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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-15 - Orange Coast PilotIt '· Burglary at 'l'Og Store TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 15, 1977 VOL 70, NO. 06, 2 SICTIONS. 2t rAOES ' • • • • BB Officers Save Teen's ! 'Mobil Off er Best' Directors Tell Irvine Voting By TOM BARLEY Ol Ille O•lh root Sl•tt l Three directors of the James I Irvine Foundatton testified Mon- ' day that they voted for the sale or I ~eY're Both Retired . .__ I ' Life Berserk Lad Cuts Artery A 130-pound youth who went berserk and began smashing win- dows at a Sunset Beach ham- burger takeout stand today owed his life lo three Huntington Beach policemen who battled him lo pre- vent his bleeding to death. their Irvine Company stock to the Mobil Oil Corporation because 1t was the best offer made lo their board. And all three agreed that a sale of the stotk for $281.9 million rather than a distribution of the hiolding.s to selected charities would best help them meet the wishes' of the late James Irvine. She claims through attorney Howard Friedman that it might be possible to reach that figure if t h e oil company were not dominating the market place and frightening other possible bid~ ders away. The heiress currently prefers the $282. 7 million offer submitted by a bidder known in court as the Allen-Taubman group: a con- sortium headed by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit devleloper Alfred Taub-man. Investigators said if the 19- year-old, who gave his address as • the Leng Beach YMCA, had not been subdued following the 10:50 p.m, rampage Monday, he would have died. Only one of the three, Mrs. Kathryn Wheeler of Corona del Mar, took the witness stand in the Orange County Superior Court trial of the lawsuit filed by her cousin, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith. Judge James F. Judge allowed the reading of pretrial deposi- tions taken from foundation directors F.dward W. Carter and Robert H. Gerdes lo go into the I record as the trial testimony of • the two men. Gerdes denied in his deposition that the foundation board had ig- nored the wishes of the minority abarebolders in the lrvme Com- P.DJ' when they negotiated a deal that will, if approved, see the 111er1er ol the Irvine Company with Mobil. Genia poiJJtad out that the abarebolders would get the same price as the foundation and could ,o back to court to protest that price if they thought it was insuf- ficient and did not represent fair market value. The foundation owns 54.5 per- cent of the Irvine stock and will receive an estimated $155 million from Mobil if Judge Judge ap- proves the sale being ctaallenged by Mra. Smi&h. Mra. Smith owns a little more . than 22 percent of the stock in the company founded by her grandfather. Her lbare of the Jlobll deal wouJcl be about $63 million. Mn. Smith arpes, however, that the Irvine Company's true value is closer to $1 billion than the $281,9 i:oUllon offered by Mobil. Mrs. Smith was criticized in Gerdes deposition Monday for what he said was her refusal to accept realities in the founda- tion's negotiations with Mobil and the decision to sell to the oil , company. Gerdes pointed out that the CSeeBEIRESS, Page AZ) Teen Nabbed In Burglary, Store Blaze ArWll'l,_.l• A 13-year-old Newport Beach boy ls UDder investigation today after be was arrested Monday night on charges lbat be bad - burglarized a toy stor~ and set it afire. Jens Jorgen Jensen of Copenhagen, Den· markl finally had to quit driving his 1929 Mode A Ford. Nothing was wrong with thP. antique car. But Jensen is ~ years old and may no longer drive. His last trip w~s to take his younger brother to church. His younger brother is 94 . Police said the youth bu a bia· tory ol arsons that date back more than three years. The teenager was taken into custody at about 9:45 p.m. out side the Mini Bazaar, 400 Westminster Ave. where police had been alerted by nearby resi· dents that there was a burglary in progress. Officers said they watched the teenager smash some of the toys . in the store. They a.treated him u be left and they discovered the fire which was doused after do- ing about $500 dama&e. Police said they tried to in· terview the youth, a Newport Hei1bts resident, about other ar~a burllaries and an.-a that have occUrred ln th• clt.Y recently but be was rushed to Hoa& Memorial lbpltal for treatment of a dna8overdoae. He wu released to his parents b7 otfieeriwbo said they planned to r8Mme\hetr q\lellionln1 ot the )'0'4th today I Teacher, Kids Freed Austrmian Police Capture· Kidnap SW1pect MELBOURNE, Australia (AP> -Police recaptured an escaped convict today who kidnaped a teacher and nine students Mon- day five years after be abducted another teacher and six students. Edwin John Eastwood. 26. col-lected six more bosta1e.s during the day, held them in chains dur- lnl th• ni&bt in a state forest. and tben was wounded and captured ataroaclblock. His captives were freed unhurt. "lt'1 a miracle ...• It's WI· believable that such a number of people could all be taken ~ . e1cape unhurt after sucb a drama,•• aald ac:tlna State P.remler Llndeay 1'homp~1 from wbom Jtaitwood demanaea NO,OQO.-...om. 'S!llttw0o4 t1cape'd Dec. 1' WU. wa::• term fw the it..,.., m whJcb be and :u aeeomp lee dt1Danded n odJW: He vOnd to ••t ...,_.e for havtn1 been ftnprliOl*a. prilO* iQnll 1Ud. Autborltiel ••ve thJa ac:~ of bia~kidnaplnt: nae )"OUlll man Invaded the •mall ....... tM b,e•let .~ t Wooreen, 80 miles southeast of Melbourne, about 11 a.m . Monday armed with a .38-caliber pistol. He forced the teacher, 20-year-old David Hunter, and the nine pupils 6 to 11 years old to go with him in a pickup truck after leavlng a note that said: "Taken the children for a nature study walk. Back in an hour." He drove bis captlvea 40 miles e•tward along a country road un- til he collided with a truck. The driver. 27.year~ld Robin Smith, ana a hitchhiker with him got out to investiaate and were taken cap- tive. A timber truck pulled up to in- vestigate and then a camper van. The convict took Ute two other truck drivers and two women vacatioaen in the van captive aUo, herded them all into the van and bound their hands and teet wltb cbiins. Eutwood then drove into a ttale forest and 1et up camp for the ntibt. keeping bis boeuces bound. "We wert all calm, but lt wu all quite unbelinable, llM a dream," aald Joi !'Awards, '9. Durla1 tbe at•ht, Smith maaaltd tO tfilt hlmaell and trept .. .,. He walUctfor four IMlun wan~ to UM bOme .nf'rm Trill&et)'Uoa, w-.O o.lkid tbe9olee. ~ . The 1Poll• meuwhllit, W · been alerted by the parenta of the dall~ More than a.oeo ,...,.~ were tUreblnl. and roa41doCU wereMtm. · A PoUci1"Patri>I cb't•lnt ~ ' the ttatefonltuw t.be"Yan liPeiecl clown a tract atiOut a a.an. Mil <SeelDD!UP,Pa&•Al> Huntington Beach police were called to the Jack·in-the-Box drive-through facility at Pacific Coast Highway and Warner Avenue by terrified employes. They barricaded themselves in an upstairs storage area after the would-be customer exploded in an unexplained fury and challenged one fry cook to a fight, in- vestigators said. He proceeded to demonstrate his toughness by smashing his fist through a plate glass window, causing a deep forearm lacera- tion," one Orange County Sheriff's Office spokesman said today. Authorities said the slender suspect then vaulted through the shattered window and proceeded to attempt to destroy the pre- mises, including the cooking utensils. Huntington Beach Police Of- ficer Bob Jeffrey who responded to the emergency call said the sus- pect, apparently tot•lly lntoXicat- ed, had fied across the highway to a liquor store, blood spewingfrom asevered artery all thd way. He and Officer Joe Guamera. along with Patrol Lt. De Wayne Brown, finaJly mana1ed lo ecrrat <See BLEBD, Pa1e A.%) .. Coast Weather Locall)' dense fog near the beaches nlaht and momtna boura. Otherwise talr Uiea. Hi&ba raqtng from upper *>I at beaches . to 70s and Jower&Ps lnland. Low1'5to55. INSIDE TOD&Y 1 I I • Basket Case T_his yc~low c~t adopted the Dally Pilot c1rculat1on department about a mon th ago, taking his c~t naps in the .. IN" ~asket. Circulation employes have tabbed him_ "D. P. Kizzy" and ·the folks trade off buymg food for the not so frisky feline. The staff obviously believes in letting sleeping cats lie. Frona Pa~ AJ BLEED .•. the ~er.earning_, struggling youth, sheriff sdeput1essaid. "Three of our guys had to fis- !fight him to save his life." Hunt- ington Beach Pol.Jee Patrol Sgt. Jarrett Webb noted s hortly aft<'r the desperate Monday night scuf- ne. "They just had to 'go to w1tr with him.• the guy had no com- preb~~U>n of the fact he was dy-ing ... The team of policemen held the suspect down so ftrc department J:!aramedics. working against time, could apply a tourniquet and bandage the wound tern· porarily. Investigators then turned him over to sheriff's deputies Don Lambert and Christine Davidson. who booked him into UC Irvine Medical C('nter's psychiatric ward for observation Deputies said today they will also seek charges of drunk·in· public against the young man. The spot where the rampage oc- curred is in county lernfory, but the suspect had ned across the street into lluntrnglon Beach city pohce JUnsd1ct1on and they were nearer when the call was re- ceived Man Sought In Jailbreak HI GH POINT. N.C. CAP> Police and shenlf's deputies com- bed Gwlford and surrounding counties today lor a man who forced a magistrate at gunpoint to release a woman Jail prisoner. Lawrence East, 28, of High Point. was being sought on war- rants charRing him with 11ssault °"1th a deadly weapon. Other charges were expected. East allegedly left the Guilford County courthouse here Monday night with Margaret Hughes Sim- mons, 30, who had been Jailed for falling to appear in court on an arson charg<' British Official Ill LONDON CAP) The Foreign 9 m ce reported no change today in the condition of Foreign Secretary Anthony CrO\lland, 58, who is in a coma after apparently suffering a atroke two days ag9. Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford an- nounced that the condition of Crosland "has gradually de· teriorated a nd he is n ow dangerously ill.·· DAILY PILOT ,...o._c ...... o•"r ....... 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SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The drought, now in its second year m Northern California, has inspired rain dances, chants and prayers -and now, a poem. Forecaster E. Jan Null of the National Weathe r Service's Redwood City office, faced with a Northern California weather s ummary that looked just about the same as the daily summary for months now, hit the teletype Monday with this version of the "High Pressure Blues'·: "Strong high pressure remains I 1rmly entrenched. . blocking all storms that might leave u.~ drenched ··Some rain would be mce with snow in the mountains ... enough to ftll up the dams ar even some f ountams "But the new forecast says it's more sunny days ... unth patches of fogandajtemoonhaze " Also Monday, federal officials warned states in the Pacific GAS SHORT AGE PROBE ASKED-AS Northwest to begin taking water saving measures. Californians have already been warned of possible power blackouts this summer. U.S. Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus called on residents of Washington, Oregon. Idaho and . Monlana Mondeytocut water and electricity use by 10 percent. before mandatory measures become necessary. The Bonneville Power Ad- ministration in Portland, Ore., responded with an official call for a 10 percent cutback in the use of~ electricity in the region. In Northern California, critical· ly low reservoirs could mean less water to power hydroelectnc turbines, utility officials eaid Monday. "We're hoping to bring about a shotgun wedding of all the major utilities in the state to coordinate distribution of what power there is,'' said Robert Ham, emergency planning dire cto r for the Calilornia Energy Commission A call for voluntary cutbacks in San Francisco has resulted in a 10 r I ' percent drop in water consump· lion. officials said Monday. But the city could face a man- datory 25 percent curtailment in Ma rch if rain stays scarce. * * * What Water Slwrtage? MALIBU CP> -As drought- slricken Northern Californians ration dwindling water supplies. a n d officials in Southern California urge conservation, the citizens of Malibu and Lomita arc being urged to use more waler to qualify for a rate discount. Owners of large properties in those two areas of Los Angeles County get a 10 percent discount if they own al least 10,000 square feet of well-cultivated property and use 7,500 cubic feet of water for six or more months a year to keep it green. One Malibu resident who didn't want to be identified said his 10 per cent discount was taken away because he cut back on watering his tree-studded. well-landscaped property. Defendant Hiu]udge In Rematch . MILWAUKEE (AP) -Judge Christ T. Seraphim was decked by a punch from the witness stand in a rematch with defendant James E . Wicks. Wicks, 24, beginning trial on an attempted murder charge, scaled a railing Monday as Seraphim leaned close to ask a question and caught thejudgeon the jaw. Both fell to the floor. They were untangled by two deputies and two policemen. T he judge regained his seat, rubbing his jaw and complaining. "I didn'thave a chance to throw a fair blow. This guy was on top of m e before I knew it. And on top of this, I've been ailing with back t rouble all day." he said. Seraphim, 57, had instructed a deputy sheriff to stay near the de- fendant as he took the stand, re- calling that he had to duck to &void a fi ve-pound microphone that was thrown at him in an earlier meeting with Wicks. After the latest round, Wicks was handcuffed and returned to jail. The trial, In which Wicks is ac- cused of stabbing a former girl friend, was recessed until Wed- nesday. Boy Slain; Suspect Held SAN DIEGO <AP) -PolJce have jal1ed a hotel worker describe d a s a rtiend of neiehborhoqd chiJdren for in· vestlgaUon of murdering a 6- yeaN>ld boy. Robert McFarlano Jr., 34, wu arrested at bis borne U blocks from wbete J01e LUIS Ramirel Uved in the Golden Hilla ..-ea, pollCHt.ld. 't Tb• boy's nt.MM a.ocs1, covered with 1 braoebtl and leaves, wu f ouna Wedolilday lb an ed&e ot Balboa Part. He w., lut report. ed aeen by hil f •mlly tht 8'mda)" before. lnveaU1ators aatd be was 1e1uaJijt 1111ulled. , i - C'oundl . . __.,,, ,.,.... ,,,,., .4J ~ ·KIDNAP •• PropOs~l. Dies: • tarn lnto a bJahway. A 20-rnUe chase ensued, at speeds up to 90 miles an hour. Shots were ex- chanaed. and Eulwood crashed through a roadblock. The chue tnded al ~aecond roadblock wben Coaatable Bob Kin• shot oat one al U.• Urw on the v•n, brinclnJ it \O•~~ ' . By JOANNE REYNOLDS 0t• oaitv r11.-11•ff Three of Newport Beach's seven city councilmen want to call a halt to building homes in their city. Fortunately for developers with plans in Uie works. four or their colleaaues disagreed, kill- ing a proposed moratorium Mon- day night. If the moratorium proposed by Councilman Paul Ryckoff bad been put into effect, it would have halted two proJects which need city council and coastal com- mission approval to go ahead - Sea Island a partments and WestcWf Grove. Th4'1 apartment complex is to be built by the McLain Develop- ment Company on Jamboree Road across from the Newporter Inn. The city's Planning Com- mission has approved plans for the complex which call for con- s truction of 226 apartment.s primarily one-bedroom units - on the 29-acre site. The Planning Commission has likewise approved Irvine Com- pany plans for the 28-home de-• velopment. Westcliff Grove to be built on 10 acres l>etween Westcliff Drive and a wind break near Dover Drive. But Monday night, Ryckoff was successful in delaying coun- cil consideration of the plans until Ma rchl4. He later tried unsuccessfully to get a moratorium on all new re· sldential construction in the city, say mg that he believes a maJOri· ty of Newport Beach residents want building hailed so that cnanges can be made in the city's general plan. That plan currently calls for an ultimate population or 90,000 to 95,000 a nd Ryckoff said a moratorium ought to be invoked while the general plan is being revised so that the city's rinal Freighter Stuck RIO VlSTA CAP> Efforts were being made today lo free a Japanese freighter stuck in the mud in the Sacramento River near here, the Coast Gua rd said. , . ' ~..._uJUJon figure wlll not be iO '1.IClJ. Ryckoff also chatted tbat Sea Island md WestdlffGroveouaht tct be baited ~auap. ot the en• vironm~tal ~lcms tboso twt> deveJop~\viU ca.Se"" 1'is ~al drew the wNlb of Ma~or MUan Dostal wbo said he could pot see how cJian1es in the general plan would be used to re- gulate the environmental protec- tions built in either development. Dostal called the proposed moratorium a "red herring" and pointed out that under lbe general pl~. one third of the ad- ditional 30,000 people who wl11 be living in Newport Beach wiU be living 1n the older parts of town wher~bomes are nol yet built to maximum density. • Ryckolf replied that-he was also eoocerned wt1h traffic and density, but before he could go further, Dostal snapped that those were two subjects the city council had been concerned with "before you even became a resi- dent of this city." • When the mor a torium was brought to a vote, Dostal was joined in opposition by Mayor Pro Tem Pete Bar rett and Coun- cilmen Lucill~ Kuehn and Don Mcinnis. Ryckoff was backed by Councilmen Trudi Rogers and Ray Williams. Mcinnis pointed out that by law revisions in the general plan can be made three times a year a nd that no moratorium 1s necessary while the revisions are being made. Eu&wood 1ot out, firiDI two · shot• at the poUc,. The police ·fired ~ck, hit hl01 n the leg and ovetWhelmed him. Eastwood was brouc.ht lhn{>ing lnto Melbc>\Am• Clty Court later and ordered to at4nd trial May 23 . on 2S chQl'lea, lncf'-ding ahoQtlng, · lllelal uae of a firearm, car theft and 18counts of kidnapine. f'ro. Page AJ HEIRESS ••• foQndaUon has OQly a few years to comply with the provis ions of the Federal T~ Reform Act of 1969. The measure compels the foundation to dispose or its hold- ings in the Irvine Company. Gerdt!S said Mrs. Smith's at- titude was impeding rath~ than aiding the foundation in meeting that obligation. "She changes her mind from day to day," the director said. Siege Eased . BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) Arab peacekeeping forces today eased a two-day siege in which tanks surrounded Palestinian guerrilla strongholds in Beirut. Tratric to and from refugee camps was allowed but all ap- proaches to the camps on the southern flank of the Lebanese capital remam~ controlled by Syrian armor. Tales Linger Wlw Remembers Henry? l y Ill• A•-l1tld Pn1u Henry Kissinger m ay have left office, but Kiss- inger stories goon. The latest originates with Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. (R-Tenn.). who was on an elevator with some tourists when Kissinger entered. A woman gave her child a push toward the former Secretary oE State and said, ''That's Henry Kissinger. Shake his hand.•• The child looked at its mother and asked, "Who's Henry Kissinger?•• "How quickly they ~orget," muttered Ki ssinger. FREE? 1977 Rand McNally International World Map. .. .. . ' Orange Coast EOIT!ON .. TOday's Closlag N.Y.Stoeks YOL 70, NO.~, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANG_E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 19n I c TEN CENTS .. . lFnutrations Stalked Killer of Five ~~ --By PETER ARNET!' A ..... lll~Pfllt IT WAS THE FRUSTRATIONS IN Cowan's personal Ute that friends were speaking of today as they tried to put to1ether the puzzle ol a neighbor apparently gone gun crazy. said a high school youth on his way to school today, NEW ROCHELLE; N.Y. -He ado.red only tall, blue-eyed blonda, aecordlne to hia best friend, Jim Parks, and they cruised the nelebbortlood diners together trying to pick them up. They recalled Cowan's inordinate interest in guns and the arsenal of pistols and rifles be kept in his attic . room. Tbe big man was so proud of his guns that be often traded neighborhood kids a look at the collection for washing bis car. John O'Neill, 14, said he beard Cowan comment to one such gathering, "If you want to be a man, get a eun.'' But Frederick Cowan, a 8-foot, 250-pound weight-lifting giant of ~man, "could never make jt with them, be never had a girlfriend lo the seven years I've ltoown him," Parks said the morning after bis -33-year-old friend went on a rampage in a New Rochelle warehouse, ·killing five people, wound.in& five others before taking hls life. <Related stories Al, M> Tommy Gee, 14, liked Cowan and used the weight lifter's .22 at the local rifle range. . On summer weekends, the burly man would often sit on the stoop of his parents' home where he lived, regaling the kids with war stories and gun lore. ••A LOT OF THE KIDS IDOLIZED him because of his guns," But other youths interviewed today said they didn't like Cowan's attitude. "He scared us.'' said one 14-year-old neiehbor who didn't want to be identified. "Some kids took to him but the way be talked and the way be bragged, it frightened me." (See BE A MAN, Page A2) CoH Course Homes Ban Cheered Rationing ()/Water Increased .SACRAMENTO <AP> -The state told State Water Project agricultural users today that they will suffer a 60 percent cut in deliveries this year -10 percent more than previously an· nounced. One of the affected dis· tricts is the Metropolitan Water District in Southern California. The Department of Water .Resources said its municipal and industrial users will take a 10 percent cut from contracted amounts. Jn another drought-related de· velopmcnt, Monterey County an· nounced plans for rationing. The state project cutbacks are aimed at leaving the project enpugh stored water to meet minimal needs even if the drought continues at the same severity through next winter, de- partment director Ronald Robie said. An exception to these cut. backs, Robie said, is the Feather Rlver service area which will be cut 50 percent -the maximum aflowed under its contract with tbestate. Project contracts dictate that if agncultural users are cut by more than 50 percent, t.ben municipal users have to be cut by an)' amount that the agricultural u.strs are cut above SO percent. The federal government bas already announced cuts or up to 75 percent for Central Valley Project users. For um, project contract allot· mtnls totaled 1,667,321 acre-feet l)ef ore the cuts. The cutbacks .Ul reduce the amount to 1.):51,907. The move affects about 21 con· traeting agencies, including the two largest -Kern Coonty and Metropolitan Water DistricL (SeeC'U'l'BACK, Pa•e AZ) * * * What Water $/rortage? . MA.USU <P> -As drought- stl'tclcen Northern Calllornians ratloa dwiDd.l.lq water auppliea. •9'd offlclab in Southern catlfomia urge conservation, the citbens ol Mali bu and Lomita are ~log urged to use more water to fldalilyfor a rate discount. . Owners ol large properties in thole two areas of Loe Angeles County get a lOpercent discount II they own at least. 10,000 square feet of well-cultivated property end use '7,500 cubic !eet of water ~ aix « more months a year to ldilrp ltcr-n. one lllallbu resident wbo didn't wat to be ldentified Hid bis 10 pettent.discowlt WU taken ft'&y beeaUM be cut back on watering hMtree.atudded. well-landlcaped II »t"epetty' 1. • F an Gore d in R i n g An unidentified fan jumped with his cape into the ring at a Mexico City bullfight and paid the price. Medical authorities said he was seriously injured in the right leg, Al' Wlr•pliol<K throat and chest. Some 65,000 fans watched in oorror. _ u~.a!>le to help the young man. Planners Push Project Defendan t H~tsJudge With Punch 48-a.cre Job Urged/or.North Costa Mesa Costa Mesa planning com- missioners recommended ap- proval of preliminary plans for a 48-acre building project just north of the San Diego Freeway Monday night, despite claims of traffic congestion and too much density cited by nearby :···-··-----....... --...... -..................................... _____________________ . _____ : . . . homeowners. In a 3 to 2 vote. with com- mission Vice Chairman Arlene Schafer and Commissioner Dick Carstensen opposed, the panel forwarded its recommendation to the city council meeting next Tuesday night. . !i :~ ~ MILWAUKEE CAP) -Judge ~ Christ T. Seraphim was decked by : a punch from the witness stand in : a rematch with defendant James i E. Wicks. ! Wicks, 24, beginning trial on an : attempted murder charge, scaled i a railing Monday as Seraphim ! leaned close to ask a question and : caugbtthejudgeonthejaw. Both fell to the floor. They were untangled by two deputies and two policemen. : The judge regained his seat, • rubbing his jaw and complaining. E .. J didn't have a chance to throw The Arnell Development Com· pany sought approval or a plan to build 1Z7 single-family homes and 543 apartment units on the parcel. located at South Coast Drive between Bear Street and c a fair blow. This gay was on top of s : me before I knew it. And on top of ~ D/Eqo F.ZE £W,......., : this, I've been ailing with back San Leandro Lane. .;,_--::--:--===-===:-:=u~=='""='== '========== • trouble all day," he said. Seraphim, 57, had instructed a Tbat parcel, owned by Gene Kawamura of Newport Beach, ha been the subject of many planning commission and council meetings in the past year, with PROPOSED 48-ACRE MESA DEVELOPMENT GETS NOD Plannera Recommending 670 Unit• on Parcel battles between the city's plan- ning staff, area homeowners and the developers culminating in Monday night's meeting. And the arguments continued with North Coat.a Mesa Homeowners Association mem- bers protesting the construction TV Deal So1•rs Man Loses $700 in Scam of apartment. units south of South A HmiUn ... ,_ Beach man who CoutDrive. •-... Tbe homeowners, led by M· t.tiougbtbewugettlngagooddeal IOCiation President Paul Diehl. on color t.elevblon set.a found out objected ooce again to the densl· diHerenUy when be attempted to ty sou""'t.•by the Arnell ComnAnv, load hlltruckMondQ' aftemoon. ~ _....,. Frank Standard of 18552Cooper potential traffic problems and Lane told Costa Mesa police he lack of adequate open space fer lost $700 to a man named Steven, ~~j.:fssionera beard city who called him on the phone and planner Perry VaJantlne outline :f ==..:·•good deal 00 color the 1taff's objections to the pro-d s d d f d Ject. includlne some of the al· Inatea , tan ar oun 11t1ed deftdenclea voiced bv the hlmtelt c:oo.frontin( a loading his friends and mate some mone.J on the deal. After calllng several friends. police said Standard placed $700 in $100 bil1a in an envelope and marked lt. "Attention Ann.0 as instructed. . . He met the man named Steve at a rfftaurant where the suspeet told him to meet blm at the South CoaatPluaatore. deputy sheriff to stay near the de· fendant as he took the stand, re- calling that he bad to duck to avoid a five-pound microphone that was thrown al him in an earlier meeting with Wicks . After the latest round, Wicks was handcuffed and returned to jail. 'lhirsty Burglar Gets Wine, Beer A bursJar '1rith a taste tor the finer thi.nes in life, broke tnto a Costa Mesa man's garage Moo· day. taking a $30 bottle of champagne and eight bottles ot expensive beer. OCEANSIDE (AP) -Police·.., a llartbe it •c• euaed of.· bllJ:J off bl• wt!•'•...... swallow· Ina ttdurtnl aapaL " dock crew at Sean ~buck and . boa~· db''• planned de-Company at South coast Plaza ••loPmtnt ordinance, Valant:ine who told blm they bad never aaicl tbie Arnell plan barety meets heard ol a inan named Steve and m·-o1---.1 .. em-taolthat tbat there wu no sale on color There the aUipecl took Stan- dard'• cub and told him be would .•o get a receJpt for the telmalon aet.s. He told SW\datil to pull bis truck around to the load1n1 dock and that he could l.Dlpeci the televilionMts there. Warr en Ayers of 142S Deauvtll• Place told Costa Mesa Police the bur&lar mado off wltb a magnum bottle ol Tatetnger Champagne and .tibt one-dollar botUea of Etaenbect beer. Siege Eased Tiiey booted Pl'C Vernon~ Taykll', 21, for lnvestiCatioil of u-tault. wUe beaUn1 and ma.Jblltn. -Y _,..,..,....... -televlakmaatthestore. ordlnance, lnctudlna: Coata Mesa detectives re· --Open 1pace under the or-o ._ ............. ~bu,_,_., rime•a.1. dlnanc• which 11 aet. at a ::1;:6-.,,_ ..... .Ll&ll•.c ...... minimum ot 45 •percent Of the stindai'd a wreektne yard alt•. Valanlln• •ald the PfOPoHd .. owner. laid.be received a call at pl'o;l9Ct WUl lnclude "3.~ percent ldt b--. trom a man wbo 1ald °'~':anee allow• 8 mu-:;.:actabar1aJntnnewtelevlsloil lmum lite coverace by bWlcllttCI He cittered to aell Standard ol 27 l*>omt.: Tbe AftMU ~ thNe or tour Hta tor $'700 ~ IDIUc-. • •·• perfllat bull~ that tbe victim eould Mll :.Ome to (a.e l'SOIBCI' ••••• Al) •. --. --. .,. .. ----. ---· . -~ ... -..... -· """ --...... -~ ---·- When be pulled bis b'ue!t op to the doclr.I, police 1ald, he ques- tioned the Joadlna ~ W'bO told him noonenamta Ann worked .. ace=, th• ltcn bad no 11Je on tel~ and t.blt tht1 had never Mard ol a man nalned SteVe. Police are aeeltlnl a clean-• ah .. ., m..., aboUt ftye feet et.dlt llldM8 tall .... • mMcular bWlcl a4....,c81.Jbalr. . BEIRUT, Lebano.n (AP) - Arab peacekeeptn1 foreet todv eased a two-day aeae hi which tallkl 1urrounded Palntinian 1uerrilla strooiholdl tn Beirut; Tuttle to and from rerueee um111 wu -1lowed but all ll>': pi'oacbee to the camps on the IOUtlMrD tlaak of the lAHnese capltil rmia.bied CoatrolJecl bt a,numnor. ' Planners Oppos e Building By STEVE MITCHELL Of tlM D•ll'I' l'llet Staff An overflow crowd or jubilant Mes a Ve rd e homeowners cheered wildly Monday night when the Costa Mesa Planning Com mission voted 4 to 1 against allowing new homes near their golf course. The ballot was a setback for attorney Phillip Bush of Hunt- ington Beach, who sought a general plan amendment to al- low him to build one to four homes on a 1.2-acre parcel at the south end or the golf course near Lanai Drive. Planning commission action, however, ls only a first-round recommendation. The question now goes to the City Council, probably al its March 21 meet- ing . Bush sought lo change the land use designation for the property he is buying from golf course use to low-density re- sidential. Planning Commissioner David Lorenzini cast the lone vote against the denial. Before the voting took place, angry Mesa Verde homeowners followed each other to the podium for nearly two hours prot~sting the developer's plans. Among other things, the homeowne rs, led by John O'Brien alleged the proposed project would: -Be a precedent for further development or golf course land. -Increase traffic on Lanai Drive. -Compromise the city's master plan and cause lbe loss or valuable open space land. -Force the country club to realign its driving range, local· ed near the parcel. The homeowners also raised (See BAN, Page A.2) Burritos, Milk Target of Thief A hungry burglar ate burritos and drank mllk inside a kitchen -at Maude B. Davis Middle School sometime before Mon- day morning, then fixed himself a doegie bag, fleeing with $50 in food. Costa Mesa police uid · the suspect either consumed or took 16 burritos, two dozen chocolate chip cookies, 10 packages of doughnuts and six half.pints or mllk from the school at 1050 Arllneton Drive. '· Co ast Weath er Locally dense fog near the beaches nlgbt and morntnc hours. Otherwise fair skies. m&hs ranging from upper 60s at beaches . to 709 and lower 80s inland. Lows '5to55. INSIDE T ODAY· Got. a bad babU1 A pu&lic heoUh o/ffdOl uiont1 to I= u. .at M apkdnl Codof .at .G 1l«JUh core con/rmtee. Sn .ea,.A11. 1-lelt 0~91..~1: u ....... .;: • ~~..:s; cs ·II!: S J.=:=:-a•n -= ••J1~ n . =::::b U~ M . ' ·1 A2 DAIL v PILOT c j 'frostees Reverse Decision Dari•« • apeelal lloncla7 board of education meetinc, Newport-Mesa ac-.. trustees revened a previMll tledllon that hatted U. ldriniflll a prlqte COD· aultiq firm te est out a. com- plex paper work for two federally.financed improvement· projects. TIM district will •• llpllnt $38,cpt of the federal fuads j•Uo make swe dlie moaey is aot bt due to a technical error on re· · quired forms. Wilh 0111J five trwtees pr9lellt at last Tuesday's re&ular board meetille. di altiac "4.eS cast bJ traatea Carol llartin and Marian Bergeson were enough to cancel a proposed contract wit.b Mark Briggs and Associates; the same firm the distnct hired to sgccessfully fill out the applica- ti• forms for the $2.3 million go.e1 nmelll crat. 'lbe funds will be used for the coutructioo or &D additional gym at Estancia High School and the extensive remodeling of the auditorium at Newport Harbor Hieb Scbool. Mmes. ~rgeson and Marttn said they wanted more lime to see if another firm could be hired, or it t.be ddtrid's staff could do the paper work which Board President Donald Smallwood t e rm ed "a bureaucratic labyrioth." However. trustees wef'e tckl the disbict's staft was incapable or handling the bevy or forms, and alter • cbeclt d other COO· s ultini firms. trustees learned MODday the BriCCJi offer was as good as any. llODC:J-.y's ~to appro~ the cons.altinc firm c:ontntct was un- animous. Caa.stn.diOD bidding an both projects will close Mardl is. just two weeks befatt construction must begin. Mesa Police Officer Hurt In Cycle Cr88h Costa Mesa motorcycle officer Chris Monis suffered slight in· juries Monday afternoon when his madrine skidded on its own leaking oil and eras~ iata a curb. Morris, 26, was responding to an accident wt.ea be crashed at 3: 15 p.m. an the southbound lues of Newport Boulevard aear Broadway. He was ln!at.ed and released at Ho•c Memorial Hospi.t.aL .. He·s real sore today," s.a.id fe llow officer Sgt. Clifford McBride. "He landed on his back on the ~ and it raised a bump about an iocla across." Morris suffered ao brotee bones in the accident which ~ curred wber1 bis motott,.c:Je IOll an engine oil filter outlet ptuc. Tbe oil sprQed onto has rear Ure. c ausm, him to lose cootrol ol ta.e cycle. Israel Rape U.S. Report JERUSALEM CAP> -Israeli sources aaid t.oda1 br-1 would keep on PIO&pe<ting for oil la OC· cupied territory despite aa America ltatemeat tbat it•• illqal and possibly harmful to peace. TM 90atteS said the~ Monday by U.S. State Deput. ment spokesman Frederick Brown was .. nothlnc new or dramatic." lsr.el bas et foroUtntheSlnaiandU.. d Suet for most of Ute 10 ,._.. s~e lt captured the area~ Egypt. DAILY PILOT ......... _ ..__..__. .... --. ----------..... lflMr '-:-•:..M= """'"" ..... ·~·­--.....- - TOMGBT .. BBJIJNl> TBJ; BEAD· UNES" -Dr. Giles T . Brown lecturer.OCCForum, 7:30p._m. COASTUNE CC LECTUllE -.. l•Y•tmenl AJ&eroati•es, •• u.ric..tan Churela. l2SI Vldl3ria. 7p.m. ''DESIGN FOR LIVING" - OCC Orama Lab Theater. Feb. U-19,ap.m. Free. .. OLD TillES" -Soatll Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday. Sandaytllroiugh Feb. lt, lp.m. WEDNESDAY. FE&. II OCC LECTUJlE -"Cl'e* a New Im.ace,.. Fi.De Arts Bldg. 119. 7:JDp.m. COASTLINE CC LECTURES -.. Classics of the Silelll Screen," Estancia High School Forum, 7 p .m . "What You Always Wanted lo Know About Travel. .. " E stancia High Choral Room. 7:JO p.m. Tuv TmsWes Slat,e Talka OnThanday It's going to be a busy Tbu:rs· day momUt.g for two Newport. Mesa school trustees. Trustee Marian Ber~ will discuss curreat district t.eaet.er contract. negot.iat.icms before a 7: 30 a.m . meeting ol t.be Cittmem Harbor Area Researda Team <CHART) at G&eedale Federal Savings and Loan. Harbor Boulevard and Wilsoa Street. Cost.a Mesa. Tbere is no cbarce for the pabtic meetiQ«. School Board President Donald Smallwood will ove a pceswta- t.iaa on ''Problem& confl'Gltiag the Newport-Mesa School Dis- trict, .. at I a.m . at Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Bo•rd of Realtors, 401 North Newport Boule.-ard, Newport Beach. The~ is a $l charge which in- cludes a morning snack. FrOM Page Al PROJECT • • coverage, exceeding the or· dinance. He said his major concerns in· volve density and related open s pace on the apartmeot portion or the project, .ciding that the projedisjust "o.er~IL" Commiasioner Donn Hall s&td b e thiolts tbe paael ·'bas agonilied ottr tbis project as much as the homeowners," but moved for approval, subjed to 36 coecfitiolls placed oa the de- Teloper-. He was joined by Commission Claail"man Clareatt C. Cfme and commissioner David Loreazilli ia ~ the de- velopment. Clar'ke said. "I've bee.a led to believe b)' the traU~ eneiDeers tbat tbe roads ia the area c:u handle tnft'ic generated by this project." Lorenzini agreed. "I 'm not aw-.yed by the emotion ol this is- Re a madl as tbe teduUcaJities. WIM!a I blk at the total de.aop. •al -Id tbe demity by itsdf -I see an imaiinative, io-~atheptan.·• Mobil Purchase 'Favored' BYTOMBULEY bf .. D .. ly~lt ... Three directors vi the Jaalea Irvine F.-dalion ~ llaa· '8y tlallt~ voted fGrU. .. ttl their Irvine Company stock tot.be Mobll Oil Corporation because it was the best oiler made t.o t.beil' board. And all three agreed that a sale of the stock for $281 .t miDioD rather than a distributioa ot tile holdillo to selected charities would best tietp them meet tbe wishes ol the late Jam es lrville. On.ty one ol the tbree, Mrs. Kathryn Wheeler of 0..... del Mar, took the witness stand in the Orange County Superior Court trial of tbe tar.suit filed •1 ber cousin, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith. Judge James F. Judge allowed the radiQg or pretrial deposi· tioAS taken from foundation diredon Edward W. Carter aml Robert H. Gerdes t.o eo illto CM recont as the trial testi~ ol the two men . Gerdes denied in hi s deposition lb at the foundation boacd bad ig· nored the wishes of the minority sbar~ in the Irvine Com- pany w9'm they DqQtiat.ed a deal that will, ii approftd. see the mercer ol the Irvine CompaQy with Mobil. Gerdes pointed out that tbe sharebolders WGUJd get the same price as the foundation and eoald co back t.o court to protest that price ir tbey thought it was insuf. fident and did not represeia fair market ''aloe. The foundation owm 54.5 per· ceat ol the lrviDe st.ode and will rtteive an estimated SUS millal hat Mobil if J~ JQQee ap. proves tbe sale ~ ~allempd bJ Mrs. Smith. llrs. Smith owns a little more t.ban ZZ puceat of the stock ia tbe em any (ounded b y ber Mber. Her share of the obi1 deal woo.Id be about 163 million. · llrs. Smith argues, boweva-. that the Irvine Company's true value is closer to $1 billion than the $281 .9 millioa offered by Mobil. Sbe claims through attcwney How~ Friedman that it might· be POISSlble tc reach th.at figure if the oil company were not dominating the nulrtet ~ace and frlcbt.entng other posstble bid· dersaway. The heiress currently prefers the $282.7 million offer submitted by a bidder known in court as the Allen·Taubman group: a con- sortium headed by Wall Street finan cier Charles AJleo aod Detroit devleloper Alfred Taub-man Mrs. Smith was critici~ in Gerdes deposition Monday for what he said was her refusal to accept realtties in the founda· t1on 's negotiations with Mobil and the decision t.o sell to the oil comp&Qy. Gerdes pointed out that the foundation has only a few years to comply with the provisions ~ the federal Tax Reform Ad of 1969. The measure compels the foundation to dispose ol its boJd- ings in the Irvine Company. Gerdes said Mrs. Smith's at· tHude was impeding rather than aiding the foundation in meeting that obligation. "She changes her mind from day to day," the director said. Fall Fatal JOHANNESBURG, Soutb Africa <AP> A black police de- tainee fell 10 stories to bis death today at Johannesburg police headquarters. police said. He m akes the 18th blact to die in police custody in less than a year. The man was apparently trying to escape duriQg question- ing, poltce said. ,,._Page Al 'BE A MAN: GET A GUN' • • • HaPAm,WBO'IQDAYDllOVECowan'sgrievingparentsto •'-rallilometo make burial arrangements, said his big friend was C"eMl'G9 md ltilad t.oodller-mell, ••and would pft JOU bis laslclollar if be Uked you.·' However, Cowan had difficulty communicating with women, Parkssaid. "We_.tDtalk aliotaboatgirls and he wanted them. We would go to pick them up ud lhen Fred cou.&do't talk wkla tae:m. Ille was alwQSwillll1.rawa..Be•ftl'lllt'°knowanyrealwell,"'hesaid.. Shy with women, Cowan was more relued ia tM ~ GalwQ BQ Bar,..... lle11NM*i displa, hislaqe mmae.in UM_.... rw_.rfR!lellist..._.,ladwhgaswutika.. CMJAN WOOLD Oft'&'N ACCOMPANY BIS mUS(:J~ wttllatlrede....,,bl.Mbmd.lews. "No doubt • .._. u.t.. • ._ re.aJ prejudiced.•• said W. lrieM Pub. Wl9oaftenwen:t•-.U.g trips widalaiJn . !& ...... anld llldqtlMIJ were not runy awareoltlileedellltol C....'a ,.. dt lice _. _.... llal lmow ol dte atCk tcow of Nad arm ......_......__.._..•Ml>lfHiller'aTlai.rd~ t-atm wml 'M J*'tof t.M puzde ol Ida rriead._ .._ ._. .., ..._ be1t.eW ~a.. Cowm felt lae Md 1-ea -'116:rV treated when be wu aua.,_.... for two week& by a •JOrilc _. ttonae oompan, for-not movtna a~---· ••Pa£t)C)'4•*•'1118ftlDGE WAS NOT Ofttlle au&t•"' Parbuid. llDd m Q11'1.a.oulJt. · --..-... ... Ntm 111 t.o normal tod.ey a t>ae ........_. UllltUl..._•w•lttllD,...ndebwU..PNWJouadAl1 . ._.... -Glllhiltowm•bitl'CIUalilaMatlillfeCet .. 11.-. a.. ...... c.itila •ailllu. lndadlns an,... for a CB~---di , ................. . ... 0..-ta~aii~er aropoatmen, Uaefatber now,.. ~ . . "*"!.!'9«' $ ,... &lb ... u. ............... . ,....91M;_-u .... .,*laa'liwlwbtnlbearcl,.... ... ...._. ·:rnnnerWMta••• ... •eouldbappea" • ~Man Held ,. •• r..,.,.i BAN ••• In Kidnap Ute IPK'W ., • u. -~ ........ .meat ...... Ill "'*" th aobe Cuc.de eom,_, attempted to b~lld 91 dwel.Uq unlta on the Of Cl aolf COUJ"le. ass That plan WU defeated after be•Y7 ...._,waer prcMst. · • APWIN--,,.,.,,. 20 Yean 1 Andrei A. Gromyko, 67. ob- serves his 20th year as Sov- iet foreign minister today. No other foreign minister of a major nation has been on the job as long. CUTBACK •• Another btc ~affected will be Santa Oara Valley Water J>is. trict., said Al Jones, Sl)Otesaum for tbe departmeat. la the JllcJmltsey C-ounty de- "t'elopmeat. tbe county's. water aceacy acreed llGDCla,y ni&1lt to uk tbe .state Public Utilities Commbsioa ror permission to impoee a severe water ration- lliq pnicnm within. week. Tbe acency is a.ski.De a Feh. 21 effective date for' a rationing plan propoeed last week by a special subcoaunittee beaded by L. C. Mcintyre, public worlcs director for the city ol Monte~y. It would limit residential use to SO gallons per person per day in· itially and restrict. consumption by most other segments ol the commwrity to fixed percentages ~their use rates last year. The agency board proposal also called for a system of fines for violators. MELBOURNE. Australia (AP) -Police recaptured an escaped convict today wbo ktdnaped a teac.Mr and nine atudenta MOil· clay fl" years after b• abducted uotJurteacher and sbt 1tudeota. Edwin John Eastwood. 26. col· lecled six more hostages durlne the day. held them in chains dur- ing the night in a state forest. and then was wounded and captured at a roadblock. His captives were freed unhurt. "ft 's a miracle. . . . ft '5 UD· believable that such a number of ~ple could all be taken and escape unhurt after such a drama," said acting State Premier Lindsay Thompson, from whom Eastwood demanded $50,000 ransom. Eastwood escaped Dec. 14 whHe serving a term for the earlier kidnaping in which he and an accomplice demanded SL million. He vowed ta get revenge for having been imprisoned, prison guards said. Authorities gave this account or his second kidnaping: The young man invaded the small school in the hamlet or Wooreen, 80 miles southeast of Melbourne, about 11 a,m. Monday armed with a .38-caliber pistol.· He forced the teacher. 20· year-old David Hunter, and the nine pupils 6t.o11 years old to go with him in a pickup truck after leaving a note that said: "Taken the chlldren for a nature study walk. Back in an hour." He drove his captives 40 miles eastward along a country road un· til he collided with a truck. The driver. 27-year-old Robin Smith, and a hitchhiker with him got out to investigate and were taken cas>- Uve. A timber truck pulled up to in- vestigate and then a camper van. The convict took the two other truck drivers and two women vacationers in the van captive also, herded them all into the van and bound their bands and feet with chains. Eastwood then drove into a state forest and set up camp for the night, keeping his hostages bound. "We were all calm. but it was all quite unbelievable, like a dream," said Joy Edwards, 49. During the ni ght, Smilh .managed to free himself and crept away. FREE! aui.. aec01DDUied bJ ht. wife. discounted many of the claims expreued .,. tbe bomeowaer1. aa,ia1 tralf lc created .,, cme to four Dew bomes .... be minl8a.I. · He also objected to a atate- men t that 100 percent of homeowners polled were op- posed to the development, say· in1 ... Tbe qaeaU.nalre had apace for cmJ:t twe ----md both ~ thma ......... die project." Bu1b told commiaslone.rs. ••t •m willl.o~ to attadl any COD,. dltlons to the project, mbJ«t the houses to a arddtedunl review board. « ~ re- asonable." . "And," he said, "if the com· mission does not feel three or four houses should be .-ected. I'm willing to pUt one house• the lot -my own.•• . But homeowner leader O'Brien objected to Busla'a pro- mises. s aying, "His word of three or four houses. or even one for himself is based on a perhaps. There legally ii enough land there for seven lots, maybe eight wltti a variance. We can't listen to the 'perhapses' at this lime but the legal realities." Commission Vice Chairman Arlene Schafer moved for de- nial of the general plan ch~e. saying the project would en. cow-age further encroachment or the golr course and would diminish open space land. Commissioner Lorenzini, who supported Bush's project said, "I defend the lndividuars right to purchase land and build oo it. "The issue here is if this land is suitable for residenUal use, I can Cind no public i.uue here. It's an issue that should be set· tled outside of the public court." 19 Held in Raid VISALIA <AP) -Nineteen peo- ple, including some connected to the prison-based Mexican Mafia gang, were arrested on narcotics charges, Tulare County sheriff's officers r eported. A predawn roundup was conducted Monday in the Tulare and Visalia areas. 1977 Rand McNally International World Map. Come in ~and pick.up the n ew full-c1>1or edition of Rand Mc.NaUy'saciring lntcrnarional World Map. 1t's big<~"" l6"), hi~hly detailed (shows cities, riven aod mounca«u). and up,t~~ (fatwa •ulti-colored political be.den and all the new coumries,. Subbic fut-fnmiog and put few dm OI' dlildftD •• roo.! nu. bautiful Raad McNaOy map is abdutdy FREE at First Federal! There is no oMipti<m -'uttoe"Vet. It's jusi our way of sayil\g ..We'd like to &et to know vou!" S.pplie.t are limited, to eotM in 500G. Limit: one map per family, 18 tun and o&dtt. This .d cnuSt be preseoced for re~. Frame not included. Foilow t •ap to d.c highest b"cuesl on ins~ .W.. plut aft tMle mcmcy-saq customer aervicel! FREEsafedtpOSitbox• · fl\UcbeckfnJaccountat leadiJ1i ball!• fa& ntoaey ~ FREE da«k cafhlns l.D. card REE «a"'1Clu'1 checb• FREE~ eervb FREE tnast ~collection• •w, ..... ...._..,.... ' ... Weapons • ID nev•r attempted to have re· itni'•Uoia «any oth r control on ritle• or 1hot1uns, •• said MontaomerY County, Md .• Police Cbtel Robert DiGraaia. "The fact that tbe)''re 1pot1.1 weapons, l have a dlfflcull time saying anytblnc about sporta weapons." lllt'.h add~. "I have always h•'d strong feelln1• tha~ all hltidlUJ'I ou•ht lo be baMed from the f aee or the earti . . . A haflClaun is just a people killer, a peo,Ce hunter.•' In New Rochelle. N. Y.. on Monday, a gunman wearing a Nau-like uniform and said to idolize AdOlf HJtJer took several host•aes and wept on a shooting spree ln a wuehouse where he'd been suspended from work. Five HUNTED llOSS ELUDES GUNMAN-A4 persons, including a policeman, were killed. He later shot himself wlth a pistol. Tbe gun used was an M-16 rUle, an automatic military weapon, or the clvUian ve'rsion of it used for bunUng. l'olice said today the weapon was illegally owned. l'he gunman, identified as 35- . AU Station Switch Benefit Loss Eyed By°'~L~fitcR~A · personnel and S.000 active duly But new base commander- About 75 military veterans and servicemen in the Long Beach designate Col. James 0 . Benson their wives said Monday tbey fear and Westqrange~ounty area. said he could not t~U the ~udieo~e "erosion .. of their military . ~alifom1a National Guard of-exactly what services w1U be dtS· benefits when the California Na· C1c1als called a press conference t'O ntinu c~ a nd h.ow many tional Guard takes command of Mond.ay at the air base le;> answer employesw1ll losethe1r jobs. Los Alamitos Naval Air Station questions about the pos!iable shut Benson said services would be Ma 1 down of most of the services at the l'Ut back and would be geared ror Y · base. the weekend activities of the The benefits which may be lost Congressmen Jerry Patterson Guard's servicemen. by that date include tux-free food, <D-Santa Ana). and Mark Han· Base facilities to be closed bevera~es. medical services and n ~ f.o ~ d ( D ·Long Be a ch l. between March 1 and April I in· recreational activities now of-t'rat1c1zed the Department of dude a small commissary, liquor • 0 fered atthe base. Defense for what were termed s tore convenience shop, beauty "~e.cretiv~ and "unila~eral" de· salon, theater, bowling alley, Capt. Kelly Carr, current base commander, said Los Alamitos now serves about 100.000 retired c1 s 1ons an transferring base st•rvice station medical dis- operation from the. Navy to the pensary. gymnasium, library and Guard. lhreeserv1cemen'sclubs. Patlerson and Hannaford said .. : Clemente Island the communities around the base !>hould have been contacted before the defense department acted Shelling 'Common' SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND <AP> After some 40 years. re sidents along the Southern CalifOIJlia coast will not be sur· prised this year when distant thundrer rattles their windows. The noise will not be that of ;.m approaching storm, but rath~r the earth·shaking blasts of U.S. and for<?lgn naval guns a!> their shells rake San Clemente Island, 40 miles off San Diego. In a given year. up lo 200 ships will bombard the 20·mile·long . is land with 25,000 rounds of . heavy explosives. This month. the Navy and Marine Corps conducted night raid exercises on the island to I lest how survivors of a simulated r ··helicopter crash can be rescued 'i lrom enemy territory ' Explosions in the test weren't • naval barrages. but did include • under"'ater d e molat1on run tbroughs. The blast!> on San Clemente Is land, which belongs to the ·Naval Undersea Center. have not with gunfire. it a lso worriel> about San Clemente's ecology. Thousands of goats and wild pig!> were removed over the years because they were stripping the island of vegetation. The Navy said the island at one time supported thousands of In dians. but it became barren and eroded in most places after early settlers introduced farm animal!> and cleared the forests. The Navy has been using the island as a gunnery range since 1936. and it is the only one de signaled for such a purpose along the Pacific Coast. Crash Kills Driver Going Wrong Way "If Los Alamitos was critical for national defense or for our in- tern at1onal military commit· menl." said Patterson. "I could accept decisions made in secrecy. But the fact1s that Los Alamitos is not a strategic military base." Hannaford charged that the de- f ens~ department "has been de· laberately deceptive··. Guard officials foresee no in- crease in air traffic ar<>Wld the ba st• and no J01nt civilian· m 111 tary operation of aircraft. P altt'rson said defense officials lold him the transfer of Navy un· it!> to Guard personnel at the base WU!> a tax·saving measure. Currl•nlly. the defense depart· m1•n1 h11rteets about SJ.5 millfon for Los AJamitos operation. With the Guard in charge of the facili h '. about Sl.9 million will be budgeted .. Hut it's a well known fact that ·the Navy does not want to leave L-0" Alamitos." said Patterson. 1 he base stores are "well· managed" and currently making a profit. said Hannaford. ·w e are going to do every thing \\ e ('an to keep them open." he addcrt T ht· current base commander ... aid all but 65 of 280 civilian l'mployes at the base may lose their Jobs year.old Fred Cownn. was aid to be a cun collector with an arsenal or weapon •t his home Last week in IndlaJ\apoli.s, An· thony "Tooy" Kirltsis defied police for most of three days with a 12·gauge, s.wed-orr shotgun, the muu.le ol which he had wlred tightly to the neck ot his hostage, Richard Hall. Police said the shotgun was legally registered to Kiritsis; un· like a handgun, they said. no permit is required for a shotgun. However, sawing the barrel from a shotgun to make the shot spread in a wider pattern is ii· legal under the fedttat Firearms Act. J"sie Coulter ts u~tr arrest lla Olnclnnati ror bofdlnt d1ht bostaees overnight last week with a sawed-orr 1bo\gun and a knife. Police there would not dis· cuss the caliber of the flreal'f'I or whether it was lecaJly purchased or regist,red. Two incidents in Marjlland last week Involved rifles and hostages. Daniel Roger Evans, 27. was charged at Wheaton. Md .. with two colant.s of assault with intent to murder; pOJice &aid he fired more than 100 rounds at them with a .22-callber Di\IL Y PILOT A# rme wbUo holding bis 6-year~ld 100 bOsfage. And In Sliver Spran1. Md., Stephan Gregory, 2'1, was being held for alleeedly spraylnc rifle fire throuah the door and ceiling of a bank while be neeotl•ted wlth police for release or hos tares. Montgomery County, Md .. police spokesman Philip Caswell aaJd the rifles used In both ln- etancea were legally owned by the pel'80ll8 arrested, and pre- sumably were used for bunUng. "You don't have to register rifles," be said. ~.~ Textbook Brings Lawsuit BANK HOST AQE SUSPECT (RIGHT) TAKEN AWAY BY POLICE Robert Payares Said Action Was "Polltk:al Robbery" 'Poli tical RolJIJfteg' Yorba Linda Bank Gunman· Incoherent In what he called a political robbery, a m an carrying a loaded 12-gauge shotgun held two women hostage in a Yorba Linda b<ink for 21 2 hours before releas. mg them unharmed Monda)' af. ternoon. Unknown to the ~unman. iden· t1f1ed as ca~llllo J'>ayar~. 25. of Yorba Linda, five other women were hidden away m the bank as police laid siege tottie building But Payares WCJS more con· cerned about news represen· tatives than he was a)>out police as he holed up inside the 'Bank of America at 4802 S. Main St., Yorba Linda. As he beld the hostages inside the 11~· Payares talked with two' newspaper omces and a radio station. lt wasn'~ until his political message was read on radio sta- tion K EZY that he agreed to gave his gun to his wife and surrender SELLERSBURG, Ind. (AP> - A ninth-grade biology textbook that allegedly promotes the Biblical theory of creation has stirred a controversy and a lawsuit in lh1s southern Indiana town. Attorneys for the West Clark Community School Board plan lo be in court next week to defend the book. West Clark Supt. Herman Miller describes the court case as "a Scopes trial in reverse." He referred to the famous trial of John Scopes, a Tennessee school teacher convicted in lhe 1920s for teaching evolution in public schools contrary to state law. The Indiana Civil Ltberties Union filed suit agamst the board on behalf of two patrons, E . Thomas Marsh and Robert 0 . Hendren, who claim the Biblical theory IS promoted m ninth grade classes wtule other theories art! down~raded. The book. entitled "Biology-A search ror Order m Complexity ... was approved by the Indiana Textbook Commission and adopt· ed by the board last fall over another book recommended by a committee of biology leathers and parents. Marsh, Hendren and others claim the book has religious overtones and that board mem· bers were influenced by religious groups in the community in choosing it. Miller said there was no pressure. that it was one of seven biology texts approved by the st.ate comm1ss1on. "I personally don't think it has religious overtones," Miller said. ~rry ~~.ut ~' .. generated any recent protests. ·unlike a Mtuation 10 Hawa11. -where some res ident!> are angry ·over similar use of one or their -;stands. San Clemente's only mhab1 '"lants are 200 to 300 Navy ob· •ervers. who sl·ore the hits by ships on heaps or old cars and other pilel> or Junk metul. While the Nav y rakes the ll>le A wrong.way driver was killed on the Santa Ana freeway in Orange early today when his car crashed headon into an auto traveling in the opposite d1rec hon, traffic investigators said. A spokesman for the coroner's omce identified the victim a~ Daniel Mungia, 21, of 13881 Tustin East Drive. Tustin. According to a California Highway Patrol report, Mungia S'WI. ung his southbound car on to the northbound lanes of th~ Santa Ana Freeway near the Garden Grove Freeway overpass shorll~ after midnight. County Con Slwt In Prison Rioting S mall and sHght Vickie ~ayares was in tears as s he ap. proached the bank door. held out her hand and then turned to give police the shotgun. A few minutes later, Payares stepped out the bank with his arms around the two hostages. Police immediateiy handcuffed the man who pro- claimed himself a political rob- bet and hustled him into a wail· log patrol car. . That, Chief LOS ANGELES CAP> - It wasn't bad enough for Frank Aguilar, an alleged· ly tipsy Northridge pants maker, to rear-end a new Cadillac. He had to pick on the city. owned car being used lo ferry Los Angeles Police Chie( Ed Davis through Granada Hills. :~obe Ordered •. TOKYO (AP> Transport t >tanbter Haimlme Tamura or , dered an investigation today into • alleged "questionable traru.ac -lions" m connection with Boeing ·Aircraft Co 's sales m Japan five years ago When the car collided with a northbound van, the victim was thrown from his car and then run over by another auto. the CHP spokesman said. Relatives help Maria Bompensiero, widow of murdered Molin chieftain Fran~ BompensJero, down stairs of • church in San Die10 after his funeral. About 300 moumera att oded the erviccs. A man i>ervtng a sentence from a robbery conviction in Orange County was shot by guards d11r- mg a work stoppage uprising last weekend at the Susanvllle stale prison. Glynn Lewis Walker Jr .. 24. who was convicted of second degree robbery in Orange Coun- ty. suffered a gunshot wound in his thigh following a riot Satur. day at the prison. He was taken to a Reno hospital for treatment, authorities said. Three other prisoners were in- jured, two by Oying chips of ce· ment blasted loose by gunfire and the third suffered an injury to his wrist, not caused by the gunfire. ·'Things are back· to normal now." said the prison's acting supermtendtnt, C. S. R,ice. "We were fortunate that th~re were not more injuries.·· He said 97 inmates who refused to parliclpale in prison work pro· grams were transferred to higher-security prisons, Folsom and San Quentin, on Sunday. Guards used warning gunfire Saturday when inmates stormed from their cells onto the tiers. Rlcesa.id. Moral I ssu e s Topic of Talk The public is invited to a free talk tonight at UC Irvine by Dr. Ruth Macklin, co-editor of a book on moral problems rel~ted to ·medicine. Dr. .Macklin 'a talk, "Ethical Jli1ue1 ln ~havior Control," will becln at 8 p.m. ln room 178 at HumaanlUa Hall. Dt'. Macklin. a researcher and philosopher, hau written and spoken on the pbUoaopby of mind and utlon psycbolo&y and p11cbotanafy1l1, suicide and euthanut•. The lecture 11 a part ot • aertfl of dlacuaslone bl bumanbt.a, acl nUsts and phys • cla.M be1ni conducted at UCJ. Rice said starr at the lighl· security Correctional Center had classified over 900 1nmale:, Saturday night <ind Sunday morning to determine which m mates would agree to go back to work. The maJOnty or the inmate populallon did agree to end thC' work stoppage that began Wed nesday evening in a dispute over new enforcement or dormitory cleanlmess regulations Two delightful young men from Sn Lanka (Ceylon) are v1&1ting me and I am having the pleasure of showing them 90me ol our wonderful country We recently spent two week.& in Washington. O.C .. New York City, and vis1t1ng Ginny. my daughltlr', who is teaching at Bates College in Maine Yes, we hit the East at the height of their severe cold weather but we dre&Md warmly and didn't let 11 slow us down at all. I think Tina •net Mah1nde even enjoyed It more bec:auae tttey had neve< aeen a snow fall or felt Icy winds. During the pe!'lod we spent 1n our nation·a capitol. we took two whole days to "do· the Sm1thSOn1an The h1ghhght of that. of couru . wes the National Gem and M ineral Coli.ction II con1l1t1 ot over 1000 Item• repreeenllng all known gem materlal1, Many breathtaking gems have been obtained by the Smithsonian through dOnatlone and beque1ta. The Eugenie Blue Olamond la a remarkable 31 carat, bright blue. l\1ert1haped gem Mtound4'd by diamonds and mounted In 1 ring Another beautiful Item on d1apl1y la• 12 carat C.nary (bright yellow) Before they did, however. Payares shouted his somewhat incoherent political message. "I've been subjugated (sic ) to malignant lies about me for 25 years," he shouted. Then he said something about "a nucleus of the world on a universal basis." During the so-called political robbery attempt, the 2s.year-0ld man made no demands for money. police said. CHAR LES H. BARR .. Police said the 43-Y,ear- old Aguilar. who dut at least Sl.000 damage to Davis' car, flunked a breathalizer test and was booked on suspicion of drunken driving. He was released on $.115 bail. Diamond ring,. The Star or Asia is a 330 carat Star-Sapphire especially noted lor its deep blue color and sharply deflnett &-rayed si.r. ()fie of the finest quality Chryaoberyl Cat's Eyes 1n existence 1s the Smithsonian's 58 carat Mah1tani from Ceylon. The Amarl~n Gem Society donated an unusually cut, flawless 177 carat Kunzlle fashioned from C:.lllornla material. The etar attraction or the wtiole collection is the Hope Diamond, • blu. oval diamond &ncircled by co orleas d111monda and au199<1cJed from a diamond necklace. The Ko~ weights 45 52 carats. The rich depth ol color and brilliancy of this renown*d gem always exert" edm1rat1on. Ttl9fe la no official quote of the stone's present value, but the last un0ff1c1al price mentioned was $10,000,000. If you are " faaclntted by oama .. I am, vou muat vlelt the Nattonal Gem Oollectlon. tt It truly awe lneplrh1g. You might bt lnter•a~d In the collectlon we carry at Chart .. e .. r Jeweler• -• wide MIKtlon of Olamonda, and colortd 1ton... We wlll be t:itppy to antwer any quut1on1 ~ mlght t\1ve abo\lt them. . • -t 'i I . ,. .(' MU.sic Highlights First State ~er • S O UNDS OF MUSI C: Sometimes you 1el to thinking tbal the only time anytblna big time happens in Orange County, it's when the Yankees from New York wander out here to play the Angels in Anaheim sUidium. But sometimes it gets better. Not too long ago, the Los Angeles PhUharmonic Orchestra drifled down our way under auspices of the Orange County Philharmonic Society. With guest conductor James Levine, violinist Sidney Harth and cellist Ronald Leonard, they played some Brahms and Schubert. YOU WILL NOT get a review of the performance in this corner. I'll leave t..hat to the experts. Suf. fice that for this unreconstructed beach boy, it was a soothing pleas-ant evening of listening to some of the finest music ever created. I found the setting for this performance interesting. Mind you, the LA Philharmonic is ranked among the finest musical organizations or its kind in the world. And we got them right here in1 Orange County. Ana where d1d they play? At the high school auditorium in Santa Ana, that's l where .. I kept asking ir indeed we were bringing one of the world's finest orchestras to our region, why were they playing in a high school auditonum in Santa Ana? Now, I'm not going to put the knock on that auditorium, which is nice. Further, the Santa Ana Police Department has asserted· ly caused crime to evaporate from thecity'sstr~ts. But J remember that area as a pretty rough neighborhood from a few years back. I was still nervous to be there. When I parked the car. l mumbled to myself. "Well. k1s:-. the old hubcaps goodbye. Maybe the wh~ls too.'· LISTEN, THAT neighborhood used to be so tough that I worried about the receptwn for the or chestra people. It used to be in that area, if they saw 16guyscomingwhowerecar- rying violin cases, they wouldn't figure they had violins in them. So there we were. bnnging this fi ne orchestra to a high school auditorium that might seat 1,000 in a pinch. And it was a full house. The explanation given to me was that Santa Ana thgh ~hool 's auditorium 1s the only house in Oran~e Count~ with idelll acoustics for the performance of a philharmonic orchestra. In other larger auditorium:-. of our re~1on, the proJe(·t1on of delicate and sub- tle musical sounds 1s indeed sus- pect Of cour.;e, we have no problem in Orange <.;ounty when we want to bring in some famous acid·rock musical group. They bring their own electronic acoustics with them. If you want lo call that acoustics. AN D WE CAS really pack ·em m to Anaheim Stadium for the rock outfit. lt 's a 140-a cre com- plex with three tiers of seating for 4~.204 rock fans and more, if )Ou fill up the infield and oulfield. Parking for 12,000cars. too. We can really turn out the throngs for that When the ptulharmon1c comes to town. however, the best we can offer is a high school hall. Nice, butsllll a high school hall. There must be some kind of social commentary somewhere m this. W ASRlNGTON (AP) -Thi!I Carter adl:OhU1t ratton•1 first atate dinper featured Amy Carter, her cat. concert plulJt Rudolf Serkin and a surprise performer. tbe llnt lid)' of Mex· ico. Prealdent and Mrs. Carter got all Lheir iu~ta away early and diapensed With a few frtua as they gave a warm·hearted salute to Mexican Preisident and Mrs. Joae Lopez PortUlo Monday night. NINE·YEAR·OLD Amy wu among the 100 dinner guest. and was aeated at a Uible with ber parents and the Mexican cuettl ofbooor. President Lopez Portillo •mll· lngly disclosed in bis dlnner toast that Amy bad been reading " 'Tbe Mystery of the Screamln& Cloot •right here at the table." Amy•s Siamese cat, Misty Malarky Yln1 Yang, tried to come to tbe party, too. The cat made a dramatic entrance down the grand staircase while photo- gr aphers were waiting for the Carten and the Lopez Port1Uos todeacend. MISTY WAS TURNED back by nub bulbs and a military aide. After dinner Mn. Lopez Por tillo, a former concert pianist, played two selections from Chopin's works. I n introducing Mrs. Lopn Portillo, who once studied piano at the University of Michigan, Carter said she gave up her career to marry .. the man she re- cogoiud as future president of Mexico." Serkin, the ramous concert pianist. performed afterwafds. Broken Heart Sam Dies Piningr/or Mate LONDON (AP) -Sam, a swan in London's Hyde Park, died of a broken heart on Valentine's Day, his keepers reported. They said he had been pining away since his mate was beaten to death by two drunken students the day after Christmas. Like all swans, Sam mated for life. After his mate's death he was shunned by other swans on the Serpentine, an L-shaped lake In downtown London's large.central park. Aod when people came to feed him he never swam toward them. IDS CONDITION Df:l'ERIORATED, AND two weeks ago he was taken into the animal hospital at the London Zoo. "We all thought Sam was getting bet- ter," a zoo spokesman said. "He was beginningf.o eat more. It was a terrible shock to come in today and find he had died.·' Two Iranian students admitted killing Sam's mate and said in court that they were drunk at the time. They were fined the maximum $8.50 plus $144.50 court costs. Vance Vows Israel 'Survival, Security' . TEL AVlV, Israel !AP> -U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance ar· rived in Israel today hoping to revive Middle East peace efforts that have ~n stalled for more than a year. Ma king his firs t journey Vance flew in aboard a U.S. Air /N SHORT abroad as secretary or state. ( J Force jet am.Jd heavy euard. In an airport s tateme nt, h e ------------declared "the United States is committed to Israel's survival and secunty ... Foreign Minister Yigal Allon. who greeted Vance at Ben· Gurion International Airport, said: "It's high time the polttical momentum was revived." Vote Gilt• CU•IJ W ASIDNGTON CAP> -The American Medical Association's political committees contributed $1.8 million in the last con. gresslonal election and were the largest single source or special· interest contributions, according lo Common Cause. Business and corporate trade associations nearly tripled their 1974 donations in 1976, the self· styled citizen's lobby said Mon- day. V rk• Bulq Vrged WASIDNGTON CAP> -The U.S. Civil Rights Commission says children in large metropolitan areas shoµlc1 be bused between the inner city and the suburbs to reverse a trend of increasing segregation sn big-city schools "While elsewh ere much pro- gress bas been made in de- segregating public s('hools." the commission :-.aid in a report re leased today. "1t 1~ these children of the cities more than anv others who have yet to reap any benefit fro m the promise" of equal ed ucational opportunity. F und Probe P1Uhed TEL AVl V, Israel !APl - Pressure mounted in Israel to· day for an investigation of the ruling Labor party's finances after n leading politician claimed in court that he funneled a fortune in illegal contributions to the party. The Labor party. beset by a s~ries or money scandals In the past year and facing election May 17, denied the charg~ made Monday by Asher Yadlin, who claimed two cabinet minister!' were amon~ those pressuring him for or rere1vsn~ from him -money for the party Temperat11res Near Zero Snow Fluniea Dot MU£h of Nation ,.._....,,,., ... n ., '"° t,,.. '°"'"' Mlnln lPDI VAll .. y • _._.r"" w•'\ ••PKtf'd ti) br1no ltmoer•tu'"' Ml.et .... .Alben., .IC) n .. ,.__ u ,. Atlehot'9f 0 )4 AUlftt• .. 3' 11.tlenfltld n u 111""1......,. 10 3J 81tffter<ll '11 I llOIM .. JO ~ ... )4 e.-ott'lltt• 77 !O 81/ff•to 17 ,. 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Nall°"'' W•••h•r S.r vlrf' wh•d• or.-d•c l .. d lllqll\ bet"ffn ~'end tl ''°"'ti~ <~••I 111rowv11 ,.,...,d "'""'' Anow1-qu•Hnobtt-n ts.run s "'''•' ~· 110ur •houkl <ontlnu* lo \w••Oi Of>""n from '"• mount-tin' '"'°"•" < ... YO'I\ """' Weon•Ml~Y mof111"q toreu•W.H"'O T•mo-r•1urn at rrtoUnt•1n rt-\Ort\ \llould .. ..,,,.,.,.I<> t>o mtld With loooll• lnlM '°'"""'°"""11'>1-•<'1~'''"1 >Cl In ''* dl'wrh f\•O'ttt •l•v•lff11"' •llo•Jld "••• cltY' lrt 1 ... 111'-/0\ wllll• ,,,,.,., •tQ•O"' '''''""' "••t 1'1101>\ ottw .. n 17 <lfld tt hm'"""ll'"' ~ICI d•Oll .tlovt U Clte•t<'\ ol n19111 c ... c.i lt'eaalaft- o.11w tow ft9 nltf\t e!ld m01nl"O 11011n. ot'9tf'w4 .. '"""V •M l•I• lllrou9ll Wtdnl\4N'f. LIOlll v•rteblt wind\ nl911t •nd mo,nl119 "°""' 14IQll• M•r a Cot tl•I ttMIMn'flurts wfll t•nO" b•lwttn SO and 70. tnltnd ttm 11er•h1tt\ Wirt ren0t bet-rt 4' tnd •· Tllt•tWl-r•lllftwllltM>•I S-, • ....,Tfu• TUUOAY \e<ono1ow 1.)Jpm, .1n St<°'"'"'"' • lh,,., 4 ~ "We tried to find the best performer lo our country,'' Carter said, *ause of the Mex- ican first lady'a interest In music. Alter Serkin 's performance or Mende.lasc)hn and Beethoven was treeled with prolonged applauae, the President sald , .. It was almost worth campaigning tor two yean just to come here and bear that." IN THE DI NNER toasts, which were much less formal than in past admlnlstraUons, Carter quoted a Spanish phrase he said was used by one of Lopez Portillo's predeceuors. He translated it into English as: "Poor Mexico. So distant from God, so close to the United States." He added, "But I know that un- . der President Lopez Portillo's administration,· the distance Crom God has become much less and the proximity to the United States, I hope, wUl become a blessing and not a curse.'' &P ........ CARMEN LOPEZ PORTILLO WINS OVATION President Carter Conpretu11t•• Mexico•• Flrtt Lady ~illings Puzzle Town .J Four 'Super-fine Boys' Deadfor$30? HOLLANDSBURG, Ind. <AP) -Talk in the Raccoon Lake bar usually runs to fishing. politics and country music. That was gone today, shattered by shock at execution·style slayings or four young brothers in a town where c rime has always b een so mething that happens somewhere else. "This is supposed to be a nice, safe community." said Virginia Tyler, whose husband owns the bar and restaurant on the fringe of the Raccoon Lake recreation area. "EVER YBODY I S JUST shocked. They were super-fine boys." Ralph Spencer. 14; Reeve B. S pen('er. 16 ; Raymond M. Spencer. 17. and Gregory B. Brooks. 22. a step-brother, were found Monday face-down on the blood.s oaked floor of their mobile home. Each had been killed by a shotgun blast to the head. Their mother escaped by playing dead after gWlShots lore through her wig, police said. B ETTY S P ENCER , 43 , Gregory Brooks ' m other and stepmother of the three teen- agers. wa~ wounded sn the back. head a nd shou ld ers . S he managed to walk to a neighbor's and summon help. The trailer was ransacked, the telephone lines were cut and the victims' wallets missing. Mrs. Spencer t o l d in · vestigators four men. believed to be in their early 20s, invaded the trailer shortly 41Jler her husband. Keith, left for his job as a techni· c i an for an Indian apol is television station. POLICE WERE STILL unable today to team more about the· in· cident because Mrs. Spencer was heavil y sedated, though listed sn satisfactory condition al a Terre Haute hospital. Police said they had no leads on the assailants. "We're going to be checking all the neighborhoods, the bars and taverns." said Sgt. Hobert McClure, state police post com· mander at Terre Haute. "If we hear of several young subjects who mention those names (the victims'), we'd certainly like to talke to them. .. BUT I'M SURE we're going to run into a lot of dead ends." Two youths, described by state police as "extremely lntox.icat· ed,' • were stopped about an hour and a half after the killings in a car resembling the Spencers'. They were questioned for about eight hours and then released when the car was found aban- ctoned about seven miles from the Spencer home. Police said they assumed there was a second car, but had no description of it. .. There might have been at the most $30 taken;• aaid SUite Police Sgt. Don Aldrich. Hunted Boss Hides From Avenging Gun NEW ROCHELLE. N.Y. (AP> -"He kept asking people if they knew where I was. Thank God nobody did," said the supervisor for whom Nazi-sympathizing sharpshooter Fred Cowan was bunting dur· ing a rampage in which he killed five people. "I heard the shots, and I knew he was after me." said Norman Bing, AP Wl,..,pl!olo ·oeNTLE' KILLER •NazJ' Fred Cowan who dove under a desk Monday when the A r my·t rained marksman set out to avenge his two·week suspension in a siege that ended when he put a bulletin his own brain. About 300 police and federal agents had been held al bay for 10 hours. BING SAID HE s uspended 33·year-old Cowan from his job as a trucker's helper at a moving company warehouse because he had "refused to move a refrigerator." But he said that Cowan had caused no other trou- ble during his 11 years with the firm. "He was a very gentle man who loved children," said a sis· ter·in·law. Mary Ellen Cowan. Added a neigh bor of this Westchester County community about 11,-;i miles north of the New York City line : "He was always a nice boy." But others remembered the hulking,· six:foot. 250 pounder who attended Catholic grammar and high schools a n d was described as a brilUant student. an avid gun collector and lover or Nazi uniforms. CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION ASSETS December 31 , 1976 LIABILITIES, CAPITAL AND RESERVES Cash. U.S. Gov't Obligations Savings Accounts •••••••••• $131,554,633 and other Securities ...•.••••• S 23.497,729 Advances from Federal Loans on Real Estate .••••••.• 130,884,254 Home Loan Bank ••••••••••• 12,1eo.ooo Contracts on Sale Notea Payable -Bank •••••• none of Re:lt Estate • . .......... 119,364 Other Liabilities •••......••• 12,971,030 Loans to Facilitate Sale ---·-· - of Rear Estate .............. 479,379 TOTAL UAllLtTIES ••.•..•.. 168,845,983 -·-......... Real Estate Owned (Net) .... 404,079 DEFERRED INCOME , ••..••. 882,830 Real Estate Purchased for Investment .................. 6,628,314 CAPITAL AND RESERVES Regulatory Reserves •••••••• 546,953 Fedr ral Home Loan Bank Stock 1,010,000 GtUtrantee Stock, Rt1erves and Surplua .•.••...••.•••• 8,238,831 Office Premise'! and Equ1pm1 11t (NPIJ 1,483,88t TOTAL CAPITAL AND REl lRVEI ............... 8,782,889 Other Assets 2.904,592 -----TOTAL UABIUTIIS TOT AL ASSETS ............. $168,201.382 CAPITAL AND AESEAVU ...• 118',291,382 &ll>lo<:I lo ..,dll a !!rPft"S Savt~·1i;mc1 ~ LOan AssoclatlOri :-:._--:: • NEWPORT BEACH (M1ln Office) 1515 Weatcllff Dtfvl (714) 842~000 W•DNISOAY I fllr\ll""' I~· fl'I ll ~ ""''"'"' ' ... '" • t W•Jlll1'9tt11 ,, I • NEWPORT BEACH (Bayside Center) 1024 Bayside Center (714) 642·4000 LAGUNA BEACH (Corner o1 Forest Ave.) 310 Gtenneyre Street {71"4) 494·7506 IRVINE (Coming soon In Woodbridge) • ' 11.&8 .. .. Otld ·~ ... -""" ,..._,,,.lot 1-"9 a«tleft .. Ille n&• ,, .. l*'f, ~ -· the !- 1 '-<..,•!Ow 1 )Iii> m ·I T St<ond 1111111 • SO•,,., .t • Sun''-'"•• fl'!., wt• s 11~ "'· ~tlW (· St m . MIU•Jtp m. l ., . ~!:r!~!! !!.~~s 3, Escapes • botlage by a robber makrng tus getaway, but were mahwar Patrol. aaid Monday lhal as many as 180 releued uniJ\Jured, poJlce said. pel'IOftl, mosUy non-citizens on student visas from Tbe bancllt remained at large thil mornini five natiOQS ln the Middle East, may be involved deapit. an intense aearch ot oeia.bborhoods where tbroufbgut the nation. He said the claims have in- thoae abduct.eel were freed. volved ria1ed vehicle accidents, nonexistent P~ENA CAP) -Sclentlsl$ say they have been undereat.lmatin1 the power of the world's great earthquakes and that the 1960 quake in Chile, for example, released 62 times as much energy as they formerl.Y thought. Stale A revlaloo of the 40· 1 year-old Richter Scale was announced Monday, and for the fint time. a penonal !Jtjurles. phony thefts, and fires involving arson. Siie• Ill Faen Remo1'al SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -For the first time, State Atty. Oen. Evelle Younger will be asked to test a 1971 state law that permits him to remove an elec~ offtcial from office. THE FAMILY CIRCUS • DAILY PILOT A5 By Bil Keane lJtlHtg Audit Gas Shortage Probe Asked LOS ANGELES CAP) -A consumer group here baa asked the California Public Utilities Com- mission to invesUgage the current natural 1as shortage, to make sure it's real. Campaign Agalnst Utility Service Exploitation -CAUSE -announced Monday it ls asking the PUC to: -AUDIT THE BOOKS of Southern California Gas Co. ot Los Angeles to determine if its pricing structure was fair; --------few quakes now rectster 1 abo~tt9 on the &caJe. . The San Lula Obispo County Board of Supervisors unanimously voted Monday to ask Youn1er to file a lawsuit to remove county 5heriff John H. Pierce from a post to which he was elected two years aao. Pierce. 45, hasn't been on duty since be un- derwent heart surgery last June. He has said he would retire this June. the day he hopes lo get his first disability payment. -look into federal regulatory pricing policies to determine ir they allow "unfair and unjust price increases'' for natural gas producers; · :· WcdaotlfU911t•Querfed .• LOS ANGELES CAP> -County Counsel John , Larson •aid Aaaessor Phllip Watson doesn't have the riaht to cancel a number of residential property ¥' reappra.laala to freeze assessment boosts for the next two years. ' In a four-page opinion issued Monday, Larson 1 • advlaed the five-member board of supervisors that • he believes Watson doesn't have legal grounds to keep higher valuations off the assessment rolls if the property already has been reappraised. Arab Fraud IJ11'e•tfgated SACRAMENTO <AP) -California in- vestigators say Arabs on student visas have filed millions of dollars worth or phony accident and theft claims against U.S. insurance companies. Glen Craig, commissioner of the California (JACK ANDE~SON) REVEALS in the By Jove. DAILY PILOT "Why do they make beaters so hard to lick?" Energy Needs hy 1985 -LOOK INTO THE feasibility of a state-owned oil and gas corporation to look for fuel In California and to buy it in bulk from out-of·state sources. and, -investigate the possibility that Southern California Gas Co. may be uslng the natural gas sh~rt~ge ~ an excuse to expand its rate base by building a liquefied natural gas facility in Southern. California. State to Import Natural Gm A SPOKESMAN for Southern California Gas SACRAMENTO (AP) - California will have to import limited amounts of liquefied natural gas in order to meet energy needs by 1985, says a legislative report. The Assembly Subcommittee on Energy report, released Mon - day, said liquefied natural gas- LNG -will be twice as ex· pensive as present unregulated intrastate natural gas, and wall require offshore transfer plantSI that will cost $3 billion. I But the committee disputed claims by the Pacific Gas & Elec- tric Co. and Pacific Lighting Co. that a gas shortage is imminent. The LNG would come from southern Alaska and Indonesia. The gas companies say Oxnard and Los Angeles would be the best places for tr.ansfer stations. The subcommittee added that Co. said, "There is a shortage and, unfortunately, it PG&E and Paclfic Lighting, in is real, not the result of manipulation." planning their plants, used quali-"We are not accusing Southern California Gas t y controls st a n d a r·d s of any impropriety." said CAUSE omcer Burt "daneerously below the quality Wilson. "We just want to get at the people on the control standards of a nuclear other end of the pipeline, to see if they have been facility. withholding supplies." Ile said has group feels that 1.ake Water Releases Cut ·· --~ ·"major producers have been withholding gas." ~ - -.. SACRA M ENT 0 <A P > -day. Because of the drought, water re-The releases will be cut from leases from Folsom Lake into the 800 to SOO cubic feet per second. American River will be reduced Precipitation on the American Wednesday, the federal Bureau .River watershed has been only of Rec lamation announced to-eight inches since October 1. A new shipment of Merchandise From England has just arrived at: I I l\ussell ifnteriors DIRECT IMPORTER::, rim· Fmm111, /••r n,,,, • O(Ji,., • L1br,111.1 N'.111//1jt/ /1t11J1 • /Jr,111 1uu/ C.upp.r "''""'m" • H..ct BcMd & Acid ltcMd Mlmws • Sold INls. HCMCJing. Dnk. 9ld Table l.aMps ......... ,.. ...... • H..ct C4rTecl Woodell SJgia • OR Oii Gian TtMn -~~ ......... . • 1_,a1't.d. .,_...ct M_.... Codllal T--.. ANTIQUES OF TOMORROW •nd AUTHENTICATED ANTIQUES of TODAY OPEN M<fNOAY-SATUROAY 10-5 F~IDAY 10-6 IN MARINER'S MILE SQUARE 2700 West Coast Hwy.• Newport Beach 548-2505 VIDEO INTRODUCTIONS MANY WOMEN REACH A TIME WHEN A NEW DIRECTION IS NEEDED; THIS OPPORTUNITY CENTER CAN HELP TO POINT 1JIE WAY It could happen to any woman in Orange County- the sudden, helpless feeling of frustration and be· wilderment that comes after a death in the family, a divorce, or the realization that the children have grown and your own life seems empty and purpose- less. Or there may be a working woman wondering , what other career avenues might be open, and even happily-married mothers looking ahead to an ex- panded future. What is needed at such a time Is some new direction from someone who understands you and your individual and very personal circum· stances. The Women's Opportunities Center .could be the answer. Located on the UCI campus, this non-profit organization counsels women seeking new directions. The answer may be a job needed to support a family, or an extension of education or training, or meaningful volunteer work.This Center helps women plan and implement programs appro- priate to their individual needs and interests. In the photo above, a group attends a job seminar, while the inset shows Counsellor Jeanne G o lding in a personal conference trying to add new dimensions to a woman's life. If you would like to know more about this markable Center, if you can help support it, or · you have a job opportunity for some wo n, call WOMEN98 OPPORTUNITIES CENTER Mary Moshy Director 148 Admlnlstrallon Building Unlvarslty of California, Irvine lrvlne, California 92717 Telephone: (714) 833-7128 umber 40 In a series of public service advertisements sponsored by Avco Financial Services, Newport Beach, Callf omia ' • 'tJA8 -DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I -I 1 . l • . Reaching Too Far? ..: Gov. Brown bas been under pressure to appoint a woman and a black to California's Supreme Court. 1 Last week he did both. ' Rose Elizabeth Bird, 40, was named chic! justice .~of the high court and Alameda Superior Court Judge • Wiley W. Manuel, 49, was named an associate justice. The appointments arc for lite. Ms. Bird1 if confirmed, will step into the highest •judicial position in the state -with no previous court experience. ' Her background includes posts as a law clerk, a public defender, a teacher of law at Stanford and, for the past two years, as Secretary of Agriculture and Services in Brown's cabinet, the first woman cabinet secretary in state history . ...,. She is described as intelligent, hardworking and •·a superb criminal lawyer." There is no doubt she is a person in whom the governor has great confidence. But the fact remains that, lacking experience on the bench at any level, she will quite literally face a period of on-the-job training. In the nation's largest and m05t litigious state, this must raise quesions, sex aside. Specifically. could the governor not have answered political. pressure by settling for an as- sociate justice appointment for Ms. Bird, leaving the top post, for the time being, to one of the experienced justices already on the court? Another Approach A contrary approach has been taken by California's Sen. Alan Cranston who has decided to take the appointment of federal judges out of the political spoils system. Traditionally, the senator from the President's party selects candidates for appointment to federal judgeships and U.S . attorney posts in the states, on the basis of personal patronage. But Democrat Cranston has joined forces with Republican Sen. S.I. Hayakawa and the State Bar of California to name a commission to screen can- didates for the posts and recommend appointees . Cranston bas selected four members of the com· mission, Hayakawa two, and the State Bar will pick another three. The membership reflects a regional, professional, ethnic and sex balance. The commission will recommend three to five qualified i>crsons for each vacancy and the senators will present the list to the White House with their com· men ts, but without changes. This is a real step forward in taking politics out or justice. Strange Silence For decades the ba\,t.lc over fluoridation of water supplies has raged. Proponents say it's the only answer to reduce tooth decay. Opponents insist addition of the chemical can cause disease and some hint of sinister plots. Nevertheless -usually after heated elections - some 40 water systems in California now add fluoride. So how is it working? Shockingly, no one kn<>ws . The Dental Health Division of the state Depart- ment of Health says no tests have been run on the cf· feels of fluoridation sioce the 1950s. At that time a state check of eight areas using fluoridation found the average 17-year-old had 5.4 de- fective teeth. A check of 16 non.fluoridated areas turned up 11 defective t04?th in the same age group. And that was the end of the testing. Health Department officials say they haven't the time or the money to continue checking. For an issue that has caused such storms of con- troversy, and so directly affects the health of the citizenry, that's a pretty strange state of affairs. United f ro~t Parents in Dear Gloomy Gus Lincoln Warned Ifs of Domestic Despots A.New : Ball Game . ' , (SYDNEY HARRIS J Pa rents or newly grown children today are fond of shrug· ging and saying, "ll 's a new ball game," but that is an understate· ment. It's a new ball park, too, with dimensions nine times as large, and all the positions have been changed. It used to be that parents were ' proud or what their children ac- complished; now they are compelled to be content with what their children don't do. If they don 't wind up in jail, on dope or premature- ly pregnant. the parents consider this a nota· ble victory. Many a father who. years ago. told himself he would tum his daughter out of the house if she openly had an affair. has now re· signed himself to the fact that his 20-year·old (or younger> is living with a Bulgarian shepherd on a cranberry farm in Manitoba ... Al least he makes an honest living." the father is reduced to mutter· ing to himself. And the same parents who, in the past. bragged about their son's college record and grades now tell you, with a sigh or relief. that be is a carpenter's assistant in the Colorado mountains, "but working hard and keeping out of trouble." We used to expect. and even Eyes on SACRAMENTO. Calif. -Gov. 1 Edmund G. Brown Jr., a darling of no-growth environmentalists, sat in bis state capital office last week bragging about California's recent economic growth and ex· pressing hope for more -a sign of evolution by this most fascinating young politician. Supporters say Brown was 1 ~tunned when Dow Chemical Co., , fe-d up with I envlronmen· I tal red tape. abandoned a petrocheml- c a I plant plan-ned in California. This im · 1 mediately brought an at- ; tempt by the g o v e r n o r •t o c u t d ow n 1 bureaucratic harassment of busl· nea. But beyond the Dow affair. 1 Brown seems impelled toward , pro·busineas positions by the l a beer logic of hllJ own phUosophy. \ Even more t.ban when he en· 1 tered clfice in 1975, Brown today 1 doubta govemment•s effectlve- 1 nu1 -particularly ln maintain· f Pll a bleh,,.mploymentocooomy. , But bl1 admlnl1traUon'1 pro. I envlronmenUU.t. antl-bu.slnesa ton~ the flrst bro yean dll· couhsed Job creation ln the bate sector. Now, Brown's "It is called urban sprawl. complete with noise, smog and traffic. The true quali· ty of our lives is being con· s umcd by a developing monste..r. We wall be held accountable for the world we create: where will my children play?" J .L.Z. Gloomy Gw• commtnu ••• '"''"""'d Oy r~~fn. •tut do not nt<tH•rll'l rel~t thit v1•.-s of ltl• MW,,.,., S.nd yo.., ptt Pffff IO Gloom, G11•, 0•11, PtlOI. demand, positive things from our children; now we are privately relieved at the mere absence of negative things. On the whole. we have been forced to become a hell of a lot more modest about what our kids are doing, and this alone must be a good thing. for them as well as for us. Those dreadful parental pressures to "achieve" at any cost have been relaxed to the pomt of limpness, and this must represent an improvement in the natural relations between parents and children. BUT, still, it is a rude shock to the parental ego, gazing out at this new ball park, into the reced· ing distance. and scarcely re- cognizing the dimensions or the strange posilion1ngs of the players. All this is terribly confusing and upsetting to us. bu• most or us find that our emotional lies are stronger than our moral pre· conceptions, and we accept what we never thought we would. with good grace, or a pretence of it. Those wbodon·t quickly find that the ball park is uttfrly closed lo them, and there as nowhere else to go. Demagogues in Many Guises W ASHJNGTON -i\.!>raham Lincoln forewarned us. In his Lyceum address, he declared that this country need never fear a foreign tyrant, that our real danger would come from a domestic despot. Lincoln described a demagogue in star· spangled cloth who would put power ahead or principle, ambt· tion ahead of conviction. Down through the decades that followed, the demagogue has come among us in many guises. Thad· deus Stevens, the cadav· crous, beetle· browcd dema· goguc of the post·Civil War era. appeared as a prophet or doom. Georgia's fiery , red-haired Tom Watson. who raised the cross or the Ku Klux Klan. was a spellbinder. Old Ben Tillman. or "Pitchfork Ben" as he was known in the South Carolina hills back in the 1890s. came across as a backwoods rabble rouser. Mississippi's Sen. Theodore Bilbo was an educated man but carefully hid the fact to keep from offending his semiliterate following. He deliberately dressed in cheap clothes and spoke low-grade English. Cl oser to our day. Gen. Douglas MacArthur projected a majestic presence. He had the Roman profile, the messianic urge, the oratorical artillery, the mastery of imagery to captivate the nation. During the occupation of Japan. he reigned in patriarchal absolutism over 80 million Japanese. His troops called him the White Mikado. (JACK ANDERSON J and he was in truth an imperial personage to whom the Emperor of Japan was but a deputy. Gen. George Patton was a natural authoritarian, a curser or subordinates and maltreate'r of animals, an erratic prodigy. By his choice or imagery -ramrod posture. theatrical swagger. patente<t"scowl, gory metaphors. be·pistoled costume -he pre- sented himself as the incarnation of destruction, a walking glorification of war. IN CONTRAST, Sen. Joseph McCarthy was an ingratiating. gregarious fellow. called "Joe" by almost everyone who had known him more than five• minutes. He was earthy and un· pretentious. He had an awkward manner and a rough, whining voice. Yet people were persuaded by his un· sophisticated appearance, by the look of perspiring sincerity on his face, by the awkward, ringing delivery, by the heavy fis t· pounding on the rostrum. Se'n. Thomas Dodd, though less effective, looked more the part. He was elegant In appearance. with a fmely patrician profile and an air or dignity. He was always well manicured and tailored, in his four-button coats, peg trousers and Italian shoes, with his identifying prop, a watch fob and chain suspended from his lapel. James Forrestal was a backroom demagogue. He had an arresting face on which a de- tached intellectuality seemed at odds with the tlattened nose broken in boxing and the pencil· lane mouth, with the combined in· limation of the physical -what J onathan Daniels described as features that "the movies dramatically give to the better gangsters." THEN THERE was J . Parnell Thomas, the blustering chairman or the House Un· American Activities Committee. He was an improbable figure, a caricature of a congressman. with a great belly, a bald head and a round face that glowed perpetually in a pink flush. These latter.day demagogues shared a curious common bond; all were martyrs of the ultra- right. In the pamphlets and pro· nounccments of the fanatical fringe, the authentic heroes and tragic giants were accorded equal godhood wl,lh the rascals and buffoons. The press ha:,. also had a pro- pensity for damning in the same breath a MacArthur with a 'C.l.A. ch,.f• offlct1 h•rel He llln't in yet. Anything I Clln dol' McCarthy, a Forrestal with a Thomas, as though figures of so obviously disparatl' ability and rectitude were JOtned together by a bond so close as to render in- significant their disharmonies• Yet there was a common bond a belief in a preventive nuclear war that would cripple world communism before the plague could overtake us; a pre- ference for increased arms· spending over economic im· provements. a faith in authoritarian schemes for the purification of national thought, an imputation of disloyalty to those who disagreed. THESE PATRIOTS of the soapbox favored the imposition of a patriotic orthodoxy sufficient lor the rigors or the world strug. gle. to be achieved by unmasking widespread treason, making ob- ject lessons of the disloyal and the lukewarm, censoring uo- h e Ip fu I news, fumigating libr aries. classrooms and pulpits, broadening the cloak- and-dagger function o( the FBI and the CIA and reinterpreting away whatever constitutional prohibition might interfere. They sought the expansion of our counterintelligence and counterinsurgency activities to fight the Communists at their own game, abroad or al home. They also shared a strange soft· ness ror dictators, particularly Chiang Kai-shek, who already was sinking slowly under the weight of Oriental conundrums that seemed insoluble. In America, the transition from demagogue lo dictator has never succeeded. But thJs is no reason for complacency. Wlth each passing demagogue, the danger has increased. '78, Brown Would Warm Business Chill quiet move to warm this state's chilly businetis climate indicates his belief that jobs are generated primarily by private capital. Combined with restrained spending and no new taxes. this overture to business moves Brown rightward for his 1978 re· election campaign -deepening dereatism which is rampant among Republicans here. Although polls s how Brown's popularity down. Republican leaders privately call him un- beatable. And an impressive re- election could hurry him back lo national politic1'. JERRY BROWN, 38, cannot forget 1976 when his late·starting campaign defeated Jimmy Carter ln six out of six presiden· tlal primaries. Brown's aides. unimpressed with candidate Carter, see in bis presidency neo- popuU1t ilmmlcka borrowed from Brown <including the plactarized "new spirit" slogan) covering up pedestrian pollcle11. .. If Jerry la reelected by a mUUon votes and Carter's record is Juat ~so." a Brown lnsider told us, "look tor a challena• at tht ~Sol 1880. '' Thr.. yea.rs bef oro any such chaDenie. bow~ver, Brown hu t0me trwble with fUndamentaUy conHrvaUve mlddle-c:lasa Calllon.lans. Tho rouon.a are ( EV ANS-NOV AK J many: Brown's conventionally liberal line in the presidential primaries. his championing of Cesar Chavez's defeated farm workers' rererendum. his recent pledge to veto capital punish· ment if passed by the legislature. On another flank, 011- ganized labor has lost patience with Brown's pinch-penny fiscal policy. Add to this unaccustomed press criticism, and one longtime supporter describes Brown at bay. afnlcted with the third.year govemor'11 blahs. Yet. in a long interview, we found hlm charac· terlstically exuberant and ir· reverent, thinking on his feet as few polltlclans can. t 'l'BIS YEAR'S addition to Brownlsm is the notion that ''cltb:ens have duties ln addition to riehts." Brown proposes ·•voluntarism." with prlvate clUieos taJdnj over some chorea from professional social worken. Correclly pcrcelvlng the lhrut here. labor le4ders and D mocratic leal!~lators have con· demoed and ridiculed Brown's Idea "Voluntarism" •t•ms from Brown's profound distrust of government, his major link to middle-class voters. He sees gov· ernmenl as self-aggrandizing ("more and mor~ people derive their sustenance from the public household"). To Brown, state legislators working nearly fulltime in Sacramento away from the constituents are "bureaucratic wHticians" in le· grally connected with this ex- pensive system. IN AJ>DmON, he so categor· lzea the University of California'~ board of regents, calling it "cx- ceulvely ceremonial" and de· voted to the university's high budget. Brown has been disrupt· tnc sedate reaents' meetlnga ("they sound like a play by Ionesco") with demands for JUSUllcaUon of rising costs. Even more disconcertinl to the un- ivenlty was his recent appoint· menl to a 1&-year regent's term of Verne Orr, a conservative Republican who was Gov. .Ronald Reasan's parsimonious ala te finance director. While rece{ltl)' ar Bodega Bay wlt.b fellow envlrooment.llilts OS· teoatbly to listen to whalu, Brown apcnt five hours Wktni to Nobel laurut..e a.nd conaervaUve economllt Miiton Friedman; they found wide areas ot ~ ment about llmIUng sovel'll~L ' Brown's property tax program put permanent limits on local government's growth. looking suspiciously similar to an old Reagan plan. BROWN'S lieutenants predict hts renewed popularity with the middle class because of two is· 1uea: taxes and crime. He pro- poses property tax rebates for those making less than $36,000 a year and will stress law-and- order at every chance (honoring the etfective Santa Ana poUce force witb an unannounced Saturday night visit that found the govemor riding pulrol cars at 2a.m .). Even his stand against capital punbhment. which buck~ public opinion, Is considered a political masterstroke by strategists ot both parties. Since Brown has ' been irrevocably committed a1a.lnat capital punishment, wh;t not qwckl~ get the laaue out of the way? Furthermoro, since he wm not lobby against an ovenide ol his veto, the legislature may aave Brown a lo.tnc campa~ Is· sue tn im by pa sine th• bill in 1m. Brown's possible nemesl.8 ls not the death p e nalty but California 's economy. threatened b)' two years of dtoutht and that anU·b\.11.ln(Jss cUmate. So, the evolvinl Youni governor drops hi$ old "len Is beautiful" talk and Instead starts wooing. business Investment. Beyond that, more than riding in patrol cars and lis tening to whales, his goven1orsbip is marked by a genuine effort, transcending l'hetorlc, to reduce and ratlonallie tbe role or gov- ernment. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rob4>rt N Wl'td, ~t>lllhf"f Thnmus Kt•l'lnl. 1':d11or llor/Juro ~ri·lh1<·h l-:d1tortal Ptlyt ,.;duur Th4· <'dltorlul JHll(t or the Dally Pilol 'eel.:. lo Inform and !iitlmulnt<' reodt'r!\ b • prt"\ nt1n1 on th1!1 p111t dher:1e c:ommrntan on top1ci1 o( antere•l b) li)'nd1c"i· t'<I columnlsls 1&nd cartooni!lt:s, h) providing a forum (or rt'ad~rs· vu•ws and b)' pru11ntln11 th1i; ne"'llp;iper's opln~QM 110<.I .idea.'1 on currt'n' topl<'!O 1'h1• 1-rirtonal oP•nlOn'I or tht• Da.11~ l'ilnt ;1 pJ)<'or onl) In the td1tomil cttlum11 ul th• top ol tht pu~o Optn1on1 l.'X prcn.td b) the: tol11mru1ti. ;md nrtC>on1$15 und ll'ltl·r v.nicr are \htlr own 11nd no l'(ldor rn~I ol ~htlr \'14'W" by thl.' Oally Ptlul. •hould bu 1nr1•rrt'd Tuesday, Feb.1S1 11m . , GI Bill Tougher Laws Affect Vets WASHINGTON (AP -Veterans going to school under tbe GI bill ave a new incentive to complete their course w k. If they don't, Uncle Sam will demand full ref from them. In the past, if a vete' n dropped courses and ended up carrying too fe hours to qualify for his payments, the Veterans A:iimlnistration paid for the courses until the date he dropped them. BUT UNDER NEW tEGISLATION, the VA is seeking retroactive refuf)ds from any student who drops courses and take' fewer classroom hours than required for his VA payment. The amounts vary for full·time, three-quarter-time and half-lime students. Congress passed the legislation last year to reduce overpayments to veterans who dr91>ped out of school or canceled courses without tell~ the VA. Those overpayments totaled more than S2 billion since 1971, but the VA says it has mana.ed to get about. 70 percent of the money .back. T-e biggest overpayments were $883 million in the yfar ending last July l. THE RETROACTIVE REFUND provision went into effect Dec. 1. The rule alsd applies m cases where a course is completed but tle grade 1s ignored by the school for graduation purposes. The penally docs not apply when t)e situation was caused by circumstances beyond the student's control. Andrew H. Thornton, chief of tht VA 's educa- tion benefits. said in an interview ''il'I too early" to guess how many students will have t001akc refunds . for the school term that ended recenur. HOWEVER, "SOM.E SCHOOIS HAVE ex· pressed concern about the effect the 11le will have" on the veterans. he said. No repayments for the past termean be collect· ed for VA payments made before Dec. . But for the current and future terms. the retro tive repay· men ts can be assessed to the start oft term. The VA ts urging veterans to co r with their schools' veterans affairs offices to s what effect dropping courses will have on them. ey also are urged to consult with the schools l explain the reason for dropping courses when porting the change to the VA. A VA OFFICIAL WHO KEEPS ack of the overpayments said the rate of ove ayment to veterans has been $49 million IC6s he past six rnonlhsthanmthesamcpcraodayeara o. "Cautiously, I'm saying this do ward trend should continue." he predicted. While the rate of recovery has en above 70 percent m recent years, the official sa , 1t bas risen to about 90 percent in the past few mo hs. Of the $2 billion overpaid since 1971, the VA is till trying to collect $&38 million. fl wroteoffSJlS m ion, either in com promises or just 11 ancollectable. •MONDAY % Fried Ehidll!n .99 •WEDNESDAY ·111p Slrlain '2. •THURSDAY Rib·eve Steak SATURDAY Brachettei al lncludlng grHn peppers and onions rved on a bed of rice pilaf ~Ith soup, mixed green • pineapple ring, W8l1Y' roll end butter, and dessert •SUNDAY 1 lllW Yark Stea •2.95 •q of hM dMnen.,. Mrved wt • ,.._,er oMkle ef pot.toi "•"" roU All dlttftert ewved ff'OM J TuMday, Febfuary 15. 1971 -----*...-_.,.._cw_L_Y_P_ll_OT __ ~_z_ Energy Dr.•ID to Dictate Cha:Dges WASffINOTON (AP> -Americans could find themselves bath.ln& in form· fillinl bathtubs in the near future as the natioo seek.a ways to conserve its dwindllnC en~rgy supply. three ener&Y experts say. than any other people on earth," said Dr. Bruce Hanooo of the University of Illinois. "'l'bey eat bl& steaks, drive bl& cars and live in ?tig houses. All of that must change." dl vlded into mulWamUy d wellln&s. SUPERMARKETS MAY be abollahed, replaced by computerized food warehouses. Consumers would telephone orders to a clerk and de- liveries would be made door·to-door by a resularly scheduled truck, eliminat· ing the need todrlveto a supermarket. ·•your c:ooJdes will probably como a retumablejar, "said Muller. Supermarkets and throw.away packages may disappear. Houses and cars will be smaller, the experts say. HANNON, UNIVERSITY of Illinois researcher Seichi Konio·and John G. Muller of the Federal Energy Ad· ministration said insulation of homes probably will be the first major step to save energy. "The end of the supermarket would also mean an end to impulse buying and that itself ls an energy saver,'' said Hannon. To save energy used lo beat water, the ex"ert.s sa,y. bathwbs would bo.cte. sl1ned to the appro)Cimato coatour ol the body to help rcch1eo wute. Hoe water ror washin1 clotbea would W forbidden, or alleut frowned upon. "THE NEW COLD WATEa do· tercents are already beUer." THESE WERE SOME ideas three energy CQMervatlonists predicted for tbe future as the nation becomes energy·consctous. Standard attic insulation may be 12 inches thick instead of six. Windows may have three panes of glass instead of one ol'two, holdinl more heal inside thetiouse. Americans may be forced to eat locally produced products which can bodoliveredinexpensively. Power-boat and auto raclna may be forbidden on 1roundl tho activlUes waste fuel. When th~ changes will occur, and whether they will be voluntary or by government decree, is less clear, they said ln interviews. New houses will likely be smaller, they say. Each room will have its own thermostat. Older houses may be NONPERl~BLE FOODS may come in standardized returnable glass containers. Recardln1 family Ute, Hannon aaid, "The long run soluUon is pretty predjc· table. Thesocletywlll bes;:adoutln· to small communlUes. '1' ere wiU be people~dcrtbesamoroo hoarenot oftbesametmmcdiatefamlly." ·'There are three things that Ameri<-aM do to waste more energy / SAVE TAXES , \ SAVE TIME SAVE AT FIDELITY FEDERAL NOWHERE ELSE CAN YOU FIND All THESE FREE TAX RELATED SERVICES! It's all here at Fidelity Federal ... your convenient One-Stop Savings Center. 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It contains 225 food gift Ideas tor a variety of occa- sions that you con make right In your own kitchen. Full color photographs show you how. Ofte< o'.IOiobllt ...._ lrrlled PJOC>/ IOSll 0<v:. N" ~ Ao.i~ ONv pleolOJ Sonv rot o~ 01 moC ND TRUSTEE FEE ON IRA DR KEOGH ACCOUNTS Start now to reduce your 1977 income taxes by opening a tax-deferred retirement account. By opening your ac- count now. rather than at year end, you'll also defer to)(es on Interest credited to the occount during the entire year l.R.A. (INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS) for Any Employed Person. KEOGH RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS for Any Seff·Employed Person If not already coveced by a qualified retirement plan. set oside up to Sl.500 earned Income .eaph year exempt from current Federal and California Income taxes. No cur- rent tax on Interest earned. either. Set aside up to $7.500 of earned income each year exempt from current federal income taxes and $2.500 of Callfornla state Income tax. Interest earned also exempt from Income taxes until withdrawn in retirement years. 011IER FREE SERVICES EXTRA BONUS: Fl~lty Federal Pays 73/,.% (equal to 8.06% compounded dafty) on any balance I.RA. or Keogh Account • • I AND Atl THESE FREE SERVICES, TDD! Free notarizing free travele~' cheques Fr•• document copying Fr•• Savings Bond redemption Free Operation Safe guard for Identific ation of valuables Save by moll -postag• paid both ways --------. AND WITH SPECIFIED BALANCE ACCOUNTS Free money orders Free collectlon service for trust deed and other notes and leases , Free safe deposit boxes Free checking accounts • Free MoneyGa rd for a check month. and many, many more HIGHEST INTEREST Your savings occount at Fldel- lty Federal earns the highest Interest allowed by law on In- sured savings! 7%% per year 6 yeOt Certtflcote Accounts Sl.000 mlnlroom Anrual 't'leld 8.061.. 7Y2% per year 4 yeor Certificate Accounts Sl.000 minimum Anrual Yield 7.79'1. ' 6%% per yeor per yeor current rate per year 2'/t yeaf ~ate 1 year Certificate PossbOok Accounts Accounts Accounts S5 mlnmum Sl.000 mlnmum Sl.000 mlrW'num Arriual Yleld 5.39'1.." Arroal Yleld 6.981.' Annual Yield 6.72'1. • ·~~~arid lift In occ<>unt IOt one V90f ~ ~ t~ llbltantoal ~ ICf .a1v ~ onCll~ We plan to save you TAX DOLLARS. Let us show you how. , ---.................. _ 21 offices to serve you statewide COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH 1855 Harbor Blvd. 645-4420 • .. •• .. .. . . LM.BPfld What Wastes .Most Time? ' A aurveytaker uked a sizable sampling of exec\ltiv to name the three lblnp that cau1ed them to waste lbe mo.t Ume. Listed they: l. The telephone. 2. Drop.in visitors. 3. Meetings, whether acbeduled or not. Surprised to aee lbe telephone on that roster. Thouabt lt was more of a time saver. Those m ld·work meettnca certainly merit mention, tbou1b. Such 1roup therapy treatment of tense b,uainessmen would be better ad· m lnlatered over breakfast, lunch or after din· ner. If a spider fails to r epair Its web after a rain, that's a good sign there'll be more rain soon, It's said. Castanets, too, are identified as to sex. The treble tone is the female, the base tone the male. Winter 's midday Sahara Desert t em- peratures usually top 135 degrees F. WHALE Again lhe question arises as to whether there has ever been an authenticated case of· the rescue of a man from the stomach of a whale. Know of only one such, and it has been reported here before. Off the Falkland Islands in 1891, a crewman on the whaler, Star of the East, presumably drowned while helping catch a large sperm whale. The following day, he was found inside it. a raving maniac. But the log rep<>rted he had completely recovered within three weeks. How do I know it actually happened? I don't. But in the spring of 1934, the editors of Colliers magazine produced suf- ficient documents to convince themselves and numerous historians that the tale was true. BAYRUM '· Q. "Wh at's bay rum and why do barbers use it as an aftershave?" A. 1t •s rum distilled with bay leaves added. It tends to disinfect minor shaving rucks. It gives a cooling sensation. And it over- rides the smell of alcohol with an even stronger smell or alcohol. No, my dear , l stopped orr not at the bar, but at the barber. Q. "Most modern refrigerators are equipped with special egg drawers. I presume so nothing else stored on top of the eggs will break the shells. right?" A. That. and so the eggs won't absorb other refrigerator flavors. Put an onion in there with them, and all our omelets will wind up with the taste of onion. No other fi sh is said to have as many natural enemies as the herring. Boyd. P.O. Bor 156-0, : I .,_ , , ! . . . .. Deathil Elsewhere NEW YORK CAP> Max Hamllsch, 69. f a th er of co m poser Marvin llamlisch and for 22 years music direc· tor for the Viennese Opera Ball. died Sunday of comphcat1ons follow· mg a heart attack. DALLAS <AP l Manuel Gonzaullas, 84. a Texas ranger widely known as "Lone Wolf" because he often went alone lo put down trouble D~aCla Nod~e• HAU. '>AOIF H HALL, 11•\\•0 ,,.,., F=tb'Vrtrv t) 1UI ~· •\ \uri;l..,...d ttv twoelduQN~r'\ Mt'\ M•r••Fttr\l•offl l oro ("' Mrt. V1ro1n1• Mllv of "''°"'(!t ,.,.,..., Voo, ~ ~ Jo\..-pn P H•lt Jr ot ~W'rff"'WI'\ P,.1'1n ,.,..'#n 'Q,_ll,,()f f\1tdrt t'\ (,r hl'P\•~ .. '"''"' .. WPdnt'\dot-.i I I 00 AM .\t A , '°"\tU"l C•m•t•ry () ( Ol"lnic"lr t \flVl'I" Htlh Mof'it.loArydr,.t.llW"' OA lllC'll ~U,Aftit ( GARE V O.,.\..,t"'J _. .... tJ•~U41rY U 1'11 ~~ I \~'"° Y•t'J ~ fwor hu\~ M totf\.•I l G•r1v ~ 'l"W\ 1n old oil field towns, died Sunday of cancer. BALTIMORE CAP> - Jessica Cleveland, 57, daughler·in·law of Presi- dent Crover Clcvc!and. died after falling and striking her bead on the sidewalk near her home Friday rught. MINNEAPOLIS CAP) -The R ev. Arnold Lowe, 88, author and re- tired clergyman, died in Tuscon, Ariz. D Palh No•i~e• o• CP'Hl\tl,ln Burt•I TruJr\Ottv ""' ~ o6 AM "' SI Kl11...., CAl"°ll< Chur<n Ml>· \ton "'•10 ln••rmertt A\.(ens1on Ctm•lfry 81tt0GIS PEGGY HUGHES BRIDGES, N\\•d -•Y F•IM"1Wry 1l 1'11 S"" I\ \Ut1i11Vf>(J bv ¥r P'MJ'\bitl'\d Or Jttc.k R 8ndl'Jflt' cww ~ 'J~r Sr.ctqoe>,. two d•1iH~t\l,.r J.tn .,nd o .. ". 8r•OQe1. PAr,.nlt M, •"Cl M'\ W•lte-r 8 t-4UQ"'f"' "'~H Orort•_.,, 'our \1\t•r, f uner•I M"f'Vtc~ w ilt bf" ,.to at 1 00 PM °" T~y •' Mount of 011""•' 1..ul¥r.tn "'"''<"' M•~ .. ·Ot'I Vlf"IO Int.-"" ,.., .. "' I(•"''°" ftrfortn c.tro11n., 0 Co" f"W)f l.•O~t11ll\Mortu.uyd1rtt(tOr\ HAllTIH •HH L YOIA HA Al 11'f, re\idenl nl Hunh"'Jlon S...:h C...t•t...,.1• Ph~d Coast St dents Honore AL.LERGY "FOU N ~ATtotJ .!{ Af-\ERICA ORANGE COUNTY Forty-one 1tudent1 from the o-ra.n,e Cout area have been eamed to the honor role for scholaatlc achievement at California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obllpo. Tbey in· elude: From SEAL BEACH: Michael Cudahy, Richard Manners and Paul Thometz. UC' Essay Contest From a>a ONA DEL From IRVINE: Su.tan LAGUNA: Le MAB: Frederick Moore. Cullen. Hernandez.. Prom COSTA MESA: From M I SSI ON From LAG J ames Cole, Charles VIE JO: Thomas Kruse, NIGUEL: Oark J Corlcb. Judith Leitner, Cynthia Tedford and Daniel Penney and Catherine Campbell and Cathy '1lnlln. Tweedie. La.rryCross. From SAN JUAN From WESTM N • From EL TORO: CAPISTllANO: Steven T°l:R : Kathe lnel .....i • Milklos. Petnacc:l. · PamciaKegebetn From SOU TR From FOUNT I N From ~GTON V A. L LE Y : J t I e EO PEOPLE ITC+tll/6 'FOR w BEACH: Nancy Bester, G Alt Herdrick' and L da Susan Johnson, Cynthia rove orney W 1k K uno, Dav id Mu bs, r-•a•er~ ...... ,... ... .r,:=~-=·=-==9l="====~ Mark Rlef, Karla Stein· Ge• ... Top Post bru1ge and Nancy ae Weller. Eric Laulerer or F r om LA G U N A Garden Grove bas been TRI: BE ACH: Debra Berg, selected as the new pre-on Read;ng Slated ~':!!::::~!:~:. and sident of the Orange .., County City Attorneys ~=::~~~~=~~-I From NEWPO R T Association. - "Readina That Ha& unde/graduate and BEACH: Jeffrey Dyer, Olberoffic;ers selected Mos t Influenced My graduatestudents. Elizabeth Marr, J on are Thomas W. Allen of Life" will be lbe toplc of Euays of 1,000 to 1,500 Olsen, Pamela Pattison, Los Alamitos, vice presi· a student essay contest words m~ be submitted Gregory Prechel, Elaine dent; R . K. F ox of at UC Irvine. The con· to the refetence desk of Robertson, David Smit~. Fullerton. treasurer, and' test, sponsored by the lbe tJCI general library Jan Wooley and Robm James G. Rourke of Friends of the UCI by Al'ril 4. WinOera will Chard. ' Tustin,secretary. Library.~opentoallre-be aooouoced.i at the .~---------------------------.:......._ ___ .::=:=:=::==::==::t:~~======~~~~~!' gisteredUClstudents. Friends of th.~ UCI Cash prizes of $125, $7S Library Annual Awlll"d$ and $50 will be awarded Banquet May-2. · to the three top entries in More in.formation and sepa rate divisions fq.c a complete statement of · .... ~s~ rules may be ob-pwp P • ks tain~ from the re-I C ference desk or the UCI general library. Leaders Officers for the Orange Coast CtJapter No. 26 of Parents With o ut Partners were installed at a recent dinner and· dance in Huntington Beach. The new officers arc Ken Cray, pre:.1dent; Bill Glennon. executive vice president; Dani Bus h, treasurer, and B eve rl y Ru s h, secretary. Future meetings will t ake place monthly on Wednesdays al the Costa Mesa Country Club. The chapter welcomes new members. For more in· formation call 546-5788. Lecture Set O n Seaweed Colorful an d little· known facts about the sea will be discussed by marine scientists from UC Irvine in a Friday luncheon lecture series beeinning Friday at the Balboa Yacht Club in Corona d el Mar. Dr. Peter Dixon, pro- fessor of biological sciences at UCI , will speak at the first meet- ing on "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Seaweed." Admlulon-dlJOOUnt coupom, FREE. et ALPHA BETA , FEB.17-21 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER THU-FRI: Spm-1 Opm SAT-SUN-MON: Noon-10pm Id a There's an easy way to pick up an extra $156 every month without doing any extra work. If you work 1n Orange County, you probably drive your car an average of 20 miles to work. That costs you $167.20 every month to get to work and back. If there was a way you Savings Chart $11.00 a month. That's all you hc:ive to pcy, no matter how far you go 1n Orange County. The alternative means of trans- portation we've been talking about is the bus. Before you turn the page, let's tak abbut the bus for a moment Oraige County Transit District buses are modern. clean, MILES YOU SPEND NOW FROM YOU COULD SAVE I air-cond1t1one~ vehicles designed for efficiency and comfort. When you take the bus. you can read, work, talk or just daydream WORK MONTH ,_ --10 $ 83.60 --20 167.20 ,_ -30 250.80 40 334.40 >------50 4 18.00 YEAR, _,..""OJ'!!~ ! YEAR 1003.20 I l 2.60 I 871 .20 2006AO 71 56.20 ~ 1874.40 3009.60 239.tnf _[ 28!7.60- 4012.80 323.40 I 3880.80 -------501 6.00 401.00 I 4884.oo on your wc:iy to work without having to fight I traffic or worry about a parking place. You arrive refreshed, rested and relaxed . And when you ride the could keep $156 20 of that amount OCTD bus you're helping every month and still get to work ~~~;..a~ to reduce air pollution and back conveniently. would you be and conserve our interested? rapidly dwindling energy Of course, you. might not live resources. exactly 20 miles from work. The Pay yourself for being above chart shows the cost and smart. Call OCTD for savings for other distances. Just complete information. t ind the mileage closest to the one-There .m_ an easy way distance between your home way to get ahead without and work and look across that column driving yourself. We to find your cost and possible thought you'd like savings. to know. Surprised? You shouldn't be. The cost of operating a car has been escalating rapidly for several years. Our alternative means of getting there only costs SO<t a day. orl!~it~~~~PM weekdays \nd 8 AM to 5 PM weekends. • £11't•l"t c;..,.y ON' 0 ktqf"llPr All1Vtn 0..,.,.., Oil"Mh Mr 4f'Wt Mt\ Ru'Ji.>lplt c. PO.§•d~I ••o \ \, ... , fl•rt••r1 ~· \o\lf'O .,._r,, ol ,,,.,. ol '"" A119•t\ C.Onwnt M•nlo P•r• C• ftowry .... W ....... \d•v "' I 00 PM •• C)'C.on"°r U-H•ll• Morlu•• v M• ., •w•v """'°'"'rv 1' 1•11 •1 t~ "q• ot 11 -------------------------------------------------T--------------' •~•" ~ 1\ \•,nttWd by two SOt'\ Alt~ M•rtltt and Lovo H•rt1n. J" • •••e qt~nttd"9'uqfl1'1'\ onr qr,.nd .. on nnto . .. I • .. \. . .. ,. . ., .. J . .. .. .. .. .. •• .. .. .. •• •• •• •• •• •• •• , . • • f i )" f! .. . ~ ·~ •• i . :) ., .. , 'AClffC YllW MtMOa lAL , ... Cemetery Mortuary Chaoot 3500 Pacific View Drive NewPOfl Ca1tlorn1a 644-270(\ McCO•MICK MOUUAllH Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 IALTZ-IHGUOH JUMUALHOMI Corona del Mar 673-9<450 Costa Mesa 646·2424 HU.llOAOW4Y MO•TUAIY 110 8foadwav Cost-a Mesa 642·9150 SMITH tvntlLL L.AMI WlSlCU .. CHA'K 427 E. 17th St Costa Mesa • 646--4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway SantaAna * 547"4131 SMITMI' MOITUAIY 827 Mein St. Hunllngton Beach 63M~39 PllKP4MllT COf.ONIAL 'VHl lAL HOMI ~ qr••C9ranct\Of1 Al\O \U,.-.tflY .. d b'r two orot,,.n. Ca<I <,e1i,,., Rao.rt ~""" fovr U\t@r\ Edttf\ John,on Altri- (l~l•nd f ''""' C•'''°" """Manie J~""°" V1\.ftl't1CM1 will t')lll Of'I T~\-d.ty '""'"""' IS trom. 00 PM IO l .lO PM \lfllrv1c,.., on WftdnA.,a4y FtbruMy ••.at 10 00 AM Sm!O• \ C."•P"I wit" llev B•rt Ormand oltlrnll•nq tn1•rmer11 to IOllO¥t Al Good SheOll .. rd Cemttery In ll•u of ftowfln. f11m11y rNJue\t' dOna. 11an, 10 W1>•~r <11.,.n.,.. 8aD11st Church Ml•<lon•rv '""" ~m1tt'l s MorhMry dtr•<tor\. f'Oltdlt ELEANOR S PORTER, retiO.nt of Cosl• M•sa, C..tlfonua PH••CI •way onFebrUMYIJ 1'11 ~IBUNIYedbv her 'IOn !><OU Po<le< ot Lo• Anqetn. Ca. Prt•ale t•mllv -v•c.H 10 be nrtd Rev Tom Hamilton offlClatlnq 8•11 9roedw•v Mortu•rv d trtctor\ ..,19UO "OSAOA IANOlltlONI JEANHli (ANOEASONI POSADA, Pl\sed ... av on F~r ... rv tO, 1'77 •• Sl•ntord Unl¥ers1ly HOR>ll•I •lier • tonq 111~•• ol <.,,or sr.. IS wrvt 119d by~ hv\be ... Tony Pl>s..S., Arpel- Aereo Uk. Call. Cotomllla Soulll Amorlc• •l'IO suNIVf'd by ·oarenl• Goodw in and E1199n1e AnMr'IOn of I""'"'· C•llfornla; 1lster J11d., Hun~rwd ol 0.11tel•y. C•llfornl• bfolller J "'1er And9r'IOn of t'ffwool1 B•acll Catitornl• Gr•du•t• ol Rlor"de HIQI> S<l\oot University ot Wisconsin •I Mlldlson, 9rM1u•te ot Un1ven.lty of Olllforn1a at 8er~eto. S.rvitn ,...ti be prlva1• F•mily WO· ~'" In Heu ol •-.~. dOnellons may be Made lo Tl\9 ,...,.rl~n c.nc ... 5oclel.,. . SMITH CLAltA. SMITH, -••m of Hunt· lnvton 11Mc11, ca111orl!I•. PHffd ... ,., f'•bruer., 1c, 1'11411eoe114 v•rs. Silt•• lut11I-b'f ~ hUtWM c:;,.l'!et M. Smith; two brOlhft's Ct-u St•rr 9f Wllllams Loe, erUI•" Co!11mbla: Larry S!«r Qf "9dondo, WMllll\flOfl; two tlt19" I!,,.~ Qf FfttM, Ca.; Oorh !.. IAuMl>Ufy of 9elclwlll '""· Ce. Vll!lllltlon on T~ hbt',..ry 15, lrom 4,00 to • 30 ll'M 8nd Wedlle~cs.ty "•t>rvarv 1•troma·JO AM tot.JO 'M *' Smith'\ _,., ..... SeNICn Of\ TIN•~ City .. et>n.trr H et 2 00 PM el $mllh't ~·'1111 with ltt11 TllolMt W OW•IOtl Mlklalfjo -ACIKIA lt•bollall I.~ N• '" .. HumlnQIOll ee ... 11 ACll ... 1N1lllleere" Wiil 1:19 "'""be'l ef OM OOd fl'tll .. t l..od09 He "9 lnl ... ,.,,.111 Wiii 7801 Bois. Ave Weit minster 8~3525 o.... .,. ., M•lroHAllClty ~ ............. 11111 ~.,.. ______ ....,-_.,, t Allllllelm Sl'llllll'IMorllMry•f'9Ct«S • . )• ... ~-­.~-... ... the penthouse ROBERT'S offers the hmllless "PENTHOUSE~ The "PENTHOUSE" a plush. super comfortable seaung group with conlempo1ary styling and plump fringed pillow~ The comb1nat1ons possible are limited only by your 1mng1na11on. Corners. armless units. and omans crente conversation areas 1n a variety of forms. squares. rectangles, and L's. Find out hy more people ijre buying modular sealmg ... at ROBERT'S. l Located In Orange County, ROBERT'S has 40.000 sq. ft. of fuality furniture, lighting and accessories prov1d1ng you with quality at truly affordable prices . ' ' ., 1 ' I TAX SALE SA VE s200.s400 I.ALDWIN PIAMOS-Ol•ANS FACTOIY FIMAMCIMG ' . ,Gigi Mating? WhtUe Captured aa Baby SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Califomta eray whale captured as a baby and kept for a year before beinl returned to sea has been found apparently mat· lng off Mexicb. marine acientilta re- port. The whale was named Gisi while at San Diego's Sea World marine park in 1971 and early 1972. THE SECOND CALl.FORNIA gray ever reported in captivity, she was beUeved the only one ever to survive two months in captivity. But whether she could live again in her natural en· vironment was a subject of dispute. whale and later lost at soa. At the time of her release Gill weithed 14,000 pound& aad wu 2'1·feet lon1, compared to c,obo pounds and a lensth ot 18 feet when captured ln Ba- ja California's Seammona Lqoon at the age ol three or tour months. A half.dozen tlmea Callfomlana sailing along the wintor mlaratlon route of Lbe whales from the Bcrlns Sea to Baja California th9uSht they found Gigi but mariile btoloatsts were unconvinced. DAIL V PILOT ,4f Cholera Down SENIOR CITIZENc SACRAMENTO (AP) 0 f All -.,, -The waterfowl kill by a 1 ow f avian cholera ll down 18 Parcla•••• 1liptly UUa wiuter, aaya $.4Vl OH All PUlCH.4SlS ev ICCO ... IMG A tb. C~ •• Depart· MEMIU Of OU• SEHIO• CITlltNS SAVINGS vuu PUN AT NO con TO vou. meot ol and Game. RENTALI • AU Prt·PtW II Pro1re•1 MoHre4 Spokesman David , •• ,. Dick aald about 15,000 bird.I bave died of the diaeaae since mid· November, with s.ooo of the duths occurtna on : ::.=. • ,...,, the North Coast. ._ ___ _ oliege Pharmacy ll•' 111114 ,,,, • 'fl •.•l '" lJ•''l'olf't\ '1t lo I \t \0 I\,.. QUALITY lftlUrGnce· at reasonable prices! Yates Music Center Phototraphs taken in a natural hls· tory expedition from Whittler College were used to identify Gigi from mark· ings lelt by monitoring equipment. A GREAT, SQUARE pat.ch on the whale's back -left by a radio transmitter, Sea World said -was clearly visible along with other mark· ings from devices secured to lbe MARINE SCIENTISTS told re· porters Monday that Gigi has been found of Mexico's Baja California ac· companied by another whMle that could be ''her consort." Now, the scientists say, phota> graphs taken by students show the whale about 3S feet long and weighing about 30,000 pounds. AUTO HOME OWNERS sso.ooo ~~~. 5173. s100.ooo •• ~~~': 5363. ............. ... S..' J Ii"- ~-yo. I•• .. ,. a•r»t,.,.. ....... ~ 61 '-"'°" I.a.cl -640.t OZO 0,.. I 0-6 • MOL Ir Fri. I 0-t "She's about right to be looking for boyfriends, 0 lhe scientists said. MA ... 0 '821 ........ s116. ,.., ... • ~~0~~4>~ ..... ~~ \\~ ... ~V"-~~ \1 ff,~ \t-~· ~~· ~· ~~ o•~~\~ u Snail Fan Forgiven By Wife LONDON (APl Chris and Debbie Hudson, whose marriage foundered his Jove or snails. were reunited. ready Lo give it another COLLl61 STUDIMT • SIM6LI O~I R 20 • s1so . PHYIAJt STORE KEEPERS FACTORIES APARTMENTS CONTRACTORS YACHTS LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS EXTENDED CRUISING TO MEXICAN WATRS COMMERCIAL BOATS ~~fit_ •• tt \\ ... ~~ ~~~ ..-~ o•~~~ ~ es~.~~dot.you bring me BOB PALEY HORTHOC-546•320.5 ~~~~o~n:sk~~a~lss?h'~ & ASSOC, INC_ .SOUTHOC -642·650.0 a~ '\.~~ft, ... ~ft... This handy device " ~ ~ ~ ~ calculates the probable threw his arms around _ _:_~:=::::'.::~~~~~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~ his bride at London's Q..\'f, .-Jl.. ~ current market value of ~1-~~-..I!\~ your home based on when you 1 f<'"'"' ... ~ bought it and what you paid for it. \f. t,"-Turn it over and it allows you to compute for yourself the amount of cash you may .-~--.-.---. be able to borrow through a A 1ul\11 Newport Equity Funds· ~~\\':f 11·,~.\1 '' arranged equity loan. \ ' ' Whether you're looking for a loan or not. if you'd like to have a Home Market Value Calculator, ask a Newport Equity Funds Loan Officer for one. Or mall the coupon. We'll send you one. No obligation. Newport Equity ~unds ,Inc. ,Licensed Broker WE'RE CLOSE TO YOU! 620 Nev1port Gunter Drive. Newport Beach (92660) (7 14) 644-8824 25283 Cabot Road . Laguna Hills (92653) (714) 830-5700 • • e e e e • e • • • • • e ••• • ••••• e • e • • • • I e ••• • • e • I •• I e e ••• Mail Toclay NAME STREET ••• NEWPORT EQUITY FUNDS, INC. 620 Newport Center Drive Newport Beach (92660) CITY ZIP __ _ U Send me your calculator. -: Have a Loan Officer call me, too PHONE 1 __ _ OP·1 Heathrow Airport and reported the bathtub at home still held 200 of his favorite creatures. H IS 20· YEAR ·OLD wife, who fled on a tour of the Middle East 10 days ago "to get away from those s melly snails," announced firm - ly : "We arc going on a honeymoon to Malla to start all over again. We did not have a honey- moon before because Chris was working with the snails." After their wedding in October. Hudson, 22 , famed in snail circles as the trainer of Geronimo, the world 's largest gastropod, had promised to give up his obsession and settle down. BUT ON FEB. 2 he ad- mitted lo newsmen that he signed a contract for a series of television ap- pearances about snails and it had been ''the last straw for Deborah." The snails in the bath? "IT IS THE rainy season in their life cycle and running the shower on them Is the only way to get them out of their s he lls.·· Hudson ex· plamed hastily. "If Deb- bie objects. I will have to put them up outside.·· Hud son . of H ove. Sussex. became a snail ce l ebrity after Gcroinmo, a giant 11 1 2- inch. H><>und 4 "'2-0uncc African snail, was en- tered in the Guinness Book o f Records . Geronimo died last year. Cr ime Fight SACRAMENTO CAP) -A $250,000 federal grant to fight trans it system crime in San Francisco wa s a n - nounced by Gov. Ed- mund Brown Jr. r-, Ski l11av11a/1 Eas1-1 our days, three nights from $53.00 11rsK1 HYRLA3J J . ~~ 4JI!!! J, ~·­CALIF:ORNla We're easy k> rake. ! SAVE ON STEEL BELTED RADIALS AND POLYES I ER CORD TIRES . . • ·. NOW THROUGH FEBRUARY 26 Size 878-13 E78-14 F78·14 Size BR78-13 ER78-14 FR78-14 GR78-14 HR78-14 GR70-15 GR78-15 HR78-15 JR78-15 . LR78-15 $21 .95 $24.95 $27.95 $29.95 $30.95 $33.95 $32.95 $34 .95 $46.95 $51.95 $55.95 $61.95 $68.95 $64.95 $64.95 $69.95 $71.95 $73.95 $1.72 $1.82 $2.23 $2.37 $2.53 $2.73 $2.59 $2.79 $2.06 $2.47 $2.65 $2.85 $3.04 $3.05 $2.90 $3.11 $3.27 $3.44 GENERAL POLY-JET Now Only $ 95 • Smooth riding polyester cord • Wide -flat tread for traction size A78-13 tubeless blackwlll. plus S1.72 Federal Excise Tax • Deep -wide voids that resist hydroplaning Rain Check: Should our supply of some 11zu or Imes run lhort dunng lhls event, we wilt honor dny oroer& placed now lor future delivery al the adv•rt•ted pnce GENERAL DUAL- STEEL RADIAL Now Only $ 95 site BA78-13 tubeless Whll&- well. plus $2.08 Federal Excise Tu • Radial·ply construction for long mileage •Two steel belts for Impact resistance • Smooth riding polyester cord construction BRAKE RELINE ALIGNMENT SPECIAL ., I .j ,. ' We adLust caster. camber l0&1n. and toe~ul settings to car manufacturers sPeC• fle1t 10ns Sooner or later,you'll own Generars CHARGErT AT GENERAL Prl~ • •l!own II 0.'*91 Tire 810f'lt. CoinPttttlvety Otlced at Independent ct.lltfl '11911Yill0 "' Gtnertl llgn. .. COAST GENERAL TIRE .............. . 2855 Harbor llYcL Costa Mesa Phone 540·5710 646-5033 Biting Into Toy Sales Toy s hark model called, of all things, "Jaws," had more than three million s ales in 1976 and is looking for more this year. Along with Slime , Electro Man. Zogg the Terrible, Mr. Muscle, Mean Machines, Power Shifters, Sizzlers II and Delay Sounds IJnreasonable DEAR PAT: t ordered a turntable, stylus and 12 cassettes last November Crom Discount Sound in Rockville, Md. I enclosed a check for $383 with the order and requested that if the products couldn't be sent that my check be returned. I have written to the company several times, but never did receive a response. M.G .. Irvine FoUowing an A YS contact, Discount Sound, a mall-order house, agreed to ship your order im· mediately. It could not explain the Jong delay or wby your letters bad not been answered. If you wish. you can Issue a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission, 11000 Wilshire, West Los Angeles, CA 90025. This transaction appears to have b~n a viola· tion or the F'TC's current mail·order regulations, which requfre a mail order company to rm an order within 30 days or offer to provide the customers with adequate cost·frtt means, such as a postage· paid card, for cancellation notices. Upon receipt or this notice. the customer aho is given the option of requesting a refund. Clteckfng on Piao~ N~ DEAR PAT: r have an unlisted telephone number and for obvious reasons t didn't have it printed on my personal checks. When I use my checks to pay for merchandise, groceries and to get cash. the clerks always ask for my number. I ex- plain that lht> number is-unlisted and that I don't wish to pro\'1de 1t. They then inform me that my cheek cannot be aecepted. When I remind them that some people don't PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOVS aUSINISS NAME HATIMINT '" .. tottow1nq lk''\Ot'I t\ cto•IM) bu\t ~'II\., PA T '> ~WCA\( 1111 H•rbo< ltl•<I CO'\I'"-'"' CA ,,.71 P .Hr1(1l f ow•rd P4~t•rd 2211 .. ••bo• 81Yd CO\I• ~ CA ...,.,, LOV! Al FIRST SIGHT CllVW.Oftew' VIOfO'MW OfftM MOii£ • p • .., ... • T....,.. • Sk "'9 • V-pe S.·~·on •Tr-• o...no •C•- Actml•• • 997-5400 '°' I. c..,._ ..... Or-. A .. Wl~o warriors Mazinga . Raydeen and Zython, it's on dis play at the American Toy Fair in New York. For those who wonder, Barbie and Ken are at the show too. Most new toys will go on sale in August or Sep- te mber. Got a problem ·1 Then wnte to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape. getting the a11swers and act ion you need to solve meqw lle:. 111 government and bust· ness Mail your que:.t1ons to Pat Dunn At Your Service. Ora11ge Coast Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Ml!~a . CA 92626 Include your t elephone number T he column appear:. daily except Saturdays even have :1 phone. they either reluctantly accept my check or ask for my number at work. Can a store legally refuse to accept a check for the Jack of a phone number -any number? J .K .. Fountain Valley The Offict> of Consumer Affairs tells A VS that there is no legal require men~ for a person to provide bis phone number in order to cash a check. The Orangt> County B4ltter Business Buruu's spokesman pointed out tbat a merclaut )Jas the right to request a person's phone &umber ($' con· tact purposes in case tbe check ''bounces." Although the BBB has "no po111tlon on thls matter one way or the other.'' It did atate that H the customer does not care to go alQllg wltb the merchant's request for a ph~ number, he bas the option ot either paying casb or going elsewhere. Paclllc Telephone Co. 's spokesman said that Ma BelJ leaves the choice of divulging an unlisted phone number entirely up Lo the telephone sub· scriber. One should remember, however, that an edra monthly charge Is involved in having an un- listed number. Tbtte is no definitive answer to this problem. Just as there Is no law reqlllring one to provide a phone number to cash a check, neither ls tbere any law problbltlng the merchant from refus.._ to cash a check U a phone number ls not made available. Matcla Tip May Help Boatn- DEAR PAT: ls there any way a person can water-proof matches on a do-it-yourself basis'! I'm fixing up a First Aid kit for our boat. anc:l I think this item should be included. L.T., Balboa The moat Inexpensive way to water·proof mate.Ms a. to dJp them ln thin naU polish. DlP one at a Ume or lD small batches. Th.la information comes from the Glrl kout Handbook, a wealth orllarorma- tlon ota inexpensive crafts and safe&y materials. Old·faahioeed kitchen or wood -match~ would be moat rellable. Keep them ln a small tln box along with a autp ot sandpaper for sure striking wbea you need to ue them. ,,..., b\,I\•,,.'\\ '' <.onckl<.•#d bv a'\ tn·I------------;--------------;-------------. 1"' ,,\hl f P•\r1c\. ldw•rd P,uyrd ff\ 't ''•' .. *"""""' w•\ t1 wd w1tf\ t~ C ~u"tV C••'• .,., O••nor '°""'" on J•ru1•r• 11 H11 ~ltl• "4.bn,twd Or ... CO.Mt O.•lf l'1101 ,, .. ~1.e.1s n,,.,, >A11 PUlJUC NOTICE PUBUCNO'ftCE PUBUCNOTICE PUBUCN011CE l'ICTIT10US auSINESS NAMa STATEMENT TM lelloWing ~§00\ Is doing bu\t nus•s T.lllL TllEES ltEALTY. 2SllS lllvenclell Ot' .. El Toro. CA . .,430 Jame' Sylvnl t r leaon 2Sl1S Rlven~ll Ot' .. El Toro CA . .,6JO T"I' l>U""H' Is tondu<lecl bv an 1n- dlv1du•I J..,..,. s. Lta«I Tiit\ Sl•IM>tlll ••S flltd w1lll Ille County Cieri< ol Ora11oe County o~ '•bru1ry II, 1911 "'71161 Pobll•lle<I Oranqe Coa•t Delly Piiot. '•b. •s.n .-Mard •l,l.1917 PICTITIOVS auSINISS NAM•STATIMUCT 51'/.11 TM totl-1"9 ~"°" Is oolno busl· nenas: N!Wf'OltT aEACH CONTRACT FURNITURE. 1130 w. c .. st H•y., Newpart t e.cll CA. '2'60 Elll•I J Ham,.,..s. n s E. 111,11 n • 56, co.ia Mfta, CA m n Tlll1 bv~-Is <OlldOCttd bf an I"" dlvldllal EIMIJ~ Tiii\ $\a .. ,,_t Wft llleel Wll' lllo C.U11ty CIHlt ol <><anoe CH!lft tf .i.1111¥y 21."" ~t: Pullll"*f Ore<.-Coett o.ll' 1'11411 Jett 21. aM 1"911. 1,1, IS, tf11 f9.7 JohS Support ---l Sought · Bill's Sponsor Looks to Co-,igress, Carter W ASHINOTON CAP)!... A chief spoo.sor 1ay1 h •s tryiAf &o line up support tor Con1t'ess 1 ap- proval ol the conlroveraiaJ Hum· pl\rey·Hawkinl bill Wa sprinf, whether Preaident Carter de- cldea to support it or not. But at ~ same Ume Rep. Aucwstus F. Hawkln.s <D·Callf.> Said be is lryinJ lo set all the SUP· port. from the Caner adml.nist.ra· tion be can "ao there is no con- fusion.'' The Humphrey-Hawkins bill would set up a framework for over·all planning of government proirama with a target of reduc· inf adult unemployment to 3 per- cent in four years. If a variety of federal aid to spur private employment and assist depressed areas was not sulfi. cient to get the jobless rate down. federal jobs would be provided as a "last resort" at low wage scales to persons unable to find work elsewhere. Plant Displayed A scale model of one of Holmes & Narver's copper plants is on display at the South Coast Plaza. Costa Mesa, through Friday. The exhibit or the Anaheim firm's plant is part of activities planned by the Orange County Engineering Council for Na ti on al Engin~rs Week, Feb. 20·26 IBM 1tln• Sult LOS ANGELES CAP> -A U.S. District Court Judge has ruled in favor of IBM Corp. in a massive antitrust action brought by a California computer firm. The ruling of a verdict in favor of IBM by Judge Ray McNichols came after a jury had heard three months of evidence from the plaintiff. CalComp Corp. of Anaheim. which had sought $102 million in damages. Had the ruling been in favor of CalComp. federal law provides for the plaintiff lo be awarded treble damages, or $306 million. CalComp contended in the suit ( TAKING STOCK J that IBM had lllecally lowered prices of certain computer pro- ducts in an eUort to monopolhe the market. Drougltt DraVJ• E.,a WASHINGTON <AP> Momentum is building in Congress for some sort of major govemmental action to deaJ with the problems of continued drought in the American West. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey CD· Minn.> has urged Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland to order a study or the impact of heavy snow and frigid winds in the Midwest and East and lack of water-producing snowpacks an the West. At the same Ume. 20 House members f'rom the Northwest, northern Great Plains and Rocky Mountain states wrote President Carter to urge immediate dis· aster relief pJans, full assess- ments of crop damage and or power shortages in areas de- pending on water.generated elec- tricity. AccountaRt• Meet Helen Shepherd, CPA. partner in Touche Ross & Company, will speak at Thursday's meeting of the Orange County Chapter of the American Society of Women Ac · countants. The meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the Health and Hap- piness room of the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana. Gues ts are welcome and may make reserva· lions by calling Norma Hartman at M'i-2284. Credit Fee Ba11 Dia SACRAMENTO CAP) - Legislation barring California banks from imposing minimum Over 1~he Counter NASO Listin9s Pak<O Park' H Pauley P Pttrl M t Pa EntPf" Pn1IOG PPP" aw PPfr\n H Pet roll I P<lllbOn P•ec!ml A P1nkrtn Pion H18 P l\llt•n Pos~1\ C.O :~'r0Nc P Bennet PulO C•o Oval tnn" R4t0Pn Pr Rahall C Ravtnm Qa.,mno R•tOQ EQ RoaCI E• RGOln M Ro•EIOll Rou\• R u-. Stow Sadl1~r Son Dal Set\ OPll ~''"" " Sev•nUP !>haw C1> Snap Tl' SoltdSI Sc s Ca1w~1 SwGs Cp SwEI Sv 1•i. 1 Slanovn ::-; :.•: ~::n R:;i~ 131 .. 14', Stntq St, 11 • 1R1 • Strolwb Cl ll ' •) ..... ~, El 181• IQ > TIME' OC u •. 1) T~moa; 44 •S T~Ch Pol> 11 17 Tl'(um P \ S'-"> f flnn4nt ll • l• T1tnv Co i'l • 141 • TO\C l)(p 7 1 3') Trd n.O 0 1 , 1 Trt(O Pd 1 • 1~ Trttn OG •7 •1 "> Tymv.r 10 10 , Ty\on I' 1'-.. 1' Un McG1I ; > !" ~~ ~~~ln IS 16') UV a Bk, IJ6 141 UoP~" P 1' • 1S • Vafl11>y c,, o 111 fl • V•nD Air ll', lC1 1 V..)ttC~ !t 1'11, 10 .. v .. 1cro '"J • _. VdN 8n~ ,, • ~ ._ WctO\ Pu 14 I\ W\h N C. :', '1 o1 W,.bb At-a • 1 11.,, W(·coOvf f: ~· : :;;3~,tn W ~'• ~~~; ~:::n~"~ ?01' J01 • W'\tn M IQ ,j • q• o1 WP\tmo U ,.,., Wdwr(j L ~~'11 ~;~.! ri~~: r: monthly finance cbarcea on crtdlt cU'dl bu been killed ln tts first test ID thls senion '11 the Callfomla Jegialature. Then 1t'e!'e only two votel foe the measure in the Senate Busi· ness and Profesaiona Committee. It needed ftvo to stay alive. Sen. John Dunlap (D·Jiapa). who introduced tho blU. quoted Sylvia Porter whose column ap. pears in the Daily Pllot, u say· inc banks across the nation would follow the lead of New York 'a Citibank, which cbaraes a minimum of 50 cents a month for ·lta Master Charge. Dunlap said, that would re- quire people who pay their bills on time to subsidae those who don't. TUITt 'em Off -Or Else WINDSOR LOCKS. Co nn . (AP> "GOTCHA!" -in bright red letters -reads the small slips of paper left on the desks or workers who foraet\otum off lights. "There are 5,000 workers here and every one of them has access to an energy plug and a switch. How and what happens is up to the individual," Richard Ryan, engineer at the Hamilton Standard plant here, says. Ryan. who has designed technological systems to s ave energy since h e became engineer in 1970, estimates that energy con- servation will save his company more than $1 million this year alone. I 1 IJps and Downs """"' CIOb8cn AnatQ•'-B•ot~ f , ACf'IO (., lnlt w<t Inc llov•< Co 5'>cur Ph Ku\lm EI Samii Ci; P,nr1I Co s...1 ... p, Olbtf'I A• Crtttrl ~'" Cycuron Jpt~ro Cl> A QfHCO Cenllll' P Kf'M• Ori Trf'-t\ 1,1 ~1~1~"19,• o-.ct~ 0 11t W ash Hm Cl.v ke Ct> SubMu Nttmt• Dari Dr11 A•r n,1 UP'> La\I C.hQ PU 1 • "Ii Uu 41 1 1J1• -1 .-Uo 1\ 0 7 \.I" ~ • Up 19 t 17 ~ ... 2' ~ UP 16i I ' • uo u l 1\ ? • 1';, Up 10 Q ' • _. • UD 10 t ) • • UP 10 \ 1 .. • Up 100 i'. • Uo qt I• • • Up kt 11 • 1 '• Up ~ ') 11 • -1' • Up 1 " I• -•.-, UO bCf 1"' ,,. 1• UP bfl J _. •..-, VP b I ... '• Uo b 1 .. '• Uo "'1 ... •.1 Up ,, I -•. Up b r H'.1 .6.. 1 i UP 6 \ I" -•,. UO f) t .f', -,.._ Up 6 :l 7' ~ .. '.. uo \ ti J•.. • 1At Ur> '> ~ DOWNS l.d\I I Chq -11. 1\ .. tSD1tQ S1mnnory ~ s fl 1 8 Pie S.w M1Cr0dl M •nMt l ASG Ind W•cm In B4!1co P,,1 B•rkly8>0 E 8rl9111 T• M•rk IV Fa<lllll N '" 10•· ,, . 1 I .. -1'. -1A• Pel 0 11 1S' 011 I) Q 0 11 10. OH 101 011 q I Off I l OH 8 ) 011 8 0 NEW YORK IAPl -MO\I a<llv1• O•-r· lhe·COUfllP< \loth\ SUC>Ohed "" NASO N•mP llol..me 81d A\ht><I CM PnilOG 101 600 13 13 • Am Finl . 91 900 lJ ., 1)' Am Exo • 8-' 000 16"'• 31 • AnMu:. 8 7!>.lOO 2P. ,, • Dorch C 611.400 II II • R•n-Oro ~ 800 1 , 7'• Comb In• I' l>S. •00 u 14 , 0.8Hr l>I JOI) 1•16111 16 Cmol Aul \ll SOO H H , S.-c Pac '3.400 16 • 71'. •• q ... 1() , 11 .... t2 • tl J •• 14 • '• IS 16 17 . ,, •• 101 10 1'11 II Jlldlf•f><l'<I ~"""' Unth•"9fd Tot .i I""'" New t\1qn, N~w tOW\ Total s•ln • 114 n 1 S?t ll ... 14 I> IS b •H.400 111 ~~,,.,.i,,- s1 .. 1B1d TIME DC Tri ()Mom l<•yol Inc. R-Tt-< Tutao SJ Enoy Min Rttfll{O~o Am Biom Comp CA Fr Ion,. P.-.llt Pr '" ' .. ''• Ho l I 11. .. , ,, , 1 • )1. 1).1. I '> 1•, l., \ , , .. j•, s " l • -.. .. ... ' -II. .,. '" .. '·J _, '. -"" -1 -.. -.. .. -.. -l ·lfl 1. ~. '. 11. -... OH 80 011 11 011 7, Otr 1 1 Oft 1 1 011 6 .. Dlf &• Off •• Olf 611 0 11 6, OH 6 1' Olf 6 1 Off •• Off •• Off 6 1 Oii 6 l 011 6 I Olf •l MUTUAL FUNDS 1$1 Group; llldU 1.16 1 Jl Pllg "4 U t 1.6' MonM 1.00 NL Orwtll U2 $.OS Mau 10 60 11 SI M•ll c J Q 3... Munl 10 61 '11 I~ lnc:om J 48 3 eo Mau FIMn<I Mao In 91S • 14 Suo G 1.00 1'•s Trst sh 10.14 11 08 MIT 10 56 11 ~ PIM St II If Nl Suo In q" 10.6• Trst "" , 73.. MIO 8 4S q II Pion••· Fund· SUI> s 10.21 11 ,. Imp tep 8 10 u s MIO 14.4' 1U7 FuM 1'.l'Q lS.07 tee n 7 19 1.86 I~ Glh 7 16 1.13 MFD 11 et 1t'74 II 14'1 • JO ILEql'( • 7J NL I .. ~,..., ace. MCD 1294 11'7 Pl•" .,, ... 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F!!lru!ty 15, 1977 l,tf DAIL V fllllOT ,tlJ ~ferenee 'Toda11 'Bad-habit' Tax Eyed by Doctor By JORNCl1NNIFF AP.-...AMlnC A tax oo indJYidua.11 w~ eating·drlnklnc bablts and Ufo atylel have the potential o! drivlni up the 01Uon'1 bealth care COits ii beini advocated by a prominent doctor and public bcaltholtlclal. Althout)l he didn't say bow the tax mlaht be levied, Dr. Kerr White, who made the proposal, said It would be aimed at eticouraglng sound health care habits and dlscoura,cln1 prac· tlces conside~ to be both unhealthy and cos Uy. IN A PAPEB PBEPAllED FOR A conference today OD Future Directions in Health Care, Wbita said chance m peraonal behavior would be a sure means o! reducing the risks and COit fl many com moodlaorde.n. "Wo can at.art with band wuhing after elimination, avoldJn1 ex~&Ne caloric intake, abstaining from alcohol consumption before driving, using automobile aeat belts, obtalnina ade- quate test, taking regulll!' exercise, and avoiding cigarette tobacco smoke,'' he said. Askedifhisproposalwouldn'tbecoo· CUNN"P stnied as an invalioo of personal privacy, Wblt.e sn-.ppecl: "You can't have it both ways." The people responsible tor rising health care costs must be prepared to pay. he said. WIDTE SAID HIS IDEAS WOVLD IN NO way interfere with the manner in which a person chooses to live bis or her life, but would merely all0<:ate to them rather than to the publictbecostsinvolved. The special tax also would be levied on companies whose products and practices are harmful to health, said White, director of the United Fund's Institute for Health Care Studies and former professor at Johns Hopkins University Medical School. "Each firm would estimate and report its own healUi care tax in accordance with national formulas and these could be periodically audited in much the same way the ln·1 temal Revenue Service audits individual income tax re; turns," be said. WIUTE ~CALLED FOR GRADUATED health care} taxes oo products such as alcohol, cigarettes with high tar, and nicotine content, junk foods, soft drinks and automobUtsl sold wit.boutsafety·beltsystems. He said the revenue from such taxes would be used "to,. offset the costs of providing lhe inevitable medical care the consumers of these products will experience." The two-day conference for which White's views weau prepared is sponsored jointly by the Institute of Medicine, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Blue Cross Association and the California Health Policy Program. ... IN ANSWER TO A QUESTION, WIUTE said be was not· simply attempting to get the subject discussed more openly but was making a serious proposal. "1 prefer it to regula• tion," he said. White also suggested in hls paper that a system of ··health accounts'• should be a part of all corporate annual re- ports. stating: "We need to know not only how much each company is paying for health insurance benefits, but how much it spends on occupational safely programs, physical fitness activities, health education for its employes, and what it does about smoking on the job and vending machines that dispense cigarettes,sofldrinksandjunkfoods." JUNK FOODS AND DRINKS FROM VENDING machines" and high caloric-low protein quickie appetite sup.. pr ess ants from fast-food chains all lake their tolls, "he said ... He described American society as one in which peoploi are "increasingly free to consume, but increasingly unwill~ ing to pay for the medical care consequences reflected in lhb inevitable increases for health insurance premiums and taxes." " Rebounding Stocks Continue Advance NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market followed through on Monday's followed through on Monday's technical rally with a moderate advance tbday. The Dow .Tones average of 00 Industrial stocks added 5.99point.s to944.32on top or a6.81·point gain Monday. Sto~k• In The Spot Hglat NEW YORK IAPl· S.IM, 4 p.m. price •nd net <'*'119 of ttte 111...., mot! «II.,. New York Sloclt E•cr.....-lttues tr9dlr19 nat~lty •I more lhlln 11. ' Arn h l&Ttt..... ..• 371,'00 64 + •4 Ml"""""" ........ 2•.1oOO ~ .. w. Tnoro Pet......... 214,IOO .. .._IV. Eoon .......... •• 111.100 nv, .. . c;.n Motors........ 20',500 71\4 + "' Hercule Inc........ 204,IOO 14'--''°' Ent Kcxi.k.... .... 201,200 73 + \11 PKG E ........ . 1n..eoo n>ro-.,, M•rrlott • • .. • .. .. • 10,700 10't eo111 P•1m. ... . . ... 161,-IOO 24'• .. ''t Tu•co Inc:..... • . .• n•.100 21 + 1~ Kresve SS...... .. . • 151,JOO U'4 + .... Dow Cll.. .. ...... . 1•.aoo J11(j + ..... Cotn•1th Oii..... .•• 1.tUOO S~l't llenlcA,,_ ......... 141,.00 ~+ ~ NEW YORI( (APl· Sales. 'p.m. Pri<• end Ml <'*'VII of the llfl "'°ll «ti-. ArnertU<\ Stoel! E•<hll.... ISWft.. ~'l'fM~~1•1~. ~ rniw1~~ '1i + V4 Net Ptttnl........ • 122,100 11~ ..... v.,.n1tron .. • •• • •• 112,300 .,.,. + ~ CAltllnlPw A......... 50,200 19\11+1 ::.~rkJ"~·::::::::: !::: ~" ! i: Mlle Cof'p, ... •• .. .. • "2.100 10 ••••• synte11 Corl>.. • .. •• • "·'°° :tOY>-v. A 10Ar1 Ind ••••.• ,. J0,000 I'll •••• Bell lnd1nt.......... 29,200 ,..,_ + V. 1t'Jaat Stoclu Did Nl!W YORI( CAPI WMAT AM•JC DID N!W YORIC IAPI \ •• B1 lllIA&YKAYE °' .. ~ .......... MOit Irvine reeidenta IUJ'Ve)'id aald they would rather lnilate their parkt wtth reelal.tQed water than belln a water 1'ationl.DI proO'am in Ora.nae County. But they allo aa14 tbey would prefer re.trtctln1 water uaaae Tat.her than uaina reelalmed water m. aJde tbelr homes. Tll08E WEaE SOME nNDING8 of Janice ·Pratte, a UC lrvtne student who conducted t.be study (OI" her social ecoloay class ~lth professor Betty OleOll. Mill Prattt conducted the. random survey last fall. but t.be findings are underlined now, when parta of Northern California are al.Nady rationing water and Southern California appears to be next. Mila Pratte surveyed about 150 lrrine resi· denta, obtalning a 44 percent return rate -COil· sldered an adequate number iD random sampling. SHE SAID SHE CROSE lrvine for her research beeauae the city la already using reclaimed water for some purposee. Greenbelts are lrrlgated with reclaimed water, as are Masoo Regional Park and Rancho San Joaquin Golf · Coune. · (. ECOLOGY J Participanta io the survey were asked for '----------what purposes reclaimed water could be used lo avoid water rationing. Of those responding: -93 percent said reolalmed water is okay for urigating greenbelts. . . -92 percent said it is okay for watering recrea- tional areas. -85 PERCENT SA.ID THEY would not object !o using it in industrial production o( paper pro- pucts. -84 percent said it is all right for car washes. -56 percent said it is okay for commercial laundries. -36 percent agreed it could be used to fill •wimming pools. -21 percent said reclaim~ water is okay ·for personal use in their homes. OF 1110SE ASKED, 58 PERCENT said they )mew reclaimed water was being used somewhere in Irvine. But less than half of those knew where. Only 26 percent .said they knew it was used in Mason ~egional Park and 23 percent said they were aware ..of its use in watering greens at Rancho San Joaquin Golf Course. Both areas have signs posted explaining that ?'ecycled water is used to irrigate those facilities. Miss Pratte also asked survey participants how they felt about using reclaimed w'ater for a variety of uses, but not in the context of avoiding water ra- tioning. ' SHE FOUND THAT THE CLOSER people would have to come into contact with the reclaimed water, the more opposed they were to its use. Among the responses were the following: -60 percent of those surveyed said they w~re against using reclaimed water for food]>reparallon ,in restaurants. -56 percent said they would not want to drink reclaimed water. -45 percent said reclaimed water shouldn't be used for swimming. -33 PERCENT SAID RECYCLED water ·should not be used for home laundry. -14 percent were against its use for pleasure boating. The UCl student. who recenUy graduated, has been invited lo deliver her findings at an interna· tional wastewater conference in June in Sout.h Africa. Learn What Makes The Undora Method So Effective A compfete progom to Instruct patients how to lose weight eosUy, then how to maintOl1 thei° leai weight. Doily therapy, with oudlo and sub-liminal visual aids to promote motivation and encou-ogement. H.C.G .. a fat moblBzi'lg Sl.bstonce. makes it easier for patients to lose weight without fatigue or excessive hunger Undoro's very special diet. designed for rapid welglt lcs. end i'rpOlled eott'Q hcblls. Behavior modification techniques to leom weight control. Undoro's easy-to-follow maintenance program to prevent regaining. The entire program Is under the strict supervision of medical doctors. s'peclollsts In baiotrlc medicine. Coft lot lnlotmolion Monday ttw Friday 9A M TO 1'M.-~PM. l0 6P.M. NEWPORT BEACH 640-6831 \ fattnltnj COSl'AMESA 557-1893 W ASIDNGTON <AP) -Aides to Prealdeat Carter bave be1un a aeries of~ .. to ex· plore contentlona by repreaentattvea of bom01eXUU. that \hey are obJec:ta ol olftcial dis· crimlnatlon. Convicted Waterfate burglar ame1 W. McCord Jr., who served leas than four months of hl1 five-year~ sentence. is now living quietly 'with his family in Fort Collins,. Colo. SACRAMENTO (AP> -Certain d roucht·weakened Northern Calltomla •Id resort.a are reportedly belnt ltalked by Irulan and Cana- dian lntenlta. • But Bob Roberta, president ol the Sierra Sid Area Aaoc:latloa. adct.d that the offers were 'beinc turDed doWn. (EV-' -'ND NGVA~ OOVER lntM For fast relief &om that run down feeling ... "Maybe IOIDe people will UH~ Mil out, but moat to far. • .u. tr)1at tom8Qltoatbelrown,''b•uld. • . Tbe second atral_..t year of drQIUPt meau mo1tly mlaeey to the ·tu million NCIC1.hml California ikt tD· duatry, ~dl bu reeeived oaly about 10 percent Clf its UIUal IDOWf all. SA I llAMDS POUND IM llTTll MIH1 S STOllS IVHYWl- SAVl ... SUPTO 50%~ ALL J st QUALITY An assistant to Margaret Costanza, Carter's assistant for public liaison, confirmed Monday that Ma. Costa.ma met witb two. official.a ot the National Gay Task Force last Tuesday and that a aeeond meetinlJ to be at· tended by 10 represen- tatives ol the group will be held at the White House <111 March 26. .. call us first. take a First National Auto Loan. and go directly to your clealerl That's all there Is GOlfSHlm TENNIS SHIRTS THE ASSISTANT to Ms. Costanza vouched for the authenticity of a letter her boss sent to the Task Force officers. Copies of the letter were distributed to the press by the organization along with a press re- lease that began: "For the first time in the history of the United States, a top·level of· ficial at the White House bas met with represen- tatives of this nation's second-largest minority. the estimated 20 million lesbians and gay men." 10 11. Upon approval cl a simple credit appUcation. we'U loan you up to 80% of the pur· chase price of any new car you choose. lnclud·.dilll~-..-:~ mg aocessones! And here's a bonus: Since MAINOFACE At the Plaza in downtown Orange COSTA MESA: Mesa Vefde & Adams IRVINE: University Or. & Michelson Or. LAGUNA HILLS: Alicia Parkway & San Diego Freeway If )OU need a loan for • ng under the teC'S L~ S&.IWI VELOURS .... SJJ.00 ~$ 1788 ••T•SIUI v. • ::v:s7ss AtL..wAs ask Security Pacific Bank ' We must ht! easy to talk co about a loan. Wc'v~ made over I billion dollars worth of them. For things like pnipcrty 1mpruvcmenc. aucomnhi lc~. mohtlc homes, recreational vt!hicles, anJ boats. You can even ger a simple incere ·t Homeowner L{ian. ~pend mg on the ~Ult)' you have in your hou:ie, we may he jible co l~)an you from $5.0CO up, w1thollt affecting your current mortgage! S<.1 Jon't put 1t off. Righc nuw. we've nt!ver heen ma hcrrcr position to loan you what you net.'CI for whatever you need. Apply ac Securiry Pacific Bank. Where there's '>t:Cuncy m numbers. \ I \ \ \ . \• \ \ t 81 DENNIS •cLEUAN ... .,.." ...... ...., Hni'lotllm, Joni beld in the pul>Uc'I ·mind as beln1 on par wltll black ma1ic and parlor came tric~, 1s CODiliil out of the clceet aDd into It.a own. Mon and more peoplo ue turniaC to the 81\clODt &echnique tn ov~ bad babtta (amok· tn1. clrinking, overeattn1>. •ala· mi Hlf.conftdeoce and livlnl up to their potentlal. · Numerous professional athletes, for example, swear by the hypnotlst's ability to help tbem relax and abake off ne1ative aWtudes bef()re the m& Game. '1People are startinc to see it baa a lot of value, .. says James Mccann, a Huntintton Beach hypnotberapist. McCann, who bas a PhD in bume behavior wltb an em- pbuls en paycbolOIY, attended the HypD01l1 Motl vation Inat!taain LOI A.Diel•. . JIU IN'l'E&£81' 1n the 1ubject developed while worklDI lo markettn1. He bad done re- search ln tnnaact.lonal anabsls and lta effect.lvepeu ln or1anha· tlons (motivating people and build.Inc self-confidence). "l found TA to be an eitremely cood tool in belJ>ing people to be more effecUve in their transac- tions with otbers, .. he said. That led to bypnosla, wblcb be discovered to be "a very fast method of' gettlnc from where you are now to wbere you want to be.•• It Is, be believes, effective in behavior and attitude modifica- tion. But there are many miscon- 'People BEA ANDERSON, Editor ,Tuesday, February 15. 19n 81 ffPUODIS 1urrouftd.in1 the tecbni-que. People often fear they will do tbinp that would embarrass them. •'Th• aver ace person views hypnosis as a sltuation where the)' are in a complete trance with Uttle or no control over what tbeydooraa)'." Mccann aald It ts difficult to define a state of hypnosis primarily because everyone is different. EIGHJ'Y PEACENT of those who come out of bypnosis for tbe first tlme, however, be said, im· mediately say they didn't think they were hypnotized. He said it is more like a state of conslousness between being wide awake and asleep. "It's a super state ol relaxation, an emotional and physical state with the mind betnc calm yet alert.·· · Techniques used to put a person under vary according to what areas the individual is sug- gestive. He gives them simple suggestion tests to determine how· receptive they will be. Mccann seldom uses the eye fascination method commonly seen in the movies. •'That went out with Svengali." Instead, he uses various relaxation techni- ques. When a person comes in with an overeeting problem, for ex- ample, the hypnotherapist looks ,. beyond tbi 1ympt0n to what is causiq tt; sudi u deprenloa. ~. OQ the individual and the~ of the problem. be said, cllentl iniUall once or twice a wee&. KICKING THE smokinl habit, whicb be aaicl ls fairly easy to ac· compliab tbrouab hypDOtil, may take about five 1essiona. lie spen.da the lint one discuss- inc motivation. "Jf a person doesn't want to quit, it wUl be very difficult because be'.s the one who bas to dolt.•' Once under, be tells them bow much damaie smokine can do and reinlorcea that their llf e is important to them. He may succest lllat inhaling smoke will be unpleasant and make their mouth feel warm. He also sets a date when they will quit, usually eight or 10 days. Clients also are taught self. hypnosis ''&K> they can keep 8iv- inl themselves positive sugees- tions and develop more selt- control. '' MCCANN NOTED that children are especially easy to work with because they are not filled with misconceptions. They also are "very receptive to sug- gestions." He added that parents often • don't realize how receptive · children are to their environ~ Harp music is increasing in popularity, especially as dining entertainment in Orange Co_ast restaurants. Two mu_sicians. talk about how they picked the instrument and what patrons' reactions arf). Some, Strings Attached Harpist Maureen Love By JUDITH OLSON Of .... 0.11., .. , ... 5tatt . Don't ask Maureen Love or Nancy Levin to come and play a quick concert for you. There are a few strings at· tached. It's not easy to just pick up a harp and travel to a concert site, and it takes a good 20 minutes to tune the instrument. Once they get s tarted, however, the music Mrs. Levin and Mra. Love produce is "heavenly.'' The two Irvine residents, who both entertain at local restaurants, are following a tradition that dates back to an· an easy t~k for a 9-year-old. "Your ringers really hurt at first," Mrs. Love explained. "You go through the whole cy. cle-you get a blister then it pops. For the first few weeks, 1S minutes of practice is enough." Mrs. Levin, the daughter of Hollywood conductor Gene Garf, was started on piano very early by her father with the promise that she c~d switch to another instrument later. "HlS orchestra was rebeanlnc at home, abd I was home from school .sick,'' Mrs. Levin said. "I saw the harp and told my father that was the instrument." clent Mediterranean and Near BER FATHER, ment.ally ad· Eastern civilizations. · ding up the costs, replied that No one is sure when the first "all harpists have to study the harp appeared, but many pianoforlOyears." legends abound descrlbin& its Her teacher was Janet Leigh. origin. Tal£lor, also a Los Angeles in· One says, accordinC' to Mrs. strumentalist. Love, tbat a hainter heard music Both Mrs. Levin and Mrs. Love when he touched his arrow to bis were music majors in college, bow. Pleased with the sound, be Mrs. Love starting at USC and added a (ew strings and had a finishing at California State harp on which he cQuld play University, San Jose and Mrs. melodies. Levin graduating (rom,UCLA. "The first were lap harps," Mrs. Love assumed in college Mrs. Love added. "The Babylo-_ that she would play with a sym- nlans and Egyptians had harps phony orchestra. while Mrs. and the J>eOl>le in Ireland and Levin, possibly because of ber Wales lovetbem toc:hly. father's work with celebrities, "Io the lSSOS the harp was de· never thought of an orchestra at nloped enough to be accepted in all. "I prefer recordings," she symphony orchestras." said. B0111 MRS. LOVE and Mrs. Levin fell in·tove with the instru- ment at first sight. Mrs. Love said her family was very musical, especially her mother. who was always having concerts ln her home. During one of these, Mrs. Love beard the harp for the first time. "It took me two years to con· vince my parents I was serious about it. They started me on piano," Mrs. Love rec~led. •'There were four or five teachers in the Los Angeles area 10 my mother researched and chose one in particula~1 Cathryn Jackson, who was artisuc." Beginning on the harp was n~ Mrs. Love, married aurtng her senior year, s~ed performing in a restaurant-to supplement the family income and she has been playing dinner lnustc ever since. She was the first harpist at the N ewporter Inn and currently plays at the Chanteclair restaurant ln Irvine durtnc the cocktail hour. "I play requests," she said. Some of the mOlt popular sonp are "Love Story,.. theme from ''Dr. Zhiv•go, '' "The Sting" and "Sunrlae, Suntet." REACTIONS FROM customers are varied. "Some people walk by wltbout notlc- in c," Mrs. Love reported. meiat. He emphasizes the im- portance of positive suaeatklns iD the early yean. McCann views bis job as .. un- prosrammlng" people who have been conditioned to think acer-tain way. "One ol the things you 'II bear Is •rm afraid to quit smoking because I'll gain weight."' he s•id, notinc pounds may be added because they've been pro- erammed to make it bappeo. .. It's a self.fulfllllng prophesy." "I see myself as a byp. notberapist belpina people get control of themselves. I give them euidance. When it's all over and everytblnc is said and done, they have done it themselves." He notes that persons with any medical or psychological pr,- blems (such as weight, .allergies, phobias, alcohol and drus abuse), must have a doctor's r~ ferral. f To help overcome the m)'lh$ surround.lnc hypnosis, McCann glvea free lectures twice a month on Friday evenings. Further in· formation is available by callinJ h1I omce. 8'8-0688. O.ily ........... "' f*•tft<ll0'0.-11 Nancy Levin_ entertains "Otberl stop. Many have never beardonealone." Wblle she enjoys her restaurant work, Mrs. Love always ls looking for new cballenees. She ls practicing some ditfieult classical pieces for a fund·raiatn& concert in March at the Unlverslt)' Methodist Cb\lrCh, Irvine, and recently performed with the Irvine and Orange County master chorales. l(ta, Levin, who provides .mia1lc all evening at Alfredo's restaurant in Costa Mesa, played at O'Shauchnessy's ln the Atlan- tic RicbOeld Plaza, Los Angeles the first slx months it was open, then moved to the Victor Hugo in Lacuna Beach. She has played on the Tonight show twtce and worked in Las Vegu .and Taboo for a variety of artlata, including Elvis Presley, Ray Bolger, SoMy and Cher, Ray Conllf, Tony Bennett and the Carpenters. <8ee91'RINGS. Paie BU , ~I DAILY PILOT '°" Youth: DEAR ~NN LANDERS: oltecently you ptblted ao Essay OD Yout.b. Tlaeaender Hid be bad found tt OD a bookmark and tbe auUaorwu "anooymous ... wbo _,.. lntenieWlnt G..erll MacArthur at hii Tokyo bead· quarten ta 1MS wu impreaed by a framed poeQS oa bil deat. It • WU called 0 Youth" -and tbe author apparently uonymous. DEA.a m: 1& a. ww. PHt ,.._...~I .,.. IM COIQlete .... , .. I& wu wrtua b1 yoar •r•••at.Mr, Sa••el tlllmH. 'n•ilkJWf•.,........•··~ u..raeu. llay I lM>w a Uttl ltabt oo the bJed! That euay wu written Y Gen. Doutlu lllcArthur-ln eue you want to ee& the record at~ai&ht. -0; CITY ·The 1etaenl 1ald W. euay had been aeot to blm yean before and he found it so lmplriD1 be took it wherever bo went. YOVTH.BYSAMVELULLMAN Youth la not a time of life; it ls a atate ol mind; it ls not a matter ot rot)' cbeekl, red UPI ud sup. pie kneel; it ii a matter ot tbe wlll, a quality of tho Lmaslnatlon, a vtior of the emoUona; lt is the freehnea of tho deep aprlnp of llfe. DEA& O.: For tM ltrallM re- ard, pleue read teie folJowtas: DEAR ANN: The EasQ on outh was written by my IJ'andfather, tho late Samuel Ul· Iman ot Blrmingbam, Ala. ~wenty years after my I lat. leamed the eaaay ap- peared in prtnt under the title, "General MacArtbur'a Credo." SO, Ann. will you kindly run the entire euay in your column as my arandlather, Samuel Ul· lsuan, wrote it! It would make • tho.e ol us wbo loved him proud. -SAMUEL ULLMAN Ill Youth means a temperamental predonllnance of eourage over UmJdlty, ol the appetite for ad· a~andfatber's death, a journalist 'Ubra Rebuild WEDNF.SDAY, PEBKUARY 11 BJ SYDNEY OMAJUl ARIF.S (March 21·AprU 19): Accent OD friendship, fulfillment of some hopes and wishes. Romantic interests are intensified. Protect self in emotional clinches. • 1 TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Stand tall . for principles. Acceet responsibility -re· · ward follows lf you are perailtenl Em· ' phasis on civic duty -and honor. Room is made for you at more elevated position. 1 GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Potential comes into focus. Broaden horizons. Refuse ; to be limited by petty fears, doubts. Be "in l touch" with one at a dlltance. Read, write, publicize, dlstrlbute, advertise. CANCER (June 21·July 22): Concern with the occult, bidden clauses, obsc;ure meanings -these are empbaahed. Look for light u well as beat; a new direction for enerl!es. elforta ls indicated. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on COD· tracts, public responaes, atiWty to deal with those boldinl views opposite your own. Hunch pa)'I dlvidendl. You know without knowing, perceivo without formal knowledie. VIRGO (Aul'Jlt 23-Sept. 22): HJchliaht '· Weddings~· and Engagements To avojd disappointment. prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and while glossy photographs to the Dally Pilot People · Department one week before the wedding. Pictures received arter that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accom- panied by a black and white glossy pie· ture. be submitted six weeks or _mo~e before the wedding date; otherwise it wall not be published. To help fill requirements on btlth wed· ding and engafement stones. lornts are available In al Daily Pilot oCfices. Fur· ther questions will be answered by People Department stafr members at 642·4321. From 131 l :'-, ,. ability to experiment, to laugh, to improve relationships witb co·worken, others wbo share your interests. You receive mesaaie which "lifts your,pirits." ... Friends ONE WOMAN, in her late 40a, a mother of five, and scrvinc time for a 1 l f I I -~ I l LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): You're a\'le to revise, review, to tear down for purpose of rebuilding. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Emphasis on home, aecurity, closing of busineH transaction. Check papers, le1al docu· ments. Be analytical -take nOthina for 1ranted. SAGITl'AllIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Fami· ly member talks of relatives, visits, meaaaaes. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. U): Em· pbaais on wbat is real, what are cotts -tb1.s as contrasted to wishful thinkin1, Uluaion, sell-deception. Key ls to collect data, to perfect techniques -and to protect valuables. AQtJAJUtJS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Lunar CY· cle is such tbat you establish contact with one "ln chuge." You make sienificant gain by be1n1 at right place at riaht time. PISCES <Fcb.19·March 20): Whataeems positive is far from it. Know it and cbeclc additional sources. Women's Week · second count of forgery. was so deeply moved by receiving a letter from a strancer that she must have fe!t It necessary to apoloJdze for her precUc:a· ment;Mrs. Denig..,sald. "Sbe ended by sayin1. 'I'm reallv not that bad a penon.' '' · 'Tber feel they have to Jay tbemaelvca bare. Wbo am I to bo that Jud1e? And who do I have 1 tosafthatto? "I don't think a lot of them are any different than we. . .only they got caught. "How many of us have never written a bad M•ry Denlgan chec:k?'1 capableoffund·ralsine. ltiathlscompaaaionate "They don't have to be nature of the Newport gung·ho. Beach mother oflO thatls ·. '1Tbey Just · need the compatible with her in· same spJrit that would volvemeol She prefers prompt them to package thecllrectcontact. clothing for a thrift shop. The difference ls, that is •eature over tbe love or eue. Thil often eldltl in a man ol sixty mor• than a boy <>f twenty • NobodJ crows old merely by llv· int a numbet of years. We IJ'OW old by c1etert1n1 our Ideals. tton: 10 Jone a1 1t recelves meisaaces ol beauty, Mpo, cheer and couraa•.10U ue fOUDt. When the Hrtala are down, and your aplrlt fl ~red wtth tho snows ol cynlcllm IDd pie lee ot pea1lmt1m, theft Y'O'l haye crown old, eftft at twenty. But ao Iona aa four aertala art up, to catch the ODtlmtsm. there Is hot>O you may dl•YoUn& at el&tll7· -FEDSVILLE • DEA& FED: ,, a CM 6-a't wu&-.•oWDad•IM...,.. .., "No' ............ _ ... Ye.an may writ\kle the akin, but to 1lvt up entbualum wrinkles ~soul. Worry, rear, self-doubt bow• the heart and turnetheaelrltNcktodu.st. take lliel' c---U IM ...... t 1et a biUer Gfter 1M•1 ~ fllt al ltome Wtdl a foOcl Moll. • Aro your paronts too strict? Whether sixty or alxteen, there is in eveey human betng'a heart the lure of wonder, thG unfalllng child·llke curlo•lty of what's next. and the Joy or the 1ame or llvin,. In the center ot your heart and mine there ls a wireless sta· DEAR ANN: Dou a 1trl HA VE to acec>pt a dat~ to an lm- Port.nt ~from the dade wbo uka bet flrstt A IUY I'll call Tho Bore trapped mo Iwlce by calllnc two moollis in advance and I am Haid to roacbt Aim I.anden's bookltt. "Busted by hrenta? How to Get Mo~ Freedom:• could help ;you brtd1e-Uio aeaera· UQn aep. Send SO cenls In coin wUb ~ mucst and & long, •lamJ>qd• aclf-addreHect' en· volo~ to Ann Landen. P.O. Box '1400, !!fain. J.ll, 60120. D·irt Not CheOp _·e w':!-s' •~END By ERMA DOMBECK I have a friend who has been trying to sell her house fot six months end frankly, I'm worried about her. The other morning, whlle havlne coffee, I excused ln,YSCll to use her bathroom. She threw her body across the door and said, "Do you r~lly have to use this? I mean you eouldn't wait and stop at the service sta. tlon on the way home, could YOU?" "Get hold of yourself, Gloria," I said. "Ever s ince you listed your home you've developed a clean fetish.'' •'Are you flnlshcd lean- ing back on that pillow?" she asked, grabbing it and punching it up with her fist. "See what I m ean? You're going crazy with neatness. Whal hap· pcned? We never sec a newspaper at your door anymore. We never see garbage cans at your curb. I almost hate to ask, but where arc your children?" "I laundered and stored them until after we move," she aald, grabbing the cup and sauce!' away from my lips and rinsing them un· der the faucet. "Face it. No one buys a house that looks like it's inhabited.•• "That's a dumb thing to say." "It's true. Take your average model bome. The light switches mi1bt not work, the walla smell like paste, there la no water, and the doon are bunc backwards. No pro· blem. The house wW atlll sell. But if the lids are up on the bathroom com· mode -forget it!" "I don't believe that at all." "fi's true. Take this house. Please. R WU a model home when we bouebt lL I'm here to tell you a virgin house is the most beauUf ul aigbt in the world. There was even a bowl of waxed From 81 . • trult on the cotree table. Then we moved in. "First, it was a basket· ball in tbe foyer, bandprlnta. around the llaht 1witobe1, a cardboard boz in tbo utility room to bold the dog, cup dllpenaers on every wall, a calendar over ~ stove, notes on the refrigerator, an iron- ing board in the dining room, a boo~ in the flower bed, rolled·UP newspapers in the spout- ing, 50·pound bag of f ertiliier on the porch, a bread card in the win· dow .•. " .... ..., __ _ ••And the waxed fruit Tu "It's still in the bowl V(ith inltJals carved into lt. along with a brush roUer, two marbles and a trat\alstor battery. The illusion is gone." Just then the realtor came Up the drive with a pros pective couple. "Quick," yelled Gloria, grabbing her sweater. ''Put the coffee pot in the oven, the mail in the frecser and follow me to the basement. Just pray they don't slip in the driveway. I waxed it yesterday." ... Strings Attached 1 •'Elvis Presley stopped the show to tell me he liked my 'Work~" she said proudly. Mrs. Levin also ha~ provided mU5lC for tbe coronation of tho Roso Queen the last llx yean .. JOBS COME laY word of mouth, she salcl. "A good musician has to alt home and wait for the phone to ring." The Toni&bt sbow ap. pearances came at the recommendation of' Elizabeth Hamburior, a noted harpist wl\O baa done many NBC abowa and play ed at tbe ·Biltmore years a~. "The Carson show is .. always me111orablc, •' Mfs. Levin commented. For th.la appearance, she alwaya aob tho union scate ·~ approximately $150 for the nJ&ht plus tnneportation costs for borharp. Mn. Levin, who ro· ctnUy added a third harp to her collection to tho tuoe ot $8,000, also plays popular tunes for her restaurantaudiencea. Tu e°'t ofton r•- queatj!d ·ls the theme from "Dr. Zhivago," she noted and tbe next is "Claire de Lune." "People· are surprised at the versatUlty of tho harp," ahesaJd. ''It has a nice, quiet sound,. ~lticb. is perfect for dinner music. People can talk overlt." Tho two mus icians, who both described the harp as a "beautiful, graceful instrument," also agreed th•t it's hard on tbe hands and that playlnl it takes lots or dedicaUoa. "You really have to love it," Mrs. Levin said. "Before you can even sit down to play you have to tuno tt for 20 minutes." Her dream, she added, is to have a harp tuner ma1ically appear while she is still in bed each morning so ahc could just get up , go downstaln and play. 1 Speakers Due l T .. E oaGANIZATION needs more people who will bec:omo involved like Mn. Deni1an, but It also n•edl people wbo wlll donato clothing and food auppllea, ortbose who are given ln anonymity and -iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiii wltb FO there is some Hear Ye! Baar Ye! HICKORY FARMS' OF OHIO ANNUAL f c t f i Caroline Bird, author of tho boot ''Born Female: the Hilb Cost of Keeplnl Women Down," will headline the third annual Women's Week at Oran1e Cout Colle1e Feb. •March s. Mlaa Bl.rd, a member of the editorial staff of Fortune, Newsweek and the New York Journal ~Commerce, will speak at 1 p.m. Tuetday, Mateh l, in the atudeotcenter. Eacb clay of tbe week wlll rocua on a dll· fcrent topic or activity and a abow of art works by female memben.~ tho facuJty will run throughout the week in the Women'• Center. TalU and event.a Monday, Feb.~. will deal with how women are portrayed in lllma and drama. Tuesday, March 1, will focus on body awarenus and Wednesday, March 2, wlll be devoted to the liberation of both men and women. Rape will be the topic Thursday, Marcil_ 3, and f aJ11lly life and parenting wW be d15' cuaaed rrtday, March 4. Workshops on se~ ism on in education wtll be o(fertcl Satur· daf, March 5. A brochure Ustln1 all the actlvlUes iJ available in the colleae's women'• center. Information la available from the center, 5S6·55S'i. GRANDPARENTS • UNCLES • AUNTS identity." Anyone lnterostcd in bocomlng a volunteer may call Mrs. Denlgan at 842-0338. ' ~------~-~--:-~~---y/ WASHINGTOrfS BIRTHDAY . -~v1~Bl4rA ~"tJ n&.lO·FBIUl rJ~ I I <.lfilght ~~ SkJ:' ·'11ickers 'Tilt' tor SaUy Actress Sally Struthers of "All in the Family" tries her hand at a coin-operated basketball game duriJlg a fund raiser at a Culver City arcade for a charity organiza-tion. TH•CAST ll"Me Ll'llllQit'llll ---J<Nle Nltll 0.Yk!Mll ~ .... C.dlo <:Mt•"°" fll~•ld Robert Tn.lllw S .. ll•LM""'°" Jfffl ..... t\ ,.-.nc .. al.tcil --~" ~~S... fo4dH~ ~T-EttlsESW\ Tylef' 11•"""'1\ .... J\ltll N.., LOMll C'l"llW• l..otil11 Wllll .... H..o.11..... OkllVU• Sftfl-/C.,, ClllKkl.lltM aome DQteworthy performances, but they are offset by others which fall to realize the comic potential of their roles. ONE OF THE more delicious acting gems is offered by Jane Nigh Davidson, a former movie and TV actress whose pro- 1300 MINIMUM ..,. -· S.D. Wholesale Growers 11622 WAm&AVE. FOUNTAIH YAU.Ff PHOME 54'93429 fl~] fesaional experience la evident. 14111 Davidson slips comfortably into the manUe of the celestial Broadway actress aod com- mands the ataie with a quiet, nawral authority. Robert Truhlar u the weepy director ls equally Impressive, •ll~ltlng maximum mttea1e from bis hilarious toaat101 monologue which closes the firat act and remaining, as be D;)uat, a caricature of the old·tlme dlrec· tor-dictator. Also bri&htenlnt the stage Ls Joanne Apfle1ett as tho plain-talking wife o the hyperac- tive producer. On the negative side are Joe CordJo, whose frenetic band mo- tions and lapses of timing detract from his effectiveness as the pro- ducer, and Jean Spears, in her stage debut as the asp-tongued mother of the star, whose cutesy manneriams and incessant play- ing to the audience lnhibit. her ef. fectiveness. TODD HUMPllllEY ts quite believable as lbe idealistic young playwright, but Ellis Estes ls un· l~~i~f '"''\I '-... ,, ,..~, •• .... ~· """• .. CAssANDRA CROSSING .. (R) "F~U.. MY L,O~E" IMJOY IVD~ YOU DO 'IN 1917 . If YoU 've added P<>Unds and Inches over the holidays .. If It is difficult getting into that tight fitting pants suit ... Start now at urnan Ballards It takes so little hme and ef- fort. I 11-·t •••• .;,.., • ._., It all begins with your.._._ ..... --. ••• trained figure counselor .•• _. ._..._....._ s~ will give you a thorough ..... ~ figure analysis to help you set your weight goats. ,,... ,.. ............................. c•..., rw • .. n,... ... .., pro- ...................... or ...... ...... ./ No Strenuous Exercise ./ No ShOts or Pills ./ Nutrttlonal Guidance I No Disrobing I Improved Posture ./ 10 years Experience SALON HOURSt Mon • ..frL a a.m~ p.m. Sat. I •. m.-3 p.m. lHIATRIS-OfWIOE CO SOlll cmzos $1.SI UIN'I WTWOOe THI INFOICllct1 P\U1 TUCKDOWN111 LOS ANGELES (.\P> tirton at tbO Paramou.at -• .,..,. Bad News J)ean lt\ldto. in Bre.aldn1 'l'r'ain1n1" 11 liiil-...i!!!l!!l!!l~~ .. !1!1!11!111' the UUe of tbe Para· mount sequel to lta 1971 bit comedy starrlna Walter Matthau &l\d Tatum O'Neal. Neither 1tar will ap. pear in the new mm, to be produced by Leonard Goldberg and directed by Michael Pressman. But most of the mlaflt Little League players willbeback. Production atarta lato this month with locationa planned in llowiton and El Paso, Tex., and in· -woMTY PYTHON & 1ME YGUJL•CPGt ..NETWORK .. Cit .. SHAMPOO" Cit "BOUND FOR GLORY .. IPGI "SIJ. VER STREAK11 CNt .~ l)lRLIN& MEltE Olm4 ~ CfFICJAL. Of 1lE ' JUMBO AIRCRAFT CDMPAt¥J' / NANCY byTom lati'* UIEll I I 'TMINK IT'S MAINLJJ DOE 'TO 'THE FACT" 1AAT rT WAE> 00tL.i Ct'1 A CAA&H .~J byEmlelushmlRtr --------.....-. TODAY'S CRGSSIGID PVIZLI UNITED Fee lure Syndicate '-Ot>O•fl 1111uie Sotto•CI ~CROSS ... ' PEANUTS I'M AGAINST V IOLENCE ···I'M S~OOTING BLANKS • • bJ C'-"s M. ScWz WHO KNOWS? MA~ l(OOR IUUAANTI( /S STILL 6000! ~ ........... V:r HA'TE 10 AD\trf"TWIS 1J -BUT JoE ~f<NQ'S ~LO FEEL SO 0000! THE GIRLS "You'll be very pleased to hear the trcasu'1r reports she will be able to ba!al'ICe our bud&et by eli"'lnatlna the refruhments durina our meetlnas." ' ' DIMMIS THI MIMACE ,. .. ··~ ........... ,,,.,.. ... • 8181lWA•1n-.11ANDY ................. Lecio ~al N-' Beacb ~ bild tbil MerD-: m11y wlMmtiewoea pair 1Uver medals last 1Don&,h 111 aa~al compet.lt.lon ta tM IDOW ~ of lup at WU Aadd, NM York after Gi1J u.r;=:anct.lce. 'L• looa•> '°"' aay? h's an Olympic Games wiD'8r C!OllD])etitlve 1port. lt la a ont·man 1le4 run down c Anteaters Tangle With Northridge NORTHRIDGE -UC Irvine bidl to bait a four·came losine streak tonight, taking on Cal State (North.ridge> here at 8 o'clock in a college basketball game. Coach Tim Tift's UCI An· teaters defeated Nortbridge by an 80-66 count a month ago, but thinas have been a litUe bleak for Irvine since tben. UCI bas dropped games to Creighton, Cal State <Bakersfield), UC Riverside and Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo), run· nina its season record to 9-14 with four games to play. Tan11er Ad.,ance• SAN JOSE -Top.seeded Bjorn Borg tangles with Ricardo Cano in first round action of the SS0,000 San Jose Gtand Prix ten· nis tournament tonight following Monday's salvo which saw Roscoe Tanner defeat Jose Higueras, 6-1, 6·3. Other results found Bernie Mil· ton topping John Lloyd, 3-6, 7-6, 6-0; Jeff Borowiak ousting Balazs Taroczy, 6-2, 6·2 ; Jim Delaney eliminating Byron Bertram, 6-2, 2·6, 6-3; Tim Gullikson besting Karl Meiler. 6·3. 3-6. 6-2; Tom Gorman atop Terry Moor, 6·3, 6-4: and Geoff Masters trouncing Tom Smid, 6·1. 6· l Aztec• Get David LOS ANGELES The Lo~ Angeles Aztecs of the North American Soccer League have bought Steve David from the Ft Lauderdale Strikers. _....,.... _____ ... _.__.,...__ ------..... '· "l atr.O found th•t my atie nt Iii well ,_. Ju,e. So. I aavo4 money and too& time off to'° to the development camp at Lake Placid tor &ix wee.ks." Montapert stands about 5-10 and welOIJ between MO and 2SO po"'ada. He baa an intense competlthe sp\rtt and once .Played water polo tor coach Ed Newland at Newport Harbor Hi.ch. . Havlnl 'Oeft!' been on a luge sled before, how dld he leam so quickly? Oilers QB Unhappy I I Rams to Trad,j • j For Pastorini? HOUSTON (AP >-Houston• Oller quarterback Dan Paslorini. stung by fans criticism and frustrated by what be terms un· kept promises, said be no longer feels loyal to Oilers fans and wants to be traded to a team with a winning tradition -specifical- ly tbe L<>s A1lgeles Rams. .. I'm at the end of my contract and I really don't want to play here anymore," Pastorini said in an interview with The Associated Press. "I'm tired of waiting for promises to be kept. I've con· 14-year-old Steals Show, Despite Loss LOS ANGELES (AP> -A 14· year-old girl with braces on her teeth and pigtails stole the show from the established players Monday night in the first round of a $100.000 women ·s Lennis touma· ment that features Chris Evert. The fact lhal little Tracy Au&tin of nearby RolUng Hills lost her doubles match wai. almost secon4,ary to the fact that she kept her composure and thrilled the crowd or 2.176 at ,the S~rts Arena. fronted Bum <Oilers coa~ Phillips> with it. l "I've told him it wouldn't ~ fair to the city of Houston, ·the Oilers organization or my team9 mates lo make me play beii again.st my will." ·~ Pastorlni has been quote4 several times recently as sayin& he wants to be traded. Oilere ol't Clcials have said the outspoke' quarterback was either f\lSl momeotarily upset or was la)rln• groundwork for a new c0n(racl 11 But those explanations arerrl valid anymore. "I really don'l want to renegotiate and t thb* the feeling is mutual," Pastorhli said. "Thev haven't asked me aboutanewcontracte1ther." 1 Pastorini said his disenchant· ment with Oilers fans started h1~l fall after he was involved in an early morning car accident on a Houston street. Pastorini said public reaction to the accident bad given him a "salty" altitude~ "I've taken a defensive ~ proach to the public ever si~ then." Pastorini said. "I alm<$t lost my hre in that accident asJd all people wanted to know WJ$ why I was out al 4 a .m., wastl drunk and who I was with." t Pastorini. who received tb brunt of the criticism ff>f' Houston's 5-9 record last seas~ said he no longer owes any loy~• ty to Houston fans. , ··what does an athlete owe l<> anyone who is cheeriug him ooe minute and then literally readY' to tear him apart the next? .. :- Pastonni said. "'The only loyaJty r: owe is to the Oilers organizatio~ andtomyteammates." : David, one the NASL 's all·timt• leading scorers, owns league re· cords for most goals in a game, 5. and mo:;t assists in a eame. 10 The two-time all-league forward was the NASL's Most Valuable Player in 1975, when he led the league in scoring with 23 goah and stx assists NEWPORT'S LEON MONTAPERT ON LAKE PLACID LUGE AUN. However, the top-seeded Evert and second-seeded Martina NavratilovJ do not play their first round matches until tonight. $<> Austin had the crowd to herself. Pastorina said if a trade can't; be arranged with the Rams bej will play out his option this year: and seek a new team next season. "I'm JUSt tired of waiting • Pastorini said. "I don't think were a 10-4 team in 1975 to honest. We got a lot of breaks but they caught up with us last year." Jheerican• Lead TORQUAY . England America's under-21 international tennis team. defending the trophy• it has won the past two years. defeated Italy, 2-1. Mon· day on the first day of the B.P. Cup lntemaUonal Tennis Series. Biil Mays gave the United States a good start with a quick 6-4. 6-4 victory over Enzo Va tuone. but Bruce Manson was de· Ceated. 6-3. 6·7, 7·5. by Gianni Oc· cleppo in a 21 'J·hour match In the doubles. Manson and Mays combined to beat Occleppo and Valuooe 7-5. 4·6. 6-1 in a two· hour marathon after trailing 1·4 in the opening set. Basket08ll Poll llw Too T-y ... ""'"TIM> f.-l•IH Pren cOlll!!J" ~-•ttMll ooO w1111 lof\I 0111<• _, In Nteftl--r.<O'Gt-••i.••"'" I U ft t•I lS4 1,-11 ,.,,. n .1 10l 1 1<11 111 11-l M 12.M-•t 301 J IJCl.A ltl ""1 .. , tHlo C.ro 11·• 201 • ···-~ Ut 14,T-17.4 191 s """' ie..i -,, 0.1..-1 •• • 6VllllY »t <IM 1'~• »l M M fir• "-3 '31 '1.Arlt. ••> '1 I I.a"" ,._, .UI 1'.C-IM lt t Mt4111t 1..i 'Wt It YMI 21-1 2• IO GI"' y IW 316 21.S'tflCINI 19-J 20 Lakers Get Draft Picks NEW ORLEANS <API New Orleans Jazz had to give ... ., first·round drart choices in 1977 and 1979 to the LO!> Angelel' Lakers for ailing ~uard Gall Goodrich. 33. J au general manager Barry Mendelson con· firmed Monday. In addition, the Jazz and the Lakers will swap first-round picks in the 1978 National 8askt!t· ball Association draft if It is to the La.kers· advantage The Jau slened Goodrich, a veteran or 11 NBA seasons. last summer after he played out his Dption with the Lakers. He got a two.year. no.cut. contract for a reported $225,000 per year. Goodrich is out for the season after surgery on an Achilles ten· don. Mendelson had said recently the deal did not cost the J au such a high price. But Lakers' at- torney Alan Rothenberg re- vealed the details of the deal. Mendelson said Monday he was told not lo give out the de- tails i>e(ause the matter was un - der judicial proceedings. 13-year Climb Gutluie Hurdles Sex Prejudice LONDON <AP> -Ittook Janet Guthrie 13 years to overcome sex prejudice and make good as a driver on the American stock car circuit. "I really don 'l know why," she said as she lunched in London's historic Guildhall. ''Women are just as well equipped to drive racing cars as men -physically. men tally, physiologically. psyc:hologically." Guthrie clocked 180 miles per hour at Daytona Beach. Fla .. at the weekend to qualify foe the Daytona 500. then flew to London and arrived at the Guildhall with jet-lag in her eyes. Now she heads back to Daytona Beach for more racing Thursday. The world has tatten notice of her at last. She was one of the runners-up nominated for the an· nual Valor in SPQrt a"'ard. "I tried and tried 'tor years,•· said this 'unassuming New Yorker as she sipped her wine am id portraits and stlltues of England's all·Ume greats in the 12th Century hall. ''For 13 years I worked as a technician to earn money to finance a car. J bad almost given up hope of driving full-lime. But now it has happened." The award, presented by Lon· don 's Victoria Sporting Club, went this year to one of Guthrie's heroes -Niki Lauda of Austria, who was near death after crashing at Nurnburgring. Germany, last August but bat- tled back to finish as runneMJp to James Hunt of Britain in the Formula 1 World Championship. Guthrie now drives for Rolla Vollstedt, an independent car bui),der from Portland. · I would love to drive on some of the famous European circuits," she said. "Monte Carlo, Monµ, Silverstone -they have been just a dream until now . Maybe 1'11 make it yet ... " The CJlation spoke of Q1,1thrie's "courage as a forerunner in the world or motor racing. and her • deter9liJlation to break into and be accepted on equal terms in the ranks ot a sport in which women are not acc~pted." It added: "For over two years she has coutlnued to overcome every sort ol 4iscouraeement. hostlUty, even prejudice or race officials and organizers, and the resentment and ridicule or some men drivers, "Last year, despite open dis· coul'agemel\t from other drivers. Jan el Guthrie entered the In· dianapoU. 500, one of the most d.an&erous circuits io the world. De1pite setb•cka, inferior cars. crashes and conaequent injuries. her skill, audacity, auatalned courage and sheer drivlne skill have now won her a substantial level or acceptance In what Is still a male domh1ated world." "ActuaUy, 1 don 't get as nervous for the pros, not as much as for a junior tournament." said the teen-ager, who spent the morl\ing and afternoon attending classes at the DappJe-gray Secondary School before showing up torherdoubles match. Playmg in her first big match before a hometown audience. Tracy teamed with Kate Latham of Palo Alto. They lost to Brigitte Cuypers and Marise Kruger. both or South Africa, 6-4, 6·1. After the match, Cuypers paid tribute lo the tiny eighth.grader. saying she played with a great dea 1 of poise. Later, England's Virglllia Wade raced through her first- round match in 51 minutes, beat· ing Sharon Walsh. 6·0, 6·2. Wade won the first eight games . Then Miss Wals h changed her style and volleyed her way into a service break at 2-1 in the second set. Miss Walsh won the next aame before the ac· curate ground strokes and crisp volleys or the world world's third-ranked player broke her momentum. Tonight al 7. the top·seeded Evert takes on Janel Newberry and Navratilova. formerly of Czechoslovakia now living in Dallas, opposes Yvonne vermaak of South Africa Austin's first singles match is against Lindsey Beavan of Enaland. 1 Rt1utn ol tllP l..O\ AM!tlr' wom""'• D•Glt.soondl '9<\n•l IOU,...mtftt ~' 81 llWt \..CHI Ano-I .... *'" "',..,. PREl.IMINARV ROUND SINGLES 1(<1h• L•lllem d!'I Glynl' Coif'\, Enql&nd, • I •.O: T~ny Hollod•Voet Jene S4••11on. 1>·3. •·I. FIRST ROUNO SllllOl.ES -p_., T~rOHI def lf•lerlt ~U I•, IS.4), •••1 Kel"Y Mn clef ~,.,.. K"'9fr, ,.11111 Alrit•. •·t. •-4. lterl'\I Rl'ld cltf. 8tl0illt C11YOt~. So11111 Afrko ... , •·1 (2·SI, 7 S. Jiii._ Ant11ony def Vlrflnl1 R1nl<f. Roll'!•nlo, i.a, 6.0 Vlrglnlt Wtoo, t:no•~~del Slleron We"ll 6·0. 6? Ol•nn• Frornl\4111, AU\1'41110, Cltf. U,..,. MOllreM, &,,.!.,,.. '"'-•·t. 6-4. Err.fir Deeid~ 6ame The Oilers quarterback said he has been promised year after year that the orrensive personnel will be Improved but that hasn't happened. Pastorini has played under four head coaches and five offensive coordinators. "I've had my hopes built up too many times and then had them dashed." Pastorini said. "I'd rather go somewhere that has a winning tradition and the same coaching staff every year." CA.l!FHEN RIDES AFTER DAY OFF NEW YORK -Apprentice jockey Steve Cauthen, brand· new working papers In his possession, came off a one·day layoff today and won the first race at Aqueduct. aboard Tyr- rhean Star. Cauthen spent lhe morning Ironing out problems with the New York State DeJ!arlment of Labor which had said horsemen were violating the law which pro- hibits lhe hiring of minors under 17 who don't have worklhg papers. Cauthen Is 16. ' • In a loa1u• loaded wlth pltcbln1 pro~pecta. San Cleinmto lll&h'• Trtt.oaa rate u tb• tatiY plea to claim Pt• South CoHt 1Aa1Ue baseball cbam-plomblp. Here la a look at eact» of the el1bt memben u tbey Jlrd for tho 1tTf campalan: c:er .. a del Jtlar The Sea Kin&• have only two return1n1 1tartcra from the me vanity, bUt eoacb Tom Tnger saya bia crew hu a good abot at the championship. Senion Chris Raymond and Bob Wlltse return lo the fold ln tbe outfield with Wiltse also tabbed for duty at third base. With pitcher Cory Alder, a. venaWe nght·bander ·who also poaesaes power at the plate, and pltcbinl depth ln seniors Jobn Distuo, Tom Neeson and Guy Ellestad, the Sea }(ings have potentlal. Trager. beginning his nlntb year as Sea Klnts coach, has Scott Sherman and Bruce Beck to choose from at catcher while the infield abapcs up with seniors Don Harrier at lirat base, Don Barth at second, Earl Calllaon at abortatop and Jim Jones at third buc. llaymond and Wlftse are joined by Bob Hughes in the out- field and two transfers -Gary Fo&a.rtY from New York and Mark Morgan from Costa Mesa·s Estancia High-<:ould work lnto the Startin( unit. co.ta 1tle•a Southpaw pitcher J eff Greene. a 6-4 ~. 200-pound returning all· leacuc pitcher. and Infield aces Dave Mollica and Tom En1d8l)d3 1tve coach Jim Gmur a soliu I nucleus to mold a championship contender. Greene, with an assortment or off.speed pitches. Is joined by pitchers Kras r ern1arom <rh > and CUffKlng (rh>. MolUca. SouUJ Cout ~ back ol the 1ear lD football, la coaaldered a bettn t>aMball player than football ~er by hil eoacb. Eneland 1rovldff excellent potential u a junior and tbe MuataQP ala9 bave catcbtr Troy Ybarra, llnt baaemaa Steve Cllasold. outllelder Mlk-e Ganlon and outfielder Tony Trolio back from tbe lt16 team. "We've f°' a little m ore punch tbll year,' aaya Gmur. "And wo have better team defense. Wo won't beat ourselves.•• Others Gmur is counUnc on for duty include infielder Kirk Bauermeilter, outflelden BUl OesterTelch and Jerry Cribbs, catcher George Moore and Dale Boucher, a Covina transfer who co\tld be the key as a lefty on the mound. DaJtaBllb Catcher Paul Bethke.. p itcher Stu Hein and outfielder Dana Brown are among an assortment of returning starters for Dana Hills High coach Dennis Nespor, giving the Dolphins an excellent shot at rival San Clemente, the defending South Coast League champion. Bethke, with offensive and de- fensive ability at the key posi- tion , plus Hein. a senior riaht· hander heralded by a national spor ts magazine as one of Southern CaJjfomla 's best. gives the Dolphins a formidable punch. And, 6-5, 260-pound lefty Mark Kendall, who has not lost in two years on the fr06h-soph and a year with the junior varsity, could provide the depth needed for the long haul. Brown, who hit .348 in lcaaue and .320 overall as a junior, is joined by Steve Crapo, a seeond team all-league choice in the out· field . David Reeve returns to the outfield, along with J im Romero at third base. Sophomore shortstop Brian K inney is joined by several MONTAPERT • • • <Continued From B·S) the course and then in the stan- dings --from third to las t place. "Thal was my only slip in all the time I was there." he re· calls. "l hit the wall, flipped up- side down and came back on the track ~k idding on m y slo"'ach." · In compctitaon. each lug<: competitor muke~ four run~ down the course m about 50 second.a or less. It i~ a closed course, ~~·miles in le ngth Competitors then walk back to the top. car rying s leds tha t weigh SO pounds. The winner is determined on total hme elapsed dunng the four runs. During Montapcrt"s lime at Lake Placid, in.Juries were a common occurrence. '"It seemed hkc someone was getting hurt every day -a very bad sprain or a break. I might have broken my foot when I ran into the wall but I didn't want to h ave a cast on 1t back there and not be able to compete. ··r may have to go in ror x· rays. though. It still hurts." Montapcrt. a pottery maker and photographer who works oul of his home and s ells at weekend shows. ia looking forward to being a member or the U S. Olympic team ln 1980 Is th<?re anything he can do during the summer months lo improvt' his skills especially in an area where there 1s no snow? "I have to get at ronacr." he says. "On the bobsled run we used at Lake Placid, the ccn· trifueaJ force on the turns Ls about thn?c Gs. In E urope this ls up to five on a regular luge course and il l akes more strength." Normally, luge is run on a course specially designed for the s port but there is no such course ih the U.S. and com· petilition is Oll the bobsled run at Lake Placid. LEON MONT APE RT "They arc going lo build one back there and It will be com- pleted in another year or two. .. It will be a super track, all lighted and totally refrigerat· ed." he says. "We will be able to use it before the s now falls and can start training in Sep· tember." Montapert wilt travel to Eu r ope in November and December as a member of tho U .S. winter sports team, an honor he gained by placing second in the U.S . o pen division. He will be home for Christmas and then return to Lake Placid for the U.S. na· ~:~~l competition early nctxt There may not be a ny lee snow in Newport Beach but e lsn 't concerned. He has already started HY· ing money for his further adventures in tuae competition withohis ultimate goal being a ~pot on lhe U.S. Olympic team ln1980. An ·Improbable goal for a Newport Beach resident, but one that ls very realisUc f OI' Leon Montapcrt. hea Sports Calendar Rmtlers at LACC LOS ANGELES -Oolden West Colle1e takH on Loa An1eS.. City Colle&o toftlcf\t (8) tn Southern California Con· teren~e basket.ball acUon: ( ~a Cagers in Action Prep b11ketball re· aumca on two front• toOJaht for Oranao CoH t &Nta bJ8b achool quln· teta. At Santa Ana 'a Mater Def Hllh 1ri tho Anselua {Leas e tbo St. Paul \ ottterw wbo muat fW eorne 1aP1. Included aro flrst bueinan Gres Bura1. 1hort1top Wayne JobnlclD, outt'leliden Joe Mack and Mark Slmoa, utWt¥ player Brad Mathlu. lnll•ldets Tom MatOMlan and Pete Strotla and plteh• BNUJlellurran (rb). ou.er. wltb a •bot at the varsi- ty ar• Oro1 Van Dyke, John Wilcox and Davo Willock. Elr .... Th Ol.arf•n of Bl Toro coach Tlm R.elnl, the Oruce Cout area ooacb ol tbe year after IUld· lnl bla 'T8 team to tho CIF 2-A quarterflnala, are solid with aoven retw'n1nt atarten. Pitcher Bob Livesay, a right· banded aenlor, catcher Jeff Tolbert and second bueman Sal Grljalva, bolstered by thlrd bueman Steve Key and out- fielder Bob CrU., load tbe El Toro attack. Grijalva Tolbert, Key, Llve11y, pltcber-outftelder Mark Kache!eln. outfielder Pete Cbansala and flnt baseman Bob Ko1bau1b all are returning sJarten. ''We bave aood defense 1n the Infield. piteblng and decent team 1peed," 11ys Reins. Alao fl1ur~n1 ln a major role for El Toro ls La Qulnta Hilb (Garden Grove> transfer Ray Butera. First bue ls stlll a question mark -senior John Leahy. In1lohart or Moebau1b may fill tbe blll. Also ln tho fold la senior outfleldor Brad Brl.Jcoc. £..-•Beaelt With eltbt players aportlnc 1tartini experience, the Artists of coach Hal Hensler are elven a good chabce to challenge San Clemente and/or qualify f« the CIF 2-A paayott.. r Loaded with pltcbln1 and veraatlllty, Hensler bas 6·S pitcher Ben Bacon and All· Orange County returnee Rieb Nµnil at second base to mold a contender around. Depth ln the outfield i5 pro- vided by retumlng starters John Brotherton, David Chapman and Scott Henderson. Robert Green alves Hensler, a former Detroit Tigers player who prepped at Vllla Park High aa a catcher, a solid appearance behind tho plate. Pete Hauser should start at secoad baao with Nunls, who batted .402 as a junior, at short.stop. "I think we have five quality pitchers," says Hensler. "J oin- ing Bacon. Hauser and Nunis arc sophomores Stephan Lipson and junior Jim Richardson." Also in the fold arc Dana Hills High transfer Brett Stevens Cc· lb), and junior outfielder 'J'1m Houts. Bill Gompf is another retlll'1:1- ing starter at third base, but his availability is tentative due to scheduled surgery on a torn thumb ligament. Fillin g that void will be junior Kevln Kicsselbach. ltlb•lott \/leJo Power In the middle of the lineup and speed at the top make the Dlablos of Mission Viejo coach HaJ'l"Y Hilke a better team than the 1976 unit as they prepare forthecampaign. Hilke top bats Includ e See South Coast, Page 87> SoCal Dealt 62-59 Loss SANTA BARBARA - W estmont College's Dave McGowen hit an lB·foot jump s hot with 50 seconds left, giving t he Warriors the lead for good on the way to a 62·59 college basket· ball victory over visiting Southern California Colleee of Costa Mesa Monday. SoCal, shooting only 37.9 per- cent from the floor, still led most of the way, until McGowen's shot. Randy Adams played well for SCC's Vanpards, hitting 10 of is shots and flnlshlna with 23 points. McGowen led Westmont With 19. SoCal returna to play Thursday ni•ht, boltina Cal Baptist College of Rlveraide at 8. -.C..I Clft• lltl .. ft"'. Glttlff S 4 S 14 .. ,rot\ J 0 •• 8erotMOn s 0 0 10 M•lstMCI 2 2 2 • ACS.ms It 1 I U Ctvfl~ O 0 4 0 """"'*' • • t • CUI ""'1lleM "It ,. • Moore o o •o "~ t 0 0. Meo-. 1 '" ltt"MllMll • 2 J 10 S..lty I t 0 1 0.11.,. s • ) 10 ..rCl•t 1 0 0 t Mlllff t J 0 ~ Mowtll 0040 IM\lnl"4!11 I 0 1 t Tettl• ts 12 '' •2 • DOKlNGUEZ -UC also tanate wftb Cal 1rv1ne'• baseball team State <Loni Beach) Fri· opened the 1977 col-day at UCI at I and le1late aeaon on a sour play a doubleheader with note Monday, falUng to Loni Beach Saturda>: Cal State <Domlnauez <noon) on the 49er1 Hilla), 8-0, here . • dlamood. New coach Ed AUen•1 uc•~m r 11 "' Anteaters committed Ht11tr,t11 ' o o o eleht errors lntbe came, :m~·" ~ : : : flve 1n the fifth inning Tl••11r,11 l o 1 o when Domlnauea scored ~~~;.!;:°",,. : : ~ : flve tlmea to turn the ,,.,,... , o o o a a me lnto a rout. ~'!;.~cl\ ; : : : The winners only had a w ..... ,,"" , o o o g.5 edCe ln hlts. Norm•"· o o o o o Tbe only extra bast hit ~~!'•·• : : : : of the 1ame wu a double ro1e11 " o • o b UCI short.stop Scott Sdr't_., ,......., r 11 • ~ayer. uc 1rv1,. ooo ooo 000-. s • The Anteaters had two o-. "'u' '°' uo ~... ' 2 men on base in each or the lut four lnninas. but couldn't &et the key hit to drive any of the m home. Startlng pitcher Mike Norman went the flrst three inoi n gs and Women's Golf absorbed the loss, giving 1.0,,..1" ~=~~~cF119111_1• up two runs. Freshman "" 11v .... Vl'91nl• 0·~1 .... E•Mnor Bob Frishette tossed the "°'''•'"· a.tty J ... e s....1111. 1JO; 1. d !>wit LD'M, JeOle Mc~y. ~ next three fra mes an "•'°"''"· e.ttv J-Stn11 ... uo1 J. was the victim of UCl's Eddi• er1c1t.an, "'''" ll>betton, h dd 1 A d l l Etunor "-· M41•1M PoYM .• UI; '· WINNING PUNCH-San Clemente High's John Carson Cleft) congratulates Mike Horvath followin g the latter's no-hitter in 1976. Both return to the Tritons fold to form a solid one-two pitching combina-tion. s o Y P ay. n e • Kn Netto. \.1t1ten 0e111-v. u r t er m an Bob t> obey o ...... 0oro111r G<-..,, m : s. v1r91n1• pitched the final two in-~!.'::.":w:::ie~1:;;r· .. "::!;: nilfcs for the Anteaters. 01111o11. J-Boelld, .. tty Woodford, C·• returned to play K•111v "'1-"'· '34: 1• .. "., wui, cA 111ro1111a ~. M¥1• ~.., ... tty today, hosting Southern o.11er, tu. Cal Colleoe o r Costa 8 FlloM-1. M.,o.,•t Hodo•. a ElolH Kidder. Jo vu B•tclletter, Me.a. The Anteaters .... ,,,. .. ,bon; 1. Ju n t.am•rt. S11nset Baseball. Vista: 3-team Race for Title The 1977 Sunset and Angelus League baseball seasons are nearing with campaigns beginning Feb. 22-25 with non-league tussles on tap. Mater Del of Santa Ana, with a host of returning letterman , is given an ex- cellent chance at the Angelus crown- but for the Sunset cha mpionship pre· dictions seem futile. but Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Newport Harbor appear to have a s li ght edge. Here ia a capsule look at the Orange Coaat area's five Sunset League teams and Mater Del in the Angelus circuit. •-•lng•on Beaela Tho equivalent of eight raturru,,g starters, including All-Oranic County outfielder Don Kerce and All-Empire League pllche r Paul Sanchez. gives the Oilers an edge on paper u they prepare ror the upcoming season. . Coach Don Terranovc says his team's major strengths et re three re- turning p itche r!. ( righthanders Sanchez. Ed Shute and Troy WickHnc), bona rid<> lette rmen at nearly every position and a proven hitter in Kerce. Kerce batted .333 during 1976 after going hitless in the fir~t ~•x games. Sanchez had a 2.44 c.r .a. in '76. Other returning starters include Shawn Gill. a Junior catcher. senior third baseman Steve HJelm~trom. s enior second ba s cmun Kurt Lundstrom and senior ccnlerficldcr Jeff Recd. All three pitchers figure In outfield plans when not invol\'cd in mound duty. The Oilers will carry only 13 on the squad and figuring to stick with the team are designated hitter and backup catcher Kevin Mugavcro Csr.), short.stops Tom Samperi (jr > and Phil Wright, n freshman. first baseman Jim Thomas Cjr> a nd righthanded pitcher Tim Young, a senior . Ecfbon Four returning varsity starters and rive-deep pitching gives the Chargers of Huntington Beach's Edison Hiah coach Ron LaRuffa basis for op- tim ism. Back arc outfie lders J eff Smith and Brian Desrosiers, All·Sunsct League catcher Tim Innes and All·Orange Coast area ace Tim Nichols. Dampening the outlook, however, is the tentative availability of Nichols, still not fully recovered from a foot· ball lnJury. v Softball WOMIN'S SOl'TBAl.I. And the Chargen have lost two potential aces to the transfer routo- Scott Mertzon to Palo Alto and Chris Stone to Ariwna. "We'w got five pitchers who can win on the high sctrool level." says La Ruff a, in hia second year at Edison after an impressive stint at Colton High. Senior righthanders J crrc Tittle, Russ Abbott, Steve Slaton and Don LaValle, along with le fty Dave Richmond. form the mound staH. Tit· tie and Abbott arc returning varsity lettermen. ''We're optimistic." says La Ruff a. "We had a 20-7 record in a summer league and with the deepest pitching staff in the league. it 's Important because things wlll come down to the No. 2 pitchers ... for everyone. "But we 're concerned a t shortstop i! Nichols isn't available." Vying for s tarting roles arc seniors Roger Hayes and Danny Smith at first base. junior Craig Justice at second. junior Mike V anderveer and sophomore Mike Zinn at shortstop, .seniors Ron Ward and Mark Cooper at third. junior Bob Smart in the outfield and Smith and Hayes at designated hiller. Fountain \/alley The Barons of Fountain Valley coach John Cole have only three re- turning varsity lettermen In the fold for sure. yet arc still considered a ma· jor threat to the title. Pitcher Kevin Fitzhugh , a rlghthander with a 3·2 won·loss record and 2.10 e.r .a. {n 50 Innings or work In 1976. is bolstered by infielders Tim Holmes (third base) and Mike Lung <shortstop>. Bo Boxold's status In the outfield isn't known. he m ay bypass bas eball to concentrate on the weights in an ticipation of collegiate football - probably at Stanford. "We're looking to fill four spots," says Cole. "One is at catcher ~nd I think we have with Mike Empting. Another is at pitching depth and we think we've done that with Steve Sickman (sr. rh>, J im Connor Cjr. rh) and Bill Carroll (sr . lh). Second base and centerfleld are still spots that need to be ironed out. We think we hove the personnel, It's just a matter or making some decisions ... says Cole. &e Sunset, Page 87) Owe11 WUllAIM. Cllrlt SCIMWt«, LM· •I• Wll•on. 131; l l.ou Hug...,s, Sar'Nr• l);SOft, O.rrl Mc<on"lllck. EllHl>ttll P•rr. Ill; •• Gunte ateOlldte. Sefly Wrlgllt, vlrotnle Crom'"41, Edie M9nltt; 5. N•M'I' J-s. Maroa E11ans. P.Csy 0.11 ... 1. Nyrn• llarMs; 6. llMroe Lllld9n, H-ou111. c.ett Sult111an, JElll• Fe~n. 1n; 1. a.,t>M• 0eFl-1nco, M•"• Wlllttell~, car..._ ~rry, De'-S Gey lord. IJ1. 111\llN• COA$T CC Most P••• Towrl\ament: A Fllgllt-t. Kay Gordrler. IS; J. llfel Ellt11 V•ltf'ltlne0 8ot1t C.llK..t, Dff Dee 'Wlllte. 14; S. Bobbi Snlltll. U. 8 "10111-1 fllel Gloria Dellos. Jean O'Sl<U. Nudle Rice, IS; •. ltlel C.y H•lberg, Fern Sprowl. U ; 6. t.Wrtl S<llntl!ltr, ll. c Fllotlt-•. Oo<otl>Y 9owe11. IS; ?. ltlt l M•rv 41111 Bat-If', Botty Hell• Otr\On. ~,...,,ti,.. V•ldos, Barb••" Wood. U ; •· Hoe) Jov• I.ester, Pal Morris, Jo si..wcirll, Jun Taylor. IJ. o Ft10111-1. Olrl' Vernon. 1S; t. 111 •1 Pl\ylll1 Steonen1on, K1ttc O"Dell. 14; • Helen MUlld'(, 13; s. Helt<le Martin, 17. Guot Dev n-better balls of tou•M>met !Grout-I. Gtorl1 D•R ..... Doroll\V 81Me11, oueth c..te Coury. At111111e Mlr ... 1• IMlulon Vlelo CC>. 1'1; 1. S•ttv Cefln, J•nls 'Wlllteslde, guest• Ju111 Drury, Lois ECIH IS.111• Ana CCI. 16t; 3. t.Wrct1 St~r. Kele H•l"ton. gue'ts Pat W.ls1111,.1_, !Aolllng Hitt' CCI, Virginie O"Brl.., (81g Cl"'l'Oll CCI. 110; 4. DH 0.. Wtllle. Kelle Glr-r. Ql»\11 a. J. Jollnson •El Nlguet CCI, Eon• M<H~ll !8h;iC.,,.,.oot CC>.171. INtll -1 Dorottty Gr•v. Hul«M O•vtu. Outlll Setty Cofte nt. Pit 4nlth fBto C.nvon CCI. Ill; 1. t.Wry Allll e ....... 8"ny C•lh<¥1. quftlS R-11• H•r1 CS...t1 AM CCI. P•I Feto•• CRoll•no Hiii\ CCI. Ill; l . P•I Morrh Georgie Holey. ounts vorolnl• McC.rtnev. Mittie llog•11 <Sent• •n• CCI. 1l'J 4 Dody Gr•nl, M••llyn J-1. 90fllS J•c~lt \l~l-1. Oo<oltly Noclo ISlnl• .,.. CCI. 119. Basketball H•w .. 11 101 HOU\1on 8aPllll 81 O'lahonM Cltv 111. W•c1lt• 61. n 8owllnq Grwen ~ . l.ovol• CC"IC•<IOl 111 OeP•ut 11. MarQVt11e 11 12 OT) Otlroll 86. w MiCll•t)illl 6• low• 74, Olllo !It. 10 IOTI Notre Damo "· 8utle• 14 s• Aubvrn 16. V•nde•l>llt 71 IOTI 4u\tln PHV 12. E. Ten11tufe St. Furm~" 90, AotNl•<hi•11 St. 83 tetntuc~v 104, l'torld.t 78 I.SU 1S, Otorot• H M•rt ... 1116. Motr tt H.t•nv 73 NII l.OUo\IANo llO. N~w Orlren• IS COTI ~• 1.oul\ •'· _.,,ot>ls St.'' con Te11nenff 9>. MIUIUIPOI IS VMI 13, O•vldto11 .. Nia~·· 70. Bufl•IO St. 64 Pro Hockey NftleMI MO<-tY UlqW PllllOdllt....i• •. SI LOUI\ • Butl110 1. Toranto 1 NY Ill ..... ,. 2 ll•!ICOU .... r t llVIH ADVANIAOU oua,AODOIJIU tJ..afttoc:-e 16\ CU '-11tU40lllCI 0r..,..c..1t .. •lnre HIGH·RISE VIEWS. LOW·RISE CONVENIENCE. that your1 ,,,.y not! W.rore.c F"1111ra,n lt~h.u GIHntlll. lb Hulttendtr.• llouito, 21> TMIA"l.<f Woll <I 81irn1 II Mo110fl,rf W•y,111 Totel• •• r II M I 1 1 0 • I 1 1 I 0 0 0 • I ' , I 0 I 0 I 1 I 1 1 I 1 0 1 r n O , 0 I , ) 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 " • 10 • tc_..,,.,....,. , " . 100 no o -. 10 1 toO 011 0-1 • • Gateway Plata In Newport Center. Four new buildings In a garden otftce communltv- Outstandlng views, high IC:ientlty, presttge environment. Up to·a,000 aqua .. feet per floor. Free adjacent pc;wrklng. · Free ~ce planning. ~~-~AV Col'lloct your broker ~.lift.Ml or 1111 D(Jlley Of Tom Utman Bl. ·A .,A · Of MollOW·K•nn•dV CorporotlOn. r;~ (714) 644·&l6&. ~ 1 C:OM"-m OAAN•I C:OUNn COYllAM .................... ... c ....... ,. ..... ,.., ... ,.. ...... ..... ............ LA. .. 2 MOtmt fO MONTM lll!f'AL IA,l&S 3 MO '90lff utUllD ON A'PIOW9 C_,., 4 ONLY t1'.1f .. ~ TOTAL C:otf , ......... ,..... 5 NIW COM,ACT ... .,. ltft (1 v •... 'la. 6 WOICI MD&HI PA ... AUO AH AYAILMLI 7 MU .... MAtttmlAMC:i !ll ~ \ °'fl•I ('llU1'1 i \ Ji \11111J11 I l'>Ht'il \fl/\'llf ' r I I f I ......... . .... (<Willt wfl'ilili•> Cbatftortb HI.it truw Jrlf Ria (d), outllalder 8er•l• Hawtln1, rcturntn1 flrit bueman Davtd R~. catcher Oary KnoDoffc.. pltebcr-1eeoad buemm !elf Newton and out· ftelder Jim Greeley, baclt ln tho 'Mt11loe Viejo llnHp after a 1 year'• ablencc. . It UMn II• 1-ct ~an~. lt t , may be on the mouod ln ~cf , apeed. StUl. Hilke bat a Mt of • eanclldatet at plteber, lnchadinl retumlnt starter Jim Walker <rh>, Ed Mccann <rb>, Butch Blehaai (J'b), Knopof f, Newton and sophomore lefty Paul La Joto and Junior southpaw Gary ~ Arn~ld. Sqpbomorea Vito Hite <in-~ fielder) and outfielder Greg Davis, aJoai with catcher Mike Sweazy round out tbe list of , varsity candidates. • "We loet a lot of one-run games ,.. last year," says Hilke. "Loslnc one-hilt.en ts rldiculoua. Our de- fense abould be decent and Ris and Reed will probably be In the No. 3 and 4 spots In the llneup." s-Clemellte San Clemf!Dte High 's defending Soutb Cout Le-.ue champions a re favored to repeat -due mainly to a tough 1-2 combina· lion on the mound and possibly the best group of bitters in the league. Miko Horvath, a returning all- lcague choice who fashioned a no-bitter as a junior, is joined by , 6-7 junior John Carson on the . mound. Depth ls added with Ben· ny Martinez -all three arc · · right·handcrs. ' The holes are at catcher, second base and shortstop. "I{ we can fill in at those spots," says SC coach Marshall Adair, ''we'll bede<:ent." Carson and Horvath figure to rotate at third hue with Jim Meadows, a two-y~ar MtM:rman, at flnt buo. Scott Carr and MartUies are In tbO Portitop pie· lure, wtUle lecond base mvolvos Hnior Jobn MacJ>otlald. Tim Dunham returoa to cen- terfieJd as a two-year stater, and Bob Reynolds, Ted Hett!nga and Fred Morrill, alone Yiilh uUlity .nm Forrester torm the outlleld. Cateber po11lblllt.ies lndude 1cnlor Mark Messenmith and sophomore Brad Parker. l/•le>en lt• Five returninc starters are in the fold at lrvine'•• Univenlty High, but coach Ken Tratar is faced with S01De lnexptirience at catcher and 1D the outfl~ld and an unproven bltttn1 attack u the Trojans gird for tbe '77 seaaoo. Black are all-lea1uo aces Joe M uTt, a ricbt-baoded junior pitcher and junior Steve TiJles, all-league as a designated bitter in 1976. And there are pitcher Ed O'Donnell (senior rig.bthander), second baseman Bill Moua.ban and shortstop Mike Shaw. Battling for catcher are sophomore David Langmade, senior Bob Foley and junior Tom Hughes. Other mound possibilities in- clude juniors Andy Murashko (rightbander) and lofty Mike Bouffard, plus senior right· hander John Kepke. · Infield candidates inch.Ide senior Cary Post al first, juniors David Gentile at second and Steve DcPauw and O'Donnell at third. The unproven outfield will be filled from this list: juniors David Evans, John Reiss, Joe Parker, Jeff Scheel, Eagle Rock transfer Dean Kane, Bouffard or Kepke and Dominguez High transfer Steve Nevens. In Cage Poll Fountalo Valley Hl&b's 22·1 Barons continue as the No. 3 team in the CIF 4·A buketball ratlncs as tbe season closes in on the fbtal relU)ar week. In 3·A circles the San Clemente Wah Trtt.oGs rem&ln No. 2 with Coroaa dtl Mar Hlgb'a Sea Kinga, one point victors over San Clemente ln the fbist round, a noich back at No. 3. The two South Coast League rtvall clash Friday hight at San Clemente. Costa Mesa's Estancia High,. cbamploo oft.be c..,tury League, picked up votes in 4-A, while Newport Beach's Huntington Valley Christian is rated No.son the small schools level. •A >A 1 ~~ f:ll-21 100 1 Le Heo-e 110-31 197 2\lt11mo.lllMI 111 1,$Cl..,.CIMI 111 l. ""' v1111.., cn.111.. i. C•M , .. ., 1tt 4 Ve<1ture !»31 131 4 Oownetf1MI 129 s COMPIOft l l7·l l IU s.w ... ~I~) 102 6 MUii.._, C .. I 94 6 Re-IJO.S) • 1 LaPolylll-S) ~ 7.G-slwt l~I 11 t .S.,,•fn·21 '3 l.Cul~rCll\'llt-11 so t All\e..-e CJO.SI 31 t RubldOux 116-61 .-J 10. El-r 11.,.llt 10. Lo-111._.I l2 00.er': ~loL SI. • Other\· La Mlra<N, Aftti-y, Moml"9!'1de, HH WllSOll, Loft Allos, Sent• ..... LoYol•. Covlne. Slerr•. O~· EUell<le, Cructnle mlen.Rlvers•Otf'oly, Velley. Glend•I•. TllOUHn<I Oell,. 1-A 1·A 1 r.Mr. Vltey C20-J) 194 I, Penis fl}Sl ,, VctrVlty<(f).11 111 t. LA Lul1'91'., C~?I 3. C/'1....,11~ UMI 1S9 3 Morro !Ny 117·0 •, 411• l..ol'N 121-3) 1~ •. S•ur.aus 11.:il S R-landf10.ll 111 S.MervSI .. !l._31 6.111111~ (J0.21 'IO 6 Bishop 0 1"91> OS.II 1. Sn Mrlno llH I 71 1. Notre Dame 111 o I W«~-ll"SI I.I I C•'J>lllll!f'I• 117·11 t. lndlo llt.31 SO 'I. 81-..,p l~I 10. Snll Clere 11S.71 10 10. Aaulna' Cl"Sl Other\: El Monte.St. Olhos: 0'\l••IO Monie•, Puemounl, Christian, St. Jos~n. Harver4. Elsinore, Tellec1'41p•. 6•M•ft9. S.nl• Vnez. Trona , Netdles, Fillmore. Wh1t1 1er s .... u ~"~lt'· Kern ~ellev. I. Provident• flS SI f. Marshall 11).31 3 IUo HOftdo 114-SI • Moftl<l•lr Preo 114-SI S. Hwnl· 1"1111 Vl"ey Qwhll•ll fU-41 6 L•• V1ltlno 111).21 ) ·cuveml Vellpy rn 21 8 F11n1roc19e 11011 '· O.eth v .. 1.., 11) SI 10.Amu•un Clw'lsllM 111-11. COmttned n. ... , The Nit~ th Fountalb Valley 1quad Includes eateber Mart Roberta. MCOad baemn Stuart MUea (topbomote), lnftelder-outfteldef'Jelflluoo, outtlelden Scott n.t.ona. BW GrU1. lf lk• SbatUes, Boxold and potlibly topbom~ Kevin Ro.rune. Fitalualh ncurs at tint buo when bo'• not oa tbo mound, wb.Ue Doui Thompson and Jerry Wllaoo are alao flnt buo ca.aclld.ates. .... _ Two bil ila cloud the plctunt at Huotincton Beacb's Marina Jillb. 1. WW all·lea1ue abortatop Mark Dapello re1alD Corm afterunderioin1 • aboulder operation lD the summer.? 2. What's the availability ot pitcher Ed Selby, who is under a doctor's care for • pulled or possibly ripped muscle In tbe hamstrln1·grolD area! Other than that, coach Paul Frey bu a bundle ol young, yet experienced, talent to mold a cbam- pionabipC(llltender. A1th0ugb the Vlkea must endure their customary late st.art. Marina baa several aces returning to the fold, Including third baseman Jeff Mancino, caU:ber Steve Porath and centerfielder Greg Ven· tura <all·league as asopbomoreandjwtlor). "Pitcbir(g is our biggest questJon," says Frey. "Among the candidates, aside from Selby, are senior Kelly White (rilbthander), Carson High transfer Lee Magga (rigbthander), Juniors Mike Bors Crigbtbander), Rick Pulido <lefty), Jeff Graham (lefty) and sophomore Chuck Graham <lefty)." Up from the junior varsity are tho following, wbicb along with the aforementioned players, must be trimmed toa 13-manroster: Juniora Eric Irwin (of.uW), Larry Coy Cuti}), Gary Springer (inf), Rod Davis (of); Seniors Rod Skinn (lb-inf>. Todd Klng (inf), Mike Fuentes (inf), Rob Harris (inf), Phil Schwabro (of), Ken Hanvey (of) and Ed Mitchell (of); and sophomores Gary Henderson (catcher) and Ron McGuire (inf). Neeeport Barhr Blue chip pitcher Gary Bram, a 6-t, 185-pound junior southpaw wi th an assortment of pitches, in· eluding an effective changeup, leads coach Mike Gray's Sailors in their bid toward a Sunset League tiUe. · "We're looking for a se<:ond and third pitcher, some hitting and solid catching," says Gray. Newport Harbor has three returning starters and a bundle of lettermen in the fold. Gordon Barr. a third baseman in 1976, will be used as a pitcher and in ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimmmm. th c out fie 1 d , w b ii e M a tt Palm er rel urns to KTLA.e 8:00 -"Glant. •• This oplc story of Texas -from catUe to oil - stars B.oc.k Hudson. Elizabeth Taylor and James Dean Ctn his tut screen role). TbO 1956 movie is shown in two parts, tonllbt and Wednesday. ABC D 8:00 -Happy Days. WW Fonzie graduate? That's the big question in the conclusion of the story which winds up the kids• "happy days'' at Jefferson High. KCE"t99:00 -In Search of the Real America. Boginnlng a slx·part series of programs examining the mood of America. (TV DAILY LOG] TUESDAY IVININQ 8:00 B 8 Cl> 9 ((ll) CDl lllws U ID ()) (QI Cll m News 0 • .,,.,. (I) '°'*',,.. ·~ Q) P.-trie&t F1111U, m ..... 12 fD Cltctrlc CellpattJ m Dnllltk Series l1t) MIU Dou&las m Lit.tit bsuls -6:30- I I f) Dinallt JamtS ind Gloria Stewart. Allen Ludden and Betty Whtie. Hal and F1ances linden. Cll wr Criff'tt1t ®! MtlY Gritfill s.. QJ F.-,Aff* (@ Cl)) '-"e m l.oom (~ (f)) lnitdlM 7:00 Bdly lu1111 lllal Estep, Wllose Senllt vtdtl(J tNtl R'4y ws Olly lllllOr, sllll pl1u Rudy's C4111plete destlllCllOll. CID MIN: ~ (2111') "nllrt W. A CfMkM Mall" (dra) '70-Kiill l>oa&las. lleftrY FOllCll, l• Gra11L ID ~Dll.nPIWita * Geo,.. ...... Milt lntttl I Jad.t. flnlOO CD ~ liffftll S... Q)V11pu. tlJ.._.Vlliety m I• S.dl et lllt M MMtl "There's No S.s111ess Like 811 8uS1•us" New six.plfl monthly series hosted by Ben J. Wattenbe1i; which challenaes the accusations and asumphons lhal Americans are an unhappy, 1nlernally oppressed people, whose II.sic btltltutions are falhns. et Qla11plmlll!I .,,...... -9:30-11 (cm CJ)) (I) 0.. Dly It A ti. Ann's ecsttsy over a bi1 PfO· mot10111S l1111Sformed 11110 u aeon•z· 1111 dtcl1IOll wllen ifs stnpped away and Ci!:: less Quahhed ~man ~ m ..... Amsts EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA shortstop. Lettermen arc seniors Paul Smith (third base), Rolf Schwalbe (outfield>. Mitch Massey (of-first base>. pitcher Randy Hailey and Rick Clark, back after a year's layoff. 8 DINAH! WfSITS wmt * LOVlllG COUPLES! f)~ 10:00 f) ((ll) CD) (I) Ktj.tll A Young membc< of Ille polic;e for'8, acldic:ted '1 ...... \ ........ ,'"' Gray's roster of candidates to fill some boles in- cludes juniors Steve Bullington (of). Rob Miller (catcher), Jeff Plaskowski (inf), Steve Sauerbrey (pitcher). seniors Joe Halderman (third base), Bill Morton con, Tim Pfeller (first base). J,A?w Snider (of), AJ Vom Steeg <catcher>. John Benbow (inf) and sophomore Recd Sherm~. an in(icldcr. Palmer. Barr and Smith arc three of Newport's top bats and Gray says there's decent depth and adequate team speed to play his gamo-with an cm· phasls on running. Mater Def It ·s difficult to find any holes in the Mater Dei High baseball lineup as coach Bob Ickes welcomes back 11 varsity lettermen and eight &U.rtera from a second place Angelus League nine and CIF playoffs entry. The Santa Ana·based Monarchs have all-leacue pitcher Nich Harsh. a righthandcr with a 1ood fastball. and fou r others (catcher Mark Draiba, second baseman Steve McGowan, ouUielder Jim Schultz and outfielder Matt Macauley> seeking their third vannty letter . uaornm m•.., e LMa. Cl)MyllwwS- (J) Te T• Ille Trvtll 0 c.c.tratil8 CD flMLlq II> 1\t Fii fa America/btltl Jewisli Hour a Andy Griffith fJ!I Mldltilll.ellm R"9ft ('1t) (I)) Tht P'1rtrid&t F1111tly OJ) EJmlneu on Sinka l'D McHale's Navy -7:30- 0 DINAH/JIM STEWARTS * ur1ous a LUDDENS f)DiAaM .. c.-. CllMtl ..... ,.,Dtllan CI> Tiit GIN C..,.. U ®l @ Cl) ID Mollywot4 S.111n$ (I) 11lt ""' 5"" Ill 11lt JIUf's WM ... (121! Cl)) ..., lllldt (Clll CJ)) llasMik .. Ille load ®HecM'•HelllS m o-.. 21 Ttltiallf Umtl9' m "f" T "°' --------"We're strong al pitcher.catcher," says I.ekes. who has lefty Tom Croat and righthander Frank Martinez behind Harsh. 8:00 D ((tl'J CJJ) ()) Wiit's Wiie Strong. Polyester cad resists flat spotti'lg Atl0$ CUshlonoire is o 4-ply Polyestet. Drazba hit at a .357 clip in 1976 and has backup at catcher from Juan Abbott. IJ WI (I) <ID Cit IN IN 8'ack Siieo "Trouble al fo11 Ap•cht ' Pappy 1e1s e1uah1 between one gentral wllo says "fly" and 1nothtr 11tho s.~ "don t lly" General Moole. belore luv1nc lot a slalesidf ~· ferell(ie, 01deis Pawy to llr escOlt when General Wn1ht amv9$ wrth a new eipe11menlal bomber. But W11ghl oiders h1111 not fo llr rn Older Junior Bobby Meacham at shortstop, senior Marl< Liekhus at third and Ron Silagyi in tbe outfield round out the Monarchs squad, intact from 1976 with the exception of the addition of Vie Martin 1n the infield. Martin, a Junior, Is up from the Junior varsity. lo test whether the bombei can 5urv1ve w11hout e.sc:ort. anas CUSHIOIAIRI TIRE SALE PRICES ... U Movie: CC) (Z~hr) "Gi111t" Basketball <Part I) Cd•a> ·~6-Elrzabelh T111or. OlltLS8ASK«T9Al.L YA It SI TY hv•or 181 ,. fl&I Fur\! BrooU1ar1 101 ft tU l Uribe 'Ion• ••I c '101 O•lllstrorn ,;ou {10 G 181 G•ll•~n M•l•I\ Ill! G 161 Po\I Seo••"'! s\llX Edison -Mtcl\elsOfl • Mo1m..,, 1. F.-1•~ 2. S11va 1 ~­o·M .. 111n •. 8,.y J Wlll1...,~"" 2. Ed01 PUBLIC NOTICE Rock Hudson. James Dean. Cl) Movie: (?ltr) "AssHlt H A Quleft" (alh) '66-frank S111a1r1 8 (121 CJ)) 8 Htp,, Days "The Gr<1du1tion" ~ntl. ro111e keeps Rlth1e. Potste and R»lph Malph up all n1gllt cramm1nc for 1 1111keup qu11 so they taR r.ilduah:. but wllen the boys learn lht Fonz wilt nol be 1ndudtd 1n lht wemonttS. Iller I tad I boycott. 0 Mtvle: (C) (211f) "" Cl!I .. Done A11i10" (dra) '7'-Jack Palanu. Bud Spenct1 ... Last of tlM WiW Cl)P'cnyllll ... "I CT tTI OU SIU 51 HEU Q) llews/f'Vtk Alf airs NAMUTATEMEHT QI) Matit: <l:) (2hf) "~f' T,,. foll0Wlt'Q P8"ton\ ••• 001"91111•1• (mus) '64-Elvis Presley. ... ts~'s ... LT ESQ Fl!>H ~CHIPS, nn m Nati..11 '9o111phk Special So llrOOkllllr•I StrMt • .,...,.,,,,, CA "T~ N11W Indians" The Natrona! 'l'llO<I • Geo11aph1c c.m11as journeyed Kuo·Y•no Clltn, 9S7l MedllOll lhrou1h the Un1led .Stiles lftd • Av• . No '· WftlmlMI••. CA 97Ml s,.....Net CIMll. fl11 AM<ilwn ....... CJn1da a11d found lndi111S wllo 11e No. t . wet1m1m1er,canr.a rtdiscovenn4 their roots, their pride Tlllt butlM H ,, C011d11Cl•d bv • and their VOICt 9811•r•1 llMlMNlllP. O> Yarnos a tinter ICuo-Yet'QCMft ~-Ttllt 11•1-I wH fllecl wfllt Ille m hydllt ,__.,. Oounty Clefll al ()renqe County on Jen. , -1:30- U, lt17. l'?O,,. 0 ((II CJ)) (JJ) lmr11a & Publl"'9d 0renoe CoMt Oelly Piiot. Shirley "Daddy's l1tllt Glrr' Sllirlty Feb a. u. n. -Merc111, 1'77 1s erc1led ~ust her dad, wllom •IHI She h1sn't $tell IOI 0¥U I ytll, IS ----------comina fo mrl 8411 she tels mo1e PUBUC NOTICE than lhe ba11a1ned lor wllen lie ~ICTITIOU$8USINEH NAM• ITAT•M•NT $hows up. CD CroD·Wils TM lell•w1no __ , __ l"9 bu\1-fl) aii.. "'crllll e> Sillltiae Contelly .,.nn Good ttvough Februory 28. l977 ~tire thofs cx:>nCOVe-molded Prices may vary at Chevron Stations tohefpprolongtreod6fe. Con'lxrtet"-designed , ~·•1ocJrS1c1eww11 ~-WM9...._. MUTT LYNCH0S, 311 PelM Sltffl. 9alboe.C<llllom<e•M1 Oe11lel '-" a. Gell Marie LY1'Ch. U02 S•'ftl•n Cowrt, Sef'I J111n Cfflm•,,..~.,.,s 8 100 8 (<IJ) CJ)) Cl) ll•A•S•H Hl'liltye ltlS tllt oPl)OrtUltf f()( a Mllr job es peaonat p~11n to Ille I Corps commandef, lrucible Gen. Thtodor• A. Korshak, pt,yed bt 1uut Edward 8111ns. G OCl>ahlk• hN• seven-rt>bed tread pattem I Sue Piie• Tlllt bvw.IM " '~eel "" •11 .... •lvldVel 0•111111 L'fft(JI Tllll Sle .. "*'t WK Rltd wltll tM c-1., °'" of Or8119t Covlltv •11 JMuerv-.1m 1'11tU "Shall'' SJllltf J.t Joftaa Cmtl .. ~1*1tlMHI ~ eo.t 0.ll'f Pfltt, the INlllCtl of I loaft COlllptAJ wllo ...w ... rv 1,8, IS, ft, ltn J1 "77 IS wspecltd bJ SC!s. An4efscicl and Crowlfy ol t'"""I ow" his more difficult OCbts to I l•nt ol mleldal loan sllttu . PUBLIC NO'l1CE • (8 Cl)) lldt ..... ,_ .... Oiallf• 11!4(1IOll 11¥ Wtlley CIV* IW to attempt colcld•; wtlllt • to 1~blinc l!ld in debt. falls Pflf 10 a powerlvt CMM fi&lltt .mo uses 111111 uascrupulously. • f'OUC( Sfon·2 Cops * t.. up It tilt 1**r foe' ~ lltroit bust! U (21) (I) Cl '9licl Story "Haid Rock 81own" Ricardo Monulban porl11ys a Me.ican nart0hcs agent and D.tv1d Cloh rs his Amefltan counterpart in a coocmatlve effort lo sna1t the American buyei and Meaican selle11 ol 30 pounds of he10tn (]) Celtllrlty .... U FAMllY.fWICY'S * OlD FWU ON OIUGS D (QI Cl)) 8 F..., Nancy's relahonstup -'th a niediQI school v1C1111te setms ~inect tv Mcolne 1 Stn<M ro1111nce u11til she dlsaMll • her SUttOf " addicted to dnlc:s. ' Cl""" Ill~ m lilltlillc " t11e ...,. (II) -10:30-........ 11:00 U D ID@"-' .. ()) <II (UI Cl) .... a ca (J)> u.. -.nc.M str1e ()) Sillcles Mite* U11 G lbwricl ID H.tppinm Is TllrH f1 * Bt4 In Ftn!W004 In More Thin One F1mil1 m MlfJ H1rt111111, Miff "'11IMn O>SttsUfdlllkt ((Ill Cl)) Tiit a..d Slltw QtJ hst of Gl'Olldlo mr•r-..n.a -11:30-.. 11 ccm rn> (J) w Lat• ...... a G (I) <mm...., c..n (]) t11t m a-.. 8 (Qll Cl)) Qt T..-,,,... of Illa w.11 Q) Tfll .... JlllM Gii ~Tiit 100a.. 12:00 • lest " GlwcM Cl MoM: ~ "Siie "°"A Jtllow -.." (wes) '49-Joha Wry11e. tD ~ "01r.9 u,_ A T'llt" (com) '44-Clry Grant. Jlnet 8fatf. m MoiM: ~ "hllMI 111 t11a s .. " ~ (dra) '57-la~. -12:30- 0 All·lll&M Sllow: "Sa1fon," "G"'l14 Otlta lt1Wtrt," nu T.,,.... 1100 , D ~ (])<!IT_,.,.... 2100 Cl Mme DHMtfUbut: '40ur ....... "LMr ff• Milt(' m A11.1{;1tit $1tow1 "l rel\eot," "P'r\Mt of P'111tes," "Mr Old ""t" -3:05- 11 Mftlt: "Cltrle" (dra) ·s2- lau11nce OUvier. Jennifer Jones. ••MJ ..... l .'OGe.1•N,AUl l'tCTlTtOUl•llllltSSS _ ......... ,._, ltMWITAT&MmMT U......._CA_.. The tono.lnQ---doll'llMl-- ,,_.ftNdOr .... C:Mst o.ll't-Pllat. MUH: ~LU.D. .. Mlrcl\t.1977 VI SS I! R ·LAM 8 I! RT INVl!STMl!HTS, Int N. Mouftt•IA V._ "'*-· N..,,_., CA t26)I Roc:llM rt.~ 11JI N, ,,._. i.lft Vt.w .,._., Fiii..,_, CAttUI WllMMI P. y._-, 101 west Uncoi.. AW~ll\.CA,_, Thia Ml-la C..-CIM lrl a oe-r.t C*1MI IMO. ........ ~ lllb~-11 ......... 0ountv a..tt 111 ar-. Cowitv °" "'"-1, 1t11. PVBUCNOTICE PICTIT10US•111tNUI _..,.ITA,_MT T ... .......,. __ ....,. ___ n : I I I SCX>TT-1.ANO COMPANY, ftl SCOTT·L>-NO 1 ... VIESTlll\alfT (X)M. P•NV. IJI $COTT·LAlf0 11t•AL IESTATIE, St172 CINfool'-Dr. s..111 ~-C91~'2617 Zolll• MN Sc.att. '1f72 a........ °" .. Solllll u.-. C-'ltoml•ta71 Tll" bwl!Mlt 11 ~ lly ... lft. dlvldlUll. l.oltt•Alw. Sc«t • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y .p I L 0 T c ,L A s s I F: I E D 6 4 2 • -· ! ~ HERITAGE ·. . REALTORS BILL GRUNDY . REALlOR · . ~ VIEW ON THE BLUFF Hllltington OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 12·5 ---- U11ta:goMadll ....... va.w ...... Many u&ra features too numerous to men'100 ln this bl1bly upsraded bom£' Custom wall cov· erln&•. wtnd ow and carpets. • Bedrma, 1peclom fam rm. formal dlnlna rm. fplc. On a beautlfully landlcaped corner lot . 1188,000. '""mo 11106VAUAITA n=i Bea~ 2 bedroom, 2 1r•lJ'On batb. Cultom carpet.in& • "" & wallpaper. Flrtplaee, ~~~~~~~~ large entry ball with wood pegsed floors. 2 patios, dOuble gara1e w1tb electric opener. Pool, ~ courta. Just 9mont.hallt'9. $77,toO IXTllMI PllVACY Located orr Ellis SHARP •--------. betweeo Beacb Blvd. 6 • Bedroom ram11y home. Mmsae· ar Newland ln HunUqtm 3 bdrm 2 bath home plus bolMl9 rooJn located at tbe end of a cul-de-sac with NO adjoining neiihbon. Thia 3 year oew home bas an over- llled lol <R.V. acceul. ~ carpets and a step aavet' kitchen. Call collect (TI4 I 842·2535 up1rades t h ruout.-Beach. Waterfall, pood, room & U_._... Coutllne Realt1 ror recreatlooal vehicle. ........a 636-8802 $71.000. • Parlez•vou1 F rench OlfN Ill II • II S fUN IO 8( NICf ' 640.9900 ~ t! ::r;ri~1--l-IR_l_EA_C_H __ courtyard. Taking de· .CITY IOMUS ~THE 'REAL ~_Jl_E~TAT-ER~- \\I.I.I<·' 1:1·\ll) '.\ ! , ,, I ,,,,.1.,• l lio•1,I• posit• now at $51,000. Neat u a pln. clean u a ~ wbiaUe on a beautirul pg' Ol HOME I~ I tree Ubed street. Elev at· · OMUPE~RSB tng stairway leads to ma11lve bonu~ room. ns,nno. GIOIG-IAM Walk to acbool• and "" ..U COLOM•.• s~ng from a quiet Co=letely redei:orated uu. f l I hb h d 3 m, 2 bath, pride· SIX. ·-OM am Y ne g or oo . J1WUlft rahlp home with -"' --------• Call collect (114 I 842·2535 "'"' .... HIARllACH l•--HURR---Y•l•l--t .~"'''..•9·1rsiVNrolilN1C1• :St1oB~ l=b~o::;g ~~~~b~:~~~~~~ ~~~'Tmny. n~~~~·-~l~lldr!!1~:~~·~1 ~cfilc;:1.~1qulck room wttllf)ooct.ocelllD& home close to Mesa t...... .-•• = .. ••1•~ C:SELECT ftmplace. Banquet alzed Verde Country Club. L T'PROPERTIES formal dinloa room ll Grand plaDo abed living w911m a coovenleotly secluded room, large separ ate R..chltfe llMT 'TIU. .from b uae coun try family room comple.te WITH VIEW YOURS! $59,950 kitchen. Family casual wit b wet bar. b1 g entertainment room bedrooms and heavy Nearly 2 acres nesUed Abandoned by Owner ·overlooks grounds. ,bake roof. Covered ~ gJant oaks only and available for you Guest quatttts. Sweep. patio and beautiful 2~milestothe1urfwtth NOW! Sparkllo1 • lng open ban.nlster stairs grounds surround An· a remarkable c ua~om BDRM Family hoq>e on to ma11lve bedroom tbooy free,form pool. built 3 bdrm + den + quiet street! Secluded suites. Hurry for this Call ~ for full de-family rm home de· entey to aweeplng Llvl.ng "Gone With The Wind" &alls. slgned to mulmlie the Room. Gourmet Kitchen cbarmer.CaJl96S-1881. panoramic. bi lly plua dine! Rambling ortNrU•11u1JN ro111MC1 ranchlaod vlew. Alao 5 puaage way to Muter -'!.:.~ HERITAGE ~ ' THE REAL ESTJ\TE RS _· SAMTAAMA SAVll·$49,950 FUU.PlqCI super cle~ready to llv~ ln ramUy e In deslra· ble aiu. V /FHA term unbelievable that thil undet' s;o,ooo. Call toda 141-7171. ()Ptfw II•• II S ,.,_, IO!lf "«11 ~THE Rf.AL ~ ESTATERS ~ -VA NO DOWN OWi-...... 4 ~1 idnt toeatlon Upp:mueq thruout. Hug covered paUo. Waterfal In rear vant. •.ooo. illd~e Rt•.11 Estate . ,:,•,,. '.' ·''.w.··,·< Doll~ lflvt up the 1blpt "Ult;r It In claa1lfted. Sblp to 1bore resulta' ~ car covered parltln& + BDRM retreat. Pool ii.le room forcampen, boats. back yard l Owner ·~~~~~~~~~~!etc. The corral can ac· desperate! Try u1 of. 1: commodate as many fer! For quick •bowin& horses u you could ever call847.f010 . • REALTORS UMDB41AILY DESIGMID l'OR UVIMG IM MESA DB. MAR ' Wow! Loads or charm in this beauUfully decorat· ed home. Your ramlly will live ln warmth. Four want wtth room to 1pere. Ol'fN '1111 • '' $ 'VN IOlll l>#Cf• OFFERI NG PRICE ~'[-THE REAL ~ £STATERS $220.000. C411644-721 I Bedrooms and Famlly ====-=;..;;....--- rNEED Sood residential lot or building aite. So. coast area-Caab l>Qfer. Rita Myers, Rltr , ~oreeo-1101 Room with versaUllty fo tbe creative homeowner. Connecting door between two Bedrooms aod you bave a pla1f'OOm. Do you need a Den? You have one wi t h three Bed.rooms. The price Is right at $72.!iQO. Separate llaater bedroom and dole to schools and abop· piaa. can now 546-2313 °""' 11•11\1'-"" ro11tr.<1• UAL ESTA.Tl SALIS s&UMAR For llceosed agents In· 3 PLUS ..U.I terested ln our preaenta· F~ Y lOOM Uoo "How to earn com· $61.000 missions through re· Located In prime Hunt· a l tor . d e v e I o Pe r lngton Buch location cooperation ... Free near Golf Course. """e seminar al the Le Biron t -Ho&el. BUIU Park, call L1vln1 Room wltb for details & rnerva· erat'khn1 fireplace. uon.s. (21J)2a3.7201 or Gourmet Kitchen with Breatfut area. Pride of ~·FMmELOPERS ownership home. Call Deai1J>ert8uildert ~9 •1l ~'WIOl!IMC1• <Broken lnvtt.d to brin1 _____ , ~,~=~" !:~lfllJf;~I WAl&FIOMT IMVISTOAS . -.:_·-····. E Pta,ft.OAT , Olotce corner • rare • 4 $36,100 bdrm., 3 blth home, 2 Older home located tn 1 tt•• ._....., frplc1.. Ice. covered Huntlnaton Buch Of. <ftltw UUWll peUo. Nft noat! 11'19,$00 eox100µ. lot near echoo • AA' c:oni&IUoned. 3 bdrm I ...... _..,"_,..., r~l ~rt:r.c,~~~·8; =~ .:!~ ~~'id;ri~ more IAtormatlon on thll Call • '71-7060 • unique buy call 913-6767 ~1·~ O#'fNl'111•1f\llJl'llO!i1N<f' w ................ ~;.;..U..;;.dl...;.e....;~;.;..ems-.: __ 142_·5e'18~ W_an_t _A_dl __ c_al_1_6'2_·56_'78_ [ .... a;::-:_ GwNI 1002 .............................................. Ull TO MAKE MONEY? · If yoq bouJht your property s years go, Jt probably ls worUt double the amo.mt you paid: maybe even more. Tbe experts agree that there never baa been a better time to sell tban rtshtnow! For your better service, we have doubted our floor space, increased our staff & relocated in Newport Center, coaventent to banks & Fashion Island. We wtll estimate the value of your property with intelligent analysis US· Ult several of our very professional members. WE'VE MOVED To larger quarters in the Great Western S&L Bldg., 450 Newport Center Dr .• ground floor. fiqt .. 759-081 !UR 6'..t Wut.u 11~. .... ,.. I 002'Gwral I 002 ······················~······················· OM 1HE aUFfS EDGE. in The Bluffs. A beautifully upgraded Dolores model: 3 bdrms., 2~ baths, wet bar & a view that won't quit! $149,500. Be sure to bring your binoculars. 673-4400 BEACON BAY IUY Impressive 2 bedroom home with a deligbtfUl patio for garden entertain· ing and a dining room for more , formal occasions. Approximately 1700 sq. ft. of living space .•.. and good living it is in Beacon Bay with Newport Bay ju~t a block away. Property priced at $121,000. with financing available. Ufllll! l()UI: fi()Ml:S REAL TORS•. 675-0000 2443 East COast Highway. Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde, at 546-5990 UDO ISU HOME .FOi L1AS1 Lovely 2 story. 3 Bdrm & den home in· cl. lge master BR w/Ige sundeck. Spac. LR & formal dining. Cpts., drapes. Unfurnished. $1,000 mo. ~~z .. 1 ... 11 s-Jam I , ....... MEWPOIT can&. M.I. 644-4910 ~ Walkm 1; Lr.ti Rt?al lst.itr A WTSIDIMM Sharp 3 Br. a ba on 1r1 tot. Reduced .to ••• ma. 983-8371. FIXER UPPER IN •.ooo. NBllHOOD. Sel•wtlliDI to do appro:ic. a.ooo. worth of off .. ttea. Alldng $57,000. AGENT, 813-1901 Jeff MESA North 3 beclrQoal. f1Qllly ~ and a tr.alter ac· ceea. AU for only ll0.500. MISAYBDI 1'182 Kintlet Ct. 38R, Iba upgraded BU«Ola bom• in beaut nbrbood near l•R 101f eoune and park. REDCARPETRL1'R Call 75'·1202 CAU.USYol TW11111 .. /Ca1dD1 .. T .... lr'lrfllle Frodl $39,000to 11!9,000 EXCELLENT TERMS THI HOMISB.LEIS Pk .7J.SJH Lota of wrousht·lroo " briclt. Agent 611-7601 P<HJI W f~, t .. ndH id ' ~ ~ , 'I ~ '1-J .. j ') L' 16oaP1tlt11A11 1007 BWtder•s bome! S!eP dn ••••••••••••••••••••••• llv rm. r~. -• ' br, -------1 dr, Chris, Bkr. 411L-21ATHS 963G17,963-6876 Plus office; prime loca·l•-------•1 lion. Listed at $1$.8.500. ARCHITECT'S JEFF BRIERY . DB.IGHT REALTOR 675-9111 Lota of redwood, at1U~ & brown plmll c~ts make tb1s Mesa Verde home~ real value at only $76,900. 3 Large bedrms. 2 baths, bufe lards. brick patlo an fruit trees. Hurry, call H>-5880 VIEW ON THE BLUFF ~ .......... FOOL Home 3 br. den, 2 ba. w 11unken bathtub, frpt, lg. lot oo cul-de·aac. By owner. tsa .soo . 863-S804 ~ \\';tlJ..1~r J; ! t~l!0 H1 .. i1 I ·.l.1 It: \'v t' ~/~ ,, :1'f 1~~ '., ' 1r'-,1. ; .• ...... COLOMY ... ~~· bedroom I•• bOme wttb MPt13,\: famllJ room Ud I~. Coavealent to ll1bt4td. TENNIS ~ru. POOL ud PARK. Call to Mt at .., .. ; o.odbrtdge Place • G.....atar Plan. ' Br. £-l l . ACOIM&&. In Univenity _Park. a bJgbl,y Ul>IJ'~ add ex· qula!tely deco.rated 3 bedroom with dlntna room, on • .-_emium lot on the &reenben. Near tht POOL. m.aoo. can rot an 1ppotntment. I t' I a•fli 'Ori ..................... .. .................... . ..,._ SJl4 .._ 3240 ..... JI._. t .. ss,_.._ JUt ~·c:aa ........................................................................................... . MIMI IAMCH NEW . 3Br. ZBa. near SO. ' BR. nwl)' up~radtd. 1\arUtnd Glen Pip .• , .• 80.\TStJP W/CONDO. 3 dll.. Z'4illA 3000 ft to.at Plaia. "50 mo. c:ao.. to beach. ~/mo. Br. Pam Rm, tena... ~1 2~ ba. Like new homt 00 Z.•tOvel acr:. 3 CJU> 431-1383 or eve• Alk r« Kellh. 968-1311 l)OOl. ISOO.jtMO« a:io. All· &M·~ -----------.Car pr. ham. t..ckrm, <2U>SlM..oa7 Slwl>SBror a+den. L1e 'hrnte CoQdo. 38r. 2bll, Had)arV11Hma.Cutnel3 bono stall fruit tree.. CUSTOM 3br 2be frpcl r.tcd yd. Desirable loca· din rm <Dover>.' Nr Boe ~ + flt, Ill' park & fenced " croea.fenced. pOOJ W/IJ)a nu prll epU Uoa. 9'2$/mo. ~or cntrlspool. Pb5t8 .. 10t achool. SSISmo. TSJ.0817 :C:o~ota m s::~·t. p~~:c: & dJ111. wik to ~eboola, -~ UNIVERSITY PARK W~M)oek, • BR. 2 terms BXR. 7141522·2080 ch11tth & shop•· ten •MlwlNch.._.. OomerU.utTowabouae Ba. h-ole, new cirpt"· or8'f6.Srl7 , ~cl pool aervlce. Get read for summer VILl.AGE Ul dips, blt.na. *700. eu...9932 · now! Wal' to beach rrom 3 bdrm. a bath. Two or11SUeee J VllW TOWNH• r ,......, Me .-• er..t Tenll 1111 • • alum111ton~ flrepl•_eo ......... &.ide 3br, lba hrdwood here. Walk to grade firerlacH. Avallable•--BW--Fl'S--CO-N--OOS-- l*J'(luet noor. catbedtai '1 ,,,..., JOOO bl t 1 11 2100 nrs. tceyct. Clean. Newl,y 8Cbool " hl1h school. 4 :UJntl= "'" ol al l4uea atartlng at l'SO celUna " wet bar ......... :.............. ....................... dee. 131115. SO.sits br, :s ba. huee •utldoc:lt, ~""' __ llootb. A1ent&44-Ula . ....~ ....... v.,., ....., ....... , '~ ........................ -&ecluded Muta' wtna-C.,_ Gto•• dbl pr. •mo. 614 20th --~-=..:.:·-=----1:::--=--::--:---:--:-- w a I k i n · rn Irr or• d New-rt Baacll Trade/Sell. 19 acres ,,.'r 2= i,:S ~ St. 53S-1T18 Turtlerock • Br pool 6 Bil C)'ft Twohse. J Br. wardrobet. Walls of ,,... choice 1rove. Sunkisl incl 1425. ~ • 1 BR Condo, lmmac .. COG· tennis tadl. isn mo. ~~ 2~ Ba, DR, pool. J. .............. ....., ,,,... ......... .. \ ................. OllrltUOO. 1la11 overview H ' 4-ft.EX f{ower. Yuma. Arla. venient to everythlna. 6"-41S'1,abortt-entaJOK. ,,.. .... ,t,ennb.S185.6404U46 ~t3'.;,1;8~'l. p R I D E • 0 F . lei;:::.~·8ef[•tre~~~~te ~mr~:!~ ~,i:t~~: sm.mo.•a.2 GREENTREE-3 Bra Ba. THllLUFfS calltoprevtew. 7U.1700 OWNE&SHlP, near Orange County property. drpa. dshwshr. frplc, 4 BR. 3 Ba uPltaded new tplc & lam rm. cloee to 3 Bdnn., famlly rm., 2'1ii Olr~ 1110•11 HUN ro111 "'"'' lloal ffolpltal, Spanlab Call 540-1151, Heritage pr, M20 mo. ~3388 S650. mo. w / I rd n r . schools, no pets. LM bL •· Le&H. CALL NOW 752-7315 Ule roots. frlvate R.Mlton. IMIMl809842·7461JW1e. lnclpdnr.668781 3 Bdrm., 2 be .. alngle DONALD M BIRD balconies 6 p aUoa. SD5 mo. Dlx Twnhse. 2 leWl.Si185,Leue. . • eocloHd aaratH of•.-&..&.. Br. 2 Ba. new cpl. dbl Uk". l~ baSurfaldeCoo· 111ECOLONY,beauungJ CORIMASSOC • • ···~·_,!.A~"2!"''~~!t~:.!l~~~~1!!!!!._.J ooune. All Z.bed.room. 2 -gar, pool. 546·6299; do. Frplc, pool. patio. fam. a Br, pool 4t tennla. ...... 75f.022' -I bat.b. Z.atory uoita. WUJ ....................... SST.QMS 831-9815or538-1827 Grdn/wtr lncl. $395. ---------------.--------S.Qa•"• 107' comlder exchange. By .............. d Ownr/Agt.6"-2932 3Br. 2Ba. frplc, bltns . ....... •••••••••••••••• •PPOintment onl)'·DO •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• 4Br. 2Ba, M35 mo. kids & NEW • Br. 2~ Ba. fplc, d dl'1l8 cpts 2 car gar ~-IHdt 1048 .._..-rflHclt 1069 L.U,RJM-• drtveby'splease. Gt•nrl 3102 pets OK, fenced yd, din area, wetbar, 1 bl~k WOODBRIDGE Broa · rncd'yd 8~ to pool' ~ 'r-"" _,. ~ ....................... SST-0231 bch. Landsc. S49S mo. moor borne. 2br, den or .._,._.:.beach ft:IU\mo. ••!"•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PO.... h &-0652 aft 4PM 3br, 2ba, D.R. Highly up-_.., ....... • -· Oce.VlewCORdo Early Bluffs "J " plan, '"' !!'= i\ SIA Be!lc area collage. Beautiful 3br, 3ba, FM, lf9ded.S475.613-4976 yrty,8'M898 '2 Bdrm 2 baths de end unit. Canyon. Fa1b. CUSTOM VllW : : All uh& pd. Fee $20. FP. FD, nr bch. Only Ccndo l sty, 2 Br, pool. 1 fireplaei.&booua ho~b Isl view. 3BR, 2BA. c1n·g HOul Beacbcomber.631-2011 $750. mo. 646·1035 Call Kay Hod&e at Beaut Deerfield twnbse. Sled·~ bcNb. 'te,ddlx 3 br rm. patio, Astroturf ""' · ~ U•• 963·0841 or Bob (213) Br. 2 ba, 2 }'n new. _...... ew&J . ecorat· rooml. 1 Y0ear new deck pool Own~ Construction to begin 7"•1920 CotlaMeta 3124 "3Br,2Ba.frplc,lgyd,$335 6'1·1Ml $MO/mo. Call wkdays ed. $400/mo yrty. Day apac ous. wner mus $110,ocio. 6"·7641. Prlo Januar)' "IT.: 3100Sq. ft ..... .,... MMN •••••••••••.••••111111 .. + utUlUes. 55&-s:M3 for · Diane at 992-5000; 1G-2546,eve1·985-E952 =r~W~b the aun ooly , 48R.3Bacontemporary &Side $200. Utll pd. 1 br. info rato. 2brT.H. Pool. Kids, wtnds/eved'll·TW. 3 BR. l "'1 ba frpl dbl or ,...,... rancb"styJe home Many _.....,.A MESA patio. kids ok. Fee. Maill petaok. Fee bib • bch. NOIUMS RIALTY Seawioddlx 2 Breon®. many -xtras. Piana i ..WI, Rentals.5'()..5370 LARGE 3Br. 2ba. 2 MainReotals,54().5370 WALNUT SQUARES Br ~le;~! Lse ~ *49,.•0S7• sty 1~ ba fpJ.c UP· F••n children OK. Call Ba,upgradedtwnhse.N a._.... · ... uadect, end ' atiO. els l"LLA sir1 Ba. part. fum, lfre· 54CM431or546-3776 Ukenew, xtrasbarp. 3br, pets. ass.eo-9799 or8C7-8855 _P_R_l_V_A_'r_E_D_R_I_V_E-1 6cb. $65,500. ~nc only. Just repainted, new qd. W.Side.$300 UtUe m• 1225 1 br 2ba, cpta. drps. frpl. ·BARBO ----R-V-le_w_So_m-ers-et Ocean view, privacf 1·998·6320; 646· 766 carpets and drapes. WUJ 548•7972 C le gets Ok Fff • bltns. patio. Dbl gar. nr IMclt 3241 s br 3 ba view walk to potential. 2 BR +den, evstwlcnds. con.aer exchange. LAlgllla•adt 3141 i.at:Rentais 540_5370 schools. Lse Ownr ........................ pooi & t~M. Saso/mo. ,larte fU.place. decks. 2 u.a••-•VllW Private patio.s, extra•••••••••••••••••••-•• · 963-2146 br. 3ba. suitable for Lse.At't.6PM6'4-3828 car garage. $129,500. rlAIWVK tarae units. G~at lnV'est-OCIAMFllOMT S!Q). 3 br T.H. Pool. Kids $360 PER Mo. 3 Br. l;\ ba. adults only. Will accept ' • ' ~ POln'OflMO DJeQLpotentta_ $120,000. s BR .• 5 baths. 2 fplcs .• ok. Fee bltns, df1l8, cpts, fenced, ::_~J~5 pet. S&OO mo. S.Cll•• 3276 · '*"i • 3 Br 41ba + bonus rm 49J.2143 mald'a unit, prtv. ateps Main Rentals. 54().,5370 cul-de.sac. C71A> $36-8884, •••• .. •••••••• .. ••••••• • gn~ • d . ...... b Le $1300 (213)--Plusb In scpo'g & • to""'ac. aae mo. &Side new 3 br, frpk, ..._._ ach charmer. 1 br. Tri-leveltwnhse,2br,2'1!1 039 G~ 494-8619 magnificent -¥atlo area. . BEACH FIXER IP. .Qe•i\I fllllle McCormac~ bltna, gar, pool, jacuzzi Just $200! Nice 2 br, fa ml· $275. Petsok. Fee ba, ocean view, dbl car ...---------•KA.THY RACY . Umque 2Bllbomeneed! Iii P1ac:9 Realty 494· 551 laundry rm . S400 ly & pet ok . Fee. lllaioRent.als,540-5370 gar .. golf course, pool. CHECKTHESE ~EALpt J3.~· 5~~9ta~r help. Walle to beach. Lrg ... op•I ti• ............ 3150 6444r18 Beachcomber 631·2011 OC MT clbhse. E·Z commute RJvierabd-..iY•I 752·2887. rcar~ara1~~nnV.parr • 752•1920 H•••••••••••HH•••••• 2br l•ba crpts kldsok • ~ Irv /airport area. Forsolid , ng. ew g, on Y MOOtaUMn MACH ~ ROUND full 1 · Encl ard G • &q>er 3br. w/frpcl, new 5 BR.. tba. 2 fplcs.. $385/mo. lat+ sec. Lse. real estate investment MR. EXECUTIVE $59-=RTHA HENRY {S Xlnt Tax Sbel~ 'haull $350. Sm fee urn mo. ~29is arage. 1235 ~bet_ ~&rta;:r~· ::S~ =~h~t!a:,~~::. ~ 496-200'7; ore 5*4l1o · 4 Oceanrront lots. heart Big canyon beauty! Ex· REALTORS 6 81'6 Be, licensed board TENEXW9pm888-9891 NEW APART HOME Daya, 597·4258. Eves. lnllie McCormack of Laguna. with units & elusive location. 4 bd 215 Del Mar. San Clem. & care home. f'urn1.sbed. Mt..-rt leach 3169 spacious bdrms 2 Ba 962-3155 Realty 494·7S51 .::-.__ nursery. Ripe for de· home on prime l\4 acre 492-4121 Newly landa~aped .'-' ••• ;:;; ................ SUNKEN living' roo --velopment. Sl.075,000 lot wl•iew of city lites, acre. Overlooltln 3 br, crpts. drps, fncd. Hiia 3250 Caiphtr.o 3271 golf course etc. Terrific YOU ASK FOR IT AtucadetoLake. Owoe UDO. YEARLY. 4 Br, 2 w/MASSIVE brick fJ)lc cover'd patio, detached ........................................... .. Larae oceanfront bome. patio for exec entertain· IT wltl ¢arry la( inst. ba, fam. rm .. s unny OPEN BEAMS ceilings gar.•"' bat.b. Walking c 3Br, 2ba condo. Lota Nice small 3Br condo. l dowt\town Laguna. Coin· ing. Call for details. WE CiOT l158 500 Term• .Cal = S700 Mo. Agt vacant $385, no fee. Cal distance to beach. S395. ~privacy & rec Children ba, patio. drps, cpts, merclal possibilities. 81Mi256. ~==~e:~anon v:~: ..-.-• 1 ~n~da Z1 636-6300 as 842-8091 welcome.'3&0 788-1222 or stove, gar. $285. 493•3406 mo.ooo Solltll Lw--n 3116 BEST BUY, 768-0720. A/I.. ~ Walkr.r & Ltm Heal btaft! END UNIT CONDO with ~1-1-~--Dab ~ · 2 weeks free rent new 3 everything from sunken '-'Tll'li ~. ··6ur · ....................... MonUcello Townhse 3Br Great location Nariaa ~ Mlcjltl lZI Br 2 Ba. Fam Rm, cul de gas firepn, remodeled Good rental. 1 llr t 3 Arch Bay, 2 Br. WW 2ba, bltoa, '325 mo HS,4Br28a,fplc.kkia. •••••• .. ••••••• .. •••••• sac,$370,rec&poolfaeU. kitchen WITH PANTRY, court.bouse&tramporta. cpta. drpa, fplc, pvt pool.988-0856 peta OK. Immed oce1. Lovelf3br&denw/view. illcl.83'7·~ 2 full recreational tlon. F.aay maintenance. beacb. ocean view. $525 $385 mo. Call Don at Avai . March lat. facilities. Can walk to 3Br.lba&2 Br,lba.Ca mo.5"-4418 modeatZBrhouaeora 846-1371or~ $450. per mo ! Rit WINNER 3 br. baa it all OMTHEIEACH shoppingandtennisclub. 558-0589Mary w/stove & refrig In CM. Beach Walk Twnbome Myers. Rltr. 494·542 K&Pok~.Smfee SUMSIT&SURF A MUST for active fun & UNITS ...... U.fwwl•d Up to $210. Willing Beaut.2Sty.lbr.Z.,.,ba.: 900-1701 TENEXUl9pm891Ml891 2 Lots wide at corner. lovers.$62.ooo. •••••• ................. help with upkeep & famrm,wetbar.2paUoa. STOP4brcblldrenok Lge walled patio & I£ Q1 II WTSIDE Gwral 3202 grading.645-0616 $500 mo/bat otr. Call only5'00.Smfee. SalltaAM 3fto rple attached. 3 BR. 2 • Place COSTA MESA nlEBLUFFS-Vlew! fncd yard. $350 mo. GrQt loc. great homes. ~•-vt-fo 3267 Sl85. 2snbr1s'o gkaraFaeee, Kids. fiar en .. u oor nc I Nice2Br1Ba,fplc.bq ... _.,e.,..... . TENEXW9pm896-9891 ...................... . d 0 td b . k 1a~ ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ...rel a .. o 2801 Ba. room for expansion. Pl .... -ti.. . 3 BR, 2.,., ba. $695 Mo. .,,.., ,,,.,.... --•.. pets 1 Olde World Multiple mnlng ~s ooo -r:--SEA VIEW TERR.· View ..._..._ ~era& 3 Br, $350-$375. ....................... Mam aeotais. ~5370 darmerwilhbigvunr. By owner. Phone Mon: l400ouJ._5~·,!.920 UAOt ~a~nP~P~~~~~rBy 3BR,2&,;Ba.$1000Mo 4 BR SUPER SHARP! Sing}~. pets OK. Eaay 3Br,2baAlisoViUaCon-•--------- Victoria Bch. with a de-Fri, 6pm-10pm, wknds -• appointmentonly BJGCANYON Mesa Verde. Fam Rm, move m terma, no ree. do, single story, A/C, ....._Fu,,...dor tacbed studio, 3 bdrms .. Bam·llam. <714)67~ San,,_ , 3BR.2.,.,Ba.S700Mo. Fplc, cpt.. dtpt, fncd yd, Ai1963-9088. cpts, d.Jlls, view & pool. a.tfwabMd 3300 den, all on double lot.1 _________ 1 Capkfrafto I 0'1 LAKE FOREST Sngts, Peta OK, $450. Lge 2 story. 1 mi to bch. No pets. 83().5085 ••••••HH••••••••••••• $154,500 PBCIMSU&.An ••••••••••••••••••••••• E· ,..~ 38R,2Ba.-......, Jiw, lam rm. 3ba. ""'· >Claotille,IA!mN,-. c~-1 Jacuni 51111 A doll house! 2 BR, 2 ba, SPREAD OUT in thi~ • Plac9 3BR.1.,., Ba Condo, pool bltna, fncd yd, gar. Kida super view, 3 Br. DR. ~?fT BE. ~e bea~h - With a beautiful pooriin a comp. redone incl. new. bdrm, sill&le level 1m-~ti•• . rJ . playpound. ht & last, ok. No fee. ~/mo. 1st FR, AC, upgraded, dfP9, ~a rent.al a1~uatiO(l 1S secluded yd. This 3 BR. modern kitchen. 2 Car !Mculate Garden Home OUAK'\t•1ft0 11AOt ~aL.--$340. mo. Nr So. Cat Pioneer,842-.t42l immed occy, agt. c!~ ~~::i.f~LTx: home has a family rm.. gar. Used brick patio. ~Village San Juan. Ask· MOO R-"..,';~ Plaza. 962·1839 Q.EAN 3Br. 2Ba. w /xtra 788-'nOO Sm fee. Oi>en W 9pm fpk & grt-location. Only$126.000 mg$71.500. Deluxe Dplx. $125,000. 3 -~/..'I; COLLEGE PARK 3 lg.yd. Marina lligb Sc~I 3 Br, l~ Ba. cpts, drps.•----.. ----- $124,500 Owner/Agent548·1290 AMCHOU411 BR ea unit. Bltns. micro 022 8600 bedroom, den, 2 baths, Dtstrlct, Edwards·He11. bltns, great cover'd COlldo.......,_ IMYISTMBITS oven. Will exchange for~· builtlns dishwas her S395mo.84?·2622 patio frplc. S375 mo. a.t,....d 3425 --uff Triplex. Henry Wall r· 1 • 5390 Ph· 23295 'v· Bahl o ••••••••••••••••••••••• T "t'"t~d·~ 17141496-7711 Realty,496-1435 irepace. . :4Br,FamRm.2sty,3car ia a. wner FRONTROWVIEW aate u ecor. conve· .. 5Z3~"5~11tVttfE 546-9164 gar. 6452 Newbury. then =t~J68.t!::rt'°o~s~ SECURITY-PRIVACY nient·flow floor plan. IUILDER'SHOME EASTSIDEUMITS 3 Br 1~ ea. new paint. call846·7996an7PM 581.1100 Eaatblulf condo. 20oo lanai. patio & pool. 3 When a contractor builds We have six units-(3) OPEN DAILY cpts, drps, dbl gar, fncd Vacant 3 BR. 2 BA. fplc, sq.ft, adult. n.o pets. ________ _. lyBdrms .• 29.,.,, baths. fa mi· his own home he rre· houses & a triplex all for 8A.M. T06 P.M. yard. $360. 546·1238 upgrd. bllns, OW.no fee. 3 Br. 2 ba. cpts, drps. 714-6Zl·OIW6 or tn eve:.. rm. Sl4 •500 quently puts tn many ex· only $195.000. Im ""4-2 "-1 • B evs;wknda 846-3301 · 968 2884 bltns. frplc. air cond, 64().5288 DUPLEX TO FIX UP. tr Ri""t h Two 4·plexea, aide by a""""~ .. ., c s, 3 r ·pm · · covr'd patio, S375. mo.•---------OCEAN VIEW FROM as ~ now we ave side. +fa m rm • s ~Per Dix poolside 3 Br 2.,., Ba, tWt.:.4°" 27046 Via Callado. Owner TONHM U PPER UNIT. S. ~~~~s~~m:~ob~~~s~ aharp.Only$385.S1ngles, Woodatream Condo. ttar1:t.,. 3242 5&8867&768-612SorAs· ........,....d 3525 LAGUNA. formal dining r-.; llVlng ~ pets OK. Agt 963-908&. Many amenities. lplc • •11•••••••••••••••••••• soc i ate d Re a Ito rs •••••• .. •11•••••••••••• JAYW. YEATS rm. & family rm. with 'Many areas of Garden dbl gar w/opnr, vie. 3 Br. 3 ba townhouse. 581-1100 2 .New Townhouses in C . .a.•ua onalargelot.Callfora ma0r .... c.MMtN &4Brhomes.$360-S385. $4.25.714-839-28!0 S470. Call "Lila", arce ona r •. a, story $425. 3Br. 2Ba, 2 Realtors 499·2237 HAR IO R VIEW frplcs.; over 2600 sq. rt., ~ Y Grove. Super selection 3 Irvine & University Sts. Sparkling new cond. B 1 4b 2 b La1una Hills,3Br. 2Ba. I """'"" 1i b I .... """-9161 • M · ,....,_ s· I a .. ,1371 846 5456 lam.rm. AC & punller. story $325 84().1987 HOME & ACIUGE Upgraded & cheerful. at of~ amenities ui t -. ove m """"Y· mg es, E·Side 3 br. 1 ba duflex . .....,. or . eves. $C50 831·2179 ----·----- Updat.ed Laguna charm 38r. 2Ba. fam rm . In by owner. Pr ice pets OK. No fee Agt Fncdyd. Kids,smal dog 3Br38a Seagate Lagoon . ~utu.tfww 3600 home w/sep auest cot· Sl3'1.!i00.644-M13 Sl95.000 DUPLEX-.in.!500 .. H.B. 963-9088. ok. 2061 Marlon Way. Condo.' 5500 per mo. M.wporf hoch 3269 ...................... . lDge. on i.., acre. New ~nicer. LOS ALAMITOS area A $325.$4&-0433 846-3301&84().2268 11••••••••••••••••••••• COSTAMESADUPLEX2 kltcb, eountry sethng, MIWPOITHGHTS ~I LE~.~,3/ 2:Rti realbeauty.Lovely3Br, New 3 Br.28a,fplc, OCEANFRONT Exec. br,pvt 'yd&garage. l P.~.~~tEA'f.roR. .• S::-86~· NEW 4 Br, 2.,.ba, den. ~ge. su m upgraded & super clean, S450mo. l..W. 3244 bome. 1900 sqrt. 3 ~r Child ok. No pets. ·uv.nn. din.rm. wet bar, ------"--.;._..-...;;;=1 •ouRPLEX C M nr Valley View & S45·5501or675·2305 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba. Fam Rm. 2 fplc s. $240/mo. 642-6682 or --------• f11>lc. •many xtras.fllllln 1090 r -• ·Lampson St. Children, IRVINE car gar. $950 Yrly. 631-3156evea mua&~o••y Some ocean/Catalina ••••11••••••••••••••••• $115,000. (2) 3BR. (2) .-.. OK No fee Easy 38r l~ba oewcrpts lg 2BR lBa ... CJ\ 67S-2134 ._ _ _.._ -views. By builder , trades 2BR ...,... · ' ' ' • ·········· ~ ---------t&Slde Costa Mesa new HILLTOP PILOTREAL-ATE move·ln terms. Agt. fncd yd, $395 . 299 2BR,2Ba ....... $375/485 ~ _ _ _ _ l&2 b frpl b .. __ ronsidered. $139,950. 22S -.a.e-.11 1:...-u 983-8088 Croftdon,546-ooeo 28R 2..._Ba -u ~~--r. c, 1\Ui>, gar, Unique iqp of Emerald LaJoUa Dr. Open Daily _,.. .. ~ 540-055S · • · • · · • • · • • -W•'re Mow looklllg pool, jacuui, lndry rm. Jhy location wit h till duak. 646·7085 or laOADMOOI .._lllaltd 3Z06 MESA VERDE 4br den 3BR.2 8a ....... $425/600 S-Reetah $300/$300 644-0878 funicular railway BP· 8*-7968 3 Bdrm home, hlably UP· OWNER'S ONLY l want ....................... 2.,., ba. frplc. new crpts 3Bll.Z.,., ba ..... SS$0/62$ r . proech. Fantastic Vi('W, ---------graded. Pool &t Jacuzzi. toA""b"uyfllxncome propeOrtK)'. no Pearl. 3 Br.den. frplc, redec. 3car 1ar. 2 patios ~B BRR,22,'!:8b·~ ·,·~m·· .... ~ 34121 El Encanto. Dana pool. S Bedrooms. 4 HARIOR VllW m.-, ,..,., er uppers · patio. Part. furn. Adlts. prof. Jndscpg. SS75/mo • • ~ ... · · _,., LIASIS Pt. Open Sat/Sun, Iota of baths. deft. Lower noor Ua•c)olyOwwer 1htttw..... Tellmewbatyouvegot. $575 Yrly lease . Grdnr&wtrpd.979·2832 4 BR,2~8a ... SSS0/800 2Br.2ba,endadgar,bUt wood,oceanview,decb. excellent 11uesl s uite. Mo 752-5351 ~ Pieraccl, 1502 No. 2 1 3 I a 8 7 • O 1 7 7 • s BR, 3 Ba .......... 1891 to bcb, ameoiUe.tt. etc. Lfe 3 BR units. ~.000 ~l~'f..:-d~'!?t!lpn:..._1,~r8· ClEI ca.mt lnPob !l..!a1ira8an 714/6'75-l624. ,, DeRmluxdeb4l Br !,.!°• Fa mo/utU pct, PESOTALTEE 34Y R EC A L .. ,..,. '" ~ IUU.I emen e. ....,._.... • 1at. ........ 3 Br , 2 b a . pa t 1 0 . • 144 oast 3 Monarch Bey Plaia lAauoa Nl11Uel 4t6-7W tJ 1.013' L.Allgbtaatnlptfrom MOITHTUST1M ._...._....__.:....._ 2200Newerlbr,lbaduplex. 968-4865 Park /bcb n earb Hwy,DanaPl. thla beautifully decoral· _,. fllll"' ~ E 7 ) ---------i ed ho .......... Br, 2ba, ram By Ownr, 481', 2Ba. dln ............... •••••••• S275 mo. vea < 14 Lrl :s B 2 b frpl 1 ssoo1mo . .. .., "' rm, aeparate lam rm 7 1 2 • 3 6 5 3 • d a Y • . Wtr r. a, • c ean 3Brwltb woodsy tntr, AsnN....ca rm, prof lndscpd. lge w /uaed brick hearth '12 ACRE (213)289-9307 /~g pd. S375. 27 to bch. VacHt. readJ .... ••••••••••••••••••• =~ ~rs 1~~~f 2250 aq. ft, 1 at)'. "' acre. Lev~dl1 all 1uaablo bland. Broa wa)' m.3125. now seao. ...._ Pt••lll• 3707 ....... . cul<de .. ac. $87,500. Prin Bui~ lnlJ • te OT rlna c...... .. M• 32Z2 mGHT ON 2br bse lge f Oceantront 581' on prime ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ CO\lrt. Many ~ T31-G087 )'OU( mobJJellome, all ....................... yd $250. Sm ree Penin Point. Sl200 a lge 2 br, 2 ba, utU In· ~...... 1052 house su;. ~~~ ~ animals vK. Loaded DELUXE 3 Br 2~ Ba TENEXU19pm89'·9891 Turtleroc~ Glen. Mew cl, $325. Winter. 111.5 w. •••••• 11 ••• 11 •••••••••• Port Dorneas Place. 0...-......... ~~~~~ti.,~.tr· dpl~. 615"'1 Martsold, SUPER 2br cozy , .... 1 't513CutfvsDa~IRVhtE 3Br on bet st. '815()/mo BaJboat62.0SOS • S EA T E R R AC E ! Mt~ ••1111••••••••••••••••• "85 mo. 644-2405 Oilldri'27S Sm tee • ,. . OPtN DAIL y llo. -' Garden home. 3BR, ........... , • R·2 lot, duplex, Costa cozy 2Br frplc drpa TEN tllQ..m.,_,_.1 8A.M.T06 P.M. W•trfrwvHwt 13E3Br2Ba,$475.2Brl entry ltltch, ultimate In l'WS. UOO Mesa. s39,500. PhlJ • • • .... --6Jl·l400 Ba, '375. (213) 332·32'1'0. ~i:ch~v~~· tennis, N.,....,.. lUIU~ ....................... &aJUvan Rltr se-aioa cpts, refrifc· patio, ~ mr lba fncd yd iar n View. Turtleroclt Terr. a Open Sat/Sun 10-ePM. •NORTffVtEW! Custom -~~-'BR Ma.HOAG HOSP Ml ... ~ lse,600Hel otrope pet., •. lat & '1aat mo. Br & Fam Rm. beaut. • •. 20:J.. __ 33_rd_St_. ---- 3BR. FR, 2.1ty, deck. wttb v-. 3 • i~ • '77 Skyline 12X44. N·ew ™Cot • 240b Neat, a1ey, 3 bdrm, 2 ba SlOO. eleon fee. 1940 8, SIM>Omo.m -0617 ! 2BR. +convert.den.2ba C...Meta 3724 Lovely vuolmte.$119,900 :'i!'be'.:°~· :;1~'. coach. adult pavk ........................ homeinoldCdM. All new Pomona.642·0'128 4 Br. 2 Ba, FR, cpts drpa, ~:18: &cr>t~wAl~ •••••••••••••••••••• .. • • BOND REALTY O.Jtrormorelnfo. C79'l3K> Amcttcan Mbl lNDlAN WELLSCONDO, ~l's. $5~0. Unique DmMIPolllt 3226 prof lnd1cpd. $625. 5 64.5--0ua en 1· · $40.00WI& &UP 831.fell 645-1474 Hms.557·9380 °' casa Dorado-3 Ii a, eaReaJtora675·6000 .................... , ... Mornln1dew. 552-7350; *8ludiof&lBR-.\ots'. Mewpert IMcll I 06' .. CQSTA MISA ~olf, tennis, poolaJ:a• btk· Fe» LIA.SE Deluxe 2000 aq. I\. 3 BR. 2 6'5-2330 abdr. 2ba. t:• ram rm, 1l1'V 6 MaldServ Avall n••·:::·=:.:w··••••• 1 I 1 ~ '77 Skyline 12d6 new 1. Pers. •itua on de· .17$0.00 month for this Ba, ocean view. «rt level, 1\artlerock Glen. new ~~~1 t:'rcb ~ob pct~oolS$Sr ·=~rt 'f::!.rc'M __...,.. Coach. Adult park: walk ma~ds sale. $86,000: lovely tamUy home ln '475. mo. 493-2252 3Ba, ram rm. tennla, pooa ~ · • 548 t755or645-3tie'1 OCEANFRONT dupleJt fo aupermarket. (7968K) furn, uni. ('114) 348-3282, Irvine Terrace. Corona ..._1• VGley 3214 owur '86(). 64<>-3tl8 • oa Balboa Pentn. 3 br, 2 American Mbl Hms. ~ del Mar. 4 BDRM.,CarnllY. ................ ••••••• Greentree 3 Br 2 ba 3 Br. 2 ba, beach duplex, SUS CASITAS ba, owner'• untt w/bay .,..., ......_,._, ~FnOJ:!e!.n~~0• 38DRM. to/, Ba. Preat11e house. Lrg lot. 'cul-de· g?:eu~~w ;,.~~· ;~ Mlnut" to NB. l BR vtewftUWKlecks + 2bt c..tom made•2br, lba, Gro•et 2700 ()llllNr110·1rHUNto11tN1Ct• area. $400 mo. Aa\. Aak sac.$380/mo.6«-4646. 613-'7884 · · · turo. Adults, no pets. rental unJts. 4 car park· CAUllAMCH bltns. reflg, ,wuber, ....................... forKeithooa.1317 MO WAITING• ~ 2110NewportBlvd.CM. :lf~ $285,000 .. Call HARBOR VJ£~ HOME, dryer, walltobcb,1bo1>t AYOCADOCOUMTaY M~ s br, ll ba, fplc. asr.1335-M25permo. ll•CAMY"'" G tae t Br ll"dn PROPEBTYHOUSE )lnlttilioua area. Enter & market. Pvt. Pty. 3BR 2BA home ob 8· t>W r.o ~ax firs cpt, 3Br 1385-.S.?Spermo GoffCOWMVltw! apt. PooU&recrm.1220. throu1h open beam. S20,000,ff3.29'76 acres. Fantutlc vlew. ........: '395/mo 963-4569 •er' • . .u"-"'"" per mo' Uve ln atylc' Brand new 7lOW. l.BthSt. 8a"cttat 3 b z b Vaulledentryw~ lartte 4·Acrea m1ture trees. ...,,,.. . , ,_,.._.,., · e -on • ..,,. n. 1 1---------, r. a, 1-·-u . ~-.... 1200 O.S.-mmtttU.W0t1'&•NEWJ.SIUBrl8a,fplc, 531·9545.AIC\'.no.ee. •Br,pool,apa.S700. 2u.-Ol"•HH,.TIIP9,poo, ._..__2 ... 1 am . rm , din • rm ~ enterta UUJI v room ....... -............... "'-a .,.OK tennla aecwity llBOOmo ...,.. ..-. tl&0,000. $0·7881 o.-lhet family rm. dlnJAI I a• t Ion I · 8 k r • wu rm. I~ mo. Wow! Only $2$9. Nl<ie1 br, w.ti.v M. T.Y....co' Bltnst w/*, df1>tt. Adlta. ~ nn le • bl1 bedrooma. TNlllACIE 714/$22·2080or87W71'1 '""4033or 12 laud. Foe. I NEWliOl\TCtNTER nopetf.SZ2.$.~l ---... ----1 Move up to• beautiful ml....cll site ~THIO&.D lBr. atove, refrl&. dla· Beacbcomber,631·2011 R£ALTORS 6"-4910 tills one! Nlee 1 br. ~~r buny, call All utillUet na1lable-A , .a11Tlll PDUl. 2 blb 1l\o09, mkt, o-...a.... ua.. •-c~ 3br a. ---. well-F\IU prtee •uoo. ~ Qdaa Con. $215. mo. 2btlf~d •n yd· FRONTROWVIEW •lnalea o ... $la. Fee.· Xlnt terma. BKR. 100 Yr. o&d atom~. PK• l-684"5016 ;Ude 1e $17S t8UllS$? ' ... SECUlUTY·PlUVACV Bleehcqfflbw,tal·tott '714/5.Z2·21B>orrrt-STtT old noetal•lc 2·ato~ . Mr, ' . E11tbhilf Condo, 2000 vu.r..APOMONAAPTS barn.out bl=wtndmlllb,illcMho l8Rl, 2 BA.,f'Ok, lndry~ n0o9 ............... _. 3240 ..... ......, eiq.t\, adults, no ·pets. l bctrm fn>D\ '186. QW.t: • • mo e me pu1. re 1.. I a r . • -••••••••• .. •••••• •• II I 2000 7l4.Qll.oet8 or lo evea. adUlt eoanpla No I*& S I l v e t C • le t a , for ca kcir or IA•la~1 GoJdeO.rod $495. 875-8900 lbr 2ba 2 lltoey twnbse . ~ 8«).5288 n....1 1790 Pomoaa A'¥'t. MCQllJoCh't nnnt pro· bugt lrtel. on 7 acret oc • • 11 r-Jec\: Cioll crH, lod~e, all·uaable land. ran. OARAC~ SALE ads In =1· ;:t ocatlon. RancboS.J .)BrtBas.n NEWPORT !l'ERRACE C~M . 1 bolltl"I, awlin's. ftlh c. ,taa&k vl•w. 8. of Orana-Uw Dell, l>lloUmna hap. 80-l ~ v:•'°°~~·= • TWMmu 3 Br 2 Ba, h>lc, a...dio•llt. Sl'5 lncl utn.1;.'\ t.an&a. 900. doWn 6 H Co. OWl'lr anxious II wUI py ....Wta.-JTo place your Tr 1 a Dal I 1 Pi Io t Jl(IOI, + .. Ulla. Kkia OKI f\lf'D NO cook lot ln bac~ J"* lOt '4800. at*· Clift')'. au. 1141111_, ctnwlo•·Jurd, pbont ClMiUJtd Act to t>Uy.'aell no pets. 1400. Aval ot iMt Continental St . ...... ---.----•mo. b,486-•119 ore71-S11T -.at?tMday. orNftlt0mllhlot. WantAdtftip! · ea~ t 11m.$65.3309 &0-'3ee.mforlo.l . • l JI ,, .... 1 l OLSON a.-.... J71 •••••••••••••••••••••• ALICIA Pl.AU ~c Mountain Views Larae. dJx adult U1 Bdrm ASIQ. Furn • un ham. Pool,Jacu.uJ, BlJUarda ~1-IW or Ml-41130 ~au Stockport, La H!lli Sorry• DO petl . ... .,., ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 880 Irvine <•l 17th> (714 >M5--0550 38EDIOOM -~,ARLY SU 1240. rno. 1&• 1 bdrm dllPlts. ~frll• bllllt, ........ Mutt.a. "2·9911 YiAMLY. '""'·I BR., &roil chl• ~lh\A'""' ol ,, phW fornc ~<'11'°"1 (WI tumbllny w.lfvrfnlli &nJ c.iuwc e>oc:* ~"" to the liOUnd o4 buhblh,i tttv<'I,,.. Nwt ~ thlr~ . 'tbur "'tult &f>drtnwnl honw ill Pl1M1C!'Wk \Aliogct Is • IOC"' r#t14•4(, tWr .. ~ <"411 ttOJUY UllUM.Nll priwcy blwJ luKU~ .A RECWEATION PARADISE. 1'wu t~nnl• CU1.1rt1. &wnmtng pool plu1 unlquv \IOl~ll pool. JdQwl. Sond ~n «Mt. Muµntoln lodge dubhuuw IA.4th firel)loce. co1weno11on pit. bllUard~. !l,'m. 'lduna. Huny IO the good lift Md th~m r~lax FROM U65 TO $355 Including Hat ,, II ,f s ~ 0 c i J t t d ~ ---- HAPPY BFJ.ATED BIRTHDAY lo Barbara Unbedacht - Are )'Ou 22 LO 85, female, single. auraetlvt • a~ eaM at aoctal fund.ION and avaUablt for ex· pen11 paid trips tu rcnt111 ooumrttt at th end fit March. irnt Cal" '*6181 • Add tl .• Bulld lt...Ofaper lt ... Hammer It •.• Carpet it...C&ment lt ... wtre lt ... Hoe lt. .. Cfean tt...Movtt lt...Press IL.Paint lt ... Nall lt...PJaster lt. .. Flx It. •. ,..,_ •• c.,.tSeii •"* ••1• .. Senkfi tlnndu ' I f.WkalPlfC "'9 T••W...,.. -·· .. ··-··-········ ....................... ....................... ···-·····-········-· ....................... ....................... . ... .;;T.............. ....................... .. .................... . teetu.rel • Struc WeC.rtC.l"Ptla..-n WlerO • Sons. Espr HOU 8 £Sf TT ER . MRS. KINGS Carpet. Blodr, Slumpatona walta PAINTINO. lot/!:~t. PLUMBER· Repair, rt• CANOPY TV SERVICE tln1 Plana. RtndJ • St.mC..Uor&ham p1*ner, fr uta, r• Cbildteft.petaOK. V~a· CIHnilll &t PalaUa1 Co. ltbri~ptanten.Expert. Reu., ~e. pipe, loalallatloo latBATBSERVlCE --~.Relld Aleo Uphol1ter1·AI .,...,.__..,,Upm Uan.wknda.etc.Mature "WE bO lT ALL" lY lnatalled a\_apeel.al ..t.. Call Ja7 tu-7 Hrvlcea. G. Gldle1. AU'alrPrtcate().1'33 /Com l/Jodu1trla Won JAPANrsE l.ad~fa. Noa 1moker aw,,e1 ....._. prhw. CalJ ,Dob, lbrAlrMut.eretcacpUL IO-DlS. 1i S-.lce M).'1m0 ~n.:.:~=1:'1 GARDENING or er. <2UM&l·582S OOUPLESCLEAN1NG S11--or~ PA.PE&.PAlNT HOJ11£9AVERS Plumb• •=•••••••••••••••••• ~~ •• !•-•••••••• Cii•••/C••c•• Complete~~c!!!?up w8eat1be11r Sctrlpp1n1 ..... ~l"-P wi1u..~1 ....:. .. Pd N ,,..,c:... !?..!" lbp~ Saves. ~=•t·"-""'"Ret1a"btt..e R=emoval1,,:._~rt~muln4d. · f'reee--pee a ty ompany U&I" • au a.-.__ •••• , .. , ... •••••••••••• """" saar. rr ltll. N ... US¥, • 1. an:oc 'Clio.. c Bab)"llttl111. my home ..... -............... Prd J LandKa C\Dtom wHther 1trtp· ~ble lad Pmt y C.. wall. Dy H0·310t •v Sv1. BofA • lhtreba y iotured. MZ-2at ~c~"t':at~~·~:': .. ~A.;1~~Uc lni &~=nlQI. Pr: ~~fp,r·u1eoe1. wants houlec~n°h:;":~ Avera&e=l&ry~ SG-ltCIO M'1.-,1&1si.mo W...wcte••g AJde,JuUe•1GO B>nded.l'orbl.761 est.54S-1072Geo.tbusbJ. • recularbula.8C7-363'7 z.stryMU,lntr~m PWocJt"*t Pormtr Col Coot. Non ..................... .. ---------afteo'lpm614am . Gt16lcg Pr1ceslnc:lmatf'l/1abor .... -•-••••• ......... UlUon Plumber 25 Yrt. Window CleJn!nl Strvl~ ,.ab a• s.r.H:. otbaawaLaadscapelnc. ....................... IM:wTa Gu.r,inard.rrteeet. Lani Pbotocr•fh1· bpairloa& Replpla1 no Fast. etnclent.. id rat.es . ................ -.... C A uc:tw Gardenlnt Maintenance. Sldploader, dump truck, ....................... Ted'2'l·TIOOor552..QlS4 Speclallsta that wU help Job too •mall or too bla. Call5'1~ ~at home. any kind. ••••-•••••••••••• .. •• Cleanup.~ hauliba. tree wortt, grtd· Fonner IRS Agent offert ~ sell )'OW' product& ,. Pree eat. Reliable Al ae..-ntel,wtllplckup ~:EM.J~RVIS i...WN&ERFREEEST lnl.demo,etc.751·3930 complete, profesalonal WORKGUARANTEED aervlcea. 04·1U7. llowry.~71&1,751-3539 Rave IOmethlna to sell" deliver.~1 Add1t 1• RmcU a. HnlU. Now/Ecl&e/Clean·UPI tu&erV. 961-20:.15 lntr/Extr. P'reeElt. 91....SOS Classtfledadadoltwell . ,.__.Str¥tu Pb96Z-3200.Uc3111S6 RJ1tAWNSer&S4.-l1ll H 1 I Pnl(essional Income Tax 2$ynExpr.IU-0295 .....,./I__. ....... .,. . -,.... • •• • P ll I .,.,_ II I _.. I ...-••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• .. •••••••••• PUT A ROOM OVER ••••••••••••••• ••• • re para on n your .:Kele c. nau~. ow •••••••-•••••••••••••• USI THI Carpetllanwllllayyou YOURGARAGE. G•rtllSwwfcel llaullne.movtns.cleanup home. Call BUI Dow prleea too. E•tertor PATCHPLASTElUNG SAVE$onADD1110NS& or mlne. Repalra Porfretatcall631 •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• $7/\lp.Treework.Reas, ~. ~alln.Tryme-Callco ••A.LLTYP~•* REMODEL. You do DAILYPILOT dean1n1 too! Guar wor Plans & flnancln SHOPPINOSERVICE fast. f~est&c.4S8'7 &1&.ssss Freeeat. ~ part, we do pad rt &pJl\dde ..,.ST t bi ln Fr available Call BARBARA >W &br\I. We raw an1. .,,_ a ueuav p . es K.enAh.mlberg IXOYE <n•>s.40-1883 PET,ERS PAINTING Homes-Add:Woos. Restuc· get pttmits. do layout. RISULfM ~ BUJSherbacolf ftl•1dl•lrlg Flttl>laces·Planten Eitpr d. Reas Rates. C'O over bllt walh. Free pour footing & s lab, $-VICI pr 0 f c A R p E U«medftBonded HANDYMAN·Homes I:••••••••••••••••••••-• BrickCoocretePaUo Free Eat. Call Geoe est.lowrates588-4892 fnmlog, etc. Provide llii" CLEANING. noor&win Apts . Con1denllou1 Want a REALLY CLEAN Block Walls BBQPtta ~ ' 1ub·contr lists, dllc DIUCTORY dow care. Dut.<:h Main a.ctrical craft.am.an. Ph: 645-C302 HOUSE? CaU Glqbam Refs. &its. &4&-0484 purchasing. tbru job For Result t.eoan('eServiceS37·15'l8 •••••••••••••••••••••••Handyman. Odd Jobs. Olrt.Freeest.,MS-5123 Exl:n~~~a~-g ":~~~~~ .... ~~~ oounselangonbowtodolt Service Call ELECTRICAL SERVICE Quality workmaosbtp. HOUSEC..EANING SELL idle items with a Freeett.caJIHl-2708 place an ad lo the Dall)' ot pt It dooe. Adapt to Hive something to sell? CALLS $15 /br. Call R e a s . J l m B1reliablecouple DailyPUotClassifiedAd. Poot Want Ads! C.Uoow slit YoUr needs & save 642·5671 Classified ads do It well. MZ-3233 'l»mt!M2-91n Refs sa.sau 842~. idle Items 842-5e78 -6'2·5678. money. Pb en &GITTO Id. HJ ---------• ev/Wkn • c te. ~:= ......... ~?.~~ ~!!~ .. -.?! ... ~!~--?~ ~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~!!~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~--.. ?!.~ ~~-~~ ..... ?! ... ~ ~ ...... ?! ... ~!!~ ...... ?!!! ~~i:m!r~~e A~~~~t:~.~~~~~ ~C-0-U--..NT~E-R......--.H-ELP-=---~ o,•TA ENTRY GUARDS LABO es -n:~i:!.W~1nn 4Mbrsad1y8JS.3830 oriented, will train. Ml1 CostaMna IF OUHAYI at Laguna, 211 N. Coast PREGNANT? 848-2350orS48-lS26 .,,._.Y SHIFT. FULL & Pfflu• A1CCQUNTING ,.. l:Dlf Permanent. Full & Part· 11u&WI H•Vt Hwy., Lag. Bch. Cartn g confidential ATT'a.DAHTS .,_ ,...... " . ~ tl!'™'. P~e&traupre. ~ "' counaeUng & referral. AlllWe ..._.. '°" M.l'#I•• Full time position open as a video q d . Retired welcome. The Jolltl MAID Wanted Seacllrf Abortion. adoption & Full Ume & part time hr· display terminal operator for a Call 546-<Yl74• ofc bra io.2• LETS..,. . ._... Mot.el, 1681 s. Coast Hwy, ly attendants to In· • Clos4ldWedoe.day ,...,,,..., LaawiaBcb.494-4892. keeptnA1.g.E troduce new Innovative Applj .. p.,.. Basic/Four Qlini-computer. Some · _APC __ AIR_1 ___ ~_7_·2563_ health screening pro· experience is desirable, but will train «MIA.RDS MAn HANDL£RS MANICURIST •SHARON'S* f~!~~l'lu~hi:~o d:!l individual with demonstrated typing Full&P/time. El Toro& want!t~~~:~P on OU'OCALLMASSAGE Withe public. Flexible DEL TACO acc~cy and speed. Work in pleasant ~n:C~e~~e~nlf::-m~ w••EffOUSIM~ Balboa, Peninaula 499.1224 hrs & nexlb!e days. Hrly environment with godd company furn. Please phone for M a 6'7S-mo '"""~EXPERIENCE" wages. Call Deanna for 2$252 La Pm Id.. &...,... Nit benefits including 2 weeks vacation appt. Mr. Dever (714) fORIUFJ Man __ uf_a_ct_uri_n_g ___ _ •""" appt. ~~ after one year, -company paid group 994.2271 ::c~~ ~~~~~ Rc;;.~::a~ AUTO MECHANIC, 5 yn ~ ........... ---~-..--.~ insurance, credit union, etc. Apply at HAIRDRESSERS wanted u11un TECHNICIAN lions. 00·396'7 ~~e~m!:.0~;:· Help W..tect 71 oo Help Wmwhd 71 oo ORAM&I COAST DAILY PILOT apply in person. Regia, J Yra min. exper. xtnt KARE .... 'S Niguel. Call Tune Time, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3l0w.141r St .. COiia MeM So. Coast Plaza, 54G-8888. INJ. MOlllMI: benefits. Eitper. in bigb * " * lnc.831·3131betwn9·S. IOOICKHPERF/C Cockt&ll betweenthehoursof8:00AM.S:OOPM Hetp Wanted Male & 1 ::~wg~~,co~~: OU'OCAUMA.SSAGE Automotive 'Ibrouch general ledger BeAProfsnl C.fwtlfllakl elf..... Fem. Over 18. Apply in SaletySboeaReq\&red ground.. Mlaslon Viejo 6PM·2AM 838· 1780 New Detail Shop needs & rananclal st.at.ements, Cocktail Waitress 64M32 I, nt 216. person. Kentucky Fried area. Call Carol, 581·3830 help. exper required. Salary •$99.00• p_. ... 1 Op E 1 Chicken, Laguna Beach. Day-Week-IConth betwn t-Spm. AIORTIOH Top wages paid. Engine open. hued on skUI & Exciting&Profitable &;At...a& portunity mp,oyer OrLonger PrCounseeg .. t_!!!1,g3v&3R1.1e. wfekr~~~ Steamers, eng paint.ens. a bill ty N. B. Area Glamourous Profession Hom~.~~~ra w1/pokwfer Calll'1•orYourcom Dedalonelo•--'-'f •MASSAGE TECH• """• '""' buffers & polJshers, up· f>13.7?72 for appt, ask for •Learn in 40 hrs from ~c......, ... over oc or ......., FEMALE 24 HrHelphne547 9495 holstery s hampooers, Betty pro(snl's the ~ine art or ......_W-.d 7100 Y-1.Wmlfed 7100 ~l~~!,essportswear. IEL[~ 553 Comm·Guar min. '---k k "· d •"at•~· te bn •-.... •-.... ·-~· 1"111 & P.T. work. Mbr M .a.55 .a.GE c.~ out. pie ·up "' e-.. ..~ c aques. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . A .,,_ Lavery.Applyat •FreeJobPlcmntAsslst Hostess C b' CMTA or 2 yrs exp. RGUREMODEL5 2059 Harbor8l,CM BOOKS •Dayorcveningsess1ons DELIVERYMANforear· ENGINEER A ly / ll6 Wier, matusre. SERVICES Legtt. S......._ CALL ly AM, LA Times home PP 5'7 · 19th t. 833-1441 ELITESPA 540-6195 ESCORTS MS.:_lOOO Housewlv~s & For 8 fr~7~~~t9~9!ne delivery. Adults only. 2"2 COMPOHEHTS c'08ta Mesa. 1--------•t':-:-=-:-:-=--=:---=--:-=--:---OUTCAU OML y M4 _...... ol lbe most profit profess Hrs a day. Must have Degree not nee. 4 Yrs ~s MAT U R E W 0 M • N 631-3811 AYON o~ en So.CalifWaitress,lnc. economical car, no min. exper. in high re· nv.-1~ /CASHIER I•--------p /tlme to w e lcom e HELAXING MASSAC I:: Million dollar corp. l?922Sky Park Bl, Ste C soliciting, no collecting. liability s mall. com po. Must be exper'd & rella· Lib ary newcomers & contact needs men & women or lrvine,Calif.,92'7t• Westminster. Hunt· nents. New facilil)'. Mis· ble. Over 21. P /time r merchants. Ftexible hrs. BuildAa.aiMss any age who enjoy lnaton Beach area. sion Viejo area. Xlnt eves.CaUS48-8277. We need e ne r getic, Need car, lite typing. Bob James·L1c. Ma!>:.cur Outcalls 9 9. 494 5111 Wiithout Gi.,~ speaking w /others & who ni tt hskk lf f 638-0126 a r tic u la t e p e op I e 547 ·3095. ""» areboredw/theaverage pa on·· P •or ---------bene. Salary com· 1---------UpYow nmofthemilljobs. couple, pt-time. ust DELIVERY/PHONES mensurate w /back· HOTELMAIDS ~~Y!,~°!:'!rtrr:f:'8toll~~ Mature women wa~ted · R-"-Job! ~!v:,.~ansp .• 6llk-3646d or Part-time.20Hrsweek ground. Call Carol. PtrHOUSMEN .-.. .... e ........ product to for h o usecl eaning ~ ,,.., . ....,...evescxw n s. S3hr. Ph67.,llftlC 581·3830betwn l·Spm. Good •--i-g al f uuu-. """ I Ptr T •• Ma~Hge & Modehn~ Let AVON show you how No actual selllng In· or ..., s ........ d a ary or customers in Calif. & serv ce, · op -car EXOTIC GIRLS OutcallS42·3169JS43·3250 to bwld & run your own volved & no seUing ap. Cook, breakfast. Full Dental Assist, front & Eitper1enced ta bier exper indivi ual + out· Arizona. Work 6 hrs a ,_nec __ oo.. __ 51.23 _____ _ BE SLIM KIT business. Control your poiJrtments. Work w/one tune, exper req'd, Call back ofc. P/time, X·ray needed for new drapery standing employee profit day, perm. in our office Med Asst, exper, Fr Ofc. 645·1469 own hours. own income. of the most popular & MZ-8475 cert req'd. Salary e>pen, workroom. S46_·tMS___ lbartnf plan. Will train. nearO.C. Airport lo tdeaJ Bllllng no smoke, brs Mer6 00 p M To find out about this successful products oni---------642-fi880or6?3-3403 :~~;:'~noo Moo·f'rl friendly otc atm0&phere. compensation opo. ---challengmg earning op. the market today. An lh· COOK, EXPER'D FAST FOOD SHY Creative oppor. for men 646-5194 so L v E you R porturutyCallS40-704lor expensive product whose With refs. Carrow·s D&fTAL/Chalnicle Prepare Plua & lrvHostMotorHotel & women to make aa•--------- E M 0 T I 0 N A L Zeruth 7·1359. name Is a household Restaurant, 620 Avenida Assistant: IJ\ttracuve. Sandwtcbes. Over lB yrs. 1n1 E. Dyer Rd, Irv much money as you de· PROBLEMS Lack or l~~~~~~~~~I wordw kt.bruol ut the wborld. Pico,SanClemente. mature woman for full Ex pr. pref. CdM. E.O.E. M/F sire while retaining an MEDICALASSISTANT ron!1deoce-0verwe1ght Babysitter, mature or 0 a yout ful,i---------• time ln etlucal geoer£1 1_~ __ o______ HOTEL xlnt base salary. Perm. HlmtmgtonBeacbPbysl tenalon·smoktng sexual woman S days week. fbariendfly at~pbere & practice. Experience not GA•.,. Wanted to crochet NlGKI' AUDITOR positions available. Ad· aan. Reply classified ad problems· New soluuon, Musthaveref's.642·"n70 ve un WWJe you earn COOKS Callbt 94'10AM tuA> ~for personable, van cement to 1861 Daily Pilot, P.O. t-' 1 .... h lop pay. You receive a nee. ~ · bikinls. Exper'd only. 1. bl · managerial position Box 1560, Costa Mesa, ~~~~ppta/Oeg~ .. ils' Babys1tler, your home, 4 guaranteed sala~ + ex· Tb e J o 11 Y Roger Mon th.ru Fri. 962•3432 Call 7~eves. mature, re 18 e io· available. Work eves or ea. 926216 . ... .,.,.. "' Id I M F i t I lib Restaurant is accept.mg dividual w/positive al· ---------(714)•••.1231 Develop· mo o g1r on· r . reme y era com· • ~ 5a.---c1--1.. GENERAL OFFICE ._ ... ud .. •-ab'lit to momioga. For persooal ..,_ Q "'PM c<7 3160 . . ,._ ho Co annUcaUons for Exper'd lv.-w' ..... ... ... .. ... I y te· MEOIC "'L ment Center. Hunungton o-... • oN • ltllSSJ<lO "' nuses. n· c"" k X 1 f . member customers by interview contact: M1. ,.. - Be_ac_b. _______ Babysitter & light t.est.s & other incentives. 00 s. nt range Expenenced. Full time. lite bkkpne. p/thne. HB name. Exper desirable. Rossi, 833·8098. Time RECEPTIOMIST housekeeping. Wkdys. 2 Xlnt advancement beneflta & hours. Apply LagunaBeach494·7SlS DrugStore.S4'1·256S $3.SObr, depending on Lile Libraries, Inc. Exper'd, group practice. t i,!ormv"!! Children. Reh. Mr. posalbilitiesforboth men ~w':,'T!·g::a S&C:~~ l•--------•l•--------•I qualificaUooa. Outat.&Dd· F.Qual()ppor. Employer. las, understanding of n~ Hood,833-2900. Awomec. 494-ll37 B.£CTRONIC G&lERALOFFICE Ingemp1oyeeprofit1bar·, _______ Data Processing billing ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• .... "''"' W__._... No exper oec. You re·~~~~~~~~~ , Sec:retarial·Gal Frida)' lngplan. lfinterestedaJ>:1•--------procedures, 60·4670 Sd9ooh & ----ceive full pay while being I-TECHNICIAN type. Xlnt oppor. offer· 9~AM~PpenooM. ' Moa·Fri LOAN ,_Mrs __ . A_us_te_n ___ _ ..._... 7005 .,,~~bo KB~GCM trained. You can work Kt WManted ror pre-Ing dllveralCledk &f in· lrv""'u~t u oc.oru...... REGIONAL MEDICAL ASSISTANT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~....... r , monai:ng or eve bra. Only achoo , on·f'rl, llam ESectronics nrm bas im· terest ng wor or a 17t7"""E D.. n_!-1 COHSUMR E f t & b It i MEN WOMEN Call&M-9910 10 ,..in b Fw I 11 'W 1:30pm. $2.!50tostart. mediate openin" In career minded person . . yer nu, " Opxh~~-• ronilogj.at aOfc bior TUIMFOR _Be_a_ut_y_Sa_lon _____ , 1u';rou~di:g ~':!!. So. Coast Plaza area. manuf. dept. Tec~ical w/gen'l ore exper. Thls E.O.E. M /P' LOAHOFACEl llng~n;~~resui:~..; IAITIHDIMG MAN1CURIST munitles. You owe It to Call540-4?Sl. or military service ~~t.i_?ft 0 f1fers a g~ HOUSEKEEPER ~:'~~!.Jatviingsltba~ Ad. No. 862, Dally Pliklt. TWOWEEKCLASS wanud forEITorosalon. J'(IW"Mlf to at least in· o.metlc Clrk for HB acbooltrainingorexper. ~gs~~;:;: LAOUNABEACH fi:':."U;'~g:~a P.O. Box 1560, Co.ta NATION·WlDEJOB Call837-c74l. vestigate this unusual Drug.store.P/time.Expr req'd.Llnearsolidalat.e, Accurate t)'J>lng easen· We are looking for a area is offering a ,_M_esa_._c_a_.92626 ____ _ PLACEMENT Beauty operator. Hair ~~r~~act Renee pret,over24.847·2S63 ~l~r~!aeea ~=Pl:r~ UaL No sb req'd. Xlnt resUpooslbl blale1 aghog~ive, cballeoglbg career ad· u-..aJT~~L.-~SJSTANCE .,,.,_., ................ benefit• include majo re a e ay w "" not c me t ~port unit ........ , • l'1llD'liOTIUW'I'" dresaer w 1f0Jlowlng for~~~~~~~~~ COUNTER GIRL ... anted, helpful. Some trainee sa•'-"'ed wi·th •'--tr pre van e n Y .__ ___ ~ GOODJOB 1-.. medftpro(it.1bar1ng. u:.u """' • for an lndlv" u.al wttb s .....-~ OPPORTUNITIES exciting new NpBcb IOYSA.MOGIRLS mustbepleuant&rconfi· pos~a;;!lnlment Applylnperson sent salary & posWon. r=rs prior consumer In Fasluon Island all ..... -U'O.... Salon.642·4114 dent with the public. ,.... 9am-4pm ., Duties not difficult, but experi-ce DuU-.... 11 M ... _.Fr" -·~,.." ~ Mission Viejo · El Toro Steady employment. TB.OMIC/ALTAIR Cl CO must be thorough. No "'u • _,. uo.wn -4, on uuu 1• I A IT IM D E R S ----area. Earn your own Eaatblliff Cleaners, 2547 • -leodl M children, no pets, no will Include loan un· 644-0295 SCHOOL HtkJw !Conltruc $900+ --.. llln ,_ E b I I r D N 8 ,......,..... I r v I 0 e I n d us t r I a I derwritidg, bualness de· ---------Trav•l Agent S800 ......_)' ae I su-cnp· ast u r . · (7141494-9401 cooking. Must have car. ve•-ent and internal Mgmt Tme, perm. Earn llOC E. 17th St .• SA , -n Proci'"-m'I S12K Uons after scboo~For in· 6'4-0032 Complex Call (714> 87G-8802 (213) ...,,.."' 0 k F 11 ...,.. \.NUI , __ .,__ ti L3 Co~uaJOpporEmploy•r ..., .. n ... fi.,•Ave cu ••"""rv1S100. If you are $17S·S2 0 w • u er 8S4-l86() D.11,"" CJ k to -IUI U'4UUIJ, Ca ~ """1 Dfl -' ,Jn, tl>l·50U. .._-8 h Sal "°"' School Co tT c t ........ '6 er _., r or Yard person Ca 1646-4460 ---------looking for a position rus es,ssc-..... 1. 1 aa 0 oas FeesPattl/AlaoFeeJob$ CAIWASHHB.P part time. 20bn wk, U· ELECT R 0 Lu X •F.quat()ppEmpl)'l'm/f Housekeeper. Engllab with a company whlch1 ________ _ LA COL LEGE of lrvlnePenonnelAgency F /time.Over\8. Haul Moving Center, Authorized sales & speak'g,Sdays,9-S.$500 respects your ablUtiea MASSAGE. Low coat 4118E17thCostaMesa MetroC..Wash CostaMesa.631-12$0 service. M/F. Full mo.Qmckadvaocemenl andcontribuUons.please Mllrw-Uke WCMMn Strong & capable of car· log for pleasant semi in· valid. Coot. u~ hlwrk. !Jve·ln o.l.ce atmosphere. ~5067 Day.Eve-Sat Cl~ m SUlt.eZM 642·1470 ac>HarborBI C.M. CREDITM'-R. P/time54.2-053 GIRLFllDAY for right person. Reply sendyourresumeto: SANTA ANA. :IM-7171 for ~ ' w For ffi&ht school in H.B. Ad '828, Dall)' Pilot. PO Classlfied ad no. 829 pampblet. Acrdt CAL Calhier/Hosless, mature. Growane marine dis· ---------_M0-_2209 __ or_s.&-_7_S_76_. __ Bolt 1560, Costa Mesa Ca. c/o DaUy Piiot DelJt. Ed. Apply, 547 W. 19th St. tribullog co. seeks a~· B.ICTROMIC 921S216 P.O. Box 1560 Jak W......_ 7075 BLUE UN£ Colt.a MesL =v~ resp. & re~!'b e IHSPECTOR GIRLS & GUYS _lns_uran_ce____ ~~a~~pO~= •••••••••••• ••••• •••••• CUEF ana~er. tn 2 Electronlcs manuf. has Neat. alert, over 17. Need ---y-o-E kn OPERATOR "'l yrs eitper. m related lmmed. opening in quali· vwn -... " mp yor Practical Nurse tun charge kitchen field. Salary' benefits & ty control dept. for elec· a job? Like to travel en-.... me.-ACJl'ICY HURSERYMAM~ . Day ~ Nl&hta. Lota of lllust~T~xper. COOKS advancement for right t.rooks test inspector. 1.2 tl~ ~~~~la~~~~·~!:r; No exp ~aro while n.c. Refs. 540-0722 Term Alslgnments o.y "Night sh1fts. App· person. Call 55&-0540. Yn exper. Must know oa· ca.ah advance. For ar· ~' leJobam .... ., traYp_~ pre· I Y • B e e r rn a s t e r CUSTOMR cllloscope11 & test lnslru· Po 1 n t m e n t • c a I """'K Wuue uuug. LEARN PIANO TUNING Restaurant. 3010 Harbor SEIVICI ment.s Xlnt benefits In· 71•"'2·3030. Ext. 4, l l Fe iMft ..... a.c.e Umitedopenings, arp Blvd c M elude medlcal!dental In· toJ d u G,.... MUioos. PIANOCARE • . . llCWTIOMIST aw-. a.m. p.m. a y. EdL.i 752 I 147 kl--Otll 581·7647 Cilld c.are 12.50 per hr. In Orowlng artlncal kidney · DISC Govemeu/Houtekeeper. • ~Wmhd 7100 _..=Dr our bome. 3 Children supply co, loc in the Irv IMtr•u•ll llltttfor21U'la. aies 1t 4' loaurance tU. all. acbool & all day Industrial compleit, nds 102 E Bak c M Mio N.8. Xlttt oppor. for Personal lines Sec'. -· ••••••••••••••••••• S"'L "' 41 ln -· So-· drtv •~ M t · er, · · 1 bool tt .. _ -1wn ....... r. ...... · Cl.llW'!.uer 1va rep. us 0 ,.ormer IC acucr. ty /Underwriter for ...... .... to SI aoo <Am.a From lng. Call •••. 551-0592 be proficient typist. --m.-·5300-·.E_E_. __ , ADDUcaat mual bav• 1e· morta•ie banldn& firm. EaceUentSkllll OnqeCo.Alrport> l•--------i knowledge of basic re-nlune Interest in S.A. Exper a must. Xlot Uneac umbered I Equal()ppor Employer cord keepin1 procedUftS Energetic peopleperaon dlUdreo, eQJoy1ports ac. Job o ppor w Jg row ·c SomeTfavtl & po11e11 gd comm C.M.bsmanlooklnafor tavitles "bne an in· aienc1.Salaryopen. For Em'*>Yera Pa,y AJI P'eea ,.._ _______ ,1 skills. Medicare 4' Medl· p.Ume aseoc. 556-4378 tttest ln the arta; 4 yr a]llll call Claire Lutes, lb Rei.nden Atency •· ........ TS Cal bUUaa eicper helpful. dearee pref'd. Must ~ 4Cl20 Bi.n:b St. Ste 1oc ovn Please le:od complete re· na~INE£R drive; car ii provided.•---------Nft1Jort Beacb 833-81 W1Ll.Alt010AT aume4'salaryreqto:ad U1QI SboQld be flexible re. EWELRY.sALES CalllorAppt/Eltab '6S COMPAMY #791, c/o Daily Pilot ~oct•llHJ 1ardlng wknda. LovelY J.f.....,. 1UOOCoodorAve Ntw1paper P .Q; Box s Yrs min. famWartty pvt rm & be. Satar)'~ HllJewalets AMIMALHOWfTAL FountalnValley t5GO Cotta Mesa, Ca. w/hlch ttll.ab1Ut1 am.all per mo.+ rootn&board. Now tntervlewlA1 at So. TO $600 lmmedlate Openings 82JS218. components. Dearee not Seod retume to: II. Coast Plu.a locaUon for S.U.-Kenoelllaoqer. For: oec. Satar)' com · &ieeer¢ PO Box 19547. Exper'd Jewelry Sales N.B.~. ~torC&rpenten Have aornet.hlng to sell! menaurue w 1baek· Irvine_ d271S. Person. Call 549-1319 for ~=: Clusllledadadoltwell. 1round. Call Carol, .uAIDIWAHTIO ,_a .... p __ pt. ______ _ motl.EIS PRECISION OllJ qualln.t penoantl aud appl)'. Good aasaual dea:terlt)'. ~U&*.Oro •ltmall co. ln Miii V'-Jo ....... catl Carol 811.mG bttwn I 61)m, ' ~Plu.mben ............... SS1-3!30blftwnl·5pm. Pull·llllM. Anab~lm. LET ME INTRODUCE ~bP~t ••cn.CIDlll ~re"':ea~ ~r:r~: ~':J::~~·L~ ,._.eacePrelerred DAILY PllO'f' lhlllonnl furn. No eub t»MO '* h•· No fn• l:q.t . Em$lft0Yet ~ .& eSIAED C!llla1. Olr •~nee. veaunonl. W' & pbon• '91~ .\pp~Yetlll Pro4«· ..-. .. Cati llra.. CloW ADS ~. a .. ~~ 1:1:.~· ~ ror per1ona1 1o~rnt. , .. Cot WI "· fW It, fr*•WlltloW•M (M2•H1'8 ) ~ ll•P' tO·llam· D>-*3or541'·1488. aeon lit:.,...: LVH l-11 P/t Medications. Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 Qlnter St, CM. MS 5585. Exper'd, f /time. Mature male, over 21. 6 Days lo· eluding Sat/Sun. Work w fplanta & trees. S3 Hr & up. Overtime. las benefits. Advancement MACHINISTS potential. Laguna Hills, Nursery, Inc. El Toro. 1 en1 lathe & t m Ill _U>-_5463 __ . _____ _ macbliililt. Must do own Nurses Aides s e t u r & w 0 r k Orderlies w/m n1mum Lad supervision. Short run ~I to unG.2 Id ,,._ commercial Job shop. Y : ie '""'"' 0 v e rt I me , fr I n ll e eacent. 7781 Garfield beoefita, lacl JNild vaca· Ave, H.B. Ph:847 9671 . tlon ft medical Ins. NURSES ~pltal Machl~e. 1M2 . L VM'S Edinger,S.A. 5412652 F /t1 me, a rternoon --------•I Charge & Medication MACHtMIST Nurst. P /time Nl&hl Progreuive groYith Nurse. Oood sal. oriented electronlce benems. Apply Park • .1 ha f Lido Conv. C.nter. 486 m&nUI. 1 openiOf' or Fl •I • h Ip Rd, NB. macblnlat w/5 yrs expcr. on lat.hos It mllla. Setup _6G-8044 _______ _ & operate c l ose tolerance. 0111 t\ 1win11•--------tblftl. Xlnt. beneftta In• dudln& medkal/dental pl.an. Alrc:cmd. plant. INSC ............ 102 E. Baker. C.M. fm.5300. 1 .0 . £, I For Ad Action ·Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642a5&78 PHONE SALES Phone Sales people, male or remale. 16 to Y9An of age. Guaranteed waia or commlaslons. 250 East 17th Street. Suite 0 . Costa Mesa. between s.oo & 8 .30 p rn . 646-4223. Equal Opportunity Employer SADOLEBA C K BMW '1 • NEWPORT OA IS UN IPICIALS 8210 4 Door. 4 speed, radio. (09TPKI!) NOWS2195 888DOV!STREET Near MacArthur &J amboree Roads 133-1300 • TOPIUYEll See ~ flnl & last! Top dollar patd ~or imports. COST~MISA DATSUN 28e Harbor Blvd. Calta Mesa MCM410 1975DATSUM ZIOZ2+2 4 speed, rad.lo, heater. air cond. new Urea & low miles. Sliver w/blact ln-terlor. (()()(11121. ONLY$6995 COSTAMISA DATSUN 2845HARBOR BLVD. 54CM4 I 0 540.021 l , i2 XJ6. Dark bhat w ,,,.. intr. AM/FM tape. miles. Daya S48·'17'1 1172 9US, T~a. loaded, •ve11Wlmd16U-388S. fully reconditioned. ....... 9732 M2-182lor~ •..WCOLOIS •~MODB.S Hue• aavtnp on all re· malnln1 new 161 Ii Demas ln atoek. MAl9UIS VOLVO M~lONVIEJO ll l·nlO 495-1210 74MAllCIY 1 Full power lnclu4lnc AM f FM ~tereo, Hl wheel, cruiae control, to appreciate! 761.NUO $6416. l1U~;1 I\ F SON t r, • i ~ '-4 •••• '" "\' ~ lt,hj 4• f~,. H h filv(1 Hur•' qt1 f1 Pt .I( I 114. ·8844 '970 .......... ••••••••• •••• 19'10 Pocwcbe 911 s Coupe. ~I COUNTY VOLVO EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO Largest. Volvo Dealer in Orange County! 1970lm~a4doorV-8. 3$0 cu lo, A.IC. Rldl. be•ut· COO(l. sum. See at 2544 Ntwporl ~lvd, C.11 •• th•n oall 7~2·183-0 ; ~ GUSTAFSON ....................... * $'7000. Ma11. AM/FM, 1974 Jen.sen Healey Pvt pty. 114«M-1.3St Low MUeaae. 15.500 "10 914 Porsche, low mt, 548-0991, ull for Hiplfo xtnt cood, 5'S-n11 Ol' aft • 6pm, S$1.o6S6 BUY or LEASE DIRECT 19'19 Suburban W1n. K....GWa 9715 PORSCHE '14 914 ~r~~~ Silverado. full pwr, ....................... Sllver/blk. Xlnt. cond. ti~~~ fmttrear air, cruise (On· '68 Karmann Ghia, reblt 52M3'1S • • trol, auto trans, 454 en1. eng, xlnt cond Sl800tol· Roll Royce 9756 ~~~~-..~--Tbirdseat.173-um. fer496-6648eve. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S. '13 Monte Carlo. F\&lly '67 Gnta •1 DEA UR IN U.S.A. Anaheim 750-2011 ~: ~:t~~~: ~· Black,runseood. rm OY '7S 164·E . S unr'f, air 556-185$ BIO. 644-137 CAIVER cond., AM/FM, 4·spd, ----------1 .....,_..a._ 9•31 /0 o 18M · 1 t '63 CORVAIR Comp., bu -1 ROUS·ROYCE w · • ma., x n not runnine. Sl2S or be tttt °"'"'"'" cond. Ph: 673-3707. olr. 498-02!8 =='~"' ---------... I lt<C ''l '-.i Mt RL 1 1~v ll.' ·' ,, d •• : 't I lfl(jt•ll1 t.i ,l fl o -1 :.!-884 i GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY H.dUu Bede h Blvd Huntington 8( .1c h '940 ....................... "73 LTD, 52,000 ml, new Ures, RIH. pwr windows. Xlnt cond. 552·33'10 ev. dayg· 540·4121 Francois Janvier, 'mStatJon Wgn. new tires. air, 390 VI, 1 ownr. $900. \.._ _ ___, ·~~~l.v:.:tI'i>s~J7:: Chrysler 9925 ~...... ClOSl.O SUNDAYS 496-9689eves. •••••••••••••••••••••• . Topta 9765 ''IS Cordoba. XJnt cond, "13 Cpe. 43M. A real find Havesomtthiag you want 842-8844 833-9570 ~~..-11!!-ff' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alltol. Hew new tires, full pwr, as w I a 11 the. x tr as. to seU? Classified ads do ••••••••••••••••••••••• sumelse$4380. + nomnl. Lookfruns m1nt. $4SOO. it well -Call NOW. '74' Mazda RX3 Coupe, 4 spd, under wrnty, very clean &:r1 .3202 '7l J TOYOTAs '74 Mazda. xlnt cond. BUy or Lease 14,000 Mi. $2000. w.597s •MEWCOLORS Autos.Used ·11 Mazda RX2 Cpe. Koni MEW MODELS ••••••••••••••••••••••• s h ocks, Miche llns, * General 20mpg. 3'1M on now eng. Huge Savinas on ALL re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Always deaJer serviced . mainlng new 765 & Low blue book $950. sell De~.Beller Bargain for $895. S49-9890 eves MARQUIS TOY OT A Merce•s lens 9740 MISSION VIEJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 131·2180 495-12 I 0 LeOM Mew·UHd ova 100 MB CEDES OM DISPLAY House of '"'ports AUTHORIZtO MER.CEDES DEALER 6862 Manchester, Buena Park 523.7250 On the Santa Ana Fwy. '75 · 4:SOSE. 25,500 mi, dark blue w /blue int, cassette, 'Ill Blue Corona. 4·dr. 4. spd, good tires &t brakes, ___ ....;;_-'---"-'-==-t new battery, carb and Buick 9910 valve job. well m ain· ••••••••••••••••••••••• tained car. $995. 893·6460 '72 Riviera, perf. cond. aCle r 7pm Orig. owner. Loaded. $400. cash rebate for quick New steel belted tires. sale oJ '72 4 dr Mrk n. Sac. $2450. 557·2819 o V/top. air, new e ng, _548_4_258_. _____ -I tires, clutch, etc.. etc. equals $1655. 549·4187 days '64 RIVIERA Classic. Xlnt. cond. ~. 646·1211 Cadillac •••••••••••••••••••••• 1976TOYOT.A CELICAGT (763NX.O l xlnt cond S14,900. 646·3569 '70 Cadillac Coupe d 72 DIESEL Ville. Vinyl top, gold leather interior. gree a ir, s tick , A M /FMll••lllln.~;e•lllCI exterior, all power 9i000/ofr. 714-8<Ml·0567 63,000 miles <original> r "73 MB 21!10C, l ownr. air S 1 9 O O. 8 7 O • 4 S 61 elec. sunrf, super clean .::::=======::::I _<_FU_lle_rt_o_n_> ____ -i~ $71100. 497·~ aft 6P M '73 280. Sharp' Auto, PS. PB. S t e r eo /tape . s ilver/blu i nt. $7595 644-1755 1971 TOYOTA CBJCA fees. 963-7767. Must sell. PP5'4-9344 642-5678. . IRAllD llEW '77 0[15 98 LUXURY SEDAN FUiiy loaded Including peeata. p.Wlndows, P-'runk retea ... p.t100t tocks . 111nyt top, rnr window defogger. visor vanlly mirror. cruise control, lilt & IN w!Me~ 403 V-8, 11mutatec1 wire wheett. p•ntenna. dtgltal cloelc. AM.FM stereo, comenng lamps. (269605) 77GMC•hTON 77 GMC SUIURIAH '77 G~J'• TON --~ ......... -. .. ~ ~_.~ .. o .......... o~-·--a.-. ................. ..,.., ..... ._.... ........ .__ .............. ,,,,_,_ .. .._... ................ ,,.,. -.. ............. ¥'-& ........... .... ,. 53955 ..... " 58555 -·n 55255 911.1'11Y ..,..., ' ..,.,., .... , •• <..... ---...., ... i...... ....... l..- 77GMC l/4 T~ " '76GMC MEW C...-91CIAI. .. TOM4t4 --,, ............. ..,..__. ...... oi.c ............................ -.............. ............. ~ ........... ..,........_ • ....... --\.II ... _, ... ~ ... ................. 0 ................ ·-.. ..-c ...... ,,....,.. ........ ---Tl 57155 -...n 56755 ..,.,., ..,.,., .... , •• \«-. ........ h _-... MB '76 3000. 9,000 ma , as sume lse or sell. P vt pl.y 1714) 493..0164 4 speed with air cond. lmmaculale t bruout ! <SU EHN>. OMLY $2195 (!) WEEKEllD USED CAR A•· TRUCK SPKIALS MERCEDES BEMZ MEW CAR TRADE IMS 41MOSIAHk ANAMCIHG AVAIL.AIL! HOUSE OF IMPORTS ~ Kercedea Sedan, P /S. 4 1pd, elec sunroof, Xlnl Ml\RQUIS MOTORS , ,. •w 1.t..i Tf ,, ... .,.,,, •• l• ' .... .. • •• "" ., · ... ·1 "' • :'I'' J J .... ·, '. '71 ·royota Corolla. Xlnt cond. Must sell. S1200. Cllll 640-6731aft6 pm. Triwnpll 97'7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• eond. PP, $3$45. Eva. '72 SUPER Beet.le, 821-8068 yellow, sunroof, AM /FM atereo, tlpe dk, new W. 9742 brha. mags, many •H••••••••••••• • ••• •• lttru. f'IS·9121'1 i5 NG llld1et. 11.000 ml, 'l>VWConvt, minUroris. ~ radlala, mint COQd, 11~. cau • *'700. 919-31515;30-3:30 495-5101. Nabers Cadillac Quality and Price Guaranteed Lcasini: Spccialim Preferred Rates Largest Selection of New & Used Cadillacs in Orange Cou11ty Open Sund;ry Cadillac Master Qealer 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa S40·9 I 00 '76 PLYMOUTH 740LDSll YOLARE I Dr CouH. 11Hoo $ 3155 ,,...., PO-tl-lflO (fl(Y4111 ._., ... l ...... •6ootVl.~IOI> '"$2155 c:ond. P_$., Pit, tulo. "'"-(611116) ,__, ... ,l ..... 1974 OLDS '72 CHEVROLET IMPALA va ~E~to10, hHttr 2 °'· COupe.,.., -$1655 """", ........... 74 CHEVY 'h TOM. l'•c •uo ve P•" $ 3155 tlMfl"9 PoWI" bf»• IUIO"'•hc. h••t•r 11))1151 • . _,....,, .. \. ....... . '73 MAZDA '70 COUGAR ''HURST'' '73 IUICK WAGON CONVERTllLE . RIVIERA =JCl.~.,, •ool rock ••$ 955 ~nrc' .• :::. =~.·.::$ 2255 :~1~.Y°':""..'!:'9'.,::;$ 2655 o0'""' wonoowa. 1111 VB. c~tom vlnr,1 top. power windows. '°""· v '°"' 1111-· 0 """"'· _,....,..., bf'lkff. _ raOr• whMll. • power <1oor ocks. AM/FM s1ereo IUOOJOO ""''•"•-~~~~~~~~~~··.·-~~~~~~~~~~~-··-·-·~~ w~a~. ral~e wheels. 1111 wheel.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ crutse control (030lJCI •73 OLDS 76 OLDS 88 MUST SEE! I • CUTLASS ltOYALE COWE ~~>=·~$2655 =~~~8~$4255 ' ....... "...... "-'•"...._ ... OverTV ·~t A HunUnaton Beach man who thou1bt bewaa 1ettlng a good deal oo color televiaion aeta found out differently when Ile attempted to .load his truck Monday afternoon. Frank Standard of 16552 Cooper Lane told Costa Mesa police be lost rrooto a man named Steven, . who called blm on the phone and offered blm "a good deal on color televisions." Instead, Standard found himself confronting a loading dock crew at Sears Roebuck and Company at South Coaat Plaza who told blm they bad never heard ol a man named Steve and. that there was no sale on color televisions at the store. Costa Mesa detectives re. 'AMiraele~ constructed the bilk:iai crime this way: . Standard, a wreeklnl yard owner, aaid he received • call at bla business from amanwboaaid he bad a bar&ain in new telffilkm aeta. He offered to ae11 Standard three or four sets for $700, llddiDg that the victim could sell some to his friends and make some moaey ontbedMI. , After calling several f riepds, police said Standard placed $700 in $100 bU1s in an envelope and marked it, "Attention Ann," as instructed. · · He met the man named Steve at a reataw-ant where the suspect told him to meet him at the South Teacher, Kids Free; Suspect Captured MELBOURNE, Australia (AP>. -Police recaptured an escaped convict today who kidnaped a teacher and nine students Mon· day five years after he abducted another teacher and six students. Edwin John Eastwood. 26. col-lected six more hostages during the day, held them in chains dur- ing the night in a state forest, and then was wounded and captured at a roadblock. His captives were freed unhurt. "It's a miracle .•.• It's Wt- believable that such a number of people could all be taken and e1cape unhurt after such a drama," said acting State Premier Lindsay Thompson, from whom Eastwood demanded $50,000ranaom. Eastwood escaped Dec. 14 while serving a term for the earlier k:idnaping in which be and an accomplice demanded $1 million. He vowed to get revenge for having been imprisoned, prison guards said. Authorities gave this account of Teen Nabbed In BBl'glary, Store Blaze A 13-year-old Newport Beach boJ la under Investigation today after be wu arrested M~ nlgbt on. charges that be bad lM!rllariled a toy store and Ht it allre. Police said the youth bas a his· tor)' of anons that date back more than three yea.rs. Tbe teenaaer was taken into c:eatod1 at about 9:45 p.m. out aid• the Mini Bazaar, 400 Westmtmttr Ave. where police bad been alerted by nearby real· dents that there wa.a a burslary Ua pl"OIJ't!IS. • omcen uid they watched the teenaa• smash aome of the toys la the atan. They arrested bim u be left and thelo:.:Sovenid the fire which wu '4er do- hig about ISOOdamaae. Police Hid tbey tried to in· t.rvtew the youth, a Newport Hetaht. resident, about other his second k:idnaping : The young man invaded the small school in the hamlet of Wooreen. 80 miles southeast of Melbourne, aboutlla.m. Monday armed with a .38-callber pistol. He forced the teacher, 20-year-old David Hunter, and the nine pUJ>Us 6to11 years old to go with him In a pickup truck after leaving a note that said: "Taken the children for a nature study walk. Back in an hour." He drove bis captives 40 miles eastward along a country road UD· Ul be eoUided with a truck. The driver, 27-year-old R4>btn Smith, and a bltcbblter with hhn Cot out to investicate and were taken cap· tive. ~ A timber:· truck pulled up to In· vesU,ate and then a camper van. The coaviet toot the two other truck driVel's and two women vaeatiooen in the van captive allo, herded them all into the van and bound their banda and feet with cb.ai.Ds. Eastwood then d.roYe into a state forest ~ set up camp for the night, keeping his hostages bound. .. We were all calm, but it was all quite unbellenbJe, like a dream," said Joy Edwards, 49. Durin1 the nl&bt, Smith managed tq free bimseU and crept away. He walked for four boun before coming to the home of Frank TrinWyllou. who called the Police. The police, meanwhile, bad been alerted by the parents of the children. More than 3,000 people CSeeKIDNAP.•a1eAZ) LyingDmm, Urmea Altir.m, A mesuge relay~~!:.= Beach police sent Beach police racinc to cMtt CID a man crouched on tbe aouiid belide Brookbunt Street near Paclflc Coast Hlibway Monday. Tbey raced to the scene and found the Southern CalifQl"Dia EcUacm Compuy workman wu not lDJured or W ~tall. He was jUlt l1tnc down OD the job wbUe pamuna u ei.etncal uWity inlt11lation. bout Plualtcll'e. ' . '1 There tbe IUlpect toot ~ d.ud'1 caab ud told b1i:a be w.aJd · 101et a reoel~~ the~ aets. lie told ard to pull bis truck arowd to the lolldina dodl and that ... ~d .. peet ., teleriaioauu there. ... When be pulled his truck up to the docks, police said, be ques· tioned the loading crew who told bim_no one named Ann worked in accounting, the store had no sale on televisions and that they had never heard of a man named Steve. Police are seeklnf a clean- sbaven man, about five feet eight inches tall with a muscular build and bland, curly hair. Al'WIN ....... ,,_.,,. 2e ~ear• Andrei A. Gromyko, 67, ob· serves h1s 20th year as Sov- iet foreign minister today. No other foreign minister of a major nation has been on the job as long. Talks Sets OD Housing For Seniors Two 1'".tory towers for senior cltiien housing will be discussed tontnt at a public hearing before the llwitirigton Beach Planning Commluloa. U approved, the complex would be the ftnt bllh rlae residential •ttueWl'elin Bunttncton Beach. As.o on tbe qenda for the plan-ulnc ~mlu\oowbicb meets at 7 p.m. MWtJCO\.IDcllcbambenswUl be a Marini to eonalder a n• mwtHlurJ bulldiilaordlnance. TU~WOul~ae\uppro­ .,.... for ,..... blab rtae de- veao,tneabtnt.Mdb'. · Ttie twe towen .,...d t. local- ed on ao 8erM at the ,...,. Polnta area DMr Paetftca Jloepn,J at MaiDSlr..tand FlortdaStreet. R«ommended by the plannlDg departmeat staff, the pre>pONI 1'ould callfortOO houllna Wlltafor tbeelclerlY. Catting Otit for llcneali Professional hair stylist Frank Bennett splits hairs with Huntington Beach High School Junior Merritt Snyder during ts-hour Monday haircutting marathon held in the school's quad. Bennett was one of two stylists who donated time to raise cash for the drill team's planned junket to Hawaii. About 00 heads were trimmed, raising $250 for the trip. Plan To Operate Preschool Dropped A plan to operate a tax- supported preschool in north Huntington Beach has been dropped, according to Ocean View Elementary School District Superintendent Dale Coogan. Ocean Vlew t.n.aatees tabled an application for federal funds to expand an existing child develop- ment center into a full-scale pre- school last week. Defendanl, HitA]udge Jn·Rematch MILWAUKEE (AP) -Judge Christ T. Seraphim was decked by a punch Crom the witness stand in a rematch with defendant James E. Wicks. Wicks, 24, beginning trial on an attempted murder charge, scaled a railing Monday as Seraphim leaned close to ask a question and ' caught the judge on the jaw. Both fell to the floor. They were untangled by two deputies and two policemen. Tbe judge regained his seat, rubblnghbjaw and complaining. "I didn't have a chance to throw a fair blow. Tb1s guy was on top of me before I knew it. And on top of this, I've been ailing with back troubleallday,"hesaid. Seraphim, 57, had instructed a deputy sheriff to stay near the de- fendant as he took the stand, re- calling that Be had to duck to avoid a ftve-pe>Und microphone that was thrown at him in an earlier meeting with Wicks. · After the latest tound, Wicks was handcuffed and returned to jail. REIVRN OF 1HE SI'REA.KER Irvine police are~eepine the if eyea peel tel for a male in ft1i. mld·2C>a who wu apobed Monday nlaht 1prtntlng du'oueb the in· duatrtal area weariag only the top half of a woman's blk1nl. But parents repreaentine a privately run cooperative pre- school in the area told t.ruatee:s the proposed tax-supported pro- gram would drive them out of business. Trustees were ''pblloeopbieal· ly" divided on whether the school district should become more in· volved in the preacbool area. Coogan said. "I don't think the board would have approved the application even if the pressure group bad not come in," the svperlntfaMDt said. Trustees were especially coa- cernf4 wtth the actual peed fer the program an4 bow lt Could be financed after its federal fundina terminated in its fourth year, said Coogan. Presently. the district operates a child development center which provides three to 4-year· old yowigsters with early iden- tificatiCJG ol learning problems. Thls program is in its last year of federal funding. its future ls uncertain at this time. according to Board President Marianne Blank. Mrs. Blank said she was in favor of the proposed tax- supported preschool. "But the majority of the board feels we don't belonJt ln the pre· school are&i" said Mrs. Blank. "I feel we really need to be inwlved in this area. State officials qree withtbia." Parents who opposed the ex· panded preschool proeram said the dlatrlct was ''infrinlina on pr\.Yate ent.erprlae. •• 9ut school district officials de- nied any attempt to put the cooperative nursery out of bual· ness. Mn. Blank said the proposed district preschool would have provided "just another option for parenta." The proposed tax-supported preschool would h•ve served about 200 youngsters OD a first come, flnrt aened buts. The exlating ~blld development prosram lel"Ves ~ 92 cblldren. "I'm aarry for the parents who could have been served by this propOled presebool,.. •8'd Mrs. Blank, "It'• not u if we we::JtoJ.nc to mandate tb1s for all drtn In the dlatrlct," she aald. '11 wu surprised to see this whole thlnJ tum out tb1I way.•• ~ , area ~ and anoaa that have ocC?Urred in tM dt7 neentl1 but be waa rushed to Hoaa •emortal HOIJ)ltal for tnetment . . ' ..-. of a druC OYerdoae. • He wu released to bis parents ,bJ offtcen who aatd they pllilDed to resume their queat.ioaina ol the ,outb toda.Y. Hmitington PoQ~· :Faees .'~a~s' ' TEN CENTS A lJO.pound youth who went bel'Hftmd beaanamuhlngwtn. dow• at a Suaaet Beacb ham· burfer takeout stand today owed bll llfe to three Huntington Beach policemen who battled him topre- ventbiableeding to death. lnvestilatora said if the 19- year-dd; wbo gave b1a address as the Loni Beach YMCA, bad not been subdued following the lO:SO p.m. rampqe Monday, he would have died. Huntinltoo Beach police were called to '\be Jack·in·the·Box drive4brcdgb facility at Pacific • Coast Hl1hway and Warner Avenueby.J.errifledemployes. Tbey barricaded themselves in an upstairs storage area after the would·bec:ustomer exploded in an unexplained fury and cballqed one try coot to a figbt, in· vestlaators aaid. He proceeded to demonstrate bis toqg!rM1s by amaabln1 bis fist through a plate elua window, ca~• deep forearm lacera- tion,' one Orange County Sheriff's Office spokesman aaid today. .• Authorities said the slender suapeet then vaulted through the shattered window and proceeded to aUempt to clestroy the pre- mises, including the cooking utenaila. Bunttncton Beach Police Of. fleer Bob JeffreJ who respcoded to tile emergency ~all aald the sus- pect, apparently totally intoxicat- ed, hadlled acroea the blghwayto a liquor store, blood spewing from a severed artery all the way. He and Officer Joe Guarnera. along with Patrol Lt. De Wayne Brown. ftnally managed to colT81 the screaming, struggling youth, sheriff's deputies said. ''Three of our guys bad to fls. ~ht biJJ1 to save bis life, .. Hunt.- lagton Beach Police Patrol Sit.- Jarrett Webb noted 1bortly after tbe desperate Menday night acuf· fie. 't'l'bey just had to •go to war with him,• the guy bad no com. C';~~ of the fact be was dy- The team of policemen held tbe suspect down ao fire department paramedics, working against (See BLEED, Pase AZ) A brote but persl.stent fund· raiser who first offere4 to sell bis watch and rine to a disinterested Huntington Beach service station attendant finally whipped out ·a knife Monday and robbed bis target. Kelly P. Rector, victim of the armed robbery at the Lemer Oil Company, 10379 Beach Blvd .• told police about $100 was taken In the holdup. Rector said be bad just come on duty shortly before the 3 p.m. incident involving a man of Latin descent who uked $85 for bis jewelry. The victim told the suspect he could not use the service station's money, whereupon be was menaced with '8 knife and or· dered to band over the money • Investigators said the bandit fled the station In the direction ot. the Five Nnta Shopping Center at Beach Boulevard and Main Street and disappeared. £oast 'Favored' lh'l'OMBAU.V -,,. .. Ditty~ ' Three dlNetcn of tbe JAJQtS ~ Irvine FOUDdatloD ttlUfted Mon- day that U.., voted for tbe nle ot. thelr Jrvtne Company atoc~ to f,be Mobil OU CorporatlOft became It waa the best offer mid• to lbltr board. And all three a~ that a aale of the stock f9r. ~81.9 mllllon rather than a dlatribuUoa al tbe holdings to aelected charities would belt heh> them meet the l wiahesolthelafeJameslrviDe. I OnlJ CJDe of the three, Mn. Kathryn Wheeler of Corona del llar, took tbe wUneu stand ID tbe Oranp County Superior Court trial of tbe lawsuit filed by her cousin, lln. Joan Irvine Smith. Judge James F. Juqe allowed the reading of pretrial deposi- tiont ta.ken from foundation directon F.dward W. Carter and Robert IL Gerdes to 10 into the record as the trial testimony or the two men. Gerdes denied in his depo1lUon that the foundation board had ie· nored the wilhes of the minority shareholders in the Irvine Com· pany when they negotiated a deal that wlll, if approved. aee the mer'er of the Irvine Company with~obU. Gerdes pointed out that the shareholders would 1et the same price aa the foundation and could go back to court to protest that price if they thought it wu imul· ficlent and did not represent fair market value. Tbe foundation owm 5'.S pet· cent ol the Irvine stock and will receive an estimated S155 mllllon from Mobil if Judge Judge ap- proves the sale beinc challenaed by Mn. Smith. Mrs. Smith owns a little inore than 22 percent of the stock ln the company founded by her grand.father. Her share of the Mobil deal would be about $63 million. Mrs. Smith araues, however, that the Irvine Company's true value ls closer to $1 billion than the $281 .9 million offered by Mobil. She claims through attorney Howard Friedman that it might be possible to reach that figure if the oil company were not dominating the market ~lace and frightening other po111ble bid· ders away. The heiress currently prefers the S282.7 million offer submitted by a bidder known in court as the Allen-Taubman group: a con· sortium beaded by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit devleloper AUred Taut> man. Mrs. Smith wu criticized in Gerdes de\><?51tion Monday for what be satd was her refusal to accept realities in the founda· lion's negotiations with Mobil and the decision to sell to the oil company. Gerdes pointed out that the roundatton has only a few years to. comply with the provisions of the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969. The measure compels the foundation to dispose of it.s bold· lngs in the J.rvloe Compaqy. Gerdes said Mrs. Smith's at- titude was Impeding.rather than aidinl the foundation in meetin1 that obligation. ''She changes her mind from day lo day," the director said. F,....P,..eAJ BLEED .•• time, could apply a tourniquet and bandage the wound tem-porarily. 1nveslJgators then turned blm over to sheriff's deputies Don Lambert and Christine Davidson, who booked him into UC Irvine Medical Center's psychiatric ward for observation. Deputies said today they will also seek charges of drunk-in· publicqal.nat the YOUDI man. The spot where the rampa1eoc· curred is in ~ty territory, but the IUlpect bad fied ICrou the itreet lnto Huntln;ton Beach city Police jurf.adlcUon and they were dearer when the call wu re- 'tived. I ' ;, ORANOI COAIT "" DAILY PILOT ' Car, Dri1'er Botla Retired Jens Jorgen Jensen of Copenhagen, Den· mark, finally had..to _.q~ drivlJW hlB 1929 Model A Ford. Nothing wa's wrong with the_ antique car. But Jense~n.is.96 years old and {nay no longer drive. His last trip was ~t.• tllke-bis-younger brother to church. His younger brother IS 94. "' F,....PageAJ KIDNAP ... were searching, and roadblocks were setup. A police patrol drivini through the state forest saw the van speed down a track about 8 a.m. and turn into a highway. A 20-~e chase ensued, at speeds up to 90 miles an hour. SboU were ex· changed, and Eastwood crashed through a roadblock. The chase ended at a second roadblock when Constable Bob King shot out one of the Ures on the van, bringing it to a stop. Eastwood got out, firing two shots at the police. The police fired back, hit him in the leg and overwhelmed him. Eastwood was brought limping into Melbourne City Court later and ordered to stand trial May 23 on 25 charges, including shooting, illegal use of a firearm, car theft and 16count.sofkidnaping. IAUian Carter Happy On Return to India. VIKHROLI, India <AP> - "This i.5 the greatest day of my life, honestly,·· s aid Lillian Carter u abe returned today for a tearful reunion with friends in the cotnmunity where she worked io years ago as a volun- teer nurse tor the Peace Corps. Some 4,000 workers 'Mobbed President Carter's 78-year-old mother in this modern in· dustrial certter 15 milef northeast of Born bay. "Ever since I left here. I've told of my love for Vikhroli, not just India, but Vikhroli," said Mrs. Carter. "This is where I've wanted to be." "Everythlne they have done today bu touched me to the bone,'.1 she said. ·~oday, when I saw that crowd, I really forgot that I was the President's mothe('. I waa one of them again, just like I used to be." The American delegation left Bombay in midaftemoon for the United States in 'a special Air Force plane. It was to make brier tefueling stops in Tehran and Madrid. "She's incredible," said an In· dian security guard assigned to accompany Mrs. Carter. "I've been with her the whole time and she looks great, but I'm ex· hausted." SAN FRANCJSCO (AP>-'lbe droupt. now ID ita aeeoad yqrbt Not1bern California, baa luplrtd rata dances, ebants and prayers -udnow.apoem. Forecaster E. Jan Null ot the -'Natlooal Wntber S.fflt••• Jledw.ood Qty oftlc., fae.d'wttb. NorUMrn Calilol'ala w .. tbtr summary tbat looked Just about t.be same u tbe dally summary for montbl now, bit the teletype GM 8HORTA<JI ' ...,_ASKED-AS Monday with tbii version of the "High Pressure Blues": "Str.,.g Tdgll pre...,,. remmna Jirml11 ~-•. blocking . au lforfMllJat~~-cfNttehed. •• SonwnmstooUld be nice tmtltsnoeo .,. tM '"°"""*'· . ...,, .. io IUl 'IP tM domaor_.,.,. .,,,..foatdt:dAI. "But Uw . new for.can a<ifl it'• mor. A1tS11f1 cfi¥. ., .wftla patcha of '°" andaftemoonbar.e.'' Alao Monday. federal offtdals warned states in the Pacific Norf.bwest \0 bel(in takinl water 11vin1tmeasures. c.ntomrans bave alrdlly been warned of possible power blackouts this summer. U.S. Interior ·Secretary Cecil Andrus called on residents ol ·wuhington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana Monday to cut waler and electricity use by 10 perce.nt, before mandatory measures becomenecess~. F,....PflfleAJ POOL •.. maintain it." 1be remarked. "If we wait for a laur date, there's only a sliibt chance that it would be' built." Councilman Al Coen said he had concerns ~at the pool would be only remotely related to the handicapped populations. ~mben of. the audience also lobbied for projects that included storm drains, senior citizen hous· ing, home checks by police cadets while residents are on vacation and putting chimes in the Huntington Beach High School Tower. - FREE! The Bonnevllle Power Ad· mln.iltndoa lo PonlaDd, Ore.. ,..DGOC)ed wttb aa affldal eall for a 10 pwcea& cutback ID tile me_ ot el~intberetklD. Io~mCallforela, c.rUicU. Jy Jow..-ervom could mean les.s •eter to power-by4roeleetr1c t1111>blee. utility olftoialt aaid Monday. .. We're boplng to bring about a shotgun weddln& of all t.be major uWities in the state to eoonllnate diltrtbUlion ot what power there ls, .. aald Robert Ham, emeJ"lency plannloa director for the California Energy Commlsaion. A call for voluntary cutbacks in San Francisco has resulted ip a 10 percent drop in •ater eamump- Uon, oftldala said Monday. But the city could face a man· datory 2S percent curtailment in Marcbifral.nata,Ys•carce. * * * What Water $horf,age? MAUBU (P) -As drought· atrtclten M'orthem Catlfomtans ration dwindllng water supptie&, and officials in Southern CaUfornl1 urge comervation, the citizens of Malibu and Lomita are bein1 urged to use more water to qualify for a rate discount. Owners of large properties in those two areas of La. Angeles County get a lOpercent disCOlDtt if they own at least 10,000 square feet or well-cultivated property and use 7,500 cubic feet of water for aix or more montba a year to keep it green. One Malibu resident who didn't want to be identified said bis 10 percent discount was taken away because he cut back on watering his tree·sludded, well-landscaped property. Quake Small CHINA LAKE (AP) -A small earthquake rumbled through this Mojave Desert town early Mon- day, rattling windows but causing little damage, authorities said. The 5:S9 a.m. temblor regislered 3.8on the Richter Scale. Valley School' Union Backs Bette Miganelli Her friends and former co- workers presented her wilh a sa ndalwood wreath and a handmade n ecklace. At a ceremOl\Y later, a lot of red dye was placed on her forehead. the traditional Indian symbol for welcome. Mrs. Carter, a registered nurse. visited the community clinic where she used to give out birth control advice and work with lepers. 1977 RandtMcNally The Fountain Valley Education AllOCiAJtiOn <FVEA) has en· doraed candidate Bette Mlgoanelli in the March 8 elemen- tary school board election. Mrs. Mignanelli is one of seven hopefuls running for three Foun- tain Valley School District trustee seats. But Mn. Mignanelli told FVEA officials, thediatricl teachers' un· ion, 1he would not accept the aroup'afinancial backing. FVEA could apply for funds from the Aasociation for Better Citizenship (ABC) to aid Mrs. Mlgnanelll 's campaign. ABC is the political action arm of the Califomia Teachers "8· sociation. ' Teacher volunteers will work in Mn. Mignaneli 's campaign, ac- cording lo FVEA spokesman Shirley Rickabaugh. library Seeking Volunteer Aides Huntington Beach Library Director Walter Jobmon b look· tn1 for volunteers. to belp keep three branch llbrattes open. Citbens interested in belplni should call Yvonne Fee, 842-7421, oreooudber at the library, 7111 Talbert Ave .. l'here Jr• qo qe UnslU md aeruor citizens are in· tited to participate. 19 Heid in Raid .VISAIJA (AP)-Nineteenpeo- ple, tbcluding some ~to the prilcJn.baled lle~i~an Mafia 1an1. ~ vrelted on nartollcs charges, Tulare OOlllrty abertff's officers reP9rted. A ptedawn ro~qp wq COl\ducted Mooday ln tbe'l'id~ andVtsaU.a area. • Inside. she met a 40-year-old former patient who had come to see her. "How I remember him! I cured him of asthma," she said. Mrs. Carter, wearing an aquamarine pants suit, alao visit- ed a school where the children performed native dances ror her. "I've forgotten I came over for a funeral. I am so happy," said Mn. Carter. who rellJrned to In· dia on Sunday as the head of the U.S. delegation to the funeral of Indian President Fakhrudd.in Ali Ahmed. Bui.let Holes 'Myst,ery' Cleared Up A Huntington Beach citizen tipped off police M<>l\day about a Ptckup truck riddled wttb bullet holes. Inveati1•tora raced to tbe 6700 block of Warner Avenue,t ,where they indeed found the verucle -• its driver's aide door punctured by numerous slogs -but it turned out the truck was the only real victim. Police said lt.s owner, a con· struction worker on a job nearby. readily admitted be was responsible for the numerous old bullet holes in his personal mode of truaportation. He esplainrd be drew his gun ad blued away at lt repeateclly sometime ago when it broke down oo an ~lion in tbe de- sert. Intemational~World Map. •1 tr:na AllNB'rl' Af' .... C.o f I t 1 NEW ROCHELLE. N.Y. -He lidond only tall, blUHYed blondet, accordinl to bla belt bienct, .1lm Parts, ID4 they cruiled. the netcbborhood c1lnen tosetber trylq to pick tbem up. IT WAS THE RVSTMTIONS Ill{ Cowan•s persQQal life that trienda wete ~~aklnl of today as they trled to put to11ther tbo puuleot a neiatlbOr a~ gone tun-crazy. But Frederick CoWan, a &-foot, 2SOopouDd wet&bt.liftiU Ciant of a man. 0 could never makelt wltb them, be never had aelrlfriend ln the aeven years I've known him, .. Parts said the moroint after bis 33-year-old friend went on a raDIJMlle ln •New Rochelle warebouae, killing five people, woundinl· five others before taklnl bis life. <Related stories A3, A4) They teea1141d Cowan'• inordinate interest in euns ud tbe aNeDal ol ~ and rifltia be kept ln bfs 1-ttic . room. Tbe bi1 man WU IO proud 'of Ida fUlll uw be often traded Qe11bborti0od kids • look at the collectloG for wuhinl bis car. On IUllllller weekends, the butly man would often lllt on the atoop ol Ida parents' )lome where he lived, re1ali.ai the kids witb war stories and aun lore. ''A LOI' OF THE KIDS IDOLIZED hi~ because of bis 8lJM, '' ...... ,...,..... Fan Gored in Ring An unidentified fan jumped with his cape into the ring at a Mexico City bullfight and paid the price. Medical autJiorities said he was seriously injured in the right leg, throat and chest. Some 65,000 fans watched in tx>rror. unable to help the young man. NB Building Moratorium Voted Down By JOANNE REYNOL~ Of.,_ O.tly l'llel Si.ff Three of Newport Beach's seven city councilmen want to call a balt to buildin& bomes in t.belrctty. Fortunately for developers with pl.ms in the works, four of their eaDeacues dJaagreed, till· mg a proposed moratorium Mon· u:rnllbt. U tbe moratorium proposed by &tl.octlman Paul Ryckoff bad ~ f'lt. into effect, lt wooldjlave baJted two. projects wblcb need cftJ council and coastal com• mlslloa approval to 10 ahead -Sea lt1and apartments and WatcWfGrove. Th• .,iment complez ls to 1"s buUt by the McLain Develop. inent Company on .Jamboree ·Beed aawa lrom the Newporter JDn;. The cJt1•s Ptann~Com. IDlllMn ha ~eel for • comp1o wbicla c for CGO-•C1'11eUon of 228 apartmuta p.lmarlly one-bednom uni!a - -tlae»«reaite. 'nae,, •• I • Cammllllaa ... Tales I..inger Wlw Remembers Henry?. . By&beAuoclatedPreu Henry Kissinger may have left office, but Kiss- inger stories goon. The latest originates with Sen. Howard H. Baker J r. (R-TeIUl.), who was on an elevator with some tourists when Kissinger entered. A woman gave her child a push toward the former Secretary of State and said, ''That'sHenryKissinger.Shakehishand." The child.looked at its mother and asked. "'Who's Henry Kissinger? .. •'How quickly they ~orget, .. muttered Kissinger . Forecasting Bard Working Too Hard? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The droulbl. DIO'V in its second year in Nortbem California. baa inspired rain dances, chants and prayers -9ndnow, a poem. Forecalter E. Jan Null of tbe Natioaal .a..!!'_eather Service'• Redwood UI.>' office, faced with a Northern California weather ••mma17 tbat looted juat about tbe same • the dally summary toe ........ ..,.,, bit tbe teletype GAS SHORTAGE PAOBEASkED-M distribution of what power there ii," said Robert Ham, emergency plannin1 diuctor for the California Enera Commission. A call for voluntary cutbacks in San Francisco bas resulted in a 10 percent drop lo water consump- tlon, oftldals eaid Monday. But tbe city could face a man· datory 25 percent curtailment in Karchifralnstaysscarce. * * * ~· c .. JJ.•l!JI Five Fon1ms . Set in Irvine School Race Irvine residents will bave at least five more chances to hear the 10 candidates who are vying for the two open seats on the Irvine Unified School District Board. The next candidates' night will be held at 8 p.m. Wednesc:tay at El Camino Real School, 4782 Karen Ann Lane. It is being sponsored by the school PT A. Next week's schedule includes two forums. One will be at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 23 at Los Naranjos School, #1 Smoketree L~ne, sponsored by the Ranch Homeowners Association. Tb~ other will be at 7 p.m. Feb. 25 at University Hi&h Scbool, sponsored by the Associated Stu· dents at Uni Hip. There will be two more forums the followin& week. On March 1. the Juniol' Ebell Club will bolt a candidates' night at 7 p.m. at El Camino Real Scbool. The forum will be televised by community cablevtaion on Channel 3 and viewers wtll have a chance to phone in qu~ons to the can- didates. TEN CENTS 1 aald a h1lh school youth on bl.I way to school today. Johll O'Neill, 14, said be beard Cowan comment to ono aucb aa~. ''If you want to be a man. cet •IUD· .. TOIDlllY Gee, 14, liked Cowan and used the welaht lifter's .D at the local riOe range. But ether youths interviewed today said they dido 't like Cowan'is attitude. "He scared us," said one 14-year-old nel1bbor who didn't want to be idmtifted. "Some kids took to him but tbe way be talked and tbe way be bragged, it frightened me.•• (SeeBEA MAN, Pa&eAZ> 'Mobil Otter Best' DirectOrs Tell Irvine Voting BY TOM BARLEY ,,, .. "Dlllty f'f.-stlff Three directors of the James Irvine Foundation testified Mon· day that they voted for the sale of their Irvine Company stock to the Mobil Oil Corporation because it was the best offer madelto their board. And all three agreed that a sale of the stock for $281.9 million rather than a distribution of the holdings to selected charities would best help them meet the wishes ol the late Jam es Irvine. Only one of the three, Mrs. Kathryn Wheeler of Corona del Mar, took the witness stand in the Orange County Superior Court trial of the lawsuit filed by her cousin, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith. Judge James F . Judg~ allow~ the reading of pretrial deposi- tions taken from foundation directors Edward W. Carter and Robert H. Gerdes to go into the record u the trial testimony of tbetwomen. Gerdes denied in bis deposition that the foundation board bad 1'· nored the wishes of the minority shareholders in the Irvine Com-pany when they negotiated a deal that will, if approved, see the merger of the Irvine Company· with Mobil. Genies pointed out that the abarebolders would get the same price as the foundation and could go bacJc to court to prot~t that price if they thought it.was insuf - ficlent and did not represent fair mark.et value. The foundation owns 54.S per· cent of the Irvine stock and will receive an estimated $155 million from Mobil if Judge Judge ap- proves the sale being challenged Gifted Slate· Special Sho~ Students involved in "mentally gifted minors'' classes at Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School in Irvine will present a specW program tonight for parents and the general public. Classroom units · on ancient cultures, Greek mythology and comparative mytholoty will be included in the presentation, to be&ln at 7:30 at the school, 4861 Michelson Road. Students involved include those from the MGM classes In social science and communication sltllla. Teachers are Jane Courtney and Paul Mills. by Mrs. Smith. Ml'S. Smith owns a lltue more than 22 percent of the stock in the c ompany founded by her grandfather. Her share of the Mobil deal would be about '63 (See HEIRE~, Page AZ) RETURN OF 7JIE STRE.4.KER Irvine police are keeping their eyes peeled for a male in his mld·20s who was spotted Monday nl1ht sprinting through the in· dustriai area wearing only the top half of a woman's bikini. Hall Site Tops City Plan Meet Irvine planning com- miS&ioners will tackle a number of '41'ics tonight, ranging from location of the permanent city ball to whether Village t• should be developed. Commissioners will meet at 7:30 to hold another public bear- ing on the general plan amend· ment now being considered by theclty. The public is invited to make comments at this se~son, but Senior Planner Mel Roop pOint- ed out that there will, be anotbeit bearing before the planning commlasion sometime lo March. The City Council expects to besln its public bearings in April, Roop aatd. By way of the eenerat ·plan amendment, city officials will attempt to decide a Jand use plan to follow in future planning deciaions in Irvine. At the present time, the general plan contains thr~ land use options , but nothing finalized. Amoni the topics to be coo. sfdered toalabt, are: -Where the permanent city hall should be built. SitM being considered include a spot off Jef. frey Road, a site off Culver Drlvj' acrou from Woodbridge and a location ln tbe upcoming Univerait)r Town Center. • .,... •PP"••ed Jm.t c.o.. paQ1 plana for tbe 28-bome de-- velopment. Westcllff Groft to be built on 10 acres between W•tellff Drive and a wlDd break .... Dover Driye, But Mcmd_, nlebt. RjekOa .... lucccml'ul ta·c1e1~ eeuD> d~oldtepWlsud (s-BlJILDINQ, PapAZ) Monday with this version d tb8 .. Blab Pressure Blues .. : ••st'°"" Moh preuun nnacdns /fnn'11 nam.cw. •. blockmg • °" lformlUllllndglat,__•cfNllCW. .. SOIM,___,.,_,.__.,,._, LBJ.te Fill Eaces Halt -Whether Village 14 (located off Culver Drive acl'Ols from Woodbr ldee> should be de- veloped as a new residential vllla1e. -Whether the city's sphere ot lnfiuence should be annexed within city boundaries. ... Jtllloirla.. _.!°1"'. r ,.,_.,.eon....,,....._ .. N ,,.,,,.,. I~ .ap'ft"• ,,..,. ..., dafs .•. toiU& patdla~ /og-S~bazie.•• • B1WILUAll8CB&EIBD ,. .. ....,~ The Callforala Water Baouree. Control Boud will be .uked nett week to ferce the Iii.s- alon Vhjo Company to liilt tbe nmn, ol its 1.2 bill1on ·p11oo manmade lake until drou16t ~ dltions in the state have ceased. Wllllam Dendey. executive~· -Which noiae contour Ihle aboulcl be uaed by tbe cll7 in future pUnnlq declalon.s. -Possible alternative land uses IUITOUQdlnr tbe sites now betnc eyed by Wdleback Cocil· munltf CoUece tnaatees for a new Junior eoUece alte. -Wbetber the ecmcept ~ an Esc(lpes A television 1bow dealln1 with nutrition and dental care for children will be shown Wednes· day morning on the cablevision television station in Irvine. Anyone whose television is 1 hooked up to cablevision may ~ watch the show, from 10:30 io 11: 30 a.m. on Channel 3. The show will be broadcast from University Park School and each school in the district will be participatipg using the dis· trict'ainteractlvevideosystem. Guest speakers on the program will be Nadine Proctor, a preven· live therapist serving on the Council on Home Economics for the Orange County Health Department, and Linda Unrein, nutritionist for the Orange County Commwtity Development Coun· ell. Viewers of the show will be in· vited to phone the school and aak the speakers questions related to nutrition and dental care. F,....P11geAJ BUR.DING BACKED while the ge:er:J ;Ian is being llEJRESS • • • Fr .. Page AJ I ' lrllrch14. He later tried WUIUCCeMfully to set a moratorium on all bew re- stdenUaJ construcUon in the city, saylnJ that be bellne1 a 1"JOrl· ty ol Newport Beech tesldeml want bu1litJn1 bait• 10 that cbaq• can be made tn the dtJ'• C•neral plan. Tbat plan cunently call• for an ullimate population of 90,000 to 95,ooo and Ryckoff said a mo~a~um ouibl. to be lnvoted lrvine Paneliate Meet W edneaday The lr•1ne C•,mmunity Stnleta Commldton will meet W edwd8)' ntl)lt In an lnformal study Hsakla wtth staff to up-4ate aacl c1llCuu 8111 ldeu, projecta aJad concern• of Community &frvlcedivtalom. . . iLocal residents are encourqed tQ off •tbelr Input at the meetlq, 1 ''° p.m. 1n aiy · eouneu CbaJD. btn. t. DAILY PILOT reviled eo that the city's final million. popuAt.Jon figure will not be so Mrs. Smith uaues, however hish. -that the Irvine Company's true Ryckoff also charged that Sea value la closer to $1 billion than Island and Westcliff Grove ought-the $281.9 milllon offered by to be baited becauae of the en· Mobil. •lronmental problems those two She clatma thtouab attorney development.a will cause. Howard Friedmaf\ that It might His proposal drew the wrath of be possible to reach that fiture if Mayor Milan Doltal who sllld he the oil company were not could not aee how cha~es in the dominating the market place and 1eneral plan would be used to re-frifhtenlng other poaalble bid· IUlate the environmental protec· dira awar. Uona built tn either development. Tbe beireu currently pref en Dostal called the proposed the '282.7 millloo offer submitted bJ a bidder known in court u the mora•--'um a "red herrt1'"'" and A l T b wn ... en• 8U man lrGU.P: a COD· pointed out that under the sorUum headed by Wall Street teneraJ plan, one third of the ad· flnanc4er Charlea Allen and dltlonal 30,000 people who Wilf be Detroit devleloper Alf red Taub- Uving in Newport Beach will be man. living in the older parts of town Mrs. Smith was critlcized in where-homes are not yet built to Gerdes de~ition Monday for maximumdenaity. what he said was her refusal tQ Ryckoff replied that he was accept realities tn the founda· also concerned with traffic and lion's negotiaUon1 wlth Mobil density, but b9fore .he could go and the deciaion to tell to tbe oil furtl\er, Dostal mapped that ~ ·compaft1~ · f!loae were two 111bJects the tlty Gercl• pointed out that the coaineU bad been con terned with foundation h~ only a few years '"bef_..10'1 nen became a JU.I. to comply with th• provialonl ol deot aUbil city ,. the Feaetal Tu Retorm Act ol • tNt. Tbe meuure comMla the Wben the ipoutol1um waa f oun4atloo to cUapoH ot lta bold· b?'oulb& to a v~ l>qetal wu lnt•lnthetrvlnc!Com~f. , JolneCI tn oppotttton l>y Mayor Gtirde9 taid Mra. SmiU.'1 at. Pro Tem Plte Barrett an" Coun· Utude wM hrt~ rather than dlmen Lucille Kuehn and t>on aidln~ founctaUon ln n\eetiq Mclnnll. R1ctoft wu b•cted by that ration. "She chances her Coundhneb Truell Ro.1era and mind m day to day," the Ray WDUama. d1rectcltuid. MellllM pointed out that by Jaw ~ lD the pneral plan can be made three tlm•.-t19ar •nd thati 110 mota,~lum Is necUfal:'l wblle tit• nvlalQDa are belna... . ·Baslcet€ase Th.is yellow cat adopted the Dally Pilot him "D. P. Kizzy" and the folks trade off circulation department about a month buying food for the not so frisky feline. ago, taking his cat naps in the "IN" ·.The staff obviously bellevu in letting basket. Circulation employes have tabbed ... : sTeeping cifs lie. · . Fr .. P-AI 'BE A MAN: GET A GUN' • • • . JIMPA.RKS, WHOTODAYDROVECowan'slrievlnsparentato a funeral home to make burial arransements, said h1a bis friend was senerous and kind to other men, "and would etve you hla Jut dollar if he liked you." ' However, Cowan had difficulty communlcau.n, with women. Parks said. "We used to talk a lot about.stria and be wanted them. We would 10 to pick them up and then Fred couldn't talk with them, he wu always withdrawn. He never got to know any real wen," heaald. Shy with women, Cowan wu more relaxed in the nellhborhood Galway Bay Bar where he would dlJplay his huge muacln In the mlr· ror and ripple his tattoos, includin& a swastika. COWAN WOULD OFTEN ACCOMPANY ms muscle-flexing with a tirade against blacks and Jews. "No doubt about that, he was real prejudiced," said his friend Parks, who often went on hunting trips with him. His neighbors s$.id today they were notfully aware of the extent of Cowan's prejudice and did not know of the attic trove of Nazi arm bands, swastikas and books on Adolf Hitler's Third Reich. Parks contributed part of the puzzle of his friend's violent Mon- day when he told reporters that Cowan felt be bad been unfairly treated when he was suspended for two weeks by a moving and storage company for not moving a refrieerator. FREE! , F,....P-.eAJ WATER ••• The company baa contended that IDOlt ol the water 1oln1 ln· to the lake la now from the Colorado River aqueduct, whldi •Ull bu plentltul IUPPllea. Acccmllni to Dendey, Reilly 1itd the company bas a commit· ment to people buyln1 expensive homes around the lake to have the basin filled by mld-1ummet. It 11 presently about one-third 'full. Dendey said the five-member water resources panel will hear all sides of the issue next weelt but mleht not arrive at a decision until March 2. •'They are certainly allowed to vote at the hearing but I think it will probably go on tb~ir March 2 .agenda for action," heaald. 1977 Rand McNally International World Map. .Mobil . ··~Purchase 'F8vored' By TOM BARLEY Ol "'9 o.i1r ~•io. s1e11 Three directors or the James Irvine Foundation testified Mon- day that they voted for the sale or their Irvine Company stock to the Mobil OU Corporation because it was the best offer made lo their board. And all three agreed that a sale of the stock for $281.9 million ; rather than a di5tribution of the holdings to selected charities would best help them meet the wishes of the late James Irvine. Only one of the three, Mrs Kathryn Wheeler of Cornna dcl Mar. took the Witness stand in the Orange County Superior Court trial of the lawsuit filed by her cousin, Mrs·. Joan Irvine Smith. Judge James F. Judge allowed the reading of pretrial deposi· 7 lions taken from foundation . directors Edward W. Carter and • Robert H. Gerdes to go into the , record as the trial testimony or t the two men. Gerdes denied in his deposition ' that the foundation board had ig- nored the wishes of the minority shareholders in the lr~ine Com· I pany when they negotla"t.ed a deal that will, if approved. see the merger of the Irvine Company with Mobil. Gerdes pointed out that the shareholders would get the same price as the foundation and could go back to court to prolest that price if they thought il was insuf· ficient and did not represent fair market value. The foundation pwns 54.S per· cent of the Irvine stock and will recetve an estimated $155 mlllion ftom Mobil if Judge Judge ap· l>loves the sale being challenged b1 MJ'S. Smith. . , Mra. Smith owns a lltUe more than 2Z percent of the stock in the com~ny founded by her !ndf•ther. Her share of the bU deal would be aboqt $63 ID Jim. Mra. Smith arcues, however, that the Irvine Company's true value 1s closer to $1 billion than the $281.11 million otrered by Mobll. • She claims through attorney Jttwud .f'Hedman that. it might be pcmible to reach that figure if ·the oil company were not Emlling the market place and tmina other poulble bid· away. ,'·~ '11e l»elress currenUy pref era ~ sm.nnillido off• sutiftµtt.ed bi a bldlfer 1mo1tn lft court u tNt Al.Jen-Taubman ll'OUp: a con-aoi'Uum headed by Wall Stl'ftl 11,_an~ler Charles Allen and D~t devleloper Alfred Taub- m~. n. Smith waa crltJciud ln G es depasltion Monday ror w at be aa1d wu ber refusal to (SeellBDtES8,Pa1eA2) 1 Weat•er Locally deQle fog near -the beach" ni•bt. and · momtni lJoun. OUterwiie fair skies. Hiaha raaamc from Uppet' 80a at beaci.et &o 70. and lower 80s i..Jaoct. Lows '5 to SS. INll8ETODAY J ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUES9AY, FEBRUARY 15, 19n ~ Afteraooa N.Y.Stoeb ' TEN CENTS j Bay Artifacts Ra~ed 'Sig,,,ificaiit Oate.'. to Delay Building?o planning commission request ror a muter environmental Impact report tor Laauna Canyod. Items on tbe 3 p.m. agenda in- clude: artifacts. Ing totbereport. . material from several deep Jean Tadlock, an arcbeological Among artifacts reportedly boles opened at Crescent Bay consultant working with CSUF's found are chips .from old tools, Point. PublicAntiquitiesSalvageTeam knives and drills, broken bowls City officials have been (PAST>, said in a report to Plan· 81\.d projecUles. cautious about releasing in· nine Director Douglas Schmitz The artifatts are being dated formation, fearing unqualified that investigation has produced through Carbon-14 and amino me·mbers of the public might be "significant arcbeological data." acid techniques. A final report is attracted to the area, most of The data •·verify the presence expected within days, according which is private property. of an important public historical (() city officials. The proposed specific plan and scientific resource within the The work w-.. performed by calls for secrecy of maps of any vandalism and exploitation. The council's 6 p .m. agenda also contains six other pu~c bearings dealing with proposed amendments to allow churches io industrial zones and to the: commercial zone. -A request Crom the Oranee County Health Department that the city install toilet facilities at Shaws Cove, Anita Street Beach and Agate Street Beach during the summer. -A report Crom Police Chief Jon Sparks on the juvenile diversion program. city of Laguna Beach," accord· arcboo'"'gy students sifting arcbeoJogical sites to prevent ·--~------~~~----:---------~~~~------------------------------------~----------------~--~----~ There also is a resolution to favor state acquisition of all un· developed land on Crescent Bay Point, and a discussion or a -A proposed appointment of a community cent.er committee. Fan Gored in Ring Skipper Escapes Boat Fire A Stanton man diving1off Abalone Point in Laguna Beada Monda~ leaped into tbe water from his malfunctioning 25-foot cabin cruiser as it burst. Into flame. Gerald Baldwin, 37, swam to a nearby motorboat piloted by Charles Winkler of San Pedro. who pulled Baldwin from the water. then picked up the man's wife. Kathenoe. 35, .who wa~ed the explosion from nl!arby roc"8. Baldwin was unhurt. The fiberglass cabin cruiser, about 220 yards offshore, was ful· ly ablaze when a Harbor Depart· ment fire boat. from Newport Beach arrived. The patrol boat already had been on its way because Baldwin bad radioed bis craft would not start and a thick fog had drifted into the area . An' unidentified fan jumped with his cape into the ring at a Mexico City bullfight and paid the price. Medi. cal authorities said be was seriously injured in the right eg. throat and chest. Some 65,000 fans watched in oorror, unable to help the young man. It took harbor firemen 20 minute&tocQntrol the fire, which flared repeatedly during the tow to Newport Beach. Harbor patrolmen 'SaPd the damage was total, and estimated the 1068 at $10,000. LEAP Project Blasted CUSD Trustee, Candidate to Debate Plan By ANNE COOPER Olllleoally~lletSlllff A new quarter million dollar program in the Capistrano Unified School District came un- der sharp attack Monday when school board candidates ad· dressed the Laguna Niguel Homewoners Association. Incumbent. trustee William Thompaon defended the pro· gram, prompting candidate William Manahan to challenge blm to a debate. Thompson ac- cepted, but no date or place have been set for the encounter. The controversial Learning Ex· perience Appraisal Proeram, called Project LEAP, is expected to be ready for implementation next fall. It includes a testlnl pro- gram, intricate teacbinJ obJec· tivea, buic graduaUon require- menta and a reading aup119rt syam.. TbOl'l\pSOll. turtnine "'"oppo1ed lb trustee area 7 <Mil~•on Viejo) in the March 8 dlstrict-Wlcle eleQ · tion, represent& trustees Oft UM Projed LEAP steering commh· t". He said Monday the propUQ \. will lndhidualhe wtructiolt abd prl>vide teuhen and parents with lmm~ate feedback on stu· dentprogrw. ~andidateManahu, rbnntniln 1ru:Stee area 4 (banHotnt and coastal Laguna Niiuel), called implementation ol the LEAP re- ading Pf'Oll'UD a financial dia· asterfortbedbtrlct. • Manahan. who holds a master's degree in reading, teaches first grade at Aliso School in El Toro, located in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. He has taught school for five years and ran a readinglabfortwoyears. •'I strongly ur1e parents to con· sider that I, as an expert in the field of reading, with the educa· tion and experience "I bave had in the area, am 80 big}\ly critical of this program which is going to cost district taxpayers something over a quarter million dollars." he said. . Thompson told Manahan he < M anlban) didn't understand the proO'*m and urged him to meet wlth"dldrict a~mlnlstrators. MaNhans d be had talked for two ho61' w th a4m~istrators respansibJe fa, .tbe JJtp•ram and ls no ~e bleed now than be 9-d V.. befo ~that tile program .. . should be implemented. Incumbent Bob Hurst. who is running in trustee area 6 (inland Laguna Niguel), supported Pro· ject LEAP. He said it reinforces the concept of education. Hurst countered ManJhan's criticism that teachers have not been involved in formulating Pro- ject LEAP, saying more than 70 teachers are currently involved. The four mobile reading labs in· eluded as part of the LEAP relld· ing support system will provide the equipment for a proven technique, which has worked in other districts, Hurst said. · Candidate Robert Bachelor, running in trustee area 6 against Hurst, said that as a teacher of nine years, he h~s the knowledge to Judge whether a program will benefit school children. ''Project. LEAP, modem math, all theotbereducatiohal cure-alls are ioaking the publlthing com- panies rich, but are the)' really benefittlng the childrep? •' be asked. "Looting at whe~ we have come, I must ask. why did we ever leave the fundamen· tal1?'1 Incumbent .ran Ov~rtbn, wllo . . wota electlon Nov. 2 by three votes our William Manahan, did not address the issue of Project LEAP. She said her basic concern as a truateeia to do what is tood for the children and to build commwilca· Upn between parents qd all those Involved tn thescbools. • David Emery spoke on behalf of candidMe Pat Maoclnl. who wu out of town an butlnesa. £a,ery aald Manclpl, ruqntnt In trust.ee area 6 aaatnst Hurat and Bacbelot, believes the schoolt (See LEAP, Pate A%) Man Swal,lows Wife's Tongue OCEANSIDE (AP> - Police say a Marine is ac· cused of bitinj off his wife's tongue and swallow· ing it during a spat. They booked PFC Vernon Henderson Taylor, 21, for investigation of as· sault, wife beating and mayhem. "'The wife. Rhonda, was listed in fair ~ondition in Tri-City Hospital tod~y. Apparent cause of the blast and fire was bilge gas formed by a flooded carburetor or a leak, a harbor department spokesman safd. Lag\lna Beach lifeguards re- covered items of diving equip· ment which they said included scuba gear and sacks containing two undersized abalone, a starfish, a sea urchin and a shell. / Dropout Cuts Laguna School MannuulM iaJre i:c:.~~.~i~! .. didates for the Laguna Beach F fW,.es Forced school board. bas withdrawn '""'' from contention in the March 8 IF/.-•.-r CutL--k election. W ~ 16(.U; "Last Deeember," she said in By WIUJAM SCHREIBER OIUll Dally ~S!llff a letter announcing her decision, .. I filed to run for the La,una Beach School Board after read· ine the depressing news that. in· sufficient candidates for an el~· lion bad filed." Most candidates, however, had waited to file until near or at the deadline. Miss Hunter liald she. ha~ dr<>i'ped from the race because .. the otber eight candidate. are well qulllfied • . and l a~ cer· tain whichever of (them) are elected will serve the community well." She began the board campatcn as one of a slate ot three ~an· didates that lQcluded ~er 11.tt«', Mira ~oenig, and her alstv'• husband, Jam• K. Hoenlr. All thrM llac>Md to Laguna Beach about ali. monUll •· • Wltb UM tlOenltl, Ule remaln· inl c~tee are Bruce s. Hop. plol(, ioeumbent ¥lcbael S.,ar, Wiiiiam s. Kentle, Marylyn Pauley, R~ c. Lawaon and M'cbael P. Onorato. I. k 2 DAILY PILOT L/SC ! i Spilled Oil Coming Woe . &AN nANCISCo <AP) -The Coast Guard saya "99 percent'' of the noating oil from Hawaiian Progress, 20,000-Jallon- pJu.s San Francisco Bay •Pill hall been picked up But it's a different stOry with the globs of gooey· bunker fuel that went ashore at a dozen points in· •id• thee. aloni the ocean .eecJl'diU to Cout G Pett.J Ofi'lcer Larry Clarti:. He aald they will t.ake up to a month to elimiDate. The San Franciaco Fire Department said some oil that leaked into the bay Thursday night noated among the pilings under several of San Francisco• piers, mainly 26 to 30 and constituted a fire huUct. Fr-. Pflfle Al HEIRESS ••• -accept realities in the founda· lion's negotiations with Mobil and the decision to sell to the oil company. Gerdes pointed out that the foundation has only a few years to comply with the provisions of the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969. The measure compels the foundation to dispose of its bold· ings in the Irvine Company. Gerdes said Mrs. Smith's at-titude was impeding rather than aiding the foundation in meeting that obligation. "She changes her mind from day to day." tbe director said. Defendanl, HiuJudge In R ematch MILWAUKEE CAP> -Judge Christ T. Ser aptum was decked by a punch from the witness stand in a rematch with defendant James E. Wicks. Wicks, 24, beginning trial on an attempted murder charge, scaled a railing Monday as Seraphim leaned close to ask a question and caught thejudgeon the jaw. Both fell to the floor. They were untangled by two deputies and two policemen. The judge regained his seat, rubbing his jaw and complaining. "I didn'thave a chance to throw a fair blow This guy was on top or ' me before I knew it. And on top ol \ this. I've been alUng with back trouble all d~y." he said . Seraplum, 57. had instructed a deputy sheliff to stay near the de- fendant as he look the stand, re· calhng that he had to duck to avoid a five pound microphone that was thrown at him 10 an earli er meeting with Wicks. After the latest round, Wicks was handcufred and returned to J&ll Thief Cools LB Waterbed A [Aguna Beach elementary school teacher told police Monday she was sure someone had ~nm her home while she was away ror the weekend Not only were five one-dollar bills missing from her son's dresser drawer, and lSone-dollar bills missing from her own dresser drawer. she said, but so- meone had turned down the tem- perature of her waterbed. Police surmised the bur1lar came in through an unlocked wfn· dow. 19 Held in Raid VISALIA <AP ) -Nlneteenpeo. pie, including some connected to the prison-based Mexican Mafia gang, were arrested on narcotics charees. Tulare County sherlff'a orncers reported. A predawn ~oundup was conducted Monday in the Tulare and Visalia areas. DAILY PILOT ~ . o.ily ffllet Shff ...... VARIED CAREER Candidate McKnight P oe01 T ells Drought Plight Tale SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The drought, now in it.a second year in Northern California, bas inspired rain dances, chants and prayers -and now, a poem. Forecaster E . Jan NuJJ or the National Weather Service's Redwood City office, faced with a Northern California weather summary that looked just about the same as the daily summary for months now, bit the teletype GAS SHORTAGE PROBE ASKED-AS Monday with this versioo df the "High Pressure Blues": • "Strong mgh pre1.ure Temc:iiM firmly entrenched. .blocking .all 1tomu that might leave rudrenched. ·'~rain wotd<f 8e nice with mow in the mountaiftl ... enough to fill MJ> the dam1 or even aome /OUfftains. "But Uae new foreccat says it'1 more mnny doy1 ... with patche1 of fog and afternoon haze." Also Monday, federal officials warned states in the Pacific Northwest to begin taking water saving measures. Californians have already been warned of possible power blackouts this s ummer. U.S. Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus called on residents of Washington. Oregon. Idaho and Montana Monday to cut water and electricity use by 10 percent. before mandator y measures becomenecessary. The Bonneville Power Ad· ministration in Portland, Ore., responded with an official call for a 10 pettent cutback in the use of electricity in the region. * * * F r .. r age Al WAT ER .... perts will make presentations to support the operation. The company has conteAded t~at the lake has been in the plan- mn1 stages for six years and that contracts for the water were signed three years ago. Company officials ·also argue that the basin could serve a.s an emergency fresh water supply and that if the water is not used it would now on to the sea. . Dendey takes issue with that argument, s aying the water would be consumed for the most part by dowmtttam uaers. Prhe state official also claimed e--»ia 1 t the water filling the lake is 35 to 40 percent•' northern California water from the aqlleduct tbat crosses the Teh~ti.pi Mountains. The company has cont.ended that rnmt of the water going in· to tbe late i• now from the CoJonido Rivel' aqueduct, which • 1tiU bu plentiful supplies. Aceording to Deodey, Reilly said tbe eompany bu a commit· ment to people buying expensive homes ,around the lake to have the buin filled by mid-summer. It is presently about one·third full. Deodey said the five-member water reeources panel wnt 6ear' all aides of the issue ne~ week but m~ not arrive at 1 dtdsioo until llll'Cb 2. ''They ate ffltainly allowed to vote at the Maring but J think tt will probably go on tbelr March 2 agenda for ac:tion, .. he 'Saki. • Last Challenge· fEdUor'a Nole -Tm. ii the Nth and ft.al. ortic~ in. o am.a profilino c~ for thre~ open natl °" tM ~ ~ Boord ol Tnllfftf. tlw MarcA. hl«tion iul Jorg.. Giid,,.. top uoe. gdta in eada tt'Ufec..,autiailt.) ByWILUAMSCHREIBER Olt1190Mlyli'I ........ , After a multi-faceted, 25-year career as a community collele profesaot, librarian and ad· ministrator, Dr. Eugene C. "Gene" McKnight bu decided therelaonemorefacetyettocut. McKnight, who lives with bis wife at 25S31 Purple Sage Lane in Sao Juan Capistrano, is running for a seat on the Saddleback College BoardofTrustees. Not only that. but the soft. spoken philoeopber is challenging an entrenched incumbent. Patrick Backus, who bu been a board member since the college was fomtded 10 years ago. The 70-year-old McKnight, who loots, talks and acts 20 years younger than be is, figures the beat way to counter the incum· bent's advantage is to make bis own name and background known. To that end, he's already made ' dozens of peraona1 appearances at community and civic organiza. tion meetings throughout the huge college district, which sprawls from Tustin ·to San Clemente. Retirement from bis years at Los Angelea City College didn't dull McKnlaiJt's personal com· mitmenttotheldeaofcommuoity collece eduution, which he con· siders the most dJ"Damic form of learning available. A resident of south Orange County since 1968, be bas been an active member or Saddleback's Citizens' Advisory Board since 1973. His zeal for the college and its activities has drawn the support of the college Faculty Associa· lion, an affiliate of the California Teachers' Association. McKnight said bedidn'tseek out faculty sup· port and won't accept any funds but noted that the support is "ap· preciated." "Although l do receive criticisms about some or the col· lege operations, I have never re- ceived a complaint about mem- bers of the faculty," McKnight said. "They are noted for ex- cellence in teaching." 'Phe candidate accused incum. bent Backus of alienating the faculty by "his abrasive, arbitrary and authoritarian methods and attitudes. There is very little, if any, two-way com· munications." McKnight strongly fa vors a second campus for the Irvine- Chamber F etes San Cleme nte Police Chie f San Clemente Police Chief Melvin Portner was honored by the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce in a breakfast mem- bership meeting today and com· mended for "outstanding service lo the community.·· Portner, SS. will leave his post May 1 and formally retire from the force in August after serving three years as a chief and 2S years on the police department. Cha.mber President Roy Hamm presented Chief Portner with the commendation at the chamber's "Take a Cop to Breakfast" program. In the a..U,ence of about 100 were MayOC' B. Patrick Lane and council members Donna Wilkinson and William Walker. In oardin1 Chief Portner the chamber's plaque, Hamm said the honor was "well deserved." The breakfast also honoredtbe San Cleme:nte Police and Karine Safety Departments and their persormel. ,,....P_,,e Al LEAP ••• must be ded.lcated to providing tbe bestopport~ for each cbild todenloP bis full pots ti al. Basil Roman, runnln1 in trust.e area 4 a1ainst Manahan and llra. <>v.rton, did not atund themeeUq. Tustin area and wants to accept the Irvine Company's offer of a site at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. Backus supports the site chosen by trustees last year at M)'fonl Road and Bryan Avenue, a posi· tion McKnight bu challenged. "The real coocuo is to tind a northern ai~ as quickly aa poui· ble in order to provide maximum service to students 'ln the most economical way," McKnight said. According to McKnicbt, Backus "remains aloof and noo· responsive" to the community, ln part because of ot.ber commit· ments that prevent more college- related ad.ivity. - "Saddlebact College is grow- ing lnto ao outstanding institution with continuing concern for tax- payers and students," he said. "New buildings are under con- struction without debt and on a pay-as-you-go basis. ~...._.Sllft- $AN JUAN STUDENTS BRUSH THEIR TROUBLES AWAY Vince Albatecola, Jullenne Arnold Refine TechnlQue ··But the college bas pro· blems:· -added. "As a re&ired college cobsultant. I can &i~ full time without salary to promoting excellence in education and also carefU.lly watch for any waste of taxpayers· money." .Apart from bis extenalve back- ground and educa&.ion, \lcK.nizbt said be can offer an outlook thal is not "provincial." Valentine Sweets Dangers Sounded "A trustee must be fair to all communities in the college db- trict," be said, noting be i& not sacrificing any objecti'vlty because of such things as faculty support. "I always rely 0n my own convictions but I do want open communications." Youth's Aparbne'nt RiOed for 8 1,400 A skting vacation ·cost Sad- dleback Valley School District custodian GleM Roy White $1,400 more than be had expected. White, 18, returned to his apartment at 21702 Ocean Vista, South Laguna, to find that that amount or cash had been taken from his home during his absence by burglars who ap· parently gained entry by the front door, Orange County sheriff's officers said. On Valentine's Day, third graders at San Juan Elementary School ln San J uan Capistrano bad a lesson on doing battle again.st sticky plaque, decaying teeth and rotting g~s. School nurse Ba?bara Ryan used giant false teeth and a root- long toothbrush to demonstrate proper brushing techniques to the yoWlgater&, who appeared w~lling to forego Vale•tine sweets -at least for the duration or the lesson "If you are goin&. to ht Valen· tine candy, what b the b~t time ·or day for it?" Mrs. Ryan asked. Four wrong answers later, Harold Waller came hp with the one Mrs. Ryan was looking for: alter dinner, with toothbrushing following close behind. Children took home pills to chew, which Mrs. Ryan told them would help them spot areas of their teeth they have been mis- sing with the brush. "Wherever your teeth turn the shocking pink color of ,Valen- FREE! tin~. you know you're leaving food that can cause decay," she said. Mrs. Ryan also distributed toothbrushes and toothpaste, pro- vided by a hygiene products com- pany. She told the students they could take their new brushes home or keep them al school to use after lunch . "But no fooline around in the bathrooms," said April Wilsey. the children's classroom teacher. Mrs. Ryan also suggested that children keep their hands busy in front of the TV, not by stuffing snacks in their mouths, but by dry brushing their teeth. Parents who bad drill~ into them the three·brushings-a-day commandment may be surprised when their children report home that once a day is sufficient. "After meals is good," said Mrs. Ryan, "but not too many people have that kind or dis- ciphne. Instead, try for one very thorough brushing every day.'• 1977 Rand McNally International World Map. C ome in and pick-up the new full"(:olor edition of Rand McNally's exciting International World Map. It's big (54" x 36"), highly detailed (5hows cities. rivers and mountains), and up-to-date (f~tutt5 multi-colored political bor<krs and all the new countries). Suiuhlc for framinJt and great for den or children's room! This beautiful Rand Mc Nally map~ absolutdy FREE at First federal! There is PO oblig.tion whatsoever. lt'a just our way of aayiag "We'd like to get to know you!" .. Supplies are limited, so come in soon. limit: one map pet family, 18 yurt and older. This ad must bt ptetented for redemption. Frame oot Included. Follow this map to the h•ighcst interest on insured Mvini•• plu5 all thue money·savtng cu tOJMr services: FREE 5Afe dtp05it box• FR~E checking account at lead int benk 411 FREE money ordcn FREE check cubing l.D. card FREE tnvclc:r's chedu • FREE photocopy "rvice PREE trust dttd collection• "Mlnh111,1111 ~leoc• requl.rid ff)E~.~~~ ~Mesa.Office \ r Baker Near ffiri>ot HOURS: Daily 9AM to 4PM; F~y~AM co 6PM. tutday 9A.M ta lPM. Am~ ffti6 ~ TdephQM Sif9 14 l for information. ' , .. .. .. ' ' F .VOL. 70, NO. 46, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Totlay's £1e•l•g N.Y.Steeks TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1977 N TEN CENTS. J?rust'rations Stalked Killer of Five BJ PETER .UN.£TI' Ulfldel(lih J •1 NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. -He ldored only tall blue.eyed blondes, according to hla i*?frieod, Jim Parka, and they c~ 1he neighborhood diners toeetber tryiq to pick them up. . I. · But Frederick Cowan, a 8-foot, 250-pound weight-lifting giant of a man, "could never make it with them, be never had a girlfriend in the seven years I've known him, .. Parks said the morning after his 33-year-old friend went on a rampage In a New Rochelle warehouse, killing five people, wounding five otben before taking bis life. (Related stories A3, A4) IT WAS THE FRUSTllADONS IN Cowan's personal life that friends were speaklng of today as they tried to put topther the puzzle ol a neighbor apparently gone gun·cruy. They recalled Cowan'a inordinate interest in guns and the arsenal of pistols and rtnes be kept in bis attic . room. The big man was so proud of his guns Ulat be often traded neighborhood kids a look at tbe collection for washing his car. On summer weekends, the burly man would often sit on the stoop of bis parents' home where he lived, regaling the kids with war stories and gun lore. "A LOT OF THE KIDS IDOUZED him because of bis guns.'' said a high school youth on his way to school today. John O'Neill, 14, said be beard Cowan comment to one such gathering, "If you want to be a man, get a gun." Tommy Gee, 14, liked Cowan and used tbe weight lifter's .22 at the local rifle range. But other youths interviewed today said they dido 't like Cowan's attitude. •'He scared us.'' said one 14-year-uld neighbor who didn't want to be identified:. "Some kids took to him but the way he talked and the way he bragged, it frightened me.'• (See BE A MAN, Page A2) ·Another Water Cutback Due Council Uplwltb Building By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol tloe 0•11' l'llM Sl<lfl Three of Newport Beach's seven city councilmen want to call a halt to building homes in their city. Fortunately for developers with plans in the works. four of their colleagues disagreed, kill· ing a proposed moratorium Mon· day night. If the moratorium proposed by Councilman Paul Ryckoff had been put into effect , il would have halted two projects which need city council and coastal cont- mission approval to go ahead - Sea Island apartments and Westcliff Grove. The apartment complex is to be built by the McLain Develop- ment Company on Jamboree Road across from the Newporter llUl. The city's Planning Com· mission bas approved pla111 for the complex which call foe con- struction of 226 a partments primarily one-bedroom units - on the29-acre site. The Planning Commission has likewise approved Irvine Com- pany plans for the 28-home de- velopment, Westcliff Grove to be built on 10 acres betweeD Weatcllff Drive and a wind break near Dover Drive. But Monday night, Ryckoff was successful in delaying coon· cll consideration of the plans until Marchl4. He later tried qnsuccesafully to c•t a moratorium on all new re- sidential construct.ion in the city. saying that he believes a majori· ty of Newport Beach residents want building halted so that changes can be made in the city's 1eneral elan. That plan currently calls foe an alUmate population of 90,000 to 95,000 and Ryc koff said a ~atorium ought t.o be invoked <&.BUILDING, Pa&eA2) Boy Slain; . Suspect Held SAN DIEGO <AP) -Police ,b,ave jailed a hotel worker described as a friend of neighborhood children for ln- vutlaatioo ot murdertn1 a 6- year-old boy. Robert McFarJane Jr., 34, was arrested at hia home H blocks from wbere Jose Luis Ramirez Jl•ed In the Golden Billa area, poUceaaid. Tbe boy's nude ~. cot•ed with bra.Debee and lea ...... wa Jound Wednesday in an edle ~ 'Balboa Park. He wu last report. e4 1een by bis f amll,y tbe Sunday before. Jnveetiaaton said be was isuually as.saulted. Fan Gored in King An unidentified fan jumped with his cape into the ring al a Mexico City bullfight a nd paid the price. Medical authorities said he was seriously injured in the right leg, Al'Wi ........ throat and chest. Some 65,000 fans watched in oorror, unable to help the young man. Tnistees Reverse Decision 3 Irvine Directors Backed Mobil Bid Teen Held In Fire, Burglary During a special Monday board of education meeting, Newport-Mesa school trustees reversed a previous decision that halted &be hiring of a private con· suiting firm to sort out the com· plex paper work for two federally·fmanced improvement projects. The district will now spend $38,000 ot the federal funds just to mate aure the money is not lost due to a technical error on re- quired forms. With only five trustees present at I~ TUesday's regular board meetiQc, dilsenting votes cast by tnatees Carol Martin and Marian Berceson were enouiti to cancel a proposed contract with Mark Briggs and Associates; the same firm the district hlred to successfully fill out the applica- tion forms for the $2.3 muucio aovemment grant. The funds will be used for the construction of an additional am at Estancia mgh School and the extensive remodeling ot the aud.ltcdum at Newport Harbor HllbSdlool Mm-. Bergeson and Martin aa1d they wanted more time to see if another firm could be . hired, or if the dlstrict'a ataff could do tbe papel" work which Board President Donald Smallwood terQ)ed ••a bureaucratic labyrinth." However, tnaateea were told tbe dlm1et's stattwu incapable of bandlln.& the bevy of forms, ud after a check of other can· 1ultmi firms.. trustees learned llonda1 tbe Brial off et wu u ... ....,.. •oMa1'• .. to approft UMt eomUldaa &m contract w• UD· .. aid.iDoUI. ~ blddlnf OD l>Otb ~will ClclM llareh 15, Just ...aware~ • IDUlt~. By TOM BARLEY Ol IM Dally ~ltet Stitt Three directors of the James Irvine Foundation testified Mon- day that they voted for the sale of their Irvine Company stock to the Mobil Oil Corporation because it was the best offer made to their board. And all three agreed that a saltt of the stock for $281.9 million rather than a distribution of the holdings to selected charities would best help them meet the wishes of the late James Irvine. Only oae of the three, Mrs. Kathryn Wheeler of Corona del Mar, took the witness stand in the Orange County Superior Court trial of the lawsuit filed by her cousin, Mn. Joan Irvine Smith. Judge James F. Judge allowed the readlnr of pretrial deposi- tion• taken from foundation directors Edwant W. Carter and Robert H. Gerdes to go Into the record u the Uial tesUmoay of tbetwomen. Gerdel denied in hls deJ>09ition that the foundatbi board bad ig- nored the wish• ol the mlaortty sbarebolden ln th• lrvlnt Com· pany wbea they neaoti•ted a deal that will, lf approved, see the mer1er ot the· Irvine Company· with llobll. Gerdes pointed out that tbe abarebolden would aet the same price as tbe foundation and could 10 back to court to protest that price If they thought lt was iuuf· flcient and did not represent fair market value. Tbe foundation owns 54,5 per- cent ot the Irvine stock and Will receln an esUmated Sl.SS million from Mobil it Judge Judge ap. prov• the sale beina cballea&ed by Mrs. Smith. Mrs. Smith owns a little more than 22 percent of the stock In the company founded by he r 'grandfather. Her share or the Mobil deal would be about $63 million. Mrs. Smith argues, however, that the Irvine Company's true value is closer to $1 billion than the $281.9 million offered by Mobil. She claims through attorney Howant Friedman that it might be possible to reach that figure if the oil company w ere not dominating the market place and .frightening other possible bid· dersaway. The heiress currently prefers the $282. 7 million offer submitted. by a bidder known in court as the All\'n-Taubman group: a con- sortium headed by Wall Street financier Charles' Allen and Detroit devleloper Alfred Taub- man. Mrs. Smith WflS criticized in Gerdes depoeltton Monday tor what he said was her refusal to accept realities in the founda- tion's negotiations with Mobll and the decilion to sell to the oil company. Gerdes pointed out that the foundation bas only a few yea.rs to comply with the provisiom ol the Federal Tax Reform Act o( 1969. The meuure compels the foundation to dilpose of its hold· ings ln the Irvine Company. Gerdes aaid Mn. Smith's at- titude was lmpedlnt rather than aid.in& the fouDdat.ion in meet.Ina that obligation. "Sbe chan.ces bei' mind from da1 to day,•• the d.lrecU.. uid. A 13-year-old Newport Beach boy is under investigation today after he was arrested Monday night on charges that he bad burglal'ized a toy store and set it afire. Police said the youth has a his· tory of arsons that· date back more than three years. The teenager was taken into custody at about 9:45 p.m. out side the Mini Bazaar, 400 Westminster Ave. where police bad been alerted by nearby resi- dents that there was a burglary in progress. Officers said they w*hed the teenager smash some or the toys In the store. They arrested him as he left and they discovered tbe fire which was doused aftel' do· ing about $500 damage. · Police said they tried to in· ter.view the youth, a Newport Heights resident, about other area burglaries and arsons that have occurTed in the city recenUy but he was rushed to Hoag Memorial Hospital for treatment of a dru& overdose. He wu released to his parents by otflcers who said they planned to resume their questioning ol the youth today. Farming Projects Face Trim SACRAMENTO CAP) -The stale told State Water Project agricultural users today that they will suffer a 60 percent cut in deliveries this year -10 percent more than previously an- nounced. One of the affected dis· tricts is the Metropolitan Water District in Southern California. The Department of Water Resources said its municipal and industrial users will take a 10 percent cut from contracted amounts. In another drought-related de- velopment, Monterey County an- nounced plans for rationing. The state project cutbacks are aimed at leaving the project enough stored water to meet minimal needs even if the drought continues at the same severity through next winter, de- partment director Ronald Robie said. An exception to these cut· backs, Robie said, is the Feather River service area whicft will be cut 50 percent -the maximum allowed under lts contract with the state. Project contracts dictate that if agricultural users are cut by more than 50 percent, then municipal users have to be cut by any amount Lhat the agricultural users are cut above 50 percent. The federal government has already announced cuts of up to 75 percent for Central Valley Project users. (See CUTBACK, Page AZ> * * * What Water Shortage? MALI.BV (P ) -As drought· stricken Northern Californians ration dwindling water supplies, and officials . in Southern California urge conservation, the citizens of Malibu and Lomita are being urged to use more water to qualify for a rate discount. Owners of large properties in those two areas of Los Angeles County get a 10 percent discount if they own at least 10,000 square feet of well-cultivated property and use 7,500 cubic feet of water for six or more months a year to keep ltgreen. One Malibu resident who didn't want to be identified said his 1() percent discount was taken away because he cut back on watering his tree-studded, well·land!caped property. Coast Weather Locally dense fog near the beaches nlght and mornlnt hours. Otberwile fair aides. Hlgba ranfin1 !tom upper 60s at beaches . to 70s and lower 80s Inland. Low14Sto5$. INSIDE TODAY . ~I DAILY Pn.OT N Seniors'· 'Potato' Tossed Wb.ldl la more lmportaQt -1'0 · scbool chUdren or t.ooo senior citi&ena7 That wu the qaatio6 put to N~Baeb councilmen Mon· dlY mtlll. The eouncU decided to Jet the federal Department ol Hou.ling and Urban Development anawer it for them. Councilmen we-re confrooled wltb the choice of backlna the children -sludenla of lbe private acbool whlcb leues the aite intended for the city's senior cilizeo center -by l"eDewinC their scbool 's lease wiW August ol1978. . Or the council could deny thtt lease renewal, which would make the building at lbe corner oC Filth and Marguerite avenues available for Newport Beach's 9,000 seniors this summer. The pro-school faction was led by Councilman Paul Ryckotr who lauded the school and its own.en, John and Judith Wilson. "I would bate to see this kind at a school eased out of existence," Ryckorr said. "To put your kids in public school when you could put them in this school -well, I just wouldn't do it." Ryckoff wanted to renew the Wilsons' lease lo give them time to find a new home for their school. He said the seniors could use a vacant church on Cliff Drive for the year. Ryckort was the councilman who, in April of 1976, when the Wilsons won lhcir current lease extension, vowed the lease would not be renewed after its lermina· tion date this August. Mayor Pro Tern Pete Barrell reminded RyckoH and the Wilsons that they have known since the lease was first granted on a yearly basis in 1975 that they would to move. He also reminded them that when they sought the extension they were granted last April, they were told the lease would not be renewed another time. But council members stopped short of endorsing an Aug. 1 opening of the senior citiien center and Ryckoff could not get support for his proposal to renew the school's lease one more time even when he claimed the city couldn't afford lo open the Corona del Mar facility this sum- mer. The majority or council mem· bers said they could not make a decision until they know how much money the city will get from the HUD grant for the center. City Manager Robert Wynn told them the least they will gel is $174.000 and the most is $522,000. He noted that with the smallest amount, the city will be able to open a "modest" center in the school buildings. Wynn also pointed out that HUD has told him lhal lf the school lease is renewed again, the city w\ll have to justify its ac- tions and face I~ of the money. Councilmen decided then to put orr further ~sideralion of the center's opening or the lease re· new al until the city finds out how much HUD money it will have foe the center. Wynn said he had expected to have an answer on the amount by Mon day. so be could not speculate when notification would be comina from lilJD. Council members .,CMay 9 as the date t.hey wm consider the matter .,ain -if they haven't heard IOODer -ao that ii they de- cide to cancel the school's leue they will be within the IO-day canceUaUoo period written into lheleue. Fall Fatal JOHANNESBURG, South Africa <AP> -~black police de- tainee feU 10 stories lo hls death today at Johannesbur1 POiice headquarter&, police aalcl. He makes the 18th black to dle In police custody ln leas than a year. 11'9 man was apparenUy· tryln• to e1eape durln1 question· Ing, policesaid. DAILY PILOT .....,..,._ __ ......., '9cll• cw-. ~,,..,.,,.-°'_.~ ,.....!( .... .... ,,._.,. ........ MilMtiftt a.., CWIMlt.'-·· .......... .... Altltl••IM ........ Mi!Nn Co11neil Action '1'be Newport Beach Clly Council acted oo thae .ltems 11aac1.,~t: CANN'&AY VIUAG&: Directed 1tatt memben to WGrk JllrtUl a committee iJI bualneumen ttylnf to solve park· me pnablema ill tile Cuoery V'Ulqe-Central Newport u.a. CONSULTANT: Decided to filre a comultant to work part l1me in salary neiotJaUons with clty employes. &\\'UDE Da.IVE: Referred proposals for fluh1n1 wam.lnl llchta and atop ales to llow tralfic on Bayaide Drive lo tbe city's ~affic Af1llrs Commltt.ee. SENIOR CENTER: Approved ln concept plans for the Corona del Mar seniot' ci\bea center, but delayed settln.a an opening date until the city finds out how mucb money lt wlll rec el ve from the federal a rant fort.be cent.er. A111ERTON INITIATIVE: Delayed consideration of a chan1e in the parkland dedication from residential de· velopen until aft~r the March 8 open space and park bond election. One Exeeptien Tourist Pamphlet Pleases Council All members of the Newport Beach city council except oae were quite pleased with a pam· phlet the city staff had designed to inform tourists of city laws. The pamphlet, which will be distributed through realtors, lists a variety of city ordinances, such as leash laws, surf laws and curfew laws that permanent resl· dents of the beach areas thought visitors ougbt to know about. Only Councilman Lucille F,....PageAJ CUTBACK • • For 1977, project contract allot· ments totaled 1,667,321 acre-feet before the cuts. The cutbacks will reduce the amount to 1,151,907. The move affects about 21 eon. tracting agencies, including the two largest -Kem County and Metropolitan Water District. Another big user affected will be Santa Clara Valley Water Dis· trict, said Al Jones, spokesman for the department. lit the Monterey County de· ·veloppient, the county's water agency agreed Monday night to ask the state Public Utilities Commission for permission lo impose a severe water ration. ning program within a week. Thieves Take Pills From NB Pharmacy Fast-moving thieves got away with "several thousand" pills early this morning after smashing in the glass door to the Newport Center Pharmacy, police said. The burglary, which occurred at 400 Newport Center Drive, set off an alarm in the police station at3:2Sa.m. andorticerasaidthey were on the scene by 3:26 a.m .. but were unable to find the sus- pects. Lilted as missing were several bottles of depressants. and stimulants, including codeine and morphine. The missing pills have a wbolesaleva1ueof$388. Police said the Newport Center Pharmacy and a neighboring one in the building at 1401 Avocado An. bave been plaeued by this tY)>e of early morning breaJdn in wblcb the thieves smash through the .iass doors, grab selected pill bottles and flee before police ar· rive. Kuehn wasn't completely happy. She turned the pamphlet over in ~er bands, studying the sketch of a tourist family on the cover. "Really, it's just fine," she said . ''But the picture on the COY· er-the dog's not on a leash." Then Mayor Milan Dostal laghingly pointed out that the boy ln the sketch had a slin&shot in bis pocket and seemed to be ey. ing the windows of lbe rental col· tage with undue interest. City staff members promised to put a leash on the dog and erase the slingshot before send· lng the pamphlets out. Open Space, Park Issue Previewed Newport Beach councilmen got a sneak preview Monday of the slide show that will be shown to the public tonight lo drum up support for the city's open space and park bond election. The $7.1 million bond issue, which will provide funds to buy 134 acres of open space that is in danger or being developed, is on the March 8 ballot. The slide show. put together by the Yes for Newport Open Space Committee. uses historical photo- graphs of the early days of the ci- ty as well as pictures of the sites intended for purchase. Members of the committee will be showing the slides tonight lo the public at city hall at 7:30 and again al 8·30. Committee mem. hers will be available at the city council chambers lo answer questions about the bond pro- posal Additional showings of the slide show are s lated for Thurs- day al 7 p.m. at Newport Ceo· ter's Glendale Federal Savings; at 8 p.m . Feb. 22 al 501 Cliff Drive in a forum sponsored by the League of Women Voters; al 7: 30 p.m. Feb. 23 at the Corona del Mar Elementary School. At the same time as the Corona del Mar presentation, there will be a 7:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. show mg of the slides at city hall. Siege Eased . BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP) - Arab peacekeeping forces today eased a two-day siege in which tanks surrounded Palestinian guernlla strongholds in Beirut. Traffic to and from refugee camps was allowed but all ap. proaches to the camps on the southern flank or the Lebanese capital remained controlled by Syrian armor. l'r .. Pqe AJ 'BE A MAN: GET A GUN' • • • JIMPAUS, WHOTODAYDROVECowan'sgrievingparentato a funeral bome lo make bur1a1 arrangements, said bis big frlen~ was generous and lcind to other men, "and would give you his last dollar if be lilted you." However, Cowan had difficulty communicating with womas, Parbsaid. .. We used to talk a lot about.lifts and he wanted them. We woo.Id eo lo pick them up and then Fred couldn't talk with them, he was always with41rawn. He never got to know any real well," be said. Sby wttb women, Cowan was more relaxed in the netabbortlood Galway Bay Bar where he would display his huge muscles in the mir· ror and lipple bis tattoo., lncludinc a swastika. COWAN WOULD OFTEN ACCOMPANY ms muacle-fiexiq wlthatirade.agalnstblacksandJews. "No doubt about that. ho wu real prejudiced," said hla friend Parks, wbooftenwentonhuntingtripswlth him. aisoeiChbonsaldtodaylbeywerenotfully awareoftheextentof Cowan:,r~dice and did not know of the aUic tnrve of Nad arm bands, u an4 bookaoqAdolf HiUer'a Third Reich. Parb cootrlbuted part of the pu1zle of hll hieod'1 violent )(00- 1· daJ wbilt. ~ told reporten t.bit Cowan felt be bad beta unftlrty tteat.111wbedbewM1uapendec1 for lwo weeks by a movlng and .....,.,toaapaQ1 tor not ~ovlna a retrl1eratcll'. ~. ~C'LADDDTllBfalDG•WABNMONthemanlfest," ParbMIA4.aodw•uarY Uoutit. · M.-blle, llf e· r.tumed to norinaJ tocl•J ln the ne:l&hbonood ttiatW .,._tbM'DlntofearaDdehaoe theprmouaday. PnMmM l'oe Gallao went an Illa rowwta and •tUtfeC! 1n1rall« ten• tbe CoWaQ mallbo~. lncbadin1 a flyer for a Q radJo Unh ed· drt!IMd totbeal,ala l'ted. 8c6 co.r.n•1 htbet and biOtber ve postmen,~ fatM:r smrte-UNd. I M•ar .A_..Clll1 f(tlltaaliO. Wlio hu lived next dOor fGi' ... BlY .... crttJ WIMft I beard l'n461 Ulk. unc1.-tac11taowltoould~·· BUILDING wb.Ue tht 1tMnl plan b btlnl revlled so that the city 11 f1Da1 . =•ettOn flauN will not be so p . Rycbft able> cbar1ed that Sea . IJJand and W teUff Grove ought to be halted because of the en- v1toamental problein1 those two develoPUMDta wW cause. Hll Jlll"OP09al drew the wraUt of MQor Milan no.tat who Hid he c:o\lld ncJt ... bow tban1ea in the aeaeral pla would .,_ U9ed to re. plate tb.e en\ttronmental protec- tions built in elthe.r development. Dostal called the proposed mor.atorlwn a "red he.,rtng0 and polnted out tbat under tbe- general plan, one third of the ad· ditional 30,000 people who will be ll\'in1 in Newport Beach will be llvlnl in the older parta ol town wbere homes are not yet built lo maximum density. Ryckott replied that be wu also concerned wltb traffic and density, but before he could go further, Dostal snapped that those were two subjects the city council had been concerned with "before you even became a tesi· dent of this city.'• When the moratorium was brou&bt lo a vole, Dostal was joined in opposition by Mayor Pro Tem Pete Barrett and Coun· cilmeo Lucille Kuehn and Don Mcinnis. Ryckoff was backed by Councilmen Trudi Rogers and Ray Williams. Mclnnla pointed out that by law revisions ln the general plan can be made three times a year and that no moratorium hi neceaaary while the revisions are being made. utters Probed LA JOLLA <AP) -The FBI said today it ls checklnc into threatening letters received by five black employes of the Unlvenity of Callfomla at San Dieao. The letters were alped "KKK," aaid campus police without dlsclosin1 their contents. REI'URN OF 'IJlE STREAKER Irvine police are keeping their eyes peeled for a male in his mid·20s who was spotted Monday night sprinting through the in· dustrlal are.a wearing only the top hall of a woman's bikini. Mara 20 Year• a~w1,.,._. Andrei A. Gromyko, 67, ob- serves his 2oth year as Sov- iet foreign minister today. No other foreign minister or a major nation has been on the job as long. Tiro Trwtees SlateTcilb On Thursday It's going to be a busy Thurs· day morning for two Newport. Mesa school trustees. Trustee Marian Bergeson will dilcuas current district teacher contract negotiations before a 7:30 a.m. meeting or the Citiuns Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) at GlendaJe Federal Savings and Loan, Harbor Boulevard and Wilson Street, Costa Mesa. There is no charge for the public meetin~. • School Board President Donald Smallwood wlll give a present&· tion on "Problems confronting the Newport-Mesa School Dis· trict," at 8 a .m. at Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board or Realtors, 401 North Newport Boulevard, Newport Beach. There is a $1 charge which in· eludes a morning snack. FREE! ~ Spilled "Oil . Cauaing ~ oe SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The Coast Guard says "99 percent" of the noatlnc oil from Hawaiian Pro1re11, 20,000·1allon· plu• San Franclleo Bay aplll bu been picked up. But it's a different atory, with the eloba of 1ooey bunker fuel th,•l went • uhoN at a dolen ~IDta in· aide tbe bav and alqq the ocean h'onl. accordllil to Coast Guard Petty Officer Larry Clark. He said they· wUI take up to a month to eliminate. The San Franclsco Fire Department said some on that leaked into the bay Thursday ni~t floated amon1 the p s under several of San ranciaco piers, mainly 26 to 30, and constituted a fire hazard. Defendant Hit,sJuJge lnRenuJkh MILWAUKEE (AP) -Judge Christ T. Seraphim was decked by a punch from the witness stand in a rematch with defendant James E. Wicks. Wicks. 24, beginning trial on an attempted murder charge, scaled a railing Monday as Seraphim leaned close to ask a question an" caughtlhejudgeonthejaw. Both fell to the noor. They were untangled by two deputies and two policemen. The jud1e regained bis seal, rubbing his jaw and complalnlng. "I dldn'thave a chance to throw a fair blow. This guy was on top of me before I knew it. And on top of this, I've been ailing with back trouble all day," heaaid. Seraphim, 57, had instructed a deputy sheriff to stay near the de· fendant as be took the stand, re- calling that. he bad to duck to avoid a five-pound microphone that was thrown at him in an earlier meeting with Wicks. After the latest round, Wicks was handcuffed and returned to jail. Freighter Stuck RIO VISTA (AP) -Efforts were being made today to free a Japanese freighter stuck in the' mud in the Sacramento River near here, the Coast Guard said. 1977 Ratid McNally International World ~ap. Come I~ and pick-up the new full-color edition of Rand McNa1ly'1 ncitinJ ~ntemational World Map. It'• big (5'4" x 36"), hilhJy detailed (shows cities, riven and mountains), and up-to-date (features multi-colored politlcaJ borders and all the new countriet). Suitable for framing and arcat for den or children'• room! · This beautlful Rand McNalJy map is absolutely FREE at First Federal! Thett is no oblipt.ioo whatlOClver. It's jwt our way of •vina 0 We'd Wee to ~t to know you!" - Supplies ne limited, to come in 80()n. Umit: one map per family, 18 y~.r• and older. This ad must Ill I . be preaented.lor redemption. Frame not Included. . foUow thlt map to the hi&hett lntereat on insured tavinp. plus 111 thite "1oney .. savin1 cuttOD\el' terVius: , FRE! safe deposit box• FR.EB checking accooft~ at l•dlns ~~· FREE money orders PR.SE check ca1hln11.0: catd , FREE traveler'• chtck1 • FRSB photocopy envice l FREE trust deed collection• •MJ•o• ~ ,..ulrtcl ·~~~ Baker Near Harbor ~---11 , HOURS• Dlllt9AMto4mF~y9AMto6E*M. Stturday 9AM.to3PM.: • Ampl. lric ~ Tdepbooe S.f9'-91if~ foi lnf~t- • , • . • S&ddlehaek EDITION ' .VOL 70, NO. "6, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1$, 19n f TEN CENT~ E'rtUtrBtiOtls Stalked Killer _ of Fi1'e By PETDUNE'IT A,9-KNIC. 0 Fl I NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. -He adored only tall, blue-eyed blondes, according to bis best friend, Jim Parks, and they cruised the neighborhood dlnera together tryinc ~pick tbem up. But Frederick Cowan, a 6-foot, 2SO·pound weight-lifting etant of a man, "could never make it with them, he never had a girUriend in the seven years I've known him," Parks said the morning after his ~jfi:ar-old friend went on a rampage in a New Rochelle warehouse, k g five people, wounding five others before t.aking bis life. <Related stories A3, A4) IT ,VAS THE FaUSTM'l10NS IN Cowao's personal life that friends -were apeak.ing ot today as they trted to put tosether the pu:aJe"' a neighbor apparently gone cun-cruy. They recalled Cowan's inordinate interest in guns and the arsenal of pistols and rifles be kept tn his atuc room. The big man wa~ so proud of his guns that be often traded neighborhood kids a look at the collection for washing his car. On summer weekends, the burly man would often sit on the stoop of his parents' bome where he U ved, regaling the kids with war atoFies and gun lore. .. A LOT OF THE KIDS IDOUZED him because of his guns." aaid a bigb school youth on bia way to school today. . John O'Neill, 14, said be beard Cowan comment to one such gathering, "If you want to be a man, cet a IUQ ... l'ommy Gee, 14, liked Cowan and used the wel1bt litter's .22 at the IQCal rif\e range. But other youths interviewed t.oday said they didn't like Cowan's attitude. · "He scaredl1S," said one 14-year.old neighbor wbo didn't want to be ldenUfied. ''Some kids took to him but the way be talked and tbe way be bragged, itfrightened me." (See BE A MAN, Pace Al) Teachers' Pay Protest S~pported Water Cutoff In Viejo? By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ol lllt O•llY ,.let St•ff The California Water Resources Control Board will be asked next week to force the Mis· sion Viejo Company to bait the filling of its 1.2 billion gallon man made lake until drought con· ditions in the state have ceased. William Dendey, executive of· fleer of the state board, said to- day he called for a special bear- tng Feb. 23 to determine if a "cease and desist" order should be issued. "Under section 275 of the state water codes, the board can issue such an action if it determines water is being used in a wasteful or unreasonable manner," Dendey said. "Based on a preliminary in· vestigation by my staff, enough questions were raised about the l~ke project to call for a hear- ing." Dendey met last week and this past Monday with Mission Viejo Company President Philip Reilly to "get a feel for bis position." The state official said Reilly assessed the situation over the wee~end and returned with the conclusion that the filling opera- tion bad to continue. "There was no indication of voluntary cooperation on the company's part," Dendey said. "He (Reilly> feels he should go ahead and fill the lake but on my part, I don't think be should." Company Vice President Harvey Stearn said today that any rurther comment on the fill- in& project would be withheld un- til after the bearing next week, where the cqpu>any and its ex· perts will make presentations lo support the operation. (See WATER, Pa1~ Al) F an Gored i n B i ng An unidentified fan jumped with his cape into the ring at a Mexico City bullfight and paid the price. Medical authorities said he was seriously injured in the right leg, throat and chest. Some 65,000 fans watched in rorror, unable to help the young man. LEAP PrQject Blasted CUSD Tnutee, CandUJate to De bate Plan By ANNE COOPER OI h o.lty "let Stall A new quatter minion dollar program in the Capistrano Uniried School District came un- der sharp attack Monday when school board candidates ad· dressed the Laguna Niguel Homewonlrs Association. Incumbent trustee William Thompson defended the pro- gram, prompting candidate William Manahan lo challenge him to a debate. Thompson ac- cepted, but no date or place have beensetfortbeencounter. The controversial Learning Ex- perience Appraisal Program, called Project LEAP, is expected to be ready for lml>lementation next fall. It includes a testing pro- gram, intricate teaching objec- tives, basic graduation require- ments and a reading support system. Thompson, running unopposed I in trustee area 7 (Mission Viejo) in the March 8 4is~rict-wide elec- tion. represents trustees on the Project LEAP steering commit· tee. He said Monday the program will individualize instruction and provide teachers and parents with immediate feedback on stu- dent progress. . . Candidate Manahan, runnmg tn trustee area 4 <Dana Point and coastal L~una· Niguel). called <See LEAP, Page AZ) lrl'lne Directors T estifg Man Swallows Wife's Tongue OCEANSIDE CAP> - Police say a Marine 1s ac- cused or biting off his wife's tongue and swallow· ing it during a spat They booked PFC Vernon Henderson Taylor, 21, for investigation of as- s au 1 t. wife beating a nd mayhem. The wife, Rhonda. was listed in fair condition in Tri-City Hospital today. Mobil Off er Said Best Br TOM BARLEY Of .. Delly........... I Three d.irecton of the1 lames Irvine Foundation testified Mon· day that they. voted for the sale ol their Irvine Comj>any stock to lbe Mobil OU Col'poraUon because it was the belt Offer made to their board. t And all three qreed that a sale of the stock for $281.9 million rather than a distribution or the holdings to selected cbariUes would best help them meet tbe wishes of the late James Irvine. Only one of the three, Mrs. Kathryn Wheeler of Corona del Mar, tooltthewltnessstandlnthe Orance Comity Superior Court trial or lbe lawsuit riled bf her cousin, Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith. Judge James F. Judge allowed tbe readtn&-or pretrial depotl- tiona taken from f oundatlon directors Edward W. Carter and Robert H. Gi!rdes to go into the record as the trial testimony of tbetwomeo. Gerdes denied in his deposition that the foundation board bad ig- nored the wishes of the minority shareholders ln the Irvine Com· pany when they negotiated a deal that wW, iJ approved. see the metier of the lrvtne Company with Mobil. Gerdes Pointed out that the shareholders would 1et the same prl~e as the roundation and could 10 back to court to protest that price lf they thought it was insuf· ficlent and dtd not represent fair market value. The foundation owns 54.5 per- cent of the Irvine stock and will receive an estimated $155 ml1lion ,..om Mobil it Judie Judge ap- prova the aale beilll challenged by Mrs. Smith. Mrs. Smith owns a little more than 22 percent of the stock in the company founded by her grandfather. Her share of the Mobil deal would be about $63 million. Mrs. Smith argues, however, that the Irvine Company's true X11lue ls closer to $1 billion than the $281.9 million offered by Mobil. She claims through attorney Howard Friedman that it might be possible to reach that figure lf the oil company were not dominating the market place and fri&b~g other possible bid· deraaway. Tbe helress currently prefers the $282.7 million offer aubmitted by a bidder known in court as the Allen-Taubman group: a con- sortium beaded by Wall Street financier Charles Allen and Detroit devleloper Alf red Taul>- man. M.rs. Smith wu criticiied in Gerdes deoositioo Monday for wbat be aald waa her refUAl to accept realities in the rouncta· lion •1 negotiations wt th Mobil and the deci.slon to MU to the oU (8eeffEaE88. Pa••A2) Freeze Ruled Unfair By LAURIE KASPER OI • D.i ty "let St.ff The charge by Saddlebaclc Valley Unilled School District teachers that trustees comanitted an unfair labor practice when they froze salaries last summer bas been upheld by a state bear- ing officer. According to the decision by Jeff Paule,. a bearing officer with the state's Educational Employ- ment Relations Board <EERB), trustees were not bargaining in good faith when they said teachers bad to agree to delay a contract until July, 1977, or ac- cept a salary freeze. After teachers s aid they couldn't sien the agreement, trustees refused to give them their normal salary increases for another year or experience and additional education. "Their actions were take it or le ave it Instead or give and lake," explained Terry Filliman, assistant general counsel with the EERB, which administers grievances under new state col· lecti ve bargaining law. He said, however, that the hearing officer's decision is not yet final. Trustees have until Feb. 24 to file an appeal and ask for a bearing before the employ- ment bo4lfd. If they decide not to appeal the decision, then it will become final. John Cooper, assistant to the district superintendent, said trustees jl,&St learned of the de· cision Monday so they have not bad the chance to meet and con- sider an appeal. He said they may consider it during an ex- ecutive session Wednesday. Normally, when the decision is final, trustees would be ordered to pay the raises retroactive to July 1. However, trustees already did this on Jan. 5. Bill Mecham, president of the Saddleback Valley Educators Association (SVEA> which filed the charge through the California Teachers Association, contends the board's January action was an attempt to circumvent the pr~ and prevent the decision. He characterized the decision . as a vindication of the assocla- tion 's stand. He said it tells the community that "this board ma- jority has not been dealtne with a fair and open mind with us." Although the incremental raises were previously granted, Mecham said bis association now will ask for interest on the money withheld from the teachers for four months. <See UNFAIR. Pa1e AZ> Co ast Wea th er Locally dense fog near the beache• nl1bt and momlna boun. otherwise fair skies. Highs ranging from upper 80s at beaches to 70s and lower 80s inland. Low1 "5 to 55. mfll•ETODAY. By WILLLUISCllJlEIBBa ott•~ .......... After a multi-faceted, 25.year career u a community colleae professor, librarian and ad· ministralor, Dr. Eucene C. "Gene .. McKnight has ~ecided there is one more facet yet to cut. McKnight. wbo lives with Ilia wile at 25St1 Purple Sage Lane in San Juan Capistrano, is running for a seat on the Saddleback College Board of Trustees. Not only that, but the soft· spoken philosopher is challenging an entrenched inc um bent. Patrick B~clals, who bu been a board mernbef' since the college was founded 10 years ago. The 70-year-old McKnight, who looks, talks and acts 20 years younger than he is, figures the best way to counter the incum· bent's advantage is to make his own na m e and bac kground known. To that end, he's already made dozens or personal appearances at community and civic org8JlUa- tion meetings throughout the huge college district, which sprawls from Tustin lo San Clemente. Retirement from hi s years at Los Angeles City College didn't dull McKnight's personal com- mitment to the idea or community college education, which he con- siders the moel dynamic form of learning available. A resident of south Orange County since 1968, he has been an active member of Saddleback's Citizens' Advisory Board since 1973. His zeal for the coll~ge and its activities has drawn the support of the college Faculty Associa· lion, an affiliate of the California Teachers' Association. McKnight said ~e didn't seek out f acuity sup- port and won 'l accept any funds but noted that the support is "ap- preciated." ··Although I do receive criticisms about some of the col- lege operations, I have never re- ceived a complaint about mem- bers of the faculty," McKnight said. "They are noted for ex - cellence in teaching.·' The candidate accused incum- bent Backus of alienating the faculty by "his a brasive, arbitrary and authoritarian methods and attitudes. There is very litUe. if any. two-way com- munications." McKnight strongly favors a second campus for the Irvine- Dally Pilot Slalf Pfwlo VARIED CAREER Candidate McKnight Tustin area and wants to accept th'e Irvine Company's offer of a. site at Irvine Center Drive and Jeffrey Road. Backus supports the site chosen by trustees last year at Myford Road and Bryan Avenue, a posi· lion McKnight bas challenged. •'The real concern is to fmd a northern site as quickly as possi· ble in order to provide maximum service to students in the m05t economical way," McKnight said. According to McKnight, Backt.LS "remains aloof and non. responsive" to the community, in part because of other commit- ments that prevent more college- related activity. "Saddleback College is. grow- ing into an outstanding institution with continuing concern for tax- payers and students," he said . "New buildings are under con· struclion without debt and on a pay-as-you-go basis. "But the college has pro- blems," he added. "As a retired college cons ultant. I can give full time without salary lo promoting excellence in education and also carefully watch for any waste of taxpayers' money.·· Apart from his extensive back ground and education. McKnight said he can offer an outlook that 1s not "provinciaJ." "A trustee must be fair lo all communities in the college dis- trict." he said. n~mg he is not sacrificing a n y objectivity because of such things as faculty support. "I always rely on my own convictions but l do want open communications.·' l'r .. rag~ AJ 'BE A MAN: GET A GUN' • • • JIM PilKS, WHO TODAY DROVE Cow an 's grieving parents to a funeral home to make burial arrangements. said bis big fnend was gen_erous and kind to other men," and would give you hls last dollar if hehkedyou ·• However, Cowan had difficulty communicating with women Parkssaid. ' "We used to talk a lot about.girls and he wanted them. We would go to pick them up and then Fred couldn'l lalJt with them. he was always withdrawn. He never goUoknow any real well," he said. Shy wtth women, Cowan was more relaxed in the neighborhood Galway Bay Bar where he would dtsplay his huge muscles in the m1 r· ror and npple his tattoos, including a swastika. . COWAN WOULD Ot'TEN ACCOMPANY ms muscle-nexmg with a tirade a1amst blacks and Jews. ''No doubt about that, be was real prejudiced." said his friend Parks. who often wentonhuntinetrips wilhhim. His nei&hbors said today they were notfully awareoflhe extent of Cowan's prejudice and did not know of tbe attic trove of Nati arm bands. swastikas and books on Adolf Hitler's Third Reieh. Parks contributed part of the puzzle of his friend's violent Mon· day when be told reporters that Cowan felt he had been unfairly treated when be was suspended for two weeks by a moving and storage company for not moving a refrigerat01". "Fred claimed the fridle was not on the manifest," Parks said and was angry about it. ' Meanwhile, life returned to normal today in tbe neighborhood that l\ad been thrown into fear and chaos lhe previous day. Postman Joe Galleno went on his rounds and stuffed several let- ters into the Cowan mailbox, including a flyer for a CB radio unit ad- dreued totbe slain Fred. DAILY PILOT ·--· • ( l'r .. P ... AJ WATER ••• Tbe company bas coatended that t.M lake has been in t.be plan- nlnt stages for six ye.-. a.od that eontraeta for the water were allned three 7ean uo. Compa111 oftldals abo argue that tbe buiD ~ aern u an. emerceoey fresh water supply uct thJt ii the water ls not Used, it ~flowon to the sea. ..J • DMae, JU.• Issue with that .: ;Fent, •v•n• th• Yater 'hi be COb811roed1fOf tbe JDOll • '~~dowmtftdl"8tfl. > ' • The state official also clalhled that the w•ter fillln~ the lake la "J~ to •O percent • nortbena California water from· tbe aqueduct Ulat ero1ae1 tbe :S-•ltldlPI .... elnl. • I Skipue~ EscilJ!es ... ~ Boat Fire A StaAton man dh•lnc off Abalone Point ln Laguna Beach Monday leaped lnto the water from bis malfuncUoning 25-foot cabin crulser u it bunt iato name. Gerald Baldwin, YT, swam to a nearby motorboat piloted by Charles Winkler of San Pedro, who pulled Baldwin from the water. then piclted up the man's .wile, Katherine, 35, who watched ,the explosion from nearby rocks. Baldwin was unhurt~ The flbergla.u cabin cruiser. about 220 yards offshore, was ful· Jy ablaze when a Harbor Depart- ment fire boat ·fl-om Newport Beach arrived. The patrol boat already had been on its way because Baldwin bad radioed his craft would not start and a thick fog had drifted into the area. ,,...., P"fle AJ UNFAIR ••• Filliman said there is no men- tion of interest in the hearing of· titer's decision. He aaid the only other r~uirement of the de· cisfon, if 1t is finalized, will be that the district must post a copy of it in all their sc~ooJs. The district bad contended that giving the raises before a settlement was reached would be a violation or the state's col· lective bargaining law. But the teachers' leaders con- tended this was being used to in· llinidate them. Mecham said he is "elated" with the decision. "It's what I sald all alone would happen." Cooper said in a press release, "While disappointed in the rul- ing, the district was not un- prepared for it.•· Noting that the· EERB bas been charged with defining the new law, he said there were conflicting labor la.w provisions from the private sec- tor which could support a ruling either way. He said other districts in the state took similar action. Fllliman said this is only the fourth decision made on an un- fair labor practices charge. Since the law went into effect in July, he said, there have been 180 unfair labor practice charges filed. Frott1 POfle AJ HEIRESS •.. company. Gerdes pointed out that the foundation has only a few years to comply with the provisions ol the Federal T~ Reform Act or 1969. The measure compels the foundation to dispose of its hold- ings in the Irvine Company. Gerdes said Mrs. Smith's al· titude was iJJ'lpeding rather than aiding the foundation in -meeting that obligation. "She changes her mind from day to day " the director said. ' l'ro..PageAl LEAP ••• implementation of the LEAP re- ading program a financial dis- aster for the distnct. Manahan, who holds a master's degree in reading, teaches first grade at Aliso School in El Toro, located in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. He has taught school for five years and ran a reading lab for two years. "I st.roogly urge parents to con- sider that I. as an expert in the field ol reading, with the educa- tion and experience I have had in the area. am so highly critical ol this program which is going to cost district taxpayers something over a quarter million dollars," he said. Tbompeon told Manahan he <Manahan) didn't understand the program and urged him to meet with district adminlstrators. Manahan saJd be had talked for two boun With administrators responsible for the program and ii no IDCll'e convinced now than be bad been before that tbe prognm should be Implemented. Incumbent Bob Hurst. who Is running In trustee area 6 (inland Lacuna Nlguel), supported Pro- ject LEAP. He aa.id it reln.f0ttes the cooceptof education. Hunt countered llanaban 's criticiam that t.eacbera have DOt been involved inf ormulatlaa Pro- ject LEAP, saying more than 70 teachers are currently involved. The four mobile reading 1.a. in- cluded .a part ol tbe LEAP read· in& support -qttem •ill prorid• the equipment for a proven technique, which bu worked in other diltricU, lluntaaid. Candtdat.e Robert Bachelor, runntna in truatee area • .,.._ Hunt, aa1cl that a • teacber of llin• )'earl, be bu the knowl•e to J .. Wb4'lber a procram wlll benefltac.bool chlldrea. . "~LEAP, modem 11Mi1Ja. all lbe OtMtedaeatkJIW cure.alls are ~ ._ l"lbllabla& COIQ• parue1 ~ w ... tlM1: Nllll1 beneftlthlj lite dtlldreef .. be a1kid. ..~ at Wiler. .. beve ecme. I ..... ii*.__, cM We ftW ..... tM falillltlllell• tallt" ' COURT DAY-LONG EVENT FOR SIXTH-GRADE CLASSROOM R•ncho C•nMI• Elementmry Student• Hold Mock T.rl•I · Kids Get Day in Co11rt Fledglings at Bar Meet With Justice By LAURIE KASPER Of h o.u., ~leUt•ff After the verdid was rendered and the court.room emptied of spectators, both the prosecuting and defense attorneys admitted their knees were still shaking. They linge red in the courtroom, talking together about the trial. Lisa Maloney contended cbarges against her client should have been dropped because the law enforcement officer hadn't written ~e violation properly. But prosecutor Rachele Fuhrman argued that the defen· dent bad committed perjury ln her testimony. The two were frlendly and talked nonstop about the case. · . Rancho Canada vs. Tracy Moore, tried recently in the Court of Rancho Canada with Judge Billy Cunningham presid- ing, was a fint for both at· torneys. They saf"'lt won't be their last trial. Fut.Ure bearings, however, will be more difficult. "It won't be as easy," the defense attorney explained, "because, you know, we won't be in school." Court was a day-long event in the sixth grade classroom at Rancho Canada Elementary School in Lake Forest. It was lhe cUmax of the jurisprudence part of their career educatiori pro-gram. -.t'bey bad previously studied about jobs in tbe law, heard talks by policemen and attorneys and viaited a real courtroom In Santa Ana. Back at the school, tickets were given Cb fourth, CJ.ft.h and sixth 1rader.s for the three greatest violaUons of school rules -running in unJutboriied areas, throWlng food and cutting in line. Sixth graders .. bought" the job of judge, attorney, other court of. ricers and jury with credits they earned by doing regular school work. The alleged violators were given the opportunity to plead guilty or not guilty during ar· raignment. Those who admitted their fullt wete sentenced to clean the lunch area for a term of one to two days. The seven who pleaded not guilty were brought lo court. Attorneys studied the defen- dants' tes timony and in · terviewed witnesses. For each case. which was handled by dif- ferent attorneys and court of- FREE!· ficers and jury, they were al· lowed to subpoena three wit· nesses. Even faculty and staff members could not escape the summons. In this particular case, Tracy was charged with running. Two witnesses, who admitted they are best friends of the def en. dant, testified that they had seen her running. Lila tried to dis- prove ooe of the witnesses' ac- counts because she was faced away from the alleged violation. Rachele foiled this attempt in cross examination b y establishing the fact that Tracy had called to her friend, causing her to tum her bead. But in the closing argument, Lisa said her client should be ac- quitted because the ticket wasn't specific enough. This obviously was serious business. While the jury was out d~ liberating, the audience -fourth grade classmates or the defen- dant and sixth graders who weren't involved in this case - was perfecUy still. There was hardly a whisper as the youngsters waited for the jury to return with a verdict. 1977 Rand McNally International World Map. Come in and pick-up the . new full-color ~ition of Rand McNally'a o:citing International World Map. 1t•1 big (54" x 36"), highly detail~ (shows cities, riwn and mountain5). and up-to-date (features mulrl..colored political borders and aU the new countries). Suitable for framing and great for den or childttn's room! This beautiful Rand McNally map is absolutely FREE at First F~eraU There is no obUpdon whats6tver. It's just our way of .ayin& 0 We'd like to get to kn<)w you!'' Suppliea ue limited, so COCM in soon. Umit: one map per family, 18 years and older. Thi.I ad mUJt be pttMnted for redtmf'rion. Frame not included. Follow this map to the highest interest on Insured saviftp. plus all thae money-saving cwtomer serviA::at FREEaafedepoait box• PREBcbuld,QtaccQUfttatlmdina hUJc.• FREE money orders FR.EE check~ J.D. CHd FRBE·tnveler's checks• FllEEph&Mocopytenke 'FREE trust deed collection• ·~ .._...,.... E~A~~~ Costa Mesa.Office Baker Near HatbOr I ' ~eaday's Afternoon Pricee . NYSE C6MPOSl!fE TRANSACTIONS ' Lucky Earnln«s Drop OAKLAND <APf -Luci:y Stora. Jnc., bu announced record Nies ot sa.s billion for 1978, but reported that net .anlinp had dropped 4 perc:eot from tbe p_revlous year. · Board aw.rm ... Wayne Hr Fllher • said Mood~ that 1ales were qp 12 pel'c~ CM!r tbo ~vtoua )'Mr, Eam· 1n11 ..we ... t mWioo or ll..22 a com· DMld t.b.are. down 4 pueent from Sf1 .t antWoo. « $1.2'1 a share, t.M pnviOlll year. L\aeb .,-ates Im atona, lndu.!· 1.Dj ~· t0Pem1arteta, m dlseount · cen~ 140 tabrlc ttora, 8''~ meat ltOre8. U auttMnolive ~ ·22 drq llclNI, 142 rata.urama Gd ' tPOitlnl ~ ltorell. • • . S OAILYPILOT ~) :'Bad-habit' Tax Eyed by Doctor By JORNCVNNIFF AP---~ A ta on lndtvtduala whole eat1D1-<trinking habits and We &t)tlel have the potenUal of drtvinl ~the naUon'e bealtfl' eare etlllla ls beinl advoeaMld by a prominent doctor and publlcbealth offlclal. • Altbalaah bo dldn"t •aJ bow tbe tu ml1ht bf! lmed, Dr. lUIM"Whlte, wtio madetbe propoul, aald it would be aimed at encounatnl aoundbealtbcan habit& and d114:ourqiqpn.c· den ccmidercd to be botb u.obealtb.Y and costly. IN A PAPE• PllE•AaBD l'Oa A conference toclay OD Future Dtreetiom lD Healtb Care, White aaid chana in penonal behavior would be a iure means -... i-· . 1 ot recludna tbe riaka and ~ 411 IDIQY eomJDOGdllorden. ••we cu atart •itb band wasb.lQg -: alter eUmlnaUon, avoldin.I a.ces1ive • caloric intake, abstainlDg trom alcobol cons'\&mptlon before drlvtng, using automobile seat belts, obtalnin& ade- quate test. taking regulu exeretse, and avoidina cigarette tobacco sm.oke." he said. . Aaked lfbis proposal wouldn't be con-CUNIO,,. ~trued as an lllvuion ofpersoaal privacy, White snaJ>l)ed: ·"You can't have it both ways." The people responsible {or rising health care costs must be prepared to pay, be said. · WmtE SAID BIS IDEAS WOULD IN NO way inte. re with the manner in which a person chooses to live his or her life. but would merely allocate to them rather than to tbe · publicthecioetsinvolved. .> The special tu also would be levied on companies wliose products and practices are bannful to health, said White, director of the United Fund's Institute for Health Care Studies and former professor at Johns Hopkins University Medical School. "Each firm would estimate and report its own health care tax in accordance with national formulas and ~e could be periodically audited ln much the same way the Ih· teraal Revenue Service audits individual income tax re- turns," be said. WBITEALSOCALLEDFORGRADUATEDhealth~ate taxes on products such as alcohol, cigarettes with higH t¥ and nicotine content, junk foods, soft drinka and automot:ltt5 sold withoutsafety·belt systems. T He said the revenue from such taxes would be used ·~ offset the costs of providing the inevitable medical care o consumers of these products will e)lperience. • • _ T1le tw<Htay conference for which White's views were prepal'OO is sponsored join Uy by the Institute of Medicine, \tie Rockefeller Foundation, the Blue Cross Association and the California Health Policy Program. · IN ANSWER TO A QUESTION, WHITE s.Ud be w&S )Wt simply attempting to get the subject discussed more openly but was making a serious proposal. "1 prefer it to re~~· tion,''hesaid. ·· White also suggested in his paper that a system of "health accounts" should be apart of all corporate annual re- ports. stating: "We need to know not only how much each company1is paying for health insurance benefits, but bow much it speads on occupational safety programs, physical fitness activities, health education for its employes, and what it does about smoking on the job and vending machines that dispeme cigarettes. soft drinks and junk foods." "' JUNK FOODS AND DRINKS FROM VENDING machines "and high calorie·low protein quickie appetite s\Jp· pressants from fast·foodchains all take their tolls," hesatd.• He described American society as one in which ~e are "increasingly free to consume, but increasingly unwill- ing to pay for the medical care consequences reflected intfte inevitable increases for health insurance premiums 'Mid taxes." ; i Phone Company Lists 1977 Plans General Telephone Company of California has an- nounced plans to spend mont than $233.3 million on construe· tioo and equipment in 1977. •''!be figure represents the largest annual capital ouUay for service expansion and the improvement off acilities in the company's history,•• Charles A. Crain, vice president, opera· tions, said Monday. GENERAL OF CALIFORNIA SERVES MORE than 3,252,000 telea>hones. including those in Huntington Beach. Westminster, Cypress, Seal Beach, Sunset Beach, Stanton. and parts of Fountain Valley, Garden Grove and Laguna Beach. It gained about 173,000 telephones last year arid expects to add another 184,000 in 1977. Last year, the company spent $226 million on construction and equipment. Foreeuted installation and removal of telephones is ex· peeled to cost General more than $50 million one of the largest individual segments of its construcUon budget. The company also will spend $.16.3 million on new telephone equipment, such as desk ( ) ~::~~mcnts and key CONSUMER SERVICE ORDERS forecast for 1977 -----------include an estlmated 1,143,000 iP&tallation or· den and a projected 959,000.removal orders. "'lbe bulk of this year's capital outlay is earmarked fO'r tbe expamton and conversion of exiltlng switching a.nd ou~ atdeptantfacWties, ••Crain said. Toll s\tltching and electronic automaUc exchange eon· tinue to be keys in General's plans to prepare for exchaqe growth and future customer needs, be said. OPl10NAL ClJSTOMEll SERVICES SUCH AS ab- breviated dialing.and call forward1n1 will be made avaUab1e to10sneot General 'a customers bJ 19'18. ID tm, General plans to Incur poss addlUorus ol $:l1 millloafor lfOwth in step·by«epawttehing offices and spend another '17 million in converalqn from atep-by·atep to •lee· tronie call 1Witcbln1 in central olftces located tn Bitartna dtl Rey, Artella, Bodlands, R0Wn1 Hilts, Weat•ood and Hunt• JnctainBoaeia. Gmeral wJl1 oet>d aboUt ... G mlllloa tbl.s ,ear toward coanpWJon of ttl eleetromc ~ dlstanee mtcb.bll centera at Sota Monica ll1d Ontario. Santa Monica wiU cut i.oto na-tl~-* Mrtico ln Juno and Ontarlo wW ao Into serviee in. 1171. . -