ...... ~ $eft Jote It JOI. l"rl ., llMrdl l-Vefte_. et Cerrito. C..lt9t la). Svft., --.rc11 • -.,.rttelld •I Ce1tltt•efte ve1i.y """ u :•1. l'rl., Mer(ll l._..n JoM et U Mlr.O. SltdlvM O:•l. We41 .. ~ ....... Yoril~l1 JOI • MM,, Mott lf-•IOflton (1•JOI, lllAk~ ... -S.l, Mrt11t•-.ts.t1OMW 17.IOl Fri., M«tt1'8-oi<.tt0 11 301 Set., •M 1-59.Mtle 17''°' Set ,A,.,.ll 11-LMA.1'Qelff 11 JOI Sun .. °""" n...i Oellllftd 111. Sal., April it-el OelleS Ill. Sal., Me't S-Mtml)flls 17 JOI Sat., Mey U-ttew E119111ftd 17 JOI Set., Mey If-et Po<'llllM !al Wtcl , ~2'-o.Hroft ti JOI Set., Mey 1'-$e<I Ote9D 17:301 Wtcl., Me•~l '"l/141dtfp!ll• (7:301. sun .. ,,_ t-et llot .... sttr m. Wtcl., J-•-et ..... EftQleftll Cll Sel , J_,_I Lot.Anoeln 11,lOI. Wtcl.,J-1J-Ven<-11:JOI s.1 .. ,,_ ~· ..... 17-JO>. S\lfl., JUN!._.. VllllC-IU WtO.,J-27-TemjMI ley l7:JDI s.1.,J11n1......i .......... 111. $ti , Jiiiy 7-el Meftltlflls 11 IOI Wect .. JUIV " ll tmoe llo '" Sufi • Jiiiy lr.H o.t4nlll u JO' wee., MY 1 l'Ol119"CI C1,ao1. S.t. Jlllytt-WeUll~ 17:•1 Wt4.,JlllY2S-FOl't1 • 'lll,.._11,J8> Siii., Jiiiy ....... '"" .. ,,.,., WtG.,AllO l etS.11~ (It. Sal, AllO 4-Seft JeM O·JO I Wtct •• AW I Oellle!IO 0 30 I MOl'le 911'Nt •I AN!ltlm f>ltcllllf'I! All llfMt ere Pec:WI<. ' 33 Qualify For Tourney Lon Nielsen and Mark Mccumber fired four.under-pat rounds of 67 to lead qualifiers Cor the Hawaiian Open at Irvine Coast Country Club Monday as 33 players out or a starting field ol 86 gaJned a spot lo the tourna- ment. H""9119'1 °'9fl GMlfflff\ 61 -LOfl Nltlteft, Merli M<Clllnber. .. l llldy Mlli.r TOM Cllelfl, S.m Tr- C .... lt C..,_, Jeff~- 6'-f'rw Voelkel, JGM Lister . Jolin Jec:Ob5 Oene Oulelev 10~ Merli L .... 8oo L-. Mike Sufll•ell, Rio M•n•,,.el•. O••v M'CllM'd. 0 A Wtlbrl110. Cllerllt CiOloll, "OllMotlley, DIMI 1411119fd- ll 0... .. kff Jtll Mll(lltll. Lff Mlkt.. ~ .. Cedlt. $1ew lpr.v. toll9v Wtlttt TClfl' HollllltlO, flllfMY TllOmp~. L•rr' lltOlff 0.... l!cMtnb, 8111 MllftlltMfl, .>oM Adfm\ lllelld'f ErllllM. CORVALLIS, Ore. CAP> Southern Cal, hoping to stay within striking distance or P acific-10 basketbal I leader UCLA. missed a chance to tie ror the league lead by sucrering a 70·67 setback at the hands or the Oregon Stale Beavers. Steve John so n . OSU 's sop homore center. did the damage for the Beavers as he scored a career high 33 points Monday night. The victory gave the Beavers a 7 ·4 Pac-10 record and 14·6 overall mark, while the Trojans dropped to 8·3 and 13-7. UCLA has a 9-2 conference mark. Purvis Miller led the Trojans with 24 points. 14 in the second ·half. OSU held a 70-63 lead with 1 :09 to play. but two free throws each by Dean Jones and Neal Arnold cut the difference to four points. 'fhe Trojans had two more tries 10 the last 30 seconds but Don Carfino's shot was short and Jones was called for an of· fens1ve foul. Johnson hH 13 of 19 shots from the field. and had a career high ff 'rebounds. In contrast to most of his efforts, he had only two personal fouls. His counterpart, USC star Cliff Robinson. was three for 14 from the field. and had only 11 points for one or his lowest·scoring efforts. Robinson picked up his fourth foul with 9· 16 to play and saw only 27 minutes of action The game was ragged throughout. as OSU had 28 turnovers and USC had 26. The batUe for second place in the Pac-10 should continue to be a competitive one. as each team still has a chance at the NCAA playoffs. use: 1•1• ,, ff tp I CM> 1 Mtll!'• 1t 7 • >• Aob111son J \-6 11 JON!• • ,., ,. Cerf1no J o. 1 • Ar"Old 1 3 l \ BrOOll' 0 17 1 Wiotlf'ldl I 0-0 1 !.mill\ ' 0-0 1 A •tkovlc" O CM> O l olat• 71 I~ 1e ., or,..,. St.I• t70I 0 Allen Mclr1•n JOtlnson 8tume 11.olon! J Allen McSllane Stoull To·tAI' '" It '" 1 1 \ • 3 \ 10 " tJ T·l3 33 1 11 • 3 0-1 • 0 0-0 0 0 0-0 0 \ CM> IQ 71 1~31 10 ... 1111me 0r_. !>lat ... l•·ll fol•I ""''~ use 7S. Oreqon Slate •• out· Wiiii~ IUSCI Allel'Olan<f' l .•ZI Cougars F aJJ To AIA, 67-56 Brad Hoffman's 15 points and Irvin IGffin's 14 led Athletes in Action to a 67 -56 uhibition bas ketball v i ctory ove r Washington Slate Monday night. Al A outscored the Cougars 12·2 midway through the second half to break open what had been a close game A IA trailed 45.44 with IS minutes remaining betore Ho((. m an sparked his team with t"o baskets and two assists. helping put AlA ahead to s tay. The Cougars had kept the con· test close. trailing by 38-35 at the 1nterm1ssion. Do n Coll ins topped th e Washington State scoring with 12 points. and Terry Kelly and Stewart House added 10 each. Hoffman was also the game's top playmaker with nine assists W"~'""°" State 1141 AlA .. 71 '" n Ip '" " Ip 11 • ..,,. 3 '3 , Holtmdn I I 1 U CotllM • 0--0 " o Jae~~ \ ().0 10 ICtlfy 4 11 10 W•nstey 0' e Oon•IO\On • I 1 • IC I fl in 0 I I• Houi.. • 2 1 10 Hell •• 10 hu,,,,,.r 1 0.0 4 P•O;~r 0 I • Pt ft Sf Of" , 0 1 • Smllh C.Q 1 fu"'m 0 0 1 0 Oroll•N!('r ' ().0 • TOl.ll\ 1S ~11 St fol•'' l • \ 11 ., H•tlh..,.. AIA, le JS rotat louts Wa•llinqlon SI.it• IS .Ala. 14. Fout.cl out ,_.. AllrllOen<e 7,800 Success Helps . Lopez 'I Consider Myself Very Lucky' RANCHO MIRAGE <AP\ -She was a little worried that the victories and the accompany- ing money and attention might spoil her. But Nancy Lopez says her golf success in 1978 in- stead helped her grow up. A year ago. Lopez was a 21 year-old rookie on the Ladles 'ProfessionaJ Golf Association tour, looking for her first victory. She was a promising newcomer. certainly, but even she couldn't imagine the succesa that awaited her 0 1 LOOK BACK at everything that's hap- pened to me in just one year and it's hard to believe." Lopez said. "I couldn't-have dreamed it. •. She became the to11r's superstar ln 1978, winning nine tournaments -five consecuUvely -and $189,813. The vktortes and the earnin1s were women's golfinl records, and at the end or tbe year. she received practically every honor the LPGA bestows. Lopez seems to have handled the fame and pressure in stride, appearing little changed by events ol lhe past year. "I CONSIDER MYSELF very lucky," sh said. ''I'm •cry happy with the lhin(ls lhat have happened to me. l grew up a lot: I had to In or dcr to be able to handle everything happening so fast. ·'I did well in golf. I married a wonderful man. I reel like if I were to die tomorrow, I'd still consider myself fortunate because I've done what I wanted lo do." Lopez marrted Tim Melton. a sportscaster from Harrisburg. Pa .. a month ago. She said they reaJJzed her traveling on the tour would pose some problems. but added that her husband intended to join her at tournaments whenever possible. "AND, TOO, l'M NOT going to play in as many tournaments as I did last year," she said, although not specifying how many events she planned to skip. "There are more important things to life than golf. and I'm dete rmined to keep my priorities ln order.·' Lopez' Cather, Domingo, taught her to play golf, and Crequenlly Is in the &allery when she's playing. "My dad's very happy with the way things hove turned out,'' aald Lopez. "He worked with me for a long time, and I'm happy to be able to repay some or that. "lie always had a lot ol confidence in me, but even he's amazed 1 did so welt so quickly." ' , ~ • " I• If ~ c .. " II .. "' • • ., "' Spill €an't Wipe 0ut Swinuner Tl'SCALOOSA, t\l,t r AP 1 When I 14 a~ on lo p or lhl• "-•H p I WU 0 1\ Uul lhl' wat r ~ot 100 rouJih and 11 loc~k m l' Ulldl•r "Wht'n l t'rn hNI 1n1n tht• .uid aJI that \\tllkl'tt "'J' m\ hnun I <: uldn't lulk ••nd ou .um~ •md 1<'15 didn't ~8nt to mo',. ·o~. 1 lltU ov.r 1 munlh al\er hit r~nd avoua with d uth, Lind II vows he "'Ill ~unw hi• C'411l'••r t111 o nlvera1ty or Alabama 1wlmm4.1r. but he 1uya he wlll awlm MCiin." LI N DELi. SUFFERED his 1nJury while bod)' surfin&: Dec 2tl The wuves were peakln.a at 12 feet and he was l'njlulled by the awirUng wuter t m e rgency unit und they came to rescue me." LINDELL WEARS A BRACE from his walsl lo his chin and has received permlJSion lo start light weight train· lnJ(. "ALL l ('() LO Tiii, K 11 huut wu a,:dlln6' lo th1• ~hor1• I lh•lUMhl I •u go 101 tu <1\-u•n I kn w Ir 1 dldn I J.(l'l out or lhl' w lcr. I wa!. t1uln1& to die " "I HOPB TO TA&T 1wlmmtn1 •tain ln Mardi," uld Lindell, a proml1tna frubman butterfly arU1t from Slllr11en. WN n. "Thal will defy aotn odd1, buL lhal '1 what I plan lo do. "l 've never had 10 much pu.ln.'' he sru d of hls Initial onehore realluUon "ll WMJ terrible from my waist to my head . He wants to be a physical therapist after graduation. "The practical experience 1 'm ,ettln1 rrom all this helps c ul down on the boredom ol recovery." he said. Tommy l.1nrt<'ll d h.I OQ\ die lhll rnahtcruna lil'1\•rnuon on lhf' t:K>ach near Fort l.~ud •rdule, FIA llf' '" than1cful h un wtilk ull.l'r !!uUn 1na a hn1kt>n n ·ck .. nu -.t"H•reil> l"' 1:.tt'd arln~ .. , have lO move my n.c;k " lot In the butt r Oy, 10 I mt1hl have lo trr h'eeat~te. R~tiatdlua1. I want to com· pel •t•ln." "Tommy w&I at centimeter from be· ln1 d ad or parliploalc, ·· Hid Oon Olm· brll. tho Alabama swim coach. "The doctora say h wlll never fully recover. · • Fortunululy 1 I wus •bl~ to get on my reel and walk. J atarted making cr azy noises and waving m y arms to get some uttenUon. but people thought I was a freak and walked away. Then. about 20 yards down the beach, I ran Into a man and somehow explained the situation He ran away to get a Red Cross Lindell, a S.Coot-9. 165-pound national champion in Sweden. was discovered by Ala b uma while swimming ror the Stockholm Police Swim Club team. ... A Captule Report From the World of Sport• Mary Malavasi Sounds Off On Coliseum Incident Mur~ Mulavu:.1. \11fe of tbe Los Angeles [iJ Rams heud footbnll coac~. c~n hardly wait until ••• the tea m moves to Anaheim m 1980. ""I'm l(om~ to write letters to Pele Rozelle. Mr Rosl'nblnom and Jim Hardy about Monday night." she told the Dully Pilot, referring to an incident at the Colit>tium following the recent Pro Bowl g ume. ""I went uo the tunnel to see Lo u Ann BullouRh. the w1ft• of a Ne w England coach. and stepped outside the ren<'l' It wa:; unbelievable, there wasn't a policeman in sight. "I told Lou Ann she shouldn't be out there by herself and one or those kids got close to me and I told him,..>.f'm going hl break your hand if you put it in my pocket.· • "My son De nnis was there when Roger Staubach had his wallel stolen. That crowd outside the fence wasn't th<'rc ror adulation. they were <1rter other things. '"Roi:cr told De nnis he now could see why Mr. Rosenbloom wanted to mo,·e to Anaheim. "I don't know where all the people came from but it lool.c>d Ilk<' they came out of Lhe woodwork. Next year I'm l(oing Lo ask Mr Rosenbloom for protection for the coaches coming out or the tunnel after the games." ..-----Quot~ of llae Da·----- When Carnegie-Mellon's Larry Hufmagle hit on JO of 10 frc(• throws and l2 of 14 field goals to beat 8l'th1:1ny College, 82-76, recently, ll prompted losing coach Jim Daner to really search for a compliment. Praised Dafler of the 6·6. 215-pound Hufnagle : "He looks like Clark Kent and he plays Uke Superman. Next time. I think we 'll try a box-and-one with kryp. tonite. ·· Arizona Mcu~ot G~t• Belte•deft T UCSON The pttpier-mache head of m l'n1\'rrsity or Arizona ma14cot Wilbur Wildcat has been stolen. Cheerleader Don Johnson says he took the head off Friday in Berkeley during a Pac-10 Conference basketball J!ame hetween Ariwna and California to help tn a chcerlcadlng routine. . When he came back to the sidelines, the head, valued at $500. was gone .. 1 was all decked out and set the head down orr to the s1dt-there," he said Monday. "then went off to the middle and built the pyramid. When I returned i\ was no longer there ""[ went uµ to a guy and asked him, 'Did you see my head?' lie s:.iid . 'Yeah, it went up into the stands'." Johnson said university officials and police were notifil'tl, hut "I ussumc it's now residing In a frat house in Berkeley." John McCusey, California's sporu. information direc- tor. said the thieves were not necessarily students because the i;cating area in question Is open lo other rans as well. McCusey said there would be no otriclal Investigation unless UofA officials complain M.rotl .lof11s CarftD Ba11deea .. 11 Thc Califoroi a Angels announced Monday • that stncc s1~ninit Rod Carew they have sold 250 season tickets. including a pair to former Presi· dl'nt Richard M. Nixon. "Since lo'OU've obtained Carew we know you are mak mg e very effort lo bring a winner here and we want to sup· port you." Nixon was quoted as saying in his ticket re· quest The 2.50 season tickets represents about SS0,000. IJC'l..A Mo'Ve• IJp a Netrla The Top Twenty teams in The Associated Press col· lcitc basketball poll. with first-place votes in parentheses and season rccorrls · t. Notre Dame I 251 15·2 11. Texas A&M 2. Indiana Stat<' 1201 20·0 12. Trxas 3. Duke (7) 16·3 13. Ohio State 4. UCLA 16·3 14. Arkansas 5. Louisvillc 121 19·3 15. Iowa 6. North Carolin<• 16·4 16. Alabama 7. Syracuse 18·2 17. Vanderbilt 8. Louisiana St 19-3 18. Georgetown, D.C 9. Mar:quette 16·3 19. Temple 10. M ichtJ(an St. 14·5 20. llllnois Gfln in Crifleal CeMdltlen 20·4 16·5 13·6 15·4 15·4 13·5 15·4 16·4 17.3 17·5 OTHER SPORTS Former National League President Warren Giies Is in critical condition In a hospital in Ctncin· ati s uffering from cancer ... President Calvin Grtlfltb of the Minnesota 1 wms says no cash was mvolved m the trade that sent Rod Carew lo the California Angels . . . Houston Astros outfielder Jes~ t\Jou, a veteran or 14 ma- JOr league seasons, was named as a player-coach with the team for the 1979 season ... The Washington Redskins have s igned Fred O'Connor, interim head coach or lhe San Francisco 49ers m uch or the 1978 NFL season, as offensive backfield coach . . . .(oho Madden, who retired last month as head coach of the Oakland Raiders, will be tbe first non· player lo receive the Vl.ncenl T. Lombardi DedicaUon Award ... James Scoll. cun-enUy serving a 30-to·.0-year term In Rahway State Prison in New Jersey. wlll llghtYa· qui Lopez in a nationally televised boul at the prison In May, NBC announced ... Suspended Bos ton Celtics forward Marvin Barnes' status Is still in doubt, with Player·coach One Cowens inslstinll he wants no oart or the wandering rormer Providence College star ... Gaylord Perry, the 1978 Cy Young Award winner for the National Lea1ue, cut his right hand when he fell down a Olght of stairs at hl1 home ln North Carolina. The injury was not belleve4 to be serious . . . TI Ahl end Don Basselbeek of New England Patriots was sideswiped by a mail truck Monday shortly after the start or a marathon blke trip. Telet.tl•lea, R•dle TV: No evPnls scheduled. RADIO: Basketball -San Antonio Spurs at \he Loa Anaeles Lakers. 7:SO p.m., Kl.AC 1570>. Chick Hearn and Pat RUey<feport. He started swimming when he was nine. at the prompting of his mother. IAN CAIRNS IS REGARDED AS ONE OF THE BETTER SURFERS IN THE WORLD. They Live a Dream Surfers Hope ·io Xum Popularity lnJo Gold By RAY ESTRADA OI ti. 0.Hy Pfte4 s .. tf Top professional surfers Peter Townend and Ian Cairns. known as the "Bronzed Aussies," say they plan to tum their lnterna· Uooal popularity into gold. The two globe -trotting Auatrallans believe thal soon m uch of their earnings will not only rome from surf contest prize purses but rrom the lucrative product endorsement business as well. CAIRNS AND TOWNEND are resting In Orange County loUow· Ing their tour-man surf squad's victory in the recent Katin team challenge held tn Huntington Beach. Townend was ranked No. t and Coirns rated No. 2 in 1977 in- ternational surfilll compelitlon. And they say they plan Lo ride the current renewed wave of surfln1 popularity to e ven more fame and fortune. In much the s ame way golfer Johnny MJller and tennJs star J immy CoM ors have sold their images, the Aussies are in the process or marketing their team trademark to s ports clothlf!g a nd s urfing and skateboard product manufacturers. The surfing product industry is booming due \o the renewal or in· terest In the sport that was once thought of as an out-dated craze oflhe 1960s. CAIRNS, 26, SAYS he and his partner "still have a rew good years Jett" to travel the grueling pro surf clrcuil that takes them from Africa to Mexico to Hawaii for nine months . Townend, 25. a nd Cairns let their 1977 rankings slide in order to provtde the surfing sequences and technical advice ror the film ''Big Wednesday." Nol only was the film a big money.maker for the Aussies bul its reception showed that the Basketball f'AltWHT Ort90f\Sl.10. ~., CllamlNde ... Hawall·HllO ... Lewi•• Clarh.110, Simon "'"awr 41 P~Htound .... ~Coll U eJCMlalTIOMI Atll .. tts lnActlor"1 • was111nvton St.~ EAST Colo.tt• 17, Army 15 IOT I Piii 11, H41w•ll 52 SI 8-IUfl IOI, Hohlra II IOUTlf llll.tltlmt16'.~l15' Clt.t4tl ?t, 0.vldtOll '° KtlltllClly 11, MIHIUljllll 91 LOUlal-St. ft, Vlf!Olltlllll II Loultvlllt '°3, Nltmolll• !>I It Mlo ln lPOC M tO, T1119.-•• V MI '8, M.trtMll ,_ MIOWllT efncl-tl U. Ofoot'Oll h ell !I CAltfltell 14, S. llllflDl• .. Haw W•tJlto 5' ts, t "'"' ti Httra 0.-.. , lOyGlll Ill '6 ICMITMWISf Mle-11•. wayt..W aacMl\1 H H Tuttst 10t Pw11111Cf$1 71 1114111 ,.,..ICM·~, .... LiltflerMI n sport is still very strong m the youth market. BIG WEDNESDAY portrayed three surfers in the 1960s uving t he dream o r so m an y youngsters who wish they could join that endle~s searc h for waves. Cairns and Townenu were idea l choice8 for the film since they are still living thot dream. • Even though the "dream ·· earns them about $30,000 annual· ly, "You're lucky to put SS,000 in your pocket" due to road ex- penses, Townend said. "It's a dreMm come true but we take It for granted," Cairns aded. TOWNEND SAYS he has a cer - tain Oairthatsets him apart from other surfers. "l used to be mechanical but now l 'm much m or e spon - taneous," says the 5·7 Townend who Is best known for his "Soul Arch" maneuver and rus unique stylistic surfing. By contrast. 6·2 Cairns is kno wn ror his "snapback .. m a ne uver th at utilizes h is massive strength. Cairns· strength 1s evidenced by his fi rst and second place fi nishes in the 30·foot surf of the Hawaiian Duke Kahanamoku Classics in 1975 aod 1974. On land. Cairns and Townend write weekly newspaper surfing columns aod have a rad io show in Aqstralia. TOWNEND SAYS he is tookl ng forward to surfing in France this year with the rour-man team that includes J im Banks, 19. and Cheyne Horan, 18. Townend. who doubled in the Big Wednesday surf stunts for actor Jan.Michael Vincent. said he would like lo be come in· volved in more films. but the op- portunities are rew. Cairns. who performed stunts for actor Ga ry Busey, said rums like Bi g Wednesday enhance s urfing popularity because rans commonly return many tJ mes to see the action. But whether they take part in a nother surf film or not. the chances 11re the public will hear a lot mo r e of the Bronzed Aussies in the future . SURRAS Pf:TlA TOWNEND (LEn) ANO IAN CAIANI. ) Seahawks Setting Hot Pace Ocean View lli8h 's high· acorlna combination or Jeer An· drade and Wayne Carlander continue to lead the Oranae Coast area athletes In league scoring with th e Seahawk tandem averaging 23.1 and 23.0 points per game respectively In the Empire League. A 110 acorina ln the 20s lhrou&h six Jeagi.ie games ls Costa Mesa High 's Chris Beasley, who has a 21.0 Cigure In Sea Vie w League ac· lion. SUNHTLaAOU• Ptey•r,k..._. S••U. N•woor1 Harllot Frftm111 _ _,Herllof 8oweft fOhOft f lGrlCIQI. Hlil\11~ !Ma<" Fl•lell F-telft Valley Wooltft HUftllft9lOI' .. IC" Helton. '-\MIN H"lelellffl~h AMrl1"" CelOwtll. ,.._, H•tllof We"''· Wftlmlntltt ThomptOI\, Huntl"910ft S.at II Tltul, Mlr1"4 M<Ooftllcl felltot> ... VIUI l•Aou• 11 .. ,,..,. Colli Maw HOIMf\. II Toro Viti Horn. ftla11<t• c W ll\Of', f'l·Toro ICO•llltr. C.,,._ Ciel Mar Stol1oll, Uftl"9r\llV K l"llor1. Corona Ciel Me• Audv trvlM Mt10000. Etlf'l'ICI• ~ 1 lv•f'Y, lrvln. JOM\IOf'. COl'ONI Clll Mer SOUTH COAST Lat.GUI . "' ... • •OS 11 ) • l()o II J 6 97 I\ J • ctt 1\t • 8J 138 ~ •• IJI • 18 IJO • 1\ ., \ .. 13 11 I • Mo u o I> M l()f I> •1 10 I I> &I 10 I 6 •7& 71 0 6 "' I's 0 I ll "\ • I~ 11 \ • "" •• s & 91 "·' • ,, IS I 6 8b ,. .l 6 8J 11 11 s S8 "• 6 6J 10' O•CeW\ MIUIOll Vlt lo 6 111 1' \ 5Ult0f'. ~ C'-"'" 6 97 I) J --•h, Ml"""' V IPjO b oci 15 0 S•mu.t\ O.NI 01111\ o 83 IJ 8 Cll••ln. Cl!M\l•~N> Vellov ' I~ 11 \ LIPM>ft L19Un. S.Mn 6 n ,, 0 llrvenl. CIP<\h &no V•llf'• & 11 II M Hutfm•"· Ml•'"'" '11 .. fO t. 11 , , • Metlllf'U. Otft6 >1111\ 5 51 I I t Co,,.b,, l.l9UN Hill' 6 llO 10 ll lMl'll'l Lt!AOU£ •ndr-Oreltl Vll!W 6 l)Q 13' ~ 1311 T.JI) ... 1f)\ Ct•l•l'<lf• Ot"<1n Vie• Pr•"'"'. 1C•1elle Mc•~•' CVPF'tU l-1.Kei.ll• Ltmon•.Kelllle M Moo .. L°' AlemllO\ llulllel'l lt-v Welh IC-v O.vl~ LOI•• J•llccJ.I ICitnneOY II•" LO\ •l•mlto. ~ Moot• l~ Al~m•tO\ 0 11'1 ,. • 6 a., .. .I 0 ... 1• I) .. 80 IJ J b 1'0 IJ I ft lft n e 6 I t 17 • ,. 11 ' 6/ It' J 6 61 I() J New Leader Heads PCAA Scoring List In the sam e week the Pacific Coast AthJetic Assn. developed a team race for the championship. the PCAA also wound up with a tight race for indJvidual scoring honors. Cal State Fullerton 's Calvin Roberts took over the scoring lead with 45 poinL'i in a pair of losses last week that upped his uveruge to 18.3. Dean Hunger of Utah State maintained his 18.1 pace while Rickey Williams of Long Beach Stale. held to six points In one game last week, slipped out of'rirst and into third at 18 0. Utah State's Keith McOonaJd Is a lso In the running at 17.2. UC Irvine's top scorer, Steve McGuire. ranks sixth on the list at 15.6. Fullerton dropped out of first place in ,the standings by losing two strai~ht. Utah State had <1 pair or wtns. including one over the Titans. to move In to the top spot a t 7-a. PACll'IC COAST AT .. LlTIC ASSN tltoDerU, Giii Siiia Futi.rlon Hu~. Ullltt Slat• A Wllll~. LOl'q l!H<"Sl•te M<OoMIO Ulefl Stal• c::~r;:.~~'.~, ... Cortl911"'. Paclll< II J eO!IOll, Ulet> St.tit M JaCktoft. Slfl ~ S1att WIM.L-~Slelf Nlln, Cal Stell Ful .. rtotl H_ .. ,,_ C4M Stall Fulltt10ft .11-rlO". Cal Slat@ F11t11tr1on A Wiiiiama. Fn!\tlO Slat• Oc<n lo UC S.l'lle 8anlft•• Sulllwen. S... JOM Slel• Bolatn. UC 1rv1ne Witty, LOllQ IM<ll Slltt ll111k. Se11JoM Slale Weldron, Pe<lllc Belin?, U1elt Sti tt J-•,uCtrvlne Me neltt, $ef\ JOSI Slllt Madltrcn.. UC Silnta Blfbl•• SllHn. UC Senta 8Mbera HoCIOH. LOllQ BM<n Slalt Paollotll, l'ntt.no Slelt . "' • 1"6 • 16.J • 144 • 15\ I 17S I IH • m • l]I • 1711 s n • 111 • 111 • 108 t tto • 101 • 41 1 8' I 'le 6 &• I ll8 • 47 I IS I 8' • 113 1 n • 87 • QC) av• 18 J 18 I lf II 17 1 IS I IS 6 l \J I \ I 15n ... u o "0 IJ \ 11 • ,, & I? t l?O 12 0 " \ 11 0 10 8 10 6 10. 10 . 10 . 10 3 100 Basketball Standings So~I C011i!9' "1L-USIU Aru~Pec1fk UC S<tn 019911 Cll Beotllt MAIA DISTltlCTI ....... 04 ....... ~. He.--Ol1'1~1111 W L s 0 . ' ' J I J I ) I 4 O•'IHM w l. .. 7 ., . 4 II & 17 l " 10 IJ C.,,..~• Owun W l W L Wlll-4 0 IJ 1 8i0te J I 12 • CallutllHlltl a t tO • (;'I Ool'ftl"9WI Hiiis J t IJ 1 LA hptli! I S 10 U trruf'O ~Ille 0 • • IJ Rusders, LACC Vie The Golde n Wut ColJege basketball team , trying to pull lllelf out of the cellar or the Southern Cal Conference. hos ts Loa Angeles CC tonlibt 17:30 >. The Rus tlers <2·6 in con ference. 8-17 overall l are cur· rently lied wlth Rio Hondo for last place. LACC Is ln third (S-3, 12·7). ' 4 • l • .. t• ,. Id '" IS '. .., - I l GOLF I HORSE RACING I BUSINESS Say r Charity Gets Golf.Profit By HOWAaD l.. HANDY Of .. ~.._~ A ponM>r ol • mlJOr IOlf tournament ahouJd nol m ak mon y from th t'vent 1nd tr th Women'• K mper O~n at Meu V~rd Couolry Ctub <Maf('b 29 Apnl 11 l ha a •urplu • tt v.111 110 dlttrtly to c:harlty 1'hol'a lho nrm bellt>f of Jam S K~mpor, Jr . chalrman and chltf ~nculli. omrer or lhe K •mPf'r (osuralle'e Co. •&><>n.or or lM r1rsl l..PGi\ Vt>nl for tbe womt-n inCost Me •· "Aromm ~1alspon oratbenou1hben hUoul or the use of lhe n•me and should put all ~urplu~ money lnlo chanty, ·· Kemper aid while tn Co:sla MesarttenUy "If we draw 25.ooo ror the w ·k. that will be acceptable ror the firs t year A crowd of 50,000 would be a block buster •nd l would love lo see It" Will Hus be a one· shot tournament on the LPGA lour " "We're looking at three to five years and l( we don't we shouldn't go into it." The insurance com· pany will bring about 100 agents here lo play In the pro-am from all over the country. There KEMPER are sun a number of spots open in this part or the tournament for those Jnterested and pro partners will be made by a blind draw The Kemper people have had experience with the PGA Kemper Open and have conducted a similar drF'W. Ke mper bas been near the end several times in the draw and every name bas an equal opportunity to play with any of the top pros during lbe Wednesday event Tickets for the tournament are now available al most Orange County courses as we ll as a number or other ticket outlets. For further in· formation on the pro-a m or tickets. call the tourna· ment office al 540· l 708 • • • ~~ld119 A r e a Co 11rse• NEWPORT BEACH Low net tournaments for the men's club: l. Jim Grant, 45 ; 2. Tom Ginger, 50: 3. Carl Larrabee. 52. l. Jim Gra nt, 46 , 2. Max Cole. 49; 3. I tie > Carl Larrabee, Jim t'reeman. 50. IRVJNE COAST Tt>e lo Green Tournament. A Flight 1. Alice Rohdy, 43; 8 FUght-1. Beth Kraus. 50. C Flight -l. Joan Furry, 491~: 0 Flight l. Ernestina Valdes, 53. Least Putts: A Flight-l. Bobbie Smith. 32; B Flight -1. Dottie Wright, 32: C Flight-I. Marge Schwarz.JO: 0 Flight-I. Mary Burke,31. LAGUNA BEACH Low net tournament al Mile Square Golf Course: A Flight-1. Frank Rossi, 67; 2. Frank Etheridge, 69. B Flight-I. Hie>· H. M. Currey, Ernest Schopfer , 69. C Flight-1. Martin Rummel, 66; 2. Harry Green, 68. D Flight--1. Carl Horn, 63 : 2. Stewart Penman. 65. E Flight l. Wilbert Lowry, 66: 2. ltie) David Shand. Waller Essig, 71 Almnitos Entries TOftt ..... , 0...11-nr E11lrl•• Fi,.,, Post· l ·O FlllST llACE 350 y,trO\ 3 'ff'dr O•O' & uo Puf'ir U.SOO Cl111m1nQ prirr U.000 1 m A S<TICOll• Jrl fTru\urrl MoOft V••I IMvlul I Ol\8 Folly IC•rdo1.,1. M• Zlno llCnl!l"ll Rambhn' Man fPernttr ' Too J CFr•vt. Homb<r Supremo •Fre•IOf>I. S,111 ano !;(11"'(~ IL1p1Mml SEC·ONO llACIE l'lO \'~•a~ 3 v~f' otd maiOPn\ (all Orf"d Pur~e \1 '.IOO Cl111monqo<1cr\b ~ SI•• Bunnv 811• !Pe•r>erl PlunOl'r l uc ~l1rl IW~•d • Such FuH •C••ootal Or Shake IAOalf I 8f'll<" 8dl>f' C8roo•\ I, M~cnn Mi'<llh•I • q:~ouotP Premier f(tf',..~)it' 1 8~11~\ Frtlll CCrra~r l , 8 01>11v Oh 011 IH•rtl: Klul>li!\ PnOf' (Myfol THIRO RAC£ 400 y,1(0\ 3 Yf'M old' Pu•'><\ 17 • .00. Clalmlnq p•l(I' SS 000. ferns Jt>t f PerMrl O••I A BIO IRuugnt Tl°""••ry IMVIP\) Goll• Bt Trut IKn1ohll Ml\lt• Ohbl!t CCaroo1al Truck!• Prince ll\e•dl. HU• O•ll<N ICrea~r l, St>Qunda ~u,.ec11 IFrtS!Of>t• Werrlor Run !Adair I. Fl~t Patrol (Wal\Ont l'OUllTH llACI[ -JSO 'fd'<'.I• 'i Yt'•' old ma1dtns Purst' U 300 Clalm1no e>rl<e \b 'iOO Jet Arlende tClffhwl; lce,,mauu 1wanon1; ~Ian O..r~r !Rouq"I Sonny Go Eaw tFrf\lon) Joeda Mine IH.tttl WawiHome 111aa1r1 Oe<lr. Ell-IOl<doHI. Go To Town I MllclH•ll I; Sw•tl SU ft OancH ITr••sure>; Motlfowr l~rMrl l'I l'TH ltACt: -870 verds 3 veer old\ 6 uo Purw 11.100 Cl••m1n9 pricen.ooo l(k k A 51\r# IL~"'l; Ra1MO A "'"""'" IOH'lswl; Qual"lef' ~ IW•rdl; Oorer TI!M ICrff91Prl; Hy M•lor All ... (Luck .. ); Buen LOOI l lC111911t>; F1Ylt19 Cl>lc k•i •w SIXTH 11.<ilCE -3}0 'farch l v,.,,. otch & VD F'IHl"'\ a. m 11r .. '\ PUr\t" \4 ~00 C•l·b••d Cla1m1nq prt(l' SI )00 &1q M Chi(~ K•ll•n ltlpham I Olt~ey\ Ch•Qult• fP,.rnrrt ~1<klfll AO'IY t(lf'rl~V) CoHy u:·,,.,ton l umt>lon Tuml>lrwf'•·d ICJrooa 1 Oro Prt~tit t H.,rfl C.o Odrhnq tTree~urr1 Luv A Jt"t CAOt\tf I SEVENTH llACE J)O yard\ J yHr old\ & uo Pl"'~ \A SOO Claim 1no one~ l.f,SOO BtonOI'\ Rtb l811rdl Mtltt ,,,.,,,,.. IM11Chtlt1. lrulv Proud fWM<I• Dully S-r\ l(ltrt•W'•. ""'.'11A fMvlt\1 Jel C"6rq<•r 7 !Wa F •lllom Go ll te>n•"' I TM o.a~to ICrtMOCrl. Lant\ Golorn F~oll' l(dtOozal COPV RIQM 11<n1qlltl EIGNTN RACE JSO VMd\ ) yf'•r old'\ & uo AUow•n<{ Pun._ "000 8uQQed Moon •M1lc h~lll . tru Kaweall J~I ITr,...\ur~ Truly l~r· r thc l(dr(tf')tad F;1 1"~' Jtrn • l •Phlm I, JO(Jy• Gtorv C(reaO<'r 1 BuQ Aool nQ IBudl Petit Chou tAdA"t NINTH llACE -JSO .. ~tO• 1 n d• otO\ & up P\i~e \1 100 Cl .. un1na prltt' u.ooo. Macie In ,_. 10ara 1 S<llurne !Mart I, Pau 'ln Geer 1 l(nrontl, o .. n OY\ St•• (Mello); P~\S Tnt Bon i• 1(1111 r1s'•'· Soloman' World I Perner I; Su.,,.,,._ Juele ((4r001111. Jets Command (LIPllam l Roc-•lellw IWardl: Leo s Bally tWet"M>n). Pre p Soccer fjeW"'1 Na..-J, l'-1•1" V fife, 1 Newoort HM1lor KOrln9 Mon9 , I H-y. OCIET SHm lrlFROM ROD lAVER ~ IUJ.J~JP4rl0 8 1' /ltA IONSON tr 1$ a 1 fl(Al fl(A f l't1ll' fl#A~t ~ Arre#T m ~ttP ~ ~U. ~.t 1;1Mr ;tr "'s 1tJ1.-r tlf ft!tU'llNG ~et'P 1r All !'11!/t/( P llP AIJ() C4Nr1'41. ~ t:> [(: 0 Top-ra nke d Irish Roll Past Loyola From AP Dlspat~bes SOUTH BENO-Sophomore Tracy Jackson came off the bench to score 18 points Monday night and lead top-ranked Notre Dame to an 84-66 col- lege basketball victory over Loyola of Chicago. Notre Dame. 16·~. never trailed. The Irish went ahead for good at 18·16 with 9:42 left in the first half on a baseline jumper by Stan Wilcox. I T~. Februety 8, 1979 DAI~ Y Pll,.OT U Coastal Firms Report lnMHI to Pa11 4 Cewecs Directors ot Jenoa Inc .. Newport Beach. have ·declared a cash dividend of 4 cents a share, paya· ble on March 1 to shareholders or record Feb. lS. It ls the company's fourth consecutive cash dlvldend. Jenoa has reported that sale& for the first quarter ended Dec. 31, 1978, increaaed 39 percent to $5,810,000. compared with the same period a year ago. Operating income from sale of electronic pro- ducts foe the quarter increased 3Q percent to $330.000. or 28 cents a share, compared with $254.000. or 23 cents. for the prior year's quarter. Net income was $330,000, or 28 cents a share, ror the same quarter last year . Last year two non· recurring items increased income -a $427,000 gain rrom real estate exchange, included in conli· nuing operations, and a $475,000 gain from the sale or the company's Dana Laboratories subsidiaries. l'..,,..la., lob Near• E•d Fluor Corp., Irvine has announced that a sub· sldiary bas begun the final phase of a $40 million uranium mine and processing faciHty near Ljubl· jana, Republic or Slovenia, Yugoslavia. Fluor Mining and Met ru Inc .. which performed conceptual and basic: engineering for the project, will procure process and instrumenta· lion equipment. The work in Yugoslavia. consist · ing o( engineering and construction or the mill complex. will be performed by Yugoslavian con· tractors under Fluor Mining and Me tals supervision. Daon Corp. Lbt• G r o aeih Daon Corp .. a Newport Beach real estate de· velopment firm, has a11nounced year-end figures showing an approximate 200 percent Increase in a&Scts since its founding in late 1976, with about $250 million in assets. 1 The wholly owned subsidiary of Doan Development Corp. specialbes ln r•w land de· velopment. commercial and industrial complexes and condominium conversions. S.U• Aefl•H• tt'fllls The acquisition of Willis OU Tool Co., Long Beach.· by Smith International Inc., Newport Beach, has been completed, Smith bas reported. Willis makes a patented multiple orifice choke valve and other specialty valves. and valve ac· tuators that are used primarUy on well heads, blow-out preventor manifolds and pipelines. Smith JntemaUonal ·manulactuns and sup. plies drilling tools, equipment and related services to the energy industries and develops oil and gas well drilling and mining tools and equipment. Car~el•trodMeed A service called Tidy Car "Preserv-a~Shine'' has begun operation at J .J . 's Cleaning. Costa Mesa, according to owner Harry Filmer. The process uses chemical bonding to treat cars· paint and chrome to protect them from weather. It can be used on vinyl roors and fabric interiors as well as on metal car exteriors. be said. Antlq11e Store Opera• Donique·s Antiq\les has opened Donique's Depot, an import ant1qu~ store, at 600 W. Pacific Coast Highway. Newport Bearh. It will serve as lhe container unloading site for Donique's chain. The public may buy the antiques as they are uncrated at lbis store. The chain also has stores in Long Beach and Torrance. Plagued by 15 first-half turn-overs. including six inlhefir~Courminules,thel~hh~da ~im ~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 40·38 edge at the intermission. But a three-point play by Bruce Flowers and a layuJ> by Kelly Tripucka made it 45·38 early in the second half and Loyola never drew closer than five points after that. k . Guard Rich Branning started the strea with a field goal. Wilcox had a bask~l, Jackson adde~ fou r points and Orlando Woolridge completed it with a dunk. ~ •• 1s.,111e, J 03.a2 LOUISVILLE Bobby Turner scored 23 points and Larry Williams added 16 as fifth· ranked Louisville ran away from Memphis State and took a LOJ-82 Metro Conference victory. The win, the Cardinals' 12th straight, pushed Louisville to 20·3 record overall and 6·0 in the conference. Memphis Stale fell lo 11·11 and 4·3. CASH FAST Homeowners : Loans arranged for any reason. Credit. no problem . Borrow on your equity. Call now for courteous. fast information . (7 I 4J 547-7151 AMERICAN Mortgage Co •. Anqouncing che formation of ,. ~~fnJ?ale &,Company Corporace Finance • Mergers • Acqu1s1t ions A FRESH APPROACH to raising caplfal for induscry (714) 67~·09'54 6.H V1.i Lido Nord. Newpon lk.ich. {./\ 9266 S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Alamitos R esults ,,.,-., U lsl ot ~nl9fol M-11191 Qt6art-• Fi.st rate Flamlnq Count IM•r1 H 00, IS 60. 11 ol(), T1meto 8ta Rlct IWardl "10. 1 10 · Roemark •Cre419•rl 11 60 U EH<I• 1"11 pala UIOIO 'ircond r•u• T ll•s Reou•'' ((ltrtsi.el I 00 3 .0. 180. 811r Bo MAn IC.rdolal 3 00, 7.ol(), Mr. Jel f'ro\I !Mitchell)? 60 Third ra<l'-Klpty' Copy Kai l(lerl•~~I 1'160, 1.00, 8.90; Plunders FlaSll •Broohl s IO. l.60; Yl kln9 Four Sons IFreyl S.IO. U E-..<I• C.·SI oelO \111 00 Fourch race-Mr 80 CherQ• l(IUIU•I • 10, 3 •O. , 10, war lruOle fFrttlOf>I 4 00. 7.90, SlrlO'n M•" toerrwir 13 00 Ftlth •IK• The Pearl IW•rdl. 60 • • .o. 4 'IO, Mi•\ Kiiiie Moore Oiertl 6 IO. ~'IO: En)oy -IClerlswl I 00 U E••Ua (4-111>810 \136 00 s .. 1., ra<• Top Roan M 11n IClerls ... I • 60. S 00 4 'IO; Oon'\ Go Man ll1o!\aml f> 00. 4 olO. Calllornl• Sr•en 18.,,dl • llO 'i• venlh race Ciame Cnaroer IWat\Oftl I) 40. 6 00. 3 60 Crl•9 C.0 I Treou•"I 6 00 3 ?O: Aalr>y Bull f,,.llch~lll 300 \S f •&<l.t CJ.t i 1>81<1 \117 ~ E•anlr. r<'IC~ t<olf'.I On lm11 Comlnq 1 PPrnu I • 60. 110 1 60 Some>ln Jump1n •Crr-r , ao. 2 60, ci..ro· •no Biro ILU>Mml 4 ol() Nlr\U\ rMI' W,ttfC" 80 f Pflltn~r\ 10 00 S 60 '60 '><>•'O t(.lrOOz"I J 90 7 60. OuPf"\ ,..,,,,., IRouqhl 2 40 U EaMl<I IS-10 P."d S8'100 All•"°""'• S.elll Tennis Glrlt Pop~lne •, UC 1 rvlnt 0 SllWJlf\ Mo,..,..,., IPI def SIQ<'ton 6 1 • 4 l hol•n !Pl Cll'I ... -1. 6 I I" 7.0 ''~''r~a• c,.,noPr tP' Ot'I Clt\On 6 4, S 1 6 0 F'""""OI I P t Qrl ~lihll\, lt-t , 6 2 Cai"\ IPI ~I An ,,,.,,, •• ) "'' Vouno IPI Oct. Hl•Of>. l>·I ••• Oovblt\ Mo,..1non Fo rnsledl IP J d"' ~to<'10ft.Mo<row. 11>, • l. G•ftOI'• Tholen IP I ""' (Ar\Of\ Hhon •• 1, f> 7 Cetn-~hOll ael Anlt1olly Sl••h .. 3.•3 ao,. Ool<tttrl Wttl S. EHi LA t SI,._. Htwlln !GWCI 0.1. Gotlel!o, 6 i. ••• ; GUllillson IELA I oct Mar<1lnq 4-4 ... 7 I>·?: Lotnatt IGWCI def Moy•. 6 2. ~. li9mPlllll 1£1.A) ""'· Bt-11. I •• •·3: MCCiure 1£LA) de l T lllOl'41n, .,., .... •·3. Wlnltrowd (GWC I clei. Mere, & 1 1>-2. OouMfl Cosltf~Mov• IELA) ,,.., H•rd•nq Etem, ..... 6 l, 1 •. Ntwlln·Lvnoll IOWCI dfrl &tstal.on.M<Cturt, l·S. 5-1. ~; Sllvtr ~I IGWCI O" Htm. 1)1\111 MeH,M, .. 3 Say •1 love you" with an elegant Roger's cre- ation, our special .. 4 touch tells her you really care. Phone your order now. that way you'U get exact)y what she likes and you won't forget! Gifts of E legan ce for Our Valued Cus tomers D ·po)tl $100,000 or 111or1' 111 ,, r11111• l.t·rr~fiwte <>( Deposit at Herita,{1,,e Ba11/.: fo r a 111ini111w11 cif Ollt' yct1r .111d 11•1• w1ll .~11·1· y1>11 tl Gift Cert ificate fo r jewelry of your choice worth 500 or more. '/ '/11s 1s 1lllr "'''Y <f showing appreciation to our m ost valued rnstomers 1111d 1s ll!H 111 /it'll ll( 111tert'st. ) ou will receive tlie f ull amount of 111tdes1 10 111/111/i yt"' are e11titleti. ~Ve feel that distinctive w stomers dt!sert1(' '1 disri11cr111e .~ifr. C~{t Cerriji'cate retail values are determined as folfo11 1s: SJ00,000-S199,000 1500 Gift Cert~(iciw• 200,000-S-199,000 S1 ,000 G~ft Cerr~(irtllt' S500,000 or mort· S2 ,000 Gift Cert~(itatt· Au Gifc Certificates 11r£' redeemable nt AflfO)ftlll ·~Jewelers, 225 fJ est minster J\,Jal/, Omt1ge Co11my 's fine st indoor sl1oppit~.~ mall. To open your account or fo r more info rmatio111 call (714) 991-3860 and ask /c>r 1;1irl1 Ryan. Customer Service Represemati11e at I lt:rira.f!.e Bank. Offer expires on A fay 1, 1979 1100 No rtli Tustin Avmue Sama A t1a, Cahfomia 92701 i21 No rth Euclid Strt>et Atwl1ei111 Ca lifom1t1 92801 J\lt!ttibt'r FDIC VALENTINE FLOWERS 640-6774 n·~erit~e .• .,ank DAILY PH.or Cl.ASSIFllD ADS M2•H78 • , Roger's Florist 't•1t J°"4avtn •I M.cAnhllt • NfWPOl't &. ... h 9•m 10 5pnl , • • • : • "' ., et •• • '. iX SI DAILY Pit.OT Savhigs Bonds Program. Overliaiiled B.Y LO 18 COOll .. ,.. ............... T be mUUona ar Amfrkau wbo owm U I'. l'avln11 Bonda ~uld be P~recl ta AV ~· their ln~mt!'Dt!t •tt.b o t~ ta roN VMEH J parrenl ll the bonds are held lo m lurity • rlt"S H bonds, ln denom1na- Uon1 from SSOO to $10,000, are aotd l face v lue. lnt~mt Is paad •c ml -llanu ally on araduatt:d sutc desicned to pro. dut' a e percent yield " the bonds ttrt held to their 10.year cnatur1tf eome cbangl'6 ' The TteU""l' Departmtnt b •~ a major overhaul ot t.bt f amlUar procram -\he nm ai,_nlficanl truoturln1 l1n JNl. £ and ll bon<ll will be dllcon&inued and repJattd by ~ri Et aod tm. Th m bond wlll dlMppear. T8£ CHANG , d t•Md to t'Ul t:Oatl ror the ltOVerctmtftl, wm be made l(raduall) tlf're re some que Uons and ana\jj about LOO way the prol{1'am wut work: Q. WhJat lund of bonds ans a.old Coda""' l1 :a E And Sertea tr. rt g ~ a aold •t • d&a· c:out1l and can bC! rednmed for the rue v hw 1n1 Um aft.er "' acb lo1 .naturlty They 11re 1v1llabh: ln dnomtn tlon• raa in.a from S2l to ll0,000 1li~ chu~ bolM1 rot\b $l8.i5 8Ea l£ E 80NDS ha~~ a maturity or C1vc ye ra. with • auar1oleed JO year extension dunna which interest c.-ontlnues to occumulate l\ddltlon•I ex ten aons l Ut'<i m the pattt meun that out.standlni.: Ser~c·:-. E bou<b r aOll enrnlng interc~t In· tuc•t on S4.>r1e1 E bond~ 1s nh:u.lated to produce a yield or G They can be redeemed for (ace v lue at any tlme six moratb.6 after th • 'ssue date. Like Serles E bonds, outstanding Ser1e1 JI bon<U are still earning lultir~t due to extensions. E RIES E AND Series H bonds will be sold through Dec. 3 1, l919. Q. What happens next? A. On Jan. 2. 1980, the govern mcnt wiU start. selling Serles EE Utilitks Buy Secure Stock H edge Against I nflatio n By SRERRV LUCAS "They're hardly likely to tum out the lights lo Southern California 1 ·• Not a very profound stat~ment but it is, ln· terestingJy, the reason many investors find themselves lncltned toward buying stock 1n utilities, local or otherwise. A feeling of security som ehow accompanies that t.bought. MANY INVESTORS A.RE A'M'HACl'ED to utilities because of their hjgb_jtMdends. For this reason. this is a particularly auspicious time lo purchase utilities. With interest rates so high, many quality utiJities have yields of more than 10 percent of their current prices. In a way, utilities resemble bonds. When interest rates are high, utility stock prices are often low. Con- versely, when in terest G'"EIF.l'fflflH J r ates decrease, those '• W V l r.I. same pnces trequenuy mE SIREET rise. bringing dividends in line with interest rates - on fixed-income vehicles radio pager WIDE AREA COVERAGE o~i}~~A. ;.z=. NO DEPOSIT ON APPROVED CREDIT Albert Story C'"rected LOS ANGELES 'AP > The Associated Press incorrectly reported that Eddie Albert bas a p- pea re d in adve rtise· ments for Home Savings and Loan. The refe rence ap. peared in a story in the Daily Pilot Jasl weelc. Albert has appeared in a dvertisements for Imperial Savings and Loan. use R " Reduces HAIR loss s timulat i ng ne w growth in most cases with regular use. Easy to apply. ~ ........... c.!t 4557~ Say •r rove you• with an elegant Roger's ere· ation, our special A A touch tells her you really care. Phone your Ofdet now. that way you'U get exactly what she likes and You won't forget! VALENTINE FLOWERS 640-6774 Roger's Aorist "" Joaq11ln di M<teAMh1n • Newpo<t Such 9ilm lo !'>pm FEBRUARY CLEARANCE SALi Na:K Coples from our 695 Dry Copier ire amaz- ing. Blec:b are blacker. Solids ftlled. It Is alto one of the most reliable COC>lera. See a demonstration today. Ctl 714/631-HOt COP.p c..lyt 21 J/4JMJ l l CLAc-trt SALES PRlaD AT ·s1 , 177.00 ...... _,... ........ c...._. J . t Some investors view utility stocks as a hedge against inflation. Whereas the return on a bond is fixed for its lifetime, there is the possibUity that a utility may increase its dividend. WHEN RESEARCIUNG THE PURCHASE OF utility stock. it's always a good idea lo find out how often a utility has increased its dividend in the past American Electric Power bas raised its payout, for example, for 25 consecutive years. How do you decide which uUmy to buy? We've already m entioned a history of increased dividends. Also important, of course, is the general s~urity of that dividend. What is the source of the utility's enern? <OU is sometimes in peril as a source. The avallabllltv of coal can occasionally be af. 1 fected by strikes or weather conditions .) Wha t a re the posslbillties of a rate increase for the utility? Ar e its ex· pansion plans manageable? In addition, try not to be trapped by outdated prejudices. For example, historically in· vestor.i have gravitated toward companies with a state in the name, whose ser vice area s preads over the map. LUCAS However , take heed : Many of those so-called "big-city" utilities get two-thJrd5 or their revenue from outside the central city. Many "rural'' utilities, on the other hand, get a large part of their revenues from one city in their service area. ALSO, TIMES CHANGE . SINCE 1974, many of the "high quality" electric-companies have declined in quaUty, while many of Ute "low quall· ty" companies have improved. Beware of labels tacked on~ a company two decades ago. Jf you are interested in a particular utility, your broker s hould be able to provide you with a research analysis of it. As I sajd in the beginning, this could be an especially good time to buy utilities if your objec- tive is to Jock in a ttlgb yield. But many investors buy s hare5 in their local utilities any time. They look on their utility dividends as a discount on their el~tric bills. Shen'y luccu is on c.iccount eucutive in the Santo Ana of~ of MeTrill LJ111Ch, Pinet, F'ennn and Smith. Bg Major Fi,...s Wage Hikes Cut Back NEW YORK <A P > -President Carter's wage and price guidelines have caused about three· quarters of the nation's major companies to cut back on wage increases from the assembly line to the executive suite, according to a survey. "The survey indicates the cutbacks are being felt across the board in employee paychecks, bonuses and benefit plans," said Ronald B. Goel· linger, presiden't of Slbson & Co .. a Princeton, N.J .. management consulting Cirm that conducted the survey of 600 large companies. CARTER'S PLAN PUTS a voluntary 7 percent •limit on the rise in total compensatJon -salary, bonus and fri nge benefits -in 1919. _Act'Qrding to lhe survey, 73 percent of the com- panies studied have scaled back their pay raises. Those that have reduced their budgets for pay in- creases have cut the raises from an average of 8.5 percent to about 7. l percent. The survey was re- leased Monday Several of the nation's largest firms have said they wouJd change their pay-increase plans to meet the president's guidelines. These include General Motors and American Telephone & Tele-graph. THE NATION'S OIL companies and the Oil Chemical and Atomic Workers Union have reached agreements to keep wage increases below 7 percent a year over the life of the contract, and truck· ing companies are looking for a similar deal tn their current ne110UaUons with \be Teamsters union. M08t. or the attentJon given the guJdelines has . dealt with their <iffect on blue·collar workers. many ot whom might have to stretch • 7 percent increase to cope with 9 percent inflation -the rate recorded in 1978. A Carter plan tbat would grant tax ~lier to workers whose raJaea feU within the guidelines, bul did not cover 1nllaUon, I• being debated In tho Con1iress. BUT l NCltEA ES In oxecuUve compensation have a1lo been reduced, the aurvt!y abowtd, In part becauee .,many corporate executlvea (eel they are more ""1bleand l hoGkt setanexample. - · "Hardett hlt b1 th cutbacks in pay tncrusea ar~ manacement personnel. with ju.at over hair <Sl percent> Of the companle1 sayin& manaaement ptraonnel are affected more dramatJcaUy tbao non· manaaementpersonnel, • • GoetU.O,er a~f(f - and Series KH bonds. Series E£ boods wtU be 10ld ln denomlna· lions from ._,,, to $10,000 and will cost hall their face value. SERI E S EE BONDS will mature and be worth their face value in 11 years and nine months. The interest ra~ wtll remain the same as tbat paid on Series E bonds. Series HR bonda wiU be sold in denominations frOUI SSOO to $10,000. Interest. will be paid at 8 percent. The change In the method or paying interest leads to a cbange ln redemptions. Series H bonds can be redeemed, at their full face value, any time efter six months from the issue date. T he interest ls · gradua ted . however. So le.a than the full 6 percent rale ls earned if the bond ls redeemed early. SER.IES BB BONDS will start paying 6 percent immediately. In order to prevent people from using the bonds as a short-term investment, which the Treasury Department says "would be un- fair to similar forms of savings offe r ed by financial institu· lions," there will be a penalty for early redemption; Jess than full face value will be paid if the bond is cashed before maturity. This penalty applies only to Series HH bonds bought for cash. Bonds bougbt through an exchange or savings notes, E bonds or , in the future, EE bonds. will be redeemable at their face value six months after issue date. That's because, in most cases. the securities used tom ake the purchase a I ready wtll be earning& percent. Q. Will old bonds become wort.bless? A. NO. THE maturity on the earliest out.standing E bonds - bought between 1941 and April 1952 -has been extended. in IO-year increments, to 40 years; they keep earning interest until they fall due between 1981 aud April 1992. There will be no further ex· tensions ror these bonds. They will stop earning interest after they fall due. but they can be cta•hed in for their face value. Out.standing E boadt bou&bt alter April 1952 receive a n'w 10-year extension during wbJch they will continue to earn In· tere1t. AFTER THAT, NO further U· tensions are expected (or bonds purchased between Aprtl 1952 and November Ul6S; oo declalon ha• been made on extenaJom for E bonds bought after November 196S. The early Series lt bonds - boueht from June 1952 through May 19S9 -wtU reach maturity between 1182 and 1989 and t.bere will beoofu.rtherexten1lons. Series H bonds boUJht after June 1959 will receive another 10.year extenaion, for a total Ute of 30 years. No further ex· tensions are expected. _,, ........... Frequency Tested Mary Schauer of Honeywell's Test Instruments, Denver, inspects scientific equipment that measures and records high frequency e lectronic s ignals. The units, called Os· cillographs. are used in scientific research and for pro, duct testing in which cause and effect of physical and electronic variables are permanently recorded. Over l 'hc Cou n ter HASOUitings ?IYt nll'l J"" ,t~ If 11• ••d o • .,,.. 7Yt '"' NEW VOAIC CAP) -TM tol-ln9 lilt ·~ j•M S/loW' '"" ow.. 0 11'4! • Co\lnl~r ?_!,~ 12 SICKk\ ~ _r_,IS ltiet llaW -UP _., 60¥> ™ ,,_, _.,, down 1'M lftO'lt ~ on 79..., JOYt ~runt OI c-. ~ of vo111-,.,~ .0..., for MOnaay. 1"'-'\It No t.KutlUH tradill!I bttow $1 art Incl· •~ 1 \Oded. Nee ar>d _c..,..• <"""9K ••• 111e ~lj, i:\11 dltte ... nce ~ .... l>rl'YIO\" CIOSlllO '"' ,.., l>l4I prlu -IOd4t~·~ast bid IH'k•. 1411'> Ull'I N-L•sl CllQ Pct 101'• 11•·• I WP~Fn 14"1 • 4 Up JI! I 1•~ 19"l 7 Orlcolnd l + '4 UP l:l J 14"1 ls>4 J £mW-1~ • "' Up 33.J n~ 73'. ' Weldl!n , • ~ UP 31 3 l1 17\, S OldTun 3 • '• UP 31 I 10 10'> 6 Auaton 7''7 , ... UP 17 I> 11 11'-1 O.nvltE 1''•> • 1 UP 1& 0 ~~ ~ 8 <:arolln 3'• • Ill UP 1~ • I~ 14'°" ,: ~~~LI ,!,.., : 1~ ~~ :; ~ 14~ 1l'-11 Llll<,ifl ?'~ • 3'-'> Up U \ 11'• 11 17 Welblll ~ • '') Up II f 7 7i, 1J II.a.Ill~ 73 + 1•-. UP 10 1 I '• ' 1' W\I [)ref 3014 • l '1t Up 10 0 l ,,, IS HrtoWis • + .... U1> q I 3"-'"' 16 l...Cllrt t • "'1 UO • I 11~. ,.. • 11 lr"°"'r • • ..... up , 1 11 21°'< 11 0 '°"F 3 • V• Up q I s... s~ " WelhG.t , • •.• VP ' I "' ' ..... '° L<K-j • .. VP I I '°'" 11111 71 l(Coo!O 9 )·16 4 1 f.16 Vo I 0 77 8utfelt IJ't • I UP 1 8 73 CIC Fin IOlt + -"I UO 1 ) 7• WO-11-. • h UP t• DOWNS l•1\' 5';v~ 1·~ -.,., , ... -,, J'---~ , ' -"" .... -... ''" -~ \•) -~. ,.,. -"" .,,., -, ... " -1') ,, , -, . ., ''• -1# ''"' -'1 4'• -a., ,, -•'· 1-. 1,. 7'' -I t ,,.. '. '"' .. 1'1 I -1 20 -, ,,~ -'• '"" -•o.1 Pct Off 1\ • OH 191 Off 18 7 Ott 141 Off no ()ff ,, j Off no Off "0 Oii "0 OH It It Ott II I Off 1n ~ OH 10 \ 011 10) 0 11 10) Off 107 011 100 OH 100 Off 100 Oft 9~ 011 q J Off • 1 Off • 1 Oii •• MUTUA L FUND S INVl!:STING !lull & bMr (.ep• Slo<~ &.11 ',, 0.n SK tvt) H L Allllf II Ill NL Urr"'-~ C.rWlll I/~ ')) COMPANIES C•P"• • )6 NL EDIE SP 7l 16 NL C.rlll Ind 21 ... NL Loni Ab«len· to\. & & ".,. ~ s.cwoi. n.'1 NL NEW YORK (AP) C81)11 5 • 11 NL l!d$0nG t SI NL H8mll!Ofl: Afflllci 1.79 7.17 HIV Id 2' 17 ,, 81 Sefltry ,. 14 31 IS U -Tiie fOl-lng QUO-C8lvln !IUllot• Ellun Tr U ,, . .. " HOA 4.11 •,4' Bf\d Otl 10.71 II 16 lftC8os 1 17 I fJ SM•,_ l'untls· t•llon,, \Ul>Plled by Suitt~ 11U13 .. 1!1111" Tx t JO , Orw_tll 612 l .U On Gt l'02 17 SI MonB I 00 NL APl><9 ,11.00 '7.JO ,,,._ Ntll-1 Ai-1· Candn 1 ~ I.to Falr110 10 Clll 10 ~ ln<om 6 JI Nl lncom JI• J .H 0..tn n .J7 l4.0 ln<om 11.'ll II It •lion ot Se<urtHes Dlvld 7 ... t M l'rmBG 10 76 ti 16 H<trt 0111 1UI NL Lutlleral\ B<-o· Ti>Fre ,,'3 Nl ,,,,,_,, 10 ,.11 ~ Dulef\, Ill<., •r• Monlll 13371461 FIH!erlled Fllndt· Hirt L<!v 1011 Nl Fund 10G>1CU6 AIM I0.6011,.Slerre G 1011 NI. 1"-l>"l«l 1!11 wllkll NIWS '11 10 07 Am Ldr 1 .. In H1911V1d II 1117 ~ lfl<om I T1 'SI Tim<! t •1 10 ~ SPter mO 14.1• NL IM~ _ .... lllM NYVn 13 0 "·'° Emptr 1811. • HOldo Tr 1.00 Ml Munl • 51 10,,. OTC S« """ If.JI s.,,,,.., F 10.1» 10"' co;itd NV& bHn CG Fund 10.33 fl 11 Four E II l'O. • . Hor Mal\ UNIYAll US Oov •Joi 10 11 PitrefT! M '·II .... T1sMOd 10 26 n " sold (Net ..i~• CGlncm 1m05 Hll<"' IJ., u,. INAPd ..... v.11 Mauac!Kdett Co ~ SCI '" NL Ttmor Gt ,.,,, 11.14 vel.,.I cw bollolll CsllAsM I 00 NL Mol\M I 00 NL 151 Or-oup· Ff'ffd 111 11.60 Pefln Mu 5 <ll NL Tempt W U.ft IJ 6S IY•lu~ Phi\ .,.,~ CapPre\ 1.00 NL MMM 1 00 NL Orw!h j 09 S.'6 ll•d•o • t2 • ~ Pllll• 1.09 ... Temp 11\v 1 00 NI. cllitr~I Mond11y Con• cc t.00 NL ~·" IHI 0" lncom HA 3.9' MIH IOIO 11.to p,_ Cai> L02 1.n Tms Cao , .. , • u Seti ... ., CefllS/>T 10 ~ 11.46 TaF•• ll 17 NI Tnl ~ II.JI 17.Jt l'dll\C ..... ISA Pl>Oeft Fd I.ft U• Tm\ llllrS .... 'n AOEFd UNY•ll Cl11'1Fd 1391 IS.Jt vs 01/t .10 HL Trft•Sll 3.0lo ... Men Fl-I• Piigrim Ot1>: Trev EQ ,,,.,UM Acorn I' "" NL ,,,.,,. Or !lot· l'i.i.llly Gr'ooo: llldusl•I' l 1'. . . MIT ' .. 10.•I Pllo Fd fl 5' 1U.• Tlldr Hd 1&.<U NL •crvnlnv un.lYlll Fund • 47 1 °' Agru • 4• NL lntc•o 1 00 NL MIO • ts '5' Mao c 3.U J.7S Twl\C Gt S.65 NL Afut11r• 17 u NL Fronl •lit 4J1 Bond 117 Nl 1111 lflVlt fl.» IUO M IO 13.10 II 71 Meg II\ t .01 •.61 TwnC lflC 1 16 NI. Allsl•le I '3 Nl S,,.r, 1 10 1 76 C•Pll I 13 I .. Inv Gtild 9.59 NL MCO •OS • 76 Ptonffr Fund· USAA Gt JM NL All)fleF 11 '1 NL S!>e<I 6 O'I 6 66 COlllld IO 19 NL Inv 1..01< UI NL MFD 13 t1 14'0 Fllftd U $.1 IS. USAA IM 10 • NL AlllrtllT ',. IO .. CllopO 11 M Nl O•llY I l ao NI. 111\t lies -•II Ml'l!I ".,, IS u ti ,.01 '·'' Unf A«ll • .. NL Amt"rlt1n Fund~ Cl>emFd 7.10 7,t1 O•tny t 61, • • • tnwslof'\ Group: MM8 '7' 9.75 Pl•fl 11\v U.~ ti OI U11 I MUI •. II NL AB•• • " • 95 CNA Mot Fm EQ Inc 11.11' HL IDS 8d 5.4' ,... (Ill Mo '00 NL PllQrlh f0.91 II ft VIII ~ 100 NL Amcp I 36 '1' llbrly 1.11 4.je M ... I IS•· IOS O<t 6 '2 7.57 Ml~ 1UI HI. ftlltrnd 10.4 It.AS U11IOll S11C.u· AMuil • .. 10'1 M1n11at Mufi 9d HO NL IDS ndl S 3' S.11 Me"'!' LYftCll: Price M; lroH 3S It 16 AflGl!I • 90 1 .S. 'at NL flcMI 15.l2 l6 14 M11ll 1.71 t o Bas c •.IS 10 16 Otwtll I c'7 HI. Nil llW 30 • 1' !lond U.116 15 u S<ll•it 10 °' 10., HI vie ,. ,. NL ,.,OQ 1-lf ..., C.Olt " IS 14,. IMom • .u NL u Ceo "-" M 4' CtllMQ I DO NL ColOf'li•I Funch: LlMllft • 1s NL TUE• 445 ... Ea11l• • c.o 10 DO H Era 11 •• s NL UN IMm ""'"¥ • n 1. Sell Sec •• ,, • u Purlm 10 ~ 10.~ SIOCk 11.n "·" HI Ill( • 71 10" H Horii .... "IL 11..JI "" Orwllt 1 )I 1" . Fund I. US Siie"' I°' S 54 Seit<! 1.7' •.i6 Mufll '11 'J1 Prime 10.00 Ht,. V11llH "llrldl ln<om , •• ff 0 .-..111 ~ s 10 Thrill • ., l'fL Var ,.., "" 1.Jll gA•I I 00 NL l•Fre •M ~L A((l!I '·"' 7,, l{A IJ 117 It 41 lncom I ' 1.U Trend n IO lU, t11v Ae"' S.'Sl t<CW Val •If •.n Pnl Ful\CI l.Gll I. ...... i.111 7 41 NPen •.1t Ut OPtn IO.J7 ll,6S Flnen<lal f'Jvv: lslel ~.M 23.U ~I AM S 2SS 14 ft"'lll< HO L (Oft Of' .1t to'' WJllMt 6 11 113 fu Mo 1'.90 15 30 OV"I SU NL lv_y 600 NI. ~I HY F I '3 'J3 Pf\I SIP t .f;I I0.14 (Oft Ille 00 • 14 Amar o.ntf411• Colu 0111 "i NL lfldu\I • II NL JP Ortll iocn I0.40 5 • Fd "IS NL ~·"' FUllCk: IM~ ··~ to.31 Ce1>8cl I.Sol f II C..1111 A8 • I 03 fftCOf'll 6 t4 NL J•11111 F 11,. NL ut 8efl I IO '61 OllV 11.)t lf,t1 Mllill 'JS • 14 CapOlll 4 21' 6' Cwllll C I, 1.4' Fsl lpvHior.: JoM N-a IF I'd 7 7l I 31 QUI! It.~ 14.tO ~ltfl ..sr 1 11 £ntrp 61• 671 Comp Bd 1.H IW Bnd AO 1•73 Ulf 8-17 .. lt.71 IAIF Otll 477 Ul ~ lU! 14,ft 'Val!O 6.1. US HI Yid II IO IHS COfl\P Fd 1 • .tl 7,1) OIKO ... ,.! Gt'wffl 6.01 6 60 1A11tu110t "MM: 11.n11.11 "'"" '~ t 15 NI. 0\CFd 60I .... Concord UAO Nl Orwtl! 7t3 ll•l•fl .... ,. A .... , 109111 JO 13.0. tt.J7 v., ... '"" Fd· Mlll\8 n )11• 1$ Con1 '"" ,., !000 lll(om ,0, • h•h Grwlt\ 311 '11 ~-, " 1" 'V•I LI to:i •. , • Tot Itel 6 74 1 J1 COl\\let 0 1 S1 NL Stoel! 'O e U IS.7114 W Jn< om I '3 '-71 ,,.ti 1 • .S 3t iii S.Sl S t4 i.,,,r •• 11 11 .. Cont .Mui ·n NL 1'1fMll "' •• "'t JOl\Mln '°so NL i:nFr• "OI IS 30 .. " ll.0. '4" t ,.., 17 3.S "'"" , ,. l<IO CvYld k 11. IUO l'IMltOI .. N l(tmott Fundl; Ill Slws ~O'.I Nl "'"' n.itra;.s l H1 S..'1 QIGlll 1 SI' JI Ctry CJIO 11 I 17.11 "" Vaf 'O 00 NL IJ\t"' t .. Ji eft IM II SO NL Vista IJ.13 I Vtfl(e ..,_,,: FdAm •JS ,. Oty CaMI 1. NI. "' W!Oll ,, " NL O"'w ... • •• $«w Sar: Voy•o 11.St 1 61 ln<om "SS ,,,,, H•rbr I.to : 11 Olyl11<m 1.00 NL Fnd Clll I 90 4 tt HI 'Yid 11-g t2 8•19!' t .12 •.9" Re tflOw U2 HJ. lnw I UI 71o1 P•<• IHJ , n Otl•w•rt ~· "~ O<'OUll' MonM I Nl llOftf (., 4 ..... _ MIO Nl £ ... "' Proy~ "n 'In Oe<•t 1 11 '1 Crwlll • ., "' M11fl8 10 ~ n Ottt\f • 11 • 4' i,.. $,AO NL !1.tf IJ.04 AGlll,.d 6 79 HI Oelew tO, t 11.~ 11\t&m 1J 0. U ta ~Ill U.tl I ,pt G,_lfl UT '11 Ecit U t • .. V Otouo: A"erllJ I 7>. • 0.ICl'I I ft • U r,\ul•I t 09 ',, !tumm lt.M I ! l'f SHI ta 1 SO 0111 ~« U 19 ~111>1r t•.«J NL Al"'ln d 01• .. hl'rt t •le $«IHI tjJ! I J lacll Ut I 'llCIM'n •CM ~ U• lldK IJA NI. AlnvHI t07 NL 0.111 J • G> l'rfl!ltll,. 0--• TotR .... •.:.?:!,.10.A 1~ ~It J, ._.., t I • '"" ll!" t;tj NI. :i.~~~ 1] ~ SNt\ ~~:.e ti n •N~ g~rt f:r1 :' IC l(?u'!T. ri;;rh.2''" .!.~ It~;. 1863 0!9I rSt~1t: flU. W~ lff II NL Aft\wey 1 '1 e" O..C1tf4 "li NL Otwllit 6 16 4-1 jlij, 8' Ill S1 M.'4 GfWl!t 11 77 It H '"'°"' t .4J WL W htl'l'll Nt AOPttill -•ell Oru ''" 10 JI NL VIII• 4,. s.1• t11\ B• • '° • ,. tll(om ,, a IJ.•s =· Fd ' ,. ~L w ~ s N A~· "°"°"'°"· Ote,1u1 ~: '"!Of!' I,, I~ Cu\ '" 120 I ft RetlQ I\ S11U1 " 10• .... .., " ti N """. 1 ... I)\ Orey "1"" us~ .. , •141 ~'" lt1 j,i j N...,WOW ~"' 8 •t-• ..... W.tttn •11 NL lftCOf" 4 56 ... t~.,_. It 11•t C1111Jf. UNttell llt ti 11 tt • fllt9"f t;· el. 5-1 31~ kl.. Well • t.tJ NI. !.100 •OS •ti As ' NI. t11u1t UMv•ll II~ , • Olla,. • Li$" ~: WI\ MM i. NL aLC Gt " t5 u t$ ~ tne 1 NL lqA ... 1 "' • t Plrtll 47 L • 'l • .. .,,,,., .. ..I, a-111< 1 a HL 11\C ·1 NL I 00 NL Polaf J 11 l )t N•w W14 11 14 NL IWfY 4,,, ··= Ver 11 ,. Ut t-11111 • "'' T" "'e I• NL ,..,,,.,"' • n • " 1.a•lftQlPll Gt0• NtwlGt " 11 NI. '"""I 1 14 , Wal " () .4$ 1 OS NCGlh • NL tiro •I NI Fuftd 111< ~ Co ldf lt4' tP• """"' lrt( 'OI l"l Ullre IO., 11 Wtlll Ill , .. ., NI. .CWIH t.. HI. faolt ~ t t 7t CO"''" t 0. NL ltt 0t ) • h ; Nl<lll,11 71., N~ Set.ct:eO ,.,,., WIK 111< 4 to NI.. ....... r ~ C••lll•"-lmp4'( ~ ..... 11 t .. Ill '·ff Kl" NO"'llr• 10.I 11.41 illl!IM\' •• ,, Hl W004 RNtf!ta· lot I'd • ,., Ht •l•ft 1l· ,., 11\d Tr lll!AYtll •• " ,, IS" Nor .. " I~ M NI lelSft• ,,.. HI. -.v .. i NI. IOI ,. • ,. NL ours Nl f"°' , n NL I.IN ''" • 4 • ~ Hll-',. 'n ~'"* Ottlwt "'""" NI.. ttwt C.ttt , "'J ~ Orwl'\ '~ g;-.c ll4' HL L'41 Ceo 10• NI. OiMM" IO ,, to J..l illM• '~ ,,., "''"' " NI. IO!Wl'1k U1 f ln<om . Ito. t 4' kl. Letmlt S.rlt\i ~ Wl'll It n NI. 111111 J ,.. NI. -.... 8°'tl'dll U I I $~cl • :I~ I t 5' • C.,11 U.IO NI. H t Com $ It II.JO !Mlft C.'*911 ' .. 6 D • • .~ (,. '" 4~ 11 °' ':, .... r:e '" = ' . ts; ""' STOCKS/ BUSINESS Tu diy' Cloe~ Pri NYSE COMPOSITE ,~ ' . . TRANSACTIONS I l~. F.Oruaty e. 1979 N OAJL Y Pll.OT 8 5 UCB Persorii.fie-a Truth in Lending By lllLTON MOS&OWUZ T~anb to ·'tnrth·f.!·lending" laws, b&nka, savings and Joan msUtuUonl, Onance eompaniea and stores are re· qulred to dlaelale to you what prtce you are paying for the prl vilegeof ualnl their money. The price la, of coUrse, the Interest rate. And this rate can vary considerably, depending on the type of loan c house, car. penonal). where you get it, bow long you wtll take to re· pay and other factors. THE INTUE8TING QUESTION 18: Does knowing how much lntenllt you wiU pay have any lnOuence over your decision to borrow or not to borrow? I 'm aure the authors of the ''truth·ln-lendlng" laws thoucbt it would have a beaJU\y lnfluence. They fl1ured that once people saw in cold print how much money they were paying In Interest, they wollld be ao appalled that they would reduce their borrowing. The lnslJtuUona that lend money agreed. That's why they opposed .. truth·ln·lending" regula· 'tions . In practice, it doesn't seem to have worked out that wuy. ln~t rates soared toward the ceiling in 1978 -and so did · nsuiner d,ebt. . Millions f people carry Vlsa or Mast.er Charge credit caµ'ds : they use them and let balances extend into loans at the clearly marked interest rate• ot 18 percent a Money Tree year, not exactly cheap money. Why do people borrow at such high iotereat rat.es? There are al leaat three reasons: < 1 > They feel they need the money and have no other place to get it. (2) They ex· pect £o be making more money in the 1uture than they are now. <3> They expect to repay ln dollars that are worth leas than they are today. ERGO, IDGH I NTEREST RATES probably infuriate many people but deter few rrom borrowing. But the requirement that lenders disclose their in- terest rates has had some bizarre consequences. One reader forwarded to me the Visa statements he has been receiving from United California Bank .. UCB, along with other issuers of bank credit card1>, charges 18 percent annual interest on unpaid balances. However, lt also happens to be a bank that Imposes a minimum finance charge of $1 on any unpaid balance, no matt.er bow small. It will simply never charge less than $1 per month. LAST SEPTEMB E B MY READER r educed hls balance from $64.79 to $4.58 -and UCB assessed him the $1 minimum charge. duUfully discloatng to him on bis statement that the annual Interest rate worked out to SO percent. The next month no payments were made. UCB again slapped on the $1 minimum charge -and lta computer showed in the appropriate box that the annual interest rate · was now 262 percent. The next moot.b my reader paid $6 or tbe $6.~ balance. hoping posalbly to shame the bank. But the UCB computer baa no shame. It never heard or u&W')'. · Confronted with the relevant n1ures. it simply dis· closed to lbe haples!\ customer that he was now borrowing money at the annual interest rate of 79t.'15 percent. That's truth tn lending! Dow Falls Again In Mixed Trading SALES Due to late transmission today's listing will not a~ar in the Dally Pllot. WMAT AMEl( 010 NEW 'VORIC (API t I MARMADU KE "Hove you been boriting at Mr. Snyder ogoln?" ... SUPERHEROES SH.OE MOON MULLINS t.-~--~~---------.....•@ ,AN[) ON OLIR WEDD!~ NIGHT ""TI-IE SILL.Y MAN SLEPT IN !Hf; LOBBY Of lHE HOTEL! By Bil Keane "This IS my homework. Jn history we're studying the fifties. DENNIS THE MENACE • MISS PEACH by Pasko, Tuska & Colletta by Jeff MacNelly GORDO TUMBLEWEEDS • SAV. 'Wt:WS l ... ~PIC tHews 10f1ACCO ... MAV'fle HE SWAL.LOWE~ HIS CHAW AN~ rfMAPE HIM SICK! NANCY I'M LOOKING- FOR SOME FIREWOOD THAT'S HARO TO FIND ----- by Tom S.tiuk by Mell Lazarius AGATHA CRUMM DR.SMOCK OH, M RS. RAL-PH ! N OW VolJ!Re GOI N 6 .,-0 GE:.,-Y S!L-t.-OW W A XY e u11..-P U P At,..t.. OVf;R YOLJR FACE:.' MOTLEY'S CREW Ol..D 'flMe.R 1 11 M ~ES'Al.l.'Y DE~re,,. CAN ')(XJ~D Me ~1000 -fOPA'( MY 511..tS~ by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux 1 J , I PEANUTS HERE'S THE ~!AAA r FL'r'IN6 Al.E smowN6W.W A COIJNTl'r' ROAO ... ONCE AGAIN ME sees 'THE CMAAMIN6 FROO LASS .. , EN~DEFAIRE VOTRE CONNAISSANCE . , r ........ COMIC$ I CROSSWOf\ by Charles M. SCtaulz GUICKL'i' ~ COHSUl.TS MIS PHRASE BOOK ... •· r AM MAm ro MEET '(OU H _ __, ~ ! I d i _:'~'~''"' S°<R;_,& ,...;._ J -i> by Bill Hoest by George Lemont · S OMES FO R M S O F COM.PASSION esCA Pe MES .' CIL . by Templeton & Forman TODAY 'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS C7 Slopes 1 Pnce 49 BIOcked UNITED Feature Syndicate 5 Offets S3 Oranges 9 Bargain 57 Renl events 58 Frosting 14 Brain lamina 59 Of the mourh 15 Monster 61 -b&ne 16 Test 62 Meaning 11 Bible book: 63 1949 paci. Abbr Abbr. 18 Ctiurn &4 Instrument. 19 Uneven Suffix 20 Take - -: 65 Flower OI t IN I• I• I rl.4111 .. I y A I H . '"" .. ' -·•It II I • , ..... . ,.,. ,.. . nlnlnla I a I &I• • ti I . . ..•. , ,,,, .. '• " r -y II I I r . ,,.. la I < • ~ s .. I , , I [ . . -... -A I • 5 a A II t s ''"'"'" I Ill •• , . ( y ( "' f •l I ( c 0 " c l u D £ 0-•11 l l --,ft • 0 II A l 1 I tr IS II I s , l I c [ ., c 0 •11-Travel 80 Evince , II l r f II D I r " u s T l t 22 Abstained 87 Tastes • u II r I f ~ 0 o I c 0 " .. l 24 CIOser DOWN A " ' . I a IU t " I ll 1• ' 'i$ 29 Lots 1 Lahn T l A .. I • I' • a [5 • " Ii l 27 Spur 2 Reduce city 43 Cover 29 Ptgpen 3 Tropteaf listl 23 Rodents 4S Tarry 30 Smile • Uproot ZS Gypsy H High-strung 33 Usages 5 Haircut 28 Portrayals .a Isaac's 37 Muslim 6 Operatic 30 Meat curs mother tudge prince 31 False god 50 N.Z. nauve 38 Moor 7 Leas moist 32 Mlniscufe 51 Prevent J9 Edgu A -8 Ego 33 Theretore 52 Doyens 4f> -Runyon 9 Vaporous 3.4 Nevada city 53 --vis: '1 Else: Scot. 10 MOiding 35 Ofrec11on Fr. ptirase 42 lndelallg· edge 38 Con1unclion S. Cards tbly 11 Celebnty 37 Some win· 55 Fuu 44 Negative 12 Relieve dows S6 Japanese 45 Resin 13 Luge, e.g. «>Transfer Pf&mler 46 Rodents 21 Australian •2 Soapstone 60 Moo . ' Television I I I ..., , , \ \ IVIHING .. , ..... ()NI) Tiit &11te111e•1u ere .,.., WI t 1ttonQ llrti • lfllOfW A ,11'0'-'0NI OAl"biet IMfM lie OoMft I k~w IN! lllC\e of "411 lltltil e MIMOY~ T1141 9te4~ tftOW ... ,,.... to tel.• llO m.IO to ,.. ~ l:Ml'.'OlllM Mt IMtOllNdllfll e a~orMH ~ "' """ 11\)f\ tf1llDCAll'f ,....,_ Olll """' •!Nell ,,,. • ~o•-•~19d .-0-.IAl'f ~· ~ lllldl .... ~ ' e AN INft"V.W Wl1'M ttNG Hl6AO NtG OMNIWe AeONIWt uo 1\.0"4 l.UC'f Ll'CY ~la hetNll a. R.U y I 4l9'1"I • MCHAa JAC'*>H Ou.t LAI08cM1111 C*CJM.Wl'tl Interrupted lill'N GIWPIN o~ tsi\IC!e 0wn ~· lwy MOOtt. Arthur M111rev o.no... 7:00 I a. NIWI Macon McCalman is distracted after he corners Sutanne Somers at a company party on "Three's Corn vany" tonight at 9 on ABC, Channel 7. N9CNIW8 NIWl. YWID QAMI MCMIWI ()) JOKIR•a. WllO II)( MILLIOH DOUAll MAH • MAOHIK. I ~ NPOM' •0t.e1UNN.Anva tONG Chlld•tn wlll'I 1pec1a1 1*1111'1 problem• •.!IP«•· ence .ummer camp. Steve muat "1rl4W9 a prltettH ttelut tloltn lrom • 1"1141 counlry belo•e en fnhlfnahonel lllCldenl OOCUtl. -~AH080N Frtd Htrelly borr"w• money from Lamoni'• benll ec:c:ounl 1:aoe~ HO&l s: Cel Dodd. SlleriMll Laurence The alQhl• ano sound• of world la,,,ovs c1rcue acta are comb!Md with mutltal variety. Cluut•f"I LbtlRfl• 9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angetei. 8 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind I Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles KFMB (CBS) San Diego • KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego I KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles KCOP·T\l (tnd I Los Angeles • KCET· TV I PBSI Los Angeles GD KOCE·TV(PBSI Hunllngton Beach I FAMll V FEUD DATING GAME (II HOlLVWOOO 8QOAAU I TIC TAC OOUOH ADAM·12 Tiie ottla.n 11arch tor en alleged lildnepper, engage In • tl'IOOIOUI end capture two hl)ICkert . 9 21TOHIGHT Famlly "Porenlfng P1obff!m1" ID NEWS (IJ THI! OOHQ IHOW l.'00 8 ()) THE HOMOft 8HOW "60 Magical Veara Of Mov- ie Mon111r•. Madmen. Al\d Other Cteelu,., Of The Night" Anthony ~Int I• hOef fOf a I~ rtlrc»- pec:uve ~ horror movi.. a N8CMOV\E • • "Two-Minute Werning" 11976) Cl'ltrllon HOSIOn. John Casa3Ytlle5 To d1ver1 .men1ion from a planned mu111-m1HIOl1 dol·· lllf •Otlber; of 111 1111 uhlb 11. ii OC1"Q Of 11'1-pltnll • tlllC)et 111 ,,,. crowd of • INll!oul f0olb4111 D.,.,. • "'°"" ..... ,,,. ~ .. c IOHl Ma11on 6r•n<10 An,.,_..lt Co!Mf A 1111e pony IS •loi.tl from • COW· boy and llld<ltn WI ...._~ 12 In I e G.J H.AWfDAYI Ho-11<1 and Menon IO<H· ney fO I~ IOdgt where lhey "*'' ll\tlf l\Olley• moon lo try 10 retCln<Jlt the old llMrt4t • MOVtl • • ·~ "Chino.. I 1973) Charita Broneon, Jiii l1eland A driflet t>eeorntt 1nv01vtd Wltl'I a boy WflO ~ • hOmt •• WOl'llen wM IOllM him, end • man wflO W91'1te 10 rllf't """ on 1M rtnQe. (2 ''") • CMOl IUNCT'T AHOf'MNOI Skill: "Ham AclOI." "Old MINI And The S..." ., ..ovia • ••• 'The Counterfeit TreltOf" flff2) Wllllii:i!, Hoklen, LllM Peitner The Brrtllh~t~· "*'• • n.1~ sweoe 1n10 ~coming • spy againtl the Neill <luring World War It (2 llra.1 fD THI HOUYWOOO MUSICALS • • ·~ "On Tne Town" 11;so1 aw l<eoy: F'ranll Sinatra. Three H llorl on ht>erty In ~..., York Clly ex~lence adventure. I!) TO MM MOWN: A OAUOKTl:" The conoep•ton and cBeurlen birth of Ille world'• flrtt IMl·lube baby are dooumenled. t :80 8 @) LAVEAHE & SHIALEY Laverne and Shirley win five minutes of free ahoc>· Pt<lg In a IOcal aupermer. ket. e THI 000 COUPU Felix brings home an at>lllde>Md baby. mutll to Oac;a('s dlsc;ornlilure. 9::00 8 9 THAEl'I COMPAHV Jack lriee to Mve Christy from her llfm's lecnetous P<9Sk1ef'lt. tD MPVGAlmH Guests.: Bruoe Dern. Dud· ley Moore, Arthur Murr;;iy Denoett. Andrea McArdle, TUBE TOPPERS CBS 8 8:00 -The Horror Show. An· lhony Perkins hosts a two·hour special on horror movies Cscc story below l NRC ID 8:00 "Two Minute Warn- tnl(." A srupcr at a football game keeps Charlton Heston ~md John Cass,avetes hopping in thls 1976 suspense movie fsee siory below >. KCET 9 8:00 -"On the Town." For those who missed it on KOCE Sun· duy. Channel 28 inaugurates this series on Hollywood musicals with this high· steppln~ fli c k with Gene Kelly a nd Frank Smatra. Robett 0.bofne • MAlltfU>llOE THIATM "Country Mnn«t Crlp· pied Bloom" A crippled yo11og woman's 111111r mak .. ott w111> tile one men wflO mighl heve mer· rlecl her. l'M•III TAXI Afltr having an oe>w•llon Louie panics wnen ht 11. .. to 1!11419 a P<omtM he mlde! to God dunno surgery 10:00 8 Cl) THE PAPE' CffAIE The allldy group """8 that • handicapped •ludenl'a? Clestr• to join IM!n 11 motl~ated by r••· aon• 0111er lllan lrlendship •DGD NEWS III IT ARSKV l HUTCH Hutch. posing at 1 >·111m1n. la forced 10 gun down Steraky to prove himself 10 l helllOb e AU'MO t OU PONT "Columbia Unlvereuy Awerdt For Broadctal JOurnllllsm" The eward1 end cffps from varlou' ......... wl" be preetnltd 10:101 • NIWS VOTIWS PINUHE 11:00 D • CJ) lfOl NEWS MAK! ME LAUGH M<MI • • • "Okie 01 Pleasure 11111'<1 ' ( 19531 Leo Geon, Abby Ootton The peecelul Paclfre ialand Ille of en Engh1h schOlar 1nc:t h11 dllughte<S IS d11rupled by 1500 Ma11nes 12 hrs I G> THE ODO COUPLE In Order 10 win the levor 01 1111 new gltlltlend. 0Kar ~on• nMtneu l!lelt • THI OC>OC>lll Tl'lt Goodin ert efmoSI mvtilaled by • mullltude of tnlnt4"0rllltrS. 11:30 8 Cl) BA~Y JONU -"'-II e>.,fOoU>all pleyet l'IOS hit '#tit kjled. ll'len..fJ\Ur. dlft 1111 Ntman to 111ture Slfencl, IA) 8 TONIQHT Ho11· Joflnny Carson. Guetl Mtrlt Eatk! 8 TWIUQH'T ZONE "Nici! Ot lime" ~yw.ds Oon llfld Pat Carter tnlt< a dlntl \n • ll'llaM town and ,._.... tbllt ten-told to. ,,,.,,, by. mact>ln•. 8 9 MO~ • • ·~ "love Boat 111" ( 19771 Gavin Macleod. lwuren Tewes The cep1a1n ot 8 CrolM Ship beCOIT\U rom11nUcally inYOIYed w11h a young w oman he belfe\185 10 be a paNen· i .tRI Tlfl OONCl 8HOW GETsMAAT Ma. meets a woman Who Oerllatw:IS S50.000 fOf lier tetltinorty age1osl e l<AOS rJ."10Nf0 ABC HEWS MOANING 12':00. TWIUGHT ZONE "The Arrtvlll" Flight 107 arnvea on acneo111e. ~t emoty at AlFlllED HrTCHCOCf< PMMNTS A man lalls 1n lo•e wllh a woman t>ul Iler fdlller ""on·1 consent 10 htt mer~ • GIT IMAfllT' lolaic. Ml •xect tooli-allk• '°' Ille KlnQ. tgl-IO Calle h•• p1eoe ., • oec:ov I DO<CAYWn 12:30 MCWll • • • '• 'Tiit Young L1ont 1 tllHI M.,1011 Bral'<lo. MOl'lloomef'f Clllt lo ,,-of A~ tnd I Getman r~ dltt«tn"Y 10 IM ......,,,, of World Wll II it'~m> * * • "The 0 I " (111571 Jack Webb. Don Oubt>lnt A tough drlll ln1frucll>f mutt prepare boot camp •ec1u11• IOt combel 1n IW4IMI weetca. 12 ht1 I • MOVl& ••·~"I Wu A 811oCMlfltr" I 19501 SOOtt Stady. Mona Fr•.m•n A d•ltcllv• CIONI .. 1 lhopllt1er 10 991 In with a geng Of profM. lllonale 11 tw .. 30 min .1 11:40. ()) 0. LAlt MCMI • • i. "8anectll. flle TWO MMllOn Clam• 01 Cep'I\ Jeck" 1111131 Georg• ~d. AndrtW 0uggen 8atlllOtll la hlfed to find vlllwt>M tloelc ceti1hce1e O/llet If Olen fr"Otn e majot •ood compel\y 1:00 G TOMOMOW Guest lee Aldi. ei.ecu11v11 proelu<:ef OI ........ IOn a "TNI WlllOfll " -· ., uwup1Me_ 1:10 ~ ,,, -...... ' ' WAHTID: OfAO <>A AU\IE "T rlpll Viet" 2:008 NEWS MO\llE • • • "S&bOleur" ( •9421 Prfscllla lone. Robert Cummings W'*' eocu•ed ol sabolllOf e11<1 the mur· det of "'' best friend. a rTIM'I tell OUI to linc:t IM real Nail saboteur9 (:l hrt I • KTIMAAT The Chtef 1ft9S 10 1mp1~ • m~ reoot'I~ In l'IOI* Of giving CONTROL a better Image 2:t19 .-we 2:30. MOVl& •• "w-·1 p,,son f 1955) Id• Luo-no. Jen Ster~no A P<l9on SUPf'f•n· tendanl causes a rtol wneo a/le !>@els 9t'I tntMle 10 deiith ( 1 hr , 30 min I II) H!WS 2:AI tJ MOVIE DAIL.,~ • •. ''lr>Ow Tr41Jl1U"a'• 1111971 J;,me1 ~':T.:' 111oN1 AodQlrl A Ofltc• Ii.kl Illa hie I 11'141 women lie IOvel. (I IW . 30 ~) I 3:1111 NIW8 • e:ao MOVI£ * * "R.1>411 C11y • l1<153) W~d 8111 Elholl, M= Lord A guNllngltlg 1111tt 11111• his life 1c!t lhe WOn\111 he IC>Yff. ( 1 ..,., 25 mm I 4:00G MOVtl • • 0·Tne Runarovnd" I 11146) ENa Rolon, Rod C~on Two detel;tlves vie 10 btltlg en "f'reu beek lrom San Fta"°'sco tow tein11t in New.YOllt. (2hfl I ' • MOVll • •·~ "I.,. Of The qead" ( 1114~1 8orl• l<atk>H. Ellert Drew A Greek ~at. HglllfftQ an itland drtak· out. II eN'Tleelled l1n • world ~ wll~llt and vaml)lr• ( 1 hr , 30 rrfrt t WedRe•da11·• Da11rl•e Mot1lea A"ERNOON 11.'00. * .... "The Nalctd Oswn"~(19Ul A~r Kel'tnedy, ~lie SI ~ ll'llef Is killed by a man ~ ' hired to help hlltl deliver 11oi.o money to hl,. bOU LI_ hr . 30 mtn I ID * * * '> "The M011al Storm" ( 19'401 Mlfgarol Sullavan. James s1-er1 A Garman pr.0111ssor't home 1& 10tn apart when hlS IWO sons beoOm8 NIWS dur1ng 11111e1's rise lo powe< ( 1 hr . 50 min I 3:00 (@) * •• "Tile Girl Most likely To " ( 19731 S1oo1t. li•O Channing. Edward Asner. A young ,.om.,. -'lo I• ~· t>Mut1fu1 tl>rough plaaUc surgery ...... revenge on ,,,. mM ""'° tCOt Md her belOf'I! the 1r1n•fO<malfon (1 tw .. 30mint t 3:30 8 * • "' "Shakleat (fun In Tiie We$!" (196tl Don Knollt. Barbata A~· Wn.te tra•el1ng W9$1. • oent•SI meets up With a rormer Dand11 who u- 1181 PHI 10 hele> lrack down lllegeHy IOld *98P. on1 11 hr , 30 m•n I Morie Monsters Prom I Again '.J.1onlght By MIKE SILVERMAN NEW YORK <AP) Anthony ol Movie MQns ters. Madmen and Other Creatures of the Ni~ht." All the great fiends or filmdom are here: Drac ula, Frankenstein's monster. the Mummy, the Werewolf or London. The Invisible Man is visl· ble, and the Phantom of the Opera ls h(!ard from. So are the more recent Creature From the Black Lagoon, atomic-age mutants like The Fly, a nd animals run amok, like The Bfrds and Willa rd's ra ts . The script, by Time magazine rum critic Richard Schickel, brings a touch of historical perspective to bear and leavens the screams and s hudders ot the clips with a Ugbt tone. Discussing the many Franken· stein sequels, each or which ends with the monster seemingly destroyed but actually ready to spring back for tbe next movie, Perkins describes b.la as- sailants aa "strangely careless about cbeckingoutlbeirbandiwork." in the memory. Still we do get some classic mo· ments intact : Janel Leigh being sur· prised in the shower in "Psycho": Perkins is no doubt a gentle soul, loves his wife and children. and is kind Elsa Lanchester being created by lightnlng in·"The Bride of Frankens· tein." lo a nima ls. But lor anyon e who saw him as the psychotic kllJer ln .. Psycho ... one fl ash or his shy s mile ls enough to send shivers up the spine. T h at m a k es Perkins a fitting host for the two- hour s pecial on CBS-TV tonight at H on Channel 2 deditated lo the hor- ror film in a ll Its gory glory. Its title SIXTY YEARS OF good , un· wholesome entertainment --and 60 years of good business at the box of· fice "Leiend insists that only a stake driven through the heart can finally kill Dracula," Perkins reminds us at one point. "Actually, the only way to get rid of him entirely Is to drive stakes through the hearts of every movie producer in the world." OCCASIONALLY, however, the et· forts to relate horror movies to other aspects ot life grow ponderous, as when we are told that the shark in "J a ws" is "a mugge r " who ''translates our fear of crime in the streets to crime in the deep." One problem inherent in s uch a broad survey is that we gel only a cursory glimpse of each film - many sequences tend to run together ANOTHER PROBLEM ls the wide varlallon tn quality of the films chosen. True-blue horror movie rans will regard It as sacrilege to see snip· pets of a favorite llke "King Kong" s urrounded by such inferior ex· a m oles of the craft as "Return or lbe Fly'I"· or "The Omen." One sldeltgbt: I aJ ways thought that Boris Karloff, a fine actor. felt s tifled by his type-casting afte r "Frankenstein." Au contraire, it seems Karloff regarded the monster as "the best friend t ever had" for bringing him life-long e mployment and prosperity. as ungainly as some of the mis· shapcn creatures who star lo It -Is "The Horror Show: 60 Magical Years NBC Snipers Take Aim at 'Wanting' By PETER J. BOYER LOS ANGELES t AP) Once there was a movie called "Two-Minute Warning." It was about a fellow "ho vented hls torment on a football crowd. He 1:rabbed a rine . went to a football game and started shooting people. Folks who paid to see this movie never knew why the man was sbooUng. They never saw his face, just the omlnous dark figure. What they did see was Jack Klugman as a poor slob who's into the mob for some heavy gambling 108Ses h'e hopes to recover at the football game. They also saw David Janssen as a cad hav· ing problems with hls lady and Walter Pidgeon as a pickpocket working the crowd. T HESE LITTLE ILLUMINATIONS were tossed in so the audience could reel sorry for Natalie Cole Joins Father on 'Walk' HOLLYWOOD IAP I -Singer Natalie Cole •has been honored with a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame, possibly m arking the first ttme ln the walk's 75-year history that botb a fat.her and a daushter have received such recoplUon. A three·llme Grammy Award winner. Mias Cole became the 1,703rd entertainer Monday to be immortalized on Hollywood Boulevard·a ra mous walk. Miss Cole's father, Nat "Kini" Cole, haa two stars In the Walk of Fame, both installed ln 1181. One recoinlzes his accomplishments In televlJlon while the other is for h\s acbJevement.s in t.be re· cording industry. Janssen, Klugman and Pidgeon when the sniper started blasting away. It's part of the disaster. movie formula. folks will be more moved when tragedy strikes someone they know something about Me1t of "Two-Minute Warning" was spent introducing the folks al the stadium. Then a few minutes of random kUUng, and finally, Charlton Heston gives the killer his due. "Two-Minute Warning' was not a very good movie. It was full of cuss words and gratuitous violence. NBC apparently did not realize this until after they bought the movie. THEY PAID LOTS OF money for it. Then they looked at lt. Uh·Oh. At least 30 minutes of the movie's us had to be chopped away, leaVing Just 85 minutes of a dumb story about random death. This would never do as an "NBC Big Event." So NBC decided t-0 add on. The network com· misslo~ the shooting of 66 minutes of new film, involving Heston and some of the other actors, and mixed it in with what was left of the old movie. You won't beUeve what they did. Tonight's "Two-Minute Warning" at 8 on Channel 4 ls no lon1er the story of a craiy with a gun and a penchant for murder. lt ls now the story of a blth· class art tMft ring. The 1unman lsn't there to klll folks, ~ut to draw police attenUon while his ac· ........ ORSON WELLES .......... HAL LINDSEY •• ,tt .... 11 • 'l'IUtCICl\~(lll!R!'RISt~lllUJ.Sl r ..,, " LAST DAY! FOUNTAIN VAWY It ...._ ....... 1»1600 .. e,~COAST ···~ ~ WfSTMIMSltl MALL , so ............ ~ compllces steal art. Now, this 1s "Big Event" stuff. THEY E VEN ADDED A love s tory. This isn·t the first time television has doctored a film to make it work on TV : "King Kong,·· "Earthquoke, ·· "Midway" and othe rs were padded wUh new footage or cutting room floor root•Jte tor stretching purposes. But "Two-Minute Warning" 1s the first theatrical movie to have its entire story line chanJ:ed to fit the little screen. And if ever M movie needed to have its story h.ne changed. this is 1t. "THERE WAS A MAJOR problem with stand· ards <the network censor) be<:ause or the violence a nd language," says Perry Massey Jr .. NBC 's chief of program operations. "Jt just couldn't be broadcast as it was originally made." I haven't seen this hybrid creature yet. but l can imagine what resulta when you take the rrame of a theatrlcal awful and build on with some made· for-TV footage. At least with thJs warnfog, you get more than two mlnutes. • D c-s.. Our fom..tic ..,, In lo-Z.loy1 ......... ~ ..... -...... _,_ .. • UST sa.te:OOtf • lllTMIYICI •lltTNtOH S4YI ON THt ,4MOUS J WIY& RIC&.IHB IOClll a-. .. y.,,,, ~ C..._. W1"I LA·UOY* TWO OF MOVIEDOM'S FAMOUS MONSTERS K•rJotf (top), Chaney on TV Special rr:-----1 "'n .. ,,.~ , .... . .... I ~au ..... ,..,., I THEATRES I lWI .,...,. 10 ol I C Wfflll AREA ) I =-~:.!:Mry. I CINEMALAHO "' •111'11>'" U •It • d A I r LI• u , ut • H11u111.0 1,11 """"' 014•••'-"•· r1y111•w tll, I Sellllh, Mllt•tt·lr •4tey, I M c D•••l4 't , 014 Mllw..,_, C-"'-'~ Air u.... cwt. Jr.. •""!ff 1 ...... ........., ..... •r4tlw I Trtec,_., 111111 6 Cllfpf. Kool Aid. ~. I 1t •••Ii. L1,t•11 Soup I Cefllt11trcl •lt -TOI' .~ MO .. IY. DfRI illMiJDl tiilHGU" ....... ,. . '"W ATllSMIP DOWM" ... "'WAT9W. DOWM" _, .. "THI •MUOA fttA..-r \ ~ I ,_., . 1 .... DOUT S,_IO "SWllMAM" ........ fll~t ... •· llttf ...... ·• ~,.... I So••la C•atii& At'a..-.c ... p I 3723 Birch, Nt wpon Beach (714) 957.0292 J ------ .... -DAILY PILOT ('t"lEDDmE ~ S[Aeen f, l '' i '-> •, 1 C c o rn ~ L i: 1. MATllES SATUIUY & SUlllAY "KING OF THE GYPSIES" !R> LOOKING FOR MR OOOOBAR" (Rl , "MAOIC"(R) PARAOtSE ALLEY" (R) "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR" fPO I "ICE CASTLES" (PG) . MOMENT SY MOMENT (HJ FORCE TEN FROM NAVARONE PINOCCHIO lGl "REVENCE OF THE PINI( PANTHER (PC.1 'FORCE TEN FROM NAVARONE MIDNIGHT EXPRESS (R) NATIONAL LAMPOON S ANIMAL HOUSE AMERICAN ORAFITTI '(RI "MOMENT BY MOMENT" "HOUSE CALLS" (R) "MAGIC" EMBRVO"(R) "UP IN SMOKE" CA) "A BOY AND HIS DOG " Superb 'feuoc~a"t' WIUi1&ml at>m:r&lly brln11t out lh bt'11t ln commwu ly theutc-nt. 110 1t (•o ml' UK no 11unm11t• to find 1 1uperb proouc lion of · at on a llol Tin ttoof" ut th.-Colfta M l'~a Civic Pl•)'hOU.'1(' WIJhuim' b1ttrr treitt1su on de t'ep11on. frwitruuoo and ulwnjj lion 111 glvt:n top druwtir lreut mcnl by an out.riland\nte caa.t and tilre\'lor Puu Tambelhnl who ulso doublei. on 111hort notice ln the roll' or Big Maamu ll is. qul\e •Imply. tht? fine t production of the U178 79 8t•u11on on the com munlty th<'nter <'1rcult .. (' T ON A Hot Tin noof" 1~ un angry, lleethrng play, lllecped 10 levt!IS of hyprocrisy, with l'Uch of its maJor characters at· "CAT OH 4 HOT TIN aOOI'" A O••-liy T~\-W11f,.,.,~. di-i.d ti• P•lt t •mott11n1. 19<"'*•' dtrt<lor •nd wt Of •ICllM'r SIM> Wl•tlO touno •nd 1191111"9 l>Y °''" HlmmelMDfr P<•~n1ed bf tf\e Co-!11.i Mtt.,.. (IVK Pt•vhou..,, frl<My• •NI 5'11ureloly~ •I I JD'"'- t't'IJ 11 .. tr. C...,.munity C•nl,., •udllo.1""' "" "'" Orenoe County F•lr9rovnch, Coti. Mt'W R<1serve(IOll• fj.t.~1S9, M ar9•ret 8"0 8•Q0adely BIQMem• •• (;(loper Mff Re" lootff Or 6•"9'1 . THlCAST Und" Pu1n..n . St•n W lll\K ~ Adfpn A1<1t<--.i P•ll T embo!tlln1 l""Knorr P"IK""'t' R-f'oslN Cl1r1S HlnHnel-r -=~~= • in Costa Mesa Intermission Tom Titus belllni essays the pathetic Dig Mama as if born to the role. But the crown or this estimable pro- ductlQn 111 Ralph Richmond's lllCHMOHO TAMtlLLIHI ... a2.tnalinterpretauon o! Big Dad- dy. the dyin~ despot. Richmond reaches into the guls or a c haracter that has become lhe basls for innumera- ble cliches and fleshes out the brutal. vital personage un- derneath. I l1s Dig Daddy as steel and sinew, a commanding pre- sence even in culmcr moments. whose revelation when he learns or his impending doom is one of the s how's indeU blc scenes. whose showdown sequence with Richmond wUI Ions be remem· b e r e d . Wlaslck s plendidly portrays the bitterness and sell· doubt that haunti this bepc>dln1 character. a onetime ath~te ob- s ess ed by bis 1nablllty to perform as he did in hls prime Either the <lirection of such a sterling production or the crea· tion of a poignant character like Big Mama would be a remarka· ble achievement. P a ll Tam· bellini has accomplished both. taking over the role a few days before opening and doing full Justice to each assignment. TED KNO. AND Pat Krone are very good as the s hut-out <Jlder son and his asp.tongued, overly fertile wife who connive for their share of Big Daddy's estate. lland_Foster and Chns Hlmmelheber only partially overcome the problem of youth as the minist~r and the doctor, respectively. tempting to cut through the ALL 0 1t1vE ,,.s o"'r"' 4:JO,.M.HfGNT\Y c harades that pervade their Chila UnG•r 11 l'ru Unftu • K•OG•• ,.,.,..,o .. na Jives. It is an emotionally de- MISS PUTNAM . the pacing, clawing "cat " of the t itle. beautifully interprets the role or a frustrated wife determined to drag her husband back into their marriage bed. Seductively stun· njng, she endows her character with richnel>S and dimension in a superlative performance. · W lasick 's token setting is an artistic effort to counter tbe ef· feels of Proposition 13 on the playhouse's budget, a nd it sue· cecds except for one bothersome point. The feigning or operung imaginary doors tends to dls- tract, partjcularly in a play or this nature, and should be aban- doned. ·.~-------------------"·' manding exercjse requiring its . performers to stretch their act- "Cat on a Hol Tin Roof" is a shining example of what eom· munity theater 1s capable of achie ving under the proper con· ditions. not the least of wruch 1s a script worthy of the effort. It continues f o r two m ore weekends. playrng Fridays and Saturdays at 8 :30. in the Com- munity Center auditorium on the Orange County Fairgrounds ..... , .... I 1 ............ 99•·2400 h •11•U ...... , .... 994 2400 ~· ...... •' .,..,, .. , 99• 2.00 u •• ,..., " ..... ., ... '94·2.-00 ····· ........... 113 \JI ~\tO ..... ·--11Jl~l1 9!110 .. . ' .,. ..... ._ ?1J/~JI 9~80 , .. .,.., .,, ............ 7lll~Jf 9~10 ' \ .... " ,,, ...... .. •9• 1!114 ' ( ....... . 11• .... .. 494 1()14 .. o•oc c. scon MOVlf JllOVlfJ"9l 'IUS NICKllODION Cl>GI .iAH A&OA "IUS All l!AI CAHI CAllfOaNIA SUITE '"01 n ,. • > ,. • • ,. • •,. • • ,. • 10 JO CllHl USTWOOO IVllY WHICH WAY IUT lOOH 1'01 IJ Ml • J Ml • f >0 t t •I t f4J & 11 0t J I I. TCXCICH'I lOllD Of THI alNGS 1'0> U 0 • l U • l •U • t II & I 0 0 ---- -...10 Sll!lllllANO e U004At 0 NfMOf INVASIOH Of THI IOOY 5HATCM115 1~1 •IUS ,AIADISI AlllY!Nll •UH •lN l'lUI .Ul ITU Olf CAllfOaNIA SUITI ll>GI IUO t >JI e •JI e ut e I JI I IO JI Of<la« C. Kon MOY ti MOYlf 1,.01 'IUt NICKllOOfOH c'o' CUHl fatl'WOOO MIT WHICH WAYIUT lOOSI 1"01 liOO • l .liO • .. -00 • I lO & 101)0 ~c.scon "MOYll MOYll" IPGJ ~,,....,.. "'' ___ ,,. .. .,. .. .,. .. ,,. ...... 0to1101 c scon MOVll MOVll 1,01 'lUS HIAICHI lalAICUt ''°' ----tOttl -t l~·~ Kt CASTUS cro1 'lUS CASIT'S WDOW 1'01 J,I a. fOUClfH') 1. lOlO Of ... (PO) tOllf lllltOlt t I TOIMIGll f fOMlllOll tCI CAITUI (NII ,..lit THANK 000 IT'S •alDAYcPOl CUNT tAtTWOO. mrr WMICM WAT Mn LOOM {PO) "'us OAUHTlfT 111 tUtn usrwoo. MIY WtllCM WAY Mn lOOMC,.l ,lUI OAUHTlfTt•l .. , lllltOlt • I 'MMIOll f IOtllllOll tel CAlfllllH l 'Uli CANT'S SMA00W IHI W•lf MHIU"t TNl lOYI IUO o rtUt 1"f OHi & OHl Y 1tt01 IU STiii Ct.Sf CMAfOIMA Mn 1 .. 1 l'lut ans Of LAUU MAH 1•1 PRlCIO GANGA CARRO ACOLORll "IXOACllMO'' YM AM ft •1 """4 ,_.,., llf "OHOll" 1. DIYll nMll PIVI 1•1 2. HOllOI HOlltlTAI. (IJ i . THI COlltSI CMINDlll 111 ·' ing r anges and rise lo their material. This is done impressively al the Civic Playhouse where re· gulars Linda ,.Putnam a nd Stan Wlas ick turn 1n their best performances to date as Maggie <1nd Brick <1nd director Tam· li er drunken . c rippl ed husband. Brick. is equall y well meas ured by Stun Wlai:;ick, Memories But No Money Our Gang's 'Farina' Looks Back on Career OAKLAND CAP l -Allen Hoskins says he has fond mem- ories of playing Farina in "Our Gang" almost 50 years ago - but he hasn't any residuals. "I 'm sick and tired of people thinking I get residuals," or pay- ment for replays of the still- popular series. Hoskins said in u recent interview. "I haven't got no pot of money. l have never tried to trad e off the name 'Farina.' I haven't done that -I don't do that.'' In s tead the 58-year-old Hoskins s aid he s trugg led through years of house painting and dishwashlng before landing his present JOb as public in· fo rm a tio n office r for the Alameda County Chapter of the A ssociation fo r Re t a rde d Children. UNTIL TlJREt; year s ago, Hoskins said he concealed from friends that he had been Farina in the celebrated movie shorts. He knew his wife. Fran1.,y, for more than six months before divulging his secret, and that was only "because l didn't want anyone else tellin2 her.·· Hoskins also refused ull in· ter vil'ws and honors until agree- ing in 1976 to accept an award from t he Black 1''1lmmakers Hall of Fame. "I fi gured , l owe it lo them," he said. ,.,..,, .... 50 YEARS LATER Allen 'Farina• Hoskins But he recalls with fo ndne!>s his days as Farina. "The first black kid on the s how was Sunshine Sammy. Then came Pineapple and his s iste r Mon~o. then m e. then Stymie and his brother Cotton, then Buckwheat," he said, "THE GANG WAS unique, well·integratcd, ahead of its time. There was nothing else to compare wilh 1t in its day. I'd fall in a bucket of feathers; a ~hitc kid would fall in a bucket of feathers." But Hoskins ran into trouble when he outgrew his role and sought other jobs in the race · conscious Hollywood of the 1930s and '40S. He tried radio. but op- portunities for black actors were limited . During the McCarthy era. Hoskms was questioned by lhe House Un·Ameracan Activities Committee wh•ch found that as a teen·ager . he had attended dances sponsored by the Young Communis t Leagu e a nd the Socialist Workers Party. THE COMMITTEE took hts pa ssport and H oskins was blacklisted. "But it dldn 't mat tcr. l wasn't working anyway But 1 djdn't want to stick around and be another has·been. f want- ed to do someUting ." Hoskins Jen Hollywood in 1952 and headed for the San Fran· elsco Bay area. Ther e he paint- ed h ou ses. washed dis hes. "anything to make an honest buck." before enterinJ! a train ing pro~ram which led to a Job :is a psychiatric technician and eventually Lo his present posi· lion. Recently he wrote and pro duced a radio documentary on the retarded children's group ''f'm finally gelling a chance to work in radio." he said. The <Sorrows of ~redcr1ck MmlC Center Prt!-.cntarlom AMERICAN BALLETIBEA1RE Special low-priced Previews thl• Weekend I I Fri. & Sat .. 8 ()()pm Tickeu· $6 & $6 et Jh• door Advance Soles: 967.,.033 Son. • 2:30 & 8 ~PIT'• (creait c:•rdt only) 1f>/!...if1c.<::5'0~~!!!~f.erlorj) ~ (714) 9&7«1033 ... . .. . Three performance in the TERRACE THEATRE, LONG BEACH FRI. FEI. I, 1:30 p111 LES PATINEURS SAT. FEB. 10, 2:30 18:30 ~~~·~toeux COPPELIA lc:hino/RndnjcvK (lull-lcn~c h) LA SYLPHIDE (Act II) Matinee, 2:30 1 <. hl·rkn.,sky/P~·11.•t ... n11 Ttherku~ky/Rndojcv1t THEME & VARIATIONS Evening, 8:30 van I l.1mcl/Bb11dl vnn I l.1n1\.·l/M~d\,111 T l t<l!T~NOW .11 M1111 t '""' )l.h1111.1IA11 .. n,,,·,,T,11.1u J fi1,l!fl,I111'11 l~,I\ h l\o\ 11lhH' I 111l11 .. lit I 1t1J f•11td111-C,, l 111 ( 213) 436-3661. I . ... .. . ... . . ... EN-TERTAINMENT / INTERMtSS10N·--. llON 1"'1flll. 11' t '' , ............ . •••rau•?• ••· • ••• • .. 1•» wooov 4U.£H s "AMA.t~lY BfflUJAHT" ..... -................. _ Ptwa (R) ''THE BOYS FROM BRAZIL" .... ,....,.. , ,, • 1 ht I tt. • t•. ft ft ••'11w•' OI J II, t .-,, R08ll\I • o:m~~~:.c: llU.~N 4 SUPER.NAN I 1•·· ••• " •• ~· ICf: E~i.STLES S.an Conn•ry ''THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" "THE LATE GREAT PLANET EARTH" (lllO) ttOlt-l'lll , ... .. ~,-, •. , ... . , .... . ... O•IY PIWC ...... W Patridl O'~K Jom M. Goodman, left. and Norman E. Johnson wffh plans tor The Experience Center, a new science museum. Infant ~eari ng 'If a baby cannot hear, it has probably missed the opportunity to acquire language instinctively. ' VISALIA <AP> -A computer built by volunteers tests sleeping infants here to insure they won't spend a life isolated by deafness. Dr. Philip Peltz man, the program.,s creator, hopes it will help in early diagnosis of deafQeSS since an infant's auditory system is almost fully developed at birth. It is believed that a language code is developed between eight and 12 months afte r birth. "DEAFNESS IS THE most devastating of all handicaps," says Dan Patterson of Atlanta, Ga., national director of the Infant Hearing As- sessment Program. "'Hearing is a basic sensory learning tool. If a baby cannot hear. it has probably missed the opportunity to acquire language instinctively," Pa tterson said a fter studying the system at Kawellh-Delt.a hospital here, one of just three pilot programs in the nation. The others are at Mt. Diablo Hospital in Concord and Daniel Freeman Hospital in Inglewood. "Nationwide, we have just been Jetting deaf children slip through our fingers," says Peltzman, a researcher at the University or California, San Francisco. PELTZMAN'S .. MINI COMPUTER" was designed by a Paclric Telephone Co. engineer, refined by Bell Laboratories volunteers, and built by the Telephone Pioneers, a tlub of re- tired telephone company employees. Kaweah Delta was chosen for one of the tests because of its neonatal care unit, its rural population, high birth rate and enthusiasm of the local Sierra-Pacific Telephone Pioneers. THE TESTING PROCESS begins when babies leave the hos pitaJ. Their parents are given questionnaires pertaining to family histol')' of de· afneH or hearing lmpalrment, lnfant responses to certain audJo stimuli. whether-the mother un- derwent Jong bours orlaboror had to be assisted in <See INFANT, Pace CZ) ( Happening s ) Gift For Youth Coneerts The Orange County Philharmonic Society's Youth Concert Programs will take place again this year, according to the women's committee. They are being made possible with a gift from State Mutual Savings and Loan Associa· lion and its president, Howard A. Siegal. The monies will be ticketed toward busing the stu· dents to the concerts. The programs, now in their 24th year, have received the Disneyland Community Service Awards in Cultural Arts six times and more than a quarte,r of a million students have been expose<j to classical music through them. Good Citizens Four Ne wport Harbor area high school seniors received Good Citizen Awards from the Col. William Cabell Chapter bf Iraughters of the American Re volution during a tea in the home of Mn. Fnftk Marshall. Balboa. Honorees a nd their parents are are Gregory Lowllz, Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Lowitz. Newport Beach ; Carolyn Scrantom, Mr. and Mrs. Cbarles Scrantom. Costa Mesa; Todd Pickett. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Pickett, Balboa Island: Habert P. Schroer. Paul E. Schroer, Costa Mesa. Presenting the pins and certificates was Mrs. Frank Undner, Good Citizen chairman. Also during the tea . Mrs. John Dean Boggs and Mn. Harold H. Cox were honored for 50 years of membership in DAR. Honored guests were Mrs. Herbert H. Ertel. Mn. Le Roy C. Kaump and Mrs. Robert Nelson, all state officers. Ski Honor Gau Krfelow-Showalter, a Newport Beach resident, has been named Miss USSA <United States Ski Association). She is a member of the ~alboa Ski Club and represented the Far West Ski Association in the competition in Crested Butte. Colo. Miss Krielow-Showaller was Miss USA in the M1ss International contest in Long Beach in 1964 . She now ia a partner in a catering and gill_ buying business, Something Different. Inaugural Ball Mr. ud Mn. Baroid S. Vogella of Newport Beach were among guegts at the lnaU1ural Ball of the Lo6 Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce in the Century Plaza Hotel, Los Angeles. Vogelin is a director of the chamber. Entertainment for the event was arranged by ABC·TV and Included a performance by Carol BameU and Helea Reddy. Music was pro- vided by NellOll Riddle and bis orchestra and the invocation was given by Dr. Bllb Graltam. Valentine Brunch A typographical error was made ln the an- nouncement of the Junior Women's Club or Costa Mesa's Valentine Brunch. Those wishing to order brunches to be delivered the morning of Wednesday, Feb. 14, may call 9S5-08S8. Grant Given The Calllomla Community Foundation re· \ A Center FOr Experiences It will be a museum with a new approach to the principles of science and technology. By JUDITH OLSON Of 1"9 O•hf Pllet St.t" Mosl museums are places to be quiet, to ap- preciate one-of-a-kind art objects that must be preserved for posterity. John Goodman's dream is to have a place where the exhibits are designed to be used up, worn out, learned from and touched. When oi:>ened -in late 1979 or early 1980 his dream, The Experience Center, will be the most extensive museum of i ts kind in Southern · California. . A lab-for children and adults, it will teach the principles of science and technology throu~b exhibits lhat call for participation, not just viewing. One such display, Goodman said. will be a three-sided room with shiny walls and floors, faintly green in color. After visitors enterthe room , a bright fl ash wiJI come out of the ceiling and suddenly the shadow of every person in the room will be frozen to the w al I. "You can walk around your own-shadow," Goodman said . "'You can make pictures of it." ANOTHER WILL be a walk-in kaleidoscope consisting of three mirrors where "the world is repealed in six directions and you see an in - finite number of images of yourself. This helps show how a kalei'doscope works." Goodm an's concept is similar lo othe r science centers in the United States. The big- gest ones in California are the Lawrence Hall or Scie nce in Be rkeley and the Science Ex- ploratorium in San Francisco. The idea was first formulated in 1933 in Chicago when the Museum or Science and In· dustry was founded to deal with the physical and Ure sciences, engineering and mathematics. Since then. others have opened in the United States, including The Experience Center, the newest and 87th member of the umbrella or- ga oization . the Association of Science- Technology Cente r s , headqua rtered in Washington. D.C. Such centers are necessary for several re- asons, said Goodman, who holds a Ph.D. in physics from Cornell University. "SCHOO~ HAVE a great deal of difficulty teaching science. It's hard to teach abstract concepts without experiences. Schools have dif· fi culty affording equipment and teachers are not accustomed to le aching in experiential modes." Goodman a lso said that he bas received m any complaints from industrY that graduates or United States high schools are not prepared to work in the science and technology fields because or this lack in education. He feels that '·science is an accessible sub- <See CENTER. Page C2) Above left, Henry Brandon, conductor for Philharmonic Society's Youth Concert Programs; right, Howard A. Siegal, program supporter. Good Citizen Award winners, from left, Todd Pickett. Hubert Schroer; Carolyn Scrantom, Gregory Lowitz. At right is Mrs. Frank Lindner. -cently authorized a grant of Sll,300 to the As· sessment and Treatment Services Center, Santa Ana, to be used for the center's capital drive. ATSC plans to relocate lo a new sile later this year. It provides a n alternative to the juvenUe Justice system through ramily counsel- ing and intervention. Lot Needed The SATCH Belles of Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital are looking for a lot on which to buUd a home wlth donated time and material, accordlna to Betty Belcleq. FUNDSY House chairman. The money raised from the sale or the home will go the the 1978 FUNDSY drive to bulld a four-bed bum unit la the hospital's critical care· center. ! Anyone wishing to loan a lot may call Ms.: Belden at 835·35SS, ext. 1274. • Seminars 1 I Several members of the Junior Ebell Club of Irvine have comple ted breast s etr-1 examination training through the American I Cancer Society and are avallable to give com· muntty seminars, according to Mra. James Reynolds. club president. Those wishing to have a presentation may call her at 559-1545. \ . - OM.YPU.Of ~,..,~ .. ,.,, ERMABOMBECK /ANNLANOERS /HOROSCOPE Call tlie Paper ...... ... We. PUBUC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS aus~HS NAM8S'fATIM,Nf ''"' ··•-111 ..,_. ., ....... llllM"fnat -·----P UIUJC NOTICE PU8LI NOTICE 0 An A N You H' b ee n • fnQnd t o • W'6ilr e1~c•. rnnll•l ma td . f1rrmen , pohcem o. ne>W•lJllper l'lrnerr.. po tm n and tlllCI dm•t>r: Nuw wltl vou pit' e •uy • 11-.d wCM'd for u. "omt•n who •re actuoll) )our •·o "-\lrkt11 lo &t &\•nst• • •• La•ders Toga Time At College HIW~T HOM~ LOAN Tlt(ISf Ht lAI, Htw!llO'IT HOM LOAM TltU$T •U tel, NPllOllT HQM LOAN TltVST ... IC)+' H•w...a1u HOMa LOAN TltUS US (Oi i HEW-0,_T ~ LOit.H T"lnT •M It>. NIW .. OltT MOMI LOAN T9'UST ae1 '"'· Ntw...altT HOMI LOAN TlttJtf •• IOI; H•Wl"OltT HOMf lOAN TltU6T ltt 1111; 11 I am a l;HX OP'C!r .. lor for a o<>w l)Oll)t•r In lbe iftd"t.' l No • tlt" "'ou\d tM!ht·H~ the qut>SUOnll -.~ .irr skt"d I hOJX' )nur <·otumn "'"' http f'dU('.tlt' ome ()( thow folk& out the.... It ~'UUtd ,un· lmprove lhu qu lily of our llvM Kut!i <'Ull to .. .,k who wa& Pr~-.uknt 1n 11..: 1 Th11y w~o wur1 t lo knov. "h.11 l\m\· the• ni u' '" .. turl' al)t.I 'f<h 1t 111 pha~ •n.c Wt-are f'lrlN"t• d lo kno · U lbrre af'() ny mon• RlrcUH It fl In "that bl~ dc-r.ar\mt>nt tort' .. Pt•op f" phonto and .. for the n nw of tbe belt ~nu t tn town 1.. •t ~ k l 1ot . c•ll from 1 woman who ~ 11.,~d af I S.: n1•y, of o 1t1.1od 1foctur y,hn ltHtld rt• mov~ b r cur114 ••• Infant c •~rom Pac~ en dcllvcnng lhectuldorh11d G rmanme~ll'll while pregnant The cards .art> returnt!d to the ~pttal every four montm Wllll lh" bi.by 11> one ye r old Tramed volunteers asbeSJS the qu~&tlon ruur~11. ~nd the f1tmaly physician is notified 1! :.iny mdkate a baby may have a tendency lowtud a hear1ng 1mpa1rmeol wmr THE PHVSICli\N'S and parents' •P· proval. a test o( the buby's hearing using Peltzman's mnti computer ts ordered Electrodes altuched to the sleepmg baby's sc-.~p carry clicks to the child's brain and the bra.in 's responses to the cUckB are fed back into the computer which are recorded on tape and analyzed. Babies are tested while asleep because muscle movemen~ interferes with the computer picking up braih waves If a bearing problem ts found, the baby'b parents arE' told where their child can gel bpecial help TRE MT. DIABLO program, in operation for more th<tn a year, has diagnosed seven newborn infants with hearing problems, and one ulrc..•ady is wcarin1t a hearing aid. ••• Center t From Page Cl> Jt:Ct " and that the Experience Center will help bridge the gop. He hopes the center will be "a place for ll'arning to happen instead of a place for stU· dents lO be taught." For "serendipitous" teaming to take place. "two conditions have lo happen,'' he added. "People have to be interested and therefore there have to be a large number of exhibits. "The concepts are not to be exhibited just once. You have to have 5 to 10 exhibits so pe<>ple will begin to generalize for themselves. HE ANTICIPATES that slightly more than half or the visitors to the Experience Center will be children and that "hundreds of thousands of people" will come each year. Goodm an pointed out that some local schools now send their students routinely to The Exploratorium in San Francisco and therefore his Experience Center is "a valuable and miss· ing resource In Southern California." He plans for the Experience Center to grow to Include many more assets and a much broader program to teach "all manner or useful things One of the concepts is a pubUc laboratory where persons interested in working on inven· Uons or performing scientific experiments can do so under conlroJled and supervised condi· tions with all the necessary e(\uipmen\. IT ALL WILL happen when Goodman finds a place for the center and the necessary funding becomes avajlable. He said he has received sup. port from major corporations In Southern California and has several places in mind for lhe location. Goodman anticipates that il will take $700,000 for Lhe first year, or Phase One, which will have 200 exhibits in 40,000 square feet of gallery space. "Ultimately we envision a program which wiJl require nearly 10 times the Phase One pro· gram area as well as reaching into the com munity wUh various traveling exhibits .and pro· grams." The board of trustee!! includes president John M. Rau (president of David Industries, Costa M esa), Ann L . Mound, Alfred Bork. Thomas Key, Robert W. Howard and Charles c. Moore. Goodman is founding director and o member or the board or trustees. Further information Is available from Goodman at 645-0201. H, P\4.-a\t•o forbid, lh1• p pur ahould le \'tl aoml'thina out. wet uet uUtod uw1 >' oam In thu lx"HPk rr II hnr11wM lo tw Ann l..!ndt>r ~. Uw board I I p h t -:i u 11 I I k t: e Chrl!ltrlWI trt•t• We-a l tbrl'at.a from people who •er a01. · 11 lhc column t"'n 't in tomc>t nw., wt 're cant't'lllnfl uur MUb:4l'tli,i tlCJrl W h t> n t h t• r c a r a hockt•y g.am~ ... or f()Ot bull 1umt''i, or basket btill Marne'>, tht'y call us • rnd .,,, .mt t() knuw the ~t·on· lf th(•y hf'ar on TV about a ftrt' an town, thtty call a nd uk. 'How 's the fire com· tnlt ., '· On t'lt'dion night WC get hundrt'<is or callll wt.1nt1n g to know , "WhO':; uht.>Jd?" I 'II bet no one would believe we ure bother~d hke this with stuff that hai, nothing to do with ·our Jobs. So please, Ann Lanrlers. print my letter u nd do a lot o f 1wwspapcr t!'l ephon~ operators a bag favor. Si n cerely yours - t .. ov E MY WORK. BUT OH THOSE PEOPLE DEAR LOVE: Hf'tf''S your letter, along with my sympat.hy. I go along wttb almost every. thing you complained about -but I bope your PBX board conllnues to llgbt Up like a Christmas tree when they leave my column out. Or, II It looks a Jot s horter than usual, I hope you get plenty of complaints. Put •em through to the managing editor and let bim sweat with ll. P .S.: l 'lJ bet plenty of papers around the coun· try drop this letter. lf YOUR paper prints It, you've got a rtve·star, straight-arrow t.aff. Ctrporet• "'"'· N-1110f1 IH<ll, CA.,._. NtWOt<"t Htm. LHll lfl(., • CMllorlll• CMllOr.Clon 'fllll WV-I\ COndllCltcl Oy • cor-llOHllon NtWl)OttH-t.OM lft( CortlUO-.. Prea COUflly Cle'k of Or.,,.. C:-tv Oii J._,, "·""' PMIDl1 ·-------,..,.,. Pllbllslled Orell09 00.tl 0.111' PllOt J•11. 1•. n.JO. Feb.•. 1m T b &t n k '> t o Lb e they call al the house ---------r.o p u I nrJ ty o( movlu and uk <or "Suds" they PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 1kti ·Paper Chase" and d all e d the w r o n a --,-1-cn-Tl-out-.-111-,-"-.. -, "Anlm~I Ho use," number. tell'vlslon will 1(0 ofl this I want to believe the NAMUTATWMINT SU .. HIOll cou1n OP TMI l)l'll on on a rollege kkk two hollow eyes and the w~::.~0~~'"' Penofl' .,. 601119 ITA.,.MCALll'OltN•A ~o• Th\' lwo movies, both pale face are from 1.u1111AocHO£svc ,.mA1tJ1• TM•ClOU..rv..:.::•ANO• do.!llng wl\h \he SlUdylng into the wee •norlAOr.,HIH\1l"910118e~ll,CA. NOTICIO, MIAllllNOOP .a i \ h f'h · .,.., lllaTITIQtil l'Ott "oe.AT• 0" Wit.I. ac•ucm c commun t y, ourso \. emorrung. J•m .. Merlin ~Alldrtw, •·SSJ ANO &.•TT••• TISTAMINTA•Y hJVe clearly divided I want to believe .•. AltUIHlrl• Of., Hllftll"9\0ft e.acll, tlOll AUTMOllllUTtON TO AO· .M ( It l 'b t I k bett CA .,...0 1 Iii I HI M-4. u H 0. • T". P8fC0U> 0 C)O ege S U U DOW er. oneld W.$ley RC1d9tr\, l1!11 INOl .. aNOINT AOlllWNllTltATIOH d"' t • t I k LL t th Me~• St .. Vortwi Linda, CA f211M di s tiho wo group!! now wa no mo er T"'' 1111,1,,." " condutt•d by • o, •STATH ACT . those who con s ider in her right mind should o-Mra1oartt1tur1111. Ett•te °'WAI.TEA s. Pe:Tl!RSON · · P u p er Ch as e · · a ever pay a surprise visit T"'' :.= ':'.~:; .,11., 1.,. J'!.o~ MEAE11Y G•vEN 11\411 documentary of campus to her son's room on county c1mt °' °'8'19t c-rv on MARGOT 11 PETERSON M1 Wtd I r d • • A · I Jenuary 11, tm. ht•tl11 • .inion ~ Pn>blt• of Wiii t e an n J ma campw;. ,1'"" end itw..w;• ot ~" Tu terntnt•rv House .. science fiction I know for her own PUblhMd Or'tnOI CO.ti O.lly Piiot, to .... Petltlonw.,.,, lor eutllO•IHlion and those who mental health she J•11·1•.u.JO -Fe0.•.••1' 10 4141"'1"'"tf' ""°"r u.. llldfOeN)tf't ,,. tt •d"''"''''•tlon O! E1tatu Act, ••· believe Peter Pan had a should never ask, "How tenMA 1o w111ct1 it -'°' ,..,,.,., wire in his back and thut long has it been since 1 P<trtkv••n-•,..t"'"' urne •nd 1>1•• PUBLIC NOTICE ot tie•••no ,,.. ,._ 11.t\ ._,, W'I fo• things haven'\ changed you've washed these F..,...,.,.,~.m,.i1ooo•m .1n1i.. a bit since they went to towels?" ir1CTmounusiN1H ~~~,: ~=~ 7;,~.0!,,.':;~ school. -I know that the pa· Miw• STATlfMINT lfl n. c:•tvaA *'• A11• c.111 ....... 1 am one o r those 1amas she sent with him °"!1~~10•'119 o•rso" 1• d01119 o.wo.sw-rv?t.1m parents who wants to in September will be the • HK~ HOME 1~P1tOVE~eNT, ~~!~No., believe. same pajamas that will :i.~~i.~00"""1'$1 1" Hu"' "910n LATNAM&WAT1C1Ns I dwant tot bel,ileveh my re1tutrn inthJ~e ••• com· si . :1·~=~~ Jr., 74«0 ""19 ~=--~= son oes no wn e ome p e e Wl pans. r111s """""' ,, ~""' by •n Ttf1 ..,,,,. because be ,dropped a I know be will never lndtvidu:)1111.mN.~'Jr A=-=~=-~'' O•llv P1io1, Bible on his fool and know t he school song, "''' ,,.t_I •.tt 1111'd •'"' n. J ...... ,,_,,_., ,.,, .. ,. cannot hobble to the the school motto or the county c1er11 o1 Ot•"99 eounw Ofl - mailbox to post his tel· stale flower. Jenu.rvM. "" ..,...,. PtJllUC NOTICE ter. I told my husband I PvblltMd 0r.,. eoeu o.uy P11o1 -"'CTITIOUs au siN•ss I want to believe he In· h~d a dre~m the other J•"· 30• FeO. •· "· 20• "" 3'°"" MAME sTATSMaNT ter cepted his grades rught in which I sa~ my PlJBUC NOTICE bu~,,~~~~·1119 "''0 tU •r• 001119 before they (ell into our s o n s I t l I n g 1 n a SANO 1.EAs1NG co . 1201 w. u I I -' p CT Vet•, • 600 Ofcfn99, '-' '2W hands because he wants c assroom o sen ous stu· ~.~~~!:~.!':.::' w1111 .... c. °'11tnn11i... Jr . 1101 lo have them framed dents ln a jacket with Tll• lo11ow11111 ... "'°"' ••• cj0j1111 :i,o~·,,,..__ •1tJ, s.n1. 11,.., "' and given to me for suede patches on the bu''':~V8' Jo"" w Henoes11. 11m ee~ M th • D sl eeve with pen c i I PANE1. cuN•c. 1101 "'°"'· 54111 .. AnA, "'"1os o er s ay. • Nlcllol• St .. Hut1t1not0ft e .. c11, u T11r, bu''""' '' <Oftd11<tea by • I want lo believe he poised, looking intense •2•.nn*''~' c. J~nun '" n ~··1 _,_.P when a Prof Ktnosfield w1111.,..., E 0\1 .. m1111:r Jr postdated 8 Check for · ' tt Otlryvlf!W 0t • H""li"9\M 8H<ll, CA l l11• ~t.1-1 w;n 111"'1 .,,. .. '"" PUBLIC NOTICE MO\'tCI ~ CltSDl"Ottl ,U ... ltlOlt COUtt'T OP TMa ITAT• 01' CALll'OtUOA l'Oa TMI COUlfTYOPOUHOa NO.,...,,. Eafele of JOSIPH 0 FITZ PA TRIO(, O.C.a'leCI NOTIC:£ 1$ HEA£8Y GtVeN 'IO ltl• cre41ton 04 IM..,,,.,......., dt<ec:tent t"9t tll ~ NY1fl9 cl .. ,... ~111\1 ti. wld _,.a.ti ••• rioq111~ to the tllfM, Wiii! IM llt<tlS.l'I' VOU( .... , Ill tllt OUIC. o4 ""' <1•111 Of tM •llOW .,, tllleCI c-1, ~ to pr_.t tllem, •1111 Ill• nt<e•M•V YOU<Nrl, NI Ille Uft ci.r~l9...a .C f1'0 14•rW 81\td., COii• M•W c..flfoMI• wlllcll It tlle 11141<• Of bu\I~\ Ol tht ~IQM'll In •II mel ttr' Pt•1•1fllnq to Ille <1st .. t Of ••Id Cit' ("'9ftl. Wllllfll tow mortlM •fttr IN llnl puOl~ellon aA tllh notl<.e. Oalecl HO.Wry j , lt1' E_,,,A Flb!Nllri<ll -.....i,tr41!«0( Ille . Ell•.., Of llw •OOve Mrned~I ltOllltT A. IASfMAN J1W H•rW' 81,,_, ~SU c;..u -·CA '16M , ... ~ Atter•vtw• ....... .,. .. ,,.. •llllWIUA,.,.• .. Pu1111111«1 °'""* °"'"' 0.llv Piiot "•llf'IMlt'l•. tJ.to.f1, ,.,. 4)0.1' PUBLIC NOTICE HOTICe 0, DIUOLUTIO.. Notlu 11 Mr•by given 111•1 "'" P•rlner\lllp 11eretolore eah ll"O l>elwf'~n HAROLD W HAVEL •ncl ltAVMONO HENSON clolftQ busl~\ Uflder tlle !lrm .. .,.,,. end •hit 01 WPF.DS ANO COMPANY at noi M1ln Strett. NO "· CllY ol H'411lln910 .. 6"<11, Sl•te '1f CAlllOrnlt w•S Oft ti•" "1 o.v of l>P<•mber. 1m, Oinotved • 0y !m11lu.I COft~l I !Mild boNMll In Ille IU1Utf' Wiii IJoo tonoucled bV llAYM()tolO HENSON wllO 1Mll Ii. \Olely ..._,1t11e tor •II 1teMactl0<>s of -..1a bu''"""· ttw wlllld•••lllQ o•rlner f&I ..... , .. 9 lerm•nat.0,..1111~11,.oln Oat.a ~fl0, 1'1t HMOIOW. H•WI JOM,. GUlltlN AtterMylltL.aw It 11 A l'edtk CMsl H..-wo NlllOI.,..._ llMdl, CA.,.,.. PuC>llslltd Or-C:O.•I Otllv Piiot Februa•v • 1m 4)41·1' $loot b j kll said "Mr Bombeck •'1~7 COUfttvC1eRofOr9ftOICO..n1yO(IJ•11. 0 uy a ac e 0 go The answer.please,.. . 0198 p Hytor. 11tM. Walnut SI., 11, 1910 with his ti'e for the eve · Fou111•1n veu~w. o '1?709 Pt-· • . . "That's funny... sa1·d Tllh blltlrl~\ I\ conducted ow • -k th d f • JACKSC>tt. KIDOElll & MITCHEU. PUBLIC NOTICE ning a wee ey ress or my husband .. 1 h d a C>tM••• s-t""""'P '""...,' w 11-• -- dinner at the dorm. dream too where ou: son n1s ~=~"!"~., •'"' ,,,. :'.!.~'::':°""' s~~~:':;:'c!~~~~~A';':'1t I want to believe he was in a fraternity ~!~~'iy'i!'.~m~' Oninoe couniv 011 ,. • .,,....,tlHdl,CAnwo Tllf'COUNTYOFOAANOE needs a car on campus house that had to be .,,..,.. J•~u~~1~:,'F~·~a~~ 0'"11" Poot. NoT1u "~·:~~1t1Ho o" lo transport a backseat cleaned before they J:n~~.~C:~.~~1 0•11"3~;~! m..n l'UITlot4P011tP1to•ATEoirw1LL o r reference book s could condemn at. There •------------;::v"::Ol:C,~~A~n!~::t.';~0N" which he tried to strap he was surrounded by ' PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE To AoM1H1STH uNou THE to his back on a bicycle. st a I e rood . bro kc n su""1°" COURT ol' TME ~",0:.it~~~~'!hA::!:::!~:Ac~g; but couldn 'l. spra· nos ... the cha a' rs, and FICTITIOUS 8USINESS STATE OP c;U .. l"OlllollA FOlll 5'1 lfT seol "' "' NAME STATEMENT TM a CIOUNTT OF ORANOa I want to believe when bodies wearing wrinkled r11~ 1011o••ll9 iwri.ons ••• 001n11 HO.....,,, E1t•t• of ENtO c .. MlfLTON .. o• bv'ineun NOTICa Of' NEAlllNG OP ENIO CROS BY HAMI LTON . shirts. They were all in THE HEIGHTS JOINT VE N· PETITIOtf "°" ftltOllATI Oil Wit.I. 0.tHMIO. Conn a Jine ShOUtino, TURE 1, ld1(M4111,S..lfel05,NewPort AND L....,..""'S TESTAMENT•lt'(, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tMI ., !!> •• , .. " .. CROCKER NATIONAL BAN~ "Tora! Tora! Tora!" ~"· '-''2660 PO• Aun401111.rATION TO AD· former1v l,.o.,,. n c1tocic E 11 Su,.119111 ln~tn-GornoenY. • .<I I N IS TIE It UN 0 I[ Ill TM If ••Arc YOU sure it C.tilorn1• <orpor•llO<I, ldl Ou•tl, IND"',•NOENT A...._.IHlnltATION CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK ""' "' '" ,,... Iii.ct ........,, • petition IOr P-•• ot was n 'l Toga ! Toga ! 5ulte20S.~Be.Klt,CA~ OllESTATUACT. W iii •nd for 1uuance of lelt~t\ Toga! .. The Oevld E. CunnlnQNn\ Com· Estelt 04 Ml!LI E J. COUTl.E E, Ttatam...iwv IO tne pe11tlO<Mtr ""° 10, jMlnr • Clllltornl• COf'PO<tllon, SOS H. ~c••*· 1-~~ ·~i·• 1 ) ( Horoscope WEDNESDAY, FEB. 7 By SYDNEY OMARA ARJES <March 21-ApriJ 19>: You complete transaction. Securtty is enhanced if you refuse to sell yourself short. Your Urning ls on target. Some persons may claim you are striking a hard bargain. TAURUS <April 20·May 20>: Accent oo re· gaining sense of direction. You may be bar· raged by suggestions -from associates, neighbors and relatives. GEMINI IMay 21·June 20>: Obtaln hint from Taurus message. Follow through on hunch. You learn through teaching process. Review "lessons." Accent on finances. CANCER <June 21.July 22>: Make con· cessions without caving in on principles. You win through diversification. humor. expression o ( intellectual curiosity. LEO <July 23·Aug. 221 : You're trapped, un· less you create. change, make contact with one w ho does love you. VlllGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Emphasis on re· lationship that intensifies nothing is halfway now. Whal you do is a commitment -you're in all the way. LIBRA CSept. 23·0cl . 22>: Mlld·mannered individual has something important to convey. SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Look beneath the surf~ce -:-take nothing for granted. Long. range vtew 1s necessary. 8AGITl'ARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 l: News of investment opportunity should be placed under light of scrutJny. Be aware of financial ratings, potential. past performances. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22..Jan. 19): You gain through careful planning. You lose ll you rush or skip details. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): New ap. proach to basic tasks may be Oe<!essary. Know and don't be a sl ave to tradition. PISCES <Feb. 19·Marcb 20): Emphasis on reeling, giving of yourself, receiving accolades. '·same thing... he Tu,tf11 Awe .. Suite 21•, ~AN. CA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVl!N tMt A"'"°'~-· 1·0 ..... "' "'' •r Uncl<'r Ille 92705 JOHN COUTLEE "'-' fllecl ,_':/ • lnotclttldtlll Admff!IJtrMloft ol E•l•lf'' Sbru~ged. Sulo.ul Conuruct1on, In< , "' -111•-...,.. -ceete -Wiii • It-Act IP>-otlllt Olde St1 et >eql, ,.,. ------------1 ~ ""' "'" ,.... "' i.<e11c• IO""""'" '' .....-f~ lurthe~ /~Belbe \\bmanlbu wantU>BeJ w ....... Pc!>i·•••y ..... (..,,,~ I "tse •t 1!1t ll'l(MU ~IOI <ISMll 111« "~ Of I# tQrt hht Ot•tlo!ifd lfY°'41 l'O#ff\ 11""""'1 I"'°'"' Ml Wr"i\1111 vtfJI C.lll •..U1 IOf .... \oNI _ ......... """ "'"'Mtl6o<-••v-.. .,.,..ww ORANGE COUNTY 3 rowN & COUNTRY ORANGE (71') 547-1221 C•llforn1a <Of'PO'•hon, C.tnor. S..,t• 1ua"ce of ~n THl-tary to ,,,. partlcul•rs. e11d tllat 1M um,. ,.nd AN, CA Pf'lll•-9llCI IOr eulllOrltallon to ea-Pl•<• of r-rlftQ th!! wrne hit\ l>P~" .,,., Tiii• l>ll\lnt5\ " concklcttO by • mlnl\tu under the lndtpl'ndellt •d· t~ F•~Y 71, 1'19. •f 10 oo • "' "' .,,,.,., pe0ntnh1p m1nl~l••llon of E'1•t.._ Act, reltJr~• t~ cou~ ot ~rtrnent No J ol Sunl~llfWt\m.nt~Y IO Wllt(ll I~ tn•Ot for furfller wld Courl, •I JOO C1YI< C.nter Orov" .-llelde.PrfttOtfll P•rl1<ular\ '""" 11\411 tile time •IWI W~lt, In ti.. City OI S•nl• An• Tll1S $!4lt-• ..... "'"' .. ,,,, IN Piao of llHflnQ tlle -"" bffn Stl C•llfornl• C.O..ntv CWll Of Orat\911' County on Je<t tor F""u.r~ ll, tm. <II 10.co a.m. '" D•l•O F~-Y 1. 1'1'. 11. 197'. Ille c:ourtroom ot ~nwnt No 3 of c FltMff ~Id court, 41 100 Chi< Center Otlv~ ~~:.:NCH, Putlll111ed Or-. COe\I O.lly Piiot, Wot. In tllf Cll'I' Pl Sa,.I• An• 11talNJOMN, CATLIN & CLEMENTS .J•ll. 21, JO, F'eo. •· ll, 10• C.htorn•a ,,, w. 51.nll St., •?• __________ ,_n_1 oueo J.,_ry n. "" ..., A....-. CA "'17 P UBLIC NOTICE U•A 8r11Mll. At1lonleyt ter' P..tlt'-CounlY Cltr-Pullll~twoo Or~ 1.l>it'I 0•11ly P•~>t ,.AUL I' SMITH f'PO ~. 6, n 1•1' U ) /~ STATI MENTOllWITl4DltAWAL Jl!lolSEN, SMITH &ASSOCIATES ,ltOM PAlllTHlltSMI.. I WOW.Ire a..., Ste 1!94 OPl!ltATING UND&lt L.41~ A~. CA t0tl7 "'CTIT10US 8USINIEH MAMIE Tel US.11M PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie fotlowln<1 l)ef"Mlft 11•1 •lthdt aWfl A lt-ys t.r ""11t,.,,., •1 • 9tn~r•I partfler lrom Ill• Pul>h•.....,Or""I» Coit\I Oally PllOI, -SUl'lllt104'COUltTOl'Tl4£ o•rlnt ... hlP oo.retlftQ unde• 111• Jan lO,ll -F•O 6• 1"' ,,.,, UATE 01' CALll<DlfNIA FOii li<tltlou1 blnin"51 Nlftf ot NI & W MARINE WOOOCllAl'l, I SJI PVBLIC NOTICE tHIEC~~T: .. ~~lfANGE MOnrovl• $1., N••llOrt S.a<ll, Ca. -----------NOTI Cf. OF HEARING OF '7'60 FICTITIOUS 8USINIESS l'l!TITIOH l'OllPltOllATI! 0, WILL Tll .. flclltlOUI l>U\lllU\ neme NAME STAT•MINT ANO Ll'TTlltl TISTAMl:NTAltV. sl•t•m•nllorflllt1N1rlner1hlPWti flltd Tiie IOllOWlnQ per\OM .,. 001110 Ell•h ol JAMES HAA Ol 0 on AUOWSI tJ, 1'7S Ill ttlt C-tv of bu1h-.S• a• BR EWEii MAI JAMES H. llAE'NEll, Ora~ WAAOEN Pl!OPEllTICS, IS2 ()f><~'IWO ..:,_::, .:r:.!~· AodfeH or ,,,. A11tll l•M. N-1 ~~ ... °' '2'60 NOTICE 15 HCl!EBY CIVEN '""' Tommi• w Wtll!ol., IS71 Senl• W~1••r c W••d•n. "'' Soulll AV rH 1.0VISC 8AEW£A ,..., lllN Ana SI C:OSIA Meu ca '1•21 S11n•l•I 116?, Anallelm, CA '7eo. i..reln • pe11ll0<> tor Proo.le of Will "TOfTW'nle w w.,1,1.., M•rv1n H W•r«M,., IS2• Aul •ncl ll!Wll••o of t.et1'!rs Totement.trv · ftlle H• ,..~nu l •,... Ne--1 IH<Kll. CA '7fl00 10 ,,,. ,..,,,_ r~lt'r-ce to whlcn ,, Put>llslled 0 ... n~ C.on't O•llY TIU' bu•t,..U Is C-<leO by • m~e fof f\l<'lller 1>4rtlcu1an, ....0 lllal Piiot Jt" JO. l'fll 6. U, 20, 1'n Jn ,. 9<1ntr•t 1»rtner1lllP '"" 11-ena e>l•n of "*••lftQ ,,,. "'"'" PUBUC NOTICE IUNlttOlt COU•T Of' CAUl'OltNtA, COUNTY Oft OltANOlf ,.. QYI( OtMtf' °'· w..c s-.. AM. CA mot c.e .... 012-1 .. 1• SUMMONS l,_..llltlAOU 1 n •• 111111•-.rnaoe of P~lltlontr. CAROLYN LOUISE GOLLINS W"l~v E Warden, M' o.en ~I 1or rot>r...,ry U .. 79, 111 P•rlner . 10 00 • m 11'1 !tie court•oom ol Oep;irt Tht\ ~lnlC!TW'lll "'"' lllf'O •lln I '"""f NO ·,of Miki '""'' "' '"" (IYI( Co\mtY Cle" OI OrM>Qe County on J•n Cefller 0tl~w.t$1, In IM,Clly ot 5,.nle •S. lt19 An• CAllitoml• Pt .. IW 0..l•d J_., '' lt'9 T ......... Y ....... _, lf,Q<llN Ll:E A. aRANC.W lUU H•-..e 111..0 Slit. 00 County C .. ,,. Torrt11<e,CA_., 1 JESSIE MILLER Publl-Orefl9" Co.st O.tllv Piiot '171 Helt,,_ 91'10 • Jall. !:J, JO,~ '· tJ. '"' k•ll 114 21S.1• Httlyw-. CA Mn -----------hi ..... ,,... PUBLIC NOTICE .,..,., ttr· _,...._ Publllf*I Orenvt c:o .. 1 Oellv PllOI. J•" lO, JI end ,,.0 •· 19" l~ 19 PUBIJC NOTICE- lllCTITIO\IS 8USINl.SS HAMI! STATl!MIENf Ttle tollOWlnQPenon lsdOln9bvtlne" •\ RUFFEll'S UPHOLSTHY A Slender New You in '79 L.t,R$0N VACHT SALES 1101 W CO•ll Hlqllwty, Mtwiior1 llta<ll, C"\ .,~ f!lm~r J, I•"'°"· 1000 H~m1>51'11f~ Lent Newoon flH<:ll, CA '1M.O t~I\ .,.._.,_,. I\ C'Qndl;(ltd by 8'I Ill• Ol••OUal .... ,.w ... ...... 1'22 Het't»of 8fvd. Co ... Me .. -541·1111 ll'a February. In most every woman·a mind thtt means keec>lng your resolution 10 improve your figure whether you need to lose many POUnda of Just firm up, At lllllan Ballard's, It takta so 1m1e time and etron TiteCOMllllt..e II all begins With a profeulOnal hgure analyslt. We11 help you set your goals. check your figure faults. posture and bone structure. then determine vour fullest beauty Potential. n.,,.,. .. You II be given, at no charoe. a relaxrnQ figure treatment designed Just for YoU using exclu1111e lirm10Q and ton.no techn1Ques on 1<1ulpmen1 that does 1n. work for you. There 1 no ahota, a1ar'.lallon diets 0< stronuooa lifting, You're invited lo Slenderfte with Oanoerclze. a bOnus method 10 Increase circulallon and give you a more youthful attractive 8')Pearance ......... beg1n1 wl'l&n you do. You can IOse one dretS slut by neX1 month Tell ua the s1H you went lo be. we H tell you how long II will take and the coal tnVOlv.O · L1191 ....... M•tt It htyTe ... llft,.... SNCIAL IMTIODUCTOIY Pl~AM 7 treatments S 16.00 L.wwti-eHwi CALI.MOW Hl-.2444 El,,..J LMw11 '"'l •lale<ntfll •.o 11~ wltll ·~ c;ounty CIHl 9' Ore!IQe COllfllV on J-~ t. m• TNOMASWl1Ytl.ltlUltTON ,. ci.rc c:-w onwe. W.tt , ....... °"" .... Dlfly PMot ,..lty letla ,.,., Whllt'9 ,,.. .., rour looel ~, ... ~- l@b141N' Betty Palmer , or1ncsmoti. ol 7, loot • 2'4 YI inches and 19\.\ Pounds. ..&llui11 'B4114dt A.ult CONT~ SAi.ON . u, .... ,, • ..,... ....,......,.,,_,...,...w.t ..... 1 Jul•~ Matloff loat 1 O 1nchPa and 8 J)()IJnda 1n 30dlly$ ........ c.l~tU'U ... ,, J ' \ ' I ~ MO?t< TOUIOUO•\ O" 11,/Lli( T•Alllt••• Nellce " ... , ••• ~l;.elO I• 11•• fOdltor\ If "ANO•r l 1 •••O, .,...,,,_ ....... -·,." -··\ " 1a.eO """"' C...tt .... ,. ( llY I ca<te .-.-... ,_,., ul Or-~'*'~ o• C•I•'"'""' """' • """ ''""''*' ,, ·•~I I• .. ~ '° l'AHtlCIA I VAN llU 111111< •not Wll l IAM I VAN QUW.111" J•-l•t .. t - wtiNU ~ I\ 40't c;.. ... .,_r W••· Clly ot llvt,,. <ounh •• ,,. • ._. \/-.,. c .. iNl"'l•t '"" IW-1Y .. Dlt ''""''"'"" " "''"'""'WI O'"Ntf<'l All \I"'' In ti'°"*• 11•1"'"" l'QUl,,.,..,..tl •'Id .._ wlll 6'I l-•"1•0 p;.,11 ''"'• Wu ""' ·-a• H•li 1-EllN f'AC lOMV end l"'•le<t •I ll'° \<HUI> (OA\I l"l•1• ( llY •I I C.\l.t M"'• C-t•CllO. .... Me~•••l•lllClll\I• ... tM'-,, ...... , .,., ... ,.,..Wtl) "'•IM nn ., •ft•• ,,,. 11"'1 0•¥ o , .. ,,,..... ..,. ... 10 00 " ... ... Co It () V l H I \ I 1" 0 W COIU•OllA.llON o\ll>tltl•ul \~o '•"'Ith wt-.. tMla< M. l• IDl1 Ir Vll\t llvtl '"''"' ( lll110tnl8 l"ltll'I\ "IUU Oo "11111'111•0 lh ,_.,.,,, 71 , .. ,. 'D fat •• '' ._nr>w n to thtt , ........ ,,.. • ., OV-llW ...... ,,. .... •llCI cMidr•'"'' U9d try ttw ', ArOfHOI tut '"-.... ttw"• •••••• ,. , .. ,,. C>••" , .......... 1~ .. ,. Wltli.,n J \laft *''-'VU\ ~ .. ,,.,. J "'"" llu.t.11• ,,,.,,,, .. ,....., o •ove11 ucaow COllll'OllA'flON • Mitt I rviN ..,..._ • T•u• .. ~.._ lhcr.w Me ~Miii - Ncn'JCE •tCTITt9'K •Vl'MeM NAMatTATIMeNT • ~ ,.,_,,. .. ,_ .. •119 -t ,.." ., 14AUI 411TIST.A'f, 1~ Allei. l"lltk••• ~ """· ~w.>1 ""••Y .i.MI w1• nn1 "'*'• °''"" Nit..,,.,, llleJO. CA~\ Tll,. lboA.._M h Cendt.Ki.d Dy"" In CllvlOV•I --,-w.... fl\!\ \la\a<Nnt .... tllf!'ll '""'" .... C-.t• (lllfk 8'0r-C-..¥11'1JDI\ " .. ,., PVBUC NOTICE P1J8UC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE n Art8 Uojt .ACRAMENro t API A l\c.tvel"ly H.ill:f bus1 Elsewhere P110ll\NG Oran·1• (O.t" O••lr "1101 '""'*v • ""' 01 :rt PVBLIC NOTICE 272-"•--------- fllCTtnous •USlllll!H NAMEST4TlfMll!N'f 'file lollowln9 ~r\on Is doing l>U\l,,_UH flCTITIOUS BUSINESS lll6:v~~~ ~c'!'i:~~l~J!;P• nt.·s~m•m Harold ~e1th. huts be n appomtl'd to th ~ Calllorn1 a Art<. Council by A ssembly ~peaker Leo McCarthy k.e 1th. once tnv<.1lvl'd in the Old Vic Thl"atre Company 1n London and New York, helped found the Los Angeles MUSIC Center ruc:s<>N. Ariz IAP I Mlldred Gordon, CO· Julhor of 20 novel • six of which we r e later made into m ovies in eluding "Experiment in Terror" and "That Darn Cat." died Saturday of bone cancer. She was 73. H<Uo41HTATEMENT OevlO M•ftOOk lan. c /0 TSL r,,. fo4-l119 pe.sons ,.,.. doi"tl M•n•o~n.nt S«vlct\, 111 w. 11th ~\l...S\ •s Sll'ffl, 8-11, Gosla "'"'°· C.. 97•1.7 rHE GLASS CONNECTIOfol, 31~ 'Tl'll\ OUSlneu •• ,_,.., by an JrOA••,S l.AQUN ,CAmn 1n01v1ci...1 Mery Gretctwn x11m1<11. 31••s Jro 0 .... 10 Menooltlen 4ve • s UtouNI. CA 926n '"I' \l.otemen1 wH 111ec1 "'"" ,,,. S111>tM Seier, 2 .. SH•lew, ~ Cou"IY Clerk of Oranoe County on 8oa<ll, CA'12611 J•nuar'f ,._ 1'7' Thi& oustneu ts conoucte<I Dp • ,,_, QtMr•I l)¥tnlr~up. Publl\MCI Or.not CO.st Oallv Piiot MIJry G. Scllmodt Jttn 30. Feb. 6. ll.10, 1•7' M-1 . '"'' statenwnt was !fled with l!'te -----------County Clttk 01 Of"a<19e Count• Oil J..,, " 1'1• PUBUC NOTICE Death Notl~e• ~LY ROBERT HORCARO POl LY llOrft J••111•rv 10 1q1q "' ~,Id..., ""''"'° •w•y F~ ~ lffl 1n Slw>rklan HP ••s • Comptrotltr tor McOonn•ll 0ouQIH In Hunl11>qton a-.1ch HP Wd\ P•\I Prl',ldenl •nd m~"'°"' 01 Ill~ l>Ootrd of Ot~I°" to< ti.. Hunllr!Qlo<> Bl'<Kll Puol1< FoKthllf\ !>urv1vf'd OY w ill' EINnOr of ~tO•n "°" A~r1 P Oiiy Jr o l HunlHIQIOn Bf' .. Cll O.ugllttr Trlc1• Dyk~ of Hunl•llQIOI' S.•cll, \t-CllarlP• A"¥ of Hunt 1nq1on Buch SIPP O•uqhlt>•• Jae q.,..lyn W-ot Hun11nm°" 8Hcll •net E,._ M«kt>I of Fort W•Y"* Ind••"• 6 q•anoc1111ort>1> ~rv1CI'\ will bo' hrl(I •' Cll.omp-\ FU"*••I Ho"'• Wf'dnM,day Ff'Oruarv 1 11 AM P•<lllC V,pw MHnorl~I P•r" Nf'WpOrt B•ac11 will ~ •n cl•••Q• ot loc •I ~ntlO\ and OUri•I OOLOBERG RUTH B OOLOBER'G'; '""'°""' 0 1 Laqun• a .... ,,, Ca P•••f'd llWllY F l'OrU•N \ 1'1" Survlvf'd tw hrr "'n "'""n C.Otdbf'ro of LOCJYAd N1ou~1 C• Gr•v.,s1M 'f:'rwrl's W•lf ,,,. n.fd on Wft(jnl"odav 1-f'!>ruftry 1 1'7• <II , PM at Tne HMOO• l"wn Moun! Oltv• M•mori111 p.,,, .,..,.I(,.\ uoOf'• lllP Ollrrllon of Hbrbor l <>Wn Mounl Ollv• MOrlUMV, tosu111.1 .. \d )40.SS'IA LU80 J ... CK LUDO. DM'>A'd "w•y Fe1><.,.r11 S, 1•1•. S.rvl<e\ <trf' Cl"'flOit'IQ at H11rOOr L"wn-Movn• OllvP Morlu•ry, Cost.t M <>Y ~nu COHEN MILOAEO COHEN IMS\O'O •way F"OrU.•yb. ••79 ~ICl!<•••-1"'1 at Pa<thc Vll'w Monu.of'Y. Nl'Wp0rt 81'.Kll 6".1100 llOY COVINA I AP > f'uneral services are scheduled Thursday for Paul Buenaventura Lugo. a descendant of o n e of Southe rn Ca lifo rnia 's oldest pioneer families who died Monday at the age of 76 P UBUC NOTICE l't CTI TIOOS BUSIN EU lllM'E ST41TEMENT Tn .. tooowu'9 ~ •s -nq bust. ,...,,." HUNTING TOH HAqeouR BEACH CtUB ASSOCIATES.• tlmll .., D•'1~1p 16"7 ... k)onQuln, Soot• 8t-n WM,,..,\ GM-Inc H HuntinQIOI' Bl'a<h Calllomla 97~~ • Publl'lfled Or<lnQP Coa\I 0..lly Piiot ' KELLY SNOW, 111~ qpner"I F~Dfuary6, 13, ""' 4~1' P!i'1nt• 16"11 ~taot. ClrclP. H1rt1I· 1noton BNKll, C.fllom1a~ Tiiis bu'4nt'S\ •\ conoutteO Oy e limited partMr;hlt>, IC@lly Snow PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NA..-1! STATl!MEN'f PVBLJC NOTICE SUPl!ltlOlt COO RT OF THE STATEOl'CALIFORHIA FOR 'THEC:OUNTYOFORAHGE Tiii\ \lollPment w,9' 111..cl wtlll lht> County Cler~ of Oranqe Counh on J•nu•rv 30. t~l'I Tt"' fot1owln9 per~n~ •r• OOlno HO. A....n buslneu tts. ffOTICE OF H EARING Ofl PUBLIC NOTICE Fl"°'2 BIRCH PROPERTIES, 610 ~l!TITIOHFOllPllOB.ATEOl'WILL ------------Publlslll'd 0rilnQOJ Co.1st Oally Pltol, Newoort C~nter Drlvot, Sulle 1000, ANO LETTERSTESTAMEN'fARY ,:.,br.,..ry6,1l,20,77,1919 4S.-7' Nawl>O'f 8Hcll,C8lllornl&~?li60 Esl a le o r NAOMI NELSON James Palrlc k Rll~~. q441 Oecu* ' F~<llll~rl!lll Od .. f!, Vllta Perk, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\al C.llfornl497661 ROBERT L HEATH llas 111!'0 het'eln ------------t Ruoo.11 RltherO Frtclt\on, 191SI •~!Ilion tor ,,,_lo of Wiii and ts. NOTICE 01' NOH-RESPONSIBILITY Otarter AMO, 1111111 Par1t, <:..'llllornl• suancp of Letlen TMtam.n:tary tot~ Hollu ts ~ 91~ INll Ille un 92667 Pellll_,., ~-.K:e 10 which Is m.oe "'"'II,,..., wilt no1 be ~tble tor Tl'lls b<IS""''' Is condu<tlld by • for turt...., oartlcule~. ano that Ille •"'I' Otllts or tlallllflin contrac_-by ~rar IM'tnerslllp lime ellCI Pl.Ce of .....,.Ing tile Wfl'le "'1YOnl' °""" llWln our11etves °" or P•trklt Atll!y !las OMn Mt tor FebrUert 13 1979 •t attrr 1111\0att' • Tiiis sl81_,,t wits lllf'd wit" ""' IO·OO• m .. ln!fleccwrtr-.of ~rt· 0•1ea 1hlslnddayof F'~oruar,, 1979 Couftly Cterlt ol Ora"9f' County on ment No l of S&IO court &t 700 Cl'lltc ~ DuoMnn Jenua..., 7', '"' Center Ori"!' ~st. 111111t' CJtv of S.nta o,,.,. S. ~Ison "''""" •n• Callfon>fa '>11111,. Plt'f'°" Publlllltd Or~ C.,.SI Dally PllOI, Dlitt4 J-ry 7S 1'7' !i.litOHetllnci Februarvt>. ll, 20. 77, ••M •U-1' LHA. er.M.11, l.W.SS Co.st Hwy • COUntv Clerk LtQuN 8H<h CA '111>~· PVBUC NOTICE #IL.NI.Ao. BJOIUCLUNO PuOli\~ Or-Collst Daoly Pt.01, 1'5,. lta'fl'M St,_, Ste 2t1 FH>ruary •-1-13• 1"" ...._,. ----:,:-c,CT=-1-:'T.,..IOU:--S:--e-u-:S,-N-.E""s:":s--Ve" Niii", ~ '14tt PUBLIC NOTICE Cl"-1241 SU~EltlOR COUltT O~ THI! STATE 01' CALI l'ORNIA l'Olt Tltl! COUNTY Ofl oaAHG• No.A ..... 12 -NOTICI! 01' Ml.AlllNG 01' ~l!TITIOH RM ~llOIJATe 01' WILL AHO l'Olt Ll!TTl!llS TEST.AMEN· TAllY ANO AUTHOlllUTIOlll TO .AOMIHIST•tt UNOl!lt THE INDl!l"l!HO.HT ADMIMISTllATION 01' IU TA TH ACT Estate of FREDEltlCI( JOSEPH SIFFERMANN, el<• FREDERICK J S IFFERMAN, ·-· FREDERICIC JOSEPH SIFFEAMAN, aka FRED J -SIFFERMANN, OKease<t FRANK 8RIC[ ROY ,.__,, o1 Co~ld M••• Ca P.t\Ud ...... ¥ Fl'Oruary J. 1'7'1 Hf' I\ \UrVI~ O'r "" w11,. t-ia Roy ol CO\l.t M<-w CA d,....,,., .. ,.. Golrot "''•"" of ....,.,., r,. Sprong\, C.. •no ~OO<•ll Roy ot U'i ... F '°" Fr11n-T Rny of Cost• M•\a C• ..,,,., I-or..,Cl<llllOr•n Rt'< tlitllOI' of 11• r.,......y on T U.'CIA•. F"Oru•,.., 6 1'1'1 .i 6 30 PM •I Tiii' H•rt>Or L•""' "'°'1uarv Crwpet Man NAME STATEMEN'f Tel: ft1-131l TM IOl'-"'9 perwns •re 001119 Att-y *• ~letler bu.ilnen M -Puotlsllld 0..91191' eo.nt 0.11'1' Piiot, l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS P"' NT H F R LE 4 TH E R J•n 30, 31 Md~ •• 1'7' 3S1·1• NAMESTATEMEHT COMPANY, 1007 18th Slrttt, OKta T"e lollowtng persons art> doll'O Me':, C.I •-~A~-~-O Wll .-So Sin""~' as e r~" ~nor son. 9\19 PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Illa! ~111'-r, LORRAINE LAURA SIF· FERMANN has filed llerell'I a pelltloft tor PrObllt• 01 Wiii el\d for le«'Pr'\ T.rutm..,la<Y-tor A11llW>rlt•llon to A.,..,.lnls~ UndH lhe lnOl'c>enOt111 Ad· ministration of E'l1al~ Act, relereM• to wlllcll ts m•O• to r fur111er oartlcu1.n, ...o thltl t~ 11"'41 ano e>IK• Of llHrll>Q 1111' wme 11.s O.,,n wt tor Fel>rtMry 20, 1m ttl 10·00 • m., '" Ille courtroom of Dte>artmen1 No 3 of of tilt> Owt\lo.., ourt•I wlll ti@ on W"<J I nt>\CIO, FH>ruarv 1 1m ;'It' AM <ti St JcMKt11m C.lhOlic Cl•<l'(ll Wllll M\Qr T"°"'il\ J N•vln CPIPOf""'I lntprmpnt wrvlo\ to tottow "' H.,bo< lawn M•morrat P•"' <,prvicM °"°"' 1"" Olr~hOI' OI H¥00. L•--Mou<ll Ottvf' M0'1u.try ot Cosllt ~ -..0-H 'IA CITY OF INDUSTRY llMl'TED SMw.-. SMll• Ana, Cit 97104 PARTNERSHIP, 71)0 Easl .. ,. SlrM>I, Guy T C.uOlt. 1007 '"" SI ------------I ~Id court, at 100 Civic Otnter Drlvf' l"ICTITIOOS BUSINESS West, In Ille City OI Santo An• rtfACl llOTHUS SMITH'S MOlTUAIY 627 Main SI Hun1tn91on Beach 536-6539 "18 FAMILY Cot.ONIAL FU .. HAL HOMl 7801 Bolsa Ave Wes1mms1er 693-3525 PAC!JtC Vl£W MIMO«JAL rAH Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Orrve Newoort Beach 644-2700 McCC>aMICK MOITUA•lts Laguna Beach 494-94\5 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cdp1strano 49$-1776 IA&. n.IBGHOH FUMlltAL HOME 646-2424 Costa Mesa 673-9450 HUUOADWAY MOtn'UAU 110 BrOadwa'I Costa Mesa 642·9150 5Mf1K. TVTHIU..UMI ...ott'TUAH WISTCUff CHA.'1t.. Qermtory • Flower Shop 427 E 17th St.. Costa Mesa 646-4888 VETERANS ll•er•id• Matlo•al c ....... ,, .... ow OpH. MO CHAltGI for ...... to ••flH .,. .... -,. ..... c• hr"""'......_ SMITH TUTHILL LAMI w .. ~J:;-~t ~ .. ~1176 427 1. 11'111 St .. c..e ..... 646-4888 ' "" 140 s.tnte Ana C;,lllo'"'" 92105 CM la Mf!w, Ca 91&17 c.ampl>foll City 01 Industry, a Tiiis busl11eu Is <Ol'dv<ll'O D'r • •lllornla qf'ner"' parlne,.hto geMr•I P11'1nt>~hlp ~n('rlll PiOrtnt'r of City of lnOu"rv Petri<' R Wll\(ot! lmll~O Pi!nn('rshlp, ?l'.IO East 4111 Tl'l1s sl11fem@n1 w11\ hlNI with lllf' 1r..et, Sult~ 1«1, ~ta Anc1. Ca•llornla Coun1y Ctefk ol O•onoe Counly on NAME STATEMENT C.lllOrnlo T tit' loll-lnQ llt'n.on Is dolnq OUSI-D•teo Ff'Clruary 1 _ .. ,. "MS H LEE A BR ... NCH, MEFCO MEOICAL, SlO W Wll'IOn Counly Cieri< Ul,CO\l~Mes.t,CA"2o2L COHEN a Lf!WIN Mic ..... , Ernest Freem.Jn, S30 W, 1201 o .... St., .... 10~ J11nuttry 10, 1979. This bu\lnt'~5 is conO\Kled by a Wll\On :: •1. C.OSUI Mesa, C/\ 91627 Newport 8"<11, C..lllornl• 1'1'7111 This bu~~s Is conouctl'd by an in-Tel; 714-IJ:l..m2 PubllSlllod Or..,...,.. '°"'' Oalty P1101 01vlOual Attomnt kw: .._,It.._ 11m11eo 1><1rlt1enlllp Camol:l"ll Clly ot tnctu"•Y, a Cottlorn•• ~ral oari,...,..,,10 Jan JO. Feb 6, 13. '10, 1'1'1 373-7' Mlchlt"I C Freem;,n PuOllstoed 0.-anot Co.ut ootly Piiot Tiiis Slat-I Wd\ I/It'd Wl!h '"" F•b. s. 6. "· 191'9 .,. 7q ~"°"" M cam~11. Pttrtnf'r Thi\ stat-nt w.H Ille<! wllll Ille County Cterlt of OrenOI' County on January 30, 1m OUllYEA. MALCOlM 041-Y &VITTI Attw,,.yut LAw 4Jl>t M~ llolltr<•rd ~.,t Offk• .. ,. tile H•wpert 8Mdl, CA f2'6J ,,.,,... Pubfl~ cw"'* Coast O•llY Pltol PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTll'lOOS 8USIHl!SS NAME ST4Tl!MENT Th" lo1tow1ng perwn. ••• ootno ouslrlt'nas PRIME TIME ACTION, 6UI IC11mehe Clr<1•, Yoro.o Lino• CA .,, ... Loutw Moolll•rt '631 1(1 .. neha Cirri•. Yorba l•ndll. CA '16!!1> e~l'l'ft Roy, tlS7 H8rttof Blvd Y101,Costa~.CA 9?1>.>6 Feorw,.,,•. IJ.10.21, 1m •S1·1" TlllS bll\lnt'S\ '' condurtea 0\1 • -------------1 'llt"f'r•I oartnl'r\ll•o PUBLIC NOTICE Ev~l'll'I Roy 'Tiii~ \1411-1 Wll'i fl""' Wllll lllf' County Cit''~ ot Orcll'Q(' County on NOTICE OF DIS$0LUTl0tt JMl""fY 11, ,.,., 01" PAllT'NEltSHI.. Fl090t7 PU~~!~f ~o ~~!. R~r.s G::~.: Pu041\toed Or-Coots• Oalh PtlQI Con>cH•llon~ coo. 01 ,..., Stal" ot J en. 1•· U.lOMIO ho•·''"' IS.7<1 C•lllo rnl&, 1na1 Ill• Gener••-------------PttrtM~llip ol NANCY SUTULA a1'd OOUGlAS ACUFF, Cio!Mrat Pariners PVBUC NOTICE enq&9e0 In l>llSllll'SS In Oranor-COUtlly, 1---------c., 111ornl11, undt>r lllf' nttme ot l'ICTITIOUS BUSINCSS DESIGNERS IN GOLO, wltll lls prln-HAMESTATl!MCHT cl pal e>la<e Of~~ at 234 Ettsl 17111 Th~ followl119 l>f!•loOn, <Ire dOtno Slrt'tl, Suite H, ~ta MHa. Or~ ous1~ss es· County, catltornla,wasOISSOlvedasol ARCHWAY VE NDING ANO Jttnu•ry 2', 1979, end that 11111rt!.tflff AMUSEMEN~. lfff SUperlor, Costa "° pef'SOI\ "80 .ovtllorlly to 11\Cur IMIY Me\a. CA o041~1k>M tor MIO fOrmer firm, Tiii' Cll•rles E<l'tltanl WHr, 4171 B narnes of llll Pllf1nen and tllelr PfacH Hllerl•, Nf'Wl>Ort BellCll, CA <n66J of r-esto.nce11reas follow~· Paul MalllltW An<ll!t<en, 10 6'md. N4NCY SIJTULA, lllOO Pttr'k V~w Newpor'I ffH<n, CA '116U l aM, Ae>t. IB, INI~. Calllomla 9271S Th IS buslnus I\ <onduCleO bV • DOUGLAS •cu FF, 212S lrvl1>e 99f1<tral C>arlnt'fshop 1'1 .. tnue, No. ~. NewPQrt S.ac11. Char""£. WMJr C:.lllornl11 '2660 Thi\ &lat_.,. "'" II~ with 1"9 DetedflllU?nddaYofJ .. -rv.197' County Clerk of OranOI' CWl'lly on DESIGNERS IN GOLO Jaftu.ory 11, 197'1 By Haney Suhrla ~101n2 Put>ll~ Ora19 C.0..sf O.lly Piiot, Publlsllt'd Or-°"''' OeHy PllOI Feoru•,., "· "" 4S1-7' Jan. 11>, 23, :JO, Feo •· 191' PU~UC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE C"""'2 NOTICE TO Cllll!DITOllS SU~f!ltlotl COUlt'T 01' 'fHE A"'"-ICATIOH l'Olt STATE 01' c:AUl'Oll .. IA ,Olt lltANCH OPl'lCE THI! COUNTY 01' 011.AlllOIE Wells l'lfVll 8-, N A. ha\ 11190 an HO A...,.. -tlcatlon tNlaO J-rv 11. 1'1t, £'1•1• Of MAOROHA ELIZABETH with Ille O>ml>trotlff or the CIKl'tl\(y PRINCE Oece..-tor•Nlllllnooffk eloDetoulfd•llN NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 tile lnlerse<tlclft Of Berrtnea P•rl<woy anO Nldllor ol I .. ~ nctmec1 OK..sent Crfflt Road, lrvlftf, Ore11911 COllnty, llWll all'*"'°"' l\avlnQ claims 999lnst c.lltoml._ the Mid -~t •r• required lo 11.. PuOll'hld Oranoe COatt Oally PllOI, 11,.m, wllll IN -\MY VOU<hers, 11'1 .Hn. JO...,, Fab. '· 1'7' ,.,.,. IM omu Of -<let'll Of lfMI 1100-e en· 1111.0 c-', or to pt"Keftt tllenl, wltll Ill• "9COSSWV vouchers. lo ,,,. UI\------der1 lgntd ttl tl'lft l•w o lllu ot -------- PUBUC NOTICE TROM & SAROAM. 2" M••I,.. Ave111111, Post Offke &ox m. 8alboe hlal\CI, Ctllforl'll(I "'61, Whkll I\ Ille PIKI> or bllslnnt of Ille ul\Ol'r1lonfld In •n mAlleri Clff1olnlnq to tlle Hl•I• 01 \•Id <ltceoent, wltlltn four monll'la eller Ille flnl publluillon 01 1111, noun Dalact February I, 1979 C. 4 .HIOBIE E1t9CUIW Of IN Wiii Olll'lt•OOVel'l•mt<IO.C~t 901TllOM&S411D.A.M ntM•rlMA-P.O, .. -abl ... , ... ,...._CAU..J let• C7HIUWU9 ""-"' tw1 IJre<Ww ,ICTITIOUS IUSllllllH NAME $T.ATlfMENT 'TIM' lollCMlllO Offtoll Is tlol119 IKrsi nHS H ' BRIAN IC. l(Nll'F, 0 0 $., PC., Oba F•MILY OEl'ITAL Cf!ttlER 19511 8N<ll OlllO, • H•. HU11llno1on a.atll,CA~ lrltl\ ICtf'll t<nltt, ltO. Oovtr Or N-port 8"<1>, CA"* Tiiis °"''""' Is ConCIUCltCI ll'r All Ill· OlvlC111•I 811.tft K ICll"I OOS Pe Tiii• \lal-1 .,..., lllfO Will! IN ~IY Clel'll el OrDllQIO c-ty on J•n ti,..,, fl117'U CounlY Cieri! of Ora~ Counly on JM 12, 1'79. l'IOIOU Publts""" 0rMIQIP CMst Dally Piiot, Jan. 16, 23, JO, Fee. 6, 1979 14?-79 PUBUC NOTICE fllCTITIOUS 9USIHESS NAME STATEMENT The tolkMlng pef$Cft 1, OOinQ bu\f.. M u as· RA I NBO W M ... ICER . a•o1 P•rlvlt'w Ln lrvrne, CA 9?71~ lr!'nt> P.K~O 8J44 M<Con""tl An , LOS AnQell'\, CA 'IOO<S This l>U\lneu Is conducted bv ~ In Olvl<lu"t 11'!M P«llKO Tiiis st.<ltement was nted wrtti ~ County CIC'rlt Iii OranQI' County on Janu.,.y 26, 1m. l'IOltlJ Publl\...., 0.-anqe eo.st Delly Piiot Jen 30, ~-'-ll, 10, 1'1"1 30-1" P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -------------11·7Ha SUl"EIUOll GOUkTOI' TMI! STATI!Ol'CALll'ORHIA l'Olt THE C:OUNTY Ofl OllANG£ NO,.._,, NOTICE 01' HEAltlMO 01' P'ETIT!Ott l'Olt ~llC>eATl 01' WILL AlllO l'CHit LllTTERS TESTAMEN· T411Y AHO F01' AUTMOlllZATIOH TO .AOMlllllSTl!lt UHOl!lt 'fNE INOEP'ENDE .. T AOMlllllSTR4TION 01' ESTATl$4CT. Esla1• Of NEIL A KINGSTON ~l'llsed NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Ill.Ill NEIL A KINGSTON, JA, hits lllP<I 11tre11> • C>"ltlon tor PrOIMte of Wiii """tor ts~ Of lM1ers Te<ta~ tary an<I for Aulllorlr•llon to AO mlnlsl~r undt'f llMI t~I .Ad· mlnlstrallol' of Es1ai.s Act ttlertl\C~ lo wtrlcll IS m•Of' tor ftJrlh•r 11art1cu1ars, •no lhet Ille limp a nd e>l1tce of ""er1119 t!IP ~""' '"'\ llllen s..t tor F•DruM-y 10, 1•7'. •I 10 00 d.m , In Ille courtr_,, of Oe9ert,.,.111 No 3 01 ~kl court. el 100 Cl•lc C.,,htr Orlve fllCTITIOUSIUSIHESS West, '" lhe Clly ol S•nla AnA, NAME STATEMENT Tile lol'-lno 111<son Is do4no Ml Callfornl•. neu es: 0•1.0 Jltftlltrf 30, 1m THE HFAD LITE, ,nn <>-. LM 4 . Branch, County Oen Mluion vt.)Q, CA 9167S RlclNll'f ~.NNaN OeJll"Y M. Br•m~. 11327 Oturle. HICkl!'f&Nl!UlANO Mission Vle)Q, CA 9261S tt6tt u,,..., Strwt 01!:;;!.~ ,, COfldue11'd by ... '"" S4llte - Dnllny M. Br•mble El T-, ~ t1la Tiiis 11••-t win llll'd with ttte ht: Ott) 7 .. net C AtterMtt fer: l"ttff~ ounly Cl..--Of Oranoe County Oii Putllltlletl OrMtQe C.O.Ut Dally Piiot, J-..ry2', ""'-,,_,,i,.,12,1~ •»1' ,, .... 4pybll"'9ct 0r*'Oe eo.st 0.lty Piiot I------------- J•n iio. Feb.., u. '°· ,,,. *-" PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE C"'4247 !UHalOR GOUllTOI' TH8 ST•Tll! 01' CALtflOllNIA FOii T'Hll COUNTY 01' OltAHOI! NOTla TOall!OITO*S .... A ....... J SUPERIOlllCOUllTO~THE NOTICI! 01' Hl!ARINO Ofl STATEOl'c.Lll'OlllNIAl'Oft .. ETIT!Oft POtlt ~•O.ATE Ofl WIL'- THE COUlllTYO,O•AHGE AND flOll U iTTells TISTAMEN- IH. """2IM TAii Y AlllO AUTNOlll~4TIOH TO Eslate of Nl4RY ELIZABE TH AOMIHISTall UNOEll TNE KELL V, Oec:Hte<I. llllD•~ENOl!NT .ADMlllllSTltAllOtil NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Illa 01' aST.ATH.ACT crt<1110f\011111Ubo11ename>c10Ke<1Mt Ettale of Tl~OM.AS MITSCH '""' ·" ---•"9 <i.ims~1nst PALM Elt, •k• 'fMOMA S M IM Wtd CIKl'Otl\l -.._,.,...,to lllt l"ALMElt. alt• 'fOM PALMER, 11•'11, •llh ~ n«eU¥Y llOUC.l'litrs, In 0.C.•HCI· the oflkt 04 ltll! <left! Of tile -,..._ NOTICE IS Hl!REB~ OIVEN Ille! Ill~ court, cw "° ""'9nt tl\Hn, Wllh ... tlll-. ltOSE c. PALMl!lt, lltt\ llM neouer~ ofOUCMI'\. to 11111 Ufl• flltd llet'llil'I • e>etlllOll tor ProtNIC' ot Clert l91'1e0 el LAWRENCE IL Wiii •l'ICI '°'Lanen Tttl•,,.,.nl•ry HARVEY, INC.. :r.o Hawpor'I Cenl•f •"" '°' A""'°'lul-to 4dmlnlster Ori••. Suite u o, He•oorl encl\, Under tht 1noe...-nt 40M111"trat1on Ca tllor-n1e 'MtO, wf\ICI\ •• tile pie<• of OI £\t.lt'S Act, "''''""" 10 Wh•<ll I• butit MSI of tilt UllOlnio-111 .. 11 met• 11'14HI• fOf lunlltr oanlU•IAr\, •nd lhel '"" DertAllllllO lo .... u latt 01 H IO M tilt llmtt...., Dlll<e OI llt41111'10 , ... "'""~ ce<ll!nc, '"•lfllo tour "'°"''" titer thl' llef ~ "'' ttw Ftorvary 70. 1•n. el first puDllOtlOI\ 011111l110lkt. 10'00 a.m .. II\ 1"8 c.ouf'froom 01 0.Hr1 D•l•O DKernl>llr ,., 1918. mtnl NO 1 of N kl court ... , 100 Ct•I< L ... V.AENCE IC. HARV6Y e.111er Ofl,,. ......... 11'1 '"" CllY CJt Santa P.f'Clllor of Ille Wlll ol it.M , C4111tonltt ,,,_ ttDovt llerned tleCeelelll Q<l le(I F~ I, "7' L"'WlllNCl t<. HAltVIY, IN~ Ll!E A. BRANCH, Hf Ntw"'1 CellWf °"" COul'tY Cterli S•lte•.. , CHAltLHOAa1t1TY ... ._.rt 8-<ll, ~lfenlla .,... "' w '""St. Tat 171411..._,J S.ntaAM,C.llfwftl•tDt& AllWMyNte11... Tel1 '1t-Mt,.,._ ' .............. PuDUQleCI 0r-. Coa" °'""" PllOI, flellnlery6, tJ,to,fJ, ,..,. .,..1. Publlllltllcl Oranot Co.~t 0..Uy Pllol, Jen. 1', U. 30, l'eo •. ,.,. P1101l\Md Ottl\Of C'o.t\I 0.lly P110C, 4~Y "'-..,..,.._ J•n It, tt ·-ho •. ,m Pllbll•i.t 0rttf191 CM'I DeHy PllOI • ••. ,. ..... s ••• , .. ,.,. ., i; 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ~. F~ruaty 8, 1919 DAILY PllDT -The 8'09 .. 1 Matkttplaee-11n me Orengo Co .. lt DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You C.n Sell It, Find It, Ttade II With • Want Ad ..., • ...., HovM• for Sde Hamn for 5* .............................................. ······················' EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTU~ITY .• W...,.'s Hoffee: All real estate advertised in this newspaper ls sub· ject to the Federal Fair H.ous rng Act of 196ts which Qlllkes it illegal to advertise "any pre· fereoce, hm1tat1on, or discnmination based on race, color. religion. sex. or national origin, or an wtention to make any !luch preference. 1Jm1ta- tioo. ordiscnmmation. ·· nus newspaper wlll not knowin~ly accept any advertis ing for r eal estate wluch ls m viola· tionofthelaw. BtRORS: AdYtriiMrS w..d check tt..ir ads daffy and~ .... ron innodiate4y. TIM DAILY PILOT 0 1sumt1 lability for the first in- cornct iftsertion e»My. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cienercd 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UPPSl IAY FtXElt 5 bedroom. 3 bath. bwlt by John Lytle Needs TLC but the price 1s ng}lt. Localed 1 block from m11l1on dollar custom estates. a soar mg 2 sl.01')'. open beam entry way with skylights & tndoor garden hes JUSl inside the front door Over 3000 square fttl or luxury livmg f''ull pnce S~.000. Ca II 556-2660 t;:SELECT TPROPERTIES EASTSIDE BEAUTY MESA DELMAR Cnsp & clean 3 Bedroom. 2 bath on a wide tree· lined street. A short Jog '°Costa Mesa's biggest park with tennis courts. rugbt baseball & mean- den ng s treams . The o wner h as already moved & is more than anxious to sell Fu II pn ce $89.SOO. Call unmed1ate ly, 751·3191 «=:SELECT I PROPERTIES 48R +den $69,500! Sunke n living room Bnck fireplace. All r e. modeled kitchen. Ex- cellent location Im· maculate bargain! Call rast to take advantage• 752-1700 [ i "lif ftiil MESA DELMAR Lvly' clean & neat home on a rorner. Quiet street. Plush crpt.s one yr new Kitchen remodeled last year_ No wax k ltchen floor. Pride of ownership lhruoul. Call today lo see. ()pen Eves. S4S·9491. Newport Heights 3 BR-FIXER! ~.. 1002 G~ . 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• THltlLLIMGl 210 Feet ot unobsttuctecJ view in Hitrbor View HUls A beauutul 4 bdrm home with luxuriou paneled ramuy rm + V>ew·Slde fornwl dtmn.:. Prie(ld below tht> marf..ct at$2W,OOO. 673-4400 ' HARBOit t\ I >I\'"'°" Of llarhor lnH•:-.tml•nl ('o Unmarried. n eat pro· fess1ooal straight man wants qwet furnished room or apt. near via Lido & Newport Blvd Non s moker. non drinker. Chrll>lhan 67U2:>0 TRIPLEX NEWPORT llACH CON00-$82,500 Ola.rmJng laq;c 2 UR 2 &, ~u1111y fa mily /dwlng, dose to pool & tcnnu . Yacei> park. l'lans for ~'t slrt'et to be3ch ! Invest now! ! OPF~SUNOAV t ~ 1'1~ Rig Dipper ll'nd or W. 19th St. tum r1gh~> ~~~ MINI RANCH ~lnco...I! near Newport's Bark Smgle story owner unit Bay • AJmost "'1 acre! No with 2 townhou.'>e design Quahfymg! Owner will rear units All with finance' Hol'S('SOK! pnvate patto. w ID hook Tait to Red CClf'IMt up & ind1v1dual enclosed w~ Us-ten! 754-1202 ~arages Co ll now1---------- 673-8550 ()f'tfl\J ·,, O • '' \ •u"'-1 "''I 'V I [~- ROOM&ROOM Unbehevabll' value' 5 bdnns + Jacuzzi! • Only S80. 900 ! Crack II n R fireplace! Entertainers pat.Jo' Can't last al this pnce!' Call 645-0303 .. ··~-~ $48,500 That's right ' Only S48.SOO for thts super sharp 2 bedroom condo With all the amenities Pool. clubhouse and beautiful grounds. Thts defwtely won"t last. Call Now. 54().3666 For Class1f1t'd ;-\cl ACTION Call a Oa1ly Pllot AD· VISOR 642·5678 Only tl'le 0.lly Pltol ,..,.. lall• 'rO<I "°"'I'S MW In \'O'lf IOC:•I community ... _,, Cloy umut.11 Is It Possible? OLD CORONA DEL MAR 4.000i-4. rt. Yes!!! Triple A. double wide lot 1ust off ocean Blvd. Formal living rm + family rm w/wet bar . S large bedrm!, eal·h with it's own bath. 3 secluded pnvate patios. Spiral staircase leading to 2nd level. 4 car enclosed garage. All lhlS under one roof oo comer I()( Don't let this one get .iway• Call 673·8550 JhNlll •)·•t\t tN I H·J t f [\8 1fl&HI HARBOR VIEW RARE SPLIT LEVEL. Double doors open tnlo this lovely 4 bedrm home. 1-'ormal dining room & livmg rm w/fplc. Family room adjoining fully bui It-in all elec k1tr hen. 3 Bedrms up with master s u1 te & added on bonus rm oo private lower level. Spectacular view of ocean. harbor & nit~ btes 673-8550 Olf"'I "' 9 • ti\ II.JN f(11f1 fV'lf.I• ['8181111 For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 S©\\oll~-~£~s· Thol /nl1i9uin9 Word Gome with a Chuclcl~ ------1-4. .. 4 "• CUY • POU.AM------ 0 ft0<f'Cng. "'""'' ol "'• to..• te•o...t.'-<I WOtd• be Jew tO ·~ to.,r t1mo .. wCfOI I NEECAM I I' r I I I lARCW ,. I I I I I . ~_,H,__0.,._C...,...P_A_-c,.:. Las vogos ,. such a wild I I I r lown. They e"ren have sto1 • _ _ _ maclllnH In the we<1<1lng chapels •a II you're nol taking I C U S N E S 1 • -•lreeQy. hj.--"l'.--.-1-.-1-1,---1,---r O (omQ...., tlie clMlle quofed br Ml•n11 •n !he """'"O wo<d ....._ ________ rou .;...1op ftom \lep No 3 ti.low Pl lNI NUMMRIO 1t:hR, IN IHf~( SQUAUS A UN!K:llAMftlf A80Vf l(llUS V IU (,(I ANSV.U I I Price just reduce d ! Giant lot. Walk to beach. One year home warran· ty, too! Call fast', 752-1700 SQtAM.LETS Allsw~rs in Ckls.sif1cati0ft 5300 ()11N Ill t) • 11 ~ IU'4 J1 I~ ' C&.051 t o everyth1n1t 1 Tnm.sferred seller will pay buyer's costs on thl~ txccutive Jewel: 3 Br. denllamthuge recreo· Uon rm. 3-car 11arage Now only '98.900 HALPINCHIN REALTORS 67$>«4392 ' SllK & FINl1 LATIN AM ERICAN INOIANS C S l L T H G l B R 1 L H A 0 L H 1 H M R £ A M E R I C N A S l V E Y A l V 0 0 T T A R N T C 0 A U T U W I R H A T R I P A T 0 R R I A R 6 Q N R I D S H A N C E A I R A A T S C A A L 0 N H E V H H E A H T R N 0 H C Z M E 6-ff RNIOEHTNEA S OUAYHOH~ U 8 J M Q A 0 0 D M A A 0 R Y L H P Y 0 E A U R H L 0 P Y R C 0 H M T T 0 0 T G W A I C T G A A S 0 Y E V U E A H E U S C 0 B E M W N Z E C S l E Y R 0 H C E P K I C A J 0 l T 0 0 H J T l E 0 T A R B H K R X N C A E B C I S Y R E T Z A T C N W 0 U I M P C R K L E A 0 P U R G P H L T E S P l G H 0 K A 0 11ttructlON' Hlddtn worda below~ fotwwd, beck·· Wlfd. Uj>, clown « ~ly, Find eed1 .nd box It In.~ Ame Areucanl111 Olmec ..: Ct4b A1'9W8k 0m118"1"' Ince A'{mll'I T•,.o ~ Maya Chlbch1 Toltec Ona Jivaro .. Tomorrow: Biiia .. CAM'fON-'111.000 fabulou 4 bdrm cu tnm t.ullt hum with f(rt> t \le o( n C. ~olf cour: •· P rn l) room -y./v. t b r. n r •twn room. formul dmmi• room. :J h th ~ lu ury p\,\:c1 ' n1 I ~,. flrl\ uh• Jininl ln nclo. ~d J>.ltio Lot nll•d cu1 qu1 t c re<'I . C fl u-, tod \ to ! Wl'SUY N. TAYlO• CO., ILUTOIS Ultt S.JH ....... loed M'.,IW>M~.,..,. .... T CIHTa, _,. t. 644-4tt 0 l?!!S1!f~!!SD 410 N EWPORT CCNT A ORIV 7St 0111 llCYCLE TO IEACH . from l h 1 .,, 1 m m tt t· 11 I ,, t e mulll·fl•aturN1 home ~1th 3 bdrm., 2 frplC!\ ont• m thl• nmmK rm .• that mak('s din int.: a ~Pl't 1ul ph·as ure . other fNHurt•' indude parquet flrs . f'luntutmn shuth•r!'> ~· oiwn lw..tmttd t•c1hngs PLt 'Sa \JHH'tnus 1 t•ar g<Aral(t• Wllh <•3bllll'l built 10' $172.500 l.otttted 1r "l«"" port tfetJ!hts you own the l an<I ~COATS & WALLACE ':J:J1 REAL ESTATE, INC. A LOCAUV OWNED COMPANY SlRVINC T Ht SOUJ A 1 ARE SINCE 1963 • HOUSI IUUTIFUL -Where can you find a 5 Bdrm. 31-'l bath home with pool, jacuz7i. RV parking, courtyard e ntry, large cu l de s ac lot. air conditiorting, professionally decorated and much more for $178.900?? Cal 54Ml41 and we'll show you. Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine Huntington B each-Newport Beach IAY VIEW Ccreet" Opportunity 1''1nd out ahuut thc• n•al esuitc sales car<•t•r 0 11 vortunll1t'S with The lte1tl ~totcri. 1.1c:l·ni.in~ 1>l'hOOI fet?ll cumplc•tely rdundahle to 'l'hool or your chml·e +-1·'tlt•n.,1v1: ~ales trt11nin~ pr11J;(ram uftcr hl·cnsm>i 111 .1:.sun• tJie hiJChest opportu111t11•., ror succe .. s Jo111 and :..111· c1."tld with the most out i.tandtng ll'am ol .. 111 l~~rul pro((•\MOnJI<. ... the businse<>s Thl· tfr;1t t:.6l11ter'I 1-'or mlorm .1 lion call Dl!rlc•nl.' t u1•. The Rl•al Estutc1 :.. 714: 640-2500 & foshi°" Island Too H e a u t 1 I u I h o m 1· wl !>t'C luded ynrd in DOVER SllORES Lr~ p<>ol, Jacuzzi. separate Family rm. formal din- '"~ rm, bltns inr-luding di~hwasher s.!!~1.000. Prnl cleaning gcurl'<l for He ultors. Ocvt•lopl r ... who hUVt' VU('IHH homt• .... bkl~s. olcl:I thul nt·«d 111 look good for future owners. ~nter'i, l'l<· Call 64.>7867 for more info fur t.tus servll'e Hcoson.1 hit· rates. mamt uv111I, lrt•t• ~· u1d1lla<•i. t ;o Carl~ Whatl'Yl'f { l' 1'':111 Holl 'cm off l I' m.irk1•1 With a . ~1fwd /\cl JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 WAii HI HONT llOMfb RE-'L EST-'TE 6,jl-1400 0 111Now'1;.i;.1, ;,4i7!1 Wont Ads Ca II 1;42·5•178 macneb /Irvine realty LID<>-OPEH WED & THURS P.M. 115 VJA WAZI ERS. Exquisite nl'w custom Medtcrranean 4 BR. 3 bath. f amily rm h oml'. Spl•ctacular mas ter ~u1tc. Extensive> use of imported tile brirkcd entry patio -gourmet kitchen -observation deck · s t -to-st location 3·car garage. $489.000 fC'<·. <S -119) 642·123S 644·6200 901 Oovtr Drive Harbor View Center I rvlne at Campu, Valley Center 752·1414 llEAl.HlAfr *FREE* CIHTUIY 21~ .... l:ttwt. c.....-s.11 .... .. Your Challenge & Success '79" ..... ..., MIKE FERRY Renowned Real E1tate Consultant Trainer & Speaker * unhmlted Income potential * lntematlonally acclaimed "2 & 1" Training • true career o pportunity -f'Gf reshments- THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1979 . 7:30·10:00 P.M. HUNnNGTOM IUCH INN 21112 PACIPIC COAST HWY. HUMn ... TOM HACH For Comptl~t"Y Tlclltts. Call or Crop By: Jll4M.MOADW.AY ~ SANTA AMA ssa.9121 . ·r rr "Every otnc•• 111 in{'ll'SWnd,nlly ownfd and operated'' ' LIDO 15LE Uuy \ ll''-' from 2 1>allu ch cks cnhancl' ~u torn arpuc·wus s bdrm .. • both t rud1111 nat h ml': hkt> n ~. Id <ti for t·nt rt nir Corn r lot . $.S00,000 OCEA .. FIONT Qu ht eran 11\Ut\~hlp In m ho~ trim o:.k fl<Wl t•t off this I ndm rk1 4 UH . :J h... homt· In 1111«"!.l loC'utlon. f:stnhll111twd lH'l''i & lu\\rt.., $4&,000 , · IACK IAY f''int• 1 ldrrn. 21 • holh fum1ly homo on rtull't t•ul dt· '""' <h <>r~t1Nt pool, pla~ huttw . lor ••I'<' SlfitJ.t)UO 1'<'rmo; IAYFIOHT ~·\ t•ral f1nt• h yfront hunu·-. \\ llh Jlll'I & -.lip AVALON • W t•ll rnn,tnu·tt'tl 3 UH. t bu. oak rluo1 , µ..11 liul huht.>ffit•nt. t•o nrr(>lP · founctutmn Flot., .11 t'<l $120 000 Fee BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 141 Snr .. fr D• 'v•· N 8 ol'> 01 0 1 sur!R-DO DUnD In CEE-DE-Em. Cthut':-; CdM ! > and clean as a whist ll'. la rs,?c rooms. spacious mas ter ~ulll's. new paint inside and out. quiet arl'ti. yet close to shoppin~. Both units s uitable for owner-occupant one is 2-bdrm·2 bath: the otht-r 1s 3 bdrm-21".? bath. Both arc well -maintained. Together thc•y cost S220.000 U~I() I RFAL l ORS', b/11 CilJCJO 2443 Li~t Coa\I ll111hwJy, C.m1111.11l1•1 M.11 .il:.o 111 M1 s,, Vo 111• ,,1 1, l11 1,<11111 HEWPORT HTS. l IS SIGNAL RD. 2 Bdrms . 2 baths, lrpll . spacwus family rm . 1k tached 2 cur garag•, "" large lot Varant, doM' to &chools. <'hurches & pnced at $14!l,500. Call to ~· b7J 3663 642-2'..!53 )o;\l(•)i R~ent changt·~ 1n V A regs may enuble you to quabfy ror SI00.000 horm• Joans with absolulely NO OOWN PAYMENT Wortd Rut Estaf~ an Oran~e Count.y firm spec1almng In VA horn (• loam We're the VETS truit help the VETS fo'or more Info cu ll· lilt Norton, Agt. 541-0800 Sell w1lh 1-:AS 1.-: • It's a BREEZ(o; Class1(1cd Ads 642-Sli?I! ---------- CATALINA VIEW Just .,teps to OCEAN- PRONT beach and surf' LarJ:t> 4 Bdrm and 2 Bdrm duplex In act 1ve rt>nl;tl area. $l97.SOO OH WATER w /Slip Commodious home on ON WATl':H. whc•rr you own the l:inil, and 1·an J)ltrk yoor boat in your "wutc:rfrrint ha1·k yard". lntcrl>slm.i :1 hdrm 11nd fomtly rm .I larf(e k1l r hcn. J(:.trdl·n and Pal.lo 5345,000 - Wl\TI IUllONT rtOMlS RE-'L ESl-'TE 631·1400 DARE TO BE DIFFHEHT Custom dcs1J{n home for people with Oare. Mov(• about with ease in this large family horn<' Secluded by lovl'ly trees $3.50,000. A COlDWIU. IA.Ml• CO. 644·9060 2111 SAN JOAOOIN HILL8 RO. ~'--------'-N_NIE_~ ____ T_C_E_NTl __ R __ O!O!l!ll __ ,,,,,~. CE 810111 ILllRS UOa OVER 50 Y[ARS Of srnv1CE IAYSIDE! In The Fabulous R ay~ldc Cove Co.mmunity W /Security Gate. Nr Prav. Reach On Ray. 2 BR + 2 Be. Original Model Hom e . t•'umished. Pool, Jacuizl. Cull To Inspect. ' SUPEltl· DUPLB On Coplstrano Beach. Each Unit II a s 3 n n + 1-· • P . w on n e r r u 1 Location W/Scclu!Jion & Leisure On The Sand Midway Btwn L.A. & San DJeno. Como Inspect Thl.!t Gorgeous Smng.free & Temperate Locitle. $750,000. ® 631·1IOG Lm.~ .. t 00¥91 DllYI ' A very uttractivc 2 bedroom front cottag with cozy worm firepJoce ln front. A BRANO NEW DUPLEX ls nestled nrrw>m~st mature trees on the sume SS by 173' !Hlc. Thr dupJex contains 2 Bdrm. 2 bath ond 3 BR. 2 ba units PLUS 4 N•r enclosl'd garage . Greut mc.'Oroo property with a reallst-lc investor's price of S205.000 •o•as llALTY 61s.2111 MeMV .. 4.ft .. a s,.cio.JIAJIA WlJsAml~.tTD.U an:t.L1ffJaJOll • • • Ent l''aaaloyo 368IJ K.lYtl"l!td\i l>r. ·Co1«3 M Mo YOU UC tho W lMM Of Two Ft-M Tidl.tt totht- 17lh ANNUAi, LOHGIEACH IODIO ut the Luntc 8l'Jt'h J\rcm11. 300 1-:. Oct·un Blvd • Loall licut h To claim your ttck(•tl., l'tall 942,~. l'ltt :t12 * * .. CAREER IHREAL ESTATE AUAun your rl'al estu\l' 1Jre1Ute now _.11tart the yc~r w1lh u new pro <ess100 floalunnl( exclt ln;l Telt-<'Ourse 200 l'ro w-um. thl' rnst nnd r My Wit)' lO pitllS till' l>lUll' l'X urm. C~ll for 110 uppt lo· day. Sall Real Estate School t\ 11ublS11llury or S1111 l'rn1x.•n11·" NO LOAN l"l':E." 1.sc1w ,;. & 9""'"' and 10'.4 <ind 5103Sea~hore l>r. NR 4IYI Jll.Smlne. CdM CJlAltL~QUINTAHD REALTOtt since 1!1<1G We Ust Mc.iltlple 4' < MINI-VIEW 4 Bedroom. Newport RJVlera 2 story. Jn area or expensive homes. ..... ,s'-d 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I duplx, lnl'ludln1e huy troot to t>fl t'XCh. down 10 11 pk.C 213/fM 3200 D""-lX Owner'• unit wit h fll'\•pll1t·• t thruu 2 Ult ll.. llu 1.111111 C:ull Mil~ for more dut•ll11 ~~HERITAGE . ' RCAtTORS Two 2 bdrm uoll • •-------• +owricr" h11l1•Jw11y . 11ellt!r will rrnunc(• $2&9,000 NEWPO•T HACH UAL.TY 675.1642 CoroM cW Mw I 012 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Top of Spyglo•• C.'U!lun lot Pion• tiOOO 'I ( home, .;r,·11t vu J:00,000 ~m> SPYGLASS SPECIALISTS a.Cllltff..t Soufflporl fJ lxod.room r nm II~ rno111 dining tOl>IO, llX lfh IMIW .;lime room h hl lul II U I> ll r I o 1· II l I 11 II I II f11IJUllHlll h fl)' I: f U bl> S3M,500 64~1812 OCEAN VIEW JASMINE CREEIC PLANV .. 955-3454, ..,59-0363 Reduced To SELL!! Pn111lle1101.1.1o Mu1ou Vurtlt• 4 b<.odroom 111111111 1o11 u ht plu1h 1nturl11r 101 m11I 11tn111.i. l11101ly 1 011111 , lln11l11c und f1 1 ,11 p,11nt Suokt.·n l1v1nii m um il3J.UOO HI\ It I Jtl ~174il.I TM BBL -· "HURRY" '1. \'t r)' .i11r1H111;1· M1·~u V 1• r d U h Ii Ill l (J II I.I hfl.t< 1111111 lu l llcal 11 1•1111, CflY(!rt•fl JH11l11, i(l&ll IU(J wllh 3Hill111, 2 liulh wvl muny othor 11dllcd foulun'I> for 1111 .. •ttllrll '"· 1111( Cu If !><46 5Hllfl I 01 ITlllf•' dt·l 111111 ~HERITAGE ' • REALTORS • l:;n11Uah Todor 2&.1 Ur CUSTOM I ACltt ISTATf ~w ·11tn1 rtrt·ul1H dtl\1• to "111anlk 11 lil:1lro11m I IJblh rrljj n\1un 11111111• 1 •1luult.'Cfoo ov1·r I .11 11· 111 r 11mbl1fl11 11111u11d ::Wplrlltt' 4 1'111 ICJI ">-' l>W\lt twiu,t•" ~un vor('h 1 umm.11111 .. """t'\'lllrt ll 1<1c1o11 ul 1uwenn.11 t 11·1•"' .U'IUfidl. & futh pu111I Ohl '"'hmot~ w1.ICJ(J 111011 t u111 lt!lkh Lo rnu1tt•r .. u1t.• (I., HI t n)l)m with 111 r'111"' "n tr 11 n I' l' ~ t o up 111· r vti11u11la11 Ow1wr ... 111 <-ooi.1111.'r hnut1c:1u.: <'.ii I for: "J'f!'!.lril t•,,•nc KATILLA REALTY 147-6061 646-9366 HO M.AIHTEHAHC f ~no.n111h V1llJ '1'ow11hou"· Wllh lt'llrlll), (111•1tlu1't• HM 3 Odrm111. :l1t IJ11tl1., ltedUCt!d lO llOi! UOO MULHIAAM 1.-ty Ae91ter 754-7800 . Cal_!SeY Co~ HlllTOIJ HAV~ <lvt•rtoot.. > wn1l.-"' t tirr Vll'Wll ~P•H IQU' "' 10..C 11•10! I'. t llo•1ll•lOOU, 4 li.111\, \dJJ11·nt bl.91d<& Olt' fut Ul 17.! ;b.J 'I~ "' • 11114 ~l ( llJ~l t11 ...... y 111 \ lllJ1t1· I' .ur J.At1l ''llA Ut-:A<.:U •!11 ~~T •DUPLEX* 1044 Ore.in ldcofbv.~.l~•t1 •••• •• • • • • • •• • • •• • • • • •• lot. ~uy •l'tt-~' lo bc--4' n TR~EVEL Nc'fd.S pa1llt m 1nnt rrt PJ.1"'. tdt'JI f1)4' l\f>m~ &. IEAUTY .nt•o m1• fl urry. unl1 OHt.Y SID7 900 $~.IAAI Pool, sauna. jal·uzz1. ten----------rus couru.. Eal in kitchen nAH t 11µl1l ll'Vt'f 2&.J l'IH l(drttlltt . frpl1 "· m1<·rowJv1•.,, ~· •·••nhouiw windows. pool. b lJU TENNIS cout1 C'oll1•y1• Park'\ ~ri::lllllll' ~·~~Jlty h 44r.ll n~I 4 bdrmi. J b.i. OPEN SAT !>.l:'li U 3 + uxu formal dining. JASMlt-'E CREEK FUil pnce$84,900. Hurry, Vfli:W frml din. lit(• lmly rm 1w<.:lll<JL tT \ w/bnck frJ.t lt• RUI 1111 SlJPfo.H «ha.nmng ? HK call&46-4477 J..4 955-3454, Q. K€Y ..,, Jo'rom S89.!lSO 646-0061or9~1920 fkveloped by Woodtree Dev. <.:11 w/murucur('(f lawn:. Jn<l 2 bd . Ille h• frpt RVacress 7S9 1501 hdwd p~1tced floor ,, ( rr wood paneling . \EJ!$1 RE:ALTORsh 759"0363 vl1Jjl!;171l1rnrw bookshetve ... pat ''' <wean 1de h!#y Fe• .,l~~ to bt-alh ~ t'TI<l 93;4% 3 Bdrm 2 bath. 3 car garage. fo'cnced yard. patio, $23..500 down. Pay ments, $568.63 PITI. Cati: 645-9161 I OPEN HOUSE REALTY ~· \ 2 IDttM COTI'AGE P1111 lnc:OtM Unit Pegged hardwood floors. beamed celhngi., 2 bnck fireplaces and nice coun· try kitchen -PLUS - 2 Bdrm, 2 balh incom<> unit with pnvulc put10 and yard. Red. to SI 85,000 Jo'OR INFORMATION CAU.644-7211 DELIGHTFUL Two br, 2 ba condo. Pool. Many amenities. Close to everyttung. Only $71,500. A home that you can re· aJly ellJOY. 979·5370. ALLSTATE REALTORS Real !::.state W 0 0 D,I RIDGE Probate s.ile )k•nR $210.000 ~ubm1l C~DO. 2 Br. 1i,, OU. nr lake. pool 2 BDRM home. N C;l<l . &'s pa . Sellrr may R 2 lot. can add unit r1n ante-. ;690ll Bkr $159.5')) M6-6l7l PEG ALLE~ REALTOR 494·7571) TR'ROCK/lrdmoor 1~v OWNF.R s121 ,ouo rte. 2 Modified • 4 BDRM . 2 BATll Walk to bca<'h & town $lZ7.SOOfec <.:oly. immaculate cot TWO OH A LOT ~Sat/Sun 1 5 wge. totally renovate<t 2 VI""" Hr I Bu. some ocean I 3 BR 1 2 BR. ~ood 23 Bethany Dr view. mature trees. big Easts1de local1on, o-.nl'r kaoM '~rtiH bJck yard. <'oven'<! deck. , , • llJ\JCJOUS $125.~ 752'2838 644-2542 Pnn. only 494. 7296 ;;;;;;;;oo;;;va;;;;;SH;;O;;;;;;;;RE;;S;;; '= 4 JREHIG€ Turtle Rock Glens e-;::31--------.-.-_;--_ NEWLJSTING ! I HOME~ ba.:i curgar ./\IC.space ,ACIFIC Superbcustombwltview · -ror HV Ownt·r t agt ISLAHDVILLAGE home-VouJted ceilings. OCEAN FRONT l333W Cst. Hwy. Phonc645-077G. ev!> Orean view condo 1n sunken livmg room-CAMEO SHORES 645-6646 PETER'S TOWMHOME o du It en mm u n 11 v quality foalures thruout. SOOO.OOO Pool. '1br, 31,.bd ,. .. _ ,,_ s fill Spac•C>US 3 bdrm . 3 b,tlh. 4 Bdrms, 3~2 baths. ..,.wn>"' immac ' · 2 rrpt<.-i.. rounlry k1ll'ht•11 master s u1 te w ilh 114().~. EASTSIDE Fam rm, din's: rm & many other extru'i d r I MuriefRepolds 18Rolderhomc.R·2 1ot. Ta,.terully decorated Ownt!rs mus t ~•·II ! separate stu y, orma 640.5390 t'l<lfle m. sm.ooo Owner Ouhl andln~ vJIUI' dining room , family •ud K 1 A 1 S~.000 room and breakfast Turner Assoc will provide rmanc1n g. &.o-r:?'i ape us. .:en . W'e:a· Come and u p lore Costa Mna 1024 Roy McCardle, Rltr. th 1 s u n I q u e b om e ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-7729 further. 1 Oranget rec Condo. hy ownl•r Plan 3 I hr 3 Monarch Jluy Pl:.i1a PETE BARRETT REALTY &42·5200 HEWW/OCEAM YU Monarch Bay Terrace E.legant Pr. Prova.nc1al Offered at$32S,OOO 0111 for appl. 640-62S9 c-/~.)/3/t/ RE A~TY IRVIME CONDO UQUIDA TIOH SALE Owner 3 monlhs behind on payments. must sell fast. Submit your offer. -g •. lt.C. TAYLOR CO ~5112 VETERANS No down for VETS. super family home. spacious 3 Bdrm 2 bath. includmst family r oom wi th fireplace Well located. near schools. Asking on· ly 177.900. To sec call 54().1151 ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS MESA VStDE 2STORY Spacious 4 bdrm. 3 lrn. formal dlruog, furn rm Newl y dc co r.it e d throughout. Close to 2 golf cours es . Only $133,000. David Bourke, Rllr. 546-!ll.>50 $40,000 PEI HOUSE 5 houaca on one lot. Fenced yards, cnclos(od icarages. Formfocall : 645-9161 .! OPEN HOUSE REALTY ;· . ' FfXERUPPER 2431 Santa Ana Ave CM 195.000. Only $5000 down. Assume 9"'2% loan No point$. no Crt.'<111 checks 3 bdrm. 111. bath. fncd yard. Gallery of Homc>~ Kirk Lao_b, 631·0900 PROF. Decor & lndscp~ 2 year old. 3 BR 21-'J ba. ex ten decking w/8' 1ac. Lge mstr ste. cust features thruout. By owner. Sl.38.500 642 5003 i\rchltect remodeled wood. glnss. hrdwd rloors. decks. skylight 111.rtum In mas ter swte. lrg. lot. Owner $119,SOO 642-7817 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Magnificent ocean view. New 3 bd, lge nns. t3rd bd sep _ suile). A.gt 83:J.()6Zj ; 644·5 7 42. Luxurious ocean view single family homes nr the harbor. 201.2 to 3206 t1q. ft. cominit soon! 549 5111 ,......Vahy 1034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PLUSH L• tho word for t hi~ 3 IY OW HER 8 d rm h o m c w 1 l h 3brtba Me$a del Mar goraeoua family room Adults only Tennis. pool. Lal(un11 N1gut•I spaetc.$51.000 640 111111 496-7222 831 -0836 Woodbndge Cr<.'t'k S1d1• 3 bdrm, 2 bn. Mpcon llp graded . Lnd:sc pd & sprinklers. $99,500 Ownr/AKflt. SSI 4038. Woodbndgt" Creek Sidi' I bdrm. 3 ba Wiiiow Custom inside & out. Air Sprinklers. $1 29.5011 OwrirtAgnt S.Sl 4038 _ R~SanJo.,. 2br 2ba & den. On golf course w lunobstructt>d view. $J 18.500 J' P M2·5712 Tunlerock new 2 Dr. dt.'n. 2bacondo. fk>stv1ew.n1r cond .. all upRradc .. $126.900 Ownr/a((I 714-644-4772 VILLAGE •STEAL nus 3 BDRM • 2'' bJth hnmc> pri cec.J be low rmrket value Beame<f t•t>ilmgs 1n 11rch1tt'c:l cit" ~•.incd home w 1?rt•.1t vwws. SI 17,000. Cll2701' tO 0 Gfttllltyr~ SI. 1..,.,.1ucll of NORTHWOOD LCllJIMCI Nf')Mf f 052 Tr1ttfltional styling 1n Irvine's newest villoge 4 bedrooms. family room. anddirung room. Central rur, Spanish lill' roor ond 111uter bedroom retreat Now a11klng $13$.000. -Hl\NC tl ~ HIALTY ~ 11111 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna Niguel Realty .. SE,500 S45-J639 and the new earthtone cpt'g. A rare find lft the • BR b"auty fill ed ....:ie mkt. $98,000. Coll MAaqume • " ' P.B.J. 71'1984·201 or UMVMSITY ,A.IC I.I.SALIS wldecrt'r ltem1, new 1 "'"-...... t fl""PJilan In "' CJ)ta, d.rp9, 1plit level l.H, S?i&«J40 0t 83So02 1 puacr ""' """' ""' .. ff you think the real ldo&l loc. nr. schls. & col· ll~lS park liko set ng. 3br. PANORAMIC VIEW Qldet cul-de·uc, clO!lc to ncwelrmenlary school 4 lldrm. plu.,h carph•tma &. tile. Cathedral cc1ll11'lS '" l1vlng rm wtrrplc, plate mirrors, all new ma)or appliances, 3 pattOll SI 13,000 4H·94'4 495-5220 496-2413 130.5050 RY OWNt:R Hlghty UP· Rrod('d homo on golf COW'Ml 14lthln .,. block or ttnnia l'IUb. $2'75,000. ~.495-4959 t l b ....... Is tun ._ I 1 Th 1 21,;ba. 2 frplc, 11upur ea 11 e usm~ • ..,8e ... rfe ot. 1J 8 n """ 0 cal1Sm1lln' Melvyn tor a barlalnl VA auumoblc Halla4•hoch 1040 view 1124,vvv wn1ir conlldentlal Interview. toveu. 656-052$ •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• wUJ finance at 9~~. Coll Qomm1.uionaplilto901l.. •---------3 Bdl'm + PoOI. ssa,ooo. week daya or evu. 6*4463. Super Ir« family rm. 7'4·5.\2-150$. COMFO•T AILI Xlnl finan<'inll ovall. Oct -EJea--an-t_T_urtJ __ e_roc_k_O_len lmmarulole well const. Mariner's Cove RB.:A I ~r Y WATMMOMT Pier/float; duplex on le,.J R·2 lot. dote to Aholla l.1110 V 1118 Re • • real value tor $249.500' ...... , .... .,. ........ • '71-7060 .. ' I LfVIMG read.y for 11ummcr now. ex.ecuUve hOmo. 4 bdrm ex« home. Unique loc•· tnthlaopenapaclou1, Star Re al Estate, 3 btl. Ubrary, dramatic lion for l'lH'<' 11c•kin1 3bt, 21>1 ramify lfume. 7S4·6362 central flreplnc • m lr privacy. Uc. vu. Private qaa BBQ In kltrhcn. 2br l~ba frnlc, new crpt l"Oted wet bur. romun beach nvml. Avoll 1m· Joam rm/cfln. rm. Ls well Nr 8..,_P1:,,r0 Aaaumable t u b • m 1 r r o r e d mt.od .. movc·ln cond. El lndacpd lot Quhll, pre · • ..,... ..... wardrollo., walls or Nh1ucl CC ncrOtl• w11y. 1U1tou1 nelahborhood. loan. ~7.S00963-l.242 bookcaae81 air rnnd 'l'cMis ond Ueallh club. Se to 11p11rec1at e " DY OWNt:R 1 BR CON· wood deck a patios with _P_.P_._GG_l_·~------ you'll love It! Owner wlll oo. Nr. ocean & ahop'g Jacuaal. ~corututt In le l'lf'loftnanco. 019 5370 R.efria~alv. 546.000 Cull \Rstorul ulh tont11 . Mlwport ach 106' A L Lst:A TE •i.a.2 tteauufully landJcaped ..... •••••••••••••••••• Pnol 1latd lot with Tennll Vllla11 Hlufts, 3 br. Must &II. SlrS home 1n spnnklera,outdoorh1ht.11 21.., b• Cfnlury 2 1 REALTORS llB w/pooUrRV11pace.• 4s ~ru aaloro '211, ow p o rt Cooter, Ur2Yt & 963-9233 8y0wntt'75213l8 94C»3&7 • . •+---tt.on ..... ~ ~ ,.,_ -HoMtu.fot' de Ott\tt l •el a t .. • ~r R~• btate ' ""f~ February 8, 197& • OAJL.V PILOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·····················~· ................... J..._ •• ~...... 1016 Sc.6LOIJlll'O 1096 '-"'-' ~'"P forSol• 1100 ~!:':'.~.~~ ...... ~~.~~ ...... ,~·············,·· Cott M 1224 tH UnNnll~ ...... URf ..... lhecll ,_ tswe•t• ,_.tll1d ·••••••••••••••••••··•· ............................ c.fltr.o 1071 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 tont•KUUUI ff l lot.a. ••••••• .. •••••••• •••• • • I ACAlS \'UJaa_(' or Northwood 0 ... l ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ........................ .... ..... &.. 3 ... .t .. N ., • .., '"' t I ........... °" """"°" oc" 6 9 7 L-hoch 37 •• ('W """'" v.,tm, !"\lit , u......... 32,.2 •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• -.,-~ ~ 499-4551 on·~ 0-ano • Cm1 I 1:1\);. 10 l 11g, ,,,,. --- -- Hewpooi .. ach I 069 ,.wporl leoch I 069 •••••••..•....••••.....•.•.................... llG la IEAUTIFUL &liGERTOGO :i UH. J Ha, ~11n11 .. l l..1lchen lrnuui... I J 1111 I) "' Wt>tbar dmm.: rm ' (µll' 's, \ 11'111 111 'I'\\ IJ<H l l:l.'nlt•r /\ i•ottmi.: -.hc·1I pn\,1l'Y t. J 1"11 " \1•IJ l':Sl\'l lwul ( 11.Hlo'f h.1.., bought anotht·1 h111111 ~ u b m 1 l u 11 n r 1 1• 1 , sm.<t10 ·lljQ} 1'1.11 l l'.t I h l\4 '1cli~ 675-3411 WEST NEWPORT .!. llcc.J room 11\'.tt h n11 luge Well mJ111t.11111·1 f 1111 I<:! lol I hhwl. 111 h,,, \SL> lM·udl 1 J.'l UIMI CONDO BY OWNER 3br 21 ~·ha S!tH.Mo Nl'ar lfo,;,.: :.-1 .. :11;:111 WATERFRONT *S-5000 DOW N* I IJr puol '4pt II b \' 'Ulllt'\ h .11 111 ')l,1U,OU\J ";'lio mu \1111r11\ lU , 1nt '\u 1 H·<l1l llt t'Ut•rl ()\\m•r "'II 1 .1rn ',1 ""'' (' 111 t~•,) ~f.1 EXECUTIVE TOWMHOME JASMINE CREEK f l~l' l !,\llf\ \4 1'XfJl11'1l1• l'I Jllllli.: ~ '>l,1trll'tl J,!l:.1'" \\lllCI0\4:., ,I h1l1 m, :..' 11.1 lrml tJ111 11111\ r en IJ):c.·-.1 rn11cltl II\ .l.1--.m1 n1· l'r1 >t•k 7!'\.'f l..O I I tluµlt•\ 111d utJ10i.: h,1) fr1>11I 111 hl' 1•\l·h,111i.:1·1f 11 II \4 fl I 11 J p k J.: :!t:I ~ J:lm DUPLEX B\ 11wrwr r1•tl111 c·ll lu ~I i':i.mO 11111 h :! Ill< 111111' I ltlk IP Ill f',IO C11ocl in s:lti!l.OOU ~·. "'~u111.rl 1i1• nmll' "' '"' 1or 1 cH7.> In. 0 W (' µ.cfll't I Ill< I Sl'\('Jlll S :!Hit. Ut•fl l>H l>u Chl'rr) I ~11.1·" clcu I. 111 \II'" t I Ill! .1pl m•·r f'nn uni\ 1~12 Jil l d,,,, i.:.11 ~1.1.11 pr\.. g 21 .. ..,I or 1,7;, l~SllJ l '\1•n111 L;' \\ t\nclr1·v.' l!d ~l'<' h\ '4kmf... .111111 \k'I I r ;,mt· ;,w 01;1114 WESTCllff SHOWPLACE ( ivr~eou' W r I 1'11 If I i. r humt· SµJ1·1111" 11\lni.: rm W ,, r m ,. , , r n ,. r firl·pl,1l't' F.1m11\ rrn (:1anl ktlChl'n lo.111' of 1·u1,hw111l' • II u~w m ..... 11•1 "' 1 n g H 1 ..: ,., 1• v. 1 n ~· 1<1umln-rm \1""''1'1· t·cntrai'p.1l111 ''•nl ninclc Lton' (.\111 fo sl h2 171HI OPa-. DAILY < ··ir1wr lv1 Jlmn ht•.1111t·1l 1<·11111.:~. I f11k' ,._ I lot1r 111 l'l'lhlll! "'10\ltl'A ... th.1l ·'' lurd J '11·\4 of J M't luch·rl !Miio & .:~1rc1t>n 1'·1::11 un•, lhat makt• 1:i110 !'>u'w' l~in•• .c th.•,1rahll' hom1• Stt:i.~110 W1~1o:,·nhu111 ltltr-.. m~·till.o EAGLE'S ~EST The Bluffs It \II.I:: OPl'OH fl'!'\ITY r----===~=-! TO 1\l'Ql'IHE fHll\1 -. I-~T1\TI•, OF <Jltl<:li'i1\I. OWNl-:H T ll lS "lt:'ooi COMMO'.'I" & ~C,\Ht'I': :I HH l'.NI> lJNIT MIMI aAMCH 11~ • )'t•llow r1 bhon (former p11rku1.i lots for 'ruwll.I Uk u .. k th'" on m00d1>I PhtM tnl'ludl·d. blU\:'11, a (' •r 1¥r•a• ~ ~ ~ Lado bl. 3 on 21) ba 220 ...................... . &u'164SSG37 ••••••••••••••••••••••• y18 ~lh •cu. Slf':.o l..AHVNA 8&ACll M'fft .!. 3 IU'rt'll ; fklrin 1 tuo h, puu!, t.Jolb.i.u ~ 1 ;iur1111\' Z1111111 1111 I h11rel"I St11l.l ll" eur r o u n cf ,. cl h \ l r •' '' ' Jlfl\illt) d. 1111111.!lt ll 111 tu.rlloir & r 11 \ .... ~1.IUI fl 0 N U H f \ I. I \ trll Mii 1010 ...••.......•....•.•... :'I ti-lrm •·~ "':1u \1.ry hur,-1 c11•.1I fur 11 I .m11 ly l lJ)) lo bu> & 1 ·~v •m ~""' µur 1• s t .it 1t1 .. 1I ~).t•ll 7~~-~til 0Mwt-1"6 &tat& ··•··•··•···•·········· 1100 •.•••..•..•........•••. Sl6,900 STEf'S TO IEACH lllll ~11J1• .,, '' ·"'" 11111 ll>'.'li •• 111t.1 .I IHI 111 h ,\ 1111 I ~h ll'\1111~ 041111\4 0•1f 114 J lt'<I tn 11 C• li.'1111 h ,(_.IJ 1'111 tlh 1'11,"l ltw\ I a.: llr h fll 1• c 1 •1 I" tt1•n»ll!.,.U ll1 1 \I I' 11' l 1!1 ;~It; Information HOT LINE! Exclusive! BANK REPOSSESSIONS NO DOWN PAYMENT *FREE BUS • *TOURS DAILY * 1-2·3 BEDROOM HOMES IN PARKS ALL AREAS CALL HOW MOBILE HOME STORES ~. ,\n.1h1?1m !1;,i; l.>IM• w._~11111n'>tt-r 11-114 i(li'I.> (.'. A1Mh\'1 m !I. >ii 1111 l SJnt;, •\11.1 ·'"' 711711 on a ppr H\ .ii nt t•r,•1ltt AFFORDABLE LAGUNA CHARMER .Ju.o;t llskd. hurr} ltn llw .. 01'1(' Sl40 !-Pll('{' r1•11t IOI I ut1J Wulk l11 l11"-'n & hch S111o:I w1dl' Sparlwl lot ;cl I) rt' cond '\'1•\o,. c•pi... rd ri.: Onh l'l :!.11;111 11"'.H ·13!1:S !">i'I M O BILE H OME STORE 956-4500 Costa Mesa Fixer ~µ;it· .nl<fo<.1 l:! >.. 2'• room on Ill X 511 <.:ru,,Jtl1 r l'lli:! 1 A•\4 fl.Irk 1 enl m1 I "um1· uld Slili.h1il lo Si 2,!110 Ht•\lll l1_• f 1na11c 1r1R 0 w n •• r v.-1 I I 1· a r r ' morti.?alll! c 1;;11, 1 '71 HOMATT "6,950 l:.! X tiO l'upu I .ir fr on l & rcur Wrm pl.in ;:, l\Utr park I 1" B·<l7KI I -lhia. 4"J'.1h'UUll.) .t1rt• ~.<nll'Jfh rt.ittf'I Jlr<l '* ctlllOM lor &iA.> ~l12 llruk1•r lmm:iculut.-3 bdr • 2 bu. Condo 2br 2b:t blUn. pool. ~Ol!>l, 84G ~3 1 N $75/wk & up. Maid teruus. bt!illth SG95mo --serv • i<Ulor TV. he~U:d '11111 to hiulll )10111 llt''A '··'™' fAR~ l/'76-5717 l/UM462 Ca uwrclm ~ 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAGUNA RETAIL H1a1i,1t11.i •n U11· h1•at l of U14• do" nlu\111 11 ui 1·01 1111 lui 11ttu11 1•\rl'lh•nl l'"'lll 11)' 1111 .irt i,:.•lkrv. funutw 1• Piloi t', vr un) 11•\,111 1111,1111· ·~ • 0\4111'1' 1111 1\'lllf! & w;ioh t11 11> II \..lu11~ S:.?!IO .oou lh•ult100m1r'> ti7~ rnoo l\y t1~1wr It 2 Int. 11ppro' ~OxOO w 111 .. tl I hou:il! n·nkd oit $1~ mo JZJJ ('l.1y Nt•'A vc>tl lk' JL h. ~.500 l'rinc only c •• 11 1M1wr \ IU'A)'~r ~&II 7JJI lf not In leo' e-mc·,~a~l' <.:UM. re.u1y w 1>u1lc.J. ull ,1p1.irovl'd plan~ for d~I~ 646 3621 A.:t OutofCouttty Properly 2550 ..•..•.••..•........... ncwp;lml • .dfP). rrpb. 2 t •t l l •• •.t Do"'k xlr .McL11ln Tt>wnhou:Jt• (':I pool Ulll. 171•>49f-52!r4 car 111.r. CQV polio. <'OC I " ' o d ! d 1 If ~N CoQ lH }d, 11rhool1. cow1trylikt-day7141894-1717 l'\'l' ora 0 1 ° s9oo io · s _W'f __ • __ '<1ltll11. avo1l nuw PI P 2131582-2977 ~r~ e2i Ncwp~~I M9wpoti le«h 3769 ~Imo 7l4-6458156 WF.ATI-IERLYRAY Center,640-5357 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Musa Verdi'. 2 BR. tlt-n. Presuae 48r twnhm Lrg. Npt <;re<1t rondo. 3 IAYFaOMT covered pnt10. nl('l' yard boot i.up, pool. tt:nnl:.. 2 Br 3 ba u • (..10llC to ltCbOOI & i.hOP!I rp, wsbr, dryr, refrg ma. i,;,t. ~)~l;,'t~ ;n~ ~~· 2 BR. 2 ba .. year Nu·(' SSOO 644 5Uf7 or BBQ· Agt Diana 846-1371 Kar. pool, tA:nms, walk Lo '5~0T·O ...... CH ~l9 orlW0-4021eve::. lx'h SG:il> ~7456 •v-~ 5"' 4 BR, 3 ba., wnlr. $000 •2bt (.'()fJdo, POOi. JU\'Ul.ZI. Nr S C11t Pini~ S~ Irvine 3244 ('htlJ uk . Nu Jl l'l!>. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833·11!171. 3 Br. Z ba hse newly n· . de<-rt d, c·rp\'d thruout. 3 Hr'! Ra, 1.y r old patio, W /O . t:omm l0wnl1o~w. nr So. Co,asl poolttennis crti;, 1:hlc.J rm. Pl111a. l cnnt'\/pOOI Call play vard Yard matnt 641).6395 wkdys afl S me $51Jo m~. 9G:i-1381 CHAHMlNG OCl-~AN 38R,2bo,wntr $4~ fllONT 3Br. den. drnlng :l Htt. J ba, yrly. $+Xi rm, frplc, yrly 675 9'-JOO ---Se.1v1ew. 4 BR, 212 bit , torm;.i l din , lam rm • 2 frpl.. v1t>w. ~u ardcd >:ale, poo\ & tellOlll $900 associated 9ROKERS REALTORS 101', W 8olboct •I II 6 f Mo ,...-::::::=-...::.::=:=:=::::::::., ---°'f:t~·ra1. 1800 Re::stof• 2800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• taar.g. S.l.502br.112ba condo.dbl Willow11 . 3 br. 2 ba, frpl<'. ~ar, fl p. pool. JJ':u~'~· d~hwh.r. pal10. fncd yd, W "'.' b I u r r VI t I ,1 g c . J!at, kids & pets ok. $4.15 r.12 5200 A~t. no fee 964 2566 . AJ,!l'nl 631 34441644 5403 IAYCREST &aut dl't·ur 4br, !>ep mst bdrm living rm dlnrn~ rm 3ha, fam1l)I rm fU.'ilom clrps. fplr, rac.J10 1ntt>1 ('um. BBQ. TOTAL LIVING 4PLEX (' h tJ I l l' II u 11 I 111 .: l u II h 1• .1 • II I " c c 1 1 o n s. h•,lllln l 11t11Wlh Sl:JXIJ pu mu Ma.> t'Jr r.> ... m.dl •' n d ~ I !f !f . !I" U ( 1'4 lll'I Ut okt-1 1142 7107 DUPLEX I J "h1tlt' ('o,l .1 \I " .1 Owrwr m.1) •·,1rr) .. rn.111 'n d > I I 11 :i:, II (~ rwr H1 ukt r IS l2 7 \Ui Inc~ Pr0p.rty 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •S5000 DOWN* lnr 11rop, a\surnt' hul ot $120.000 ~ll Sl.070 mo G11ii;, 1111· S7oo mu T"'' Cll1 fol No crt•<hl rit.'l'tkd. vwrll'r will t·11rry. Npt itft•;t 645-5399 7 UMITS-C.M. Bl•aut 111.'W 1Ju1li.110~ F'lrl•ph1c1•s. xlnt lot•ahon. 'r.\Llnlimb 642· 1603 BREAK EVEN 15°o OOWH I l'lcx & Sn~I 1'\1mll~ "''uml' !:ott'llt•r will c.trr) pap(·r )\nl(ml .l\i.lll J\~e11t {;Jry () l!o.,lc•r !!till I~ or 53ti :rn~w l'nm·1pJ I-. onl~ •LIQUIDATION * -20HOMES- LOWDOWH Ha Qualifying t >v.ni:r lo 1·arry Lnv. li1\4 llt·~<ill\ l' Prinl'rp;.ils uni~ 549-7991 Hutch Aqt. ..•..••.•......... , .... TRADE WANTED llAVE s:ioo.ooo ot•·Jn trnnl Muw Condo und )00,IXX) S<'o\t'id.11~ Condo WA NT W .ll l' rf r on l hot&> or r<Jndo. "outh of llun llngtou 1-kh W 111 trJde l or both up 111 dol.\n Pnnc1pal' only lJll or v.nll' \' 1\n 'lt-rso n lll7 \t·~:i :. Vaill'> Ur. L.1:. \ ei:J-.. ~ l' \ J d a 8 'I I 0 !.I , p h 702 7 33 li:!i :I or 1'.cl I 7 H bi3· 7!r.!. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hous~ Fu"'ished ••..•...••.•..•.•...... Cot-ono ~I Mor 3122 ........•..•..•....•.•• Jasrruoc Critck. !'Ian 3. Jat. & frplr. 3 ur fl mo lse $!JOO mo. 75!1· 14l3 ----LGCJWMI Beach 3 148 ••..•.....••...••.....• 2BR ~cm1 furn 11•1 l'.1 n)'OO Ane:. Or S:i~l!i l'h 213 :g,} 25<JI or t>45 l!t;:J•I . . .. Jose Gouolei. liiOO W Jr nl'r t\' llUlltmi.,ttoo Beut:h You arl' the w1nncr of Two Fr-tt Tickets to lh£• 17th Annual LOMGIEACH RODEO ;ii the Long Bl•urh Art>n.i. 300 1-: Oct>an Kl\d , l..oog lkaC'h To da1m }our tirkct!I. r11ll IX2 5678, l'Xl 272 ..... E.ISL'iUl' 3 hdrm 2 ba. ram &c.Jin rm. frpk, ne w rrpl & c.Jrps . bit In::;. I nl·d y .1 r tJ B I o t· k r r o m sl'twols. <t;.irdcn<:r No P<'ts Ll'ai.c $1.125 rno ~1737 ~SIDE LUXURY :i Br. 3 ba & dl•n, 2200 sq H .+ lush gardl•ns. IJ<)IJI. p,1\lllk ~jj() mo 673-633ti 01·1>12~ 3 bdrm hrcplact>. gar.igc. Newporlleoch 3 169 }ttrd S395 pl'r mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• &12 ~SS • House-s Unfurnished NEWPORT HEIGHTS ....................... AREA 3202 MEW LG. TWNHSE. ••••••••••••••••••••••• J Hdrm. 2• , Ila Frplr' !173-2971 6-SIDE LUXURY J Br. 3 ba & dt:n. 2200 sQ fl + lush gurden. ... pool. pa\lQ-. S6SO. mo 673·6336 t>r 642·0282 1lle Terrare 2 br. 2 ba. frpk. 2 rar ttarage Up h'tiJded S<&50 mo 559·4819 days, 552· 1 lJO {'V('!i t::xeruttve Turtlt-l'Ot'k Glen Townhomt· Hu~e 2 br, 2 i.1ory. 2 frpk w/ten rus. pool, Jar . 'it>w of tu I ls $ti7 5 559 5588 Nt:W llOUSt:, 2 br. 2 b<i . fpk, J.(ard\•n p;.il 1\r(', elt."e i.:ar <Ir t'lo m.imt Tcnm:.. puol. S<l60 No last mo rcnl rc:q 'd . 675·8138 RENT.US 1 RH, Iba S350 3 BR. 2 bJ SS25 650 3 BR. 21 ~ ba SOOtl 1;50 l BH. 21 2 l>.1 S5!15' x;;o 4 Bit. 21 z ba . N B )llllJU LEASE W /OPTfOM v.,1 HOJr'>. 1.1w,c.Jr~ rrni. 3 BK. 111 h,1, 111 Or;ml!t' t:.1rnl!l':.. h•m·t•d ) ti-. & i+5Z3 C.olPOSDl ·IRV11'E frplr, patio. l1g ~ .ir1l dt•l'k:. Curn1·r Knox & l'Orncr ho11 s1• ~:1 .• 1111 Oranc1· A~ l' C .\1 324B down. S5i::i mu IU5·1i.!~i. t.25 h.io t.31 13811 LGCJWMlleoch 9'J!'>-l!IOO l-7jji 2'•lli Bol>oa Island 3206 3 1,r. :!' .. ba, :.nr co11d . •••••••••••••••••••••• • \\._lsh dr), rl'fn,.;, (rplc. 2 IBR 3b::i. d!'n. d1nmi.: rm c·.ir gar. ll•n111s l'rt & ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Br uruque qwl'l 1, ;u· Frpl1-. krd:. Pl'h ok Rou,l?h S.ISO 499 2286 pul10 w gas l.ihq ">4'" p11nl. C.: ~t S525 I mo :I Br townhouse w /orl'an lilt>. vury dt>an. S175. t;W 2717 l'H'S .~ wknds vww. pool. J:ll'. S550 mo FOUR UMITS-C .M. 6'75-l4'12 :!fHl. llt'um t'<.'1 lrn1is. frplc. 846-0'M, 2l31596· 1671 Nf•:ir new. :1 Br o wnt•r-; Corona del Mar 3122 f>illt0. S.1751mo /\dlls. no 2 txJrm 2 ba new l'arpet. 1tnl1 :! (),1, lrpl, 2·t•ar ••••••••••n••••••••••• fX'l'i fl:Jl 2177orfi-1fi ti7!19 lll'l!an Vll'W. (rpll' $525 ~.1r J2 1\r,:!ba.lmlh L1kt• Ill'\\ Hrn;idmonr uul mrl 4'+7~ '!'SL fn,~tmt~ tJ.-1:! ltiPJ Sl•av1e" h•mll'. \'11•"', I·. Suk. 2 hr. I IJ.1 No • . . Tnplt'), Jo: er .... r.c .\ll' ... J . SIOJ mo cni·11m1· ~127 501.1 lh Ownl·r G75 H7!111 11r x.13-23.111 * * * * * sc:cu11ty ,..,_ Pl'l\,cl'\ l>l'l:.. Uhl .:ar lrpli:. Charmin~ 3 BR. ~ ba . S!l:>O m 0 111 c• I u cl i• s gar<lt•nrr. S:Ji5. ~Iii ~l(lgJ frpl. ocean Vll'W & ap garden 1·1 O WO\'r phaflfl':.. jl;orth -.1de !!i9-8430 Dana Potnt 3226 S750 l\1ontl'I or purr ha:.e ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPllOO J\\i:Jtl 3 /1 I blks. to OC'ean. Newer 2 un <.:onclo. Ol'eHn 'U, m-4674 Eves 7 to R I' M 3t>r. 3bn. 2 lrplc S795 kmm. ""'ll l''c C;1ll L-H1'lls 3250 bis-GL'J.t or6i5·5ti.'lf) 11 • .;.,'3 ~,·,,:-;-. .,• ..,, -r-·- '1 nJ Vi' ~1 r. R l'd ••••• • •• • •••• • • •• • • • • • • Krdnr ind Sl.2SO ~7~ 3br 2l2ba Bluffs TplJn &>Jut RaC'k .RJy Vu Clo,.,l• to pool St;7 5 6TJ 3359 2Br I b(llh <.:uttJl!t' l.l!l' )lard. p:.i t10 Ht•1h-.oml decks Com·n•h• walk-. II. pldlltcr. $485 mo 2327 1 M;;rgarH Dr 645 6625 OCt:AN VIEW Lr.: 3 Hr 1'2 ba. lower dupll'x. I h.'>t· from hrh Prt•I lam1 ly S550'> rly 40' Boat :.!Jp :i b1 . :!1 " Ila. <·ondo on Fllpt Channl•I wtwlr v11·w SHOO/mo Call 675-677{, G75·HOIH lfGCANYON OEAMECOHOO f or lcJw J\-Jil nuw .1 Bdrm:-. . 3 balh,,. "'11 h ,p;.it'IOIL' IJ\ Jrt .. I LtJH' I} }ard & \•ntr:-;1n·.1 Sl200 Mo ind gJrd1·nl·r EILEEN HUDSON REALTOR 644-0322 Co1} I te\t'I. :! J bdrm Condo f 1rt·pl::1t·1• pool \lt'W. tc.·nn1:.. J.:JfJRl' $495 492 0734 TUDOR STYLE L:ir~i: 2 !'>I)' 4br :lllJ 1.1 v Apartments. Entertainment. Recreation ... Yours-36S days a yea:r! • Beaubtul S1111Ji.. I 6 2 fledtoom fumMlhed 6 Unfunuabed Apo-rtm•nb • AU lltll1bH Pa1d • No L9CD1e Requuod • SwUTUnU19, T•nzu11 8.UlGlda • Act1~lll•• DuKlor, fr .. Sunclcty .8NDCh<t» • H•ulUl Club. lac~ PLUS MUCH MORE! Oakwood Garden Apartments N•wport Beach/North ijRQ lrvino Im lbrhl ,, 141 M~-o~~o Nowport Beach1Soulh I '(I() fbth St l•••vr 01 l•01h1 11164l 8170 "'hurt lt•rm bayfrun\ J 1-IH :! b.1lh:. Sli50 mo plu-. u111 1\gi ms 1n10 m~ rm, v. J:l:lS!> d<JOr l<• '>te1.it.. to INJ<•h. " br. • l'obblc· 'lo rw _i>JlH1 den $S~aw1111t·r V.75 yr Formal DH. bn·aki...:-.1 b' i\h'l t714 ltr7~1·9&JO YEARLY LEASES! I Unit off aceanfront. Bolboa Penin. .! nu. i u.. M .iu :! Hit. I l~.1 S-l2f> I UH. I u.. s:mu l'OllllH'l 1)1,t lll'. ~\It) 1\it.~ or Thur-. tii:1-11Uti11 0.1\ 111:.011 lfrJ ll ~ 19 Fourplexes Fh o~ nl•r f>n l't'' e'< t1C'tn<'I} low Sl'ller ~111 1·.1rrv .ill (IOJOl'lfl~ Ill \j•,-, 'llcw 3 Bl<. ram rm luwnhsc\ ~l·•·url'd a n •:i, romm pooli. & (·ourh 1\\atl now $1 100 \lo \l..iJ. 2 BH. :! ba home. So. of ll~y orr Cu 11yon. ad1dL'i, no p<>ls ~S25 mu Wl'hU\e oth •r'' <h1·k rm "'' 'n:nt'h 1loor'> & o<tk fir... H ul\t' ni...t r :..UJ\<: w 1·alht>dr:tl t't•ll •nl!~ dn•:."nlo: rm ~ ll.i lc·un' J 11"' l 11·"' .it I µ.1pcn-<l l.:u.,lom dr Jl>\'S. uµ11rad1_'<f l'arpt'l~ ,\ C. :! r~u j!arl( t•ummon po.11 . Jal'. :.JUJlJ Som,· Ol'l'Jll \ l('W $ti()IJ b R ${;25 n• 111 s:iCJO mmc· tn allo"an1 ,. IJCJMlhlt' l~J-45'\0 I'\ 2~1 CJr-196 i<!l;-1 J bdrm. 2 ba. frpk, b;.ir, _ I Br :! H.c Ul'P•'' 111 1'.tn l IC'~ ·111 '" ........ 11 l11rJ1' rm. ,l.!ar .ii.:c \\ 11111.•1 ._.,.!.• Sl71.llJUor l l;I 11 1 .!.11 • .! l~CashRow Low Down Payment Siu-. 71 4/542-3676 CALL. !"OH SETt:I' 1~en( hiJ .,:;:,1 ·1'17 J:~I! 'tr old hou.."'-' 3 br. 2 bJ. l:un rm. frpk . <·an}on <>ct·~n.' u S550 4!J3-7112 BToro 3232 •••••.............•.••• d1:;h washt•r , 1n1d .)d . Sc:.TtaAno 3280 patau ~lrll?C !\-hed., S50CJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo 492·9886 Adult 1 s1orv Condo. 2 1$H. 2 bdrm 2 ha (;1 l·Jl "·" 2 ba lcrtchen "1 bltn~ vww '""'w' ,,.,111. 'l'J larrul'y1dm1n1-1 rm. patio' SS25 l..i-1 lUi-t \\ .111 :J I Commun £'1uhh'-t' & New Shadow Run 4Br 2' 283. f:Jm rm S750 mo 962-0!l'l.'> or 892·i!>30 aft ti ~Hi~ 3252 ..•...........•........ (Thl' Shores I Cust )lome, pool Ampll• 'tor.Jl?t' AP.ar'!me~ts Shopp111~ & f"' \' 1 lcN• Unfw1"11shed g: ;;~tin AH· ii33 217i, wb::;;;1:,:,•d••••• JS06 • * * * * Sh.till 31J1 :1h;1 v. hit 111 1\ frplc. St:OU C'all M t•\\' &!4-0510 MO 11~•1 t'l<ll'I' to lrwy. 4 br. 2 ba. trvh" p:illo. fncd) d. ~ar ~Ill' & !Jl'l!> <•k \55 Mrt. nolL'i.' !11;t Z.'>00. 973-~71 J BR 2 B.i, "-oOO burnmR -•..•••••.••.......•...• ---Fountain Vatl~y 3234 PRfCE SLASHED S6.000 ·I &ill.JOU lslJnd dpl"' ind bayfronl to b<.' t'.'lth d" n 21:.i IJll.t :!ZOO IHVJNE11".HHt\l'I-: ....................•.. fple. 1'·am Rm . formal :I bdrm $50(1 JX'r mu on dining. det• ~;.ir d1Jor. monlh to mvnth l lorw-.. 'm llll ptl 01\. SiOO d11 1!.., I.id ' 0 1\ lk•at·h. rl't' 1at1I 493 1675 ~lh i :.6 61111> ! Br fnrn 111 ur111e111 \\1111 t1r1·pl.u 1· ~l!ICI \\,Iii now :!l•l ll1>al 1;-;;, !-1.!:!:t Bolboa Peninsula 3807 ________ _, t '\ 1'; <i U A L L 1': l> l•IU\'i\C', l'OM:\IA-.. IJIN(; U.\\' VI EW~ .\i l 'lot.IM l'I l·~fl 110 f'lo. \ Owner lea' in it arl•:J Mu.,t "l·ll OW ' ' IJhl ''Ilk 1!>70 Gull Strt•am. ;, !>lllr µ11:sl park Im nw c· St11,!r:1;, 1 G Z 115!17 >11 APARTMENTS I Br 2 Ba, nl'w r aqwts, drapes. pa ml 1hr111111l <;rl•al ratl· lur rt>?hl fam1 ly• Ht'fs. Lon~ lrrm µn fcrr<'d <1c>e;l· lo d£•m ~rhool :I br. ~ ha w lµe dl•n. l"rpk. dshwhr. covered rw 110 " hh'f· Kid"' ok. no Pl'ls S58f> /\Rl No fl'l' ·~;i :!.'litili. (li3 Wit 3255 ....................... :! Bd 2 lkt <:on do 1,0,.1 ••••• ••••••••••• •• ••• • • :11r rondctcon ~325 mo plu. ... ~<-'l' dcp 55i s.1 t.1 )4:.!:1 :mH "' d1 ·1·~ :-,,." .. BARGAIN HUNTERS Mukt: ;,,in ofler on l111' .1 Tl1\I. V,\LL E \l:l'nl ~l~i(I tx'<iroum homl• m lh1rh111I _________ _ \-11•v. It 1~ f;11rl)' 1u 11·1•d . hu1 tlw nv.nt·r nt•e1b le "1V\l' I\ lhl' I'> t•l'k .\1.Jkl tum an 11fl1•r lw 1·an I r1· lu...i· Newport Center 640-5357 THEBLUFfS Alr..ululely 1mmat'ul.111· :1 l>r 211 lM. form;.il d1111n1.:. 'Plit It•\ t'I t·on<Jo Op .. n 'fl'H'l' ''""' lrom II\ 1n~ n11m .• .tnd mJ-.ll'r ... wll' '\11"' '.tt·ant Ollt•rc•<l JI SlSl,500 C.11 1 .>II! 11'11 ~HERITAGE REALTORS I Jl'-'t"l pri n ·d llarhor V11•" u~;.\(.'ll ~f·t-:l.:11\I.~ 1n \1 ,1r('h 1 MUff !.ell :i hr. :! oa. "~1•111 15~ Of.I,/ hr1mt· 1n 'a1lahll l>or .in rltlt.'(Jl> TLC. Jui.t n·IJ1w<·<l B~ Owner 2 br. 2 ba homl· toS!l5.UOO. Ill l'WJ)Ort lle1ghli> 512 3 br dollhou'>e 011 (•orm·1 l' a t a I 1 n a D r lot, D W, frpk. n1111t Sl25.000 ofr G-IS·317!l rund Tnkl' ovt,>r 11 1•, 101111. Sl09,!l00 :1 br 2 i.lt1r} 1 !ult Sll9.500 Trv 111'. rlown ~ brhrk palio SlZl,1)()(1 Ou-pit>.'< w lnnd 2 br t•uc·h Xlnl l'<lnd $182.000 W•\Lh TO BEA<.:11, 1•001.c:i. T 1';NNIS ~·no\1 ANY 111-'Tll l-:Sl-; NJ)I Cn.I Plan I 3 hr " I~ of ~la'' & pn1l1 111 ownership $13.'1.000 Npt Crsl 2 br" air rnnd V W. frplC' II urp • $1\,,500 ~ Merino R•°' ,.~·. 642-1150 BEACH OCEAHVIEW fH CLIFFHA VEN l.IH• 1111 qull'l ptt•stl~wu ... Kin!(s Hd .• 3 Hc.Jrm I 1 , Ba Moln Jll•d :.I.' lier A ... km/.1 S'.!4!1,llOIJ 964-2611 O SUD r~ealcy MUST SELL OCe.MVIEW SIOS,000 2 txlrm 2' 2 ba. den. lot:. or 1•xlr..ii. Best nffrr !'hone 6 42 '4361 01 l2l31~ 1417 "FIXER 1, lonJoin Hunters Npt Shnrt-:<1 3 br Steal 1l (;ult' 3 br beurh h-.1• rorS!>5K W ,. b 11 Mnnnu Hen It v R-12 88S-O oou c am cc1 n 11::. · Hnek frpk Ncedii work bol )'OU i.OVt'. lturry. C'tlll Sa\ ce.mente I 07 6 oow• 645-7221 ••••••••• •••• •• ••• •• •• • ,. THRIFTY? Sput'lou. 3 OR family rMtl1• in nrt'd of pumt 116.!)5() Tey V /\ tcrm'I UEf<TIIA HENltY REALTORS 215 Del M:.r 492 4121 MO B ILE HO~E STORE I 062 Stofe Coll~9e ANAHEIM 9S6-4500 I' , BLOCK~ TO U !'; \l'll ~ RR :!ba l!•ifl St.' hoc· 1 ~li.lr fJJrk !lbU .iO:!l 'Th<-' :\lc:adow, \lnbtlt• homt· ~ l"(t.5 11pi.:r;11lt·d Byowm•r 7U ~ JHWJ •EXCITING• Li~Hewport Sch Sm:H·k dah in lh1• m1cldlt• or IJ,·aulllul Nt·wporl llar bor ,\ .:arctcn P a r a 111 ~ 1· t I' ._. t " Mi.ncloui. I"\ bt•Ut'h Walk lo ~hopp inR in Newpon. Harbor'., mo~l cxl.'lus1ve an•a. ( 1\7.0757 \ CALIFORHfA PACIFIC MOBILE HOME SALES 27c..> II arbor Ste• 20ti i\ 540-5937 Ac~ tor Sale 1200 ...•................... 16 ACRES Ii f: L A I H I'. <I ~ Fi\LLBHOOI\ l'HIME AVOCADO L1\NO IN P R E S T I l; I U (I !-. llELEJ\l-1 l':STAn: l'i\ '\ DI-: SPLIT ~·, hal.1111•1• do-An OW<: $JtlK. ooo flnnt• Onf\• M1k1· Wink 957 0054 At1nl WHAT TO DO WITH $20,000 TODAY??? SMDll lftH,tor Doti en Xlnt ahort term return & own the only !ll'muhlt• .;ommodl1y lt>fl . rt~nl F.stute Land FARGO t/677·S69 I 1/522-2010 • I l'.XC•t•J11•1tl OUl or !,\all' 111 "'' l m 1· n l I u r 'mar\ liu)cr'l-(;J, ~. WO. 1111. IUG & lar.:i:r uiul 1·u11) pll•x<•s 1,1~.11l.ihl1• ('a~h n•q u1 rl'd • 3011. 000 l <1 I WO OOU l'.1 .. h llow & tui;:h Ul>'>ldl• l'nn <•111:0 t.'.111 \'1·nlurt' Ht>alt.' 711 i52 t 737 l'or11n.1 d1•l \far tn ph•-<. 111:11 , ,, hi! 1!15 111111 l'nm· Onlv bi.J 11 U! I'\ l' or~knd - C.M. 8-PLEX ;\nl\uJ I 1n1·om1• SJl 1-. 0 "' n i\ i.: l ,\ I T U 71 t ;52 71["-1 TWO I BR STUC C O I lt1US('., 1111 I lr1l 2 BLOCKS FllOM Ol'l-:1\N ONLY Sl47 .000 Call unytunl' SCOTT REALTY 536-7533 SAM CLEMENTE Yt•Hr old Duµl cx. 2 BH . 2 IJath unlls. CtrcphH·e~ /\mt101L~. SI :19,500 1n;nTll/\ II EN n y It !-;Al.TORS 215 ~I Mur 402·<1121 ...................... *WILL TRADE* DIAMONDS lor eqluty 10 tnl'l'lmr pro Jlt:rty <: s A ror l\1 A I \ 111~ \hn $50(1,UOU CONTl\C:'I' lill Horton World Aqt 54 1-0800 ••••••••••••••••• Loh fOf' Sole 2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Will tr.id(' 21; resort .1rrl's oo 11\lt<' m F.lko. Ncvodo rur t'llHh, !!Ullbolll. t:Jl , 1l111m11ntl.'I, 1111lrl . t•lr 675 76117 Will trade 3 !Wb cll111<H.'<l lot.<!. Las Ve~lhi, for l'Ush. 11111lhoal, car. tJtomond11. l'lf 675 7687 lluw 'on~·thtnii vou wont ltJ 'l'll' Un,~1111•d 11tl' Ito 1( wl'll Call NUW. li"2 5(illl UIJ!'iC Ert & ,\SS()(' %i-IJ'i01 :Jltll·J.·>4h) Costa Mesa 3224 ···•··················· \vatlabll' F't•li 1:-1th Urand nt·v. IJJl'tt.111) furru~hl'Cl. 2 bdrm :: ha <.oodo"' rtJJh' 5.>7 rn;2 \\.111. no". 1111 <''t \!,. .... , Vl•rdl• hunw :1 llr :! lfa t-lam rm ~·1;, f•I t 5i57 HEW.EASTSIDE l.:irJ?l' lov.nhnu::.l' t~ Pt'. l br 11 i ba. ha., t'\ t'r) lhin.: + + Sma II P<'l nl. ~1:; mo Dnw bv 2:>.36 Santo Ana i\\(• ·lht>ll 1•;111 612·1>282 2 hr. I ba. S300 mo. Yd & gar;i~e. Bll·ms. 641Vi3ill btwn6-7P.\ol ••ENiTSIOI-: IJ!t' 2 llH d{'n. ;.idull <·ondo Uhl gar , $425. 55!1 6SHli , &'f.5·6822 Spar1ous 3 br. 2 hi.!. 1\tr 1·ond f'rplc Cuunl r) k1tchrn. blt-111s r So Coast Plata 9;J.1 ,\1:il1•iJ SSOO mo 54ti 7214 111 975-fi635 3 Bdrms. 2 bathi.. Mes~• Verd e ho m ,. S 5 2 5 mo inrl ~rdnr 32H I Colorado Ln Ownr1 ol(l 559·6221 . 559-4026 ~ V NORTII 1 br. 2 ba. I J m 1 I y rm . r 1pI1·. ctshwhr. patio. fnC'd )Id garai:e. t\1d:1 & j)l.'tB ok S525 1\ ~t No fee 964.2.'iG(), 973.2971, 3BR. 112 bo t-:xtra l!ll' harkyrd, dO!!l' lo i.chls Cpt, drps. NO oor.s S.'>00 mo. 1·879·!1\Uli or 5'11H7!l> ----LUXURY DUPLEX ~ br 21 ~ hu, 1600 SQ fl t•ath c·c111ln11s. dhl ~ltr. fl'l)lr. h1g yd w1room for hoa\. t!ll.' S.1:.1~ 67:1 113.10 01 &12 9GGU ,\Ille• Sq l'ark l!br. J <·n I 1 1 h:i S4~1 l•:nl'ld ~:tr)! a,<,(,.~\ i;,l ii211U N<1ly Hurmnqton Beoch 324 o ...........•••......... :\c•\4 f'l1•1.wnt 2 bl'<.lronm '-">.'iU. or:! l~-.Jroom t dt>n ~'i > (.'1·11,cr & \4 111\Jo14 h11rnt• I' I\ t' hlcwk:. In Jll'.11 h J'1 I\ .Ill' :.! I ,tr p 11 J~l' I' ulf\ main tainl'CI 'Jrtl ;\dulh. No pcb lnqwn· al m Hllh !Mt'i.'l 1714 1WO6J31 ~"I05 130' on lh1• 14a ll'r' :I hdrm.;: ba '411h pn\a \l• dock. Wt>( hd r &. t\ <.: A ' J 1 I n u w :: ~ .1 O r. Porwhartrum is.I 7!JOIJ 4br 21/iba l.:U1'llllll 1·iirpt-l1n.: ii. drJj>I.." L.iai: t'nl Id h.1rl. >rd flt 11 ~1 "' r rplc· .s. '-'tl l>Jr Lr)!l' m .. tr Wrm modl rn k 11l'hu1 14 mtl'r\1\4 <1\ l' r\ (.' I Ill dt' s ar Sprinkler-. & land!..l'apm2 Woodstdt• neighborhood S595mo 586-0Jbi or 76h 5700 Newporl leoch 3269 ................... ._ ... ;'\;t·~ 2500 "q fl 4 Ad hornl' abmc llunl 11;.irbour rmm "'lr.1 .... $i!l5 Call Mike !ltiO 23511 ---------• fk•aullful dt'1·or 5 Bdrm (.;WP Ex1·r I fl) me 4 br. 3 ba. 3,()1.,, sq rt. lo(rdnr. nn l"'L" $7!15 <\!13 9-131 d)!I 114U-620J I! H'S. homt• on l.lt>O '4'1lh ( I n t' ... I ;1 m {' n I I I t' !' Sl5001mo leai.l' ON WATEJt. rharming 2 bl-droom 2 bath w bo1JI slip S750rmo Wull'rfront Homl'' 631 -1400 l .. 'lrgt· :irm Jha rondo wt'J. r:.r ~ar S4!i-O r>cr mo ~I Wildwood l.)r 1 , m1 LO l>rh 2131438-4180 after---------6p_:n.___ SEiWIEW. 4 Br 3 Ba, Ii: • Nice d ean 3 Rr 2 Ra, 2-sty, Pn'' gatl'. lenn1i,, frplr. pn110.:? rar ~arage pool,$1300 640-oo:lti $450 mo 9G2 2273 3 Br. 2 ba. frplr. gar 1 1 Garden v1rw from every bllt to brh S550/mo t:Jll room J br. 2 ba. prcst~e _&_~ __ 6_e_\_s ____ _ hum£>. famil)' room. Lwcury 3 br. 3 ba condo. rrplr. do;hwhr. muny ex elec $!&r. opnr, frpl1·. tras Pro< land!lrapcd, dshwhr. trftllh romplr . inrl 1rnrd<-'nl'r Edison Newport Crest O t{ II S II.ids ok. no ~ls pool. tcnrus Kids ok. nu S62S 1\ ll l n o f ct' pets $5!15 /\gt No fr\' !llW-2.566. 97 3·2971 !!&I 2.'i&l. 97 3 2971 Ver)' spe<_·1al 3 hc<lroom. 2 ••••••••-ba. frpf('. dshwhr. fn\'d yd, covered pal10. gut Pro< lttnd!lrllP<-d. /\ vu1I m 3 ""eeks ss.io mo in l' I 1t11 rdener \ rl} ll•ai<e l\l{t, no (e1: 964 l!SGtl, •UDO ISLE• 3 BR. 2 ba. Lrg Sunny Pollo Ac1•ess to lennrb. bch &r flub Call Frunk KMI. ( l? 13 ) 653 7900. V732971 ~~~~--- RF:i'\UT 2 lllY 4Ul'. 11 ~bu Twnhse Pool. 1e 11n111. S451l. 2 13 t l!i0 ltOHI. 7141004 41~ ~ 3242 ...•.....•....•...•.•.• MIWPORT HEIGHTS AREA 4hr tb.1 Ohl ~uric w hll( lluih. <'ondu. with vtew ex1r::i mom 1IUjtc 1r11r1•cl l'ool & J&<' orro"" frorn yrd $425 673 6331) lic11ch S34S 1147 4525 MEW LG. TWNHSf. 3 Bdrm. 2''t Bo f'rplr'I. ~• bur.i. Laundry rrnt1 Gora.gef:. rcnccd yd!> & dl'\'lu1 Corn,•r Knox & Oran111• 1\ \l' C M S4i2S Sti!>O tiJ l IJ8K 11:,G 2908 Houses Furnished or 11;.11111 l'. 1·pt-. I 1111. 111 lll.•.u h cii:J fi:!i~I u.m.ntished 3300 \(·" ,.,l .. 111 1111 1.1k 111 ••••• •••• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • IH· ·" ,, l f ' I 'ti(' t ti 'l.% 11111 Iii.> .1\1:!\I 11r "'l.Jl<J, t'\ ,., TAKEOVER PAYMENT l~fo"OR~1 ATIO\ 0 \C l.i.: 11.;" I-con1 :!hr :!h.c ll"flfl -L!jl .1 t f'\ I fh h RENT OPTIONS 'I rh h .1 ... ,. \ct uii... ""'·' TOIUY 400 HOMES 11,,111.'i... ~' 1.,: •11,·• A.LL AREAS M081LEHOME ~~-~!~~~ ... ~!.2.~ STORES ~ ~ l.i.l\t>I} :! h1:d1 m t1 11111 .. , r•r SanlJ t\n<1 55-1 ,o,o bcat•h f,•,1111n11 i.: 11111 ~ I': Analwtm ;•~ -151.Ml ,1nidi• 1 ,11 i.:u c l .rll l' Anuhl•lm ,1;1h IOI! '4kd.I\' •t , c 11 ,,;.x :!I I J Y.eslminS\t'r Molli ~·1.1 .md :111 ,, t-14 i..1111 ... , I • ·~·· 11:'11 Condomi11iums l Jll)l'I I lu I 11.1 I 11·k Unfuntish .. d 3425 1\clufl\, nu pcl" ~l:!.'1~1 h ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ht•I r•·•1 Ii lU i h H• 1.a NI!" lMU\l' hillloµ l'onllo ~II 31:!2 f'«110ram1r rouiil<tl '1t•w + 0 Pt llartK'lr . :! Hr. den. 21 2 Ba Obi gar fuund I :tt'. 1\l 1ao <h. :.! frpl 496 1'.181>1 2Hrt 2ij/\ Npt ·1,·rr 1·1111 rlo. sn~I l\l) t'lld un1l S460m11 l.'i H1f.! U1p1wr en 5411·803!! ~nts Furnished •••...•••.•.......•.... Bolbaa Peninsula 37 07 •••.•.•.......••....... 'cJnfront. >rl> I~ I Hr ma1urc 341ull no p1·t:. $4iS bi J 189.1 Bt-:i\L11. Pl<'t . prt..: lbr S3iS Adil.'>, 1111 pd :it1:• 1': Edi?<''-' atl•r 111t17 t 2ll'lb ~on leach 31 40 ...........•........... l lnrur n :> hl'tlrrn ·11•1 within w.1llo.1n~ 1lc:.tac11·e (o l11.•11ch 1\' ad 1111nwd l'all wkd~'> o r1 c 1 1 5~>1·24 11 ,111!1 .cl I .1 ,\ v.kndt1 I I l !rlti ll:!fl OPf:N SAT SL':\' 1 " t..lt> di\ 2 Ur. 2 U:i l'lthh t'Pl. drpi.. pal111. IV k fjlLru.. dshwshr l lll r1I Allull.-.. no l>t'l:. Sf>:.!;, 11111 1;.1r> :r77!1 or 6.tf> ~ti I \ 111 f,l() !lJ.'l~ l ..irJlt• 8.tt•hl'lor S25CI 1110 tnt'I uul No pt'\,. :,111.I! le onl) b75 1i737 14Zl' cilx 2 Br, 2 Ra l'lu ... h 1·pt drp!'. palm r µrl1 UllJI.'>, d::.hwhr l lll J>•l '\dull.' no pet:. $.\:.!S 11111 t;.K1 Ji7'1 111· ti at; lli I I ur t;.1().933.S SMJ\l.I, B~ \l'll llOTf:t, Costa ~so )824 ROOMS$37 50 WlTk ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apt SI~ mo :>:JG 3037 :! Rl. I ba. II(<', S:lOO 11111 I • Ur. frwtl )Id, .car. l>:Mo W --Ltv Rates 11)11, K1d11 . J)t'l l< ulo. CC't\ I,. ~~: tlr:I~ 2316 Spurious SI 1kll11' ,.., I fk.droom SU1lC'H Cnmph•t\• "111•h1•11" Bell\JI. Pallor l'•lOI M11td S1•rv1rt• TV I MllctOO<'l.'1111 Roval Suites 7zt'Yo1 l<to.,.,n .11 l1'.'11ch l\h cl 5J6.·0• I I or so.2000 LA MAHCHA APTS l-l1r1it' l.2&3 bd jlar.ll•O ur1t11 Ad1.1ll11 0 11hv.hr . hltn11. (•m•t. Aar • .:.1l' bu11 l)ool Gus Pd nil Swll r'I. ~ :io73, 645 5611 Sl'lhn)( unyt hint( with a u.ul)' f>llu! <.:lu!l!ufh'tl ,\\J I!> u 1u1npl~ n11altc r JU.'t r•o 11 t>U $678. t Q Mil V PILOt T'*Clay, J"ebtwiry ·~ 1119 4000 Offk tl...t• 4400 .......... 5100~ ........ -----~.f .. •h cw... A,pwJ .... r. UiM1i: Ara tmta ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S I 00 Lost It Fowtd 7075 5 3 00 Jobs Wonted. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C..W... lt24 Cotht~t Jl24 ...... .., .. hec~ l'40 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Be•ut z ilR. a ba. Mo ,, M a v rd(! 2 on , ;: b1. Nf.:W :! nn 2 ll1\, nl·I On\ • nr SA Cntrv llJC.I "'4 fl hpk, c-nd •nc , rl • to bt·•lh c..iub P~t Co~ nrd. 'I JI.Ar OW ~ilr dJ11,1I SJ'l~ pt, mo ., · 1.n ~MWn wilnoncc. S.l~ C' •h OK 7~.a 6210 1>1 - mo m 13' , eJI riue ~1 I 'IWJ -MIWHllDA"S I Rdnn & lc•ft I ~o 1 tldrm BAt·h >11 l''rpll' , N(' room Pool >"'• UU!, t lc• '(J ll(ilrt1tll' u .. ~"tr l"i Adult•. no pcti. Jb1n1hun l ' M I .. ll °'lWUW\jj I• .lbr :b.i •' arn Jf..lt I 'vol !'\.'(' ., ;I ):U dO W UAh~t 3141 ~ltoct. 3141 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11n • Ni''lt(IN'l' l,u w• lull uni 12'1'' :I hr. <t ha •1~ Inf I Ulll 1-W.UOO;') ....... .dofoa.• l,p~ ly 1•11Jen Hruok1 v.tr r.u •l\.IU:hi·n FllCtl 1H iall •Jiu I.I.Ill. hrlllh'(f pool .~._Iv or c!iflly maid 11rv •TV l>hont> i.vull11hl1• '-'rot. Wo call ~Jh.u bur I tie.la ~1' a 1'14~ 4H·l0 ttouo1 w lul\' hc-nt•\lc $W Wl't.'k & UjJ )&M~~ 1•~,11n~uh1 l'olllt. pvt t•nt ni0m • hunily nn. ·rv No 1mok~. oo too.k 1120 mo 613-4-419 l'\im 01vtl'I ruom'f, pool, l111c11J>, rnl11r TV. S300 11\0 1 lw l'Cdc~. l.u11 lkh ~~:.. Nfl( .,, ••• ,w J.'rnt Room & l\,1 lui u•nt No I. 1l<:h<'11 vcw nrii In rm Sep 1·0 ll!llll't'. ulll pd LIAUnd tudl orr 11t Pl" ·.i f\VJll hit 1 .• y ll~ s:n:, mo II>• I.JI fl 4 JIJ, t'~t'I> h~ J7:ll <A!>k tor Uoh ,.._.IHcuthe Stiff ff f'rlV~l4) I I.lite W1th tl'Cl'p lion & sec rcL.&ri.tJ itt•r\ h'l'. confrrco1 t ' 1~1QtT1, .ill rauUllt·'i 211112 M1c ht•liun. l r\ inc 7~~ Y.l<•gant ofr1r.•\ up tn 11;o :iq It on New Port lJ I. C \' 00 Zll I • l'o41i liJO:J llAUTIFUL SUITES 400 tu 200U Sq 1-·1 C~;:.:, •er\>lt'Cd re• Pon N<"wport 833 tlll lJ Downtown llunt1nato11 lit':trh ~101.; Mu m S\ Ont> .ll·rm off1n1 avuil SUI). 960~. _ "i Jl A n E n cw Cl rr I ( I' $1 US/Mo Co ~tlJ Mc11.o/Ncwpo rt Jrcu 0011.\)1 ----- ON THE WATER! ~ SENIOR CITIZENS SPECIAL l25°/o DISCOUNT) Uunni! Uw rnc.mlh of l-'eb1 uuryl St-n1or C1t 1.1.t1n!1 m · ~ ~·: orr on tht"1r on v;i c Dart v uds tor mcrthanduw for tialr in tht> C.'ltt1111tf1l•d St•cl1on or Ult' Doily Piiot <Heal 1-.:..-.t:itt· 1s not 1ncludedl Dn111t your ocJ lnl.u <mt• of ottr otflces. listed below lx'twet>n 8 /\M & ~ PM tiny day during the week uod we wlll 11turt 1our ad the next t111y. Costa Meso -330 W. lay StrHf ~ .. och -I 116 Gltttnt yr• Hwttlftc)to.t leach -17175 lffch II. 5100 fouwwl .. ttw.11 'ulllt 1-. r\'<1111h hrn 11 mah· \ 11 fo4.l1ft1\l\L Bl~ci 1111\' & \\' 11 I n • I K I I h I I ':' t l3 't77 1.a'tl F11un1I 'iholl l1;,1r1•tl I 'mnt1 r It ,11 hot \. 11 \\ Hom 1r(•a Io C'f:un1 ~all64(M~ --"""11l'l F.a~1~1dt· <''1 i11·1 n1ni f141i:ll>i' )o'ound !ill\ 6. wt l /"'l H..1h1Jt1. vu t'1q>c· { 'r>< 111 <ih-11 \1.a1 :.II.I'! z.i:!I FOlJNO · HC'llH t'°1>1• f1•m;1ll' llluml < ·,, •• i, .. q14.c1 Talul1 Ur Mt i..i Vl·rdt• :,;,7 :.1&U 1-'0UN O l•••mul1· :,hdlll' f'Lll.\l,\"l;t-;1';·r LIVJ:.: I~ l'O\l l•ANfONS ttSI\}' It~ f%\(.7fCAL l\ltJflSf:S WU.l.SCltF.FNI 11 t-.:MPLOYF.R l'A"t ~ 1-·11:~:- DYNA SE.ARCH Ptn.onn•I Scrv Jeu at.II t:H ll,!;.A ~145!1 li.tf1\'nU"f, t°t'ln..tll'. H 'I.) r;•lt..tlll•· l11ok111.: lur lt•1'1lllhJh• pt' rm '.lncnt Job NH .trt.oti 67~·tl02l L1vt· Ul ~111,.111011 aR Nu11 ny Pr~v1ou~ PXp~r w \0h1h.ln.n &ut'h Jrl'u ·1'~ ;w , Iv nwi.sa~c· Ov.111:r net d1 d urJ.:l'lll 1•r1tc.1w .. 1 or h<>w.ck~upc:1 ly•' 64'1 $.'M;1!NK i 1!'l:i • r .t·1M.1r .. World cx1ic:1 u,i,t <;rl'Ytbhwk >1t11µl•1I J •t Sd}S wli.. <1~1 lSOO k.llt0c:11, l110~11hh nu"~" 5 HtlpWanted 7100 mo=' Clld V11· W , ;.m1 h •••••••••••••••••••••• • St . C M ~••IK 4!+1>0 ,1 fl 61Jm fo'OPNll Mix l)r1•t<l rlu.: t1\·;t1 M,111 .. ('.ill1111kr .1t 171 h 111 t' \1 ~:i'1 K.l'J:I i\Jlt•r lll'M ACCOUNTING CLERK l:>O Hulbun I 'll Sn.ii peNOO Nr 1;hopµ111..: & bth ti7J ~ PlUSH SUITES 350 to 1300 i.q fl Fantastic: Views Wet Bars Udo Marina VJ~ ~ Opportunity SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found hl,u k & ''"\'I Tt•r rwr m" fo 1 m.1lt· \-11 \\ llllOJI & lk11ubh<:. l' ~I (i<Wj !1117 <:ro\\111•! ~ompuny h,1s 11~ 11111); for u 11tron11 ,Jt' t ou11l1111l clerk In th!! 111 \(•ntor"\ control1coi-I ..11· 1 ounl1r11 area. ~Xt't•lll·nL ••••••••••••••••••••••• (Xt«.Ul VIC'W, patll) C'O\ t'nd PJI king I ii! HI(, ' I llH $.JOI.IM~ Wik Lu tx-h S4!f 1t11CJ ~.,7 ~o Hmm lor Reill SllS mo l\1tt lu:n [>ri vll1·.:e: .. 111 ch•r m.1h.• under 25 "" t'a 11 ~ 5671-i Newport 675 8662 • * * Robert Downin9 L.~ Park Ncwpo1 t Newport Ocarh You arr the w1nn1>r of Two frtt Tick•ts 1(1 th1· PENNY PINCHER ADS J lilfrrn 1ownhou , •Vl Jbt 2 1b.; nt:w t1uµl,•x. di!> \duJb, I l 1 ho) ~ UICI h W , p .a 11 c>, Jl J r I) <:.s.-.v.i1d t..l.ll07J n111drl'n Of\ S.17~nio 1 lxlrm ~ blod. lo IN.uh ~ Voc:GHCM flttttafs 4250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEW OFFICES 3 I~ brand new office!. airport urea. w t full secretanal crvice, good pncc. 54~1151 ----ONLY S2 )o:o._-.L,ld\• ' br blln, nu pt1:-S32S mo ~I 1~71S, M2-4201 t'\.("' 11tt ~ ''llAI "1ml'r St :.57 157~ l!t-lww Q.Hulu 2 bdrm 2 1.1•:,\.'\}o; 01 ... 1 IUN ba. pool. f''jJ\lUtllll' View Jbr :?h,, \11·~.1 clc•I M.1t 2 house' froul occ:rn lioo:w fur n-nt H1g Bea r l'l1 ltlPb ti, luwns furn. S!.S nllfly pr cpl. Call ulll'r 3 p 111. $48 l!.lli9 :J fldrm Cabm for r\'nl ti rruJcs fn1m Snow Valley ~IHOO. ~lrnds 867-2220 Airport area office spare ... sec:rclanal s~rv. on pre nu.-.c:;. $140. V~7-9J31. 17th MflUJI LONG HACH RODEO :11 Lh c Lon A Ht'ud1 Ar t'nu ,3110 )o;, On'.•ll Blvd . Lonf.{ Uea,·h. To l'IUJ m vour lll'kl'li>. 1·.l)J ~·56711, l•Xl 27:t Sc•ll any Item or l'um 0111.illon of 11\'m\ for S'/5 11r h•u with u 1'1•nnv l'mt'hl.'r Ad 3 lint.''> ft1r :! tl>rN·ruhvt• da.v' Ku·h 11ddit1onal lint' 1i. 00< 101 th(' 2 day~ C'harl(l' II ' 1.:~ 1110 ~.~.oo;,_l5 3GJ'J 1 ron t A Y .11 l 2 I .i .! Hr.:? ha. 115thq ft l'pl< ~~l-7100 \•nr ~a r . f) W. $J7r1 llcJullful 1>.inuram1r \'ll'W M~a Verde K3!! 1!l2 1 or twnh~\·, 3 mu,t<>r1111e LOl)WlaHIH1 3850 499 4721 bdrm:., :!' ~ ba. tu1ko11y, ••••••••••••• •••• ••• ••• fr PI . t 1 ·• "h com P · Adults, !52 year muumurn :s Br. 2 ba upper, Me:.a dcl dshW!lihr, 2 c.i.r .iar with Ni!.W upt. l.l'isurt> World. .~.!'."~~3SO. No pell. upem·~· Avu1I Mar I. S57S To p-O·Htll, Montecito .,...,_UINU ino._003-0784 ViU, 2 DH. 2 bu, tcorgeoui. MOWTAKIHG DmtaP-'-t 3826 north lliO del( vuiw. ..... $500 /mo Owner RESEltVATIOHS ••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• 0 • 71411;.W 1121. SGS 3974 Urand new deluxe l OR. ! br. 1 ~it ba, twn hsc pvt 2 Ba apts Xlnt Costa gar • l~c patio, n<'w ~~ hoc:h 3869 M~a lorallon J\Ya1labl\• cartbtonc cpl. &. dr:.ipe::. ••••••••••••••••••••••• March J,1979. Prom S375 No pets, $335 / Mo P"'RK .... EWPORT per mo. Brin~ your 673-72().J "" " ruommutes Cull. - ------~ean view lge 2 bt, 2 ba 2 balrorues. enrl. dbl Rar. IUDS OK t. hr, l bu. JJOOL $l75 •>15-llO!i4 IOam lo 7pm. Very pnvale $375 mo f>4<>.W78 Pulm 0 ('11<'rt Det•p (;a. nyon Tennis Club, 2 Br. furn <'Ondo. Liled tennis an('! $6000yrly. 1173-4407 Rftttclfs to Share 4 3 00 ······················~ ROOMMATES Share-H·Sav~ F.llJOY more. Pay less ! All Ages & Lifestyles W(• Chl'Ck Hefcrcnccs caa 546-4282 Unfurn or will furnis h for )'OU l'vt. bdr & bath. plu.<1 ttn.r Fme II){' •• id· JOmln~ J(Olf eourse & swimmm~ pool nearby Mu.,t be over 52 & smgle. 770-4140 Ft•m 24 lca1·her, ndi. fem rmmat1• nn i.mkr, for 2 1m h.w in CM $165 mo 646-ll7tl9 art ti. F _ to shurc w/svmc .J br , 2 ba homr Mes a Verde. $300 t 1 :i u l I. J an 5"16(1786. CdM Gmd fir. 600 sq fl. Ideal for tnl det.1gn 285:> E.CstHwy I large room whkh <::tn IH:' divided. Carpels, draµt•s, private rt•s troom . Stora~e. S2SO per mo Utll pa id. Call 548·387tl Ask for Carol. ------Building for leai.c 1111 Newport Blvd. Pll•nty ol pitrkUlg. Ca II 64G-392K Feb. h Pnce Sale 3 mos "1 pnec on I yr L"le. lmmed. movc-m )o\im w1ronfoee rm. 'it~·relanal sentl'l'. & telephone r eception Ph 646-74411 * •• PLA NT ~11 0 1'. ide a l ~tup for lady, c·u•1u,.1vc• art•u. !>Cllln.i.: lx•low setup <'Ol'll 'l'ry S71Joo Cull pncc l\gt. 751 MOO C:O<.:KTAll.S , l'cwµorl Bt.>a1·h, i.l unt.'!> thro~ Crom w.ilcr, partnen. f11(hlmg t:x<·t•Jlc..nt ll•a::.c Term.., AUL 751 HOO lmfffmtnt Opportunity 5015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CdM Offlu Sult-. lnwstor, ('llm Sil'' or pro fits A '<UC'C'f'~!lful h111 ld.-1 ---------· ~-ekb funcls. s1:1.00ll llt'r hou::.c Shurt lt•r111 , A•ollabl~ 75• per fl a nd u p Oceanside of Coa11t llw) w/toas of old c;u M cha.rm. ROGERS REAL TY 675-231 I <;('('Url'<J MrGordonU5.'l ~l6'1 COM DUPLEX 10'\ DOWN to l•\lbliOll llllJnt'tn~: rmm\•d1.1tc ,.. h · n:q u1 red . S:l05. ooo Pnnt unly This offt•r i:ood tnru 2 .' IO 17!1. C1.·ntury <!I Wc..'bl 554 41MO f>ro(. woman St."Cks person 235 SQ ft In l'cnlral f''OU/l· lo i.hr La~ Nig home. 2 taln Vnlley. Heasonable. Rr 2 Ba . Eves, 496·6754 964-2:?3H or 963-861 l Investment Ml F Cum room, $140 + 1 •• utll. Costa Mesa. Non i.mkrs AYl 2/JS.645-8434 Siil> Up. Offtl'C·s lort'. 4HO ft, A/C, 17301 Bcad1 HI. 11.B. LE1\SE842·2834 -----~ lulinHs R.ntal 4450 Cut Living Expenses! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~tiw • h"m' "'arr Nc.-wport Mannl!r's Mile. House-Mates Unlimited Modem S02 s <1 It 5t11rc 1'1r """' "l Annmm.<lo 2 G 3 0 ( (.; ) 1\ V o 11 '"·''' t1 ''II•"''' 19, I 21J-477-7()()1 f, •l111tcJt•t1 TV t 1v., --- w~ 5020 • •••••••••••••••••••••• •Ho•in<J Troubte• Pull.Im.: u Hcul .. : .. tall'. bu&tnl!'"" or pers(Jnal lo;m·• Wt·'q• ~Ul't'l'<'<kd whc·reothn' haH· fallt•d. )o'loun1·1.1l l'v11.,ult<111L' IAS~I ------- Nu l'umml'rct.al a c.b For ~re> 1nform1t11t1r1 Jrld tu phu'l' your ad NII 642-5678 fll"fo'ANY 'S PHIVATF: ()ISCO. CO RPOHJ\TI'. MJ:;MBEHSHIP. SOOO 00 CALL KAREN 171 11 54()-6384 Ext 29 Lost & Foelnd 5300 ......•..•............. FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 64.Z..5678 Lost or Found a pct·• C'.ill Animal As11 1s tun tl' Leagul' 537·2273, no fCl' Lost: Long hair mul!1 dr rem rat M<>.<;tly wht S1 W HB. Heward. 5:16-20l0 Sl.500 Heward HPturn ol man-; i.told \lathnon &. <.:onstanuen wnst WllLl'l1 ~t Ul Lu~ lkh IJl·e 759-1139 aft 5 w1 th h '''~ u1 I 1m1 '''·' l·•ht" I t ,, ., ,1, 714/832-4134 1-'ocslorc & offire space .1t l'l':.tsorrnbll' rat«>'>. MonCP.Jei. Trust Dffdi 5035 HEWARD Jo'ur lhP rt.> tum or known where abouts. Female Aklt J Red & sliver. v./blk ma ... k. wh11t• 1·heM I.~ do,.:. 1h11k Cur . chui.I..} looktnll > Last sel'n nt•.11 TOW ~h()t)J <1rea Wl·d .J ,1 II :t I 0 W n I' t hf•anhml.t·n • 4!U·!l6J!I cu l!Jf',.JJ17 C:om!ortablc lll'W 2 br. · ha. kid'> ok. no pct:. ·•">7 mHS SJG.5. mo .! Ult dl'an. pnv palm laundry $315 '46 !1950 !°>46· 64 I .! HR 1 ~1 . 1H'wly PJtntcd 111.-.1tle & out $325 rno Cull !•am or L .. rry . 546· J8l:j() 3 BH 2 Bu twnhi.t', I ,Yr old Nl'xl lo S . Ci.t l'la1.a l l•n 111 <;, r1oo l , S52!i mo li40-~S art 5 wkdy::. 1, blk to bcarh 3 hr. 2 ba. doWn.~t. bltns. frpl. p11tw. i:ar. Lease $500. 127 44th St. 64()..6140 •Walk totbe beaeh • Casadei Sol Heauuful Adult 1\pts !!1001 Brookhurst.118 Promontory Point, tenn. 962-6653 t•rt. p ool, d ub h s<· . ------Choice vu lcw l br SSSO. •2 Ur. 2•, ba lownhou::.l' ~76:Jl 0519 ap l . S p a nou s & ------- homt·likc. Ol x k1trh Near Lido. 2BR. 2ba lux .! hr. 2 ba Twnhs l'ool. w1bllns. inc l. refriJ.: & ury Wat<>rfr ont a pt ,I tit'. & Hee llm Nr Coa11 lra!>h mat.her. t::arl gar Gara~e. balcony, frplr Phu.a Child Ok. No l'CL'> & pot10. Small pct ok $750/mo. 55lHl!02 S I o o m o S410. mo. li42 1008/673 5781 G~nuru Realty 839 60-zl Nt-wport HeighL'l 2hr, d1·n. Adult Apts. nr bch. New p.il10 Nr <1h11pp1ni: 2br frph.', puhu!>, flOOI ll'fllt·r No IX'L'i $400mu Sf>t· J.(atc 1702 1'1onda. Lovely & Spaciou-. 2hr, 2b.i apt .. with mu1tn1f1 rent view of th<' Ha) SIO:l 611 Ledo Park Or 673-nl'l. Female rm male wantc1I l'ompldd) furn 2 br dupll•X l hOUS(' from ht'ach 1n Newpo rt $17:>/mo. 1213> 480-l!l71 Mule wants to lihr Npl/ CUJ\1 home w M /)o'. Wlle<1. 21.1/ 675-3673. noommatc oceded. COM 2 UH home Ca ll Mare for det.a1ls. 5~·20'.!2 -----------rl'mall' rm mate to ::.hnre, 4 BR llulbott 1!11. Duph'"<. $150 mo + uti I. 675·65tl2 l'V!> V i>ry nkt• home overlook· lnl( waler tn Newport !Wur h. to 11harc. Wl'll rurru~hc..-d all bltn'i, park- 1 n~. l\t /l''e malc . 711 ~18 436G 500..SOOb Sq Ft MESA VERDE DRIVE PLAZA 1.525 Mesa Verde ,.;, C.M 545-4 123 M.UINat•s MILE PRIM E LOCATION ON WATER J\v111lubl<· for relall or prote!t!.lonal offt('('S. Total of 3000 Ml ft . Can be divided tolo 11maller units. Wat«il"Oftt Ho.-1 631-1400 Costi.1 Mc-sa-upµrox 1400 sq rt ofrlce bid~ l':a rk in~. 766 W. l !:ILl'I St 5<1' pr fl. 557-63.'i l ----Stew~ 4550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New Gara~l'b for ftent .•......•.•..••.......• LOWEST lnfendRotH ht T.D.'s, also 2nd T.D. Loons. Fairt>~l Term., ~•nrr W1!J Sattler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 545-0611 MONEY AVAILABLE 2nd TD LOANS SWJN(; LOANS f':<JU lPMl-:NT CONSTIW<"TION <>ll ANY PlJH P()SF, Oavid P. C;.rt-v & Ae.i;oc· JU; Urokt.•1< !I00-1!157 * DISCOUNTED * Small TD uu·ome nol<'s from $25,1100 C s :a I 1 :.. b u r y t o w n \' 1 64{).R1S5 -, Jh.t m1" fem -.C'l Wht fm'f• & che'<t San .Ju,1n Are.i 4.'lG-6508 '192·001 o l.t)lo.i" Sm whl shal!1n fo'em. doi.t. AnSWl!t s tu S;..i kc Ht-w u rd l.u-. I Thurs. 2· l. Np t. <.:rt"sl area. f.31-1764 LOST flrown & white pup P.V. looks 11 kc: St He· rn:.11 d Vil' 22nd & ~frwporl I! I v d 1\ n !> \\ t' r 'i t 11 Falstaff REWARO li45 1000 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS l"ouncl ~rn I <: olrJ1• 11 l'od11•1 }ot·11'l \Iii. Nr \h-i.t111ont ~(·hi in II U 84l~tl PH'SOftal1 S3SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• RJ.;l.\Xll\J(; \1,\SS/\<i E U11h.J11m1·~ l.1r \lu'"''UI Ouh·olltf !I. ~111 .111 1 1•1n:c:NAN'l"1 l'.1rin11 1'0fll111t'rit1.1I 1·ou11w1t11i: Iv 1 dt•n JI Abort u.111 •• ulcl)l lion & k~·cµcng 1\J.l('A HE 5'17 ~!>t,.1 Spfritual Reader l815So El CJm11111 ll1•al Sun Clcmcnh• Fully 111· For ,1 fJIJt tJ2 7:!'•1l LINDA & VICKI Outcall Maua9~ For Tit~ Fvn of It! St>r. mg :ill Or:inl!,t• l'u tl3:> 731:1 MASSAGE FtGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCA.Ll OHL Y Days,etrH,h,. 631 -2140 GOLDEN GIRL l'hy,1ca l m;1:.,,Jl!l' hy 111"11 mui-i.1•11r I 1•1·hr11 ; 11111 ·I KP M Al>Jll MH281,• h •• n l r I I !i (' ,1 I 171 1 llfl111HOO (,,,. .1f111t PUN HOLD, CORP li~l Von K:lrman Irvine. C..:al 927 14 l'.qu.iJ oppty t-mplo) er ACCOUNTING C&.ERIC l\n t•nr rv It liCI )>Us1lwn 1:0. 11v.i1l 11Jll1 1tl our S1\Ll·.S t'l l'A."ill l\('COUN'l'IM; Dl';PA((T\fF.\IT for .1 111·r..11n ~ho ha-. lmul 1·cl 1 •Pt'n1·m·•· 11111 1-. u1n lullow. & will111~ to h•J rn I.It luiitdy 11 ~rowtb l>ll'<t tHlll 1'111 It'°' ll'l C'lUill• .1ul11tmi: ol :talcs r 1·11or1 "· t'J.',h d1·sx·~""· i.om<• r11 •nit & gl·rwr.il rlt'n<·ul ~~"~· I :)(cdlcnt bt•nt>lthl & worl.rn,.: 1•nndit1011'i with ,1 ••row1rir. romµJll) 1\tllJI;' Ill [>l'l 'ilJO 11r..:.10 1.1.v HC)(if' R lN(' 17Gtl<Jlllclte AV<'nue lrli&nc. Ca !12714 711 541\ 113.ll AOQEtlT HALF Ci accounlelffps l'rnutlly Annount·t•s Our Move.'. to l .. tri(rr 01111.·1•' Visit V~. /\I Our Nt·" I'" nl1111l <'OLU\Vl-:1.l. Bi\NK I· It NICOLE'S Bt' 11.1)1 NG !-.Ul'IJ-: 200 Modet & Dance Studio 2:13.:J N JllHMDW 1\ 'r Ht'.IUlllul i.:1110, IJll\,tl\' ~ANTA/\N1\ room'> We.• 'tam 1• .01 11ll'l't•a:,1n~: 531-9530 dMn,111d lhrou.:ltotJI t'all u-, }OU wo11 I ht· Or;m)(t' County fur 1·x ~OCT\' pt•Ml'nt t'f.l '1('l'C)U0ltll~ ~ fk!I So 11;11 bt11 \11.1t11•1m J,1(1okkl'c'1Jtnl( 1>c:r \011m•I Coma• m ~ou 11 ht· ~I.al.I C.cllur \'1."il us lodJy "'" \'1111d1d · · at•· luokmJ,! forwa1 d 111 Mon S.11 111.im to :!:tm i.:n .. ·1mi: ~ou 111 our m·11o t-'l-1 till :1 :io ;1 30a/I\ Ive. ,itwu SUFf'EHINC; from ...,, t1<11 t7 I 4J 835-4103 rhra. J)-OnJW• nr cl.an FRl· I" l'\UKl..,.t, drull'' \-.k .1houl 1'1•1 >.1 •--------· cit> .lt1Jt1IM tla1r & l-.1 .t111 Trt-.11 m1•n1 l'h I.al 1111 h'Ur. Ml 1~11 •ESCORTS* 972-1138 WANTED: Di vorced Wom~n Lt:I S II I" lll'lp \1111 ~mo L 1on11 11 v . I 111 .1 n ('1Jl1y, t•tJUl'>Jl11>11.1ll~· &-m1nJrs & \\tJrl..•h111" now IH•in1: ::.d11•dult n <.:;111 x:.1.ns:.>t..1. *SEQUIM• \111dt•I., ,1, 1·:...n111 .. M 11«• f1•111;1l1• t\1111.111 .tin\ \1.1n11\ m-.11hc1. U11·mla, l 1. ,> ~I t11-..:i.1•t\H11( () (' 1\<ok .thoul •JI•'<' r :ll•'' 752-8708 \thl'r11Slll.: '>:lie:. (.';.all 1111 n.1twnJI aet·u1111 t' I,; phorw li;,1m to I~ 111 .. w Lt:.idm~ l'r.1111.: l'uhhc.·.1 lion, (iot11I •·.ir111n> 1x1t,i•n11,1I C<tll lot lllll·t 1 71 1 !l:J(i 'l.>111 * * ,, kaffiC"rinc Augustine !l:lJ w J!.11)1 Cui.ta Ml'~.• Yoo an• tlw wm111•r 11r Two Fre~ Ticbh lolht• 11th AllllU<tl l.OMG8EACH RODEO .ti I hl• l.1111).{ lit"" Ii \1 t'llJ,JC)ll f-: 11 11'.lll HI\ t1 . I.mt>: 11,.,11 II ·1 .. dJlnl ~llUI Ill !\ch. t•,tll 1~ ;)li7H. 1 xt ;.•u * • * r\1''1 M \\'\(;I· I( li75 7213 !J(j() 6610 ~alianu CatJronua J\pts. 1&2 Br. ~ ,.. Clooe lo b r h & !.~s. Wl'.STt.:Lll"F 2 br, now ltl Jww 1. Adil.,, no peti. $300 fi73·Gtl40. 1700 Westcllff Or. HS.I Vll'w Condo tn ~har(' "Ith "'"Pon-.1 hlr non "moktrtl-' ft•mah• Pool & Ju1·u111 S2.'iU .\lo + • u 11111 h •-1 Ul· 11ui. il re <I u 1 r 1• ii C a I I 1-· a v 1· K.17 ·1>663 or 975·066.5 eve;. C08ta Mei.a Allnounc.menh/ 1ox22 675 5tltlll Penoftals/ Rentals WClftted 4600 Loat & FoUnd \fonace -Cra\\I l'o.wh -Cl'nsu:. CIJA:-JCE &poymtnt& Pt-eparGtion "nr ·'·' 111111 .. 111 ( u ... t., \It "' I ', .. I ti l'llllfl It ll1i..I .11111 ftt ll">l J1..1\ l 11~11111 ''"V W1 h: hi.lo; p 'llt>w bt>a ut1ful 1tardcn 1'romS2!Js. 008 7176 ...•............•••.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1...a... cJ:m, 1s :.urh u \\tic! town They l''-cn h.1\1• !>lot mnrhmt'S 1n thc· w('d ding <'h;..ipds A!l tf you'tt• not lJking a CHANCF. . 1pJrtmenti.. pool & spn ----- Uiwhclor S2 3 Br. 3 ba townhouse apt. :.! Hr frplC', end. ~ara~e. lge Adult... no 1>t·t~ md. paUo Cll'an as new 2250 Vani;:uard W .1y l\l.irnl'<f t•ouple w /srna II 1:.1tN1•wport Blvd> <"h1ldrrn o k . 2 1702 540-9626 Brook hurs t , $4 50 . ----~0778or (2l3)432 8687 ;t Ult. 2 bu. <•nrl J!ar, S.'t75 N1·ar OCC . No pets 151·2156 ---- 3br Jb, crpt. drapes, frplc. pnv pauo. 3blk, from IAYFROHT SUP AVAIL. Spac 2 br, den, 2 ba apt wisp<.'<'· ta<:ular VJCw Luxunous 11ppo1ntmeols . beaut ~ardens with sandy beach. Overlooks Ualboa Island. Adults, no pcL ... (714 )673-8414. Female roommate wa nl- ('(f Lo shr r h:armmg J BR. 2 ba hou$c in t M . <'loi.c lo tl<'nch\.'S, tennis & rue QUCll>all crts & JOAJ:inA lrut't No Pt'ts plt•ww. Rent $160 + ''" uUI. Call 9-5: 645 8737 7 to!k for l'ut or L.i11a. ---------brh. $550. days S.'l6-6ti6J, 2RP 2b II bit' ., blk S:~ 2 br, I 1~ b:a. balrony. SJCi.11705 eve. 840 5949 " a, a '"11 "' s Garaaes lai.llldry rm l\cJulls, m , ---lo h e h. s375/mu. l'h forll~ 4350 pt>l'I 2 Rr. 2 bu, pvt patio, ('lose 673-2571 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 'r.iL Mgmt 642· lf.03 to b(>arh. $3115/mo. Dnys, Wc>strUrr Arca 1 Ult, i><>ot.· $3S Sh w/mitr 325 .. J t7 Pl. ~ 6663: 536 870S eves '" S200 1 Hr. nirc, quiet 84()..564S. Rutland Arms . Nr shop 1 Santu Ann Ave, aft area. Yard. Non -smoker '?.'"~· Avail now $325 l lAM.~0130 Hers req'd. Nop<.>lK 3 BOHM. 2 bath. 2 story _63_1·_2984 _____ _ lSLMgmt 642-1003 Townhouse Apt. $450/mo BEACH -----!l64 1507 1 hr $265 rcrni: CI D ' ------2br frplc. sun /deck, I Aduit..'I No'11(·t~ 73i.u w' 3 Ur, new condo, l mile to blk. from ocean. $400 llllhSl.673-7787 ht>o c h . Total re l'. ~~~:w:uss 1157-1900 ur ---packutie. lncl. tennis. N\.>wGarar<es for Rent Costa Mesa 10•22 675-5800. Sllij(IC liC&raJ(cs. $40 mo 1959 Maple Ave, Costa M{'lla. $37S 2 bJ townhou~e. lmmed occupy. avail. -,. ttMMI Fvnished frple, !tundtH·k , pallo. (21J)9l9S541. -•L..L-.t-L.--" 3900 -----•~ :idults, oo pets. 2656 F --VWTilflllll....-u ~ "_._ 4400 OnU1J1e. Ave 640.7905 Brn new. 2 bdrm. 2 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --bit-Ins, Jacuzzi, pool, ten ntE EXClTlNG 523 Sq, n. office space to N<>w 2BR. 2ba, no kids or rus,garage. S550 ix•r . m o 'ALM MESA A"S s ub·iease In Laguna Plots. SJM. l mo rent free lsl &last + dean up & MJNUT~ TO NPT BClf Hdls, La Paz Rd just ~ 1>e<:urity. 840-277K Bach, 1&2 BR south of the Son 01e1:0 2 Br, l ba. ~ar. Kids. pets 2 Br. tt11:-;;; v111nt & i'd>~t~o~~ l~~~~,;'lw. ~onth ok $325mo. new chocolate brown ~I M<-sa Dr. ~or646-2316 rrp\A, One at S2.SO m o <S Blka East of Newport Dc.>luxc m edical u1lc. W--:av411I now. Ont' at $22.5 Dlvd > ground nr., Corona dol tsHall• YUlogt mo. uv:ul 3/1 AdulL'I on Mar Reatonomlcs Corp. BcautHul brand ne w ly tall vvc5 collect. 9nm-5pm 546-9860 67:> 6700 :iduJt apt.a. No J)('ls Pool, 1213>2R9-i12G ---------1 ---111rnizl. ()pen dally. __.,__ MOllUHOMI 250 :JOO sq. fl. offlceR. OM W.19th St New apt., now rentinj.t. 3 1..-RM"'TIO... f''tom $145 Incl. utrl. 779 Buch.~~ $265 bdrms, 2 bo & encl. Jlar . """' "" " W lllthSt. 540·2200. l Dr $200-IOOS start at S49S. Lot•otcd 1,c_, Rt'l>088etajon11, buy OP· ---- 2 Br~ $3~ block from Beach Blvd. tiOO-'\, tuk over paymt1nl TSt.Mgmt M~IU22 1·orner of T t•rry information. F.n 11y Or /Viewpoint Ln. Open flnnnclng OAC Trade ~Sat & Sun. Call for anythlng valuable lnfo. 847.0001. Sant.. Ana 554 7070 NOTICE Responsible, worktnA w r 1 l e r s e c k s o n c• bedroom eoltage 1n Corona del MM or c;oi.1u McsJ. Qwetncss CSM'n tJU1. Wntt.' Class1r1~'<1 J\tl wais. Omly 1'1lot. I' O Box 1560, Costu M csu ~. Worklnl? mnrrl<'d roupk in their SO's need unfuru 2 bdrm house or npt. CM or NH urt•a with rN1son1.1 l>le reot . Rcfcrt·nl'c:t W1•'U take ~ood {'Of\• 111 your property. 646 7217 eve. or weck<'nds. •Wantt.\d• 4 Br house w/2 rar garage w/yard lion dyman/earpentcr & seamstress/Int. dl'('IJrkr "team" will rt•pn1r . pnjnt. dcrorote or n · novaU! your horne to up mlct value in exchanlll' for rent/Jea.se allowanee 984-1848 4650 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oceanfront art s tudio Wry J.>nvate.Cnpo. Hrh ~.496-1338 ....... /lft•••t/ FMm.Ce ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... SOOS Opporfwtlty ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAIL ORDER mfu. u dua1ve product < yurht Ing>. unUmrlt-d p0tentl11 I S(tllcr under c11pit Ahird Bring t>ffcr Alilt 7~1·1400 Sharp 2 nR 2 ua. towlly remodeled w/ncw c pl11 t.hruoot. Bost Coata MeH urt'n. S326 mo Old r duld acccpt•bl<-A1k tor l...JrTy 01' Pa m. 548 ?JO_ Make your 3hopp10 g eaMcr by u,ln~ lht• On1~ Ptlot Cla11s1fled Ad'! Wcstmln~ttr 8'8·8895 C.Anith im 956·1011 E AnM~m 958-tOOO how Dfllly Piiot Cltl!\11 lrit.>tl nds dhlploy their IOO.'\ll81tl?S Wtlh ICj!lbJllty 11nd lmp11('f ' Our ndll. Wt' al'\' proud to "•>'· r e1dly JC •t r esults. Phont> ()112·~11 Bus. fCJr ~ale or cxch Irvine Org \;<> 9yrs. old 6 empl oyees II m 7141~9828 .... Amounc~nh 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * • • Edward Kotlbacko 'J!U1 Wc ... trn1nster 1\ \'e . Cost.c Mc.·-..1 You ar ... thc \\ innl'r ol Two Frn Tickets to the 17th J\Jlnunl LOMG BEACH RODEO a t the Lon.: lkud1 J\rt•n u.300 >-: Ot•t•n11 Blvd . L,on.: 114•ac·h To rl&Jm your llt'ket~. t:ill tl42 ~-ni. t•l(l 272 * * * ------ already: ____ _ FOUND. 127 M. lns h Sc•t Ler. Brookhurst & Han rung. 96.184_78 __ 1-'0UN O S amoyed Oesenbc 840-2821 fFYOU uuvt• ;1 Nt'r Ykc• t1111rt1·r or .:oodi-to 1>l1ll. plnn· ;111 ;ttl 111 lh t• D :tll > 1'1lot nass1fic'<J S.•C'l 1on Phone 642 5678 ....... ~. Opporluntty 5005 Opparlunity SOOS •••••.•.••••........... ...........•..•........ THE DIET CENTER IS HERE! O"{'f 800 D1•'I Center locations ~ross 1h1• lJ S Jnd Candd.1 AND 'ifVfRAI Will BE OPENING SOON IN ORJ\NC.~ ('Ol JN I Y l\NO I A COUNTY W<' "'" looking for dmbilioui people wir h thl• de,1rt> ,\nd rm>an<, 10 lx>eome independent 1 hro uqh .,elf-employmenl. Som1· b.ic kqwund m Coun!tehnq, Nur<;inq, 01111\ Nu1n11nn nr Rusml'Ss would be heloful If vou how rlw de..,1w 10 srrw other~. you ... hould 11111~119.lli• 1h .... unique opportunitv WI! olll!r ,m 1•t1&y , •• 111•. proven method u f r,1pid wec9h1 loss .1nd control. FX>tw4'c>fl I 11h r, .!!lli!.10 <.111 7141 774 7817 •1 ! I~ .met .i:." iw 1 l'lll vrov ... , II' DIET · A ... 1t•.1t•r.·d 1n r tlnllly C1rc If' CENTER ...•......•............ Xhools& lmtrucHon 7005 , • .,. p t •• 1 I I c v l' . (llJ '~" JH." ..•...•..••.•.•........ Th e Causey Hea l E5tate School ·rm; MOST ~~;Nsl Ill. F REAi. 1-;sTA n; CUUHSF. YF.T GONGP.IV,.:n t~t.1-:cou Hs .. : • llNIQtH; VIDEO t:nuc..:A'l'IO'll rJ<OGHAM l>F .. 'ilGNl':O HY AWAHD WI NN ING 1-'ACUl.TV 'J'mtion A MiiiiiT Progr11 m • Surf .ind S1111d Shos1rim~ v11111wr M~ So <..'C)llNI flw v 1.1\0UNA UF.A<.'11 497-2457 \pt .\fi•ri., IK unth, S.111L.1 ,,n,1 M.1t1111• rr•I I 1·,111 """rt.out Alli + ultl Jo'.1\ 75" ~Iii ASSEMBLER MECHANICAL l'll'>il 1011 ITI l'Jl'l'I r,tl nw1•hnn11-.1I a 'IS(•mhly .1r1•,1 l11r tn\•ChJflll'<tl a ~ q• ru h I 1• r S I 11 n rl a r ti knowll"fllti' of h11ni1 Looi' "' .1 h I I I I v t II r I' a If rn•·<'h.11111·:11 · a 11-.c•mhh 1>1111h :i rno .. 1 M 111 ·11 rrw" E-;'JI ,.;o,.; ~.~1 ~> . .a ui<I< lot H ry lillmon \ !'.. ~ .. ; \I B I. Y ;\ W 1\ ll 1-:ll'i I•: Sm ~.'I 1•1· prh. 1't ,h1ll, 110 l''lfl llt't :O.Jnt 1n11111• ,,..,,, "l;r n" ,\1q1111 I j\\ lll'l ~lc.•1• V-C1111r , 7'.>-t iiVll A'iS}o~l\I RLl':H ~h'rhantl ;ii bt·nd> '" '\t'nlhh r nl'Nkd. Ahtbh 111 v.vrl\ ltolll prints rt•• ·~ 011 nl 11 ours 7 .trn I u a ·..:,11m M 511 µt•r hour ~ull fur .q•pl 962 7'101 t''ll ;!l .. II 1\1' i.11m1•thmj1 l\l :wll '' t 1 1· 'llJl'<I mht I O 11 ~\'I I For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot AO-VISOR 642-5678 \ J T~.F*'*Yt. 1971 DAILY PILOT D ;· IJ I)~"~" i"I • ... • ' .. Nlrl I I -• ~· -. ~ ............. l°ll!!tdl..... • •-1. --~ .. ,.... ........ ,,..,.., ..... ........ -. ••••••••••••• ,1~.-;;;~.; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;; ................... .._ • ._ ••••••••••••• ·············~········· ........ ._........ ····" 1-...-. ........ -•• -. ........ ,,......................... ........ • •••••••••••• AD types tJI ronstnle'U<>n :CU'iTOw •aodworklna, 1 0::-~-... -t aU l)' No ll!Ul\lyn1"n l 11rpen1rv. Thr MoPl)rll ln bus104'8s ~laces, ptanten, etc. Knowtee Palntlna. Int/. PATCH PLASrERING 'Iboma1 pattl Uc. roof rt· R.ecnodel, llddltJ Wt reaht•ntla 1 " rom . Jt1b 100 am.ell. 1J1 rnwd drywall. patio rov1•r~ linNI llm. lfonl'tl. de· New remodel. Rell. ~t. ut.Sand h!ast. text coat-A 11 type t . Fr• e P&ir " coaUna•, Feb. l ~:..1m10 mett1al Call Wa)'nt 5'Jlro.l~l8'f'll l'.llnt1n1o1 J.'rl•e Pt'n<lAblc. tfflc1enl Of G46-0t64 lna.Comm/Rts.836-1120 esU.matesC.11~ S~$tOOolfooU01et-'d 4 _.,. I I )tf."364 ' , -, Ellllmatn Ruaonoblc nctll, home • vacancles. od tre1Ung, 11h1n&IH &t -.,....•IP • E C i; RAN 10.N 0 "'n rut• lm-962I U-nan or l.1c'd. ~2393 Mo¥!'!! Paperhan11ng. Startlnf. ....... , ahatee. upbalt" ac~lk ••-••••••••••••••••••• r_. •-1#, '"'-tr Add a room . •m ........ ---at S8.00 per alngle rol . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""' .. u .... for com™"'I on ~,......,~.... "..... -,~"" '---T •••••• •••••••••••••••• ..o_tM:AQ k" Sob ... ._ ... '& ,..,.. -sa .... M~.,. • .................. •••• lll'V\'t' 41171 ~ Anyt.1mt< -" --.. --I.$ 1or · Plumb~repaJr. S""'c. ln shingl~ & blt·UP roofing. , ~ ••••• • Moma Movln°: Lic'd & ""' .. Ori\ •n •ru1on1 lot ~m fl t 1m cl an, :='. J tL. 0 It' l •-.., ••• •• •••••••••••• Jna ure d . Tl u 886 . Cuatom Wa1Jpaperln1t ~ema le copper re· 20 yrs. exp"r. r r ee •R "•lu • ·•IC'oau~ Ct•le<ir bri1ht n "'· wht ~·r u..•nt, 11 0~1 • •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• LINDA'S Proreu ional urvlce. AlJ WorkGuarFreeEet ptpe. Good pricea. Top Eatlm. Membe r • l.•C' R. CM S6~ ciiu IOmln blr cPI C'tea11 taniw !np1f:~~;1~:c1~· 00.:StutJ.:nt l Too truelc, TAX St:RVJCE MC/Vl1& accept. 962-4.242 61J..4t5a · HatPlumblna. "7·31i4 Qiarnber ol Coaunerc~ l'V~~l. lh, dU1 rm. tJ•lt $1) A\iJ mr.t'm nu ~I 2111>4 or T°l'.f•h, lr o trim. tton P rs/Bua Income 1'ax ---------NoWaitinC~l3 rm ll • ,'VUlb 110, chr ,._114 ~$703.6'2~ Call&U&Wforappt "Movlllg Out ft About?" QUALITVPAINTlNG HOMESAVEBS. Plumb· 19JaltllR; 1uat •bm rv t c11lor "Don't ~lay Call To· lnUExt. Nul. Rea onu· Ing " Heattns. F'ree S,. •• ... ••••••••••••••••••• "'Plllr,t.1)'n t'~Vt 8tdric• Lit• h~ullna ·m~vtna PROFESSIONAL day"LocaJ&ataU,..wide ble. W•yoe <IXOYEJ estlmat.es.Sl&hr.Honest ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mabuar• "'"Om•n w 1u .m "'> rlf R 1, ••••••••••••••••••••••• <ln1t1c·Vatd clunlnit INCOMETAX SERV serv. 24 hrs. 7 days. ~ & r eliable aervlc e . Spas, hot tubs installed ~ ~u.l. nr ¥artner'a !l.11 ulOJ tl..tX.'11U ·1~ Pl1 t'd It r•t~ 6U-07~ Yourhomt ormyolfico. ~ i---------BA/MCOK.9'79-8065 Cas. l'lect, phunblng Sthc..101, hr If tu -"'•• Cart1 C. H ."lun•r• "•ht frtt c~Um11t; <rn Ho..ec~ ---·~ appt. l'all 98&5438. PaUlUt\fl & k'allpape~lnfi· Beach City's Plumbing Freeeill. Llc:d. 751·9872 ~r__hmn . la_ra,• h .. Ii StA!.tm 1rf: At.,u \II • wwt•Qr.m1&UJoba ....................... LCIOdlc.,hMJ Hard working men./ ~~ Jt:fs.S.~~~~nab e willbeatanyestbyl0%. 1'1le . ~UR!•. Janiet iCMln • I' / Wok au•: Uf'\'nM'(I tiT:IOU,q . ROBIN'S H OUSI!:· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~tttt:i/~·.Jg,s· --Guar.24hr.se&.Ol93 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .;.:!lcPue~•0:1~':;.:!,u , ·'l'Nrk i:,ount runtt-f / firs ti ct,.,r~~ .. ~hlt:yHVcllCe~n· Euro~an Land.caper. Pt'o'RNK1'.E3~S NEED Ora.lil:SlOGuaran~re· CERAMIC TILE . ec'!ll..1'1'a .. rat~ MS .. .to ••••••••••••••••••••••• , " .. ..,..._ ,._ Top work. Faar pnce. P~P ..... 1t9 Int/ex .& Ac~rscl~~.~· sult.s. Drain Speclaliats. ldYkhemt,llbat.M. entirys . .. , t•S..-.lce ,.__./C _...._ I~· u1 lh~ unllll l'a11t, ~ 54().-0857 Rris.646-4871dys/eves. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Work auar. a41 .s1ti6i S4().8783.5'0-878f -2~ e or m n e ....................... ~ ... ~'::°: ..... dn,& pror O~n toola WantaRt:AJ.l.YCLF.AN Japa.neseLandscaper PETERSrAt NTlNG 972-t:iOt~ R.-del&a.,.... ....__,., ~tt A\"at1-b Npl <.~·,,.te-bnoakam• h haul [).i .. t_t~U381&&2 ' 9 tfOUS~? Coll Cilnaih am Spnnkler. Low prices. Ell.pr'd . Reoa Ra tea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •CERAMIC TILE * All ~~ .. '!~,·.,0~HP•~t> ~ in• •.·ihl "'· t'lfir li•nt Gw••-Girl Freeei.t 6455123 Work guar. 9 yrs exp. Free Est. Call Gene Int/ext. Re asonable. .__._.1 •..t..U.t.1-, types. Reas. rat~s. Frt•e .,. ............ • v• .. BOlO ~ -• -Llc'd/Bonded. Noburo. 552-04.s& Dependable. Free eat. _.. -.-..... Uce-o""" • ...., oc•z -Rtaiu 1)4.\ ~14! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cttll Janice s R111Mcdy 531-8162 897-2862 Jay. 6'5-7965 Rena.lssance'714-f499·3816 ...... ·~· _.,._... · Untu1t. ... 1eJ dJ\utte SSS • Garck-nina. rl~an upi. & l\M"a housecleanlo& for ---•;__ _____ Palntlng. Extr/lnlT. Ex- f>t.r& bw\knptc-,yS.'\S l'()UmJa\lun · rrtainan11 hrnd•c:op1nl( G~Ofl'-' thorough, reliable & ANY & all types of ex-pr'd, honest, neat, reas. G & M Painting, lot & ltooflRg T,..Senlce ACTION wall• bh>"k\ P_.tiow ll~h.i 54.$-707? l'our1eo us serv ice. t.eriordesign&coostruc-Lic'd964-10t5Dave F.Xt.Cabinetfinl.thina.& ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• -·••••••••••••••••••••• LP.GAL TVPI G Llf''d~ )t)l:I .4300 ~U!OO ttoo. Uc. 364419. 64-5-6716 tucco repair. 751·3448/ Repair & Reroot. All Landscape Creations t:'\: 96C»tl9,&&l _ OtldCcre G-c•.S«•lcet Prolpamting Ext& tnt. 673-8457. tyee s -shingles-pert shaping, tblonin.:. --••••••••••••••••••••••• Complete Housecleanlng Moloftli'/ Low rates. Recs. Free --r·oc shakes·com&,°·tar. st"""' removal. 67S-2821 ''WUNA""ON£YMGR.c ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 · d EXCELLENT PAIN --..... " .. , ~ •MR. FDUT• .,. ma1 service. Dully, ··~··•••••••••••••••••• esL536-4780,536-4383 · · Free est. 541·59 Fm. Ins. BkkPM. budgt·hni;, bill lJr d t .im1ly dayhrl' C'n rp"nt"'r pa lntin~ weekly. monthly or uve-Bnckwork. Small jobs. TI.NG. Reasonable ra tes. Av 1 1---------pa.yil\.J: Sml b11& & ""'~boo! proi.:rum to .. " "' • an. Xlnt services. v~ry Newport Costa Mesa & Fine Exter. Painting by FreeesUmates. 548·2706 81 TRIMMING, ALL KINDS 1ndl\l\dui.li. ilil-7831 M'f"\1•yo.1 Nlt ~~I ~a11. rute5• Ja yrs n · low rat~s. Lic'd. Agency Irvine 675.311se s R. Sinor. St. Uc., ins. Try Honest roofer will work Toppin g . re mov a I , -on.-a MIH7S2 ~OH~ . ve . me.836-SM52'hrs. Painting-lower winte r rortune&matenal.Call cleanups, Lie /Ins C.,.llltr Coiollh actor Brickwork. Small jobs. rates interior. Neat. Rec. Dave. 979-8068 646-l~ ............................................... <if'dlg Ll't wi do the bal'( JObS like N rt. Costa Mesa & Int, ext, serving area tor 7 Free est. Greg Riley -------- Carpenter. 1-'t'ee Et.l Any Remodel. repair. icen ••••••••••••••••••••••• noors. wmdows & cpl'g. ~bi~3175eves. yrs Prof. qual. work. 646-56Sl Dan's Tree Servlt'e. TOIJ Slz.t> jobs Call Allan or r upeatry. u!<J t1mt' H•ul, sk1ploader. dump Dutch Main ten ance Resld/Apts/Comm. ---------Your frie nds a nd ping, staking, & thin Tony. 646-8&t9 ttidtsmansh1p 16 yrs 1n trk. gradmg. tree wrk, 97J.ll.:>4 Custom Masonry, Patios, Reas. Dave.~ ,._hr/R-.Jr neighbors use Class1f1ed rung. 646-9239 , _.. .-.., --30 :trt>.i Ll<''d Mr l'alom demobtaoos etc 83\.1257 Walls. Fireplaces, Re-~ when t h ey h o v e UJU S ""~ntry yrs ho 9628314 . "JUST US .. houseclean-taining Walls. 1oo·s of WAU.PAPERIMG ••••••••••••••••••••••• somethi.ngtosell They'll Slump&treeremoval. el(p Doors. w1ndo"":.. ----SELL idle items with a 111g.We'rehonest&effl· loca l r e f e r cnt'cs. Hefsoffered.Eves, Neatpatcbes&texlures tell you how well it Freeestlmates. ~ ett• Ml ~ Want A<b Call 1)42·567f Daily Pilot Classified Ad t·1ent. Call 673-0163 64S-8512. 631·3MS. 675-1.266 FRH EST. 893· I 09 wori<ed for them! 646-3627 HelpW..ted 7100 twpWCCRted 7100 twpWanhd 7100 HelpW•hd 7100 HelpW•ted 7100 HtfpW.ted 7100 HelpW.ted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Assembly Banlong a ~nouics Uubty Clrk 'Teller ~ " Expenence pr<'ferred Slltfers Solderers Salury commens urate Wiring Re-Work w/expcr. Please apply at Trainees Bank of California. t401 Temporary & permanent Dove, NB 92660. 833-JSll Jobs Pay according to E.O.E. exp. lmmed. work avail. --Pac1r1c Personnel BE A MOONLIGHTER Newport Bch 640-1970 earn money wh1le others Santa Ana 558-7016 sleep LA Times has operungs for corners ror early morn'g route!>, ATTea..iTIO~•. 2~.J hrs daily. Earn ~ l"llll SJ50.400 mo. Cull for de· fwa! & Travel! w1s. 546-4481 or979·21ss. CIRCULA TIOM CLERK f\111 time PoSttlon for circulation clerk. Must type 45wpm & use 10 key tlddinR machine. Some clencal experience is de· sarable as well as n pleasant phone voice as light phone work as also reqU1red. Good company benefits. including 2 wks. vacation after 1 yr .. com· pa ny paid group in· surance, credit union, etc. Apply at: Girls & Guys ~~tyg~~111f~dwt~~~ ORANGE COAST Dut> to expansion. we school OK :ilso PJ Umt• DAILYPILOT ha\e openings to tra\'cl rmrucunst 540-247,i 330W. Bay St.. CM Lo Hawau & thru-out USA ~--------Apply between & return wlyoung run "Beauty operators. PIT. 9AM-4PM . I? r o u P :-J 0 Pick your own hours Cnll 642·4321Ext.219 E X P E R I £ N l' E Great opportumty for ad· ror appomtment. NEC ESSA ll Y. 1\ 11 vancement. Call Mr. E.O.E. transPortat1on furnished Johnson. 978-0230 or -·-------- Companion. bve·ln. ror elderly lady in beMh home. Car nee .• room, board & expenses + salary. Call 499·2825. Drwer wanted ror student from Wilson School to SSS Victona.' daily, 11:30. 548-4579 •DRIVER• Expandiog co. looking, Cook Experienct.'d hne for people wlllln~ to cook. Busy downtown work. Neat appear. Good t.as: Hrh. He:.taurant. driving rec. Over 18. Co. Call Lynn or Harriet vehicles. $2.90 per hr+ 494·9765 lncentives. Call Mark 751-2686 Cook!I. days or evenings, --------- 1nterv1 c ws between DRIVYS 3·5PM. Mon·1''r1. The Newspaper delivery, Rusty Pelican 2735 Pac. Permanent part·time Job Coast Hwy, NB. delivering early morning LA Times to homes in COOKS Exp r 'd . Sma ll restaurant, Corona del Mar. Days & evenings. 644-0210 Irvine/NB area. Must be reliable & have dependa- ble transPortallon. No collecting. Salary $350 mo. S16-0235 EXPERIENCEDCOOK _______ _ Snack Bar. Country DRIVERS General Office .ACCOUMTIMG CLERK Two positions are availa- ble In our busy account· ing department. One position is in our Ac· counts Payable djvlsion and one is in the general accounting division. Some bookkeeping, G/L, or accounts payable ex-pencnce prcfered. 10. Key expe rie n ce r e - qwrcd. neat handwriting & light typing helpful: GUARDS F\Jll & p/time. All areas. Uniform s furnished. Ages 21 or over. Retarcd welcome. No experience nee. Apply Universal Protection Service. 1226 W. ~Street, Santa Ana . Interviews hours 9-12 & l-4 Mon thru Fri Head housekeeper: part Ume stock boy & maids. The Inn At Laguna, 211 N. Cst Hwy, Laguna Beach Hospitals NurwsAidff Above average wages & health benefits. Apply Newport Conv Center. Excellent working condi-uons & company benefits ancludJng dental plan. Apply 8am·llam & lpm- 3pm, National Educa· lion. 4401 Birch st.. 1555 Superior Ave. Newport Beach. (Near Newport Beach. O.C. ~rt). Equal Op-Hostess, AM shift, exp. portunJLy Employer. Top Pay. Blue Dolphin. 673-1803 HetpW..e.d 7100 HefpWmhd 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• L E A D E R S 1-1 I P l\1811\tenanc~ supervisor POSITIONS-College s m n I l p r i v a t c Scn1ors1grads. M /F, pr;ych1atril' hospital 111 ~27 years. Salary plus So. Orange County. Must benefits from first day of have some knowledge or :JO.weeks training period. buildin8 malntenanc1.·. Learn leadership skills indud1ng plumbin ~. to use m business world electrical & Minor equip after s1.>rvil'e. Technical ment repajrs. 496-5702. training, combat arms 831-1774. avwlable. Invest in your -------- future . Call now ror Management ambiliOU!> Army Off1Cl'r Candidate person needed to assuml· School <<>ail. full responsibility for Co!;ta Mesa 540-1026 rapidly exranding bust HwiUngton Bch962·8821 ness. Ful tr aining 11" qwillJied. Call 646-8}96 or Lead person wanted Skm· 962·8957 ny Haven R~l. La Pat -------- Rd .• Lag. ffjJls 581·8440 ManageFAS~lOM LEGALSECRETARY Bttome a vital link in Lagwia Hills 2 yrs CA. growing fashion chain-exp. De<'. SIH 100wpm. Shelly's Tall Girl Shoµ. type80wpm. salary com-lmmed o~ning for exp mensurate with ab1bty. sales orie nted indh . Cull Mrs . Wins low maturity of judgementin lm-1060 high vo I stor e & <1long w/2 wk. truinm,:? at 1)78.0608 tor appt. Tues- our expense. All appli-day lhru Thursday. l'ants must be 18 & over. CLERKS Club. Must be a people Men or womeo 25 yr11 or person. For interview older. Know the coosl f'aJI 6"·5404 cities. Net S180 a week or more. Orange Coast GENERAL OFFICE-HOO'EL Front desk <'Irk. Live -Jn Housekee per. Typist accurate 45 wpm. all shifts avail. Call ror English speaking. Lido ~11 before Sam or art. appt. 645-5000 ext. 520, lsle. NB. 675-2233. supervise sm staff. 40'. discount, pd. vacation~. salary + override. Must have 3.5 yrs sales exp. preferably in apecialt~ wiatlached & ready to Beauty salon needs recep· leave immed . F or llon1st. manicurist & personal mterview see. saloo SM't C&IJ 9SS.1842, UTOTEM Counter gi rl . dry Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt. cleaners. full time. 186 E Herrmann . Fountain 16th St. CM Ask for Valley. (No of Slater 4:~m. 714-549-3942 IJ:30to5PM. Mon-~i. Ms. Barnes. WEDS & _s._5_. _M_oo_-_f'r_1 ___ _ muRS ONLY. 10 AM lo 5 PM at Costa Mesa Inn. Boal Hardware Sales :!2lk5 Harbor Blvd tNexl Per.i;oo. P/T2days 3 wk. 10 S Diego F'rwy l Shock Hardware 2900 Lafayette M7-8360. Newport Beach AUTOMOTIVE bi5-33'l4. *PARTS BOOKKEEPER Ca_!:hY 5'18-4243 ___ bet~o Newhope & Girl Friday. Typing, Operungs now available COUNTER WOMAN To •E~uc~li~) ~~~~~~ some Short hand. Heavy for full or part/ti mt> write contract in rcnlal -phone work for busy ofc. clerks on 2nd & 3rd b I EXE CUTIVE AS 979-3M2. shlfls. No experience center, must c ava1 ---------neressary, we train . wkcnds . Apply l930 SISTANT (or Statewide Start S3 per hr. Assistant Newport Bl, C.M. Trade Assoc. near OC airport. Should have Managers to $3.60 per hr. Couple wanted to manage secretarial skills (die· G-R·E·A·T SALES JOI HOW OPEN Hotel·Motel MIGHT AUDITOR 11 pm to 7 am. ex· perlenced NCR 4.200. Im· mediate opening. Full time. Ambcnsodor '"" CostoMHo (714_ )645-4840 COUHTEtlMEM! (Comm1ss1onsl Busy Chevrolet dealer Newport Beach Invest near Orange County Firm full chnrge com· Airport needs p a rts missions bookkeeper req ('ouote rmen with GM exp I n peg boa rd parts experience. Good systems. knowledge in pay. environment. reading computer re· Permanent. Opp: for ad· porta. Call 640-012.3 Managersto SS.50perhr. sml business. PI T . taphone). Wiii handle Advancem e nt Op · 642·16.14 Cinanc1a l and m em· porturuties lo those who ---------bership records and be GOOD PAY, GOOD1--------HOURS, GOOD CON· DITJONS . MANY FRINGE BENEFITS. FAST GROWING COM· PANY PROMOTES FROM WITHIN. TRAIN F 0 R T 0 P MANA GE MENT S TART S "I M - MEDIATELY ". KEYROARD EXPERIENCE HELPFUi~. WE HAVE OUR OWN TRALNING PROGRl\M PUT ON BY quallfy. For information ---------responsible Cor smooth go to our nearest market or contact the Personnel CUSTODIAN running of office. As· ()('. t Head "··•o<flal urgently sociatioo experience de· 1cl'a : "'""" sirable. Sala ry Open. UM22 Lampson Street needed by It. B. City OardenGrove.$37-4840 School District, $858 to P.W.C.A .. INC. 714 / F.qua.IOppor Employer S1067 per mo. depending ..;833-:.;__313_1. _____ _ ~~ement See Bob 8 0 0 K K E E P ~ R HOWARDCIM•rold FULL/CHARGE Dove & Quall St.s. For rapidly expanding l•--------•I on exper. Apply 735 14th Factory Trainee, ceramic Street, HB. Call 536-8851. indusl. Apply Ccram- Tek, 981W.18th St. C.M. NEWPORT BEACk <'onstrucllon company. Q.EAKS ---------Salary commensurate Delivery Man f\111 time. •UTo p '"'RTS with experie nce. For Work local. Temporary Local area deliveries. A A immediate work. DELIVERY appt. 840-4404 Cal For An Beach Stationers. 4020 Well groomed fe male IOOkKHPEtl ~paMtHwntToday Campus Dr. N.B. over 18. Good dnving re· Permanent part lime. 3 557-0061 cord. Must bve m Costa to 4 days per week for Mesa area. Call 556-2500 beach real estate office. ~Q~ office • , forlllterviewappl. '.J1lrotl8h T/B, some typ. 0 overload Al.TJ'OM <YI'JV E llli. "MAM FRIDAY!" Burr White Realtor. Inc F.qualOppor Employer To dean new & usl'd l'ars SH Nt'wport Blvd. NB FAcroRY ASSY. Whse. Little or no e"pcr, work day or night. No fee. Weekly pay. Start now, nowaillllg. (Over 18) Norrell Temporary Services SSS-9021 E.O.E. FIBERGLASS MOLDING ~I Pool Attend We are ~-eking a reliable person with a current water safety certiricat(I to attend our hotel swim· rrung poo~ area. Apply 9am·l2 Noon, Mon/Fri. Personnel. Mcsrioff Hotel 900 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal Opport Employer WE COUNTRY'S TOP --------0 R GAN S ALES --------PEOPLE. CALL AT ONCE FOR INTERVIEW. ORGAN EXCHANGE. STAN NUNN 714/586·7302. Hotel Room Service Supervisor ,~ to supervist' lhc lot 675·4630 Like to work a round ----Clerk 7 11. Sales. A II DEUVERY & PICK UP dnver to deliver auto parts in C.M. area. Mu i.t have valid CA lac & gd dnving rerord. Apply llub Auto Supply. 2120 Harbor Rlvd • Cost a Mc.>sa. trainee 548·5598 --------• Manioff Hotel 1·ars'.' This will plt>ai.c BOOKKEEPER F/C shirts Good pay Will you ! Idea I for !\Cm 1 fash Isl 1m•i.lmnt (1rm. tram 1515 Gisler. CM rt'ttred.Sularyopen See xlnl oppty. Exp & Q.£BKTYPIST Ken Ptert'e mat urity r eqd. Call ._ HOWARD Chnrolri ~0123 Newpo r t B e a ch -lnsurnnce Company or. Dove&Qua11Sts BOOK PASTEUP fers an entry level posl Dental receptaonist for peno. omce. We need you now. Fashion litland. .Salary commensurate with experience Call 644-0683 NEWPOHT BEACH Part time person on tion as billing cle rk. d ~-• Mon. ~ Tues. No expcr. Minimal typing $500 ------Auto route river ne .. "'~· necessary. Apply in · · DENTAL ASSISTANT llunt . Reh. Founta in '•..,nwn Pennysaver 1660 Good Company benefits. with chair side and fronl Valley. Newport areas. Placentia c M Hours 8· 4: l5. 833·8450 office rnpabiLitics Flexi· i::xcellcnl l'fT income. · -I W ble FIT schedule in our Call Herald Examiner. Busy PT orr1l·1.· needs ex Codctai oitrtts Newport Beach office. .;.J7·0301 µenenr cd atdl'. Fu II School 5Sl-6896 call eves A' """'MOTIVE tune. 1f necessary will &Im up t.o S300 per wk v •"' train. S11lary depending Low twtion. Placement GUARDS -~-m:--~pe-~-ni:-~-ou-r 1 SECURITY cootinuou.5 pohcy dept. Prior business exper & It typing desired, but n!>I nee. Please apply 1n ~ANSAMERlCA INSCO. 3420 Bristol Costa Mesa !At'ross fr S Cst Plaza> Due to our recent ex· pansion program, Wells Fargo Guard Services is hirln~ Security Guards for: lmne/.,..wport hoch Santa AM/ Allah.Im fvlartOR/ ..... Pork Costa Mesa & Tiie Whfttit.rArH Career oriented op· portunity avallable for reliable Individual with related experie n <'l• Supervisory experience prc{erred + abillty to or· gani1.e & sell. Enjoy ex-c e 11 en t compan y benefits• Apply 9am-12 Noon. Monfl-'rl. Person· nel. 000 Newport Center Dr Newport BelH'h Equal Oppor Employer * SEtlVIHCEER on experience. Call Dee &SISL 751·9194 DISPATC 644-9600. ------ DENTAL A SS T · Penodontrst nds l''IT as- st. Expanded duties o~p· ty. X·ray cert reqd. l!:xp pref'd. Sal open Reply to #371, r~ Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Gardener n eed e d 1n Laguna Bea<'h. Bx· penenced. Cal 1673~ HOUSECLEANERS I M M E D I A T E Car nee. PIT. TopS 0 PE M I MG S f o r Gingham Girl. 645-5123 Experiencl"CI ooly. Busy Chevrolet de111n near CASHIER TELEPHONE Orange County, Airport. GEH!AAL OFFICE. Excellent pay, pleasant Prefer rnal\Jre person !\urroundings. Prrma over 2S for our .Mission nent Opp. for ad\ance Viejo branch s tore . menl. See Mr. Trevino. l\hnimum 2 yrs. exp. HOWARD Che•rolri Cashier. telephone & or- Dove & Quml Sb. fice reqUJrcd. Good with NEWPORT BEACH figures Part-Ume. 13.25 --per hr. Apply The Earl's 8abysitter·before & after Plumbing Inc. 28922 school. llarborvlew Camino Cap istrano, School area. 752·02ll MV.495-0401 COLLATOR PACKER Will.mg to train an in dustraous career an- div1dual t o p a cka~e educational materials. Excellent workmf cond1 tloos and bene Its. 40 Hour week. Apply North Ameri cJn Scrvic1· Center. 1339 E. Warner. Santa Ana. .Equal Op- por1uruly J::mployer. DENTAL ASST Chalrside. X·Ray lie. 546·3000 Dial A Rl<tl' GENERAJ.Oi''FICE Wholesale Lumber Co. Billing exp. 70 wpm. 10 key, good with figures. Mature, dependable & well groomed. Xlnt com- pany benefits. CAii for in· terview. Weekdays. 6'75-5923 Drinn Operate modern <'Quip General THOS• ment & door to door PAY K: super•lljOry 1•••1 Housekeepe r live-In. Secarftr Officers who Spanish speak 'g or I w.tTOP rAY, with a t'hlld ok. 963-9105 or rnpectedc°"'P-r· 963·2286. __ _ Hou s ew ives & EARM U .00 TO SJ.ts HC>U.1eCleaners. We havt> PIRHOUR P/T work for you. rROMOTIOM 645-2839, 968-2810 CAN PAY HSKrtt/COfftPOftlOft TO S4.25 PEtl HOUR Pvt. Room. boa rd & trnMp. Qalif. dnvers ht· CMUSTMAS llLLS req'd. No prior uper WORK WHEN YOU CONTROJ.LER/ rte<' Good dnving rec a WANT days~20IK>eve1 CAS-H-1-8---1 ________ _ Babyg1tterf8 ouaekeep,•r 32 ffoul'll ptr wk1 expcr, salary. Core or elderly Apply In person Montl•t couple.~ to Friday, 8AM lo 5PM 1-;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Uve-ln1 lrvtn~. 1 Infant. 9am-6pm, Mon & Tues, rm..mAr, ondrinkcr. pre 9 """"' Sat ,,,_ "·· A I fer driv'"'tll lie. rt'<'cnt :-. ...... n. pp Y '"' in person, Kerm Rima rd11651"8048; 754-1456 _ Rardware. 2666 Harbor Ollby&ltter. 5 days wHk, Dl.C.M __ _ 3·11PM. some wknds. Costa M'esa. 645-1708 aft Cleaninl( person wanted 7PM foe' model homes. SS per hour. Own tram. and ref. BABYSJ'ITER wanted for 848-0671belw.8 & S p.m. 2/~r.bny C<SM or Npt. Q.ERlCAL Bch area. li'1exlble or r_,,_,_ p~~-• perm a ne nt hr. Call _.,.. ~ 9:31).1.2:00.m 64-4-584-7 .AcJtMy Uaa IOU ol)obe available BIW.iuef.EI Toro area. w\th nuny fine, au:per Mature woman. etartlna com_p_IJ'\J• and they're Jan2Dd. wtl.4a117amto alJFREJI.:! 4:30. care ror lofant. 140-6011 Rel. req. 1•1'46 C ....... p I : .......... . TncSt you.r old etutr for • ne w 1oodlH with a Outllled ad. GQ.5678 .. _ 2m=..cM A.LLJO~FREE I ' . . . - at I• ACCOUNTANT must No Sunday work. Optnlnp In war •house. WELLS IHSPICTOR COMMERCIA L Orange Coast Y('llOW factOtY&otclce. Call CONSTRUCTION Cub, 17300 Mt. lie r· VICTOR FARGO Im med. opening with rmann. F. Vly. _ T...,-ary Senlcet GU ... RD m llJO r es tablis h 1:d DRAFTSMA N 434181r~h8t,Stc213 ,._ Ornna.tc t:o Developer/ Newport Beach General Contractor. To work on Opto· 556-1520 SERVICES Must have <'OnSlrU<'llon Mechanlcol device•. & EDP. experience a, be Prefer 3 years ex· And add your n ew 1532W capable of assumina.t pcrlence. Con ider paycbeckl to Febniary'a eo-aaw..attt comple te ac countinJ( formul lramlll(l in llru of .iNliiiiiiiiRietiii.______ ,_..,.._CA respona1billty for aeverol experience. lllluril IHI OR enUUca. Quallrled In· 1650 to $7.00 per hour. GM. OPC/SICY dlvldual wtll bo In· Call for llJ)l)t. 982·7701 Exper & good t yplntt Monday. Tuesd4y, Wed· nov1Uve, well or1anl~ ext.2165 1Jklll8i. useoldlctaphOne. n11dal. T hu ud•y. ftcapableoflmplemenl· Driver, errand• etc. ror haode correaPondtnce IOAM· PM . CLOSED Ina an ln·houae data pro-work Ina couple. Must ror 2men + mite sent ofc f'tld2•10•tw w-ceu.lna •Ytt.em. Perma· Uve Ill Or. Co. It have d~ (« 1m mfr firm. J _ _... nent potlUon •llh •x· perfect dnvlna record. P\eaaant wortt1n11 cond le IRe 217 ceilentola.ry It ben fits. Ai»J)I)> M r1. Grun ;beMf1ts. T•p Malle s.t.AH. CA &lbmltyOW' con.NdMUal P.0.Box C, Downey, , lrvl.ne. C.11 Mr1. Sl.lltl'Uc NOC·6036 reaume to Ad "80, Dally Cellt. 90a41 Wit • f'7i.ll080. .l!:Qual Opportunity flNcitloft MecMnical Se\.1q) fr perform line & final Inspect ion of machine pans. Must btl proficient in tl\e use of precwon meaaurina In~ stnnnenta & tho reiadln& oC blueprints 2 Yrs. machinists exper fc genoral maehln1at tool• a NQliremcnt. Apply ut Paul Dosier Associatet Inc DO RedJIJll Ave CC.. M .. , CA 92l8ae C7141 H .. 7075 tg:J <>rgor Employer Piiot, no w. Ba,y St. --------_...._..;..______ RmploytrM/F QJlta Maa, Ca. 82628 Want ,\d Help? NZ..5671! Want Ad Rt1ults 64.2-56?8 ---------• Ousfned Ads 84.2-5818 ~ ' .. , -• .. LOA"H stcres. For mterview call COUHSB.OR Westminster Mall. l7141 · 898-S70.S. A PQeltioo is available ---------for a career person who Medicnl Fr ont OCfin· has the desire to join un Busy N.B. 0 .JJ. Gyn. of aggressive mort gage f1ee. Experienced only loan company doing need apply. Please send buW>ess in So. Orange resume to P .O. Box 1560. County. A California real Olsta Mesa. 92627, BoA estate license Is re 423. quired Preference will . . be given lo applicants Medical Secret~. exp d , who have had prior ex-mature. ffeavy dicta~on. perience in tho field of & front desk. Busy offtc~ finance. real estate. or Salary open. 645-7172 insurance. Excelle nt Ml!AIC •L commiss ion schedule ..., ~ permits unli m it e d CO-ORDINATOR personal growth & im-Good pay & be nef1h mediate income. Send some m edi cal bJck resume to: L. Blue . 620 ground helpful. Mu:.1 Newport Center Drive. li bl Suite 2 11• Newport havere a e transportu tioo & enjoy dn vmg. Beach. CA 92660. 768-8500 9.5 ----------··------~~--Lot Attande11t must be J8. Full or Part·l1me 553-7454 or 848·2212 Machine Operator. no ex· per req'd. Shop environ- ment . Call 55 7-7626 MACHINIST MlLLHANO For proto-typc ma l'hmc !>hop ln the instrument d.ivtsion of the 011 tool in- dustry Workmg from blueprints. sketches & verbal designs. directly with engineering, to RS· slst ln new product de· velopment for world wide well bore naviga- tion equipment. Lathe experience helpful for more \'ariely of projects . Salary open, ex.cellent Medical Newport Psychiatric ofr wt plants, antqs & stained glass needs 0 Fe MGR to match. PR I CE S MI T H 714/631-3800 MGMT TRAINEE Opply tCl grow w/in- temat'J chain or retail :.tores. We of'r full salary traing prog, m gml bonus. pd vac .. In!> •• sa \ mgs plan. Retail ex per or degree req'd. Must be willing to re-locate at co expense. Call 636·248l ask for Sandee 540-7337 ask for Marsha, Mon lhru Fri. 9: 30-4-. PIEA I IMPORTS EqualOppor Employer benefits package. E.O.E. 1--------- Sc1entific Drilling Con· ModelsMale&Femate trot. Corporate Head· WE t4 EE D MEY' q u arters, Newpo r t FACES: Beach. Call (114) 557-9051 for 1V Commercials. ad ask for Mr. Moll or Mr vertislng, shows. etc. 11 Adams. you are a proCesalonal Maid need ed . ex · pcnenced . hon est & dean. Must know how lo cook. Lh·e ·in. <.:a ll model or want to get into Uus field, please call for appt. You couki be work· mg as early as next week, so call now. 631·5600 873-17().1 _ NewYorkWestModels Malntenance man for SS wut apt Mmpl~x ln 'C. M. ~ what you want m <213)86S·38Sl Dai.lY PUot Cluellleda. • .... WuAu .. -t lOO H.t,W...t.4--l..U)O ....,.Wmihd 71 .A.-a .... ••.••••••••••••••.• ••. •••• •. •• ••• •••. •••. • : ;:r ..... •• •• 00 ,,.....n 10 I 0 ftw llltwe 1050 1050 a;l..!"1<1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• • •------•ml9!"~~~~---~ ---------1 c.a.IU:fARY "'ull·Urn ,. ... 1w.•s YlUClGllT OAMAG ~O MUST SE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' "-taunnt Attraeh""· mo.lurt-"',.._ HOI'POINT SAL.£ LL·end lbl&, SOFA"LOVE:S~T peorion with o(r1ct• "" NATION .&L W Warner ff . :c:8 :,::•. rec I 1 n er•• Sl11. Century Mod e l BOB'S Ptrten ct> Accurue " sim.aAna ...!"-a.r • case1, cite. Oucu llomeFum.n•·--7 l YPl•l. JOOd p hon~ WHOl.ESALHS d••r -.l Moic*HJome li'\am -· MOMl°'THI ~craonaJ1ty Contart NOWHlllMG BAROAINS-UIM!dfflriS.S. m4>549·30'17 HIOY l\.•tlhrhr•h•·o'\lufbv o bbLe at tl4fi 21!84 Will traao. l'!ictlltol WllU¥.dryl'5,IWU',beal 1'WIMOll_E_.11LL--1 Q ll3J •-~~• UUC l':ill 1on1111fu•t11.il, lt~nY$ ..._,,,,,. ~.weserv.ann1.n-st rv ~wntwra. u•m..v 11ptmnt1 m tJ11r «H»mtrc 1ul, 1.11u.t 1n,lllu uuh . .., A-'"''""'...... .... ...,. Matllyjl or bo~ 1pn npr-......:........:..;.;;;;;..:::::.:..:: __ family r 1lnr41ot •t tuin.-1 C'f'OUnts Wllh " ~to;nU."TAltYTJtAtNt;t-: CIDN $500 WK _.......-.....u. ~ $28. each~· (Ht.a ontY>. at.er bed, Queen .. lied J~~~~~~~~~I neatbylorauon Weu• hld\Q1&0IJlyhnl•of lJ1tht l\pu11( It -chorthand re i.M .CASfi PAlD Q\Mlen set.1'89.Kingsets heildbd rrame, heater' !~~~~~~~~1 : fl""' oo prMttoU, tt11J)('r 111 prodUl'tt 1-;xr<'nt nce g1.1red ~II 714--1!ii.•W7 Call 957-1150 Wstir/ Dryr a/ Kefriga, '99. Samples m\lll be li ner . $150. S'S·41H i Ja.n OW' frtendly lt'lm irt Ar) W~ tram r°' tot~~ 11ppl wort.Ulg or not 957-8133 iold lmmc.'cilu~ly from HHOll. t·omt' .... u1 lodu)' """' °" ... our warehouse 01 -;;:---=-=------~· ~2--4~m "~ 'H"'" 11 aood re S t-XR1':TARY F\Jll llm<' TYPIST WA.SHER DRYER SALE Model Hom• ..... :mlturseeo Geogt S-. 1055 ,.__ axio1t b lfl 11 11t 11 ht"h for u t t r.-.. h d l "ru • _ --.1---• -·•-,J • wanu a c urer:. .._..., .. insurance co :as o ux~ mu ltt·""Clo Call:~-w...a ... _ .. •••••••••••••••••••••• ..._... • ...... "'l'Un\mi~l"fl nlu11 A., ..... ~ 2 1mmed I r ___._,_ "" ---·· a.. UlTU 239'2 ,\\eold d t! ltt boo hot ., •· ,.,,~.,. J>Cf"\oo:s m or-open n1' o r "~ Comple~l,y re· Sun. Credit Av1111. (Alao araae Sale, Watubed, ( rlotu 1..aMWI• Hill pl~'etlt:r~!~~lll!-;;~ ~~ Jc~~~tuordru,e~!-_.0P1~e& rypolic~1P!!LIJ ... 1:_ wpm111• built. refinilhed. 1 year avalt., Uviog rm, bdrm1 ~t.•.J>b1J21o1~g .et le t t&41. C:O..T......... ~r~·iwfilJI ,... " .. " ,..,.., ,.., ".,.... W guaramee. Your choice bookcase., umpe eoo ':!"wr e oth. S.m-4pm. C _...._ CA.LL MR.-H T S-Oui.-lypma Musl be train Ext benef1ti., fl38 each. Delivery .Sale ~etc.) • '" oodland Dr, lrvine ~ "'"" 11ble to orxan11e omcti plca.sonl workmg coniJ. ends l·lS-79. So. Coust (Woodbnd1e> 1lll t.:.d1n .,, Au JI u C.ZIJI J8M415 759-l t.')(). J\ppl)I J11 pers, 8 30 2. Appliaoce537-~ Coak r..-... 1-:.t,ubl Opponun1ty Mon tbr u f'rl. Safl'CI> * *' BUY** Honn 1060 c;~ f<'.tnployt•r Mi i' lnsuranc.: Co .. 17570 Reing: side.by-side La te ••••••••••••••••••••••• l!MP. l'fth M • M SfCRETARY JR. Broohkhur1t, Flo Vly model, n e w cond. Good used Furniture & Arab Qtr gekhng 8 )'I'll l1aun J A J W -t.a.tn Ck-nt'Till offtc:c duties re· £.0 t.:. M/F. l:mtterms. 750-1150 or AppUaoces-OR ' will Engl/West. traillsboV.: PM M t 1~ ..., SAl.ISPtltSOH/hlM'd r1wnnl( gOO(J t)'plnl{ ~kills 537-6333 ~llorSELLror You. Oddisp. 640-9613 irM W..,..lft <1udu11.: 11tt)r" Mulll tw & hxht d1rtvt1on Wiii be Upholstcrtr ex~ncnced MASTBS AUCTIOH Cools Tf'Cl!Mfft no·111 ..-11111 Pt•i unohty' lr.i_tned ror rl'hl'f of PBX only custom i.hop Top Re/rig : New 21 C.F . 2 dr. 646-t68 & UYlttock 8075 .-.ODUCTIOM "'Ull Of' r 1T i\pply 2233 ~rulM Extelh·nt OP· wages l1lld bene. P/Tor delux lowest pnce ever 6 all- 96 25 ••-••••••••••••••••••• t•flc••ITakc 10 P~r on TltAIMH C~ W &lboa. HI. Nt•wport porturuly in salt>Stlepart f'tr C.M. MS-11.56 Only S4m/terms 75()..IUO IAIY GOATS W 1I1 t r•• n m .a n ft KubtieT hQ'\t· prucl11t'h. 4!.0I C'ampui. Ur Ir\ 111t'lll for self motivated w 537-6333 S ST<>r S Nano.lea & Billies bcft.f1ta t-•or """" 'll 1 l-i-· •n·• 1'..clu-'1oP~1 ... mpl"r SJ.k'll ~., .. 11 ... u .,1 L",i~. 1 1--•·vidual a,1tresses needed. Mr .. __ .. 1 ...,.. o 1 ...... • • • '" .. .... min.t P '"" • ... " '''" ,. ·• """ D s Cofret: Sh ""u. E O'K.....r •-M nccou no more! We have ....,,.e990 ii Munitoo M<l•13HO c-.ump.u\) pl\)"l<"lll lnil ,,. ~im: 11.it'kJHl»lil <.'1.1 . \oomctMrs White op.,,._, · """e .. errit stove, a1Jsue matlre8ses rrom Askfor Kna SE.'.Jo•~}c k Jt-w411 t't ') bit i~ r.1)' ~76J» lk.'"'di !llwrp intcll.iw1·nt t-•0t 1n~rv1t>wi\p11t Coa.st Hwy,CDM. ohter model, works well S56 l ( f "" ... o., Pl'™'" Outw:. rnf'luJ1• w-;rehouse man ex· SSO/orbest.751-7102 sns:w ~o;~d~:;~~f'11rull &Tower,6l4S. O Y t • 1 C E H t: LP t-, H l>roj«1 tooi.cp ... r .. bJtt·ct RESTAURANT ~~.~~.a :-01 .. ~fituryb "'~~~' Paul Dosier perienced in i.hlppmg & Canister vacuum. 550. Sl47. s leePers. bunk beds. eveland, Oceanside. 'nlC urs Swi Me1a Vcrdt' 1•.uru ~nni hrm i....nJ trol Will tra1n rtA;ht Associ recemng. UPS. Parcel Oster knife s harpener end"\ables. etc. Why pay M·F. 8 to 5 . 714 ·722-5010 ~~ .HotJ>ll•I. vtil pWnrufl"'" h1d.-.<p anh HELP ~·hon Start J l $800 ates, Inc. Post, Will al!to be SS.Oster can opener ss' st.ore pnces., Call Cen· Miac .. 1ry 1071 ""'"'""'SL<' M 5411 ~ UC\-n.w O<lt o~t s.d,.n 7~12'7811 COSTA M~4.iA respoo.s1ble ror pullmg & Hallllltoo Beach Mi~er. tury Model Home Furn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• v OPt•n 323 OYJ1 olc WANT ss~101s packing parL'I orders $25 . Japan ese Rice Wed thru Sun ror d1tec-SmaJI Craftsman metal (,.f'ic..-M&n~L'rSule•' l23"->i'2n' · fO ~l-:. Wonll'n C:.ft Shop o-Must beorgamzed&ac-cooker, S20. GE Ha ir t1ons l o Wa rehouse/ C\Al.Ulibandsaw S200 Good oPPOrturuty lor 61U l}l< 'l (o,t.i M l''<i N Equal ()ppor Employer curate. Heavy uflmg re-Dryer S2S. All only 5 mos storage a rea. lnstanl 979-1658 · · "IUX't'tMOt Will tra1n1 no ~;it utu•-•l aco, a rapidly •"~ f'ull & cw port q1ared. Applications· now okf. ~5....... credit avail. 549-3077 t' f>'" ..... ~mg fast lood ehain PJrt lime IJ3!1 2643 ..... SA/ . Must n~nc~ nect'1>~ury SO. CAUF. HOrrfST h.35 immt.'du1Lc opcrimi:~ Sea m s t res' L•s t'. lnbe'~. ~""a"clc72epted. E S.S. SEA RS ELECT R l C CM area. Mhcel-om 8010 older 4t bt' 1~a~ld ~{. UAL ESTA TE MICT. tir all pos1lK>1\S, full 11nd pt>ncncl'd r.1;n Thu;, S " .,......, _ DRYER. white-excellent CA5H PAID ••••••••••••••••••••••• Saturdays . SS7 0324 or HL;NTI CiTON l:H·:M ·11 ~..1!1 tune, day and mg ht 64 30 Nr' o c .urpor.t · * fCRETARIES * Warehouse condJl.Jon $.50. 962 .. 3437 aft For gd used rum, anti· 'Netll Supe~uit. Taped 774·6090. U2S MC't.J Workwh •ft>lhl'aiv.•r:.uw ,...,Jb Applydwly24pm m.14113 G.O./Conslru,Several $]SO& :>pm eves/wknds642-4321 ques&clr1V's957..Sll3 sea m s . Used o n c e Verde ~206. Costa Ml•:ta wit> pn1•1· I!\ SI00.000 lur ;l\ 2112 Bnstol, N1•wport - -$80().$1400 Ranl(e • Up ext.~dys 8am-5pm . doesn't fit $110. S48·02S6 -tht• f.111h.'i.t 1:1 owrni: & &!.irlL SEl\MSTR fo.:SS wan led Employen; Pay All Fees Warehousemen m.~ded 0 1 n 1 n g s e t I W · OllOet Q.E:RK h1.:hl'st p dy '"~ Rc.i 1 our shop or youffl. Com Lu: Reinders i\Aency forkbrt exp prcf'd Stcei lkitding Materials 8025 ingman/ rosewood. 6 WIMDOW SHADES AJert,c:apoblepcrsonfor Estate <.'omp .. n y in 0£lJACO, INC. merl·•al exp . on 4020BirchSt,SLel04 toed s hoes helpful ••••••••••••••••••••••• chaars,table,sid('board. wooden shutters, mini busyorderdeskini.mall Cilhlomia Our off1<'e ut machines. <Jraybo Newport Beat h 8338190 Permnncnt&lcmporary ~ .. PARTICLE BOARD SJ.500.545-5245. blmds. woven woods & office. Reqwres phone & Bolsa & Goldcnwl!st is An l';qual Opportumty Or1i;iinall>, 1131·2630 or Call 1'~or Appt/EStub '64 jobs. C<lll today, work • Some sheets, 12x4'. som e w 1 n do w ti ntin g rroth aptitude, type w DOOMING. Get in on the Employ~r MW 49S-53116 t.ommorrow. wa rped, some broken. SOFAS Jo'ebruary Sale 20%-30"k w Pm . Exp e ri e n c c action <.'<111 our z.1 hour Se Pacific Personnel l...fte amount avail. Make We are authon zed to sell oll belr"ul Medic"I 0 l 1 recordt"d m" .. S"" t ams tress, canvas & up· Secret a r y I D i ct a t 1 o n San•n Ana cco 7016 o(r. ca11 ffa rold 962 oo.1 12 custom s.ofas 11 -Lov. ASP"'"' '""" .... .,1 ~1~. .. · t>n a moreinfo u .. .,e or SAlLBOAT SALESMAN h olslcry p r odul·ts. s k illed ~yp 1 st ex : ~rt Bcb 640.1970 11wn8AM&3:30 PM-:'°" eseats direct rro":n the1---i:.l-~---~.:....;....:.::..:.:" F'abncated Plastics Inc. 54Z..3402 Experience p refer red Permane nt pos1lion. pt>nenced m word pro-- ------=---~::....:~:..:...;::.:._ manufacturer at"" of the 1-'FANY'S Private Club tllSW. l8lhSt .C.M. _____ KooaManne67S-1403 Compuny benefits, exp. t-essing. E xcelle n t' WOMANTOCOOK ~& origina l r etail pr ice M e m be r s h i p . 646-3279 Real D;tate SALES ~referred. 645-2247 benefits. Fred S. James druly 3 simple meuls for EqiiipMtftt 8030 Prices start at $248 ro~ 1250+ tra nsfe r . Call • _-;;.-.-_-;. ____ 1 HAVF. OPENING ror ag· HICKORY F"'RMS Secretary for Pvt. Club. BrE Co, Irv. C<lll Maunne elderly man. Possibly ••••••••••••••••••••••• both . I nstant c r edit 673-3351 ,_ grt.'si.1vt., m otivat ed n..---ver the w~onderful J.5yrsofcexp.Xlnttyp~ __ ad.l--'ey'-._752_·0990.E.O.E . hve.1n . Need car Canon FTB w/l5mm l .8 avaJlable.C8ll Wed.thruF--l-l _____ _ """DElt DESK :>all'S af(ent wll() has the Ull)<." 1~" ... Sec ----~af15pm. &120mm 2.SCanoolens& Sal. or 8 your vacuum Irv window mlr Ex d~1re to <,IJ(:t•etod with world of cheese & u~, •uithly detail onen-un ty OH1cn-armed W ----case, S2SO. Canon Pel.ix 549.3077 cleanerneeds,lookusup per'd woman prl·r·d for unl.lmitt'tl opportunilll's gourmet foods while tatt"d & conse1enllous Exp. f'/l.lme. 3:30PM12 ORk 4Tl-t0ME w/SOmm 1.4 3Smm 2 5 & &n t he yellow pages. respan, h1·pr1•!.~ dci.k in M1ll111n Dollar loca ea ming extr a m oney Ability to interface with ~\1. Perm. Pos1t1on. Phone Sales l20mm 2.5 leases & case W a 11 u n Its • whi te Va cuu m C I ea n • n g xu;a sharp math apt. hvy uon Ctll Al MelldtO for PJT AM sales, takmg ap: top level l'xeeutives a 549-3281 EOE 530-5220 Sl75. 642.WSO • w/s mokdl Rlass, chrome Center. 1572 Newport phs, c~tomer i.er. bill t:0nf1tll'nt1.1I intc•rvll.'w placaltons at ll1ckory r_nust Call for apt._.... -----tnm Per!ert c.-ond S350 Blv.,C.M 646-3107 ,,.,., :u ,,,.., ,,,,,,., • UUV'V\eeper ....._L-..11 C'""' '"""" d 847 9 · or sale anttque oak 2 1~/uivoicmg, 4 dy \HJrk New AAl'nL'> ~t>lromc.... Farms, Westcllff Plaui 64S-5000ext 520 ~y/~~ Canoo AE-1. 1.4 lens with SSZ.ll66 · f' w • <"O bericf Reh iJ<»'56'7I \PO<.'""''· ___ Set'retary AJA Exp Pref toS14 ~ff ...... _,.,, ays · 345, s.6-9690 s.10. 213-595-2431 ext. l l. Designer's Custom: 7 root door !ce Box $275, Oak · ( 1 rrA J SALES Amb1t1ous person Newport Center law Please Call For Appl ....................... Askror Mike avocado velvet sofa & Hoosie r l ype kitch en __ ..__Am i'?lft (tUI who wan~ to earn bul r1rm lntclh~encc. good lrvm~ Personnel Ai.:cncy AllHquH 800S brown patchwork Jove cabinet $450, and 3 tub ORntOOONTlC ASSIST Heal Estate t-Opanonlr Y work part t1m~ slulls & pnor lt·~JI ex· ~':;.,l}Lb,Cosla64Mesa ,.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·.·.·-·· DOCJi 8040 seat L.i.keNew.962·6895 st.amlesssteelrestaurant RDA Part-time 1 vear -P orgd. xtra 1m·omc penencc reqwred. Ccill .._........,.. Z-14701• ....................... ____ ._,;_...:....:..=...=::::::.:..· type slllk SlOO. Call after expen eoce &od rt''i.umt• R IE f f Assis la n cc JC 1 ve ri Kut.h8r:1zer7~3800 ~ AnllqueMualc Boxes! AKC E n g . Springer SoCa & lwo matclung oc-5:00,964-1761. toClass1r1ed i\d 11438 Dai ea s a e Whlslc. rctwl SUll'S Call -SECRETARY--SERVICE STATION J\T· Slot Macbirtes• Clocks! Spaniels. liver & wbt. casional cba1rs $175 ly Pilot. 330 W1..-st &y Sl. Brokers & Salt-smen. We ror appt. 5:30-6 JO daily M TENOANT, f /t, expftr HUGESELEC'TlON Sl.50to$Ul>. 559-4489. 494- 2417 · . . pt~~yllonMillrDoli~$4.50 C.M.~ havt> un o~ning m our 731·2198or559-1684 ust be st•lf motivated, nolnec""'csary.'"'ftllCa"'r1 4"'tricm Sol "' Helidential Div. for a n 1nte ll1gent, fa'lt. al'· ,....,. ...,.. I Lhasa Apso puppies. 8 517a5 .. 2Cam11atdung cha1rs,,_)'d._5'9-8 __ 1_a_11_67_5-S906.;,...:;:..:..:. __ PAltTTIMEOHLY cxpt•r1cnl'ed m<10 or S.,_.AptRetrtiftCJ curate typmR skills. 10 495-0121SJC nternatlOftOI wks old . AK C .$135. 494-2417. ' Must now ht> employed wom.rn p<•i.-.cM>tnl( en-Full lime & part time key expenerice Front of· Service Station Atteo-Galleries Beautiful. 554-7688. and frre to v.iork in my thu.-.1ai,m and rnlcgnty. Exp. helpful, exce llent f 1 c e a PP e ar an re . dant, exper'd. Day & Open Wed. tbru Sat. Lab. pups, AKC. excellent 2 pc sofa. 9 fl, gold pnnt *** Mart JocobsOft 15631 Sunflower Ln. Huntmgton Beaeb Yoo are the winner of Two Free Tld&..ts to t.he s mall armllanre hus of lf you ure mlt'rt...ost<'d m a H. 8 loc at 1 on , Good Pleasant phone vo1 cc Eves. Full & p/time Ap UI02 Kettering, lrv. pediiree. 5 weeks old. velour. Xl.nt cond . $75. air t reatment t'qull>l bcaut1lul 0H1t-c m the salary. For appt. call Salary commensurate ply, Shell Stal.Ion, l7th & (714)754·1777 751-8409 982·5339 after4:30 M·F, 6 t.o lOPM. or Mon fmrst locatwn, working 521-8541 wathcxpenenre.Send re-l rvme, NB. 1---------Quahty Drexel bdr m. set. wood " brass. compl w/k.ing sz. mattress & boxsprin1s. Ne1ollable 67S.9747 Thurs 6-lOPM and S~t with con i:enlal a s· Sales i.umew1th sulary h•~tory 9 : 3 0 A M ·1!; J 0 p M . b0r.'1alt-">. we are mtcrest· & E11grav1ng. Full to P.O. Box 2195. Costa $400/mo sal or prori·t tod rn ml?<.'ting you. In· or Prr. Noack Trophy & lesa92626. '" e b Engraving Co. 102 E -----s ha rin ~ p r on ram , ...::>CV1 w y appomlment. ,,. .. S SECHE'l'ARY/EXEC "' W--• ....,T •--1.,.,., l. al SUperior, CM. whichever you prefer . IOley n. oy,_-Co. 64&Jl41 nt>ed sharp woman to do No expr. n«. Some Mgr Rc.•altors ll4H910 vanety or dut1e11 incl oppart avail. 1-'or 111· Sales <.:hefll relations. L1ghi terview calJ afl 1 PM R..£. SALES EARN WHILE book.keeping, typing rt'· 979-3860 ' OperunJ:.'i now avail. lfl ports etc. Good oppty for our Jllract 1ve, we ll YOU0LL LEARN advancem<'nt, salary to Service Station uttend able to work days, a ppl}: at Manna Shell. 15922 Pac Cst Hwy, H.B. (2l3> 592-1571 Service SLalion l\lcchun1l'. & attendant F/t. Apply Chevron. 12Sl N Coast Hwy. Lag Bch. PART TIME EVENINGS funushed Laguna Beach Have fun part-u me earn-startS800. 751 2788 olf1ce, ror exper. or new-1 n g $ 3 o o . ----------Serv Sta Help needed 1m. ly ll<'UISed, enlhus1ast1c S400/comm1ss1on offer· Se<:retary • mtereste<.I ID med. Full or !¥l. Apply salespeople. Xlnt com-mgchargeaccts in a ma lear ning group in-990 E. Cstffwy, NB. rruss1onl>Chedulc & a tru-Jor retail store 1n your s urance Jo;xcellent ly .(real l0<·auooon Coas t area. We lram! ~'flef1ts f'rc<I S James Sewing: extra mco~ alterations for cleaners in s tore o r at bome Adults with outstanding. auract1\e persona lities who eDJOY working with lods Over 21. Start al ~.SO per hour. Phone 642-4321 Ex t 2!'JO. BETWE 1'.:N 4:00·5:00 l'M Hwy • 2 blks. from the A.D.S 7141523.5165 & Co. Irv Call 752-0990. beach. with ample off-Ext 530 ~~au ri n e 8 r ad I e y . street park1ni:: 213/!HS-396l KO E. SULIOHREALTY SALES SECRETARY 4J 7·3388 GALS GUYS Lcgol dept of Newport Aslrfor ...... ;a Equal Opportunity ___ E_.m....:ployer Reecpt1omst, Dr.'s orrice, ABLE TO Beach trade ass n nccd!i Newport Beach. heavy secy Mag Curd II or phones Expcr r eq'd. TRAVB. HOW? sirruhar t•xpcr dc!.1rablt• -Matun'. stable. ll 30.5 Need 9 cner~etic gals & SH hclplul R<'Qs typm~ PJ\ST E-UP ARTIST, P/T lienef1ts. 644-1037 · · guys, must ~ oeal, sgl. 60wpm, i.alary $750 to fon fSat. Expcr'd i\pply -- -& 18 & over. T r aHI $800 Pl'r mo Xlnt P eonysavu · l 66 llECEPTtONIST/TYPJST Fton da. llawaii, New ~ncf'1~&workingcond. Placentia. C.M. ' Newport Reach Ad Agen· York, Texas & return. No ""'" 1" ersonncl for appt. --~Y has entry level open· exp. nee. All expense IS33-8484833·8384. Plt'JE UP 111g for dt:ta1I minded. piud traming progra m. --------• fti) • self·starlcr with good Above avg earnings & SECY/EXEC l('SEMBLER phone J)t'rM>nallty, xln t bonuses. Must be en· E d ' . _ fti) typing skills & l(ood thusaasllc & ready lo xpan 1ng, dyn amic, • with at least 1 year ell· spellrng to handle lront start today. Personal in-consulting engineenng per1ence, prderabl office. Excellent op-t.erview call Mr. Adams plannlng firm In Orange newspaper . Excellent parturuty to learn ad· 10AM -5PM Mon thr~ Coroqs theserv1cesoran company benefits. Appl vcrusu1g business. Thurs only 63S-4oSz exper Exce Secy Cora Sr. between 9AM & GPt\1 'The Sanborn Company. · · Vice-Pres. The pas reqs a Mondaylhru Friday. i\flvcrtis rnR & sales nun of 5 yrs cxper in ORANGE COAST Public Helat1ons Mana~er. Career op-comparuble work along DAILY PILOT 714·64G-8444 porturuty available with w/sat.11.ractory rers rrum the wor lds largei.t 1n recent employers. Xlrit 642-5682 Reecpt1om!tl/Sec'y Im -dependently owned & -.a.Jury & fnn1tc bcnl'flts n>W Day St. mt'(Jmte opening for ex· operated hgure salon arl• al~o oHercd SUhm1t Costa Mesa pencnc1.>d, "-'C.U groomed chain. Sales t>Xp d l• rC!!>Ume to Per~onn el t;qual()pportumtv & personable r ecep-s1reable but will tram 01rl'<'tor, Jack G Raub Employer · t.wrust Must ty pe SSwpm bright, tnm lady. Salary Co. P.O Box 5019. Costa P-BX---'-...::...:.:.: ~~::!::C1%/ ~~~~~~ + comm paid. For appt Mesa, Ca 92626. E.0 . E. Answe r ing 1>erv 1ce Hrs Tues·Sat, 9-S 30, call&42-3630or 556-47tl6. M/fo'/H. operatar full & PIT. Call Call Barbar.t l>av1i.. Sales --------- 1135-3561 _wkdYH. 642·162G ll.E. SALES SECRET ARY PIX OPU R EC E P T I T Y p I ST We have a few opcmngs P\rchcninq/Recept Part lime or ruil time lmm(.~ opening, Flt. All on our sales staff for Young expanding com· da.ys or evenings. Must maJ ~nee. 214 E Alton. beensed, professional re· pany seeks pcrsori for be able to work som(' S.A.Ulll 5S7-096l. a l estate agents o r vancty of duties ineld'g weekends T · ---brokers. ((interested s ecr etarial , heavy r . · ypmg skills Recepllonist /Secreta ry ~lease send T'l'Sume to J '. purcbasinl( &. r ecep't equired. Many com for busy contractors off. Krembas, Quail Place task!!. Good typing skills, ~a n Y b e n e (I l S · l n C M. Must have pleasaut Properties. 1400 Quail llll,ell, ln1twt1VC!, busy • a.sbioa Isl~ area . Call phone vo1Cf' 45wpm· St., Suite l3S, Newport ph s, opply to progress. ~1110 EOE. ue<'urat.e 548 5543 Beach92660 X I n t b t• n f . C a l I PBX OPERATOR ..., ...... A M E R I C' A N Orange Co Arprt area. "'...-nY'S The fast.est drow in the LEARN l NC1 CO HP inte r busy s witchbrd RESTAURANT West. a Daily Pilot 714/894-4437 • 1''tr & PIT day shifts' llll.5 pos1t1on open for Classified Ad. Call Today E.O.E . Many benefih . U~'T!o-:SSES HOSTS 00·5678 Selhdle itc_m_s __ 642·567~ Pay acrording to t'XP WAITRESSES S46-:ml.~3333-WAITERS COOKS DlSHWASllERS NX OPIA. Prud weekly. company ()per's for t e lephon e benefits. Apply in person amweting service. Must 9am to4pm daily. be able to work somt' Alph)'S's Restaurant weekends. T yp in g 3S 16175llarbor al Edmger wpm req u l re d . Ell · Founuun Valley peri~oce prefe rred or An Equal will tram. Many com · Opporturuty Employer P8QY benefits. F\Jll time Restaurant or part time, day & e ven· Waitress & Klt .... a -M . lnllhil\a ava.llablc. ..,~, an lrviDe Airport area call Awly blwn 3·!'J Anclent sew.m. Manner. 2607 w. est Fashion laland llrtl& call _!twy. N.8 646-02()1. ~1110 ColLa Mesa area l'&ll RESTAURANT HELP 673-lla E o E Breakfast & lunch buffet · · · Sl>'ll'. 0 C. Airport area. STOP!! Port & full Um n c<led. Take Ume lo relax a nd Cook. d lshwu her. ahop al home. Jt'a 1lmpll' count.c:r h Ip. Cnll Roo or w It h D t 1 l y P i I o t Omer 2-Spm. tor appt. CluaUicd Ada. And If _DM_0534_;_ ______ 1 you have ~mt't.hioa to sell. call • f r ie ndly J.Uv 10mflhtn1 you want Claulfaed Ad·Vbor al tosc.11? Clauihtd ads do &05871 ""u &42...5678. • ,. . Sales Personnel W..t.d Gnat Sahtpeopl. For n. Ci;reah1t c---. Se ve r~ I f u JI . t_i m e pos itions •mmedintely availa bl e in our sales d e pa r t m e n t . E xpe ri e n ce d~s1rable, but any sales aptitude will ~e cons ide r e d . For a n intcrv1cw. please contact Laurie ~t f7 I 4J 644-7030 AL.:SGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 546-~ SHEET l\1 ET AL Mechanic/ Class "A" Expr'd Must do own set· ops. TECHHICIAH/Expr'd 549-2426 --------Stationery Ston• an Corona del Mar needs ex per'd sales lady. Full· tune. 5 tlays. xlnl work· in~ conds. Es pecially fine clientele. 675-1010. Studenls·A ~e~ 13-16 nt't'ded for Part Time work Aft school & Saturdays. Good earn- i.ngs. For mfo call : Jeff at547-m7. TB.EPHOHf SALES Work p/t1mc 1n our lt>lephorie sales room <AM sh1CtJ and still have µleasure time fo r yourself . W ai.t el> +comm. Call for detu1ls L.A. TIMES ' 540-0301 Telephone contact work. Benefit show tickets Pay 1s good. 495· 11193 TB.EPHONE SOLICITORS Expenenced Only Stoll Oail> Pilot. H1Rhc:.l com mission pu1d. Your l'lhone at home Over 2l I 0 Ca rd. Ca II tl3S·64S3. 1·3P.M. TELEXOPER. Exper'donly Snuall N B Expart1ng firm needs person 2·6 PM, 5 rta)'S a wk .. $3.50 per hr. Plea!lc C'all 640-6313 ask for Peggy T O MOR RO W S FACIUT'Y TODAY Get ln on the ground noor On• ly the best need apply. INN'S & Nonnnu Asst .• J\ll llhlfU llVllll. i\pply 1n l)CnlOn. Snnla Ana Com- mun1Ly Conv. Center. 600 E. Washington. Sunla Ana, Ca. Tow Truck Or)ve~ l!X· per'd. Top pay. i\pply G&W Tow ln,a. 740 il Ohms Way, C.M. 6'2· l2S2 SEU. Idle Item• with a D. ily Pilot Cluailled Ad &42-5'78. ' *** M.k. Goodlnan 3'l Woodland Irvine You are Lbe Winner of Two Free Tickeh totbe 17th Annual LOMGIUCH AKC register ed m a le Collie. 6 m o. S50 lo good home. 842-7918 or 842·4148 eves. Frftto You 8045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M. Cat. long hair. Fem. shortha1r spayed cat. Good W/k1ds. 646-8600 Rau.an Haatan cotton sofa & chair, t able & matduog lamp. Nt'goll3 ble. 675-9747 17th Annual LOMGIEACH RODEO at t he L o n g Beach Arena, 300 E. Ocean Blvd.., Long Beach. To chum your tickets, call 642-5678. ext 272. 8' Davenport. Xlnl cood * * * f'ounaitwe 8050 Brown is h g rey. S25 --------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Pool table. beaut. old- RODEO at the Long Beach Arena. 300 t: O cean Blvd., Long Beach To chum your tickets. call 642-5678. ext 272. Ant.iques table & chairs · Twin bed & f a s h ioned mod e l hand carevd ~fa. rust dr a we rs w /dc:t~~th:J ~/artistic piano legs. area rug. sohd m aple mirror . White w /gold Slate. Lea lber pockets. harvest table " chairs lnm Sturdy matt $1 ,500 value, sacnf1ce misc. S48·l290. ' $150 ·CM> .. .,..., ress. $485. De h v e r Fr ee _,.,., &3&-jtQ2 ••• Rock maple table & 4 cap· Sola bed Qu b =-. --------ta m 's chairs, writ ing gm pla°ad ~~i7c. ~I· T1Uany m e m bers hip desk. 53&-0094 S7S 6TJ.2l23 con ·• Goldcard, NO DU ES. · (2l3)4~eves You may win tickets for 8:00 P.M. performances F riday, Februar y 9th. or Saturday, February t Oth . Or a Matin e performa nce a t 3 :00 P .M. O N S und ay, F ebruary Jlth, 1979. Long Beach Arena 300 E. Oce•n Blvd. long Beach, Cal". Info: (213) 436-3881 Tu.di¥. February I , 1179 DAIL V "II.OT ll8 ylls. pile spal't' cpl l vr old (no peti.-rhald > Ma,dung ('OUChei. 5. 11 fl Xlnt cond 3 pti. Sami;onile lug~JJ.(t 6 folding Sami.onal(.' <•hrs Wdat:S rlothl'S 12 & 14 8-tZ· 2.WS or 997 !WIO •lst SUPERMAN COM IC 6 ~ & Pall) tlt'ar'>l fo HI wtd ,l.)O'>lcr li73 Kl79 In.me r-·8m1ty Golf Membi.'rsh1p S600 9711111;:11 wkdi. Air compres.,or th p SlOO . .ilummum storui.ie sl\.ed li''lll' $175 Call bl'tW 11 .im 12 nr11rn 9f)l.jl;{/ :..cw 1-;ngl11.h nd111f,l hat, S.111 Nl'w GcrmJn Stel'I Stirrup::., SbO. I Were Sl4111 <t95·5J94. Mesa Verde Country Club Swan & T enn1i. mcm ber:.h1p F'or Sa ll• 5-JS-3176 25" C-Olor TV l'IJyi. J(oocl SllO Can1~ter Vat•uum SN 646-lS25 FIREWOOD Whlsle pnce 2.'>11>:. ~ Will dclvr 25 b..t>(" or s~MS 1932 arter6PM Was h er. Drver SJ7S Wc1ter sortenl'r Stso ·75 650 Kawa!>uk1 frame not ~· S75. 633 8005 af~6_£m Offic• Furnftwe & &,ilpment 8085 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74FOAD COURIER Mags, fla res, shell & much more! Ow.Iv $2295 l'fUVATE PARTY 640-6375 Hnaclu stereo receiver . 8 SUPS AVAIL~ILE '64 Dodge Pickup w/cmpr 1 r a c k t a p e . VACNewport646-0Mt shell Xlnl running cond. Phono!>peal.cr::. $100 NEED slJp 24 n Islander Sl.700/best of~er 646-3511 ~ ..i n .i so n • c C o I o r Side be OK. will share _an __ s _Chn_s_. ____ _ .relc\•1s1on $200 tboth use. Hurry! 00-1331 or v.. 9570 :fyr.. old l 495-5194 548-9996 eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• 23" color eonsole 4 way loots. s--a & '74 Chev. 9-passcnger rt:'m\H\', x Int S275. Sid ~ 9080 window van S3250. Gl4 !1277 ••••••• •• ••. •• • • •• •• •. • 54&-l 156 eve 675-2213 7.t•ruth tr"n~oel.'anic· suhJ 13' jlydropl:rnt' '76. nu 703 spd shift. 6 cyl custom !>l.ilc r<1d10 tAM FM, AC· trlr. ~ood nmd. 45hp long bed. $900. OCH! band!> including Mere, re<ady for water . ____ 4_94_·_6642 ___ _ ...,t•uther, seldom USl.'d. Slrl0.646-5574 '18 Chevy 100 w/V-8 & 3 Pht..73b685___ __ '78 Rally ski/pleasure spd trans. Perfect tor loats&Marine wtMerc.Crsr170HPt/O. w o rk or ca mpe r &,.ipment Ken. 842·3205, 894-1~ $4950/ofr. 645-3178. .........•..•....•..... ~ 90 I 0 Trcmportatiott '74 Ford Van Conversion. Auto, PS/PB. Xlnt cond. S7SOO. Ph: 646-8105 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.Sale/ ---------• Rent 9120 78 Chevy :i4 ton. lwb, •••••••••••• ••• • • •••••• black van, rull pwr, ltll Older camJ)(!r 4 !>ale. w/o whl. full conver s ion, truck. $150. Stove & 14,000 m1, $12,000 invest· r'('frig. 640-2700 ~5 ror fast sale. "-------~ "70 YW CAMPER VAN. , Ni•w eng. runs gd 73 914 2.0 Xlnt. cond. SUnJlbsl 54&3908 $4,900/best offer. Dy - --G46 7741 eve ./S un Motoriud likes 9 I 40 500-6442 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nu: MO· PEDDLER New PEUG 1-:oT MO PEDS Reg $469, Now $299. 631-3830 ------·11 Chevy Window Van. AIC. Jwc f!aS t:ink, N<'w vaJvei.. S2SOO. Ph :;52-5687 Autos Welftted 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEWILLIUY YOUltDATSUM . PAID FOR OR NOT • TOPDOU.Alt .. •,. •, -. BARWICK DATSUN "".111 lu.1nl .q11 -..t1.111•1 Bll-1375 493.3375 WE PAV TOP OOLLAU for top used cars·Forelg i . dom~tlcs or classics. :r your <'ar 1s extra clean. sec us 1''1RST! 'Heatts of CLove '74Suiuki 185. lo mi. $350 615·1""'4 ~. This Valentine's Oay send your love a greeting all the world can share with a Daily Pilot Hedrt of Love. 11 s easy. compose your personalized greeting & we II set your message an type to fit the border of your choice or your own handwritten thoughts may appear 1n the border you select Borders come in 3 sizes $15, $10. & a special child's size for $2 (You must be under 1J to q ualify fo r this one) If you wish to create your own greeting. use a black pen & wnte your message tn the heart below or draw your own Valentine of this size '74 Honda 350. Need& minor exl work. $300 or ' besto(r 642·2995. 74 CZ 250 & 400. moved up sbox, electronic ignition. Mula.mi carbs. S4SO each, 962·8228. ATC 90 Honda $415/ofrer Ace 100 Hodocka. a& is. $100 VW enlo(inc com ~ete S2oo 493 9:m 65() Yamaha. 1977, low m1 Xlnt s hape l-'a1riog, crash bar, pegs, back rest. Sl200/0ffer. 968-3452 Motor Homes, Sole/ Rent/Storoqe 9160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENT '78 Luxury Motor Home 22' slL>eps 6. siso wk + & ma 640-8585 ---- RENT. 23' ft"ireball Self contained. 645-2283 Trailers. TraYtt 9170 #I l11C>r-..C....., I 2925Harb0r Blvd. COSTA MESA 979-2500 WE BUY CLEAN CARS &TRUCKS CONHEll CHEVROLET IX" I I.tr'"'' Ill' d ' c l"\l \ \I I·~' \ su.1200 WE BUY USED CARS CALL PAPPY Used Car Mgr 540·5630 Ion xso~ & sox • l INCOl N M£ IK IJRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21· 1962 Kensklll with 8x16 2628 HARBOR BLVD cabana \n ar. adult perk. COSTA MESA s:mo. 548-6113 or 631 ·966S Camping or all purpose lrlr. Man y compart meots. Very handy. S2SO. Pb 963-6.135 """° Serric•. , .... WEIUY USB>CARS! We're the new Chevrolet dealership in the Jrvlne Auto Center. We need your used car! WT CHA.Met FOR 1971 UOl's SAVE! IUYOttLUSE MOW! 79'1 HOW ARRIVIMG! 1976 IMW 2002 COUPE. 4 speed trans. air condiUorilng & LOW miles. (446NYE). . ONLYS6895 HOWARD ChevroJ.t Dove & Quail Sts. NEWPORT BEACH 833-0555 OftANGE COUMTY'S OLDEST • DRIVIA * * LITI'LE ••• * SAVE A LOT P&r.OMPAR a a DD Fantastic Closeout on 1978 Models 1979Modds now arrivrnl( MUST SE LL DICK MlLLER MOTORS ~W. Warner. S.A S.S7-2132 Im6 Fial 131 4-dr sedan, radio, S spd. less than 2SK mi. Xlnt cond P .P. Call 955-0031 (8:3().5pm l. 55 1·1673 eves . ck weekends. MkSgtt new top, new clutcll good cond. S2000. 962·97'2 after 6PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Poracbe 914. pelf. con d1t1on. $5900 . Eves ~ 60 356 8 toadster convert. Mint cond .. $9500/oller 6'Z-8683 '17 924 · silver , A JC. stereo, 22,000 mi. Must sell·Besl o(fer. Call days 979-2333 eves & wkods 768-5363 '68 912 Ta.ria. blue. hard \0 find soft rear window. $1,000 Or best oHer. 49.5-UM3 66 911. Must see to ap- pnic1ate. Xlnt in & out. Make offer. 581-9153 '76 llM convert, 5-sod, xlnt Sales-Service-Leasing cood. $2000 & take over paymenlS. 646-SS14 I Porsche196S Cpe Con- cours. Compt restored, onJ,y 4000 mi. Blk/Blk tnl Mu.at see Sl0.950 tBB> PP aft 1 pm. 714-644-5039 Rav Carver.Inc. L.1--'-9727 Rolls Qoyee BMW ,._ 1540 J amboree ••••••••••••••••••••••• RINllllt 9755 . Newport Beach 640·6444 Brand Mew •79 HOMDA Cars TESTDRIYEOUA ••••••••••••••••••••••• CREVIER 0 I Sf Ii H OAOWAY SAIHA ..... ,. 835·3171 THE UlTIMl\TE ORIVIH(; MACNIHE • . •USEDBMWs• '73 BavS/R (567HJP) '732002Tii 1187JJL) '752002 Auto, air (2236) '77 530; 4 spS/ R (0179) '77600csi4sp (TRS962> '78633csi SIR (~) Closed Sundays 1978 633csi A Dealers personal car. Picked up in Europe · 700 miles · s unroof. Tao leather • nawless exam· ple I l.ser0045) SAYE CUVIER MOTORS Lst & Broadwt.y SANTAANA 835-3171 *** St.vettRoberts 2810J7th Huntington Beach You are the winner of TWO FAH TICKETS to the 17th Annual LOMG BEACH RODEO at the Long Beach Arena, 300 E. Ocean Blvd., Long Beach. To claim your lickets , call 642-5678, Ext 272. *** '77 5301, 4 s pd, snrf, AM/FM eass. Burgundy. SU.900 or assume lse. $271 mo. 673-3707 (home> or 833-0433 <ore. l '75 Super Clean 2002 brn/tan, AM/FM cass. air. $6,300497·3282 '79 BMW 633CSI. auto, silver w/b!Jc & wht In· t.erlor. sunroof. rur. P/W, fog lites. stereo, CBC wheels, to mi's Call eves; 675-4054. '16 2002. am/fm ster eo. Must see. Xlnt cond 557·3657 days. 675·9097 aft. 7pm. 'UCAR MAHY OFTHEYE ... R" To Choose From! "' V RSITY Good inventory i.n stock. UNI E Hurry whlle they last! Oldlmobile MIRAC&.E Honda CCll"'S • GMC MAZDA/RENAULT Trucks 2l!i0Harbor Blvd . 2850Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA Costa Mesa 540 9640 645-5700 '78Accord CVCC LX , S IR. 76 LeCar: l6.000 mill'!>, AJC, PIS. urn/fm stereo $3200/best ofr .. sn. rl .. cassette. Must give up 542·3973 days 494·1618 lease pay ofr to the bank. eves. $6778.42 Call 6'2·0846 -.. --.-.,-ec-e ___ 97_5_6 ,,.,... 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• #l DEALER IN U.S.A. •XJ6 Repnirs & Service• Joe HeM essey I Jagua r 1SIO Plac • C.M. 631·2742 '61 XK 150 J ag Rdslr. Has chansma! Sm/tan, tugg rk, ~ boss Ford Must eng, dual f~ Hlly, Esk. Cam. Must. c .. trans. B&M hyd. s hfl kit, new Pirellis. AM/FM stereo cass & rec'dr. Tri Ax s pkr. Sl3,500 . (714> 964-1&18; (213) 533-0666 70 XKE 2+2. 6 cyl. auto. 60.000 orig. miles Show cond. $8.500. pp 586-9177 Jag '77 SJ XJ 12L, immae. cond .. lo m i., Sl&.000. p. p. 642-1200, 544-7660 1965 Classic Jag Sedan 3.8. Blu~. hte blue int., perfect cond. 640·2973 Jemett 9732 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Wlutew/blk top Conv Xlnt cond . 14 .000 m1. ROY CARVER ROUS·ROYC£ 1549.Ulll .... ff _...,a.au \._ __ _..,...... --aOHP WHOAYS ':i9SilverCloud 1 $19,000 98M.144 '71 Shadow. white. low ml sunroof', vnyl top. Extra sharp. $27,000 631-1266 days 675-<!840 eves . 1961 Rolls Royce Sedan. line cond. Elegant white $20.500. 64().4999. Toyota ················•••••4• '78 Celica GT: Many w as. xlnt cond. Best of· rer. 559-1998 '77 Celica. Low m1. xlnt cood. StiU under warr. $4950. Ph 645-1207 S7500. 673-2906. ·72 Toyota la ndcrwser. Mazda 9731 30fl top. Must sell. Best •••••••••••••••••••••• offer. 646-1331 miracle mazda 2150 Hcrbor ll•d. Costa Mesa 645-5700 '79 RX7 GS, tl,000 ml. Fully loaded. sunroof. Must sell leaving coun try $9800/Pirm 548 3961 73 Maida P.U. $800 631·3768 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOYOTA m~baoie now at. Ivan's, 1995 Harbor Blvd. C.M. &IS-1982. IEfOREYOU SEU YOUR TOYOTA. SEE US! MARQUIS TOYOTA MISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495.1210 Movin& back East. must sell 72Toyota. xlnt cond 540-9703; eves, 546-0532 Kathy C.-f 9715 '00 ~ MBZ. Gd cond . ••••••••••••••••••••••• S3500or best offer. Tri ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Capri V6. 4 s pd. 957 l568 AM/FM ster . $1700. Must sell. 7S2·0184, 497·2918 '76 Spitfire. Tahiti blue ~.000 mi. AM/FM tape. Datlllt 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Wen~ to buy clean Oat.sun used ears" SWlU Pay Top Dollar$ COSTA MESA DATSUN 'Tl MB 3000. only 26K ml Tires/rims. lsl $3500. Mich. ures, xlnt fuel 644-3'73. 6'4·2507 milea~e. smooth positive _"1'6:.._Trl __ um __ ph_T_R-7-V-ict-ory- ~~So~O real value. Edition moon roof. -----• am/fm 8 trk. luggnge 1978-tSOSL, 3M, Milan bm , stereo. absolutely mint $29,500. Eves (213 > 947 -3301, dya (213 I 6S6-fl!3Sor <n4> 551..oJS. rack, s ide moldmf xlol cond. mst see 4300 536-88S4 al\ 7pm. Volbwegee ••••••••••••••••••••••• & AccHsoriff f400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want to trade pair or LS" wide (saod tirel wheels (Of' 10" or 11" wide. 5 hole V.W. wheela. 642·3379 JOI MAC PHERSON 284SHARBOR BLVD J.S76 MB ~L. bnllJant '73Super BeeUe gd. cond CHEVROLET 540.6410 540.0213 red w/parchment. Local Needs brakes. $1600 #12 n us Size s10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tszo ••••••••••••••••••••••• • & l Owner. Make offer 961MXJ71 21AutoCenter Drive New79280ZX Atr, P/S. 4 ™-1782 -------- IRVINE paas. _;s,ll~!~ Lie. pd ---------• '13 Ghia Coov. Ke lly 76 .. 7222 $ll.M'1~ MBZTURBODIESEL vee'!J. lolrru. Xlnt. cond I am Takinll f1ctory de· Dy. 6'2-0671 eve. 840-5LS8 1.912 3'-0Z. Beautlrul eond la very of 300SD lrt April. 1974 VW bus , sunroof• WANTED! A/C, maga, Met blu~ Mual sell. You bl.I)' & AM1FM 1tereo 8 track, I.ate model ToyoUs. _S3.'i85 __ . 979-__ 9707_.____ savel Zeroml. $24-8408 x.tnt cood. Asking $3450. Volvos, Picku"'" & Vans. O"'TS',,.. -h lc no .. ' 2U ...... •t..u Call la lOd•Y I.... n ,,., m-•0 .. M • r c • d e I D I •• e I .... or ( ,_. . .,_!> at lvan't. 1995 Harbo1 "78-300CD, Uk• nu, l yr -vw n .. v /FM sa BRAND NEW 1979 DODGE VAN I ncludes automatic 1ransm1<;s1on VS-318 enQ1ne. exterior c;ound conlrol rad Ill tares. tinted windshield CB 120~51 (1100S4) Only 55495 SURFER VAN SPECIAL! Buy any new unaltered Oodqe Van and we will add one inch foam paddlnQ and cerpetinQ end panPlan9 If you wish at no extra charge with your choice or available color Oller ends 2· 16-79 No substitutions Acceptance or th1~ offer must be made at the tame of ourchase Advert•!ed vehicles excluded For help with your ad. just cell 642-5678 & a friendly Valentine ad-v1ser will be happy to assist you. And. 1f you llke. you can charge your Valentine ad or use your Master Charge or Bank Americard. '51 FORD CUSTOM This ls the One. 2 dr wide white walls . All origlrrnl. mohair int . Silver on Blk, AM/FM stereo. $3500/bst olr. 6'$-0785 aft apm . Blvd. C.M. MS·l982 old, l.5K ml. Take Over ,., .. ~ ,.,... ca · '7101t1un 510 Jse paymnt.a or cash out. Carpeting & curtain&. •--··..i *"""Firm. Rare mdl. f'or •PPl call '71,000 ml. $2,700. Call DAILY PILOT 842-:;678 Mail to Daily Pilot Cle&s1t1ed Oepartmont. Box 1560 Costa Mesa 92626 ,,.,...w .... c .... ~ "641-tJOl • 140.f467 1900 Rambler, Ol11l cond, radlolblr 4-dr. 80K +mi, au&o u-ana 685-2525 U ;you w1nl your 1dvertls· ' Ing me 111• lo retch '41 Ford Coupe sound more ~ople al tower rood .. se,Obo ori1 m1'11, cost, Cla11tltled 11 the 2nd nwnr. t:2500 or make •1.1 to ot Call Now t otter. 556-7665. SC.5671 _,., Klam at 875-9893. P11r1n. 1l4/552-a.40. ~all SPM. pla~MY-300CD. "' '57 BlJO. Com9letely ttt· "78 Datt un 8 210. Xlnt MERCEDES 300D, 'TS, Wit. Sl500. See lo IP· cond.Oiily'7000ml, Sunroof, Sl vr met, pteeiateM2·227S Tfl8.807& Mlchel\n a. S \2 , 100 ·ssvwconvert. Runs rlne GARAGE SALE ada In 11412118 lOOOearlyAM. Body rou1h. 000 the Dally Pilot br1na hap· •15 MB UOS t.. Tan. _548-_T_l_IA_e_v_•_. ___ _ py reaullS. To place your ~011i. convert top, 4CYLCARSWANTED drawln1 urd. phone t. a n I • a t b e r . fWnn1nt or nol·f&lr cash. 6'2·5e'18today1 S:Zl,000,752-60:.>. 673-M6S 631·2697 ( ~ I .. • PWCHASE OILIASE YOUR NEW 1979 CADILLAC NOW! • NABERS ~ *** DGYid Utley ZJl11 Golden Cir Newport Beach You are the winner or ............ , .. ··"' o..e.•.-..... , ..... .,._,. ... c...... , ...... '71 FORD WAGON '"Fainnoftt Scpilr.'' V8, auto matic, pw r. steering, facto ry air cond .. AM/FM stereo, lugeage rack & ONLY 8,000 au Les! UIYIVOZ>. THEODORE · ROBINS FORD 1060 HARBOR ISLVO. CO~TA MESA 641·0010 '76 Monarch. black Sharp. 26.000 m1 Afc:. amtfm radio, bl;H·k inl vnyl lop $.U50 963·1912 afl 6 TWOFREE TICK ETS 77 Mercur y Marques t.olhe Brougham 4dr. load~ 17th Annual New t 1 re~ . ~ 5. I ~ 5 LOMG IEACH 714/831 1212 RODEO t4ashmcj ___ 9952 At the Lon g Beac h ••••••••••••••••••••••• Arena, 300 E Ocean • Bl vd .. Long Beach To 68 F a s tback Ori g claim your t1 ckeu.. call owner Good cond $2,uoo 642-5678 Ext 272 2131333-014_1 ___ _ *** '71 El Camino SS4S4. Xlnt cond .• very low miles. Air pwr brakes & steer mg, AM·FM 8 track in dash. custom body & paint. 2 sets or whecli. High perf suspn Mu!>L see to appreciate $4500 Call SJG.2785 or 536 8405 \ ·75 Pinto W .1~on V -6. auto trans. 20mpl(, low mile~. S2!100/offH (7141 !>18-8625 after 5 p.m. & Wt.>ekends or < 714 I 498-1000. exl 307 wkdays 73 Wai.:on 4 spd Top "hill)t' Real G..1!> Saver Sl2i5 l>U-HJ27 Plymouth Fury I. 4-dr , nu prunt & vinyl top. Runs xlnl Must !.~ & dnve! $1475 964-1848 ·64 Plymouth V8 Fury. It II. Run~ great $350. Ulll ti7S ·'834 'Ill f\lry Ill, 840<IO m1. Ver) t'lc.m. i:ood tranw $975 Pvt ply l44ti 2119 \ , ... Ruhthlgto Beach Fountain V!i~0~y VOL. n . NO 37. J SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Your Hometown Dally Newspaper TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1979 TEN CENTS ' Entire Co-uncil Target· of Recan B) ROBERT 8 ltKt;R OI ""' 0.Wy ~ \l.tff All Vl'n nwmbt>N or Lhf' llun t11\1.4lon &·uch City Council now have bt."t'o namt;d offi<-111ly a targets of rf'call dn\.'f~ The four l'O\.ltlCll omc1als who were not namett wheri lhe On.t recall wav(• hat in December were served wnllt'n notices at Monday night's City Council ~t>Sl>lOn Four Huntington Officials Added to List Two residents ot north Hunt· 1ngton Beach. Donald W. Rehl· 1ng and LoMie Marion. served oaoers on Richard Siebert. Bob Mandie, Ruth Batley and Don Mac Allister. Rehling and Marion wouldn't go into specific charges. but Rehling declared that. "lhe cily has gotten orr lhe track and maybe we can help gel il back in the right direction." Mayor kon Pattinson. City Al· t.orney Gail Hutton and Coun· cilm en John Thomas and Ron Shenkman were designated as recall targets in December. Shenkman resigned before the papers were served. Steve Schumacher. a leader or the first recall group, said the gathering or signatures should begin against Pattins on, Thomas and Mrs. Hutton next week. Recall proponents have 160 days to gather about 12,000 signatures or registered voters after their papers are certified. ''I've been a resident or Hunt· ington Beach since 1945," Reh· ling told reporte rs, "and 1 wouldn't want lo hve anywhere else. But all this bickering really hurts. "l wouldn't say for a minute that I could do a better job than anyone up there. but. even if we <See RECALL. Page AZ> TV Set Shorted .. Huntington Wonian ... Dies in Honie Fire • I ' f . · 'So There!' ·- Forty-five-year-old Gwen V. Mawson died in her rented Hunt- ington Beach home Monday af· ternoon when a television set shorted out while she was nap- ping and she was overcome by heat and smoke, authorities said today. Her body was discovered burie d .under cloth es in a bedroom closet about an hour a fter firemen arrived al the burning house at 7631 Yukon Drive. "Everyone including some $600,000 OK'dfor Fire Hall The Huntington Beach City Council voted to spend Sl.25 million in federal money Mon· day night with the big item be· ing $600,000 for a new fire station. With financing provided by Housing a nd Comm un ity Development funds, the city plans to replace the aging Lake Street Fire Slation with a new racility. Officials said today the station is under nearly constant repair a nd leaked badly in r ecent storms. The fire deparlmen~ has oc· cupied the buJlding for the past 14 years. It previously was the site ror a boat manufacturing concern and before that served as a maintenance building for the Southem Cali!ornia Edison Co. Striker Larry Childress leaves no doubt where his sentiments lie as he issues a Bronx cheer at the front gate of the NewPorl News Shipbuilding Company in Virginia. More t han 1,000 members of the striking United Steelworkers Union staged a show of strength a t the shipyard Its age is estimated at about SO years. The City Counc il also ap- proved spending $39,000 for a new paramedic vehicle for the Lake Street facility. Four Sent to Prison Petrikin New Other projects winning' council a pproval and earm arked for federa~ financlng include: -Senior citizen development at former civic center site, $145,000. In Bombing Plot ~= .. ~~~::.has been named president or the -Ramps lo improve mobility for handicappe d residents, $80,000. -Purchase or smoke detec· tors to be given to low and in· term edtate income residents, ~.ooo. LOS ANGELES CAP) -A Superior Court judge has im· Posed a three-year sentence on four reputed members or the rev- olutionary Weath er Under - ground who pleaded guilty to conspiracy lo blow up the office of state Sen. John Briggs. i Sentenced Monday by Judge -Julius Leetha m were Judith E mily Bissell, 34 , Thomas Michael Justesen, 28, Leslie Ann Mullin1 34, and Marc Curtis Perry, 30. Deputy District Attorney CAR AD BROUGHT ' 50 PHONE CALLS ··1 received 50 calls nliht and day -even durln' the holidays. ·'The people sa1c! they always read tbe Daily Pilot, and they bought my car without heartnc the engine." That's the advertising suceea slory or lhe Costa Mesa man who placed this ad in the Daily Piiot: ·~ VW MuM Sell, Good en~ Ch•on <'tir. Needs EN·trac:ul work . xx"· X'lX" Tt you have a car to sell, let the Daily Pilot make your phone nng. A friendly ad-viser will help write an ad at 642-5678. Robert Jorgensen said the four will serve only about nine addi· tional months because or credit for time already s p ent i n custody and good beba~or Leetham meted out three-year terms despite a probation de· partmeat recommendation that they receive niae-year terms. r FBI agents said the four were arrested Nov. 19, 1977 just hours before they reportedly planned to set otr a bomb out.aide the of. fice of the Republican .enat.or from Fullerton. They pleaded guilty Dec. 19 to five counts, including conspiring to blow up Briggs' office and posseuio1 a bomb, the ingre. dients" to make the expl01ive, dynamite and other ammunl Uon , u well as poeaeasing a bomb witb the intent to injure people. In lldctition to the plot to bomb Briap' office, prosecutors said the defendant.a planned to kiU police officers and bo~b the car driven by a judge wh6 was pre. siding over the t.rial ot two American Indian activist.a later acquitted of murder charges. A fiM defendant in tbe case, Clayton Van Lydearaf, 83, pleaded innocent and was scheduled to a ppear in court Tuesday for a prt·lrial hearina. Fountain Valley Boys Club Board oC Directors. P etrikin ls also the current Fountain Va lley Chamber of Commerce president. Other 1979 Boys Club officers jnclude attorney Peter Nix, first vice president; real estate man Walt Hammond, second vice presid'enl; l:nsurance counselor Chris Ton'es, third vice presi· dent; printer Bill De Fraga. secretary, and accountant WU Carter, treasurer. -Expansion or Oak View Community Center, $125,000. -Rehabilitation loans for homes In downtown Huntington Beach, $200,000. -Grant to Orange County Fair Housing Council. $10,000. The HCD money is designated to benefit residents with low and moder ate Incomes or to al· leviate blight or deterioraUng conditions in the cit y. 'We Love Each Other' ... WASHINGTON CAP> -Despite recent con· troversial remarks about Arabs and Jews, Billy Carter says his relations with his presidential brother are "as good as ever. ev,n better." And Carter insisted that the president thought "lt was fine" that he was keeping company with a touring delegation from Ubya. "The Libyans are the best friends I've got in the world ri~ now." Carter said at a reception ror the Libyans Monday night. "I came to Washington became I Uk~ them, theylre good people." Carter aald he spent two hours with the presi- dent at the White House Sunday nla~ and "we have better relaUona than ever . . . becaute we love each other." neighbors thought she was at work when the fire began," said police arson Detective Bob Russell. Huntington Beach fire Capt. Roger Hosmer said the inferno apparently began at about 2:40 p.m . while the woman was nap. ping in a bedroom with the television set on in the living room. Awakened by the fire. the woman is believed lo have opened her bedroom door. but was drive n bac k into the ·~-~ SHE'S MISS CALIFORNIA Fullerton'• Fogarty Ful.lerton Coed Named Miss Ccdifomia LA MIRADA <AP I -Linda Marie Fogarty. an 18-year-old coed from Fullerton, won the Miss California-Universe title in competition Monday night at the La Mirada Civic Theater. By winning the title. Miss Fogarty earned the right to represent California at the 1979 Miss USA pageant to be heJd at Biloxi, Miss., April 30. The n e w Miss USA will represent this country in the Miss Universe pageant at Perth, Australia next July. First runner-up in the Miss California -Universe pageant was Sheri Covington, 21, of Baja California. Second runner-up was Kelly Jane BaiJey, 22, or Alameda County. Rounding out the five finalists were Ren ee Rolle , 20, o r Richmond, who finished third runner·up and Lona Miller, 20, or Channel Islands, fourth run. ner -up. The new Miss California· Universe received cash awards • and clothing. Tmstees to Hold Meeting f oday Huntington Beach Union High School O istri ct trustees •cheduJed a 5 p.rn. session today to study a new budget plan, tbe metropolitan busing proposal and a 1880 balJot Jnitlatlve call· •na for a state-imposed voucher system tor educ41tion. Trustees are meeting al lM D\atrict Education Center, 5201 Bolu Ave .. Hun~lnaton Beach. ( .. •. ------------------------.. ,. ' '_.,· • -J bedroom by heal and s moke. She then hid in a closet where she.died. Hosmer theorized. Russell said investigators have ruled out the Possibility or arson as the cause of the fire. Fire officials said the lack of a s moke detector in the home was a key ractor in the inability or the sleeping woman to safely escape the blaze. "She also had no apparent pre ·flre planning that would have a llowed he r to escape through the bedroom window in- stead or opening the door." said Hosmer. Agent Claims Marvin Faced Bottle Woes LOS ANGELES <AP I -The agent who testified that actor Lee Marvin .. had a drinking pro- blem" was called back lo the stand as the property rights trial of Marvin vs. Marvin entered its fourth week today. Meyer Mishkin. Marvin 's agent for 29 years. said bt!fo;e the court's weekend reces!.""ltfat his klient "had a drinking proble m, but not in relation to his work." "If an actor can know his lines and report lo work every day, he doe s not have a drinking problem in relation to his wrk," Mishkin testified. In the SI million landmark court battle, Marvin's former Ii ve·tn lover. M ache lie Triola Marvin, 46, is s uing for half his assets during the time they were lovers. Mishkin was called Friday as a h os tile witness for Miss Marvin. He conceded Marvin, 54, had problems with liquor. Mishkin remembered rcceiv· mg a letter from Miss Marvin when the couple traveled abroad on a movie location. She wrote that Marvin was drinking and appeared to be on the verge or a mental breakdown. The agent said he called \he film producer and asked ''if Lee's drinking affected produc· lion of the film. And they said it didn't affect it at all." he re· called. Coast Weather Sunny through Wednes· day with not much tern. p eralure change. Highs Wednesday. 64 to 72. Lows tonight in 40s. INSIDE TODAY The chairman of CciUfornfa'• Propo1ihon 13 Commilrion MY• a Btate tiu inc1'eoae ii "Cllmoat ineuila· ble." See Page A7. , iPreSley Suspect In Jail 1\ 'U~ll\.'<'t tn ttu <Jt\l'mph.-d u torllon of $250,C from New\lC)M llcoch bulhJcr ll.Jn.d"'U P~h.) "'OS c~ .ltrt•,kd #donda) b) •"porlltt' rhpohrt•antwowu cants r0tlltnn for ball lotahn11 S2:6in.OOO 0 t l IV(' Lee ttobt.'rt.., .aid lhi s u s JH' l' l • P h 1 I I I p f: d w ii rd ... a u :. 11 l' t :n Cl r 11 .. \\ ll 1111 " ( ~ .! rd l'"' • v. J :. u r rt• :o. h · d 1t1 Downey Muruc1p I Court. wtwn• he wrui fucmg u malicious m•~ chuif <'harat• m <'t1nnt-cllon Wlth u pt.•llct .:un shoot1n~ ut the home ol u Dov.m.'~ poltt•,•man ttoberts said th~ txJlu.·cman wh<> hurl bt.•t•n \\-Ork111g w1lh Newport polJ(·c on lht-Prt>-.lt>) case. wwm't 1hu on)y per:.on "' volved In lhe 1nvcshga1wn to be ttw target of v1olt>n~ t It• s.ud the Lo:. i\n•:des homt.' or a kcy "1lnt•:(i, in the ca~c was burned down r('(•t•ntly und that . r thl' Loi. An Kcdc~ S tar1H's Department determined the hre tu be arson HobC'rts said Faus nct had been arrested last fall in the Presley caS(• but was released for lark of evidence. However, he said further investigation in . volving another ::.uspc·cl tn the case led to t'au:.net ·s re-arrt'Sl Monday on two Orange County Harbor MuniC'ipal Court war rants One $250,000 warrant charges · conspiracy to commit extortion and a $10.000 warrant charges parole v1olatJon. Roberts said r ausnet remained in city jail to-day. Roberts s aid two other sus- pects also have been a rrested m the case He said Jess Patrick Romo. 29, of Downey. was arrested Jan 31 on susp1 c1on of con· spiracy to commit extortion but has been released on bail re- durcd from $100,000 to $10,000 Roberts said the third suspect. Edward Dempsey, ,26, of Pam . mount. 1s in Orange County Jail awa1ting sentencing after plead- inf( ~uilty to extortion charges in the case The case bega n last May when Prc·s ley received threatening te le phone calls demanding $250.000. Pistol shots were fired into his Lido Isle home. Presley is believed to have come to the attention of extor· lionists after a rinancial news ::.tory listed his Newport Beach firm as one of the top ·100 in Southern California, police said. Roberts said $250,000 in play mon e y was s ubsequ e ntly dropped at a pre.arranged spot in Anaheim and Dempsey was arres ted after he allegedly picked it up Bases to Stay In San Diego S AN DIEGO I AP I -A published report today sald both the Naval Training Center and Marine Corps Recruit Depot will stay in use in San Diego unless a new Navy study is ignored. A decision is expected by the Department of Defense before March I The two downtowfl bases have been reported in jeopardy as a result of base consolidations pro- posed to cut military costs Among suggestions was one to move the recruit depot to Camp Pendleton Sentence Declined NEW ORLEANS <AP > -A fede raJ appeals rourt has re- fu sed to res ent e n ce three Houston policemen who beat up • a pnsoncr and threw him into a bayou. where he drowned. aHhough it said the j udge acted 1Llcgally in placing the men on probation. The rourt declined to order resentcncing for Terry Wayne De nson. Stephen Orlando and Joseph James Janish. con· v1cted Feb. 8. 1978 of beating Joe Campos Torres and throwing ham into the Buffalo Bayou. ORANGE COAST 1.-. DAILY PILOT l rw Q,.,~fOtl't Ol!Mf• P;k'tt wrtttwrhcrtn<N'l'1 tun-f-Q f~ N, W\ Pff'\\ 1\ CJuflfl\"+G Dy lf'li! Ot#"•tti 'f>lt'f PUftffVWf"ICJ C~v 5"eMt•t•f'dtf~ll'" l'Yiltlt ,"41-n ~ ttw"04,IQJ\ ,. rtfUly tot (fll\l4 llP• • N.,""""""1 ~fr\ "4~.tl1~ f'l>Mf\ ,,,.,,. \itfll\ VAl ... w O•~ l •IN f\.-11<"-'°"'"(o.t"if • •""-''" t'OK'll'\i'' l'O•t,~ 1\ovtMt\~\,f'u'd•n•f'O •Ol"lditY' f~ pt1NIJ""I rHJC)fj\ftl~ OfM'f ,, At ~ ~ntfuv''"""' C'O\tA~w (•htottt•••1'-1' ·-•!N-t•,..-·.0.-"'•""1 ~•..,..,., J••-11 '"""" V1< e PtHli)tftt •"d 0-M'f _. ~Mqilt ,-.... .. 11-Ldftor ,_ ... _ .......... oql91 ... DI•,,., \4 ""' Ill<-I'.*" AW \1 ... 1 fMftllQI ... ~\ .. ...,. .. _ -" °'-"°""') "-* Huf'tll~on h9dl0Mct 1111f llffOll--11 ~·""'> ""'"' p 0 '°' l'O ·- Ofttc4t• ~·~.~ ~~: :~·~~~!:~""' T.teftlton• (714)MMalt Cla111flecf AdYertlllng to.le11 fr...,_t~o. .... c ....... ~,~ M0-1t20 -t LAK WOOD I AP• Holy ,Pl\ement, IJ.atm»n SOmelaody hH •lolen 2t m1nbOI• C'<>vora from 1 a1wer pro.)ecl 'I h • 9.000 J>()undi. ot u~l iron hds 1nd flnM•, valued t f7 ,TIO. v.c•tt' 1tolt'n from th Grtfhth C"ool\lru<'tlon ·o ••tc· om• llm,• b.-\Wl:l'n Jan Wiid f ''b 2. Lo" Al"I Mt"lt". .. County t.hNIH .. drpullt• aW Mooday M on1),1\ ,~taurant Aid Foil Extortion Police htt\'C found no trac or a p1t1r of extortaomsU. who have tt>l('phoned CJrders for money to thret> Huntington Beach fast food re:;taurnots during the past two weeks Mt.er lhreatemng to shoot employei!~ w1th a high· powered rifle The lalel;l extortion attempt proved uns ucces::.ful Sunday when a female voi ce demanded that employees al the Del Taco restaurant. 5856 Warner Ave .. put the mg ht 's receipts 1n a paper bag ~ind throw them out of a window at 10: 10 p m. A customt'r at the restaurant called police while the employees dropped to the floor' and crawled to a back room. No shots we re fired and police found few clues to atd their hunt for the extortionists. The extortion scheme netted $548 on Jan. 30 when a female t e l eph o ne voice o rde r ed employees at Burger King, 16331 Beach Blvd., to throw the re· ceipts over a back wall. The first attempt on Jan. 23 failed after the crooks could riot find the money th11t was thrown into a vacant lot The fi rst extortion occurred at the Jack-in·the·Box restaurant. a c r oss t he strt>ct from the Bur~er King. F .... PageAJ RECALL ••• aren't successful, we might get them to pay attention and do the jobs they were elected to do." Both Rehling, a machinist in Costa Mesa. and Marion, a car salesman, cited stormy council relationships in recent months. the resignation or a mayor and the failure to appoint his suc- cessor as reasons for their ac. tion. They also criticized the pro· longed salary dispute with Police officers and said both policemen and fireme n should be given salary increases. Rehling said the group is not connected with any special in- terest group, but indicated that up lo about 200 citizens who have gripes against city hall may be involved in the movement. Allegations listed on the recall notices accused each of the four council me mbers with incom· petcnce, fi scal irresponsibihty. failure to respond to citizen needs, involvement in practices which appear to be deceitfuJ to voters. conflict of Interest and conduct unbecoming an elected offi cial Rehling said the charges were copied from forms submitted by the earlier recall group. Mayor Pro Tempore Richard Siebert said today that charges !lre vague and unfounded. "I have no conflict. of interest and I am proud of my record," Siebert said . Siebert was elected in 1976. Mandie. MacAIUseter and Mrs. Bailey were elected last April. Man Con/ e~ses To Killing 2 SAN DIEGO <APl -Robert .Harris has confessed to killing two 16-yenr-old boys -a crime for which a jury convicted him over his protestation of in· nocence. and a judge had grant- ed immunity from prosecution to his ex-wtfc in return tor her testimony. · Ar. the jury heard evidence in the penalty phase of his trial Monday, the 26-year-<>ld Visalia man admitted he U d when de· nylng the klllln~ last AprU. •'There was a shot. -the next thing I knew I was shootlhg," he testllled. "When the shot was fired. J saw myself raising the gun. 'n>e colors were different. l was Jike a robot, empty inside." Teng Visits Japan TOKYO <APl -·Chinese Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping ar· rived today for Ulks with Japanese leaders an.er a visit to the UnJted St.atea that he called "a complete 1ttcceu." Ten1. maklnt hll atcond trip to Japan in len than nve months, waa to stay until Thursday ind &Mn '° on to Peking. . rt:llRAN, Iran CAP> -lrl• naan jet flfl)tt.er. •nd heli~n bun~ secUon~ or Tehran t.odMy In iii 1how or government force B l l'M O( thou.bands Of deflant muc:oor" chlltlled support for Ayatollah Ru.hollah Khomeini'• nomltlt'e c.o head a provtltonal revoluUonary rtl(lme. Tbl' ~xodua of foreigners con· llnu~d with a boul 400 more Americans and 70 Canadians leaving In Americlln military transpart phanes. An American Embassy 11pokeaman said about S,000 Atnel1ciaru remain In Jr'n out of an estimated 50.000 when I.be lurmo1l tarted a year ago. In other developments: Andrew Young , th e American ambassador t.o the United Nations, Is quoted in the West German news magazine Der Spiegel as saying the UniU!d States failed to forecast events in lran because "it didn't want to tteethem.'' -Am e r ican sources In T e hran confirmed that Gen. Robert C. Huyser, deputy com- mander of American forces in Europe, has left Iran arter more than a month. Sources said he was in Iran urging the Iranian' military lo s upport Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtlar. · Khomeini's backers said Huyser 's presence there was another example or Americah interference. Bakhtiar told the lower house 01. Parliament he would remain in o(fice •·even if all the parliamentary deputies resign," and until he cooducts the next general election, despite de- mands by Khomeini that he re- sign imm~ately. • ·1 have nothing to do with governments that exist in the imagination of people and are more of a joke," Bakhliar said of Khomeini 's designation of Mehdi Bazargan a s interim prime minister. ··But if they start taking ac- tion. I will respond accord· ingly." The state radio reported that Parliament approved dissolving the dreaded SAVAK secret police and speeding up the cor- ruption trials of former olCicials. The Oy-0ver by nine F·l.4 jet fighters and about 100 Chinook and Huey helicopters was the second such show or force in a week. The planes and choppers passed over the marchers in formations. The jets made about six passes over the volatile university district, and each time the crowd sbouted "Allah Akhbar CGod is greau." * * * U.S. Believes Iran Diplomat Will Be Fired WASHINGTON CAP> -The State Department said today that Ambassador Ardeshir Zahedi ls still lran 's diplomatic representative in the United States but that it had "no reason to doubt'· press reports from Tehran that he Is being fired by the new government. "We have had no official con· Cirmation" of Zabedi 's t e rm lnation. department spokeswoman Jill Scbuker said. "He is still the ambassador." The status of Zahedi, a former son·in·law and cl08e confidante of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, has been unclear since the shah was forced to leave Iran and a power confrontation developed b etween Prime Minis ter Shapour BakbUar and Ayatollah RuhollahKhomeini. The official Iranian news agency Pars quoted Foreign Mini s t e r Ahm e d Nir - Fendereskei as saying in an in· terview that ''the periods of service of some ambassadors, such as that of Zahedl, have been terminated. and the United States has bee n Informed of this." An Irani an Embassy spokesman here later denied the report. Pair Arrested In Burglary A Coeta Mesa man and a Hun- tington Beach woman have been booked for suspicion ol com· merclal burslary followln1 the Sunday night burglary of an auto repair 11rage . Arrested at 6:20 p.m. Monday were Donald W. Patterson, 23. of 2120 Walla~ Ave .. Cotta Melt, and Cbel')'l Lynn Jabk>n•ke>t. LS. of 5121 Hell Ave., huntln(ton Beach. Their arres t at Miss Jeblonakey•s apartment. folloWfld 1 break·ln •t C.R Auto Repalr, 2138 Harbor Blvd., Col~• Mcaa. A 11ra1e door was forced O~b, poUce Hkl_, and • pertial tally ol tooi. ana poqJble other llema t1ken &olaled S3t$ In value . ··~ FACING DEATH? EJc-Premler Bhutto Paki.stan &leader May Hang RAWALPINDI. Pakistan CAP) -Pakistan's Supreme Court in a split declsion upheld today the death sentence given deposed Prime Mlnlster ZuUUcar Ali Bhutto. Pakistan's dominant political figure from 1971to1977. The court assured Bhutto's lawyer the former prime minister will not be hanged for at least a week because he ls al- lowed that much time to petition for clemency. The decisk>n prompted pleas for clemency on the former leader's behalf from several countriee and organizations, in· eluding the London-bas.d human ri&hts group. Amnesty lntematioftal. The court rejected an oral re- quest by tbe lawyer for a JO.day stay of execution while it carried out a final judicial review of the case. It advised the attorney to file a formal request for more time and the judicial review. The Lahore High Court con- victed Bhutto and others last Marcia or conspiring in 1974 to murder Ahmed Raza Kusurl, a co-founder of the People's Party who later accused Bhutto of pro- voking the 1971 conflict with East Pakistan that led to the war with India, the breakup of Pakistan and the creation of Bangladesh. Kaauri survived an ambush on Nov. U , 1974, but his father was killed. President Mohammed Zia uJ . Haq 's mJlitary government tried lo head orr demonstrations in support of the nation's best- koown politician. Thai Leader Meets Carter WASIDNGTON <AP> - President Carter welcomed Prime Minlater Kriangaak Chomanan of Thailand to the White House today, and said the United States is "intensely interested and deeply committed " to the preservation of Thailand's freedom and indepen- dence. Carter reaffirmed U.S. security ties to Thailand, which hag been bolstering its military forces because of the Vietnamese·led con· ques t of Thai land 's eastern neighbor, Cam- bodi'a. Choose from our famous selection of necl<weor 'l'n'lctors Blorlced ·Bergland Hits Farmer Tactic WASIDNGTON <AP) -Police kept a Ugbt corral around lbe tractors of thou.lands of militant farmers t-Oday aa Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland e.barged that some or UHt pro- taters were "driven by juat old· fuhioned greed." Bergland declared that the disruptive tactics or the farmers were "an unmitigated dlaaater. from a public relations point or view." The display tends "to discredit all of agriculture and does not reflect the majority•· of those who till the soil. he said. Despite i1<>laled reports of rock-throwing and slashing of police car tires. authorities stymied the traffic-snarling tac- tics with which the farmers had tied the capital ln knots a day earlier. when 19 protesters were arrested. Police .had a nswered the motorized protest Monday with their own vehicular show of force. 'They surrounded the main armada or tractors and trucks with squad cars and ot.Mr gov· ernment vehicles after the farm vehicles bad been parked on the Mall. a grassy strip between the Capitol and the Lincoln Memorial . A uthorilies and protest Jeaders met without success to- day in what police called an ef- fort C.O work out a compromise under which the farmers could resume their demonstrations without violence or major dis· ruptions of traffic. But Tom Kersey, head of a p rotest contingent from Georgia, said the police present· ed several demands "and we didn't agree to any of them." Tf>us the standoff continued. with the farmers determined to • drive their tractors and the police firmly blocking the way. Police said they asked for commitments that the tractol"S would remain off expressways. not travel on city streets before 9 a.m. or after 5 p.m ., that drivers would obey routine traf- fic rules and that "wagon- masters" would maintain con- trol over caravan routes. Several farmers said tbose eonditiOht were unacceptable because they should have t.M same right to drive their 1.350 vehicles whenever and wherever they choose a s a r e1ular motorist driving a car. Bercland, meanwhile, said tb1t desplte their claims of financial hardship, the pro- testers have yet lo present cohesive proposals for bolster- ing the lot ot the farmer, "and until they do, I m not going to respond to their individual de- mands." Ragtime l.A3ads Boat Race By ALMON LOCKABEY o.M¥.....,...._.wnter The two Jight displacement Class A yachts in the Marina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta yacht race were setting a torrid pace down the Baja California coast today with the 65·foot Ragtime laking over the elapsed Ume lead from the 69·foot Drirter Art.er failure to report on Mon· day. Ragtime came up on today's roll call c laiming a 267-mile day's run in the pre. vious24hours. .-.. Her position placed her north of Point Lazaro with 528 miles to go in the 1,125-mile race. The race started Saturday al l p.m. from Manna del Rey . Dri~r logged a 244·mile day's run and was about 23 miles behind Ragtime with 551 mil~ to go. Ragtime's average speed since the start has been nine knots to 8.6 knots for Df.ifk>.r. At those speeds both yacht!'. have a chance to erase the elapsed time record of six days, three hours and 39 minutes. Handicap leaders at today's 8 a.m . roll call were Dakar. Green Hungarian and Secret Love in that order. Winds of 12 knots from the northeast were reported from the escort vessel Pioneer. Cops Kill Gunman; 10 Hostages Freed PONTIAC, Micb. CAP> -A 28-year-old worker at • General Motors Corp. phant -shot a woman and took ei1bt to 10 plant employees hostage before police shot him c.o death. aulhoritie& said. None of the hostages sought hospital treatment. although one was reportedly grazed ott the arm by a bullet. Police identified the de.ad man as Fredrick William Wunnen· berg. of Pontiac, an employee at the GM Truck and Coach Division Assembly plant. where the Monday night shooting oc- curred. GM Spokesman Frank Cronin said that shortly after 9 p.m .. a woman who worked for Canteen Corp .. the plant concessionaire. was wounded in the leg while walking in the plant parkin~ lot. The woman, hospitalized with a leg wound. was believed to be Wunnenberg's estranged wife, Police said. Wunnenberg, carrying a .22· caliber rifle, then stormed into the pJant lobby aod fired several times into the ceiling, Cronin said . The spokesman said the employees were herded together and held at gunpoint before Pon· tiac police officers, firing through the lobby's glass doors, hit the man twice in the chest and once in the neck. Howard Thrower , ad- ministraUve assistant at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital, said the gunman was pronounced dead at the hospital at 10:05 p.m. Film Set for Deaf The deaf and hard of hearing are being invited to a showtng at the Huntington Beach public library, 71ll Talbert Ave., of the specially sub-titled movie. "To Sir With Love." The movie wiJl be shown at 7 p.m .. Feb. 15. Ad- mission is free. ( ) .. "°""°" IMand. Newport~ (7M) 6«).83K) .. - ' \ ... ,,, .. our H ometown Dally Newsp a p er l VOL 72, NO. 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI.A TUESOAY1 FEBRU.ARY ~1W9 TEN CENTS LOS GELE. fAPl -l.ff M arv n ~ lloll)'-.ood n1cnt tt-shrit'd today lhal th~ tC'tor t'<'klflA to t•nd hlS IO\'P afhu~ with M1eht>llt> Triol Marvin. onel' cum(• to htm and a ked · · tlow do 1 l(el rtd oft h.ls broad• · · Meyer M1Rhl.1n. testirving a~ tht• landmark trial t!nlert'd 1~ rourth Wt'l'.k . SUlrt he WUS 10 lttvor or Marvin's breaking up with Lht> lormt•r ho"°glrl who had bt!t'Ome-hi s live 111 ~ •lrlflilend. ·1 told h m it was hla prob lem," Mlsh.ktn aid "Butt did tell him on one occaidon that Ir It w1ti. up to mo. I would l(<'l rid of her " Tht agent. t4.'lllf)'ln1 1111 u hoJ>ltle -.1c.neu under qu~1U0Jng by Ml Morvtn·a attoro y, ad milted that he sometimes in troduced the actor's ctrlrrlend as "Mrs Marvin" or "Michelle M rvm.'' But he said he did ll only becallSe he thought it would pleue her On one occasion when they were trave ling in Tokyo, he said , Miss Marvin ..f11tsked him to Introduce her as .. M rt. Marvin." M 1ss Marvin's attorney al· tempted unsuccessfully to ques- tion the agent about remarks he hus made outside court that the ucrimonious property settlement trial has brought Marvin valua· ble pubUeity for his career. ' 'So There!' A,. Wl,.,,._,o ' Striker Larry Childres!) leaves no doubt where his sentiments lie as he issues a Bronx cheer at the front gate of the Newport News Shipbuilding Company in Virgi nia. More than 1,000 members of the striking United Steelworkers Union staged a show of strength at the shipyard. , Skates Used • m A Dana Point m an was arttst· ed Monday in Newport Beach on r harges that he attacked a 16- year-old boy with broken glass and roller skates. police report· ed today. Jn addition, three or his com· pafti ons were arrested when they reportedly created a dis· turbanre at the police station bee use police refused to give the m back the roller skates. police said. In Newport Beach City Jail to· day in lieu of $10.000 bail was David William Leitch, 20, of 33801 Street or the Golden Lan· tern He races a charge or as· s aull with a deadly weapon, police said. Police said Tom Larson Warne, 20, of 211 Coral Ave .. Newport Beach. was taken to Orange County Jail on a charge of falJure to disperse. He faces $500 bail. Wayde Torrey Nelson. 19, of 215 Diamond Ave., Newport Beach. was released on S500 bail on the same charge, police said. A third companion, a 16-year· old Newport Beach girl, was transported to Juvenile Hall, they said. Police said the incident re· portedJy began about 9:30 p.m. Billy 'Close' ( 'We -Love Each OtMr' WA_SHINGTON CAP) -Despite recent con· trovers1al rerq~ks a~ Arabs and Jews, BUly Carter says his relations with his presidential brother are "as good as ever, even better." • .. And 9ar:t;er insisted that the president thought 1t ~as fme t~at he was kee1>ln1 company with a touring delegation from Ubya. "The Libyans are the best friends I've got in the w~rld right now." Carter said at a reception for the Libyans Monday night. "I came to Washington because I like them, they're good people." Carter said he spent two houn With the presi· dent at the White House Sunday night and "we have better relations than ever . . . because we love each other." Attack Monday oehind 600 E. Ocean Front , Balboa , as 16-year-<>ld Scott Nathan Stinett and a friend were about to enter the building whereStinetllives. Witnesses reportedly told police that the boys were con· fronted by Leitch and four com· panions and that Leitch. alleged· ly without provocation, smashed a liquor bottle on the pavement. It is alletted that Leitch then knocked Stinett down, slammed his face into the broken glass,. pulled out some or his hair and kicked at h1s hands and race with roUer skates until Leitch's companions pleaded with him to stop. Leitch was arrested a short time later after Officer Russ Sutter spotted him leaving from the ferry on Balboa Island, police said. Police said Stinett suffered deep gashes over his eyes and numerous cuts and bruises on his face and hands. Stinett re· portedly told police he would seek medical treatment on ttis own. About an hour lateT, police said five people came to the police station and demanded• that they be given the roller skates. When told the skates were evidence and couldn't be re· leased. several or the people aJ. le1edl)' be1an cursing and kick- in1 the glass front door. police Hid. -- • He cited comments by Mish· kin Urat "Lee Marvin stands to make mlUions because of this trial, and scripts keep pouring in." However , Superior Court Judge Arthur Marshall ruled tbe comments were irrelevant to the case. The 46-year-old Miss Marvin, who changed her name legall y, is seeking $1 million. or hall of the assets the actor acquired during the sU< years they llved together. The trial was in recess Mon· day so that the judge could at- tend to other matters. In the $1 million landmark court battle, Marvin's former live-in lover. Mi chelle Triola Marvin. 40, is suing for half his assets during tbc lime they were lovers. Mishkin was called Friday as a hostile witness for Miss Marvin. He conceded Marvin, 54, had problems with liquor. Mishkin remembeud recelv· ing a letter from Miss Marvin when the c-0up.le traveled abroad on a movie location. She wrote that Marvin was drinking and appeared to be on the verge or a mental breakdown. The agent said he called the film producer and asked "if Lee's drinking affected produc- tion or the mm. Pact Pondered lroine Sclwol Sites Sought Trustees of the Irvine Unified School District and represen- tatives of the Irvine CompaQy are expected to make a three· party compact with an architect to find sites for schools for two big residential developments proPQsed by the company. The proposed res idential neighborhoods a re designated Village 14 I Westgat e> a nd Village 10 !part o f Walnut Village). Both are located orr Cu1ver Drive, with Village 14 just north of the San Diego Freeway and Village 10 south of the Santa Ana i'reeway. Development of the Irvine Company homes is scheduled to Entire HB Council in Recall Try By ROBERT BARKER Of"" 0 .. 1 .. Pllet St.tff All seven members of the Hun- tington Beach City Council now have been named officially as targets of recall drives. The four council officials who were not named when the fi rst recall wave hit in December were served written notices at Monday night 's City Council session. Two residents or north Hunt· ington Beach. Donald W. Rehl· ing and Lonnie Marion. served oaoers on Richard Siebert. Bob Ma ndie. Ruth Bailey and Don Mac Allister. Rehling and Marion wouldn't go into specific charges, but Rehling declared that "the city has gotten orr the track and maybe we can help get it back in the right direction." Mayor Ron Pattinson, City At· torney Gail Hutton and Coun- cilmen John Thomas and Ron Shenkman were designated as recall targets in December. Shenkman resigned before the papers were served. Steve Schumacher, a leader or the first recall group. said the gathering of signatures should begin against P attinson, Thomas and Mrs. Hutton next week. RecaJl proponents have 160 days to gather a bout 12,000 signatures of registered voters after their papers arc certified. 'Tve been a resident or Hunt· ington Beach since 1945," Reh- ling ~o lJ!. reporters. "and I woulcfil'fWant to live anywhere else. But all this bickering reaJly hurts. "I wouldn't say for a minute that 1 could do a bette r job than anyone up there. but even if we a ren •t successful, we might get them lo pay attention and do the jobs they were elected to do.'' C4R AD BROUGHT 50 PHONE CALLS ·'I received 50 calls night and day -even during the holidays. "The people said they always read the Daily Pilot, and they bought my, car without bearing lhe engine." That's lhe advertising success story of the Costa Mesa man who placed this ad in the Dally Pllot: ·64 VW Must Sell Good eng. C>e~n car Needs l!:ectrlcal work. xxx· xx.xx If you have a car to seU, let the Dally Pilot make your pbooe ring. A friendly ad·viser will help write an ad at 642·S6'78. -• J, ,,. begin 10 1980. Total development 1>lan s in the area call for between 9,822 and 10.574 dwell· ings. The homes are expected to produce between 3.200 and 6,400 school-age children. Part of the problem of finding appropriate sites fo r the schools, according to school district ad- ministrator Dave Kmg, is that most o f the te rrito r y particularly in Village 14-is in the landing or takeoff pattern or helicopters based at the Marine Corps Air Station i n nearby Tustin. King said only a few corridors exist that are not overflow by the low-altitude craft. "When a helicopter pilot is in trouble, he looks ror the nearest open field. and in a residential area the nearest open field is almost always a schoolya rd.·· King said. The Irvine Company proposes . to advance the dis trict the money it needs to hire the architect, a sum estimated at $35.000. When-and if the district re- ceives state money to build the schools. King said. the Irvine Co mpany would be reimbursed out of those funds . King is recommending that the board select Willi a m Blurock and Partne rs or Newport Beach as the architect for the project. Exemp t ion N e ede d Airline Seeks Us e Of County Airport · Orange County officials said today they plao no changes at Orange County Airport to make room for Frontier ~irline, the l roine Firm Offers Aid ToCluuclws The Jrvine t:ompany has an· nounced a lease purchase plan intended to assist lrvi ne church groups to tmance church build· ings. Richard Cannon, a company vice president. said that under the plan, a church would lease its prefe rred site for three years. paying njne percent of the price which is agreed upon in the initial lease arrangement each year. The lease payments would be applied toward the purchase. After the third year. the church would have to pay the remaining purchase price, or its lease would expire. Cannon said the arrangement gives churches the lime needed to raise money through dona· · tions to buy a site. I rvine congregations t}ave complained that the high price or land has made il difficult for fledgling nocks to organize a church. Extortion Suspect Re-arrested A suspect in the attempted ex- tortion of $250.000 from Newport Beach builder Randall Presley was re-arrest ed Monday by Newport Beach police on two war· rants calling for bail totaling $260.000. Detective Lee Roberts saJd the s uspect , Phil Ji p Edward Fau1ne t , 31, of Hawaiian Gardens, was arrested in Downey Municipal Court, where be was facing a malicious mis· chief charge in connection with a pellet gun shooting at the home of a Downey policeman. Roberts saJd the policeman, who bad been working with Newport police on lhe Presley case, wasn't lhe only peraon in· volved in the investigation to be the target or violence. He said lhe Los Angeles home of a kev witness in the case was <See PRESLEY, rage AJ) " ' .. latest airline to file a route ap· plication for the county airport- Bob Schulman, a spokesmrin tor the Denver-based airline. said the application was flied in Was hington with the Civil Aeronautics Board CCAB l Mon- day . He said the airline is seeking an exemption to fl y two round· trips on Boeing 737s daily from Denver via Las Vegas. He ex- plained that the exemption would enable the airlie lo use the route pending the outcome or a legal maneuver aimed at shortucttung the existing CAB route applica- tion process. ··w e know there will be prob· lems." Schulman added. "But · sure we can work things out, o erwise we wouldn't have bothc lo file an application.·· But c ty oCficials were con· siderably less optimistic about the airtine·s chances of getting space at the airport. Supervisor Thomas Riley said he will take the applicat1on to the board of supervisors for comment, probably next week. .. If the board is consistent and I have no reason to think they'd be otherwise then there will be no changes. There 1s no room attheairport," he said. Last year , North Central Airlines was denied a route certificate for Orange County by the CAB because or the refusal of county orricials to grant the airline space in the terminal. Coast Weath er Sunny through Wednes- day with not much tern· perature change. Hig hs Wednesday, 64 to 7~. Lows tonight in 40s. INSIDE T ODAY Tht c hai r m an Of Cali/omia'a Proposition 13 Commimon aays a state tC1% increase u "almost mevita· ble. ''See Page .47. la•ex • i ... ' as ..-_Bergla~d Hits In Iran TEHRAN Ir m IAP I lra1 ~·l'il ........... ..:.w•.Wla.#:C~ ntan Jtt fhtht r •ttd h llropt~ra " buu•d C"\'lloru. or Tehriiin toda\ '" J ho-. or ~ti\ •'tnm nl fort( "" 1 eN of thou and. of dt•f1 ml m urdw t•ba ntfd upp(\rt for ,\)'ia.tollab lluhol.lah Kham, 1n1 • nom 1~· tC\ hod il prv' 1to1on11I • t•v,1lutmnur\ n"mm•• ttw 4.'llOdu:. nf fortt 9 ,..., <vn. l\mu .. "-d ~lb1 ~bo~l' 00 mo u Amt•rk 1\~ 'tnd 'lb Can dl•n!> k•ov111g an i\mN•tt• tn m1ht11r\ trun,port plun A n /\ CJH' fl c u n £ n\ tu ~ \ . 11okt,sm1.t 11 nld 1o1bout ~ 000 Amt•rlclU\S rt1mum an lr .. n out 111 ~111 '">llrnukd 50,000 wht·n lht• turmoil i;turtt•d u vt<ur &11:(0 In other dt•\ elopnwnh And r \' w \' u u 11 a th,. ,\m,•rH'i,11\ Jmhu' .ador lo th1· l 11\ltt•d 'llalm11:-.. 1' 11uoll•d tn th1· Wt>st Gl•I m.rn m•w' mu.:u:t111t• Der Spw.:l'I a:. "'~ mR the l rutt•1I ~latch f:.11lt·d to fun•('Uhl t•v1·nu. mfr.in ~t'JUW 11 didn't "'t1nt lo 11ee ttll'm ·· A nH• ri c a n is o u r<' f' In Tt:hran (·onfirmt:d that (;tn Hobt•rt C lluy~l·r. <kputy com mander of ,\mt•rt(•an fcff<'c:-. in EurOJX!. hai. left Iran ufter more than a month Source:. said h~ · "'as an Iran uq~lng the I ram an m1lttary to. s uppo rt Prime Minister Shahpour Hakhtiar Khome ini 's b~c ker s said lluyser 's presence there w&s another example of American interrerence Bakhtiar told the lo wer house of Parliame nt he would remuin rn o fCice "even if all the parliamentary deputies resign." and until he conducts the next general election, des pite de mands by Khomeini that he re· s ign immediately. "I -have nothing to do with governments that exist in the imagination of people and are more of a joke," Bakhtiar said of Khomeini's designation of Me hdi Bazur gan as interim prime minister. "But if they s tart taking ac· lion. r will respond accord in~ly ·· Fro• Page Al PRESLEY ... burned down recently and that th C' Los Angeles S her i ff '~ Dt•purtmcnl dete rmined the fire h· bt• arson. Roberts said Fuusnel bad been arrested last fall in the Presley case but was released for lack of evidence. However . he s;.iid further investigation in· volvlng another su11pect in the case led to Fausnet 's re.arrest Monday on two Orange County Harbor Municipal Court wa r rants One $250.000 warrant char~es cons1nracy to corrynit extortion a nd a $10.000 warrant charges parole violation. Roberts said rausnel remain<>d in city jail to· day Roberts said two other sus p<?cts also have been arrested in tbe case. He said Jess Patrick Romo. 29. of Downey. was a rrested Jun. 31 on s us picion of con· s viracy to commit extortion bul hi.a h<len released on bail re· duced from $100,000 lo $10,000. Roberts said the third susP,ecl. ,Edward Dempsey. 26, of Para· mount. Is in Orange County Jail awaiting sentencing after plead· ing guilty to extortion charges in the case. The case began last May when Presley received lhroatenlng telephone calls d e manding $250,000. Pistol shots were fired into his Lido Isle home. Presley is believed to have comf' to the attention of extor· tionis u after a financial ne ws story listed his Newport Reach farm as one of the top 100 in Sou them California, police said. Roberts said $250,000 in play money w as s ub sequently dropped at a pre ·arranged spot in Anaheim and Dempsey was a rrested after he allegedly pa('ked il up ORANGE COAIT DAILY PILOT I tw Ur 4'f\Olll C-o-t't o.tl~ Pt,_ •tff' •t'llt h tt < oni .,.,,. 1J ,.,. ,_.,.'#'\-,,...it\\ ., PWIJ'i~ t>• '""' °'~ ( OA 'P110t1,~(0'ftCJIMty ~l"Mlln•..ott~\-t, Owhtt~r·d Moftd.V 1fWOU91" 'tta•¥ •Ot (O\I" M,..,.. Mt'wpott t\tl"Mh ••uno.,.eon .-... ., , oun '"''" V•ll•Y tt'ttlW. L..,._,. 8t«.Pt \.OWtft (O.\t A tr.Qt• rf'Q~I fdlf~ h (H..c>fl•Md \.•furO•Y' .,_, ~¥) Ir. pt'iN~l llllWbf,_,..ftl OIM'lt t\ .tt ,., w ... fh1¥\tftot-t (otl•~• C••H'Orn•••tt.1' 11-1·-,.,. ....... , ........... ,.... J•O II c.wt.¥ \lot Port"\•"4'ftl•f'lidGitniitr"-'~ '-··1(-[dll .. ,~._ ....... _... M<t ........ t:clllof Cll•l'lttlt UM 111-.il' - """'""' Mt""'l"'ll"''-' c1 .. elflect Adll•ltlelftt tu•N7' '·-~(­......., '. li-e Age i11 Chicago Tht•:-.t· 1t•t• {'OH'r<'d pilings. which form the breakwater for Chicago ·s North A vt>nue Beach . arc a result of Mon· day's record low 17 bC'IO\\ zero temperature. More th~n 74 inches of :-.now h avt• f,11lcn on the Windy City ~o far this year Two Armed Youths Frighten Students MARIANNA. F'la, 1AP 1 J\ cocked revolver pn·sst•d to her head. 14 year-old Teresa Mi ll listened and look<'d at her I I year·old assailant. "He had a serious fof'e." the pert honor -;tudcntsa1d lal('t 'lie kept saying he wasn't foohn~ around " Miss 11111 would learn l<itt•r that the 22 C'ahlJcr tevolver hatl a faulty hammer. which could have fired the RUD at any time after the revolver was cocked. even· if thl' trigger was not pulled And for a llffil'. Miss Hill . about 30 other pupils a nd a teacher were sho1•ked by the p1stol -packin~ schoolboy a nd another knife w1eldin~ <'lassmatt•. Tht> two boys were 1n c u!>tody today. held by youth services of· fi c1als. Marianna Police Chief Wiley G Pittman says th<• boys were "just vym~ for altcnt1on," but. "we. .there will be chargei. ril ed. asrnr<ivall•d as~aul l Cll least " No injuries were reported 1n the incident, whic h oc<'urred Monday al the Middle School an this Florida commun1ty west of Tallahassee. The boys were not identified by police because of their ages. Principal M.R. Stokes said Miss Hill, an eighth grader. went to the la n g uage arts classroom Lo give a message to teach.er Karen Hughes. One youth jumped up with a gun. pressing it to Miss IUll's head . police s au.I. Mrs Hughes shoved the boy from the room ond told another pupil to call the principal. But when that boy tried to leave t o s ound a n a larm . another youth threatened him with an eight inch hunting knife, pohee !>aid. The youth Ocd after he was disarmed by another stu· dent. Stokes said. The two boys were picked up about eight hours later by an un· 1dent1fied Ma rianna ma n about seven mjles from town. Police said a Joadcd 22 caliber re - volver wa!\ discovered nearby. Miss Hill said students had overheard the boys discussing their plan for several weeks, saying they wanted to be sent to "the boys· school" -Slover School £or Boys, a detention center , Mrs I lugh«'s. who is 1n her firs t year teaching. said neither of the armed boys said anything threatening, declaring only that no one shouJd lea vc the room. She commended the boy who dis armed the knife-wielding · youth "I would never have told them lo do that," s he said of her pupils. "1 would neve r tell them that was the thing to do." And Stokes said students were worried about the boys' rate. in light of Florida's law setting a three-year mandatory sentence for anyone convicted of using a g un 1n a crime . "This was a common concern of the kids today," said Stokes. "Wh al would happen to them" Thev've all read the signs. 'three years to life· .. Cops Kill Gunman; 10 Hostages Freed PONTIAC, Mich. IAPl A 28-year-old worker at a General Mo tors Corp plant s hot a worn an and took e1~hl to lO plant employ<·cs hosta~e before police s hot rum to death. authorities said None of the hostages sought hospital treatment. a lthough one was reportt•dly grazed on the arm by a bullet Police identified the dead man as Fredrick Willia m Wunnen· b<'rg, of Pontiac. an employee at the GM Truc k and Coach Division Assembly plant, where the Monday night shooUng oc- curred. GM Spokesman Frank Cronin s aid that shortly after 9 p.m .. a woman who worked for Canteen €orp., the plant concessionaire. was wounded In the leg wblle waJkln.i In the plant purkiQJ< lot. The woman, hospltallted with a leg wound, was believed to be Wunnenberg's estranged wife, police said. Swim Classes Set Swim classes ror all ages from three months up will com mtncc Feb. 19 at the dome·enclosed pool at the Orange Coast YMCA, 2300 University Drive, Newport Beach. lotereated applicants ahould enroll now, th" YMCA· said. \ , Wunnenberg. carrying a .22· caliber rane. then stormed into the plant lobby and fired severnl times into the celhng, Cronin said. The -ipokcs man s uid the> employees were he rded together and held al gunpoint before Pon· ti ne po li ce office r s. firing through the lobby's gla11s doors, hit lhe man twice In the chest and once in the neck. H oward Thrower . ad m inistrative ass istant at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. said l\.he gunman was pronounced dead at the hospital al 10:05 p.m . Mom Kills 2 Sons for Devil PASCO. Wuh. (APl -A womon who told authorities she threw her two small sons lnto the Icy Columbia River at the command or the devl1 ls being held In the Franklin County Jall. Offlc\ah s uld Tanya A Adams, 24, turned herself In Mo nday afternoon and told p0l1cf' that ehe had thrown h r sons lnto the river about 4 a.m. £rom the new cabl bridge Unk· lnll Pasco and Kennewick. . Farmer Tactic WASlllNGTON CAP > Pollro kt!pt a tight corrul around lh\' truc:toMJ of lhousun<Js of mllil•nt farmer today us Aiiricullure Secretury Oob Beraland charted that some or the pro testers were "drlvl'n by JUlll old fus hlonc:d l(r••ccl " Bcqtlnnd declared lhol th•· dlaruptlve luctlc11 or th f1Armeri; were "an unmlthcutod dh•»•t.ur. Pakistan Ex,. leader May Hang RAWl\LP I NOl . J•rakl11\1rn tAP l rukh1latn'1 Supr11rt1" Cour\ In u Rpllt d(I '"Ion uvtwht today tht tl('uth II nk•n1•11 "IVNI de~cd Primo Mlnl1t r Zulflkur All Bhutto. Pukl1tun'11 dornlmotl p0llllcul ri,,uro from Jll7J to 11117 The court Hsur •d Hhutto:• l uwycr the torml!r prlmu minister wUI not be hong~ tor at lcbt a wuck bccnu8 h(' 111 aal lowed that much time to pelltlon for clemency. The declslon prom ptcd plenR tor clem ency on the former leader 's behralf from Reveral countries nnd organliatloM, In· eludin g the London-baaed human lights group, Amnesty lnternalional. The court rejected an oral re· quest by the lawyer for a 30-day stay or execution while It carried out a final judicial re view or the case. It advised the attorney to file a formal request for more time and the judicial review. The Lahore High Court con· victed Bhutto a nd others last March or conspiring in 1974 to murder Ahmed Raza Kusurt. a co-founder of the People's Party who later accused Bhutto or pro· voking the 1971 conflict with East Pakistan that led to the war with India. the breakup of Pakistan and the creation of Bangladesh. Kasuri s urvived an ambush on Nov. 11. 1974. but his father was killed. President Mohammed Zia ul· Haq 's military government tried to head off demonstrations in support of the nation's best· known politician. Schools were closed in three provinces. Bhutto's politically active wife was put under house arrest and most or the leaders and workers of his People's Par· ty were in jail. The judges who dissented on Bhutto's verdict favored acquit· tal, and his lawyer. former At· tomey General Yahya Khan, told reporters this provided ·•sound grounds'' for ajudlciaJ review. Zia, the army chief who over· threw Bhutto in 1977 after na· tionwide demom~traUons charg· ing the political leader with ril(· gin his re-eleo-Uon, s aid previously he would not change the Supreme Court's rulin~. Tax Seminar Set For Irvine Seniors A seminar for Irvine senior citizens about income tax prep· aration is ~cheduled for 9 :30 a.m. to noon on Feb 21. al the U nive rsity Park r ecr e ation center. 1 Reechtree Lane. Tax advice will be offered fret: by representatives or the Internal Revenue Service. Choose from our famous selection of neckweor from o public relations point of Vil'W " The• rll11vtuy h•nd1 "to dl. credit all of uarlc\llture and does not retltct lhe majority" of those who till the 11011, he 11uld . 01•11i11tf' hioluh•d r eports of rcU'k lhrowlnl( und RIURhlng Of vull <'«' <·ur tlrf'11, autbor1tlcii 111y111ted OK1 lr1tfflr·11narlln11 tat · lk1t with whkh th rarmera had llNJ lh•• c•i.plt ul In knots a duy 001 llflr, wh1111 10 prot.c11t.ers were 11rr«'1IM'I f'oll1·n hut nnt wi•red thu m nltit l1rd 11ttlff'"' Monduy with thfllr 11w11 vt•hkulur 11how of fur 1 P '( ltt v ""' ruu11d1•d lhfl muln 11rin1011• 11r II urtori1 1111d truck11 with •1wml 1 1w1 ""'' oth r HOV 11r 111111 111 vnhlf h•11 11fl r lht• (Arm \11•ltl1•I•"' 1t111l h111111 1111rk11d on th1• Mnll 11ittnH~1111111 t>e•t w•·1•11 lh.- f • n •1 I I 11 I 11 11 1J t 1 ,, I. I n 1· o I n M10r1111h1I A11th111 lllt • u1'1 proh•11t l111HlN • It WI Wit h11Ul. I UC'('f lllf U1 1h1V Ill "'11111 V'>llf•ft ''•llNI un ,., '''' 1 w w111 k 11111 • <·om1m1rnl11c: u11tlot _.hlc h th f1trm r• rould r11•UIW" '''"'' d~mon•trullonll wlth111Jt vl11IM1• '" m•jor dl• r UJJl11111• 11f I r1ttrl1• Uul 'J'om K• nwy, hfHld of a p r o I • " t c· '' tit I n a c n t f r o m Ororglu. old ttlf' pc;llc prcmcnt- •d uve>rul dt·m•nd• ·and we dldn 't lil&rt' t.o on)' of them " Thu• the •lundort continued. with Uw· form •1'8 determined to <lrl ve th<•lr trattora and the police nrmly blocking the way. Polle tuaid they asked for commltmcnta that the tractors would remain off expressways. not travel on city 1treela before 9 a.m . or after 5 p.m .. that drivers would obey routine traf· fie r ules and that "wagon· masters" would m aintain con- trol over caravan routes. Several farmers said those conditions were unacceptable because they should have the same right to drive their 1.350 vehicles whenever a nd wherever they c hoose as a r egular motorist. driving a car. Bergland, meanwhile. said that despite their claims or financia l hardship. t he pro- t ester s have yet lo present cohesive proposals ror bolster· Ing tbe lot of the farmer. "and until they do, l m not going to r espond to their individual de· mands." tn the first of several public appearances In which he re- iterated a tough Carter ad· ministration line. the secretary said m any or the farmers who participated in the American Agriculture movement protest were "gener ally representing what ~describe as local problems ." Heavy'I'lw/t In Lakeirood LAKEWOOD (AP l Holy paveme nt. Batman Somebody has stole n 29 manhole covers from a sewer project. The 9,000 pounds or cast iron lids and rings, valued at $7. 790. were stolen from the Gr iffith Construction Co. site sometime between Jan. 26 and Feb. 2, Los Angeles County s herif£'s deputies said Monday. Monday. c ) A6 Folhlof'l llk:Jnd. Newport leod'I (71A) 6et0-&3l0 -~-~ SHE'S MISS CALIFORNIA Fullerton'• Fogarty Ftdlerton Coed Named Miss CtdifonUa 1 .. A MIHA DA f A I' 1 l.lnd.1 Merle f"ogurty, un 18 yt>or old t<H'd rrom fi\1l1('rton. won lh•· MI H Cullforn1u Unlver11e lllle 1n <'<>mp~tlllnn Moncltty mi<ht al tlw La M1r:1<1a Clvu: Thcitlcr By w1nntnic the lath!. M1 <si; Fogarty earned lhl' ri'lht ''' represent California ut the l!Y7!f M las USA IJUgeonl to l>e held al Biioxi, Mil\" . April 30 The new M '"" USA w t 11 represent lhlt. country 1n th1• Miss Uruverse pageant at l'erth, Australia next July First runner·up in the Mlb~ California· Univ ·ri•e pi1gea11t was Sheri Covington. 21. of BaJc1 Califom1a. Second runner up was Kelh Jane Bailey, 22. of A.la mcdiJ County. Rounding out the five flnah!>t~ were Re nee R o ll e, 20 , or Richmond. who finished thml runner-up and Lona Miller. 20. or ChaMel lslandb. fourth run· ner-up. The new Mass Californw Universe received cash award.., and clothing. Sing!e Drug Succee<h in Umcer Fight CHICAGO c AP > A phy:o cian has recorded the first cuse in which chemotherapy alone was used successfully to treat a case of large celJ lung eancer. the Journal or the ~merican Medical Association says . Dr. Gerald J. Vosika or the University of Minn esota Hospital said he lr4aled a pa· tient first seen in Ma rch 1973 us ing only chemotherapy The 41 .year -old patie n t wa -; diagnosed as having metastatic large cell carcinoma of the lungs. The condition accounts for about one-fifth of all lung canuer and is conside red much more difficult to treut with multidrug usage than the pre\'alent sm<.111· cell cancer Veterans Adminis tration studies of unlrl'a led pat 1cnb with extensive large ct!ll canct'r disease has shown a typical sur vival of 11 I weeks All 102 pa taents in one such study group were dead within one year 'This case re presents. to our knowledge. tht' first patient with lung carcinoma of a type othl•r than oat cell who wus cured by a chemotherapy regimen .·• Vos ik a said . ) ' r ----- Lag11na /South Coast \'our Hometown · Daily ewspaper 1 VOL. 72, NO. 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1979 TEN CENTS Agent TeStifies ltlGrvin Sought Split; ' • f J r ~ . I f LO ANGELES <AP l -u Marvlr1 ·1 Ho llywood aaena t~11taru.-ct loduy thut lht> ctor • ~kll\R to tnd lu. Ion U.ur with M1cht•llc Triola Mun m. Ont't' CURI\' w tum and kt.'d 'Howdolgeir1dofth1s broad"' · Meyer Ml hkm, kshf lnR ii.., lhl• h1ndmark triul t•ntert.>d us fourth Wl'Ck, suad he wus in fo\'Or or Murv1n 's break an up "1th the former sho"g 1rl wh<> h a d bct'o m c hi s lave -an ilrlfri •n<l. ··1 told ham al wu~ his prob lem." Mi. hktn u1d .. Out I did tell ham on ooe OCC'fthion that 1f It wus up'° me, I would g t rid of her " The agent, \~.11l1(yang as u hostile witness u11dcr queshoan(ol by Mi Murvm's attorney, ad matted th•l he somet1mes in troduced the aclor'.11 girlfriend as "M r8 Marvin" or "MactwJle Marvm " But he said he dad at only Laguna's Hopping because h~ thought 1l would pleu~c her. On one occasion when they were traveling in Tokyo, he said, Miss Marvin naked him lo introduce her as .. Mrs Marvin." Mass Marvin's attorney at- te mpted unsuccessfully to ques- hon lhe agent about remarks he has made outside court that the iicrimoruous property settlement trial has brought Marvin vaJua- ble publicity for his career. Fiery Arts Panelist . ·May Face Ouster l Laguna Beach City Council r members will consider ousting Arts CommJssaoner Bruce Hop- ping when they meet tonight after bearing charges of abusive language and uncontrolled out- bursts leveled against the long- time Lugunan by the com- mission chairman. been able lo handle the rejection or several projects that he has originated without loud and un- controlled outbursts. Harold Pas to r iu s Jr ., chairman of the nine-member arts panel, made th"e charges against Hopping in a recent let- ter to the City Council in which he claimed Hopping's outbursts at m eetings h ave caused "several ladies" on the com- mission to refuse to attend meet- "It is my personal opinion that the increasing frequency and violent nature of his outbursts could lead to an action or ph ysical damage and it is therefore imperative he be re- moved from lbe Arts Com- mission as soon as possible ... It was not reported what in- itialed the alleged outbursts. but council members have had an opportunity to listen to a taping of the commission session. 4 ings. And while t h e issue is scheduled to be heard in the con- s ent cafendar portion of the council agenda. it ls expected it will be pulJed orr for public dis- cussion. f Councilmen decided last month to delay a decision on the matter until Hopping had a c hance to res pond to the charges. 7 , • ... Hopping said today he will tell his side of the story tonight when councilmen meet beginning at 6 p.m . in council chambers. The council said it also wanted to h ear a tape recording of a Jan. 8 meeting during which Hopping allegedly made verbal attacks a nd threats against fellow commission members. 1 o his Jetter lo lhe council, Pastorius said Hopping "bas not T he removal of .a council- appointed commissioner re- quires approval by four or the five council members. Coun- cilman Wayne Baglin will not be at tonight's meeting. The Arts Commission, formed last year. oversees cultural. a rtistic and historical matters in an a dvisory capacity to the City Council. Huntington Woman Suspect Held 0 • b . F• InAttack on -';.~f~!e~-old ~~ vJ~ried u~~~olh es in a Newport Boy Mawson died in her rented Hunt-bedroom closet about an hour A Dana Point man was arrest- ington Beach home Monday af-after firemen arrived at the ed Monday in Newport Beach on ternoon when a te levision set burning house at 7631 Yukon charges that he attacked a 16· shorted out whi le she was nap-Drive year-old boy with broken glass ping and she was overcome by "Everyone including som e and roller skates, police report- heat and smoke. authorities said neighbors thought she was at ed today. today work when the fire began." said In addition, three or his com- H e r body was discovered police a rson Detective Bob panions were arrested when Russell. they reportedly created a dis- $200,000 Bail Set/or Teen LOS ANGELES IAP> A Lynwood teen·ager remains in custody today on $200,000 bail afte r pleading innocent t o murder, robbery and burglary charges in connection with the November 1977 killing of rock promoter Steve Wolf. Keith Cook, 18, was arraigned M onday b e fore W est Los Angeles Municipal Court Judge David Perez. who scheduled a preUminary hearing for Feb. 22. · Authorities said Cook, who was linked to lhe slaying after he reportedly bragged about the incident while he was in jail in connection with an unre lated burg lary, w as ord ered two weeks ago by a juvenjle court judge to stand trial as an adulL Huntington Beach fire Capt. turbance at the police station Roger Hosmer said the inferno because police refused to give a pparently began at about 2:40 them back the roller skates. p.m . while the woman was nap· police said. ping in a bedroom with the In Newport Beach City Jail to- television set on in the living day in lieu of $10,000 bail was room. David William Leitch. 20. of Awakened by the fire. the 33801 Street of the Golden Lan- wom an is bllieved to hilve tern. He faces a charge or as- opened her bedroom door. but sault with a deadly weapon, was dri ven back into t he police said. bedroom by heat and s moke. Police said Tom Larson She then hid in a closet where Wa rne, 20. of 211 Coral Ave .• she died. Hosmer theorized. Newport Beach, was taken to Russell said inves tigators Orange County Jail on a charge have ruled out the possibility or of failure to disperse. He faces arson as the cause of the fire . $500 bail. Fire officials said the lack or a Wayde Torrey Nelson, 19, of smoke detector in the home was 215 Diamond Ave .• Newport a key factor in the inablUty or Beach, was released on $500 baiJ the sleeping woman to safely on the same charge, police said. escape the blue . A third companion, a 16-year- "She also bad no a pparent old Newport Beach girl. was pre-fire planning that would transported to Juvenile Hall, have allowed he r to escape they said. through lhe bedroom window in-Police said the inC'ident re- stead of opening the door," said portedJy began about 9:30 p.m. Hosmer. <See ATrACK, Page AZ> Billy 'CJlose' C4R AD BROUGHT 50 PHONE CALLS 'We Love Each Other' WASIUNGTON CAP> -Despite recent con· troverslal remarks about Arabs and Jews Billy Carter says his relations with his presidential brother are "as good as ever, even better.'' And Carter insisted that the president thought "it was fine0 that he was keeping company with a touring dele1aUon from Ubya. "The Libyans are the best friends rve got ln the world right now, .. Carter said at a reception for the Libyans Monday night. "I came to Washington because I like them, they're good people." Carter said he spent two hours with the presi· · dent at the White House Sunday night and "we have better relations (han ever . . . because we Jove each other.'' . .... "I received 50 calls night and d ay -even during the holidays. "The people said they always read the Daily Pilot. and they bought my car without bearing the e ngine ." T hat's the advertising s uccess story or the Costa Mesa man who placed thJs ad ln the Daily Pilot: '14 VW Must ~II. Good •na. Clun car. Needs f;eclrlcul work. xxx. xx xx . Jf you haft a car to sell, let the Dally Piiot make your phone rtnc. A friendly ad-vlser wlll help write an ad at 8'2·5418. He cited comments by Mish- kin that "Lee Marvin stands to make millions because or this trial, and scripts keep pouring in." However . Superior Court Judge Arthur Marshall ruled the comments were irrelevant to the case. The 46-year-old Miss Marvin, who changed her name legally. is seeking Sl miJJion, or half of the assets the actor acquired during the six years tbey lived together. The trial was in recess Mon- day so that the judge could at- tend to other matters. In the $1 million landmark court battle, Marvin's former live -in Jover. Machelle Triola Marvin. 46. is suing for hair his assets during the time they were lovers. Mishkin was called Friday as a hos tile witness for Mi ss Scuba Diver in Trouble Marvin. He conceded Marvin, 54, had problems with liquor. Mis hkin remembered receiv- ing a letter from Miss Marvin when the couple traveled abl"oad on a movie location. She wrote that Marvin was drinking and appeared lo be on the verge of a mental breakdown. The agent said he called the film producer and asked "if Lee's drink1ng affected prodtre tion of the mm l:-1iremc n . life g uards and county paramedics administer first aid to Garden Grove scuba diver Dave Hanna. 30, who was pulled rrom about 10 feet of water off Diver's Cove in Laguna Beach Monday af· ternoon by friend Dan Dries. a lso of Gardeo Grove. Hanna was rushed to South Coast Medical Center, where be was treated and transported to Mission Com- munity Hospital m Mission Viejo. A helicopter transported the diver to the USC decompression chamber on Catalina this morning where doctors said they were working on the diver in the emergency room. A report on Hanna's condition was due la ter today, USC spokesmen said. Business Family Affair Scluuters Auto Know Their Craft By STEVE MITCHELL Ot the 0.lly Piiot St•fl Bill Schuster says he's really been taking life <>asy since his five sons joined him in the busi ness. "I don't do nothing," he grins. but the grease on his hands in- dicates he might be strelthing the truth a bit. ·'Yeah, well maybe I answer the phone and do a little tinker- ing in the garage," he shrugs. Rut life's been pretty good for the 52-year-old auto mechanic since his f'ive sons started work- ing for him. Aulomobilies are c rammed onto every square inch of the garage and lot operated by All Seven on DB's Council Face Recall By ROBERT BARKER Of IN Dally ftllot SUlll All seven members of the Hun- tington Beach City Council now have been named officially as targets or recall drives. The four· council officials who were not named when the rirllt recall wave hit in December were served written notices at Monday ni ght ·s City Council session. Police Seek Employee in Deposit Theft Pohce are seekin~ a Laguna Beach man they believe walked off with nearly $2,000 In receipts from a local restaurant after be· ing asked by the manager to de· posit the money in a bank. Frederick Valentine . manager of Murray's Restaurant, 215 Broadway. told police he handed receipts tota ling $1.965 to assis- tant manager Daniel K. Case, 20, Friday iµ-temoon, asking hjm lo deposit the money ln the r estaurant account at the Laguna Beach branch of Bank or America, NT&SA, 299 Ocean Ave nue. Wh n hiA employee did not re-turn, Valentine called the bank, where he discovered no depOSlt bad been made . Police went lo Case's home at ,.64 Park Avenue over th wtebnd and said he had v•cal· td the apartment. Two residents of north Hunt- ington Beach. Donald W. Rehl· in~ and Lonnie Marion. served oaoers on Richard Siebert. Bob Mandie, Ruth Bailey and Don MacAllister. Re hling and Marion wouldn't go into specific charges. but Rehling declared that "the city has gotten off the track and maybe we can help gel 1t back in lhe right direction.·' Mayor Ron Pattinson, City At- torney Gail Hutton and Coun- <·ilmen John Thomas and Ron Shenkman were designated as recall targets in December. Shenkman resigned before the papers we re served. Steve Schumacher. a leader or the rirst recall group, sald the gathering of signatures should begin against Pattinson . Thomas and Mrs. Hutton next week. Recall proponents have 160 days lo gather about 12,000 signatures of registered voters after their papers are certified. "I've been a resldent or Hunt- ington Beach since UU5," Reh· Jing told reporters. "and I wouldn't want to live anywbere else. But all this bickering really hurts. "(.wouldn't say for a minute that I could do a better Job than anyone up there. but even lf we aren't successful, we mtght get them to pay attention and do the job they were elected to do.'' They also criticized the pro- longed salary dispute w1lh police officers and said both policemen and firemen should be &iven alary ancreasei. . Schuste r and Sons. Inc. on Coast Hi ~hwa v in La ~una Beach where Bill and the boys work on more than a dozen cars a day Bill's been repl acing engine block!) and tuning cars for LI years at the garage overlooking lht• OC'ean And he spent another 22 years before that working in the serv ice a rea or a n auto dca lership in town. Now. with a pit crew or six Schusters each with has own "'pec1alty Dad has the work schedule wired. That's Bill Jr . JO, over there on the heavy stuff and fore1J!n cars. Mike. 29, on brake drums, Patri c k . 25. is th e carburetor and alignment ex- pert. .Joe. 19 , also works on foreign cars, Tom. 17. helps around the shop after school Even Mom gets in the act by helping out witl:l the bookkeeping at night. Bill says . And. while daughters Susie • <See FAMll.V, Page A.2) Coa~c -'=-- Weather Sunny through Wednes- day with not much tern peralure change. Highs Wednesday. 64 lo 72. Lows tonight in 40s. INSIDE TODA V T h t chairman of California's Proposftion J3 Commtuion lJ(Jys a state taz increllM! f.' ''almost 1nevita· ble." See Page A7. l•tle .. ~ion Blo~lced O•flY ...... SIAtf .._ AUTO MECHANICS A FAMILY AFFAIR FOR SHUSTERS OF LAGUNA BEACH From Left Joe. Mike , Pal, William and Dad Outside Garage on Coa.t Highway Pak~tan Ex,. leader May H ang RAWALP f NO l , Pakistan 1 AP) Pakistan's Su pre ml' Court in a split d<>cision upheld tod ay th<' death sentence given deposed Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Pakistan's dominant political figure from 1971 to 1977. The court assured Bhutto's lawyer the rorm er pr ime minister wall not be hanged for at least a week because he 1s al- lowed that much tame lo pet1t1on for ele meney The decision prompted pleas for clemency on the rormer leade r 's behatr from several countries and organizations. in- c I u ding th e Lo ndon based hum:.in r-ights group. Amnesty I ntcrnational. The court rc1ected an oral re quest by the lawyer for u JO-day "tav of l'XN'ut wn while it carried vut· a final JUd1c1al r(•v1c•w of lhl' casl' It adv1st'd th(• atlorney tCJ f1l<' a formal rf'qu<>sl fo r mon• t1m<· Jnd the judicial review The Lahore I ltgh <;ourt con ''1ctcd Bhutto and otheri. last March or conspmng in 1974 to murder Ahmed Raza Kusurr. a t·o founder of the People's Party who later accused Rhutto of pro· \Okin~ th(• 1971 <'onfl1ct with Easl Pakistan lh<.1t led to the war with India . thl· breakup of Pakistan and th<· creation of Bangladesh Kas uri survived <m ambush on Nov l 1. 1974. but his father wus killed Prcs1dl'nt Mohammed Zia ul Tlaq's military government tried to head orr dt•monstrations in s upport of the nation 's best known politician Schools were closed in thret• provinces. Bhutto's politicallv C:tC'tiv<' wife wus put undt•r house arrest a nd most of the leaders and workers of his People's Par· ty were in Jail The Judges who disscnt<.'<i on Bhutto's verdict favored acquit tal, and his lawyer, forme r Al- l orney General Yahya Khan. tolrl reporters this provided "sound ~rounds" for aJud1c1al review Burglars Take J ewels, Metals Burglar~ e ntered a Laguna Beach woma n ·s home by un· known ml•uns Monday. cst.'aping with S900 in jewelry and pre· cious metals Di ane L. Crow. 35, who lives in lhl' 400 block or El Camino del Mar. told officers s he discovered that the Jewelry was missing from a bedroom dr('si,er ORANGE COAST L \C DAILY PILOT '"" Gt·•nfJl"(""I QJtl, Poot,..,,,,._.,..,"'• cont f•"'9-d ,,... ~ p,-,.,, t\M'l'l"""<fbf""" o.......,- 1 .. 1f:>-.bf•V'nq(c~• \to.tt111fftf'd•t.,,....11111tr I otflt t"llfd Ml~., lf'W'OUiQl'I ,rtdAY tot f O"IA N~ tt N w(.•fff ~P\ ... wMt,.,tOft ti•• f\ I UUf'I '•·t'VAlh., ,, •. ,... l•J'l'\ltf°lf· ....... '-"'ntdnlU,. .,...,., ,,,.!Gl\lt, '''°" •• °'1bt•,f'f'd \.lltu•ft~• •"'• <YN1·•• frw-f\ff"" ~t Pw04 'Mf'O OIAf"t •· ~I 'JO Wr I I'·~ 'ttt....-t C.-.tie ~A (•tlt0f"t•01t>a 1te-.nlf -Pt.-,"f)lt#\ot efll;J P\MH1~'t ,..~ .. c--, y,,.p.,, ... "'•""°"'~.-~ ,.._ •• 11 .... 1 f••UN' '"-:::.'.:ift4Mf~ Cl .. '1.,M Lff> II-" OQll .'"'""'" MA11t•O•nQ L•ton L1aun1111chomc1 n .. c;,..,.,..,,, •• , .. , TeleplloM (714)142"4321 Ctaltffled Adwertllllng IG>Kn Letun• leecll AN D1p1"""9nta: Telepflone4 ....... l'ro• Pag~ A I FAMILY AFFAIR ... a nd Cathy don't work in the garage. ''They've hung around here long t'nouith to rt·pair their own t.'ars 1r they ha cl to." Bill boasts Schuster "'a)'i:. his put rons art• all repeat c·ustomcr!! "On<' guy used lo drive down ht>r <' 1n his Buick from Bi g Bear for tuneups," Bill says " ow he lives in town. · Schuster said he never went to college. and neither have his luds "f got a good education. though," he said. adding he does n 't belH•ve a college diploma Is vital. · Education 1s important," he s aid. "but what's a degree? I know guys thal never mudc at past the third grade who arc making more than college pro- fessors It's not everything " But pride in workmanship'' That's important. the garage philosopher st.tys .. rr you take the Chevrolet of toc1ay and compar<· it with a 1940 model. todays t.•ar 1s a better mac·h1ne.: h e s ay" "But " o r k m :1 n s h i p h a .., g o n c do" nhill " That's why pcoplt• kl'l'P older cars and buy ron·1g n modrls, Schuster belwves Th<•y hke the appoinlmcnb and \\orkmJnsh1n Driver Faces Crash Charge A Lag una Beach ~oman whose car allegedly slammed tn· to a block wall and struck a home on Summit Drive• Monday night, faces charJ.!CS of driv1n~ under the influem·e of alcohol. police said today. The woman was rus ll<'<J 10 South Coast Medical Center following the single car al'Ctdenl al 10:30 p.m She was treated at the South Laguna facilit y and luter rt• leased. ho::.p1l<1I officials said Police said they believe the woma n lost control of her cur and slammed into a block wall bdore s triking thf• homt or Robt•rt House al 911 Summit Drive Tax Form Aid Available Low income senior citizens can receive free assistance with the fil ing of the ir income tux forms bv contacting the San Clemente Seniors' Center. Vo lunteers trained by the California Franchise Tux Board will b e available by appointment Mondays and Fridays through April 13 between noon and 4 p.m . to help with tax returns, a Seniora· spokesman said. Information on the l ax service is available at the Seniors' of rices. 110 W. Mariposa. or by calling 498-3322 T o illustrate hi s point, Schuster sna ps s hut tbe left front door of a s hiny 1930 Ford Mode l A sitting in the garage. "See," he beams. "it fits. and you don't have lo slam it shut like the new ones. And I don't think old Henry had that much pride mworkmanship." Bill will be setting up appoint- ments and giving advice at a new location next month when the . r a mtl y packs up the wrenches. ratchets and hoists and moves out Laguna Canyon Ho ad "The rent here is going out of -.1ght." Schuster said , adding the landlord intends to double the monthly rate in the near ruture. So il ·s off to a larger location. across from the Laguna Beach School or Art, where the Shuster clan <.'Un continue the family trade s urrounded by green hills and eucalyptus trees. "I wouldn't have it any other way." Schuster smiles. Planners Eye Ranch R e port In Clemente San Clemente planning com- m 1ssioners will be asked tonight to a pprove a draft environmen- t ul tmpact reporl or the pro- posed 3,000-homc developme nt of the 2.000-acre V1sbeek Ranch T onight's planning com- mission meeting is scheduled to begin at 7 ::!0 pm. in council chambers at City Hall, 100 Ave. Prci:.idio. The Visbeek Ranch property. l<Jcakd inland of the San Diego Freeway. between Avenida Pico und the San Diego County line, is being developed by the Nu- W est Ot.'vc lopmcnl Corp. of Alberta. Canada. 1 In addition to s ingle family homes. ranch lots and c lustered townhomes and apartments are proposed for the Visbeek proj- ect. to be called Rancho San Clemente Tennis Class D ue At Clemt>nle High The Capistrano Unified Adult School program wilJ hold a ten- 111s t"luss from ~·30 to 7:30 p.m . W('dnesday evenings al San Clemente ~Ugh School. The cost ror 12 week!> of in· s truct1on is $20. Sign in at the courts with Phil Wilburton Feb. 7. F'u1t hcr information may be obtained by calling 498-0340. Speed Re ading Set A speed reading t.'oursc will be h<•ld at 7 p.m. st arting Wednes· daY m Roont 504 at Dana Hills I h gh School Further informa · lion may be obtained by calling the Capistrano Uniried Adult Sehool at 498-0340. Trash Pickup Hike Lo.oms i n San Juan San Juan Capistruno resi- dents, property owners and busi- ness proprietors will be paying more ror trash collection nex.t month if proposed rate Increases are approved by councilmen Wednesday. City officials are recommend- ing propoRed rate lncreQses ranging from 2!I c nts to $14.2S be approved effective March 1 for lhe Solag Disposal Compuny Under the propo!I d rel lruc· tu r<'. resident! al custom r R would be ra1 cd rrom S3 to $3.2S per month. Multiple dwelllna cualOmtrs would b4! Increased from S2 to $2.25 per month. Comm~rclal cul'!tomers would face rule lnc,ea11 s predicated upon the frequency of trash col· lec lion during a week. Once a week pickup would increase rrom $19.50 to $22.50 per month, collecllon Rix times per week wm1ld go up from $52 to $66.25 per month. Solog Disposal Company of- flcla ls say the Increases arc necessary to offset salary hikes, Increases ln the Consumer Price Index and futur~ charges for dumpinl'C trash at the county's Prima Oelbecha dump. The company haa not been Jlranlt>d a rata incrtase ln San Juan Inc July, 1977. W dneaday'• meeting takes place at 1 p.m . In councll cllam· hers. 32400 P,ueo Adelanto. WASmNOTON IAP> -Polke kept a tl&ht corral around the tractors of thousands of militant farmers today as Ag riculture Secretary Bob Bergland charged that some of the pro· testers were ''driven by Just old· rashioned greed." Bergland declared that the disruptive tactics of the farmers were "an unmitigated disaster. from a public relations point of view." The display tends "to discredit all of agriculture and does not reflect the majority" or those who till the soil. he said. Despite isolated reports of rock-thr<>wlng and slas hing or police car tires, authorities .sl)!mied tbe traHic·snarling tat.'· lies with which the {armers bad tied the capital In knots a day earlier. when 19 protesters were arrested. Police h ad a ns wered the motorized prolcsl Mo nday with their own vehicular s how or force. They surrounded the main Heavy Theft In Lakewood LAKEWOOD CAP ) Holy pavement, Batman Some body has stolen 29 manhole covers from a sewer project. The 9,000 pounds of cast iron lids and rings, valued at $7. 790, were stolen from the G ri!flth Construction Co. site sometime between Jan. 26 and Fe b. 2. Los Angeles County shc rifr's deputies said Monday. Monday. f'rmwPage A I ATTACK •.• armada of tractors and trucks with squad cars and other gov- ernment vehicles after the farm vehicles had been parked on the Mall, a grassy strip between the Capitol and the Linculn Me mortal. Authorities and protes t leaders met without s uccess to- day in what police called an ef- fort to work out a compromise under which the farmers could r esume their demonstrations without violence or major dis - ruptions of traffic. But Tom Kersey. head of a protest continge nt from Georgia, said the police present- ed several demands "and we didn't agree to any or them." Thus the st.andoff continued. with the farmers determined to drive their tractors and the police firmly blocking the way. Police s aid they asked for commitments that the tractors would remain off expressways, not travel on city streets before 9 a .m . or after 5 p.m ., that dri'vers would obey routine trar. fie rules and that "wagon- masters" would maintain con· tTol ove r caravan routes. Several farmers s aid those conditions were unacceptable because they should have the same right to drive their l 350 vehicles whenever and where'ver they choose a s a r egular motorist driving a car. Bergland, m eanwhile, said that despite their claims or financial hardship, the pro - testers have yet to present cohesive proposals for bols ter- ing the lot of the farmer. "and untll they do, I m not going to respond to their individual de- m ands." In the first or several public appearances in which he re- iterated a tough Carter ad- ministration line, the secretary said many of the farmers who participated in the Ame rican Agriculture movement protest were "generally representing wha t we describe as local problems." ................ SHE'S MISS CALIFORNIA Fullerton'• Fogarty Fwlerton Coed Named Mus California LA MIRADA IAPI Lincta Marie Fogarty, an 18-ycar-uld coed frQm Fullerton, won the Miss California-Universe title in competition Monday night at thE: La Mirada Ci vi(' Thl'ater By winnin~ the title. Mii,,s Fogarty <•arncd the rtg'hl tr> represent Cuhrornrn at the 1!179 Miss USA pageant to be held at H1loxl, Miss .• April 30. Th<' new Misi,, vS/\ "111 r e present this country in the Miss Uruver:.c pa~cant at Perth. Australia ht-xt Julv First runner up in the Miss California Universe pageant was Shed Covington. 21. of Ba1a California Second runner up was Kell\ Jane Batley, 22 , of Alamed'c1 County Rounding out the five rinahsts were Re n ee Ro lle , 20. of Richmond, who finished third runner-up and Lona Miller. 20. of Channel Islands. fourth run ner-up. The new Miss C alifornia· Univt-rsc received cash award:-. and clothing Monday oehlnd 600 E . Ocean Front, Balboa, as 16-year-old Scott Nathan Stinett and a friend were about lo enter the building where Stinett lives. Witnesses re portedly told police that the boys were con· fronted by Leileh and four com paniona and that Leitch, alleged- ly without provocation. s mashed a liquor bottle on the pavement. Four Sent to Pris o n In Bombing Plot ll is alle~ed ttiat Leitch then knocked Stinett down, s lammed his race into the broken glass. pulled out some of his hair and kicked al his hands and face with roller skates until Leitch's companions pleaded with him to stop . Leitch was <.1rrested a short time later arter Officer Russ Sutter spotted him leavini; fro m the ferry on Oulboa Island. police said. Police said Stinett s uffer ed deep gashes over his eyes and numerous cuts and bruises on his race and hands. Stinett re· portcdly told police he would seek medical treatment on his own. About an hour later. police said fi ve people came lo the oolice s tation and demanded tha t they be give n the roller s kates. When told the skates we re evidence and couldn't be re- leased. several of the people al· legedly began cursing and kick- ing the glass front door, police said. Choose from our famous selection of neckweor. LOS ANGELES IAPl -A Superior Court judge has im- oosed a three-year sentence on , four reputed members of tbe rev- o 1 u t iona r y Weather Unde r - ground who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to blow up the office of state Sen. John Briggs. Sentenced Monday by Judge Julius Leetham were Judith Emily Bissell, 34, Thomas Michael Justesen, 28, Leslie Ann Mullin, 34. a nd Marc Curtis Perry, 30. De puty District Attorney Robert Jorgensen said the four will serve onJy about nine addi· tional months because of credit for time already s pent in custody and good behavior. Leetham meted out three-year termS-despite a probation de· partmenl recommendation that they receive nine-year terms. FBI agents said the four were arrested Nov. 19,. 1977 just hours before they reportedly planned to set off a bomb outside the of- fice of the Republican senator from Fulle rton. They pleaded guilty Dec. 19 to !ive counts. including conspiring to blow up Briggs' office and possessing a bomb. the ingre· ~ foel'llon llklnd. Newpolt leoct\ ('11~~\0 •. t dicnts t.o make the explosivt;!. dynamite and other am!llun1- tion, as we ll as possessing a bomb with the intent to lnJure people. In addition to the plot to bomh Briggs' office. prosecutors s:ud the defendants planned to kill police officers and bomb the car driven by a Judge who was prl' siding over lhe trial of'" t~o Ame rican lndwn activists lakr acquitted of murder charges. A fifth defendant in the case. Clayton Van Lydc~rt.tf. 63 . plead ed innoce nt and w as sche duled to a ppe ar an court Tuesday ror a pre-trial hearing Story Time Slated Valentine's Day. F e b . 14. will mark lh e be ginning of Spring Story time at the San Juan CaptStrano pubhc hbrary. 31882 Ca m i no Capistra n o Library officials said the valen- tinc-makin~ and story session will be held from 10 :30 to 11 am. for children ages three to six .. " I ' • TU!119!X, Fl"bfuary 8, 1979 S DAIL V PtlOT ,4:J 'Blmek Hole' ·in Dur Gal~g Center? PA AD EN A <A P t -allforru a."ltl'ODOmC!r5 ay lb y ha v fo und vtde nce o f my \C'rlou proce t' poutbly • bl ck hot\• 1t the c\:nt r nf our 1 ala y. • ~" man for I~ a1lfor n1u l n<J\l lu\e of Tf'chno'° , A ltOO<llnt'f'> a t ('•ll~h'a Halt' Obnrv torlH sa id n un prt!t C!dt\tUf'ct P k'har of thf' t'f'ntt-r ot Ult~ Milky Way rc.-v ab lnl<'D e procfuc t1 u n O( radfu W3Vt' . Olhrr Cnlh•rh atronomrr By Frontier atd th4!1r studiu o t th a t enNJeUc 1ea lact1 t' rorf' · tn· d•n te, urpnslngly, that ll I umformly cool." T ht' at\'3 CO\.IJl'S oouc lhr<"t' li1ht >t n , nearly 18 crimon mil~I, and 1-e m l tO <'Oftlaln mllltota1 ol st.an, th le nUSL\ 11ld , Yri, ~vidt"nc-e andlcatt it ron1aln1 no hlth·lfmp raturt• •t..arl.. common elscwher In U'lt' 11a1uy • 'Whll tb~ evidenct' wt>'Vt' fQUnd for a unHormly cool aal a<"· lit' ct'nlu does runt cru.t .a aln&t)e County Airport Use Requested Orange Cout1l) oCfactah, said today they plan nu changes at Orange Coun ty Airport to make room (or Frontier Airline, the latest airline to file a route ap- plication for the county a irport 'Bob Schulm an, a spokesman for t he Denver·based airhnc. WneDrug Successful On Cancer CHICAGO fAP> A physi· cian has reeorded the first case in which chemotherapy alone was used successfully to treat a case of large cell lung cancer , the Journal of the Ame rican Medical Association says. Dr . Gerald J . Vosika of the U nivers i t y o f Minn e sota Hospital said he treated a pa· tient ftrsl seen in March 1973 US· ing only che mothe r a py. The 47·yca r ·o ld p a t ient w as diagnosed as ha vi ng metastatic la rge cell carcinom a of the lungs. The condition a ccounts for about one·fifth of a ll lung cancer a nd is considered much more difficult to treat with multidrug usage than the prevalent small· cell cancer. Ve te r a ns Ad m in is tra tion studies of untreated patients with extensive large cell cancer disease has shown a typical sur· vival or 11.1 weeks. All 102 pa· tients in one such study group were dead within one year. ''This case represents, to our knowledge, the first patient with Jung carcinoma or a type other than oat cell who was cured by a chemotherapy regimen, .. Vosika said. Oat cell 1s one common fo rm of cancer "At this time , four years later , and after two years without specific antitumor therapy, he is free of de tectable diseas e.·· Vosika said in the Feb. 9 issue or JAMA. A recent examination showed only scar tissue. he wrote. The patient was treated with the drug lomusline every six wee ks for two years , Vosika said Vos ika said the patient sus- J ained side effeC'ts includiacute nausea and vomiting fo r one to two days after each dose and chronic anemia so1d the applJcatton wa~ filed In Wa~h ington with the C1 v1l Aeronautics Board ICAB > Mon· d ay He said the airline is seelung a n exemption to Oy two round- lnps on Boeing 737s daily from Denver via Las Vegas. He ex· plained that the exemption would ena ble the airlie to use the route pending the outcom e of a legal ma neuver aimed at shortuctlung the existing CAB route appUca· tion process. "We know there will be prob· lems, ·· Schulman added. "But we're sure we can work lh.mgs out. otherwise we wouldn 't have bothered to file a n application." But county officials were con- siderably less optimistic about the airline 's chances or getting space at the airport. Supervisor Thomas Riley s aid he will take the application to the board of super visors for comment, pro~ably next week. .. If the b<nlrd is consistent and I have no reason lo think they'd be otherwise -then there will be no cha nges. There is no room allhe airport." he said. La st ye a r . North Central Air lines was d enied a route certificate fo r Orange County by the CAB because of the refusal of county officials to gr ant the airline space in the terminal. E:dta•ted Rep. Daniel J . Flood. D·Pa ., whos e tria l on briber y charges ended in a mistrial. wa s a d mitt e d t o a Washington hos pital for t r e a tment of w hat was descr ibed as p hysical ex· haustion. Jones' Son Freed GEORG ETOWN. Guyan a IA P > -Stephan Jones, 19, son of the Rev. Jim Jones. walked out of a courtroom here today a free man. but fellow Peoples Temple culUst Cha rles Beikman was ordered to st and trial for murder before a judge and jury sometime in April. Beikman. 42. will be tried for the throat -s lash ing de ath of Sharon Amos, a top aide to Rev. Jones. She and her three children d ied in the Te mple 's head - quarters here last Nov. 18, the same day that more than 900 other cultists dJed in a mass murder·suicide in the Temple settlement of J onestown. By George, ~'sFunny Ralph Clark, chairman . o( the board of the Orange County Transit District, admits It doesn't make much sense. But Monday he a n· nounced a cbanae in the date ol the next dlrectora' meeUn1: ~'The meeting will be held oca F~b. 22. That'• a Tbunda)'. We have to move ll from hb. lt on which we c e lebrate WHblqton'• birthday. IJUtead, we'41 be m eeUn1 Ob Wa1hln1ton'1 actual ~."Clark aald . A fter M a g is trate Prem Pe r s a ud r e ad his ruling , Beikman grabbed J ones by the h and and elbow a nd congralulat· ed him on his rele~e. Beikma n was n o cha rged with the deaths o the lhr~ children. but unde r Guyanese law he could be later. Two Victims Of Collision Identified Two people burned beyond recognition in a bJaiing bead-on tramc crash Saturday in the Yorba Linda area h ave been identified as Michael Gould of Orange and Darren LeCevre of Anabelm. Orange County coroner's dep- uties said today· the two 18· y ear-old traffic vicllms were identified tbroogb a check of dental record.a. A third vic:tlm of the crub, 17·ye ar-old Darlene Doyle of Yor ba Linda, died Sunday, SlepuUessald. Tbe era.ah occurred wMti a pickup truck colUded head-on with a car on Imperial Highway wett of Oran1ethorpe Avtn\ae, olflclals said, causing the auto to bunt lnto names. The driver ot the pickup truek, ts.year-old Cta.ia Burrow of Cer· rttos, w., hoepitallied for \Nia\· ment of what were deacribd N m~or lnjurta. maa I" object such as a btaclt bolt could bt rttponslble for the ener1)' e mtsslo ns ee n, t he evlden~ Cor a black hole ls sUU ont)• Indirect ... said Thomas Ccb1ll . l o otb r words . proces es kno wn to p roduc e so much e nercy W()UJd normaUy be ln· ('rt'dlbly hot A mca,.uive b l a ck h o le , hown r. mlght account for the eneqry by expl061vely con.sum· ing maner thttl falla it1to the ros- mlc abya.s . Some ast.rooomot1 hive sug. l{t'tt~ tht posslbJlity of a s uper. m assive black bole at the center of thia and other galaxies. A black ho le theor etically would exist when matter ls com· pressed to Incredible density. U the eart.b w&re within 8 black bole, all fts mass would fit into a table tennla ball. Scientists su ggest tha t ir enough mass is cra mmed into a s m all enoug h area , nothin g could escape its gr avitational pull, not even li~ht. Tbe bole. the refore, would be a black soot lo space. None has been positively iden· tlfied but a growing number of astronomers accept the theory. The Milky Way is a spiraled disc iri space that contaJns about 100 billion stars. The greatest concentration or stars are near its center. Our star, the sun. is near an outer edge. H a le a s trono m e r s Eric Becklin and Gerry Neugebauer produced lhe first picture of the Ralactic core with a one-meter Dousing Fund ·telescope at Hale 's Las Cam· panas Ob6ervatory in Chile. The photograph was taken in the in· frared wavelengths. which are invisible to the eye. Oeballe, working with John Lacy and CharlP.R Townes of the Uolvers ity o' •"'alifo rnia at Berkeley, anr '"Cd Baas or Le iden Uni" ity in The Ne therla nds, .ntified the unexpectedly cool core, which contains enough mass to make eight million suns. County Gets More Grants ,.,..,..._.. TWO SIXTH GRADERS TAKEN INTO POLICE CUSTODY Pair Held Florfda Sixth Grade Class With Gun, Knife Tiro Armed Youths Frighten Students MARIANNA, Fla. CAP> -A cocked revolver pressed to her head, 14-year·old Teresa Hill listened and looked a t her 11· year-0ld assailant. ''He had a serious face," the pert honor students aid later. ''He kept saying he wasn't fooling a round." Miss Hill would learn later that the .22 caliber revolver bad a faulty hammer . which could ha ve fired the gun a l a ny time after the revolver was cocked, e ve n if the trigger was not puUed. And for a lime , Miss Hill, a bout 30 other pupils and a teacher we re shocked by the pistol-pa cking school boy and a n o the r knife .wi e ldin g classmate. The two boys were in custody today. held by youth services of· ficials. Marianna Police Chief Wiley G. Pittman s ays the boys were "just vying for attention," but. "we ... there will be charges filed , aggravat ed assa ult at least ." No injuries were reported in the incident, which occurred Monday at the Middle School in this Florida community west of Tallahassee. The boys were not identified by police because ortheir ages. P rincipal M. R. Stokes said Miss Hill. an eighth g rader. we nt to the l angu age a r t s cla ssroom to give a message to teacher Karen Hughes. Myth Movies Screened for Class at VCI A series of films exploring classical myths, screened in conjunction with a course on Classical Myth and the Cinema at UC Irvine, Is open to the general P.ublk. The films are s hown on Tues· day and Wednesday afternoons, 4 to 6. in Humanities Ha ll 178 on campus. There is no admission charge. Jules Dassin's "Phaedra'' is scheduled Wednesday. Other films in the series and their dates or screening are: Michael-Cacoyannis's "The Tro- jan Women," Feb. 13 and 14: lfarlo Camerln i 's "Ulysses , .. Feb. 20 and 21 ; Cacoyannis's "Electra," Feb. 27 and 28 ; Ma r cel Camus's "Black Orpheus," March 6 and 7; and Jean-Luc ~ard's "Le Mepris," Ma rch13and 14. Mom Kills 2 Sons for Devil One youth jumped up with a gun. pressing it to Miss Hill's head, police said . Mrs. Hughes shoved the boy from the room and told another pupil to call the principal. . But when that boy tried to leave t o s ound a n a la rm, another youth threatened him with an eight.inch hunting knife, Police said. The youth fled alter he was disarmed by a nother stu· dent, Stokes said. The two boys were picked up about eight hours later by an un- identified Marillfl.Oa man a bout seven miles from town. Police said a loaded .22 caliber re· volver was discovered nearby. Miss Hill said students bad o~e.rbeard the boys discussing their plan for sever a l weeks, saying they wanted to be sent to "the boys · school" -Stover School for Boys. a de tention center. Mrs. Hughes. who is in ber first year teaching, said neither of the armed boys s aid anything threatening. declaring only that no one should leave the room. She commended the boy who d is a rmed t he knife-wielding youth. "' would never have told them to . do that," she said of her pupils. "I would never tell them that was the thing to do." And Stokes said students were worried about the boys' fate, in light of Florida's law setting a three.year mandatory sentence for anyone convicted of using a gun in a crime. "This was a common concern of the kids today," sa id Stokes. "Whal would happen to them ? They've a ll read the signs, 'three years to life'.'' Ordrnanly two hours 1s plen· ty o f time to allow to get from home to LAX. but It reined the morning I left for New York and I barely made my fllght My luggage didn't and I had to wait for 1t to catch up to me at JFK I should have recognized that as an omen of things to come The tnp seemed to be full of close calls and minor In· convenienoes. The v.ieather was one of the contributing factors. It was cold, really cold. Now I grew up 1n Minnesota and enjoy the cnsp freshness of winter air but even I d<>n't get much en- joyn'ent out of fr weather. It sno wed .... fresh ly f alle n s no w I s so beautiful ... but enough 1s enough! The larpe Quantities o f that lovely white stuff ciosed the airport and delayed part of ""I Journey for an extra day. Mohammed Ali was on that fllgtlt too and Charmed everyone as we all waited around 1n as good humor as possible. Congressma n Jerry Pa tterson. D·Santa Ana. has announced that Orange County will receive an additional $1.35 m illion an federal housing grants. T he a nnou nceme nt. made Monday , bas yet to be confirmed by offficials in the federal Hous· ing and Urban De velopment De partmeqt , from which the. funds would come. But one HlJD spokesman in Los Angeles said he has re · ceived verbal notification of the a llotment. "I just ha ven 't r ec e ived anything in writing a nd so l 'd hale to comment at this pomt." said Herbert Roberts. T he money ca me from Hous- ing and Community Develop- ment grants turned down by the cities of Orange and Newport Beach. It is e xpected to be made available for the cities and the county by late spring. HUD offi cials say they wa ll Lake the money available on a com petitive basis. giving granL<; lo agencies that have worthy projects and that a re ready to spend the funds. Last week. county supervisors allocated $4.6 million an HCD Disneyland Fall Victim Recovering A critically injured 4·year-0ld Oregon boy is progressing after falling 30 feet from a s low- moviog ride a t Dis neyla nd. but doctors have not decided when to r e lease him. a h ospital spokesman in Anaheim said. J ason Hansen of Terrebone, Ore .. s uffered a skull fracture in the J an. 2:1 fall from the People Mo ver, an elevated t rain ride that travels at approximately two mph. The boy wa s listed in critical condition at P a lm Ha rbor General Hospital shortly aner the accident. On Monday, h os pita l s pokes m an Mike Windes said the child was ''do· ing much better . "He seems to be doing much better now." he said . "He's no longer in the intensive care urut, but he 's still under oser vation." The boy's condition was listed a s stable, he added . The child "apparently climbed out of the vehicle prior to the fa ll ." s ai d Di s n ey land spokesman Bob Roth. The cars of the scenic tour ride are walled to a height or a bout three feet, he said, but are not enclosed with windows . Mary Barr Q!111flec1 Gemo1o01s1 grants in the fifth year of the program. The money is to be used for a van ety of projects to upgrade housing or to provide housing for the county 's low and moderate Income families. One possible use of the addi· tional $1.3 million would be to provide housing fo r Jow and moderate income families from Bluebird Canyon w~o lost their hom es in t he La guna Beach la ndslide. lroine Co. v To Aid Churches The frvrne Company bas an· noun('ed a lease purd1ase plan intended to assist Irvine chun:h g roups to tmance cnurch bwld· mgs. Richard Cannon . a company vice president, said that under the plan, a church would lease its preferred site for three years , paying nine percent of the price which is agreed upon in the initial lea se arrangement each year. The lease payments would be a pplied towa rd the purchase. After the third year, the church would ha ve to pay the remaining p urchase price, or its lease would expire. Cannon said the arrangement gives churches the time needed to raise money through dona· lions to buy a s it.e. Irvine congr egations have compJained that the high price or land has m ade it difficult for fled gling n ocks to organize a church. Nixon School .Hit by Fire Orange County firemen are in· vest1gating the explosion a nd f a r e th a t burne d out on e classroom of the Richa rd M. Nixon E leme ntar y School in Yorba Linda Monday n1ght. A spokesman for the fire de· partment said the blast occurred at about 10:30 p.m . at the desert· ed school at 18011 E. Yorba Lin· da Blvd. Damage was estim ated at $76.000. It took 35 firemen 35 minutes to p ut out the na mes which were confi ned to the classroom that housed a sixth grade class. There were no injuries report· ed in the fire. friends In the 1ewelry 1ndust I had a Chance to visit with the Kaplans and am happy to re- port that the wonderful old gentleman. Lazare Kaplan. is sllll going strong . . a truly amazing gentleman ... aurte universally recognized as the dean of diamond cutters. The ROlex Walen people put on their tradlllonal brunch on Sunday Thus time It was at the United Nations Plaza Hotel and featured a tennis clinic on 1he penthouse court~ When they served bfunch I shared a table with friends from Savannah. Green Bay and Kansas City Ille Nastasi was there too and showing off his .. nasty.. image PASCO, Wash . CAP > -A woman who told authorltles she lhNw her two s mall sons into the Acy Columbia River at the command of the devil ls being held ln the FrankUn County JaU. On the flrat night In New York City I went to a dinner dance at the St Regis Roof where Peter Ouchln played and the Concord Watch Com- pany was the hott. Tht y toot< this OC>QOrtunrty to Introduce •lll!lll~CHA R LES H BAR R their new super·thln Quart1 • TueSday T saw a fantastic private collec t i on of gemstones that Is being of- fered for sale by a Boston lam1ly One of the most out· standing pieces was a natural Alexandnte with a beautiful color change They are asking half a million for It. That sounds like a tenible price but It Is really a VGrV rare oem. Also shewn were eome blacic opals e nd blue s tar aaphlrea . . . truJy lovely and my rsvontet of the colleo- t i o n . No . I d id n't b uy any .... bUt maybe 111 be able to show t~ eoffectlon to YoU If the ~ bring It to the West Coast later this year. as they are thinking they wilt. Ottlclal1 uld Tany a A . Adami. 24, turned herself in Monda)' afte rnoon and told poUce tMt 1be bad thrown her 1on1 into the river about • a.m . from the new cable brtdce link· in& Pueo and KenMwick. • ,, watch ... less than 2MM thick. The production will ~ limited IO theV couldn't pro- mise when we will have the ~ .. wetch In the store to •hOw YoU ....._ • ._ s.ci..y Saturday WIS the annual 24 K1,.t Club di"'* Ind parties Acc......, o- th1t •IWllYI follow II'• I won-UMr ... , derful time to visit with nld 11tll&lrvlN Wffkliff Pl•• ...,.,.,. hMtl In the meantime come end aee my eoltecilon. I have I lot ot beauties too. and YoU mtght eee aomtlhlng ycu o.nl live wllhout .... or that your V•I ntine .o11kf kMt to hftve. ' , I ... ' ONt..VPlL.OT Tuted1y, f'tbruary &, ,919 NATION I WEATHER -- wlc• Tom Ma.rphln• Escape Brief for Would-be Ford Killer tamp ·~ • our WH01 Ill *O•. VT '(IU h \ no rt&IOO today to rrct o\ •r \bu thr'\'a\ of 1 aolinl' ntlonln• Never mlnd ll. ll \\-Otfl h_,s;IJ)l'O Tiu! rea:.on tl 'l\on'l hapS)(!n l!f bc'eau. th(• &oYernmeonl I l'I ):. )'OU ll ""Of' 'I • Thut'I why thev prlnt l'<l up those 1atoUn<' rallonJn• sl•mps back m 1~71 duran~ the> phon)' ent-rgy cril'la T~ "'rd ral dtdn't h. "~•Ill) thing t'I e to do w•tb tbe1r prtnllnM prf'Ht• that "t••k· ho1n1t already run out of paper moocy M> lhcy JU.St prmte!d up lb raUontna stamps Tiit!" PUT <a .cut , ~ Wai.tuni ton on them Un&m11J11te 1914 Gas &twnmg Stomp I ~ft J, World War II fright J George. He ls looking out at you from the stamp as if he's saying, ··vou aren't cheating and bootlegging this stamo. are you"" That's better than the Federals did during World War II. Gas ralionm~ was real then. So was bootlegging. Tbe early stamps during the Great War just had olaln old numbers on them These were easy to copy. A grade school ktd could do 1t. Counlerfe1bng prenes roared in basements and back garages all across the land. Later, the Federals caught on to this. The Office or Price Administration IOPA l t heri began issuing gas s tamps with complicated , etched watermarked back· grounds behind the etchea senaJ numbers and code iden· tifications for A. B or C coupons. THE NEW GAS rationing stamps that were printed up in 1974 look pretty complicated too. But you could probably "lift <f~rge'lt picture from one dollar bills and tum them in· lb gas stamps. The dollar bill isn't worth much by itself, anyway. Besides that, don't worry about gasoline rationing. The economic boys in Washington say it's "unlikely in the near future." Whatever that means. And anyway, the government people say they won't be ready with a coupon rationing plan until next fall. And besides that, we won't need it unless the Iranian disruption cuts our oil supply by at least 10 percent. SO, VOU'VE HEARD the govemment tell you that the Iranian disruption will probably only be good for four to s ix percent and anyway, they won't be geared up for coupon rationing until the fall. Don 't fret about 1t. Just think, you got all summer to drive around burning gasoline willy·nilly if you can aHord it. I wonder what I eve r did with those old gas stamps I got stuck with when the war rationing ended? Ansivers Sought To End Smoking WASHINGTON tAP > In ;mother 15 years, the govt•rnment hopes 1t can tell people how to avoid getting hooked on smoking in the first place. For now, it admits, 1t still doesn 't know what worki.. although there seem to be somt• c lues "THERE HAVE BEEN a numbe r of improvement!., particuJarly with the 1ntroduc· ' t1on of behavioral techniques." ·~aid Or Ovide Pomerleau, one of the authors of the latest Surgeon General's Re port on Smoking and Health Among those techniques. he cited one in whi ch s mokers in- hale a puff t•\ery six seconds. keeping it up until they can't take any more. But that idea has drawbacks for some smokers such as heart patients -and doesn't always work anyway. Researc hers have n 't fo und anything close to a final answer, Pomerleau said. The report, just released, said, "It is hoped that in another 15 years we will not have to say, ·w e still don't know what works!'" THE PROBLEM, AS set out by Healt h , Education and We lfare Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr. in his forward to the new r eport. is that despite an ef· forts. more young people are taking up s moking nqw than before . Al..OERSON, w.va <AP> ara Jane Moore, ervlng a life aentrnce for tryln1 to kfll ~I· dent Ford, •~•led a t2·toot prl.on tenc. and 1ot her llrsl l11t.-or freedom ln three years. ll J11tcd a rew hours. Prison otncl&ls aald s he would be put back Into a phased-out. mulClmum·tieturlty bulldhtg she ·once call~ a "corner of hell." U.S. Attorney Robert King 11ld today that "lf tbe tact.I bear out what the new1 reports say, I would contemplate prosecuting Sara Jane Moore and her cohort to the full~t. There's oo use be· Ing coy about tt." The declaton whetber to pros· cute on escape charges will pro- bably come within a few days, King said. MS. MOORE was serving a Ure sentence for the 1975 as· sasslnatlon attempt . She and Marlene Martino, 47, of Brick Town, N.J ., made their way out of the Federal Correc- tional institution here someUme between 7:30 and 9:30 p.m . Mon· day, said Jack Fevurly, an as· sociate warden. The two women were picked up by police while hitchhiltiog GAO Program Aims at Check On Inflation WASHINGTON <A P >-The General Accounting Office, con- cluding that President Carter has no authority to withhold gov- e rnment contracts to force com· pliance with his anti-inflation ·campaign. is preparing legisla- tion to give him that power. · But even if s uch authority is granted, GAO says, that element of Carter's fight against inlla- lion is expected to have little im· pact. Despite the laudable inten· lions berund the program, said Jerome H. Stolarow of GAO, the proposal "is ·primarily a ps ychological device to focus at- tention on the wage and price spir al." WHILE THE congressional auditing agency was raising doubts Monday about one part of the president's effort against in· Oation, another portion or the program was winning a major e ndorsement. The 650,000-membe r Com· mu n icalions W orkers of America aMounced its approval of Carter's wage-insurance tax credit, proposed as an incentive for workers to hold their 1979 pay-raise demands to 7 percent or less. 1 Glenn E. Walts, president of the union. said Monday the ex- ecutive board voted last week to support the plan, which is being Considered by the House Ways and Means Committee. THE communications workers union, wruch represents many e mployees of the American T elephone and Telegraph Co .. was the second major union to endorse the tax credit. The Unit· ed Auto Workers gave its en· dorsement last week. The na- tion's biggest labor organiza- tion. the AFl.rCIO, opposed the plan. Storm Brings Mixture All>Al\y ""•"'• Alle11llc City &•lllmor. &ol~ 8cKtoft 8uffeto Che•l•ston, w v OlkeQO - CI llC In l\etl ci. ... 1enc1 Colum~ Dell•\ F°'1 W0ttl'I ~· 0e1ro11 Oulutll I n<Sle11epotl\ K•llMl C•IY UlV~ llll1• ltoai L011il¥fl .. "'-l'lltlllh MllWMl!t• M'-ICIOll•Sl Ptyl ........ 11 .. ,.._votti Oll~C1t1 ~ ""lllldetpt\141 PlttMMI,,.,. AMO Aklltno!ICI $1. LOUIS ..,,... .... ..., ........... -.t\"Fll<J.lf II -O 11o1 l'o.t yovr~ ('l'~~ll"' (f ll>•·•••" I ti "' • ..., '°"' 000. """ .,. ,,, .. ,_.., ,, along U.S. 60, about 20 miles from the prlaon. Just. before mid· night, aatd Capt. 8 .H . Cassell of the state police. The two escapees got a lift from an 18--year·old New Yorker and hired o cab for their getaway. Oavid Shelton Ross called police after realizJng that two women he drove from Alderson to Lewis burg -about 19 miles -were the escapees. "lt really shocked me to find . out who they were and it's just that they d idn't seem more nervous than they dld," he said. "If I'd just escaped from a penitentiary, I would have been acting a 19l differently.'• Ross said Ms . Moore and Ms. Martino bad sought help at Hospitality House, a charitable institution for visitors to the priso9. "One of them was cut and s he was anxious to get cleaned up a nd get her coat cleaned up," Ross said. "The other one was talking about how her car bad broken down and they we re in a rush to get to the bus sta- tion before 9 :40. At that lime it was aboullOofnine ." A CAB driver who later took At'Wl~O C'autlS Bo•• Quit• Manuel 0 . Plotkin bas an- nounced he will quit a s di rector of the Cens us Burea u to avoid a ny ap· pearance of conflict of in· terest in connection with a Sears, Roebuck & Co . la ws ui t in which h e 1s named as defendant. At'W~e TAXI RIDER Sara Jane Moore the women from Lewisburg to White SuJphur Springs said he was paid with $7 in quarters the medium of exchange at the prison. The driver. who asked not to be identified, aald he was Upped 7$ cents -all in quarters. PrillOll officials said a reeort guard ln White Sulphur Sprt.nia recogniud the two women and called poUce, leading to their capture. The maximum secur1ty unit at Alderson -Davis Hall -was s hut dqwn J an. l, but officials said Ms. Moore and Ms. M'artino would be hou.sed there after the escape. Ms. Moor6, an activist at the prison here, once caJJed Davis Hall a "corner of hell." She rre- quently complained about condi- tions there during her months in the maximum security unit. Ms . Moore. 48, was sentenced to life in prison ln January 1976 on her guilty plea lo a charge of trying to assassinate Ford on Sept. 22. 1975, in San Francisco. Ms. Martino was serving a life sentence for conspiracy to com- m it murder on a government reservatlon In the contract slay- ing of a Fort Bragg, N .C. soldier. Ms. Moore was seen by prison staff members at about 7:15 p.m . The two women failed to report during a count of inmates about 9 :20 p.rri. Cults Probed? Tax Exemptions Questioned W ASHJNGTON <AP l -Congress may look into the financial status of the Unification Church and other groups cla1minf re- hgious tax exemptions to determine whether tax laws are being violated. say two U.S. legislators. Sen. Bob Dole. R-Kan., who co-chaired an unofficial hearing Monday into the growing cult movement in America, said af· terwards. "We will be aslung sen ous questions or the tax exempt status of Mr. Moon's wealth." The Rev. Sun Myung Moon is the founder of the Unification Church. wruch bas vast holdmgs in real estate, banks, and other businesses, including a New York-based ne wspaper. "News World." REP. RJCHARD OTTINGER, 0 -N. Y .• the other co-chairman of the hearing, agreed that Congress must get "into the fine lines" of what is and wbat is not a bona t1<Setax-exemptreli{iousg_rou~. For instance. he said, one can write lo an address in Modesto. Calif., and get maH order credentials as a ministe r or the so-called "Universal Ufe Church.·• These papers, Ottinger said, are used by some people to evade paying proper taxes. Dole, ranking Republican on lhe Senate Finance C<?mmitlee. is urging the chairman. Russell B. Long, D·L:a., ~o delve. into t~e tax- exempt status of some controversial organizations which claim tax exemptions on religious grounds. AT THE HEARING MONDAY, severaJ church leaders asked Congress to be cautious when stepping into matters of religious beliefs and church affairs. "Congress must resist efforts to ~strict the non-criminal acts or new religious groups or so-caUed cults," said the Rev. Barry W. Lynn, legislative counsel for the United Church of Christ. Wea ft$ of GLove ~ ·. This Valentine's Day se nd your love a greeting all the world can share with a Daily Pilot Heart ot Love. It's easy, compose your personalized greeting and we'll set your message in type to fit the boraer of your choice or your hand written thoughts may appear in the border you select. Borders come in the 3 sizes as shown below : $15, $10 and a special child's size for $2. (You must be under 12 to qualify for the littlest greeting.) ,--------, -, " --~' ;,--,_ ' , ',', ,,, ..... I , --... ' ... ;,-., ' " " ... ~ .. ,; ' \ ' , ·' ' I , I ' \ I , I ' I I I I I I , \ ((, I I I ' q.~/ I I ' I .... ti:>~-·" I .. , I ' .. I ' , I \ ' ,,. I \ ' , ' , .... :\.~, , ' ' \ ... <:>' , .. ' ' ~;()"" ' ' .. ' ... .. ·' ' ' " .... ~,1-~ ;" ' ..... '»'<:>,.. ,,; ... .... ,, .... ; ... ,, .. ,, Mall lo: ' ' \ \ I I I I I I I I Dally Pilot Class1f1ed Department. Bo)( 1560. Costa Mesa 92626 If you wish to create your decorated own greeting, use a black pen and draw your design to fit one of the dotted line "hearts" shown below. For help with your ad, just call 642-5678 and a friendly Valentine ad-vlset will be happy to assist you. And, if you like. you can charge your Heart of Love or use your Master Charge or BankAmerlcard. · DAILY PILOT 842-5878 ) I Orange · €oas t ED IT I ON Your Dome-t o wn Dal ly Newsp a p er t • , VOL. n , NO 37, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANtlE COUNry, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1979 TEN CENTS I 1_A9ent Testifies Marvin Sought Split; LOS ANCgt..ES fAP• ~ Marvln ' ljo llywood a1tint tl'stl ftt'd today that lh artor , t'~l"na to nd hi. IO\ltt anatr with M1eht·lle Trrol• Mtrvan. onl't• ramt" to him and ked How do l C\'l ndoftht broad?" · l\tt>yt•r M1~hk1n. t stilyan a the I ndmark trial ente~ its fourth week , 111d he was tn favor of Marvin's bruklna up with the fonner how#trl -.'ho h ad become hu ltve-10 'So There !' •'rlfriend • "I t.old ham 1l was his prob lem ... Ml hkJn aa1d "But I d1dtt>ll him onooeoccnaoo that 1f at wws uptom ,lwould1etr1dofht1r " Tht' aa nl, t 1t1fyana MS a 00.tile witneu und r qu stJomg by Miu Marvin's attorney, ad milted that he aomellmes tn· troduced lbe actor's g1rUnend as "Mrs. Marvin" or "Machelle Marvin." But be said be did lt only because h~ thought It would please h r. On one occasion when they were traveling in Tokyo, he said. Miss Ma rvin asked him lo introduce ber as "Mrs . Marvln." Miss Marvin's attorney at- tempted unsuccessfully to ques- tion the agenl about remarks he has made outside court that the acrimonlous property settlement trial has brought Marvin valua- ble publicity for bis career. .. .,..~ Striker Larr} Childress leaves no doubt· whe re his sentiments lie as he issues a Bronx cheer at the front gate of the Newport News Shipbuilding Company in Virginia. More than 1,000 members of the striking United Steelworkers Union staged a s how of strength at the shipyard. Skates Used • m A Dana Point man was arrest- ed Monday in Newport Beach on charges that he attacked a 16- year-old boy with broken glass and roller skates, police report· ed today. In addition, three of his com· pan1ons were arrested when lhey reportedly created a dis· turbance at the police station because police refused to give them back the roller skates , police said. In Newport Beach City Jail to- day in Ueu of $10,000 bail was David William Leitch, 20, of 33801 Street of the Golden Lan· tern. He faces a charge of as· s aull with a deadly weapon, police said. Police said Tom L a r son Warne, 20, of 211 Coral Ave., Newport Beach, was taken to Orange County Jail on a charge of failure to disperse. fie races $500 bail. Wayde Torrey Nelson, 19, of 215 Diamond Ave., Newport Beach, was released on $500 ball on the same charge, police said. A third companion, a 16-year· old Newport Beach girl, was transported to Juvenile Hall, they said. Police said the incident re· portedly began about 9:30 p.m. Billy ·'Close' .., 'We Love Each Other' WASHINGTON CAP> -Desplte recent con· troversial rem~rlts a~ut Arabs and Jews, Billy Carter says his relations with his presidential brother are "as ~ood as ever, even better ." And Carter msisted that the president thought "it ~as fine" that he was keeping company with a tour~ng delegation from Ubya. 'The Li6yans are the best friends I've got in the w~rld right now." Carter said at a reception for the Libyans Monday niaht. "I came to Washington because I like them, they're good people.•• Carter said he spent two hours with the presl· dent at the White House Sunday night and "we have better relations than ever . . . because we love each other." .. . Attack Monday t>ehind 600 E . Ocean Front, Balboa, as 16-year -qld Scott Nathan Stinett and a friend were about to enter the building where Stinett lives. Witnesses reporte dly told police that the boys were con- fronted by Leitch .end four com· panions and that Leitch, alleged· ly without provocation, smashed a liquor bottle on the pavement. It is alle~ed that Leitch then knocked Stinett down, slammed bis face into the broken glass, pulled out some of his hair and kicked at bis bands and face with roller skates until Leitch 's companions pleaded with him to st.op. Leitch w.as arrested a short time later a~er Officer Russ Sutter s potted tµm leaving from the ferry on balboa Island, pollce said. Police said Stinett suffered deep gashes over bis eyes and numerous cuts and bruises on his race and hands. Stinett re- portedly told police be would seek medical treatment on bis own. About an hour later, poltce said five people came to the c>e>ltce station and demande<l • that they be aiven the roller 1kate1. When told the akates were evidence and couldn't be re· leased, several of the people al· le1edly be1an cursing and kick· Ing the glass front. door, poUc. Hid. • ' He cited comments by Mish· kin that "Lee Marvin stands to make millions because of this trial, and scripts keep pouring in." However . Superio r Court Judge Arthur Marshall ruled the comments were irrelevanl to the case. The 46-year-old Miss Marvin, who changed her name legally, is seeking $1 million, or half of the assets the actor acquired during the six years they lived together. The trial was in recess Mon· day so that the judge could at· tend to other matters. In the $1 million landmark court baUle. Marvin's former live -in lover, fs suing for half bis assets during the time they were lovers. Mishkin was called Friday as a hostile witness Cor Miss Marvin. He conceded Marvin, 54, had problems with liquor. Mishkin remembered receiv· Ing a letter from Miss Marvin when the couple traveled abroad on a movie location. She wrote that Marvin was drinking and appeared to be on the verge of a mental breakdown. The agent said he called the film producer and asked "if Lee's drinking affected produc· lion ot the film. Rejects Own Plan Council Backs Off Rezone.of CM Club .r Harbor Racquet Club owner Don Ward can serve up a new residential development plan for his prope rty because Cost:L Mesa City Council members . have rejected their own plan to zone the private club as public parkland. The council action. taken Mon- day night, is expected to draw renewed protests from College Park area homeowners who pre- viously opposed Ward's request for high density development on his two-acre parcel at 380 W. Wilson St. Entire HB Wuncilin Recall Try By ROBERT BARKER °'-o.My Hell'9ff All seven members of the Hun- tington Beach City Council now have been named omcially as targets of recall drives. The four council officials who were not named when the first recall wave hit in December were served written notices at Monday night's City Council session. Two residents of north Hunt- ington Beach, Donald W. Rehl· ing and Lonnie Marlon, served oaoers on Rich11rd Siebert. Bob Mandie, Ruth Bailey and Don Mac Allister. Rehling and Marion wouldn't go into specific charges, but Rehling declared that "the city has gotten ore the track and maybe we can help get It back in the right direction." Mayor Ron Pattinson, City At· torney Gail Hutton a nd Coun· cilmen John Thomas and Ron Shenkman were designated as recall targets in December. Shenkman resigned before the papers were served. Steve Schumacher, a leader of the first recall group, said the gathering of signatures should begin again st Patllnson. Thomas and Mrs. Hutton next week. Recall proponents have 160 days to gather ~bout 12,000 signatures of registered voters after their papers are certified. "I've been a resident of Hunt· ington Beach since 1945," Reh· ling told reporters, "and I wouldn't want to live a nywhere else. But all this bickering really hurts. "I wouldn't say for a minute that I could do a better job than anyone up there, bul even if we aren't successful , we m ight gel them to pay attention and do the jobs they were elected to do." CAR .4D BROUGHT 50 PHONE CALLS 'I received 50 calls night and day -even during the holidays. ''The people said they always read the Daily Pilot, and they bought my car without hearbi& the engine." That's the advertising success story of the Costa Mesa man who placed lbls ad in the Daily Pilot: '64 VW Must II. Good en1. Clean car. Need Eaclracal wor\t. xxx-xxxx If you have a car to sell, let the Dally Pilot make your phone ring. A friendly ad-viler will help write an ad at M2·!1e'18. J "We're very much opposed to any new d e v e lopme nt," homeowne r representative Edgar Baum told the council Monday. He said most residents were unaware that the council's past decision might be changed. "We're back to square one," Mayor Ed McFarland said as council members voted 4·1 to re· jecl "institutional and recrea- tion" zoning for Ward's rpop. erty. Councilman Dom Raciti voted ·'no•• without explanation. The council had recommended the 1'6.R zone alter Ward last year sought approval of a zone that would allow him to build apart· ments or comdominiums on land now occupied bythe tennis club. Ward has said the racquet club ts a financial loser. City planning staff members · apparently were surprised by the council's recommendatimon to institute the I&R zone. "It's probably not the best zone," Planning Director Charlie Roberts said Monday. (Sft ZONING. Page t\%) ~emption\m'eeded Airline Seeks Use Of County Airport Orange County officials said today they plan no changes at Orange County Airport to make room for Frontier Airline, the latest airline to file a route ap- plication for the county airport. Bob Schulman, a spokesman for the Denver-based airline, said the application was riled in Was hington with the Civil Aeronautics Board <CAB) Mon· day. He said the airline is seeking an exemption to fl y two round· trips on Boeing 737s daily from Extortion Suspect Re-arrested Denver via Las Vegas. He ex· plained that the exemption would enable the airlie to use the route pending the outcome of a legal maneuver aimed at shortucttung the existing CAB route applica· lion process. "We know there will be prob- lems." Schulman added. "But we're sure we can work uungs out, otherwtse we wouldn't have bothered to file an application." But county officials were con· siderably less optimistic about the airline's chances or getting space at the airport. Supervisor Thomas Riley said he wiU take the application to the board or supervisors for comment. probably next week. "If the board is consistent - and I have no reason to think they'd be otherwise --then there will be no changes. There is no room attbe airport," he said. Last year, North Central Airlines was de nied a route certificate for Orange County by the CAB because of the refusal of county officials to grant the airline space in the terminal. A suspect in the attempted ex- tortion of $250,000 from Newport Beach builder Randall Presley was re -a rrested Monday by Newport Beach police on two war- rants calling for bail totaling $260,000. Detective Lee Roberts said the Swim Classes Set s u s p ect , Phillip Edward Faus ne t , 31, of Hawaiian Swimclasses forallages from Ga rd ens, w as a rrest e d in three months up will commence Downey Municipal Court, where Feb. 19 at the do~e-enclosed pool he was facing a malicious mis· at the Orange Coast YMCA, 2300 chief charge in connection with University Drive, Ne~port a pellet gun shooting at the Beach. Interested a pphcants home or a Downey policeman. sh~uld enroll now; the YMCA· Roberts; said the policeman, · said. who bad been working with Newport police on the Presley case, wasn 't the only person In· volved in the investigation to be (See PRESLEY, rage AZ> T1mnel Thief Scared Off, Leaves Loot A burglar apparently tunneled bis way into a Cosla Mesa busi· ness complex early today, but left most of bis stolen property behind when a tenant arrived and scared him orf, poUce said. Police said the break·ln at. 888 Baker St. took plac~ about 4 a.m. Six businesses, lncludlng an attorney's office, are loeated ln the common building com· plex. Property was reported mlll· Ing from at least two of the bull· nesses but lnvestigaton have yet. to aet a loes figure on \be stolen goods. Police said the bur1lar fled after bearing one or the tenant.a arrive for work. Coast ~ Weath er Sunny through Wednes· day with not much lem· perature change. Highs Wednesday, 64 lo 72. Lows tonight in 40s. INSIDE T ODAY The claalr'"an of CoU/onria'• Propolition 13 Comm"'*>* .0111 a dote laz increBN ii "almost inevito· bk." sU Page A7. l•tlex ) • o.il•I'• ......... .._ SUCCUMBS AT 100 Mn. Minne Morri1 • ID lOOth Year Harbor 1&rea p1on~er Mannie Morns of Costa Mc::.u died Mon day night after several years of declining health. Mrs. Morri!.. who received birthday greetings from Pres1· dent Carter when she turned 100 in December, settled in the Harbor area in about 1885 after leaving Moorehead, Mmn. She a nd h er husband. Ed. opened a small hot dog stand and family restaura nt across from the Balboa P avilion in Newport Beach in 1923, accord- ing to relatives. The "Coney I s land " restaurant was used by various Hollywood companies as the location for several films during the 1920s, re latives reported. and remained open until the height of the depression in 1933. The Mortises moved north and later took dofe nse plant jobs during World War II. Eventua lly they purchased a home in Cam- bria. where Mrs. Morris lived alone after her husband's death nine years ago. Mrs. Morris 1s survived by 16 nephews and nieces. including Mr. ::ind Mrs. Gra nt Langseth or Costa Mesa who cared for her for several years until she en- tered Port Mesa Convalescent Home. Costa Mesa. four years ago. Funeral s e r vices a r e scheduled for 3 p.m. Wednesday al the Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel. 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa. Burial will follow al P ac ific Vi e w Ce m e t e ry , Newport Beach. ,,,..,. Page A I ZONING .•. Robe rts s aid l&R zoning generally is placed on land used for public or educational use. He said the zone could apP.lY to Wa rd's private club "1£ you stretch it." The planning commission re· cently·rej<.'Cted the council's re- quest for l&R zoning on the property. Councilman Donn Hall agreed that the zoning "would not be ap- propriate" and r ej ected one homeowner 's s uggestion that the city buy the courts for public use. .Hall said the purchase would not sit well In hghtor Proposition 13. ·'Obviously the· best usage would be residential." Hall said. The Racquet Club is located between Wilson Park and a va. cant parcel adjacent to the Ha rbor Shopping Center. The vacant parcel wall soon house 52 ~partmcnt units. The council 's rejection of l&R zoning means Ward can devise an apartment or condominium plan to bring before the council m the future. Meanwhile, his club still is zoned for light com- mercial development. Council members said they were l ea ning towards a "planned development residen· lial" w nin.R that would give the council control over how many units could be built. ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT '"" ('1r-4ft0P(M'\t0.11yPOot wft"'llf't\f("l\'Oft\ t-. ~f1 I~,..,..._""""' 1'(1111..0h\l'f'OO• '"" OftnOP (1·•'' Pub4•~C~T s.,,.,-•t•"'"'''°"''"r f•wfWl\MCI Mono•Y tM~ ,.,kt.I, tot (°''• M.1 '°"' N~ ~ 6"Mft H""IH'tO'Of\ 0..tel\ fOun 1••,,V•IW'r l,'41~ l....,,..&tMft ~"-(Ot-.t A •Mt. re-Qt0f'Wttrdttt('lft1t~n""'4)S,,..wird-\n•N '~M•t' nw or•M•Pllt• INbft\N""O P'Mlt ., "'llO w, \t S.t ~•H>t CM••~W. C•IOOf""•·~ . -... ... -Ptfl'\ktilfltl •"° Pvtl'i"""' J .. ,. c-v~c.• Prt'\ICM'1\I •ncl Gett+t .. Mie~ ~ ....... .. l <lltOf '":~ ... ~ ~ H ~· •lct-trt ,, ... II A\\l\t""1 IMMq"'9L•tot• Co1t1 Mell omc. M.o•lt"O :.:~:· :•J ~"='1i.o. •l•h Telepttone (7f•)M2~1 CIH~choert1""9tu.M?t • ( Former Prime Minister's Sentence Upheld • RAWALPI 01 , P 1 klst1n •Al'• P k••tan·1 Supremu Court tn a ,pht c:k-t'111 on uph Id today the-de.ith st-nhmc • alv ·n depual"CI Prime-Manltlt'r Zulflk r All Bhutto. Pakl t n i. dominant poUUc1I fhCu.rl'-lro m 191 1 to urn The court 11urcd Bhutto's 11111; yrr ttrtr form r T prime mtn111lt•r wait nut be IH11'lg('d for l It t " "'" k t1C•l• 1U11il' h \s a I lowed that much lime to petition for cle~nc~. The dl'cl.'Slon prompted pleas for clemency on the former leader's behalr from sevural <:ountn~ nd oracanizatlons. 1n cludln1 the London-baaed human riBhta group, Amnesty lntt1rniet onnl. 'l'he court rejcC'lcd un oral re- qucgt by the lawyer tor u JO.day stay of execution while it carried out a final Judicial review or the case. It advised the attorney lo me a formal request tor more lime and the judicial review. The Labore ffigh Court con- victed Bhutto and others last March of consplrine In 11n4 to murder Ahmed Raza Kusurt, a co-founder of the People's Party who later accused Bhutto of pl'O· Force Shown in Iran Jets .Buzz Thowarub of Khomeini Followers 'TEHRA . Inn <AP > Ira nJan Jet ftghte~ and hellcopteM> buned M"Clloos ot Tehran today an .a show of government forcti a~ tl'nb of thou,ands of deftant marchers chanted i.upport ror Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's nomanee to head a provisional revolutionary regime. The exodW> of foreigners con- t 1 n ued with about 400 more AmC'r1cans and 70 Canadians leavang 1n American military tr'1ns port planes. An Am eri can E mba ssy * * * l>POkesman s aad about 5,000 Amencans remain in Iran out of an estimated 50,000 when the turmoil started a year ago. In other developments: Andrew Young . the Am erican ambassador to the United Nations, is quoted in the West German news magazine Der Spiegel as saying the United States failed to forecast events tn Iran because "it didn't want to see them." American so urces in Te hran confirmed that Gen. * * * Iran's Ambassador To U.S. Dismissed? Stales has been informed of this." An Iranian Embassy spokesman here later denied the report. Robert C. Huyser. deputy com- mander or American forces in Europe, has left Iran after more than a month. Sources said he was in Iran urging the Iranian' military to s upport Prime. Minister SbabPour Bakbliar. Khomeini's backers s aid Huyser's presence there was another example of American interference. Bakhtiar told the lower house of ParUament he would remain i n office "even if all the parliamentary deputies resign," and until he conducts the next general e lection. despite de- mands by Khomeini that he re- sign immediately. "I ha\te nothing to do with governments that exist in the imagination ·of people and are more of a joke," Bakhtiar said of Khomeini's designation of Mehdi Bazargan as interim prime minister. .. But if they start taking ac- tion, I will res pond accord- ingly." voklng the 1971 conlllct with East Pakistan that led to the war with lndia, the breakup of Pakistan and the creation of Bangladesh. Kasuri survived an ambush on Nov. u . 1974, but bis father was killed. PrHident Mohammed Zia ul· Haq 's military govel'nment tried to head off demonstrations in support of the nation's best- known politician. Schools were closed In three provinces. Bhutto's politically active wife was put under house arrest and Dl06l or the leaders and workers of his People's Par- ty were in jail. The judges who dissented on Bhutto's verdict favored acquit- tal, and his lawyer. former At· torney General Yahya Khan, told reporters this provided ·'sound grounds" for a judicial review . Zia. the army chief who over- threw Bhutto in urn after na- tionwide demonstrations charg- ing the Political leader with rig- g in his re -e l ection. said previously he would not change the Supreme Court's r uling. But he is believed to be under pressure from the United States. China. Saudi Arabia and other allies who rep0rtedly believe Bhutto's executJon would result in a period or extreme instability in Pakistan. Heavy Theft In Lakeirood WASHINGTON CAP> -The State Department said today that A-mbassador Ardesbir Zahedi is s till Iran's diplomal1c representative in the United States but that it had "no reason to doubt " press reports from Tehran that he is being fired by the new government. "We have had no official con· firmation ·· of Za h e di 's t e rmination , department s pokeswoman Jill Schuker said . "He is still the a mbassador." Farmers Hemmed In ,,. LAKEWOOD CAP) - Holy pavement. Batman. Somebody has stolen 29 manhole covers from a sewer project. The 9,000 pounds of cast iron lids and rings. valued al $7,790, were stolen from the Griffith Construction Co. site sometime between Jan. 2.6 and Feb. 2, Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies said Monday. Monday. The status of iahedi. a former son-in·law and close confidante of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. has been unclear since the shah was forced lo leave Iran and a power confrontation developed b e tween Pri m e Min ister Shapour Bakhtiar and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The official Iranian news agency Pars quoted Foreign M i ni s t e r Ahmed N ir - Fendereskei as saying in an in· terview that "the periods of service or some ambassadors, s uch as that of Zahedi, have been terminated. and the United A,.WI~.,.... SHE'S MISS CALIFORNIA Fullerton's Fogarty F~lenon Coed Named Mus California LA MJRADA CAP > -Linda Marie Fogarty, an 18-year-old· coed from fo'ullerton, won the Miss Califomia·Universe title in competition Monday night at the La .Mirada Civic Theater. ay Winning the title, Miss Fogarty earned the right to represent California at the 1979 Miss USA pageant to be held at BiloxJ. Miss .. April 30. The new Miss USA will represent this country in the Miss Universe pageant at Perth, Australia next July. First runner-up in the Miu California·Universe pageant was Sheri Covington, 21, or Baja California. Second runner-up was Kelly Jane Bailey, 22, of Alameda County. Rounding out the five finalists were Renee Rolle, 20, or Richmond, who finished thJrd runner·up and Lona Miller, 20, of Channel IJlands, fourth nut· ner-up. The new Miss California· Unlvene ~ived cuh awards and clothins. ........ By Washington Cops WASHINGTON IAP> -Police kept a tight corral around the tractors or thousands of militant farmers today as Agriculture Sec r et a ry Bob Bergland charged that some of the pro- testers were "driven by just old· fashioned greed." Bergland declared that the disruptive tactics or the farmers were "an unmitigated disaster. from a public relations point of view." Tbe display tends "to discredit all of agriculture and does not reflect tbe majority" of those who till the soil, he said. Despite isolated reports of rock-throwing and slashing of police car tire~. aut~orities stymied the traffae-snarhng tac- tics with which the farmers bad tied the capital in knots a day earlier, when 19 protesters were arrested. Police had an swered the motorized protest Monday with t heir own vehicular s how of force. They surrounded the main armada of tract.ors and trucks with squad cars and Qther gov- ernment vehicles after the farm vehicles had been parked on the Mall, a grassy strip between the Ca pitol and the Lincoln Me morial. E',.._PageAJ ~HESLEY ••. the target or violence. He said the Los Angeles home of a key witness in the case was burned down recently and that the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department determined the fire to be arson. Roberts s aid Fausnet had been arrested last faU in the Presley case but was released for lack or evidence. However. he said further investigation in- volving another suspect in the case led to Fausnet 's re-arrest Monday on two Orange County Harbor Municipal Court war- rants. One $250,000 wanant charges conspiracy to commit extortion and a $10,000 warrant charges parole violation. Roberts said. r ausnet remained in city jail to- day. Roberts said two other sus- pects also have been arrested in the case. He said Jess Patrick Romo . 29, or Downey, was arrested Jan. 31 on s uspicion of con- spiracy to commit extortion but has ~n released on bail re- duced from $100,000 to $10,000. · Roberts said the third suspect, Edward Dempsey, 26, of Para- mount, ts in Orange County Jail awaiting sentencing after plead· ing 1uUty to extortion charges in the case. The case began last Moy when Presley received threatening telephone calls demanding $250,000. Pistol shots were fired lnto bis Udo IJle home. Presley 11 believed to have come to the attenlion of extor· tionlata after a financial news story llatfld hil Newport Beach firm as one ol ta.. top 100 ln Southern California, police said. Authoraties and protest leaders met without success to- day in what police called an ef- fort to work out a compromise under which the farmers could resume their demonstrations without violence or major dis· ruptions or tramc. But Tom Kersey. head of a protes t contingent rrom Georgia. said the police present· ed several demands "and we didn't agree to any of them." Thus the standoff continued, with the farmers determined to drive their tractors and the police firmly blocking the way. Police said they as ked for commitments that the tract.ors would remain off expressways. not travel on city streets before 9 a .m . or after S p.m ., that drivers would obey routine traf- fic rules and that "wagon- masters'' would maintain con- trol over caravan routes. Several farmers said those conditions were unacceptable because they should have the same right to drive their 1,350 vehicles whenever and wherever they c hoose as a regul a r motorist driving a car. ~ Bergland, meanwhile, said that despite the ir claims of financial hardship, the pro· testers have yet lo present cohesive proposals for bolster· ang the Jot of the farmer" "and until they do. 1 m not going lo res pond to their individual de- mands." Choose from our famous selection of neckwear. ( Pair Arrested In Burglary A Costa Mesa man and a Hun- tington Beach woman have been booked for suspicion of com- mercial burglary following the Suo4ay night burglary or an auto repair garage. Arrested at 6:20 p.m . Monday were Donald W. Patterson, 23, or 2120 Wallace Ave .• Costa Mesa, and Cheryl Lynn J ablonskey, 18. of 5121 Heil Ave., HunUngt.on Beach. Their arrest at Mi ss Jab Ions key 's apartment followed a break·in at C&R Auto Repair , 2139 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. A garage door was forced open, police said , and a partial tally of tools and possible other items taken totaled $395 in value. Eviction Halted , LOS ANGELES <AP> -An 86-year-0ld tenant who refused lo pay a rent increase after th€ city's rent freeze went into ef- fect has been given a reprieve from eviction by a Municipal Cou rt jud ge. Rent on the Sherman Oaks apartment was raised from $135 to $235. CMHlr .....,. Sl.llff PMel CHURCH FOUNDER DEAD Rev. Ctaude E. Thurmond Oergyinan 1hunnond ·Bites Set Funeral se rvice s are scheduled Thursday for the Rev Claude E . Thurmond , 87. rounder of Costa Mesa's Harbor Assembly of God Church. Rev. Thurmond died Sunday of a heart attack at Royale Con· valescent Center. Santa Ana. A minister from 1924 until 1959 when he retired, Rev. Thurmond founded 23 churches during bis lifetime. His ministry began in Nebraska and moved lo South Dakota, Idaho and Iowa before Rev. Thurmond arrived in California's Mojave region in 1949. He was past.or of the Harbor Assembly of God Church. which he rounded in 1954. until 1959. He resided in Costa Mesa until 1976 when he moved lo Lancaster. re- turning lo Orange County only recently. Rev. Thurmond is survived by his widow. Clara : sons Delbert of Costa Mesa and Frank of II· linois: daughters , Vanita Winchester of Mountain Home. Idaho. and Ruth Williams of Lancaste r : sisters, Alma Fox a nd Thelma Willcox. both of Benton. Ill.: 11 grandchildren: 19 great.grandchildren and five great-great-grandchildren. Funeral services are set for Thursday at 2 p.m . in the Harbor Assembly or God Church. 740 W. Wilson St., Costa · Mesa. with Rev. V.L. Hertweck officiating. V lsitation i s scheduled between 4 and 8:30 p.m. today and Wednesday al B e ll Broadway Mortuary. 11 0 Broadway, Costa Meaa. Man Con/ esses To Killing 2 SAN DIEGO <AP> -Robert Harns has confessed to killing two 16-year-0ld boys -a crime for which a jury convicted him over his protestation or in- nocence, and a judge had grant- ed immunity from prosecution to his ex-wife in return for her testimony. As the jury heard evidence in the peealty phase or bis trial Monday, the 2.6-year-old Visalia . man admitted he tied when de- nying the killings last April. "There was a s hot -the next thing I knew I was shooting," he testified. "Wh en the shot was fired. I saw myself raising the gun. The colors were different. I was like a robot, empty inside." \ I .. STOCKS I BUSINESS >PricNYSE TRANSACTIONS ~ ._ .... ~ ... ~ """ Soito "'' s.. J ! 1 t"'9 ("" t 1 ~ 0-O. 1 (• t I Ct"' I •I ..,. CW ~ • l N> (qa C"o •.t NW O.. ~ !f.•,. 1"i 1;·41~.,:." ~~:.i ., 1 L~ ~ ~~:1u·1-: ~~ ~ l~-ra' .... , '!"' ""=:::.M ,.I~ ~ t;. ·:::· Out.W .JOI• llS '"···· laMY • 25' m•: ~ •1i1 t1111 i ~-• /·• ~ • " "'" 1 1 j 1 ~ • -11 ) • fii ~ ,,,.,,,.., 10 1 n '''-1, "~A 1"A ";«w.-,,.,._ -ivctt ,i. = tt ;g.;;. " ~ft I .e 1''>-'°' !°!!.f!. 1 • <. iv 1 If"> ~ • ~ 1,-:!• "t '' 44 • t:i:4t<O .tO t :n U.. "; '-.. Aot I.JO .. tJO .014-,:, AO •. 1: 1'\'lt., . ! 11 .. t ~·~ ~ ~ JI •1 ~ : ;11 ··~ :~ • 1" l..;.c. 4 J ~-.... -...Ji'•15 1 4 ltl tS-.:..'."i.j !!r: llf _J t J tt-.:::;, l~":~ AO J ~ n:: ~ A 0 l 1 • _, ... ,. ,,_ ~ t U~ .,_ Ii('() 40at th If.'-• \t ...... I • ff 1' -~ ~I.( ._ 1 U U\'lt "'J•ILI"'" MU M l:z-'4 •Wt.a 1j ., 1... t )I t t !'i •t IOC ~,.,,, • ,..._ • 1 1 '7 + ~ Ital\""" .~ t 616 11 ti.<Of' 1 .. + .... A(-1': I t f • •H \4 ~ lJ'°' loo I'"'.! .. , It •J = U JJX t I 49 . =•fflad 1Jta2 m 11 .... :-~ ettclfl t .Wl,3 ... 1 +1'4 3.-.. .J .~:-• ~ r= t .~ ~: ... .=" • , " :.~ 1.. =.: ~~,. ... ""'-· := ~ • ff ;r .. : ..... :;i°"' .• i ~ :t::-tt l~' "m ·~~-~ _,,.,.U1 : W' ~:It = 1"? j ~-~ ~~ l ti ': ~ ... ! :: 1~~'1 1 w-: ~ VI "t t " 'r'.: ~ =~~nc:.~ ~ 4! n !_ .... l=: t.J0 S = '°1•a::·· •--1 ' '1''--• • olr . tr~ I ~ 11111 ;;;jJr 1 ~. ""'-""" 1 "a1• ••. 11avt1111 1A010 )~1 47 •.• ,, r.,.,,..,,,.,, 47 21\'t-111 :~ .... 1J :r..:...:n: r . ~ =n • f ~:: 1=~~:· ,~ .. ,= 'lh ~·· =~t:i,~ ! 2: ~l~-1'1 :r111'.~"'1 . .; a ai ~1 ... : ;l:!~ ii,. -:t ~ .. ·:::: "'""" I • lh j" t t ~· "' c1\,f ~ • ' ,., ,....,,,. • -. ~~ ... § ""'····· 1'1MmM'°'9 4 u '-'-i. Tu~·· .JO , n1 Jill'>-~ ~·1~:r '. ~ •"1 ..!. 1 .. • • ~ ~·• ' t nit t' \Oi 1£E~-' I 4-.... · ~t t.Arn1 ... It .th ..... fle.ttCo ·'° 1 19 .... _ .... Tat T IJf ., t 26"' -14 ~ .,.. ~..,' • MVI,. 6 ) ~-'" K t• IS t ......,. ,. t I 1' • • llffV\8. UO 4 ti 2' -\\ Tt1GT t.tl 1 1a ,._.. I.'. •At-It ... '• 1 .! 1 ri .,,. ~. 11 I . ~-"" , ... a. g ' ,. I ~ 111 ... S dO;I fl O'; • '4 MOt,..I• 1'0 IO )4J ,. •••• 1'1•1<1>('11 14 t 10 1140 ••••• Tu Ind .Ml S » It -4o --,_ .. ' ~ ti ~ ii"'* 11 1 " ln•llu ... s .. 1J Ml-I L'° ' ~ ~"" . . R•lnEI 1.so • 3Jt 32"' .. THl11t1 t 1> no 1114-1 •••• ~... ..., " I..• I u • ... "' I I ) 1111 • IMll( ... I u ) ~-... Mt!>fel •• )1 ~. ··~ 1 ..... JIJ •• 14 Tttlnt 17 • • • l't := J • f: •Ill~ , D I ,,,.. -. .,.:.~ l M J \ol , 1-, lot t•11l11•Tt 1! 11. .... M<intord • IO'•• '" lltelG Df UO •• S ~-\\ luOGs .l6b ' ,_ ,._ ~ .,~.,. -l ... ...~ " t P ti '' .,,.,, 1111 1-49 ~ ' \o 1"'-~ 1' I•• \o ~~ A · ' • • 14 Rell" Pf f .... 24' '6\4..... •P<L4 R IS 2 .......... , _... •• --.,. , ... t It',_,_ 1c;..,o , .. , 1 "'' ,, 11<• 1"1f t ~ M11r I,. t t5 1'~-\\It~ ..J2ll 4 13 11"'-\\ e•Ulll 1D I li2 ~\¥ Alf-j •114 111f 111 ~. ~-·-, .. t t ...... , ,. t11t••ct UO • U ~71•1+ .... Murrv6 ..IDll I~ 41-"' .. !t•i1~5 l.50 4 t t21~-.•• "°. t1!•,,19I tt1_.1.J01,1 '? 238· ~.• .. YI !ltol; 1 • ;f .,.1rfet s-f ~ '"' •• , ,. _ 1 .. 101v I tie 6 ) )e\'o v. M>lr Om I S 1 1f>'O.. •• R•olllt' • it ... • If ..., ~ _ 611...,.11 J IU i': (•'!.~ •• \ 1 1 1!."' • ...... i M(' 14' • jO tJ... '-111tr1-J JOU ) >'"-, , :111 L I 11 n 13'--YI RtpSll ...,, l U U..-y.. ft•lror> UD t. 111 ,. ..... $11 ••to Pl •• , ·-" • _ M(.,. , 11 1 ,...., l"'"ki'" so 1 ,. 11 -nrs . .o .. ~ lO'l'I-" Rtpff• • o 1111 .... , .. ..._ !!\'.!!~ t1.::• •1. ..! a31 .... -t", Alltl.• I )I • I• '• ~'"I ... \ fl""• "-... ,~ «I • ~1 ..... IM ll>lt 14 ~J '°''* t .... NCl4 -,. llttvOll .14 10 110 . • .. • "''""" " """t ff J t \o -t I'° ~I 11 41f>ff(~ t• • 11 I le tnh I•• ai 14 ,.. 1tli+ t "'> NClt .st. I I~• \4 lls011 pf I 7J.. 1e 1 V>... Tl11"ht I U 1 .eo.a.-""' .... ,. t" .. .n ' 1 \t -h <elllll ,,, ,. .._ '"' .. r,;"' JO • I~ ~. I'° • SJO .. ..._. ... RevcoO ... 10 .. Ult-. \\ TllOfnl" .J2b • 1 ,.,.,.. • l.'t ., ....... I ... ··~ ..... • .JI • • l'-alf'VI\ • , .,, ,. .. 0 \o,, lnlM" , .... 1t) ~ •• N\.llld uo • lt7 , ..... v. 11 .... ,. s • I~ • ttwnJW I.JO s ' ""'·· ~• •-wl 6' 1-. llai~l"I! .. I 4' fT"-... l"'M.111 I It 1 2 --NI. l I • <I 11~+ "-lltt.,IOll UO U 41) 4'1-.... T!lrlfly .~ ll JI 141.\-1• ":""~ ' ~ " ,.... .. ~""'" t,,. s 0 )I... "' f6i<Ofl\ .. II 110 -~ ..... lnlP-' • m '"" "-NVF 1 m ' ,,. 10\o\. "" Rt•Ntn .60 ' IOt 11.... •• • Tl<M I.JI • .., n 9'. ~ :,~c1;"" ., ', .,: ~: ~ Mi~-"" \' ·--.. l<rW\tF" , • ,,. • .... h•lllOKll l\ • u '°"'' Nalll\CO I fO • 10 25 -....... n,,, ... • I 1••·. l.'t Tl4fw•lr AO • J2 21\to .•. • ' "'MAI • • ... 11-. -MW t 40 J ,.. '° .... faraf\Mf ,. J"-1, l111Tf 110 I 111 ,.~, •• • N•ko 13' u 1H ""'. ~ llteynln l.80 1 '" S1't. "" Tioerlnt AO ' 42 ,, ..... .,. ., 40 ,. --(lwl\M fft U J•"" '-rectoe•~ 1' )\ '"' 1nn1 ~H 4 I )1-.. • Na~o .. 1' 7SS w-. · · Roln 1Jf7 25.. t '4 -tllt Til'Mln U O 1 "' a~+ 1 !11:f.S~ ! _ f ~ lf,"' • h (M-~ • S1 M\o,: \\ FtCIC~..-10 .a 14 + ... lllll pl~ 4 11 •I~ t it. N•\l>ua 1.10 S 10 U>!t-14 Rtyll'I pl w1 •• 341 4'I , Ill TIMI ptAl.S7 ,. 4 a , , ... ..... p ',., ,, •• ~ 0-1... • It IO' "' fllMoQ t~ • 11 ~"" lnlTT!ffi( 4 . 10 46\'t-14 H•IAcrl .'4117 61 J1 • "" RtvMll 1.80 6 " 35 + ... Timi Pf8U7 •• 10 ""'·· Atlt.All '* t • ~• ~·NY i" i Ja • ..: • 4o11 f'_...AA e t)t ,. •. , lnlTT pl0 ~ ) U..+ 1<1 NAv.I• 2.l)e · · I• 2~+ \\ lttyM pt4.SO .. I 14 , 11/0 Ttme\M 1.10 ' 40 ti t V• Altlll~ .n. J =-"" ... -'l.N I fi' : "' F"9PI ' ... t•'-.... llllT t pl, l\ l l~ "" H•tC.tn n II 10 II"'-~ lll«!Co 1.10 s " " ' 14 Tlmlln '"°" 7 ., !3\lo •• ~fL '4f .. • ~~ .. --!':. "• ,.,. ti '4 ..... \I, "":!iE ... ' • """ 11-, 1n1n pf.~ I w •... Han pl I JO . ' 3' -.. R(l1Me• t• ' u s 2'111!:• "" TT~t-~ 1, .! u,, .. ·•· ··~ ' .._ "" -.. ""t• ti 1C1t 2... F • ' Ulolt '°' '"'riK• I JO S 14 1eyt •. N10e,, t • S II 30\'t-1~ lti.ot1T I.SO 6 I -. -·-,.. -,_ ~ • ...... .,J10 •t· -·.. 2.». ,, . . FH I 110 I at J) • '"'''PO PI >. I n -1 H••Olst , •• '° 1•~· '· RloGran ·'°. » 21"9• t.;, TOIEdls l.20. JO""'' .• :m••... n, ·: ·~. 1•-. .~~ 1• • ·~ -~. :; "-'... 1M In ,._. '"'...00 uo 7 4 JJ.,.,_ II. N••FG 2.ll ' " U'lo-"' llloGr Pf .IO. .,. 14... .. . TonlcaQ> A • S7 , ... _ i.. • :::..:1' 10 • » ~. "" IMrw " ,. '"' ... l<ldFll' 40 • t1 ~ ••• lnttlPW 1_j0 • It IS "' H•tGYP ,_,, s "' 1114-lllteAkl ,., 7 27S ""'-... ToolROI Ab , ,, llV.-.... •-c· I'° j It ,..., ... Cit•~·-., . J llll~ ~I l'klUnl uo • ' 31\\-lllPw pf U•. 1110 """'·· HaCMOm 19 1 11'1-"" Retltllw '·'° • 111 ,., .. ..., T-CO .Ml II 1C 21 ... \\ A~\, Ill 1 -.. •. 1, O>t ...... ,., 11 1' t 1, tt 11 ?~~ FIOCst 1...0. ~ 21 ?e + 1 lnlrw•y AO t 1S t1'•• NIL~y .24 • 12 I •... ROCll5" I 1'0 1 12 1'l4-'"' Tr~or A 1 19 "'"'• v, """ ~· •• ~ 5 .. , Fltl'f)w'l 10b & ._., U"" • l-a8f 52 • a 431-• ... HMO..., ,S. 11 IOI ,,..,_ .... Robin\ AO I 62 •v.-y. Trene " 1 6 20 •••. 14HH of HO n ?'..... •• IW'l.Ctl • 7S " . Flll(P .1() ' ,, '"'. •ow•EI I.SO • 10 U\\ .. ~ H'4'°E ,1S • 190 11'14-"' RocllG 1.Afb , • "~· .... Tr1111.1 .. t.I) 6 10 l014 •. :"'~"' ... -~ tJI 1'-... Pl 141) , t• -1 F!fl58M AO • " 14\j,-"' 1-11G J , n ~ Ii. NM llt~V -~ ,, ,. 1,.,..-\I• AOCJlfl l..s6 1 ,. m •....• TWC • • "' ....... \\ "',,. ~ t • I~ > • \'t E"n .-' JI , , ~ Flftll<~ 1 10 4 31 ft -•PL 1 1 'IS U"'-"-NtPA't 1.10 ' 11 11~ •. Roekowr I s IS !?~· .. ;; TWC ~ uo . . 1o 1611> ••••. " Ir.... 1e . ,, J6-,.-... • I'° ' ~ •• ..., .. ''"'"" 110 141 IJ •• • IO'l'r•PS ,~ 7 • ''"'··· N~I< IO m :ioa. .. "' AO(-wi f,AO 7 1$S ··~ .. T ... I ,.... ::::: I~,' ~1 = .. Pl \ i .., : IY) Flc;Mt ., ., 8l IS....• lj)CeHP It » Sl<t. i .. NSv<lnd I Cl • 11 16 •• • llklnlpfl.35 3 :u .. :., T~::r: , -~ 1't 11 :::· 148dot I JO • ,. lit' ... Clw'r''-' 40 . 711 10 ..... f SICIW< I IO ~ UI ""'•· I Mk CO ll • 20\4. 1• ~s, ..... I 14 s • ISV, .. \\ llellffl+i 1.n • st. )$~ •••• Tr-. 1.10 10 400 2311.. "" 8 1 .. • (llfy\-1 '~ ~. "" f tl!lnfll I~ , > >4""• lltl(p ... ' 131 "'" ..... tlSll t.JO s .., JI ...... ROfWlnd 6 .. I~ I Trens<ft AO ' ,. II • ·~ A -IO s ,...,, .... °"""· \ pl'? 7S )I ,,.... '• Fll .. 811 UD • "' l)ft ••• ' .... pl I";· ' •• -"-NtlO"' 2 10 s SS 43 ... -\\ Rolllnl • .o • " !!.~ "" TrG ol 10 R •• I.SO 100 • • 14mC.." 2a 6 ll J6loo. CJ>utOI 44 11 ~t nt .. "-fSIMln .AO )44 414 IJ.\o • ... --.I -Nat"' Pf UO.. S 21.... •• llotrn JI 1CD .-.~ • T p 1 AC..."' I JS , 11 -.,. Clflhtl 2.32 s t ta.>.. ~-F\IH8o 2 s 10 '6'1t-... Jmf'\f° 11010 •10 21\\ •• NevPw 2 • " 21 ... -,, Ron)On .. s 3111t-... ,•gp :a~ .. aoo ~~· It :?~rt •.10 10 ~: ~-;: ~ cmge "' a .., '°',.-"' F1HS1B11 2 ' 11 n~ • ... J...,. .. ,., .oat> • 10 '""···· NevP p11 . .0 ·• '"° 1~ • 1 ltoPtr _, • 11 11~r~ -..., T~anwv 1 • .0 ·5 ~ 21~:;·ii, A Cy.., 1 JO t 2" ,,.W • ._. Ctn pf • •• 1.50 41\j, . • . FtlP• U2 7 110 M t Ja1111en 1 S 11 11..... • NevP l' 2.30. Y2'll 27"'7+ 1'" "orer .76 1' •JO -• ';1o Tr•vlrs ue 4 211 lS _ .. .... 0 1.11 ~ s IOlo'>-... c pf •n . r100 100 • 2" "f'P• wt •• ,.,._"" ..!•onF 1.561! 600 """·· •. NEnq1 12.10 1 22 23 •... RO.WI~ .JOit IJ us 1 IOo-~ T11~ tme " 17'11 OT I -. CIMillfl 1 IO t 14 J2 F P•Mlq •• I H'I J.t!Pltt U M t 24 JOO,.+ '~ NEnGE 1.U 7 30 IP.•. •. llO#•n .10 t 11 ,.,.._ V. Tr ... •..,. •. • .,.,~···i.'. !Dvtllvt OI • 11 i:::• ~ Cllkrp 1 16 , IOlt n.1. ·;·;,. FtV•8k fO • 10 ,....,_ ' n~ IJf ' •• 130CI .o • , .. NEG !If •.IO •• 11100 101 • i.o RC cos uw • SJ ,,,_ ... • Tri M• • ...., ·; ts .... -~ :r.:.:rt:10 .J ~< .. ii. ~n~.F .1 ~ 51 ... ::: ~::~ :~ J ~ ~ t~ = ;::.'~ ~ .:.~ =~~~f.~~ 1~ ~~· ~ =~~1~ ": ~!~: .... ~~l!:.i' ·~·s J, ~~·;·(.; •rnE.1111 uo, 321 ,. .. : .... Cllyl-I l IJD 14 ....... Fjlflll'ck • .o, 110 11\i')+ \\ .H f'i1l.l0 •• UDOl14"'1•1 HESl lit. s :IS"'• .... 11t11uTo0 ... H 10 ..•. Trko ... 1.., ·~..:"" AF.,,,11 60 • 5t ,,.,._ \'t Glt•lnv wt • s "• " f' .i.•S<• u ' " u~"" .,._5 i..u 1 ' '°" • '4 =vs.!f, 1~ io' «>, ,11>1o+ '" Ry~H I 1 ,., .is•.-Trtfttvln 1 ' u '°'"···· .AG>ll!ld , ... •l ""' Cllvln of 2 . • 14 n~ • "1 F ... tEnl .~ s .. 11111-"" J.-. ... Ot I II JV.~ It ew... -6 -... RvOtrS .80 1 301 n 11t-"' TuunG 1 '1 1 se 1• , \, Ac.n<v t.l2 •• S 171 ...... i,\ Cl~llE' t ' r,. • ..__ .. FIM\1119 .'II 1 2'11 ,._ "° J ltn,.,,.n 1.80 4 1211 U... ..•.. Newml llJ It JS1 2~ .... 1, -S-S -TCFox l.20a S » l2'11• ... AGnlftl 1 •• 1• ?tY> -Cla<llOO .601375111. ""4-\'t , .... v .80 • a !L -... =~pl ""4 iS •l' ~::: \\ ;:::.:.: •. so · 7 ~ ~~=Iv. ICA ..35' IJ 1176 ,,,,._ "'-TwlnOs I 1 , 20*-.. A.Gin pf l.IO JO ~·· ·~ ClvClf I.JOI ' 11 2'11. • \4 f'lflllll 1.AOD t 1) -..,.-14 JelflnEF J 6.__ •~ Nl•MP l.U II 104 IS _ \\ CM 1.IO 4 31 18\.'t ••.•• Ty~oub .ID ' 42 17~ ·~ :~~1fL1 ·: t ~ ~.,:-llt <:~~E~:,. ;:;: .~,.: it~;,~ ~:~:t 1.44 1? 1J ;;~-~ JOhnCft I 10 · 7 201 79"' -i4 Nl•Mpl UO .. 0J0 lSlie + \, s.":.'ec ~ lS i7 lly,· • • • • ~~~ AS I~ m m:: ~ Afl'IHolSI . I • 7' u...,·· ..... '* .601t " ll'<lt• ._ Fl•PL t.Cll ' us "'"': "' Jotll9fl .60 , • W4. NlaMpf 1.n .. tlo , ........... s.10:.n » 1: ~ 10 ;·~ -U-41 -·~ I -••• """' M 1 171 II Fl•-... • ... 1 -.,.,, JOtllft"I I.JO 6 2 JI .... -Nl119Sll I.Ille ·· '3 10I<. ..... ~~f-y .·,,. • •t •• • .._ U•l -• •1• 27'"···· ........... -12•» t1 • \'t •• • .......,. ..... •• =~·"-Jo\fens .14' 1 IA+.._ NKM ?AO S 21 2' ..... :-~,..-~ : !. :::.~ .. " "" • • ~ ·-p1' 1 1 l:!O\<o-J ... CkoenPe AO S • 1~-\'t Fl•Sll UO 4 6 ~ .. -.,, .,, Hl<Of' pf to ~--• ., -UMC 1.20 6 JO ~ t ¥, AlftMoset 6811 lfl ""' CIWllPpf I ,. 3 '°"'. Fluor 1.40 711l) J:>l4• ... JovMl9 l"4.,. 30\'t+ \\~n I .•• t 2t ... -°"SJOMn IJ020 a 11-.;·\.,, UMETTr •• '1 1~ ..... Amtnvlt :,017 ill '"'"• ·;.,. '°*<""" .0 4 n f''>-"• FooteC 140 6 l Ir-"'-... KlM 1.JS,K;-«1'l S2 +I Nor11nn :::: ~ ~i ~ ... ~ ~ UoLP 1°2' 1 S It''' \'t UHCRU .AO' 176 tl._.+1 AMI .8010 153 )Pie ~SIGl .JO ) 121 ,. • • FordM lAO ~ "' 40\-). • • Kmart .n 10 -, ..... v. NOf'rls 1.40 ' 31 23\.'t .•.. S4' .. $•F 2,50 s s 11• ...••. \JVlncl I '1S7~· IV. •inMotn • 14' s,,.:.:·v. ISG Dll.ll ,, 7 19' ....... ForMI( 1.24 s 36 ,.~.. •• K'Al••AI I s ... 11 .. -... H.t.C.0.1 .st • l 21"-• .... SPeul M •. 10 '°'-··· .. UVln pf ..,. . IS n ., .... AH•IR 3 ' 1• 3''•-'• •811 .40 ' • • ... " FMI( pl I.,. l 3014-~ K•lte l 20 3 33 ,,~ • ..., No/I.Mtg .. 6 3 .. "'51Rct"IP 1.80 .... JllAt ," .• UneKo .7. s • IOV.-'• ASll. Ip ..,. 2' 17 "'· -"'· •Cl 1.14 14 '41 ., ....... l"tOHt ..,. . 4 13~ ...... ,C•IC pl 1.37 . " 1911t ..•.. NoAPlll 1.50 s •• ,.'Ir v. S.l~I .AO • ' •Yo-14 u .. Bncp ·" 12 IS7 ~ • ~ 14Sletld' UO 4 4S .,,,, ·~ -OM 1,40 a t 40'4 • 141 frttiow I Ol 11 61 lRi .... K•lsr$t 1.501) I 22119+ 't NoCAlr .lO 4 1'6 4"o-I,~ S.rn~ .60 .7 2ll!I 10V. .•••• UUGan,.~rp 12~ t, ~ !~-... "' .. 14Slerll .3710 27 ,,_,,_ ... tNI .64 ' 4 I~• "° FO\Wll 1.2'0 8 ISJ ll>llt •I K-Mll 2t _... I 1~ NOC/I.Ir WI M 2i.-Ill SOMIGE 1.44 I '9 U.... • ""' b -.-~~'" ArnStrs 1 24 6 n ·3 31,,. • '• o • · 1t 3"'-"'i FOl~I .lO 1J S11 ,, ..... \!> • ,. • • • • • • s.i ... 11A UISt 20 41 14"' • "" UnCmr<ll! .10 II U ,,__ ~ /4TT 4.60 I IQJ~ ~.,_ •• oip,Pal Ull t 377 1e11i ..... ,,_..... 12 llS 31"'• .. ~·c ... i .70 • ,., ll't-"'~~~'I~ 7 114 ......... S.nOtn .AO • SI IP,,-.... Oft!Of>Q> .241 1 ll •II> •••• ATT pl 4 , 6"' ,,. OI Al• .n s .. .,. .. . FoaS1*P AO ... IJ • ' K~~l 'o.~ ..... ~ =-~ NlndPS 1'10,: ;; :~: :: SFelncl 210 s 281 l2"" • u .. eiec ..... 1 st. ,.~ ·~ 14 TT pf 3 M. l1J ... ~-otllnF .29 1 .. U'-• .... Fox~o I 10 J • 31\'t-," K PL ...,. _ '"..• "'". "" NorHO• f 60 6 ,7 ., • .. 5Feln pf .!II. 1 ..._ .. Un El pl 4 JO •• 1'0 4S'4 t •• 14 TT pf l.7• IC. 4r,,,"· ,_. Ptft 1..20 • l3 ~ • .._ Fr-M .JO 7' ~ • <. '"'""' • • ~ • "'"' SFelnl .6010 01 21 • \.o Ui\EI pt Jn . . 11 ,..._+ "' "'WlllWll 14 •; 7 11',: \\ 111\d 2 IO S 14 lSl'f -a,, FroMln IAO 1.. lS"t • ... IC In 'D 4 4 1\t., '• NoSIPw l It 7 J2' 24'"" '~ SqlW.I rz 1 t7 ,.._ Un El plH I . • 1 11 +I 14W•I pf I 2S 120 u·~-'· ColGe\ 7 M ' 'X U"-.... Frlglm m 11 31 IS-... l(K 5.ouGEpl I . IJ10 '°" . N$Pw oM" .. 1211 4S -"" s.tullltE . " .... . UllC>Cal 7.AO • '16 S6 .... A · 1 6 1 II' "" Col11P<1 .AOil 3 87 111~ • 'It Fn.eflf 270 4 4J ,,,,,, • '<If &n 1.90 I 33 I~" • H$Pw ,llfl.IO · · JllOO '18~ + ._ S.11/4Slp iJ n 71 ~· • i4 UPac<: 2.lO 10 ~ SJ"--.... • ~~o -• ~ 11·~=-·~ (otS()tl 7.J:1 u » r.l'i'). '4 Fuq... :... s " 10 l(l(eftNPLbt1Abl ~ 6 1 ••••••• • HorT•· .111 IO m lS"•-"• S.¥()110 ,,. 1 s •• ~. lilt u I • 146 1 ii:Ml'.tc 1to • ,; ;n.i; ;; Cotrtt><:rn .20 II 31 ""'-..., -~ -•n -1 ,. '° .... Nlt\o<ll• .. 7 S'ii., •• 5'1¥EIP I • 2 11\.1'-ltt U~l~~:r pl • ·: ueo 60•..::·ei, Arnie< I '10 • 10 1914: '' CrnbEI' 1 I '1 »"°'-11, 8"F Al S 17' U 4 \'II Kl(etylnd J ,. 61<11-\\ Norfrl) IAO • '7 3.3V.· I'll! S.vln SO 4 51 141.'t t \'t UnBrnd 1~ 8 2' 10\\+ ,._ /4MIC 20 IO SJ ,.... CmbECI 1411 IO fO ll'h... AF pf 170.. 3 1.r. + .... lllY pf I 41> • IS 11\oi .•• • · NW\1Alr1 .15 t 6.3 17'11 • .... $AJCOn • I llS S'~-"" UBnl pl I 10 •. 2 11...-i,. AMPlnc )6 IJ SS 31'-9·· ;, (rnwE 1.0 I 07 2'''>..... ATX HID j 32 ""-• 1 IC•vf8r .10 1 3:J I•··-.... Hw18<D I.~ 13 U •;, •... S<N•fff 2 ~·~-\'t UEnR\ 2.Cll S ltO Jr~-._ Amc><O .Ml I U •o-'• CwE pf I~. J ,....._ \'t GCA .IS 11 11 17\lt+ \It Keene «I S 11 ll"'1• \.'II NwtEnr 1.AO S 11 ,..__ '"' S<hrPlo 1.24 •• 196 ,.... UFlnCM 113 S IO 12~ Ill Al!IPe• 11 7S U'1o· \w ~t pt I~·· I 20 ••• GOV 4 16 1\1>-"o KeHer ..JOb • 11 I''>····· NwEft cOAO • 2ll 2' -1" 5<111111 .A039 U4 11 .:::· UftGrt\I 17 I 113 121\• '" 14mrep0 17 13 "' wE Of 1 . 4 11 • GF f'CICI 10 .,,., Ket'-1.2010 .. If\\ .. , Nwllftd l.7s • "7 ~::'.!~ t! 5<1111111> 1.A011 1S1 '3.,,-v, Ulllllftt 2 56 I 7 1"'• °'" '°""¥ 1~ 11 'f1 .. ~ • wt pl ••• '° .. • "' GMA ~ lo JO '"'_··~ K•llwa 1.12 s 1 1)\.o-~ Nwtlncl "" • • lJ -~ ~ SCOA ., • u 411'"· .. Uftltlnd A&ll s 10 Ullt-.... "''"i.o 1 n 7 31 37'-·· ~ E pt , ,, • Jt ~ •.••. G.ff\Sll 1.• 1 n 1N. • • K.,,.,,11 1.11 I 10 JS•.. ~ NwtP pl 2.)t .... JOO 2SY) + "' • ·--Uftlllnn .n 6 • 1111, + .... An<fl<'H IAO ' 1S ""'· "' E pf 2.V •. • a>.. " 0-tt I.AO 14 1J9 ..,... • ~ K-t ~ 1'3 ISl>f 74llt + "" NwMLI 1• .. n IO'•· .... ~=~ ~.; ~ 1~ :-: UJerBll UM s 11 11-"" And<: .. y I • IO 21"'-..., "t , " .. 3'Yt-"" ~Sir .JO • SI 11-\\ KyUlll ,,.,. 11 l1 10\tt •••. NwStW I.AO 1 • 31'" + '4 S<.ottP .M 1 ti' 11 ... Uft!'llMn .. " 1'14-.... Angel!G• .. 1 , ........ YI CoPsy• .J012 " ,, ... _ \\ On I 142164ulOYI~"' KerYGls . .cl s ti ""'···· Horlon us 1 .. U'I"• "'scOll s ,,., • ,, ,,,..: .... Ul'Ae•o .n s 11 21 ..... Anlalff .J2 7 ~l 1011> • v. Corn PS 1.• 6 l 10 -l<lt Ink 1.14 1 14 ;•\It-\\ KeNM l.1J IZ ns '1 .... + I\\ NorSlrn .'211 6 6' 16, • • •• S<ov1f1 I.AO ft 1119 It" USFoS 1..-l 1~ ~~~o~:t J~~!: g::::tl .101!~~7'1~:..~ co.::!; ':in ; ~~·~. ~rJJ!~l-=1~ ~t ~-l ... ~~Pfl::·7 ~ ~~:-.~~~ .. l@IS n : .. :.;·;,.; ~~~PS Un m ~-~ "'pld019 t 41 10"'• \\ ConA~r 114 S 11 It -\\ GH111t0 .11118 4J 34..,_ "°' K-prt"" ·· I nl'-"' -0-0 -~aCO<lt A 06 ISS 1714···~ U5Hom .52 3 112 Wt-''t ApplMq • IS ..... C-MI IAO f 20 ?t-"o-\\ G.t<o I 10 27 77.,_-.._ Klml><:t 760 7 111 .... _ OICC 1.10 t •7 2l ··· StaOCL 2.20 6 41 71\'t -\\ USlncl ... S 116 '"' ·~.tlaC " 1 ,, ,, ........ <:.,,,.,,"' AO 1 ,. 11~ .... c;.,nu. 1.-0. I ,,..,_ ..... KlnoOSt •• 21 12\'lt-Oet lncl 11 •s 1""-"'SHDWA "'°" s '°' u-. -USlHW .S7 s s f:Pi~··i .. Arc••• ori 16 • • 76..., • .,. ConnM 1.ao 1s 19 ,....._ "' §!'"'n I.JOI . 3 1414 • ._ 1<1r~11 1.25 s 2 I•"-O<.cl~ 1 25 ll SOO 11'11 + -. S.•ht ... 1 3 25 :.:·.,.. us Rly •. n s .... ArchrO .JOI> 10 31 16\.o Conrec: .t011 • 11 14•u \\ '"" I~ J ~ • Klllq111td AO 10 • n\\ D<<IPtl "" • 116 6 ••· · • till9'M "1711 IJt 77"4+ v. ~$110e 1-31 S 117 ,..,.._ .l.o ArctkEM s JO • ._"' C-Ed 1.AA '33' ,. .•... Am0.M1f>77 ~ • •l\t. Koehrln 1 s '1 11""• ~clP ptl.I •.. JI ,. -~, .1'•. 4 14"4+ .... US$1"1 IM. 1" ~ .... ,.,,,PS ... 1 111 10\'>-.... ~EEpfpt ... ·s·· ...! ~-"' Gn80ll AO s 1 1S • KK~ 1·~·,1 •10, 2,,s!!-.. ~c<llPP~~·· 2' s7~...,. :", :1'P:. 1.10 7 • ""'···· USTob< 1 .... 12 " 3S -''• Ar11LG$ 2.20 1 so 33"'-"' .....,., ·· 4"' -••• •• GnUtllle 1.10 t 49 Wl't •. • • ~.. ·"' .. ..,.--.,.,.,., · · • -erleG .52.. 104 12...,+ YI Unfe<11 2.>o 7 3" 3114 .••. A•i.nAIV •• 101 N \\ ~~fs1 1.J ·7 1J ;f"··•· g::g:l)r'l ... j 2.S 7l'4 . .,. ~~':1 ~·; ~ .:i.:··· cl~~·~·s 1~ ~v.=:: ers I.Ila 8 '25 2'>111 ••••• IJT<llf'U1 .. 11 st ... • .... ~~~ l.lr> 1~ .J 4'.+"'" Cn\Frt 1.10 4 41 21-..·.:·;,, GCtn~ 1,12 I 1: ~~ ~ Ktafl 2AO 1 61> 4~'"• \/, loEd 1'.7614 16 I.,,. .• ~~·1" 64 t ~ ~=::-:! 8~ff~ 11:J~ ~·~;;_. "'"'"°' ' 7 ''° 16,,.···;,, Cll~NG ' • 39 ...... _ "' ~()yn .1Se. "' ~· ""' Krot"'' • 7 ........ 01\Ed pf •AO •• HO ., •• s.lGi~· LI 1.20b • s 11vt-.... JJ111v•r .S6 ' 10 , • ~. Am111tu 1.10 4 I ,,... Con\Pw l.2' 7 121 27>4-\\ 0.nEI HO t est 41\\ • "11 Kroqer 2..32 7 M • -14 DllE4f pf 4 S6 •• allO 44"-• "-11 Int .ll S 4 7'"····. U" vFd .'6 I t "°' .. 14roCotll I ' ,. 101.... . OIPw ,.. so. no o .-.-\\ GnFctJ 1.IO ... , )S\\ + .... l(llfllrn ..,. 6 1 l•'WI. "' OllE of 10,. •• 1100 10. • 'l, \pr A • s ·~-.... u .. L ... 110 7 ' 19'1o -.... ANln I s n IS\\0• "\.,; C11Pw pnA$ .: no ~.... GnGtll 1~ II .. ,, ..... "' KYtor :!> L~I~" •• 8::: :!8~~ :: u~ g3/, :'O: S-IM .74 s 3' ,. .... , .. Uplofln l..S1 II m 44 ..... ·~ ANlnpl '··IS 1s .... ~n:::pn.n •• 110 T7 -~GnHost .eon 11 n""-l P:E 10r • ',._ .. OllP pfF 14 111011s;o..11, Slit•• .. .A03,,. !O',.!:-!! u0~1l1,.111F.,E.~.' w1• 22._• ~. AHrco .AO .. 409 11\'o + \.'t n llftA . . l 14V..... Gnlnst ..60 I 12A lOll'>... LLITCO • '1 1 U'llt + ()tip DfOl 1' . • r3t00 ~-,; SMll()ll t ft 143 • ..-.. • r -• 10 • • · · ~~~ t: ~ llJ f.~~I~ ~:~.a. -~,, ~~·~ ~~~lll.J;; 1~ ft..,,: \.'t Lrvpf . ~ J~a..~l~'i:EJi ··I~ 1~~ ~~S::l&'°.r.1:18 .~ ~~~::;::mi~,,.;:~~·~ =7 .~ Atfl-1.20 •• 20''>. .• I~ 2 4 111 ~. ~ ~119'1.1610 714 27;\lo .•.•. LTV pf I s: 10 1" ~l•N<Jt..o"i 12 10~~ llrWln •. n ... "~:.:·;.:VF~ l~v,-v,~11·~ ·~ AICvEI U 4 ' II It\\.• . llG<'I> t.20 I 1'1 111o!t-..... GMol ... S ... S6V. + II> LTV pl UO. 20l ''-"'-Olln •• 1 ,.. 11~ + II> w Pl 4.AO .. II.. .., ..., ,.., , ..-~ AllAl<I\ 2.10 ' fCM S41''H .,,, l"lfGo po: 1.. , 24 • \le GM04,,. us . , ~ . . . l.A<C..$ 1.16 ' 1 !'MO+ °"'•"' I 12 s n ,,..,._ .,. ltrPAC 1.22 1 " ,,...,_ .... VSI "° 1 2 11~ •••. """'',,, 1.80. 1 .. "'>. ,... Cofttfll IM • Jll »~. . ~pl s . . I 62 -"' LAl<T!S. I ' ,. .. -"" OnelCI• :.. 7 1 JO -.,. ,.,.., .80 • 'tS '~··· \lattevtn .AO t7 ,. s ........ . AllHCi> •. 2' 11v.. •• tof\lllP 1.30ttt G ""·· .. Gf\Porl .Ml S 1' 13'11· \io L.eMB,.., tO t SO lW. + ()pfll•• ... I 1 t~ 519node IA 1 t 321/H "" """°"' .'7 • t UY>. • • 14ulo0t• .UIS u tt ... Cof\11111• •. J3 1-.-"t Gt>IJ I.Ill I 141 17""····· Lanier :sc,12 • 27 _ Or•nRll l.52 7 I> u~::::. SlmPrec .2•U 68 1110o -\\ V••'•" .AOM "4 1~-l<t AwoO> 1 2 11• 10\4,.,r. Coftt()tt I.SO 7 ,.. tt • \\ GllA..,. .. 3' I ••••• L.ewtCll A~ 2,. 11~ E~ .20 4 ,. ,_ ~ f:i"'PP•I ..S61t 1'1 1119 + '"' Vero .» 4 "'1 --.,. Av<O pl 3.JO I 4S -... CeM()llpf 2 •• 2 n"'-t~ GnSiqn4 ' IO ,,., ,.,__ • ----... ,. ... i'Oft"c ..30 1 • • 11911r .IO ' 21S IP..-"" \lte<O • 3l ,..,., .... A c pt 4 70 lJ st. II> OIMT•f U 4 I 14 ISYr-\\ GnS1"1 .A01> 1 l1 .... ....a • ..,, -4 107 1t + 1 ~ •••• · .111 9 • lS-\\ Vt-7' S -"" A• .. 0, .J7 •• 17 1·~: ... (110.la .AO 7 '111 ,. ...... GTE 2M 110'1 ~ \4 LH\W n 1.20 1 .. ,,........ Mff I.AO s '° .. ~· ... 51111 ...,. • " -VH& 1.Jlie 14 12" { m t"" -ipt UO 110 41 •I GTE Pf 141 ' 2S-U.Enl "411 5 tl14.... lel C:O 1 S 21 ,Ill> IQ S•yll~ At "4 1114•;•i4 \/lacorn ..2$i6 36 tt ·; i.. ~:: i:1~ m ~ .. ·w: ootoUn.;.. ., ,., ·~-\\ GT... uo s ii ?SY.+ II& !..te-1.16 , I 21"'• v. OWrtlOr .70 6 ll ISl't •.. SmllllA 1.AO ) 12 ,,.,._ \It Va(Pw l.J2 • ,jl ......... -8-fl • In 1.M I 70 47~+ ~ GellHCO • • IS 4S.· "' Lel.V•llr. S 1 1"'-• • • · OvrnTr 1.10 ' 6 . l9 IA, ~ttllt"I .'1 8 7S ..,,,.._ , .. \/41f(> pf .l ·. LllO 52 • h BT Mtq u 1'4. . T..,R -!210 31 " ... i G.ntlr ? • I 31"• .• t~:~ ~ ·3 ~; ~ 1.-. Oveg::•Sllc ..sot>1-? Ifs ?1""• ~ ~ '"" 2..401' 111 111!1-... Y.•EEPP pf7n.... •. 1. 21.,,. '4· v. 8aclle .«>a s 31 7"'· .... .-s ' 12 • " Genul>t 1.10 14 .. ~... "' L " wen IV v ' ••• ,.. ~ lllllllTr .ID • " ,1~~:-~ vv!_:t' P• '""' •• r20SI 1• "",~.:. '1, 8a~rl"1 ... 17 111 :n>..... C-tncl ... 7 19 18~• ''O GaPac I 1010 314 7tlil •.•. L:~~V I ;i ; ~ 1::• I nlll 1.16 j ltS 18 .... Iott rnv<ker I I ' ••• -. _......,., ,. , ..-BalOwU 1 , 71 11\tt \\ Cotdura ..U 12 73 ••·· "" O.Pac pf wt • 3'0 l4 • V.. LtvFdC 2 ,..,.,' "Ownll pf L , 7• • . • • Snil!>Ofl I 21114 8" -• '" Vulclnc ... S • 11'-• v. BICIU pf 706 7 :J3 t •\ C-ln .11 7 11 ,..,.._ \\ GePw l)f7.S7 •• 4 10'tt-Le•Fln JS.• J l) ... ·•·1 OxlrOln M S I '"'····· e"' .IS@ ll t• 1'• I~ V111<nM 1.0 1 IS l1 B•llCo 1 20 ft 102 ~· •, CornG ta • 117 SJ '" GePw IJf7 IS. · lO 16'" • °'" • · · · • -~ -In 4~ 1 4 611')-'°' -W-W -8•11 Ml 101• l~I ,..,.I" C:O<"rBlk 1.74 IO • 2, ... c;.o~rc ..... ., 21w I l•v1~1• '., • l:J1 41"" ... PHH "9 .. ' IS lf>'h-loo In WI •• • J()l;· .... WUI .6017 11• 34 ..... \lo 8•tttE 121 • .. 25-'to • \\ ~sin\ . . '" l •• ,. 0.rt>Pd I 50" .. ,...,_. .... t~~ltF 1° ~ m J; ~ ..... ~BMI .,. • 1 ,... . All Tr •. s l'1f.. . . Wal>Hll .fO • 12 1•\to-Ball pll!I .:50. r300 401/, ~ IH 'D It 1'6 2t'lt-\\ Getty 1.10 • '1 31 •• • Ll1>1L pf 1~ ~ IO • "" PPG 1.14 6 2' ?f>to· lo'e S<:rEG 1,1>8 I 4t 11-...... Wacllov .16 I 2$ 11 • Ill Ben~I .n $ I 1~. . , •IW<t .n II 1• S)\4-Y, Ole"'PC .6019 10 I t.<. • l.tqqal 2SC,. j, ,1 ,, •• • PSA • 6 19•,o, •• .. e•rln 1.611 8 4 ll'lr-" W•<llRIV . ? Ji. .•. ~ JO • " !3'11-"' ••11 .50 • ,. 10~ l(o Glbrr:n. .0 • ,.. 14V. + ·~ llh ~ . v "" • PMAS ' ,. . 18 12.\lt. 1.<o ldwn .6() 1 IOI 39"11' ·~ WelMrt .n" fO 22~-.... Ba11QPn1.·.o 4 •1 ~-v, ~reM UOb 9 ts lO\\+ v. OldLew ,1!) ~ .. IWH '• bJ~l1 ~~'l ~ ;~:'° PecGE 2..31 8 U8 2•'1o... 18k .60 • 103 n v.· "• Wa19m I.AO 1 10 ,.-.. 1 8nkHY 2 4w S I 33l<o· I.\ ~F .«I 6 23 1'-···· GlflHllt .ID S 2'1 IS"" ... Inc "" ' ••· P•cLtg l 1 18 20'tli-'" IP$ 1,111 1 1 ,... '"' WlkrA UOa I If> 3SY7+ "" 8kOfV• j 01 S ~ 1''tt• i,. roOH 1.80 S 1S ,, ... \\ Giiien. UO 9 1'1 1~• "" tion!.' 1·a t. I~ ·~:~' 1 Paclrn 11014 1' 44"9· ... ~11£ 2411 8 ls.d ~ I• WalMu 1-"ltl 4 11 20'lr ••. 8n11Am 1.10 7 «11 24>1.+ .... CtON "'21' •. 10 241'-••• 1. c:;....,,1~ 6 2'1 1~. • LlltOfl .Sit 9, It•~' PNwhl r1 119 l-16..... lhCo l.S. IO 460 11"'-\'t WelUm 1.0 S '43 17't• 8tnl!Tr l s t7 :13>,, " C~"'pi( lbl 6 ft 14*tt • Y'J Glee!W .IO 7 t -• 14 ·• • Pec:,..I 114 11 SJ S4'lt • "' l"GE 6 210 18 -'4 W•IU p4 I.. 1'0 11 • •.-, Bl<Tr pf t.lO • 2 ~-.•• (rouMI I" ' 10 ,,.,._ ~ GtobM•• " JO ,...,, "' tm:,t~ 1 . t ~ ....... PPacTTPw 1 !! '1 !! 2C)>l,1S \\ ~N"e' 1.2$ , 10. 34 ....... W•llJ !HUO . . 102 ,. • " 8•-.17 IJ 1• I~ "' C""'nc-I • ,.~ .... G_ .... ..JO s 21 1714 1..oc11hl' 6 SS 21't \\ llC ,_ ~ \Ott.... ~HETel l.20 ' 11 J1 \\ W•tdF41 • "5 10'• l't &¥tier 1 • .010 20 1S . . . . • C""'Zel l .'D I 2111 :JlY> ..... er l.l2 S 30 II"-+ Loctite .3' ll lllS 2~, ,,_ Pac Tin 90 S 11 1JVH \.. mPK t.AO 6 tlA 7N • \\ W•r"KO • S4 10Y7-'• 8•rdCR .3710 II 11.io.+ "· CromF 7.GI • 3 36V... . , ''° 6 613 """• ~' 1.20 s • ., O"'-""P•lneW .44 4 ' 1a....... Ry 1 20 6 JI ......... warns IAO • • tPtt-... 8•rmGt> I 1 1 ,,.,._ "'-~u11>ro 1 . .016 1 IJli')-l't w 60 ' 1\ 11"1. •••. LornF" JIO 1 fl lOV, PalW pf 1.lO .. 1 UY7..... UnC:.O. 1.16 6 • 20111 • 'It WrnCom I I SJ .. ,,,_ t\ etrryW' n.4' IO 31 !Sitt• ..., umE" I.ID S 113 36>t.. ••• Id 1.60 e 170 2t.llt-L.omM use 9 2 11\.\o· "i. P•lm8c 1.10 ~ 41 11'1'o+ \'t ulll\CI .72b • 32 26 -"1 W•rnrl 1.70 t 166 24\\-lilt B•lttMf AOS8 l S114..... unn0f'9 .l2 I I '-'II-\tt *ace UO 6 46 2Sloo+ 14 LnStar l.«1 6 4f> ll'°' o,: ParnkN .1710 13 4~..... Ao,1 I 1J IS 4WJ •••• Wesl\Gs 7.7t IO 10 24 t ~ 8 ... \Cll 1 n • SI 3'\<0· ... IH'tW .80 • .. 1 ..... "' ••nor .1t." S6 l3 -v. c:o 1'0 • • P•nAin 3 .., ·--· \\ ..V.lr .28 s a u -"' WsllN•t I 10 • • ,,~-\\ Bntlrv :..01s10t0 3'14-\\ urtW.t. 2.. 1 l2........ anltvl 1391 20 11'111• Lil 1• 1 44 11 · ·•· P•nEP UO 1 32 ~-"' $wtl"ore ~ • 107 u"•..., Wa\f\5111.AOlO 111 n .. Iii BeyColP • j 3'11...... Y<IP .. • " """ \4 Gf•rD• AO s • 13\lt.. t:t ~ ffl . ·~ fl .... 4 Papnlt 1.14b • 2.S It -v. SwlFI ofl..50 . • ""' ..... W\llWI 2.0I 1 t n -\\ B•ySlG 1 ... t I~+"' n>nl~ .IOl>10 S6 15""'+ \\GIA~ S3 '02 ..,__ •~Or Mil S 1I • • P•'9ft IOIU lol 1l''-' 't SW1PS 1.18 9 40 O..,_,._ WH!tM .JOl2 st~ •• e.r1rc19 .M 1 l ,.. .,. -o-o -~uo 1a • 14 :ts •. . . _,,, · ·• P•rllOr 1• • '" 1~-..,., ~''°" 60 11 > '"'" v. wa1atnJ .AO u ' ,... • YI Beatl .Ill' ll ,....,:. \4 OPF 4 S2 'IO'....... Im 2He20 11 17\\-Loral;: .IO 9 33 19'#-~ ParH•n I IO I I ,,,..,_\Ott SpeclP" IS l3 71\u ,.., W•~ M I 4 S"'t-"" 8ff1F'l 1.C11 ' ISO n -"' Damon .JO 111 :r1 S•"t.... IHONll 1.40 • U1 J>~..... ~~ac 1: ~ ~ ~~ ..... ~ P.tn:Pn Mb 10 » 21"-• •i. $otrryH I j 11 !!~-... "'. ww~yGo"''~ 1"7" .J "'1,:1 •• ~ 8Kl!lft ,n 16 1,).S 23">-..., OanRlv ... ' '" l:t\'t.... tWFln ,,, s "' 171\-' + P•IPll ,. 77 11\i') • SOeryH pf 3. I ~· ~111> ...... ,.., ff •• B"l"O '.M 11 .. 34'-..... O•n•(l) 1 40 ' J7 ti-\Ott ~.,.. I CM • 20S ,,,.._ "' t=~:, .J, ·~ I~ t!~. ~ P•vl\nw .so • " "'"'. "" 5'1rryA 1.37 1 56.3 Ollt . )'It W@l\Mtl 1,10 • I 3114, .•.. 8*<11 .'2 •• 7"11-"' g•nlel .76 9 IS ll'i't• ... ••YllM-1 . 3' .. 1 •••.. tullnl 1.11()17 131 ..... ="' Pt•DdY ••• 36 2'11~ ••• SprnqsM 1,0!> •• w-.-"' WtlllF l.«I s Ill 21 •••.. 8"er .. 41tt· Iott 8r11"° 1..0 I 13 41 • •• wC Mb 6 11 9-• S "4b Pe~ , olJ 1-'0-~, SQu•rO I.SO • 77 73''-···• WelFM l.l(M ' 1S 12Vr-v, &elc.oP .10 • S 11 2S + l(o Dari pf 2 .. 3 41 • V. tt!Rty 14 •'4 • L~.:.. SO 9 1!! :43~ ~ Pen n • . • If>'°'+ '°' $qulbt> l,Ol 17 1JI JO'"'-II< WIPI~ 1.110 S I ll3 •••• S..Mf> 1.4' • I 2'1~+ "" Dlll•Geft " .. fJOVt. .• inrn 1.10 s :a IS''-···. .... . •• '"'" II pt9 •• »' s -\\ ~tallllt .10 6 ,, 11 • 14 Wtt<tT .n 7 407 ~a.. eeionH .J60 1 s 1~ ••••• O&lahr .lOP u Ill »lt • .,. Gvardln .J6 • IJ ''"" • ~. t!!!S~ _:t 1~ ..! :.s:r ~ ~~· , .1 4111 .a>w-!~ laley 1 IS st. tq\1 + "-WnJltlrL .AO l 1'7 11.'r-\'t llellHOW .'16 1 so I~.... Oat•onl u 143 .. -v. GtfWSl/i" .1'1f . 4)J 14 ..... I\ ... •• v ... ·-.. ......,.._y I " I .114-" l tlllftd 1..» 10 st 7S • WAlr pf 7 •. 1S , • ...,._ •• l!lelllnd • ,,. s 41 ,.... "" D•v<O .5Gt> 4 •S IS ... GlfW pf 311 I .... • -~ -PaPL I., , 3t ~.... """' .st • 1n 1111">-.,. WnllM ,.,. ' " ,. -Y'J Bemis 1.40 , IS ,,..,_ .... DaylH(f IAO 3 ,.. 31\'t-..... ~tf()ll 1.tlj • 440 23-"• ~ M/l.«>M .AO" 20I )t • "' PePL pf4 40 •• 1160 4.S -..., ldMOtA ... • s 16 -'· WnOIHA .AO • 2'1 n-.-... 8eftcll• t~ ' "' 31l'r· "" g•ylPL I.. • 3t "'~. ... HRH 2112 MM ,,,._ MCA 1..20 • ,.. .. -'" Pa PL pl •..SO •• aso "' -... \tOllCI 2.IO 1 S10 ·-.. WPacln I ~ :II Jl>4 ..... &efldl• ... ). 1 n'\I.. ~ PL pt IUO. r40 lit • .... ulfR pfl,JO 6 ,.,...., + ME I ·«> ' 31' ulJllt. '' • P•PL jlf .. .., • • rJI) 17 • "'> SIOlnd 3 • •10 .st•-. ..... WllPullf .. 14 ,. u ..... "" !MnlQI 1..ID • ~I n... ..... Dttt• 1..SO • '2S 3$"". IA. HStUI ..,. , IOS n-. ..... MGIC .n 1 100 1fl<lt ..... Pa PL pf~· •• 11100 102 • "' SIOtlOll •• II Ill •J>tt-\\ WU"IOn I.AO 6 17' uv.-" BeMtpf•..SO •• zllO •JVJ •IVt OelrnP I.JI. ?S" •••·· llSUjlfuO •. l90 '411>+ 14 MKA"..,., 1 »" . "• PaPl Df 11.. d0~····· 11P*CQl.SOb4 , .......... W\Jlldpl1.1' •• 17 ~· \\ 8_, pf 2.so . ,so 2;v.. •• DtllaAlr 1 6 m ~-.. . GvHUld .• " ., 134-.... MKOft .'40 s 12 ""' .... Pe PL pf 1i •• llOO II• _, ,,,,.,.. J,S , • It ..... WUTI of ,,,.. J 3 13V. •••.. &enVl8 10 ,,, •'~ -.... Dtllone 1S 6' •l4-\4 G<,llOfl .«> 8 31 ~-\'t M•<kt •• ft 2'1 .......... Pe PL r I ·•USO 11' • ~ IMIW l.01 7 t 22\.'t •••.. Wet It El .'7 t 416 17l't + l<lt BerbyP 1 4l ~-•• OtnMI U2 1 s 37>4 • • . -.. _.. -Mac!nlll .n 1 3U 111.'J ....... _, t.'D , II l2~-..., larrtt U2 " I 27""• ... WStvllC 1..32 1 10 1'"'1. "· 8et1Pd ...... 2'l9 •.••. °'""" .Ill 1 )t ,, ......... "MW '1 , 314-~MO us s 1ldlJ"'-" Penw pf uo :! ' 20-.-" t•Mvttnv n ,, 41/o-Mt w...-rnr I • J03 21~• lot l!lat"SU ,..,, • JOI n ......... Otn1sot., .11120 u 1•'4• ._ Halou • , ...... Md~Fd l.2'e •• • I)\.. Peftn~ > 197 )S4 32~• .. \aMS. UIS., n -····· W•Y~ pf J.IO .... 2' 4114 .••. l!llqTlW .. u II 3' • DtSoto I ' " n ..... HallFB I 10" • ,....,_. MaVl<CI "° s ..... . .. P9ol>VT .t4 l " •.. 1.ufCll 2 7 ., 40 -1\'o w..tfF 1.lO ... 1n 30\4 . \.. Bln4Ml .llO I 3 1S"--I,\ 0.IEd 'I.Sil I 11' 14flr .•••. H•ll,,.,, .-11 I t7 ..•• M<llon" ... 11 I JO..,• ..... llieooGt t• 1 2J lJV.-II. terl&<p ,66 8 I 7~ •••. WflaelPlt 4 S6 IS~• 1<1 81tF$ I • JI ,....,_ v. 0.IE ... U?. uo 17~ ..... H•llll>I 1.80 ... ""' + Manllln ..30 4 1 --"" Pwt>slC. I,. '11 dll-"'-,.. MflOt .n 11 ,.. ""'. 14 WllflPll pf s .. 1100 .., •••• ea.ck Al IO -,..,,. "' 0.11 pf 7.AI •• 110 " ..•.. H-P I«> 7 .. 23 + I Manlllf ..30 IO u , ..... PerlllflE ""',. ,.. ,.... .... rPrt .11b 10 II >'"-\\ Wl\l1'1pt I.JO • llJ 11 .. -.... 8taw.JI> ..,, ' 10 ,.~. 0.1 pf 7AS .• OJ 11 •• 1 •• Han.IS 1 SI•. ,. 15"'• Minten 2.21 ' ., JJllt .••.. Ptf'WC 1 137 .,.,._ It "rndllt .j() 11 1.0 t4\t •.•.• W!lllC uo J SI ,.,__ l(j llllut,. 1 1 1 15""' .••• 0.1 pl 7.36 •• 1240 7$ U HAnJI I.Ma . 1 19\'t+ MJltPCO I.AO • 170 ,.,.._ 111t Petri• I 20a 11 IS 3'~.... vtnJ I.JOI> 1 4J U + .... WfllteMt •· 4'I •1111 lllOMR , .. II 11 n~-14 llE.,. 1·" .. s is~-Mncllft'VI 1 " 40 1S + \It M•r•IM AO., 116) :Mlt-,.. Pelrot11111.iM. ,. 311'4..... • .... w. t.10 6 ......... Wl\lttell ~ ! 211 u~+·...a Blue8 I.AO • t.S 2\'t..... I! r• .1S •• • U V.-"' HendyM .. 60 10 ff 1~-I" M<tratO tAO • •112 5'\lt+ ._, PttR' J..q, ·· II 2114 .. l<lt IOllVC l.32-t ~ 2'14+ YI WICllH .'2 MM 1S + \.'t 8l111bf1t .20 7 23 ti.It-\\ I Df .12 •• ISS20 n~-ft H-a UO 11 ~ ,..,.,_ \\ ~a"l"'I I 7 U ~-\\ hills ,..1.>S ,. 7 10'AI-"' toMW 2.rSr I t 46Vt+ '4 WltlMOI .... 30 ~· \\ Boelellellr ' 31 s....-If ... 2.Ji.. • 1\'t-... ...,.,"' 1.A4" SI 11 •I M.afMld AO • 33 uv..... Si"' uo II •St 30"". "" :ton "'°" I,. ,,.,,,._ "" Wllll•m• 1 U -1714 ... ,. llOeli> 1.!0122$44U .... +14 •ltr AO t 2' 1-\lt H•nMe• .20 6 •UV. ••• , M<ltlofll.. "4~ JI 141'11-\\ IPO .60)4 668 ~· '4 "pl.10 4 If '6 + ~Wll•llfO .M10 1' n.t+ ... BoO•C us ' ... l1-"+ Glor A • t.s 12~+ "-""lllf I 7 1101 ll'4+ MarllOI .lit.. " I,...,_ "' ••El 1a 10 ., " -.... ec " m ~"" WlllO. 1..W IO • 31\'t-... lkwdttll t.n 6 21» 2•tii-11; atC. 1.20 7 7 20'lt-Vt .... ,.11 .SO II 91 21 .. M<lrtl pf t.lO.. 1 I~.... ll'tlllE llf YO ·· 1111 44 •Ill• tor•f8 1.30 I 4? J21¥-It WI~ JI 14 1,_,.,, ~w t s 4't 7714-.... •Int uo • ,,, ..... _ ... Hllffl!lll IA6 7 1t ~ Marlty I • ,. Ullt-"" PNIE,,. ...... aoo 47\t+lllo lrlCIRll 1 • ,. 11\11-lltr WlnlttrJ 111 .. CMt-... llOt-• s 11"~ v. i.1111 !1'11.20 •• , 11\'t ••••• H•rrh AO 12 24' 211 -M.,rlOt ·" ' 331 In\.... PNIE pf t" .. ,.., 11 ••·•• Fu"Wor 'tt s 20 7"\tt-"' Wl\EP t_)4 7 420 H..,_ Ill llflEd 1.M 1 tt ~ 141 ~"'S 1A ' >ts '""' • Vt 1-+arxo • • ' 1 JO • w. MrS/IM J.20 u u .,..,_ Vt PllllE '' .IS .. 1100 rw.+ 1~ avSllo '° 14 s1 Jolt-'• wuo.s 1.tt 7 • 201lo-It BosE Df t.• .. r«IO l:SVtt ''°" 1<0•8.toa14 1 I~ •••.• MertW. .a • d net .•• , M""I' 1.24 t JO 1~ ••..• f'l\jlE ~ .JO ·· tt0 92 -1'4 ul>PrG 1:Jt 6 1 19''o-"" Wisc PL 1.7' t ,. I"'• \'t llo\E llf. l.17 •• .. ~-111 lcl•Pf! .1410 US 2''4 ••••• "artfld .AO 4 S ~ "' M41r1M 1.80 ft SS 31 -~ Pl'l IE pl 1.IO •• 11.0 n-..... Sun~m 60 S t 1• , • ., • WIKll'S UJ I :II 1'Vt ..... BOJE pr 1,.46 • 1J 13~. ••.. bOld M 13 » 'I t 1't Hanst ltO 11 1 16 •• • . Maryl( .411 • 8 111.1i.,.,. PllllaSllO .te 7 41 2' ~ " l§un I .60 fl 2 )4'4 + "' W!ICe 1.20 S J I ~ + '-Br•n•lf ..» s 104 11~... lt•lfCI ,. 37S sm ..... "'""'""' t ,. 1 11 ,. • .,_ \i; Md Cuo .s. 1 29 01'-llo -"' PtlllMr 1.0$ 10 '40 •'"" "' 210 ' IJ) ,,..,.... WllVA .Ill s ts II~-.., Br ..... c AO 1 .. ,. -""' 01 lnqrn .St • _,, tit-.... ".,.,. I" ' • 171,.._ ... MH<O .5110 6SJ ~-... Pllllllld .n s .. •• -\' Ull pf 2 75 .. s .. • 14 WotvrW .JO • '" 111't-.... BrlqSt I.GI t JOI 11 -It Oiiton 1.12'110 6 "14 •. · · H•zeltft .«> 1 7' IJV..... MatOOlll .llO t llO .,, ... + vo Pflt!Pet I to 7 ~ 31 •· • • unbm 1...0 1 "3 lt'lt ..... WofMtC .60 I to U-YI 81'1slNI 1.22 11 ~ ).1'4 • • 01\"t'f .• 12 2'9 ~ + ~ .... lllTK ' J2 '°""· .. . Ma\M l.)4a 10 ,. 1••• ... PiedAvt .,. 4 ,, io.. ... SWIO\tt ., • .. u v. + .. WoOOPI A 13 1t lAI + ... Brl\IM pf 2 .. I .oil.-8lvn11ttn 22 I 2 ........ "-<:ks ,1, 1 1' ~. •• • MH:>YF { • SJ t'.. .. Pied. NG I !M I 2 16 ... -Ill SuMM .20o t• 2S 17..., • 1,. WOIW1I\ I.AO S ICD 10 + ... Br11"9t At I J1P ull.... lvrsMlt • 7 Jt41 ••••• He<leM • 21' 1•~ •• MHCp ... • • I 1"11 • ''t PIH I 770 4 SI ,.._ ~ $1>PrVal S4 ' f9S 16\\ • ... WOIW pf 2 20 4 21'9-a. 8r11wGt 1 GI I IS U:W.• \Ott ~...._ _.. IJ .U 14"·· • "•j""B I to ) 11 ~-'°' MHlllC I Oil . 13 ll'• \' Plftbry I S7 I "6 ~-'-Su!lrOll U0>4 2l 311 ....• WorldAlr 5i\ IJ 7~+ \Iii Blt,UG l.'D • JO 19'11-·" Oo<NM .111611 70 .,...,.1 ... "'" t • n ~ .. \\ M•ll•I .1)9 7 )I , ........ P!ontr I 76 7 ,. 2"'11 ••••• Sup!'lkG .42 s " 11111-.. WrlOly , .. -. I ..... .., BllUG pfU7 1 ~.... OonU .f'1t .J1 '"'·· • • • ... ~C $ S 1"-+. '"' ,.,,.ttel wt • . J1 '''" t ~ PtonrEI t U !Wt-Vt SulroM .... t I "" • .... WUfltir A 6 ti lOfta ••••• 8-Sflp JO • s 1111> ••• ,. Don"'' I'° m 21'9-11t ttt11r11111.10 ' 14.1 •~-'" M•yOS 1.21 6 text 24'•-"' Pltney8 l.20 • us 24-" swanll l.AOll 1 1 n'1.... Wytein AD • u U.., ..... e-oo l.tO s 11 )411>• w, OorOllv AO • l• ""··· •· "•'"''' Al 10 7 u..,-II> M..,.trO llJ • t2YH 1<1 PutFrg llOtl • 2 »~h '" Svbron .'6 • • 11111 • ~ W'flel.D .lt S n t\'f • "" 8-F•• .tOtO '° ~""'t. OoneV 60 S ~7 179'-MemlM .... ·; I 711t. , ""41\'lq 1At0e ' • 241.'J + It PttUln 120211 0 1 11'"4-\• Sy,lron ,10 I tt ._ -""'Wyly , 1l ·~-.,_ 8'1'1Wll .10 6 UI 1 • "' 09.,., l"'O • I 4' -IWf<lllH I 252 1Wt + M<DtNlll 1 l 216 21>!t + ,._ ~t•nRtot II • · •• · · -·· Y-l· B'711W of2.All It • \lo ~OI I.AO ' 111 )Sftt. •• • · ... ,,,_y 1.lD 411 ICM-llo MC Oq11ft to 60 17•1,. • ._ li'lanl,.,, • IJ I• M41 191'0 • "' -T-T -X•rolt! 140 10 ·~ mu '-BrestlW iM "a 16 71\'t+ \lo Jfl I~ It Mf aJ\\• "9stteft . • 11 t -lll(Dt p1 t AO •• 116 »"" Pl•YllOY ·'t 1t I .. 11\'t + l'I Tllf ... It 14 1''11 • • llTRA I 04 ) SH!t-\It l!lll(YE• ,II • ltl 11i. .... t.a ' 11 ~-~Ill 1.D IO » • + .,_. M<Ollkl .» 1\ lo:J1 en111:.:· .. lttftw-I II •1 1'lt-°' ltW •.ID 1 » JS + II> f5'H .20 1 11'11-w lufF• 1.-• J 27-..:.:· . HI I JO --... \lo ....nPlt M It lff ~· MCOotlO 15 e '4S S111t+ .. ==--II UI I~• .,_ TRllll pf 4.«I •• I Jt"-···· •iec. I 7 U .. ~.-.... ._.,. •• N ~,. ... Ba tA .~ 1 '"'+ Ee-.1012 • ..._l<lt MC~t:,0 i t t6Vr ..... ..... 11' U1 !O\IO + w TltW~'·'°• I .. ~ ....... PIA ..IO ., I ""··•• i M S ~ I 111-.1'e • Joi ~... I., • t JI~ M<Gld I.ID • tsl't .JO i tlJ 1M+ \\ t9"arO AO 1 11 10-...... .. •re llS tt-.+ "7 rf4 t.a ·~ 1 Ill+ ja I ~ tjUU H ,_ 10 tie tslli<+ fl!'<Of-H 1.91 1S1 fi ~·(.i =MI.Ii f S It -\'t t•leott •• II f¥1-\'t 15! 4 M f1\6 .••.• ,. •• 7 ~... """'~ ·~ ' a:;: ""9ft , .. ' 1 16-. ••••• 11'(1~ "'° ..... l'I ..... JO ~· .. '""' I , 41 11 ..... "' 111 JW '~"'· ~ tf I,,.. Yr6 t.. *•~ m • 11S -~ .$6 •. '60 11 ... ,1 M<ltllft _.. ·i Z! 1 11o-lit ~ Y:l'O ' 41 IJh-\'It IMtiE U2 1 t1 0....... Wiii,_. .IO I 7l Olli-l't ,.. :A l I ' 14... . flf .•• uuo ~ •.. '4iM01 •• " ~· "~lout J ; 1 --P'oO '1"° . r10 '°' """' 811N':'tlftl. p,;: ·= ::.m I' .. ttf.'.,·:.·h l~,."'·.·i.. ==° J' ,, ~·" ,'l~t12 ·• s~ n,.: .... Com. petition Backed .llt,.,. .. ~ ;[ "' • flf •• ' -~ _,. • .. -"'. ~· '60 7 ... ,,...,_ ,, t!.":11 l.M • SS 14'"'-... LOS ANGELES (•pl ' -ord 8rMRl .Jt. t I •• • ilJf Um + = .>A• U 1' -"7 M .. pllb.lo ' 6>\4-S ~"''!lo MO ""'···· " -n.u er· =::: .. ~IJ 4 ~~ t 1J1'6 ,, n~··· ~ AU 1~ .!::.: .. = ::~ : f:-• "PYllM~ !t 101 ~~::.'., desl1ned LO lncrea.H competltJoa In hnts • ~ = J:I " dlf v,!' ""1'°1;\t A 1 6i 't + ""-..If'\ A11 ,. nw.:.::y, =ft11 ,i ., 71: r ""I. the Wbeel~hair industry hal been ap. M 2AoCf\;-• t)S '.'. dlt ,._ -~ '; ;; ~= l: :::iv111•:A J: mt:_:·v; ,......., . fl • t'°"'-14 proved lD federal COUrt &It.bough Ol>-C~ty ~ t ~ a .fl ·~ i ~ ~ ;'.!t • ;.o ;#:.:.:· . ~Ef' t• ,J )Pi,. ... PSvet;t., '' ·~ ~:.:··· eonenls argue notblnt abort of :~ ~·t t~ fl-.::::: MO ~-,;4,r:rt '"o"t ', m 1;~-\\=~""i1·'°': II ~U::::: lf:Jlaj ·•,.,.J..... dlveaUture wm end the ·~r,.e;,,r ) ~. '" '"'• 11~ M::::·: Mt • ;. sl ... ..... .-. 10 ~-~ =::::i'A!. 11: =: ~ '?l' 1 ·4 •:' ~: ~ 1tr1n~ld" Ever-eat ft .J , NA 114 1'0 •• 4 't" + Sys ! 7 ~· l..D ' i ,.'~ • L Mt\at1 1A · 1 .,.._ It H •• aJIO n "'-"' J"fJ h~Or ~e mar~et_ NA• 1... j ~! .-1 • 1t -·~ ... -..ollll .ao '° .. ,..... " ·?! , 1• ttli " · • ~· ud 1 R •• UO f I ~ \io :irr1r J 4'f •11t-a .tt "' lji ""' ... Mt~l'll\ "'' e ll Siio I lf.0,JJ& 1 , tti.-\· • · C ge an\ae ea1 c 1:= J ~ ...:ar'~"" it •1• t~! ... _j ~: ~~= ~ ==.r:~·, 1 1 ''T f!it!. 1 "' eol mi;·,,.. l:i.:-11, ruled ln a consent decree Monc:t.)' al 't-Ill n tl'1t1 ti J ~\• ""' '1 ~ m:-M!IWI°~ • 1 f7 \ ~ • 1iz >''4 •I that. \ht fltm • the WOr}d'I laJ'Ctlt "=" --~ ~ ~tit = J t ~ •• eti :tt : u ,.~;. ~ =i·11'1 ·; ; m~: :: • ...... . lllO ~.~-."' mara ufac:t urer of wheelchalrs -~~, ._.. <fll fl 'Ii ~ ~ ,_. -""··"· ~IM]'°''t .,1 ti._:·:·· ~.:to' '4 S! t~·.: tould continue to opua~ Ill two •11 w ... ,,. ' • . 1~• t~ I:',. II .~ '% =:."' =~j . ': J ~ i:,;~. ~ UI I , .!!"! ~ lobrelp .ubtldtlartes1 unt dedrda tprotJt •• '"I ~ +.,. • ... I~ ·:ij ..,.._ ,_ • ~ • 1tt' r~ ... , 1 arlnt •Y• em n en e o en· 'l •• '-·• + l Ht ~ • 11'-··· • ~ • fl::·· "• t ~ ,.,_"' c:our~ex~tothil eountrY. · it • " •• ... ti ""• iu !; 'M ·i J f:::· M°li:iM • I d !!:+·· ~ 11 J a Jr::.~ The foretfn manufaetuNra are f9 ~ ' .: ~ m!. \~r , .. :6· " "": .... ~~ t I 11 .. ::,.._ ,,'-Ji l.f. ': 1'1~ Hld l O prOdUCt bt\ttr quality . 1 .... ' J? .~.... .• " ,...,.. .. iii9N"lflM •. I nie--.,. "f ., • ..... WbMJdJalrs It lower prfoet. ,_. ~tt>fUll'Y~. 11'7't---s- Interest Sears UCB Personified Truth in Lebding By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Thanb CO ''tcutb·ln-lendinc" laws, banb. aavtn11 and loan lnatltutiom, fl.Dance companies and stores are re- quired LO dacloee to you what price you are paying for the privllegeofuaIDatbefrmoney. The pnce la. of cou.rae. the interest ra~. And tb!s c.ate can vary considerably, depeodi.JlC on the type of loan <house, car, pertOnal), where you get It, how long you MU t.ake to re. pay andotberfacton. mE INTERESTING QUESTION 18: Does knowing bow mucb lntereat you will pay bave any influence over your dectaioo to borrow or not LO borrow? I'm sure tbe autbors of the ''truth-in-lending" laws thought it would have a healthy lnfluence. They figured that once peopl~ aaw in cold print bow mutb money they were paying In Interest, they would be so appalled that they would reduce their borrowing. The lnstitutiona that lend money agreed. That's why they opposed "trutb·in-lending" rf'gula- ·uons . In practice, it doesn't seem to have worked out that way. Interest rates soared toward tbe celling ln 1978 -and so did consumer debt. M UUons of people carry Visa or Master Charge credit cards; they use them and let balances extend inLO loans al the clearly marked interest rate of 18 percent a year. not exactly cheap money. Money Tree Why do people borrow at such high interest rates? There are at least three reasons· ( l ) They Ceel they need the money and have no other place LO get it. f2) They ex· peel LO be m aking more money in the future than they are now. 13> They expect to repay in dollars that are worth less than they are today. ERGO, IDGB INTERESI' RATES probably infuriate manypeoplebutdeterfew rrom borrowing. But the requirement that lenders disclose their in- terest rates bas had some bizarre consequences. One reader forwarded LO me the Visa statements be has been receiving from United California Bank. UCB, along with other issuers of bank credit cards. charges 18 percent annual interest on unpa1d balances . However. It also happens LO be a bank that Imposes a minimum finance charge of $1 on any unpaid balance, no matter how small. ll will simply never charge less than S1 per month. LAST SEPTEMBER MV READER reduced bis balance from $64.79 to $4.58 -and UCB assessed him the $1 minimum charge, dutifully disclosing to him on bis statement that the annual interest r"te worked out to so percent. • The next month no payments were made. UCB again slapped on the $1 minimum charge -and its computer showed In the appropriate box that the annual interest rate was now 262 percent. ' The next month my reader paid S6 of the $6.SS balance. hoping possibly to shame the bank. But the UCB computer bas no shame. It never heard of u.sury. Confronted with the reJevaat figures. It simply dis· closed to the hapless customer that be was now borrowing mon~y at the annuaJ Interest rate of TIM. 7S percent. That'• truth in lendlng! Joe Raqeer has been named savings manager of Great Western SaTlaga and Loan Asaocladoe'a Costa Mesa of· fice. With the association since December, be bas· more than six years of fmanclal and sales experience. • ltGIWd G. Langford bas been appointed to the newly created position of diredot for markeUng support for 1181 Data Colp., Costa Mesa. He joloed the company in 1977 after more than l1 yean in marketing with Honeywell Information Systems. For the pa.st year a nd a half be bas served as director for industry planning and requirements for MSI. * PeCtt KolUant bas been named vice president of finance for lleHmarc Basbless Comuhan&a. Irvine. He ls former data processing manager for Industrial Parts Depot, Inc., Torrance. • • Int.De Savings, lrvlne, bas announced the appointment of the following officers: Jobll IL Bradley bas been promoted LO vice president of finance and administraUoo; Dntd A. Ulyqaist bas been . named vice president of savings and marketing and ••neU Rowe has been named vice president of loans and secondary n:iarkets. .. Dick TIN>mas, Huntington Bea~b. bas been prom<>td to president and general manager of Mutla bdutnes, Huntiagtoft Beath. He is responsible for operations, including manufac· tunn1 of spas and related equipment, product dealp and deve19Pment and retail marketing. He hu more than lS years of experience in tbe fiberglass manuf1cturlng In · duatry, six of them with Marlin. Savings, Loan Asset,s Exceed $95 Billion Asaett ol California's savtnp and loan auodaUOos topped• billion at the end of 1978, ac iD,cNue of 3.5 percent over the tolal at the end of the third quarter and -up 14.1 per- cent over yea.read 1977. Tbere are 170 uaoclaUoos operaUn.a ln the state, ap In· aeaeeofllxrromtheendof1977a.ndtwomorethanattheend of t.b• tb1rd quarter, the C&llfornla Savlna• and Loan Le1sue reported.. IN TIJE FINAL QtJUTEll or um. two aaoclatloas pasted the '1 bllllon mart in aaeets, brlntlnc the total to lt In Calllornla. Eitbl of the nation'• top 10 savtni• And loan1.,. headquartered ln the state. The at.ale's uvtnp and loan pro'ltde an ettlmated T$ perc.t ot the ltale11 boullnt Clnante. Tbe)' invest aearl:>* an lbelr Uletl lD bome loau and other bom.laa relatal iltvmmenu. 'l'be •:vear old C.llfcnla Leape rep1....ata tM in· duatry oa educaUonal, le,W.Uve and public alfaln mat· ten. ,. • . • I .. • Tue.My, PtbNery t. '"' ~ by lracl Andtnon FUNKY WINKER BEAN "Ho~ you bffn barking at Mr. Snyder again?" SUPERHEROES SHOE MOON MULLINS v-~--~~----_...---.,.1® ,AND ON OUR WEOOI~ Nl~T ~ 'SILLY MAN SLEPT IN IHE: lOB8YOf1HS HOTEL! "This IS my homewortc. In history we're studying the fifties. OENNltTHE MENACE MISS PEACH by Jeff MacNelly TUMBLEWEEDS SA~'~! ... f:PIC CHEWS ~ACCO ... MA'll'e H~ SWAl.t.OINEt' HIS CHAW ANP 11 MAP!: HIM SICK! NANCY .... ___ _ I'M LOOKINCT FOR SOME FIREWOOD THAT'S HARO TO FINO by Tom &atiuk .. by Mell Lazarius AGATHA CRUMM DR. SMOCK OH, MRS. RAt..PH .' NOW YOU'RE: GOING -ro cse-r vei..t..ow WAXY eu1 t..c:>UP AU.. oveR YOUR FACe .' MOTLEY'S CREW O\..D'T'IM6R 1 t 'M ~e'AL.L.Y DESP6RATE: ,,, CAN '>OtJ L6ND Me ~1000 10PA'I MY 61U.5~ ' f , s by Ernie BuShmlller PEANUTS ENCAANTE DE FAIRE vme CONNAl55ANCE ·SOME:: COMIC$ I CROSSWOF by Charles M. SCfHlll ) QUICKLI( ME CONSULTS MIS PHRASE SOOK ... '' I AM MAF'N TO MEET '(OU" _ __..., . -. by Biii Hoest by George Lemont FORMS OF COMPASSION E:SCAPe M6.' I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 41 Slopes 1 PrlCe 49 Blocked UNITED Feature Syndicate 5 Otters S3 Ofanges 9 Bargain 57 'Rent events 58 Frosting 14 Brain lamina ~Of the mouth ~~~ltl'W~~~~ 15 Monster 61 -bene 16 Test 62 Meaning 17 Bible t>ook· 63 IM pact Abbr Abbr. 18 Churn 6' Instrument 19 Uneven Sofhx 20 Tal\e --65 Flower Travel 66 Evince ~ 22 Abstained 67 Tastes 24 Closer DOWN 26 Lots I Latin 27 Spur 'l Reduce city ~Cover 29 Pigpen 3 Tropical ltsh 23 Rodents 45 Tarry 30 Smite 4 Uproot 2S Gypsy 47 High-strung 33 Usages 5 Haircut 28 Portrayals 48 Isaac's 37 Musllm 6 Operatic 30 Meat cuts mother ludge prince 31 False god 50 N.Z. ~tlve 38 Moor 7 Leas moist 32 Mlnlecule 6\ Prevent 39 Edgar A. -8 Ego 33 Therelore 62 Doyens .o-Runyon 9 Vaporous 34 Nevld1 city 53 - -vis: 41 Else: Scol. 10 Molding 35 Direction Fr. phrase 42 lndelatlg· edge 3S Conjunction 54 Cards ably 11 Celebrity 37 Some win-55 Full 44 Neoatlve 12 Relieve dowa 58 Japanese 45 Resin 13 Luge; e.g. .0 Transfer Pfemi.r 48 Rodents 21 Australian 42 SOapstone 80 Moo