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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1979-02-27 - Orange Coast Pilot17 ~ I Fighting Nears Ha II ' ' Newport Man Carter's Sister Sentenced in Gets Arrested Roekets Case For 'Sour Notes' -• DAILY PILOT aso e at1on * * * 10< * * * I • • . • • ' l 'e • : • I . • • • • VOi.. 11, NO. ,.. J seCTIONS, 2t .. AGES Elde rly Citizens Rescue d MIAMI BEACH, Fla. <AP> - Three young men jumped from a yacht into the water and hauled five elderly residents to safety after a car plunged into 10-foot-deep saltwater creek. Police said. "These were just average citizens who saw an accident and decided to help," Miami Beach police officer Zell Hall said. "They also saved a few Jives. ' Police said five elderly Miami Beach residents were in a car and a sixth was gelling in late Monday when, for unknown rea· sons, the vehicle screeched down a ramp in front of a seaside condominium. The car came to a halt 500 feet away at the bottom or Indian Creek, wh~re Kirk Grimsgaard, 21, of Miami; Allen Bradley, 20, Wierton, W. Va ., and Bill Banks, 20, were standing aboard the yachtP.J. Hall said the three pulled the struggling passengers out or the car through an open door One passenger, David Smith, 91, was listed in critical condi· lion at a hospital. Miriam Goldberg, 75, the car's driver, was treated and released. The other three were unhurt, police said. 'Polar Bear' Seu R ecord AARHUS, Denmark <AP ) -Adam Abelsen, 33, of Greenland, set what the swimmJng club here said was a cold-swim record, swimming 710 yards in a "pool" backed out of a nearby ice·co~ered lake. The pool, about 80 feet long, was hacked through three feet of lee. Abelsen covered the distance in 23 minutes, breaking a rec· Ord Of 5IO yards. The swimming club, which or1anizes the event and keeps the records, ta)'I the awlm muat be tn water colder than 36 de1ree1 Fahrenheit to quallf7. The Gulnneaa Book of WQrld Records do.a not have an entry for tbe event. A,.WI,...._ FINED $25,000 Newport's Vernon Edler Newport Man Semenced in Rockets Case A Newport Beach engineering firm has been slapped with a $25,000 fine and its president given a 20-day jail sentence and live years' probation on a con- viction or illegally exporting technical data oo rockets and missiles to France. U.S. District Judge Manuel Real denied a motion by defense attorney James McDonald Mon· day for a stay of execution pend· Ing appeal. ' The same sentence was given out -and suspended -In 1976, when Vernon Edler and his firm, Edler Industries, were convicted or similar charges, also in Judge Real 's courtroom. The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court ol Appeals upheld their appeal at that time on grounds that the statute under which the convic- tions had been obtained was overly broad. A new trial was ordered. • Monday, Edler received a SUI· pended two-year prison term on condition that be devote 1,200 hours to community service projects during his probation. Assistant U .S . Attorney Theodore Wu, who prosecuted the case, said today Judie Real denied a stay of execution ol the sentence, aaytn1 he saw no bula for appeal. It waa unsuccessfully alle1ed In both trials that Edler Jn. dustrtea, which once worked on the U.S. Minuteman and Tttan ml11iles, provided technical U · sistance to a private French company in the roc:ket Industry without obtalnlna clearance from the U.S. State Department . • ans To Faee Musie Presitknt's Sister Arrested --~ AMERICUS, Ga. <AP> - President Carter's. sister, Gloria Spann, Is free on personal re-. cognizance bond after being charged with illegal harmonica playing. "Obviously I have less talent than I thought," Mrs. Spann said Monday night. She, her husband, Walter , and two other people were arrested Saturday night at the McWalfle restaurant. said Americus Police. "I am charged with: 'Defen- dant was playing a harmonica. Wh en asked to slop playing music refused to do so and kept on playing'." Mrs. Spann said In a telephone inter view from her Plains, Ga., home. "Walter is c harged with: 'Defendant was asked to leave building, but refused to do so un· less placed under arrest'." she said . ··1·m re adi n g from Walter's ticket." The four arrested were sitting together in a booth, she said. Police got a complaint from the r estaurant's assistant manager, who said patrons couldn't hear the jukebox, said police officer Mae Davis. She said she asked the Spanns to leave, but "they said they paid for their food and weren 'l leaving," so she called for help and a lieutenant arrived and made the arrests. Mrs. Spann was charged with disorderly conduct and others in the party were rharged with failure to leave when officers re- quested.,Ms. Davis said. She said the Spanos are to ap- pear in Americus Recorders Court on March 12. Mrs . Spann said she was play- ing th~ Hank Williams tune. "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry." 2,000 Kille d ? .... w, ....... SOUR NOTE? Gloria Carter Spann Mrs. Spann said she and a dozen friends had gone to the restaurant "after a musical evening at my house," and one of the group dared her to play the harmonica. She said she had been learning to play it for about a month. ''I went in playing. By the time I sat down, a girl came over and said. 'You can't play Fierce Fighting Told Near Hanoi that~ thin~·n here'," Mrs. Spann said. " and sajd, 'Play me a e,' so I played some more . OCJobless RmeRues The unemployment rate In Orange County rose to 4. 7 per· cent in January, figures re· leased by the state Employment Development Department (EDD) show. But despite the .6 percent ln· crease ln unemployment from December's all·Ume low ol 4.1 percent, lbe county employment scene drew favorable notices for statisticians for EDD. Story,' Page A9. Paybaek Refll8ed LOS ANGELES (AP> -A 1roup ol well-paid lawyera tn the attorney 1eneral '• office bu re· fuaed to pat bllck •.ooo tn ac· cldental aalary overpayments, t.be Loi Aaael• TimM ~ today. The at.ate toatendl tbe money wu cl11bwffd l11 a pay mlxup that atteeted •bout IOO at.ate workera -includla1 Janiton and window waaben. BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Vietnam reported fierce fighting today In the northwest corridor to Hanoi and said its forces wiped out 2,000 Chinese there from Friday to Monday. The olficial Voice of Vietnam said the fighting was conceotrat· ed In the Cam Duong area which sits astride the Red River delta corridor which runs from the frontier to the Vie tnamese capital. <Related story Page AS) The broadcast also said two more Chinese companies were decimated in Lang Son province northeast of Hanoi on Monday and another 250 Chinese soldiers were killed or wounded In two days in Phong Tho district ol Lai Chau provtnce. President Carter called on China to undertake "a speedy withdrawal" from Vietnam, in a message 1iven to Chinese leaden by Treasury Secretary W. lllcbael Blumental who la vl1ltio1 PekAn1. It waa tbe bhmlelt statem• ol American oppotitloa tot.be war. But ln=ence sourc" . In 81n1koll that the c~ ahowed no 1lpa ot a withdrawal after 10 clap ol ftptlq and ln fact ..,. relllforelq troopt ln aome froatler anu, lnchldl.DI Laa1Soa. No ft1ur" were 11ven, but Hanoi baa claimed lta troops have killed more than 16,000 Chinese since Peking invaded Feb. 17. Intelligence sources consider the kill count inflated. China has not given casualty figures. But in one of its few re· ports on the war the official Hsinhua news agency said today <See VIET, Page AZl Colle ge Frats Face Ouster HANOVER, N .H. (AP) -The 22 fraternities and two sororities at Dartmouth College will lose sanctk>n to operate on campus lf they don't clean up their act ln 12 mootbs, the school's trustees warn. . The trustees sided with a faculty aaseument that the system promotes "racism, sex· lam and the abuse of alcohol." Accordins to the trustees, the fratemtti• and aororitiea have 12 months to demonstrate "they have the capacity to make a 1ub- 1tanUal potltlvt contribution to atudent lite.·: Tbe tnllteft uked the faculty e11ec:uttve committee to evaluate effo!U by the Inter-fraternity council and fratemtty board or over1eer1 lo chance the (raternlt.lea. Measure Only for • 'Crisis' WAS.UNGTON IAP > -The Energy De partment made public today proPosed standby plans it has sent to Congress for gasoline rationing and other fuel·saving measures to be used on l y in a ser1ou ~ ener gy em ergency The plans were sent informal· ly to key congressional commit · tees Monday night Department spokesmen said they would be submitted formally to Congress Thursday To be adopted. the plans under a 1975 law must be approved by both the House and Senate within 90 days . If gasoline rationing were ever needed and department 0£. ficials say they see no prospect of it in the foreseeable future - rationing couPons would be is· sued to owners of registered vehicles. The coupons could be sold or transferred at will although the government would have authori· ly if necessary to imPose price controls or other steps to pre- vent excessive hoarding, anti· competitive practices or other disruptive activities. <See RATION, Page A2) Coast • Weath er Chance of s howers in· creasing to 20 percent \ Wednesda)'. Lows tonight 43 to 48. Highs Wednesday I low to mid 60s. l INSmETODA~ ' TM 31th annual reunion !l} I World War II ~tnans wc:u a night of noltalgia. TM eve11t. $f>Onaom1 bJ1 IM Coala Mesa Hulorlcol ~t11. MW Mld at Orange Cooat College· s Student Cenler -the Mme i propert11 I.ho.I I008 once part of IM Smlta Ana Aar Bcut t ~e F eaturi1t11. Page CI. • I ... ll ~ ., . Ct ... , IM A4 At IJ Cl ., .... .. ... , A4 A4 l I ' \ • s UCI Scientist Tells Cleanser_ Danger Tht' l ,. lntn "•tt•nllllt v,ho h 1 ll 1 \ J l \' U \' I' I l h I t nm'"'._' '"'!I ,,,. '"°> oiotM: lO thC' 1tt 11h~t•IH1h' tolct th~ n· , '' ••Hm '' I l'1ut1.,·ttou Aa ru:) ""' " '""' noOw1 'hlottn tom '"'""''' " 1•ml•nt11•rl1111 hfe nn I •II '" t't t' Mw1 "'"'"'' 1111~ h.nd rt· 1•,11tnl hi 141\ t.I'\ \U&nl'I lh&1.l ""ltl\l1•hh,r1,f111 m , 1.1 ,·um mrrclnl cl anlnl olvt:nl wu.'d on t'll"l'trorur equipment nd rn •tal ml'< hlneT')' urf c ~. ·may aoon rt."c.f~Ur'f' re1uJ1t1011 .. Rol'lnnd' turtle~ 1n 1974 With l>r Mann Molin•. of tht-hauar~ I)( flun~arbon from at'roliOI 1•rnpt'llant1 nd r<'frlwt•rnntJ.. led tn n ~11:111Un1t tnrn on tht• rom pound T h 1• p 1 u b I t' m w I t h Uuuruutl'bol'l.'> And Olhl•t Chlclf'lne u rbons llkf' methylchlororonn. th t'llemlatry protet,.or 1aid, la tbat lbey r,.leue free 1tom1 of t:hlor Into the atmo.phe.re. Tht-chlorine 1tom1 drift up- wurd tnto the 1ll'al01pbere, the tone of the atmosphere six to lS mile oovt' the earth's surf•cc. ®d rc#.Ct violently with orone, dcattroymg the aubal~nce T he urth 's ozone layer ia rnponalble ror screenlna out ul· travlolet rays from the 11un wblch are harmful lo human akin The raya are believed t.o be the primary cause o r slun cancer. Ozone ~uction also can lead to c limatic c h a n ges wnd biological damage to pla nts and other animals. Rowland testified that amooa the chlorine compounds, the prime aggressor of the oione layer next to fluorocarbons ts the cleaning ag e nt methylcltloroform. Rowland carried out measure· ments of methylchlorororm with l:lniversily of Tokyo colleague Yoshihino Makide. Measurements were t.aken at remote locations, to avoid con· tamlnatlon fro m other sub- stances. rrom Alaska to Tierra del Fueao. Chile. Samples were collected an st.alnleu steel fln ks which were returned to Irvine for a nalysis. R owla nd discovered the averaae lifetime of the com· pound to be five or six yeari;, time enough to allow a signifi· cant portion of it to set into the stratosphere and do damage. audis Hold Line Dad, Sons Safe After Boat Burns ,. rahs Won't Hike Oil Prices lh "''" \,..u.·111h"d l'rf''' "\,1111lt \f Jhl,I , lht• "llfhJ \ • 1.1rgt•.,t 1lll l'll.I"" lt·r. :.aid toduy 1l ~ill htiltl orr h•1111~1runl) un anv pn l'«' 11w1 t•ai.l'' U11t A mt.•ncan l'Oll~Umt•r.. alt c•.uh Jl t' ll·•'t rn~· mon· ro1 hwl .ind 111.1\ (,u·t ga1>oluw r.1l111nm1: .11111 .,t·r \ lt'l' statwn du~tnP• 111 ll11· h1lur1· ft":m·r~y s,·<.·r,·l.H' J.1m1•11 H Srhlt·~·n~t·r told tht• n;1t1on'i. * * * Fro"' Pagt> A I RATION ... Tht.• standby rationing plan dad not anl'lude any s pecaf1c gallon l1m1l for 1nd1v1dual veh1c 1£· O\.\nt.•rs Qf(a•ials SJld tht.> hm1I would be determmed at the llmt: rat1omng 1:. imposed. according to d1stnbut1on formula.., ;md the sC'r l O U..,lll'~S Of JH'troleum shortages Tht• Encr~y lkpartmenl has <km ed publ1'>hed rc•ports that the rat1omng plan provides for a limit of t\.\O gallons or less per day for earh registered vehicle. Also mcludcd 1n the standby plans martt• public today were re!--lrit'lions on wt•t•kend ga:,ohne salt.•..,, lt•mp<•ralurc• controls m ('ommt•n·1al and puhhc buildings and l'Urhs on un11c·rcs1>ary ad vertismg hghl mg Tht.• president cu n put the standby plans into effect when he derlarcs an t•nc rgy emergen- <'V exists, but this move can be 1;1oc·kc d hy t·ilhl'r house of Congr<.•ss Earlit•r today . F,nergy Sccrct,H) .I a mes n Schlcsmger asM11 t•<l th1..• nal1on·s governors that gasohm· rationing would be used onlv a~ a last resort. and would not be prompted by the loss of lranrnn 01 1 But SchlC'~inger sa id other m a nd ator y , 'ncr~y.;sav 1n g mt•asurt•s proposed by the c1d · mmastratwn might lw imposed 1f thP lraman l·utorr continues for J ) car or longer · We \4111 not coml' to r<1t1omng becaust' or what I\ a relatJ ve shor&fall m supply" as a result of the Iranian shutdown, Schie:.· 1ngcr told the natural resources com millet· or the National Gov crnors· Associallon 2 Men Sought In Slaying of Santa Anan Santa Ana police are seekmg two suspects m connection with the .street cornl.'r shootmg death Monday evening of 22-year-old Bruce D Bracamontes Poli ce said Bracamontes. who lived al 2122 W Ninth St , wa~ shot twice in the chest and died in Riverv1e~ Hospital within <in hour of the 6 p m shooting Witnesses told police the v1c t1m was fighting with the two s uspects on a street corner near his home when on<' of the men pulled out a handgun and fired the two shots As Bracamontes was loaded into a car :i nd taken to the nearby hos pital, the, suspects ran down the street and s ped off in a nother car, police said. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT '"" Or~(W\10.Ulf Poot ""''"•h-<hl\r""' "'""""'..., ....... ,.,~, ·'~•\twelbyt .... (\11'4"rq" (&.t\tPubh~t~y ...,.~,Att1fl'd1t""""Mf nut>h\hf'<I Mt~•• '"'~ ,. rn:t•Y tor Cou,,. M ~t"W[W)tt tW.-1 l'I th#'\tl"Oi,.., f'#ac h f.-°"'1 '" ~y,.11,~ tr••ftll I ~fVIW" \tlr.uth(f).lt\I A "''"''' ,,.,, ......... ,.-n.f,.<f\1'\Ptl(lil"~Mtu'~•'•rta ,ru1 •¥ 1"9 t 1•-.I t"'""•,f\•fWJ r4 .. nt 1• •I 110 Wr •• , ... ~.,,I ( , .. ,,. .,. ,,.l•INn···~,., 110-.rtll -Ptf> .~f'lllftftt ,.,,.,, "*•"""' '""" ,_, "t<• Prt ~·nt•"°Gtr,....,ttlM.!n-~ ,~,,., . .,., LOllO' TllemoA M°""'"' ~ft-Qt"'Q f fttW • O-.rln II "'"' """"",. • ... 11 6 \\1\t•nt M.;n•ou"'Q tounn Orne .. (4'\t•Mt•• JJoWt''\tlMv~tret1 l•!JV'l•8 .. rh 1ttoG"-••Slr,.1 li...,IU>Qlon Clut• I llll llNr• lloult•AOI Ttlepll~m• (71')~ CltH lfltd Adwtrtltl"O 642-5871 ~,.~ ::. a:.:r.. c:e! .. =~ ... ~~ m•lltt •t ... tttf\f,....t\h M tt 11\ M•r .. rt••t•v,•4 wU"tV• HWCl•t H•"'IU~ et , .. ,, ..... ...., ~.J= ... ~··.~s;·::r.J;"~ .. ~~.:: ~: , .•• u .. _ ............ ~,. -···· "' .. , .... *"''""*',,...._ lJ • ~tftt• ~·m \'rl\or' ltl2H the h>l>l> or 011 from Iran I!> not rcui.on t•oough tor ratt<lmnM . but add~d that olht•r n1andato1 . energy.saving mt-asures could bt· Imposed if ttw lr:u\r;lf\ t·utofC continues for ••) '"" ur longer The new head of the Nuhonal Iranian 011 Co Si1tc1 today that the country hoped to resume ex· Dr. Small To Appeal Decision Justices o f Lhe California Supreme Court will be a sked at a heanng to be scheduled later this wee k to strike down a restra1rung order that prevents Dr Ralph Small of Santa Ana from practicing medicine Small's attorney, Terry Giles of Santa Ana. filed the petition Monday in San Francisco. It a rgues that the order issued Feb 8 b y Orange County Superior Court .Judge William S. Lee 1s unconstitutional Small i:. accused in action taken by the state's Board of Medical Quality Assurance of in· co mpet e nc e and g r os s negligence in the treatment of two patients It is alleged that one of Small's patients died after un· dergmng plastic surgery It 1s al· leged that a St.'Cond patient con· tracted a near fatal mfection after treatment by the plastic surgeon. The order which prevents Small from practicing medicine went into effect Feb. 16. The Fourth District Court of Appeals JO San Bernardino earlier re· fused to overturn Judge Lee's order A spokesman for the Orange County District Attorney's Of· flee said today that the possibili ty that criminal action will be taken against Dr. Small is still under considera~ion. Con finned AP w1 .. ,_o Leonard Woodcock, former president of the United Auto Workers. has s urviv e d Senate opposition lo Presi· dent Carter's China policies a nd was confirmed by an 82·9 vote as the first am- bassador to Peking since 1949 School Split To Be Aired The pros and cons of spUtUn1 the Capistrano Unified School District Into two separate en· titles will be discussed in a forum l-0night s ponsored by the Cnpistrano Bay Area League of Wo men Voters. The league program begJna at 7:30 p.m. at the San Dle10 Gu an d Electric Co mpany auditorium. 1-01 W. Portal, San Clemente. Supporters or two dlslricta In· elude &mard L. Rlcketa ,.and Mary Ann Whittier . Araum~nta aaalnst the division wlll come from retired admlnlalrator Truman Benedict end Dr. J c r o me Thorna ley, CUSD superintendent vorls next week. selling the oil to the h1ghesl bidder. He satd the country hopes to gel $18 to $20 a barrel -com· pared to the current base price or $13.35 a barrel set by the Orgaruzallon or Petroleum Ex· porting Countries of which Iran 1s a member. No U.S. oil firms have said whether they would pay that price. That base price -subje<:t to some adjustment depending on the quality of the oil and other conditions had been scheduled to increase 3.9 percent April 1 as pa rt of an overall 1979 price boost of 14.S percent planned by OPEC Several exporting countries, however. taking advantage of ISRAEL REJECTS CALL TO SUMMIT--A4 CAR POOL PLANS ENCOURAGED -AS STATE ENERGY GROWTH OECLINES-A7 OIL SEARCH RENEWED OFF EAST COAST-84 the cutoff in supplies from Iran, have raised prices before the d e adline and boost ed them above planned levels. Kuwait, for example. announced a 9 per· cent bike Monday. Saudi Arabia. breaking with the others. s aid it plans no gene ra l price increase before April 1. The country previously raised prices on some of its crude oil, saying it was produc· ing extra to help make up for the loss from Iran and maintaining that the extra should be paid for at the April 1 price level. Iran said that when it resumes exports, it wiU sell to a nyone - including the United States whic h had been importing 900,000 barrels a day from that country. If the United Slates de· cides to buy from Iran at the same level as before the revolu- tion and if Iran gets the $20 a barrel it wants. it would cost $18 million a day or almos t S6 million more daily than it used to. The supply squeeze caused by the problems in Iran has been pushing up petroleum prices on the open or spot market. As a general rule. each one dollar in- crease in the price or a barrel of crude oil means an extra penny on a gallon of fuel. While most of the o il-produci ng countries whic h have announced price boosts so far provide relatively small amounts of oil lo the Unit· ed States, the combined effed has been lo tighten supplies enough to cause proble ms. J1 m Campbell. executive director o f Lhe Ca lifornia Service Station Association , forecast more increases ahead He said wholesale prices are ex- pected to rise eight or nine cents a gallon by the end of the year and predicted that the retail price of regular gasoline at self· service stations could reach 81 cents a gallon by Christmas . * * * Oil Pricing Sends Stock Market Down NEW YORK CAP > -The stock market fell sharply in moderate trading today in what analysts saw as reaction to con· cern over oil prices, inflation and lntematlonal turmoil. The Dow J ones average of 30 lndu1trial stocks tumbled 12.73 points to 808.39 In four houn of trading on the New York Stock Exchanae. after slipping 2.16 point. Monday. "The market ls finally bend· tng under the weight of negatl ve news," said Robert Stovall of Dean, Witter Reynolds. a Wall Street lnveetment firm. President Carter aubmltt.ed a standby energy rationlns plan to Con1rea In the w1ke of a world aq,ueeie on oll 1upplles which followed the ahutdown of lranlan flelda. The m1rtcet abowed Uttle rete· Uon to the Saudi Arabian an· nouneement that It would tem· porarUy bold to pnces .. t by t.be Or1anisaUon ot Petroleum Ek· porttnc Countrte1 tvtn tboulb other OPEC membera b1ve relied prtcee. Flipped Out Christine Harrison. a beauty queen from the north o( England, tosses her pancake to celebrate her selection as the winner of t he beauty contest in London's annual Shrove Tuesday pancake race in London. Hawaii 'Embargoes State's Pet Birds By JACKIE HYMAN 0t IM Dilly Pllol Sll tt Hawaii has put an embargo on pet birds from California as the result of an outbreak of deadly Newcastle disease in and around Orange County. a U.S. Depart· menl of Agriculture spokesman said today. • .Dave Goodman. public in· formatio n o ffi ce r for the Newcas tle Tas k Force of veterinarians set up in Santa Ana. said the pet bird industry within Southern California is also grinding to a halt. "Commercial bird farms have posted signs saying 'Keep Out - This Means You·." Goodman said. "No breeder is buying anything from anybody or mov- ing anything near his birds ... "People who are thinking of getting birds are not buying them right no w, a nd lhal 's good." he added. Goodman said he was told of the Hawaiian embargo this morning. So far, three birds have been diagnosed Wllh the usually fatal disease. which could devastate the caged bird and poultry in· dustries if it spreads. All three birds -cockatoos from Stanton and Paramount and a parakeet in Riverside - have been traced to the same Southern California wholesaler. Goodman said. However . he said 1t is n't known yet whether the birds berame infected there or were purchased from the same source In the meantime. he said. bird owners would be wise to keep their pets from contact with other birds or from anyone or even any vehicle that might have had contact. since the dis· ease can be transmitted by or· g_anisms in dirt. Goodman said it is expected to take at least a month to track down a nd test a ll birds that might have come in contact with the diseased trio or the pet shops from which they were obtained. An yone whose pet bird becomes ill should contact a private veterinarian, he said. A North Hollywood man and has two sons are safe today after their 65-foot schoonei: caught fire and burned Sunday night 3'h miles off San Clemente Pier. An Orange County Ha rbor Patrol spokesman said damage to the schooner "Arroura" was set at S20.000 and was confined mainly lO the engine room. The boat's value Is $100.000. Harbor Patrol Deputies Crai~ Beckwith and Fred Thomas ar· rived at the scene shortly alter 7:30 p.m. in a 28-foot fire boat. The blaze was contained in 45 minutes. h arbor patrol authorities said. Schooner owner Allen Orossin was aboard the craft with his two sons when the fire broke out. T he two young boys were set adrift in a rubber raft while their father battled the blaze in choppy seas The boat wa s towed to Oceanside Harbor by the Coast Guard cutter Point Hobart following the fire. No injunes wef'e reported. I',.._ Pop Al VIET ••• that a Chinese unit was cited for "meritorious service. second class for the timely completion of a pontoon bridge across the Blnh Giang River under heavy enemy fire" Feb. 20 near the county seat of Phuc Hoa, in Cao Bang province about 110 miles northeast of Hanoi. Hsinhua also said the first thing its troops do when entering evacuated Vietnamese villages 1s sweep streets. clean houses and feed livestock. The report. c arried Monday by the Hong Kong Communist newspaper We n Wea Po. seemed aimed at countenng Vietnamese charg• of Chinese at rocities in the in· vasion. An intelhgence source in Bangkok said the Chinese moved one division Monday into Quang N10h province east or Lang Son. the Vietnamese border city that has guarded the invasion routes from China for centuries. a nd that the Viet· namesc reinforced their border command with two battalions m the Lang Son area. Bangkok analysts believe the Ch inese m ay a lready have begun a major push around Lang Son . 80 miles north of Hanoi. But the Chmcse have been quoted as saying they have no intention of trying to seize the Vietnamese capital. China invaded with the declared aim of punishing Viet· nam for border provocations. But analysts believe the Chinese also wanted to draw Vietnamese troops away from Cambodia where they have been battling guerrillas loyal to the ousted pro-Peking regime of Pol Pot since Hanoi invaded Dec. 25. I Soviets Buy Corn WASHJNGTON CAP l -The Soviet Union has bought an addi· lional :J00.000 metric tons of U.S. corn for delivery this year. the Agriculture Department said Monday. Handicapped Goon Strike Reeelpts Taken EMERVVlLLE CAPl -Han· dicapped workers have struck the California Industries for the Blind following a breakdown in contract negotiations. Pickel lines were set up at facilities In Emeryville, Los Angeles and San Diego. About 100 workers represented by Social Services Unjon Local 535 of t.be Services Employees International set up picket lines. The dispute Involves wages and other taaues. KISSING CAUSE OF TOOTH DECAY? ADELAtDE, AuatraUa (AP> -An AdelaJde University aclen· U1t l1 trylq to determine lf k181· Ina cen 1pread tooth decey. Dr. Tony Ro1ers, a senior lee· tu.rtr ln oral blolOIY, Hid In a 1chool newsletter that ell)eri· menu Indicate saliva can traumlt decay or11nl1m1 from penoa to penon. Tiro Bandits Rob Tavern Customers Two men wearing nylon stock· ings over thelr faces and C8JTY· ing automatic rifles robbed a dozen customers and the female night manager of a Costa Mesa tavern of more than $500 Mon· day night. They held o ne c ustomer hostage in the parking lot unUI making their escape in a late· model wbJte sedan, witnesses said today. No one was reported Injured when the bandits entered from a aide door of the King's lM, 720 Randolph Ave., shortly after 9 p .m . and. brandl1hln1 their weapons, ordtttd the m&8-aer to put the cub rrom lhe register In a paper baa and the customers to place their walleta on the counter. One man toot the uck. con· talnJn1 the evenlt\1 '1 receipts • a nd collected money from the wallets while his accomplice pointed a rifle at the patrons and ordered that "no one move." The two men, who appeared nervous during their brief Ume m the tave rn. pointed tbear weapons at a young man and oi- dered blm into the parkilll tot. He wu released unharmed and returned to the tavern once the bandits fled ln their car wit- ne11es said. The robbery s uspects were described as black males of medium height and build In their late 20s. Each wore a nylon 1tockin8 over hla race and tuMl cap. One ol the mtm was dreued tn a brown leather j1cllet and dark pents, 1ccordJn1 to wtt- nesaea. Police were conttnuin1 a lf'arch today for the auapeda. - '7 Orange Coast EDITION l ., Your Hometown j Dally NewHpaper • VOL. n , NO. S8, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CJ\LJE.Q~NIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1979 r N TEN CENTS} ' For Better By JOANNE REV o a.os ()1 .... °""' ~ .... '~" OeJ)t'ndln~ on your point of view, Newport Ut>uch r1t~ l'oun cilmen either Mmoothed <>ut th(• rough s pots tn their traffw phm .. Ing ordinam•c Monday ur they just made a bad law wori.c Jn a 4·3 vote wtth council members Evelyn Hart, J ackw Heather and Don Mcinnis vigorously dissenting , coun cllmt>n .ipprovt"d ;t new ad m1n1 er tJvt' procl'durt• for lht• In" the) en~t·tt"d laNl ~ummt'r ThJt mea ure 1~ mt-ant to for<.'c builders to time their proJt'Ct5 to improvements 1n tht• lntffic system The key quesUon Monday was whether that's really what the law will do Representatives of the lrvi.ne Co chanced that the law 1s in· Worse, It's the tt>ndcd to compktely halt de· velopmt'nt Ont>, attorney Bob Hreuk, tunled that the rompany m1ty tuke legal action bab~ on inverse condemnation of Irvine land Hut residents who not only wrote the law but wrote the ad· ministrative procedure adopted by councilmen said that wasn't their aim at aJ I. 'Tm sorry I have to belabor t?11s osain ... snapped Jean Watt representali ve of LEAF <Legal ·Environmental Analysis Fund> and SPON <Stop Polluting Our Newport) "Those who spoke against this measure must not want to achieve any improvements in our traffic circulation." Her view was backed by Mayor Pro Tern Ray Williams who .deCended the measure and noted that IC. pro.vides "a means of measuring our discomfort In terms of traffic.~· Backers insisted that under the law a nd the n e w ad· ministrative procedure de · velopers will have opportunities to make street improvements that will then allow them lo build their projects. Law l But Mclnn;s wa sn't •ml pressed. "This is a bad law,'' he. declared. "It can't be correcte<t; with an administrative pro·1 cedure. 1 "It can be changed at a whim! on any second or fourth Monday 1 from now on and the way things have been going for the past six' months, you can bet your bottom! dollar that's going to happen." : I I 727 Noise Tests Called Failure Onl,y in Enaergen~g Gas Rationing Plan Approved WASHINGTON <AP> The Carter administration proposed a standby gasoline rationing plan today that assigns no specific amount to individuals and could be used only in an energy emergency. The fuel conser vation plan made public by the Ene rgy , Department proposes to ration gasoline by mailing gasolme al· lotment "checks" to owners of registered vehicles. These could then be "cashed m" for ration coupons al banks or other in· stitutions. The proposal is to be formally submitted to Congress on Thurs- ' day. Congress then bas 60 days to approve or disapprove 'it. The plan could not take effect unless the president declare d a na· tional energy emergency and won approval of its implemenla· lion by both the House and • Senate. Thoug h th e re had b een speculation the plan would limit individual motorists to two gallons or gasoline a day. it as- signs no specific amounts. This determination would be made · when necessary. depending on the available gasoline supply and the best current estimates of vehicle cons umption. Generally, however . s mall vehicles like motorcycles would get less than passenger autos. and heavy trucks would get more. Besides lhe gasoline rationing plan, the proposal includes pro· vis ions for fuel-saving actions such as restricting gasoline sales on weekends. restricting temperatures in commer cial and public buildings and by restricting unnecessar y ad- vertising lighting. Under a law pa s~e d by Congress in 1975. lhe president was required to submit such standby fuel conservation plans to the lawmakers. In anothe r developme nt , Energy Secretary James R Schlesinger told the nation's * * * Oil Pricing Sends Stock Market Down NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market fell sharply in heavy tradjng today in what governors that the adminis tra- tion is putting the finishing touches on a much less restric· tsve set or steps to deal with the loss of Iranian oil This "Iranian response" will include steps to encourage ID· duslrial plants to switch from oil to natural gas or coal and may suspend temporarily some en· v1ronmental requirements, in· eluding the one selling a re· finery timetable for switching to unleaded gasoline, Schlesinger told the National Governors ' As· sociat1on " * * * Saudis Nix New Oil Price Hike By The Associated Press Saudi Arabia. the world's largest oil exporter. said today it will hold off temporarily on any price increases. But American consumers already are paying more for fuel and may face gasoline rationing and service· station closings in the future. Energ) Secretary James R. Schlesinger told the nation's ISRAEL REJECTS CALL TO SUMMIT--A4 CAR POOL PLANS ENCOURAGED -AS STATE ENERGY GROWTH DECLINES-A7 OIL SEARCH RENEWED OFF EAST COAST-84 governors that the loss of oil from Iran is not reason e nough for rationing, but added that other mandatory. energy-saving measures could be imposed if the Iranian cutoff continues for ayear or longer. The new head of the National Iranian Oil Co. said today that the country hoped to resume ex· ports next week, selling the oil to t he highest bidder. He said the country hopes to get $18 to $20 a barrel -c:Om- pared to the current base price of $13.35 a barrel set by the OrganJzation of Petroleum Ex· oorting Countries. Stooping to Help A hydraulic device that will help the elde rly and the handi~pped board more easily is featured on this new Orange County Tra ns it District bus. It is one of 65 new, 48-passenger buses that soon will be ~ly ...... S!Mff - in service on routes throughout the coun- ty. (See related story, Page A9.) The bus can, in effect, kneel down to make that firs t step an easier one. Newport Firm Hit With $25,000 Fine Lido Isle Seeks Added Cop Service A Newport Beach engineering firm has been slapped with a $25,000 fine a nd its president given a 20-day jail sentence and five years' probation on a con· viction of illegally exporting technical data on rockets and missiles to France. U.S. District Judge Manuel Real denied a motion by defense attorney Ja mes McDonald Mon- day for a stay of execution pend- ing appeal. The same sentence was given out -and suspended -in 1976. when Vernon Edler and his firm, Edler Industries, were convicted of similar charges. a lso in Judge Real's courtroom. The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld their appeal at that time on grounds that"fhe statute under which the convic· tions bad been obtained was overly broad. A new trial was <See EDLER, Page A2) FACES JAIL TERM Newport's Vernon Edler Citing a marked increase in crime on Lido Isle, residents asked city councilmen Monday to reopen the city ball POiice s ubstation. The request came in a resolu· lion passed unanJmously at a s pecial meeting called last week by directors of the island's homeowners association. City Councilman Don Strauss, who deHvered the request to his council colleagues. said resi· dents believe that crime bas been on the increase since the one-man substation closed in mid-1976. The one-man s tation was maintained for about 18 months after the police department moved out of its city ball quarters and into tbe Newport Center facility ln the fall of 1974. • analysts saw as reaction to con· 1 cern over oil prices. inflalton and international turmoil. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks tumbled 14.12 points to 807.00 on the New York I Stock Exchange, after sUpplng ~us~g Talks Slated The substalion was set uo to mollify reside'nts of Lido, Balboa and central and west Newport wbo feared the re moval or the station would reduce police ef· f ective ne ss in their neigbborboosds. City officials closed the station after It proved too costly to maintain. Police said it was In· eWcient to have the single man on duty there because he was unable to leave the substation to respond to calls that had to be bandied by other patrolmen. , 2.16 points Monday ) "The market is finally bend· 1 lng under the weight of negative news," saUI Robert Stovall of t Dean, Witt.er Reynolds, a Wall , Sti-eet investment firm. I I • 1 Lolen outnumbered gainers 6 tot. * * * ~ntoU.S. BUU.ETIN W.um:NGTON (AP) -""91· lle•l Carter aaN &Mt aftenlell &hi ltrHU Prl•e Ml•l•&er School Trustee8 to Di8cus8 De8egregation . By JACKIE RYMAN Of•Deltyl'ttltSWf Two separate items concern· tng desegregation will come before Newport·Meaa school tru1tees tonight. The meetlna wUl begin at 7: 30 p.m . at Harper Community Center, East 18th Street at Tustin Avenue in Costa Mesa. The rmt of tbe it.ems will In· volve aettinc up a ciUsens com· mlllff to study minority 1rouP1 within the school district. School district spokeswoman Jean ijarmon said the commit· tee's activities will include re· viewlng tbe district •s annual re· ports of minority enrollment to aee if there la an unwarranted concentraLloo Jn any particular scbooll. steps to desegregate within their own district, such findings might later be used to justify the Metropolitan Plan. That plan is the subject or the second desearegation Item on toolgbt's agenda, a proposal that Newport-Mesa Join In Schools for Local Control, a consortium of 60·70 school dlstrlcta In four counties. <See UDO, Pa1e A!) Waddill Attorney Abeent at Trial Airwest Appeals FAA Rule1 By GARY GRANVILLE OI ttot o.11y r 1eec Staff The Orange County Board of Supervisors declared the testing of Boeing 727 jet airliners at the county airport a noise failure to· day and ordered the test discon- tinued effective March 15. Simultaneously, a spokesman for Hughes Airwest said the company has appealed an FAA order changin g takeoff pro. cedures at the airport. That order was blamed for the ,larger jet aircraft failing to prove less noisy than smaller jet airliners used by the two com- mercial airlines that operate at ' the airport. In the early test period and I following a takeoff procedure in force at the airport for the past eight years, the 727 noise test re-' suits showed the larger aircraft l to be less noisy than its smaller counterparts. But when the takeoff pro- cedure was changed Feb. 14, noise measuring devices at the airport showed the 727 to be at least 10 decibels noisier than the other aircraft used by Hughes Airwest and Air California. When movin(i? for the cessation of the tests, which ironically goes into effect the day it was scheduled to end its 90·day trial. Supervisor Thomas Riley said: "It is clear that the 727 neither meets its original test objective of being no more noisy t han the historical noise average for the DC 9. Nor can it operate with less noise than the DC 9 with both aircraft using the new takeoff procedure. <See NOISE, Page A2> JOBLESS JU.TE DIPS IN COlJN'IY The unemployment rate in Orange County rose to 4. 7 per· cent in January, figures re· leased by the state Employment Dev e lopme nt De partme nt <EDD> show. But despite the .6 percent in· crease in unemployment from December's all-time low of 4.1 percent, the county e mployment scene drew favorable notices for I statisticians for EDD. Story Page A9. ' ' i 4 Coast f I t Weather Chance of showers in- creasing to 20 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight 43 to 48. Highs Wednesday low to mid 60s. I INSIDE TOD.4 y TM 31th amuol reunion of World Wor II veterana woa a nlghl of nonalgia. TM event . IJ)OMOm1 bl/ tM Coata Me1a Hittorlool ~I/. "'°' Mid 4t Or~ Cocut College'• StuMnt Cnler -tM aome pr~ that woa once part of tM SOnto Ano Air Bo.tt SH FNt1'1inQ, ~ Cl. . ., a ... , .. M l ' l ·1 I · Meaa-. ..... wUI antYe • WHttc • ..... ndaJ • .,_ a The committee, to comply with 1U1te law, mu.st report back to the dbtrict to that trustees by July 1 can devtae atepa to eliminate 1e1re1aUon lr any la found to ex!tt. II n . Harmon sald th< study~ required by the •tale Board of Education. ll not related to the proJ)Oled MeuopoUtan Plan to bua atudenta between diatrlctl ln several Southern Californb counties, includJng Orange. However, abe Hid, district of. flclala are concerned that once they have Identified certain school• H se1re1ated, even tbOQlb they prol>Olt adequate The purpose of that mem· bersblp, which would cost the dlatrlct $1,000 a year. ls to Joln with otbera to hlre expert le1al counael, said Superintendent John Nicoll. Jurors in the Dr. Wllllani W addlU baby·slaylna trial were sent home today wbdeo the doc- tor'• atto~y. Charle• Weed· man, falled to ahow up ln court after be complained of chest paln•. "' •• • a ,,....,,,. .. at Ille Wld&e a" • ., ... ..., 1no1.-1a ~reaW.W. Ill llJddJe Ea1t 119aee &alb. CEulier l&erJ, A4 ). • I ' . ; • ' ~. • ' ' • ' l ' • ' Or. Nicoll aaJd a Jaw firm 1pectalliin1 In conalltutional and (8" BUSING, Pase A.I) A panel ol 12 Juron ba• been picked' to try the c11e, and alternat.es were auPl)OMd to be cboten tbl• mornln1 before openma arrumenta. . ~ ...... _ • t I f , t ... , •• ... , M lt4 ...... ' t A.2 DAIL V Pll.QT N Chinese Halt Viet Drives VIETNAM • Luc Soi. TOKYO tAPl -Vlet.nam t: lroope have n!peatedl~ croNed up to 10 mU lulde China the peet few days, bot each tJme ha v~ btu drlven b1ck bf. Chin~ frontier troops , the o · fl cial llalnhua news ageftcy re· Portt'd today ftom Peking APWI,....... On Sunday. a battalion or Vlel- namtt~~ troops attacked a com mune cm the Kwamust border but Chintlse soldiers and mllltJameo fought buck, wiping out some In· vadln.c trool)8 and driving the ro8t l>u<'k acr~¥ the border. it bald lo on ~ Incide nt Chinese •Oldlen killed 68 Vietnamese troops and captured one, It said. On another occasion, retreating Vietnamese troops left more th an 30 dead a nd wounded bcbmd and a vanety of weapons Including two Soviet -made rocket launchers. it said. ARROWS SHOW FIERCE AGHTING IN VIETNAM Carter Urges '$pffdy Wllhdr•wal' by Chin• Meanwtule, Vietnam said to- day it.s forces were locked in combat with th e Chinese 15 miles inside Vietnam along the northern banks of the Red River . The Vietnamese also claimed 2,200 Chinese soldiers were put out of action over a four-day period. Waterfront Bluffs Plan Gains Support Inte lligen ce s ources i n Thailand said that China ap- pears to show no intention of withdrawing a nd has even moved to reinforce troops along Vietnam's northeast front. A process begun la~t ~ummcr moved nearer to completion Monday as Newport Beach city councilmen gave preliminary approval to a Jaw to control de- velopment on waterfront blufls. Routine final action on the measure is expected al the March 12 council meeting. The law would go mto effect 30 days later. The law was prompted by Dr Eugene Atherton and his No- vember ballot measure which would have created blufftop strip parks in future develop- ments. City councilmen got involved prior to the November election 1n an attem pt to head off i\therton's measure by writing a more fl exible city law that would accomplish the same end. The city effort proved fruit- 1 es s . bu t when Athe rton 's measure was defeated, coun- c ilmen renewed their attempts to produce a bluff ordinance. The measure approved unan- 1 mously Monday would apply lo three large l rvine Co. parcels a round the Upper Bay and the development firm's property in the coastal a rea south of Corona del Mar if that area is annexed by Newport Beach. The law defines as a bluff any landform with a SO percent slope or greater that rises 25 feet. Grading of blufrs is prohibited. The l a w a lso conta ins a formula for calculating the dis- tance from the bluff edge that houses must be set back, with the minimum distance being 40 feet. The measure also contains a complicated formula for pre- serving what is called a skyline view. or what a person standing at the base of lhe bluff would see looking up. That provis1on limits the Frowe Page A J UDO ... Bul the Lido Isle resolution d eclared "the previous ex- istence of the police• station at the city hall and the widespread knowledge of it ser ved as a crime deterrent.·· Strauss. himself a Lido Isle resident, said residents recently have become alarmed at the "reporting of the first rape on Lido, several assaults and rob- beries. It's new and different for Lido Isle." heights of the first row of build- ings nearest the bluff edge to an average of 12 feet. The bluff ordinance s pecifies that parkland along the bluff edge will be maintained ln a natural state and that recreation oriented parks should be located away from the bluffs in the center of blu!f top develop- ments. The law also calls for use or native and drought resistant plants in landscaping near the bluff edge. An Irvine Company r epresen- tative at Monday's council meet- _.r"i.qgpa.id the firm wasn't unhap- py-' with the new Jaw, although there were questions about the need for the 40.foot setback and the skyline view provisions Jn his most blunt comment on the conflict, President Carter called on China to undertake "a speedy withdrawal" from Viet- nam. The request was in a m essage given to top Chinese leaders by Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal, who is vi.sit· Ing Peking. Hanoi claims to have killed more than 16,000 Chinese since the invasion began Feb. 17. In- telligence sources consider the kill count inf1ated. China has not given casualty figures, but in Tokyo, Japan's Kyodo News Service reported classified Chinese reports list about 17,000 Vietnamese "wiped out" In the first week of fighting. The news service attributed in- formation to Chinese sources in Peking. Council Action In action Monday night, the Newport Beach City Coun· til : BLUFFS: Gave firs t approval to an ordinance to regulate development on waterfront bluffs in the Upper Bay and any Irvine coast areas eventually aMexed by the city. TRAFFIC: Approved another administrative pro- cedure 'for implementation of the traffic phasing or- dinance. CAMPAIGNS: Took final action on a new city law restricting campaign contributions and requiring more de- tailed reporting of donations and expenditures in city coun- cil and ballot measure campaigns. NEWPORT SHORES: Agreed to a plan to prohibit parking on one side or Colton, Lugonla. Walnut and Cedar streets. BOATYARDS:' Upheld planning commission approval of plans submitted by two different boatyard owners in which office buildings would be built on half of their properties. Walter Shrewsbury Services Conducted Memorial services were con- ducted Monday for long-time ranche r Walter Shrewsbury, who was a member of one of Orange County's oldest families a nd a San Juan Capistrano resi- dent for more than a half cen- tury. He died Thursday at t.he age of 88. w ilderness a rea and kept journals about the wildlife he en- counte red on these nature walks. Mr. Shrewsbury is survived by his wile, Vera; a brother, Lynn; a son, Allison, and a grandson, James Gregory, all of·San Juan Capistrano. Also surviving are a granddaughter, Lisa Shrewsbury Thomas, and a great-grandson, Dustin Thomas. both o( Palm Springs. Tbt omcaaJ Voice of Vietnam Radlo sald the most concentral· ed ttthtln1 was In the Cam Duo nc Provin ce ulona the northem reache!I of the Red River corridor, the vital river. rail and road llnk that runs from the northweste rn frontier to Hanoi. the capital. The broadcast , monitored here. said two Chinese com- panies were wiped out ln Lang Son Province, northeast of Hanoi, on Monday. It sald anothe r 250 Chinese soldiers were killed or wounded the past two days in Phong Tho Marina For Mesa Supported By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of tlle O.Uy Piiot S\Mf Costa Mesa 's push for a 3,000-slip boat marina along the Santa Ana River has drawn sup- port from the mayors of Hunt- ington and Newport Beach. T he marina on the city's "nice to have" list for more than 20 years-also has environmen- talists worried about destruction of a rare salt marsh that's home to an endangered species of sea bird. The budding d evelopment versus environment battle may go no farther than the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which still plans for a m arlna-less flood control channel ~long the river bed. A Costa Mesa subcommittee comprised of councilmen DoM Hall and Dom Raciti will ask Corps officials to consider the marina at a public hearing Wednesday night in Garden Grove. "I think it's a fantastic idea ... says Huntington Beach Mayor Ro n Pattinson . "I think the mar ina is down the line a long ways, but I 'U lend my assistance wherever I can." Pattinson backed Costa Mesa's hiring of Ken Sampson. former county di r ecto r or Ha rbors, Beaches and P arks, to serve as a city consultant for the marina bid. A more cautious endorsement cam e Mo nday from Paul Ryc koff, mayor of Newport Beach. "I believe our council en- dorsed the plan several years ago and tbere·s been no official change," he said. "We're not involved directly," added Ryckoff. "My personal reeling at the moment would be neutral, and probably favorable. If the traffic impacts prove favorable." Barbara Massey, a member of Amigos de Bolsa Chica, a Hunt- ington Beach-based environmen· talist group, is less concerned about traffic impacts on the Harbor Area if the marina is built. "We've already des troyed many valuable salt ma rshes to build marinas," she said. "and this is one that can be restored." Mrs. Massey served as a coun- ty biological consultant for a re- port on least terns. a sea bird so named because it is the smallest of the tern family. The e ndanger ed birds a re making a comeback because of a fenced-off nesting a rea near the mouth of the river. The birds fa vor the Hunt- ington Beach s ide of the river for their feeding a rea. Although the proposed marina would be bullt on the Costa Mesa side, Mrs . Massey believes the marina could still have a negative impact on the least terns. "The best kind of environment would be a healthy salt marsh," she said. district of Lai Chau Province. Phon1 Tho ls 15 miles inside Viet n am and 190 m iles oortbwe&t of Hanoi. In MO!Scow. Soviet Politburo member Andre P. Kirllenko sald their Vietnamese alltes were "rebuffing" the Chinese in- vasion on lbeir own, but repeat- ed the pledge that they also "have reliable friend~." if need be. Kirilenko closely adhered to the wording of a nine-day-old Krem lin s t ateme nt which warned China to "stop before it is too late." He gave no hint or Leonard Woodcock, former i>resident of the United Auto Worke r s, has s urvive d Senate opposition to Presi- dent Carter's China policies and was confirmed by an 82-9 vote as the fi rst am- bassador to Deking since 1949. Frowe PGfle .4 J. NOISE ... "Accordingly. it is dear that the board is obliged to conclude that the 7'!:1 has not passed the test." Only Supervisor Ra lph Clark opposed the board's move. Clark objected to Hughes Airwest not being dis missed Crom the test ·'without preJ- udice." The Anaheim supervisor said it should be clear that under the conditions in force at the time the 90-day test was approved last D ece mb e r the 727 performed properly. He said the company should be free to resume some sort of a test program when there are in· dicatioos there is a chance for success. Airport critic Da n Emory ac- cused the airline company as well as some me mbers or the board of supervisors of knowing of the FAA _plan t-0 change the takeoff procedures 3t the time the test was approved. To that charge, Riley said "that's a complete untruth." Supervisor Ra lph Di edrich, however, said be was aware of a FAA circular questioning the safety inherent in the takeoff procedure. The 1'!:1 carries SO percent more passengers than the planes now used for air travel al the airport. 1bose who favored the testing al the airport argued that it could provide transporta- tion for more a ir travelers without increasing the number of flights at the airport. It was also a rgued by Airwest spokesmen that the three-engine jet would prove to be no noisier than the DC 9s that fly from the airport on a restricted basis daily. what trught happen 1r the f1ghl· ln1 conUnl.th. "The Soviet Communist Party is firmly convinced that a world war Cln and must be averted. and is using the migbt of the Soviet Union, its lnnuence and authority" to avert this possiblli- ty. Kirilenk.o aid. At the United Nations. the Security Council pos tponed de- bate on the hostilities until Tues- day night. No ofllclal reason was given. but apparently the time was needed by delegates seeking to draft a resolution calling ror an end to the fighting Rites Set For Doctor, Teen Son Funeral services will be held Friday for Huntington Heach physician Carmen Yuppa, 43, and his 15-year-old son, Terry, who lost their lives in a traffic accident near San Bernardino. Dr . Yuppa and Terry were re- turning Sunday evening from a weekend skiing trip to Mam- moth with four other persons when their van was struck from behind by an out-or-control truck and traller The Yuppa vehicle overturned eight times before coming to rest at the center divider on Stale Route 194 in Cajon Pass. about 10 miles north of San Bernardino. California Highway Patrol of- ficers sald the truck-traile.r rig lost all. of i&;; brakes on the mountarn gra<le. Officers said that both Dr. Yuppa and Terry. a sophomore at Marina High School, suffered m assive head injuries. They died early Monday of their m1uries at San Bernardino Com muruty Hospital. Dawn Yuppa. 14. who was along on the outing with her father and brother , suffered cuts and bruises. Others injured in the crash were Lola Ann Hanson, the driver of Dr. Yuppa's van, and two friends of the dead Yuppa boy, Robert McNeil, 18, and Mike J ed· nak, 16, bothofHuntington Beach. Dr. Yupp a h as been a longtime Internist in Huntingtoo Beach. He was described by as- sociates as a major guiding force tn the development of Pacifica Community Hospital. He was a co-owner a nd presi- dent or its board or directors. Or Yuppa is survived by his wife, Linda, of Hu ntington Harbour: daughter, Dawn ; mother, Mildren Digragorio, and sis ter , Jean Yuppa, both of Sacramento. A rosary will be recited Thurs· day at 7 p.m. at St. Bonaventure Church, 16400 Springdale St A funeral Mass will be conducted Friday at the church at 10 a.m. Burial will follow a l Good She pherd Ce m ete r y, 17952 Beach Blvd. A friend says the family plans to establish a memorial fund in Or. Yuppa·s memory al Pacifica Hospital. E',....PogeAJ EDLER ... ordered. Monday, Edler received a sus· pended two-year prison term on condition that he devote 1,200 ho urs to community service projects during his probation. Assistant U .S . Attorney Theodore Wu, who prosecuted the case, said today Judge Real denied a stay of execution of the sentence, saying he saw no basis for appeal. A p o li ce d e partment spokesman indicated that the sexual assault referred to by the city councilman isn 't the first re- ported on Lido. Mr. Shrewsbury was born in Orange and worked in a mining operation in Arizona before he entered the armed forces in World War I. He was wounded in France and spent a year after the war in a Los Angeles hospital recuperating. In 1923, Mr. Shrewsbury a nd his brother purchased a ranch in San Juan Capistrano. It was located along Del Obispo Street near the present day Vermuelen Ranch Market. ,,...------Kitty Up a Tree----------.... ORANOECOMT .. DAILY PILOT ffillt" Ot ... CM \l o.tty Piklit 'IW1lftWftW'ftK<f'" ,,..,..,,,.. __ '-.. _ ...... l)•l"tO.- ""'" Pvt111_C_ St-•lf,.,.l"""M• N l>tl\IW<I -.., I"'-f'rMl•Y IC>< CMIA -.... '"-1 -h, -llnq!M 11<>4'CIVl'- lti't#\V*tt.y trvtM l ~ftN<" \owfft (ot\t A "'NJl~r~l~t~t\~ISlw>CSS.,vrd.-n#'CI \""44tY' '"""' CW-1N...,,..I ~j\J\l"f o4..-.I "•t U0 Wf'\I ft•Y \ttfft (O\le ,..,,.WI C•htorftl.t•,.,. ·-... -..., ... ,.~"' .,.. """''\N'f ... The two men o pe rated the ranch for almost SO years. Mr. Shrewsbury also owned and operated the old Flying A Service staUon formerly on the site of the present mini park on Camino Capistrano in downtown San Juan. He retired in 1962 and the service station was closed. He was fond of walking and h iking through California's Fro•Pa~AI BUSING ••• e ducatlonal law would be employed to advise the dlstrlcta on the best manner in whlda to respond to the proposed Metropolitan Plan. Schools for Local Control wUl be admlniltered by the Santa Monica Unt.ned School Dlatric:t in cordunctiOn with an execut.lv• com mil tee e lected by the member d_lst.ricts. ( A Beal Cat-astrophe By .IEllllY CLAUSEN ot ... Deity Pllet , .... When 17-year-old Theresa Martin called the Daily Pi lot 's Huntington Beach bureau Monday about a cat s tuck in a tall, tall palm tree for three days, il sounded like a great istory. \ THE AFrEllNOON was slow. "Nobody," said Theresa, "will get the cat down. It's been up there for three days, just meowing and meowtn1. We don't know who it belongs to. "Yes, I've called the Huntington Beach Fire Depart-. ment. Yes, the Huntington Beach Humane Society, too. And the police de- partment and the county anlmal shelter. "Can you get someone to help?" AHA THOUGHT I an animal fn dire atralt.s. And no pubtlc reapoftff. Checkln1 for myself. I learned from the fire department that It no lonaer aend• ladder trucks ror animals in treetop dlatresa. Too costly. and too CLAUHll danreroua to tJe up a rig that ml&bt be needed In a real emercency. Le. John FOiler of the Police department waa undid., "If the Fire Department won't do it. well, we won't either. ''Cats come down. tn IS years, I've never bad a cat starve to death in a tree. They always come down and make fools of those who try to save them ." said Lieutenant Foster. A SPOKESWOMAN for the .i:ounty Animal Control Department up in Orange said there was nothing her de- partment could do either. "Our men aren't insured to climb trees, and we don't have al\)' long ladders. l suggest putting food at the bottom of the tree and leaning a ladder In piece. "Maybe the cat will get hungry and make a try for the ladder. Nothing else we can do. Sorry." Great stuff, I thought. Animal lovers wlll be outrateed. r grabbed my camera and searched the map book for Fairway Lane where the cat. descrlbcd as black and whlle, tiny and cute was up a tree. AS I HEADED for the door, the phone rang. Should I take the time to answer when such a great human interest photo wu juat a ahutter'1 snap away? It wu Theresa. "Jerry," she bubbled jURt 15 mlnutes after her nrst call, "I doft't ftffd your help. The cat just walked put m,y house. Il ao great. He cot down by himself." Lleutmant Foster, you are oae sman cop. ' . • • ' . . • t .. . • y • ' I • • 1 ' " . • • • I • • • ... . ' =-1 • • i .: ~· :1\ ... I ' . ~ ·\ ~ '1 .c ' ~ d .: ~' !t"' I' ~ i • i I "" ..! I - r I . It's a Bird ••• No, it's a senator. Sen. John Tower, R·Tex .. to be pre· cise. doing his thing at a party in Dallas where guests were dressed as comic strip characters. Up, up and away? litter Tax Ban Costly ~roposal By DAVID KUTZMANN Of -0.11, ~I ... S~tf The state is ready to discard a major port.ion of its litter tax, but Californi a bus inessmen could still end up paying the full $18 million tab. Lt. Gov. Mike Curb was ex· pected to sign legislation1today that exempts thousands o busi .. nessmen from having to pay th"e levy and pushes back the-due date from Wednesday to Oct. 1. The stale Senate paved the way Monda¥ when it ~oted 32-1 to go along with Assembly backed amendments in the law that will excuse about 475,000 businesses that would have had to pay the tax Wednesday. Another 125,000 companies still will have to pay the assessment in October. state Board of Equalization spokesmen said . However. the Legislature has until July to come up with an alternate proposal or all busi· nesses could be liable again in October Curb. who 1s acting chief ex- ecutive while Governor Brown is out or stalt>. indicated late Mon- day he would sign the legisla· lion. The offices of lawmakers and the State Board of Equalization ha d been deluged with com - plaints from mostly small busi· nessmen who h a d ret'eived notices in the mail the past several weeks telling them of the upcoming litter tax assess- ment. An equali zation board spokeswoman in Santa Ana said th e businessmen complained mostly of overtaxation at a time when government is supposed to be cutting back. Stale Sen. John Nejedly, R· Walnut Creek. who authored legislation two year s ago establishing the litter tax. in· troduced the amendments to stem the rising Ude of criticism that had greeted the arrival or the tax bills. a spokesman for bis office said. -The legislative remedy sent to Curb for his signature will sub- stantialJy reduce the number or businesses wb.icb must pay the tax, but won't bite as deeply into the projected revenue the tax was expected to generate. A state tax official told the Daily Pilot that 425,000 retailers in the state along with 50,000 m anufacturers and wholesalers who employ fewer than three people will be exempted from paying. The 125,000 businesses which must pay the levy are those manufacturers and wholesalers who employ three or more people. Officials estimated the state would lose about $6. 7 million of the projected $18 million in litter taxes with the eltemptions. An e qualization board spokesman in Santa Ana said be didn't know the number of busi- nesses in Orange County that would be excused from paying the litter levy. ( Pilot Logbook ) Momentous Event Down to Earth By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tlle oatty ,..... Slaff One of the most awesome events in history as mankind knows it occurred Monday morning-actually two-since in addition to a total eclipse of the sun, I dldn 't have to go to work and could watch the TV coverage. YINKL CUTl'ING A SWATH of momentary midnight across the broad belly of the North American continent. the eclipse da rkened busy city streets, bucolic farmlands and all that path of earth beneath it. Starstruck travelers came from thousands or miles to best view the laat such phenomenon of this century at Goldendale, Waab., Uke the Three Wise Meo who made their pilgrimage to Bethlehem. SCIENTISTS WATCHED in silence in Goldendale, said to be the world's best vantal'e point for obeervint tbe breathtaldng blotting out of Old Sol by the earth's shadow, precisely positioned In space. · Newsmen marveled at the lmages beamed from varioUB spots as "totaUly" advanced acl'OS8 America. More humans cheered u lhou1h at a major league balJ game In Portland. Ore., and everywhere, automated street light.a came on. as darkness fell on day. Sitting ln my easy chair with another more modem marvel m.,tant oatmeal-the true momentousness of the aatronomtcal show flnalty st.nick home. THE TV NEWS COMHNTATOa satd It wlll be Aug. 21. In the Year of Our Lord 2017, before the Creator's celestial playthlncs repeat their abow. And t.Mt means 31 yean from now. ju.st 18 months before our modest Oranae Coast condoml.nhtm mort1qe 11 paid off, TU1!!98X. February 27, 1979 DA ... y PJLOT A3 Pet Birds Enihargoed Newcastle Duease Blamed for Hawaii Move By IA IUE HYMAN Of -O.My 1'1194 awtt HawaU has put an embarao on pet btrds from C&ll/ornla as the result of an outbreak of deadly NewcuU di1u•ase in and around Oran1e County. a U.S. Depart- ment of Agriculture spokesman said today. Dav~ Goodmon. public ln- fo rm •tlon o rficer for lbe Newcaalle Tas k Force of veterlnarhans set up in Sant? An•, said the pet bird industry within Southern California is also gnnding to a bait. UCI Prof Tells EPA Of Hazard The UC Irvine scientist who h e lp e d discover that fluorocarbons destroy ozone in the stratosphere told the· En- vironmental Protection Agency today that another chlorine com· pound is endangering life on earth. Dr. F. Sherwood Rowland re· ported to an EPA panel that m ethylc hloroform, a com- mercial cleaning solvent used on electronic equipment and metal machinery surfaces, "may soon require regulation." Rowland's studies in 1974, with Dr. Mario Molina. of the hazards of fluorocarbons from aerosol propellants and refrigerants, led to an existing ban on the com- pounds. The problem w ith rtuoro· carbons and othe r chlorine carbons like methytchloroform. the chemistry professor said, is that they release free atoms of chlorin&into the atmosphere. The chlorine atoms drift up- ward into the stratosphere, the zone of the atmosphere six to 15 miles above the earth's surface, and react violently with ozone, destroying the substance. The earth's ozone layer is responsible for screening out ul- tra v lolet rays from the sun which are harmful to human skin. The rays are believed to be the primary cause of s kin cancer. Ozone reduction also can lead to c limatic chan ges and biological damage to plants and other animals. Rowland testified that among the c hlorine compounds, the prime aggressor of the ozone layer next to fluorocarbons is t h e c l ea nin g age n t , m ethylchJoroform. Rowland carried out measure- ments or methylcbJoroform with University of Tokyo colleague Yoshihino Makide. Insurance Increase Plan Opposed "'--By REBECCA HELM OI ttlf Oelty ~1194 S~lt Orange County's Transporta- tion Commission voted Monday to oppose pending state legisla- tion that could increase car in- surance rates as much as 30 per- cent for some county residents. The proposed legislation would eliminate the currept criteria of basing insurance pre- miums on driver-accident rates in geographic areas. Instead, a statewide a verage premium rate would be in- stituted. The proposed rate revision was pointed out to the com- mission by Commissioner David Brandt. He is leading a coun- tywide drive to fight the rate changes. At Brandt's urging the panel ordered that a resolution be sent to the state ins urance com- missioner prior to public bear- ings scheduled, in Los Angeles March 7 and 8. Los Angeles County officials are supporting the rate revision. Premiums for the low income a reas of their county are b.igber than rates set for the suburban areas here, and Los Angeles of· ficials claim the present system d iscriminates agains t low· U'lcome area resldenu. Under the statewide-average system, rates for Orange County motori.lts would increase sub· stantlally to compensate for a corresponding drop in Los An1eleaCounty,aald Brandt, who is a Santa Ana clly councilman. ell man. According to projection.CJ by the Automobile Club of Southern California, the bligest effect of ellmlnaUng geographic ratings would be felt in La1una Beach and oth.-r parts of South Orange County with a 31 pe~nt annual increase. N ew1>0rt Buch a nd Coata Men driven would get a 20 per· cent locrease. Fountain Valley and Huntington &ach driven would lncur a J7 percent hlke. "Commercial bird farms have posted signs saying 'Keep Out - This Mean• You'," Goodm~ said. "No breeder ls buying anything from anybody or mov- ing aQ,)'lhlng near his birds." "People who are thinking or getting birds a re not buying them right now. and that's good' .. be added. Goodman said he was told of the Hawaiian embar go this morning. So far. three birds have been diagnosed with the usually fatal disease. which could devastate the caged bird and poultry tn· dustries if it spreads. All three birds -cockatoos from Stanton and Paramount ~and a parakeet in Riverside - have been traced to the same Southern California wholesaJer, Goodman said. However, he said it isn't known yet whether the birds became infected there or were purch ased from th e same source. tn the meantime. he said, bird owners would be wise to keep their pets from contact with other birds or from anyone or even any vehicle that might have had contact. slnce the dis- ease can be transmitted by or· ganisms in dirt. Goodman said it is expected to take at least a month to track down and test all birds that might have come in contact with the diseased trio or the pet shops from which they were obtained. Anyone whose pet bird becomes ill should contact a private veterinarian, be said. To Face Music Dad, Sons Safe After Boat Burns Preside~'s Sister Arrested AMERICUS, Ga. CAP > - President Carter 's sister, Gloria Spann. is free on personal re· cognizance bond a fter being cbarled with illegal harmonica playing. "Obviously I have less talent than I thought." Mrs. Spann said Monday night. She, her husband, Walter. and two other people were arrested Saturday night at the McWaffle rest a urant. s aid Americus police. "I am charged with: 'Defen- dant was playing a harmonica. When asked to stop J>laying music refused lo do so and kept .on playing'," Mrs. Spann said in a telephone interview from her Plains, Ga., home. "Walter is c harged with: 'Defendant was asked to leave building, but refused to do so un- less placed under arrest'." she said . "I'm r eading from Walter's ticket." Mrs. Spann said she and a dozen friends had gone to the restaurant "after a musical evening at my house." and on~ of the group dared her to play the harmonica. She said she bad been learning to play it for about a month. "l went in playing. By the time I sat down, a girl came over and said, 'You can't play that thing in here'," Mrs. Spann said. "My husband said, 'Play me another tune,• so I played some more." The four arrested were sitting together in a booth, she said. Police got a complaint from the restaurant's assistant manager , who said patrons couldn't hear the jukebox, said police officer Mae Davis. She said she asked the Spanns to leave, but "they sajd they paid for their food and weren't leaving," so she called for help and a lieutena nt arrived and made the arrests. Mrs. Spann was charged with disorderly conduct and others in the party were charged with failure to leave when officers re- quested, Ms. Davis said . She said the Spanns are to ap· pear in Americus Recorders Court. on March 12. Mrs. Spann said she was play- ing the Ha nk Williams tune, 'Tm So Lonesome I Could Cry." ..~.,,..,.... SOUR NOTE? Gloria Carter Spann A North Hollywood man and bis two sons are safe today after their 65-foot schooner caught fire and burned Sunday night 3'h miles off San Clemente Pier. An Orange County Harbor Patrol spokesman said damage to the schooner "Arroura" was st>t at $20,000 and was confined mainly to the engine room. The boat's value is $100,000. Harbor Patrol Deputies Craig Beckwith and Fred Thomas ar- nved at the scene shortly after 7:30 p.m. in a 28-foot fire boat. The blaze was contained in 45 minutes. h arbor patrol authorities said. Schooner owner Allen Drossin was aboard the craft with his two sons when the fire broke out. The two young boys were set adrift in a rubber raft while their father "battled the blaze in choppy seas. Doctor to Appeal Close of Practice Justices or the California Supreme Court will be asked at a hearing to be scheduled later t his week to strike down a restraining order that prevents Dr. Ralph Small of Santa Ana frotn practicing medicine. Small's attorney, Terry Giles or Santa Ana. filed the petition Monday in San Francisco. It argues that the order issued Feb. 8 by Ora nge County Superior Court Judge WiJliam S. Lee is unconstitutional. Sma ll is accused in action taken by the state's Board or Medical QuaUty Assurance of in- c o m p e t enc e and gross negligence in the treatment of two patients. It is alleged that one of Small's patients died after un- dergoing plastic surgery. It is al· leged that a second patient con· tracted a near fatal infection after treatment by the plastic surgeon. The order which prevents· Small from practicing medicine- went into effect Feb. 16. The Fourth District Court of Appeals in San Bernardino earlier re· Tax Credit Backed ~~~~~.to overturn Judge Lee's SACRAMENTO (AP) -Leg-A spokesman for the Orange islation to give welfare recip-County District Attorney's Of- ients the benefit of the state fice said today that the possibili- renter tax credit this year m-ty that <'riminal action will be stead of next year bas passed its lakep against Dr. Small is still first committee test. · under consideration. THOltISON. corduroy collection Storekeeper Mark Franklin is wearing one of many Thomson corduroy slacks. offered in three styles and seven colors ... comfortable. casual and classic. 26. to 30. .._....,I. 10~ lt'Vmt", Ntwp(lrt Bt'Mh C.J1fom1A. f'honf 642 ruo1 > • ' • I • • , • • Ii .. t " . \ Jut Coa tin (;;, & wiCb~ Tom ~Yf'l'\\' ~1arpblo~ Th Bad Old Days STOP 6 aoa DEPT. We've bad ao many bank rob· berle ln our coastal N'llon lb e day• that mott tolkl have 11.0pped counun1 Most rttently. • tavlna• and loan aot knocked over ln Newport'• Corona del Mar ntlisbborhood, re ulllnic In lh, abrupt demise of one rob btr Wllh all thl6 1oln1 on. lt'a bard to '1'all1e lhat Newport • Bearh once CDJOYed a lt-nattl'IY ttretch wttbout a alnale bank heist To ht· pr •C'I f', ,wport Bcarh wt'nl from Jan. 13, 1912, to Nove mber of t!Mi4 wtthout a ban\ robbery a span of some 52 years How Umc~ huvt-r hanged. Nl!.'"WPOllT'S lllZ BANK JOb was a real chuillc. A pair . Yeggs F'leeing in Early-day Getaway Vehicle• of safecrackers knocked over Lew Wallace's old Newport Bank down on the Peninsula at 22nd Street. According to accounts from old·timers, the two yeggs drank in Newport saloons until the early morning hours of Jan. 13. · The miscreants then staggered out into lhe streets and down to a barn where they confiscated a horse named "Dandy" and a buggy belonging to one Roland G_Gbrlest, who operated the nearby electric lighting plant. Gbriest recalled some years later, "Pretty soon we beard the explosion when the robbers blew the bank safe. Two other fellows ran from the saloon, grabbed their shotguns and started blasting away ... " Newport histories identify the brave citizens as saloonkeepers Charley Grau and Billy Hall. NEWS ACCOUNTS OF the day reported that Newport s treets were then filled with "much promiscuous shoot· ing.'' One local fisherman named Bradley Kemble tried to dash through the streets to safety and got hit with a load of number S buckshot for his trouble. . Meanwhile. somebody had contacted the sherilf ln Santa Ana. He dispatched a posse, which galloped down toward Newport. Meanwhile, further, the robbers were making good their escape with Gbriest's horse and buggy. LOCAL WAGS LATER suggested that the posse must have passed the fleeing horse and buggy somewhere oo the trail between Santa Ana and Newport. Gbriest's horse "Dandy" was later recovered in the town.ship of OUve. Nobody ever saw the bank robbers again. The yeggs, however, bad stuffed their loot into the horse's nosebag and lost most of the $3,100 taken in coins during their galloping flight. Clearly, crime didn't pay even in 1912. ·Knievel Quits Tour; Australians~ appy SYDNEY, Australia (AP > - Stuntman Eve) Knievel says he ·s canceling his Australian tour because or inadequate facilities, and about 5,000 dis· gruntled Aussies seemed happy lo see him go. Knievel failed lo appear at a performance Sunday night in the country town of Griffith, and S.000 spectators, many or whom AtlMll'IY Albu'q~ Am•rltlo Asllevllle', AOa111a I eantmo~ 8lnnft9ll~m Bismarck 8olH 8"10!' &vflalO ClllUqo Cln<lnMll Ctevetaf'ICI Cotumbu~ Oal Ft. Wiii Oe11•tr OesMol,.., Detroit Oullllll Falrtll\U Hettfte H-ulu Ho<nlOft lnd'•Pol'' Kaft'S City Las veon Lltt1e Roell LMA"9el• Lo..lsvlll• l'Mmptils Nham I M ll••ukft ""91 .. St P. He~vllle HewOnns Hew Yorll Okie. City Oma ... Pllll.O' .,.. P""1tlt1 Pltllb<lrQlll Ptl•llG,Me PUend,°'9 ... ,.., 0.-, ,.. o.lt..ry ......... , ~nl\cl.ty ,,..,.., tt fQll 00 no! - ¥O<I' -0..' JO t'"' ( .. I befl'I'•, 0 .. •"<> """' l1JIOI> -~ lie '"'~- : ...... ~ -!!.-..., II ye., 00 llCf r..CC..... '!Olf U '°f l>y t I "' ( ... 1)9h". ti • .. -'°"' (Olly .... De 0411t-H • bad driven long distances i.n the s ummer heat, responded by chanting, "Go home, Yankees, go home." Evel told reporters today that he called off the tour because some of the st adiums were dangerous and added, "The pro- moters are not providing spec· tators with any toilet facilities, grandstands or lights ." ' NATION I WORLD Israel Nixes Summit Bid Cabinet's V 6te Means 'Grave Concern' in lJ.S.- JERUSALEM <A P ) -The laraoll C1bln11t rejected today an American tnvltallon for Prime Mlolster Menachom 8 1ln to attend • Camp David eummlt meetlna. plun1inc the 15·month old peace proceu to one of lta lowetit depths. Bea In uld lul week 's mlnlatetiaJ level l&llr.1 al Camp David proche«"d no prosreas. lie acc used th• Eayptlans of hardenlna tbel r po1ltlon on t erma tor a Mid east peace truly. Hired Gun Suspect Captured CLEVELAND <AP) -An 18·year-old youth accused or ac- cepting S60 from two teen-agers to kill their father was captured- after he leaped from a second· s tory window and tried t o escape, authorities said . J erome Walkins. who had been hunted ror a week. was ar· rested Monday when he dropped from the window into the arms of wailing officers, police said. HE WAS ARRESTED oo a warrant for the murder of John White Sr., an auto plant worker s lain Feb. 9. The warrant was is· sued after White's children - Michelle, 14, and John Jr., 17 - told police they bl red W aUdns to kill their father, detectives said. Acting on a tip , police searched a 12-suite boarding house and discovered that W atkins had gone out a bathroom window of a second· floor apartment, L1.. Edward Kovacic said. Watkins crawled across the roof into another apartment win· dow. crossed a hallway, and went out another window. drop- ping to the ground, where police were waiting. detectives said. POIJCE SAID THE youth was held in the city Jail pending fil. ing of charges. White was shot to death when be returned home from work. Police said Watkins, who bad been offered $60 by White's children, was waiting with a .38-callber revolver when White came into the house. CD}MONAU'TS GO TO WORK MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet COS· monauts Vladimir Lyakhov and Valery Ryumln began a new work _program in space today after docking their Soyuz 32 spaceship to the orbiting Salyut 6 s pace s tation. It was the seventh linkup by a manned spaceship with the space station in the 16 months Salyut 6 has been in orbit. Lyakhov a nd Ryumin were sent from Earth on Sunday, and there has been no indication how long they would stay. There is speculation that they will be joined soon by an international team. probably a Russian and a Bulgarian or Mongolian. 111<reMlno ctoudlness tonigllt •"" WtdMIMY •1111 • sllgM c-• Of ~nleter~y. ll9llt .. arl•l>te wl1tOS 1tl9llt anel rftOrltfftt 110un. Hi9M WednHdey llt tfleftllel60L GoHt•I ''"'"'et ..... s wm ,..,.. belW .. tl ... •Itel 61, ll'll81t0 tt • I peraturtl Wiii renee •'-" .. , 11\d ~.TIM w.W. t~tture wlll De S7. s-, ... .., ,,, ••• TUISOAY St<Mll.... J.Jol ...... -o.• a.<OflCI """ 10· 11 ...... u wtl*llOAV ""' ._ 4:0h ftl, O.J f'tnt 111911 10· 11 •·"'· s.1 ~-4.S)Jl9\. .... IKMt Noll to. M ,._m. S.J lvfl r1Jett1Ha.m.,wnJ·••·"'· MOOft ,._ , • ., • ""· ""'1~11,.lft, S•rlR.-n """''"""' ...,.. --..... " rwri... ~..,. ... , .. .,...., ;THE TALKS WERE to have been bt ld without EgypUan President Anwar Sadat. who re· portedly fell bis presence was not neceaaary. In Wuhlqt.oo, a senior White House official said the lniUal White House reaction "wu of arave concern about what the decision means for the peace pr~esa." ·1 The official, who asked not to be named, said the admlnlstra· lion wants "to make sure we have all the Information on what decisions ""~re made" btfore commenting publicly. Begin was believed to have sent a personal message to President Carter. IN CAIRO~ PRIME Minister Mustafa Khalil said the next move was up to Carter. ··Is lt I who extended the in· vitation? Let him who extended' the invitation talk to Begin," be told The Associated Press. He denied that Egypt bad toughened Its stand. "Egypt's position has not changed. We did not present any new proposals," he said. ~ntrary to Begin, he said there wu progress at last week's Cabinet that lo t.boae talks oo tallr.aalCampDavid.. progress was made toward an Ano THE CABINET meet-Israeli· Egyptian agreement," tne. 8e8iO said: "The Cabinet Begin said. decided that the prime mini.stet' "ON THE CONT&A&Y a la not in a position to accept tbe more extreme po1ltion was Pre· propoaed meeting with Prime aented by the Egyptian delel•· Minister Khalil." The ~ote tio.D " agaJnst Begin gotna was 14·2. G B'e·e n said 6e was still Begin mused to answer ques· "prepared at any Ume cooven· tiooa about the six·bour Cabinet lenl to President C~~ter to meeting, but an insider said only eave ror the United States to Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan meet with the preaident to dis· and Defense Minis ter Ezer cuss the peace process and Welzman voted in favor of the bilateral relations between summit and that Begin voted Israel and the United States." against it. Begin appeared solemn as be TBE INSIDER SAID the read the Cabinet statement t~ general tone of the Cabinet dis· newsmen. cuaslon was to criticize Egypt's . "In addition to the previous peace proposals, not Sadat's Egyptian proposals. which were absence from the proposed sum· unacceptable to Israel, .new pro. mit. posals were made wbacb were Begin said Dayan bad report· inc~nsistent with the Camp ed to the Cabinet on President ~avid agr~menl of SepL 17 and Carter's proposal that Begin and m fact nullified the meanine of KbaW meet at Camp David with the peace tr~~ty between the Secretary of State Cyrus R. lwo countries, he said. Vance. Dayan bad returned Through Israel made from five days of talks at Camp counterproposals, Begin said, David with Khalil. "Prime Minister Khalil in.slated "It; is now evident to the on the Egyptian proposals." Second Storfl Assaulted A wave jumps the sea wall and strikes the 20· to 25-knot winds shifted slightly to the second floor of a house on Stony Beach north as lhe tide came in, keeping the Road In Hull , Mass. A weather service seas from building even higher during spokesman said it could have been worse : high tide. .. You ·Can't Tell The Players · . Without . . A Program ·' Television listings change. Networks or local stations shuffle programming many times after the typical TV magazines are printed. Tonight's Daily Pilot brings you the freshest listings of television programming of any newspaper published in Orange County. Turn to the television page for Tube Toppers -a r? mini-guide to choice viewing, and listings for Los Angeles stations, both Public Broadcasting stations KOCE channel 50 and KCET-28, plus ABC and CBS channels in San Diego. Television listings in the Daily Pilot ~re computer collected and updated daily. You'll find even last- m lnute sports event changes in each evening's Dally Pilot and again Saturday mornings. On Sunday, TV Week offers the most convenient guide to Southland television with listings, news and features. To keep up with television program changes, people all along the Orange COast rely on the DAILY PILOT 642-4321 .....,.,. llMdl· --...,,. ..... ,._. c.NltteMe11utlellt '--------------------------------------------------------------------------------' • .. • " . ·~ . • • 1 • I. "' .. IO Le u = •n. ~ .... .. , ~ G -= ... = • I ~\ I I 1! 11 II I ; ' ti •' CONSUMER I AT YOUR SERVICE &~ Y!@C!D[[ ~®rrWD©® "Col o prvblt m" N11·ra "nit• t11 flut l>Mnn Pot u.ill cur rt'd IUJ'«'. 11dtm11 rh uniu n llnd •k' tacm you nf'"CI 10 •olt't' 11'c'(Ju1r1l' 1n 911t'C'rr1mn\I 011d l>M.Y111e'' Mod llOMr qwatiutLt to l'ul Uunn, ..U Yrn.r ,\en•1u. OronOf> COOlt Ootl~ l .. lot. I' C> Uti.r JJlll), c'11s10 Mno. CA mM A,s manv l11tttr1 al pt>1st/)l1 u tll bf' OttlUJttt'd, but l)hofacd mquint1 or lrttt-rs "41f mclwbng th rf0dn"1 full rsomt. <ltldrt•u and bu..fmt•ti hml~· pholle numb.-r cannot bl' ro11.ud r1·d Thu rnlu m n oppeor t dot 111 uc~ ~urdoya " · R•l-d .. .,,... I• C'e•l•r•l•fl DEAR PAT Wt• p:u d S28 62 for M comforte r from Mon.•y ' t'ubr1<·~ of Vun Nu -. at the Oranac Drive In wnp mt'l'l lu t St·plt'mt~r Arter dis covering ll WH the wronft "llll', "l' took it back (or a refund Mo rl'y'i. n•prf' ... f'ntallve gave-us a "Returned Kin~ Sm~ Comfortt•r · nt'eipl for $28 plus tax and MUd tht> rt•fund would be mailed lo us. We still haven 't r <'l'tvf'd 1t. and hope you can help T 8 . lluntington Beat'h Morey•s Fabrics has malled a rerund check to yoa. Motty's was under tbe lmpre Ion U.at ti.e tt· fuad llad bttn given to you by iM ttpreseatatlve, bat a clleek of records lndJcated Jt bad been &em· porartly overlooked. Net All Pro•tlwflr• Ta~ Free DEAR PAT: Can you tell me whlch prosthetic devices are exempt from state sales tax? I'm partic:ularly inlerested in finding out ir orthopedic shoes are taxable. R.G .. Costa Mesa Ortbopecllc shoes and arch supports are not ex· empt rrom state tax. but orthopedic braces worn for support or correction of the body structure are. Prosthetic devices granted exemptions include those clHlgned to be worn to assist the fuctloning of a natural body part, such as artificial eyes and replacement parts, breast prostbe~s. colostomy sappllH, wheelchairs. crutches. canes, quad canes and walkers. Dentures, bearing aids and eyeglasses are not esempeed. To quaWy for an exemplJon, some of tile l&ems mast be prescribed by a physician or podiatrist or furnished by a bealtb facWty on iM order ol ACb profeuionals. Specific items can be claecked by pboolDg the st.ate Board or Eqaallza. tioa at 558-4151. · B...,,,_r A la"" Neem Ser"lre DEAR PAT: We bought a house that already has a burglar alarm system installed. Do you have any maintena nce lips for alarm systems? We weren't given any instructions by the previous owner K.R .. Santa Ana Knowing how to operate and care for an alarm system Is almost as Important as having one in the first place. Experts say that nine out or 10 alarms trans mitted are false, and half or these mistakes are camed by improper operation or the system by &be owner. U )'"Ml can't ge& instructions on the system by &be previous owner, contact tbe manufacturer or asll &lie belp of the poUce department. Wiien ac· Uvatlag any alarm system, one sboakl make sue pets are removed from pro&ected areas and win· dow11 are cloled. Don't treat the system like a toy or show it off to friends. It's important not to operate ao alarm system on the same electrical clttai& as llitd1en or heatlDC and ~lDg appUuces. Tbe cyclic opera· tlon or tbe appUances could toacb off an alarm. Also, some sensors have sensitivity adjustments. Don't set them too high or you could activate a continuing series of alarms. l..alesuit /tlafl Not Fft Ca•e DEAR PAT: I told someone who owes me money tha t I was going to sue him. He told me to forget it because he and his family are "judgment proof." Wh at does this m ean? K.W., Fountain Valley It means tbJs person bas nothing that anyone can legaUy take away from blm. A family would be Jndgment proof if, for example, they live on Social Security, have less than $1,000 deposited lD a savings and Joan association, have an old, inex· pensive car and have a homesteaded house with an equity of less than $20,000. It ls possible to be judg. meat proof now, but have lo pay Judgments, in· cl•dlDg attorney fees and court costs, la&er on. Thia would be tbe case in the above example if the family was given or inherited money or property or the bead or the family went back to work. Seflirtg lloue? Bllfl Ille Book DEAR PAT: I've had my house listed for s ale for several months with a real estate company. 1 ·ve decided to try and sell it myself. Is there any rererence book that would give me some helpful advice? J .R., Costa Mesa .. How to Sell (And Buy> Your Home Witboat A Broker," by Kennelh Gaines, will give yoa a few pointers. This book Is published by Coward McCann, New York, and it's available through the cot1nty Ubrary system. l'ietnamese Flee Vi etnamese, including young girl carrying a baby. foreground, flee southward a long Highway One as fighting flared along the nearby frontier with China. Photo was taken by As ahi Shimsun correspondent Kazuhisa lkawa during a recent visit to the area . Parks Set Tickeu Program S AN FRANCI S CO (AP) -A pilot program of advance reservations will begin this summer at three national parks, including Yosemite and Seq uola-Kings Canyon in the Sierra Nevada. Tbe U.S. Park Service bas signed a one-year contract t o have Ticketr on handle ad· vance reservations for those California parks and Grand Canyon in Arizona, announ ced Howard ff. Chapman. th e park servic e 's western regional direc· tor. Reservations may be made at Ticketron out· lets. in person a t com· puter terminals at the three parks or a t park service offices in San F r ancisco and Los Angeles. Reservations for the period May 25 through Sept. 3 may be made up to eight weeks in ad· vance beginning March 30. Mail orders must be received at Ticketron's San Francisco office at least two weeks in ad- vance. Reservations for a maximum or one week <.'an b e mad e f o r particular parks and campgrounds but not for s pecific camps ites. Chapman said. For quick results, set your sails for the Boat- ing classified ads of the Dally Piiot. 642-5678 , Tueadlry. Fet>ruwy 'Z7 1979 DAIL y PILOT AS Carpool Drive Up ped Old Idea Gains Renewed Support By The AllC>flac.ed Press Double up America! That's the mes sage the Department or TransPort.aUon Is trying to get across in its cam· palen to persuade drivers to join carpools . Federal officials have been boosting carpools since 1973 when the oil embargo sent s upplies down lbe and prices up. INTERt;S"f IN THE IDEA BAS fluctuated, however. As memories of the long lines at the gas station faded, so did the enthusiasm for carpools. Commuters got used to paying 60, 70 or even 80 cents a gallon for gasoline; they switched to smaller cars and continued solitary drives to work. Then came the revolt in Iran. Another supply problem. Predictions of dollar·a·gallon gasoline. And new support for carpools. Surveys by the Department of Transp()rtation show that just under 73 million people went to work by veb.icle -public and private -every day last year. Almost three-fourths of the commut~rs -52.3 million people -drove to and from the Job a lone. .. IF YOU A~VME THE VEHICLES, on the average, are four.passenger, each bas three emp· ty seat s." said Ed O'Hara. a d epartment spokesman. "That's over 1!i6 percent of the seats could be filled with people livtng and working in the same area. That would be 78 mJllion sea~. We don't have 78 million people to put in those seats .. · · ·O'Hara conceded that carpooling can mean in· convenience. "Some people might have lo walk several blocks ... he said. HE ALSO CONCEDED THAT FILLING even 50 percent of the em ply seats is an unrealistic goal. Supporters of carpool programs say . they think that in normal limes -when there is no gasoline sbortagtf -the number of people sharing rides could be boosted by only s percent. What would happen if the times were not normal? No one knows for sure. But.. O'Hara notes, "There's a tremendous capacity out the~.'' Indivtduals willing to put up with a little incon· , venience can save hundreds o( dollars a year by carpooling. The Federal Hii,pway Admjnistration calculal· ed last year that the annual cost of commuting to work. alone , in a subcompact car with a daily 1 round·trip of 20 miles was $500. And that doesn't count parking. I IF YOU TEAM WITH SOMEONE else. alternating the driving chores, you can cut your annual commuting cost to $27!i. a saving of almost 4S percent. Form a four.person carpc)ol and you save nearly 70 percent. You also may qualify for a discount on your auto insurance if you join a carpool since you will be driving less. And you may get a break from traffic; some areas have set aside special highway lanes for use only by vehicles carrying more than one person. There are two ways to carpool and savings de· pend on wh1ch you choose. You can share the driv· ing, with each participant using bis or her car, or you can share the riding, with one person doing all the driving while the passengers split C<\Sts . Successful carpooling takes work. Many com· panies have organized formal, computerized pro· grams. Others rely on volunteer efforts to match up potential carpoolers. Either way. It is up to the participants to set up schedules and stick to them_ Ir the driver gets sick or is on vacation, it should be his or her responsibility to find a s ubstitute. LAV DOWN THE RULES OF RIDING in ad- vance. Will detours for errands be allowed ? Whal about extra passengers? Will the drive to work be a time for conversation or for reading the paper? The government has prepared a pamphlet to help figure out the potential savings from carpool· ing. The nine-page booklet, "Rideshare and Save -A Cost Comparison," Includes a detailed worksbeeL U i9'8vailable, at no charge, from the Consumer Information Center. Pueblo, Colo., 81009. Ask for publication Sl.2G. ' I COROLLA LIFTBACK. EmA EXTRA EXTRA Check out the stickers. including California emissions and destination charges. The s&.88 TOP SIRLOIN 01 PRIME RIB DINNER . Special ...... , ..... .,71 Ol\-tht-Mall at South c:o.. Piasa Near the Caro.el °"it.it...,. Lewi. For raervadaM mil: 540-1111 r • I AND PINTO HAS All THIS: STEEL-BELTED RADIAL TIRES AM RADIO (may be deleted for credit) ELECTRIC REAR WINDOW DEFROSTER TINTED GLASS ALL AROUND PROTECTIVE BOOYSIDE MOLDINGS FULL WHEEL COVERS DELUXE BUMPER GROUP BRIGHT WINDOW FRAMES FRONT BUCKET SEATS MINl·CONSOLE COLOR-KEYED CARPETING 2.3 LITRE OHC ENGINE 4-SPEED MANUAL TRANSMISSION RACK AND PINION STEERING FRONT DISC BRAKES STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD STANDARD VAWE·IESI ITNOWAT 10llR IAFORD You'll find the 3-door Pinto Runabout is sticker-priced $976 less than the Toyota Corolla Liftback for comparably equipped models. And on the 79 Pinto you get a new design, inside and out. Plus an impressive list of standard equipment. All at a surprisingly low price. *Stici<er price excludes tllle and taxes. ·' • FORD ' ii 1 " • Oranq Const Oa11y Pilo t Editorial Page· ............................................................................ • TUQday. February 27. 1879 qot>ert N . Weed /~obllsher Thomas Kett11ll/Edltor Barbara KN11bicti1Editorlal Page Editor upervisors Show D ent Restraint Orange County ~upervisors t st k rorrected an lVt•f'!ll,::ht not of thl'lt own dei i«n when lhey aave m~l 1..'<>unty t'oiplo)'t."' ~~percent pay raise Undfr term · or a mulU year conltu t signed ln 1977, Lhe ram~ Wt'I'\' dut• lll t July l But whl'll state lt.\gtsl tors pa~M'd out PropostUon lJ H il out monl'y to locul gov~rnmenu,, they sQld locnl gov .?mment workl'nt \hou ld ~cl no more 10 p y rinses Oum state ~mpluyc ·. Tht:n. wtwn Go" f;dmund Brown Jr vt!lot-d 1>lut~ pay r~1s the coullt) Y.Ofk l'l"b gut nottung de pitc th cootruct tha t gu.., rnntt.~'ll tht•m 5 ~percent f)ll)' r u1es . The Statt• Suprt•nw Court decaded the Lssue whe n 1t recently rult>d s tate ~uvemment cannot ~rce local gov ernments into ur~ukang j good faath ('Ontract in sul'h lligh handed rash1on Consequent!~. rount> upt>n'bors corrcctc.'<I a wrong whe n tht~y uuthor1n'<i the pay raises a nd made them cetroar t1ve to July 1. 1978. Supervisors also deservt? a s ltght pat o n the back for declining to give themselves pay raases ln the $8 million pay hike package they approved. No doubt th ey were motivated by the possible ad· verse public reactio n to giving themselves a salary boost. None the less, it has bee n two years s ince the supe rvisors have had a pay raise. And the ir $29,898 a year salaries are Jus t slightly more tha n half what their counterparts in neighboring Los Angeles County are paid. New CalTrans Tune CalTrans Oirt!ctor Adriana Gianturco's proposal to s pend an additional $1.8 billion on California highway projects over the next five years indicates the public out· cr y over th~tate of the highway system has struck a nerve in Sacr mento. Ever si the ill-fated Diamond Lane project that followed her appointment to the transportation post by Gov. Brown, Ms. Gianturco has been accused of withhold· ing highway funds on the misguided as~umplioo that iD· convenience would d iscourage driving. In the earlier s tages of the dispute, s he virtually ad· ··milted this, presumably re flecting the opinion of the Brown adminis tration . . Now Mc;. Gianturco stoutly denies an anti-freeway 'bias and says s he would like to add $1.8 billion to the $6.3 billion already earmarked by CalTran s for highway and trans it system use. The catch is that half this amount would have to be o btained by increasin~ weight fees for trucks, a move tha t failed to win approval in tbe Legislature last year. Since almost every district in the state has fallen far be hind in highway con struction and maintenance, the scramble for 3ny n ew dollars will be a hot one. Orange County alone has a $53 million shopping list in hand. While the change in tune may be strictly a political m a ne uv(!r on the governor's part, it's at least mildly en- couraging. Maybe they'll e ven put some light bulbs back in the freeway signs. This past weekend the freeway lighting syste m hit some sort of a new low when even tbe sign to the L.A Airport offramp on the San Diego Freeway was blacked out. Afte r the bulbs are in. maybe -just maybe - t he re 'll be some money available to relieve long-suffering Costa Mesa from the miseries of that promised but un· built freeway that digs a deep and ugly scar through the cente r of the city Scout§ Win One T he Sea Scouts have won a round in their fight to pre- vent the s a le of the 71-year-old ket ch Argus tha t has served as their training ship in and out of Newport II a rbor. Responding to pleas from the community, the Orange County Council of Boy Scouts of Ame rica has turned down a $35.000 off er foe the 68-foot vessel and promised the Sea Scouts it will not be offered for sale for another year. During that period, backers of the Argus will have to prove it is being used for educational, not just r ecrea· lion a l, purposes and also come up with som e cash on t he line to help foot the $8,000 annual cost of maintenance. T he Sea Scouts we re dismayed last year to learn that lhl' counc il had agreed to sell t he Arg us. which carried mo r e than 1,000 passengers on training trips in 1978. for $50.000 Hut tht• would-be buyers reduced their offer after a trial tru1~c during which 1l becam e apparent <with a little h ·Ip from the scout c rew> that the old Danish vessel is I ull of quirks a nd less than easy to handle. 'fhat J,t1:tvc the scouts and their friends a chance to plc<td for <.inother chance for the Argus . Now tha t '!' been granted, the scouts hope supporters or their ~t!afaring exploits wtll chip in to help keep the Ari?u.., afloat • Opinions expressed '" the apace above are thOS@ of the Dally Piiot Olher views expressed on this page are tho&e of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Piiot. P 0 Boir. 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Memory By L. M. BOYD Claim 111 that female sex hormones relate in .ome way lo memory. Supposedly. they work in such a manner so u to fix an f'venl in lbe mind. thus enabling il Lo be remem· ~ar Gloomy Gu Ca n 't h~lr withing those UC students could havt given all the t•gs they th.rew otr 1 roof ln their experiment to chtldren who nHd them or some of tbe oldtr folk who are tat· ·Lng dog food Whal a WHte! M.K.L. bered permaMntly. Or that's the contention of a mcdJcal researcher aft.er lengthy ex· perimentaUon with animals. What's suggest ed here I~ there's some reuon why a woman recalls things a man doesn't. Ulte the night of the New Year's Eves party, l aup. pose. Or the Ume the old boy called the mot.ber·ln-law a nitwit. Or that Incident wherein the pretty lltUe wallreu loooceotly ad· drused him as "Honey." Momenta like that. Q. "Any truth to the claim that m.ost babies are born ln the early hou.rs of the mom· ln ?" 1. So says a Brltlab medico wbo checked out 1,300 de· liveries. Between 3 and 4 a. m. proved to be the peall tJme for blrtba. Then the)' fell off for most of t.be day before plckiq up acaln at about 8 p.m. Preaumably tbeae were natural bbtba. in. duced blrtba occur more nearly when t.be doetors wut them to. I Carter Turn§ the Other Cheek W ASHINOTON -In the af· t ermatb or aluonlna aloba1 eveo&.a lbal cblpped away at re- matruns U.S. prat.lge, there waa Mlt·COQ(l'atulation at the White llou11e that Jimmy Carter bad not followt'd the course taken by Gera ld f'ord ln the 1975 Mayagl.M't affair. PrnaJd nt C~rter commented privately that if he had sent M ari ne & t o Tehran lo pro l\"ct lb~ U S em baaay. h e wo uld have woo popular plaud.1ts but rasked c a11ualta es s urpassi ng the number of rescued Americans <Gerald Ford's experience in using force agalnst Cambodia to retrieve the S.S. Mayague z and its crew> Among Carter's aides, there is no known dissent from this view. SUCH r estr ai nt is the watchword of the Carter White House, both substantively and sym boli<.•a lly . The emphasis against sending the Marines to Ira n derived from the s ame mindset that determined Carter's silence after Mex.ican President Jose Lopez Portillo's toast insulted both Carter and bls country. While dangerous and unex- pected events across the world have surely cracked the com- placency in the White House, the president is not asking his fellow Americans for sacrifices. His Georgia Tech speech. intended to reassure the nation, again emphasized restrainL TURNING the other cheek to the Mexican president's insult on the same day lhat lhe U.S. ambassador Lo Afghanistan was murdered and the U.S. embassy in Iran was stormed precisely mirrored the White House mood and its deficiencies. The lack of any suspicion inside the White House that Lopez Portillo would· , violate good manners and diplomatic custom was viewed Mailbox by some senior administration ofncla.ls as inexcusable. And once tbe Mexican caunUet wu t.hrowD down, wb,y did Cart.er respond only wttb his self-demeaning ''Monte zuma 's revenge" joke about getting diarrhea from Mexican food <an "ad lib" that would have been 1mmedi,ately edited out lf the State l>epartment bad known about il)? The easy answer is that Carter, a Southern Baptist and born-again Christian. was turning the other cheek. Yet. Jimmy Carter ls no softy. His own aMes talk about bis ''ateely-eyed stares" as sl>OWo In nationally televised news con· lerences. At the moat recent pre11 coolerence. be snapped, · "What la your quesUon?" to ln· terrupt a thoughtful question by Roy Betts of Johnson Publlca· Uoos about energy conservation. Such rude treatment or a news conference questioner by any president ls highly unusual. THAT by no means suggests t bat the president is a bully who s colds young reporters but quakes before the president of Mexico. Carter's icy wrath has been felt by many adminlstra· tion otncials. from White· Howle aides to four-aw 1enerall to cabinet officers. In meeting Lopez Portlllo's re· buke w\lh pf atlludes and smiles, the president is reflecting the guilty mood of this first post . LBJ. poet-Nixon, posl· Vietnam adminlstration. "I think we all want to avoid returrtinc to the macho presidency," one aide told us. "Macho'' long ago became a pejorative a mong politically conscious young peo. pie, who carried the concept Into the administration. One young Democrat wbo was an early Cart.er supporter but bas since become critical, was content with the president's lack of response ln Mexico City. As Jong as Carter bad no advance warning of the Mexican insult, he told us, "I was just as pleased that he held bis tongue instead of attacking Lopez as a 'tin·hom greaser'." SIMILAALY, domestic aides to the president we re pleased that he rejected national se<:t.:?i· ty adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski's advice to send a naval task force as a show of support for the shah of Iran. "I lh.ink the world bas changed enough Lo make such a show ineffective," said one such aide, apparently unaware of the political Impact or Soviet naval displays around the world. The st.ate of mind at the White House disputes tbe possibility t bal Jerry Ford's Mayaeuez operation, however botched and bloody. was an essential morale booster for an American public demoralized by the Indochina fiasco. This president reJects such showing of the nag to re· capture lost American morale. Apart from morale, a presi- dent wbo predictably will tum the other cheek for reasons of theology. policy. or both - makes life more certain for the gentlemen in the Kre mlin. If they never were quite s ure whether Kennedy, Johnson, Nix on and Ford would suddenly choose force, they can be certain -on the experience thus rar - that Carter will not. Why Waste Our Nuclear Technology? To the FAiLor: These days, the bard facts remind us that our resources are sharply limited, the joy ride is over. Yet here we go, playfully ready to squander one of our moat valued resources -our nuclear power technology. We have developed this proven, efficient source of power through a n e norm ou s inve1tmenl. An o pe ra ti ng experience of many hundred plant -year s show s a n exceptional safety record. Now Mr. Zimmerman (Mailbox, Feb. 18) wants to throw it away, even while we spend a billion dollars every few days on foreign oil for fuel. WASTE DISPOSAL is the focus of the attack this time. No doubt tbb has been made lnto a touchy political problem. But it is more political than technical, and the re are reasonable t.echnkal solutions. Can anyone imagine that this ls an engineering problem of the magnitude of bringing In Alaskan oil? In real life, we go Art Hoppe on doing much harder things, without any fanfare at all ?tfany energy sources have a place -nuclear. fossil fuel. solar, hydro-electric and others. But let's d istinguish what each can do. I dou't think anyone visualues a full-scale solar power plant operating in the next LS-20 years. Even if it were eventually built, it would bring environmental problems we haven't begun to think about. Like lhe problem of covering the landscape with ma ny square miles of reflectors, or the need for e normous quantities of cooling water. Geothermal ene rgy too bas a place. But have you heard the protests or the people w ho Ii ve near the proposed power sites? The Pilot could perform a public service by bringing us exact information on potential sources. A good place to find it would be In the local engineering firm s who build power generating equipment. These people Will build the plants for whatever e ne rgy option ls chosen, and they can give you an even-ha nded view. We badly need some straight answers on a subject that is so clouded by emotion. L.T. CARLETON l11mtatio• VaHd To the Editor· We feel it important to respond to Ann Christoph's let· ter to lhe editor <Feb. 13 > COD· ceming lbe article Ms. Romo wrote about our experiences in the Solomon Islands. Ms. ChrisLoph criticizes Ms. Romo for including. ". . lhe name of the village and its exact location ... <whic h > gives anyone reading the paper the op- portunity and incentive Lo in· vade the private lives of a vulnerable people." WELL. the invltalion was . printed by Ms. Romo at our re- quest! The invitation is not from us. but the people or Polomuhu village. The invitation was re· pealed by the islanders we met. not only in the capil.01 city, but also in other villages. The gen e ro si ty and hospitality we received was ex- tended. as it would have been to a ny American visiting there, in the hopes lhat more Americans would visit the Solomons after hearing or our experiences. The Solomons h a ve ex· perienced detrimental outside influ ences from early s lave traders to the Japanese occupa· lion in World War 11. yet they have maintained their dignity and culture. As or July 7, 1978 the Solomons are an indepen· dent country and the new gov· ernment is well aware or lbe un· s p oile d beauties and open ho s pitality or their islands. Thus. they have adopted strict entry and visa regulations which are sl<iuncbly enforced. PATTY ANO PA UL ROBINSON • utcen from r~ an welcome. The nght1to conden.te ~ttn-1 to /11 ipace or ebmmaU Ubf!L " rek1"Ved. Lf!ttn1 of 300 words or ~n will be gi~n prefnmce. All ~tten ma...i include !ignature and maUing ad· dre,. but name• ~ bf! withheld on reqiuilt if .ufftdent rea'°" " ap-parent. Poetry will not bf! pMblWwd. With Friends Like Us; Your Future Is Assured It was following the most re· cent change of governments in fTan lhat the State Department conducted an exhawlive review or American successes abroad since World War II. The result was a bold new foreign policy that was to make the U.S. the most feared and respected force in world affairs. Named for its Innovator. Depu· ty Secretary Al Janus, the ingenious lecbnJque was launched by a telepone call to the vlc· torl o u s Ayatoll a h Khomeini. "Hi. there Ayatollah , •1 s aid Janus . "This Is the U .S. Stnte Department calling and, boy, do we ever have good news for you I " ,.ARA I" cried the Ay1tollah. "At lut you tnfldela are remov· Inc your lmperlallsUc noae1 from lbe lntemal aflalrs of our 1lortoua Islamic ~public.'' "Not exacUy,'• said Janus. "After supporting the sbab for 38 years, we were dreadfully ~rry to abandon him an order to achieve a stable government. For five weeks. And it really hurt us Lo have to abandon it when you put the beat on. But no hard feellnas . In the period of turmoil that lies ahead, you can count us to back you to lhe bill." "By Allah ," said the Ayatollah suspiciously. "ia that a threat?" "Now, look, Ayatollah', l know our intelligence basn 't been JOO percent on the button lbetie put 30 ye an. But. honestly. Cblana Kat-sbek wu no more surprised than we were when .. the Com· munlsts kicked him off the mainland despite our alt-out help. As Prealdent Kennedy aald, however, to our anU..Cutro Cubans alter the Bay or Pies. 'Well.~ can't wtn 'em all.' It's too bad 'lbJeu couldn't see It thal way, too." ·"Too wbo?" .. YOU at:MEMBER Thleu. He wu one of the ereatest UtUe President.I of South Vietnam we ever bad. HJm and good old Lon Nol onr 111 Cambodia. Loll wu that fellow we backed against Pol Pot. Of course, now we're backing Pol Pot against the Vietnamese. Wonder where any 1ot those guys are oow?" "And now you want to back me?" "By George, yes! We're going lo give you the same all·flred support we gave the Biah'aM agaln1l Nigeria. the Somalia against the Ethiopians, the anti· Communist Angolan rebels against the Communaat Angolan rebels. the Kurds again.at the Iraqis, and the uaorted former leaders or P~tao, Affbanist.an and Umbrellaatan agamst their enemies." "But everyooe you'te backed bas been a loser. By the Beard of the Prophet, you won't get away w1th this!" "Gosh. AyaLollah, all we want to do is help. As we now say in the State Department, 'II you can't lick 'om, back 'em .' " NEEDLESS to say, the new foreifn policy worked like a ~harm. Three weeks after the U.S. announced Its · 'wboleheart· eel support" ror lbe Ayatollah, he "was on a permanent skJ.ln.t vacatlon in Gslaad . Dia· Wusioncd Iranians retur* the shah to power and once qaln the oil IJowed properly WU't'Ward as lbe weaponry nowed pro-perty eutwa.rd. A ttutelul America pron>oted Janus to Sttrelary of State. But he atlU tnjoytd makJg bil on pboae calla: "Re.llo. t'idel! 'ndl la the U.S. State Depa.rt.mmt callln1 and. bO)'. do we tftl' bave IOC>d ...... fOf' yoql" I . • • I • ' • ,. "' .. 1 • • CALIFORNIA Temple .. Victi11U In Limbo SAN P'R.t\?iii I <AP> A judae has poatponf'd dttldloa th• rat. ot ~ W\burled bodl ol PeopleS' Temple vlctJma, but said uatna a caravan of \ruck& to alalp them crou•country for burial near here would be "very unwlte." Superior Court Jud1• Ira Brown Jr. 1dmluect, ho-.ver. t.bal "the reallUea or tb aJtua ttoa that w e c annot brlnl each OM back on United Alrlinel Jumbo Jet "Not"only l1 it ftnanclally un· feaaible, but It would take two years to accomplish and I have no intention of 1llowin1 that open wound to be there that long," Brown said at a heanng Monday OD bow lo dispose or u. bocllet. Qsr n 'ee S••lcn LA ' . J Quads Are lust Tieo M~• .. n.dly, FlbNary 77, 1979 DAIL V PILOT f 7 Federal Rtlles Energy Growtli Slow in State SACRAMENTO <AP ) -California bu experienced "a dramaUc reduction" in the rate of arowt.b ot energy uae ln the last two yeara, a at.ate report concludes. The Enern Commlaaion draft rePort. laaued Monday, a11o noted that a major problem facln& the state ta proltreraUna federal rules af. fectlnctbeenergy field. On the topic of 1971-79 enerp consumpt1on growth rate, tbe study said a major contributt.nl factor to the slowdown w• the sharp bike in the price of entrlY following the 1973 Arab oil em- bargo. .. AS ENERGY PlllCES in· crease, people use less. with the pursuit of cheaper altemaUves s purred as much by com· monsense economics as by any esoteric 'conservation ethic'," the report said. The decline in overall con- sumption bas occurred to score records· in total gallons or gasoline purchased, the report added. tricity and other energy matters. Tbe five-member commiulon wlll adopt tbe draft report March 6 and hold public meet· logs around tbe state during April on regional energy prot>- lems. TBE INCB·TIDCK report con- cluded that the nature or the . energy problem bas changed aignUlcantly since the com- mission's frrst report two years ago. Today, the report said, tbe major un certainty ls n ot whether future energy needs will be met, but bow much it will coat. HAWTHORNE (AP > -An earthquake shook lbe Los Angeles metropolitan area late Monday night, but authorities reported no damage from the temblor. The Dew quadruplets are a handful for ment. Oldest daughter. Sarah, 3'1'.r, is at mother Diane, 26, during the celebration right. From left are Rachel, Joe, Becky Among factors contribuUng to the overall decline are new coo- serv ation measures, such as those requiring insulation in homes, and relatively low population growth, the report said. Since the first report, there have been "an assortment of federal, state and local policies that orten conflict with each other ." the report said. The 11 :08 p.m. quake reg- istered 3.1 on the Richter scale and was centered three miles of their second birthday, while daddy Jim, and Elizabeth. Mrs. Dew says she spends 28, was at work selling car wash equip· $300 a month to feed her brood. "Perhaps the largest uncer- tainty for Calilornia, as well as tbe moat sign.lficant change in the energy picture in the last two years, results from in· creased federal activity," the report aald. ( Sl'ATE ) northe a st or suburbal' Hawthorne, said Caltech Seismology Lab spokesman Denni• Meredith. Law enforcement ofriclals re- Experts to Testify In Sex-change Suit ported no damage from tbe SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Several medical experts are scheduled earthquake. to testily today in a $7 million damage suit by a woman who claims a Jlemamie Rejeeted doctor botched her transsexual operation, leaving her neither man nor woman. SACRAM ENTO <AP> -The Dr. Donald Laub, chier of plastic surgery al Stanford University, Republicans in the state Senate, told a Superior Court jury Mon-. . . siding with Gov. Edmund Brown day that Julie Phillips was far Miss Philll~ sex-change opera- Jr., vow tbey'Jl try next week to from the perfect candidate ror a lion was Ca~rly s~ccessrul, but force a floor vote on a constitu-sex-change operation in 1974. that the vagina built in her was tlonal convention to require a Now she doesn't seem to fit In-.'.>nly 3~ inches deep and that she ba lanced federal budget. lo male female or homosexual maintained "a male pattern of Tbe vow came during As-.. ' b bicbai.r " sembly debate Monday before roles, aaidDr. Lau · pu · the Democrat-dominated low~rft"IT'S IMPROTANT to change WEARING A SOMBER black house relected the. Democratic e entire person to a woman. pants suit and heavy makeup, governor a convention call and · It's more than changing what's Miss Phillipa took the stand on a~opted a milder measure between ber legs," be said. her own behalf to describe her without a convention provision. T he surgeon testified tha t lonely, troubled, sexless life. ...... £oN Bfd The 38-year-old waitress fid-·D,...,nts Seek died with tbe strap of her SANTA BARBARA <AP) -A C ILu ~. handbag as she talked. about the preliminary injunction has been painful and unsuccelisful sex- iss u ed against a group or ~O Ban F;lm change operation she "was American Indians, prohibiting ., talked into." them from occupying dwellings near Point ConcepUon, the site Ilrom. Sc-hoo 1 _ or a proposed liquefied natural CJ Uf gaa terminal. But Santa Barbara Superior Court Judge Bruce W. Dodds made no ruling Monday on what access to the land, ll any, should be granted to the Indians for re· llgious ~ses. BotJ, 18, Gtdltfl LOS ANGELES CAP) -A 16-year-old Bellflower youth was found guilty Mond ay in a non- j u ry trial of second-degree murder in the Oct. 17 slaying or an Avon cosmetics represen- tative who came to the door. Superior Court Judge Everitt Ricki ordered the juvenile, whose name was not released in accordance with stale law. to re- turn to court March 12 for sen- tencing. VISTA CAP > -About 200 parents have, signed a petition seeking to 'b"an from Vista schools a seven-year-old film called "Future Shock" that de- picts a homosexual marriage and close-ups of test tube babies. The 42-mlnute color movie ts shown at least once a year to high school students here and next Monday, the Board of Education will screen it for con- cerned parents who want it barred. ''I see no educational value in it," said Irene Huntalas, whose higb-scbool age daughter hu seen the film twice. "The teachers say it sparks dis- cussion. I say they are trying to shock them." "I WAS HAPPY the way I was." the red-haired plaintiff testified in a raspy voice. "But they said I would be a perfect woman. "Now I don't seem to fit in. I don •t belong in the straight world or the gay world. I feel I am a freak because I can't have sex. People look at me, they laugh. I didn't know bow lonely life could be," she said, crossing a nd uncrossing her legs nervously. Miss Phillips, born Charles Beatty In Pennsylvania, was the victim or five rapes and assaults by age 14, Belli said. Belll said his client wanted on- ly a breast implant in December 1973, but was pressured into un- dergoing a sex-change opera- tion, later getting infected and suffertng ••excruciating pain.'' m Vera m '6X/Uef/ col!ect1on ... .. South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa ·' See the Vera Maxwell Spring Collection of Coats, Suits, . and Ensembles in South Coast Plaza on Wednesday and Thursday, February 28 and March 1. The air of knowing perfection in a season of suits. And a marvelous new slimness in lightweight woolens and UI trasuede* polyester-polyurethane: the navy coat and print dress ensemble, a study In finely detailed shaping. Navy UltrasuedEfwith navy -white print polyester crepe de Chine. Fine Coat and Suit Sa lon Lmagnm . . l . Skiing cl•sslfled ads •r• the best PIK• to buy or sen std wear and equipment In the Dally Piiot. 642-5678 TRIS FINDING was among several ID tbe commlaalon 's draft of Its 1979biennial report. which it ii required to submit to the p : emor and the Legislature on elec· Nixon A.utlwrs Magazine Piece LOS ANGELES <APl -Former P~sident Richard M. Nixon ts tbe author of an article con· tained in a new magazine aimed at the intern•· tiooal business communJty. Nixon's article dealt with the importance or trade, said the publication's managing editor Buz Schwartz. The magazine, Showcase USA. was mailed to foreign business men Monday. Schwartz ' added. The publication, which will be distributed sole- ly overseas, will also be band-carried into the People's Republic of China by the State Depart· ment and trade delegations, Schwartz said . Schwartz said the magazine, is "designed to pro~~ American products overseas." The federal approach doesn't put enough emphasis on regional dll(ereoces, the report saJd. The Newest Garden Guid e AvaDable • P1ant Encyclopedia with 6.500 plants sold In Western n&naies • Plant Seiecdon Guide with cob photoe and new ch ans • Biiiie Planting and Care Secdonwtth ~ep irwcrucdons STIMULATES young minds · Saturdays Special Introductory Price only SS. 95 (S9.95 after May 31.1979) ~~ In the DAILY PILOT R~~·~S800 S-~at MacAnhw • ~ B~adt 9am f,pm "POT~AST "IO NIGHT It's a good night to bring the family to our house ... old-fashioned, relaxed and cozy. Enjoy all the succulent pot roast you can eat. Plus soup and salad, our famous fried chicken, garden vegetables. mashed potatoes and gravy, hot com bread and honey butter. Only $4. 95 for adults, and even less for small children. Cocktails and wine are available. VISA and Master Charge welcome. Banquet facilities available. onm "BIG "YELLOW "HOUSE "RESTAURANT 1639 E. Imperial Highway. Brea• (714) 529-1891 • 3010 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa • (714) 549-0319 Dinner: Mon.· Thun. S.9._ Fri. 5-10. Sat. 4-tO. Sun. 12-9. Co to Meaa is open for lunch Mon.-Fri. 11:3().2:00 p. m . . • .. fl • '° J• ,. ., =-· = .,. ' .: - . •• I' I I ' , 1 ~\ '. \ .1 . I' I •• ti ; I ,,. • f I ,,1 ;1) t •• M DAIL y PILOT Tueedly. February 27. 1179 . l . MARMADUKE by l r•d Anderson FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batluk MISS PEACH T m reodlng o book of witty comeback~. Just wolt'll he barks ot me 0901n ! ' iUPERHEROES i HOE Pear Subscriber. So that we rr:ay continue to send pu. Inflation Eighter ~zine, ls!{·Ts)C:, Ms 8.ACKSPACE') Mft HARTBIJRN WILL FROWN AT 'yt)DR TYPING.) tE with its valuable tips Oh figl}_t~ todays high cost Of living, WEt.L, OK·· SINCE. l 1M SUP?OSED TO BE B~AKING >'bU IN t. APPEARANCE - -'IClA H.AV& T'O L&.AltN i't' L.AtA<3H AT "°"4"'7el..F.' ! DON'T' HAVE TO . ever:YE!IOC'v e~se~7. by Mell AGATHA CRUMM by Jeff MacNelly we will have to raise our subscription price t.o f 2f. ~r. DR . SMOCK "fH S: POC SAY S j; CAN STAY IN SHAPE:: IF :t S"T"AR1" P&...A YIN' A-r t..eAs-r E!IGH-re eN HOt..S:S APAY.' MOTLEY'S CREW SO 'ltxi~E !EU.It-I' r.V~­"ll-llN6 AND MOVIN6IO 1AMl1'1 ~ ~ q By Bil Keane "My shirt doftn't soy anything." DENNIS THE MENACE GORDO JUDGE PARKER WIU. YOU 00 DRIVE THIS INTO THE GARAGE 11\E A FAVOR WHILE I WAIT FORMR.&/rM ANOR:>ttSET AL'° GOIMG TO CHECK OUT THE IT? LICENSE Pl.AT& ON THA1 NUT'S CAR/ TUMBLEWEEDS I .J(}~T \ FIAJISfiEO WR/Tl/JG! A J/EART-~eER TITL£:[)1 'F<J>J/tlvr BOY". VOU'U FINO OUT HIS NMIE ANO THE.14 MR. 6ElLAOORN WILL TEU. US TO Ct4ECK HIM OUT AHO wruSPEHO ™E la:6T OF THE --=-OAV ON IT/ by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan 0 HOSH1 MY' PAJ.F'11'Ai1NG PUL5e5! r-.~C-LO_SE_i:NCi_O<JNiER~--0-F-'rn_E..,..-r -I SHAL.t.. (7AS~ VIA WIN6·EP woas-f" "'IND 15 EMC~. NANCY I FEEL LONESOME.' .. l WISH SOMEONE WOULD PHONE ME 1001SIES 1V CLARION YOOR n ' n I'\ WtSHE:S 10 HER1 VOU~ WOKSHIPJ I CAN MA KE THE PHON E RING ··· IT ALWAYS RINGS WHEN I'M IN THE BATHTUB COMICS I CROSSWOR D PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz 11 'llPE ~IPE '(IPE,11 WENT THE DOG 11 lilPE '11Pf ~IPE ~IPE ~IPE ~IPE ~IPE 't'IPE '11PE ~IPE '/IPE ~IPE L/IPE L/IPE ~IPE ~IPE ... 11 t I . I ~ I ~ OKAl.f, BUT rr's SU~E 60NNA SPOIL TME EFFECT! by Bill Hoest by George Lemont SO j"OMORROW :t '1.-C.. e>U Y A HARMON ICA .' TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE "CROSS I Imitated 5 The last 10 Roman res· trvals 14 Judicious 15 Bakery ilem t6S1nfu1 17 Stipulahons 19 Hellcline 20 Element 21 Mexican lare: Pl 23 Auctions 25 Container 26 Addison's partner 29 Reclines· 2 WO<dS 34 Pampers 35 Rip 37 Linger 38 Direction suffix 39 Boob tubes 41 M1tnx "•2 Cancel 44 Tiit 45-lndles 46 Razes 48 Tums away 50 Sixth sense: Abbr. St Wei UNITED Feature Syndicate SJ Hair pieces Monday 's Puule Solved. 57 Vocalists 61 lmtate 62 Fanciful 84 Slave 65 Wise say1no 66 Ms 1<e11 67 Airhne abbrs 68 lnslruments lntormal 69 Cleanser DOWN 1 Snakes 2 Equal: Prehx 3 Antiseptic O A I S l •&A l l ,!,!~~ I ~~~~ ll OL U ll AllO ~l ,!!2 a v£••co 110 1 11 1'ii rs A [ 0 0 L l II y • T •• I S l l 0 s ( I II ( . ·-s , ( l L S •• 0 0 l LI I II 0 , [ 0 1 l ( T I II I a1a lA I N I C I • 0 0 111 0 1 .. -urA I A C A • l S I • u .,. L. l l T ( " T A ( " T S •V ,,, I& II S -c I L 1a . ~ R • ---S II oc l E I S A Q "c I T Y AR,<;l l T O ll rt'"fr'li''l cc II , I • I 11 1,;; 'I · II I • R l l ll lT 1 ill 1'rt r'W --i....i..- • Contrives 24 Servile Aida, e.g. '9 Make wine S Puse 26 Rush 6 Ouebee's 'l7 Earth· Fr. neighbOr 28 Healers 7 Personallty 30 Angers 8 Chap Jt Command 9 French re-32 Arm pan 52 Custom 53 Comer ~Kiln 56 Maryland coll. glon 33 Russian 10 Gallery negatives 56 Beverage 11 Ego.shaped 36 Wriggling S8 Outside. 12 Dura11on 39 To the point Prehx 13 European 40 Fabrics S9 New Zea· mountains 43 The -land tree 18 Ending for USSR plains 60 Cuff med or com 45 Some shoes SJ Man's nick· 22 Spars •7 Faust and name L . ·1. it 4' , l ! 1 ~1 • •I •' • :1 I' ti • J f I .J ORANGE COUNTY .'OBITUARIES ··--,,..,._ .. _ • ·-... _ ·-··--.. -.. , ... •l ........ ......... .... -"' .... ·-....... -........ ... _ .,_ .. -·-... -..... ----v "'"'. ··-... _ .._ ··-... -.. __ .. _ ··-.... . -· ___ ..... _ ··-II'» Deatlis E lsewliere -SARASOTA, Fla (AP> -Jou E. ull· ta1, 46, who helped dt' velop Snelling and Snell ing, Inc., an employ· ment service operaUog oo two continents, died Monday o( cancer Womtn Vot~Mi from 19'4 NEWTOWN, Conn <AP> -Anna Lord Straus, national presi· dent of the League of lo 1950. died Fnday in Nt'" York Ml.S8 Strauss, 79. urved as chairman or President Eisenhower's People to People Progr am and was sent to Vietnam as an observer ln 1967 by Pres\dent Johnson. RUXTON, Md. <AP l Allee Rush McKeoo, 94. a conserv ationjst and roadside beautification advocate believed l o JOELMEve':1~!...,ot Foun•••n have coined the word v.11..,, ea P4t\Mct -o.,,, Frt>< ... ,., "Jitterbug," died Satur· t•. lt79. SuN!Wd 11¥ nl\ wil• Milfltll'lf' day at her home here. SOM Chll<IM .oncl Shan•. O•uQhlf'r __ _ LYM, •II ot Founl•1n VAll•y C• ancl 1 LOS ANGELES (AP) brOtlWrs AkllarCI -Brue• Mo•r • ~ntk•• wlll i.. on T.-4.oy •I, 00 PM HowlJ'd Schenk en 75 •t llW H¥bor U-Memo<l•I Che~I ed r • h 0 '""" Petto• Thomu J Rich!.,, report as one o t e L""*.., 0iurc11o11,,. c-.., ot••c•••· world's bridge experts •"9 ' t N11tmo d 1ed Tuesday at a 04AllLES ALBERT HERZOG. LT h 0 s p Ital in palm COL u.s A" RETIRED, roio.,., ol Springs He captured L..-tlHcll c.a PHs.d •••Y on ' FH>ruarv1•. 191'1 5'.ln1lv.d bY hit wlf• four world team Cb3ID· e11i•"""'·"""""' Mr~ c M M•ha"o1 ~ions hips r epresented A1hli111UI•, Olli.. 3 llrOt"•'t R W ' . Htfl09 • ..., FA HeflOQ of At,.lallUI• orlh Amrica m four Ollio -w "· Haf'J09 ot Amona eo1 other s and established ::::'cO: ~ -Snc•.'',~':"':! \:~ the re~ord for victories in 1~~:~ !/~,:~,:i~;~ ~:::~~~' the principf11 North p,,,.,.t 1tmt1v ,.,.,.....,.,, w•v•c~\ will A m e r 1 c a n c h a m ~,."" .. ~ ,~00 ~~":'~ ~~,~~·i,;~ pioosh1ps. (l\CIPt'I Interment wlll lw al PAC lf!C V•e• 1MM0<1t1 Par•, Nrwl'Ort B~Acn.. UPLAND I AP) T. C• P•<•f'< vie;,.~,.";'' oimio" Stanley Warburton, 68. HOLLIE LAAl<EY SAVANT. ,,..,. r etired· president Of ~nt ol Wfllmlnster, C• PAU('O •w8v c b rr c 11 d on Fe11r ... ,., 1• ",' "' 111e ,.~ 01 n . a ey o ege an 8elov4'0 wife ol P•ul 8ronl of former Chancellor or the wt s1m1M1er, c.a . tov1119 dauqr.1f'r ot Los Angeles Community JoM -R1'Ctoel Hh ot B~• Par~. Ca . mottle• ot Anootll• Joy Aryan! Of Colleges District, died of Wt\tmlMtrr C• '"''' o• .Jo1>nnv a heart attack Sunday Ho Of Gar-Gtov•. c.a . Rancll Cn · niS of LA Mlr..oa, C.o -Bruer Hay Of 8-Part.. C.11 (;rAvMIO~ wrvke\ wm "" 1w10 •• ttw c;ooo Snae>Mro Ctm•tery, Hunllnqton S-0•<". Ca In te<mrnt ,.,11 !(Ml-Sm1fh A Tuthlll Mort ... ry, 07 E 17th SI Cos•• ,...WI "' ...._ BENNIS AANOl.0 OAAL"N BENNIS. '"'' ~nt ot L"9<1ftil Ruch c. PHMO aw•v on ""'"""" 7' "" tn South L~un• c.a IHIO~ r111tl>eftCI ot All<f AM Bt'nftl\ ot L~• B•ech, "' low lnQ l.otMr of M.o"IVft .H.,. AHltoft ot L•guna 8".och Ce Q•.....,.etnar of For the Record /tlarrlage Sally M<l•rrv of Irvine, C• •nd LAS VEGAS -Merr~ t>e.enMi ''° Slf'C)~ll A~elllOf\ Of S...le Aft<I, C. wedM<elncludt; D•1vel• lemlly wrvlcn ... n llf'IO •n ~ :z. "" Ille Ch•pel Of Peclflc V.-w Mcmor1•I AICHARQS.LEAOIN<;+iAM -Clln· P•r• N•""f>M1 Buch, C• P.o< 111< ton EOw•rd, 42 ot Oerl• Point, ancl V1ew MOrt...,yOlrectors ElonorJ'"""" u.otLeoun&Be<l<h a1tACAMONTE HANEY FOSTER Wllh•m,lO,•ftCI RAY c. 8AACAMONTE. reskl•nl Of MMle.Jl,bolhOICosl•-WI. Coit• MeH C• Peueo •••Y Ort ROBINSON-LEE -U<rY Verlin. 38. Fellnl•,., ?•. 1•n !Mirv•Wd bY hi' wile •ncl Nli.•le H . JI. l>Oth ot Irvine B•lly, , br1111wlf\ AnlWJ •ncl F.ob••n P:Qnlary l, 1'7' Br.ocemonte. lloth Of !Mint• A"•· Ca GOLOSTEIN·P£LLETTIE AI -""" M•U•• nte.es •ncl nephew,. Vil E lln, 1S, ot Newp0r1 Bt'nch, •M 1tatlon on Thu<'..O..y from 2 00 PM Thero• M , U, Of v .. n Nuys. Ros•ry '""'"""' ~venlnq at 1 00 PM NOZETl WOLFSEN -StePh•" a1 the Bell &roe<twav C"4Pf'I Md\\ of P~ler. l? and AO<o Ruth. JS. both ot C.hrlstlen Burle! will be on FrlOdy •t f ount•ln valley. 10 00 AM •• SI Joacnlm (•ll•OllC GOROON·BELL -Lan<• A., 3', ... a Church. lnttf!Nftl Wiii bl' Al the H~ly Cheryl Lynn, n. both.,. c"''" Mesa Sepulcller Ce-l~rv 8'>11 Bro.tOwdy J.llNNIN(; JANN ING MIC llUI Mor't.,.rv, Cost• M<IH . dlrectOf's Louis. JI. remarried PerMla R .. J I, MEllNANOEI both of El TOf'O. ENEOINA V. HERNANDEZ, ~ BEST·OfSHON(; -Lyle Oun, O,ol n . • 5.3 .,..., res\Oeflt m Huntlnaton Cost• Mew, end J-L .. AJ, of foun· ~.och, C.. P•stecl •w•v on MOflClay, teln Vallev. Fet>rwry "·""'In Hunw,91on In Al TENREIO·JONES -lrvtlle IH(Ommwnlly HOSDll.tl B•IO¥fd RlcherO, l'. anO C.nd.oce """· 26. motller of PllllllD Hernllnelet ot Chula both ot W.stml..,s!fr. Vista C• """ Alto EsPlftOl>I end DAVIS HUGHES -R-n (.ary, 13. Lucy M.,.,.._, Doth of HunllnQton encl l(rlly OH>iw. "· bol!I ot Hunt· Beac" c.. Al\O surv1vtno are 11 lnQton 8Hch .qranocn1ldrtn end 11 o•••' CONNEA·V<X.I( T1mothY Mkh•I qr.,,ckhlklf'Pft I b<OtM• Cillclllrdo V•· JI. tno OHJra R.oc ... le, n. l>Oth .,j 1•• of <NaOal•t••• Meatco Frlef>Cls s." Jua" Caplstr-m•v call from l 00 to• OO PM IOCl•v SHERMAN MA !>ON -Ph•l•P ""o •II on Wtonodey et Pierce Nc><m•"· 31, -CMrlOllf R .. o. Brollwr\ Sm1111\ Mortuerv wMri~ I,,. both 01 H._.t1n9toro S.ach. f°O\My w111 De rf'<•IN1"11 'JOPMWPO· BAK EA l<EALEY Alch6rd ~M!av "'4K\ ot Cnr1\11an Buroal wlll Wtynt "· of Hunlin91on Bt'•ch, ...,4 twft•l•b<llll'd on Thur\d .. y Merell 1 !MIW ft 01-,l).of T~ c ... von. 1'1• •I St "i1mon & Ju.JP C•lllolt< ~ •. 1m (hurC11•11000AM M11<1nohA•n<lln WILLIAMS·OANIELS -Terry Ol<tnapoll\, H""l1nqto .. fltod<ll Cd In C,.OM ,., •net Me~M Lff, JO. Doth Of 1erm•11t wlll ~ 1n lhf CiOOCI ~Pfl••O NtwPOrt O.ach Cemflf'rY. Hunllnoton Beach, C• PU~CELL BERM"H "lllll•m S Pieru Broth••\ Smith•' Monu•rv }I. •nd Judy Mee. u . both ~j Oire<ton. ~3' Hunt11>91on ~h F.-,5,197' .----------.... (;RIMM l<OLEI< Blllle, 36. •M McCOl.MICtc MOITU.AR1l5 Laguna Beach 494-~1 5 Laguna Hills 768-0933 Cl1lre Ann.16, l>olhot Irv!"" .. -~··"" ZATIN·ALEllANOER -Mel, Q , of Alll<l010, N.M .. •nd 8¥b¥• A,_,35, OfH11nllft9t04'!8Mch Birt,._ J ohless Rate Up Overall Employrrwm Scene Hailed Ora.n t Cou nty•1 un mploymant rat• ~ Lo 4 7 ~rcent an January, ICCOT~ lo fllUrtl rf'lauod MOO· d1y b thf" s t1tC> Employmont lH\'elopmeot Dcpartmt-nt CEDD > Oe-l'lpitt> th~ 6 ~re. nt r111• ln un cmploymt·nl from Oecembt!r 's ull· tame low ot 4 I peorct-nl. lha <.-uut1ty 'll c•mploymenl &cent-drew fevorable ootlt"es from EOO'!i ~t 1Ulsllclans t'or ont• thing, tht> po11t holiday <'hmb in un m ployment Will ~xpt,"Cl· 1•d t>t"<'aWMI ol t·ustomary layoffs 1n rt-h11l tracJe outlet~ FOR A St :('ONO PL • EDD's ~l;sll,tk1.1n) polntrd out tbut the \'Uunty'b unt>mploymenl rate lai>t month W8li a rull pt>tCt'Olage polOt below the s 7 percent recorded in January, 1978 M oreov~r . EDD 's monthly tat1sucal report renected a substan· Ual increase In available JObcl lo the county over the past year. A ccording to the statisticians, there were 76,000 Jobs added to couo· t y payrolls during tbe past 12 months That's an annual growth rate of 10l 7 percent ;rnd brought total employment in' Orange County to a rerord high 986,800 Jobholders in January Simultaneously, though . the number of persons in the county's avaU.ble work force ellmbed durlnc t.he put year. In January, for eumple, the coun· ly'a 1vallable work crew climbed to over l m1illon penons for the first tame wben ll reached 1.036 million. A year earlier, the number of coun· l)' residents on band to bold jobs was 954,800 . With the usual post-holiday layoffs out or the way, EDD's statisticians predlcted there will be a continuing upward trend in the county's employ- ment picture tn the first quarter of 1979. EDD labor analyst Alta Yetter based her forecast on plans to open "several new manufacturing plants" 10 Orange County as well as the staf· fing o{ retail and financial firms planning expansions. Mas. YETl'Ell POINTED out that the number of manulacturing jobs in the county climbed to 207,200 in January, a new high reflecting conU· nuing growth in Orange County's fac- tory labor market. "Some <manulacturing) jobs will be lost. however, as two or three plants are relocating to other areas," Mrs. Yett.er said. Overall, though, her labor predic· lions were on the up side as she re· peated her prediction that employ- ment in Orange County will "rise substantially in the Ctrst half of 1979." Buses Approved _ Special Lifts Not Included A U.S. District Court Judge ruled Monday that Orange County Transit District <OCTD> can accept delivery of 6S new buses without the buses be· ing equipped with special Wts for handicapped persons. Judge lrvine Hill's ruling rejected a bid for a preliminary injunction that would have halted OCTD's ac- ceptance of 6S $99, 788 48-passenger buses from Gruman Flxible Corp. The injunction was sought by ad· vocates who alleged in a class action lawsuit that the transit district was discriminating against the han· dlcapped by ordering and accepting buses without hydraulic lilts. THE UFl'S WOULD be used to hoist persons confined to wheelchairs into buses that trave1 along OCTD routes throughout Orange County. It was the district's contention that "safe and reliable" hydraulic lifts do not yet exist. And, OCTD lawyers said, the transit district is taking care of the handicapped transportation needs as beat it can by operating 20 special "dial-a-lift" buses in the county. The lawyers also pointed out that the call for such lift!' makes up less than 1 percent of OCTD's bus ridership. "I think you can say the directors had to choose between their obllga- lion to the handicapped and their ob- ligation to the taxpayers." OCTD spokesman Tom Eichhorn said. He pointed out that tbe new buses have feat.ures that will make it easier for elderly and some partially disabled persons to board them. "For one thing, floors on the new buses are lower and the steps leading to them are less steep,·• Eichborn said. -He also s;iid the sleek new buses have an air cushion device that permits drivers to lower them from five to six inches while passengers are board.iQg. "There's no argument with the fact that there should be no discrimina- tion against any kind of passenger or that the needs of the handicapped shouldn't be met," Eichhorn said. "IN TIDS CASE, the district has done it best," be said as be discussed the hydraulic. lift.s that would cost $8,480 each with factory installation. Judge Hill said be will bold his rul· ing that allows the transit district to accept delivery of the 6S new buses until March 8 to allow an appeal or bis decisioo. Eichhorn said three or the new buses have already been delivered from the Ohio plant and that plans call for all 6S to be pressed onto serv'ice on existing OCTD routes sometime in June. • GOP Study Panel Badham on Unit Rep. Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, has been named v ice chairman of th e Republican Study Com· mittee. an organization made up or 101 or the 157 Republican members of the House. members of the House. BADBAM also is a member o r the Republican Policy Com· mittee. It is made up of 27 House Republicans. They adopt GOP policies and party positions in the House. Administration Commit· tee. IN ADDmON, he is continuing as a member or tbe Armed Services Subcommittee on In· vestigations and bas been named to the new Armed Services Sub· committee on Procure- m e o t a nd Nuclear Systems. Tbe study commit · tee 's Cdn ction 1s to analyze pending legisla· tion and prepare back - ground information for In other assignments, Badbam bas been re- named to tbe House Armed Services Com· __ ..__ _______ _ millee and to the House Bloodmobile Due Four Orange Coast Cities will be visited by the American Red Cross bloodmobile for blood dona· lions between March 13·26. Costa Mesa : St. Joachfm Catholic Church, 1964 Orange Ave., from 3 to 7:30 p.m. March 13. For ap- All San Juan C8p1strano 495-1776 SAN CLEMENTE OENE•AL pointment.s call 835-5381. . NOSl'tTAL San Juan Capistrano: San Juan Capistrano INSURANCE IAL.n.llltGHON AlteALHOMI 646-2424 Costa Mesa 673-9450 1&&.•0.ADW.AY MOllTU.A•Y 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 SMITM & TUTHIU. ...oll'UAIY WBTCLW at.Ar& ~tory • Flower Shop 427 E 171h St CostaMe5& ~ ...ca•OTHIH 5MllH'S MOtllUAIY 627 Matn St HuntlnQton Beach S3&-6539 ,., .... y COlOMAl MtftAL NOMI 7801 8otsa Ave Westmintter 81»-3525 PAClllC vtlW .....olllAl.PAH Cemetery Mortuary Chtpel r:Eeituuv u, '"' Community Senior Citizens Club House, 32102 MOWIH NEWPORT IEACH ~1>'~,7!..o~.n0ooe' Sitth, s... Juan Paseo Aelanito, from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m . March 17. Mr eno Mrs. W•vne Lllf, Oen• For appointments, call 492-6664 or 83S·5381. Point, 91n S AUTO . HOME r:H1tui1av,.,1m an ~le m ente : San Clemente General UR IUSMSS Mr -Mn owr~ M<Uv9fllln. Hospital, 6S4 Camino De Los"Mares, from 2:30 to 7 • S.ft Ju.., Ceobtr-, boy. M b g A · 700 Mr aM Mn Mr -Mn. A1etw1n1 p.m . arc 1 . ppointments, call 492~ or 2 W. Coest Hwy. Merttn. 0..-.. Polnl, boy 835-5381. _ Wfe JI 0 P:EaltUAltY 15, 1'19 ~ Mr ano """ Alvin Collfl1, San Newport Beach: Hoag Memorial Hospital. 301 ~ ......... c1em9,. .. ,.,.,., Hospital Road, from 12 : 15 to 5 p.m. March 26. For 641!8220 ~~,:;:,:~./,.,. LordolO, s.r .. s... _a::p.:po.:..::in.::t:m:.:e:n:Ul::.:.·..:c::a:.:1:.1 64:.::8:.·:8600=::·----------~==~~======·=~ FaNUAltY 16,"" Mr. aftCI Mrs. J«retd 84nSfMqer, L 119UM llffdl, 9lr1 OLD-C4B IUNEYED BUENOS AIRES, Argenilna <AP) - Federal Judge German A. Vosa I.a aUowinl 600 taxl 'drivers to collect fares While he consickn the legality of an or- dinance banntn1 cabs more than 12 yun old. Authentic 1715 Gold Fin«ier Bar Cover 4~ ounces pure gold) Recovered from the wreckage of a Spanish Galleon off the coast of Florida. Complete with Certificate of Historic Art.if acts S7500 Value For Sale or Trade TRUST DEEDS.J_~EAL ESTATE, COINS Call 1G-174t or wrt&e 3500 Plotfk: View Om1e Newport Beach 8"-2700 The city ordinance' Wll dfSlgned to t.ake UD· safe vehicles off the road. Tbe driven. who own their Clbl, llY lt dl1crlminatea agatn1t old can lo lood coQdJ. 0 don. ~ ........................ ,,, P.O. Bos 2111, N.B., Ca.~ • ... • ~OW N ~ I en ~ 0 DAILY ,_.LOT .49 INVENTORY TAX SALE Wt' will ha•t' to pay a ta1 °"all of Htt' in•t'ntory '"our \tore a• o f Mar I. 1979 Wt' would much rcrltlPr u•ll our mc-rc handi\t' ttlan pay ,,_.(' ta1t>\ -SO N O W IS THE IES T TIME OF THE YEAR TO GET A GREAT DEAL AT DAVIS-IRO WN . 1ME8CA ~\\.£CT.AVIS~<?~ ~Tl~ 1~GIVEA\v4¥ ncn RO VCUOI Sel~ctaV1s1on 4·hour Video Cassette Recorder Automat1callv starts and stops the recorder u.h4~ •• --.flf ... ..,... .. N&-UUOV .. CMIQ .....,_, ,_., _, wtien YoU buy an RCA SelectaV1sion from 08Vls Brown between now and Feb 28. 1979 ~e 1 ect aV1 s100 4 -h our Video Cassette Recorder with buill-1n 7-day Programmer 574995 SON~ Up to 3 Hows f'loy.aecorcl In tt.et- RflftOh PmM COllfrol MGA 2-Hour Video Cassette CLEARANCE CLEARANCE SUPER VALUE • 25"' diagonal Dark·lite.. SO Black Matri11 picture tube • Oelu11e G T-300• chasSf·S---M:10'11b---I-----~ solid·state • Syl~an1a GT ·Matte"' . Sel~AdJushno Color System • Ex c lusive A SC c 1rcuitry (Automatic Sharpness Control) • Room Light Monitor . . adjusts contrast and color level when room l1ght1no changes • Concealed casters ,.._,,_..Gtt~~---- SAVE s50 CL8Z26P NOW ONLY 561995 THE "LITTLE GIANr • BIG 21 " d1a90nal Screen • Corne>uter Controller • G'r -matic"' Self·ad1usting Cjrcu1ts • Exclusive ASC Circuitry • New GT ·400'-Chassis-Same OutstanC11ng Performance As Our 25" diagonal Superset • Oark·Ule"' 50 Color Picture Tube REMOTE TUMIHG SAYE 540 YOUR CHOIC--E -SAVE 550 25" diagonal. 100% sohd state. selfad1us11ng color room hght monitor -Ji;.. • HMOTI Wiit TUHnitG Television • Contempoory Styina ... mode<n space sav1nif •able mo<lel wtlll walnul hrnsll on v1nyl-ct8d WOO<l comoosll•O" board I~ d1aQ<>na11 SAVE sso 1 O" diagonal PortaColor ONLY 5 M9'5 - • fJerFormance rELEv1s 10 N 1 • • II • • . lit '"l ' ....J ,. '· I '. t I I..,. •' i ·1· I' ~' ti . , 't .JJ A I• DAILY PILOT TUHd1y. February 27, 1911 CALIFORNIA I NATION / <}ANADA Honey Bacterium Blamed ~ Infant Botulism SACRAMENTO <A p > -adult., off"tdall aaid "Honey clt'urly l"t'presentlS u weakness, and ('an cause death Hooey •PPf'•rt to ~ a major r11lt factor for Infant botulism," ln extreme useA. cauae of •ntant botulism \ale TAT HEALTH Servlcea uld tht' rt•iu.•urrht·r~ from thf' Oil. STEPHEN AKNON. who The only food known to con- tain lhat bacterium la honey. they said, adding that 10 percent of all honey samples tested in California to date have con· been fed honey, the researchers reported. They said the actual Clostrldium spores were found lo the honey in three cases. bealth ~hera wam ' Department rHearchen, ta th 1 d partmen\'1 1M<'cl1ou11 Distiasc lc•d a six-member resear ch They l'ft'Ommended Monday month'• Journal of Pedlatrka, C'tlon and MicroblaJ Disease team , aald the disease Is caused oot slvtnc boMy to lnlanll under n.,.,.ud I.bat u many a1 one Laboratory by production of a toxin bl the U months . Tbert waa no tM.rd of the v\dlma ot l.ntant lnlaol botulitlm. diagnOif'd on-lnfHt'a intestine from a bac· lained Cloltddium ApQre&. , In 41 cases of California children hospitalized for infant botuliam, 12, or 29.2 percent, bad OVT OF A WORLDWIDE sample of 7~ cases, 28, or Jf.7 percent, had been fed honey, they said. evid ence that boney ls botulllm lD a t h.Mb had bef-n fed ly in the lut several years, has terlum called Cloat rldium danatt"OUS to old r childrm or honey symptoms of constlpataoo and botuUnum. ,,.,. ........... Restaurant Flees Fame Magazi1~'s Praise Spotlights Rural Inn NEW YORK fAf' 1 SpurrlKI by 11 magazine artlcll' that pro· filed a mysterious gourmet's de light near New York, an army of food-loving detectives bas de- termined the loca taon or the res\aura.ot. And now. the owners or the res taurant in rural Penn- sylvania say they are going to move to escape the ir sudden popularity. "WE'RE GOING TO move elsewhere," s aid Anne Leib, who. with her husband, Allen, owns The BuJl's Head Inn in Shohola. Pa .. near the New York borde r in the Pocono Mountains. "We have a fragile ecology in this restaurant, and now we ha ve too many customers." pseudonym or the c hef and patron, did all of the cooking with his wife. FORTY YEARS OLD .!lnd fiercely independent, "Otto·· cooks 40 to 50 meals each night a nd chooses from a repertoire or 600 appetizers, according to McPhee. He cooks what he wants when he wants, and never -NEVER -uses frozen ingredients. He deprecates some famous New York French restaurants as "frog ponds." which do not at- tain bis standards of excellence. piece was the first article m the magazine's history that was not verified by its checkers . But using Mc Pbee's own pench ant for d e tail , the Washington Post speculated cor· reclly that the mys tery restaurant was tbe Red Fox Inn of Milford, Pa. which the Leibs recently sold to move to the Bull's Head Inn, a smaller place 10 miles northwest of Milford. The Red Fox Inn is still operat- ing under different manage- ment. The New York Times an- nounced that it determined that Leib was "Otto " Times restaurant critic Mimi Sheraton went to Shohola, ate dinner and pronounced the main courses "dis appointing·· and the ap· petizers "so-so ... WellArnaed The article. a profile that ap· pea red in las t week's New Yorker and was authored by John Mcf>bee, told or an uniden- tified "farmhouse-inn which is neither a farmhouse nor inn," within 100 miles of New York Mc Phee. howe ver, did not identify "Otto," and his account of "pork and coriander, hazel- nut breadings, s moked-roe mousses and a Ioli " was too much for some gourmet readers t o take. They jammed the magazine's s witchboard with calls , bese eching the New Yorker to reveal the identity or this exceptional cook. "Mr. McPhee is a fine man. but he promised us anonymity," Mrs. Leib told The Associated Press. "We're going to move elsewhere. We 're 40 years old, we're very tired and we can't handle this . . We can•t con- tinue to do what we have been doing for 12 years.·• ,,.,.~ Raymond Prior, 11 , really doesn't have eight arms as he walks atop a wall in Phoenix, Ariz. Raymond actually is walk- ing with three of his friends. • SAVE City. , Mc Phee wrote that be had had the best meals or bis life at the restaurant. "Otto," the TBE MAGAZINE remained mum. According to New Yorker editor William Shawn, McPhee's Anglican Bislwps OK Ordination of Gays "I think it is a position that in· volves real integrity on the part or the church.'' Hospital Sets Cooling It Barney, a young chimpanzee at Busch Gardens in Tampa, Fla .• loves ice cream as much as any other four-year-old. 0The warm weather allows Barney to enjoy ice cream all year long, but he'll have to watch it when his adult teeth come in . MemcalTalk -;:::;_==.--=~r--~~~~ · NON· SMOK~R? T he A m e r i c a n 1'.EARL'S llG SAVINGS OH Diabetes Association PLuMe11oc; will hold an education · HEAT•NG • HOMEOWNEttS meeting on "The Doc·· .. ~·~ .. ''f:,~s1 • AUTO lnwr'ClltU tor-Patient Struggle -' ..,.,v•<" ''""' ... "'"'*1 """' '-' IF you QUALIFY or How to Lose the Bat ''"11 ~ .. "'~""''' '""' A•.-•1 tie and Win the war .. conaMu.•642-17S3 • . . • IU.--1Bh• on March 13 be~mnmg ,...,s$•OM v•EJ049s-o401 at 7 : 30 p . m . an St. 1emu-... c..p."'- Joseph's Hospital, 1111 1 "o Fr .c• Pll• 1 BBITT TORONTO <AP> -The Toronto Star reports that Canada's Anglican bishops have decided to allow homosexuals to become ordained priests on condltion they promise to ~_,._~statirtrom1KmJosexua._...tt-.~-HE ADDED TBA T the churcn can-_St-'i~l'-4'hHJ~s-J~~ee""~111e·111°_r""'a""~"-ge-1.>e--,-~-:-:-:~~~==~l-......:.:IN:..:.::S.,U-R~~CE not con one omosexua acts an open to the public. More call 642-5678. ..~.-__ _,.__ MICHELI II the lostest grOW1ng !Ir~ compon., In Amel\ool 165-1 ........ 4 • 175-13 . .. . . . .. . 46.tt 175-14 . . . . . . . . 49.tt 1as-14 .......... n .tt 195-14 . ... . . u ... 205-14 ......... "·" 2 15-14 ......... 65 ... 205-15 .......... 65 ... 215-15 . . . . .. . . "·" 225-15 ....•... 71 ... 230-15 . .. . . . . . IZ.t9 · ALIGNMEN•T· ·. ONLY Rl 12!1.s 15.99 ;;::: ~ &tes S""4l11 Se~1 ·~ ( 3 CHDIT THMS AVAILAILI .,MICHELIN XZX 155-12 ........ Sl2.t9 145-13 ......... 19.tt 155-13 ......... n ... 165-13 ......... 17.tt 175-13 ......... 40.tt 165-14 . . ...... 41.tt 175-14 .......... 41 ... 165·14 ........ 4'.tt 175-70-13 ..... 42.tt 165-70-13 ...... 46.tt F [T 141!0361 ' BRAKES J--tnC ......... 36" ~our bMI ,._ .,..._ lat>ot _.,.,. ---1Unr..c:iu.M 69" ll'Ch;O.. OUf D4!01 n..itld ~""IO lab01. mtd°Mf\f) OfvM• ovttntau1 w11ee1 cv11<.o.n. -t>eanno• moetcera FREE BRAKE INSl'lCTION o,.. M-..Jri. 7:J~5:l0 ASIC AIOUT OUR sat. 7:J~J:OO ROAD HAZARD AHD CloMd s.. MILEAGE w ARUHTY All ""::..S..: V:!~~ H- ~ o ~ TIRES WEST we).t TIRE & AUTOMOTIVE CEMTH o~~o 585 W. 19tll St •• Costa Mesa 548-5511 • llJ-7707 L M. BOYD lt published a report quoting the March issue of the church's national newspaper, Canadian Churchman, as its source. said t&e bishops are in the middle of information is available Put a few words 1914 HA,.BOR BLVD. an intense study of sexuality in the at 6394912. to work for ou. COSTA MESA THE STAR ALSO interviewed the Most Rev. Edward·Wood, primate of Canada's Anglican Church, and quot- ed him as saying the decision came from recognition that homosexuality is a social reality and a need for the church to "be more open about is- sues." He told the Star the admission of homosexuality will be a private mat- ter between the candidate and his or her bishop because public disclosure would hamper the effecUveoess and accept ance or a priest in the ministry. "I'm sure there will be many peo. ple in the church who will be dis· turbed by this . . . both those who feel we have gone too far and those who think it's not far enough," Wood was quoted as _saying. church. Since the study started in 1976, the bishops have reiterated their public stance on legal rights for homosex· uals but repeated their opposition to church blessing of homosexual un- ions. Wood said he disagrees with an editorial in the church paper that s ays the bi shops have set a double standard betwe en c hurch and society. THE EDITORIAL SAYS some of the most troubled homosexual priests in Canada are those who engage in sex. "The bishops say nothing to these people and offer no hope of an honest, pastoral r elationship.", They are making a requirement of homosex- uals which they do not make or heterosexuals, the editorial says. Co11nselors Oash Triggered Sought By KKK Exhibit Saddleback College is looking for 12 volunteers from the Saddleback Valley /Sao Juan Capistrano area to become counselors for the Fixed In come Consume r Counseling program. WINSTON·SALEM , N.C. CAP> -Klaosmen and four men in Nazi uniforms shouting "white power. white Power '' confronted an opposing crowd yelling "Ku Klux Klan -scum of the land,'' forcing polic e to close an exhibit or Klan paraphernalia at the public library. More than 20 police officers moved into the tiny auditorium of the Forsyth County Public Library when the heated shouting match erupted 45 minutes alter the one-day exhibit opened Mon- day night. . It's revolutionary! It's new. ( ) DAILY PILOT AT LEAST FIVE PEOPLE WERE escorted ~~~~'N_F_O~R_M_S~ln~th_e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ fromtheau~toriumbyofficers.P~kes~dtwopeo­ ple were charged with disorderly conduct. Volunteers should con- tact the progTam's cam· pus office by calling 831 -2161. Our surprisingly easy Wd)' to lose weight ••• for good. NOTICE TO VETERANS If you are an Honorable Discharged Veteran of the Armed Forces of the United States, in good health, you are e ntitled to a Double Inter- ment Space (for you and your Spouse) in our Dedicated Veteran's Section at the cost. to you, of only a Single lnter'ment Space plus the Endowment Care Fund Deposit requ1r13d by State Law. Harbor Lawn. long known for Its Special Considerations to Veterans, is making this Program available to the Veterans of this area Space is limited and it will be assigned on a first come, first served basis. To assure your space, MAJL THE COUPON TODAY ! 1------;.-;;~L;;;,;:;~~;;;~;;------1 I 1625 Glaler Ave., Costa MeN, CA 12121 I (ecJtecent 10 ttte s.n oe.., ,wy (405) et Hert.ot INwd. to.> I l••m enHoncnb4e1>ocn,....ve1.... I I 'n good health • • • . . . • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . • • • • • • • • • • • I I I sertal No. . . , • . •.•••••.••••.•....••••.... Dltchefge Oete • I Address . . • • • . • • • . . . . . . . • • . . . . • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • . . . . . ZIP ..•.••••••. City . • • • • . • • . . . . • . • . • . . • • • . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . ••••••..• , • • ..... . ! I . I I I Home Phone No • • .....••...•••••••.•••••••..•••...•..•.••••.•••........... ! &.!:------------------------------------ • J " There were contradicting reports on whether blows were exchanged in the packed auditorium, but officers were josUed in the shoving between opposing f roups. Near y 200 people, about evenly divided between black and white, bad crowded Into the windowless hall to look at the display of Klan ~obes. publications and other items. The crowd was quiet until a white man who identified hJmself to a reporter as David Burtt of the National United Workers Organization shout· ed: "What we ought lo do ls rip this stulf orr the wall. The Ku Klux Klan is a damned trick to set black against while." MORE YELLING ERUPTED AND the four men in Nazl uniforms appeared and began shout· ing "white power." On~f the men in a Nut uni· form. who would not give bis name, said he and bJs friends were members of "the re1ional unit of the NationalSodallsl White People's Party based lnArl- J.ngton, Va." FAMILY . AFFAIR SINCE 1894 there'a no aubetltute for ex~ . DEN'S .. ;;:,;;·i! 1 :iniiillaHon:·cu1tomd1•p1ri•• l~ No '·' I 2~tf linoleum • wood floor tUJ ""-: ...... A._• c ........... Ctlf. 9HJ7 ,... 646-4111. 646-2111 tP ·-.., --.... --I.ING • PHt B! Is 73 years old. CALL(714)975-0700 NOw. It'll work for you, too. lmeginl' wearing whatever you wont and looking great! Th11i can becomt• u f'\.•Olity for you-now1 • You don't have to do it alone. Tu lot.e we11{ht p1:rmanently. you net'd the help of pn>fol'R1onals. At Advllnc.'t.'<i Health Ct•ntcr. our coun!IClors will show you our 11urprisingly e1111y way to take ofT pounds ond mche:1. Without pills, shots, or feds. And without dieting' Advanced Health Center Is different. Owned and operated by Adva nced Health Systems, Inc.. a national leader in the fields of family health and behavioral medicine, we draw from over 40 years of success in helping people. Why arc our programs so effec- tive? &-c.aut.t.• we respect the fact thut you're d1fTt>rl'nt.. too. You are uniqut•. an ind1v1duul We will design a pro- wam thut IS built around your pt>r· M<>nal nN'd111 nnd conccntrnteA upon finding 110lut1ons to t hose nt.'Cds. It'• eosi«'r than you think.I The most import8nt thing ls your desire to IOH welght. We do the rest. Call Advanced HeaJth Center today! Call (714) 976-0700 now for a free, no-obli· getion interview. It's Important! Free chUd care is available while you part1c1pate in any or our programs .. Advanced Health Center 1300 BriRtol Stn.~t North, Newport Beach, CA 92660 • • Peleriori. -· · came, Ul'nlfOra I " "' • '° • h . • lt I ~ d 'l !~ ::.' I, m: " '"" I ~ .1 1: , . d :I . ··N·s···o·e .. =.:~.t.:C.vk.,:.s .. ::_:_:_~v.".7: .• :." ...... ~ ............................................. ~ ... i,.._Orts I ,_ ...... ...,.,, .... DAILY PILOT r-., t Spark~ Neu ¥ankees Manager? teinbrenner, Martin Exchanging Barbs, Innuendoes Again 81 W1Lt. GatM BY .. ~ ..... , .......... -... Sparky And rson ln New York Yankees plnstnpes in 1980 a marnaae med In 11tranae va1..->e or the per onalities in· volved When Anderson was unceremoniously fired by the Clnclnnatl Reda last November, detplte a record of four National League titles and two world championships. owner Georae Steinbrenner of the Yankees called it HOW CAN THESE two mavericks - each strong-willed ~nd impetuous -ever find a common ground for a harmonious rela· tionshlp? the press and fans. He hasn't been reluctant to belt an antagonist when the situation war· ranted. heaven, Gt'OrRe's he•v.in' Cowit Bllly Marlln out a a f'f'tumlnt prodli•J n Ptllowy. pleasant Bob Lemon can't wait lo gel out of th dugout and tboee silly hJgh sock and long pants Hla tenur't as Interim munitger or ba ball's most sue ccasftll and volattle franchise is fmished after this season win. lose or draw lie lns!st.s on it. "the bia&Hl boo·bc>o of the year. 1' • ANDio;llSON IS Steinbrenner's kind of guy dlgnlfled, insplratlonal, strictly Marine spit-and-polish wi\h a fetish for short hair. s haven chJns and intense t~am pride. They can't. It's obvious that Steinbrenner has gln:led himself with an escape hatch in promising to give Martin his job back "if he carries himself in a manner that dignifies the Yankees." That's like telling a leopard to change bis spots or like turning a bulldog into a purring pussy cat. Dignity is not Billy Martin's long suit -never was and never will be. Stein· brenner knew that when he hired the feisty firebrand as the Yankees' pilot in August 1975. Martin's latest escapade involved a bar· room incident in Reno. Nev., last November when Billy, charging provocation, adtnilled that be slugged a newspaper reporter. The case ls pending in court. The Yankees' brass contends there have been reports of other in· discretions. SO WHAT DOE that leave? A rich. talent·loaded baseball team without a skip· per and a highly respected, winning field general without a rem Put them together and -whammo! you've got powerful chemistry. lie doesn't stray too far from George's conception of America as "Kate Smith,, apple pie and Yankee pinstripes,'• although Sparky may have to swallow bard to digest the last one. St~inbrenner came close to firing Martin three times during the past two years. One of them occurred last July after one of BiUy's frequent run-ins with Reggie Jackson. Beat· ing the gun, Martin called a press conference a nd resigned -tearfully. The Yankees named Lemon as manager. This magic merger seems Inevitable to anyone studying the s hifting winds and lbe While Sparky is fulfilling the final year of his Cincinnati contract with menial jobs. Steinbrenner and Ma'rtio are back in the pits again -exchanging barbs and innuendoes. BILLY THE KID'S record, first as player , then as manager of Minnesota. Detroit and Texas, reads like a page from the Ring Record Book. He has spent his career feudlng with players <often bis own>. bosses. THERE WAS AN OlJTC&Y of protest rrom the fans, who idolize Martin. Five days after Martin's res ignation, Steinbrenner an- See SPARKY, Page B2 Angels Check In Lansford Tops Unsigned List ' Wekome to tlae Fa•iltf A,. W1r81Mote By DAVE CUNNINGHAM OI tM Dally ,.. .. , Stall Third baseman Carney Lansford. the man the Angels wouldn't trade for Rod Carew, is still unsigned for the 1979 season. He joins catcher Brian Down· ing, pitcbers Don Aase and Dave Frost and 10 other players who still haven't agreed on con- tracts. But all· were expected to show up at Palm Springs by lo· day for the Angels' firs t workout. some or the 37 roster and nine non ·roster players s tarted c h ecking in Monday, and Man ager Jim Fregos i was counting on all of them by today. althou g h no major league baseball team eBn technically require attendance at spring workouts until March l Dodger Manager Tom Lasorda, right, welcomes three new additions to the clan at spring training in Vero Beach. From left. they are Vpn Joshua, Gary Thomasson and Andy Messersmith. Jos hua and Messersmith previously played for the team but not for Lasorda. DESPITE THE 14 unsigned players. California appears in good shape at the key positions It's Round No. 2 for CIF Playoff Teams Sea Kings, Estancia Play in Doubleheader at Cal State Fullerton 4 Dy ROGER CARLSON i Of IM Dally ~llol Staff J wo games for the price of one are on I tap tonight al Cal State Fullerton where J Sea View League kingpin Estancia and I runnerup Corona del Mar invade in CIF 3·A basketball action against Sunny Hills and El Dorado. Also in second round action tonight is I No I seed Verbum Dei against Ocean View. Sunset League cha mpion Marina and St. Bernard. and Mater Dei and ( Compton in 4-A action : and Dana Hills j and Canyon <Saugus > m 2·A play. Sea Kings or CdM Coa'Ch Jack Errion will be trying to duplicate an earlier tournament victory over El Dorado. CdM operates with All·CIF guard David Koehler and blue chip front liners Rich Kindorf, Chris Johnston and Shawn Ahearn. An additionaJ bonus is the insertion of 6-6 sophomore Mark Spinn, who scored 22 points Friday. El Dorado Coach Nash Rivera starts 6·4 Randy Wulff and 5· 11 Ron Tagney in a lineup boosted by lhe addition of Shrine football selection Chris Dressel Height is provided by 6·7 Dave Stipe. who also scored 22 points Friday ESTANCIA 'S EAGLES must contend with a scrambling Sunny Hills outfit, one which operates a lot like Costa Mesa with a pressing, trapping and rU11· ning game. Rich Cottrell, a 6·2'h rirst team All · Freeway League selection, leads Sunny Hills in the nightcap. billed for 8:30. Estancia enters with 6-4 Steve Van Horn and 6-1 Dan Maddock leadi ng the way. in addition to Tim Krohnfeldt. a third all·league selection from Coach Larry Sunderman's champions. VERBUM DEi, THE NO. 1 seed with a 24·1 record and a Uneup featuring s tarters checking in at 6·8. 6-8, 6-5, 6·5. with a 6-8 star ready to come off the bench, is a heavy favorite to s top _ seniorless Ocean View. Ocean View. however. under the coaching or Jim Harris, has ac · complished more than what most ob- servers expected this season. including a 10-point victory over Compton. Ocean View's one-two punch consists or 6·7 sophomore Wayne Carlander and 5·11 guard Jeff Andrade, while Verbum De1 's star-studded field includes 6·8 Cliff Pruitt and 6-0 guard Carmel Stevens. ST. BERNARD AWAITS Marina at Santa Monica College wit.h a one-man show in 6·1 Lance Washington, while the Yikes of Marina Coach Steve Popovich enter with the balance which saw rour See BASKETBALL. Page B2 ~ CORONA DEL MAR and El Dorado kick off the doubleheader at Cal State t~ullerton in a 7 o'clock test where the ------------------------------------------------~ Kings Win, 2-0 Lessard' s Goal Isn't a Shutout INGLEWOOD CAP) l:;hutouts aren't the most important thing to Los Angeles Kings' goalie Marlo Lessard, but be certainly does n 't mind chalkmg them up. "I like s hutouts. but It's more important that we win so lhe team can get points." the Los Angeles rookie said .Monday night after blanking the Vancouver Canucks, 2·0. "I never look for a shutout. but if I get it, that's fine. If not, I want to win, anyway." THE SHUTOUT WAS THE THlllD for Lessard, and two of them came against Vancouver. with the previous one a 4-0 Kings' triumph. "They had 13 shots against me last time, and 24 this time." said Lessard. "They really challenged me when they had a two· man advantage in the third period." Mar<-el Dionne, the National Hockey League's third leading scorer with 92 points, tallied one of the Kings' goal& and assisted on another. He gave them the lead for keeps 7:31 into the first period on a lO·footer. LOS ANGELES GOT ITS other goal with 1:54 lefl in tbe period when Charlie Simmer s kated from behind the net lo beat Can· ucks' goalie Gary Bromley The victory enabled the Kings, 26·27·8, to re1aln second place from the idle Pittsburgh Penguins tn the Norris Division. The Canucks, meanwhile, are second ia the Smybe Dtvlalon but have woo Just once in their last eight games and have a 19-33·1 record. "It wasn't fancy, but we plug1ed away," said Kings Coach Bob Berry. "It was kind of a snooser. but It was a tlght·checklng game and Marlo made the big saves for us." · 8£RaY SAID THE KEY to a lood finish la beatma the teams you're supposed to, like Vancouver. "The teams with the poorer4'eeords are the onea you have to beat," be said. "It was a muai.wtn for us. "We'd like lo play .~ hockey the rest or lbe way and 1et aecond place. tbat'a still our 1oaJ. It'll be a atru11le down to the • very end." Don Kozak, the former Kln11 wtn1er now with the Cal)ucka, said, "We rou1d have beaten them, but Lessard made some 1reat 8ee KINGS, P .. e Bl Foreip Ese•••fle tt 's not unusual to find foreign students studying in A mertcan schools but tbis case was different -umpires from Japan llnin8 up at the plate for lnstrucUon at the Blll Kinnamon Umpires School in St. Petersbure, Fla. The man behind \he chest protector. Juro AON>, is prob- ably bere for a refresher course. An amateur ump, he Is 73 years old. O'Malley Sent To Hospital For Tests · ROCHESTER. Minn. CAP> - Walter O'Malley, chairman of the board of the Los Angeles Dodgers. was undergoing evaluation tests today at the Mayo Clinic he re , said a spokesman for the clinic. The spokesman said O'Malley was admitted to Methodist Hospital Monday nlght to un- dergo the tests. A condition re· port was not immediately available, said the spokesman. O'Malley, 75. was nown to Rochester Monday from the Dodgen' spring training camp In Vero Beach, Fla., after com· plaining of diizlness while riding lo a goU cart. A team official said O'Malley's il1nesa did not appear to be serious. but he was taken to Mayo as a precautionary measure. A )'ear aco. O'Malley WIS stricken with a lung disorder while en route to Vero Beach trom Los Aneelee. He was taken then to the MaYo CUnJc and clld not an1ve in Florida unUJ mid· March. O 'Malley underwent two m•· Jor operatlonl laat year, tuna 1u.r1ery ln Junie and major heart 1ur1ery In February. He wu ac· companied to f\OChnter by the camp phyalclun, Or. Ooua Peter900. ... Seven men who figure to be in the starting lineup, three start· ing pitchers and all the key re· lievers have firm contracts ranging from one to five years. Lansford, who hit .294 as a rookie last season. is declining to comment on his 1979 contract negotiations . He reportedly earned $21,000 last year. The 6·2, 195-pound infielder gained valuable insight into his worth last month when the Angels refused to include him in a package trade with Minnesota. THE ANGELS FINALLY made the deal for Carew without giving up their bright, 22-year- o Id prospect a nd General Manager Buzzie Bavasi is confi~ dent a contract agreement will be made. •· "You can rest assured that no one who LS important to tbis team will be left without a con· tract." Bavasi said. "Mike Port. <the club's player personnel director> will be talking with them starting today." Port arrived at Palm Spnngs Monday and Bavas i will Join the club in a few days. "ALL THE PLAYERS who are unsigned are invited to spring training. In the old days it wasn't like that." Bavasi says. "But now we feel it would be cheating the players of a chance to get In shape." In case salary negotiations break down, Bavasi is leaving ,open an option some players dis· like. "We can always renew their contracts from last year," the veteran GM said. Here's a list of the holdouts : Don Aase, Willie Aikens. Jim Anderson. Ralph Botting, Bob Clark, Mark Clear. Stan Cliburn, Tom Donohue. Brian Downing, Dave Frost. Carney Lansford. Floyd Rayford, Bob Slater and Dickie Thon. THE ANGELS SKIPPED the traditional slay in Holtville lb.is season because of labor strikes in the Imperial Valley lettuce fields. Palm Springs bas only one complete diamond and an extra infield, whereas Holtville features four diamonds. The lack of facilities is a concern for Fregosi. ·w e have lo split the workouts with half the players going in the morning and the other half in the afternoon," he explained. "We won't be able to work as much on funda mentals as I would have liked because I've got to get them into shape. We're also starting later , which doesn't help." UNltGlllDANQI .. c.m.r Lanetord . • • .. .· Ill '· ' •" .. 14 •• ce f = .. . . -, : ,• • I ' d 11 1• ,, :\ I II :I 81 DAii. V PILOT .. ,• A Ceoaule Report from the Worid of 8pof1• born nows Prep tar Who Was Offered 810,000 f"Nnt AP Obtt•WMt KANSAS CITY . No -Tom 0.bome know a ot a blJb achool football &tar -.ho wu ooc. offert'd $10,000c&l b But Freddy Ahrt or Te~aa cu tot> that one. and UCLA'• Terry Oouhuo t lll an lll~1•J recru1llnc story that put.a them all ln lho ahade ''Tbt-most e'!lorbHant llleaaJ offer 1 ever h ard or wu $10,000 cash," aid () borne ol Ntbruka. "The aecood bfft. Of •'Ont. wu ~.000 cash Neither of tbo6e ktcb ended up JOina to the 1cboob that 1upposedly made the of. fer• .. Osborne and •everaJ other top col le1e football coacbe1 were asked lo llst tht-most bizarre illegal recrult!ni in· ducementl they ever beard about. The coaches. along with more than 50 sportswriters. were In Kansas City for an NCAA·Sponsored college football ~eminar "I've beard of sums e<>rudderably more than $10.000." said Akers whose home state or Tex· as is annually the battleground of some of the most epic recruiting wars ln the nation. "I've also heard of kids being offered cars and real estate deals." said Akers . "There are a lot of devious peo. pie out there. But I think some of those stories get greatly exaggerated, too." Bo Rein's favorite Illegal recruiting story supposedly took place in a motel room. "A kid had signed a conference letter o( intent." sald ·the North Carolina State coach. "I heard a represent.aUve or another school in that same conference laid many . . . and I mean MANY one·hund.red dollar bills out oo a bed and told the kid, 'We'll get you a lawyer to get you out of that conference letter or intent.· The kid finally went to neither or those schools ." Donahue admits he bas trouble believing what be once heard. "I've beard a story of a prospect who reputedly got a total package worth about $30,000," said the UCLA men· tor. "'lbat included land, farm equipment, tractors and livestock. I absolutely refuse to accept the truth of that, but I know an assistant coach who'll stand up on this table and swear it happened." -----Q.ote al fk Da11----~ Asked bow tr felt to be the Cinderella team in the Missouri Valley Conference, Drake basketball coach Bob Or&egel says: · 'l don't know -it's not midnight yet." lndla11a State Baek 111 fi'lnt The Top Twenty teams in The Associated Press col · , lege basketball poll, with first·place votes in parentheses and season records: 1. Indiana St. (51 > 26-0 11 . Iowa 19-6 2. Notre Dame (7 > 22·3 12. Temple 22·3 3. UCLA (2) 21-4 13. Louisville 23-6 4. Michigan St. Cl I 20·5 5. Duke · 20-6 14. Texas 20-6 15. DePaul 20-4 6. Syracuse 24 ·2 16. Georgetown, D C. 22·4 7. North Carolina 21·5 17. Ohio St. 17-8 8. Louisiana St. 22·4 18. Detroit 21·5 9. Arkansas 21-4 19. Purdue 21·7 10. Marquette 19·5 20. San Francisco 21-6 llosnlatt-GaH11dez Fight 011 Agal11 NEW YORK -The on·again, o(f.again Gm World Boxing Association light heavyweight championship fight between Mike Rossman and Victor Galindez is on again, with the site and date to be announced in the next two weeks. Promoter Bob Arum indicated Monday that the bout probably will be held in New Orleans, Miami or New York, with even Las Vegas a possibility. Saturday's scheduled nationally televised match in Las Vegas was called off at the last minute in a dispute over the naming of officials. Gicatt• 1t'a•t to Sip 81U,, Nortla The San Francisco Giants are reportedly • seeking to sign Billy Nortb, a free agent who played out his option with the Los Angeles Dodgers last year -.. A Pennsylvania milUonaire, Ken Pollock, has offered to put up hall the $12 million asking price for the Baltimore Orioles ... Edward DeBartolo withdrew his $13 million offer to buy the Oakland A's alter owner CbarUe Finley was unable to get a release Crom his Oakland Coliseum lease. DeBartolo wanted to move the team to New Orleans _ . . The Milwaukee Brewers traded right·handed relief pitcher Ed Rodriguez to the Kansas City Royals for cash and a minor leaguer to be named later ... The New York Mets added Nelaoa Brlles to their spring training roster. a...,.. laterrieteed blf Jflftaplal• State Memphis State University officials have m begun interviewing candidates for the Tiger basketball coaching job and tbe first man in line was former Denver Nugget coach Larry Brown. The vacancy was created when Wayne Ya&et resigned after a 12·14 season, bis first losing campaign in five years at the Tiger controls ... Leonard Robinson of the Phoenix Suns was hospitalbed with a viral Infection and his status COtlNILIU$ for Wednesday's game against the In· diana Pacers is undetermined ... University o( the Pa cific 's Roo Cornelius, a graduate of Santa Ana Valley High, has been named the Pacific Coast Athletic Assn. 's plaier of the wcelrafter S'ct>ring 41 points in a pair or games last week to help the Tigers clinch their Cirst PCAA basket· ball crown . . Peter GuclanaJHINon, Iceland's contribution to the Washington Huskies' basketball pro· gram, was named the Paclfic·lO player of the week. The 7·2 center had 72 points and 26 rebounds ln three games over the week. f.Atee1• Tee S..l.s 8JH1rlc B•ll•le OTBEa 8PO&T8 -Doe LHe scored Buffalo's nrst two goals and became the first Buffalo player the reacb the 20-goal mark tbls season aa the Sabres beat Toronto, 3~1, Monday nllbt in National Hockey League pl9 ... Former world f eatherwelgbt champion lobby Qaeo11, landing almost everything be threw. stopped 8•11 hka1ama of Japan in lhe fifth round ol their scMduled 10-roUDd JunJor ll&htwellht boOt Monday nitht before a crowd of 2.000. at the LA Sport.a Arena . . . The University of Miami (f1orid1 ) slned OaatleJ ,,_. ... to a five.year coptrac:t 11 lthletic dlrec:tor ... Tbe Toronto Bliuard of the North American Soecer League announced the alp· .. inl of two Shemeld United veterans--OoJla l'rub, a • year-old midfielder-defender and CUlfori C.lrYert, 24, a defeudel'. ~ ..... TV: No eYeat. teMduJed. L\.IJIO: .BNtetball -Kamq Clty at lbe·Laken, 7:50 ~.m., KLAC ,570). , BA.SKETBALL /BASEBAlL This Basketball Novice StandsOutontheConrt GWC STANDOUT Kim EIMnhert By HOWARD L BANDY oe .. --.,.....,.. ll you are 6-3 and played only one yur of h.llh aebool basket· ban as a Junior, what are the chances for success as a Junior col· lege player with an undereated team? For KJm Eisenhart of Golden West Colleae, the chances are excellent. In fact, she's a starter on Coach Dick Stricklin's squad and doi.DI quite well. "SHE'S IMP&OVING with every game we play." St.rick.Un says. "The inside IJ her best game and we try to take advanta1e of her heidit but her Improvement bas been ln every facet. "Klm's starting to score more and get mor,e rebounds, especially inside. I 've really ootlced the Improvement since she first came out for the team. "A lot of it ls her personal desire and she's really working hard." El8ENllA&T PLAYED high school basketball at Canoo Hl1h as a J11Dk1r before her family moved to Hawaii where they didn't have a Orta team ln the high school she attended. ''I've always been t.all." she says, "I was 6·3 in hlgb school and when I wu in the fifth grade, I was 5-4. "I've pnc:tlced a lot again.st the guys and I played on league teams out.aide of school in Hawaii at the military base. . "I feel that lf 1 practice with someone better Jhan I am, it builds me up and helps me react faster. You leart.,rou have to move." DOES SUE LIKE TO BE jostled about under the basket and does she reciprocate? "I'm not really that rowdy," she says. "You take abuse under the buket and if it starts intimidating me, I don't take it. I play a little harder and fake them out so I don't get pushed around. "Personally I don't like it when they play too rough. You might as well throw a rootball out there and tackle each other. You can be aggressive without being rough. ..MtJCR OF IT IS the intention behind doing something rough. JC someone is In rroot of you nat·footed and you knock her down, that's being rough. I wouldn't try to hurt anyone intentionally.'' When she graduated from high school in the islands, she sought to further her educaUoo at the University of Hawaii. "I wasn't ready for it and dropped out and went to work in a warehouse," she says. "l just wasn't mature enough and couldn't handle it. But my edueation is very important to me now." IN 1"IE nllST EIGHT GAllES this season, she averaged 16.2 points a game along with 11 rebounds and four blocked shots. She is bitting 53.7 i>ercent from the floor and 56.3 from the free throw line. But basket.ball may not be her bes~ ~eort. She also plays volleyball and helped the Rustlers to nru~b third ln the state tournament as a hitter and blocker. She was selected to the six· player all·toumament team and cWTently is playing volleyball with the Golden West Kids USVBA team wheo she can find the Ume. But right now. her concentration is on the Golden West College basketball team and an undefeated record that makes the Rustlers one of the early favorites to capture lhe state championship. E',.._ P.,,e BJ C:Old Wind Can't Cool Blalock Off BASKETBALL PLAYOFFS. • • players earn all·league honors as they swept to the Sunset League crown. CANYON BJGB or Saugus, which knocked off the No. 1 seed <Righetti> in the first round of the 2·A eliminations. enters with a similar lineup to Dana Hills' in terms or raw statistics-with a 6·6, 6-6, 6-4 front line. M artna is eyeing its 23rd vie· tory in 26 starts and can qualify for a quarterfinals berth against Pasadena or Bishop Montgomery. Compton's chief weapons are Dana Hills. which played and Malvin Herdon and Terry Jones, won its first-ever CIF playoff while Mater Oei counters with game Friday, relies on the scor· Sal Gaytan and John Saunders, ing of 6-4 Mike Samuels and 6-6 a pair who bave equalled the Doug Andrews, along wlih the Compton tandem in terms of rebounding and defensive· prow· scoring and performance. ess of6-5juniorChris Mathil!u. Tonight's Games 4-A otvtalon The Game , · The Site The Time Fountain Valley High 7:30 Santa Monica College 7: 30 Verbum Dei vs. Otean View Marina vs. St. Bernard Mater Dei vs. Compton Compton College 7:30 3-A Ofvtalon Corona del Mar vs. El Dorado Cal State Fullerton 7 Estancia vs. Sunny Hills Cal State Fullerton 8:30 2-A otvtalon Dana Hills vs. Canyon <Saugus) San Clemente High 7:30 49er Tops PCAA Rickey Williams of Long Beach State annexed the Pacific Coast Athletic Assn. basketball scoring title with an 18.1 average, barely holding off a trio o( challengers on the final week of regular season play. fi',....PageaJ SPARKY ••• nounced dramatically at the Yankees' Old Timers' game that Martin would return in 1980. At the time. there was no sugges· tlon of conditional clauses. Some critics said Steinbren· ner's motives were mercenary, that he reacted to appease the fans and cool press criticism. Those who know George best vow it's not true -tbe Yankees' owner, an old softie at heart, was moved by Billy's tears. But compassion can run out. The Yankees' owner was vlalbly upset over Martin's appearance at ltalning camp last week at which time be 1a1d be and acent Doug Newton were anx.loul to turn Stelnbrenner's prpmlaes in· to firm commitments. •'Nobody's 1olng to put pres· sure on anybody," SteJnbren· ner snapped. He said, ln effect, that Bll.ly must sbape up or llaY out. It'• a rap the lrluer·bappy Martin can't beat. .Edieon in Action Edison Hlgh's Charftrs, Sunset League soccer c"'bam· plons. meet Simi Valley toaltht at HWJt.inlt.oa Beacb ~la the second round of tbt CJP' •·A pl1yotta. It'• tcbeduled to belt.n •l 7. The winner advances to the quarterftn.dl P'riday qalrwt tbt 1urvlvor of the Cleremont· anraJtete match. Calvin Roberts of Cal State Fullerton, whose 247 total points were just six less than Williams' total, finished second with a 17.6 average followed by Utah State's front line tandem of Dean Hunger (17.4 > and Keith M~J)onald (17.l ). UC Irvine's Steve McGuire rinisbed sixth with a 16.0 scoring average. f'INAL R. WlllMllM. l.°"9 8ff<h Sttlt Aot.rts. CAii St ... Fulltrton Hunver, U1ett St•tt Mc Doftald, U1all Statt C.,.,..y, Paclfk McGul,., UC'"''"' 8. Ja<klOll, Utah Stttt c;o.,..llus, Paclfk Wiit,. Lono 8Hc'll St alt Rank. Sen Jote Mfte w ise, Lono ~ Statt NllH, c.l St• Fult.I'* O<aslo, UC Senta Btr-• A~noll, Ctl St ... FYllencMI MtdenK, UC '-'ta 9¥N•• H""'•"· c.t St• l'llli.tton A. WllOMm, Frtsno Sl•tt lloldt11. UC'"''"' Weld...,,,"-lfk Melldtt, Sen .>ow Statt Hl09ln1, 1'19M'O $Celt 8al IHI, U\tll Sl.-$4lltlv111. Sell JeM Stm 0 Tl' AYO. 14 U3 ti I 14 "7 17. 14 , .. 17 • 14 22'9 17 1 14 m "' 14 n4 160 .. ttl ,,, 14 717 IS$ 14 JIJ IS J 12 ,., IJ. 11 ISi U 1 14 ... IJ j .. ,., .,. 14 1111 121 14 17' 12 I 14 111 "1 14 17$ u. ti UI It• 14 ~ 11• 14 ,. 10 . '' ta 102 u ,., 101 ,, ,. 100 ,., ..... _.J KINGS ••• When he's bot be'• really oo. Kozak said be was a Utt.It bit· ter that lbe Kin.gs 1ave him up -In a trade for Randy Holt - but that he's not u:nbappy wtth Vancouver. "They wanted me,. and they're 1ivin1 me a chance," be aald. k_..,,........ v-• 0 ·-· lO\Afttti.t t • 0 1 l'fnt...,.., -t 1.M "'*~ 0-.... Q IHl!lt. Toltfl 7'11 t lot A""*" 51,.,.,_, 1 IT..,..,. OIMMI ti; ........ "'" -Orlldt ... VM. U 4l OMftllt • L.A. U:• $t(e1111 l'trltd Neflt l't11a11lu - MCllNftly, V .... IO •1 M. WllWll. lA. II ,., l.lftdtNft, ... _, • ,.,, Thlrf...... ,._ ........... _,,._. ~. l ;t4; .... LA, IO ... --. VMI, IO JS; A-l.A, It .. SllMt "' ... , -v--r • .. ,.,4 LM ........ 11·0•101' o..Mtot -\Ifft(-• .._..., 1. .. """'"· ".,..,..,,,._,.., ST. PETERSBURG , Fla . <AP > -Although it numbed her bands and chilled her bones. the cold. gusty wind that tormented other golfers couldn't stop Jane Blalock's hot shooting in the LPGA Orange Blossom Classic. Blalock shot a 70 in the touma· ment's final round Monday to finish with a toum ament·record 205 that gave her a 6·stroke vie· tory. Blalock's ll·under·par total made her the second player to win the tournament two straight years in its 26·year history. Kathy Whitworth won the event in 1968, '69 and '70. BLALOCK BESTED Amy Alcott's nine·under·par total in 1975 on the par·72, 6,109·yard Pasadena Golf Club course. Blalock picked up the first prize or Sll.250. The final round was postponed Sunday b9cause of heavy rains and winda. Tbe winds kicked up again soon after the start or play Monday. But Blalock. who began the day with a three.' stroke lead. added to that quick· ly with birdies on three of the first five holes. · · 1 really got out or the gate to- day. That helped a lot." Blalock said. "My hands started getting numb and cold. The wind was cold and damp." BUT THE WIND'S effects on her were negligible. "'I don't like to play in the wind, but I guess nobody does. I've teamed to drill the ball low into the wind and I also tend to play more aggressively because I like the challenge." Blalock said. "I've practiced a lot in the wind. What's important is that I don't fear it," she said. Sandra Post shot a 70 Monday to finish second at 211. earning $7 ,500. JoAnne Carner sbot a final·round 68 for 213 that tied heT with Pat Bradley for third and the $5,400 third priie. POST EAGLED the ninth hole but Blaloc1t said ahe dido 't let thOOght.s of a Post challenge bot.her ber. ...... ,..* ~11.,..211 ",,.,..,.. '1·1 ..... 111 7'..t-,..214 "'"'" '" ,..,.,,.,.., .. 11 '"'' tw , .. , .. ,..,.. ... , .. n.iu ",..,., .. r.:=~ '~'" rJ.-11 ra.zt1 11.,..,..,., .. ,.,..., .. ,,.,..,,,ne 3.fUNll n.ll-.,.,,. KIM EISENHART Yanks Not Pro-Reggie, Says Reggie OAKLAND (AP> -Before heading for the New York Yankees' spring training camp, Reggie Jackson dec lared, "Yankee management ia not pro· Reggie Jack.son." The outfielder, interviewed at his Oak.land home by ~olumnist Ron Bergman of the Oaklaocl Tribune, indicated he'd like to have a man·tO·man talk with Yankee owner George Stein· brenner. "I don't know a lot about what George Steinbrenner does. l thought I knew hjm, but I don't know him, .. Jackson said. "Yankee management is not pro· Reggie Jackson. l can't even talk to Steinbrenner. The only time I can get Steinbrenner to talk t-0 me is when he reads something in the paper. · "I've got to get some publicity to get b.im to talk to me. Stein· brenner hasn't talked to me all winter." Jackson was sus pended by Manager Billy Martin ror five days last summer for trying to bunt when he had orders to swing. Soon after he returned to the team, the Yankees fired Martin and named Bob' Lemon manager. The Yank ees caught tbe Boston Red Sox and won the American League East title in a playoff. They repeated as AL champs by beat1ng Kansas City in the championship series, with Jackson driving in six runs, and beat Los Angeles in the World Series with the help or Jackson's eight RBI. Jackson 's most significant contribution in the Series, however, came in the fourth game when he stuck a hip into the path of a throw lo prevent a double play. ··1 should have gotten the Most Valuable Player for that play." J ackson said. "I don 't get credit for any quick·tbinking acts in general." Basketball Playoff Sites T~t Cl I' l'lt""' •A IMCW!ld-1 v ... butn Otl"" <>c.... View •t Fount.Mt ve1 .. v Cr•1<tnt• V•llev v' t.8 w 11-. ti LAl!.WOOO HIOI\ Comptoft ¥),Matti' Del ti OwnP!Ofl Colteve lOl'Olt 0 Mornlft9~ "' c~ H IOfl l 0 Poly vs.. O•Nnl •t Mlllll••n lnQlt"'OOd"" ~Marcos •I Do\ Pueblos M• ..... YS SI. 8t'f'nard •t sent• Mo<\tU CA>lle9P Pe-..a YS 8l11'1op Monlgome,.., el "-- 141011 J.A ewe...,.,_,, Sen•• Ant ""· Noni\ IRl.,.,.ld"I •t ll1wrslCH cc 80IU G<--"' Bev.riv H•ll• •t Wflt Tor· r.!lftO Gl•nd• .. "' Ul-0 ., Troy Hlon I 1t.11Clt "' Sunnv ..... , •I C•I St•M Fullertofl It JOI los A~vs TroYat El 00.-c ...... -4 MM vs El Ooraoo •t C..I Sl•I~ FullerlOfl 111 lK At1"' Y~ 9¥1-at ll•ntow COll- L• Httlr•"' [)owlwy •t Wer"'" ''"'--' ce,.tOfl "' Oefte "'"• ., ~ ci.n."t" O\itn. Y\ Mllnono Vtlley •I 11- lroc!IO Y1 f>tr-t ti 0owMY si.rra vs CID¥1N at EOO-- M1u1on Vltjo"' Wonlmtft •C LI! w11-e1 ~"' v1c1ot v.1 .. y et APllM v .. ..,, Me'ff .. , .,_ H«11Wltw tt ~u Coli.ge Burr~"' ~lllo •I Lompoc ,_.,_,....., 1111-. It'-,_., ....... , v ....... a Ct4 .... Vellty Otrllll«I el TwtlltymM Pak'M Mlrelft .. M -< .. If' ....... St ~·ti S...U YMI l!en11l119 at AvletlOfl lllsllOI> °'"" "' ~ 801<0 Teen ti Hoe,. o..... $1, JfMPllS ..... _ '-" kMett lltaM-1 0_..,t Valln ti C'MdwlO Sl'MWIOofl et Shffmtfl lftdltn crowwds et 5efl Jacl11lo ~ ...... ,,."" ...... "' l.aStllt P•-l'ioly et Coa~t UftlOn """" °"'"'-vs. IUv•nlde OWl•t .... "' t;el 1#141,, H•lflMt L"'lltflft n Nle!Oltyl<tfld tt "-°"all Ctllf9e Cai.,.,, ~""•" tCOIOIPIOftl "' Ort119t '-11Ulere11 • t.~ All_, 111 JO unltn otNf'wlw ,_lflH NBA Scorin8 0 ~· " .... •"9 ., ~ ~..,. ,. .. Je"74'ti-. ... 0 ... t» "'' ,., tO ~ Mt t.m 1'4 t1'7'a'4'HS .. -atMtt .... .. ,. .,, "" ,. 1 J't M JtS tN 1U " * ,,.. •• a.s ,. Wit ~ ,. 11,j . • i: n •' BASKETBALL I TENNIS I BASEBALL AP Wl'""90IO POISED AND READY -Notre Dame's Bill Laimbeer. right. prepares to pass around East Carolina 's frank Hobson in Mond ay night's basketball game at South Bend , Ind The Irish won. 89-72. Irish Ra•nhle On Stanford Stum Oregon St. * College WEST Sl•nfO<'d 1'. Of'eQoft SI, I~ Nl'"•.0.-R-'1. ~altlf S• Nirw M<'•lco 1,. ,t.,11ona '9 P1!11,,.rdl"" 104 Ct'ntfMrv 86 R~1•M.Cotor-MonUS6 ~<tttlt' P11<:1flc 11 ~·~Foo I• S Coto••Oo a•. N MP<1to jof 1(11\1.tnc!\ ,,, S Ul.tl\ 110. W~tmo"\lt• I\ EHIC...ic-~-· Ot'l•w11rp n. R~r 10 Wo t Olf•let SI o8. lfhoQh M l • S.li. a., l>fOf\tra 11 O<e .. 166. Ame<o<.., U \\ on..n NOf'9 Oitme ,., E C.ro11.,.. It Svr«""'" 91, leMov"" 60 lC •YIC!r. CltMo II. Sovl"-Slt'N\ .0 Goeorqut l<'<h n . Camoce11 &I P•" A-rl«tn 811 N Tl""' SI '1 Girls' CIF Pairings Gl•L.S Cl~ 8ASICET8Al.l he"-II-1'1ayett Sl1u _,..t (7 JOI •·A !it "°"'°"•I B~n<1 HVtltl""°" 9eKll •I Allldmtir• Alf'many"t Ventur~ ~an G.tbr~t •• NPwt>ury P"'" Pc)( tit< at Arc Mio a ~ ~ •11.onq 8N1<n Poly Soutll lOtTitn<<' al C0<noton Mal~ Del .t NH •110r1 H.,bor )-A F'oolllolt •I Alto& LO<•M Ooa11 v-at C-• del Mar Nort,., IA1~"•0f') et Morn1~\1d~ !Mini• Mi>rla •I UK AllM P •Yfr\IO<' Poly di San Luo\ODt\00 Cost•,,_..,, •I Villa PM~ fu\hnat~r~ lhlal'Kt• •I R1~n1 I& JO• l·A Bl•ltOI> °"'90 at G,.l\r Plonttf at ~ ci.t'Mnle Ar1ttl• •1 Ceft1r..i f•c>er•ru• •I C•o;.ir"no Vallo 8• •••tv al Sc"'"' 11111\\IGn V .. ro •I C..lltOf"'" 8~111-•t Sonora Covin• at St. Bonavttl"tturr t·A V•llev Oln•ll..., at !>al'I• Cl•r• I.•~ •I T-nlyn1nf P""'' 1.41 S"'"e t01 f't>rYI\ Bllf'il•., Culver Coty •I•><_.,,., Cal-W\ lmoen•t al Noire O•,,.. !Riv I Pov•• o..i. at Rosamond Onterto (lw'l.tlotn di Rom ol IM World 5-llk-• Wl'lilllef' OW'IStlMI al Ma~lt4ll Cu ye,.,. V.,ley at MelOOylancl Rlo~•I~ ~rl<OCM 411 SlwnNln tnd••n P•-., "'°'Y vs. 1.llMrty Cllf"ll · llM •I Edl'IOll l>floh Ill o-M Val ... •I LaVente lu1M•an 0•1<-at 811<kle• Tem ple Cl'tr lsli•n "''· 0"""9<' 1.uther•n a1 St JOf><o El•m•,.,t•ry S<llOOI l~YI UCI Tennis MEN UC,,.,..._ I, L.9ftt llff<ll ital• 1 SI ....... WootdrlOC)t IUCll dtt F•i•dman ,..3, • 4, St•lder IUCI) dtf t<•uler •·l. ..... .,_., Eclt.s IUCll del Pontr •·l , 112, ~fly.,, (UCll cMf Hardi 6-J. M , (iood tUCll del MoravM & I, J.4. SleugM IUCIJ cwt. W4't~rhou~ •-l ll-4 ~ frltdmu 1°1>feuter ILlll det. Sulllven-Wooldr~ M . 1·5: Stalcll!r· •-I IUCll def. H-f..Pof'I .. M , J 11 Sle u9lll·Edln IUCI I dtl waf~..-.Mor•wc "''· "''· SOUTH BEND. Ind. Senior Bill Laimbeer scored 17 points and pulled down 13 rebounds in his final home gam e Monday night, leading second· ranked Notre Dame to an 89-72 college basketball victory over East Carolina. The Irish. holding an 8-6 edge early in the first half, outscored the Pirates -l0·2 to build an 18·10 lead with 12:48 remain· ing. The hosts then outscored East Carolina 10-4 lo lake a 28·12 advantage. Other top scorers for the Iris h were Tracy J ackson with 15 points, Bruce Flowers 14, Orlando Woolridge 13 and Bill Hanilik and Rich Branning, 10 apiece. Stanford.. 19-16 STANFORD -Wolfe Perry and Kim· berly Belton led a school·record 68 per- cent shooting rught as Stanford upset Oregon State 79-76 in a Paci!ic-10 Coo· ference game Monday night. Perry canned 10 of 15 shots en route to a 23·point performance. 19 of them in the second ha lf. Belton bjt 9 of 10 shots m scoring 21 point-;. As a team , the Ca1rdinals made 31 or 45 attempts Stanford. a fter over coming 10 straight points by Ore'lon State midway through the first half. led 38·36 at i!"· ter m ission and stretched that to 56·42 m the second half before Oregon Stale came back. The final margin was as close as the Beavers could come. Oregon State, which hoped to get an at-large NCAA bid, is now 11 ·6 in the conference. in third place, and 18-8 overall . Stanford is 6·10 and 12·13. NftxuJa-R~o. 81 ·59 RENO Mike Gray scored 22 points, including a game-winning 25-foot jump shot with four seconds remaining, to pace Nevada · Reno to a 61-59 West Coast Athletic Conference victory over Seattle Monday night. The contest was close all the way and Seattle went into a seven-minute stall near the end of the game, trying fo r a gam e-clinching s hot. Edgar Jones contributed 21 points for Nevada-Reno. Seattle got an 18-point performance from Clint Richardson and a 14·point ef- fort from Carl E rvin. ~·-~,104-88 MALI BU -Forward Ollie Matson scored 26 points Monday night lo lead Pepperdine to a 104·86 victory over Cen· tenary and help longtime Waves Coach Gary Colson close out his stint at the school on a winning note. Colson. the Pepperdine coach since 1968, announced ear lier this season that he was quitting to pursue outside busi· ness interests. Matson. a senior playing his final game for the Waves, also bad 10 re- bounds. Senior guard Ray Ellis added 17 points for tbe Waves, and guard Ricardo Brown had 14 points and 11 as· sis ls. GoHers Can Compete Women amateur golfers will have an opportunity to Cain a spot in the Women's Kemper Open field at Mna Verde Couo· try Club dur\ng a qualifylna round at the course Monday. Marcb 19 according to chalnnan Jim Poteet. Any woman amateur with a handicap of five or Jess is ellgi· ble to try for one of the amateur apoU in the field for the event that wlll be nationally televised by NBC. "Tbe course the amateurs will qualify on will be virtually the u me 6,100.yard, par·7l laYoUt the LPGA wll1 uu for the tournament," Art Schllllng, golf profesak>Dal al Mesa Verde CC, says. Registration forms are avalla· ble at the c lub or al the Women's Kemper Open touma· mcnt office, Suite 208, MC!sa Verde Drive Plaza, 1525 Mesa Verde Or. East, Costa Mesa. A $55 entry fee will be required with completed applications. The appllcalions nrc due at the Mesa Verde CC pro shop no later than 5 p.m . March 16. Tee times w1JI start at 8 : 30 with three plac e s In t he c ha m· plonship field reserved by the LPGA for a m ateu ni. \ Women's Sports €alendar Ba.Utball y .. .., (lt41..-• W ft 01.-.0 ¥elf •I ~~ WHI 14 ..01 0--.tVCltv~O Jitl ......., HI.II !lot-<I, ._. ).A ..... l A ........... _..,.. ,_.., l!\1-la-' R~nl .. '°'' Hvln 1~1"" ........ AINl!'l&f• Cl JOI Malff o.t <Ot H4tw!)Ott HMllot 11 JOI. Ou ... V-•t '°'°"'* O.I Me• 0 JOI Cooi. ~ et VIiie .,._ 11 Jiii .. _ .•. ~, ........... ,.,I"-"'°'· o L lll<lrfY Chfl\I~ •I ~Ol>Qft HIOll Ill TIMonMy < .... C.0..-Wini •I F'Uller10<\ \--I ,.,....., (<>11-0-Uf lovofW •' All Cal fout_., .t Uf AIV .. \ldt C.old•n Wt•• •• l'ulltrlOll 10 ... ".,,_, "" ....... 11141" ~(l>OO• (IF • A J A 1 ... ptoot•• C Oii•• tethMI\ I Softball , ... l' •11011 S<N>OI [OIW>f\ ., corona .,.,, -IJI Vftlftl\lly •I 0...... Hllh ll U I (011"99 U. H*">Or •I Or-tNsl Ill ~· H•Oll S<'*>I P:oumeln V•lltY •• !>adclt-~ JI Pa<llote •I HUf'llnqlon 8ea<fl Ill ~., Hl91t S<ltOOI G<1rci.n Qrow •I EOl>Otl fl' F-11111 at FGUM•ln Valley Ill, Cost• MHa •I Cac>astr-V .. ley (31. El Toro •IS." C-le IJI. Untvtnol)' ., Tustin U I ....... ,. H1Qll S<l'oOI MlHIO'I Vltto 41 Cosl• ,._._ 131 un•••n•tt •IS... Cle,,..,,1• 131 Colle9f Gol-WHI •t El C•mlno n lOI, Ml San AnlCWllO di OraftOe Cool•l 131 s.a.-.., .,,9,, Scl'oOI s... 0. ....... 1. •t wonm..., Ill COll191 Pa~•• Gol<len west 111 Swtmmlng l' ... , t<1011 S<llOOI Fullenon •t 1""1"" 131 ......... , Col._-0..lft'y at Or-CO.SI Il l T'"""""Y HoQlt School Fovnlal .. V•ll•Y •t Un1ve~•· 131, Marina •I K•l•ll11 131. COrona °"'MM •' NO•OOf1 Hart>Or Cl\; V•len<la at l,..trw 131 ""..., >11011 ~ s.sn Clo"""11• at PoKllk• 131. Coll09" El Camino, Ful,.r10f' at 0r•f'9e C:O.•I ll lOI, Cllf\IS •I !>addttlMIO II P m I $al~ >119 n Scl'IOOt Edison at H•ctenoa H•'9flh Wll'!On Reins , Track end Reid ""'' H lqlt S<hool Unlversltv al uouna IH11<:1t (31, Ntwpor1 Ha,_ al C-a clfl Nl•r Ill. '""' ....... HIQh Scltool Marina •I C.O•I• MtlHt ll•. FOUftlaln Valley •I Ell..-<•• C31. Miss ..... Vwto•I Con>n<1 elf! Mar 131; ~str...o V•lley, AMN!lm at I rv1ne (71 ,r\4ay Coll~ Sou1"-SI •t COIOtn Wttt 111 s..-.., COllf'91' UC '""'"" ., Cal Poly Pomon• t!O am l Tennis w~., COllflQt Rtce •t UC INIM 111. T""f'Wlay ColleQ« O••nqt' Cont •I C.roumo"t 111 Qol°"" WHt al Cy~tt> 121. Cllrus •t S<ldclle04l<k 17\ l'rhM Y Coll~ UC"'""" at UC So&ttl .. Bart>a•• Ill S.tunSay Cott~ UC I Nine"' C•I Poly San 1.ul~ Ot>bpo IOd m I Gymnastics w-..., Ml9h Scllool E\\etl(la •I VIII• P.trk Ill, ,,..,,... •t Et Oot-C3 ISi Colleqp-EI C;tm1no •I Or•"90 Caul fl JOI. T--...Y HIQll S<_l\ool FOV"t•ln Vall•Y ... Fulla<lott l•I Hunh"91on fie.Kit •I El Toro 131, Saft Oeml!nl• •I Tuslln ll lOI Friday ~tlf'O*-Or.nqie C.O.~I al Plt<c~ U JO I, El C•mlno et (,oid9ft ~ ll.lOI Vdas Falls To Walts In Tourney From AP Dispatches MEMPHIS Unhe ralded Butch Walts has scored the fi rst major upset of the 1979 U.S. Na· tional Indoor Tennis Ch am· pionships, stunning No. 2 seed Guillermo Vilas in the opening round. "I Cs a good win for me." Wa lts said Monday night aft.er beating Vilas 7·6. 7·6. 'Tve been working hard all wi nter and it finally paid off." ln other opening round action. No. 9 seed Tim Gullikson scored a 7·5, 4-6, 6·1 victory over South African Andrew Pattison and Roscoe Tanner advanced with an easy 6-2, 6-2 victory over South Africa's Deon Joubert.. Tomaz Smid s u rp r ised veteran Marty Riessen 6-2. 6-3 ; Edd ie Dib bs d o wne d To m Gullikson, 6-4, 6-2 ; Buster Mot· t ram r a llied t o beat Trey Waltke, 3-6, 6·4, 6-2: Hank Pfister defeated Angel Glmeoei, 6·3, 6-1: J ohn Alexande r beat Phil Dent, 6-4, 7-6; Sandy Mayer downed Zeljko Franulovic. 4-6. 6-3. 6-0, and Adriano Panatta topped Terry Moor. 6·3, 7·5. EcenSllarp DALLAS -Methodical Chris Evert rusposed of young Wend y Barlow, 6-2. 6-l Monday night in her first appear a nce before a Dallas audience since 1974 to gain the second round of a women·s pro tennis tournament. After breaking even in the first four games of her first set wttb the 18-year-old Brigham Young University freshman, the second·seeded EveTt began wbltlling away with a fine baseline ga me. "I waa getllnl my feel of the court,.. Evert said. "It Is slow here. At Los Angeles, it was fast ... Fourth-s eede d D i ann e Fromholtz breeied by Marcie Louie, 6-\, 6-3 in an eftortless opener and Mh·seeded Virginia Wade settled down After a slow start to defeat Bettyann Stuart., 6-3. 6·3. Fir•t·round casualties Monday night included s)xth seeded Kerry Reid, who lost to Llnd• Stes el, 6~M: ninth-seeded Kathy Jordan, a 8-4, 7.5 loser lo Lea Anton op olis, and l&th· seeded. Murita Redondo, who fell to Kate Latham, 8·2. 7~ ' T~. F~ary V . f979 OAIL Y PILOT •:J scr A Ratings County Ranks Very High By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Of -O.llY """'~ If Orange County isn 't the tennis capital of µie world, it certainly rates as one of the m a1or powers. Rankings by the Southern California Tennis Assn. have just been released, and Orange County accounts for 43 of the 327 players listed. · Surprisingly, Orange County earned only one No. 1 ranking among the 23 divisions, that by Ron Livingston. a Laguna Beach man playing in the 45·year-ol~ bracket. LIVINGSTON 'S NEIGHBOR. Jim Calde'rwood. ranks third in the same division. while Laguna Beach 's Dick Leach is No. 5 in the tough men's 35 divtsion. Newport. Beach placed 11 of its pl ayers in the rankings. more than any other Orange County city. Figuring prom inently are two players wbo led Corona del Mar High to its fourth straight CIF ( ) cha~pionship last year-rr'ENNIS Kevin Forbes and Craig i . Thomas. They're ranked e ighth and 12th in the ---------boys· 18 singles. . Al so of note is Costa Mesa's Bob Duesler . the No. 2 player in the men's 35 singles. He trails only Horst Ritter, a perennial No. 1 from Pasadena who is frequently seen in Or ange County tournaments. ANDREA GONZALEZ, a fres hm an a t Newport. Harbor High and daughter of all-time great Pancho Gonzalez. is ranked ninth in the girls' 14 s ingles. Following are the Orange Coast area players mentioned in the SCT A rankings c 11 of the coun- ty's ranked players are from outlying areas s uch as Fullerton and Tustin and are not listed>: Girls' 12 sing.Jes -9. K. Uma Rao <Irvine >; 18. Catherine O'Meara <Costa Mesa). Boys' 12 sing.Jes -15. R. Scott Brownsberger <Newport. Beach >; 18. Ian Aler CNewport. Beach l. 20. Patrick Rutz CNewport Beach ): 21. David Pratt <Newport Beach ). Glrls' 14 s ingles -9. Andrea Gonzalez <Newport. Beach ). Boys' 14 singles -5 . Richard Leach <Laguna Beach >; 11. David Gerken <Corona del Mar l. Boys' I' singles 22. Eduardo Arredondo I Costa Mesa l Class A Erik Michelsen <Laguna Beach ). Glrls' 18 singles 14. Moira O'Toole I Irvine 1 Class A-Kelley Smith <Newport Beach l Boys' 18 singles -8. Kevin Forbes <Corona del Mar>; 12. Craig Thomas 'Corona del Marl. 20. J im Snyder <Costa Mesa ). Men's slngles 7 Robert Wright !former UC Irvine player >: 13 Robert Chappel <former UC Irvine player l. Women's singles -6. Cynthia Ash.Ung <Corona del Mar>. Men's 35 singles -2. Robert D~sler <Costa Mesa l: s. Richard Leach c Laguna Beach l. 8. Gary Johnson ct'ountain Valley I. 9. Herman Ahlers <San J ua n Capistrano I. 15 Henr y Leichtfried Clrvine l Wom-en's 40 siog le s--C. Karen Knocke !Irvine). Men's 45 singles -1. Ron Livingston <Laguna Beach ): 3. Jim Calderwood <Laguna Beach >: 7. Richard Doss <Newport Beach l. 12 Tim Peralta CNewport. Beach). Women's 45 singles -3 Lisbet ~hwart.z <Laguna Beach l. Women's 50 singles -2. Irene Hays (Newport. Beach). Men's ee singles -4. Robert Hill <Laguna Beach >: 6. Horace Proul <Huntington Beach l: 13. Douglas Whitfield mana Point>. • • •• LOS CABALLEROS RACQUET and Sports Club is preparing for a $5,000 tournament. the Yonei Orange County Open, to be held March 16·25 at the Fountain Valley complex. Al so on the schedule is the Laguna Beach Winter Festival tourney. which opened last weekend and concludes Sunday • • • BACKSTllOKES: Gordon Kent has taken over as the new head pro and manager of Harbor Rac- quet Club in Costa Mesa. Kent attended Newport. Harbor High, .Orange Coast College and Long Beach State. For the past four years be bas been a tennia pro in New York ... Ross Greiner, former pro at the Racquet Club of Irvine, is moving to Provo, Utah where he will be pro al the Sherwood HUis Racquet Club, co..owned by the Osmond family. GWC Women Win MOORPARK-Cindee Secrist burled a three· biller to lead the Golden West College women's softball te am \o Its fourth v ictory In as many outl.n«s M'onday. 6 ·0 o ve r Moorp a r lt College. her~. Secrtst struck out two and waJJced three to rt£· later her second decll'lon oftbeyoungcampalan b Raleen S liva. Patti M e durls and Chrls Stock all went two.for· f o ur t o p ace tb c Rustle rs· nlnc·hll at· tack. k-.'91-.0 GolOtn Wf'Jt OJO 010 04 • 0 M04I< ~~ 000 OllO 0 • J \ S.trl I -V-. Gr~• •M V•IPntlfl'I k9"'91,_. OC(' 000 -o-o J J 11 Cafl'llM 100 Oil t-ll • O Alltll •n4 11fn•tA, T'•rO a110 ,..." ... " ' Still Playing Dora, lOO, Loves Golf WICHITA, Ka n. CAPl -Dora Spa ngler celebrated her lOOt.h birthday Monday. but like a ny golfer forced indoors by winter , she's itchy for warmer weather and the chance to swing ber club' again. "If the weather ever warms up so you can 'Jet outside, I'll play some." said the spry Wlch1t11 wom&n who took up golf at age 80. Th~ 4-foot-11, 98·pouod centenarian -whose accuracy on the fairway and greens compensate$ for her lack or power -matched her age last sum· meio with separate nine-bole rounds of 49 a nd SO at .,. . tbe 'Echo Hills Golf Club. where sbe is ser geant·at· arms and a lifetime member. ELAINE CARLSON, one of her four children, hosted a day-early birthday party for her mother Sunday and ma ny friends and relatives, includln&" son E.G. Spangler from Center port., N.Y .. came to celebrate. She bas 11 grandchiJdren and four great-great· grandchildr en s pread fro m New Yo rk to California. lnevitably, Mrs. Spangler was asked bow it feels to be 100 -an age fewer tha n fi ve. hundredths of one percent of the U.S. Population ever reaches. "I DON'T KNOW yet. This is my first time." sbe replied with a gleam in her eyes. • Responded Mrs. Carlson, "MentaJl y she's a$ alert as ever . In fact. she 's a little brat." Her mental alertness and exercise she Rell from golfing may ha ve saved her life last No; vember when Mrs. Spang ler fell in the middle of the night in her home. where she lived alone. Her husband died 24 years ago. • Although he r head was bleeding profuse!$ from striking the bed frame, she managed to crawl to the kitchen a nd pull the telephone down lo the floor by its cord. Then she caJmly told the operator to call Mrs. Carlson, an ·ambulance - a nd lbe fire department. because her doors were locked and they would have to break in. SHE SPENT two weeks in the hospital ana a nothe r three weeks al her daughter's home. She now has a fuU -time housekeeper. "Her doctors suggest that we get her out a.s soon as the weather breaks and s he'll perk right up. This weather has her bored," said Mr!J. Carlson. who takes he r mother golfing in an elec· lric cart. T hat would be just fine with Mrs . Spangler. ··1 UKE TO PLAY golf because it's fut\ to meet a lot of people." she said. "( think people in sports like ~wling and golf are more friendly than a lot of people, because we're a ll doing the sam..e thing." ; Mrs. Spangler. a native Kansan who 1s the OI)· ly survivor of her parents' family of 12 child ren. took up golf and bowling at age 80 at the urging of her daughter. She aYer aged abou\ 100 in a bowhng league until quitting it three years ago when .Mrs. Carlson. who was her partner. developed a sor.i;! elbow and could no longer bowl. Mrs. Spanglt!r says she still can bowl. but prefers golf CdM. Wins, 4-3, On Just One Hit Co r o n a d e l M ar proved that hitting 1sn 't the only thing m high school baseball The Sea Kings collect· ed only one base hit but nontheless scored a 4·3 victory over visit ing Westminster Monday in their season open er. Oddly enough. that sole safe ty by Carl Ehlmann in the fifth inning d1dn 'l even figure in Cd M 's scoring. Wh at did was control p r oblems by Westmins ter pitchers who issued 14 walks and also hit one batter . In the fourth inning. when Corona del Mar knotted the score with a three run rally. the Sea Kings combine d five wa lks with a Cielder 's choice and a balk The winnin g tally came in lbe sixth on a walk, stolen base a nd an error. Steve Leslie was the main weapon for the Sea Kings. He went the dis- t ance on t he mound , Alamitos Results , .. Metl9•' lltll ft,....,.. i.-t mee11~1 Tot>o 5-1-• IOH-rl • 10 s tr iking ou t six a nd wa lking one. In a Troy Tournament. consolat ion game. L-a Mirada r a llied in the late innings to mp Ocea11 Vi e w . 3 ·l . OV 's Seahawks were hm1ted to just three hits in !lie game. ke'9 "' lltltlft9' W'SllT'OMlet 110 000 ) & 1 CO<'Oft• ci.t INI• 000 JOI ~ I l Marcin RO(lrtquel U I ftnd 8rtt L.•'''~ •l'ld ~at• W Lt",ltr l M•rton korellyfM- La Mor.ci.t 000 01• J • 1 Ocfln V,.w 100 000 I J I PIU . Wll•on 1\1 end F.t•<~lh KOii., 8'1-00"" 10 -M•ION'Y W Pl-• L 8t1il>irlt' Baseball Scores COi.LEGE USC6. A1vw P.tellk 1 L~ 9Hcfl !>I •.UCLA ~ LOY04• S. ArlnlflA J Cal Poly ISl.01 a C•t Sllllt' ........... ,,,. Ari,_ SI 14, L• Vernt' 1 Biota J, Whffton 1 UC Rlvtrskle IS, Redland\ J JVNIO. COW.EOE Ca"Y-S, (lpr-rlt~ 1 f' ull"'10tt l:J. /, Ventur. 1 • S•n a...-c11no 12, Ea,1 '-" I EIC .... tno•. lr•TKllO W~>l lA ll, Piffu 'Cl NIG+t SCHOOi. Cor°"'* dllll Mar 4, W.stmu1 .. t'r I M"9no!I• 1, S... Otmentr • la HAii<• S. Plonffr I T,.,,T_ ~•JNillr•O.;lt I( •ltll• 4, er..-Otl""• J ICrftntcly 1, Villt P•"' O LO• Al&ml~ 6, W.-.ltr~ 1 ~•r«Ul ....., .. Ott '· OrM19t 0 Ln Mtrae.t J, Oceafl Vi.w I EIS.....-T--t Arcadl• l , s.v-11 1 1 IO, J 40, .,,..._r_ E•-ss (Mis------------h ll 1 J 60, 1 60 Su<uutul Ord•• Chuler) 3.00. U Eu<I• ,.,.., P<tfd SttlO SeCOflCI r«:e (....., 1.•N I M h· -•"' •• oo. 6.00, a.ao: • ..,., , _ _, ll.ott9o1 U O. t . ..O. DI.,. -CO.n- "isl l.~ Tlltrd rece-Ml9MY Spry CAWllll l H , J oo. 1 .O; S•"9• Suqull 18"1.,.,I l.OQ, l.40, CNNM ~ IWltt ..... SIUO P:our111 r--.•ey At<o ICr-1 4 00. J . 70, t .40. 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' '\ ,. -· Sil DAIL.Y PIL.Ol f~. feb1uary 27 1979 Business East Coast Oil Hunt Resumes 0 200 I I GEORGES BAlll NEW \'ORK (AP 1 Sttvttal Jllfl aft.r lht> oil pr IUIDed to bf-off tM AU Uc Cout •u ball)"hoot"d •~ Cllf" Dl'8wer lo E~~l C-Oast enc>f(t)' nffd , U 1Ull u n't Cutl a car or I\; t a hom Legal and ttthnkal probl ms. and Ju.a t plaJn b•d lurk. arc ktepLna thCI ar.-a rrom playtq • kt')' part In tht• nalloo · eMr~)' pk1Urt". that the 1ta11e t5 N tor •"°°'"'r lr)' THE ••t:DEAAL 10\ t>mm nl wlll open b ds Wedne day from oU ~mparu for drlllln1t rt1ht1 10 more ar~u of tht' 8 llJmor-¥ Canyon, the bt> t kno"n ut th.- Atlanttc offahore nru:. And a U.S. Court of APPf'•I• hht'd an lflJUDt'ltoo last wef'k agalnil lhf' sale of sit ln tht1 G~r((t':. S.nk arH off Cape Cod The-Ea t Coas t orfshort> 01lfielcb we~ n ver ant~nded w help relieve lht' nauon ·s rehanct> UC/ Seminar Set Saturday A seminar, "The Marketing or Pro!essiona1 Services." will ht! held from 9:30 a .m . to 4 30 p.m Saturday al UC Irvine. Fee is $55 and mcludes coun.e materials. lunch and parking The seminar wa ll be held in Room 220 of the Social Service Tower on campus Stephen Curtis, president of the Marketing Institute, will speak. More information about the seminar is available at the UCI Extension offi ce. 833·5528. So Far,, Bad Luck Has Hurt Much-ballylwoed U.S. Hopes on oll lmporu bc!fore lhc nut dt"cade. But now .-n-n the-mo \ opUmistlc anal ya la don 't cxpt-ct to '" eMrgy lrom the AUantlc bt-fon' ttllO Jn faclAbe •mo14nt of naturaJ .c 1 proctuc-NI from thee two uc t'HJllul AUantir offshore wells In a day ~-ould be le~• tbun .-nouah to heat 100 vf'rage·1l1f'd home for 1 yt"ar "I TIONK IT' ROIDJC lo be a long, stow prt)(tu to ftnd th 011 .-.nd gu out lhere," one mduslry SOUr<'f Hld Tbe number!! 1nvolv1.•d <1re what cauaed the 1nlt1al op t1mi5m. The AUanlac Coast area Iii W1!eved to hold 13 5 trillion t'ubic feet of natural gas about eigbl months worth of U.S ~upply and a lesser umount of crude oil. Five years ago. with foreign oil prices rising, that looked gr eat, especially to the East Coast, which uses four times as much imported oll as other parts of the nation. BUT ATrEMPTS TO rush into production brought environmen· ta l protests that are still being sorted out. As a res ult, only two areas have been explored. and those only partially. Wells off Georgia a nd the Carolinas in the region known as the Southeast Georgia Embay. ment produced nothing, and oil firms have just about given up on that area. [ __ E_NE_llC_Y_J Orllllng In the Baltimore Can· yon has been just about as un· succeulul. Eleven wells have bt•en rompleled Jn \be year since exploration began, and nine have come up dry. The other two produced natural gas. but not nearly enough for commercial production BVT WHILE Wednesday's biddlng on additional Baltimore Canyon tracts probably will not garner tbe $1.1 billion in bids the first auction of aites bo\lgbt, it is seen as a key to the area's ruturc. '· 1 think the next s tepping stone to see what the outlook is, is to see what \be industry does in this next bidding sale," said Henry A. Hill, regional explora· lion manager for Continental Oil Co., which has drilled two "dry holes" in the Baltimore Canyon. Exploration experts say a drilling success rate or one in rive is good, and that is about what bas happened in the Baltimore Canyon. But the hits have not been where most or the gas and oil is supposed to be. MOST OF THE nine unsuc· cessful wells drilled in the can· yon have been drllled on a gigantic geological s tructure ca lled ''Stonedome." Other CASH FAST ri 0 pager * * * * * Could Answer H o me o wner s · Loans arranged for any reason. Credit. no prob l em Borro w o n your eQuity. call now for cou rteous. fa st information. 17141547-7151 AMERICAN MorfcJage Co. DAILY PllDT CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 ORDER YOURS NOW • • 1000 WIDE AREA COVERAGE ORANGE CO.-L.A. '17.10 ....... ......... ~O DEPOSIT ON APPROVED CREDIT BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS STYLISH TYPE ON GOOD QUALITY WHITE GUMMED PAPER • PERSONALIZED •EASY TO USE • FOR YOU OR A FRIEND r---------------------, I F'lll In lhlacoupon, clip And m..i11 w11h S1 75 • ~ PC>t19Qt IO 1 Piiot Printing. label Div. I Poet Off ice Box 15eo • 330 W. Bay St. 1 C.OSta Mesa. California 92628 I I I I I I I I I Be Sure to Use Your Z1pcode I I I Pl LOT PR INTING ~---------------------~ Be in Garden? BY DAVE DOOUNG flW H""t1vllle CAI~,) Tl.-. Cousins or the rubber tree could supply a large rraction of the nation's oil needs. according to a Nobel Prize-wmning chemist, Melvin Calvin. "We have to use solar energy in all its forms," Calvin said In a recent speech at Huntsville. "THE MOST EFFICIENT WAY or doing that is by using the green plant." The UC Berkeley professor received the Nobel in 1961 for his work that describes photosynthesis. the process by which plants harness sunlight to produce their own food from oxygen, water and carbon dioxjde. Brazil already is using plants to produce fuel by fermenting almost four billion gallons or alcohol from sugar cane this year. BY 1984, CALVIN PREDICTED, the yield will be up to 20 billion gallons a year. "This is a two·step process," be said. "Sugar cane reduces carbon Clhe basis of all petroleum compounds). The second step is to fer· ment without any loss of energy. "IT WOULD BE VERY NICE if we could find a green plant that could take it all the way to hydrocarbons.·· The plants that fill that bill, he said, are part of the genus Euphorbia, which has about 2,000 species. Their common characteristic is that each has a latex compound in the sap. Calvin said he na rrowed his research to two plants. each with latex that can yield about 10 bar· rels or oil per acre per five-month growing season, although California's growing season has yields of 15 barrels per acre AN AREA EQUIVALENT lo Arizona could produce up to two million barrels of oil a year, be said. The United Slates' current consumption is 20 million barrels And that Is without improvements in the system, he said. Although It is Impossible to predict wbat tbe ultimate yield might be, he offered Malaysia's work on rubber plants as an example. IN 1940, MALAYSIA produced about 200 pounds of rubber per acre per year. Alter 1~, that nation found itself competing against rubber processes born of wartime needs. By 1960, production was up to 2,000 pounds per acre. and some tests indicate that 8,000 pounds per acre may be possible. Thus, a two·fold increase in yield may be possible by selective breeding. CALVIN SAID AT LEAST two oil firms, two _ chemical comr.anJes, and two mining companies · are interested n oll·producins plants. He said others are experimenting but keeping their work secret, and Japan bad a large experi· ment under way at Okinawa. Holding Company Buys Coast Firms MRM, Inc., lrvlnet a muacemeat services and holdl~ company, nu anDOUDCed aequilitlon or two eleclronicft companies and a diatrlbutonblp aareement. for their products with CTI Data Systems, Long Beach. The new aubeldlartes are Nat.lonal Mlcrocom· puter Corp .. Irvine, and Dltital Datacom, Inc .. Newport Beach. Wayne C. Kahn wa1 the founder and president of both comparuea and con\inues u \be pnat~nt of NMC and vice rrealdent ot ODI. James W. McKee, presJdent o MRM, becomea pretldent ot DDI. Dl1ltal Datarom t1 tbe marketint and manuf1cturtnc company under MRll, a privately b~ld company. It produces the equipment deslped by NMC. • wells were drilled on a 1maller etructure a few miles souLb. Shaped llke up1lde·down teacupe, these structures were believed to be the best hopes for gas and oil In the area. But that dJd not prove out. "You drlU your best shots first," said a drilling expert for one company that's had Us s bare of Baltimore Canyon failures. "It's dbappointlng that the biggies have not been pro- ductive so far." INSTEAD, THE two dis· coveries of natural gas have come on the frin ges of the Baltimore Canyon area, near the edge or the continental shelf about 100 miles offshore. There, Texaco found a small amount of gas and is now looking to see l! there's enough to begin produc- tion, and a group of firms drill· illg under government contract struck gas accldental1y > lo a we11 supposed lo be only a geological test. The well hit a tiny amount of gas, and the dis· covery made a site next to it a hot item in Wednesday's sale. ONCE WEDNESDAY'S sale is over. government officials will begin planning the next auction oJ East Coast drilling rights, this times for Georges Bank. Last week's court approval or drilling there, with conditions to sa!eguard the bank's rich fishing grounds, paves the way for an auction, probably in September. govenunentsourcessay. Georges Bank has been a hot issue among environmentalists. the government and the oil com- panies because or the fi shirtg there. As a result, tbe court order re· quires tbe companies to set up a fund to compensate fishermen for any loss in business due to an oil spill. Massachusetts is seeking even more stringent fisheries protec- tion. and that worries .the oil companies. EXPLORATION AREAS '-..... Pot11t1al Reserves OIL 900 11111ion barrels GAS 4.2 trilli11 cubic feet BALTIIORE CAIYOll Pote1tial Reserves Ill 4 billio1 barrels GAS 20 trillioa cubic feet SOUTHEAST GEORGIA EllBA YIEllT Potential Reserves OIL 280 m1rnon· I billion barrels GAS I .9·6.8 trillion cubic feet ................ 'BIGGIES HAVE NOT BEEN PRODUCTIVE SO FAA' Gas Additive .OK' d W ~toNGTON IA P > The Environmental t>rotection Agen- c.· y says 1t has granted a waiver to gasoline refiners permitting the use or a new octane· boosting ruel component called MTBE. MTBE. which staads for methyl tertiary butyl ether, may be blended into _unleaded gasoline in concentrations of up to 7 percent. The EPA sa1d the octane-boosting additive does not adversely af. feet emissions. but its addition to gasoline would have violated the Clean Air Act without the waiver. The request for the waiver was med by Atlantic Richfield Co .. but it applies to other refiners as well. The EPA said tests of poten- tial emission problems with MTBE were conducted by ARCO, Tex· aco Inc .. Shell Oil Co., General Motors Corp . Mobil Oil Corp .. Ford ¥o~or Co. and Amoco Oil Co. Ovt•r 1'ht• (:ounhJr HASDListlncJ MUTUAL FUNDS V IHG IV" llU!t0t•· -••ltd Fl#!Ot. HIQfll'IO H.1111... US GO'< t.lt 10 17 Pllll• I~ I e.t1 ,J, COMl'ANIES lull<• 12.S1 IUI Am Ldr 1.71 1.32 Holclg Tr 1.00 NL M•\U<llUWll Co PllOt c..-I 01 I Nor ... ..-It IAl'I = 1 U I J3 Empir lt.4.... Hor M.., 14.'4 1561 F reed 1 n U6 Pl\CH'n Fd I " t. S8 Eqty IOAI JU4 ",.. "'" .... F £ 11-Pl! I n SB l~Or 12.3' JIM -TM ~f!CI ~ 1.10 .... ou• ... . INAFd 11.S3 12.:i. lnclt'P 1.71 t 60 qr m · So'"-n In 11M 17.42 l•tloM, ..-1eo by MOl\lll •> 1J ,. :M Hll(m ,, 11 14.66 ISi GouP MeH 10" 11 ,. Pllo F 1110 11.4 "" , ... N•ltan.i AStKI• NIWS '·" 10.10 MonM 1.00 NL Gl'Wlll S.07 s S4 Fdl"< 1'.1a IS .... 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CAltlh S NL, alrf._ 10" It Harl L ... !OM NL Munt I'> 10"» ~ 1111111 41 ""· 1111<11\1 H 11f!! l!AI~ tNr1itl AJ M & M C() Nt An rig an In an 00 .: t ( i ' STOCKS/ BUSl~SS Tue da)'~ t:lo ing Pric NYSE COMPOSITE • TRANSACTIONS . . , Ta~ flme N DAILY PILOT Cases Change Medical Rules BJ SYLVIA POaTEa ~-,,~ 115 .. '. TM tens of millions who ltemiie deductions wUI ~ vitally affeeted by several 1'19 court declajons and 1 RS rulings tnvolvin& medical expense deductions. ' The Tax Court has allowed as a medical expense de· duction the cost of special food above what a normal diet. would cost, even If lbe special food was. eaten as a 5Ub· "' autute roe normal food, apd not in addJtJon to regular food. TO BACK UP f HJS MEDICAL expense deduction1 have your physician give you a written statement describ· ing your altuatlon and lbe requirement for your prescribed·" diet. Then get a reasonable estimate or what a ~fmal diet would C06t. If that estimated cost ls less than the cost ot ·1 your special diet food, you will have evidence on which the•> Tax Court would support your deduction for the difference as a medical expense. . But be warned: You may be forced to take your deduc., \aon to the Tax Court as long as the rRS continues its view that food substituted for normal food can'\ qualify as • medical expense. Money's Worth Jf you're paying a psychiatric social worker for treatment and deducting these payments as a medical expense, an IRS private letter ruling in 1978 Is good news. In a specific . case. the IRS said thal where the services constitute medical treatment, payment for them qualifies as a deduc· tible medical expense even though the person who perfor!l'ls the service~ .is not licensed. certified or required to be hcensed or certified to perform such services . .,,, .. . IN lt78, THE ~~S ruled that the cost of laetrile pre· 1 scribed by a physician and bought and used where it is • legal is a cost that can qualify as a deductible medical ex· pense. Another IRS private Jetter ruling says that if a family member becomes ill while away from home and another family member must travel in order to help the strfc~ea person return. the travel expenses qualify for medical de" duction. There was an unfavorable Circuit Court decision ih ~978 covering deductions for medically prescribed capit.al !m provement:s to. a house. The general rule is that i! yo\f "'? mstall a capital improvement prescribed by a physician 4 for medical care, the cost qualifies as a deductible medical 1 expense to the extent that il e1tceeds any increase in value of ' lbe house caused by the improvement. The court distinguished the capital improvement situa· hon from the higher costs incurred when a taxpayer patronizes a more expensive physician or slays in a private room in a hospital. Those higher costs are deduct{. ble because they are directly related to medical care. Nert: Income Averaging. illonth's Events Take I Toll on Stock Jllarket J tn1a1 Sto_.k• Did HEW YOAIC IAPI SALES HEW YOAIC IAPI ·NY !.lo(k WICi Apjlro:. ,.,..., • • • ••• • Jl, .. 70,0llD P1'9VIOV$ city ., . • • .• , •• 22..io,oao =' ..,, . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ... 22,010 -v '" • . . . . . .. . . . .. .. .. . .. 22.•to'a r!:' :rs _., .......... • .. . . . ~;:::: J•n I IOcltlt ·•••••••· 1.°"6.2'2,,w7 1;1, 10 IMW • • •• , • • • • IW..140.0llD 1 1 to o.ie . • • . . . • . • . . . •1t.uo,ooo WM.AT &MEll 010 HEW Y~t( "'"' . ~· i ,. I ·1 It I: I ii :f i: I d .J j -- I ~ -DAILY PILOT Television l'VINING 11101•• M1W1 e .... BC'tONB r-. ~l•M641C-a 84 K Cl.IMCI ol •t..-ncl Jtl()() "°"' • ._, .., ... ""C\>ft\ ...... An ACCIOent '"V(!tlfl"1J "~. -WWOhw""" ...... -.._ . .,. *1nQ "°"' Ill\ ol;t bo*I( _, e nc MADY 9UNCl4 C..OI Md ~. -°" ~ ..... ""'*" Or4IO ..,.,,It to go C>olt IC)f l'IMI ~ ld\Ool looto.11 '-! m IT'IWST8 OfF SAN ~MNOllCO AA okl man conteil-le COftVn•tllnQ •• """... ,,. wil-..0 to f'l'Olkt lMI Q!_lll\OIOn Of .. "*'° • OW..IAIY ... ti C~l•n ,J.,.~~ c.l't., e oaacu•.o "°"" INT£M>M '"-""° 11.1000• CMNIEWI A8CNEWI ILOVf.WCV Dra«-ula as Prof Lucy anUCICMtn • Mc;OnO ~ on l>er trip to Eur~, !>vi Rlcl.y '" 100 t>u1y s MtCHAa JAQ<80H au.r iUZ Cr•IJe ~ FeatMf. M ichat.>l Nouri plan Count Dracula. a varnpare posing as a San Francisco col· lege professor in "The Curse or Dracula." one or three serialized elernents on NBC 's new ac tion-a dventure s eries , ·'Cliff hangers." to be tt.>lecast Tuesdays begin- ning torught at 8 on Channel 4 m HOME GAN>EH£R 'Plant Fooos" w=.. G~u" Orton Welles ~ Vldel, John Le BoYtol- lief • A8CNEW8 Sol>O Golo l(IOn@PlnO (P&rl 11 • SANfOM>ANO &~ Greely lrtee an ancient 0.1 .,,., "'egie tridl and allac- kles Fred to Either 8t MACHEIL/ LEHRER AE.PORT 7:001 ~::GAME Cl) JOUA'S WILD SOC MtUlOH DOU.AR MAN D HOMAHrTIES THAOUOH THE ARTS "Fiim: Seeing All lhere 11" 1:30. CMClJ8 0 FAMILY FEUO Channel Listin9• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles II KNBC (NBCI Los Angeles e KTl.A (Ind l Los Angeles · 8 KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CPS> San Diego 0 KHJ-TV (Ind ) Los Angeles t1JJ KCST (ABCl"'5an D1e90 m KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles 9) KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles frJ KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles l!!> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach 8 OATIHO GAME 8 0 HOU.VWOOO &OUAAES G TIC TAC OOUOH ., AOAM-12 A pleUant even1ng tor Malloy ond Reecl 11 inter· • uptecs by a teenage ne!Qh· t>Ot wtw> 11 hign on d rugs al JUPITEJ\WATCH l!!) NEWSCMEQ< (I) THE OONO SHOW 1:36 flll 28 TONIGHT "Taxabk! You" 8:00 8 CJ) MOVIE "Women Al West POtnt' (Premtere) Linde Purl, Andrew Stevena The story o1 tl'lll tint -to enter 11>11 United States Mlktary Academy at West Point is dflty1Allzed IS..pl'Olobe- fJ CUF'FHANOERS (Premiere) Susan Anton. Geottrey Sco11 and MICll4M!f Nouf1 are 11111 stars or '"'" IMll)arate -181• in wl'l+ch. the ne<o or lletoine "' tett on ,,,. \fe(oe ol 011- Ql4"MOhwwk • MOVll • • • Nwtea• Sm11h ( teffl St4'Wt Mc;OvMn K.,I Mt.!Otn A .,.oung 1'14111 Mii OU\ IO ~ lllt t>rll 111 Oeatti• or.,._ ~.,I• 12 hit . 30 "'"') • QJ loW'flV OAVI All cu f on11• • good lrtenel•. ~ludlng l.aWf'ne and ~. ~ to ll'lf .._,, NrO • wlloke 10 ~ 11\4111 !Mt ~II (Plf1 2 ot"'I • UOV9I ••"Sii~ 11t10> SuH n Clark. Burt "4iyfoolcM MllltOOOIOQltlt 0-v~-AI d•oo1111 eno ·~·hke CtM1UrM ..,,,. .. on .. tan In ,.,..., <NlniN (2 tw1 I • CAAC>l MJANETT AHOFIWHOI au.tt Jac:ti Olltord eM<>W • • •,, "T,,. Jayrwwtiars" ( 195111 Jett Chendler, Fees Park., ,. man •nd his pnaon.r, 8 18Yf\ewll• IMO- ., , I.it In kM1 Wltll Ille __ .,, (211t'sl • TifE COU8TtAU OOV88Ft "Calypao's Searell For Atlantll" Captain Coua- teau •xptores Crete's notnem cout ~ tllt \'Of. (;MliC ••land ol Santorinl. wlllCh _.. both oes~oyac:1 thouNnds ol yNt$ ago ~All 2 o4 2)lA) W TWEY AAEN"f UKE us A IO<* at t"8 ~J and orogreu of retarded Cltll:eC'IS In OrW>Qe County 1:30 D 0 LAVEVfE & SHIALEV lenr>y tans In loYe 'With a l>Muttful g+rt wtlO IS I llklng him tor •" she e41n get • THE 000 OOUPL£ In an anempt to get ctoeer to hfa SOii, Feth1 becomes the coech ol tile t>oy's loot~• t!Mlm. l!!) AU. FOR ONE An expec;1ant couple trom Allentown. Pa.. learn about tlle Lamaze methOd ol pre- ~red cNldbtr1h. 8:00 0 NBC MOVIE • • ·.-. .. The Drowning Pool" ( 1975) Paul Newman. Joanne Wood· ward. A private lmlettlga- IOI' II hlfed by A -'ttly Southern oil heiress to dis- cover Ille Identity Of the TUBE TOPPERS KTLA 0 8:00 "Nevada Smith'' - Steve McQueen and Karl Malden star in. 1966 movie about a young man out to avenge the brutal deaths ot his parents . KOCE ~ 8:00 -"They Aren't LUce Us." A look at achie vements and progress of retarded citizens In Orange· County. ' NBC 8 9: 00 ''The Drowning Pool." Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward star in 1975 movie about a private investigator hired by a wealthy Southern oil heiress to discover the identity of the author of a letter . author ol <l llandefou• teller • al THAEE'S COMPANY CNlasy ace>denlAtly N II J&ek's entry on a bok1ng C()mj)elolion 8f>O IUbltl· 1U111 an ldentieal pastry from a b•kAfY • MSW Ol'WFlN Guests. Orson Welles. ~ Vldll. John le 8out11· '* fD TH£ HOU. YWOOO MU8CALS •••\It "The Great • Caruao" ( 19501 Maflo t..anu. Ann 81yth A bioO- lat>hY Of the grNI tenor wno roae to operatic: lame '1D MA8TEAPIECE THEATAE .. Country Mattera An Aspkjlstt• In Babylon" Tllo l!ldotes<:ent daugtiter ot a boarding house keeper becomes the ~818 IOYllf of a m+Odle-aged World Wrw I army capta.11'1 9-.30 8 0 TAXI Latlla aaaumes !"81 Alex 15 gotr'l1 10 be his new daddy ahor Alo• ano Latka's mother apend a night ~th« 10:00 B Cl) THE PAP£A CHASE Top student Eltiabelh LOgen Is mysttlied when •he,_...,. a tow ••am score from a rll$pOC'led 1aw proMesor D O 20120 Geraldo Rivera 1nvesll· oa•• the elleged mo"'611 ot lhe tale Howard Hugl\llS' torrune; Dave Ma rasll looli:s al the c;ontrovtlr'Sy Oll9t uno.rgrouno ...,.,., nghts In Colorado. Hugh eown. rlll)OfU on 11'111 PfO- C>OHd c:onatrucuon of anotllet nucleat plant 1n Mexico.NY I ::= GA&.l.ERY "There Ar1W1't Any More Mac8_.. A 1tuden1 In cOllegO •• m•ior•ng 1n Wlletic:<Afl G NEWSCHECI< 10-.30 Im • NEWS YOTEM'PfPEUNE 11;00 0 8 Cf) QI NEWS MAKE ME LAUGH MOVIE • * * "I Want The l tne" I 1970) Gregory Peck . Tuesday Weld A Sou111em s.'MIOtt b4ICOmllt the Y>C11m ot an lltuflng young wom- an ...no IS the daugtitor o4 • 10Ca1 moonstwnet 12 hrs I m THE 000 COUPLE Felix Qoet all out to help Oecat's secn!lwy rec;&i;>- 1ure her bOyfflend • TH£ OOOOIE8 Tim and o.-try kung tu wttlle Bin DeoomM mas· ter of the l.Al>Cllt tnan mar· tlal 8r1 ot "ec;l<y thump· fD DICK CAVETT "Scared Straight •• How Pr 1 sonera Help Re1or m Oel~uents" 11:30 8 (I) 8AAHA8V JONES An anomey Is killed '" an au10 accld4!nt ,.._ht aht'lf ~ the gOOsl of hll dead wne (RI 8 TONIGHT Hoat Johnny Carson Guests Sophia Lorllf'. JOan RIYllts. legends of Jau TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS e TWIUOKT ZOHe .. ~ t)'9 Of ~ 8aflokl. .... '" • holOllll ~ "" Mur•. Jenet Tyter .. IOOul 10 -tl'oe 1.-utt• ot ,... C)l)eflliO<I e O MCWCMI * * "IC*t FQt'Ce" 097~1 ,..._ Fono.. Telly s.v .. .... For the lo'lll ol 20 tnaa Hon OOlet9 '" dleMOndt ancS 1 bMUttful womtn, • ~ oHIC« and ,... lldelcl<* teed ., ~ on arnWng~(R) I THE 00H0 SHOW GETIMN'T SnW1 Ind " ...,.,, of • ~ 10 clamage U.S. Nia• UOM 'Witt! Lalin AtMrica • OAPT10HID A8C NEWS MOAN I NO 12:00. lWIUGHT ZONE "Exec:vllotl" In the 1880'1. OU!lew Jot Cetwell'• body dllepp•ar• lrom the hatlOfN'I'• nooee. • ALIMO Hn'CHCOCK PMl8IT8 ''M~ Piece" A mvM- um ctNtOf lallS • >nlltO< tt>e 11ory l*llnd hts aon's dMlh 8) GETSMART The Ct!W doubts Smert's sanity -Sfl'llllrt claims • oowt>oy Oled In ~ ac>Att· rnent. 1HO 8 MOVE **'_.. ~A Rege To l.Ne" (19e51 &4anne Pleehene. Bradtord Dillman. Aft., meny toYe aHIH'S. • oro-m•ecuou• young 1ooa1 leldet triel eetttlng down . to 1 normal mwned llte (I hr .MmMI • MOVIE • • • "Towaro The Unlc"°"""" ( 1956) Wllltam HOiden, UOyd No«ln. A pllOI al1empt1 10 gllill the reeoect of n1s oo11eaguw, alter lo6ll'lg n OWi!' a care- IMI moeteke, (2 hrS.I • MOYIE • **· "Seddle Tramp" I t9501 Joel Mc<Aee.. W8tt- d8 Hendnx. All ut1o11nbl- ooua ranch Nlnd, eo1rvs1- ed with !he Mltare of four waits. get• ltWOIYed "' the lauds and hassles of 8 r~-.(1 lw .30mtnl 12l40 8 (I) C88 LAT£ MOVIE • • "Sthtto" ( 1969) Alex co.d. 8"11 Oland. A dia- trict anorney ,,_ 10 nail a playboy count ..no '' kill· lnO tftuOe .. a f4M)r 10 • ·-~ au.la; The OOl1911Mdl .• rock group which ~ OIUtlCI -verv 10 ,_. "*' ldOll. Hell Role. • ~ tadiO I~~ t:IO ..wt WAHTWD: DIAD OR MM "&ernev'• Bounty" a:001= •••~ "All My ~ .. CtM8) Edwerd G. ~ IOI\, lluft l..-ncMt• e GETIMART The CNlf le kldnll>Ped by KAOS egent Han4V Satan. 2:211 NEWS 2:80 MOYIE * * 'h "Of LOvl And DHire" ( t9631 Merle Oberon. si.ve Coc:tora11. • MOYIE • •.t "llMI G!ent 08\lr" (1857) Jett Morrow. M8ia Cordey. l:s.t NEWS I NEWS I 3:04 MOYIE * * * ·~ "The End Of The AHeot" (19561 Deborah l<ert. Van JoMIOn. d00 MOYIE • * "T4ll!'lpt1tt0n" ( t!M6) Met1e Oberon. Paul Lukas. •wow... • • "The Miami Story" ( 1~) 8erl'f Sull!Van, BtW· et1y Ganand 4:211 NlW8 4:30 MOYIE * * ,_.. "The N&nOWlnQ Circle" I 19SSI P•ul Catpenter, Hazel Court. ( I 111 , IS rntn I Wedne•da1,.• Da11t h11e Mo"ie• AFTERNOON 12:00 D • • • "Seminole" < 19531 Rodi Hudeon, ear. bl/A Hale. ......... TheSeaOf Grus" (Part 21 (llM7) Spencier T recy. Kathaflne Hepburn, S:00 ~ * * "The Strange And Oeedly 0cx:ur9n09" (19741 Rot>er1 Stldl, Vftra Miles. 3:aO a • * .... Monster" (19771 CMstophet lee, Peter Cl.tailing. 'Cha,se' Lives, Despite Nei"ISens By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES <AP > -ll could be called "The Show That Nielsen Couldn't Kill." "'Paper Chase." that thoughtful, deliberate TV series aboul the travails or law school, has s~nt most of its short life dancing on the edge of a very steep cliff. Its Nielsen ratings weren't low. they we r e invisible. News specials drew bigger audiences. Critics raved; viewers yawned. LAST FALL. CBS SCHEDULED "Paper Chase" on Tuesday nights against "Happy Days" New '20/20' ·~ Eyes Future Rugged Course Leslie Acke rman ponders how she'll get through rugged basic training in "Women at West Point.'' a made-for-TV movie to be s hown tonight al 8 on Channel 2. 'Roots' Angers Alabama Widow HUNTSVJLLE. Ala. <AP) -The widow of Alabama A&M University President J . F. Drake says she is furious about the portrayal of her husband in ABC's Thursday segment of "Roots n ... "Tbe only bit of truth in the portrayal of AJabama A&M in that show was that Simon Haley came here is 1930 lo teach and that hls wUe dled here a few years later." Mrs. Drake said. '·Everything else was just Hollywood imagination, just something to sell television Ume." SIMON RALEY WAS THE FATHEll of ''Roots" autbor Alex Haley. One scene s howed Haley's home being. ransacked by whites. NEW YO RK IAPI -ABC cleaned house at "20·20" after that first. disastrous edition last June, and since then the newsmagazine has en- joyed moderate success on a rather irregular course. Let 's say ABC is nol dissatisfied with "20·20." Indeed. the network recently hired a new ex· ecutive producer for the program, and plans to re· .. sume a regular weekly schedule early this sum· mer. ''TIIE SHOW WAS DOING fairly well on its own, the ratings weren't bad and viewer response was positive," says Al Jtlleson, who took charge of "20·20" Jan. 1. "That doesn't mean we don't want a show that is better-produced and contains more a nd more incisive elements. "I've just put together some guidelines for the st.a((," the producer says. "I say we've got to cul through the layers of our own over-lndulgence and get more t.o the gut of the stories we do. "WE'VE GOT TO MAKE the program more re· \evant, and always look for the current. breaking st~ry that can be developed.'' ABC took the wraps off of "20-20" last June 6, and the premiere program was universally panned by the critics. The network responded almost im- mediately by bouncing the show's co-hosts, Harold Hayes and Robert Hughes, and by the next ediUon, June 13, Hugh Downs was aboard as anchorman. Hauxiiian Pi'lot Due and "Laverne and Shirley." It was not a happy encounter for "Chase." The competition regularly placed in the top five, "Paper Chase" in lhe bottom five. A TV show is safe if It rates in the top 35 or so. It's on shaky ground in the 36-45 raoge. Worse than that. goodbye. The best s howing by "Pa per Chase" is a 58. You could almost hear the ax falling But here's where the ..-bite bat shows up. "Paper Chase" has a friend, see. Somebody up there likes it. Somebody named William Paley, the gentleman who sits as chairman or the board at CBS. He has also been called the "Father or Network Television." HE HAS A CERTAIN INFLUENCE. And he likes t.o watch "Paper Chase." 00 p.m .. Channel 2.) "It is no secret at CBS that Mr. Paley .. well, this is his pet project." says Robert Thompson, executive producer of the show and producer of its theatrical antecedent. "Mr. Paley's the one who put the show on the air and he's the one who's keeping it on the air "Let 's say that if we wer t network. we would have been gone ago. We never would have gotten past shows." But sticking with a poorly rated sho grates the soul of your average TV executive. T re are many at CBS who'd like to see "Paper Chase" quickly pul away. Thompson knows this. SOUTH COAST ACTOH CO.Or Be1tt l~e ft+9f\ coat Of •C1•"9 --"'°"°'"9 lloP -"9 -l"'9"'9 a ....,., -"""' "°'11- f'tloM: 17141 '57.0JIZ ANIMAl HOUSE •• Ht Aemetce of BHU G•et ..... , .. ,. I!!! UP IN SMOKE .,.. OUT\.AW JOSEY WALES ........ QUINTET ''Tbere wu Mt one ain&le instance of racial violence here, and I've been &ere since 1927." Mrs. Drake said. HOLLYWOOD <AP) -"M Station: Hawaii," a two-hour movie and pUot for CBS, will star Jared Martin, Andrew Duggan. Elissa Dulce, Moe Keale and Joanne Harri.I. Tbe potential series, w ltb Jack Lord of "Hawaii Flve·O" as ·executive prod~r and director, wtU be filmed in Hawaii. ll la about a "for hire" oceanic reHarch company lbat does salvage , exploration, and rescue work. s1u1s1 AS LOW AS •• DAMNATION ALLEY ,,..,.. .... , costAME$A So . CoHt 1u ·.,.ti 1111 )"0 t u•iot I •t• Pti••"t IN ANOTREa SCENE. THE president of the acbool, called Dr. Huculey in lbe script, alngs a black aplrltual to please a group or white benefactors from the North. "Or. Drake was a man of dignity and ln~crtty. He would have never made a Jackass or blmldf that way. It's a disgrace to his memory," •he aaid. News from all over California is rounded up each day t!ft I ' ··lµflt)I ••••s••LA-zan FREE DELIVERY oottAMll& JM I. SM If, -------....... , -·MKM .. IC)t a..- , "1CMalf ................ ................ , "'-'"'., ... .... .....,.._ THE WARRIORS , l :»e.:•t0:30 (R) ·~·-.. ......,.... "TMI IOTI fllOM lbJa • ........ !'OUftl"l ITOlr ...... C•ll 642-5171 • Pul • ftwwonra lo work tor ou. • "I KNOW THAT IF IT WERE up to some executives. we would not be on the air . They reel it has not gone where they would have liked to see it go in the ratings. · "He (Paley l obviously has very important input as to what goes on the air and what stays on. Now. how long he can sta y with It. I don't know." Maybe not forever . apparenUy. For the month of February. CBS tried .. Paper Chase" at a later time slot, 10 p.m . (9 Central), and there it scored its bggest ratings success. that lowly 58. But the network has just announced that "Paper Chase" will return to the lion 's den. apinst "Happy Days" and "Laverne and Shirley' in the earlier time slot. "IT'S FAIRLY DISCOURAGING." said Thompson . who is prone to occas ional understatement. "I mean, th.is is not the type of show you put in that kind of time slot. That slot is controlled by kids 12 or 13 years old, and they're not watching this kind of show." There is still the c hance that "Paper Chase" will catch on. 1n s pite of its hea vy -duty competition. One network suggested they make "Paper Chase•· a half-hour sitcom. "No, I'm going to stay with the show as it is, maintain the quality that we've had all along. It's a do-0r-die situation. I wish more people were watching, but I'm not going to sacrifice anything or t~ash it u just because the ratings aren't good." . maybe they could call It "The Show That Nielsen Couldn't Kill . . Right Away." "HARD CORE" (R) WALT DISNEY PRooucTIONS "NdRTH AVENUE IRAEGULARS" (G) "~ME TIME NEXT YEAR" (PG> "ICE CASTLES" "INVASION OF THE BODY $NA TCHERS" (PG) "FAST BREAK" (PGJ "CALIFORNIA SUITE" "MOMENT BY MOMENT" (R) "THE GREAT TRAIN R088ERY" ~) "OUtNTET" (R} "MIDNIGHT EXPRESS" "TAXI Of:UVER" (R) "NATK>NAL LAM 'S ANIMAL HOUse- "MONTY HA "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" "THE ONE AND ONLY-(PG) "UP IN SMOKE" "A BOY & HIS OOG'' (R) ·cAUFOONIA SUITE" "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" (PO) Al.&. DllUV&·trd'O ... N 6;Jl,,N.-...n,y ~·• .. u~ u .,,.. u ....... • I(._., .. ...__ • .,,.. ~I I • ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES / INTERMISSION T~. February 27, 1979 DIJLV PILOT ............. HfU F100l£ lyrd Jotn• ()pry Byrd OKs .TV Date NASHVILLE. Tenn <AP > -Officials or the Grand Ole Opry have finally convinced Senate M ajor\ty Leader Robert Byrd to play the fiddle on their stage. Opry officials. who for several years have been trying to get the West Virginla Democrat to make a guest ap - pearance, have an- nounced that Byrd will l>erform at the Opry on ,Saturday night and that the show will be televised live by the Public Broadcasting Service Byrd has played the fiddle since childhood. Nam Heads .for Stardom Rentals J• Expand ___ IJywood Missed a Bet in Past, It Appears HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Paramount Pictures bu set an Industry domdtic reatala record for a calendar year with $290 million in 1978, sald Barry Olller, chairman and chief ex· ecuUve officer. 87 801 THOMAS YW D <AP> Rtn~t1on1 on the Au m1 aw oom11\at~ t.he m studtmi pas ma up a bonanu 1U thole ye hen ~)' htnottd the aubjed of Viet narn! You i:nipt think 10. JIJ<l&lrur from 17 oomlna- Oocu For "Tbe Deer Hunter" •od1"Com•n1 Home '' And, Judaiac from paat perfwmance. l''raocls Coppola may well ~ lo <>star coottnUoo n xt )'ear •Hh hl.s lortg · • w. a 1tl'd "A poutypse Now." WHO SAY THE Ft;t:f,.0000 movie Is "In" nowadays• Exc~p\ for "lleavcn Can Wall," th~ top a1x fUnu ln number or oomtnaUons wore downbeat dramas. Wh t happened to "0a)'1 or Heaven'>" Desplte raves lrom many cnllc~. the gem·Uke tum could muster mentions onl y for cinematography, cos· tume deaign, score and sound. Perhaps it was overloc*ed because 1t dlrector-wrlt.er, producer nd leading actors derlined to do anything to publlciu the film. Money tsn 't everytb1og. The biggest moneymaker of 1918, "Grease," won a single nomination. for best song The most expensive film of 1978. or any year, "Superman," was men· tioned only for fllm editing, sound aod score. The Academy's board of governons voted 1t a special award for viaual effects. VO'l1NG PllOCEDUBE FOil TBE FOREIGN language mm needs an overhaul. Why was the sublime "Autumn Sonata" overlooked for such films as "Hungarians" and "While Blm Black Ear"?BecalUe the countries themselves nominat- ed the films. Although it ls spoken in Swedish, "Autumn Sonata" was filmed in Norway for a German company. · Can anyone whistle any of the nominated songs? Song writing for movies is largely limited to tunes sung over the UUes by _recording stars. •o-No ,, ...... NIAVIN CAN WAIT (PO) Program To Grow NEW YORK <AP) - NBC has provided a grant "well Into six Moat ot Ute aones are intru.slve and-or banal. Perhaps the Oscar lor best sonc \a an ldea whoa~ u~ hat cone, atooi wtUl awards for title wrf tlng C1ilcmt movie > and black-and·whlte photo- graphy. mu.. UNllESOLVED IS WHAT constitutes aupporting performance. Jack Albert.Ion, Robert De Niro, and George Bums have won support Oscars in what seemed Uke al&n'in1 roles. Now Maggie Smlth ls noQiinated for aupport- lng actress ln "California Suite." Whom did' she aupport? She and the other seven leach ln the episodic film are Usled as stars. Brad Davis must feel like the odd man out. "Midnight Express" racked up six nominations, but none for Davis, who carried the harrowing tale on bts youthful shoulders. Ob well, he got the Golden Globe for best acting debut and bas many good performances ahead of him. SaddlefJack's ~ltla•a' ConlributJ.nc to Para- mount 'a income were "G rease ." with domestic rentals of S83 m IUion; "Saturday Night Fever," with $63.3 mUUoo; "Heaven Can Wait ,'" with $42.S million: "Foul Play," wilb S2S mlllioo : "Up in Smoke," with $21.2 million: "The One and Only," w ith $12 .1 million: and "Death on the Nile," with $8.1 million. Comedy Creaking Over its four-year history. the Sad· dleback Valley Community Theater has demonstrated a remarkable ap· titude for fashioning effective pro- ductions out of material which, to put it gently, was somewhat less than Pulitzer Prize caliber. However. no amount of talent and imagination can transform a turkey into an a eaf.le. and the Saddleback players fmal y have met their match In a script called "Ob , Mama! No. Papa!" REGINALD DENBAM'S adapta· lion of a Spanish comedy ls both overwritten and underdeveloped, spinnlog it5 wheels on a meandering plot while its characters remain single dimensional. Its premise is Romeo and Juliet in reverse-two e~us J quence ln the doctor's office, where lhe lovers meet. could easily have been capsuled Into a 20-minute vignette. TOE LEADING ROLES of the geriatric lovers are well handled by Valerie Mcnroy and Ellis Estes. Miss Mcilroy neatly overcomes some con- stricting religious aspects of her c haracter to deliver a fine performance, while Estes' transformations from terminally decrepit to swinging senior and back again are quite ecrective. Their ''seduction" scene In the second act is the high moment of the play. figures" to expand its ''Ot4,MAMAtNO,,.a,.a" 3 -y e a r -0 I d p a r en t A cotnedY .,., A901Nld Deftl\Am, ~ from the p a 1' t i ci p a ti 0 n T v S.,,.nlJll of • .._ Peso, dl1'9Cled .,,, <Mol Kn19M. P<'O- · Dick Vara and Cynthia Logan as their respective offspring come off less credible, since the script simply has not made them very interesting personalities Vara in particular is painted as an emotionally insulated individual for reasons the playgoer never is given to realize. d..Ced by INf'98 Well,,.,...., s.\ OH\9fl b1 Jim K-..t, Workshop program, un-costumuand m.tt<e.,,, bv J•,,. Nlgtt Onkbon, .,,.._,ed ~der --~'ch parents and bf ,,.. s.ddt.o.<11 V•ll•'f eom"""'"' TllNtu Fr~vs Will •nd S.l\Wdlf'S el t p.m, ~ Sund..,, Mef'cfl 4, et 2:l0 Children meel to diSCUSS p.m •I IN MlulOn Viejo H'9fl S<i-1 tr.ater. A~•· specially selected NBC 'ion~ StM:ML THE can · programs. e1e-··· ·· ·· ·· ·· ... · · ·· ·· · · · · · ... · ·· v.i.ri. Mcllf"OY SllH ........................................ EllbE~ Work.shops have been James • • • • • ·• ..... • .. • • • • • • • •• • • • • • .. • •• • .. 01<11 VM• t.ouh• • .. .. . .. .. • ..................... Cyntllla l.094lft held in 25 major cities, or. Jot.n &o11. .... • ....... •• ............... Tom Acs.ms and the a dditional Geraldirw ............................... Aft91l•Go4•y ~. ~_.., s.._, .................... , ..... Fred Knlgl\\ money is to ruake the ---------------project national in scope, NBC said. .,.. .................. ,.,,..._ ... The next ser ies or workshops follows broadcast or "Sooner or Later," a program re· commended by the Na- tional Education As· soctation on a girl's emergence into womanhood. mature lovers kept from each other by their grown children (the lmplica- ~n being that the kids have this sort of authority, which is one of the play's many scriptual faUings?. Tom Adams as the doctor-narrator gives the weakest performance of the night, appearing under-rehearsed and uncertain of bis function. Angela Golay has a bright little cameo as Estes' maid, while Fred Knight performs another vignette which. while amusing, is quite superfluous to th~ story. --~;) DAYS OI MUVINCN> U.» e StM •••IS .. -00 ....... .... AU. STAR CAST ''CALIFORNIA IUfTE" (PG) ~1:1 ... 11 ··-llo• 1:1-1....,_,~1.,,I J.Jt.A. ToumtrS "l.OttD M 1MI ..... ,. CNI ~,.,,,. ,., ______ ,,..,..,. ......... 1 ........ IOIS'I'..., ,., .. , ..... TOUalN'S LOIS> Of '"' ...... '"' ..... llV ..... NNr'Hll191 •OKM ..... noNI MUVIN UN WAIT"'9t ... MOUllWUIMI ... _ .. _ ..., .. ____ ...,,.. • ...,,:_-YNI WAIMOlllll 1Uf0 1 .. )1 .... ----J ..... NIUll a CMIY TONY_, elm:·:.::::) <flM~~=i • ... _. .......... CM.,Mm_MR ... 11 ? .... _..,.. Burns Set HOLLYWOOD CAP) -George Burns will make hi s firs t ap- pearance as a presenter at the Slst annual Academy Awards pre· sentation on April 9. The "old folks" (who actually are only in their early 50s) are h~bon­driacs, seemingly at death s door before they meet and rediscover life. Rather than encouraging their parents' newfound happiness, her daughter and bis son do their utmost to thwart the budding romance. Apart from straining the bonds of credulity, the play contains more ex- cess rat than lean red meat, running nearly three hours-<>{ which al least 45 minutes might have been neatly excised, partlcularly in the first act and late ln the finale. The opening se- CAaOL KNIGHT'S direction does little to quicken the pace of a plod· ding play, slowing il further. in fact, in the lifeless first act. Jim Kuehert 's set is attractive, while Jane Nigh Da~idson's makeup e ff ects , particularly in Estes' case, are splen· did. "Oh. Mama! No, Papa .. will be on stage for two more weekends or Fri- day and Saturday performances. with a Sunday matinee on March 4 at the little theater or Mission Viej~ Jilgh School. 91CIDBIY IWI• IOMlllTIOa • A• II M Of GHt Al< OllRA<>I ANI> O\/t H\.\'ttf I MIN<, I MOTIONAi l'OWI H A 111 R< I I\' l O\!IN<, I MORA< I en l llf . ·~;;;:;;;ADE~~=AD ~ NOMINATIONS PRESENTED IN 70 M.M. DOLBY 6 TRACK STEREOPHONIC SOUND edw•ds NEWPORT t41MCOAIT MW't'.&~ ...... ODl'a ....... 7' 103 FM STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR '"°"'Fashion Island Newport Beach • ~HOVlf 1\1:.i HOUf Plus ......... 1t 19Rd "' RLilffe.. .....,.., ........ .... IAT 12 4 .J It 1-.e.a.t1 tl --..... , .... _ MAltLOll •ltA"OO CCllt MolC .. MAll --······ ,-"9t•tU t1U I AT5'.INU• )U 1oe 10.tttl WIN....._.9 &C;AOOrirf AWAAO -HA f!Otll HICI.. MIT PICfUllC ~W¢ HEAVEN jl CAN WAIT PLUS ,,. WINNER 4 ACADEMY AWAAO NOMINATIONS "THE WIZ" G(°'6£ c. ~· ~1 SCOTT J HARD .. • 4 ' CORE I 0 " Mo".-ThuB 7:30, 1:30 Fri e:oo, 1:1s. 10:1s Set/Su" 1 :46, 3:'5 1:00, 1:15. 10:15 QABE KAPLAN (P .Q.) "FAST BREAK' MON-THURS 7:15, t :30 FRI. 7:1S-t:30-11:30 SAT. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:15 9:30, 11:30 SUN. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:'5 9:30 0A9f KAPLAN FAST (P.O.) BREAK MON-FRI 7:30, 9:30 SAT/SllN 2:00. 4:00, l :OO 1:15, 10:15 .-,., ..... ~"' '·'•·•1l. "'" .,.,..,_. 140, ""· s.• R088V 7 ... 1"°"~· BENSON (CE, • 6..STLf.sS S.an Connery "THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" a.. ,........_.. ·~ ..... ~ fN v:=:.:.:.. "FAST HEAVEN "QUINTET'• BREAK" CANWAIT "'' IN) UJ'oMt N.ftlt ?:•,a ,... .............. T..,..tM.4. "CA&.11'0..MA t;tO, 1:11, tt:11 IUtT'I" • .. I -DAA.." PILOT CALIFORNIA I NATION ' Rom Loses 4th Son to MD $13,500 Wllected ForYMCJt>P SAN JOSE CAP> FoT Dototliy Laodhohn, lhe dealh of her founh and laat son , a \Ileum or muscular dystrophy, was y t anotbet' pane or 1nef in Cour decades of t.ra1ec1¥. &It 1t was tempered by an ~ ol ,... ""' "I'm f'\'llevt'd that the paU. for all my . on1 s ov r now," Mrt U Dd· holm Hid Monday, on day after lihG held the hand or her on, Victor. H he died quietly al Valley Mtdlcal Crnter Ht; WAS 14, AND had been tn a ~oma for rivo WHkb All her son1 hue died Crom pseudohypertrophic muscular dystrophy, tbe only se.x·llAked form of the insidious daseaae It ta genetically inherited but develop$ on· ly in y0ung boys, altbou1h ctrla may carry the genes. . Her first·born. Barry. cbed tn 1966 when he was 16 Her second son, Airlines Ban Pipe, Cigars NEW YORK (AP> Trans World Airlines and United Airlines have joined the growing number or air carriers that. have banned cigar and pipe smoking during flights. Also banning cigars and pipes was Frontier Airlines, a smaller, re· gional air carrier. PREVIOUSLY, the only transcontinental airline wilh such a ban was Northwest Airlines. However, a number of smaller air carriers are said lo have taken the sam e step, including Pacific Southwest, Trans International, Wien Consolidated and World Airways . Al ~ legheny banned cigars. Previously, airlines allowed pipe and cigar s moki~g except when other passengers ob· jected. BUT THE Civil Aeronautics Board re· cenlly ordered alrlirtes that allow pipe or cigar smoking to either pro- vi d e "max imum segregati9n '' between s mokers a nd non· smokers or ban cigar.s and pipes altogether. Baggage Search es Upheld WASHINGTON CAPl Prospective airline passengers who volun· tarily enter an airport security area may not avoid a baggage search by decid!ng not lo ny, the U.S. Supreme Court s aid in effect. The justices, without com menl, le rt intact Monday a federal ap. peals court ruling that prohibits prospective pa ss engers fr om withdrawing from the screening process once a decision has been made to search their baggage. The lest case involved a 1976 search of Stephen R. DeAngelo's briefcase at Was hington's Na· tional Airport in which small amounts or mari· juana and hashish were found. A subsequent search of OeAngelo turned up a s mall amount of co· calne. He was charged with the misdemeanor crime Of possessing COD· trolled substances, con· victed in an Alexandria, Va., federal court and sentenced to six months tn jail and two years' probation. 2Si..-nts Speakers Foreign exchange slu· denta Marina lbana of Urugu ay a nd Hakon l venon of Norway wlU · be the featured sue•ts at a Laf u n a Beach Panhe lenlc ch apter meetinc March 7. The 1 p.m. meeting will tab place at 109 Emerald Bay. Both 1lu· deota will describe their rives in their home COUD· tries and their •l•Y• with families ln Lapna. The American Field Service, •POUC>.r of lbe. 1tuctenta, la • cibarity or the Pan Heflenlc chapttT Davkt, wu cOQllOod lo a wbeelcbalr bortb' lll<>r 8erry•a de.th, 1urvlv in1 for 11 yeal'I befo~ he dJed In tm It a1e2t. HS& TIClaD SON, Raymond. lS )'Un old. cbed t.-o roonthl 18\.tr M re Lindholm, ~~. aald that altbo&aah th.rc!c oC her five brother• alao difJd or muscular dyatrophy ln tht 19'0I, the never suapeet~ her on• would be vlctJms. loo "Nobody told me that my chlJdr n would have It. My mother n ver told me. I don't think she her ell knew that ab waa a carrlei'," ahe said. i UT AFTEa HEil first. two sons died, she began lO fear "in lhe back of my m.ind" that the others would, too. "But I JWll didn't think it would happen. There were two -why rour?" Mrs. Lindholm's husband, Denrus, 011~19 R J Reyno~b roo-o Co u houeepaln~r disabled In 1963. died n 1978 ot a hHrt at.tack and abe has since lived off a $J1l·•·monlb social curtly check. HER MEDICAL BILLS have been pald by the state's medical program, iibe sa(d. M usrular dystrophy. for whlcb there ls no cure. causes muscles to become weak and waste away, first artecUng arm and leg muscles and later overcoml114 the heart and lungs .S well. First StlllS Of the type the Lindholm brothers had usually show up when a child is a toddler and most die before age 20. "When they got to be 2 or 3 they just started slowing down, they couldn't get up aod down, and they'd faU down and bump their heads." Mrs. Undholm recalled or her sona .. ·'Victor had bumps all over Ms head and be just couldn't stand up." H!a LAST &EllAINING cbJld, 21.year-old Denise. Is serving time on a cbeck torcery charge in nearby Miipitas. Testa at Stanford Medical Center have shown that Denise LindbomJs not a carrleroflbedlaeaae. Young Victor's body wW be buried Thursday ln the San Bruno National Cemetery. near the bodies or bis father and his brothers Barry and Raymond. David was too old when be died to be buried in the military cemetery with his father. a World Wat JI Army veteran. Handguns Claim 465 WASJDNGTON (AP) -Handgun violence in the Unlted States claimed the lives of at least. 465 Americans during December, according to Handgun Control Inc., a lobbying group Cor gun control ·legislation. _The figures include murders, suicides and accidents. lllNSCheg Pele, Brazilian soccer i d.o I ·turned bus i · ness man, says he plans to invest in Kenya's booming tourist industry. He already has extensive business interests in South and North America and Europe . South Coast YMCA volunteers have collect· ed $13,500 in eonlribu- Uona to support tbe or· ganbation 'a 1979 slate of actlvlties and programs. The croup is aeekins a total of $30.000 in con· trlbuUons to support ac· tivilies-$20,000 from major contributors such as bualneases and cor · poratlons and $10,000 from families In the South Orange Coast area. Donations can b e made by check or through a pledge to donate m oney to the local YMCA over a period of time. 6 mg. "tar''. 0.5 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by ~TC method. \ REGULAR AND MENTHOL ONIYSMQTAR Warning: The Surgeon General Hes Deteriruned That CfQarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. Get what YQll never had before: SatisfactlOn with ulba-IOw tar. . -.... ,,.. .. - INSIDE: •Erma Bombeck •Ann Landers •Horoscope •Classlfled 1Reunion The 37th annual reunion of i World War II veterans was I a night of nostalgia. f By CBEaYL aOMO Of -O.llY ...... ,..... Loo.g rows of tables displayed black and white photographs of young men in uniform. women wearing hula skirts with gardenias tucked above their ears and the familiar races of entertainers like Bob Hope. Lucille Ball and Bing Crosby. The event, with more than 150 participants, was the 37th annual reunion or World War 11 veterans, sponsored by the Costa Mesa His-torical Society. The reunion. held Saturday night al Orange Coast College's Student Center -land once a part or the Santa Ana Air Base -was an even- ing filled with nostalgia and the swapping or stories. Most or those attending were once sta· tioned al the base which was closed in 1946. Many of the couples attending met and married during the war and some or the servicemen who came to the base to train re-' turned here to make their homes after the war. As speaker Col. Bernard L. "Barney" Bell <USAF'-Ret. > recalled, "The Santa Ana Base changed a lot of people's lives." Now a Costa Mesa resident and a retired businessman, Bell was a decorated hero who dropped the first bomb over Europe in 1943. PART OF THE evening's entertainment consisted of a slide show of what the base looked like during the war and how the land and buildings have been utilized today Many of the old barracks buildings -in- cluding .those used to house approximately 200 German prisoners of war -are still in ex- istence and are used as warehouses. Boundaries of the former base were Newport Boulevard to Harbor Boulevard and north of Wilson to Baker Street. What is now Orange County Airport was a cadet flight train- ing area. Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa High School and Southern California Collete all occupy former base property. Above, Mr. and Mrs. Hancock Banning Ill, in Mardi Gras costtmes st the Newport Harbor MMuseum.At right. Ann Santore and Kenneth Satin in Lois Lane and Superman oufflts. n.cs.y, ~u ty·27 um~ DAILY PILOT Celebrities like Gene Autrey. Burgess Meredith and Clark Gable were at one time sta- tioned in Santa Ana; and entertainers like Hope, Crosby, Dinah Shore. Eddie Cantor and Mario Lanza all entertained troops there. Many of those attending the reunion said they were disappointed to rind only a few familiar faces.One ex-G I lamented, "There isn't anybody here I know, but I intend to come back every year until I find someone I know." ANOTHER FORMER GI, Homer Bartles. 56, now director of the Southern California Drywall Contractor's Association in Newport Beach, said he "'as first stationed in Santa Ana in 1942 and later placed in charge of 30 German prisoners of war who were housed Jo a Vern Matthews looks at old pictures. minimum security facility. He recalled that all the prisoners spoke English and few were ··hardcore Nazis" but were "everyday people with families." He said many of them wanted to remain in the United States after the war ended. As the evening progressed. participants took the ir turn at s trategically placed microphones to share their own experiences and memories. Bob Hanson, 58. a Missouri native who now lives in Costa Mesa. said he was a second lieute- nant trained in Santa Ana and later sent into combat in the Pacific. Though reluctant to talk about his wartime experiences, Hanson remembered bis years at the Santa Ana Air Base as "great" and told bow Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kimmey danc;e at Merdl ~ras. .. • • CJ he smuggled a pet dog into his barracks. "I loved it. l can remember when there was hardly anything in Costa Mesa," be said. Now studying real estate at Orange Coast College, he said it becomes more difficult as time passes to "remember where everything used to be." Others admitted to being "choked up" and "sentimental." One former GI in a leather jacket quipped. "I! any of you remember me and know me. l wish you would come up and help me re- member." . Several women attending were former WACS. Most of them said they met and married their husbands while stationed in Santa Ana. Costa Mesa resident Edith Gnmm Oplinger. a (See &EUNION, Pa1ea) ( Happenings ) Mardi Gras At the Art Museu111 There were Civil War soldiers, Southern belles and cigarette girls, not to mention Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf, at the Newport Harbor Art Museum's Mardi Gras Saturday night. but the surprise guests were Superman and Lois Lane. The museum was turned into a French Quarter scene for the costume-black-lie affair, which included an oyster bar and a dinner of shrimp re moulade, crab, vegetables and Bananas Fosler. The gala. hosted by the Sales and Rental Council, was highlighted by lbe crowning of Baacock Bamalng DI as king of the Mardi Gras. "By New Orleans tradition," a museum official said, "the King of Carnival is always a dist· lnguiahed citizen, active in communJty affairs. Banning fits this description perfectly." Banning is vice president of the museum's board of trustees and is a strong booster of the Sales and Rental Council. Among guests at the party were Tem Ganer, museum director. and his wife Nataslla NleMlloa; Mr. and Mrs. Job Nlcltol1 Che's a member of the board of trustees>; David Stela- meta; Bal ud Kay Pas&oriaa aod Mr. ud Mn. aona Bayes. Boss of Year It was a particularly etV<>yable evening for Doeald E. Morcu because be was named Boes of the Year by the Newport Harbor Business and Professional Women's Club. Tbe coronation took place durlni a dinner ln the Mesa Verde Country Club with the present.· tJon made by Canba BaneJ, club president Morgan, vice president and manager of Security Pacific Bank '1 Nortb Tustin Avenue branch ln Sant. Ana, wu nominated by Ila. Harvey, a new aceow1ta representative. Cars and Fashions · Tbe Briggs Cunningham Automotive Museum, Cotta Mesa, was transformed lnto a party settint last week as Neiman-Marcus pre- sented Yves Saint wurent'a Rive Gauche col- lection beside the vlntase cars. Nearly 1.2lO persons attended tbe black-tie af. fair, which was desl1ned to raJM fUDda for tbe auto mUHUm '• educaUoiaal procrams. Amons those attendiDI were s1 .... ,. .,....... West Cout editor of Vosue; ...., 8ellla,., Vope'a mercbandile editor from New York; llr. a .. Mn. Du °"'!9Jf 81J1nll« aM ............ u .... ,. ud ........ hnart CleellAPPSNINGl, .... Cl) ( l , . .. I I I I DAILY PILOT Tllffdav. rebru•ry 21, 1979 Above, from left, Edith Gnmm Darlmger, Helene Wiist and Ina Jones. At right, Dan McNaughton with Bemard 'Bamey· Bell. • • .Reunion <From Page Cl> Conner WAC. recalled the base was called the Hollywood of the Air Force" by columnist Waller Wmr hell Another ex·WAC, Helene Wiist of Santa Ana, who friends said was one of the ··great beaut1es" at lhe base, said she thinks the war helped bring people together: ''The war made a sameness. You could have girls from wealthy ranulies and girls from poor families," she said. "But we were all one." Mrs. Darlinger added, "I never was so hap- py as I was in the Army.·· Among those a ttending was Dan MrNaughton, 71, who was a training officer who rose to the rank of captain. Later he became president of both Palomar College in San Diego and Santa Ana College He was stationed at the air base from 1942to 1944. McNaughton, who is retired and lives In Tustin, said he viewe d t he reunion with "nostalgia." He looks at the war years with mixed emotion The war. he said, gave people a "st'nse of mission" and the feehng "they were doing somelhing important." •'Th as 1s a good thing and good for a person." Does it take a war lo accomplish such a feeling? "I hope not. I can remember after World War 1 and people saying there would never be another war, and then sure enough, we had one." Bob Hanson admitted feeling sorry the base was dismantled "You have to have progress." he said. "Without it we are nothing. "But it is sad to see it break up. This was such a big base and I've seen other bases around lhe country that weren't as good as San· ta Ana was." According to Henry Panian, a history pro- fessor at Orange Coast, there is a movement UD· derway to establish a base museum and a monument to World War JI. Also a veteran of the war, but not stationed in Santa Ana. Dr. Pan.Ian said, "We all went to war in World War II for a purpose and the purpose was to preserve lasting peace. "World War II was Important. _And it is something we can all look at and say, 'Hey, we dtd something important."' •• •• • .Happen1ngs ANN LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECK I HOROSCOPf Surgery Can Be Reversed DEAR ANN LAND~RS: Recently a young man wrote a sad letter about bow be had a vasectomy because hls fiancee said she di dn't want children and unless be bad the surgery she . wouldn't marry him. Two months following the vasectomy, she ran off and married someone else. The man was in deep anguish and turned to you for help. You told blm that some vasectomies can be reversed but warned that au men who opt for Ulla pro· cedure should consider it "final." Please tell him now that remarkable pro· gress in the field of reversing vasectomy has been m a de due to a procedure called microsurgery. Dr. Herman J . SUber of St. Lows is a pioneer in thls field . Only a few years ago the cbaocea for re· versaJ we re a bout 30 percent. With microsurgery a 25 power magnifying device is used, al50 an almost Invisible thread which stitches together the vas defereM which carries t he sperm. Chances or successful reconstruction are now at least 90 percent. One day In lhe hospital Is usually required, during which time ice·packs are applied to ward off swelling. No sports, showers or sex are permitted for several -days. depending on the rate or recovery. The sperm count may remain low for a few months but it does build up gradually and the once-vas~tomiied male may father a child -which ls usually great newa to bis second wlfe. -YOUR FRIEND AND M.D. FROM NASHVlt.J..E DEAJl FRIEND : Tba.W for II leUer daat will be good news not only &o aome aecoad wh'H, bat aome llnt wlvet u well. ( Horoscope WEDNESDAY, FEB. ZS By S\'DN E\' OMU& ) AmE8 (Mar. 2l·Apr. 19): EIJ\p'\aa~OIV'"NC:· cesa story. Cycle high chips Yti l 1i~b'l fltJ Timing, Intuition, judgment are on target. TAUtUS (Apr. 2C>-May 20): Restrlctlotd &c· tually are "blessings In d lsguiae. ·· Know it, )e patient. U you accept delay as opportunity for second wind, you wlll be on winning track. GEIONI CM•y 21-June 20): Empbuis oo desire, creative decisions, proftts..from business transaction. Friendship Is intensified. CANCER <June 2J...July 22): Accent on career, civic duties. honor. reputation, a bility to "take charge" during crisis. You can gain cooperation or family. Moooy, special projed are involved. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Spotlight oo travel, spiritual insights, being quiet within. You gain knowledge about you. Lines of communica- tion are sharply-defined. VIRGO CAug 23-Sept. 221 : Accent on dis- covery. nashing insights, locating missing legal document.\. Older individual shares benefit of experience. UBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Finish rather than begin defer to washes or partner, mate Don 't force tSsues -or views. You do best now by listening rather lhan asserting. SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): New approach to work as reatured -interest is renewed, v1gor returns. depende nts a nd pets are more pleasant. S AGITTARIUS <Nov 22·Dec. 21 ). Charisma, creativity are featured. Imprint style. make changes, take a chance on your own capabilities. Children, speeuJation command spotlight . CAPRICORN CDec. 22-Jan. 19): Obtain hint from Sagittarius message. Be versatile. but avo.id:ilcaltering your efforts. One who is of con· servative bent does have your best interest at heart. AQVA&llJS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): You are re- lieved to learn that financial picture is not as bleak as initially indicated. PISC~ (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Define terms : r efuse to give up something of value for ..whispered promise." Luggage Costs Plenty RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY w....v .. w .. ...... Ir you really want to make yourself c r azy sometime, sit around and figure out bow much your luggage cost -just to get it back. I got a little over·. nighter s uitcase that E,.... -~k 11:22 Hiarbof 84'1d. Co.U Mesa -5'1-1156 --------------------------------------cost me $30 when it was <From Page Ct> Lohr, a granddaughter in the famous Ferrara ramaly New Officers Coastline Chapter of B'nai B'rith Wo men bas elected Joan Wolberg president. On her board will be llelea Greeoblat, Sae Relnlnger, Barnet Mr. anc:J. Mrs. Dan Gurney with vintage car at Briggs Cunningham Automotive Museum. Carolyn Harvey with Boss of the y., Donald E. Morgan Silverman, Harriet Katzen, Sblrle)' Deutsch, Trady Umles, Trudy Boodmao and Hilda Greenberg. Monies Given The Newport Beach Junior Ebell Club has an· oounced its philanthropic disbursements for the year. According to Pam Malik, president, UCI Medical Center. Newport Beach City Arts Festival, School Age Mother Program, American Legion Essay Contest, Girls Club of lhe Harbor Area, Natural History Museum of Orange County and the Newport Beach The atre Arts Center. Big Brothers Big Brothers of Orange County held Its second annual picnic in Murdy Park, Huntington Beach. last weekend. The event highlighted Appreciation Week, when Big Brothers joined Big Sisters in honor- ing m embers for their involvement in the pro- grams. according to Big Brothers Executive Director Jo Alexander. .. The program has an impress.Ive impact oo boys who might otherwise become dros;>OUts, de· Unquents or charges of the califomla Youth Authority," Ms. Alexander said. Sea Circle Sea Circle, an auxiliary group to the Florence Crittentoo Services of Orange County, held its annual luncheon at the Irvine Coast Country Club. The theme was Valentines. Among those enjoying the festivities were luncheon co·ch airmen Anita Erickson and Peggy Cotton, as well as Dora Rill, Raby Keeler Lowe, Fran Scott, Ra&ll Bllben aad Jane Kawamara. Speakers were Drs. Agnes TriDcbero and Robert Di Rl gelo. Volunteers Needed Volunteers from Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Irvine are needed for the board of Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Services, a branch of the Orange County Human Services Agency. Its goal is to enable indJviduals and their families to function within the community rather than in hospitals and lnstituUona. Interested persons may coni.ct JUie PoallM, 642-9240. People Peering CanQll Waters of Corona del Mar recently performed with the Chapman College Chamber Orcbe1tra. Mias Waters, a violin.iJSt, is a senlor at Chapman . Sh e also toured Northern California with the orchestra. In Qldalaa, Huntington Beach, bu reached the aemiflnals o r the Harry s. Truman scbolanhip competitJoh. One award is made per ai.te and it offers up to $5.000 annually for four yean. Mn. QutnJan, 31, the mother of three, compiled a 4.0 averaie at Oran1e Coast CoUece. She now attends Cal State, Looi Beach. An Air Jl'ortt bu.aband and wife team, aenk>r aJrmea Barbara A. and Paw D. Ferud, b1ve arrived for duty at SpaqdabJem Air Bue tn Spanidahlem, Germany. Mn. Fera11l la a 1raduate of Edison Htib School and ber buaband la an alumnua ol Servite Hieb School. She la an admJniatratlve epec!aliat and be la an electronic-mechanical communlc•Uona and crypto«raoblc equipment •Yllema apeclallll. Scholarship 8abla Cbapter of UM N1tioaal SecAlart .. Al· aoclatJon bu approved acbolan.hlp tWldl for tbe romlns IChool ,ear. Ht1h Khool and colleae studenta m11 apply by cont.ettna the flnanclal a1dl ~ at their ttbools by the end ol the ftrat week ol March. new. I figured out that 'over the years <and this is a conservative figure), I've spent $500 to h ave It carried , checked, a od stored. This doesn't count the time l lugged It into a restroom pay booth and in trying to get It out slammed the door and bad to pay another dime to retrieve it. I made a short t rip E ast last week and , frankly, with all this in· nation I don't know bow much longer I can af· ford to travel with lug· gage. At the curb or the airport, I tipped the Skycap $1 to check It through for me. Al my destination , another Skycap rescued it from the carousel <I always have the piece or luggage that is cauf,ht at the top) and I t pped him another 50 cents. Another ooe carried it to the curb_ and I tipped him 50 cents. At the curb, the man with the whistle summoned a cab for me. lifted the lug· gage and put it In the cabbie's trunk. I tipped him a quarter. Al the hotel, the cap- tain carried my luggage to the reception desk a nd I tipped him 50 centa. A bell summoned a be llhop who carried the suitcase to my room. I gave him $2.00. He gave me my key. To date, I had paid $4.15 for my lugiage and hadn't even opened it yet. It was within a few dollars or being more than the contents of the suitcase were worth. The IRS does not con· sider luggage a depen· dent. This Is too bad as that ts why J bad seen tile President carrying his own garment bag OD· to Air Force l. ll was just getting too ex· pensive to keep tipping everyone. At a hotel recently, I was waiting for my key when a young couple came in. glanced around nervously and re· giatered for a room for one night. ''Where is your lug- gage'?" asked the desk clerk suspiciously. The girl blushed. The young man stammered. I 'm not naive. I could tell they were just start· ing out and couldn't af· ford. to support a suit· case. people who travel a lot--------- probably put more into their luggage than they do their own children. <With the possible ex· ceptioo of children with . - braces.> In assessing the s itua· lion, it occurred to me A Your Dairy Pilot can be RecycltJd 0--. """~ . .._~, l'Krctn9 ..-oC.•-S56-5"'1 _..._......,.,.,,...~ lfltH '" ftlt ""'*" lolol-_, "'"' -OI *' IQfS n1<t ~ ""OUV" "°""l "llW'O IOt (Wtf !IQ~ YU'~ '""'~ IOt. OttW!.11 ,_,,,.,.. "1 pt°" ... "''°"'"°" .. °" -'lt#f>,I ... ORANGE COUNTY 3 TOWN 6 COUNTRY ORANGE (71') 5'7·1221 PATTERN MAKING NOW EASIER THAN SEWING! - and have fun doing it • • • wlth (Pattein~ 'Unlimited PATIERN FITIING lllORT CUTS ~S Nl!Vl!R Sl!l!N BEFORE! Mk h .. I Beaumont . Flt your figure perfectly • make patterns for M'IY member of your family in ANY SIZE• gu1rentMd fit with each pattern made• Ellmln1ta difficult pattern alt1trations, costly MWfng mistakes. e Sew...._ Ind cohn in mlnutll wfdt this method. m PANTS LIKE NEVER 8EFOREI Whether you ,,. en experienced Mamltrltl or 1 beginner you'll be making perfect fitting pttttmt In no timel It's the malt timple. eny end Inexpensive method IYtr dwltld • Slve up to ~ eedl v--on famffy dothn • Sew great fitting fashions for w thl herd to flt. • a.. '°"I Ind lhort •lileld problem&. TWO HOUR CLASS FOR ONLY $3.00 FREE 8A8IO 19-AND &A.CS PATl'DN AllD lllftaUUllON SIT TO ALL WIM> At IUD MorM11 a.. -10 A.II. or ....... a.. -7:00 p.m. One Day Onlyl ThuNday Marctl 1 Holldaylnn 3131 Brlstol It. ar1eto1 11. EJdt ot .. n Diego Frwr. eo ...... .. NA ..... _... .. .. =' ... -•• . • ANALYSIS I CAREERS OTICE PVBLIC NOTJ t.: 'ICTl"°"' .USlllf I" ~ 5'A'11MlllfT T ...... _,,, W"lO'lt ••• "'"t ~-•••rs lf)(AS S1Vll t Hlll ooos. nao...,.. •tvoa '°' .. -w c...,,.,. N.C ~. t2"2 U •WM ~I ~Nlff,.C..'1 .. Ali.<1 L Ill~ '1U '-~• Of ... -. ea ••m l.••n"<t E R .. o"•• ttll• ~.---Niii"~ tlJO) S.._ 9 •-~ (ruo1 ........... ""'•·CA, tl~ flo1h -'""' h Ulnctuc If!<! b¥ • -••l~ID ,.. .. Ooldw•le• Tl>h S.....,._I w•\ fliecl w•U• '"" Covtt'V Cltnl o• 0r•"9" COUllly 011 "'~,.,n.1m. PUBUC NOTICE FICTmous IUSlllfl!SS MAME STATEMENT PtJBU P\JBUC NOTICE PlJllUC NOTICE NOTICE ----------- ""•• PUO!lsNd ~ CNS1 o.lty Piiot FR. 27,Mw.6, ll,~ 1ffl •n·1' PUBUC NOTICE T~. February 27, t979 ~aker Suggest• Birth Method Crime JAink? ByTHOM"5 D. EUAS LaMue, Bradley, Le Boyer . . . the names are bywords for many expectant parents coruiidering natural dllldbirtb, with no drugs involved. Could they also be a key to crime rrevenUon? That's the suggestion from one o C&lllorni&'s most innovative legislators, Democrat John Vascoocellos of San Jose. Vasconcell<>5, whose constituent newsletters oft.en tell or personal problems and t.bQughts, has been profiled lo several oatlooa.I magazines for bis approaches to education and other social problems. NOW HE SUGGESTS THAT BlllTB pro· cedures are one of 13 possible indireet causes or crime. He proposes a state commission to examine the roots of violence and prescribe treatment. "We must search and discover." he said ln a newsletter. "How come the violent personality? How can we eradicate the con· ditioos and events that cause it? "It's not really so far out. lt 's time we brought all the knowledge together and to the attention of all our people.•· VascoocelJos would start with birth procedures, especial· ly those devised by Fred~ric LeBoyer, a French physician whose methods are becoming increasingl y popul ar in vASCOMCELLOS California hospitals . LeBOYER'S METHOD INVOLVES DIM lights and a warm bath for newborns shortly after birth and immediate close contact with the mother. It is designed to eliminate the crying normally as· sociated with birth and so produce happier babies. "How an infant first experiences life outside the womb may well determine that person's in· cUoaUon towards violence," says Vasconcellos. "An infant immediately traumatized by bright lights, loud voices and a slap on the rear end and the coldness of a metallic scale may wen be condi· Uooed toward violence.'' Vasconcellos s uggests nutrition. low self· esteem. sexual repression. television and feelings of powerlessness are other key factors spawning lviolence. BE ASKS, "00 WE BEUEVE THAT we are naturally innocent and trustworthy, life-affirming and inclined toward gentleness? Or that we are by nature eviJ and untrustworthy? "We may well be creating for ourselves a self· fuHilling prophecy, growing a child who behavt>s according to our expectations." Vasconcellos proposes spending $500,000 over SOUTHERN ~.CALIFORNIA FOCUS . five years for a state lcommissioo on Violence :and Crime. Its purpose would not be to change or disband state prisons "We need to maintain our current punitive approaches" -but to begin prevention methods that might not even be noticed in crime statistics before the year 2000. VASCONCEU.OS BAS GOTl'EN SUPPORT from extremely diverse legislative factions: Co- sponsors include black Democrat Maxine Waters of Los Angeles, Chicano activist Art Torres of East Los Angeles and fiscal conservative Dan Boatwright of Concord, chairman or the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. His proposal w~ on the way to J>US!lge. last year before Proposition 13 led to automatic disap- prov al for all measures that would have demanded oew spending, no matter bow small. It will protr ably pass this year. But the commission it sets up should not be stacked with the "bleeding heart liberals" onen associated with such factfinding groups. For the governor, attorney general and the slate s~h<?Ols superintendent would all be on the comm1ss1on. and each would appoint Live other members. "SOME PEUONS MJGRI' DEEM ALL this wuted effort because or a belief that we are. sim· ply violent by nature," Vasconcellos said. "They might feel that the best we can do and hope for is to discover more and better ways of repressing and coolrolli.og. ourselves and each other. That's not much grounds for hope." But Vasconcellos has hopes. And his bill just might cause some fundamental changes in tradi· tional child-rearing, starting with the ftrSt moments. Overseas Teaebing DAILY PILOl Bftt \lifte Architect and inven· tor F . Buckminster Fulle r s ays th e human race is in a "critlcal moment" and in "a very per· tlous condition ." Fulle r , 84, a dds, ''How you and I behave will make a difrerence in whether we make it or not.'· Talks Set On Indian History Fifth Di st ri ct Supervisor Thom a s Riley and a represen· tative from Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown Jr. 's of· flee will be featured spea kers March 14 at a J O int San Ju a n Capistrano Historical Soc iety and Indi an Council meeting. The session wilJ begin at 7 : lS p.m. in the San Jua n Wo men's Club clubhouse, 31442 EJ Homo St. THE MEETING will center oo issues related to preservation of Indian historical sites in the San Juan and Dana Point areas. Stephen M. Rios, from Gov. Brown's office and the state's Native American Heritage Commission, will be the featured speaker. D&. KNOX Mellon, state historic preserva· tion officer, will conduct an anthropological dis· c ussion concerning the local Juaneno Indians. For further informa· tion, phone 493·1228 or 496·6604. Engineering Honor Given Saddleback College student Lisa Larwood bas been selected as the Community College Stu· dent Engineer of the Year by the Orange Couo.ty Engineering Council. The 20-year-old Dana Point resident plans to transfer to Cal Poly San Luis Obispo to seek her bachelor's degree. Experience Necessary By JOYCE L. KENNEDY DEAR JOYCE: My wife aad I w..W UM lo &eadt lD a foreign cou· try. Bow can we get jobs! -D.H .• YOungstown, Ohio Do you have at least two years of current teaching experience? If not. your chances for a salaried position are nit Overseas prospects shine for teachers of math. science, physical or business education, music, in· duatrial arts, and for guidance counselors and Ubrarian.s. Crowded flelda: English, social studies. elementary grades and adnlin.istra· Uon. TBJ8 IS THE woao trom Harold Greeoey. the staffing cbief for lntema· UooaJ Schools Services, a DOD·profit group wblcb recruits tor oversea ~boots. - Greeney adds that "hlle tbe Euro- pea n market ls s'wamped , opportunities are f aJrly ~entifW ln other parts ol the world. 1)endenta are a draa on your marketabtlltf; married teaching couples and slncJe teacben have the edge. Even· ln crowded apeclaltia, such as e lementary education. married tucblfta couples are aoupt after tor remote areu wbere tbe lack ol IOCiaJ Ill• could be dismal tor a alntle teacher, uys Greeney. Here are key leacb: --INTSaNATtONAL SCHOOLS Servtce1, ~ Alexucltt Sl., PriJ>ce. ton. N.J. oes.o. la similar to aa ex· ecuUve reenaitlna fmft ln \be MUe Uaat the fOCUI la Oa flDClinC penoanel for achoola. DOt on beJploi tHd.ers ftnd jObl. You cu, however, beeome • ( C4REERS ) permanently listed in tbe group's fUes for $25, which covers the cost of a personal interview and evaluations. Detail.a are free from the organiza· lion. -"Schools Abroad of Interest to Americans" is the best-known ref· erence book. Published by Porter Sargent. 11 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 02108, a r evised edition will be ailable this summer for $16.SO. -Mailbags of teacher applications e sent each year to the Department of Defense Dependents Schools, 2461 Eisenhower Ave., Alexandria, Va. 22331. WbUe it's too late to apply for the 1979-80 year, you can obtain in· formation Oil requirements. The of. ficial applicatJon brochure for 1980-81 won't be available until September. -A aotJND.UP OF aESOVaca la liv• in a tree listing with this UD· wieldy title, "Ortanisatlona and School Systems Recruiting OT Employtq DtrectJy U.S. Teachers tor Poeltiool In Foreign Countnes, or U.S . Territories and Outlying Sta tea." Wa available by writing: Teacher Exchanae SecUoo, Div. of lot.rnat.ional Education, U.S. Office of Education. Wuhington, O.C. 20202. -If you're fresh out of achool, your best bet ll the Pt-a~ Corps; writ. to Action, I06 Cocmtc:Uc:ut Ave.. NW, 'Vi atbinatoa. D.C. 3052$. -R~A.DCM: Sad corwr ~ /or poaftNe .... tMI cobmul fo :.IGfCI Lain K~oiBor 1•,CodoMuo.CAaas. .. _a===OAl=l.=Y=Pl;;L;;O::T======T=UHC!ay==· P::eb:1.'u:::a~ry=21~·;:':-7V. , ..•.......••.•..•..... ~ ....... ..,,~ ........ ,,... he8~st Market pl er On Tne Ora~Ce>a$\ ••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAILY PILOT .... ,.. 1002 h•cal I OOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CLASSIFIED ADS OowC.h~· 642-567 , •.. , ....... _y._j IUILO YOUI DllAM HOUSI or dlOC~t· from 3 plan lncluded w1th t-1thC'r/or both of the e 2 C'OClUguou R l 'ots tn the ... m Jte a( Northwood ln t rvlne. Jdt:> I locntton to shopping & freeway ,\5king S4S.OOO ach R.c. nnoa co. 640-5112 .... (a .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• I EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ,._..~,~tier. 481 +den -500! Sunken llv1ng room 8nclc fireplace AJI re· modeled kitchen. Ex· rellenl location lm rnaculat.e bargaao! Call Cast to take advant.aac' ~1'100 )J't; hi?• '' \ H''°l I(',., ,,,. f [~lllld AlJ reaJ est.ale adverUsf'<I ~ ---__.., ~ ~ ~~:S:~a~ ;.~?; •ttlii*· Houalng Act of 1968 • wtuch ma.kes It illegal l * VEJ£RHI~ * adverllse "any pre M'1 ference. limitation. or HAa101 V11W HtU.S VWIW Recently redecoruled nd really nlfty ! A view of ba}' and ocean. 3 bedrooms. o lartte com r lot nd peek l this oak entry. beamed cellln~s. n~w er carpetg nnd muny quahty a ppc')lntment1» Now p~k al the view. Pl"'k a Vlt>W1 Jw,t $375.000. ree land! ,_.l()UI: ti M S REAL 10RS' 61!> 0000 2443 [;ost Co4S! H1ghWdV r..orona dt!I Mar ,11\0 tn M1 •\J V l'rC!t-.ll ~I\\ !>990 ASSUME SELLERS LOAM -Your indlvtduality will shine in this home wtth custom features thruout. 4 Bdrm. 2 bath, separate service area. Eating area in kitchen with heavenly amount of cupboards. Huge master suite. Great for entertaining! Take over loan at 91fl% INTEREST WITH NO LOAN FEE. Good credit moves you in now. CGI 546-4141 . . ...-• ... -........ ....-r _.... ... ,,,_,. •• .. Serving Costa M esa·lrvine _ Huntington Beach-N ewport B~ach .... .. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UDO ISLI Bay v\ew from 2 patio de.cu enhances custom sraclous s bdrm.. 4 bath trad,tiona home : like pew. Jdcal fot .eotertainlng. Corner lot. $500,000 OCEANFRONT Quality crart.imanahlp ln mahog. trim & oak noors sets oft th ls landmark: 4 BR. 3 ba . home In finest locatloo. Estnbllsbed trees & lawns. $485,000. IACK IAY Fine 4 bdrm .. 21h both f amilY home on qulet cul de sac. Oversized pool, playhouse. storage $169.000 Terms. IAYFRONT Sev 'rill fine bayfront homes with ple r & slip AVALOH Well construtted. 3 BR. 1 ba. oak floor, partial basement.-concrete foundation. Flats area. $120.000-F ee. BI Lf GRUN DY, REALTOR '· J·ll Ho y\""° Or•v• N P. 67~ bl()I EASTSIDE 3 Bedroom. 1 bath borne in Costa Mesa. $89,900. Ask for Robert Milliken. 631·1266 SHARPBt YOUR PIMCILSl IKh oMcle .... ,. ~ OWft•d •nd ~ .... OCEAN VIEW SPYGLASS HILLS This is an exceptional home. Like brand new, squeaky clean, ready to move in. Ocean views from the master bedroom. living room. & kitchen. Lush carpets. intercom. auto sprinklers. 2 fireplaces, wet bar. & on & on. Call to preview this 4 ~m, 21h bath + family room ''Tradewinds" & we wUl be proud to show it to you. Offered at $389,500. 'l·:Sl.EY'N R.C. TAYLOR CO. 640-5112 I ~YLOR CO. HEA LTOH.S ~t 11t 1· nHl> JASMINE CRESC -SECURITY AHA Best value in this quiet private community. Some ocean view. Brand new split-level "Sea Breeze" model with 3 bedrms. family room & formal dining. Air·cond .. luxury cptng landscaped. auto. sprinklers plus o ther ex tras . 24 H our gate.guarded area. TeMis courts, pool & greenbelts. $239.000. · WESLR-H. TA Y1.0I CO .. REA.LTOiS 2111 S-Joa .. I• Hlh lood SHORECLIFFS VIEW lmpodot stoM l•cade lh'M way to lmpret&tve entry ball featurl DC ..,U-al ICalrcue leadla& to 1t1•1nillc:eat m .. ter Nte. F•bWoua COUDt.ry lDtcbeo abane oceao 6 CaQ)UI views. La.rte kll rooco ror pool. tocredlble family home. For priva&e lbowtAC call ~. MeWpcwt c....- 640-5117 1 IDIM con AGE ................ Pegged hardwood noon. beamed ceillnga. 2 brick rireplaoes and alee coun· try kitchen ·PLUS - 2 Bdrm, 2 bath Income unit with private paUo and yard. Red to s 115.000 FOR lNFORMATlON Cal 644-7211 /.JD.NIGEL l31\IL£Y &' ASSOCIATES Duplex. 111 Femleaf. 1 Sr \ Ba each, cute & clean + room lo bul Id . $162.SOO. By Owner . 64()..UM() 1024 . ..................... . I ST 11ME OffUED IMSSYURS chscrhninaUon based on Recent changes in V.A race, color. religion, sex. regs may enable ~w to or oaUooal ongln, or an qualify for $100.000 borne an~nuoo to make any loans with absofotely NO such pre(erenre, Umita· DOWN PAYMENT GREAT INCOME! 2 buUdaWe parcels side DECAB _.. ·yoa•s by side of R·2 land iD VR.A good neighborhood. Over NEWPORT cana. H.a. 64iMt Io U )'OU've been walling for thlS one, here ll Is! R-2 lot (2 Bdrm house in· IALIOAISLE OWN HOME 42,000 aq ft. Approx 3 Noth.log spared to make miles from the ocean. at btil New plush neutral Woo't last long. Call le>- shade crpts. Rough sawn day. Opeo Eves. 545-9491 1--------11ctuded Creel. Room for r---------~IC.AL! duplex Plus. (8173 sq.ft.) tJon. ordlscrimination." Worid Real Estate ~ Great Eaatside locaUoo. Prime location In Asking $65.000. Call an Orange County firm nus newspaper will not specuwz.ln~ in VA home know Inf ly actept any J8ans. We re the VETS advert sing for real thathelptheVETS. Residential + 2 com· merclal rentable spaces. 5 Car parking, 1 block lo water. 3 bedrm 3 bath un· at. F\replace. Super for summer /winter rates. 67s.&sO C:a~Uc ~~~~I ~:J;.·. (~l~'Ml5§1$1Jj Huge llv rm. Dual 10' DEERFIELD TER· 54().U.Sl ,. RACE HOMES; you'll eojoy the beautiful • -greenbelt & community ~HERITAGE estate which as in viola· Jo'or more info call· uon of the law Iii Hortoft, Ari. {)Pf"'I "'? • ,, '· 'V'• ,, ;tJ ,.,. r r I 0 0 r l 0 c e al i D g ___ Re_al_Es_ta_t_e -- slumpst.ooe frplc. Cov'd patio laced w /artistic treatment or lalicc work. CaU today for appl. Open 3 IB>ROOM JASMIME CRESC pool ; features 1oct. 3 . • REALTORS 541-0800 aao•S! ActnrifMn --------[~lflt!tl thollld ch.ck th.Jr ads daily mid ,..,.,... .,.. ran 1 ... •atety. TH DA.IL Y PILOT as.-1 laWlty fw tM first l1t- ca1 rKt inMrffoll Otlly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W'PER IA Y FIXER 2EASTSIDE SPECIALS! TAKE YOUR PICKU RW.CHARMER FOR ONLY $77,800 Ji)-esh & airy. New paint ~de & ouL Lge add on fm.ly nn for your fmly's enjoyment. Qwel. tree lined street. New roof a year ago. Better see this ooe fut! Call now! Open ~.545-9491 WAT!llftt0t4T w/42' boat slip. Big 2 BR & den, 2 frplC3, bltns, 2 TRIPLIX cav. patJos, 3 car gar. Gnat h•c:Ofl911 Owner will bel~IO on Single story owner unit fmanclng. ~. · with 2 &.ownhouse desago JACOIS REAL TY rear units. All with 675-6670 private pauo, W/D hoo1t•---W--__ .W-!!-- up & lodividuaJ enclosed ~ • SELECT garages. Ca ll now OHLY$69,900! PROPERTIES ~<1·11\1VNro111N~1 · Very private sharp ron· do. Perfect for a starter ~Jr:"~'H [ ~ ltiftlttl ~~~~~~~¥~ Eves 545-9491 (~IVM!B§i$1Jj Real ~t.at.e S84SUOUS HOUSE Huge 3000 sq. fl. 2 story. designed for sensuous couple. madly In love with each other. Lux· urious master suite with shower for two, enclosed spa in tropical garden room. Separate maid's quarte r s . Ass um e S95.000. first trust deed. Call Mack,962·7788. ,.Q.. K€Y WR€ALTORSh ARTISTS PALACE-HI Huge 2 story condo in btfl Jasmine Creek. Ex· qulSite crptmg & st.aioed glass windows. 3 bdrms. 2'>? ba. frml din rm. fmly nn. 759-1.SOl (~l\'Mltffil$1Jii Real F.a t.a te + GUEST bdnm .. 2""1 baths. bnck ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil ___ _ A pnvat.e(gat.edl com· frplc . & pnvat~ patio. t--------GtA.NT VA.LUE! muruty iD the heart of You own the land. Pnce ELEGANT but comforta· Giaolbackbaybargain! Cor ooa del Mar . ·A oolvSIJ9.900. ble.nilil2story5bdrm Over 2'00 ft. of peaceful beautiful. prestigious 3 ba. home has been fully living. 4 Bedrms + 3 way or life -pool. BAY & decor•t.edinwarmearth batbs·OR·3 Bed rm + J a c u u 1. TENNIS tones by Costa Mesa's ·separate guest/m81d's COURTS and clubhouse. finest furniture store. qtrs. Formal living rm. BrandoewplaoSw/split BEAjCH Among the man y family rm. 2 Fplcs. Cov· level. three bedrooms. ft amenities are over l2S MOTIVATID ered bride patio. Potting family room and OCEAN roUsof wallpaper. teak Ac bouse--and muc h VI EW . Immediate 450NEWPORT CTR.OR. tile floors. lavish SB IR more at a bargain price! poe.sesaloo. 1248.SOO. ~11 draperies" much more. Says s ubmit any re· CaUoowtosee.673-3550. COUOFMEWPORT 1---------Mesa de! Mar. Sl.29.000. asonab\e offer5. Lvly 3 . OPW IH 9 •llSIUNIO!llNICI'' llEALTOllS Pr•nl'. Only. Owoer / [~~~:t17.~ !l~•~~~:'11~1~i~l~·~1~'~'~·~~1.··::::.':':s.:':':':1::::· ==~;~: =-=~m, ,,. l.ngs. Better bu.rryl Open R84TTIL YOURS bdrms. + fami~ rm. yard, RV access. back Eves.S.S.NU EASTSIDE 3 Bedroom, 1~ bath. Pnced by out o town bay. Newport schools. ~11our.1 owner for qwck sale al pn·ce ...aoUable, assume ~ family home. C-Overed IZC7 500 -.. TUUX IJ/<4% ASSUMA.11.E Owner wW carry some papen. Only $13S.OOO. C.-645-9161 ... OPEN HOUSE . • • Rf Al TY ~· . You can punch these patK>.$71,000allt.erms. • 1% VA loao. Agl , featurea into your com· 754-7800 673-4400 ~.556-2660. puter&comeoutawio· ~ .. ~ HARBOR oer : New appliances. M · copper plumbing . -PICK UP kildae'O garden window. skylight I D fmly rm ~r makes this lvly home ~ A l'll\'1,1on or & DELIVERY bright 6: c heerful. lfarhcll" '"'"'tmt•n t C:n Spadl.sb frplc. Tiied front Woo't be~ from court yard enl.ry. Call 11-AcnLoh --------•I this ho me. Wark lo nowforappt. Open Eves. Sub-division. ready to ~WlNECBJ.AR schools (primary tbru S6M91 t>Wld. lo beautiful home on the rommunity college), and WIST NEWPORT c II fr s over Io o king shopping. Qwet cul-de· 28drmbeachcottage. l Newport Har bo r . sac. PALM DESERT landscaped. subsW.ntial 3 Uyouliketherealcstale --------schools. We've had business. you will love It **VETS** numerous Inquiries & CUFfHAVE:H 2 Bdrms .• 2 baths. den, --------·r erp1c. aose to schools & CUT YOUR * * ... M.'••n••• 1537 Mt. Hatchings bloclcbay&beach. C-Omplelely decorated. ~ COMPLEX to see this one-<>f·a·kind 64 UNIT APT Bdrms. Oil ree land. Cal I 21 W/adJoloiog land. home. ~ here. comm1ss1on split this ooe Is about ready to lo 00%. Call Smllln· Homes in Orange and sell. Don't hesitate. Call Melvyn, 646-4463 R.lvenslde Count~ Up lo now! Open Eves. 54.S-9491 churches. Short escrow T .1t. VRe pogsible. $149,500 ~ fouot.aio Valley You~ the winner of Two t)-ee Tkkets to S2,ID),000. a~ . . .. ..,..c..... 640-5157 .c g f}.~~-,NO DO N! DO (~IW!1!@1$1Jj 673-3663 642·2253 With th1s new firat year depreclaUoo duplex. . .. l»il.. Afet ~7n:!?! I ReaJ FAtate OCEAN VIEW · asso·ciated BACKE AS--Af llL l[iAS 20~1 W · l atbOo • 11 ~·• J ~il macnab I Irvine ?" realty IAYSIDE COYE Fantastic "Legend " model in quiet location. Spacious master s uite w /cozy den -rustle cedar paneling -wood parquet fioor -antique lighting. Comm. sandy beach, pool & jacuzzi. Appl. only. S230.000. Holly Markas 644·6200. (V·97) 642·823S 644-6200 901 Oo11tr Ori..,,. Ha roor Vle-.w Center 1r11lne •t C.mpu~ V•ll•y Center 7S2·1414 $CC\\4llA-4~~s · Tltat l11#1iguin9 W otd Game wiflt a Cltudle -----,.......,QA'f L ~----- • ._....... ._...(It"'- ._~_. ... low .. IOl'll ............. _. I 8U SR AD I 1111'1 . I "YORA Ii: . I I I r . , I MUCA S 11 I I' I I . 2 I """')!new my mother WM • IOlllY OOOll until I lolMd tilt I -... 6ATTER I' I I I I I ! $.!' ::.1::1 :$'. rrrr1 I I I I I ,..., Mooarcb Bay Terrace Elegant f'r. Provlncial ()(fered at: $325,000 Call for appt. 640·6259 c/bfo//$ R E A/lLTY Pri• Of OwMt-shlp! 5 BR. 3 BA, prof. Lodscpd w/sev patios. Frml D'R. FR w/bllo bar. sep lndry rm. 'h ac. lot w/ocn & ca- nyon view&. A dream of a home. A real buy! Call fXI#. 919-5370. What's Your Trade? A ,,!·.;7~?o~ LLSTA TE for an lld tn the Daily Pilot REALTORS Service OireclOt'Y that can --------ellabliah your prof esslonaJ identity. For more ln· Have somethl:ng to sell? formation call 642·5678. Qaulfled ads do 1t well. cae: 110111 ILllffS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE OH THE SAND Beautifully Decorated 3 BR. 2 Ba. Unit With 180° View From Liv. Rm .• Din. Rm . KttCben And Master BR. Built On The Beach Nr Huntin g ton B c h . Pier. Amenities Include Pool, Sauna. Rec. Rm. Plus Private Guarded Entrance. Price, $369.000. ILUFfS SP!CIAL The Rare Single Level Paula Plan. This Is The Largest Single Level 3 BR Condo Plus Family Room In The Bluffs. Excel. Floor Plan. Courtyard Entrance. Tiled Entry. Lge Uv Rm W/Cus F .P. Cathedral CeUings. All Elec. Kitchen. Huge Master BR Suite. 2 Patlos. On Fee Land. Only $210,000. A "Joy Of Newport" Llstlng. (i) ~ .. ~ &31·1• 111 DOvmt Dllft Best of arehitectu.ral de· sign lo 3 • 2 Bdrm unit&. 2 batha each. Easy up· keep, bulll as condoe. $215.000. r:;;~~ IEACHFROMT MAMSIOM A magnif icent eJC · perienoe of ocean llvlns! Private road, guarded eottyl ~haded sandy beach! 5 spacious wood decks ! Secl ud e d aard e o s! A tr ue masterJ)lece for lu•· mious Uviall Don't wait, there la nothing Uke It ~ For det.aila F-OREST E OLS ON ...... , .... ··--c:-or U you want your advertla- lng messa1e to reac mar. people al lowe cott, Claaalfied la lb way to gol Call Nowl 60-1171 CIRCUS V ARG>AS Feb. 26th or 28th 4::1>PM Performance The City Shoppmg Center ·Orange To claim your llrkclS, call 642·~. ext. 272 • •• Balboa tsJand Realcy .. \Ul\'\'t""l11W'f~''' 673-8700 PETE BARRETT ORuM HOUSE. uoique Rf.tJY design. Priced below market value. $11.9.SOO. • 642·5200 M2·1811 VAfHATERMS JUST LISTED COOTA MESA ., ... 2237 $74,500. n UUIY ue. Prestigious Holmwood Clean 3Br. l'hBa, lg loi. Or. NB. Lots or extras. quiet st.Pr11 ""1 ~L!~rom heh IAYcalST Mini vu. AJ\ . .,_. Owner/aat. 5.56- WATERfRONT NEWPORT BEACH .....,., ......... 1007 A5&JME VA 9'h% LOAN Llvl .... GI Spacious 3 bdrm .. 3 •••••••••-•••••••••••, $15,000 O.P. ~n house , "' • baths, famlly rm. + """·-us I '"''7,..,..., d House + cottage behind ~ " , OI' C ~ -VfVI • Reduced brtfst. rm. home i.n e· o"' .. anfront . o nly 3Gt Santa Clara, 3 br, 2 11 g h t f u I a r e a o r ~" ba lo fmJ rm central $3400 BAYCREST! 2 Fplcs.1 $130,000. Prine. Only atrlu~ wtfacuUi. Tot.al lmmaa.tlate lln&le story patio, sprinklers. Pr1ceo Br1t.~NM sec aystem + much. beach & waterfront l.oseUat$205,000! C.-.. M9' 1022 much more! Byowner. townbome on Wood· ..... lay Prop. ••••••••••••••••••••••·•--------bridle Lake. w atch the R........ 2 HOUSIS °"LOT esa Verde Jmmi.c 3br -~ ... OYef' the bridge '* 675-7060 • 2 ..,. __ each. $18.5.000 home. f"rplc, new •P· ~ ...., ""' &>liaoces LO kitchen. 1 o/t Just ste.Pt from your ~~~~~~~~ ..:b::.Y..;;.<Yfll,...-oe~r_.640-__ n_m ___ . ba. Must see to ap· beach aide paUoe. Lovely :. o•k walled fireplace. G1•r• 1002 Gt•ral 1002 preclate. By owper. Coave nieoce k It c he o · •••••• •• • • • • ••••••• •••• • • •••• ••• ••• ••••••••• • • _546-_5040 __ • -----microwave .tr breakfast nook too. Mirror walled formal dlninl room. 2 PaUoe. Steps to spa. beach It lake! Price just reduced1, $3400. for fast a.Uel Cau oow 752-1700 Ol'N IU q • •• \ ,..,,.. '0 I' PANORAMIC VIEWS FRESH & NEW y ..... .....,bay ............... .. ............. ...,,... ............. . Newly Mcoreted tllr••..... wltlt MESA VERDE 3 bedroom home with a tarp pool aad Jat\W.1 I No qualllyln1 I Owner will fiaaDcel C•U DOW I ~~~ YllWS .,_ MOit ,...__ ...... _. ~ ~,.... ............. .... pttcllM IMw; ttr;t::n .. CL flllft•l1 ............ s., ..... ...., ,... wftlt ............ ,,.... .... T• .. We..-t W.u..t 754-lZOZ COl 1-PAIK •Q.IAM• UMIYBSITY PAn Bright, spacious Rutgers plan. Backs to adult pool and jacuzzi on major greenbelt. a very desirable location for Sl.29.950, Including the land. • CCIUMa&. .......... co. w ... -......... ,_. tOhlll IM••••,•~.....,. ..... a --. s ............ & Wt ... =~·-d ... •;..:•::-.... -,.: Ctl.ia~~.-cw ........ .... WATERFRONT 3 Bdrm. deft, Great loc• Uon. °"'9el' tnftlfem!d.. CA.LL 714-7100 844·9080 HOMES lac. ~36 W Coost Highway NewPon twach • ,,,, .... JOACM• ..... "°" IN'*""°"' camlR 631·1400 .._I ~.,~HERITAGE rUALTORS EnMhsb Tudor 2ll3 llr spht level, 2&3 rur garage, rrpl cs . mic.rowavH. ~nhoui.e windows, pool , l'P.t TENNIS court From$89,9~ M6-00&l or 955-1020 Developed by Woodtree Dev. Co MOTHER..fN.LAW sum COLLEGE PARK Courtyard entrance · huge fml y kitcht'n warmed by red brick dble frplc. 5 bdrm. 3 ba. separated (2 bdrms. l ba wlsep entrance), 40' cov'd patio & your own rn.ut or"'hard. 1~ 1so1 OWMr Moving; Must Sell! Nr wl y c rp~t~d 3 ~ home with din- 1.1\1. rritry and outside (wplaC't' LI.I.Sb f ard and 2 pauus Don t walt 1 $104,900 BKll Call ~17'.!0 TAABEU.. -· ----· HOWSOOM CAM YOU MOVE? Into this super re - modelt.>d 3 Bdrm, 2 bath M esa Verde home Features a new roof. new kitchen, new bath, new carpels and new added on fomaly room and master bdrm Asking on- ly $87,500. Call 546-5880 for more deta.als C.al!SCY & eompany SPECIAL HOMlS u•:AUTI fUL WOO OS t'.OVF. AREA J Utdroom vll!W home l>1n1na ruom, (am1ly ruom · extra ruc>rN. SZ:J(),000. oc•:ANS IOE OF HJGHWAV lN NORTH t=ND. 2 Bedroon>s & deo, shorl walk to beach ~t qu1dJty. $220,000. IASTl&.UFF Ch<llcx• c:orMr location. llCllaa-nl t.o pa_rk arn s Ndrnl 3 ba\hl w1lb many «lru Top coodll1ou 119'l.~ loyMcC .... ,IUtr 541-7729 ~ITOUPUX $139,500 Steps lo beach 'fhas 1s o Newport Clus1c at an af forcf11blc pr1 t·•· Good summer/winter lncom~ putentJal. lovestori; bet· lt'1" hurry! Call 540 1151 ~ .. HERITAGE . .• REALTORS OML Y $40,000 take over 9~% Joan at $1001 mo. 4 BR. l~ ba & pool Hurry! Ownr/agt. 5.5&0717 SlOK BELOW MARKET! QUIET H1U. TOP with 2 81G CANYON, 2 br codo ~xtra lots. 3 Bedroom 1SS0'·$1S8, 700. ALSO· home. Now vacant. elegant 3 br home, 20x40 owner aruuous. subm1l pool & jacuzzi. lge yrd. tlfers. $100.500. $129,900. Agt 613-4311 ui»So. Coasl tuway DOVER SHORES In VlUage Fair Gorgeous house-best LAGUNA BEACH view 4 Br. 4 Ba. ram rm. lrviM 1044 497 2457 A/C, 3 car. $450,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Owner. 646-4700 eves. COHVB41EHT ~~~~~~~~~lwestcWf, 4br + pool, cor- l()('ation nr San Diego CLEAN S h Ch ner lot. 963-0914/6314'71. Frwy, lrvme Ind com-panis arm Pri onl plex,schools &shopping. house, w/guest apl., __ n_._...;.Y_· ____ _ NiceS br, 2~ ba home. walk to beach & sbops. IY OWNER ParlcPlace,lnc842-7461 ~~-~~ah-0fil8·500· Newport Shores 3 BR. 2ba, Clubhouse. pool & WOODBRIDGE LagllM MICJllllf I 052 rec racil avail. $98,000. SPECIALS ••••••••••••••••••••••• _64&8402 ________ _ .. ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS a Walker & lee Desirous of living In the Real &tate ·--------•I beautiful lakeside com---------munity or Woodbndge? Laguna Niguel Realty • STEAL IT! Rare single story. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath. formal OR. double garage, elec opener. Only $US,000. LAVISH Pool & jacuui. rambling overs ize one story in Mesa Verde. Hurr y, won't last at S13S.OOO. !8-3371 We have homes avails· ble JD the range from $72.900 lo $145,000. JY WOO~B~IOGE REAL TY 551-3000 WAY AIOVEPA.ll nus 2 Bdrm. 2 bath up- per condo rrools El Niguel Goll Course. lrn· prove your hfe w t all blln kalch.. vaulted ce11Jng w/skyUles, pvt commun. pool &spa. $89.000. CGI 645-9 I 61 ...... :. OPEN HOU)E . REALTY / , ' DAILY PILOT ruesday. fetmwy 27. 1979 "' HcMJtH For W. tiouM" for Sd. ~..4-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2100 ~ JIOO s.ca...... 1076 s..ca.-• 107, ·······················-····················· .............................................. DISCOYH SPAIN IH SAM CLEMEMl'E TIM l9ld of hocleeda• offers yoa this , Hc ..... •ptoperty: SHORECLIFFS VIEW PROPERTY Popilllm' 4 ........ fttod8 with oc.-YleWI and prhroh co•rtyord. Y.ry low ..,...,-.c•. SI lt,900 _ e btn.go 49341812 On lhe Orange Coas1-1ook to Lingo first f'£E OWNF.Rsmr l..AND & BLDG IRVlNE INDUSTRIAL. COMPLEX fo'REEWAY l.OCATION. \7,706SQ. lt'T. APPROX. Herttl ...... n4I AtTHUl TUlt& CO. 957-6232 ""-Pt OfMrfy 2000 Hwa Ultfwwi*d .............................................. 4HouMt&~ eor-.. Mw 3222 5 28R 1 tRR with ••••••••••••••••••••••• garages & yards. Greut Oceanside of Hwy. Sharp F.astside IOt"at.lon. $60.000 2 bdrm. Super patio. 2 down-Owner will carry c a r I( a r a g e . contract. $320.000. washer/dryer hookuJ>!S. €H IG€ S400 yrty. 640-4l37 -'_..,..HOMcc 3 BR, fam. rm , Jumiflt! ~l Creek; on greenbelt. 3333W.Coast Hwy, NB some view. $1100. 64~6 2 BR, 2 ba., canyon vu , adJts $S.2S. Agt 673-~ S.a.-• 1076 C>the-rReaUstot~ .INVESTMENT •••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••• •• •• ••• •• ••• •• • • •• PROPERTY MIMI IA Y VIEW Acr'f09I far S-. I 200 10 Acres. can be aplit to 2 bdrm spacious mulU- 8AY CLlfF VlLLAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2\la acre parcels. Shows level in canyon part set- lbr2ba home an pleasant INVESTMENT xlnt return. Investor ling. Lg. dbl gar\ +ex- adult community. Stogle PROPERTY terms. Brolter. tra parking. 2'100 ayside sty home. full maant. 10 Acres, can be..splil to 677-58l94'167'9-2823 Dr. For appl. owner. trplc. k,Ucben has aU ap· 2~ acre parcels. Shows i---------•l 6..,_>JS.fi675 ___ • ------plc. •.soo. Call 10 i;ec xlnl return. Investor DUPLD CostoMeta 3224 Rea11or 213imi-S663. ~-=trm-2823 E/side Costa Mesa. 20% ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5..eal>.M 1080•---------down. 80'7., financing, no New 2&3 bdrm condos, ••••••••••••••••••••••• INVESTORS SPECIAL Assume 9%. $464 mo. 4Br, 2Ba, 2 yrs old, or Harbor/Edinger. $19.900 FP. Owner M7·6199 WntMIMter 1098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUCAH bey thts neal 4 bedrm. 2 ba cash t.o loan No quah-fying req'd. Full price $72.950. Park Place,lnc 842· 7461 HARD TO IEAT! 4 BR. 2~ ba. w/lge laml· l,y rm & formaJ dute rm Assumable 8 ~,% VA loan. Park Place.Inc 842 7401 16ACRES points, fast escrow . frplc,bltos.2cargarage. B E L. A 1 R E O F Own/Bkr. 342. 7407 $450. & up. 1076 Canyon FAl.-l..BROOK PRIME 1_Dr_.~---·----AVOCADO LANO IN PREST I GIOUS HELEAH ESTATE CAN BE SPLIT 29% balance down owe_ $368.000. Pnnc. Only. MLke Wink. 957-055>4, Agnt. INVESTMENT PROPERTY 5 Acres. can be split to lo/• acre pareels. Shows xlot retur n. Investor terms. Broker. 677.58)9" 679·2823 Neal 2 br. 21h ba condo. w /2 frpl ccs, poo l , d.shwhr, washer/dryer. Sorry, no kids or pels. Singles ok. $435. Agt, no fee. 964-2566; 973-2911 . Mesa Verde4br, 2ba. New uoo1---------drapes/carpels. $550. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4PLEX Call Roy, 898-2641, or By Owner 2 4-Plexes. Huntington Beach _-. __ 9332_. _____ _ ~.oooeacb. Pnnc. On-~%0n.80%fananclng. S4 00, 3br, tba . non ly494-0536or540-1219 Nopomts. fast escrow. s mokers. Ref's. 989 C:O.-rcial Own/ Bkr 842-7407 Arbor. 548· 1605/543-0358. r.opeti) 1600 ---------English hunting lodge ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Ut41TS-C.M. type 3br. deo, 2ba. 3 SHOPPING CEKTBl Beaut. new bualdang. frplc. brick cr tyrrt Large 8 urut center with Flreplaces,xlntlocauon $650 mo. 551 2215 or ( u 11 y e q u 1 pp e d 'ISLlnvrots 642-1603 1_qr_.1_744 ___ -___ _ restaurant. bag parking ••••••••••••••••••••••• lot. with room Corso carlt: Mobil. Hon.s located on a major blvd 7 BEACH UNITS 3VEARSOL.D SC01'T RL TY, 536-7533 3br 2t;;iba new duplex. d1shw .. patio. gar g . Children OK. S475mo. 2168 Mmer St. 557-4579. Far 5* I I 00 with tugh traffic count. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rents bave not been an· I ACIE creased for sev eral lltllilatrial/ 2 Bdrm. lge fenced yard. ~To..-... 493-9494 495-5220 ~~~~~~~ --------• OeSirable end unit in Pvt 49~2413 830-5050 - loc. Sgi stry 2Br, deo, 2 --------- ba. frplc. A/C, 2 car gar, 3br l~ba. fm. rm. patios, xtra lg lnscp'd patio. no as11()('. fees. $85,900. •IESTIUY• Eastbluff Condo. Views, well kept, many c_ustom features. "' FOR YOUR MOBILE or. years. $510.000. Call Properly 2100 completely redec. Use of HOMESITE. Room for 7Sl·319l ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool & Jae. $425/mo. EASTSIDE R·2 Freshly painted 2 BR cottage on bwldable R-2 lot. $74,900. Agent. 552-7367 plusb earthlone cptg, 495-4779. drps. wallpr . Walk to __ ..;,..... _____ _ pool, barn, corrals and .SELECT PRIMELNDUSTRlAL ,_642_:-4_7_58 _____ _ animals. Xlnt ter ms. PROPERTIES BUILDINGS t BR. stall shower. patio. Broker. e4919sqftofc/uld'I lndry rm, l;!i blk lo E . __ 677_-56m __ &_679_-2.823 ___ 1----------• •6390 sq rt 24t gross. 17th St. shopping It bus . pre, elem & middle sch ls. QUIET & PRIVATE By owner $81.500. dys Qwierful, airy, 3 bd. 2 ba 759-0'781ext11, ev/wlmd house backing on pcrma- 551·5029 oent greenbelt. ~nc'd $165,000 Financial Consultant OlDLAGUMA machshop New crpl, dr ps. tile. ~IT60•901~"'CH Downtown business -rooo sq rt 23" gross, 91 stove & paint. Mature Broker 645-2509 NEWPORT CREST 0301....-030 !!;A prop. \.'Ortler toe. 1n the Fwy adlts,nochlldreoor pets. front & back yards, c<>v· UNDER ered patio. Nestled in the SI 00•000 hill& or Laguna Niguel COHDO Plan 3, 3 ki" 2'11 ba, gd locat. upgjlded, wet bar. mirrored wardrbs comm pool, jactWi. tennls crts, $135,000 Obi wide '61 trailerama best retail area, approx. •5500 s q fl, Tustin S295.955-U78. <DN5186) 3 pvt bcb & 2800 sq. ft. As king $254.700 pier. Sub letting aJlowed. $290.000. Realooomics •3949 s q fl , Tustin EASTSIOE 2 BR, NO located in Traeasure Ls. 675-6100 Sl9L500 DOGS. $375. 268 ( 8 > 3811 Pacific Coast Hwy.•----------CALL 1714J 838-5970 Costa Mesa Str eel. Lag. Bch. Offered by NURSERY SCHOOL c:tp _645-_9341 __ • ----- Sea Country. Compare for a 4 bdrm .• 2 bo de-U\ls value. By owner. " tached home in Irvine. •ooo. Pb 831-9627 Ren a 1 s s a n c e M .P . Uc'dfor44children+3 (714) 581-5717 *** Girl & Boy Bunnies BunnttS on Pilad&-a small child will love this Eastei 11lt• Quick. U SJ. low<oSt! S1st&1· btothei bunnies are fun to ~n11 of synt11e11c SPotf yain. Sew clot!les of waps of fabric. Pat tttn 7518 d1rect1ons, clothes patttt n p1ec.ts included SI.SO for uch pattern Add 40t each pattern IOI h111-Class a11 mail and h1ndhn& Sted to: SIZES 9349 10Y,.20Y2 f"t 1fTMi-11f~T.- Ahu .,.. You can't htlp but llM a Needlecraft Dept. 105 lottly t1mt where.er J011 IO in Daily Pilot ttus Sll~n s/laplnc. fallJ WllJ, .. lU. ON~ $t., lltW sltndeflJ bene.ltll the scooped Yd, llY lOIU. Prilt ltMll. neclhnt tap sleMs are a plu.s. M*-. z;,, '*" ...... Punted Pattttn 9349. Hiii NEW/NOW' Our 1979 NHDlE· S11rs 10~. 12Vt. l'Vt. 16Vt, CRAFT CAT~ 200 PoP~ 18Vt. 20Vt Sue 14\t (bvit 37) l1r deslCM. 3 free plttefft bMs 2 ~18 flnh 6G-1nc1L Large corner lot with RV access. Covered patio. gas BBQ, electric garage door apener. S97.000 tt523 CAMPUSDl:IRVIME UNDER $!1) 000 4 bedroom bQme in the Ranch. Ideal locat.aon on a cuJ.<Je.sac street. This single story home Is priced to sell fast. Asking $5.900. e--HANCH HEAL1Y ~5 1 2000 LogllllCI leoch 1048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •LUSHGREEN Fairway frontage with distinctive 2 bdrm. & 2~ ba:tb home. Handcrafted workmanship throughout. $359,500. (8022DP) •COOKOUT On either of the 2 brick patios surrounding 2 bdrm. charmer. Ex· cellent ocean views. Completely remodeled. ~.000 (B030DP> p11nttd "'Side. Send m s.. sue "' _. ,..... lnOllcl/lllJ r..-...Sl..51 _.. 4" fw _. ,....,. fw 1 _______ 1 l~ Qlltl .... $1.50 -ll ... _ ..i.-.u .. ..- 1%1 ........ 'II' Dlllel .•. $1.51 I:;;----MOMAICH IAY IMrft ............ SUI TalACI 125-hllJ Olllll ........ $UO U1W11MJ11 Beat.ltlful 3 bdrm., 2~ 124411fta 'i Orum 1MI .. $1.51 bath cuatom home with a 12J.Slldl'~~~U5 Patternoeot.«2 paaoramlt ocean & U2-5'1ft'll'~::;•·n Dally Pilot coas\l\ne view. Cit y m:;-..... =::Jt=mw.tlltllSl,lhwY ... llY lights by nlab\. Ex· UM._"-"' ... $1.00 10011. priftt "Ml!~ AOOltlSS, =ly decorated llS. ... QicW ..... 1$1.00 Z.,, Silt '414 ST'Yu. RUlllU. aaw1 J:sa= pool 4c ll,..._. Slfll ....... SUI All tllt lltw CIOlllH 1()11 nted tor J • • ll~IUI"' ho ........ 754 lOIJr bu\J hture in 0111 SPRINC. CEJ C oldwe!I Bon~~r IOW. I hit.. .. ... ,1.H SUMMCR PAnERN CATAt0G1 , , .. ...._. ...,_, , • . l.00 O.~su. tops. U.•11S. puts. ~ts. 1-.... ,..... . . . . I.DI ji(Mtt Plui 'J !le> free Pttt~n lts.llltllt Cfldllt • . . . a.II eo11p0n Send ~c ......... ..., .• $1 ... l»S••......-)1..5' suo IU.IS QilMI .. t..., . , 1W 12Mlkk/lllr Trwten SUO IU..-~ .. nc iza.,atdlwl Qltlts. • $UO HI .. Cllldlll.,:. . nc U1.....,_ ·-· r.. Sl.50 S Monarch O.y Pina Laauna Nl.pel 4t ... 7W 131..0136 oeutROMT Soan. charm, No La1. 4&R13BA.•t!lt I PCM Realty 833-8430 MIGB. SHORES WATBFltOHT JllDROOM 714-400-3816. bedrm, 2 ba home on nn/wto.ds ... ,........___.. R...,.._. backoflarge lot. "'~ -::r·.-· 21/J ACRES Park Place.Inc 842-7401 Loh for 5* 2200 llMl Paula Circle Start your own ranch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huntmgt.On Beacti in the lovely private COMDO community of Niguel lbr2baView/sUp Plenty of room for .__~ 2000 Youarelbewinner or mobile or. home and =::': ••• ~t:;.!••••••• See ad, beading PALM Two,,...Tidlets Shores behind guarded Lae/opt. $159,500. gates. a spacious 545-3639 barn . Xlnt terms. D~ERT.56coodosun-10 Brok HE.AR 1REA1C EVEN der class 1200. Ji.5609&6'19-2823 150/o OOWH CORONA DELMAR LOT CIRCUS VARGAS beautifully kept 3 579,90011,~ bedroom home with huge ·--,.....' vaulted wood beamed Super sharp 3 bedroom ceUlnaa in the living rm. condo, attractive decor. ...,..al • r beautiful enclosed brick I Feb. 26th or 28th Walk lo be •• l2' Expan-4-Plex. Assume. Se ler Ready to build. Ap· 4::.>PM Performance do,pricedtosell.lBR,l wall carry paper . proved plans . TheCity ba, lrg porch. 34202 Del Management avail. $150.000/bstofr.646-3627. SbopipingCent.er Form dining rm, am•· patio, pool, jacuzzi & ly rm and breakfast view. Owner motivated. nook. All wllh large .... ~RT Cl!.a..lTER Obispo, #27, Dana Pt. Agent. Gary D. Bosler ~ hofltr / Orange t0x45 Mobile Home with ~g~~~98 Trir Prtts 2300 To cl:iim your tickels, yard, custom st.onework "''""'...-" '"" front and rear REALTY 10x3l add on room & ••••••••••• •••••••••••• call 642·5678. ext. 272 porch. El Morro Beach in FOUR UMITS-C.M. DeAnza Bay Side Village., ____ *_*_* ___ _ -PLUS-640.1812 Laguna. Ocean view. Near new. 3 Br owners 3br Mobile H~me.Newly BeauWuUyupgradedJBr Partially furnished. Xlnl urut, 2 ba. frpl. 2-car decorated. $21 ,500 terms. 2 8 f . 1 fabll lous recreation 1---------roodition. $27,000. Prv. gar .• 3-2Br.2ba.unlts Boal Dock. Pvl Bch. r ,_8 • ,a:i Yh rmN . facahties with features too numerous to mention -AND- access to private beach ONLY $167,500 CAU.644-7211 "1n NlrJEL Dl\IL[Y & AS5UCll\TE5 ... .-port .. oc.. I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONOO IY OWMEA 3br 2~ba. 199.SOO Near Hoag 545-3639 8.15°/o INTEREST Newly remodeled & highly Ul>l(l'aded beach cottage. Walk to private beach. Exclusive Newport area. Take over subject to existing 8. 75% loan. Exchuive liaU.ng. 646-m1 SPACIOUS 28R, den OR, LR. vlew+l BR apt over gar+6 car prk'g. Z15 St. Andrews Rd. See by appt. Agt Crane 54C>-OG08 IG&l!AUTIAIL llAGaTOGO 5 BR . 3 Ba . Somerset, klttho nook, ramlly w/wetbar. dln ln~ rm. 2 fpk's, view o Newport Center. pottlnR shed , privacy & a prtt you can 't beat. Owner has bQul(ht anol h er h ome Submit all offers, '2ll1500. ll!OJ Port Csrlow l·f lJSK~~ t--R EAl .rY BEACH "FIXER" Cute 3 br beach hse. Wood beam ceilings . Brick frplc. Needs work but you $ave. $135,000. Hurry, call DOW! 645-7221 Pty. 213.919.2977 TSLJovstmts 642·1603 po o I . J a c u z z I . rp~.AvaJ · arc 1. O Clubhouses. Broker I pet.s. $515. 646-3627 10x44 with add on.Liv Rm. lo rent. park, CM $11,000. 751-0383 '78 Skyline, 2 BR 2 Ba . S40t~· 4 star park. pool . duooouse. l~ blk to bch Hnti Bcb. 900-5022 ***** By 1o~~!:-ex- tremely low. Seller will carry all financiog at 9~. LcrQt Coslt Row Low Down Pfl'fll'l'nt ... 714/542-3676 CALL FOR SETUP Owner . 6:J1·4920 / $3'15. 2 br, gar. yrd, new 675-&4.58. c p t , l 1 I e • p a i n l . o.t of~ wsb.r/dryr book up. 356 Prapwty 2550 Rochester. 645--4725. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br .2ba View. Horses OK. A&5UME ~'k no qualify. Gar. new w/W crpls. lSt, tng SS2.000 Coodo. 28r. las t & sec. $450 mo 2Ba. frplc. Pool, Jae, nr b"13-4928 golf course . Ownr.1--------- 0ceamide. 1·757-403S Nt>w. extra dJx townhouse BAY FRONT Luxurious mobile home living with spac\Ous cabana. lbr w1tb den. ce- ment patio, stone frplc. plush new carpeting W.stclff RHlty tbroughoul. :l levels • open beamed c'e1hngs. EAGl.E'SMEST xlot. cond. Home In · ***** ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• urul. 3 br. 2 ba, $650/mo OR 2 br. 2 ba for $5.50/mo. Porthole. skylight. win. dows. open s taircase. master bdrm suite. Call Uoda Hart 646-7171 or TM~ dudes stove and refng. RACH DUPLEX eoro. de& Mer l 122 --------RARE OPPORTUNlTY al unbelievably low pnce Price reduced to only ••••••••••••••••••••••• Super clean 3 Br J Ba, ~7m TO ACQUIRE FROM oC$49,SOO. 673-7890. $86.950. MustselJ . CLE~ 2 BR. Garage, eocl. garage, ocean vu, ESTATE OF ORIGINAL•---------SCOTTREALTY patao & ocean view. no pets. Call 675-1094 or OWNER, THIS "UN-~fwS. 1200 53~7533 ~/mo.54l-6727 673-1023 COMMON"&SCARCE3 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ---------lludlrM)tonl.ach 3140•--_,-... _---b----&- B R . EN D U N IT ; INVESTMENT SACRIFICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Frpat1"""'o ~!\ 2moa. garage U N E Q U A L L E 0 PROPERTY Two d I d . . Be cb alk 2 BR . ~· . PRIVACY, COM MAN-5 Acres can be split to up exes on a JOln· a w • . -+:guest S48-820Cor616-2316 DING BAY VIEWS & 1~ acre parcels. Shows Ing la rAe lots nea r room. pool. J&cl1lll, close UNLlVl'l'E D •POTEN· xlnl return. Jovestor Ne= eights. lo bch. Great loc., $S:iO 2br lba ha rdwood fir, TlAL VALUE. Agent terms. Broker. 0 ~MUSTSE'1L mo.536-35(17 beamed cellinfij fent. 640-SS80 """-~ .... ,,_2823 Financial Consultant 11-1...-3 I 44 yrd. bit.Ins. Sm c 'Id OK. RACH Dura.EX 1-Blk. lo ocean; newly reoovated. l1S5.000 toEWPOIT llACH UA&.n 675-1642 v11 ,_..,.,.u,.,... Broker 645-2509 ~ • No pets. $375. 1982·8 ••••• •••••• •• • • • •• • • •• • M Pl S49-3M4 knd PALMDISBT New Dplx's 164-168 Univ. Prk short term lse. ore~.:.) w ' 7.ooe for approx. 56 con-Magnolia Costa Mesa. March.June 3 Br, 2 Ba. ---· -· ----- dos or arts. Approx S Sl78.500. Owner Agent. adults no pets. $550. :Air, 2ba, dbl grg on quiet acres. Al uUl avail. 4 67J.9479 SSZ·7896/S5l·la'-S , St. $500 mo. Call Abe. street frontages. Pncl' CdM TRIPLEX •-t.ach l 141 979-5370days/556-9956 S 3 7 S , 0 0 0 . 0 w n e r .......,.... eves. AJ.tnl. 714-3-3720 Three 2 Bdrm units. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----- 1 "'Clm $195,000. 673-\418. eves or ZBR aema furn. 190 Ca· Pohlt 3226 ~ ,.. wtaxt.s. nyoo Acres Dr. $395. Ph FOR VOlJR MOBILE or. 2l3/:m-250tor~9 000 ON HOMESITE. Room ror UNITS UHITS UNITS pool, barn. COCTals and, 24-plexes/L.8 . $79 900ea Mtwporl leod 3169 C 4 Bdrm. 2 bat.h bo:ie ;;~s. Xlnl tC'rms. ~~eTrlp&ex ::·::: ;.;·;:;.;;::;;;;•c:~ Qcem View Caa•a I ely 2 BR 2 BA. ocean vu. ft'Pk, gar, S4SO mo. lncl uUl. Eves 830-191.t =~t.elrre~:Sef~: 6T7-~80Ut679-281.3 •4-Jliexes,/HB Sl45Mea do to Bl'-'fs. mr+~n. Dix 2 A 3 Bdrms. Big lot-much more. SWISSCHALIT JOODlts $180,000 2~ba.Nrpool.675-337l Wasber/dryer \nd. Ten- OWDer will fl.IWX'e. No 8iddeD to die 1>ioes with ID Units 1225,000 Waterlroat 2 br bome, m.. pooi, Jae. PYom $400. credit needed. $155,000 ... ..-an vlew 11 &bill i&Urut.s . t ... _:,ooo w/pvt boat dock. Yrly l-.._,::;.;..:::..:;.:;__ ____ _ balance. Aalt for Ed -....... Call now or uc on 1HM req. Matute aduJta 0Jemow~S5 dmtotnlA·frameonl'4 8nY ot ~~stme.nl only. S'l50 mo compk!te. , 3Ba, 1paH~ new, M:re1 w/10 ft'Wt treM. property,.,_..._, ...,00 mo house only . ~Ol~~c .. .!.. -!l!f12b. ---<part klan\ab\e t o -......, -_..,_._ ._...._ _._ avocadO, 2 stall barn, D 673·3531 evea. 845.8146 • By owner. reduced to bunk ouse. Bkr, d.lfS BaautCoadoorMartnaft $1~000. Both 2 BR uniU. l/676.5117, l/522-2080 If-"'-"'-lllO beaebel. 381" 2ba, r>oo'. · l blk to ocean. <J'ood in-_.. -~ \ J $425/mo -... ....... ....," lti75 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac, enn 1 . • .,.,..... ..... .,,.,._ 21/2 AC U Pueo Corona. No I 076 SJ:art your own ranch. 1h "°'* CCX' rent, uUI od. peta/smollen. 831-2816 S.CI••• Plenty ot room tor SUNfTS oleo yard, chllaren OK, 1..!-:..:....;..;._ _____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• mobile or, home and Owner anxious! Looking no pets. ~. 541-8300, •Toro JZJZ VllW FIOM THI TOP e\'11, S56-08l7 •••••••••• ••• ••••• ••• • • barn . Xlnt terma. far lnlt.allmeouale.SUb· "~br 2 ba dini"" Brutbt.aklntc ocean view Broker. mat )'OUI' down Xlnt loca-" • • • . • ... from hiib in 'Pruide1'0al m •560U1 '79·3123 uon, ck>M to iec~aUon, "'-" U.fu wl•d rm. • dllhwhl', pat.lo, Hel1ht-1. New ll•tlng,1---------i and golf course ........................ ~=fU'.Kids6Ptta nearnew28RCoado,on· IOACllS _50ll. CqhtwlMc•lZll oil. • ~.No lee. b'"7 .... 5llll:.... !blth ti Oraqe ~nty. 1 1 P·1• -~ ·-•••••••••••••••••• : ~ BunnAHENllY Oood for lot apllt. ln 0-. .PIBi'...:.__:._. 3br 2ba frpk. w fendd. REA.LTOM path ot tro•th Bkr, -4471<.r:n Yid. ex.an View. 1115. f\nd What. JOU wut la 21SDelM• .tta-Wl 1/8"11-S71'7,1/UMtll tall41Mm. DailyPilotau.inedl. l DAIL't'Pl\.OT T~.~~t7,111'1 Jr+a ... ahu.tw.. .......... u..fww. ,........................ ....... .. Sii.re 4300 \Jrn•~••ah 5100 t 1 rr ••• 1100 ·····•••··••·•····•·············•··•·········· ······•···••·•·····•·• ..................................................................... . ...... U.fw I t d ......... "'""~ ... ... ..... ............ .............. ... .. . ... Celle...... JIJ4 c:o.a....... l82C ~..... JllO ROOMMATES ...... .,. ....... d •••••••••••••••••••••• ' hi v..., lZ6t .... ,_ t .._._ 37 '' .... •••••••• •• • •• • ••••• •••••• •••••••• •• ••• • •• • ••••••••••••• ••• ••••••• Slt ... H-S..e ••••••••••••••••••••••• N1w lBr. Iba, rl)U, drJ>I . 8i:lch.. Encl. patio Utll Lei.Sr World. ~. Super SENIOR CITIZENS •••••••••••••••••••••• .UDOI * s na. a biol, l ra Su nn1 P.l•1 t\ttt'SS to ~nnis. ---------paUu • $ cit'PM1t• pd mo mo UIO desrtt vu 2br. 2ba, EoJoy more. Pay leas! stWtSTOllACH &42-5711 or~ W7 752 !i48 8204 0l'6462316 New. Adult.a sz yrs min All~atUlett)'ln. 4 B ~ bA • wntl' tlllJIU C 8) Shalimar. Top of hlll. Montectto We Cleek ReJert-oces •s 2b .u.... • "' ......... ~u• ..... S BactlC.'l<>r, nt'W, great E Vllla1e $500 Ownr CelU4MZ12 • 1, Wllll' _.. -~,.. ~ • Ide location SZGS mo. TU._ ll27f568-S7 J BR, I ha,~ ~ 1.M'll l.Jltl bd lat'd n '7»11.31, CV~$ 837 06&J ~ 4.. C090MA MAit al>t.I Adult1 Dabwhr. t .. wportlNct. ll" S 8R.. I ba .. ~rb'. 11000 lllu.. 4'0<1 1ar, 1u bbq. ~e 2 SK. l UA. pvt patio, ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Mo Pool Ou rd. m Scott lodr)' hkupo1,u.r. S3l~ mo PAIKMIWPOltT Pt ~.165611 s.&-&!:99;5$7.(1848 B•c helor s, l or 2 associated I.. .. I M •, t.i' ) ' o# ', • r"lt • • • • ' lb r b a c h • a p l . 8edrooma&Townbousea 1tove/refrilf. ut.al r••d. From··~ 5.W Hamilton. Avai 3/l. Spect•cular ape, total IZ'IS.6.57tmor642-7671 recre1tion procra m . b()Clal Pl'OiJ'lm . 7 pools. 8 Roommate wanted for SPECIAL 1250/o DISCOUNTJ Durirul the month Of t'~brutJ"'L~ninr Clthl~l'8 tteelve 25% ort on their prt v1w p1u1~ ads for· brh • lun Call ~1tnk ---------. ~ 11>1 lndr)' rm. saos.mo tennis courta. At FHhton Ip. 4.bc hse. Fem pre + $100. clep. MoYie 'in ~4. Island. J ambottc & San fernd. $l'4mo. shr. ut.al. ~handiff for sale in u\e Classl(ied Section of I.he DaJly Pilot. (Real Estate ia not included>. Bnna your ad into one oC our oCftces Hsted. beloW belwee.n 8 AM & 5 PM an~ day during the v.oeek and we will at sr1.Jour ad tl\6 next day. Kari, c:!t.1t G.U ... CAHYOH DI.AMI COHDO • f\y I i!M.t: IYl ll """"" !I 1\1.nn , 3 bath!. .,.iltl D:Jolsa/Spn~dil.lc< ~ br IClul hv an:• Lon· ba. (DC(l yd , 1arqe I\"' \ )llf'd .. Ub"Y U' a It pn:t ok. ~ A.ct N Mo UKI •ank Mr ft'\' 964 2*. 9T3tgfl a.BM HUOSC>tt J\dll..lm1M1gnoha • br aA&:roa 644.0JJZ ba. frpk, da.h .. br, pauo, NO .,. {f'td Jd._.1,~q~ Klcb ft't;c.• Apt 41 Condo peb <*. t:d.J.&oo II s ~ l"t'nl.li1» Rf'nl.al ... y I h 0 0 Agt. ao f~t'. 9G4 ZS6d ~12 Rk.r Tues S•t 973-29'71 3 br. 1 b.I. d .. hwbc, ns:~ 7f1l Sbalirnur. ~41J.754G or Joaqum HUis Road _9'1!MJ.36 ________ _ 962-9962. 1714164 .. 1900 Need roommate Park O.chelOl' apt w/slovc & ••~umoa U ... ITS Npl. M /F betwn 3(M5. Oe1ut brcu'ld oow adult rerria. UUl's pd. $140. -;:-25 .,.,.. .~.... $200 . + 'h u lll 640· 1987 apla Spac l & 2 br ........ cn...t -+ .... ~ .. 3 "" Apartme.ntll, w/wwnh&c atylc t'rplc, .....,.....,.. •0 11.•-a.....-..... ·, -"-"'· -·---·----- EnlAlrtainment. Ludf')' rm lmmMI. OC· "' -·" • F e m r o r 2 Bdrm . fO'EAI. LIVING C-hl Mna -30 W . lay Strfft ....... ltocll-tlH_...._,... lludh (•~-17'15.._.IL c'py l'/J MONTHS C4 .._.. 55 .. 7707 Peninsula. $19'l.50+util. RitCI .ation · · • u:... o -..... ~.. &INT Fltll! E I 6 4 2 15 t l I Youn-365 l Dl'",l ... • --MOW•........,G Near Lado. 2BR. 2ba lux· u geo • · ....._ 2 0r t~Ba $38$-542$ "'°""" ury Waterfront a p t. 548.-tmeves. Offke...... 4400 5005 day11 a y.arl TSLingml "2·9412 IRAND NEW Garage, balcony, frplc. Fem rmmate waoted for ......................... !?!!.i:'.~!! ........ . • B.ou1Jt.ii ~· c I 'f ~ 2 BR. 2 bl apt.I. Perfect ~/mo. SS9-UI02 b e a u t c o n d o Lagul\ll Beach, S00-1200 sq Pl.UMllHG 1 & 2 ledtoom 180 E ·2 s rot 2. Great C M loca w/baclcyan:I. pool & ten· ft. 111' cood, new cpt, . . lat tree . · b De!uxe4 BR. 2 BA. gar. no Dis. Very reas. Call J ohn parking, hwy visibility. ~ ~ drain service r~ d> Eutslde 2 br & den split Uool Available Marc petS steps to bcb $575 at SSUJ.32 or 498-3&68 or !ie-1186. 499•3922. blmness. Excellent l~a· UBlumlabed level. Frp lc , de c k. 15th. S37Slc$39$. Call for yr1,y"1se 644-U03 • 85U4.UM/FS.5. tJoo. Comple~ rac1U~y. ~ sltYIJMbt.. all enras. *'20 detcails while selection · · Hunt. Bdl best locauon Gnm·S2SO.OOO yr. Wnte ' 2 BR. ar Lalu~ Park, -. ""', CTJlt.. acrue.s from bay 1 d r a p e a . I ., r a ' .: , btk l.o bc.'h lltr 1~ St»~ ~ardener & w.!l ter pd 3 b d r m 2 ~, b 16 Clean. oo pets <.:plb only l'ownhw.e Ue;iuhfully $350.536-'J9.W dt•cornlt>d boat s li p •AU U~hid rrr NocbJld'i6~orpets. ~-40.J::::::~~w/all Roommatewant.edto shr Exec s uites, uttl pd. t.o Box 337. c /o Daily •No'-"-""' ~6' •4 ; evu r!i.B • '""'· Qw<'. P"'· huge 11gYC631M~ev·!f7975}•!!!3. E._round93ll!!;;.::n7t58p1ark1og. ~~~·M~08.~ 1560, •S•.m&l.119·T-ll. deck . $575. 673·6336 ; · . .....,. " ... .,......, _,. "'......,. ......., ... "" ·--•· a.a-• r::~~ fd~t'ti1b.1°J31i~ 64.2-9666 dys. Approx . .oo sq. n. C-2. BEER & WINE tavern. •An<YV-Dwctot, 640-1Z78;s.s2420l evesaft OCEANFRONT. uppe r Roommatewanted to look $130 E. 17th St. Suite NptBch.Nets $3000mo ,. 4br Z"'1ba Oc. vu z ,.. avail $t1$tl pe r nm g~. Gardenmg service m 6310 or ~Gfti5 rH,~·~ct·· ... -a,::c~~ s. a.c. TAYLOR CO. un.t\, Very llJCe. Large 2 Nr oB/rCDaJ'/Ct Ml h54soeoo38' n :_1.:;tJ160. mo. Doyle Terms. Agt. 7Sl·l.OO • .... .., ,,._ .--640.51 IZ BR. gar . $700/m o . 644-00&l"'Dana . • .,... * * * $650 /ls SJ& L9S6, 9~7 lliSl BluH~ tiutaeous 2br 2ba 3Br, 1g ba. (rplc, allii('h vtt.>w.1 cui;~m dlt'COr, wet gar patio $475/lnd luir, .:ankner, pool, $550 ad.Di no pets avail 3/17 640 62:>9. S:>'1 4700 ext. Pl.US MUCli MOREi 2 Br. l ~·~ll ~tt5 B~d 675-1.906 · · Delwc.e ofhce furnished. i..;,. Salgado Oakwood new~54·k t. · Eastsldc 2 br. e nd . ~to beach,2 br.gar. Quiet GAY professional lOOOsq rt.plus.H S P O ~CilmbridgeLaoe Garden Apartments mo. · l· · ~arage. Wash_er /dryer new paint & cpl. Unfurn share plus h Newport Box 5878. H.B. 92646 Call Huntington Beach c.omfortab\e new 2 br. 2 ook·UP. patio. $350. orfum. Yrly. $42Sw / utl. ~~· 1~f~~;;!~~ 9ro-0030 Youare lbe winoeroC Newport Beach/North ba, kids ok. no petls. 548-1157. &-1362,213·670-7933 Don. 7SZ·llOO. Best time :m sq. ft. Waterfront of· TwofrHTkk•h 880 lrvln• M1~~-mo. r1 ne a I Ca to 16 h) -•.-L.A 3126 All adult. no pets. 2 br. 2 ~ '" vai · nne ry " • ' 2312 d ys, 6 <10 ·2426 900-64S9. t•ves1wknds. Clean 2bdr, dlb. gar. S blks. bch. No Pets. Ava.JI Feb.24. $375. 964·2283 art UARBORV1EW (at t _ .. _ • v t 11 age a r e a . CIRCUsv••G•s PORTOFINO (714J 64>0~Ml meatiBJIB ••••••••••••••••••••••• ba, from $330. J acuzzi. Fem to shr 2 BR 2 Ba apt. 7141673-1003 ~ A 4 bdrm. si,.,ba,F.R. 2 Newport Beach/South New beautiful 'garden Ocean view lge 2 br. 2 ba. pool, rec. bldg. Located pool, fplc, beaut furn.,•---------4·.~PbM.26thPerfororm28anth ... . story bonus rm. pool & 1100 16th s1 apartments. pool&s pa . 2balcon.ies, encl, dbl gar. acros s from Ne wport NB area. 642-8971 Office s pace·Newport ,,., ... ... NewCoodo 2br 2ba. incl Spa.SS00.960-1326. (Dover at l&lh) Bachelor $260 Very private. $375. mo. :::ch ~olf ~o urs1e . 2 tes-....,.edF Center. Large office ~'":i~oter •• UUI. Tenms, pool/Jae. re<' ---'---------• (7141642..8170 l Br ~ 640-5078. wo Y app . on Y. roomma u=u . or w / v 1 e w • r e c e p t . *""".....,. """' ---------5454SS. M. To share 3br hse. secretarial & day ume ange rom . ....,.,. ""··l.,.,., JASMINE CRE EK. New Adultaonly.no pm. 2 Br $360 $150m0. Call 64s.S268 phone answenng. Call To claim your tickets, SUper oew re mod. 4 BR 2 & neve r } I v e d ·1 o . Mod•I• open dally 10 7 Adults, no pets $100 MOVE IN OCEAN RtOMT 75&-0'ZlS call 642-5678, ext. 272 Ba.closetoall.$525.6342 Beautifully decorate d 22:iOVanguardWay ALLOWANCE 3br.2b8. Yearly. F'rplc. ()ffiQllfttal 4400 . '* • * RoyalOak.968·9300 2.Bdnn+den. Mini view, Short term rentals, 2 & 3 (at Newport Blvd > 2.bt. 1 ba $350. 2 br. 2 ba gar,$1050. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S23 ~· ofrtce La Paz -...:.....-------•all amenilles. Tennis. BR.from$375 up.Agent, 64&-Qll6or540-9626 + den $400. Enc l. 'I'SLMgmt 64.2·1603 S23Sq. fl. oCQce space to ~. S308th or Satho ADteRlo FDAS1vTorcFeOO. SD1 3N.opo~ Bmcoh .. Temfic 3 br, 2 ba. patio, Ja c • lg bac k Ya r d ~170 '1'HE VICTORJAN" garage, pvt. fncd gr ass 3br 2ba oear Lido Village sub· lease in Laguna ,.. .. ,.642 moo . va1 . Terms. Agt. 751-1400 reocd yrd, gar. Kids & $850/mo PROMOHTotlY 2 Br studio, l 'h ba w/gar. yard. 33411 Cheltam ssso. 514 Club House Hills, La Paz Rd. just now. --4321ext.276. pets O.K. $445·$455. BOAT SLIP. 2ednn. 2 POIMT adlts, cpts, new drps. Way;~1097or496-S275. 998-5868 orS26-L928 south of the San Diego llllifttssRewtal 4450 ROLJ.ER SKAT E rental Agen t· n o f e e · ba, lower unit. frplc View Villa.-Completely range, fncd yd w/pallo. Freeway. $308 month. ••••••••••••••••••••••• nets to $6500 monthly. No 964-2566:973-2971 $750/mo. funushed. l BR & Loft. wtrpd.s;r)S.667 Victoria. lbr <lishwab. stove/oven S.O.-• 3176 Avlll.l.oow.8JG.6030 Newport Manner's Mtle. trouble wtc1ty. cty etc. ttlllllillm~ Watetf1otttHome• Available now. Tenrus, SJS.;t120, 1·5. lndry rm. gar. Ocean ....................... Deluxe medical s uite . Modern 502 sq ft sl.ore. ~~'.f~ lo se ll. Agl. ---1242 6ll·l400 pool & s pa. De n ne MESAPIMES View.$250m0.498-2361 Beach apts. 2 HR l'AJ Ba. ground fir .• Corona del 26.l><C> Avon. Low rent.•--------- ••-••••••••••••••••••• S ode rling , Unit e d 1 Br s;r)5 Frplc pool =:: ~ 8a~ \ S:i\ f~!~: Mar.Real67?~cs Corp. ,_~ __ n_-700 __ 1 _____ lnoeedof3ltey peoplefor 3 br townbse, boat s up, Brokers. jacuui 8ru, bbq 'closed $lOO FREE RENT 49t>-11Sl """'"" my rapidly expanding pool, tauus. Agt, Diana ~°Gely !:i~·~· 675-5626 ~Adults no~ts.2650 2br lba$350 Sundeck& -------...--250·500 sq. ft. offices. IEACHSTOI.£ ~iness.call tosetupm- 840-4QZ7. BKR.644.-0~ · poo • Ave,549..2447. eoci. garag~. Lots or 2g!R iJ" m~~f~ From $14S. lncl. uW. 779 o.Mewporilhd. ter\lleW.675-3083 lrriM 3244 3BR BA.f I U dbl ¥1w.ts Newlydewrat.ed3br,2ba grass. 496·9230. 33552 m4) . W.19lbSL540-2200. 0.er2000sqft. ••-•••••••••••••••••• 2 P c, pa 0 • u.twWIMd townhous e. Spacious BlueLante.m . ---'--------Sharp Huge (2200 sq rt.) gar, $550. Yrly · Agent ... •••••••••••••••••••• fireplace & pool. Quiet Lg 3BR. 2 ba. $375. l BR l IEAUT1RIL 4br condo, 2'hba, ram 673-9060 lc6oolsbld ll06 area. Adults, no pets. zbr2babalcooy. ba.oceanview,$225,call SUmS rm. 2 frplcs, dbl garg. in Hewnnrt CrestCCMM:to ....................... $400.645-3381 ; 67>5949. Avall3-l. $295.mo. 49tH299 400t.o2600$q. Ft. University Pa rk. $545. r-· 1br spacious new quail •---------,_.~."~.serviced 551·1549or551·5790. 3 8r,2'v'l ha.Someooean • • ' · So.CoalltPlazaarea,dlx3 67>?571 5..eaAna 1880 ""......, ... .,., BURR WHITE REALTOR. INC. 675-4630 Real &tate Fraochise NATIONS LEADING FLAT FEE Brokerage Exclusive Territory SAV-COM 714 640·28m ---------• view. $600 /m o. Agt . ty, car port. Yrly. $425. Br2 Ba 4-plex, encl. gar, ••••••••••••••••••••••• C-rc..Pari& A new 2br townhouse $390 645-0295 675-4857. drapes, carpets, bit· ins. l br + de n. Condo, new Newport 833-88131--------• mo. 759-0721, 1·496-1206 CUI'E 2 Bdrm ='{ le • -·" 3807 $US. 761Vi336aft 5PM lkilli19oa1Hch 3840 cptg, pool, 3blksS. Coast Downtown Huntington HEALTH FORCES MAIUHER'S MILE QUICK SAU alt lO:JOAM . . -... 'Y • lcAoaPe..,.wwwa ..... •••••••••••••••••• Pla•a 1 y r lse S375 Be b 210• .. M · St brick walks. Lrg pauo & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnl cood. 2 BR 1 Ba. avatl Marl. 67s-9226. · ac · .,.., a m · Deerfield. 2 br & de o ya rd , $485 /mo. P h Lg bayfront 2 Br 2 Ba pat\o, no pets. 3319 SHARPfrpl 'cit:chhl,2 &38R. •---------One 2·rm office avail. home. rncd yrd. frplc, ~ f rplc g a r age prt ~ Baker. Apt. B. $350. Aft " C, . ws ~ .. garage WetflNMter 3198 SU0.9ro-t558. w1\l a c ce pt pets & beacll.' ~·lse .• Adults 4,968-3636 goofatios. o pe t s . ••••••••••••••••••••••/ ~THE children $485/mo. Ag\ Sana...• 3276 only~ pet s. $850. ZJ58 1325. Dix 2 Br 2 Ba condo "'" l>IS-6160. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-2162 3~R. ncl2 BA, Crpldcul. Cenc. Townhouse. lovely, spac. type, encl. gar & patio. W &JERI. RBfT A.LS Beaut. Towhs. 2br 2ba S.A'. ~f~"cfub ~ & bome·like. 2 br with Ulfant OK. 721l Trask. PlU~ SUIT£S 3BR,2ba ..... $475/625 Re treat. f?e n, gol f 86'a~w~a;hre r2/~ry°!/ 673.im/631-1816 · · ~gated eotra~ce + 2 IJIM..2585,891·2144 4BR.2'hba.NB .... $tOOO course, pool/Ja6c6.11 b12lk9sto garage, patio. Crplc. s.wo Olx Br Ba . 1 patios. Sos ~e ~1th at~. Af lwllh,_.sMd ;:r.i:'v~!·s San Clemente bch. $525. . • permo.Yrly.21.3-374·7486 2 • 2 'in 4·P ex, garage,. wun.aung poo . or......,.IMcl 1900 2Bo 2 ba. ~""/<k1'11 492-4727. nr So. Cst. Plaza <JWet JaCUZZl. Tenrus courts. 1 Wet Bars ·~ ~..,.,., ---------y, le Ba b. 'h blk cul·de ·s ac , blttns. blk to Huntington shop. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• UdoMmilMI S. .-. :>'~.~ ~ per mo. garage, oo pets. $335. ping center mall. Adults. ,~ EXMESCIT~2..s vua-~·......,_, 3278 util. incl 67s.J029 wkod 64U42l No pets. From $435. --,.._.., .__,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Seawind Village, 1SSS5 MINUTES TO NPT BCH Newport 675-8662 New 3 bdrm. + den. Rec. or eves. 2tlr, lba. 2S "D" E. 16th Hunti.ogtoo Village Lane. Bach.1"2 BR llS> Up. Office-store, 4.80 (acillUes, Close to Dana STEPS to bch. 2 br, pauo, Pt Ldry rac, cpt.s, drps. H.B. (714)896-9961. frorn$2SS&i up. ft., A/C, 17301 Beach Bl. PRJMELOCATlON High proflt m one y on WATER. Availa ble maker. Custom trophy for ret.aJI or frofess1onal shop in San Clemente. offices. Tota of 3000 sq sss.ooo. ft. Can be dmdcd· into AA BEACH REAL TORS smaller urut... Onve by 492-2100 2633 W. Coast Hwy. N B,, ________ _ then call lmiilns ... - w-.f1owtHOftllts tolllSi.u 5010 611-1400 Foc store & off tee space at reasooable rat.es SOOto 5000 SqF<. ME5A VERDE DR PLAZA 1525 Mesa Verde E. C.M. 545-4123 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Business Ta Business Pt.832-0264 carport. W/D, fum/un· Nopets.l280.6#-0452. W Adults.No pets. H.B.LEASE842·2834. r $500 I 675-7758 • alktolbebeach• 1561MesaDr. Santa Ana 3280 urn. yr y. Sharp, clean 2 BR apt. 1 Cena def~ (5 Blks East of Newport Plush offices. up to 750 sq1--------• A MARKETPLACE for ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br, frple. yrd, gar, near yr old Westside 4-plex. .Beautirul Blvd> ft in xlnt bldg. 18th & ICM CrTY SHQPS PurchAsmg Agents and l~ 2 Br Tudor. No. S.A. feny&shoppiog. 6617 Nopets,$32S.G4.s-7479 AdultApts 9am-5pm54&9860 N e w po r l BI v d . New Businesses. 1+523 CAMPUSDt·IRVll'IE , handsomely restored , $400. 536-HEW DUPLEX 21001 Brookburst, HB ~21ll/646-6303. !h~qu_e f~ 0:e:v.~':s~ Thill i!I a new DAILY m any e xtr a s. $495. $230 Bach l ncd. utll. 2 br,2'hba.every amen\· 962·6653 MOtlLEHO ME 900 ft 3 t N Quamt Seal Beach Mall. ~!~0t7:i,~!;s5!~~at!~1!~ I~. Counir Club~ke 639-0054eves/wknds. H':lblksto beach.673-6279 ty, 1650 sq . fl. Dblc NEW 2 BR 2 BA. encl IHFORMATIOH O.C~Aiporf.mN~w 4;\vai'i 311 Mam St. Agt/Owner t o H t h~r. Sell vour s~ro.:'°~M Red SouthLCICJU"CI 3286 aft.6wkd garage. Huge yard. garage, close to beach. ReJ>()5sessions. buy OP· Mar1.Conlact752·8263 213-508-7717 surplus. overstocked or l· o. o. e ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/room for trlr, e tc. S3Q>permo.9G4·2!13'1 !~~~~~~~~~ no lon$!er needed items • TtH talbl·_,,~c~l.t7500Y • J a n c "'an• ~~t'1c View· Monarch ,._ .. M-3822 $485. 673-6336; 642.9666 lions, take over payment Dana Point, deluxe office or suoohes of anv kind .... w...... .. .....,. _._ -2 &lBrZb r 1 ti informa tio n . Eas y space.S&'sq.ft ,across HARIORILYD. Summit, adlt comm.••••••••••••••••••••••• ALLADULTA"S s m yrd.an~d~ag~'. fin ancing OAC. Trade from BofA. 495·4975; Store20xtiO+omcc.1450 ~1=~:c:d~:i!ifn or LacJ-eleach 3248 2BR&de o. $550 /mo. NICE 2 br upper dplx. ...,...W •y•u "'IL.E s450/m o , 752•7474 .• anythlngvaJuablc . 49S-4.Z45 sq. rt ..... _, ~cos Per mo ••••h••••••••••••••••• Comm. clubhouse, poo\, Em.pl'd sgl or marne<l """ ,.. ,iu-Sam.a Ana 554-'1070 8kr · ........... ~ · 642-5678 3 BR. I ba. rncd yard. jacUUJ,etc.Teal&Bab-cpl.No smokers orpets. 2 brapt.Pool,jacuui& 9Q).537G. Westminster 848-8895 DECORATORS · des k ·675-6700 b et ween 8 AM and deck, secluded, $550 mo, cock Realty Inc. 499-4797 s:BS. 64G-t999 BBQSOareRRaY. EncNOlP. ~~ge. d c. Anaheim 956-1011 space, samples, delivery l&k It kll R...tal 4500 ~ · 30PM. Monday tbru 1 532 Ready for you! 2 bd, en, Bch. Fhday ror your ad to ap-_1..::yr_e_ase_._1_-48_1·_7 __ . __ ,Houses F.nlitMdor 1 BR Waterfront apt, $3SO 1T1E.22NDST. frplc, gar. $350. 962.7788 E. Anaheim 956-4500 area. Npt. . 551·1572. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pear the folloWU1g day or Lg 2 BR h o use, n r IJftfwftislted 3100 mo. lease. Costa Mesi 645-2498 a.SkCorMack. 2rmsuite. 3!0sq ft, ample PRIME INDUSTRIAL call between BAM and 12 h 1 g h sch o o I . Pvt . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67S-3282. 9-5PM U 1 grnd 3 Br. oew condo. t mile to ao-4000 park, uU incl AIC ad/a· 94919S:W~~Jf'~·~ noon on Saturday for $450/mo.494-8178 On thebeach!2br,2006W. NEWLYREMODELED 2 2f~;/!!:;ark~o ~ts. beach . T o tal r e c .••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:C!~e~cE.P1~ii! ~ •6390 sq ft 24• g ross.,'=&incl==a=y=·s=p=ub=ll"='=lt0=n·== Q.istom bit. 3 bdrm. 2 ba ~~63t·1 ~or uof. bedroom rront house $350. 310 Vi cto r! a . package. loci. te nnis, Orange, C.M. 642·4210 machshop 1· walk to beach. no pets, 0 ''· """"" with fireplace. 600 block 642-2164/673-0782/552"4894 lmmed, occupy. Avail. *~ IMt• n-=e ~sq ft 23< g~s. 91 ,.__._-1. (213) 919-5541 Lovely gardens· Brooks l\UA.l Fwy 1650/mo. 494·6833. __.Riunts d Marigold. S450/mo. 2 Bdrm l Bath, ..,"" mo, wtr fall 5500 f T . 50 tlftfwnisMd 3425 hn 675·2515 ~ Beach/ Slater brand new · Cd.M dlx suites, uld pd. •500 • sq t. usu n 4 matched display cases wil.h a back bar. alJ light· ed. Mod. glass & met.al, a· 645-1744 LaiJii-a Hils 32 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------r 2189 Pacific, no pets. Call dlx units. 1•3bd 2.,.,ba •Kitchen Fac1I. avail. AC. ampl pkg. Fr $195. $254,700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 54&5880,Pam Owners s tudio .. 3·2bd, •Jacuzn .heatedpool :D>'.No lsereqd.675-0000 •3949 s q ft. Tus tin ~per 3 bedroom 2 b' 2 br .. 2 ha condo. country Cotta.._ 3124 _;_ __ ;...-_____ ood f 1 •Wkly or daily maid srv Sl9l.500 11 bm. viny l upholstered f 1 d h h • r ad. 64.'ltmg, pvt chllds park, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo. nr back bay. Ideal 2ba. w burrung rp cs. •TV &c phone available Bayfront Office. Lido ,._. (71 .. 1 ll8-5t70 chrs. Wea. 4 36 •• round rp c. s w r . pauo, nc p1cruc BBQ. 3 pools. jac. 2 smgles. 2 bdrm ea q1net. res. neigh. Rec Low as $72.50 Wk --.. :r. this. $!ieea. t Scotchgard- yd, gar. Klds & pets ok. clbhse, gar storage, nr OCEAN & w/ba. Bltos, cpts. drps, area. lmi bch. Adults. No 2277 Harbor Village. log machine $75 Hot/· ~3~A~~2Jt o fee Cst Plaza. Child OK, oo CANYONVJEW dblgaf$400mo.998-4761 -'petS __ .9ti0-4 __ 14S_. ____ 1 CostaMesa S45-4840 ___ 549-50 __ 3.1 ___ • __ C7_14_J_S_l_·_S7_t_7 __ t'Old G.E. waler llO(ller ; p e t s . $ 3 9 O . Newly redecor. 2br lba t>er 5pm. 646·1812 art Hun Harbor h 3 Rm office. carpe~. ·• S1SO 8' nuorescenl light $8'.M>. New 4 BR. 2~'.t baths 642-l<Q/673-5781. +study. Huge (nc. yrd. 7pm/wknds. Ad Its, no saz!i It saviO: ~b:aun':f aircond Skypark Circle, JOOustriaJ 800 to t600 sq rt rixtures S20ea. Box of "Shadow Run". 714/ New 2br2ba lncl. util Ten· Panoramic vu of lites. pets. new lbr lba duplex Roomw/kltchenett.e lrv\oe.549·5033 with offices. Newport. fluorescent bulbs. Floor 962-0925or892·7S30 nis, pool/jac, rec. rm Frt>lc. stove, rerg. w/d, 2brlba $275mo. w/pvt. patio, blt·lns. $60weelt&up. ~2W.646-6303 electrical conduit. 2 3Br. 2Ba Condo, r ec $.'500.972-1000. ~·~~si Adults.noPets. crp/drps & w~lk to 541•9755 ~·~1:o~~;p StiolCllJI 4550 ~e:u~~·~~~~~r center. pool, $42~ mo. Condo, 2 br, 1~ ba, bltn for IUck e ve. 687-Cl865 aft. ~3 beach. Dayl SSo·6663• Sunny Fashion l. suite upstairs front w / lge ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/tractc, lock & key. $90. 7'10-2M4or831·1317 AIC. sauna, Pool & 6. lBR,ataUsbower,palio, 536-8705eve840-5H9. w/ba & patio. Mature ~,pvt ba,A/C4321 SelC·atouge, 17601 7l4f770.G883. __ ... HHJ-1 325l jacuul. New cpl. Nr s. lbr 2 bl r Mesadei 11w:1ry nn. ~ bllt to E. 2Br,orbeaeh;reh1g, gag empl'd genUeman $265. Birch t., Suite 200. N.B. M:\a~ La .. 11.B .. off 1-..,.-..-..---,--'t--- •••••••••••••••••••••• O;t Plaz.a, $US. SS9-M20 MM $350Vo~ts 17th St. sbopplng & bus. "water Curo. $300. Call ..;~---·------~~~:::~~~. K. Bch . ater.MS-9998. 0 DeHi" s. ,... 5035 t BR. den, 2 nn, rplc, aft.6pm ' 5'6..cl036 . New crpt, drks, tile , 9S).2272,eves'92·9482 Room. kitchen & laundry ---------........ W.ted 460 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bltns pvt atnum 3 car 2 br eothouse pool stove It paint. Mature 8.111 San Angelo, 2 br. 2 prlv . S an Clemente g ar.' T ennis, p0ool & adul:. $375. Macy Ellen ; 1 Br d!JPleX w/fard, good adul\!i_!IO chlldren or ~pvt deck, oew cpts & S175/mo. 498-2227 art 4 ~cl~.;<Pvt. comm. $800 661·2311. Evea831·7S84. =n. Cal after 4, pets.~.955-1178 pamt. Perfect for couple 1-:.pro_. ________ 1 ,.,.,.. ....., Dup&ex 2 BR l Ba. encl Ct suwes. Call arter 7 AUract1ve rm. •"1 m1 to t._ rta. h 3269 h tww..ts,.,..IMd 1.4te 3br,2 ba,upgraded, gar. Mature adults. no pmCol1ect 213/289-2426. beacb,$30wkin118 ,.. wpor CIC "r I d N O C ""'". $310 mo. 964-l OSS .. .. SG0-3531 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :,:..:.::::::::_-••••••3••7•2•; new y ecol'. r . . ..-.~ ........ 31,, _. .... _.._ .. CoUege. Encl gar. $400. $375. Nr. new 2 br, 2 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• v...-R..tafs 4250 2 bed. 1 bal.h. Lido l~l(' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 751-9905 Call & leave gar, (rplc, bale. Close to 3br 2~ba Brand Ne w ••••••••••••••••••••••• =e:~;J' S:~ ~~ SUS CASIT AS message. Avail Mi r l. all. Woodbridge. S700mo. 2 lblse ror ~nt, Big Bear 64:H1441/640-1&45eves. ~e & small 1 bdnQ, 2 Br, l~ Ba townbowle. 'I'SLMgmt 64.2·1603 c&rgarg.213/~l Ot)' alps 6 ; laneos fu.m UDOISU ~duit1.•~0S2:!ia~2~fo f~eh :rlpat.i~, /d°.:I~ 2 BR t BA. carport, kJds S290. 1 BR. rec raclliUes. :e,.~~·~·~·~&:9. call n.a-kt.. N-81 .. .., --i~ _are ~~ OK. DO clop Cpta. drps avail. n-.. •etree, adlts. 3uuuu,2balhs.Fresuv ~ ........ ·-· ......,._. t._.. S11$mo.831·al ' NrfrwY:MlS23. BIOBEARCABIN oaUUd, new cpt, frplc, iH•b•uber. refrlg, W~Rates 1.llrae3br2baapt.,oewty NEWAPARTllENTS .......... ll41 2~~rtl>lc1<'P~:a~8. wuber/dryer. Qardnr *" decor. w /eocl. ~ar . NRSO.COA.5TPLAZA --••••••••••• .. ••• W«&orw1DCJ.640-led*°· Bedroom Suites P7$/moNopeta. '151 151 2 BR l~ ea. air rood, °'*"' view, paUo. COY• BIG BEAR. Cabin. sips 14, O>irnl>leteKil~bena lBR,•f'linW/Baker, Dt W. pool, sauna. eredputio.c. UBR,21 pool tat>te, color TV, 2 BURR WHITE REALTOR . INC. 67S-46l 0 MaiclServtce·TV lt0¥9 • retr11, SMO mo. ~· + many atru . BR. lJS0.$475. Wik. to frpb.54.5418. Cklee t.o all t11a)or 1>11 H2· HOO, evH Im. bcb. -1186 557·5870 f"9eWaysaodlrvine m-1• .D. PROPERTY . llgBurLlkeC-bln, rent Ncwport.BcachareH. MGMT 2 bdrm. 2 JteOele max. day'! or wtekends R al Suite Alrnoll new condo 2 BR 2 751·2!1' -~ 3rd St. '475 plus 63&"'230 OY1 S Ba, t-omp1ele kitchen securlt.y depo1it {ffl ...;;.;,;;...._ ______ _ Bayahores. pvt comm. ~11!ewpon Blvd (blt·lns. d l1b•u ller . BaautJIW panoramic view M.1-~ (W) 634•6548 for ....... SMN 0 0 0 cbwming2aty, IR patios 641.J,l I or t.raah compactor) 191 twnhH , 3 tn .. ter1i1e application ........... •••••••••••• rrplc. 3Br, 2Ba. $875. 54..,1000 BBQ. frDlc. w/w cai:peta. bdrma. 2"' be, balcony, Roomm•t4l wanted to &ca.~ or &G-5054 ,. drapes 2 car •tr., t'ltctr . r r p I. l r u h comp • 2br \.iblk from Ore.cent eh ire 2br Balboa apt. BRAND NEW 38C', 2\.\8& •-IMdt 3741 door opener. Nr Or. dshnhr. 2 ur au ~Ith Bly bch, Beaut. ~ean Im med. occupano. -.--Coast Coll. M2S mo + opener. Avall Mar 1. $S1S vifJW. Just rtmod led. m.-.e Condo,gara.ge ltcarport. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •200 l'ltan depoalt. mo.•17M MIO/roo.41M·5818 all ammiOes. LM " LAGUNA BF.A.CH !llTR • •-------- mo. 8CWOll2 INN. '75/Wk le up. Maid 5S7-M73 Eullide 2 BA t \.\ 8a. Ocea11t.roat 2bdrplc, ~. Get ORE EN cuh .-v .•. co&Of' TV. healed E ·aldt 2 br, p1Uo • rpk, entl ptOo. l)OC)l. no uill &ocld. Alto studio forWHITEtleDhaots WANTAcnONT pool UUJ. (714) 494..$294 ......... mo. pet.a. Klcll OK. USO. apt. •• uell lncld. No ~ICll~Ad a-11 .. AdllG.w?t 1115N.CoutHwy. sa.GIM« ..... 2316 5tMJl16 P9Ufft*SaOl21 ---·• .. .. .. Prof Offke S.ltes tnJNTINGTON BEACH Central loc. J us t off Beach Blvd at M llln St 11iE MAIN OFFICE 847·5338 Sl'AINED GLASS CLU 8 Work Area + Locken; &i Storage. Jane. 5411-3532 •MEWaDG• 13lO ft. lsL floor. beaut. decor. Seacltrr omce Prt. 2120 Mal.nHeHuot. 8dl. 7" r:, ft, rm10 crHeary am CcMSUm OWminc m aq n omce ~ with very 1Unc· new waJlp~r and white abutters. usl ~ to=te. Sf7S/mo. SUALTY '15-2llt Conlidcnllal ~rivate of flees. 2 comp furn. Sell contained. New bldg. Ex· ~l vaJ1.1e 240 1q ft c .7744 aa.ifted Ada, >wr ooe· -~~lltet'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Resfonslble. work•nit LOWEST wr t e r s eek s o n t' ............... bedroom cottoite tn lttT.D.'s,aho Corona del Mar or Costa Mes:i. Qwetness essen· hdT.D. Loon. Ual Wnte Clas:r.1f1e<l Ad Fairest Terms since \949 •206. Daily Pilot, P 0 s.ttlet-Mt,. Co. Box 15fi0. Costa Meso 642-2171 545-0611 92626 u c .1. Pmressor. no kids ~AVAILAAE or pe\s, needs rurn1shed 2nd TD LOANS ~· April J.June lSlh. SWINOLOANS II C. Lave, 83J.6flOO, ~MENT wtdays. UCTlON ~ w/3 cltlldreo w•nt OR ANY PURPOSE O.vid l>. Cuty. Alloc. SBr'. El Toro. L•kc R.E. Broker, -.1161 Forest home w /pool ri81·1'118 LOAM PACICA._.. AltenUon LlOO HOM r. ef'LAC&llMT• OWNERS ot n-0ar prox· Equity Loans I mil)'. Do you ha vu u Ventw-e C.pital =tlallbo b('OUtltul Minimum $50.000 ! ls la r too cMU~ Financial C0011uJtant for r c mod l'tin A OKA. 00.2509 Carpe nte r. m arr ied PRIVATE RARTY w/l>lbrr dc$11'eft low l't'nl wlU ~ more ror your ~ n exchange tor lst 2rMi 's. 6'2·3573 tlus cal'Jl('otry. All rera from Udo Isle. 493 1910 CASH-ANY AMOUNT alt 7pm. On your home paJd fOf' or oat. For any purpoee I Sleeflna room w/bath ~r:mc UC Prof lhtu~lllel. r.tiable. r"d's US I DatsS-1'15& Ev. m.sA5 t I I . . T~. FebnA!ty 21, 1979 DAILY PILOT (7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • an•• 51 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• POINY PHCHCI ADS OtlYR Stoll "11Y llC'm cw t'Otn ~llOn of lll'tn> f« Jl) Iii' Ina ..,ilh • PC'nny l'lll~l'ltr <\d 3 bn fof 1 ~1.tll\" da.> •·•1'h .addl11M1al 111'1 ~ 61.lf lur ltW2dA)'ll ( hitflll'il' Not'Umnwr""'' •U~ h \r mur•' '""''fl\¥111•11 ..ndWpl.a11 \•II.If .1lh .. U 642-5671 ••• ,._,Teylor 2Q) V\Jl100\ 1 H~d l'O..UI Mt'H Yoo ar" lh.-11rlnnc"r of fwo ,.,... Tidl•ts to CIRCUS VARGAS Feb Zl6tb or Zfllh I 30fM Pttfornuwc" The Ctly Shoppi..ng Center Orange Tu chum your llckt!l~. call M2 5678, ext 212 *** ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND ADS ARE FREE &all: 641-5678 L-Ost or Found a pet? Call Animal Ass1slance League. 537·2273, DO fee. 1$1': 2 blk cockapoos. Vic. Golden wcst & Mc Fadden. M & t'. lm-3768. LOST: Turq breasted whte paraJl:eel. fnendly. HB. <Sue> 960-1700 LOST gold bracelet. lnltals M.l.L. Vic o Irvine on or abou 2-10-79 RE WARD. 8J3.9t90. L<liT: Female Collie, wh · body w/brwn head. Irv. Blvd, CM 646-7842 Lost: 9 m os o ld Siamese/Tabby fem . 2 /15 The Willows. MICROWAVE COOllMG CLASSES FlllUAIY IASIC MICIOWAVl COUISIFOR HEW STUDIHTS LlAlH HOW TO REAU.YUH YOU. M1W CHalSTMAS PllS&n' RESERVATIONS ONLY ~nrolt Now -Llmllcd SeuUog Ctll 76 ... SO 11 MICIOWA VE MAGIC COOIOHG SCHOOLS BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES SEMINAR SHERATON·ANAHEIM HOTll 8:30AM-4:30PM MARCH 10 & 11 Learn before you buy How to flttd and check out a businHs Approv~ for 12 hou" educotioft c~it by deparhnetd of Real Estate $100 od!Nssiow coven two-doy ........ Matetiall CllMl~IH. CALL FOR DETAILS: :i:~.~~d5;~~23 RICHARD PARK, BIR. 673-7348 $100REWARD . • • -Blade Toy Poodle Male. Schools and Instruction This variety of fine schools could introduce PRIVATE HOME TUTORING (Serving You Since '62) you to a new tomorrow :;~. galrul!. .St..Jto o/ mlUk: 61t 1,..1,.. AV911ue (-.ff-. Newport Hott.cw Hlfhj N.wJ>or1 hod>, O>llfomi. 92~ 11141 64$4003 BASIC SUBJECTS I •tADtMG •MATH* STUDY SIOU.S ALL AGES ALL GRADES Mr L Robtnson M A lhrector /Teacher Study wltti a Professlonal Performer Beginner to Most Advanced Classical Popular Harmony TheotY Mr W Joaquin 8.A. ~tant t>lrector/Teacher 556-7666 NOW IN THE NEWPORT AND , IRVINE AREAS CLASSES OffBED All: * Beginning, Intermediate and Advanced Ballet. Toe. Pas de Deux and Variations * Beginning and Advanced Jap •Jazz Performance Scheduled For Late Spring ALL AGES ACCEPlED Director Bonnie Wilcox BEA TRAVEL AGENT Day & Night Classes For Men & Women PACIFtC TRAVEL SCHOOL 610 ... 17Hlstreet, s..to~C.92701 CALL (7141 543.9495 Established 1963 F1nanc1al Aid Programs Accredited By The Accrediting Commission of Ttie Nallonal AsSOCtallon of Trade & Tecnn1cal Scnoo•s M.A,.._S.-W 4251 Mw ...... W.G IMeattecm•a...wt Newport ...... c.M. 92660 llJ.1395 644-1295 OPENINGS MOW IM IDEAL DAY-LOMG STRUCTURED CHILDREN'S EMVIROMM&n' Montessori Pre-School and AMI Elementary Classes OPft' 7 AM to 6PM INTERNATIONAL MONTESSORI SCHOOL 2022 t Cypress Dr •• H•wport hocla 979-9241 YOUI CHOtCf OF JOIS! HundredS of career opPOrtunities In well paying exelttng environments are yours tor tile asking . If . you have OFFICE SKILLS! In a short time. you WILL BE sell-confident and prOductive! Career ttam now for· • SICHfAIY ~ ~. M.ct.I • ACCOUNT~. IOOIUlllf'll • 61NHM. OfftCI ASSIST A"1' llC8'1'1o.IST Typing & Shorthand Brvsh·UP DAY...., IV~ CL.ASSIS c.15"4190 ...... ... _.. ............. , . ...,.__.. 1rume Atthh•c. College of sw-. G-.ts B . ..dL.o.. usmeu •• .._.... ~-~Newport Fwy at Oyer Road REGISTER MOW FOR A CAREBl IM COSMETOLOGY RICHARD1S BEAUTY COLLEGES Costa l1esa Huntington Beach Ricllanl's Beauty Colleges Feature: A. Jhlfmad< Educational Programs B. National Accred11att0n C. School Distnct Conuacted Programs AND o A program that Wiii allow you 30 college aed1ts roward y0ur A A. 8~~RE~ at COASTi-INE CQMMUNITV LE ~ APPLY NOW • You mey be eligible for a Federal Educa11onal Grant of a School District Program lo cover the cost of schooling. Phone our Registrar today at: 645-3850 462.C I 7fll St. CostaMeH 962-8831 19060 lt"OOldm .. IMltiftgt• IHCll ~n!"~'i1l11~~1g:t~Lost&Fo.d 5300 Peuotlds 5350 tWpW..ted 7100tWpW..ted 7100 IWpW..ted 7'00 WClllled 7100 HtfpW.ttcl 7100 ~!~ ..... !~~~ ~3568 day ornate. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••··~·· ••••••••••••••••••••••• I-•------- Found 2 ma I e pugs Acfytrfi...i..... As t Assemblers Back ofc medical assist. Losl: 2/24. ~ M. puppy. purebred vacmlty Foun· •ESCORTS* ...., '· ASSEMBLY wanted . PT. FT for vic. Vtctona/Placenlta. La.In Valley calJ962•7198 Needsharpperswbocan See our j o bs under yowig progressive grow· WhtOea collar. 646-1418 • · 97J..1138 assist lnour prod dept. & MECHANICS Ware house ro r i m . log specialty io N.B. Call pe rform secret a r i a I r l •· · l · lAsl: 14 gold karat ID· sen au 'ETS ,.. .... Senic•s 5360 dutiea. Kual type 60wpm medlat.eope~~S-or app ... ID ervtew, 1ualed pinkJe ring. 2fl.2. IUUW"L .. ••••••••••••••••••••• & be able to do past.e up PRECISION VICTOR ,_64&-__ l6l9_. _____ _ 54(}-0018 ANSWERS TIRED?SORE? work . Sal lo com-Ta .. ~urySenlc•s Banking · Come & gel a soothillg. mensurate w /abillly. Aggressive iodepeodent Lost : Norwegla Absurd -Roary-r elaxing, full -body Seodres.AdM25,Dally bank Is seeking ex - Elkhound, Male, 3 \r. Sumac-Target-massage. Feel better PUot.POBoxlS60,Costa perienced Credil blkt gry look s Ii ARMY imm.Formen&women Mesll.Ca.92626. Advanced Controls of· ASSIMILHS Olecker.CallMs .Davss. Hus k1e REWARD . Ineverknewmymother Callbetwl0am-10pm£or fers air unusual op· PRECISION 848-1234. ~ ~a lousy cook unUI 1 applS36-6825 Aggres~lve mdependeot portunity for people with Openings available In Pacific City Bank REWARD' Keys lost 2/8 joinedtheARMY. bank is seekin~ P ay good, basic mechanic or precision Ins trument E:quaJOpporEmployer near Gi~nda le Fed. Personals 5350 ~nt& :or"llears.t~S9411 !?~nst.oflta machineshop skills This shop. Applicants must B k w lson/Harbor aKon ~ -ooo• is your chance to move enjoy the challenge of )llBanki.ng-·.------an · 1 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• acificCit~Banlt k · troubleshoot•' ng •-Cati 751..()168 ••••••••••••••••••••••• from routine wor mto "' · RELAXJNG MASSAGE Equal Oppor mployer · cust o m f it t In g or TB.LERS Http W..ted 7100 diversified, perc1sion as· Lost: Cockapoo type, 12 lb BobJames-Lic Masseur ••••••••••••••••••••••• semblers. rnecharucal assem lies fem. .. Pooh". Blondish Outcall 9·9, 494-5lll ANIMAL Good manual dexterity & NEW tan. Springdale / Ed PREGNANT? Caring, Accounting HOSP mecharucal aptJlude ex-ACCOUNTS inger, HB. Reward. coofidenllalcounseling& • Youwilluseyourtalents pera musL Min. 6 mos. ~114.3 ~ al Abo u· d Bath, clean. assist F -T . to build an entire com· exper req. E .O.E. Call r0e00•er;_kee. pi'ngr. 00• a OP· ROllERTllALF11 lrvme.552-0990. puter -controlled G5571man·905l, ask Cor Ray Ne.ed sharp, personable P> REWARD for the an "' -"'--tool y t t T II d N A APCARE 547 2563 account~ APT MANAGER mauu.u.: • ou mus · e ers an ew C· formation leading to lh · ""~ be able t.o use precision 1--------•I coont.s persons. Savings return of a 78 BI u ~hlal Reader For SS units In Costa measuring lnstru~e!lts Assoc. Rep trainee. New & Loan experience pre· Peugot mo-Ped With a . R I Proudly Annou.oces Our Mesa. Exper'd couple . (or c_lose tolerance r1tt.ing Co. ·-o .c . o-a n---'s felTed. Full-time poSI· buddy seat lhal dlsap-lBlS ElCammo ea Move to Larger Offices. Husband must have &all t u• ..... """' ttoos available. Please peared from Estancia San Clemente; Fully lie. Visit Us Al Our New mamt. e"f· Wife bkkpg gnmeo · men & women or couples call: H.S. Call 545· 7863. N For appl 492· 7296 Location. exp. Cal 642-5073 or for P /T work. Many quest.Ions asked MICHELLE"S COLDWELL BANK ER (213)865-:BSl. Yo u ·w i 11 r ec e i v e benefits ror right people 752-2600 BUILDING m1· ru· mum supe rv1·s1·on Call for appt. S4l-0863. IRVl"""'E Lost: Female Akita o.tc• A/RRECEPTlONLST " (Japanese, husky look· llAM-2~ :as.3749 SUITE200 .40to50 wpm. 10 key. Full while wor~ing _in our As&. Manager. Fabnc ex· SAVIMGS & LOAM ing dog). Thick fur. 2333N BROADWAY tame, fringe benefits . clean shop m. l.rvme We per. needed Costa Mesa Op black mask, reddish COi· u .. DA & VICKI SANTA ANA Newport Beach a rea. ()((er competitive wage~ 646-4040 ~plo~~r~ty Baolwlg OPERATIONS OFFICER A career posll1on Is avaJlable In our Costa Mesa branch which of- fers a desll'able. warm working almosphere. nie individual we seek should have 3·4 years Savings & Loan ex · perience incluc:hng J year supervisory experience IBM 3600 is helpful If you are interested an joining our progressive and growmg Savings & Loan please call Thomus Denn.Ls (714' 979·3910. C~HIERS UTOTEM MARKETS ()pem.ngs now available for full and part-lime Ca.shiers OD 2nd & 3rd shifts. No experience necessary. we train. Start al $3 per hour. ad· vancement opportunity for marwgement position to $5.50 per hour ii quallfted. For intervie1o1< go t.o store 36. Mondu) 9am-lpm. 885Gtenneyre Lag. Bch .. 494.9235 E:quaJ Oppar Employer BRENTWOOD 1 ________ _ SAVINGS & LOAN t640 Adams Ave Costa Mesa, CA 92626 C~HIERS UTOTEM MARKETS EquaJ Opportunity Openings now available •--£mllipl•o•ye-r M-/F--1 for full and part-lime ________ 1 cas1uers on 2nd & 3rd BAR GlRL-Netghbomood bar FUii or part tame. C.OSt.a Mesa 646·5544 or wtwh1te chest and ~-M-.-We have an increasing 114-04.5-7040 wiafttb 30Yovd r rirstht reJvbiew -... -~5-T-M-6-1-1-H-0-5-TE-5-5-1 ·-~~~~~~~~~~~~-·-·~ feet. Curley tail. Last ...,..,._ .... ~ demand throughout er aysoo e o · ~ •-------- seen In v1c1n1ty or TOW ForTMF'"'of It! Orange County for ex· 1--------· 5 Eves, call 548-7418 --------Barmaids-Port Ii, C M. shirts. No experience necessar y. we train . Start at $3. per hour. ad· vancemcnt opportunity ror management position to $5.SO per hour 1f qualified. For more in· form11t 1o n . call the Personnel Office· s r h 0 0 I L a g u n a . Serving all Orange Co. perienced accounting & Assembly Apply in person or call between 7am-12 Noon. Banking Tap pay +. Mature prer. REWARD ror return o 835-7313 bookkeeping personnel. 714·556-~ Alfl'OMOTIVE 646-3666. known wberenbovts . "-'lor.ne1tustoday we PARTTIME Needs Medical altention. p~~slcal massage by ......., • .., -TRAINEES *LOT DETAIL Owne r hear tbr oken . he d. masseur techni· are looking forward to Parl·Ume. 8 AM to 1 PM TaLatS ..... _...,cn1.,,,,,3317 c I an . 4 · 8 P M APP t. greeting you 10 our new ADVANCED C 0 N · Moo. lhru Frt. at one of "'"...,.... .....,.. • CAO "°17 localloo. (OR EXPERIENCED> a?Uman Apply an person See Judy Surf & Sand Hotel 497-4477 ~Lampson Street Garden Grove. 537 ·4840 Equal Oppor Employer ---L~-ound--.---.f .....,......, (714) llS.4103 TROLS Orange County's leading c SUFFERING f bo M• new car agencies located Scottie rom se r· FREE PARKJNG 1cro In Costa Mesa. Must San Juan Capistrano •--------- branch Boat Hardwa r e Sales Person. Ptr 2days a wk. •---------Schock Hardware CLEA.NER·2 respons1blt f>U...3656/548·21S3 rllea, psoriasi!I, or dan· 1---------ltDOl Jamboree have valid eaur. dnvers --------of dNr? Ask about Perla --------El . E .O.E. Ii call c t t Found: lrisb Setter 1 yr de Jojoba Hair & Scalp Admin. Mgr. ectron1cs -------r ceose. or app . o old male. Nr Bushard & Treatments. Pb LaCoif-Executive secre tary . ASSIMILY Chuck Coiart or Paul la-•1 ,...., ..., feur.~ The Akins Co. Ass'l to for ti""" .... fixture co. DcFabla. I UJJ ton. 2,~1 "' at 9 -'dent res 6 comm. 1 &&>w-. 540-9640 AM96J..s:.>5 .,....,.. We are seek ing n· 20318.E.Main.Irvine. RSV ~. ~rman Shephero *S~UIN * ~~~'!iv=:~! == l~oro.!,.~~~:~ 1--------· S~""EsEJiicE female. About 6 mos old, Model!" Escorts legal, profit sharing pro-tioo Department. We will ASSEMILERS Reddish/brown . .Warner Male-Female gram, office manage-train the ri ght In-IAcal Mission Viejo Co AUTOPAJtTS nr Hunt Harbour. HB. Ann. Destiny, Sonny, ment, Ins. progr am . dividu.U lo the micro needs assemblers. Some COUH'TlllMAN 846{;()S4 · Enca,Marsh~.Cissy personnel. Career orient· clectrorucsindustry. exper. preferred. Can· Minimum 3 yrs. Jobber 24 hnservmg O.C. ed w/good growth poten· didates must have good expenence. Must be well t~o u n d packa ge ASkaboutspec. rates tial. Must have excell We have Immediate manual dexlerily. be fl:med "rrsonable ~~k~.0~ ~as[ Pl~: 752-8708 ~-legaltJeoxf:iocr.a~oren· openings to lhe followmg neat in appearance & de· ..,;.ard.lh ~og !_oodmpaP!J ~~..4.I ,.._ '""'~ Tus 1'n!as· pendable. 'Work is lo life ... o·--· w •"J .,... .. ot . .,.,,.9635 --------•1 Salary $1400 + beneftts · s upport ME o 1 c AL Call 556-2500 fo r in KIVIAt41W CalJKaren&32·28lll •Toolltg ELECTRONICS. Only _t.erVlew ___ awt.'-'----- AUTOMOllU • Tilll9 Fillll respoc.sibe persons seek· AUTO PAltTS We have immediate openings fO(' 2 Part·Tlme Tellers. Must be able \0 work Saturday. E x- perience Is preferred. but will train. Excellent be ne fit s. career apparel is pro· v1de<t. Please contact Ter ri Gulmmayen al (TI4) 493--0601 ror an ap- pc)U)tment. HOME FIDatAL SA VINOS a. LOAN EQua1 Opportunity £mployer M/t' 2900 Lafayette mature &<lits, 1 dys wk 4AM to 7~ JOAM . Pv Newport. Beach club, call for appt 675-3334 . 644-0050 B>dy-Man. HarbOr Body CLERICAL Works, ~6 Placentia, Deputy Clerk wanted. C.OSt.a Mes · Oencal position ava1la· IOOKICHPat F/C ble immediately. Re· n.... / F l R E q1.1res 1 yr. clerical e'<· In~~ r.~m.XJnt · oppt.): penence. 40 wpm typing. for exp & mature $705 to start. 833-0411. person. Call 640--0123 ext 260 for aept. Orange -'---------1 Co u n l y H a r b o r CABINET MAKER-2 Yrs Muruc1pal Co.rt. E 0 E exp wood & form lea.,_ ... ____ _ salat)' open. apply 260 E .. Oyer Rd. &nle M. Santa Clerical Ana. Found white cat w1 blue e)'ft. Blue collar w I Fritz 00 it. 67S-5582 about~·SlOOO cvlpOSCftCMI ment need apply. Call • DIUYaY •---------C.ARRJt.:RS. LA. T imes. every year for ~ -__.. ing permanent employ F o o o d • m a I I Most Makes . • ...... lelltt ~581-3830 Well groomed female early A.M. houn, Irvine a.a1CAL Jo•s The fol)owl.ng iObs arc available Immediately m the Orange at I rvln~ areas. wbite/~y/brown male 64.._2526 : . over 18. Gd dr1vlng re· BANK area. $300-$400/mo, no cat with collar. Vic. --------•I Comprebenslve com· • ••fua•S cord. Must live \ft C.M. •Tai.ER* collections. 544·05~ll Ma ID o ll a I Ad a m •. --------NEW plo,)' beoeflta including -~ area. CaJI 556-2$00 for lo· _m._98M1 __ sz_. ___ _ 9C»t72 M .e.e5 •4 1 BUSINESSMEN rm.Jor medical ud den-needed for awtna sh.In... t«View appt. lm_JAR'l'TIMEI I ,....__ Wub Man•r. crowth ••ound whlte fluffy ~ MOD&S contact th• DAILY t~al. Ca~ ~agt~P~ ~1t~•::. ~.~~ Babysl\ter needed, COM wr = ~ :IJ,C:, '& Good pay~ Bonua Ii am.all/med. grey spots PILOT fer lnformetton Newport e.ach _Cli;.;__ff..;..~_. ~·6'2_·_5254 __ . __ area,yourhome,2yrold S.vinss and Loan or profit s harlnl plan. fe m a l e dog . T•a UCOIT'S ,.gerdlng the.county ( )~.Weare an boy.M0-9548 bank ellperience r e-MeUoCarWar.hSystems w/WiwonlL 548·3MO OUTCALLOHLY requirement• for equl o_pporlunlty BABYSJTT£R. mature. :!':fn1E~\~1~7ci 29SOHa.rbor8lvd.C.M. FoundGtrls Baa. Vic. Vic· Ddyi..••H. hr ualng • Flctltloua empk>yerM/F/H. Toplaceyourmeaaage days. my hom e. VI C' benefits. Call or apply at C.SHtB toriaSt.Co.taMeaa. Pie· 631·2140 8us\neuNam.. TRANSMASK beforethe Y~l.O*tl At HunUnRton branch: Rettauranl experience tweswilhCarla.642·USS ~ ~ 1.1.IRL 842-4321 reading public. St .. UB. 834..0.11bef 5:30 AMERIC •N demable. Apply 2·5PM FOUND ~ w EXT. 332 pbooe Nicole A Ben 8rown't 31108 Coall Y'orkshlre Ten1er FR.EE room fl board In CORP. Daily Pilot-Blbyalt\fr t i Toro area. SAVINGS Hwy. So. Laauno. MS-JS08/64-t·3656. return for comp a -1_________ Classifted,642·:i678 MatW'fl wom1n. •t.M•n• :MOISElToroRd nlomhlp f1cxlble hrs. Mak e th 0 1 e g 0 0 d ~~~~~~~~ ·-------• Ju 2nd wk . da)'l lam to w,u.Aa Hilla 11 you're oot readini the M¥ race. a,e. Laauna ~ ttema you're 4.30. Carl' for infant Ma Goldblatt llUle ada tn Clualfled, Btedl IC\l]ptor, Call Ed· not ualnC 1vall1ble to GctOREE.N cuh ~ 1.nyt.hlnf with a Rd req. 7 76te 779-281& )'OU.,. milalnl a lot of mund aut•-4a9 101n1 other family by ad· IOI' WJUTI elft)hants Deily PUot CltMtned Ad Equal Oppey DtWt1 lnformatlon aa tine IOIDlthlu to eell? ~ tbern tor Nie l.o wtth • Cl...ufed Ad la a simple matt.er . • SW. lcilt itema with • Emplo)'ef' M/F Will• tome •reat bu.ya. a wined wdO It well. awtned. Call 84Z·M'18 , ___ c:a_u_ea_-56'1'1___ JUlt call 6G-M18. Dally N°' Cl&Nllied Ad. •------- MlmHILP7 Htlp )~lf to. t!N.IMJl aelec.1\on ot ~HoDetull In the DAIL\' l>ILOT HELP WANTED ADS TYPIST'S (45wpm) KEYPUNCH SECRETARY (w/or without SH I 10.KEY OENERAL OFFICE You can ehOOM your own hol.u's & days to worlt. Top pay & excellent booW1plao Clll or atop in tod"f. VlCTOl T .. .,.,...,senfce• 4341 Birch St. Ste 213 Newport Oeach SSM520 ms.Malo Or~· lll-2622 l · Q DAILY PILOT . . E ;• t . .i, > ........ ...,"' 11 t' ~1JT 11 ~l)l~~l·~ -''I 'I ,,, ~· ·~ l * ._ ...... I I ~ I) ...... I I ~•I I ~ ~ I) •u I • ~ • ' ._ .. ... I .. ,C1-lechr ... , .. s.rnc.. " utnalag ..._we ._ latSenlcn .......... ~ ~--~ -. -s.r.lc.• c.,.tS..k• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... 4 ........................ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~mocf t. rep Ir, f"" IDOrT AU Hou.ecleanina Serv1re s:a101 In avlo • Pvt. Duly NW"M l\v•I ~althel & Lhlurt'I •Sav MOOf)• MA.R!NA MONEY MGRS ShaMPDO ll alum clun l'lr,f,: niry . o ld \ m• :,48..o9 bu opeoJn1• ror ne w 111tt rovera1es. lmmt d. for d•y lm IST. ltl-1439 Orwewa~·Parkin• lot Bkk~. buctl tlna. bill Color bn1nt~1wra •• •bl CTU UlANlhl~ IG )'r'll In -eultOmen. I yn . .:xp In .. ~_., ..... Hom• Ca r e Cit l -•Rtlpaln • ulrollUn>i ~::fu smt bu~ 411 qita to mm blr•rh t: lu n t&ttA Ut"d, r PaJom Orange Co. Fr e e ...._ Auoc.. IM. UecnMCl 644-WJJ YATt1 t PLASTERJNG •L1r fl t'M S 6 S I VM ual:t 6TJ 7831 U\. dm rm. hall tl!I Av.s bO Q\4 a. ..... ealimate, loaured. Aft. 615-0562 I P'~CllplriilCJ All l )'P Oll . Free ~ . ~ -nn f1 • couch no. chr ••••••••••••••••••••••• *M· Call Ann.~. .t,1 ma IL1 Cd 15311·711.3 '~' Typu\I~. rrot typ O\IM elJm ~ od,,r -~der. dump .Lai m 1.e1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 a• Ru an •' 11 • o r Cpl ""fl tr. U \',,. 4'•P" Hom• 1 m/crove m enll, MIMSenkA PETERS PAINTING f'l••U r P•tc h1ng. dKU It a dt\J Rn• U1l. , tree wrk, ....................... ..,....... p· I ~ r.x \:~di.I! __ Jlu audL ~1L .Rd.a. raid Llt'd coult'actor tJonS etc 831-1.2$7 HOUAeeleanJna: Honea\ Mml Mald Service. Euro Expr'd RC!H Half'I f'l•"lf'r , s tu cco It ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5~ SJl~lOl R4nal11•ote t>evolop Dependable. Homes, l-'ree £at. C11ll G1 oe drywalJ lnL/£.at. Free ~ Ltdy for' •l"allon -Aptl. Alt. 5 . ~l.93 pean t.ra med peraonoe l • ~ lll.~l.Ml ia1 J¥11'1'li E1<' "'fa T\ 1-'lNcl ·All ~*" pm-Wt C.... Ce..,,et (.1Untl"I fllttlt •31118 lLl1 J 549-7899 -r '*'O(k ~·am rlean l·o up -"J\JST us·· houseclean-Prof pa1nUna Eitl &t lnl ..... ~ Nn 1mkr Orl\f'& m.dtf ail ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......, ~33Jl hul•Cl'r) Work auar OCCStud<'ot. I Ton truck. tna. We're hooesl & efli-Low rlll.h Rior• Fre .. • ••••••••••••••••••••• 17) -J'r\JI k mouut unil t'I' ••••••••••••••••••••••• cient. C.11873-0163 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -v ea,. ... , c l. reu rot.I'• M~ J7 l5 fJ.J-x:''fJUCIAN Pr1c ·d • Tra.1h. tnl' lrl m. Oan Brickwork. Small Jobi. Cit. 53&-47~. ~ Ku • balhl. romp. room BADVSmY.tt l.n d M rldtl frt.-e c11llm11lc 011 6'2·3224. llon 642·5703. ~le~rs. 5 yr.i H · Newport, Co8ta Mesa & fioc F.itkr P111nUnl( by Oddi Cupe otry. c lect . ... "'"'' lltlc lu'" ~ l.Q\ ····-·················· u•c Constru ct ion. •na l'i.r" l.\t •r•• <'arpt'ot.~r ~ 1-:Ml nv M"nlUUAY DAV St'l'~C I.al¥•• or ~rtwll Joba Lile haull~·moving . pr. Local refs. f)"ee eats. Irvine. 675-3175eves. R. Sinor St Ile . tia 'fry !Al 0$12 c.C • ~ t-.11 llun nr (Hot \tJUI' t'•T"ll •ti-am ,,,t,.11.1il'd m ~ Cilrage Va clUO!Di. Call IK2·0M7 or 964-4345 f1'le.836-~24 hr'I Custom Masonry, Pat1os, . c&t. llllY S.u .. 1 :;1ul &:as ratet 6'2-070$ looflwg p'd lh~h Sl'hot I j!trl 11\1 ~ ..i;n • C'a 11 for t...imp rep.11r & dt'11111n Uousedearung, Exp lady Walls. Fir~places. Re. W ALLP APBUMG ........•.•••••••...... will b.iby111l .iO 'H hi nrs-ro ... ' I IC! ln:.lulla111m. 1111llc1ue:. I IAUUNG fr CLEAllllJ P wire~. Prom SlB.50 wk. w~ Walla. 100·11 or Ref a offered Ev,. ... Repair " Rcronf 1\11 \l1._nd" & 1u.mm"r viu: ln&mor t • •11.,..ntrv fU'IU talr:. ti45 ~ <:omm'I ~denllal 556-4071 aft. SPM. loc:a refere n ces . 031 D5, 67~ l21lt t y pes -shi n gle s ( CwiLOdl&n ~·rv11·t• --645-8512. Bal t\.'n .. n ·a1 1>1~ i HV b> Ja\ • l•U Kiii~ Ltd ladw."l or tt'&ad •pt FwtcMg S:JHSJl 1962-1462 RelJable refs. ca11 Linda. QUl\JJTV PAINTING roc:kshakcs·c(lmpo lar. -=-Wmdows & ovens, etc. Chris tian bricklaye r foh..-eat. 541-S9JO Fm (.~ -\ftl'f' '1 K \ dea_n101 101 1iu1ar ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.nt/F..xt Neat Re11i.r,na ......... Stn-ic• RF.PAJIC CO'Wt'R rT t-. l'•ll David L•nktonl K • 8 a.·en\'IJl~ •t-,,•Ki••liilCJ Xlnt wark 848-8200 needs extra work. now bk Wayne llXOVE> Avail ....................... Call 11.J\)UJM m ~ f..lJ 2074 Gata It fu0t•t• r~pa1r ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. LttiffiftC) Exl r e m e ly r e a s. ~ -640-4000. 644 00~ • ROBIN'S HO US~· &LS-872,8. -Roots done reasonabl<.' lJnct111l..,.l~ di V()(('t' $.\) L:.ir~nlr)' II l>rywall C-lft/Coc.cNt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A')k ror Jim. 636-8284 or ---CL~ANING SERVICE, C ft M PauntinJ:. lnl & Pt-n. bltn.ltru~ry ~ Nt-w or rP-Pl-if v.ork ~ny ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ for a \hc:lir'OOgbly clean Mind V our Manners lnc Moviftg Ext. Cabinet fln13h.lnit. & ~JOS Al"TIO &1111:' 10t> ~ T.?32. ok for Utacttte brc14kl~ & buul ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bonded reliable people ••••••••••••••••••••••• stucco rep•1r. 751 3448 / Ll:JCAL fYPING bouse.~7 .,. UW~l!l.00~ ow in.: F•11l A dftl'lt!tH Gl&Tderung. clean ups & will care for your home & Moms MovlnSt · l.lr 'd & ~7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Heu ~u landscapi~ Georc e Want a REALLY CLEAN pets. 879-5701 Jnsured . T ltS88 6 . ---~t!Oll't & • i£blOl•t EXCELLENT P AlNT · Ceramic UJe Installed. Jbushi 545-HOUSE! Call Gingham Professional service P R 0 to' E S S I 0 N A L , !ltna1.I J~ It re· Foundi.tton1. retaining Girl. Free est. 645-5123 .._Tu MC/Visa accept. 002 4242 EXCLNT PAINTING firs, shwrs, lUbs. 547·2639 TYPING sf;Rvlct-.: !:;it JUIA •'rl~l·tl CA5 2003. 1Nalls. blo•·k!l, patlo1J Go•ral 5-rvicn ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALL 548-2706 d)'ll, 545--7W1 eve. p«r1enrcd • Lou's (~rpenlly JO ¥"' • ~c'd 53ti-501.3. ~-4309 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.all Janice's Raggedy CNOOMETAX RETURNS "Moving Out & About"" Wallpaper Hanglns;t Trw S..-.lce ---l\nD's bousecleamn~ for Prompt, reasonable. "Doo't Delay. Call . To l'rompl • Profll'tt'nt • <'XP Ooor~ ~111do"'•· C\1mplt.'le ron('f' ~ Job 0 R •MR.FIXfT• thorough, r ehab e & day" LocaJ & sta1.Ae·w1de BulMar Unllm1U!d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Bch. 833-81.99 Caml'rD r t!ull y patlOUlC Ml-20)4 ~l'l your form1:o. s1a ve carpente r . palotln~. courteous service. serv 24 hrs . 7 days. Free iiltlmale$ 751·9171 NOWISTifETlM1'.: Rc~um1•s /form1 Expenenc:ed Tri mm1og ecrp.t S..-.ice ~y Atl!l!l 6'15 9926 64.S-IP LINDA'S M<M844 S!!/pu.:l'•Sl'al rt"por h -Reas. rates. lS yrs n TAX SERVICE CUslom WaUpapenn' Removals and Cleanups $2 50 /pa.:e•T)'piog .••..•..•.............. eo..tractor area 548-17:>2 1lte Moppets in business Pers/Bua Jacome Tax Moving & hauli ng. AU Wortc Guar. Pree l. U C. & INS. 645-8285 $1 /pagt! •S u pt-rll' rt p lit U3 00 lilt' b11: Jflb' hk~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMMEDIATE SERVICE sl1'Ce 1974. Honest. de Call 842-6439 ror appt. Freight.. bldg matenals . 673-4158 ~ ~ ea Call L\.l.'lyn t'llll)('l'>. nu()r... v. 111tlows &?nt 's Con.--lr Remodel lrv. a.n:a All ma,or appl. ~odable. efrtc1ent. Of. bsh.ld goods el<: Lowest Have something you want Consc1emous. guar. work. at 714/833-2781 ext 2tJ6 Dutr h M a 1n 11• n a 11 c e mg, patios. & landscap-A.G.&G. Appl. Repr oes, homes. vacancies. Have someth.lng to sell? rates an town. J ohn. Int/ext lots or refs reas. lo &ell? Classified ads do !Tll·ll~ IJl&. 5,M.205(, S51· l090 8.11-'1639 Lic'd. 54&-2393 Cllmilied ads do it well. ~2654 Jack bis.8336. 1t well. 642-5678. Ii 1 1 I - .-. Hetp W•ted 7 I 00 .wp W•ted 7100 Help W..t~ 7100 Help W.twd 7100 HelpW..t~ 7100 fWp Wa.ted 7100 HelpW.tect 7100 HelpW~ 7100 HilpW-.ct 7100 ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... Oeriral DEMONSTRATORS Gardener in eitchange for GIRLS-GUYS Hospital NURSES-AJdes. INSRNCE F1LE CLERK Mature woman lo compa -0Cf1re Manager -Sales Pn.n~ Teebmc1an. Sad· lmmed.Jate open111~ for Fri & Sat 10.6, near your apt r e nt , S pucious All shifts. LVN or RN. .Begiooen spot for bright nioo sit wkOOs. eves with Good opporturuty for ad· d.lebac College, MI SS ton dependable ind1v1dua1 home. foods & sm ap-grounds for 5S urul rom-TRAVEL 3-U. Newport Convales-perscn. Pleasant work· well, older grandmother vancemcnt. Will tram/no VieJO. Salary range w /Re a l E s talt) phances. <710 768-55-73 plex 1n Costa Mesa. ce nt Cen t e r . 1555 ~ cond1t1ons. General for pro(. daughter. N.8 . experience necessary. Sll}S-SllZ7 per mo. Ca II Devlo per/Propert) orTI4-9883 642·5073 or <213 )86:>-3851. I need 3 ~pie free to Superior Ave.N B. o ice experience pre · area. 640-8222. Must be 25 yrs old or 831-9700 x 302-303 btwn 11 Mgmnt Dept . Pos1llorJ -travel awa1i , New ferred. Opportunity for older & be avail. o n &S. Calls for Vanous clenc:al DENT AL ASST front & General OU1ce. Fas t York. Colo. & other cities Hostess Mature woman lraming & advancement. MECHAMIC Salurdays. 557-0824 or duues & reqs acrtg bkgd back Ofr dUh<.'S, it-ray growing St. John Kruts in U.S. Must be neat & only. Ideal for P rr in· 371,; hr. week. $500 per Experienced w/alr c:ond. 774-6090 . 1525 Mesa & 10-key & type tci rert nee. Would pref exp needs a competent self willing lo team. We offer come. 11:30-3. Mon-Fri. mo. to s tart. Call tune -up . light Verde lt206, Cost.a Mesa. Printing 60wpm. Irvine <1rea RDA . Sal open Call starter in the order dept. above averaae earnings Apply in person at 6 549-4700. ask for Andrea. mecllanlcal. Cood saJary PRESS Please eall Lydia Schaf &e6880. Servicing our coast to & aU expenses pald dur-~m.: Charles Dickens E.O.E. " benefits. Goodyear PANTRY WORJCER·5 dys fer at (714) 95S·lll3 for roast accounts Involves 1ng training. For Jo· estaurant: 3344 S. T\reStort> wk. approx 32 hrs. Pvt OPERATOR anterv1ew. DENTAL ASSISTANT, heavy phone contact. tervlew call Ms. Conway. Coast Hwy, C.M. JANITOR 646-<1814 rlub call ror appl. temp. Mar 16-May 16. Call Stacey SW-7171 536-1421 10AM-6PM. 644-0050 SmaJI in-house shop has Clerk-f\111 tune b1lhn~. l(] Exp, 546-2448. 'lil 5:30. Moo· Wed. H<Yf'EL.Asst. Housekeep-Full lime Mon-Fri. Ex· MECHANIC Fo r e i g n posil.Jon available. Some ---ing Manager for private reUeot benerits. Bayview Car /Di<.'s e l Pantry person for pnvate press experienre key by touch. Marine Dental Asst. Oral surgery GataAL OFFICE Golf Coorse starter apply rt>- knowledge helpful. A'd.; only. N.B. loquines con-c lub . Full tim e . Coov. Hosp. 205S Thurin, Re palr f overhaul , ·country club. Part l.Jme ~red ly 1~e rson . L1 Eleclronic: distributor. 9am-2pm. Weekdays 7 :30·4pm . U n i on C.M. 642-3505 Mercedes Benz autos now. could be full ume 10 PAPER S>upy • 900 Lldo Park fideoual. 644-6161. loca~ in Irvine. needs Newporl Beach Golf benefits. Call for appl. Elect, m anual & auto summer. 496-5767 Dr.N.8. DENTAL ~SISTANT for ~for office dulies. Course. 3100 Irvine Ave. 64.S-5000 x 520. LEGALSECRETARY trans/ brakes, etc. Read CUTTER ·-group EododooUr prac-opportunities plus N.B. Fullllme. exper , San job ord er. dete rmine PARKIN G LOT Clerk· Typist for Soulh tJce an N B .• great opply, excellent compan y Hotel-Motel Juan Ca po. 831-1121 malfunctloo. plan work SWEEPER. night work Computenr.ed machine! Coast Repertory 40 hrs benefits. Contact: Bob G-R·E·A-T Management position. procedures. d o valve & wltnds. Ovr 25. Sal SlSO expenence preferred. exper necessary, non-L.5AL SECRET ARY per wk to slart. Call pr wk. "5wpm tYJ>U\ll ac: sUIOker.644-0595 Tracy. 8am-5pm, Mon SALES JOI 1'40W Immediate opeoinJ for Jobs. ra l1bration s. Four day work week, e x- curately . $3.50-$4.00 pr lhro Fri. Phone 549·0954. a mbitious, enthusiastic: Growing dynamic Littga-replace 1grutions. repair 645-~ ~Dent benefits inc:tudaoit OPa. .hr. Call Wynoe. 957·2602 Desk clerk. Must be ex· rront office manager. lion F1rm in Newport fuel lnj sys lo CA slan· dental plan. Apply Sam - penenc~ NCR 4200 AP· G ENERAL OFFI CE GOOD PAY. GOO D Must be resrnsible & Center haa perm. part dards, weld /use elect PART TIME Uam & Jpm-3pm, Na- ply David McNeil Hotel HOURS. GOOD CON experience Sala r y time o p e ning for equip. & band tools tlonal Educalion. 4401 Q.ERKS800 Laguna. 425 S Coast Typis t s. a cc urate D ITIO NS . MANY open. Apply Roy Fraser eoergel.Jc efficient & ex· Diesel mech training. 5 EVENINGS .. Birch Street , Newpart Typing earns you J!reat Hwy, Lag Brh 494-1151 ~m. call ~3942. FRINGE BENEFITS. or J uaruta Presley, San ~r. legal secr etar y . )TS exp. SlO per hr Take Beach . (Near 0 .C : benefits plus dental 10 FAST GROWING COM· Clemente Inn. 125 Ave. u s t hav e xl nt ad to Employ m e nt Adults with ootstand1og. A1rport) E~ual Op- s urance Call L i s a . Dial A Ride General Office PANY PROMOTES E s p landia n . Sa n shorthand, typing & diC· D v lpmnl D c pt. attractive persona!Jties portwuty Emp oyer 640-3470. Dri•ers JR. SECRETARY FROM WITION. TRAIN C l e m e nte , CA . tapbone exper . Call DCYr-620.261.010. Ad paid who erijoy working with American Ca r eer Operate modern eqw P· F 0 R T 0 p 714/492-6103 for appt. Sharon 64<H960 by employer. k:i(l,. Over 21. Start at Agency menl & door to door Vanety of dulles 10 our MAN AGEMEN T S3.SO per hour. Phone Production Workers. 610 Newport Center Dr trans/. Cahf. drivers he collections department. STA RT S .. 1 M • Hiousecleaners l.O work Cor ~ MODEL& FA.51UON 64 2·432 1 Ext 2SO, HEIJARC WELDERS· Newport Beach reef No J;.f'or exper Du ties in r lude MEDIATELY ' .. J anice's Raggedy Ann. LEGAL SECY Coordinator. Resumes BETWEEN 4 ·00·5 00 $4.80 to SS.96. H ANO NO FEE TO YOU oec. Good ·ving rec a shorthand, typing and K E Y B 0 A R D Tues· Fri, S.3. 645-1800 Be ri ght arm to buay too. PM. ~ TOOLGRINDERS: $3.93 m~t. No Sunday work. f~ Good figure ap-EXPER I ENCE Housecleaners needed. Nwprt Bcb atty. Good PO Box 177F. NB. 92663 Alkfor~ to $4 .80 . E LEC --Orange Coast Yellow t1 helpful. Excellent HELPFUL. WE HAVE salary & benefits. TROSTATJC PAINTER: Cod:WW~s Cab, 17300 Mt. He r-working condiuons and OUR OWN TRAINING Must have car. 1be lrvlne Models Eq\l&I Opport ty $4.47 lo SS.Sl. PRODUC-Elcpr'd, f\111 or p /u me rmann. F. Vly. bentlll.s including dental PROGRAM P UT ON BY ~9372 Personnel Agency We Med MW faces: Employer TION WORKf:S : Apply tn person. Forest ios uraoce . Appl y 488 E. 17th, Costa Mesa ¥ale/Female. fU ture mE COUNTRY'S TOP HOUSBCHPER Models-Male & Female PASTE.UP ARTIST. P tr. Lanes. 22771 Centre Dr, Draftsman . designer p rr Bryman. 200 McCormick ORGAN SALES Suite 22i4 642-1470 lf yo ur fa ce h as & F.T . Exper'd. Apply lacer s, Fu rnlture As· El Toro morning or afteronon. Avenue, Costa Mesa . PEOPLE. C\.LL AT No. LagWJa family ia ~ character. i s h1~h Penoya aver, 1660 se mble -Packin g --Santa Ana. Retired 0 K. Equal Opportunity 0 N C E 0 R pvt. beach communily. 5 fashion or looks Uke t e Pla~Ua. C.M. Operators. $3.61 to $4.4-0. Co. loolung for part or ful ~1006 Employer. lNTERVl EW. ORGAN day week , II ve i n . UMOD1l1VER girl oextdoor. Call Coran IROWN JORDON t ime bookkeeper irJ EXCHANGE. STAN Separate nice quarters. Prv. Pty. Newport Bcb. appointment r or a. PBX SANTA AMA Newport area. Call Cln Driver, LA Times. So. NUNN 714/586-7302. Position avail 2/27. Refs. proressional, exper. personal interview. You Ans weri ng serv 1 c:e dy for appl. 644-9810. Hunt Beach. Must have pref driver's he. Salary mature driver. 2A to 55 could be modebng as opent.or full & P rr. eau ~7 S. Halladay St. Construction Prc;.tert dependable car. Good General Office GUARDS & board. 497-1636 yrs. Sl7S-$200 per week. early as next week I So 835-3561 Manufactures or high salary +comm. 894-8307. 1'4CR OPERATOR qua.Uty aluminum OUl· M1lnager. Growth o cot F\lU & p/time. AlJ areas. Housekeer;r, fem .. live-References. 645-6156 or don't hesitate, call now. PIX OPERATOR door furniture. Call ed Tustin based builder Drivers & Helpers. Local (Proof Mach.lne) Uniforms furni shed in, cook drive for lad6 . 213-822-0611 ext. 284. ask for Hazel m.-01317::rltlll4pm. sdiedulJng. govemmen moving co. Apply 1n Afternoon shill. nex.lble Ages 21 or over. Retired Pvt. rm.Iba. Npt Be . 631·5600 lndepeodeot bank seek· t.al processing, design & person 15571 Producer hours n o exper ience welcome. No experience fMZ.003:)/646-1524. LClt man. GeoeraJ help. New York West ang experienred P BX Production Worker. Hol budget rcsponslb1lilles Ln, 118, HB. 896-0973 neces.~ary . Must be able nee:. Apply Un iversal Must be 18. Valid liceruie . Modeling Agency QPeralOr for Sat. only. Air Balloons. Layout. sala r y negotiab le lo work mdemndently. Prot.ectlon Service. 1226 HSKPR·Childcare. Eng 847.1241/847-1.242. Contact L . Davis. cutl.lng. seaming. rig . Forward resumes le DRJVEA/SALES Good bene its . Jm -W. 5th Street. Santa Ana. speaking pref, malure, LUNCH SERVICE help 1'totel Housekeeper, s dys 848·1234. ging. Full Ume wUI train. mediate opening. in ma-own t ransp. Mon-Fri, pr wk. 9-2 :30. Ine xp. Paci.ficCitt Bank Karco. Akins Develop Co. van. XJ.nt opportuni· Interviews hours 9-12 & ror pvt men's dub. Mon Equal Oppor roployer Call 642·3545 menl Co. 310 West lsl Sl. ty Must have valJd Calif. jor Newport Beach firm. 1-4 Mon tb.ru Frl N.8 . Rer. 644-Ql87 thru Fri. 12-2 :30. $3.00, exper. $3.25. Contact: 54>9471 PRODU C TI ON Tustin, Ca. 92ii80. u c. and gd dnving re-JDEAL P /TIME , $3.50/hr. 752·7'905. PIXOPSl. WORKERS Hood Sails. Cook-Experienced fr~ cord. 55&--0363 Lynn Stansfield housewives &t college MOTHER'S HELPER, ()per's for t elephone cut-out & se-cond lay out GUARDS cook for breakfast & din (714) 759-7853 girls w/cars. Over 21. MACHl1'41ST live in. rm le btd + sm amweriog service. Must worker s. Fu II ti m e. ner . Top ~ay, good DRIVERS Between8am-llam SECURITY . 9:30AM·l2:30PM Mon· s alary. exp ect ant be able lO work some 548-3464 Fri. Earn S81).Sl00 week· MJLLHAND mother OK. 170-25Sl weekends . Typing 35 benefits. Bo ' s Fam1b Men or women ~ yrs or FOl' proto-type ma chine Restaurant. 1409 S E ly. Mu s t be oea t , wpm re qui re d . Ex· R.E.SAl.£5 Camino Real. 4.92-135.1 older. Know the coast ~§~· Due to our recent ex· ~rsooable & energetic. ~ IJl the wtrumenl perienee preferred or Open1ngs oow avail. in cities. Net $180 a week or =ion p~ram, Wells 's Kitchen. m-0747 diV\Sion oC the oU tool in· ·· · MOVIE EXTR~ wUJ train. Many com· our a ttrac:t i ve. we II more. Oran ge Coast aft 10 AM FOR APPT. dust.ry. Working Crom pany benefits. f\111 time rurmshed Laguna Beach Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt. argo Gu Services ls blueprints, sketches le ~ht by Hollywood COOtc ~Newport Center Dr or part time. dai & e••en-office. for exper. or new Expanding reslauranl Herrmann. Fountain New-port Beach hiring Sec:uri ty Guards IMMEDIATE verbal designs, directly e firm. $2().$200 per tngsbifls avaHa le. ly licensed. enlhusiastie Valley. INo of Slater for. with engineering, lo as· day poss. Looking for chain with over SO uruts. F.quaJ Oppor Employer ........ ,._wport is.och rARnlME Irvine AJrport area call salespeople. Xlnt com -Family-owned "'ocganl2a. betwn Newhope & EMPLOYMENT slst in new product de· outgoing 18· 70 yr olds ~3333 or 833-3333. mission 1Jthedu.Je &t n tru Euclid I s.uta ... ~ ... velopment for world wanting to break inlo Fastuoo Island area call tion offers pleas a n t -SAN CLEMENTE ly great location on Coasl working conditions. Fults ton/ · Park The DAILY PILOT Is wide well bore navlga-movJes. (714) 761·1244. 640-lllO Hwy .. 2 blks. from the Good opportunities for ~neral Costa'Mna" The consolidating a substan· tion equipment. Lathe V IDEO CASTING Costa Mesa area cull beach, with ample off -advanccmeol. Exc:ellenl DRJVERP(f PAY THOSE WNttt ... Ana tJal ~ of Its distribu· experience helpful for SERVICE. (now in 4th ~1166. E.O.E. street partung. company benefits. Ex. CMtJSTMAS llUS more variety of proJerts. year). from Newpo rt Lo lion to paper routes re· Salary open. excellent PHAaMACY CLERIC SUUON REALTY lltrle~ desired. Apply Westwood . R etail WORK WHEN YOU IMMEDIATE ~uirtog afternoon de · benefits pac:ka~e. E.O.E. Expr'd. To work 1n 497·llll mpenonlO: WANT very by m o tori zed NEWPORT BEAC H clolhing store, receiving Openings in warehouse, OPEM11'4GS for transportation. Scientific Dril ng Con· MORTGAGE BANKING Corona deJ Mar. 30 hrs Real Estate ~)ol\9 lloiF dept. Good drivinll re-fad.ory &office. C.all Hpenlsory le••I •Liberal lnrome al · trol, Corporate Head· FIRM HAS lMMEO. per wk. Mon th.ru Friday. l'Ord & refs. rcqwred. quarters, Newpo rt 12::rl pm lo 6 pm. Refs. MIUt be 21. Hours are VICTOR s.c.t~Officen who lowance plus bonus plan Beach. C.U (714) SS7-9051 OPENINGS FOR req. Please call Mrs. ...-.&Sal•-• 1•• !-t1A t• ti'~ • 8 :30·1. Call Nancy. T....-•rSenic.H W91T PAY, wttta a i-a&ort..wortlng bours (7 ask for Mr. Moll oc Mr 11IE FOLLOWING POS. Young 644·7575 for In· We have an operu.ng an 2300 H.w llvd 6'4·5a10. 4341 BirchSt.Ste213 ,. .. d..tco ... _,. days per week> Ad.ams. LOAN SE RVI CE terv>ew bt wn 9: 30 aod 12 our Residential D>v. {or Newport Beach •Excellent partUme In· COUN~ELOR : Prior am. an experienced maa or CoetaMesa 556-8520 UIH Sl.00 TO $3.15 come &oao aervlclnC exper. de· woman poesessing en· Dry Clean ing counter slrable, preferably In And add your new ,.HOUll F or detail• contact Maids. apply The Inn at •PLUMIBS& thuslu m and ln~rity. COOl(jl.mca..o. help. f\all& Part Um<.'. pa ychecks t o next Foster OuelJet 496-6800 Laguna, 211 N. Coast mortgage banking or re· MAIMMEH. If you are interes in n 75&-9901 PIOMOTIOM between 9 : 30AM·7PM . Hwy, Lal\Wl Beach lat.f'd field. beautiful office in the 5 Days, call 548-7418 moolh's budget. CAM F'AY M-F. CLERK TYPIST: Ex-Top pay. Medical in-fmest location, working between 7am-12 Noon. Dry Cleaning plant needs cellent entry level pc>s&· suraoce, paid vacatJons with rongenlal a s -combination p resser. TO $4.25 P'IR HOUR Mail tJoo. Must type 45 wpm. & must have own truck. sociates. we are interest-COOKS-Pr ivate Clull 7S9-9901 GBIMAL OFFICE tMSPICTOR TlAIMH CLERK TYPIST : Will train. Call ed in meeting you. Jn seeks qualified sauce & Engu\et_r . design. p rr . Apply lo person Monday TUJMH Some heavy Uftlng to (Personnel) Temporary. 751-6942 tervlew by appcintment broiler cooks. 1·2 )'TS. ex Dependable, self ·starter per. a must . Call for electro · hydraulic <:OD· wanted roe COf1$terual one lo Fnday, SAM to 5PM To learn all ~aaes or in· stock shelves. Will b(! approx. " mo. may leaa w.-,1'4.T.ytorCo. al: tra ine d lo operate mto perm. position with appt.~x~. lrol systems. Retired girl office. Electronics ~lion. ust pass POl.ISHElt Realtors &M-4910 O.K. 545-1006 firm. Typ~ »sswpm. WELLS ical & back x-raf various mailinA fU\ure. D&GttlASIB --- COUMTElt HELP rvin e. E .O. E . Ca I machine ry. F.xc:e llent Salary ror all the above Part time ~ment rental yard Aptitude w th figures. FARGO 540-7G. benefits. including den positions will com · Deg reaser h e lper REAL ESTATE SALES man for ~nera\ ~ open. Call Mr. A. t.aJ pl.an. Apply between mensurate w 1lh exper. w/some polishing exp. Ucellled or we wlll train caJl~befllor es or appt. 557-6543 GUARD 2031 S.E. Malo. Irv aft2pm. duties. 2J1TS Har r 81. Sam-llam & lpm03pm. excellent co. benefits . you ror s tate exam CM SERVICES l~URANCE : Ftn Vly National Education. 4401 Please contact Person· Ltmited offe r . Call branch ol lrl auto ln5 Bircb, Ne~ Beach. neJ for further lnlorma· CUSTODIA.MS FACTORY ~Y . Whse. Girl Friday, tu.JI lime for PRINTING Causey "Co. 494-805 7 P /T 7-3:30 PM, F /T decoratln1 1tore . Will lSllW producing agency has <Near 0 .. Ai rport> Uoo. 640-45ll). E.O.E . bnmediate open'lhg UttJe or oo exper, work c-......... the following lmmed Equ.I OpportunlJy ex- 3-11:30 PM. Ex~rieoce. day or nilht. No fee. open .\ clou s tore. ~~llrT,.._. Employer. OMCIPOSmON ists for: RECEPTIONIST ~-Sao emeote Weekly pay. Start now, answer pbooes I& hel~ fllll:'-CA PllSS onRATOA Hoep. 481-LW. Informal environment, lmmed e>penlng for at no wall.in&. (Over 1.8) C\lltomers in salesman a OR Experienced prf'U ext 224 absence. Will learn to Noupernee. Maintenance man full job aecurllti advance t:w:tive receptklni.St ror Norrell construct • d ea I gn MondAy. Tuesday, Wed· Acdeler*s meot, rint c as medlcaJ ~ lO •rate multi· YoUDI dl'Damic devek>p Cuatomer Service. Fast time, rmo ~r mo. to 1250, 1850 preuea. s badea I& do so m e n esdayp Thund~. Ea_,belpM, but not M C start, N. ran1e Co. le dental pla.n. Bring us Sa lary w i ll co m -corp typ1nc so.a> wprn. ICfOWiaC Sl. John KnitB Temporary Services speclaJl)' &ewlng. Call Sa commens urate basic l)'= ak.111, au.en· ISJO.S700 a mo lo etart. needs a compeWnt self 5l5NOZl E.O.E. 10AM·4 M, CLOS D w/exf I& al>llltr· Call 7$2.2S73 Uon to t. ab~ t.o 1t1eneurate with ex· 549-3842. f73·7UO or come by. Frid~at pcrience. Cootact: ~ start.er ln U,. order depl. Fast FQ9d Mature Help 3 C u 1 tom Shade & uoww...,. Kat y Schm dt at MAMM9t fer YMCA allOW up on Ume. we ,_ t Servktq OW' coaat lo Dt•~~· ~ .:. HMl161 cw come Into our SUMMER Rf.SlDENT will tnJn for a variety of coast accounta involves bra m id day. Apgly Coaat y,C M. bt211 de. •l moo Brookbunt, CAMP localed lo San actlvltles. We are • Lynn Sttnstleld \ ANIMAL hea~ phooe contact Lynna 8ur1e r1, M S....A-.CA (714) 759-78$3 64&-lmG. ., Ste 218. fl'tn Vly . Brma.rdino lltn.s. Hous · ~ estabUsbed and Between S.m-Uam HOSP. Call cey 540-1171 GtlLRlDAY State Uc. No C 603G Ing • emc:ymHt for email compaoy Delivery c£/\lme AM . LA Female factory p~rs. F'ART·TIMI ~ ()pporturul)' INSURANCE Expr'd other-mem "'of famllr. lellini to music store3 Rtlcept/A&.SL N.B. F·Tor Time1 ellv. $100 P«!r 12JIO hr to start. ent Mornlnf It afternoon ~rM/F available. Summer ~ · t.br~t the world ~§~ P·T Incl. Wkndl/EvH. w~k. t.aavna ~acb. raJaes. 1537 Monrovia shifts, rool doak. for commercial liability and tlon only. Call 21 3/ Start le 10 up lo S67S ~ ~ Ave. N.B.548·5.W. bu."Y tax office. Please HairStrc:•t propttty penoo to han· ..._7063forappUcaUon lo ~ da.)"I. wri~ 1tatinc ~aUllca-die arcouota •nd market Then it'~'::loul D> Newport Ce nter Dr. l>Jo"l.IVER V If you nd a 1')oonl desk help. A~I)' in t1ona to Allen amood. Latte Salon, ookl~ for \heir in&urance. Salary PAY , N~Beach When Y'OU call Clusificd decnt pay P rr Job *4·'6 ~.~Judy. ,.,. CPA, 2041 Bualneu hair ,nru.t wlOt fo Jow· opm. Call ~1530 Make tboae good COMPUTER. F.qua.I <>ggor Empk>yer to plll('e an ad. rou 're ... br + E¥1 S-~. Mst Hotel. 497-4471 CeoterO. o:nust. 103. Ult. are#. Call Sualc, bcuehold lt.eD\3 i ov 're 81LUNO, aurod of a r lendly haveowntmap 1.()842. l.rvlne. . SISMn'l7 not ualn1 avaUa le to INVENTORY. welcome and help In Havuon,.hinA 100 want ULL k11e IWml wltb a tome oUJer family by ad 10.KEY EXP£1UENCE Mah cur abopglitl ~ your ad for but F\nd What &:, want lo lOltUT Claul ed adt do Sell thinp fut wtth DaU, l:laYe ~lo Mllf o.ib' PUot C&uailied Ad. vertlsl.q tbe:n for 1ale ln canboOlltatuUn1 pa ... --=the alll ~It. Call Now! Dal.ly Ptlot U1eds. lt..U.~a.. Pllot Want Adi. aa..m.ct Ml lt welt. ta-5111. Q...inid. Call &0·5678 ._._, NcwJ)Ort. PUotClau Ms, • Rilltaurant BOB'S NOMI OF THE •IOY lmmed ~nln&a IJl w lam1ly rl"11laurant 1t l'lt'arb)' localJooa w., re ~\.II'\' no Pf'\'' IW > ._.,.,._,r J11&0 our fnC"nitl.,, h'am l'ome ate u 111 tod 11 \i bt'tw~n ? .. pm •4-; T ........ CotMers -'73.11 Edina~ An II ff 23111.\2 A veruda ck I a C'ark>U.a Laa. H1lli. Walte1'llW1u~ C.5h1m. 4501 Campus Or Irv • •• .,.,..Ubel ~11 lr> Ill\.' A\.e l'\t<-..putl Ut·.arh You Ill'\' th(-winnt•r of Two frft Tlcbh t.o CIRCUS VARGAS F cb :?6th or :Mh 4 PM t>erlormanct: TheC1ty Shopping Center SA.ILUOATSAL&5MAN Orange Experience preferred Tu elf.um your ticket:i, K.ooa Manne 675·1403 call 642-5678. ext 272 .... ..:" 101 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CASH PAii> W•hr/Oryn Refrl.I a , woMul\l or not 9S1 1133 ~!~.: ......... ~~~.~I '°'° r~. ~rx 21, 1979 DAIL v PILOT n SM:lUFIC Cont.enl.I of' Yot Sale. 1ftany'1 of ,.,... .... A loClh. SH,./ Tl'WCb 9560 . ..........••••..•.... ~ bdrm bouav Conlury N e c 0 r p 0 r a t e ,.... 1015 Docb 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---HARGAJ UM<! rrfrl&•. w..tin, dr)ora. iiarur. bt-1t liuy9, W Mrv appl Helt ~ ~11. $36 •330 ::d' I II o m ti Furn Mmbnhp Call Debby 8 . ~ ;:;•••••••• •••••• • ... •••••••••••••••••••• '74 Mazda ltQtary truck _,., 944-9030 l>lao. fll! U:: c::::~:i MOJ'OR OR SAILBOAT Auto trao1. 11tcno . DES.K & CHAIR Com· WIHOOWSHAOIS C...E.SURPLUS63127'71 SUpUpto20' SSS/mo 233 c~llleU. iood colll :::I.Ip~':..::.:: Like Woodt'n a huttua . "-"lr()rgaM 1090 ~t. Apt C. NB f!>PM~wkdy11 att lnlnlbbndl . .woven woodf ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1---------" wtndow UoUq. 20-40~ UPRIGHT _puinoeJ SGS to ....._Speed & '74 G .M .C. El Cam1nu Haod1om• ocla,onal &""'· 21'. atdo by 1Jde. aame I.able + 4 h1·bactt ~. ttxturt."11 hnlJh 6 lllddle arm cham. Near mo okt. dnl eood. ~ new. _,firm ~ 7$1 ... ------Kol bed. br•nd new! Box aprogs . matt.\ steal rume ft booubelr hdbrd Sl7)/bcst orter. 5411-1349 Wuber. dryu r aale C()mplewly rebuilt. re· tlnlahed. y~ar "u11r Ottllv1•ry You1 c.-ho1~e S149 each Snle e nda ---------'J/7rt9 Su <;oast AP Everything must s o . lliJ..nt"t'A ~ 2M2 Couch s ets. desks. bookcUJS(.-s, lots o( rnlisc Mmtral fn>111 fn't' uprtght Call 675-1900 aft. 6. ~ 15ij cu fl Like N\'w, $116. Bt\2·&MJ. DuUng table 6 chairs Med ---Perfect cond 2 leaves . c.h 1035 $525/olter968-1076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l:lega.ot glua din.Ing tbl, ~f~lema. Sl.950. Grandi from Sid 9010 w/Gem top, spoke wbJe. ------~.:..::...::..:..;.S:.:1 S2.250 Rebld'g, re · ••••·•••••••••••••••••• ::;"~· bktseat.s. ~ typewri~r. xlt'a long ru».~·p. t~. • '78 K.ooa !O' day c:rwser. s:s.• sc.~' xtru carrlao N1a11ara HwrJD.~1t 400 F,ord·Panthf'r jet. · · recliner w/mauager l&lOHamdtoo Ave. HO Swim atep, bow rail, li'l'OOMC Dtlwu~. Air, 548 1074 536-8'175 hght1. cover. tandom PIS, w/sbeU. $3750. ..,.._., 8 A "~ CM&... 1093 l r Ir X l r a • h a r p Call ~5586. (8-S) • ~"'"' """'Y M achane. .__, S83X>/olr. Call 963-2963 also makes off11et •••••••••••••••••.•••••• '77 Ford 100. XlDt cood rm1tera. 714/Ma-7033 Ti o•p1Whatlow =:~sev~~ m1 o. ....... Frelcjht ••••••••••••••••• • • ••••I...;... ___ _;__;_..;;..:._;__ CCMltaltMn Cu•"" S./ '64 Dodge Pickup. Rbl• It.wt 9 I 20 trans. new rear end. Xlnt now ror sate. 20' & 40' ••••••••••••••••••••••• runruni eog. JlSOO/b~.1 lengths avail Call Rob 06der camper •·sale. w/o ofr. 646-3511, work 213!830.()370 truck. SISO. Stove &1_54&-__ 2400 ______ _ For Sale: AIR COM. ~ G--~ 8094 refng. 640-2700 '72 Ford ~T wtshell & hvy PRESSOR, s Hr. 3 phase ...... -""7 ~ dut R mot.or 2 cyl. Ingersol ••••••••••••••••••••••• '10 Dodge Camper Von."• Y susp. uns great, Rand pump. 00 gal. tank SKIS, K·2 233 short sx 160. t.oo. sink. st.ove. lg rerr1g. $1800, 497·»'15 $750 o'r best offe r Salomon 444 bandmgs elec. Ii gas. lg bed & tbl. V 642~ Sl2S.S36-7883 cabweLS$2000.540 1053 -tS70 ... -..................... ,. • • • TV, llaclo. Moforiud likes 9 140 '78 Ford Van converslon c .. ns Wah Hifi, St.rwo 8098 ....................... Has pwr. steering & Wat'f!ihou.<le ••••••••••••••••••••••• _...,.MO PEDDLER brakes, alr cond .. radial w.a-...uowia.1 JOIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9056LaCasitaAve. 25" c I IPL l I 11rtvv~ w Wd • 8 1 Ma~ twin bed ai maple Fountain Valley o or TV console New p EUG EOT M 0 ares. cru se control Open1npmthdullowmi.i a.n t:ng ul Dog desk &cbaU'.6'2·1648art Youarethewinneror RCA. gd cond. $1 25. PEDS Reg S469 No~ AM /F~ 8. t r ack & w /m l rro r pede:s ta I. 42X12 6 upholstered chrs . New. Cost ove r S2<XX> Sacrifice. 960-8920 Kt!g Klmalayan K1lte°' Blue 41 Seatla l200 Call64U828 1040 areas Jobs are avalJa pup Gooci ~o=1 _SP_M_._______ Two frff Tickets :MIB-~1 afters. $299. 631.:BJO · custom m~nor wtuch 10 ble 11:runed1ately loOts Ir McstM eludes icebox, ta blc . W~REHO\JSE small maruatutt apricot Two Salem Maple ster. to "-' '78 Honda Express. only carwts. swivel chairs PACKAGING male poodl AKC end tables. good cond . CIRCUS VARGAS ..,..,...... IS ma . S37S/bst offer. Uke NEW! Pri. pty. A FOODSERVERS S7S Pvtpty:... 5742 reg. lion $20 each; 45•· Feb.26thor28th ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549-4'174.SS1-0668eves sacrifice at $8995. Call LOADERS diameter round coffee 4·:J>PM Performance GeMral 90 I 0 (714) 537-5659 or (714 ) TI.RECHANGF.ES AKC Teacup Poodle pup· table, antique gold $25. The Caty ••••••••••••••••••••••• For Sale: Peugot Moped 637·31194. STOCK CLERKS pat'S. M/F also Teacup Call 642·4321 ext.250 Shopping Center w/surf rack. 370 ma, perl•--------- 1.ocated in lrvhw, Santa Stud service. 714/992·2178 days. 962-8437 after 5pm. Orange cond. $375. 4.944554 1977 DODGE V AH Ana. Orange. Raversade To claim yollf' tickets. pkup ad at pasteup. I rol 15 PASSEMGH Workownday11&hours A.KC Toy & Miniature ForSale.6foot couchand calJ642-S6i8.ext.272 x 4•" with heading of ~=-/ V8, automatic. pwr Call or s top in today. Poodles Puppies & 2piecesectional. 73J.S675 • • • boaung ·"run tf & 1s to 9150 steenng. air cond. & I<>" Everybody as welcome. adults. after6. ---------be first ad in the column. ••••••••••••••••••••••• miles' (349SAX) Never :i ft.'t. 714/7614265 Gcrap Sale 8055 For Sale: f\irnare, e ighty ~ Ml.ISi Sac. ·ro Yamaha 750 CALL FOR OUll VICTOR F'rfftoYou 1045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• thousand BTU. Near ---------Spec .• UIOO m1 Sells ror LOWPRICE!!! TenlpOrary Set"\'lc•s ••••••••••••••••••••••• One Day Only! Estate new. $75. After 4. ~-8361 ~ * • * $31.85 Will sell ror $2900. 631 . 1842 4341 B1rchSt,Ste213 M Cat. long hoar. Fem. Sale Sat 9AM·6PM. 4900 SX> f WaloceY 64.5-8594 . ____ __;._:_ __ -.1 Sporting Goods · need Newport Beach shorlha1r spayed cat. River Ave. N.B. Quallly sq. t. ~" tng pegged acJi •---------"A'-Cus F /T assis t. mangr 556-8520 Goodw/kjds.S46-86E9 household items. oak flooring, Sl 75 sq rt 86J9DarterCircle 1972 HONDA Els inore . .,....,,.. tomer Service tnunee & also PIT sales m s. Main <\ntique school desk. $30 Fountain Valley Entire Bike Recently ••• Sail cutter, full time, wall --------- tram. COHHRL CHEVROLET ~ ll.1rhor Bh d I I ~T .\ \1 i'-" \ 541>-1200 ~ J:~.ti~~cx~r.e° bf:S. person, preferably morn· Orange One yr. old neute red Jewelry 8070 Antique Coca Cola ice You are the winner of Rebuilt. Excellent cood. d1scoun IJtRS. lnqwre at Fron- 83 s., 2622 female cat. Needs loving ••••••••••••••••••••••• chest, $35. Push mower. Two frff Tlck•ts $1.000. Ca II eves .1...;;;=====-==-==;:: ~ s l a ~ X!n~ o~p trunners 1000 Bristol St. ~~~~~~~~~ home. Call aft. 4pm. 14.K Gold charm bracelet $10. 26" 10 spd. blke. $30 to 494-4747. or see at 462 St '75 f'ord Van.~ Ton ven Montgomery Ward: JN. Npt. Bch. Ask for -_75_1-0654 _______ ~~olold jade charm, _546-04m ___ al_t._7_P_M_. ___ CIRCUS VARGAS ~~;: Dr., L aguna ~=~~ & out'. Cail Forum lns Co. Call Mr oey. MwehcMdlse M Dalmation/G ldn ..,...,, .... t r.640-2202dys, Must sell trumpet. power Feb.26lhor28th Beldu>545-8243 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rlrvr. max. 1 yr old. _67S-4788 ___ e_ves_.____ mower, (r eel rronl 4:~PM Performance '78 BMW RlOORS, under ST~ GIRL Ir .... , 8005 Shots. Good w/children. U---"-j. 1075 throw). bicycles, <man's The City 8000 ma. Bes t orre r . Sales Clerk Res ponsible --.. .. ~ 3 spd boys• •-g I ~,,..A """'""""" C •tHI ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....,..,14.2. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . • ... Ir s vent.er ....,......., everu.ogs. '72 Ford Van: New eog. & trans. Custom mt. Many xtras. Best offer. Call Tony eves. 496--8 L97 persoo ~ed to learn ~ a HHDED --------• ---------Sdlwu:m & racing bike>. oge olC1ce supply business. IMMBHATB.Y!!! AntJqueMuslcBoxes! AKC Poodles. Adults . IAIYGOATS 8C2-8S33 Tu claim your !tickets. MotarHom.1.Sale/ Busy & pleasant work For retail s hop in SlotMachines!Clocks! To)'s&mtniatures. Naonles&Billies call642·56'18.ext.272 .... /Storacp fl60 "l'ODodgeCamperVan,:.. Beach SLalloners. 402 Fastuoo Island. Must..J>e 714/761-4265 l.6J7-IJMIO Newport Beach Tennis * * * ••••••••••••••••••••••• ton. sank, stove. lg refni.: Campus Dr N.8 . .__A I d b HUGE SELECTION Ask for Kns Club FUii Family Mem RENT: Lux""' '78 MolOr elec & gas, lg bed & tbl. _ __:_ ___ .:___ _ __. llUIUw e gea le in the .,_ric• FwNhn 8050 _____ __; __ ber s h 1p. 642·011 2. -.......pow-9040 -J Salesclerk· fiddoffashfon&beable .. 4.._.......___ 1080 c.u=--... Home 22· Sleeps 6. cabtnet.s$2600.~10~ DRUGSTORE toworka 5day wee k.On-lllht..atfoftal ••••••••••••••••••••••• -......,,.,.,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• W int /Sum rate s . '72 Dod Wiod V fi "·U t1'me. Mon· Fra. ly eyp'd _..,.,.apply. Call G---'•• • MATTRESSES ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17' B h M . 6t0-858S ge ow an ·u A ·~ _....., • LUGG 50sqydsplushcptw/xtra ay ner utiny '78. . 8 200, xlnl. s 2100 ' PortPharmac} or see Manager at 29 OpenWed.thruSat. Twin or full mattress AGETAGS thlckpad,deepbrwn. pd LJO Volvo eng. under For Rent: 20. Motor 847-6342. 2727Newport Bl vd N B. Fashion Island, N 8 . l.802Kettering. Irv. sets$56. from your business card. $500. less than 2 yrs old WlllT lnclds trlr, bristol Home. c o m rlc t c I y 1---------644 26S2 (714) 754-1777 Cewtwy Seod ooe card for each Xlnt cond, moved t.o new cond. Must sell. 645-1271. equipped. Avat Easter '68 DODGE SALEi Modef LI~ ~-m tag plus one spare. We home that has cpl. must """S'"" WlNDOWVA"" -·CHER nvns"' '78 Scarab-330 TS out· v•"' ...... "'~ .. ,_.,ORY F•RMS ''""" 549 3077 return permanently sell$2S0.556-2035 $1500 -,,,_ Exp. Eng. Major for lge AntiqueBa~berCbr.wood • sealed attractive taf & drives.8Shours.Loaded! '73 Fin?baU 19~'. Sips 6. ____ 549-1352 Discover the wonderful parochial hiahcchool w/porcelam, rechromed ·--------·I strap. meeting 31·r 1·ne Two Saiem Maple step 6S mphJilus. Stored on · b • 33 world o( ~h hes e •-" " •· phol-50 n eod bl ood tr ·1 t II/be f nu u.res. alt s. ,OOOmi, GMC · ~ '' · " Call Mrs Parsons. Mater ... rcu -· .... 1-:r>Sl 1.D. requirements. Pre . ta es. g conda· lll er. us se st o · very gd gas m ileage Gd 78 By appt only ~ourmcl foods whilt! 0e· H' hs h 1 s **I BUY** ventloss&theft! For 8 t~on $20 each : 45 " fer. cond.$6.500.645·7836. \'.an bas 27 factory op earoanJ? extra money ~ 1 ;f 11 '{i 00 • anta Antique Oak reverse S Good UM!d F\Jrniture & persooaliz.ed tag enclose diameter .round coffee 731 .. 216ta.o..I 1i t1ons. Eves . 645·7673 l'ff sales. Takml( ap-. . . desk $950. 642·2164 or Appliances-OR I will .wallpaper. fabric or table, anUque gold $25. 546-1200lworitt ~ Tnntt 9170 S'l(m. pllcat1ons at H1 ckor .)l l•--------·I 673-0782. sellorSEU.rotYou. ''Day Glo" paper •·we Call 642·4321 ext. 250 f ••••••••••••••••••••••· 1 ---------Farms WestcltCC Pl TECH ---------"' ~ ..... """' .. A...,-~ Ask or Jerry Perluns '77 G MC Van: l Tou · aza. MICIAM * * * MASTERSAUCTIOH will back & trim your ucy .. ,....,.......,, wterspm. TENT Trailer. steeps. 6. 00.am!; Fashion Island ""A... . LJAL•.1.•6&8 ''"'"·Or try two cards ~.... 195625'""·"'-e"at'neChns ...v\ ,.,,.Ar 6PM LWB. Fully equap'd ~ c.IC\.:•l'ODICS background. Sf.••V~ ---ll-9625 ._.. ---C r a r t'.,t~e°';d boat ••-·""~ Clean 1ns 1de & oul . 3yr. exper. minimum for 7661Garfield Ave. back to back. IMta-..ts 8083 ---------900-1628 ~ Deslt Medical Component Mfg. Huntington Beach PRICF.s: ••••••••••••••••••••••• (classic). nt673-7771. ..-Ser-rice. P.+s -------Ellp~odadng electGron1cs e-:;r~ ~~iiTu~ .• ~err':r Youaretllewinneror ~~~~~~~B~ ~~ii~ooea. Oarlnet: Uke new. $175. 23' Bayliner NissquaJly. &AccntoNI 9400 ~~~3!'n ~~~t!9~'r ~+~nre~~Jt'~ Bk~~~ ~a~ppt:~.~~~·~·~:BJO~~~~~~ TwofneTid&ets Century Model Home 610/9t.ags $1.SOea. Callafter6. w/ f\yUlg brdg. Loaded ••••••••••••••••••••••• Extras. See to a~rec ,..uu to ""·rn~..,,,,.., ormoreSl 40ea 640-9034 with xtras. $10.500. Call 6 nag n ms. four bole tor CM 71• 646 •9 .. A req 10 t:lect component .-u ............ ,, • · 548-1156 days, 675·2213 Capri or MG Midget. ... ... .... ve!. sales, pun·h or cust Tec hnician e l ectro CIRCUS VARGAS CA.SH PAJD ~J~~~ed ~FwHitwit& eves. 6'6-4064 _J_im _______ _ ~· Ht-Rel Ols tnbutor mechanical hydrauhcs . !ePbM. 26thp or2Slh Fer gd used furn, aot:i· Draw yoor own or send ...,...,.... 1015 Will ll '72 OM!vy. too many a t· ~~4/638-4541 Ask P/Tretu'e<IO.K. 545-1006 4: ..... ,,,:g~rmance ques&clrTV's9S7-8133 na~. address. phone & ~·cils .. t·········~·· I St' en iot.eresl lS' Mllotfor5* cess tollst. Call ror mfo ~pi,..a ,.! ter SO ~ff make ooe card per P ay cases. like Lre>'s mp an bwl I d o c k t o ••••••••••••••••••••••• 497""3tl. Sale1i1 persons wanted . 1be Bay. 303 M aan St . Balboa. Mens & Womens Sportswear Immediate Part llml· OJ)t!nlO~!. for W\lek-ends Call 673-5650. TB.EPHO.._.E .....,,,Or .... ""'n FA & LOVESEAT or tag. Add25teacb. new $225 ea. Call eves. Perfe oos 1 e pers on. 1""111 To claim Ya~; tickets. sMleeo1peerl SHlo19m. eCeFotuurryn Send check or money or· 492·!M82 collect. ect cood. 640-1136. ·~J£1 ~ W..ted 9590 -SALES all de derto· '78 MA.. ""' ctr I tSZO ••••••••••••••••••••••• c 642-5678, ext. 272 549-:.>77 • Lge heavy office desk. drk .... o -conso e. •••••••••••••••••••• • • • Newspaper subs. Your • * * '11.0T PRIMTIHG walnut ftnish. nght hand #US & 7 .s Mere engine '46 FORD WOODI E WE WILL IUY phooe,4to S hn.aday. ---------*QlllSALE P.O.Box LS60 ec retarlal throw . Ro~dpedruno,er dlx t rlr. Fullyrestored!SlJ.000 YoutlDATSUH S200 & up comm. wk. Antique Duling table can M * CoslaMesa,Ca.92626 $275/new. Must sell $75, equip or all fishing 675 6161 PAJDFORORN01' Exp. pref. Over 21 . I.D. seat L2. SlSO. 6 Hep· ~back c.-hrs sss.95 & 631·3634 aft6pm SlO,OOO. 754 -0368 TOP DOLLAR Newspaper Ent. 835·6453. plewhite chairs. SlSO. up. Oak Parquet coffee & O'Neill Supersuit. Taped ------'------. 78 2 4. Fl Yb r t d g e. Garage for storage. Can-FOR TOP CARS lto3PMOnly. Olherantlques.540-0303 end lbls s et $299.95 seams. Us ed on ce Three 00" waJ. dsks. one 22SOMC. Full canvas. nery Village. Newport BARWICK DATSUN SALES RETAIL. office supplies & slationary FulJtime poS'. avail: ~for appl 557-9212, T~ Truck Drivers ex-Applh•cn 80 I 0 ask for Mr . We s t per'd. Top pay. Apply ••••••••••••••••••••••• Saloon chrs, rockers . doesn't fitSllO. 548-0256 48" waJ dsk, 4 swivel many extras. mint cond Beach 675-4912Tues-Sat "'·ll •-bo . . arm cha a rs w /pads, 4 .-u sz matt... x spr· Carpet M1ll Closeouts armedslde chalrs. $l2SO. $1000 TOP of $171 mo Mel"l'edes Bem.1950 1705 ings $55. B&J Mattress, Nyloo Plusb $4.00 & up. valuefor$67S.CallHolly 6@-9401. Convert. Mus t s ee ~.111 lu.tr\ c .qu .... 11 a n n 8 31-1375 493-3375 NewportStatlonerslnc. G&W Towing, 7408 FREIGHT DA MAGED Seamstress s mall sail Ohms Way, C.M. 642·1252 HCYI'POlNT SALE. 3308 1 f E • • W. Warner nr Harbor ~~uw:/P· Full time. WantAds_..£all642·5678 SantaAna.979-2921 • ~3:.~~ 1st St .. S .A. S49-81Bl/67S-S906 95.S-22'1S. _______ ... SJS.000 or orr. Aft s . -673-6372 ---------1aassified Ads. your one· WANT ACTION? USED BOATS SECRETARY I GJ RL FRIDAY. wanted by in· dependent oil co. Salary negotiabl e , pho n e 646-9661. -------· SICllETARY Nauooal MortRage Ins Co bas challen1u ng pos aviul as Secy to VP or Mktg & serondar)' M kt Mgr Good secy sklll11 re· qd. Mortgage le nding bkgd desirable Send complete resume lnclud· mg salary h1SU>ry to PO. 2910. Newport Beach, Ca. 92660. Secretary. Immediate open in g for c hurc h secretary . Geo. ore duties. Hrs. 9-4. 979-8234 days, 56-1450 aft GP M . S SECRET ARIES $ G.0 ./R.E./Acctg $1J00.$1300 Ranfe Employers Pay AI Fees lli Reinders Agency GIO Birch St. Ste 104 Newport Beach. 833-8190 Call For Appl/F.atab '64 SF.cRETARlES Come work temporary with a company who cares aboul you Im mediate work-top pay. cau for an appotnlment. H7-0061 ~s~ o ffice • ~~overload Service Station Atttn• daot, exper'd . Oay 6. Ewls. f\lU Ir p/timo. Ap-Pb'. ShelJ StaUoo. 17t.b Ir lmne,NB. Sttvlce Station Attnd. ltledl'I exp. preferred. Qlevron Station. 3000 Falrvlew. C.M. Serv Sta Help needed Im· · med. f\IU or p/l. Apply .-0 E. c.t Hwy, N .8. .. Sell idle items 642·5678 stop shopping cent.er Classifed Ads 642·5678 FIND YOUR NAME Tickets Worth s 11 A return to the rich traditiqn of the circus as it-once was in America FEB. 28th to MARCH 1st at 4:30 and 8 p.m. CALL 937·0547 for Info. 150ANIMALS BEARS 3 HERDS of ELEPHANTS CW MPS WILD ANIMAL AC'rS THE CITY SHOPPING CENTER ORANGE Q ty Drive Edt of the Santa Ana Frwy. It'• eaay. Look tor your name and addreu In today'• cla1slfled ••ctlon. Call 142-5878, ext. 272 and we '11 arrange for you to pick up your tickets •t the neerest office of th• Over JOO's io stock ACTION BOAT l714J SJM891 26' Edycraft Sportfisher. sbp avail. Call Harvey 00-4644 SklpJack 24 ' flybndge, two6cyl 170Volvo. VHF. tnm tabs. sumlog + more, x.lnt rood John. 67>4229 Skipjack. 1975, 20·. open. lo hrs. xtras. $8900/ofrer 494-6671 or 837-44 74 '60 MG A. Good cond . LDnds ol back up parts. P>OO/Best offe r. Senous inq. only. Mike Perkins 714-551-Slt'D 1960sruDEBAKER Hawk Black wath )an mt Musl part wath fhlb weU cared ror car. v..s. automatic Pvt ply Ask for Mr. Falk 955·0235. 493-8887 '36 Ply • dr. $(.>(!an, Body xlnt Runs gd. '35 Dodge pickup. bOdy xlnt. Both cars Besl/offr or trade . 979-1257 or 962 1Ul8, ask for Steve 28' BayUoer Bounty. twn ---------200 Volvo. dual controls. 1936 Ford Panel Truck. hokllng tank. P /waoch. Xlot running. Ong. cond. I rad.Jo, etc. $31,000. Call $8500. Days 645-6284. 546-5139 Week nd s & Eves . loats. Rtttt/ m.o672 a-tw 9050 'fD Ford GalaJUe 500. Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. V-8, PS, PB. auto. Oiarter Luxury oo· or 75• Oragrnal equipment. motor yacht. Reasona· Make orr. Call eves .. ble. Hr. dally, weekly. "'."54&_4.5_12_. _____ _ 675-Zl72or67S-32S6 ~Race, loah. Soll 9060 Rods 9540 ········~·············· •...•.•.•...••...•..... 2 boat owner must sell 1976 30' Island er. 549-3598/548-4292. Hobie Cat 16 1971 full rig- ging w/trailer. $1,300. or best offer. 960-1339 aJt. '75 Bricklin Shows IOV\03 care. a rare white performance automobile unques - tionably a rme invest· mtnl Eqwpped with air doors, stereo system. Montgomery 11. Teak Int. =· Best Ofrer above custom mast, Sb~ sail, Pvt Ply Ask for Mr. Falk 6Pm 2 anchors. Seag OB, llM-0235, 493--1 $3SIO. s.-8528 , ____ _.;..;.. __ _ 4 Wheef DrhH 9550 CAL 2·29: BALBOA •-• .. ••••••••••••••••• DOCK . D1esel·wheel· • · auto p1lot·furllog Jib · • PLUS. 67M3'12 aft.er s. 2S'Qlrooado. Want quick sale. Under market al '6,500. Owner : 496-4024. cr?S.515. 9070 • •••••••••••••••••••••• S&ISAYAILA•I YAt NewPortt4&-0551 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR for top u.c;cd cars· foreign. domesllcs or classics. II your car is extra clean. see us FIRST! ~. ' #1 .. 0r-,.C-ty 1 292SHarbOr Blvd CaiTAMESA 979-2500 WE BUY CLEAN CARS &TRUCICS COHNElL CHEVROLET 2Ki11 I l.1rhor Hh ll COST,\ \H:S.-\ 546-1200 ., f j ' t I I Ac ccord lng to t Ctlilornl• BullinHt and I P•olHllions Code IS.c. 17100 10 171130) •II I pertona dol"9 tlulliMH I under a fictitious n•,.,,. 111u11 Ille • •l•l•rn<tnt I wlall ,,,. County et.rk I •nd 118¥9 It PllbllaMO i f our tl111•• In • ,...,.,.._ _..."" I •t• e In wl\ICll tl\t f bwltt•M ta locM.O. Tll• etet•lftent 11 t re.iulrect by I•• •ltd '' I -•Nl'Y If! ptOC.C:Clnt rour bu1ln••• n•"'•· Mott b•nkl r•qulr• Pf90f of '*"' lo op4lft OOlftlfttfelal ICCOUlltt, Th DAILY PILOT provld .. bOtll llllllf •ltd p11b4IC1tloft -~·· *• "'" aH tli. nece111ry 101111• •nd INllntlllt 1 dill~ Hrvlct to th• Orang e Coun1r Courttlcl-. EltMr ttOf> b' Ott e O f •ur connnl•nt offlc .. or . pllo1u .... l.IOAL OIPAlnMIN'T '°"321 111. :au ,., 111ore rMor111.-... llftd--. 1 I ~ CJ• OAaLYPtlOT 11, tl71 ...... l-1..W ~t.pe:W 4Mtet,UH4 ...._,UMd .. ...... .•....... ~ ..............•.•...•..•..••...•.••• ··••·•················· .•................•••.. ... w..w tlto ...... 1.,....... ~ .... ":!~............ ............ t740 ,.,... '161 c •• ttll ~ ttll ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_,,_ t7J:J ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE.Uy IMW t712 -·••••••••••••••••••••"fl llDZ ZtO D•l• I, "r.IToyOU.CorooaDlxSta "I'll SevllJe Ele1•nt.,, lo '7) Uod& Coronet. 2 Dr ....................... '11 Otoo 141 OT 1-ly ._aot Konomy t2' ml), WIJ\, AT. low Blue Ok ml, goklen bronie. com haNJtop Gd cood In/out, USED CARS CAJ.J.. PAPPY Ucied Car Mar 540-5430 2128 HARBOR Bl VO. COSTA MESA ,......,,,,=~ WllUY usec.ust "''t'i-. I.bl M• Chl>•ro&co dr,_a_&e~lp lo OW' lrHM Ault> Cttt&.cr Wt 1"W' UNll c.'AI'' JOI MACPHBSOM CHIVROUT tJ. Au.to <.'4!aJar Ori • C' IRYINP. 761-7122 --- WANTED! Lau• mod~I To)otu Volvw, Plckupt • \'a1u l&U U& today I LAST CHAMCI FOi lf71 UOl't SAVI! -.,.,-oe a..ASI NOW! ""' MOW ~I tlmitl'd DUmbc>r Qf l.l1ll .,. bl 11.t.all avatJ• .. 0.ll today I ll l..JCMO 49s.4t49 XJo't coodftioo lhkana .......... ~ famo.g, cw.tom ~<.iddl~ ••••••••• •••• •• • •• ••• • • ~ m11d S2700 (arm .AHaa-o 9705 Pvt Pt) Mk for Mr fo'alk -······· •• •• • • ••• ••• • • 95iS-023S. 493 8887 '74 liJ..fA ROMEO DatMt " 9720 G1V 5 s~. s tel'l'O, :ur ••••••••• •• •••• •• •••••• cmd. 4r IQw mile!. F.x· c~ll e ol cood1t 100 * z~s * , (840NXV). MUST SHiii HOWAltD Clte•r*t DISCOUNTED Dove 4r Qua al Sts. •; & COMPARE ~tl5\~Ac_:_ - -9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Fox. Xlnt cond. Must S e II . $ 5 9 5 0 . 833-07191833-7238. Audi '71 Super 90 Sta Wgn. Clean $775. 644~ ---- . - •DATSUNS• Larp SftKtloft Of Al Moct.ls SALFS-LEASJNG PARTS-SERVICE COSTA' MESA DATSUN 28.tSHARBOR BLVD · 540-6410 540.021 l '70 Audi 100~ Rbll eng & brakes. M1chebn radials. Hod.)' very good. Vinyl rool. AM radio Nds transmission Xlnt car•--------- for aulomollve student or mech. $600/bst orr. yel~•· ~ur o11r1n Atil FM t'aautu. Sl.250 SllOO/bott ofr puier, all opUooa. Incl lladio, A/C S'l9()0. Ph 113......, yellow/\an, t o rr, alnl work GU-'19S3 morl M50 dn, TOP Rud • m-rond •10,500 PP Lynch 17115110. evu ---------lSUl41.l 'GU Corona, rbll tn1 · !ill•tllO t725 Grut lran1portat100 -------••••••••••••••••••••••• aaao. t'll.Ot.aalK' l'L~t un tmMoo\'111 UllV Mod la no. arnvtna M U~I SU.I Dl<X MI LU!H MOTORS IJOW WurM•r,£ A ~7 ll.32 .... 9U7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... 1, HONDA Cars MA.MY To CIMI DM '"-1 UNIVERSITY a.-w.1e ~ C... • GMC Trsb 2850 Harbor lllvd OW.ta Me.a S.U "4U '71 Mf1/ 2.'50 4 dr Sdn 'QtoY w red iot p/a, p/b. amtrm. alt', .e oew Ul't!t M Int tond "61)(1 Call lJa Mu.atSeU f700 87"40'7 "12 Carina. 561< ml. new P1U)t.. LIPhOl 6 llrea Xtnt «JOd $1~.Callaf\SPM . ~ '76 sevllle charco11I arey w/ bUi Vfl)'l root. bile llhr 1ol New M1che llo1 , poke wheels. R oll1 Royce terlll , n e w tr.asmh11fon Looka 6 67 ', •uto. f•ct alr, runs m agnltlct.>nll y AMt•'M 1tert0. ' new ~ t7'7 $8,650 Call 957 2611 1"9dl•I». ocw iu 1hock1 ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • wkdys, ask for JoanAa. l~t11t1 eoud t'tnl S3llOO '73 TR1UMPH TR8 Exel , burl 6'4 00C» Condi . Lo Mllea. MUS'f 70 Cpe de Ville. Xlnl 1 St:LL lMEO Make Of cood. Leath 1ntr 1 llnS ak~edeal lteOJ 300 le r ( 4 21 so I> < 714 ) owoer $1~. Ph 496-9345 dtt'M'I, 38,000 ml.lei Xlot .,.,, U-. a .. o'ri , <'ond u a.oo o Days .wa·.-... rwy me. 76 EJdo, nice, full pwr 5*~1 evee*"8l92. 9770 Blk/grey. Mus t aell ' --VolllWOl)ltl m>O/het ofr 968-0290 . 'tll2at6E 4dr Clean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• New lJn:t 13,800. "12 VW Bus. C urtains, '76 Eldo CONVERTIBLE aill~alt.6pm carpet. fold Otsl bed, Showrm cond. 11995 50dlum valves $2000. _S!i-8423 _______ _ 'al2:1C>MBZ,4dr,tobaccu l)oug. 951·8444 ore, b "W PS '7S F1eetwood Brougham t•'r~a ··, ~wn'eror o~~ 67S-:MOZeves. Hard w flod mdl. Quab· rood $44:1().67J.4976 ·74 vw Bus. needll body ly, comfort. safety an work, rblt eoa. call beaut cood S8M A.slung '61 $ E rare coupe, Jow ml.la. x.int cood make otter 631 0210 dya . m1832tivaftwlmds. ''11$ J>O Coupe d1esel. Perf l OK m 1 S n•r ' f , 642-71.Sl. $2800 ~. 673-5004 'tBCahf Bug. Cuswmued. '76 SevdJe, loaded, qwck oocnpletely over hauled. ult.~ 2231ldays. Oxnes w /many extras _. S2SOO rum. S.Sl-6244 lllfli>6e/bamboo, $19,950. '73 VW 4l2 wagon. Good Olli 673-9336 c on d . M u s t S e 11 . .,,.. 9 730 S1850/bstolr. G4·2S21 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 9742 Mtow '978 " 1979 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JAGUARS XJ6Ls, XJ 12Ls &XJSCoupes Moet colors avallablt' for 11nmed1ate deU very TEST DRIVE ONE TODAY!!! IAUER MOTORS 2925Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 979-2500 BREEZY 1976 MG Midget, 15,000 m i's on r e bll eng, AM/l''M, w nne au, lug. gage raek, BRG .w/gold <kUul. $3550. See tn CdM or San C l e mente , bil--4400 work. 493·8325 altSpm. '77 MIDGET. AM /FM eass. 20M, $3800. or best. ~7SS2 '16 MG Midget. AM/FM. '76 XJS, 27K m,i, execµ lugg rack. xlnt cood. tiooal car, drkA>lu w/tan 2 1,000 ma. 831 -1801· toL$U,500. Eves675·0255 Opel 9746 '67 Jag XKE t'pe, good ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 VW, needs rblt motor , $300 or best offer 499-11 TI, 8-4 • :Ml. '66 VW W be bought by SO· meooe who wants w put California look In al. $650. oroCrer. 751-<Mim. <llOice of 12 In all colors & all ha ve a utomatic trans.. air cond., pwr steering & ALL have LOW miles < 162V AU > SAVE SSS coodluoo. $4200/bc.sl of-. 7 0 0 I? e I G T . N u fer.551·5050 Machellns, AM/FM 8 9732 track stereo Good cood. Jemett $1800/bst ofr. 962· 7593. 76 VW Rabbit, 4 dr. dlx int., AC, xlot cood .• $3.650. 642-8580 dys ·CONNELL CHEVROLET .'>Q14 ll.1rhor Ill' d 1·1 ~1 \!\H_..,\ S46-l 200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Linda. Jensen Healy '74 White ---------m VW Squareback, xlnt --------- w/blk wp. Convertlble 71 Opel GT, 4 speed. m e ch cond .. $800 . Orlrolet 9920 Xlnt cond. 14,000 ml. Yellow, ruce car. $1650. 642-8580days ••••••••••••••••••••••• $7500. 673-2906 o r PP 544-S316 •72 vw BUS. Rblt eng. 213/~. Porsche 9750 new brks & radials, FM K~tinGWa 973l ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereoS2100. Pb64.5-2374 •• .. ••••••••••••••••• • '73 914 2.0 Xlnl. cood. 'TI Scirroco, sacrifice, lo ...... _ .. _00....•·-· ..... ___ ~ '71 FOUWA.OM ..,awww•Stfi're" V8, automatic, pwr steering. factory air cood , AM/FM stereo. luggage rack & ONL V 8.000 miles! OO'TVOZ>. $5771 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR llLVO CO~TA MESA 642 0010 "IO Ford Sta. Wgn, good cood.iUoo $550. :>52-9260 alt6PM 'Ill Tonoo, auto, PB. PS, A/C. clean. gd cood: 1815 farm. 631-3020. '75 LTD Bro ugham , loaded, wht. lo mt. 641).lJ96 after 6PM. u.caln 9945 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.977 Lincoln Town car F).ally factory equipped Plus much more $9,500 or best. Call nights after 9PM. Ask for Bill 673-3462 1979 COIT ''IWINSHIFI'' 10-SPEED ??77????? I FOllWAIO. 2 UYaSI snas CALIFORNIA'S GAS MILEAGE CHAMPION• MaYerick 9947 '74KARMANNGHIA $4,900/best offer. Dy mi, s tereo tape, AC. Sharp, xJnl cond. $3, 700 64& TI41 Eve/Sun 559-6442 63l·S870 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 43 MPG 26 CMrrYPG 499-42M 1 od --------900So.'"--tH '70 Mavenck 2·dr, P IS. HIWAY •-...:... '78 924: X nt co · s 1 .-..-PER BEETLE -wv. _._ Maida 9738 oo( /f te $1000 "'u ' air, radio, good tires. ;;~:~~·;;~~·~;~:m1mm:r.r.ti~rnn"l•I ....................... ~e:;;;ar~e~. 7~0sss ~~~~.~l~~ very L?t':-1 ~~ Good cood. S850. 644-9583 l .... ~~E~PA~&~1~"'1~-;V;OUliiM..._fi~M;ey~VWV~:-.. .. 5:12-8375 New Cl\S? .. trans .. rear. ".~ .. 1.;100~ .. ~",,,,.....,.~~~lll '72 911 lo/mi, xlnt. cood. ,74 VW Super Beetle, _•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_•_• ~••••••••••!!.~~ NII QUR New pa.ant and brakes.1~·-~·"~-~.,,~-~~"'~' ~1 ~,,.~ $8,500 . 494-3672 or f\M/FM 8·tk, very.lo ma, '14£ lUl' ~~ l \S Part.Jally reupholstered.,'!!! 661-1161. ask for Darlene. . x1n ad $3 00 NOV As ORANGE COUNTY'S n• Th.ls car IS road ready. "We need lo buy clean nu ti.reS, t con . l . ' NEWEST l"Q\,: 64&-4064 Datsun used cars" '78Targa, met. copper, all SJG.2785.5J6..8405 OIOiceof tO. All colors. 2 lJNCOl..N·MERCURY \Q-SP££0ptct"' ~1"1lJ' A.1R $Will Pay Top OolJar S 2150 H..tMw ll•d. extras, l2K mi, sUll uo· Volvo 9772 doors & 4 doors. All with DEALERSHIP ~ i\.I" ~ ••••••••••••• !?.1. Costa Mesa 64s.s100 ~~.~~~~~.r;1J· ·······vOl.vo······· =~~cra~~rul& ::.~~i ~~~~~ c ll&QSl S & ~10UNO' COSTA MESA DATSUN CONNELL · 1974MAIDARX4 Porsche 9ll·T 1970. Mint bave8.U'cood. An exam· 16-JBAutoCeoterDr. ~~~~~"!'~~'6U"'~&~DJ~::·"-iiiii __ . SPORT COUPE rood. l owner. 510;000. or SALES, SERVICE pie: (281RS0). Now only SOFwy-Lake Forest exit ICl"lo..t1Qh\ 1 ~ 4s peed, vinyl roof, radio, best olfer. 675-7737 aft. ANDI.EASING $3996 lRVINE ~ 11' beat.er & radial tires. 7p.m. OVERSEAS OEUVERY 130.7~00 <5521..GS) · -.60--Po_r_s_c_h_e .-R-o_a_d_s-te-r EXPERTS 2845 HARBOR BLVD. . 54G-64 I 0 540.021 l &1st • ••OADWAY New79280ZX Arr. PIS. 4 SANTA ANA pass. silver L ie. pd. SZ 171 '72 Col. Part 9 pass. wag. Q>overt. Mint. $9500/ofr. White, fully loaded ! CHEVROLET ;.!lQ)I 11.H l10 r 111 • .f l I ~·1 \ \1 E . .., \ 835·3' 71 ru.347 5.'1).64()9 THEODORE Pb 642-8683 EARLE llCE Xlnl! $2,000. 675-n61 fH( Ulnll&A re OlllYIHO MACt+IH[ -•USED IMWs• '7320024 s~ (384.JSP) '732002Tii (187JJL) '762002S/R (497PHJ> 'TIS:.>: 4spS/R (0179) 'T76."llcsl4sp <TRS962> "186.13t'sl S/R (0045) '78320. S/R (910UKU) VOLVO $181.82 PER MO. 1966Harbor Blvd. '77 280Z 2 + 2 TEST DRIVE OUR 646-~6~ :.~~467 6 c y I. a u tom a t I C • •u C .a. 11 AM/FM-8 track stereo. ~ ,_ ... ...--.ECOUMTY (Ca t $8500 OF ~ YE •1•• ~ mags. p. COS • Ins; A Cap. Reduction $1500 ALL MEW 1979 Good inventory in stock. VOLVO Residual S4000. 36 mo. at MAZDA GLC Coif Hurry while they la.st! EXQ..USIVEL Y VOLVO $181.82 incl. lax on ap-~1_. Hatchba Is. MIRAC&.E Largest Volvo Dealer 9755 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROBINS . FORD '.2060 HARBOR &lVO. COSTA MlSA 642-0010 S46-l 200 '78 Zephy r Villager Wagon: Loaded. Low m1 . 1971CllevelleSS4-spd, 350 $SS95/Make ocrer 962· 1886 eog. A/C. P/S, AM/FM ..... mg 9t52 vin. root, $2000/or best. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 846-2197 *** DebraZ-n 'TI Mustang V ·8 good cood. $4.500. 64.5-2372 lo/ml Closed S..ndays p r o v e d c r e d i t . > .....,_ 91 c In Orange County! -------i (OIGTWP) $100 DOWN M~~:,~t,~~T BUYorLEA.SE BEACH LEASING plu.stax&license COSTA MESA DIRECT 9563 Pettswood Hunungtoo Ql!ach You are th..wl'nner of Two Free Tfcl:eh ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOB McLAREH's 4019~;~~:s1~\:·203 ~~i~rxiJ.~~~~;~ --19-7-:- 4 .-6-EH-5-7-:-~-L-T--"~·~~ 9 . Deferre d paym e nt GTLDaUXE ----------'76 2fK>Z 2+2. auto, aar. price-$5205.04. £quip· 2025 S. Manchester w CIRCUS VARGAS '75 Toronado . Bristol cood. Cruxz C. & all ex· t:ras. $6400. 962-7033. ~Supreme; air, . steer ., good cood. .968-6208 AM /FM· s72oO/Q.ffer · ment includes 4 speed $I 00 DOWN Anaheim 750-2011 850 N. Beach Bivd. 498-!i963 aft S: :Ml. transmu;sion & fold down pl~ tax & license Feb. 26th or 28th 4::MIPM Performance The City Shopping Cent.er Orange La Habra '74 2QJZ 2+2. Absolutely rear seat. (008590). Tbc $104.41 per month for 48 'Tl Volvo 264GL, all ex- <At Beach& Whittier ) incredible sha pe! 27.000 cashpnce iJonly months on approved tras, 14K.mt-must s~. '79TORONAOO 4M ma. Char grey blk. Leather, sort, loaded. 847-0R aft 6PM. (7141522-5333 m a. As k 1 ng $5995 · ~. $3820 credit. APR·l 2.98%. P.P. 751·5106 Closed Sundays 631-0493. plus tax & bcense Derer r ed Pa Y m en t -.67-V_ol_¥_o_l.22S __ . -runs--g-ood-. ~To claim your tickets, call 642-5678. ext. 272 *** ~~~~~~~--!'76 Datsun B-210 Htcbck Mlrode pnce-SM27 OO. <3025895> $400 or bes t offer. = Xlnt shape. S2.200 Ca II Cash pnce is 759-lG '77 5301. 4 spd nrf. 714 /552·8029 or 21.SO~:t:~J.M . $3972 • •••••••••••••••••••••• '61 IMPALA ~Pinto Wagon V·6, auto tt57 AM I FM cal> s. AC 213'920-6682 L 4.,5700 plus 1.ruc & bcense Burgundy Sll.900 or as ---.------v ~ Mirode ::.ume lsc. $271 mo '67 1~ Sports Car Very m.:nO? res, 833 0433 or~ ROOd cond Ask_an 1 g $1.750. '71 RlOO . Xint transport a · Mmda/R.....et Callafter45527 38 Uoo. MUST SELL by 2150 HarborBlvd.,C.M. '71 2002. snr'f fu lly · We d . As king $375, 64S.5700 restored, 90K, $3400/bst Want Ad Results 642-5678 548-J.Jro 631·2561 eves. 6-9 p. m -;::;;=--========!1-i~~===-=:;;;;1 Rois Royce 9756 Ask for Chris SEEK & fJND• GROWING RICE •••••••••••••··~··••••• "l DEALER IN U.S.A. *** s.tdsY-....• 9946 Camrose Care le Fountain Valley You are the winner of Two Free Tickets to CIRCUS VARGAS Feb. 26th or 28th 4::MIPM Performance The Caty Shopping Center Orange To clalm your tacket.s, call 642-5678, cg. 272 ••i i6 SKI 1. 4 spd, sienna brwn. tan inter. srf, p-w, a/c. amJrm cass. $10,000. MWSa>. "12 2002, sruf. AM /FM, 57.000 mi' $4250. 673-65S9, wk 497 ·ZlSB The fatal draw in lbe Wal. . .a Dally Pilot <laulfied Ad. "2·5678. C C E L 0 I E C I R 0 N A L P U C C R S L S 0 0 Y V M E S S R S I L T H E W I C T A 0 L C A L E G E G E H L R I H T E E D C A N R V W E N V 0 L E S S P N S A Y 0 0 V E T V S N l 1 C T R 0 T I P S G L 0 L S E U R N R L E T P E A A P A P A 0 T L R P E D I L D A 1 C E L I L N S T N K 0 L L R E M N E N R C P K I E M E N R B A L K N I S I E T E L He 0 el As ET IE c DH c .R s y C E S S L R E C S P T L 0 C E N C Y E B R 0 A D C A S T E M B 0 R E R S l S L B S G E L B I G R 0 W I N G I H 0 R 0 T E R B 0 R L R I N E L G S C I N B E S T B 0 A 0 B L E L D 0 I S E N K lnelM:tlons: Hlddetl words below IPPf• fofw9rd. bee*-• wwd. Uj), 6-1 °' dllllllJNlly. Find""' end boll It In.~ Tilltn Stem Bo11n Plddy -' hnlde Bobolink Lev. "' Spiktleu Seedlinga Up1111d Ra ~ Bi.rt Orlll Ctylon Sedoll BNlldmt Chl11t Tomorrow: Fortitl Sonia .Mtos. Mew tlOO ....._Mew 9100 ______ .., NEW BUSINESSMEN Contect the DAIL V PILOT tor klfofmetton r•oarclng ,.._ county requirement• tor uelno • FlctJt1ou1 lualn ... Name. 142-4321 DT.m ROY mR CARVER ROLLS-ROYCE IS40 J•mborff HewllOf't IN• ell \'---~ M0-6444 ClOSED SUNDAYS '69 Sliver Cloud 1 $19,000 1165-4144 1961 &lls Royce St!dan, fioe cond. Elegant white $20,500.~. '71Shadow. wh1te. low m i. sunroof. vnyl top. Extra sharp. $25,000. 631-1266 days 67s-4840 eves. Toyota t765 ....................... llFOIEYOU SB.&. YOUI TOYOTA. SEE US! MAllOUIS TOYOTA MlSstON Vl EJ 0 lll-2110 495.1210 '72 Corina: Brand new trans . Good cond . f700/Best ofr. 640·3567 dll)'!I. 492"8498 eves. MOW IS n41 TIMI for job aeeken to check the OaHy Pilot Help Wuted clualflcallon. ff tile Job you wut 1a not tai.re you ml«ifK coattder ClfferiQI your aervlce• wtt.h an ad lD the Job WMted caLelOtJ. Pbooe 8Gll7I '78 4 dr. Sedan. auto. an, 10,000 mi. Xlnl cond. 540-1893 Must sell . WAGON tram, 20mpg. low males. Nds. TLC. Runs good $2900/offer . C 714 I Power. $999 cash •-8625 after 5 p.m. & 642·9489/646·5201 aft -weekends . o r (7141 ..,._ UMd 5PM $1000, ext. 307 wkdays . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Ill Nova Good . '74 Pinto Wagon. AM/FM llild& 99 l 0 best olfer. 557·2911 aft stereo. 8 traclt. etc. $1600. •••••••• •••• •• • • • • • • • • • 6J>m/ · Ph 960-37zt 'TI Electra, aJI extras. -.73-R_una_bou--t.-G-ood--c-o-nd-. good, clean cond. $5,995! Olev '75 lmpala 2dr. New $1200 645-6284 Days. Call Art ~. shocks, One owner. m.1000 873·9187 Full pwr . Lo ml . 979·0672 Weekods le Absolutely Xlnt cond. Eves. ~ir?~~, '#ft~· ro:~!5d ~5646~ v l p t y .,., --,_--..... -----,-,-6-0 w/every accessory possl· ••••••••••••••••••••••• hie. l ownr 644-5248 '11 El CamJno SS454. xlot '74 2 dr Duster. XJ.nt cood. 991 S cood, very lo ml, A/C. Pvt Pty. Best Offer. Clllllac P/B. P/S, AM /FM 8·tr.k 548-321.S .. ••••••••••••••• •• •• • • lo dash cstm body & paint. 2' sets o.f wheels '7S Ply Fury Sta Wgn, High perf suspension good cood. $25SO. ~-9260 Must see to appreciate aft6PM. • • PURCHASE OR LEASE YOUR MEW 1979 CADIU.AC NOW! • $4500. Call 536-2785. -,...._------,-,-,-5 536-8405 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chi pier '925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '87CROWN IMPERJA.L ~ '12 Newport. $1350 or bst dr. Lo mi. Aller 6 pm, 50438 '78 Cordoba. Rich coco bnm. all extras, 17100. ~ dys, 551·0020 ev c.,........ tno • •••••••••••••••••••••• I t75 POMTIAC NElllO The s harpest one lo town! V8, automalJc, au cond., pwr. steering. stereo. vinyl top & rallye whee.ls. <MUXG>. 11.EADYMOWUl CONNELL • CHEVROLET '-"' li.lf1••' I 4 I ..... j \ \1) S46-I 200 1967 Lincoln ~ntlnental . NAB,41'.:'RS &&.<XX> miles. . '77 Sk.)'binl. Stereo, T·top, ~ 64&--4064 xlnt cond. 28,000 ml. • •Cool . '79 MK V . tl6100/orbstolr.7S4-8941 LOADED. l84S ml. P/P. •70 Bonneville, as ts. Beat $13,950 beat offer . offer. 2600 ~rt>or 8lv<1 n4/644.-9217. ~ (0$(4 Ne.i. 540-9100 '!!!!!!!!!!!~~~ '71 Mark V. ipldnilht '11 Pontiac ror 1a1e. ate. .: blue, l>e$igner s Serie1. nu brka. mk ofr car at '71 El Doredo: retlr d &oeded Ind. moonroof • Bch/Atlaftt.a 10 frotlt ol G.M. f;xecuUv&. Owner l..-33.000 mtles.18495. '** 53M014 drtwn only. Pnme cond. OtPvtM9$ -~~:;J>bone. ... tt74 ... --7883 pe.rty. _.,_,; eves ........... ~Z391. • •••••••••••••••••••••• "It eedall De Ville. Good is Hatdtbadl. UM mt :::d1'oo P•Vt1. ?:.,~&:.::.in =~u':~~~· • SEE THESE DODGE ECONOMY CARS TODAY! •0-24 •CHALLENGER •OMNI •D·SO PICKUP '73 DODGE 1200 S....YAM Yellow v ·8 . automatic. air, high back seats. mags. (51539P) 174 DODGE 1100 S ... YAM Blue . 6 cy l .. auromatlc. high back s eals , mags (037618) 54195 53995 FOR FLEET & LEA SING CALL PETE RYAN SE HABLA ESPANOL ' l I ) l 1 7 7 17 . ' I ! ,, Huntington Beach Fo11ntain Valley E D l ll O N Your Home town Dal ly New~p a perl VOL. 72, NO 58, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDA Y , FEBRUARY 27, 1979 TEN CENTS l Huiitington, NeWport Bae~ Marina By MlC"HAEL P ICl\VICff Ol•o.11.," ..... ~ C'oall M •11•' p1u h fo r a 3,000 aJlp oo t m nna alona U\t' Santa Ana Raver hu~ drawn sup port from th ma)ot, of Hunt l11aton and Nt•w1x.rt flt\acb Tht! marina on the> ('It ·, "nice lo bne" h t for more tha n 20 year.-uliso has t>nv1n1nmt•n tahsb worrlt'<i .1bc.1ut dc~truclJ011 of a rare sall mur'h that ~ bomt- to an endangc-rt"d 1>t•c1e11 of N1 bird T he huddin1t d~vetopm~nl versll!i en\ 11 onment battle may 10 no farther th n the U S Army Corps of En1<1ne rll, which stall plan!' fo1 • munna lc111> nood t'Ontrol cha11tlt'I i.lone thl' rn .. c-r bc'<i A C~ta. Me..,a bUbcomm1ltc compn.ed or coune1lmen Ooon Hull and Dom Rae1h will ..sk ('oq):i ofrtc1als to cOnl>1der tht' marina al a p ublic bear ing Wednesday night in Carden Grove. "I think it 's a fantastic idea," aaya Huntington Beach Mayor Ro n Pattinson. "I think the marina ls down the line a long ways, but I'll lend my assistance wherever f can.'' Pattinson backed Costa Mesa's luring of Ken Sampson, former count y d irector of Harbors. Beaches and Parks, to serve as a city consultant ror tbe marina bid. A more caulious endorsement came Mo nda y from Paul Ryckoff. m ayor of Newport Beach. "I believe our council en- dorsed the plan several years ago and there's been no official change," he said. "We're not involved dir~Uy," added Ryckorr. "My personal feeling at the morpent would be neutral. and probably favorable, if the traffic impacts prove ravorable ... Barbara Massey, a member of Amigos de BOlsa Chica, a Hunt· ington Beach-based environmen- talist group, •is less concerned about traffic impacts on the Harbor Area if the marina is built. "We've already d estroyed many valuable salt marshes to build marinas." she said. "and , this is one that can be restored." \ Mrs. Massey served as a coun·; ty biological cons ultant for a re- port on least terns, a sea bird so named because it is the smallest or the tern family. The endangered birds are making a comeback because or a fenced-off nesting area near the mouth or the river. The birds favor the Hant· ington Beach side of the river <See MARINA, Page AZ> Viet Claims 2,000 Chinese Killed APWl,..pMto Leonard Woodcock, former president of the United Auto Work ers . has s urvived Senate opposition to Presi- d ent Carter 's China policies and was confi r med by a n 82-9 vote as the firc;t am- bas sador to. Peking since 1949. Skipper Held On Drunk Rap After Blaze A Huntington Beach skipper, whose boat caught fi re Sunday night Wlth fi ve children and a Newport Beac~ man a board. was later arrested by Harbor Patrol deputies who said he was drunk and passed out when the fire broke out. William Hutchens. 40, of 16150 Tortola Circle. also faces a rharge or endangering the h ves of children. deputies said. His 38·foot craft was about three miles off Sunset Beach on the return end of Catalina Island voyage when an electrical short touched off the blaze al about 9 p.m . Sunday. Passenger Kevin McCarthy, 32, of Newport Beach. radioed for help but the fire was out before a Coast Guard cutter ar-r ived. deputies s aid. Damage to the craft valued at $80,000 was reported as minor, but it had to be towed back to Huntington Harbour Ther e were no injuries. Hutchins. however, was later booked at Orange County jail where he posted bond and was released, authorities said. Payback R ef U8ed LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A group of well-paid lawyers in the attorney general's office bas re· fused to pay back $68,000 in a~· cidental salary overpayments. the Los Angeles Times reported today. The state contends the money was disbursed in a pay mixup that affected about 500 slate wo rker s including janitors and window washers. I JOBLESS JUTE DIPS IN COUNTY The unemploym ent rate in Orange County rose to 4. 7 per· cent tn January, figures re- leased by the state Employment 1 Deve lo pme nt De partme nt <EDD> show. • But despite the .6 percent In· crease ln unemployment from December's all-time low or 4.1 percent, the count)' employment scene drew favorable notices lor statisticians for EDD. Story, Pace A.9. .. Gasoline Rationing Plan Told WASIBNGTON <AP > The E n ergy Department made public today proposed standby plans it has sent to Congress for gasoline rationing a nd other fuel-saving measures to be used only in a serious e nergy emergency. The plans were sent informal· ly to key congressional commit· tees Monday night. Department spokes men said they would ~ submitted 1ormally to Congress Thursday. To be adopted. the plans under a 1975 law must be approved by both the House and Senate within 90 days. If gasoline rationing were ever needed -and department of· fi cials say they see no prospect of it in the foreseeable future rationing coupons would be is· s ued to owners of registered vehicles. The coupons could be sold or transferred at will although the government would have a uthori· ty if necessary to impose price controls or other steps to pre· vent excessive hoarding, anti- competitive practaces or other dis ruptive activities. The standby r ationing plan did not include any specific gallon limit for individual vehicle owners. Officials said the limit would be determined at the time r ationing is imposed, according to distribution formulas and the se rious ness 'Of petr ol e um shortages. The Energy Department has denied publis hed re ports that the rationing plan provides for a limit or two gallons or less per day for each registered vehicle. Also included in the standby plans made public today were restrictio~ on weekend gasoline sales. temperature controls in commercial and public buildings and curbs on unnecessary ad· vertising lighting. The president can put the standby plans into effect when he declares an energy emergen· cy exists, but this move can be blocked by e ither house or Co ngress. Stooping to Help A hydraulic device that will help the e lde rly and t he handicapped board mor e easily is featured on this ne w Orange County Transit District bus. It is one of 65 new, 48-passenger buses that soon will be in service on routes throughout the coun- ty. <See related story, Page A9. ) The bus can , in effect . kneel down to make that first step an easier one. Pet Birds Embargoed Neu:c0$tle Dise0$e Brings Move by Hawaii By J ACKIE HYMAN Oft ... DAily Pllet St.ti Hawaii has put an embargo on pet birds from California as the result of an outbreak of deadJy Newcastle disease in and around Orange County, a U.S. Depart· ment of Agriculture spokesman said today. Dave Goodman, public in· form a lio n o f ricer for the N e wcastl e Tas k Force of veterinarians set up in Santa Ana, said the pet bird industry within Southern California is also grinding lo a halt. This Means You'." Goodman and a parakeet in Riverside said . "No breed er is buying have been traced to the same anything from anybody or mov· Southern California wholesaler, ing anything near his birds." Goodman said. "People who are thinking of H h ·d t 't getting birds are not buying o wever . e sai 1 1~n them right now. and that ·s-known Y.et whether the birds good, .. he added. became mfected there or were Goodman said he was told or purchased from the sa me the ijawaiian e mbargo this source. morning. In the meantime. he said. bird So far. three birds have been owners would be wise lo keep diagnosed with the usually fatal their pets from contact with disease. which could devastate other birds or from anyone or the caged bird and poultry in-even any vdicle that might dustries if it spreads. have had contact, since the dis· Fierce Battle Rages BANGKOK. Thailand CAP> - Vietnam reported fierce fighting today in the northwest corridor to Hanoi and said its forces wipiEut 2.000 Chinese there fro ·day to Monday. T official Voice of Vietnam said the fighting was concentrat- ed in the Cam Duong area which sits astride the Red River delta corrMlor which runs from the fro n tier to the Vietnamese capital. C Related story Page AS > The broadcast also said two more Chinese companies were decim ated in Lang Son province northeast of Hanoi on Monday a nd another 250 Chinese soldiers were killed or wounded in two days in Phong Tho district of Lai Chau province . President Carter called on China to undertake "a speedy withdrawal" from Vietnam, in a m essage g ive n to Chinese l~aders by Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumental who is visiting P ek ing . It was the bluntest statement of American opposition to the war. But intelligence sources in Bangkok noted that the Chinese showed no signs of a withdrawal after 10 days of fighting and in fact were reinforcing troops in some frontier areas, including Lang Son. No figures we re given. but Hanoi has claimed its troops have killed more th'an--18,000 Chinese s ince Peking invaded Feb. 17. Inte lligence sources consider the kill count inflated. China has not given casualty figures. But in one of its few re- ports on the war the official Hsinbua news agency said today that a Chinese unit was cited for "meritorious service, second (See VIET, Page A2> KISSING CAVSE Of' TOOTH DECAY? ADELAIDE, Australia <AP> . A.n Ad~laide University scien- tist 1s trymg to determine if kiss- ing can s pread tooth decay. Dr. Tony Rogers, a senior lec- ture r in oral biology, said in a school newsletter that experi- m e nts indicate s aliva can transmit decay organisms from person to person. Earlier today, E nergy Secretary J a mes R. Schlesinger a ssured the nation's governors that gasoline rationing would be used only as a last resort. ·'Commercial bird farms have posted siitns saying 'Keep Out - All three birds cockatoos ease can ~ transmitted by or· from Stanton a nd Paramount ganisms in dirt. ------------- ,,.......-----Kitty Up a Tree ------- A Keal Cat-astraehe By J ERRY CLAUSEN Of .... .,..,, ...... s- When 17-year-old Theresa Martin called the Daily Pilot's Huntington Beach bureau Monday about a cal stuck in a tall, tall palm tree for three days, it sounded like a great story. . • THE AFTERNOON was slow. "Nobody ," said Theresa, "will get the cat down. It's been up there for three days, just meowing and meowing. We don't know who it belongs to. "Yes. I've called the Huntington Bea ch Fire Depart- ment. Yes, t he Huntington Beac h Humane Soeiety, too. And the police de- partment and the county animal , shelter. "Can you get someone to help?" AHA, THOUGHT I, an animal In dlre straita. And no public response. Checking for myself, I learned from the fire department that It no lon1e.r sends ladder trucks for animals In cuus.-. treetop dJ1tress. Too costl,y, and too dangerous to tie up a rig that ml1bt be needed in a real emergency. Lt. John Foster of the police department was caadid. • • • • • .... .. ' I I • • .. • r "If the Fire Department won't do it, weU, we won't either. "CaL<J come down. In 15 years, I've never had a cat starve to death In a tree. They always come down and m ake fools or those who try to save them." said Lieutenant Fosler. A SPOKESWOMAN for the county Animal Control Department up in Orange said there was nothing her de · partmenl could do either. "Our men aren't insured to climb trees, and we don't have any long ladders . I suggest putting food at the bottom of the tree and leaning a ladder in place. "Maybe the cat 't"ill 1et hungry and matte a try for the ladder. Nothing else we nn do. Sorry.·~ Great stuff, I thought. Animal-lovers will be outra1ed. I grabbed my camera and searched the map book for Fairway Lane where the cat , described as black and white, tiny and cute was up a tree. AS I.HEADED for the door, the pbone·rang. Should I take the time to answer when such a great human interest photo was just a shutter's snap away? It was Theresa. "Jerry." she bubbled just lS minutes after her first c11l . "(don't need your help. The cat jus t walked put my house. It ao great. He got down by himself." LJeutenant Foster, you are one smart cop. ' r • • • -~ ... (' I Coast We athe r Chance or showers in· c r easing to 20 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight 43 to 48. Highs Wednesday low to mid 60s. INSIDE TODAY Tfut 17th mmuol rnnion of World War II veterans waa a night of no1tolgia. The ~. apon1ared bl/ thf! Costa Meaa Hiitoricol Socifty, "'°" held at Orange Coaat College's Student Cmter -the same pro~ that um one~ port of the Santa Ana Afr Base. See Fea.tvring~ Page Cl. ••••nr IU Y-lefllk» AJ ,_..._ lrtN...,.... Cl a,..~ ., CJ L,M,I•.,.. A6 ....... ....... ...., ...... ,... ..., ~· A7 M•u..t--. .. M At ' ! 1 I I I I l 0.tlt.. ~~ == r.-' C-IC't Al LC.. I tc• c-.... Al ....... at I a o. ......... ,,._.,,........ llHMri .. ~ M"'""" lllWtei ...... , ...... == C1~ ......... ; .,~ •• ... , M M ' Tun«ar. Ftbrytrt 21. 197! Arabs Hold l,ine . On Oil A NEO $2~000 Newpon'a Vernon EdltH Man Fitied 111 Ro k e ts lncide1it A Newport Beach eng1neenng hrm has twen !.>lapped with a . $25.000 fine a nd its president given a 20-day Jail sentence and fi ve years' probation on a con Vtc tion Of illegally exporting technical data on rockets and 011ss1les to France. U.S. District Judge Manuel Real derued a motion by defense attorney J ames McDona ld Mon- day for a stay of execution pend- ing appeal. The same sentence was given out and suspended m 1976, when Vernon Edler and his firm, Edler Industries, were convicted of similar charges. also 111 Judge Rea l's courtroom. The U.S. Ninth C1rcu1t Court of Appeals upheld their appeal at that time on grounds that the statute under which the convic· t10ns had been o btained was overly broad. A new trial was ordered. Monday, Edler received a sus· pended two-year prison term on condition that tie devote 1,200 hours to community ser vice projects during his probation Assistant U .S. Attorney Theodore Wu . who prosecuted the case, sajd today Judge Real denied a stay of execution of the sentence. s aying he saw no basis for appeal ll was unsuccessfully aUeged in boUt trials that Edler In· dustries, which once worked on the U S. Minuteman and Titan missiles, provided technical as· sis tance to a private French company in the rocket industry without obtarnuig c learance from the U S. State Depart ment as required under the 1954 Mutual Security Act. Brown Admits Oversight SACRAMENTO <AP) It wasn 't musical chairs just an oversight, explatns Gov. Ed- mund Brown Jr. 's office about appointing four persons to three vacancies on the Los Angeles County Superior Court bench. And Brown 's s pokes man added Monday that Los Angeles Municipal Court J udge Morio Fukulo, who was named to one of them. agreed to stay where he is until the fourth vacancy really occurs. Then, in Brown's absence at the NalJonal Governors' Con· ference in Washington, D.C., his office announced his appointees to the three vacancies, along with 11 othe r ne w judges statewide Soviets Buy Corn WASHINGTON <AP> The Soviet Union has bought an addi· tional 300,000 metric tons of U.S. corn for delivery this year, the Agriculture De partment said Monday. ORA NOE COAST H F DAILY PILOT fl'lilt Or•not ('OMt ()e11y Ptkn wH" 'llit'lk " *"'nt'n t)1fl""'1fht N,.....,....p.,I"\, 1\CM.~h\IWODtl""Ot~ '"'-'' Dvbl•'NfWJ(~y ~'"'*tJidtflQnt#H't O.Ubil\f'i4'd Motftd•Y ''"°"91"' '"O•v t0t CO"IA lilt· W 'l•#OOf'f """'"' H'lf't~on "t'lf<" F~ ''""VAii•• ttv1,.. t«JIUll"loitlH.tttt ~nca.u A -ftlt-t• Q·~I t"dtf""f'I I\ DWbttUWG 'S.11Ufd40 •f'WI ,,..,, .. t fhl lWH''lll 1M4 rofC>tt\"l"'O ~Ant'' •I >10 Vt· I f'-'11 Ith t (O"IA Mt ...,. (•hh""'tt41-)6 --.. -Prt\tdtnt •net Puett~ , ..... "" .. ' V11 • p.,.,•11rlfl"lt •11\d ()t,., .. ~~ ''*"''' ....... (<lllOI f"9fN,\. "" ........... IM.,.9,l'O Ed<tor Q,a, .. , H \.M• IUC ....... '1 Nttt .,, •~• Mttrwo no Edlitor\ ................ W.•1 Ot •11<19 C°""t' E<l<IOf Hunllnaton Beech ontoe •1•1'fn.•c" Bou..--•"' MalilllO "....,. .. p 0 . ..,. "° ,.,. OfflcH u~t~ '!:.~: ;:~1~:i~:"'' Telephone (71419424321 CIHeffltd Aclvtrttelnv~• ,.,..,. ...... ~ Ot•-, • .,,.., oi.-n1t ... M0-1220 ~~vr•y_."~ ~ C:e:\ c~~:,:::t=:.t'":_::.:. ,...7,., er •dv.,thtnwrU\ ,.,.,,." m•• M '•ttH\t .. tf •1,hrtvt '~ f411 oerl'r'tnl6" of f:OOfrltftt~ ~~.~d111!'·,u,s;·::r .:.·~ .~.; ~~· ~~.',,!).:n=u-i.::::.·t .. !: ~ MeMMt , 8 )' ,,_. Auetlale4 PrHa • aad l Anbta, lh<" world'• l1rf~ t oil t'.•q,10nt-r. uld today ll wll hold off &emporarU)' on uny pn('• ID<'n'lllt Hut Am rlctn c.-onaumcr. wlrudy arc-payln1 m orl' for rue! and may fa('a 1• ollot ruuonlna and s.ervlee· iwt.ltton <'l~ln(lli 1n thl' future Em•rgy Secrdatry Jame·~ R Sr Mt•a inil"r told tht> ni.llon " ISRAEL REJECTS CAU TO SUMMtT-A4 CAR POOL PLANS ENCOORAGEO -A5 STATE ENERGY GROWTH DECLINES-A7 Oil SEARCH RENEWED OFF EAST CO~ST-84 g1.Ht>mon. lhttt the losi. of 011 from Iran 1:. not reason enough for r..1ttoning, but added that other mandl:ltory. energy-saving measures could be-imposed If the lraruan cutoff continues for a) ear or longer The new head of the National Iranian 011 Co. sit1d today that the country hoped to resume ex· ports next week, selling the oil to the highest bidder. He said the country hopes to get Sl8 to $20 a barrel -com· pared to the current base price of $13.35 a barrel set by the Organization of Petroleum Ex· porting Countries or which Iran is a member. No U.S. oil firms have said whether they would pay that price. Fro91 Page A J .. MARINA ••• for their feeding area. Although the proposed marina would be built on the Costa Mesa side, Mrs. Massey believes the marina could still have a negative impact on t he least terns . "The best kind of environment would be a healthy s alt marsh," she s aid. County Environmental Protec· tion Agency <EPA> officials are in the process of leasing 17 acres of land on the Huntington Beach side or the river Jor a least tern feeding area. The feeding area will be a pro· tected habitat for the least terns while the county widens the river bed to make way for the flood control channel to be built by the Army Corps, said county project coordinator Dave Upde- graff " That's where the Costa Mesa subcommittee and consultant Sampson come in. "We 're no t goi n g to go anywhere without Corps' ap- proval," said Sampson. He says the first push will be to have federal funds released for a Corps' study of the marina plan. The funds for a Corps ' study have been in lim bo since 1974 Sampson said it will take at lea st a year to get the funds back on the boards. Funds for actual construction could come through state loans available through the Depart· mentor Boating and Waterways, said Sampson, a Newport Beach resident who was for many years the county's director of harbors, beaches and parks. The marina carried a price tag of $39 million five years ago Marina s upporters s ay that figure has at least doubled by now The number of least terns along the river bed south of 19th Street in Costa Mesa has risen even more dramatically. Accorrung to the county report filed by Mrs. Massey, there ·w ere just five pairs of least terns s potted in 1974. At last count, there were between 75 and 90 pairs or birds who call the river mouth home. It's a Bird ••• AP Wlre ..... te No. it's a senater. Sen John Tower, R-Tex. to be pre· l'tse, doing his thing at a party in Dallas where guests were dressed as comic strip characters. Up, up and away? Scientist at UCI Cites New Hazard D•llY Piiot St.off PMte WARNS OF DANGER UCt's Rowland 3YoungMen Save5 From Sunken Auto MIAMI BEACH, Fla. CAP> -- Three young men jumped from a yacht into the water and hauled five elderly residents to sarety after a car plunged into a 10 foot-deep s altwater creek, police said . • These were just average citizens who saw an accident and decided to help," Miami Beach police o,_,. Zell Hall said . "They alsosaved a few hves ' Police said five elderly Miami Beal'h residents were in a car and a sixth was getting in late Monday wh en. for unknown rea- sons, the vehicle screeched down a ramp in front of a seaside condominium. The car C'ame to a halt 500 feet away at the bottom of Indian Creek, where Kirk Grimsgaard, 21, of Miami ; Allen Bradley, 20, Wierton, W. Va .. and Bill Banks, 20, were s tanding aboard the vacht P.J. The UC Irvine scientist who helped d iscove r that fluorocarbons destroy ozone in the s tratosphere told the En· vironme nlal Protection Agency today that another chlorine com- pound is endangering life on earth. Dr. F. Sherwood Rowland re· ported to an EPA panel that melhylc hloroform . a com mercial cleaning solvent used on electronic equipment and metal machlnery surfaces, "m ay soon require regulation." Rowland's studies in 1974, with Dr. Mario Molina. of the hazards or fluorocarbons from aerosol propellants and refrigerants. led to an existing ban on the com· pounds. The problem with fluorocarbons and other chlorine carbons like methylchloroform. the chemistry professor said. is that they release free atoms of chlorine into the atmosphere. The chlorine atoms drift UP· ward into the stratosphere. the zone of the atmosphere s ix to 15 miles above the earth's surface. a nd react violently with ozone. destroying the substance· The earth's ozone I ayer 1s responsible for screening out ul · traviolet r ays from the sun which are ha rmful t'D human skin . The rays ar<' believed to be the prl m a ry caus e o f skin cancer ..... Ozone reduction also can lead to c limatic c hanges und biological damage to plants and other animals. Rowland testified that among the chlorine compounds. the prime aggressor of the ozone layer next to fluorocarbons is the c l ea ning age nt , m ethylchloroform. Rowland carried out measure· ments or methylchloroform with University of Tokyo colleague Yoshihino Makide. Measurements were taken at remote localtons. to avoid con lamination from othe r sub· stances, from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, Chile. Samples were collected in stainless steel flasks which were returned to Irvine for a nalysis. Rowland discovered the average lifetime of the com· pound to be five or six years, lime enoui:ih to allow a s ignifi· cant portion of il to gel into the stratosphere and do damage. fi'ro111P-..AI Top State Court VIET ••• Doctor to Appeal Close of Practice Justices o r the California Supreme Court will be asked at a hearing to be scheduled later this week lo strike down a realrairting order that prevents Dr. Ralptl Small or Santa Ana from pracUclq medicine. Small's attorney, Terry Giles of Santa Ana, filed the petition Monday in San Francisco. It argues that the order issued Feb . 8 by Orange County Superior Court Judie WUIJam S. Lee ls unconstitutional. Small is accused in action taken by the state's Board or Medical Quality Assurance of In· co mpetence aod 1ro11 negligence in the treatment of two patients. Jt is alle ged lbal o ne of Small's patients died after un· dergoing plastic surgery. It is al· leged that a second patient con· lracted a near fatal infection after treatment by the plastic 1urgeon. The order whic h prevents Small from practicing medicine went lnto effect Feb. 16. The Fourth District Court of-Appeals ln San Bernardino earlier re- fused to overturn Judge Lee's order. A spokeaman for the Orange County District Attorney's Of- fice said today that the possibiU- ty that criminal action will be taken ·~•inst Dr. SmaJl is still under con lderallon. class for the timely completion of a pontoon bridge across the Binh Giang River under heavy enemy fire " Feb. 20 near ttie county seat of Phuc Hoa. in Cao Bang province about 110 miles northeast of Hanoi Hsinhua also said the first thing its troops do when entering evacuated Vietnamese villages is sweep streets. ~lean houses and feed livestock The report, carried Monday by the Hong Kong Communist newspaper Wen Wei Po, seemed aimed al countering Vietnamese charges of Chinese atrocities in the in· vasion. An Intelligence source In Ban g ko k said t he Ch i n ese moved one division Monday Into Quang Ninh province east of Lani Son, the Vietnamese border city that h•s guarded the Invasion routes from China for centuries. a nd that the Vitt· na mese reinfor<'e1 their bortf r C'Ommand with two b:ittAll<'M I ' the Lang Son aree Rites Friday Doctor, Son _Dre in Crash Funeral services will be held Friday for Huntington »each physician Carmen Yuppa, '3, and hla J.S.year-old son, Te&TY. who loet their lives in a trafnc accident near San Bernardino. Dr. Yuppa and Terry were re- turning Sunday evening from a weekend skiing trip to Mam- moth with four other persons when their van was struck from behind by an oul-0f-cootrol truck and trailer. The Yuppa vehicle overturned eight times before coming to rest at the center divider on State Route 194 in Cajon Pass, about 10 miles north of San Bernardino. California Highway Patrol of· ricers sajd the truck-trailer rig lost all of its brakes on the mountain grade. Officers said that both Dr Yuppa and Terry, a sophomore at Marina High School, suffered massive bead injuries. T hey died early Monday of their injuries at San Bernardino Community Hospital. Dawn Yuppa, 14, who was along on the outing with her father and brother. suffered cuts and bruises. Others injured in the crash wer e Lola Ann Hanson. the driver of Dr. Yuppa's van. and two friends of the dead Yuppa boy, Robert McNeil, 18, and Mike Jed· nak.16, both of Huntington Beach. . o'!' Yuppa h as b een a longtime internist in Huntington Beach. He was described by as sociates as a major guiding force in the development of Pacifica Community Hospital He was a co-0wner and pres1· dent of its board of directors. Dr. Yuooa is sut\ived by his wife. Linda. or Huntington Ha r bour: daughter . Dawn : mother. Mildren Digrigor10. and s iste r . J ean Yuppa. both of Sacramento. A rosary will be recited Thurs· day al 7 p.m. at St. Bonaventure Church, \6400 Springdale St. A funeral Mass will be conducted Friday at the church at 10 a .m. Burial will follow at Good S h ephe rd Cem e t ery . 17952 Seach Blvd. A friend says the family plans to establish a memorial fund in Or Yuppa's memory at Pacifica Hospital. 2 Men Sought In Slaying of Santa Anan Santa Ana police a re seeking two suspects in connection with the street corner shooting death Monday evening of 22-year-old Bruce D. Bracamontes. Police said Bracamontes. who lived at 2122 W. Ninth St.. was shot tWlce in the chest and died in Riverview Hospit al within an hour of the 6 p.m. shooting. Witnesses told police the vie tim was fighting with the two suspects on a street corner near his home when one of the men pulled out a handgun and fired the two shots. As Bracamontes was .oaded into a car and taken to the nearby hospital. tbe sus pects ran down the street and sped off in another car. police said / ? J 0.llyf'I ... ,_..._.. DIES AFTER CRASH Dr. Carmen Yuppa Oil Pricing Sends Stock Market Down NEW YORK IAP l -The stock market fell sharply m moderate trading today in what analysts saw as reaction to con· cern over oil prices. inflation and international turm91l. Tbe Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks tumbled 12.73 points lo 808.39 in four hours or trading on the New York Stock Exchange, after slipping 2.16 points Monday "The market is finally bend· ing under the weight or negative news," said Robert Stovall of Dean. Witter Reynolds, a Wall Street investment firm. President Carter submitted a standby energy rationing plan to Congress in the wake of a world s queeze on oil s upplies which followed the shutdown of Iranian fields. The market showed little reac- tion lo the Saudi Arabian an- nouncement that 1t would tern· porarily hold to prices set by the Organization of Petroleum E x· porting Countries even though othe r OPEC tnembers have raised pnces. Girl, 7, Hit By Car, Hurt A 7 -year-old Huntington Beach girl suffered cuts and bruises Monday afternoon when she ap· parently darted onto Adams Avenue and was struck by a car. police said J eanette Justine Spake, of 1848 Park St . was taken to Pacifica Community Hospital following the 2 .45 pm. accident near Main Street The young g irl was treat· ed for her in1unes and released to her parents Police said the driver o( the car. Nedra M. Overton. 56, of 502 Crest Ave . Huntington Beach. was unable to avoid the little girl. who apparently ran mto the street Wlthout looking. Momentous Event Down to Earth By ARTHUR R. VINSEL °' tM O.lly Pli.I SI.AH One of the most awesome events in history as .mankind knows it occur red Monday morning-actually two-since in addition to a total eclipse of the sun. I didn't have to~o lo work and could watch the TV coverage. CU1TING A SW A TH or momentary midnight across the broad belly of the North American continent, the eclipse d arkened busy city streets. bucolic farmlands and all that path of earth beneath It Starstruck travelers came from thousands of miles to best view the last suc h phenomenon of this century at Goldendale. Wash .. Uke the Three Wise Me n who made their pilgrimage to Bethlehem. SCIENTISTS WATCHED m silence in Goldendale, said to be the world's best vantaj{e point for observlDi the breathtaking blotting out or Old Sol by the earth 's shadow. precisely positioned in space Newsmen m arveled at the images beamed from various spots as "totality" advanced across America. More humans cheered as though at a major league ball game in Portland, Ore .. and everywhere , automated street lights came on, as darkness tell on day. Slttlni in m y easy chair wlt.h another more modern marvel-instant oatmeal-the true momentousness of the astronomical show finally stn.ack borne. THE TV NEWS COMMENTATOR said It wlll be Aue. 21. In the Year of Our Lord 2017. before the Creator's celestial playthings repeat lhetr show And that means 38 years from now. Juat 18 monlba before our modest Ornnge Coa~t condom1mum mortaa1e ia paid r" • .. ' t I e d e ' s I ; ! , 1 .. ' . 7 I L r ! ti I I Irvine ED I TION VOL. 72, NO. S8, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 1 Vietnam Claims 2,000 [ r Chinese Troo_ps Slain • , Teachers Get Pay ·Raise s Catlng a California Supreme Court reversal or pay freezes in post-Proposition 13 bailout legislataon, Saddleback CoUege trustees approved $457 ,000 in raises for faculty members Mon· day. The raises, contained in an employee contract in force when bailout laws froze wages. pro- vide a 7.8 percent increase to 170 full-lime faculty members and a portion or about 600 part-time teachers. The three-year con- tract expires June 30. The facul- ty raises arc retroactive to July 1, 1978. College Bus iness Manager Roy Barletta said today the percentage of part-time teachers receiving the pay hike will de- pend on their position on the col- ' lege 's salary scale. ' Board members voted 5 to Oto • approve the raises, with William ( Watts and Robert Price absent. f The move was mere-ly pro· cedural since the court decision 1 indicated that trustees must • , ..... , Tllo -VIETNAM • lane Son Af'WIN11Mto ARROWS SHOW FIERCE FIGHTING IN VIETNAM Carter Urges 'Speedy Withdrawal' by China Emergency Measure Fierce Battle Rages BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Vietnam reported fierce fighting today in the northwest corridor to Hanoi and said its forces wiped out 2,000 Chinese there from Friday to Monday. The official Voice of Vietnam said the fighting was concentral· ed in the Cam Duong a rea which sits astride the Red River delta corridor which runs from the frontie r lo the Vietnamese capital. <Related story Page A5) The broadcast als<> said two more Chinese companies were decimated in Lang Son province northeast of Hanoi on Monday and another 250 Chinese soldiers were killed or wounded in two days in Phong Tho district of Lai Chau province. President Carter called on China to undertake "a speedy withdrawal" from Vietnam, in a message given t o Chines e leaders by Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumental who is visiting Peking. ll was the bluntest statement of American opposition to the war. FINED $25,000 Newport's Vernon Edler Man Fined In Rocke ts Incident A Newport Beach engineering firm has been slapped with a $25.000 fine and its president given a 20-day jail sentence and five years' probation on a con· viction of 1llegally exporting technical data on rockets and missiles to France. U.S. District Judge Manuel Real denied a motion by defense attorney James McDonald Mon· day for a stay or execution pend· ing appeal. 17 honor contracts negotiated prior 1 to the bailout biU which froze salary hikes. Gasoline Rationing Plans Made Public But intelligence sources in Bangkok noted that the Chinese · showed no signs of a withdrawal after 10 days of fighting and in fact were reinforcing troops in some frontier areas, including Lang Son. The same sentence was given out and suspended -in 1976. when Vernon Edler and his firm, Edler Industries. were convicted or similar charges, also in Judge Real 's courtroom. The court ruled that colleges and other governmental institu· lions must honor employee con- tracts in force when the bailout <See llAJSES, Page A2) · Trustee Asks I l ~ \ • • I , \More Exciting Campm Talent Saddleback College Trustee Norrisa Brandt would like to see some "'more exciting" talent come to the campus, maybe a hip-swiveling Mick Jagger or a snake-wielding Alice Cooper. During a discussion Monday of community service entertain· ment events lined up al the col· lege, Mrs. Brandt asked why no rock and roll bands for younger people ever played at the school. "I think there should be someone more exciting," the former Republican Secretary of State candidate mused. "We haven't had the ex· perience with some of the things like security that would be necessary for that kind of ev~nt," Community Services Director Doyle McKinoey answered. Citing an act booked at the col- lege for April, McKinney said ··w e 're going to start gelling ex· perience with this bald-headed Kingston Trio." The trio, first popular in the 1950s, is making a com eback. Co ast Weather Chance of showers in- c re a sing to 20 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight 43 lo 48. Highs Wednesday low lo mid 60s. INSIDE TODAY The 31th an~ re-unton of World War II veteran& wo1 a night oJ no1talgaa. TM event, 1ponaored by the Coata Mtta llutoricol Society, waa held at Orangt COO$t Colltge'a SlllMnt Cenur -the samt propert11 thol woa onct port of the Santa Ana Air Bo.at. S.t FtaturfnQ, Page Cl . •••• Al 'f-Serrlce At 1 ......... 1 ..... •-•......_• CJ AML..-n 11 CJ L.M..... A•*"'" ............ ~ ....... ... , (;allf9nlla AJ ,..._,.._ g,_, CJ Or._ ClllMy Cltltll.... Ct-ti ,,,,,._ ...,.., =.:.,. u a.ca . ..._ .,.....,._ ::.=:-....... • ..._... .... MT-..-·~--... , ..... ..... ._. Cl.J ..... .._ .._.,,. a ... M "' •• a ..., .. ... , M M WASIDNGTON <AP > -The Energy Departme nt made public today a contingency energy plan il has sent to Congress for gasoline rationing"' and other fuel-saving measures to be used only in a serious energy emergency. The plans were sent informal· ly to key congressional commit: tees Monday night. Department spokesmen said they would be submitted formally to Congress Thursday. To be adopted, the plans under a 1975 law must be approved by both the House and Senate within 90 days. If gasoline rationing were ever needed -and department of· ficials say they see no prospect or it in the foreseeable future - rationing coupons would be is· sued lo owners of registered vehicles. The coupons could be sold or transferred at will although the government would have authorl· ly if necessary to impose pr'ice controls or other steps lo pre· vent excessive hoarding, anti· competitive practices or other disruptive activities. The standby rationing plan did not Include any specific gallon limit for individual vehicle owners. Officials said the limit would be determined at the time Oil Pricing Sends Stock . Market l)own NEW YORK CAP) -Tb.e stock market fell sharply in heavy trading today in what analysts saw as reaction to con· cern over oil prices, Inflation and international turmoil. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks tumbled lS.33 points to 805.79 in five hours of trading on the New York Stock Exchange, alter slipping 2.16 points Monday. "The market is finally bend· Ing under the weight of negative news.'' said Robek Stovall of Dean, Willer Reynolds, a Wall Street investment fir m. President Cart.er submitted a standby energy rallonlnt plan to Congress ln the wake of a world squeeze on oil supplies which followed the shutdown of Iranian fields. The market 1howed little reac· tlon to the Saudi Arabian an· oouncement that ll would tem· porarily bold to prtce1 set by the OrganlzatJon of Petroleum Ex· portlnl Countries even lhoulh other OPEC membera have ralaed prices. rationing is imposed, according to distribution formulas and the seriousness or petroleum shortages. The Energy Departm~t has denied published reports that the rationing plan provides for a limit of two gallons or less per day for each ~gistered vehicle. No figures were given, but Hanoi has claimed its t roops have kille<S more than 16,000 Chinese since Peking invaded Feb. 17. Intelligence sources consider the kill count inflated. China has not given casualty figures. But in one of its few re· ports on the war the official Hsinhua news agency said today (See VIET, Page AZ> Saudis Rold Out The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld their appeal at that lime on grounds that the statute under which the convic· tions had been obtained was overly broad. A new trial was ordered. Monday, Edler received a sus· pended two-year prison term on condition that he devote 1.200 hours to community s ervice projects during his probation. Oil Cost Hike Opposed By The Associated Press Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter. said today it will hold off temporarily on any price increases. But American consumers already are paying more for fuel and may face gasoline rationing and service· station closings in the future. Energy Secretary James R. Schlesinger told the nation's governors that the loss of oil from Iran is not reason enough for rationing, but added that other mandatory, energy-saving measures could be imposed if the Iranian cutoff continues for ayear or longer. Th• new head of the National Iranian Oil Co. said today that the country hoped to resume ex- ports next week, selling the oil to the highest bidder. He said the country. hope~ to gel $18 to $20 a barrel -com· pared to the current base prace of $13.35 a barrel set by the Orgaruzataon of Petroleum Ex· ISRAEL REJEo-TS CALL TO SUMMIT-A4 CAR POOL PLANS ENCOURAGED -AS STATE ENERGY GROWTH DECLINES-A7 OIL SEARCH RENEWED OFF EAST COAST-84 porting Countries of which lran is a ivember. No U.S. oil firms have said whether they would pay that price. Thal base price -subject to some adjustment depending on A Steal at f4 .. ,oee the quality or the oif and other conditions -had been scheduled lO increase 3.9 percent Apnl 1 as part of an overall 1979 price boost or 14.5 percent planned by OPEC. Several exporting countries, however , taking advantage of the cutoff in s upplies from Iran. have raised prices before the deadline and boosted t hem above planned levels. Kuwait. for example. announced a 9 per· cent hike Monday. Saudi Arabia, breaking with the others , said it plans no general price increase before April 1. The country previously raised prices on some of its crude oil, saying it was produc· Ing extra to help make up for lbe loss from Iran and maintaining that the extra should be paid for (See SAUDIS, Page A2> ""',,.,...... Think you're paying too much for automobiles t hese days? Thia little number, a 1936 Mercedes-Benz Type SOOK, was auctioned in Los Angeles Sunday ror a repartcd price or $400,000. And that's ror a used car . • ! •. :~ ~ • t I I l t I t -·· f ( , ~ ' ' . ' 't'oar Home town ~ Dal ly Ne ws paper . i • in Arrest By PJDLIP ROSMA&IN • Of ... ~alty ll'llM Staff An -Ontario, Canada, teen.ager l left a lasting impression on Irvine• shoppers at Walnut Village Mon· f day. So impressed were they that lO I men gang tackled the 17-year-old youth when he fled his car Oil foot 1 after bashing the car into four parked cars, and destroying two trees and a Ughtstandard. Irvine resident Joan Wilder of 4911 Karen Ann Lane was the only shopper still in her car when what she called the 3:20 p.m . "demoli· ti on derby" got started. "It was like a maniac on a rampage," she said. "I can't believe what was going on ou.t there. People were screaming to get pedestrians inside.'' Mrs. Wilder, who was suffer- ing from sore muscles today, but said she was otherwise unhurt, described what happened. "It was very quick. The whotel thing happened in less than twoj minutes. "I pulled into the lot. parked, heard brakes or tires screech and he hit me.·· Her car was struck from behind and knocked across the parking lot into another parked car which in tum was propelled into a light standard She said the driver of the careening car apparently had tried to exit the parking lot onto Culver Drive. near Walnut Avenue, was blocked and quick· ly tried to reverse to go through the Walnut exit, and lost control of the car. Police said the car also hit another parked car before back· ing up, knocking over two trees a nd a bank sign, and smacking into Mrs . Wilder 's-car . Frustrated. his car ruined and1 all exits then blocked with debris and wrecked cars, the driver abandoned his car and tried to run. police said. Irvine Police Officer Terry DeVerse happened by just then and witnessed a teen-ager being chased and finally caught and pulled to the ground by aboullOor 12 very angry men, he reported. The driver was booked at <See 'DE RBY.' Page A.2) Security, Contributions Top Agenda Ao amendment to the cam- paign contribution ordinance. police security at Irvine High School and the city animal sheller are scheduled for con· sideration by the Irvine City Council tonight. The council meets at 7:30 p.m. al City Hall. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. The campaign contributions 1 ordinance change would restrict 1 contributions by individuals to council candidates. Currently there is a $250 limit per candidate, but individuals , have been able to step around · the limit through extra contribu· I lions to political committees. I The amendment would plug the loophole, including alli categories of political support within the $250 limit. The amendment also provides I for adjustments of tbe contribu· lion maxim um to account for fluctuations in cost of living <or contributing> based on the an· oual Consumer Price Index. A further adjustment is pro- vided for increases in popula· tion, computed annually on the basis of a penny per increased r egister ed voter, not quite permitting new voters to get their two cents in. Police Chief Leo P e art is scheduled to report to the coun- cil upon the effectiveness of new security patrolling methods at Irvine High School, of lale the target ol vandals. (See OOUNCIL, Page A%> 1'l~NG C4lJSE OF TOOrH DEC4Y ADELAIDE, Australia <AP> -An Adelaide UnJ venity scien· Ust is trytna to detennlne II kiss· Inc can spread tooth decay. Dr. Tony Rosen, a M rtlor lec- turer in oral biolop, aakl ln a school newsletter tba t expert . ments indicate saliva can traumlt ct.cay or1anlam1 rrom penon to penon. PAIL.Y Pl!.OT O•llY l'lhPI U•ll ""°'• ANl~ALS ANALYZED IN SPECI AL LAGUNA SESSION Beatrice Lydecker ·ratk1' to the Anlmal1 Animal Analyst She Diagnoses Pet Problems If you could talk to tM animals, Jt.ut imagine 1t, chattany tu o chimp in Ch1mponzee. Imagine tallang to a tiger. chat tang in Cheetah, What a neat och1evement 1t would be. I/ we could talk to the animals. -From th<' /1/m "Dr Doolittle' By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille Dally Pllet Sl•ll Beatrice Lydecker talks to the animals. And they in turn, chat with the North Hollywood woman, telling her their woes, describ· ing where it hurts, and express- ing their gripes about their masters Now it 's not the kind of con- versation you or I would un d e r s t and You can't even eavesdrop during her counseling sessions It 's all 1n the mind Beatrice Lydecker 1!> a pro fessaonal animal analy!.t. She'll tune in on your pet s psyche for S25 an hour And i.he came to Laguna Beach recently to diag nose behavior problems suffered by several do~s cared for by the Laguna Beach Pct Responsibili- ty Committee. Inc Specifically. pet com mittee members wanted the woman to analyze "MuJ<?sy," a German shepherd with a bad reputation. ---'"'The dog was adopted out once but after problems was brought back to the animal shelter "Mu~sy " was adopted out again. this ttme to a family from Encinitas. The shepherd bit one of the famil y children. a nd was returned, with the owners ask- ing that it not be destroyed Local vet Dr John llamil checked the dog and termed the dog "unpr edictabl y ag. gress ive," although he said he could £ind no definite evidence to indicate brain damage. The dog was returned lo the shelter, and part tame V1ctona Drive resident Jane Allen ad- vised PRC 0Hic1als they should ask Mrs. Lydecker to diagnose the dog. She came down last week, and when she departed several hours later. she left behind a n awe- struck group of animal lovers. "She's fantastic." Mrs. Allen said. "I've seen her work with animals for year s and she's good." The animal a n alyst 's diagnosis? "The dog has brain damage,'' Mr s . Lydecker s aid in a telephone interview. ''He is schi zophrenic." ORA NOE COAST DAILY PILOT fM O*.tnorC~\t O.llv "Hot lflll'llt\W"H'"''•""" htn.GflW Hf/IW"\Pt"'' • ouot1""""n,tNUt*"°" I,.,_,, Pubt+~nq(~· ~l)tt•t~•tttl·l'lft\M• ov&•""" ~-· OWOUOf\ fri(f4~ fC>f' (O\IA Mf'W NfWOOft f'M;(~ tt~hf'l9'0ft BfM" f ,..,,.._ IAtnV•ll•Y ''"'""' l ~.tn .. ,Mh \nvtht .. \4. \•~ttit ,.,."°""'' fOtl!Oft '' ~f\IWO '-•tVf'<NY\Mlld \.HWj.l'' 0.. (WHW'°"'I ~l~l"IQ Ofttf't f\ .ti~ Wt't ,.,..,,h,tt rf""t•MI''" C•flfotn•••>ett. .... ,,H_ P•.--.•dilflt e"'4t "1\lbl ,,,,,... J•Oll c .. 1n Yff,Pr• t<Nnt.tno(,.,..MM.•M')H Tlt9'ftlt•t1C•ff'tl llelot .. n:::::.,~..:r"''J:"" o.., •• , ........ , tlt;cM,. _ ...... ...... ,.~, ...... o .... "°''"'' T~one(7t4)142-4!21 • And how did she arrive at those conclusions? "I talk with animals bv means or mental communicat1~m." lht- woman said, "or extra-sensory perception. If you wi IJ '• She said she asked the dog why be bites, and the arumal projected to her the impression that he can't help himself. "He said. ·1 just turn around and bite.' By ana1yzing mental pictures -in color directed to Mri. Lydecker by the animal the analyst said she was told that he had been in a home on<'e where he bit a child. • "He didn't know why ht· bit the child, and he r~ally had no reason to do so " Based on the lack or reason ing. Mrs. Lydecker said, she came to the conclus ion the dog's brain is damaged Dr Hamil said he C'ould not dispute the woman's findings "The physical examination of the dog shows its neurological refl exes are all no rmal." the veterinarian sajd. ··But I would not deny she perceives somethrng different than we do. or that she is aware o! things we are not aware of," he said. He said the woman lakes to touch the animal during analysis although she says she can carry on a perfeC'tly lucid con- versation with an animal ovt'r the phone. "Ac upupcturists do t)le same thing, and they make quote. un- quote diagnoses.·• Dr. Hamil s aid "And I be li eve acupuncture works beyond a shadow of a doubt." ·'I wo uld not deny s h e possesses some techniques or abilities that the rest of us do not," he said. As a result of her diagnosis. Pet Responsibility members arc a sk ing the city lo a ll ow an animal behaviorist to care for Mugsy Mrs. Lydecker said s he db - covered her talent in 1959 when she walked up to a dog that looked like an animal she had lost ··it really freaked me out." the 40 -year-old woma n said. "He told me he !ell deserted, and s ure enough, his owner said he had receotJy returned to work after recuperating -al home with the dog fr om an automobile accident. "l thought r was getting into the occult, and J don't like that stuff;" she said, professing to be a Christian. "I don't believe in relncarna· tion, tarot cards or astrology " But she claims 95 percent ac curacy for her movie screen vis· ions she says she receives from a nimals. She said even animals with small brains can transmit the images to her. Iran Frees Fluor Aides TEHRAN (AP) -Brttlsh Of· flcials have r eported the release of an American, a Belgian and two British oil men arrested Monday in south Iran. They were employed by the Fluor Co., an Irvine drilling and construction company which said they were arrested by lslamlc revolutionaries on charges of "plunderln1 the wealth or Iran by charging ex- orbitant pr ces." British officials said they were questioned and freed . The •iuor Co. said the American was John Caasiba. 49, a construction foreman. Police Kill Santa Anan TULARE <AP> A S1ant• Anu )OUth wu11 h1tilly bot and oolbl., w1 arn• ted by TulaTe pohe mt'n un •r A ruuUnc \raffle 11h 111 turned Into o hl11h speed cht1:1e and i;hootout l''rt.-d Xavier Crua, t7. waa shot 11111 !\lllc>d and lluben Gutterrez. :M , ~lib arn•itl •d ulonR with M urv 1'1(w11. t9, of Pinedale, fut.11 tf po IC-\' 'iUld OHm ·r Uob nrunUey stopped a c•u for cxl'I.' 11lve pet-dlna ear- ly Monduy, but the driver Jumpt·d out, r>ullcd a 11 mall t•.il1bt•r .:1111 1mcl look Rrantley's "'''vi\'\' rtivoh llr. said Lt Roger lllll another exchange of gunfire, the two men nn off. leavlnK the woman in the abandoned car. Orflcens found Cruz ln the rear of a home and after a round of gunfire, Sat. Bob Eckert fatally wounded '1m. Hiila aid. Gutierrez was arrested about two hours lattir, police said. He and Ma. Pipes were being held for investlgalion of murder, attempted murder of a police of· ricer and armed robbery, Hill uld. Authorities believe the three were involved in an armed robbery aom ewhere else and panicked whe n the officer stopped them. 'Polar Bear' Sets Record AARHUS, Oenmark (AP> -Adam Abelaen. 33. o( Grffnland, .et what lhe awimmina club here said waa a oold·swlm record. swimming 710 )'ards in a "pool" hacked out of a nearby le covered lake. The pool, about 80 feet Iona. was hacked lhrouRh three feet of Ice. Abelsen covered the distance in 23 minuta. breaking a rec· ord of 580 yard.I. The swimming c lub. which or1anizes the event and keeps the records. aays lbe swim muat bil in wat.er colde r than 36 degrees Fahrenheit to qualify. T he G uinness Book of World Records does not have an entry for the event. Suspect Ruled 'Unfit' By KATHV CLANCY Of .. DaMy "* •tMt A young drifter accused of s l aying JO .y e ar -old San Clemente Police Officer Richard Steed Nov. 29 was Judged men· tally unfit to ·•land trial ror murder Monday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robert Rickles ordered Jam es Richard Hoffer, 23, sent to Patton State Hospital in San Bernardino for treatment of what waa described by physicians as chrOflic schizophrenia. Rickles asked for a progress report alter six mootba treat- ment and suspended criminal proceedings against the murder defendant ln the meantime. "notht•r off1 cl'r <irravcd. and I he• ~u11rnun drove oH with .11111thc•1 mun and woman, Hlll -.u11J l\uthont1t·~ <.'hMist'<.I the fleeing 1 a• and Ir adcd gunfire untU the H•h1 r lt.> went out of control at a T 111h•r11t•t·t1cm , 11111 said. After Skipper Arrested Mter Boat Blaze Suspension of legal proceed- ings does not mean Hoffer will not someday stand trial and con- front a death sentence for al- 1 e g e d I y murdering the policeman. The suspensibn means the ac- cused man will be imprisoned in the mental hospital until. Ir ever, he is found mentally capable of standing trial. E',.... Pflflf! AJ COUNCIL ••. School officials complained earlier this month that adults who are not students have been creeping onto school parking lots from next-door Heritage Park, and damaging or burglarizing student cars . Peart stepped up patrols dur- ing the noon hour and after school. A Huntington Beach skipper. whose boat caught fire Sunday night with five chHdren and a Newport Beach man aboard, was later arrested by Harbor Patrol deputies who said he was drunk and passed out when the fire broke out. William Hutchens. 40, of 16150 Tortola Circle, also faces a charge of endangering the lives of chlldren, deputies said. His 38-foot craft was about three miles off Sunset Beach on the return end of Catalina Island voyage when an electrical short touched off the blaze at about 9 p.m. Sunday. Passenger Kevin McCarthy. 32, of Newport Beach, radioed for help but the fire was out before a Coast Guard cutler ar- rived. deputies said. Damage t-0 the crart valued al $80,000 was reported as minor, but it bad to be towed back to Huntington Harbour. There were no injuries. Hutchins, however , was later booked at Or ange County jail where he posted bond and was released, authorities s aid. Hoffer is charged with firing two fatal .38 caliber handgun rounds into Steed as the officer stepped from his patrol car in San Clemente responding to a call for medical aid. One slug hit the officer in the left forearm while a second tore into his chest causing fatal in- juries . Seven hours alter the shooting police arrested Hoffer a block from where the officer fell. Jn addition, two plainclothes officers. a man and a woman, carrying police radios in pl.ace of guns. have been walking the Irvine High beat Crom 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. since Feb. 20. H Judged effective by Peart and by the council, the pair. which were lo do the job for just two weeks. will periodically re- turn, at the request of Irvine High Principal Dean Wald!ogel. Huntington Doctor, Son's Services Set T he former mental patient matched the description of a man Who had asked night shift workers at a local newspaper to call an ambulance, saying he had cul his arm. When arrested, Hoffer bad a gash above his wrist and a four- inch knife wound in the abdomen which police said appeared to have been self-inflicted. Another area of security con- cern has been the city animal care center, located in leased facilities orr Laguna Canyon Road in Laguna Beach. Peart proposes that the city sublease a small house on the property in which Carl Pagano, a n animal services officer, wou ld li ve while p roviding security at the center after busi- ness hours. The two-bedroom house is va- cant. In exchange for use of the house. Pagano would maintain it and pay for utilities. in addition to watching over the animals. Fl"Olel PageAJ VIET ••• that a Chinese unU was cited for "meritorious service , second class for the timely completion of a pontoon bridge across the Binh Giang River under heavy enemy fire" Feb. 20 near the county seat of Phuc Hoa, in Cao Bang province about 110 miles northeast or Hanoi. Hslnhua also said the first thi ng its troops do when entering evacuated Vietnamese villages is sweep 'Streets, clean houses and feed livestock. The report, carried Monday by the Hong Kong Communis t newspaper Wen Wei Po. seemed aimed at countering Vietnamese charges of Chinese atrocities in the in-vasion. An intelligence source in Bangkok said the Chines,. moved one division Monday into Quang Ninh province east of Lang Son, the Vietnamese border city that has guarded the invasion routes from China for centuries, and that the Viet- namese reinforced their border command with two battalions in the Lang Son area Funeral services will be held Friday for Huntington Beach physician Carmen Yuppa, 43, and his 15-year•old son, Terry, who lost their lives in a traffic accident near San Bernardino. Dr. Yuppa and Ter ry were re- turning Sunday evening from a weekend skiing trip to Mam- moth with four other persons when their van was struck from behind by an out-of-control truck and trailer. The Yuppa vehicle overturned eight times before coming to res t at the center divider on State Route 194 in Cajon Pass. about 10 miles north of San Bernardino. California Highway Patrol of- ficers said the truck-trailer rig lost all of its brakes on the mountain grade. Officers said th at both Dr. Yuppa and Terry, a sophomore at Marina High School, suffered massive head injuries. They died early Monday of their injuries at San Bernardino Community Hospital. Dawn Yuppa, 14 , who was along on the outing with her father and brother, suffered cuts and bruises. Others injured in the crash were Lola Ann Hanson, the driver of Dr. Yuppa's van, a nd two friends of the dead Yuppa boy, Robert McNeil, 18, and Mike Jed- nak. 16, both of Huntington Beach. Dr. Yuppa h as been a longtime internist in Huntington Beach. He was described by as· sociates as a major guiding force in the development or Pacifica Community Hospital. He was a co-owner and presi- dent of its board or directors. Dr. Yuppa is survived by his wife, Linda, of Huntington Harbour; daughter, Dawn; mother, Mildren Digrigorio, and sister, Jean Yup pa, both of Sacramento. A rosary will be recited Thurs- day at 7 p.m. at St. Bonaventure Church, 16400 Springdale St. A funeral Mass will be conducted Friday al the church at 10 a. m. Burial will follow al Good S hepherd Cemetery. 17952 . Beach Blvd. A friend says the family plans to establish a memorial fund in Dr. Yuppa's memory at Pacifica Hospital. fi'l"OlelPageAI SAUDIS ••• at the April 1 price level. Iran said that when it resumes exports, it will sell lo anyone - including t he United States which bad been importing 900.000 barrels a day from that country. Uthe United States de- cides to buy from Iran at the same level as before the revolu- tion and if Iran gets the S20 a barrel it wants, it would cost $18 m illion a d ay or almost $6 million more daily than it used to. The supply squeeze caused by the problems in Iran has been pushing up petroleum prices on the open or spot market. As a general rule. each one dollar in- crease in the price or a barrel or crude oil means an extra penny on a galJop of fuel. While most of the ~ucing coun tries wh ich have announced price boosts so far provide relatively small amounts of oil to the Unit- ed States, lhe combined effect bas been lo tighten supplies enough to cause problems . Jim Campbell, executive director of the California Ser vice Station Association. forecast more increases ahead. He said wholesale prices are ex- pected to rise eight or nine cents a gallon by the end of the year a nd predicted that the retail price of regular gasoline at self- service stations could reach 81 cents a gallon by Christmas. I',.... Page Al RAISES .•. legislation was approved. , Saddle back's c l assified e mployee wor k force wa~ negotiating a new contract when lhe freeze went into effect. College officials said today, however, that group will be given retroactive pay increases also because negotiations for Ju. ly 1. 1978 increases were sus- pended when wages were frozen. Barlett.a also cited a board res- olution that provided for pay hakes to be retroactive when negotiations spilled beyond July 11 but prior lo bailout legisla- tion. On Monday, trustees also authorize d a res umpt ion of negotiations with the school's classified employee organ1zat1on to reach agreement for wage hikes for those workers . Classified employees include c lerical worke rs, g rounds k ee p e r s, m aint e n ance per sonnel. campus security forces and some administrators. Board Chairman Larry Taylor said college officials had kept funds to cover the raises in a contingency account in case the pay freeze was ruled unconstitu- tional. Officials indicated the court decision would not affect fund- ing for other college programs. f'....,PageAJ 'DERBY' .•. Orange County Juvenile Hall on . charges or misdemeanor hit and run driving. Police were not sure today what touched orr the calamitous chain or events . ------Kitty Up a Tree--------..., A Keal Cat-astrophe . By JERRY CLAUSEN Ofttleo.lty ........... When 17-year -old Theresa Martin called lhe D1Uy Pilot's Huntington Beach bureau Monday about a cat stuck In a tall, tall palm tree for three days, It sounded like a great story. THE AFl'ERNOON WIS slow. "Nobody," said Theresa, •'will get the eat down. It's been up there tor three days, just meowtns and meowing. We don't know who It belongs to. "Yes, I've called lhe Huntington Beach Fire Depart- m e nt. Yee, the Huntln1ton Beach Humane Society, too. And the police de· p a rtment and the count)' animal shelter. "can you get someone to help?" AHA, Tll01JGHT I an arum1l ln dlre straitl. And no publ[c retponse. Checking for myself, I learned from the fire department that it no loncer send• ladder trucks for anlm1l1 ln "' cuusa" t.reetop distress. Too eottly, and too dangerous to tlc up • rl1 that mi1ht be needed In a real emercency. Lt. John F0tter of the police department w11 candid. ' \ "If the Fire Department won't do It, well , we won't either. "Cats come down. In lS years. I've never bad a cat starve to death in a tree. They always come down and make fools of those wbo try to save them," said Lieutenant Foster A SPOKESWOMAN for the county Anlmal Control Department up in Orange said there was nothing her de- partment could do either. "Our men aren't insured to ellmb trees, and we don't have any long ladders. I suggest puttinl rood at the bottom or the tree and leaning a ladder In place. "Maybe lhe cat will get hungl'y and make a try for the ladder. Nothing else we can do. Sor ry." -Great stuff, I thought. Animal lover& wiU be outraaed. I grabbed my camera and searched the map book for Fairway Lane where the cat. described as black and while, Uny and cute waa up 1 tree. "'As I HEADED for the door. the phone rang. Should 1 take the Ume to answer when such a freat human interest photo was Just a shutter '• •~P away! It was 'l'beraa. --f"' "JftTY," •he bubbled Just 1~ minutes after her nnt call. ·•1 don't need your help. Tbe cat just walked paat my house. It IO 1J'9lt. He Cot down by himaell." Lieutenant F'otter, you are one smart cop. ' • ' I 7 • Lag11na/South Coast ED ITI O N Your Hometown • Daily ewspaper ~ VOL. 72, NO. $8, 3 SECTIONS. ?8 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1979 Vietnam.Claims 2,000 • i Chinese Troops .Slain Teachers Get Pay ~Raises Citing a California Supreme Court reversal of pay freezes in post-Proposition 13 bailout legislation, Saddleback College trustees a pproved $457,000 in raises for facuJty members Mon· day. To Face Music Presiden4's Sister Arrested AMERICUS, Ga . <AP) President Carter's sister, Gloria Spann, 1s free on personal re- cognizance bond after being charged with illegal harmonica playing. ·'Obviously I have Jess talent than I thought." Mrs . Spann said Monda~ night. She. her husband, Walter, and two other people were arrested Saturday night at the McWaffle restaurant, said Americus Police. "I am charged with: 'Def en· dant was playing a harmonica. When asked to stop playing music refused to do so and kept on playing'." Mrs. Spann said in a telephone interview from her Plains, Ga .• home. Fierce Battle Rages BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> - Vietnam reported fierce fighting today in the northwest corridor to Hanoi and said its forces wiped out 2,000 Chinese there from Friday to Monday. The official Voice of Vietnam said the fighting was concentrat· ed in the Cam Duong area which sits astride the Red River delta corridor which runs from t he frontier to t he Vi etnamese capital <Related story Page A5l D .. ly l'l..C Staff - The raises, contained in an employee contract in rorce when bailout laws froze wages, pro- vide a 7.8 percent increase t~ 170 full-time faculty members and a Portion of about 600 part-time teachers. The three-year con- tract expires June 30. The facul· ty raises are retroactive to July 1. 1978. { College Business Manager "Walter is c h arged with : 'Defendant was asked to leave building, but refused to do so un· less placed under arrest'." she said . "I 'm reading from Walter's ticket." The broadcast also said two more Chinese companies were decimated in Lang Son province northeast or Hanoi on Monday and another 250 Chinese soldiers were kiJJed or wounded in two days in Phong Tho district of Lai Chau province. COUNCILWOMAN WAGNER INSPECTS RAGGED ROSES In San Clemente, Probfem1 With Ctty Flower1 Irk Her Roy Barletta said today the percentage of part-time teachers receiving the pay hike will de- ; pend on their position on the col· 1 lege's salary scaJe. l Board members voted 5 to O to f. approve the raises. with William Watts and Robert Price absent. ' The move was merely pro· ' cedural since the court decision indicated tha t trustees must Mrs. Spann said she and a dozen friends had gone to the r est aurant "after a musical evening at my house," and one or the group dared her to play the harmonica. She said she had been learning to play it for about APWI ......... SOUR NOTE? Gloria Carter Spann a month. The four arrested were sitting together in a booth, she said. President Carter called on China to undertake "a speedy withdrawal" from Vietnam. in a message g iv e n l o Chinese leaders by Trea-sury Secretary W. Michael Blumental who 1s visiting Peking. It was the oluntest statement of American opposition to the war. Rose Garden Tlwmy San Clemente Issue honor contracts negotiated prior ' to the baiJout bill which froze ~T-1 Sh h sa+:;::~~-ruled that colleges "atter rews ury and other governmental institu- tions must honor employee con -s c d trac~~~;:,e;.~::z~ilout ervices ·on U~Cted But intelligence sources in Bangkok noted that the Chinese showed no signs of a withdrawaJ after 10 days of fighting and in fact were reinforcing troops in some frontier areas. including Lang Son. By STEVE MITCHELL Of tlM 0.ilY Pl ... S~tf San Clemente Councilwoman Myrtis Wagner is peeved over Posies in the seaside town, but city officials said today they · never promised her a rose garden. l : Trustee Asks Memorial services were con· ducted Monday for long-time rancher Wa lter Shrewsbury, who was a member of one of Orange County's oldest families and a San Juan Capistrano resi· dent for more than a half cen tury. He died Thursday at the age of88. hospital recuperating. In 1923, Mr. Shrewsbury and his brother purchased a ranch in San Juan Capistrano. It was located along Del ObisPo Street near the present day .Vermuelen Ranch Market. No figures were given, but Hanoi has claimed its troops have killed more than 16,000 Chinese since Peking invaded Feb. 17. lntelUgence sources consider the kill count inflated China has not given casualty figures. But in one of its few re· ports on the war the official Hsinhua news agency said today that a Chinese unit was cited for "meritorious service, second class for the timely completion of a Pontoon bridge across the Binh Giang River under heavy enemy fire" Feb. 20 near tbe county seat or Phuc Hoa, tn Cao Bang province about 110 miles northeast of Hanoi. The latest flowe r flap involves a weed-choked rose garden at Plaza Park that Mrs . Wagner says should be maintained by a Gardena landscape firm hired by the city to care for city park areas. t t More Exciting Campus Talent Saddleback College Trustee Norrisa Brandt would like to see some "more exciting" talent come to the campus, maybe a hip-swiveling Mick Jagger or a snake-wielding Alice Cooper. During a discussion Monday of community service entertain- ment events Lined up at the col- lege, Mrs. Brandt asked why no rock and roll bands for younger people ever played at the school. "I think there s hould be someone more exciting," the former Republican Secretary or State candidate mused. "We haven't had the ex perience with some of the things like security that would be necessary fo r that kind of event," Community Services Director Doyle McKinney answered. Citing an act booked at the col- lege for April, McKinney said "We 're going to start getting ex - perience with this bald-headed Kingston Trio." The trio, first PoPUlar in the 1950s, is makin~ a comeback. Coast Weather Cha nce of showers in- creasing to 20 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight 43 to 48. Highs Wednesday low to mid 60s. INSIDE TODAY The 31th annual reunion of World War II veterana 1DC11 a night of nostalgia. The event. spon.aored bf/ the Coata Mesa Hutorioal Society, uw held at Orange Cocut College'• Student Center -the same pro~rlJI that wa1 once port of the Santa Ana Air Bo.ae. ~e FeolurinQ , Page Cl. ., a ... , ... M •• •• Cl ••4 •• ... , •• .. Mr. Shrewsbury w'as.. bo""-in Orange and worked in .a mining operation in Arizona before he entered the armed forces in World War I. He was wounded in France and spent a year after the war in a Los Angeles Tiiree Flee Boat Blaze Off Clemente A North Hollywood man and bis two sons are safe today after their 65-foot schooner caught fire and burned Sunday night 31h miles off San Clemente Pier. An Orange County Ha r bor Patrol spokesman said damage to the schooner "Arroura" was set at $20,000 and was confined mainly to the engine room. The boat's value is $100,000. Harbor Patrol Deputies Crai~ Beckwith and Fred Thomas ar· rived at the scene shortly after 7:30 p.m. in a 28-foot fire boat. The blaze was contained In 45 minutes h a rbor p a trol authorities said. Schooner owner Allen Drossin was aboard the craft with his two sons when the fire broke out. The two young boys were set adrift in a rubber rafl while their fat.her battled the blaze in choppy seas. The boat was towed to Oceanside Harbor by the Coast Guard cutler Point Hobart following lbe fire. No injuries were reported. Laguna Burglar Gets Stag Films Police are searching today ror a burglar who took a list of items valued at $730 including eight stag films, a Mickey Mouse Lelepbone and cash from a Laguna Beach book store ear· ly Sunday . The predawn break·ln oc· curred at the Book Boutique 1495 Glenneyre St. Police said the crook removed some louvered windows at the rear of the abop, frabbed hla loot and fied out. the lroat dool'. The door was left open. ,. ... The two men operated the ranc::h for almost 50 years. Mr., Shrewsbury a lso owned and operated the old F lying A Ser vice station formerly on the site of the present mini park on Camino Capistrano in downtown San Juan. He retired in 1962 and the service station was closed. He was fond of walking and hikin g through California's wilderness area a nd kept journals about the wildlife he en- c ou nte red on these nature walks. Mr. Shrewsbury is survived by his wife, Vera; a brother, Lynn; a son, Allison, and a grandson, James Gregory, all of San Juan Capistrano. Also surviving are a g r a nd daughter , Lisa Shrewsbury Thomas, and a great-grandson, Dustin Thomas, both of Palm Springs. Hsinhua also said the first thing its troops do when entering evacuated Vietnamese villages is s weep streets, clean houses and feed livestock. The report, carried Monday by the Hong Kong Communist newspaper We n Wei Po, seemed aimed at countering Vietnamese charges of Chinese atrocities in the in- vasion. An intelligence sour ce an Bangkok said the Chinese moved one division Monaay into Quang Ninh province east of Lang Son, the Vietna m ese border city. The firm, BMC Landscaping, receives Sl2,123 a month to maintain seven parks, city hall grounds. the community center. beach club, a reservoir and the corPoration maintenance yard. But it is the San Clemente Post 423 Memorial Rose Garden at Plaza Park that is the thorn in Mrs. Wagner's side. "Look at this mess.·• the coun· cilwoman said , pointing to a ' clump of weeds that tower over nearby rose bushes. And, no doubt about it, things are in a sad state at the rose garden. The four plots o f e arth, separated by asphalt trails, are overgrown with weeds, grass and unkempt rose bushes. But city officials s ay the landscape firm is not to blame for the mess . And. they say. there's no need to prune the roses, or weed the garden for that matter Die lande Storti Dentist John Bruce checks the teeth of 1 when he examines patients, is one of second grader Tom Warmuth at Ambuehl several area dentists wbo volunteer each Elementary Sc hoo l tn San Juan year to check the students . More than 500 Ca pistrano as part of a projtram to find children were examined at Ambuehl last students who may have tooth or gum prob· Friday. Another 610 youngsters had their lems. Bruce, who always wears a mask teeth checked at Del Obispo School. • ~ \tttJ l.t ·-·. . ' ' . ' I l It's all going to be torn up in the near future, they say. • .• "The roses are d1seased, "'5aid Stewart Frame. the city's leisure services coordinator. 1 He said an Arizona plant con- s ultant said the cost of re· fu rbishing the roses , plagued with root knot. crown galJ ano menatodes . would be prohibitive. <See ROSES. Page A2 > Oil Pricing Sends Stock Market Down NEW YORK <AP > -The stock market fe ll sharply m moder ate trading today in what analysts saw as reaction to con· cern over oil prices. inflation and mtem atlonal turmoil. The Dow Jones average or 30 industrial stocks tumbled 12.73 Points to 808.39 in four hour.; of trading on the New York Stock Exchange. after slipping 2.16 Points Monday • "The market is finally bend· ing under the weight of negative news," said Robert Stovall or Dean, Witter Reynolds, a Wall Street investment firm . , President Carter submitted a standby energy rationing plan to1 Congress in the wake of a world squeeze on oil supplies which followed the shutdown of Iranian, fields. , Thef'arket showed little reac· · tion t the Saudi Arabian an-' nouncement that it would tem-; Porarily hold to prices set by the• Organization of Petroleum Ex·' porting Countries even though other OPEC m embers have raised prices. Bowl, Ticloots A 'Ste~' in Laguna Beach Tickets are going hke hot cakes for country singer E mylou Hanis' Sunday concert a the Irvine Bowl. The only problem. Police r ' Port. ls that many of the ticke have been stolen from the So Spectrum shop, 1224 South Coa Highway. For the second time in th past five days, a number of th" ducats were taken from th shop. A burglar broke through a roo window at the s hop Sunday made off wttb t67 worth of tickets, two smoki n g pipes some cash and a psychedelid calendar. Police have no sua-: pecla. I Police arrested two Juveniles Thursday on auapicion of steal· ln1 S8:IO worth of Ucket.s and $250 .ln caah from tlM Sound Spec. trum . ' I • A2 DAILY PIL01 U§C Woman Trapped In Home A l.AiWla Dcach pohee In 'Hlt1Eator aJd b wn tart.I~ Mood•> fluaoon wb n lht. body ot 1n eldc.'rly woman who had repurtedly d lf!d 1n hl'r bathroom s uddenly bc!&an t o mO\'U, lnve tiutor Marl& v non i.aid h b d untfllrf'd the dowo&own home of an Ill> ar old "am n wb~e au.om y U.ld hl' rean.'d he h11d dle-d Everton round lhl' oman far down and moltonJ~ a& ! p m Sht> "a. "l'«i&ed bet Wi't"etl the wall and t.olM Tbe attamty told poltec the woman had not ans-.ertd hJ knock on her front door when~ came by to dellver her wall ear Her Hut wh11 Evt?rlon w11ted ror a doctor to arrive, be HJd b Wlb blartled when lbe woman sud denJy began mo\•1n1 Arter helping her off the noor. Everton learned from the woman that she had (alien severaJ hours earlier and could not free herself after being ~tuck bet.ween the wall and toUet. ~ She was taken to South Coast Community Hospital where she was Teport.ed in stable condition this morning after treatment for dehydration. · Armed Rapist Sought in San Clemente San Clemente police are seek mg a man who allegedly at· tempted to rape a woman on the city beach Monday, using a handgun to force his vicum to comply with his wishes. Police were called to an apart· ment by the girl's boyfriend, who said she -was accosted on the city beach by a man "with a mihtary appearance." The woman escaped the sus- pect. WhO Wal\ descnbed as Of medium build with dark hair. wearing a yellow sweat shirt and denim trousers. Police s aid the victim saw a s ix-inch revolver in the man's hand at the time of the attempt- ed rape. Officers said tbey had few other details or the crime today. School Split To Be Aired The pros and cons of splitl.tng the Capistrano Unified School District into two separate en· tities will be discussed in a forum tonight sponsored by the Capistrano Bay Area League or Women Voters. The league program begins al 7.30 p.m. at the San Diego Gas and El ec tri c Company auditorium, 101 W. Portal, San Clc~te. SupP91"lers of two districts in· elude Bernard L. Rickets and Mary Ann Whittier. Arguments against the division will come from r etired administrator Truman Benedict and Or. JNome Thornsley, CUSD superintendent. Durkin Quits Traffic Post Jay Durkjn, a member of the San Clemente Traffic and Park· ang commission, has resigned his post. stating that he does not have the time to put into the city panel. - San Clemente citit.ens who would Like to serve on the com- mission can apply at City Hall. Applicants must file a state- ment as well as a resume with City Clerk Max Berg by s p.m. March 21. OAANOE COAST Ll5C DAILY PILOT tl"t< Or•~CO*'fO-i••PtfrOt wttf"l•tucrtkcom '''"'" ,,.. .. ,..,...,, ,., .... , ''OUOfj\N'Oby ll'lit Ot41'\91' r "'"'\' Puofi~CO"'P"~'f ~Pl'•••f'<llh~"'e wbH\MCI ~ tf'tf°"9ft f.r•Ny for (.0\11 M• '~ H-8"< .... Hll•lll~ e. .. h1- '-''n V11lley hvtrw, l~V'Mt8~•" Sot.ifftCN\I /4 •"'0'" 'f"Qfan.tl f'dlhof\ "oubtt\ht'-0 \.eturcMyi •no .,._''" ~ prlndpeo pullllsll•no 01""' •I el 1JO W• .t 8•• !>t"'"' r0tl• MtW. c.tflfom1••1'Jt . ..., .. _ l'ft•IOo•t --·-Joe••~ "' ... ,., •. t~t\••ftd~~.-MtMIJ" ftteiMHl(.....:1 Efitot ·-···~ M• .... l<IOECllilot O..rle\H Lwf ·-· INn """'"'" f<M-,~-1~ T~ne f114)to-U:l1 CltMlf!H Mwertte1ntto.M11 uovn• leect1 All o.-m.l'lt9! Telepftone ........ , __ ca.-..... '"""'1:: ~ °'~ .. <=:.~~ ::'Ti. ,., tf ~;;t;;;rNPlh M telf\ "'•• .. ••••M~· .. •II-I -t•I Mt•lllO ...... ,., .... ..,.._ ~~::....!'•:v,~l:::O::tte:: .. ~~ ~~ ~::.,::.:..::::.,:to ::= ... r. H ,,_M,, ' < I ' Delly ,. ... Sl.tft - LAURA CUNNINGHAM PVTS WAJ..l. Y THROUGH lflS PACES Pooch Gr•bbed a Second In Laguna Beach Dog Show ~a Dog Show J_ - Presents 19 Awards Laguna Beach's Riddle Field went to the dog::. over the weekend as 20 prizes were awarded at the city's kiddie canine show. Thirty-one contestants showed up to complete in six categories. 'fbe winners are: Best be haved dog -first place, Stacy Andrew's Tata; second, Chuck Bream 's Brandi; third Brooke Landis' Charly. Smallest dog first place. Heidi Van Rensselaer's Panda; Pag e Van Rensselaer 's ,.,..,,. Page A J ROSES ... Nol so. says Mrs WagnJr .. pointing to new growth on the s crawny rose bushei•.. "Wt<at they need," she s aid. "1s a Jillie fertilizer. some heavy pruning, and care.'' But Frame said the garden 1s beyond repair He said be plans to outhne future plans for the rose garden when the council next meets. Thal doesn't let the city off the hook for a former pansy garden in front of the community center, Mrs. Wagner said. The Gardena landscaping firm planted 1,600 Magestic pansies in the plot last November, but you wouldn't know it looking at the flower bed today. There's nothing there now but dirt. Mrs. Wagner compla ined al a January council meeting that the city paid S650 for the posies, and got little in return And while council members agreed with her contention. and held off payment to BMC, the bill now has been paid. City officials said that posy plot was plagued with problems. just like the Plaza Park rose garden. "The company put in 25 flats or pansies, .. Frame said. But heavy rains in January wiped out a third of the pansies. and school children waiting for buses outside the community center smashed many more, Frame said. He said the landscape firm will till the soil and treat it for disease. and the city's garden club has offered to plant ivy geraniums at no cost to the city Frame. who joined the city in December. said that project bas a high priority in his depart· ment 'Thief Gets Cash A burglar broke a window at a Laguna Beach yogurt shop late Sunday night or early Monday morning and stole $20 in change. Police said the• break-in oc- curred at the Great American Yogurt Shop~ 2S'l South Coast Highway. Tashiaka Chan tied for second with Bethany Blacketer's Puff. Funniest dog -first place, Craig Kolle nd a's Mugsy; second, Tony Jones' Choo-Choo tied with Tresa Rowe's Hairy; third, Leslie Brown's Tic-Toe. Bes t trick dog · -Anna Houser's Brownie and Erika Houser's Sugar tied for first; s econd, Laura Cunningham's Wally. Best looking dog over 20 pounds -first, Shelley Higgs' Lady; second, Anna Phillips' Frisky; and a tie for third, Amy Beierschmitt's Roz and Evan Lewis' Maggie Mae. Best looking dog under 20 pounds -first Page Van Rensselaer 's Tashiaka Chan; second, Heidi Van Rensselaer's Panda ; third, Laura Cun· ningham's Wally. The event was sponsored by the city Recreation Department. the National Recreation and Park Association and the Ken-L Ration Company. Col. Herzog Rites Slated Private ruoeral services are scheduled Wednesday for re· tired U.S. Ail' Force Lt. Col. Charles Albert Herzog, 63, of Laguna Beach, who died Satur- day. Born in San Jose. Costa Rica, Mr. Herzog lived in Laguna Beach for lhe past 11 years. He served in the Atr Force during World War Two and the Korean conflict before retiring after 20 years in the service. Mr. Her zog attended the Univers1ly of Arizona and Valley Forge Military Academy. He is survivedd by his wife Elizabeth Boogi,e Board Wmne~Told Five Orange Coast residents won first place honors at the boogie board contest held near Oak Street in Lagtma Beach Sunday. The local first place winners in their respective divisions are: Colby Julian, Laguna Beach, ages 10\.and unde r ; Cosbey Watson, Laguna Niguel. ages 11 to 14 ; Leon Ebargaray, Capistrano Beach, ages lS-17; and Curt Brestel, Newport Beach, ages 18 and over. Laguna Beach resident Alisa Scbwarzstein won top honors. in the female competition. The event was sponsored by Oak Street and Morey Boogie surf shops. Top State Court Doctor to Appeal Close of Practice Justices of tbe Callfornia Supreme Court wlll be asked at a bearing to be scheduled later lhla week to strike down a restraining order that prevents Dr. Ralph Small of Santa Ana from practJcing medicine. Sm.U's attorney, Terry Giles of Sant.a' Ana, riled the ~UUon Monday in San Francisco. It argues that the order Issued Feb.· 8 by Orange Count)' Supelior Court Judge WlUJam S. lM la unconstitutJonal. Small 11 accused ln acUon taken by the atate'• Board of Medical Quality Assurance or in· competence and cro11 neallcence in th treatment of two patient.a. ft is alleged thal one of Small's patienb died after un· dergoing pluUc surgery. It Is al- leged that a second patient con- tncled a near fatal lnfecllon after treatment by the plasUc aurgeon. The order which prevents Small from practicing medicine went into effect Feb. 16. The Fourth District Court of Appeals In San Bernardino earlier re- rused to overturn Judge Lee's ordel'. A spokesman for lb• Oranae County Dlst.r1ct Attorney's OI· nee aa1d today that the poatblli- t.y that criminal action will be taken against Dr. Small la aWI under consideration. I 4 Cars, Trees Hit /nJine 'Derbri' Ends in Arrest By PRJUP ROSMARIN Of ... o.llY '°'"°' iu.tt An Ontario, Canada, teen-ager left a la.sting Impression on Irvine shoppers at Walnut. VlUuge Mon- day So impressed were they that 10 men 1an1 tackled tbe 17-yeaM>ld youth when he Oed his car on ro0t after bashlng the car into four parked cars, and destroylna two trees and a light standard. Irvine resident Joan Wilder of 4911 Karen Ann Lane was the only hopper still in her car when what $he called the 3:20 p.m. "demoU- Uon derby·· got started. "It was like a maniac on a rampage." she said. "I can't believe what was going on out there. People were screaming to gel pedestrians inside." Mrs. Wilder, who was suffer- ing from sore muscles today, but s aid she was otherwise unhurt, described what happened. "It was very quick. The whole thing happened in less than two minutes. "I pulled into the lot, parked, hea rd bTakes or tires screech and he hit me." H'r car was struck rrom behind and knocked across the parking lot into another parked car which in turn was propelled into a light standard. She s aid the driver of the careening car apparently bad tried to exjl the parking Jot onto Culver Drive. near Walnut Avenue. was blocked and quick- ly tried to reverse to go through F,....PageAJ legi was approved. addlebaek 's classHied loyee work force was otiating a new contract when the freeze went into effect. College officials said today, however, tbal group will be given retroactive pay increases also because negotiations for Ju- ly 1. 1978 increases were sus- pended when wages were rnnen. Barletta also cited a board Tes· olution that provided ror pay hikes to be retroactive when negotiations spilled beyond JuJy 11 but prior to bailout legisla- tion. On Monday, trustees also authorized a res umption or negotiations with the school's classified employee organization to reach agreement for wage hikes for those workers. Classified employees include c lerical workers , grounds· keepers, maint e nan ce personnel, campus security rorces and some administrators. Board Chairman LaTry Taylor said college officials had kept funds to cover the raises in a contingency account in case lhe pay freeze was ruled unconstitu- tional. Officials indicated the court decision would not affect fund- ing for other college programs. Parking Fine Upped in SJC Parking violations in San Juan Capistrano will soon cost the culprits an extra $5. Councilmen unanimously have approved a new fine structure for parking violations in the city that will standardize fines al $10 per infraction. The new fines are expected to raise $200 extra per month for city coffers. Fines were increased for such violations as unauthorized park· ing in loading zones, passenger loading iones and bus stops. Parking in red zones is pres- ently a $10 fine. YoutluSeek Speech Crown Three Laguna Beach High School student.a are among the finalists who will compete Thursday night in the 42nd an- nual Lions Club Speech contest. The contest will begin at 7:30 p.m. at the Hotel Laguna, 425 South Coast HJghway. Evelyn Fielding, Kevin Kollenda and Susan Upjobn will co mpete with high school oratort from olber Orange CoU.n· ty schools for u much as ... 500 in scholarships. Thta year's speech topic Is ''Who Am I?" Manager, Planner To Attend Meeting City Manager Fted Solomon and new Pf annlng Director Marlene Roth wUI be gues\.S at a March 15 Laguna Beach meet- ing of the Arch Beach Heighta A11oclation. The 7:30 pm. meeting will be conducted at 16'14 Del Mar Ave. The mfttJna ls open to rc&Jd nta and property o~'Dera ln Arch Beach HeijJhU. the Walnut exit. and lo l control or the car. Police said the car also hit another parked car before back· ing up, knocking over two trees and a bank sign, and smacking into Mrs. WiJder'sc•r. Irvine Police Officer Terry OeVene happened by just then and witnessed a teen-ager beina chased and finally caught ana pulled to the ground by about 10 or 12 very angry men, be reported. .frustrated. his car ruined and all exits then blocked wlth debris and wrecked cars. the driver abandoned his car <£nd tried to run. police said. The driver waa booked at Orange County Juvenile Hall on charges of misdemeanor bit and l'Un driving. Police were not s ure today what touched off t.he calamitous cham of events. Scientist at U CI Cites New Hazard The UC Irvine scientist who helped di sc over that fluorocarbons destroy ozone in the stratosphere told the En- vironmental Protection Agency today that another chlorine com- pound is endangering life on earth. . Or. F. Sherwood Rowland re- ported to an EPA panel that m ethyl chloroform. a com - mercial cleaning solvent used oo electronic equipment and metal machinery surfaces. "may soon require regulation." Rowland's studies in 1974, with Dr. Mario Molina, of the hazards of fluorocarbons from aerosol propellants and refrigerants. led to an existing ban on the com- pounds. The problem with nuoro- carboos and other chlorine carbons like metbylchJoroform. the chemistry professor said, is that they release free atoms of chlorine into the atmosphere. The chlorine atoms drift up- ward into the stratosphere. lhe zone of the atmosphere six to 15 miles above the earth's surface. and react violently with ozone, destroying the substance. 0.lty~Si.ett- WARN$ OF DANGER UCl's Rowland The earth's ozone layer is responsible for screening out ul- tra violet rays from the s un which are harmful to human skin. The rays are believed to be the primary ca use of skin cancer . the c hlorine compounds, the prime aggressor or the ozone layer next to fluorocarbons is the c leaning agent. metbylchloroform. Ozone reduction also can lead to c lim atic c h anges and biological damage to plants and other animals. Rowland carried out measure- ments of melhylchloroform with University of Tokyo colleague Yoshihi.no Makide. Measurements were· taken at remote locations, to avoid con- tamination from other sub- stances. from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, Chile. Rowland testified that among Waddill Attorney Absent at Trial Samples were collected in stainless steel flasks which were returned to Irvine for analysis. JuTors in the Dr. William Waddill baby-slaying trial were sent home today wbden the doc· tor's attorney. Charles Weed- man, failed to sb<>w up in court after be complained of chest pains. Rowland discove red the average Hfetime of the com- pound to be five or six years, time enough to allow a signifi· cant portion of it to get into the stratosphere and do damage. Panel Meets A panel or 12 jurors bas been picked Lo try the case, and alternates were supposed to be chosen this morning before opening arguments. Laguna Beach's Recreation and SociaJ Services Committee will meet tonight at 7: 30 in the American Legion Hall at Catalina and Legion Avenues. A Cat-astrophe In the Making By JERRY CLAUSEN Of IM 0.lty l'llot Staff When 17-year-old Theresa Martin called the Daily ~!lot's Huntington Beach bureau Monday about a cat stuck an a tall, tall palm tree for three days, it sounded like a great story. THE AFTERNOON was slow. "Nobody," said Theresa. "will get the cat down. it's been up there for three days, just meowing and meowing. We don't know who it belongs to. "Yes. I've called the Huntington Beach Fire Depart- ,. ment. Yes, the Huntington Beach Humane Society, too. And the police de· partme nt and the county animal shelter. "Can you get someone to help?" ARA, THOUGHT I, an animal in dire straits. And no public response. Checking for myself, J learned from the fire department that il no longer sends ladder trucks for animals in cuuia" treetop distress. Too costly, and too dangerous to Ue up a rig that might be needed in a real emergency. Lt. John F~ter of the pohce department was candid. "Ir t.~e Fire Department won't do it, well, we won't either. Cats come down. In 15 years, I've ne\ler had a cat starve to death In a tree, They always come down and make fools of lhose who try to save them,·' said Lieutenant Foster. A SPOKESWOMAN for the county Animal Control D•:partment up in Orange said there was nolh1ng ber de· partment could do either. ''Our men aren't insured to climb trees. and we don't have any long ladders. I suggest putUng food at the bottom of the tree and leaning a ladder in place. "Maybe the cat wlU get hungry and make a try for lbe ladder. Nothing else we can do. Sol'ry." Greet stuff, I thought. Animal lovers wlll be outraged. 1 grabbed my camera and searched the map book for Fairway Lane where tht cat. de~cribed as black and white, tiny and cute was up a tree. AS I BEADED for the door, the phone TADI. Should I tAkt the time to a.nsw r when such a great human interest photo was just a shutter's snap •way? rt wu There a. "Jerry," ehe bubbled just 15 minutes after her nnt call, "l don't n~ your he\p. The cat Just walked put my house. tl ao peat. He cot down by h.lmtelf. •• Lleuttnant Fosler, you a~ ooe s mart cop. ' ' I f 7 - 0.11Vf"li.tStaff ....... ANIMALS ANAL VZED IN SPECIAL LAGUNA SESSION Beatrice Lydecker 'T~llka' to the Animals She D iagnoses P et P roble 11UJ If you could talk to the o"imoLf, Ju.st imagine it. chatting to o chimp in Chimponue; Imagine talking to o tiger, chal· ting in Cheetah; Whai o neat ochiewmem it would be. 1/ we could talk to the animoLf -From the film "OT. DooUttle" By STEVE MITCHELL Of -O.Uy l'tlet Suff Beatrice Lydecker talks Lo the animals. Aod they. in turn, chat with the North Hollywood woman, telling her their woes, describ- ing wbere it hurts, and express- ing their gripes about their masters. Now it's not the kind of con· venation you or I would un· derstand. You can 't even eavesdrop during her counseling sessions. It's all in the mind. Beatrice Lydecker is a pro- fessional animal analysL She'll tuneioonyourpet'spsycheror$2S an hour And she came to Laguna Beach recen tly to diagnose behavior problems suffered by several dogs cared for by the Laguna Be~ Pet Responsibili -ty Committee. Inc. Specifically, pet committee members wanted the woman Lo analyze ''Mugsy," a German shepherd with a bad reputation. The dog was adopted out once but after problems was brought back to the animal sheller. "Mugsy " was adopted out again, this time Lo a family from Encinitas. The shepherd bit one of the family children. and was returned. with the owners ask· ing that it not be destroyed. Local vet Dr. John Hamil checked the dog and termed the d og "unpredictably ag - gressive." although be said he could find no definite evidence Lo indicate brain damage. The dog was returned to the sheller. and part-time Victoria Drive resident Jane Allen ad· vised PRC officials they should ask Mrs. Lydecker to diagnose the dog. She came down last week, and when she departed several hours later. she left behind an awe-struck group of animal lovers. "She's fantastic," Mrs. Allen said. "I've seen her work with animals for years and she's good." The animal a naly st's diagnosis? "The dog has brain damage," Mrs . Lydecker said in a telephone interview. "He is schizophrenic." And how did she a rrive at those conclusions? "I talk wi th animals by means of mental communication," the woman said, "or extra-sensory perception. if you will." She said she asked the dog wby be bites. and the animal projected to her the impression that be can't help himself. "He said, 'I just tum around and bite.·" By analyzing tnental pictures -in color -directed to Mrs. Lydecker by the animal the analyst said she was told that be bad been in a home once where be bit a child. "He cUdn'l know why he bit tbe child, and he really bad no reason to do so." Based on the lack of reason- ing, Mrs. Lydecker said, she came t.o the conclusion the dog's brain is damaged. Dr. Ramil aaJd he could not di•P-ute the woman's findings. "The ph.yslcaJ examination of the dog shows ita neuroloakru ren eitea are all oormaJ," the veterinarian said. "But I would not deny abe "rceivet something dlfrerent than we do, or ,that she ls aware of thltlp we are not aware of," beaald. • ' I He said the woman likes to touch the animal during analysis -although she says she can carry on a perfecUy lucid con- versation with an animal over the phooe. ··Acupuncturists do the same thing. and they make quote, un· quote diaguoses." Dr. Ha mil sa id . "And I b e l ieve acupuncture works beyond a shadow of a doubt." · '1 would not deny s h e possesses some techniques or abilities that the rest of us do not," he said. As a result of her diagnosis, Pet Responsibility members are asking the city to allow an animal bebaviorist to care for Mugsy. Mrs. Lydecker said she dis· covered her talent in 1959 when she walked up to a dog that looked like an animal she had lost. "It really freaked me out," the 40-year-old woman said. "He told me he felt deserted, and sure enough, his owner said he had recenUy returned to work after recuperating -at home with the dog -from an automobile accident. "I thought I was gettmg int.o the occult, and 1 don't like that stuff,·' she said, professing to be a Christian. "I don't believe in reincarna· lion. tarot cards or astrology." But she claims 95 percent ac· curacy for her movie screen vis· ions she says she receives from animals. She said even animals with small brains can transmit the images Lo ber. And the former housewife bas her fans. "I called her in tears a few years back when I returned to my car from shopping and found my dog missing.·• Mrs. Allen said. Over the phone, Mrs . Lydecker said two men in a white van took the dog. "The dog will be found at the bottom of a hill on a comer street at a white house sur- rounded by a chain link fence,·· the woman told Mrs. Allen. "And." she added, "there will be two dogs in the back yard. "One of them is yours." Mrs. Allen, accompanied by a bo y f ami l iar with the neighborhood, found the home a nd -you guessed it -her dog. ''The man at the house said be spotted it walking down the street and took it in," Mrs. Allen said . "But I doubt it." Mrs. Allen. who professes to be an animal lover, said Mrs. Lydecker has helped her re· cover a pet bird that flew the coop, and has diagnosed several of ber animals who were ailing. And when the woman lost her cat, Mrs. Lydecker had Lo break the news the animal was dead. "We looked all over the place for Amigo." Mrs. Allen said, ·•and I finally called Beatrice to help." Using her unique abilities, Mrs. Lydecker told the woman to ·•go to the left side of your house ln some dark green vines where there appean to be over- head watering ... "I can't get anything from hlm oow," s he added after a pause. "I'm afraid he's gone." Mn. Allen's husband followed the woman's telephone instruc- tions and found the cat's body beside the house. Mrs. Lydecker aald she rc- m embers the lncldent, but added she does not UJte to com- municate with dead anJmala. "It's condemned In the Scrip. tures," she saJd . B uslnns Blt1 State to Junk Litter Levy By DAVID Kl1T2MANN Of -o.;1y ....... '\Mt 'ft\e alale I.a ready to discard a major portion of lts Utter tu, but Callfornl buslnessmen could still end up paytng the full 118 mUUon Ulb Lt Gov Mike Curb wu ex- pt>rted to sign legislation today that citempts thousands of bus1· ne,_amen tl'Om bav\ng to pay the levy and pushes back the due date from Wednesday to Oct. 1. Suspect Mentally 'Unfit' By KATHY CLANCY Of .... O.lly Pllel ~ A young drifter accused of s la ying 30-ye ar-old San Clemente Police Officer Richard Steed Nov. 29 was judged men· tally unfit to stand trial for murder Monday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Robert Rickles ordered James Richard Hoffer, 23, sent to Patton State Hospital in San Bernardi.no for treatment of what was descrl~ by physicians as chronic schizophrenia Rickles asked for a progress report aft.er six months treat· ment and suspended criminal proceedings against the murder defendant in the meantime. Suspension of legal proceed· ings does not mean Hofler will not someday stand trial and con- front a death sentence for al· l eged ly murd eri ng lbe policeman. The suspension m eans lhe ac· cused man will be imprisoned in the mental hospital until, if ever, be ts found mentally capable of standing trial. Hoffer is charged with firing two fatal .38 caliber handgun rounds into Steed as the officer stepped from his patrol car in San Clemente responding to a caJl for medical aid. One slug bit the officer in the left forearm wbile a second tore into his chest causing fatal in· juries. Seven hours after the shooting police arrested Hoffer a block from where the officer fell. The former mental patient matched the description of a man who had asked night sbift workers at a local newspaper to call an ambulance, saying he had cut bis arm. Wben arrested. Hoffer had a gash above bis wrist and a four· inch knife wound in the abdomen which police said appeared Lo have beens-elf-inflicted. Insurance Incre ase Plan Oppos ed By REBECCA HELM Of tllt o.lly ~li.t Swtt Orange County's Transporta- tion Commission voted Monday to oppose pending state legisla- tion that could increase car in· surance rates as much as 30 per- cent for some county residents. Tbe proposed legis lation would eliminate the current criteria of basing insurance pre- miums on driver-accident rates in geographic areas. Instead, a statewide average premium rate would be in· stituted. The proposed rate revision was pointed out to the com- mission by Commissioner David Brandt. He is leading a coun· tywide drive to fight the rate changes. At Brandt's urging the panel ordered that a resolution be sent to the st ale ins urance com- missioner prior to public hear- ings scheduled in Los Angeles March 7 and 8. Los Angeles County officials are suppc>rtlng the rate revision. Premiums for the low income a reas or their county are higher than rates set for the suburban areas here. and Los Angeles of· ficials claim the present system discriminates against low- lncome area residents. Under the statewide-average system. rates for Orange County motorists would increase sub- stantially to compensate for a corresponding drop In Los Angeles County, said Brandt, who la a Santa Ana city councilman. ell man. According to projections by the Automobile Club or Southern California. the biggest errect of elimlnatinll geographic raUngs would be felt ln Lafuna Beach and other parts of South Orange County wilh a 31 percent annual lncreue. Newport Beach and Costa Mda drivers would get a 20 per· cent increase. Fountain VaUey and Huntington Beach driven would incur a 17 percent hike. The stale Senate paved the way Monday when it voled 32·1 to ao along with Assembly backed amendments ln tbe law that will excuse about 475,000 buslnesses that would have bad to pay the tax We dnesday. Another 1.25,000 companies still will have to pay the assessment. an October. stale Bqard of Equalization spokesmen said. However, the Legislature has until July Lo come up with an alternate proposal or all busi· nesses could be liable again in October. Curb, who is acting chief ex· ecutive while Governor Brown is out or slate, indicated late Mon- day be would sign the legisla- tion. The offices of lawmakers and the State Board of Equaliiation had been deluged with com- plaints from mostly small busi- ness me n who bad received notices in the mail the past several weeks telling them of the upcoming litter tax assess- ment. Delly,.let Slefl~ GENE WIWAMS AND JOAN CRASS SHARE BIRTHDAY Huntington Duo Don't Let Unuaual Date Bother Them An equalization board spokeswoman in Santa Ana said the businessmen complained mosUy of overta.xation at a time when government is supposed to be cutting back. State Sen. John Nejedly, R· Walnut Creek, who authored legis lation two years ago establishing the litter tax. Ul· troduced the amendments to stem the rising tide of criticism that bad greeted the arrival of the tax bills, a spokesman for his office said . Rare Oecasion The legislative remedy sent to Curb for his signature will sub- stantially reduce the number of businesses wbicb must pay the tax, but won't bite as deeply intQ the projeded revenue the tax was expect~ to generate. A state tax official told the Daily Pilot that 425,000 retailers in the slate along with 50,000 manufacturers and wholesalers wbo employ fewer than three people will be exempted from paying. The 125,000 businesses wbicb must pay the levy are those manufacturers and wholesalers who employ three or more people. Officials estimated lhe state would lose about $6.7 million of the projected $18 million ln litter taxes with the exemptions. An equalization board spokesman in Santa Ana said be didn't know the number of busi- nesses in Orange County that would be excused Crom paying the litter levy. The tax ranges from $25 for small firms to $2,000 for larger companies with 100 or more workers. The tax is to be used to finance the state's Solid Waste Management Program. Feb. 29th Set Celebrates By ROBERT BARKE R Ot Ille o.tty l'l4et Sleft Gene Williams has bad only 13 birthdays but he can pass for a man of SS. A FRIEND OF his, Joan Crass, bas had 12 birthdays, but she doesn't have to bother with an ID card anymore. Williams and Mrs. Crass, both of Huntington Beach, are Feb. 29th birthday babies and they only have offi cial birthdays each Leap Year. They should celebrate Thurs- day but February stops at 28. They don't let that bother them. EACH YEAR THEY toast the occasion with John Dun· can of Westminster and Bettie McCollum of Anaheim who also w.ere born on Feb. 29. . The four and their spouses celebrated Sunday night with diMer at a restaurant and a party later al Mrs. Crass• home. All four are members of a square dancing club and became close friends after learning from a roster of club members that they shared the same birthday. .. Only 30 couples belong to the club and lhe odds that four persons have the same Feb. 29 birthday seem t.remen· do us.·' Williams said. MRS. CRASS, a nurse in Orange. says it's kind of fun having a Feb. 29th birthday. "I've never felt that I was deprived. My family always remembers me.'• Williams, who owns a glass and window company in Huntington Beach, says the group plan.a a real shebang next year when there reaJJy is a Feb. 29th. "We're going to Las Vegas and celebrate in sty)e ... IF THERE IS to be a whopping celebration. it will be a far cry from Williams' .\_3th birthday party three years ago. ~ Guests brought gifts of marbles. a yo--yo and a toy truck for the occasion. Ironically, businessmen had supported the original litter tax proposal two years ago as ao alternative to a more stringent anti·litter proposal. But that was Two Men Sente nced in India before Proposition 13 was ap. NEW DELHI, lndia <AP> - proved by voters, triggering tax-Former Prime Minister Indira cutting sentiments throughout Gandhi's son Sanjay and former the state. • Information Minis ter V.C. Shukla were sentenced to two years at hard labor today for destroying a film that satirized Mrs. Gandhi's regime. THOJISON. corduroy collection Storekeeper Mark FrankJin is wearing~ one of many Thomson corduroy slacks, offered in three styles and seven colors ... comfortable, casuat and classic. 26. to 30. 101& 1rv1.,.., Newport Such C.thfom1., ~ 041·7001 . , • ' ' . # ~ ....... ~? Tom~~'" ~la.rpbiae 1he Bad Old Day STOP• aoa o PT. -w 've ba_d to many bank rob bertea ln our <'Oa1taJ re1klin lbeM d1y1 that motl rolkl b1ve 1topptd countln1 Molt tte ntly, a aavlqa and loan 1ot knockf'd over \n l"'twpor' 'a Corona d t Mar n lgbborhood. re ulona tn tbC! abrupt dfimlse of one rob· ber Wilb all thts 1otna on, ll'I bard to re.lite that Nt•Port . Beach once e~o>f'd 1 lt'nl\hy stretch wi\.bout a ainale bank hels.t To be precl e, Newport Beach went frorn Jan 13, ltlZ. to November of 1964 v. Hbout a blllk robbery 1 apan of some S2 years How \Imes have changed NEWP61lT'S ltlZ BANK job v.u a real classic A palr Yeggs li'Leeing zn Early.day Getaway Vehicle& or safecrackers knocked over Lew Wallace's old Newport Bank down on the Peojnsula at 22nd Street. According to accounts from old-timers, the two yeges drank in Newport saloons until the early morning hours of Jan. 13. The miscreants then staggered out into the streets and down to a barn where they confiscated a horse named "Dandy" and a buggy belonging to one Roland G. Ghriest. wbo operated the nearby electric lighUng plant. Ghriest recalled some years later, "Pretty soon we heard the explosion when the robbers blew the bank sale. Two other fellows ran from the saloon, grabbed their shotguns and started blasting away ... " Newport histories identify the brave citizens as saloon.keepers Charley Grau and Bllly Hall. NEWS ACCOUNTS OF the day reported that Newport s treets were then filled with "much promiscuous shoot· ing." One local fisherman named Bradley Kemble tried to dash through the streets to safety and got hit with a load of number 5 buckshot for his trouble. Meanwhile, somebody had contacted the sheriff in Santa Ana. He dispatched a posse, which galloped down toward Newport. Meanwhile, further. the robbers were making good their escape with Ghrlest's horse and buggy. LOCAL WAGS LATER suggested that the posse must have passed the fleeing horse and buggy somewhere on the trait between Santa Ana and Newport. Ghriesl's horse "Dandy" was later recovered in the township of Olive. Nobody ever saw the bank robbers again. The yeggs, however, had stuffed their loot into the horse·s nosebag and lost most of the $3,100 taken ln coins during their galloping fUght. Clearly, crime didn't pay even in 1912. Knievel Quits Tour; Australians Happy SYDNEY. Australia <AP> - Stuntman Evel Knievel says he's canceling his Australian tour because of inadequate facilities, and about 5,000 dis- gruntled Aussies seemed happy to see him go. Knievel failed to appear at a performance Sunday night in the country town of Griffith, and S,000 spectators, many of whom .,... .......... ..., .......... "'"~., foatrl " '!'QI• 00 "°' ,._ --"-~)On"' Ull~!(l!wl D"' enq -CUPY Mll 119 Oe•1 ... W had drlven long distances in the sum me r heat, responded by chanting. "Go home, Yankees, go home." Evel told reporters today that he called off the tour because some of the stadiums were dangerous and added, ''The pro- moters are not providing spec- tators with any toilet CaclliUes. grandstands or lights." NATION I WORLD Israel Nixes Sununit Bid Cabinet's Vote Means 'Grave Concern' in U.S. J ERlJSALEM <AP) The larull Cab ntil rejected today IQ Amulun lnvltalion ror Prlmtt M lnlster Men a chem Bci&ln to alt ·nd a Camp Davld 1umroit m ting. pluna'n' the 15.monlh old peace process to one or its low l depths. Bealn uld Jut week's mlnl&Lerlal·levcil tulk• at Camp Devld produced no progress. He acc ui.cd the Egypllana or hardenlna their position on terma tor a M ldeasl peace treaty ... Hired Gun ~ Suspect Captured CLEVELAND CAP > -An 18-year-old youth accused ol ac-cepting $60 from two teen-agers lo kill their rather was caplured after he leaped from a second- s to r y window and tried to escape, authorities said. Jerome Watkins, who had been hunted for a week. was ar- rested Monday when be dropped from the window into the arms of waiting officers, police said. HE WAS ARRESTED on a warrant for the murder of John White Sr .• an auto plant worker slain Feb. 9. The warrant was is- sued after White 's children - Michelle. 14, and John Jr., 17 - told police they hlred Watkins to kill their father, detectives said. Aeling on a tip, police searched a 12-suite boarding house and discovered tbat Watkins had gone o u t a bathroom window of a second- floor apartment. Lt. Edward Kovacic said. Watkins crawled across the roof into another apartment win- dow, crossed a hallway, and went out another window, drop- ping to the ground, where police were wailing, detectives said. POLICE SAID THE youth was held in the city jail pending fil- ing of charges. White was shot to death when be returned home from work. Police said Watkins, who had been offered $60 by White's children, was waiting with a .38-caliber revolver when White came into the house. a1SMONA.U1S GO TO WORK MOSCOW CAP) -Soviet cos- monauts Vladimir Lyakhov and Valery Ryumio began a new work _program in space today after docking their Soyuz 32 spaceship to the orbiting SaJyut 6 space station. It was the seventh linkup by a manned spaceship with the space station in the 16 months Salyut 6 has.. been in orbit. Lyakhov and Ryumin were sent from Earth on Sunday, and there has been no indication how long they would stay. There is speculation that they will be joined soon by a n international team. probably a Russian and a Bulgarian or Mongolian. THE TA.l..KS WE&E to have been held without Egyptian Preeldent Anwar Sadat, Yiho te• portedly felt bia presence wu not neceseary. In Washington, a senior White House om cfaJ said the inlUal White House reaction "was of grave concern about what the decision means for the peace process." The official. who asked not to be named, said the admloistra· lion wants "to make sure we have all the inlormat.ion on what decisions were made" before commenting publicly. Begin was believed to have sent a personal message to President Carter. IN CAIRO, PRIME Minister Mustafa Khalil said the next move was up to Carter. "ls it I who extended the in· vitation? Let him who extended the invitation talk to Begin," he told The Associated Press. He denied that Egypt bad toughened its stand. "Egypt's position has not changed. We did not present any new proposals." he said. Contrary to Begin, he said tbere w11 pros:reaa at la.t week's talk.a at Camp Dav1d .• AFl'D THE CABINET meet- Ln1, Bq1.D aald: ''Tbe Cabinet declded that the prime mlnLster 11 not ln a position to accept the pro~aed meeting with Prime Mlnlater KbalU." The vote a1a.tmt Begin going wu 1'-2. Begln ~used to answer ques· lions about the slx·bour Cabinet meelinl, but an inalder said only Foreip Min.later Moshe Dayan and Defense Minister Ezer Weizman voted in favor of the summit and ·lb.at Begin voted agalnatit. THE INSIDE& SAID the general tone of the.Cabinet dis· cusalon was to criticize Egypt's peace proposals, not Sadat's absence from the proposed sum- mit. Begin said Dayan bad report- ed to the Cabinet on President Carter's proposal that Begin and Khalil meet at Camp David with Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance. Dayan had returned from five days of talks at Camp David with Khalil. "It Is now evident to the Cabinet that in those ta1kJ no progreaa wu made toward an Israeli· Egyptian a1reemenl," Begin said. ••ON THE CONTaAaY, a more extreme position wu pre~ eented by the Egyptian delet•· tio.n...'..:...._ BegJn said Ile was still "prepared al any time conven· lent to President Carter to leave for the United Slates to meet with the president to d1a· · cuss the peace process and bilateral relations between Israel and the United States." Begin appeared solemn u be read the Cabinet statement ~ newsmen. "ln addition to the previous Egyptian proposals, wblcb were unacceptable to Israel, new pro- pasals were made which were incon sistent with the Camp David agreement of Sept. 11 and in fact nullified the meanJ.ni of the peace treaty between the two countries," he said. Through Israe l made counterproposals, Begin aaid, "Prime Minister Khalil insisted on the Egyptian proposals." Second Storg Assawted . A wave jumps the sea wall and strikes the 20-to 25-knot winds shifted slightly to the second floor of a house on Stony Beach north as the ~id!? came in, keeping ~he Road in Hull Mass. A weather service seas from bu1ldmg even higher durmg spokesman said it could have been worse: high tide. Television listings change. Networks or local stations shuffle programming many times after the typical TV magazines are printed. Tonight's Daily Pilot brings yo" the freshest listings of television programming of any newspaper published in Orange County. Turn to the television page for Tube Toppers -a mini-guide to choice view ing, and listings tor Los Angeles stations, both Public Broadcasting stations KOCE channel 50 and KCET-28, plus ABC and CBS channels in San Diego. Television listings in the Daily Pilot are computer collected and updated daily. You'll find even tast- m inute sports event changes in each evening's Daily Pilot and again Saturday mornings. On Sunday, TV Week offers the most conven lent guide to Southland television with listings, news and features . To keep up wit h television program changes, people all along the Orange Coast rely on the DAILY PILOT 642-4321 1 # • • ( 7 • } ' Orange Coast Today' CloslagJ N.Y. Steeks EDl f lO N VOL. 72, NO. S8, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1979 c TEN CENTS, 2 Coastal Cities Back Mesa Marina ] . q By MJCttAEL PA. llEVIC1t t to an endangered peclMi of St1u m1rln at a public hearing serve as a city consultant for the neutral, and probabJy favorable, this is ooe that can be restored.'j oi-o.111 ...... ,...,. bird Wednesday night In Garden marJna bid. if the traffic impacts prove Mrs. Massey served as a coun· Coe ta Mou·· push for • The l>udd1n1 development Grove A more cautious endorsement favorable... ty biological consultant ror a re· 3,000 slip boat nuuirt1 1Joni tht' \·usus environment buttle muy "I think U'.s u fantastic idea," came Monday Crom Paul Barbara Massey, a member of port on least terns. a sea bird s0 anta Ana Rtvl'r has Jrav.n up t:o no farther than the U.S uys Huntington Beach Mayor RyckoH, mayor or Newport Amigos de BOlsa Chica, a Hunt· named beeause it is the smalleSt port from the m yors ot Hunt Army (.'orp. of En11nt'l"rs, wh1c h tt<>n Pattins on "1 think tbe Beach. ington Beach·based environmen· of the tern family. ln)rtQn od Nttwport Ot.>ach still plan~ for ti mu1nM lcsr. marina ts down the line a long "I believe our council en· talist group, is less concerned The endanger ed birds are Oood control channel filona lht'. ways, but l'IJ lend my assistance dorsed the plan several years about traffic impacts on the making a comeback because of Tht• marana on ltH• cit y·, "nice lo have " lust for m ore than 20 yeanJ also ha cO\ 1ronmt'n tallst worned baut dt' lruct1 n of a ra~ Bit mam.h that's hom~ nver bed wherever l can " ago and there's been no official Harbor Area if the marina is a fenced-off nesting a rea near A Costa Men 1oubcomm1ttee Pattins on backed Costa s:hange,"hesajd. built. tbemouthortheriver. comprised of councilmen Donn Mesa's hiring or Ken Sampson, "We're not involved djrectly," "We've a lready destroyed The birds favor the Hunt· Hall and Dom Ract\1 wtll ask fo rme r county d1 rector of added Ryckoff. "My personal many valuable salt marshes to ington Beach side of the river Corp~ offictals to constder the tlarbors. Beaches a nd Parks, to reeling at the moment would be build marinas," she :;aid. "and (See MABINA, Page A2) 727 Noise Tests Called Failure Emergency Only Gas Rationing Airwest Appeals FAA Rule I • , Plan Revealed By GARY GRANVILLE W ASfilNGTON CAP) The Energy Departme nt m ade , public today a contingency 1 energy plan it has sent to Congress for gasoline rationing and other fuel-saving measures to be used only in a serious • energy emergency. r The plans were sent informal· ly to key congressional commit· tees Monday night. Department spokesmen said they would be submitted formally to Congress Thursday To be adopted, the plans under a 1975 law must be approved by both the Hou se and Senate within 90 days and the President must declar e an energy emergency If gasoline rationmg were ever needed -and department of· ficials s ay they see no prospect of it in the foreseeable future rationing coupons would be is· s ued to owne rs or registered vehicles. The coupons could be sold or transferred at will although the government would have authori· ty if necessary to impose price controls or other steps to pre· vent excessive hoarding, anti- competitive practices or other disruptive activities. The standby rationing plan did not include any specific gallon limit for individual vehicle owners. Officials said the limit would be determined at the time 1 rationing is imposed, according to distribution formulas and the se riou s n ess of pe troleum shortages. The Energy Department has denied published reports that the rationing plan provides fol" a limit of two gallons or less per day for each registered vehicle. Also included in the standby plans made public today were restrictions on weekend gasoline sales. temperature controls in • commercial and public buildings and curbs on unnecessary ad· vertising lighting. T he preside nt can put the' * * * Oil Pricing Sends Stock l\farket Down NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market fell sharply in heavy trading today in what analysts saw as reaction to con· ' cern over oil prices. inflation and international turmoil. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks tumbled 15.33 points to 805.79 in five hours of trading on lbe New York stock Exchange, after slipping 2.16 points Mooday. j "The market is fina lly bend· • ing under the weight or negative ~ new•," said Robert Stovall or ; Dean, Witter Reynolds. a Wall t Street investment firm. * Losers outnumbered gainers 6 f to 1, t President Can.er submitted a l standby energy rationing plan to Congress in the wake or a world I squeeze oo oil supplies wttlcb followed the shutdown of Iranian lleldt. The market showed little reac· lion to the Saudi Arabian an· noltn~t that it would tem· porarily bold to pr1ce1 set by the Or1•ruut.ioo of Petl'Oleum Ex· porting Countries even tho\lg.b other OPEC memben h ave raJaed pricet. standby plans into effect when he declares an energy emergen· cy exists, but this move can be blocked by either house of Congress. Earlie r toda y, Energy Secretary J ames R. Schlesinger assured the nation's governors that gasoline rationing would be used only as a last resort. and would not be prompted by the loss of Ira nian oil. * * * Saudis Nix New Oil Price Hike By Tbe A.ssodaied Press Saudi Arabia , the world's largest oil exporter. said today it will bold off temporarily on any price increase~. But American cons umers already are paying more for fuel and may race gasoline rationing and service· station closings in the future. E nergy Secretary James R. Schlesinger told the nation's governors that the loss of oil from Iran is not reason eoougb for-rationing, but added that other mandatory. energy.saving measures could be imposed if the Iranian cutoff continues for ayear or longer . The new head of the National ISRAEL REJECTS CALL TO SUMMIT-A4 CAR POOL PLANS ENCOURAGED -AS STATE.ENERGY GROWTH DECLINES-A7 OIL SEARCH RENEWED OFF EAST COAST--84 Iranian OU Co. said today that the country hoped to resume ex· ports next week, selling the oil to the highest bidder. He said the country hopes to get $18 to $20 a barrel -com· pared to the current base price of $13.35 a barrel set by the Organization or Petroleum EX· porting Countries or which Iran is a member. No U.S. oil firms have said whether they would pay that price. Stooping to Help A hydraulic device that will help the elderly and the handicapped board more ~asily is f ea tu red on this new Orange County Transit District bus. It is one of 65 new. 48.passenger buses that soon will be in service on routes throughout the coun· ty. <See related story. Page A9.) The bus can, in effect, kneel down to make that first step an easier one. Two Bandits Roh Tavern Customers Two men wearing nylon stock· ings over their faces a nd carry. ing automatic rifles robbed a dozen customers and the female night manager of a Costa Mesa tavern of more than $500 Mon· day night. They held one customer Kl~NG C4VSE OF TOOTH DECAY? ADELAIDE. Austra lia (AP) An Adelaide University scien· list is trying to determine if kiss· ing can spread tooth decay. Dr. Tony Rogers, a senior lee· turer in oral biology, said in a school newsletter that experi· ments indicate saliva can transmit decay organisms from person to person. hostage in the parking lot until making their escape in a late· model white sedan, witnesses said today. No one was reported injured when the bandits ente red from a side door of the King's Inn. 720 Randolph Ave .. shortly after 9 p. m . and, brandishing their weapons, ordered the manager to put the cash from the register in a paper berg and the customers to place their wallets on the counter. One man took the sack. con· taining the evening's , receipts and collected money from the wallets while bis accomplice pointed a rifle at the patrons and ordered that "no one move." The two men, who appeared nervous during their brief time in \be tavern, pointed their weapons at a young man and or· dered him into the parking Jot. Neuport Man Semenced in Rockets Case A Newport Beach engineering firm has been slapped with a $25,000 fine and its president given a 20-day jail sentence and five years' probation on a con· viction of illegally exporting technical data on rockets and missiles to France. U.S. District Judge Manuel Real denied a motion by defense attorney James McDonald Mon· day for a stay of execution pend· ing appeal. The same sentence was gi'>'en out -and suspended -in 1976, when Vernon Edler a nd hls firm, Edler Industries, were convicted of simHar ch arges, also in Judge Real 's courtroom. The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld their appeal at that time on grounds that the statute under which the convic· tlons had been obtained was overly broad. A n~w trial was ordered. Busing Talks Slate~ Monday, Edler received a sus· pended two.year prison term on condition that be devote 1,200 h ours to community service projects during his probatlon. School Trustees to DU.cuss Desegregation Assistant U .S . Attorn6y Theodore Wu, who prosecuted the case, said today Judge Real denied a stay of execution of the sentence, saying he saw no basis for appeal. By JA.CXIE BYMAN Of .. DalfY ...... , .... Two separate items concern· ing desegregation will come before Newport·Meu school tru stees tonight. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p. m. at Harper Communlly Center , EHl 18th Street a t Tust in Avenue in Costa Mesa. The fi.rst or the items will in· volve telling up a ci\bens com· mittee to study minority ll"OUPI within the achool diatrict. The committee, to comply wltb atate law, muat report back to lhe dllt:rict '° tbat trustees by July 1 can d evise steps to eliminate aegregaUon If any ta found to ex.lit. • School district spokeswoman Jean Hannon said the commit· tee's activities will include re- viewing the district's annual re· porta of minority enrollment to see lf lbere ls an unwarranted concentration in any particular •choob. Mrs. Harmon said the study, required by the state Board of Education, ls not related to the propoeed Metropolitan Plan to bu• ttudenta between districts in teveral Southern Calllornla countl•, lncludlng Oranae. However, abe aaid, dlatrict of. liclala are concerned tbat ~ tbey ban Identified certain aeboola aa ae1re1ated1 even tbou1b they propoae aaequate steps to desegregate within their own district, such findings might later be used to j ustify lhe Metropolitan Plan. Waddill Attorney Aheent at Trial Thal plan is the subject of the second desegregation item on tonight's agenda, a proposal that Newport·Mesa join in Schools for LoeaJ Control, a consortium Jurors in the Dr. William of 80-70 ecbool districts ln four Waddill baby·slaying trial were counties. Kent home tdday wbden the doc· The purpose of that mem-tor'a attorney, Charles Weed· berahip, which would cott the rotn, failed to show up ln court district $1,000 a year, la to joln alter be complained or chat wltb othe" to blre expert leaal pains. counsel, aatd Superln\eodenl A panel ol 12 juron baa been John Ni~. picked to try the caae, and Dr. Nicoll tald • . law nrm alternalel were auppoeed to be 1~lalllina in conatituUonal and choaeo thb lbornin• before <See BCJSING, Pa1• .U> openina arsum.mt.s. •• J' I Of tlle Daily ll"li.t Si.ff The Orange County Board of Supervisors declared the testing of Boeing 727 jet airliners at the county airport a noise failure lo· day and ordered the test discon· tinued effective March 15. Simultaneously. a spokesman ~or Hughes Airwest said the company h~ appealed an FAA order changing takeoff pro· cedures at the airport. That order was blamed for the larger jet aircraft failing to prove less noisy than smaller jet airliners used by tt•e two com· mercial airlines that operate al ' t.he airport. In .the early test period and following a takeoff procedure in force at the airport for the pas t eight years, the 727 noise test re- sults showed the larger aircraft lo be less noisy than its smaller .. counterparts. But when the takeoff pro· cedure was changed Feb. 14, noise measuring devices at the airport showed the 727 to be at least 10 decibels nois ier than the other aircraft used by Hughes Airwest and Air California. When moving for the cessation · or the tests. which ironically goes into effect the day it was ., scheduled to end its 90·day trial, Supervisor Thomas Riley said : "It ls clear that the 727 neither meets its original test objective of being no more noisy than the historical noise average for the DC 9. Nor can it operate with less noise than the DC 9 with both aircraft using the new (See NOISE, Page AZ> JOBLESS RATE DIPS I N COVN'lY T he unemploym ent rate in Orange County rose to 4.7 per- cent in January, figures re · leased by the stale Employment Development De pa rt menl <EDDl show. But despite the .6 percent in· crease in unemployment from December's all·time low of 4. l. percent. the county employment scene drew favorable notices for s tatisticians for EDD Story. Page A9. Coast Weath e r Chance of s howers in· creasing to 20 pe rcent Wednesday. Lows tonight 43 to 48. Highs Wednesday low to mid 60s. ., " ... , .. M At .. CJ .,.., .. .. , .. M J l I \ • Jt2 DAILY PILOT c Chinese Halt Viet Drives ~ , ... -VIETNAM • lan1 Stn T OKYO (APl -Vletnameee troope have r.~atedly ct'OAed uo to 10 mil• lnllde China UM pa1t few day1, but each Ume have been driven back by Chin e frontier troope, the of· flcaal lb nhua ntsw• a1ency re· portt'd today from Peking .. AP'#I,....,... On Sunday, battalion of Vlel- ""mne troops attacked a com- mune on the Kwangsi border but Ch1nete MQldltn and mUlUamen fought back, wtpln& out some ln· vadlng troo1>11 and driving the rt-ist buck ucn)88 the border, il U ld In one Inc ide nt Chinese soldiers killed 68 Vietnamese troops and captured one, It said. On a nother oecMSlon, retreating V1ctnamea~ ,troops left more th •n 30 dead a~n~d!._'l~~te'l:f""-' behtnd and a vane y of weapons \nc ludtng two Soviet -made rocket launchers, it said. Meanwtule. Vietnam said to- day its forces were locked in ARROWS SHOW FlERCE FIGHTING IN VIETNAM Carter Urges '$J)4Mdy Withdrawal' by China Shrewsbury Memorial Rites Held Rite " Friday ... Doctor, Son Die in Crash Memorial services were con ducted Monday for long-time rancher Walte r Shrewsbury, who was a member of one or Or ange County's oldest families and a San Juan Capistrano resi· dent for more than a half cen- tury. He died Thursday at the age of88. f'uneral services will be held Friday fo r Hunhngton Beach pbysician Carmen Yuppa, 43, and hjs 15·year-old son. Ter ry, who lost their hves in a traffic accident near San Bernardino. Dr Yuppa and Terry were re· turning SWlday evening from a weekend skiing t rip to Mam· m oth with four other pers ons when their van was struck from behind by an out-of-control truck and trailer. The Yuppa vehicle overturned eight times before comiug Lo rest · at the center divider on State Roule HM in Cajon Pass. a bo ut 10 miles north of San Bernardino California Highway Patrol Of· fi cers said the truck-trailer rig lost all of its brakes on the mountain grade. Officer s said tha t both Or. Yuppa and Terry, a sophomore at Marina High School, suffered massive head injuries. They died early Monday of their injuries al San Bernardino Court Rules !;us peel -Unj"it ' By KATHY CLANCY OI ti. Deity PIMl'I S'-ff A young drifter a ccused or s la y ing 30-y c ar old San Clemente Police OHicer Richard Steed Nov. 29 was judged men· tally unfit to s tand trial for murder Monday in Orange County Superior Courl. Judge Robert. Rickles ordered J ames Ri chard Hoffe r, 23, sent to P atton State Hospital in San Be rnardino for treutment of what \\<as described by physicians as chronic schizophrenia. Rickles asked for a progress report a fter six months treat· ment and s us pended c riminal proceedings against the murder derendant in the meantime. Suspern;ion of legal proceed· ings does not mean Hoffer will not someday stand trial and con· ·rront a death sentence for al· l eg edl y murdering the policeman. The suspension means the ac· cused man will be imprisoned in the mental hospital until, if ever, he is found mentally capable of standing trial ORANOE COAST c DAILY PILOT rr. Or•nor C0iint 0.1fy P ~ •Ith wh+c:f'I •uom "''""° ,,.,. Nfi#'\ Prf'\t ., PUOUvw401 uw Ot.,... (Q,f\t PvOh~(cwno.f'I• SifCWtAtt'Hll~•t~ tvOtl\"4'0 MG"'(ley tf'W~ lllt~y IO'f' (O\f• """'° H._ Off<h .,..,.l·"OI°" ...... f°"" f' l'I Y•llf'V ''"*~ t ~ hMfil Sfutt\(O.\t A '•"4'" t, rJ"'~' "'''"'°'"It °"'°'luwct $4Jtv1Ny\ .,_. \.•.-• lj ..,, fhr• I"'.,.,,'"'°'' C"t•bil•""'',.. 044'1""f r\ •I 110 'li"'•I tt.tw)tu • t.(t'\14t"""-\• (•li'M"•••>t~ , llo•rtN -l'f1 \•Otfrlt •NS f)vN1YttH J•<•• ,_, "flK• .,~•c:filt1't .,,, ~M'f .. ~ ,_ ..... "" ra.t0t T•m••• M~M M ..... ,,.. l!dltOt Cl\•11 .. N l -•1<:-" ... II ~"*''•"' M.,,.,1"°1.d!lton Co-'• tlleea Otftce ~11.1111 :::=~:· :•6 'tlo~wi .• ,.n Ttltphoftt (714)~ CIHtlfted Ache.t ..... I04llt Community Hospital. Dawn Yuppa . 14, who was along on the outing with her father and brother, s uffered cuts and bruises. Others injured· in the crash were Lola Ann Hanson, the driver of Dr. Yuppa's van, and two friends of the dead Yuppa boy, Robert. McNeil, 18, and Mike Jed- nak, 16, both of Huntington Beach. Dr . Yuppa has bee n a longtime internist in Huntington Beach. He was described by as - sociates as a major guiding force in the development of Pacifica Community Hospital. He was a co-owner and presi· dent of its board of directors. Dr. Yuppa is survived by rus wife. Linda, or Huntington Harbour; daughter, Dawn; mother, Mildren Digrigorio, and sister, Jean Yuppa, both of Sacramento. A rosary will be recited Thw-s- day at 7 p.m. at St. Bonaventure Church, 16400 Springdale St. A funeral Mass will be conducted Friday at the church at 10 a.m. Burial will follow al Good Shepherd Cemetery, 17952 Beach Blvd. A friend says the family plans lo establish a m emorial fund an Dr. Yuppa's memory at Pacifica Hos pital. Pilot Logbook Mr. Shr~wsbury was born ln Orange and worked in a mining operation in Arizona before be entered the armed forces in World War J. He was wounded in France and spent a year after the war in a Los Angeles hospital recuperating. In 1923, Mr. Shrewsbury and his brother purchased a ranch in San Juan Capistrano. It was located along Del Obispo Street near the present day Vermuelen Ranch Market. Mr. Shrewsbury also owned and operated the old Flying A Service station formerly on the site of the present mini park on Camino Capistrano in downtown San Juan. . He retired in 1962 a nd the service station was closed. He ,.w9s fond of walking and hiking through California 's wilderness area and kept journals about the wildlife he en· countered on these nature walks. Mr. Shrewsbury is survived by his wife, Vera; a brother , Lyon: a son, Allison, and a grandson, James Gregory. all or San Juan Capistrano. Also surviving are a g r a nddau g ht e r , Lisa Shre ws bury Thomas , and a great-grandson. Dustin Thomas, both of Palm Springs A Cat-astrophe In the Making By JERRY CLAUSEN Of, ... 0.llY Pllel St.H When 17-year-old Theresa Mart.in called the Daily Pilot's Huntington Beach bureau Monday about a cat stuck in a tall. tall palm tree for three days, it so11nded like a great story. THE AFTERNOON was slow "Nobody," said Theresa, "will get the cat down. It's been up there for three days, just meowing and meowing. We don't know who ll belongs to. "Yes, I've called the Huntington Beach Fire Depart- m enl. Yes, the Huntington Beach -- Humane Society, too. And the police de- partment and the county animal s heller. "Can you get someone to help?" ADA, mOUGHT I . an animal In dire straits. And no public response. Checking for myself, I learned from the fire department that It no longer sends ladder trucks ··ror animals In treetop distress. Too costly. and too cuuseN dangerous to tie up a rig that might be needed in a real emergency. Lt. John Foster or the police department was candid. ·'If tbe Fire Department won't dottt. well, we won 't either. · "Cats come down. In 15 years, I've never bad a cat starve to death in a tree. They always come down and make fools of those who try to save them," said Lieutenant Fosler. A SPOKESWOMAN for t.he county Animal Control Department up in Orange said there was nothing her de- partment could do either. "Our men a ren't insured to cUmb trees, and we don't have any long ladders. I suggest putUng food at the bottom of the tree aod leaning a ladder in place. "Maybe the cat wlll get hungry and make a try for the ladder. Nothinf else we can do. Sorry." Great atuf , l thou1ht. Animal lovers wll1 be outraged. J grabbed my camera and searched the map book for Falrwar Lane where the cat, deacribed a• black and white, Ul\Y and cute was u.p a tree. AS I BEADED for the door, tM phone ran1. Should I take t'1e time to answer when auch a areal human lntereet photo wu Just a abutter'• 1n1p away? llwuTMresa. "Jerry," she bubbled Just 15 minutes after ber flnt call, "I don't ~ your help. TIM c1l Just walked put my houae. lt IO sreat. He tot down by hJmaelf." LSeutenut Foeter, you are OM a mart cop. combat 9w'ith the Cblneae lS mUea lna1de Vietnam •Iona tbe northern banlr• of the Red River. The Vietnamese alao claimed 2,200 Chinese oldJers were put out or action over a four·day period. Intelligence sources In Thailand said that China Ill> pears to show no Intention of wlt.hdrawlng and has even moved to reinforce troops along Vietnam's northeast front. ln his m08t blunt comment on the conflict, President Carter called on China to undertake "a speedy withdrawal" from Viet- nam. The request was in a message given Lo top Chinese leaders by Treasury Secretary W · el Blumenthal, who is visit· ing Peking .. Hanoi claims to have killed more than 16,000 Chinese since the invasion began Fe b. 17 In· telligence sources consider the kill count inflated. China has not given casualty figures. but in Tokyo, Japan's Leonard Woodcock, former president of the United Auto Workers . has survived Senate opPQsition to Presi- dent Carter's China policies and was confirmed by an 82·9 vote as the first am- bassador to P eking since 1949. F,.._PageAJ MARINA •.• for their feeding area. Although the proposed marina would be built on the Costa Mesa side, Mrs . Massey believes the marina c ould s till h ave a negative impact on the leasl terns. "The best kind or environment would be a healthy salt marsh," she said. County Environmental Protec· lion Agency <EPA) officials are in the process of leas ing 17 acres of land on the Huntington Beach side of the river for a least tern feeding area. The feeding area will be a pro· tected habitat for the leas t terns while the county wide ns the river bed to make way for lhe nood control channel to be built by the Army Corps, said county project coordinator Dave Upde- graff. That's where the Costa Mesa subcommittee and cons ultant Sampson come in. "We're not g oing to go anywhere without Corps· ap- proval." said Sampson. He says the first push will be to have federal funds released for a Corps' study of the marina plan. T he funds for a Corps• study have been in limbo since 1974. Sampson said il will take at least a year to get the funds back on the boards. Funds for actual construction could come through state loans available through the Depart- ment of Boating and Waterways, said Sampson, a Newport. Beach resident who was for many years the county's director of harbors, beaches and parks. The marina carried a price tag of $39 million five years ago. Marina s upporters s ay that figure has al least doubled by now. The number of least terns along the river bed south of 19th Street in Costa Mesa has risen even more dramatically. According to the county report. filed by Mrs . Massey . there were just five palrs of least terns spotted in 1974 At last count, there were between 75 and 90 pairs of birds who call the river mouth home. Fro• Page A I BUSING .•. educ•ttonal law would be employed to advise the dlstrtct.e on the beat manner lo which to respond to the proposed Metropolitan Plan. School• for Local Control wm be admlnlttered by the Santa Monica tJmned Stbool Olatrlct in conjunction w1th an ollecutlv• com mltte• el•cted b y th• member d!ltrtcu. Kyodo New. Service reported cla11llled Chinese reports Uat about 11,000 Vietnamese "wiped out" ln the first week ot fighting. The news service attributed In· formation to Chinese sources in Peking. The official Voice of Vietnam Radio said the most concentral· ed righting was in the Cam Duong Province along tbe northern Teaches of the Red River corridor. the vital river, rail and road link that runs from the northwestern frontier lo Hanoi, the capital. The broadcas t, m o nitored here. said two Chinese com· panies were wiped out in Lang Son Province, northeast of Hanoi, on Monday. ll said another 2~ Chinese soldiers were killed or wounded the past two days in Phong Tho district of uu Chau Province. Phong Tho is 15 miles inside Vietnam and 190 miles northwest of Hanoi. ln Moscow. Soviet Politburo member A.odre P. Kinleoko 6&td their Vietnamese allies were "re buffing" the Chinese in- vasion on their owo , but repeat- ed the pledge that they al!IO "have reUable friends," ii n~'<I be. Klri1enko closely adhered lo the wording of a nine-day-old Kre mlin state m e nt which warned China to "Stop before tt is too late.·• He gave no hint of what might happen tr the fight· Ing continues ''The Soviet Communist Party is firmly convinced that a world war can and must be averted, and is using the might of the Soviet Union, its influence and authority" to avert. this possibili- ty, Klrilenko said. Al the United Nations, the Security Council p0stponed de- bate on the hostilities until Tues- day night No official reason was given, but apparently the time was needed by delega tes seeking to dralt>a resolution ralling for an end to the fighting Fro•P~AJ NOISE TESTS OUT ... takeoff procedure. "Accordingly: it is clear that the board is obliged to conclude that the 727 has not passed the test. .. Only Supervisor Ralph Clark opposed the boa rd's move Clark objected lo Hughes Airwest not being dis missed from the test "without prej· . udice." The Anaheim supervisor said it should be clear that under the conditions in force at the time the 90-day test was approved last December the 7 2 7 performed properly He said the compa ny should be free to resume some sort of a tesl program when there are in- dications there is a chance for success. Airport. critic Dan Emory ac cused the airline company 11s well as some-..P"1embers of the board of supervisors of knowing of the FAA plan to change the t akeoff procedures al the time the test was a pproved. To that C'harge, Riley said 'that's a complete untruth." Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. however. said he was aware or a FAA circular questioning the safety inherent \n the t akeoff procedure . The 727 carries 50 percent more passengers than the planes now used for a ir travel al the airport. Those who favored the testing at the airport argued that 1l could provide t ransport.a- t ion for mo re air travelers without increasing the number of flights at the au·port. It was also argued by Airwest spokesmen that the three-engine jet would prove to be no noisier than the DC 9s that fly from lhe airport on a restrict ed basis daily. 0.11,,. ... , .. "~ GENE WILLIAMS AND JOAN CRASS SHARE BIRTHDAY Huntington Duo Don't Let Unu1u11 Date Bother Tham Rare Occasion Feb. 29th Set Celebrate By ROBERT BARKER ot , ... O•llY ttlle\ St.H Gene Williams has had onl y l3 blrtbdays bul he can pass for a m'n of 55. ' A FRIEND OF bjs, Joan Crass, bas had 12 birthdays, but s he doesn 't have to bother with an JD card anymore. Williams and Mrs . Crass, both of Huntington Beach, ar e Feb. 29th birthday babies and they only have official birthdays each Leap Year. They should celebrate Thurs- day but February stops at 28. They don't let that bother them . EACH YEAR THEY toast the occasion with John Dun- can of Westminster and Bettie McCollum of Anaheim who also were born on Feb. 29. Tbe four and their spouses celebrated Sunday nltht with dinner al a restaurant and a party later at Mrs. Crass· home. All four are members of a square dancing club and became clos~ friends after learnina from a roster of club members that they shared the same birthday. ''Only 30 couple• belong to the club and the odds that Cour persons have tho same Feb 29 birthday seemtremen· dous.·• Willlam• aaid. MRS. CllASS, a nurae in Orsoae. says it's kind or fun having a Feb. 29th birthday. "I've never felt that I was d~prtved. My famlJy always remembers me." Williama, who owna a glass and wtndow company ln HunUnatoo Beach, says the group plan.s a real shebang next year when there really ls a Feb. 290\. "We're toina to Lu V-au anli celebrate ln style." IF 'ftlE&E IS to be a whopplnt celebration, tt will bo a far cry from WllUama • 13th birthday party lhtte yurs aao. Guettl brouaht aifts· of marbles, a yo-yo and a toy truck ror the occaaioo. 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H ,..._ llf' -... IOI ... L ... ti .at »'~ • "" !WA.MC It ·~-lftAC. I 'O ~ • 1'\t • M tlllltt t .__ i\O • Ii . U I~ 111. 1' ,,... , I°' ... ,, » ,." . 11'6Alfl 1,U • 1 ' .. BC t. s ,. \ • ' f ,, 11'-• • '·* ' ,, ~ "' :,:Mt • 110 ·~-u 1111 .ts .s in .... _ • ,., " . ! n•11-!'91' JO 10 ,, • • ~~ .. , ~ = ~= = ..: "~ ', ,: ,i-:-. .=: t.• • J m:-'. = ":Jli , "' u::.. -~-, ,. ,_ " ir • ., • ,. ... • .. ", '*' • " :J E tO Q '" .. ,.~ 1 .. , "'~ I -1 ' 4 e i. ltt• I )I 1 Jlt ,.,., *ttfT ~ '1 -" : II' 11-.-fl ,. t'8 '9''1-t. S Jt "' "'" I I .. II '61 ))--111 .... t t.21 I "' ~ t<• • ) 100.+ I It Pl t •• • ,. -1 " ... Ticor Accepts Merger Bid LOS ANGEL°"ES <AP> -Ticor, the Los An1eles·based title lnsurance Jl•nt, bas reportedly reached a tn· tatlve asreement to accept Soutbem Pacmc Co's $il0-a·sbare rnercer otrer of calb &Del MCurltJ• valued at .. mUUoo. Tlcor'a aanouncement Monday came on the beeta of It. reJectloll lut week of a SSS.a-abare off•r from American General lnaur~Co. ud la likely lo doom llM werioualv u- nounced mer1erJlan wtth Penn· sylvan.la Ule Co.. Santa Jllonlca. T~. Febrwty 27, 1979 s DAILY PILOT as Ta~Ti•e l Cases (:hange I Medical Rules ·~ . ,. By SYLVIA POaTE& ·, ,... ... II~ I The tens of mUllou W'bo ltemlie deductions will be vltally aftect.ed by several um court decisions and UIS rullng1 lnvolving medical &xpense deductions. · , The Tax Court bas allowed as a medical ex.pe\\se de~ ' duction t,he coet of special food above what a normal clitL would co.t. even if the special food was eaten as a sub· sUtute for oormal food, and not In addltlon to regular f~ • TO BACK \JP THIS MEDICAL expense dedu~Uoa, have y0ur physician give you a written statement descriJ>. log your situatioo aod the requirement for your prescribe4- diet. Then get a reasonable esUmate of what a normal dkt would eost. If that esUmated cost ls less than the cost ol your special diet rood. you wUI have evidence on which Ute Tax Court would support your deduction ror the difference' as a medical expense. But be warned: You may be forced to take your deduc· lion to the Tax Court as long as the IRS continues lls view that rood substituted for normal rood· can't qualify as a medical expense. !! you're paying a psychiatric social worker for treatment and deducting these payments as a medical expense. an IRS private letter ruling in 1978 is good news. In a specific Money's Wort h case. the IRS said that where the servJces constitute medical treatment, payment for them qualifies as a deduc· lible . medical expense even though the person who performs the services is not ll~ensed. certified or required to be licensed or certlrted to perform such services. IN 19'78, THE IRS ruled that the cost or laetrile pre· scribed by a physician and bought and used where it is legal is a cost that can qualify as a deductible medical ex· pense. Another IRS private letter ruling says that if a family member becomes ill while away from home and another family member must travel in order to help the strtckeo person return, the travel expenses qualify for medical de- duction. There wa s an unfavorable Circuit Court decision In 1978 covering deductions ror medically prescribed capital improvements to a house. The general rule is that if you ~ install a capital improveplent prescribed by a physician for medical care. the cost qualifies as a deduchble medical . expense to the extent that it exceeds any increase in value or · the house caused by the improvement. The court distinguished the capital improvement situa lion from the higher costs incurred when a taxpayer patronizes a more expensive physician or slays in a private room in a hospit al. Those higher costs are deduc:.ti ble because they are directly related to medical care. Ntn: Income Averaging Stang Revenues Grow in Quarter For the first quarter ended Dec . 31, 1978, Stang Hydronics Inc., San Clemente, has reported net income of $286,986 lrom revenues of $4,780,815, compared with net in· come of $106,130 from revenues of $3,453,259 for the same period in 19'11. The company earned 38 cents a share ln the first quarter, based on outstanding shares of 761,100, compared with 14 cents for the same quarter in the previous year on total shares outstanding of 760,880. Revenues were up in all categories, the company said. The most substantial increase occurred in the dewatering contract area, which was approximately 70 percent ahead of the same period in the previous year. TAKI NG STOCK Stang specilizes in dewatering system :, and well drilling for the construction industry and utility companies. pumps and pumping systems, pollution con· · trot equipment such as small sewage treatment plants and lift stations, fire fight· ing equipment and commercial aircraft ground support equipment. . J < ., ' l . . • RCC. Inc .. formerly Rossmoor Construction Corp .•. Laguna Hills, has reported a loss or $23,000 for the first quarter ended Dec. 31, 1978, on revenues of $4.5 million. This compares with a toss of $96,000 on revenues of $5.1 million for the comparable quarter a year earlier. RCC is the developer of Rossmoor Maryland, an adult. residential community in Montgomery County. near Washington, D.C. The decline in revenues was attributed to inclusion in the year·ago results of the oper ation at Woodridge Center. an all-age residential community our Chicago. which has since been sold . Oat ... Rq e rC• R~•rd Datum Inc .. Anaheim. bas announced that J9'T8 earn~ ings reached a record $1 .016,000, a 33 percent increase o.-er earnings of $765,000 for the prior year. Earnings for the 12·monlh period locluded an ex· traordinary credit (benefll or a 1976 lax·loss carryover) of $331,000, or 18 cents a share, while for the prior year tx· traordinary credit was $350,000, or 20 cents. Revenues for the year reached $16,457,000, also a re· cord, compared with the prior year't,SlS,697,000. Sales for the rourtb quarter were $3,944,000, a decline from prior yur'a $4,370,000. Net Income for the quarter of $188,000. or 10 cents, compares trltb income from the prior year's quarter or $330,000, or 18 cents, whlch benefited rrom an extraordinary credit ot llSl,000. or 8 cent.s. r "' Bad ~heeks Who's Sorry Now? -;, • CINCINNATI (AP) -8ounced checks are no tonier considered the ernban'Qlment they once were, and that lnvolves a p-eat.er rtak by bual· Detlft accepUna cbec.ks, • cbeek·IU•ra.nte. nrm. prnldmtuya. Lester Wells, 29, prnident ol Metro Check Inc .• ..,_ =• 1.em to bave adopted a more C: aw a.bout belDI c1uabt wilb tbelr don. Three ,..,.. qo, he Mid, J pettel'lt ol lbe cbeekl 1111 C01'lpa.Dl' approved wen bed La1L ~· l.1 percent of &.M approwd cbecb bouaci9d, aaJd. . ' .J "' ... -.. • 4 f , -DAil Y Ptl.Ol Television IVl!NtMQ .. , •• HIW9 IMIMIHCV ONll Tlla paramadlc:t ••• llCcumcl of alMllng 1!;00 ~ • Mw1 ..... YIC'ltm 6'0 ·~ An eeeldant 111vohing lfontlOt ..... ., ~ """ wllll • wOfNn wflO • .if, ltlf tng ll'Olfl an 010 «M111e1 ~ • nt9""""" IUOf CttOI end Mit.e -on ~..,.. WNlll °'-O '"'""'' to 90 CM IOr ,.,. "'911 achoOI ~'*' '""' • atMST'I Ofl MM FMHCllCO An old INll1 con.__ to ~lllt)Q • lnlKO. .,. wit,...., 10 0101tlCI IN ~~ollllflt~ m OVIJ' IEAtY O~t (0n"9C1•*1 J--. .. C<111t"' DU*0.-0 t40MC INTPIOM ll'len\M ANJ Mocs'I• l OUNEwa MCNEWI I LO\l'E WCY l UCY *'''~~Ifie a -Md ~mOOt• Oii ...,. 111p to E\Kope, but Ady It IQO b\47 • MICHAf.L .IACIC.ION 0-t 1AU c:moc: Leon.,d ~ .. ,,,., "' HOM(~ .. f>IMll Fooda OAOSS-WJTS MERVONFFIN a...... 01t0n wan .. Gore Vidal, Jonn l.e &o.1111· her D ra~ula O# Prof . M l('hnl'I Noun playb Count Dracula. a \'ump1rv pooutg u n San l''runc1sco col ll'~l· professor In "The Cunw or Dracula,·• on<' of lhr<'e s<'nahzcd clcm~nl~ on NBC's nt>w a(.'l1on ud\ t:nlurt ~er1c s. "Cliff hungt:~." to bt' tclecs~t T\Je:;days begin nrng toru~ht at 8 on Chann1;1l ·1 Soloo Gola 1<o.te1napp.ng IP..-! 1) .INWOfU>AH080H G1.oy ,,,.. an lll>C-1 011· ental m-oic tnci. ~&e· i.iea F1eo to Eatller B OATIHO GAME ~LYWOOO 80UAAE8 8 TIC TAC DOUGH Cl> ADAM-12 1:00 I C88 NEWS NllCNEWS NEWl. YWtD GAME A.BCNEWS -. Cl) J()t(E.R'8 WILD 8IX MIUJOH DOU.AR fD MACNEIL I LEHR£A MPOR'r '1l) HUMAHITIES THAOUOH THE ARTS "Fiim Seeing All The<e IS. A pteuanl evening fOf' Malloy nd Reed 15 1n1e,. 1up100 by a 1oon1ge neigh. l>Of who 11 lllgh on drugs tJ3 JUPfTU WATC.. MAN 7:30 I CIACUS FAMILY FEUD Channel Lbt h•fl• 11 KNXT tCBS) Los Angele!. 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles D KTlA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angell'" Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angerei. ®I KCST (ABC) San Diego ID KTTV (Ind ) Los Ange1ei. ., KOOP· TV (Ind) Los Angelei. e KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles G KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beacti '1'i) NEWSCHECK CJ) THE OOHO SHOW 7:36 fl) ii TONIGHT "T IJ!lt>le You 8:00 IJ Cl) MOVIE Women Al West Potnl'' (Prernoere) Londa Purl. Anclr-Stevens. The SIO<y OI Ille first women to 8"18' Ille United Stales Mllllary Academy at West Point IS dr@m8Uzed ISeec>llOtObelow. 8 CLIF'FHANOERS \Ptem1e<e) Susan Anton, Geolhey Scon and MICheel Nour1 are lhe stars ol three sepa1a1e se<laJs In whlCh the llero or ,...,-oone 11 1611 on Ille verge ol dt5· Ht8"MCI\--• "'°"" • • It "Ntllld• SMUh'' I 19ffl 8ttvt MCO~n Kati M•ldtt• A )'OUtlO man ..c1 CMit to~ 111t b<u tel dMlhl OI hta per9nta (2 hfl .30mln) • 0 HAWt Ol\YI All 01 Fon11e • good "~ tnCluOlnQ L.awfne w>d 81Wl9y. ~ 10 Ille 1a11en 11ero·1 ••• 10 fUt'I ,,,.., lut rtlOtCt• 1'*'1 2 Ol 21 GMOW •• "lllUllduooert" ( t970) 6uun Clerk, $u1t ~cit AllllllOP<*>91all dllCOVtf va1Uab141 mlrMlfal Jaooalll tn<I •e>e·llk• crealllf81 wt1!le on .. ,.,, In N-~(2111•) .. CAAOl 9UfllHETT AHOfNIEH08 OUMI Jan GlllOrd ·~ • •·~ Tiit ~.,....,, (19 ti Jeff Chllll<llef, F ... Park8' A rnat'I ttld hll l)fl-, I .. ytlawl<ar i.&4• 1H foll In low With Ille some woman (2 "" I to THE C008TEAU OOYsaEY CatyoM> ' Search For Attantlt'' C8')11m Cou1- te1u explores Crete's not,_n COMI ttld Ille YOI· eMllC lslaod ol SantO<"llll. wtliCh -e botll 0..lloyed t~Nnd• of years ago ~¥1 2 of 2) (R) '1i) THEY AREH"T LIKE us A klOll al Ille actuevements Dnd prog<MS of rel8'dad cll1Z9"1 In Orange County. 1:30 G ®J l.AVERHE & SHIRLEY Lenny tall• 1n love wnll a boaulllul girt who Is taking 111m '°" all she can get. m THE 000 COUPLE In an attempt to get~ 10 Ills son. Felix becomes Ille ooach of Ille boy'& lootball t..,... '1l) AUFOAONE An expect8lll ~ frorn Allentown, Pa •• learn about the Lamaze met.llOd ol pre- pared chlldbK!h 9:00 8 NBC MOVIE • • •;, "The Drowning Pool" ( 197~) Paul Newman, Joanna WOOd· wa1d A private lnvestlga· 10< is 111r90 by a wealthy SOuttlefn ool heiress 10 dis- cover tile Identity of the TUBE TOPPERS KTLA e 8:00 "Nevada Smith" - Steve McQueen and Karl Malden star ln . 1006 movie about a young man out to uvence the brutal·deaths or his parents . KOCE 9 8:00 "They Aren't Like Us ." A look at achievements a nd progresb of retarded citizens in Orange· County NBC IJ 9: 00 ''The Drowning Pool." Paul N ewman and Joanne Woodward star ln 1975 movie about a private investigator hired br a wealthy Southern oil heiress to discover the identity of the author of a teller. autllor ol a sian0erou1 latl., 8 9 THME'S COMPNN • Ch<laty l()adlntlllfy Ntl J&ck • entry "' • balong COl'l\i)ttlliOtl ll'ld subst1- 1ut" an Identical pastry trom 1 bakery m MERV ORtmN Gue111. 011on WelhlS. GOl'O Vidal. JOlln Le Boulll· lier fD THE HOUYWOOO MUSICA.l.8 •••'• "The G1ea1 Caruao" ( 19501 Marlo lll\ll, Ann 8ty111 A bt09- 1aphy OI Ille OfNI Leno< whO rOM to operatic fame G MASTEN>IECE THEATAE "Counlty Mailers An Aaokllatra In Babylon" Tiie 1dolesoent daugllte< ol a b0ard1ng house keeoe< beoomes the passionate lover of a m1ddJe.aged WO<ld War I army cap111m e-.aoG ®> T~ Lalka assumes 11111 Al@ IS gotng to be 1111 new daddy •her Alex and Lalka s moll!« apend a n1g111 ~·her 10:00 B (J) THE PAPER ~E Top student Et11abet1t Logan Is myslllled wllen ane receNes a Jow exem ICOfe lrorn 11 respected law proteeao< 11 9 20/20 Geraldo Rivera 1nvesll· g1tM lhe alleged muwse of 1"-lalt How.,d Huglles' ror1une, Dive M&1Hl1 IOOll• el Ille controversy OYef underV'ound water rlQhi. II' Colofado. Hugh Oownl repor11 on 111e PfO- poHd conat1uc:t10f\ ot anotl'ler nude.Ir otant '" Melllco,N Y I =OAUERY "There Atel'l'I Any More Mac8anetl" A atudenl WI college 1s ma1or1ng in IW1'ci,;,"ao..Ea< 1(>-.30 me NEWS VOTEAS' PIPELINE 11:00 DD Cl)®'! NEWS MAKE ME LAUGH MOVIE • • • "I Walk The Line" I 1970) G1ego1y Peck Tuetlday Weld A SOulllern a....,.,lff baComeS the voc:tom of .,., •llunnO young wom- .,, wflO Is l"-d11UQl118' of a locel moonah•ne< ( 2 llrs I m THE 000 COUPlE Felix oo-ell out to llelp 01<:8''1 MCf'etar; rec11?- tu1e her boy1ftend (I) THE OOOOIES Tim and Or-Lry kung fu wnlle BIN becom.s mas· 1er of ,,,. Laoc8Stnan m11t· 11a1 e11 ot "eclty 111urnp • ED DC< CAVETT ··Sceted S1ra1gt11 •• How Prttonetl Help AelO<"m Oe1~1·· 11:30 II Cl) BAAHABY JONES An anOfney is killed '" a" au10 accldilnt rig111 a!Wlf -no Ille ghosl of 1111 deld wile (R) 0 TONIGHT Hott Johnny Carson Gu .. 11 Soph111 LOt'en Joan A1vet1. Legends ot Jazz . • TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS • lWtUQHT ZOftl "fha Eye Of The &eho'doo .,.. In • hOlpltll ol ,.,. Mllfe, J9MI Tyler II about 10 ... 1"-1.-i/11 of her ~lllOfl. • 9 llalC MOVIE • * "l(lllef f'OICA" (t975) P.ler Fonde. Telly s.v .. .... ""' the IOY8 ol 20 mll· llOft dollMw In dllrnOnd• end a bMutlM woman, I MCUtlty officer end lllt lidllllell IMd 1n 111tdl on a mloinQ camp fA) I THC GONG 8"0W Gl:TIMAAT 6mer1 and 99 learn of a plot to damage U S. r.ia. tlol\t Wltll 1..111n Amenca . • c.vTK>NEO AIC Nl'W9 MORN I HG 12:00 8 TWtUOHT ZONE "EJtewtlol\ .. In the 1$80'$. Olltllw Joe CMwefl'• body d111ppeu1 l1om Ille lltngm8ll'• ,_ • Al.FAE> HITCHCOCK PM.IENT8 "Muaeum Ptece" A rnU98- um CfNtO<' teflJ 11 ltlSllO<' tlle ttory behind ,111s son's death • OETSMART The Chief doubts Smart s sanity wnen Smar1 claoma II Cowboy died In 1111 apart· "*'' 12:30 • MOvtE • •·~ ··A Rage To uw" ( 1966) Suzanne Pleshatte, 8fa<lf0<d Otllrna11 Atter many IOY8 alfaira. a pto- moacuous young social iMd8' tries Miiiing down to a nomial manled Ille I 1 hr. 55 min I m MOVIE ••• "Towa1d The Untcnown" ( 19561 William Holden. UOyd Nolan A ptlOt enempt• to gain 111e leapect Qf ,, •• co11Ngu8S. litter ~no 11 over Ii care- .... miatllke (2 fW'I I • MOVIE It** "Saddle T1amp" ( 19501 Joel ~--Wan· <la Htn<Jnx An unamt>t-''°"' ranch hand, entrust· ed wtth Ille welfare ol fOIJt wlllf1. geta lflYOlved In ttle laud• Ind haules ot a r~wat.(1 llf.,30mln I 12-AO 9 Cl) C88 I.An MOVIE • • "Stoteno" ( 1969) Alex Cord. Britt Ekland. A 0•~· 1nc1 allomey tries to n1111 a pleyb(>y count WhO IS klll· Ing lhuga u a t•vor 10 a ~·-lftel\d. 1:00 U TOMOMOW Outtlt: The C\ofteohttde. t rock oroup wlllch ~I l)IUtlc IUfQt'Y to reMll'lble their lelolt: Nell Aola. • unlQUe ledlo ,__., I uw.-aotR--1-1 1:IO HIW9 WAMTID! CIAO CM ALIW "Btfnty'• loullty" l:GOI:: * * ·~ "AM My Sona" t 1$481 Ectwlrd Q AoOln· aon. 8Yl't Lancut.,. e MTIMMT The Chief I• kldnac>&*S by t<AOS eoen• Han.y Satan. 2:111 Nl'W9 2:30 MOVIE • • ~ "Of Love And Desire·• ( 19631 Merle Obtton, Steve Codw1n. • MOYIE • Yt "The Gltnt ci-" ( 19571 Jeff Monow. Mara Cordey 2:141= S;(M MOVIE • * * •)> "Tiie End Of The Att111" ( 19~51 Debor all !(err. V8ll JohMOn. 4:008 MOVIE • • "Ternptlllon" 119461 Mef1I Oberon. Paul L.ullu. m MOVIE • I "The M eml SIOfY" ( 19541 Barry Sulkvan, Bev- et1Y Garllnd 4:261 NEWS 4:30 MOVIE • •'It "Tiie Narrowing C11cte" ( 19651 Peul Carpenter, Hazel Coun. ( 1 hr. 15min I Wed•f"•dar,.• Doflf i•e Mo.,ie• AnERNOON 12:00 D * • • ··Senwnote" ( 19531 Rodi Hud90!!, Bar· bare Hale ........ "The Sea Of G1au" (Pllf1 21 (le-471 Spencer T1acy. Katlllrlne Hec>bum. s~ Q9l • • "The Strange An<l Deadly Oc:c:.>renoe" (19741 Aoberl SllOll, Vera Mlle&.. 3:30 0 I* "I, Monater" (19721 Coostopher Lee. Peter Cultllng 'Chase' Lives, Despite Nei&ens By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES <APl It could be called "The Show That Nielsen Couldn't Kill." ''Paper Chase." that thoughtful. deliberate TV series about the travails of law school, has speot most of its short life dancing on the edge of a very steep cliff. Its Nielsen ratings weren't low , they were invisible. News specials drew bigger audiences. Critics raved ; view~rs yawned. LAST FALL, CBS SCHEDULED "Paper Chase" on Tuesday nights against "Happy Days" l New '20/20' ·~ Eyes Future h.:. Rugged Course Leslie Ackerman ponders how she'll get through rugged basic training in "Women at West Point . ., a made-for-TV movie to be shown lonjght at 8 on Channel 2. 'Roots' Angers Alabmna Widow '-HUNTSVILLE, Ala. !AP> The widow or A>-abama A&M University President J . F. Drake sa ys she is furious about the portrayal of her hus band in ABC's Thursday segment of ''Roots IJ ... I ''The only bit of truth in the portrayal of Alabama A&M in that s how was that Simon Haley cam e here is 1930 to teach and that his wile died here a few years late r ," Mrs. Drake said. "Everything else was ju$t Hollywood imagination Just something t.o sell television lime... ' SIMON HALEY WAS THE FATHER of "Roots" author Alex Haley. One scene s howed Haley's home being. ransacked by whites. NEW YORK <AP! -ABC cleaned house at "20·20" after that first, disastrous edition last June, a nd since then the newsmagazine has en· joyed moderate success on a rather irregular course Let's say ABC is not dissatisfied with "20·20." Indeed, the network recently hired a oew ex· ecutive produce r ror the program, and plans to re- ' sume a regular weekly schedule early trus sum- mer :·mE SHOW WAS DOING fairly well on its own, the ratings we ren't bad and viewer re5ponse was positive," says Al lttleson. who took charge of "20·20" Jan. 1. "That doesn't mean we don't want a s how that is better-produced and contains more a nd more incisiveelemeots. "I've just put together some guidelines for the staff." the producer says. "I s ay we'.ve got to cut through the layers of our own over·indulgence and get moretolhe gut of the stories we do. "WE'VE GOT TO MAKE the program 111ore re- levant, and always look for the current. breaking !ltor y thatcan be developed." ABC took the wraps off of "20-20" last June 6, and the prem iere program was universally panned by the critics. The network responded almost im· mediately by bouncing the show's co-hosts, Harold Hayes and Robert Hughes, and by the next edition, June 13, Hugh Downs was aboard as anchorman. Hauniian PiwtDue and "Laverne a nd Shirley." It was not a happy e ncounte r for "Chase." The competition regularly placed in the top five, "Paper Chase" in the bolt.om five. A TV show is safe if it rates in the top 35 or so. It's on shaky ground in the 36-45 range. Worse tha n that, goodbye. The best showing by .. Paper Chase" is a 58. You could almost hear the a" falling But here's where the white hat shows up. "Paper Chase" has a friend, see. Somebody up there likes it. Somebody named William Paley. the gentleman who sits as chairman of the board at CBS. He bas also been called the "Father of Network Television." · HE HAS A CERTAIN INFLUENCE. Aod be likes lo watch "Paper Chase." 110 p.m .. Channel 2.) "It is no secret al CBS that Mr. PaJey ... well. th ts is his pet pro1ect, · · says Robe rt Thompson. executive producer or the show and producer of its theatrical antecedent. "Mr. Pale>,"s the one who put the show on the air aod he's the one who's keeping it on the air. "Let's say that if we were al aoy other network, we would have bei!n gone a long time ago. We never would have gotten past the first 13 s hows ." But sticking with a poorly rated show grates the soul of your average TV uecutive There are many at CBS who'd like to see "Paper Chase" quickly put away. Thompson knows this S<>UTM COAST ACTottS C0.0, Bf.'l f\ '"" f'\•a" co•t o• acttno "°""'-~ 1111) -·~ l>ellflt •"'0"'11 A .,,.,W otner lye>e wori<&l>Ol>a f'tMM!r.17141957-0212 ANIMAL HOUSE 1.3 ••• Remak~ of Be1u Ge1t a •tt;!! f!!I UP IN SMOKE •• OUTUW JOSEY WALES ~·•11111 OUINTET ' •:• "lbere was not one single instance of racial violence here, and I 've been here since 1927. ''Mrs . Drake said. HOLLYWOOD CAP > -"M Station: Hawaii," a two-hour movie and pilot for CBS, will star Jared Martin, Andrew Duggan, Elissa Dulce, Moe Keale and Joanne Ha rris. The potential series, with Jack Lord •Of "Hawaii Flve-0" a s ·executive producer and direct.or, will be filmed in Hawaii. It is about a "for hire " oceanic research company that do es sa l vage, exploration, and rescue work. R~ES SIARY$1 AS LOW AS DAMNATION ALLEY ,_, .... "" cosflMESI So. Coast 1i. ,., ..,., l U'I 8• \IO• I••• l>J""'O IN ANOTHER SCENE, TUE president of lhe school, called Dr. Huguley in the script, sings a blac k s piritual to please a group of white benefactors from the North. "Dr. Drake was a mao or dignit y and integrity. He would have ne ver made a jackass oC himself that way. It's a disgrace t.o his memory," she said. .. News from all over California IS rounded up each day I ... • •••Ras • LA·z..elYS FREE DEUYERY OOtfAMUA U. L "911 If. -.... --·-c-......... 1 -"''°• -~ Clo!Olot- Mtt1tOllVllJO tMHM• ...... c.ii..-ti:.:_... _ ... _ 4Mo9902 ......... io. ... IO.t -- 1•~·-... --"SUP9MA"" INI .. ,...,, .. Plta.1 .... ,_ "°"" ,,_ THE WARRIORS 11:304:30-10:30 (R) C•ll 542~8. Put lew word& to WO k for OU. • 1 I "I KNOW THAT IF IT WERE up t.o some encutives. we would not be on the air. They feel it has not gone where they would have liked to see it go in the ratings "He <Paley > obviously has very important input as to what goes o n the air and what stays on. Now. how long he can stay with it, I don't know." Maybe not forever. apparently. For the month of February. CBS tried "Paper Chase" at a later lime slot. 10 p.m . 19 Central l, and there It scored its bggest ratings success. that lowly 58. But the network has jus t announced that "Paper Chase" will r eturn to the lion's de n. against "Happy Days" and "Laverne and Shirley'' in the earlier lime slot. "IT'S FAIRLY DISCOURAGING," s aid Th o mpson . who is prone t o occasio nal unders tate ment "I mean, this is not the type of s how you put in that kind of lime slot. That slot is c ontrolled by kids 12 or 13 years old, and they're not watching this kind of show." There is still the chance that "Paper Chase" will catch o n . i n s pite o r its heavy-duty competition. One network suggested they m ake ··Paper Chase" a half.hour sitcom. ""'lo, I'm going lo stay with the show a s it is. maintain the quality that we've had ull along. It's a do-o r-die simation I wish more people were watching, but I'm not going to sacrifice anything or trash it up JUSL because the ratings aren't good .. Well. maybe they could caJI it "The Show Thal Nielsen Couldn't Kill . . Right Away " MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "HARD CORE" (R) WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS ··NORTH AVENUE IRREGULARS " (G) "S~ME TIME NEXT YEAR" CPG J "ICE CASTLES" "INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS" (PG! "FAST BREAK" (PG) "CALIFORNIA SUITE" "MOMENT BY MOMENT" (R) ~·t•ll• .... St"°'""' "THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" (PG) "QUINTET" (R) "MIDNIGHT EXPRESS" "TAXI DRIVER" (R) "NATIONAL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE" MONTY PYTHON" (R • "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" "THE ONE ANO ONLY" (PG) "UP IN SMOKE" "A BOY & HIS DOG" (R) "CALIFORNIA SUITE" "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" (PG) ALL DlillVa•tNIOnN 6!lt,.N..~f '1ui. Ullhr 11 "'" U"'-" e .1( ... ,. l'lan,..M11•