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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-02 - Orange Coast Pilotll c ~ ' • i . Allawa·y .. Deniell Ray's Slaying. · . . Trial Outside Of King Said J ~ • ~ ~ " ': .. . .. . Orang~ Cot;anty Dis Own Doing • I• .. l' , • • I DAILY PILOT e ______ ompany· * * * 10< * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 2, 1977 ffers e .· .. .. . ... VOL. 70, HO. n. 4 SllCTIONS, 44 ~AGES Draft.Evaders Vets, So Ions· Sue • ID ,WASHINGTON (AP> -A group of 20, including Medal of tHonor winners. six former ~risoners of war and two con· ~essmen. flied suit in fedJr°at ourt today challenging the gality of President Carter's ardon for draft evaders. . , Pardon the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment and violates federal laws governing . citizensblp. President Carter and Bell were named as defendants in the suit. Canadia~ . . - Comp&ny ·Polls Ou. By TOM BARLEY Of tlle Daill' Pllet St.tt ''And then there were two." The suit said the pardon is ague and ambiguous, illegally ~elegates the President's con- \ ~~:;~al pardon authoritf to ~~;;;;off~ The suit was filed in U .S. Dis· tdct Court by the Foundation of Law and Socittf, a Washington- bued, public-interest law foun- dation. Members of Coneress who joined in the suit included Reps. George Hansen (R-lfjaho), and Larry McDonald (D-Ga.). That clearly audible comment from the rear of Judge James F. r Judge's courtroom Tuesday was one observer's immediate reac· tion to the announcement that the Cadillac Fairview Corpora.ion of Toronto is no longer interested in purchasing the Jam es Irvine Foundation's controlling interest in the Irvine Company. The decision by the Ganadlans came as no surprise to the feor parties in the lawsuit, the two re- maining contenders or close bb-... servers of the five-month Orange " County Superior Court trial. · I Pf King Ruled ~D· FL-· .4 ' ·LIU viui ~Ct I WASHINGTON (AP> -Aft.er a io-montb review. a team of Justice Department lawyers has concluded that James Earl Ray acted alone in the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., department sources said today. The lawyers rejected theories that Ray was only a cog in a con- spiracy to assassinate the Nobel Prise-winning civil rights leader, the •ources said. The t.eam of lawyers from the department's Office of Professional RespobaibWty de- ·llvered its report to former Atty. ~en. F.dward N. Levi shortly before be left offlce Jan. 20. Tbe department plans to make public a .. unitized version" of the report. deleting names of in· formers and other sensitive m•terial. the sources said. But the public release bas been delayed because department of- flcla.11 want ·to avoid the ~ pearance ~ teytng to ihtluence tbe Jio.. of aepreaentatives ln tw det>ate about launcbln& a Uaat,by and COltl1 n~ inveati1a- tibll of the ml&fdtn ot Kini and Presldem .John F. Kennedy. When the House completes its action. the department will re-ltudti report. Laat April, Levi ordered Jllebael ·Shaheen. head of the Of. flee of Prolealonal Respon,s1blll· <SeeMY,Pa1eAJ) The suit was instigated by re- tired Air Force Col. Norlan Daughtrey of Albuquerque, N.M., representative of the ex· POW movement. · M eda1 ol Honor winners who joined in the suit are Col. Lee ThOrsness of Siowt Fcalls, S.D.; Col. Van Barfoot of Ford, Va.; Tech. Set. Ralph NeppeJ of Iowa City. Iowa and Col "Bud" Day of Etlin, Fla. The suit aald Carter's order pardoolnJ draft evaders who Oed the country ia void because be Jacks authority to restore fUll political rtahts to persons wbo are not c;tizens of the United · States and that tbe law says that a person wbo leaves the United States to avoid the drafl loaeis his cltizensblp. "The executive order invades the legialaUve •prerogatives by direetina the attorney aeneral to . discontinue lnvntl1atio11s and prosecutions ol violators of the Military Selective Service Ad," the suit ehaUes. · It uked the court to declare that Congreu alone llas the (See PAllDONS, Pa•e AZ> HOME EOJJNP A COOD DOG Sbe IOl4 to the first pfnOn wt.o called. rm very bapJ»y I ad· • vertttecUn tbe Dally Pilot." That's the-•al• aueceu ex- perlenc.d by UM HuatidltOO Beacb pet owner wbO ~ced tb.ll eWsifted ad: Ntck Pugay didn't feel like going to his ·San Diego of~ce Tuesday, and now he wishes he hadn t . "I'd just closed the'door he recalls. Co-worker Dorothy .Jernigan said sh~ hit the brake's as she pulled into her parking slot, but "nething happened." .Well, almost nothing. · -when Bhe came driving up over my car," . ' Tria~. Stays, • ID ·County Pot Penalty Cut Sought 'SAN FRANCtSCO CAP) ->--· semblyman Wlllle Brown'Jr. bu propoaed tbe r,ductton of crlmlaal penalttes for home- 1rown marijuana to remqve wh•t be called lnconai•tencles in t!lelaw. Ttie San Franciaco Democrat tOld a DeWJ eonterence Tbunday that bi IDll"Odue-4 leslllationi I!) SacraiiMI*> to reduce the penal-,. Houee Rules Committee 'l'U81· ty for lfc)wtng six marijuana day acned to a two-mont.b e&· plant.I or lt11 from a felony to a · tenalon of a con1re11lonal in· miademeanor, carrylq a $100 veatlsatlm into the asaustn• ftne. tiona of JOhn F. Kennedy and Brown utd state'• law. which Martlll J.utber KJU Jr. The ex· le1,.llaed small amounts of • tention. which mut be QProved marljuant, •\ill tlau .. 1rowtna by the Ml House. waa a com· or cultivating the weed as a promlae reached by Democratic l•lC?DY · • ,, le-4.,s. , Representatives of Cadillac Fairview made it clear last w~k that they were not prepafed• tc;). again engage in open bidding procedures that were described by one Canadian official as •;a tasteless Orange County version of the Persian market place.'' The decision to withdraw from the contest was taken when it became clear this week ttiat foundation trustees, who want to sell their interest to Mobil, are not prepared to endorse a sys~fm of sealed bids. Cadillac Fairview at one time seemed almost certain to be the <See HEIRESS, Page A2) · ~ Coast Weather Patchy fog or low clouds late tonight and early \ Thursday morning. Li>ws tonight 47 to 52. Highs Tbw'lday ln mid 60s. 0 INSIDE TODAY Even Jn Math. Clm'~ ~ continua to loom larger tbon · : 17lO"JI "10fM dots of todaJI. A ·: QUmpee of "Long Uve tM .King/' /irft ~ ~ · lrisdfath, ii.on f;>Qot A1. •••~x An-~. At Melley,.,. ....... Att ,_..._ L..M..... A11 IMtk ... tat~ ~" .... ,... Qall.... DMt .......... ........ ~....!...:.. cu -.... c:i.My ~ 1;f"-'• . .............. M =MMtllb ............. '4-J , ........ ~....ct ..,, TIINten flt!!: CAot• .... ..., .. .__Cl9t_ . Cl ~.,..... ~ .......... Cl .. • I -~ • In Midwest; By'fte Auoct1Cec1 PftA Conaervatton measures ap. pe&ted to be easing the drain on natural sas tn the cold-plagued Midwest and East today, but there were wamJ.nia that the fac- tory cloainea and layoffs de· 1i1ned to save the fuel could tut unUJ April. (Related photo, A4) Tbe Senate approved a com- promise venion of the emerJlen- Third 'ftevise I cy natural gu bill today and House passage wu hoped for before President Carter's televised appearance tonight. The bill is not desiened to in- crease nattral gas supplies, but to flve the ~ident the power to shift some gu from low-prtoril_f uaers -such as industry -to bt1h-prioritl'.. u.tera sucb as schools, homes, hoapitala and &hmit Wipes Out ··Debts Owed Cella By GARY GRANVILLE OltM O.lly 'lt9'Staff Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit amended his 1974 campaign disclosure state· ment Tuesday to "wipe out $119,197 in debts owed to Dr. Lou'is Cella or fi ctitious cam- paign committees controlled by Cella. It was the third time Schmit amended the statement that at one point showed he spent $1\1,810-$141,539 of it Cella con- nected money -to defeat incum- bent David Baker. This time. Schmit reclassified $119,197 in Joans from Cella and his committees to donations. Jn part. that statement ap· parenUy reflects the fact tha£- neither Schmit nor his campaign committee officials signed notes covering the alleged loans. But in an interview last week. Schmit pointed out that most of the so-called loans were in the form of campaign material for which there was no accounting. "I really don't know what we received or how much it was worth," Schmit said as he cHs- cussed his 1974 campaign debt. lf# is the first Cella protege to disown obligations to the one- time "County political kingmaker who was convicted of felony crimes in a federal court last year and still faces a felony trial in Orange County. Cella was in court part of the day Tuesday and could not be re- ached for comment. Schmit first ran afoul of 1974 campaign disclosures when he reported substantial Cella loans from such theretofore unknown political entJties as "BPMPAC." Later such COl'}'lmittees were given titles like Bristol Park Medical Political Action Com- mittee. Last May, Schmit amended his return to show $10,000 paid to political consultant William Butcher that had not been re· ported. Simultaneously, a reported $100 contribution from lobbyist Frank Michalena was upped to SlJ)OO on the often amended cam- paign llatement. . The Garden Grove supervisor also had difrtculty with a finan- cial disclosure statement filed when he took office. Omitted from the statement was alm06t $14,000 Schmit had earned while campaignln1. eam. int& that came from a Cella con- trolled hospital. Schmit also was forced to amend a conflict of interest slate· ment filed Jut year. The am~ment came after it was diaclosed tbe county supervisor had accepted gifts _ valued at more than $200 from lobbyists and developers and then voted on issues in which the donon. had a financial interest. Schmit avoided a possible mis- demeanor conflict by reassess· lit& the value of the gifts to bring them under $200. ~ 0..ANGE COAST ' DAILY PILOT ~t:':.~~~.'T,t:i:::.::~:; ClNtt"'*lt11m.C-.._ ........ -... ...... _ -~·· .......... ~ ... , '°' co. .. .... Ht_ ....... " ..... ....,_ .. _ t•tft Y1ttty. tt•IM, 1 ... -...C:lll Y .. lllf'Y .,.. ~=~~= .. -~,:,::•;: !WWICN+ -1y.1,.. 01..,1 11 .. DI "911 ~­~(At.Mew c.m.-,q~ ·~· ..... ..... ,_,_ .....,,_ Vl<e ,...,.;.-:i',!, = .. ~ ,,._ ... _ llfller ~ ... ......... ,,... ......... ... c:a.tlH It.~ lttcllefol P. IMll AUl'44"11,,_....., ... C .. tarl Offlc .. eo.ta Mtw: >>0~1 ~"'"' law_ .. Kii> ,, .. O.._,.,.. llf'#t ..... ,l::r.O!l ... <11· ,,.,,. ... 11 ~···· .... ~~ Vll .. Y • 1)Jtl 1..t ,,_,II• .. als.tf\01• .. ,.,_..,, 'telephone (71')MMt2t C11 .. lfled Adwertllll'lgt42-M71 s.dclletokll Val .. y ...... Cf'k• M1...i10 ,.,,_..,.~ .._..IO .._MwtllOr-~~, ... .... 1220 • Dally Pl .. t Stall Pllolo CUTS CELLA DEBTS Supervisor Schmft Frma Page A J . . RAY .•. ty. to take charge of a review of all department records concern- ing the investigation of King's de- ath. He took the action alter the de· partment's civil rights division finished a fi ve-month pre- liminary review of FBI files and said a more complete study was necessary. ·The senes of department re· views was prompted by detailed disclosures by a Senate commit- tee of the FBI's campajgn of harassment against King in an effort to discredit him and the civil rights movement. That campaign was carried out under th'e direction of J . Edgar Hoover. King was shot to death on a motel balcony in Memphis in April, 1968. Ray pleaded guilty to King's murder. But he told the court he· did not agree with stat~ments by the prosecution and his own at· tomey that there was no t:on· spiracy in the case. Ray ts serving a 99-year prison sentence in Tennessee. He bas unsuccessfully soueht a new trial. Victim Identified SAN DIEGO <AP> -1'he nude body of a man found floating off Black's Beach Sunday has been identified as that of Paul William Lee, 49, of Long Beach. East am all businesses. • • Over thousandl of miles ol American countryside, the mis- ery of the harsh winter was evi- dent. But there were some bope(Ul lll(ns. The flnt contlnient of a 20- member Army En1lneen bat. talion from North Cvolina and more than two dozen pleca of snow.fl(btlng eqwpment arrived in Buffalo, N. Y ., to belp National Guardamen clear the city ~a blbz~ that has cost the area an estimated tao million. The National Weather Service predicted temperatures up t.o 30 today in Buffalo, no signlftcant snow and winds easing to 12-to 25·miles per hour. The sun broke through the clouds there Tuesday for the first time since rugh winds, snow and cold struck Fri· day. Also for the first time since Friday, the entire length of the New York State Thruway was open to traffic. At one time, all but 45 miles ot the highway was ' closed due to the storm. On the Chesapeake Bay ~d thet()hio River, fuel barges which were idled for up to two weeks were moving again, but progress was slow due to ice. In West Virginia and Ken· lucky, more than 30,000 coal miners were off the job, their mines shut down because of the cold. Thousands ot schools and fac- tories also were shut and about a dozen states had declared enei:gy emergencies. On Tuesday, North Carolina joined the ranks of states declar- ing suet\ emergencies, and the auto industry alone announced · that 80,000 workers in the United Sta~es and Cana<ta would join some 1.5 million persons estimat- ed to be laid off around the na- tion. In the auto industry. parts shortages were a factor as well as gas shortages. The harsh weather has cen- tered in the East, Midwest and South. but the problem was na· tional in effect and both the federal government and some distant areas were acting to help. Whetmore Recovering Former state Senator James Whetmore was reported in good· condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital where be is recovering from open heart sur- gery. The former Orange County legislator underwent surgery Monday to replace a cardiac valve. A hospital spokesman said he is being cared for in the hospital's intensive care unit. Whetmore retired froll} the Legislature at the close of the last session and has been practic- ing Jaw in Orange since then. Gandhi Challenged \MEW DELHI. India (AP) - Prtme Minilter Indira Gandhi faced the severest chall~~ to her ll·year-old rule today foDow- ing a revolt by some leadini membet'5 of her Congress party who vowed to work for her defeat in the March parliamentary elec- tions. One of her long-lime sup- porters, Food Minister Jagjivan Ram, resigned from the cabinet and the party. 1 APWI ....... JIM OLSTROM SHOVELS HIS WALK IN.WATERTOWN, N.Y. Temperatu,.• Rising -Slowly -In Frozen Eaat 65 and Bolding Brown Chills Suit For.Energy Test SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has turned the thermostat down to 65 degrees in his office, and intends to kee"p it there. At least that's the idea his 90 staff members got Tuesday when workers installed shields on tbermostaL,, t.o prevent tamper- ing. Although the heat was cut back in Brown's suite, it will remain at 68 in other state bulldings for a few more days, said Brown's ex· ecutive secretary, Gray Davis. Davis said the governor'• suite will be the test area for an "energy audit." When the audit i.a complete. probably thUi week, an optimum -temperature for energy savings will be picked. Then similar audits will be conducted in other buildings, Davia aaid. Several aides and secretaries came to work with sweaters Tuesday. but one, who asked not to be named, said, ''I don't think we're suffering all that much. It's colder, but w~·re not freez- ing." Since 1975, state office thermostats have been set at 68 in the winter and 74 in the sum- mer. Meanwhile, Californians are being urged to turn down thermostats and wear sweaters to help conserve natural gu for otherpartaof)llenaUonsuffering from shortages. "The steps are beina taken because jobs are being lost and people are dying," in other parts of the country, state Public Utilities Commission President Robert Batinovich sald Tuesday in San Francisco in announcing Fro.a Page AJ PARDON •. ·~ power to declare the manner of acquiring, losing or reacquiring citizenship. James T. McKenoa. one of the attorneys who file<t the suit, told a news conference that the suit does not question the Presi- dent's powen to g1'ant pardons. ·~That ii unqueaUonable," be said. But he said the suit challenges the validity ol the particular pro- clamation which Carter issued for the draft evaders. the voluntary conservation or- der, effective immediately. Batinovich said the restric- tions, characterized as a "moral injunction," include lowering thermostats to no more than 65 during the day and 55 at night. They also include curbs on Jux· ury uses such as to heat swim- ming pools and operate de- corative lighting and fireplaces. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., which serves most of Northern California, has offered to loan Southern Natural Gas Co. of Birmingham, Ala., up to 100 million cubic feet of gas a day for a month for use in Georgia. South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee and Florida. Southern Californfa Gas Co. says it will make 2.5 billion cubic feet of gas available lo utilities serving Oklahoma and Kansas. The PUC admitted it would be tough to enforce the order. The state attorney general's of- fice said even though Lhe restric- tions were issued in the form of an order. they have no legal weight and are ''simply a request appealing to the morality of users." The order makes no mention of electrical beating or propane gas. Youth Burned By Exploding Car Battery A 20-year-old Los Alamitos man suffered severe burns Tues- day when a car battery exploded in his face, Orange County firemen reported today. Mike Eshelby Ht a match to check the level of water In the battery. firemen said, and the match ignited hydrogen gas escaping from the battery. Investigators said Eshelby may suffer damage to his eyesight. · He was taken to~s Alamitos General Hospftal where he was reported in satisfactory condl· Uon. Firemen said the accident OC· curred at the Sunrise Glass Corporation in Los Alamitos, where Esbelby ls employed. Frol9P-AI_ HEIRESS ••• new dlfec:torl ot Irvine affaln when tile company potted what waa then a top bld of $111.2 mtmon foe the foundation'• M.5 pereent stake la ~ Irvtne Com· P~e otter was eclipsed by all caab btds ol $281.t million froa\ fdobU and Sla.7 mllllon from a consortium beaded by Wall Street nnancler Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. · Cadillac Fairview indicated early thiB year that they were preapared to 10 aUll btaller but only It Judie Judge ordered a system of sealed bids. No such order bas been tasued. Judge Judie la beint asked t.o rule on the merits of a lawlult flied by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith who took legal ac- tion when the foundation detided to sell out to Mobil for $200 million. Foundation trustees are com- pelled by the provisions of the Federal Tax Refocm Act of 1989 to dispose of their Irvine Com- pany interests by 19&1. Mrs. Smith has argued that the $200 million Mobil was then pe'e- pared to pay for the 8,415 shares of stock in the company founded by her grandfather was'far below the true value of the shares. Mrs. Smith owns a 22 percent interest ln the .Irvine Company .. She is on record as preferring a sale of the foundation's shares to the Allen-Taubman group which has assured her that she can re- tain her minority interest if their bid ls successful. The withdrawal of Cadillac Fairview from the lawsuit ap- pears t.o leave the way clear for a confrontation between Mobil, backed by the foundation and the Irvine Company, and the Allen· Taubman interest, backed by Mrs.Smith. Mrs. Smith's 17-year feud with other members of the Irvine Company board was discussed at length in court Tuesday during the questioning of investment counselor Bowen McCoy. Loa Angeles attorney Howard Friedman, representing Mrs. Smith, grilled McCoy at length on what be described as de· rogatory statements made about Mrs . S mith by McCoy 's employers, Morgan Stanley of New York. Friedman then asked McCoy to explain the significance of wbat he called the "Joan Irvine Smith factor," a financial adjustment which reduces the value of Irvine Company shares by $1.50 each so .long as Mrs. Smith is connected with the company. J McCoy explained that the mark down was the result of dis·· sension between Mrs. Smith and the Irvine Company board and the reluctance of investors to become involved in a company that is divided at management level. "Don't you subscribe to the theory held by some business in· •terests that dissension within management is not always a negative factor and a strong critic might be jus t what management needs?" Friedman asked McCoy. "Certainly," McCoy said. "But we looked at the recor(is of this dispute and two cardboard boxes filled with clippings about it before we decided that this was a . negative factor." &dloonUt 'Grounded'. YUMA, Arii. (AP> - Karl Thomas, trying to float across the country'in 14 days under bis hot air balloon, landed unexpec- tedly today in the footlUUs · some 14 miles east of ·this Colorado River city. Members of bis ground crew said. Thomas landed the giant balloon in a re· mote area, and that they were trying to reach him. They said they knew of no r6ads lntothe area. Yuma is about~ miles south of Blythe, Calif., where Thomaa llf'ted off at 4 a .m. en route to Phoenix. .Agnew Wateh ··'Jewel? Colketon Lock Item in Safe Depoait Box.ea "Mickey Mouse wean a Spiro Atne~ watcb,'1 lhey uaed toaay . Now itaeem1 no one wears them, but collect.on are atlll buylll& them, •t "9.05 apiece, ~tead of tha old price ol $14.95. •·on. IN!OD!e who have been buy1QI them for the lut two to 2~ ~ean are Jtrtctly collecton," 11ld Larry Dou1~ert1~!_3. aeneral mana1er ot the uiny Time Oompuy lD Aaabelm. ·~don't even wear them. .. ' be1an in ear~ 1970, when Dr. and Mrs. Hale E. Dougherty of Anaheim and their 10 children copyrlehted a carlcatur• ol Agnew and began abJppin1 wriatwatches from theJr ~me. Their tfademark came from a nei1hborhood cblld'a ml1pronun- clatioooftbefaml\y name. Tbe Doushertya bouabt a re1taurant buildln1 ln Anaheim and converted It. lnto a shop wher• all types of Um•keeptni devtces are aold, Thtff are only .to or 50 Agnew watcbtl left and no more are be- inl produced. Doulherw said he waa offered $250 for OM of the old onea but he doem't blow of an owner who would tell. Alex Haley, author of .. Root.a," which set TV viewing re· cords In an el1ht·part serlea last week, autoaraphs copies Of his novel whUe a crowd of aome 3,000 book buyers waits outside a Los A~ielea bookstore. A publbher's repr entaUve described the scene ·as ''ln· cr~ble." Tbey ~ them In sale depoalt boxes, • M aaid. • •-' Tbe Splro ~ Watch crue The 1>ou1be.rty1 ketp their aaJea fl1urea Hcret, but a pubJ.ialMtd elttmat. Hid 100,000 ol the tJm~eces •old in t.b• fint )'Hr ind there wu ~tr buy. tns 1pmt when Aanew fdlmed lnltn. ~ . But for a~eulatora on the future ol polltlclam.; the Dtrty Tlme Company cy otter 1 Jlm· my Carter watch -and 1 Gov. Brown watch. .. ' '· . . ORANGE COUNTY, CALlFORNIA eSa Planners. ·Get Caseload Ke.lief . ' After bearlnl complaints aboUt 'or&le problema In the planniq epartment. Coeta Meaa offlclall ued down thal department'• Uat thinp to do th11 week and hint· that devel0s>en won't be cOd· ed lnAallnp wttb Uie clly. Plannln1 Director Charles obei'ta met with council mem· tu and the plannln1 com· inion Monday rugbt to voice Foncern over his department's .. 1rowlnework load. City ol'1clala were shown a Uat of ~ project.a and etudies which Rot>.rta said •ould take 14.S man 1 yearatoeompleee. .. And that'~ no joke," said Roberta , who added morale pro- blems in the department to his list ofwoea. "My people are busting their tails without extra pay to get some ol these projects done," Robertsaiucs. He said that, In addition to work on miandatory general plan el.,. P!enta, epecllic plan studies and •J)lannina ordinance amend- ments, hls staff also handles tbe day to day phone calls and personal contacts with citizens. Roberts said the department 1011ed an avera1e of' 110 telephone calls and 36 personal visits per day last year, adding that his staff Abo works with prlvat, developers to make sure . their projects meet city standards before they 10 before the plannlnc commission. The planninf cble( asked cjly officiall to If ve him the eo·Abead to work on about 10 of the trojects, along with some ~oing studies, putting tbe rest on tbe t)ack bumerforalx moot.ha. Councilwoman Mary .eports Draw Revi~w ~Fairview Av;rsion Therllpy Gets Study ~ . By STEVE MJTCHELL Ol IM Dally l"li.c $Wt t Reports of electric shock treat· nt and forced restraint of re· <led patients at Fairview S~ate spital have prompted a review ftbe hospital's aversion therapy rogram. But Fairview's administrator, r. Michael Levine, said the version program, in which elec· ic shock is used as a deterrentl- 3 lif~ saver. State Health Director Jerome ackner inspe<'ted Pacific State ospital in Pomona Tuesday, WASHINGTON (AP> -A ' E: ol 20, including Medal of onor winners, six former I · oers of war and two con· j(l'esamen, fUed suit in federal ~urt -today cballen&iDI the 1 Jegall~f Presidenf Cute.r's ardon for draft evaden. The IUit aaid the pvdoo ia • ague and ambicaous, ille&all>' ele1ates the Presiden.l'• con· ~tutional pardon authority to tty. Gen. Griffin Bell, offends e equal protection clause of the 4th Amendment and violates ed:eral laws governing ltizenship. President Carter and 11 were named as defendants ~eauit. The suit was filed in U .S. Dis· rict Court by the Foundation of w and Society, a Washington· ased, public-interest law foun· ation. Members of Con1reas who ined in the suit included Reps. eorae Hansen (R·ldaho). •JM\ McDonald <D·Ga.). The suit was insti1ated by re- tired A&r Force Col. Norlan '1nauahtrey of Albuquerque, : 1N.M"" rePrelentaUve of the ex- 1 POW movemenL Medal ol Honor winners wbo ' Joined bi the •ult are Col. Lee Tbonnaa ol Sioux Falla, S.D.; Col. Van BaJ'foot of F.4>rd, Va.; • Teeb. Sit. Ralph Neppe' ot Iowa • City, Iowa and Col. .. Bud" D;uo I of Ellin. n.. Tbe IUit said Carter's Ol'der pardonlna drat\ evaders wbo ned Uie comrtry b void becaase be lacks authority to re1tore tuU political ri&hts to penou wbo are not clUzens of tbe United States and that the law •'1& that • • penoo wbo leaves the Untted s.tates to avo6d the draft loaea bt.s ciUaenablp. Coast . Wealher . :. Patchy fOf or low cloud.I late tont1ht and early Tbunda,y momlnl. Lowa toni1bt -47 to 52. Blahs Thursday In mid•· ; and the health department has indicated it will review Fairview's program in the near future. Fairview and Pacific ar~ the only two hospitals in the state's ll·facility mental opera· lion which use aversion therapy. Reports of the use of cattle prods on patients came following a joint state-councy health team visit to the Pomona facility. Levine said the Costa Mesa hospital's aversive conditioning program is limited to a very small group, and called the pro- ject a sophisticated operation. One Drops ~ut ''It is a well controlled project restricted to between eight and 12 kids here," he said in an in- terview today. Levine said the treatments are done only with the consent of the patient's parents and with the ap· proval of a Human Rights Com· mittee. "The project is a life saver," Levine said. "There are. from time to time, residents with very self-abusive behavior (such as striking their heads on walls). Their whole life becomes restraints and drugs because of Two Bidders Still Seek Irvine Firm By TOM BARLEY °'*Dally ~· ... , .... •'And then there were two.•• That clearly audible comment from the rear of Judge Jam~ F. Judie's courtroom Tu~sd•S' was one observer's immediate reac· tion to the announce01ent that the C14illac Fairview Corporation olTocontols l'io lonaer interested tn purchasing the James Irvine Foundation's controlling Interest in the Iryi.ne Company. The decision by the Canadians came as no surprise to the four parties in the lawsuit, the two re· maining conteoden or close ob· 1ervers of the five· month Orange Count.ySuperiorCourttrial. Representatives of Cadillac Fairview made 1t clear last week that they were not prepared to again enaage in open bidding procedures that were described by one Canadian official as "a tasteless Orarute County version of the Persian ma..rtet place." The decision to withdraw from the contest was taken when it became clear this week that foundatian truatees, who want to sell their interest to Mobil, are nol prepared to endorse a syslem of sealed bids. Cadll.lac Fairview at one time seeD)ed almost certain to be the new directors of Irvine affairs wben tbe company posted what WH then 8 top bid Of $286.2 Third Revise Dally Piiot St.ff PMlo PART OF THE EQUATION lf!11n• Stockholder Smhh million for the foundation's 54.5 percent stake in the Irvine Com· pany. l/f; The offer was eclipsed by all cash bids of $281.9 milllof\,lrom Mobil and $282;7 million from a <See BEIBESS. Paie A2) ... SChmit Wipes 'Out · Dehls Oived ce11a their self.abuse," he explained. "And, what usually happens is, after a short period of time it no longer becomes necessary to ad· minister the treatment,•• he said. Levine said the shock treat· ment disrupts the destructive behavior long enough for other behaviors to be taught. Levine also denied that the aversion conditioning involves the use of cattle prods, saying the devices are less crude than those used on animals. (See REVIEW, Page t\2) AllawaY,'s Request Refused Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Kneeland refused today to move accused mass murderer Edward Allaway's up· coming trial to another county. "I don't think it's been •wn Mr. Allaway will not get a fair •nd impartial lri•l in Orange County," Judge Kneeland said. He a1lo refu.aed a request by Deput)I Publlc Defender Ron Butler to delay Allaway'a trial 18 months. As a result, the man accused of shooting seven people to death and wOwlding two others last Ju. ly 12 on the Cal State Fullerton campus will stand trial in Orange County March 7. Butler hoped to get Allaway's triJll moved to another county because of what he said was the vast . amount of publicity the mass slayings received in this county. : The defense attorney asked for the 18 month delay after the mo· tion for a chanee of venue was de· nied. Butler said the time was needed to diminish the impact of the slayings on prospective jurors' minds. But Judge Kneeland didn't agree. He s~d that while the publicity bad been pervasive in Orange County, its most severe impact was on the university campus and in Fullerton. Judie Kneeland also noted that Allaway'• chief defense will be hia mental condition at the Ume of the slayjngs. He then mentioned Oranee County'• population of 1. 75 million persona as beinf an in· dicatiOn of an abundant number of proepecUve lanpartJ,aJ jurors. 1111 apparent Inference was to the underitaucliai that lt will be the 37~year-Old former custo- dla.n '• meGtal 1tate at the time of the 1bo0tiap that wm be of m08t cone em to the jury. Small'fOOCI said, 0 Even when we chtp the Ust down, they're sUU 10· ing to be overload~. I think the plannlna departmefft is probably carl'ying the heaviest load in the city." -Roberts said he would like to avqid hiring more people because of apace limitations in city hall for the planning department. And, be said, limiting the number of cases ttandled by the staff for any 1lven plannlna~m-, mlasionmeeUnawouldalsonotbe • <lesirable. He said the clty's pubU•rel1· lions lmaae would aulfer, and added that tbe staff currently pro· cesses every application sub- mitted within a lbreetofourweek period. Mrs. Smallwood interjected, ''Why should tbe planninl staff do <See PLANNERS, Pa1e AZ) A,. .. ...,.. .. JIM OLSTROM SHOVELS HIS WALK IN WATERTOWN, N.Y. Temperatures Rising -Slowly -In Frozen EHt By Tbe Associated Press Conservation measures ap· peared to be easing the drain on natural gas in £he cold·plaeued Midwest and East today, but there were wamings that the fac· tory closings and layoffs de· signed to save the fuel could last until April. (Related photo, AO HOME FOlJND A GOOD DOG She sold to the first persoo who called. I'm very happy I ad- vertised in the Daily Pilot.•· That's the sales success. ex· perienced by the Huntington Beach pet owner who placed this dasslfied ad: -'•• Beaut blonde rem. cocker. AKC registered, 12 mos. • · AskingS:SO. xxx·xxxx If you have a pet you want to sell, tall ~5678. lt only takes a ,few words in the right place to at tr act a buyer. Along the Orange Coast. the rl&ht place to advertiae is in the Daily Pilot. • • A 2 DAil. Y PILOT YUMA, Ariz. CAP> - K.rl Thom , U'>'!nt •lo fl.o•t :acn.t the eou try In 14 days under hb bOt aJr baUoon, landed unexpec. tedly tcnay tn the foothills some l• miles east or this Cotoredo River city. Members of his ground crew said TboQ\81 landed • tbe Ciant baJlOQD in a re- mote area, and that they were tryihf to reacb him. They said they knew or no roads Into lbe area. Yuma is about 60 miles south of 'Blythe. Calif., where Thomas lifted otr at 4 a .m . en ~te to Phoenix. F,....PageAJ SCHMIT ••• crimes in a federal court last year and still faces a felony trial in Orange County. Cella was in court part of the day Tuesday and could not be re· ached for comment. Schmit first ran afoul or 1974 'campaign disclosures when he reported substantial Cella loans from such theretofore unknown 1 political entities as "BPMPAC." Later such committees were given titles like Bristol Park Medical Political Action Com· mittee. Last May. Schmit amended his I return to show $10,000 paid to JIOlltical consultant William :Butcher that had not been re· ported. Simultaneously, a reported $100 contribution from lobbyist I Frank Michalena was upped to $1,000 on the often amended cam· ,Paign statement. I Th~. Garden Grove supervisor also had difficulty with a fman· cial disclosure statement filed when he took office. I Omitted from the statement · was alm06t $14,000 Sebmit bad earned while camQalgnlng, earn· ings that came Crom a Cella con· trolled hospital. Schmit also was forced to mend a conflict of· interest state· ent filed last year. · The amendment came after it as disclosed the county upervisor bad accepted gifts alued at more than ~ from obbyists and developers and then voted on issues in which the cionors had a financial interest. Schmit avoided a possible mis· emeanor conflict by reassess· ng the value of the gifts to bring them under $200. Gray Whale Excursion Set in Mesa A family excursion lo watch the migration or gray whales is sc heduled Feb. 12, by Costa Mesa's Department or Leisurc- Services. The all·day excursion. ar· ranged through the Cabrillo State Marine Museum. will cost $8.25 per person. lt includes bus transportation from Costa Mesa lo Long Beach and a two and a .half ·hour ocean cruise. The bus will leave the Com· munity Recreation Center al the ()ranee County Fairgrounds al :30 P a.m. and return al approx· alely3p.m. Deadline for registration for the excursion is Feb. 4. For further in· fermaUon, call the excursion c:oordinator at $56-5481. rProbe Extended ! W ASHlNGTON (AP) The I House RuJes Committee Tues· day agreed lo a two-month ex· tension of a congressional in· vestlgatlon into the assusina· tions ot John F. Kenneay and Martin w~er Klng Jr. The ex· tension, wbkh must be approved by the Ml Houae, was a com· promise reached by Democratic leaders. ORANOI COMT c DAILY PILOT Httll.C-. ~~ ....... -.. ..._., ...__.. ...... .... , .. eo.. ...... ~ ,,_." .... ::: ~~o.':.~ ... .,.. , WASHINGTON CAP)-Aftera lO·month, review I a team or JusUce Department lawyers bas concluded tbat tames Earl Ray acted alone lnlfhe assaaainatlon of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., departmentsourcea said today. The lawyers rejected theories that Ray was only a cog ID a con· spiracy to asausioate the Nobel Prize· winning civil right.a leader, the sources said. The team of lawyers from the department's OUice of Professional Responsibility de· livered it.s report lo former Atty. Gen. Edward N. Levi shortly before he left otrice Jan. 20. The department plans to make public a "sanitized version .. of the report, deleting names of in· formers and other sensitive material, the sources said. But the public release has been delayed because department of· ficials want to avoid the ap· pearance or lryinll to il)fiueoce the House of Representatives in its debate about launching a lengthy and costly new investiga. ti on of the murders of King and President John F. Kennedy. When the House completes its action, the department will re· lease its report. .Last April, Levi ordered ·- Michael Shaheen, head of the Of. flee of Professional Responsiblli· ty to take charge of a review of ad department records concern· Ina tbe lnvestJgation of King·~ de· ath . He took the action after the de· partment'a civil ri1hts division finished a flve·month pre· Umlnary review of Fbl tu~ and said a more complete •u«y was necessary. The \eries ol department re. views WlaS prompted by detailed disclosures by a Senate cooimit- tee of the FBl's campa1411 of harassment against Klng m an effort to discredit him and t.be civil rights movement. That campaign was carried out under the direction of J . Edgar Hoover. King was shot to death on a motel balcony in Memphis in April, 1968. Ray pleaded guilty to King's murder. But he told the court he did not agree with statements by the prosecution and his own at· torney that there was no con· spiracy in the case. Ray is serving a 99·year prison sentence in Tennessee. He has unsuccessfully sought a new trial. Mangers Repaymen,t Attempt Rejected Fullerton attorney Michael Remington said today he turned down a SS,000 cashier's check from Assemblyman Dennis Mangers (D·Huntington Beach> because a receipt drawn in favor of Mangers' campaign commit· tee was included in lhe package. "And Mangers' campaign committee doesn't owe me any money. He does," Remington said. The rejected check was the latest twist in a Mangers· Remington dispute over a $5,000 loan. The assembly man s ays a SS,000 non·interest·bearing loan from Remington is the rightful obligation of his campaign com· mittee. But the attorney says it was a pers onal loan he made t o Mangers last Oct. 22 and has copies of a note s igned by Mangers as well as a check paya - ble to him personally to back his argument. Now, Remington wants his SS,000 and Mangers has bor- rowed $5,000 from Assemblyman Howard Berman CO-Beverly Hills > to repay the loan. Remington sent Mangers a let· ter today as.king him to "repay the loan in the same manner it was obtained." Tongue in cheek. he also cau· t i on e d t h.e f ~ s h m a n as . semblyman against repaying a personal debt with campaign funds. Fro• Paflf! Al HEIRESS FEUD CITED. • • consortium headed by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. Cadillac Fairview indicated early this year that they were preapared to go s till higher but only if Judge Judge ordered a system of sealed bids. No such order bas been issued. Judge Judge is being as ked to rule on the merits of a lawsuit Ciled by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith who took legal ac· t1on when the foundation decided lo sell out to Mobil for $200 million. Foundation trustees are com· pelled by the provisions or the Federal Tax Reform Act or 1969 to dispose of tt1~1r lrvine Com· pany interests by 1983. Mrs. Smith has argued that the S200 million Mobil was then pre- pared to pay for the 8.415 shares or stock in the company founded by her grandfather was far below the true value of the shares. Mrs. Smith owns a 22 percent interest in the Irvine Company. She is on record as preferring a sale of the foundation's shares to the Allen-Taubman group which has assured her that she can re· taln her minority interest if their bid ls successfuJ. The withdrawal of Cadillac Fairview from the lawsuit ap· pears to leave the way clear for a confr;ontation between Mobil, backed by the foundation and the Irvine Company, and the Allen· Taubman interest, backed by Mti.Smtth. :Mra:smith's 17.year feud with other members or the Irvine Company board was discussed at length ill court Tuesday durinz the questioning or investment counselor Bowen McCoy. KUls Compete . Jn Basketball The Optimist Cl~b's Trl·Star basketball contest, open to all boy• • Jdrls 8 to 13 years old, will be hefd Saturday at the Up- per Bay Branch of tbe Boys' Club_ .,,, Th6 t!ontest, 1ponsored by the Cost•;Me1a Optimlat Club1 lt a test 01 paaln1, ahootln• ana drtb- blln• akllll. eontetunta wm com· pei. qalnlt otben in tbtlr a1• eroup. 'tl()phlea wlll be awarded to the Los Angeles attorney Howard Friedman, representing Mrs. Smith. grilled McCoy at length• on what he described as de· rogatory statements made about Mrs . Smith by McCoy's employers, Morgan Stanley of New York. . Friedman then asked McCoy to explain the significance of what . he called the "Joan Irvine Smith factor," a financial adjustment which reduces the value of Irvine . Company shares by $1.50 each so long as Mrs. Smith is connected' with the company. McCoy explained that the mark down was the result of dis· sension between Mrs. Smith and the Irvine Company board and the reluctance or investors to become involved in a company that is divided at management level. Solring Parking Prohlent? Nick Pugay didn't feel like going to his San Diego office Tuesday, and now he wishes he hadn't. .. I'd just closed·the door when she came driving up over my car," he. recalls. co:worker Dorothy Jernigan : s aid she hit the brakes as she pulled into· her parking slot, but ''nothing happened." Well, almost nothing. . • --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:..__~~__..:· Fro.a Page Al PLANNERS the developer's work for him? Just give them an outline, tell them what the planning com· mission might accept for a plan, then let them do their own project. "They're down at the planning department angry with the slafC and commission about recom· mendations made to them and taking up the staff time," she said. "If you give them advice and they ignore 1t and have to go back to the drawing board, it's their problem." City oNicials agreed with Robert&' list of priorities. telling him to come back in six months to review other projects. Vice Mayor J ack Hammett said the list shows projects the city must have. should have, and "those that would be nice to have." Priority project s recom· mended for completion include noise. seismic safety and •afety elements of the general plan. Roberts said the stale mandat- ed studies must be completed in order for the city to qualify for certain state and federal funding as well as lo receive favorable court decisions rn planning and toning matters. Mesa Antique Shop Looted Burglars broke Into a Costa Mesa antique shop Tuesday night and made off with merchandise valued at $3,882 arter drilling through the store's .safe, police said. · Police said the burglars ap· · parently pried open a screen then broke a window to j!nter Antiques or the World, 19S7 Newport Blvd. Employe Lee William Clark told police the suspects took a number of necklaces, rings and watches after drilling through the company safe. Clark estimat. ed damage to lhe safe at $SOO. Shadow Sighted. Six More Weeks of Cold Seen?~· PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP) -Punxsutawney Phil, the weather.forecasting groundhog, was lifted from his burrow al sunrise today and his in· terpreters said he forecast six more weeks of winter. Phil was taken from his com· fortable museum cage to wind· swept Gobbler's Knob an hour before the annual ceremony and tucked into his lighted and heat· ed burrow. Charles M. Erhard, president of the Groundhog Club, had a pi;epared forecast after talking to Phil in .. groundhogese." Other members or the club had pre. pared signs ready for television and newspaper cameras, which said "Blizzard." and "Six More Weeks of Winter.·' According lo legend, if Phil had not seen his st\adow, spring would have been just around the corner. It was seven degrees wilh a wind chill factor of 25 degrees below zero on the knob when Phil made his prediction. Another well·known pro. gnosticator had predicted that Phi1 would forecast more winter weather. 'Tm going to lay 2·1 odds thal he'll see his shadow." said od- TONIGHT . COASTUNE CC LECTURES -''Classics or the Silent Sc.f'een," Paul Ballard lecturer, Estancia High School Forum, 7p.m. "What You Always Wanted to Know About Travel..." Lee Part.in lee · turer, Estancia High School Choral Room, 7:30p.m. "OLD TIMES" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday. ~unday through Feb.19. 8 o.m. THURSDAY, f'EB: S LIBRARY STORY HOUR Costa Mesa Ubrary, 10: 30 a. m . -COASTUNE CC LECTURES -"In-laws in Your Life," Sylvia L .. Bogen Je.cturer. Unitarian Church. 1259 Victoria, 1 p.m. "Successful Prerelirement Plan· ning Seminar," Hoag Memorial Hospital Meeting Rooms A and B. 7p.m . F,.._PcsgeAI REVIEW ••. "It's kind of a receiver at· tached to the arm and operated through remote control," Levine said. "So the kids are not touched with a cattle prod." He said the hospital ls faced with recent court rulln1s saytn1 tbat ii a patient cannot be treat· ed, be must be released. "If we have a self-abusive client, and other programs do not wcrk on him, and we 1et the authority to u.e aversive cond1- tlonfnl to correct bis problem, then maybe we can help." "Bu\ if we take away the aversive conditlonln1, which does Wor\r then we are mandat· ed by recent court decislOftl to re· lease that patient. which doesn't help him a btt,'' LeYlne sald. . "ThlA prorram la far better than bavtna pat1en&a apend thl1r entlN lives on rea\ralDta and dru11... · <Amaker Jimmy the 'Greek in a telephone interview Tuesday. from Las Vegas, where tht> tem:. perature was 55. . Phil's predictions are alway& right. That is. you can always find some place, at some time; where they fit. If Phil sees his shadow as he has every year except two since 1887, legend has it there will be six more weeks or winter. If he doesn't, spring is just around the corner. "I hope it's a gloomy day," s aid Erhard's wife, Nancy. "I'm ready for spring." The last Ume Phil predicted an early spring was in 1975, and ac· cording to the National Weather Service, "the nation ended February wlth well·above- normal temperatures in most areas.'' Though Phil is a well·known forecaster, there are skeptics who contend that he is stuffed; that he ls carried lo the knob about an hour before the crowd arrives on Groundhog Day, that his real home is a comfortable $10,000 museum in this westena ?ennsylvania town. ' Actually, there is a stuff~ version of Phil, and there is a museum, but a live groundhog· somehow does make it to the bur: row on the knob at the same time each year. . But no one seems to care what 1s fact and what is fantasy. : "The hoopla is good for .the town, good for our spirit," said one local observer ... What does i' matter whether it's fact or fie· lion? ''WilJJ the kind of winter we're having, we need a time lo smile." * * * F ..... rageAJ FREEZE ••• throuah the clouds there'Tuesday for the first time since high. winds, snow and cold struck Fri- day. I Also for the first time since Friday, the entire length of the New York State Tbruway was open to traffic. At one lime, all but 45 miles or the highway WU closed due to the storm. ,.. On the Cbeupeake Bay and t.be Ohio River, fuel barges wbicb were idled for up to two weeka were movtni again, bulptOIJ'eS5 was slow due to ice. In West Virginia and Ken- tucky, more than 30,000 coat mlnen were off the job, their mines shut down because of the cold. Thousands of schools and lac. torlea also were shut and about a dozen states had declared. ~nergy emergencies. On Tuesday, North Carolina joined the ranks of states declO- inl such emergencies, and the auto industry alone announced that 80,000 workers In the United States and Canada would join sbme 1.~ million penons esUmat· ed to be laid off eround the na· lion. In the auto lnduat.ry, ~ shortaies were a factor aa well as 1uahortQe$. Whetmore · · Recove~ I• l • Fonner state Sen•tor Jame* Whetmore WIS report~d tn 1~ condttlon today at Boa Memorial Hoepltal where be recoverini from open heart su~ aery: : • wltanera. ~ competltlon ta tree. J'or f\iither lnformaUon about the basketball contest. which wUl run from 11 a m. to 1 i>.m. Satur· day., call Harlan Andersen or C1uil k..aney at "2-IS'fl. Drinkers at the .Bears pub in Halifax, England, have not ohly one, but two roofs ver their heads. The Sears had been sc:hedulid to ~ demolished to make way for a new road, but workers objected and the pub was tucked away tinder the road. ~Fender Stolen. Claildla J. tali ot Hunu..ton Beach comp)alped to police T\lnday that tomeoo• •tole UM left front fender of her VoJbwaaen Bu1. The fof~•r. ..Oran1e Count) le1111ator underwent aur1eri Monday to replace a Q?Cti; val\'e. A hOilpUal apokesmm Pl be .a.:.bietft1 ca~ for m th~ bOlpltal'a lntenslve care Wilt. \ Wbel.more reUred from ! IAfttlal\IN at the close Of last .-on and bal beeG pr~U inl law in Oran1• since then. . State Sued By Victim Of Holdup ulwd <D-1.akewooa> 111el wtua Def_. ~t otttclala In 1r.11tia1toa. D.C., Tue1day ....... . .., tee wbat will ocevr w•n ti.e California NaUoeJJ Oard -.. the facillt.J tlvm tlN AnnJ bl Mq. Defeme olftcials .... urect t1'e ecasr-men no lncreiaed tulbt ac$iritJ ii oow plaa.oed for Los A.lalllltGI. However, military officlals l&ld ••a cbance atUl exilts'' lbat a l'eHrW equadrOn ol 12 turbo- prop anU-aubmarine alrcraft ••1 be ll8l1oaed at Loe Alamltol "lf lt la eott..tfeett.e." 11Wtar7 olftcials also aa.ld they anticipate a cut in spending at tbe a1r base from $3.'7 million to between $1.T and $1.9 million an· nually. Tbe spending cuts will be achieved by the closure ol the la Alamitos commissary, con· nnience store and other UD· 1pectfted faclllties, officials said. Retired military personnel liv· tna around the base will have to use exchange facilities at Long BHch or El Toro, Patterson 1aid. Nearing Its E~i This 75-foot power yacht tu.ms the corner at 32nd and Lafayette Sts. in Newport Beach today nearing its launching site at Lido Shipyard It was an early morning transfer from the builder, Dittmar and Donaldson on 16th Street, Ccsta Mesa. In • background is Lido Shores Hotel. The 42- ton vessel was towed down Newport Boulevard to 32nd Street. The yacht waa built for the , Johnson Tractor Co. of Riverside and is expected to be launched in about 10 days. DM.YPtLOT Oran1e County Board of Su~ Cbalrman 'Dollaal Rlfe1 Mid ~ be wJD uk tb• board nat.welk to tMtta .. UckUab tu~ Of draWtas ...., poUttcal boultdarl• for tbt eom- ty '• oveeupervlloriaJ dlatrldl. TbouO Bllty standl ...... about 100,000 of b1I comtftulad tbrou1b redlatrlcU01. tla• Newport Beatb 1upervlior Mid tbe talk lbould be aon. DOW ''tO preeerve tbe OQe-mu. ---~ principle." , To at.art tbe process, RU., med a letter with the clerk of tbl board utlq that tbe redl.llrtct· iDI la.sue be put OD nut .... , Board of SuperWon acenda. His letter included IUHeltiona that a committee ol aupcvllor aides be appointed to st1ldJ ,... diatrictin& proJJOlall. And. Riley aaid, the committ• sbould leek public COrdmeDl ell the impact ol new pollUcal bo9- dary 'propOtals. One redistrictln& pla• U. alreadJ been proposed, a maulve overhaul dealtned bf politlcal consultant Wlllla• Butcher. =bank manager who received al injuries when he wu lbot I a holdup at the Secwity Paciftc National Bank's branch ia South Laguna is seeking $U0,000 iD damaaea from the state and the County of Orange. Even though military person· net at the base will be increased from 3,700 to 5,000, about 2S dYilian emplO)'es at the com· miHary and eoovenience store wW tole their current jobs, said Rieb Nelsoo. a Hannaford aide. Paramedic Door Opens However. once the aeeret Buteber plaD wu made public, il died a speedy death deaptt.e •U&>- port from four of dae flff au~. .'\.. Gerald R. Guess of Milaioo Viejo da!Jm iD bis Orange Coun· t7 SUperior Court lawault that nealleence by the state and coun- t7 made it possible for Richard William Castillo of Laguna Beach to attack him on Jan. 29, ms. It la alleged that Cutillo bad earlier been released from a Watbinlton State mental facility three months before the holdup oa condition that be regularly at· tend meetings at the Orange County Mental Health Center in Laguna Beach. . It ii alleged that Castillo was . not atteading lbe clinic as he had . been lnltnlcted and should have : been returned to Washington for l' resumption of in-patient treal· snent. Cutillo, 25, of 1104 Mira Mar, l waa tried in Superior Court and ; found guilty of armed robbery, i bur1lary and uaault. The same : jury found in .ublequent action f tbat he was insane at the time of I tbe holdup. 'I CaaWlo, now confined to a wheelchair u a result of wounds lie 1utrered in a shootout that day : with aberiff'a officers, ls aening · an indeftnite term iD the state's ' Vaearillepsycblatrtc facWty. I . Gueu, who bas since re- , eovered from his wounds, teatified qainst CuUllo aa a~ aeeution witnas. Lecture Set On Chemistry :By UCI Prof The public ia invited lo attend a free lecture tonight al UC Irvine · bJ Dr. F. S. Rowland. \be UCI prohuor w'ho attracted : worldwide attention re1ardin& : hi. theories about the harmful ef. : f 9da al MrCJeOl apraya. • Rowland. who wu named the .. eond annual Distinguished P'acu.lt7 Lecturer at lJCl, wW dis- cun "Olemlatry and the En- vironment" at 1:30 p.m. ln \be aelenee lecture' ball. Tbe d1a.1ngulsbed faculty lee· turer award is given by U1e JrviDe Dlvilioo of tbe Academic Senat. to a faculty member who ~ has eontrtbuted to knowledge • tlaroutb dilU.npiabed research ~ and brou1bt recognition to lt.imaelf and the universlty. Rowland contends that the nuorocarbons in aerosol sprays reduce the osone ln the earth 'a at· mo.pbere and the ref ore produce llarmtul effects, lncludJn1 the poulbtlity or being cancer· cauma. Gilbert Reu, a Patterson aide, said defense officials indlcated about 18 ctvilian employes al the bu• stcres will be transferred to jobs with the Calilorma Natiooal Guard. National Guard Lt. Col. Grant S. Pyle W said earlier tbU year a private cooeesaionaJre may be hired to operate a grocery and drug store at the air station. Pattenoa said be la displeased with the defense department's "unilateral decisions" on bow to use the air station. "The Department of Defense bu kept us all in the dark," said Patterson Tuesday. "l view their position as irretrievable.'' Patterson added, "The com· munity's interest is not being represented. Declalons are now being made behind the scenes." Patterson and Hannaford had called for the meeting with miUtary officials t~ "clarify rumors that have been drculat· ing for the past couple of years.'' But Patterson said after the meeting, "I could undentand their position if the base was es· sential to national security, but it ii only a reserve facility. Delense officiall are not allowi.na input from the community.•• The Los Alamitos Naval Air Station will be taken over on May l by the California Anny Na· tiooal Guard. Snow Bas N'o Class FLINT, Mich. <Al» -A worhbop entitled ."Snow Sculpture" wat among the cl&lffl canceled Friday at the P'11Dt laltitute ol Arts because ol the bliuard that piled up NK>Wdrifta across southern lower 1Uchi8an. Too Young? llaySuing SALT LAKE CITY <AP> -A 14-year-<Jld bo1 bas aued the Salt Lake County clerk IOI' denying him a marriage license because othiaace. Frank Warby auerted in bi.a suit that the 1tat. law that prohibits marriage for a male under 18 is dJa. criminatol')' since it allows femalee to get married at 14. The auit. wu filed througb bis 1Dotlaer, Charlotte W arby. County ro Allow No,..firemen in Claa1e.. -Directed the coant1 bealtll ol- flcer to consider certiftcatica of qualifted trainlng programs at• sUtutioos other than UCI Medial Center aad not to objed to.._ teaching ol paramedic oriellMd Orange County supervisors vol· A• t bin g • s t a n d now , ed S·Z Tuesday to leave the paramedic service io Orange paramedic training door ajar for County ia virtually a mooopol1 trainees who ·are not already held by city and county fire de· ft.remm. partmenta. The policy decision also kept The paramedic declalona came college classes. Most coutrovenial upec:U of the plan spilt Newport Beacll lato two suoervllortal di.strim aad extended Supent1or Ralp~ Dledrlcb'• district into the Sad- dleback Valley. Slnce it was aborted, aome superrilor aides bue been wort- inl OD rediltrtctlnl plana aimed at balancing the popplatkJD dia- crepandea amoai the ftYe dla· tricta. tbe door open for paramedic at the close of a three-hour public training at facilities other than hearing and amid warnings that a UCI Medical Center, including proliferation ol training ceot.n some training through colleae could lead to a lowering ol level counes. paramedic~ards . -Left enrollment in lb• paramedic traming program et ~:11~enity hospital llmJt.s '° Sex Off ender Supervi.IOI' Pblllp AntboftJ de. Summed up, tbe Board of In their decisioo1, county Supervisors' •eriea of declaions supervtaors: could eventually lead to tbe -Abandoned a requirement eat ab Ii sh men t of pr l v ate that those admitted to paramedic paramedic service through. for • training programs bave an exist· eu mple, hospitals and am-ing job guarantee, a requirement Died the policy posiUcm would or were iDteDded to impact extattna Sentenced standards. bulanceservice. . favortngftremen. Instead, Anthony argued, tbeJ ~ p wlll take paramedic deeillom out 0 ..:caon of the political arena and leave & .a.a them in the band• of pro· A man wbo anuallJ mol..a.cl , reasionall. two U-JUN)ld glrll tn an lniM • The Westminster 1upervi.lol' park bas been sentenced to .at said certificaUoo ol tralaing Cin· leu than three yean ta tta&e ten as well as tra.iDlq gsduatea prilon. Baslness Booms Winter's Refugees Flock to SumJhine · remainsinthebandaolt.beeoimtJ Oranae County Superior Coart • bealthoUlcer. Judie James H. Walsworth or• ~ And.toempbasilebiaPOlnt,Aa-dered the priloa tenn IOI' Emil ·• tbon7 told county Health ont.c.r' William Kollb.opp, 31, of John Elpers there ia to be no . Ana.helm. after nallnl that the lowering of certlficatloo ltan· defendant ls not a mentallJ en. dards. orderedaexolfeader. His arguments were supported Kollhopp pleaded guilty to by Supervisors Ralph Dledrtcb commiWne a lewd act after lt SAN DIEGO (AP> -~ ac-Although January figures were and Laurence Schmit. was testified that be attacked two cumulation ol soow and lee back unavallable, manager M. A. But Supel'\'i.lon 'lbomu 1We7 youna girls at knifepoiQt iD Eatt ii adding up to record McDonald aaid at the San Diego and Ralph Qark argued ~aimt Huyard Part last Aui. 2S and · tourist dollars ln Southern airport that December traffic "'tampering with succeu and draepdtbemintoanenclOIUfe. California, basking in an un· was up "a remarkable 17 ·6 per· cast t.betwonovotes. Related charaes of uaault U•Ually mild and IUJUl)' winter. cent over last year·'• Even more Michael Williams, bead of UM kidnap and leX pervenion were Almost everybody ls cashing peoplearrivedinJanuary. count1'1 1!01er1enc1 Medical dJlmiased. in. Mexlco was reported beinl care Committee, argued against The hotel business ls up 40 ptt· hurt stlll by the unstable peso. the policy dectsiom propoted bJ cent o r g M h ts and ~archer Chad Pierson of alve a year a 0 · ere an San Diego State said many Anthon)'. say 1 es are running 2S to 40 per. Williams pointed to the coat iD· cent higher. · Americans normally bound for volved in certifying other pro- Alrllnetravel la booming. Baja California were spending grams and ioalatid that UCI Aft~r years of promoting its vacation doUars lo San Diego in· Medical Center is the mOlt com· winters because summer stead. plete facility ln the county for normally is the big tourist Ume, The zoo, Sea World marine training. "it's all coming torether here," park and San Diego's nearly 70 Made jubilant by the board'• said Carleton Lichty, manager of golf courses were all busy. The decision was Santa Ana-Tustin the Hotel Del Coronado. bays were packed with pleuure Hospital administrator Watne Ca.sh registers at "the Del" are boats, and despite chilly ocean Schroeder. 45 percent fuller than a year ago, water sunbathen were ualna the The hospital bolds a paramedic Lichty said Tuesday. ' beaches. tralning contract with the county Tbe East Coast storms Above, the sun-lit sky waa thatexpiresinJune. whipped into parts ot Florida, cloudless. The day's blgb tem· Schroeder ror the past year bas sending many of those normally perature Tuesday was around 70· carried on a campaign to keep \oacaUonlng there in January to Even Tom Watson, after win· paramedic training open to Southern California. nine the San Diego Open goU quaUfied instltutions other than In Phoenix. the tourism direc· tournament, said be waa sorry to the '\JCI Medical Center and to tos: of tbe Phoenix Convention leave and go to Haw~. tralneesotherthan firemen. Jury Verdict: Kilkr Grdlty LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Superior Court Jury .. bu written the tut chapter in the·crimi.naJ life" ol George Patrick MclCin· ney, accordlo.g to the proeecutor that won two murder verdicts against the llllnoil ex-convict. The seven-man five-woman jury delibera.ted 17 days before findlna McKinney aullty KondaJ of murdering bar owner Herbert Chance and bis wile, Vireinla, during a $64,000 robbery ol their Venlcebome. and Vlaltors Bureau discounted f~::;:::;;::;::;:::::;:::~~~::i~i::::;;:--;:::::;:::;~~;;;;:::;::::-==:--:;--.:::--:::;;::::--=:::::-"":-iiiiiii.iii~iii~ reporta of a great influx from Florida. "Sure, we're busier than last year but there 8l'e plenty of ac· commdation.s available," Bill MlUe.r aaid tn a Wet>bon.e in· terview. But the San Diego ConvenUon Gem Talk Heroin Probe Gets 1 Additional Staffing · llnd VisUora Bureau, which superviles S389,000 fn travel pro- motion co1t1 compared to• tl88,000 in Pboenh, Hid many J tourlata diverted to San Diego 811J.C. lll'.Wf>llRlf.:S from Florida. American and United airlinet reported 20 percent more ar· riv ala and departures than a year aao. Un\ted'I fllgbta from Chlcaao to San Dlego •ere up by 37percent. WHY BE HONEST? weU tDhtJ "°'" With the immorality of tbe W a\eJ'pte. and Locklleed scanda1I · boveriDI O'Vet' American life, la lt any wooder that Jle()ple have become dl1truatful of our institutions f Unfonunatel)', people bave come to EXPECT a certaln amouot of cbtceery "lnd cheaUn1 in -their day·to-da)' deallnp and, even more Ullfortunately1 tbere are plenty of people al'OUDCl who a.re quick to take adv ant.ace ol th1I atmosphere. j Pedlral IDd 1tate narcotlca en- l forcement autboritiee an eoo- terrtq with polJce about the I Hhun in Huntinltoa Beacb ol a I abipmmt ol extremely rare pare white beraiD from Taiwan. i Onb coce before bas tbe ct.rui about SZ.SOO d1ae to ill extreme purity. * * "Tbe lbdf aelll for $300 a~ aod we'Ye never aeen any ol •t Erm•~~ before." ~IC:'••...:;•• 11ln1U&at.loa rtteaied th ex· tnordlnarlly pure heroin lr7.el --o.---~ or•slnated in Taiwan. Most • Wt ~JReCA, * \ HEART WITH DIAMONDS .. 1 tunMcl up in California nareodea I.av atiou, aays Hunttnitoo Be:::Cve Chuck Poe, who I aldH in tbe UTelt ol tbne 1111- beroln tun.Deled into the U.S. drul CU1tul'e la a lower·srade brown tne from Mexico. BLCAJO.N CAP>-Tbebomes of United PresbJtertan Cburcb memben are be1ni opeoed to treednl Americans in ~ WMt can •e do about tbll trefjc 11adrome? How can we promote bonlRY and lliteirfty in um.a t\ICb ut.beaef When you Q4ve a diamond pendent Y'O" GIW 1 gift of tow. Our diamond and t4K GQtd pendants 11\lk• ~ gifts blcaUN ltMty IN CIOlt ~ ~ • weet aco. David Baroa, 2*, a.ad Suun Chalet. 22. both ol 2a& Elmira A••_·z HunUncton Beach, an.d " Caroc Veaa, -. ol me Newpon Blvd., Cotta Mesa, are all tr.eon '10..:.._~_ball ncb. UIQ an charced with COO· •pl.racy, sale ot beroln apd tbe P•-lca ol heroin for .1ale, a1x eowata 1n all, 1ald Detec:Uve Poe. He laid Ute aipOQDt, onlJ aboUt ~~-~ltqatt. u..n bJ ~itaDdarct o1-~•u• terola Mtm.a,· Ii Wottlt Deteetlve Poe said federal autborttiee ,are alarmed at tbe appearance of the ~l•u.e 1Mroin In Calilorn.ia, poulbly In· dlcauna a new international eon· necllon to combat. · Tbe ~ people arrested in Huottnaton Beach are ul)ICted to appear In Weet Oranc• County Judlctal ~ CcM&rt b1 mkl· February to enter pteu. Noat ol tbe thrM 'U.lteCl _, OC· cupatlon trbea U'Nlted •• tbe eoatraband at tbe Sl•lra A•-.adrw. \ · States-tft.MypaytbelrwayOut Welt. Tbe Rev. Jobn Shackell.ord, the putor, iald non• ot tbe local homeowners will cbar1e any rent for the Winter vlalta because "we're people •bo are concerned about people.•· Attbousb the campal1n to roumt up b.Om••b.Uillf otfm belan $und9J:, •. lMf'e WU DO ln• dk•tm jtt'bOW m..., openbap ~ .... One waf It for the varlou1 fndustrles to poUco themaelvet men clolett. ln the Jewelry induatr)', for Hample, Wt have tbe Jewel~ts Vl1Uant. Commlu.e, med• up of tboiuanda Cl( Jewelers. Keei>lnl the cuatoaw'• tnilt In hls local ,......., wbtt thll watcbdoi sroup la all abO\lt. tt'• the kind of approach In Wbleh .wryboclJ caJ.u and nobody loHI. It ,.. reaullt, too. I'm proud ..,..,, .. ,, ' • • to YoUr IOYed one's hNrt ... tl23 NEWPOAT Bl.VO . COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS 30 YlAAS IN THE SAM£ LOCATION ~~~~----""' -. .(_• _JN_SH_O_R_T_ popuJar support for his maJOC' domestic and foreiin polict goals, and to convince voteft.)lt · is tnoving vigorously ~n their bebaU to deal with a weather· aggravated energy crisis in the East And a belO)V·par economy nationwide. Jtl011daW B.•~k Home WASHINGTON CAP) -VJce President Walter F. Mond11le ·called his round-the-world trip a success today and sald t.be na· tions be visited agreed to · economfc stimulation, consulta· lion on nuclear proliferation and a summit conference to discuss economic, poli\ical and security matters. "I believe the trip was~ a suc· · cess because it began a process ... for the cl06est positive con- sultation with our friends and al· lies," Mondale told a news ~ ference. He said his journey started the Carter administra· ti on off oo ''the beat possjble . basjs'° in foreian aUairs. , Warnlee Oppo•ed1 WASHINGTON (AP) Despite inclicatio~ be might face serious oppos~on in the Senate. President Carter -inten<ls ·\o nominate PauJ WIU'Dke to serve as the· chief U.S. disarm•i:nent negotiator. · White .House sources said Tuesday the w·arnke nomination would be sent to C•pitol Hill as soon as all background investiga- tions are completed, probably within the next lew days. Grcd11 Threat~ WASHINGTON CAP) Despite a world lf&in reserve ex- pected to h1t a six-year high, this winter's bitter cold and drought are threatening another global grain shortage. The Agriculture Department • said Tuesday that the reserve 'stockpile of wheat and other -'grain is expected to be at 167.8 million metric tons by the time 1977 harvests are ready, up 51 percent from last summer. But the report also warned that the current poor growing condi· lions in tM United States and some other countries raise serious questions about future harvest prospecU. C.llee Baweo• t~d 1 PARMA, Italy -<AP) -Ualy's 1 Consumers Confederation today appeal~ to Italians to stage a one·day boycott of coffee shops around the, country because of .. international price specula· lion." Tb~ confederation, a private group, estimated that snore than 30 million Italians, more than half the population, drink an average of thl'ee cvps of e$Jlre5SO a day. ln the last few months a ·cup of esprest<> baa 1one from 13 cents to 19 cents. w ASHINGTON <A.P> -Richaro M.J~tjoo it looa -•from th• Wblte Houle. 'but hll 19'12 cam~l&n rund·Jr~1m on. All.'1.;t mlllloo of1t . r-' • More tbb tour yeara .iter Nbcon'• .re-election aiMI 2~ tean att~r bla refio•tion, the s1,1cceuor orta.ftb•t!<N' to the Committee to a,.e\~ the Prulc:leot atln UI in bustnus. Report.a required b)'°tb Federal EltcUon~mt111J1lQU now the im Campaign LlquidJlioa T'rust, the auceeaaor to tht camp•lgn eQp.._tee. 1611 la taJdna ln money and .P•~ debt; -slowlj. . .. TimEE WASQJNGTON banb'J)aid \he fund m.ooo tut yeer in intel'e&t. Other ~me of $11,310 al.so wu llatecJ ln tbe.r.eport to the FE¢1• ~.:~ Mountains ol ice stand at the base of the 1Jnerican ·Falls at Niagara Falls Tuesday. uiant. chunks and slabs of ice are blocking the crest and have reduced the flow to a "near trickle." Spectators say you can almost climb up tbe race of the !alls. The water flow was stopped completely in the deep freeze of 1931. Long.et. Going to J~il Singer Decides Not to Appeal Conviction ASPEN, Colo. (AP) -Claudine Longet, unwill· ing to face the ordeal of a new trial. has decided to go to jail for 30 days rather than appeal her negligent homicide conviction in the death or her lover. Attorney Charles Weedman said late Tuesday night. •tA deci.$lon has been reached not lo appeal and not to seek a new trial.•• HE GAVE NO lUlASON for \he change in earlier announced plans for an appeal. But he said MJ,ss Looget made "the ultimate decision" not to .anae a.newrowid ot legal ba~es. · The" ·36-year-old former showgirl, appearing weaiy and dejected, declined an interview Tues- day. saying, "I want to put all of this behind me.'• She told reporters who covered her trial: "I hope l never have to see any of you again.•• HER DECISION meant that she would have to serve the 30-day jail sentence handed down Monday by District Judge George Lohr. Weedman said she would accept Lohr's offer to let her serve.the time next summer when her three children are on \tacation from school. The children -Noelle, lJ, Christian, 11, and Bobby. 1 -:-could then be sent to California to stay with thelr father. singer Andy Williams, while their mot.her is jailed. M~ LONGET will be on probation for two years. Williams. who has supported bis ex-wife throughout her trial, was present Monday when Miss Longet made an emotional plea to the judge to be spared from Jail for the sake of her children. But Lohr said such a cor)rsc ''might undermine respect for lhe law." THE FRENCH-BORN Miss Longet was con- victed Jan. 14 of criminally negligent homicide a misdemeanor. She had been arrested March h. 1976, hours af\er her lover: ski champion Vladimir "Spider'' Sabich, was killed at lhe mountain chalet they shared. He succumbed to a single gunshot wound in the stomach. _ The tiny, dark-haired Missl.oqget admitted she shot SabicH but said it was an accident and that she loved him to the last. SHE WAS NEVER charged with intentionally killing the 31-year-old Sabich, and the judge said Monday he believed the ski champion's death was a "deep personal tragedy for her." It appeared unlikely that Miss LOnget would serve her time in Pitkin County Jail, a facility with only two cells in lhe basement of the 1890s Aspen courthouse. The Judge said the county sheriff could choose an alternate jail nearby when Miss Longet is ready to.serve her sentence. ~ penom wbo contributed to the 19'12 Nixon c_!ampalp have· tried to ge\ their money back. but Without 1uccess.. • ·~ tb1a re· por~ period the t.ruat baa not, honored any such reqiaest ,. tb~re­ port said. ''and it probably wilJ not do so at any time ln tbe Mure. ' M~ ot the mooey paid out b)> the fund went for_ leaal fees. I FOS J'!XAIWPLE, former Commerce SeeNtary Maurie& Stans and t~ Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell were acquitted in April 1974 of charges that lh~y intervened in a Securities and Exchange Com· miPlon Jr'(>be of Robert Vesco in exchqp fof the promise of a campaipcootribution. After acquittal, they were entitled as former campaign C9f1· tribuUon officials to have the fund pay their lelal expeOMB. The re- port said _,,000 of a legal debt of $471,390 hH been paid. But Watergate cover-up trial defendant Kenneth Parkinson ls ~aving trouble getting his legal debts paid. Parkinson alllo was ac- quitted, but tfie fund said it is not sure if Parkinson, a committee lawyer but not an employe, is enUUed to have bis $73,393 legal debt paid. STANS ALSO is seekin& $18,600 for time spent wblJe he was be· · tni interviewed by the special Watergate prosecutor and for testimony before Watergate grand juries. Stans ia askin~ $30 an hour tor 620 hours of preparation, the same pay rate he earned as the ""N!xon committee's finance chairman. He alsowanta $7,500 for "ex- penses in connection with investigative servi~s of lntertel Inc .. prior to March 11. 1975. ·•There was no explanation of that entry. Message Given Priest's Hanky-panky Told \) . AARHUS, Denmark (AP> -As the minister intoned a . benediction. a member or his Lutheran congregation raff in his pew in ~e villace church of Sabro near here and cmed out: ·'Vicar, there ls something 1 want lo say to you. This 1s no threat, but unless you stop t'Ullning after my wife you'll be ln {or a sound thruhlng. · • . R. Falka Gregersen, a 51-year-old civil engineer, was fined $50 by a district court Tuesday for disturbing the peace during last year 's Christmas Eve service. The Rev. Sven Voss, 42, was fired by the ministry of churches, who said be bad ·'profound disagreements between vicar and congregation." The ministry did not re- fer to the incident. The minister, whose own wife had left bim and sought a divorce, conceded in court that relations betw.een him and the parisruoner's wife had gone beyond mere fnendship. Grege~en, who told the court be once considered the vicar his best friend, said "since the church is where the priest gives his.messages to the congregation I decided that the church must also be the place w)lere I iave my message to the priest." 2 Texas Teens Held With $486 000 Cash Gourses by N~wspa~r WACO, Tex. (AP) -Two Sou! Texas teenagers have been or-MORAL CHOICES dered held !or 10 days or until police and federal agents figure out •• c ......... , soc'-ty ·' where they got $486,000 in cash/ound in thi trunk of their new car. _....,. • Authorities said Tuesday they don't· know where the money I counc.€5 DY N€wc.p1Ape:n 1 carne from, but the fact that the youths bad it apparently came as no nJ " o " surprise to several of tt\eir schoolmates in the South Texas town of Beginning s,turdey, Feb. 12, the ProfH1or of Soclology et the Allee. Delly Piiot will pubtlsh a 1&-week University of Pannsylunla, unlv.,•ltie• Uwoughout the c:ountry. .. EVEUONE HERE seemed to know \hey would be transport- ing lt (the money)," said. Alice Police Lt. Gabriel Chapa. "I don't know bow they knew but they did.'· · Al Roz:novsky, police chief in Waco where the pair was arrested,, safd his department had "a lot of leads, but I am reluctant to say any more since so much money is involved ... they (the youths) appear to be cooperative -at. least we think they are -but they're scared." •O'ZNOVSKY SAID one lead suggested the money might s\em from South Texas drug traffic. It was learned tbat some Waco narcoUca officers have been assigned to the case. Waco offlcers arrested the paii, agea 15 and 16, on Monday for runninc a rtd light in their new Ford Thunderbird. Officers salCl a search of the vehicle turned up a small amount of mJrijuana. a pistol in the clove compartment, and most of lhe money in two 9\li~as~ in the trunk. Later, police said they found $7,000in bills ln one or'the youth's pockets.· · serlea ot newt,paper ''lecture•" by coordlnet9d ttte cou11e whk:h H· eleven cn.t..,.ill•hed echolar•. •min•• the perennial prot)Cem1 of Thie tlldft Course by Newspaper how we.,. to llve. The JW09f•m 11 funded by the Na· tl01tef Endowment for the Humanttl•• end oH•ed by th• Delly Piiot •• e public Mt'Vice. CourH credit may be clalm9d by enrolllng •t CoHtllne Communtty College. ... mine• the oH•n controvarslat Orlglneted end developed by mor•I dlllemH 1urro11ndlng 1 .. u.. University Exten1lon, Unlver9'ty of our society Jae•• Including ebortlon, Cellfomla, Saft Diego,· Co"-,.•• by H•\l•I cond11et, C11me end punl-"" Newaptiper d41velopt materlel1 for RHkMnt• 11f the Seddlebaek Corn- man\. bCllinH• and polltleal ethlo•, college lavef courM•. They are munlty Coflege district must obtain • acleftce, 'fKtlnofogJ, wOfk and race. prHentad through ttte nM11apapars permlttorm Saddleeck College prior Philip Al•tf. Benjamin Franklin and partlclpetlng collage• end to registering for thl• courae. For convenl•nc•, uH the mall regfatratlon bl•nk below. --~------------------~---------------------------- ' I 0 NI.Imber [ r I I I I 1-i 2 Dete•I Apphc1t1on I . I c .. vo 61..,ll M&ilh Di, nii 3.Name ----..-,....---------~1 ....... ...,.,...----""L.,..,,_,, ___ U.~t f1~1 Mldille i SlrlMlltl I I I 6. Birthplace -·----..c"'ii,,...v ----J./ __ ..,.,1 .... ,.,,.,---MO<iifl tsiv Ytar X~ , • 7 H1pl'I Scnoo1 Lui A11ene1ee1 ----N.-------------'''---1-.t""'•I,.,.., ___ _.l_,.coun=i"",-.... 1-..,51..,.,il"'"•-- 8 AdelfHI wt\1le attendlnq Coastline Commu1111y College Number aiil s1r .. 1 /Apt No I I I iJp Flo~ Hit by Sleet IF LES~ THAN 12 CONSECUTIVE MONTHS AT ASOVE ADDRli~S. COMPLETE BELOW. PREVIOUS ADDRESS U.S. CITIZEN? 0 YES 0 NO IF NOT, WHAT JYPE VISA WHICH IS NOW IN THE ACTIVE MILITARY 1 certify that all lnlorm1tlon 1s correct. F11s111uuon of lnlorm11Jon or failure 10 report cP\anges In re11dency may rttult 1n d11ml11al ( 0 SELF o spouse e. 1 O M... 2 0 Female _ 10 Ar• you now or will rou be I l'llAl'I IChOOI gr1du11t 1t the time of r9011tr1tfon? 1 0 Yes 2 0 No "f 1t 19 ~ Veat ot tl~ll schoOI qredu1t1on or 1111 d•I• attended high echoot or etem•n11ry 1choo1 '2 Are you '#Otkll'IO for • College DegrM? I 1 O A6*1ste In Art• (Junior Cottage Degree) 3 0 loth AHoc11\e end B1ctt110r'1 2 0 Bachelo("t Degree ' 0 No 13 Tr1n1ler Pl1n1• 1 O Non-Tranaler ' 0 Private Cotteg1 or Unlverally. C1llforn11 2 O Stale COiiege. C1r.tornla 6 O Out of St1te College Of Unlvere1ty 3 0 St111 U111v1r111y, C1llforn11 1" Hsv• YoU ever at11ncttd 1nolhlf' college? 1 0 ,.... 2 0 No 1$ 11 VH on ''· cheek 1tatu1 up0n 1t1v1no 1 O Good Standing 2 O Probation 3 0 SChol11t1c Oltm11111 16 College UM• tMntd prior to 1111• rag1ttr1hon 1 a o to U 11t 3 0 60 Of more, no ctegrH 2 O 30 to 59~ 4 0 J11nlof CoU.oe or four-year 17, " you Wiii be •"end1f'IQ moll tchOol at tt11 ~,,,. time yo11 attend Co1tUlne Com!'lun11y College 1 ~lgtl SCllool 11tS11dlri9 1>' High Scl'lool i:ir1d1 d11ring eem .. ,., ot 1nenda~ " Co11t1lne Community College 0 11tll 1e. liat 11ch coll~• or 11n1Y1rt1tv 11tenoecs • Sign• of Times This sign on the St. Boniface Church in do~town San Francisco tells the plight of nearby Mann County. Marin County. nearly parched. bas been placed on a str· ingent water rationing program. Homeowner Faces . Manslaughter Count SACRAMENTO (AP) -A homeowner who accidentally shot and killed a man be believed bad been prowling around bis house is to be arraigned here Thursday on a charge of involuntary manslaughter. The charge was tiled against Chester Roberson. 35, who bad never been &ITeSted before ln his life. He Is accused of negligent handling of the gun that killed Robert Fehrenbacber, 20, at about 7:~ a.m. on Jan. 2S on the street outside Robersoo•s home on Sacramento•saouth side. Febrenbaeber bad been acbeduled to 10 on trial two days later on charges of burglary. srand theft and receiving stolen 1ood1. Of course, Roberson dldn 't amorui•t. "IT'S c*VJOUSLY a attuation tbst can draw a lot of aytnpatby ,- and lt draws some from me," aaid Supervi.slng Deputy Di.st. Al· ty. IUcbard Manford. wbo flied thecbarge. But, be said, the sbootlng did retult from nealllent band.Una of a firearm, which ls involuntary . mansla\lghter under California law. It is punishable under the new determinate sentencing law by two, three or four years ln prison. Manford said tbat If Roberson ls comicted, be believes It bigbly willkely ht! would M lmprlaooed. Ttw prasecutor save this nm· down of tbe incident: F1r111 Raises Priee of Gas LOS ANGELES CAP> Hiaber coats baxe forced Allan· de Rlcbfteld Co. &o raise auoUoe prices by one cent per 1alloo. a eomplll\f official says. Spokesman R. I!. Parr said Tuesday the immediate price in· ere~ at tbe pump applies in all ARCO marketllll areas. ARCO aald tlie lncreue was for "partial recovery of In· creased raw ma~al and other cOttta incurred by the company." Al i2:30 a.m ., Roberson's neighbor came to bis door and re· ported be bad chased a prowler out of Rob'erson's front yard. The neighbor said be and bis brother chased the man. caught him and demanded to know what he was doing. The neighbor said the man, who was white, told them be was ''waiting-for my· partner.'' A black car drove up and the black driver told the neighbors be would "blow 'yod-a•ay." The neiPbon fled and told Roberson wbatbadbappeoed. AT 7 A.M., Roberson saw .a black car driven by a black man frt..ve by. He told bis wife to call the police. Five mlnutes later he saw a white man with a red knit cap, who fitted the description given by tbe neighbor, walking on tbe other side of tbe street. Roberson grabbed a .38 caliber pistol, went out and confronted the man. saying be was going to bold him until tbe police arrived. Wltb his gun ln bis rtgbt band, Roberson grabbed the man's anb and spotted a laµfe ln his re· ar pocket. Robe1'SOD said he de- cided fQ march the man across lhe ~ with the IUD between bis shoulder blades. "8 B£ DID so, be said, the man Oinched and the gun ac· cldentall) fired. The police arrived within five minutes. They said they learned that the victim, who was Febren· bacber, wu in the neighborhood to make a drug deal with a woman down the street. She waan 't taome and be was waltiog around sou not to atuact atten· lion to her house. The proeecutor said Roberson bad no right to confront Febren· bacher on the !ltreet with a gun, and that "stictln& a loaded gun In a man'• back ls a pretty dangerous thiDI to do." smetraeked LA.SD~·Train ,ftan UDlilJ,ely • ... " .. Now for a limited time you can save ~. up to $400 on these classic Chandler Spring & Down Sofas and l04'e Seats. There ~re eight styles to choose from 5 ft. to 8 ft, Select fro~ a .wonderful collection of over 300 decorator fabrics. The bock pillows are down and f eother filled and the seat cushion spring unib ore completely enveloped in down ond feathers for the ~"'ate in seating comfort. .. ,, ,• i' I PILOT EDITORIAL P.llGE Educational Quality .. .r . : Newport-Mesa School Dlatriet oftlclala ~keep- '11 a wary eye on Sacramento to see wbat steps Jeglslaton .wlll take to lmplement the state &apreme .Court's recent rulln& ln the Serrano school flnanci.ng case .. · Tbe court bu ruled that Calllomla's method of (in~ local educ:aUon lar1e'1 throu-'1 local pro- perty-baled taxes ta unconstitutional 6ecaute tax- J)ayers In low wealth diltricts often pay hlaber tax rates Cll)Jy to receive leaaer educational opportuniUes. None of the tentative pro.,osals, lncludlng a ·Brown Administration reform package, can do anytb1na but hurt the quality oi local education. The emphasis is on lowering the financial capabilities of wealthy districts to equalize spending among the state's 1,067 school districts. Shouldn't legislative concern really be to bring poorer districts up to current standards of wealthier districts? · Brown's proposal would spend $1.2 billion over the next five years to reform the present school financing sy5tem·. The proposal calls for allocation of more money to low-wealth districts, either through in- creased state aid ($896 million bf _1981-82) or by shift- ing local and state funds from high-wealth districts like Newport-Mesa. The proposal could mean the tax rate in Newport- Mesa would be frozen. Thus, if local voters agree at elections to raise their tax rates, even to maintain previous standards, the district would be forced to give part of the revenue to the state. · Brown has said the entire school reform /tax re- lief package can be financed from projected state sur- pluses, without any need for new taxes. more, or more of what you pay now will 10 to other PUQKJlel aDd less to your loc-1 schools. "Robin Hood•• legislaUon that takes from the richer to atve to the poorer could seriously damqe the alrady slipping state school ayat,m. It well may produce only an e(lualbation of mediocrity throughout our schools. Vote on Water The votes afe in and a cit>: councll-appolnted water consolidation study comJDtttee ls recommend- ing the Costa Mesa County Water District become a city department. And while city officials praised the recommenda- tion as a step forward toward a merger of tl)e two bodies, water district officials discounted the 8-2 com· mittee decision as less than dramatic, saying the panel ls just a fact-finding board. The committee did a commendable job of sort- ing out th~ facts from a huge stack of consolidation studies, some prepared by the city, others by water district consultants. In the end, the city claimed to have spent $21,000 on consolldatlon reports and water district officials estimate their reports cost in the neighborhood of $10,000. But the final outcome is still a long way off - especially i1 the council votes to proceed with con- solidation procedures. There are county departments, including the Local Agency Formation Commission, that must get involved, along with the Board of Supervisors -and ultimately, perhaps, a vote of the people in the (lis- trict. 00 0 0 , . 0 How the state plans to build up those magic sur- pluses is the rub, of course. They obviously don't come from anything but taxes. So either you'll pay If there is persuasive evidence that the merger will save tax money ·-and not merely create a new revenue source for the city's general expenses - voters would be likely to accept the plan. c •if ¥1 an't ~ iht groiN~o~, htM wiU ~know whm win1ct'S ova'1' Property Tax Once Signified Privilege . . Are property taxes in themselves discriminatory and manifestly unfair? In the view or · a Solano County reader the tax should be eliminated! Earl von ~aenel writing to Senator John E>unJap advocates abolltlon of the property lax adding it would have the benefit or "eliminating one complete bureaucracy, i.e., the tax Assessor." While many have Jong con· tended that taxes upon real pro- perty should be limited to providing services directly relat- ed to property such as police and fire pro- t e cl lo n. sewers, water and streets. von Kaenel disputes that, arguing that such services "are needed and pro- vided for all.'' Allhough there is no question 1tbat the majority of the public wants changes in property taxes. lt is doubtful that many would favor complete removal or the tax. But von Kaenel's de<:lara- tion that "The idea ol u1ing pro- perty taxes to raise revenue should have gone out when peo- ple other than property owners were given the rifht to vote" does aerve lo remind that suf- &aae was once limited to freeholders. All d the oriclnal 13 states re- q\Aire hind ownenhip for voling •lthou&h some also eave the vote to the eldest son of landowners. Property wa.1 allO a requirement to hold of'Rtt. Exteaaton ot the rotba1 privilece to other than ( E~L WATERS ) landholders started in New Jersey in 1807 but progressed slowly with New York rejecUng the idea in 11121. Rhode Island was one or the last colonial states to re- move the property requirement in 1843 but newly admitted states such. as Indiana, llUnols and Alabama bad already granted white manhood suffrage. THE TllEND led to tbe appor- tionments of representatives based upon population Instead of taxpayers which climaxed with tbe Supreme Court's con· troversial "one-man, one.vote" ruling of recent history. There is merit to von Kaenel's charge that the property tax is an .. inequity" if the way it has come to be used is considered. ll would seem a proper source for re- venues for use in providing gov· ernmental services which have an identifiable property rela- tionship. But their use to fund social welfare, education and other protJ"ama which would ex· isl if no one owned peroperty can locically be termed unsound. To damper those who claim renters indirectly pay property taxes it can be Pointed out. th.at ia not true of those who live in publicly owned bousini. Probably the most inequitable aspect of the use or property as a tax base is the extension of votiag to DOD-property owners on issues wblcb saddle property with bonds or levy increased taxes, aS' in the cased school ov~rides, on pro~rty owners alone. There is .~ar Gloomy Gus It is 3 a.m. I request that the city council junk the noisy police choppers and buy them the Goodyear blimp. You could refuel it free on top of city hall J .C. Gl-'I' O.n commt"'' are '*""°tied by ••"'"and do n.i necuu rll1 ••II« I llW vltwt et Ult "•'""""'-Send your pet llffVt to Glo.n\y Gu., D•1fy Pilo(. nothing fair or democratic in a system which permits a majority composed of non-property owners using their votes to im- pose a tax, which they will not share, upon others. THE CURRENT legislative session has witnessed a pro- lif eraUon of ideas on property tax changes. And, indirectly affect- ing the property tax, one way or another, will be the various pro- posals to alter school financing as a result ot the Serrano de- cision. But true property tax reform wlll not be achieved until such taxes are confiJ\ed to property re- lated services and the burden of costs for programs shared by all are shifted to a system where all contribute on an equal basis. Neither will It be achieved before the decisions u to tax increases in property and bond issues which must be paid with proper- ty taxes are limited to tbe vot~ who have a stah in such jude- ments throueh 9wnership of pro- perty. :-We're _f;asualties of the Times · For several wffb I've hed a letter on my desk. It la written in treen Ink In • preclse, almost 9t1e1ant ba.nd. It ls from a woman ~ts a 1reat.granchnolber. She lay& wbe always carries a knlle ~ sll• rides on a bus. '."I bave ll\ted'inany yean onr AlY three score and ten,•• lhe -irltJS ... But l( any Joker Wnks I WOClld dt and be •bused ••d 'ave my \WrH taken ~ltboat re· ~they .,.crasy.'' • With ob· ..Sou1 rellsb, • ~ .. , ................. a about what the would do youn• "&oona" who are for IL" • 'Tllan, at the end, lt II M tbouO ~ NUMe to rtneet. a teepYl.-..-altina ler, a wblt•·balted I ltwu at a 4elk In~ neat-Uvtni room, •t.arlnc out ~ow, pen In band.) l'or te.: • ..... •aora la ••• FranetHO, l tblubt the dtl -IO ftll· ~·the~·* part of my -would c•use me to. coldly •ad wJtbout fear, mutllate ~bwDUl"~ • . ...,,~,.an a.a" broulbt. Sil· i)illlilt Ol lbe 1entl--aaa ladl ....., llaH, an uetr ad ban.· ._ and a ••at)' d.111\11l ot what ( ARTHOPPE J .,. , 10 many people ·~ ... ~ let them.selva.became." ' How aad that la. ~she blows abe 11 a casualty ot tbl' Umea. . t, . too, have felt the fear ahe fee.ti . 1 think ail of UI bave by now. I feel It every time I answer lbt door at nI1ht. every U.ne I park In a run -down netpbofbood, every thne I •alt a deeertecl atreet. And I bave felt tbe anier lbe feelt. I &hlAk all d • bave by aow. It ta more tban ancer. It ta haw.ct. It ii hat.red and an lrTa· tScna1 dalr• for revqe. Tbll elderb' woman vlanta to stab to deatb tbeae youni COCIU f OI' tr')'lna to ateat the purse \bat DOM baa yet tried to Ital. I WAS eomln1 bome ~e olb4ir nllbt, • tennis racquet In my band. HaUway don the block two c>mlnoua flprea a""°'cbed. I enVllioned them ~me, demand.lnc th• t...._ or fOUI' dollan I bad tn iQ ·.wallet. lb ..oiptl~on .U.~-·l WCN14 IWlflt it like a dub, =~:~.~:~ ll'ltbtm.. k t.Mm ••• All lot a lour ...-. ar fout ctbUart. ~ feet from me. they the doon of a parDS car. In tbe Ugbt I aaw that one was an old man, the other a young woman in alackl. I wu ashamed. Yeti can't help wOnderin&how mani of us haven't felt lh1s irn· tlonal ur1e to kUJ by now. I think eacb of u1 who has ii a cU1911ty ofthethna. Runwag E~tension No Help Airport Noise Debated To tbe Editor: The departure point for an editorial opinion is supposed to be objective fact. By that stan- dard, the Pilot's Jan. 23 editorial, "Airport Proposals.'' fails. Your editorial suggests that "in- between" alternatives in the airport EIR would produce a "minimum impact on those beneath the flight paths." No suc'h statement is made anyplace in the EIR. and in fact, these middle alternatives would pro- duce an impact at least as great as the present unacceptably high impact. The Pilot is also mistaken when it says that the proposed 137·foot runway extension would "reduce considerably" the noise on the ground. What the EIR slates, and what airport and airline officials have admitted, is that the runway extension would reduce noise levels about one de- cibel in a very small part of the noise impact area. But what the EIR and the Pilot both neglect to mention is the ir- reruta ble scientific ract that the human ear can't detect a change in noise level of less than two or three decibels. The only con- clusion that can be drawn from the facts in the EIR is that the runway is a waste of taxpayer's money lf ita purpose is noise abatement. NEXT, your editorial states tbat the EIR proposes an alternative in which the presenl jets are replaced by DC -10 and L-1011 wide·bodied aircraft, per1niltlng an increase of 500,000 annual air pauen1en with only two additional dally tllgbts. Nowhere in the 56S pages of the Ell\ can such an alternative be found, and for that matter, there iln 't even a mention of using these aircraft at any time in the future. The Pilot then compounds the error by stating that these atrcrart are "powered by engines that make markedly less noise" than the fel2' preaenUy using the airport. No such statement Is made in the EIR because it simp- ly lan't true. These two wide· bodied aircraft make about the ume amount of noile u the Jets presently uain1 the airport. As the Pilot notes, exploration of mlddle-.~d ~slbllitles "is the only aolutloo. ' But any such solution, to be acceptable to the bomeownen, and to meet the re- quirements of the state nolse standardl, m•t include Hbstan· • ( MAILBOX ] " LetteTs jTom-Tecden OTt welcome. The right to condense letters to tu apace OT eliminate libel is Teserved. Letters of 300 words or Leu w«l be given preference. All letters must in- clude signature ond mailing oddnlS but names may be withheld on re- quest if sufficient Tea.on is apparent. Poetry will not be publi!hed. tial reductions in the present noise exposure levels. Un- fortunately, neither the Pilot editorial nor the EIR addressed that necessity. DAN EMORY The editorial tool written os a genttal ob3ervali-On of the airport lituati-On and was net limited to Uems menttonedmt~EIR. -Editor. LotDer E~tadoas To the Editor: Dow Chemicals' putl·out from California, as reported in your paper Jan. 20, certainly lowers the expectations of thousands or CaHrornia's unemployed of get- ting jobs. And the loss of ~ million investment capital com- ing into the state, to start on- going production, ls another great lowering of expectations. ' The plant could have raised the business climate of the whole state and crealtld millions in tax- es to relieve th4! drain on the in- dividual. But alter two years of covernment and envlronr.nent'al harassment that cost the com- pany $4 million, they cannot be blamed tor leaving for a friendlier state. · With a lower than expected governor and his non-business, environmentalist aides like Larry Moss and Bill Press, fresh from 51.rra Club training, it is un- derstandable. It's a shame that the people's welfare must again be sacrificed for their unfounded concerns. GOLDIE JOSEPH TNeen• To the Editor: lsn 'l it incongruous that Corona del Mar Wgb School bu a speaker from the KKK ad· vocating racial dlacord wbUe the federal govlrnment i1 spendin1 billions of dollars to advocate raclal lnteatatlon 7 ' Ian 't It a violation of the 1chool board's ethics to permit thJs travesty? THEODORA JON~ Te~ OleJ14ti To tbe F.d.ltor: Ladt.slaw Reday paradCMl the u1ual quota of antl-teacber cllche1 ln b11 letter lo tbe edltor In the January 28th ls1ue. 1 He ahould try to teach In a 1Mt- to uhool sometime. He wool4 probabl)' be only too happy to,.. turn to tUa nice, quiet office and bl1 two-hOur lunch ln the to· callM "real #Orld. •• alARLES F. MOREWCK liHWA••N4 To~ lrAltt.or: J wu amaiAd to read Eyam and Novak'• recc.nt storr of the 1uppoeed lnti1,ue 1urroill1cSlq my appc;tntment .to the Wblt8 House staff. The reason their totn- side story" bas not appeared elsewhere ls because there Is no basis for it. Uterally dozens of other reporters were responsible enough to contact me -and get the facts before writing on the sub- ject; Evans and Novak did not .. The truth is that President Carter, Charles Kirbo and Hamilton Jordan made every el- fort to'treat me fairly ln a very difficult situation and it ts primarily due to that fact tha't the problem was successfully re- solved. GREG SCHNEIDERS Last Recre.t To the Editor: I am deeply concerned over the Irvine Company's recent an· nouncement that they plan to de- velop ball d the Castaways land with bouses. The other half may be destroyed too, unless the city votes to purchase the land for public use. Why does that land have to be built on? That land is the last of its kind to be found in Newport Beach; why ruin it with houses? Surely there are enough of them around, why do we need more? So their occupants• cars can strain Westcliff Drive even more? The traffic problem in that area is only one problem. THE CASTAWAYS !and is a place of retreat for dog-walkers and Jogeera alike; why take It away from them, especially now when places of its solitude are too rew and far between in tbis area? Why can't just one bit of land in Newport Beach be spared the death or being smothered with houses? Except for the trees along Irvine Avenue, those eucalyptus are among the last of their kind in Newport. Can we let tttem be 1ent to t.belr death ln a fireplace just aa the otben did which used to stand on what is . now Bay Crest and Westdllf? If the Irvine Company and its buddy-l)uddy developine clans get their way, they should at least spare the trees, tbe rem· nants <>! a apace of land that was oncf open and unapolled. Before this tragedy becomes local history, th• people should take a eood look at their last' apace bf open land and asJc themselves, "What can we do to save thalland?" .. DAV)DWILLIAMS • 0 .. ANGE COAST DAI LY PILOT Robm N. Wttd, Pwblilhfr • Thomo1 IC1tvll. £dltot &rtioro Krdbfch. 641torfol Pogt £d'tor The editorial a>a1e ot the DaUt Piiot "'"* to Inform and ltlmulatc r••dort by ~Ung on U\la p•J• dlver&e commentary M topfu 0t intere~ b31 syndltat· ed cohurtnlsu and cartoon!ata. by provldtni 11 forum tor rea~rs· views and by prt1en\lng \his newspaswr'J oplnJons •nd l~u on curttnt loplca. The edltorh•l ~nlOM ot lht Dail)' Pilot @P<'•r onb' tn Olt tc&Jloti•l column 11t t"- top or lbt "Pa••· Opinions ~X· prelffd by ·~ columntsta and cert~t\I w kttM wnttn ar• their .. " anU no end~tment or thrit \'lftl by lht D~ly PilOl lhould be tn 'trrtd. Wednesday , Feb. 2, W17 I' First Biography Uneove~s ByJEaaYBVCX LOS ANGELES (AP) -Even ln death, Clark Gable conlinues to loom lareer than many present-day movie stars. No cult bu developed, a~ with Humphrey ~01art. but hls fame la one ol llngerlng admiration - almost awe and a remembrance of the excitement he created in his !llms and his life. "CLAJlK GABLE WAS the ul- tlm ate celebrity -more thaa the ultimate movie star," said Lyn Tornabene. "J don't think there was a more famous celebrl· ty . He was t h e k\ne o f c:elebrltie:s," · Mrs. Tornabene is the author or "Loog Live the King," the first Gable biography since those published after his death by a heart attack in 1960. She and re-· searcher Meredith Brucker spent three years on the book. She said she approached it as •·a story of a man who happened to be a movie star -but ~rimarl· ly as a man." Uncovenng that story was no mean feat. "VOU TIDNK YOU know all about Gable, but you really know so little," she said. "He never gave interviews during his lime at MGM. There was no body of correspondence. No collected literary works. I had to re· construct him from scratch." Mrs. Tornabene said she in· terviewed nearly 200 people. often having to cross-examine them like a prosecuting attorney. "The loyally of his friends ts fierce," she said. "You get the feeling people arc hiding things. that SHE UNCOVER~ NO startl· ing revelations but pany insights about the man: -His image as he-man was stumbled upon cidentally by MGM, then car ully nurtured and protected by he studio. Only toward the end his life did he become the atk Gable of everyone's ima nation. -..He was roguish. gentle, dignified an<1 common." she said.""He started out as a com· mon man and he went out as a common man -but with an awful lot of class." -HE W.S TORN between a ste!'r. fathet who never wanted his son to re a sissy in any way anrl a stepmother who guided him towarc\lbooks, poetry and the \ \ .. I ' Siar art.I. Later, be kepi bis aesthetic leantnas a suarded secret. 1~e never proved himself to hll" father aa a man. His father tboutbt acUnt waa sissy stutf and a real man n ever put makeup on his. face. His father died never approving of him," sbeaald. · -He had a cleanliness fetish, shaved h.iJ armpits and chest and would never sit in a bathtub of dirty water. He even disliked swimming lo a pool. -IT WAS NOT ms last movie, "The Misfits," that killed him as everyone thinks, she said. "He _had had other warnings about his health," she said. "At least two times in the 10 years preceding his death he had something resembling heart at· tacks. He was told to quit drink- ing and smoking. He was a very heavy drinker and a very heavy smoker." Mrs. Tomaberie said she went to Dr. Alice Ginott for a psychiatric analysis of Gable, which is included in the book. "DR. GIN01T SAID a child who loses his mother at 10 months is a permanently scarred person," she said. "The child is too young for grief and becomes angry at the loss. A child doesn't know there is a reward for giving as well as for taking. That person clinically \•:ill turn out to be a taku all of his life." Mrs. Tornabehe said, ·:Gable's relationships with women were like that. He took from women all his life. He ultimately married his mother image. Carole Lorn· bard." \ \ ' ' ' ' \ ' ,1 .. I I \ ' ' . \ \ ' ' ' ~ \ \ \ \ . ..... \ ' \ \ I \ ' I \ \ I •• I \ I \ • • . \ \ \ I \ I \ I \ \" \ \ \ j \ \· .• \ I \ \ \ \ \ \ \ ' • \ . . \ I •, ' I \ I Wtdntlld!)'. '!bnJ!ly 2. 1m DAILY PILOT ·For WP Onlg Reagan. Starts . .. . '78 ()peFation· ~· W AQnNGT~ '(A'P) _..Ronald Rea1an is openins a new pollUcal abop with up to $1 million to mveat lo the cause of conservative RepubllcJn candidates and principles. .. Citlrena for the Republic, based In Sat~ Monica, ls ~g founded with campaign funds left over rrom Reagan's unsucceasful quest lor the Republican presidential ~ nomination. be filled, will de~ide which W ITU A SUBSTANTIAL Republican candidates to sup· bankroll, Reagan at the helm, Port. and campaign chi~ftalns decid-CITIZENS FOR THE Republic ing where the money goes, the will be a vehicle for him as well new organization will be signifi· as bis viewpoints, and Nofziger cmt in shaping the course of the sald one of jt.s missions wJU be to GOP. make sure that Reagan remains Organizational papers filed a political force. · with the Federal Election Com-If lt works, the organization mission list Reagan as the could beeome the vehicle foir a chairman of Ciliz"ns for the presidential Republic. and Sen. Paul Laxalt campaign in of Nevada as chairman of its 1 9 8 o, for 1 s teering committee. Reagan or for Lax alt was c h airman of 8 candidate he Citizens for Reagan, the pre-and his allies sidential campaign committee w . a n t for the former California gov-nnmtnated ernor. Under federal election · 7A ready · laws, the old Reagan organiza. m ad e cam. tlon Simply Changed ltS name p a j g n 0 r · ltl!AOAN and function, and now clan invest ganization would provide a ma· its funds in the campaigns of 1978 jor head start for the preferred candidates choseb by its leaders. conservative candidate in 1980. LYN NOFZIGER, a Reagan THE NEW GROUP also will ... Wlre,i.to campaign aide serving as ex-produce literature and perhaps ecutive director of Citizens for broadcasts to promote the con- the Republic, said the money will servative GOP viewpoint. So..ellector Showgirl Fiona Richmond has been nominated as rec- tor of Dundee University in S co tl a n d . A vicar 's daughte-r , she says "I'll do it to the best of my ability .•• ' I \ • \. . \ \ ' \ •I I I \ I . . \ \ ~ be used only in behalf of "Our purpose is to try to help .J Republicans. broaden the co n servative "We intend to be a Republican Republican base," he said. group, and we hope to work Reagan maintains that the within the framework of the par-Republican future should be a ly," be said. conser vative on<'. and has spoken He said Reagan and lhe steer· of a New Republican Party bull~ ing committe~. its roster yet to on that premise. Robinson'• Newpo~ Westminster t'. .. •• '. • " .. ~ .. '. . 'I · . J • >\ ' • ~ ~t •t•-. :, ! ·' "' • .. , I • .. . .; I ., . ~. ... , '• I I .. ... ... .. I I I I ·' I I r I LM.BOYD INFORMS In the Majestic lake-Tahoe Is a year 'round playground like none .other In the world. Here you. can ski chalJeng- lng slopes. step lAto nights filled with gllttertng entertainment ... or simply breathe the mountain air and watch the seasons changir. It's all Within easy reach ~ you take off for Tahoe on Air California. Convenient SunJet M.l'Vlce ayai)· able &Jly from Orange County Airport for ··ekBaekfi~ W ASIUNGTON CAP) -A federal order ba baned the General Elec· trle Co. from makhll falle or UDIUl»tantiated clalma about lh televilion aeta or other DtaJor appliances. 'Pbe Vederal Trade Commission order waa a1reed to by General Etectrtc wttbout admit-Con·•a.~..6 tins vtolatico of law. MGG...., each paid tbe '10 nn~ for trelpualni char~ ln Kew Gardea. Criminal Court Iner' belnl arrested bJ Trault PoUceomeen Albert H\ialMI and Jut. thony Morrtley who are aullMd to watch for turnatUe cheatt. ltlhak Ru, a dJamond dealer wit.la a • bulinea tn Beverly Hilll, wu found to bave SI0,100 l.n SSO and SlGO ))l1la when tak• tq the P'oreet HWa police ltatloo. NEWPORT IAY TAXSERVICI .. ftMa .... , •••• .. "'Ct 0 ba'!'.: 800°!0.g :::i~ PHILADJ:~·IA platnttbatthefirmfalae~ <AP> -A fir that ''I hawe $6.'° in my bank, Mommy. N~ con ly advertised that lo-makes cbeeteb r1er- t L--?" dependent surveys In ebaped radloadec . to 712-6740 we 99, a rlQlrse 1973 showed ill color make it a feeler cue ------------------televl.sioo .sets required when a rt val ft.rm 1 1;:;;=1t!~;!!==:L~==~====: 'Farr Appeals Inquiry Order OFF OE._. only $32.00 (one way).--AnQ flying Air California means you'll spend less time travel· ing and more time enjoying the spectacular recreation and C4$ual lifestyle that's so much a part of this scenic Inland sea In the Sierras. Money·saVl!}g discounts available for ~of ten or more, famUles and military personnel. Paclcage tours, too. Don't you • \MW\t to go? It's diy ... onAlrCalifomla. lea• service than other selling hambur er-i u s brands 1baped radios in the WORK SM •RTER. ·Accormni to the FTC, same pack•ging. ., A GE '<unfatrly cooUBued After a bearing re .._.OT H •RDER to advertise the 1973 U.S. Dtatrict Co rt " A service performance <>f Judge Charles Wein r, Tft .. ...,,_...,..,.... 1.-. .. II--,. ita color televisions while Wtndaor Industries f "WOft< amarter. not harder." P9ople i,aye bMf'I taYtno it knew of subsequent Melville. N.Y •• agreed that to me for )'MI'S. but nobody.....,Q8Ye me .. 1mp1e evidence wbicb con-atop boxing its ha p1an' for WOftdno smart. 1t tOOk me more tNn 12 Y'Nf'9 tradicted tbe 1973 survey burger radio in yello and 1100.000 to come uP with the TIPS that anyone data." and· orange and to re ~ can uee to get more done in leea time wtth tewer move a cbeeseburge headacn. GE ALSO ''did not picture from the box. What's It worth to you to ...... •single hour a day? If forward full details of A i c J f """U are WOftdnn 40 hours a week rott. an hour UYed tb •-• d ta to m o • n c . , o ,~ ..• e 1973 ~ 8 con-Pblladelpbla, wblcb l MCh dav means having an 41xtra six weetca ...,..,..,._ sumers. upon request as makes chee.seburger 1 every~. Even as little aa 10 minutes saved eech dav claimed," and "failed to 1 Al'ldtt up to over 40 hours at the end of the year. What radios, complained in. a ..-, ..... ~ have adequate substan-suit that Windsor was you do with the extra time is up to you .............. you tiatioo for tbe claim that use the time for recreation. family, self-lmorovement, « i l tel ..... 1 trying to steal its busi-'°boost your personal earnings la a P8f'900al c:holoe. ta CO or enn ODS re-neaa by duplicating iu I'm so sure 'that the TIPS will wOf1< for you thllt I'"' qRuCirAedandlesa Zaervienttb. cectholanor packlllinl. whllng to~ you 30 days to use them. By the end of .The judge ntfused to that time. 1f you don't agree that these TIPS are worth TV's," tbe FTC said. bar. Windsor from pro-meny times your Initial Investment of 110. Just Mnd , Tbe consenl order. ducing the hamburger t'-"' teck. and I'll not only return Yo4lf money, but 111 violations of wbicb are radio, saying Amico bad payifor ~postage as well. punishable by fines of up not been in the burger u~ TIPS to flave the time of your ur. -the Wiii you to tl0,000 per offense, re-rad lo businesa long wary It · " quires GE to m eet enoughtohavecornered -.-~----------several conditions before the market in the mind.a .....,.T..,.. it cites any "evidence'' ofcooaumen. • ..... Pwtec:tOI · 1-.D.,e P2J I as support for claims ---------#17.._c.ft..' , ' about its'TV sets, clothes 1.....,,,. .._ c:A t2'6l I h d .a. ( ) ~·-~IOUMYoJ<T1PSlot30 .. I0-"11'9¥CM .... _ wa1 era an \Kyen, 1--...,.,.•,•-tt..ma1.n ... 1or ... v-·-""'..,.·-""' I rangea, dishwashers, L._•Y• ..,, ... ._...,~,"-oa1"°""no'°-.., ...... ..., ... -. ~!f~'~i:::.pr~::~: INFORMS 1:_::.~.~~.~~·~.~~~~ ..... 1 room air condltiooen, I~ .................................... , .. .._ .... . ............... I ::i~s.stereopbontc coa-In the _L ~·.~·~·~·~-·~~Z.:.~·~·J . . Earning money is one thing. Holding on to it and making ii grow js ano1her. Perpetual Savings has various ways of . ' making your money make money. · . Even though Perpetual Savings is a sizable financial institution, you'll feel comfortable with us. Our employees are friendly, knowledgeable and take care o( your transactions quickly. And we otfer M enonnous range of services. So when people refer to us as a tower of suenp, it's more than just a catchy phrase. Come in and see us soon. WbeN yo.. put your money docs make a difference.. Highest Allowable Interest Annual Rate Annual Yltld. 1mDI 51~% S.39% ~-= 5%%·· 5.92% .. :.::: 6¥2% .. 6. 72% !l:. .. * I I 6%o/c.• 6.98% ::-...,.. 7~% .. 7.'!19% :::· '*%·· 8,06%::: •With interest compounded daily and maintained fQr one year. ••By Fcdcill'law, earl~ withdrawals on tenn accounts are subjecr to substantial interest penalties. ·an. At Your Service, Service- And They're Free (Some scrvi~c~ require qulllifying ~.I Safe Deposit Box Nowy Set-vice Checking Account Savings Bond Travelers Check'S Redempciona ·Money Orders Save-By-Mail Copy Serva Inter-Branch Privilegu in.st Deed Telephone Trans~ CoHections ldentikey Retirement Plans 'Jh~eferred Keogh Plan \A{self ~mployed individual may deposit 15% of his or her annual income ($7SOO maximum) in a Keogh plan. Both money contributed for yourself and for employees is tax-deductible, as is ttlc interest it earns. After retirement you'~ taxed at i much lower rate as you use the money. Perpetual pays the Trustee fees. Individual ·Retirement Account Stan your own Individual Retirement . Account if you're o(){ atrcady in one. • Contribute up to 15% of your annual · income _($1500 maximum) in one payment or regular installments. The money contributed and the interest it earns are tu deductible untf 1 you use the m<>neJ' ,Perpetual ~ys the 1i}lstec fen. .. • • • .. • . .. • -. . • . ~ , ' . " J LOS ANGELES <AP> -Two ad· .. vlaories: DOn1 OlW tomabt'a pn-TV REVIEW 01tere ol NBC'• new "Tales ot the Uoexpeet.cid ... And Tbunday, be svre to tee NBC•1 new fantasy aeries, "'l'be TEN ntAaS PA88. Capital puntab. FantuUeJoumey, nt •-B c.,..__ "-·-Tbefa,soertsasuspenaean~OCY. roe ""1-.. ut a -...-...e """"n tonl1bt'1 epi1ode concerntn1 declltonpavestbewayfwltueaump-new1papermab aor, TblDQes wbo Uon, a prospect Utat deeply disturbs vi ol the cruall_dlq reporter. wtnda ue 911 the .rec• na end pure Sa, wtth the support ot his editor and • terror While po1m, as a death row in· 8 sympathetic •arde'1, he's booked P•rilM_.. M•ter'S • D!•te for a capital punlshm•t story. Into death row, posi.Dg aa a eonvteted DEAR PAT: I got Involved with the Famlly Cllanne14,10p.O>.) murderer, to truly experience life savings Plan discount furniture buying cjub. 0 IOtl&NBY :· A SE•IES "'1th COD· there, to rouse public optnloo against The satesman told me lhat to buV Ute drscc>unt •••••••1 tb\utna cbar.,teq, .uses the famous capital PUnl.abment. · ~mlture t Nd to become• member for $(tA.9S ~ "BenDt¥18 TrJanl)e" off the Florida Only, ne. the warden and the editor plUS a$12 ""1ual renewet tee. t slaned a MaSter "' Actress Leslie Ug. eopl :Jt1 Ol'epiise for proceediq, know ot the plan. Unfortunately, the Chertte stlp with th• undetstenilfng that H I cams wbo played a ShllNI planes.mysterioully vanlab "keeper" o1 death row turns <>Qt to be didn't llke the furniture after I Inspected It, the dl-a)M role on the TV 1n tile "trian,le," they say. (Channel Beatty, who took the Job after the re. ·~~~ sllp would be destroyed. I took • took at the diama .. Roots." has 4, 8 p.m. Tbunday> porter'• auaeka on him ruined bis furniture and decided to forget the who" Idea. ftlecl bankruptcy pro-lt IN olf to a roualn1 ataJ't Thµrs· poUHcareer. . Femlty Savings Plan now ts out of buslneft, but c e e ding 1 in L 0 5 day aa ' boaUOld of folks wbo dliap. a£VBNGE TIJIE. AND it comes, my Master Charge bllf for $41•.95 stlll hasn't .. A1tgelei federal pea,rlntbeTrtaqgleinmid·l.9'(6wlnd borrlftqly. 8ut tb~ ending -well, ,,,>-,. . . ~ I . LY _ been cleared. M.J., Fountaln'Valley coort. J ~:iu:th ~ea~U:: ~.:r! ~ ~~~': J!Y~e~an expect two aur- AYS contactld Maateraw..111MM11n.bllftg Uma. Thunda1'1"JOWDey"huitaamall ._-----..... ~~'!""9"-.......... --.... ~ enor, and JOU report tMt tM full ....,at of the bll Set on Q Wand. it's a f8Kioatinl band of 19'18citilena ~afoul of a .---------------~ andfl"8neecha-•ha•beenrefunded. Enrollinent Mend of ··Sw114 Famtty Robinson" str•n--cloud in~ Atlantic ·..-aad ··star Trek," witb a lltt,le betD;;br~ked on an 'island and Dls~t StlU are.... ·a.zone"' thrown in for 1ood meetinl various folks, an but one DEAR PAT: I ordered "The ABC of At OCC m lt'aam.ind-siretebertbeen· boadle, who were deposited u., in Witchcraft" from Samuel Weiser Inc. of New Ui:.e.f!, _cEanP eiUTBEoy.to•• away when centuries r~1 from the 16th to York City, last July 30. To date 1 've not received u • -"' 23rd. the book. My two letters to the company result· 21,500 tonJgbt'a "Tales" starts at 10 p.m. The only thing all have in common , ed In tMtlng Informed that the ~ was shl~ -o EST because Its realistic. frightening ia' that the mysterious Jfermuda Aug.10,andthat I shouldexpectdeliverywfU.ln .. depictloooftbelaatmomentsofacon· Trianate left them strand~ and fac· six weeks. I've checked with the PoSt office and More Uta,. 21.~ stu· demoed man before he's strap::· ing different perils, philosophies and It's never arrived. What Is the next step I should denta have signed up for to a prison's electric chair. . technologies on an unchartered island take? Can I get my money back If It's been Jost, aprtng semester classes Repor:ter 'lbinnes is there to wt . of put. present and future. or could another book be sent tome? at Orange Coaat College the execution. He believes and ha.a . C.B.,C.oronadel Mar tbr:!Frtday, and col-wrtt...en tbat the terrified wretch is in· Ul ITS WAY, Tms "Journey" It'•• good thing that JOU hnen't INmed all lege ciala expect that nocent. the vtctin of a botched, bur-se-.isasgoodasthebest "StarTrek" about cureea at thl• point. SamHI w ..... Inc. num to reach 27,000 ried investigation by a police detec·• show. aaya1t•followuponyourc:omplalntonfJlfyoatle when school atarU Mon· Uveplay~bYl':led~atty. Both tonight's "Tales" and eloatmaUdalmwfthyourpoetofllc=e.Reoord8clOln-day. He cant bnng himself to watch Thursday's "Journey" are well· dlc8'e an Aug. 10 ahlpment. ...... es• The JQ.'28 enrollment them throw the switch. He steps out of crafted. welJ,acted and wholly enter- publlahH booka, did not offer to refund your figures ~ow nearly the death cbam~r. a~ does Beatty. taining.lftbey'reindicativeoftbings · at thl• time, nor would tt MY u... a repleoa""'nt lS,000 students signed up whom be bitter1y assails for causing, . to come, NBC bas two real winners 00 ~R. DAVID W. GtBSON ~ Chiroprador ~es the Relocation of ~s offtee Coll for on oppointmtnt to det6rmt'le if Chiroproctk con help you. Positively No Wgation 1731 Smhi ._Aw. COltaW... ,_.._. ........ ....... for CJ I I,.,_, ..... 641-1177 II I would be malled to JOU. TM firm "°"'t ...-. a.._. for day classes, and aa later proved. the death of an inno-its prime-time schedule .. untlt u. poet office d•t•nnlnn .,...,.,.. boot... another6,SOOenrolled for ~c~en~t~m~an~. ----------------------:---------------,---:ir loat In the meU, and M'• up to rou.to lnllate a tNoer. evening classes. Keep AYS poet.Ct on thla one. • Reclstration continues f 4 · ,., le I 4 A 4 through Feb. 10 and Serdee • ale,ll ••• ee•-· ·. many classes remain DEAR PAT: Commercial banks seem open. Signup appoint· quick to extract a charge when their customers menta may be secured in make errors that ca~ c~ks to be returned or , OCC 'a admilaiona and paid against Insufficient fUnds. What can the reconllofftce customer/consumer do when the banks do not For re1latratlon in· perform? I'm referring to Instances where formation. call 556-5866. materials are lost, accounts.are credited lncor-r::-;:!v or bank statements are delivered weeks Practice Hit J.L.S., Irvine . A CalHomla Banking Department apollffman advlH• teckllng auch problema with Ute bank ma,.. ' aaar lnltlaUy. If th• bank takn no 'CCN"r'edlff ae> tlon and you un prove thet It ... et fault In an ao- CUf'ete tNnuctlon or that It provtdld •xtr•••tr poor aervlce, the next move I• up to you. ff the bank la atate chartered, preMnt JGUr complaint to .... State Banking Oopamnent. IOO 8. Commol••••· Loa Ang.._, CA 80005, or pftone: (213) ne-.2A7t. ff the bank .. ndonaftJ dtarteNd, contaot tM .. ....., Adml"'*etor of Netlonal ...... Ill Calfomla 91r., Room 3131, San F,.ncl9co, CA 14104, cw phone: (415) 55fMOU. · Last 4 d~ys! LOS ANGELES <AP> -Veterans sbouldn 't get ao much preferential hir· lug treatment for municipal jobs, the City Coundl says. The Coun- cil voted 8-S to put a meuure oo the May 31 city eJectloo ballot to cut in half the l~polnt credit veterana receive on the civil aervice examina- tion. • 203 to 253 off custom draperies. Savings on fabric, labor, lining and i~stallation. I ' ' ' .. I t "' •• \ ~p~ ... ~~~~ CHEST , . BED ...i ~-;;:::; MA~749 S.....:l • ......... 'Ir. 111Lt-.Ta .. •er Fiim-...... '44" llUlllllTEST• .. 'cr' .,_ .................... ,. ..... ... --. ....... 'Wmu•• ..... '11P ...... NOWa ./ 9 PIECE CORNER GROUP '249'' AnllWI~ '499" • • '· . • . R~imeT~p _Regatta .En!rY By ALllON lAKSABft ..,..,""' ......... SD0111D1 a new mu t <7~ feet taller) and a .. bustle"· wbieh adda tbree feet to ber overall length, tbe faJJ'led New Zealand bdilt sloop Ra,Ume 9illf lead a neet of U )'8Cbla SOUtb out of Marina deJ Rey Saturday In the (ourtb aaW.na ot tbe 1.J..2S.mile Puerto Vallarta race. Ragtime, under aldpper and co-owner BUI White, will be out for Une bonon (ftnt to finiah) and a sbot at the elapsed time record allihtly more than sis daya set by the ~t 1loop Sirt"'1',ll in the im race. Tbe pbysleal ehans• made iD Racttme boosts ber Interuatioaal otfabore Rul6 bandl.cap ratlni to •IT -four feet over Mr overall Jenlth. Most IOR ratmo come eloeer to tJae waterli.De lflQltb. THE 8PONSOIUNG DEL a.BY Yacht Club bas divided the neet into tbree lOR classes and one eaau ot~ormance Handiqap RaclQl'leet. ller_e la the class breatdOwn of the yachts wblcb wW amwer the atarttna stanal Saturday at t p.m. : ~A Ragtime, 65 ft. sloop, Bill White Long Beadl YacbtQub. Sorcery. St ft . sloop, Jacob Wood, California YfchtClub. Olinka, &$-foot sloop, Tony Bill, California YachtClub. . Solution, 50 ft. sloop, Jim Calley, California YC. Spirit, S8 ft. sloop, Robert O'Brien, California YC. Celerity, '8 ft. sloop, ChMlea Hope, San Diego YC. CLA.SSB Orange Peel, 43 ft. sloop.. Ronald Greenberg, Dt l Rey YC. Venture, St ft. sloop, Gary Ezor , Del Bey YC. Deception, 43 ft. s loop, Dave Megginity, CalifomJa YC. La Mer. 43 ft. sloop Richard Mann,.St . Francis YC. · Sangvtnd, 39 ft. sloop, J e rald Jensen. Metropolitan YC Lusaino, 40 ft. s loop, AUredo Giovanelli. Acapulco YC. • CLASSC I \ Dakar, 41 ft sloop, WlWam Goodley. Del Rey YC. Gauntlet, 39 rt. sloop, Monte Livingston, Del Bey YC . Vixen. 39 ft sloop, Charles Cheney San Dieco YC. Sunrise, 39 ft. sloop, David Latta, Santa Barbara ._vc. Green Hungarian, 36 ft. sloop, A. Kris Kristoff, Windjammer YC. Saeta. :n ft. sloop, Rogelio Partido, Man%anillo Y.C. • Casper,3.1ft sloop, BUI Crew, Ventura YC. " PDF lllusloo, 41 ft. aloop, Ed McDowell, King Harbor'YC. Pertcus. 47 ft. sloop, John WUUamaoo ll, Laha!naYC. ~ Speculation, 45 ft. sloop, Rooald Hoffman, Long BeachYC. Sigame, 36 ft. sloop, Sid Renkow, Del Rey YC. , Superstar. 37 rt. sloop, Sid Blinder, tnl Rey YC. . . Butcher Boy II. 37 tt. yawl, John Snook, Long Beach YC. Ted Rust Repea ts In Cal-2 0 Sailing Ted Rust of Ca lifornia Sailing Club became the third sk.Jpper to win back to back championships in the Cal 20 Class Sunday, defeating 29 rivals in the champtouship fiight at Kini Harbor Yacht Club. The other two double . winners were Bud Gardlntt, KHYC In 1970·TI, and Paul Merrill Jr., Alamitos Bay Yacht Club in 1W12· 73. DAVEY CROCKETT OF ABYC wu the nm- ner-up and won tbe Gardiner Trophy for the skipper leading unllJ the fin al race. Winner ln the 30-boat consolaUoo rugbt WU J.J..year-old Pam Poletll ol. RJchamoad YacbtCldb,·. The championship was decided oo. the best .c:ore in b ve races sailed on Santa Monica Bay. All nve races were t ailed in moderate 10-15 knot winds. THE TOP 11 FINISBESS ln champiomhip nll.bt: 1, Ted Rust, CSC; 2, DaveyCrockett1 ABYC; 3, Scott Smith, SDYC; 4, Jlm Grant, WYl;; S, BUI Carmichael, CBYC; 8, Mike Georse. KHYC; 7, Mllte Ha~b, ABYC; 8, Karl Andenon, ABYC ; 9, Wayne Brannin, KHYC; lOJlm Calley·Cbuck Man· nlng,CBYC. · BOATING Top Field For Coast Cup Race .. NOEL ROBINS, Aaa.stralla. wbo bat been d•lpet-ed by Alan no.act to be the aldpper of the A\ISsie 12-meter entered in the challenger trials. Dick Deaver, Newport Beaca, winner of last year's Congressional Cup. He will be sailing under lbe burgee of Los Angeles Yacht Club. lnirepid l.aunching Feb •. 25 SAN DIF.GO <AP> Two-time America's Cup winner Intr~d lA in San Diego and per !'erry Driacall predicts she will be ready for launch Feb. Z5. Tbe J.2.meter yacht Will go against Lowell Nortb'a new Eaterprtse in trim atartt.na March 6 that wm determine lf ln· trepid IW.I is tut enough to compete iD the UDlted States trial.I later this year. in Laguna Festival Slated 'Fabulom 50 Fai~; Feature of Event Sellteweed LOS ANGELES CAP> -A man who reportedly used a Luger·sbaped BB gun to scare hie victims, a bicycle to nee from the crime scene and a police scanner to menitor pursuing officers bas been sentenced to a prison term for a series of sexual assaults during Oc~l976. Terrence Lee IJddeU, 3.1, was sentenced Tues- day to fi ve years ~d eight months in eriadn after pleading guilty to charges involving sexual a ssault and burglary. Tbe 14th annual Laguna Beach Winter Fesqval opens Feb. 18 with a 50-,,ear village birthday celebration. The city was incorporated ln 1927 so the theme for this year's festival will be the 1920's. The 17-day event will feature the "Fabulous 50 Faire" to be held daily at the Festival of Ai;ts ground&. • . This special attraction will en- compass arts and crafts exhibit.a and demonstrations b y the Laguna Craft Guild; music with HB&!ienee Fair Winnen Announced · Ocean Vlew {elementary) Scb9ol District officials in Hunt· LOS ANGELES (AP> fog(on Beach have announced the -NortbbOODd traffic 00 20 award·winniQI projects at the a twenties flair; international food concessions, silent movies, Dixieland bands and weekend ea· t e rta inment in the Forum Theater and Irvine Bowl. Tbe festival will begin witb a Canadians and vWton reception 2 to 4 p.m. Feb. 18, hosted b1 Laguna Federal Savings. A pancake breakfast followed by the Patriots Day Parade at 11 a.m. Feb. 19 with 13S floata, marching bands, antique ears and equestrian entries. The remalni.ng ts days, there will be a variety of sporting events, wine tastlngs, Grand Prix skateboard races, kidl dog show, Recreation Department revue, Marine ~ band and nag ~:feant shows. antique show sale at.the Museum of Art. Girls Club auction, City· School nt.trict softball rematch Tennie Exhibition . . Set for Newport th S Di F diltrld'ssoclalaclencefair. h ~ s an, m ~or ::~a~ The fair, held at Village View t\ tennis exhibition sponsored alaniftcanUy since the School, 'included 110 three· • •.• by Corona del Mar High School's ppe ning of tbe Ldle dlmensioftal projects on aubjects Atsoelated Student Body will be · Diamond Lane, s tate in the areas of aovemment, bla· held Sunday, Feb. 13, at the high in toryandantbropology. NewportBeachTennisClub. way eng eers re· Students from 11 seboola Loeal profealonals atid mem· and picnic at Riddle Field, dan- cers of the Charlest on and various "old-time" contests. . Further information may be. · obtained from the Laguna' Beach Cha mber of Commerce, 356 Glenneyre, 494·1018. ' Costa Mesa Beautificatio n Sem inar Set The Costa Mesa Beautification Committee ls sponsoring a Home Improvement seminar Feb. 26 at OranaeCoastCollege,and,wbile demonstrations in a variety ot exte r ior home impro vement techniques ar~ scheduled, there., is still room for a few more ln· structon. Committee chairman Maureen DiDomenlco said Costa Mesa firms who offer exterior home improvement services are welcome to participate in the day.Jong spr uce·ur.· seminar. which ls offered ree to the public. Intrepid last raeed in 1974 widi Driscoll at•tbe h e lm . Sbe l o st t_o Courageous in the oAil minutes of the U .S. trials. Couraseous t.f\en went on and beat Top ft~ conaolaUon fi11bt : 1, Pam Poletti, Au1tralia'1 Southern RYC; 2. Fred Brinkman, CBYC; 3, Jlm Shup, · Cron retaining the KHYC; 4, Bob GoQln, MBYC ; S, Gordon Brown United' &.atet' bold on Jr .. ABYC. ~ t.be cup. • ~· Department of partlclpaU!d in tbe eighth annual ben of Corona del Mar's cham- T r ~ n 1 p 0 r t a t t 0 n fair, dlltrictoffidali aald. plonablp varsity team will plaf ln apokeaman aaid the con· First place w inners are: tbe exhibition which beglnl at 1 .e.t, .. th t 11 St.pbanle Mltcbell Lisa '-ln p.m. 11eketa are $2, and can be o... a norma Y Charleen Neri~. Rleb':rci purcbued at the acbool'a ac· builds up during the N-m•n. Pam Thomen --..a Uvltieaolftce. Deadline for volunteers to teach such subject. as pest C<Jn· trol, exterior palnUng, and fence mending, ls Feb. 7. For further Information about the seminar, to be held between D a.m . to 2 p.m. ~eb. 26, call Paul Dudley at 556-~ . • TIM 1'" Southern Callfom.la Boat ·Show. featurtni more than eoo craft Ad 110 booth ex.bi.btta, opens Friday for • 10-qy nm at the Los Anleles Con'lentioo Center. Show bows are from I to 10:30 e .m . weekdays; u to 10:.r..m. S.tW"CIQI, and 12 to 7 p. m. .,.. ~ rear•a sbow ls 11!d b) the j1poo1orlo1 Southern Callforola llarine Auoclat.loo (SCJl.A) to be lbt lata••\ and moat compl"e •marl.De exhlbltlon ever held In tht i wnt. A tarie •eament ol the DI• "UoD'• powerboat and utlboat buUden will be ebowlna their wn modela, and bootb exhlbtta lnclade •nl')'thlna that 1oea oo a pleaauni · tr aft. Bo.t elbiblt. wW ranee from In-• .. ftatabl• 'al $U.15 to IWlwy crulffn urr1ln1 price t111 as blah u .000. 11 evenln1 r~ab bour ~" ~ ._. tbrouib. Sepulveda Pus Brian Bauman of Har View hubten~. Scbool;KeaMengofVWaceVlew The lane was buJlt Cor Sebool; Randy Peterson of Vlata . ·ate by bQsea and car Vte1' School ; and Linda pool.a but bad been kept Turabman and Laurie Lan· dOHd due to lqal ·ae~ damanotSprlqVlewScbool. tiom. Gov. BdJDU!Ml.O '·• 3eeond pl~ce winners are: Al· Brown Jr. ordered \JM Jlloa Buhman of Clrele \rlew .w..mn. stretch opened Bcllool; F.Allle Apodaca ot a.t MoD411,. cwerruuna bJa View Scbocw. Loren Lopln, Bren· portadaD da Navarre, KelleJ Miller, GlantUreO .RlclMri Ertckaon and NellJ Je. ' n.lap Of Harbour View Scbool: ..,,,_r'..., Cue1 ICtlly of Marine View SAN YSIDRO CAP> Sd.aool; CUrUI Vlac:a, of Sottaa A man tdentlf ylns ~twSchool: andCarolV._ol llhnMll u • llalcao v~ VlewScJ>OOI. ,.._,al 1lm=Uon of· .. ft1"elwau11Gt kleu.s. '"~-· Danee tertltory\ b)' polio. wbo a.-e~ aal4 he trf ed fo rob tb'~ Tb• Senlor Clt.l&ena Club ot U thq poeed U W._. 1 ,LafQila Beadl It IJMIDIOriOI a alleu. G.ei>rl• aD(I Martha Wuhlniton LG1.I Horack> Fuente& dancetrom2:•to4:80p.m. Peb. Tama 23, wu hit five JO at the llll9D Alfe&n ~· Umea ti.;._, fJrtld by m"t1'11""9tAn. Sat. Yuu• 11 anuel ~meat and rtfrelb. Lo~a. commaader of . mea~wUJ•:ai.t provldH. Ad· tll• Sa.a Dle10 Pollce ml11kiil Is tN'9 to all 1..uor Border Crime• Task dtlMaa. hatbilf JDtormaUce ii Fore • avallablii .t4ff-Ma . Ef!ents Noting FV Birthday .Slated ' Members o f tbe Happy Homemaken Club will bold a luncheon-teatlWJ1..i a presenta-tion of Ute clb'• blatory oo Feb. 2$. Studenta at Vista View School in Fountain Valley will attend an usembly at9a.m. Feb. 23tobear a presentation on the clty and the biltory ot Oranae Coutty, said Mn. Knakenberg. Plana are atm beinl made for ~UM.JI. the day before the dty'a lncorpcntion date 20 years ago, lln:krukellberl nid. · So far, blnhd~ ev•nta on Jane 12 include a oak• cuttln1 ceremoo,y, boa tour, 19$'7 car abow. recreaUon tournaments aodexbibl •. I I 0 I ) f t l LM.B .. d :Big MissOuri '.Turkey Drive Reported on IO far were the cattle drives ottbe~~-t and lbe bo1drives ~lb the AppalachJ.._. Have 1et tocentioo tbe turkey ddv.es 1n 'Ml$aouri. Tlaere. in the 1!901, numerous f•mWes pooled their birda and drove them overland to market. Incredibly 1tQpid, tw'keys. Nonetheless, It was tbey wbo decided on each nlebt's oampalt.e. When the turke)'t picked out a place to roost. that wu it. Tbe'tnany boys who herded them built their campftra on tbe spot and ate their rations .. »1 iafonnant H)'s those young fellows prayed every aftemoon that the turkeys would roos 1n a town with a tavern. Ma.Uy, they clld.a't. . From one study of medical rtt0rds na· tionwide, the researchers have turned up what tlte1 believe to be the 10 bealUt.iest cities in tbe United States: 1. Honolulu, Hawall, 2. Eugene, .. Ore. 3. San Francisco, Calif. 4. St. Cloud. llinn. 5, Austin, Texas. 8. La Junta. Colo. 7. Uf:ica, N. Y. 8. Kanab. Utah. 9. Ketchikan, Aluka. 10. Middletown, Conn. One out of three holders of baiik card.a pays off the entire balance every month. Tbe other two out of three re- volve an averaJe outstand· Ing balance of about $350. Our C hief Prognosticator says you'll be able to buy TV shows like phono1rapb records soon. The turntable hookups will cost $300 and more . The disks themselves, as much as $18 aplec·e. PEANUTS Q. "Doesn't President Jimmy Carter owe hia financial success in some degree to the peanut research of George Washington Carver? Dido 't Carver invent peanut butter?" A. Carver figured out more than 300 mes for the peanut, but1le wasn't the flnlt to come up with peanut butter. ID 1890, a St. Louis doc- tor, whose name escapes me, made what he called peanut paste. • Q. "Can you name a more brutal and cruel sport than dog flght1nt?" A. Probably not. But one candidate con- test comes to mind. In some places in Mexico and Spain, roosters• are buried up to their necks In packed earth. Their heads are greased. Then the sPortsmen, riding their horses swiftly past, try to lean down far enough t-8 grab at the exposed beads so as to pull the buried birdsloosewithout those riders themselves becoming unseated. RAINBOWS Any airplane pilot will tell you that a rain- bow has no end simply because it's completely circular. On the rround, you and I dodn't usually see the entire rainbow ring beyond the horizon. It's plainly visible at higher altitudes, though. There are more caaUea in Spain -about 2,500 -thar. lo all the rest ol Europe com· bined Hawaii is now said to be the state wherein people on the average live the loogest. Just 71.-8 years, t.o be apedflc. f Addras mml to l... M. BoJid, P. 0 . Bos JJIO, co.co Jina nas. Money Sought For Buy • 87 llllA.aY KA YE -. Ca~ Cuts .~eil ~ Hannaford Rita Government 'Waate' B1 O.C. ll1JSTING8 Of .......... Mlllt ' ... ~V"'LOT .4JJ ~· Of .. Deity Nltlutf UC lnine otflclall are lr)'inl to tlnd the money t.o buy the Irvine Town Center building across the stnet from the cam· Rep. Mm Hannaford <D·Looa Beach, Western Oran1e Count.)'> bu in· troduced lealalaUon that would eliminate llmoualo• service for moat federal officials. He n.ys m«e than Sl.3 Gruel Ave., Santa ADa. mUUon wu spent last Tbe mHt1n1 l• de- year on 152 elevator •lined to acqualntlcbool operators who .. man" board candldatu with f u 11 y a u to m a t e d department aervlcet and Proudlv Annotnm The n..-.:-of tta Nlw elevaton on Capitol Hill. U~e cballen1es factna ~'""' Hannatorct c1a1ma b1a proapective ecboo1 board RIST AURAMT Ir PUB complaints to the Houae members. ~ IM pus. "Only those persons who require a Private car for security or unefl•DC)' reasons would be permitted to use one:• aald Han-natont. tee bave re$ulted In the MAaY SCllMITZ wW ~LA AdmlnlstratSoo Commit· • • • " e HI~ diemlssal of 82 elevator talk t.o the Balboa jlay ...,. ... , rt 41119111• · ....... ~ UCI Vice Chancellor ·L.E . Cox said Monday the Irvine Company bas offered to sell the 40,000 equare foot bulldtn1. plus alx acres of aur· rounding land, for •1.4 operators, thereby HV· Republican Women. OPIM1DA'llA~7AM .. , .. ,,, ln1SM0,30S. F~erated, Feb. 9'on the ••70 _., ... -... y-........ "But I don't beUeve E4ual Rlghd' Amend· ._ _____ , _w_ow:_._, _____ -... __ ~ ___ _. mUlioo. Office-..a' U the univenity buys , & o tbe building, it would tble la enough. wben ·men&. . nearly $7115.000 wW be Tbe meetlDI aeu \ID· apeat ca the remalDJ.q der way at 11 a.m. at tbe employw, moetofwbom Jrvloe Co11t Country are DOt needed," said Club in Newport Beach.. Hamlatont. Por reservaUoa.s, call • • • J ackle Lotka, MCM093. &EP • .JESRY Pat-or DtwKazen.~. pr0bably move various n_ __ .d •Wdent servic• and the c ~· ent Ulllventty extension of· terson CO.Santa Ana)~~~~-------------;.....;------~....:..----.;._--....:.....;;_...,.. __________ _ flcetotbeslte. Cb However, UCI doesn't 08e0 bu called the ouster of Rep. Robert Sikes (D· . norida) .. chairman ol have the money rl1bt now. The only potential source is money coming from tbe slate for the sale ol university land taken by another state agency for the new MacArthur Boulevard and the Corona del Mar Freeway. Retired Marine Lt. the Appropiationa SUb- Col. Cart A. Writer has committee oo MWtary been elected prealdeot ol ConltrucUon, ••a con- Uae Oraoge CoQ.nty Unuation of tbe lmPor· ebapt.er ol tbe Retired tant reforms beeun in Officers Aasociation. • the last Congress." The local cbaptM-also Patterson joined bis elected Col. Francia J . fellow Democrat& in Briscoe of Huntington stripping Sikes of bls Beach, first vice presi· powerful chairmanship. . THE UNIVERSITY'S dent; U. Col. Theodore * * * ·30 acres near University R. MacConneU of Hunt· THE OllANGE CoUnty Drive were condemned ington Beach, second Department of Educa- by the state Highway vice president; Cmdr. lion is sponsoring a Commission. but the Ivan W. Sturgis of general meeting for the value of the land has not New Port Be a c b. county's258school board yet beendeter'mlned by a secretary,~ Maj. Vin-canclldatea at 7:30 p.m . court. cent J . Smith of Santa Wednesday at depart- ... -.WU.MES. Jll fll.LOISc Black Pine. Tam• J\lnlpere. Nendlne, Abella, Olean~. Mor.-lrta, 8nd meny ll'IOre. 69!.t . ................ S.D. Wllolesale Growms I I 6Z2 WA.,_ AYI. FOUMT AIM V ALLIY PMOHI 146-3429 The building previous-Ana, u treasurer. ment offices, 1300 S . ly served as the Irviner-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------.::.==::==:::~ City Hall, but city workers vacated lhe structure in December and moved to the new In· terim Civic Center on Jamboree Boulevard. The building ls only partly occupied now, wilb a bookstore, J>OSt of· fice, Bank of America, Irvine Ranch Water Dis· trict and smaller stores and offices remalnJng in the structure. COX SAID THE purchase is being sought by UCI Officials because things are getting "pret· ty cramped" on campus, with no sign of ex- pansion. A new student services center now lS being built on campua, but there will still be a shortage, Cox said. ·'The bull dine would provide a needed link from the university . to the town acron the atre.et," Cox com . mented. The entire area across the :street ls being planned by the Irvine Company as the new University Town Cent.er development. SA VE 20% to 22%'! Women's Separates , :-:. 699 Pan ta :,~ fi33 Shirts • Ponti ttytecl wilt. ttttched CNOM mock tt.,.. front, half-IMlt. r.ly.tter knit, aUCH't9d colon. 32.38. • Shirts classic tailored styling. Acetate and nylon. Prints. 4o.44. Use Sean Revofving Charge ....................... .....-..... ...................... .----........... ..-.......~ Officials ,---=:'.l~~~!l&'Si~~~~{i!ir;jjg?:r,;;;;;;~;r:~-=::l: Deaths Elsewhere Lrm.E ROCK, Ark. (AP> -Edward L. Wrtak Sr., 73, presktenl ol the American Bar Al· IOClatlon durlnl 1970 and 1'71, collapsed and died at bl.I omce Tuesday. BOSTON (AP > - Edward AIMrt Tltom· ·~· 58. a theater actor, dlr•ctar and teacher wbo worked often wilh ac- tress Sarah Cburchlll, died Tuesday at lbe IMITNS' WOITUAH 927 Main St Huntington Seacn 536-e~Q ,_PAMtLY CCKOMtAL PUNlllAI. HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 'AClllC YllW MIMOe&AL,411 Cemetery MorttJlfY Chapel 3500 Peolfic View Onve Newport, CalUorn1a 944·2700 Sidney Farber Cancer Research ffmpttal. ADDIS ABABA . Ethiopia (AP> -Prin- ces a EJtl•Jelnle Asafa WoHea, Jailed 1rand· daughter ol the late Em- perpr Haile 54!la11ie, died lD the Add.l5 Ababa police hospital Monday, Radio Etbiopia an· nounced . Sbe. was believed to be in ber 40s. PARIS <A P > - Norw..Sen Amb,usador Kdurcl Hambro, 65, pre· sldent of the United Na- tions General Assembly in uno-n. clled Tuesday at the embassy residen- cy aftet: a heart attack. .. For C!asalned Ad ACl'JON ean • Dail1 PUot AD-VISO" MZ-1111 Cleared In Probe Federal bealtb authortUea bave cleared Orange County officials ol alletations that they mhuHd a $150,000 paramedic trainin1 rrant. accordlna to a let- t.er received this week. The lt'ant baa been uaed to train fire depart· ment paramedics at UCI lledlcal Center. then Orange County Medical Center from October 1974 through Sept.ember 1975. But in a letter signed by Dr. Sheridan Weins· teln, relion.al director of the federal Depart.m.,nt of Health, Education and Welfare <HEW>, charges of mi.sapproprlatlon of funds and v1olaUon of civil rl1bts through racial and sexual dis· crlminatlon were dis· missed • Wayne Schroeder, ad· mlnlstrator of Santa Aoa·Tustln Community Hoapltal made the cbar1e1 l11t October when b.11 hospital was competing with UCt M~icaJ Center for the county's paramedic t;ra~ cootract. , , Rel(ular92.99Pantllne SAVE 20"J 2 38 Nylon and spandex. White. In tmoll, medium and forge. $1.19 XXt Pantllner .............. $2. 99 •t.47 Fall·Fl ... re Bra SAVE 20,J I'" Bpen'aPark Oranite , 8150 Lo~ An. Phone: 121.4400 .. .. 2100 N. Tustin~"•· ,.,..,.! 637-2100 . ... .. .. r I · Wbale-watchlac toara, 1Dllltal'J' dtnematJGQS and u-lliba~ ~t«I ... Wta .S 1ectwW wDl l$e lliild dviDI tbe DaM PolDt llatbOr'• PeaUval "ot Wllatea rubalbC ~~Feb.2Tatthe ~.., .il·)be scbedUJe d lfc:.i~!.·.Kari.Da Ima -Da. aAYMONd J(. Gilmore, an autbority on the C'11forDla &ray wbale, wlllapeak atJ:IOp.m. Feb. 13. • -Bobln Valentl.c. mmne "PUMA" LEATHER SPORTS & CASUAL All AROUND SHOE Fobulous shoes ot o· great price. Whlteleotherwltti block trim. Suede toe . .t-12. • . ----... . .-. ..,.._ - I ' &el9*e instructor, Saddleback _ -Kenneth Raymond, Na~ a.m. Feb.'U . Feb.19. PoJntHarbcll', .. 2:1Dp.m.J'eb. 21. Colle1e, "Tbe Wide World ot JI arlne FllberlH Service. -Bob llc>DM, Cabrtllo Marine -J lm Hollywood, 1lobe . KWtar7 exlalbiUIU lncJlide a Wbale1°10:30 .. m.Saturda.Y. "Oeean Releardl," 11 a.m. and Jluaeum: .\merlcan Cetacean clrcumnavteator, .. An Around Navy ~ belleopter'. drop -Mart Bowet marine 1clence l :aGp.m. Feb. ll. Soeletr ~. "Whallna and ,· the World Cruiae'to' Dua J>Olnt and recovery at oocm ~ 1D lped•ltst. ·~tbe'Cbanael -·Terry Sudarth, marine ~atkG of Whales," 2:30 Harbcr .. 10:30a.m,Feb:21. theW..tBuln. 1 lllaada: The Calllornla Nobocb' btolo&bt. ••Life lP Dana NDt p.m4f"eb,1J. -Roel Rucbte, paldtoloey Cout Guard Catter = ltnowa"2:30p.m.s.turd-.,. · Tideprda,"a:aop.m. Feh.lL • -Tom Miller, author, ·~ consultant, ••Tales Told by tours are Saturdq ud World Cl, U.. California Gray , Mariile Fossils:' 2:30 p.m. Feb. and Feb. 12-U. • -llAJUB 1fBITB mUlne -TOii Ll".SUa. IOOloa lft. Whale" with lbowbll ol ••After -. A patriotic ~paput by tlao •clence instructor, S'Watel'y .atnaetor Sad~leback Coliete. the While'' film lO:lO a.m. and 1r· -Fred Roberta, pboto· Marine Corpe be liven .... Weirdos ~ ·Blserre Marine ''Getting to Know 0Ur Marine l :IOp.m.Feb.D,20an421.. aph~ver-eqtneer, "AD Un· 21, 2 p.m. at Embarcadero Animals of. tbe World.'' 10:30 Blnll,0 10:aoa.m.Feb.U. • derwater Tour of $outbern Marina. a.m.&mday. -Richard Burse, marine -aoaBaT SPIVACK, Callfomta,"lO:SOa.m. Peb.27. Dana Point Jlatbor .. locattd -Hayden Wllllama, ••11artae . bla!Olllt and abale:iae special.lat. marJno bloloalst-underwater .... DR. JO D N CA 8 E Y, halfway between Loi Anaeles ••mmals in History, Folklon le CalllCll'Dla· DePartment. df F1sh pboto1raph~r, "Who Eats Fullertoa College president, MSI and San Dleaoat tbe In~ Mythology," 2:30 p.m. Sunday ·• anclGame .. WhytbeBan?Wbere Whom? A deep look into the Qalrman, ''Tbe Future of the of the San Dteeo rr.ew., aDcl Web.6ddFeb.20. ·• bave tbe Abalone Gone.'' 10:30 Kart.De Food CbaiD" 2:30 p.m. Marine Studies Institute at Dana PaclflcCoutHlabway. . .· 8'' NO Bl LITT lOOOWAn DRYER AND ITTLER . A ~ul gift f0t valentine·. 0oy1 u.t. APPRovEo I ,10 mLE). REG. 1.19 EA. Top designs to pert\ upyowcott .. breok. 7 -~ :;. ~ g 7 \! ~ ~ ~ .. .. ~1s1¢8anana ~ ~ FINE LINE ~~ ~ BIC PENS . ~ Popular black or t ,. ~lue i~h Wf1i• •l' 11ng !*!•· Sov)\gs! ~ CHARA OE I COLORING BOOKS · 6 Million$ Man, Stor Trek, Peonuts. & many ~•I Buy! CALIF. MADE MEN'S CASUAL KNIT SHIRTS 50% cotton-50% poly ltnft short slHYe shirt• in ouotted ho!l°dsome stripes &colors. UTH ,. 2··· llQUOI 10 OUNCE )29 JOOTABLm 93c 1¥2 POUND DEPT .... NOXZEMA BA YER ASPIRIN VALUE CANNED HAM SllNCIEAM lllcl.10tofflilW. CHEF IOY Al DEE 5tc 30 OUNCI SIZE SPAGHETTI SAUCE • 411 WHITlllllG COMPUX"* SOAP3%·0Z. IOC JOIWllDEI IOOY lXllCISll fotf to.,... ""'"°""' QUART 4:'' IEG.59c 73$ DUNCAN SIMCLAll PE•fZOll QUART SCOTCH WHISKY . 1 OW-40 MOTOR Oil light with o wonderlul totte. All purpo .. mulll·vlscoslty. \ / . ... 24TQU1S 1°' 3 OUNCE SIZE Dlll'AN RIGID ENT DKDNGBTANT FOR DENTURES . 1% OZ. TUBE 88! 16 OZ. REVLON BEN GAY RUB FLEX SHAMPOO Qekeffltt. NORMAL & 911 Y or Greueltu. CONCENTIAnD SIMllAC NIVIA LIQUID IAIY FOIMUAl .. CIUM LOTION l iqvld. ltegular or With Iron. For the proltctlon of th.'"'"· MJlCllUM'S AJfTI.PllSPIUNf I at. llqutd. 134· 1~~ ~· I . '· .. ,, -B1 IAVRBNE KEYS 0. .. 0Mly..u.ttw H The action didn't atop as the tun 1C*Dded and Corona ctel Mar W1h'• &-'1 center Alex Black and / La1una.,Jleacb'1 Jeff Greeoou1tr , attem~ to' aetUe a personal feud. .. Only 22 1eco'hd1 earlier La1uoa'a Bill Gompf sank a rree throw and the Artlats defea\ed the host Sea Kings, 41·39, in South · Coast Leaiue basketball Tues- day night. There appeared to be bad blood ... between tbe two player s all even- ing and Black took the first punch after the gun. Laguna coach Ed Burlingham came charging onto the noor to separate the two. For a · moment it looked u though mpre hostilities bad been prevented, but then Greenough retaliated by sho\/Uig Black. The stands emptied onto lb~ floor and fans and players surged forward. In the confusion one of the Corona song leaders was injured, as but later left the cym under ber own power. Coaches and officials were finally able to restore order. Corona bead coach Jack Er- rion felt the frustraUons of t.be tense and very physical gatne were resJ)onsible for the out- break. "To be honest, I did not see what started the whole thing," says Errion. ''I looked up at the clock as the gun went off, and then I saw everyone running around. There were people Sports in Brief . Olynipics Denver Tabs Miller; 'IV Price: Branning Gets 12 $80-MiHion DENVER -Robert ''Red '' Muter, the man in charge of the record-setting New England .Patriots offense the past four years, waa selected head coach of tbe Denver Broncos Tuesday. Miller succeeds John Ralston who resigned Monday, "We are delighted to land a man ol Red Miller's ability to lead our football team." said 'Broncos general manager Fred Gehrke. "His credentials as an offeruive football coach are out- standing, and we feel he is the strong type of coach who can put together a championship pro- gram." Braaal119 Sparlcln SOUTH BEND, Ind.-Rich Bribnlng, tt)e Jormer Marina High of Huntington Beach star, hit 12 Points ln leading the Notre Dame Fighting Irish past visiting Dayton. 97-64, Tuesday night in college basketball. · Bruce Flowers scored 20 points for the hot shooting Irish who sank 2S ol 38 from the floor in the first half and conneeted on all 10 free throw attempts. Notre Dame is now 11-5 after winning the last three in a row. Stadl ... Fire DETROIT -The city ars'on squad today planned to in- vestigate the cause of a two- a la rm fire th at virtua lly destroyed the press box at Tiger Stadium. The blue Tuesday night also ruiqed' some of the auxiliary press level, which is occasionally used for spectators. A Detroit fire official said there was no suspicion 'bf arson, but an investigation would be Legin Cast conducted to determine the cause of the blaze. • The stadium. parts or which have been standing since 1912, is the home of baseball's Detroit Tigers. Both the' t eam and stadium are owned by Johfl Fetzer. a millionaire broadcast executive. Ncutiue Bre~zes RICHMOND , Va . lli e Nastase served six aces to trounce Cliff Drysdale. 6·2, 6-3. in the opening round Tuesday or the , Richmond tennis classic In other matches. Manuej Orantes stopped Jan Kodes. 6-4. 6-3; Tom Okker beat Onny Parun, 6-3. 6-2; and Tony Roche beat Wotjek Fibak, ~·l, 4-6, 6-4. Somet• in WTT NEW YORK -A six-member Soviet tennis team is expected to join World Team Tennis and play a full schedule lhjs s~ason. The Soviet team will take over the franchise of the Philadelphia Keystones and will play a full 44-game schedule. Since all Sov- iet athletes are classified as a mateurs, the Soviet Tennis Federation would collect approx- im ately ~!000. LeBaron Picked ATLANTA -Eddie LeBaron, th e form er mi g ht y mite quarterback of the Washington R~ds\<ins. was selected general . manager of the Atlanta Falcons Tuesday and immediat e ly pledged to bring this v1ctory- starved city a winner. "My prime aim in Life from this stage on i's to get an excitin_g- and winning football team." said LeBaron. Goodrich Future In NBA Uncertain LOS ANGELES CAP) -Most new fathers of twin girls would . normally be expected to do some walldnl wfth lbe tnlants at 3 a.m. feedlnp, but Gail Goodrich has a perfect excuse: hls right leg is eocued in a cast. The New Orleans Jan guard witb the three-year, $600,000 con- tract can't walk. ·m s leg is. propped up these days on .• blool .q Goodrich waits fon tlme.i.-te11 him if he'll be able to -play basketball .. ain. Goodrich , wb'ose twin I dauabten were born a lf'lonth . I aco,Jsasn',t played a game since I. Jan.a. But this wal~g and wonder-tne. following corrective surgery on his Achilles tendon, Is a lot better than the way It was last season and the early part of this .. Tbe 8-foot-l former UCLA tuard was in agony -from the root and f\'om the knowledge that age •Ifs taking Its toU. YeU'I and years of running, jumplQI, outtin& and ltretclllng bad caused the tendon to -become weaty, a natW'al oc· c:UJ'Nllfffor 11uany aUUetes. ••1 mew I wouldn't play agatn JI I ruptund It," said Goodrich, now 33. "And that, combined wttb not plQing as much u I'd like, wal tough mentally. Very tou1h. • 0 1 atarted lblnktni, •Maybe J'm not the player l used to be.' Jt •u so difreJ'ent, wondering whether I 1tlU had it. I mean, J dldn 't ~ I could l<>&e Jt ill in .m montbl, but after a .,bile I dldA't bow •hat to think. GAIL GOODRICH nearly 20 pet contest. He was the third guard behind Pete Maravicb and either Freddie Boyd or 1lm Mc Elroy. Now the recuperation is on. For the time being, it's a matter of sitting with Ute leg up, im- mobl\e, while G.eodrich gets his mind bacJc on basketball. "I don't accept def'eat very well," be l'ays with a determined at- titude. Two years remain 6n Gall's contract with New Orleans, a contract be signed after he, and the Loa Angel_es Lakera were un- ablt' to agree on terms of a con• tract. · MOSCOW <AP> -The Na- tion a l Broadcastin g Co., culmlnatlng lengthy negotiations which went down to the final hours, bas won tbe United States television rights for the 1980 Sum mer Olympics. The network purchased the rights for an estimated $80 mllJion -a tigure which includes $35 million for the rights and the rest for lechhical facilities. The contract was signed Tues- day and approved by the lntema- tion<Jl Olympic Committee. "We are delighted to have been s uccessful in arranging to bring to Americari audiences the 1980 Olympics in Moscow and the American participation In this in- ternational event of the first magnitude." said NBC president Herb Schlosser in a statement is- sued in New York. "NBC will mount a production -effort which in term·s of people, facilities and air time will reflect this importance to tbe viewing public." The awarding of the rights c Ii m axed lengthy negolit!io11s which, at one point, involved fou'?' . entries -(he three ma!Ol' . networks and the Satra Corp. · CBS dropped out of the bidding' last week, saying the venture ap- peared risky. And Satra, a New York-based international trading company, apparently was ex· eluded by the IOC. JOC financial secretary Monique Berlioux, who was present for the signing, said the Committee "thought it was better to have a real television organization.·· Satra, in a statement issued in Ne w York, by co mpany chairman Ara Oztelbel, said it had signed a "letter of intent" with the Russians and threatened legal action against NBC and its parent organizaUon, RCA. if the agreement went through. After NBC officially signed the con- tract. Satra officials said their lawyers planned to take the network to court a"d seek damages. · • NBC aMoUnoed It had won the rights Sunday night, but an ABC delegation, headed by Roone Arledge, president of ABC Sports. kept up negotiations through Tuesday. When NBC finally had signed a binding agreement with the Russians, Arledge said: "It is an awesome undertaking, and I wish them the best of luck." In New York. ABC sports pre- sident Frederick Pierce issued a statement saying t hat the network's negotiators went to Moscow with a competitive bid to seek clarificaiton or Soviet inten· lions and were told upon arrival that an agreement already bad been reached with ~ac. "We dee.,ly regret Uiat tbe American viewing public will be deprived of the experience and expertise gained by ABC Spotts in televising six of the last seven games." Yoder Selected North Grid Coaeh Pete Yoder, coach of Placen· tla 's Esperanza Hl1h and a former coach at Pasadena'• Blair High, ualstant at USC and bead coae!h of Cal State (Fullerton), has beea selected to plde the North in the 18th Oran1e County All-stufootball1ame. • The ti.ff, tentatively scheduled for Aug. 6, will be at Orange Cout College. Guiding the Soutb team will be Blll Workman of HunUngton Beach 'f ll'.diaonH11h. be North Juda the1erie1, l3_.. . pusbiq and 1bovin1' and others restrainlna." BurllnsAAm, on ure other band did tee wbat happened and wu right ln the th1ck ol It. "I aaw Black hit Jeff ud then r ru1bed out and grabbed Black," says Burllneham. "Black was frustrated, but lt'a too bad the in· cldent had to mar ~urt'ictory," And it •as quite atvlctory for the Artiats as they snapped Corona's 22-game· leigue wtn streak with a slow deliberate type of eame. Wtdnetdey, F!b!u!ty t , 1911 The Sea Kings, ranked No. l in tbe ClF 3-A poll, trailed 39-31 wttb 3:391ett to play. Corona closed the gap to 39-31' on three trips to the charity stripe in less than a minute, and then Black tied it at 39 willi 5' secondJtoplay .• The Sea Kings were without the services of forward Jack Tuz who fouled out early in the f ourlh quarter. Laguna's Phil McManus put the Artists out front, 40-39, on a critical free throw with 44 • AP ..,_te • seconds left In tbe 1ame. With 8-1 recorda CorQna &nd San Clemente are Ued for tbt · South Coast lead. ~-1Hcll (411 .... .. . •tc"' I s i , 1J H•uo11t 1002 G~ l I 4 t M~M-11111 1 J l S ()llMpf I I a 3 Al'lderton • 2 4 10 Totlll 1S 11 o 41 .. l. llflC.-•MM ....... T111 l1P1>1llo lltKk Akl11 Ralt1t ICllllan KMlllar 1 I S I o o a • 1 I . Uf 4 2 2 1& 0 0 J 0 o • 2 a Total• ken-., o..erten I 0 I t . IJ 11 •• Jt laoune e.ac11 t 11 • 12~ CorQflteltlMv t I I 1~ I Takers Ro~ll .To 136~1 6 ·' Trilllllph .. •INGLEWOOD <AP> -"It'~ tough to get up for the ·gam~ every niaht," says Los Angele$ coach Jerry Wes\, bUl.his Lakert _ seem to have little trOubteTef: ting up for games at home. ~ The Lakers took their 20t~ straight home court victory Tuesday night wit'1 a 136-116 Na· tional Basketball Associalioq. triumph over the Milwaukee Bucka. The victory moves the Lakers bacJt into first place in the Pacific Division by six percen, tage points ovel'the \die Portlana Trail Blazers, . 673 to .667. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar an4.. Kermit Wash\ngton led a thiro q4J.rter surge in which \he Lakers outscored Milwaukee 33·22. Abdul-Jabbar had 12 points and Washington 10 during that period. For the game, Abdul· Jabbar scored 34 and W ashiogton 18 as both split 26 re- bounds to give the' Lakers a season-high 136 points. Tuesday night's game was the Lakers' final home appearance fo r 10 days. They now begin a !our.game trip Friday at Boston. .. This is a very difficult part of ~he season playing 49 games and preparing yourself for the stretch drive,"West said. - "Thjs Is the best game that Kermit has played in some. time," he noted. Mll.WAUKel 11UI -D•nclrld;e )(), Meve<s 1. Nater 11. 1111<-"<lr 8. Carter 19. Wlncbof'\ 1e Brld-aemw. 2, RIHlanl 4, Lloyd I, Garrett 9. Toi•", ns \.OIANG&Las ,,,., -Ford4, RuHell 11.At .. ,, J allll•r 'M, Alltn lb, C .... 11411 3, WHlltnQtofi '" TllU(n 14, KWM< 10. AberMllly 11. N•urrw ... ~ L•mar 2, Roc.ns 2 To1•1\ ll6 .. Mii"'..,_" 31 11 2l 3' -tlS Los A1191tlft 3S )() 3'l ~ -\16 TCIUI louts Mllw..,_" 21, Los A~ 10 DAVE MEYERS (LEFT), KAREEM ABDUL.JABBAR BATTLE. Tt<llftlctt -MllW..,kff CO«ll Hel\Oll, Mltw..,•ee Cff(ll-Oalldrld9e A-tl.•O Irvine Wins at Buzzer Christ's Slwt Gives VCI 54-52 Victory By CRAIG SHEFF OllMOalty Pl lot St.ff Kirk Christ hit a desperation 14-foot tallaway jumper at the final buzier, giving UC Irvine a 54·52 college basketball victory over visiti.Jlg Chico State Tuesday night . Christ, a 6-6 junior transfer from Mt. San Antonio College, had grabbed a rebound at the baseline after teammate Scott Jenkins' shot with five seconds to gohadbouncedoffthe rim. The winning shot, Christ's only bucket of the game. hit the rim and bounced in after time had ex- pired. The sbob climaxed a weird game in which coach Tim nri 's Anteaters appeared like they would mal<e It a rout in the early going. Irvine, abooting well, r olled toa 21·9 lead and had a 33· 17 edge with four minutes len ln the opening half. But Chico scored the last nine points before intermission, seven of them l;>yTlm Fruwirth, to slice the margin to 33-26. And with the Anteat~rs lee cold after the break, Chico m aint,ined ita momentum, finally pustn1 Irvine (40-39> with 11 minutes to go. ~ UCI hit only three or ill flnt 16" shota in the second half and atone Juncture went 5~ minutes withoutapolnt. The Wildcats pumped their lud to 46-43 with six min"t" left. but. tbree·point play b7 freshman Brad Canon a minute later tied it and aot the Anteaters bacJc In theeame. The-teams traded basketa the r~at of the way witb Jenkins tying It for the final time at 52 on a 16- foot. baseline jumper with 1:11 to co. • Chico turned it over 25 seconds J a ter. setting up Christ 's dramatic shot. UCJ, which hit 14 of 27 first half s hots, finished with a 44.4 percen- tage from the field (24 of 54). Chico canned 21 of 45 for 46. 7 j>er· cent. The victory ran Irvine's record to 9-10 and kept its hopes alive for an NCAA playoff berth. The Anteaters travel to cold Omaha, Nebraska Thursday for a game against talented Creighton (15-3). The low temperature iJ\ Omaha Tuesday night was fiv~ degrees below zero. UCln'IMU41 ,, ft pl ll) ,, It pl "' o o ' o canon 1 l o 7 • 0 1 18 Cllr I st 1 7 0 4 l 0 ' 6 H•lr l I 2 S 6 0 l.,2 Total\ • 74 6 14 SO 1 0 3 , tttlme: UC ln'IM,33·26. ·Bayi vs Walker? Dream Match May Come Qff LOS ANGELBS .CAP) -Steve Williams makes his 1977 debut and there is a possibility of John Walker meeting Filbert Bayi in the mile at Friday night's Times Indoor Games track meet. Williama, one of the nation's top sprinters, failed to make the 1976 U.S. Olympic team when struck by injuries. But with Wllllams entered for this meet, oreanizen are havine a pro- blem: who will run and who will not. ScheduJed tq run in the 60·yard dash are ;IDon Quarrlt, the wotld'a top sprinter last year; Hasley Crawford, the Olympic JOO.meter gold medal wlnneP; st.eve IUCldlck, unbeaten in ah!; raCts Ujls ·)'ear: flashy Rouaton McTur, and James Gilkes of Guyena, who was prevented from running in the Olympics by a black African nation boycott. Tbat'ls six top sprinters, and there are only five lanes. "U YoU have any suagestions on what we do about this, Jet me know," 1atd meetdirectorWUl Kern. pies, where Wal!{er easily' won the 1,500-meter gold medal .-ih Bayi 's absence. , Now, however , Kem has read reports that the boycptt by Tanzania is over. SO Ile bas asked the Amateur Athletic Union "to tal<e the matter up, and they have contacted the Supreme Council for Sport Iq Alrlca," said Kern. · "Our meet was on Bayi's ort11nal schedule for his tour ot the United States, so we're hop~ul." t. SoCaI Blasis Foe, 85-47 Freddie Glatter came up with.a 28-point acotlM effort Tueld'ay nlcbt to lead the Soutbetb CaJlfomia Collea• Van1uards to an easy BS-C7 rout 'of Cal State <Domtneue& Hilla) oo the wtn.- ner'a floor. . . .. Now I 1ue11 I wa1 1ub- eon1.clou1ly boldlna back, bec:aUM ol the fear. It WU very hustr•Unl·"· TM natural wear an4 tear of Est&iaeia, ·El MoRena Clash Kem, meanwhile, wa1 buay \rytna to arran1e a meetJne between Walker, the world mlle record holder, and Bayl, the former record holder . The pro- blem for the past year bas been that 11me black African dls· enchantment with Walker11 native country, New Zealand. Glutei' hit nine of 15 fronf tJJ.t rleld and 10 ot 11 from the ffff 1 throw line. Randy Adamt colleet. ed 12 rebc>Qnda and Davld BUTOn, with 18 Polnta '° hia credit, aJat bad t~ auleta. basketball made the inJury »n- tnatable without 1ur1ery, 10 · laat Frida., Pr. l'r•nk J6bt operated Ad deelaNd. the aur• · 1•1')'·~•; IUCO•H •. Be aald Goodrleb wW bi ready to Dlu th .tm-'78 bUtttl>all IHMll (f ... NaoVll'J' .. -~ to jWI. • Ooodricb wou:nct u_p playtn1 ODlf 2T PDMI for the Jua tbll 1ur, ad 11111 te0f1nc aver.,. Of 12.e potnt1 per P•• waa -. • bit under ·bll carev mark ol The league·leadlng Estancia Hilb Eaites of Costa Meea will be aeeklna revenge whim they boat the aureinf El Modena Van;uardl of Oranie In a pivotal Cenlur)' Leaaue buketbaU Ult at 7t~. Estancia ls e.2 in circuit play, wblle El Modena ii tltd for aecoad Wttb a 5-3 mark. But the first time these two teams pJayed, El Modena ~ 1 41·38 declslon 11 6·8 Junior . cent~ Steve Trumbo scored JO polnta and &-3 •~or forward J1m • ~apiro~edW ''TrmnbO 1i:ft®ably the belt indlvldiiM pla)ltr'~bl tbe leape," uys &atancla •oacb Dave CarUM. , •• ll10Ql.b both lnalde and ouUlde. We~ aoln1 to bue to atop him Uid hOld him to 10-15 polnll." _ Althou&h their record ll 11·1, the Vancuanta have won three atrallbt and are comln1 Ott a 50-47 win over TulUft, the same ' team U..tfell 59-56 to Estancia. · The 1t1,ies, meanwhile, ~ iiPiit by Salta An1'1 FooUllll, ~ bul ha" a 1A·5 overall re· e«d. . Eatancl• a1aln fl1ure1 to emp)of .ttf .. 1:2-2 Jont defense. Ahd· oa QfteMe, the !all" rei, oa ~10 ;suard •Ray Or1lll, a playmaet •ho ta averaaln• us.1 pOlnti per l•m•. Pete NeumaM, a t-$ for,r&rd, 11 acorlni lJ.1.. pOinll pttOutJIJ.f. A year ato, Tanaanla, 8ayl'1 country, beaan a boycott of New Zealand becau1u~ ll hAd re- coanlztd -athleUcally -South Af rlca. That boycott abort· circuited many aebeduled con· frontationt betwffn the top two mlddle-d.latance runners ln the world, includln,c one at the Ob'm- The non·conference vt~ we.a the filth win in 11Jc aamee for coae!h Paul Peak'J Vanpatdl1 who tMk to Aiusa·PacltlCl Tbun- day DtghL . ....... Otatt•t 1 • a t terr111 t • ' t AMnll t J 4 t MCKi... t • a 8 hr9tl'Mft • t t tt • MttY"I• I .e ' -Mel t!!!.._ t 1 1 I T"'-!t autt• Htl.-: ICC.""ti. • Area Cage Results ,.._YA ... TY ..... _ ........ ,... .._,.... fl ClelTeYIW ..... "' ,, (4)1..H ""9 WI C ftlwtafW ..._lwt G OIOl!la -· 1-1 «ti 0 1141 Wllmt GI _..,. .,.., ....._ '· •Tr ....... ..._ .. ........ :~~-................ -...~ ,, C.10.- ........ fll ,, (\l)Jef'w• ,,.. C_, C c•I A..,_ ..... 011 0 C.I TlwefMfl OIMll 1u1 o cm et111,. ... _... ... : ........... Ulll: II '. •-t. ....-..: ""*'· ....... .....,..,.. ,, 11111fw .... WI fl ........ c .__di G ..... !JI G UI~ •~: ~'*-K._.Mtt\ L OMI: _._W ..... L ,......,.:C..•tt.. ' a ,_. C•I Oii Miieir Oel T-141 II' lttlkltvlll ...... C\I II' !IOl-leu-s f ..... (11 C Cl)ISf>a""°n CM• Ill G (II ~el1fwt ....... lt?I G 161 CllOll MO--. ... :SI_.._ ...ittlrM·M0.~1'- ~ ............ (.ltallMa-... rt¥MW " m...., C-M .... "' II' W Wade !Stu c 11010.-V 1191 0 ISl$.Mull ..... ,.. f71 0 12> a. MullloM • Ml..._ Yle+a _..,. _... l(a11 2. ~· •• UMlr '· ~ o...-t• \COf'• li.rJ~l~':"'J!ll;; !Ail lllM: 8abr •. H-fl'IOncl •. Ow•Ut,Ol\'91.~llltl. H.ittifN: •o.-q, 1 .. IJ tof'MOMOtt• "--.... , .. , <•lc.M .-~ Cil ,, (fl Sllollll\ ........,CAI F (IOINewl ,,.,.. (ti c 171 J- ....... 1161._ G CS> McCorkoll ..,_, .. ,., G cm Ount•r Lo..-9Mch ICOl'lftl lllO: Cow•ll 1. CdM-+4eH •• " ......... ,~,,_25, C::..MIM C4fl '41) ec T-.J ~m fl m•u111 "-'° " W~• ~i.tf (191 C C•IHoltM\ OeM••< cm ~ m Mcfladd9ft ....... Ill 1111 G Ill H"' .,_ .... .,. .......... , . . Halftl-· ll'T.14-t2 .. Pmll <•> 011 MMw °"' 1__.., <ti II' IO KllW• ._._., " m~r f'wMM Cttl C 1111 8'own • ._...._..(I) G UI '*'-"., ...... 121 G llPIS..• Otlty"91 .......... l'Wtltc*fY~ MO_.,.. WIK Hiii 6. Morrow 6. .. _, •. 0.1....., •. S.Uloer •. •...-s. DANA BROWN (10) GETS REBOUND OVER UNl'a KEVIN HOOK (42) • HalftllM· MO. ii 1• 0.. IWt. IUI till UMwrlllf "-' .. ,., ,. !01 9orM kllM 1121 F 1101 "-r ... .,.. 141 c !411.A~ S.-IHI G ctl o.Mfl'IMI ~QI G CJ1--..1c1r. oi:i ICOl1o'I .,.. • ...,..," > • .,...., 2. ~ I. Ult!: GenM 1, UMllOll ?, .,_.. s. ~en t. • .._11u,,.: DH. JI-er • • fl•lltfMAN Cla* ..... l.lllT- Um Rolls As Eykholt Tallies 33 a. Ln 1111 " m Grwm Univenjty Jngb 's Tro-a. I.• .. , f." ••> ••u "_..,,., m m 11Mc11anc1 jan1, be"'' .... the 33·point a-111 ~ !ti-reno• ---~· 1•1 121 o.-... , scoring of Mark Eykbolt, CM ecorli.o lllbl 'S1>ragu1 17. buried visiting Dana -~· •. ~ •. ,.,.ldt 1, HUI-Tu-..a-y .. , ..... t 10· f;lcNI .. • ....... 1•. Aiu.ctson 2 ~ ...ua UA6M ~:Ji.!!~~~t South Coast League ..... ....-c•HPis-~· basketball action, 70-57. c.-!1A " llOI Aron~ The r-..:--based 'T'--T ... 1\11 fl Ctl <:Mr "YUie" £ 1 u- a.ter 1121 c ,., .._.., jans of University coach K,_1119 (4) G Ill IH<K\ Doug Sorey, took. a first ;~' ... ~ -..w1.1•11M'''11 quarter lead and never • H...._:.,,11.11 trailed as Eykbolt, who 1.., °' ""9111et*'· si.st aJso had six assists dur- ... -16~ '4:,1 ••• ~J ... _.~ ing ~e tusslt;. stored 10 !D Offwr IW F Ill Glll-.,r• the fll'St penod and 13 m Nor1c1r. 111 c 111 K•ftdeh : the third quarter to spark .== 001 ~ 1~,>~~ the winners. ·,. ~!:~ • ..,.., ,, Tr..-•• • It was EykboU's career Ha1ft1rna· CdM. »tt high output and the first Soccer Results lime he's been in double figures in league play. Tbe victory moves University to within one· ' game of third place and a pc>saible CIF 3-A playoffs berth. ~ Oo41• A.,.,._ ToQI& DIMMUll(t11 .. ft ..... • 2 I 11 1 l I 1 l s 0 " l • • 10 • 2 3 10 0 ' 1 l 0 0 J 0 20 17 13 SJ ""'--"Y'"' .. ft " • c;._ 2 0 1 • Polrlw s o 7 10 Allll,. .. 0 4 4 ·~' ll 7 t » ~...., 020 t ~..... 2 J • 1 ...... 2 0 l • Hal..... 0 0 2 0 Slol811ff 1 0 2 • Mlk-1 l 0 I 1 Tottte ,. 1t tt 10 0-Mlttt. ...... ~12 "'-1' u~ "on,.._,. MARK IYKHOl..T DRJVES FOR A LAYUP. Wres_eling Results Meu'eGoU • . , --..c... m> n1t ..... All• t,._Ytlll!O 001-1111\'fllftlK. l~IOl_lltl\'..,.._t IM-o-iw ISJ-byfar1elt. t0-1'11111Na ISldKse.-t t-t. , .......... ._101-""*""'" ,..._...,.., IOldK V...44. S • • wimm1ng ... Results •• Tritons ET Falls, 87..U In 5042 -.. Panino's 24 LeadsMesam Victory a1 mauaGA.aT a,aooaac.uuoN °' .. ......,........ • .. .., ...... Mu1cular Ted Bet· COftll lleaa mo•1 Ste't'~ Pantnolpit.d • fowtll- tin1a, • l·I forward· quarter bunt to lead tbe M"lttDCI to a IT.,.~ o enter. 1 cored San Cout Leape buketball rietclrJ over El Toro,...._ Clemente't'flnt u points d1y m,ht. ~.!~~=rtt!r~ io:r-U:·C:::U:C~~~= come-from-behind 50-42 to 1lve the Yilltinl Muatanp a 57-49 lead aft4r U. wJn over Mluloo Viejo'• Cb•r•enolJ!:lTorobadbattledbllektotie. ttny Dlabloa in South Tbevt~movesllesatntoatlefOl'tblrdplacela Coast Leaaue basketball the ctm.llt race. but for a moment it ~ared Coat.a ..acUon Tuesday nl&bt at MesawaaootbewayoutofQJClf'plQc&bopel. Newport In Swim Mlsaioo Viejo IUib Witb atart«I Gary Willi ud Fred llulno oa the And combined. with bencbwttbflvepersonalfoula,lleu'stead, wbicbat Setba-•- LagunaBeacb'•4l·39UP· onetlmewas31·1$intbefintbalf,evaporatecl.ltwu CIL set over Corona del Mar tied at 45, 41 and 49 early tn the fourth quarter u 11 tbe Tritoaa and corona Toro'1 Mike Holmes and. Rob Charles matched the LONG BEACH-The det Mar m-e tied for the exploits of Parrino. wbo bas now scored SIO points ba Lona Beach Wlllon ffllb leagu lead ·th g.1 bialuttbreegames. Jackf1bbtta dominated cords~ wt re-But tbe Mustanas reeled off eight poillta at that the aprtnta and captm'ed It didn't come euily luncture and with 2: 41 remailllng, went.to the pua· a ~eo nnltJ nrtm · for Stan DeMaggio's 10g game with the empba.sis on alowiq the tempo. minf victory over tbe Tritons who trailed SM> All El TCll'O could do Y(U foul and hope for aome mil· viaitinl Newport Harbor 13·2 and 23-10 during a sesattbefreetbrowline-wbidutidn'tbappeautbe Hieb Sanora in aoa- firstb.elfwbentheybiton llustanpprovedlOOClenoulbfromtbatdlltaMe. leape actloa 'hl9da1 five of 26 field goal triea Tbeeigbt-polntapurtwbicbturnedtbetidewuob-afternoon. forl9.2percent. talned by Parrino's 12-footer, Jim Mulligan'• 12· The match featured But forcing Mission footeroffanElToroturnover.theotwomcnbucketa two of the CIP''a belt Viejo into nine third by Parrino. swim teams. alllll tbe d• quarter turnovers and Parrino (11), Stan l&iller (12) and Wllll (8) led claioo was det.ennlDed la finding Hettinga open in· Mesa inreboundtDI and,1:1 Toro'• preudldD't affect the sprint.a. u WU.O. side the 2·3 zone Sin tb•MustallO'olfeue. toot a 1-3 in t\f »free.. Clemente took ~lead .MatkHUlplayedfor3:S3intbeaeeoodperiod. but and• f.2 in the 100 ,.._ for the first time on Het his trtjury hampered bis style and coaca. W.endell ·u and lOOfty. ttnga'a rebound basket Wittdiacardedtbeldeaofuainlbiaaeoriqace. Newport Harbor's second.9 into the final El Toro's game was adjusted without Hill a1 tbe Bob llQfllll'•in wu a. period. Cbar1ers went to a more dell berate 1tyle. It became double victor, capturing That bucket gave the even more deliberate Nalnst the preulna man-to-the ?QO free in 1:41.l and Triton.s a 30-29 margin man Mesa defense, wbiCh bad El Toro olfbalance. 500freeln4:51.2. and after Mi.salon Viejo In the fint ball El Toro made only 5 of 21 from the va1tt1TY scored three straight, fieldanditwuone-for-nineintbe1econdperiod. La __ ..,.,...,......,. San Clemente raWed off C11t11 .... w1 ,. • .,,... ... • " • ,:~• ...... " ,..~,. la ..... nine in a row, opening a W11i. ';' ~ , '° ...,._. ': , 1 , ,..,__, ............. 1101·&11. ::t:2io:t::~ with 4:27 = 1! : i ~: ::~ ! ! ! 1~ ~..:~.:.::l:I:::.: Re~ ...... had all thole Mee!"° 1 o s 1 • ••OIM* , , • 11 cN12:0 1. €ve1-cl11. .......... Sftow t ) Si"'C*ll' S J 1 11 1• fly-I. ~ Cll l :JI t . Tritons polnts. taking ·llWltto-~ , 2 ' 0ew99 1 o o 1 ---.n.a1:•.u.-.-1t11:•.a. lnaid th TOU.. S ..... 141fl O a I 3 \ti t,..._. .... 11.81 :Sl.2 l. .1 • puaes e e · zone u 17 -u " '*" • • ., ,. o-1La1:S1a.11Mwwyoo :tu. and either bitting the s-.~O-"-' • .,..._., .....-ne1 .," .. t . short jumper, Upping ln c. 11 ,_.,,... 14 11 11 ~ ~ CL.al •:ta.A a. ai.r t\.a1 rebound basket.a or driv· t0 11 » ,.. Mc11-l. o--u 1:•.a i. ingfOI' a layup. .... ........ !Nl,,.1. lldlrClall:IP He also addtd 15 re-Mona~~Lo HVC, .:::;.,.--041'·~·.:·ft\~ bounds, most coming ln __ ,a.~ t:ou. the fourth quarter as the •• ,........,_. . .......,.,~iu. Tritons were never Ube' 'fi F La._""c:':r'-.-. threatened again after rty op oes 100 ..... ., ... ..,_... la ..... takingtbe39-32lead. 1·::.r '--'4. Dllll4I' cLai 1. .....,._ . San Clemente actually ..... t1N11..._, .. ,,,,_,1:11t .... gotbackinthe fightlnthe Mater Del Higll'a Uberty Chrittian ii.,. w~.~.~':(~1 ~~:=-... ~l~; third period when it used Monarchs got beck llll&o ll·S. 2:1u. a pressure man defense tbe victory column -r.... Mater Dei got a 17. '° ,,......i. ~ no t . .,_ t b a t for c e d qi n e day night witb a 54-44 point output from Joba !l1~ 'b';-;:'~~· l:1 ... 1 t . turnovers. And bitting on Angelus League coa-Garcia and 1' points H•n-cL11 •· McCllnllktl 1Le1. 12 of 12 free throws, the que!St at Santa Fe Spr-rrom guard Jim Schult&. . "=~~!.Get,....., cla1 t. P\)IW. Tritons rallied from a ings'St. Paullfigh. Tbe Santa Ana·baMd ..... 11 .. 1a.o.wrt•c,.1.T1-::'6A. 21·10 halftime deficit to a And in small ICboola Monarchs were up by cl1~ ~;!;~.~~1..!;,~ 29-28disadvantageenter• 8Cti00 the Orange Cout three poiDta mid way 100 ~-t. crw CNI I . AIK-ingthefourthQUarter. area's two entries we"""' t .. ~·gh the final _.,... 1N1>.Slwlltft <l.81.T1-: •:•t.i "'"' J.UVU penuu 4001!'Mrtley-l.L.8Wl'-I:•.• s..a-...1•1 both winners. and went to a dela1-°"" ... "' ': ~ ': ~ Liberty Cbiiatian Wgb which led to two layups Mco-1c1 o s a s of Huntington Beach by Sal Gaytan to give tbe = ~ ~ : ~ netted a 52·50 triumph at winners a seven-point .... ,, o o l o Riverside Chriatian with bulge. ~!!.1: 1~ J ,! 22 a fourth-quarter rally, St. Paul, in scoring two ~v1t1e 1•11 50 ~ P a r k e d b Y D an points In the final period, Bost" 1 ~ " ~ Willard's aeven P91nta. missed six of seven at· Hutt-11 , 1 ~ > Huntt~gton Valley lemptafrom tbefield. =~~us • s • u Cbrilhan High of J\IMtOll YAltltTY u ..... et•>l•I~ 700 IMClley r•tY-t. LI Wll- l :Sl.S; JOO,..._ t. "--llal I St. I; 200 IM-1. l!llCllMM tlal 2 it:f0'-1.0'T .... fLSl:JU. 1• lly-1. ~Ill !LIU l :IJ; • tfw-1. 0euew !NI :W; taO '-'· 51-11.915:111.S; IOO!lecl-1. U. Cltll Cla l t :CJ; toO br--\. Leftw ll81 ,,1\.7; -..... r ... ,,_1. l8 Wll-J:4SJ .. Evert-~ ~ ! : Newport. Beach wu also , H•"flllns , 1 2 " on the road and captured ~.~ ~ : : ~ a 60·45 decision over Tot••• 11 • JO •2 Downey's Ambassador Cage Standings sa11c,_.::e"o;'~11 ,,_,., High. M1i111on v1e1o " • a 1>-42 HVC's victory found • • · all fiv4' starters scoring Basketball hi double figures. led by Doug Hamon and Jeff .scores .Frazer. each witb 13. The triumphs give HVC a 12-3 record and * •• * tount COAST c.aa•u• W L ftp flA S-a.i..I• • 1 -,., C-•Mlll • 1 4)1 ,.. COltAI ,..._ s • sn soa EIT-S 4 .. .,_ U11f--.llf • S -SIO UIUna...._ > • • m 0-Hlllt t 7 "'° "'4 Mluloft "'9fo I I G •JI ~--­eo.t•M9N67,llT ... oft l...,... ...... 1.eor-... ,,,.,,. U!llwnllyJlt, 0... Hiik J7 S.11 CJ--.•. Mlwm V .. lo 41 ,.,...,.,._. Ulll.......,MUQllM9Ncll 0-HllftMatToro C.W-dltl Mer el MIWllM Vle)O Clllt•M9Nel s...a......e. AltfMILUIL•Aoua W L flP s 0 ,.., . ' -J 7 lO t 1 .,,, I • 1'2 0 s »2 f'A Jlf w '" H7 no "' ,........_.. Ma1• °" S4, $l ......... s."'11• 1'. lllllOPAMal n St. AlllllOllY J7. Pluo X S6 ~ ...... BltllOCIAIMI el SIL....._., Pl111Xel ....... O.. StrvltuOt. PWI CMtANCM L.&MMla W L ll'fl e1 Oef'adl) • 1 we l• Habra 1 I tit lrN •,I Sii flvCl.noo. s • tot ,, .. _.. • s - Sollor• ) 6 SM Ceftyon 2 1 fH E_r..,m I I SD ,.......,.. ..... e10.-111. er ... s-ora n. c..,.,..10 Va1911<1e D, I!--S\ 1.AHtora11.l" ........ U ""9y'•t-arMelS.W• LAMflbta•C-.- Yal...cle• •1 Oar_,., £-r-•~ aMll'!nu1ieu1 "'~ ... m "' '" .. , SJO •IO ,,. W L ~·PA ic...i1t s • * 1'I LOI Al....,_ 4 I :S. Jl7 ~·911eck ) 2 ,,, - ::,_.. J , -116 Loar• 1 ' 1tt m c--. • ' 1lt ,., ,....,..tc.. SedftMcle '17 • .._ ... . c,,......,a, l(Mtedy,. ket•Ca 10, LMAIMll••t ......,...._ ,..,. ... Cll .. U.~­l(et.i111t c;y,.... LMre•~ • J• .-; Wlcfn!!d!y. '!btu!y 2. 1171 • • DAILY PILOT &:I I Plrat~ Face .. ~ Gauehos, Bi¥erclde Colllde Gl'088mont . Rt VER S l DE ..... 1 1wltchlril to 5addtebaek !:aaerman. a former Riverafdo'a Ramona Orange Coast College Saddleback. Colle1e'1 In 1975. e Lont Beach Wllaon lll1b Kish. : blda to halt a three-game basketball team fiiurea Tb GauchOI come ln&o sw who briefly attended Smith la averailna 23 4 losloe streak tonight, to race a h<>1Ule crowd tootaht'a came lrith a 5-1 SactdS.backlastHaaon'. polntusamewhUeSba~ Tbe acramble tor second place in the Sunset ~aaue bnskel- b all race contlnut1 tonlabt wtth two key con· tonight, but Gaucho MilllOllf&.t'~. a came The 'nlen are l\lfdcd llJ hltUne at an 18 3 cUp play,placem<>1tofthelr 1ame and a 20-potnt ho1tin1 Croaamonl coacbBillMulllianim't bebln Palomar. by former Newport Mcl!llrath wboblt'nlneoi hope. behind.~ Tony maratn ol victory over. College atT:301n a South worried. ' Rlvenlde la 3-8, baylns JlarborHlah coach Dave 10 •hots from the noorln Warren (U.! 1corln1 Uttlr leaaue rivals, are Coast Conference Saddleba~k battlei dropped lt1 last two W•xman. Saddleback's wtn ovet aver ate) and 1uard1 favored to do lt acain b k tball Riverside City ,ColleJe, 1amea. , Mulllcan ls expected to Southweetem Saturd"v Leland Bruce and toni1ht behind Geor1e 81 e tame. tiere,aUinanlmport.ant TbeTl1mb1veaT.O 1tmDennlaSmith,Tim basal3 2average ~, ·teats-Edison. of Hunt· ln1ton Beac~·l) ut Huntlnilon Be Ch U·3) and Newpo Harbor (2·2 > at Htntineton Beach's Marina (2·2). CbarUeKoeller. Barrioe. Roger Holmes, OCC'• Pirates bave Mission Cooferen'ce recordetbomethllyur Kni1htandStanleyScott · · ; Scott Ford and Bret dropped gam~ lo Santa game. and were U·l on 1Aeir In th• front llne with Tim "We're playing much EdllOa at Raatlncton W.llldnlon. Ana, Cerritos and Mt. "We like going to owp court ·a year alto-SbawendRlcbMcElrath better now," says Beach -The Oilers of E•"tb ls averacing in San Antonio. The Bucs Riverside. They" have a loiing only to Sad-., intbebackoourt. Mulltcan. ·.-Knight Is The other circuit Uff in· volv.ea Westminster (0·4) at F'ountain Valley (4·0). Tipoff in each lnatance ls H1tntington Beach, aeek· double ftlW'es and each have a 1·4 conference big crowd, t.hey boo you dleba~k. Earlier RCC de-Knight, a starter dur· playing a lot better and> ln1tosnapathree-game flaure.t.odothattonlaht. mark, the same as and they're hostile. But teated the Gauchos at ingtbeearlypartofthe the big kid (SCott) has: loslne 1trea.k in league Westmlnater's one-two Grossmont. The Griffins it's good, I like it," aaya Mluloa VieJoJllth. season, bu been cqming madfJI a difference. Peo·' (the first tlme since punch ot Tim Pag~ and have dropped three of Mulligan who guldtd Rlvenlde·s~l•yen off the bench and doina a ple are playing us more 1968),mustwlntoslayln Mike Sodders is the .those games on their Riverside to five con-are 1-3 cuard•forwvd foodjol>fortheGauchos. bonestnow.Ube1etathe contention for second Llona'bigweapon. homecourt. ference title.a before RobBaldwtnand6-'1T~t..·11a.ysMulligan.He'sfrom 'b•U,be'llacore." ~ at7. place.Alosswouiddrop ~~~...;....~~~~~~~~~--.~~~~~~-,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,,...~~~~~---~~~~~~..__~~~~~- lbe Oilers three games behind Edison. I Newport Barbor at Mubaa-TbeSailors, re- bounding from two open- ing loues, came through with four players in dou· ble figures in nipping Huntington Beach Fri· day, 73-71. Rob Galey1 with 21. points , lea Newport. He's been Newport's leading scorer lltimea. The Sailors appear to be at full strength n9w with Steve Timmons ad· ding 17 points lo the NH ledeer. He missed five games prior to league with an injury~ The Vikings of Marina, with a pair of one-p6inl victories keeping them al the .500 level ln league The Oilers cot only 10 points rrom their guards Friday and will need more firepower than that to stay with Edison, a more physical crew which relies on M Bob Herson, 6·5 Ed Bell. guard Mike McCourt and 6·3 s"opbomor• Steve Davis. • Huntington's Cary Burt, Clark Sims and Greg ' Steinbaus com- bined for 59 points Fri· day. Weatmlaster at Foun· tala Valley-The Barons of Fountain Valley, averaging 75 points a Gauchos Seeking Banner Swint Year Saddleback Colle_je captured the Mission Conference swimming ti· tie a year ago and the Gauchos of coach Flip Darr again figure as the team to beat in 1977. "We have a better ' team, on paper, than !list year," says Darr. The Gauchos figure to have solid depth with a good influx of freshmen parlayed with some top lettermen and transfers. The lettermen include diver Jim Murdy, breaststrokera David Koorajian , Larry Johnson a nd Terry Murphy and Phil Mor· reale, a sprint freeslyler and butterflier. The versatile Johnson is also a sprlntef. And Murphy will also compete in the individual medley. Topping the list of in· Sports Calendar comine swimmers are Marcas Vassallo <Mis- sion Viejo ), Gary Quinones (Carmichael, Sacramento), Steve Kitch CG ross mont, San Diego). Bill Bunge <Foothill, Santa Ana), Bruce Shirey (La Habra), Jeff Myers (La Serna, Whittier), Craig Fransen <Mission Viejo) and Larry Dick <Redlands>. Vassallo starred at Mission Viejo last season, earning All· American honors in the\ 100 backstroke and 200 lndo. Quinones, like Vassallo, can swim any stroke, thus will be used primarily in the 200 and 400indos. Kitch, a breaststroker, is a transfer from San Diego State while Bunge, a butterfller, went to the University of Arizona last year. Shirey, who will swim the long dis· lance events, is just out of the Navy. Myers, a free sprinter, went to Rio Hondo T .. •,1""-11 College last year, and ll•\ketbell-*di-el Hunti..tlOfl Buch, We\lrn•nil•r •I Fount11n Dick, a backstroker, ls a "'•ll•v. N-.-tH..eio<••-•ne. ai transfer from Riverside MOO.n• ~t E•t•ncl• lllll •t 71, Gron CC. · " ""°"' •I Oranoe CO.~I C04199f 17:>01, ~1et:1•<~•1R1>.,,1.111. Other freshmen in· Swlmmlno Unl ... olty •t CorOfta elude Dav .. M1'lo1ch, dol M•r ~la Mesa •I Lavun• ~ Buch e1 To.o •• o.ne Hitt,, s.n Casey Sorensen, Tim '''"''"'• •• M''''°" "••to. Fout1t••n Meza and Ken Feher V1t1oy •• R0411"9 Hllh. Foott.111 •t EnM1<1• ••t1•1J1 (Dana Hllla), Rob Pat· Gl•I• ,,,,.,._uu.-Oolo.n w.tl. 81 terson and Dou0 Bunting C•mll\O •I~,,,_ IJ•:iGl • Glrh ll••hlb<lll-llellllower •• ( L., u n a Be a c b ) • Feuntaln Vello Ill. f\lancl• •• Fe r nan d 0 s a I a% a r C•\lt ~M·IJ ll)I, l4IOUN llee<l'I at• , • • Lu Am•.,... 111 ( Bo I 1 v la ) , Br la n •••hl.,:~r~:-.J:c .• 1911,.., McDougle (~sion Vie· 111. s.u111em c.it*'IM Gollf9e •• jo), Dixon Hinderaker •iuu 1•1 ( J n d lo ) and Dave Wrw\111"9 -Wttln\lntlff •I ir-. h-' Tul ,.,,. va11•v. ,.,...., .. """",..'°" Bate aor ( sa). 11-11. "--'....-•'IN••,.. David Vannice, a ~~,:.,JO~ ~~·:=.:~!l'!."~i University High (Irvine) ,_.te ... 1a-..,s.nc1e-..1 .. 1 1raduate who didn't u~verltlY <•0 at Mo>. o.tden w." com...,.. .. last season will ...... ....,. (7 lOl -'"' • s ......... 1fto-MM1noa 11 1.a °"'""' alao swim thla year. "~ur-l'Ouflle111 v•1ev"" _,,..., Saddleback opens the ., "'"""',,.,.,. m. w.,......,.,.,. •t 1euon Friday, Feb. 11, ""nli11tton IH<11 111. New"'' facln" defending stale Haf'Mr•t E'dllGll 12:•1 h •. G,,., 11uu11>e11-Ed1'°" ., t.• c amp1on Pasadena CC Oulnt• Ill. s. . .Jow1lfl •t corone c1e1 at Eut LA College. M•r 171, El Tofo al Wt"ntlniler U:,.), f'ootllltt at Mlstlofl Vltto <•>. S.11 Cle1MntutTll9ll11 <•·,.) ~-.Cll ,..._.,. k"""'• l'rtNf (l' ... 41 l'rl .. Ftb. 11-Pa...,.M et hit I.A, leOett:>all-«flson et Nt"'°'' 7p.m. .. .,.,,, .. M ... ,,.. •• l'OUl'lllln V•ll•'r. TWL, Ftb. n -Mlqlofl O>n•-· Huml1101an 8"<1'1 •I Wtttmt111ttr, "•leyt •t Marouerlte Rec•Hllon 0••11 .. et lst8"Ci., Cflle Mew •t C.nttr. MlMlon Vl•Jo (ell vino It ll:lO, 5•11 Cltmtnl•, eoron. clel ~'at Mlt· swlmm'"9 et t I. s1CM1 Vl•to. OeM Hll11 e1 a1 r-. "•1t. 1•~11 coast 111111..,'°"11 Vnlvtrtlly et ~ 11 .. cl'I. Plut )( al UC S.nlAI a.tr11We. et ~ler o.t. I.A Hatbor et Golctf11 lfrl .• f<.0. 2S-.-1¥tnldt, C1tru1• W.tl Colleqe. Ll""1y Clltltll•ll 'It (ltorTtel. ..._, •• ltll aUI, H\lllll"9'0ft Vtllt' Tyu.1 Mt•CJI l-5o1101er11 CAii Qlr1Stl8fttt A'H1411t (t) lt•lft'I M ••~t L.A. Wnllll~ c-t at C•r· Wtd.,Mttcfl~Oft (llO!Mt. "'" (1:301. Wad., Mlwcll l~l'lwetttr11• Swlmmlftf-C" .... .,, flnlll1 .i lllofftel. lalt Lot A..-0111t9t m lfrl., MMtll u-&eft ..,._tllN et ltit0.11-seddMlte<ll Cel .... •I Cl'latffy',J:JO. occ 12:301. • .. ,, .. "-'lit...., PalofMr•,J:JO. VtlteyNll-Ctl SIHI IN~ .... l Att•li ll·u-MIHltlt Coftf•mt<• 11t UC.lrvlM t1:JO•. """\. • Ttll~~Wntals.Nlltlte<tl Allfll •JO Sa"'lie"' ~ ~ c.t .... 12:•1. .iotltlllput ,......_ S.Cttr--c.or.M dtl MM ti Mlta!M Mey .. 1-1\ttt Cl"lllllllllmllN41fl..i-"ll'" 91 Vlelt1 CMtt Nitta al Sell OtlMftW, WHt Vtl!W, oena Hiiis et II T-Unlllet'Jlly •t All """'' IMOlll ti 2, unl•n ~ a..c11. ~"et as ..... ""'""'•~UMll. cit lttt aUI. ....,..Mlaltll~l9Ml. COSTA MESA 2.946 BRISTOL ST. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 549-1533 •· FULlERTON 1530 S. HAIUIOR ILVD. f'HONE: 170.0700 SANTAANA 120 E. ARST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547·7'n WESTMINSTER 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 893-8544 SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRUSUNDAY OPEN MON. THR FRI. 8 A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. 8 A.M.-6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M.·5 P.M. RAISED WHITE LETIERS 110 WIDl-TUIEUSS · ... PLY NYlON 30 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY* NO TRADE-IN t REQUIRED l -·- FOREIGN CAR SPECIALS IHI VW' TOYOT AS, MGS, OP ELS, Oil $ DATSUNS AND MANY ~ OTHERIOIWGNCARS 1 ~ *15·29 600x 12 ,.u .su1 TU HUSS ILACKWAU.S · 560x15 600x15 ·1~· •11199 f.E.T. tl.70 f,f.T. $1.77 @)J!n~!~ LLOYD MULTl·FILTER Mvtll·llllw ._ ...... ell '"'" r:21:~t,;.yr.r~~.··10 ..... c•I ••I. 2 filter 1 '' .1-... 2,., ... ...... ._ OIL FILTER , "••••d Mllot•"'~I•"''"' wlllo New Acid 49 fl9hll•t ~ .... MelllbfHe. Pep Boys AIR ADJUSTABLE SHOCK ABSORBERS wrtH HOSE KIT 'fOR MOST AMERICAN & FOREIGN PASSENGER CHS. ALSO CAMPERS, STATION WAGOJfS. LIGHT TJUC~S AND TllAllEH . • INSTALLATION AVAILABLE . 39~a! No11 .. •or.orotln 11P• with ci.-kol nhlbilot. A •1111 lot °" tONlili-d can. LIMIT 6 OAl. 319 PR CllSIOMll OM. •A VY DUTY DINIM WORK ' APRON Our..._ ~ wltll two lull· cvt po<k•h. ld..,I lo. ltome • w«iii11op, oarave or oardtn. Med, to leltl. OtlSUf 149 ms All POWEil STEERING FlUID. WITH DC1£RG£NT ACTIOM & STAllLIUR ADDITIVES ~ Jn SHAY GUMOUJ • CARBURETOR CLEANER • I ·I ·. • • . e:oo ~ •• Cl) t!I (tnl (J)) .... . e o (1)(9(1)) ... .... ,. Cl)C..,"'9 -~ ··~f.., •Mlll-IZ ·Dlctrk~ : . .,..... ..... ·a •._ ......... . WINNER! Of ·4 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS WINNER! Best Musical-. "A Star Is Born" INNER! Best Song-Evergree SUNG BY: · lhrbra Streisand WINNER! Best Actor In A MUSICAl:-Krls Kristofferson WINNER! Best Actress In a • STARTING~·· FU. t "fUN WITH DICK & JANE". STARRING GEORGI! •GAL SILVER STREr=U< ~ •• • !1111~ ClWl lllDfft. Jill ClAY•I · BICKHI nm t:;;;:\ PO. NOW Pl.A YING • ''" IClfM C.Nl\lll'UOW L-..J. UA sount COAST e l4CM>5M UA WES1111NSTEA MALL e ----aH!DOllE • 834-2S53 FOUNT VALLEY OJ. 112·2411 9I . ...... I .. a.a .............. .. (2 a\.ii;, •11rww..r-- "" IA GlilDmON• Tb .. wete moments wben one wished that LeYine coukl let bimaelf 10 a UW.and forsake ril:ld dl.leipliDe for tile ~tu) that aueb u Carlo Marta Guillftl would bHe woven iJlto bl.s podium polt1lre. ' But that LI nlUllnl· All that needs to be said LI that tbil was a superb c0ncert. . .. ~en ltlontlas to 6~ Work is progressing on schedule at the new 10-story Fluor building in Irvine. It will house 700 employes Crom the cor- pprate headquarters located in the City of Commerce. When completed in October, the exterior will be the same reflective glass used in the already-completed Fluor t>uilding at the same ~ite. Fare Tales t,tJBe Toid . ; . . .. : SAN FRANCISCO CAP> Hughes Airwest bas agreed to disclose all restrictions and limitatiom on buying reduced air fare tickets to Las Ve1as in future advertising, C•lJlornia At· ty. Gen. EvelleJ, Yourlkersa.id. The airline signed a stipulated jud,ment in a San Mateo County Superior Court suit that alleged it misled the public concerning purchase of Che ticlcets in more than 200 billboard advertlBe· menta around the state. The suit, filed by Deputy. Atty. Gena Allan J . Goodman,.,claimed Airwest failed to disclose on the billboard ad that tickets were good only during a certain time period, required a minimum length visit to Las Vegas and were subject to reservation and ~Jy01entdeadlines .. . . ( ~~) 1 ......... ReleGsetl SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.· Ed01und Brown Jr. says 5,000 Californians will get Jobs from a $S2 rnlllionfederal program. He· said Monday that the big· gest chunk of the money -$22.2 million -would go for construc- tion jobs doing maintenance and repair work on state buildings. , A TAT Earala9• lllae Nl:WYORK <AP) -American Telephone and Telegraph Co01- pan7'a net earnings in 1976 rose 21.& pertent ~ ov~ the previous ·Peanats ~ Ely Airline Cbta ~Fares in Half I WASHINGTON (AP) -the Im\' .la.re (Ill ~~ airline in· "Peaaut fares" went l.o\O eltect dlwtry. Tuesday on certain' nJgbts of The low. rate applies on only Teua i.mational Airlines. al-two flights a day on each or the lwi.ng passengers to ny for half• rout~ during low·peak periods price. wben,,i.n~generally b.ave been The Civil Aeronautics Board fifinJ less tflan half full. Texas International said the purpose Is gave the Texas·based carrier to boost capacity during sh1ck p4!nniaa'\Olt ;~onday to try the iocfs fan!a 00 a otte·year expeTimental per . buia. PASSENGER SAVINGS will THE NEW a.ATES cover some ru1bta between Albuquerque and Los Angeles; Denver and Sall ' Lake City: ff&>ustoo and New Orleans: Austin and Dallas-Fort Wo.rth: and Midland·Odeasa, TH., and Dallu.Fort Worth. Tbe board said It would con· d\lct an inveati1allon to de· &ermine the lona·range effect of be aubatantial. A one·way ticket on the popular Houston-New Orleans nm now iB $24, down from Mooday's price of $CS. The prtce ol a ticket from Denver to Salt Lake City has dropped from SS&tot28. The airline said that on the selected : lt would sel'Ve OD· ly llglrt bments, including peanuts. year and restored "a trend inter- rupted by the recession," said Chairman John D. deButts. AT&T, tbe nation's largest utility. reported Tuesday 1976 earnings rose to $3.829 billion. or $6.05 a share, up from $3.147 bllllon. or $5.13 a share, in 1975. Operating revenues totaled $32.816.. billion, compared with $!8.91fbillion. But deButt.s said the 1976 earnr ings represented onty an 8.9 per· cent ret~ on total capital. less than the ?·'~percent rate of return the Fedei:al. Com01unlcations Commlaston bas authorized for the Bell System's interstate servi~. · PaeTel Report• Gala Pacific Telepbon~bas reported tlaat eam1ng.s for the caleuctar year 197& rose 13 percent ever 1975 &o $2.06 a 'common share, compared with $1.82in1975. Post tax interett coverage was 2.43 dmee earnings, tompared with z.ss in uns. _ "Despite the ta• the earnings reflect po1i1ive aspects of our 1978 operaltool, • continue to experience the fihaneial uncer· taintiea lliiat have consistenUy coafrontecf Pacific Telephone in recent yelll'S," Board Chairman Jerome W. Hull~aid. Veltee ra.telles Sec WASJDNGTON CAP> -Two conaressiona1 subcommittees have announced they will bold Joint beanngs on the price of cof- fee. The hearln&s will be held in W asbingtoo Feb. 22 and 23 by the House subcommittee on domestic. markeUne. consumer relations and nutrition. The panels are headed, respec· Uvely, by !Jeps. Benjamin S. Rosenthal and Fred Richmond, New York DemQerata, according to. Tuesday's announcement. ....... &.a .. tesA.,_. A fave-yur solar enero teit and demoastra· tlon pro1ram bu been prOpoMd by Southern Ca11fcitnla Gas Company In a rate •pplleatlOD med with the Public UtlUtlea Connnl .. iGO <PUC). wbo want to learn to write clear reports that 1et a menha.J: ::1°"· ~denta will learn ~ to ·~t.ruc·. ture m•Uon In a concise form. If apPn>ved, the prolJ'am ~ demoostrate and anaJ.,yse more than 300 solar aystema to &erve 8SI ·lndlvtdual fffidentlat, tommetclal and th· duatrial appllcat.lons thl'OUlhQQt Southern and Oen· tral California. To carry out the procr~. the gas· company asked the PUC for • rate Increase totanne an •timated $10.t mllUon over• five-year period. The Ql-'ttal Increase reQU4:Sted. for tbe first year, would be about $2.5 mllllo'n, or a monthly in· creue ol about a.3 cents few a typical residential customer. Rates would be M\Jwated annually to reflect actual coets ot the Pf'OIJ'all). Gu company •aftl.lnp would be un.tfeetecl. ·-occ u.ia ••,.ea O.•w . Among bcasinea•Mlated COUl'fe9 to be ottered at Orance Coast CoUeae this apting: -"Effective Business Report Wcitin•,'' meet· 1aa ~11trom'to7p~m.,11 dellaned foe people -"f'rancbJ1in1 and Ucen,ln~ listed as Jla~-1ftl 1"1w will cover the Caito franchise lnvntinmt law; federal leiialaUon; the l'ranchis~ toranQla; bow to francbiise; resiOQal, uaUonJJ and tnternattcoal francblH expansion; and franchise packace eoostructlon. .. · The clw meets .Tbundays belinblne Feb . .io, fl'Omqtotov-rn. , · : -A new toutae in ~attem f"adln& b be1q ol· feted for the Unt. time tbia spr\l\g b)l th~ e~ and t~es ~rtmen,. · ' 'the~·unlklass meets 1'aetdaya., ~llinnlnl' Feb. 8, f~7 to U>p.m.1.'beclw Olfen tunaamen~ tat techniques or paUetn aridlaa. ~ . ·open reliltraUon for •Pl'ina clau8,la Wider / way throu1til'eb.18. Peraooa ~ re~tn QCC•a admlsalona and reeordl Oft'ice .Moodajj ~ Tbundaya'&Qm 1;30 a.m .. tO 7 p.m. Ud r.dd~ from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fol' lnltl"iil•-tlOb, pboae~. ~aming: WithOUt l~ 'We Won't Meet ~' · PARIS <AP>-'nM woradllMllt use nQclear poww \0 l!lelit lta enu1y needl over tbe nelt 10 to U Yeart despite public eoneern about its Nf etf, aars the outco- ln1 prealdmlt ot the IJltematlollal Enero Aaency <fEA). ••1t la clear. Tbe ftaures ~ un· fortunately there. We woa:t meet the gap U we don't uae nuclear enercy,.. Vtacouot Etienne Davtanon Hld at ~ fa~well meetin1 wltb re20ttera. "We • can't nm away from Ula\." DA VJGNON, A Beliian, baa been named to tbe European Common Market Commlukle. Hia aucceuor u head of the l&A. formed on American lnttiatlve after the t.rra oil crtala. WW be Germany's secretary ot stat. tor economics, Dr. Detlev Rohwed· der,44. Davignon a1so 1aJd IEA fllunl lbowed t.bat Saudi Arabia Md "lo teeeat Meta" atart9d pro;; d.,clD1 more thu lta aaDOl.IDCed c~ol~mand"wefeel that,; W. trend I.I ~tlnuJQ." rtbe IEA bu al.lo conllrmed. be Hid, that Saudi Arabia wu mak· lnl p«roleum available to new cU1tomen cleUlkl• the traclttioaa.t Aramco ~tttbutJon pattern, u It had anounced. Davtanon said tntenaive ~· ••arch and devel(>pment m1i11t continue lntc> alternative eners:r aources auch as solar power, but meanWblle nuclear ener11 wU1 have to be Uled. GO~f;m'8°M1JS'l'deel with What la available now, lllld hav-an aureutve Rand DU. search aDd develol)m•t> = aram oa top ot it. but not in of It," Davllnoa laid ..... le) explain tb1a time and t'-e again." , Mn. Fis~r Heads Agents' Associ~(ion ·.;. Dorothy Harvey Flaber. Newport Beach, bu beeome u.e ftnt woman pna•dent ot the California Auoclation ot hbllc Purehuina Agents (CAPPO). a statewide regulatory oraanilatloa. 4ea!Oed to · help publicly 1upported purCbulna qenclea WCl'k to fall dftclency. Mn. Plaber baa served u dJ.rec:tor ot purcbutna for the Newport: Mesa Schoo& Dbtrlct ainee 1988. -· · Backed by a staff ot 11. abe berslUp about U.. 1'0Ftinp and coordinates purcbuea ol dia· aim{J.arttiee ot publielJ supported trict supplies and leuln1 ot equ.l~ a1eaeie9. ment. Lut year. almost $15 • million of tbe diatrict'a budaet ID ALIM> &NTISIONS "a waafunnelledtbrougbberoftlce. cooperatiYe effort to reduce tu IN un. •as. r11aaa became theft.fat woman member of CAPPO'a board ot dlrecton. Now, aa president, she will meet with atate chapters ot the approximately 100-member or- ganization tbat includes state, coqnty and special district purcbaalq acents. She hopes fo establish a better undentandinc within the mem· expenditures " She coordbiata advanced anJ. intermediate cl.aNel in ,school purcbaaing at USC, and ls a member ot Putehulna Manage- .. meat As'ociation· of Oran1e County apjl numerous o\her purchasing associaUons. A resident ot Newport Beach for the past two yean, Mra. F\s- ber bu two aona. one daughter ind three grandchildren. Over The (:ounter MASDU-. Davl;Doin aa}d, however, •:on.. concen111 0/ the people are nulne." .. Lota Ol ~k baa to .,. d<Mie on • nuclear ellel'lY· We m\llt pro. mote 1afe1uard1. We mutt ensure that the whole nud~a.r eaera procram li'l UidU1trtali.*1 CO\llltriea can be pro"rijr ••· plained to the people, ttiat we 1tve them the 1ate1uarda4 that •we do much more worl£ than. we bave beesl dolnfao far on wute cliapo .. l lsa\lff, 'he taJd. BE 8AJD THE publlc mmt M liven "anawen in a coberct lb· ternat.lmal fuhlon" 10 that tt ..bu eoufldence tbat tbere are very strict 'lntemaUonal st.an. dardl." IDdivtdual 1ovenwent1 ''by deflnltlon can only nr nuclear energy pl8J1tl are ~ ln.atalled in perfect condiotlom~ ' be noted. • Davienon aald the-qtDq WM encourqed by the morit7 ,s._ to enero pol1c1 by Pre..._ Carter . oe41Y,_1Uftp.._ ASloaATION PRESIDENT' Dcwotltr Harver FJ9her u" LAii O'CI Pel ._ + f'4t Up 3' 7 • 1 .. .._ Up 33.3 114 • \It Up 29.6 2' + V• Up 2l.S 714 + 'It Up 21 • """ +•? Up 71.I I'°' • 1'ti Up 9'. I 614 + I Up lt.O 314 + 'It Up \1.2 3\lo • "" ~ it.t ?!: : ~ ..v: . lt: U .... + I,._ Up tS,J I ll> + I .... Up O.J 2 + 14 Up 14.J : : ~ tlg :a 4 • \It Up U.l )214 + ,..., Up t•.O tt4o '" '4 Up 17.S • ·~ • .... Up It S 1~ + 14 Up 11 I ~ • 'It Up II S .. , ~ : :: ~~ ::.: OOWMI LAii CllQ Pel ..... -t\lt ~ u.o 614 -I IU t -114 IJ S •• ,. -114. lt,I 1 _..., "' , -14 f 11.1 I~ -ti.lo Off IO.• 714 -"' Oft 10.0 214 -"' Off 10.0 ..... -"" Off 10.0 7'4 -u. ()fl IO O t>t -14 °'' •.s 13'11 -1-. Off • s 1 .... -14 Off t I ,,., -"' OI! •.1 JS'• -Jiil Off •.O ,~ -.. E ., , ... -"' ,, , ... -.... ,, i. -lllOlf n J _...,°" 17 • -llt Olt 11 J•lo -lll fi 11 J\41 ·-\lo 1.1 ..... -"" 1 1 •l't -lit 1.1 .. - .. . ,, THEN, .,. YOU WILL SEND THJt labels to Cots• provlnc YoU bou1bt the products, they wlll mall you tia caeh retu.ndl. The Nfllnds, 11 you bought all nve, will ~ '3.50. So, the 13.50 refUnd plus the 85-eent cut brints yma ~ $4.lS. Since lheH five products are supposed to retail for"a~ total of $C.50, that means you can 1et them for a net outlay ot 35 cents. And who knows, if you can find a store that dis- counts these products, you may be able to get them for nothing. The question is: Why does Colgate·Palmolive engage b1 such suicidal games? It's obviously returning to consumers more money than lt recel,,es from stores for these products. And on lop of that, it's spending a lot to advertise an offer that can Only lose money for the company. Some 188 million coupons wil) be delivered with those Sunday supplements. It all of them came back to the company for redemption, they would really be ln trouble. And lf everyone bou1ht the pro- ducts ~ applied for refunds, Colgate might have to declare bankruptcy. THE ANSWER WO\JLD SEEM TO UE ln the ~rkt:t . positions of these products. Colgate has been conslat.enU., •• beaten to the punch by competitors. Procter & Gamble's Crest rules the t.oothpute business with a market share of Jaboul 40 percent. Colgate Dental; Cream, once the leader, is second wit.ha 20 percent shar~ · and Ultra Brite ta fifth with S percent. . .. 'Gillette's Foamy whips Palmolive Rapjd Shave in tbQ , shavtns cream market. · ,, . -.. ,. IN DIE BANDAGE MAkKET, .JOHNSON & John.son t.-:,. so far ahead of CUrlty that lt 'a sllb' even to count. And in the razor blade business, Wilkinson ls a.n also. ran with less than 10 percent of the market. . • . Unable lo beat these br8nds, Colgate is resorting t.o t.hel1· ultimate tatlic. It's giving away its pr-Oducts. It hopes, of·· coutse, that once you try them, you '(Vill repurchase them · .;~;;:c;:;:.:··;;0~lant 4 Fibreform Eleetronics has purchased a 1.58-acr, parcel in the Huntington Beach Business Park for relocaUon of its 20,000.aquare-foot main office/productionfacilily. . The 30-year·old organization, vthlcb employs 60 people, anticipates expansion of lts workf<>tte. - Bill Wannacott of Wannacott, Shaw & Panchal direct; ·ed the arcb.it.tttural design of the proposed structure. Jim Metcalf of Prime Contractors, Inc., in Orange County will be the general contractor. • .... ~ Effects of Weather · " -:(i 'I .. Wol Stock Market .~'l (· . ,t '. NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market was mixed to. , . day after Tuesday's technical rail)' played Itself out. Trad· ing'wu actJve. . • · The Dow Jones average ot 30 lndtistrlal stocks, up more· , thanapolntattbeoutaet.lostS.S7pointsto952.79. ; Gainen maintained a 6-5 lead ovor losers among New .. York Stock Exchaqe-lilted issues. · · i-; Analyst.a 11id uncertainty about the effects of a harsh. ~ wtnter on the economy kept the upswing that. began Tues· daY, from gatherin1 muc.b torce. '· --------------------~--------------------------------~J· Amerieo11 IA•den ·· "l!W V<>"K (APJ. s.1H. 4 p.m. prlc.e .... ,... dWn9e pf the ..., ,,_. ectl~ AIMrkM St«li IEicflen99 '"""· a __,,,at more''*' "· M • , .. • .. .. .. t1',JOO S4~Ul1 -tretl U ..... •• • tM,!00 U1't+ Ya Gt ... M .. ••• • ••• • toa,000 ''°' + -I" ............... a .100 n -11a ... _ '"········ ~100 " + ~ I,.. ..... ,..... ;J~* • + \4 ' ' ~~ ~::::::::: '3:= 2~~~ ~ • """'°" . . .. . .. . . . 31.lOO ~ + ~ PIYO;I• Oii.......... ii.too 21~+ 4 .,"!. ----911/L~~-----------... --------~ .. nnutSteeaDld ·~· ' .. .. < SHASTA ~ DIET SOFT DRINKS II Assorted fllVDl'S .:9 ~$1 12 GZ. R FANSRRAY Fa Orymg . In ssorted Colors SAY· ON Pharmacists Are: e COURTEOUS • ACCURATE • DEmCATtD • QUALIFIED Compounding your prescription to the most exact spec1hcat1ons 1s our busmess! A Re1istered Phreacist Is 01 duty t1 prepare 11d pttVifl prelessloaal coullltatiot 11t,.. pmcriptlo.. I ' lln. Smith, wbO -ore dark· rtmmed glusea u she testifled, aaid the sso percent dlfferential was-found in a study by1be New Jersey Olvi4lon of Consumer Al· falra. The study showed prices for an Identical fr ame with sin&le-via1oo &lass lenses varied from $18to$.'5S. Other atudies showed van.a. .VITAMINS SAY ·ON BRAND Vl1AMIN -E SUPER I • ranclnl from $.14.90 to '74 for pre- paring the 1laqes. Mn SmU.b aaid people .end up. paylAf excessive prices because the lack ot advertlslnc •reduces their ablllty to 1bop around. Sbe said the ratrlctlons are particularly hard olD old people. ~ lhe Big Job Cleaner 51MT SIZC Prescription Plan for Tlose Wbl Are 60 . Over You are eligible 1or a lO!t discount on all your Prescriptions aod on all-5av-on brand vitamins. Oiscoat C•d •atlots An Avail· a~le Al Sn·H "•r•acy Deparl· .. ts. ~J.25 AIM TOOTHPASTE O ~Atiii ~J FAST PA .. RWEF . . 4.6 oz. 59c CHLORASEPTIC Mouthwash LECITHIN BAN r;~ . Taken after meats. 2 99 ROLL-ON JD, PYREX and Gargle Pump Spray fi beautiful on any . S~AY PAINT s oz. ggc , 11.u77~ 100 CAPSULES • • ~::•:r•1 •• • BEVERAGE JUG Uitsceated 6 g C I Designed to look . _1._5 _oz_.----'""'" ----~a!'~· a~~t:~\ 't" 199 patterns. 72 OZ 4-WAY . • ea. NOTEBOOK 3 ·SUBJECT 11"x81/t" 120 SMtt' age C01et1 lllled SINGLE SUBJECT tr 111/J'' • sattts TRIAMINIC EXPfCTORANT 4oz.1J9 NASAl SPRAY '12 oz. sac SIZE BlEMtStf MEDICINE . Acne Pimpl~s Cream Medication. ~r;:~~r .11~ted or Vanistiing f IXOOENT DENTURE A.DltESIVE CREAM, .. ts oz. 79c MfJTifllHG COLOt OISC Youf finger is the ~1::,··99c PAN TYHOS '~NO NONSENSE'' Comfort Stride (¥.if ~~Eb ;1l.·-- Refresh & 21$5 "Comfort · soothe your Stride" legs. ~:..~"!":'.:-., ,' • .wTlllWY lflll(dlt t::;""-·-..!'..:....~ Control Top ... _ ·--.. To firm and 2 '$3 ~~~ smooth(tups & J:'~ and tummy ~ '1.':ir I .. -_.-ww•a tbe,... tbWI tbat comet to ID1ad when YGta ~ ol •emt•food! ~= ewalDe li a cross-breed of Indian W Spanllb ~ di& ln u array ·o1 fine. cbanct.tiatleally•plcecl ••· mmtAm..tcw cODJure up pictures of tortillu tw.t 1flU.· bat tmce ~ .,_am, or ao MYI a recent reP911 oa t.b"e Mexican foa~by A.uoclatedPresa. to the Nport. the b\&nito, a meat and/or beU\· e~· P.med. for it.I NHmblance to. fat little donkey, II ~the taco M the malnst&y ot Mexican fut-food . . A apoteamah 1-one Oranae County taeo-bunito cbain 1ald 16 1'9taurant wu aellll'll •1,wut 900 burrito. a ~ to 700 tacos (except on WMoesdays, whert a special offers tbi'ee tacos for the price Gf two). • Robert JeUim, Oran1e County apokeaman for'Ttco Bell, the •'• larletlt llexlcan fut-food cbaln. said national fll\U'U ahOW bcol l,loldlni their own OY« burrito sales 33 pereent to 11 pa'Uilt, ~ tbet these fiiurM don't accurately show the bur· rite'& DOPUlarity 1lnce many people will buy two tacos for every one.barrlto. . Jenkins said, a customer can get two tliries the amount of food a taeo by orderina the fll'1D's ~-ounce burrito. , tat«• operator of an area restaurant attributes the bur-. rito'• n,e in popularity to the fact that, like a tostada, it can be madewttbj111t beans, and no meat to suit vegetarians. 'A burrito uaually features beans a.Qd /or meat, cbiles and Cbeeae folded inside a steamy ftour tortilla; or the whole thing can be deep-tried to produce something resemblinl a fat Chinese ecgroU. A P.co ia a fried tortilla shell containing meat. cheese, ehqpped tomatoes and lettuce and peppery seasonings -a one· flt~ appether for the two-fisted burrito, say some burrito lov-ers. Today, according to the United Dairy Industry Assn., Mex- ican food is the faster t growing of any ethnic food cateaory both at home and in the restaurant. Once· rather an insignificant part of total supeQDaPket volume, Mexican foodsales nearly doubled between 1973 and 1975, from $107.4 million to $210.3 million per year, and are still holding in there. With the current move from heavily preser<ed foods, American cooks are finding that many Mexican dis~s are easy to adapt at home to meet their "fast -food" eating patterns and de· '°' mand for natural nutrition. Enjoy your own combination plate at home; and for a grande finale, try a Marguerita Meringue Pie. .. CLASSIC MEXICAN REFRIED BEANS 1 pound dried pinto beans 6allces bac~. diced ~cup ftnely c:hopped onion 1 clove garll.c, m inced • 1~ teas~salt 1h teaspoon coriander ~ teaapo0n chill powder Wash beans and cover with cold water ; cover and r efrigerate overnight. Tum beans and liquid into a large saucepan. Add salt and bring to a boll; r educe beat and s immer , covered, Cor about 1·"" hours, or unW tender enough to mash. In large s killet, saute bacon pieces until crisp. Drain oo paper 1 towels. Pour out excess bacon drippings and s aute onion and garlic ln rem'ainlng drippings until tender . Add sauted vegetables to m~shed beans and garnish each serving with bacon crumbles. MEXICAN BURRITOS 8 nour tortillas IA cup minced onion 1 tablespoon bacon fat 4 cups refried beans lsmall can whole, ereen cbilles l cup shredded lettuce 1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese Steam tortillas by wrapping stack in foil, dousing with a lltUe water and baking about 10 minutes in low oven (300 degrees F. >. Hot keon fat and sauteonion until transparent; add beans and beat through. Clean chilies by slitting open and washing out all the seeds. Cut into lh·inch wide strips and drain on paper\owels. On each softened tortilla, place a heaping tablespoonful of beans, drape with one or two strips of chilies and top with lettuce and cheese . (A dab of commerciat bot s auce can be added at tbia time for those who want theirs especially hot.) Roll tGrtillas uound filling. Arrange burritos in a baking pan, fold side down, and bake in a 358-delree F. oven for about 10 minutes. Serve immediately . Mak• aservm,s. AVOCADO-CITRUS SALAD 3naveloranges 1 ripe avocado 1 small purple onion, peeled and sliced thinly 'A cup v.eaetable oil 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar 1 tablespoon honey ~ teaspoon salt Dasb~ayenne ' Peet oranges and with knife, remove all white mem· . brane. Slice thinly. Peel avocado and slice into wed1es. Arrange .. onion aUca, oraqesllces a:mlavoe11do hi 1.,. .. tn aballow !JOWi. ID blender coo~. add cil, viae1ar. •alt; honef and caJellDI. Wblr anti1 well blended and pour over the tndt and ooicn Refrtaw~ eo.wed, UDtll s..wa, time. X.UQrB&nA JUalNGUB PIE t t-!ncb baked9aatry lbel1 or pretie1 crust l '4cup1-car ~cup earmtarch \4 teupoon •alt l~w.ter •. fl ~ cuptiiiqUU& .... ~ ~ cupUmeJuke t~patedllme~ 2 ta.,..OOOU CointreaU or Tilple Sec PreUel Cnl&: 1 v.a cups crushed pretaels ~cup melted butter V.. cup Sitlar ........ : 'ea wllites • • JAi teaspoon each salt and crum ot tartar v.a cup sugar ~teaspoon erated lime Mate crust fint by combining pretzel cnambs, butter ancl aucar and preuing J:DWure into pie plate. Bake for 20 minutes at ~degrees F. Cool. · To prepare filling, combine 1 cup au.car, cornstarch and salt in 2-quart saucepan. Stir in water and tequila and cook over moderate beat qntil mixture comes to· a tull boll and thickens. Reqiove fromhe..-t. Beat ea yolks until light and frothr.. Stir about half the bot mixture into u..e Y.olks, then combine with the rest of the cooked mixture; stirring constanUy over low heat. Do not allow mixture to boll after adding egg yolks. Remove mixture from stove and 1Ur ln remaining \oil ci.q> sug- ar, time juice, peel and Cointreau or Triple Sec. Tum into slightly cooled pie shell. Top with meringue. Bake at 400 degrees F . 8·10 minutes, or until tips of meringue are lightly browned. Oool thoroughly before cutting. Meringue: Beat egg white& to soft peak$, adding salt and cream of tartar gradually. Beat in sugar. one tablespoon at a Ume and continue beating unW whites are stlff and clossy. Spread over filling, sealing to edge of pie shell. . . The perfect ending to a Mexican meal: Marguerita Meringue Pie, ·made with fresh lime, tequila and orange liqueur. , Bread Can Be .. BEA ANPERSON, Editor BARBARA Gll&BOWEN, Food Editor Wednesday, Febfuary 2, 19n DAILY PILOT f:J ... We'Ve Come A Long Way . . .... #' f I <4) A ..,... ~ VJ> Will UH: <•> ., ....... aU ., .. U-e, (b) s,.-.. Jut el IM U.•, Cc) Noa1mptomaner. (I) U ,_ • •Jllldlla ... W • decter M <•Me) cu: <•> Seip , ...... ._.-eve,...()) CU. ,... IOme ol Ille be. (C) Care,._ all of Ute dlae. <•> Tiiie SJ•,&o••., .,, •• aad ~a are: <a> V..U, ital• tit: Cb) Al•o•t alwa1a ..tieeable, (C) Oft.-lalddell. (d) Al•• al••JS WddeJa •• (T) U a maa aad wo•u '*la set 1ClllOl'l'ttea: <•> Tiie •u will ••Uce .,..ptom• flrat, (b). Tlae woma• will aotlee sympComt ftnt, (C) 1'llleJ will bodaMUeesymptom• at&llleail& U•e. One of the~ unusual items to be ~ auctioned Sunda'kfj3b. 13, is this papier-mache hippopotamus which is being·· transported to the sale by Mrs. John Vittrup· (left) and Mrs. Jean B. Miller. Scorpio: surprise Due TBU&SDAY,FEBllUAaYl By SYDNEY OMAllll AaJES <March 21-Aprll 19): lfighllght move· meot. change, questions, social activity. Accent oo involvement, especially where member of op· positesa is concerned. TAUllUS <April 20-May 20): Blocks, ob- ttacles are actually challenges -and you can suc· ce11fully meet them. Know It and be confident. Build on solid base. Go after facts. GBMINI (May 21-June 20): Talkative re- lative Is in picture. Forces are scattered. You could be inundated with rumor, innuendos. CANCB& (June 21-July 22): Accent on in· come potential, valuables, locatm& lost articles. Family member discusses possible purchase ol luxury ltem. LP.O (July 23-Aug. 22): Lunar cycle is such that you pt what you need, but not what milht have been expected. Accent oo penonallty. • · perlOftal appearance, the way otber'I respond to yoarovertura. vaaG0 (Aq. Z3-Sepl. 22): You have more "strqt.h • · on your alde than m.llbt be apparent. Key DOW is to check tu and aavtnp programs. to be aware of bidden clauaes and to obtain bacataae1Umpaes. UJSaA ·(Sept. 23-0ct. Z2): Fl.nisb what JOU start -stand tall fOI' prlnctples. You attract al· I. L PllANllL. M.D. -& ASSOCIATIS Wll-· IBlltamft • .. 11S1S DRMATOLOGY -c.IMlt##>T\IMOM ........... -~~ • TATOOMllllC.WM. PLASTIC SURGERY BREASTS • F~E • EYWOS • NOSE • CHtN • EARi • SCARS •WRINKLES• MOOMEN ACNE • COMPLEXION DEAMA8M8ION • CHEMO~QEAY HAIR TRANSPLANTATION Dr. Frenkel'• let .. t technique• hawe l>ffn ~ lf'I the i.dlng d9rmato!Ogf jcX¥nal. ,___ of tnnp&ents S*fotmed. Aeey on •· ........ ALLERGY • HAY .fEVER • ASTHMA • HIV£S TESllHO • TAl!ATMENT PODIATRY ""°8LEMI I IURGERY Of THE FEET lies. Pastfavor-orloan-llretumed Empbuis op desire, romance, wishes-and costs. Theprac· tic al blends now wlth idealism. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Hlghllght ln: dependence, originality -one "at top" is willing tom ate room for you. Surprise element pops Into •picture. Some persons pra.Lse you for being un- orthodox. 8AGIJTARIU8 <Nov. 22-Dec:. 21): Lunar aspects point to dlaruptions in communlcaUons, recovery of lost artlcJe.~cbange. travel, publishing opportunity. Follow through on hunch. • CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19.>: Be flexible enough t.O avoid entrapment. Means don't feel you are stuek with one tune, pattern, procedure, con- cept. • AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lie low -do moYe llstenlnl than talking -play waltinc same. Jud1ment. intuition could be slightly off target. PISCES <Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Lc?w key ap. • proacb now brings most constructive results. Ac· cent on employment, health, routine. U f'ebraary 3rd la your blr1.bday you have 1parltllng sense of humor, love S\lfPrlses, con- stanUy break rules; you are artistic, creative and tend to put <*l weight fast Qr lose it quickly, no in- between. •· (I) ,.. .,._,..., fl ~ itiea aQ ... : (a) A ..... • ... •• puta. U.> Dllcnri• ,,_ tlae ta ,..U. <e> A rult •dale ~. (I) 'Illa.,_,..., If Q'llMlla •a1 Ille: (a) A Mn• t"9eu parta. ()>A rult • tlae bodJ'. Ce> Sen ftu •· (d) All el tlile .-.... (It) O•ee 10• 'a~• '•d _,,. • ••• allln 1oe eu ealda I& _..: (a) Yet. O.> ~ (e) Giily .-u ...... (d) o.a, sypMk (11) U a ......... WO•U Ml 1ypb.Ul9ud&tlllio&&reated.._ bab1: (a) WW alwQ9 be ban wltll Q'Dldlll, <'> May be bera wtUa ~ <i> WW ..._.be bora w\fai QPWlll. • . Unusual Intrigues .. Going. • • Some of the mOlt unusual lttma Hallatm will be plKed 0o the auctSoo block at UM ... oual fund.ralaef, apomored b1 Harbor Ke,, a support poup of the Cblld &ddeMe Centerof OraqeCount:y. For lnstance, a football ~ ta the entlre Rama team; e> A piece of the White Buffalo med ta tlae movleoftbesamename; · Automobiles; Awaterbed: A Honda owned by Steve McQueen; Anne Bancroft'• toe •hoes. ~· AutograPbed televllioo 'scripts of ... Rockford tlles; Tripeto~taoywbere. ·For thole who doo 't care to join UM lftlr btddiq, there wUJ be a wide variety of oder enttcementa,auchu: ~-,,. ' Gtft.foodandbeverqe~.ar HOUMbold uticlet ransma from~ food packqea to toys, coemetica aDd clothlq .. And, there wlll be entertainment throu&boUt the day. A preview wW be held from 11a.m.mil4 p.m . Saturday, Feb. 12, and au~ wUl be81n at noon SUnday, Feb. 13, at Spr- inger and White AucUon:.:; 8 Coata M•a. DoonwWopenatlOa.m. y. MISSION VIEJO feff A.-y "'•'I} 28892 Marguente Pkwy ---............. '495-5902 _ .. 1-.tM • CX>STAMESA B L 17~ Stnet IW ........ ~ &c....T_. It 17'11 M .,... ................... 642-8651 *"~"' ,.., "'' , .. , ~plNf SllNfl. tt•ol• er 11•111 HAMS IJNClAUDM ... YIDICtmS CAlll ......,. MAMWAC1\llllS -WPITID TIMTIAISM CC*>MA D& MAa IW. AEllSOlll HfAlllG AIDS . ,_Lc...e...,. C:--.. M4r-'71-•U FINE STATIONERY ,. ....... ltWll ,._..,_,. ... _. • "• ;tcsd ......Qrrp • Reedy to Serve with Honey'n Spice Glue • Spiral Slk>ed From Top to Bottom • We Package and Ship from COelt to Coast • Full Service Oellcatesaen • Imported a... OUMC~ ,...,._ ......... ~·-(714) ltJ.9960 ..... . ,.. .,..,. _ llUL ......... .......... (714) &35-2461 COIOllA DO. I• ,, .... c.-...... (714)17~ ·~~ .. --UICllOllW£ (714)J46.3194 HEMPHILL'S SEMI-ANNUAL LAST 3 l)AYS MEN WOMEN SffPES ....---FEATURINGTHISEIRAMDS-...... _.... WOMEN'S RORSHEIM, .JOYa, AMAi.fi, AIR STEP & OTHERS , ... ,.,.,. , - Jonat an Winters, one of several · · celebrity guests at benefit sponsored by Designing Women, is greeted by Bill Gwinn, master ol ceremonies. Comedian later Rosemarie (left) and other stars from He>ll ywood Squares at· tended benefit for LSguna Beach School of Art. She is w~Jcomed by Mrs. Lawrence Reynolds, founder of suppttrt group (ce nter), and Mrs. Alex Robertson, current chairman. gave tnonotosue. ·:~· . NEW YORK GARMENT MlNUFACTURERS' SURPLUS * OPEii TO THE PUBLIC • THIS WEEK* 5 SPECl~LS! * IOTHIH PRE·CUT-, · BUY WHAT YOU IW * 60" POLYESTER GABARDINE *155 (PURPLE) BEQ. M-fUU. IOLTI YD. / " . . . . ... .. J ~ ' ~ :-~ ~ ~ ' ~ ... 't " .. .. ... .. .. .. '\ .. . .. - Leu expensive cuts ol lamb aucb u shoulder chops and lhanb love to be cooked wtthln the cot.y contlrtes ol an eleetric Rillet ... slmblering ln a sauce ol their ()WD 10oa Juices, Ravored . with pineapple, in this.case. CIDNESE LAMBSKILLET 2 tablespoons cooking oil 4 Jamb •boulder chops, about it4 lnch tbtck 1 medlum-slie onion ~ cup'dlced celeey ~ cup diced green pepper 1 can (S. ounces) pineapple chunks in tbelr owb juice 1 can (.5 ounces> tllced bam· boo •boots . • - 1 pound lresb bean sprouts ~teaspoon a alt '4 teuaoon pepper 1 tabl~ cornstarch 1 Mi teupooa:as soy sauce - 1 medium-size tomato. cut ln wedges . Preheat" skillet to aa> degrees. Pour ill oil. Add lamb. Cook until lamb ii browned on both stdes1 then add onion, green pepper ana celery. Drain bamboo shoots, pineapple, and bean sprouts, and add p~eapple juice to the lamb . Cover and simmer at 200 degrees for 30 minutes, or until lamb Is tender.-Add bamboo shoots, pineapple chunks and bean ·~ts. ~mblne salt, pepper, cor· nstarcb and soy sauce, and stir into lamb ml.xture. Add tomato wedges. Cover and cook 5 minutes or until sauce.thickens. Other· Chinese vegetables - snow peas, lotus root and water cbestnats -may be added to lb.is recipe if you wish. Serves4. 170 E. 17tll ST. c.<>STA MESA. CALIF • ........ ~s ... .,,. ...... ~ ....... ,t'" ...... MIC:-~tr .. Wot- U.s..D.A. Tep Clleic• SIDE of BEEF UIOA Tor CHOtCI HINDQUARTER "--··· ••••• . .. ,._ .... .... 1 .... 17\. .... ..... Sectt. -------------------~ .. FW« STEAK I" .. TRI-TIP . --FIUET StaiJ 1'tth a mix -any cake mis 1and add your own creaUYe toudl. llk• beer. lpRes and lna-tOt colfee. Wlt!ttihb cake u Jnsplratlon, try your own special .touches - vaey the aplces; add mats. rai&i.Ps or data; make a layer cake with whipped cream or marmalade between tJie layeH. GINGBOEESCAKE .1 "c,kage yellow cake mix 1 ~ cupa beer a eggs · 1 tablespoon vegetable oil 2 tablespoons instant coffee 2 teaspoons ground cln-nemon . Pour batter into well greased Bundt or an1el food cake pan. Bake in modertte oven "<350"> 3S • mlnutes or unUl ilone. Cook (ake in pan 10 minutes. Invert onte cake rack and cool. When c~e 1a cool~ clue with confectioners• butter-cream f~ · . "t' I Does aecurt with 2 loq lkewen. • Place lenathwlae ln a abal1ow~~ llelt · remaininf 4 tablespoons butt«. lflx iD orecano. Pour OVel' loaf. bzwbing end pi~ of bread with butter mixture. Bake in a preheated. moderate oven (350 F.) unW bot and eheele ii melted. about20miautes. Yield: 8portkma. .... Dinner ·for Liver Lovers Oilly 1 .;. Pan-fried liver with· PANFRIEDLIVE& ·2 tables poons minut.esonea'cbsideun- mayoana,i.se · Wdone. ·• SH'SALE ~¥JCO.-.;•·1-•······"·ltw.. ~-~······" ••••• $1_.ft&a. !£~ .. , ............ Ana. IOC:S "° .. ~ ! • T ..... .SJ .lt&1 J GROUND JEEF . .. LIA~, ................... Ww. _U"l"(A LMM • • ••• ·•,. •. • •.. .aa-"4111 • .;. ··-· ,._. •• • •t••1">• •• ·~. I>ip liver in seasooed flour, coating both sides. Prepare cb~e sauce Coot bacon until crisp in. mix. followln1 'dJrecti~ laqe IJdllet · pour off just· oo packaie, stirring iii ball of th~ drlppl.nas. mayonnaise and the (ReQlove bacon and crumbled bacon. Serve crumble.) Cook liver in liver with cheese sauce. bacon drippings for 3 to 4 Makes4 tosservings . . ' ~ .. . MOWlllAnMMe CAMIY~_. ... .,... s I St . . CUIE STEAKS • •f •• • · u. .~ "99c GROUND IEEF • • • • • • . u. . 41130lllser..t ............. Pll.67J.1116 .. .. . . Del Monte ~ ,.,. FiUft Cocldall 5 70 ............................ 30-0Z.CAN .. DalMonte ~ Pear Halves 5 70 ........................... 29-0Z.CAN Del Monte / ~!!!~!!~~ 59,o -~ I • DalMonta ~ Toll!ata sauca3ac ........................... 15-0Z. CAN Apres r ~~!~~--........ ..:' ... 49° Ski . '·. J Wiien lt eomea to entertaiJabig, today's workinf 1*"..m1t• must bea bit d a miraci. worker. The ~ret to ~ with eae 11 in cboc81aa entrees that fix tJtemsetv., Attlnltbe eoot free to play with iueats. Tb1I dbm• ·f« tA&ht ii a almpllfied (and subtlety C!OO&ed-dawp) ""10n d tt.e lleldcan entree llole eon Pollo, a cb1ctm clilb that U1e11 cbDcalatet.o fiavorlta nuce. (Don't beacareclolltr-it'1dellclOU1.) Jlesican Rice is an ~ ~panlment, 'prepared in 1 UW. time and left to coot 25-30 minutes by itself. All you · ·neect ta a toaaect·aelad and aiml:t~essert. like Pineapple . · :1: ~1Dwlllcbclllortee$n't erewithtbetaste. . . , -.ZCONPOU.O Ai.out4 ~ ebldtspieees IU119water ., "'-WIJ)C)Oq Hlt :.tt,~(ljloakm ~ teaapom 1arlic powder a tablillaJM)Oill pMnut butter 2tabletpOCma ~ 2 tablespoom 6aur 3t.blespoona cbUlpowder 1 chicken boUWca cube 2 cape l'e84J'Ved eblckm broth 2 cups (twOIJ.ounce c:dl> tomato aauce . SesameseMJ WMb cbktea piecel. Combine c:hlcken, water and salt ha Dateh oven. Heat to boiliDC. ~u~heat and boll gentl~: covered. 25 mlM:t# ])rain~; reserve broth. Beat ou Jf DatCh OYeD; Md cldon and prllc powder. Cook until (Iliad i. traqaluc~t. Md pqnllt butter; cook and stir until toamy. Remove Ciom beat. . • llix cocoa, flour and cblll powder together. Add to J)fmGl butt# m~; ltir untU smooth. Stir in bouillon eabe a 2 cups raerVed ddcten. broth. Cook s minutes overmedlum be•t, sttniDC occUioaally. Remove skin from ddcten, except for drumatieb. Adel tomato.sauce and ddet• to sauce mixture. Heat to tiioiJinf. Reduce beat and simmer, covered, 15 lplnutes. If delired, aprinkle with sesame seeds and serve with Mex· · • Jean Bice. Serva I, ( . · off on any one box of l<ellogg's• Su~r Frosted .... Mini-Wbeat3• cereal. \\'hats more. ff \'OU buy all three fla,·ors of Mlni-\\"heats. you· cnn SQ\'e 81. Just mail us three box tops, one each from Sugar Frost.ed, Drown Supr-Ctnnnmon and Toasted Mlnl-Whellts with the refund coupon. o.nd wc11 send you the dollar. Th tee kJ.nds of Mint-Wheats. All kinds of sa'iogs. USDA : CHOICE I-BEEF RIB ;. STEAKS 19 Grade "A" =~=~'· Bas~d. Hens or Toms, Frozen • () . .... ... llalphs ... 1·04 yean young . ' This ~at Ralphs is ceJebratlng 104 years of gi~I~ 'people what they want al\1the Right PrJce • .. Tbe s,tcret of Ralphs succt\f>S, I believe, Is that while lott'ler markets have relJed on short-term expedie~ts, Ralphs has stuck to on• policy over the years. That pollcy is: Whenever .. lbJe. to pan along the benefits from volume buying and special purcha .... to c~atomers In the form of lowertpl'icea. Ralphs hasn't comprol1)ised on their high quality 1tanderd1 or · g,neroua selection to do It. The vJay I see It, to stay ahead . ill the competiti ve super- r-market business for 104 , y$rs, you have to be giving people what they want. I'd like tQ keep It that way. Call me if you have a questiqn, a comment, or price inquiry. pit' tb. 10• 2•• per lb. , .. p« 1e. 1•• per lb. per Fresh ·1n~Store Bakery ... featuring Birthday Cakes,, . ~~ hot folls, fresh baked brea'9 and much more for your shopping convenience •. " '" '· .. ". ,.,,, " ~ . .. , . ,, .,, . . . . . . ' With coffee P•ices soaring and consumer groups ur&in& drinkers to cut back. some coffee drinkers may find it easter to forgo that second cup by consider· ing the effects of the brew on personal health. According to a State Health Department physician, the caffein In . coffee acts like an am-pbetamlne, speeding up the heart and stimulat· lng the central ner"ous snte{ll . This brings ibout newfound alert· ness alter a morning cup olbrew. . The problem, accord· ing to Dr. Harold Mozar, chief of the llealtb • Department's Chronic Disease Section, is that ''once ihe caffeine wears off,. your efficiency beoomes less than il was beCore drinking coffee. So to fight tht slump you drink m~ coffe~ .The .,DJulng cupe mar•oring about anxiety," he said. The heaviest coffee drinktrs, says Mozar, are usuaUy clgaret smokers who put their bodies through a vicious cycle of ups and downs when altema~ly smok· ing and'drlnklng. ''Wben a coffee drinker becomes over· stimulated on a few cups of coffee. be m~ pick up a cigaret to relax. Con- versely the nicotine will act as a sedaUve and dull bis senses so he'll drink another cup for a pick- me-up and then smoke to come down." Dr. ?tJ.o~ar said. 11.ozar called a heavy C'>ffee clriDlcer someone who drinks between eight and 15 cups a day. Thb can cause dlzzineM, restlessness and sleep- ing difficulties. he said, not to mention the effects or coffee's acidic content on the stomach. Tannie oils, said Moaar. cause the bod)' to secrete gastrlc acid. "Dependina oo "°"'well an individql toaiintes coffee, It may irritate the llninc of tbe st6macb, •• he uid. warnin&.-nJ prone to ulcett IO ~ay away from tt: A ree~y by tbi Boato" Cil1$b0tative Drue ~J~ team fOUJtd •• perlODI who drink OM to fl¥e eus-ol coffH a d~f. run alit times the nu Of heart disease. · But detatfelnllted cof-' fen don't aeem to pee· sent tbat cood of an alternaltve, ell her. Decaffeinated varieties contain methylene obolor,d•, a themlcal agent under close atrutiny by the National Cancer ln1UU•te far possible carclnoaentc t.._iu . " BUr~IS~NG I'VE 8E.EN MEANING iO ASK~ .•• by TOlll latluk HAVE~ E\Q ~1~0 USING A FAKE 1lME M PLA'J2 . . by Jeff Miier Ir 8111 Hinds 11.-~~~~~~~~~~~--'~-"'-I..:/:.;,_:.~ .J__L_ ---L_I. _1_1 IT DIDN'T WORK AUNT ~RITZI, I ..JUST WOKE UP WITH CHILLS AND A H~ADACHE AND A SORE THROAT AND AN UPSET STOMACH f 0 TODAY'S CIOSSIDID PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate 1 ... 1d1y I PULZle Sol'led ACROSS ,5 M~telan c'H'A'i R C 1 .. Bultoni and • 5 Mond fur. 1rve1y Atcha•c 10COl'lloutet food 14 llHIPQSI· ti'll lnt1111r '15Stnined lood le Lengthy 1n tiine t 1 Doctor's .•• Foun t11n •6Dummy $ pertner •8 M1dt lun ol !>O Prt11den1111 nick NI me !>I Mows brilkly 53Former &'10aU.1up e1 ---t1a• e2 Commend 10 laVOt AIC.IOlR A A"' "I D f C.11 ll lE S AC. • • .. 0 0 , l Rtf I E S y E 1 l I\ T • 0 vc-L I 8 ( It Al s' t'ID S I C. ( N II E y f R SIA l I N A s s £• o• ( \-T I R IE 0 I I" "'" 9 A N THIE 'l 110 ~ I I ' s 0 T 0 1 • u s t ,_, Hf T T .. l I,.. T Alf I IS T I IT •• O• 1 • .ll' I/ s ii £ ( l i •E-T I~ I llOI• I c ID l I '""1111[ s s I I/ E VA NC S JllllEIN T R E r A II f • r RIEIAIT SA N IC 6• Slnelf --ornc:rio M\l(ray hon 95 Be fr ug.t t 9 Sufety l>Ond 6e E11>-lh.,ed 20 lllttoduchon 91 8fltlg up 21 EmlnenUy 68 Btc0me college color team 40 Ev1luate 23 e.c... ·.:.. ...,. of t1uue 69 Femll!lne I I Str11l • 3 MoV9 I.tit a urchin analle 25"1 amella _,~ 28 Saint ---. bfly lfCtltllahop 29 Shlded walks 34 A111ma1 350newhols OC>l)()Sed 37Heath genus 38Jaoanew com 39~d 41 Otfang«t person 12 ····end 45 Ardor Conclutl()I! • 7 Negllg1nt DOWN 13 Umtt lor · • 9 P11t of rqlly 0.£.D name 1 Hlf 1 BCOO'itnt 52 Mour«ain '2 Unu1ual 22 8folltn pools '*9C)n. 2• Beret 53 Persian Slang makers poet 3 Btoed 26 Ertrtme'y 5• Not one • l«ome bl!Wr 55 He9ttng rigid 27 Black: YtUll 5 Aatronaut French 5& Being: Sp 8Sfrlnted1"--280taudlble 5&Accumulat1 ' ttn111•nt1 ~ goods 7 Jactde'1 tat• 30 Stone: 59 And hulbtnd suffilt tlsewhert 8 GMeOus 3 t Eats 2 word• . Slarig e1tment 32 Ashil• ~o O\ipe: Slang 9 OnttrtO 33 Surfti1td 83 A~OllC l·OCeltrc · language (•Hetters · , town 36 lmpol't1nce btve.rao• 1 0 Member of 1 39 8fownl1h I ~ PEANUTS/... CiJ.•P ctitr '·~' , ... .- 1....:r c11Jf • '• ..... ··""!·•·--· .. •\·-'-.~ .. .- JUDGE PARKER .- 1 : ' .THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT µcJN ~E" Yow~ CRYSTAL. ~LL MAS "THOSE Um£ HOLES IN IT ? DR. SMOCK 1 i ,;'------' . r -... "I GORDO by Charles M. Schulz Ci4Dl' -~ CilOP •. ~cP by Harold Le Doux ------- by Tom K. Ryan HARK (twrtd 1o 11r). "rnE S1ACCA10 iHONVER. OF APPMACHll'(f ~. by Mell byGeorgeLenaoat ·. ..., 1Y111 1-l i)lfT1 "Mr~. Hopkins tell' me &he will apin have to postpone her lecture. 'A More Efficient You,' as she simply cannot find I\ anywhc~.' DENNIS THE MENAeE l -· TOMAT049c JUICE Libby Libby Libby! 46 02 can Soft Margarine &3c Imperial-for Teal flavor! 1 lb Ramen Supreme 19c 1 1 Oriental Noodles ... Maruchan-3 oz Shortening •••.• s1 59 1 Digestible Crisco-:! lb. size Be choo"y - choale a brand you knO\\ ! MIRACLE 93c WHIP Kraft's famous dressing! Quart jar · Peanut Butter . 93c Jit-creamy or crunchy-18 oz jar Tomato Sauce. 33c Prices in elf ett Thur. Feb. 3 through Wed. Feb. 9 Open daily 9 to 9 Sundoy 10 to 7 No •alt• to <kal•ra Sliced Bacon ••• s 1°! El Rancho's thicker ranch style SHORT s 1 a9 1 L RIBS • Boneless-rib cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Satisfaction ... that's the commodity you're really looking for. You want to be &\U'e you're getting the most of it for rour money! That's why you should choose El Rancho -for the , best · in .value -eveey day! Because we're choosy, you can be, too! .finding Rib .. SELECT SMALL END There's more value in El Rancho's famed standing rib roast .•• U. .0 .A. Choice beef, i;elected for quality, trimmed for value and aged for flavor and tenderness! · Ground Beef ... s l 1! Lean! Choose buJk or pattil'~ CHUCK 79·~ STEAK .. Cent.er Cut! U.S.D.A. Choice beef Beef Rib Bones 892 U.S.D.A. Choice-to bake or barbecue Ranchero s 119 STEAK • Select small end of Choice beef rib! • For Roasting! smm 69! Chicken Gr. "A" fryers with Oroweat Dreta· ing, butter and freth eggs! l[ffATll cdlllNE MILK-FED VEAL The real thine, for more value! J POLSKA KIELBASA KNOCKWllST • SMOKED SAUSMI $15~ Specialties from Hillshire Farms FRESH ALLETS OCEAN PERCH Bread them for a taste delight! Fillet of Sole •• s2•! Mild flavored English variety . I " • ' r .I . t i I . f ' Hunt's-in the big 15 ounce can Root Beer sa ,.°' ... 99e ' Mug Reg .. or Diet-11 01. NR htles. They'll lo\'e a root beer float! lpBHCBP liBBk ~rct ... ~2.71 Halibut Steak •• s35! Center cut from northern fish T b t STUlls s12s ur o oa FU£Ts • • • • • Rushed here from Greenland waters TOILET 79c TISSUE •••• Here's value! because it offers all the flavor, all the tendernes~ of El Rancho beef! Rib cut-U.S.D.A. ('hoice M.O. 4 roll pack-colors or \\hite Zee Napkins • • • 99c 'Fh. big family pack has 360 in 1t ! Sausage rrui sTYLE • s 14! We make it the old world way . LARCE LOIN WESTERN LA• s2s9 CHOPS • Fresh! Domestic! U.S.D.A. Choice Ground Lamb . • 79f Fresh-and U.S.D.A. Choice quality! BOND.ESS LAMB LOIN $ 279 CHOPS • Fresh! \IS D.A. Choice Saratoga cut Chicken Livers • 69 2 Tender. tasty-for fryins! SMAL~ LOIN · CHCffs· $2'! Fre!lh! Domestic! U S.0.A. Choice LARGE s 129. _ 1 CRABS Meaty Dunsene88! fresh frozen Frozen Food Oranges u•. . . . 39c Del Monte's pretty segments! 11 oz Cake· Mixes ••.• 59e Duncan Hines-all l11yer var1et1£--.. Hake a favorite this week · fr111b lpar1 Ribs ·~~~RK.~ll/l ORANGE 59c JUICE Minute Maid from Florida! 12 oz .. :~ks49c Finger lickin' l[ood! Fresh Eastern pork with 110 much lean m e>nty goodnet-s to enjoy ... they'll love 'em! Choo8e them for value! From the Suni.hlne Bakers! 1fi oz Hunt's Catsup .• &9c The big 32 ounce bottle la..t ... lnngrr Palmolive l9 ••• 79c For diahe&-and your hands! ~2 0 7. Cookie Mix..... 75e Quaker'& 0 11lml•11l-so easy! 18 n1. Fill the cookie jar, economically PUREX 49c BLEACH For whiter whitec1! Half·1allon Flank Steak smo .s21! Cubed beef with dressing! Choice! • Delicatessen -ranks w, .............. 93c Tpey plump up 1111 you cook 'em, into bi&' fet juicy treats! 16 oz pkg. Bologna OSCAI MAYO •• 39c Gruyere nm mm.~ ggc C ... Mut or Beef ••• 12 oa pkg. Plain-Sn weds11. 6 oun" package . ' Kosher Salami. '1 3' Canned Hmn ••• s99a HtbteW l;lratfonal to be auret 12 oa Reth'• "Honey Olaud .. --6 lb. can . Sliced Swiss... 79c Turkey Breast • 69~· Slictd whh• mtat.,..t>anola...:..:J oa Boneless Ham •• s21! Rath Hickory Smokcd-3 to 5 lbs. Meat Loaf ovouwv • 99f Our ~wn mi~-delightfully seasoned! Entrees DJ.ow•Y..,. 99c Stuffed Pepper, Cabbage Roll. Crumb Cake snun1189c Be choosy about Freshness! Cheese, Cherry, Chocolate Chip! App/11 REDDEUCIOUS •••••••• 1•1/ Strawberries ••• 49c Bird&eye's "Quik·Thaw"-10 oz pkg. Lima Beans • • • • 45c Birdseye's Fordhook-10 oz pki Extra fancy quality from Washington Stale ••• crisp, crunchy and juicily deliciO\J s! Egg Beater • • • • 79c Fresh Lemons • . 29f Large Size ... juicy Californian! AVOCADOS IJIC( FUEIT($ • .. 3 9 ~ CAllFOltlU CIOWN " AllD SO IM'RfTIOUS! " Alf alt a Sprouts 39c Crisp. 'ceu11e they're fresh! ~ 1-':i 0 2 tub Comice 39.c PEARS Sweet and juicy Northern fruit Fleischmann'& substitute! pint Noodles S9c Romanoff Stouffer's main course treat! 12 oz .. Liquor Dep 't. G• e. RANCHO'S OWN s3aa In REDUCED $1JO •••••••••••••••••• lt't bottled jutt (oi u.-and you.-wltb our namt on It! And it'• 90 proof! Half-gallon Early Times ••• s 1111 Straipt whitkey In the halt.gallon : : Cabernet Wine. s211 : Cribari-Cot dinned 1.5 liter Chablis Wine· ••• 1215 • AJAX CLEm •••••••••••••••• tic An tll·pu~ llquld cle•ner•28 oa. • 81. DONDNDALL .. ,, ..... ..._""""' WASHINGTON CAP)-4.: Coniwnen wW tee plenty of ? beef, poultrJ pork and milk on .. ; arocery 1belvea thi1 month. ' .. : aotber lndlcatiClll that farmers •: • ... ve •te&il*l up productloa ol ~ ~c food commodJUn for tbe .• p aat year. repoJ'ta the ! .. Alrleulture Department. • I ne fCINCut WU In & monthly ••• j .... ood llartetifta Alert·· nport : aent to larse-YOlume food buyers eucb u ICboola. boepitals and Gther Institutions. f By U.S. definition, used In the l'eport. "plentiful'• means l••more than enou1b for r equirements" while .. ade· quate" indicatel tbere will be , .. enou1h to meet needs .. of COll- tnUDera. /l .. lllht" designation ~· meana "less than adquate0 and !· therefore not enough for normal :• }requirements. .. • The report al8o said that new ;: eupplles of fresh citrus ftuitl and !• juices will be plentiful lo -J'ebruary, but otflctals said the · • leuessment was made before the • new blast of freedng weather re- ached into Florida oranae groves. A USDA spokesman said the freeze's impact on national eitrus supplies and retail prices h as not yet been determined. I Although the February beef aupply is classified as plentiful, it , will be down 6 to 8 percent from ' the record levels of' a year ago when caWe producers were ~­ •bin& their herds rapidly to coun· teract further market price declines. As farmers and rancbera 1t11t more caWe to market. retail tieef prices declined 1teadily lut 1ear. but belan rillnl late Jut fall u the cutbacks took bold . Thus. retail beef prices In Deeember averaged nearly $1.39 a pound on an all-cut basis used by USDA to indicate price changes: That was up about a penny from ~ovember. accord· lnl to prelhitinary figures. In December, 1975, beef was nearly $1.51 a pound, The plentiful pork ouUook for February will mean a supply 18 to 20 percent larger than in the same month last year, the report said. Farmers had increased hoc production sigoificanUy after holding it lo check for several years. Retail pork /rices lo December average $1.19 a pound. according to USDA. Although that wu up almost two cents from November, the lo- crease still left pork far cheaper than the $1.48 a pound consumers paid in December, 1975. Major food items in the ade- quate category for February in· eluded eggs, turkeys and some processed vegetables. Only a few products are expected to be in light supply, including raisins and pecans. Further plentiful food items for February included peanuts (they'll probably hold their own for the next 5 years), potatoes, onions. dry beans, fresh fruit other than citrus, butt.er and all grains such as rice, wheat and com. Chicken, Potatoes -One Pot Star • 1n Chicken and Potato Scallop puts two popular dishes together -roast chicken and scalloped potatoes. to create a new chicken dish. CIDCKEN AND POl'ATO SCALLOP 1 whole brotler-fr)'er cblcken 1 teaspoon navor enhancer '• cup vegetable oil 1 large onion, lbinly sliced (1 cup) 1 medium green pepper, t.bi.nlysUced (1 cup> 4 medium potatoes, peeled andallced (4 cups) 'fl teaspoon salt \19 teaspoon pepper 1 cup chJcken bouillon Sprinkle chicken with fiavor enhancer. In large fry pan heat com oil over medium beat. Add chicken, turning to brown oil all sides. Remove. Add ooion and gr~ pepper. Cook unW tender. Jn large covered cas&er<>le or dutch oven · genUy stir together potatoes, onic· ;, green pepper, salt and pep~r; add bouillon. Place browned chicken, breast side up, on top of potatoes. Cover and bake in 3'15 degree F. oven 35 minutes. Uncover and continue baking 20 n:dnutes or until fork can be iDJertecl in chicken with ease and potatoes are tender. Makes 4 servb:lgs. LAIGE LOIN IND. 1 09 Pork Chops u . SPRINGFIELD NON DAIRY CREAMER 16 0%. JAR KERNS TOMATO JUICE 4~ 0%.,CAN HEINZ TOMATO KEIGIUP 32 0%. IOTTl.E GINGHAM DISHWASHIMG DDERIENI • PIMK • LIMON • UMI 32 OZ. IO'ml SPRINGFIELD NATURAL IRAPEFRUll JUICE YOINl-IENDER PORK ·BEEF Ll,rER SPARE RIIS FllSH SKMe AND SUCID 59~. ~ 1.29La CEMTER LOIN • 6 9 Pork Chops1 u. BAR1M SMOKED . CEii HAMS MOSICIM SMO FAT . MOSHAHIC MOU MEAT TOIE4T 511~ FRESH GROUND 59! BEEF BARM • HICKORY SMOKED SLICED BACON IULK STYLE SU. IAG 303 CAN SI~?. :: r 4 Door Sedan l~cludes wsw steel bett9d radlll tl1", power ·ltterlng. powitf' front disc brakM, Mleet sf'llft crulsomatlc tran1mr.lon, dual 1port mirrors. bOdy & dltcJc lld paint stripe, deluxe bumper group, 250 CID 1-& cylln<Mr engine. Stock t317 Ser. #4909. 4 door pillared hardtop. selectshlft cruiS&<rmatic trans .. power front disc b<akes & steering. duraspark ignition system. steel-belted radial ply tires. directaire venl1lat1on system. 351 CIO·V8 engille. deluxe bumper group, air conditioner s61ectaire. wsw radial steel belted tires & ttnted glass, complete. Stock #472Ser. #5369 $300,000 WORTH OF USED CARS IN 170 VOLKSWAGEN IUG 2 dr . auto trans $1499 radio & heat~ Sharp Red l1n1sh (413AGG) •75 FORD GUMDTORINO Auto trans . pwr $ 3 39 9 steer.. power brakes, vinyl roor. radio, tieatet, 27,00C> miles (743M"-J} l'lu1T••l- •73 FORD rtMTO IUHAIOUT 2 dr auto trans $ radio & hee:ler. factory air. bucket seats (51•JEP) 1999 176 FORD LTD WAGON Station wagon. air$ 5499 cond .. auto trans., power steering. power brakes. vfnyl Interior. roof raok. 10.000 ~ r &L'· mllff. (931 NON) "' " ~..,,. 174FORD ntUHDBlllD 2 dr hdtp , amtlns4999 stereo, auto, ai r. py«. strg . Mats, btake1. wind., vtnyt roof. tilt whl .. 1pd control. ~r·•~-lharp car. (727UIN) •74 FORD am ~r~~s,:,~;,~: a!:,~$ 3 7 99 power steering & brakes. v1nyJ roof eKtra sharp• (002LFJ) PluoTu•L•c- '74 FORD MUSTANG II 2 d r . automatic $ 2499 power steering vinyl top. radio & heater (083JSOJ •74 PONTIAC GIANDPRIX ~ig ~u~~lxa"j,::";!~$ 4199 pwr wind . seats landau top. sunrool (930MTQ) ~ul Tu &l- •75 FORD FIOO equipped. radio & heater. (1A26708) Fu 11y Fac1ory$ 3995 PlueT .. &ll- '72 PINTO Auto. tran~~~ryW$AG10H89 9 a ir, radio. heater, wsw's, tinted glass. wheel covers, roof rack. wood grain siding. Extra nice Plut r .. • uo-. (109FYN) Hard top. auto.$1299 trans . factory air. pow steering power brakes. bucket seats. vlnyl roof. radio & heater Sharp little" Plus la•• L- ear. (347HGB) '74 FORD #I 00 SURFER VAN ~!~~~ .. ,'':,~~ii/~:~;$ 4499 tor summer fun . 29,000 miles. Surfer conversion. stereo 8 P1u1Taa AL-=-track tape. ff84046) 175CHEVY MONZA TOWNE CPI. 2 dr .. 4 spd trans .. $ 2799 vtnyl roof radio & heater. lux trim. 14 .000 mile s. (125NXX) P1u1Tull -.. 172 DODGE SWINGER ~~e~{i~i.u;:~Y;r~~?,:$1999 radio & heater. (750ELA) Pt .. r .. &Lic.n. LEASING? WE LUSE AU MAKE CARS AHO TRUCIS FORD • GM • CHRYSLER- ON DISPLAY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ./CHECK. OURCOMPE11TIVl1An5 AU. LUSE ORDEAS EXPEDITED FOR EARLIEST POSSllLE DBJVERY '72 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DR. HT. $199 DOWN $5814MONTH 2 dr . auto . fact air. pwr. sir . pwr brakes. R&H. xlnt cond (358EJP~ S 199 down. S59. 14 per mo for 36 mos., def pmt price S2292.04. Annual percent~ge rate 18 15% on approved credit. Full pnce s 1699. ·2 Dr. sedan Includes 4 speed trans .. front disc brakes. racl< and pl steering. clolh and vinyl bucket oolor-tceyed cut pile cptg .. mini electric rear window defroster. belted radial ply tires. wheel covers. hter ~v engine l deluxe bumper g tinted glass. Stack J0152 Ser. 15927 2 dr. hartdop includes 4 speed ma trans.. front disc brakes. rack & pl steering. contoured bucket se color-keyed cut pile cptg . so 1nsula1ton package. tachometer. am temp gauges. wheel covers, 2.3 hter eng1ne-2V & front & rear bum guards. Stock 10476 Ser. 19658 IN STOOC! 1976 and 1977 TRUCKS • VAN CONVERSIONS • PICKUP CONVERSIONS • 4 WHEEL DRIVES • COMPLOE TRUCK SERVICE FACILITIES '73 FORD GALAXIE 500 2 Or. HT. 51 99 DOWN s7734 MONTH 2 dr . auto . fact. air. pwr sir . vinyl top. R&H. xlnt colld. (862GMSJ S199 down. S77 34 per month for 36 mos . def pmt. pnce S2982 Annual percentage rate 18.15% on approved credit Full price S2199. TAKE YOUR CHOICE FOR CASH or TRADE DOWN (ON AJIPIOVED CIEOITt Many More In Our Huge Inventory '73 FORD PINTO WAGON s199 DOWN $81 18MONTH o4 spd . radio. heater. excellent cond. (525GRVI S199 down. S81 18 per month for 36 mos . def pmt price S3128.48. annual peroenlage rate 18 t6% oo approved credit Full prioe S2299 '73 FORD PINTO RUNABOUT s199DOWN 1658~ MONTH Deluxe extenor. custom paint. radio & heater. (030JFY) s 199 down S65.82 per month for 38 mos . def. pmt. price S2588.52. annual percentage rate 18 15% oo approved credit. Full pnce 11899. I ' l * PVBUC NOTICE -NOTl(I( INlllTINO 910S few Thtw Ill _,. Tift' PICk·UPI. 81-fof-ml end tell(lfk .. lcllo' eVl llWI• •• City DI Fo""· lellf 11111..,, ll'llr<llatll'IO Dept. lld 0..01..,. · 10 oo. m. ,..,,....,.11, 1tn. Pvllll ..... Or...,. COHt Olll'r ~IOt. FelJ l, "" r. , . P\JBUC NOTICE ~. PUBLIC NOTIClt , '\ -•. > -----------PUBLIC NOTlCE "CTITIOUS IUllN•lS NAMI STATIMIHT Tlle IOOO'#lf'IO 1Mr•Oll\ er• dOl"Q-· •u •1 STS ~AH OIE(;UITO, U:J Aw Prlftcaua, Sen c1e,,....,I•. C•lll01"'• "'" OaN\ JOit Hiii, in Ave ~·~ SAii c11me11tt. Cellforn11 916'1 ~~ Sc!WlnOtrl 111 Aw ...,~ <•-.SI" o .... nte, c.11•-•"'1t "''' tllllnHI 11 c~ld w.., In 111¥1-1 Oltlll Jon Hiii Wof'91M9 S(lfllldelil I I Tllh .. ,,_... ••• flllct ... -Cou.,,., Cl••-ot Oranoe ~°""• ., Jen.,.rv >. 1tn , ,,... 11'111111"*' Or_. Coetl 01111v Pllol. Jen II tt, » elld ,,., 7 "" 111-7' I ' , 0. h '•Mollee: AD ....i 91tate advertised 9' \111111.MWJpaper la IUb· .Net to the Federal Fair llouaint Act or 1988 ~ makea!t llletal t •durUae ·'an)' pre-=:::-n~lmltatlon. or REALTOR 671-1111 OPEN HOUSO •OOD IUY IM THI IACI IAY: J26t '•Ot.DIM CIRCLI -J 1.-0o•. 2 b•tlt, f a•lly roo• a•d ••flllh .... COYWH ..... 9d hilt ........... wfllt • ,.....,.,. ....... .._fwS71,000. OP.IN DAILY t~L •••• MIW ~ OLDI COltOMA Da MAit CHMM. J 11• 1-. I IMA • a.2 lot. C•o It t lo~ 1'lih bH111d al-..... .._ ......... c: ...... .... -=-..... AU. for lfpDl •to .... COU OF MIWPOIT llALTORS Ziii i. eo.t Hwy .. c...... ....... 675-5511 tJon based on raea. color, reJ11aan. aex. « n.atioQal or11ln. Or an latenUon to make any Gaw al 1002· G,.. al I 002 aach Pr"efetUce limit•· .._ ...... _,;-•.: . '' ............................................. . -or~ lWDalion. Tll6i newapaper wtll not nowtn1ay accept any •dvertta.lni for real ~ which la In viola· lioDollbelaw. ...... for Sale •••••••••••••••••••••• •11111111 • 1002 ....................... ~.:.a...-...._ A HAPPIMIMG IM COIOMA Da MAit 4 B<inns., rormal dining rm.. brkt&t. rm., study in child's bdrm., wet bar, family rm. 22xl8, 2 frplcs. Approx. 3,065 sq. ft. Add bea~ul garden, custom built-ins. fabulous outdoor lighting, exquisite condition; private beaches. For the family taking great pride in their surroundings. Priced to sell at $165,000. ARCH llACH ~ 3 Bdrms., 2~ baths; sweeping view from Laguna coast to Palos Verdes. Upgraded carpeting & drapes, wood paneling, great eye appeal! $110,000 ' • i WHTCUFF CHARMER Located on Odord Ln.. one of the ntcest streets In Westcliff! The top oondit:im ol home reflects 9ride of owuenbip in every respect. Home consists of 3 bdrms., den & family rm. The den is exceptionally attractive with its beamed ceil. & bookshelf lined walls. The private paUo & fruit tree planted rear .yard. invite you to sit down & relax. Realistically priced at Sl.29,500 INCL. LAND. If interested. don't delay in calling. Wr¥I MOY9 to our new location on ground floor of Great Western Savings & Loan Bldg., 450 Newport Center Dr .. Ne'WpOrt Beach · Rut .,_ 7 s 9-08 lo!~ Gw&t Wutw& Btq. SHOUCUffs-fJOOL--4235.000 Want an exclusive address? A m05t distinguished looking exterior? Quiet neighborhood? A lovely 3 BR £nglish rustic home with a picturesque set- ting? Then hurry to see this! 2111 S-Jooqui11 NII Road ..wPORT CENTER. lo4.I. 644-4910 · IXICUTIYI HOM• FOii LIASI . ln exclusive Shorecliffs! Spacious 3 bedrms, each with it's own bath & atrium view. This ho~e bas high beamed ceilings. skylights, walls ot glass, a wet bar, a beautiful 36' oool w·b&thhO\ISe. & a very private ·en- vironment. You . should see it, you 'U love it! $1200 a month including gardener. electricity & pool service. U~l()IJI: li()Ml:S REAL TORS•. 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del M• also 10 Mesa Verde. at 546 -5990 I 1002 G1•ral 1002 .............................................. AMCma Hf.AT YllW! On the bluff in The Bluffs; 3 bdrms., 2~ bath con. dorniniwn. A highly upgraded Dolores model with wet bar . broad wraparound deck & a view that W()ll'\ quit! $149,500. Bring your binoculan. 673-4400 . G1Mral I 002 GHaral I 002 ~···••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gt•ral 1002 G••ral 1002 .............................................. W...V .... 4.._ cc· ct OHTHEWATER ~ OWNERWILL e~~()TU~ l~ESPAE»! Orange Coast $125,000 SELL GI TRAILER PARK Mon~•ur \' -"" ...-Fantastic view from this 3 bds, 2 baths. lg ram rm ... with 19 spaces, 2~ ,....., • N. &Qper ·ramlly 2 Bdrm Condo wilh a w/frplc & blg dbl car arres with two houses. & Madam witlt II Bdrms 2600 lC t H Co d IM boat 1l1p avallable For garage. Very few sellers Pool and rerreauonal •bl. brick fi0 replace'. OU WJ., rona e ar I.be execuUve who wants wtll pay ""points·· so you facilities 4 M1le1 from Parlez-vous Fre nch beatL e.arpeta. heavy IEll mATE 644 ·4148 carefree living with ranuseyourGl benefits Pems Lake Reduced to Quarter! 2 Bedrm ·Coo· ...... root, family room !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I quabty--Olls 15 it! You'll Tius one will!' Belter $139,500. CALL 751-3191 do. steps t.o pool, private MIW COSTA MIU POOL HOWJ .,,, ._... Sll,SOO • ,. · This tastefully decorated 3 br. l" -- 'bath home. Huge FR and LR wtfA~ F/P. Custom features thruout. PI0.1r - carpets, wrought iron fence off p6$ ._.. af.:I~ fl.re ring, covered patio. ,., U 11.AUTY $64.UM)~~ 3 bedroom. 1~ bath. wallpaper, pan~J_.""' .. ing, mirrors, new paint in & ollt,~· ~t~ben remodeled. New applianc~~-· · mdU"eCt lighting, ceramic tile COUQJt .. "· , ters, new solarium floors, new carpet , ,. & drapes. Exceptionally clean! . ~~ .... &IAI THIS laYIHI SU.Sod "'"' . 3 br., 1 ~ ha bome tastefully decorat4sa''l '0 •• thruout. Wallpaper. shag carpetap-_ pantry otf kitchen. Fireplace. 2 pati•~ Attractive potted and ba.nglng plan~~-- cable TV. Near schools, freewaya\'r;" shopping & park. • ·~.'v' ~ · : ---. ,.,...,,... .. OPPOITUMITY CARIB tMHr .. ;"~' Come as you are and get the details on your future in the lucrative real estate-- profession. Speak directly with otll'l Fountain Valley Manager. Availab~;­ Tues. Evening 6 to 9, or calJ ror appt.·•-''~ PL.AM TODAY FOi YOUI TOMOUO~ ---l.Jll. l~~agnolia ~t., Fountain Valler '::.: ~ 963·8311 . ' .• . ., '), ______ .... _____ ..._, .. Giard I 002 Ga .. ral -· .•...........•...•..... ····················~~ ~ , f • ... .... \tJ', ... BA YFRONT, pier & float, lots $165,0QO! '• • to $295,000, to build your own cust0m-~·,:~ · home. Several areas to choose from. ·~,_: · ~ . ) : .. A1TRACTIVE Unda Isle 5 BR, 4~~.-:-~·. ~a., fa!D . rm. & formal dining; lge. ~~ ...... · tile patio & waterfront d~k. $285,000, •• ··1·: . . ·.~., ... BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR •'! . ,,~ • I tjl ._. much more. Good ran ln k>ve with ttie quiet look at this TODAY! c~u,r:tyard. Taking de· .,._on quiet street-Ga•ral I 002 G11Mral I 002 ec><>rdlnaled decorating. 64&7711. C::: SE.LE CT eoe1ts now at $51.000. · ,.,, .• ::Lc,~k n':r:';.r~:.: ··;;;;;;;;;~;~;~··· ••••••••••••••••••••••• DRIYE TO WATER 1111 _T __ PR?PERTI ~s I ~ UPERB I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. ·~·· 1~ • J-l 1 Boy~t<lo· Or•v•· N B 6/'J 6161 .. . .. '-~ .... HC:RITAGE REALTORS .._t.biontll,._~ PROPERTIES WATERFRONT $159,500 . NEWPORT HOMES GeMr~ 1002 GaMrd . · , ·~-~ .... ~: HOUSES •-FIXER· Piertnoat. Choice l"'"a· Eastern Style 2 Story an . • $87,500 u---:ry:"'\ .. ~ ~~~~!!:?::: ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,~. • UPPERS. Excellent op-tion. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2 Newmr:Beach. Loads of ---------'-1 lBDRM +BONUS 1556W.Beti.r,C.M. portunity to make money frplcs. Lge. patao. New qua ttr anhd room to quiet hill ct 1 d . Hex.t to Merilet BMMit 3 BEDROOM + · ; i:.E~, · -... ------1 u investors or for in· dee. Won't lasl long al roam 1n t Is 4 Bdrm 2 Q.N ,1 s1 e cu e sac. S<49•86SS OCEANFRONT . in• •• -~~-----1d 1 v i du a I 5 . c ALL $179,SOO home with beautlful pool Portico enlry/ Hui<e hv. I~~~~~~~~ DUPLEX ~-'.",';-. • SAVAGE REALTY. lal>oa Bay Prop. and grounds .. it's as im-rm, brick frplc. Spacious GUEST SUIT£ , ~ 642·9601 R-....1&--pressive inside as 1l 1s LOT re al country kal che n 1_11111!1______ 3 Bdrms .• 2 baths UP."'~ · ~ outside. breakfast area. Magni Ci HURRY!! , well localed 3 bedroom 2 bdrms.. 2 baths dowhf:'· · J t 4 U * 675-7060 * cent BONUS FAM ILY. ht Time OffeNd bath home with new both with frplc.tcoil.,: _' US WATERFROl'fT Eastaldeincomeproper· ROOM -ovcr700sq ft.! Large 4 becfrm family paint In" and out. venation area. On~·•,.,· Good Co&la Mesa loca· HOMES ty with a 3 bedrm home -RBJsed hearth frpl<-'. home c lose to Mesa separate guest suite has yrs. young. Good re'qtft' · tion. Close to srhools. 3~Uie~~:~s REALESTATE +a l bedrm rental ralhcd_r3l beamt'd cell· Verde Country Club. its own bath and outside record. Pnceda~$27~~"'~· Modernized I a r ge 631-1400 Consistent i ncome in~ 12 wet bar w1refnp. Grand piano sued living entry. Full pnce S76.500. 873-3663 ~.... . kil•hen. family room. DU PL EX in S an S62St mo. Secluded master Tiered room. large separate CALLSS6-266() -•,. SPORTSMAN•s =~~ ~~~i!f. :o~:ii ~~eu~~n~~0::4~~e~'\n --------$87.500. redwood decked lanai family room complete I .. associated Laguna SlJS.000. Pr ti $71500 a patio 2200 sq rt + -wilh w e t bar big C::.SELECT R ED J>~~~V ER "= • DUPLEX w/ocn view an Pnc~~ unde~ com-~ ~~~oomorl'' Call Casi ~~~~~o':-'~or~n~o~~~;~ T'PROPE_RTl_E_S_ !~!· ~;,~e~;.~n:~ '-"' nu~21 ~t~::~~2237 rb~~~ho~i:Q p~~!~ ANYTIME [9()/'fNlt1Vl;i~'~V"l~\1"1\~~,G ~ ::;~~d:ns~r~oeu~dt·i~~. Want Ad Results 642· f• t.elma.--lalh • plaster ~ nestled In center ortrart.' ' thony free-form pool. GeMral f 002 G••ral I o.9J. • «Jmtrucllon. N. Tustin • FIXER UPPER As pretty as a baby"s ~~~~~~~~I \ j ~lsU _546-5880 for full de· ••••••••••••••••••-••• ••••••••••••-••••··~; BllOKERS llFlll TCP: 1()]c, W l olllc.>o & 1 l .ae, t <I.-~~ HERITAGE · locaUoft I• perfect for the · · smile and available for --------1 , =-...... •portaman-:aoued for W•1tclff R.alty ' ~-plellff fast possession Don 't give up the ship! bone&. with •n adeal lot --~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii;jOK Nlc ker!lon f:rns L . • REALTORS r It I R • rn Pool Home .. •sl ·· ll an c1ass1f1ed. or par n1 V s . ced at SS0,000. and Ship lo shure resull:s! boata, etc. Beautiful Sa•rsef Moclll S9S,OOO . bere·s your &t2-S678. --..--lliiii .. iiiiiiiiiil JBR. FR home as in HA R B O R V I E W choice lo build up equity ~8 000 bralld·new cond 1t1on HOMES. Quality lhruout fast. f Ge.ral I 002 GeMral ..,.. many c~m up· In every way. Custom Fantas c buy gives you 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,...__ Separate 12'x8' drapes. wallcoverings, I£ .Quail ~ bedrms. 18x18 family ...-.,... kas potential carpets. all color • room, gorgeous pool de-fw RP zoning on over coordinated Extenslv.e Place signe d for Olymp-ic \.Wd. acre IOl. NOW only use or m I r rors . s Prap•li.. stardom. Prtv11te yard. •.aoo. Bedrms. lge famLly room 7S2•l920 step saver kitchen with with full wet bar. formal l400 OUMLST HCWPOll ICACH lw of cupboards and a AlDM.llRO AMM1et.t..a .. 11 .. , dlnln1 rm, 2 Cireplaces.1 __ ... ____ _ . New pamt Inside and out. Large covered pauo with Mesa Verde view Beautifully 2STORYS95.950 I a n d s c a p e d . 3 c a r Luxurious 4 bedroom on g&rage One ol a kmd, so qwet cul-d e·sac with HU RRY ! Sl74,9SO formal dining room, &44-7270 large family room. kitchen ealing area Park-IJke oversized yard with nowers. frwt trees, basketball ""1 court. auto s prinklers, rovered H d T 11!1 di .;~~~~~~~ patios. and yard IJJhUna .. 0 nft • = system. Looks like a PACESETTER MESA TOP LOCATION model home. hurry won't VQD~ one·of·•·klnd. Four lovely bedrooms. last. Call 540-1151. ....... Bedrm. plan witb furuly room and large rorm•l dlah;>I and kitchen with eating area ..com OYenlzed ramlly locaUd an one of Corona -~~~HERITAGE • • REALTORS """* eddlUon. Larae del Mar's-i>rime areas, ~~~~~~~~~ ~Uo •nd low main· Irvine Terrare Pool and t.aill...._ yard. Offered at Hurry, call patio area for entertaln- at$40-U.Sl Ing. Priced Ul l142.000. M~!l!ll'll!fl!llal Call for appointment to see! 673-8550. Of'fN llt Q •II) 'l.Jf'I 10111 Hl(I • . ' \' .·.. • .. • ' .. ' I• ' t . ' ... . Beal lnllatlon 3 Br 2 Ba, ON YOUR Wl'. Only $34,950. For additional iolo. Writ.e to E.c.o. Plannlog. P .o. Box 305. 8uena Park, Ca. 90621 ~~~~~~- .. ~ .. -. IA YCUST -CLIAM Sharp 4 bedroom with sunken livini room & dual fireplace. Family room & kitchen open to pool & patio. SlfS,500 for thia fee property. S@\\~lA-~£~s· Tlta# Intriguing Wora Gome wif/i o C/iucUe H ,1e4 ~ C\AY t. Pow.I ----- 0 ·-fl09 '""-'• of .... ''"" •'°"'°led -dt be to. "' '°'"' '°"' ""'91e WO<d• l i' I y ,~ i 0 r I I i' rn I . . I KKCON I l FOfthowofy<>uwf>o •~ ' I j1 j j Quired. it's easy 10 1ell wllen ·-• • • • . Yov've ceugh1 Swine Flu Vci11 ,don't .,_,._ -_, I MIFRIM ~ 1-1 I' I I' I I o c_.... .... <"IK~.. QUOl9d • • • • -by flll!ft9 ...... lt•""'9 -do _ .... lap,,_...,,...., ........ CE 111111 ILlllS aa. , OVER 50 YEARS OF S~RVJCE ... AMT WATBROM1' Loieated on the One & Only UDO! 4 Bedrooms Plus Maid's Quarters Great View of Bay. Difftcult to Describe this Delightful. Dra!natic Home. Pier & Slip $210,000 'Leuebold LUS« EXCLUSIVES CAMEO SHORES -Unsurpassed ocean views, private beach, 4 bedrms, sep dining. $189.900. SPYGLASS -Tradewind.s model . Open beam ceilings, 4 bedrm, fami- ly rm, great nook. $238,500. ~II. macnab I lrvlne ~ realty SPACE FOtt REAL uvni. Some discriminating f arnily will take pride in the acqW.Sition ol thia comfortable 6BR home, lovingly cared for by the original owners. Across from park & pool. $128 500 incl. land. Madeline Cross 752-1414. CB79) THIS OMI IS SNCW. A beautifully decorated Big Canyon home -you must see it to ap- preciate the custom decor, lush planting, Wed, full length pool 2· story living room, fabulous gourmet kitchen & sweeping golf-courd vlew. $350,000. Beverly Morpb7 642-~ (.828) .. ONT' IOW tM 'THI ILUffs• Great location w-wide greenbelt & bay view. Desirable end unit; 3BRs, 2~ baths. Beautifully decorated +air conditioned. Enjoy the "good · life,'' practJcally maint.·&ee +use of comm. ~ & lovely greeobeJtl. $152,SOO Leasehold. Cathy Sehwtekert ~ (8$1) "424235 MC-6200 f01 0o¥er Drtw Harbor Vin! c.ne.r ,,,,.,,.al ~Vat..., CMtw 7J2..1414 HIGH ATOP SPYGLASS~ • Beautiful 4 bedrm Spyglass Hilt home. Many decorator upgrades. • Magnificent view. You own the. land. New. exclusive listing.' $199.950. Call 64()..6161 BLUFFS CONDO Charming 3 bedroom home located directly across street from Newport Be~b Tennis Club. Delightful patio races onto s pacious greenbelt. FormaJ dining, 21h baths. upgraded. carpets and drapes. New listing, • $110.000. Call 640-6161 VALUE PACKED .. .. . 'V Westside J Bedrm .. 2 Bath home •·•· with 20' formal dining room + family room with fireplace. 70xl10'' . .,. lot has recreation vehicle or boat access. CALL NOW 962-4454 ~~ . • ~·"· .. . ~, WESTSIDE BEAUTY . This custom remodeled home was • gutted and rebuiJt as new. Has ex·. quisite country kitchen, massive · used brick corner fireplace in living .. room. 2 New baths, 2 Bedrooms & " den . (Huge master w -2nd fireplace). EXCLUSIVE NEW LISTING AT BARGAIN PRICE OF $69,SOO. Call now to see 962-4454. OPEN BEAM FAMILY ROOM .. Family living and a place \o spread· out I This 3 bedrm North Costa Mesa bome is priced well below the market at $65 .800 . Owner', transferred. Call 546°"141 ~ •• REMODELED .: Quality carpet and a big POOi. See:~ this North Costa Mesa home at.· $67,950. Call 54Ml41. h • \lilQ ... t :. .. .. ..... ' .. , ' ... ....... , , .. ' "-tl ' • .. -.1 •... ~ f • • 84•A&.D TMR. '1'r\&&7 Paoorainic View SBr, 2ba, yard. dbl ear, like ...... tlD.000. DOLPNMR.I. Cil 4t4-8S8 f ~HUTATI ~ liJ a blLMI moon do 10U l1nd a •&ew bom• on Lapna .. 0ttan 1ld• wtUa ~this Iara• Love- ly Ol)elf beam ft •1•11 s •---------!~~~~~~~~~ bedroom, 2~ i>.th raecb MISA VERDI ~ILOR LOCATION ..• MORTH ~.:=:;~:: a Bedrm., ramlly room. &Jbrai')wltha2ndfrplc .• END. Ocen view/Walk b•ac"' co--It carpet. drapes. fresh ldJeceo\ to the Nelud~ to be1ch. 2 BR home. '" ... -"0 Y • PAbtt. pet.lo. larae yard. Gllltr. '•\l\te. otten • new xlnt cond. Lart• lot sieo.ooo FNttreet! fJf,000, left! ti ele~HC!.e • the w/tnmenOoua R4Mtea· Roy McC.... --------• format entertalnlJ\t'bt UaJ. Lartt e~1n ror ....... 0 ... ..,.... ::tt:"~'t:~i 12ndd.~- e..taMtMl41·772f $7211. -I Bdf1!'\!.• a~ balba; f~~~~~~rJ 3lOO 14.tl. famllY deU bt Wooelldlit. Slde,tOo 1n u.. heart o1 rQWJ:m •--0-UPLIX____ NeW Ustin1: V&\lef,C~.~etalll! • 552-7000 Spacious 3 bdrm. fl 2 $49. W"'--1&.-..... '!-~ill\ l-1!11119111!11!11 ___ _.,.llWDJI Vlefo ba.... .. It • • ___,,.. THE •• ._ ................... . .....,, taC!u un • AArlt ~ • D).str. bdrm .• beamed NOuOWM 111t1IEM1twer41 VJUACE. Ml"lonVlelO ceit, xJnt renta111 p MT REA TOR WXC.Y Sl39~l1LMARTJN Specious ~ybed~m of· cAW'i'9UAWY1 [ S I ~=~!e~~ Ou an EXTRA LARGE ;lltt rte. REAL ESTATE 844-'1113 rere ~vacy and lwrury 3 BR 11'0Wfthome, .-ae Woodbrld~ Pfau. ·• LOT w /buutlria~y ,..__._.....___ 102 .. at reasonable price. No '*·,.,. .. DU c:pa paint. ~am ,bftm ... 2 ab!!· •c•a1·1 uoRTH ~o landscaped yard. t 1•1 ~~!!!.£.i!!~~!.~ -.--"' dn. paymt. Low moalhly W•• eu flr 6 DW tam • •· " 5" ahak•·roofed Jlom•1- I ! =~~£ 1Qua11 l ••••••• .. •• ............ pymta.Trulyadellit\tto SlJ.500'~~~i C041-. M0-251S. Seclualoa, JO&dfd wtt• w/rtreplace 11 la a------•• -•:Pl~~. • Pl 258CecUPlac:e see and en.joy. Rurey, -Aslumelp ofSllll. ~Oil.All · • amenitiea.2briekpatJoe. SUPERB locatloa & ... l/Sfd-,_.Oc~ p&euecall tnld ~llOC . clue• <Mee JaUfroot end UD· vu. bi& trea &top of Q.()SE TO SHOPPING. ll!lll"llllMltl"I~ • Pl ap•a tlea Bil trees', bli yard, co'v. 540.3666 sn.ooo. Atent~1888: lt·By owner. 4!M-0638 or ~~: quality thruout. ISZ;500. ~>"<tr.'OUA17est~t20 1 7S2·l920 erild patio. 3·bdrm, 2 5tO-..--.000 ........ ..__ ... ,0 .. 0 .....&.. ~----------fireplace. Upgraded. .. ••• ~ .. ,::=:: ... ~. ~!!~ldgl ........ Tradh onal cburcll cm • PIDC9 -w~ Pricedlowat$70,000for OWNU SAC&IFIC!• ..-..-T 1.Br. ~ lOOxlOO ft ·! lot Pt~l::l9• _...,_. MOOGUMnN1WPOe11U01 batba. natural brick __ 111Jl __ . __ .,.......__ ln~lrational 1£n:::it li'liirlll 100 Ge•rilll 1002 fast sale. Owner bought Prlced toaeU fut' Sooft •H.100. C•ll ('h3) Poaalbtllttu are . -r;ii ..H ~~·················· ••••••••••••••••••••••• another. We"N-.tot.elp to be vacant a btdroom MJ-tn5 all. J>M, .Prtn studlo/ta.llery, duplex. ~MOO~Ql~IMa~~n.~-~~~·~UCM~~~~~~~~~~~ ~GMIFICEMT I J!llQuail l 9'11et..Prt•afe bom•. OodJts ot· fruit cab· ~ bom~. ~~·000 Castille EJ DaU 3 br, fain Bliycreat 3 br, 2 ••· u .,· VIEW ALL JERMS!! ii l~&'lf!_ Clll det SaC Street trees. 3 covered patloa. 1 .,. Wl1'IMd by OWIU'. • • nn. up,radea. view. war· lam.rm, dla.re. 0peta . a-.-..-.._ A= $56,000. Call Beltfalr0rferbuya.3br. ,, ranty conventional. sun 1·5, aJ0.000. ~ lb·Npt Back Bay & VA.FHAora1Sumeex---•-p,752·1920 You1llovetbelocaUonof T ,RLTRS,842-8154 2b6, 2~car car, com·• -·-1soo1•.,.....,7 LeewanltiJ.to-19.81 'f'I this 3 bedroom home . .,.""" n--• S l u.... pletely uparad•d. Im · i' v ...... •• • . _,,,.. n..--. -ntalns. Prestige iltina VA loan with Just 1400QJ!AILSJ.NIWPOlrHACH "'-ndl-" ~._..e ,..... a .... ~ 3 ., ~ vw•• -ute ram home In $13,000.Sbarp homewltb ..... cughtdlnlnaroom. ,....,.,. .• mac mualsee551'3235 .,. lff: ......... By Ow ner 2 n •w I ~ p~fvate cul ·de.aac added family room for FfXEREASTSIDI! wood cabinets lo the 4or5~r111modelsavall. • . . , •· ,... ~ Cordovas, uperd-'d UDOIM~-r , I •· Rlaht I ti ' RI ht chef's kitchen. Lots or aomew /pools. 96M802 I U A/C _., """ llCt'common poo ""put· only $53,SOO. Call Im· • oca on. g decorato r touch'"• Penntqgt4n.ProperUea 2 f 1 . 1 w pa °'· t . -te.-rm•. LUXUa¥ lag.green. 3 bd, 3 bath, mediately! sile! Rltht prtce! Bring .. or · OMCI $67 500 >ex km rm, plus den-Office 531·5800 brusbesandtools. Bl&4 thruout. Living rootn, Hntg Seacllfr f Br IMA <213)421-4582 If YO'* Ukt tut oa. or4tbbdrm.Ownermov. w .. ~ .. RHlton bedroom home, huge -~.J:u~r~ard. wue'pooHarl.bo$125r ,Drooo •• ~!-1170t: H•"'e ... D.&-+Ga-IWIMOOM =~ tWJi1 Price reduced w1REM.+wort& cabin·llke family room, ,,_..., -.. DUTIQ ou ...,,11... --" ~!646-7711. large used brick Owner/Alt room ror JOU. outside a We are privileged to of· Newport.._. 1069 ~_.a flPf - ••" • fireplace. Use your Im· play~ for the kida. f.er a home that ii ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ tloal"I -lo 'd: aginatlon, but hurry! 4or Abandoned! Paint 4's "STANDING ALONE". r::sDN••araa= ,t-: lcAoahlc.cl 1006 Call64S-0303 "tllnCallfornJa" s...__ save. Thl.aban:hlbo tecturalgedemts ON THE SAND =n1,r~11:9'.:ad... a . ~· • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Versatile floor plan REDCARPET7S4-l.D auc a me. Detail all Huge 4 bedroom 4 l)ath • n;~ la,,fr OfllM 1·5 DAILY features a convertible wood exterior wttb ex· b 0 me w 1th 111 e • t /clllM1D\ A.U r--' DuDlex den. fireplace • bl& Presti,,.. Home temlve use of glaas that quarters or SUMMER this lu~1 lot oalf Balboa Island. 36r. 2ba & 2881 Veluco bollua roc>a>. bqe awim ~· affords an UNCLUT· RENTAL on Lhe•beaeb. Slll,SOO. ~'*"'· .2 New Homes 2br, lba. Sandy bch. big ~~~ ~~~ pool. Tr a lier or boat Pres~ Area TeRED VIEW OF THE Close ., the pound Ina c. 6-...71f' -lot.$225,000.831-0SM. •·~-~ =..,""""' T bell You're a w•v <1PEN SEA lT·s AN surf. An unusual op· ~ your own colors! • ... ~. ar · ~1 0 VER POWE RING part.unity beUer hurry! 1Qlaet cul.de-aar In Costa 4 BR. E/alde on qulet sl.. BY OWNER I call982-5:5ee. life, not Ult a house, I!' E E L I N G 0 F ean&IS-03o3. Mesa. Cloee lo shopping. lcAoa'tnlnsda 1007 pride·of-ownersb1p. 3 BR+fam Rm, 2ba. JllltWW witbthlaone. 3Bdrma., TRANQUILlTY. The in· r -L_ ::.-l'W.. 1i1 1 --------3 Bedrm, 3 bath each.••••••••••••••••••••••• S74 ,900. YEAGER COLLEGE PARK. New· u_._. ..._.di bathain&lefamll:rbome. ~floor plan is a .[t!.~placu + much 2BR .• den$129~ RLTY.55Mt71 1 redec S'79SOO M -x11wr Onbeautlfulpoolalak>t. stuaytnnawless cfesigl). MIWPOl1'NeHIS ' ~· $85,500 and $87.500. 4 BR. den $139,SOO ~. 557.Msl or 492:nS:1~ Handlome family home. Just 1tept from com FEATURING SUNKEN NEW4 Br, attb4a. -· . FO~EST E OLSON 'a;:___ BARRETT Duplexnr.LldoS140,000 EaahldeRxer 4 Bedroom•, l~ baths. munitypart,llaht.edten· LIV. RM . WtCEDAR rm.. dtD rm,,,,. w: pt; lit. Marshall Realty 675-4600 l Ir + FmnUy I• MESA VERDE lmmac. 4 Pool table sized bonus nit courts and pool. p AN EL ED WALL. •·~-~ f111c. + many 9'nllt. '•• u t • u• 11 .. ,.,, -REALTY-rnmhtrano hoet. 1018 Lge 1 level hme, 2 Ba br, 2 ba, fam rm. in xlnt. room, cozy fireplace. '108.000 o p E N B E A M SOme GeHJl/CI~-~ fplc dining rm shake neigbbortlood. Del Piao dining area. tu.950. Call CEILINGS•-EXPOSED Harb v· Yi-. B1 ........ _,_ • ••• • &42·s200 ., •• !·················· · · Tarbell RLTRS ... · or 1ew ..... -~~ .UILDER'S HOME roof, dbl gar, lge trees & tile entry. Cust. shut-• ,SQ.8854 ST R U CT U R A L conlldertlt. ~··· yard.CuldesacSt. tered & draped, ftr. to 0 · 'tUIBERS CORNER LaJoba Or. OijelJ~ ""ill-------t When a contractor builds cell'f · used brk. frpl., 2 WNER MOVES: Im· FIREPLACE, in co.n· (Somerset) till cjuak ,.&·Tlll_w . r ...... ,__andL--Llf his own home. he fre-COY d. patios With maculate 3 be~ro~m . teml\Eacy decor. A waJI s Bedroom with a great .. ,. .. -11 ·-\.- y....... U'U9' quenUY. puts In many ex-!JI =:'~ .. HAI.TY MUCH. MUCH more. U ~c~ flrepl~s a~ui~~· or $ opens to walled feellna of Id l hie ed ---------~...:.......;.o.,;; r:.fy2cl~!~· ~!~ri';1~~~ ~~ :•f:~~~ ~:ot::v: ~ 1JU0r.,..cesta,...... must see! n 4 •9oo . Ina. ~C:r'rar· fr~m th~ 1a t'1 WITR HEATED apace an~ ~:'mr:.t. IA,"""MfCOtllO F ed d TI hed Bdrms., 2'" baths. 645•9161 Ownr/agt.546-l08l beach.Only.-0,000,call ~WIMMING POOL & Fireplace.infamilyand U~~ula,toplJoOI'. Q()C yar . oo s . n Tarbell, RLTRS, 962·5566 SPA. bordered w /lush living rooms, large Ht·ln 2 ~~t den, 3 ...... I •f'5uil trees. Complete formal dining rm.; living EXPANDABLE p J a n t I " gs • T H E kitchen and family abed decks; oay fr ottaa :w,iLh stove & refrlg. rm. & family rm. with Builder's home! Xtras. POOL .. 523CAM"'5J>a~IRVlfE LEISURE & tHNING formal dining room. All vtewt Boat dvt&ac Washer1dryer. patio frplca .;over2600 sq.rt., Step dn llv rm, fplca. Newport Hts OPEND'"'LY CENTER has nolisbed this onalargeaunnylot avail. N"er UtiM .._ Cum.Comesee,youwill onalarge lot.CaUrora 2000'. 4 br. dr. S80.000 • IMMEDIATE POS· '" Qilkfloors&"L''°sbaped '1850IO !! lillt of~ amenities built Chris. Bkr, 963·8377. J I SESSION OJS th la 8A.M.T06P.M. wet bar. Clr c ufar =.11f.!t'0;~ba~t~ OOV.-VILL.A.. -fl•lf1•9'1••11• In by owner Price 963-6876 8W8 beauttrul 4 bedroom, ~ell of torged iron, land). BuY It today and 2·Sty. coDdO •itla I '1115,000 BeallnfiatJoo ... on a CORNER LOO' aingle story, ranch style WOODRID~I lead• to bdrm level. cbelDJune bdnm., 2 batba !ip. ~ 3 Br 2 Ba, ON YOUR with city approval to home. Huge sparkling Compere theM feat\ltta PAST 2-STORY WALL . bath~. Frple,, bll-ill 'HI· 833-9781 Hester·Brown •IAITOI~ · LOT. Only $35.950. For ADD UN IT t b Is pooplua''b marut·~uredl yaulrdt, aod dbcover •hy you OVIFEWGLMASS bdrmW/OCEAN 1£ jGual~· w~L· oven • ........,.. additional Info. Write to beautifully upgraded crp a • n q e should aee th.la out.stand-. str. . suite . -~ • dr7er. Patio. EC 0 Planru·ng PO home shows off Iota of neighborhood. Move in Ina home today'· 3 A: att. bath FEATURES • Pl--dbl 1.,a1• pool • _ _ SEAHAVEH CONM---.. -Mcr---,-0-2-21 &.·ao5. Buena Pa~k. Ca. paneling. high atone tod"y -S79•950. Call sccloua bdrms., your MASSIVE ROMAN TUB p ~ cJubbouee. • ,,,_.. fireplace, huge ramlly 545·8424 Auoclated c oice ol colors of OF ORNATE CERAMIC* Clp!fa•• G11w···-"'alk t o shopping & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .,,.. .... ~--.... B-.. · "'".,... ETC .. , 752•1920 --newly decorated TAX SHELTElt room and baa QUALITY """'"'""'""• •va.era. carpeting and vinyl •~. · Trus is 8 l400QUtllStNIW 11.kM REALTY 47M200 t 0 rd t BYOWNER COPPER PLUMBING. TRELANDINO flooring ceramic tile homeyoumustaeeloap-1--~------1 . ..:..:::::..:::;~-~.:..:::=.::.:.:. ' · a en en er· &LEVERAGE We have a lovely 3Br. WUlnotlut ...... 0001 ' preciate,offeredror Early Bluffs "J" ptan, tv.~" .. DR~.., •m ent ~enter with 0 WC 2nd TD So of 2,,.8 a Condo In the -.... lldl 400 00 huge cul-d• kitchen countertop, cent. """"' ... n.n 1• a CQWted patio & BBQ. 4 · · · · ..., lot R i I & air cood., fireplace, plus S 122.500 Fwll Pric• end unit. Canyon, F•h. AT BEA Bdrtba., 2 baths. bwlt·ln Hwy. One 2 bdrm. with French Quarters. Will 1£U sac · m or poo many other amenities In · .MISSION REALTY IsJ view. 3BR. 2BA. dn'g d&4ux.-oa eor. SllL-e storage. New huge mstr. 6 bllns., + sell or trade ror 'a 3Br • uall l boat &ate.~. $125,000. thla new home. Prited to 98$5. Coast, Lagana rm, patio, Astroturf 2-.tory. i-ll-4s Hr. eo appllances. l·bdrm. units. l~ Bib. house in or near C.M. Placlt 9G837'7Bkr aellatooly$83,900 ,__494-0731 deck, pool. O wnr. qtrs. -P'ee-a r .P . 11 toocean. $149,SOO. 55H8'74or979-4489 Prapwtlft OWNER: 2·sty, !Br, Sll0,000. 844·7641. Prin 50Z3-IUvertrcalJC.Q. MES V-"I 752•1920 2~ba. lndry, lrml din, Upper J.Arch ._ onJy LlDO ISLE :1• "I' Coleswartb~ OUMGE COAST A U\6IJ "'°°QUAIL n Nnwotn •tACM FR. rrp&c, nice yd, Jae. i 2aoRM d -2 8-A, BuY tbla yac. lot-eitU. ' . r. REAL ESTATE 3BR 2ba upgraded Bue· bit bcb. S'79 950. IM5S-OSU. ' en, ~ con· Spyglass Hill· Village of S a re a -l 11 -VI• 1JtM.LTORS 640.00 0 cola home tn beaut. • temporary. Wood-glasa. Harbor View. Sbr, 2~ ba. w _._ Of 644-4841 Dbihoodneargolfcoune 4 Br 3 Ba. pool, tennis, TAeAtrium4br,newide· View,vtew,vtew! rormaldin.rm&fam.rm. a:.ucn-Sl00.000. • ---------1 N-R1 i All r -.... •10 ... D• * Pt' of es s I n d s c pd , rer. C..1Un1 C.Q. Ll1TLEREDHOUSE and park Lots of .. -...... v era. or corated, upfra ed . • " BLOCKTOOCl!AH 8 B S f wrought-Iron & brick. '88,000. Ownr. 538-0987 Open Sat, ••6,000 GALLERY OF HOMES w/Jacuzzl, flreplt & 2 SUper duplu-a fr .J-I ·---------__ j 2 r 2 a. . 0 Hwy. OPEN HOUSE SUN 1-5: RKlltrR-at.. Sun. .-. • 831·9Ut covered paUo. BeautJrul FEE-218-• .. St '"aJI $98.000. Paul Martin -·F lnTlleWllow1t 1 1 f .... ~ _Beal __ r._ta_t.e_.844_·_1383 __ -t ~:iinalet Ct. AGT. 642•4751 OHESTOIY Super starter rn tb_l• • CALLUS f~~n~~·::~~ ~wsu0r. ~~~~°!9a11~ WITH LOVE WHAT rs" I nxER UPPER COMDO $43,500 great areal lmmacul•w. ..for all the latest mulU· rounding bills. Wlk·g dla· m.8250 .~·~room Monaco In Andwhyaretheysaylng .. OW..MOVIMG IN81.000.NBRHOOD 2 Bednlom. m&AY extra ~~~~Bo' pie Us\.lnga available in ~e 1cro!'.,..tennisSbourt1----------- '11'.,.bor View. Large all those nice things out of area wanta ac· S.UerwUllnatodo featur ... Muat aee to-.., ~· ww. a theLagunaBeacbarea! poo ......... 000. OWU38R,211A.,,_,.paletla .-.uer 11u1te. sunny aboutit?lt's lhecouest2 Uoa!Bl&4BR .• 2ba.,2· aPJll'OX. $3,000. worth ol b~lleve . Pool & paridng. &tpvJtefam~ Allo,webave byappt.~. &tout.Vtr)'ptiwaienrd. ~fhen. rlreplace, cov· bdrm. home & the ~~u!~i~~ ~~3.~~lng $57,000. c8tubbouae aearby. ~~.mii.1!:al:(~ 3 BRJU!TUmD 1 lJOOISLE Weltoni1Co.ll'IM800 !;!:tlo. dellahtful brt1hteat, ll1bteat l· On11•000 ---------• ina.C..Utoday,540-l72Q " 8 · ocean v !JW 4br,3ba, DR. LMorpou plus a view of bdrm. apt. over prage, condo. Cloee to shopping lse/opt Sl68S/mo S75-6l09 ~ __ ,..,..H enter lntown that'awhat&lt'• Have1<>methlnlyouwet & beach, in xlnt area.----------• vn ,,.__ -640-9900 ,.._ · to Mllf Clusl/ied ada do m.ooo Seawtnd dlx 2 Br condo, 2 SUMSIT a~ ,f•?·' ~=~·1e;r,n-1ve in It well -Call NOW, aty. 1~ ba, fplc, up· 2 Lou wtde al *-'· '\1.1 .F) I HL \I .I' sm ooo --------1 MU8'78. MO'DOWM Blflwblft!l ~ed, encl ~llo. ell to L1e walled pa&h> 4 ~ 1.-, llDUCED SI 0 000 ~voooual .._hoBmRe12Brro..'P. ---...-----..........,. ....,__ ,,.,_ "'·"'°· ""' ...,.. ••"'••; .. ~ ~ 81E.C.tHwy r73-65to Fantaatlc new deluxe ThtBfulStMll_.... ~auo:a~4v.('& }8A ~~v ~~!~.o; 646.7668 ~c,.:-;~~u· · ~ ~~~~~8.;.pta. Oft the ~CClllll !:~~urry for beat ASU~•; VA ,,...., Stnet 1--------i ::1:~~ ~: ·o ,_br,.•~ ,,,. llf••r• •• tt• .. .._ . "'tit.•una:uL O>untry French 3 yr old, toA rv heavy open beams, oak '· r! AND noon, 2 fplc's, bread BOAT MISSING DAILY PH.Or 191-7115 CMllMT'RH ~Off.b ena. ap•cloua ar ~ CLASSIFIED EverYthlna ~ou•ve tmmac. 2 bdrm., family "''VIRYYOUM& oven,fBrZIA Ba,40X238' Mesa North vacant 611. 61A-OUPLIX lot. w/creek. lnes.. view. home. new carpet ai · ADS lookfna for lncludln rm .• 2 Jce. bat.ht, frplc., p rt c e ! 3 Bedroom •un dt.nc~ patio, a w•ATRlUM ln maate worltahQp. roses & bedrm. 2 run bathj, botJSalnvlllea. See the ~•rl)' e.ooo aq. It., $250.000. Owner, Llc. paint, room ror boat or '¥tudlo-tn>e wm ft. hlChr.Salea--man-..... o..7'173 ___ ,I van. eteted -c:e1Un11. gach RBDCARPET ·ls Uke a two-story MR MEW DU,LEX 754-1202 ·e with a den and S°""9 of Hwy · Have aometb.ina to 1eUf f«mal dlnln& room, 2 38a•2BR. CluaifiedadldOltwell. i*U. fireplo, wet bar, You Con W tt, Find It. Trode It W"lltl • WOlll Ad .,..... 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (842•1878) ~ Inc. compac:ton. f!::rTo!:'l G=~~°p C-..... I 024 Cotto MtH I 024 etc. Separate laundry beam celllnts . Pvt •••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ••••••••••••••••••----------• rma. a oversized double balcony off muter suite. ~et. l240,000. Frplc: In both units. a ... .J~COIS llALTY Patios. Footbrtd&e to l);T 671-6670 beach. si1s.ooo. Ask ror ~ idle l\ema with a Bruce U3·3010 or -Dal11 Pilot Clualfitd Ad. am.cw. pate '45Y. Ail· Grand Opening JERESITA VILLAS CONDOMINIUMS ~ •hake roof and aunoy ocean 1 Sl2UOO country kJtoheo. Perk, * 49 .. 151 • eJanrouilcL and poof. B41t valu• ror your IDGDt'l ln lrvtne, Hurry, pleuecall 140.3666 INVESTOR·user. Mu lti· purPoae bldg. Balboa cannery Vlf area. Cor 1~. C/21Marten640-5357 CoadoMhtlUMI fTown-llouMt for Hie-17 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fat-•A.cl 191 W.-r/'1 W ... • Ct1 See 64J.5'71. Id. llO · Split-Skirt Suit 7261 ""A6ct 13~ Altce Brooks Needlecraft Oep1 I 05 Daily P1101 ' Bo11 163 Old Cne1sea StJ. New Yori! NY 10011 Pr1n1 Nem~Address . Zfp. Patt Number MOR[ 11 ner btfOl'll 20C dtslsns pfuS • ''" printed •"· tldt NCW 1976 "ElOlECRAn CATAl.OC' Hat every11un1. 7!>c Crtc~t wltll S4dfeS $1 00 C,.,U.t 1 War1'rek St.00 ltlf1J Fifty Qllllts $I 00 llppij ~rtdltt SUit ,,., -Kl!lt ... ·f 1.25 llttdt•~ilt .. t .oo n1wer Crt~et 1tM $1.00 M•lrpl11 crochet ltotc $1.00 h1sta11t Crtelltt leek l111b•t ... , ...... •••••••••••••••••••••• S. ol Hwy, new r. 3 br,. 2STORYIBr,a~1.bon"8 ba, trpl, lndry. no peg 111\, dn. frplc, D/lW. Pl6. rer.,gar . 1495.175-6900 7l081*6a8 or $31-15'5 DELUXE 3 Br 2~ 'Ba -""'~·-no_F_•----- dplx. 615"' Marigold FK>lc, 3 8r2 Ba, bltna, un· ~mo. 644-2495 , fin. b00¥S rm, toed. yd, -----------• grdnr. P15tno. SS'7·1080 3BR 2BA home, nl~ ocean , view. Bu,iltln1 ftteplc,dbl1ar.$596/ P.,.Uge llomeaMSM41S drpa, $385/mo. ~ __ ..;;.. ______ I 11l.U.~1 nofH, 2 iJcs~ ~'!t·~:r root IWI • .._.. U•O ~or!W0-22.SZ ••••••t••••••••••••••• \ Spect. mo/lie. 4M-Ol.22 MIGUB. SHORES 2br, deo, 2ba, rrplc beaut ~an view. pool tennis cru. Pvt bch guarded community $S50.mo.640-0'179 311941 Via SantA Lucia 3 br, 2 ba, A/C beauty Bltns. patio, $3'75/mo 54N887 or SSl · 1100 ~Via Sanu Maria 3 br, 2 ba, blbl.s, CJ>la drpl, frplc, patio, fn yard. '375 rno. 549-886'7 or Sll·UOO .... .,.. ..... JJ6 ...................... BOAT SUP W /CONDO. BR, 2'1.1 ba. Llke ne 18115. A#. SU.US! BrO CANYON, brand ne spacioUs, stna.te t.vel · BR. 2 ba. townhom .I I I ' DAJl.YPft.OT t.1m i a ..... 44101 IJJll...... 44H ... II .,,_... ~-•• .... ~ .. -• .... ••••••• ~-.. -• .. •••••• Oii I ..... • 1111 ""-: • ....... J .. = ....... """'9. .. t ut1Ulln. •••••••••••••••••••• '. ..!'l'! .... s~ .. -....,...... 1111 a.ta .... ••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••··-• .. • ••••••••••••-• .. ••••• w -• Oll'ftCI ·-ACI • ......,. _ __._.. ..,., .... --••••••• Mete 31Z4ColhtMete 3114 ............ 1141 .._ '*-• ,,,,,-MA.MUfAC1VIUM9 · Drta~~emT SllO ·-•••••••••••·~ •••oo•••••••••••••••• ....................... AT~ llA11 Pa'leotedlteca !AS.s~! rovRDOcS•TtmDelt Cd~Kelplln~ +-----nnA.iDNEW l Br apt. Wb.l14t wattr 1J' H /J 1 Unique pleet ot "ulp. 11"P1•1 Ml• co?Ht MM'tadat115-.SO Pftnl"" view, (~ fi:• redwood Cl ~;,,,_ mtot projected net RlllE WM borrow Dow'W • PQL NpBclL -~ ... ..-, • e.r Imeltand I.Welt Scroll lh~ Plllhw.'lys ol a pltw lornt Meander flo»l t\WnbbO!J w..ll~rfolls anJ qukd pools. listen to th~ ~nd of bubbh•llJ sr~ms aod growing chlngs. )bur lldulc 11portmeot home at Ptnec:reek VIiiage b 11 totAI r..:trcot. Hvre you CM enjw unusual pnvacy end luxury. d~... :-:1 I'd. -· .. -ooo .... ,_yr ...___0 t atlowbaa.lrnW.toeoa-._Jlll,__;;,..;..Mf._T• _____ , .--'"""' .... -· w c --· UlllJ • .. ~ ao&Wat.debU P1.1Wd ·-Carlal coafldcnllul mo..d1·M$1 m I) I I ""' • nl OWDer uuble to handlt. take a ncaUo.. roo~ POUND ema.Q wht fem COUDMllDI • referral ~a~SL50,unf,walk •6a V•,M .,£.)"'~ rtaza Can be relocated. llddJUoo.awlmpoo&.,_1 !~:.t:.•lred ea,, l ·S Abortion. atlq&ioo & .... ..:11. All ··•11 1-cl'd L11"4tqewfattl,dowft. df _..,.l;.;. .. and w ...... VloHo.1.apDL ~ . d,.~~ .._... . m V. I ·~ fl Ull 111·J141 ~~ -4N4llf AfC.UB 547·2563 1525 -64 •rd• .I.Jr. C-461 ~ t4t.,art IMdt 316' MIO~ Al.AIMS roCJNI> rem cnam eol· 5u ~ 110.,.. '5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• /) m A /J If Well..tabllabed ssi,ooo MA1'1 IAMK ..s ktttfo ftlrinf ~· * l'V'I " * PAUMIWPOU L.o6la 1lfa ./#oL.oolt. yr 1tti. sso.ooo. rr: C7t41611.ltl4 au. We=dwards. OUTCALLJIASSAG E p nMIMTS f\Ud1el lnclud.lne IDven· ....._. Tnmt ~. •llK 1!2~roomund 545 4 '23 tory. P«ontill here wUI DliJ'" IOU FOUND uiaU ftm lrt.1 ·~EXP&RiEHCE'' Townhouacs • l r"::n!ou. PlnM call ..... ___ ......... P"41• wearhll_ plnll Adult motel. CI01t t>t.I FromS2C9.50 ...................... ui. w,.711·3741 LO·~ Hi.., ~:U' .. TulUn, ~~ul!!"~Reservu- OpcnMl)aUy M~ ·~,. ---.-• Spa·Pooll·Tenni. a.,_ 4000 Offlcet..tal 4400 USTAUUMT AlleWTD&.e.I POUND 1mall b1t •tao ' ., ~REai...1•5 Acron from Fashion ....... , .. ••••••••••••• .......... ••••••••••••• UlUmat.e lo flxtur• • ll'llftKTennlllD<ietMt sna le do l' P ar t *""" " * A RECREATION PARADISE, Tuio hmnls courts. ~mming pool plus unlquti volle~ll pool. Jacuzzi. 'sand voll~ll court. Mountain lodge clubhou!ie ,._.th fireplace. conversation pit billiards. gym. sauna. la1and at Jamboree on ROOMS $15 wk up with moUI. Buay beacb area .......... C.. Cldbualuaa. nabelm1/· Otrl'CALLllASSAGE SanJoaqulnHlll1Roa4. kitcben. $31.&0 wk up l~~M~~~~rc1~~fr!m Joe. Only su.ooo. full '4Wl11 f4M61t cnir-111-t111evet. IPM..aAY 636.m10 '714'644-lfOO apta.6'8-1155 $125 per mo. Adj. f:!:· Makinc monty. ro1aod Sun. vlo. 1i'1C1 AIOl110H •DELUXE-NB. Room in pvt home. Airporterffotel. Noleaae Ult ,you'llbu/iii·741 PllVATIPAITT Oranp, CM, camera eo..ellqfcbferrul Eaatblurr 3 br, 2 ba. ldtcb prlvilefea. Avail req.8.13-3223TUooon • WUl PaJ more for,.. =-111~ aft f , ~-t.a~all.wknds Leae. lncl. apac. muter Feb 1. $150 /mo. Refs 6()< PU $ft l'T M,.. ,_......... 2ndT.D.ea.ma 1UlrKelpllne5'1·9.a05 _ suite, din rm & dbl MIJ.3166 """ '7 V I bl POUND I sange. Auto door 1617WESTCLIFF·NB $150,000. p/yr and lrOw· --~II 1 h/ a aa ti Vl D •SPUUTUALREAD~ll . opener nail. Pool & HOTEL $2S wk, Hunt. AGT. 5'1,5032 in&-Owner will stay u p Ill/ leatW eate. Clo 1161 Full)' Ucenaed recreation area. Adulta Bch. Ocean 1 blk. Call national marketing 1 !,!•.•r:... OranJ• A••· Clll. WJSE1CamlnoRc&1I onJv. No pets. From $337 980-2821Sleavemeasage. 1501 Wntclff Dr. manager. $3.5,000. wlU --.alft(21J)al\6 Sao Clemente. For appt ' =Fln I handle. Ca ll fo r ••••••••••••••••• ... ••• • -.ae 492·72116 up. . Attractive room In pvt aacla Ctr speclllca. lll•D1•1:1•• 1100 FOUND. l'an.6mo1,tn1, ________ _ . 86SAm1gos Way home. I,\ mi from beach Office Spac• Ull 75l·l74t ....... •••••••••-••••• NII' black Is ll"9Y Ucer MASSAGE Gr::d:~e:!{ Co S25 wk. Ph 960-3531 ~ ~;~ri:~f:~ Brial Newspapen Hunt. ltripe cat. llaa del Jlar. --------Hohfs,Mohh 4100 lagton Beacb Hl&b, -.sm PIGUllMODILS 3126 ••••••••••••••••••••••• u You Need A.Staffed & NATURAL FOOD Paper Drive Sat. POUND: f.10 mo. part ISCORTS .. ••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••u•••••0 ••••••• IAYFROHTHOME Week'" rentals from ..,., Furnished Office. call sandwich businaa. Fan· Feb.5th, lam·12pm, SpanielPQPpJw/ndcol• OUTCALLOHLY Vrry lurge 2Br. 2bu 4aR 4ba $UIOOMo l Y ..,.. THE EXECUTIVE tasticleue.Currentdai· Partin&Lot. lar, vie 3'0 W. Wllaoo w stove & refrig. New • ' yr Y up, plus tax. Sea Lark SUITE R · I ly groH approx. $300. ~ .. ....,.YOU 1 ___ C.ll.5tlml 631·3111 NOWREnlNG 3124 DanaPoint p..unt. l>'" balcony. lst. STlrS TO llACH Motel, 2274 Newport i . . ent me udes SUbmit your cash ofler. •""'""' or• ......... last&ikp llJl;.019:; 3BR,2ba.,unf.$'.125 Blvd. Costa Mesa . /time rece~ .• pho~e & EdRiddle Joc ........... 11• derful blrtbday party. hand cat., red color has CLIAltAHCISAl.l 3BR,2ba .. unf.$400 646-7445 ma.ii ~ervice,, ulll & ' .._..._ Tbe Old Reti.nd WIUte wb&pawslccollar.Vlcnr QaatomBru. 631·1127 2 BR. 2 ba. ~ Jarutonal. ~cy s & ofc Haired~ .... LAPD. 1 ...... )1--...a .... __ ,, _______ _ BToro 3832 Gunt Home 4150 equip avail. Newport ,.... •ou utuvn ~ ....................... Cenler.640-5'70 PAWNSHOP keep ... 1775. Is:...,...~ I ~ ••···············•····• Upgradtid 2Ur. Condo, pool, gar. :1\Ull immed. $?95 mo. 4!19·2IO'J associated $40,000. Xint locaUon. $CDIU Im ,,..,......_. Room in my pvt hm for Prime location in Hunt· A&nl. 64.5-0882 11"""1. Found, Columbia Bike, ....... •••••••••••••• • • rel person. Od food, gd In gl 0 n B e a c h 0 n IU~~ owner lclenWy by sl&e, Sdlooh Ir flt4ECREEK UVISUP TOITSHAME Bl<Ut< UI '> Ill A l 1011'. /1)}' 'W Jl"tb,,u 1.1 t )#\A 1 car~. On bus line. Brookhurst, 800 square Cafe.Sandwlchet WPUl~ color, 1enal no., date le IMtrrtl 7005 49'·8944. feet. Single, garden type Cozy French sly le Eulogy •• Gamut.. loc. lolt. Call H.B. Police •~ VacotlonRntals 4250 store or office. Good ex· sidewalk care. Seats 60 Knock··lnflnn·· propstyolficer,536-5621 ........ ••••••••••••••• HunH 3 br condo + bonus. 2 ba. 1 ••••. •. ••• • •• ••• •• •••• • posure. assigned park· people in charmlni old YOU OINK LOil Irani port. If IE A j)verSOOtall trees and l ngtonleach 384 yr. old model. Back Bay. KAUAl·The Garden ing. Call Mr. Plummer world atmosphere. Aalt· Fot'tboseof YoU who in· f d r paaa t }treams with waterfall •••••••••••••••••••••• Cpts, drps. bltns. $425. Island oC Hawall. Luxury 963-6767 ing $29,000. quired. It'• easy to tell .C:m./ :~~e contac mun A"ENT ~reate a relaxing setting 645-9543,646·1164 vucaUon rental,new2Br, Ull 137-4200 when you 've cau1b\. a 6'2-2892 ,I a for your spacious new 1 •OLIVE PARK* 2 li a c 0 n d 0 0 n the •EXEC. SUITES• Swine Flu. You dOQ 'l l4R all blk Lab/Shep mix or 2 bedroom apart· An HOMES 2 Br, 2 Ba lux. apt over shoreline al Polpu. Sips NEWPORT BEACH DINHER HOUSE tneeze, YOU OINK. male, rabies lal from rnents. From $240 & looking Newport Bay 6. Call SS9-4716 or write Receptionist, conference F . SACRIFICE •-...a.a.__.... 11300 U.C. Davis. Vic. Arches, Furniture available. Nu 2 3 Bdrm., blt·ins wtth balcony & fireplace. Mf. Milnes. P.O. Box 608, room. Xerox, top am1ly ~ragedy Core.es =:. •• ':!":': •••••• :.... N.B. B.ewa.rd,MS-399$ Small pels OK. Adults cpts, drps, encl. gar .• al 833-m4 Koloa H wail 96753 secretarial service, saleoCt.hlsgem. Woochn· only. Office open g:oo t nu. (714) 847·7566, lOam • a · "nswering service. tenor done by old world Foued: Young male lrtab LOST male SbelUe (Mlnl i :OO. 2300 Fairview Rd. 5pm. 7dys. •BEASTBdLUFF lot~elydb31 ·~ foR'--.. 300 Readyfor0«upancy. masttt craftsmen. Tbe Setler. Brown leather Collie) bl Vic. Nwpt Pier Costa Mesa. Phone r con o, pvt pa io .. .wnnmt __. "' lOOOQUAIL.STE.290 atmosphere would lend caUar. lrvlne Ave, Clll. Jan 2Ttb. Please call $45-2300 3 B 3 b ,, gar. w/opnr., rec. facil. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nr. airport&Frwys. itself to any ftne cuisine, $48.30ll'1 5*3146Rewud. r, a, pvt pauo, encl. 213-598-2135 ft--lo h gar bllns dshwhr 1385 n.uummale s are new 2 D.8 .S. 752-8880 a place people will want LOST 1 di blk Dix Twnhse, 2br. 2ba. nu Chiidren' OK. 2170 ·Large 2 Br. frpl. yrly, Br 2 Ba condo. Close lo EASt 17thC.M. lo_,!~t~rn lo. 111t's70a ring, k!er::.e, nr 0 ;::. REWARD cpl, dbl gar. pool, Brookhurst. 962.0778 $350. 67~; 556-3312, b c b , ocean .view . m..,,...,rp1ece, aea n1 • \any Shack. REWARD. Lee b1k Lab type dof mo. 546·6299, 557·0848 Joe or (21.3)928-U02 Don Raylene, 547·4425, Ive Retail or oCc. space. 32{) si_luated next lo. s.an Call coll (?t•) ir-.-''Zaf..'' wear'i "old acarf, 3 bdr 21,':iba f pl n· msg to 1000 sq. ft. Being re· Diego Fwy in MISSJOn • _...,,_ • Morning.Afternoon Evening CLASSES START MONTHLY PACIRC TRAVEt. SCHOOL 810El7thSl, S. Ana 5434655 Accredited by NATl'S Eltabllsb.ed 1963 Finaocial Aid Programs 2 Br, 2 Ba, den unfurn apt • • r · 1 decorated inside & out. . • . eves. choke chaln, U.C. Davia w/patio. Mature adults room,3blc~bch,nopet, IEACHREHTALS Roommate wanted to V1erarea.Check1t! tap &CS-8995 onJy.Nopets. $33S mo .. water pd. WINTER ·SUMMER share Jge hme facing Ample prkg . Pvt. UI 817-4200 FOUND! Bllc. male. P oo-. MEN WOMEN Martini .. Aph **2 ~avail. 2·5. YEARL y Meadowlark Go If restrooms. 646.-3922 d)e Schnauier milt' Vic Loll Golden Retriever, TRAIH FOil 275 E. 18th St. C.M. Close to Ocean, triplex. Small Beach Store avail. Course. Sl20. 846·6419 For Lease DELl--E/Z HOURS Brookhurst & Adams: female. Arch Beach Hts. IAR'l'EHDIMQ. 631·3003 spac. 3 Br 2 dbl sinks af\6. in O.C. Airport area 180 JDEALFORCOUPLE HB.963-7064 Reward.4.Bf.8293 TWOWEEKCLASS Only sin days, seats over . baths, walk in closets, sq.ft. ground floor ore 40 in this clean, well FOUND: Cat, Blk/Org. Lost. Sml black pouch NATION·WIDEJOB LoftldrmApt bltns. gas & wtr pd. MffdaRoommate7 w/wlndowwall.Answer-equipped store. Cater-<Tortoiseshcll),Stoeaon ~tainlng.wallet &other PLACEMENT 21r,21aw/Loft Lndry facil. $375. ""--··t.-CilAn.d.lm.lMSnD ing serv. & secretarial ing,shouldbeexpanded. front paws. 846.2974 items.Vic.Alley1600blk ASSISTANCE , d . t 846-2716 ·848·9427 ~ serv. avail. Priced at Come watch IL al lunch ..... 2407 Coriander Dr, CM, GOODJOB .,.mme 1a e orcupancy. · · A ProC~sn'I Roomma~te '"" O TUN Pvt · c 1 & YRLY Lrg s bl' 2 ba ...... $225 . w /s erv . in c I. lime' Reward.545-2130 PPOR ITIES patio. gas rp c Luxury 3 BR 3 Ba · ' ' Referral Company can 833-9971 or aft 5 & wknds U · 817 ,.200 LOST Dark brn Tabby AMERICAM • stove. full kitchen incl owners unit. cr-Pt.s. drps'. frplc, 1 bik to bch. $450. HELP YOU FINDTHAT 581-4367 II • ., Cat.. Male, neutered, 9 ,........,, 5350 I A ITEM D I It S refrig. Pool & rec room 1 2 frplc's, $400. hurry, call 67~120or960·J6ll. RJGHT ROOMMATE Jbs. Irvine/Orangetree ••••••••••••••••••••••• -yr lease. Gas & water pd· 842·:>837 m 2 br. sgls. $235. Bach. 832..(134 Since 1971 01.x Ofc-J anltor. util, elev. II.ER TA YUH area. 559-5216 RELAXING MASSAGE SCHOOL HAYLOFT APTS all utils. wo. Fee $15, 1801 Newport Bl, C.M. Laguna leach Bob James-Lie. Masseur llOt E. l7thSt., SA. 283Avocado,C.M. LG. 2 br, lg. balco~y. Beacbcomer631·2011 Hous~s. apts, condos, Wlll help pay for your $15,000.oet·helprun LOST : Red Fem. Outeallat-9 49'·5111 IM-1960. Mon·Frl5pmto7pm wash/dry hkup. Encl d. mobiles. Beachcomber move.673-3441. No oear competition, Doberman, 1/28/77, • ScboolsCoastToCout Sal&Sun 10·4 gar. S300 mo. Call Ingrid Lrl 2 ~r. am patio, new Registry. 631·2011 ~ modestterms. WllaonSt. CM. Choke •PALM READER• 645.0143 at846-1371or846-8413 paint, Npl Hta. $265. 5"7·2501 ~Officn Ult 837-4200 chain. Reward! 548-6309 SZOreadinfforSlO •AlnewoptholllH Adlts,nopets.831·2018. PROF. Person over 25, Palisades Comm'l Cnlr. or644>-0316 Past,preseotllCulure Lie 2 br cottage, E side B g k ds & pets' .... E~RT M•11•·.u male/female. s hare. 1 blk to 0 .C. Airport MEXICAH RIST. Uc <2U>•M3SO C.M. frplc, beam ce1I nn your 1 · " -.·n·v "' ""' Suites from $125. No DESPERATE Lost. Cbildrens pet, (red· Encl.gar.$300.:»S·SJOO Lge2&3brs,appliances. 919•-l•Drhe ~~P.O.bBo~363und,HB. lease req . Tn c l s Ab l 't 1old) Lab. Retriever, IXOTICGIRLS cl a rages cpts & _,_ _......,your ac.gro sen ee owner can -.. •-. ,.., __ I""" v•-&... aoU • ________ _. en · ,.a . · . NEW 2 br & 2 br w/den · cpt.s1d""', 1·aru·ton·a1 svs. h dJ Se •· 80 ..-n: ~ .,.. .,.,,., M·•·a-•·Modeling drps. Move an now & get lerf L ·.... an e. a.., over • col.lrae area. 1 /21/TT -... ~ • • '"Sheffer Cov•.. SIOO. off lst mo. rent. wa ~t apts. uxury M wants lo shr 2br li.\ba FM stym, all u\ll. xlnt lease. s. Orange Reward. 837 •3921 or Outcall542·31'9/S43-32SO 847.756610 A~t to 5 PM a p po 1 n l men ls . .Pvt apt. w/2S·3S M/F. Xtras. Sec~tary svs available. Cowlty. Generous terms. 768-3912 FOR EVERY MAN WHO Townhouse · · beach, boat slips avail.lo $130, CM. 540-9126 Leasing office: Suite 200. Ull 137-4200 i--------- R en l lb i s 2 stor\· Lge t & 2 Br, 2 ba. sec tenanta.Adults,nopcts. . 2082 S.E Bristol, NB. WANTS A GIRL. Pb Towo bouse -pri\•al~ apts. Adults only, no 67l-1414 Sn~ rr:.ing,rem W/S~ (714)557·7010 {behind ICECREAM 1:~e~:ae,!,o~~1c'P:~ 1.sas..6383 • Patio-2 bed rm -.ill pels. A 1C & Dshwshr. . c_ 00 ang or same 0 Carl's Jr) G oss $12000 Csl Hwy /Balboa (213) ---...~WOILD bltns-l'i bath-air -Pool & Jacuzzi. From BagQinyonTownhH.3Br f1nd&shr3BrhseinLag r mo. • ..,.11,~11"15 adults 06 yrs up OK > $220 mo. l9l32 Magnolia, & den. Golf course view! Bch or Canyon area. lualftHt Rental 4450 ~!1J.~i:e,f ~a!~~ h~~a~~ 592·5812· Reward. Of HYPHOSIS .. .,80 ont h AP t · °"""·l800 Pnol, tennl.I. $800 per mo. 642.-rS. Linda. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free Con au I la ti on -· m · P .,.... _ ~ NE w p 0 RT 8 EA c H Located· amuent area. Want Ad Help? 642..s818 BeAProfanl CoclrtaJI Waitreu •$99.00• Exctling I& Profitable Glarnourous Profession •Learn in 40 bra from pro(snl's the fine art of waitress techniques. •Free placement Sv1 •Day or evening sessions CALL (714) 751·9194 For a free consult in one oC the most profit profess So. Calif Waitress, Inc . 17lm Sky Park Bl, Sle C Irvine, Calif., 92714 dJlys~6·4141. New lux 1 Br. S2l5. 3 Br 2 Female nds sngl fem lo STORE Netting 17%. Bank Ona· &eselon! <714>~..00J4 Ba, bltns, $375. Child, Beach duplex, yr,ly, $385 sh.are my 2Br hse in HB. 2630AvonSt. $2SO/mo neing avail. Agt. 751-1400 -• • • • • P-woodA~b. smlpetOK. t-826·6916 per mo. lse req d. 2 Br. $125+~ util. 980-3SlS afl JerryWynn (213)477-7701 COCKTAILS CJleatt§ of rr -I I H -1 ~ove I -rr-· -968-8861or894-4652 4. "NEW & NEAR EW'' Walk lo Beach, Bach. gas ---------Newport Beach Cpts., drps, bltns. lg. & wtr pd Stove & r efrig HACH YEAILY 28 yr old male wants to Industrial R...tal 4500 X1nt year round locaUoo. ~Uo. Washer ~ dryer s150 m~. tst & last: 3 br, 2 ba It 1 br, 1 ba. shere his apartment ••••••••••••••••••••••• Better in summer. hkups. t & 2 br s. from 962 8050 963.1324 ca 11 Deb b I e days CdM. $100. mo. 640-2527 oce • .... VIEW Owner moving from area S205 . Ready 2/15 /77 · S31-1012;eves5'8-4012 '""'"" and muataelll Complete 646-062or645·9~ roWNHOUSES LIDONORD hC1CJ111forRttlt4350 lndustriallldCJ. kitchen. Seals aboul 80. 1001 W 17th St CM Agt. TIM E, 151-1400 THIS V ALIMTIMl'S DAY send your love a greeting all the world can share with a Dally PUot Heart of Love: It's easy. compose your personalized greeting and we'll set Your message In type to fit the border of your choice or your handwritten thoughts may appear in the border >40u select. 3br,l'iba,S240,2br$220. Uke new 2 & 3 bdrms. BAVFRONT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deluxe .ofc/shop.,11p~ce".1-.;;;_ ______ _. ~·· drps, stv. Children S32S It up. Rec. fac's. Le 3Br, 2Ba, pvt bch, Dbl ~ar. w/hi door. flO. 1SOO to·l800 sq. Ct. avail. RESTAURANT • 548·9690 art. 5PM Joan 846·1371, Sondra panoramic view, chldrn ~~gietSMM. 724 67W3-.J77a!!les Call Bob Dickinson. Gross $8000. mo. 41e 3 Br 2~., Ba, $3l0 mo . 846-1452 OK.16SO lse. 675-7687 "-Cos a eaa 0 ' Realtor Abunleeowner in a Jam. r,et bldg, lgc bachelor, 2 Br l ''J Ba, sep 1ar, pvt High on hill! SlSO. Util pd. GARAGE FOR RENT 979-8531 Could eas\ly do ~. a s. Meu del Mar area paUo 12.5(). Adlll no pet.a. Singles ok. Fee P>;~ llthSl. H~·l61l Sta. age 4650 ~1~8::i~r Noe~~~ ~ ~; 963-7298 Ma.in Rentals. S40-S370 ••••••••••••••••A••••• Beach location. Submit Newer 1 Bdrm Apt w1lh 2br, bltns. cpts, drps, S.Cle•.t• 3176 1 ,.,.00 Smallboal&traUers,ren· yourlerms.Agt.751·1400 carage. $195. Will <'On garage, <'hildren ok.•••···················· Offlc•lttlttll "'"' lal1111ace,$1.00perfoot. T•coST' .... D klda/pet.9 646-0176 840-3759 ? Br. ocean view, bltna, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Limit length 22'. 1819 "' "'" 2Br w)encl patio. Block to beach $180. l br, dshwhr. Ad.Its, no pets. Monrovia Ave. CM. See FreeG~~n=· :1~idln1 • Will consider petolt. Fee Ref de. U 65·$300. Mgror call548-862'7 wilhlnslde patloseating. a/pets. $245. Call MalnRentals,540-S370 49:2·l961 Storage gara1e S2S mo. Parking everwhere. -.-0178 1,..._ 3144 2br, 2ba, newly pntd, ~----..-.... 1959 Maple Ave, C.M. Ettabllshed 8 yean In • -2 Br, Fam Rm, 2 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .u,., cpl'I, stove. SZ55, .,,..,._ AptS. ~ rast growlne area. Good _... SlOO de 492 3166 ", for Mom & Pop & Teen. ~Uo. (l>lc in triplex. Nr WOODBRIDGE ep. . • ~M ,,_.....,.. lttfttala W.ted 4600 Tema. Agt. 751-1400 Jhac)I, oo ~ 83'7 ·8828 PINES APTS 963-W'f ~ ..,_ ....... •••••••••• ••••••• •••••• --_...;=-------1 (114) 1, 2 & 3 bdrm units. Uve al the Beach, newer ./....,_....... l Br; 2 Br hse by Itself. ' lffrj'#llMT..,.,. •a ZBA, near park. Designed like early 2Br, 2Da. bltna, dahwahr, Older cple & dachshund Nets $1,800. Month -i'-lltlns, fireplace, Callfornia bungalows. walk to everything, $260 to $175·$200 he. 2429 Semi lndustrlal localJon. ;pclosed garaie. 13$0 F r o rn S 2 7 O. 1 1 5 + 11curity 875-5312 or Cedar, Apt •'A", Long 6 Daya, necwk l(ood food IDO-'AOT. ~6 P\nestone. Ofc hrs 3-5:30 546-5880 DB.UXI OFFICIS Bch, 90806 operator for complete wkdays, 9-5:30wktlca. ....._..__ .... FurMIMd Cornm.1 & lndstl spaces. l·BR. or bach. apl., CdM , kitchen. Hardly used. •. 3ba avail now. Xlnl ssz.0400 -r-~tlMd ltOO 200 to 2000 1q. n . A.a low Penln. or Bal bland. Up Good rent, good terms. toe., xtra lge gar. pool, Reen lion R tre t dJ w as3'taq. n. Lag Niguel& to$250mo/yriug73•7060 Agt. 751·1400 $385.CllJ962·0820all.5 a e a • a·••••••••••••••••••••••• Mission Viejo areas. 07 ....__C~ ..:...;_;_;...;;..;..;;......-------1 cent to golf. tennis II THE EXCITING ....,... .. Z Br, bltns. pool, yng pool. Lovely up&l'aded PALM MHA A"S. Handy to S. D. Frwy. ~ ETS 0 ......._ No pets. m J. 17th 2br, den, 2ba condo. ,..l""""ESTONPT Call: 8.1t·l400 R...tah 4650 -...!!. beS3a~ioc. 'v..z IOIDHS COMI IM the 3 alzes aa atw>wn t.low: S1 5. H . and a IC)edal child"s alr.e for 12 (you must be und•r t2 to Quallf1 tor the llUleat greetl"9). ~-aft lAM R h S J l ~ ,,..,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..., .. " .... ,...,.. 1 · ~ ora:1s.~~"'r!: hBCH. BR ltlyftwlt Offlcn rrauer apace for 8x30' run. Fatablllhed 34 yn. aBr I Ba Mesa Verde appt Bae ,114 · Avail. 67$-8141 Adi.dtC.M.park,nopets. Ull 711·J141 / • • ' · Crom St.115 •IP\ D/W, encl. aara1e. 1 _ • ___ ... ll... Adults N p 1.1 Exec. Ofc. Spectacular tllO + · 5'8-6t73 Uftl10l STOii I ~WU, oo pell. $275. -,,--__.. -, O e ,. .. _.1081 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1511 Ma. Dr. view ol N•wPOrt Harb. • _....___ Gree• C26,500. No. I -~-------i New stud.lo, ocn vu, kltch , (5 Blb East ol Newport ocean~ Furn: Secy • -J'ttttrnt/ Nell '3000. mo. Growln1 .. ol'Au NEW beaut. 2br. pet.lo, gar, ms mo. incl Blvd.) recpt. aervlcea lacl. FfllMM area. Super buy. CaUlm· I , cpu, drp10 bltos util. 6?3-'7Sl 54f.9880 Prime Udo VillaRe'loc. ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• med. . ..,/raa1t encl. aar., LIDOBUSINESSCNTR ....._ Ull 111·1141 f Jnd17 ta0ii. Cpl onl)'. No l BR. atv. 6 refril. Mid· PamlWIMG ('714)675-4030 o,,·, 1...-, 5005 I cllUd. DO peta. $325 mo. dle-a1ed only. CZ2S. 321 JMD UMn' APPBOXCOO ft C·Z t •••••••••••11••••••••••• ~alte mGPeJ eur1 aellln& ... Mfri.leSt.,04.-S ' the Be_.. H..... 130 E. 17th 51· &tte : c...a•n.t•l•7 a decorative ana UHful ' .......... Mete 3114 n-.-~!•c~uat SZ35/mo.DoyteMM4'19 • ~~erUa500Un Ac1Pl1ve loca1t1 ~1:: •. Pp>;!ic •;:,z~ \ •••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'9,..,,,.,..__, -.__.,,, _.-.. ..._. ••· eaH ca Details, call 1138·20t3 \ • , TbebatOINtwport'• ___. _._. or atop by for tree Into. &fttr-rn Alkfor Paul coodllft. Deh1nomet1wtth All catcsona " lYPtS· --Y"--11'-· __ ..._ __ , •Beamedeellln1• etttcletluecretarial • We l'\W'&nt.ee to pita,. ""'"""'.t •Zpool1ltrecffnlan eervtees.ldtAlftwJ JOU. 711~31,.1 W-.cl 1020 • PJ.ulll erpt.t •drape. accat nr oc ,Alrport • "' ......... ••• •••. •• ••••. lrAnchomuchmaro BAKERCENTER UNITEDBUSINSSS Need Investors for 11\&m.bacibelot f2IO •Baktt' 5"-2982 lNVESTMENTS Con,umer Product. t1at\.lm~Tf01l SUS Oraoc• County Airport lS2SMeaave,,ioorE Ready !or productJon . •• _. ... -nON ....a. Small 1 man ore In <acrou from Kon• Lns > Product proven. Pl1Q on· ....,!-~= dtl~t bld• '1.30. Cati SU!i.108, Cott.a Mt'H ty. 531H1'19 1-......,..nv..-"" UBI Ope11 '7 da~11------------1 N~ll&Kh Bob J>icklnt0n, Realtor. w..y .. Loeiil IOZ '4M'1IJ 9194533 TIAV&AelHCY ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• C4K, .00-100 aq.f\... cpU, c.o.ao.ooo.crp/f" let.WaWT.0.'1 l Br, CM, eplJ1 drp1, dJW, A/C, ampt. (teo Priced 'ntbt. beautiful LOAN&AVAIL.dLI! ~. tbe to tbopa, DO paralna. From u•. aore.C.UlordttalU. cr.dincUmponacl pa.SIOOmo.."2-11.M a&lllterl,fTMlJO U11 711-J741 173.-JBioktr ' \ r ' ' ' • • you WISH TO CllATI ycur own decorated greeting. use a black pen & draw your design to rrt one of tne dotted line "hearts" shown beloW. for help with your ad , Just call 842·6878 & a friendly Valentine ad•vleer wlll be hlPPY to ualat you. And. If you like. you can charge your Heart of Love or use vour Master Charge or BankAmericard • ' / \ " \ \ • I I I I I / ' I ' ... 1 Add i\ •.• Bulld lt ... Ofaper it...Hammer it ... Carpet SERVICE lt. .. Cement IL.Wire IL.Hoe lt ... Clean lt ... Move • lt ... Press I ••. Paint lt ... Nall lt...Plaster it ... Fix It ... DIRECTORY #cNtadwte I C.f11tar C:M:.._ • '9 Mo•tde•l1CJ lt1 u•nl 1 ......... '~JPoperiftcJ ~ • ...............••..... .. ........................................................................................................................................ •···········•·····•••·• ..............•..•••••• Arebltect~ul • Struc 8 .E. FERGUSON Rcmodelt&AddiUons saQploader, dump lruc:lt. Want a REAU.Y CLEAN °'1Je0dable clunlna. wk Friendly Movins Co. Effl. PETERS Pl\TNTING PLUMBER R pair. tt tun.I Plans. R~l • o Prompt aUHllon to aU Aceent Bldg'1Uc328107 bau.11A1.tnewor1t.1rad· HOUSE! Call Olnaham l.yorblmo.pl.caU6etH ct.nt. frieodly aerv1~. E.xpr'rJ. Reu Ri.te11 P'f>e. •nattllattoo 'DeW ~tructlc;I. Retjd )'OU1" remocS.llna " re ~or 1-634-2078 col· t.na.dem.o. etc. 751·39~ Girl. FreealA.~123 pmlCT•912lLorett.a LoVJUt po111 rate&. Frel" Eat Coll Gent servicH 0 Gidley. ~~:, l /lncUietrh Pat r a F' f n • 1 t lect · Ha11111CJ HOUSECLEANING HOUSECL!:ANINO 3 IM'7.(1882. $.2-04.58 MHaJJ. --- 1 crat\amaiuhlp, re(•. 3 LEE M. JARVIS ••••••••••••••••••••• • • By rellable couple Days week open. '751·1361 MOVlNG HAU UNG Paperban11n~. palntina. T•...,_ Repair 1111,111....., Generation• exp . Addlt'a,Rmdl'a.Kn8·5 YOUHAVEITREADY Refs 96S48U btwu9-12am. Anywhere, anytime European cruHsman ..................... .. ••••••••••••• ••••••• UIMlln PhC.Z2CIO.Uc3171.W l'LLHAULt1'AWAV Fut. expr'd . very rcas. Reas Cull Moshe. CANOPYTVSERVICE A Ue'd. Day c ~. W/IChl C.,...Sertlce P"'Tl""... TIM 548.6:J06 1r;.~~c~!~1 ~r:e::~~n~ ~!!~!........... Fully enc:ld 2T truck 631·3$53 l&t RATE SERVICE procram In ewpt Deb ••••h••••••••••••••••• ~ vo• l\W'&nteed &73-m& wtllft 1a.. Low"r rates ....._.. .-a. AtFalrPrlcestG0-1633 ~call· 2531 Ca &.M Ulla OU PATIOCOVERS lwu.lm1.movina.cleanup Bo1ert & O 'Brien IC )'OU ht!lp. Wlnton rMriOCJ""'t"'9Y · rpe aow YY rs Muoruy4'Remodellng $7 /up.Treework. Land1capln1. C1tm 54&-3048.873-4114 •••••••••••••••••••••••Ta. L'lc'd baby~ttlna. m 0~~~Gpalra t Quality suar. reunbl. Rea.a. rut. free est ~~A.fi~w~~n~~. ~~ work. 1prlnklera lo· Lang Photograph y . ••••••••••••••••••••••• bome.,\tea toSyn,bo c:atbiueruvi .. :.ar:_oerat fresll.Lk'd,&46-0781 8'2-4597 ""rmaturewoman Rer ataH/upalr. Compl , ..... /PaperilHJ Spec.ulliatathatwlllhel CERAMIC Tile. New or luncbea, 7 ·8to3. M u_ ..... ~ ~ . ' matnl, Com'l /Re1ld ••••••••••••••••••••••• YoU sell your products remodel. Frest,smljobcs area 663848 CUSTOM REMODELING Sonny &Jer FREE haul· Haulins. ~work. sod PAINTING-. Int/Ext. services, 494 1397. weJcome536-24.36afU. _.___ ~I WeCareCarpet Cleanen Eitel Wort Mark Deyden Ing, cleanup. tree work Houseclean Ing by the lawns. Reas 496-0702 Reas, dependable. Free 581-4.S06 . -.1 ce Steam Clean or Shampoo Pb6'5-3802, Llc325027 for usable It.ems. Ftin· day. Mature & exp. Ref. est.CallJay&U-7965 Expr d Ule setter odsjob. ........... ......... cu /bid&• removed ·v ttmart "-Mr/Repair Cslm work anytime. Sml 1'Ylllna at bOtne any kind Alic> Upbols/teMeyC ·~I workt 81ctrical ~·2005 Ill en 847-6494/:535-4485 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• WORJC GUARANTEED ••••••••••••• ••• ••••••• job OK 498.2049 4~ RUI~ tea 0IU ~ k . euar.Refa/ ... ,eees .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Su Cl Cook F\re l Pl ten lotr/Extr Free Est VERY NE TPATCH . • 6 dd. :t;,.si..t pc u Reas Ratea · 86-3'716 ELECTRICAL SERVICE 0CC Student. Big Truck, -ru:nii:~t. s hrs. Brict ~·ret!nPat.lo 23 yrs Expr. 642-029:i JOBS & ;EXTURE Tl'ft Service pro r CAR p ET CALLS US/hr Call cleanup, ~ree trim or! SZI.00. 64~ B.lockWaUs BBQ Pits p-1-Ay C at-FreeF.st. 893·1439 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERIENCEp Book CLEANING noor•wln· Mi-8233 C HEAP . 84S ·7919; Refs F.su fJ4&.04&4 ......, Ger GS~ Removals. tr lmmlnf· keeper wants w.-k ln he dow care Dutch Maln· G al Servi 549-36&e House c I ea n Ing by ' · Average Extr 1 Stry $345 PATCH PLASTERING pruning, free est. Uc d bome.842·72166 •-·-Se. · a...,•<IWI wr c9s u.. _ ..... ..1. JapaneseLady MASONRY WORK. all 2·StryS465.lnlrS45rm ••AU.TYPES•• 1-UUymsurtd.6'2·2624 ..., ....... c:e rvice...,, . ......., ...... ~ ................ no••ww-g 549--1029aft 4 types bnclc, stone & con· Prices incl matr'l/labor Freeeat. 540-~ --------- c.p..t .. •........•..•. .,. ..... . Master Craflsman Specialty f1n~~h . re modeling & repairs Refs. t99-31~ ClllldCare State lie. cont. AU types •u•••••••••••••••••••• . . c:retework.Call498-3639 Guar,lnsrd.freeest. Trimming, topping, re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• home service from yard MRS . KINGS Carpet. 2 reliable g.lrls will clean Ted627·1900orS52-0134 Homes·Addltlons. Restuc· movmg. cleanup. Wlnter Llc'd Daye.re Newborn torool.842-2629 Cleaning & Painting Co your house . Refs . Blc)c:k. Slumpetone walls 1 • co over blk walls. Free ra.tes. Lic/lnsrd. Tooy toliyrs MvbomeCM F f "WE DO IT ALL ' 6.'1·1969bet.3pm547·3281 &brlckplanters.Expert·State lie. lnsurea. low est.low ratesS86-48~ ~5124 · " • ast. accurate. most pro ~1 . ly anstJtlled at special prices too. Exterior ---------wann meals. 548-565l field. speclal In legal. Find what you want In winter prices Call Bob specialist. Try me-Calleo F\nd what you want In Have somelhing to sell! Want A& Call 642· Evs/Wknds ~·9736. Want Ad Results 642·5678 Daily Pilot Classifieds. 531).9906 or6354384 · 836-M55 Dally Pilot Classifieds. Classlfied ads do it well. JablWmhd, 7075 HalpW..tect 7tOOHelpW•t.d 7100 HefpW..ted 7100 HelpW..e.4 7100 twpW..ted 7100 HefpW~ 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 tWpW..t.cl 7100 .............................................. •eeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeAe ············••eeeeeeeee .............................................. •eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•eeeee eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•e ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avallablel/31, prac. ,, COOK DRIVHS H 0 T E L P B X MAJDS WANTED Par-legal or Probate eptiorust 9650 nurse.494 .. lext ABBE Back up & or breakfast CCros..CCMMtryl OPERATOR Ai~rter OonQwxoteMotel Secretary. Recentexper. s..shiMCOlftPCl"yl U9 until 9"30PM cook needed lmmed. AP· No special Ile. req'd lnn Hotel. Irv. ontact 2100Newport Bl.. C.M. Ca II Mrs . WI ns I ow Seeks hke secretary for Former exec :1ecy wants ply In person to 1801 MacGregor Yacht Corp Mr. Hannan. 833-2770 837·1080 lovely ore:. Very persona p/l work 10 my home. Bayside Dr. CdM. Wed· 1631 Placentia, C.M. House/Apt cleaning, Pl· MPaFm:rnan~ perso~. ble staff. Good toe. Call Call833-8802 Sun 1 I me. nergeuc Parking Attendants, Lisa Kay. &48·1.288. Den Mature widow woman wishes ~ork ; housekeeper. 'Pl•in cook. Uveln. Write •d #853, Dally Pilot, PIO. Box ~.CM.Ca.92S!6 Practical N11rse. night duty. LotsofTLC. Refs. S40-0T22 HelpWClfthd 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DRIVER time/fut ·lime. 13.00 hr Clean cut. . 548 7948 p/time. Ideal for col. atu· nis & Dennis Personnel COOK·Breakfast. L11nch Household rurniture start673-l235 MATURE W OMAN dent.549-5042aftSpm. Service or HunUngtol) & Danner. Exper'd. App· mover w/at least 1 yrs Housekeeper live-in. 2 Sch p /tl me to welcome eART TIME Beach. 16168 Beach Blvd, l.y Rigger, betwn 9am· expe1-. Local. Richard's age cbldrn. Bch hae, sal newcomers & contact Assistant shipping clerk SUlte 121. llam & 3pm-Spm. 16 MovingCo.830-4926. $100 wk + rm & board · merchants. Flex.Ible hrs. w/some assembly experi----------~~h.oo Center. Newport E L E C T R 0 L U X C.11847-8567 Need car. lile typing. needed 20 hrs per wk at RECIEf'TIONIST 547 3095 ... h c 11 M Fash Isl. Financial Serv Authorued sales & Housekeeper · .... so per r . a r. hnn. Recept/Secy. front 1---------•1 service. MtF. Full· Leodu--..a...__ Mature saleslad v for Novak/Mr Stewart desk E R ( 'd •Uriaiaawt COOKS P/t.imeS42.-4lS3 PM shlr~M . bakery.Call ~ 540-52.22. ~ ~~m.e~,a~ •M&P/tf,_Sales Experience Preferred. 1---------•1 General PM acute hosp. 494-9240 PART·TIME . F1sh1ng MlguelOr.N.8.Su1te200 •hi & P/TFfftw & Alt«lflOlls exper. req'd. Sal com· tackle company needs . But Not Necessary EXEC SECRET ARY mensurate w /ex per + Mature Lady..P /Time part-time employee over Receptiorust. P /time. Ap· C411Afhr7PMFor""ll I 11 Day&NightShifts benefits. San Clemente Weneeda pleasantnon· sstoworkanourristung ply in person. Reg1i. ACCOUNTINGCLERK '2131273-1143 Avatlable ~~~~:rpa~0Ji~ng~~~I~~ Gen'IHospital,496-1122. smoking lady to type & reel dept. must be Beauty SaJon. So. Coast With p /R & geaeral ac· Apply In Person file. Some phone answer· mecbankally mchoed, Pla.ia. Mgr. FaJar. countingexper.Familiar ------------------SMckShopMo.9 6'~+a~0co0.0SdhlbleOn,teyfp1.itnsg. Housekeeper. various ing also. Hrs: 10 to 3 call642·U63rorappt. Re,.ept/Gi'rl"'-i'day w/quarterly payroll tax HelpW..+ect 71 tt.lpW..+ed 7100 3446E.CstHwy,CdM duties. Mature woman. <Flexlble>.Thlslsatcm· ______ ;..;;_ __ , ... .., returns. Xlnt co, benefits -•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Equal Oppor Employer Salary $900. 7·3 Shirt in guest home. porary assignment for ,IX OPHATOR For photography studio. w/growlng N.B. firm. Babysit.ting twin girls ~'~~~ 1_C_.M_64_6-_67_1_6 _____ 1 approx JO days Please Graveyard. Thurs. Fri & must have front office Must be avail am med. It. housekeeping in ex IOAT MFG. call Michelle 752·2656. 3 Sat. 11·7 Exnor pref'd, exper. Sales & market· For appt 6444360 ext Clipper Marine. 1919 E. COOK, exp. fry Also HOUSEKEEPER "" 1 n g ab i I 1 t y n er 263. ' ~~;. ro[i~:.~~{"!·15 Occ:ldenlal. SA. Needs· Dishwasher. Apply at, °"'Y"ilKO\\ A<i<;()(IAH"i Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, _to_S.:...pm_·------1 ~~II train EOE Knowledge or photo· 11 Di 6752182 Exper'd Gel Repair. !562W 19thSLC.M ,9"SONMIAC)tt1Cy 661Cent.erCM548·5585 MECHANICS ---·------ti.:raphy helpful . ACCOUNTIMG CLIC ~7S75 ~~ Be~ch o CHaardrpwearnetJensrtasl.lersD.ec k Cook full time. breakfast 3723BitthSl, N.B. Ins an"" Recent exper . Appl PEOPLE PERSON CaMiruU·mum waae to st.art. GEHERALOFACE · · · & lunch. Coffee Shop & 557·0Q45 · ur~y O Shell Station. 17th Exec needs p/tlme as· __ 962_·7_877 ____ _ Must have exp. in ac• Babysitter ror 9 mo old IOOKKEEPER Dell. 842.1426 l00% Employer our wn Irvine. Nwpt. Bch. soc. m whale supply. Ful· Receptionist for dynamic counts payable & re1 Respo ns . student Retained 1 .... cate•AC)ttlCY ·--------•I lycap1talized.673·2223 "rowing Irvine Co. celvable. Good typist It woman. Fri & Sat eve. Immediate opening for Counter H.tp ---------•I No exp req'd. earn while Phones & hght typing. pleas a nt phone Blu:ffsarea.644-!'i034be£. assistant bookkeeper In P.T . exper. Captain youleam,keepyourpre· MEDICAL neat. denondahle, level Personall.ty. Full·tl""e 4 rorporateomces. Tustin. r.vEC SECRET"RY sent'h"' hi! train g ,... •• h Mikes 815 W. 19th SL ~ "' JVVW e · 10 • headed & enthusiastic perm. position Sahry -------4 S700 Start. Must ne c.M I o r profess i o o a I F9 tMn Insurance TRANSCRIBERS PHONE SALES Call Betty 557-6660 open. Babysitter needed for 2 y good, general knowledge engineering orrice con· ~ Call(114>64.>l50f old boy, Mon-Fri. M ofaccountin~.A~P.A/R. Counter Girl. P JTime ductinggovmtcontracts. &1•-1 752·1147 Long&shortterm Phone Sales people.1---------• for appt between hmeor yours, 545-6336 bank reconc1hat1on. etc. Fast service sandwich Dictation. dictaphone, ...,. assignments. male or female. 16 to 65 R E. Sales 8:JOAM&4 :00PM BABYS ITTER needed Exce_llenl company shop. Call btwn 8-3PM. typi g lmmediateo,....n ---------yearsofage.Guaranteed UNIQUE HOMES r-... • "'-c-benefits Non-smokers 833-8919 n · .. ~ · IMW. Agcy Person wages or commissions. 7tiw~Uia-r dllys, my borne or you preferred. No phone ~25!~beral benefits. Comm T Lines Un· 250 East 17th Street. Bldg F.ll Cos .. Mesa ror 14 mo. old. 54<>-7849 calls. Send resume to CUSTOOIAN derwrlter. MlD S yrs ex· Suite o. Costa Mesa. Mesa Verde omce, 12 -Reel H'" Realty F ed s J & be 00 •. vears old and ru11 of MW Babvsltter, hsekpr 1 '" Nights ll.30PM·7:JOAM. Exnor Farm Mechanic per. r · a mes tween S: .,. 8:30 p.m. ~ " .. ~ Co La B L Co ta t ideas: Attractive office. Accurate tvpisl v/some Lake Forest, live in. o 180021rvlneBlvd. Apply only if qualified needed by growing • g. C•• n c 3148C-Dr 646-4223. " Mrs 8 di cA<> '>l\l::o -·~ thorough trainin g. sh.. pleasant sll'round· out. 7fl8.8508 Tustin. 92680 w/6 mo's general acute farmer-pecker. Must be · ra ey • .ror .......,, 54L ,.741 Eq11al Opporturuty •· · 4"" 1087 E o E ..,.... generous comm.,,s1ons. Inga NpBch ofc. J.Shr wk, hosp. + carpet & floor expert in welding. trac· -· · · · · Employer 1 M·F 8·3().4 ·JO Starting BabysiUerneededwkdys,BOOKKEEPER. L.ag exp. Adult prer'd. Sal tor repair & packing . <Acl"O&sFrom ~~~~~lai~~:~~~4:. $600: ~nd .re;;,.me PO art. school. Westcllf lkh. Pt·tlme. growing commensurate w /exp machinery Xlnt oppor Jan1toral Work. f'I B. Oran~e Co. Airport) =.,~:7c~~~l~~~· ~dre~~~~o~:;:::~· ~~:i~e:~~~~0~7~~~ ~rH0s~~t~l.~~1~te !;~~:i~~l~otivat· ~~f~~~-~:a~e· Equal pporEmployer -S-i-l k-s-~-~-~-e-n-E-~-r-in_t_e_r-1. ~·!:::::an~:::::::·s APARTME~HOUSE Babysitter & ligh nee. Salary com· DATAIH-CODER Fast Food Se~vlc.e is ac· Kitchen Helper·Mon thru MEDICALASSISTANT Mylar. fabric & l man Jim Wood MAINT NCE housekeep'g. Wkdys. mensurate w/exp. Call Must keypunch 12.000 cepting ~pplicauons for Fri Sam·l Zpm. Call Huntington Beach Physi squeegee. exper nee. 714-54t..5990 COU E children Reh R . M c M a n n i s . strokes per hr & have 6 days. mghls & grave Ri chard, 634.1471 o r cian. Reply classified ad 642-2241 art2PM !~~~~~~~~~ Exp'd .• m1ddlt-aged, Cull Hood. 833-2900 (714 )83J..0651 mo's current work ex· yards. Apply al Naugles. 556-0780 after 3 #861 Daily Piiot, P .0 . ~:S1rewi>(rt Be<Ach. ~~c of;' ~fn~:J~n looldl..,.,...Typlst !:!~!1J~e~~1:'~1111~?ftk ~~ ~~hurst. Hunt· Kitchen & Din. ~oom help. ~~~· Costa Mesa. P~:SGOPERATOR ltE. WnGUARANTEEO For 8ublic accounting Be r .. _ r 1 b .... _ 7 J Sh.fl EXPERIENCED •--------... yn ev-r. Must do ""KG. st 0 u.:ne IU g ven y .... ture women. . I Mll!U " ... D WOMEN "'P" c.. olc. range Co. Airport .... ~I N tr ~ · t h c M ~ "'" Offset presses ln·house ~SEMI\ EIS 2nd Shift Mwt like de· taJI work & tt able to work w /f1bergtass. c~ MClllllfoctwinc) 7601 ClayStrtet <West or Beach & So OfGarfield.118 > F.qual Oppor. E111>loyer Venipwicture. light lab area. 833-0257. ~:~e:fr irm54o.5001 Fees Paid/Also Fee Jobs ~1~~ ome. · · wanted tr work ror print shop 4 Day wk M 000 Per MO C.M.area.645-9200 ---------S II' f KeypunchOpr toS650 ---------Janice's Ragg(!(fy Anns Good benefits .Apply Na· "'1, • EXPBIEMCED FUU,.TIMI COW.-CIAL TB.LEI .oys "'ND GllLS nelling & Sne mg o G 0 /Accounting to $750 LEG "L·C!"'-"'RET"'RY H I ,. ,.. . N , 'd "' N Be h A "' ~ "' ousec eamn., .-ervace. tional System:. Corp.. 0 e~er. reg • Mia81on VieJo · El Toro ~~£-am:is 0~;~cy Recept(l'ypist $650 Needed for N.B. Law of Starting pay C:.50 hr 4361 8 i r r h Street . area. Earn your own Secretary lOS825 nce.CallS40-540SAskror Hrs: Tues thru Fri II to Newport Beach 1Nea Havey been thinking money selling subsc:rlp· DELI Clerk. Salary +in· Irvine Personnel Agency Susan. • 3PM Reliable help want· o.c. Airport> of increasing your pre Uons after school. For in· centlves Apply 11 3. 488E17th Costa Mesa ed.675-6553. ----------1 sent income7 Rapidly ex formatJOn.callSJ0..0913 PlazaVerdel.lquor.1525 Swte224 642·1470 LEGAL TRAINEE · ProductionControl pandinli-multi·million o.~y G P. Pra"'icc nee'"~ CMesMa Verde Dr East. Bri~ht. xlnt typing skills Merc:rUfuryled mechanic. Pref Typist dollar company is seek· .,...., ~· '"" forcareeroppor.onMag ce w/exp m out· Xlnt oppor w /well mg positive and ag· exp back ofc medical a:. · f'ILE CLERK 11 typewriter in N. e. brds & I.O's Permanent estaMjshed co. in Np Och gress1ve care~r onent.e:d sat w/xray permit Exp DelJvery ol Dally Pilot. A Must have car. 3·5 daily, estate planning cor· full time position in person.., for positions In UNITED only need apply 645-9990 large route in Newport Sday wk. 752-5571 Ask for porate law practice. Mag Hawaii w/established & for person 1w1 /good typmgk its ne w Hunt 1 ngton ,. ... ,._ ... l"'I" ... ., Be h t bl f h h Ann grow'g dlr. Xlnt work'g skills. ab lty to wor Beach /W "~tmlnstilr ASSEMBLY Appllca· ~""'"--"" CanvasMan,Sallmaker& hacl swalle orad1g . llexper.pref'd,butwlll cond.(714 )557·9559 w/Cigures. tlea!la n location co'm"pLe•~lyne"'w ti,_ • ..,.... bei·na S""ept~"' 230\ So. Main d Off! sc oo or co egc stu ent ~ ~ ~-.... tram. Call (7141833·9983 ,....~ ,.... .. ,....a ty. som .... "'"''"'.. "'' "'' San'-Ana Exper' P/lime ce Eanungsapprox·1mately ;·, .. ··, •• :·,1 .,. ........ ..-."""' Ii d t al · for ruu lime usembly .., Help. Baxter & Cicero <"'><ltl.00 monthl". p"hone '-" '-"' '-" LEG"LTl'll ""l ... EE MGMT TRAINEE customer con tart a personah.zt:h' g r a ntmg wone~ MJ.St tH? able to L<I" 7238 *"" J "' """'" N 1 1 fl ship'g & rec:v 'g ofc . Mui rourse w Jc uar n ees work witb hands. Speed (714) 551-5117 .,.... . &4.2-4321, ask for cin:ula· $65~ Job Req's good typing skUls at ona nance co be able to work nex1bl your success and In ii accuracy 1!11ent1al. ~ tioo leaving your name ''Vanety filled ! .. This & willingness to learn. needs college grad who is hrs 645-4800 come. Opportunity un· Start S2 50 •r Apply An Equal ~· ·, ~--' ''::!') and address Irvine co. needs 'Self Will leach you ever· sales oriented . ag . h'T11ted ' Please call &y Pr ____,, 1 -a F' n.......rt ··'t E I '-" '-" ' vtruna you wante d t gr e SS Ive & h 1 g h I Y Pit Sales. $40.$70 wk up. or Ed for more details 01~11 nf, 17-.. • """"' ow Y mp oyer Oell•ery . Part-lime. Stypeulf.1~·it.eenbtk'~!egr,shoa""ndtloe know ~bout being a legal motivated. Outstanding Men. ladies. students. ut Skypark Blvd. lrvme or CAIEER ST ARTE•! s-tPM. Mon· Fri or SAM· u ...... •. S 1 to train1ng program & xlnt tall 540-7013 IAl MAID Fee Paid! Company spot 5PM Sat/Sun 875-7196 or responsibilities for ok secy "'m<Jre a benefits $7200-$9000 Eves t Sat. 554. 785 l 898·7855 ---ope.a in Irvine f<K" "Detail !llM).5322 Also Fee Jobe;. CaU Con· mo. 64(H)700 Janle W~ber 54<).5001 8J9..7896. AS SEMBLY electric P/t.une days, attractive Minded" person Lite ltOI Career Employment LOAN SHVICE Snelling&Snelllngof partll, p/Ume No exp. The Log Inn. 17925 ~yptng. Flg11re aptltude DENTAL CHAIRSIDE Agency,556-850S. For mortgage loan NewportBeachAgen<'Y RECEPTIONIST oec (714)646-9676 MacA rthur 81. Ir\'. Call Xlnt "entry level job!·· ASSISTANT ,,.,.C D-' rtifllOln~ ~EAL ESTA~ 549-94445 n.. .... umc, 4 moms wk. Genera I ofc person broker firm near Fash 4....., ampus 11vc Automoove ' Also Fee Jobs. Call Con nu• d d b fa · a Ion lsl. Some exper re-New Detail Shop netds BARMAIDS· Day, Night ltOICareer Employment 548-5504 nee el YM rmh1n., q'd. Call for appt. Mgmt Tme, perm. Earn Attractwe, over 18. for HEALTH SPA. We will help & Relief Sll1fts. Call for Agency.556-8505. operat on. uat ave 644-41824 $175·$200 wk. Fuller . D9fttal lnsw Clk previous ore: exp In typ-· Brush Sales. 554·7851. train right person ro We're hen to......_, easy run job. Mr Gee. ._,.. TopwagC11pa1d. En&ne appointment. 548·7781.cashier . rounta1n , P/tlme. Some clencal ang. bookkeeping & LUNCHCOUMTU Steameni. eng pain rs. ask for James Harper busboys. No mmors need duties. Hrs nexible. Sal payroll. 496-6200 MOTEL MAIDS <Wlrs>752·9581· ILE. SALES •--------•I We have two openings tn bufholrsentery& 1i>dha1Smheprs0·1 ... urps· BEAUTICIAN needed ror applyd. Dsays & .Eve1s . open. Hunt Sch. Exper·d FoodP,..,..atton Expernec. F tlime. "'"' • ... _ Cost u h wken s ..-ensen s ce only need apply. Refs re· GLOOAOFSWEOEN Exper'd person wanted CaJl642·82S2. check out. pick up & de· .,..,.y a ... esa s op. ere m 494.9344 q'd. 842.6631 <Natural Cosmetics> to work al lunch counter ---------RECEPTIONIST I our Fashion Island offlce for licensees Interested In Investment Retl Dilate. Pleasant coodl· Uons, solid trainlnii. xl.ot comm. Contact BUI Oer rie. THE GERRIE CO. ~ livery. Apply at 646-2816 8 has openlnas ror di&· preparing sandwiches & MOTEL/NlGHTCLERK Z059Harbor Bl.iCM Beauty operator Hair CHIFS Dental Assis&.. p1tlme; lributors In tbi~ area. salads. Some grill work F/Ume. No exp nee. TYPIST ____ ~_1_000 dre!Shcr w/foltowlng for New restaurant needs chalrsidc. Eves, some Excl usive American lnclud 'd . Unlform , Willlraln.642-8252 ex<'1t ing new NpBch Qias. MWltbeexper'd& Sata H.B 846-3540. rights. Used in Europe's fun\lshed. Med & hosp. Sharp penon needed to work in leading Irvine co. Receptionist. Typist. Salon. 642·6164 u b / t bl Job hi finest salons. Complete benefit.a. Apply Lindberg MOTOR ROUTE -------1 r!,.~ ·11~ ~ 4:.19100 ~~ Dent.al Receptlorust. Ex· training seminar. Feb 8 Nu l r l ti 0 n . bet w n Dally Pilot route In BEAUTY OPR Asals· siuoo o .O.E. TopCbef perd only s Days wk. &9. Cato1.t.1ellcBullock11.So. Newport Beach. after· IET•ILS•LIS tants. fuJI lime. R1chard SlS 600 N.B. Ortho. Sal. open. call for appointment Cout Plaza Shopping noons. Monday through "" "" WW A...... Ouellette Salon, 200 JAJde Weber 540.5001 Benefita. 642-2626. Ctr. Coat.a Mesa. Ask fo Friday plus Saturday ~'~~~ Full & PO'lrt Ume. Apply WitfMMlt (ffyllMJ Newport Center Dr. N.B Snelling &Snelling ol Dental Alsl.stant 548-~ 548.5253 Dave. = ~n~~th ~=~Iii ~.rtfsoT'JiJACCON IST Up y.... IHUHEFASHIOMS Newport Beach A1enc:y EnthWJlaatlc dental as· H.AJISTYLIST LYM ).If c.sb deposit reqwred. INC ............ , Ocrers oppor. t o turn '340CampusDrive sistneededforverybusy Needed. Only the best Full & P /Ume. Team Call 642·4321 , oak for ~Y~TROMA"i"0C IAll ~ HunUngtonClr.H.8 . Let AVO~ •hf# you how sparr lime Into profha· CHILO CARI! grp specialty practice. need apply w/followlna Leader. Mesa Verd~ clrculaUon Pena••IA-v to b1ulld A Cru•tyou1r own ble p/time business. Ex· Utebakpng. Boys, glrl3. ~C:~P<>';.f~~batpgplfy1: prefd. Xlnt oppor. H B. Conv. Hotpllal, H l --... -.. -.515--... -.0-0-1-3723Bl.rc:hSt.~:B~ Retired man Ptr gardltfl· bus neu. '*' ro your citing sample l)rogram. Most aftns at eome evea. Non""IA.7•m er. aAA-059S i 983-. 3433. Center St, CM. IM8-558S ""!..-.~ .. 5 157·0045 Ina at weed Ina.· Trans. own hours, Qlvn incom!J. Phone for appt. 963·7470 AnyU 645-9979 ..._ ----..s 100% Employer provided. S48-8119eves To find out about thJS or530-5663. me, · DEMTALASSIST Hairst)'liat·Earn more MAID. rull or P•rt tlme, Day Shilt. Exper'd . Retained ROBBtE'S RAOn·MOP cballeqlng eamin& op-Cf¥'chC...todl• · SSS. Be lndependen&.· Colt.Meaaarea. &ayviewConY. Hoepltal, --------Mature women 0~ portunityCall540.7041or Bicycle repair & counter 20+ bn wk. Hunt Deb. CHAIRSIDE·N.8 . ex-lease spacebusyealonln 645-9137 2055 Tbw'in Av•. c.M. ---------for houiecleanlnl( 1.enlth 7-1359. sales. 2 )'nl expcr Quall· .. 10 hr. Pttfer reUree pn-'d S Day week, 8:30 ~b are.. Many bene. 842 3505 llCEPT/ASSIST ------•-•I ty workman. Ace 20 or ea-11..__ ~pm,""" .... -. 5:~. Pd vac 4 med in· BlllorCarol962·4747. MaJd part time to work --·--·------• Mr'Vtct. over.11D-!31fS11-4 ....... ~ ---· surance.5'8-Se02. morn'1• loci wknds. NW'WAldes-Conv. Hosp, Attractive. lnt.elll1ent1 ____ 54841 __ 57 ___ _ BOAT COMPANY heeds CC2.~TICOIAL DENTAL A11i1t HOTEL ~an~=~otel. Call ~~.r~~': work =~:= ;'=~: --------~ GltL·COAT Touch Up -HS Cbalrslde /Expr'd COOIC deslJn needed ror tbla SAILCUTTBS Penlon. Must have ex· ~. ln collec:tlon pre-Newport Bch Send rt· PAMftYWC>a•lll MAJDSWANT£D NtJRSESAIDE ~Job In Newport t'tr., HAMDWOIKRS ptt. AppJJ lo peraon. dat· I'd. Muat be bondabt.. 2 sume to Ad 11186, Dally LAUHOIY ... TTa.D. Top•••• pe.ldt Tbe l~n 7am-lpm Exper. pref'd . -~ manOC.ct\lJ'M' ol tll~ l)' 1-1. Sklpjack Boat.a, Wka ltalnlnl lncentlve PUot. Bo• l580, Cotta ~ at t.aiuna. 211 N. Coui ., .. Verde Conv. HOlp., Jame Weber M0-5001 beautiful WntSill c:nm· 1783PlattoilaAve C.M. e.l'Ofl'am In ofc: work u eea.CA92a8 Excellont opportun.IUet Bwy .. lAJ. 8th. etiCenterst.C.M. Sndlln14'Snelllngof Ins ul1boata baa Im MOW IS THI nul Top notch ro. w 1au bene. .... for consc:lendous In· Newport Beach Aaenc:y med.late opentnia fOI' .. 11 "' Startt.oMOO. dlvlduals. Oulatandlna OP'C. MOR/RECPT. 2 4MOCampus Drive c:uuer,/band worktf'I rw job Mtkcn to cb9clr Clocl1«ram_, 5'0-5001 company bonellta. Ap· Ptw open w1m1mt. co. wttb at least 111'1 txp9f the Dally Pilot Help Sneflloa'5Snelllnaof ForClualftedAd ply, Toplace~aU!llHll• OP'C.MORw/Ua.tyPlna ~µHMOFC In utlmaktn1• 1111.111 Wanted dauUlcallon. U ~Beach A1tnc:1 ACTION IAM·Noon Moo·PN befor9 the I. bMvy ,_,,ton • gen. Several to 1750 bave own hand t.oola. UM Job )'Ou want la no& 43t0Campus Drive C.ll• PenoniMI l't!11d1Qpu~U~. ledaer up .. S150 roo. ~eoAccuratell ply to John VJft, 1 thtteyoumlabtcoo.lder Da111PUot Umtlwtt...... phone W/beftelHa. RECPT. yersPayAlU ~t.la,C.M.,oJ'I offerlot your atrvlcu Dcn't fl~ up tho ship! AO.VISOR toON~Ctr Dr Oall.t Ptklt peraoo•bl•. to baodl• Reindet9A1ency 1ppfjcat.loo wltb NC wtlh an ad In I.be Job "Llilt' tt Jn elusllled. 142-'4C78 Ntw1JOrt Dtach Qaadfled, MZ-5ltl hrayy tn>(na. pboftee • Blrch St. Ste UM l\l*l'd t 275 N car WIUDtfd c:•tqcry Phou Sblp to •bore raulta I \ !qui B~r tn/f f t I l o C • • 5 O O m o NfW'pQit ••ch ISMllO Ave, O:.ta Mes!. m IC24'1I • eoa?I. w/beWU.e MS-44U ' Otll far tPP' II.Stab 'G AVON General Office Dullea, --------- Xlnt benefits. r Wwt1119d1ij.F!IWullyl.1m Mii II 1 t 0.,. IMO t•11' •• IOIO •. ,. • .-.....::ii;;;;::.:.;;..;.;;..:o.;. _______ ,,;.;;;; ____ ....., __ ..................... ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -·······-··· .. •••••• .... W-...ct 1t00 ..... I ·-~IOX~Rl*PDils,5wb, we•A .. TA•S ... ~ IMh.W to60 ........... ••••••••••••·--••"• ...................... &.&II C1&; -AWab ... ao klh s• 1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• •••••••••••••• SALIS t----------t W ......_.---,. ea. 919-iat .._ J'GUl'. .._l*a ~. ...................... PRfNDL.p; \8, f1rtoty de'IAl .... llit•j SICIDAIY TWIS Of"IUln 1m111111 Sed ooe card for 11th Yamaha Flute, IH!T'fe mo w/trai&.r All nef tUO t ....... D .... e--&.. C:....Dlncter Of ~l Adorable Au•traUu t.q Ph•. one ·~nt. Wt cood. I yr new. Paid 1eu Pattleon 8 all.1 ...... • ..,.._.d cocrunilaaon .. 1 _ wt&ll ......,ement poun \ta l. Cllarhtnatl ~ty. Able to -.... wWa fut irowt ... PIA~. Appl)' l ••raoa. TANN ER -_. .. ••IKJll ll.lllt ~ willln& to worll S..pberd Pupt. a..u.. return _per1naaeatly azs· lell 1115 ..... mt 14Ut'15 •Pull-ntne wknda. Only eaper'd, RUG r; * • r bouae P5.-..nt ...i.ct 1Urac:tlve tac 6 tftsPlll -:..;;;;..;...;;_:_ ____ _ !~~ m1ture need appl1. crammed wtlb ovw .,_toY.. 1041 1tr1p. rn liftl elrllne NAPLES SabOl. br1nd dr. • •'"--........ pm"d 1Jndhorl Ra~uet Club. m~ boisn. olclltlo ....................... LO NqulreD)mll. Pre· ~~wlt•elr ~·~· mU1t aell ad...,.il1"ia A~ ..... in wkdYt ue 1m. wknd1 deoo pbnot. c:ittua or· vent Ima • t.beft I For • llpill--.. -IOIS ~-.....;...-· --------... P om..... au.nn. aaH, wall cloclu . A~~/La~~:twp ~&mo penonalized taa. tlldolt •••••• r.':9!: ........... ......_cu .... / ...;.;.;;.;..;;...i.;,.;.;....:...:..~==-.. ~ 1randf1ther clocks. •• · ...... v.. wallpaper. fabric or • ,,.__::-r ,. WSST. South Coaa • P\alu, 59-DUSeott GO&.DIMST A Tl 1--------•I fud.naU .,_ t(l 1wtm. 10meone ••n..u G\o" • we UXE NEW . 4 uaed 8 of. _.. IAMI THlllST 0ver11~G~~ w/nke ya.rd • • lot ot .1ii'1>ac1r ,."~~ yow nee desu w/wooctrraln ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .... lODOS.PanmounlBl PHOMIJOIS Amerlc1n lotcmat.ional lo~ITWlM tap, Or try two cards • • matchln1 1wivel ~dockforpo rboatto ( ~y.CatOIU IMCAUP. OallerM!s; ll02·T Ketter· run crown Golden Leb blcttoblck. cbn, lllotbuy. Mea. for 41 . a .is per ft. l1'MD8 ~;...;.:..~;..__..;;...;;,,;,;,....;;...;._ TO Nil, detlp Ir COf\ lltnlct decontlve win dow 1badet. Some MW i•I ability aeeded C 1utom S h1 de DnJ!9r1 SIW>p, ms E. Qrt ~. CdM 173-7833. (2lll t23-1Mtl WeHaveAJJTbese: int St., Irvine. Tel. 'btfl. alnt w/chJdm. iood PRICES: ~ l20 ea. for chrs. ~or~SC,.~9888~:._----l-.i~~.-11 EQuel()ppEmplyrm/f LoaaDistanceLlnes m-1m. Opeo Wed lhru w1tcb doc pleyful Geaor1/15 l40-atOO MotororSaU.upto tsao lndMdualDealtl Sat.tAMto4 PM.ViJlt! Medam~room ....... •15tapl1.llOea. IBM Exec. Typewriter 45'.NewportBay. SICllTAltY HourtyWagff ltllTWSANT19UIS totoodbom.e-.1820 8/ttaplUo... lS" Md1C gdcond sm Call6'S.83116. (1) Girl ore. Need Cood r.:i'~:~alona Annual Feb ClearancUe Adorable Scboaunr/Poo-too;..u:;:·~~~ded ~,'eoes bOme, m·5'40 Private dock for rent, ~ ~ ah as &ypJ.a1. Gen'l ofc F\illyp•!dlralnina Sale.10lo20%olfona dle.Fem,9mot.81k. NOCARD! DoverShores.NB.Upto book"'• duties for a mall elec· P/Umeeves S:30-9:30pm mettbandlse. 5041,A, So. S44-885l Draw your own or tend ore desk &chair, cd cond. 55', m ax h gt , U'. mon John, eaa1 --------.. troftlc mtc. Top pay for HOU5 1 Ir Bayfroot. Balboa llland name, address. phone & 10\4 E . Balbo• Bl. Prevalllnic rate. 8U.oz30 Wl .Ml.-. SM.ES rl&ht Clrl. 545--7108. ~oonllude~ntab.ters f;: v1f an <Next to the Ferry) Ol>en Free. Fem Great Dane. 10 we'll make one card per <Penn 1. 873-S292. <7141 . <213 > 924-4491 9110 ' Ladl• make a100·1 o Wed Tbrouab Sunday mo. Shy. need1 good w,. Add 25t each. . 4 .._ doUan per wk fn you SICllTARY ~~~~~wlllyou. 12.$.Pb875-0'33 mellowownr.980-2289 Sendcbec:lrormooey or· EJCECDESK&CHAIR loalt,Storop 9090 ...... !(•••••••••••••• 1P8NUme. Leadln1 mr Weal Coast regional ~or83J.I098 derto: Wood,gdcond.$185 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 In erlaallonal. bid srot line Jewelry ha1 de 1alea ofc. for this world Contact Jennifer AMTl9\IE KITTY Needs home, PILOT 'lllMTIM(i 6'2·5299 BOAT STORAGE S30 mo. wine , ma11. camper ff)oped an eacltina ne wide mfar. has an open· TIM ELI FE 5 • 5 .u a Blk/Org, rt'ortoise shell> P.O. Boa "60 Cree launch. Sall/hr shell. rebll ena. Supe_r i--1-__.uct. This . t n I f or a a a I es LIBRARIES, INC. HOW. Aa.15 8toes.rmtpaws.spayed. ,..__._ ........ ea.-......... 1087 NewportDun~.644-0510 clu ! Sac. •s1u. ,.. ........ 1 .,..... Equal Opp Emplyr m/f Aoabelm Convention M&-2974/2407 vu......... ·-rwn • u.. hottest product iinc secretary /coordinator. Cent.er ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'l'Uppenrare. Can be so Pcsttioo req's accurate 800WEST KATELLA Female Slameae/M1ox Beer drafter, holds"' Keg T1...,....taffoe al jewe1J'y home partl typln& & gd telephon TRAINEE Acrou rrom Disneyland eat. shots, box lmd. will ol beer. new cood. S200. PET FAIRE ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 F • to friends or anywhere communication skills. Top nat'l co orrertna FEB. J.4.M 1pa,y&44..0l31.546-7308 m.s2'78. Call al\ llAM ORANGE COUNTY Motilfbed '°'" 9140 clean No lnitl•I Investment Exper. pref'd, but w training pro1ram for Thurs/Fri/Sal 1 lo LOPM • • FAJRGROUNDS ••••••••••••••••••••••••---+-----4M-·_m2_ C.U Mr. Novak or Mr wlll train lhe rlgh goal oriented indiv seek· SUNDAY l.2toSPM Collie Shep mix, fem. all ' CUSTOM FEBU, FrU,Sat lOAM· Moped. Batavus Deluae '74 K-s Blanr Cheyenne. Stewart any arternoo ~·1n<t:..!~& p1{:ne. ing a good solid future. CA.LI. <Z13)4.27-4MB ~xllln~~~lUon WOVEM WOODS lOPM : Sun 10AM-6P M. 347 ma. Directional llabta 32,000 t. mi, Sf,:500 Call ~~~~~·~~~~~~apply at: AMF, Inc. Pot Colle&epref'd. ToSl0,800 SEKUUCH SO%T0904K,OFF Forlnfo.CallM2·5SSl. & battery pack. $37S. SOl t er & Brum r i e Id +bonus. PRODUCTIONS Fwwitwe 8050 Ovu40in·atock &!ttems DBL. Yell. Head Parrot. 546-lOlSaft 5pm •·'75---------J>i '·lo ...,181 A 'd Carrell Halley 540-5001 ---------• ·•••••••••••••••••••••• .. 00 B da Saleal1dle:a, lfuU·Umelr v ... n, "° vem a Soelling&Snelllngor LOVESEAT Dbl. wing Alaom • • W/c111e & stand. SSSO. Mofwcydes/ mi, t6 p/tlme. Anliq le Glf Aeropuerto San Juan NewportBeachAgency tufted.61egs.Couch81.lr. **I BUY** ~ · 833-846--0870 Scoo .. n Shop, SA. 5.40·2705 o Caplatrano. 4.:WOCampusDrive hor1 ehair, waln u t Good used Furniture & •••••••••••••••••••••·:J---4------ S57.-S. F,quaJOppqrEmployer ~ Appliances-OR I will WIOBALL? 3rui~::n:.g:f:Cb. '71 BSA 650cc Thun SALESLADY SECY /LEGAL TYPISTS Rare eaec az gold leaf sell or SELL for You. We have a basketball 842-?UlO derbolt. Less than 10, ~or• ... nn•·shop. Ex-r'd Pbone493-5351. deak, matchng chair , MASTllSAUCTIOH onaf la,...,e enough for a orig. miles. Rebl.lilt froo r , ..... .. ,,_ UfE IS L,/jL •L•61r8•,.9625 -... d rtc.ol&O.-.,... 8090 suspension, racln in 1portawe1r. Mature. Service Station Atten· Lalin lnscrip. w/llon. --•-a.tadlum. woo &i ••••••••••••••••••••••• shocks, mechanical! Must be willing to work dant, uper'd. Day 556-0782 f1berglus, can be taken . . h f S 000 C 1 wlmds. Wkdys 536-8832, Eves. Full & p/tlme. Ap NEVER DULL SAVE! FEB. SALE. New apart In 2 pea, but you'll Wurlitzer piano, newia . per eel. •; . a '64 Cber1 'MOn kyl PU wltnds8'2·7747. ply, Shell Station. 17th With Office Overload & used furn, appl's, need a truck. $200 or Of· Upright, pecan finish. :.:.tl9:5 ·~er 6 0 W/Cl~per shell. sno. Irvine, NB. Enjoy . the variety of i'So.dleSewlnl4~Ji:16o ='. 2=~~=~~ fer. $M-7533eves/wknda. ~/.:i~saso. Pvt. en san me Cood Run• -V:rb 5d. Ne-t• .SALES .,--r-vl_c_e_S_l_a_. -A-l-te_n_d_a-nt-t c~doosingl slome o,r tour W. 19th, C.M. 6'2·7930 & Furn, hsehold items, Tb 0 n n arly 7$F~SuFs pl25,. pReM ~ H •a . !.!,~~'~ o 1 wor . """' wt e se ect ons o em-Q)untry Pine Draw Table, 541-3262 typewrtr. add mach, omas r11a , e m cs v•-+ exper'd. Full or p/time. porary office jobs to lasl $245. Four Rush seal fllecabnt refrig new, cost ~. sell 111115 w/atock partA. Make otr.•·R-EA-~-d+-V--5-xtr--tins--llutti-llillion SS Corp. is Apply Arco Station. 17 as long as you like. Top chairs, $100. English Sof1 8' & loveaeat to Call87S:7203. • or trade. 968-6905. S:S1·9892or496-4720 Roo I N:!s. IOme wk· starling new office In 6 Irvine, C.M · hrly wages. Walnul Hall tree Sl35 match. Gold, bllt nower Pi 'GS Hood 1SO sooo ori 540.4llS t S •Id Irvine. We need en· Typiats. Call us today & M-~any Wash 'stand: •velvet. New cood. Electric broom, electric Wanted: Used aoomre· a ' ~· P~ lhuaiastic, positive f'WIPPER starttomorrow. i._bl to S7S 0 t 540-Sllll8 lawnmower,foldiJlgbed. aaonable c:;ond. at re· mi. alnt cond ~·a $:500. • minded people to In· '11\ w mar e .P. · a • 788'"'484 4900ablepnce.548-3224 '74 Honda Trail 70. St • -• troduceanlnexpenslve For 83' triple sere ~Q~ ff · Gale leg dinlna &able, M" Non:llar Table. 4 --legal, 790 mi, llke iaew. 73.Dauun,-u. DIOO/olr. nationally known pro-diesel. yacht, for use . O lC e • Slll6. 640-81811 vinyl co. vrd aw l vet Crystal cbandller Import SewiMJMoch1111a 8091 m>. Ph548-3011 . • Shell, id, tires, xtraa. duct. Pleasant surround-San Francisco Bay area 0 overload CAT ADIMONTE CHINA cba1n. SUO. Pb ~1 ed, 10 candle. Xlnt cond. ••••••••••••••~···.~·~·· Xlntetnd.831·1831. ings in a relaxed al· Send salary req'mts. 3 Pc aet, hand painted iJl atl4. . ..... 4S2...19:Z2 133 Elplandade Dressmaker Deluxe Sew· KA~A Z~ 7Sk 6M :::.10 i •c.ourier. XlntcOnd. rno.phere Available hrs all details in lslletterto: 557..00&I Italy. As ... sed $300 by San Clem. 1ng Machin~ Po~able, rac • s oc s._ g ~·· $ll2S. 71z.o547 l :30-9:30PM. Xlnt ad· P.O. Box 3325, San Fran local gallery Sacrifice Hand carved. dll'kwood • runs good JU.t timed, 12.000 64C)..9393, 752· ·- van cement op . ciaco!Hlli 3723Bin:bSt,N.B. t88.M0-7730. · waterbed /with ead· EbliahBorel~~addlel7". camal50.898-1QZ9. • Beat all the MoPeds! '7 i2Dat.sunPU.alaat PorturuCA·uesLL. NOW• A....a 8010 boardtbi 'Dight.s~d· fver· ~n~t .. .!ond1t1on. auo. '-rffligGooda 8094 Su.sukt 380 xlnt coad. «>Dd.Sl900. ~or833-8098 v'' (.;j'' \\I '·v:.:-j I If" 'I •••••••eeeeeeeeeeee•e•• TI:IYoe:o. ....ull ........ _.;;;;-;;;,__ ______ -t---------@ ' 'PV91s•s "'Pt-men ~ ...... .!&,...!!~P·~-.. llncwit _._ . :?::"••••••••••••••••••• $700. firm ~lJ 54$.8llS&4 Ask For Jennifer ~ \:__..... Local firm offering to REFRIGERATORS sell. M2·7W • • ' · 23" ~TV, UH,f Play p AC I F I C G U L L • ·73· HON DA 500, mt ii '73 Piston En& Muda PU TlMELIFE pay fee for a mature stat WASHERS-DRYERS ~eel, Sl35. 20 Rotary orange I gol~I wa.t , oond, atra seat & helm w /Shel 1 le A II /P' 1111 LIBRARIES, INC. SMILE! SMILE! typist w/professlonal at· RecondiUons·Repros &i Black round wrought Iron Mower $35. 646·1~ bag/barneu/belmet, Sl,OOO. 9&3-512A cusette, xlnt cond. Equal Opp Emplyr m/f ss.50 Fee Nego. This N.B. titude & 1 yr CPA exper. Frgt Damage. Guar/Del. din. tbl & 4 cbn wtwht PO"PW'£BY ~.su.836Z Sl89S. &42.6919 eves or co. will train enthusiastic Good oppor. Lo work In 29 Yrs In Orange Co seat.a. New. $80. t t liiA ca--R-" __. 75 YAMAHA RD 350. xlr 8'1l..o228 wkdys • bea:lnner. Good typist for attractive ore w/xlnl DUNLAP'S · 6'2·5449,64.5-7972 Wholesalewa£ehouse. ~ riiWWWW,8095 clean, very low mileage · SALESMAN "Front Ofc Spot!" Also bene.&salary increases. Less tban swap meets. --A real bargam! 557·l9' '64 El Camino, 283 V8, Knowledge or plumbing Fee Jobs. Call Control Type SO wpm & dtc· 18UNewportBl,CM Be~uty Rest beds. $50. & Ceramic & Stoneware. ••••••••••••••••••••••• all5PM auto, R&ll, good cond. & supplies . F /lime. Career Employment tapbone. ToS700. CALL548-7780 ~n~3Maple chest !50' Pots. L523 E. First St. Piano _bar. $500. (seat• '850.6?3-4705 pro g res s 1 v e co . Agency, 556-8505. Non workJng appliances _,. Santa Ana. 12). Kimball piano, S3:1(). CHERRY 250C·Z M·X w/chance ror advance· STOCK CLERK for ore Lrg co. needs typist w 1'50 wanted Also REPAIRS Must sell redwood lawn Hos~ stand. $40. Dm $350. '7l Ranchero 500. PB/PS, ment. 642·1758. suppl,y store. Apply Mar· wpm & accuracy. $535 &SALEsfJ46.S848 rum. L-shape bar. Grand New Magnavox Odyssey rm tables & chi's. Meat 495-544% AM. new radials. $3100. mo. o ... _ma waterbed l yr 200TV Game, $30. deli case. ~ u~ _P_._7_68-4_1_14 ____ _ SALES·National firm now riner's, 225 Forest Ave, Ca II H ii 540 5001 K w b $85 ......... ' 642 5238eves THE QUARTERDECK _. ,,,_........, has '/lime openings. Hr· Laguna Beach. Snerrelli a •esy 11· . r enmore as er , old. All gd cond. See al • """" P ifl C H Sale/R...t 9'60 ta Ford Ptup; Classic ng"' ne ango Westlngbse Gas dryer 940 Congress CM HOUSES"'LE _, ac c st wy •• uo el, cost •1500 lo ly or comm. No exper Newport Beach Agency SllS. Kenmore gas dryer ' · "' 548-1177 •••••••••••••••• ••••• .. ~ • nee. Will train. Call Cor SuPft' Opportunity 4340Campus Dnve 165. Guar'/del. 546-8672 646-2209 t 7 4 5 Grand f 8 lb er TV Rocio 25' OPEN ROAD res re, sell fo r $975 intervw 963·5919. Set your own hrs to dis· Also Fee Jobs 5 .. "'CK CH "'IRS Clock <Ens>. Antq Jade t1' R S.:..__ Fully self-cont. cas 646-8395; 642'8327 ---------1 play the lastest Beeline ---------1GaHers & Sattler gas ''"' "' (lavender & apple>. 6 Pc , ......--8098 Winter rates 644--8385 S ALES PERS 0 N r or Fashions. No ex per. No UNEMPLOYED? stove, Hood & fan lncl. Approx 30 chi's. bedrm set, 2 sofas, con· ••••••••••••••••••••••• y--11-T-.a 9170 v-9570 greeting card st.ore. Ex· dellv. No investment. ....EED MO..,EY7 Good shape reasonable Bertolini. b.ikenew, naug ..... ~ tb Id rtabl ..---. .... d b ardro & li · "" "" • · seat & backs.Super ror sole stereo, dining tbl (4 uu..,., mon .o po e ••••••• •••••••••• ••• ••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••• per' in uying greeting New w be un mil· We need 8 men 9r women 963-<1108 cl b r Chnl, paintings, antique Sony TV. 12i.n. Make of· 11 1971 pnn..top C1mper cards. Marraner's, 225 ed earnings opportunity. M be Ill' t u. , etc. SlO ea or o r. prints. clothes, much rer. 842~. 847-4962 '73 Nimrod tent tra er, 1 v"· h rf · Forest Ave. Laguna Funmrashionfield.Call now. ust 'I'. mg ° Kenmore Washer & See to appreciate. 8421 misc. CaU8'13-2Sll bef& s1ps6.S750orbestoffer. ~m .trmeciu .. ~ectr Beach rorappt 963'-7470. work. XJnl eamangs. We dryer. Gd working cond, Bridgeport Dr <o ff PM Repo. Commett. record'g ~ many as . .._......_,• l ES r r "'· I . ea:.lf.reloayner.eqlrualnlteoresppledor SlSO both. 968·7028 aft New,land>HtgBeach. . studio equip. Ideal for ., ___ 1..m... 9180 _1_0AM __ ·"------SAL PERSON or o c .... pp ement your mcome. Spm IARTHWORM SALE h b t b n--. ...... ,, supply store. Exper'd an Exec nds part tame As-c 7Sl-91409am·l2. · COUCH. chair & end m: ~set l p 11 e ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Fo ore procedures. Mar· so Sal.open645"1182 GASDRYER$4.5. tables.SlOO FOR GARDENS. Let the sop as aca e · · 7, lO" wid 20' I 4, roof, rmer's 225 Forest Ave. 2528 Newport Blvd. Call 848 1.241 worm help you cultivate. 673-l417. . e, . ong, good. TECHNICIAN UMCI Car Mechanic' · 1000 ror $4. JOOO.SlO Also stake, electnc brb, ~gle -=--~_...;,. ___ _ Lag.Brh Lr ·1 h l •GOODHRS Chrome & Tinted glass worm castings B'S loah&MariM ax.leS400.842·2491 '72 Che Sports Vaa. SALES,ERSOH gnat co asxntop-•EXCELLENTkenmore elect. range, Cdfeetblwtmatchend Worm Farm. 17362 eq.a,....t AutoSenlce,Parh P/S.P/,air,new W.. FuU Ume or p /llme ror =-s:~g~~:l~~:'1':1!~~ WORKING Upper & lower ovens. tbls. SlOOlbst. 646-0785 Gothard, HB. 847 ·5l41 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & Accessorin 9400 S2550. -0259 days, or Jewelry store Refs re· tronacs background & CONDITIONS Avocado. Xlnt cond. Bdrm Se R Sect'I M h I • h I k. ~Mal.I fet1mtee/020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5411-9882 es. h'I 1 d s •FRINGES $275 496-3204 ts, ugs, ec an cs c est oc mg ~ ce fC , t q'd 548-3270or64~59l l mec apl tu e. tart l ~ Divan, Lamps, 3 Tbls, 6·drawer Waterloo in· ....................... 67 Camaro 327 auto, body '72 Fo Van. eek wort. M72 wtrapid advance· Mustba~::fu'::too 5 licydn 8020 Chn . Cheap. 642·4262, eluding 4'' roller plat· AMERICAN SOURCE parts, bucket seats, am SSOO. •nytjme. SA.LISIEP g:;:,~IJHalley 540-5001 TerryEdw,arda ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2!5Broadway,C.M. form, Va" ratc het. Marine Equipment at blJthdrs.548-8779. N-9172 Exper'd an neet leusang. Soelllng & Snelling or t;:r :~ftio~~~.bb~TI Ciarop Sale 8055 !:t~e!~~. rf:'J~~~ Sl~S~ Discowtt! 645·7280 _ Nat'l co. has openl.n& In Newport Beach Agency 548·5739 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call after 2 p. m. 631·2067 loah, M«iH Orange Co. Out111de 4340Campus Drive Moving, Garage Sale, Equl,...ent _, hies Contact all multi TeJenhnne Ans Serv ex· Paramount tandem, bike, Farberware rotisserie, Sears airless spraygun ••••••••••••••••••••••• pie users or autos & perrdor will tram. FUii & good cond. -elec skillet, blankets. used once. Originally 318Chrysler marine lrurks. Great future. p/time all shifts. 558-3'1ll SJ6-6071. books, & m6re than 100 $320, now Sl75. Call eves. engine. Make offer. Start Sl2,000 + car or54fr.333l 9ulH'=" u....1.......1a1 8025 items. Starts Thur. 600 ~3094 Call53H643 +comm -------------------•-""""' l"l'IVRTI 1 Oak St. Laguna Bch. C\ndy Kramer 540-5001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Two APS1216 speakers. New Brig s Straton water SneWnalcSneWn.ior TELEPHONE RET~~RKS Screens &Doors.Glasslne Two matching oak china S25each. More Info: Call pump,3ifp $150.6000ak Newport Beach A&ency W ted 0 t ti 5 new & rescreened all cabinets rowtded glas1 833-5244M·F10-5 St. Lag. Och. •IM-6621. 4340CampusDrive an · ppor una e wlndows&doors. Mirror $750 pr. Will sel l Woll for a;dvancement avail. wardrobes. shower door separately (cash>. 206 S. Uaed cpl. Gold 47 yds. loatt. Power 9040 Sale1wom an. ex per, ~p ln Coela Mesa, & l u b enc 1 os u res. Wil.lonSt, C.M. Shag 34 yda, wool ptle 12. ••••••••••••••••••••••• P itlme, tor beller Anahe•m: Garden Grove MS-UIM peryd.830-5092eves 2'7'Tro E pCrui.ter w o m e n s c l o t b e 1 , •lmmed Openings & Weatmanater · Moving sale Some furn & Twin Ja!'. x d sound Newport Brh area C1ll •Work At Home 642-7702 Cat•nn & odds & ends. 901 B. E. Plttney Bowes ~o. 4150 V-8 s, ra · er 10 30-4PM 548 1007 •Part· Time ~ptMftf 8010 Balboa. NpBch. Postage Mach. First S ~ AV 646-llOOO ---------1 -Guaranteed Wage Yes-table P•cklng home ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8060 t.aJi:es. 642·7344 21' EldO'rado day crwaer. SmdwkltDel .. ry •llUlourWeett eeeda sorters & packers. N I t b & Hones 1 full Olds 455 Jet. wttrailer Y_.m 1tudent. morns •No Ex~r Necess Noexper nee 496-8200 .. t!~ . .Y neDow .• ro e · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 way m nor. saa.e. cust. paint Best otter T _____ . ___ ._, ~ ... 6er. n t pass up ....._Sal Re 2 ar old Idea l for men 's or t:»DOOG Xlnt p/Um.. UN1 DCEREBRAL Waitress Food /Cocktails. this bargain at S25. ",.\;..b :ua g.lt ~ C 11 women'utore. 70ydsdht Watersltisalso.645-4251 lalott.s-014510-5 88MB~:oi;;~-4001 Apply aft 4pm, Sid's Blue ~2279 alter Spm -~ co ~I a cpt'g, must sell. &42·7288 16' aarson Crall 0 B. 125 SICllTAIY ~~~~~~~~~,:~Beet=·=l07=2::1s~t~P~l.~N'..:.:.B~:-1Cah 1035 . " .. CARPET NEW HP Mere. w/custom trlr. Lie Newport Ctr rlrml· WAITRESS&otherduUe1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8Yt~Mare.Oentle&xlnt urr Yds Hvy Rust Nylon f.Jke nu, $3,000. t714l ....-you lf you've had 2 TelepboneSoUcltora for Ortginal Pizza. Nwpt Hlmalayan kittens, CFA, ~~ne554 w;:rn &i PI us b . l 0 6 Yd s 1183-1861 yn leaaJ Ir m1g c•rd 11 GOOD VOICE Deb. 12.so hr+ Upa. CaJI M&F, blue $300 up. .-. an. · Chocolate, Sac, Must 1ell 197 --1-20-. -Sk1-pj-a-ck-ln--good- eaper Must type 80 Ge•ralllec:trtc 873-JASt s.52·1511 Je••llr 8070 875-5906 cond .. $&,ooo. Call 'Wpltl.Topbeneflta.S750. MldenC...... ~ 1040••• .. •••••••••••••••••• 675·8359 aft 6PM or • Jani. W~ber 540-5001 AJR.CONDITlONING ..._,. ...... ~ • 5nellingl&Snelllnaot •TopHourtyW1ge RE.Sales ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED ~ -"'-"'-'"13_. _____ _ Newport Beach Agen(y *1'op Bonl15 L001(!1 Golden Retriever Pup· TOP CASH DOLLAR W..ttd 8011 loah. Sail 4340CampusDrive •Pleas:antConditions Opening for 2 llc'd real plea. Ma lt. Fem •• 8 PAID FOR YOUR••• .. ••••-••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SICllTAIY l•tl')W.,.w1U1 e$tate 1alespeople In an weeb.642-l<l85 I JEWELRY, WATCHES, SSSCASHFOI Hobiel8,trlr,newtranili G real oppor. for so· We"N TM hat office with 21 yrsexp and c h a m p t o o A K C ART OBJECTS.t GOLD. Good IJJed rurn/retrlp more. 11.425. 646-&2M or meoae who ta .alert, <n•>83S-3S23 ln the same location. Doberman PUpa. Great SFllLNVEE~USRENnyt cANE: rrm&atoveaS46-0'TS8 _56_1_·7_505_. -----c1lm, cool. (ollected, Many refenals & walk· tempermeot, 1how quail· " • ins. Your own desk & l". 711.1 . ...-or'" .... --'nQUES.6'5.2200 w.a.~TOIUY ERICSON 29'. Fu II h1rdwor~er. Type 60 # " ~ ..,......_, ,_.., I -1 000 f .,,._... ~ L~ JlllER phone. Broiler-pays all ----·LRU•S cne race, .,. . or. wpm. ~n to.....,.,. ree . advertising. Top comm. Rare all blk AKC German ~ Carat, xlnl quality _....,.,,,_ • 675-1830ev & wknds Pald. Call BILL LACHEN· Shepherd pupa Won. diamond weddiDg rlna NEED-USED Per1i1n Cindy Kramer 540-500l A ................ t part-time MYER. ror Interview derful family doaa. Mt. Whit. gold, oranse 4s Cb.tnestt Ru as & 18' SOL CAT. I yr old. all Snellln1A:SneWn1or ..-~-~ ..... , 1860 N ... 4!N-3ll?alU.. bloaom .Wnt. 1lie 7, Tape1trles from Pvt. extru. NewportBeacbAcency position ls currently a..,. .. me ewpo.. 050. Call alter 6, PartJesonly.M0-7014 s&lOCS OtOCampuDrive available In our ~una Blvd ,C.M. AKCSllkyTerrterP\lllpy, m.tm. E ..... -MloP'"8.Joba HlDa Office for a Te.t~r 6'6-3928 tves873--4577 lwkoldfem,cbampllDe, Wanted: Kenmore dryer, SanU Cl'lll 27, n.sen ... a wtlbpreviousretaUJalea cbam tlted6'S-CT34-LheltDck 1075 ps wuber Mult1 cycle, race winner, complete Stuulav to $100 111d/or f'lnanclal e.x · P _. .................... lat.e models. $150. Mu w/trlr. 1 uHs, racing t .. PaJd perience tovotvma COO· P\U'ebred qual German Bq. Morpo mare, brote .aMlp gear SlS.500. &44·5492 ro~:.r•:::1ro!c: :!,:e'd =ble.:~:~j~iu:;?n =======::;-~;s t~'o~ m: tEo rlde .. :,.~·~:icn~~ ..... I l Hobie \8. blue & wb:~ per'liODable lndlv. for key worttn1 hours are re· 91N051. na. w .. tern <7l4 > lutu .ta 01 w/trol er. lo<>'! .. ~~ .. .;· poa Alao Pee Jobi. Call qui.red. S.turday hours -----------• 1011 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Sl400 or ofr. ....., . .......,, Nan Beek, ... 1289. Den· will be mudatory. We r Lie to1 malea. a --------------Conn lllo-O·MaUc el4c. _KJ.rn ________ 1 rill• Denn.ta PenonJMI ofteupnicnqivutart· •moe.1yr.l'1Cboc ttc timr I071 oraan. trtttllent coodl· 28• SHOC.K Endeavor Se,.,tce or HuoUnstosi ln&NJ1ry and compuiy lyr.Mf.014'2 •t-• .. ••••••••••••••••• Uon,llQO,P.P 532·1259 S&oop fullY eqwp'd slpe Budl.llllaBtacbBlvd, bellentaproaram. ICISLSR aKW, 1pot ~au xlnt cond '·dbl Ufe Une, ent. 5 ~ w. Piute Call FOi' Appt. USI THI ~i ~ ~&.k co.t trench wtt•H. Mull Nill, llke n~w. b1vullp SECJ\£TARY PettY Boyd DAIL y PILOT _ii."_13"-,-"..._' ................ ~_e._ . ...;;ieU~--f>a--vt_d_4_ ... _L79_1 __ 1 =r-::. ~ ~~:; ~UM:i~~~c:n~~'~ (71417!M911 ~AST Mic•--.oto GlbloftEl25 1ultar, mint ....;;•--•:..;.._J:M_1 ____ .... dutiea. ilat IMI train•· ~•.a.y WISTllM lllULT" ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• !.!~··...!'~!. !!'1ho\lt 18' U,bt~nin• Cl.asa day ... C.11 Pre9atlf0 Hom• ~ w ~ -· -· --II c ' h II ~wn::-=IO •m .. ~:~~id D=-=y TOP C~~1~LA1t ' .. ~~: ~Mi~:l~R ~ct!~!o~~lc. u SICRBTARY·:clme .. 1 Lapnaltilla,CaUf. Oilfftllllo.., ..... ,...,.... Fot Result PAID POR YOUR ... ---...;.'~---.i Ila. ...... "-c,1ttt"'... ,___.. ... 111,._..,... ~-lee Call JEWILRY, WA'ICHES, 1»'1tlU Dlokltten No. 5, a~· ru ....... YO\ Eq11alOSlllOl'WAJ~ ~. ART OBllCl'I. GOLD. W/baod lrir. fbrcla• but kpia, accur typlo& '* atnniM.l~• rn 1 ...,._....,., 642·1611 SILVER 11!9'VICE, Ftftder f'r1tl u 8111, Ii mut Pm for rowm IOdllf ah ,_..d MIS bt. ecticlaempkl,.,.M/P' i@i@§i .. JU l"INS PURN. It AN .l luul flnl1h. Xia\ « a1lln,~ B "ofr\ialc• teo.IJLl. liiiiliiiilil.._.,·..,.. ___ , TIQUD.•.., fOl.t f'J.MTJI ~itr~ la:'I This Valentine's Day~ vour kwe a greeting all the wortd can share ~th a Daily Pilot Heart of~ove. It's. easy. comPOse your ~ized greeting & we'll set your riMtssage tn type to fit the border of ~r chotoe or your own handwntten thoughts may appear in the border select. Borders come 1n 3 sizes: s 16. $8. & a special child's size for S2 C'fou must be under 12 to qualify for this one). If you wish to create your own greeting. use a biack pen & write your message In the heart below or draw your own Valent\ne of this size. For help with your ad. just calf 642·5678 & a frlendt ad~v1ser wlll be hai>s)y And. 1f you like. yOU can Valentine ad or \JSe Charge or Benk Amari . • • t , I ~ • ..._ ' ' ... , • -: -~ A.wtot. l•potied Auto.. .. pottld .... •,.w Wedntsday. ,et>ruary :;;:2•:..;1...;;.9.;..;n;_._ ____ _..;D:..;A;;;..;IL;;_;Y...;Pt_L_o_r..._ ... • ....... • v... • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............... ,.t!?.~ ~.'!'!f.1:!~ ...... ~ ~°.~·!!~ ....... Matc .. 1 htn '140 T-n.te . '765 V•w.-9770 ~.:.~!~.......... ~-~~!'. ........... ~-~~~ ........... : lf11CHIVYY>.M ._. 9707 W-"t720 .............................................. : ...................... Cedlloc 9915 ca..,.. 9920 ,_... tt40 VI. automatic. ·P•r. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Leete '77 • VW Pa~l V n, new ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• .... • •teerin1, radlo • Ion Audi 'TS. tOOLS • driv•. Tot IUYEA Mew• Used ~oou. areal, $1900. '68 Chry Statlon W11uo. , wbffl bas•. E•C9U*" 4do0r, 10.000 mf. Im mac. 8" ~ fll'lt. le laat! Top OVH I 00 ® Xlot cond. $7~/bit ofr. Tl Gran Torino. 2 dr. c0Qd1tk>1s-rudy foe lm-su~ .... ._ dolla.rl>&idfor impo11.1. MHCIDEc TOYOTAS ,. vw Super Beetle. Low It CallMM299 rad.l&IJ • .i..ctrooJc ,,,.. m•dlate 4•11¥•,.>' COST ... u&.it.A ~ rnl. air, new tires. Uon, PS, PB, SHOO. tllll'IZ>. IMW '712 A--"' OH DISPU y l Clrytl« tt2S $.W-lSSl ONLY.•..a495 ••••••••••••••••••••••• o•y5u11r...1 ~-~·~· HERE NOW ~~::=.~btJ,t ...................... . ~ "' " ,........__ VT '75 Cbry1ter Cordoba 'TS LTD Broacbam, .. ,r, 2M5Harbor81vd AUTHORIZ D ... EWCO "Tl Super a. low miles. white w /bur.:undy Int'. PS/PB. AM/PM &leroo, lt74DODCHVAM eo.st.Mesa 5406410 MERCEDESDEALER *" LORS 11450 Hurry! Chuck be loadedwtallxtras,qulck tit whJ, xlnt. S231151ofr. Va, automatic, pwr. '75 Datsun 8210, iclnt 6862Manchester. •MEWMODELS 751-8050.afler675l.0118 N~I rs sale.~5172 788-4731 ____ _ ateertnar, radio " low Buena Park ---U - mllea1e. Ready for lm· ~1~2 ~ir~o~o-~'. 523·7250 ~~fn~~v~n~seo!~~~rt '68VW.Cleanrond. Cadi)lac '76Cordoba.8,000m1,lux 73 Ford CountJ'>'.. Wagou, mtd la le de II v • r y . On the Santa Ana Fwy Dtlmos Must bl!e. $1000 ury Int, loaded. S&GOO. A/C, P/B, PIS, clean, <57645X>. IUY OR L• •5• 9-5. -The Beller Bara11an Call 540-0320 830-9Ul $2300. Xlnt cond. 6'1$.$2lS AMLY $3795 ~ Ii "7• Datsun 610 'dr auto "7• • ~ SE. 17,800 mi, u.A•l!!I " Quality and Price '71 G l 1 500 0 id vn YOUR 1977 MOW 8 trk, alr. new 'tires'. allver, bllt lthr, cruise -,.UIS TOYOTA '70 vw Camper Van Guaranteed Co111liltalltd 9'30 au. . r 6 Sharp. Mwit sell 12495. cocitrol. sun roof, 5 new MISSION.VIEJO Westph111iu mdl. rebll ••••••••••••••••;•••••• OWl\I'. PS, PB. Racllats. Ml\RQUIS MOTORS S ... DDUl ... CK or bstofr 640.2497 MlcheUns. 114.750. PP. 831·2880495·Il1 O ena. new tares. xlnt cond. L~·r'\t'ilncgrr~~cRi~t1·'.:" 1975 LINCOLN tlnled gl ... , AC, lmma~. "' "' . . 548-3028 Sun 549·2042 $2350. 493-4803 ~u u , TOWH COUPE $11150/bstolr. 768-1131 .'·•'"'.' Mi\W' l•IWlft .-tit.W¥ \. l'· ''" ..... ' l\ .• ', t ... VAUIY IMPORTS .7 PU M wkdvi Toyota Corona '69. $800. L.irgeH ~clc:ttr•in ......__..__ n52 131·2040 49M949 3 • A /Fl\t 8 trk --'---900 Victona Costa Mel.a '66 VW. Grul cond. $fi75 llf N~w & U-.ed l<'ull power including ....a.-""S ---------• stereo, mags, cm pr, '75 ~SL. Lo mt. Maple 5'&8-4095 '61 VW. 1575. Pvt ply Cadillacs in vinyl top. lilt wheel. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $36.2926 or 968·2161 aft cir. $15,900 or tuke over mustaelJ 644·1059 crwse control AM/FM '66 Mustan1 Gd. cont! Mt",'oll•"9 'ilf H) 1 ii 11,.H ·IV\· IJIO CREVIER 5PM _ Is e wit b. n 0 m 1 n 8 I 1968Toyota 2·door OrJnge County tape, alt' co~d. Looks $900 140 Cabillo. Sp. :ZS, Aet 9725 char&es. Ciill 837·7660 CLEAN VolYo 9772 Open ~unuJ\ good! (087REC> Costa Mesa ____ _ 73 Ply. Cust. Wan. Clean 11900/offu or will trade for van or lilte vulul!. !162-U23 & I ST 6 UOADWAY SANTA AHA ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 28-0 SE 58.000 mi, $TOO 642·2895 •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• Cadillac $6386. Sale/trade '66 Cobra New '75 X19 i''aal. X lnl SbiOO Ph 496·5759 days, Trilllllflh 97 6 7 '77 VOLVO Master Dealer powered. llaAY extru . GUSTAFSON .!600 HJrbor Blvd $1400/bit olr 64s-&&3I ~~t:;;;~,::~·::: ·it~i;,~::~·~~: .... ~tlii .... 835·3171 fHI ULTIMAT[ OlllVlllG MACHlllE (.o)ta Mesa 540-9100 Otdsmob• 9955 LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Be ach Blvd Huntington Beach 761 ~ Dodge 15 pass Wind. B300. Hu everythng, $7200. Evs. ~-1523 FORD '74 Ecooo Van F-200. V8, auto. PS/PB, cstm windows. top vent, trlr hitch, new brakes. $37.50. Ph 847·1057 AutosW..t.d 9590 •USED IMW's * '75530tA tHKWf) '73 Bavana S!R 906LVY '7620024spdSIR 334PCW '691600>tspd ZXX866 '74 3.0CSAS/R 746LWB '76 20024spd 496PHJ '76 S30i 4spd S /R 602PHM Clo•ed On S•doys 499·3S2'7 dark bwn ant. 6 cyl ruel ·7s 131 4dr, 5spd. silver AM /FM, Low mt. inj., perf running order. •"4S0U'"' BllEA llOUlEVAAO. Bll(A 640-~ or 640-1893 11-2900 • 11:1.6~ M• HERE MOW Sacrirlce. Pvt. Ply. '67 250SL. New Mlchetins. Eves.642·3364. both lops. new paint. '76TR7 with AC. Loaded, •MEW COLORS Cassette. Luggage Rack. •MEW MODELS mags. Sensible pay. men ts !1372VC )Cap Huge savings on alJ re- '69 Fiat. good running S6lU.5o. CapRed S500 malnlng new 76s & clean. 673-3434 or 675·3302 cond, $650 or best oner. '70 280SL. spectacular Res s3122.26 36 mos Demos in stock. C>.SH FOR CARS! 645·143hfl6PM machine. fia~cu.co.nd. pymnt.sorooly $122.28 MARQUIS VOLVO T S Doll S "d f $10,900. 499·2109 MlsSlON VIEJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORAHGE COUNTY'S OLDEST Cloepan used c8arrs, tpr8u1t·ks0I &' FIAT • D f --1-'76 ·TR7• red, black int. 13 I ·2880 495· I 2 I 0 "' 11 300 ., sunroo · s.1 v~ AM/FM, air, 4.000 ml ·as· Corvettes. Ask for Paul Redvced for fast sale. metallic. Ju!ll arrived. sume lse s129.80 or O'Neill. • Fiat 128 SLC '73. New in· N 83 0725 ORANGE COUNTY ew. l · __ purch, $.5665. 833·2575 Nabers Cadillac, Cadillac, 1S Coupe de Ville. !<~ire Mist Cerise. w /while cab top & leather. All options. Minl. $7,000. 551·5316 art 5:30evs, all day wknds. Illness forces sale. '73 El Dorado w /Cabriolet top. All pwr. Make offer. 496·7635 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842-8844 i3 Omeiia. 19,000 mi, 1ur cond. all pwr. xlnt cond. 1975 MARK IV S2500 Aqua edition. Full power 554·7829 including vinyl top. 5 - leathe r interior . tilt l"Wo 99 7 wheel. cruise control, ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM /FM stereo. air cond. '71 Pinto. Low mileage, (S89RXH). perfect cond. $1000. $8386. Ph962·1616 GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-8844 One car too many. 1972 Pinto Runabout. In good condition, one owner, tow mUes. $1400 or best orfer Call 545"8157 or 826-6920 and ask for Dan. HOWARD CIMnolet Salcs·Service·Leasing ~rlor ~ ci;.rpet. A~i'FMd VOLVO Dove&Qualt-Sts. R C I errari ags. are MG t742 '69 TR. New clutch, rel>ll EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO ---·---------- NEWPORTBEACll oy ••er, nc. wb.ls. R.ear molded •••00••••••••• .. ••••••• trans, new tires, new Largest Volvo Dealer Rolls koyce BMW spoiler. vinyl to~. Spot ........... .J • brks, Xlnl run'g cond. C WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 1S40Jamboree I~! New paint! 645-7588 • 11400./bstofr. 536-7737 in~t~~~eL~,~~· FOR TOP USED CARS NewPort Beach 6-10·6444 Sat. & Sun • • DIRECT FOREIGN.DOMESTIC ---Volcswagew 9770 orCLASSICS '73 BMW 3.0C·S. Coupe '69850SPYDER •••••••••••••••••••••••~ r.1:..,r:i.~ll':',..,~.n{~:::r.:=·•fr::r.,~~ .. "9 • .,.I~,... If ·our car; .. e"'lra cle n lit.e blue, 4 spd., sunroor. Mag whls, AM /FM, ,..,sou•11 e~eovLt•Awo • oA<• __ > "' "' a air coruL. pwr steering, 644-2433 '""°'•111•'1:1.~•3"' see us rirat. • 7 1 M G B • s F' r .. e UR pwr windows. New . " '685""1 CK IA E IUICK M r ch e It n i. I m m a c . 1972 Fiat 124 Sport 'Cpe. 5yr /50,000 mi ext. warr ,. A 20.25 S. Manchester 2925 Harl>Or Blvd 497.1c.i1. 759.0571 good cond .• sunrQOr. 5 with 17 MGB purchisse New mags, Michelin Costa Mesu 979.2500 --spd. w radials. Call Choose one or our 27 radials. Gabriel shocks, Anaheim 750-2011 '75 BMW 3.0Si. Show room anytime. 494·3012. $1200 Buy /Purchase Plans Frendo racing brakes, WE BUY CLEAN CARS & TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 546·1200 classic, whl. loaded. firm. ALSO N E w M G Hurst shifter. Coco mats, leather & stereo. sunr·r. --M I D G E1' S ON L Y leather steering wheel. pvt ply. Must sell. Make '73 Fiat 850 Spyder Conv. S7"mo. SerNo80617. cap engme, 6mos. new. <Oil ofr.675 7554 xl!'l cond. AM /FM, lo $4318. red. $398, Res change & valve adj. nu, SJ.950. 644-4209 12352.4048 mos OEL every 1500 miles). Super '762002A1r,snrf.slrcass.. . clean. $1800 FIRM. SM. exl warr. 1mm11c. 75 X19 Fiat. lmmac Opel 9746 ~-5735. 646·8080 even- 540-8365 & 559 11944 Loaded. $4250 or bst ofr • •••• .. ••. •• ....... • •,. - ---833-8242 dys 836· 1160 ev 0 •74 BMW 2002 auto . . 72. pel 1900. super buy, AM FM tape a ~ Supe; Honda 9727 air, best offer. Aft 7PM .. •·l1e"n I \sk0trl" .S.5500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968·<&8 7 ~ vw .Bug, orange, ~ u / ,., • ---56 000 mt xlnt cond see 631 0095 1...-d Mew '77 Porsche 9750 to' apµr.ec. 673·4.319, I ·-------- Ho ..... DA Cars ···••••· ··· · · · · · · ··· · •· 645.8211 TOP DOLLArt l975 lntW 2002· whtlt:. "' PORSCHE '70 911 T ------ PAID w.bluc tnl., 30,000 mi. M_.."'"'Y MEW* USED IMMEDIATELY AC. AM/FM stereo, "'" Spor tamatic , PP . FOR ALL Call fi15 0396or675·5244 To ChooH Froml AM /FM, mugs. yellow, VW'S Ull...llVERSITY xlnt cond. 1 ownr . FOREIGN CARS '7·1 BMW 2002. 4spd. snr'f. " 646-5807 Stan. Mon·Sat. Ov•r 125 Vol 'iJ. 1800 es Orig 0"11r. Personal car . mint cond. days, 838-5155 Eves. 551·5051 '65 Pl800S Ai. is. make of fer Call 675 6588 Autos. Used Cad. '73 Eldo $4250 p,·t. party. orig. owner. While w Jgold lop. gold leather int. lmmac. Stcn'o tape. crwse cont . air-cone!., trunk lock. tilt wheel . full power. Showroom sharp! Mr. Taytor644-4910 Days 675·7957 Eve. &Sun. '74 CdV. Loaded, 1 ownr. $5700. Call 548·2554 before7pm. '76 Seville SI 0.000 each 'i6 F1eelwood Brougham Bcaul1Cul low mi cars. fully loaded. SV 113717. filwd 113-i73. Dir. 646·2963 or752 0687 Chorolet 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 MALIBU 74 MARK IV '72 Pinto Wagon, 4 spd. Full power including air, top shape. $1575. '7:l AM /FM s tereo. ltll Panto Squire Wagon. ·I "heel. cruise control, spd. top shape. $1975 J vinyl lop, leather in· owner.642-8327 terior. air cond. (Lie. 761N1X) $6486. GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. Huntrngton Beach '77 ST A TIOM WGN 4 Spd, air, P /S. steel belt ed radials. roor-rack, radio. Lie. 176RYQ WALKAWAY CLOSED ENDL~ASE $111.79 mo. + tax for 3(i mo's on approval of =__:;;.;..;..;c...:;.. ____ ....;;.1 credit. CAUFORNIA AUTO LEASIMG 1600 W. Lincoln. 842·8844 74 Lincoln Continental. lo mi. xlnt cond. $5,200 645 8961or548·3597 '76MARKIY Fully loaded including Anaheim 776-2860 tilt wheel. c rwscontrol. '72 Runabout. Lo mi . AM /FM stereo. air con· R&.H, Gd tires. 4spd ditioning. U>94N KW) $1300. 559-4433 or 838-l-i46 $9286. GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. Huntingto n Beach 842-8844 '71 Pinto 2 dr scd. Air. auto trans, r adio, Runs great. By owner. $995 548·6056 afl 6pm. Pinlo Wgn '72 w /rack CALL OR COME IN h · "'"' TO SEE us w l / bl u int. AM /FM Oldlmobll• 8-5. 16.500 , ... STOCK :. l l' r e o . M r M o r u __ _._ C G C " Gld, 4·spd, A/C. remott' Extra clean. Blue. blue ----1 mir. $1950. 552·9510. int. Air Cond. Stereo Sale or Trade '70 Con· --NEWPORT IMPORTS 9<.nOJ.u 673-7692. r-.-°" • M '68 912 T11r~a. body Hordtofind 3100 W. Cst Hwy, NB -----Trucks perfect. new paint. 2 ne" models Cassette optional. 96,000 tinental Cpe. Xlnt cond. Plymouth 9960 freeway miles. $1600. Days 546-8833. eves & 00••••••••••••••••••••• . 642·9405 1972 BMW 3 O CS, 4 si;><t. 2850Harbor Blvd. tops, new M1chelins. --------• new M rchel1ns. air. Costa Mesa 540·9640 2.000 mi on ovcrhld mlr. 551·3855 after 6 pm or wknds 646-2226 AMC 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ATLAS WE BUY •USED CARS& TRUCKS• Come ill or Call FREE Apprebol Grott. Chenolet 18211 Beach 81\d Hunt1nirton Beach 847·6087 • 549-lll I TOP DOLLAR PAID fORCLEAN IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS ~~] '"' r'> HE A( H lll VO t• 1•;. IN t,' <J N t!t A( tt iw : ""l!t "'' 014;> A¥fol.~4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'iS Audi 1-"oA. 4 dr, Jutn air cond. stereo. ~WI roor. hrwn. lo ma. 'lnl n111d $4,495 64b iHJH evestwknds '73 IOOLS. >t dt i.t•d.10 auto. AM i'"M stt•r(•O far air nl'W t1n•i. 1m· mac .• low mt. cir1i.: owner. Must soil 1h1 wk od. 646-2:1181 AM /FM. tape. sJl\•er --Mustsell,673·6510. metallic . 1mmac. Jaguar 9730 ---------494--0141aft6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '66 Porsche 912, 5 spd. ·i ·-.._..J ' AM /FM stereo. tape. ••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• • • . snow wht. xtra sbarp, ~~ 7800 WHtmlnater Blvd. Weatmlnater 193-7551 C.,t 9715 : •• tl'•tli~·~ Ta,rga rims. new radials, '74 Capri. V-6. low mi. 531-8796 t'ust int A:\t FM l>lereo '7~ Beetle. Xlnt cond. Nu arr.· xl~l 'cond. S3150 ....... ,-:-:'.;;,~:;.;.~~~~:,· 8"r• '74 914 2.0. Lo mileage. gd br~~-es838& ~ires6 • AM FM 551 0545 SAVE ON FINAL FEW cond. Must sell. make ra iv. • 44 NEW '76 JAGS · ORDER ofr. <71' l846·3775 1970 VW Fastback.Auto "7l C<111n 1600. 4 C}I. S1200. XJnt i.:a' mileage Call 644.2355 YOUR ·n, NOW! Low~r .58 Porsche 9115spd,° K~ trans. Call pmnls on 76 Jags. Buy 1t whls, new tires. f'M /AM 536·6071 a different way with stert:0 cuss Xlnt cond. • . . '71 C \l'HI, n c" en~. :.eru;1blc paymcnts Call S5500 /bsl ofr Ca1172Camper fullyeqwpd. dutch. dc Hun~ Xlnl. for details !!63·l6S8. new valves. Top cond SM95. ~u~l llell' 675·3622 Mazda 9738 --$2850873·0287. i.n 5 30 ••••••••••• ••• ••••••••• fra~~~s~~~ ~:~!s mt~c~ '71 Fastback, new trans, Datsun 9720 front crashed. SHOO. AM/FM 8-trk stereo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 541!·6902ttft5 new murrter. runs & DRIVE A LITTLE .•. miracle mazda looks xlnt. 492·3467 or ·70 Targa. blk w Ihle brn _842_-6963 ________ 1 '66VWIUS int. fur alloys. AMWM, 5 i.µd. $7500. 673·0816 SAVE A LOT 2150 Hsbor llYd. SHOP ··coo PARE Codo MeM 645-5700 H. Porschr 914 , l 11 . $800. Needs Body Work • ....... 645-1700 • "' AM /FM stereo. black 111· IARWICK DATSUM '74 Maida RX.a Coupe, 4 sade&out. $4400 830·1929 "68 Baja Bug, l>Un roof San Juan Capistrano spd. under wrnty. very 8 _._ ll-9756 AM I FM, CB. S 12 00 tl1·1375493·3l75 clean837·3202 -• oyc• relrigSS0.645-6557 ....................... --- ·74 Maida Wagon RX4. "1 DEALER IN U.S.A. '74 VW Super Beetle besloffer 1.;,000 mi. Showroom 67 Rambler Wa~on, auto. 6W-J754days. CCWY~ 9932 AIC. 1 ownr. 61.000 lie ----"------••••••••••••••••••••••• tual mi':; New tires •69 MOVA s1200 864 Sonora Rd $1 IOO 64().4971 75 Vette •. T-top. while tan CM 540-3071 evs. dys: · leather ant. loaded. $7900 Chrysler jPtymouth Open Daily & Sun. 'lit 10 PM 540-8814 '72 Malibu. Auto. air, New 714 -675-6778 art 6:30 2929 Harbor Blvd . .... k 9910 ltres & lop. bef JOam or '75 Corvette 15 000 m1 -c art 6·30pm 498·2727 • • ••••••••••• •••••••••••• Showroom cle<tn. ~1 11 ex Costa Mesa 546-1934 '72 Riviera Load •d Orin ·59 Nova xlnl cond. p /S tras. $7795 bst 1138 5071 · ~ ,.. p B T • '69 Plymouth 4 dr VS, full ownr. Perfect cond. Pvl ' ·Auto rans. Cougar 9933 pwr arr runs perf S675 Ply. $2650. 557 2819 or $1500 _ _ _~3·1055 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Phs45-s6t4 · 548-4258_ _ ·73 Monte Carlo Landau 1970 Cougar XR7. Xlnl -- '76 SKYLARK 32,000 mi. s2:300 Air cond. 36.000onj.! mi. A/C. 73 Ply. Cust. Wa~n. Clc:in. Cond. Call 495·6446 Eves. full pwr. tape deck. $1900/orfer. Call E' i. 4 Dr. automatic. air.---------$2300. 496-7635 _962_·1_523 ____ _ PIS. vinyl top. 16000 mi, '77 Ch•nll• Malibu lilt whl. cust. tnm, Lie. Classic c-846PKH. --r-WALK AWAY CLOS£0 3SOV-8. Hydra trans, air, ENDLl::ASE P /S, P /B. lilt whl. $87.56 mo. + tax (or :IE radials, Rally whls. Lie. mo's on approval ol 935RTP. credit WALK A WAY CLOSED C ... LIFOR END LEASE "' MIA $112.10 mo. + tax for 36 AUTO LEASING mo's on approval of 1600 W Lincoln credit. Anaheim CALI FOR MIA 776•2860 AUTO LEASING ·10 Bwck Wildcat. loaded runs j.!rcat. l>mt1shed re arpanel $'250646 2833 1600 W. Lincoln. Anaheim 776-2860 '72 Cougar. Shwrm cln. '69 Rood Runner new: pnt, auto trans, air, Please Call 963-5327. brk, s trtr. Jo mi. must P~i 9965 seetoappret'. 645·7191. """"ac -...................... . Ford . 9940 '75 Firebird Formula 400. •••••••••••• •••••• ••• •• Fully loaded. $4700 firm One car too many 1972 6454568 afl 6pm Pinto Runabout. In good. f-. condition. one owner. lo 69 Grand Prix SJ. Oni; miles $1400 or bei.l uffl'r ownr Loaded w /leather Call 545·8157 or 82t>-ti92li l'I<' Xlnl confl 833·21!211 and ask for Dan Sl500 '71 Ponuac Grand Villi! Loaded . very cln 10 Passenger. automatic. G Id h SJ oo 673 024 air. P1S, P/B. AM stereo 0 ~~~-·-.i '77 LTD WA.GOH NEWPORT DATSUN S,ECIALS 8210 4 Door 1 lllJCt•d. re1d10 1097 PK E I HOW $2895 HAA DOVESTREET Sjc.ir :\f dci\rthur &JJml>orec• Roads 133-1300 545.7211() JR ROY new. must sell. $2590. R CARVER 552-0247 '70 R1\'iera. super sharp 60 Corva1r. all ori~. xlnl Meru•s hM 97 40 0 S RO Cl Xlnt cond Fu II pwr cond. S800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• R ll · y 65 VW Bug, xlnt running loaded P\ t Ply 642 8884 495·5951 IMOJ.ombort~ -------S4:JI or lease "76 450 SL Newport k.0<11 cond · S750. '67 Buick Skylark Special '67 Chevy Mahbu 283 \Jercedes Bl'n7 Xlnt \'-----' ..._~ -__ 495~951 2·dr. auto. I' /S $750 Good cond. $800. cassette. tape. split rronl '74 RREllRD seal. crwse control. rool fullv loaded 645·715.'i rack Lie 677RTT WALKAWAYCLOSJW Veqa 9974 END LEAS!:: ••••••••••••••••••••••• rood (1) 528·2G34 ClOSEO SUNOAYS 70 vw Bus. xlnl l'ond 675·8338 aft 7 30pm 962.6359 Mil '74 450 SEL Toyota 9765 Manyxtras. ~oo Codlllac 991 Im mac cond. Slate gray. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 495-5!151 •••••••••••••••••••••• sunroof. 45.000 mi. '00 Toyot11 Corona. Nl'w '72 Van. No side window CAD •75 El Oorudo Cpe "64 lmpaJa convt. Rebll eng. gd tire/ball. P tS. radio. $300. 548·0727. l973 2407. Com PI s er v recs clutch & brakes. $700 panel. Runs great, cpl 'd beaut. brn w /bicge vlny Gdcond.Mui.ts $12.500. (714l 894·063 Dys 548-5783/548·6312 Interior. Call Van top many xtras $7990 55Chevy,runsgood, $3200 494-5272 days. (714 I 493·6773 eves. c_v5. __ 752-7355, niles 551-4076 Aft '6pm, 759 0163 $250. 548-8708 $140 12 mo + tax for 3f. ·75 \'ej.!a Statton Wagon mo'i; on approv:il ol S2JOOoroffer 499·263tor crcdrt 646 2!1:l!l CALIFORNIA AUTO LEASING 1600 W Lanrnln, Anaheim 776°2860 '71 Vci:u i\M/f'M. TUJW 4spd, clean, ~d radials . ~,ofr 497·3!151 Class1f1ed Ads 642·5678 Wot. M•w 9IOO 4-tos, Hew HOO A.8to1, H•w 9800 Autos, H•w -9100 Autos, Hew -9800 Wo1, Hew 9800 A..to1, Hew 9IOOIAuto1, He• 9800 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IAIGAIN SPECIALS on ALL USED CARS '66 CHIVY •74 YIGA .. ALA CPI. WA~ "... ...... ,.._ $ff99 2199 ................... ·~-._. ~ Ill,.. ... , .,, CHIYY '7 4 MAZDA IMPALA CPI. ...c.UP ,,.--...... s1099 ..... 1--s2300 ~-ti• .. ~ Plt1:1JI • 17 7 flRICES R·E·E·EALY GIVEN OVER THE PHONE -847-6087 e PHONE e 549·3331- lllW LUYI UlH DICIAL PllRUARY sioo::: 1977 Chemltt Vt Ton Pickup I ..,.\Vt .......... , t T•~••MI._., P0•40 ''":c)Hl.y•101•1 '8a MO. M f' ~ ,,., '",. (IO t••• \\,.,l:tl tn•llflltf·CW\ t1 "' • ~•I U.,ft Nf'ttf iJtt •t -"'' *""""'' • ' .. •· u."' c•((\.ur)t1t10~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DJ 0 DAILY PILOT Wednesday. February 2. HITT 4 • .. .1. :.o..''''"-•1111111u~ .... ATLAS CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH'S~ ENTIREi INVENTORY OF FINE NEW ~ AND USED CARS, PRICED FOR • IMMEDIATE ·DELIVERY! • OUTSTANDING VALUES • • • • • GIANT INVENTORY •••• GREAT II . ... OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE! SEE • PLYMOUTH VOLARE • · ATLAS CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH • 2 DOOR it!;t'NOW! _ ,a> SEDAN P"'~.Qllllllll~''''''''~'~'C' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON A FINE SELECTION OF BRAND NEW 1'117 ARROWS •••••• , TEST DRIVE THE All NEW 19n VOYAGER ••••• READY FOR THE ROAD •••••• GIANT V ALUESI BEST USED .CAR 11BUYS 11 OF THE WEEK ••••• SAVE NOW ON THE ARROW OF YOUR OfOICEI 1973 PONTIAC YIHNltA COUPI V -8 . automatic. air oond1t10ntng. pawer steenng, power brakes. radio, heater. white Sldewall tires. License 070HWA. s1795 1970 CHEVY MOM't'I CAILO V -8. automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio. heater. whitewall tires. vlny1 roof, tilt wheel. License 602BTG 1972 CHEVY CotlYITTI COUPI V -8 . automatic . air cond11ton1ng, power steering, power brakes. AM/FM radio, heater. white sidewall tires. tllt wheel. License 867PQN. s4795· 1974 FOID PIMfO SIDAH 4 cylinder. automatic. air conditioning, radio. heater, bucket seats, raised white letter tll'9S. License 11 &KXY 1974 PLYMOUTH SCAMPCOUPI 6 cylinder, automatic, air cond1t1onmg, po~r steering. radio. heater, white sidewall tires. vinyl top .. License 894KXU. $2395. 1972CHEVY c.v.tel COUPI V-8. automatic. ail' conditioning. power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewall tires,. vinyl roof. tilt wheel. License 8e4FBG ' , t 1976 DODGE TRADISMAM I 00 HOUSICAI V-8. automatic, lac. air. p. steer .. brks .. AM-FM 8 trk. htr. tire rack. r. o side spare. fully equlpt. cap- tains chrs. mags. sta pop top. Mtr. #18502 $8191 1973 MERCURY . MOH1'IGO SIDA.t V-8, automatic. air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, AM/FM stereo radio. heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof. License eieMWZ 9 1891 1976 PLYMOUTH COUPI 6 cylihder, automatic, air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, radio. heater. License 679N00) ·'3391 1974 CHEVY YMAWAGOM ~ o4 cylinder. automatic. r8dio, heater. whitewall tires. bucket teats. Uoenie 801 KPB. '1291 1976 'FORD GllAHADA COUPI 6 cylinder, automatic. air cond11tonlng. power steering, power brakes. radio, heater. License 796PCE. ·s3995 1975 LINCOLN COMT'IHIHTAL COUN V-8. automatic. air conditioning, power steering, power brak.es,,power wlndowa, . power seats, radio. heater, whitewall tires, vinyl roof. (ji:ense 246MYS - 91691 ) . I Lt , ,,.. l' TEN CENT~1 Halt of I W .\SHINGTON CAP) -A aroup of~. includln& .Medal ol Honor wlnne"'• •ix former prilonen of war ~ two ~on- 1resamen, filed sttlt in federal court today cballen1ln1 the le1aUly of Presiden~ Carter's pardon for draft evaders. The suit said the pardon is vaaue and ambiguous, Wegally delegates the President's con- athuliooal pardon authority to It Was a Ki~k Alty. Gen. Griffin Bell, oftenda Members of Concresa who • the equal pl'OteCUon clause ot the joined. bi tbe suit Included Reps. J..4th Anaendnlent and violates • ·aeorp Hanset1 CR-Idaho), and federal I 1ov~rnln1 LarryMcDonald(D·Ga.). cititensbip. Dt Carter and Tbe suit was lnatttated by re. Bell Wert as defendants tired Air Force Col. Norlan · b:1 thesuit. Dauehtrey of Albuquerque, The suit was fiWd bl U.S. Dis-N.M., representative of the ex· trlct Court by the B'oundation ol POW movement. Law and Society, a'Wuhia8ton· Medal ot ffonor winners wbo based, public·inter4;11 law foun· joined in the suit are Col. Lee daUon. Thorsness of Sioux Falls, S.D.; Huntington Beach High School's John Rossi hangs on to the ball and his bucking mount during Tuesday night's donkey basketball game between Oiler cheerleaders and their counterparts from Marina High School. Watching the action is Julie Mecurio (No. 13) of Marina team. Rossi later lost his seat, but Huntington Beach won the game, 26-22, to take a 3-2 ~dge in the five-game seties between pep squads from the two schools. !~---------------------------------------------------------------------~ I ! Conservation Aids East . Job Layoffs May Be Extentkd to April B1n. Auocla&ell Pl'eu Conservation measures ap· peared to be eulne the drain on natural pa in ~ cold-pl.aped Midwest and East today, but there were warnings that the fac- tory elosinp and layoffs de- signed to save the fuel could last until ApJil. (Related photo, A4 > The Senate approv~ a com- Latcgers' Flndi•g Ray 'Acted Mone' ' In Slaying 16ng WASHINGTON (AP)-All~a 10-mqnth revJew, a team of JusUee ~rt.meat lawyers bu concluded that James Earl Ray acted alone tn the asaass.inaUoo of Dr. Martin Lutber K1.Q8 Jr •• depar.t:mtai '°'8'Cet tldd todey. I The lawyers rejected theories that Ray wu baly a coa in a c:on· ap(raey to auU.laate t.be Nobel Prlte-~ civil rt1hta leader. tbe IOUl'eel .-Ad. Tbe team Of lawyers from the department's Office of lP.t_Ol~l RelDON1bWty de· li""941ta ~ff for~« Atty. Gen. F.dward N. Levi shortly before be left office Jan. 20. The department plans to make pubUc a ',4sanltized version" of .th• repcrt, deletsq names~ in· <&e.aAY.P11eAJ) Col. Van Barfoot ot Ford, Va.; Tech. Sgt. Ralph Nepr,el of lowa City, Iowa and Col. 'Bud" Day of Ealln. Fla. The suit said Carter's order pardoning draft evaders who fled the country ls void because be lacks authority to restore full political rigbta to persons wbo are oot cit.hens of the United States and that the law says ~t a penon who leaves the United States to avoid the draft loae1 bis citizenship. "The executive order invades the legislative prerogative1 by directing t.be attorney 1eneral to discontinue investigations and prosecutlon.s of violators of the Mllltary Selective Service Act," t.be suit charges. It asked the court to declare that CongreS& alone has the power to d~are the ma.oner or \ .· acqutrlnl, losing or reaequlrinc citizenship. ' James T. McKenna, one ot the attorne)'s wbo filed the suit, told a news conference t,bat the sld,t does not question the Presi· dent's powers to grant pardons. But he sald t.be suit cballeoges the validity of the particular pro- clamation which Carter 1asued for the draft evaders. Park Elephant~· • : ..,,. Poor Attendance Decried By ROBERT BARKER Ol Ille INllY ""' .. si.li- H untington Beach City Coun· cilman Ron Shenkman says that the city's Central Park is a white elephant that is plagued by "very, very poor attendance.·· "The people of this city paid millions of dollars for the park and they are not getting their money's worth," Shenkman said Tuesday. Shenkman will recommend that the city look into the possibility of asking the county to Allaway's ·Trial Stays Iµ County Orange County Superior Court Judie Robert Kneeland refused today t9 move accufted mass m111'C!erer P.chlfard All.Wcy'a up- coming trial to another county. "l don't think it's been stlown Mr. ~aw~~ ~ill not get a fair and ln\PIJ'U&l trial in Orange County," Judge Kneeland said. He also r:efused a request by Deputy Public Defender Ron Butler to delay Allaway·s trial 18 months. As a result. the man accused or shooting seven people to death and wounding two others last Ju- ly 12 on the Cal State Fullerton campus will stand"lrial in Orange County March 7. Butler hoped to get Allaway's trial moved to another .county because of what he said was the vast amount of publicity the mass slaying received in this county. The defense attorney asked for the 18 month delay after the mo- tion for a change of venue was de- nied. <See TRIAL, Page A2) Thennostats DouninHB Huntinpon Beach Mayor Har- dered thermostats in all city bµUdinp 19Wered to 65 degrees in daytlme~. Mn. ~eder aaid 1he took the action tn an effort to relieve \he pain and suffering .caused by freedng w~er In the iast and Midwest. City thermott.ta had prevtoJa. ly been set at 61 degrees. Thermoetata •• •ulomatlcally abut off at n1iht except at the police ataUon Ud some other facllitlee. * * * take over and maintain the park on a regional basis. He says he thinks the county can provide facilities that will at· tract people to the park that was acquired as a result of a $6 million bond election in 1969. Part of the money went to other park development throughout the city. ''The attendance is very, very poor," Shenkman says. "When people do get there. they are dis- appointed because there is not much to do.·· Third Revise Shenkman says he would like to see recreational activities de· veloped such as lawn bowllog and croquet -"sometbin& :to occupy time." He says the city can't properly develop racilities because the ex: lent of capital ouUay is not fea.si· ble. Central Park also is plagued by low water levels at Lake Talbert and Huntington Lake. Lake Tai bert is presently being drained in order to seal the bot· <See PARK. Page. A%) Schmit Wipes Out Debts Owed Cella By GARY GRANVILLE O(t• ~Uy f'llot Staff Orang~ County Supervisor L~ Sthmlt amended his 1974 cainp4\1n disclosure state- ment Tues day to wipe o"t SJ.19,191 in debts owed tQ Qr. Louis Cella or fictitious cem- patan committees controlled by Cella. n was the thifd Ume Schmit amended the statement that al one point showed be spent $171,610 -$141,539 or it Cella con· nected money -to defeat inc um· bent David Baker. This time, Schmit reclassified $119,197 in loans Crom Cella arul his committees to donations. In part, that statement ap- parenUy reflects. the fact that neither Schmit nor his campaign committee oCCicials signed notes covering the alleged loans. But in an interview last week, Schmit pointed out that most of the so-called loans were in the form of campaign material for which there was no accounting. ·"I really don't kn<\W what we received or bow lJl\&cb it was worth," Schmit said as be dis· cussed his 19'74 campaign debt. - He is the first Cella protege b> dlaown oblieations to the od• 1 Ume COW'\tY political ltintmlker I who was convicted of felony crimes in a federal court last year and still faces a felony trial in Orange County. Cella was in court part of the day Tuesday and could not be re- ached for comment. Schmit first ran afoul of 19'1' campaign disclosures when'~ reported substantial Cella I~ from such theretofore unknown polllical entities as "BPMPAC. "' Later such committees were given titles like Bristol Park Medical Political Action Com- mittee. - Last May, Schmit amended bis return to show $10,000 paid to (See SCHMIT, Page.AZ) Huntington Early Dismissals Droppe~ allow all students at the lout schools to leave classes early. All teachers at the four schools would be Involved in the planning sessions each Thursday, Ma~ said. · "The whole Idea is not a good one," said school board Prest· dent Jack Clapp. ''Frankly, tbl• 11 the flrat tiine I knew this was aolna to b•.P- peh," said Clapp. "Thia would .. erodtni the ~diool d•y ,.., · Weather · Patehy fOI or low clouds late tonlabt and early Thuraday momlDg. IAws toni1bt '1 to $2. Hlgha Thursday in mid 908, DAILY PILOT M/F By TOM BARLEY °' .. .,..,., Piltlt '4tft ''And then there were two." That clearly audible comment from the rear of Judie James F. Judee's courtroom Tuesday was one observer's immediate reac- tion to the announcement that the Cadillac Fairview Corporation of Toronto is no longer interested in purchasing the James Irvine Foundation 'a controlling interest in the Irvine Company. The decision by the Canadians came as no surprise to the four_ P•rties in the lawsuit. the two re- maining contenders or close ob- serven of the five-month Orange County Superior Court trial. Representatives of Cad11Jac Fairview made it clear lut wttk that they were not prepared to again engage in open bidding procedures that were described by one Canadian official as "a tasteless Orange County version o( the Persian market place.•' The decision to withdraw from the contest was taken when it became clear this week that Cound~tion trustees, who want to sell their interest to Mobil, are not prepared to endorse a system of sealed bids. Cadillac Fairview at one time seemed almost certain to be the nciw directors o( Irvine affairs when the company posted what was then a top bid of $286.2 million for the foundation's 54.5 percent stake in the Irvine Com-pany. The offer was eclipsed by all cash bids ol $281.9 million from Mobil and $282. 7 million from a consortium headed by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. · Cadillac Fairview indicated early this year that they were preapared to go still higher but only ir Judge Judge ordered a system of sealed bids. No such order has been issued. Judge Judge is being asked lo Fro• Page Al RAY .•. formers and other sensitive material. the sources said. aut the public release has been delayed because department of· ficials want to avoid the ap. pearance of trying to influence the House of Representatives in · its debate about launching a lengthy and cosUy new investiga· tion ot the murders of Kine and President John F. Kennedy. Wheb the House completes its action, the department will re- lease ita report. Last April, Levi ordered Mlchael Shaheen, head of the Of- fice o( ProfessionaJ Responsibih· ty, to take charge ora review of all department records concern- ing the investigation of King's de- ath. He took the action after the de· partment's civil rights division finished a rive-month pre- liminary review of FBI riles and said a more complete study was necessary The series of department re- vjews was prompted by detailed disclosures b) a Senate commit· tee of the FBl's rampall(n of harassment again:.t tl.1ng an an effort to discredit ham and the C'l\'tl rights movement. That c;.impa1tm was carried out .. ander the d1rectton of J Edgar Hoover King was shot to death on a motel balcony in Memphis In Aprll.1988. Ray plea<\ed gutlty to King's murder. But he told the court he did not agree with statements by the prosecution and his own at· tomey that there was no con- spiracy ln the case. Ray is serv1n1 a 99-year pri1on sentence In Tennessee. He hH unsuccessfully sou1hl a new trial. Bug Fender Stolen Claudia J . Lona of Huntington Beath complained to police Tuesday that aortteone stole the left Cront fender of her Volkswagen Bug. DAILY PILOT D•llY "1191 Su" ""9tt PART OF THE EQUATION Irvine Stockholder Smith rule on the merits of a lawsuit filed by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith who took legal ac- tion when the foundation decided to sell out to Mobil for $200 million. Foundation trustees are com- pelled by the provisions or the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969 to dispose of their Irvine Com- pany interests by 1983. Mrs. Smith has argued that the $200 million Mobil was then pre· pared to pay for the 8.415 shares of stock in the company founded by her grandfather was far below the true value of the shares. Mrs. Smith owns a 22 percent interest in the Irvine Company. S~ is on record as preferring a sa e of the foundation's shares to th Allen-Taubman group which ha assured her that she can re· FREEZE ••. Guardsmen clear the city after a blizzard that has cost the area an estimated $60 million. The National Weather Service predicted temperatures up to 30 today in Buffalo, no significant snow and winds easing to 12· to 25-miles per hour. The sun broke through the clouds there Tuesday for the first time since hiib winds, snow and cold struck Fri· day. Also for the first time since Friday. the entire length of the New York State Thruway was open to traffic. Al one time, all but 4S miles of the highway was closed due to the storm. On the Chesapeake Bay and the Ohio River, fuel barges which were Idled for up to two weeks were.moving again, but progress was slow due to ice. In West Vit'glnta and Ken· lucky, more than 30,000 coal miners were off the job, their mines shut down because of the cold. Thousands o( schools and fac· tories also were shut and about a dozen states had declared energy emer~encles. On Tuesday, North CaroUna joined the ranks of states declar- ing such emergencies. and the auto industry alone announced that 80,000 workers in the United States and Canada wowd join some 1.5 million persons estimat- ed lo be laid of( around the na- tion. In the auto industry, parts shortaees were a fuclor as well as gas shortages. tain her mlnortty interest ii their bld is 1ucc:es&tul. The withdrawal of Cadillac Falrvlew from the lawsuit ap· pears tO leave the way clear for a confrontation between Mo~U backed by the foundation and u..; Irvine Cqmpany, and the Allen- Taubman Interest, backed by Mrs. Smith. Mra. Smith's 17-year feud with other memJ>ers of the Irvine Company board was diacussed at length in court Tuesday during the questioning of investment counselor »owen McCoy. Los Angeles attomey Howard Friedm•n. representing Mrs. Smith, lfrilled McCoy at length on what he described as de· rogatory statements made about Mrs . Smith by McCoy 's employers. Morgan Stanley of New York. Friedman then asked McCoy to explain the significance of what he called qie '1Jo1tn Irvine Smith fact-0r," a firtahclal adjustment which reduces the value of Irvine Company shares by $1.50 each so long as Mrs. Smith is connected with the company. McCoy explained that the mark down was the result of dis· sension belweeQ Mrs. Smith and the Irvine Company board and the reluctance or im(estors to become involved in a company that is divided at management level. "Don't you subscribe to the theory held by some business in· terests that dissension within management is not always a negative factor and a strong critic might be just what management needs?" Friedman asked McCoy. "Certainly," McCoy said. "But we looked at the records o( this dispute and two.cardboard boxes filled with clippings about it before we decided that this was a negative factor." Pair Thwarted In FV Store Holdup Try Two would-be bandits fled empty-handed from a Fountain Valley drug store Tuesday night. police said. Two men entered the Rexall Drug store at 10990 Warner Ave at 7 P..m. One of the suspects, described as about 21 years old. rive feel, 10 inches tall with dirty blond hair. brandished a dull chrome automatic handgun with a four-inch barrel, police said. • The ot her suspect was described as about the same age, slightly shorter with long dark hair. The two,.men confronted store em ployes Paul ~nd Lynette Holloway and de~ anded money. Mrs. Holloway left the store lo summon the police. When the two suspects realized she had gone, they fled the scene, the wit· ness told police. E'ro..PageAJ BROWN •.• Fro• Page Al SCHMIT ••• The state attorney general's of· flee said even though the restric· lions were laaued ln the fortn or an order, they have no legal weight and are "simply a request appealing to the morality of \ uaers." pQlttical consultant William Butcher that had not been re- ported. Simultaneously, a reported $100 contribution from lobbyist. Frank Michalena was upped to $1,000 oo the often amended cam· paltn statement. The Garden Grove aupervilor also had difflcwty with a finan· cial disclosure statement. flJ,ed when he took office. Omitted from the statement wu almost $14,000 Schmit. had eamed while campai1nln1, eam- inaa U.at came from a C•ll• con. troll~ hospital. . Schmit also w11 forced to amend a conftlct of lnterea.t 1tate- ment filed last year. The amendment. came after it was dlscloaed t.be county supervisOl' had accepted lift& valued at more than '200 from tobbylat.a and developers and then voted on issues ln which the donors bad a ftnancial lnterest. Scbmlt. a.oidtd a poaslble mis· . demeanor conflict. by reuaeu~ tnc the \talue ot the sift.I to brtq them under $200. Art LeaP,e Meets The HuntJn1ton Beach Art Leap WW meet Mo«Wfay, Feb. T at t.M EdllOft Communlt.1 Ctnter al 211'n M~1nolla St. Guttl ai'Ult~tor at Ute T!30 pro&J'am wl11 be Carl Zeller. The order make1 no mention of electrical heating or propane caa. ............ Two Roof.s 01'erlaead Drinkers at the Sears pub in Halir,x, England, have not only one, but two roofs over their heads. The Sears had been scheduled to be demolished to make way for a new road, but workers objected and the pub was tucked away under the road. &dloonist 'Grounded' YUMA, Ariz. CAP> - Karl Thomas, trying to float across the country In 14 days under his hot air balloon, landed unexpec· tedly today in the foothills some 14 miles east of this Colorado River city. Members of his ground crew said Thomas landed the giant balloon in a re- mote area, and that they were trying to reach him. They said they knew of no roads into the area. Yuma is about 60 miles south of Blythe. Calif., where Thomas lifted off at 4 a .m. en route to Phoenix f'rotte Page A J PARK. • • tom to prevent future water losses. Huntington Lake is down to about 14 feet because of drought cond1t1ons. Prentice Taylor, the master concessionaire for the park. !>ays he has lost "horrendous amounts of money" because of lack of park use. He Indicated that the city has not completely lived up to its bargain to develop the park. Taylor operates two fast food r~staurants and also offer!> f1s- h1ng and sallin~ lessons. He said his operations are now closed until the summer. Recreation Director Norm Worthy says the pa~k was de· veloped to preserve the natural swampland of the area and to provide passive recreation. He said there are plans to de· velop a group picnic shelter and fam'lly camping accommoda- tions. Wor:thy said there are also dis· cusslona to build a major sports center. miniature golf. tennis and skateboard facilltles by private enterprise. There are 270 acres in the park of which 170 are developed. Non-teachers Win Pay Hike In HuntingtQn Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District trustees approved a one-year contract Tuesday with 398 full and part-time non-teaching employes. It calls for an average 6.2 percent' across-the-board pay hike. The contract. retroactive to Ju- ly 1, 1976, includes a 2.8 percent increase in salary raises for merit and experience as well as a three percent increase in health, welfare and retirement benefits. The boosts will cost the district a total of$93,800, officials said. The district employe group is the Huntington Beach Elemen· tary Chapter 316 of the California School Employes Association. FrOlfl Page A I TRIAL .•. Butler said the time was needed to diminish the impact of the slayings on prospective Jurors' minds . But Judge Kneeland didn't agree. He said that wbHe the publlclty had been pervasive 'in Orange County, it's most severe Impact was on the University campus and in Fullerton. He then mentioned Orange County's population of 1. 75 million persons as being an ln- dication oF an abundant number of prospective Impartial Jurors. Judge Kneeland also noted that Allaway·s chief defense will be his mentai condition at the time or the sJayings. His apparent Inference was to the understanding that it will be the 37-year-old former custo· di an ·s mental state al the time of the shootirlga that will be or most concerntothejurv. Judge Kneeland said if, al the lime of the trial, it appears lm· possible to !ind an unbiased jw-y, he will reconsider his denial of the motion to move Allaway's trl al to another county. ' Seniors' l!rojects • I Okayed Huntln1ton Beach planning commlsslonera have approved three senior tlUaen projecta to be noanced by tl.2$ mtlllon In federal Community Develo~­ ment lunds. The list Included $2~,000 to purchase land for a senior clthen bousina complex, $105,000 tor ex- pansion of the seniors• recreauon center and Sl.00,000 for Improving seniors' houaln1 that included a youth paint and pickup prosram. Final re.quests for the federal grant will be made by the city council alter a public hearing Feb.14. Grant applications will be sub- mitted to the Southern California Association of Governments tor a review before going to the federal department of Housing and Urban Development. Action to rank projeets for fed~ral funds was previously taken by a citizens advisory com- mittee and by department direc- •tora. The planning commission list and its rankings included: 1. Senior citizen housine, $250,000. 2. Bushard Community Center. $205,300. 3. Oak View outreach program, $31,500. 4 . Rehabilitation loans, $100,000 5. lmprovement for han- dicapped mobility, $43,500. . 6. J>\t('cbue of Old Town park alte, $2:50,000. 7. Orange County Fair Housing Council, $7.~. 8. Senior recreation center ex· pansion, Sl00,000. 9. Oak View Day Care Cent.er, $165,000. IQ. Senior cillzen housing im- provements, $100,000. Youth.Burned By Exploding Car Battery A 20-year-old Los Alamitos man suffered severe burna Tues-- day when a car battery exploded in his lace, Orange County ff re men reported today. Mike Eshelby lit a match to check the level of water in the battery, firemen said, and the match ignited hydrogen gaf escaping from the battery. Investigators said Eshelby ma y s uffer damage to his eyesight. He was taken to Los Alamitos General Hospital where he was reported in satisfactory condi- tion. ·~ Firemen said the accident oc- curred at the Sunrise Glass Corporation in Los Alamitos, where Eshelby is employed. - Whetmore Recovering Former slate Senator James Whetmore was reported in aood• condition today at ftoag Memorial Hospital where be i<> recovering from open heart sur- gery. The former Orange . County le gislator underwent s urgery Monday to replace a cardiac valve. A hospital 1pokesman said he ls being cared for in the hospital's intensive care unit. W hetmore retired from the Le1lslature at the close of the last 1es1ion and has been practic- ln1 law in Oran1e since then. Elk Slaying Under Probe CONCORD <AP> -An ln· vesuaatton has been launched in- to tbe fatal 1hoottni of a prepiant tule elk, part of a small herd transplanted to new f eedln1 grounds near here, state otficials •aid. The dead elk waa found at the Concord Naval Weapons Center, a Navy 1pokCJwoman said Tl,aes- day. · State !'teb ~nd Oame DeDart- ment oftlclala ntoved a1x ol the •hlmall from near B~t,..fJtld to a fenced preserve. hoptna to atart a new~· Fewer tbap 700 of. the maJeaUc •nlnula exUt ln Catftomt•. Bobby Sox sp~p• 1\.ea11t.ratlon for tJI• t(orth Hu.Uncton Beach BObb~ Sox Leasue 11 ~beduled Peti. lit, a and 2'. Gtrll fiom ' ~ 1S can •teil upttom 10 a.m. tolp.m. at the Ma ~ ~ au t.arcbWOod Drlve. l\artMr lri· format.lm caa M Obt&lnld bt calllDa .... i.m. l Irvine EDITION ;·vandidates Eat, ( .· B1 lllLA•Y KA YE ~ .... ..., ..... lutf Three Irvine school board can· cl.idates said they were uncon- cerned about the district payin& foT their dinner Monday nlght. but they coutctn•t agree on what they atefordiMer. One candidate reported be ate f"'tsh crepes. Another said she had creamed chicken. And Trustee J'une Foley, who sat in on the briefinc session. guessed it was "either fish crepes or creamed chicken." Several other candidates pro- te.ted the dinner meeting, saying they objected to the district spendinc money to feed can· did ates and district olllcials. Robert Gray did not attend the meetina as a protest, and Cathy Larkln and lncµmbent Frank Hurd arrived after the dinner Solving Parking Problem? was over. Robert Shupe ~ did not attend. but for other re~. but be, too, said be opposed the • ~Inner. . When in!ormed of the can- didates' protests last week, Supt. Stan Corey saidhe would pay the tab out of bis own pocket. He said be planned to serve "baloney sandwiches ... Tlie baloney sandwiches failed to materialize, but judatng from . ... ... .... Nick Pugay didn't feel like going to his San Diego office Tuesday, and now he wishes he hadn't. "I'd just closed the door when she came driving up over my car, .. he recalls. Co-worker Dorothy Jernigan said she hit the brakes as she pulled into her parking slot, but "nothing happened." Well, almost nothing. ~ Bidders ReIDain Finn Drops Ir.vine Company Pitch By TOM BARLEY , OI tN Dally ~llot Sl•tf ~ .. And then there were two." That clearly audible comment · m the rear of Judge James F. dge's courtroom Tuesday was e obseTVer's Immediate reac· 1tion to the announcement that the ICadlllac Fairview Corporation of Toronto is no longer interested ltn purchasing the James Irvine jFoundation's controlling interest .in the Irvine Company. The decision by the Canadians came as no surprise to the four parties in the lawsuit, the two re· mainlng contenders or close ob- Urvers oC the rive-month Oranae County Superior Court trial. Representatives of Cadlllac Fairview made it clear last week ttlat they were not prepared lo asatn engage in open bidding proffdw-es that were destribed by one Canadian official as •·a tasteless Or~e County version ol t.be Persian market place.'· The decision to withdraw from the contest was taken when it became clear this week that foundation trustees, who want to sell their interest to Mobil, are not prepared to encfq.r:se a system of sealed bids. · · Cadillac Fairview at one time eeemed almost certain to be the new di.recton of Irvine affairs .rben the company posted what was then a top bid of $286.2 dlllllon for the foundation's 5'.5 1119rcent stake in the Irvine Com-pany. Tbe ofter was eclipsed by all cub bids ot $281.9 million from Mobil aDid $282. 7 million from a "onaortl\lm b,eaded bt Wall Street financier Charles Allen aad .Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. ·Cadillac Fairview indicated . 1 Deity ...... l&ltf ,.... PART OF THE EQUATION trvlne stockholder Smith early this year that they were preapared to 10 still bi&ber but only if Juqe Judge ordered a system ol sealed bids. No sucb order bas been issued . Judie JUflle is bein& aale4 to rule on the merits or a lawsuit tued by Irvine "eiress Joan Irvine Smith who took legal ac- tion when the f oundaUon declded to •ell out to Mobil for poo million. Foundation trustees are com· pelled by the provisions of the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969 to dispose of their Irv,me Com· pany interests by 1983. Mrs. Smith has argued that the $200 million Mobil was then pre· pared to pay for the 8,415 shares of stock in the company founded by her grandfather was far below the true value of the shares. Mrs. Smith owns a 22 percent interest in the Irvine Company. She is on record as preferring a sale or the foundation's shares to the Allen-Taubman group which bas assured her that she can re· lain her minority interest if their bid is successful. Tbe withdrawal of Cadillac Fairview from the lawsuit ap· pears to leave the way clear for a confrontation between Mobil. backed by the foundation and the • Irvine Company, and the Allen- Taubman interest, backed by Mr~. Smith, • Mrs. Smith's 17-year feud with other members of the Irvine Company board was discussed at lenath in court Tuesday during the questioning of inve11tment . counselor Bowen McCoy. Los Angeles attorney Howard Friedman, representlng Mrs. Smith, grilled McCoy at length on what he described as de· rogatory statements made about Mra. Smith by McCoy's em_ployers, Morgan Stanlet of New York. Friedman then asked McCoy to explain the stgntfleance of 1'hat <See HEIRESS. Page A%) . .. . What Was the candidates• reports, the cafet~ria·prepared meal was hardly gourmet fare. "It definitely wasn't a feast," remarked Mrs. Foley, who ad· milted she did not have a dinner meetine in mind when.she and Hurd suggested last year that lhe· next batcll of candidates should have a joint briefing with staff. Candidate Dottie Blaine said she consldered the money well spent, even if the district does pay the bill. "'the funds expended for the simple supper were well spent from a taxpayers' viewpoint. considering th e almost $20,000,000 school budget," said Mrs. Blaine, a senior ad· ministrative analyst with the county. "Substituting •cookies and punch might h1ve saved a dollar or two over the creamed chicten and spinach salad, but not mU(lh more. For a few mlles per tax- payer, caodlda~ were given an opportunity to gain a wealth of lnformation regardin& the schoQl system and its major tunctions," Mrs. Blaine said. Candidate Tom Wilson, an as· sistant principal at Newport Hubor lllgh School, called the (See DINNER, Page A%) Pardon Furo-r . . . . Medal Winners, POWs Protest .. WASHINGTON (AP) -A group of 20, including Medal of Honor winners, 'six former prisoners of war and two con· gressmen. filed suit in federal court today challenging the legality of President Carter's pardon for draft evader~. . The suit said the pardon 1s vague and ambiguous, illegally delegates the President's. con· stitutional pardon authortty to Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell, offends the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment and violates federal laws governing citizenship. President Carter and Funding Decision Scheduled The Irvine City Council will make a first attempt Thursday to decide which areas should have t_op funding priority In the ft'J7 -111' city budget. The public is invited to the budeet session, which will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the City Council chambers at city hall. Among the areas pinpointed by the staff, are: -More money for main· tenance of parks, streets and trees. Public Works Director Brent Muchow is suggesting a preventive maintenance pro· gram rather than an ultimately more costly system of periodic replacement. -An additional 10 police of- ficers and three public safety as· sislants to handle the increased population of Irvine. -Two hundred and six re· quests received for capital im· provement projects, totaling $52,899,500. City staff suggests that the most important r~uest is the 5425,000 project for site ac· quisition and preliminary design of the city corporation yard facility. -Spending $18,000 to hire a full time staff person to develop a new city policy for capital im· provements. -lncreying the city's general contingency account by $100,000. -Establishing a self-insurance program to replace State Worker 's Compensation Insurance, -Giving a high priority to the special litigation fund. PmueDeath Blmnedin Girf 'a Suicide GLENDALE CAP) -A 13· year-old La crucenta slrl has killed herself in a flt of depres•lon over the suicide ol comedian Freddie Prinze, police said. . Lfnn B•rilller dJed at Verdugo Hilla Hospital 111te Tuesday after •boc>tlna hene1I in the head a 4-.y earlier with her f atber11 .a&· c:aUber revolver. old police apqkesman Pete HamUtbsL Tbe llrl left a 1UicJ~ note cl&.. tns tbt lleatha or~' a r mll1 friend 1•1.lned only as Bame1. her cat and ber do1 aa "ruaons ·why I really c•n't 10 on." 0 1 would 1Jke to" burled nett to or• dtM • poulble'\O ~ Bell were named as defendants in thesuiL The suit was filed in U.S. Dis· tricl Court by the Foundation of Law and Society, a Washington· based, public·inleresl law foun· dation. Members of Congress who joined in the suit included Reps. George Hansen CR·ldaho), and Larry McDonald CD·Ga.). The suit was instigated by re· tired Air Force Col. Norlan Daughtrey of Albuquerque, N.M., representative or the ex- POW movement. Medal of Honor winners who Balloonist Seu Down YUMA, Ariz. <AP> Karl Thomas, trying to hop across the country in a hot· air balloon, was forced to wait for favorable winds today after being forced down near the Me~dcan bol'de~. Sberttf's deputie~ aad volunteers combed rugged mountains 20 miles east of here oearly three hOUrJ before fhomas was picked up by members of a chase crew. Thomas said un · cooperative winds forced him to burn more propane fuel that expected, and he could not land on a restrict· ed Marine Corps gunnery range. Sclunit Erases Debt to Cella For Campaign joined in the suit are Col. Lee Thorsness of Sioux Falls. S.D.; Col. Van Barfoot of Ford, Va.; Tech. Sgt. Ralph Neppel of Iowa City, Iowa and Col. "Bud" Day of Eglin, F1a. The suit said Carter's order pardoning draft evaders who fled _ the country is void because he lacks authority to restore full political rights to persons who are not citizens of the United States and that the law says that a person who leaves the United Stales to avoid the draft loses his citizenship. (See PARDONS, Paie'AZ) Fairview Treatment Reviewed By STEVE MITCHELL CM tao.My f'llet l!L'" Reports of electric gJiock treJt· ment and forced restraint of re- tarded patients at Fairview Sta• Ho.pital haft prompted a review of the bospi~ 's aversion tberap1 pro1tam. •1 But Fairview's administrator, Dr. Michael Levine, said the • aversion program, in which elec- tric shock ls use4 as a deterrent. la a lifesaver. State Health Director Jerome Lackrier inspected Pacific State Hospital in Pomona Tuesday. and the health department has indicated it will review Fairview's program in the near . future. Fairview and Pacific are the only two hospitals in the state's 11-facUity mental opera. lion which use aversion therapy. Reports oC the use of ~We pro. ds on patients came following a joint state-county health team' visit to the Pomona facility. Levine said the Costa Mesa hospital's aversive conditioning program ls limited to a very small group, and called the pro- ject a sophisticated operation. "It is a well controlled project restricted to between eight and 12 kids here," be said in an iJ1.. terviewtoday. Levine said the treatments are done only with the consent of tM paliet;>t's J)aJ'ents and with the«P. provai of a Human Rights Com .. mittee. "The project is a life saver.'' Levine said. "There are, from time to time, residents with very self-abusive behavior (such u striking their heads on walla). Their whole life become-• restraints and drugs because of their self-abuse," be explained. "And, what usually happens ii, ~W,Pa1eA2> : Coast Weather Patchy fog or low clouds late toniaht and early Thursday morninc. Lows tonl&ht '7 to 52. Blabs Tbunday ln mid 808. .41 DAILYPtlOT SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov. . Edmund VtO\m Jr. Jl turned the thermostat 'down to ta deerees ln h1a <>l'fkc, and Intends to keep it there. At least that's the idea his so start members got Tuesday when workers installed s hields on tbermostats to prevent tamper. ln1. Altbou~ the heat was C\ll back in Brown 1 suite, lt will rem.Sn at 68 in other st•te buildlnt1J for a rew mor e days, Uld Brown's ex· ecutive secretary, Gray Davia. Davis said the governor's suite ·' wlU be tbe tut nea for an "Ull'CY aUdlt." Wben the audit it complete, probablY tb.11 week, an optimum temperab&re for eoer•y t1vlnp wJll be picked. Tlten aimUar audits will be conducted in other buUdlnp, Davia .aid. Several aides and secretarln came to work with sweater1 Tuesday, but one. who aaked not to be named, said, "I don't think wf ro 1uffering all that much. Its colder. but we're not rreei· ing." Since 1975, s tate oUice CSF Maaa Slaglng• Trial Stays • m Orange County Su~rlor Court Judge Robert Kneeland refused today to move accused mass murderer Edward Allaway's 'Up- coming trial to another county. "I don't think it's been shown Mr. Allaway will not 1et a ratr and impartial trial ln Oran1e County." Judee Kneeland said. He also refused a request by Deputy Public Defender Ron Bqtler to delay Allaway's trial 18 months. As a ~ult, lbe man accused or shooting seven people to death and wounding two others last Ju. ly 12 on the Cal State Fullerton campus will stand trial in Orange County March 7. Butler hoped to get Allaway's trial moved to another county because of what he said was the vast amount of publicity the mass slayings received in this county. SJap Happy Sports Intimacy Suggested thinks fans ought lo be let in on the fun. thermoatata have been tel at &8 In tbt winter and 74 iJl tbe SWD• mer. Mean•blle, Califomtau are belnf ur1•d to turn dowa tbermmtata and wear 1w.eatera to help conserve natural 111 for other parts ol the naUon sutferifta from Shortages. "The steps are belnl ta.ken becaun Jobe are be1n1 Jost and people are <tying," in otber pvta ot the country. state PubUc UtlHUes Commission President Robert Batinovich sald Tuesday in San Francisco in announcin1 • County The defense attorney asked for the 18 month delay after the mo- tion for a change of venue was de· med. Butler said the time was needed to diminish the impact of the s layings on prospective jurors' minds. But Judge Kneeland didn't agree. He said that while the publicity had been pervasive in Orange County. its most severe impact was on the university campus and in Fullerton. He then m entioned Orange County's population or 1.75 million persons as being an in· dication of an abundant number or prospective impartial jurors. the voluntary t:0n1ervatloo or· der, eff ectlw lnuMdl•teb'. .. B•tinovlcb 1aJd th• r•lrlC· Uoaa. characterized as a "moral loJuacUoa, •• Include lowtrtnc thennottab to no more than '5 durina u,. d•Y and ss at night. Tbey .a1lo include curbs on lu.x· urr. Uffl aucb u to heat awim· m n1 pools and oeera_t• de· cor aUve lleh.Uq and fl.reJ)laeee. Pacific Ou " &Jectrlc Co., which serves most of Northern Califom.la, baa ortered to loan Southern Natural Gaa Co. of Blrmlnabam. Ala., up to 100 ml Won cubic feel of 1aa a day for a month foe use in Georgia, South Carolina, Alabama, MiaaJ.ulppi, Tenn~ and Florida. Southern California Gas Co. says k wtU male 2.5 blllJoo cubic feet of eas available to utlliUes serving Oklahoma and Kansu. The PUC admitted It would be tou1b to enforce the order. The state attorney general '1 of· flee said even thou1h the restric- tions were laaued in the form of an order, they have no leeal wel1ht and are "simply a request appealln1 to the morality of users." The order makes no menUon of electrical heattn1 or propane 1as. Commercial and Industrial businesses should abut down heating during nonbusiness hours except to prevent damaie, lite order says. All hotel, motel and similar businesses were ordered not to beat or cool vacant guest rooms. * * * o\~WI...,._.. JIM OLSTROM SHOVELS HIS WALK IN WATERTOWN, N .Y. Temperetur•• Rlalng -Slowly -In Frozen E•at \ Sports fans often see athletic team members boost each other's spirits before the big game or after a particularly good olav with a joyously frenetic hand-slapping exhibition. Bruce Hopping, a candidate ror the Laguna Beach school board, Hopping told the school board Tuesday he watched a Stanford basketball game in which the players ran to the bleachers and slapped every hand stretched out. Judge Kneeland also noted that Allaway•s chief defense will be hts mental condition at the time or the slayings. Has apparent inference was lo the understanding that it will be the 37-year-old former custo· dian 's mental slate at the time of the shootings that will be of most concern to the jury. Conservation Aids Irvine Senior Citizens Set Special Meet All senior citiiens in Irvine are invited to attend a 9:30 a.m. m eeting Thurs da y in the multipurpose building at University Community Park in Irvine. This is the first lime the aeniors' regular monthly meet· ing will be held outside of city hall. Those attending the meeling will discuss: -Progress oo the new Rancho San Joaquin mult.Jpurpose build· ing. which. when completed. will serve as a meeting place for seniors. -Selection o( a new chairman and vice chairman of the seruor citizens committee. -Introduction o r J esse Washington, Irvine's new com· munity services director. Following the business meet· ing, there will be coffee and cookies. The meeting place is located at #1 Beech Tree Lane. adjacent to the public library. Fro•Pa~.-11 PARDON •.. "T he e11:ecutive order Invades the le1i1laUve prerogatives by directing the attorney 1eneral to ditcontln\J«-tnvestigatfons and prosecutions or violators of the Military Seltttive Service Act," the ault charses. It ••Iced the court to declare that Con1reu alone has the power to declare the manner or acqulrin1. l~lni or reacquiring citizenship. James T. McKenna, one of the attorneys who flied the suit, told a news conference that the suit does not question the Presi- dent's powen to l'l"ant pardons. But he 1aJd the suft challences the validity of ttie particular pro- clamation which Carter' Issued for the draft evaders. ~ANQICOMT DAILY PILOT Laguna contests should be run thesameway, he said. "It would establish a personal relationship, like 'Hi! I'm Bruce Hopping, I'm on the swimming team, I'm glad you're here." Job Layoffs May Be Extended to April H o ppin g s aid fan ·hand· slapping wouldn't be necessary in football. "because of the logistical problems." but would add a nice touch •'in tbe more in· lim ate sports." The school board took no action on the proposal. Fro.. Page Al REVIEW ... arter a short period of time it no longer becomes neceasllry to ad· minister the treatment." he said Levine said the shock treat· ment disrupts the destructive behavior long enough for other behaviors to be taught. Levine also denied that the aversion conditioning involves the use ol cattle prods, saying the devices are less crude than those used on animals. "It's kind of a receiver at- tached lo lbe arm and operated through remote control," Levine said. "So the kids are not touched with a cattle prod." He said the hospital Is faced with recent court rulings saying that il a patient cannot be treat· ed, he must be released. "If we have a self-abusive client, and other program:; do not work on him, and we get the authority to use aversive condi· tioning to correct his problem then maybe we can help.•• ' "But If we take away the aversive conditioning, which does work, then we are mandat· ed by recen~court decisions to re- lease that patient, which doesn't help him a bit," Levine said. "This program is far better than having patlents spend their entire lives on restraJnts and drugs." ,,,... Page A J SCHMIT. • • ported. Simultaneously. a reported *100 con.trtbutioo from lobbyist ll'raf\k MJebaJena waa upped to $1.000 on the often amended cam. pal1n statement. The Garden Grove 1upenilor atso1 had cl1fnou.tty wt th a flnan- cJaJ d1lcloture statement filed when be toot olfice. Omitted from the statement WU almolt $1',000 Scbmlt bad earned wblle campaiplof, earn· ln•s that came trOm a Cella con. trolled bolplt.aJ. Schmit also was forced to amend a conflict of interest state· ment ftJed Jut year. Tbt amendment' c:ame after It wa1 dl1clo1ed ' th• county aupervilor had aec:epted = valued at more than '200 1obbylata and developva and' tben \'ot.d on illu• ln whlcb tile donors hid a flnanclal lntfl""" Judge K.neeiand said Ir. at the tame of the trial, it appears im· possible to rind an unbiased jury, he will reconsider his dental of the motion lo move Allaway's trial to another county. By The AssodaUd Press Conservation measur es ap. peared to be easing the drain on natural gas in the cold-plagued Mldweat and East today, but there were warrungs that the rac- tory closings and layoffs de· Lawyers' Finding Ray 'Acted Alone' In Slaying King WASHINGTON CAP>-After a 10-month review, a team of Justice Department lawyers has concluded that J a mes Earl Ray acted alone in the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., department sources said today. The lawyers rejected theories that Ray was only a cog in a con- spiracy to assassinate the Nobel Prize-winning civil rights leader, the sources said. The team of lawyers from the d e partm e nt 's Office of Proresaional Responsibility de- livered its report to former Atty. Gen. Edward N. Levi shortly berore he left om ce Jan. 20. The department plans to make public a ".sanitized version" of the report, deleting names of In· form ers and other sensitive material, the sources said. But the public release has been delayed because department of. ricials want to avoid the ap. pearance of trying lo influence Froa Page A J HEIRESS ••• he called the "Joan Irvine Smith factor,·• a financial adjustment which reduces the value of Irvine Company 1hare1 by $1.50 eacb so .long aa Mn. Smith ls -connected with the compaqy. McCoy explained that the mark down was the result or dls· sension between Mrs. Smjth and the .Irvine Company board and the reluctance of investors to become involved In a company that la divided at man11ement Jevel. ..Don't you su1>1crtbe to lbe theory held by some bualnas ln· ·teresta that dlaaenslon with.In management ta not alwl)'I a n•f atf ve factor and a 1tron1 , .er tla ml1ht be Jud what· mana1ement needs?" Friedman aakedMetoy. "Ctrtalaly," McCoy 1aJd. "But we looked at the recorda ol thll dt1pute and two cardboard boxei fllled with eUpplna• about It before we deetded that thit was a .ne11tive factor." Prob'e Extendea W ASHINOTON CAP> -Tbe ffouae lluleia Committee ,_. the House of Representative! in its debate aboµt launching a lengthy and costly new invesliga. Uon of the murders or King and President John F. Kennedy. When the House completes its acUon, the department will re-lease its report. Last April. Levi ordered Michael Shaheen, head or the Of. rice of Professional Responslbili· ty. to tat«-charge of a review of all department records concern- ing the investigation or King's de· ath. He took the action after the de· partment's civil rights division finish ed a rive -mo nth pre· liminary review or FBI flies and said a mpre complete study was necessary. The series of department re· views was prompted by detailed disclosures by a Senate commit· tee or the FBJ's campaign of harassment against King in an erfort to discredit him and the civil rights movement. That campaign was carried out under the direct.Ion of J. Edgar Hoover. King was shot to death on a motel bllcony in Memphis In Ap_rll, 1968. Ray pleaded 1uilty to K1n1'a murder. But he told the court he did not acree with sutemenis by the proeecuUon and hia own at· torney that there was no con· aplracy ln the cue. Ray is servln1 a 99-year prison sentence ln Teonesaee. He bas un1ucceaafully 1ou1bt a new trial. ff',...P.,,eAI DINNER ••• meet1n1 .. lnformall•• and useful." Wilaon said be Wll aJad to leam mon about tbe dlltrict·and to meet t.b4I other candldatea. He added that be bad no "petloul qualmt" about the dlttrict PQ· tn1 for the dinner andtalcltMex· P•nH wa1 a ••verY. small. amount" tn comparllon tC) the vaat awm Of mon•y 1pent b1. tbt ICltool dlstrtct. ''The Nal quetUon we •hOl.ild be IOOldq at ii the major *"-Pe• dlbnw In tbe d.lltrf ct.•• WlllClft added. · Fred Gahm tald tbe m~ ... • loG.d Idea bet • "eott llfree. t1¥*,'' ~ .ttM·at.aft um. lnfOI~~ ~houri. ...,... 8biiia ~ ......... . day a~ to a two-JDonU. U· ten.ton ot a COiDl'l"UllOCW !ft. vatt1ation lDto Ute 'uataal.U· Uou of lobn JP. ~. and ••nm Imber ~fJr.i ~ a· tenalon. which muat bt approved br. tb• (WI Route, WU • COiia• promtH rudted by DemocraU.CJ • ltade.ra. bl•f•~t~ ............ bla tm .. ...., tJI bow IM~ tat ..._ 11e 11 au.Miu•, coe-· l....._.iDW~D.t. I ·. . ( signed to save the ruel could last until April. (Related photo. A4) The Senate approved a com- promise version of the emergen- cy natural gas . bill today and House passage was hoped for before President Carte r 's televl5ed appearance toni~ht1 The bill is not designed to in· crease natural gas supplies. but to give the President the power to shirt some gas from low-priority users -such a s industry -to high -priority users s uch as schools. homes. hospitals and _,mall businesses. Over thousands of miles of American countryside, the mis· ery of the harsh winter was evi· dent. But there were some hopeful si~. The first contingent or a 20- member Anny Engineers bat· talion from North Carolina and more than two dozen pieces or snow-fighting equipment arrived In Buffalo, N.Y., to help National Guardsmen clear the city after a blizzard that has cost the area an estimated $60 million. The National Weather Service predicted temperatures up to 30 today in Burralo, no significant snow and winds easing to 12· to 2_5·miles per hour. The sun broke * * * through the clouds there Tuesday· for the rlrst time since high winds, snow and cold struck Fri· day. Also for the first time since Friday, the entire length of the New York State Thruway was open to tramc. At one time, all but 45 miles of the highway was closed due to the storm. On the Chesapeake Bay and the Ohio River, fuel barges which wer e idled for up lo two weeks were moving again, but progress was slow due to ice. In West Virginia and Ken· tucky, more than 30,000 coal miners were orf the job. their mines shut down because of the. cold. Thousands of schools and fac· tories also were shut and about a dozen states had declared energy emerizencies. On Tuesday, North Carolina joined the ranks of states declar· ing such emergencies, and the auto indusLry alone llJlnounced that 80,000 workers in the United States and Canada would join some 1.5 million persons estimat· ed to be laid orf around the na- tion. In the auto i.ndustry, parts shortages were a factor as well as gas sborta~es. * * * Shadow Sighted Six More Weeks of Cold Seen? PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP> -Punxsuta wney Phil, the weather.forecasting groundhog, was lifted from rus burrow at s unrise today and h is in· terpreters said he forecast six more weeks or winter. Phil was taken from bis com- fortable museum cage to wind· swept Gobbler's Knob an hour before the annual ceremony and tucked into his liebted and heat- ed burrow. Charles M. Erhard, president of ttie Qroundhol Club, had a pref ared forecast after talkinl to PhJ in "groundhogese." Other members of the club had pre· pared signs ready for televiJJlon and newspaper cameras, which said "Bliuard, .. and "Six More Weeks of Winter ... Accordina to le1end, if Phil had not teen hit shadow, 1pring would have been Just around the comer.. Jt WM aeven de1reea with a wind ~hlll fact.or of 25 degrees below iero on the knob when Pbll made bis Pnd.lct.loo. Another wtll·known pro· anosttcat« bad p~ that Pbll would forecast more winter w•atber. u1•m '°"" to lay 2-1 odda that he'll tee hil shadow," Hid ocl· "I hope lt'a a gloomy day, .. said Erhard's wife, Nancy. "I'm ready for spring." The last time Phil predicted an early sprine was ln 1975, and ac- cording to the National Weather Service, "the nation ended February with well-above- normal temperatures in most areas." Though Phil is a well-known forecaster, there are skeeUcs who contend that be is sturted, that he ls carrted to the knob about an hour before the crowd arrives on Groundhog Day. that his real home is a comfortable $10,000 museum in thta western Pennsylvania town. Actually, there Is a stuffed version ol Phil, and there la a muawm, but a live ground.boa 1omehow does make lt to the bur· row on the knob at the same time each year. But no one !'eems to care what la feet and what ta fantuy. "The hoopla lt good f« the town, 1ood for our apltlt," said one Ioctl observer. •'What doe, it matt.er whether It'• fact or fic- tion? ''Wtth the tlnd of winter we're havln1. we need a t.lme lb smlle." damO. Jimmy tlM Gl'ffk ID a G ...11..:..t Ch )) d t•l•pbone lntervlew Tu.eaday 8DUD18 ~nge ==-~:: wben tbe t.m· NEW DEIJn. ladta· CAP> - Pbil'• ~an alWIJI Prime Mtnliter lndira "Gandhi rtot. 'nail la, yoq cu alw11W faced ~ 1tvereat cb.,U~e to ft.iid Mme~ at tomt t1aae. ber.ll·ye&N>ld rule today fQllow-· w!MN tbe1 lit:: " · lnf • nrvolt by ao1ne Jea4tna aa.•mbtrt ot Ml' Concnu.··PArt1 U Pldl M. bll lbadoW • be who '°"9d to "#Ork for bet cltfeat bU •"'7 ,..... except tlro 11.neoe m tbe Mu-cb parllamen\Uij elec- 1117, ~ lau U U... WW be ttona. One ot ber lonc·Ume ~ tb mor,;'"*8 ol ~-iU be portera, Food Mbiisttt Jaail•JO doeall'-. iJNi ia J~tt~ u.. Ra~r rea1'ned from tb• C:ablaet ~er. • • and UM par1.J , ... ': W ASIDNGTON (AP> -A 1roup of 20, lncludln• Medal of llo11or winners, six former jrlsoners of war and two eon- tressmen, filed suit in federal • eourt today challenging the Jlaeauty of President Carter's pardon fer draft evaders. . : The suit said the pardon is yague and ambipous, illegally 4elegates the Presldent•s con-~titut.iooal pardon authority to ~ Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell, offends ·the eqQI protection clauae OI the 14th Amendment and violates federal Jaws 1overnie1 citizensbip. President Cuter and Bell were named as defendants in the tuft. The suit was filed in u .s. Dis- trict Court by the Foundation of Law and Sodety. a Wasb1ngton- baaed, publi6interest law foun- dation. llemberi ot Coatl'ff• who JolDed lD tile ault. lfteluded Reps. • Geor .. HanHn (R·ldaho), and Larry llcDooa1d <.o:.Ga.). J Tile IUit WN iMticated by re- tired Air Force Col. Norlan Dau1htrey of Al~uquerque, N.M., representatlye ol the ex- POW movement. Medal of Honor winners who joined in the suit are Col. Lee Tboraneas of Siowt Falls, S.D.; Canadian Firm . : " .. . -. ~ ' DrPps IJ~Vine _Bid By TOM BARLEY Of .. DMI\' .-1 ... s~ "And then there were two." I That clearly audible comment 1'rom the rear of Judge James F. 1 efudge's courtroom Tuesday was I e>ne observer's immediate reac- tion to the announcement that the I Cadillac Fairview Corporation of Toronto is no longer interested in purchasing the James Irvine Foundation's controlling interest 1.ih the Irvine Company. The decision by the Canadians I ~ame as no surprise to the four J>arlies in the lawsuit, the two re- maining contenders or close ob- servers of the five-month Orange County Superior Court trial. Representatives of Cadillac Fairview m ade it clear last week that they were not prepared to again engage in open bidding procedures that were described by one Canadian official as "a tasteless Orange County version of the Persian market place.•• The decision to withdraw from lthe coot.est wu taken wben tt 111k•me clear tbia week ~t •'foundation trustees, who want to , iell tbftr interest to Mobil, are • llOt prepaired to endorse a •Jltem • .t sealed tiids. i' Cadillac Fairview at one time seemed almost certain to be the ,_., direc:ton of Irvine affairs ~ben the company posted what -a then a top bid of $288.2 illion for the foundation's 54.5 cmt stake in the Irvine Com- ' y. bubrary ~kThefts E·· Prove Costly By PlllUP &OSJIAAIN ... °""' ............ • The theft of La1una Beach 101b School libral7 boob coat tbe ICbool dlstrlct more than $17.700 over a two-year period leoded l9lft March. • • ~ tM ecbool board ap- JiiV+eit tbe purebaH of an elec- Voalo...,. cleted.ioo system that ts e~ to pay for Jtle!f, in unuot ~boot 10Sle9. lta ftnt,... of operation. ,.... SJltem ~ '8,500, wtth pa1mata apread onr three • ~-TM IDWt recent library · kittialili7 ihowed a year'1 loa of -=Mdat.,590. , A to school librarian Qarll • other 1ebool ens:: t:ftala ..... MCUJ'ity 1c•""'"'I "l.. report reductlou ta CIMC081'LY, Pap Al) Mly~StaN..._. ~ARr OF THE EQUATION Irvine Stockholder Sm"h Tbe off er was ffli~ed bY all CUb bids of $281.9 DlilliOn lrom HobU mad $282. T million from a consottium headed by Wall Street fmancier Cbar~s Allen and Detroit developer Allred Taubman. Cadillac Fairview indicated. early this year that they were preapared to go still higher but only if Judge Judge ordered a system of sealed bids. No such order has beentssued. Judge Judge is being asked to rule on the merits of a. lawsuit filed by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith who took legal ac- tion when the foundation decided to sell out to Mobil for $200 million. Foundation trustees are com- pelled by the provisions of the Federal Tax Reform 'Act of 1969 to dispose of their Irvine Com- pany interests by . .1983. Mn. Smith has argued that the $200 million Mobil was then pre- pared to pay for the 8,4lS shares of stock in the company fouMed by her grandfather was far below the true value of the shares. Mrs. Smith owns a 22 percent interest in the Irvine Company. She is on record as preferring a sale of the foundation's shares to the Allen-Taubman grou.p which has assured her that she can re- tain her minority inkrest if t,\leir bid is succeaafuJ. Tbe withdrawal of Cadillac Fairview from Ute lawsuit ap. pears to leave the way clear foe a confrontation between Mobil, backed by the foundation and the Irvine Company, and the Allen- Taubman interest, backed b7 Mrs. Smlt.ll. Mrs. Smltb's 1'7-year feud with other members of the Irvine Company board was discussed at (See llElaESS. Pa1e .\2) Sl•P Bapny· Sports Intimacy Suggeaied Sports fans ofteD '" atbletlc out. team members boost e•cb Laguna CO(lteall should l>e nm other•• aplrtti before tbe bil thesameway,besaid. came cir after a ~11 IOOCi 0 1t would establish a pel'IClllal olav wtUl a jo~ fteMUc l'\!latlonsbip, like 'Hi! I'm Bruce band·alQIPincexldblllon. Hoppm., I'm on the swimming Brace~, a candidate for team, l'mgladyou'rehere." the Lapna Beach ecbooJ ~· Hopping said fan·haad· lb1nU fans CIUlbt to be let in on • slapping wouldn't be necessary thefUIL in football, "because of the ~told lbe tchool bard 101ist1cal problems," but woulll ~ wlllcbed a St.utotd add a nice toueb .. ID the more iD- buUlball P.JD• 1n wtUell the tfmateaporta." playen ro to \be bleachers aDd The school board took no action alapped ~·hand 1t.retebid on the proposal. t ( Col. Van Barfoot of Ford, Va.; Tech. 51t. Ralph Nep~ of Iowa City, Iowa and Col. •Bud" Day of Eglin. Fta. The .Wt said Carter's order pardonin« draft evaders who fled the country is void because he lacks authority to restore full political riehts to persons who are not citizens of the United States and that the law says that a person wbo leaves the United States to avoid the draft loses his citizenship. "The executive order invades the legislative prerogatives by directing th& attorney general to discontinue investigations and prosecutions <>l violators ol the Military Selective Service Act," the suit charges. It asked the court to declare that Congress a1one bas the power to declare the manner of TEN CENTSi ' Xl : acqu.irinl, loslnt or reacqui.ring- citltenablp. James T. McKeMa, one ol the attorneys who filed the sUit. tald a news c~rence that the su.lt does not question the Presi- den\'s powers to er ant pardons. . But he said the suit challences the v alldlty ol the particular pro- clam atlon which Carter iBsuecl for the draft evaders. Solving Parking Pro1Jlena1 Nick· Pugay didn't feel like going to his San Diego office Tuesday, and now he wjshes he hadn't. "I'd just closed the door when she came drivin~ up over my car." he recalls. Co-worker Dorothy Jernigan said she hit the brakes as she pulled into her parking slot, but ''nothing happened ... Well, almo~t nothing. • Ea:Dwiew. ,Review Slated .. · · . A.veni()n TlwraJ>Y Critidam Prom,,11 Move By STEVE •ITCHELL °'',. o.11y "' ... st..i Reports of electric shock treat- ment and forc:ed restraint of re- tarded patients at Fairview State Hospital have prompted a review of tbe hospJtal 's a version therapy program. But F'airview's administrator, Dr. Michael Levine, said the aversion program, in which elec- tric shock ls used as a deterrent, j,S a life saver. State Health Dlrector Jerome Lackner inspected Pacific State K•pit.Jl in '.Ppmona Tuesday, and Ute health department ~ indicated it will reylew F~ew's profl'am in the near future. Falrvtnr -.nd P~cific are the. only two hospitals in the 1tate'1 11-facility mental opera- t.IOJl wbldJ use aversion therapy. Reports of the use of cattle pro- ds on patients came f()}Jowing a jeint ~ty health team viltt to the Pomona facltlty. Levine said the Costa Mesa hoepttal'1 averalve conditioning )»rosnm ii limited to a very small~ •cl called tbe pro- ject• sophisticated operation. .. It ii a well controlled project restrlcted to between eight and 12 kids here." he said in an in• terview today. Levine said the treatmenta are done ooly with the consent ol the patient·s parents and with the ap- proval of a Human Rights Com- mittee. "The project is a life saver,"' Levine said. ''There are, from time lo time, residents with v(fry self-abusive behavior (such as striking their heads on walls). Their whole Jife becomes rest:raintS and drugs because of their self-abuse," be explained. "And, what usually happens is. after a short period of time it no lQnger becomes necessary to ad- minister the treatment," be said. Levine 4ald the shock treat- ment disrupts the destructive behavior long enough for other behaviors to be taulht. Levine also denied that the avenion eonditioning involyes the use of caWe prods, say.ing th• -(See llEVIEW, Pa1e A!> . . Clemente Police OK 2-Year Pay Packet San Clemente police employes have voted to accept a tw~year w aae and benefit packa1e offered bythecity. Tbe·31-member San Clemente Peace Oflicers lncotporated ls the second employe group to ac· cept negotiated wage and fringe bene,it proposals. · San Clemente flremen agreed to a 14 P4'l'Cent pay raise spread over tw9 yean last week. Details ()I the police setUemeot were not •vailatite. J For Ca:mptti:p, i a I A2 DAILYPILOT L/SC NetDSe I Petitions Senior A .committee or parents will present the Capislrano Unlfied School District board with a peU· tion Monday. ulttna Lhat Caplltrano Valley mab School open next fall minu.a a senior class. Committee members have con· tacted parents of 140 San Clemente High School juniors who would be tran&(erred to the new hi&b school if trustees decide Capistrano Valley should open with erades nine through 12. A committee spokesman sald parents of 103 students contacted oppose havin& their younasters transferred toe their final year or bigb school. Only about a dozen parents said they would prefer to have children who are juniors this year complete high school at Capistrano Valley. "Parenti said the possibility or having their children transferred for their senior year came as a huge surprise," said Mary Ann Jacobs, a committee member. "They said they were told when these ,tludents started San Clemente 'High School three years ago that they would be al· lowed to finish there,'• she said. .. Parents have been driving as • f',.._PageAJ HEIRESS .•• length in court Tuesday during the questioning of invettment .counselor Bowen McCoy. Los Angeles attorney Howard Friedman. representing Mrs. Smith, grilled McCoy at length on what he described as de· rogatory statements made about Mrs. Smith by McCoy's employers, Morgan Stanley of NewYork. ' Friedman then asked McCoy to explain the significance of what he called the "Joan Irvine Smith factor," a financial adjustment which reduces the value of Irvine Company shares by $1.50 each so .long as Mrs. Smith is connected with the company. McCoy explained that the mark down was the result of dis· sension between Mrs. Smith and the Irvine Company board and the reluctance of investors to become involved in a company that is divided at mana«ement level. "Don't you su1>scnbe to the theory held by some business ln •terests that dissetBion within management is not always a negative factor and a strong crltlc might be just what management needs?" Friedman asked McCoy. "CertainJy," McCoy said. "But we looked at the records of this dispute and two cardboard boxes filled with clippings about it before we decided that this was a negative factor." Coast Panel Okays Dana Bluff House · Condjtional permission to build a $14.5,000 blufltop home over- looking the aea at Dana Point has been granted a builder by the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission. Fred Grant must first, however, submit a notarbed geolofist 's statement confirming bis plans conform lo commission requirements involving soil atability. The 17 ,580-square-foot re· sldence planned by Fred Grant and Sons wlll be at 24722 El Camino Capistrano and Includes a swimming pool and attached apa with fountain. Blueprinls ahow the stately re· aldence situated 25 feet from the edae ol the Daha Point bluffs, eommandlng a spectacular view. DAILY PILOT Status many as 40 miles round-trip every time their student wants to participate in an extracurricular activity. Sometimes they've bad to make this trip two or even three times a day. "Since Oley have been willing to make this sacrifice In order tbat their youngsters can participate fully in school ac· tiviliea they feel the school spirit which has been developed should be taken into conaideration." Supt. Jerome Thornaley re· commended to the board Jan. 17 that the new high schooJ open with grades nine through lZ. The district's Growth Planning Ad· visory Commission (GPAC) re· commended at the same meeting that the school open without a 12th grade class. Thomsley said be based his re· commendation on an evaluation made by Philip Grignon, assis· tant s uperintendent. Grignon said including seniors from the start would be "the most defensi· ble educationally and be fiscally sound." GPAC members said they based their recommendation, in part, on results of a survey among this year's juniors at San Clemente and Dana Hills High Schools. Eighty percent of the students polled said they wanted to stay where they are now. In response, Grignon said, "I believe it would not be prudent to open the school al less than its de- s a g n ed capacity to accom· modate the emotionalism ot a few teenage youngsters." San Clemente junior Jill Jacobs, who will be affected by the board's decision. said trying to i'nflueoce trustees and ad· ministrators has been a dis· illusionlng experience for stu· dents. "We learn in school how the American system of government w~rks," she said. "Then when we become involved we realize how much manipulation is going on." Laguna High Dance Ticket Fund Stolen Laguna Beach High School stu· dent dance concert receipts or $400 have been stolen from the of· fi ce or Principal Robert Hughes in the second burglary recently of a Laguna public school. Laguna Beach police said Mon· day that investagation showed the burglar let himself in the school building with a master key. Officers believe the key was stolen in a burglary at the school last year. Entry to the principal's office •s forced. The money, located in Hughes' desk drawer was taken after forcing open the desk. Apparently, the thief tried a number of keys before prying open the drawer. There are no plans to reim- burse the students for the loss, Ray Haggard. dean of students, said. Thur-.ton Intermediate school was burgled of about $1,200 in of- fice equipment and a pencil vending machine over tbe Jan. 22 weekend. I' ..... Page Al REVIEW ••• devices are less crude than those used on animals. "It's kind of a receiver at· tached to the arm and operated through remote control," Levine said. "So the kids are not touched with a cattle prod." , He said th.e hospital ls faced with recent court rulings saying that If a patient cannot be treat- ed. he must be released. "If we have a self-abusive client, and other programs do not wort on him. and we get the authority to use aversive condJ- tionlng to coM'ect his problem, then maybe we c~ help." ''But If we take away the aversive condltionlng, which dop worlt, then we are mandat· ectby recent court decisions to re· lease that patient. which doesn't help bim a b.it." Levine •aid. LB Reboil~ . Project OK'd CqncllUonal permission to de- moll•b an old !tame house tn L*1una Beach and erect a $160,000·kuare·foot two-story real eltat• office on lta Oleq· "•11'• Street '1ite bu been srant-eet by the Soutb Coast Rettonal Zone CloDlervation Commtwoc. Thomu ~co Real Etta.le may proceea with plant for the lot atlllO Glenn.,re St, but on- Jy after 1ubmllti~• a reviHd plan iboWtnC a 'aii.inf TaUo ~ OD• .,.ce to ttery ISO aquan feel of bu1Jdlna area. TIM' tiulldlna bu •;.SSC> 1quare feet Md Uillo bad plaruMd 1S parldnc 1pac.. tor cUJtomen arid 1wt. Swallows P,arad.e Readied President and Mrs. Carter have sent their regre~1 but the San Juan Capistrano riesta M• : aoctation has yet to hear wbetbel' : the Gerald Foi-da and the,. Richard NlxODB will attend ~ 4 year's Swallows Day Parade. No news ls good news say , members of the promoUon or·. ganlzation. 4 In the meantime, the associa, lion Ls gearing up for record. crowds of 50,000 or more for the r March 19 parade. This year the famou.s swallows of Capisll'ano • are expected to return to the mia· sion city on the same day a.s the parade, traditionally held on Saturday. CMll'JP1 ... M8",,..'9 RICH CHRISTENSEN CHECKS OUT LIBRARY BOOK FROM LIBRARIAN CHRIS REESKE Thia la the Right Way; If You Sneak One Out, You'll Get Buqed The all-equestrian parade o! 200 entries will proceed north on Camino Capistrano starting at 1 p.m .. through downtown Sal'( Juan, ending at Junipero Setta, said Toni Decker, publicity chairman. •• The 200 enlrie~ will Pll~· between 3,500 and 4,500 people in the line of march, she said. f',....Page ·AI SCHMIT ••• the so-called loans were in the · form of campaign material for which there was no accounting. "I really don't know what we received or bow much it was worth," Schmit said aa be dis· cussed bis 1974 campaign debt. He is the first Cella protege to disown obli1ations to the one- time county political kingmaker who was convicted of felony crimes in a federal court last year and sWl faces a felony trial in Orange CouJity. Cella was in court part of the day Tuesday and could not be re- ached for comment. Schmit first ran afoul of 1974 campaign disclosures when he reported substantial Cella loans from such theretofore unknown political entities as "BPMPAC." Later such committees were given titles like Bristol Park Medical Political Action Com. mittee. Last May, Schmit amended his return to show $10.000 paid to political consultant Wilham Butcher that bad not been re-ported. Simultaneously, a reported $100 contribution from lobbyist Frank Michalena was upped to $1.000 on the often amended cam- paign statement. The Garden Grove supervisor also had difficulty with a finan- cial disclosure statement filed when he took office. Omitted from the statement was almost $14,000 Schmit had earned while campaigning, earn- ings that came from a Cella con· trolled ho6pi~al.· Schmit also was forced to am end a conflict of interest stale· ment filed last year. The amendment came after it was disclosed the county supervisor had accepted gifts valued at more than $200 fro~ lobbyists and developers and then voted on issues in which the donon bad a financial interest. Schmit avoided a possible mis· demeanor conlllct by reassess- ing the value of the girts to bring them under $200. I . Ray Killing Of King Ruled . 'His Own Act' W ASHlNGTON CAP) -Arter a 10-month review, a team of Justice Department lawyers bas concluded that James Earl Ray acted alone in the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., department sources said today. The lawyers rejected theories that Ray was only a cog in a con· spiracy to assassinate the Nobel Prize-winning civil rights leader, the sources said. The team or lawyers from the department 's Office o f Professional Responsibility de· livered its report to former Atty. Gen. Edward N. Levi shortly before he left office Jan. 20. The department plans to make public a "sanitized version" or the report, deleting names of in· formers and other sensitive material. the sources said. But the public release has been d~layed because department of· ficials want to avoid the ap- pearance of trying to influence the House of Representatives in its debate about launching a lengthy and costly new investiga- tion of lhe murden of King and President John F. Kennedy. Jail Ordered For Burglar A Dana Point man who ad· mitted burgling homes in Laguna Niguel and Mission Viejo bas been sentenced to a total of 16 months in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge James H. Walsworth ordered the jail term and three years probation for Dennis Lee Cassady, 27, of 33582 Street of the Blue Lantern, after the defendanl pleaded gutJ. ty to two felony counts. Cassady was arrested by sheriff's officers July 2. He ad- mitted breaking into homes at 23882 Paseo de Campo, Laguna Nleuel, and 2S892 Jomon, Mission Viejo. For 2078 Viewing I..aguna Mementos Sealed in Capsule • ... a photograph of city When people 100 years from now wonder what people in 1976 were like, they'll. disinter a La1una Beach time capswe from a cemetery, open tt up and find Boxes Fall On Freeway; Cyclist Hurt· A 17-year-olcl motorc1cll1t who hit a number of boxes dropped fl'om a t.ruclt abead al him en San Die10 Frffway lo S.n Clemente 'l\taday "cal)ed Without •watent leftous ~Ul'J despite a lldd-over·beela lwn· ble •loac the pa•ernelit. BrMlley Youn.a of Su Dtero was nahed by fire department amb\llabce to San Cl•meote GeMl'll Holpltal for eme:retnc.7 ur•. Mremea Nported that Youn1 aaftered numerou1 abraalclm; but no broken bonel .. :Youna WU r.I~ to aillltary medJcal care. Tbe cyc:U1t told Caltronla Hipw_ay hU'OI Olfteen ~bf WU loutbbouad J111t IOUtll OI Camino l'Atrel1a wbft .....a boxes tell from ,. tnaok J111t a.bead ol blili. employes, dressed for Halloween. With any luck at alJ, they11 atlll be celebrattnc Halloween 100 years from now and recognize people didn't always dress that way. With aWl more luck, and a few more contrlbuUou from present· day ~. Art Colony pro- aeoy circa 2076 wlll reco,mze . there wu more to Laauna than may meet tbelr eyes. So far l. however. the city human anail'I department re· porb, the peculiar photograph is about all t.ber~ la to Pill into a time capsule -that and a m aa11lne that celebratea La1ullW at play, and a blcen· tenntal yeat pro1ram. The department\ ls 1ollcitine ldeu about what elle to hlclude ln tbe four-~lon1, elcht4nch• dlamettr \'UMl otnclal1 frankly admlt looU like a Slant bhae cold eapsut .. · Lut day to contribute arttdes ls Feb.21. • On the %7th, evaythtQC collect· ed will be teal4d iD the C8P1ule and buried with aPPl'f)Prlate fan· far' at 1 p.a;t., Wettmlnate.r Ill• orlll Part. 14801 B .. cb Blvd., Weatmlnster. lt •lll Join th• colledH inemorall&Ua qt ~ as Of-e ~ cttl•, each Of which bas • on ume capsule to be bUrted. at th• front eqtr1nc1 to the Hmtte"Y, Mxt to the n~e. FroraPageAJ COSTLY .•• los~es lls high as 90 percent, with an average 72 percent . The system works like the metal detectors airline passengers walk through. A toil strip is put into the bind· ing of every bQok. The strip is sensitiied to s~tJ olf a bell or buzzer at the exit door unless the book Is first handled at the checkout desk. Laguna Beacb Principal Robert Hughes said the system will be in use before the end ol the school year. Mrs. Reeske thinks it will be none too soon. The 2,000 books stolen in the last two-year census represents a 142 percent increase in theft compared to the two-year period that began in 1970. Beyond the financial savings. M..rs. Reeske said, are benefits of "ifoowing a book is there when you want it" and of no longer having lo hide certain books behind her desk because they miiht disappear otherwise. She said the mos t popular targets of theft have been fiction works. Books on religion arc most likely to maintain perma-nent berths, she said. Mrs . Reeske said if a student sets off the alarm while going out the door with a book not checked out, it will be presumed an acci· dent. "Everyone is assumed inno- cent until they prove themselves guilty." Square Dance Set In San Clemente Mick Sheahan will call for the Shipmat~s Square Dance group Saturday at the San Clemente Community Center, localed at Avetiida Del Mar and Calle Seville. Dancing will start at 7:15 p.m. and refreshments will be served, said Dorothy Whittaker, publici· ty director. Additional informa- tion is available by calling Mrs. Whittaker, '496-4543. Other events scheduled foe , fiesta week include: . -The crowning of Miss San t Juan on March 13. -A pet parade March 15, with . prizes going to the prettiest, ug-• liest, most unusual, best · groomed and most talented pets. belonging to children 6 to 12 years old. -The hairiest man of San Juan contest March 16; Miss San Juan and her court will select the · three leading contenders, with final judging scheduled tor March 19. . -Hoosegow Day on March 18, with a town sheriff arrestin~ anyone not in Western gilrb and locking them up in a roving jail. . -Swallows return on March · 19, with a children's pageant in · the old mission, the parade at l p. m . and a dinner dance at 7 p. m •. al the El Adobe Restaurant. l -The mission will have day· long ceremonies March 20, with . Masses at 7, 8 and 9 a.m. and at 6: 15 p.m., a crowning ceremony following the 9 a.m. Mass and a special program at 1 :30 p.m. Addittonal information on fiesta week activities is available. by calling Eleanor Darnold; 493-3133, days; or Toni Decker, 493-6029, evenings. Crimemohile Sets Visit to Mystic Park The mobile crime prevention unit will be present for a meeting of the ·Mystic Park Neighborhood Association at 7:30 tonight in the. multi-purpose room at Thurston Intermediate School. The unit, a 27-foot motorbome outfitted with displays of locks and alarms, is operated by the Laguna Beach and San Clemente Police Departments and by the Orange County Sheriff's Depart- ment. Police officers will be on hand to explain techniques of.burglary prevention. A business session with elec- tion of officers will precede the crime prevention program. Drlll1¥"" ........ PMIEIMNG 1111 FOR POSTERITY IN LAGUNA City'• Nancy Neteon, G 1 Liddle Contrlt>Ute .. ' Orange Coast EDITION • TOday' Closing ,Y. Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • N TEN CENTS ·. By TOM BARLEY oe .. oa11,1"11«statt •·And then °'ere 1Were two." That clearly audible comment from the rear of Judge James F. Judge's courtroom Tuesday was one observer'-s immediate reac· Uon to the announcement that the Cadlllac Fairview Corporation ot Toronto is no longer Interested in purchasing the James Irvine Foundation's controlling interest in the Irvine Company. Cutbacks 5lid East In Freeze By The Associated Preas Conservation measures ap- peared to be easing the drain on natural gas in the cold·plagued Midwest and East today, but there were warnings that the fac· tory closings and layoffs de· signed to save the fuel could last until April. <Related photo, A4) The Senate approved a com- promise version of the emergen- cy natural gas bill today and House passage was hoped for before President Carter's televised appearance tonight.· The bill is not designed to in· crease natural gas supplies, but to give the President the power to shift some gas from low-priority users -such as industry -to high-priority users such as schools, homes, hospitals and small businesses. Over thousands of miles of American countryside. the mis- ery of the harsh winter was evi- dent. But there were som e hopeful si~ps. The first contingent of a 20- member Army Engineers bat· talion from North Carolina and ftR>re than two dozen pieces of •now-fighting equipment arrived in Buffalo. N.Y .. to help National Guardsmen clear the city after a bliuard that bas cost the area an estimated S60 minion. l The National Weather Se{vice ~redicted temperatures up to 30 ~oday in Buffalo. no sienificant now and winds easing to 12-to miles per hour. The sun broke rough the clouds there Tuesday or the first time since high inds, snow and cold struck Fri- ay. A.1$0 for the rirst time since riday, the entire length of the ew York State Thruway was +pen to traffic. fr * * Gas-saving Tactics 'Eyed In Newport ;.-SACRAMENTO CAP) -GO•. Edmund Brow1l Jr. hu turned ' tb• tbermoatat down to SS •• ,.... in bis omce. and 1nt4mda lo k"P llttiere . • At )ealt that'• the Idea his IO ltaff members got Tuesday when y~_rk•r• Installed ablolds on tMl'IQCJlftata to prennt tamper· ~lt.boqh the beat WU tut~ IABrown'stulte, ttwillremain•t • la o&be:J' ltate buildint8 tor a h man da11, wd BrWn'• a· ~ .. ~.GrayDa.U. DaYlS •at4UM1cweraor'1 Mllte~ .. U be Ute teat area for a" ~~.udiL .. It.When the audit ta complete. of the P«aian mar~t place.•• The decision to withdraw from the contest wu taken when it The deeision by the Canadians came as no surprise to the four parties in the lawsuit, the two re· malning contenders or close ob- servers of the fiv~month Oran&e County Superior Court trial. Representatives ol Cadillac Fairview .,iade It clear last week that they were not prepared to again engage ·in open bidding procedures that were described by one Canadian official as "a tasteless Oranjte County version • beceme clear this week that foundation trustees, who want to sell their interest to Mobil, are not prepared to endorse a system of sealed bids. Cadillac Fairview at one time seemed almost certain to be the new directors of Irvine affairs wben the company posted what was then a top bid of $286.2 "" w1,....,.to JIM OLSTROM"'SHOVEl.S HIS WALK IN WATERTOWN, N.Y. Temperetures Rising -Slowly -In Frozen East Vets, 2 .Solom Hit PardOn of Evaders' WASHING TON CArP) -A croup ot 20, including Medal of Honor winners, six 'former prisoners or war and two con· gre11men. fil,d suit in federal court today challenging the legality of President Carter's pardon for draft evaders. The suit said the pardon is va1ue and ambiguous, Ulegall~ delegates the President'• con· stitutional pardon authority to Atty. Geo. Griffin Bell, offends the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment and vlolates federal laws governing ciUzenahip. President Carter arid Bell were named as defendants in the suit. The suit was flied in U.S. Dis· trict Court by the Foundation of Law and Society, a Wuhinston· baaed, ~lie-interest law foun· dati911-Members of Con1H11 who joined tn the suit included Reps. Geor1e Hansen (~Idaho>. and Larry McDonald (0.Ga.). The a.ult wu lnatigatAd by re· tlred Air Force Col. Nodan Dau1htrey of Albuqu,rque, N.K., representative of tbe ex· POW movement. Medal of Honor winners who joined in the suit are Col. Lee Thorsness of Sioux Falls. S.D.; Col. Van Barfoot of Ford, Va.; Tech. Sgt. Ralph Neppel of Iowa City, Iowa and Col. "Bud" Day of Eglin, Fla. ·Whetmore Recovering Former state Senator James Whetmore was reported In good• condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital where he is recovering from open heart sur· gery. The former Orantie County legi~lator underwent surgery Monday to replace a cardiac valve. A~pltaJ 1pokesma~1ald he fa beln1 cared for ln the hoapitaJ'a intensive care unit. Whetmore retired from t.he Legblature at the clote of the la.st aeulon and has been praeUc• ing law In Orance aloe• then. • Out ID Suit million for the foundation's S4.5 percent stake in the Irvi.ne Com· pany. The offer was eclipsed by all cash bids of $281.9 million from Mobil and $282.7 million from a consortium headed by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. Cadillac Fairview indicated early this year that they were preapared to. go still higher but only ii Jodee Judge ordered a system of sealed bids. No such order has been issued. Judge Judge is being asked to rule on the merits or a lawsuit flied by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith who took legal ac· tion when the foundation decided to sell out to Mobil for $200 million. Foundation trustees are com· pelted by the provisions Of the Federal Tax Reform Act or 19m to dispose of their Irvine Com· pany interests by 1983. Mrs. Smith ha, argued that the $200 million Mobil was then pre· pared to pay for the 8,415 shares of stock in the company founded by her grandfatMr was far below the true value of the shares. Mrs. Smith owns a 22 percent inter~t in the Irvine Company. She is on record as preferring a · sale of the fou,ndation 's shares to <See HEIRESS, Page AZ) Election ConflictS Delay.on Parks? By MICHAEL PASKEVICH OI IM Dally ,.llol 5ul! Newport Beach Parks Beaches and Recreation commissioners want city officials to delay con- sideration of a parkland in- itiative until April because they believe it may conflict with an upcoming park bond election. During Tuesday night's meet· ing, commissioners decided to ask city councilmen to hold off action on a petition s ubmitted by Dr. Gene Atherton. His proposed Fairview Treat01ent Reviewed By STEVE MITCHELL Ol 1 .. Dally ,.,._.St.II Rej)Orts of electric shock treat· ment and forced restraint ol re· lard~ patif:nts at FaJrview ~ate Aospital have prompted a review of the OO.,ttal'• a.venica.tMrapy program. But Fairview's administrator, Dr. Michael Levine. said the aversion program, in which elec· tric shock is used as a deterrent. is a life saver. State Health Director Jerome Lackner inspected Pacific State Hospital in Pomona Tuesday, and .the health department has indicated It will review Fairview's program in the near future. Fairview and Pacifi c are the only two hospitals in the state's ll·facility mental opera- tion which use aversion ther'apy. Reports of the use of cattle pro- ds on patients came following a joint state-county health team visit to the Pomona facility. Levine said the Costa Mesa hospital's aversive conditioning program is limited to a very small group, a"d called the pro· ject a sophisticated operation. · "It Is a well controlled project restricted to between eight and 12 kids here," he. said in an in· tervlew today. • Levine said the treatments are done Oftly with the consent or the l>&tient's parents and wilt\ the ap- proval or a Human Rights Com· mittee. "The project is a life saver," Levine said. ''There are, from time to time, re"idents with very self-abusive behavior Csucb as striking their heads on walls). Their whole life becomes restrlinta and dNgs'because or their 1ell-1buse," he explained. "And, what usually happeM is, after a short period of time lt no tonier becomes necessary to .ad· min later the tteatqlent." huald. Levtn. aaJd the shock treat· ment disrupts the destructive behavior long enou1b for other behaviors to be taught. Levine allO dented that the aver1lon c..'OMlUonlnt Involve& the uae ol cattle pt"ods, saytn1 the · <See llEVIEW, Pace AZ> ballot measure calls for residen- tial developers to dedicate more land to the city for parks. Parks Director Cal Stewart said today commissioners fear the issue would be confused with a $7.1 million park bond election slatedforMarch8. IC voters approve the park bond. the city wm acquire 150 acres of open space Crom nine sites and improve s ix existing parks. Third Revise Al&Jerton's petition calls for an increase in the park dedication standard from the current two acres per 1,000 population to five acres per 1,000 people. He submitted the proposed ballot measure to city councilmen who decided to put off a decision until the PB&R com10ission studied the matter. The city council is expected to take ~ction on the commission's recommendation Feb. 14. Schmit Wipes Out Debts Owed Cella By GARY GRANVILLE OltN Dally,.,._. Stiff Oran1e County Supervisor Laurence Schmit a mended his 1974 campaign disclosure state!"" ment Tuesday to wipe out $119 197 in debts owed to Dr. LQuls Cel~ or fictitious cam- palgp committees controUed by Cella. It was the third time Schmit a mended the statement that at one point showed he spent $171,810 -$141,539 of it Cella con· , nected money ..-to defeat lncum· bent David Baker. Dally f'llM Stllft ~· CUTS CELLA DEBT$ luperv16' Sc""'" A/Jaway Trial Schedliled'f or Orange County This Ume, Schmit reclassified $119,197 in loans from Cella and his committees to donations. In part, that statement ap· parently reflects the fact that neither Schmit nor his campaign committee officials signed notes covering the alleged loans. But in an interview last week. Schmit pointed out that most of the so-called loans were in the form of campaign material for which there was no accounting. "I really don't know what we received or how much It was worth," Schmit said as he dis· cussed bis 1974 campaign debt. He is the first Cella protege to disown obligations to the orie· time county political kingmaker who was convicted or felony crimes in a federal court last year and still faces a felony trial in Oranae County. Cella was in court part of the day Tuesday and could not be re- ached for comment. Schmit first ran afoul ot 197t campaien disclosure$ when lie reported substantial Cella loans from such theretofote unknown potlticalentiUes as "BPMPAC." IJater such committees were 1iven titles like Bristol Park (See 8CIDUT, Page Al) Coast Weather PatcbY foe or low clouds lat• tonicbt and euly Tbund_, mornin&. Lows tonl1ht 47 to 52. Hilb• Thunday tn mid 80s. il DAILY PllOt N w.d~ey. Feb. uary 2. 1977 eity .&as S~le Ey.ea Energy <£runch Prlshes Project By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI Ille DMlf l'li.t ltatt Newport Beach city officlaJ• and representative• of CalTrans • are setting up a system to sell the natural gas Jylni under stat.e- owned land in West Newport. City MID8fer Robert W)'fln said today plan1 are betni rushed, ln part because of s hortages that prompted the state Public Utilities Com- mission to restrict use ot natural gas in Califomla. He said he bas received a verbal agreement from state right-of-way agent Harry Kagan for the city and state to share cott ~ COGa&.nacUD& an $11.000 central coUect.lon system ror the live wella tappln1 lb~ natural 1as pool below the property on West Cout Highway. The collection system is just the first step, Wynn said. Even- tually a pump and plpeUne would be buill ao the gas can be sold to a neigbboringoil company. The gas would be sold at about 45 cents per thou.sand cubic feet. A consultant has estimated that it could take as litUe as two years for the project to pay for itself, if the cu.volume bolds steady. Wynn said that the responsibility for ~e sale of the Mangers Repayment Attempt Rejected Fullerton attorney Michael Remington said today he turned down a $5,000 cashier's check from Assemblyman Dennis Mangers (D-Huntingto.n Beach) because a receipt drawn in favor of Mangers· Ca.JDpaign commit· Bal,/,ooni,st 'Grounded' YUMA, Ariz. (AP) - Karl Thomas, trying to float across the country in 14 days under his hot air balloon, landed unexpec- tedly today in the foothills some 14 miles east of this Colorado River city. Members of his ground crew said Thomas landed the giant balloon an ::i re· mote area, and that they were trying to reach him. They said they knew of no roads into the area. Yuma is about 60 miles south of Blythe. Calif., where Thomas lifted off at 4 a. m. en route to Phoenix. tee was included in the"t>ackage. "And Mangers' campaign committee doesn't owe me any money. He does," Remington said. The rejected check was the latest twist in a Mangers· Remington dispute over a J.5,000 loan. The assemblyman says a $5,000 non·interest-bearing loan from Remington is the rightful obligation of bis campaign com- mittee. But the attorney says it was a personal loan he made to Mangers last Oct. 22 and has copies of a note signed by Mangers as well as a check paya- ble to him personally to back his argument. Now, Remington wants his $5,000 and Mangers has bor· rowed $5,000 from Assemblyman Howard Berma n (D·Beverly Hills) to repay the loan. Remihgton sent Mangers a let- ter today asking him to "repay the loan in the same manner it was obtained ... Tongue in cheek. he also cau· tioned the fres hman as · semblyman against repaying a personal debt with campaign funds. Lawyers' Finding Ray 'Acted Alone' In Slaying King WASHJNGTON (AP> -After a' 10-m ooth review. a team of Justice Department lawyers has concluded that James Earl Ray acted alone in the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr .• department sources said today. The lawyers rejected theories that Ray was only a cog in a con- spiracy to assassinate the Nobel Prize-winning civil rights leader, the sources said. The team ol lawyers from the department's Office of Professional Responsibility de- linred ita report to former Atty. Gen. Edward N. Le\'I sborUy before he left office Jan. 20. The department plans to make public a "sanitized version" or the report, deleting names ol in· formers and other sen'\itive rnateriaJ, the sources said. But the public release has been delayed because department of- ficials want to avoid the ap- pearance of tryl.n1 to inlluence the Home of Repreaentalives in its debate about launchinc a lengthy aod costly new investJga- tion of the murders of Kine and President John F. Kennedy. When the House completes its action, the department will re- lease lt.s report. Last April, Levi ordered Mlcbael Shaheen, head ot the Of. fice of Professional Reaponaibill· ty, to take charge of a review ~ all department records concern- ORANGECOASt • DAILY PILOT ing the investigation of King's de· ath. He took the action after the de- partment's civil rights division finished a five .month pre- liminary review or FBI riles and said a more complete study was necessary. The series of department re· views was prompted by detailed disclosures by a Senate commit- tee of the FBl's campaign of harassment against King in an errort to discredit him and the civil rights movement. That campaign was carried out '"1der the direcUonof J. Edgar Hoover. King was shot to death on a motel balcony in Memphis in April, 1968. Ray pleaded guilty to King's murder. But he told the court he did not aeree with statement. by the prosecution and his own at- torney that there was no con- s piracy in the case. Ray ls serving a 99-year prison sentence in Tennessee. He has unauccuafully sought a new trlat. Probe Extended WASHINGTON (AP) -The House Rules Committee Tues- day agreed' to a two-month ex· tension of a congressional ln- vesti1atton into the assassina-tions of John F. Kennedy and Martln Luther King Jr. The ex- tension, which mµst be approved. by tbe full House, was a com- promise reached by Democratic leaders. 1a• lt not really &be aim of tbe project. "We got into this to abate a public nuisance," he said. "Our charter specifically probibit.s the city from engaging in the drilllng for oU for production.•' He sald that preliminary re- port.a indicate that the problem.a with noxious odors that have plagued west Newport residents have diminished considerably since the wells were dug. "Our eoaJ is to get this problem resolved," Wynn added, "but I do think lt'a wuteful to burn ofl this 1as." Fjve wells were dug last sum- mer under lhe direction of eeologist George Zebal who was hired by the city and the state. Zebal has been unable to estimate the amount or gas in the reservoir and last month recom· m ended the collection of the gas by vacuum. so that the volume brought out of the wells can be measured. If there ls no drop in volume over a JO.day period, he said, it is likely there is enough gas in the reservoir to pay for the cost of pumping it to the neighborlng oil company for sale. Since the wells were dug, the gas has been allowed to escape under its own pressure. ll is burned off by a tiki torch-like de- vice 1ocated over eacn wen. The cost ol the pipeline and pump needed to get the gas to the neighboring property of the General Crude Oil Company is estimated at $70.000. Wynn said state officials are unwilling lo commit the state lo sharing the cost of the pipeline until they see the volume reports. The city manager conceded that because the state. as proper- ty owner, controls the mineral rights, it could move in and take over the entire operation. Death of NB Man Suicide Coroner's investigators have tentatively listed as suicide the death of a West Newport Beach man whose body was found in his 36th Street apartment Monday afternoon. Ofricers said George Ronald McClellan, 29, of 304 36th St. ap- parently shot himself by prop- ping a rifle up against his chin and pulling the trigger. Friends told investigators McClellan was despondent over the recent breakup or his mar· riage. Teens Admit NB Burglaries Newport Beach police said to· day three teenagers taken into custody Monday have admitted committing 11 burglaries in the NewPOrt Crest condominiums. The boys, ages 13, 14 and 15., were arrested Monday afternoon following the theft of a purse. They were released to their parents pending juvenile court action. Kids Compete In Basketball The Optimist Club's Tri-Star basketball contest, open to all boys and glrls 8 to 13 years old, wlll be held Saturday al the Up- per, Bay Branch of the Boys' Club. The contest, sponsored by the Costa Mesa Optimist Club ia a test of passing, shooting and drib- bling skUls. Contestants will com· pete agalnst othen in their age ' group. TrophJes wUJ be awarded to Ute winners. The compeUUon is tree. For further Information about the basketball contest, which will . run from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. satur· day, call Harlan Andenen or Cbria Kwasney at 6'2-8372. ............. .........__ "'*'""' ..... ~ Newport Seeks Aid For City Committees Vi(t .... i.tfll--11~ ,_......,. ..... ..._ .. ..... .......... , .. . cai..1t.L-6 ..... II. .. ~91'114 MIMll<ol ..... Newport Beach city coun- cilmen are looking for city ral· dentl wbo want to serve on the clty't lldvisor)' commltues. Coundlmen are tlatecl to mile a total of 55 appointments to their alx •dVi.lorl' committees a\ tbe1r Feb. l5meeti.n1. Some of tbotCI ~itlOftit wUl be filled by' reappoUattni the com· "mlttee members whose terms · have expired, but lilt w"t coua· cilmen stressed that tMy would like to set u many M~ faces on their committees u pouible. The cotnmlttees are BicYcle ,Trail•• Community Develop- ment, Environmental Quality Control, LltteT Control and Transportation Plan. Membenof tb committees are appointed to one· year letmt. Members of the Tei:hnlcal OU committee 11rve 1lour.year tumt. AppllcaUon forms are ••allv. ble ln the omc. of t.be Cit)' aet Dorta Oeoqe. 8be a.a.Id abe woUJd Uh to have tbe appllcatlclinl by th• tJme t.be nm 8'1Dd• Iii .... oul•l'M.10. Solving Parking Pro•letn? Nick Pugay didn't feel like going to his San Diego office Tuesday, and now he wishes he hadn't. "I'd just closed the door when she came driving up over my car," he recalls. Co-worker Dorothy Jernigan said she hit the brakes as she pulled into her parking slot, but "nothing happened." Well, almost nothing. Host,s. Sought For Newport Foreign Teem Families in the Newport Harbor area are needed to house a foreign student participating in a one month cultural exchange pro- gram this summer sponsored by the British European Centre. Host families are needed for college age students from France, Spain, Italy and Germany during the two sessions in July and August. The students wlll attend morn-ing lecture classes al a local com- m unity center and visit points of interest in the afternoon. In exchange for providing room, board and transportation children or the host families between the ages of 16 and 30 will be eligible to participate in a low cost reciprocal program to England this summer. For further information call Kathleen Les at 673-2527 or Jolyn w ayne at675·S135. E'rot11 Page AJ SCHMIT ••• Medical Political Action Com-mittee. Last May, Schmit amended bis return to show $10,000 paid to political consultant William Butcher that bad not been re- ported. Simultaneously, a reported $100 contribution from lobbyist Frank Michalena was upped to $1,000 on the often amended cam-paign statement. The Garden Grove supervisor also had difficulty with a finan· cial disclosure statement filed when he took office. Omitted from the statement was almost $14,000 Schmit had earned while campaigning, earn· ings that came from a Cella con· trolled hospital. Schmit also was forced to amend a conflict of interest state- ment filed last year. The amendment came after it was disclosed the county supervisor had accepted gifts. valued at more than $200 from lobbyists and developers and then voted on issues in which the donors had a financial interest. Schmit avoided a possible mis· demeanor conflict by reassess- ing the value of the gifts to bring them under $200. Joint Session On Mariner's Mile Planned Members of the Newport Heiebta and Cliff Haven homeownert a11octatlons wlll hold a Joint meetlnf Thursday to bear a report on the Mariner's Mile specific area plan. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the library at. Ensip Middle Scbool. The plan, to be discuss~ this month by the Newpart Beach Planm.n, ComraJuton, wW be explained to boineownera by ,1ty atatt memben Bill DarneU, Tim Cow~ and~ TaJ.arlco. .. A 1pokesman tor tho usocla· ttoaa 1ald ooe of the troup'a prJruary conc~rna 1!!?• effect of intreued density traffJc tn the bUlineu area on tho retid.en· tial ne!Oborboodf. , ... Bias Suit Filed SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A u .2 mWlciG damace 1u1t Mb' a tederil court to tad "Mlactive and dliCrta1tnatory tnlore.mmt of 1tate laws Md munJclpel or-. dlnanc.1 ai.atui bl.lcb .. 'by &be Eurm Police Df P&rtmnt. • Shadow Sightecl Six ~ore Weeks of Cold Seen?· PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. CAP) -Punxsutawney Phil, the weather.forecasting grouodhoi, '"s lifted from his burrow at sunrise today and his in- terpreters said he forecast six more weeks o(.)¥inter. Phil was taien from his com- fortable museum cage to wind- swept Gobbler's Knob an hour before the annual ceremony and tucked into bis lighted and heat- ed burrow. Charles M. Erhard, president of the Groundhog Club, had a prepared forecast after talking to Phil in "groundbogese." Other members of the club had pre- pared signs ready for television and newspaper cameras. which said "Blizzard," and "Six More Weeks of Winter." l\ccording to legend. if Phil had not seen his shadow, spring would have been just around the corner.. It was seven degrees with a wind chill factor of 25 degrees below zero on the knob when Phil made bis prediction. Another well -known pro- gnosticator had predicted that Phil would forecast more winter weather. 'Tm going to lay 2-1 odds that he'll see his shadow," said od- dsmaker Jimmy the Greek in a telephone interview Tuesday from Las Vegas, where the tem- perature was 55. Phil's predictions are always right. That is. you can always find some place, at some time, where they fit. If Phil sees bis shadow as he has every year except two since 1887, legend has it there will be six more weeks of winter. Jf he doesn't, spring is just around the corner. "I hope it's a tloomy day," said Erhard's wife, Nancy. "I'm ready for sprin~." The last lime-Phil predicted an early spring was in 1975, and ac- cording to the National Weather Service, "the nation ended February with well-above- normal temperatures in most areas." Though Phil is a well-known forecaster, there are skeptics who contend that he is stuffed,· that he is carried to the knob: about an hour before the crowd arrives on Groundhog Day, that his real home is a comfortable Sl0,000 museum in this western. Pennsylvania town. Actually, there is a stuffed. version of Phil, and there is a museum, but a live groundhog somehow does make it to the bur- row on the knob at the same time each year. But no one seems to care what is fact and what is fantasy. ''The hoopla is good for the · town. good for our spirit,'' said one local observer. "What does it matter whether it's fact or fie· tion? "With the kind of winter we're h::iving, we need a lime to smile." Fro•PageAJ REVIEW •.. Clev1ces are less crude than those used on animals. "It's kind of a receiver at- tached to the arm and operated through remote control," Levine said. "So the kids are not touched with a catUe prod." He .said the hospital is faced with recent court rulings saying that if a patient cannot be treat- ed, he must be released. "If we have a self-abusive client. and other programs do not . work on him, and we get the authority to use aversive condi- tioning lo correct his problem. then maybe we can help." "But if we take away the aversive conditioning. which does work, then we are mandat· ed by recent court decisions to re- lease that patient. which doesn't help him a bit," Levine said. "This program is far better ~han having patients spend their entire lives on restraints and drugs." Frot11PageAI HEIRESS FEUD CITED. • • the Allen.Taubman group which has assured her that she can re· lain her minority interest lt thelr bid ls successful. The withdrawal of Cadillac· Fairview from the lawsuit ap- pears to leave the way clear for a confrontation between Mobil, backed by the foundation and the Irvine Compllny, and the Allen· Taubman mterest, backed by Mrs.SmJth. Mn. Smit.h's 17-year feud with other members of the Irvine Company board was discussed at ~ngtb in court Tuesday during the questionine of investment' counselcr Bowen McCoy. · Loi Angeles attorney Howard Fr1edm!__1?:. representing Mrs. Smith, griued McCoy at length on what be described as de- roaator.r Ntelllents made about Mrs. Smith by McCoy's employen, Moraan Stanley of NewYofk . l'rledman then asked McCoy to explain the aiat!canco of what . he called the ·•Joan lrvll)e Smith 'factor.'' • flnanclaJ •clJuatment wblch redue.t the vaJue ol INine Compan,)' abares by $1.SO each ao Jo:na u Mrs. Snt.lth ta connected with t.IM~Pant • McC07 uplaln.d that the mark down was the result ol dll~ ·nntion bel'INCl Mn. Smith and tbe Irvble Compall)' board. and lb• reluetanco of lnvettora to become involved ln a company that~ ii divtded at manacemeai level. : "l>oQ't 10'1 IU!Jleiibe to tbe tbeoey beld by aomc b~ en- Delly .............. PART OF THE EQUATION Irvine Stookholder &mnh . terestl tbat dluenston wtthln rnana1ement ts not elwaya a ne11tlv. factor and a 1tron1, crlttc might be Ju1t what· m anqement neecla?" Friedman asked MCCoy. "Catalnly,., McCoy said. .. But we looked at the recoi'd.I of Udl dlspute IDd two cardboard boxes • ·filled with cUpplo1a about it ' before wed l~ that Ulll •u a 1ne,aUve factor." • ayroMBAaLEY .r:• Ot•o.HyPl•l&lllf : ,. ; ••And theft there were two.·· :"•~bat clearly audible comment : .from the r6ar ol Judge James F. .Judae'a courtroom Tueiday w¥ one observer'• immedtate reac- : tlon to the announcement that the : Cadillac Fairview CorporaUon ; Of Totu1to ii no lon.eer interested ! in purchasing the James Irvine • Foundation's controlling interest · • in the Irvine Company. • Tbe dedslon by the Canadians of the Penlan rnarht Place ... came u no surprise to the four Tbe decision to withdraw from partlee in the lawsuit, the two re· the contest wq taken when lt mainille conlenden or close ob-•'became clear tbia ~eek that ~erverw of the five-month Oranee foundation trua~. who want to CountySuperioc Court trial. sell their interest lO Mobil, are Representatives of CadJUac not prepared to endorse a system Fairview made it clear Jut week of sealed bids. • that they were not prepared to Cadillac Fairview at one time again engage in open biddini seemed ilmost certain to be the procedures th't were descri~ new diredors of ltvin• affairs by one Canadian officlal as "a ·wren the company pos~ w1'1&t tasteless Oran«e County version was then a top bid of $ZM.2 Dlllly ,.._ .._. llf I.ff ~•YM . Frothg Frenzg in El Toro , ~·The exact Jcore was in ~spute...afte th Here Bill Wodell defends the itttden,f. goal )* innertube water polo game between the 'as nurseryman Bud Burquist, apparently students and the faculty at El Toro High's a ringer slipped in by th41 facvlty, gets . new pool Tuesday but spectators agreed club~ on the head a::; he atte"lpts to ·that the student:J won by a wicje margin. sink one. 1 cho_ol Hopefuls Back~d CSEA. Vnit Endones Cantlidates for SV Board The'Saddleback Valley chapter J9f' the California School Employes "5sociatioo <CSEA> has elldorsed · Od prOmised to support Juneann l>ecaaas and William Kelly for 61ection to the Saddlebact Valley Qaified School District Board of ~du cation. .:;.This is the first time the as· focialion., which represents the district's 600 clerical, main· teoance, transportation and food er~lce employes, bas endorsed -atbool board candidates. • ; Sharon Grimes, chapter J)l"t'Si- 4ient. said members felt there was .»o need to become politically in· VOlvecl in previous years. But with the advent of collective bartaining,shesaldmembersde- ~<Jed they need aomeotle on the ~who supports the concept of ~otiating with employes . . ; ,.She said CSEA will live• $100 d>}itlcal aont.ributioo and cam-.valsn belp to both candidates. ln ~dltlon, she sald, the chapter wW aeek sup~rt for lbe can- dldates from a state political OT· ~1ation. -!...~ccOfdinc to a CSEA pte:U re--· .. Coa i lease, Mrs. Decasas was once a m·ember and is ''s trongly in favor'' of CSEA and collective bargaining. :> Mrs. DeCasas, a perceptual· motor development s pecialist wbo previously worked at Valen· cia Elementary School. also has been endorsed by the teachers· union, the Saddleback Valley Educators Association. The CSEA pTess release said that keJlY toid members he high~ respects all classified employe"J and supports them with an open mind. He is associate dean of stu· dent affairs at Saddleback College. CSEA is supporti~ the two "for their honesty and full support of the classified employe," accord- ing to the release. All 14 candidates in the race had been invited to talk and answer questions during a genera) meet· ingofCSEA. Members latervoted on their choice for endorsement. There are two trustee seats available in the March Selection. Lawgers' Finding ~y 'Acted Alone' _ID Slaying King · Michael Shaheen. head of the Of- fice.of Proteulooal Responsibili- ty, to take charee of a review ~ all d~ent record• concern· ing tbe lnvestlaatlon of King's de· atb. He took tbe .ction alter the de- partment •a clril iichta di~ flnbhe~(ar nve·montla pN- Uminar1·nvlew ol FBI Ill .. Ud said a ~ Cftnplite madY. wu CllltaAl',P .. eAl) 1;11Dllon fOf' the foupdatloA's 54.5 percent at.ake in tbe lrvine Com- i>any. Tbe olfe.11 w.as ,ec~ipsed b)' all caab bJds c4 flal,9 million from Mo•n and ~T million trom a cobsorUum he.Ped by Wall Street fioancier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Allred Taubman. ca~utac Fair.view indlcated early this year that they were p.reapared to go still higher but only lf Judge Judge ordered a system of sealed bids. No such order has been issued. Judee ~le is being asked to rule on the merit.a of a lawsuit flied by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith who took legal ac· tion wbeo the foundation d~ided to sell out to Mobil for $200 million. Foµndation trustees are com· peUed by the provlsions of the Federal Tax Reforr:r\ Act of 1969 to diapo1e of tbelr Irvine Com- pan1 interesta by t91t3. Mn. Smith hp argued that the $200 mWlon MobU was then PMJ- pared to pay for tbe 8,415 shares of atoek in the company founded by bu p-andfather was far below the true value ot the shares. Mrs. Smith owns a 22 percent interest in the Irvine Company. She is on recol'd as preferring a sale of the foundation's shares to <See HEIRESS. Pace AJ) ·Pardon Furor .f Meda.I Winners, POWs Protest ,WASHINGTON (AP > -A eroup ot a«>, including Medal or Honor winners, six former prisoners of war and two con· gressmen, filed suit in federal court today challenging the legality of President Carter's pardon for drafl evaders. The suit said the pardon is vag~ and ambiguous, illegally delegates the Presideqt 's con- stitutional pardon authority to Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell, offends the equal pTotection cla~e of the 14th Amendment and violates federal laws gove rning citizenship. President Carter and Bell were named as defendants in the suit. The suil was filed in U.S. Dis- tnct Court by the Foundation of Law and Society, a Washington- based. public·interest law foun- dation. M-embers of Congress who joined in the suit incl\lded Reps. George Hansen <R·tdaho), and Larry McDonald CD·Ga. ). The suit was instigated by re- tired Air Force Col. Norlan Daughtrey of Albuquerque. N.M ., representative of the ex· POW movement. Medal of Honor winners who Ca111pai9n"'Funding Schmit Erases By ~.utY GRANVILLE OI ,._ O.l!y J'llee SUlft Orange Coul\ty Supervisor Laurence Schmit amended his 1974 campaign disclosure state· ment Tueisday to wipe out SW,197 br debts owed to Dr. Louf.J Cella Ol' fictitious cam· paiggnmittees controlled by Cella. I\ th• thlrd time Schmit amen the statement that at Schmit first ran afoul of 1974 campaign disclosures wh~n )le · reported substantial Cella loans from such theretofore unknown political entities as "BPMPAC." Later such committees were given titles 1Jke Brisfol Park Medical Politlcal Action Com- mittee. ,.._~st May, Schmit amended,bis return lo show $10,000 pata to joined in the suit are Col. Lee Thorsness of Sioux Falls, S.D.; Col. Van Barfoot of Ford, Va.; Tech. Sgt. Ralph Neppel of Iowa City, Iowa and Col. "Bud" Day of Eglin, Fla. The suit said Carter's order pardoning draft evaders who fled the country is void because be lacks authority to restore full political rights to persons who are not citizens of the United States and that the law says that a person who leaves tbe United States to avoid the draft loses his citizenship. (See PARDONS, Page A2) Debts political consultant William Butcher that had not been re- ported. Simultaneously, p. reported $100 contribution fr6m lobbyist Frank Micbalena was upped to $1,000 on the often amended caa. paign statement. Tb~ Garden Grove supervisor also bad dilflculty with a finan.- (See stJIMIT, Page AZ) ' one point showed be spent $171,810 -$141,539 o( it Cella con· nected money ~ to defeat incum· bent David Baker. Fairview to Conduct This tim'1 Schmtt reclassified $119,197 in loans from Cella and his committe~ to donaijons . . In part, that statement ap· parently reflects the fact that n'ither Schmit nor his campaign cOmD'Httee officials signed notes covering the alleged loans. But lh an intt;rview last week, Schmit pointed out that most of the so-called loans were irt the form of campaign matert~I for which there was no accounting. ''I really dol\'t know what we received or how much it was worth.'' Schmit said as t\ct dis- cussed his 19'74 campaign debt. He ts the first Cella protege to disown obligations to the one· time county political kingmaker wh~ was convicted of (elony crimes in a federal court last tear and still faces a felony trial in Orange County. Cella was in court part ot the day Tuesday and could not be re· ached for comment. Treatment Review By STEVE MITCHELL Of I._ Dally Piiot Stall Reports of electric shock treat- ment and forced restraint of re- tarded patients at Fairview State Hospital have prompted a review of the hospital's a't'.er$1on therapy program. But Fairview's administrator, Dr. Michael Levine, said the aversion program, In which elec· tric shock is used as a deterrent, is a life saver. State Health Director Jerome Lackner Inspected Pacific State Hospital in Pomona Tuesday, and the health department bas indicated it will review Fairview's program in the near future. Fairview and Pacific are the only two hospitals in the state's ll·facility mental opera· tion which use aversion therapy. Reports of the use of cattle pro- ds on patienta came following a joint state.county health team visit to the Pomona facility. Levine said the Costa Mesa hospital's aversive conditioning program is limited tQ a very small group, and called the pro- ject a sopbiatlcated operation. "It is a well controlled projeet restricted lo between eight and 12 kids here," he said in an in· terview today. Levine said the treatments are don~ only with the consent of the patient's parents and with the ap- proval of a Human Rights Com- mittee. "Tbe project is a life saver,'• (See REVIEW, Pase Al) OellY ...... " ...... PART OF TH£ EQUATION lrvlne Stockholder Smith From Page Al HEIRESS .•. the Allen-Taubman group which has assured her that she can re- tain her minority interest if their bid is successful. The withdrawal of Ciidillac Fairview from the lawsuit ap- pears to leave the way clear for a confrontation between Mobil, backed by the foundation and the Irvine Company, and the Allen- Taubman interest, backed by Mrs. Smith. Mrs. Smith's 17-year feud with other members of the Irvine Company board was discussed at length in court Tuesday during the questioning of investment counselor Bowen McCoy. Los Angeles attorney Howard Friedman, representing Mrs. Smith, grilled McCoy at length on what he described as de- rogatory statemenls made about Mrs. Smith by McC o y's employers, Morgan Stanley of New York. Friedman then asked McCoy to explain the significance of what he called the "Joan Irvine Smith factor," a financial adjustment which reduces the value of Irvine Company shares by $1.50 each so .long as Mrs. Smith is connected with the company. McCoy explained that the mark down was the result of dis- sension between Mrs. Smith and the Irvine Company board and the reluctance of investors to become involved in a company that is divided at management level. I "Uon"t you suoscribe to the theory held by some bus iness tn· l!erests that dissension within ~anagement is not always a 1'1egative factor and a strong ~r1ti c might be JUSt what iinanagement needs'?" Friedman esked McCoy f "Certainly." McCoy said . "But 1..-e looked at the records of this ctispute and two cardboard boxes -illed with clippings about it 1J>efore we decided that this was a 11egal1ve foctor " E'ro• Page A l RAY .• ·. necessary. The series or department re- views was prompted by detailed d1sdosures by a Senate commit· tee of the FBI 's campal1tn of harassment again!!l Kin1t in an ~ffort to discredit l11m and the c1v1l rights movement That cam pa1gn was carried out ...tnder the d1rtttton or J Edgar Hoover Kmg was shot to death ,,n a m otel balcony In Memphis in .April. 1968 Ray pleaded guilty to King 's murder. But he told the court fie. 1ctid not agrtt with statements by 1the prosecution and his own at- torney that there was no con-aspiracy In the case. Ray Is tervln1a99-year pnson entence In Tennessee. He has nsuccessfully sought a new ial. Victim Identified SAN DIEGO (AP) -The nude body C>f a man found floaUnc off ck's Beach Sunday has been ntllied aa that of Paul WIWam • ts, of Lona Beacbi DAILY PILOT Cbnstruction crews workine feverishly to repair last week's major slope failure In Mission Viejo were plagued with anotfi61' mi~or slide Tuesday afternoon. The latest sllppage occurred on pert of the raw dirt escarpment No Seniors Urged, for New School A committee of parenls will present the Capistrano Unified School District board with a peti- li on Monday. asking that Capistrano Valley High School open next fall minus a senior class. Committee members have con· la cted parents o f 140 San Clemente High School juniors who would be transferred to the new high school if trustees decide Capistrano Valley should open with grades nine through 12. A committee spokesman said parents of 103 students contacted oppose having their youngsters transferred for their fin•I year of high school. Only about a dozen parents said they would prefer to have children who are juniors this yeac complete high school al Capistrano Valley. "Parents said the possibility of having their children transferred for their senior year came as a huge surprise." said Mary Ann Jacobs, a committee member. ·'They said they were told when these studenls started San Clemente High School three years ago that they would be al- lowed to fini sh there," she said. "Parents have been driving as many as 40 miles round·trlp every time their student wants to participate in an extracurricular activity. Sometimes they've had to make this trip two or even three times a day. "Since they have been willing to make this sacrifice in order that their youngsters can participate fully• in school ac- tivities they feel the school spirit which has been developed should be taken into consideration ... Supt. Jerome Thornsley re- commended to the board Jan. 17 that the new high school open with grades nine through 12. The district's Growth Planning Ad- visory Commission CG PAC) re- commended at the same meeting that the school open without a 12th grade class. Thornsley said he based his re-· commendation on an evaluation made by Philip Grignon, assis- tant superintendent. Rites Friday For Elderly Crash Victim A funeral mass will be said Fri· day at 10 a.m. at St. Nicholas Catholic Church in Laguna Hills for Anna Mary Maguire, who was fatally injured Sunday when she wasstruckbyacar. Sbewas76. Rosary services for Mrs. Maguire, ol 648-C Avenida Sevilla in Leisure World, will take place Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the church. The woman died in Saddleback Community Hospital about three and a half hours afl•r the noon- hour accident near the intersec- tl on of El Toro Road and Rockfteld Boulevard. , California Highway Patrot In· vesUaators said ahe wu attempt. Ins to crou bu.y El Toro Road on foot and wu not in a crosswalk. She w.-hit by a car driven by an 1'-ye~d Mluion Viejo atrl, wbownnotheJdtnthelncident. ~ apotesman for Pierce Bf'Otb. ers Mortuary in Los An1eles said Mrs. Maguire leaves no sur· vivors. Funeral arranaement. were made by the le.1aJ flrm act- Ins asexecutorforherestate. r ..... PaeeAJ SCHMIT ••• clal dllclosure ata~ment filed when be toot office. . . Omitted from tbe 1tatement was almolt llA.000 Scbmtt had earned whlle t•mpatlninl. eam- tn1s that came-from a Cella con- \rolled boe~ttal. . Schmit abo WH f orc.d to amend a COftfltct ol lntereat 1tai. ment ftled Jut year. The amendment came aft« tt was disclosed the county aupervtsor had accepted lifts valued at more tha1' $lOO ti'om lobbyiata and developers and then voted Oil iuuea)n whlcb th• donors bad a ftna.ndat tote~ Schmit avoid~ a "PONlblt lnli· d~meanof conruct bitfeUMll• • Ins the vatu. of the tint \a brlJll them uncser szoo. behind the backyai:-d walls ot nve VJa San Gabriel homes, w•e oceupants were evacuated after 1a1t week '1 sUde. Restdent.i ot tbe houses. have been lodged at Mission Viejo Cotnpany expense in the ~una Hilla Holiday Inn untll \he restoration work is complet~ in about two weeks. A SPoketru•n for Jack G.· Raub and Con:rpany. the c9nsult.- ln1 firm advtsJn1 the lfluion Viejo Com,any on melbods of correctlns the rroblem, said there ls no way o knowlhg what caused Tueaclay'a small slump. Since last week's large slope failure, which blocked the north- bound lanes of Trabuco Road between Alicia Parkway and Los Alisos Boulevard, heavy earthmoving equipment bas been working on repairs. The entire slope has been 1Uted back close to the boun- daries of the houses atop the bank to permit new earth rm operations. With the assistance of hlgh·lntensity li•hth~1. crews have been working into the'rught. The slope originally failed about a month ago, after rain saturated the earth and a layer of dense pampas grass ostensibly planted lo hold the dirt In place. BalJoonist 'Grounded' YUMA. Ariz. CAP) - Karl Thomas, trying to float across the country in L4 days under bis bot air balloon, landed unexpec- tedly today in the foothills some 14 miles east or this Colorado River city. Membets of bis ground crew said Thomas landed the giant balloon in a re- mote arejl, and that they were trying to reach him. They said they knew of no roads lnto the area. Yuma Is about 60 miles south of Blythe, Calif.. where Thomas lifted off at 4 a.m . en route to Phoenix. FroaePa~AI PARDON ... "The ex~cutlve order invades the legislaUve prerogatives by directing the attorney general to discontinue investigations and prosecutions of violators of the Military Selective Service Act,·· the suit charges. IL asked the court to declare that Congress alone has the power to declare the manner of acquiring, losing or reacquiring citizenship. James T. McKenna, one of the. attorneys who flied the suit, told a news conference that the suit does not queation the Presi- dent's powera to grant pardons .. But he said the suit challenges the validity of the particular pro- clamation which Carter issued for the draft evaders. OIMty l'lllt Sl•t 1'11(19 SLOPE FAILURE CONTINUED IN MISSION VIEJO DESPITE REPAIR EFFORTS Shortty After Thi• Photolfaph WH Taken, a Third Small Sllde Htt Trabuco "olld • f ... .. Governor Trims Beat. .. .. Themwsti:ita Lmvered to 65 in Capiwl Of/We ·~ SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. baa turned tbe thermostat dpwn to 65 degrees ln his office, and intenda to k~ep it there. At leut that's the Idea his 90 staff members got Tuesday when workers Installed shields on thermostats to prevent tamper- ing. Although the heat was cut back in Brown's suite, it will remain at 68 in other state buildings ror a few more days, said Brown's ex- ecutive secretary, Gray Davis. Davis said the governor's suite will be the test area for an "energy audit.•· When the audit is complete, probably this week, an optimum temperature for energy savings will be picked. Then similar audits will be conducted In other buildings. Davis said. Several aides and secretaries came to work with sweaters Tuesday. but one, who asked not to be named, said, "I don 't think we're suffering all that much. It's colder, but we're not freez-ing ... Since 1975 , s tate office lhermostals have been set at 68 in the winter and 74 in the sum-mer. Meanwhile. Californians are being urged to turn down thermoslats and wear sweaters to help conserve natural gas for other parts of the nation suffering from shortages "The steps are being taken because jobs are being lost and people are dying,,. in other parts of the country. stale Public Utilities Commission President Robert Batinovich said Tuesday in San Francisco in announcing the voluntary 'conservation or- der. effective immediately. Batinovich said the restric- tions. characterized as a "moral injunction," include lowering thermostats to no more than 65 during the day and SS at night. They also include curbs on lux- ury uses such as to heat swim· ming pools and operate de· corative lighting and fireplaces. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., which serves most of Northern California, bas offered to loan Southern Natural Gas Co. of Birmingham. Ala., up to 100 million cubic feet of gas a day for a month for use in Georgia, South Carolin~ Al2'bama, Mississippi, Tennessee and Florida. Southern Ca1Jfornia Gas Co. says it will make 2.5 billion cubic feet of gas available to utilities serving Oklahoma and Kansas. The PUC lldmitted It would be tough to enforce the order. The state attorney general's of· . flee said even thougtt'the restric- tions were issued in the form ot an order. they have no Iec..i weight and are ·'simply a requ~ appealing to the morality QI users." Tbe order makes no mention pr electrical heating or propa_qe. gaa. Commercial and industrial businesses should shut down heating during nonbusine~ hours except to prevent damag"- lhe order &aY!l· .. All hotel, motel and simifar businesses were ordered not (o heat or ~ool vacant guest room$. ; Allaway Refused ... ~ Change of Venue I,• Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Kneeland refused today to move accused mass murderer Edward Allaway's up- coming trial to another county. "l don't think it's been shown Mr. Allaway will not get a fair and impartial trial in Orange County." Judge Kneeland said. He also refused a request by Deputy Public Defender Ron Butler to delay Allaway's trial 18 months. As a result. the man accused or shooting seven people t.Q death and woundlng two others last Ju. ly 12 on the Cal State Fullerton campus will stand trial In Orange County March 7. Butler hoped to get Allaway's trial moved to another county because of what he said was the vast amount of publicity the mass slaying received in this county. The defense attorney asked for the 18 month delay after the mo- tion for a change of venue was de- nied. Butler said the time was needed to diminish the impact of the slayings on prospective jurors' minds. But Judge Kneeland didn't agree. He said that while the publicity had been pervasive in Orange County, its most severe impact was on the university campus and In Full~on. .... He then mentioned Orange County's population of 1.f5 million persons as being an in- dication of an abundant number of prospective impartial jurors~· Judge Kneeland also noted that Allaway's chief defense will ·be his mental condition at the time or the slayings. F,...PageAI •'I REVIEW •••. · Levine said. "There are, from ·um ct to lime, residents with very self-abusive behavior (such ~ striking thei r heads on wall~. Their whole life becomes restraints and drugs because, of their self-abuse,•· he explained~: ''And, what usually happens'is, after a short period or time it no longer becomes necessary to ad· minister the treatment," he said. Levine said the shock tre•- m ent disrupts the destructl'fe behavior long enough for other behaviors to be taught. : Levine also denied ·that 'the aversion conditioning involves the use of cattle prods, saying tile devices are less crude than thOSe used on animals. "It's kind or a receiver at- tached to the arm end operated through remote control," Le~e said. "So the kids are not touched with a cattle prod." Conseroation Steps .. : Ease Eliergy Drain : ~ By Tbe Alsocla&ed Pre11 Conservation measures ap· peared to be easing the draid on natural 1u in the cold-plagued Midwest and Eut today, but there were wa:mings that the f ac· tory cloalnss and layoff• de· si1ned to save the fuel could laat unW April. (Re.lated pbot.o, A4) · The Senate approved a com· promise version of the em•sen· cy natural au bUl lodar and House passage wu ~ for before President Outer's televised appearance toniaht. The blll ii not dest1ntcl to ln- crea1e natural saa 1upp1le1, but to 1lve the President the powvto sbllt aome 1u from low.prtorttY UMra -1UCb u industry -to hl1b-priorlty UHfl IUCh .. 1chool1. homet, bolpt~i. end small buainease1 .• , Over tbouaand1 of mllet of American ~tryalde. the mb- ery of the barab wi11ter ,.., •vl· dent. But there were aome boMIUI 1l1N. 'l'be ftnt Ccntlncent of a • member ~ SIWneen blt-taUon ftom North Carolina aDd PiON than two dOleft ~ecel ~ '""·ftltiUna eq.apin,at lll'iiv.d lD BUlfaJO,'J\(Y .• to belp·NaU.W Gu•fdimm clew the cltJ iftW a bll11ird ttiat h .. cost the a an estimated '80 mi WOil. Tho MatJanal Weather servtc. predicted temperatures up to '3o today ln Buffalo, no slanllicant snow and winds easlnt to ~-to 25·mlles per hour. The sun b~ke through the clouds there Tues<lay for the first time since blab winds, anow and cold struck Fri· day. Also for the first time since Friday, tbe entire lenlth of the New York State Thruway wu open to tratnc. At one time, aU but 45 miles of tbe hitbway wu cloa~ clue to theatorm. : On the Cbeaapeake a_,, met the Ol\IO River, tuel bar1es wbleh were Idled tor up to two weeb were moving aealn, but progress waa slow due w lee. · In We•t Vlrftnla and Ker)· tucky, more titan 30,000 coll miners were otr the Job, their mlnta abut down because ot the cold. Tbouundl of 1cbools and fac. tortes a1ao w.re 1hut and about a dozen elates had declared ene:t8y emerl(enctea. ' • On Tuaday, North cm>Un,. Joined the nnb ot 1tate1 dectar-ln1 sueh tmer1cnctes, and &f,ae auto industry alone ann~M that 80,000 WOtlcen tn tbe United . staie. and Canada wou.Jd Join 10me 1.s milUon persona ~t.­ ed to ~ laid off ·around the n,_ tion. In the auto Industry, parts 1bort11es wtre a factor u well a1 au •bortue:s. . . . JV edneeday'e Afternoon Prtea •l..,.. a-:: _....,._ ....... "~-.... > n -. .. . ,..,.., ., ~·"' :.~,JJ ~ ~~ • td JO • 17 ,,___ \lo e. ... ",~_.,. 11•0• .... •4' . l'fJM S1 11._ ... . 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J J::::: "°" "' ~\lo a ,19 t 1)111 IM-Iott IP4'11+'- 'f, ~, .... ~·"' I Ji''°'"' »If •t • • .., IM.'°' + ~ .,... • ~.I' .... . It -,'-• " ~-f ., i' ..... tlrt•·~ J • ~ ... ,, ..... wu:rij°r •f .-.•·~ '-1111 ti !?...! ~ '-'-•'J 1' s~ .. KQO fr'\" tt ..... ~rCM'O ''· ij-~::.~ 1111111 .. 0. •. O·•• ... ,. •tC1fl¥ • ti.+ " ITPl"I ut t 'j ..,,_ + '~ I.A .='j· 1 ~a •r;. r. I ·~-~ ... .. ' " ....... 41'a ..... . The ad will tie headlined.. .. You.r K~ to Savi.PO." and tw once tb1s la entlNb' tnrtbtul advenJatn1. You can save by aceeDtl.n&Colaate'ao4er. . -~ llS'e's bow .tbia -deal wtll work. Tbe ad Will lnehaff 6 eC>UPoOI enUUlla& you to price redl.lCtiCJM on all these ~ • ducts. U JqD tan the. COUPona to tbe store and tMq .U ftv• "'. producu, )ICM& wru 1et es ceata knocked oa ~ total r.' purcbae price, • TBBN, IF YOV WILL SEND TBB labels to Coll•W-PNVinl you bouPt the products, they wW mall you baclt :..,, cub refundl. 'l1le refunds. lt ~ bouaht all five, will total t.1.&0. • I •"::'• So. the 13.50 refund plus tbe 85-eent cut brtnas you to • S..lS. Since these five produeta are auppoeed to retail for a. total ol M.50, that sqeans you can aet them for a net ouUay ol 3S cents. And who knows, if you can find a store that dta· counta these products, you may be able to 1et them for nothillf. Tbe =on ia: Wby doee Collate.Palmolive engace In auc~ IUi . games? It's obvtoualy retumina to consumers m«e money than lt receives from 1tons for these products. And OD top ol that, it's spending a lot to advertiae an offer that can only loee money fOI" the company. Some 188 mtwoo coupons wW be delivered witb those SundQ supplementa. If all of them came back to tbe company fot redemetioo, they would really be in trouble. And if everyone bou t the pro- ducts and applied for refunds, Colgate mis t bave to declare bankruptcy. y\I) THE ANSWEa WOULD SEE• TO LIE in the mark.t'':°•: positions of these product.. Co&cate bas been constatenu,•·· beaten to the punch by compeWors. Pl)oc:ter' & Gamble's Crest rules the toothpaste bull.Den with " market sbare of about 40 percent. Colgate Dental Cream, once the leader, is second with a 20 percent a.bare, and Ultra Brite is fifth with 5 eercent. · Glllette's Fo~y whips Palmolive Rapid Shave iii the ..shavingcre~ market. · .... , · IN THE BANDAGE llAUET, IORNSON & Johnsoa la' so far ahead of Curity lb at it'a 1llly even to count. And lD the ruor blade business, Wllki.Dson is an also-.· ran with less ttlan 10 percent of the market. ' • Unable to beat these brands, Colgate ls resorting to the ultimate tactic. It's giving away its products. It hopes, of course, that once you try them, you will repurchase them without an indbcement. But that's up to you. Meetlag 1'1lgra•t• . ~. Secretary of Agriculture Robert Bergland shakes· • bands with 4·month-old Pedro Campos and talks with his mother Josephine during a visit to' Homestead, Fla., to view damage from recent un-: seasonable weather. President Carter has declare(( Florida an agricultural disaster area. · " Tent's No Circus, Bui/Jer Fights Cold . . . FREDE.RICK, Md. (AP>-Somethougbttheclreua blld . come to town, butit '1 juat a bomebW.lder's way of copinC witb • the Arctic-like weather. ,. After encounterin1 construction delays because ol 1ut..· zero temperatures and aoow, Ryan Homes, Inc., erected a red·and-white striped circus tent over foundation boles foe new houses. . ACCOl'ding to Jobn ll'laberty, proctuctlon supeNi.sor on ·. the Job site, the company wu three weeks behind on bulldlnJ •· roundatlons. '"TllE WEATHER W .U DWNG VS." be a aid, explain-• Ing that the unusual cold was freezing the mortar for founda· tiOAI. Tbeteot.40-by.SO(eet, wassetuptoahelterworkersfroqt the wind and precipitation, Flaherty said. Kerosene bea~' · are burtU.nc in the tent to keep It above freezing temperature,.~. be added. :· • Flaberty aald the tent wu purcbaaed from a tent &n4 awaJnceoaipany In Gaitbenburj and costaeveral tbouland ' dollan. He HJd Ryan bu so far put up three tenbt U'OWld foundations. oaebere and twootben in Montgomery County. F1r111 Builds HB Plant Fibreform Elect.ronlc1 baa putthued a 1.58-acre parcel in the Hwitlqton Beach 8uainesa Park for relocaUon of ita 20,000.tqUare-foot mainotnce /production f aclllty. Tbe JO.year.old oraaolsatlon, which employs eo people, a.nUctpacea npamloo of Its woridorce. BUI Wannacott of Wannaoott, Sbaw., Panchal direc~' ·: 9d tbe architectural desllft of the proposed IU'Uct.Ure . .Jtai;;; : Mete.it of Prtme Contractors, In(., tn ~1e COunt,y wUJ".'" • ; bit tbe ~ contractor. : • .. : ..