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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-10 - Orange Coast Pilotf I Lt THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 10, 19n YOL.. 7t, NO. 41, J SECTIONS, 31 ~AGES • 'Network' . ' BEST ACTRESS ROLE? Dvnllw8y In 'Network' J)river, 7 4, Uninjured· in . HBAccid~nt Watergate Film Follows LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Network," a scathing view or the television industry, and "Rocky,'' the story of a rags-to- r i c bes boxer. each won 10 nominations today from the Mo- tion Picture Academy as the top film of the year. The Watergate film, "All the President's Men," followed with eit.!hl in the 49th Oscar nomina- tions. "Bound for Glory," the Woody Guthrie biography, followed with six. The late Peter Finch was nominated for best actor in "Network." Also nominated were William Holden of •·Network; '' Robert De Niro, "Ta~ Driver;" Giancarlo Giannini, "Seven Beauties," and Sylvester Stallone, "Rocky." "Network" also scored a best actress nomination for Faye Dunaway, and Talia Shire was named for" Rocky." Others in the race: Marie- Christine Barrault, ''Cousin Cousine;" Sissy Spacek, "Car· rie," and Liv Ullmann, "Face to Face." Nominated for best picture of the year were "All the. Presi- dent's Men." "Bound for Glory," "Network," "Rocky" and "Taxi Driver." Other nominations: -Supporting actor: Ned Beat· ty, "Network;" Burgess Meredith and Burt Young, "Rocky;" Laurence Olivier, .. Marathon Man;" Jason Robards, "All the President's Men." · -Supporting actress: Jane Alexander, "All the President's 'Men:" Jodie Fo1ter, ••Taxi Driver:" Lee Grant, .. Voyace of the Damned;" Piper Laurie, "Carrie;" Beatrice Slral&bt, "Network." -Direction: Alan J . Pakula,. .. All tbe President's Men"; In1mar Bergman, "Face io F•ce"; Sidney Lumet. "Network"; John G. Avtldsen, "Rocky"; Lina Wert.mullet, "'Seven Beauties ... -Foreign lancuace film: "Black and Whit• ln Color," Ivory Coast; "Cousin Couslne, .. Franc.; ".Jacob the Llar, .. German Democratic Republic; "Nights and ·Day•.'' Poland; ••s.veo Beauties,'' Jtaly. ~ screeaplay; J....,. Chad• Taccbella and Dalliele Tbomwon. ..CoUlla Coa11D6"; w alter Benlteln, ••n• Piurt"; (8ee08C.tUS; •• ,. AJ) .. , . oar ' Mishaps, Br-isk Winds Enliven Vfft!ht Jlaee • • • :-. -. . . . . . . .. -. .. -.. ... .. . • . . .. .. .. . . -. . · 'R k' oc y = .. Top·-Movies· Didn't Go Near Water o.lty f>ti.t-Staff "'9te Signs pasted or\ this sloop bring to mind that old gag about a yacht being a hole in the water surrounded by fiberglass into which you pour money. Craft currently ls berthed alongside several wheeled vehicles in one of those impromptu used . car lots that spring up along·major stree~ on the Orange Coast. Perh~ps the boat is 'Owned by a little old lady iliTt>psic;ters who ·ran out of money before she got it to the water. J]videnee Due . Judge "B;ejet;ts _Bid ~ ' 'fJy lrVine Heiress $33.50 a share, he asked Fried· man wby Mo. Smlltl "does not have an adequate remedy" if she believw that ftgure to be below the true value of the shares. "Slte ~aa uam her rlcbta as a di11entlo1 shareholder ,t• the judae said. "She can come to court and demand an apprallal of the Irvine Company stock." Friecb:nan, wbQ appeared to be taken a&ack by t,be oblervaUon. Immediately tol4. Judie Judie that hll hwsult ~ deal&ned to preterve Jt(n. Smith'• status as a mlnoritf l.harehoJdel' ln th~ Irvine Company. "lle.t •tatua u a shlrebolde~ wouJd.'~.MVcn4 l! ~ fouMai (Ste~~. P'a•e A!) Crew Routs Pirate Attack On U.S. Ship Mishaps Spark Regatta •, By ALMON LOCKABEY ~11, Pli.t INtHot .... ~ A man overboard and two jury, rigs was the running score in the l,125·miJe Puerto Vallarta yacht race today as the 24-boal fleet rocketed down the coast of Baja. California in strong northwester•" ly winds and surfing seas. ' Hard luck Sorcery, the 61·foot sloop owned by Jacob Wood ef' the California Yacht Club was the,:. first to report a mishap altribut,.;: ed to the wind and sea conditions.· The report said a crewman fell~ overboard but was recovered un- hurt in about 10 minutes. W~ said the yacht's engine was used . for about 71h minutes in rescuing' the unidentified crewman. Sorcery was l'he yacht that was rolled completely over by·a giant sea on a voyage from Japan to Alaska last summer. Robert O'Brien, owner.skipper of the 58-foot yawl, Spirit. report• ed a broken main boom but sai.cl the spar was jury rigged and tha yacht was continuing in the ra.ce. Casper, a Ranger-33 sloop skip. pered by William Crew of the Ventura Yacht Club, bad rigsing failure which resulted in dam•re to the mast. Jury rigging aJso kept Casper in the race. • Freshening winds, reporfe¢ variously at 15 to 22 knots, de- pending on the position of th8'Te- porttng yacht, had injected new life in the race and were driving the fieet toward its destination at afastclip. Ra1time, the 85·foot blatt <See YACHTS, Page A%) ~ . . . Weather Sunny through Friday and slightly warmer. Highs in 70s. Lowa 42 to 52. '~ .A2 DAILY PILOT s Thurtd1y February to. 1977 Brown Wains South I ·.To Conserve Water ' SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. with dismay the lllling of 5wim· alter a 2~·hour free-wheeling Edmund Brown Jr. has warned ming pools in Southern dlacusslon with about '15 Southern California residents CaWomia and the conslructioo leglelators, slate officlala and •that they, too, must conserve of new recreational lakes," represe!llativesofwaterdiatrictl water. even though water is still Brown said Wednesday. and agncultural groups. ·,plentUulintheirregion. ''People in the north want to "Wearegolngtohavetoshare .. When people are facing see more conservation in the the less, share the burden, share bankruptcy in water-short south. We're in a crisis we've thehardship." Northern California, they view never faced before," Brown said A legislator from California's moat severely hit county said be will propoee mandatory mrnunity Studied .By Gunman INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -A vengeance-seeking gunman thinking he is "a marked man" for life, continued to hold a ·hostage in a booby-trapped apartme nt today while his lawyers studied an offer of im· 'munity from prosecution. Anthony G. "Tony" Kiritsis asked this morning that his at· torneys examine the immunity papers which local prosecutors approved in an effort to bfeak the tense standoff which began Tues· day at Kint.sis' apartment. · Authorities said Kiritsia in· dicated he would accept bis al· torneys' judgment. The papers, read to Kiritsis Wednesday night from an apart· ment across the hall, were picked up by his brother, James, and then delivered to the A spokesman for negotiators said there was no reason to believe Kiritsis would issue any new demands, and authorities were hopeful the ordeal would end when Kiritsis' attorneys verified the documents. "He (Kiritsis) is optimistic. We 're optimistic," the spokesman said'. In a predawn telephone in· terview with WIBC radio news director Fred Heckman, to whom Kirltsis has s poken GUNMAN SURRENDERS, FREES 7 AT BANK-A4 several times the past two days, Kiritsis said. "I've already lost all myself respect. I'm going to be • a marked man all my life." Kint.sis also told Heckman he was angered by reports that there were no records of his ever working at the Military Academy at West Point. N.Y. "I was an adviser to the in· structors there," he said. Frustrated police and sheriff's deputies maintained their vigil near the building. Occasionally, one or two uniformed otricers 'walked between a large bus used as a police command center and a neighboring building where the · sherifrs department set up head- · quarters. >A friend took a copy of the im· munity offer Wednesday night to the apartment where Kirltsls held executive Richard 0 . Hall hostage, said Geor~e Maru. spokesman for police negotiators. M aru said the friend read the offer through the booby·trapped front door to Kiritais, who told him that he didn't want to think about it then and preferred to wait until mominjl. Martz. said the document, signed by a deputy prosecutor, offered ''tOUll Immunity" from arrest or psychiatric confme- ment to Kiritsas, the ~-year-old bachelor wbo took. Hall prisoner as part of a plan for revenge against the mortgage company. Authorities l earned that Klritsis recently bought 100 pounds of dynamite and police eaid tbey believed his declara· tion that the apartment has been Jigged 90 that it could blow up. "We felt it was more than a JH>Hibillty tbat the dynamite would be set olf, .. said Martz, a deputy Marion County pro- secutor. dftANOI COo\IT DAILY PILOT Queen Visits IA Airport LOS ANGELES (AP)- Brilain's Queen Elizabeth and Prince.Philip stopped over briefly al Los Angeles International Airport early today to refuel on a flight lo Western Samoa for the queen's silver jubilee visit to Commonwealth coun- tries. The royal couple spent an hour and 45 minutes at the airport after their British Airways Boeing 707 Speed Bird touched down at 1:28a.m. A spokesman for the airport said the queen re- mained aboard the plane during the stopover. seated by a window reading a book. Other members or the royal entourage disem· barked to walk around and eat, the spokesman said. Public Fails To Circulate 2-dollar Bill WASIDNGTON (AP> -Hav· ing failed on its own. tbe govern- ment is considering paying an advertising agency $300,000 to convince Americans they need the $2 bill. Officials admit disappointment tn the public reception given the $2 bill since it was brought back with considerable fanfare about 10 months ago. In fact, the Bureau of Engrav· ing and Printing has stopped printing the biUs, at Jeast tern· porarily. Of the approximately 415 million that were printed, about 222 million actually went into circulation. But the number is not as im· pressive as it might seem. Millions of the $2 bills apparently were hoarded as souvenirs soon after they were issued April lJ, and have been wiused since. James A. Conlon, director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, said he is encouraged that four million of the S2 bills · showed up in circulation in December, the last month for which a count is available. Conlon said in an interview that he thinks consumers want the $2 bill but just aren't getting a chance to use it because retail merchant.6 aren't distributing it. "A:s we see it, citizens are wait- ing to use the bills, but they are being denied the opportunity to use it," he said. "I'm disappoin- ted . • • in the apparent reluc· lance of cashiers to use the bills." Conlon said there is no danger yet that the new $2 bills wUI go the way of the old S2 bills, which were phased out or circulation in 1966 because people weren't us- ing them. "We're firm in our intention," he said. He said the Bureau of Engrav- ing and Printing and the Federal Reserve Board are proposing a ''more positive" public relations campaign than bas been tried before to win acceptance for tbe $2 bill F....,PageAl OSCARS ••• Paddy Chayefsky, "Network'': Sylvester Stallone, "Rocky"; Lina Wertmuller, "Seven Beauties.'' -Screenplay adaptation: William Goldman, "All the President's Men"; 'Robert Getchell, "Bound for Glory"; Federico Fellini and Bernardino Zappont, "Fellini's Casanova"; Nicholas Meyer. 1'Tbe Seven· Per-Cent Solution'•: Steve Sbaean and Davld Butler, "Voyaieof'1le Damf\ed." -Or111nal aoni: .. 1.Ye S1tan1." from "The Onien"; "Come to Me, .. from 0 Tbe Pint Panther Strlte1 Acahi.,; "Z•erpeen." the Jovt theme from 0 A. Star Ia Bom••; ••Gonna FIT N'ow, .. from .. Roe~"'; 0 A World Tbat Ne.er Wu,' lroin ••Haifa~'' · -Clnema\ofl'apbJ: Butell Wexler .. Bound tor Glo17.,; •JUc~ R Kline. ".Kin• KOQa0 : statewide rationing. But Brown, questioned later by reporters, expressed doubts about statewide rationing .althoujb he di® 't rule i~ out. "Anything is a possibility con· sidering this drought. There is no statutory change that is not UD· der consideration," Brown said. But, the Democratic governor added, "it may be more efficient to work cooperatively with local water districts than to issue more paper and regulations and edicts from the state Capitol. "The object is to save water, not issue edicts,'• Brown said. .Brown said he convened the session to bring together all of the mutually dependent water users and water providers, get them to exchange views and to help assess "the real problem, its magnitude and complexity ... and what can be done." Bob Will, spokesman for the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, was a special target of complaints from Northern California growers and cattlemen who said they faced cutbacks or 75 percent or more in water. and in •some cases bankruptcy. Wiil sa1d rus dJslncl is cutting back its us e of Northern California water from 800,000 acre·feet to 400,000 acre.feet by s ubstituting lower quality Colorado River water. But Will was challenged to do more after he said there is no plan in effect to save water in homes, and when he defended Southern California swimming pool$ by s&ytngthat water "is be: ing stored there." Assemblyman Michael Wornum CD·Mill Valley), whose Marin County district is suffer· ing drastic rationing, told the group he will introduce a bill lo require statewide rationing. Front Page Al YACHTS •.. sloop out of the Long Beach Yacht Club was reported off Magdalena Bay at 5 p.m. Wed- nesday and skipper Bill White was estimating an arrival in Puerto Vallarta at noon Satur. day. Ragtime was 70 miles ahead of her nearest rival and had 524 m Iles to go to Puerto Vallarta. The next three boats on elapsed time were closely bunched with Tony Bills' 6S·foot yawl, Olinka, leading Sorcery by about a mile. Sorcery was about a mile ahead of John Calley's custom sloop, Solution. Handlcap leader, despite her mishap, was Casper in the In· ternational Offshore Rule division. Leading on handicap in the Performance Handicap Rac· ing Fleet was John Snook's Butcher Boy II, of the Long Beach Yacht Club. Al the last rollcall the fleet was strung out for about 200 miles. Korea Ties Probe Okayed WASIDNGTON CAP) -The House Ethics Committee now has the authority It asked for to conduct a thorough investigation of Congress' alleged Korean con· necUon. Tbe House voted unanimously Wednesday to investigate whether any past or present members had recefv.ed • 'anythlnf ol value, directly oi;: indirect y," Crom represen- tatives or the South Korean gov- ernment. Ltuto/ Big Spenders? MONTREAL (AP) -A 34·1ear-old man ls un- der101nt psycblatrtc ex-amination after police found hlm bandtn1 out ~rllp $100 bills as Ups to Montreal waitresses, store clerks and tut drfvua. Police 1ald the man who was not tdentllled, r;;bertt- ed ~ooo ft'Oln the estate of bil dHd mother. He bad $3 000 left in $1.00 blll:J wbtm plck•d up lnstde a, downtown reltaurut. Tll• n:t011e7 ba1 beeo • • plaeed in a baolc by ~lice wllo •r• awatUn1 a p11chiatiio report tro11l Ernest Laalo, "Lo•u'1 RUa": Owen Bollmu, "Network .. , Jlot.trt Sl&l1e ... 0 A Stir la · Bora.• • &la. • •or.~1 Vhtorla :::=.·-~ • O•llY Piiot St .. 1 ""940 TRUSTEE SUCCUMBS Or. James Marshall SB College's Dr. Marshall Succumbs Dr. James W. Marshall - educator , adventurer, philosopher. film maker, opera buff and a Saddleback College trustee for the past five years - died Wednesday at Saddleback Community Hospital after a long illness. He was 69. . Dr. Marshall, of 140A Avenida Majorca in Laguna Hills Leisure World, brought a wealth of ex·· penence and education to the Mission Viejo college when he was appointed as a trustee 10 1972. Despite recurring bouts with ii· lness, he won a full term 10 the 1973 election and was running for another term in the upcoming March 8 balloting. The former president of Wayland Baptist College in Plainview, Texas, Marshall's most significant and lasting ac- complishments stemmed from years of study and hfc among the stone a~e1ndian tribes of Bruil · Reward I Offer BJ PBIUP BOSJlillN °' tllt o.lfr ..... "•" Rewards totAllng $1.500 have been offered for lnformatlOil leadin1 to the eaptUJ'e, pl'Oftecd· lion and conviction of an armed robber wbo pistol whipped ~ Laguna Beach pPiitemu Mon· day. W edneeday the City Coun(ll unanimously voted to add $1 ,doo to a reward of $500 offered by the Laguna Beach Pollce Qf. ficers' Association. Police Ll. John Zelko said the action by the police association was the first of its kind. He said the council's offer also was un· precedented in bis 30 years' ex- perience. On Monday police OCCicer Jim Lansford, 50, walked in by coin· cidence, on an armed robbery. at the Jewel Searchers, 102'7·0 N. Coast Highway. The gunman held Lansford at bay until he tried to take the of· ficer's gun from its holster. Lansford grabbed the bandit's gunhand and scuffled to get the gun. Lansford, who bas 22 years with the police force, was unsuc· cessful in wresting the weapon from the burly young holdup · man, but his action allowed the store proprietor to escape into a back room with the jewels the robber had stuffed into a grocery sack. the floor during the fracas. The bandit clipped Lansford on the side of the head with the frontier·s lyle revolver. It' knocked the policeman to one knee. He was then ordered to lie face down on the floor, "Or you're a dead man." The gunman escaped and eluded a four·hour search of streets and beaches by more than a dozen officers. Fro.PageAJ PffiATES. • • radio, but be said he couldn't help Meanwhile. "the sound of the wbllslle made them more and more nervous," Deaton wrote of the would-be buccaneers, and the ever·frowt.n• crew Ul'lltrved tbem. Aa a reaWt. tho pirates lbari· doned shlp, but took along Deaton's watoh and cigarette lighter. · Deaton eald he is ••sure t)!y would have used the aun lt J or anyone had attempted l9 force them off physltally. Tbe1t., •P· peared nervo~• and ap· prehe.nslve and I kept telllmg lhetn that· we bad ~ailed the police." Capt. H. G. Guice said it was the first time a Lykes Bros. ship had been boarded in force by a rmed bandits in the area, "although our ships are always on the alert for it.'' A spokesman for the firm. which operates 42 ships, said crews on the Far East route have reported trouble with thieves sneaking aboard to pill er, and ships serving Colombian ports are frequently boarded by stowaways who hide beneath s acks or corree beans. FroraPageAJ HEIRESS •.. lion deal with Mobil is ap- proved." Friedman said. "That is the thrust of her lawsuit." Mrs. Smith, who holds 22.4 per· cent or the issued Irvine Com· pany shares. is known to prefer the $282.7 million offer made for the foundation's holdings by what is referred to in court as the Allen-Taubman group: A con- sor 1um ea financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taub-man. · Friedman's comments and testimony from Mrs. Smith's de. position indicate that her present status as a major· minority s hareholder in the company founded by her grandfather would be preserved if the Allen- Taubman bid prevails in court. RCA's most automatic TV ever1 Electronically tracks and corrects the TV signal before •I becomes a picture on your screen RCA lColorTrak • Automatic contrast/color "tracking" sircuitry ties brightness. contrast and color together so that all three are balanced simultaneously. • Automatic color control holds flesh tones and other color s 10 the sellings you select~ven when TV signal vanes or you change channels. 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Are. ....... - Orange Coast · · EDITION Today' Clo lag .Y.Stoek8 I .VOL. 70, NO. 41, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSOAY,FEBRUARY1~1W7 c TEN CENT Newport-Mesa Teachers to Woo Public By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI Ille o.i1, ~ ... Slaff Teachers in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District plan to woo public opinion. By getting community back· ing. teachers in the Newport. Mesa Education Association, an a fCiliate of the statewide California Teachers Association (CTA>, hope lo strengthen their political muscle and their posi- tion at the bargaining table. NMEA officials discount those aims. They say the purpose of the campaign is to improve the im· age teachers have in the com- munity and to promote com- munication between the teachers and the community. They also insist the program they have designed is strictly grassroots in origin and has nothing to do with their parent or- ganh:ation, theCTA. Officials at CTA's bead- quarters in Burlingame have a dilferent view of the local pro- gram. Jose Colmenares, assistant ex· ecutive secretary in charge of communications for CTA, ex- plained that the program being readied by the NMEA is one of many that fall under the general umbrella of Community Action Programs designed and dis· tributed by the CT A for use by af- filiate chapters. Heiress However, teachers Chuck Stegmeir and Mike Lennon, both members of the NMEA exe<:ulive board, denied the program they proposed had anything to do with the CT A during an interview about it six weeks ago. Stegmeir. a history and journalism teacher at Newport Harbor High School and Lennon, a teacher at Harbor View Elementary School, said they came up with the idea for the campaien to repair damage done to teachers' community image ln the opening round of salary negotiations th.is fall. The NMEA, bargaining agent for all district teachers under a new collective bargaining law, was the target of angry outcries from community members and some teachers because of the in· itial contract proposal which in- cluded, among other things, a proposed four-hour work day and an 18 percent pay raise. Both Stegmeir and Lennon con- ceded that use of a form PJY packet provided by the CT A bad been an error on the part of the organization. The public relations campaign scheduled to get under way at the end of the month will involve teams of two or three teachers who will meet with small groups of residents and businessmen. <See TEACHERS. Pue ,U) Dealt Setback By TOM BARLEY I Ol tlle o.i1, Pll•I Slaff j A bid by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer for a j udg- ment that would have given her victory in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit against the James Irvine Foundation was re1ec ay m cou . Judge James F. Judge's de- nial, issued immediately after he took the bench, means that at- torney How ard Friedman will now have to put on evidence in what is expected lo be three more Invitation By Mangers Disputed By STEVE MITCHELL Ottllt O.Uy ~lletStaft A letter from Assemblyman Dennis Mangers ( D-Huntington Beach) to CalTrans Director Adriana Gianturco. allegedly in- viting her to meet with Costa Mesa officials over the future of the Newport Freeway, has been interpreted differently by both factions • And Mangers. who said he "was embarrassed and, frankly outraged." by Miss Gianturco's "no show" at a meeting he set up ln Sacramento Tuesday. said he received verbal promises from the CalTrans chief that she would attend that meeting. A delegation of Costa Mesa of· ficlals and Mangers had a date with Miss Gianturco Tuesday af- ternoon to discuss state plans for the freeway, which currently enda at the north end or Costa Mesa. M aneers. along with Costa Mesa Vice Mayor Jack Ham· melt, Councilwoman Mary Smallwood and PubUc Services Direct« James Edlridge, were met instead by three members of Miu Gianturco's staff. A spokesman for Miss Gian· turco said Wednesday afternoon "there might have been some miaunderstandine," and added. .. I really don't know who misled whom." Tbe spokesman, Jeff Rupp, also said, "She's an awfully busy woman and we probably get re- quests for 20 meetings a day here. · "It sounds to me that it is just a bit of disappointment on the part of the city officials not to be able (See LE'ITER, Pase A2) Orange Coast Weather Sunny through Friday and slightly warmer. Highs ln 70s. Lows 42 to 52.. weeks o(testimony. Friedman's phase of the tnal that began last September will include a tour or the Irvine Com- pany's holdings in Orange Coun- ty with lawyers for all four parties involved in the Smith · u ge Judge. Judge Judge told Friedman to- day that he was "having pro- blems" in understanding and as- sessing Mrs. Smith's position at this phase of the lawsuit. Noting that the Mobil Oil Com- Mesa Offices Get Holiday Costa Mesa city offices will be closed Friday to commemorate Lincoln's birthday, and city workers will be off agatn-Feb. 21 - a Monday -for Wasbineton's birthday. While city hall will be closed, the police and fire departments will remain open both days. Along with city employes, students, facul· ty members and ad· minislrators in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and the Coast Community College District will take both days off. A s pokeswoman for Dewey Rubbish Service said trash crews will be working Friday and Feb. 21. ·Mexico Boat Race Plagued By Problems ~ BJ ALMON LOCKABEY o.lty Pli.t ... II .. E4111er A man overboard and two jury rigs was the running score in the 1,125-mile Puerto Vallarta yacht race today as the 24-boat fleet rocketed down the coast of Baja California l.n strong northwester- ly winds and surfinc seas. Hard luck Sorcery, the 61-foot stoop owned by Jacob Wood of the California Yacht Club was the first to report a mishap attribut- ed to the wind and sea conditions. The report said a crewman fell ( overboard but was recovered un- hurt 1n about 10 mlnutes. Wood said the yacht's engine was used for about 7~ minutes in rescuing the unidentified crewman. Sorcery was the yacht that was rolled completely over by a aiant sea on a voyage from Japan to Alaska last summer. Robert O'Brien, owner·skipper of the 58-foot yawl, Spiritbr~ ed a broken main boom ut said the spar was jury rigged and the yacht was continuing in the race. Casper, a Rancer-33 sloop st:ip- pered by Wllllam Crew ol the Ventun Yacht Club. bad rilging failure which resulted la damaae to the mast. Jury rilllna allo kept caper 1n \he race. Freabemn. wind•. reported v~ at 15 to 23 bot., ct.. pendlDC CD tho DOSltJon Of the ~ porUna yacht. had fnjected new ll!e lD the t~ and were drtvlq the fleet toward Its destlnatloo at afaatclip. RaaUme. the 65·foot black sloop out of th Loas Beach Yacht Club ••• repo:rt6d off Maadalena Bay at 5 p.m. Wed- J\ffdq and atfpper SW White Wal esUmaUq &D arri•&I ift Puerto Vallait.a al DOOG. Satut· daJ. ~WM70 mU. flbeed ot her neen11t maJ • ..., bed • JDJJm to10to P111ttO v~ pany's $281.9 million offer for the foundation's 54.5 percent stake in the Irvine Company works out at ·$33.50 a share, he asked Fried· man why Mrs. Smith "does not ha~e an adequ~te remedy" if she (he true value or the shares. "She can assert her rights~ a dissenting shareholder," the Judge said. "She can come to court and demand an appraisal of the Irvine Company stock." Friedman, who appeared to be <See HEIRESS, Page A2) Oally Piiot Slolff Pltoto Didn't Go Near the Water LA Assess Halt Won't Affect OC Sigos pasted on this sloop bring to mind that old gag about a yacht being a hole in the water surrounded by fiberglass. into wbleh Yt1t1 pour money. Craft currently ls berthed alongside several wheeled vehicles in one of those impromptu used car lots that spring up along major streets on the Orange Coast. Perhaps the boat is owned by a little old lady in Topsiders who ran out of money before she got it wet. County Asseuor Bradley Jacobs said today a so-called freeze on reassessing homes in L-Os Angeles County won't have any impact in Orange County. Jacobs said conditions that touched off Los Angeles County Assessor Phillip Watson's an- nouncement Wednesday of a two- vear freeze don't exist in Orange County. (Related story Page AS.) 'Network,' 'Rocky' Vie For Top Oscars "So, we're not going to take any precipitous action," Jacobs said. "However," he added, "we'll be watching what happens in Los Angeles very closely." What happened in Los Angeles County Wednesday was that Watson sent a shock wave through taxing agencies when be said homes will slay at their 1976 assessed value for at least two years. That means property tax- payers in Los Angele.s won't be assiened higher values on their homes because of values that continue to inflate. It also means that taxing agen- cies won't have an expanding Lax base in residential property to · fall back on for added revenue. Watson, who has been feuding with the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors in recent months, said he bas no choice but to honor the freeze because of a staff shortage and a Jack of com- puterized systems needed to re- assess all homes once each year. Orange County Assessor Jacobs said today he doesn't have those problems and pro- bably ls legally obligated to put new values on all Orange County residential property each year. "There's very little similarity between our operation and Los Anieles." Jacobs explained. LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Network," a scathing view of the television industry, and .. Rocky," the story of a rags-to· riches boxer, each won 10 nominatio~ today from the Mo- tion Picture Academy as the top film of the year. The Watergate film, "All the President's Men," followed with eight in the 49lh Oscar nomina- tions. "Bound for Glory," the f.roody Guthrie biography, followed with six. The late Peter Finch was nominated for best actor in "Network.'' Also nominated were William Holden of" Net work;" Robert De Niro, "Taxi Driver;" Giancarlo Giannini, "Seven Beauties," and Sylvester Stallone, "Rocky." "Network" also scored a best actress nomination for Faye Dunaway, and Talia Shire was namedfor"Rocky." Others in the race: Marie· Christine Barrault, "Cousin Cousine;" Sissy Spacek, "Car· rie," and Liv Ullmann, "Face to Face." Nominated for best picture of the year were "All the Presl- dent' s Men," "Bound for Glory," "Network," "kocky" and "Tui Driver." Other nominations: -Supporting actor: Ned Beat· Moderation? Income Definition Boosted The lrvlne City Council bas boosted the definition of moderate income -raising it about $$,000 from the level adopted lea Ulan three years ago. 1'llB OUGINAL definition adopted In October, 1974. stated that moderate income was between $8,000 and $15,000 8J'Oll mcome per year.· Tbe Pebnaary. lf7T, definition reaards moderate in-come at belns betweeft $13,~ and *20,lGO. The councU was ubd tol'telefta.e the figures to be U$ed wlt.b Its sonlq ltanclarda which require developers to otter a certain poiiJ.on ot their bouaes tor moderate income lamlUAll, T88 NSW nGuaa ldopted by the councll Tu.tt.Y are the aune ona used by the federal Department ol HoU.S· JAi and Urban Developm~ Several council memben said It wu "aad to note .. that 8 $20,0CIO breaehriimer ii DOW eonaidved to i,. earninl mod..-.tneomaw el. • But tbl1 that tbe ~vioul flcures wer. no IOG .... rMlll\le lmne. . .... . . ' . t y, ••Net work ;" Burgess Meredith and Burt Young, "Rocky;" Laurence OJivier, "Marathon Man ;" Jason Robards, "All the President's (See OSCARS, PageA2) -- 8 Trustee ·Candidates Air Views Eight of 10 Newport-Mesa school board candidates pre- sented their views to an au- dience of about 75 at Corona del Mar High School Wednesday night. All eight listed the impendinr effects of the Serrano decision as the major concern of the dis- trict in the immediate future. The California Supreme Court recently ruled the state must replace its present property tax-based school financini system by 1980. Legislation is still pending, but the effect most likely will cause wealthy districts like Newport...Mesa to divert funds to improve educa- tion in poorer districts. The candidates are vying for four seats on the seven-member board of educaUon. Although they are runntn1 lo their respective trustee areas, can- didates Will be elected at laree in the March 8 election. Here is some of what the can- . didates had to say Wednesd~ niaht: BE1TY JO BAILEY, Corona del Mar resideat and candidate in trustee area 4. said abe is pf'CM4,d of tbo quallty education in ~e distrf d SJJe called oo parenta to tab an •ctive role in pu,ab)q tM Leaislat.ute to ll:Qplemeo1 the Se.trano decl"lon w~th a minimum financial eHeet on Jocal 1ebooll. She aald ''acbool closu~ are tnevitable0 aQd 1ald "we mu.st look atit realllUcally." However. she adct.d Ute dJI. trlct muat be aware of clowncout bome developm.ta wbtch could bolaier decJlnlng d.latdct eDiOllm.. . . MARGASg'I' a. "PBGGY" CAaD, a teacbeT' at LacQD& (lel~,-~ Kidnap, Rape Charges Jail Harl>our Youth A Huntington Harbour youth: captured by a pohce stakeout squad remained jailed today, as a 17-year-old girl hitchhiker pre· pared to retell detectives a nightmare tale or kidnap, rape and forced sex perversions. The victim, police said, was thumbing a ride lo Costa Mesa. Wednesday njght when she was picked up and taken to Hunt- ington Beach's Central Park. . Jailed on multiple charges as the suspect, investigators said, is John Bryan Gifford, 19, of 16400 Saybrook Lane. He was booked on suspicion of kidnaping, forcible rape and sex perversions, with bail currently set at $25,000 pending review by a JUdge. Police Officer Robert Winstein was dispatched to a shoe store on Warner Avenue about 7:30 p.m. Wednesday alter a clerk called to report a near-hysterical girl asked her to call. The victim told investigators she was hitching a ride on Warner Avenue at Gothard Street when a chubby-faced man in a blue Volkswagen Bug offered her a ride. From there, the ordeal began and she was driven to a secluded area where the attacks occurred, police said. Usina details supplied by the victim, police traced the suspect and arrested him at the Saybrook Lane address. The victim was taken lo Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, where examining physicians confirmed the sexual assault.& she described, investigators said. Mesa Thief Sentenced A Colla Mesan who was caught by police shortly aft4'r he broke into a clothin1 •tore in the dty has been sentenced to nine months ln Orange County Jail and placed on three years pl'Oba· tlon. Superior Court 1udfe James B. Walawortb sentenced David Lee Robert.!, 23, of 2210 Colleee St.. after the detendant pleaded 1ullty to buraJary charces. Roberta was arrated Jut Aug. 14 bJ police respOndln' to en alarm at Callfomla Sportawur. Ht W. Baker St. Bobuta smashed tbe wftidow to aatn .- &ry. police aald. • . ~ • ' A' DAIL y PILOT c Thur!d!y Febtuary 10. 1&n Brown Ynes· Wa1-ning on Water SACRAMt:NTQ (AP> -GQv. EdmWlld Brown Jr. hu warned Southern Call!ornta residents that they, too, must conserve water, even though water is still ,Plentiful in their region. .. When people are faclng bankruptcy in water-short Northern California, they view with dismay the filling of swim· ming pools in Southern Calilomia and the conatructioo ot new rffreaUonal lakes," Btown laid Wednesday. ••People U1 the DOrtb want to see more C<Mlaenatlon lo ~ south. We're Ill a criala we've never faced before." Brown said after a 2~bour free-wheeling discussion with about 75 legl.slators, state officials and representatives of water districts and a&ricultural groups. "We are aoing to have to share Fr ... Page AI ta. less, abare the burden, share th bardshlp ... A lesblat.or from Callfond.a•s most severely hlt couniy aald be will propose mandatory statewide rationi.D&. But Brown, questioned tater by reporters, expressed doubts about statewide rationing a lthough be didn't rule it out. "Anything is a possibility con· sldering this drouCbt. There ia no . TEACHERS FLEX MUSCLES ON ISSUES • • statutory chqo tbat ls not un· de.r coulderatloo," Bl"OW'n aaid. But. tbe Democratic governor added, 0 1t m~ be more erncJent. to work cooperaUvely wltb local water districts than t.o issue more paper and regulations and edicts from the state Capitol. "The object ia to save water, not issue edicts," Brown said. Brown said be convened the session to bring t.ogether all of the mutually dependent water users and water providers, get them t.o exchange views and to help assess "the real problem, its magnitude and complexity ... and Stegmeir and Lennon said they his program is going to be interviews with small groups ol * * * what. ean be done." Bob Wlll, spokesman for the Metropolitan Water D1slncl or Southern Callrornla, was a special target of complaints from Northern California growers and cattlemen who said they faced cutbacks of 75 percent or more ln waler, and in some cases bankruptcy. Will said bis district is cutting back its use of Northern California waler from 800,000 acre.feet to 400,000 acre-feet by substituting lower quality Colorado River water. Teen's 'Cash' Re~lyStash A Corona d e l Mar t.eena1er called police Wednesday to report the theft of hta ca.sh box by three teena&ed acqaaln• taocea. But pollce found after taking the trio into custody that the cash box waa ac· tually a stash box. The victim was then booked on a char ge of p0ssession of cocaine and held in lieu of $1,500 bail. His companions, a u juveniles, were released to their parents. see it as a way or convincing the' "Listening to You," attributing power actors. Droiiu.L' Saves community th at teachers are just. its use to a clerical error. ~ ,.u, Fr098 Page Al as interested in quality education Thal clerical error put that ti· Then comes the feedback as the taxpayers and parents are. Ue on top oI three of a series or sessions at which results are """-urple'S L•tfie However, documents bearing eight documents carrying the analyzed and a mailing list is ~ a. HEIRESS SET BACK • • • the NMEA letterhead which out· NMEA letterhead, all of which compiled. taken aback by the observation, line lhe so-called grassroots were designated Community Ac-p LACERVILLE (AP) immediately told Judge Judge · · di t 'ls als · p ln asking rbet.orically "What that his lawsuit is designed to campaign, m ca e 1 go are tton rogram. . d ., .. th doc California's drought is a disaster preserve Mrs. Smith's status as a not as limited as Lennon and One document lists the step-by-are we tryang to 0 · e U· to a l moot everyone, but a Fre-. . Stegmeir said they were. step procedures that are to be ment responds with follr points h minority shareholder in the including "Make you presence mont locksmith and is wife lrvineCompany. For instance, one document followed: . th . believe it may have saved their "Her status as a shareholder headed "Listening to You, A "First, identify your powe't feltm ecoll!m~ty. lives. would be severed if the founda· Community Action Program" structure." This involves setting "Let people know that you Fun Yee Pang. 47, said Wed· lion deal with Mobil is ap· slates; up a strategy team within the or-care. And, as a result, make it nesday that a truck forced him to proved," Friedman said. "That "Goal of the Campaign: ganization which then picks out clear l.o the school board that you swerve off Jngbway SO near Lake is the ... _._. of her lawsui't." "P bl' d T h the community's "power actors" ved · th T h d d 250 • uuwn u ic agen a : eac ers and "change agents." ! are also invol m e com-a oe an own a ·10ot em-Mrs. Smith, who holds 22.4 per-take an active role in listening to munity and have developed a bankment into the drought-cent or the issued Irvine Com· the community concerns on "Real power people are not power base. shrunken American River. education. always immediately visible. "There was just enough water pany shares, is known to prefer '•Hidden agenda: Teachers Like icebergs, they're around, in-"This is something the board in the river t.o cushion the fall but the $282.7 million offer made for identify s trong, supportive Ouentialbutnotpublicitystars. shouldremember asilbargains notenoughtosinkthecar,"said the foundation's holdings by teacher advocates in the com· with you at the negotiations ta-Pang from his hospital bed here. what is referred to in court as the munfty." "As an example, contact ble." Allen-Taubman group: A con-cilizens who at one time held · h ded b w 11 Str t A list or obJ'ectives that follows sortium ea Y a ee politicaloffices.Theyoftencarry f' · Ch ti All d shows four goals teachers are to Fro• Page AJ inanc1er a es en an accomplish including "To iden· great weight and are important Detroit developer Alfred Taub-contribut9rs and advisors to tify possible community mem-elected officials,'' the document, TRUSTEES SPEAK man. d bers lorsupPort in negotiations," Friedman's comments an and "To apply some influence on su~~ests. • • • testimony from Mrs. Smith's de· the Board." The next step is to set up teams Montessori School, said she be passed to implement Serrano, position indicate that her present Goals the program sets lo at· of two or three to visit the power would bring "new ideas" t.o the then take steps t.o keep effects at status as a major minority tain in the community include actors. Once the teams are school board if elected. a minimum. shareholder in the company "To create a power base in the established, they need to be Candidates Vickie Ann founded by her grandfather •--~c~o;m~m;~~·~~~w;hl~';c~h~w~il~l~s;u;ppo~rt~~tt~a~inH.~A~~n~n~~~~~~~~~te~a~4~Co~ro~nia~die~liM~u~>~~=~=~~=~~~~~~-wouldbewes~vediftheN~~ • , e eams are t en given can te suppo e concep Von Berger. area 4• did not at· '"Taubman bid prevailS in court. and "To identify teacher ad· aboutthreeweekstohandletheir of small neighborhood schools tend the candidates night Friedman vainly argued voe ates in the community.•• and suggested young children sponsored by the Corona del Mar throughout most of Wednesday Lennon, contacted Tuesday, have the same teacher for more Zone Advisory Committee. that the foundation's case for the acknowledged that, contrary to Front Page A 1 than one year t.o establish more The next candidates night is sale of its Irvine Company hold· his earlier statements, finding personai contact. s lated for 7:30 p.m . Tuesday at ings to Mobil is "a tainted ac- teacher advocates is a goal of the OSCARS the offices of the Newport tion." campaign. • • • She extended this concept to Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of He angrily condemned the sale "Sure it is." he said. "We want older students, suggesting that Realtors, 401 North Newport or the foundation's stake in the to have spokesmen for what is Men." students having the s~mhe '::ath Blvd. company as a "sweetheart deal" "OOd from our ranks J·ust as the -Supporting actress: Jane or biology teacher m1g t ave b Alexander, "All the President's better study hab1'ts and more School board solicited people who Men ·," Jodie Foster . "Taxi rsonal student/teacher con Spoke against our pay proposal at pe -Driver·," Lee Grant, "Voyage of t ct the board meeting." a · the Damned;" Piper Laurie, Lennon was adamant that the "Carrie;" Beatrice Straight, THOMAS CROSSAN, a can- program is still local in essence, "Network." didate in trustee area 5 (Balboa even though the outline for it I s I and and pen i n s u 1 a ) • camerromtheCTA. ·.-Direction: Alan J . Pa.kuJa, 'bed hi If " He explain. ed that the docu· descn mse as a scrap-"A 11 the President's Men"; d f h " f · ed ments were provided by a CTA per an a ig ter or improv Ingmar Bergman, "Face to education. staff member who had set up a F a c e • · : Si d n e y L u m et , He is opposed to the teacher similar program m West Orange "Network"; John G. Av1ldsen. tenure system because "there CQunly. "Rocky"; Lina Wertmuller, are a (ew. very bad apples who ''We had to have a starting "Seven Beauties." are teaching in the district." point." he said. "We changed He called for a closer study of some thin~s. but it's the only -Foreign language film student reading capabilities and direct mput that the CTA has .. Black and White in Color," renewed interest in drug abuse had." d t f th Ivory Coast·, "Cousin Cousine," which he claimed has infiltrated Lennon sai the pom 0 e to grade school level. program1s still "lo taketcachers Fran ce; "Jacob the Liar," d t em ... -rs out of German Democratic Republic: an communs Y m Lit' RODERICK MACMILLIAN, their adversary roles " "Nights and Days ," Poland; He aisodenied that the name or "Seven Beauties," Italy. incumbent in area 7 (west Costa Mesa), promised to be available Fro•PageAJ LEITER 'UNCLEAR' • • • to see the great czarina," he laughed. But members or the Costa Mesa dele~ation, and As· semblyman Mangers were not laughing this morning. He said Miss Gianturco came to his orfice in January, "and I asked her what her plan was for the Costa Mesa (Newport) Freeway. "She said, 'we don't ever plan to complete that freeway'," Mangers said. to the community for discussions prior lo the election. He supports decentralized ad· ministration because it lowers district costs, but said district of- ficials should continue to have in· put into individual school pro- grams. He believes the tenure system is generally good and said he doesn't think there are many teachers in the district that hide behind the system which guaran- tees employment after a three year probation period. and a "prescription for disaster. "They are drowning and they want Mrs. Smith to drown with them," Friedman protested. "They tell us the Mobil offer is the best they can get but it's only the best they can get because the marketplace in America &as been told hands orr, this ls Mobil's deal," TONIGHT COSTA MESA-COUNTY WATER DISTRICT -Regular meeting, 1971 Placentia, 7 p.m. COASTuNE CC LECTURE - "Success · • rung semmar,'' Hoag Hospital Meeting Rooms A and B, 7 p.m. "OLD TIMES" -South. Coast Repertor y Theater, Tuesday- Sunday throu~h Feb. 19, 8 o.m. OCC LECTURE -Phifosophy and Wisdom of the American Jn. dian, Cluef Red Dawn lecturer, FineArtsll9, 7:30p.m . Mangers said that in a letter dated Feb 2to Miss Glanturcohe wrote, " ... At our Feb. 8 meeting (Tuesday) I will be accompanied by Cost.a Mesa's public services director and a representative or the city council ... " Mangers said his i.otent was to relay lo Miss Gianturco that, "al our meeting -meaninc both of us and the city officials.•• "l told her the city can't even plan for its redevelopment of the downtown area because the freeway issue is still up in the air and asked her why she hadn't told Carta Mesa officials of the decision." Mangers said she didn't have an answer lo that question. CAROL MARTIN, incumbent in trustee area S, called for staff and community involvement to aid the district in minimizing the effects of the Serrano d ecision, which will most likely force the wealthy Newport-Mesa district to financially support poorer dis- tricts. RCA's most automahc TV ever1 Electronically tracks and corrects the TV signal before it becomes a picture on your screen. • Automatic oontrasl/color "tracking" sircuitry ties bnghtness. contrast and col0< together so that all three are balanced simultaneously. RCA ColorTrak 19'' But Gianturco spokesman Rupp said his interpretation or the letter was that the stafr would 01eet with city officials, picking up a sentence that says, "I would hope at that time your staff will be able t.o address themselves to the spectfic problems ... " ·'I fully expected her t.o be there to open the meeUng, meet my constituents from Costa Mesa and bear their concerns," Mangers said today. DAILY PILOT ·-· .... ---'"'·~ VIClt~• .... Oe-al~ '--••-.... ,,...... .. ...... ,..._,"' ... .., .,...... ... .._ ~ ....... ~'"'''""4 Mluleol"' u"" c ,:""---~~~------------'!' \,. ' "Then I asked her it she is aware that there have been SOI accidents, eight fatalities and more than 90 injuries on Newport Boulevard. ·•1 asked her if she knew it takes 12 extra Costa Mesa police omcers t.o police that 3.7-mlle suetcb ol roadway, and that ac- cidents per million vehlcle miles has averaged 395 percent above the standard freeway ... Mangers said Miss Gianturco admitted she did not know those problems existed and told Mangers she was not prepared lo answer the questions. "But she told me, 'Let's meet again when I will be be tter prepared to respond to you•." "I said 'fme." and set up the Feb. 8 date with her assistant," Mancenaald. "I understand tbJ.s is a l>UsY wom~ but 1be bu cootmually refused to c:om• down to Costa Mesa, take a hallcopter fllaht to Me what a mea lt 11. And then sbe didn't 'e\'tm show for • meet~ tn1 lll ber own Oftlce bulldlq. '' What's the nm •teJ> for tbe u- sembl'ymanT "They (Ute CalT1'au at.aft) promiHd to have an annrer, one wa7 or the oebe.r' on tba freeway b7 Mattbt.. .. heaald. At th.It dm an ••aluatloD ol the~'· m -1ear hllh•aJ plan will beODtllned. :' •· Peiana1l7. rm sotna to watt u.ntll March l, Maqen Hid. "The if tbe amwer la tbat ~ are net loiDi to do ~. I will Join~ ... l'1 • flCbt lo '" Wbat'• riOtfully tbeln ... She said the decision will c hallenge local control of schools. She noted the tenure system is a slate law that would require com munily pressur e if any changes are t.o be made. N.C ... DUKE" O'BRIEN, can- d l date in trustee area 2 (Northeast Costa Mesa), said be is "Phllo.'IOl>hically opposed to the tenure system." He cited support from Trustee Orville Amburgey, wbo is not runninC for re-elecUoo, and said the Serrano decision ts a m.wr concern of the district. He sald the district must await legislation on Serrano, then move lo minimise tu effects. DANIEL S. WALLACE, at- torney and candidate in area 4 (Corona del Mar), believes the Legislature abould move to bring poorer acbools up to the level of Newport-Mesa rather than lower Joe al ltandard.s. He called tbe present prope?V tax-baaed school flnanclnc 1y1tem outdated and said sohool ftmd1 c:ouJd be ral!ed through in- creased 1tate sales tax on gas, cl1areu 01' liquor. &JCIDIOND E. WESTLAKE n ., area 2 candidate (Nortbeut Costa Mesa), 1ald be ta aeekin• electlon to malnt.al.D the quality of education ho es~rlenced ln the dlsttlct. He abo aaJd local residents 1)loutd kup a cloao e7e oa. Sacrammto to HO Whal bllll wUl • Automatic color control holds flesh tones and other colors to the settings you s{'lect~n when TV signal vanes or you change chal'lnels. • Automatic room light picture control adjusts picture brightness as room light changes. d•agondl • RCA Super AccuFllter black matri1< picture tube has filtered color phosphors that absorb room tight. Result: colors appear sharper and more vivid. RCA XL-100 25'' I °'-ti l. 5.5.4995 Superb RCA Color TV • There's great cotor TV viewing In store fOC' the whole famtly with this RCA XL-100 console. • Reliable XL-100 chassis has no tubes to bum out-lt'a 100% solid atate. • Black matrix picture tube deliver-s spart<llng, dramatically detailed color pictures. •Automatic Fine Tuning pinpoints and holds the cor~ brOlldcast tional. . . • Plug-in AocuCircu1t modui.s 91mphfv 9efVlc1ng. • Quality eound from a 8" oval due>-<Xme apeaker • CablMt of attractive walnut-Qraln finish on hardboard and selected hatdwood aollda. 2'75 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ..... ............ .... 21 .... w•.,c...Jr. Phone 642-8882 Store Hour3 Daily 9-6 sat. 9-6:30 ........ ........ .,.. ...... , ... f I Thursday. Februarx10, 1917 DAILY PILOT 41 Pats on Behind Bring Slap of Lam ~ VlA.MI<AP>-ATexuoilman who· lallecedly refused to ~ warn.inp to "cut that out" bas been diar1ed wider tbe federal alr pl.racy law wttb aJappift& the behind.aof twostewardesaea. Stewardf'Ss Patti De Woody told U .S. M.,lstrate Charlene Sorren· tlno'lbat one of four pata she re-~elved durin1aJan.20 London·tO· Miami Olgbt WIS 10 llrODR that she aJmosUeU. "I told him each time, 'Cut that out.' and be mimicked me," the National Airlines stewardess testified Stewardess Jane Otto testified that the oilman Aubrey Bumgard. '5, alapped her twice Bumgard of Galveston, Tex., 1s a drilling supervisor on the North Sea project off the coast of People-oriented Super Agency Gets Started By KATHY CLANCY OllN O.ily Pl .. 1 St.tit Orange County's new Human Services A gem· y < HSA >. de signed to incorporate welfare. health and other people-oriented programs under one umbrella. was given inallal approval Wed· nesday Supervisors agreed the agency can begin operation July 1, but said il should incorporate its pro- grams gradually under tht· b<>ard's close direction The agency, being formed Pair Nabbed In Robbery After Search Two robbery suspects were captured in SanlJ Ana Canyon sean ·h by Ornngc pohce and of ficers from t\\O other cities. police reported Officers said tht· pair was ac· cused of taking $20 from the U Totem Marktot, 1800 E. Santa Ana Canyon Ho:id about 11 ·45 p.m. Wednesdav Arrcst~d "l'r<' M 1chael J Lyons. 18, and Ch:irles W . Nielsen. 20, both of Paramount. who wer c bookl'd into Orange County .Jail on 11rmc•d rohbcry ch:iri.!t'::-poli<'r :.;11rl Thl' p.11r al11·g{·rll\ "t•n· .1rmed with .1 :Pi c,tl1bl·r l'l'\ oh l'r ;rnd knife. polln• n·1x11 tt·d Officer'.'. sauJ llH• mark ct was being \\alt•ht•d at tht' ltme or th1• holdup by Offrrcr Art Homo. o mt.!mb<'r of J ::.p<'l·1.1I robbery de tail Fifteen Oran~e officers were involved an the canyon .,.-arch. police reported along w1lh the Costa :\k'.'..i ancl llunt1ngton Bt•ach polan• hl'11l·o11tcrs Oemenle Girl Saved From Cliff San Clem l'nte State Park rangers and city lifeguard'> rescued a 19-yea r ·old girl trapped on a ledge 70 feet above a rock strewn shorelinE' behind Con- cord ia Elementary School in San Clemente Wednesday Donna Cox of 3204 A vc dE'I Pres1dc.-ntt' wus re11cued by authorities when llhl' became trapped on the ledge and was un able lo chmb up or get down Mass C'ox was untnJurcd an th1· ordeal Aetivist Jailed ~I OSCOW <AP > Police picked up human nghls act1v1M Yuri Orlov today after he c.-merged from a week an hadan~ and warned that Stallnasm may return this year , Andrei Sakharov reported. from nine separate d1v1s1ons. will include the county Social Services. Mental Reallh and Health Departments. along with the offices of the public ad- ministrator. consumer affairs, veterans services, senior citizens. cooperative extension and Community Referral and In formation Service. HSA Director David Odell said he did not expect the new agency· to be completely formed for two to fi ve years. He noted the HSA was the re· s uit of two years of planning, de· signed to link county. city and private human service programs mto one coordinated network. The agency aJso is to fill in gaps that may exist in services, avoid duplication of effort and hopefully save money Supervisor Ralph Diedrich cautioned. "I don't think we are going to reduce costs al all And that doesn't bother me." Instead. Diedrich said, the new . . within communities. will dis· cover unmet human needs and will try lo meet those needs. That will cost money, he continued. ··Anybody who thinks there is going to be savings isn't really looking at the problem ," Diedrich said. However. Supervisor Laurence Schmit said he was concerned that after two years of study there were no figures available on cutting expenses. Odell said he did believe the agency would make it possible to avoid what has been a 23 percent increase in costs over the past fou r years. And at Schmal :. suggestion, the board asked the new human ~erv1ce chief lo develop per .c•i>1ta costs for human Se{V•Ct?f- to present during budget sessions this spnng. Supervisors earlier also con s1dered placrng the county Probation Department in the new umbrella agency. However. a committee helpin~ plan the new agency r ccom mended leaving that department out for the present and later transferring in those funct.Jons that see m l o b<.' "people services" rather than law en· rorcement services. That committee also recom· m e nded Wed nesda y that $Upervisors adopt four ~eo graphic regions within the agen· cy so programs can be developed and delivered to meet needb or residents by region But the board voted 4-1 lo hold off deciding what the geographic breakdown will be. with board Chairman Tom R1le~ castm~ the lone dissenting \'Ote · · 1 can not only see better service to the people in the arc;; but more efficient and less costly service:· Riley said. s upporting the four region concept Odell also said the four regwns already had undergone ex haustive study" and were de signed to provide a good balance or service without crossing city llnes. This oval·shaped antenna in Cornl Gables, Fla .• seems like goOd restina place for a flock of blackbirds who seem to be olmost overlon<Ung it. Or maybe they just liked the TV pro ram m progress. Scotland He wasn't in court. hav· mg posted $1,000 bond and re- turned to work His lawyer spoke for him. After the third s lap. Miss DeWoody testified. she told the pilot and be warned Bumgard to stop. A few minutes later, however. s he felt another whack on her backside and turned lo confront Bumgard a1aln. Defense attorney Donald Fergusoa asked if Bumgard bad beeo drunk. )f w Otto aald 1he tbouebt that "he had a few" before be boarded and that when she served him abe ''had poured outonlyaUUleofeachdrink." "I bad a feeling be might be a problem." she testified. · Loading the Space Shuttle FBI agent Gary Dunn said be queaUoncd Bwngard at Miami's airport alter the women com plained. "I told Mr. Bumgard of the cbarees made by flight atteo- dants," DunnuJd. "Hetoldmebe had patted one of th e stewardesses 'maybe twice' and that maybe he patted her bardel" than intended." M albtrate Sorrentlno ordered the case held over tor a &red jury. • Bumiard is charged under the federal air piracy law, wbfc;b •• makes tt a felony for 8J\1 .tr · paasenier tointlmldate or UQ,Wa acrewmember"soast.oin&erfere • with" bls or her duties. It ts a felony puohhable by 20 yeara in priaon and a $10,000 fine. Marines Face Suit By Klan SAN DIEGO CAP) -A suit by the American Ci vii Liberties Union on behalf of the Ku Klux Klan seeks $775,000 from the Deiense Department and the U.S. Marine Corps and seeks to block 'the transfer of KKK members from Camp Pendleton. The suit brooght in U.S. District Court by Michael Pancer , local ACLU director, stems from the Marine Corps' rapid transfer of Marine KKK members from Pendleton loother bases last Nov· ember alter a racial melee un- covered a Klan cell on the nation's biggest Marine base. Pancer told a news conference the Marine Corps violated the constitutional rights of the KKK m e mbers through mandatory transfers and threats or discharge and other punitive actions. America's space shuttle is loaded onto the back of a 747 aircraft outside Palmdale The first taxi tests with the mated shuttle are scheduled for next week, as are the first captive flights. T he suit asks $250,000 on behalf of the KKK for alleged denial oflts rights and amounts ranging from $25,000 to $75,000 for 10 Marine KKK members Pancersaidthehigheramounts a re sought for PFC Ron M. __ ap uspec Guilty of Robbery Double Woe It seemed an ill-fated tnp for rancher millionaire. politician Richard ,J . O'Neill. p e r , e nn1 s . Campbell. who allegedly were held in a small room for five days without. explanation and denied showers or contact with friends or relatives. OnthenightofNov.13, a band of blacks raided a barracks room in which seven whites holding a beer party were attacked with clul>s . and screwdrivers. Some of the 14 blacks charged in the incident . have testified in their hearings they were out to break up a KKK meeting but got the wrong room. Six whites were hospitalized. William Paul Gullett, once charged with kadnaping and m urdenng Rossmoor housewife Joann Seigman, was convicted Wednesday by a Los Angeles federal court jury of robbing a La Ila bra bank Gullett. 27. Bellflower. was found guilty after three bank tellers identified him as the man who wore a dar;c wig and dark glasses when be robbed the Secunl)t P¥tfiO" Nat;lot'al Bank July6, lle1~awaywithS421. U S. District Judge Harry Pregerson will sentence GuJlett Feb 28. Gullett already 1s on Children's Par<Nle Set For F es ti val Dana Point Har bor Festival of Whales will be marked bv a children's parade at 10 a.m. Saturday, one of a series of event s and exhibitio n s throughout the weekends this month al the Har bor D1snevland's Donald Duck will act as Grand Marshal and Wally Walrus of Sea World will lead the p3 r ade, which will inc lude children from k tndergarten through sixth grade wearing nautical dress and ridin g bicycles or pulling noats Other activities will include marine lectures on the depletion of coastal abalone, life in Dana Point tidepools, whaling and the conservation of whales, coastal marine birds at various loca- tions. Programs are available at local businesses. Search Still On for Lost .County Pilot PHOENlX, Ariz. I AP1 ' The Arizona Civil Ai r Patrol con· lioued a searcb for a Californian Wednesday m\ssing on a light plane night. but officials said they had no Idea of his flight path. The CAP began a search Wed- nesday for a Cessna 182 piloted by James Smith, 32, of Fullerton. Smith left Fullerton Feb. 3 on a trip to Phoenix. But he was not.re- ported mlssin1 until Tuesday. But CAP orficlaJs said they de· termlned that Smith bad purchased gaeoUne in Phoenix on Friday and then took off agaln wlthouUWni a Ol~ht plan. CAP officlata sald they planned to check radar tape recordings about the Ume he reportedly left Phoenix in a11 attempt lo de· term inc a direction of travel A total of 1$ J)lanes combed 45.000-aquarc mUca 1n Arizona WedneJida)\ orrlclala said. parole from an eight-year sen· tence for a 1971 bank robbery con- viction. Gullett was charged with another Bellflower man or kid- naping and killing Mrs. Seigman l ast August. In Dece m ber. however. charges against both men were dismissed on grounds of insufficient evide nce Earlier this week. the second man , Ronald Lewis Ewing. 27 was sentenced to 15 months an prison and plwced on five years' probation after being convicted of illegally possessing two rifles When he got to th e Democratic Convention in Sacramento. he was ousted as Southern California t•hairman of the part) When he got back to h1~ San Juan Capistrano ranch. something else was massing fl. burglar had c;.ir r1ed off television s<'h. radios and lamps worth abouUt.260 The Marine Corps admitted it was transferring most of the 17 men whose names Naval In· ,·estigat1ve Service police found on a roster of KKK members. The suit mwntams transfers and har- assment by the Corps of the m"H precludes the chances of several of them for promotion. GARRETT'S SEMI ANNUAL SALE Includes Several Groups of OCCASIONAL TABLES AND CURIOS ~.11•• :_9 BY DREXEL & HERITAGE 15o/o to 30o/o OFF SaJP '599. <:ollf>('tion. illwtratPd i~ Cla1111ir Court Heritag!I>. SaJr '229. Salt> '399. tJ., It l,,f w s.1 .. •339. OTHER COLLECTIONS ON SALE CAMEO 2 l5o/o OFF MARACAY 15o/o OFF BISHOP GATE 15% OFF Sale •4$9. FRANCESCA I 22% OFF KINGSBRIDGE 25% OFF LES BAUX 30% OFF Oclutr Dkeotttfnaed Table• at 3~ Ott PROHSSIONAL INTERIOR D~SiGNERS Opel\ Moft Thurt.. l Fri. E .. tt. 2 21 S HARBOR Bl VO. COSlA MESA CALIF. ... u l>0-0275 GunDian Gives Up, Releases Hostages Pope K e cei1'es King Pope Paul VI received King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia of Spain in Rome today. expressing hope that the 38-year-old monarch would bring about ''responsible freedom" and "solid peace'' for his country. The king and pontiff met privately for more than an hour. SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP> - A young man armed wftb two rtnes holed up in a suburban W aabington, D.C., bank for seven hours, first taking and then re- 1 e a sing unharmed seven hostages before surrendering to police early today. The man, identified aa Stephen Gregory, 27, of Silver SprinC. Md .• walked into the bank with two rifles after an argument with bis girlfriend, police s aid. HE DRANK SEVERAL cans ot beer and munched on a steak sandwich wh.ile negotiating with police by phone and c>ccasionally spraying rifle shots through the door of the bank and into its ceil- ing Sgt. Douglas McFee of the Montgomery Counly. Md., police said after the siege ended that Gregory made no threats and few demands. He said the gunman placed a rtne at the ear of one of hia hostages once during the evening and demanded to talk with a policeman. McFee 11aJd be responded by approaching the back door of the bank as instructed, and Gregory aent a rifle shot over hi.a bead. .. HE ADVISED ME it he truly wanted to be could have killed me, and I believe him," Mc Fee said. There were no injuries report- ed although police estimated Greeory fired more than 200 rounds of ammunition from bis two rifles. Gregory walked into the bank .at about 6 p.m. with bis rifles in plain view and ordered the customers and two employes out· side, police spokesman Pb1Wp Caswell said. RE KEPT SEVEN bank e mployes, including three women, as hostages. but re- leased them one by one as the evening wore on. He traded one of the bo.<1tages for a police bullhorn. When he discovered another bank employe hiding under a counter several hours after the siege began, Gregory allowed him to leave. Qw•B•rfed ............ Derailments Slow Trains At Gregory's request, McFee said, police placed a call to his girlfriend, who apparently con- vinced the gunman police would not harm him if be surrendered. Jordan's Queen Alia was buri e d in the royal cemetery near Amman t<>- day, less than 24 hours after her death in a ·helicopter crash. About 3,000 mourners joined the grief-stricken King Hussein at grave-side services for the 29-year-old queen. WASIUNGTON (AP) -Con- cern over a puzzling series of railroad derailments has caused a reduction of some train speeds and longer travel times tor many passengers. A coast-to-coast trip over cer- tain Amtrak routes now takes tour or five hours longer than it did a month ago. Many trips between the Midwest and the east and wes t coas ts are averaging two or three hours longer. AMTR AK SPOKESMAN Brian Duff said the slowdowns alfe~t 36 of Amtrak's 250 daily trains and added: "These are miles, so they represent a large percentage of our reve nue passenger miles per day.'' Many Amtrak locomotives now are slowing to 40 miles an hour on curves or two degrees or more inclination. These are the General Motors SDP40F model, involved in 14 derail- ments in the last three years because of a mysterious in- teraction between the engine and the rails. One person was killed and 332 were injured in the accidents. THE DERAILMENTS oc curred as the trains negotial<!d curves at speeds as high as 88 miles an hour. But m ost OC · curred at 50 to 60 miles an hour. u .s. railroads own 5. 795 or the SDP40F engines. almost all 1n freight se.rvice. Amtrak has 150 e ngines and oper ates t hem mostly on long-distance passenger routes. After an Amtrak derailment Jan. 16 near Birmingham, Ala .. a test program was instituted in Screams for H e lp Apartment Blaze Takes Four Lives DES MOINES. Iowa (AP) -A woman who begged for rescue from a fire escape and the daughter she held in her arms were among the four peoplewbodied as fire gutted a decaying apartment building. "God, the look on her face." said one of the helpless bystanders At least 10 were injured in the blaze Wednesday, including a m an who jumped from a fourth-floor window. screamed and started to bum," VIVIAN RAND, 26, perished as she begged someone to save her daughter, Sonya, 5, who died later of burns at University Hospitals in lowa City. The first fire truck on the scene had been inspecting buildings nearby. Eyewitnesses said it had no ladders, and firemen stood nearly helpless as occupants screamed for help and dropped children to persons on the ground before leaping themselves. ••1 saw people hanging on fi re e scapes and dropping to the ground," said Jay Furnas, 20. building manager ... Others were Jumping from windows." JIM FURNAS, 18, his brother, said he was oo tbe ground as Mrs. Rand ~reamed, .. Save my baby, save my baby" from a third floor ftre escape. Furnas said he and others tried to talk the woman in- to climbing down, but she re· fused, saying the metal handrails were too hot. .. She had the c hild in her hands. As I stood there. sbe Furnas said. Furnas said firemen later managed to get to the child. but left the mother's body "to go a fter somebody who was alive." THE CIULD WAS taken to a Des Moines hospital and later flown to the burn center at University Hospitals in Iowa Ci· ty. where she died of her burns. The other two victims, whose bodies were taken from a fourth floor apartment were identified as Nellie Hall. 55. and Larry Gene Thomas. 28 The H-sbapcd, turn-of-the· century brick and wood building bad 98 residents in 44 units, ac- cording to Fire Chief Lee Williams. No official cause for the fire was given by authorities, but the building manager said a residen' had reported a fire in his room, started by a cigarette, and that when he brought a blanket to ftgbt the fire," the whole hallway was on fire and I couldn't get throu&h. I heard people scream and windows break.·· an effort to determine the cause of the problem. Participating are Amtrak, the Association or American Railroads. General Motors and t h e Federal Railroad Administration. WHILE THE investigation is under way, it was agreed to restrict the engines' speed on the curves. "The action at this time is precautionary," said William Harris of the railroad associa- tion, leader or the joint project. "There is an unknown interac- tion between the SPD40F locomotive and the track at cer- tain speeds on curves o( two The National Transportation Safety Board issued its own separate report Feb. 3 on 18 de- railments, including those in- volving the STP40F and another six·axle locomotive, the P30CH model. I T SAID PRELIMINARY in- vestigations indicate that on curves that exceed 1.3 degr ees, and that have certain deviations in track geometry. these two engines, traveling at more than 48 miles an hour, "cause the out side rail to either move laterally or to tip outward." This can result in derailment of the locomotive wheels and or the following cars . It recommended that t he Federal Railroad Administra- tion conduct an extensive in- vestig ation a nd s uggested res tricted speeds on curves or I 3 degrees or more. DUFF REPORTED Amtrak CHIP STA YS MUM ON P<n: UWS WASIIlNGTON <AP) - Chip Carter, 26-year·old son of the President, has turned down an invitation to testify in New Mex- ico for decriminalization or mari· juana. White HoU8e Press Secretary Jody Powell said young Carter had sought advice Crom him and presidential assistant Hamilton J ordan and that both men counseled him against testifying. But, Powell added, "I think Chip would say it was his de- cision ·· Keith Stroup, director or the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said young Carter wanted to testify be f o r e t h e New Mexico legislature m Santa Fe on Feb. 18. but the appearance was vetoed by Powell and Jordan. .Mild Temperatures Rule Some States Enjoy Year's First Thaw Te•perat•rn ,..~ Hltlll a... Pre. ,. 2' Anc~o .. oio Alltflte 80IM eo,,.,. lhlll, .. Chk:lltO Clncl11M1t Clevelend Oelles·fl.WOt!ll o.-0.tn>lt Ovl\M ........ 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Hlfll pt_. ~ lo rff\11141 9¥9'" Callfoml.1, •Min'"""' w111 ... 111 bt ............. --. Ov••nltM Wrll-mret ·~ '"'"' J...,...'" ,.,.,.. ............ . ...... icn ..... ,, .. c.11 u2-1111. Pulafew.,,.q to wortt for u • Sperllll"O sltle9, warmer tem· per•l--lfeWQVtlyWlllCH•re ln sto.-. tor fNlt el Soulhffn Celllornla lw the,.. Of---· Tiie NMiontl '#Miiier SffYkt U ld wlMt ''"""' ffilm 1S to 2S mllH per hour w\11 lllMe4 U. mountains and ven.,,llt._llW~•· Temper-tflould rffdl Into,,. low 10I f""" ti• coest to the SM Ferne"40, S.n Oebrltl end $tn 8 .. l\9r4lnG .......... Wiii\ loWsdl~~ lfttotM• Mo11111e111 r .. ont, mee"t1111e. ,._.. -• 10 119 SOI «Nrl119 .,_ .. , ....... '** to-1..-11.,. •• ftloM. t11t•~. NtMr...-.slMIM I'll ... 0.,. In the ml4 to """ '°'· Wlllle ._........,..,. tllollld be lfl.,,. ,... ................... dtol'_ <....,. hnn' '"""'-" Melly wltll llltll!Uy ••r'ftltr d9fl, Loeell., _.ftdy 9C tlMet. Hltlll Ill 9'09. CoelUll lemperetltrft wlll rtl\Ot MtwHft " and 10, 1nt1nd t•l'll· _.tu,.. ...... '8119' • .._.. 40 9lld 14. TM....,...,_,. .. vtewlll••t. s.., ,._, 'J'lda 100AY ,, ., P,llt. ).0 1:*p,rn. IA llWIM Y '1fM ~ 2: 64 '·"'-SA l"lf'\t... IOl .. Lft. IU ...... """ 4;64p,M. ... itoMMt• t :ttp,rn. l.t ._,...&:a_,.,__.~»!Mft. ...... 111'9 """"-.... it:• ... bas had no problem with the P30CH locomotive, but said the current four-party investigation might be expanded to include it. Also, police granted Gregory's demand to speak with his mother and a Washington television re- porter. A RT HOPPt: SATIRIZES 1n the l •1111•J11;•1l .. '"'l .. d-i"("'1) ... I • EASY-CARE. GLAZED li""t-Mf!"4;.f,;u.l-+1H-!t-i+tt~ ti FETIME FINISH! .....-1:+H'"'+-+++*+-...,....·1-.to~..,.........., • WON'T STAIN, f ADE OR BURN! 6~ INwl Color TJ. hilt/ LATEX FLAT WALL • DURABLE, WASHABLE VINYL LATEX DRIES IN 2 HOUltSI • SOAP I WAlO CUMS UPI ~2!l9 DESIGNER MOSAIC TILE rllOM • PRE-MOUNTED SHEETS INSTALL 5 9" FAST! ACCENT FLOORS, WALLS, V COUNTERS! APPROX. so. n. SHEm SHm SPARKLING CLEAR MIRROR TILE INSTALL TILES BRIGHTEN & V • ALL lST QUALITY, EASY TO 4 9" ENLARGE ANY ROOM! 12 x 12" ~. VINYL COUNTER TOP MATERIAL • DURABLE! RESISTS HEAT AND 5 9" STAINS! COVERS QUICKLY IN ~ KITCHEN OR BATH! 36" WIDE n.' Armstrong NO-WAX SOlARIAN° • CARE-FREE FLOOR IN BOLD y •EASY SELF·STICK BACX.S! 8 9" DESIGNS & COLORS! 12 x 12" ~: PRE-PASTED WAllPAPER! • EASY TO INSTALL! IN STOCK 7no111~11'11C111s 8 PATIERNS FOR EVERY ROOM! SOlD Olft.f IN DOUIU 110U.S , D/a 0.. B11t! o.Jue Atrff/t 1-COAT FLAT WALL COSTA MESA 2221 HarbOr Bl. ...... WlhCMI. • SOMl rAnute WESTJINSTEI I SANTA ANA 15191 llACH · ·322 W. Hti 898-3388 547-7781 f-1 P .M.: SAT.1:30.S:JO P .N.; SUN. IM P .M. IMWff~ltO & MASTtl CMAICE WllCOMO USE OUl LAY•TI • Ph. 645· I I 26 ce.,:,,..,.. 1111 I L OS ANGELES (AP) Patrldallearst.'a lawyers, Qying theJr own belicopter, 111ade a brief stop In Loa Anaela to dis· CUii with prosecutors procedures lor tbebe:lress' next trial. F. lM Balley and Al Johnson, wbb had bee n attendina a !ieUcopter convention in nearby Anaheim, flew to an undisclosed de1tiJlatlon alt.er the nearly one- hoor meeting with the district at- torn.ey•a at.alt W edoeaday. They bad larxled on a helicopt.er pad at.op police headquarters. Van de Kamp said the at- torneys did not attempt to plea ( S t ate J bargain for Miss Hearst who 1s charged with kidnaping, robbery and assault. She 1s scheduled lo stand trial. April 4. Tot F ound S lain SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police say they are trying to piece together what happened to six- yea r ·old J ose Luis Ramirez between the lime he disappeared Sunday and h is nude, molested body was discovered three days later. 1t was the fourth killing or a youngster in the San Diego area since last July. Paynw 11t11 Sought LOS ANGELES (AP) 'ThC' Universily of Nevada., named as a beneficiary of the purported .. Mormon will " of Howard Hughes, claims it should receive S2.8 million from the l ate billionaire's estate. In a suit filed against the estate ·n Su rior u01vers1ty's chancellor: said that }{ughes had agreed in 1968 to make annual paym<.'nls to the un· i ver sity lo build a medical school. .rtbW1e Ch a r ged SAN FRANCISCO <AP> A suit seekLng more than $500,000 m civil penalties has been filed agaiust the state!s largest nurs- ing home charging 107 violations of Jaws and regulations designed to protect jts 385 elderly resi· d ents. . The consumer fraud unit of the d istrict attorney's orfice filed thP. suit against the Post Street Con- v alescent Hospital. &at lt Leap Pierre Salinger's son Marc, 28, jumped to his death Wed· nesday from the Golden Gate Bridge in San Fran- cisco. Reginal DOty, a former neighbor of Salinger, said, "Too many down things.hap- penedtothatguy.'' Man Slain In Robbery Of Store LONG BEACH (AP) -Police say the co-owner of a record store h&S been shot and killed Vi a shootout with three men ~ho robbed his store. · Herbert Banks, 38, entered his store and saw lhe three bandjts leaving, police said. He returned to his car, got a gun, and opened fire. But the robbers shot back, one of the bullets hitting Banks in the head and killing him. The robbers escaped. ove Freeze Put on Tax Rate LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coua· t y Aaaessor Philip E . Watson saya a new Jaw will prevent him from reaasessing any homes in the COWlly for at least two years. and county budget. plaMers say • the lack of new assessments could have a major impact on the 1977 · 78 county budget nqw in pre- paration. Wataon nid Wednesday the state law requires that counties must be reappraised as a whole rather than piecemeal and that his staff, at its current size, wilt not. be able to make countywide c ha nges until as late as 1980 or 1981. "'It's a question or capability," W atsoo said in announcing the freeze on reassessments. If his s taff is increased, Watson said. he may be able to reassess the entire county by 1979. He blamed the moratorium on reassessments partly on county supervisors who cut funds with which he bad intended to hire ex· tra personnel to complete com· puteriution of the appraisal system lhis year. He also said supervisors were to blame for diverting some of his staff's time in an investigation of marine pro- perty assessment practices, County supervisors have said they they oppose an increase in the tax r ate, but they obviously had planned on a boost io the lax base brought on by higher assess- ments. About half of the county's re- sidences were reassessed last y ear, and 20 percent were re- a ssessed two years ago. Marines Solve Plwne Bill SAN DIEGO (AP> A sergeant at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot says all those expensive telephone calls ~hat puzzled the U.S. Marine Corps came from his conversations with girls in Japan and Okinawa. s. Sgt. Aaron Guidi')'., 24, or Opelo~sas, La., entered a guilty plea.before a special court-martial Wednesday to 30 of 120 counts of making unauthorized telephone calls. The corps said the calls to the foreign points and several U S. cities cost lhe govemmenl $2,858.54. · A military judge set sentencing for Guidry ~or Feb. 22. He could receive six months at bard labor, forfeiture of pay and allowances for six months and a bad conduct disc~arge. . . Thuraday, F'•bfullY 10, 1m OAILYPILOT 4 .S Indian· Letider Indicted • a:. Navajo Charged With Fraud, Tax:E~on From AP Dllpatclte9 . Nav$ Tribal Chairman Pet.er Mael)QDaJd. one of America's most powerful Indiana. wu tn· dicted by a federaJ gl'and jury lD Phoenix Oil cbaries ol fraud and tllinc a false 1.ocome tax r. tum. The eight.count indictment also named WIDI .. Moore, a fonner MacDonald at.atr asslatant. U.S. Atty. WlWam C. SmWtermu aald the I. dictmenta were the result ol a 13-mooth federal pro- be into alleged financial 1rregularltlea on the Nava· jo Reservation, wbichcovenspartso~Ari.zona.New Mexico and utab. * Saying be wanted to show potentla! criminals the risk lhey may be taking, a Providence (R.l.) judge bas given life sentences to three men who participated in the $3 million Bonded Vault Co. rob- bery. Judge Anthony A. GlaanlnJ imposed the ~en· tences against Ralph S. Byrnes, 30, of W arw1ck; Johll F. Ou.lmette, 37, of Cranston, and Charles F. Flynn, 35, of Cranston. The Bonded Vault Co., which was robbed dur- ing the daytime Aug. 19, 1975, 106t almost $3 miµion in gold, jewelry and cash, according to an admitted participant and state witness. None of the money or valuables, however, has ever been recovered. . * •'I'm not trying to get out ol sex. rm not gonna go straight." said ltlari.tyD Chambers, star or several X-rated films. The denial came in New York as Miss Cham· bers, 23, discussed her recently begun singing career. She bas recorded a song ·entitled "Benihana." "I'm having a tot or run ... she said. "I don't mind posing in . the nude. But I'd like to think of myself as an all-round enter· tainer." At a party to introduce her ·record Miss Chambers wore . blue, ;ee-through lounging p~­ jamas. In a back room,.~ moyie in which she starred, Behind cHAM1us ·the Green Door," was shown. * Former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger and his wife, Nancy, are vacationing at the home of former Mexican President Migue l Aleman Valdez in The couple arrived Tuesday night with U.S. and Mexican security agents for a week or two at the Aleman home, securi- ty sources said. Kissinger was a frequent visitor lo the r esort while secretary of State. The couple honeymooned ther e and last vis- ited in December. * . NAHCYKISSINGER The L<>s Angeles Police Commission apologized to state Sen". Nate Holden for "discou~ treat- ment" by policemen who held him at gunpoint out- s ide his offic~ building tblnking that he was a rob- ~~ . Holden carrying a briefcase and walking hur· riedly said' he was confronted by two orficers as he left th~ building, which also houses a savings and . Joan offlce, Sept. 23. Tbeoftlctn ~to a sllcot bur&lar alarm 1 , wbtcb, it wa• learned[ J later, bad been let oil ac-PEOPlE ... eldentaU,y. • • Holden. who ls black, C!Ontendcd that the of· tlcers'wouldn't have accostecl lalm u rnd11Y t1Jn aoyotbupa.rtofthedty:• * The new bead or E•er~ State Collete SQ'S he bas two park.inc Ucketa toabow be'•IMl&Je*ablg man on cainpus. • Fonner Wuhlnetoo Gcw. Da.n Enns. who stepped Clown last mcnth after 12 yeana In of. flee, allo aaya be gets no speeial treatment in making racquet ball court reservations. Evans. wbo succeed9 CbarJee Mee ... on June 1S as president ol the state's newest four-year college, says he •vANs turned down nine other job of· fers, all but one paying more mc:mey. · * Former Rhode Island Sen. Jolm O. Pastore is the winner of the llalpb Lowell medal tor contribu· lions to public television. • Pastore, who retired last year aft.er 2S years id the Senate, was awardecj the medal the Co tion tor Public Broadcuting at an awards banquet in Atlanta during the Public Broadcasting Service's annual meeting. Pastore participated in enabling legislation that led to the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 while h e served as chairman or lhe Senate subcom· mittee on communications. • Gordoa Hirsch of Skokie PUTOH couldn't wait until he reached the required age of 21 to run for public office, so be initiated a change in II· linois law enabling him to seek election as a teen .. ager. Hirsch, 18, said he will be a candidate in the April 9 election for the Niles Township High School District 219 Board of Education: TWo years ago, when he was a student at Niles East Hi e a aft bill to lower the age requirement for public office candidates. The 21-year-old age limit had been in effect since Illinois became a state in 1818. * King Kbaled of Saudi Arabia is suffering from an undisclosed ailment in his left leg and requires surgery, the Saudi stale radio ~ reported. ~' It said the 62·year-old ' monucb will fly to an un- s pecified European capital on Friday for medical treatment. • • Sbarmon Dougl as Hay, qaughter of Lewis Dougtas, former U.S. a mbassador to Great. Britain, has been granted 1 a divorce Crom her husband, An· drew M.Hay, an importer. MAI.ED ART FESTIVAL • - FAMOUS BRAND WALLPAPER SALE NOW T HRU FEB. 27TH! SAVE 25°/o ON FABR IC-BACKED VINYL WALL CO VER INGS FRO M WALL-TEX, BIRGE, VICOA , UNITED DESOTO AN D -OTHER FAMOUS MANUFACTUR ERS . HUNDREDS OF PATTERNS ON SALE I Here 's the kind of savings you can really appreciate! Save 25~o off our already low supermarket prices on hundreds of exciting patterns Fabric-backed vinyl wallcoverings are easy to install, easy to maintain and easy to remove. They're scrubbable. stnppable and child proof. Ideal for covering defective walls. And best of all, they're on sale now at 25°0 off our regular low prices! Shop early for best selection! MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE: Buy with confidence. Except for sale Hems. all wallpapers sold by Wallpapers to qo are returnable '°' exchanges or complete refund. Wallpaper1 to gq HIJIJRS 10 9 MOtlOllY TllllU HllOAY • 10 fi S~TUAOAY • NOON 'i SUNDAY ANAHEIM 181' W. LINCOLN AVE. I (714) 991•4870 .COSTA MESA • I 2300 ffARIOR ILVO t-bbor Center -'.J (714) 646-5058 .. ON THE MALL AT WESTPORT SQUARE 369 E. 17th STREET (at Tustin} COSTA MESA FRIDAY & SATURDAY ~February 11 & 12 10 a.m. 'Tiii 5 p.m. Presented by: COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE TEAM i\CTION T""' Ir llldlvldllal ~ C)OOd$ 646-1770 - K. W. BAKER t Yow hCMM decoraHnc) c ....... Phone 611-4440 RUSSO'S DELI Food to Go Phr:l-. ... _ .... ., etc. AMERITONE PAINT C!NTER w.., ... ,.~ ..... cmte.dl•rle• , trmETON's BOOKS Hw A1cb.,.... Mc:b. c ............ ..... .... 64loeb·t.....s.f.10.S:.lO 0 THE BOD 0,... newincp Ir s.daya '1-offftlonal hauty •kh THE HEALTH NUT Miits. 1CllldwlcMt. fresh lciilces ... .. -Open dally I CM. Sat. I 0-5 WHITES LA-Z-BOY I 00. of L•Z-loy • cltphry Phone 642-1657 LILLIAN BAllARD FIGURE SALON Pen a •net fWOtl-of c-.hh fltilr9&welgllt ......... ......,.. ,.....,11.2444. THE TIDE POOL ~~..;·::=. Pholte 6i l•H70 WESTPORT ANIMAL CLINIC ... ......, ..... ...... ,i t-1454 369 East 17th S~et c .. ,......, Costa Mesa •Acftiw ~ • ..,., .... , - ' l t I i -I A• ~··o IL'\" PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ,~---.~--------- ~f· .,,.•, .". n • r- 4 • ~ \_.. ·~ ·: .... . 'll"t .. ... [, " , ... ,., . ~.~, . ,., ... Choose Yo1ir Pocket (l Orange County supervisors' cry ror property tax reform the put few months ls not without merit. . The board, for example, laat week sent to Sacramento a list of state-mandated programs, seek· .ing additional state help in thelr financing or in- creased local control in operating them. That list totaled $S5 million the past five years and was financed through county property taxes. The list also included $15.8 million county officials believe they could have saved since 1972 if Medi~Cal contributions had been based on population instead of on assessed valuation. They contend local property taxpayers are already hit hard enoueh because of soaring market values on homes . However, supervisors. state legislators and citizens as a whole must not forget that all govern· ment programs come from the public purse. While the state does have greater resources to raise funds than the county, in the end it will boil down to a choice between paying for government through property taxes, income taxes or other special assessments. It's all our money. Paying the Piper Recipients of post-Christmas mail may not be ~urprised to learn that this is National Pay Your Bills JN eek. National Account Adjusters Inc., which counts a membership of some 2,600 collection agencies, estimates more than a million American families find themselves in serious financial trouble around this time of year when the results of holiday spending-on credit-catch up with them. How do you know you're in trouble'! If more than 20 percent of after-tax income goes for past purchases; if new bills c~e in faster than old ones are paid; if you 're taking out new loans to pay oft old ones; it you're engaged in a financial jug. gling act to evade creditors. The answer. says NAA. is to hide all your charge cards for a while; contact all creditors (never ignor them> and try to negotiate a catch--up plan; then (this is the tough one) add up what it costs to live each month, cut that expenditure by 20 percent 8!1d use the saving to pay bills every month until you re off the credit blacklist. The problem obviously won't ~o away overnight, but perhaps Nation.al Pay Your Bills Week is a good time to get started. Electronic Pal Are you ready for this? Wall Street Journal says we're approaching an era when home computers will be just as much a household fixture as the television set. Already there's a flourishing market, at prices ranging from a couple of hundred dollars for small, assemble-it-yourself models (these require some electronic know-how) to elaborate thousand·dolJar jobs,.some complete with programs. What do you do with a home computer? You can feed it tax information all year and come out with a ready·made tax return, keep track of the kids' srhool grades, summon up a kitchen recipe or menu. play assorted electronic games. challenge it to a round of che'ckers (if you don't mind losing>. or use it to create electronic music. Like pet owners, computer owners already have formed up into clubs in several areas to exchange ideas for their use and care. Many address their com- puters by name. Says one owner. "Roy (the com- puter> isjustlike a member of the family." And. after the initial investment, probably cheaper to maintain than a hungry Great Dane. New Views Dear Gloomy What Will Happen ta Expel"led Diplontat? the .,:.;.-~~--=-..,_-_..,:__-+----.,-. Gus -Relations. Test (;ase Elderly (SYDNEY HARRIS J There are more beds ocrnp1t·d in •·nursing homes" in America today than there arc in regular hospitals. Mosl of thl.' patients are going to die there. or will be removed only al lhc last moment • for intensive hospital care A study done at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health found that more than 10 per cent of people sent to nun;- i n g hom e:-. were dead or back tn th1• ho sp1tJI ' withtn fo ur week s Of these. three· quarters were dead. Io another study. more than two-Uurds of all nursmg .home patients had nol had an adequate physical examination within a year despite the fact that most were lak10g one lo four drugs a day. Actually, Dr Leonard Cosio. au internationally recogniied ill- nov ator in care for the elderly. bas found that only about two percent of old people with some impairment of faculttes really need the kind of total custodial care that nursing homes provide. IN MOST of Western Europe, where nursing homes are run on a non-profit basis, people are en· cour aged to stay out of them '\'atber than enter them, and to avail themselves of a wide varie- ty of outpatient services. Jn those NUntrles, unlike the U.S .. there is no sharp di.atinction betw«n the old person who is "convales· cent" and one who is "custodial." As Dr. Robert Morison, the Cornell biologist, bas pointed out. an elderly American who is hospitahzed for an acute condi- About those dedicated. , 1\ crv. orked teachers: Last 't•ar my dedicated math t eacht·r look a three-mont,h val'alion lo Aus tria to v. atch the winter Olym- pics and ski. Guess it de· pl•nd:. what you're dedicat· t•d to STUDENT c;1oomy Gu\ comm•.,h art \ut>nwtttcf by '' dd~n .1nd do no1 neceU•t'iltt rdlect t""" v·•~ ot 1he nfo•\P•Ptr Stnd yovr oet peevt to G•oomY Gu•. OJoty Po tot lion s uch as 3 broken bone may be transferred directly to a nurs- rng home for convalescnce, and ~ed1care will pay most of the 111 II But 1f the patient goes directly ho m e. or is Judged unlikely to re- cover normaJ health (as in the c ase of a stroke victim), Medicare will pay nothing for his post-hospital care. This un- fortunate, or his family, must pay for custodial care until re- sour ces are depleted to the pov· erty level. Only by the time the patient is. for practical purposes. .1 pauper, can Medicaid be called to help. UNLIKE past eras, the great majority or people -about two- th1rds -now reach the age of 70. with their life expectancy an ad· chlional 12 years. Our so-called "population explosion" has a special meaning for the old: in developed countries, such as the U.S. and Western Europe, there will be a trebling of old persons past their 80th birthday in the next 15 years. This is a whole new problem society has never faced before in all its dimensions. Most people no longer die, as in the past, of some sudden acute illness, but from the chronic deteriorations of old age. Neither modem socie· ty, nor the modem family, has adapted itself to this change. Death comes later today, but the end is grimmer and more de· solatetban ever. A. Singer's Memoir ~VBBLES : A 1 SELF· PORTRAIT. By Beverly SUls. ISobbs-Menill. 240 Pages. $12.50. "I have always been a kind of fatalist," Beverly Sills observes deep in this cbarmina memoir. "I firmly believe that what's go- 1n1 to hapPt?n to any of us is already written down In a great • big book. Someone 'IP there • Jooked down one day, pointed a -long finger at me and said: 'That one ls •olng to be a singer with very high notes.' I lllte lbat no-tion . •• So must anyone who ha.s ever ._.._d the prlvile1e to listen to and to w atcb Miss Sills H she dominates the stqe. Yea, she is a ainger, and, yes, she bas very b.i•b notes. And what sbe does with this fant.astk glrt or hen sUc:ks ln the mind -and ears - long ·after the curtain baa come doTm for the last time and the float round of thunderous 1p- pl1uao has trickled into ailenc:e. IT WAS NOT always ao. Whlcb the PW'J>OI• of Mlu SUI•' ~ , sad, but alw')'I e.n1routn1 boolt. Startin1t oU With ''WbtO I ( was only three. and still named BeUe Miriam Silverman," Miss Sllls takes the reader on a cap- tivating to&&r of her ure -a highly penonal story but as warm and hµman as the opera superstar herself. Mias Sills, encouraged.by her family, devdoptd a love for opera early. But 1l was to be yea1"1 befon 1be was to rise to lb• top ln her chosen prof essioo. Flnt there was the rathert'OU.Dd· about ~try into &bow b"51neu vl1 such vclllcles u appearances on Major Bo'Wea Am ateu.r Hour on radlot some ltnflna on a local radlo show c&Uid .. Uncle Bob's Ralnbow Hour.0 betns lbe voice ot a aoap oa radio commercl&la, before tbe tn1b st.art~ co~ berway. Step by step, Kia 8lUt d.-.lla tier eUmb t.o tho"~ top lD U.. or1d or~ w a llDo Ac*)' It 11, full ~ a'iiiiedotet. PHIL THOMAS AP. 8ookl Edltor W ASHJNGTON -The next as· signment for A distinguished U.S. diplomat , who ha s b een languishing without assignment since being kicked out of Moscow five months ago, will reveal much about the Carter ad· ministration's mindset m handl ing the Kremlin. The Ford-Kissinger State Department hardly said boo when the Sov- iet Union expell e d Marshall Bre- ment as No. 3 man in the U.S. embas- sy. If that pat.tern is followed by lhe Cartcr- Vance State Department. Brement will be shunted aside <perhaps to a permane n t desk job in Washington ) -thereby fostering the imperatives of detente. But promotion of Brement, possibly as ambassador to a Communlst-controlJed Eastern European country, wouJd send a different message to Moscow : President Carter is rejec.ting the notion that appeasement of the Soviets on secondary and tertiary questions is helpful -in- deed, necessary -to agreement on broader questions. Though repeatedly disproved, that notion has survived for some 40 years, constantly nurtured by political appointees to th~ Slate ( EV ANS.NOV AK ] ciprocity. 'l'he suggested response by the Soviet desk at the State Depart· ment in Washington was to in· Department. Professional diplomats, such as Marshall Bre- ment, have argued -usually in vain -that the Soviets respect strength, not weakness. Brement's problems began last August when the U.S. ex- pelled Svyatoslav A. Stepanov, a low-level member of the Soviet mission to the United Nations, by revoking his visa while he was temporarily out of the country. The only cause given by the State Department is "improper ac· tivitles." UNOFFICIALLY, Stepanov is accused of working improperly through a thlrd-nalion diplomat to obtain technological data de· nied to the Soviets. But it is wide- ly believed that the FBI had much more damning information about Stepanov for then· Secretary of State Henry Kiss- inger to approve his expulsion. Whatever its cause, Stepanov's ouster brought immediate reprisal from the Kremlin. Bre- menl, in Rome on his way home for biennial leave, was informed he could not return to Moscow: B r e men t , th i rd · r a n k.i n g American in Russia in the post of political counselor, for Stepanov. a relative nonentity. But that is no tooth for a tooth; it is a jaw for a tooth -the Soviet version ol re- form the Kremlin that the U.S. would retaliate by immediately expelling the No. 3 Russian at their embassy here -unless the Russians relented and let Bre- ment come back. Since nothing had been announced , s uch backstage pressure was indeed possible; the outside world never would have learned anything about Brement. BUT THE UPPER levels of the Stale Department vetoed any su<'h confrontation and instead used "quiet diplomacy" to at- tempt Brement's reinstatement. That proved no more effective than it had in trying to get the Russians to s top their electronic bombardment of the U.S. em· bassy in Moscow. On Nov. 18, the State Depart- ment gave up and announced Brement's ouster. He returned to W ashlngton shortly thereafter, occupying an offlce without as· slgnment or duties. The lameduck Ford administration awaited the advent of the Carter boys todeal with this headache. Although Brement 's tem- porary absence from Russia made him a convenient target for expulsion. his hard-nosed at- titude in dealing with the Soviets probably clinched the choice. Thup, fellow Foreign Service of- ficera await with interest whether he is now kept in the mainstream or East-West rela- tions, perhaps with his own em- bassy. or is sent off to a backwater. In other words, can the Kremlin poison a U.S. diplomat's career? BEYOND TIDS, what happens to Brement could clarify the Carter administration's am· bivalence in reacting to Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov. In toning down State Department support or Sakharov, Mr. Carter seemed to be accepting that old notion that conciliatory gestures will lead to Soviet amicabiHty. On Oct. 20, 1940, a tough. minded Foreign Service officer named Laurence Steinhardt, who was U.S. ambassador in Moscow, wrote State Department Soviet expert Loy Henderson in Washington: "The moment that these people get it into their heads" that we are appeasing them, making up to them or need them, they immediately stop be· ing cooperative ... They respond only to force, and if force cannot be applied, then to straight Oriental bartering or tr~ding methods." That advice was ignored far , more often than followed over the I next four decades, with often tragic consequences for Europe \ and the West. The case or Marshall Brement provides a new test for a new American President: follow that oJd advice, or ignore it yet again. The Speech Ford·. Didn't Make (JACK ANDERSON] leave was being packed into box· es of confidential papers, which hold the written record or the Ford administratton. But we were able to obtain two drafts of the unspoken fatewell address. One was wrijten by Patrick Butler, the other by George Denison. Both contain the pm· ing advice that Ford wanted his countrymen to remember. He would have liked to have told all Americans, as BuUer phrased it: "In a nation as populous and diverse as oun, a nation wb.ase borders spread a continent wide, lt is unwise perhaps to ask for a return to simpler times. ''But we can ask for -we can demand -less regimentation, le.ss uniformity, less regulation of our dally lives. We can de- mand to be treated with the respect and the dignity that is our birthright as Am erican citizerw ... .. IF MY presidency meant nothing else in tl\e scheme of things, let tt be saUl that my ad· ministration took the first steps on a different path that leads not to bl11er 1ovem.ment but to bet- ter government." Denison's draft put the same message even more forcefully: ''Government has spent too much time and far too much money answering the demands of the pressure 1roups at. the ex- pense of the lodlvldual," he would have had the d parting ,president say. "In our complqx and collectlvlted society, t.be in· dlvldual -tbe for,otten American -baa been shunted aside, bll wanta unmet, hla 1oals unfuJ.fUJed. . . "If we~· to avoid ttOC>Omlc collap$e, ~e mu.It atop the run•way growth of cotemment. We m•t stop llvtnc bey6M our means. aa too meny of our polltJcal &eaden irreaponalbly ,Sve tn tb demanda for more and more spend~ -wllhout con· cem Cortbetuture ... 0 WE CAN no taacer aft'otd to be mllled by the trusty bromide ~ tbat etlmin1llai bureaucr&Uc w11te a OftrtapPl.fti Pl"Offlml I will cure all. .. It is lime for the· American people to look theJr government straight ln the eye and say, 'No more! We wUl make the decisions about our uyes. You protect us from fore gn ag- gressors and domestic criminals and give us a stable currency and courts of law, a nd we'll do lbe rest.' The word' were put together by the speechwriteni. but the thoughts are Gerald Ford's. He was too modest to make a bi& show or bis farewell ideas. But down deep ln h11 heart, he wanted Americans to remember this last meisage. It would be a shame U they never cot a chance to read it. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Ho~rl N W1td. Publlahtt ThOmlJI t<Hull. t:dllor Rarbnro Krdl>tth. Edllonal Pagr £d1tbr The editorial pe1e ot the Dally Pilot seeks to lntorm and atlmulate rudert by preMl\UOJI on this paae diverse ('ommentary on topics of lntere-&t by UJ'dlut· td (()lumnlsu and cartoonbts, by provldlns a loNm for ttaders' \ltews and by pre11ent1n1 this newspaper'• opinions •Pd ideas on currenl topics. The fdltorlal opinions of tht Dally !,)Uot •ppcar only In the c.-d1lorial cdlum1n1t the top ol the paae. OptniOM ex· prci~ed by the columnl•t.e ond cartoonists and letter wnt ere their own and no endorsement of their vicH by the Dall1 Ptlot, ahould be inferred. 'Thursqy, Feb.~ 19'Tl • I ' • ! I • ,, .. '· ' h I I• di II ,., /" I . ' . • Thursday, Febtuary 10, 1977 OAILVPILOT 4i ·l;hief Ey.es Sacramento 'Monster' . S~hle Congress to Bale •• .. . . . Flower to Upstag~'.1 Big Pmver Plant? LA's Davis Says Brown 'Out of Touch' Settled LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ed Davis, the toueh·talklns Los AnaeJe$ J>Ollce chief, H)"I Gov. EdmWld Brown Jr. is "an eU.t.iat" who ia out of touch with the people on issues such aa jobs and crime prevenUon. Davia, 58, thiDJu the Democratic governor can be de.teated for re- election next year. And, the allver..-halred veteran policeman adds, be will be retiring u police chief next January, "so I wlll have some Ume ~my hands." ASKED IF HE will be a can· dldate for the Republican nomination for eovernor, Davis stops short of saying yea -but just barely. "I've been looking for dis· couragement, and I have not been able to get any substantial discouragement," Davia says. .. So l am convinced now I will in all probability be a candidate." If Davis runs, be can expect strong support from the right wing of the California GOP - which baa dominated the party 13 years -in a contest with Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger, San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson and possibly Assemblyman Ken Maddy. Their flrst test will be this weekend at the state GOP convention in Sacramento. DA VIS USTS unemployment, crime and cuts in highway con· struction as campaign issues. He also disagrees s harply with Brown's opposition to the death penalty. ''I'd say the No. 1 issue in California right now is people getting jobs. We have lagged a <:.Ouple of percentage points behind the rest of the nation," Davis said in an interview. "We ran for a long time with 10 percent unemployment. That's absolutely unconscionable. And al the same time, we were run· ning employers out or the state and discouraging new employers n . .. WE HAVE AN abysmal busi· ·ness climate. We have no-growth policy. We have sort of a birth control on industry and business in California. So the No. l pro· blem in California is to make it a place where the Cree enterprise system can flourish and provide jobs," he added. "Probably second is the quali· ty of life -in terms of the fear of crime has to be improved greatly." Davis, who worked his way through the ranks 37 years, speaks with an air of authority about crime, citing numerous statistics and personal ac· complishments . H E SAYS CRIME dropped 2 percent in Los Angeles during the seven years he has been chief, and it would have dropped more if it had not been for ·'the machinations in fantasyland" of state government. such as Brown signing a repeal of law:, against homosexual conduct But he said Brown·s signing re peal of the indeterminate sen- tence law, wh1ch Davis says will reduce pnson terms, was the act that made him start thinking about runrung for governor. "THAT WAS THE last in a long series of absolutely irresponsible acts in the Jerry Brown ad· BE A LOVER! Vale ntine8 Day Phone or Come in for our PTO Fragnnt fresh flowers, a big red heart anct lovebird& 15.00 See us for many moll' Valentine gift.s, plants and flower . SPRJ\ Y DOR\tt\NT FRUIT TREES AND ROSES NOW. Prevent pcnch leaf curl, shot·hole tungus and other :;&0 •" problems that can • cause damage later. .1\0RDOIL t "-.... $ Donn ant spray ,.,,. We thow you how to use •• NA ME i n the NEWS ministration. And he's serious about it. And I fell the sheer frustration of seeing everxth.lng I've worked for all my working career going down the tubes" with that bill. Davis also says Brown's image as a fiscal conservative is "a ter· rible ripoff." "He sits there now in an era of great inflation and allows the continuation or the present 10· come tax rates. People even in the poverty level are beginning to g et into pretty substantial in· come tax rates when they get a pay raise with inflaUon. "THERE'S NO INDEXING or adjustment of the income tax rates. It's something 1 think has to ~e done." Davis offers a sharp contrast in personality a nd bearing to Brown. While Brown often answers questions with his own questions or abstra c t philosophical discussions, Davis is direct, sometimes blunt. And Davis thinks that's a plus for him. . "I've been a cop all my life. I'm not a career politician. I'm a rather common man, and I think I would represent the interests of the common people -with com· Mbn sem~.· Dao is saJs. "I TIDNK I WOUW r epresent the great bulk of Californians. I'm not the son of a governor. I wasn't raised in a governor's mansion." Davis argues that Brown·s con· stituency is only 15. l pcn·ent, a statistic achieved by comparing Brown 's 1974 vo t e witti Califomia"s total population. ''We're in the ha nds of an elitist crowd that really says 'to hell with 85 percent of the peo- ple.' They're serving the very narrow self-interest of those who put them in omce ... Princess Hit Over Stable GATCOMBE PARK, England <AP l -Princess Anne and her husband Capt. Mark Phillips, both avid ~uestrians. have been criticiJed for plans to build a S68.000 stable "when people need houses." "I think they are lacking in feeling fgr their fellows," said Wilfred Gardner, vice chairman oC the town council. The stables, approved by the district's planning commlttee, will be built on the couple's Cotswold estate. GLADIOLUS BULBS in new ·~touth· Watering' Colors Strawberry and Cream Lemonade Plum Tart Cherry Cordial iilf Yinett Qualia,, Bulba. AP'Wl,..,...t• GOVERNOR CANDIDATE? LA'a Chief Dmvla CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - The Cambrld1e Clty Council has given permission to lwo universities to be1lo con· troversial 1enelic research, end- ing a squabble that pilled pollti· clans against prof es1ors. The council voted to allow Harvard and the Massachusetts InsUtute of Technology to e:ic:perl· ment with the genetic material DNA. CriUcs teared the work could create bizarre, uncon- trollable forms of life. The council stalled the work for several months while it de- bated whether to allow that type qt research withln the city. It finally authorized the un - iversities to begin the work under strict controls drawn by a com· mittee appointed by the council. The controversy surrounds work with recombinant DNA. DNA bolds the basic genetic code that determines how life de- velops. , BANGOR, Maine CAP) -The fate ot a rare species of wild snap. dragon which grows on the site of a proposed mulUmlllloa-doUar power plant rests in the bands of Coneress, says a federal official. Paul Nickerson of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said tbe anap- draeon -known as furbish lousewort -wtll be placed on the en· dan1ered species list "in a few days." THE ENDANGERED Species Act passed by Congress in 1973 proh ibits federal projects which threaten endangered plants or wtldlife , but members of Congress ·•may make exceptions to it if they wish.'' Nickerson said. He told a committee appointed by Gov. James B. Longley to study the proposed $668 million federal Dickey·Lincoln hydro· electric project that biologists will examine the area this sum· mer lo determine whether the proj~ct threatens the species. ( __ E_co_LOG_Y -·· J were found last year on land that would be flooded if dams for the project are built on the SL John River. U plants are found only in the flood area. the project W()uld en· danger the species, Ni~keraoo said, bul Congress could make an exception to the law and aliO't' construction to proceed. Call 642-5678. Put • few worda to work for DAVIS e YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR: RCA, G.E., SONY, MGA, FRIGIDAIRE, AMANA, SYLVANIA; CALORIC, LITTON & MORE. c~ SONY 15" ( di..,al) COLOR TRI N ITRON PU~~ WITH REMOTE 100% solid state. Econ0Qu1ck POwer saving system Tnpl&-Functlon Remote Control (Channel selection. volume. on/off). 12·posit1on all-electro"n1c channel selection svstem Earphone Included. NOW ONLY 469!~ ~ LASTS! 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Recelpe guide on front • TElEVISION • APPLIANCES .. --- I A• OJJt.. y PILOT Thursday February 10. 1en Murders, Bombs Jews Seek Youths Back 4 IRA G11nmen Get Life Terms He said t.be ''coffee bouse.s" should be warm, informal places, hospitable to hJppie-types in blue NEW YORK (AP) -Leaders of orthodox Judaism have called for new and unorthodox methods t.o counter rival movements, such as "Jew• for Jeaus," which they said are wooing p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-i young ~le out of the fold. Jeans, and rabbil should stay away. Rabbi Walter S. Wunbureer, president o! the Rabbinical Council of America, urged Jewish com- munal agencies to 'aid ln establishing "coffee houses" for Jewish youth tobelp bold their loyalty. MAYNARD BRANDSMA, M.D., F.A.C.P. LONDON (AP) -Four gunmen of the Irish Republican Army who for 18 months waged a terror umpaign of murder and bombing in England were sentenced today t.o life imprisonment 47 times over and to additional prison State 600yearsamongtbem. ( J terms totaling more than The four -Martin --------O 'Connell, Edward Butler, Harry Duggan and Hugh Doherty -were found guilty Wedne~day of25countsofmurderand bombing. The judge, Sir Joseph Cantley, who at the start of the 13-day trial was told he was on the terrorists' de- ath list, said the four men shottld serve not less than 30 years each on the murder charges. In Britain. a life sentence can be reviewed and shortened al any thn e by the Home Secretary. Pana•a T alb to R e•11111e WASJDNGTON (AP) ~-President Carter's special envoys are preparing to leave for Panama Sunday amid reports that the Carter administration is readytoease U.S. terms for anew Canal treaty. Major elements of Carter's projected com- promise remain secret, but U.S. officials say they ex- pect the President. represented in the talks by Washington lawyer Sol M. llnowitz, to move nearer Panamanian demands on several key issues. Orange Cr op Grow• An11w a11 WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's orange crop still is expected to be a record despite three days of severe freeze damage in Florida last month, the Agriculture Department says. As of Feb. 1, the orange har'lest is estimated at a record of 248.6 mimon boxes. three percent more than the previous high last season of 242.4 million boxes. the department's Crop Reporting Board said Wednesday. E'uel BiU A id SKfJ9ested WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Budget Committee has recommended that the federal gov- ernment pay up to $250 of the fuel bills of low and mid- dle-income families in areas hardest hit by the un- Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (0-Maine), chairman of the committee, said Wednesday he understands President Carter supports such a program. It bas not been determinE!d which areas would be eligible. 1b1gola Offe r s f'r ietad •h ip LAGOS. Nigeria CAP> President Agostinho Neto of Angola, in his first meeting with an American official since his Marxist faction took power in 1975, has told Ambassador Andrew Young he wants to est ablish relations with the United States. Young told reporters that Neto said ''he and the Russians are friends although there were manY. • things they disagreed on, and he didn't see why we couldn't be friends although there were many things wedisagreedon.'' Pn o Elfet!t M'orrit-• Ca rter WASHJNGTON (AP> -President Carter told mem hers of Congress concerned about the effect de- valuation of the Mexican peso is having on border- state economies that he is considering some form of aid for Mexico. according to participants. ''He showed a very strong interest in it," Sen. Lloyd Bentsen ( D-Tex. l said Wednesday after Carter met with border-state congressmen in the White House Cabinet Room. "There seemed to be considerable support:' for such aid, Bentsen said. Ford, O'Neill Get Mone y WASHINGTON CAP) -Former President Gerald R. Ford and House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill are on a list of politicians. including 67 pre· sent and former members of Congress, who received illegal corporate contributions from American Airlines. O'Neill and a spokesman for Ford s aid they did not realize the $100 each received was corporate money. American did not say whether the recipients knew that they were getting corporate money when it made the list public Wednesday. ESTATE AUCfION Part of a 150 piece clock and watch collect.ioo. Highlights Include I • A fine collect.ioo or antique dolls • 150 piece antique clock and watch col- lection • Plus fine <'rvstal & cul 1tase. fufnlture, bronzes. oils, ailver. jewelry & much more. 2 M G DAYS Sunday, F ebruary 13th at ll:30pm Monday, February H tb at 7:30 pm lnspeetlon on Saturday 1 to 5 pm and 2 hour s prior to sale .. TE•MS: <;sh. B or A, Master.:hart~. personal cbeeks upon vertncatton. Phone at maJJ bid• aecep&ed w:ttll %0% deposit. NOTICE: We are Immediate CASH BUYERS for any and all fine merchandise or consign for quick sale. Oft.en, a cash advantt can be arranaed while items are pending sale. Vi11it our wholesale depL Mon. tbru SaL 1:80 PM to 5:00 PM cucep\ Au6- tion days). Empire Galleries, Ltd. 2722 N. Main St. Santa Ana, 541-7384 A Beal Romeo CBS has ptanned a children's special to in- troduce youngsters to Shakespearean drama, so who better for the role of Romeo than the Fonz. Henry Winkler of "Happy· Days" poses on the set of the production. YMCA Ge ts Grant For Cham Fellce The South Coast YMCA has been issued a grant of $2,4.30 for construction of a chain link fence for YMCA Camp Dolph in Aliso Can on South La una. e grant was given by California Community Foundation, one of the largest community founda- tions in North America. Grants are made in accordance with a donor's expressed intentions. if possible, otherwise are de- tcrm ined by the advisory committee of the founda-tion. PARTICVLAllLY ON COLLEGE campuses. he said, "defecUon or Jewish youth to non.Jewish cull$" has become a serious problem. About 500 rabbis last week took part in a sym- poelum under a~pices of the Rabbinical Council of America on "Deprogramming Victims of Mis· ·sionary Activity," the council said. SPEAKERS ESTIMATED THAT 5,000 ''mis· sionaries" are working in the New York area, most· ly (>D college campuses, to lure young people into various new cults. Of PLOMATE AMERICAN BOARD OF INTERNAL MEDICINE ANNOUNCES THE ASSOCIATION OF WILLI AM DAVI ES M.D. DIPLOMATE OF AMERICAN BOARD OF INTERNAL MEDICINE IN INTERNAL MEDICINE AT . 27852 PUERTO REAL, SUITE 118 MISSION VIEJO. CAUfORNIA 92675 PHONE: 014) 495·~1 014) 831-088~ "The coffee house system works for 'goyim ' (gentiles) and it can work for us Jews," said a Long Island professor, who bas done research on the new · -------------------"missionary" groups. ·•we are losing our young people," he added, ( "and we must reach out to get them back." OUR PINK STRAWBERRY MARGARITA ISAREAL SWEETHEART L. ~f. ROYU ) INFORMS in lhe DAILY PILOT A family of popular cocktail mixes for home entertainment FOR EVERY SQUARE YARD OF CARPETING YOU BUY ••• WE WILL SB L YOU A SQ. YD. OF PADDING* FOR ONLY 10 ' Select.,__, .,.11dl11• a._. ...... , .... 41 Me ........ !tow _.. or liow 1ttW ••• For....,.., Hr-..., 60 tcto J*. ef c..,.., yor .,,.....,..... ... ,.....c.:...,,, w .......... of .... c.,,... .............. ......, .. h hct ... t NYLOflSHACI SturdV~ !>Mll>li.. prcbl s4ss ......i COio<&. 0..0.t 1 S• 99, Dad or/Ir a penny , • • buy i::h la< $5.00 10 •O 9q yd. CUSTOM DRAPERY 1¢ SALi! D\wtng our Pftt*"f• llrthd9y ..... .. Wiii -~ ~ eth yt(d Of drliPl!YfllbftO= OM penny ... ~ tf rt '81'1Y MQa fOr 11.00 • ywd or 10.00 • ,.,.s. ............................. f84,000 Aiaelfd Hospital Emerges From Red-ink Past South Coast Community Hospital bas finished the year $64,000 ln the black after a number of red·ink years, members of the South Laauna community hospital association were told at the annual meetl.Qf. In addition to reports on the hospital's fiscal affairs, the mem- bership elected two new members to the board of dlrectors and re- turned four to the 21-member board. NEW 0DIKECl'ORS ARE ROBERT McDonnell, certified public accountant, and Melinda While, active in civic and community al· fairs. Both live in Laguna Beach. Returned to the board were John Raymenl, of the Lquna Beach Bank of America branch; Walter Sibbert, retired -:eat estate developer; Tbomu Thornton, attorney, and Dr. Neil F. Amsden, former chief of staff. Arthur Briggs, board president, in his report noted receipt of a $100,000 grant from the Irvine Foundation, creation of a new hospital foundation to receive trusts benefiting both the hospital and the donor, and chaog~ in office and medical activities. TOE P&OFlTABLE.OPERATION OF THE HOSPITAL was at· trtbuted to increased patient days, adjustment of hospital rates and a $188,000depreciation. · Evelin Alleman, hospital auxiliary president. reported that its 490 membei'B contributed 65,000 hours of service and donated $50,000 to the institution. The auxiliary plans to open a thrift shop this spring in Dana Point to augment its fund-raising activities. Vakiitine& To Dlll'l£e For Acteza Club The Acteza Club at Dana Hills lligh ScbooJ will sponsor a Valeo· tine'a dance in San Clemente Saturday to raiae money for the club's scbolarablp fund. The dance is scheduled from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the Elks' Lodge. 1505 N. El Camino Real, said Lulu Avila, publlclly chairman. There will be a dance band, and refreshments will be served. Tickets are $4 at the door. · )(isa Avila said club members are mostly Mex.lcan-Americam, Vietnamese and black students. The club la trying to raise money to help ooe club member attend college next year, she said. Additional information on the club or the dance ls available by calling Lori Lopez, 496-9484. ln8tallation .: Dr. Kenneth W. Kengla of Costa Mesa wa.s installed, as a fellow of the. American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons at the group's annual meeting in Las Veaas. • . Actor Dale Robertson. star of the old television series "Tales of Wells Fargo,'' has been sued for divorce by his wife of 17 years, Lula Mae. She cited irreconcilable dif. ferences. They have a daughter, 16-year-old Revel Lea. Thund!y, Febnl!!Y 10, 19'71 OAllYPll.OT 41 Topl~Nb:ed City Votes for StanJard PORT HURON, Mich. (AP) -Voters in Port Huron liven a chance. to set their own .. community at.andard, .. have vot;d dlaapproval or topleu entertainment. · With about 23 percent of tbe reptered voten 1otn• to the poll.a ln a special election, the City Councll'a enforcement of an obscen.lt.y code• prohibiting tople5s bara wu up. held 2,832 to M3. THE COUNCIL scheduled the vote to allow Port Huron resl- dentl to set their own standard of decency, City Clerk Guy Provost said. ••AU the court decisions on ob- scenity talk about a communit.y standard," Provost said. ''Tbls should tell us what our standard ia. The flrst and only topless bar in Port Huron opened late last year, but city officials closed the establishment after one day. •-TUE OWNERS HAD a liquor license, but no entertainment license," the city clerk ex- plained. "After they were closed, they apPlied for a license for such entertainment, and were turned down under the city's obscenity code." Port Huron otrlclall re~ no organized campaicnln• b>: either aide alter a petltlon drive was conducted to put tho iuue before the public. FJectrical Gear '· Taken in El Toro ~· . Electrical equipment and sup-' plies valued by the .victims a\ .. about '8,400 have been stolen • . from an El Toro company by. burglars who cut the lock to gain· entry to a parked truck. -Orange County sheriff's of· ficers said the vehicle owned by Cutter Electric, 21761 Laite Vista, was looted before its contents could be unloaded. .. . . STARTS TODAY, SHOP 10 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. Save 45%-50%: knits Natural and light soft lo.nit tops in sizes S, M , L, ~l. button-front cardigan, comp. val. 22.00 10.99 b. pullover with johnny collar, comp. val. 17 8.99 domestic knitweJr i 2 8.99to 10.99 comp. val.17.00-22.00 Dress shirts and ties. Short sleeve .shirts in solids and fancy patterns. Polyester aod cotton, 14Yi-17,comp.val. $9-$105.99 Silk neckwear In fashion patterns, were 5.99 3.99 men's shirts 6, neckwear 8 5.99 and 3.99 • I Special: 3-piece pantsuits Get jac ket, pants and matching print blouse ... all in crisp and carefree poly. Cool pastels with their own coordinated blouse.10·18. In mint and blue. boulevard dresses 95 17.99 special purchase Levi's® bush cords Favorite jean styling that's super for casual or dress-ups. Polyester and cotton in light blue, navy, tan, brown. You can't go wrong with Levi's.~ Y<>Uns men's P,ants 133 10.9i9 reg.17.SO Wltttllllnster Mall Zip jersey loungers Shown, just one ot many perky floral prints in this 4'lep-into favorite. Easy care in machine . washable acetate an d nylon jersey. Sizes S, M, L. budget loungewear 8 t 5 Ten days only. 9.99 reg. 14.00 Lightweight luggage Our own exclusive lightweight, canvas luggage. large, roomy cases with handsome vinyl trim. Navy or dark brown, tote, 23" or 25" pullmans. luggage 36 5.99 to 14.~9 were 9.99to17,00 . GlldallWeSt at San Die11 FWY~ •2521 ~-.. . -. .. • • . . . . ' ' '• ~ • • i ' . ' \ Deatlu f:lsewhere NEW YORK (AP) The Rev. J am es G. Keller, 76, founder of an Am erican Roman 'Catholic ecumenical m ovement , the ObristOPhers, died Mon- ctay in a New York hospital. Death Notl~e• MARSHAi.i. • .I.AMES w. MARSHALL, rtslci.nt Of 1;:n• Hills, C•llfor111i1. P•s .. d away ~ bru•ry 9, 1977. Form~• trust~c al I' febOKk Colle9PJ, ro1~rla11 ol Ht·12 YIYed by hii wit~ Rutt\ M.tr\t\dll, I 4.wgt>ttr AM Aldrk1Q9; sen Wiiiiam Mer\halt. Servl<o< will be t>tld on uroay Fel>r..ary n •I 3· )0 PM al tt\f Cll•Pel of McCormick Morluory L»9uno1 Hill\ tntermtnl will b~ ""'v•lP Mc.CCHm1<k Mortut.try dlrf" •en OllAVf:~ I· "OBERT EDWARD GRAVE'> ... " ..,, of C~t1 ~\a C<1hforn1a Pd'>tO ..,,ay February 1 Hl1 H• '' \Yrv1v•o l>'t ,,i\ w1f~ Et••nt' Gravt\ two \.OfU -.rt Graw\ of Norw•lk 8111 Ba tlwn ol Pl«tnlla C• to~ O.auQhltr\ 1.---.iQ11111111&..J11111.Jll .\.MILi.~ c.._~ G 1vn of Cc»ta Me\a Ca Btll• 0¥llark ot Prncott, AroroM M••• $Ulltv..,. of Or""9C S.noy Tonkin of AMlhelm, C•.; brolt\fr Dick Grow\ of t-•. st-mother M•ry Gravn of ~nsno. Ros.ry "' 1 JO Wedna.d1y .'fJllbru.,y • at 8.tltt Btr~ron Corona IM M., Ch•P<tl. M.tu of Ct\r1st1an .Wtal ti 00.t.M ThurMUty February to. •t St. John Th<t Baptist Cat ho tic CllUrct\. lnlef'menl di B•llt·S.rQeron P«lfi< View ~mor111 Park Coron• Otj Mir Funeral Hom• di rte tors JOHNSON MAR JORIE Mac ARTHUR 'OHNSON, resident of Soult\ t...gun•. C:alifort11a P•••ed ;iway at htr horn• February q, 1q11 Memorial MC:Vi<es to be """' S.turcMy F'ebrU<lry 12 •I 1· OOPM at Chrl\I Lulhtro\n Churct>, Sdn Clemente In lieu of fl_a,., tt\f family rf'Que•I aonattons to Christ LutMran Ct>urch ol !.an C .. rnente Or t Emory Acorman of tl<f•tlnQ Prtv.ttP lntrrm•nt M,., Jefln•on'• blrtf>place ""' Antlqo W'Konsln, .,,. .... ca,..,.~ to Cdlltorn1.t '" lft9 and "''10t<I "' °'""9" Co.,..tv f~r • .,.11,., W "•urv11r"d by ,..,.r t\u\l>Md Adol!lfl Jofln<loll Sou!'> uquna lhrr• d•uo•"•rs. Cnttr•our HA,.rvm•n o• ~gun• &@Kt\. Ca S\H' F"1100• lrv,nt ¢at., Killv Hauck of Alt-n• c~ ono •~•11'1•• Do'lela M•<Artt\ur of 1 '$.lf'asot•. F'la .ilnd t1v@' qr:tndCPhldr""" I ~fer LM1UfW 6'Ja<n Mllrlu••Y """' ...... WlllOHl WILLIAM H WRl(;HT ,._,.,..,,, of c .... ~u. C•"'°'"'"' P•\\--CI •w•• "~u•ry ~ "" ~rv1<~\ .,.nd•nq •• IP.t<lf1c View Mo r1u1r1 N~woort a..ct> C• '1HF4MILT COlOHl4L FUNHAL. HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave Westmins1er 893-3525 l"ACIFIC YllW MIMOR14L l"l.llUC Cemetery M ortuary Chapel . 3500 Paci he View Drive Newport Cahlornfa 6<l4·2700 McCORMIC• MOITU4RIH Laquna Beach 49<l-9<l l 5 Laguna Hill<> 768-0933 San Juan caoistran() 495-1776 IALTZ-IRGUOH MBALHOMI Corona del Mar 8 73-9450 Costa Mesa 648-2424 llU UOADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway 1 Costa Mesa 6-42-9150 SMl1N TUTMU. LA.Ml WISTCURI CHA ... • <427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa• 64M888 Sall1a Ana CMpel 518 N. Broadway SanlaAna • ~7.,..13t SMITNS' MOlTVAllY 627 Matn St Hunttngton Beach 536-6539 PUBUCNOTICE c; , Thursday, February 10. 1977 . Denlae.ttats' Bift Widening? 'l'HE Bf O.C. RUSl'ING CMt•M., ..... 5Yft ls the split between Oranee County Supervllor Ralph Diedrich and Auemblyman Dennis Maniers a terminal case? Witnesses to a confrontation between the two feuding Democrats in the chow line at Dick O'Neill's annual roundup of political cronies lut Saturday think so. According to others who were waiting iD line, Diedrich 's opening comment went like this: "Well, there's that mouthy, one-term as- semblyman." There are conflicting descriptions of the ex- change that followed, but everyone agrees there WILL THE SPLIT CONTINUE? Diedrich Mangers were words between the two and that things got a bit tense for a while. . ... repretenlative and vicepresJdent of Local •11510, CommunlcaUon.s Workers of America; Lorett• Walker ol Westminster, an Oranee County Airport commlaaioner and co-chatrman of the Orange County Democratic Central Committee; Ada Taylor, another Westminster resident. a busi- nesawoman-homemaker;. David Lander , an at- torney and Los Alamitos planning commissioner, and Helen Kuricaj of Buena Parlt, president of the Oranee County Democratic Women. ••• A TESTIMONIAL luncbeoo is planned March l in Sacramento for former Oranee County as sem'blyman Robert Burke of Huntington Beach. State Senator John Briggs <R-Fullerton) ls or· ganizloi the luncheon at Posey's Restaurant near tbe Capitol. Tickets are coing for $100 a plate. Briggs hopes to sell 100 of tbem. After serving ror a decade in the Assembly, Burke lost his seat lut November to Democrat Dennis Mangers. Briggs said be i& organizing the testimonial to generate some money to tide Burke over until he lands a new job. Burke, a former Huntington Beach •u"H elementary school trustee, won't be eligible for a $600-a-monlh legislator's pension until he turns 60 in six years. .. "' MICHAEL CUSHING has left hi s post as ad- ministrative assistant in Orange County for Rep. J erry Patterson CD-Santa Ana). in favor of a job with the Carter Administration. Cushing, 29, a onetime aide to former Orange County supervisor Robert Battin, joined the White House staff Jan. 21 as a ssociate director of the President's Personnel Otfice. ••• HENRY QlJIGLEY, tbe former lrvme city councilman, is making political noises qain from his new home in Riverside County. In an interview published in a Temecula newspaper, QW,ley, a Republican, is quoted as saying be aspires to be able to personally finance bis election to a statewide office in 1982 or 1984. .. FEB. 10.13 PU.IMllHG HIATtM• AIR COHD. ,, ... _ .. ,__, 54n~I~ Y-Ar~ footlSllON YICJO 1M~2 c.n-tt'K) C..1M1h••a ... , ..... h ... 495-0401 cos Ti'iitsA 1'2tl'l.-IJJl'Ct ' \1 l , .. •I 7JJ ~ •W•"' ICE CLASSICS PERFORMANCES ON REAL ICE loath Coast ?tua ORANGE COUNTY Democrats are scheduled [ lo pick an executive secretary to assist Frank Barbaro oC Costa Mesa, new party chief in the - county. DAILY PILOT The selection reportedly will be made Saturday from about two dozen applicants. Whoever gets the job will be the first executive secretary the Orange County Democratic Central Committee has ever had. ••• ASSEMBLYMA N CHET Wray ID·Garden Grove) has appointed seven Orange Countians lD the state Democratic Central Committee. ~e1 '•11tM llH't"ell,-e Bttene-Pat"lt-etty councilman; Soo.ja Sonju, a Cypress City Council member; John Pope or Garden Grove. Wray's field ·Dial-a-lift Bus Service to Grow Dial-a-lift service, which allows handicapped residents in North Orange County to telephone for door-to-destination bus service, probably will be ex· panded throughout the county. Directors o( the Orange County Transit District <OCTD> have agreed to pursue expanding the service area, along with its operating hours and the number of buses available THEIR VOTE FOLLOWED PROTESTS from some handicapped residents that the present three minibus fleet is inadequate, and filled at peak hours . Those residents also asked that the 75 new coaches on order by the district be equipped with wheelchair lifts. One of the speakers. Patricia Bayley of Anaheim, said the dial-a-lift program segregates the handicapped and denies them equal treatment. While she supported its improvement, she asked that the handicapped have access to other buses as well. Spanish Class Set "Spanish track 2" is a new course at Golden West College this spring designed for people who want a proficiency in Spanish. ll is a three-semester class offering oral and conversational practice as well as a study or the civilization and cuJture of Latin America. Golden West's walk-in registraUon continues through Feb 17. No appointment is necessary. Valentine Dance Se t A Valentine dance and dinner sponsored by the Polish National Alliance will be held at St. Gregory the Great Cbdrch, 13935 Telegraph Road, Whittier, Saturday at 9 p.m Admission is $2.50 for the dance and $1.50 for dinner. For more information call (213) 697-4202. UNION 76 announces a new dealer in your area. ! __ ....,..___ (~ .. :.-· ,-1\~: .. . ... , ,.. ..... - \ 1 I 1 76 BALL RADIO FREE With Tires or Battery Purc:hlle • FREE HOT DOGS & PEPSI • FREE BALLOONS Ir GIFTS Outtng Grano Op9nlng .....,, Illa*;. S.-CW, • ,.. U, IZ.13 INVENTORY FINAL 6 ·DAYS THRU FEB. l.5.-t971 0 LITTLE M.AC by Hamilton Becxh . . .......... . 0 DOUBLE M.AC by Homihon Beoc.h ...•..•..•.. 0 PRESTO I HAMBURGER C(X)KER . . . . . • . . . • 0 PRESTO II DOUBLE HAMBURGER C(X)KER .. 0 CANNING JARS .. IS.II .21.11 .13.11 .20.11 Pinls, Cose 12 . . • . . . . . . • . . . . I.II Qucm. Cose 12 . .. ......... 2.11 0 ALL LIBBY G..ASSES ............. SOOfo OFF 0 KROMEX ICE BUCKETS . . ..... 50% OFF 0 ELECTRIC PENDULUM CLOCK by SporM Woodlone Goin . . . . .. . .. .. .. ........ 9.tt 0 CASE RNE CUTLERY. Ali Kn1ve' 25% OFF 0 SALT0'-1 PEANUT BUTIER MACHINt Model P82 •.. _ . __ . . . .. . • . .. . . . .. .. .. .. .. . 17 .II 0 SAL/ID SPINNER by Triumph .. .. .. .. . • .. .. .. . • . . . 5.18 0 WATER PIK Ool Hygiene Appliance. Model 37 .......................... 22.81 0 RAY-0-YAC T...alE LAMP Battery Operated. #I 005 0 SOLID STAINLESS STEEL FLATWARf 50 oc. Set. Ser"'ce for 8 .............. 6.11 lb Tsp. I Sugar & I Butter ...................... 19.18 0 BEAN POTS. West Bend Use m o slow cooker . . ................••. I .II 0 DECORATIVE BASKETS Rotton Ty~"' fOf l'h Qt. Pyrex Bokinq Dish ................. I. 19 fOf 2 Qt. Pyreic Baking Dosh . , ••....•..•.... I .It 0 PRESTO Continuous Oeon Bro~er/oven. #QfBocc .. . ............... 16.H O WEST BEND 9 C14> Percooltor. #q'4613 . . . . . . . • • . . . . 7.11 0 WEST BENO 9 cup Percolator #~7 I .............. 11.11 MJlhillm a Mh 111c11n PAINT Tru-Test. Glidden & Behr Plus 10 Stains B RED DEVIL CAULK •.•......••.•...••.•..•..•.•.. 49• RED DEVIL LATEX CAULK ...... • ..........•....••. 7r G~IDDEN ~AINTS 25%0FF lntenor and Extenor 0 BEHR KRETE Concrete Stons Premixed Colors. Gallons .. • . . . • • • • . • . • • . So-Yo Off 0 MASKING TAPE. All Sites . . . . . . • . . . . . . JS,.o Off 0 BEHR SEAL-UTE FVniture Ston . • . . . . . . . . . So-Ye Off 0 TOQ BOXES. Lorge Variety. Most Sizes. A real bargain . . . . . .......... U 4Y• Off 0 TOCl.S. Vise Gips. Sites 7' ond 10 ........... 259/e OFF • Estwitq Hornrneis • . . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 15% OFF • Fuler P'ipe Wr~ .. . . .. .. .. .. . ........ 25% Off 0 CEM8'lff TOO..S. Professional Odty Trowels. Edger, 8ridt Trowel , Liner ............ 21"9 Off 0 Bl.KK & OECKER Worbnate. 8 atty •.•..•.•...... 11.U 0 ROCKWB..L TOOLS: 3/'G' Drill -..100. 16 only. Reg. 1'4.99 •••••••••.•••• 11.99 Jig Sow. #.4300. 7 only. reg. 1'4.~ .••.•••••••..•.• I I.ft 'h" Orill #'4200. 4 only. Reg. 22.99 ..•.••••..•..•.• It.ff Orbirot Sandee ti +400 S on•y req. 24 qq Ro1.11er. #%(0_ 4 only Req 39<1Q 7'/•" Sow. #4S1 I 3 only RP J 24 qq 7'/." Sow. #4500 2 only req 22 qq O SKIL TCXXS 3/8" Vaioble Speed D11ll 4 lb26 lb roy. Reg. 199S . .......... IS.'9 . ........ 29.99 ......... 11.tt ........ "·'' ........... 14.99 ........... "·" Orbtol Sander. tt4S9-4 Req ']q 99 0 KWIKSET #800. I' 1hrow. DEADSOL T Any finish in slock . . . . • . . . . . . . •.•••••••• I I .II 0 FIRE LADDER. 2 Story. Steel & Cham ....•.••••. -•. 12.95 0 KIDDE ARE EXTINGUISHERS # 110. 1-AIO-B.C... .. .. . .. . .. .. ............ 9.11 I KWIKSET SMOKEAL\RM 23.88 0 ALL SCOTT FERTILIZERS VefY limited Quont1tie~ ...................... 50CYo OFF OUTDOOR LOW VOLTAGE LIGHTING S!T Maltbu by lntermat1c 6 Light Set with ltmer 69.88 OHOSE REfL #236. Woll MC>l61t .................. 12.11 0 LAWN SPRINKLER. Nelwn Dial Oscillot1ng Type. Reg 24 9S . . ............... 13.11 0 HOSE 5/8"..SO fi Nylon Remforced Vinyl Blodt . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . ..... S.U 0 TRUE-TEMPER Gorden Tool~ • Rotn:l Shovel. Model SLRCS ......•.•..•.••...•. l .7t • Sauae Shovel. Model SLSCS •••.•.•••.••••••.••• 3.H • Rake Model SB 14CS ................ -.•.•..•.• l.29 • Hoe Model SQ,CS .•...........•.....•........ J .09 I MR COFFEE Modlt MC-IA • 23.88 j 0 MIRROMATIC Automatic Drip Coff eemoker .•..•..•....••.•...• 14.11 0 AR~8oz .....................•....... I.II 0 ARMORAl.L Oeoner. 16 oz. .. .................... 1.29 2.49 TRASH CAN LIDS For 32 Gal. Size 0 NAILS. Odd 'n Ends. Vanous Saes urrited Oaitities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1s· .. AMBOCI MONTEREY PATTBM HAIDWAU •Towel Bara• T.P. Holder • So-.> Oithet • Front Door Hdwe 0 FURW.CE ALTERS: 50%°" 20"aJ'/16"XlfJ"/16"x2.S"/1'4"l10"/IS"x20" ........ W ... 0 G.E. BRITE STIK, A"°'9icent Bulb & Fistura/Plug~n ............................ UI . • ... wouldn't be complete without a sweahr by H.,._ (hist · F1111 FashiOMd ..• s I 800 b d di ck =-=--=-===;=: =-vernon's !'port swear W estcAff Pfcaa 548-4121 w.-..r ...... w ..... '-'.W .IM: n.....1 .. , Valentine rad, Valentine blue, lalboa Island 67>1904 .._,_W.lt.l S...,IM Love said fn DIAMONDS is love tried and true. -· \ ,, ... Put on your \_ lite ~f ride. specs! s-rt ..ct ""lflPY spec· tatot-••• Two•- IMHler. Tan -'"d W't"t• •"° 8h1tt •"" Whtie Coordinating handbag WntcUff Pina • Mewpori leoch Ph. 548-8684 Have a Valentine Party! Valentine's Day is Monday - t he perfect time to have a party. Make your party a success with colorful , coordinated Hallmark party sets and accessories! PAPER UNLIMITED 1112 lam.AVIMUI WISTCUllF PLAZA S4 .. 7t2 I ••• • • • Thur!d!y, February 10. t977 DAIL y PILOT A J. WES TC UR= l'L4U To your Valentine With Love, F r om HALLI DAY'S MEN'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING FOi YOUR VALBmMI A handsom e combination of a Robert Talbott tie aod a Sero Dress shirt wm make a welcome gift. TRADITIONAL OLOTBJNG eooo TAm WILL ALWAn ... mu 17th & trvtne Ave. • Wtetdln Plaza Newport Be8Ch • 84&-0792 239 .. ,.. •. 8t1"t San Diego • 23U193 l j L.M.Bopd Battle Over Typewriters Somebody Juat proposed that only French and Belpan typewriters be used at the Euro- pean Community beadquart.en in Brussels, Bel&lum. Do you realiH what this will mean, if au ch com ea to pus? The French and Bel&lan secretaries, already irate over the number of American and British elrls employed there, will suddenly have an enormous advantage. Tbe typewriter keyboards are dl!ferent. The French and Belgian secretaries would be mighty com- fortable with the native typewriters. But the American and Brltiah secretaries would have to adjust, no easy chore for an experienced touch typiat, or go elsewhere for work. The French and Belitao girls are said to be lobby- ing for the typewriter standardization to go their way, lobbying most heatedly. The Public Library in Bethlehem, N.Y., keeps on file the current menus of approx- imately 40 restaurants thereabouts. Not a bad notion. U you so wish, you can check out what's being served for bow much all over the area before booking reservations or walking in to be seated. You'll probably get it just about right if you reckon that the depreciation on your car costs you approximately five cents a mile. A little more than the co~t of the gasoline itself, typically. FOSSIL Q. ''How old does something have to be before It's called a 'fossil'?" A. At least 10,000 years. That is, if you use the word to refer to the remnant or evidence of some sort of organism. But there are other kinds ot fossils. too. Fossil words, for in.stance. Consider the phrase "to and fro.'' You never see the word "fro" outside that phrase. It's a fossil. Q. "Is there an ethnic group anywhere whose people don't get cancer?•• A. Only one. The Hounzas in the Himalayas north of Kashmir. No cancer case bas ever been diagnosed among them. Correspondents insist that's nol because their doctors just failed to identify the ailment. Western-trained physicians have worked there, too. Tbe why of it all remains a mystery. although reporters think the fact that the Hounzas eat only fresh food they grow themselves might have something to·do with it. Addreu mail to L.M. Boyd, P.O. B<n 1560, Co.ta Meaa, CA. 92626. 'Happy Poseur' Hospital Queen's Lead Changes Sets Two @]@ . Films, Talk1 BY USA ROBINSON f:leld H•ws~ Sylldlute Tops in Pops u, Two rums, "Abnormal Behavior" and "Depression," will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Tues· The Railroads Tough rugged FHA approved 14 colors, styled for California living. A maior manufacturer has used the finest autoclave heat set nylon yarn for durability. Caprice These luxurious 14 colors are designed with Practicality In mind and are ready for your every decorat- ing challenge. All solid colors using autoclave heat set nylon yarns in FHA approved construction. All~ tfle first v11ent1nn In ArMrkl wer9 mldt bY nuN Md monkJ In tht earlv 1700'e, It w• n't until 1aso tn.t tht tint ~k valtntlnt 1ppe1rtd. At tt11t time thev were ealfed "Pennv ~ fuls" and wert prlnttd on Chea• paper. Thew were followed bV lacy, ruffltd paper "~' tvpu that u1ually f11tur1d angels, cheruba. children. hNrts and flow.ra. ' Twenty-nine veers 1nw the first COMk: val1t1tlnt 1PPHl'ed. Jdln 81otw stlrttd • c:1roet busJneu on tht soot where tllt current City Hall of Los Anett" stands. Since that time the compenv has grown and prot- l>ef'ed bv building a rtPUtallon for service and lntegrltv that Is ~ matched In the Southland. sa95Per Yd. INSTALLED $·995Per Yd INSTALLED Decoresq SOLARIAN Come In right now for our lowest price ever on this exciting series of hlgh·sMe no wax floors. Each has Armstrong's famous MlraBond• wear surface that keeps its sunnv shine without waxing for longer than an ordinary vinvt floor. Freddie Mercury smoothed an avocado-colored French skin cream on bis legs. Wearing red and white satin boxer shorts and an em- broidered black kimono, he certainly didn'tlook like..abapker -nut as we talked in his New York more interesting for me; it's another tb~ot.b.inka.Qo.uL Jnslead of rel_ying on the high heels to give you stature, you have to count on your own body movements. I stand differently now," he said, jumping up to demonstrate. "It's like the way Ruda Nureyev walks,·• be added, referring to the dancer be so obviously admires. day at South Coast Com· -fD4AAJl~4•.~.p.i_~·~tMa~~J-~~--,,_~~~~~~ ..... o"11111~ Auditorium, 31872 Coast Highway, South Laguna. • hotel suite, it was obvious that Queen's outrageous lead singer, who • in the past has referred to himself as a "Kensington Poseur," has changed. HE'S NOT WEARING bla ck fingernail pol ish anymore. Queen <Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Roger Deacon , J ohn Taylor) rose to tremendous inlcrnationaJ pro· minence with a complex, sophisticat- ed musical sound during the heyday of glitter rock. Freddie would stalk the s tage in e xaggerated face makeup, dressed in a flowing Zandra Rhodes ensemble, then strip to his shiny shorts for a flashy encore which was, or all things, "Big Spender," from the Broadway show "Sweet Charity.'' FOR TIDS U.S. tour, Freddie's look is different. He's still banng his rather hairy chest in ballet tights. But gone are his pop star platform shoes, replaced by Little leather ballet slip- pers . "You get used to being a rocl< and roll singer m high heels and tight trousers," Freddie told me. "and this ballet stuff 1s hard. On one band we're delivering very rough rock and roll, and then I have to look graceful wear· Ing those tights Because they look perfectly dreadful, dear, if they sag. "But this drag has made the tour "DURING THE SOUND checks I do some ballet exercises. You should see it, the crew dies laughing "I'm quite happy being the lead poseur in Queen at the moment, but my life i.sn 't all that different from when I was running a stall in the Kensington antique market. Of course, I have more money, but to tell you the truth, I don't know how much. I know it's easier for me to do things now, but I've always lived in the same extravagant fashion. ''Those early days were frustrating for me. because I was marking time. I just always wanted to be a star. "BUT PEOPLE GROW up, don't they? l know I have. I'm 30 years old, and 1 've changed. As rar as my image is concerned, well, I still have certain pretensions, but that's the show biz part of me. "When I first started with this band, I never thought I'd wear my kimono onstage." And the boxer shorts ? "Oh," be laughed, "that was on a darefromthecrew." WI HT AMY SCll. J2 YRS. DPIRllHCI MADI TO MUSUll HAHO T AU.OUD Q.AlMIH'l'S ATH..a.NICUPWSDUTY • • cs. u1ts rom Slt.50 Custom Made Shirts Sl.H I u, • .' Pnces Less Than Ready Made Suits • $4llh C.....,. ()y~ S 165.00 t. ...... store.. I ' • 1,, ... ---~~---c:-1 AL ... 1·104T .. 0NlY HS . 11 10 111211 I 4 It; 16 I 1 18. I 'I 20 21 . 12 21. 24 . --·""-""'"' . -oi _,,,, --a 500 .-ec1 r.brica "°"' EMlencl ~'°-'"""°"d-... IUY l sum. MI )rd °"' NH ••• Call or Visit Danny IJO.USO 9 00 to 7-00 p m '::JI' 23932 Paseo De Valencia. Laguna Hills ; I ~L~~~~~~~!!~~i~f!~ f .& ' oooRs oPt.N AT-, P.M. FoR 1NsPEcr10 N n. l 1 JEWELRY CHINA CRYSTAL : : Plus hundrods of other items of furniture, objets d'art. etc. I I Merchandise consigned from oul·o f·pawn, bankruptcies, court·ordered I I sales, banks , etc. I ~ Mowdfo•oonv::~~:SL:.63 ~ (714) 645-2200 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I • I I I China by Limoges, Wedgewood, Rosenthal and others; fine European and Amencan cut crysldl and art g~; porcelilsn hgunnes; bronzes; fmP. fum 1ture; chandeliers and one of the largest displays of hne jeweiry m lhe southland. Everything from 20 carat diamond solitaires to gold necll chains. FREE ADMISSION TERMS: BankAmencard, Master Charge, Personal Check, Tenns. ADDmONAL INSPECTION HOURS: Mon .. Tuos. & Fri. lOa.m. to Sp.m., Sat. 12 noon to S p.m., Sun. 2.p.m, to S p.m . AUCTIOHEER1 Art LOVlne • I 'l_ WE BUY FOR CASH J OR SELL ON CONSIGNMENT. , -~~==~~~~E~-~~~i:'G~~~ . Following the films, a discussion will be led by Charles Head, clinical psychologist and pro- gram coordinator of the mental health unit at South Coast Community Hospital. Admission is free and open to the public . Refreshments will be served. Further information can be obtained by call· ing Kathy Temple at 499-1311,ext.163. C•H'or"1~ Cont• .t<tnr-, L1ctn~ 7111ll Ntw0• (Of\11".c'IOt"\ L1<tnw Ila COSTA MESA 2927 s. Bristol FURNITURE .. °"'" Cellllfr. i r-:::"Tl .... J 1 · 1f I .. ., ... ,. . ., .... _.. ... ~ ··~ ~-I '1 Design, quality and comfort at an extra- ordinary RB price! 7~ foot SOFA and 5 ~foot LOVESEAT or the two-piece 15 Yi foot SECTIONAL =2ss Sectloaat. IOla, lne.eat. ehalr, ottoman wl&lt &be fine detallla1 of aaclcl.le arm 1tylln1, buUoa·tafted caabtolllDg, ud 1manl1 styled aide pocke&a bathe most aapple real leatber-look, efff &o care for Ttayl ta Jmtroas 1hadea of f1ISHl, 1u1et, and cordovan. Deeoratbtg service, delivery and fall nn-year warranty at ao ertra char1e. =ss. Oversized ch.iir *t3S. Bigottom•n COMI HOMI TO RI FURNITURE SHOP 7 DAYS A W!!K • WRKDAYI 10 UNTIL t • SAT\JADAY 10 UNTIL t • SUNDAY 12:30 UNT1L t ANAHllM. 1872 w. Uncohl. nl-1231 HUNT1NOTON 111.ACH • 1Ml1 IMch Btvd •• IU.21973 ~· MllA. in• N. Harbor Blvd .• S4N711 LA HABRA • 1720 w. WhlttW • 111~11 FUU.IATOH• • 31111 YcM'bt Lindi Olvd. • 634-t011 IANTA ANA/lU8TlN • 1703 I!. 17U\ St.• l-Ot201 c.p,,...,.. ~ 11n Aa lllcMIMt. 1nc., .,, ~ llOdt l11Cif11191 ~ . ...... ( I DAllYPflOT AJ3 'Media Spotlight' Magazine Publisher 17 . By JOYCEL KENNEDY Jack SdruPer, 17, ls a hip ICbool JUDior ..a publiaher of a mooey-makht1 mqutne that baa a national oewut&od dlatribut.loo. He wu 14 when he beaan a serie1 ot •ctlY!Uet Joadlnc to the publication of Media SpotUaht, a bimonthly acl·fl and fantasy magulne launcbed a yearqo. MEDIA SPOl'UGll'I' lMel'B tn Cb Star Trek D08talgia wilb aueb articles aa "The New Voya1ee," "Spbit ot Star Trek,,•• •-romonow•11 World," ...... tlt_,I "Allens," and "Science nction in Music." Dr. Benjamin Kraut I asked the young publiaber and ez. has been elected ecutive editor what would happen c bi e f o t st a ff at should the ent.Mssiasm for Star Ttek c 0 s t a M e 8 a fade: "We'd switch to another special M · 1 H interest," be said with equ.anim.ity. emona Ospital "The interest in science fiction is _f_o_r_1_977_. ______ growing." Coastal Students Honored Twenty.five UCLA stu-. dent.a from the Orange Coast area were named to the dean's list for academic excellence in "the college of letters and acience. They are: Jack is a distributive educatian stu· dent at Peary High School in Rockville, Md. which means hils after- noons are free for the basiness which began in 1974 when Jack attended his first comic book show. A LON<PTIME come boot baff, Jack took a table space at the show and sold some of his collectiao. He cleared $1.500. Another show added $500 to bis capital fund. With a $2,000 base, Jack wrote a now-defunct comic book publisher re- questing the right to serve as the publisher's wholesaler in his area. (Jack wanted to become a wholesaler who wouJd supply pro- ducts to the area's some two dozen specialized comic book collector shops, not to newsstands.) ( C.4REERS ) JACK GOT TBS eoutract, matbe because the publlaber didn't know he waaOG.lyH. Jack'• next atep ••• to contact potentlal reta1l MtOUDta u far away u Baltimore. McL lie quietly landed enoqb ~ for a viable buai· nesa. About thla time, Jact'a father', Irwin, became intensted and the two formed a faml17 corporation, IrJax Enterprises, Inc. At fint, his father. a parapie8ic as the reau.lt ol a work ac- cident.. merely siSDed checks and drove J.ct to cuatomen• shops ill a specially equipped van; later be helped Jack in other aspects ol the business. EVEN'l'tJALL Y, JACK became the wholesaler for other comic boot publiabers, but, noting the field la as bruising as a battle between Spiderman and Howard The Duck. began publ1sbing his own materials - posters, one-shot limited-interest publications, and the quarterly magazine, Wonderful World of Comics, all of which are sold t.broQgh comic collectors sbop5. While Media SpoWght is Jack's first brainchild to bit the national newsstands, it won't be the last, he said. Fl"Otll ~AL llEACH· J•Y Fr•nklln SlleoMnl-JtMINr Kertf\ Wel•h Fl"OtllCOSTAMESA: Mal'ttSt•llllen . ~-_.. ___ a;.a.._...,,,. ----------------------- Laund.MMtMnNttv.,.t»rg --~ -•-From HUNTINGTON llEACH: Glenn Le'9h lhacll. 0°"9 Leroy Snlel8'1•. C.Mn Tell""'I TOQunl. J•mt. Lrnn Oulllftlay Md 0ouglA$ Eclw•rll...,_. , For the Win One Hundred Dollars In Gift Certificates From LAGUNA BEACH: Brent --ll~"-=~~ ......... ---11--i---------------------------------------------------------------------------_...---:--------------, R099r Utlestrom LI,..,. 5u'l«I fl91\•_ IWfiffiCl!eu11iM0tWiit~-From NEWPOIH BEACH:. 01"89MY an.c. Otemond, .Jonn Al ... ender F..-Jn. O.~ld O.nlt4 Kii_, ,.. -Llnde~ret WOife. FrOfT\ l"VINE: Sherrie Lynn B•nq. From SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO; "'<ll•rll T-MAbuou ... a Juli• ece,r,~:-·souTH LAGUNA: Noll Overstreet...., Bridget Ann T"""'~· From FOUNTAIN VALLEY· Glori• Joyee R-lnnd. ThOme• Al'I t lloy Tri1pa11I a nd Alleen Aiko Y•m•chlk•. Cadillac Recalls Ordered St. JOSl!"H HOS,.ITAL ~,.,1l,1tn Mr. and M,.,_ H.,.cld uitrapes, 5211 Apt. G ··s·· St., El Toro. olrl. JAftNry 14, ltn Mr •nc:I Mo. Gll~r1 B•n•~s. 1481 Middle town L•ne. We Umln•ltr, twins, boY,.ndQlr1. Mr. •nd M n. Const a l'l tlon l(•rtsonu ls, • Or a•es Bay Or., Newport Beacl!,g lrl. Mr. •nd M ri. Jon Wiimes. 15750 Swallow l..ane, Wtttmlnster, girl. Shutter-up in minutes LOS ANGELES (AP) -AU 1977 Cadillac Sevilles sold in California have been or . ·d e red recalled by the state Air Resources Con- trol 'Board because or faulty smog controls. Eighty percent of the Sevilles, the most ex· pensive general produc- tion car made in America, faiJed slate- re quire d tests for emissions ol nitrogen ox- ide, board chairman Tom Quinn said Wed.nes· day. THE ARB s aid the car's exhaust gas re- circulation system was not pumpine enou~h ex· baust back through the engine for recombustion. A small restrictor plate -actually a m e tal ga s ket -is b e ing replaced with one with a larger opening lo in crease th~ now. The alteration was described as a simple one requirinK no more than half an hour QUINN SAID tests showed the larger ex- haust recircuJatlon would cure the problem. A General Motors spokesman aalcf 3,800 Sevilles, which bave a base atJcker price of more than $13.000, were involved. THE AD Hld'onens will be aslted by mall to bring their cars ln for the change and dealers will Janl!Ary ,., 'm Mr. ana Mrs. William Green. 26101 Via MartJ..ie. Mluioft Viejo. girl Mr. and Mrs. Fred ~ro. 14591 8 H cll A ... I rvlne, boy Mr. end Mr•. DMllel Veleiqu.,r. 1.5061 Waln Clrcle, W"tmlnster, girt Jan_., 1t, 1m Mr. and Mrs, Aln.rt J ue. 21551 Broollnurst. • 161, Huntrngton S.1Kn, girl. J-ry10,1'77 Mr. •nd ""'-Fr-T.., Tlly, '3301 Vie Gu1e Gued1x. Minion Viejo. gir l. Jan...-,21, "" Mr """ M" Jo"" Ourkey. 14S0t Bu~ ourv, E.1 Toro bol J•n ... ryn. IID Mr and M,.. Wlll••m l(rl>Q"r 7111 H•rOOr Bl.a :O CO\I• Mew 9orl J•n ... ,.,u.1m M r •nd Mn G<~ Our1nq 11411 1<01.00 L•M "4~tmqtcn fHacn. Q•t .i. ..... ,., u. 1tn Mr •nc:I Mr\ J•mMGoocloauay. 71611 S.ummer t1•ld L•"e, S•n J•.u11n C•Ol\lreno boy M r •no ..,,,.,_ CMI -., 14 Sunset R1 .. r '"''ne,glr1. Mr •nc:I "'"·Jim Powell, 14971 AU.. Ave .• lrv•ne Qlr1. ~H,1'17 Mr •nd Ml"\. Ger•IO IHollu , 264161 VI• Al'•'•· M osskln Vie to. bov. Mr •nd Mn. "°"'" OeLiem•. 2Sl62 PO\•d• ~. MiHlon Vl•Jo. girt, .,_,., 2', 1'71 M r • .&nd Mn. O!Arlt• Levlt .... 16181 ~• Wtkll i.-. HU1111ngton 8ea<n boy ' J•-rvn.1m M r and Mr\ Er,,.tt Mot•r••. JOU w. Ocun l"ronl N•WJIO'IBH<h.girl , ...... ,., l1. ,.,, Mr •nd Mrs H•b•b M•ll-. 40J1 Etcuoero Or trvlne. oov ,...,..,., 1. 1tn Mr •nd Mo, Rol~y M4ira1111, 1~ Spr· lnglteld, Cml• Me ... OOy SAN CLUolfNTe OeNEllALHOSPITAL JMIUolr"f 190 "71 Mr •nd Mr• U n<t ~C.bt. ~ C.l•.,,.,,1•, Dov J-ry•,"71 Mr end Mrs. J•mfl A11ten, S•n Cl-•.Qtr1. J_ry,,,tt11 Mr •nd Mr'-0•,.lt4 Jones, S.n Cl"mente. 04 ti :: ... ~":.,~~ 111< ... nl P9r"I!« "· o .... Mr • ..., Mrt .Jetus VllltOllS. S... Juen C•P"lr•no l>oV 1 J-.yU,tID Mr •nd Mr'-J-• Wood. Mlulon VleJo.tfn. JafturrH,IID M r end M" .._,,,.,.,., Hotrnn. S.n J11;an ~l\lr-. Qlrl ,_,..,21.1m Mr. end Mra Jernes Green, C•pl&tr-lh«n, boy. J-rylt,lfPt Mr. •"' Mn. 9r.C HHCl'I, MIMlelt VteJo,1111r. ,_.,.,,,,, Mr. and NW-. 0.Yld (llljfehfll, 0- f>olftt, "". '-l'Yit.1'77 .,. ~ -... Mair 111111 ............ Vl4Je,110y. . ......., .. ,.,, Mr. afld Mr-&. J¥tld U!Mltl~ OM.a """"'-boy. • Mr. and Mrs. Devld Coftdon, S... Cl-nte,glrl. modify tboae stJll in r----------.1 showrooms befote de-( livery. , No dollar eo1t for the recall, paid for by the manufacturer, was T•E BOelUIA~ ) REVlEWS given. In the DAILY PILOT I E1tec11tW. Offices: 7812 Edlngor Ave., Hu.nUngton Beael\, CA 926-47 Soul/l•rn Ce/llornfa Region•/ Olffces. _ ... ___ _ 4UO Long Beach Blvd., L~ Beach, CA 90807 8955 Valley View St .• Buena Park, CA 90i20 207'5 S. Av•lon Blvd., Caraon, CA 907,.6 1001 E. lmperlal Hwy., La Habra. CA 90631 1095 trv141i Blvd., Tu1tln, CA 92680 • 23& N. C11ru. Ave., Weit C<wlna. CA 9 '793 It's never been easier to put up shutters. These have a strip you simply nail on. That's all you have to do for that charming, custom- shuttered look. Nail-on shutters are fully assembled with antique hardware. Handy slip-off hinges allow removal for cleaning .. WALNUT FINISH 4 PANEL UNIT 6 PANEL UNIT WHITE FINISH 4 PANR UNIT 6 PANEL UNIT ....... 54.18 44.H ...... 53.H SI.II 97.H 9•1• prlcee good Thureday lhrough Sunday. 537·9571 or 893·6523 870·0050 568·1500 832·2506 Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9 Ope'1 Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9 O~n Mon. thru Frl 9 to 9 Open 9 to 8 flVery dly Sat & Sun. 9 to 8 Set. & Sun. 9 to 6 Sal & Sun. 9 to 8 . ~ . :1 ' .. Thursd!)'..Febru!tY10,1977 Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. Kings: 1 O mg:•tar:·o.e mg.nicotine-____________ _._, 100's:12mg:'tar:'0.9qig.nicotlaeav.percigarettebyFTCMetllod. ,. er . -' J .. I ' . • Parenting Class: P'EP-y By BEA ANDERSON Ofl .. Delly "91 Staff To reduce anxieties and fears connected with the procaa of adoption is no easy taak. But through a pilot program, entitled Preparation and Educa- tion for Parenting, help is availa· ble. In a series of discussions, would-be adoptive parents learn, amont other bsues, about the process of home studies and why they are investigated, new adop- tion laws and availability or newborns and hard-to-place children. The first program was present· ed last spring, unde r co- sp0nsorablp of several Orange County agencies and Rancho· Santiago Community College District. Some reeults of that class of about 30 couples include: -At least four dropped out because they decided not to adopt. -Some came through feeling stronger and more flexlble. They were ready to adopt hard-to. place children. -About one-third conceived during that period of time. Processes Another result of the first series wu that Mrs. Kaplan and her husband, Samuel, who have adopted two mixed heritage children. decided to make con- tact'wttb the children's maternal grandparents so they could give more information to the youngsters as they asked. "It was afte r we heard a speaker from ALMA (Adoptees Liberty Movement Association> talk about the adoptee's need to know aboutbisheritage. "We thought about that for a time, discussed it, and then de· cided to make the contact. "That was the most difficult and longest phone call I ever made," Mrs. Kaplan recalled. "Yet, it has been the most re· warding. The children feel more ours than ever before." BECAUS E MORE .ADOPTEES today are searching and their searches are publicized, Mrs. Kaplan said, there is a great deal or anxiety set up in couples who are plan- ning to adopt. She observed that more single adulta wbo are adopting seem less threatened by open adoption. a noticeable trend. ''Too many laws are in a state of flux, and people need to learn bow to parent without owning the cblld," Mrs. Kaplan stressed. "aEGARDLESS of whether persons are biological or adop· live parents, to be effective they must learn the process or letting go." In the PEP course, Mrs. Kaplan aaid. "We try to show participants that when an adoptee begins to search, it has nothing to do with love of the adoptive parent. "However, being adopted is an added element and the issue bas to be dealt with. ''The question of identity com- es up at various stages of de- velopment -usually when the child starts school, at adolescence, becomes an adult, marries, parents and when the adoptive parents die." Other issues and anxieties ex· plored in the course are; -Why people even bother lo parent. -On what basis are prospec- tive adopting parents turned down. "We can't figure out why (about pregnancies), but if we could we could make a fortune," said Sharon Kaplan, a Children's Home Society caseworker wbo is a seminar consultant. "Probably, the pregnancies happened because the couples re· leased some fears and relaxed," she speculated. lo some instances, she said, the birth and adoptive parents are allowed to meet and ex- change as much information as possible without revealing iden- tity. -Exploration of infertility and why people want lo adopt. -Anxieties in terms of adop· tion processes. -What is involved in the home study. "There's a lot or anger. They want to know why they are investigated and biological parents are not. Personally, I think everyone should do a lot of thinking before parenting.". Sharon Kaplan, involved in the adoptions field for 15 years, is shown with her adopted children, Tammy and Josh. ·~~: ''When couples insist on closed adoption as an absolute, I advise them not lo adopt. -Child development. -How the child feels when he is separated from birth parents and enters a new environment. Who are his birth parents? And why did they relinquish? Mrs. Kaplan said her adopted children are a great help with placements. (She usually starts proceedings in her home.) "They have such marvelous in· sights and really help the children, especially older ones. adjust. Tbey offer so much en· couragement." Single adults, she noted, are more open to adopting older children, especially school-aged ones. United States. The second session, which is in progress, has been honed, re- vised and modified to meet the needs of participants. The course is designed for persons who have adopted, are in the process of adopting or are " thinking about it. PEOPLE CAN EXPLORE their feelings about adoptive parenting prior to getting in· volved in the actual process. Those who have adopted in· dependently have an opportunity to learn more about adoption and how it does and will affect their lives. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Thursday, February 10. 19n 81 Mrs. Kaplan, who has been in the adoption field for the past 15 years, helped write the course, the only one of its kind in the It also gives those waiting for a child or children the chance to develop P,arenting skills, build support systems and become aware or available community resources. :. ~ "~ '~ ·;: ' i;. . f~s:. .... ~ h.)f. ~ . ... • " ,JJ l. ~l~ '!~ " ~ .. Ham Hobby Makes WOves By 11.JDITB OLSON Clf•Dlll"~SWt When Toni O'Brian was in the grocery store the other day her purse started talkina. Candid Camera? Sboppen muat have wondered. But It was only ber husband. Larry, calling her on the radio to tell her be would be late for dinner. O'Brian. who commutes to Los Angeles from his Fountain Valley borne, uses his radio mainly for ~ontact with his family. Other "hams," such as Paul Frtebertsbauaer of Costa Mesa, eQjoy .. rag chewing" and collect- ing as many "QSL cards" as possible, signifying contacts made in foreign countries. Friebertsbauser (W6YMV) has thousands of QSL cards, each different and many representing foreign friends be hopes to visit someday. There also is a giant map on the wail of his "shack" (each ham calls bis hideaway his sbact, whether it's in the garage or a spare bedroom) so he can locate the remote places he con· tacts. Some of them. such as llle Amsterdam, Diego Garcia and Tristan de Cahna, are all the way around the world and unknown to many people. HAM RADIO IS addicting. Friebertsbauser said. He spends time in the morning before work and several hours each evening listening and talking and is at the microphone on weekends as well. Each day there is something new and different and the ham radio operators never know what human melodrama they will hear. Friebertshauser recalled working with the hospital ship, the SS Hope, when a nurse was treating a girl who bad been bit· ten by a rabid dog. He had been maintaining re- gular schedules with a Costa Mesa doctor on the staff and of· fered his asst.stance when the emergency arose. Friebertshauser called a New York hospital and relayed the ad- vice of specialists until tbe nurse was out of danger from the con- tact with the bitten patient. Another time b e helped a youoe sailor contact his mother in Brooklyn from an icebreaker in Antarctica. Frtebertsbauser said he now is listening to people on the East Coast talk about their cold weather and crippling snow storms. HE AND ms wife, Donna, also have written to Southern Rhodesians who wer~ amateurs and met hams from New Zealand when they were visiting in the . U.S. ID the early 60s he wrote to a Russian who had requested American radio magazines. "We haven't beard from him for quite a while," Friebertshauser said. "I don't know what happened." In addition to collectinf ~ cards, amateur& can comp.ta ii\ various kinda of contest~ sponsored by the Amateur Rildfo Relay Lea,ue. "One la to try to make u mUl,)' C!ODtacla u poulble with otber parts ol the worl§I in '8 baarl•" Frieberbhauser aald. ••r" woei one part ol tbe cont.eel lD Ortftle CountythnefU&olfour yean." Hil ~t l'ffOl'd for thla event waa a,ooo contacts tn tbe two ~leMrt1bauaer Hid bam1 ~UM world \alk aboUt tbe weather ad their equipment but never polilicS. Aecordhlc to Jloa•r Denny CWBeAIUC) of Garden Grove, ARRL emer1•c7 coordinator for Ofaap Oc;MllitJ, blllll iD the \1 .S. HD '8Jk abcMit any laNect but m\.W& ldmity tbelr ltat&Gim In Ellllilb pert0dtcall1. Outstanding lectures on topics germane lo adoptive parent skill development are presented by experts in the field. In addition, group discussions are held the last half or each meeting with graduate students from Chap. man College serving a s facilitators. PLANS ARE UNDER WAY to offer PEP as an on-going pro gram . The next ser ies is scheduled to begin Wednesday, March 21, in Saddleback High School, Santa Ana. It is free of charge and re· gislration is open to all county re sidents. Further information 1s available by calling Mrs. Kaplan o1-Ron Johnson at Children's Home Society. 542· l 147. Mrs. Kaplan, who holds a BSW and a degree in psychology from Arizona State l.Jniversity, recent· ly was selected as one== fellows throughout the States by the North Am Center on Adoption. '.: Of those selected, five ~ the west Coast and all are"'J~ Southern California. Two ~ Los Angeles County, an others, Betty Toal and de Henke. are with the Oraue County Department of ~\:161}­ lions. ' "'· For the three countians, 'wtt& are involved in the PEP course, Mrs. Kaplan said, "It is a UDicjbe o p p or t u n 1 t y to res e a"Fff together." -til• Goals of their joint effortsii- clude. ..• -Educating the public ahiGl adoptions, what children .«a available and what kind of boniei are needed. "'• 1· ,-._ \' ?: (SeePEP,8%) ,.~ .i f •• Delly l'tlel l'MIUy .. atmllO' Toni O'Brian ... calling. to become a ham while he the Army but didn't actua\q[ .. ll.: going unUI he helped one friends pack for Tabit thought about bow much would be to communlcapr~rJ r•dlo. \ Singing Blues Key of S . • 1n B1 E&MA BOBECK My typewriter de- veloped a cue ot hiceups the other week that nur- ly drove me up the wall. Every time I hit tbe "S" it would rat-a-tat-tat to the end of the line and hiccup 1.n place. I dldn'l think It wu too serlou.s unUl J aot the bill. "Of coune you have a policy on tbe typewriter, don't you?" asked the re· pairman, his pencil polaed in mid-air. "Oh sure,'1 I ttsgled. "My husband and I took out an endowment on it the day it was born. That way we don't ba.ve to worry about it.a educa· tioo." ··1 am quJte seriOW1," be aald. "A policy on a typewriter la not un· 1.Yual. Or for that mat· ter, nelt!Mr ia a poUcy on rour washlnJ machine, awn mower , dil· bwasher, furnace, pic- ture window, septic tank, or the picture tube on your televlalon aet." "You mean people buy insurance polible1 on all those inabimate ob· jecta?" "They're the most un· predictable kind. We can pretty much determine the life span of people, but these little turkeys can go just like that!" "How much money are we talk.lne about!" ''Well, to insure this machine for a year wltb a minimum of three service calls, includtn1 lbe yearly service and· cleanio1 and _A 1uarantee on the 'S' key a1aln.st hiccuping, would run somewhere in this neighborhood." He sllpped rne a piece of paper with a figure on It. "That 's some neighborhood. For a few bucks more, I could have the column carved on stone tablets on Mt. Sinai. That typewriter would be worth more to me dead than alive." "Others have con· sidered that," he said stitny. "Are you saylna that some people 'do their ap· pliance1 in' Juat to col· Ject the lnaurance? .. He amUed. "Let me just say that there are a lot of little old ladles touring Europe every summer on the in· surance money len by their dead dis · bwashent" I told bim I 'd think about it, bl.!$ when be lert I sa.t down at my typewriter and got a let· ter olf to his company. Dearir: peakine .a a writer or aUre, I mut protet. Without an -on my typewriter, communica· lion l lm,p0ible. I ak you, how can l be!! cinUUating with my • miln1. Thl! price you ak for an 1~ urance policy tin exce of theervice. omehow, I will tumble along without It. Jut re- member, thank to you-ex i now a two-Jetter word. Let that be. on your con- cience. Feminist Favors Alternative Blind to Miracles By MARCIA FORSBERG Oltlle Dell'( ,.,let" .. ' Outspoken feminist Germaine Greer told a mixed, though mostly female. audience at Orange Coast College to chuck the pill and in· trautertne devices and turn instead to "abortiQn as a method of birth re- gulation." I Thanks to a Florida ophthalmologist who performed a 30-minute operation, August "Gus" Fry's sight was restored after 19 years of blindness. An artificial tens was set into his !Mt eye, correcting complica· lions that followed an operation in 1956 when his right eye was removed. The author of "The Female Eunuch" does not, however, advocate promisc;uity. Sbe even laments bow accessible women have become, thanks to widespread use of contraceptives. Ms. Greer's spicy com· mentary, peppered with occasional common, though healthy, vulgar· ilies. drew spontaneous laughter and applause as she established an easy rapport. i$ ·aw Look Offered N~ded facial cosmetic sur· r~ an abiUly-to·pay basis is in ·provided by a Los Angeles But when it was time for seriousness. the Austalian-born PhD launched a grave attack• on chemical and metal birth control devices. n· fit foundation . F nded by Dr. Nicholas er~: a cosmetic surgeon, the of: Foundation has treated 40 lower-income patients s gical fees about half the evijiling rates. Deserving people with no in· ie.r may even receive facial ri~ry al no surgical cost, if elua.W'y under the foundation i ines, Dr. Herr said. · don't perform surgery refy for vanity purposes," he tt: "We have a practical goal <ftel ping lower·income people Y'" ~ .• PEP Developing professional c ld advocates. GetUna agencies lo work ether and having Joint train· .-ions. .?cirming a citizens advocate pr -people interested in ementa who will work restore a look of youthfulness to their faces and eyes, so they can get a job. keep it and improve their income." Under a five-step fee structure, the foundation charges patients according lo their income range. Those with UlUe or no income may qualify at no cost, provided the foundation is convinced that surgery will materially help them towards a practical goal. People in high income brackets also are eligible for surgery at the foundation. Their fee is somewhat less than elsewhere. However, when they choose the foundation they also help the less fortunate because some of the funds are recycled to help un· derwrite the cost or others. Dr. Herr calls the foundation plan a "helping hand" program. Those interested may contact the foundation al 7080 Hollywood Blvd., Suite 904, Sara Medical Center, Los Angeles 90028, phQne (213) 469-8349. From 81 "l'M STILL trying lo figure out what would be a feminist management of fertility," she an- nounced. One way would be to "go easy on in · tromissions." Sh e explained the Latin word : "You know. intro, into, and mission, putting. I mean less put- ting into, or input. Less intromissions. • • The women howled with glee. ''But I don't mean less lovemaking, fewer or- gasms or less tender- ness. "We are the inlromil· ting generalion ... the ac· cessible generation." She recalled that . "in • • • Hobby developed rriendships with hams around Southern California. There are other bonuses to being a ham. Mrs. O'Brian reported that she was on the air re- cently in La Palma when she was lost and re· allied her children had taken her maps out of the car. A fellow ham called immediately. with direc- tions to the address she was seeking. St.oriel aboWld on where the term "ham" came from, but no one is sure of its origin. Denny · aue1eated that the word is the Lancashire version ol the word "amateur," or that when wire operators shifted to radio they were dubbed hams because they were new or bad operators. Amateur radio is a hobby for everyone, though there are many more men than women with licenses. Many women, such as Mrs. Friebertahauser, a cratt. ~acher, prefer to let their husbanda take to the air. ''That's why I took up stitchery," sbe ex- plained. "I can sit out in the aback and listen to him." Aeg. Price New 124.00 ··············' .. S32.00 ............. 1 10- 139.00 ............. 1 11• 140.00 ••••••••••••• • 13• v 144.00 ............. • 14• 1154.00 ••.•.••••••• .'17• ............... & Wllht-........ , s..m ...... ..... T-.ulssncr•Swt._s ... •RAINY DAY SPEClAL SALE us to blame the pill," she said. BLASTING IT as a ''dumsy medication," lb. Greer blamed it for "tnottled face, fluid re· tentlon, pelvic infJam· mat ory disea se, s1.4!rility." She added that ·'the pill affect.a the secretion or the mood-regulating substance, and one in three women on the pill Is clinically depressed." Ms. Greer is equally displeased with IUDs, citing them as "probably an abortive agent, and not a very good one." MaQy women ''-can't bear the thought or abor· ti<'ns, ~et we are faced with a situation where wom e n who know nothing about it are hav- lion." Advocating s pecial clinics set up specifically for quJck abortions, Ms. Greer mentioned minttnuin dilation, the suction cannula and Jess counseling. "WOMEN CAN deal with it if it's the right abortion,'' she added. Ms. Greer believes the current generation "caught what ours set up. We believed that to be free of anxiety and Junior League perfectly accessible wu a sian of freedom. "The next generation took it as a sign of norm allty,'' she sal~. To Ma. Greer anowlng young women of today Co "go at their own pace and discover their own fertility, then terminate a pregnancy ln the pro- per fashion" ls prefera- ble to "medicating them before they even know what's going on," she asserted. Proiect National ing hundreds of them" NEW YORK tAP) It is aimed at giving older volunteers a chance to use their education, career ex- perience and knowledge of the community to help others get services or rights. the '50s we dated and we tortured each other. We made love in the back seat of a car." due to the IUD. which The Association of prevents implantation, Junior Leagues will un· she suggested. dertake the l•rgest, privately financed pro· HER ANGER flared. ject in its 56-year his · "Ican'tbe$.l'thethoughl tory : Project VIE, of some abortions Volunteers Intervening either. in Equity. "Most are disgusting, The women's volun· MS. GREER allowed that women of h er generation believed they would be free of anxiety and able to enjoy lov- emaking more "if there weren 't so man y tensions" surrounding the rear of pregnancy. because women have to tary organization has re· ,_..=iirT~iiiiiiiiT=i;:a:;;;:;;;~ wait for them, plead for ceived a $790,000 grant them. borrow money to from the Edna McCon· pay for them and they nell Clark FOWldation to UftHQLSTERY are performed in an inef-rund a lhree-year pilot w... T• w_. ficient way. project. ..,. lelt "But there are some IUJ H..._ lf•4. abortions th al I look up·-----------2=c....==.,.="=•=54::•: .. :I:· ::·=~ on with complete "So, we had th e diaphragm." Women then seized on birth control pills as a way lo stave orr unwant· ed pregnancies. "We wanted the pill to be a part of our religion. We wanted to be in· fertile. .. We defended the pill up bill and down dale, and it never occurred to equanimity," s he re- vealed. Howeve r , "the de· livery system doesn't ex· ist. Pleading. s he ques- tioned, "Wouldn't it be better to struggle for the delivery or the right abortion? "Abortions with no trauma, no anesthetic, low cost, no hospitaliza· Weddings ·vv and Engagements To avoid disappointment. prospective brides are remind('d to have Lh('ir wedding storiei, '"' ith black and "hite glossy photographs Lo the Daily Pilot People Department one" eek befor,e the wedding. Pkt urei, rcc·et ved after that ti me \lo ti I not be used. For engagement announcements It is imperative that the story. also accom· panled by a black and white glossy pie· lure. be submitted six weeks or more before the wedding date; otherwise it will not be published. To help flll requirements on both wed· dins and eneafement stories. rorm:; are available In al Dally Pilot o(flces. Fur- ther queatlona will be answered by People Department starr members at 642·4321. • I ' New Noveffy Tie Tee Shirt 0..1..,... by Hartl S,M,L •24oo : 111£ CAl1"i llOOllD HAS A GOOD 11m .._.. Hiln11YIUlDOOll A flttt Of IWitftt blu. lffl DodOt vans, compltWv outf1'ted Ji oroont Y'M "*to Ptf'ftctlon right •t vow cuttt. awaits~ ull ... (114) QUlf4t • 111 GW.OPl8 uoom .. •m llUSl caus .. ' •.•• , prlcea comparabft to .... ,,, trtcfS. tloftll tt00mlnt1 ttlona ... erld the GALLOPING GROOME It tllmfnatn •II the Mt and bOttllt In the bar91ln. TIS .. llllt llOMI IRYIL •r••" tt1e illCUttlttof the llMlt pet PMIM '° yout door In a con.,e.MC-, Nlf-c:ont•lnlf moll~ ~t tNt Offert c:onvtnfthel ti&• and air condltloftef ~to~ pet, WflO fUMln.cl Ind • troemtd to Wit-. W•lm Of lt\U.lc. ,_ 1111 PD-wtio "'' 111e" tr'OOIMd ~ ._ GALLOP I NO o.-OOMH • ..a lkllled IW°OftUloNI _,.. • Ml combined Kltntlflc leno*~ •nd CtMtlv. artlatry to Pf'OVldt a~ ttllt wm NW you Ind~ pet..._, '°" I "*9.., ' J 1 j ( He lJ a former mayor of Sall Clemente. Gina Marte OS CSlovu· Mlu Dl Gk>vann.l la a nl and Erle a. SmJtb are c r a d u at e o f S a n plaDniq to ••rry Jn Cle01ent• HJ1b School Aua111t.. .it_1_ and attended Sacred · News ot ui~ ~aa• Hea~AeademJ. She also attended McGeorge School o( Law and craduatecl with honors from the UCIJA at· torney assistant pro- aram. Miss M.,... attended Hunt.1.octGp Beach Hilb School and Pacific Coast Two u ti ttn ct o a Baptlst Colle1e where Beaob women wer& her flanc:e araduated. He bonOfed by tbe Oraia~ ia a student at Golden COUllt1 Red er-a durtni Weat(:olle1e. the anau.al Vohtnteer • • • Recopltion Tea. Andrews-OeMille They an Mrs. Robert. m'nt and lodbcoDling· Her fiance attended wtddinc WaJ anDO\UlCecl CypreH Co1le11e. Hl1 tf.tt ~-paresau, Mr, •od. parent. are James R. Mrs. Tony Dl Giovanni. SmUh of Stanford and !fer nance graduated wlU. honors as a CSF Sdlbearer at Miasion Vtejo lligh Sehool, earned a BS degree .from UC Irvine and a JD decree fro m 'the UnlvenitY of C.ufomia, Hastings College of Law. Janet Andrews and Wilkins, who recelvdd a--------------------~~ Malcolm DeMllle are 3•·)'•&r pin aqd Mrs. planning a garden wed· John Bloodworth. 1 Mrs. S. B. Steele of Gina Di Giovanni (above) and Susan Reed (right) to join 1977 bridal ranks. ,Bedtime Story Khartoum. ••• Reed-Koski )f ra. Marjorie Reed ot Corona del Mar hu en· nounced the enaaaement of her daugt)t.er, Sutan Elaine keed and Army Capt. Michael C. Koski, son of the Samuel Kosltis of Tustin. The couple plan to marry April 2 in St. An· drew 's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. Mi ss Reed is a graduate of Corona del Mar HiEI School and UC Irvine where she studied on the masters program in adminislfaUon. He is atteoding the Judge Advocate Generalys School in Charlottesville, Va. ••• Mayer-Burnett A July 1 wedding in North Long Beach Brethren Church is being planned by Shelia Fae Mayer and John Samuel Burnett. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. James 0 . Mayer of Huntington Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cunningham, Garden Grove. dlne. to take place July 2 to.year pin1 in the Victor Hugo, Laguna Beach. NAMED Teen Citizen Miss Andrews is a of the year by the South graduate of Newport Coast Junior Women, Harbor High School and Fountain Valley •was UCLA and now ia work· Debra Lin Wellington, ing for her teaching 17, a senior at Loa credential at UC Irvine, Amigos Jngb School. She is the daughter of the She was honored for late Mr. and Mrs. Robert h e r s c h o l a s t i c L. Andrews. a c h i e v e m e n t , Her flance son of Mr. extra· cur r i cu 1 a r and Mrs. 1Leslie B. activities and civic DeMille or Santa Ana involvement. Heights, is a graduate of [ ) Corona del Mar High _ L M. BOYD _ School and Orange Coast ·------College. He also studied INFORMS In the at California State University, Chico. DAILY PILOT . H••• . tronsport~dlon f : For Classified Ad ACTION C:a:t A Dally Piiot Ad·•isor '42·5671 Body Tai kS LA MODE .EABRICS 18582 BEACH BOULEVARD : . HUllllllllOll 'IEACH ~ Even when you 're fast asleep, the se(ll"et laneuage known as body talk continues to send out tignals. So says the current issue or Family Circle, which reveals that your slumbering position of. fen as much insight into your personality as your more active daytime movements. Some prototypic examples, according to author Dr. Samuel Ounkell, associate medical director and head of psychiatry at New York's Postgraduate Center for Medical Health: The Full-fetal Position -You sleep on one side in a folded position that may curve around a core object such as a pillow. This indicates a strong desire on your part for protection, and the need for a central touchstone aroYnd which you can organize your life and totally depend. The Semi·fetal -This is the most common sleep pc»iUon and generally indicates a degree of sensible adjustment to the world. You are usually fairl)' well·balanced and secure -able to accom- modate to the facts of your existenee without un· due strain. The'Sphinx -This position, adopted primari· ly by children, finds you crouched upon your kees with your back, literally, •·up" against or resist· Ing the sleep world. Among adults, the Sphinx is often associated with poor sleepers who want to get back to their "day" lire as quickly as possible in order to continue the combat of everyday ex- istence. The Mummy -Swaddled completely in bedc~. you •• virtually trussed op for the night, thus giving a graphic demonstration of your timidity andteneral need tohldefrom the world. The Royal Position -These people sleep Oat on their back, generally considering themselves to be the kinJi or queen of their sleep as welt as of their day universe. You usually have a security, a self-confidence and strength of personality that make it possible for you to accept the world and what it bas to offer. Awake or asleep, you're open to everything, hap· py to give as well as receive. The Prone Position -You sleep flat on your stomach, indicating an attempt to assume com- m and ol the bed space, make it your own and pro- tect yoorsell against unforeseen nocturnal sur- prises. During your waking hours, you show a similar compulsion to regulate the events of your life. You do not tlke the unexpected and organize your hours in order to avoid it whenever possible. P!oecf6 a1&e fJe.'lied ie1t a eitf&- Uu'l yea OIJ'la'/ I Uoledlu' • 1>ay Spetiot six;_e S.,.lli• ltt '&6W wllft '.Bit tw 'Beua. •9.95 Town & c.ntry C...-•t Seuth tf Eaa ·Nat Te .... S-.... 11111IsAS.Criflce111 Deed ......... Wlla J•t a.·Pw,.w. GET IJD OF .UOUT TWO.THllDS OF OUI PUSINT STOCK OF FAlllCS ..... n. SMrtett PottiWe n.tl 1xtN AM Qumity FMric, Pro. T .. Comtiry't L.eac19t ~ • .a..tett AMI MM ,__.. Dff9• a C.,.._ •• AT THI SAVIMCK OF A UFITIMt! At Cott ••• Mffr C0tt .•• lelow Cost. • .MIUt Mo DHhtw•I We lHIJu 1W IXTllMB.Y LOW n1c1 •• ,,.. CWy n..c, 1W WJI G .. •I" 'l)UICI DISPOSAL Of n. Mecetuary ........ Of~ .. ! • BE NLYESTER INTER· ,FAClllG · TOf' Oft THI LIHE Cj>UALITY all t•t ••tt•r wel,llh, eur., be...,. ..t.ctlcNi m .ofid1. for ,.,.._. cetor. Doa't lllit• ttlk! •ery drftt., •• ...,..., we«. •ery. a.. SJ.ti .,ct. •ery good fookin9. Tops in 5188 .......,. "~ S7.50 yd. QUILTS VELVETEEN ~ 1f>Kiol 9"CMllf> of ~. n ch ol••lun. h11clova lo119 tklrh, jockeh, pant u ih , 'f'Kfoclllar. lte<J. SS. ti yd. ::l1 .......... yd. s 3aa Ow illest --•• .n ~M 1-----------1 SAU $298 Wwt.ellofJ It-. .11.00 yd. 14 yd. SGSSORS l'IUCE.... • • • • .,c1. SALE .... ----------PRICE ........... .,d. STOaHOUIS. 10T08AM DAILY SAT. 10-6 SUH. 12-5 /\. nd ( A:mhm''"' \ 1 nhl \V~ A~ cum.,1t1t. 1t1f" H..-dut hon of !ltu< \.. - PENDLDON Coatwel--~1 O•~~~ .... WOOLS! 1 Pe11dleto11 woof 111 •••r SO ,_. ...,., ...... , ,. .. ,_ .... _ "' ..._.... ~ pMids. colon, •••-.... c-.1 • - .-.. tntw.s, •• carry ..._. Tiie beat of tt.e belt. l'tCllfts. , best..., -c.-ry _,.of It. tedorH, aolld1, -•r •••t typea, ofl the to, of tMflilt :emu sroac .,-ity. •-.. s1uo to szs.Oo :.~1 ........... 25! "Cl•111" "U11l11111• tcluon" Drwf-lier .ti.on to, of tti. ll11e •dl111tobl• lrlllfe ed9e, CALCUTTA ..,__________ yd. Yl·Y20FF 1 lttTl .. STOCX :;-, ..,_ _______ __, -tybodMn ,,..., a..,. st.2s -All the newed, most •anted solid colon . This It fMrltd for •••rythlng, po~t welqht, top JERSEY 5458 ~ .• t~• ... u.soy~ ;.~I .......... ~ ......... $18! CORDUROY Hff•., wel9t.t I 000/o cottOll, ~ & llrwhed 1tyhr1 e•ery pcltMllor cofcw, lftcredli.t., ,,_t Mlectlolt of all of todoy's _,, ..... lflHlal v.. of -_. '°'""9r tlillliy, dreuy atoff. .............. ti • .,.,.... fw .. ............ h".,. ............. .... SUt .. SJ.ti y.&. ::: .... ~·········~ CORON . PRINTS I 00'1 9111 100'1 of llolh ill • ... specW .,....,... of -.... .....,. • ._. colon, aofl ....... ,..._,,.., Mllcb. fmtmtic ..,_ _______ __. ~ .... "'1 c«9, ..... 1r-t.brlcs. LAURA ... "·"J4.toS2.ltyd.. ASHUY ....... c •.... 88~ _ ...... 12 tl d. s 121 PRINTS SAUNJCI .~... • yd. !::-:::::...~~ .. ·:-= TRIMS .,.-., .. ...,-, -· wMhd Drwf1_..,, .......-i Wo ••• ..,.. "'""""' -.... It ... -....................... "9" DM't ........... , ..... al.ti ,.. ..., ........ ., ......... , Hl~roldore4 trh111. Moat1., 1.,.rte4 .... ... ... .. •• $148 ............ .,.,. -..C• ••• ,.. SALi ...... .,...,... .... ""''ROl1 •. ~ ~-Y20fF Yi LOUR 1-----------1 WWlfed solld colon. ltec} S4.50 Kettlecloth c:wwr...s dotllet, Wr9p tldrit. .. _..., ... Gr"Ht ......,ty. •I -r c... lt9CJ-U .4t .,c1. ~E .......... 5 14:! & S4.91 yd. BmltE STOQ Y2 Price PATTERNS "McCall'•" "l llttHtck" "Sh .. lctty" All .... MWHt, ..... ...,. •• to ... ••ery,....,. ... •tock. : ..................... Vi PRICE .... KL OP MAN ~Si IPES • , . r GllFFONS Y2PRIQ lnl)ht colora, d•rir gro1Htd1, flor .. , •tc. Perfect druau, °"" llloaH, etc. Htll)e .,.cw ,...... 11..,. $4.tl d. WOOLS:!, ,ft• ' =···········$~ -~.~.-~!.~~· ~ ----------t-lrert, ttl I wllf 111rpn 1• ... dlltw y-Softs. slilrtl, • GABARDINE .................... ~ Mild colon. .... Sii.ts Slt.00 yd. .,..__ __ ...... NLYEST "C•~~ .... CREPE?.> ............. ty. _ .. , .,,. •• lllllko1 11p IM..tlflltty. dr•pe• ...... "c:..ler" ... """ ....... _ . ....................... "' ,.,.. ...... for flaett .... ty. a..suaye. W.t sia f'llCI • •••••.. • • s.Lt s 1 NICI........... : . • ANN LANl>ERS: I~ "JQlllf colwu fOC' yeuw and 1'itb JOU Dine Um• oat of • bharre that I DOW t1Dd wrfllns for advlee. ... IDMUM aac>, l llarnec! I an Incurable (and poulbly aU Wtat:as. It wu a blow but I've ad.fUltecl ~ kins and have no trouble dllntlt. The problem is my husband. tm1sts that our children be ld. We have two married uehters and a 15-year·old son. see no reason to upset their ea prematurely. Right now 1 good and the symptoms are y to hide. To my way of lhink- g nothing can be accompllahed telling them news that may use undue anxiety. My husband insists that as memben of the fam.01 UM7.,_ve a rta.at to lmqw. I •=ce I'm :::~tt;rrom~2 ton~ pcjNlble..,.;;tf t cbooM. 1 -t llke whal tllll 11 dohli to JDJ nJatlonabip wlth mr huaband. I tblnt he will Ult.en to you. Pleue b• on my •1de. Tbanb, Ann. -ARLENE DEAR ARLENE: I AM Oii your slide-a.ad JOG doart aeed to 1baak me. AJUaoasb lou dlda't ldadfy &be tllaesa. lane u idea what It 11. You cbancet for wlnaJng Ole battle are a lot beUer tban Uae1we.re10 yean ap. If yoa don't wut tbe dlldrea lo bow UDtll }'Oii feel llke &elliDC tbea, yoar wta• sbeald be reapeded. lna1ato11 it. D~ ANN: Becent.ly a re· " . . ~er·aaed. "'How doel one cope · wltb 81' 'unhappy• uiarriaie?" I bMelOlll• answers. 1. 1 elk myaelf ft'Ot'D time to time, ••now perfed am I?•• I. I lock at the troublts m1 friends are haviil1 wltb THEIR husbands. and my proJ>lem1 '"m * lot1maUer. 3. I know my husband will always take cu. of tbe mort1qe p_,mem.s, taxes, the J>bone. eu and the electric bills, •tc. • 4. He would never go t.hrouth rny purse or listen in on my phone con venations, ~. He eats whatever I prepare and never complains. ~ He ls .Ucltoua U 1 am W. <H•rullJcarea). 7. A falr ar•ument with some feeth .. fl1tni can be a woo-dertulw~ valve. Mer all. who 11 completely b 'appy all the time! - CHERL<;HED IN ORIO DE~a CBBalSBl!D: You· IOGlld like a re'1lade, f fftoOD·tbe- IJ'OGDdlady. Utile wlvet o~t there wit• tblU tbelr man1a1ta are IRfJ will read your Uat carefUlly, tlle1•D feel a lot bet&er. DEAR ANN : My neighbor maltea extreme, statements about people we both know. Some of the Waia 1he HJW are bard to • Mllne uiS impoeslble lo ,.-ove;. uni... 10\I Wellt ft&bt to th pwlOll-~ Jallla\o~face. Moet ot t. inlormatloa II -. pel'IOllll; I Wouldb='t . When I abow of dJl~ef 1be '"' out. U.. fam 1 blbl~ and takes an oath on It. What dO you thinkoftbla?-BlOQ . . DEAR Q.: ~ W ....... ty exped to be IMiUffe4. ftey .._ k••• Ume wU1 ,n.e U.e• ~ and are wDUng to wali. To a Dar. a bible oatb meau .......... It woalda't lmpreaa me la &Ile 1U1btest. (MCllOLU ) v .. M8PFM.4N 11 IRREV.ERE'Nr lnth• DAILY PI LOT -----·· TO OUR GREAT CUSTOMERS Be Independent GOODBYE, ELIZABETH . FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11 By SYDNEY OM ARR ARJES <March 21·April 19): ccent on emotional responses. ommunicaUon, ability to nail own a long-term agreement. ood news comes from afar. TAURUS (April 20·May 20): oney as it affeds partnership. arltal status is highlighted. Dig eep for answers; be versatUe - lve full play to intellectual urlosity. GEMINI <May 21.June 20): ccent on public relations, sponse of others to your ac- ns, ef(orts. Be aware of le1al uances, obligations. Partner or ate could aid in clearing up a ystery. CANCER (June 21-July 22): ghlight change, variety, ex- ression of thoughts, emotions. •sic issues dominate -read, rite, become familiar with es and regulations. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Good nar aspects coincides now with reativity, intensified rel a - . onships. "feelings," personal agnetism and popularity hange occurs in home life. Talk flravel and love could dominate. • VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You ceive offer, se~urity is tested. d or home value is spotlight· Basic matters dominate du have luxuty now ol choosing. t defining your own policy. acing to your own tune. , LIBRA CSept. 23-0ct. 22): Ac- *'1t on short tnp, call from re- lative. reorganization or priorities, more responsibility due to intensified relationship. Close neighbor imparts needed data. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Finish rather than begin -ac- cent on costs, expansion leading to completion of project. Protect valuables -streamline techni· ques. Get rid of burden not your' own in fint place. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Lunar cycle high: get going on your own. Be independent in thought, action. Trust judgment -rely on timing. Circumstances ttirn in your favor. Be direct. con-fident. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Emotional responses domjnate. You gain access to privileged information. You feel as if you're being pulled in two directions at once. Key is to balance impulse with logic. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Spotlight on friendship, social ac· tivity, exP,ansion of personal horizons. Opportunity knoeks - you can open door with aid of one you befriended in recent past. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Be direct, specific; guard re- putation. Prestige could be on the line. Promise only what you can deliver. If February lltb ia your blrth· day you are a natural teacher, possess innate wisdom, have ex· trasensory perception and mem- bers of opposite sex find you very attractive. July should be your most signl.f icant month of 1977. Best Idea Since Shopping Carts J ~ow you can do a week's shopping· without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 ..,... ... pr1nted tceme, piua llddltloftel epaeH you C.ft '"'In rcMI'*•"· 34 ..... 21 VegetablH 14 PNlta I hkery h•m• 5 llewentgH 19 MHt end flehenbt•• 11 Dlllr ....... 20 Mlacen.neou• Today is the last day of work at At-Ease for our Miss Betty Thompson, manager and buyer of that which she has made great -our boy's department. Last August you could have asked her how long she'd be with us and she'd. have happily told you "probably forever" because she loves and is loved by every customer she meets and by every person with whom she works. But fate dropped in last autumn and Betty has since written her very own September Song; It all started on September 11th at one of those silly high school class reunion things that seem to occur every five or ten years. Betty received an invitation to attend the 35th reunion of her high school, Winona High, in Winona, Minnesota, class of 1941. She's single and easily justified her somewhat whimsical and impulsive decision to attend and she immediately began · planning the proposed 2200-mile trip down memory lane, ./ such · planning consisting mostly of dieting (one must be 1 slim and chic), and the buying of an entir~ new wardrobe (how better can they judge .one's success?). The weeks ·, flew by and soon it was September 10th, time fo_r her r departure and her unknowing appointment with destiny; she left for good old Winona High hoping to recapture some 35-year-old memories and looking for a few good laughs and maybe a cry or two. But she found something different, something bigger than all that, something that is many-splendored, something that makes the world go round -you guessed' it -love. By the night of · September 11th everybody in Winona knew that At-Ease no longer had any real claim on Betty Thompson. It was that doggone Jack Critchfield, '41 (of course): If she hadn't re-met him she'd still be a loyal, diligent, hardworking, "forever"-type At-Ease employee. Nuts! But love struck those two kids and the "forever" they're talking about is like the one that God makes, not one that means 'till you're 65 and fully vested. She'll officially become Mrs. Critchfield this Monday and we'll be there on Sunday to help her celebrate. But meanwhile this is it for At-Ease; today's the day· when the last lines of her September Song must be written so we'd like to write our own last verse to make sure she knows that THOUGH THE DAYS DWINDLE DOWN TO THE LAST 01=' A PRECIOUS FEW WE'LL REMEMBER THE PRECIOUS) YEARS WE'VE SPENT WITH YOU. LOVE; . ALL Of US AT AT-EASE • • •• I \ • f I .. ' ' lte•s fro• around re111arkallle · SA YINIS Beeause of our long association with 111e111y estate dealers throulhout the natiO.. w~ have received shipments ~f merchandise \from Boston, New York, Miami, Texas and Los · Angeles -and of course from our own local area. 3 DAYS ONLY Friday and Saturday, 11th & 12th,.: Monday, Valentines Pay Partial listing -All Items Subiect to Prior Sale -Partial Listing 14th NO, DESCRIPTION APPRAISED SALE NO DESCRIPTION APPRAISED SALE NO. DESCRIPTION APPRAISED SALE-. VALUE PRICE;, MEN' RING Magnificent 11 carat. bnlllant diamond. virtuously flawless. in gents bar1< finish. 14K gold setting. APPRAI SED VALUE-S62.000 Call for Ouole DESCRIPTION LADIES'RINGS Platinum engagement ring, traditional style set with 5.45 carat center diamond and two APPRAfSEb SALE VALUE PRICE GB·90 GB-70 14K white gold. hand-made mounting containing a 7-carat Ooal center . completely surroonded by 1 17 in Emeralds and 1.05 carats 1n round, brilliant diamonds. Delightfully different. 14K yellow gold. hand made. elegant Diamond and Ruby ring containing a 1.02 carat center Ruby. surrounded by 'J carats 1n r ound. br1ll1ant diamonds and over 1 50 car ats in tapered Rubies VALUE PRICE S3200 S1625 S2800 S125Q tapered baguette side s 30.000 s 15,500 GB·60 diamonds. One of a Kind -14K white gold Butterfly Ring which converts into a beautiful pendant containing .10 Marquise. 8 round. treated blue Diamonds Also contains 16 round white diamonds totalling almost 3 carats Custom cocktail Ring - over 6. 75 carats of beautiful oval. marquise. pear shaped and round diamonds 1n a cluster setting S 14.500 S6 890 Dinner Ring set with 9 50 carats of beautiful. round diamonds 1n unusual 18K Gold mounting. Absolutely citunn1ng 10 75 carat Emerald cut Aqu armar1ne . surrounded by over 4 25 carats in beautiful round and baguette diamonds set in 18K white gold, hand made mounting S t0.000 SJ 950 S 7.600 S3.200 S2900 S1500 LADIES'RING GB-30 Esoec1ally for her on Valentine s Day 14K yellow ~d. hand m.cje mounting containing a 1 48 carat natural. fancy. colored oear shaoe diamond surrounded by over 2.4 carats 1n round bnlhants and almost 2 carals in tapered baguette Rubies GB·15 APPRAISED VALUE~4900 EST ATE SALE PRICE S 2400 JG-20 SR-33 ·. JG6 JG·J EF· 1 TG·14 VALUE PRICE BROOCHES AND PENDANTS HT-2372 Free-form baroque Pear1 and Diamond Brooch elegantly set in 18K gold. very unusual S1 ,800 SW-27 Exquisite· hand-made mounting set with large, .f. natural cabachon :J lavender Jade, with ll three genuin e )' Amethysts and two Fancy pear shape design. dinner ring con1a1n1ng a 2 33 caral pear shape center diamond. surrounded by round. natural blue Sapphires; also contains 2 50 carats in smaller pear shape and three ro und , brilliant diamonds. all in ' platinum. handmade mounting S 12.000 S5,870 brilliant round diamonds. suspendedt from a 14K EARRINGS Lovely Diamond EarnnQ$. set wrth over two carats total weight. f ine diamonds 1n sun burst design mounting wtth clip backs. Beautiful Diamond drop Earrings with two carats 1n oval diamonds and over 2.33 carats in round, brilliant diamonds MEN'S RINGS 14K Gent s Ring with over 2 25 carats in line quality brilliant round diamonds Gents Y G Gypsy Style MTG Set wilh a 3 10 ct. Pear shaped diamond MEN'S WATCH Gents 14K Pink Gold Rolex Olronometer w1lh malch1ng atlachment. hard to get older style yellow gold neckwire. TZ:3731 Magnificent platinum dLamond '11tpel watch:, -• paved with rose-cut · diamonds. Very striking. A collector.s item! . ....,,.,., "' s1 .200 JG-2 • F·abu!Ous diamond floral S3,000 S1,400 Brooch completely SS 800 S3.390 S6, 100 S3.400 ·. JG-12 saturated with diamonds from petal to petal. Contemporary st yle Diamond and Emerald brooch, lavishly set with round. brilliant and baguette diamonds. centered with a large Qreen natural Emerald. s18.ooo PENDANT-RING COMBINATION Extraordinary ballerina style emerald and diamond platinum. nng-oendant combination. From famous estate incredibly pnced. · APPRAISED VALUES56.000 ESTATE SALE PRICES22,325 S 1.200 S550 JG-60 Lady~ huge (over 22 carats) fine Aquamarine accentUllted wtth over~ carat tot8' wetght In fine round diamonds set in a 1 4K white gold. hand-made nng S5.750 S2,300 Dainty Diamond and Emerald nng. set with 80 carat oval grass green Emerald and ,,._, can,ts in round br11hanl diamonds. and almost one carat 1n baguettes. S 2700 S 1275 RJ.5 LADIES'BRACELETS Wide 14K charm bracelet. with 6 heavy Jade charms. Super value. Elegant combination nng. pendant, ballerina style diamond ring; 2.60 emerald cut center. accentua1ed by tapered baguettes and round brllhant diamonds. Over Beautiful fancy ring Center diamond 1s 1 23 carat Cognac marquise sh ape diam o nd surrounded by 2.85 carats total weight In fine round wtute diamonds. set In 18K white gold accompenied by. )'911ow gold Jld<et nng Truly magnificent Gorgeous 14K yellow gold. rope design. contemporary wtre nng. set with almost 5 c:aratw in oval. natural blue sapphlree, and 1 /'5 carat total weight in round. brilliant diamonds GOfgeous 2 80 bezel set. heart-shape Diamond attached to a 14K }'1!111ow gold se r penti n e ned1chein Sc>r-v design 2 30 carats of tapered Baguette Rubies and 1. 75 carats of brilliant cut diamonds. suspended from a yellow gold ltaflen made ct\a1n. t.dln' 14K yellow QOfd, hand-made rlng containing a large center ()pat,~ fabulous play o f rainbow colors. completely surrounded by round. brilltant diamonds. HOURS MON-FRI 10 a·.m.-6 p.m. SATURDAY GB55 08~5 se.400 s3,100 JG-90 S 1,500 S679 JG-8 JG50 S5.500 12400 JG..40 13eQO 1142S Fabulous 14K white gold Diamond Cluster dinner Ring with over 6 50 carats in round. brilliant and baguette diamonds Lovely 14K while gold Diamond Dinner Ring set w ith 31 round. bnlhant Diamonds. and 30 baguette Diamonds totalling over 6 carats Beautiful large cluster dinner nng, containing diamonds and rubles - a "real sparkler". almost 5 carats in diamonds. Very unusual AntiQue diamond cluster ring. with a flood of round and baguette diamonds. I Elegant cocktail ring containing 4 carats 1n oval and round diamonds. and 2 carats In natural blue sapphires. Massive Marquise shape cluster of dlmnonda and natu,.I blue aapphlres, e1thlblted In an 18K, hand-mede white gold mounting. 18K Ruby and Diamond ring. with a gorgeous 1 70 carat. natural Ruby, surrounded by round brilliant and baguette diamonds. S1 ,500 S550 S 7,000 S3.350 GP-e Different -18K Yellow gold hand-made bracelet containing Laois lazuli, Coral. fine Persian TurQuo1se. and over 2 50 carats in brilliant white diamonds set In floral. leafy design. S6.700 S3.200 S9,800 S4,275 S 10,400 U .360 S8,500 S4,350 SB.000 13.985 S3,900 S2,200 LADIES' BRACELETS Magnifioent antique platinum Braoelet containing over 45 carats of beautiful. br1111snt diamonds. Outstanding. APPRAISED VALUEl~.000 ESTATE SALE PRICES13,750 JG·18 Antique Diamond and Sapphire Bracelet 1et with 5 oval cabachon natural blue Sapphires, and 30 round, br1111ant diamon&l. JG..11 Exquisite platinum bar ber pole style, diamond bracelet with over 12.50 carats In baguettes and round diamonds. 18,850 13,<475 6.75caratstotalweight. S35,600115,785 TZ-190 Fabulous antique Perldot and rose-cut Diamond necklace. Five large. cushion-cut and two large pear shape Perldots Interspersed wl1h rose cut Dlamonm. Truly a collector 's delight. S7~ .a.-,.=--·. 'Q -- :~ 13723 LADIES' Peart Floral Solid Gold Ring •.••...•••...•... , ••.• s 80 #2893 Ladles' Opal Solid Gold Ring •...•...............•••.••.. S70. !f2487 Ladles' Natural Sapphire Solid Gold Ring ..•...........•.•••••. s 70 #2488 Ladles' Natural Ruby Solid Gold Ring •.•.............•...•..•..•. S70 lt3727 Ladies' Synthetic Aqua SoHd Gold Ring ...................... S50 12879 Ladies' Emerald-Cut Pendot Solid Gold Ring •.•..........••• , .•... s 70 #2875 Laldes' Oval Peridot Solid Gold Ring •• ' ••••••••••••...••••••.••• 170 13'« Otr'lne Tcpaz Pendant with Gold Chain .......................... 1130 '3323 ~Pendant wtth .10 d . . Diamond I Gold Chain .............. I 200 f3917 Heart Pendant with .10 d .• Diamond & Gold Chain .•••••••••••••• 1200 ...... 7 Ant!Que Y.G. Ruby Pendant with Gold °"'"" ......................... I 150 ~Ldea'18KWhtteGold " ' • Antique FlHoree Olamond Ring· wl1h Approx. ~ ant Diamond •••••• I 1 ,000 t338e ~·White Gold , WattfwJI Diamond Watch • Approx.~ carat totat weight ........ seoo WHAT KIND OF A SANDWICH? A BALONEY SANDWICH IDAY'S CIDSSIOID PUZZLE PEANUTS TEO Feature ~yndlcate W•dnHdafsPuule Soloted: op• riet ~no , <;o.11 .... 1 TMy 1 ""away : ~U· c: .,.. .. Ing 2lteieoathsh 2 CoMmie1 2 ,... ____ .. "*" In town t::i:· ""'food 3 ~the tlnOO 3 FavotlnO 3 =n•• • ge RM °''· ttrc:u"• 4 DIMgrMmtntl .. Golf •cflllecf I • 'et•tldn " '"return • """'11ef • 4 Sltnllarlty to: s =ix einpiOYM S ftlndOm tfdlonolM 5 Nc:Mt se ....... b•t- 1ery 59 Wind instru- ment 62Juz trum· peter ... S.ver111an 6' Eilpressed one's Pftlertnce 65 Fetnlntne name e 1 ~ubleaMr's interest 70Eattmated 71 Black Pott 12 Its cap1ta11s Teneran 73 Planl teat 7' Cher. IOf one 75 Luck lriah lortl gown s-it .. 1 2 "like two 't OultleMd pa ... -I In· '3 Slip -•e~nt 13 Fondlt1 •8 Oome1lic 18 U.S. play· ~nee ., IQftl 51 Colof DOWN 22 Boy 53 S.llrlc:al 25 Red and 55 Pcpular , BHI part DMd··-llowef• 2 ·---nez 29 CIUIH IO 57 Heb. wtlglt 3 Varnish tall unltt 1111n· 2 28 P11ent1: In-68 Ety1ium1 worda 1orm11 59 --Stwlntr 4 Sall mar aft 30 NMrow 60 UMd In th• 5 PotH\fH IMCal 1trl0t mouth 6 Auatreli.n 32 Ludlctoua It ftflllnlne bird COPY neme 7 Had reafilY 33 Writ worda ~3 Sugar unll e Scoll 34tntonnatlon 18 Hoosier 9 TllM period: 35 Oevelop1f'1 labl.lll9t Abbf. map 18Featllef 1 o Goodm1n'1 38 Sprtad ICll1 torte unc:MC:ked 99 HIOl'I 11· t t ~demlc 38 0.IH' op-ploai'le ! "!MINK TD BE.m:R ~KE Ml.) (:J.)M a..ornES HOME. AND GET TueM WA5HED J .· THE YlllUI OF VEIA Y ALIAMT DOOLEY•s WOJILD ..., ______ ,.. DR. SMOCK OKAY. eACK "f"O YOUR s-rA-rro....is , GIRL..S ! GORDO lnefma needs ~Ville , "That handsome Who lover,~' madty from head 1?> fute. MR. Slt.NSRMA~ ~AS PECI i::>ei::> A.GAINS'"T" POING A MePICA.L-VE!RS ION OF "CHARL-IE!'S ANCSE!t...S" .' PLANT SPe:Nt> -rue A~ST P,ART OF iHE Wf El< S,A YIN<1, At-ID S,AVt: TH HAST by Charles M. Schulz t\iE ASKED OVR ME~O 10 SA'< A FEW WOR05 ASOl.IT THE '7H~ILLING !?ESCUE ...... AIR.PILOT: THE FLOOR 15 l{OIJRS •. il1l•,,1,,, 1 1,,1.1,. '1111/11\1111111 111111,f I 11 I 111C1 I j / 1 l I I / I I, I// I I 1 ,,,,,,,,,,"' ''''' "'''"' 1111,11111,111,,r,,1,,,,1, I( I If II/ r 1 I 11/ I 1 I I 11•t,1111 1//111/1••11 •11 • t I 11II11, J 11 by GeorcJe Lemont "Dear, if you can't decide what to act me for Valentine Day, atop in that fur boutique on Main and ace if, by chance, MiH Sepl bu a niu suaeation ... ( ( . \ I . . By Bil Keane ~'Mommy! Dofty soys I hove dandruff!" Got.a problem? Then write to Pal Dunn. Pat will Cldf'ed tape, getting the answers and action you Med to solve inequities in government and busi- f¥8S. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn At Your Service, Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo:t IS6'J, Caito Meaa, CA 92626. Include your telephone ~urnber. The column appears daily except $crturd4ys. ~ker Ollft' Goa Aao111 DEAR PAT: In early September I ordered a .West Btnd Slow Cooker for two proof of purchase aeat1 from Premium Saltine crackers and a $1!.99 ichttk. So far, my check has not been cashed, nor •bu• I received the cooker. I ordered from an ad- vt(tlsement In Good Housekeeping magazine. The .-...t part ls that I no longer know where I sent \he ~~~r. Can you help? , K.M., Huntington Beach 1 Good Houekeeplng referred A YS &o tile Dile JCorp. ID Yoa.ng America, Mimi., t.be comp&Dy •wllleb ftlled orders for tb.b premlam offer. n ad-;+tse. yoa &o cucel paymeat oa yoar orllfnal clledt 'ad laae a aew oae to Nabisco Slow Cooker Ofter. No record of yoar orlclnal order could be loca.ted. Mail your cbeclc to: Dile Corp., Box zoo, Attn: Nell Akre, YOWlg America, MN 55.197. Other readers.ex- • Pe.flenc1n1 problems with advertisements lD Good Boasekeeplng are advised to write tD the maiutne ); caft of: Pat Quigley, 959 Eighth Ave., New York, NY10019. Watch Ca.Ing 111 No Time DEAR P AT : I sent a m a n's Westclox •wristwatch to General Time Service for repairs In 1April 1976. I enclosed the $2 fee for handling with the 1\Urranty for the watch. ·A few months later I re- •,oetved a watch In the mail with a bill for S2 for handling. I paid this fee once and the warranty doesn't mention anything about paying it twice. I also noticed that the returned watch was not the same cme I sent to be repaired. I wrote to General ~hae explaining the error, but I haven't received an a~er. I sent the m the warranty with the watch so r dOB't know the correct model number. ls there any •-r I can get the right watch returned to me? • C.A., Dana Point J 1 • • LoreUa MaDOla of General 'nme Service, ZM N. rtl1«1l.leu Ave., Clllca10, IL ..... report. tllat yoar JWillDal wa&cla probably WU loa, IO ..-.ber WH \te•L Downer, 109 report daal lite aeeoad watch •••• not &be same at,le u tbe oee 1e11t for repair. Alter being contacted a1ala by tlals colamn, Ge•eral nme a1reed to send a new watch wll.lcb ~C>tl may choose from the current catalo1-, ... ftaear .. 1 f'I,...'• Mea c.,,,. DEAR PAT: Last April I was notlfled that I bad won 100 pounds of Prince macaroni products in the ~ce Sweepstakes Italiano. I was told that I would lie contacted within the next several weeks by a •ates representative concerninJ delivery of the ,..ae. Since then I haven't beard anything from the GMDP&JU' or lta sales repreamtative. D.P., HuntinltOD Beach. • .A Prtace Macaroal spoke.•• ta.lei tbt 1laee . Dine were wlllaen an .... lite coatrJ. dlfferetd .,.._. lwldled each relloa. Yov complaJa& wH f•nr.,.. .. .-aneet rellaUJ omee. n ftP9rted &Ml Is ; he ......... at&em,U k •ad bee. aUle &o ~ JW ud anu1e • dellnry da&e. !bee ti.e ,.,. d1 ue perlalaable Uley coa14 llOt M left at ,_.. ..... DellYU7 ef ano&Mr alalpmelll aow •u W..arra1ed. ._.e11911eper, ••• •u• a,,.. DEAR PAT: You know bow j>eOple 1et up ln tbe M9nllni and listen to network televlalon news sbows W!tfa oafy one ear open. I have relatives In the Eaat, and I am quite concerned about their comfort Mciauae they are elderly. Thll TV program's com· ..._tor mentioned L. L. Bean, a firm In the Eut, tba& 1peclalbea In warm clothlq. How can I contact tllllcompany and place an order? 1> .. ,. T.C., Newport Beach :'\: •.L.L. Beu lac., speetalhtl .. ele&Wa1 ud ~for o.&dMn wear, eu be etMac:ted b)' •F .. Freeport. Ml MID, or r.1 Pboet.1 (217) Jlll. Af.reecatalo1 ll av~ble..-req•..t. "'" '>1 " .. ·~· ........ . ' Thll!!d!y. r:.bru!y 10, 1117 I OAILYPILOT --------------,··~ IE! . . IMPflESSIVE PRICE CUTS ON CB, STEREO, RADIOS, TAPE, SPEAKERS, MORE! , sgo PRICE CUT SAVE seo SAVE 510 ARCHER ll CB ANTENN'AS TWIN I TRUCKERS Reg. 34 95 • '2495 i ~ 2\·942 I THE REALISTIC oo CB ONE HANDERT• ~ MOBILE Reg. 149.95 59~ RADIO BUY OF BUYSI Lowest price EVER on Realistic TRC-61 23-channel CB due to impending 1977 model change. All controls built into rugged speaker/mike handset! Hideaway 1 Y2XS%X7" chassis cabinet. SAVE 5 40 AUTO·REVERSE CAR REALISTIC STEREO FM-AM RECEIVER SLASHED 20%! ·12~ ·1 .. . ... . -- Reg. 299.95 STA-64 loaded with features 23. ges g~t~~i~~~~~~fi;~1~· Genuine walnut veneer case. 31-2062 Definitely a ··best buy"! SAVE$11985 BUY THE SYSTEM AND SAVE $$ MORE! ---- Reg. Separate Items Price ... 479.80 ~ TR~~~RS J t ; 1R9ea. 295 21·943 CASSETTE TAPE PLAYER! 35995 Reg. 99.95 5995 12-1813 BIG 37% SAVINGS! REALISTIC CASSETTE RECORDER CUT 53095 REALISTIC'" HI-Fl SPEAKER SYSTEM R~.7995 s59 49~~ Reg~:~:u:·1B floor/sh elf s~aker sysl:- REALISTIC $100,000 SONG SEARCH CONTEST WINNERS. ' . $18,000 JIM COX MUNCii, IND. -rALKIN' ON THE C8 .. $13,000 SS,000 BOB MILLER JEFF BOYAN HUNT1NGTON. W. VA. HAMMOND, IND. ''19'NIE'S TALKING •'HE.Alff 89'1.AKH KITCHIN-(lltlAK IN ON ME)'" fhe CTR -308 features auto-stop. auto-record level. condenser mike. recOfd/battery meter. cue/review. counter "Record .. savings at The Shack.11 St-6002 SAVE 20% "GUITAR" SPEAKERS 121NCH 2395 A99. 29.95 40-1314 151NCH 2795 A99. 34.95 40-131' HUNTINGTON WCH • IHI M1i1i1 a ... .... ~ ... 11"'41Qt 1 O" woofer delivers bass down to 20 Hz without booming Two midrange/tweeter speakers produce clear treble up to 20.000 Hz. Genuine walnut veneer There's only one place you can find it ... Radio Shack. SAVE s3 SAVEs10 .. -· - FM·AM TABLE RADIO DOLBY" STEREO CASSETTE DECK Reg.199.9517995 • M•mory Rewind • Dolby' R•duc•s 14·189 Hiss •Trarl•·"'I''• "' nulhy l 3b>. '"' MICRONTA 11 CB POWER SUPPLY -.---.;.,,1 Reg. 19.95 • con.,.rts AC'to 12 voe Reg. 1&.95 280-IN·1 PHYSICS LAB KIT 10~.! ·SANTA AMA •mJLlrtlW ............. REALISTIC DIGITAL I, :). • •) •• ·:• AM·FM CLOCK RADIO Reg. 49.95 3995 • Snooz• B•r • s1 .. p Switch • Cont•mpor•rr Look 12·1501 • Du•f VU M1t1rs • Fist Forw•rd Switch • Auto.Stop Control CUT40% 4·KEY-MEMORY CALCULATOR Reg. 19.95 11!! SAVE 510 ARCHERKIT • STROBE KIT Reg. 29.95 19!§. 84!.! r • R•pld·f W. Bur1t1 lor $top.MOflon llll#iolt• J • "•""" Iulo Ad1111t1 60-IOO F1-lltH/Mlnllt9. .... ............ c..w •17111. ...... • ... 1V1.1n.se. ...... ...., •• ,, t ...... 1 I I . . I TV mghli §!!ts c~ e 8:00 -Tbe w ~oho· Boy <Richard Tltomu) covers the arrival -and fiery disaster -of the German dirigjble Hindenbera. . NBC U 9:00 -Best Sellers. The opening segmen t of the new zaovel .. Seventh Avenue" follows a young man through poverty to wealth and power in New vortt•a Garment 1>15trl~. Steven Keats, Jane Seymour, Ell Wallach and Alan King are featured. KCET .@-"War Widow." A lonely young woman whose husband is fighting overseas in World War I develops an at- tachment to another woman. (TV DAILY LOG) THURSDAY I •VINING I , e:oo • e W CBI (tm W> "'-e U CV< w> • .., e QS Stir Tr; (l)C...,,,.. .. ~ • , ., 'artridce r """ •a..1z ·m Uectric C..,.n1 tllJ .... lltucta m L1tt11 11.nu11 -6:30-. G Oi111h! Gue~ts include Muhammad All. S.1ry White, f1eddy • Fender and Norm Cro~by (]) Wy Griffith (1GJ MtrY Sriffltt Sllow . m r 1nt11y Mair (Wl QJ) G~e tll> lAlotll (.21! (.I)) lewitcllff 7:00 & DINAH! FIOM VEGAS! • All/If. Closlly/ftnder t'J 9iultl a • ~~ CI> m m llft'S U U.rs C19' rn "'1 n,... s.ris (.() Tt Tel tilt Truth O ColceMubon d)l lM l8cy Q) Tiie FBI m~ (21) a.dy Gritfitll • fl) llbclleilllthrer Report (at! (() Tiie '•itridet r-11 m McHalt's ""' -D DINAH!Fii/avEGAS! • Ali/Bury White/une B DIMh! D Andy Juliet Pro~e gu~b e Bowtinc tor Dollars (j l The Odd Couple u Tht Gon1 Sllolt Il l Candill ~I D Tht Joltr's W"rld 11~ ~t (JJ Matdl C:~ · m (~ CU> Brady a.nc11 ('J1) QJ) Tht Wilbtra lrttlltfs m Today's eo.1111 ~ llopn's HtrMS fD OllftMI 11 T tttlcht Clll Um a. m..,.. T..., 8:00 • fJ HISTORIC TU6£DY! * llEW·THC WALTON$ U (Cill Q)) (I) Tiie Waltofts As w1nntr al lbt Natrona! Prm ~e root est for tht · bnl S/11111 paper ,.,btalitd, ' Jolln 8oy fe«IYfS I CM IWlld ~nd IS ISSlcntd lo CO"tf tltt H111clenbtf1 arr!Yll for !ht syndiuted ~ stmee Tiie shoe• of tilt llonr ' Me 511111 of Ille German wtrall , t1910d•nr blotks his lhouiflts end-'°' IN Int l1111t-lle douMs hi$ tntin1 abtht1es. • D FMTASTIC JOURf!El 1• IHW MD Demi.Gt G 0 CJ) (fl D h •tastk lt11'"1 "411ant1um" Va111n. Or. Walters and Scott Jot~ C'Mle to Ille •wondttful crty al Atllnhum and lt11n • ... tllt pl"ottu bJ 11!11d1 tltty tlll ,ittutll to their rtsJttt1u ltme ..,. Clll 11sD PfM !ml to tlltm • 1111.-: (M) '"Olleks.." (com) '33-Tlle Min 8'otlltn. e (QI ())) U Weic-t Itel WW Tlleft •t i.n" MOhon:s 111 th Kotter llcMnelldd wt1tt1 klli. tell~ 'Wf 5" IS IO'lll IO lllft I ~ 1 e llllM: <tJ (ltlrl ...,_ tttr• I .... (wes) '11~ Ftlltt. . tD ,....,.. & TrailMmr * ...... Sflilt Flnt ...... .._,,ems : ~,,...__, • Cl),_ ... ..... Jtdtdllh ~· llt 1126, Sillrlll UOIWd Sitt •l1h ttld the Mot1tt cltmt to ' 'ltcOIN lllt IN"St llhlte 1ua to reach r~llbnla from IM [ISi •USC lahtMll lrotlftl n . W~Oll~rn • lllN: CC> (Zlw) ''TN .... -*11' (wn) 11-'rteory ,KL er 1 •"'*• .. ,,....,. ......... ......... Ulplp ,,... -l:lO- • (Cfl Cl)) ...... ".,,... Tiie bop are ..... wllell t11t11 friend, ~ ii !ired as• Wlitras llut ,,. al a loss n to wfllt s!!2. can do. ~-9:00 : 8 P£0Pll'S CHOICE • awAIOS/Mett stars '9ttcl .. bJ fm! • (Im (J))Cl) IHfi!j)nt ....... a.icl Alifia(Zlw) Som• mer llttlolomew is llolteu tor tlllS llwd llllllAI PftlHllhoa fllllll !tit Lona!lom Tllt11tr Ill Hollywood, lloll m Ille .UOO\ fMfitn hi Ille lilld " ~ .... ,,.. . .., ...... ai-..fl!ftlll'*'"t 0.C. ¥111 0,.. IM '"'11 __., • o Cl> a • .. , 1111t liilri ....... ~ (2llr) As .. ,Cit..,...~ .. .. ~ ..... _.......,.... .. ... ' • lolls Ult SW..,,.. .... Ms "81W •• , .......... . ~ .... .,_...w .. . i-=r=-~s.:::: "'• Alllll Ate..,,, ,... Pltshttte. Eh Wlllach, Knslolfer, Tatior1 and AIM! Kiq. Tht fnl of th1tt two-hotlr 1ttmeitls. CJ) llowie: w (21w) w ........ tlle he" Cdra) '65-Frallk Sinatn. •<tl9 W) 1ntJ MkA shoohn1 rnadtol leads tllt d«tet lives to ponder 1 dllfe1e"" betwtt11 m therapy and l)!O$l1111t1011. ChlrltOll Hest011 A11c1 * Earl HellilUll Tell It Like It Is On .Mm m m .... Griffill S11ow mw.Slli._ m Yiilttts "The W11 Wtdow" A gentle and lonely young woman •hose husband LS hght1n2 111 France dunn& the hr$! World War. hnds heisell becomtnf 1ncre1sin&IY all1ched to ~nother womu. m llorun LlftCUll' -9:30-a Gttte Bartow Sltow • (12fl Cl)) (it! Tony bnd1!1 Sllow Aller look111c fooord to a vKahon rn Aupulco. Judge Franklin LS asktd lo spend somt llmt-rncog nito tn a rnm1t'Aum secrmty 1n1btu !Ion and make 1 report on COlld11!011$ 10:00 U UCU &.$hlb11t UCLA at Wa$!11n1ton Sl'te • (tJf) ()) M> SlrHb of SH ~ The use 1g111nl a known drug PllShtr suspected al slJY•Pg a poliu oHlctr dun1111 ratd appears almost dead alter 1 witness-1notltr1 o!fictr-m~kts an admr~ron that damaaes his cred1biltty CJ llews m Get s.urt CMl~t e>D8it11Amldo -10:30- 0 The hict of PtKt & r mdorn (R) mm mNm fD Jeanne Wolf Witll ..• 11:00 o u m Oil Mews D ilJ.l cu Clj m News rt ) Sinfles Mltcll Up D M1wtnck CD Mary lle<omes One Of * The Boys & Tom Says No He Has A HeadKhe! CD Mary H1rtui, it¥J HlltN11 m Sttstattt -. (. t~ cu Tiie bitch Sllow 121 lest t4 5rMho m 1&1ct ,.~"' ""' """ (Jt (J;) LM Mtriall Slyte -11:30-fJ ( t1J Q)) CIS Utt MCMt D Ul Cil ta! m ieltilay C.- < • 1 T11e m a..e D (~ ([)) li Thund1y Hrcht Specill CD llews O>Tllt~s tMI Tiit 100 Cllb fl)C-34 12:00 8 Mef"'9cllo G ..._: "MH If llltfllll" (d11) '71-Ptter Str1U$$, Tuia Aull!Ont e -..1« .:'Tiit lrl11114ll" (•dv) ·~ -Antlloliy Duttr, Jody lMence. ID ..._ "IMftt at llloo4y lucll" (dn) '61 ...... dll! lilllfplly. -12:30-............ s-. "Tiie Clmds." "Tiie ,_.. ........ "Soil .. £1 c.."' 1 :00 8 U Cl) <II T...,,.. 2:00 a Meont DIAltlHhut: ''lack ~ S!tfJ," "St111prs 1t ,.,..,. • aHjflt S-. "lttltr f19111 • u.... ...... " "°"' .... ,.... -3:05- • llltlir. (CJ "Tiie llK• ..... (dfa) 'S4-Melt MMJ, Coleen Cray. 'ChiCo' Series '.Resumes LOS ANGELES (AP> -The popular NBC comedy "CbJco and the Man" will retume pro- duction Monday, but its young star Freddie Prlnze, who t.ook his own life recently in despair over his marriage and other problems, will not be replaced. Irwin Segelstein, NBC 's programming chief, said Tuesday that no contract had been signed yet that would re· new Lhe series for a fourth year. But he said the series probably would return. NBC HAD sald pre- viously that it would air four episodes Prinze competed before his death Jan. 29. On Tues- day, James Komack, ex- ecutive producer or the hit series, said an addi· tional four episodes are planned to round out the series' third season. Prinze, 22, died a day after he shot himself in the head. Quick. what's the loncest tt&nn1ng play oo the New York stqe? If )'OU gueaaed ··Ma1' or La Mancha, .. "Hello~ Dolty~or •'Fiddler oo the Boot:• take a baek seal Tbe correct answer la '-rile F~ticb." which OPeQed In May ot lllO. has aeen upwarm ot 7,000 perforaaances and la still 1olncatrong. Having recently presented the lon1est-numing play on tbe Erlgliah stage, "The Mouaetr~p." tbe Westminster Community Theater ta now preparing to mowit ~American theater's record holder. Tbe·muslcal rantuy opens March 11 for a tour- weekend engagement. D IRECTI NG THE Westminster production will be Sondra Evans, who staged the popular "Gypsy" for the same theater l ast season. Kent Johnson, well known for his direction or musicals in Orange County, will play the central role or El Gallo. Taking the romantic leading roles as the young boy and girl wlll be Brian Shucker and Saundra Allen. Robert Sax and Robert James are playing the two fathers, Chuck Staneart is cast as the old actor with John Autry as the Indian and J . D. Elmquist as the mute. Bill Woodburn, who fashioned the Prison Drama Set by W arners LOS ANGELES (AP) -Warner Brothers has announced it will re- lease "Brothers," a prison drama s tarring Bernie Casey, Vonetta McGee and Ron O'Neal. Described as being in the Warners tradition ol "I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang" and "Cool Hand Luke," "Brothers" describes how a modern jail inmate grows "to herok stature" against all odds. Arthur Barron. a former Columbia University teacher, direc ted "Brothers" on location at North Classes meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays in Room 257 of Corona del t"'!:---~!!'!!!:'""'---t Mar High School, and registration can be made in class. "~"""O""lll~'lftT,,.,.Prl'll""'-t • BACKSTAGE -South Coast 1311111111 Repertory has been allocated $4,000 from the California Arts Council for its public service programs ... these include reduced ticket rates for senior citizens, students and non-profit or-~ ganizations, tourin g educational theater productions for county schools and scholarship support for appli- cants lo th e SCR Acting Conservatory. . . .. CASSANDRA CROSSING" (R) "FAREWELL MY LOVE" Joel Tropper. who performed with rx--:':'Sitjfmm!n:".""-'1 Mary Eastman's Orange Studio Theater in the late Sixties, has re· ached Broadway -as a stage manager ... he's with the production or "American Buffalo, .. operung next week ... Philip Sweetland of Corona del Mar appeared recently in the Brown University production of "Secr et •--~~•Mmi!~iiiiiii ' 1 ........ ' M a r y K a .;.i. Place, w b pl ay1 Lorett on "Mar Hartman, Mary Hartman;• will be a guest ori ·.·; John Denver's • March 2 TV , special. ··· He had played the role of Chico, the brash young Mexican-American who ------------------------------------------------1..-worked in a rundown Dakota State Penitentiary. Service, .. a Civil War drama ... garage owned by a crus- ty old whJte man played by Jack Albert.son. KOMACK SAID the segments to be taped will feature Albertson. and the program's two other regulars, Scatman Crothers and Della Reese. The producer said he hopes to phase out Prinze's role by having Chico move away to live with his father. That plan could proceed from Prinze's las t C hico performance, aired last Friday, entitled "Chico's Padre.·· Best Actor HonorWon To Olivier LONDON CAP) -Sir Laurence Olivier, whose actin1 laurels already in· elu d e an Academy Awards Oscar, has col· lected another honor. He was named best film actor or 1976 for his portrayal of a Nazi war criminal in "Marathon Man" at the annual Brlliab Variety Club Awards cere mony in London. Ele vat ed lo Lord Olivier in 1970, the 69· year-old actor received his Oscar in 1948 for "Hamlet.'' ft9 IOCI MM CUIMC OITMl'l'IM l .,,. MATUS CMllOMIC:U" .-"'ltOCICST AH" No matter where you look.everything seems to cost more nowadays. Unless, of course, you look behind this funny menu mask. · That's where you can read about Red Onion·s seven 50c meafs for Little Amigos under twelve. Only 50c each! Your little Amigos can c hoose a tasty taco. a burrito, or an enchilada, served with rice and beans Or they can select a hamburger, fish and chips, bacon·lettuce-and·tomato, or grilled cheese sandwich. ' . Each comes w ith a beverage. ~ And the entire meal costs just 50c each. And as a bonus. all Little Amigos get a free menu mask to wear. So next time you're out shopping. or just looking for a fun place to eat lunch or dinner with the kids. go to the participating Red Onion Mexican Restaurant in your neighborhood. Treat your Little Amigos to a 50c Special. Your kids'll love the food. You'll love the price. I ~Bot Portland Leping "[!P 1 1 PORTLAND, Ore. <AP) -Did yoa ril1sS last nlsht'• episode of ''Mary Hartr:nan ?ihry !Hartman?.. ' ' No problem, b~ause now tbere'a a •~ Hartman Hot Line and YoU ean k-.> up wlb the 1 late-nlgbt soap opera eve" U ~ou went to th4' Oiua. '"After each nJghl's episode on Portland'• 1'.PTV Channel 12, Ken Kahn, a aopbomoro at Reed _C_olle1e writes and records a synopsis of the ntabt's ~T:s. . : '!ff£ HOT LINE nu"'bfr is shown over, the c.r~ts and through a voice-over announcement. • C'all~rs can hear the tape until the next episode. • One nlibt at Reed we missed a really crucial · ode," said Kahn. "We wished we bad some • e to call to find out what happened." ! · SO RE DECIDED to provide one. Kahn writes !. ~ s':'mmari~ short and to the polnt. A sample: • Dura.ng her rarst and last night at the Bijou Mary ~ got robbed by a polite mugger who only lhre~tened ·~ow ber head ofl. Consequently, she was fired. ( .~: The line has been busy night and day. reports ~ t_l\f station. r· H. MIUIOH 1'0 OHi MtOT'" IOCKY1NI IO&rt, NO 'UllS ---MVJe ~AIWOOOY • IOUND POI GlC>aY '"°' Pl"' ..-.;.;;.;.;;;.,1 llonll CAN TOU WAii & DW !NI ,_ ·~ 53M510 IAYI IUMWAT e ""11 JIHCM NITWOl't<~ touY, NO 'USU --~ ...... ,_ .. MTSTUllS noM llTCMe .... Nit '"' u 1xnDmON .. CUHt IA9IW009 THI INJC)aCll 1., MUI TIACKDOWN111 ---OAVIO CM._ II_, W1tl&ll .. C::. IOUND JOI GLOIY '"°' 531-9510 ,lUI HAID TIMIS IN l PlUI Just Like Dad Adam Arkin (left) welcomes his tather. Alan Arkin, playing Adam's eccentric grandfather in an episode of the younger Arkin's new TV comedy series "Busting Loose." The show will air Feb. 2lonCBS. Channel2. Words Main Topic Of Albee One-acts By WILLIAM GLOVER HARTFORD, Conn. CAP> -WoTds words words. All plays are full ' of them. Now 'Edward Albee has w~tten two t>lays about them. .. The switch . In emphasis depending upon in· davadual semantic concern. can be either highly in- teresting or numbly irritating at the Hartford Stage Company where the brace is now being premiered under the dramatist's personal supervision. To whet spectator attention an admirable trio or performers are on hand -Angela Lansbury William Price and Maureen Anderman. • . ALBEE, WHO feels language is rapidly losing its value for person-to-person communication in an era o f media s upersaturation, mourns melodramatically in "Listening," the longer piece. and ironically in "Count the Ways." "Listening,'' done previously on public service radio's "Earplay" series, brings the three actors together in the garden of an asylum. Elliptic, dis· cursive and repetitive like a musical abstraction the piece presents Miss Lansbury as a tough, cool: unhearing keeper, Prince as a servant who may have been once her lover, and Miss Anderman as a catatonic inmate. Through a score of scenes. announced by a sepulchral oCfstage voice, their sto~and-go-and· detour conversation echoes with strange memories and chronic isolation. Albee's terse style fills the landscape void with tantalizing questions. --------------~. THE SHORTER play, performed last fall in Mi-m~: I London by the National Theater Company. presents ~~ ._,.,. Miss LaQsbury and Prince as a r.ouple debatmg marital fidelity through a series or vaudeville blackouts. A Wll'f•""8fMM <!II• :fr.;;~) llMN :~~ tmlill ma :;~ '"!Ml MGCIHJ rirnu• ILUMlll PAITY cin l'Ult IMJll( 01111 OlllWDllS i-. AoM Fash ion Island Newport ·Beach Some of the "do you love me'!" items are drily amusing, others are forced. To stretch through the ,assigned time slot. the two al one point step forth to talk briefly about their real selves. "Counting" is done on a stage bare except for a table, chair. a vase of roses and three screens behind which one player or the other periodically disappears. "Llstening" has been provided by David Jenkins with a crumbling stone wall and stained. arid fountain In accent or the despairing. linguistic metaphor. ALBEE KEEPS his players moving about for pretended action in what are essentially plays for reading. Miss Lansbury is cheetiuJly vigorous, Prince properly badgered and Miss· Alderman pathetically sincere. Dramatic eccentricity this, pedantic satire for wordplay Caneiers. . ... . . . . . :r'hU!!c!!y. F~ 10. 1m . . . . DAIL Y"lOT -Marty·'s Not Savlllas •r Q: 1lh:rty ADu loou ao mu8 l1b George Saulu, I woader -are t.M1 rdatedt -A. Ter- ruce. Y~. Oil.lo. A: No. But ~1e (Detectlve Stavros on "Ko-· jak"> and Marty are such look·alikes, many fan.a uk that same quesUon. Chattina with Marty after . be dld hla act in a Lu VegH hotel, a femme fan em· braced the comedian aod sald: "I love you on our brother's show. I couldn't belleve you could dance that well!" Marty said thanks, and not wishing to disap· point the gal, gave ber an autograph signed, "Sincerely, Stavros Al- len SavaJas." • Q. b &bere aoyt,ln1 to the rumor that Rod McKua bu a aoa? - Lee A&ldu, Plt&aburgla. A: Yes. Though the multi·talented McKuen is a notorious loner and unmarried. he told us: .. 1 have a young son. He's living in France GEORGE & MARTY with bis mother. I see him as much as I can, but it's not enough. He's really super and I miss him a loL Q: We often bear aboat bow eapeastve tt ts to put on a Broadway sbow -and bow much la lost If they don't make lt. Wbat were some of tbe most spectacalar fiopa! -M. Halley, Queens, N. Y. A: Three of the biggest one-night disasters· were "1600 Pennsylvania Avenue" whtch went down the drain for $1.2 ·million. "Kelly" lost $650,000. And "Home, Sweet Homer" Jost some $800,000. All three closed right after opening night on Broadway. A more recent financial flop was "J:le.llzapoppin." ~t went through a r,eported l million backer bucks -without even getting to Broadway. Q: Oa the TV talk shows, Burt Reynolds bas a delightful sense of humor. Is there anything to the rumor that he's going to do his own comedy series? -D. McG., Los Aa1eles. A: You can never tell what Burt will do next. ~ut we all know he can do almost anything, includ- mg comedy. Nothing, however, is planned for a TV series at this time. Burt's got too many mealy pro- jects in the cooker. ''Stuntman" for Warners a Florida feature not yet tilled, and TV guest ~P· pearances with top stars. He'll also be a judge in "The ~ss Nude World Beauty Contest," to be staged m July In Niagara Falls. Early in the filming of "Nickelodeon." Burt established his relationship with Tatum O'Neal ''Remember, kid." he cracked, "that I'm the star!" The quick-on-the- trigger 13·year-old tyke draped an arm around Reynolds and retorted. "I quit the prclure!" Q: Until I met John Wayne a& a banquet wear· Ing a J ewish sb·polnted star dangling from a gold ch ain on hjs neck I thought he was Catholic. Isn't he? -T. Ryan, Phoenix, Ariz. A: "I was born Catholic," he says. "My parents saw to it that I was spoon-fed by catechism as a boy . but I've grown away from the actual dogma -THEATRE I " EVY" BALBOA CINEMA 109 E. BALBOA Bl VD ~L BOA PENNIN5tJLA fl14) 67' JS O aM't' U.STWOOD -THEATRE II--- '7UNNEL VISION" Al~o "MONTY PYTHON & THE HOLY GRAIL" PllDAY & SATVlDAY ''>WlOU> AMO MAUDE" "HARRY .AMO TOMTO" Color tRI .... , ......... " S.....M9wA....._ "HICKEL DEOHM PG "'MONTY PYTHON & THE HOLY GRAIL" f PGI "NETWORK .. tRI "SHAMPOO .. CRJ "BOUND FOR GLORY" IPGJ .. SIL VER STREAK .. IPGI ~ ""THE SHAGGY D.A. .. .. IN SEARCH OF MOAH"S ARK" "'THE EMFORca· Cl) ""FUlllE AMD THI llAM'9 "'MAUTHOH MAM" Ill .. SIX MACHIHr ."UYIHH OF 1M1 CHIHLIADIRS,. fl) ' KING KO G11 cNt "MYSTBJES liYOHD IAITH'9 " .· 'Glad You Asked That' by M...,. ..Ml Hr GardMr . somewhat. However, I bavtp't •rown away from the upUIUn1 faith, JuJt puJJal away from the eo- tangllng religion. f guess you could say l 'm A cardiac Catholic. About that star," Wayne f\Jrt f explained "one ot my real beat friends lo the wo ' is a Jew. And he said to oie after my bout with cancer thing: 'Duke, lf your time com~s 1 want y to be ready just in case you're golng to have to sl in the back door.' I fiaure he bad a good point, I've worn his present evet since he gave il to me." Q: "11ae Bii Bea of tbe Hoar&lass n,..,-es'' wboaald ltandabOutw .. mn!-C.W., S&, Loats. A: Trwnan Capote, describloa Mae West. • Smd your quatioM to Hy Gordner, "Gkld Y Aaked That," care of thil. ~. P.O. Boz l Co1to Mna 12626. MoriJ~ and Hy CardMt wiU OMWer. many quetffona .M fMt/ can in their column. but t volume of moil mokn per30fJlll rcpUcs ~f>#e. . I &JA~:' GEORGE SEGAL 1 JANE FONDA IPO) ~-'-!:~C!!:~~·--------~ -~ EDWARDS CINEMA MAllOl Al 404.N\ c n • .. u• H .. 1101 .. ~ylOANN.Ea«VNoLDS °' * .,...., ~ .... -... In a ritual neatlY u reaular as the swallows• retum to Caplltrano, one pf NewPQrt Beacb'• pldeat aeroapact1 firm• recently an11ounced. that it J-as cb'1)Sed its nariae. Sloe+ the lint of &be year .. Use pf ant that iita atop the hill eloo1sSde JJJnboree Road hp ~ part of the Ford Aerospace add CoJilPUUlicaUona Cor:P.· -tbe seventh name '9cracetbebusiPess1btceJ~wasf~edinthelat6'5Ds. It's coolusiae enou1h Just teyl.D1 tO keep up with the name changes, 11ut plant sPQkeaman Doo Flamm e~plained that, actually, the name chaoee doesn't affect the Newport Beach facility, bich ii the Aetonutronic Divisjon of the new~red ClOrporaUoll. In other words, everyone \lrbo got It'••~ to aalling the company Aer~blat.ronlc. Ford, ~' most recent (ormer name. can ..till call it Aeroaut.ronic because that's the division name. FLAMM SAID THE NAME chanca haven't beeD made over the HYNOLDS year$ to CObfdse people. On the cantrary. •1 JORN CVNN1FP .......... ......,.. The 1ame could be lost, Thomas Wllcox believe&, 1f we don't learn to recognize that many ot our meentlHa, our ioais and our attitudes aN erod1ng tbe ay~tem that " m • d e America so productive. Tbeeamela economic . Considering boW'we play it -with big eovernment d e b t , unproductive cvMN•'" make·work projects, a tax poJiFy that dlacoura1ea, investing - Wilcox feels we're heading toward the wrone go-I line. The system we should be de- fending, says Wilcox, chairman of California's Crocker National Bank, is private enterprise capitalism. Capital ii the invest- ment for tools, factories, jobs. A.ND SO, LIKE A coach. be would put in a new game p~. one that would encourage .. MAYBE," HE WONDERED, "it's bee~~ business was too occupied with profits." But pro- fit, be said. is .. the name of the game." Profits and savings are needed to pay fbr tooi., plants and jobs. • "You can't legislate jobs," he said. "There ls only one way to create them and that ia, by invest- they have been made to clarlfy the work done by the firm and its standing with its parent company, Ford Motor Com- pany. Perhaps a bit of background would be helpful. Panel Seeks Delay In the late '508, a •roup of scientists in the San Fernando Valley len Lockheed to set up their own company, Systems Research, Inc. . . Of S11ndesert OK • FORD MOTOR COMPANY GOT INTERESTED in the kind of 1overnment contract work the firm was doing and bought ~m out. The firm was then renamed Aerpnutronic SysCems, Inc. ' Flamm sald the term aeronutronic was the brain-child SACRAMENTO (AP) ...... TbeCalilornia State Energy Commisaion's staff says prelim1nary approval of the Sundesert nuclear power pro- ject should be withheld be<:ause of major unanswered policy, ques- tions. o( Ford's th~-board chairman, who devised t.b.e word by merdng the names of the tbJ'~ fields of research and de· velopment in which bis newly acquired company was in- volved -aeronautics, nucleonics and ~ectronies,. The staff said the San Diego Gas & Eleclric Company proposal to build two reactors near Blythe When Ford decided to move its subsidiary (o Newport Beach in 1959. it also decided to upgrade the farm lo division status and 10 it became Aeronutronic Division, the name the physical plant still bears. AfTER THE COMPANY WAS SE'ITLED JN, a series o( names came and went as the parent company bought other companies, merged with th~m. sold them and ' generally fooled around with the name. ~r· The plant was a division of Philco, then it was part of r Philco-Ford Corp., then Aeronutronic Ford, Flamm said the latest chan~ was made because the name aeronutronic didn't renect what the wht>le corpora- "' lion-it has plants and facilities across the country now- • does. l Hence the new name. r' UNDERSTANDING WHY THE NAME WAS changed seems easy compared with deciding where to look for the telephone number in the phone book. will continue in the review pro- cess on schedule, but the com- mission "should withhold a favorable judgment" on the pre- liminary notice of int~nt report due March 21. LOYD FORREST, com- mission director, said Wecines- day the proposed $2 .3-billion complex has already cost the utility more than $50 million for planning. He said the next phase of hear· ings will be in May and June, with the commission scheduled to make a decision next January. Then another 18-month hearing process will be held on certifying the complex. The utility hopes to operate the plant in the mid-l980s. "BECAUSE THE preliminary report ls an early step in a three- vear !liting process, it is not sur- PUBLIC NOTICE '9CTlnCIUS811SINHS NAM•fTATSMIMT Agency I' r Y ''"' Ill o fl ,, r< ,-\ ~M ~-J;f~®~ T,,. lol-119 per-Is 00!119 l>u\I· ...u-.· A. AUOREV05 ANTIQUES .•• SEAi. llEACH ARTIST SUPPi. V. tn ~ti\ Slf'ffl. S... 8-Kll, C.i1I-• ..,,. Al>drlly ~""'Ito. tit O<Hn A-ue, 5MI llN<ll. C.ill~ 'OUO Thi! _.,.u ~ .. ,,,. c~ted by "'l.}l\dlvfM I i ..,,,,..., a.-Pltten f'llh st..,.,_ In.ct wl"' U. County c..1 ... 11 Of Or-.~ on· 1'"""9ry l, ,,,, 1'1t,,. NbtkMO OtMQe (Nil Oelly ,.llot, "•b. l . 10, ''· t•. 1'11 0 .. 17, ' PlJBUCNOTICE STATIMSlfT 01' WITMD•AWA&. ••OM l'A•TMaittMlf'ON•ATINO UMDI• l't(TITIOUS 8USINaSS MAMA Tiie '°'-'"' "''°" ~ wlttldrew" •1" • o•n•r•t et•rtner tre fft the ............ .......... ~ ...... llll•1t• MttlllMl ,..,.,. o! Oen~•t P-1~ • "1 Ollllra Ave , e.1~ lsl .... ,CA ... 1 1 , ... ·~ ..,,,_, -...... _,,., .. ·~ ... filed .. ~ 1'. lmlft .. c..r.tyol0rM•• "v't....,.. _ ...,,.._. Mf'- •lttlcW.-4"'. ,._.,..,_, lClfi'tCooll•!ll.A .. ........... CA.,_t ISIS11e.r11•-,.."' fll'vblli!IM 0r ... Coetl o.lly l'llol, ,.._ ... "·"' .... ~"·· .. ,, -... 11 Chosen Plus Products, Irvine, has selected Cochrane Chase & Company, Newport lkach, as agen-, cy of record for ~m­ munlc.ation.s. ' Plua ..Products pro- duce. na\QJ'al vitamin and a>Q.eul supple- mentJ and ~artets natural vitamin/mineral supplements and the Tiger's Milk line of nulri- Uon boosters, protein ttan and protein.cooties . FJrmHired Panei Concepts, lnc., C.os~ Mesa, has named Cotnmunication l\nources, Inc., also of Costa Mesa, to handle its marketinc, promotion and public: relatlons ac- tiviUes. Jtenneila Nell Jameson, Mission Viejo, has been promoted to ass'5tant. vlce president for operations at Buk of America'• Newport Center branch. He has been assistant manager for operations at fl(ewport Center since 1975. * WWlam a. Bovey, manager of the JCPenney atore in Newport Beach, has been promoted th dis· trict manager in Portland, Ore. He ls responsi!>le · fot" the Mer-all <>peratton of 29 stores .in Oregon, Nevada &nd Northern California and will be head- quartered In the company's district offices In Portland. prising mpre information is needed on several critical policy issues," Forrest said. He said SDG&E has already begun addressing itself to some of the questions. The staff said the major con- cern is whether the plant's ruit l,900-megawatt capacity is needed. 'CAN'T LEGISLATE J088' Crocker'• TJtom•• WllCox ing capital." IJ"Onie~ be mused, that the very job-c!r~aUnf pro- cess of saving and inv~Ung lS 80 often denigrated. He referred to an •ddi..ess he gave to the Los Aneel~ Rotary Club in 197S, about a year aner leaving the chairmanship <lf Blyth Eastman Dillon & Com- pany, one of the world's largest investment banking firms. "INVESTMENT MUST be earneCl and saved," he said then, .but ''we have t)een doing every- thing w~ could to discourage saving and .penalize the .saver. Inflatiop discourages savihe. Our tax structure discourages saving; our ceilings on interest rates discourage saving." At 60, Wilcox ls young looking and vigorous -a Princeton class mate said, "Tom always looks younger than the rest.of us'' -but he seems to1 generate an even more youthful zest in dis· cussing his economic view. Over The Counter NASO UstilM)s "lndqstrlal aodety and all rule. a.net ntulaU<MtS • teated .. ainal the criterion enb1ncln1 or weakenln1 , caplt.lllt l)'ltan,'' bo cont.til\i . ""~ HOWSV£1l. BE IBU~ te1lllaturu and ,nucl\ I r.ubl!c dO Slot ma~e \hat t" , n•tead~ 'often rue11ure 10111 m.U.ly in terms or al eqult1 which, however a 1~•­ ble, la it.elf. endap14'red t('~ t)ateip is ruined. ..~; Tbe aystern will creat.i~&\s and ·tr..e means to tackle r;• problems If new faclliti~ project• are oncouragea;.. iS thinks. If the system t~:-Urf. dermiDed, he aald, no amount~ Codd wlll can pay for 10c~l goals. • ·.· 1 And ao be proposes •'we .. Ct into law a basic policy relaii our econo~tc environment '9 co11ra1e investment for Jobs~ ,rowth, and to enhance the QUa.l l)' otlltefor our people." .. ~ 1 THE nJU P&ODU Act would obllte aU agend( federal 1overnmept to ~~r:i their affain lQ compl(aJl.ce. .. lloalll ~roduetivlty, :w e1'9wth and e"cour~ge them to~. derscore the lnteqt thro reglal•tion. . .... ~ . . ., ... .. Later, there would. bei,~:11 firmative actions related i centives, tax policy, utility~ oil and coal prlces, deprecii ~ rates and other factOrs tbat,Jb ~ it possible to make more ;r and Jobs." ,,..,_ ~~!S4 11 YoU pursue such a pollf.ii~ purpose, aaid Wilcox, "&a_y~ becomes a virtpe, ~gh 1ni-m rates to encourage a4~J1:1 become commendable:· heavy debt burdens becom_. trary to the public interest.·~,-:;!, ""''I If we could create a;:l-)tt~ Employment Act of 1946, ~.P. Environmental Protection XD~:ol 1969,' he said, we tan do lhe-3tfU for enhanced productivity, 'tfll~~ has long been the style crt:'ffe American gamt!. ~.:~', I ~~,>J MUtlJALFUNDS • SE COMP0SI'FE t0,1171 l/N =ILTON MO$l0Wln Credit h• me a wq ot 111• in America - indlvkluals, fam ... corpor•Uofta and aoventmtat. lo'1la have become ao buce that )'OU jl&st w0tt1 about p off the interest. . the qe at which you can jol(a ~ranks of debton b been eneoded downward •ttb tK llilroducUoo ol ll\llCltl~ loans. It's dif(icult t.hesa dayg to rind a corpcraUoa functions wiLboul loan1 and/er lines of cNdtt. And becoming tou1b t9 tlnd f amWes"" of debt. • • MOST PEOPLE KNOW BY NOW WHAT btppeu wh they don't~ tbelt BankAmerlcard Qt Maater Cbarc~l! in fuU. The unpaid balance ~ver;ta automaUcall)' UJW loan. at tt perceot a11n.._al lnteiqt. Tbe bank.I \hat issue thde cards ue. of coun deUthted ~en XoU pay only part of the tab. That's w you're pointedly biformed about the "minimum payrnen ln your monthly statement of chargea. Banlta, after all, are in the business of making loam. Bank• in many states alao use an insidious device that .,.rmttl you to write checks ror Jnpre money thP ta In yo account. They are not exactly doing you a favor. Here. t they have dlacovered a new way t9 exp~ \helr lo b\llin,ess. EVEN BANKS APPAUNTLV UNDEBU'ltMATE the lure of easy credit. A year and a half aco tbe natJon largest bank, California's Bank or Amerlca, introduced its more afrtuent customers the convenience "PersonaLioe Credit." Dependin& on your.credJt standin yo\I were liven a personal line or credit ranglnc from $3, up to $15,000. Some 30,000 BanJc of America customers have opted f tbls scheme. As you start to use your line, you' go lnto de J . A. Carrera. executJve vlce president of the Bank America, said that at the start the t>'aruc expected aboul b of th'e PersonaUnes to be active. This estimate proved to far too t1111ld. CUtrent usage lS 7$ percent, and the Bank America now has more than $10Q milUon ln Joa outsilnding on these Hnes, or roughly SC.500 per ~count. In this world of credit. who ls the biggest debtor of the all? The answer. not surerisingly? is the Ceder gove~ent, now in bock to the tune of $650 billion. That what's owed on the bonds and notes issued by the U. Treasury to make up lbe deficits in the government budeet~ Tms FIGURE IS so GARGANTUAN that it• impossible for most of us to get it into focus. But Arlen Large, a reporter for The W~l Stree,l Journal. recent provided us with a pithy explanation of what it means. 1 Large noted that this year's interest payments on t public debt will m,ount to $44.6 billion. That's just interes As a result; the Treasury Department now ranks as t third largest spendµ,g department in government, behl Health, Education and Welfare ($159 billion) and Defen ($110 billion). . Large further points out that the interest expense oft U.S. government is "greater than the annual sales General Motors. greater than all government spending Sweden and greater than the entire domestic economy Greece or New Zealand." So if you're worried about your debts, welcome to l club. It's a big club -and its headquarters is Washingto D.C. Gas Supplies Boon To Stock Market NEW YORK (AP> -Blue-chip issues raUied in the stock market today in response 'to evidence of a letup l.n wlnternatura.gas supply problems. The Dow Jones average or 30 industrial stocks gained A.08pointsto937.92. . Gainers held a slight lead over losers in the over·all tal· ly of New York Stock Exchange.Jisted issues. Trading was rairly active. Government reports today noted a dropoff ln the number of people out of work because of natura·gas shortages. Stock11 l11 Tiie Spotlight A•erfcan Leader• HEW YORK !AP>-Sain, 4 p.m . r><ltt •nd net c"-'Of Of the ten mott •<tl¥t ~Z:i~~·~t~~Y ~~'.::rT, luu•~'· .. HEW VOlll( (AP)· SalK, ' pm prtU •114 Mt CNN)ll ol the 1111 ... " "'°" ac 11ve Hew York Stotk E•thanqe '"'""· tradlft9 nellonally at more than ''· KO•rd ,lofln. • . •• S21,)00 10"'-'• ien ~otcrs.. 34.~ 71~ • 'I\ Syntu Corp. . . . .. .. 291,'l: 21 -"• HO\IOllM . .. . .. 2U,200 SO -l'"r· Husky 011 . 1)6, 100 23"'1 + 'll • utfW1tt\ . . • 1tA •. IOO tSt1• + "• ransco CO\ 757 ,IOO 1a ~ lnthlTel .. ll7 ,)00 )41~ i >. 1Ctt1oers .. .• 1n.'°° 2JI/•-'-011H11011m • 176,700 11~ + l''t McGrw Hill 1TO,IOO 11'~ + '11 OISMY W... . 110,600 39~1V. PacG I! . . . 170,JOQ 2•••1 ..... lllt Paper . 167 .100 S4' ·-• ., • East Kodak. , .. ,= 1l''t+ "' O<elcMn Pet IM, l•~ ..... H•fl Ind ,. lff, S011• + '~ l(r•l9' U. . t !0, 100 l-li.t + I • T us tar Cp.... . . 00.000 ,,,_ .... ll••nllron . . . . . 104,700 7 + " Ecod.,.,t .. . . 11,300 "" + ~ AlldArt Ind.. . • ~.200 1'11-'II Giant Fett...... . 0 ,400 16•1t-~ Mitt Corp........ ,.,!IOO 10 ... , HartrMt Cp.. 37 JOO Uh-•It M'l.aat Stoclu Did HliW YOIOC tlPI a::~~I I Total IS ' VMl\ai N•• 1'1.. lllQll' Htw ltt.. 19*\ WHAT I.MEX 010 HIW YOlll( <Al'I PVBUC ~Ol'JCE PUBUC NOTICE ~ ,,cTmout eUStHU l NAMllTATIMINT PUBUC NOTICE !'l"i TM loll-Ill\)""'°" ~ dol1'I busl·I------------ -.· MUH: s..9146 FEATHERS, 210 North CoHI NOTICITOClltlDITOttS Hwy.,L99\IMhKh.CA.'26SI ..._._90N7 Ket Y. v..,,.. .. d, 13'2 ~"'°' IUNllttOltCOUltTOFTNt! ,._ Or.,La9\1fta111Ncll.CA '21UI STATl~CAU~NIA f'Olt ' • Tiiis 1Wtlf14'1S It <OOCluC1ed by MI~ THEllOUlfTYOl*OltANGE • dlvldwl. 111 Ille Matltr of .... E•l•I• Of KetY. YCIUllll'llfed GEORGE J. SMITH au GEORGE ...,, Tiiis sta..,,_I WM filed _,.Ill the JACOBSMITH,0.Ctawd. <-Cou11tr Clerit of Or•ll09 c-111 on Notk• Is...,. 91...., to creditors ) JaftVMYl•.1'71. Mvl119 tlai!M .-inst 1ht wld de«· ...,.... dtt1t lo 111• Aid <lelnu 1n the offk• of PWllsht<I 0.... eo.11 Dally Piiot. Ille cltrlt d the efwKald cou~ or to • ,tt ,U11. 21, F.it.3, 10. 11, 1'11 201·11 PttWfll ''*"'°IN UfldrrSi-4 at Ille ------------tolllu ol MILLER, BRONN & BRUM- 1 •1 PUBLIC NOTICE METT. Suite 610 Fidelity Ft<Hra Pi.re, sss e. oc .... ar'ltd., Lofl9 e.ac11, 1 ------------1Calllort1la 90802, wtllch laUet ofllu Is .(.i fll("flTIOUSe UStNISS .... plactOI buSiMSSOfth<! U<1dersi91'td ~ • i *Ml STATIMINT In all metler'l pertainl119 to said ~talt. TM followtno "'son Is 401119 bu!.l· Suell clalms with the nMeuary n.stas: voucht'l must bot flied or oresented a. '.:.•\ l'IAl'IEWOOO IMPORTS, 301 Celle alornald wllhlt1 tour months alter the , 'Fiie•, s.nci.mente, Catllort11•91'12 first oubtka1IOl'IOl th tsnolfce. ~ EdWant J. Mescro, 301 Catie Rice, DattdJMuarylt, 1'n. ' ;t S.11 Cltmeflle. Calllornla 91'71 CLARENCE M. SMITH , Tiiis buslfltu it <Oflduettd by an In· Admll!lstretor or the ~state •. dlvldllat. Olsatddeudent 'ti.• EcMatdJ.Mascro MILLll't,eltOHN a eltUMMETT ' Tiiis stat-I WH llltd with ,... AltWMY...t·LaW .. County Clerk of 0r•"9e Cout1ty on Sit. 6tt f"ldl11ty l'eC. jll'fHa : Fewwrvt, ""· Wit.CK-•..._ fl 71129 Le11t INCll. catH. "901 P11btllhtd Orlf!OI Coast Dally Piiot, Publlslltd Oraf!OI C:O.st Dally Piiot, • ~rvl. tt,11.1,, 1m 01.n Ftbnia"'J.10.11, 2•, 1w1 ·""n ,, ' .. PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE so·me~hing very special for your prized dlchondra lawn You've put a lot of work Into making your dlchondra lawn the patch of beauty that It Is. Help keep It that way with Vlgoro Dlchondra Fertilizer. It's power packed, contains Iron, yet It won't burn. 25 lb. bag covers 3000 sq. ft. Reg. 6.49 llttle chain saw ... mighty results The Remington Limb 'n Trim electrlc weighs only 4 'h Iba. and cuts trees up to 16" thick. Reg. 29.95 2211 less noise and water waste The Fluldm11ter water control valve provldet leas noise and leas w111e In running water through your toilet. #400-A. Aeg. 5.95 311 formulated tolftdUre extend your source of power 100 ft. of heavy duty 12·3 extension cord brings the power to tools, bbq's, garden appliances. #55100. Reg. 29.95 1911 • malle your coffee taste better The Mlrro-Metlc automatic brewer mak .. 4 to 10 cup1 In just 8 minutes. Brew• It to peak flavor. #M-0193. Reg. 22.95 14~· NET WT 21 LIS FEEDS 3.!!!;:_~t! ~ .. you'll root for this routers action You can rely on Skit to make a power tool that don so much with such a line degree of perfection. 1/2 hp. #5'8. Reg. 44.99 2911 •• wry bltllr ... for ..... , ..... In CUI of fire, be w1med & survive No home 1hould be without • KwlkMt fire end 1moke detector and alarm ayatem. Simple to Install; no wiring neoea .. ry. 2811 au-. IPW mlller ,,. .. ·. ·:: . . ' I ·Sizzling Smlors Test Potent FV ~ 111 aoGElt CASI.SON °' ... ~, ..... Steff Newport Jferbor ~ Sailors, p1.aytn1 llte a team rated ID tbe CIJ' Top 10 poll with ftve atrailht Sunset Leaaue buket· ball victories in hand. travel to Fountain Ville,. Hl1b toni'b1 to duel Or.111e• County's No. I · qulntet, tbe FV Barons. Tipoff la at 8 o'clock and for coach Jf!lTJ DeBusk'a Sailors, a victory would probably clinch a CIF 4-A playoffs berth 1n addition to movma wi\hl.Q • aame of the 'leaaueJead. J>aptt.e &be ~J'S· ~ooth play of late, the task -a>pean up-hill. Coach Due Brown'• Barons are 21·Uorthe year, 1-0 in league and have outscored the opposi- tion l5 points per game. In their first ~ meetine, tht Barons •book loose in the second quarter and went on to an 8Z-fi6 victol'y. "'We've been playtne well with tbe runnina game," says DeBust. •1but we.know we can't set Into a lbootout with Fountain Valley. We°"' gotnc · to bave to think a little bit about tempo, we can't,ftcure to U-ade buket for buk4'~F~~Vallay." . 0 We botb nm.." 1ays Fountain Vall91's Brown, "and I llke that. We 're bard to outrun, especially ll we're abootine the bill. We re- alize if we Jose lt would U&htea up tbe race and put ua In a pas!tion where f\mlny thln1s eould hap. pen. WiDn1ng the Sunset Leque championship bu been our goal and we have a chance to cl1nch lt tonight ... The Fountain Valley areen.al includes auard Geofle Barrios and and ~ otben-Jloger Holmes, Bret Wtlldnson and Scott Font-with any of the quartet capable of 20-point plua Three Stroke. Back Bruins, Tapie Se~nd Cougars In Hape . Classic. Tangle • 87 The Anoclated Press PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Rik Massengale shot an eight·under- par 64 and hit 18 greens Wednes- day while Gerald Ford hit two spectators in the first round of the $200,000 Bob Hope Desert Golf Classic. The former President, making his second appearance or the year in a pro-am event, played as a partner of defending champion Johnny Miller before a massive, enthusiastic gallery that lined every fairway and green four or five deep. The crowd was so large any er- rant shot was almost certain to hit someone. Ford got two. one with his second host shot on the 10th bole and one with his drive on 16. Neither was injured. Massengale, meanwhile, a run- n er-up to Miller a year ago, played an a lmost errorless round and assumed a three-strokt: lead in this unique, OO·hole, five- day event spread over four desert courses. He hit every green, mis· sed only one fairway, didn'tmake a bogey and holed putts totaling more than SO yards in length. "Easily the best round I've ever played," said the soft-spoken Massengale, who, like Miller, played at Indian Wells, the shortest and easiest of the four tournament courses. Bruce Lietzke, the young man who is the sudden sensation of the tour this year, and Irvine's Alan Tapie tied for second at 67, three s trokes back of Massengale. For Lietzke, a two-time winner this season and the leading money· winner with $100,550, it was bis 17th consecutive round of the season -and 22nd going back to laal year -in which he has been par or better. Hubert Green, a former winner of this event, headed a group of about a half dozen al 69. Green, Massengale and Lietzke all played Indian Wells. Tapie was at tougher Bermuda Dunes. Barry Jaeckel, Australian Bob Shearer ALAN TAPIE and Steve Melnyk had 69s at Tamarisk. The best score at La Quinta, site of Sunday's pros. only final round, were 70s by J.C, Snead and Charles Coody. Fl~I round SC-•-rs In IM Bob Hoo• Oewrt Golf Clnslc: R MaUotftCJllle»·»-44 Bruce L'-10.. JS.JJ-47 AIMTapie >Wl-47 B•rry JMCkef 35-,.-49 W Arms19 35-34-69 80bSllHrw J>~ G'"G'°" 35-34-19 Hllberl ~ 34-l~ ~ -nyk 34-)~9 L. Wadlllnl 33-~9 Joe In...... Js.lS-70 c C-y 3'-:W-70 A. M•lltli• 3>11-70 Jerry McGee ~37-10 J im Simons J7·~0 Gary Pl•yw ls-»-10 M 11te Morley 34-»--70 A°" Cer.,Ullo 34-36-70 Fr•nl< llM<d JS.lS-10 ,,c. SM.o )6..36-10 M9rk LY<' ~10 D Newquist JS..3S-70 Kennlll.M1ey ·~ 0 .. 19111 .... ,,II 34-36-70 tlol>Mllr"....., -.u-11 F.Zoetl« 35--71 e111., c-•»-n Gene Lfll\W ~71 T°"'my,._.,,,,,~71 ~ndY a.... JWS-71 0.00.~ cad•• :J6.lS-7 I M. Fleck,,_ 31·3' 11 w. 81..:kbum lS-3'-71 Fornsl Fezlef'3S-J6-71 0.w HUI 34-31-71 c;.ryMcConl 3'-JS-'71 c ..... ,,.,_ n.7'-11 Jol\n Lisi.,. ,._31-71 P•ul "'°""" ll·Jol-71 l(lkuoAral 37-34-71 H Twitty ).t.]7-71 Jim Colb..-1 JS.3'-71 1\111 09de<> ls-:16-71 P.utHarnty 3'-lS-71 Lou Gr•....., 3.S-37-n J. Scl'lr-r 3S-l1 n J•ckN-~71 Art W•ll Jol.lt-72 Tom Nleoorte 37.JS-71 Daw SlocUOft37-lS-n John Sclllft H-17-1"2 Monlyl(-r •»-n P Oostllr'hul• 14-»-n ~ Pow9n .,..._,, Don Bies 3}.37-72 J•Y H•es •36-n Bobby watt.. H-37-n LH Elder 37·lS-72 c;.yer.-r :J6..311-fl Mike Aei<I 3.S.37-.71 Old Rivals Clash Huntingto"' Vikes Put Hopes on Line BJ GLENN WHITE 0tt11t DM1Y "-' IUM Huntington Beach Higb's onen and the V1kings of Marina <Hontin8tcn Beech) throw their flickering hopes for a CIF basketball playoff berth on the line tonight at 8 when they lock horns at Marina. They are currently deadlocked for third place in the loop with 3-4 records and three aames remain· in& on the state. They are two games behind Newport Harbor and each plays Newport next week. For tonight's winner it means an outside chance of at least ty- inl for second and gaining playoff entry. For the loser it's lbe end ol tbe line. Karina hasn't misaed being in the playoffs since 1966. Hunt-lncton Beacb bas missed only on- ce since '66-, that coming in 1970. •urbis same is clearly our big· 1est of the year," says Oilers coach Elmer Combs. Marina boss Steve Popovich concun. When they met in tlnt round action last month, Marina rallied in the lat llve miDuta to crab a 61.fO veidict to take an 11·10 lead ID Ute ~ aerie& rivalfy which baa on many occulom de- dded leacue c:hamP1onlhlp out- ing all seaaon: finding con· sistency. Erratic shooting has especially plagued the Oilers, who bave watched fatleads eHporatewben they've suddenly lost their shoot- ing eye. He ts uncertain whether \,OD· treras' severely sprained ankle will be well enough to permit him to play tonight. He saw limited duty in Tuesday night's loss to Orange County champion Foun- tain Valley. Marina, still lookint for steady play from it.a guards, haa gotten a major lift from the efforts of sophomore Randy Hejdenrelcb. Since being elevated from the junior varsity be ls averagina 10.3 points per game and baa sup· plied excellent rebound support for Tmy Warren. Warren is Marina's leadin1 scorer, averaging 15 per contest Burt is Buntintton 's leading scorer with an average of 14.3 a contest while Sims is close behind aU2.3. UCLA's Bruins invade the Northwest in a basketball quest that will virtually net the Pac-8 championship again or throw the race into a wide open battle. Tonight the Bruins play at Wastiliigton State and Saturday they'll oppose Washington and despite two home court vic- tories in LQs Angeles over those same two teams last weekend, the issue is far from settled. UCLA, ranked No. 2 national· ly. carries an 1~·2 overall re- cord and 6·1 atop the Pac-8 standings. Both Oregon and Oregon State are S.2 in the conference and both Washington and W asbington State stand 4·3. "I have confidence," com· mented coach Gene Bartow of UCLA. while al the same time saying his club faces two tough assignments in the Northwest. In the other Pac-8 games tonight, USC is at Washington, Oregon plays at California and Oregon State at Stanford. The USC game will be shown live on Channel 13 at 8 o'clock while the UCLA game will be televised at 10 on Channel 5. The University or San Fran- cisco, rated No. 1 nationally, plays at Nevada (Reno) in a game that can't be considered a top test. In the other games on the Pacific coast, Pepperdine plays at Seattle, Loyola at Portland, Santa Clara at St. Mary's, Denver at 10th ranked Nevada (Las Vegas), University of the Pacific at Fresno State, San Jose State al Cal State (Long Beach) and UC-Santa Barbara at Cal Stale (Fullerton>. UCLA's Raymond Townsend, a starting guard until stomach problems sidelined him a month ago, will probably be in uniform this weekend, but bow much he 'll.play remains pro- blematical. Veterans Roy Hamilton and Jim Spillane have both been playing well and adding points to the Bruins at- tack. . "On a bad shooting day we would have been fighting for our lives," commented Bartow of the past weekend versus Washington and Washington Stat e. "But Spillane and Hamilton shot awfully well when the inside was clogged up." Marques Johnson continues to lead the UCLA attack and the senior now bas a career 1,450 polnts, most ever for a U~ forward. POKrUND CACER HrIS 71 POINTS . PORTLAND (AP) -Freeman Williams, college basketball's l••ding scorer, poured in 71 points Wednesday night aa Portland ~te routed Southern Ore1on, 142·85. Williama bit 34 of 49 from the field, 80 percent. He broke bis own aingte-aame school scoring tecord by 20 points. His old re- cord of 51 was set earlier this season against Eastern Mon- tana. Williams bas scored 2,155 p'ointa ln 76 gaines at Portland State. The old muk or 2,123 was stt by John Nellon in 102 games between 1962 and 1~. · efforts. All are usually Sn dOuble n1ures. Newport Harbor, moan.till•. enten wtth excellent balance, although Rob Galey and Rolf Schwalbe have bee:n the a~ puncb ol late. More than seorina, however. baa been the uaist factor in Newport's aame. Steve Tim- mons, Ron Cra.t1. LYn Geronlmi and three off the bench-Mark Bradbume. Mltch Massey .uid Doua Brown-have added their touch to Newport's aucceu. "CoasiateDC)' bu been the bll thine for U1,t-• .,. De Busk ol bis tHJD'I flte ltra.llbt ~ flnt Newport team to Wtn ftve teaiue lama in a row since 1970. "And we haven't JOit ~ wbea we've cone to the bench. 0 Barrios, tbe focal point in Fountain Valley'• attu1E, ieorecl 21 point.a the last time theH two met. ''Barrios did pretty tnuch anyth!q be 'Wanted to Jut t.lme, '' s~1 DeB>mk, "I don "t know it lt is Po"ible to take away b1a same.'' Missing from the J'outalD. Valley attack. will be bacm. center Mike Heide, a t-7 J\mlor, pouibiy with ll;\ODOlludeca. Tucker Selected Pirates AD Dick Tucker, Oraqe Coast College's bead football coach for tbe pa.at 15 yean, has been select· ed the achool's athletic director. Tucker's appointment was con- firmed Wedoesday nilht by the Coast Community College Dis- trict Board of Trustees. He will continue in bis capacity as OCC's head football coach. Tucker replaces Wendell Pickens who has been OCC'a AD since the school was fou.ndecl iD 1M8. Pickens will retire June30. Tucker will be In charge d OCC'a intercollegiate athletic pro,ram. He will handle l>Udg~ me and scheduling for all of tbe college's athletic teams.. .,I am loolµng forward to the challenges and opportunities that this new position brings,'• Tucker said. He has served as OOC's a&- slstant athletic director since 1964. Tucker, one of the top JC foot· ball coaches in the nation. joined the OCC staff in 1962. During his 15 years at Orange Coast he bas racked up a 10CM4·2 mark, one of the best records in the nation .. His OCC football squads have captured four conference cham- piombips and two national ·JC titles. 1bey have also gone to f~ bowl games, including the J\uiior Rose Bowl in 1963, and have twice gone to the state playoffs. In otbeT action, Susan B~wn, a physical education instructor $ince 1964, wa~ selected chairman of OCC's Division of Healdl and Physical Education. · Brown will be in charge of all scheduling curriculum and in-·~ ~· struction for the OCC physical KAREEM ABDUL..JABBAR LOOKS FOR A TEAMMATE. educationdepartment. Sports Clipped Slwrt Jahhar Confronts Fan BUFFALO -Kareem Abdul· Jabbar did in the Butralo Braves Wednesday night, and then threatened to do in a fan. The big Los Angeles center had 30 points, a dozen rebounds, six assists and five blocked shots as be led the Lakers to a 105·90 win over the Braves. When Jabbar left the game with 39 seconds to play, he headed toward the Los Angeles bench, stepped over it, and con- fronted a fan who bad been heckling him all night. The man bad been calling Jabbar names. includint "Lew." Jabbar was born Lew Alcindor and later changed bis name. The fan cringed away and Lakers assistant coach Jack Mccloskey wrapped his arms around Jabbar as security· police cleared the area. "l asked him if he wanted to take it up personally," Jabbar said later. "He didn't want to . The guy was on me all night. I decided not to take it anymore." LOS ANOaLH (I~ -R-11 11, Ford 6, Abo dul..Jtb!Mr 30, Cl'ltney t. Allen 74. 'Telum ._ llV.shlnoton 11, K~6. H-2. A'"'"'9tlly2. •U,.'ALO tttl -St111m•ll •• 0~11., 2s. Jonnson n . Sn11t11 11, 01Gret0f1o 6. MlllM 1. Averitt 10, GlaNlll a. LoSAnetta ao t9 22 ,. .... UIS 8110Me 1' io ,, n -'° fC!UMd CM -"-· TO(ll toull -t..os MOeM9 1'.ellfttlo11.A-6,7n. Bra••l•g Bk• 15 SOUTH BEND-Notre Dame rolled past to a 9,1-13 basketball vie~ over visiting Holy Croes Wednesday night. bi&hllghted by the 26·polnt scoring or Duck Wiltiarns and 15 counters by freshman Rich Branning, formerly of Marina (Huntington Beach) High. The Irish never trailed in the contest. They led 29-26 with 5:13 left in the first half when Bran- ning converted on a three-point play. The Irish then went on to outscott Holy Cross 13·4 and lead 42·30 at the hall. K.1 ... r .. 11~ RICHFIELD, Ohio -Dennis Maruk scored a goal and assisted on two others in a second·perlod outburst that led the Cleveland. Barons to a 6-3 National Rockey League victory over the Los Angeles Kings Wednesday night. The Barons built a S-0 lead V alboena Signs With Dolphins Gary Valbuena, a former stan· dout at Fountain Valley High, Orange Coast and the University of Tennessee, baa signed a pro football .contract wltb the Miami DolpbinS of the National Football League, the Daily Pilot bas learned. A quarterback. Valbuena played in the W.orld Football League two years ago. siped with Miami last season, was traded to Tampa Bay and re- leased just before the regular · aeaaon started. JJe'll report to Miami in April. -· . - before the Kings got to former teammate, goaltender Gary Edwards. for three goals in the third period. SOC Plap , <,__, Southern California C~ege's Vanguards return to NAIA Dis- trict III Southern Division basketball action tonight. clashing with visiting Azusa- Pacllic at 8. ~ OAILYPILOT ~Coastal : :.€1;1gers :ID.Action ., San Clemente and Corona del Mar blch C>'. •choola continue on a path to a Feb . 11 ' •bowdown for the South <"A>ut uague basketball _ champlonahip toolcht as the circuit &rinds into lta 12tb1alvo. Here ls a look at each of the four loop encoun- • tera tonicht-all of wblcb are slated for ~ o'clock starts: University at Corona del Mar -The 10-1 Sea Kings of Corona del M•r figure to see another slowed tempo on the part of the 4-7 Trojans of Irvine's University. Jn the first round the Trojans played 1t ultra conservative and held Coronadel Mar to only 37 points-but lost by 10. Corona del Mar, No. 3 in CIF 3-A rankings, is led by the Alex Black- J ack Tuz-Paul Akin com- bination, while Universi-• ty pits most or its hopes on 6-4 Roger Poirier and 1 Mark Eykholt. Eykholt 's best output this year is 33 points in one game, while Poirier has been in the 20s 10 times. .. ~ D•lly .. llot Pllotot lly Patrlell O'l>MMll occ·s BILL LISCOT1' (RIGHT) DRIVES AS MIKE BERRY (54) WATCHES. Mat Finals FV, Estancia '7(] Track Outlool{ For S11nset Loop Newport Harbor H11h '• Sailon figure to be the team to beat in Sunset League track and field circles as the api.ke season nears. Individuals to watch for include distance run· ner Charlie Christensen of Huntinet.on Beach's Edison High. the veraaWe Ken Margerum of Fountain Valley and several from Newport Harbor, including sprinter Chris Corum and middle distance ace Matt Dickey. Here's a capsule look at the Orange Coast area's five entries in the Sunset League: EcllsOll With 440, 880, mile and 2-mile ace Christensen, a pair of 6-6 high jumpers and a promising hurdler in sophomore Steve Davis, the Edison 'High <Huntington Beach) Chargers have reason for optimism as the 1977 season nears. Christensen is Edison's No. 1 track and field athlete, with clock- ings of Sl.O, 1:54.8, 4:20 and 9:12 (a 2-mile cross country effort) to bis credit. Craig Fidoae and Ran- dy Dutson went 6-6 in 1976 and Fidone was a sixth place finisher at the CIF 4-A finals. CA>ach Sunset League cbam· Sailors prepare for the plonship. 1977 aeasoo u SumeL Talent, especially In League favorilf115 . the sophomore and Coram and ~asparek. junior ranks, makes wbo cou14 go 1-2 in the Marina a team to watch. 100 and 220 lo most however. league dual meets, are Junior Steve Laine both juniors. CA>rum bas (43·8 triple jumper), eone 9.9 8.Jld Kasparek senior Dave White (a 10.0 in the ~entury, while 6-7 b1'b jump at an in· Kasparek has a 22.9 to door meet recently), Corum's 28.0 in the Randy Heidenrlecb (6-0 furlong. h i g b j u m p a s a Corum, too. is a threat freshman) and junior Ed in the 4'0 with a 49. 7 re- Tborpe 12-6 pole vaulter corded in 1976, ahead of as a sophomore) gives Steve Dawson (51.3). Marina a nucleus to Coach Bob Hailey also work with. bu a formidable mile re- Others in the Marina . lay team available, us- fold include pole vaulters lag four from the list of Phil Patterson, John An-Corum , Dawson, dre and Chris Kudelka, Kasparek, Dickey Shawn Mehaffey (47-6 as (1:58.9 880 in '76) and a junior), and Carl Frank Vencllk (2:02 in Cherry in the shot put the 880 in 1976). Hailey is andd.lscus. hopeful ol a sub-3:18 ef· In the sprints there are fort. Ken Gabrielson (10.4 as Dickey could go to the a sophomore), Steve mile with Jimmy Corum Schnelder (23.4 as a (2:04) and Venclik sophomore) and Laine. available at 880. Brian Pendergast (54.0 John Overall turned a as a sophomore) and 10:20 in the cross country Fred Loya (53.2) are the 2-mlle and pacing the leading quarter milers, hurdles are Jim Hanke, and both figure to double Dawson, Brian Ward and in the 880 where Loya PaulHelfricb. has turned2:08. Ron Craig has a 6-6 to L u is G a r c i a , a bis credit in the high sophomore who bas jump, with depth pro· turned a 10:12 in an in· vided by Roger Brannon door~ is the leading and Scott Ertz. Mike mile candidate. He's also Hoose is a 22-2 long· clocked a •:"3 mile and jumper, b~ed by Dee 2:04880uafreshman. Ward (21-ll)~lloose also San Clemente at Dana Hills -The 10· 1 Tritons of San Clemente, win- ners of 13 of their last 14 starts. got 30 points Crom suard Tim Dunham io their triumph over Dana Bills in the first round. The Tritons also feature a front lane or 6-6 John Carson. 6 1; Ted Hettinga and 6 7 Bill Neely. as opposed to the Dana Hills setup of 6·2 S tu He an. 6-0 Dana Brown, 6-1 David Reeve and 5-11 guard Steve Crapo. Dana Hills is 3-8. C T • I Gordon Fitzel says apture It es !1nd~nrih~:-:s~~~ Gree deHeras went bu a43-0effortinthetri- 4:40.• in the mile as a pie fump, pressed by sophomore. Chris Keys. Costa Mesa at Laguna B each This tiff ·matches two aggressive defenses and a malchup of Mesa 's Steve Parrino and Laguna Beach's Ben Bacon, a pair of all- league candidates. Parrino scored 20 to pace Costa Mesa's first round victory over Laguna Beach (4·7> and has been in double figures 20 times this )ear. lie s tou~h outside and can dqve the lane. Bacon. meanwhile. IS Laguna Beach's No. 1 weapon. sconng an dou- ble figures 10 all 23 games for the Artists His league average 1s 17 .6, Parrino 1s at 19 5 in league. Mesa as 5·6. "' \c Fountain Valley High wrestlers captured five individual cham - pionships and finished first in the team scoring at the Sunset League finals at Fountain Valley Wednesday night. And in Century League finals action the host Estancia Eagles of Costa Mesa placed first and ! bad three champions. Fountain Valley's Larry Budgen ( 168) and Mitch Finklea (194) won their weight classes with falls. Huntington Beach's Ben Lin (llS) and Marina heavyweight Carl Cherry also pmned their opponents. Fountain Valley's 136-poWlder Bob Chase won his third straight league championship. Meanwhile, Estancia's 106-pound«:r Forrest MetcaJr won bis match over Tony Mitchell of Santa Ana on an 8-6 de- cision. El Toro at Mission Vie- jo -The 7-4 Chargers of El Toro, with a two- game bul~e over Costa Mes a in lhl• race for third place and a possi· ble Cl l" 3-A playoffs :berth. face an opponent similar in size. but lack- ing the the out.side punch ol El Toro's Bob Charles and Mark Hill. BOB VOGELSANG OF OCC DRIBBLES. And in the 148s Estan- cia' s Dave Rolfe was awarded a ~ decision over his Tustin foe. Pirates, Gauclws Romp Past Ri~als '-1A19WP'IM1l tl"t '1Ww quallly fOf' Cl P Charles, a 5·11 guard, has scored 60 points m his last two starts, and Hill. deadly rrom 16 reet, is at Cull strength after surrering an ankle injury earlier. Edison Duels Bob Vogelsang scored 20 points in his Orange Coast College debut and the Pirates defeated vis- iting San Diego Mesa. 84-67, in South Coast Con- ference basketball ac- tion Wednesday night. And in the Mission Conference, the host Saddleback Gauchos ( 8-1 > beat San Diego, 114 -101. Westminster Orange Coast ran up a comfortable 37.25 adv an· Edison High of Hunt-tage at halftime and was illgton Beach, trying to never threatened. The snap a four.game losing Pirates had a sizzling 80 ·dstreak, plays host to percent field goal Westminster High 's average in the second ·Uona tonight in Sunset half, cormect.ing on 20 of l.eacue basketball ac-25. tion. Tipoff ls ata. Vogelsang, a former The Cba rgers of Ediaon lllgh (Huntington • Ed is on co a c b Don Beach) stat, bit eight of ·Leavey, formerly the nine from the noor, all b e a d c o a c h a t from the 18-20 foot ranee. •Westminster, are led by Saddleback, still in 6-5 Bob Herson. who iir. second place a game averalinl 14.4 points per' behind Palomar, did a a me, is deadly from most of its damage in tbe :-, 16-18 feet. first half. Dennis Smith led the Saddleback scoring with 24 points. Rieb McElrath and Tim Shaw each con- tributed 20, with Shaw getting 14 in the first half. Saddleback outre- bounded San Diego, 48-35 .. IJCI Nine Faces. Pro Stars \ uc tnine'• baseball tMm, featurinc a pew ,. \o9t, opms tbe 1m seasan Friday, bostiDI the ;triowtey All«an at 2: 15. · UCJ~ under new coach Eddie Allen, wm f.ee a Crowley Dine that la loadOd with major le.,-ae ,..,. ... Expected to play tor Crowley a.re Boston abortatop Rick Burlefton, Minnesota ouutelder t ~yman .Boltbck, Ba1Umor6 third buemaA Doua -~ clace1, S.n Franclaeo flnt baseman Daryl • 'Tbomu and San Francllco catcher Gary Alex· ii.Hier. · Frank Dully (C1e9eland> Brent Strom <San Dleso>, Jim Barr <Sao Fr~) tUY allo pll)'. And tbere'e a posalbWty tbat Fred Lynn ot the • 'BOiton n.d Solt #ill be an.ll•ble. Pl"lce ~ 9dmii.alon 11 St for adulu. 50 centl for DOD:ua StUdent.1 wtu. chlldNo uDdS u Jidmtt&ed tree. AJJtill will opell -1th a U-'-thatmtJadel ~ 1eUCrmcia. ~ JU114-Under Mike Nonnan. a junior wbo sat out Jut yes wUb an arm hdUl"J will be tbe sta.rtina pttcller and 10 two lnnlnp. He'll be followed by frclbmm Bob f'rishette (two lnnlngs), letterman Bob Dobey (two lnDing1) and letterman Bob Goodyear (tbreoilmlD.11). Other 1tarte?1 for tho An.teat.en include: rtnt bue-Rccel' Engle; aecond bese-Br.d He&ter; third b8M-Dou( Chard; shorbtop-Scott Tbayer; )eft fl•ld-Brad Weavei:i. center field-Eric Peyton; riaht field-Ken ,yublnaton; catcher- Jim Wick; des.tana~ bitter-&eve Morton. All but Wick and Peyton are lettermen. Wlck 1a a transfer from Pierce Colle&• and Peyton ls a lrMh.man from Kearny Jn1h ln SaD Dleao. Ent1e WU UCI'• lead.lntl hitter with • ~ averqe i..t1e.uon. UCI allo bu a aa.-Sat:Urday, m~ an AlCmiat teaG1 at 2. The AateM.tft ~ tM tGUecl*ta ...... Jlmidq •c.l~ CDc"ild"llHI' Hllla). Hwt-1 Ch•rrv CMaro"a 2. Hotlidav I FVI I Edl!loOn) 3 Cllt,,,.lcl (FYI . EavesCHBI. Tum w:or~t Fo1111taln Valley HO 2 W~lmlMl•r 1)1) 3 Huntlnoton Beach lO'I • ~r.n• !Otts Edt!lon o •· N9WPOn HUbol 66 JUNIORV•"'ITY s-.. 1 L_ ... P'IMIS ff-I. SewM<I CFVI 2. Brown (NH I 2. Rivera (HBI 4 Farr.,, ( E!llwnl 101>-I 5,...,,, IHBI 7. Larkin IFV) 3. C"\:'"' (Wml 4. La Bare I Edlsonl- l IS:-1. Taylo.-CEdl\Onl 2. Jon~• (WM) l . H&a\e CHBI •. Durkn CNHI. 123-1. 8r0<k 1Wml 2. Roublen (NH! 3. Kno• IEdl.onl. Barton (HBI 130-1. MOOle-1; (Wm) 2 Cuclnottl (Eo•sonl J. Stlney (Merln•I •· Amlr\olal"""'11 C FVI. 136-1 Ross ffll) 2. S..UC1t_,.,D CNH I 3. Ct.,k (Wm) 4. Wood !Marina!. 141-1. McG•rrv (Wml 2. Feemtra tNHI 3 Seoel~• (M.tronal •. Hiii tFVI 141-1 Stanctll Nml 2. MAer I Edlson l 3 B•oer \Marln•I • Looney INHI t SI -1 xhullr I Wm I 2 Shl•lds IHBI ). P•11e<"son IMartn•I • Fol\om INHI 1~-1 Vobo•ll (NHl 1 W~ISOll I Fiil 3 M.tta•.nl ( Ed•\OR) 4 C••O•ll (Wm! 118 -1 HMlllf"•n I FVI 1 Frlllk IE01wn1 3. P-ovence <NHI • C.rilfln IM•rlnlll 194-1 CIA•k I Edl\Onl 1 Oor•mt I Fiii J R•ynold< (Wml '· Brummel\ IHBI Hw\-1 Hel~ctl !Fiii 1 N•bol CEdl\On) 3. Youno (NH) .. GroKo•t (HBI. Rakbshani can attain a 14-0 pole vault effort dur· ing the season. Others that make Edison a threat include distance runner Mike Slobom ancl 880 ace Rudy Arciniega, a senior who has done2:04. Bob Wilson in the weight events figures to pick up valuable points in dual meets. He's ln the SO-fool range as a shot- putter. Others to watch for in- clude: sophomore Jason Jordan, Dan Hulse and Ken Moreen in the 440, Hendrik Kirleis (880), Jon Goldstein, Mike Lansdon and Billy An- derson in the distance races and Tom Jordan, Dutson. Pat Lyons and Davis an the hurdles. Davis ran 15.4 as a freshman in 1976 and Jordan clocked 42.3 in the 330 lows (a frosh· soph school record). In the sprints are Mike Dresser, Keith Johnson and Rob Milucky. In addition to Fidone and Dutson in the high jump, Rakhshani in the pole vault and Wilson in the shot put and discus, the Chargers have high jumper Gil Harris, Mike Farris (pole vault), John Herman, Steve Magnuson <and Fi done) in the long jump and tri- ple jump, Randy Holla- day in the shot and Nick Roach and Holladay in the discus. Mari•a The Vikings of Marina High (Huntington Beach) coach Dave Okura appear solid-but may lack the knockout punch to pull out a Give her comfort and style this year with foxurious robes of terry. Oioose from many style~1 patterns and oeoutiful rainbow colors. It's ' the perfect gift thot you can Doth enioy, Jeff Endicott, Curt Two 13-0 vaulters are Platt and Carl Anderson, in the pack <Roy Ray all in the 9:40s, are the and Steve Schock), 2-mile candidates, while backed by 12-6 Tim Steve Lui (16.0 as a Campbell. sophomore and Mike Greg Steverson in the McAndrews (15.5 as a shot put and Doug junior) form Marina's Brockmeyer and Dave hurdles corps. Sturgis in the discus NetqHWt Barhr A 440 relay team or Wayne Kasparek, Corum, Steve Dawson and Paul Helfrich form the nucleus of Newport Harbor High's track and field potential as the round out the major scoring potential of Newport Harbor. .. B-thlgtOll The Oilers of coach Carter Lewis revolve around the exploits of See Sunset Page C3 Top Swi~rners At MV Saturday More than 300 high 50 free field could pro. school swimmers will be duce a record-breaking competing in the Mission. time. Viejo High Invitational Fountain Valley's S a t u rd a y a t t h c Mike Kelly, seeded No. l Marguerite Recreation in the~ with a 21.9, will Center with the prelims be challenged by the likes beginningat9a.m. of Jeff Scolman of Mis- T he final s are sion Viejo (22.5}, scheduled to start at 2 Anaheim's Mike Preece p.m . with Mission Viejo with a 22.3 and Mark looking like the over-Whitmore of Costa Mesa whelming favorite. with 22.8. Orange Coast area teams participating in Baa.ketbaJJ the 10-tea\t) meet include ..o Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa. Fountain Valley, Edison of Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa's Estancia along with host Mission Viejo. Fullerton's Sunny Hills, a tough contender in CIF competition, Anaheim fl.lid Newbury Park, with an up and coming team, will also compete. With some of the best swimmers in CIF com- peting, the talent-laden O<clOMta111, Pomo"'1S6 WhluterM Clar-t·MuddM Colo.--1>4 •-•SI 62 Olll•-'3,0lllahomaSt.St 0 ... 1 A-r1sl0, Murrayl>b Cll\Cl,,,-.1111, e. Kentuc~v60 0.\<111171. SI. Bon.twntu,..62 1( •llY \ 'ii &7. NPl>u<ka 62 M••QUeltell, L.o'J'C)la !Chi~~) 71 Ml•ml (0) "'4. ICfntSI S. MIMOUrll7,l(..,on" No1 ... o ..... '1,HolyCro157' GeorQla Tectil2, Pr.,btlterl.,.'3 Loulsvlll•IO! SWLOUISl8ftatt Nor111C¥o41n.tt7 ~'Yland 70 Nor1hCarot~St ~7.0llVl<honSS Sov111C¥o41naU. Cll-161> Ill 1"91111• T<t<h 70. MemohlsSt.69 Provl.,.nc9~, De Paul n RltOdt hlan<IU, Bo~ton Col S8 St JoP>n'sNYS7.A""Y SSCOTI Temolel6, P!tnnSt 6" We\I \llfVlll18'IO, Pltt69 ,. Wis' Sports Rftmlts OlllU MMllftALL VAi.sfTY ._. .... Ua)CSlT•lot ~!ID fl Cl) Or•blll VI_ I., ff f&) CM1t9 Ntclltml,. c 1'1 ~y .,.._,ID 0 C'I ""*'"" '--• •• o m ,..,... °"-...... ~ .. .... f'lllMJO.C. ..._.._. ... ,mt•.._.. ·-"t) P m HMVIM Wfty 1141 ff Ct) A4191e thrr-lltt C ft)UllttrmM CMY171 G tt>H-&.tc-...rt '11) G CAI fll!q9reld ... ____ •a.IHI• 2. ... ._ l. HeltUIM: HLJ\.1, Wlllll9 «Ill (11) .......... ~ 11'1 P IOI ~II "*111M C1C) P 131 Cuervo TMn11111 (6) C C Ill a..- E rkll-~l G i.1T1 ..... ,,. Spunocll 12) G 10) Lelleiw; LI 1octrlftt1Ut1&: MIMlftt, C:...y, Half!~ LL lM4. .......,,.., C~INll ... WOlfoe !'61 F (41 ~ Mee DoftetO (t) F 1 ll C.U9Mft 5"119* (41 c f&) ... 11......, "-elMIWllt G 121 Fl-r Horl'l!ttl G cmv.-. HH Kerlllt .,.,., P..ur !, a.to-. Hel"tme:s.t'-90, 1'-16. •1T-(G)U1ISMQAN ea"' 111 " 111 Oxce 8atft <Sl ,, ., ~I-Im Wiil I l90ft on c m "1'111"' C.rter 121 G 1141 Sci..ner Moms 141 O !ti Wud ET KCWll)g ... : Moyl11117, Gre<1U, CMflOetU. H•lftlme: El Toro, 24-n. JUNIOlt VAllSITY ~ 1161 IUI w .. .,,. Robtrhon C10) F i.> Eve~ A..,9er IOI F 0) Lerldt Whlt•k•r 10) C (6) Qu.lnt•nl• wec,,., IOI G 181 Rows Conti"° IOI 0 (01 AllC!ette L8 KOf'l"9~: Kll!Mlbecll 2, L4tWW<l 2. W.lllk 2. Hettume: Weslem, ,,..., EIT-04) lttl IM\a A.,. PIVflOM IOI F m Ge,,,., WOOOel (4) F (2) SkllH Selders Ill C (01 Thonlpton A~ IOI G IOI Telbert Bu~(OI 0 161lt,,_utt ETw:orlnvsu& Mc:C.be2. Haltttme: El Toro.~ N'-1 US) (I() S.ntl ... &err Ill F C:ll Brobl<k -rle 121 F 121 Misner McAffmy lCI) C U1 Ptlltt.m McGrall UI G I 1) Dyer Clltrry (61 G I 11 Frost NHw:orlnv~ Shelton•.Mlllor• Wel\1..S.4. H•lltlme: NH.,,_., H11ftt, leKll (44) OOl ltMIMMh Jt\kt 111 F (1) Fitch Vt t1<1t1ltn 121 F (2) Slloemaktr Winier (61 C 121 Gtrrwt Robtnon 11) G Ill Peltrsan Bonwell 111 G ( t I Sta fiord H8 •corr119 sub• Townseno 11, Brooks 1. Hines 4, TOll1U. Halttlme: HB, 1'-4. DtM Hiiis i UI 1141 Tustin lndlvtooal M:orlnv noc av•lolebre. Uni CUI IZ71 Wntmlntltr Unttrtlaller 141 F 1101 Brhtow Wall\ ISi F 111 FrltHll Tnurd (7) c IOI OndlCS Tl'IOM•l 101 G 101 0\110 Gordon IOI G (4SI Friend Uni M:Of'l"9 Wb' VOllfWI. Halfll,,,.: Westmlnlltr, 14·2. ~01111• VlejO IJJI 133) T11tllft ICHnt 141 F (2) Collier Harrel_, 121 F ttl Giit Rlllner 110) C IOI l)mpllrty LUllO IOI G 171 Pllolherl MurPl\y Ill G 1101 A..O..rson MV M:Ori"9 ~ 8e'llk l. C..lt l. Hallllme. Tustin, 14-12. 'WOMEN'S OYMNASTICS t. OrM-117.t l. LA Valley MS.I :Lo.1Wft'Wnl97 I Floor ••r<l-l<lann 1 Ake !GI I' 1 Or•~o-u IGWI I I J Pho I lop' IGW) 1 I l<• .. s 11 I Cllllon IC.1 6 IS 2. Lon(I tG) ) IS ) Hulltne (GI S 0 Ve11l11nq-lct.s111 1 Rt<t IGI • s 2 DrlOMl<u IGW\ I l ). G...-IG1 I 2 •Cl•" 11 1 8 •rlon fl.At I• 7 Cllflon 101' 15' Huffine IGI. 8 t!ltllft(9 bN<n l<len •1 ·I Rice IGI I 0 1 Tofftl !LAI I S l Gud<M IGI 6 'S tclnt 11-1 Durrett IGWl t. 3' 2 Griffin IG> 'OS 1. 8rlne<omb 10160 Une..,..., ~ l<letS 11-1. Rl<t IGI IOS 1 Tott*' fl.A) I.I l. G...-IGI 1 U Icons 11-1 8tnth IGI 7,U 2. H•lt IOI • IS:L L-1014 H All """"6 lcteu 11 -• Rio l3 60 1 Toftol l JI S l Gu604,. 06 rcl•u 21-t Clltton 2l002B•rton11 'O. JC Cage Standings __ ...... _"" . . DAILYPLOT A Es:tancia's Olite ~_,....... llO'IM8=1°"'9M IV ..... COCle'TCMtnte fllc;"n'hOUllUllN•• n. ..,._IT&'H~ IU"lltOltCDUUWTM J'f A~ Ol'CAU fllCNtMIA f'CMI MAMe ffATIMl•T .... ~..,_ ~--STATa .. CAU...,..U•M 'ftlCDUtln'Ofl_,....a !::,!"..._..,_ .. ..._.._.. s••••A o•»tCJC1i. ''"' ., ., ... CDllnT...... liOT'IC11 .. :.=-0f'NTITION CRAIG ll1HtNMAltOT1tH• In S lin S •Y•-'>O~l!Wle,CA.tl,W ....... f'CMI HtOll&TSOf'Wl&.LANO"" l ull!AVH )\U Je9111 .... ~ • • • $t-~· ••• Wtllt. a.flt '"'"' ................. llVTtt ... -.-............. , .... ., Mw.CA.,wat:•.o. .... n&\lfl. '#..,,C:..-.. Mw CA. Vt1te1tYaeffUS04lll ... Nl'fMV, '' _,...,,_ .. ,. CA.t14IO lZZ g WlDl Tllls~i.~"•lllo HUSOf119'.~ .JlT'!.le~~·RIT• MAllll "'"'n Cr•ll Mlll\tlertl, UJ-4 -~"""'....... ...i:.'::.~c1~-:.::.~·-== NOTICUJHHHYOIV•Nei.t•. J•.::~~:i..,·~·--:. .. "''' ... .,,... -filed •lltl ... dllltlittU.-~Mll1"1"' .. efftc.of M01t•1SSMl'n4.1t01•1tTL.IMIN. flv1411el ~~ Estmda Rtc.b'• Phil Ohle turned in ' speedy 22.$ to win tlle SO-yard freestyle u tbe EaaJes from Calta Mesa fell to tbe boat El Modena Van1uard1 (Oranee>. 90-TS, in a Century Leasue swtm meet. And lll South Coast League action, Costa Mesa lost to visiting Dana Hilla, 89-81, despite the double victories of 'Mark Whitmore and Bob Dolan. Whitmore posted a 22.9 in the 50 free and a 50.3 in the 100 tree. Dolan cap- t ured the 200 free in 1:51.9 and won the 500 free in s:02.2. VARSITY -~OSl!ttl•I...._. 200 ~ r.iav--4. e ~ t·U.6.. 100.,.._,, G9rft t EMI t :sa.st. C.-roll (El t:0&.13.Wtck tEMlt:Oi.O. JOO IM-1. DeMonl (EM) !:1U !. Nontnim (El 2:2'.I ). Ti.otnpSOI\ IEM12:J:U. so,,,,.._,. Ol>I• re1 tt.s 2. Lau""' (EMI U.U. Vlrt~ll (liM) 24.0. IOOlly-1. ~Mont (EMI St.0 2.0tlle !El St.U.Welktr IEMI 1:00. 1. 100 fr.,._I, o.rtf !EM) Sl.41. 9eld-tnv IE I U.O . RINI (E) 57.0. ~free-I. SoN (EMI S::U.U . W~k IEMl S:~.Ol. Scllmldl 1El6:02.0. 100 beck-I, Wellltf' !EM) l:OS.0 2. Donntll IEI l:OS.• l. L.a11renl (EM) , 0. o. 100brMSt-1. Wuesthoff !El 1·10.•2. Vlrvll IEMlt:ll.23.Softl IEMI 1:14.I. .OOfrff relay-1. EsW.CleJ:1S.O. DHa Hlfft (ftl 111 IC.~ Mew 200 ,,,.,,..., retey-1. 0.n• Hiiis. 1:so.1. 200 f,..._1. Dolan !Cl 1:51.t 1. TlloMl'SOfl (0) l:~O J. Oet-y tOl 1 s•.s. 200 ,,,.,,_, v ....... , (01 2:1'. 2. Cftacon ICI J'.21.0l.-• 1012:24.3. St 1r....-. -'Whitmore IC> n.t 2 MCC.rllfl (0114.13. AMn Wllltmore (C)20. OIVl"!J-1. Pulgtnclo (Cl IU 2. Mot9•n 1011?2). FIOOC! (01103. 100 fly-I. 8tMon (Dl 1:02.S 2. TWffdy IOI 1:02.1 :L Williams (01 , 14.l. 100 ,,_,. M41rk 'Whitmore <Cl so 3 2 M•11 Whim-a CCI S2.9 J McCartl11 IDIH l. SOO free-I Dol•n ICI 5:02.2 2. Verney (0) S:OS.93.Arnold ICI S:tl S. lOOba<ll-1. P1Ckel1CCI1•01.12. M. BHm•n ID) LOl.S l. Ben'°" (01 1:05.4. MO......_..,,...._ (01 t ., J. W..-IDI 1:11.2 a. ~ ICI l>tl s. 400f,...,...ev--4 C.UMM.tS:D.I. ... , .. "', "~~) 2IOO ~ rel~t. Aolll119 Hllll l;J•.•. 100 ft-I. Adell (Ill l:SD.O; t. LHmy (Ill !;"·'; a. w.41Mr II!) t ;Jt, '· 200 111111, l'Md.-t. Ill, Manti• IRI 2:06.1; t. It. Menzie uu t: u.a. a, W•> O.Pkltfercl CU...cl9ootllUl)t IU SO trw-1. LHtny (II) 2U; 2. HM· lmt" !El U.l:l. SllMll'I IE> t4,1. OM,._,. Wll.,,. !ltl 27S.40 P0111h: 1. MKk Cal 14US; a. Olbeon (RI 111.lS. 100 lly-'I, II. Men~t IR) SI 1; :t. We~Mr Cl!I t.OIU; '·Chu 11111:02.4. 100 .,__,. Axttll !RI SI t ; 1 0. Plctfn <•I SJ.1; s. wevooner Clll $4.7. 500 ft__.. H•IAtd fRI S:OS S. t 1Cu119rf\lll Cit) S.11.3, 1 u.,.tew• (El S.14 t. 100 bl<1l-'I. Olnlln IRI l'.00.7; 2. c;llu IR) , CM,J, l. SIN<• IEI 1 ·os.1 100 brN&l-1 K_,,,., IRI l:OI S. 2. Hof!""" IE) l.Ol.7; 1. ._., tit) \•O' '· 400 free rel•y-1. Rolll"9 Hiiis 3 HO l'IT-ml 160 Lat-lOOme<hYrtl•'l-1.lAQlllM t U.0 200 lrH-1 C1'oci11•h11•nc• !El 1·su 2.. 0. llklll• IE) 2.02.0 l P. 5Maf ILi 2:04.0. 100 I~. llrU115Wlc.lt Il l 2 "S 2. Mtton4 1l l 1.U.O a. Menhell 1£1 2:u.1. SO trw-1. Ll'*l•tter (LI t4 S 2. Wiison IE) 24.13. Heu IE) U .S. 100 lly-1. a. ltkhl• IE) S'l.4 ?. Smith (El 1:03 s. l. W Meirwell ILi 1:06.S. 100 frH-1 Wll$011 (l!I S? S 2. Lin-letter CU SS.J l. 81uermann (El ss.e. ~Ir-I Tuttle fl!I S 17 'I 2 D. Richie IE> s:u.o l . P. Shoel IL) S:lt 7. 100 INck-1. Choquenu•nc• (E) 1 03.4 2. Brunswick ILi. l ·0~.4 J. Rl<t•btull'! (E) 1 04 I. 100 brH\l-1. Met-(L) 1•07.0 ? . T11ttl• !El ,, u I 3. Mersllall (El t;1J.O 400 tree rtl•Y-1. Et ToroJ:40 0 U fllvenl ty lertef IH lo MlulOA V le Jo. UM I•> (12) S.11 C'-"lt 700 m..itev •ef•Y I COM. 1 : ... , wm.~'~,' ss":~~~11~i ~~st 200 lnell>-1 Hl<kfl119 IS) 1 111 t W•lker !Cl ? U 4 J. Mtlrger ICI 2 17 6. so lr .. -1. Obtrm•n ICI 1l 3 2 GrOO\ (SI ll.63 Sltve !Cl 14 3 Dlvlft9-1 Pheli>' IS) 2. Srnl111 ISi 3. TUftntclllff ISi. 100 fly I O'Gormen 1$1 S4' 2. J•11kl"' (Cl S7 4 l 5'-m ICI St.4 100 lree-1 -l9ftl IC) IO 0 2.-0roos ISi S2 4J Hl<kll119 ISISI 'I. ~ ll'ff-1 l(rtdet ICI S 0. J 7. Wernerl51S:11 IJ K•IW'l (SIS·113 100 IN<k-1. o·~n IS) SJ.3 2. Wrl9ht ICI SI 03. Cool< !Sl 1 02 'I 100 b,..st-1 y.-, ICI 1.08 l 1 C-lt c:i... .. OHftlt c:.MHIC't M t ... ct4111 ..... #ltwMlll-'•• ll lCHAllD W. SMITH , •1111 j.,,_o-.19M11nM.- llore lSll to.1l.W'""9rCC1tUU. ll*"-\'1,tm, ~-tllllllllit .. lllM9ec ...... Mh :;!.W,:1.:f:..!4t.r=.i:;1 t111d Tllla iltt-t .. , fll• wm. 0.. 40tfree,..r-1.c;GM n.t '1Mtt e«tc.efY•tlW\.C.tVA.N,ISOJCaf'IM Witt• efL.91 .... ~I--= °""'' Cltnl .. Orlftlll Qowlly • '~!OltVAltflTY PWl\tlllltOr ... Clla4t Delly ...... 1t....c.111Ma~c..111.wm ..... ':::.... "*'-...... .:: I Jtfl¥Vtl4. "11 ,. .... .,,......,. ... .,.,,.ntty. ~10,11,14._,Merchl,ttn 111-.CMYet~1111.11-..1et ,,.,,,,: ....... -.... ' 1 ' l'1'llA .V-n CMrlty, ~ ...._.nkt ls IM pl-,_ ,_.,_ llllt\kvt ..... l"4 "'-' ....i1t11111 OrW101 CMlt o.tty PltaC, 8 ..... l&OIM)llelll411MIUt 1-----------.. 1111\lntU of UW ._..,... ... hi eJI ll'ltl---~ .. llMrl.._tllot .. -J 17 fl•l.9'.U ttn * ........, ,.. .. ,-Ed,_ 2:ou: .. ,.. •c NOTlcv l'Mt""'...,.... ...... ..._ Ml> ......... "'-., ~ '· ,.,.,, ~ 101• -• • _.,, Mt frM-f'. l!Mtl~ lltl t:tl.t: 100 .. ..,_. a claws wlfl .. __., w.C11en a.111.J 111 h ~of O.,.rtlftefl11 __________ .,_ .. IC.-• .....,_,, SNelcls 11!1 t1 "-'1 to """'be fll•Ur............, .. tforeMICI Ne. J of wlcl-i. .. lW CIVIC Citlll!H lfM-t • ....., IA> 25.2; 100 nv-1. ._.,"2 w1t11111 ftlllt _._. •"-' tlle fft'at 0.-lw Wtll. HI .. CllY ef Sellt• AN. PUBUC N011CE Shields 19> 1:01.t: 100f,.._1, Hllllkt tUNlllOltCOU•TO~TNI Plll>lk•l*'ollfll•llfllk• Ctllfwnle. r-----------llU SU; S00 ,,_,,........,.Ill) JTAT•Of'CA&.lffO•fl! l'Oa OaledJe11-11,..,, ' DltlMllltllNtfy._tm. c.....,t S:)t.7; 11111 Mel-\. K_.,.. Cit) TM•COUNTYOl'Ofl NOi PATlllClAH.allENNeR WIWAMLIUOHll, • NO,.taTOCft•OtTOll• 11 ... 4: 100 .,, ... ,_,_ War .. I (£) .... ...,, •K.cuttlufllllwlll Ollllll';Clwtll •UP•llio.COUaTOllT ... 1 1 U ; 40I MM ,....._,, llOlllnt Hiii• NOTIC9 Oft N•UINO l"ttOaA H Oii Of woiddKIMlclt MAlllllAU. L. MC NfttlL. IT ATI 01' CM.I fllCNtNIA llOJt 3;SOO. WILL. AllO llOR L.•YYllll '110,UUJYAN MCOA•t•t.&MCDMH•L. YNICIOUNTYOflOUteO• OtMMllltl41l Ut>OMte.._ T •$TAM• NT' A It y ANO A"-Y.ft<Ww A'*-n= .... ...._. lOOl'Melley .... _1.boll'ltetfl'I~. AUTNORIJATION TO AOMINtaT•ll .... c.,_ ........ ·: . . 1:9~~=..n.u, l!lt•t• of STl!PHl!N .1o••PH 100 ,,._.., WlllH (01J:OU;100 ,,.. UNDlft ,,.. lllOllNND•NT AO. L.Mtew-.u.•n ' Teti UllU•M ICILLIAN, .... 51'•"'4•NJ.l(IU.IAM. 6o -t. KIHtw CCI f:Sl.7; so,,.._,, MINISTRATION OllUTATIS ACT ~lilled er.,. ONM Diiiy PllOI. ,....,...,. ... ~.. OKefted. SllM1(0)1'.$;100fl-1.Ntff (0) Etl•te Of all.L DtL.t.MAW, JM.to,21, ............ ,,n llOt-7' ~ .... Or .... CoHtDeltyPlloC NOTICl!ISHlftl!9YGtVIN .. tlllt l·ll.O; lOOf,..._1, Wltes (O) t:•.t; OKHMd. l'IWIMI t IO lt.ttn CNdltortoflM-"9Nn*ldK....,,. SOD •r-1, Frou (Cl 7:01,7; MO NOTICI! IS Hllt89Y GIVl!N lhet p•rauc N~ ry • • 491-, ... I •If --11tvl119 <i.lms ag.elMt btck-1. Kltlltr fCI t:tO •. Ito Maic Olll11Wthe.slll9'llerelna,...ltlon uu vaa...c. u. Mid ctectdttll -._itNd to 11i. br .. 11-1. 9-f IOI 1 :J0.1; 'llO ftff tor P~e et Wiii end tc.r I-• of n.tm, wltfl Ille MCftWtY -.~. II\ reley-1. Olostt ~"' "-'· Letters T~ •11111 ....,.._,,.. l'ICTIT10U$ euAMHS PtJBUC NO'l1CE lfte Ollk• ol 1i.. <leflt of !he ello.,. - ,llOSH-SOf'H tlM to ~ftiUtr""""' tllt ·--· NAM«STAttMaNT lltl ... C011r1,•to-t"'""'wf91""' •n-.la CU I UOI El...... din! Aclnlltllslrellon of EllAIM A<I. ,.. TIM foll0wln9 '*---dllllt llllsl-M<..Wry _.....,'°IN ............ 200 medley ,. .. ,_,_ El ModtM ""•><•to -kll " ...... tor further .,.UH: • ""1C'f!..'•'OUSSTAT·!'~-"·" •I 1111 lew office of llALPH J. 114.0 Ptrtlcul-d lllel Ille lime-pt-ct $ANTOltO SPORTING GOODS, ..... --NT MORGAN, 11111 Dow str• Su<• 110. 200 ,,..._,, ~y IEI 1. Htrrl119 of 11Hrl"9 , ........ Ms-. ... Mt tor 243111 Mulc1tndl lllWIS., l!t Tor•. CA. The~._ ................... "' ... I-He---1 IMCll.c..llfomloet2MO.•tc1t !El3.$il1mltEMJ.Ti-:J·19.o, Febr>Mrytt.1m,e11o·ooe.m.,lftllle ft6» neu as. 11 1111 plecie °' 1111s1-o1 u.. -- 200 IM-1. Salulltct IEI 2. 8r-COlirlroomef °""""*'' -Jot w+c1 S ..... J . s.ri.-Jr .. U11• J.. P A 0 P E II T I E S F 0 II dtnlv"9CI tn all ....tten PINlnlflO to Nelle CEI l. OtMont IEMI. TI me: Court, •t 1000..tc Conltf' 04'1"9 Welt In 9'f' $1., !> T-. CA. "630 ~'-!~~ 1 IOW At11 0rf"9, l"9 Hl•t• of M1c1 -·· wllllln '°"' 2'.311.0. tlleCltyOISMteAll•,CalllOml• SI ........ J. SetllQro Sr. ltml VI• -"--·-~ ,,_thuflwhtl~tpullll«i!llll"•tn•• SO free-I &oriH'• (El 2. S.lnll D•i.cl JM.11 ttn. C.stllle, EIT-.CAm30 Ml<hMI Peot Sltl"'I"• 0 O.S. 111110ll<a. (EMU Herbert IEMI. TI,...: 2'.0-'WIWAM8. IUOHH, Joflft J, S.0.orD, l3lfS 511.,.r Uc>-:,.~IN Sal....,., Sell 0.-19, CA, 0•1M Je-ry14. 1'77. l:;~ •. lly-4. O.Mont IEMI ' TI,...: LIPPOLr::~N'=SON& , *r"ht~bu~:~,~~.:u:y • Tllo' tius\neu 11 <~ lly en I"-~":~~~1!:"tt11 l!statt 100fr-1.Htrrll\Q IE12.Mllrplly DINSMOOR .. nore>pert~p. dMdu•I. oltllt-Mlned-.....t. !El3.Pet<lllEMI. Tl,..., 1:010. Atter11tyutL.nt JoflnJ.s...toro Ml<llMI PeotS1clrvt11 ODS llALPM J.MOllOAN 100 beck-1. Burnside (EM) 2 UIE.11111St..Wte111 Thlt stei.m.nt w•s flied wlltl 1M C:"1: ~~.'""':! O,'" lilff With the lltl Deffit.,wtl 11't 5'11ulU<• (Ell. &r...,.1ci.. IE>. Time· Cett•MeMI. CA. ntl7 County Cieri! of Oranoe Coullly en J 11" 't ,,-1_ •nve County °" M~ 9-11. CA.,... 1· 1• 6. Att11: R9' brl ~d .i.n"8ry 11.1"7. •nuery • ni. T .. : OHi ai. ... 100 brH•t-1. H~116rlc~s (El 2 Att_.,...,: """ltMr ,..,.,.,, ll'l'tS11 ........ y ....... , .... ,_ Htrb•rl (EM) 3. ZutmtMI IE Ml P11bllsllecl Or.not C.oet.t Dally Pilot, Publlsllecl Orenve Co.HI 0.fly Piiot, ;."Ut:l1'211ec11 .~ .... ""''Delly Piiot, P11bllUMO 0rlfl9CI Coat°'"' Piiot. Time· 1·1•.• f"ebru•ryl, •. 10, 1'117 Jel\. 20. 27, ...o Fe«>. 1, 10, 1tn n. '"· • -FeO. J. 10, 1m Je<1. U, '•11.3, IO, 11, 1'17 .OOtr•erel•y-1. Est9nela 4: 27.4. Q.77 171·71 21•17 ~·::::1::1.<~,~c!~-. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE __ P_tJ_B_U_C_N_OTl __ C_E_' __ 2.13.S 100 tree-I. GrHf (Dl ?.00.? 2. PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR SEMI-ANNUAL REPORT E•rneit \Cl l. Z•<ktrY ICI. 200 nk lnOo-1. 8ortosflr CCI 2:>4.02. RomaM ICI 3. Beemen COi. 50 tru-1. Loper IC> 16,9 t. 8•r1holortllne CCI l. 8ull.,6 IC>. TO THE HONORABLE BRUCE W. SUMNER, PROBATE JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE: JAMES E. HEIM, Public Administrator of said County, respectfully makes this return of all estates of dece- dents which have come Into his hands for the term c.ommenclng July 1, 1976, and end I no December 31, 1976. lob lly-1 Gllltlam IC l 1·1S.3 1 Foyera-IC) 3. B•vNW tel. 100 lr .. -1 LoPel ICI 1 :Ol.• 2. GrHI 1013. Bull•n:I IC>. 100 INck-1 S.rtcr.llr ICI 1· 14' ?. AomtM CCI J. Bettnen I 01. 100 b<~l-1. C..StlllO (Cl 1:12.6 t. C Ze<kery ICU. Settle IOI ~ ~ 200treerel•y-l.Cost•-~l.S7.l. O t:: l'dfMfl !'2'hl (Q V,) ltolllnt ""'' ,:? ~ zo 100 medley relrt-1. Edi..., 1 · tO t .,. ~ 100 ,,.,._,, Rld<lle I El 1 SAnllotn .g .A..! !El 3 Nelson CEI Tl,.,.. 2:<1'.4. ... ::1- 200 1no --•. w_,.,, 1E1 2 a. a. u. Name of Otcedent ~~6;' !RI 3 Emery IEI. Time A-880BaWllliam Edgar Selwyn so 1,__1 &erVP101t1 1E1 2. Pth1io -88162 Richard G. Pugh CRll x"""rtR> Tlrrw 2sa. A 88t81 Rubin Ortia Medel aka 10011y-1 R•ddie lEI? W-nlEl / 1 Pertr !El T•me: 1·0'11 Ernesto Megana 100 ,,.._, Sant>orn 1e1 2. Arml90 A-87359 Lucille H. Burbank tEt > o. M<C.rtney <Et. Time: A-88195 Charles R. Long Sr. 1 :~111to-i eergtio••z <E> 1 Runve A-88196 Esther Dagmar Howard IRI J llle1 Nel\On IE) and Slallord A-88197 Mary Josephine Day 1e1 r 1me·1·11> A-88198Ernest0ness 100 breol-1 Emery (E) 2 Perez A 88199 p Ii H p rt fE> 3 Ken"' 1R1 nme 1:~...... • au ne . O er 7-2-76 7-9-76 7· 13-76 7-9--76 7. 14-76 7-t4-76 7-t4-76 7-14-76 7-14-76 Approx. Value of Est.te $ 3,33S.3S 63,000.00 521.24 44,65t.'5 9t0.40 1,150.00 1,383.48 3,647.29 4,846.00 S2t.24 19,357.76 910.40 t,144.45 1,383.48 3,647.29 4,on.01 7.34 6,329.85 611.tS 900.00 284.60 804.10 1,425.79 $ 513.90 13,027 .91 299.25 244.45 1,098.88 2,843.19 2,646.28 513.90 38,321.60 299.2S 250.00 1,098:88 2,843.19 3,420.21 SUNSET TRACK .•. 400 ,,.. relay -I. Edhon A-88245Helen Florence Alexander Time. t:0s.s. aka Helen M. Alexander t'.•T•ro-1>v1or1.i1. 7643-0t9 Robert Braucher Spltznas 7· 16-76 7-26-76 7-22·76 7-27-66 7-27-76 g. 4·76 BM.77 336.SS 543.90 187.00 146.23 884.77 336.SS 543.90 1 t2.00 146.23 150.29 152.62 297.42 734.~8 t83.93 246.48 lt0.00 146.23 734.48 183,93 246.48 1as.oo 146.23 Continued From C2 junior Cary Burt, a 6-7 high jumper, 50.7 quarter-miler as a sophomore and a 10.1 dash man. Burt is involved in bas ketball and gets a late start, however, for the s pike season. Others in the Hunt· ington Beach stable in- clude Scott Ledbetter, who will team with Burt in lhe 100 and also run lhe 220. Jim Flaherty is also a possible in the s prints. Burt, senior Mark Murphy (50.0 last year}, and Rod Stephens (50. 7) are in the 440, while the 880 features Bill HarrelJ (2:00.0), Jerry Short (2:00.0) and Carl Berg, capable of better than 2 :00.0, ac· cording lo Lewis. Mike Gtrrord (4:24.1) and Harrell (4:206) are the leading contenders for the mile. while seniot' Mike Calvano (capable or the 9 :30s) and s ophomore Gordon Duff (the Empire League froah-soph champion) are the leading two-mile entries. Hurdlen David Moon and Eddie Gutierrez are m the low lSs for the high sticks while Bob Russell, Craig Colbert, Moon and Gutierrez are possibles for the 330 lows . Burt, who won the CIF frosh·soph crown as a sophomore with his 6-7 leap, is bolstered b y sophomore Justin Davis (6-3). Deron Linsacum and Alan Bravender figure at Jong Jump and Scott Brummett (41 feet lut. year) and Mark Thorson are triple Jump can· dldates. ,.._,..,.v.uew The versatile Ken Margerum. depth and talent in the middle dis- tances and sprint speed make the Barou an im- proved track and field team as coach Stan Clark's crew prepares coM 011 , .. ,s. .. c1 ....... 1. A-88307 Herbert Kurt Liebert for the 1977 campaign. 100 medley re4•Y-I. San CletMnll 7643--020 George Joseph Beck, Jr. Margerum, Orange 2 ~~'i,_1 a1a1rernore cc12:oe.s 2. 7643--021 Myrtle Lee Jones w1111•m~ 1s13. Pt•lrlns <s>. A-88178 Linda Mae La Chapelle County's bes t triple 2001n0o-1 ee1<1rid<Jttc1u1.12. A·88214MaudeMarlonRiese aka ·u (h , d c11o ... nucc1J.Mou1c1 Ma . L'ttl fl Id , J m per ever e s one so,,..,_,_ oe11s cs> 25 8 2. GI~ cs> non 1 e e 48·31/. this year), turned 3 auc~ IC> Rlese,akaM.Marlon 8 14.6 in the 120 high 100 toy I Deb\ ISi 1:07.'7 Perkins Littlefield hurdles as a junior and <s;;. ";>,"::;'d1 Bu<t 1c1 1 00 , 2. A-881 23May Anna MacKenzie went 10.0 in the 100. Ile tcnow11"" cc» tCr•mer rs1 7643-02:2 Della A. Reynosa can also be counted 00 100 t>e<k-1 K-1•"" (Cl n 1 2 A-88504 Franklin Kenneth Morris for work in the 330 in-2'~~ ':!~.~.~~.~~ 1s1 n 1. , A-88501 Agnes M. Blakeman termediate hurdles, the e•••emo<e cc1 > w,,.,.,.,,~ cs> A-88502 Henry Kechter 400frMrllrt-• s.nccement~n I 7643-023 Edward J . Young 220, long jump and 440 Untventty 16'11'6) Minton Vl•lo 7643-02~ Harley John White relay. 200 mNJley relay-1. Univtr\lly 7643-025 Lottie Soul I 1er The mile and two· mile Time 1·St 4 7643-026 Hector Castro has deplh with juniors M~o~r:r;;',J,~i'~·72 s.;;v,~r IMI 3 7643-027 Antran Ngoc, aka Mik e Appell, J o hn )()()tfld med -1 er .... n(Ml l Nov Ngoc An Tran Spreitzer, Kirk Buehler ~;,:::/~~ l . Wt •omu cM1 A-88388ErikaErnaHendSelrson so,, .. _, BIH'H 1u11 w11'°" (ul A-88379 Ruby Ernestine euw and senior Jim Testrake ,. Rob'"'°" 1M1 T1,,,,,·2• •. A-88551 Mary Elizabeth Ringler involved. All are in the 1001>u1tert1v-1. Brown <Ml 1. R•••Y 7643-029 Rebeeca loslf 4 30 . h 'l d CUil W•l-IMI Tl'""'' 003 A 89C•LF I A ldR' h d : s m l e mt e an 100 ,,...._1, Eby IM> 2. wo1te1t cu> • ......, ranc s rno 1c ar s figure to give FV added l M<Cov 1u1 rime ss >. A-88864 Lawrence Stull power in the two-mile. • 100 b•o -1 Wo11e111u11 Derr CM> A-88886 Hattie Gertrude Cole 3 ~v:;e~~ ~1~~.!'it, 2. Novot· A-88885 Barbara Ann Boyd In the sprints , with' nv tMll.HentevWI Tlme:•:•OJ 7643-0JOArthurF.Stlllwell Margerum. are junior •oo ,,,,., re1ay-1. M''''°" v1&Jo_ 7643·028 Tina Deleon WilHe Gittens (10.3 as a rimt· N>.S. A-88497 Albert M. Gutheinz sophomore) and a pair of A-87188 Leland Stanford Martin unknown quantities m A-88838 Lucille L. Schneider transfers Mike Corrigan GWC Tangles 7643-03t Thomas George Pond from Garden Grove and A-89072HlldaM.Moulton Bill diGaralmo fro m W"th C A-88890AnnieSnowden Neff u:gh m· La Mi'r ada. I ypre88 A-89179 Ruby E . Strauhs, aka n.i Ruby Alice Strauhs Here's a look a t the Golden West College's A-8819~ Mae L. Gore other even~ for Foun-basketball team tries to A·891n Eduardo Reyes Manalo lain Valley: accomplish what no A-89t78Aurelio Rivera 44~Mark·Wetzel (54.0 o t h e r S o u t b e r n A-88949 Anna F. Van Ever a l C I . r . c I A-89066 Fannie Harbison ast year) returns. along a l ornia on erence A-89286 Gladys Marlon Parent w i t h s op b o m o r e outfit has been able lo do Kevin Rom1'ne. 880-tonight-defeat highly-A-89287 Mary New1on, aka Mary I. New1on, aka Junior De nnis Duddy. rated Cypress. Murtle Elizabeth trans( er Mark Nagle The two schools tangle Newton (junior) and perhaps one at Golden West at 8. A-89329 Carmen Evans of the distance runners. Cypress. led by 6· 7 7643-032 Robert Ross The hurdles-Romine, Tyrone Branyan, comes A-89439 George White Don Bush. Don Raymond into the game with an 9·0 A-89440 Marilou Troescher Wiison and sophomore Alan SoCal re<:ord an~ a 23·1 A.89246Leslie BallevJr. Duncan. High jump-overall mark, losmg only A-89S38Gertrude Ruth Perkins Mike Harris (6·3), Don lo Hancock by two 7~3-033HeleneGertrudeToal Raymond, Corrigan, points. GWC's Rustlers 76.43-034ClelaAzaliaJaquette Mark Bastian. Pole are 3-5 In conference A-8945SL.arry Frederic Rose vault-senior Bill play and 10..'13 for the A-895t9RlchardHudelHolmes Reeves (12·6), plus Fred season. I 7643-038 Lydia Dahl Vernon Guertz and Kimball A-89739JullaLouiseGerth Hall. Long jump-A-89740MagdaleneRoslne Welss Glttena (21-10 last year> Prep Soccer ~!:~~ ~; .f,·t.,:~~Y and Margerum. VAllllTY 7643-037 George F. Hamrick Triple jump-Ken Siu, 11110_....m mo .... ..i11s 7643-039Carl Nystrom C h r i s P 1 p er a n d sc "_,._.."'"'n 2· F. s...u., A-89835 Shirley L. Szok 2, D S.rtCMt, J. O•rc••. Hlloer. Margerum. Shot put-OH-S11Wf>I. 11omero. A-89564 Eugene Carl Flower seniors Tim Bienek and JUN•onustTY A-89610Helen H. Blair SHC1-•UI (ti O~Hllh A t177•2 .... _ I B k R Ill Frank Christy, botb In s' St0<ini.-Votlebre99, Mor•. ..... ~ mar on a a oe noer, the so-toot range. Discl18 Lllos~~. aka Bertha Marion _Bienek, Christy, Gary OH•Hll111t1mM1ni..v1e1• Roelllnger, aka Barrow, Rlcb Stanton Mv~;~~~iietTtf'o Sert Marlon Roelllnger and Maril BrouJUard -untK~i~=MMe ~=~!e";:.,f,;~lsey 8-6-76 e.. 2-76 8-3-76 8-9'-76 e.. 9-76 8-9-76 8-18-76 8-18-76 8· 18-76 8-t8-76 8-18-76 8-19·76 8-25·76 9-7·76 9-14·76 9. 3-76 9-13-76 9-14-76 9-14·76 9-14-76 9-14·76 9-23-76 9-3().76 9·30-76 10-8-76 1().. 4·76 10-8-76 1().. t3-76 1()..12·76 1().13·76 1()..t3-76 10-1-4-76 1().22-76 10-25-76 10-25-76 10-28-76 10-29-76 11-8-76 11· 8-76 tMS-76 tHS-76 11-22-76 12· 1-76 12-1-76 12· 2-76 t2-f().76 12-6-76 12-6-76 t2-9-76 12· 9-76 12-9-76 12·13-76 12·15-76 12-10-76 12-1().76 32,442.00 56.467.58 39,024.18 328.0S sn.83 3,535.22 t,29'3.00 189.10 2<17.00 153.18 1.00 t49.13 124,307.03 4t,303.00 4,S1~. t7 56.78 78,743.82 764.10 1,995.48 1,000.00 214.68 7.80 3,926.29 7,974.93 25,000.00 8.89 733.00 J.4,,446.06 1,829.75 914.SO 994.12 3,480.00 144,328.00 40,917.00 2,S2t, 12 879.S2 1, 100.00 186.48 1.621.0S 1,829.00 12,428.00 2,699.81 177.15 116.70 1S, 12S.OO 6,013.00 36.04 SSS.79 1,445.00 t .50 149.56 SS.9S .92 2,042.02 8,677.00 8,3t1.2S 3,215.SS 32,603.66 3S,6&5.S8 301.03 sn.83 3,S3S.22 27t.06 6.00 24S.OO 153.18 1.00 t49. t3 10,8t6.54 192.80 4,5t3.17 56.78 78,743.82 764.10 1,995.48 -0- 214. 68 7.80 3,926.29 7.974.93 23,880.47 4.89 708.32 22,m.84 1,829.75 821.16 994.12 475.44 20,t55.38 t,086.38 2,521. t2 860.S2 -0· 186.48 1,621 .0S 79.37 3,814.36 379.86 111. ts 1t6.70 101 .20 1,335.78 36.04 SSS.79 ..(). 1.20 12.56 55.95 .92 672.09 6,189.SS 8,311.25 ' 2.00 . -0- 137.30 1t,060.t3 4,647.20 t99.59 74.48 t49.13 2.00 2.61 t98.05 -0- -0- -O- S,S41.91 189.30 309.11 56.18 3,948.22 -0- 830. 47 -0- -0- .73 79.00 932.24 104.00 .1 t -0- 2, 132.27 813.38 65.00 -0- -0- 467.19 6.00 972.39 711.70 --0-16.89 6S3.92 17.00 377.43 -0- ·0· -0- 36.30 65.00 -0- -0· -0· -0- ..(). ..(). ·O· .().. 80.00 S0.00 3,078.25 21 ,543.53 31,038.38 lOt .44 498.35 3,386.09 269.06 3.39 46.95 t53. 18 1.00 149. tJ 5,274.63 3.SO 4,204.06 -0- 74,795.60 764. tO 1, 165.01 ..(). 2t4.68 1.01 3,847.29 7,042.69 23,776.47 4.78 708.32 20,640.57 1,016.37 756.16 994.t2 ~75.44 19,688. 19 1,080.38 1,548,73 148.82 ..(). 169.59 967.13 62.37 3,436.93 379.86 tn. ts 116.70 64.90 1,270.78 36.04 555.79 -0- 1.20 12.56 SS.95 .92 6n.09 6,109.SS 8,261.25 32,304.70 45,407.4S 34,376,98 t28.46 498.35 3,386.09 t,291.00 t86.49 48.9S 153. 18 1.00 149.13 118,765:12 41, 1 tJ.70 4,204.06 -0- 74,795.60 764:10 1, 165.01 1,000.00 214.68 7.07 3,847.29 7,042.69 24,896.j)() 8.'78 733.00 32,313.79 1,016.31 849.50 994.12 3,40.00 1'3,860,.81 40,911.00 1,S48.73 167.n 1r100.00 169~9 967.13 1,812.00 12.0S0:57 2,699.81 177. 15 1 t6.?0 15,088.70 5,948.00 36.04 SSS,79 1,A4Spc> 1.50 149.56 , SS.9S ,92 2,042.02 8,597~ 8,261.25 all ln theUO.footrange. cdM~• A-89950 Katherine L. Messenger -----------------__.;;..------'"---------l A-89963George Cole, aka 12·15-76 12-2().76 12-28-76 12-1!-16 20, 194.00 n•.OO 1,971.14 1, 164.02 1,311.00 276.00 1, t6t.29 914.02 1,311.00 -0- ..(). ..(). -0- 276.00 1, 161 .29 914.02 18,883.00 n4.00 1,971.14 1,164.0'Z W. E. Cole, aka Geora-Earl Cole, aka George W.Cole A-89965 Wiiiiam Fr•ncls f ritse'h A-89729Yancy Paulson STATEOPCALrFORNIA ) u: ) 12-2 .. 76 11-21-76 1Ml-7' 1,0S7.79 8'6.SO 12,711.ta '50.23 702.70 6,740.80 1S.OO 17.00 1S0.90 685.70 6,.589.90 1,IM2.79 829,SO 12,567.18 . ' JAMES e. HE IM. being first duly sworn, del)OMI Ind says: TJ\at he l.s the Public Administrator In Ind for the County of Orengt, State Of C.tlfornl~ t"at the f0rt90lng 11 a tru. and cor,..ct ,..POrt of all estates of oo-u!Mnts ~lch have come Into his hinds tonne .,.rtOd comrnendno July 1, 1976, al)d ending Ote9mbtr 31, 1m. Including ell Ht•tH Whl~h hlv. not htmotore bHn reported by him; th1t ht 11 not now and was not 1t 1ny tlm. : Interested In the expondltures of eny kind on eceount of •ny ut•t• he administered, or which ht his In tht course al tM edmtntstratron, nor lsht tslO(latecl In bus\ness « ottlerwlse with 1nvont Who Is so tnte~sted. · JAMES e. HEIM Public Admlntstr'ator 5ubscrfbtd and awom ~o blforw ""'thlsVthdlyof January, 1tn (SEA.._) ' W. &. ST JOHN, Co41'1'1ty Qtrit • By FANifc:ESL. VALASl!K, DIDutY f'Ub!llhed 0rltn(le ~·~lty Piiot. ~~ 4, ,o, 11, 1'77 *f' .. l 1'11BUC NO'l'ICE l'ICTITIOVS BUSINl!SS .. AME STATEMENT Th& fo1tow1ng P"°' "°"' .,,. do1nq bU\• "'"''"' AZUSA ROOFING. 1"7 Anal\~1m Ave ,CMt•~'• Gerald E Tw•rdow•~• 1••2 .,,.,..,m C0\1• MeW C4 '1&11 ,iowivd Tw••-U•. '3S 6•1•1H, llru•• CA"I07 Uui bu\•f'~·u '' tonouctf'd .,., "" ,., dtV1du4't C-r•IOE TwMdow· •I T"t"-'l•f..,,..,.l\t "'•\ ttlf'Wj w 1U' trw- COW1t'I (lfflll" f)f Ot•~ Covn1<; on ,_ • .," .... ,..,. lffll • l'UBUC NO'l1CB PUBUC NO'llCZ "1BUCNOTICS ., I '873,624. 469,621. IJ,_.,l()lJI: t Ml:S R EA1.. TQ.R~ 6-6000 2443 East Coat Hith Nat, Corona del Mar ' also in M¥a Vt.fde,at 546·5990 --RS:~-G-rill 1002 _..,, ~et"S ··-·······••it-•••••• slMlllld cMdl. .., ... oc1t1-.------1 ~ .::= T: CUSTOM DAILY MOT oslUIMs .Back Bay area. 3 Bed rm, fw th first in-! bath, 3 fireplace~ (2 used brick,one SwedJSb ) . ..._,.._only. Den or ram rm large . enousb for pool t able. Open beam ceilings, Hwn for Sale loads of charm. ··-·-•••••••••••• .,. 400£.l19~ FOR All ~ 10.2 c.M. --MW ..................... ,..4 . & •• ......_ 4 BR + F /R I ~· :, •. .._ 2STORY E<ECUTIVE HOME Torma! entr y lo hug Living Room. Gourmet •Olive Park Homes• K!t~ben . w1fh Fortna 20 brand new homes, lg 3 D1mng ~1th view of Ter· & 4 bdrm, shake & tile race. Bwltm wet barplu roofs from $59 000 f'a~y Room: Wmdin (714)s.:is-587s. ' stair s to h1 deawaY1·--------Master Su ite. Ca111--------- 963-6767 OPfN 1119·11s'llN1oe1 '"''' l•&lltl AN sos Help! Owner desperate to sell this \2 acre Mini illiliiill Horse Ranch. S70,000. ---------• REDCARPf.."'T 7!>4·1202 FIX&UPPIR tri ........ OK Nickerson fans . Priced at sao,ooo. ud S95,000. he re'• your cholce to bulld up eqwcy l ast. a. '52•1fl0 MOOGUAl\R f Have some.thing you wan to sell? Classified ada 1t '1(ell. 64.2~. · macnab/ Irvine 188lfY IAYF.IOMT· LEASE/OnlOH New bayfront condo on Lido Penimula; larce. over m> sq. ft .• with 2 extra large bdrms., den. very larce living rm .• wltb boat docking available. Security double Jocked en- trance. Owner offering lease at $895, or option to purchase at $185,000. Be the first becupant ! WE'VE MOVED To larger quarters in the Great Western S&L Bldg., 450 Newport Center Dr., ground floor. Jiul IPat 759•08 I JUR Gu.t Waiau 'BP.q. associated lo\ tJ ) ~ f. I.' ~ Q ' I\ I T ,-, ~ <, lnJ• " r\,,.,," . ' (,. f REALTOR~ 67~1111. OPEN HOUSES 120 WHITIWATllt DI. -JASMIHI CRiii: .. Mooar••I.. ••def, Pl•• 4, ...... .., ~ 2 ....,. l ....... f-'r,... 21/a...... 11., .... = & ..................... ftoon. ~..., * I; np 1rM. • n llad f-'1!!°°9 IPecllr adr & ..,._..L Al __...., - 24 ..._. wc:allr ....,.... Pool. lecnd· d ............ ca.ts. $1)9,900. 0,.. Frl.,W.&S-. •• s. J ) I ~ ............ of .... ltWng _, ...... lff ..... too. U..Cele . COLE OF NEWPORT I.EAL.TORS JS 151. Coast Hwy .. C.... .. Mer 675-5511 ........ 10021Gwral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . . \A.i'ESl.1-:Y N TAYLOR CO. HEJ\ LTOHS s 1 m ·e 1 H4(} UDO ISLE HOME FOR LIA5a Lovely 2 story, 3 Bdrm & den home incl. lge master BR w/lge sundeck. Spac: LR & for mal dining. Cpts., drapes. Unfurnished. $1,000 mo. ; 2111 s-.looqllift Hila ~-HEWPOaT CEHTEll, M.L 644-49 I 0 I 002 GfMf'Cll I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE CREAM PUff!! Immaculate Eastslde Cosla Meu family home on quiet cul de sac street. 3 Bdrmi. . 2 baths. lg(' Camily rm. w1lh frplc . new ktt('hen, 2 car garage. Shows llkl• a modQI ! Fast possei.s SiJ,95,() C. F. Colesworthv REALTORS 640-001°0 TOO MANY will miss their chance to reserve a new con- dominium in Euo;t Costa Mesa in the S60's. RED CARPET 754·1202 a: IBDB~ILllNS CD. OVER.SO YEARS OF SERVICE Dova SHOllS WITH YIEWI Elegant Ivan Wells Home Overlook- ing Back Bay. 3 Bedrooms 2M& Baths. Formal Roman Gardens With~ Old World Elegance ··~ .. , UDO ISi.i IAYMOMI' . Space fer boat. Two-~ modern' 40ntemparary 4 bedrOoms, over· abed lfvm1 room With· fireplace and coov~auon plt. Tremeadous J>•Deled galJie roo~l parquet noon; 2 wet ban, dell&nt(ul view. individual decks, surprts• blue-:!r:-1 jacum wtth bubblinf foun· $315,000. Fee. · · 631·1• . DAILYPILOT· J'f WE1U DIFFERENT w ................ .. .... ............ Wat ................... 'WE'RE NATIONAL -and like any good idea whose time bas come RED CARPET REALTORS have grown to over 700 offices across our Nation -RED CARPET REALTORS sell a home every five minutes of every day. That's $1 Billion worth every year! It makes sense to investigate the many Red Carpet off er- ings in: •Multi-unit Developments & Condominiums ! •Homes priced with "GI" fmancing to a .. Yacbt- mans' Paradise" on Newport's fabulous BayCront! Jack Peck "Top-lister -Dollar Volume Sold" °' . TWO THOUSAND ASSOCIATIS & llOICBS ... Hewport ...... c .... Mete I04S'dof ...... 1976 Jack's Record Volume of over $5 tnilllon total volume of homes sold is received with appreciation for the coopera· tion of bis Associates & Cooperating Brokers all members of the NEWPORT HARBOR-COSTA MESA BOARD OF REALTORS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE! If you're contemplating, the selling or purchase of property, wouldn't it make sense to call J a ck by "Radio" NOW! (714) 58&-5964 Radio Page "K·161'' _JJ'l"nl~ · HuclMg a "HEW"' bperl11tc• . Jack Peck & Tom Turner &nnOW\Ce the establishment of the first of a series of RED CARPET REALTORS offices in their plush & extravagant office quarters -serving . the South Coast area: •Commission splits'to 80% *Fast access to San Diego, Newport, Riverside & Corona del Mar Freeways. *Management positions & partnel'Ships. •Lovely executive office -designed by Elizabeth Broyles -Interiors. •Referrals galore -Red Carpet is "National" *Medical Insurance at lower group rates. · Canadian bom, until recently Manaaer of the Santa Ana office of Walker & Lee, is a craduate of the University of California at Los Aqel•. There he achieved bis degrees as a Bachelor of Arts in Economlcs and a :Masters Degree in Finan~! tB Equal Profusio,,_. • Servlc. I ~ ' . • .. ... ·. ... ' .... ~:?,1f THE REAL ~Ji £STA'l l:RS $17.tlO Freedom tract, newly redecorated New carpets & paint inside & out, no wax kitchen noor. detached work.shop & storage. Room for expansion. cov- ered~ brick patio entry way. Ofltt HOUSI SAT • SUM 12·5 611-ltN ----- eor.adefM• IOU eo.ta.._ 1024 .............................................. DUPLEX OUen Sat • Sun 12-SPM. BAl.BOA S1>11cle>Us a bdrm. & 2 (leg del Mar 3 Br. 1~ mil bat.ha each unit Laree Ba. FaGt Rm. new decor :~i~r~';°:e matr: bdrm .. beamed By O"'.ner. S68,900 sand. Located OQ uw end c e ii . , x1 n t rental a I 556-0866 • $5'-4311 ':~~~~-: $139,~ULMARTIN Y•CCllldo tl'J from 3 rooms. Off. REAL.ESTATE MH~ ....... .,.... ..... CALL NOW 752-7315 streetparldnlrorecars. -------• SUPft' sharp condo with DONALD M BIRD Thls is one o1 tbe best PRIYATIPARTY comm. pool. tennis and • l tio a t• Newport Local resident waat~ play area. 2 bdrms + • oea n u d-zu.. ba•""·. formal .. l!!!!tl!IL.-~A~S!;S~O<~i!a~te!!_Sz.!R~e;!a!_!l!to~n!,__J Beach Full prl ce duplex or tri·plex an ...... ~ ..... "II Sl9uoo.'cALL TS1.al91 c d M • L. I u n • ch djnini. air condltion.IJli a __ .1. Capistrano Bch area. &,500, call S40-1720. G1•r.. 10021._,.. 1002 CSELECT Prinonly4M-4420 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••-•••-•• .. T'PROPERTIES COUNTRYCO'rl'AGE llST IUYS -a&lfff OPIM IDllSI. Tues., Tbun. & Fri., 1-5 319 Avenida Cenitos. On the bluffs edge in 'lbe Bluffs. A beautifully up- graded Delores model. 3 bdrms., 2~ baths, wet bar & a view that won't quit! $149,500. Bring your binoculars. IEALL Y IMMACUl.A 11 & GOIMOUSL Y SO is this exceptional Linda model; 3 bdrm.5., 2 baths! in the early Bluffs area. Just listed! Shown by app't. only. 673-4400 Dlmlmof ............. 'Co. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BA YFRONT, pier & float. lots $165,000 to $295,000, to build your own custom home. Several areas to choose from. ATTRACTIVE Linda Isle 5 BR, 411.2 ba., fam. rm. & formal dining; lge. tile patio & waterfront deck. $28.5,000 B I LL G R U N DY, RE A LT 0 R. J.I: nCJ y\1d•· Or"" N ti · 67) 6161 OCEAN VIEW Big RECREATION Rm 2 BR. 2 ba1 S. ol Hwy --------1 -.ooo. Paw Martin Real Eat.ate 8"·.,. MlllSielr ZBr + den, lndiv home w / & M~ &ermll. oool ..... 1ecurf. ....... ; ly auard. IUUIO. Ownes Parlei·voua French ~ '· Quart.er? 2 Bedrm Con· do. steps to pool.,private e.taMeta 1024 courtyard. Taking de· posits now al $51,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549-865S ~UPERB HOMES ~ Walker & lee Real E srate Custom home on the bluffs. This spacious cor ner hou se he1 s 4 bedrooms. 2 bathl>. and breakfast nook plus un 1que Ceature or i.eparate "motber·in·law" unit Auto gar age opener , isprlnklen, etc. 1135,000. Huge open beam effect. Owner IS packed fort--_.;;;;;=====-- lransCer. Great North TUDOI PETE BARRETT -REALTY- . "2-Sltt HUGE Costa Mesa locauon. See POOL· IEACH t~ls 3 bedroom home $62,950 m.aoo. Circular drive lo 546-4141 secluded entry. Ruge .· 4. CO ATS& WALLACE RE AL ESTATE . INC Llvt ng Room with crackling a tone fireplace. Pul> gourmet Kllcben. Dine. Dramatic view of covered pavilion and sparkling heated II filtered freelorm pool. --------•I H.ideaway Maste r & Guest suites. Assume VA BIG CANYON Brand new. never lived in. executive borne. 2 Story Jlvani room with massive fireplace and view loll. S Bedrm, 6 loan. Hurry ! Cull 963-7881 OPFN II• 9• II S kJH TO~f NICI ' • ~.: :.i.-HERITAGE • . • REALTORS MUAVl!RDE lmmac. 4 bdr, 2 ba. fm rm home. HAS slate Palos Verde stone, beams , marble . etc ... C HARMING! Primeloc. Qniy $85,000 µ(1,,4 "''" r. u 11d1.·ld ,r, b·l1 ~'>.)0 ~THE REAL ~~·E STATERS balh, ramlly room fr TEMGSAMYOME? '"# I In Callfonla .. MISAYBDI 1782 Kinglet Ct. 38R. 2ba upgraded Buccola bomt in beaut 1lbrbood near aolf course and puk Lota ofwroughl·lron & brick. Ask for Jeff. Agent 673· 7601 CUSTOM HOME Grandparents. aunl3, un cles welcome Pvt area tor vl11tora. young adults OC' r111 w/happy children, 5 Br, 3Ba. very lit kitrben. huge den w /super wet bar. on a rorner lol w tofr street boat/camper parking. F\reprool r~ slate roof, around the comer from Grammar achl, walk to all achla. bus line. shop· pin&. churches. $87,500. Owner BJ<r. 636-1854 or ~ library· All of Ul1s lodts ecre.. .. Mw I Oll Enjoy leisure Ume In oul ooto spectacular pool .. -••••••••••••••••••• beauUCully up&raded 4 br waterfall and aotr ..... ~MRMI +famr-.home. Walk lo--------court• TrlllJ an out· ~ ..,..." ... 1taodin1bocne. 4 II+ Nl£U Tennis Club & park. Call .o1..<1A ... ,,, 119" nOW'548-1002.ownertagt. -the Ideal combination of ---------a new home in a Builder's bome! Step dn 4 established neig h - borhood. fnturin& all l M llACH tbe latest kitchen ap· --------CITY IOMUS polntment1, overalie COATS ,, WnLLACE Rt f,L f Sl ,'\T ~ INC 1arage, lllTie rooms, Neat u a pin, clean as a baths. steR down w whJstle on a beautlful ·--------r bar mtnl ocean view. trM llned atreet Elevat· waiklng distance t ln1 stairway leads to T ..... C-11 private beach, Onl maulve bonus room. JACUZZI &POOLS Sl6S.OOO. fee. Walk to schools and All 1owtth tbis a bedrm, c• 644-7211 shoppln.i from a quiet 2 t.. b a t h c o r o e r family nel1hborhood. Townhouse on large lot. Call collect <7141842·ZS3.S In Un Iv . Park . a.t~111••11Sfl.wlt).,MC1• Fireplace. Fam rm, ~•,rr,: ,,,°' '' I • '(. • l , '•I h 1\ I , bltns, FA beat. dble aar. 0wuer·1 auJious. . c-... ...... MS-:mt;eve 64,$..52S3 s.,.rv-.& S.,.. Location SAVE BY OWNER. must 2100 sq.ft . 4br, 3ba + se,. Up1raded 4 BR. Camlly. Customized hme frplc, prime loc,..$671900. tn Mesa Verde. W/slump OpenSat!Sun,~Snan· stone renc'g.qulet corner noo Dr. 892·6909 lot·patlt> W/pl•y hae. OWNER'S PRIDE · S84.500. Open hse · Sat/Sun 10.5. 32300regon Pro Cessio n a 11 y Ave. Call $51·8382 by O'#nr. I PRIVACY A PRIOllTY? Sprawllnl lelaunly uo· der a heavy abate root la a d.enllna, near-new 4 bedroom. a~ bath home completely 1urroundecl by a n11ced used brick 1tx root wall. This ramll1 home on a cul·de.uc REALTY INC. 714/846-1371 Leitun World 2br, 2ba ba C.CSO. New, ireat view. e 11: Kilbourn, aant~ ... 119 C5J Cold well Bonker Baycrest 3 br. 2 ba. lam.rm, din.rm. Open Sun l·S. $150,000. 1806 Leeward Ln. 642·7889. By Ownr. -LIDO REAL TY , .U77 \ i.1 I ulu. '\ II . *67J-7JOO * OMTHllEACH SUNSET & SURF 2 Lots wide at corner. L1e walled patio & iarden. Outdoor brick frplc attached. 3 BR. 2 Ba, room ror expanaion. Multiple zoning. $275,000. By owner. Phone Mon- Ftl, 6pm.10pm, wknds 8am· llam. (714 )67S.e!l68 aM~blM'JPlua NEWCONDO Laguna NJ1t1el New England style Con· 496-7222 131.0136 do with 2 BR, 2 BA. 1•--------·1 beamed celllnas. ex-oollent view. Sl.18.000. California Coast PrOperties ~144 •DUPLEX• ... steps from Mach. ts yn old. Copper ptumb·ar. beamed ceillnas. frplcs. Beet bl.ty at$1.Z5,000. -COAST PROP£1tT1£S• ~o PRIV. Party want.a 3 BR+ born• W/ pool In Dover Shoret area. suo-1115,ooo. rang~. P.O. Box l903, N.B. 92660 Prine. only. .. .. r " MoliMtfwS. .... Wi ............ Olli.rle.l•t.tt lh•"U.fw 'rhd "-""-'-.,Id n,U!!d!f.f!bn!!ty'0,19'77 OAllVlt.OT Cl I ..... ••••••••••-• .. • •••••••• ...................................... ~··••••••-· •••••••••• ••••••••• e e •••••-••••• •••••••·····-·-•••• .--.--.-..~=-------;.;_~------...;;;.;.~-...;~.;,_-11LL Mtw,.tlMdt e S.CS.1 1fe 1016 ............. ....._.n,a1tr 1000 ..._...._. l,iH ~.... W4 H111nUufw '1t1d Uwfw '9'1d d ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rflerS. I 100 ..................... , .... •••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ....... •••••••••••••• ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• f191MSUlA" • . • .... -................ . · 2lOPearl l8r dt'n· frpk z br. l ba. crpu, ldClSOlt. IWW• ~leoCa. lJ41 ...,.,.-..Cit lJ6t A'doll hotiM' 2 BR. i ba • BEACll1t'IXE8 &x40' F1amln10 In nlc• TRADE~N paUo. PUt. ;u;ft. · Acllts'. EDct. yard. Garaae 1235. .._,. •• • 324 ....................... n:::_u..::.. .. ~·~·~· tlOtn . • I U!\lqueZBlthO~need.s part. pool, clbhff. No . . U75 Yrly lea1e . mo.14S-2171 .... ._ ....... -..... Leueln£.Jcclu.1ve3Arcb '-'w--..-----~~~c i~' ~Jp.Walktot;•t U't hrn. uuo Cub. ~!ct;~~ f,gm~ ! 2 l 3 / 3 6 7 . 0 17 1. NEW APART HOME. 3 3 Br.' ba townhOUH. S.y.3bt-,2~ba.F R..V\I WewHowaoo. .... 1ar. U•td. bri(k pauo ;l,car '::'*11'..un1• ~Al~ s..mo.. rftltal. 7t4/675-3D4. 1packKu bdrm1• z a.. S1P•0rkltcn•11°~';YL c1°~~· Pvt bch. T onJt. Cell St a ir • ....,. OQI Sl.Jl.000 u1 Ne-t .. • .., , SUNK!N ti I 41 • a l • en.er Ruth Sachar ev• 'I .:JOO.. COSTAMISA So?00.000 bay v&ew home. •• v ni room M-U7lor846·S4.Shves. trl-4051 SOut.bJencl ~-Ovt'ott!A BE.RmA RENRY 'Tr Skyline llx56, new Avail. 2 mos ooty. m:>. w/MASSlVr.. brick 1,ie. ---------~20U LIA.SIS REALTORS Coach. Adult park. walk ~ rno.m.m1 OPEN BEAMS ceUtnp.. '""9e 3244 IOC • 2 Br. 2ba, encld 1ar. mDe1H1t.SanClcm. toaupennarket. <1MSK> .....,.\ vacant~ no fee. Call '••••••••••u••••••••• Sbr, Jba, 11• llv.rm ~to bch. amenltlee. MIDWEEK . 49Z-4121 American Mbl Hou. ~ IOIOUIUULTV c.pistr901eodt3Ztl ec, ntury 2l 83H300 ask IRVINE W/frpeJ,Hpdln.rm. gar, uu pd.$400/rno. OPEN HOUSE Steps to the be h i I 5S7-93SIO tl6IO-...c•u .. w ........................ orL a 28R. l'-'8a......... secluded back yd, ocean 3 8 r • 2 b a• pa tlo . I .... 1 ... ate dm· 645•9161 LSE/OPT 2 Br 1 Ba hse, MooUce.llo TownhH aBr 2 BR. 1 Ba . . . . . . . . . . vu. SG> + u.tU. 846-9040 J> ark I b c h nearby . LIDO ISLE rnacu •-a "' con o. .._HOA& HOSP. quiet w /focd Y•rd. $300 2ba bl 1:125 1 i 2 Bl\. z Ba ....... $.1'15/ S4:!0/mo. Sel~ wtl finance . '17 Skyline Ux'4. New CLEAN, LGE4 Unit Apt. mo.493-4874 pooi.~ mo nc 2BR,28a........... LGl)llMMll1 3250 3Br W/WOJOUY lnt.erlor. CHARMER t39, • co•ch, aduH park . House, by owner. H.B. Corae. .. Mcr 3222 ~=::~:ab;···· .$435~625 ••••••••••••••••••••••• btk ~h. Vacant fr re· Ir you lllte that old ~)1~erican Mbl $130.000.847·5713 •h•••••••••••••••••••• .,_,_. 3216 •BR aBa ·····~~Spac3Br 2ba"lC)Odo.Loll ~ 2 ba Eut Ocean· fuhloned country IOOk ma. -S. ol Hwy, newer. 3 br, 2 •••••••••••••~•••• .. ••• 4 sR:2\.; b~; ;u;.;;:: · ~ ot prtvaey 11.rf:C ChJldnm rrcxiuBr. 2ba, MSG yrl wttb used brick. slalned Quick Sale Mobile home SHARr ba, frpl, lodry. no pet.a. Tennl1, Swim a. HUU. 4BR.2~Ba •.• USO/ ~c:ome.'350 768-1221 or West Oceanfront :sir. llUI, ~ellinl fan.a and ''Obi'', 24"50. 1pace rent Adult 4 star mobile home ref .• car .• $495. 875-6900 ~vt comm. 2 Brh2 Bad eon· 5 BR, 3 Ba .....••.•• $895 788-0720. A&t. 2ba. rroo yrb' pe11t'd wood noora com SJ,.55, 138.000. Furnl•hed . uO. D /W, WI r I ryr. BIG CANYON Turtlerock Olen. New biped to produce a warm w/SlS.OOO antq. Orienta.I park. $89S.OOO ...,_ DELUXE 3 Br 2\-; Ba sns.ssi.im 38R 2'-' a. S700 3 Br a Ba. air cond, WW 3Br 00 beat street coz,yllv!ifienvlronment. 4PLEXw/Frplcs fumaU3S,000.788-S208 llV&LYC...-vM dplx. 61SV. Marlaold, •i 3232 • ......... cpta,fbcdpatlo,dbl&ar, $750/molse. tl:' J:cn'~uwrnt to ;ee ~~8:o11V1:Wi~~a: ~~~~ ..__fof'Mle 1200 RIAL.TOI 645-2411 $68Smo.644·3405 •••=•••••••••••••••• m>.~ OceantronuBronPrime ~..,!2bdru tu,r,n eyl eath. $138.500 =·~••••••••••••••• 3BR 2BA home. nice Lake Forest new cboke •252 Peoin Point Sl200 mo, ..... D\ w orma · B lit" JI Yrly ng 2 t>.ths $129 500 S.ACUS ocean view. u ans. lakefroot 4br, 3ba. wet ·..,._...,,_., Tbe lowest ·riced 0 · TRIPLEX. Near all Loh.._e_.~ 2200 fareplc.dbigar. ~/mo. bar. A/C. $495. Lowered WalwfrofttHws Ud P sbopplna. Ideal Pu· Southol~allleCounty. ----PrestieeRomeslMS-6646 for quick rental. •Br.2baexecuUvehse. Cal631·1400 o. lhouseunitwtth other .~antasllc view. Full ••••••••••••••••••••••• m4>9!Ml60ldays Spect . view. S4SO .. OPIH THURS. I ·5 In-law atucUo atTacbed: prl ce S 11, SOO . XI n t . l!J ACRE Newer sgacious & airy · mo/lse. 494-0122 .. ._.-.-. .. _.,.,.""-1111_ .. ,.-.. .. _ .. ,.-.. .. _ ... _ __. .. _,_ ... _ 123Vla%urfcll Garages.Sl.29.500. terms. Bkr. 714/522·2080 Level, all usable land. 3br,2ba me.So.ofHwy. Homey3Bd, l~Ba. Con-Lee t b r HarborVlewPortofino4 C• 644-7211 POIMraEALTY or876-s711 Building site or bnnt1 Frplc, laund., tge game ven.ient toe. Frplc, patio. vi ":m 3 C>w:rm.rm, er, 4 ba, bonus rm, pool~ Call496-S600 14.4 Acres. Rivers ide, youlr ml oboilehome.daldl ~i:.r~a:;!"c!iy~o. E1Toro788-SOM,530-1980 IJ523CNffosDa:htVllf£ w!:r.~evea.pays tennis &...!~ren ok. /.Jn ~ll1£l Bl\IL[Y & /\55Ul I/\ If S _.a.aMOUSa Close in. $6000 per ac. an mas K. Loa e 4Br2Ba~r lc.cpts,drps, OPENDAlLY 1595/mo._.,. . _....,.. ., Zoned fi horses Tenn with lret!$. Terms. Bkr. 2 Br 1 s. 2 blocks to ..... ,.... 00 .-. $400 Mhlioft Yhtfo 1267 Sat/Sun 1-4:30 call898-~ · 1' 714/522·2080or67S.5717 oce~n. no' children or :;;,_"""~ .-.... IA.II. TOfJP.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br, din rm, den, ram rm, 3customred resldenoes. R 1 d 1 c pets,67S-OU9eve View, Turtlerock Terr. 3 Avail Now. 2600 sq f\, new 2 patios, lovely hotedm~ O: --------lllf 449,447.443AvenJda 400 ACRES West of ·2 ot, up ex. osta On Leite, ffOl'leGUS view, Br & Fam Rm, beaut. s Br,·J Ba, kids, pets, lglol,Justrepaln m TOWNHOUSE Crespi. Corona. Tb.i.s property ls Me~a. $39,500. Pb ll Sooth of Hwy. Great 3 new 3 Br 2 Ba plush .-»rno. 752.()617 park· pool. EZ terms, out, cul-de·sac street, & loat Doell $14S,500·SlS4.500. not re~ fOl' develop mt. Sullivan, RJtr, 548·2103 BR., 3 baths. $590 Mo. Camel cpt.s, $495. 830-4315 $.'!9S, 99'7·l284 (714 > Back Bay Area. 646-5239 40'8o d k r h DavidD.~Realt.or attblst.i~~everala Momrt•Dnert Ageot644-4848 ..._. 32 ... •Br.2Ba.FR,cptsdrps. Br 2Ba frplc bltns at oc • o rt e sun 752·9031. price o1 $150 per ac., It a~__. ' 2 .. 00 Fowt• V-r .-prof lndscpd. $625. 5 3 Br, 2 ba Aliso Villa Con. ' ' ' ' paUo. Lge 3 BR, 2~~ BA, ..,,.,.,111 make an extreme· .._... "" COZV 28r, frplc. drps, •••• ... •••••••~••••••••• Mo"'lnadew 552·7.'JSO· do single story A/C drps, cpts, 2 car gar, near new w It h a II AM I 080 ~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts retrig patio $350 3 BDRM ..... Ba Pr u ·.. • · • ~· ~-1 ;_ 1• tned yd, access t.o pool. b' ad. tnvestmt. to bold INDIAN W"'" ' ° CONDO, lse eoo' Heuotro' ' • 1-· es ge 645-233> • ....... ,,, v ew "' poo · .aN>.' from .. -acb, .,..,,,. mo amenities. Call for dircc· ••••••••••••••••••••-• • ~ pe 9MV\ A"" "·k pets 83C>-5085 ~ vc __,., t.i for tbe future. Low taxet. C24 Casa Dorado· 3 " 2 . • area. _,., mo. a•· "" 4 Br 2 Ba FR. ts d . yrly, 645-4'998 ons. &45-3474 5-lm11rfield '.ferms avl. For. further eolf, tennis, poolspa, bik'. Neat. ~· 3 bdrm. 2 ba for Keltbll68·1317 prof lndscpd~P $625~5 t BR or 3 br & den. Bltns .• • 41dmt + ,...eyR111. ~~.k:!~r~e:~ ing. Pers. siluaUon de· hom~!n ol~mM.~111new 2STORY38r,38a,bonua Momlngdew. 552-7350; frpJc, cov. patio. Movein Sm.._. II Near South Coast Plaza. soc Inc' 541•2621 mands sale. $66,000, apl) t s. · n que nn. cm, frplc, D/W. $395. 6'5-2330 cond. $395 mo. 232.sl Via Caplstrc.o 3278 I I 1 I t Comfortable floor plan, ·• · rum; uni. (714) 346·3283; Homes Realtors67~. 714·963-4569 or S31·9545 Bahia, 549·8867 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• __..._ • ...,..... breakfast bar, formal THREEACIE 346-9837 28r +den. indiv. home A&t.ooFee TurtlerockOlen.n~SBr. 581-1100 ~!!!!!-!!!~I dining gather round -1-.1 h-u /te · pool 3Ba.ra~rm,teorus.pool •---------1 ... cH•RMl ... G ' -rmc ...... Out~C~ w . nrus, •spa, sec. Modem 3 br, 2 ba, Cplc, ownr$850.640-2418 3 BR 1~ ba, A/C. bllns., "" "' "" ---------•fireplace. S65.000. call AllutlliUesavallable -A Pr.,+y 2550 guard, S685 w/purcbase 'fNI. no wax Ors, cpt, great view. Cov. patio OLDSAHJUAM EARLY BLUFFS S40-l720 well-Full price $21,900. ••••••••••••••••••••••• optioo644-4!920 drpe, $395/mo. Greentree 3 Br. 2 ba w/firepit. $375. 22591 Via This c h arming 2 Xlnt terms. BKR. RESIDENTIAL BLDG 531-11545,A&t,nofee. house. Lrg lot. cul-de· Santa Maria, 549-8861.or bedroom, 2 bath & den Delores Mdl. 3Br. 21" ba, 114/522-2080or676-5717 PROGRAM Loe in. N.E. ,.__._ o....l.-..-~224 sac. $390/mo. 644-4i46. 581-1100 home has plush carpet. End unit on grnbll. San Di Co s t '"'VHU--JI • r•-1 b ·it l & $105,000. Prln only . c ... t .. 'ILoh/ gd ret~. Coo~~vf_!~ ....................... MoYelRTodayf Woodbridge Place, close t .. wporthach 3269 ~~ .. g~:.C:.'~on;t~st 6'4·2227 aft6pm Crypti 1500 Lilly, exclusive bkr for NEW. 3Br. 2Ba. near So. Super sharp, 3 bedrm, 2 to I.alt~ 3 BR, 2 ~~ fam· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ion&! CaJJ 646-2158 days; S.ClelftA.te I 076 ...tla I 090 •••••••••.••••••••••··~· North Ameri ca n Coast. Plaza, $450 mo. ba. fplc, lg fenced yd, rm, d&n·rm. Fin1sbe<l BOAT SUP W /CONDO, 3 493-0588 evenings & ...-Com~an1on c rypt an De I t c 1 (213) 431-7383 or eves xlnt·-a.-.mo. Mar.ch 15 ... Lease 9·12 BR. 2'h ba. Like new ..,...ends ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• P . Vi Memorial ve opmen o, nc. (213) c.u. o'Y.... _,.. _... ..... b w..,.... . ~--------1 ac 1c iew ml Btreh St, Suite 111, ............ , 142-4466 mos. w/o,,,_on to uy. $650.Agt.644-1133 ---------MARINERS aau-n1L Pk,forlnlo644·7443 Newport Beach. ca. CUSTOM 3br, 2ba. f ...... l. LEADERSIDPR E 567·9001 3 BR, 2 Ba. $385. New. ~u urv • '" · · BIG CANVO~. brand new Rec. fac's. Avail Mar. l. POINT UOADMOOR Ca: rdal 92660. mo759-02l3. pool w/spa, nu pnt, cptsl~•-·-~~~~~~'!'!'!'!!!!~ MOWAITIMG! spacious, single level 2 ~ CUSTOM VIEW 3 Bdrm home, highly up· Property 1600 I 0 & r---~ & drpe. Wlk t.o schools. AVAILABLE NOW 2 Br, $32S·S425 per mo. BR. 2 ba. town home -------- graded. Pool & Jacuui. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'ens ~su church & sbop'g. $415 2+ den lwnbome luxury 3 Br, $311$-$475 per mo. w/sweeping golf course Beautllul new 4 Br, 3 ba HOME $78.!IOO •BALBOAISLAND• Beautiful like new home. mo. incl pool service. shag, bltni; Atrium 4Br,$440-~permo. view. Lease at $700 per house on cul-d·sac. Lge Construct ton to begin n. H~ers Prime l~ation + estab. 4BR. 3Ba, bit in intercom 963-6505 patio; elec garage opnr, 4 Br. pool, spa, S700. mo.; sale at $125,000 fam rm w /ft'J)lc & wet- January '77,. 3100 Sq rt. 752-5353 Buss. Oppty. LORA Frplc w/heatalator & child OK. view Mlle Agent64().5S60 bar. Frml din rm, Mster 4 BR, 3 Ba oontemporary VANCE ReaJtor673-4062 blower Covered patio, Prestige 4 Br. 3096 Square Pk. $380 mo. I Br suite w /Ci replace. ranch stylo home. Many. ' wired for sauna. 12 fruit Roanoke $4 9 5 mo. ' -~. .. Harbor Vu Hms, Carmel 3 $545/mo. 768.1947 many xtras. Plans HOR.TH TUSTIM C.M. Commercial + R2 trees. Even has auto dog Jeanine, 752-1920 or Geo. 832·2322 Br + FR. nr park & --------- spcc1flrations avail. By n. •. nr. •Br, .,08".,, d·in lmplots $14.000+gross. feeder. All this only wkdys,8344616 Wow!Only$259.Nlce2br, school.SS75mo.752·0617 SantaAna 1280 rf. Sl"" 900 vw ..., P I Ag t ...,. 000 1 "' F ••••••••••••••••••••••• o ice. ""· . t f r me a r ea . n ..,.,, . Fr hQ rt 3b 2•~ gey'f. ee. LEASE H b Vle " <9.'~ rm, separ~ e am rm 586-4000 GALA PROPERTIES enc ua er, r, ~ Beachcomber 831-3011 ar or w $1.SS. 2 br, garage, Kids, ~"""'•"' w/used brick hearth, Mr. Frey (714)542.3456 ba, dble e nc l. gar. · Homes, 3 Br. 2 Ba, cl~e pets,snglsok. Fee ~·~ , 2250ul 1,_Q n , 1S8st7y500, '14 aper~. Tustin-Recently bit com· R--.. £--StovtetrefrlS3g7.5PooAI k& r,e( foUlllwytOll leodl 1240 RCllldl 1......_ !.?~.kAv&81.sc12b1~.l.FQorwin~ Main Rentals, 540-5370 c ""'-sac, . . n n mercl.al bldg of ateel & _ ~~ cen er. . s or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... , ou~ .., only,31-0087 concrete construction. GroYft 2700 Jean. 963-3961 or M4·1412 3br. 2ba, 2 1t«y hrnhse 551·2000 fo or appt, call 752·74M, s.tll LaguRO 1216 Now leasedS by N~rA ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Verde 3 Br, 2 Ba, w/pool. xlnt locatloa. RancboS. J . S Br2 Ba Saa Frl.SatorSun. only. S••••~•lln••••;•••~•~••••• Have something to sell? Auto Parts tore. an AVOCADO COUHTRY FR. 2 fplc's, bllnl, ardDr '340.84.2-1718 Lula Bey. aolt crae Waterfront·Dock, 4 BR. 2 praw g anc ome. Classified ads do It well. WI J 1 i am a . Agent. aBR 2BA home on 8. lncl M2S 83!M94S lake vu. 9>0 5471044 Ba Crplc new crpts Very pvt. Superb Ocean ----------1 5*«1oo; evs. 768·13S8 acres. Fantastic view. · . 4 BR, newly up(lradtd. · • drPs bltns' r100 844-9932 & Catalina view. SSSO. 11111111111-.i ................ -.~---·· ,,..,,...., 2000 4·Acres mature trees. M~A VERDE · Atlrac· Cloae to beach. 1425/mo. l'urtlerock Glen Plan 2, 4 or'15i.a6as • · Owner, 496-0295 Wed. Trip le Aattery h ............. ! ....... Owner must sell. Won't tive 3Br. 2Ba. w tw cpts, Ask for Keith. 1188-Ul? Br, Fam Rm, tennis. nltethruSuo. --------•I I as t Ion g . B It r . drps, dshw1br, frplc, 2Br. 2Ba UPIJ"aded Coo· pootl800.547·70U BLUFFS TOWNHOUSE HollMsf.aMshedor D ........... op1rlv! TI4/S22·2080or676·5TI7 gar,S420mo.540-3368 do, aecwicy wtbr/d.ryr r ,. __ ,,,,,_ ... 2b 38~. 2Ba. balcony IL •• llchsd 3300 -_-rr---J'T} 1 visb ,..:., ,. • etTace \AAIUU • .u>r, a. w/v1ew, ample storage. -• -I can find it for you. UHDER THE OLD S3lS mo. Dix Twnhse, 2 a rec, _...,l5S din rm <Dover>. Nr Rec $475. mo. 873·4426 or ··~·~·•..!!_••_!!_••.!!_9• Beach area specialist. OAK TREE Br. 2 Ba, new cpt, dbl Sharp 3 Br or 2+den. Lge cntr & pool. Ph 548-8104 6'2-4463 ~ .. w..n.wn .. Probates.foreclosures. gar , pool. 546·6299; r cd yd Desir bl 1 MHDARENTAL? S.nkniptcies, Divorce. 100 Yr. old s~ne house, 5.57-0848 !' . a e oc:a· ~EW UNIV. Prk 2 br. 2 ba Nwpt Crest lux 2 Br 2 Ba 1 est t rti old nos.talg1c 2·s tory . Uon. $425/mo. 642-0S6Sor detached home. Highly split level condo. Green'. &io::1ar~~':nc:S· barn. wmdm11l , lots of 48r, 2Ba. $435 mo. kids Ii 89'l·3385 upgraded cpts & drps, belt. wetbar fplc 2~ car TENEX can help you I• Ja•1-. lrWer out·bldgs, mobilehome pets OK. fenced yd, •Hew leach HoMse frplc, wet bar, vaulted gar tennis Pool 'walk to find the beach city rental Call (n4)673-4MS for caretaker or In-laws. 557-0237 f ceilings. Mstr. suite bea~b. $450. 645-8277 you need. EXAMPLES New Envelope Ouift huge trees. on 1 acres or . . G« ,ready or summer w/Roman tub, mirrored _____ . -----• l•--------1 all·usable land. Fan-Beautllul 3br, 3ba. FM. now.Walktobeachfrom wardrobe & pvt. patio. Forlease5005RiverAve, For sale by owner Santa tasllc view. S. or Orange FP, FD, nr bch. Only here. Walk to grade Micro. Din rm & liv rm. W. Newport. 3 br, 2 ba. Ana 4·plex. Spendable. Co. Ownr anxious & wiU $750. mo. 646-l03S school ~ hJ&h school. 4 open onto patio w /view. Call <213>445-6666 """' carry. Bkr. 714/522·2080 d br, 3 ba, huge 1undeck. Pool & spa ste ps to ,_Sl:_04_._ooo_.&12_._1...., ____ , or676-S7t7 3Br.lbadu~ex~cdl t. dblgar.SSSOmo.61UOlh library park "tenn. BLUFFSCONDOS glaars.t ,noSlpeOO c. ln'g. rs . St..536-1118 $125 mO 552-8587 Leases startJng at $450 COSJAMESA FOUIPLEX TWO ACRE ee. . · Month. Agent644-1133 MINI RAHCH S42-0'728. 4 BR, 3 Ba upgraded new rnE COLONY beaut. sgl i--------S850. mo. w /grdnr. f 3 BR .. ...:.~ /Wt · THEBLUFFS·Vlew! 4BR. 2~BA. 3000 sq ft Mesa Verde 3br, 2ba, 2 84&.(8)9842·7481Julle. am. • 5-1uur r Ul· "BR 2 .... b $69" M '--me on 2-lcvel acres. 3 car gar, r n c d yd , cl. $395. Own/agt 644-2932 ~ • "" a. " o. "" SEAVlEWTERR.·View Car gar, barn, tackrm, children & pets ok. Xlnt 3 Br. 1 ~ ba Surfside Con· UNIVERSITY PARK 3 BR. 2v.a Ba. SlOOO Mo horse stall. fruit trees, location, avail now. 1425. do. J:l'rplc. pool, patio. Comer Unit Townhouse BIG CANYON fenced & cross.fenced, lsl , last & clean 'g. 81Hl875«5J8.1827 VlLLAGEIII 38R,2~Ba.S700Mo. and lots more. Priced 540-1720or496-3634 N-~ Br, 2 ... Ba. fplc. 3 bdrm, 3 bath. Two below market. Xlnt "'" • .,..,, I terms. BKR. 714/522·2080 Large 2 br, 2 ba, S275. din area, wetbar, 1 blck fireplaces. Aval a ble or616.S717 month. 337 E. 21st St. Go bell. Land1c. No ~ta. n~! Includes use of all direct anytime. $495 mo. 968-0M2 aft4PN facilities. $495. 552·7552 --- . Macuab -lrvme \ CM, 2br hs kids ok $250 SJC 3br hs kids ok S375 CM tbraptutilpdSlSO FV 2br cottage gar S260 DPT 2bd dup view $300 NB 1 blk t.o bcb 2bd $325 HB cottage child ok $26.5 CM 3br 2ba dbl gar $325 L BCH 2br furn k&d S32S BAL 2br hse furn $300 CM 2br hs fplc kok $275 LAG ff 2br dp kid ok 1250 NB2br hse poolfp $325 PLUS MAMY MORE TENEX has 100'& or COii firmed vac. dally all areas all prices. Rental counselors on hand till 9pm 1 days a week. Prompt courteous serv. CALL NOW for more in· fo.smree 89 .. 919 I 19 .. 9H I 1 A OM.VPILOT Thu!!d!y,F•bN!ty10,1977 b Apale1B11Ulfw& ............ ,.,,....... OfflceR..W 440 ....... 1001 Martg~11,n.t A rt ... F -1..a...-. ......._ .... . I • ........-.. ..................... " .. ••• 'ttttt Jtoo -..................... o,, I I Jty Dliidi IOJI •r mt111wwww --.z &Hll--. ......_ I' 09 ,, • .._. 3140 -.... , .... •••-·••• 't'JROXMrA-ft C"at •-•·••••••••••••••••• "• .. •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••eeee•eeeeeea e•eeaaeaa••eee ... eee .. 1 eeeeeeeeeeee ............... -••• ,............. • -.....-.......-uo ._,..,., " .. _._ ..... .ILH& a...a.:..;:.;..a I I ~707 ,,,.-...;__~u-•••z u~-~•24 ..... •••••••••••••••••• ··--~••~ E. l'Jt.b St. Suite E. -·~-LOANS n.L~. ~r11r. a.a • ------.. ---eo.t...._ 3U4 alkl.obea .. i.· -.115;1:;. 1 PALMMISAAnS. 1319/mo.DoYteAS.ot'19 NEWPORTBEACH .. ..,.,,, ... ••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• •• •• ••••-•• •• ••• ........ ••• ••• ••••••••• ....................... br Pot ok. F:i... .... 111Ufl1J'JS TO .NPT . X1nt )'ear HNnd locaUon. AIM W TD a.o.i Xtra~Ubr,Zautilln llllANDNEW MatnftenlalJ 5«>-5110 BCR. , .00.700 1q.ft. epU.. Beller ln •uaomer. hinaTennaalllet19'9 el, tsts. Wint#. ll~ W. _.. ' Bacb,1&:2BB. drp8, A/C, am9Je tree C>trQiermovtnatromarea s.ttlerMtttC .. 8albot9C«!OS ~~' ... v Br. 28&, vie. Warner le fto~Sl95. r,ar1tln1. P,rom •$•, aod muat .af1 Co.,:tete '42-2 '7I 141-0&l I LSE a Br z Ba, $C75, 2 Br ft,. W --It and Goldenweat. $340 mo. Adult.a. No Pets ..-... ~ kttchen. Seats a eo. Ba, $37J. (2)J) 332·3270. 'l~~-·.. .l.A.Jw.: ~.8'2-8985 <smi!:'ia~:"JB!wpot\ •lMOFBEERENT• ~.TJM.E7~H.OO PllVAftPAITY Open Sat/Sun 10·4PM., CORONA D.EL MAR ~ It BR. Z~ ba & 2 BR. 2 Ba. Blvd.> No 1 .... nq. Dis oles. TaMS FACIUTY WUl 1*Y )DON for J'OQ.r m.ndSt. 1 Bt Towl'\.l'lowJe f le all conveniences. Nr ~ Adj. Alrpott.er Bolel. SADDLl'!BACIC 2ndT.D.aa.ma • rp · beach. 5 36 ·1$79 ftooml·rm.toZ800sq.ft. VALLEY -----CollhaMeH 372 Pool.tc:mls.Someocnn S · eve/wlmda f'llVllWt• LOWESrRAT!S.FULL Practice machinee ...................... 6 CaUllna vlewa. Close troll tht> P<'ltftA.lftvs of 11 pl~ forN Mt!"nd~ f)Mt IRe 3844 2"D UHfT Sf!':RVlCES 833-3223 tH leaoat •ell rd.•ted aP: A 1 a mt U••ft/ $40.00 Wiii ii UP ~"floe beach. rumbling w.11erft\lls and qui~ pools. Llsfl'n to the ....................... 0000 pa.rel & ecudpment. Get r.lllallft/ . *5tudl.o& l BR AIJU · sound of bubbll•'l9 streams and gm.vlfl<:I th1119$. • WOODBRIDGE tile Beacll ffOllS8 300 Sq.ft. deJuxe of· ln on llfOUDd noor 1n thla Lost & FoiJld ..-rv & Maid Sen Av all ~ur adult apor1ment home at Ploecreek \Allage Is PlNES APTS Ccntemporaey "cuual fices, S120 each. C.111. fast growfni area. Xlnt ••• .. ••-•••••••••••••• •PhoneServ.HtdllOOI ~~ atotalretreal Hereyoucon~JOYunusualprivacY l, 2 & 3 bdrm uolt•. ThebestolNewport'a M&o3UIOor6"19-3709 terms. A •119Cl•llh 1100 2378NewportBlva,cM Beautiful new 3 Br, 2 ba and luxury. · · Deal1oed like early eoodllfe Ull 117-42~0 ...................... . M84755or645-3887 duplex., flrepholace.'. REC. DrA'l'I,,. s T. California bunaalow&. •BeamedceUing• ()(c mp sqnCst. PvtH yba:.....2 Used Beau .... ca....A equip. sca•u I rft' . 1arace. c,oee to a P9 ... A na:n.1 avN PARADI E. awu tvnnb courts. F c 0 m s 2 1 o • l l s *2 POOi.a & rec centers nna, ac w .... •1 .., •• .,,, ah ~I~ SUSCASITAS beach.$4'75permo.Ask 5-Mmmlngpoolplusunlquti!vollaj>aUpool:Jocuul Pinestone.Ofcbrs3-S:30 •Plusbcrpta&drapes dress CdM. SUS. from 5 =.ator op. l~W£RS MJou~ to NB. l BR forMl&al,57s.23u . Sand vol~ll court. Mountain lodge clubhouse wkdays,9-5.:30wlmd.s. •Andt0muchmore 475-205l. 980-1.836or l73Baft5. RM furn. Adulta, no pets. h fl lac bill els M2·CMOO f\irn. baebelor SZ30 CERAMICS Exotic -Gulch 2110Newport8lvd.CM. """""n 'Y. 2 BR. 1 ba., \Mt rep e.convetsationpit. lar !b"T'·a.tuna. Unfum lltr 1255 SO>persq.ft. ac..ruu. &.og.aleodt 3841 HUaRYFOI 4001Birch-N.B. Mostl)iwbolesale Groin-Patter snJNNING lge 1 Br grdn w/lge. aundeck + patio. Huny lo the good hie <'Ind then ~lax. •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• Agt. 541·5032 ff Year owner bas plans GET OUT . apt. Pool & rec rm. $230. Garagesp. for 1 car. FROM $265 TO $3S5 harming Centrally mTSal!C110H OFC SP CE N t to take a mate &quit the Overheard: "He hu no ' 7LOW.18thSt. Aalt'forCathy Including He.al · located 2ar. 2aa: 2 blks 14338uperior · A ewpor business. Shop equipped friends. He brought WIWAM WIHTOM 1 be h. all w $335 Newport Beach BclL 1300 sq, f\. 3 ofc a. + w /00 cu. ft. klln. Big shop home a parrot and il told LAJe tw.. 2 .. REAL EST ATE 675-3331 On.-Aedmom. One S.1h rom ac u · · 646-1453 lg. room. + 2 toileu, Id. can· handle bigb volume. him t.o GET OUT." n••-,..~ ell Tw.)13.tdruocn.Two Batn mo.497·1340eves. cood. A8 ls $400 per mo. •~al boo1 ··"'lin •----------_.._, wrw, ... .,... A ta. Call: .._ ac wu g .., • nopets.$235.645-3971 OceansideofHwy,ZBR, 1300AdamsAve~inColtaMesa. APT.RM.AEMTIALCSH Room PACIFICRealEslate finance apeclal pro·Lost&Fo..cl SlOO 1 Ba. frplc, avaJl. 3/1. across fromOrangeCoastr...Ji-.... 1 ... ,_.11 e• 4000 grams at this facility. 1 Br, sno. utll. pd. Cpt.s, $MO. mo. 673-9149 bt1ween Ha-'-and f:•'-"~. ---Gene Hill 642-0200 Good terms. So. Orange •••••111••••••••••••••••, drpa, paUo. quiet adults. "'VI uuv-STUDIO APT.. located •••••• .. ••••••• .. ••• .. • Co. l'OUMO lllD 644-8158 Y. Beaut. 2 BR .. (714) 540·13m. NOW~ near Pottery Shack. 2 Sleeping rma '80-$1~ mo. Spac. 1SO sq. ft. ofc In Ull 837-4ZOO 96Ma83 ---------i a,.. ba. unit with apee· .._.,...._ Blk.s. t.o beath, 1 blk. All $50. wk. Share tlt/· Newport Center foe onlyt-----.::...:..=--:.=..:...:..t-------:-- Senlor Citizen, bach apt, tacular view o( bay & from shopping & bua. bath. Showa Mon-Set $100.CallDick~~ Mf9.hnltw• FOUND: Panot F .V. El Nido Trailer Park. ocean. 2 Decks, frplc. & Collha Mesa 3824 Costa Meta 3824 $165 Mo., lncl. uUUtles "only'•. ~au art lpm. Sml dlx offices ID Cost.a Sl.S0,000. p/yr and grow. area, call 5~·•154 to 16'0Newport Blvd. CM. gar. Walk to beach. SS50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refs req d. 5:56-0058 or Meea. From $80. mo. Ing. Owner wUl slay as ldenUly See tbla one! Nice 1 br, PW.w:M~IMTOM Tri·plex.1 br, bltna. cpts, THEIAYLEAF ~C~.~·hd:T.=: 548-5'154 lncldutll.751.arl national marketlng·i-11-0.-imd_:._Gold __ n_·m_m_ed_pr_e- slngles ok. $145. Fee. dr)Js, adlts, nopets. l Blk 2 Bdrms water pd $260 tion. Close to everything. ROOMS S25 wk up with •••CH manager. $35,000. will scrlpUon glassea oo _:Be=.=a~cb~co~m!!ber~,~63~1~·20~11~1-R_EAL __ ES_T_A_T_E_67_5-_3J3_l t.oabop'ng. $2105'8..:Sm BeaUUfui. spacloui n-Has Oak bdwd. floors. kitchen. $37 .50 wk up LAGUNA~ ha~ d 1 e • C 8 11 r 0 r .beach at Newport Pier 3 BEDROOM apt.a. Pool. pvt patios. Bllt·ln kitchen, 2 car apt.s. 548-9'755 Xlnt exposure corner on specifics. <Open 7 dayst 631-3388 • 2 Br garden apt, frplc, Adul18 NoPets A 1st I NorthCoastHwy.,street Um 751·3741....--------1 .... Trtr S37S, YEARLY patio,dshwhr,$245. 329A •ad c M garage. c ass ren-Buslneu or proreu level. 320 to 640 sq. ft. Found: Large Golden From $140. Gas & water 646-0111 557-2841 ~ · · tal.~~~EALTY penon. Walkt.obch.,lov: Freeparldng. Gfft&DryAowers Labrador Male. Nr pd. No kids/pets. 132 E. Close to beach 2 Br 3b lt 2 el)'bome84&-103S Hillie McCormack LAGUNAICH College View School. 16thSt,C.M.642-126S roomy, garden patio: S:ide~~~;-lc~aU~& Weatside _newer 2Br 494-0731 G..st~ 4150 Realty 494-7551 $17,000. Hunt.Bcb.847-4953 S?75.SS8-8566; 494.3324 pool. Adults. $325. No =~~l:Pcb'~i:!': :.fl~ lBr, North Laguna, walk ••••••••••••••••·~··•••Sm. ~ffice avail, in Next .ooe of tbe m~or Found: Male Chihuahua •--a.-L. 3748 Costau--3824 pets.64.5-3381or&:J7·9517 646-0l76 to be ach & stores, Room in my pvt bm for Fashion Island. Nwpt sboppmg attractions ln 1n Laguna Bch. 673-8064 ~ ..... ~ . S350mo. (213) 790-54.28 ret person. Gd food "d Center. $150 mo. 673-8167 town. Woman alone una· or497·3438 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br, no pets. Refng & Du 1 28 lBa d Its 0 b 11• .. ble to handle, since mate•---------c d H to ,_ 1 S225 p ex r , a u • 2 br 1 b •• ,_ t care. n us n e. .A.""--6 Offi FO lBR.,fll'eplace,lblk:to asa e ennosa s ve ... c .. mo. oopets,S250mo.1st/last. • a ups ......... ap ~. ....,...-. c•t transferred, submlt UND:M.lrishSett.er. beach. $295 + ullls. 2br apt w/fareplace, 1~ 968-8064 646-sea> w/balcony. 2 blk:s from 1 blk to 0 c Airport terms! Choke chain, Brookhurst 4M-9767 bath, range, oven, dis· . bcb. Walk to shopping & Sz oar R...tal1 4200 Suites from 's125 No Ull 837-4200 & Hazard, Westminster. hwasher, $320. Also 3 br z !JR, l Ba, encl ~~~o, & STUNNING 2 Br 2 Ba lge restaurants. $375/mo + ••••••••••••••••••••••• le a e r e q Inc Ids 531.2700 Mewportleoeh 3769 <.sep.bldg)$370. ~!1~,!_a~:. ... n.,<!_1 or garden apt. Pool, rec util. Avail March lat. 5 BR rum home on .ex· c ..... ,s.a~ jaoi.torlal svs Me.Clotllilq _o_s_t_m_a-le_d_r_k_/_g_o_l_d ••••••••••••••••••••••• 160 W. Wilaon .......,. -· .....,..,~ area. $US. 110 W. 18\h St. 6404236 after 6 pm. clmive Balboa Pen Pt. fM s';slni. all util. Suite NETS $3.500. afo retriever. Reward. vie IEST BUY Adult &Side l&2 br apts $315 mo. Dix Twnhse 2 Br, CM. S500fWeek. f'rom June 1. 200. 2082 s. E. Bristol, Prime beach toe. E·Z Bristol/Irv. 213~ Some people say you get Encl gar patio pool. 2 Ba, new cpt, dbl gar, BRAND new bach apts Newport leoeh 3869 OwDen 714:6'J3..362l). Ne. ( 7 14 > s 5 7. 7 o lo run. Established 34 yrs. whatyoupayfor!Weof· Like new, no'pets: pool.546-6299;557-0848 Frplc. Refrlg. inci. $210: M••••••H•••o•u•···· RlllhlhtoSltlcre 4300 <behlndCarl'sJr). Ull 751-3741 OST Mlnlature • fermore.Andthepricels 644-0878 ZBr 1 ba bltns $250mo 6'.5-8256or979-33T6 Spacious new 2 & 3 •••••••••••••••H••••••.-.URmal 4450 r__...a...l'-.,.~S Schnauzer, 2/6. Salt~ leu. Membership in a • • · · Bdrms, 2 bath units · _..""11"9' -pepper. approJt 201bs. vie· Health Club. A tennis I-SW. new dtlure J.st le last. 121 E. Bay· JUSTComplet.ed. Beaut. l across from oceanfront & MALE T 0 SH A R & ... •••••••••••••••••••• $15,000. SALES 40th St. N.B. 833-0552 cl!Jb. Free tenni~ lessons. townhouses. Frpk, encl. 71A/549-3826, 213/(31-8568 br apt. Freestanding new city recreational de· DUPLEX ~SAME LAGUMA IEACH Located near college & FOUND ml ed 1 Billiard~ .. swimming. gar. 2 br & 3 br, 2 ba. 2 BR•VIEW•DLX trplc, bltns. Many win· velopment. lmmed. oc· 5...a1 schoob in fast growing x ma e P~P Golf Driving Range. from$32S 642_1603 dows. $235. ~ or cupancy. Families & c.tDown C dalStore Sad~eback yalley, fan-approx 7mos old vie Saunas + great ac· · BLTNS.ADULTS-$295. 979-3376 pet3 accepted $335 up OlllMfW . tasuc potential not yet Bushard & Adama. tivitiea: Sunday BBQs. 2 Br, l~ Ba, bltns, D/W, 548·5419Days 675-4911 Brier · · U•ftMJEl»etases! or c.an be used as pro-realized, Ideal family set 644-1230Ca.rla Parties with live bands. cpts, dr)Js, gar, aduJt.s, 673-0512 Evs/wknds BAY MEADOWS . Share a borne ~esstonal office .. Located up! F 0 U N D m a I e Free Sunday brunch. no pets. 5484.291 ; 645-0527 WANTED: BACHELOR Spac. l & 2 .br apt_s, encl. 3 br condo + bonus, 2 ba. 1 or aptment. m1 older . stboh ppmtg· comt· UBI 837-4200 blk/bm/wht Basset vie Your i:ent dollars go even rurlhe r•••A t errific main.tenance crew, pro- fessional management stare that cares, and friendly neighbors. Models open daily 10-7. Sorry, no one under 21 & no pets. Roommate service available. Mon· lh·to-monlh occupancy. · gar, pool, JacuzZl, close yr. old model. Back Bay. l"\...,,,.... 01.AnJUHuMrn:D P ex. w1 rus ac a • . FoxhollowYillage APT for clean cut, qwet tobeach&college. Avail. Cpts. drps, bltns. $425. ~r:.-~phere. $175 Mo., utll. U9UOR STORE Qibnllo, Westminster. 621 W. Wilson St ~t~t. about St5o. Mar.1st . No kids or pets. 64.'>-9543.646-1164 Uk~~~ ~dby landlord Gross$26 500 mo 548-6859 646-2010 Fr. $2:.>. 646-0073 Q) ebM-WweiNq MISSION REALTY Nets P>OO. ~o. Growing r-FO_UND __ :_Y_or_ks_hir_'_e_T_e_r; MODEL OPEN 10.SPM 2 Br, 1 Ba apt. Refrig, up· 2 Br, .2 Ba lux. apt over· Forover5yrs.832·4134 985S. Coast, Laguna area. SUper buy. Call im· rier or Silky male, vie Ertioy the privacy of stairs, garage, xtra. 3 BR, 2,,., BA Stu<!Jo. els. lo_okmg NewP<;>rt Bay 494-0731 med. Other to choose. Florida, H.B. 960-4139 your own home w /lge park'g. Sm. pet maybe to schls. & shop g. $310 with balcony & fll'eplace. F. rmmate to share 2Br NWPT BCH STORE Ull 751•3141 r---------- fncd patio att gar wood OK 728 "F" W 18th mo. 998-0659 833-9234 Penn. apt. Mar 1• reas Found: Grey & Blk . • · · • · · rent kit priv ideal loc ~AvonSt $275/mo s · d burrung frplc, pool & $225.Call: 846·12A6 NEW tge 2 Br w/patio & BEACH RENTALS 67~eve . . JenyWynn <2U)477-770l Moped Dealership tripe Male Kitten. ~acuui. 2 br, 1 ~ ba start· st«age. 22.4 Avocado, nr WINTER. SUMMER $7000. PER MONTH W h It e co 11 a r . N r . mgat$3SSmo. 3 br, 2 ba. Me5a del Mar Fairview & Nwpt Blvd. YEARLY Young active prof. CANNERYVlLLAGE Partnership split forces Westcllff Shopping. Call area. $27S. References. sass mo. Cal1Sid839·S368 B 1 unt $400 penoo. 23 seeking same 240SQ.FT. sale. Shop bas exclusive aft6pm,645-8175 Call7Sl-9905forappt. or845-J408 2 ryry. · · tofiodandsbare 2brapt. ~;Wkdys8·3:30 right_,inarea,topCout Now renting 2 br $225 & in Newport Bch. 633-5444 Hwy loc. Get in on new Oakwood Garden Apts B Irvine (at 17th ) <n• >645-0550 $235. Adults, no ~ts. ? BR. l Ba, w /encl patio & day 673-60t8 eves Stores for rent, Newport fowld bonanza. 6 Days, Pool crpts drps stove& carport. $22$. mo. 1st & ' Blvd at Harbor Blvd . shorthours,easytermsl i----------refrig. N~t to ~II shop· last+ dep. 752-0160 doys, Roommatetosbare2 br. 2 downtown C.M. Various UBI 137-4200 male Collie, Sable& ping. 313 17th Place at or642-5673eve/wknds ba ~pt Promontory sizes. Bob,548·1313 ~ht, vie Magnoli~ & F.d· 1700 ~~~~l?8ver) SantaAnaSt.00·2464 EASI'SIDE 2 Br 1 Ba 251 MEWPORTMARIMA ~~:t. $200/mo. 673-6647 CORONA Del Mar Store COIMLAUMDRY JDger. Westrrunster. ---------i PIMECREB Lge 1 br Sl9S. Mesa del 16th Place. Sep. unit: pvt 919 Bayside Drhe over 1000 sq. ft. Top loc. ~br=C::~~ Reward. 893-0923. Yearly 2Br1 Ba. S3SO mo. UYES UP Mar area. nr. schools & yard, nu cpts & drps, NEW 2 br & 2 br w/den Wife left. young man S8Xlmo. 673·8033 s hopping center loc. FO u No . German lblocktoocean. TO....r: ............ r. shopping998--0659 sns.979-3848 wateri~nt apts. Luxury wants to sh~re 3Br l-..a........&..alRetltd 4500 Goodnetonbooks. Shepherd, w/blk mu~le, 675-0475 , , ~ ~"'""K; a p po 1 n t men t s, pvt house, will consider cou· _..... abt 6 mo vie M gnoha & ---------1 beach,boatslipsavail.to pie or couple w/l child. ••••••••••••••••••••••• UBI 751-3741 · 8 Beach duplex, yrly · S385 Over 500 tall trees and 10 2 Br stud.lo, util pd. Bltns, Dana PoW 3826 tenants. Adults, no pets. w. Slde C.M. $150 mo. + Lm' w /front ore, lg. rea.r Adams H.B. 968-8274 per mo. lse req'd. 2 Br. streams with W;llerfalls ~~~71240' 1978 Ma· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-8414 ~ util. 54().5273 days, or door. 1240 Logan St.. Umt PRIMTIMG SHOP. FOUND: Black/tan Male 968-8867or894-4652 create a relaxing setting · Very large 2Br. 2ba ~9777aft4PM L,CM. Day540·5710,eve S2000. Monthly net. Loe. Shepherd. Vic. Ward & for your spacious new l ~ew Dix 2br, East C.M. w/~e & refrlg. New 2 BR Townhouse, patio, 646-0681 in h I g h d e n s it y Talbert, FV. 834·5196; 2 BR Condo w /pool/Jae. or 2 bedroom apart· Firploe, dshwshr, lge pamt. pvt balcony. 1st. pool, jacuzzi. 1 Mi. from Walk t.o OCC. 2Br furn. nidustrial·commercial 963-2(177 "iew of th\ bayd patio, me nts. From $240. patio, adults no pets, 388 last&dep.496-0195 ocean. Avail. 3/L $365 Sll7 mo.+ ~ util. 25·50 1,000 & 4,000 sq.ft. clean area, whichisexpanding--------- g a r' w 5 r / r Yr · Furniture available. BaySt.642-0461 afl5. Sunny "Parkllng clean 2 646-1958 · F. Dorothy 979-5897 or units. 220 3 phase pwr. rapidly. Present owner REWARD ror ladles tan S375+util. Tom B . Small pets OK. Adults , ... 644-21K>Oext296 idealC.M.loc.673-1417 not capitalizing 00 purse. Left on bench at 546·3693 dya. Wknds only.O!ficeopen9:00tol..arge 4 Br 2 Ba, lndry B.R. bltns! gar, ocean growth in his Ideal Joe. footofCrestSt.CreasSt. ~1197$ 6:oo. 2300 Fairview Rd. area, encl gar, balcony. view, no kids/pets. $240. PEHIM POINT Wanted super career Sta1age 4550 Goodterms! L.B. 2/8. Contact Daily Only 1145. Supreme area. Costa Meaa. Phone $400.~1091;645-7762 493-7231 BR b i t $350 woman in 30's to share••••••••••••••••••••••• UBI 837-4200 Pilot 1186 Glenneyre. Sludio,allutU.F-. ~D>O Partre-•for "-v1·ces,' .. e ..... ~.•--L. 3840 2 O~EAMFROMr gorgeous 1300 sq. ft. Smallboat&trailers,ren· L.B.494-9466 ..,.. ..,. ....,. 06 -...,. --... Nwpt. Bch apt. Call dys, tat space, St.00 per foot. ........... ...... 1.....a.-1 Beacl>comber,631·2011 2 Br. 2 Ba, den unrurn apt 2 ~· beams. nr stores. ....................... 1.BR, 1 Ba. wntr. S180 6444492: Evs.67:Hi950 Limit length 22'. 1819 MUtOl"llOll'le -• WST:1·29, sm male tan See Park N......,.,..,rt under w/patlo. Mature adults qwetadlts.$21.S.642·1276 2 BR,2 ba,yrly$4SO Monrovia Ave CM See Bookspro~e$30.~.net. Shepherd/Collie dog ~-,.., .1~ N ...... or64.'>-2610 •OUVEPJLRK• 3BR,2ba,yrly$700 Maletoshare2br,l 'Al ba. u-orcall~ · E·Zopera~1on.Motivated w/blk markings head/· untucn. apts Newport on,..,. 0 ~.... ,. STEPS TO BEACH Male/fem. 25·35. $130. ""6A sellei: as~mg on $.55.000. tail,notagsorcollar,ans Beach.. Furniture avail. Mew IW .. A.pis #2 2 BR Townhouse, lge APT HOMES 3 BR, 2 ba, unr. $425 540-9.126. C.M. Storage garage S2S mo. but 1nv1te a ll orters. to "Poteat''. Nr Fair & m4>644'1900 27S E.18tbSt. C.M. patio. 1 ~ ba, gar. Nu 2 & 3 Bdrm., blt·lns, 3BR.2ba, wntrS350 NEED MaJe2Sto3St.oahr 19S9 Maple Ave, C.M. UH8lurryonthiso 7 n 5 e. 1 • 3741 RFEWa iArRvDi!ec! ~ ... 77 c. M. 2br, Winter or yrly. 631·3003 Eastside. $250. 631-0995 cpt.s, drps, encl. gar., all 2 BR, 2 ba, wntr $375 3 br house $122• 962•9740 Apt s. 646-6505 .....rve 673-1674 LoftlchtApt 3BR 2BA. near fark. ~;~<V~~S4HS66, ioam· Eves. · Rettta11Wmted 4600 tCECREAM Lost: s~. fem. Burmese. 5-lltL.,. • 3716 , .. 21aw jLoft B\.llltina, fl rep ace, . . FEMALE Sbr. 2 br. d Ix, ....................... MAJORFRANCIUSE Please call 557·1909 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Immediate occupancy. encl:_~0~•~/ • Cd.M. S200+ ~ utlll~es. Oluple wants to rent one Grossed Sl46.000. In '76. 9'79-4321. Reward. 2 BR. 2 ba on t.be ocean. Pvt patio. gas frplc & moo · •AllMWoptllooMI 640-15946-SPll lBrapt.furn/unfumSan Outstanding~· Orange LOST fem Irish Setter. FUm. $700 f S600 stove, full kitchen incl. NEW TOWNHOUSE, 2 Bring your kids & petal _a_eme_n_te_Ar_ea_4_98_·1_687 __ 1 Countyloc. Tratnlngpro-Brn collar "Brtdgette" Total secufit;'.1 e~at.ocs: reM1. Pool & rec room l BR, deluxe, S280 /mo. Lge 2&3 brs, appliances, ~ R..tal 4400 vided. Bank financing Reward 493,7241 r«.facillUes.499-2835 yrlease.Gas&waterpd. Adulta. Call Dave encl. garages, cpts & •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ....... 1/lftYelt/ avail. Agt. TIME,1 ____ • _____ _ HAYLOFT APTS S46-4141. drps. Move In now & get 1Br1 Ba, West.cll(f area. 60' PEil sq FT AncmCe 751·1400 ~ lw• 283 A d C M $100. off J.st mo. rent. pool, no children or pets. 1617 WESTCLIFF·NB ....................... •--.-G-l_FT_S_H_O_P_* __ hrlGMll ........ d voca 0, . . NEWBREEDAPTS 847·756610AMto5PM S?75mo.646-5681 AGT.541·5032 ....... . 5350 ....................... M~~ ~ ::lpm 1 br w /loft, frpJc, applns, ' .. e 1 & 2 Br 2 ba sec 2Br 1Ba frnlc Eaatbluff ~'I 5005 plus property. Prime loc G•ll'd ->•02 pool jacuzzi encl gar ~ • · ·,. · • 150 I W---•LILI Dr -....-on Balboa Isl. LORA Drildog problem? .... -••••••••••••=••• 845.0143 Aduits $2GO m~ 393 apts. Adults only. no NB. Adulta. 801 Dom· tranolRT • ••••••••••••••••••••••• VANCE, Realtorm-4082 Call Alcobol Helpline 2llWA_,.OMT Lee 2 br cottage, E .. tde Hamilt0n,645-44il · ~~i tt1a~z~~bF::!i lngo.cru:M3/644-~6Sl =FlnanclalCtr Colll1Wfftgalu7 STEAL 24hrsadaySM-l830 liuiltina. -s, drps, B· C.M. frplc, beam cell. r-.VeryCleantbr,crnt, S320mo.19132Magnolia, 2br, MWlY redecorated, Callon =:~,recgere ~~~ru5•~ .. AcPtilve locaJall Closedsao·shop.Soldfor CariPnREGfi coNnAfNTlde?ntla l 8-Q. b .... ;~k. garage, Encl.gar.S300.S48..ul0 ~!... bltns, paL La~n"d. 962-1800 all We kite.hen & bath, <714)•• ..... next246 """' s....,'6s. ease c $22,000 9 mo ago. $435. -. ;;r.' Adlts. No pets. S210. · gar, st.epe t.o water. PIO. .,.......,.. ~15~te~~J: fl~~: Balance ctue $7900. Best counse ing & referral. 3801FlNLEY AVE NB Ptpptt wood AMI. /Call 642-026$ aft 5pm New lux 1 Br, S21S. 3 Br 2 mo.MZ-~orM0-5650 lf You Need A Staffed Ii: We guarantee to please buy in CM. Full price Abortion. adoption & JACOIS REALTY . "NEW &NEAR NEW" 278 E. 16th St. . Ba, bltnJ, $37S. Child, 1 Br Park Newport apt for Furnished Office, call S'19()0 caah. 557-9659 keeping. 67., 11.11.10 Cpts., drps, bltns, ill. smlpaOK.1~18 b I 1 c ll THE EXECUTIVE you. 751•3741 APCARE 541·2563 -patJo. Washer & dryer East.aide quiet 2"3 bdrm eu . ae, yr. a SUITE Rent Includes INTERIOR i-------------------t bkUpl. 1 cl 2 br's. from unfurn W/patio. Some l br, encl. aar. laundry 6'4-4668or7BJ.3l8l. f/time recept., pbone & UNITEDBUSINESS DECOR:"TOR •SHARON'S* BUENAPK·~·1112 S20S. Ready 2/15/77 w/frplcs.Adultaonly.At· ~1n~,7blbfrombeach.Outoftbei~$150.UUJ mall service, utll & INVESTMENTS P/tlme. Aaaoc1ateforfast OUTCALLM•al!>•GE Brapt.a. cpt.s, ... _, bltns ........ ~ ...... or•.n ......... 1 _. "f~ • • 1 et~ , •• f 1525Meaa Verde Dr E ........,. f nit b l"1QA pool. 'The Villa Woods ~ _._ tract verents. pd.Snglsok. ee JaNtoria . ~)'. s .,. o c ...... -.111 ur ure us. .,1234 m.sa.U.St. (n4)521-7072 Westside 2 br $220. Cpt., M•tW.-Aph 3 Br, 2Y.a Ba, fplc, din rm, MainRentala,540--53'10 equip avail. Ne•port <~~.c!t':~!':> Sm. lnveetmt. Will traln ..___ i-•...L.-...a ~•o6 dJiis, atv. Children OK. 17T7$anta Ana Ave, CM 3 blk.s heh, no pets. $335 .,. .. .,...BLUFF l l 3 b Center. 840-54'70 UBI n....n 7 daya mature or retired person "'11!E EXPERIENCE0 - - -548-9580atl.5PM 6'6-5542 mo. wtr pd Aval.l now . ..,.,,.,& ove Y r --:-:-:-~=---=-v:=.-~=~1..:ooly:::!.:..:· n:.:4:::..e31=.:-0060.=:_ __ Adult motel. Clo&ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968.o652 condo, P~~~-o, d.bfl 1ar Pril me locat18on In hHunt· MANUFACTURING KITES & ICIYS circuit TV. For Reaerva· l·BR. carp, blt·lns, prtv. 2 Br w/balcony. Close to lBr, $210, all util pd, w/opnr.,.,._ ... rec ac's. ntton ettc on Patentedltern GIFTS a• ......... -Uoos,645-396'1 deck. Oarag&. Year park&abopping,oopcu adults, no pet.s, 383 W. 1 Br, pell! O.K. 3 blks to 213-598-2135 8roiokburst, 800 equare 1 Unique pt~e of. equip. --.r-~ leuecmly $27SMo. Bkr or children please. 8ay5'8·9516 ocean. 326 13th St. $210 PARJ(MEWPORT teet. Single, garden type d Be your own boss on *KAREN'S* 6"·i:w.39 Tos . 752·7150or548-7964 MesaVerde2 bru.,StaJrs. ~_:~·4ll ·Sal8 ; Bache lors , t or 2 :!:'!:.-~!!~:n:C:a:k: ~~~PJ:;'~~~ea:~ =:~~~n~r~·~~':! OUTCALLM.ASSAGE cozy 2BR UPPER $245 Lge 2 Br, Pam llm, 2 ba, New cpts. Refs & credit Becbooms &Townhouses lni· Call Mr. Plummer owner unable t.o bandle. will train. A steal at 6PM·2AM 838-1780 +uW.,adu.lta,nopet.a,nr paUo,fplc:tntriplex. Nr app.$240.4fl6.li36 3 BR, 2 Ba, walk·io From$249.50 863-678'7 Can be relocated. soooo. +inventory Dick "'IORTIO .... , Bay,noaar, "r'"613-:i003 ahops, no ........ 637-8828 cloeets, dshwshr. frplc, Spectacular spa, total . Leveragew/29%down. p k Bk 67 .. 7348 "" " , evetwnd.s # v (714) .......... $295 pvt patio. Owners apt. recreation pro1ram, D&UXIOFRCES Ull 751-3141 ar ' r. .,. CounselingfcRefmat New 1ardeo apt, 2 Br 2 Close to bch. Children social proaram. a DOOla, 8 Comm1 le lndstl spaces, to Loe 5025 Preg. teat·avall. "knds ..._Panh!lilla 3107 .2 Br. 2 Ba, Mesa Verde, Baat.udlo,encl ~ cpta OK.$375.mo.892.o7'5 tauilseow't4.AU"a.shlon 200to2000sq. tt. Aalow 24HrHelpllne5'1·9495 ....................... J'/Pi OIW. 4!0Cl. garage. " drplc NO Ph.'1-:s. No ----...-.. l.aland ifamboree & San uS!'aq ~ ~~~ NAT u RA(. FO 0 D ltt Ztlcl& WT.D. $mYrb'2br,2ba..2atory, ::_~~ no pets. $275. ~ a1~reLntug21 ':im; Joaqulf\HllllRoad. Minton vte o veaa. e&DClwl1cb buslnesl. Fdao1• LOANSAVAILABL: MASSA•t 2careoel.pr,.bakony. -.u or ya Deluxe downatain apt '714U44-lt00 H•ndy to S .• Frwy. tastic ease.Current a• Credltnothnportant FIGUll-MODILS IG-1803 Coilh W.. -•• .....__ -·· w /lara• Milo. ~c, encl Call: 83"'1'400 ly cros• approx. $300. e1Mlll8I Broker ISCOITS ------lnd I SUbmh your cub offtr.1--------ln Ute sun. •ns. U\11 pd .... -.......... -... -.. -.................... aarqe, r1 ac, * 1 OPENHOUS&&ATl-4 la't,fw..eOfffcft J'.dlU-.lnc . ..-u. OUTCAU.OMLY ~elalt. fee ecsuu.. J)O peg. -mo. Sped.acularlldoltle AvZ 675-8141 631·3111 atn..--,~o Sl1ftSHlfl(i/ ~~ _ _ ~•PIJ'Un•··• -.....-...v-.~.-t1m1mo1·211'1Mavall ••nn••nM•••••....... lNQ.UDES UTlUTtES 413 Via Udo Soud A wtMtng comt>lnolton Brand new ( r pl ca, f11'>e73-12.81 oroduttopampemhomes Dtw's, ex.etpt'l Trl~.1~~~~~=~~1 Wltfllu.xu1Yoppolmment1Qncl 28R $325/ 38R 1380. S.Ct••• 8UPlf6 rtcfeaflon GT o premium 8S2·1'187 Ail· No ree. toccJtloo. Tennts • gym • 1t1tn:JS>V 1PO • Mlmmlng • bllllonls. on.. Two 8ldfOQml, ont 8o1h 'i .a.~'~Me•e.• -==A ............. - ' I At•s~uit ....... ,, .. kw Cal act• t 1 tts..ta. HJ ids • 1 Pila ,,..,.,.,. ....._.,... ...................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... . .......................................................................................... . Arcblteaural la Struc: °l'Y&JUllatbotne.an)'klnd. Reinockll~AddlUon1 Cabcllet'O" Soos. Eitpr HANDYMAN.CarpHitry, MRS. KINGS Carpet, , ... Yam-Castle VKRYNEATPAttH ERAMlC Tlle. New or .; tunJ Plam. Rmdl la hu-rata. will pickup It Accent Bklf • Uc 82810'1 1ardener. fr eata. re· electrical. plumbln1. 9 Cleit.n.ln~ & PalnUnt Co. Av••&e Ext.r l Stry S34S JO~ •TSXTU. RE recnodd. ll't ..... scnl Jobi IMWCONtnacUon.R.esld clellvtt.~1 &54-310tor -&l4·Z078col· umableMMl54afl4pl'n AMtolPM.847.zm "WE 00 JT ALL" i&ry$MS,lnt.rM5rm ~eeEst. ftU431 ~Uf.adSliAL '• '~c;;,'l/1nduatrla Capa.bltformereicecaec· led. LAWN6ERPR&EEST Relcneni.ngaUslies,lret 83W.'let Priewlnclmat.r'l/labor PATCHP~ERJNO Sil•lce • t 'y to auht over LEEM.JARVIS Mow/Edte/Clea.n·UP9 pickup & aellvery 24 hr IMMACULATI Guar,lnatd.rrt.een. uA.LLTYPES•• ~ •tllllta; burdened business Addlt'a, Rmdl'g, Hl'l 8-S. RJaLAWNSer83H'71t 1trvlce. 842·0114 aft Cltaat n 1 Ser v Ice Ted.GM900or~l.34 fneest. HM8Zl5 Removal•. trlmtnlftf • ...... •••••••••••••"• s:nooa at home-or Ph9Q..3200, Llc 3178S6 S:IDpm. SatJatad.I G t..s WORK GUARANTEl!!D ~nln.1. fl'ff est. Uc d ~~=· ~~~:V1!: idblt. CallM0-5M7 PUT A ROOM OVER ~~~~~G Handyman. Odd joba. m.TT7'6 oo uaran lntr/Extr. Free tr.t. =~it:.•J: Uy tnsuNd. Ma·_. sa.oobr.MS-<15'74 c:.,.tS.-.lce YOURGARAGE. Conll>lettJoblac.leanup Quilty workmanahlp. a..co.tTa •mlbpr."2-0285 e.st.lowrates-....a mrnta1. topplnlf, rt· ----------t• .. •••••••••••••••••••• For rroe eat call 831-8085 P'reeest. -.a:see R e a s . J l m ....................... St te ll 1 d 1 movtna. cleanup. Wl.nter BabygltUn,. Mature re Carpet Man wlll lay yourt Ph n a & fl nan c In 8 750-9354~·9117 •1 c. Mure · 1°W ........, rates. Lie /lnard. Tony Uabie, drtvee Xlnt reta 0 1 R 1 & available Prof Ja~ Land.K9p-Proteaalonal lac Ta x pr cea too. Exler .or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~S~ S2perhr.e•M5'1' ' Je.:.:':.oc,, ~~:..~ork Ke:nAbren~fl fXOYE lq Ir Gardening. ,._ee • ...., Preparat.lon for lndlv • •PeciaJlat. Try me.C-11co PLUMBER-Repair. re· -------- at bl.uer aa~inp. Fre$t BWSherbacoff eK.MS-7072Geo.lbuabl ........................ Bus,lneas. 7SZ·2481 8S.sw pi po. lnslatlatton , ........ Babyarttlns, my home. MS-U Ucensed&Bonded Lawn&Gardensen Cln· stll)loader. dump I.ruck. Anytime PETE1'SPAINT1NC urvlcea. O. Gidley.••••••••••••••••••••••• W9ekdaya, vie Otani•• u lite haul' • • , hauling, tree wort. grad· Fonner IRS Aaent olfen Expr'd. Reas Rates. ~~. R ln EJltl.bb: BNd· 2.2nd.C.M. 83S-25n P r o I C A R P E T ~l1Rconldt.ra~. UCom· i!'5r00 rates '7:.Z .r:;:' I · ing,demo,etc. 7S1·3930 complete profeaalonal l"rH Est. Call Gene 0 -~ VERS Pl b ln1. wrltlna. epelll'!ll. Bab a.EANING. floor & win· m J ea . "'lera 001, · · • taxsav 983-203$ m>04S8 H 11._A um · 81'8Jnmar. penmanship. ,..1tt1n1. my home. dow care. Dutch Malo· rm lldda. gen carpentry. Okinawa Lancbc 1 ,,, . Ina & HeaUq. Free eat. Reu. "Cert. lf you need Any age. Nr f'a.irvtew & teun~ServlceS37·1.S08 Concrete, 1peclall1ln1 Gardenina Mal =. nc. H -'9 &..dlcaplllg ExcellentPalnUag SlOHr. Honest It Reliable one calJ831·3MS. Warner. SA. 549-2103. driveways. fo'r est. AB Cleanup.~ nee. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Int & Ext. Reaa. Free Svs. Bo/A Ar llstrcb1 --·------- WW babJalt ln my hom JohnRomeroisback. Conatructora. St lie Haullng,mo\llng.cleanup T4tA Maintenance • est.Call$48-2'108eves 847-0383&7Sl-3l!i0 Tut.crinS. apeelallliq lo da birtb to i Steam or Shampoo 320388. ~3MS. Gewal s.rricet $7/up. Treework. Re~. Repair Landscaptni 6 ._.__ readina; e lementary ya, our )'e RepairorOeodorile ••••••••••••••••••••••• fast.freeest8'2-4S9'7 Hauhn. 730 PAINTI NG. Int/Ext . ..._ • ...,. math. exper. refer. old.IMT--0997. BEST PRJCF.s! Call for Electrical SHOPPlNGSERVICE i 847·S . Reas. dependable. Free ••••••••••••••••••••••• avallable912-86'77. Bab 1 1 ho information. S31-0101 ....................... Ca.II R eat. Call Jay 64S· 796S Roofin1. Save 20 to 25% on , SanyaJtt 01.1. my I me ELECTRICAL SERVICE BA BARA BofA" Masten:hg acptd. a new root. Ca1Jfar rates. W...w Clu • I uan \;Apo, ots Cs•RtfCo-:reh CALLS SlS/hr. Call <714>$40-18S3 for usable ileaia. Fen· Doo.&t6-0038 ...................... .. TLC. trained Nurae ••••••••••u••• .. •••• .. 842-8233 HANDYMAN·H & cea /bldga removed ~aces-Planters Papering & Painting. ~ Crystal Clear window ·• Aide,Julle49a-'7820 PATIOS WALKS A t C iomt~' 5S72005 Bnc Concret.PaUo yrsexper Lie 10UI09 E ,......._ • .,... cleanin,. RealdenUal. -....YSerYket PhiJllp& Ce~ent Co. Uc. Electrictan. All types ot cr~m.:.P\~ ~a . m~-:a:ts ~it.a Salisbury: ss1.5s:Js . . •••••~••••••••••••••••• Beautl ully cleaned ...................... Bonded. For l!lst. 7Sl-56S7 work. Llc. Bonded. Ins. lla11tdea4e; • · CANOPY TV SERVICE glass. Good rates. all ~m & 7-8 m Free est S46-24<M 531).8586 Don'a Plumbin~ •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• Ut RATESERVICE SS7"2285 Mary Kay cnsltnt ofra er v., a l I t I • HOUSECLEANING Block. Shunpstone walls •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• At FA'-Prl ....,,.1633 ---------free compliment facial y don' _...__. G'" n '"GE SALE d l car pen ry, e ec r ca • & brick planters Expert· b ...,. ces....,. at b M Dun OU . t ~a gwi to 1'nn a s n gen1 rpn + car rprs. B)'relillblecouple ly installed ·~· s~lal Lang Pbotogr~p Y· 10W' m. n . ca "draw fut" when you the Dally Pilot brin& hap. ~ Rets 963--5813 Specialists that will help SSM003. place an ad in the Dally PY resulta. To place your winter prices. al Bob. you sell your products & Rave ~ft )'OU want SELL ldle .b.ema with PilotWan\Ads!Calloow drawine card phone Have aomethlllg to aell! SELL idle ttema with a Sl&-9906or63S-4384 services, 49'-1397, totell?CI edadado Delly PUot Clualfled Ad. -6C2·S6'78. 6C2..5678 tOOay. ' Ouaified ads dolt well. Daily Pilot Cluaified Ad. Want Ad Help! 842-5178 S81-4S06 it well. 642-S6'18. IA)'thlng with • Da111 Pilot Claplfled Ad la • atmlM Glatter • • • Mature l•dY daalre bouuwort by the day. Avail. wknds. Own trans. lln. Fanner 551-9133 ,, ' MACHINIST l~:::s=d Costa Mesa. Calif. -calJ Mz.:ss71. ..... alC8'TIOHIST Med/l'rmscrllMr Fubbl. P1nancia1Serv .. ·.; IMwwe Sectv nnn. Becept/Secy. front In Fashion bland <!all desk. Esper. Reta req'd. btwn 11-4. Moo thnl Fri. Type 60 wpm. • San 644-0295 Ml1uel Dr, N.B. Suite • ---------•a>O. Mgmt Tme. perm. Earni---------- S17S·S200 wk. Fuller Brush Sales. SM-ml. MO!>B.S Patrick T. Barnes, a...---------Penthouse Conlributin1 Photographer. Is now In· terv1ewlng girls ror magazine layouts. No pnor exper. la needed and the pay la very tugh for thclse acc.ed. Only serious applicants need apply. call for interview 9-S weekdaya. <714)i)75-~ pt. & Typist for small enaineeri n& firm . MaterlaJ Science Catr, nr O.C. Airport. S49-0343 E.SALES DON TYLER & AS· SOCIATES REALTORS, has positions open for ex· perlenced full lime salespersons Interested in estab l is h ing _, 2nd Mother wanted for 6 themselves In sales & yr old girl. 2:30·7:30pm rentals on Balboa Isl. & • wkdys. Vic. Unlv. Park. Harbor Area. Irvine. Must have tranap. 5S9·5699 eves. ~-----11 a Days 768-3631. I-, = DON TYLIUI • A9SOC., lt.A&.TOllS 30IUiiVH~· AVI 8At.. m •?a-4000 SALES Inside correspondent, or· der d esk . National , ... Organisation. North East Anaheim. Xlnl company benefits. EOE nU»-1400 Cit ONLY PILOT ~.,!bM!rytO um • ,. la• 1050 Mlle•••-1010 Mite•••-IOIO ..._ btt.....t. Sf•• totO --~--;,o,;;;;;;.;..;...;;;::;.;,.-""-:'----..:..:.=:=:IJ.:~-~~~::.,, !_!!!.. • I ·--··---•••• •••••••••tt•• •-•••ff•• .. •••••••••••••••••••• ~ IOf I •••••••••••••• ........ . ~!!~!!" ... 11~HltpW..._. 7100 Mirca•G -"'-" Mll;ta•1 ~ f\aU •Kbel .. -~~ W:"":~ED IAITMWOIMSALI " .... ••••••••••••••••• r AT61'01 RAhG,!!_~,__~· •• •·-·--••• .. -. ......... _ ..,....--··---a.,..np. u...-. "'"' roRGAJU>ENS. Lett.he St.ahilu1 atetl alt'llta. , .. euoe . ~ .... , ...... r . !We. W• 1a 100 ....... NOS eouch.GO.•.~ TOP CASH DOLLAR Wllll"lllbell>roucuWva\e. cablaels, couQter dr Du:Dea.MM&lO MllD THlllST .. _.......__. •--• *'*1ynewfUmh'omha& r.r.:~o:Afu'l.Y:l LOOOforM..30QO.S10.Alao Lock•re. atou~e ~ ••1ttWtloa Two ••l•amen wh PMO••JOIS bay front eondo . ART owicrs. OOLD worm cuUn11. B'S ~i°"tblaCN l .; .. _ ................ . NEED IJ>CJMY. 10 yws INC.U.. UrriAIR' ..... BIX ra1 nu Tbomaavllle ki1'tahe SILVER S£1tV1CE: Wortn Far•. UHJ ~' r~ Sl~w '11t.h c I'., ..... , MmtldNllocaUoa WtffavtAllTMM: JaUIWt ., MU:~ bdmuet .. lpcdlnlQirt1\ FlNE F\TRN ... AN-GoUmd.HB.Mf41U sa.m~:-m.2$1o ... tuo 1A:ll ~LID ~ I nW o 1 clecb Ml. aut~ IOfa & lo•· nQUE&. IU-2300 ...................... . lndMdual DeMa .,., ltu • .... ~ rotfN" end tbla. WANT SIRVEL OAS • LIKE New •• U1bl4d "IO Ford Ecccaol1n• 2* ~w,:.!~-•--~~cJ!t'.u..~~=pa.~:fi, =:.~~n:~~":i~ WHA•ITAGS REFRJG :~cMesw~·U' BubbM&opc:amporvan. Duatl1.....vu•-1oos I Ml fron••I, ~ ... "'·atrt-· <a"'·matl" I am P•' 816 3048 or h'ocn your buslMM card, NMOT& w c&M. nut B V8 tnf, atove, re1rt1. Nauoo.J Product .. v • "',.,. .,_ ..... ~ · • Send ooe card for each • • rn.eoa3 Id cmd. ... Lo •pprec. l\11rr Whit.· IL..:li~-; ~ tf ' t It "" I ' ' ' • • I •• f4 '' .i + : ,, ', P\ally pllcS traininl ottbiatraa ~anoc&'::· dtuCN. ~it= 8'15oG5& taa phi.a oae apare. We TV ..... ~ Sal::a• ':"f:cs'°:~!t~l ~=~~ ~ooS::ut ~1.11 ctoe~;andfat :. ~r~n:.Cs~~N':!; ::.~n1tf..'."ct~!n~n1t1L tt11•--Hii:sten. 1091 --,-.-c-_,..---SW--- lllllt be oot10 =t.en find it. an Oodal! Atmo&ret! Cablneta! Tab&•! Chlll"at atrap. meet.Ins airline W..ttd 1011 .............. ~ ......... 1181). 642"3748 lnl eoeraeUc. LlnkJet Ideal aowW )'OU. e.dsl Olaul Qoyatal! Ori1tn&1 Curritr "ha =-"~'cpJ:-; ~';,:, l.D. reqwremeota. Pre-•••--•••••••••••••••• GE co&or TV. 23 eoUole. I.er Firebrand Fooda cwll33-8098 prlntaf Palntfnca! Statuea! 1001 other g• Wbt marble colfee tbl vent lou &r theft! For a $$$C•~U FOi walnut cablnet, needa CamPll"cab/ov•~ll 14NT10. CGntact Jeanlf• UWIP-lncludln1 OYet' 500 muaic bo1tea and b pcnonaUzed uae enclose ~ wn. ~fer.~ 8 s O T r t u m p h T 1 TlllELIFE docb-.SA.Lf;! llUQ'Sl001temaoowjuat$50 w/brasa ase srs. MOV • w1t1pa~r . fabric or Gooduedf\aro/refrl&a w-c ...... 1. ADHV oew/rebuUt Houae wln-SIAMSftlSSIS • tbbJt.n•PC! INC to IM>; *500 Items jus\ $300 Lo "25: $5000 tt.ema ina. muatldliN&-7834 ""-" G .......... •-~e fnnlcatovea~ ~~.......-en. Ren.A· dowatn&!Wailee ~--. · Ju t s.> .,.., _,..... .. .. 10" 3-way 1,ystem ex-'f'Ull·Um4t MU45t Equal ()pp Emplyr ~If ~ted( to ~otuUe MViapl Dee.l«I e &tet ofc chairs. like wW back & trim your WANT TO IUY cetient condltlon. • $200 ,. vw Dlx Camper. Xlnl --;SICUT;;::;;;AR;;;,--i~~~~~~~~ PL'U'S Uvor.,Ume plano muak coocertl Plus :·J:': f:di~u:. =~~ two carda OIUIMTALRUGS. palr.CallM&-1898 oood, AM/FM, ~ ml. F•b lal Ftnandal Serv.fT>'peeettAer for publlet· drcusbandorpnmuakcooc:ert.! Pluamuakby &y.M0-1661wltdygM PRICES: NEED-USED Persian ao.e ICU speakers, '350, _«_..J125 ______ _ flrm.Typi.ng70wpm.ah Pb~eey•exper player planoa. orcbeatrlona, and or1ans! $2eaor3/ts 4' Chinese Ruga & H .. tb amplifier suo, a• C.mpr abell, iClt box. 90-100. 368 San Ml11.ael on oto·typeaetUns Once·in-1.Ufetime bartalna. Lota ol mu.sic! Lott Tnmdle bed. brand new. 2 4/Staacs Sl.60 ea. Tapeatrles from Pvt. quad m•tri.a $15. Eves. cabtoeta. dbl bed. Table. Dr.N.O..SUJte200. ~ r:ppio'i'uy~e'!i~~ ('r~~ d fun ! We are tbe world's la.rseat music box mattres.set&cover.S150. 6/9tapS1.50ea. Partlesoal)'.M0-7014 6'S-4ll2 & boot. Nice. ssn. ~ dealer. Our -.000 aq. ft.. abowroom IWarebouae.. M-t.1868 10 a.-more $1.40 ea. Wanted Pair of Restorea 144-1Ul3 ~~;:,: .~:ir·~~-n:,~~;;;;;;.;.;.;.;;;-;.-;.-;.-;., anexperieoceyou'U ~ver fcqet.. Quee• size waterbed, Sales Tax Included b t e Que e o A a a~ COLOR TV'S ....,.led IU&et 9140 co. Sh 100. type 70. Tnm SPECIAL~ ONE DAY ONLY: redwood frame. l yr old. Draw ~c::~~ teod WI n g back Cb al r a Prices to Amue You!!! ••••••• .... •••••••••••• personal appearance. TYPISTS PBBRUARY12, SATURDAY. $12:5.546-0l87arts. na~. address, pboae & ffi4)496.39Meves. ~~o!.t:b~. NewJawallloped,aWl Wlll req. t ravellnf ................. _... lOa.m.abarpLo4J>.m. BUNK BEDS. Stereo wellmakeoaecardper WANTED: Sm•ll used ea-RCA. Zenlt.b onwarraoty,$325. Salary open. Ca 1 ~--=-SJXHOURSONLY! (:oosole w/tape dk .. 9• tag.Add25teach. wbeekbalr roe elderly etc.Wrlaht1VMS-l'188 ' S4l-&'108 &42-7840. -,,.,,.. couc b, much. much Send check or mooey or-tad.y. S48-899l5 OfficeOnelotld Locatedl.Smlftutesaout.hGfot.soeylud.Ftom more. 752·1028 1ft derto: MOPED P«11eot4 moe. SECRETARY /Girl Fri· day 8:3> Lo 3 Mon thru Fri. Start $3.2S hr. Bar· rett Realty 642-5200. Jotn The Team tbe Newport Fwy. take byer Rd. East exit. Eut 1 ::t>PM PILOT '1UMT1MG Wide wbeela for VW <s. loah & M..... $400. Tbatotf ... ~y on Oyer Lo Red Hill Ave. South OD Red Hill Lo PO Box'"""' hol'>. Pair of older s....i--a 148.-n Slat ta Al•-Ave . .,. _ _. -"'"-•-G111et•-South oo New rou.od redwood tbl & · · ._, M-'-1 VW ... _ .. et •-........ ...--..... ~ .,.. "' ...... ...., µ. ....,_ "-ta M-· Ca -.,...,. """'.. sea .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• er-...a --Bravo .. -.1 lb&ll Opetaton Gillette te Katerina. Just 2 mlnut.a from the 4 director ebra, $80. """ -· · __, 6'2-3379 loafs. Mtilwtt •n/ xlnt ';o'"nd. bi:"t:t;: SECaETARYP/thM X«o>t800()prs freeway. 640-8Si2 Beerdrafter,bolds~Kes TravelTnmks Senke fOZO ltabt.1. xtr11. UOO. Pe:ri:nanmt posltlon for General Typist.a AMEIUCAH IMTHMA TIOMAL ADJUST ·A-IEDS d beer, new c:ond. $200. Good C<ladlUoo. ·-••••••••• .. ••••••••• S15M98t an. 7pm sharp consciel)t.lous CAW.. US TODAY GALL~IS 673-&76.CaJI aft UAM. 538-3$46 AMERICAN SOURCE MofS::='' mature 1al <over 30 ). START TOMORROW 1802 K.ttetRg-lnlH, CA 92714 ~~ :r~d~w~~t 1:!a'1 CUSTOM Marine Equlpmenl •l 9150 Experienced ln all raceta ~O~ office • ,.._1714, 75 .. 1777 .... _ eek pd si~N\ s Makd Discount! ~7280 ~ aU office dull.es. Llght .)._ ... uua w • ........ ac WOVEN WOODS ....... I la 1083 ....................... . typing. about~ 0 OVerlo~d Regularhoun:Wedftesdaythroogh $595.644-48'72or640-8260 •••••••••••••••••••••••lcNih.M..... '71 BSA 6SOcc Tbun- workload is bookkeep· S.turday lOa.m. to4 p.m. 1' sofa. like new $125. Also 50% T080% OFF Coon Mln-O·Matic elec. ._.__. 9030 derboll. Less than 10,000 in&. Must be careful & 557-G061 SPECIAL SALE on ll'~b-12tb0ftl.v. Be here!!! 2 bar sM>ols. end tables. OveM~'Mj;r.:~&:~:ms organ, excellent condl· •• :::;.r.:;:; ••••••••••• orig. mil~. Rebuiltfront thorouah and not afraid 3'723 BlrcbSt. N.B. queen size bed, etc. Mov-645-8950 833_9170 Uon.. 9600. P.P. m-1259 '16 "--I 08 hrs s u1pen1 on, r ac lng to work. Pleasant al· Allliqills· IOOS Doga 1040 Ing, must aell all. 201 '-'"".7" er • 25 • shocks, mechanically mosphere in small de· ••••-•••••••••••••••-••••••••••••••••••••••• Colllm, Balboa lslaad. Furn.hseholditems. Fender Fuas/Wawa. Pd $1750. Sac. S950. perfect. Sl.000. Call sign oriented mrg co. Jf ........ c....•-813-4880 typewrtr addmach Neverbeenuted.$80.00. 556-'IM4ora.fU,8'13-S930 963-1925 after 6 or )'OU qualify. call Sally for TYPIST LOVESEAT Dbl. win& Qua~. UIOIJ ~-Pups. rue cab' ' 963-64T7 35 b Johnaoo 0 /8, ms. weekeods llD)'time. an appointment btwn lO TECHNICAL tufted. 6 lep. Coucb 81J'l 4 M es. 3 fema left. Call Tan & White Bdrm set. Ceallca~!!!!i'· P AmandlPm.~m tioraebalr, w1lnu 87~ dresser. headboard, 2 v'""'"-· _Peavy VTA 400 Bass '1620hpMerc0/8,$S50. Sell/Trade "76 Kawasaki. TYPIST 494~ Yorkle pups, cbamplon end tables & mirror. KlNG slz.e bed. llke new Amp. SSSO. Alms Elec 991-:ISShll«S Z1 900Cc, Uke new. 2SM SECRETARY Appllances 1010 sired. maJe & rem. Will S12:5.646-4635or646-0486 $350. FUa & ataUonery Guitar. Les Paul Copy SLIP WA NTED ln ml,Si!OOO/bstolr.7S2-S33'7 To SdH M....-Typist Cor teebnlcal & ••••••••••••••••••••••• be ready for Valentine's ALL MUST GO! Frm 1 ~~~~ ~·m~~: ~ d ca 5 e s2 O O · Newport for %7' new tail J8'10 Yamaha 125 Enduro. lmmed. opening Top typing & sh req'd Major electrorucs corp k>cated near O.C. Airport PrevlOUS sales ore ex per pref'd. XJnl compensa tJon & benefit.s. An Equal Oppor. Employer statistical document:;. REFRIGERATORS da,y. 982-8717 Med It. Dr set. lge 8C8-88'1l boat-by3-l-T7.848--0107 New I.op end. xlnt. cood. ~:!~~or~;~:~~ WA.SHERS-DRYERS LAB pu£JS, yellow, AKC. thlt/4cbn & hutch, all Rolletnex f2.8. W/meter CallaftSpm. 751·9070 4qu1· p. Proflc1ency ln Recond1tlons-Repros & champ. Unes. male& & wood. like new. OCC-wht Ma!Dlya 3Smm camera & PlOorcl01eStofr. loafs. Poww 9040 -H d CT70 '-'t _ ... .. Frgt D g G /Del r . Pvt pt 968-e8'12 color. Will sell separate-Princess House 32 piece SS1..Jl39 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ on a xw. couu: grammar req'd. For ama e. uar . ems. y. ly. Tables, lamps. oil crystal SSO eacb/oUr. TRADEINSALE must aefl, moving S30Q. apptc:~~·Taytor 2SYrsoa?ML':;·i0 · AKC Golden Retriever paintings. 2 frml LR 968-0804. Offlce,.,iJtwe& 1964 38' Pacemaker Aft Call646-5967alter9.30pm 1815 N .---Bl CM Pups, xJnt taunt.en. fami· chrs 9621961 • p ~...... 1085 Cabin Cruiser. Twin '71 BSA 650cc Thua· Avco CALLew.-;:,..7780• . ly.,... wtr dlVI. ~-.,....1 · · Push lawn mower S6. air ••••••••••••••••••••••• vs· 6KW G br .,..... .-.... ~ .. ._.......... Baj f nd S3 Ex desk dbl ped tat S. en. 800 s derbolL Less than 10,000 ---------t -"--"'-----------•Beaut. China Cab. Liv rm reah. ao1r be r enBaj ~ I 'a1 & l es total time. Gen newly orig. miles. Rebuilt front A.tancld Sef-yjces Non working appliances AKC Samoye: pup~y, chair, rotfee & end tbl. 2 ~ S20. Pa~~ c~[t.er fo~ heavy 3~ty m:.t~1~! 0 .H. Large ~bl bed afl. suspenston, r acing 644-5800 wanted. Also REPAIRS male. 8 w 5 • x nt Lamps. All xlnt cond. h Muchequ1p.1ncldlngby, shocks, mechanically Call Becky 540 7311 SECRET ARY -SALES Equal Oppor Employer &SALES646-5848 pedigree. 673-2934 644-01.39. illustration brd, t in print. rues. cbrs. C.E. OB. clavils, elec galley, perfect. Sl,000. Call metals.etc.$50.642-3379 Sw-plusFum,900W.l9th hailer, windlass. VHF. 963·192S after 8 or Im med opening ----------1For Sale: Washer and A Teacup Poodle 12wks GiG"agtSale 8055 Golfcartl\Jay875·W. St.63J.2'T17 fatbo & new full weekendsanytime. Secretar ial duties Typist-General ore work. dryer. xJnt cond $150 ror otd. champagne color all •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ed .. c: en"l,..ure art. Boat ln•---------H t •-ct pb & · c 11 palr. o•a ""'79. shots. 673-243> FREE GARAGE SALE Never us . ~· Used steel office desks, ... ""' eavycusomercon..... . one vancty. a O'tV""9J Phone673--0254 va io g sit avail average coodilion. List-'74 Kawasaki 350 'ftpe1 60·70. Ma.)01 r elecd· M6--0606 K h $65 . Rare blk AKC German SIGNS .. Callf RCeoluryC21 49'l~l~S.S M:!·Fri . eel at $39..500. lst $33,000. Lonahom. orr Hwy, good ron cs corp. ocate enmore was er • Shep pups. 3 F, shots, re-Westchf ealty o. Wards signature portable • · takes. Wasson Yacht coad. s:soo. Cirm.979-5814 near O .C. Airport. yplst & phone reception ~.e_:.rbndltmtr~Both adyt.ogo4S4·lll7 64.S-7221 dishwasher. never used, 6 Exec ofc chairs. like Sales(714)223·2609 it Yamaha·-tow m·i, Previous sales ofc exper. 8:~ to l pm for.pleasant m .iunlco . 556-.-,,, . S8S M6-6004 new, perfect Cor o(c or ---------• -.. pref'd. Good compensa· oCCaces In Irvine Ind. K W b *" AKC Male Yorkshire Ter· Kit .range, ref'rig, rdwd . den. Will sell individual· %?'Trojan. Exp Cruiser xJnt coru1. S250. Aft.. s. uon & xlnt benefits. An Complex. Call 752-0234 or en more as er ..,s. tier, 8 mos. $175. patio furn. hvy duty. tbl 2 COINS 675-1900 I 640-1661 kd M Twin V-8's rad sounder 640-5734640-9448 EquaJOppor.Employer. apply 2082 Michelson. I>ryer~ga&.Goodcon-548-0340 benches, 2 chrs. rnd cof UdoVlllageCoinN.R. y. w ys $6500 ' AY&46·9000·--------- Call Becky 540-7311 Sult.e212. lrvlne. diUoo. Call 673-0653. tbl, blender, wet sult. Pays more-sells ror less Pets 8017 '7S Yamaha 400 Mooo. Set G I b d Ft-ffto You 8045 2·3/4 beds w /sprds & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.W74, 18' Omega lri-bull. up For Desert. New Top Secretary· Personal for Typilt/Clttil ~:!ch '1:,r :& •••-•-••••••••••••••• sheets. BBQ. rot.o mwr. 3 way mirror. Cull size. 55 GaJ salt wtr aquar 18/0B. 165 Mere. motor, Eod and Low Eno. Need rem. artist. Mon. Tues. A Laguna Niguel ofc. Yo'Or'kgood 2S28N~rt8eauliful spayed rem odds&end.1994Arnold ideal for men's or I>ualntn manyxtras+' less than 100 hrs. xJnt C.asbSllOO. Wed. Adv exp. helpful T~trwx & film& Light 81 CM ~183 Golden Lab to xint bome Ave. 642-0473. women's st.ore. 64.2·7288 fish. $135 'Evs 751-0116 cood. $4~. 839-5926 919-4279 Non-smoker. Mature typmg. Salary based on • • only 540-0583 . · · woman. 968-99ot9 aft 6pm. exp. Hn. M. 495-1.980 RCA CONSOLE. CLR TV. . G.,arage Sale; SaL 9AM UI Freer.er., bke new. Pool CAT GROOMING 40' SeawoU Ketch. Fine "72 Yamaha 250 Enduro. H.8. 1---------1 VHF works nne SlOS Female St. Bernard. Lov· . 336 E. 20th St. CM. tbl,cha1rs,sofas&more. HOUSEOFEGYPT world cruiser. Albin Xtra clean. runs xJnl. SF.cRETARY·Does your boss appreciate your 8.A. We will if you·re out.standing Send your best written r eply to Collins Associates. 567 San Nicolas Dr. Newport Beach. UTOTEM 2S28 Nwpt Blvd, CM. Ph es kids. Needs good Clothes. beds & more. ~9·1678, 17511 Wayne S36-0782 dlesel. 3 KW gen, Aut.o S47S/dr. 557·2509 wa~~Alkg~~~~les ~ home~9S44 Fri/Sat/Sundayc9to5.940 Ave,lrvme Pklnos&On)aa 1090 ~~~·:::ct~!: HONDA 750, '71 ~omp. for advancement avail. WUI buy some refrlg, Darling 4 .mos o ld Congress. M ~ar . EQwtymembersh1pMesa ••••••••••••••••••••••• aboard SfilOOO Wauoo touring accessones & Operung.s U\ C-Ost.a Mesa, eppi's, working or not. Shep/Lab MIX female. redwood lawn runuture, Verde Country Club. YAMAHA Coo.sole Plaoo. y a c .h l . s a I e I ' cust seat. Al cood. $195. Anaheim. Garden Grove abo1erapmetal67S-5258 need good home.Free. drapes&mlsc. 552-712A> Walnut flnisb. 4 yrs old. mc>223-2609 Call OonDuncanS4S-8261 &Westaun.ster. S.1.532aft 7· HUGE GARAGE SALE! Deep Sea Tackle. $12. $1~. PbW.1434 days.997-746Jeves. 642-n02 Dryer-Gas. llke new Free White Ions haired S':SSOO· Car~tlng, a.P· Penn Reel Sl3 Custom U . ght Piano ~.:e'· classic replica. ICawaaaki l7Scc St. bike. Vehrin H $17S Ownr female cal Lo good home. Fwance:5· clothillg, CB s. Pote, $25. ~·9832 ~cood $295. ' ~ Runs Good. S31S. Ph. Ga~~ned Recept :"'ae:i o re 847~aCt3. Call aft6,848-1608 ~t~uB~1':oO:~~~~~ Ladie Kenmore Washer. 541-09llorS8H647 2S' Chris Craft, bristol S48-8083afts shifts. Must be alert, Work. 3838 E. Coast GuRan.C~'.4bumer•. Lab/Rtvr Mix. 8 mos Jl'ri-Sun. Gas Dryer. vy &d coJKt SpottlhgGooch 8094 cood. Twin engines. full Kawauki 115, ~runs neat & mature. Retired Hwy, CdM wtllte. nt. rrs. Call =e l~af~ ~~ mG Garage Sale. Feb. 12, ~ ~t~h!:k~·r.~e~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• plley, closed head, all ~Pu~~:.·~- we I co m~. APP l Y. Waitress Food/Cocktails. 631-0M3. alUpm. 9at,1J. 309 Poinsettia, <in $35. Wall unit, 1 pc $50, New Scott boots, med can~as, xtras. Must se-.·--------- Newporl Dunes .. 1131 Apply aft. 4pm, Sid 's Blue 15.S Cu ft ref rig, coppe alley) CdM . No presale. Upbol chair . vy gd cond abell, Sl50/beat. 613-7079 now · S2900 or best offer. Moped, good cond. Back Bay Drive, Beet,1072lstPl.N.B. bronze, xlnt co nd Givlng to good home $3S,2cbests$15,SS1-4840 eve,556-6328days _6'75-3l98 _________ • S200 NewportBeach. ~ femalebe1gemedszdog Misc. hshld Hems. •68.32• LUHRS twin 499-1886 Waitreases. exper'd, for aboutlyr,842-6932 Whirlpool washer. new Ch I VH F•---------Seml Retired proresa. breakfast-lunch. dinner. Allct&o. t015 pwrmower.Sat.9-4.2650 ~ys er e ng. 125 Suzuki MX. S32S or ladyseekssame to.share Apply Ben Brown's •••••••••••••••••••••••DarUngDachshund.dark Vista Ornada, N.8. rad~o. f~thometer, CB tradeforlate model75cc San Clem res. May have Restaurant. 31l06 Coast .... IUC• red miniature male. 2-<Bluffs ) W.e~ a{ CLo~ radio, baJt tank, electro-Enduro.552-9073 outside job So ~ r-v <>H ooc gurd system. S22.SOO. · me c · Hwy So. Laguna yrs . .,............,l .· Terry DeBard al ~ u--.. U\I etc ln exch ror room ' •FURMITUll• Don't miss this! Nice ..._._...._....... & board or salary. Wrtu WAllHOUSI 1 ~ Large rem puppy to good furn. & accessories 752-mt ofc, 752-7074 res. Sale/R...t 9160 Classified ad no. 8:!0, c /o M ~ CJ k ar A I *A"'-1 """* hme only. 3mos old. all many anUques + misc. aft &PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~!;.~ ~ iseo, ~bu:, 97!HS:~~ •TOllite 7:30 PM• abot.a. 645-58619. bargains. 2307 Francisco This Valentine's Day send your love '7S H Tahiti Day Cruiser 25' OPEN ROAD ---------.. tos pm ......, • 8050 Dr. NB a greeting all the wor1d can snare 21 •. 460 Ford Jet. tandem Fully self-cont.. Service Sta Attendant.. We need people sharp & -ISTATH.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HorMS 8060 with a Dally PilOt Heatt of Love. trtr, custom cover. XJnt W'mterrates. 644-8385 expet,.d FuU or p/Ume. neet.. Lo n1ake their living ,.._ Y• & Stotoge SAVE! FEB. SALE. New ....................... cood. $6250. 751·1919 t.o A11PtY Arco SUUoa. 17th on their feet. worltiae lleS.Clt••• & used Cur~. appl 's, Qtr type sorrel gelding. It's easy, comPose your personalized _see_. _______ 1 Is lrvhw. C.M outaide door to door. the misc. WUson s Bargain gentle. xlnt trail or greeting & we'll set your message in 9060 Service Station Allen job Is run the money's •z.dH.AMO STOit!-Nook.2 Stores, st5 & '14 pleasure. S:SOO. 581-3528 type to flt the border of your choice dant. nper'd Doy a. aure A super wa1e & c_.1, tMt ~~· CM. 6"2-793() Ii .__._ 8070 Of your own handwritten thoughts Eves J\JU & ptt1me An. bonus too. total Income is ~a i.-.a~ _._. ---r l"l\llU t:t"'pear In the ....._._ """• select ... up t.o """'· lflots ol ca·.. -...,...--••••••••••••••••••••••• .,_, -uuouicn ,..,.. • ~ SheU Station, t7th" ,~ '"'' --c I _.. givea yoo a thrtll. call u ~-# •M• WA ...... ED ne. NB. up and ask for Phil "1 Service SU Help Full or m..s..u •Dttlltn Weko,._1t TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID FOR YOUR ce· Apply. 990 E. WHOLESALE FLORIST '·'·SAVE'·' JEWELRY. WATCHES. ___ H_wy'-,_N B. Dnver·Salesperson J SlecpersfromS16S ART OBJECTS, GOLD, Service Stelloo Allen· 548-7980 ~5 Food available on th Ind ct.o aota-love $450 Sl.L VER SERVICE. danl. P/Ume. Avail eves premises. It.ems subject NauJt.~Unen$14S FINE FURN & AN· & wknda, Exper'd only. WOMEN wa~ted to work lo pree1de. We •bono WoodOameaetaS385 TIQUES.645-2200 Neat afpe ar . 4r for Janlces Raiied>' Ba nkAmerturd a n MUCHM0.8EATTHE h•ndwri t na. Appl)' Ann housecleaning Master C har ge , FURNtTUR• Eatate Jewelry aale. morns. 2590 Newport Rn/ice. Start $2.50 hr. 8 Cashier'• Chech an CONNEctJON , Prl/Sat/Mon 11,12 & 14. Blvd, Costa Men. !2_ : .... !ues thru Fri. Ct~"NOP• t!~. N 'lZtKelJ,SML.HB RaclU Jewl Co. 646-T741. ••~ •-..~ ........,.,c; 1838 Newport Blvd C.M. s ff A R P , F A S T MASTBS AUCTIOH CalllU·IJU SECRETARVtrYPIST . ....._... 20751/aMwpt... Lmllodl 1075 For dealan firm. fill-••••·~··•••-•-••• COSTAMllA r.te11e-...1000 ........ ioos t11 ... t11•t•2s ____ ,....................... . ... ~ Wonderlanet t114,,....,,1, r:; = ::=:·~~ Of Anti.es! ~ .......... ~~! ptl req'd. Salary com· R UGE war e ho us~ Like new Hull)' m'!D'• 1 CDSMW'•te with "uca-crammed with over SOO llld bite • .,. MS-•1 &Jon lc 0 ...... Y• .. t. ..._ ... 1lb muatc boxes. n•fhlo-61>Mtwkods "" ~· ·-dean pianoe, clrcus «· ---------:i • educational ~. 1aa 11 w•ll doch. •CTc::L&i"' ~o!~!/:"~; b'::n:'.:. =ather cloch. MOYIMGSALI .... in.1antlca~. USEO SOii£ NEW Over $1,000.000 Worth GREAT DlSOOUNT America l~aUonal On Btacla CN.Mn And Ace-* uAMto•:aos Borders come in 3 5'zes: $15. $8. & a special child's size for $2. (You must be under 12 to qualify for this one). If you wis h to create your own greeting, use a b4ack pen & write ')40Ur message in the heart below or draw your own Valentine of this 8'z.e. For help with yoor ad. Just call e42-S878 & 1 friendly a1ent1ne 80-vtaer will be hac:>PV to assist YoU.. And, if vou Hke. YC>U can chlrQe YoUr Valentine ad or UM your Muter Charge or eank Arnerfolwd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• H.>bie 16, trlr, new trans le more. Sl,42S. 646-a2SS or S81-~. i3Enclnada20, Trlr, bead, S.5 0 /8 le xt.ras. $3500. 496-4349 CAL 2·29. VHF splnn. knot, tathometer, furl Jib, dal. $25.900. 997-8062 Sailboat C&C 24', mtr. Mu.st sell. Ofr. Moored at B-30 Danu Marl na. ~. TOYOTA CHINOOK Try .. fore Youluy Rental Rebatn at RactniSabot,Feathertng.---------- oars. xl.ot coad. '3'75 or "72 WJnnebqo Cbieftan. bit. 875-ClJO. Loe4ed w /almost every ~· Sootlesa. Muat be ~Sidoe7dbihull,2 a,een. Pvt. Aakln1 sails. rac. rtued. '375. Sll..500/otr. 7$1-5224 ~ AQUACAT!TRAILER Sale·l973 Mini Mol!'r Mak of, Call U.nd ·l Hme, Sips 6, fully contd. e 1er. a a Xtras. 675-2128 GW0'12 ---------1'71 Newport 19' MlnJ. xlnt "73 Catalina %7. Located cond. Lk new. 2 ~aa Dana Pt. Martn11. Xlnt ia w. bvy dty &bocks eotMl. Well equlpPed for CB ant.. cab .air . al raclng/crul1ln1. Pvt reme .• motorbike rack. Ply. 968-1.398. Dll•'1 xtru. S7150. PP ...... Slpi/ 1 _&e0-_18_19 ____ _ Dodit 9070 '75 4 STAR :i>' Dodae in ••••••••••••••••••••••• x1ot. cood. ~ ~ ell· Boal Sip for rto&. llO'. Pn t.raa. •·•· 8134410 bme Newpcn. 540·*4 . cbl· 815-91172ev11•taadl 72 Dodce EJtelour ' Motorhome20', Mlf-eoot. , Pvt 8ackbay Slip ~arrl• 10 pl fuel, bvy toae• '100/mo, city trtr hitch. root •lt. • MS-'78H ntichu 4000 watt 1"1. top coDd. 110(>. 8 ~·l\28 Mtoew-.... 9190 ,1.,.rw ..._,.,..... AlllM.ll••rW ~-.aaW 9SJO •••·--••••••••••••••• •••••••••••--•-• -·••••••-·--••-••" •••• ......... •••-••••••••••••• .. .-•••••••••••••••••••••• WE a.w t7 u ....-.. .,,. '-11"' t7IO • r au 111 tn, ...... ..., LondoftTaxl 'ST AusUn s IUY •i• .. •••·---··•• .. ,._ ......................... , ...... , ... _ ... , ...... ,., .... , .... ~............. Qr ......... ,........ t94S dr xlnt eol\d Used 'ior Cl.IAM CMS ·-lU POISC ... ?O ti I T ..... SIASOM lllMll ff IO • HZI ._ ................... . ad~lu by Newport &TIUClS e1·1p1:1;1 ~or t amatic , PP. s•• E ·--.... -....... "·-··-.............. 13 Mark av . f'&tll1 ~yn. moo. or &'-•••-•• 1Cl n1t~on~~· rt./:':: ON~YW ~~~~ii.~\ ~s~~0o~r cC::::: • q u • PP~ d · N • • • • . CONNB.l ' " • llllQlllllllMY • 646-580'7 Stu. Mon.sat. pwr,All/Flhtereo. new '750/bltoCt PP. 9'73•3Clf7 llllchelins. 32.000 mt. '4Y.&oftQevy, good enft· s ... ,. AMA a.s. '8.SOO I c .... s tirtl. ort• OWQr. saeoo. Ori&OWftSSS.(1898 ~ COOd. 982-N33 • t CtfEVROLET ,.83"!?!. C....MIM'4M700 '73 914 2.0. Yell Blk. ~--• llMl'IJ ' HSO.--..:a: •Hwbor Blvd. titllUU'llllAUSID~• '74 Maida RX3 Coupe. 4 loaded. sharp. 1 ownr. lAtle -.et10n ol '*" • t9ti Ul37 V-8.Ford Pkk"p, all on1ln111. sharp. lluat aee. $3000. Call <213) 442>2150or <2U> 28M714 9110 ....................... '71 Jeep Renqade. PS, PB. va. Rbll bar. Ura. --~.SIM301. 1\wb 9160 ....................... . JauCI VICWo$ 7Z W..Plda9 ' speed with raato . <WfMT>. Reduced tc selJ at OMLYSl495 73Dat..Pkkup 4 speed with radio & mags . (79970U). Reduced to sell at OMLYS2195 ·11 CJle¥y J/4TottPldaip Automatic with pwr. steer ing, air cond. 4' custom cab. (70526M >. Reduced to sell at OMLYS2495 76 Dahm Pidlup 4 ·speed In sharp condl· Uon. C1Bl4008). Reduced tcsell at ONLYS3195 '16 Toyota Pldmp Automatic with radio & low miles. Jn excellent c9.qdilionl OB6S894>. Reduced to sell at OMLY$3795 COSTAMESA * ....,-.. 'I* llld. under wmty, very WOO/orr. Pvt. Pty. MW•medmodeb. ·-·--• .... •••""' lt71LJMCOLM 146-1200 '755.'lliA <BKWT> clean837·3202 831·3687 llU. TATIS tOWMCOUPI TOP ·~~:,tt~r,.i'~=~ '72 Muda. R /H, air. Pampered 4' Poli$hed '69 VW...ORSCHI '10 cadtllac Coupe :fl P\&U ~r lachadioa '5 lCIOOa ~ ail/blue. xlnt cood. New 9U. SS.000 Mi 'a. Mags. Su IUD C.pl.ltrano ~~ v::r~!:_,• ,::.a Vlll)ll to,. UU *._ffl, P\:Jrd Ma~~. a /C, DOU.A.I '743.0CSA /R746t.W8 ..,,. SU4$/bat ofr. Konls, S loatr'limenta. 5 U7-4I004tMll I •Jtttrt•r all Po••r ~ ~A~-M aut.o. ~ clean. '13:1(). PAID "76-4'Dd~HJ 41W112AM. Spd. Webe .... AM/FM. 8SAQO ..u. (ori ... al). ta~. • . . I C&lH13H838. Jl'O.RCLEAH '7&530l4spdS/R 6()2PH¥ um Mazda RX2 sedan. SNl5. Pvtpty.mc:M. 10VW8':'.tmOor•of· S 191>0.. 8 T 0 · 4 SI 4 IOOd! ~· i...;;.;.___;.,;..;.__.;.. ___ _ IMPORTCAR5 ClotedOtts..dayt 23.000 m1 00 new eng. "13·914, 1.7 Stlver/Bllt, f~. l48-ta9 ':'.~miiiim)iiiiiiiii ,,,..,,,,. • Mwc8'y ttsO COUNTY'S New paint. S«lel belted man)' xlras. AM /FM --------• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• AU.MODELS ORANGE radials SlSS0.963-1904 Lape. xlnt cond $5295. Sq eb " W ® ·ee MERC. blahl)' up· OLDEST · 644-~ '70 uar ac"" agon. -araded. Call $36·0907 ~ .'I!.~'M?.~.nt c:o nd. R....tt 9755 = =-J:. =· ·,· 1 after7PM. &:wkeod& . .., 893-5978 -·•••••••••••••••••••• Orte owner. 962·3597 .....__..a.._•--9740 '68 Renault R·lO. RUNS _eves __ • ------t•'7S M••w I"' 9952 Sales&rvic~Leaslng _......~ ..na XLNT. ~. Call 67~ ·-VW 8 11.._ l -" ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.-ver,lnc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or642-4718evs -UC· .... rg ass Rare find! Aqua ed1ti0o. '67. 390 eng. alr. good Roi BMW LeclM1 ..;olh~-.-oyc-.--· __ 9_7_5_6 'undn.d ma:t.mndsh<?-a"...d::C. Nabers Full power includi~g COQd. Sl095.1or best of· ~ . .'l '"~ ~·. tll ACM BLVJ Hi NT1~; ;TON BEACH "~' ;•.11 --')ol0-0442 WE NEED CLEAN USEDC.ARS HOW CAU.PAPPY 540-5630 yce t -.. .... vinyl top. leather !n• fer. 96:J..l590 a.ft 6. IMO Jamboree New. Used ••••••••••••••••••••••• but runs. $300/bst ofr. t.ertor. Ult wheel. crwse ,_...;.._ ______ _ Newport Beach 640-6444 OVER 100 •t DEALER IN U.S.A. 8'1MMl/545-41813. Cadf)Jac control, AM /F?d ster~. 117'3 1\IU$tanl(. l owner. '73Bavaria. Loml, 4-spd. MERCEDES ~ ROY '6.1VWVan·1,oooniionre· ------aircond$8. <~~u. ~~ml. :m cu in. vs. sar'f. air. AM /FM. super OM DISPLAY CARVER cnf& en;. clutch. etc:. Quality md Price ~•· •--·------- cJn. 752.--0277. u-~-of =rt ROUS ROY~ Wtwar·Oleeb super. CU$t Guaran~ 1967 Mustang. New motor · ~ I • ~ Int, Mag wbla. $800. PIS. Air. Black Vinyl ·74 BMW Bavaria, lo AUTHORIZ D tS.J•m-.. ., • .,_u.11 LeasingSpeciallsts 0 mil I k f ~ 9N<1t ,,_"" Preferred R.ites Vphols\r )' · Sl.20 or eage, C ean. ma e o · MERCEDES DEALER ,....._ _ __.... .-.... . . trade for VW Van. Call fer. 67~18.W 6862 Manchester, CLOSIO SUNDAYS '67 ~~~t cond, largest Selection $48-2U7 after 4pm/. '76 BMW 500 l. AM /FM. Buena Park er of"New & Used stereo cass. 4 spd. rac SZJ..7250 Toyota 9765 __ 552_·7_i_73~a1t-6_· --CidllLlcs i" 74 MAU IV 9955 mags. Xlnl cond. Days On lbe Santa Ana Fwy. •••••••••••••••••••••• • ·oo vw Bus.~ mech ·1 Orange County Full power Including 6"7W:565.eves640-94e9 '74 . ~EL, gm w/tan '77 ooad. Best er. 675-2057 Open Sunday AM/FM ster eo. tilt 2626HAlt80R llVD. Capri 9715 lthr lnt. sun root. cruise alts. Cadillac wheel. cruise control. COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• control. AM/FM stereo, '65 vw Bug. xlnt running Master Dealer vinyl lop. leather in· 1-------99-5-7 WE NEED YOUR USED CAR NOW TOP SPAID CAUGORDOH COSTA MESA AMC-JEEP 2524 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA 549-8023 Need Chevy Luv, cash, lo mi's, 536-WJS Alltol. 1Mp0rted ...................... .74 Capri V6. 4sp, air. many xtras. super clean. JOYOJAs cond. ssso 2600 8 d terlor. air cond. Must see $1"250 B .,_.....,.. · Harbor Iv · lo appreciate'. <Lac. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM/FM la"" $2750. Aft .., · YOWDl'o.>•·~• "95-SS51 Cos M ~Al\9100 """' ta esa .,..., . 161NIX> '71 Pinto. Cpe. Good con· _5'-prn._67_3_-8544 _____ '65 Mercedes 230SL. xlnt HERE NOW '6S, 7 PASSENGER. Nabers. $6486 d1tlon. Sl250/bsl orr. •73 Capri V6. 4spd. cond. $6500. Pvt Pty. RUNS XLNT. MUST • 646·1740askforJeff AM /FM stereo. decor _642_·2.87_6 ______ 1 •NEW COLORS SELL$1450.673-1363 l"..:...:.J 11 '?•RUNABOUT 32500 mi. int. $2,000. 960·27l 3 •NEW MODELS '66 vw 'd"i JlC(' ::,~·d ~~2~0CO~ec ~w~ Huge Savings on ALL re· $1l)O. Aft 5. 675-2T76 640-4935 ev~ or see at maini ng new 76s & '.-· '76Sevllle ~ Pacific Hwy. So. Datsun 9720 Demos. ·~vwcamper:Neweng, SIOOOOeoch Lagunadays. ••••••••••••••••••••••• The Better Bargain Outcb, good cond. $1850. • h 74 Contine ntal 4 dr. •--'-------- DRIVE A NOW 48 MOS FINAN· MA.R9UIS TOYOTA 497-3585 :a~U1~~B:1gc=. beaut. gold, bas ever· '72 Pinto. Auto. 21.000 ml, CINGAVAJLABftE MISSJONVIEJO 62VWVan,neweng,$985 fully loaded. sv '3717. ything.$S700.844·S927 new Radial tires SlSOO. LlnLE... NEWCAR 8ll-288049S-12IO crbestoffer.557-9807or F1twd #347l.Dlr.64H963 nllnental n. cream 64H630att5 SAVE A LOT RADE 1...a5 '76 CeUca lift back GT. MMIMO or~-0687 puff. leather & xtras. t 9960 SHOP&COMPARE T " air. AM /FM stereo. S 76Scl.rotto. perfect rond. '74 CdV. Loaded. 1 ownr. ownr.59.000ma.642-5851 --··••••••••••••••••• BARWICK O.ATSUM '73 280 SEDAM spd. $4875. 63H979 aft Still under warranty only $5700. Call 548·2554 64 ConUnei;it.aJ. A good San Juan Capistrano 2tochoose from, starting 7PM _ 11.000 mi, AM I Pl M before7pm one. but needs muffler & 831-1375 493.3375 at$7900 (56SMIU> '74 Toyota Celica cassette, must aeJI. 5'500 197$ El Dor d battery. S5Hl01 MERCEDES • BENZ ATLAS -==============:::?:~11G~1M.,1•d 9701 72Datsun. xlntcond. $1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74280SEDAM Xlntcondltion or bet ofr. PP. 97M398 Lowmila 0 3attoS8900choose(762fKXromYs>tartlng .... ,000. S51-ll42 ~~~M. wkd)'S/ all day <7 .... > .,_ • ..!!pp c:o.g.-99l3 -i'IJ WIU~ VS V'9V*MIUV eeeeeee•eee•eeeeeeee•ee '75 280C ·m Blue Corona. 4-dr. 4· Volvo 9772 ,73 Eldo. Convertible '68 Clean. low mUes, l ~J?lywth Open 6aily & Sun. 'tll 10 PM 2929 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa or best offer. 545-8664 or 673-6309 ·m Ford Tilt over cab. 20· Slake bed. xlnt cond. $3750. 540·7283 days. 548·231 l eves. '68 Ford PU 1 Ton. 8' bed w/sheJI, boot. CB & PA. new tires, many xtras. Very sha rp.· $2000. 642~ or ~39619 ·74 Chevy ~ton. 350. P /S, P /B. air. wtRoyal util body. 979-3079, 556-6045 '75 Luv. 16.000 ml. paint spoked whls. rtairs, bucket seats, S3.000/ofr. 842·5617 Ford cabover truck. 1973 •SALES . •SERVICE •LEASING O.erseos Del very Service & parts now open on Sat·s 8 to 4 for your oonvenience. VOLVO SPEC. "'LS 2 to choose from. starting spd good tires & brakes. · Cla••IA lmmac co .. d owner. $1.500. 644.a305 or A • ••••••••••••••••••••••• -"' • ,. • 67" _.. 8210 4 Door. 4 speed. at Sll.900 (804NCW) new battery, carb a nd 49.000 mi. Coaslder '70 tc _.,. ________ _ radio. 1097PKE> '73 450SE'1 valve Job. well main-'77 '72 f1eetwood as trade DodcJe • 99351--------- NOW $2895 Jtochoosefromstarling tamedcar.$995.893-6460 In . $6,750. Pvt. ply.••••••••••••••••••••••• 6~6;1~~~tic. 888DOVESTREET atSl0.500<960JLW> after7pm ~/58l·$986 '72 Charger SE. New s;:m.oo 645·9486 Near MacArthur '74 450SEL $400. cash rebate for quick VOLVO '71 Cad· Fleetwood. Xlnt tires, xlnt c:ond. $1950. •,----u--------- &Jamboree Roads 2 to choose from starting sale of '72 4 dr Mrk II. cond. $31!i0. M. $49•3281. 646-4848 &675-8258 _.._ 9965 833-1300 alS13,700(S4448) V/top. air. new eng. HERE ...aow 6-10.842-0889 ...................... . ---------• 75 450 SE .ct SB. tires. clutch, etc .. etc. " ~e '69 CoroneL 2dr ... MIMINIWWMIMllW TOP BUYER Starting at $15.500 <No's. equals $1655. 549-4187 ---.-'6.5 Cad Covert. Wht. FP. Ht. 31.S eog, auto &.rans. '968 ARBIRD See us firsl. & last! Top 5434 & 3299> Smart Ex· days •MIWCOLORS Immac. 1 ·ownr. $1500. PS. PB. AC. $SOO . air cond, xtra nice car, dollar paid for imPorts. ecutive cars. Trimlph 9761 •MEW MODELS ftrm. P /P848·9958 963-8839 Steve. nd5. COST A MESA Ml% 450SLC's ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huge aavings on all re-El Dorado "ll, wies reg '75 Bili; ck ~entury. .PS. ~ ~. DATSUN ~4~:~1 ~:~e Cn;:~o~':!~ TR. 7, '75, xlnt ~· low maiolof new 76.s & gas. low miles.orig.spec PB, &r. tilt whl. vmy\ ... ~~·~--IQ//' 2845Harbor Blvd. Cond. (NO's. 7014 &S34J) mi, AM/FM radio, cass Oemoslnstoctc. paint. xtras. Clean. top. sharp lot. Ofr. Call ~CZ> -W Costa Mesa 540·6410 ...,._ .. 50SL player. cocoa brn, $4895. MARQUIS VOLVO clean. Owner. 646-5675 _642·1902 ~ • ,......,., l714>494·1329 MlsSfO~VltJO · . Ford 9940 751·5664 540-936% 975 Datsun 280Z 2+2· '72 and '73 lo-ml like new 831•2810 49~1210 C•.•o 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Loaded! Metallic brown l713EAM&946GUY> VolbWCICJlft 9770 --------DIR.r.as ••••••••••••••••••··-· -•lo.1.1!!.ecou..-....................... 1969FordGaJaxie.PS. exterior with saddle in· ... ~ "' • Mak rr od terior. Like NEW! Ask· Jtocb006efrom '73220D. MEW* USED O 74C&maro~,newpalnt. eo er. 68 Flrebird, xlnt co .• ing $6500. Pri. pty. ·74 2400, ·75 3000. Im-YOLY . narea, susp. XJn\ cond . 642-5236 auto,air.magsnublkv· 546-1934 581-7991. maculate! <No 's . VW'S EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO $4800.ln.a551<21:1) 19'1'0 Ford Torino Brm, 2 tcp.SlJSO/ofr.586-6433 H.t>otC.M.64&-9303 376GD L. 097LGL. _.__ 125 LarirestVolvoDealer dr Zl VS. full pwr air ,.-"-A-toSdll '76 280Z. 11.000 ml. very 74SLWH> v..-.... lnOrangeCounty! noltf' '. '920 c:oOct $1595 • ~ --, THE IRITISH clellll, 56950. 546-4195 or 2 I l/921-1588 IN STOCK BUY or LEASE • · '71 Fireblrd Formula '73 Ranc:hero SOO. Beaut 548 0097 · DIRECT •-••••••••••••••••••• 400. air. PS. new tires, cond, low m i. PB/PS. ARIDEAUNG! -. 714/523-7250 Hcrdtofiftd · tl\nllnt J~ new brks. good cond. AM. new radials. $3100. 76tR7 '74 8 ·210. 4·dr 4spd. gold . modet ~'~i"~~~.~~ '64 Corvair. AU\4). new ... ~J''°'--. f'q,~./' Please make offer. _586-_24_31_a_n_s...;;p_m ____ 1 ~· :!'1~·:i~fs~·c°a~ ~:ind. Pnced right. 'et:• • ~t~1:::.wr~Be~t ~ ~ •W 1 _5f7_·1B02 ______ _ '71 Datsun Pick-Up c;1!---·-__ --~-__ Mu t wn OI' off lC 4> '68 Flrebird Formula 400. w/shell camper. Sl.295 L<090eaRTa~>lo pyment s '76 Datsun 8210 Hlchbck. Wll ...... 2025 ~ s see._,.., er. 751-5664 540-9362 PS. PB. AC. Sl.000/ofr. Phone842-4904 ,7SFfATXl/9 Bm ext.lanint,AM/FM f} · · Casb only.638-9308 968-0441aft.6pm. M b 71J'/U(,_;/lr:r. A;..~-750-1 '76 El Camino. Bt'a"k. "' "'· _, LTD I . . . I stereo, 4spd. S3200./ofr. '67 280 SL. new k 's.. t1 1"\11at•a•n• " ~ u; , o ma. aar. vany -------- '74 Maz.da Rotary PU Like Uke new! Loaded, flaw· c 1 l 4 l 6 4 o . 5 3 1 l . new top, AM /FM, air, 7IOOWeetmlnater Blvd. 70 Volvo 1455• Wagon. Stereo, lo mlles. Xlnt roof. pwr. Jo book $li50. ·74 Grand Prix. Loaded new. many xtras. 26,000 less (470a.1Y0 1 <213!553-5221 SSS00.675-2305 w..tmtnater 113-7551 stereo, air, 66,000 mi, cond.631-0141.831-0990 SS7-6434 Low mi., like new. Pvt. ml.mustsee.S48·S 7 60 ~~lo-mi. bcauurul ·;o510.xl;t-cond. '75 ·450SE,25.S{)()mi,dark '12 5!iUAREBACK. R & Sl775·551·1~ '15 Nova 6 cyl. 2·door, '5 Fairlane Sta Wgn. 8 pt,v.$3850.673-3:599 ·so Ford ~ ton. sharp. tnvestment <034M DU >50 $900. blue w /blue int. cassette. H. x nt. cond. Lo. ml. Volvo •72 l800E Sports AM/FM stereo tape. 5 pass, 302 VS, A/C, n pwT, '74 Flrebird. Muat sell. every xtra. $1000. others to choose from' 540·0362 xlnt cond $14.900. 646·3569 $1895. 536·1484 &642-lS.54 Cpe. N~ pot. low mi... new radial tlr~. xlnl crs cntrl. S.1275. 842-1102. tully loaded! ~71 '59 .r.-rrE 72 vw Sq b k t loaded. * .... "". 644·5192 cood .• must sell $2~. 645·71S5 ~"'"'' ·74 Dat!lun 260Z. Air. '76 Me r cedes 450SL pare ac •au o, ......,... S967aft 9 30p '6.5 Falcon Wgn. 289 V-8, Clasaac Austin Healey Mags, new radia ls. R•iadster. perf. cond. alr. $1495. 492·7296 San eves. 1~-32W ext 272 646-er : m auto, A/C, P /S, PJB. nwldertHrd 9970 comp.restort.-0 perfect body. 34.000 mi. Full pwr. $18 •. 000. Oemente daya. '74 Monte Carlo. Low mi $375.631-0223 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Dodge Van, xlnt cond. 71240% MIOO. 714-772 5250 497·2453. <Financing '71 VW·Bug-YeJlow ..._UMcl beauty. Bluewlblt vinyl ._.,.._0 W . '63 T·Bird. Runs. nds Many xtru. Must see Air,AM·FM, mags. mint avail or lease) Clean, gdc:ond. .. .. •••••••••••• .. ••• top. Newtln!e, x!m~, _.,... on 1111. new tires, work. Sl7S. apprec. $3100 firm (342JYW) 9725 of """" 4 ~ 9901 Must sell. ~ake ofr. air. 390 VS. 1 OWIU'. $llOO. 898-7032 .,.,7·"'°"1. -2 J'"'~U "'R XJ6L ....................... 72 DtEsa Bst r. 646-......... •••uw 540-0731 or846-4750 833-9570 -..... , --... s ........ ·-········· 1....:...;.;._ ______ _..,_ ---------4 •-mt. flawless beauty. "12Flat8SO pyder air. slick, AM /FM '64 vw Camper, needs '""Gal 1 "-...- '73 Ford Van Ecooo 200 "-Conv rt XJnt co d '""""" f 71• aAa f1Lt!7 '5 Chevy Nova -ax e -··•••••••••••••••••• Loaded <507EYW> e . n . ,,,.,.,.,.,/or. ............,.. eng & body work, matte SHARP FuUyequipped "76 STATION Wgn. Perf. ~~· ~ P°B?'xtn 72 YW CAMPER AM/FM 644 -5 923 '72 210 s& ~fer. 675·9007 :~if /B, Air. SIQ.1065 S896. 968-4149 cond. Appear. group. SMS0.552-«1.21 Has everything. ex· Honda 9727 4•5 Uter with electric '70 vw Pop-Top Cam~, '7r............:..w._ uo:>o mi. S29951orr. ---------1 cellentcond. (482FDN> ••••••••••••••••••••••• bit ••~ nt '11 MOll&e Carlo. 57K ml, .---__... 962 3638 & Bob <2l") '70 FORD9 Pass. Van.1 TIUUMPHS -OVER20 sunroof • .AM/FM ~nd.~~=........ .Fllc:tatr.AMtFMstereo, 4drCOunt.rySdn.Vs ~ • ton. VS. auto. lo ml. G Drive over 20 used and 8rcmcl New '77 1t•reo, cassette new tires, very nice. AC.PB. PS. Topcond. -------- rond. Call btwn 8-5. Ph look into our lease pro· HONDA Cars player gettlllHleather '69VW.Goodcond. $'2500.n4·556-7318 BetorroverSl,000. '74 VEGA Hatchback. in 495-4631 gram Super sensible MAMY ........ ,;_ This cw ls SlOOOFi.rm ~ 9925 673-0160 super c:ond. Make offer. ts ..,....... -· '' Call 545-2294 • -r--C!i65 KBI t 875-3059 ·6316' movinl{ van, with pymn · To Choose"'°"'! in perl~ condJtloll. i4 Dodge ppt 4 dr .. '7 •••••••••••• .. •••••• .. • For Sale. 1 owner Ford spd. $2200. 5'xs· U·Haul ~;•i>O!:!~an fun u...alVERSITY and 11 Hfllg sold by Ul73 Super Beetle. $2000. Datsun 610 2dr. Phone '88 airy &aUon Wagon. LTD. um. j\tany xtns. 74 Vega 01'. xlnt cond . ...... 1 .... _S400 __ . 7_~ ____ _. machines! 27 Lease ~ ariglnal owner. Tobac· Great cond. l owner. 840-1091 all 6pm Pvt ~nt cond. $'1S)/bst ofr. Cleah. Good trans. $1875. Air . mags & radials. '?"-Ford Van, VS custom planuenaible pymts. otdsmobile co cofor. $7,950. flnn. 642·7342. -Ply. Call642-S299 ~;6'4.as93 ~.96:2.m9 titf. Low mi. 13900. .._.. C.-s • GMC Call F. L. lr•t, Aldos.Mew tlOO ...... New tlOO ........... flOO ...... New tlOOAlllol.Mew tlOO lilii.otlS Truckt 7 7 8 • 6 6 0 0 o t -••••••••••-'-• .. •••••••••• .. ••• .. •••• ................ , ......... •••••••••-•-• ..... ••••••·---·· ~ W-"d tltO ~!!':°bor 8~9840 673-7932 ········-············· 9570 •••••••••••••••••••••• •974 1976BJueHonda Wa1on. '73 MB 280C, 1 ownr. air, Stick shin. xlnt cond. elec. sunrt, auper dean SADDLEBACK ' BMW "ASK TO SEE l'HEFACTORY INVc;>ICE" SALE 5 YR.. 75,000 *2 WAllAMTY " • 76 COSMO D1MO .. SAVE s2000 WAS $6015 MOW '4085 541< •CDa3C702?IM • 176 MIZER S2545 SAVE '537 ... ;>e< •STC3821QI • 176 RX4 DEMO $3974 SAVE '1500 S.. •LA 2"1"1111 • MEW RXl ROTAIY WA~. 5 Yr., 75.000 Mile Full Factory Wamnty SAVE 'I 100 NOW '3221 Se<. eSS124Wl~lll ".., • . . . ALL CARS PRICED AT FACTORY IMYOI~ MUST SELL! HURRY! LARGE SELECTION EXAMPLE: ALL NEW 1977 GREMLIN .~~ $ 8 cyllnder engine. ' 1peed tnrMmilllon. ~ ...... Ser. tA7M486E17040t flOl1m ..... ,...., DIAi.a .. SOUTt9M CAlllO•IA 40 JEEPS TO CHOOll flOM MEWlt17 PINTO .. . Z.OLSIDAN 4 spd.. front discs. vinvt budcet seats. elec. rear wind. defroster, sll. bit ' radials. tnt. glass, whl. c:vrs. STK237 (1~1722). s3372 ··· Plus Tax and Uoense • I l MIEW 1977 MUSTANGS 2 Dll HAUToPs 2 + 2 FASTIAQS , Over 25 new 1977 Mustangs in stock. We h•-ve a SUPER SELECTIPN of standards and Ghias. SEE US IEFORE YOU IUY! • MEW 1971 PICKUP'S "READY TO aOLL" CHECIOUR . VOLUME SAVltGS , From light pici<op1 to oustdm heavy duty models. we can serwyau best. . • .t• . • ho HURRY FOi AMAL CLEAIAMCI DISCOUN'l'S OM ALL REMAINING 71.'s~ ··· '71POMTIAC C4TMNCOWI AM/FM --e1ec. -'ndoWI. tilt whl. <nM oontr'bf, air cipndltlonlng, P.S .• rallye wh .. I•, vlnyl top. (839NLfl s3999_- I 75 Fleetwood Brghm ..•• · •.... S9295 (173MCF) -75 Eldorado Coupe ....•••.•. $8495 (725KYS) '75 Coupe deVllle ......•••••. S7995 (135MON) '75 Coupe deVllle •..•..•••••• S7595 C986M>rn '74 Eldorado ..........••• , ••• S8995 (135JSF) 74 Eldorado •.........•••••• S6395 (079KGE) 73 Eldorado Coupe .••••••••. S5795 C752POS) I CADILLAC VALUE • J PROTECTION Pl.AN I ~__,,,,,,__. AVAILABLE 1 ON MOST CARS ' •••••• ·73 Olds 98 Sedan ..... , ••.•.. S3295 ' (354~0T) 78 Chevy Monza 2+2 .•••••.. S3896 (084PCF) '78 ToyotaCellcaGT •••.••.. S4395 • (783~XB) ' '14 Dodge Surfer Van ........ s 5995 With mag wheels. stereo tape & suoroof-LUU; NEW! (18333U) NEW! ROMDATSUM .... \ 810 OU.FAll&YZCAA BRAND NEW 1917 . * . . Great Selection IMMEDIATE DELIVERY .. BUY I FROM IKE "71 TOYOfA COIOUA Olux Cp. A. T., AM 52599 UC. 122.,.MO 7JCRICA A/C. 4 IC) •• l'lldlo 52799 Llc.388GJY '67 YOl.Y,O 122 Mint Condition AT.~ 51699 Uc.UU0012 . ONLY$1171 ~~· TO BUY, BUICK5 SMALL CAR ~EW OPEL LOW LOW COST HIGH GAS MILEAGE -C&llf. EPA Ratings: 22 MPG CITY 32 MN Hl~HWAY Wett.ft45p11• . &,..amrtla SwW-.AJrC1 •t1 ·1 ALLATGREAnY REDUCED PRICIS *4'8 months at $71.71; cash price S2888 (plus tax & license); deferred 1 payment s>rice$3891.36; APR 12.e1: 1 , down payment $199 plus tax & license (cash or trade). On approved credit. • '· All of our C8IS have a 5 year-50,000 mile aervice contract available. · 1/J Mile So. of the San Diego Frwy. Between Adams & Baker Wherever you. live In .Orange County, buying a Uatfd1 Car In Costa Mesa •fro"' Johnaon & Son "Just Makes Sense!" • • I "71 IMCOU4 MAU IV V-8, automatic, factory air. power steering 4 power brakes. power window._ power door locks. cruise control C691LPY). 58895 07' fOID .UMADA ..aA CPI. A•to. trans., factory air , coodl~ steering, power brak~ , beater, whitewall tirel, ~I roof, tinted l)us, wheel coven..~. lea than 9,000 miles. (l93•n1.) 15395 "71 UMCOLM COUN VS, automatic, factory air, C!OQditlonin&, whitewall tires, full power, 'heater, stereo radio, vinyl roof, tinted &lass & wheel covers. (252CCY). '2495 7Z ll09L1D 4 H. HAIDTOP Auto. trans .• factory air ~. power ateertni. power brat-. r.cBO. beater. brown f1Dllb wltb white •ill11 roof. Sharpl ( .... ) '2715 .,, «.DI c:un.us 2 Dr. CG9e. vs. automatic, fador'J elr~&. pwr. Mering. pwr. ""*•• 9tereo radio, beater. tinted = Wl11 roof, nitewall tlrea & coven. C537HTY). '31tS I BJ aGBl!!ltT BARKE• Clf .. Oell, .......... Tbe BfllJtblgton Belch Charter Rerilian Committee is at T(Of'k .oa a aumber of proposed changes in city government that could de- lvelo&t Dito explosive political i.s- . euee. Potentially bot topics tbat will be studied by the nine-member committee include: -The election of a full·time mayor. • Heiress' Suit Bid Rejected By TOM BARLEY Of IM Dally f'llot Staff A bid by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer for a judg- ment that would have given her victory in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit against the James Irvine Foundation was rejected today in court. Judge James F. Judge's de- nial, issued immediately after he took the bench, means that at- torney Howard Friedman will now have to put on evidence in what is expected to be three more weeks of testimony. Friedman's Jjhase of the trial that began last September will include a tour of the Irvine Com- pimy's holdings in Orange Coun· ty with lawyers for all four parties involved in the Smith lawsuit accompanying Judge Judge. Judge Judge told Friedman to- day that be was "having pro- blems" in understanding and as- aesstng Mrs. Smith's position at this pbaseoftbe lawsuit. Nottnc that the Mobil Oil Corn- y's $281.9 million offer for the un.datlcn's 54.5 percent stake in the Irvine Company wort.a oul at $83.50 a share. be a.steel Fried- m&D wby Mn. Smith "does not have an adequate remedy" if she believes that figure to be below the true value of the shares. "She can assert her rights as a dissenting shareholder," the judge said. "She can come to court and demand an appraisal of the Irvine Company stock." Friedman. who appeared to be. take aback by the observation, tmmedlate)y t.ld Judge Judge tbat his lawsuit is designed to pnserve Mrs....5.mith's status as a iaority shareholder in the eCompany. ... Bet st.afile as a shareholder ouJd be 1e9ered if the lotmda- lon deal with Mobil ls ap- IunwiM .. Jl'rledman said. "That Ute Unit« her lawsuit'' , ........ SSS. Pa•e.U) Cll~ges ~oming to a Boil • -Elec:Uonotcitycouncil mem-Attorney Jerry Bame is be.ta from districts ra&her than at cti'1rman ol the ClOllllOittee that laree. • meets publicly the fll'lt ancl1hird • TuesdQs of each month in city -Appointment ihltead ol elec-council caifereoce rooms. tioli of the' city attorney, city clerk and city treasurer. The question of making the lat- ter three positions appoifitive has goae before the voters on two previaas occasions and they were soundly defeated each time. The charter bas been ua- cbanged since it \tu adopted by voters tn 1966. Since that time there have been cha~ which necessitate it bebll brought~ to date and into coDformaace with state legislation. Baqie says be plans to have the commi~ ncommeadations in the handa ol the ci\y council by November. Any changes in the charter will have to be approved 'bY voters before taking etfeot. An election is not expected until 1978. Bame says if there are any chanses the public wishes to see incorporated in the city charter. now is the time to make them known. He added that the 1roup will hold public hearints. • He said residents can contact him at 962-aill or Jeri Chennelle. a city administrative aide, at "6-5553. ·Bame said.fJ"ecomme:ndations will be based on input from such sourc~ as the ~ague of Cities, current office hOlders, depart- ment directors, officials of sur- rounding cities and opinions ~ . from the public. Bame said that the re10r1a1calil committee baa been elven &el rein to explore Cban•es bytbe et. tycoWlcll. "J hope this continues to be tbf case wbeo the report C01D• m." be said. "By November, we will bave put in an awfully lot ol wort into the report and I have hopes that tbe city council wlll give il serious consideration,•• he said. . . Care Home· Hit·: . Violations Found at F acilitY:i An investigation into condi· lions of a Huntington Beach board and care home for emo- tionally disturbed women has re· vealed 11 violations of state re· aulations, accordine to a county orficial. . , The violations were found at Juanita Bray's Board and Care Home at 11102 Dale Vista last Friday by an tnvestigator from "" the Orange County Department of Social Services. BEST ACTRESS ROLE? Dunawayln 'Network' BEST ACTOR NOMINEE Late Peter Finch 'Network,' 'Rocky' Vie to Top Oscars LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Netwofk," a scathtnc view ot the television industry, and "Rocfrt," the story of a rags.-to- rlcbe1 boxer, each won 10 nominations today from &be Mo- tion Picture Academy as the top film of the year. • The Watergate film, "All the President's Men." followed with eight in t1'e 49t.b Oscar nomina- tions. "BOund for Glory," the Woody Guthrie biography. followed with sbt. 'Men;•• Jodie J'~ter. '"1a.xi Drtver;"'Lee G~ ''Voyage Of the Damned;'' Piper Laurie, "Carrie ;" Beatrice StralC)lt; "Network." -Dlreclion: Alui J. Pakula, "All tbe President'• Men"; Ingmar Bergman. "Face to Face"; Sidney Lumet, "Network"; John G. Avilmen, "Roclt1";-Lina WertmuUer, (See OSCARS, Page A2> . The violations include: -A furnace that bad bet!n broken for five days. -No fence around a swimming pool. -Bathroom plumbing broken for three weeks and patients had to roll up trousers to use bathroom. -Improper handling of money belonging to patients. -Lack of admission records and medical reports and tirst aid supplies. -Premises not 111ail\tained in good state of repair including the bathroom, torn curtains and ~ken•..., . l>ean ~. a supervisor with tb~ County Department of Social Servloes, said the home was in· habited by six patieqts . He aaid they are being moved to other homes with the as- sistance of representatieves of the Mental Health Department. Harris said normally an operator or a care home is pre· sented a list of violations and The late Peter Fiacb was nominated for best actor in ''Network.'' Alao nominated were William Holden of" Network;" Robert De Niro, "Taxi Driver;" Giancarlo Giannini, "Seven Beauties," and Sylvester Stallone, "Rocky." BB, Valley City Offices t·o Close ..Network" also scored a best .-: ti • F Huntinctm Beach and Foun-actress .DOuuna on .or aye taln Valley city offices will be Dunaway, and Talia Shire was named fat .. Rocky.'~ clOHd Fri.day for Lincoln's birth- Othert in the Tace: Marie· day, cltyofftcialuald. Christine Barrault, "Cousift But Wes$min.ster and Seal Coualde:" Silly Spacek, "Car· Beach citf offices will remain rte ... ad liv Ullll:um.n, ·~!Pace to open. • Face.•• , All West Orange County high ,..a • ~ r sebool and elementary students Nominateu aor ._" p.ctunf of • have Prid•v off .... d t to the year wen .. All tbe Preli-~ -· i:e um ffllt'• Men." "BoUnd for Gl~ c~~see llonday. school ofilcials ''Networt;• "Bocky" and .. Tail 'said. Drinr .. ~ Muina High Scbool students <>t.bef.nominatlons· .. leftcluses at9:30 a.m. today due -Supportin& acto;: Ned Beat-to an electrical failure. Hunt- Districtofficials said. Electrical power had been cut off since midnightt according to Southern California Edison Com- pany spokesman Bill Comptoo. Edison officials cut power at the high school to repair a faulty underground electrical switch. Power was doe to t>e turned on again at 7:30 a.m. today, but servicing took twice as long as anticipated, Compton said. Marina High School studenls will mate up the lost claaa time later in the year, school officials said. given time to correct them before steps are taken to revoke the state license. He said this is not an issue in this case because the operator of the facility is being evicted by the landlord. Harris said complaints were lodged against operations of the Oller Studied r acility by a former manager. He said that conditions were "pretty bad-certainly not wbl¢ we would desire." The facility has been in oper.- tion about a year, be said. Efforts to contact Juanita Bray were not successful. Gunman Contidues To Hold Hostage INDIANAPOLIS (AP> -A vengeance-s·eeking gunman thinking be is "a marked man" for life, continued to hold a hostage in a booby·trapped apartment today while his lawyers studied an offer of im· piwaib' froaa-MWf!CU~n. Anthony G. "Tony" lttritsis asked thii morning that bis at• torneys examine the immunity papers which local proeecut.ors approved in an effort to break the GUNMAN SURRENDERS, FREES 7 AT BANK-M tense standoff which began Tues- day ai Kiritsi.s • apartment. Authorities said Kiritsis in- dicated he would accept his at- torneys' judgment. The papers, read to Kiritfjs Wednesday night from an apart- ment across the hall, were picked up by bis brother, James, and then delivered to the lawyers by a deputy prosecutor. A spokesman for negotiators said there was no reason to believe Kiritsis would issue any new demands, and authorities were hopeful the ordeal would end when Kiritsis' attorneys verified the d~uments. "He (Kirits1s) is optimistic. We're optimistic," the spokesman said. In a predawn telephone in· terview with WIBC radio news director Fred Heckman, to whom Kirltsis haa spoken several times the past two days, Kiritsis said, "I've already lost all my self respect. I'm going to be am arked man all my life." Kint.sis also told Heckman be was angered by reports that there were no records of bis ever working at the Military Acadeln;J at WeltPob:lt,N.Y. . "I was an ad'riser to the in-structors there," be aid. Frustrated police and sheriff's deputies maintained their vt&il near the building. OccaslonaDr, one or two unifonped omcert waited between a laree bus used as a police command ~ter an4 a neighboring buildine where thEI sbertn's department set up bead .. quarters. . A friend took a copy of the im-1 munity offer Wednesday night td the apartment where KiritsiS held executive Richard O. Hall bostaee. said George Martz.; s pokesman for poMces negotiators. i Martz said the friend read the offer through the booby-trappecf front door to Kirltsis, wboth'h!= him that be didn't want to about it then and preferred to wait until morning. 1 Martz said the docum•t;i , signed by a deputy prosec~ offered "total immunity" ~ arrest or psychiatric con«aeii ment to Kiritsis. Kidnap, Rape· -1 Charges Jail ! I Har'bour Youtli t y, .. Network; .. Burgess il\•ton Beach Union Hlgb School MeredJt~ and Burt Young, ------~--------------------------------------~------~----------------~ "Rffky;•• Laurence Ollvier:- "llaratbon Man;•• Jason Robards ... All the President's Ma." ~ . -SQpport.ing actress: Jane Alexader ... All the Presldedt'i1 .~nPi'obed Al DAIL v Pfl.O'T H/F 1 Co:unty's Jobless J :Dropped • Oraoie Cou.oty'a aeuonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped to five percent in January, accordlq to flJures re. leased today by the state Employment Developmeat Department (EDD>. (The California rate also dropped from 8.9 percent to 8.5.) In December, the county's un· employment rate stood at S.4 per. c:ent. But post.cbrlstmu season job ayof& were not as great as ex· peeled in January as Orange County's seasonally adjusted un· employment rate declined. Overall, however. the total number of employed in the coun· ty dropped from 801,800 in December to 795,400 in January. EDD filures, therefore, show the post·Cbristmas season layoffs took a toll but not as great .a one as predicted earlier. The report shows that in the past year 40,600 new jobs were · created in the county, a growth . rate of6.9percent. A strong factor in that gain was · the addition of 7 ,300 jobs in coun- ty manufacturing plants. Also, there were strong gains during the year in the construe! lion industry with 10,200 jobs added to county payrolls, accord· ing to the EDD report. The department's statisticians predicted continued rise in con. struction employment in the ear- ly part of 1977 as well as a gain in public service jobs. Front Page A 1 OSCARS ••• "Seven Beauties." -Foreign language film: "Black and White in Color," Ivory Coast; "Cousin Cousine," France; "Jacob the Liar," German Democratic Republic;. "Nights and Days," Poland; ··seven Beauties," Italy. -Original screenplay: Jean· Charles Tacchella and Daniele Thompson. "Cousin Cousine"; Walter Bernstein, "The Front"; Paddy Chayefsky, "Network"; Sy 1 vest er Stallone, "Rocky"; Lina Wertmuller, "Seven Beauties." -Screenplay adaptation: 1 William Goldman, "All the President's Men"; Robert Getchell, "Bound for Glory"; Federico Fellini and Bernardino Zapponi, "Fellini's Casanova"; Nicholas Meyer, "The Seven· Per-Cent Solution ·•; Steve Sbagan and David Butler, "Voyage of the Damned." -Original song : "Ave Satani," from "The Omen": "Come to Me," from "The Pink Panther Strikes Again". .. Evergreen,'' the love theme from "A Star ls Born"; "Gonna Fly Now," from "Rocky"; "A World That Never Was," from .. Half a House." -Cinematography: Haskell Wexler, "Bound for Glory"; Richard H. Kline, "King Kong"; Ernest Laszlo, "Logan's Run"; Owen Roiiman, "Network": Robert Surtees, "A Star Is Born · The nominations went much ac· cording to prediction!!, few sur- prises bemg noticeable. If there was a dark hone, 1t might be Jtaly'1 "Seven Beauties" with Its nominations for Giannini and w ertmuller. Surprisingly, "JGng Kong," the most expensive and highly touted of the 1978 product, was named only for cinematography and sound. But the Dino de Laurentiis remake also bas been given a special viaual effects award by the Academy's Board of Gov· emora. The Oscars will be pr~ented March 28 at the Loa Angeles MuaicCmter. DAILY PILOT County Assesaor Brad1e)' Jacobs nld today a se>called freue on reaaaesalng homes ln Los Angeles County won't have any impact in Orange County. · Jacobs said conditions that touched off Los Angeles CoWlt.y AasesSOl' Phillip Watson 's an· nouncement Wednesday of a two- vear freeze don't exist in Orange County. (Related story Page AS.) "So, we're not going to take any precipitous action," Jacobs said. ~Howe.er, .. he added, "we•n be watclUne what happens tn Los An1eles very closely.• ' What happened in Los Angeles County Wednesday was that Watson sent a shock wave thro\l&b taxi.al agencies when be said homes will stay at their 1976 assessed value for at least two years. That means property tax· payers In 1.4' Angeles won't be aaslinect higher values on their homes because of values that 'Dut~h Courage'?' Woli't Be continue to Inflate. It also means that taxlne agen· clu woo't have an expandlnc tax bne in residential property to fall back on for added revenue. W atsciQ, who bas been feuding. with the Los Anaeles County Board of Supervisors In recent months, said be bas no choice but to honor the freeze because of a staff shortqe and a lack of com- pute:riied systems needed to re-. assess all homes once each year. · Affected Orance County Aasessor Jacobs said today be doean•t have t.bose t>~Jems and pro- bably ls legally obligated to put new values on all Oran1e County residential property each year. .. Tbef'e•s very little similarity between our ol)eration and Los Angeles, .. Jacobs explained. "We have the capability to do thlnJts Los Aqeles can't do ... what tat efficiency means to Orange County taxpayers ls that Jacobs cannot fall back oo staff short.age or aystema sbortcom· ings to justify a so-caned value freeze. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. bu warned Sbutbero Callf()rpla residents that they, too, muat conserve W•ter, even thoulh water la 1W1 plentlfUl In thetf'repon. .. When people are factnr bankruptcy in water.short Northern Calltomla, they view with diamay t.be tiWng of swim· ming pool a lo Soutbero California and the coostructioo or aew recreational lakes.'.' Brown aa1d Wednesday. Heist Evid ence Culled County asseesors in California follow a unltorm set of laws that govern assessment practices, ln· eluding a mandate to put an up. dated value on all homes an· nu ally. .. People in the nonb want to see more conservation . In the south. We're in a crisis we've never faced before," Brown said after a 2~bour free·wheellng discussion with about '7S legislators, state officials and representatives oC water districts and agricultural groups. A rather unlikely bandit team ma_y have sat outside swigging whiskey and beer t.o bolster their ~ourage before invading a Hunt· mgton Harbour home in a $2,850 armed robbery late Tuesday night. And one of them, presumably the younger, who carried a pistol, may have also dropped a buJlel while fumbling to load his gun before bursting into the Mark Bent residence. Investi1aton were again dis· patched to tl\e home at 16282 Wayfarer Lane, Huntington Po lice Cars Spark Huntington Crash A Huntington Beach man, ap· parently intrigued by a bevy of police cars and the flashy new sportscar they bad just corralled after a high speed chase, created a traffic problem of bis own early Wednesday on Beach Boulevard. Police say Edward Ojeda, 21, Grand Jury Continues Fund Probe By GARY GRANVILLE OI Ille Dail., l'llot SU.If The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into co~oty polibcal campaign practices continued to- day with the appearance and nonappearance of key witnesses. Most notable among the nonap- pearances was an aborted trek into the jury room Wednesday by former police informer Gene Conrad. A week earlier, Conrad bad cit- ed his first, fourth fifth, ninth and 14th amendment rights when he refused to testify before the grand jury. He was set for what be said was to be a repeat performance Wed- nesday when banded a court or· der signed by Superior Court Judge James Walsworth. The order commanded Conrad to testify and. in effect, said he would be in contempt of court if he refused. That message was enough to block Conrad's entry into the jury room as through his at- torney he declared Walsworth prejudiced. As a result, Superior Court pre- siding Judge Byron McMillan will decide Monday If W alsworth's order will stand and if Conrad will be made to testify under threat of contempt. Conrad reportedly pumped mon than $50,000 into political campaigns last fall , including more than $40,000 directed into county Supervisor Philip An· thony's campaign. · F,..,.PageAl HEIRESS .•• Mrs. Smith, who holds 22.4 per· cent of the issued Irvine Com· pany shares, ls known lo pref er the $282.7 milliOD offer made for. the foundation's holdings by' what la referred to in court u the Allen·Taubman group: A con· · so'rtium beaded by Wall Street flnaacler Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alf red Taub- man. · Friedman's comments and teaUmooy from Mn. Smlth'a de- poeition indicate that ber present atatua as a major mlnorJty 1hare~lder in tbe company. tounded by her 1rHclla~er would be preservec;t It the Alleoo Taubman bid prevalll til court. Friedman vainly! araue4 throuocut m09t Of w~ that t.6e foaadJtlon't HM b' thie salt ~Ha lrvme Company bol4· in11 to Mobil Is 0 a tainted ac· tlon!' · He~ eoocltlD.D.cd lb• uJe of lbo (OUDdatlon'a stake in tb9 cQmp80)'. a,s a "1weetheart deal" Ud a "pr'Cscrlption for dlsuter. "They are (lrowning and they want Mra. Smith to drown wJtb them," Fttedman protested. "Tbejtell us th )f()bll offer ii tile biitt they can aet but I\ 1 only tlMt .,.-tMy can 1et bec•uN the marketplaiee uf ~inerlca -been told h&Jlda off, Uala 11 If oblr1 deillt.. • of 17001 Stanley Lane, walk~ away from a 3 a.m. crash in which bis car rammed a parked auto, careened into a power pple and flipped over. Westminster police officer Earle Graham said Ojeda was traveling southbound just north of the San Diego freeway when be apparently became distracted by the police activity surrounding the new sports car. Officers theoriied that after surveying what is left of bis auto, almost any other car would look good to Ojeda today. Driver, 74, Uninjured in HB Accident A 74-year-old motorist ap. parenUy received minor .injuries in a chain reaction crash trig- gered in the parking Jot at Hunt- ington Center when his car's ac· celeratorjarnrned. According to police reports, the car first lurched forward, crashing into three other parked cars. Witnesses to the Tuesday night mishap said the driver then apparently shifted into reverse and the car zoomed backward striking three more cars and a shopping cart . Police said the driver, who is deaf, reported no injuries in the mishap. The six parked cars and the s hopping cart sustained varying degrees of damage. "His car had major damage. All over," said one officer. · Ocean View Sclwol to Hold Pa~ntsBack Ocean View (elementary) School District officials plan to withhold $11,600 in payments to a building contractor for the al- leged failure to complete COD· structlon projects on time. District Superintendent Dale Cooean said the Orange County Counsel will meet with attorneys for the contractor this week to discuss possible legal action on the matter. DlJtrict officials told trustea Monday the COl)tractor, Profile Structures Inc., of Santa Fe &r· ing1, was '7 days late in compfet· lnl a relocatable classroom at Star Vlew School. Tba project was to be eoml>leted by Nov .10. DiJtrlct olftclals saJd the COD· atruction firm was $5 days late in completln1 w.ork on nine t~ lotatablo bulldinc• at ei1bt OJI. trict uhoola. · Edward Feser, Profile Struc· ture, Inc. president, told trustees MondQ numerous delm dot to plan eban.pa, weather, unavalla· blft eqQIJ:Cmt and replacement ot u tncal 1ubcontraetor ha•• =::•nted construction oomi>I MEXICO CITY (AP) -An ()verloaded ptweqer bus fell about 300 feet down an embank· ment several mUa outside Tax· co Wedntldtf'_ruaht. lcUlina 20 ~rsontlind 11\)urtna U. police re~. ':The aumvora are au tn f'lftr/ mUc&l coacHUon." a pollee 'PC*esrnan aiicl. ..Moat an IWl ~lou U4 Di11M AN·-= to talk." Hjq'4 1lO OM MC~ unllurt; Beach, shortly before noon Wed- nesday after Mrs. Lily Bent dis· covered the posaible new evidence. "We don't know that there's any connection," DetecUve Jack Welsh said today. W elsb said be has now received a full report of tbe 11 p.m. holdup. He planned to interview the Bents at home today. · Investigators declined to speculate on the gunmen's motive for choosing the home of the public health officer as a rob- 'bery tar~et. A riniing doorbell awakened the couple and Bent answered the door, only to be greeted by the suspects, one in bis early 20s and the second man about 60, pushing their way inside. They threatened the couple with a pistol and shotgun, keep. ing them seated in chairs, until forcing Bent to open a safe con- taining jewelry, $450 cash and a .22 cal. automatic pistol. The couple neither saw nor heard a car throughout the holdup, in which they were forced to remain in a bathroom to allow the gunmen sufficient time to escape. Watson's stance, therefore, was a "I would if I could but I can't" postuie that Jacobs tn- dicatedisoutOf reach for hhn. However, with b.ia promise to "watch tbillgs closely la Los Angeles" cune a ple<lge tb "do all I can w\tbin the law to help re· lleve county property taxpayers' burden." CB Recovery QinicSet A special public service to as· sf.st in recovery of stolenQndio gear and stereophonic sound t.'Om· poneni. will be offered Saturday in the Hwitington Beach City Ball parking lot. Members of organbaUon otCB buffs who provide an emergency communications syatem will be there from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. to en· grave owner identification on s uch units. The items will be marked with the owner's driver's license number to deter theft loss and make recovery easier in cases of grand theft.or bur1Jary. "We are going to have to share the leu, ahare the bW'den. lb.are the hardship." A lelislator from California's most severely bit county said be will propose mandatory statewide ratiooina. But Brown, questioned later by reporters, expressed doubts about statewide rationing althoUlhbe didn't rule it out. "Anything is a possibility con- sidering t.b1s drought. There is no statutory change that is not un- der consideration." Brown said. But, the Democratic governor added, "it may be more efficient to work cooperatively wft.b local water dlstrtcta than to issue more paper and regulatioo.a and edicts from the atate Capitol. "The object is to save water, not .lslue edicts,•• Brown said. Brown said be convened the session to bring together all of the mutually dependent water users and water providers, get them to exchange views and to help assess "the real problem, its magnitude and complexity ... and what can be done." RCA's most automatic ever1 Eledronlcally ttacke and correda the TV signal before it becomes a picture on ycur screen. • Automatic contrast/oolor "tracking" slrcuitry ties brightness. contrast and color together so that all three are balanced simultaneously. • Automatic COior control holds flesh tones and other colors ro the settings you select-even When TV signal varies or You RCA ColorTrak 19'' dlaoonar change channels. • • Automatic room tight picture control adjusts picture t>nghtness as room light changes. • RCA Super AccuFllter black matrix picture tube has flltered color phosphors that absorb room light. Result: color1 appear sharper and more vivid. s419ts f Ll I I I I VOL. 70, NO. •1, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Network." a •~thing view ol the television industry, and "Rocky," the story of a rags-~ riches boxer, each won 10 nominations today from the Mo- tion Picture Academy as the top film of the year. The Watergate film, "All the President's Men," followed with eight in the 49th Oscar nomina· ~ lions. "Bound for Glory," the Woody Guthrie biocrapby. followed with slx. Tbe late Peter Finch was nominated for best actor in .. Network." Also nominated were William Holden of'' Network;" Robert De Niro, ''Taxi Driver;" Giancarlo Giannini, "Seven Beauties," and Sylvester Stallone, "Rocky." .. Network" also scored a best actress nomination for Faye Dunaway, and Talia Shire •as namedfor"Roelcy." Others in the race: Marie- Ch rlstine Barrault, ''Cousin Coualne;" Sissy Spacek, "Car- rie," and Liv Ullmann, "Faoe to Face." Nominated for best picture of the year were "Aill the Presi· denl'alllen," "Bound for Glory," "Network," "Rocky" and "Taxi Driver." Other nomlnations: -Supportin1 actor: Ned Beat· ty, "Network;" Burgess Meredith and Burt Young, "Rocky;" Laurence Olivier, "Marathon Man;" Jaison Robards. "All tbe President's Men." -Supporting actress: Jane Alexander, "All the Ptesident's Men;" Jodie Foster, "'Jlaxi Driver;" Lee Grant,, .. Voyage of the Damned; .. Piper Laurie, .. c ... r1e;" Beatrice Straiaht, 0 Netlftlrk." -Directiob: Alan J. Patula, "All the Presldent'a Me11"; Inemar Bergman, .. Face to Fa~e"; Sidney Lumet, "Network"; John G. Avildseo, "Rocky"; Lina Wertmuller, "Seven Beauties." -Foreign \anguage fj)m: .. Black and White in Color," ];QJla)''s Clo lafJ N.Y.Stoek8 TEN CENT~ Ivory <JoaQ; "Cousin Cousin&," France; "Jacob tbe Liar:• German Democratic Republic; "Nights and Days," Poland; "Seven Beauties," Italy. -Original screenplay: Jean- Charles Tacchella and Daniele ThomPSOD. "Cousin Oouslne": Walter Bernstein, "The Front"; Paddy Chayefsky, "Network .. ; Sylvester Stallone. "Rocky"; <SeeOSCA&S, Page AZ> Heiress Dealt Setback Dally Ptlot Stllll PM\o Didn't Go Near the Water Signs pasted on this sloop bring to mind that old gag about a yacht being a hole in the water surrounded by fiberglass into which you pour money. Craft currently is berthed alongside several wheeled vehicles in one of those impromptu used car lots that spring up aJong major streets on the Orange Coast. Perhaps the boat is owned by a little old lady in Topsiders who ran out of monu before she got it wet. I -·Irvine Energy Wnservation Methods Vrged Irvine residents are being asked to take fast showers in· s tead of slow baths They're also supposed to plan meals with oven dishes that can I be cooked at the same time and cover their pots and pans when cooking. .• Those are some or the 16 I energy-saving Ups included in a resolutiol\ passed by the Irvine City Council Tuesday. The resolution. written by Coundlwoman Mary Ann Galdc>, received the unanimous enctars. ment of the council, alt.bough several counclJ members said they would also like to see the na· lion aquarely face the energy problem rather than rely on ciiliens to restrict lbelr energy uaage. Other conservation Ups in· eluded in the resoluUon are: -Lowering thefmoatats to 6.S dearees in all residences, buai· neases and clty racmues. -Tw-nin1 beat off at all swim· min1pools. -Not usln1 decorative 1as loga, aas li&hts or cu barbecues. -Turnina down thermostats on water beaters or buying in· sulaled blankets for the water beaters. -Keeping drapes open on sun- ny da.Y* and c:losin& them at night. -Runnln« dis ri°ishers, washing macblnes and dryers wU.h full loads only. ; Late @ontractor ... Fined by Boar4 The Irvine school board voted Wednesday to charte Newport Beach caotractor Harwick and Soos $7,800 because Deerfield Elementary School was complet- ed 78 days behind schedule. The DeW school was originally auppoeed to b& completed Aug. 9 ol last year. However, the de· edline was extended by the dis- bid • days:to a new deaclllne of Oet.17. After discussinl the matter In a private, executive session, trustees decided to assess the contractor from the Oct. 17 date to tbe date atuclenta and staff mO¥edkttolheacbool. Jan. 3. At part of tbe contract, Brown Warns Southland: Save Water H~rwi,.clc *14 Sons agreed to li- quld.Uoo damages or Sl~ per day. Peter Harwick spoke at the school board meeting and ex- plained the delay was caused by numetous probl••• including early trou~e witb the framing and drywall subcontractors. David KiQf, district ad- m ltlistrator in charge of facilities, said Harwick and Sons also ia buildipi the new Bonita Canyon Sctx>ol in Turtle Rock. King said t.fiat school is not as Car behind schedule 4s Deerfield, but because of the energy crisis, some of Ute work there is being delayed. "We h9Pe it will o~n in Sep- tember, bUt we're not lure yet," King said. Harwick also has been awarded an $8b,OOO contract for work at the new North Wood- brldce Middle School. The school board also denied Wednesday a claim filed by Service Engineering Company, the firm that installed the air conditioning system at Green- tree School. Tbe ~mpany ls attempting to have its $19,000 security bond re·· turned, but the district is wltbJK>lding the money, contend-. iDI that the air conditioning aystem ii faulty. Now that t.be district has de- nied the claim, the company can rue ault, lfit so desires. • Brr'OM BARLEY °' ... O.Uy ~ ... SUff A bid by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer for "judg- ment that would have given her victory in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit against the James Irvine Foundation was rejected today in court. Judge James F . Judge's de- nial, issued immediately after he took the bench, means that at· torney Howard Friedman will now have to put on evidence ln what is expected to be three more OC Jobless Takes Drop In January t I Orange Cotlnt.Y'• seasonallf adjusted unemploymeqt rate dropped to five percent in January, according to CI&ures re- 1 eased today by the state Employme nt Development Department (EDD). <The California rate also dropped from 8.9 percent lo 8.5. > In December, the county's un- employment rate stood at 5.4 per· cent. But post-Christmas season job layoffs were not as great as ex- pected in January as Orange County's seasonally adjusted UD· employment rate declined. Overall, however, the total number of employed in the coun- ty dropped from 801,800 in December to 795,400 in January. EDD figures, therefore, show the pos t -Christmas season layoCfs took a toll but not 6S great a one as predicted earlier. The report shows that in the past year 40,600 new jobs were created in the county, a growth rate of 6.9 percent. A strong factor in that gain was the addition of 7 ,300 jobs in coun· ty manufacturing plants. Also, there were strong gains during the year in the construc- tion industry with 10,200 jobs added to county payrolls, accord· ing to the EDD report. The department's statisticians predicted continued rise in COD· structioo employment in the ear- ly part of 1977 as well as a gain in public service jobs. Kurtz IRS Chief? PHILADELPHIA CAP> - Jerome Kurtz,. a 45-year-old tax lawyer, says Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal has asked him to head the Internal Revenue Service. -Not altpwin1 hot water to now continuously while washint dishes by hand. Vance Urges Ban WASHINGTON <AP) - Secretary or State Cyrus R. Moderation? · Vance today ursed Con,resa to reinstate a ban on U.S. lmPol"ls ol Rhodesian chrome. lnoome Definition BOo11ted weeks of testiJnony. Friedman's phase of the trial that began last September will \n~lude a tour of the Irvine Com- pany's holdings in Orange Coun- ty with lawyers for all four parties involved in the Smith lawsuit accompanying Judge Judge. Judge Judge told Friedman to- day that he was "having pro- blems" in understanding and as- isessing Mrs. Smith's position at thia phase of the lawsuit. Noting that the Mobil Oil Com· 0.11' Pllet St.it ...... TRUSTEE SUCCUMBS Dr. James Marshall Four Irvine Principals Reassigned Four more educators in the Irvine Unified School District were named Wednesday by the school board to be principals at new district schools. Tom Perrie, Don Erger,· Marilyn Boyd and David Holmes were selected for the new posts. They will continue their current duties in the district, but will as- sist in the planning and design of the schools. Tom Perrle, currently a district psychologist, was picked as the new principal al the Northeast Woodbridge Elementary School. The portable "instant" school la expected to open in September of th15 year, and the permanent structure should be completed by March.1'78. Don Erger, who is now the_prin- cipal at Venado Middle SC:~ol School, \fill be the new principal at No.rt!iwest Woodbridae Middle School. expected to open ln March or Septembero( 1978. Marilyn Boyd1 currenUy as- signed n Ute curriculum coordlnatorin thedi•lrict, wlll as· sume the principal du~~· at San· tia10 Hll1t Element.,.y Sc:bool, to be located in Northwood Villaae. That ICbOof is slated to open ln Septe.mber.1978. pany's $281.9 million offer for tbe foundation's 54.5 percent slake in the Irvine Company works out at $33.50 a share, be asked Fried• man why Mrs. Smith "does not have an adequate remedy" if she believes that figure to be below the true value of the shares. "She can dsert her rights as a dissenting shareholder," the judge said. "She can come to court and demand an appraisal oC the lrvine Company stock." Friedman, who appeared to be <See HEIRESS, Page A%) Trustee Succunilis To Illness . ' Dr. James W. Marshall ed ucator . adventurer. philosopher, film maker, operr buff and a Saddleback College trustee for the past five years - died Wednesday at Saddleback Community Hospital after a long illness. He was 69. Dr. Marshall. of 140A Avenida Majorca in Laguna Hills Leisure World, brought a wealth of ex- perieru:e and education lo the Mission Viejo college when be was appointed as a trustee in 1972. Despite recurring bouts with ii· lness, he won a full term in the 1973 election and was running for another term in the upcoming March 8 balloting. The form~r pres ident of Wayland Baptist College in Plainview, Texas, Marshall's most significant and lasUng ac· complishments stemmed from years or study and life among the stone age Indian tribes of Brazil. Starting in 1953. Dr. Marshall made trips into the Xingu River region of Uiat South American nation's Mato Grosso jungles. His anthropological and documen- tary mm project cost him nearly $300,000of his own money. He flew his own single-engine airplane on nine round trips to Brazil and made SO other such trips into uncharte d jungle areas to bring back his precious cans of film. Two of Dr. Marshall's edited movies were shown by ABC television as part of the "Expedi- tion" series and the veteran ex- plorer once said he had enough left over to make al least 40 more 28-mlnute films. "The rest has never been edit· (SeeTRUSTEE, P11e2) Coast' Weather Sunny through Friday and slightly warmer. Hi1hs ln 70s. Lows 42 to 52. IN IDETODA.'t" Ma1tJ1 of oar mcenUw1 are •rodhtg Ow qltmi that made America ., pro®cliw, . ac- cording to the cboltmoiJ of Crocker Notfoool Bonk. For Tllomo1 Wtlcoz•1 ••'1ome plora," .c Pug. 810. .. M en •• AZ DAIL V PILOT I .J ,,.._P..,eAJ HEIRESS ••. ta)ten aback by the observation, immediately told Judge Judie U.•t b1a lawsuit ii ....,_to preeene Mn. Smith'• atatus a minority shareholder lo the Irvine Company. "Her status as a shareholder would be severed if the founda- tion deal with Mobil ls ap. proved," Friedman sa1d. "That is the thrust of her lawsujt." Mra. Smith, who holds 22.4 per- <!ent of the issued Irvine Com- pany shares, ts known to prefer the $282.7 million offer made for the foundation's holdings by l!hat is referred to in court as the Allen-Taubman group: A con- sortium beaded by wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alf red Taub- man. Friedman's comments and testimony from Mrs. Smith's de- position indicate that her present status as a maJor minoritv shareholder in the company founded by her grandfather would be preserved if the Allen- Taubman bid prevails in court. Friedman vainly argued throughout most of Wednesday that the foundation's case for the sale ol its Irvine Company hold- ings to Mobil is "a tainted ac- tion." He angrily condemned the sale of the foundation's stake in the company as a "sweetheart deal'' and a "prescription for disaster. "They are drowning and they want Mrs. Smith to drown with them," Friedman protested. ''They tell us the Mobil offer is the best they can get but it's only the best they can get because the marketplace in America fias been told hands off, this is Mobil's deal," Foundation attorney Howard Privett. again branding Fried- man as a liar, denied that the foundation had ever ignored tne wishes of th e minority stockholders in the Irvine Com- pany. Privett told Judge Judge that the foundation had struck what he caJled excellent deals for the sale of Irvine stock on severaJ oc- casions only to have Mrs. Smith be the sole minority shareholder to back out of the transaction. Accusing Friedman or "fast and loose conduct with the truth" and "putting on a theatrical play fo r the press," he told Judge Judge that the tactics employed by Mrs. Smith's lawyer had con- tributed to "a carnival sideshow display that is being carefully watched by the m arketplace.'' Privett criticized Friedman's contention that the foundation could get as much as $400 million for the Irvine Company hold· ngs as being absolutely contrary .o the soundings made by the ·oundation. Privett pointed out that the Cadillac Fairview Corporation of Toronto Canada has now backed out of its earlier interest an the Irvine Company after bidding for the foundation shares. F ro• P age A J BROWN •.. >aper and regulations and edicts rom the state Capitol .. The object is to save water, \Ot issue edicts," Brown said. Brown said he convened the .ession to bnng together aJI of he mutually dependent water 1sers and water providers, get hem to exchanee views and to 1elp assess "the real problem, Its nagmtude and complexity ... and 4'hat can be done " Bob Will. spokesman for the ~etropolitan Water District of .\outhern California, was a 1pecial target of complaints from 'Jorthem California growers and :attlemen who said they faced :utback.s of 75 percent or more In Nater, and In some cases )ankruptcy. Will said his district is culling oack its use of Northern California water from 800,000 ~ere-feet lo 400,000 acre-feet by rnbstituttng lower quality .:olorado River water. Of9ANGI! COAST DAILY PILOT t ~::.~~~~r.= ==~:::; °""" l'\lell\11 .... c-_., "'9r ............... =.:":.·...=.~~~= . .::-.. :.. ~ t•t" V•ll-ey ltYHi.t. ,......., V ..... , .... ~lt-~f""'4~C:O.•t .................. ..,, ·-.. -·-s.. ....... .,..; ~ , ... ;;:i~ci.:'~'.'L~.':;~~~ ..... , ._ .. _ "'••Hlltftt .,_, "*',,., '.oc• • c..rtty YI(•,.._~,---~ ,_,._ ...... ,.._,,.,_...,. Mo .... , .......... a.tin II. ~ lllctleH "· -Attit• ... , Mt ....... I[ .. ,.,, Offloe1 C..leMtMI UOWlttlti.JM'"' • ~~~; ''"~"·"­"""'~ .. ~Ill '""_....,._. -i.Mc• V•~"'' ''"'I.I,.,,.... e4Jtlft0..,.l'-T..., .... cr:.'1.': Ult O H .med Mite MNl'7I ~-\' .... f ... OHW ... ~ .. ' \ o.11., Pl ... llatt "-'• 'RETURNING FAVOR' Candidate Brooks 'Privilege' Returned By Hopeful (Editor's Note -This. article is one of.a 3eries profiling candidates fen three open seats on the Sad- ~back College Board of Trwtees. The March. 8 election is. at large and the top vote getter in each trustee area wiU wm.J By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ol IM O.ily Piiot Sl•lf Clifton Rowland Brooks, a Tustin allergist who has traced his family tree back to Charlemagne·s Holy Roman Em- pire, says he's running for the Saddleback College Board of Trustees to return a big favor. "I bave a lot of education. which is a great privilege we have in America," he said. ''I have a responsibility to return this privilege." Brooks is in a race with two other north Tustin residents for a post vacated last year when a r c h -con serv ati ve R obert Bartholomew resigned to move out of the county. The 53-year-old physician, who is married.and has six sons, said some of the community's con- servative element asked him to run because "they felt I could represent the conservative at- titude." Part of the reason for his "American" outlook on life may stem from his heritage. Brooks and his wife, Agnes, have documented the family 's genealogy in this country back to tbe earliest colonial times. Despite his self-professed con· servatism, Brooks said he ap- proaches things with an open mind -including such con· troversial issues as collective bargaining and "teacher power." .. Collective bargaining is not a threat," he said. "It is a fact of life and we must deal with it ap· propriately. We have to maintain our perspective.·· Brooks has had some back· ground in loc<1l government Whale living for a decade an the Washington, D.C. area. he WliS a school district trustee and a member of a community safety board From 1970 to 1971 , he was the associate medical director of Orange Comnty Medical Center, before it became the property of UC Irvine The candidate said that if he 1s elected. he would be "sensitive" to everybody in the distract, from taxpayers to admm1strators. But he s aid he would owe special attention to the people of Tustin, who he contends have re- ceived short shrift by the district until quite recently "The northern campus offers some distinct relief from the un- rest in Tustin about the college," he said. "I am anxious to serve Tustirutes. wruch I expect to be a strong part of the total effort in the district." Generally speaking, Brooks said he is "against foolishness, irresponsibility and being rushed into decisions where I can't foresee what is going to happen." He said he thinks Saddleback should serve tbe people "ap- propriately" but only as far as the taxpayers can allow. Brooks also said the college's main objective should be train- ing of young people right out of high school "because they are the taxable people of lheluture." "I am not at all convinced that they can be dealt with In exactly the same way as people In adult education or continuing educa· lion programs," he said. According to Brooks, his will- ingness to serve was the prime impetus behind his candidacy, plus a personal belief that "education is a cornerstone or communication among people." 1,000 at Fun~ral SALISBURY. Rhodesia (AP> -MON than 1.000 blacu and wlUiel au.oded an qpen alr r• qulein Mus today for &even . wblte Roftlao CathoUC' ml•· -.loDUi• al&la b1 black lµt.r· rWu. A fftr d the wblte1 wllktd «*t •bee a black .print bl•sned the kfDlnp oo racJa.I ilij"8tiH Jn RbOdeliA: By ALMON LOCK.ABEY °""' ...... IMthol 1*'• A man overboard and lwo jury rigs was the rWlning score in the 1,125-mile Puerto Vallarta yacht race tod~ u the 24-boat fleet rocketed down the coast of Baja California in strong northwester- ly winds and surfing seas. Hard luck Sorcery, the 61-foot sloop owned by Jacob Wood or the California Yacht Club wa:s the first to report a mishap attribut· ed to the wind and sea conditions. The report said a crewman fell overboard but was recovered un- hurt in about 10 minutes. Wood said the yacht's engine was used for about 7'h minutes in rescuing the unidentified crewman. Sorcery was the yacht that was rolled completely over by a giant sea on a voyage from Japan to Alaska last summer. Robert O'Brien, owner-skipper of the 58-(oot yawl, Spirit. report- ed a broken main boom but said the spar was jury rigged and the yacht was continuinj? in the race. Casper, a Ranger-33 sloop skip· pered by Willia m Crew of the Ventura Yacht Club, had rigging failure which resulted in damage lo the mast. Jury rigging aJso kept Casper in the race. Freshening winds, reported variously at 15 to 22 knots, de- pending on the position of the re- porting yacht. had Injected new life in the race and were driving the fleet toward its destination at a fast clip. Ragtime, the 65-foot black sloop out or lhl? Long Beach Yacht Club was reported off Magdalena Bay at 5 p.m. Wed- nesday and skipper Bill White was estimating an arrival in Puerto Vallarta at noon Satur- day. Ragtime was 70 miles ahead of her nearest rival and had 52A males to go to Puerto Vallarta. The next three boats on elapsed time were closely bunched with Tony Bills' 65-foot yawl, Olinka, leading Sorcery by about a mile. Sorcery was about a mile ahead of John Ca lley's custom sloop, Solution. Teen's 'Cash' Real,ly St ash A Corona d e l Mar teenager called police Wednesday to report the theft of his cash box by three teenaged acquain- tances But police found after tak mg the trio into custody that the cash box was ac- tually a stash box. The victim was then booked on a charge of possession of cocaine and held m lieu of $1 ,500 bail. His companions, all juveniles. were released to their parents. Fro• P age Al TRUSTEE. • • ed. Sometime, when I retire, I plan to set up an office and edit these films. I might have to go back and update them somewhat," he said in a past in- terview. Dr Marshall's film studies of Indian tribes that insert plates in their lips, hunt and kill animals with ironwood cudgels and live primilJve. sample lives have been shown in 33 countries and in seven different languages. The kindly, soft-spoken trustee' also said he saw many miseries surtered by the Indians when they came in contact with civilization -like the common cold, which he said killed 30 healthy natives in a matter of days. During hls tenure as a trustee, Dr. Marshall was often the only voice of logic and reason' during heated debate over controversla) Issues. "What impressed me was that he was an extremely kind, human person." fellow trustee Larry Taylor of Laguna Beach said today. •·But al the same time. he had an extrem ely intense com - petitive spirit that wa.s clear, hard and sound, .. Taylor added. "The last Uung he wanted to give up on was the college.'' Board ol Trustees President Norrisa Brandt of Irvine said Dr. Marshall was "dedicated to spreadina knowledge and love to the Indians of Brazil, college stu- dents in Texas and the communi- ty aod Saddleback Colleee in Orange County.'' The family has asked that con- tributions be made ·to the Sad- dle back ColJege scbolarsblp fund. Dr. Marshall ls survived by hls wue, Ruth; 1 ion, WUUam: a da~1 Ann Aldridge and two arandcnudre.n. Memorial aervlca wUl take place SaturdaJ aU:IO p.m . attbe McCormick Mortuary Jn Lquna Htllt. Dr. WUUam Totbert. putor ol the El ~oro Baptist Cba-:tb. 'Wllloftlctate. • BEST ACTRESS ROLE? Ounaway ln 'Networtc' Irvine School Smo~ing To Continue Irvine high school students may continue smokina on cam- pus at least through May, Irvine school tnistees decided Wednes· day. After taking a look at how the new program has fa red at the three district high schools, the school board took a 3·1 vote to continue the policy. Trustee June Foley, who made the motion, said she'd like to see another review in May, rather than wait until the new scbool year in September. Board President Dean Olson was the only dissenting vote. He has been opposed to allowing smoking oo campu.s from the start because be says he believes the school district should not con- done an unhealthy behavior. Jerry Rayles, a district ad- ministrator, gave a report on the smoking policy and said authorities at University, Irvine and SELF High Schools all believe the program has worked well. BEST ACTOR NOMINEE Late Peter Finch I',.... Page Al OSCARS •.• Lina Wertmuller. "Seven Beauties.'' -Screenplay adaptation: William Goldman, "All the President's . Men"; Robert Getchell, "Bound for Glory"; Federico Fellln1 and Bernardino Zapporu, "Fellini's Casanova"; Nicholas Meyer, "The Seven- Per-Cent Solution"; Steve Shagan and David Butler, ''Voyage of the Damned ... -Original song: "Ave Satani," from "The Omen"; "Come to Me," from "T'1e Pink Panther Strikes Again"; "Evergreen," the love theme from "A Star Is Born"; "Gonna Fly Now," from •:Rocky''; "A World That Never. Was," from ''Half a House." -Cinematography: Haskell Wexler, ".Qound for Glory"; Richard H. Kline, "King Kong"; Ernest Laszlo, "Logan's Run"; Owen Roizman. "Net work"; Robert Surtees. "A Star Is Born." The nominations went much ac- cording to predictions, few sur- prises being noticeable. If there was a dark horse, it might be Italy's "Seven Beauties" with its nominations tor Giannini and Wertmuller. Queen Jluits I.A Airport ·. LOS ANGELES (AP>- Brltaln'a Queen Elisabeth and Prince Pbllip stopped over briefly at Los Angeles lntematioeal A.lrport early today to refuel on a fiigbt to Western Samoa tor the queen's sUver jubilee visit to Commonwealth couA-· tries. The royal C)()Uple spent an hour and 4S minutes at the airport after their British Airways Boeing 707 Speed Bird touched down at 1:28a.m. A spokesman for the airport said tbe queen re- mained aboard the plane during tbe stopover. seated by a window reading a book. Other members of the royal entourage disem- barked to walk around and eat, the spokesman said. IBWoman Attacked By Zealot A Laguna Beach housewife leaving a party Wednesday was kJdnaped, robbed and forced to drive to Newport Beach and back while her attacker preached the Bible with knife at ber throat. The woman, 29, was released a hall hour later unbanned. She told police she climbed into her car after attending a party on Temple Hll1s Drive when a young mao with dirty blond hair and a strong bod)' odor rose from where be was hiding in the back seat and put a knile to her back. She said the man, who wore a khald jacket and a backpack, stole $123 from her purse, then forced her to drive up the coast to Newport Beach, then back again. The whole while, she said, be preached at her. RCA's most automatic TV ever! 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Superb RCA Color TV • There's great color TV viewing in store fOf the whole familv with thla RCA XL-100 console. • R.tlable XL· 100 chassis hu no tul:>es to burn out-1t '& 100% aolld state. • Bla<:k matrix picture tube delivers sparf(llng, dramaticallv detalted ootor pictures • Automatic Fine Tuning pinpoints and holds the correct broadcat slgnal • Plug-4n AocuClrcult modules simplify servicing. • Ouallty aound from. e·· OVll duo-cone 9')elktr. • Ceblnet of attractive wa1nut111raln finish on hardboard and Mlect«I ~ eollda. . ncn 1::i:rruaft .. MANY OTHER MODELS ~T· COMPARABLE SAYINGS I 11 11 I u1·1or11 Hu i,..,,.,;,.,,.,,,, Our 1•,.,.,..,,,.,1 Out• l ,.,.,. t.unt·uulf••· O n I 1 ·1·1·~1 1•1·11tl1t••I H ,. 't 1•lt! 275 East I 7tli St. Costa Mesa Ll I I \ J Lag11na/South Coast EDITION * * * lvOL. 70, NO. 41, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY,FEBRUARV1~1"7 " Afteraooa N. Y. Stoek.s TEN CENTS! Brown Wains Southland to Save Water SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. bas warned Southern California residents that they, too, muat conserve water, even though waler is still plentiful in their region. "When people are facing bankruptcy in water·short Northern California, they view with dismay the filling or swim- ming pools in Southern California and the construction or new recreational lakes," O•llY Pll9t Sl.tt PMlo TRUSTEE SUCCUMBS Or. James Marshall Trustee Succmnbs To IJlness Dr. James W. Marshall e ducator , adventurer , philosopher, rum maker, opera buff and a Saddleback College trustee for the past five years - died Wedn esday at Saddleback Commuruty Hospital after a long illness. He was 69. Dr. Marshall. of 140A Avenlda Majorca in Laguna Hills Leisure World, brought a wealth ol ex· peTience and education to lhe Mission Viejo college when he was appe>inted as a trustee in 1972. Despite recurring bouts with il· lness, he won a full term in the 1973 election and was running for another term in the upcoming March 8 balloting. The former president or Wayland Baptist College in Plainview, Texas, Marshall's most significant and lutine ac· compllsbmente stemmed from yea rs ofltud.y and life among the stone a$te Indian tribes of Brazil Starting ln 1953, Dr. Marshall made llir into the Xingu River regioo o that South American nation's Mato Grouo jungles. His antbropoloclcal and documen- tary film project cost him nearly $300,000ofhisownmoney. He Oew his own stn1le-engine airplane on nine round trips to Brazil and made 50 other such trips into uncharted Jungle areu to brina back his precious cans of film. Two of Dr. Maraball's edited movies were shown by ABC' television as part of the •• E~· •ion" seriet and the veteran ex· plOl'el' once said be bad enough . (SeeTllUSTU. PaceZ) Coast Weather Sunny through Friday and slightly warmer. Hi&bs in 70s. Lowa 42 to 52. Brown said Wednesday. "People in the north want to see more conservation in the south. We're in a crisis we've never faced before," Brown said after a 21h·hour free-wheeling discussion with about 75 legislators, state officials and representatives of water districts and agricultural groups. "We are going to have to share the less. share the burden, share the hardship." A legislator from Callromia's most severely hit county said be will propose mandatory statewide rationing. But Brown, questioned later by reporters. expressed doubts about statewide rationing although he didn't rule it out. "Anything is a possibility con· sidering this drought. There is no statutory change that is not un- der coMideration," Brown said. But, the Democratic governor added, "it may be more efficient to work cooperatively with local water districts tbNl to issue more paper and regulations and edicts from the state Capitol. "The object is to save water, not issue edicts,'' Brown said. Brown said be convened the se,asion to bring together all of the mutually dependent water users and water providers, get them to exchange views and to help assess "the real problem, its magnitude and complexity ... and what can be done." e Heiress Dealt Setback By TOM BARLEY Ol t• ~l'I' 1'1194 St•ll A bid by Jrvme heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer for a judg- ment that would have given her victory in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit against the James Irvine Foundation was rejected today in court. Judge James F. Judge's de- nial, issued immediately after he took the. bench, means that at· torney Howard Friedman will now have to put on evidence in what is expected to be three more LB Cop Beaten weeks of testimony. Friedman's phase of the trial that began last September will include a tour of the Irvine Com- pany's holdings in Orange Coun- ty with lawyers for all four parties involved in the Smith lawsuit accompanying Judge Judge. Judge Judge told Friedman to- day that he was "having pro- blems" in understanding and as- sessing Mrs. Smith's position at this phase of the lawsuit. Noting that the Mobil Oil Com- City Offers Reward In Suspect Hunt By PIUUP ROSMARIN Ol 1 .. DAiiy l'lloi Slffl Rewards totaling $1,500 have been offered for information leading to the capture, prosecu- tion and conviction of an armed robber who pistol whipped a Laguna Beach policeman Mon· day. Wednesday the City Council unanimously voted to add $1,000 to a reward of $500 offered by the Laguna Beach Police Of· ficers' Association. Police Lt. John Zelko said the action by the police association wu the first of its kind. He said the council's offer also was un· precedented in his 30 years' ex· perieoce. The bandit clipped Lansford on the side of the head with the frontier·slyle r evolver . It knocked the policeman to one knee. He was then ordered lo lie face down on the floor, "Or you're a dead man." The gunman escaped and eluded a four-hour search of streets and beaches by more than a dozen officers. Wednesday Mayor Phyllis Sweeney called the incident "shocking. and frightening," and said she was impressed with the way Lansford stood up to the situation. She then suggested the $1,000 (See REWARD. Page A%) pany's $281.9 million offer for the foundation's 54.5 percent stake in the Irvine Company works out at $33.SO a share, he asked Fried· man why Mrs. Smith "does not have an adequate remedy" ir she believes that rigure to be below the true value of the shares. "She can assert her rights as a dissenting shareholder," the judge said. "She can come to court and demand an appraisal of the Irvine Company stock.'' Friedman, who appeared to be <See HEIRESS, Page A2) Queen Visits L4Airport LOS ANGELES <AP>..--Britain's Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip stopped over briefly ,t Lota Angeles International Airport early today to refuel on a flight to Western Samoa for the quMn's silver jubilee visit to Commonwealth coun- tries. The royal couple spent an hour and 45 minutes at the airport after their British Airways Boeing 707 Speed Bird touched down at 1:28a.m. A spokesman for the airport said l.he queen re- mained aboard the plane during the st.Opover, seated by a wrndow reading a book. Other members or the royal entourage disem- barked to walk around and eat, the spokesman said. In Orange County Bob Will, spokesman for Ute Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, was a special target of complaints from Northern California growers and cattlemen who said they faced cutbaclts of 75 percent or more in water, and in some cases bankruptcy. Will said his district is cutting back its use· or Northern California water from 800,000 acre·reet to 400,000 acre-feet by substituting lower quality BEST ACTRESS ROLE? Dunaway In •Network' Colorado River water. But Will was challenged to do more after he said there is no plan in effect to save water In homes. and when be defended Southern California swimming pools by saying that water "ls be- ing stored there." Assemblyman Michael Wornum (0.Mlll Valley), whose Marin County district is suffer- ing drastic rationine, told the group be will introduce a bill to require statewide rationing. BEST ACTOR NOMINEE Late Peter Finch 'Netu;ork,' 'Rocky' "Vi~ For Top Oscars LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Network," a scathing view of the television industry. and "Rocky.'' tlle story of a rags-to. ri ches boxer. each won 10 nominations today from the Mo- tion Picture Academy as the top film of the year. The Watergate film, "All the President's Men, ti followed with eight in the 49th Oscar nomina- tions. "Bound for Glory," the Woody Guthrie biography, followed with six. The late Peter Finch was nominated for bes t actor in "Network." Also nominated were William Holden of "Network :" Robert De Niro, "Taxi Driver;" Giancarlo Giannini, "Seven Beauties," and Sylvester Stallone, "Rocky." "Network" also scored a best actress nomination for Faye Dunaway, and Talia Shire w_.. named for " Rocky." Others in the race: Marie· Christine Barrault, "Cous in Cousine;" Sissy Spacek, "Car· rie," and Liv Ullmann, "Face to Face." Nominated for best picture of the year were ·'All the Presi- dent's Men, ti ''Bound for Glory," "Network.'' "Rocky" and "Taxi Driver." Other nominations: -Supporting actor: Ned Beat- ty, "Network ;" Burgess Meredith and Burt Young, "Rocky ;" Laurence Olivier, "Marathon Man ;" Jason Robards, "All the President's Men." -Supporting actress: Jane Alexander, .. All the President's Men;" Jodie Foster. "Taxi Driver;" Lee Grant, "Voyage of the Damned;" Piper Laurie, "Carrie;" Beatrice Straight, "Network." On Monday police Officer Jim Lansford, SO, walked in by coin- cidence, on an armed robbery, at the Jewel Searchers, 1027·0 N. Coast Highway. The gunman held Lansford at bay unW he tried to take the of· ficer's gun from its holster. Lansford grabbed the bandit's gunhaod and scuffled to get the ·gun. Assessing Freeze Nil -Direction: Alan J . Pakula, "All the President's Men"; (See OSCARS, Page A2) Lansford, who has 22 years wltb the police force, was unsuc· cesaful in wresting the weapon from the burly young holdup man, but his action allowed the at.ore proprietor to escape into a back room with the jewels the robber bad stuffed into a erocery sack. The gun was fired once into the floor dw1ng the fracas. Worker Hurt In SC Fall County Assessor Bradley Jacobs said today a so-called freeze on reassessing homes in Los Angeles County won't have any Impact in Orange County. Jacobs said conditions that touched orf Los Aneeles County Assessor Phillip Watson's an- nouncement Wednesday of a two- vear freeze don't exist in Orange County. <Related story Page AS.) "So, we're not going to take any precipitous action, .. Jacobs said. "However .. be added, "we'll be watebillg\.bat happens in Los Angeles very closely.'' · What happened in Los Angeles County Wednesday was that W abon sent a a bock wave through trucing agencies when be said homes will stay at their 1976 assessed value for at least two years. That means property tax· payers in Los Angeles won't be assigned higher values on their homes because of values that continue to inflate. It also means that taxing agen· cies won't have an expanding tax base In residential property to fall back oo for added revenue. Watson. wbo bas been feuding. with the Los Angeles County Board ot SU~ison in recent months, said he bas no choice but to honor the freeze because of a staff shortage and a lack of com· puterized systems needed to re- aaaeu all homes once each year. Orange County Assessor , Save-the-farmland Assistance Sought Jacobs said today be doesn't have those problems and pro- bably is legally obligated to put new values on all Orange County residential property each year. "There's very little similarity between our operation and Los Angeles," Jacobs explained. "We have the capability to do thin~s Los Angeles can 'l do." Town Meeting Set Tonight A town ball meeting designed for Laguna Beach residents to voice comment.I, suggestions OT gripes about cJty government and schools is scheduled for 8 o'clock tonight at the N eitbborbood Congregational Cburcb, Glenneyre Street and St. Aon'• Drive. Speakers include Laguna schools &uperintendent Robert Sancbis, Poi.ice Chief JooSJ)arlca, Fin QJef Charley Kuhn • .Mayor Pbyllla Sweene7 and D•n Armatronc, dlftctor of com- munity lnformalioo and aervte. at Sadd.tebadc Colle1e. The publlc meetlng ta 1pooaored by La1una Beach Fdends ol the Library . .... Sauna 10Verheated LB Woman Attacked By Zealot A Laguna Beach housewife leaving a party Wednesday was kidnaped, robbed and forced to drive to Newport Beach and back while her attacker preached the Bible with knife at her throat. The woman, Z9, was released a hatr hour later unharmed. She told police she climbed into htr car after attend in& a party on Temple Hills Drive when a young man wttb dirty blond balr and a strong body odor rose from where be wu biding in the back seat and put a knife to her back. She aald the man, who wore a khaki jacket and a backpack. stole $123 from her pune, then forced her to drive up the coast to Newport Beaeb, then back again. The wbc>W wblle. •be said, be preached at her. Some Off On Friday,. Clb' ameea In Laauna Beach •nd San Juan C•PlltraftO ~ ClC!!le !'ri· day for uneotn•a BtriJ',day Feb. 12 but San Clemente city omces WW •t.aJ oPeno Scbooli will cloee tn both Capistrano Unllled and L••urs• Jle•cb Unlfled SCbOol l>Jatttct.1. 'it 2 DAil y PILOT USC Thur!d!y, febrv!!'Y 1Q, tm Problems Plague Boat Race By ALMON LOCK.ABEY Olli? f'tlM .._..,.._ •fttw A man overboard and two jury rigs was the running score in the l,125·mile Puerto ValJarta yacht race today u the 24·boat fleet rocketed down--tbe coast of Baja California in strong northwester- ly winds and surfing seas. Hard luck Sorcery, the 61-Coot sloop owned by Jacob Wood or the California Yacht Club was the first to report a mishap atlrlbut· ed to the wind and sea conditions. The report said a crewman fell ovetboard but was recovered un- hurt in about 10 minutes. Wood said the yacht's engine was used for about 7 'h minutes in rescuing the unidentified crewman. Sorcery was the yacht that was rolled completely over by a giant sea on a voyage from Japan to Alaska lastsummer. Robert O'Brien, owner-skipper of the 58-foot yawl, Spirit, report-~ a broken ma.in boom but said the spar was jury rigged and the yacht was continuing in the race. Casper. a Ranger-33 sloop skip- pered by William Crew of the Ventura Yacht Club, had rigking failure which resulted in damage to the mast. Jury rigging also kept Casper in the race. Freshening winds, reported variously at 15 to 22 knots, de· pending on the position or the re· porting yacht, had injeded new life in the race and were driving the fleet toward its destination at a fast clip. Ragtime, the 65-foot black sloop out or the Long Beach Yacht Club was reported orr Magdalena Bay at S p.m. Wed- nesday and skipper Bill White was estimating an arrival in Puerto Vallarta at noon Satur· day. Ragtime was 70 miles ahead of her nearest rival and had 524 miles to go to Puerto VaJlarta. The next three boats on elapsed time were closely bunched with Tony Bills' 65-foot yawl, Olinka, leading Sorcery by about a mile. Sorcery was about a mile ahead of John Calley's custom sloop, Solution. Handicap leader, despite her mishap. was Casper in the In· ternational Orfshore Ruic division. Leading on handicap in the Performance Handicap Rac- 10g Fleet was John Snook's Butcher Boy II, of the Long Beach Yacht Club. At the last rollcall the neet was s trung out for about 200 miles. Fr°"' Page Al OSCARS ... Ingmar Bergman, "Face to Face"; Sidney Lumet, .. Network"; John G Avildsen, "Rocky"; Lma Wertmuller, .. Seven Beaul1e6." -Foreign language film · "Black and White in Color," lvory Coast; "Cousin Cousinc," France; ''Jacob the Liar," GermM Democratic Repubhc; "Nights and Days," Poland; .. Seven Beauties," Italy -Ortgmal S<'reenplay: Jean· Charles Tacchella an<l Daniele Thompson. "Cousin ('ou<1ine". Walter Bern.stem. "The fo'ront". Paddy Chayefsky, "Network ·. S~lvester Stallone, "Rocky", Lina Wertmuller, "Seven Beauties " -Screenplay adaptation · William Goldman, "All the President's Men"; Robert Getchell, .. Bound for GlorJ"; Fedenco Fellini and Bernardino Zapporu, "Felhn1's Casanova"; Nicholas Meyer, "The Seven· Per-Cent Solullon"; Steve Shagan and David Butler, "Voyageorthe Damned." -Original song : "Ave Satani." from "The Omen"· ''Come to Me," from "The Pink Panther Strikes Again"· "Evergreen," the Jove them~ from "A Star Is Born"; "Gonna Fly Now," from "Rocky' .. "A World That Never Was," from ''Half a House." DAILY PILOT O.llyl'l ... SIA't ...... 'RETURNING FAVOR' C•ndidate Brooks 'Privilege' Returned By Hopeful f Editor's Note -Thia . article ii one of.a series profiling cantfidatu for three open seats on the Sod- dlel>ack College Board of TTM.Stees. The March.8 election is.at large.and the top. vote gettn-in each tn.&Stett area qJill win.) By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ol IM O•llr Pitel St.ff Clifton Rowland Brooks, a Tustin allergist who has traced his family tree back to Charlemagne's Holy Roman Em- pire, says he's running for the Saddleback College Board of Trustees to return a big favor. "I have a lot of education, which is a great privilege we have in America," he said. "I have a responsibility to return this privilege." Brooks is in a race with two other north Tustin residents for a post vacated last year when arch .conservative Robert Bartholomew resigned to move out of the county. The 53-year-old physician, who is married and has six sons, said some of the community's con· servative element asked him to run because "they felt l could represent the conservative at· titude." Part or the reason for his •·American" outlook on life may stem from rus heritage. Brooks and his wife, Agnes, have documented the family's genealogy in this country back to the earliest colonial times. Despite his self-professed con· servalism. Brooks said he ap- proaches things with an open mind -including such con· troversial issues as collective bargaining and "teacher power.·· ··collective bargaining is not a threat," he said. "It is a fact of life and we must deal with it ap· propriately. We have to maintain our perspective." Brooks has had some back· ground in local government. While living for a decade in the Washington, D.C. area, he was a school district trustee and a member of a community safety board. From 1970 to 1971, he was the associate medical director of Orange Comnty Medical Center. before 1t became the property of UC Irvine. The candidate said that il he is elected, he would be "sensitive" to everybody in the district, from taxpayers to administrators. But be said be would owe special attention to the people or Tustin, who be cont.ends have re· celved short shrift by the district until quite recenUy. ''The northern campus offers some distinct relief from the un- rest in Tustin about the college," he said. "I am anxious to serve Tustinites, which I expect to be a strong part of the total effort in the district." Generally speaking, Brooks said he is "against foolishness, irresponsibility and beinl rushed into decisions where I can't foresee what is going to happen.•• He said he thinks Saddlebaclt should serve the people "ap· propriately" but only as far as the taxpayers can allow. Broob also said the college's main objective should be train· in1 of young people right out or high school "because they are the taxable people of the future." "I am not at all COllYinced that th~y can be dealt with in exactly the same way as people ln adult education or continuin1 educa- Uon programs,•• be aaid. Accor,ling to Broob, bit will· in1neas to serve was the prime impetus behind bis candidacy, plus a personal belief that "education is a cotnerstone of communication amon1 people." . Funds in Trouble SACRAKENTO CAP> - Federal tunds tor bl1bwa11 ml m111 transit to Los Ancelet County could be cut off lf the Bl'Own adm..hU.16-ttioo cmUDUes to JNU beck from DlamoDd ltlnes ana otlMii' prof!' amt to encourac~ carpoalq and bas rtdenblp; the Sacramento UniOt\ taJd Wt'dnes-d11. r Judge #Threatens Contempt Rap By GARY GRANVILLE Of .. Oeltyf'llMStAIH The Oran•e County Grand Jury's probe into county political campa.tgn practices continued to- day with the appearance . and nonappearance or key witnesses. Most notable among the nona,p. pearancea was an aborted trek into the jury room Wednesday by former police informer Gene Conrad. A week earlier, Conrad bad cit· ed bis first, fourth fifth, ninth and 14th amendment rights when he refused to testify betore the grand jury. County's Jobl ess Dropped F...,.PageAJ He waa set for what be said was to be a repeat performance Wed· nesday when handed a court or· der signed by Superior Court Judge Jam8' Walsworth. Orance County'• seaaooally adjusted unemployment rate dropped to five percent in January, according to ftgures re· leased today by the state Employment Development Department (EDD>. ffiVINE HEIRESS • • • (The California rate also dropped from 8.9 percent to 8.5.) In December, the county's un- employment rate stood at S.4 per- cent. taken aback by the observation, immediately told Judce Judge that his lawsuit is desicned to preserve Mn. Smith's status a.s a minority shareholder in the Irvine Company. "Her status as a shareholder would be severed if the founda- tion deal wltb Mobil is ap- proved," Friedman said. "That is the thrust of her lawsuit." Front Page A J TRUSTEE ••• lert over to make at least -40 more 28-minute rums. •'The rest has never been edit·· ed. Sometime, when I retire, I plan to set up an office and edit these films. I might have to go back and update them somewhat," be said in a past in- terview. Dr. Marshall's film studies of Indian tribes that insert plates in their lips, hunt and kill animals with ironwood cudgels and live primitive, simple lives have been shown in 33 countries and in seven diUerent languages. The kindly, soft.spoken trustee also said he saw many miseries s uffered by the Indians when they came in contact with civilizatioo -like the common cold, which he said killed 30 healthy natives in a matter of days. During his tenure as a trustee, Dr. Marshall was often the only voice or logic and reason during heated debate over controversial issues. "What impressed me was that he was an extremely kind, human person," fellow trustee Larry Taylor of Laguna Beach said today. "But at the same time, he bad an extremely intense com· petitive spirit that was clear, hard and sound," Taylor added. "The last thing he wanted to give up on was the college." Board of Trustees President Norrisa Brandt of Irvine said Dr. Ma rs hall was "dedicated to spreading knowledge and love to the Indians of Brazil, college stu- dents in Texas and the communi· ty and Saddleback College in Orange County." The family has asked that con- tributions be made to the Sad- dleback College scholarship fund. Dr. Marshall is survived by his wire. Ruth; a son, William; a daughter, Ann Aldridge and two grandchildren. Memorial services will lake place Saturday at 3:30 p.m. at the McCormick Mortuary in Laguna Hills. Dr. William Tolbert, pastor of the El Toro Baptist Church, will officiate. Laguna Cop Will Receive Valor Medal Laguna Beach police officer Jim Lansford, who barehanded.Jy grabbed an armed robber Mon- day while at gonpolnt and pre- vented a robbery, will be given the Medal of Valor, police Chief. Jon Sparks said today. The honor is the highest bestowed by the department. Lansford wlll be presented the medal at annual police inspec· lion ceremonies Feb. 19. The award is given \o an of. fleer wbo displays heroism under extremely hazardous conditions, Sparks said. ''Certainly •ben Jlmmy re- fused to ctve the IUY bis gun and resisted, with the idea that be might overcome the py, that waa heroi.4'm," Sparks said. "Most officers would bave given him the cun. It wasn't foolhardy, but heroic." The chief added, .. I'm personally damn proud of Jimmy ... * '* * F,.._P Oflt!!Al REWARD ••• reward. Councllman 'Jon Brand ·aud that thougb tbe co'1ncil U U ccneeroed about UNults on private Cllllens, the reward octer &bowed ~proprtate aup. port for thD cit.Ya police omeen. ~ an tDlervlew ~ay. Police CbW Jon sparu c~ tbe af,. tick on Laoilord. •bo •cued wtth a lar1e 11.1mp on h1I bead biat In~ ciiOodtUoa.; .. ~cloul." ••TM council II OUtHI~'' Sp&rb ·~ '"t'be como:uaalt.Y la outraced.. So a.re all ol us.•· Mrs. Smith, who holds 22.4 per· cent of the issued Irvine Com· pany shares, is known to prefer the $282.7 million offer made ror the foundation's holdings by wbatis referred to in court as the Allen-Taubman group: A con- sortiwn beaded by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taut>-man. Friedman's comments and testimony from Mrs. Smith's de· position indicate that her present status as a major minoritv share~older in the company founded by her grandfather would be preserved if the Allen· Taubman bid prevails in court. Friedman vainly argued throughout most of Wednesday that the foundation's case for the sale or its Irvine Company hold- ings to Mobil is "a tainted ac· lion." He angrily condepmed the sale of the foundation's stake in the company as a "sweetheart deal" and a "prescription for disaster. "They are drowning and they want Mrs. Smith to drown with them," Friedman protested. "They tell us the Mobil offer is the best they can get but it's only the best they can get because the marketplace in' America flas been told hands orr this is Mobil's deal," ' Foundation attorney Howard Privett, again branding Fried· man as a liar, denied that the foundation had ever ignored the wishes of the minority stockholders in the Irvine Com- pany. The order commanded Conrad to testify and, in effect., said be would be in contempt of court lf be refused. That message was enough to block Conrad's entry into the jury room as through his at- torney be declared Walsworth prejudiced. As a result, Superior Court pre- siding Judge Byron McMillan will decide Monday if Walsworth's order will stand,and if Conrad will be made to testify under threat of contempt. Conrad reportedly pumped more than $50,000 into political campaigns last fall, including more than $40,000 directed into county Supervisor Philip An· lhony's campaign. Initially those contributions were not shown by the candidates but amended returns show the extent or Conrad's involvement in politics lastfall. Two witnesses who did appear before the Grand Jury to t~tify Wednesday were James Roosevelt of Newport Beach and Conrad aide Loran Norton. Roosevelt's testimony cen· tered around a $4,000 Antboay contribution be made at Conrad's suggestion. Norton was questioned about two ~.000 checks he received from Conrad at the time he was a Republican candidate for state senator. Norton insisted the $10,000 was for services performed and not for campaign purposes. In a recent interview, Norton said he declared the $10,000 as in· come on tax returds be will soon be filing. But post·Cb.ristmas season job layoffs were not as great~ ex- pected in January as Orange County's seasonally adjusted UD· employment rate declined. Overall, however, the total ·number of employed in the COUO· ty dropped from 801,800 in December to 795,400 in January. EDD figures, therefore, show the post·Christmas season layoffs took a toll but not as great a one as predicted earlier. The report shows that in the past year -40,600 new jobs were created in the county, a rrowth rate of 6.9 percent. A s~~ factor in that gaU) was the addition of 7 ,300 jobs in COUD· ty manufacturing planta. Also, there were strong gains d.urin' the year in the construc- tion industry with 10,200 jobs ~dded to county payrolls, accord-mt~ ~e EDD report. The department's statisticians predicted continued rise in con- struction employment in the ear- ly pa.rt of 1977 as well as a gain in public service jobs. Fro.. P age Al FREE ZE ••• What that ,mciency means to Orange County taxpayers is that Jacobs cannot ran back on staff shortage or systems shortcom- ings to justify a so-called value freeze. RCA's most automatic TV evert Electronl<:ally tracks and corrects the TV signal Defore It becomes a picture on your screen. RCA ColorTrak 19" • Automatic oontrast/oolor "tracking" slrcultrv ties brightnesa. oontrut and color together ao that all three are btilanced slmullaneouslv. • Automatic color control holds flesh tones and other colors to the settings you select~n when TV signal vanes oc you change channels. · • Automatic room light picture control adluata picture brightness as room light changes. • RCA Super AccuFllter black matrix picture tube hes filtered color phosphors that absorb room llgttt. Result: colors appear sharper and morevMd. · diagonal ncn '"'Dall!m Mooel FA«BS Superb 'RCA Color TV • Thet9'• greet eolot TV vitwinQ In store tor the whole family With this RCA XL-100 coneole. • Reliable XL-100 Chasais has no tubeS to bUm out-1l's 100% IOlld etate. • Blac;K metrtx oloture tube delivers spertdlnQ, dramatically detailed colOr ptctu,.._ • Autonwtlc Fine T""lnv pinpoints and hOlds th• correct broedcast aignal. • Pluo-ffl AccuCirc:ult moduf .. elll'IPlify ..,.....olno. • OuaUtv eound from 1 8" oval duo-cone SPN<er. • Cl.biMt of~~ wtlnut.greln finish on herdbOerd and ·~«t hlrct«IOOd IOlfde. l Orange Coast EDITION • OL. 70, NO._ 41, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1977 N TEN CENTS Newport-Mesa ~eachers to Woo Public· BJ JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. O.lly Plloie $&Ml Teachers in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District plan to woo public opinion. By eettinl community back- ine. teachers in the Newport- Mesa F.ducalion Association, an affiliate or the statewide California Teachers Association (CTA), hope to strengthen their political muscle and their posi- tion at the bargaining table. NMEA officials discount those aims. They say the purpose of the campaign is to improve the im- age teache~ have in the com- munity and to promote com- munication between the teachers and the community. They also insist t.be program they have designed is strictly grassroots in origin and bas nothing to do with their parent or- ganization, the CTA . Officials at CTA's bead· quarters in Burlingame have a d.ilferent view of t.be local pro- gram. Jose Colmenares, assistant ex- ecutive secretary in charge of communications for CTA, ex- plained that the program being readied by the NMEA is one of many that fall under the general umbrella of Community Action Programs designed and dis- tributed by the CTA for use by af. fill ate chapters. However , teachers Chuck Ste1rneir and Mike Lennon, both members ol the NMEA executive board, denied the program they proposed bad anything tc,> do with the CTA during an interview about it six weeks ago. Stegmeir, a history and journalism teacher at Newport Harbor High School and Lennon, a teacher at Ha rbor View Elementary School, said they came up with the idea for the campalifl to repair damage done to teachers' community image in the opening round or salary negotiations this rau. The NMEA, bargaining agent for all district teachers under a new collective bargaining law, was the target or angry outcries from 'community members and some teachers because of the in· itial contract proposal which in· eluded, among other things, a proposed four-hour work day and 8J) 18 percent pay raise. Both Steemeir and Lennon con- ceded that use or a form pay packet provided by the CT A bad been an error on the part or the organization. The public relations campaign scheduled to get under way at the end of the month will involve teams of two or three teachers who will meet with small groups of residents and businessmen. <SeeTEACHERS. Pue A%) Irvine Heiress Dealt Setback By TOM BARLEY QI llw Dally Piiot Stall A bid by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer for a j udg- ment that would have given her victory in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit against the James Ir.vine Foundation V<as rejected today in court. · Judge James F. Judge's de- nial, issued immediately alter he took the bench, means that at- torney Howard Friedman will now have to put on evidence in what is expected to be three more Su ccessor For Glavas See nhyMay Newport Beach could have a ~lacement for its retiring police chief as early as May 1, Ci· ty Manager Robert Wynn said to- day. Wynn said the city's Civil Service Board agreed to a recruiting and hiring process that could provide a replacement to B. James Glavas immediately after his April 30 retirement. Glavas. who began working in Jaw enforcement in 1938 and bas led the Newport Beach depart- ment since 1961, announced his retirement Monday. Accarding to tbe plan agreed to Monday, the city will advertise for applicants in a variety of law enforcement and city manage- knenl publications. I Qualifications include a minimum ol 10 years in law en- forcement and a minimum of live years as a supervisor. Wynn said a panel comistlng of a representative of the clvil .ervice board and bis office will screen the applications for the 20 most qu.ali:fled candidates. Thole candidates will be given an essay test to be eraded by some independent source such as the state Police Officers Stan- dards and Training Commission (POST) or a management firm. Tbe applicants who are in the top ten will then be 1iven an oral examination by a board conslst- inl ol two representatives of the civil service board, two police chiefs and a represent.ative of Wynn's office. That board will rant the appli-~ants by preference. Wynn Will interview the top three on the list and they will be elven a ptycbological exam. Orange Co ast Weather Sunny through Friday and slightly warmer. HJgbs in 70s. Lows 42 to $2. weeks or testimony. Friedman's phase of the trial that began last September will include a tour of the Irvine Com- pany's holdings in Orange Coun· ty with lawyer s for all four parties involved in the Smith lawsuit accompanying Judge Judge. Judge Judge told Friedman to- day that be was "having pro- blems" in understanding and as· sessing Mrs. Smith's position at this phase of the lawsuit. Noting that the Mobil Oil Com· Teen's 'Cash' Really St<UJh A Corona del Mar teenager called police W edoesday to report the theft of his cash box by three teena1ed acquain- tanoet. But police found after taking the trio into custody that the cash box was ac- tually a stash box. The victim was then booked on a charge of possession or cocaine and held in lieu of Sl,500 bail. His companions, all juveniles, were released to their parents. Mexico Boat Race Plague d By Problems By ALMON LOCKABEY o.lly Pllet ... u ....... ... A man overboard and two jury ri1s was the runninl score in the 1,125-mile Puerto Vallarta yacht race today as the 2A-boat neet rocketed down the coast of Baja California in strong northwester- ly winds and surfing seas. Hard luck Sorcery, the SJ.foot sloop owned by Jacob Wood of the California Yacht Club was the first to report a mishap attribut- ed to the wind and sea conditions. The report said a crewman fell overboard but was recovered un- hurt in about 10 minutes. Wood said the yacht's engine was used for about 7~ minutes in rescuing the unidentified crewman. Sorcery was the yacht that was rolled completely over by a giant sea on a voyage from Japan to Alaska last summer. Robert O'Brien, owner-skipper of the Stoot yawl, Spirit. report- ed a braken main boom but said the spar was ju.ry rigged and the yacht was continuln.c in the ra~. Casper, a Ranger-33 sloop skip- pered by William Crew or the Ventura Yacht Club, had rigging railure which resulted in damage to the mast. Jury rieging also kept Casper in the race. Freshening winds, reported variously at 1S to 22 knots, de- penct.lq oo the pocdUon of the re- pOttlna yacht, bad injected new life ln the race and were driving the neet toward its destination at •fast dip. Rastime, the •~loot black •loop out of the LOne Beach Yacht CJub wat reported of{ M.,dalma Bay at s p.m. Wed· nesday and skipper Bill White •u eatlmaUn• an artlval in "' Ptaerto VaIJarta at noon Satur- day. Jlqtlme wu 70 mUea ahead of her nearest riul aDd had 52' m llet to 80 to PuertO Vallarta. Tbe next~ boata on elapised Urne were doeety t10ncbed wttb Tony Btlll' SS.foot yawl, Olinka, leadlnl SorceQ,'bJ about a lille. \. SorcerJcWU"abOUt a mllo ahead ot Jou calle1'• custom sloop, SOl--. pany's $281.9 million offer ror the foundation's 54.5 percent stake in the Irvine Company works out at $33.50 a share, he asked Fried- man why Mrs. Smith "does not have an adequate remedy" if she believes that figure to be below the true value of the shares. "She can assert her rights as a dissenting s hare holder." the judge said. "She can come to court and demand an appraisal of the Irvine Company stock." Friedman. who appeared to be <See HEIRESS, Page A2) O•llY P1lol SI .. , Photo Didn't Go Near the Water LA Assess Halt Won't Affect O C Signs pasted on this sloop bring to mind that old gag about a yacht being a hole in the water surrounded by fiberglass into which you pour money. Craft currently is 9~rt~e4 :'longsid:;. sey~ra.l '!!~e!~ vehicles in one of those impromptu used car lots that spring up along major streets on the Orange Coast. Perhaps the boat is owned by a little old lady in Topsiders who ranputo{~eybeforeshegotitwet. I County AaseHOT' Bradley Jacobs said today a 50-called freeze on reassessing homes in Los Angeles County won't have any impact in Orange County. Jacobs said conditions that touched off Los Angeles County Assessor Phillip Watson's an- nouncement Wednesday of a two- vear freeze don't exist in Orange County. <Related story PageA5.) 'Netivork,' 'Rocky' Vi e For Top Oscars "So, we're not going to take any precipitous action," Jacobs said. "However," he added, "we'll be watching what happens in Los Angeles very closely.'• What happened in Los Angeles County Wednesday was that Watson sent a s hoc k wave through taxing agencies when he said homes will stay at their 1976 assessed value for at least two years. That means property tax- payers in Los Angeles won't be assigned higher values on their homes because of values that continue to inflate. It al8o means that taxing agen- cies won't ha'.·~ an expanding tax base in residential property to fall back on for added revenue. Watson, who has been feuding with the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors in recent months, said he has no choice but to honor the freeze because or a st11ff shortage and a lack of com- puterized systems needed lo re- assess all homes once each year. Orange County Assessor Jacobs said today he doesn't have those problems and pro- bably is legally obligated to put new valuea on all Orange County residential property each year. "There's very little similarity between our operation and Los An.celes." Jacobs explained. LOS ANGELES <AP > - "Network," a scathing view of the television industry. and "Rocky." the story of a rags-to· rich es boxer. each won 10 nominations today from the Mo- tion Picture Academy as the top film oftbe year. The Watergate film , "All the President's Men," followed with eight in the 49th Oscar nomina- tions. "Bound for Glory," the Woody Guthrie biography. followed with six. The late Peter Finch was nominated ror best actor in "Network." Also nominated were William Holden of •·Net work ;•• Robert De Niro, "Taxi Driver;" Giancarlo Giannini, "Seven Beauties," and Sylvester Stallone, "Rocky." "Network" also scored a best actress nomination for Faye Dunaway, and Talia Shire was named for" Rocky." Others in the race: Marie· Christine Barra ult, ·'Cousin Cousine;" Sissy Spacek, "Car- rie," and Liv Ullmann, "Face to Face." Nominated ror best picture of the year were "AU the Presi- dent's Men," ''Bound for Glory," "Network," "kocky" and "Taxi Driver." Other nominations: -Supporting actor: Ned Beat- Moderation? Income Definition Boosted .. The Irvine City Council bas boosted the· definition of moderate income -raising It about SS,000 from the level adopted lesa tban three years ago. . TBB ORIGINAL defllliUoo adopted in October, 19'1', stated that moderate income wu between $8,000 and $15,000 INll Utcolne pet year. l Tbe l'ebruar)', 117!z. definition regards moderate 'in- come as bdnc ~tween ~MO and $20,160. The council wu uked to redefine the figures to be used wit.b It.~ standardJ whiebl'eqwtt developers to otter a certain portion of their houses for moderato income ·famW•. ty. "Network ;" Burgess Me r edith and Burl Young, "Rocky;" Laurence Olivier, "Marath on Ma n ;" Jason Robards, "All the President's <See OSCARS, Page A2 ) . 8 Trust ee Candidates Air Views Eight of 10 Newport·Mesa school board candidates pre· sented their views to an au- dience of about 75 at Corona del Mar High School Wednesday night. All eight listed the impending effects of the Serrano decision as the major concern of the dis- trict in the immediate future. . The California Supreme Court recently ruled the state must replace its present property tax-based school financing system by 1980. Legislation is still pending, but the effect most likely will cause wealthy dlstricts like Newport-Mesa to divert funds to improve educa- tion in poorer districts. The candidates are vying for four seats on the seven-member board of education. Although they are running ln their respective trustee areas, can- didates will be elected at lar1e in the March 8 election. Here is some of what the can- didates had to say Wednesday night: BE'ITY JO BAILEY, Corona del Mar resident and candidate in trustee area 4, uid she ls proud of the quality educatJoo in the district. She called on parents to take an acti•e role in puaJUna the Leelslature to implement the Serrano decision _.lt.h a minimum financial effect on local acbools. She sald "school clotures are inevitable" and sald ''we must look at it realletlcally.11 KoMVer, she .-dded U.. dis· trht muu be a•are of downeout bOme dPVelopmtnts •hlth C9uld bolster declln?n, dl&tnet elliolli.tent. OC Jobless Rate Drops To 5 P ercent - Orange County's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped lo five percent in January, according to figures re- l eased today by the s tate Employment De ve lopme nt Department (EDD). (The California rat.e also dropped from 8.9 percent to 8.5.) In December. the county's Un· employment rate stood at 5.4 per- cent. But post-Christmas season job layoffs were not as great as ex- pected in J anuary as Orange County's seasonally adjusted un- employment rate declined. Overall, however, the total number of employed in tbe coun- ty dropped from 801,800 in December to 795,400 in January. EDD figures, therefore, show the post-Christmas season layoffs took a toll but not as great a one as predicted earlier. The report shows that in the past year 40,600 new jobs were created in the county, a growth rate of6.9 percent. A strong factor in that gain was the addition of 7,300 jobs in coun· ty manufacturing plants. Also. there were strong gains during the year in the construe· tion industry with 10.200 jobs added to county payrolls, accord· ing to the EDD report. The department's statisticians predicted continued rise in con- slC"UcUon employment in the ear- ly part of 1977 as well as a gain in public service jobs. Holiday Set In Newport Newport Beac~ city or. fices 1fill be open Friday on Lincoln's birthday, but city ball will be closed Feb. ~l in ob•ervance or Washinaton'a birthday. A city spokesman said there wt11 be no trash pick up Feb. 21 and J*>PI liv- ing ln meas with a Monday traab Oic~ up will not1have a p.ickuP UDtll the foltowto1 Thurlday. Schools Will be closed botb on Friday and on the 21SL ~ 2 DAIL YPILOT N SACR.AMENTO <U> -no.. Edmund Brown Jr. au wumd Southern California resldenta that they, too. must conserve water, even thoueh water la 5tlll plentilUl in their region. "When people are facln• bankruptcy in waler-short Northern California, they view with dismay the f.llling of •'fiim· Fro•P~AI TEACHERS FLEX MUSCLES Stegmeir and Lennon said they see it as a way of convincln& the• community that teachers are just as interested in quality education as the taxpayers and parents are. However. documents bearing the NMEA letterhead whJcb out- line the so·called grassroots campaign, indicate its goals are not as limited as Lennon and Stegmeir said they were. For instance, one document headed "Listening to You, A Community Action Program" states; "Goal of the Campaign: "Public agenda: Teachers take an active role in listening to the community concerns on education. int~rviews with small groups or power actors. Then comes the feedback seasions at which results are analyzed and a malling list is compiled. In ulting rhetorically "What are we trying to do?" the docu- ment responds with four points including "Make you presence felt in the community. "Let people know that you care. And, as a result, malte It clear to the school board that you are also involved in the com- munity and have developed a power base. ''This is something the board should remember as it bargains with YoU at the negotiations la· ble.'' But, the Demoeratic governor added, "it may be more efficient to work cooperatively with local water districts than to issue more paper and regulations and edicts from the state Capitol. 0 Tbe obJtct··Ss to M'le wai.r, JlOt ""'"'ecUcta,. t Bl'OW'Cl 1aid. Bl'OWD aaJd ho convened the Hltlan to brtili togethe-r all of the mutoally depeadent water uaen and water providers, 1et them to exchanie views and to help assess "the real problem, It., magnitude and complexity ... and what can be done." Bob Will, spokesman for the )tetropolttan Water District of Southern California, was a special target of complaints from Northern California &rowers and cattlemen who said they faced cutbacks of '75 percent or more ln water, and in some cases bankruptcy. Will said his district is cutting back its use of Northern California water from 800,000 acre-feet to 400,000 acre.feet by substltutinJt lower quality Colorado River waler. Conrad May Face Contempt Charge A week earlier, Conrad bad cit- ed bis first. fourth fifth, ninth and 14th amendment right.$ when be refused to testify before lbe grand jury. BEST ACTOR NOMINEE Late Peter Finch \ BEST ACTRESS ROLE? Dunaway ln 'Networtc' F ro.a Page Al OSCAR NOMINEES • • • Men." -Supporting actress: Jane Alexander, "All the President's Men;" Jodie Foste r . "Taxi Driver;" Lee Grant, "Voyage o( the Damned;" Piper Laurie, "Carrie;" Beatrice Straight, "Network." -Direction: Alan J . Pakula, ••All the President's Men": Nicholas Meyer. ''The Seven- P e r -Cenl Solution"; Steve Shagan and David Butler. ''Voyageofthe Damned." "Hidden agenda: Teachers identify strong, supportive teacher advocates in the com- munity." Fro•Pa~Al He was set for what he said was to be a repeat performance Wed· nesday when banded a court or- der signed by Superior Court Judge James Walsworth. Ingmar Bergman. "Face to Face''; Sidney Lumet , "Network''; John G. Avildsen, "Rocky"; Lina Wertm uller, ··seven Beauties.'' Planners Eye Ve r s ailles Subdivision Newport. Beach planning com· mission.en are scheduled tonight to pick up discussion on a request to subdivide 20.8 acres into 10 building sites on the Versailles- on·the·Bluf(s property. A list of objective5 that follows shows four goalJJ teachers are to accomplish including "To iden- tify J)06sible community mem- bers for support in negotiations,'• and "To apply some influence on the Board." TRUSTEES SPEAK • • • The order commanded Conrad to testify and, in effect, said he would be in contempt of court if he refused. -Foreign language film : "Black and While in Color," Ivory Coast; "Cousin Cousine,'' France; "Jacob the Liar," German Democratic Republic: Goals the program sets to at- tain in the community include ·'To create a power base tn the community which will support chapter negotiation objective,"· and "To identify teacher ad- vocates in the community." Lennon, contacted Tuesday, acknowledged that, contrary to his earlier statements, finding teacher advocates is a goal of the campaign. "Sure it is," he said. "We want to have spokesmen for what is ~ood from our ranks just as the school board solicited people who spoke against our pay proposal al the board meeting." Lcnnpn was adamant that the program is still local in essence. even though the outline for it came from the CTA. He explamed that the docu· menls were provided by a CT A s taff member who had set up a similar program in West Orange County. "We had to have a starting point," he said. "We changed some things, but it's the only direct input that the CTA bas had." Lennon said the point of the program as stall ·'lo t:ike teachers and community members out or their adversary roles." He also denied that the name of his program as going to be '"Listerung to You ," attributing it!\ use to a clerical error. That clerical error put that ti· tle on top of three of a series of eight documents carrying the NM EA letterhead. all or which were designated Community Ac· tion Program. One document lists the step-by· ~tep procedure:. that are to be rollowed. "First, adf'ntsry your power structure." This involves setting up a strategy team within the or· ganization which then picks out the community's "power actors" and "change agents " · Real power people are not always immediately visible. I .1ke icebergs, they' re around, in· nuenllal !Jut not pubhcaty stars. "As an example, contact citizens who at one time held pohl1caJ offices. They often carry J::reat weight and are important contributors and advisors to elected officials," the document. suggests. The next step is to aet up teams of two or three to visit the power actors. Once the teams are established, they need to be 1rained. The teams are then given about three weeks to handle their DAILY PILOT , .. , •. c....., Vlct ... ttltt~t-Ot_ol __ ,_ .. !( ..... .. , ... .,_ ............. • MOl,,..."tl!tlhor · ow.ttt M. UM ._,." _. .AnlN""I Mellltl .. Uiort .. Montessori School, said she would bring "new ideas" to the school board if elected. The area 4 (Corona del Mar> candidate supported the concept of small neighborhood schools and suggested young children have the same teacher for more than me year to establish more personal contact. She extended this concept to older students, suggesting that students having the same math or biology teacher might have better study habits and more personal student/teacher con- tact. THOMAS CROSSAN, a can· did ate in trustee area 5 (Balboa Island and Peninsula), described himself as "a scrap- per and a fighter" for improved education. He is opposed to the teacher tenure system because ''there are a few, very bad apples who are teaching in the district." He called for a closer study of student reading capabilities and renewed interest in drug abuse which he claimed has infiltrated to grade school level. RODERICK MACMILUAN, incumbent in area 7 {west Costa Mesa), promised to be available to the community for discussions prior to the election. He supports decentralized ad· ministration because it lowers district costs, but said distnct of. ficials should continue lo have in· put into individual school pro- grams. He believes the tenure system is generally good and said he doesn't think there are many teachers in the district that hide behind the system which guaran· tees employment after a three year probation period. CAROL MARTIN, incumbent in trustee area 5, called for staff and community involvement to aid the district in minimizing the effects of the Serrano decision, whkh will most likely force the wealthy Newport-Mesa district to financially support poorer dis- tricts. She said the decision will challenge local control of schools. She noted the tenure system is a state law that would require community pressure if any changes are to be made. N.C. "DVKE" O'BRIEN, can- didate in trustee area 2 (Northeast Costa Mesa), said he Is "philosophically opposed ii>' the tenure system.•• He cited support from Trustee Orville Ambur1ey, who is not running for re-election, and said the Serrano decision is a major concern of \he district. He said the district must await leeislation on Serrano, lhen move to minimize its effects. DANIEL J. WALLACE, at- torney and candidate in area 4 (Corona del Mar), believes the Legislature should move to bring poorer schools up to the level of Newport-Mesa rather than lower Jocahtandards. He called the' present property tax-based school flnanctn1 syatetll outdated and said school funds could be raised lhrou~ in· creased state sales tax oo 1as, cl•areta or liquor. RJCllMOND E. WES'l'tAKE JR., area 2 candidate (Northeast Costa Mesa), said be la u.ekin&. -ere~uon ta mililtiln tne qu&UlY of educaUOft be experienced 1n the d!ltrict. · He allO said local A1ldent1 abould keep a cloae eye oo SacrallM!llto to tee what bills '"11 be pUHd to Implement Serrano, t.he.n take lt.ep& to keep eflects at amlnlmam. CaDdldatH Vlckl• ADD Brtueiou. area a, ud aoa Voa ..._ • area 4. dkl no£ & tend the candidates night sponsored by the Corona del Mar Zone Advisory Committee. The next candidates night is slated for 7:30 p..m. Tuesday at the oCfices of the Newport Harbor·Costa Mesa Board of Realtors, 401 North Newport Blvd.• FronaPa~AJ • HEIRESS ••• taken aback by the observation, immediately told Judge Judge that his lawsllit is designed to preserve Mrs. Smith's status as a minority s hareholder in the Irvine Company. "Her status as a shareholder would be severed if the founda- tion deal with Mobil is ap· proved," Friedman said. "That is the thrust of her lawsuit." Mrs. Smith, who holds 22.4 per· cent of the issued Irvine Com- pany shares, is known to prefer the $282.7 million offer m~de for the foundation's holdings by what is referred lo in court as the Allen·Taubman group: A con· sortium headed by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taub- man. Friedman's comments and testimony from Mrs. Smith's de- position indicate that her present status a s a maior minority shareholder in the company founded by her grandfather would be preserved if the Allen· Taubman bid prevails in court. Friedman vainly argued throughout most of Wednesday that the foundation's case for the s ale of its Irvine Company hold· in gs to Mobil is "a tainted ac· tion." He angrily condemned the sale of the foundation's stake in the company as a "sweetheart deal" and a "prescription for disaster. "They are drowning and they want Mrs. Smith to drown with them." Friedman protested. "They tell us the Mobil offer is the best they can get but it's only the best tbey can get because the marketp1ace in· America &as been told hands off. this is Mobil's deal," Foundation attorney Howard Privett, again branding Frled- m an as a liar. denied that the foundation had ever ignored tne wishes or the minority stockholders in the Irvine Com· pany. Privett told Judge Judge that the foundation had struck what he called excellent deals for the sale of Irvine stock on several OC· casions only to have Mrs. Smith be the sole minority shareholder to back out of the transaction. Accusing Friedman of "fast and loose conduct with the truth" and "putting on a theatrical play for the press," be told Judge Judge that the tactics employed by Mrs. Smith'• lawyer bad coo-. tributed to "a carnival sideshow display that is being carefully w atcbed by the marketplace." The Orange County Grand Jury's probe lnto county political campaign practic~ continued to. day with the appearance . and nonappearance of key witnesses. M06t notable among the non~ pearancas was an aborted trek into the ju.q room Wednesday by former police informer GeJ>e Conrad. · That message was enough to block Conrad's entry into the jury room as through his at- torney he declared Walsworth prejudiced. As a result, Superior Court pre- siding Judge Byron McMillan will decide Monday ir Walsworth's order will stand and if Conrad will be made to testify under threat or contempt. Conrad reportedly pumped more than $50,000 into political campaigns last fall, including more than $40,000 directed into county Supervisor Philip An· thony's campaign. "Nights and Days," Poland; "Seven Beauties," Italy. -Original screenplay: Jean- Charles Tacchella and Daniele Thompson. ..Cousin Cousine"; Walter Bernstein, "The Front"; Paddy Chayefsky, "Network·'; Sylvester Stallone, "Rocky"; Lin a Wertmuller, "Seven Beauties." -Screenplay adaptation: William Goldman, "All the President's . Men"; Robert Getchell. "Bound for Glory": Federico Fellini and Bernardino Zapponi, "Fellini's Casanova"; The developers, Newport View, Inc., are seeking com. mission approval of the final tr act map for the second phase of the development off Hospital Road near. Hoag Memorial Hospital. Commissioners are also slated to begin discussion on pat,k land dedication requirements and a resolution calling for develop· ment limitations in Newport. Center. The regular public meeting of the planning commission begins at 7 p.m. in Newport Beach City Council Chambers. RCA ·a most automatic TV ever! Electron1caJ!y trscf(s and corrects th• TV slgnal before it beeomes a PtC1ure on your screen. • Automallc contrastrcolor "'tracking" slrcu1try ties bnghlness. contrast and color together so that all three are balanced simultaneously RCA ColorTrak 19" • Au1omatic color control holds flesh tones and other colors to the settings you select-even When TV slgnal vanes or you change channels · • Automatic room fight picture control ad1usts picture brightness as room light changes. • RCA Super AocuFllter black matrix picture tube has filtered color phosphors that absorb room tight. Result: colors appear sharper and more vivid. Chagona1 ... Ren Th~Oal!Qn MoOtl r A48) Superb RCA Color TV • There't great color TV vle~ng In store for the whole family with this RCA XL-100 console. • Reliable XL·100 chassis has no tubes to bum out~t'a 100% solid state. • Blaek matrix picture tube deh"8f's sparkhng, dramatlcalty detailed color pictures. • Automatic Fine Tuning plnPolnts and holds the corteet broadcast signal. • Plug-tn AccuQrcult modules simplify eennc1ng. • Ou11ity sound from II e"' oval duo-cone speaker. • Cabinet of attractive walnut~ra1n finish on hardboard and selected hardwood 90lld1. Privett crlUclced Friedman's contntlan ~ -loundettaift-.... -W' 1.5-East I-1th St.- could get as much as $400 mUUon for the lrvtne Company hold· ings u belnl absolutely contrary to lhe sou.ndin,. made by the foundaUon. Privett pointed out that lbe Cadlllac Fairview Corporation ot Toronto Canada bu n<* bacted out of ita ca.rllu interest ln the Irvine Comi>a"1 after bicldlni for the foundallOl!1twa. Costa Mesa .................... J 0.... ... .,, c.ta "· Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Daily ?-6 Sat. 9-.5:30 1•rua· ........ io11;1I , .... , ic·•• •·or ;111 .'our ho111•• ••l••c·fron ic·' 7 .. ~ - ' I Sattdlehaek EDITION 1 VOL 70, NO . .Cl, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1977 Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks TENCEN~ 'Netmork,' 'Koeky' Battle for . Oscars . LOS ANGELES (AP) - .. Network," a scathing view of the televiaion induatry, and "Rocky," the story of a rags-to- ricbes boxer, each won 10 nominations today from the Mo- tion Picture Academy as the top film of the year. The Watergate film, .. All the President's Men," followed with eight in the 49lb Oscar nomina· tions. "Bound for Glory," the Woody Guthrie biography, followed with six. The late Peter Finch was nominated for best actor in "Network." Also nominated were William Holden of" Network:'· Robert De Niro, "Taxi Driver;" Giancarlo GiaDDini, "Seven Beauties," and SylvesterStallone, "Rocky." .. Network" also scored a best actress nomination for Faye Dunaway, and Talia Shire was namedfor"Rocky." · Others in the race: Marie- Cbristine Barrault, "Cousin Cousine;" Sissy Spacek, "Car- rie," and Uv Ullmann, "Face to Face." Nominated for best picture of the year were "All the Presi- dent's Meo," "Bound for Glory," "Network," "Rocky" and "Taxi Driver." Other nominations: -Supporting actor: Ned Beat- ty, "Network; .. Burgess Meredith and Burt Young. .. Rocky;., Laurence Olivier. .. Marathon Man;" Jason Robards, ••All the President's Men." · -Supporting actress: Jane Alexander, "All tbe President•s 'Men; ... Jodie Foster, .. Taxi Driver;" Lee Grant. "Voyage of tbe Damned;.. Piper Laerie, .. Carrie;" Beatrice Strata.ht. "Networt.•• -Direction: Alan J. Pakula, ••All the President's Men .. : Ingmar Bergman, "Face to Face": Sidney Lumet, "Network"; John G. Avildsen, "Rocky"; Lina WertmuUer, .. Seven Beauties." -Foreign languaee film: .. Black and White in Color," Ivory Coast; "Cousin Couslne, » France; .. Jacob tbe Liar, .. German DemQCratic Republic; .. Nights and Days," Poland; ""'Seven Beauties," Italy. -Original screenplay: Jean· Ch1,rles Tacchella and Daniele Tbomoson. "Cousin Cousine": Walter Bernstein, .. The Front,.; Paddy Chayefsky, "Networit"; Sylvester Stallone, .. Rocky"; (See OSCARS, Page AJ) Heiress Dealt Setback Dllfly Pilot Stllfl f'llOte By TOM BARLEY Oft .. Daily ~llot Staff A bid by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith's lawyer for a judg· ment that would have given her victory in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit against the James Irvine Foundation was rejected today in court. Judge James F. Judge's de· nial, issued immediately after he took the bench, means that at· torney Howard Friedman will now have to put on evidence in what is expected to be three more weeks of testimony. Friedman's phase of the trial lhat began last September will include a tour of the Irvine Com- pany's holdings in Orange Coun- ty with lawyers for all four parties invo)ved in the Smith lawsuit accompanying Judge Judge. Judge Judge told Friedman to- day that he was "having pro- blems" in understanding and as- sessing Mrs. Smith's position at this phase of the lawsuit. Noting lbat the Mobil Oil Com- l'aried Career pany's $281.9 million offer for the foundation's 54.5 percent stake in the Irvine Company works out at $33.50 a share, he asked Fried- man why Mrs. Smith .. does not have an adequate remedy" if she believes that figure to be below the true valu~ of the shares. "She can assert her rights as a dissenting shareholder,,, the Judge said. ''She can come to court and demand an appraisal of the Irvine Company stock." Friedman, who appea.red to be (See HEIRESS, Page AZ) Did11't Go Near the Water Signs pasted on this sloop bring to mind that old gag about a yacht being a hole in the water surrounded by fiberglass into which you pour money. Craft currenUy is berthed alongside several wheeled vehicles in one of those impromptu used car lots that spring up along major streets on the Orange Coast. Perhaps the boat is owned by a little old lady in Topsidets who ran out of money before she got it-.. Conserving Of Water Stressed College Trustee ~.Dr. Marshall Dies SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has warned 'Freeze' Halts at Line Southern Californla residents that they, too, must conserve water, even though water is still plentiful in their region. ··When people are facing bankruptcy in water-short IA Tax Decision Won'i Affect OJ:ange County Northern Calilornia, they view with dismay the filling of swim- ming pools in Southern California and the construction of new recreational lakes," County Assessor Bradley Jacobs said today a so-called freeze on reassessing homes in Los Angeles County won 't have any impact in Orange County. Jacobs said conditions that touched otr Los Angeles County Assessor Phillip Watson's an· nouncement Wednesday of a two- vear freeze don't exlst in Orange County. (Related story Page AS.) .. So, we're not going lo take any precipitous action," Jacobs said. "However," be added, "we'll be watcbine what happens in Loi Anteles very closely." Wbat happened In Los An&eles County We"nesday was that Watson sent a shock wave through taxing agencies when be said homes will stay at their 1976 assessed value for al least two years. Th at means property tax· payers in Los Angeles won't be assigned higher values on their homes because of values that continue to inflate. It also means that taxing agen- cies won't have an expanding tax base in residential property to fall back on for added revenue. Watson, who has been feuding with the Los Angeles County' Board of Supervisors in recent months, said be has no choice but to honor the freeze because of a staff shortage and a lack of com· puterized systems needed to re- assns all homes once each year. Orange County Assesso~ Jacobs said today be doesn't have those problems and pro- bably is legally obligated to put new values on all Orange County residential property each year. "There's very Ultle similarity between our operation and Los Angeles," Jacobs explained. "We have the capability to do things Los Angeles can't do." What that efficiency means to Orange County taxpayers is that Jacobs cannot fall back on staff shortage or systems shortcom- ings to justify a so-called value freeze. County as.sessors in California follow a uniform set of laws that govern assessment practices, in· eluding a mandate to put an up- dated value on all homes an· nu ally. Brown said Wednesday. "People in the north want to see more conservation in the south. We're in a crisis we've never faced before," Brown said after a 2112·hour free-wheeling discussion with about 75 legislators, state officials and representatives of water districts and agricultural groups. "We are going to have to share the less, share tbe burden, share the hardship.'' A legislator from California's "most severely hit county said be will propose mandatory statewide rationing. But Brown, questioned later by reporters, expressed doubts about statewide rationing although he didn't rule it out. O.lly ~IM4 Stiff IMle TRUSTEE SUCCUMBS Dr. James Marshall Laguna Hills Man Faces Theft Raps Watson• s stance, therefore, was a "I would if J could but I can't" posture that Jacobs in· dicated lS out of reach for hirn. However, with his promise to "watch things closely in Lo6 Angeles" came a pledge to "do all I can within the law to help re- lieve county property taxpayera' "AQyt.hing is a possibility con- sidering this drought. There is no statutory change that is not un- der consideration," Brown said. But, the l>emocratic governor added, "it may be more efficient to work cooperatively with local water districts than to issue more OC Jobless Rate Drops To 5 Percent paper and regulations and edicts Orange County's seasonally Orange County sheriff's of· Jicers have filed burglary charges again.st a Laguna Hills man accused by them of break- ln1 into two homes in the area. Deputies jailed Ricard Sterllna Coast I Weather Sunny through Friday and slightly warmer. Highs in '70s. Lows 42 to 52. burden." from the state Capitol. adjusted unemployment rate ~trauss, 20, of 25092 Modoc "The object is to save water, dropped to five percent in Drive, after identifying him as ABC E F• notissueedicts,"Brownsaid. January,accordingtofiguresre· themanwt.brokeintothehome yes trm Brown said be convened the leased today by the state of fire captain Robert Bruce session to bring together all of Employment D~velopment Turbeville, 31, of 25Crll La Suen. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The the mutually dependent water Department (EDD>. Steree equipment, record American ~roadcuttng Com· users and water providers, eet <The California rate also albums, plants and coins with a panies Inc. of New York are tbem to exchange views and to dropped from 8.9 percent to 8.5.) total value of $580 were taken ne10Uatine to purchase the firm help assess "lbe real problem, its In December, tbe county's un- from the Turbeville home by a wblch publishes Los Angeles magnitude and complexity ... and employment rate stood at 5.4 per- thief who entered vla an un-· M.agazlne and several other <SeeB•OWN, Patet\J) cent. locked sliding glass door. publications. But post-Christmas season job Strauss is fU.rthel' accused of * * * layoffs were not as great as ex- entering the home o! fireman Laite .foh n1•t". peeled in January as Orange John Elon Thompson, 31, of 250'12 -,, County's seasonally adjusted un· L8 Suen. and taking property employment rate declined. valued at "8.65. Overall, however, the total Deputies said they added ·number ot employed ln the coun· cbuges o1 receittng stolen pro-0-..:....... __ Comment Seen "...:. Slar.n ty dropped rrom 801,800 Jn perty to the aJ'leaations \1¥ben ~ ~ r Decemberto795.400inJanuary. they allefedly found a shopping . EDD fteures, therefore, show c:art Moke from· a local market the post-Christmas season at Strauaa' home. layoffs took a toll but not as great Offlcert said StraUJS Jumped a one as prediated earlier. thfroemf~t oldl~,c htt'!f::~ , Tbe r'*rt shows that in ttie \bit UM ... pall year .0,800 new Jobt were Dr. James W. Marshall - educator, adventure~ philosopher, film maker, opera buff and a Saddleback College trustee for the past five years - died Wednesday at Saddlebaclc Community Hospital after a long illness. He was 69. Dr. Marshall. of 140A Avenida Majorca in Laguna Hills Leisure World, brought a wealth of ex- perience and education to tbP, Mission Viejo college when be was appointed as a trustee in 1972. Despite recurring bouts with il- lness, he won a full term in the 1973 election and was running for another term in the upcoming March 8 balloting. The former president of Wayland Baptist College in Plainview, Texas, Marshall's most significant and lasting ac- complishments stemmed from years of study and life among the stone age Indian tribes of Brazil Starting in 1953, Dr. Marshan made trips into the Xingu River region of that South American nation's Mato Grosso jungles. His anthropological and documen- tary film project cost him nearly $300,000ofhis own money. He flew his own single-engine airplane on nine round tripS to Brazil and made 50 other such trips into uncharted jungle areas to bring back his precious cans of film. Two of Dr. Marshall's edited movies were shown by ABC television as part of the •• Expedi- tion" series and the veteran ex- plorer once said he had enough left over to make at least 40 more 28-minute films. "The rest has never been edit- ed. Sometime, when I retire,. I plan to set up an office and edit these films. I might have to go back and update them somewhat," be said in a past in- terview. Dr. Marshall's film studies of Indian t.rtbes that insert plates in their Ups, hunt and klll animals with ironwood cudgels and live primlUve, simple lives have been 1bown ln 33 countries and in 1even diClerent languages. The kindly, soft·spo~en tnistee also said be saw many miseries 1uftered by the Indians when they came in con\act with (SeeTBVSTEE. P•1eZ> tered dllebomet wb.lle the ownera created in the county1 a growth 1'4'._,;...,+~wEeH.1.J.Jf~~~~----~--~'COifii'iiiieiitrni~bll~~iii!~~~~·~~~~~~~fi'P.:~"t:~..,.~~~:-=-:---=~....;,_--f~Sf'lfi FRIDA.¥ OFF Tbe two school dlatricta 1ervm1 the Saddleback Valley area, C•piatrano Unified and Saddleback Unlfled, have dtelared Fri- day a b0Ud91 In bCJnor of Ltncoln'1 Blrthd91, ~•b. 12. AU otrlces and gcboola will be ctmed. "---....... --~.1 JlJ OAILYPtLOT 58 HEIRESS •.. taken oback by the observation, immediately told Jud&e Judge that h1a law.wt ii clu!ped to preserve Mn. Smith'• atatua u a minority shareholder In the Irvine Company. "Her status as a shareholder would be severed if the fouoda· tlon deal with Mobil is ap- proved." Friedman said. "That is the thrust or her lawsuit." Mrs. Smith, who bolds 22.4 per· cent of the lssued Irvine Com· pany shares, ia known to prefer the $282.7 million offer made for the foundation's holdings by what is referred to in court as the Allen-Taubman group: A con- sdrtium headed by Wall Street fibancier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taub- man. Friedman's comments and testimony from Mrs. Smith's de· position indicate that her present status as a major minority shareholder in the company founded by her grandfather would be preserved if the Allen. Taubman bid prevails in court. Friedman vainly a r g ued throughout most of Wednesday that the foundation's case for the sale of its Irvine Company hold· ings to Mobil is "a tainted ac· lion." He angrily condemned the sale ot the fowtdation's stake in the company as a ''sweetheart deal" and a "prescription for disaster. "They are drowning and they want Mrs. Smith to drown with them " Friedman protested. "They tell us the Mobil offer is the best they can get but it's only the best they can gel because the marketplace in America has been told hands orr, this is Mobil's deal,'' Fowtdation attorney Howard Privett, again branding Fried· man as a liar, denied that the foundation had ever ignored the wi s he s of the minority stockholders in the Irvine Com· pany. Privett told Judge Judge that the foundation bad struck what be called excellent deals for the sale of Irvine stock on several oc· casions only to have Mrs. Smith be the sole minority shareholder to back out of the transaction. Accusing Friedman of "fast and loose conduct with the truth" and "putting on a theatrical play for the press." he .told Judge Judge that the tactics employed by Mrs. Smith's lawyer had con- tributed to "a carnival sideshow display that is being carefully watched by them arketplace.'' Privett criticized Friedman's contention that the foundation could get as much as $400 million for the Irvme Company hold- ings as being absolutely contrary to the sowtdings made by the foundation. Privett painted out that the Cadillac Fairview Corporation of Toronto Canada has now backed out of its earlier interest in the Irvine Company after bidding for the foundation shares. And he told Judge Judge that s uch entities as Exxon , American Express and a "giant Amencan company" identified only as "X" had not even re- ached the bidding stage after ex- pressing interest in the Irvine Company "Mr. Friedman has given U.'> an excellent example of how a good lawyer with a command of the English language can duck and bob and weave and dance away from stark reality," Privett said Gym ClCUJses Set in Toro A new class in physical condi- tioning for men will begin Thurs- day at El Toro Jllgh School. The class will meet weekly from 7 to9 p .m . Students will be able to use the training and gymnasium facilities as well as the track, basketball and volleyball courts. They will be taught the techni· ques oC body building, weight control, physical conditloruog and physical relaxaUon. There ls no registration fee. Further information may be ob- tained by calling the Adult Education Ofrlce at 837-6270. DAILY PILOT °""' ...... ,, ... ,.,,... 'RETURNING FAVOR' Candidate Brooks 'Privilege' R etu rned By Hopeful ( Editar's Note -This article is one o/ a series profiling candidates for three open seats on the Sad· dleback College Board of Trustees. The March 8 election is at large and the top vote getter an each trustee area will win.) By WIU.JAM SCHREIBER Ol I,_ 0•111 Pilot Sl•lf Clifton Rowland Brooks, a Tustin allergist who has traced his family tree back to Charlemagne's Holy Roman Em· pire, says he's running for the Saddleback College Hoard of Trustees to return a big favor. "I have a lot of education. which is a great privilege we have in America," he l>aid. "I have a respansibility to return this privilege." Brooks is in a race with two other north Tustin residents for a post vacated last year when arch-conservative Robert Bartholome\V resigned to move out of the county. The 53-year-old physician. who is married and has six sons. said some of the community's con· servative element asked him to run because "they Celt 1 could represent the conservative al· titude." Part of the reason for his "American" outlook on life may stem from his heritage. Brooks and his wife, Agnes, have documented t he family 's geneology in this country back to the earliest colonial times. Despite his self-professed con- servatism. Brooks said he ap- proaches things with an open mind -including such con- troversial issues as collective bargaining and "teacher power." "Collective bargaining is not a threat," he said. "It is a fact of life and we must deal with it ap- propriately. We have to maintain our perspective." Brooks bas had some back· ground in local government. While living for a decade in the Washington. D.C. area, he was a school district trustee and a member of a community safety board. From 1970 to 1971, he was the associate medical director of Oranie, Comnty Medical Center. before it became the property of UC Irvine. The candidate said that if he is elected. he would be "sensitive" to everybody in the district, from taxpayers to administrators. But be said be would owe special attention to the people or Tustin, who he contends have re· ceived short shrift by the district until quite recently. "The northern campus offers some distinct reJlef from the un- rest In Tustin about the college," he said. "I am anxious to serve Tustinit.es, which I expect to be a strong part of the total effort in the district." Generally speaking, Brooks said be is "against foolishness, irresponsibility and being rushed into decisions where I can't foresee what is going to happen." He said be thinks Saddleback should serve the people "ap- propriately" but only as far as the taxpa,yers can allow. Brooks also said the college's main objective shQuld be train· ing of young people right out of high school "because they are tbe taxable people of the future.'' "I am not at all convinced that they can be dealt with in exactly the same wa,y as people in adult education or continuint educa· Uon progra!Ds," be said. Accordine to Brooks, his will· lngness to serve was the prime impetus behind his candidacy, plua a personal beUer that "education ls a cornerst(Jne of eommun:icatlon imong people.•' Funds in Trouble SACRAMENTO (AP) - Federal funds toe hlabways alll mua transl& in Lot Aqe)ea County could be cut oil ti the Bron ldminlltnUon coaUnuiea to PUB bldt from Dtamoad l&ne1 · ua otbir: Protr•ms to encourap catpo0Hn1 ud bus rldetlhlp. the Saaamento Unton uld Wedofs. d11. lNDIANAPOLIS (AP) -A vengeance-seekin& gunman lbinklng be ls "a marked man" ror Ute, continued to hold a bostace In a booby-trapped apartment today while his lawyers studied an offer ol im- munity from prosecution. Anthony G. "Tony" Kiritsis asked this morning that bi$ at· torneys examine the immunity papen which local prosecutors approved in an effort to break the GUNMAN SURRENDERS, FREES 7 AT BANK-A4 tense standoff which began Tues· day at Kiritsis' apartment. Authorities said Kiritsls in· dicated he would accept his at- torneys' judgment. The papers, read to Kirltsis Wednesday night from an apart- ment acrou the hall, were picked up by bis brother, James, and then delivered to the lawyers by a deputy prosecutor. A spakesman for negotiators said there was no reason to believe Kiritsis would issue any new demands, and authorities were hopeful the ordeal would end when Kiritsis' attorneys verified the documents. "He ( Kiritsis) is optimistic. We 're optimistic," the spokesman said. In a predawn telephone in· terview with WIBC radio news director Fred Heckman, to whom Kiritsis· has s poken several times the past two days, Kiritsis said, "I've already lost all my self respect. I'm going to be a m arked man all my life." F ront P age Al TRUSTEE. • • civilization -like the common cold. which he said killed 30 healthy natives in a matter of days. During his tenure as a trustee, Dr. Marshall was often the only voice of logic and reason during heated debate over controversial issues. "What impressed me was that he was an extremely kind, hum an person," fellow trustee Larry Taylor of Laguna Beach said today. .. But at the same time, he had an extremely intenioe com- petitive spirit that was clear. hard and sound," Taylor added. "The last thing he wanted to give up on was the college.'' Board of Trustees President Norrisa Brandt of Irvine said Dr. Marshall was ''dedicat ed to spreading knowledge and love to the Indians of Brazil, college stu· dents in Texas and the communi- ty and Saddleback College in Orange County.'' The family has asked that con- tributions be made to the Sad· dleback College scholarship fund. Dr. Marshall is survived by his wife, Ruth; a soa, William; a daughter, Ann Aldridge and two grandcbildren. Memorial services will take pl ace Saturday al 3: 30 p . m . at the McCormick Mortuary in Lagwta Hills. Dr. William Tolbert, pastor of the El Toro Baptist Church, will officiate. Froaa Page Al OSCAR S ••. Lina Wertmuller, "Seven Beauties." -Screenplay adaptation: WlUiMt Goldman, "All the President's. Me n"; Robert Getchell, "Bound for Glory"; Federico Fellini and Bernardino Zapponi, ''Fellini's Casanova"; Nicholas Meyer, "The Seven- Per-Cent Solution"; Steve Shagan and David Butler, "Voyage orthe Damned." -Original song: "Ave Satani," from "The Omen"; "Come to Me," from "The Pink Panther Strikes Again": "Evergreen," the Jove theme from "A Star ls Born"; "Gonna Fly Now," from "Rocky"; "A World Thal Never Was," from "Half a House." Metals Class Starting at Saddleback Special machines wlll be used • In a met als class beglnnin1 Thu rsday in the Sadd l1back Valley UDltlcd School" Diltrlct'a Adult EducatJoa Prognm. The cl~ will meet Thurwdays from 1to 10p.m. In Room27 all.a Pu lntertnecUate Scbool. Studen.la will mate their own proJectl *1'ld ltam to use the lalb : mUliD1 macblno, oxy- •cet7Jene wtJdtr aod 1bHt • metal equlpment. ~~there ls no tuIUoo fee; etudllita wW P•1 fw mat.eitals. • Furtbilr lnformiUOD ma,. be ob~Ja:r ~th• AdWt Ed~Mlai( Oftke at m;.cno, Kiritsis also told Heckman he was angered by reports that there were no recorm of his ever work!n& at tbe Military. Academy at WestPoint, N.Y. "I was an adviser to the in· structors there," he said. Frustrated police and aherifrs deputies maintained their vigil near the building. Occasionally, one or two uniformed officers walked between a large bus used as a police command center and a neighboring building where the sherilrs department set up bead· quarters. A friend took a copy or the im· munity offer Wednesday night to the apartment where Kiritsis held executive Richard 0. Hall hostage, said Georee Martz. spokesman (or police negotiators. Martz said the friend read the offer through the booby-trapped front door to Kiritsis, who told him that he didn't want to think about it then and preferred to wait until morning. Martz said the document, signed by a deputy pro,,ecutor, offered "total immunity" Crom arrest or psychiatric confine- ment to Kiritsis. F~PageAI BROWN ••. what can be done." Bob Will, spokesman for the Metropolitan Water District or Southern California, was a special target or complaints from Northern California growers and cattlemen who said they faced cutbacks of 75 percent or more in water, and in some cases bankruptcy. Will said his district is cutting back its use of Northern California water from 800,000 acre-feet to 400,000 acre-reel by s ubstituting lower quality Colorado River waler. ~en Vuit.1 IA Airport LOS ANGELES {AP)- Brlt.atn•a Queen Ellnbelh and Prince Philip stopped over bridly at Los Aneeles IntemaUonal Airport early today to refuel on a tucbt to W eslern Samoa for the queen's silver jubilee visit to Commonwealth coun- tries. The royal couple spent an hour ~ 45 minutes at the airport after their British Airways Boeing 707 Speed Bird touched down at 1:28a.m. A spokesman for lhe airport. said the queen re· mained aboard the plane during the stopover, seated by a window reading a book. other members or the royal entourage disem· barked to walk around and eat, the spokesman said. Grand Jury Continues Flllld Probe The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into county political campaign practices continued to- day with the appearance and nonappearance of key witnesses. Most notable among the nonap- pearances was an aborted trek into tbe jury room Wednesday by former police informer Gene Conrad. A week earlier, Conrad had cit· ed his flJ'St, fourth fifth, ninth and 14tb amendment rights wben he refused lo testify before the grand jury. He was set for what he said was to be a repeat performance Wed· nesday when handed a court or· der signed by Superior Court Judge James Walsworth. Problems Plagµe Boat Race By ALMON LOCKA8£Y Delly ........... "' ... l .. A man overboard and two Jury rigs was the running score in the 1,W·mlle Puerto Vallarta yacht race today as the 24·1;>oat fleet rocketed down the coast of Baja California in strong northwester- ly winds and surline seas. Hard luck Sorcery, the 61-foot sloop owned by Jacob Wood of the California Yacht Club was the rtrst to report a mishap attribut· ed to the wind and sea conditions. The repart. said a crewman fell overboard but was recovered un· ! hurt in about 10 minutes. Wood said the yacht's engine was used for about 7\.'.I minutes in rescuing the unidentified crewman. Sorcery was the yacht that ~as rolled completely over by a giant sea on a voyage from Japan to Alaska last summer. Robert O'Brien, owner-skipper of the SS.foot yawl, Spirit, repart- ed a broken main boom but said the spar was Jury rigged and the yacht was conUnuin~ in the race. Navy Captain Service Held LOS ANGELES (AP) - Graveside services with militarv honors have been held or retired Navy Capt. Ray Maurer Pitts of Lal\Ula Hills. Pitts, 66, spent 30 years In the Navy, before retiring in 1960 to form a company called Ocean Systems, of which he was vice president. He was prime contrac- tor and on-the-scene supervisor for the recovery of a hydrogen bomb which was dropped ac· cl dentally in 3,000 feet of water off Spain. Pitts died Feb. 2 oi br ain cancer at the Naval Regional Medical Center in San Diego. 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"' Stockholder Sues Xonlc1 LOS ANGELES <AP) -A New· York ltockbolder bas riled a ctus. action IGlt qainlt Lot Al\leles-baaed Xonla Inc. Uld 12 of it.a omcva, clalmlq u.. nrm artlficlally ln.lleted an4 manll*lated lts 1toek. Th• wit. flied by Harold Golden. wbo owm Z,IOO •haret In tbe firm, clilb 1be tompaQ1 mantpu)a.led it.a tt.ockt b1 mlsrepra~ntaUon arid '*· d.laclt»Ute Of lnlormaUon about an al· leced new technique for taktoJ x. ,.,. .. Tbe IUll allec• that varfcu daJm1 ,..,.. meOI about the X·ra1 t.ctill· qut, bUt none WM ttue. Xoma offtebt1 bad no eomJ'l\fttl, ••1lnl ._ bda't seen I.tie dotu· m.ntl 11l lbe lawauJt yet. . ~ - -. 11oanl;· iif;i W,kome to~ ClUbt . t By MU.TON MOSKOWITZ • C..m hu become a way Of Jife in .America for lnd(vlduall, famWes, corponuona and aovtrnment. The ;1 loana have ~ome ao bu1e that you Just worry about payina! off the interest. : The age at which you c-.n join the ranb of debton ha.~~ been extended downward with the introducUon of 5tudentr loan.s . ~ .. It's diffic~t these days t.o llnd a corporation that• functiom without loans and/or llnes or credit. And it's.~ becoming t.ouah lo find f amilles free of debt. r ' M06T PEOPJ;E KNOW 8Y NOW WHAT happens when"' they don't pay their BankAmericard or Master Char1e bill~~ tn full. The unpaid balance converts automatically into al loan, at 18 percent annual interest. .. The ban.kl that lssue these cards are, of course. : delighted when you pay only part or the tab. That's why' you're pointedly informed about the "minimum payment" r in your monthl y • statement of charges. ~ ( Banks. after all. are in ,. ~ the business of making ··! ~ Money } I loans. Banks in many Tree sla les also use an ' insidious device that f permits you lo write checks for more money than is in your • account. They are not exactly doing you a favor. Here, too. ( they have discovered a new way lo expand their loan business. r ' EVEN BANKS APPARENTLY UNDERESTIMATED 1 the lure of easy credit. A year and a half ago the nation's.' lar1est bank, California's Ban.k of America, introduced to I lls more affluent cus tomers the convenience or'· ''PersonaLine Credit." Depending on your credit standing ,/ you were given a personal line of credit ranging from $3,00CY\ up to $15,000. i Some 30,000 Bank of America cusromers have opted for(~ this scheme. As you start to use your line. you go Into debt. J . A. Carrera. executive \'ice president or the Bank of • America. said that al the start the bank expected about half f of the PersonaUnes to be active. This estimate proved to 00:\ far too timid. Current usage is 75 percent, and the Bank of l America now has more than $100 million In loanS:• outstanding on these lines, or roughly $4,500 per account. ~ Jn this wor1d of credit. who is the biggest debtor of them~. all? The answer, not surprisingly. is the federalA government. now in hock to the lune of $650 billion. That'~ .• what's owed on the bonds and nptes ·issued by the U.S .• \ Treasury to make up the deficits in the government budget ·, THJS FIGURE IS SO GARGANTUAN that it's.\ impossible for most of us to get it into focus. But Arlen J ( Large, a reporter for The Wall Street Journal. recently"\ pro\'ided us with a pithy explanation of what il means. ! Large noted that this year's interest payments on th«!.' public debt will mount to $44 .6 billion. That's just interest·~ As a result; the Treasury Department now ranks as the'.1 third largest spending department in government. behmdl Hea lth. Education and Welfare C$159 billion> and Defense..; ( $110 billion>. < Large further points out that the interest expense of thc'.. 7 U.S. government is "greater than the annual sales of.t General Motors, greater than all government spending in'.) Sweden and greater than the entire domestic economy of~ Greece or New Zealand." ., So if you're worried about your debts. welcome to the..· club. It's a big club and its headquarters is Washington.; D.C. ' .. ' 1, ... , w ........ Dazzling Warnatla :j Metalized Thermos blankets that are a by.product o(. the coWltry's space programs have.been shipped bY.l the thousands to coJd .ptagued parts of the county • The seven·by-four·foot blankets weigh two ounces : and can be folded to pocket size. When wrapped:! tightly aroUlld the body. they renect back 80 perceoL f of the body's heat. · 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~: I Washington Port Favored in Reports .. . I VlCfORlA. Brttish Columbia (f\P) -Development oh • major oU tanker port at Port Ai:Jcel<?s, Waab., would be I more ecpemlve. yet preferable, to one at KJtlmal. Brttlsll l Columbia, accordln1 to two confidential studies by the pro. l vinclal govemment. , : Tht reportt prepared by the Environment and Lanct U•• Secretariat aay preltml.nary anal)'ala "would appeRr t~ • lndtcate U'lat Port Anselee ls a pr&fef'able alternative to ~ KlUm.i from 8.C.'a Point of view" bttauae of envlroomen..: tal baisnll' at the ctorihem Briti1hpot11mbt11 batbor. : • . , POltT ANGELES AND Krl"IMAT .U.I: •mOl>I po~ J bell\,I «lMldered u W l Cont terminals for pt~lints that l woud CUf1' ~l h1und otl'ltrtrudeoU tolbo Midwest. :. One report uld there f. nlmost no detaUod to\llronme.a{ tal lntormaUon Ol1 th K tUm ,, Clrt'"l. '"0 mu northwest ot. Va.Dcou\-er, and ur,.. that no d~ls on bit made untll \M: 1 Canad11D pem"'41r!l hu studM-d the "eoetp,. MOMmlei-l and eon.VlrOIWentaJ hnplluUMJ~ t.be proJt'=l • • 1 1'bi DIOlt ra..,able ·u~ at IUtlmat, ~to ·1 repo~ ii• •Ull\Aled C9'l tbtre OI JeOO 'irillUOn 1o .. mlWl'lft, Coimpared 1'tttl an ..Umat.ed cott at tl bllBoa al .Pon AbjilM. • .. . . --'