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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-03-01 - Orange Coast Pilot' f, ' Anaheim Vice Rolling Stones' Cops Curtail -G11itarist Faees Curbside Calls Deroin Charge· DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * T U ESDAY AFTE R NOON, M ARCH 1, 1977 YOL 1', .. 0 .. , t SECTION~. 1' rt.GES Demond Che~k Guiurien Invade House in 118 By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ol 11• 0.11, 1'11•1 \1•11 Southern California lawmen are seeking two llollywood-style debt collectors who allegedly burst into H Huntington Bench movie producer 's home al(11.in Monday night. forcing hJm to write a $13,000 check al gunpoint. Inves tigators b e lieve the 1 episode -the aecond lo occur there in two weeks could be linked to a bizarre extort10n ring apparently involving people within the motion picture in dustry Similar 1nc1dl'nts have bet>n re ported in recc•nt wC'eks 1n the San Jernando VallC'y area, according ! to authoriltes James T Floc kC'r, 36, of 7271 Little Harbor Lane, called pohce shortly before 9 p.m . arter the duo gave a repeat performance of 1n earlier incident The two sus pects, both dressed Court, Okays ·Racial lsBue 1n business suits and evidently meaning bus iness. reportedly burst into the Seaclirf Country Club region residence two weeks ago, unarmed that Ume. One then grabbed a shotgun kept by Flocker and hi s toom- m ate. Phil CatalU, the pair told police. and forced Flocker to write a $3,334.40 check allegedly owed to their employer. ··nus account will be settled tonight." one assertedly snapped as the trembling victim -star· inJ,? down the shotgun barrel all the wh.ile -wrote out the de· manded bank draft. Flocker told Detective Jack Welsh at lhe lime he was shaking so badly it took three tnes to make the check legible. Just as in the previous inci- dent, po(Jce uld, the suspects - one black and the other Caucasian -ripped Flocker's telephone wiret from tbe wall Monday nieht. He told inv.estigators in the latest apparent eirtortlon inci- dent bo<h men burat through the front door armed with what ap- peared to be .357 Magnum re- volvers. a.'ASHINGTON CAP) _ Thl' AThe pair in both incidents lped any possible fingerprints Supreme Court today ruled that hey may have left rrom the state omcials may take race !nto telephone_ and other •tems which ad~ount when changing pollti~al were '°'-tchecf with a towel from bhndarl~s to comply with Flocker'sbatbroom. federal ~Olinglaw~. . Detective Welsh saJd today 1'he .high court, m a comphcal-the awarent web of intrigue ln- echenes ofspl~l opinions, upheld volving FJocker, Catalli and ap- a tower court s. ruling that the parently previous businesa as-New York legislature d id not sociatea becomes more com- yfolate the ConsUtuUon In draw-pllcated as the investl1ation inf up a 1974 reapportionment ~ continues. pbm offerini freater represt:nla· Orange County District At· tion to black and Puerto Rican t~ey'iJ Office investigators voters. ~. (See FORCED, P age Al> , .... I ,I ' ' l . ' i I ' Heroin Datil Roch Guitami Charged: TORONTO {AP) -Rolling Stones pitariat Keith Rithard has been charged with possessing heroin for the PllrpOSe of trafficking, police say. • The 33-year-old rock musician was convicted In England last January of possessing c0caine and was fined $1,275, A spokesman for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Monday that its officers seized an ounce of heroin with an estimated street value of $4,000 in a downtown hotel. Earlier, Rl.phard's &irllriend, Anita Pallenberg1 ~as arrested at Toronto Intematlonal Airport ana cbareed with pouesaing huhlsh and herOID. .................. ~ ................................................ 4 Death of 2 U ·- orkers ·Pro e £1•rbsiders Ct1rtailed Undercover Policeiromen Bag 8 Soliciters The women apparently went under- gr ound but their cli,ents rem ained out m the open. So. An a he im vice squadders las t weekend s ent two undercov e r policewomen oul along the so-called Dis- neyland strip on Harbor Boulevard. By the time the weekend vice chore ended, eight men had been arrested and charged with soliciting prostitution. A vice squad spokesman s aid his de- partment the past month had r eceived complaints from indignant husbands tha t th,eir wives had been propositioned as they journeyed through the strip. • And It was in an attempt to curtail lhe harassing males that the weekend opera- tion was undertaken. In early Occemtser , it was the women who pli ed the ir trade along Harbor Boulevard ne ar Katella Avenue who were the t arE?ct of a police cr ackdown. Undercover operators arres ted 15 women tn the December bust and 22 m en customers. police said. On the weekend crackdown. the two policewomen nailed m ost oi their eight al· leged solicitors as they shouted their in· vita tions from cars pulled to the curb, ac· cording topolicc. Most of the arrests c ame in a two-hour period Saturday night, police s aid. And, they added, it wasn't tourists out on the town who were causing the curbside fuss. All but one of the arrestees was a n Anaheim r esident, police said, .Manager Thwarts Theft Pmr Fail to Rob Von's Market in Valley By RAYMOND ESTRADA Ol ltie o.lly I"ll"' Staff A supermar~et man ager'\ wrestled a gun from a bandit..Mdr thwarted the attempted robbery or bis Fountain Valley store Mon- day, police reported today. melee and said he heard the sus- pect 's weapon "click" but failed to fire. the st.ore. One of the suspects dropped h.i s revolver. witnesses told police, but recovered il before leaving the scene. Police are still combing nortbeaat. Fountain Valley for lhe two robbery suspects who failed ln their attempt at the Von's Superrnarket at 16201 Harbor BdUUivard. Both suspects, described as male blacb in their 1nld·20's, wore wiis to drsiutae themselves, sald police Set. Mat· ty Eniqulst. One of the brown, curly wip was recovered at the 1ceoe. Tb e robbery attempt beean about 10 a.m. Monday when one of the BUlpeCts uked a store cter'k where t.be restroom wu. Tbe clerk pointed for bim but the IS\lspect beaded for th• store ot . flee. . . ..IL_ Tbe su:1pect, lilht complected with lrecklel and a large ban- da1e on bi.a cheek, brandished his .22 CJaliber pellet alr gun at another clerk and told him to open the a..,. ofti~e door. But the pmified clerk said.be • \.'OUlcl not open th door becauM it. was locJled, £ncQU.ilt related .• T be auspect had tbe clerk , llnock oo tho door. The baodi~ tbeo ru1hed in when 1tore manager Steveb T. Hottman, 3Z. ol 11.lallon Vldo, opened it. All three men fell screaming for help down a night of stairs. The suspect l011l his grip on his weapon and fled to the stor,J's front door, Engquist said. The second suspect wAlted at the door for his accomplice and brandished a .357 or .44 cllber revolver with a six-Inch barrel, Engquist said. The two bandits hightailed it for a block wall near the rear of ... utiefl The suspects ran through a condominium complex on Ed· inger Avenue and were not seen again, Engqltist said. The thwarted bandits reported· ly fled in a brown Cadillac, police said. Meanwhile, back at the supermarket, store manager Hoffman was recovering rrom a small cut on his right hand and a bump on the back of his head. Santa Ana police have joined Fountain Valley lawmen today In their search for the robbery sus- pect. because lbe incident oc- curred ne'ar the two cities' boun- daries, En'gquist said. The suspect who lost his weapon was additionally de9cribed as about five foot, 11 Inches ln height and weigb.lng . about 18S poundS. He wore a brown corduroy jac}tet, jeans and a bat. said Engquist. (SeeaANDIT, Page AZ) Country Sieged SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP} -El ~vador, Central Amerlca'umallestcountry, '11188 • under a state of alege today alter. troops and police routed 6,000 de- m onstratora occupylng the capital'• main square to demand ' a new .,...ictmUaJ election. AutborWes &aid at le.ast flve- Mystery Ailment Fatal ATLA N T A I AP ) -Two· employes of lhC' national Center for Disease Control who worked in the laboratory where virus dis- eases are studied have died of a m ysterious ailment, the center said today. Laboratory tests were under way to try to determine the nature of the ailment from which the warehouseman and main- tenance man died . Neither was involved in actual research on ''legionnaires' di sease" or other disea ses investigated in the building. Both displayed s imilar symptoms, which the CDC said a ppear lo be rC'lated to flu. Don Berreth, director of lhe of- fice of information, emphasized that onl y the tests would de· t e rm 1nc if 1t w a:; flu . A s pokesman said it may take several days to find the cause. "Chnlcally, th.is does not seem to be "legionnaires· disea:ie,'' Berreth said. "but we are looking al everything. "There does not ap~ar lo be any usual Illness among the other employe&." he added. (See AJLMENT, Page A2J Coast 7 Weather Sunny with norlhwe~t to northerly winds IS to 30 miles per hour throueh Wednesd'ay. Cooler with lows tonight 37 to 42. Highs Wedne5day near 60. I NSIDE TODAY A 25-uear-old New Jffttfl f ou rf.tt 1DOLlced . ac rou the Ken11a borcl6 todav, the /int Amencan to teaw Uganda a/ter Prelidftd ldi A min U/ted the ollder bonning U .S. cittzem from Jtamng. See lfOfll on PCJ{1ft A4. ··-· Before the suapect could· 1pea1t, HoffO'llD anbbed the• 0uian11 vm and bejao wrdt.Ung Wl~ Wm. Tbe derk ~ed tbe.' Americans staying in Ugan- ' da (dark area of map) are now free to leave the coun- try, ac~g to President Jdl Amin. <See story, Page ~··>-------·---. pe raona were kllled ancl 71. , wounded. ,• f ... ~ -CAP)-IW ...... .._...., ..... , .... _.,.,.... ... ,. • t:..::i .. ~ =·-...... "'*'.. ... .... Big Arrives The framework for the huge platform in the Santa Barbara Channel arrives off the coast near Goleta. A well blowout in 1969 had delayed delivery of the ri£ for e)ght years. Story on Page "'5. " Froaa Page A J FORCED ... ·ha ve bee n studyini:t what criminal charges may be fil ed ever since the first occurrence at Flocker's new home. Detective Welsh said Flocker, who maintains a business office a t 419 Main St, Huntington Beach, apparently hired a movie director some time ago with a · $10,000 retainer guarantee. Their plans and ph1losoph1es apparently soured and the d1rec· t or was discharged after rece1v· ing two-thirds of his fee but de· manded the rest of the contract price, Welsh srud. Flocker told investigators the SIC,000 director's fee was to have heen paid m increments of one· third each m explaining the odd SJ,334.40 sum he claims he was forced to pay at shotgun-point last month. One suspect 1s described as 35 to 40 years old, short and fat, with a deep. menacing voice. The second is bla<;k, or a very dark Latin man, roughly the same age, with deep, pitted acne scars and a thick, bushy black moustache, according to the v1c· ti ms. They reportedly ordered the victims lo stay m the house or race the consequences long enough for them to escape 1n both alleged extortion {'ases, police said. Key Slaying " Suspect Gets 12-year Term LOS ANGF.LES <AP) -A parolee who had been charged m the kidnap-murder of a Rus,moor housewirc has been sentenced to 12 years in prison for robl>Ulg a hank of $421. The sentenc(' was impos('<i on 27-year-old William Paul Gullt>tl of Aellnower Monday by U S Die; tr1ct Court Judge H arry Pregen;on for the holdup last Juh or a bank 1n La Ila bra Gullett alr<'ady wa4' on pa ml<' from a 1970 bank rob~rv con' 1r t1on · Gullett and Ronald Lewis Ew· ing, 27, of Bellnower had b(>t>n charged in the kidnap lute la'>t year of Joann Stegman and her three children in an attempt to <'xlort money from the woman's husband. Mr4'. Slel(man wa:o; round murdered two days arter an att('mpt lo collect the ransom was aborted. However; the charge!I were dropped because of l ock or evidence. ORANOICOAST s DAILY PILOT -n..o.-c..110.11, ...... __ ,,""" "'-"'° .............. _,_..,_°'_ "'" .. -..... c.-• ..., --... ,-... ="='~~~(~~:',,::.~,~ 11111-. Yalttf. t,11lf11t. '•Ht..e.c• v., .. , a.NI ~~=::...~~~· .. ·:J'"~~ t~:::t:.::.~1.T!~:.:.--" ... ·-"-"·~··flld~•""" .NG•c.wt ~ ........... ,_°'_ .. ~ ,,_.,._ ldl• T..:..6;..~ 0.....M.l.Mt •-1'-••u.u..IMo_• ... N_, omc-.. °""'•-t>lOW.tC ... -u. ............ , 11•0_.,...se,..t _,_ ...... ,, .. ,,9"dl ...... ...... ~!ONO Vtli.-t1Ultl la .... 11iM11 tl$MOI_,.._ Tele9flone (114)~ c1 .. 11nec1 Actvert1ll119 IQ.M11 ~·IN<-Ytli.y ..... ()llltt 511""10 ,,_s-c- •N-ONO ,.,_...,..°'--'°""""""'' .... • M0-1llO C...:'t: :. °:1~ '1':!.::: ... ~ ::1...-•t ••••rO"'"'"h fWt•'t:: :cf" ,...,fllfv<•d wltMwt '"d•t .,,fftln11• .. ~....... . , s..-..... -· ... """' at c-.1• -·· t.m .... , •. , .. •crltll•• •• u., .. , u it =~Zf."&:::!..~.:--~''· ...... , •• { Heroic SC Officer Victilll of Robbery A San Clemente reserve police officer who last year won the state's highest award for law en- forcement service: was the v1c· tim of an armed robbery today in Los Angeles. James R. Straus, reported his wallet and badge were stolen m the eariy morning incident re- portedly at his hotel room. Fro.a Page Al AILMENT • • Dead are George Flowers, 49, who died in an Atlanta hospital Sunday, and Robert Dubingon, 43, a retired military man who died at Ft. McPherson Army hospital in Atlanta about 3 a.m. today. Both worked in Building 7, one of 14 that make up the center. It contains lhe research laboratories ued for invesllga· tions bf diseases such as in· fluenza. smallpox, measles and ·'legionnaires' di~ease.' · or about 1,200 employes who work at the CDC here, about 900 have access to the research labor atone::.. FloY..ers, a warehouseman. de· livered laboratory supplies throughout the bu1ldang, and Oub1n~on. employed 10 maJn· tenance, worked in the basement and the first two floors, a spokesman said. They knew each other only casually, said Berreth, who described their s~ mptoms as fever. chtlls, vomiting and diar· rhea The cause or "legionnaires' disease." which k11led 29 persons Y..ho attended a state American Legion convention in Philadelphia last July, was 1den· tihcd as a bacterium only a few "eeks ago. Thf' source of that bacterium s"ill 1s unknovm and research m· to its ongm still is being carried out 1n Building 7 Although there was some tt>n-.eness among CDC t•mploycs toda~. a spoke-.man said non<' r<' fused to ~o into the restncted areas. Tax Relief Bill Critical SACRAM"ENTO CAP> -The long-brooding taxpayer protest has landed like a ruined tomcat an the lap of the Assembly Revenue and Taxation Commlltet?. At a hearing Monday, the ctm-· mittee began wading through a flood or property tax relief bills amid warnings that homeowners won'ttakehofor an answer. ''If property owners don't get some relief you're going to seethe biggest property tax strike you have ever come acros~ .. The people out there are very, very, very unhappy," said J ane Nerpel ofVanNuys. ,.,.... Pflfle .41 BANDIT.,,. The other suspect was about alx·foot. ooe inch in height and weighed about 180 pounds. He has a dark complexion and busby m~dium l ength Afro-style haircut and a mustache, police said. Farmers Protest MADRID, Spain (AP) -More than 40,000 farmers were report- ed blocking· northern hJlbwa)"I with their tract.on today ln an eeonocnlc protest that threatened to bJ'in« Spain'• ricb•t larmhlt region to a virtual standstill. \) Details of the crime were not av ail able and Straus could not be reached for comment. · Straus, an ins•rance. agent, was attending a business conven- tion. Straus was uninjured, his wife said. · The reserve policeman was cit· ed m August for heroism during the great San Clemente fire which destroyed or damaged 144 homes and caused an estimated $1.5 millipn in damage. Straus was injured In the fi.re as he stood on the roof of a home at 710 Avenida Columbo and beat back the approaching flames with a garden hose. The house next door exploded and names engulfed Straus who passed out on the roof of the home. The officer was rescued by firemen and his acti"RS in wetting down the roof of the home saved it. For his actions. Straus was given the certificate of valor by Eve lie Younger, California al· torney general. SF Man, 75, Kil"Led With Ice Hammer SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A 75-year old widower was beaten to death with an Ice hammer, Police said today. The bod.y was found on the floor· of his ransacked apartment Monday night. homicide inspec- tor Frank McCoy said. He said police were called lo the scene by neighbors who became suspicious becetase the tenant's mail and newspapers had not been picked up. The victim's n ame \lfaS withheld pending notification of relatives. . In two oe.lH!r unrelated killings, M'c Coy and ins pector Dave Toschl made arrests Monday. A 17-year-old Mission High School senior was taken into custody in the slaytn1 of cab drt ver Michael Albert, 29. The in· spectors saJd Albert was shot to death Feb. 5 ut a robbery by two young men he had picked up. The officers also took into ciutody James F. Coates, 20, an unemployed Palo Alto man. He was booked fo r investigation in the fatal shooting of Jay A. Scott, 26, also Feb. 5. Identity Sought OCEANSIDE <AP) Coroner's officers said they were attempting to establish the iden- tity ot a manaled man appareni- ly struck by senral cara·aa be tried to crou lntentate 5 Mo11-. day night. . Eggciting Competition · BURR OAlt., Iowa (AP) -Art Rakow answeted a challenge to bis "lf · proclaimed raw ei1 eating c hampions hip, gulplpg dowa 64 or the pr.alrle oyaten in 18 minutes 15. ~econds. ' About zoo speetaton in McCabe's supper club here watched as Rakow, 6S. a reUred Burr Qak construe· tlc>o worker, w~nt one up on Howard Newell of Clovis, Calli . Rakow aparked tbe cballeQJo mat.eh Jaa.. If, consuming so.raw~ lo '2 mln'411. TU daya later, Newell resp(llDded wWa a sa-eudfort.. , -.. ~ hl• life have After ,._a•• Mei Pf*l Wider bilt l&lL ...,.-Cl/I ca~~~-~-:! ........ not\O~ tow• d;dde Its bed1et. and 1HdV.~1-ut to explaln bl• Three -w:-chililren , • • ·~1-..mat1le..._ .. • Solmeniten, WJlO IDOffd \0 ~ COWD d 1.300 .IMt fill and erect..s a fence aro.andl bis spacW.. mate. told nelf}lbon Remain in Hospi'tal . that the fence as lo diacourage Soviet agenta rotn harassing bim. "Messages have been put un· der my 1ate with tbftats to kill me and my family," he said wi tho.ut elabotatinl. "My fence preve nts your snowmobiles and hunters from going on thelr way. I am sorry for that and ask you to forgive me, but I bad..&o protect myself from certaill types of c&lW'banees," be said in his 20-minute speech. The 58-year-old Nobel Prize· winoiog author, accornpanied by bis wife, Natalya, also said the seclusion was vital to his writing. "I like il very much here, but I don't want the fence to be un· pleasant for yo\.f here," he said, speaking through an interpreter. "All my life consists of only one thing -work," he added. "And the characteristic of my Three Fountain Valley grade school children were reported in atable COQdition today at Fou,n- tain Community Hospital after S\lffering injuries ln an auto acci· dent Monday morning, officials reported. One d the youngsters is suffer- ing from a broken cheek 6one and a fractured rib. The other two are suffering from head trauma, hospital officials said. The accident i~oJved a total o( eight children efi route to St. Barbar;a 's Catholic School in Santa Ana. The children were driven by Kalh~n Payne, 34, of 9029 Bitteroot Circle, Fountain Valley, in a privately-owned sta· lion wagon. A passing .sedan driven by a 16-year-old Santa Ana resident collided with the station wagon al woriv.;..-. ::=: j?::::.:~ _.,.,~...._ terruptions andpauses. •• ... ~£\~ C0100 ~., Solzbenit.syn was exited from t.AJr J IUVIiJ Russia in February 1974 and lived in Zurich, Switzerland, WAl'W ARD COW'S before moving lo Vermont late lastyear. CHULA VISTA CAP> -Ten He said h1.s decision to setUe in while-faced Holsteins were this south-central Vermont town, lassoed by police today af~er run· nestled in the rolling Green nlng wild through str eets, fences Mountains, was no accident. He and Jawns for four hours. Five chose Cavendish because or the more were reported loose. "simple way or life of the ~le; Rope-toting police officers said the countryside and the long win· they were unable to find out ters with snow whic h remind me where the cows were from. of Russia." A path ol apparenUy minor "J shall soon be 60. But ln all ' damacewu left. my life before, I have never had a Now from about 8 a .m. when lht sedan's brakes locked oo Ward Street near Edin1er Avenue, police said. · The sedan :struck the rear left - side or the wa100 knocking the vehicle lo.to a parked tractor· trailer rig. All those Involved in the accl· dent were taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Five children and both drive~ were released Monday momine, hospital officials s aid. The driver was nol held, police said. Birds Doomed Over Disease , SAN DIEGO CAP > -Exotic birds on sale in 56 shops in Southern California are going to be killed because of possible ex- posure to Newcastle disease, a federal official says. The shops dealt recently with a breedine farm in Alpine east of El c~ where a silver neck pheasant died or the contagious virus. The exposed birds, rang- ipg from "two or three" to around 100 per shop, will be suf· footed. All but six or the shops are located In San Diego County. Their owners will be reimbursed by the federal goveniment for UM loues ol birds. AMERICAN SAVINGS FREEf Taxpayers sumvatKit An easy.to-read guide to understanding some significant aspects of the complex new Income tax laws. The tax preparation profealonals at Tax Corporation of America have developed this Informative kit that wUI help you organize tax records and may save you money on tax.preparation. As a speclal bonus you'll get the American Savings' Gulde to Personal Financial Planning: il simple and easy.to-maintain system for controlling your budget. Come In to your neighborhood American Savings office and ask for your free Taxpayer's Survival KJt. OM kit per famlly. and adults only, please. Supply I• limited. Sorry. not avallable by mall. • A'ni'~f ica n 's 'hig~ interest-compounded daily . . ' ANNUAL 8.064! 7. 797: 6.98~ 5.92~ 6. 72°!'. 5.394J. YIELD• ANNUAL RATE 7%0/o 7%0/o 63,40/o 6%0/o 5%~ 51/44J. 9·10 Y't'MIS 4 YEARS OR MOAl 2•· Y£ARS OR MO~ •Y't'•R OR~ 3MONTHS D•YtN-OAVOVT l'IUS800!< l1000 Olll MOM • tOOO ()fl M()Af: \oOOOOR~ 11000 OR MOAE I'°° OR t.IOAE SIMINIMUM •Interest compounded dally e1ms lndlc1ted annu11 yield when m1lnt1lned tor one year ** Federtl rwgul•llOM require • tub1tant1a1 Interest penalty for ear1y withdrawal from certlllcate acoounll. FREE Se.-Sea vte.e (some with minimum balance requlred): Saft Deposit boxes • Travelers chKu • Checking accounts with a major statewide bank • Automatic savings/loan payments S ave·by-maU MrVk:e • Money orders • Free "ovu 62" checking account. • Social Security direct deposit• Notary acrvku •Statement savings• Check·a·month plans Telephone 'Jfansfer/DW.•Check Hrvlce • Truat deed and note coll«tlon t\o,k dbou t 0 111 D ollbll' Yo ur Morwv Account . ~-. . #~ • . \ 92 Years Safe Ii AMERICAN SAVINGS ~ • I Auets over $6 BWlon atrong Buena Park 82G1 La Pltma Ave. at Buena hrtc Center 522·2801 Cotta Mesa 825 Sunflower Ave. at South Coest Plaza 979-9800 Garden Grove 12141 Garden Grove Blvd. at Harbof BNd. 534-8690 . " Huntington Beach · · 7830 Edinger Ave. .. at Huntlngion Center ~ ~2222 . .. 8PEdAl. HOURS.to MTWe you ktter1 9:30 am to 5 30 pm MondAY' tf\rough Thursdbys,. F~ 'tt 6 pm Saturdayl 9'.30 am IO 2 pm. .1 • YOL 70, NO. 60, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES ORANGE Q')UNTY, CALI FOANtA TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1977 C TEN CENTS W ASlllNGTON CAP> -PraJ. derit cart. NDl Concreu his prOl>Qlal to create a Department of Eaero today, combining all J>r Part o1. at leut nine existing latencies with manpower totall.M nearty'20',IJOO. The proposed department ~ould have a budget of more 1.han $10.fl billion in fiscal urn. Tnutees' Policies I • !Re.capped I By MICHAEL PASKEVICU l Of Ille Dilly l'llot St.Ill l ' In what may be the last public 4ebate before next Tuesday's 1 -.:hool board election, seven of , Uie nine Newport-Mesa trustee hopefuls recap~ their plans for lplproving the district before a •mall audience in Newport »each today. r Although the impending finan· eial cutbacks of the Serrano de· ~sion has loomed as a major is· aue throughout the race, can· didates zeroed in today on local Jasues such as school curriculum, potential strikes and the middle Khool concept. . Incumbent Rod MacMillian (area 7, West Costa Mesa) and Vickie Ann Bridgeman Carea s. lJalboa lslanct and Peninsula) were absent from the Newport .Harbor Area Chamber of Com- 1'?1 e rce sponsored breakfast n)eeting. Once again' the exchanges ~~tween candidates were cor- cijal, although area 5 candidate Thomas Crosson said, "I'm not as thrilled as my opponent <in· cumbent Carol M(lrtin > about t.IUa district.'· Crosson claimed the d~trict's rfadlng program is Inadequate, there ls insulficlent counseling. vandalism is going unchecked and that drugs have infiltrated to the grade school level. • Mrs . Marlin believes the school board is working well. rneetina its challenges and that · -..,e should be educatin~ our eblldren lo be contributing mem· : be rs ot society.'' I Here ls a brief summary of trustee candJdates comments on . lbe following key issues: TEACHER STRIKES. Can- aldates N.C. O'Brien Carea 2. ~>rtheast Costa Mesa). Daniel •· allace Carea 4, Corona del ar > and Thomas Crosson stressed a hard line administra-~n stance in the event of a fttacher strike under the new col- lt':tive bargamln& law. Richmond Westlake Jr <area 2) and Peggy Carfy (area 4 ) sug· 1.Sted improved communication • the most effective means C'>l ~imiiing the chance of a teacher walkout MIDDLE SCHOOL CONCEPT: All candidates 11reed it Is time to re-evaluate t.lle diatiict's 10-year-old concept Which prea<'ntly haa sixth •radera ft\rolted with sewnth .. ~d eighth eraders at live ot the dlttrict 'a alx middle schoolA. "Westlake supports a parental ruon whether lo enroll lhelr six· craders in a middle school or p them an extra year ln an '*'"mentary environment while iponent O'Brien said he sup-~rta the present concept cause ol the costs involved in hanetniit. · ''Miss Carey and Wallace both Hid tltey werf philosophically 91posed to the middle school con· cwpt and would like to see a de- eper analysis of its effecUveness. CSeeTR1JSTEES, Paae A2) I .,......,_. ~IMtftl , ' Americans ai.,ytng in u aan· • (dark area. of map> 81'e now free to leave the coun· tty. according to President Mi Amin. <See story, Page M .) J -Gets Energy Unit ProposQI Ca.rter'a..MU would abolish u muapmeat ~ al&boro oil aad iadepend"lnt asenciu the natural au areas between the Federal Enerty Admin1.sUatlon new deP&rtment and t.be Depart- < FEM. the Enerd Research menf Ol lnterlor which bu that and Development Admh1Jstra-• reapomibillty. ti.PD <ERDA> ud the Federal The ~al would also place Power CommiJalon CPPC). ln the new energy department tn· And ln an unusual ananee-terior's re&k>aal ele<:lric power men t. it would divide marketinc programs and the responsibility for the leasing and Bureau of Mines fuels data pro- Ofl,., ...... --. ... tr+O. 0'0-A 'IT SOUNDED LIKE THE ROOF BLEW OFF' Wind Victim Jen Buch.tlen Outakfe Her CHt• MeH Home . . ·Roof Blows Off Wind Rips Top From Home By STEVE MITCHELL OI-O.tly l'ii.t Sutt "ll sounded Just Like the roof blew o(f. '· s aid Mrs . Jan Buchanan When tbey went outside to look. .>1arge P>rt.ion or the roof on their three-story, six-year-old home was laid back. and gravel cov- ered the street as far as three "And. sure enough, at did." the houses away. Costa Mesa woman laughed Mrs. Buchanan said she 1s not Mrs . Buchanan. an Orange Coast College instructor. said she and htt two children were at home at 11 1~ this morning when they heard a loud scraping sound outs ide County Man Held at Border SAN DIEGO CAP> -The Secret ~rvice saya it is continu- ing an lnvestigaUon into the case -of an Anaheim man arrested at the border with botus SlOO bills. Culltoms agents said they found $10,800 In counterfeit money and a small quantity of cocaine in the possesslon ol An- thony J. Vertucci, 26, aa he at- tempted to enter the United States from Mexico Sunday at the San Ysidro crossini. During a preliminary bearing Monday, U.S . Magistnte J . Edward Harris ut b9il for Vertucci at $10,000. sure if the UlSurance policy on the home at 1871" Parkview Circle covetl' wind damage. ''The Insurance company phone lines have been busy and I haven't been able to get through, .. abe said at noon today. Her two children, Bill. 12 and Sue, 19, were h~e sick when strong wlnda ri the roofing from ~house. "I was lyin1 In bed when I beard a loud noise and saw a shadow outside my window." Bill said . "He was scared to death, .. his sister laughed. Bill ran downstairs and told his mother tbe roof was damaged. I "I just didn't believe him," Mrs. Buchanan said. "We figured a tree blew over or somethin1. R~fs just don't fall off.'' she saJd, shaking her head. "The lady who lives next door said her roof blew off the first year she moved in.'' she added. "Maybe the bllilder should re- evaluate his work," Mrs. Buch~ said. "We're just trying to keep our ~eme ~ humor until we hear &om the insurance people." * * * Gwts Reaeh 50 lflPB 1ram; eoatlol over the rate of ex- ploralkm al the Naval Petroleum Reserve U.-Alul&a, an area to be managed by Interior; and juriadicUon over petroleum re- serves in Callfomia and Wyom- inc and oil shale reserves ii) Colorado and Utah . ·The proposed energy depart- ment would plck up other pro- trams rrom the Commerce Department. the Department. ol Houain& and Urban Denlop· ment. the ~urities and Ex- change Commission and the In· terstate Commt~e Commission. In this letter transmitting the bill to Congress, <;art.er said. "Even with a new Department of Energy problems of in · .,, terdepartmental coordination will remain, since virtuaJl)' all government actlvaty affects enersy to some extent. ··Establishing this depart- ment, however, will 1ive us one government body with sufficient. scope and authority to do the massive job that remains \o be done," be added. ess Kills 2 Cause of Ailment Mystery . . AT LA NTA !AP l Two employei;.of the 11.:alional Center for DlSease Control 11 ho Y·orked in the laboratory where d r us d1i.· eases are studied ha·:e died of a mys terious :iiJment, the center said today. Laboratory tests were under v. ay to try lo determine the nature of the ailment from wtnch the warehousem an and main· tenance man died Neither ~as in volved in actual research on "legionnaires' dit1e::ise" or other Mesa Views Federal Job Funds Costa Mesa 1s going to get more than a hair million dollars in CederaJ Manpower funds to provide jobs lo 68 unemployed or underemployed residents. City J>('l'sonncl officials are ac· cepling applications for the jobs. which range tn salary from ~ to $1 .161 per month, according to Rebecca S. Ross. an aide in the city's personnel office The city was notified last week by the Orange County Manpower Com mission. that $518.842 in Comprehensive Employment and Trauung Act CC ETA 1 tunds had been approved 101 city use. A portion of the funds will be used to extend eight CET A posi lions currently filleo. The rest will go toward salaries of 60 new CETA employes. The JObs, mostly spec1 al pro· jects such as golf course and park improve ment, main· tenance, license and code en- rorcemenl programs. will be funded through September of this yeaf. The CETA jobs are only open to Costa Mesa residents who have been jobless for at least 15 weeks. Jobs are also ava1lablc for resid ents who a r e un· deremployed, Miss Ross added. Application$ are now being ac- cepted by the personnel depart· mont at 77 Fair Drive in Room 300. . Man Arrested Jn Bank Heist SACRAMENTO CAPl -A 36· year-old man has been charged with taking pprt in the Colfax bank robbery and shootout with police that left one robber dead. authorities say. Antonio Martinez was arreflled at a Sacramento gas station a few hours after the bank robbery last Thureday in an unrelated case, the FShald. The U.S. altorneyon Monday filed charges against ·Martinez in lhe Colfa:Jt bank rob· bery. said FBI agent Bill Dom. d iseases investigated in the building Both displa yed -;1 m ilar symptoms, which the CDC said appear to be related to flu . Don Berreth. director or the of· fice of information, cmµha:.ized that only the tests would dt!· l er min e if it v. 11s flu . A s poke!>man said 1l ma~ lake se\"cral days to rind the cau:.e. "Clinically. this doer-. not seem lo be "legionnaires· d1seusc ... Union Boss Still Gone LAS VEGAS cAPI Hopes that Ne\'ada labor leader Al Bramlet would be found began lo wane to· day as the fifth day passed without word from the powerful union boss. The 60·year-old Bramlet, president of the 22.000· member Local 226 of the Culinary Workert1 Union and tht'stateAFL·CIO, has not been heard from since Thursday ni ght. The last direct word from Bramlet was a telephone call to an ex· eculivc at lhe Dunes Hotel. Bramlet asked that Sl0,000 he delivered immediately to the cage of a do" ntown cai.mo. 3 Hazings Remain in CM Super Block Three houses r emain to be bulldozed or removed in Costa Mesa's downtown Super Block area, city orricials said today, and there appears to be no pro- blem with owners of two of the structures. But Mrs. Ruth Swope. an out- spoken 81-year-old widow, is still giving redevelopment propo- nents ulcers over the third house. "We've got one house coming down. probably today." said As· sistant City Manager William Dunn. "And the other one will be moved off the block sometime this month." Thal leaves Mrs Swope's house al 574 Center St .. a wood slat home that she rent.a lo a family oC five for $200 a month, before the city took possession last month. The city's plans for the block. bordered by Plumer and Center Streets on the north and south, and Park and Anaheim Avenues on the eut and west, Include $2.8 million in lmprov~ments. Plans call Cor a new fire sta- tion, expanded library, a com· munity center and. possibly, the elimination of Center Street, thereby joining the block with Lions Park. Berreth said, "but we are looking al everything. ·'There does not appear to be any usual illness among the other employes." he added. Dead are George Flowers, 49, who died in an Atlanta hospital Sunday. and Robert Dubingon, 43. a retired military man who died at "Ft. McPherson Atmy hospital in Atlanta about 3 a.m. today (See AILMENT, Page AZ) Jury Urges Punch Card Vote System The Orange County Grand Jury reeommended today that the Board of Supervisors put money in next year's budget to buy a punch card voting system. "Inasmuch as the preaent. cvote counting system> is cosUy an terms of manpower and materials and the tallying is slow. it is ti me to consider an · alternate method," the jury said. ll also noted that as many as 960,000 county r esidents may vote in 1980, roughly 100,000 more than last year. And. the jury added, at general e lection time the county's Colemao-Gyrex vote counters are already working close to capacity. The Grand Jury also noted that Orange County's votes last faJI weren't counted until 9:25 a.m . the day after the election, a finishing time that ranked the county S7th among California's 58 counties. The t'!r74-7S county <;;rand Jury also recommended that the COUD· ty abandon its vote counting machines in favor of a punch card system. But the '75-76 jury praised the Board of Supervisors for banging on to the Coleman-Gyrex system ··rather than {voting) to r,eplace it... ...I But today's Grand Jury report pointed out what the jury sees as the advantages or the punch card voting system, including: -Versatility that allows them to be used in primary and general elections as well as in local elections. -''Simple and efficient" voter use. More economical upkeep and storage. -Lower ballot printing costs. Coast l\'eatber Sunny with northwest to northerly winds 15 to 30 miles per hour throu1b Wednesday. Cooler with lows tonitht 37 lo 42. Highs Wednesday near 80. March Winds Roar In But Mrs;Swope has repeatedly told city officials that she does not want to part with the Center Street house at any price. Md her tenant.a, a woman and ber three ct\lldren and father, stlll remain in the structure INSmETODAY A ~ Nr111 Jnlfv touri1t walUd .aero" the Kenua bot1f.tr fodav, lhc ffr.t Am•ricaa to ~ Uganda a/t er Prt..,., ldl Amin lifted .thf order banning U.S. cUuem from lea1'fno. See ltOf'JI °"Page A4. T~ to form, Karch wiAds came roaring like a lion lnt.o Orant~ County today. iusun& ~ to 50 mpb in local hatbon and causing sporadic power oui..cea d\le to u.es blowlQI lnto residen- tial service linea. T.be National Weather Service foreeaat calls for dlmlftlJbtd winds by WtdnesdaJ with con· tinued clear akin, but coc6r temper1tu:tt$. Wedn.ctay b{ghs should rucb about eo d ~ wlt.b etlap mgttWme tows about 45 alone the Oranie Cout. TodQ'• iustt led to •mall c-taft advisories for the entire coastal al'••· Coaul seas had swen1 of nve to 1~ feet. At Dan.a Polnt Harbor, • sPokeaman reported water thrubinl over the b~U"Nater. However, no Mriou8 btutkal problems wero reported 1b~ most yachtmen c:hoM not t. veo- ture out ln the rOugh 1eu. lndhldual bomea In C~a Mesa, HunUnctoG Beach, Pouo- taln Valley and Newport 9each were without power tor a abort time earq today after susts blew tree brandM:9 lnto power lines. A apoketm•n for the EdJaon Com9any said the oUtages were sbort-UY«l and that all lines were operatin1 normally by mid-mornm,. 'traveler's advisories have been Issued for all tnOGntain and desert areas when winds up to u mpb haw ticked up •and and made drlvtnc condttlona baaatdoiis. Th• .iMs were beavy tnouab #.o .~ most litbl plane1 a& Oran1c Count)' Al.rpc>rt and ~m­merclal nJ1ht3 altered tbelt ru1ht pattens to land from the ICM.ltb instead ol th• 40l1.b. • tev«al months after a city man- dat.efor them to move out. C~ Mesa took posseulon ol homes Jn the Super Block last Jan. 8 UDlk!r ecodemnatkm ae- tJon. Most ol tbe oearly 20 home owners sold their propertles to lbe city~ mcS tlle f• rernabUU tloldouu eventually comptleCl with tbt CCIDdemnation ord.,-. But kn. Swope's teoaota con- tinue to i_pore orden to vaeat. die 2:S-ye.ar-old bocne. Ctt;y Manqer Fred SorJ•baJ said a reloeatkln naistan~ f'inn, bind by the clif, hu founcl four <See &AllNGS. .... Al) ..... ' c t * * * MaeMillian Ri111ning ~ Unop~ fEdftor'1 ~•: Rodmct tfoc- MUUan ii nmftPlg u~ .. trudn ONO 7 (Wm Coda ltlao). TM •z.ctbl u NOJ'Ch I. J aed •ac•lllla•. 49, 111s Anaheim !lve., Coeta Ilea' ls married with · six children, one ol whom is still '11T01Jed in a district school Edacallon: Graduate or Newport Harbor High, Orange Coast Mld!UWAN ColJege and Long Beach State. He bas served on the Newport- M esa school board for 12 years while employed as a social worker. Spedal Qualifications: "I have lived in the district for 45 years and have been director of the Harbor Area baseball program for 31 years. I think these two fac- tors help give me a fine perspec- tive of the district that other can- didates don't have.'' Key iuDeS fadn1 the district: "Well, the major problems are collective bargaining, Serrano and declining enrollment. There is also the traditional problem of improving com muolcation between parents and the district. "Tenure is generally good. It keeps the teaching profession clean from personal interests ·and political efforts of those who exercise 'clout' if possible. But a review oflenure laws 1s needed." .. Wby are you more qualified than others? "Basically, my knowled1e of the district enables me to look at problems better than a newcomer. I have Jreat lnlen>st..,,- in the youth of our commuruTy and have formed a pipeline to that part of the district through my counseling work." TONIGHT OCC WOMEN'S WEEK Fat ms sp eakers. wo rkshops Caroly~ Bird. Sc ience Hall, 7 p.m. ''RElll N D THE flEADLINES" Dr Giles T Brown lecturer, OCC f orum. 7 .JO p.m WEDNESDAY.MARCH2 SOUTH AFRICAN BLACK '77 THEATER -Two dramas by Bl ack South Arr1can actors from .J o h annesbu rg . Drama Lab Theater. March 2·5, 8 p m fl. JAPANESE ART SHOW - OCC.: Art Gallery, March 2·April 1; OCC LECTURE "Create a !"Jew lma~e. ·· Fine Arts Bldg 119.7 JOpm COPS CORR.4L WAYWARD COWS CHULA VISTA <AP> Ten white.faced Holsteins were la11soed by police today af\er run- ning wild through streets, fonc.-s and lawns for four hours. Fi ve more were reported loose. Rope.tot1ng pol Ice officers said they were unable to find out where the cows were from. A path of apparently minor damage was left. O"ANQI COAST DAILY PILOT ' ll-'11f-~.,.,.,.,\t .,.. ~'~ JM••·C-. vi..~ .......... _.~ ~--(flt .. "-::..:.~ -;;r.:- 0-. If l-.. _..._ "'"""""' ""'_. .. ·~ C:O.UMH•Offlw Mol""' :.:..-:::• :•n~-:MO . ._ Otne.• -~ ........ ~~::':\?.·;:~.:;;"' ~--· ll••lf•• ""'""""·-.. -0 .... l'r- T1la~ (rt4)to.4111 a..._a~tc:MS71 es _g la Area Five Bridgeman, Croaon, MIU'lin r1e Yldde Aim .....,..Mt n . m hb'y A ....... Balboa lalaDd. bl recre11U1 married wltb oo e~ a part-Ume •tucleM."' bouewtf~. ~b aalltant 1n, public ad· minlatralion and oc · caslonally works as a ride operator at Dis· neyland.. Edaeatloa: Attended Oranie Coun- t y p u b I i c •••C>OaMAM scbools and is a senior in public administration at Cal State Fullerton. Spedal QaaUficatJoa1: Cur- rent education in public ad- mUtiltratioo and budgeting ex- perience. ~ey luues facing the district: "Obviously the Serrano fund- ing uaue is a key problem. It will take tax money away from the area and no one is anxious to see local quality go down. I'd like to , see a. move towards equalizing poorer districts up to our stan-dards." Mrs. Bridgeman supports clos· ing more schools to help minimiu financial problems and also favors a more sophisticated screening process for teachers under the present tenure system. ''There's an oversupply of teachers so there's no reason to accept low qoali ty," she said. Wby a.re yoa more qualified than others? "I don't have any children. which is a benefit. and I have an eye on the future of district stu- dents. I wish to start input mto the community and I feel the school board is a good vehicle." "'--a. Cw fl Tl. 42, "' 212 Sappldre Ave., Balboa 1a1and. D manied wttb foar clilldreo. ad ol wbom CWTeatly auend dlstriet· 1cbooil. A local raldent for za· yean, Crouon runs an advmiain1 aaeocy in Newport ~ach. £dacatl•: B. A. in busl· n~s from St. Mary's College. Special Qaallflca- t I o a a : Member Big uosSOM Brothers and president-elect of Newport-Balboa Rotary Club. Key lssaes ladng the district: "Besides the widely publicized Serrano situation, 1 feel there is a problem with the lack of fun- damentals such as reading and writing." "I think we need a complete re- vamping of the counseling system as far as the number of students each counselor handles and an annual testing program to evaluate students." Cr0sson would also like to see further investigation into student drug use and $Uggests more on- premlses caretakers as a possible solution to vandalism at local schools. Why a.re you more qualified than others? "l think I would be a stronger personality on the board than the incumbent. I would eliminate the noddmg of heads I see at board meetmgs, and 1( something is im- portant, it should be dug into more deeply. To much idJe time is belng spent simply filling up the minutes of the meeting." Frata Page Al DEADLY AILMENT • • • Both worked in Building 7, one of 14 that make up the center. It contains the re s ear c h laboratories ued for investiga- tions of diseases such as in· flue·nza. smallpox, measles and "legionnaires' disease." Of about l ,200 employes who work at the CDC here, about 900 have access to the research laboratones. Flowers, a warehouseman, de- ll vered laboratory s upplies throughout the building, and Dubingon. employed in mam tenance. worked in the basement and the first two floors, a spokesman said They knew each other only cas ually, said Berreth, who described their symptoms as fever , dulls, vomiting and diar- rhea . The cause of "legionnaire-;' disease," which killt'd 29 pe"ons who attended a state American L eg i o n co n ve nt io n 1n Ph1ladelph1a last July. was 1den- t1f1ed as a bacterium only a few weeks ago The source of that bactenum FromP~AJ HAZINGS. • • places for the tenants lo move. but added the tenants will not go out and look al the homes. "We·re nol Jtotng to bc "ogres about It. but our attorneys have given Mrs. Swope·s tenants a Mar<'h LS deadline to move out or be evicted ... Sorsabal said t..'ndcr condt'mnat1on proceed· in1s. St>rsabal said. the t'ity hus an obligation to Cip.d suitable similar housing for ~omeowners and tenants who lose their re· sidences to the action. · "But when they conUnue to ig- nore our letters and won 'l even 10 out and see the places our re- location people have found for them. then we really don't have much choice," Sorsabal said. Mrs. Swope, however,•aid she doesn't blame her tenants tor not looldnc at the four replacement hous•. ''The city agreed to find a three-bedroom place for them to move into," Mrs. Swope said. "And they agreed to get her 1omethi.ng close by, so why don't they do it?" A spokesman from the El Se1u.ncto-based relocation firm Hid hi.a ftnn is sWl looking for .suJtable boualng for the family. •'The woman wants a t.bree- bedroom houae, but with the number of people living there, we are looking for • four-bedroom dwelllnc," the spokesman said. Drinking Talk Set Dr. Jack ff. Mendebon, ·a ~mber of t he American ftf edluJ Society on AlcohoU.m, wm dikuas problem drinking Wednesday at 12:1s p.m. at Ralellh Hlllt Hospital. 181 DovtT Drive, Newpois ilncb. The lee. lure open to tlte pub!!c still is unknown and research in· to its on gin slill 1s being carried out m Building 7. Although there was some tenseness among CDC employes today, a spokesman said none re- fused to ao into the restricted areas F.-...PageAI TRUSTEES ... Betty Jo Balley. who is running against Wallace and Miss Carey in Corona del Mar. said she would maintain ob1ectivlly on the subject e~n though she has a t'hild currently enrollt'd In fifth grade at Harbor View Elemen- tary. Harbor View parents recently callt'd on lne i.c hool board to al- low their flftn graders to remain at the school for another year rather than be trans ferred to Lln-roln Middle School. SCHOO L CU RRlCULUM : C'and1datcs agreed there is a need for a closer look at in· d1vidual classes with an eye on sterner preparation fo r college. Cand idates expressed concern that high school seniors are often left with little to do during the final year and contended that some lt'achers are doubling up in rla<;sc>S the) arc not qualified to te:ich SF Man, 75, Killed With Ice Hammer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 75 year·old widower was beaten to death with an ice hammer, police said today. The body was found on the floor or h1a ransacked apartment Monday nJ1ht. homicide inspec- tor Frank McCoy said. He-said potlce were called to the scene by neighbors who became suspicious because the tenant's mall and newspapers had not been picked up. The victim's name was withheld pending notification of relatives. In two other unrelated killings, McCoy and inspector Dave ToschJ made arrests Monday. A 17·year·old Mission ·m1h School aenJor was taken into custody in the slayillg of cab driver Michael Albert, 29. The in~ spectors said Albert wu gbot to death Feb. 5 In a robbery by two young men he had pit'kcd up. . The offlcera idso took Into ct1.1tody James F. Coates, 20, an unemployed Palo Alto man. He was booked for investJ1aUoa lo the f'l,tal abooUn1 or Jay A Scott. 28, aflo Feb 5 • • C8"1 ..... •· ollnt W. Ocan ...... Nw»Ort Bad. .. u.. 1Dcmabelll la1Jowtn1 ..... Polntmmt two,..,. •to. Sb• a. married wllb th1M dauaht.en. au attendinc dlstrtn schools. E4MaU..: B .A . and teacbln, c redenll a from UCLA and graduate work in education at Stanford Univenity. Author in Seclusion Apo/,ogizes to T~ S p e e I a I M.HTtN QaallflcatloH: Incumbent with bustoeu experience serving on Newport Beach Transportation Committee. She is alao a local PTA board member. Key..._. fada1 lhe district: In llibt cl the impending flnan- cial cutbacks of Serrano, Mrs. Martin believes "tax reform i. essential." "We need tight !heal control and· effective com- municatioo between parents and the district to lnaure the success of the board in matntainine loeal control. •'Teacher lenW'e is a problem, not just to the admlnistraUon but to teachers because or the dif. ficulty of operating under declln· ing enrollment conditions. Although tenure is a problem, Its something the legislature muat become involved with. "Also, we must work at setting. education priorities for every child and maintain high quality.'' Why a.re yoa more qualified than others? "I know the strengths, pro- blems and needs of the district. I can, and will give the time necessary to do the job and help the district move ahead from where it is now." CAVENDISH. VL (AP) -Ex· iled Russian author Alexander Solzhenitsyn bas emerged from bis estate to apologize to neigbbon fOI' building a fence which be said be needs becaua~ notes threatening bis Ule have been alipped under bis iate. He appeared Monday niiJil at Cavendiab'1 New En1land·1tyle town meet.ins. not to help the town decide Its budget and leaders, but to explain his secluded lllestyle. Solzhenitsyn, who moved to Ulla town of 1.200 Jut fall and et'~cted a fence around his spacious estate, told~ neighbors that the rence was to dl1courage Soviet agents from harassing hlm. "Mesaa,-es have been put un- der my gate with threats to kill me ancL..my family," be said without elaborating. "My fence preyents your snowmobiles and hunters from golni on their way. I am sorry for that and ask you to forgive me, but I had to protect myself from certain types of disturbances," be sald in his 20·minute speech. · The SS.year-old Nobel Prize- winning author. accompanied by his wife, Natalya, also said the seclusion was vital to his writini. "I like it nry much here, but I don't want the fence to be un- pleasant (or you here," be said, ape·aklng through an interpreter. f Taxpayer's Survival Kit An ~sy-to-read guide to understanding some significant aspects of the complex new Income taJC laws. The tax preparallon professionals at Tax Corporation of Amerk:a have developed this Informative kit that will help you organize tax records and may save you money on tax preparation. As a special bonus you'll get the American Savings' Gulde to Personal Financial Planning: a simple and easy-to-maintain system for controlling your budget. Come In to your neighborhood American Savings offlce and ask for your free Taxpayer's Survival Kit. One kit per family, and adults only, please. Supply Is limited. Sorry. not available by mall. "All my IUe consists of only one lblng -work," he added. "And the characteristic of my work does not J>UDlil sudden in· terrupUons and pauses." Solzbenitayn was exiled from Russia in February 1974 and lived in Zurich, Switzerland, before movin& to V tirmont late last year. He said hls decision to settle in this south·central Vermont town, nestled in the rolling Green Mountains, was no accident. He chose Cavendish because of the "simple way of life of the people. thie countryside and the long win- ters with snow whlcb rem.ind me of Russia." "I shall soon be 60. But in all my life before, I have never had a permanent home._" bP. uid. When be firushed, Solzhenitsyn received a standing ovation from thos e gathered in the local school's assembly hall. He paused to shake hands with severa1 townspeople and left the meeting as quietly as he entered -leaving the town to transact business. Help Ref used LOS ANGELES (AP) -The City Council has refused to in- tercede to slop the eviction of re- • sidents or a condemned hotel in Li tllc Tokyo. A1_11erican' s high interest-compounded daily ANNUA.l 8.06!: 7.79~ 6.98~ 5 .92~ 6 . 72°!'. 5 .393 YIELD• ANNUAL 7 3,43 7 l/2"1o 6 3,43 6 1/23 5 %3 5¥43 RATE e.10 Yf:Af'IS • YlAl!S Oii t.t()lll( 2-, YEAR$ ()I! MORE 1 VEAR OR MORE 3 MOMlMS 0AY IH-OAY OUT ""'SSllOOI< st ooo OA i.tOfll 11000 OR MORE 1•000 Oii liolOfllE S•OOO ()IHIOAf: S'°°OAMOfll! HM~"'W * lnler••I compounded dilly Hrns lnd1c1ted 1nnu11 yield when maintained for one yesr **Federal r.gulatlona • require 11ub1t1nt111 Interest pen1lty for early withdrawal from cert1f1c:1te 1ccounts. FREE !fa•et" Savic .. (some with minimum balance required): Safe Deposit boxes • Travelen checks • Checking accounts with a major statewide bank • Automatic savings/loan payments Save·by·mall ae1Vk:e •Money ordert •Free "over 62" checking account•• Social Security direct deposit • Notary services • Statement savings • Check·a-month plan• Telephone Tranafer/Dlal·•Chuk service • Trult deed and note collectJon Ask ilbout our l>ouhll' Your Morn•y Account. 92 Years Safe [ii 8 AMERICAN SAVINGS Asset• over $6 Billion strong ' Conwini.nt oMoH Mf'Vfng louthefn end NOfthem CelJfomla, lncludltlg: Buena Partc 8231 La Palma Ave. at Buon• Partc Center 522·2801 ComMeu 825 Sunnower Ave. qt South Coast Plaza 970-9800 Garden Grove 12141 Garden Grove Blvd. al Harbor BIVd. 534-8690 Huntington Beach 7830 Edinger Ave. at Huntington Center 848-2222 6P£CIAt. HOURS·to .._.. roa Mtt.tt 9:30 am to 5·30 pm Monet.~ through Thundoys. Fnd.ys 'tO 6 pm. Setun:ioys 9.30 em to 2 pm r • .... . .. I ' j o.lly "'-~ ...... MEN ANO WOMEN OF LAGUNA BEACH LAWN BOWLING CLUB DO THEIR THING ON THE GRASS It'• Not a SlmpeGame, aa NewcomeretoThtaUnlque Sport Wiii Teii You Game Bowls 'em Over lAguna, Beach Lawn Playing 'EX<Uperating'· By PJOUP ROSMARIN Ol I._ OaH, "ltot Sl•ll Almost any d~y you can watt h the men and women of the Laguna Beach Lawn Bowling Club heft a 31r.i Pound black ball ·set the feet just so. crouch, take a step, draw back the arm, swing it forward and s end the ball rolling 100 feet down a grass lane toward another. ltttle while, ball Or not really toward 1t. Jf you roll your bowl directly at the white ball <they call it a Jack, Jail and Fine visiting Canadians call it a kitty 1 you'll shoot wide. · The bowls are unevenly weighted, or biased , which means if you grip it one way it'll roll to the left. Turn it over in your hand and it'll roll to the right. . · Most beginners find it doesn't matter how they hold the bowl, 1t JUSt sort of wobbles down the track dipsy doodle until inertia gets the'-better of It Thjs off.center bias of the ball gives the game all sorts of 1n Oregon Bans Sale Of Fluorocarbons PORTLAND, Ore. !AP 1 Oregon became the first state to ban the sale of 'sprays that use fluorocarbons as propellants to- day. but it still hasn't decadeed how to enforce the ban odorant can cross the state line to buy it. Major retail chains began pre-~aring ftthe deadline some tame ago. Fred eyer .· Inc . \\hich teresting possibilities that makes putting "English" on a billiard ball look like child's play. lo fact, an doubles or tnples play it takes two people to decide where the bowl should be rolled for best effect. The bowler stand~ at one end of the lane and his teammate at the other end near the Jack and makes motions ltke a surveyor. The strength of the roll. where 1t 's aimed, probably even the wind speed have to do with where the bowl will end up. The bowlers seem to have de- veloped the ab1ltty to cofitrol the roll ofthe bowl even after it's left their hands. Techniques are endless One man looses his bowl. lakes a squat w1de·legged stance.· throws his arms wide and shim- mies his body right or left de- pending on the need. Another takes the traditional bowling posture most have seen in indoor tenpins. releases the bowl in a crouch-and stays there, bowling arm flung forward. a kind of living bas· relier. U anythmg he crouches even lower until the bowl has stopped rollmg. Two yeas ago, lawmakeri. cit ed evidence that fluoro- • carbons damage the earth's pro- tective ozone layer. The law they adopted went mto effect todav operates 30 s tores in Oregon. posted signs idenbfyaog products known to contain nuorocarbons All w~e to be off the shelvec; to- day. said D~le Warmon Fred Meyer vice president for market tng Another man lakes his turn. rolds his hands in front of him at the same \ime be turns to inspect his bowl al an angle. and stares it toward the Jack. only a twitch of a cheek betra} ing where he ~ants 1tto go I Anyone com 1cled of selling the contraband cans fares a max tmum penalt) of one }t'lff an Jail and a Sl.000 fine The law doesn•t prohahtl U:-0(' or the sprays. at only ba n~ their sale. So anyone who wants to stick with a favorite aerosol oven-cleaner or u11clcr<1rm dti Three Rob Visitor at Drug Cente'k- A man who was plannine to vis 4t an 1nmalc al the Straiehl Ahead drug rehabihtatlon ct>nter ln Dana Point changed his mind Monday night wh~n three men robbed him all he parked hts car llear Ole facility Orange County Sheriff's of ricers said the thrtt blacks t~v t1re seeking drove their red Cadillac in front of victim Dem ing Kruse Smith. 24. or Orant(.-. as he parked in the lot at P1ctf1c Coast Highway and Street of lht> Golden Lantern und then de· manded his wallet. Officers said the trio drove oft et high speed with a wallet con- \aining 185 In cash, credit card~ and other documents. A dcscrip lion of thc auto aod the three m<'n has been circulated lo lowmen throughout the county Small :.tore:. were h«ivtng mon· trouble ·w e re crying J lot. :.aad Qob Rosenthal. manager or the Nob Hill Pharmacy in Portland "Ma mly. the pain in the neck 1s l don"t have any idea what cans have fluorocarbons in them.·· That's one o( the problems ~ 1th the law. Because there is no na- tional labeling requirement for s prays. retailers ha\ e trouble finding out wbich ones contain fluorocarbons Wholesalers say m nnufac turers are not telling them w~ich products have fluorocarbon pro- pellants. Rosenthal said. Many of the manufacturers. anUcipating a federal ban on fluorocarbons, already are sw1lchmg to spTay pumps or other types of pro- pellanL~ Rosenthal, like many Oregon retailers, has had his ael"MOI pro- ducts on sale at haU-prlce for a few weeks. I The law aJao does not specify ..,ho shall enforce the ban or who shaU be exempt. Tom Caton . executive !'ecretary of the State Board of Pharmacy, said, .. nobody is" de signattd as enforett. Wowever, Deputy Atty Gen. Jim Durham said IOC?al dlatrict attorneys will be responsible for prosecuting offenders. "Probably i{ somebody saw ~omebody selling the stutr," he said. ''they'd scream and the 0 . A 's office would pros~te " And all the while their partners on the other end are helping out ~1th an exhaustive repertoire of wiggles. gyration:. and Just plain hard studies ·'This 1s a stupid game lo watch." Bob Bauer. one of the players, whispered afterward. ·'The reason is no one knows what the score 1s or who's play- ing or for how long the game is." A scoreboard would help, he said. One tends lo agree after watching players bowl to one t>nd, waJk down to it and bowl back to I/ye end they just left. usually 14 times. And in between ends, all the lit- tle bowls are gathered into a half- c1rcle corral device on wheels so· meone pushes around to trap the bowls together "They call it a rake." Bauer confided. "The loser has to push 1t " He's exasperated. "Now. you take basketball Who would watch five mlnules if all they were doing ls dunking and you never .knew what the score 1s?" He added, ·•some of these tournaments are damn interest· 1ng " The intemat1onal cham· p1onships are held in Worthing, England. One spectator who thought Bauer made too much or a small game challenged him to a couple ends of bowling. "Your game doesn 'llook too tough," he said. The mfll was right. After the game, tie made it took fairly easy .. scooping the bowls into his rake ' , Dad Wants Son to Die Tot, Critically Hurt, Kept on Re1pira1Dr WILK~ BAR.RE, Pa. ,CAP> -car. Joseph Yenchalc, 22. was not. aprofessionaljudsment." 'IA grief-stricken father ~aid today charged. He spent several days Dr. Samuel Mackall and Dr. fl~ decided to stop his pleas that at the hospital after the accident Victor Ambnlso both or·wbom :•;5 3-year:old son • ..kdd1e, waiting for word on the boy's have treated t.ht boy were not ~ ntically in.Jured w~en hit by a condition. ava)lable for comment. Their -~·be allowed to die before bts On Monday. Rhodes asked for answtri.n& service said neither 1 RY :;::norates. . help ill 1ett.ing bo&pital oCfidala could be reached. ~ o , lhodes. answering _r~ to let the boy die. Jeddie has ~n unconscious rten q~tions In a hospital "He's dead,'' ~e said lo a •and in criUcal condition with al:way, ,said te ~ade the de-telephone intervtew Monday neck spine and internal injuries ~:' hia l~ a'!ily members "I& whole body is freezing cold. sin~ he was admitted Thursday ebo ' m to IS.ve up hope for Hls whole body is white. a nunlng supervisor said • e Y irrecovery. "His eyes are dark and bis face · ~Rhodes sald he and bis wife bu been ice cold for almost u R.hodes, a 27 -year-old till believe their boy Is dead, but hours now." mech.anlc, and hJs wife, Denise, ave aiteed. at le•at for a while, Rhodes had said be believed 20. have beell at tbe hospltal 1tve up the ftaht to turn off the th• respirator was slowly eaUne since then. Rhodes aald the doc- eaplrator keeping his Jungs the child away and erasing any tors told him ..to 10 home, c• ovinc. · chances tor having the ~y's some aleep and wait bJ the "" The youngster was struck cutetopeo. phone. Huaysbecan'llleep. "'bm he ~arted into the street in A .SW'fton rejected Rhodt'S' re-"Since the day he was ad· lront oC his house in the town of quest Mooday to remove the boy miUed, the doctor said th~ WU lvaarf'f'otch,fiveQlllessoutbol from tbe .retpiratol'I. A no cbanc.," Rhodes 1akt. •11 ~re. '1 . apokesmea foT MeYoeJ ffocpltal know bia brain is dead. Hi8 whole Police uld the driver of th~ bore called the ded.aJon "clearly bead ls dead ••. errano ·.Decision Repeal Proposed SACRAMENTO (AP> -A Newpiort Beach leclalator I.a pro-posing a repeal to nulllly the Serrano dec1s1on requiring Calilomia to equalize school dis· trict funding. Tbe coaatitutional amendment propoul was introduced Mon- day. .. If implemented, the Serrano decision will set California education back 100 yeari. Educators have worked for de- cades t.o identify the vat1oui. thin&s that eo into successfully teaching kids how to read, write and do arithmetic." said the author. Republican Sen. Dennis Carpenter. .. Now, stampeded by the State Supreme Court, the governor and some people appear ready to throw aJI this out the window and proclaim money as the sole answer. Well, it isn't ," added Carpeter. The State Supreme Court rul· ing says that the state's educa· tion funding system, based on local property taxes, dis· Finn Loses Medical Contract SACRAMENTO <APJ The State Department of Health says a Long Beach firm has lost a S6 miUion annual contract lo pro- vide medical care for 16.000 Lo~ Angeles and Orantie County Medi-Cal patients. Department deputy director Bruce Yarwood announced Mon day that Meclt·Cal cards were mailed this weekend to people served by the Family Health Program of Southern California Yarwood s aid medical societies and lota1" health of ficials have been asked to help persons tn the i.even-year·old Family Health Program find meCiical care He said that in:.tead of going lo the group health plan's offices ror medical care. the rec1p1ents now can go t.o any doctor or other medi ca l provid er wh o participates in the Medi Cal pro gram . Last Friday. the plan was de· nied a one-year renewal of its state contract because of "fanan cial maUers." Yarwood did not give details. but said federal and state officials have been looking into the program in recent weeks. Bandits Rob Te(lCher Class SACRAMENTO <AP> -TweQ- t y·three city school teachers were attending a special class a on "Teaching Children Use of Their Own Senses" when Ill popped two men armed with a gun and a knife Police reported Monday that the teachers were terrorized and robbed of $280 by the men, who wore stocking masks. Here it 1s March already and time to celebrate for those with an AQuamarine birthstone. • AQuamarine means sea water 'Mlat an apt name for this lovely greenish-blue to bluist-.-green gem. The finest are predominantly blue. We have a ring in our stock with a very fine. large AQuemar1ne set in it. One of tl'le mosl beautiful I have ever '""· It is 18x23x11MM 9merlld cut and wergtis 29.3t carats. Easily found In large flawless crystal•. It• very eppeerance produces • coo~ng. soothing effect. Just like the 98&. the deeper th•. stone the deeper the color' AQU1mlr1M OMdl to be fairly large to eichlbit good color Many fine stones today are ' heat-treahtd to intenalfy the blue cotor, end the process la perm1nent Aqu.-nwtne la a vartety of the mlMfW befyl The other lmoort~ wrt.-y ol tMNyt ta Em•ra14. Chromium, th• O.lly ~llOI StMf -· SEEKS SERRANO REPEAL Newport's Sen. Carpenter criminates against students in low-wealth districts. The nalln1 bu been unpopular ln wealth>' cliltricta. Under most. plans deslaned to meet. Serrano I.bey would have to share their taxea with poorer areas. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. an- nounced a plan Friday which would, in its final year, allow dis- tricts which contain 86 ~rcent of the state's students to raise amounts within $200 of each other at the same tax rate .. Brown's five-year, $3.7 billion program includes a revenue shartni provision. Carpenter's proposal would nullify the decision and allow a school financing system based on local fl.nances. But it would re- quire the state to insure enough funds for "basic education." "There~ unfairness in the ex- tremes between high wealth ~d low wealth school distrids," Carpenter said. "But this can be solved with state aid programs. We need to adjust the present system of school finance, not destroy it." The amendment is SCA 28. Eiglit Considered 23 . Coast Citizens Seek Transit Post By KATHY CLANCY Ol IM D•1ly ~ilet S14111 Twenty-three Orange Coast re- sidents are among the 80 people from throughout the county who have applted to be the public·at- large member of the new Orange County Transportation Com· m1ss1on. Commissioners decided Mon- day to keep secret the names of the top eight semi-finalists for the public member post. And while they earlier agreed to keep all names secret, a list of the 80 was released later Mynday through the offices or Supervisor Ralph Clark, one ofthe four com· missioners. The semifinalists will be In- terviewed privately by Com- m1ss1oners Ralph Diedrich and David Brandt. and the top two or three contenders will be ques- tioned publicly later this month. The commission was formed Roof Ripoff Clan Hunted Huntington Beach Police are searching today for a clan of gypsy con artists who have sold at least two Huntington Beach re- sidents faulty roofing jobs. According to Police Lt. Merle Schneblin, the con artists are peddling S240 roofing jobs that apparently wash off in the rain. He said at least two residents have been victimized and there may be others not yet reported. Police said the group selling roof jobs in this area may be part of the notorious Williamsons, a large clan that has long been blamed for roofing con jobs in California. this year under a new state law, giving it budget review powers over transit and local road- buildlng plans. Two members are county supervisors, two others are city councilmen and the fifth member is to ~selected by the other four from the public at large. Orange Coast residents seek· ing the post include Coultas S. LaBorde, Costa ~esa ; Jacques Warshauer, John G. Rau and W. P Hadley, Irvine; Ralph G. Marcarelli, Joseph J . Milkovich, Richard R. Healey, Michael K. Barnes and James A. Clark Huntington Beach. ' Also, Ray Messner, Laguna Hills: Robert A. McRae, Samuel S. Wray Jr., James Roosevelt Gilbert A. Henry, Richard B.' Dickson. Lowell M. McGinnis an'd Carol S. Jeffs. Newport Beach; Also, Richard C. Monroe, ·San Clemente; G. 8. Hallahan. "hagqna Beach; Conrad Blankenzee, James G. Berry and Richard John Hollinger, Foun- tain Valley; and Joseph Arthur ·wal~er, Corona del Mar. Fire Comest A Dry Affair LOS BANOS CAP)-California firemen will muster as usual this year t.o compete in their skills - but they won't be using much water. Dean Young, president of the California Firemen's Muster As- sociation. says up to 100,000 gallons usually is used in com- petition around the state each year. But the group has decidtd to forego most use of water this year because or the drouebt, he said . element which produces the green COior or Emerald, also producea other ctiaractertat1cs " which distinguish the gem fro"' Its sister stone. AQu1mar1ne is more abundant In nature than Emerald and therefore ls less costly. Golden Beryl and Morva• (the pink member of the beryl f1mlly) are also very lo~y 99m1. I bought a belutlful oval Morgan1te weighing 17 ... 1 carats on my last trip to ldar·Obereteln. It wat my Intention to Mt It up in a ring mounting, but we have been ao · busy with our customers' special designs and custom ord•'1.. that I haven't had lime tor myown. We do have a wide Mlec:tlon of AQuemertnee set up jewelry though. They are In rings. · bracelets, pend1nl1 and M .,.__ , , • eerrlnga and range In Pl1ce ary i:;iwr. Cert1f1ed Gemologist from a "*'49d. to an eteoant rII "RLES H BARR t7,800. #e'll ~ happy to ~.n.n • thow tn.m all to you on your · next vltit to °""" H. Batr ........,.,_ . ........... I .. !IAir ' \ WllZELIW a DSAIJN' -It .... Joq been • th~la of thia ear- ner th.Ill tf we are ever to have ' peace in tbe West, the Powers that Be must uproot every bJoody parJdnC md.er in out re&ioo and I conaJsn them to scrap heap. Parkina meters -the Dreaded I T!cky Birds -ruin vacaUooS,. huale shopping trips, cause the citizenry to have run-ins with the Jaw, frustrate merchants, cause I iU will among our visilon and are generally bad news. • The Ticlcy Bird capital of our coastline IS, of course, Laguna Beach, where they planl one behind every bush, affixed someUmes so you can't tell which of the ooe-legged monsters you 're supposed to feed. YOU HAVE TO s uppose Laguna is the Ticky Bird Capital because the Art Colony has pro- claimed itself a bird sanctuary. Despite th.is, some regions of our great s tate are more : enlightened than we are, and have thus proclaimed the Ticky , Bird as an extinct species. Up in the countryside. the city of Bishop did this some seven years ago. Now, it develops that former Newport Beach coun~lman Dee Cook currenUy resides in Bishop and happens to be mayor of the town. Cook never could stay away from a city hall very long. Also. just as he did in Newport, when Mayor Cook is presiding in a city hall, he prowls around some. Thus it was that Cook was rummaging through the Bishop City Hall basement the other day. And what did he uncover? A WHOLE COVEY of Ticky Birds, that's what. lie discovered a cache or some 350 parking meters stored away. He even found a washing machine once used to wash down the Ticky Birds. Now Mayor Cook is a frugal m an with the taxpayers' dollar. He couldn't understand why all those parking meters should be gathering dust in the Bishop City Hall basement when they coll.Id be making money. But Mayor Cook is also a bright man. He knew bis city bad anished the Ticky Birds and he wasn't about to suggest they plant the blight back on the municipal streets. What Cook did, however, was urge his City Council to peddle the infernal machmes. Cook even . c hecked around and found a cOU· · pie of prospects. l Thus it was that only last night. the Bishop City Council I authorized Mayor Cook to negotiate for sale of the 3SO dusty 1 parking meters a nd thus banish ! t~e~ forever from the municipal limits. COOK IS DOING even better than that. His prime prospect 1s the city of FaJloo, Nev., where he hopes to get about 10 bucks apiece for the 350 meters or a tidy $3,500 tor Bishop'~ city treBBury. 1l FaUon should fall through, h1zzoner has an al_temate plan to push the ncky Birds off on a city in the RepubUc of Mexico. Clearly. not only 1s Bishop Mayor Cook gomg to ~et the ghastly parkme meters out of tus town; he's going to get them out • or the state. He may even banish • them from the Uruted State4'. He's my kind or guy. More E~ to.Letme _Uganda 9¥1111' It,.._ --...... --.. • . A U.yHr...W Hew,...., =-= .. .,,..,._IDMa =:.-====· .. Loarill w.albd llU KeQa l*"1 I --, ·~ tbe ant Am9'tCM..; Uftet tile 1-D alter C:: U.. ·~· lt ,... au.-.~u...._ ..... =i••.._.timeau.u.a. ,_,... • PraidenfldlAmfal.tftedldln.. wtdda lie !lad t.um-asked tobilwcede. day bu a.od allowed U.S. mtt-m-.d .. U.S. dtbeu UviDC io 'l'llB ftAT& DDAJna&Nt t.od lat.SllltAtricaAeow&ty. eaacele4 plaa1 lo •••d ··=btmlDUsandabefcn ~of state C)'"1I R. d~lomatlc troable1hooter to.e tbe people very mudt ...d Vuce aaf4 todQ be expects T ~SeelJ'etoU1&DdL bad a ftM time,, aakl ltobert more Americana to leave Ami.a'• iDitlal orden pre· Sllnn_ otSprini'Lall• JW h~ Upacl&. aumabl,ywwefromgtedbJcon. N.J:'ll WU. baP1>7 maa .:.n ASm 1r TBB UNITED demnatloaa 0 blt rqjme by stepped across u.e DOrW 1DU> Statea would 1et the mis· ~~&Dd s.c,,_.,1~ Kenyatbtsmorniq" aioaartm.•eatben buaineurnen "'"&-we uu~1 .OSI' O• TBE ,;..__,_.... andu.irfam.Wa~toftbeEast report• that tbe Aacllcao .. GO••..,.•DU .. ...,, --•--V . archbUbop ot UJanda had bee 240 Americans in Usuda are ~nean ...__..,, ance replied. murdettd after b.l.a arrett for il· missionaries world.q in outly1iJc tbl would expect that som-: of Je1ally plott1n1 a1ainat Amin and em probably would be leaVlllg. I don\ know what the details that Amin wu mauacrtq mem- Financial Privacy Suggested WASIDNGTON (AP> -A federal commission is recom- mending a series of safeeuards on individual privacy, including a law barring the government from obtaining records about a person's finances without his knowledge. wou.ld be. We'll have to walch benoftwoCbriaUaotribes. and see.•• Amin a1ao char1ed that tbe A m I n a al d to d a y th at United Stats, Britain and Israel Americans in Ueanda "are now ~ere plannlnl to drop paratroopa free to go anywhere they wish mto U1anda to support a plot to such as iolnc for holidays or go: overthrow him. iog about their normal business AFTER THE DETENTION or· be it inside or outside Uganda,': der last Friday, U.S. officlata ex .. Radio Uganda reported. press~ rears tor the sarety 01 ~e Amin forbade the estimated Amencans, most of them ml.S· 2'0 Americans ln Uganda from sionaries, but .Amin and bis leavin(l the country last Friday spokesmen gave assurances they and ordered them to meet with would not be harmed. him Monday at the internation~ Amin then began backin1 conference center in Kampala down, saying he wanted only to his capital. ' honor the Americana for the 0 "good work" they were doing for tJRING THE WEEKEND the his country. He spoke of giving meeting was moved to the En· some of them medals tebbe airport, 19 miles from · Can't Bel"'~ It "We've always thought San Francisco was such a nice city," said Opal Reese of Sebastopol. She was at Mission Emergency Hospital Monday after her husband. Arnold was shot in the eye when the couple stopped their ca; behind a bus at an intersection in' the Bay City. Doctors say her husband bas lost sight in the eye. The commission on electronic funds transfers made the recom- mendations in. a 14&-page report ( IN SHORT ) Kampala, and postponed until Wednesday. And Monday Radio Uganda announced the meeting had been put off indefinitely with a new date to be announced later. Ugandan sources in Kampala, reached by telephone, said Amin "is keen to improve good rela· lions with the United States." They said the delay would give the two countries "a chance to re· solve their current difficulties." Fish Limit Enforced • being released today. A copy or Ule report was obtained by The Associated l'l'ess. · Major retail and credit· granting companies have said that they regularly turn over in· formation on a person's transac- tions to government in· vestigators without notifying the individual involved. Fuel BIU Aid E~ WASHINGTON CAP) -A Senate-House conference com- mittee weighing President Carter's tax cut and rebate plan wants the economic stimulation progr~~ to help needy Americans pay their fuel bills. The conferees proposed such a one-shot program, costing $3)() million, BS part of a pacltqe of tax cuts and increased spending designed to pump up the economy over the next seven months. Stqdad C'llarflftl Several Arab and African gov- ernments. including those 01 fiming 1' aries By The AS80Ciated Pren In the Gulf of Alaska, off the coast or New England and in waters shared with Cuba, the government today tried to en· force the new U.S. 200-mile limit on foreign fishing vessels. Meteorite Find Promises Data- WASJUNGTON CAP) -Geologists studying 11 meteorites re· covered in Antarctica, including an 898-pound block buster say their find promises to yield important new scientific informati~n, in part ~cause the space rocks appear to have plunged to earth al different tames The Nationaf Science Founda- tion said Monday that American and J a~ese scientists found the meteontes, including one or the largest on rerord. on patches of old blue ice in the Transantarctic Mountains. ever found is believed to be one weighing almost five tons un- earthed two years ago in China,. said the National Science Foun- dation. vt'JICHITA . Kan. CAP) THE LATEST METEORITES Herbert Smith Jr. has been were found between last De<:. 10 charged with the beating death of and Jan. 20 by Dr. William A. has 19-mooth-old stepdaughter, .Cassidy of the University of Pit- The Coast Guard beefed up Its staff, aircraft and vessels for the chore, and in Washington. Adm. Owen Siler, Coast Guard com- m and ant, said, "The Coast Guard is ready and accepts the challenge." UNTIL TODAY, THE limit was 12 miles. Under cpmplaints from the U.S. fishing industry that foreign fishermen were ruin· ing their livelihood, Congress adopted the 200-mile zone and the Ford Administration a year ago approved the legislation. 'l'bere were doubts aboat the Immediate effectiveness of the limit. "Most fishermen are all the same. If they think they can beat you, t.b..e¥'ll cross the line a lit· Ue ." said fisheries agent. Ken Creamer. CREAMER IS ONE of u 'Na- tionaJ Marine Fisheries Services agents responsible, aJong witib tbe Coast Guard, for enforce- rn en t along the Alaskan coasUine, the nation's largest. and richest fishery . In Boston, Daniel Russ. a Com- merce Department official in charge of e nforcement from Canada to North Carolina, said he still was waiting for instruc- tions about issuing permits to foreign vessels before tbey can fish inside the limit. The government's first task is stopping for two months all foreign fi shing 'Off the Pacific Northwest, except for tuna. lt also must Umit foreign fishing an the North Atlantic to hake and squid, for · the time being, and halt all fishing in the Gull of Mex- ico where no countries have ap- plied for licenses. JAPAN, SOUTH KOR°tA, Spain and the Common Market nations have signed agreements t.o allow their fishermen to get permits from the Commerce Department, but Congress must still approve them. one week after be argued unsuc-tsburgh. Dr. Edward J . Olsen of cessfully to prennt doctors from the Field Museum of Natural disco.noecting her respirator. History in Chicago and Dr. Keuo Smith. 31, was charged with Yanai of the Japanese National first-degree murder Monday. He Institute of Polar Research in had been cbuged inilialJy with Tokyo. chUd abuse after Janeen House The find is significant not only was brought to a hospital Feb. 1. because of the giant rock, but Hurt Doe Aborts, Recovers NEW LONDON, Conn. <AP> -A .doe beaten with heavy sticks a week ago has lost a 2'h·month- otd fetus she was carry. ing, a veterinarian says. It takes· 111oney to 111ake 111oney. Doctors said the child bad suf· also because the meteorites pro- rered brain trauma, possibly mise a variety of data since they from a blow to the bead .. A apparentlydidn'tfallatthesame r~plrator disconnection test In· time, the eeoloilsts said. The dicated the child was legalJy meteorites' ages and when they dead. " fell to earth are still unknown, they added. ERA •~Wag Ne.rs SALEM. Ore. <AP> -Orqon, which ratified the Equal Rlgbt.s Amendment in 1!113, 1s one step away from becomin1 the tlrst state to reaffirm iu rauncat.loo. After two hours of testimony Monday. the Senate Agln1 and Minority Affairs Committee wh1sked •decision to the Sena~ 10 a S-0 vote. \ "Tbe-se meteorites represent many different falls. We are get· tine a very nice cross section or what la falling on earth," Cassidy said in an lnlerview. CASSIDY SAID THE large meteorite was found in 33 pieces -th=:Sl fragment weighing 2SO -scattered over a two-acre area. The Jareest s tony meteorite Dr. Leo Lieberman of Waterford, who donates his services to the Herbert F. Moran Na lure Center, said Monday that the 13-year- old doe is recovering well from both the beat- ing and the miscarriaae she suffered Slllturday. THE DOE AND a 9- ye a r -old buck were found beaten at the center Feb. 21. Bloody sticks were found nearby. Strong Winds, Snow Hit The doe apparently was cornered In a shelter and hit oo the head and hindquarters. Officials believe the buck, less seriously injured, escaped after the ioltial blows. Ask Linda, Doug or Jaek Western Statea Placed Under Stonn Watch Police are still t.ryine 4 AtllMI~ 81-•rdr -·· lt0\10!' 9,_,_., .. lktl1alo Ollcavo Oncl11Mll a. ... '-"d 0.tlK-f'L~ 0.llWf' DetMol!llS O.t,,,.t Dull/tit ........ " "9fto4vf• ....... tCMIMeQty Lnv...-utt .. ttoctC llllllaml Mltw..._ I Ml"lt.•St ..... l fMw~ ·- tlltll U. Pr u ,. JI 2S ~J ,. ,, 1 v lD 41 JO ,, ... J! :n ,. 70 42 111 :n 10 ., ~ SI ,, <1(1 ,. :11 .. n .. ~ 7l • ,. .. ... SS 20 4$ • '9 4' 112 ., M 17 31 10 .. ~ .11 .02 .21 .01 FORECAST - • to_detennlne who scaled ""'·'"*--ctoor~ltvr.. r t h i Ji k -cr-e1r1v1tio.,.ZM<hl"111ec1oo-a seven-oo c an n Mt"ts. ....,. ~,.., .....s rMIK..t fence to beat the deer. A WISll>llllvto_,,l"-soott. • 1 l b in b wlftdl .. 1oam1 ... _1>ourt1utt••· o~a us easman as """'u.~., ... w11iu1_,. raised IDOl'e than Sl,000 9'Atsot•1oom1,..--"°"'11"ll as-a reward for inlorma--~,,_,,.,,_,.,",.,.., . . ~ ...... ,_111uwdnef1. lion leading to the COD· Natlenal Weell1er $er¥ic• viCtiOD of • ....__ fe8"""'""i• ftr9CllS1w .-~ Mid lhe ....-C • r-•- wlndllorm "'°"" '"'o Southern ble. Gtllfemle1nu.-otu1crmrront The doe bas aiven ,,.., ---u. teqlen Moftdey • ., 111t111w1tt1o1ot..._." .. ""''"°k11n. btrth to 18 fawns since T1Mwlnda_...,._...,,,,.M1c1. arrhing at tbe Bates Hllley-ceo1•Wd'"-tf'9 w __ ,,..,. _ ,,. ..... _, oods center 11 years ,, .... -.. ~ sys .. m 8"'0 after beino rescued ....,.,,_PIKtfltttM... • • ,.._...,., '* 1tLJes -., ,... from an Old Lyme late mel11 .....,.ally (IHr afld llmfty Where she (ell tbrouah tlllroetlt WHM .. ay, l>"t lem-•t.e f-She -•-tri_.. llWM _ _...,._llltkeUly~ M£ '-..,_ uu.nCa ICU ._.,.,..... several years ago, after c..n.IW.nller being attacked by dogs. s-., wttt. _..,... W1'ldl U to• ft\jt,I\. ............. ,. ""'"-'°' I C»MUl1 ...._..,.. wt ....... .. , • ..., SO -U. llll•nd tem· =-·--Wiil , .... a.twMtt ., eftll • .,......... ... •• Ill .. ,,. Slayer Sentenced VlSALlA (AP)--,\ Vis· all• ·man CGIMc:ted of aecond~esne muntel" .... amtenced to staw prison. Robert Reye1 Valda, 20, ••• ••n·· tenced bl Supaior Court Jud8• F'redstc J~ in Uae ,,,,,.... death ot Michael Ri•u. 22, of 1>1DubaonkQ 1-t. I -. ·Whether It's an opportunity for your business or a new Investment, Newport Equity Funds may just give you the opportunity to take advantage of It We speclallze Jn secondary reaJ estate financing for people who already own prime resldentfaJ property and have a better· than· average f ncome. If you quaJlfy, let us help you arrange a loan for a substantial percentage of your home's appraised value -at attractive rates. For details, call Linda Blue, Doug Sulley or Jack Barnes at 644-8824. They work together to help you get the money you needl Newp~rt Equity 'Fu1tds,Inc. ..... Oftb 820 NEWPORT CEHTER DAM! • 8tnTE 2111 • NEWPORT BEACH (92880) (714) 644 882'6 ' ....._ Yllfo I Laoaae Niguel 2UIDCA80T ROAD• 8UfTE 1~ •LAGUNA. HIUS (92653) (714} 830e100 I I I r I I t i l • . ' ' I • Wife Nan:ied ConServator ~ANGELES (AP) -Tbo wife al suspend.s state Suprwme ' Coat .JDIUc• Maraba1J McComb llas been named CODHrvator for ber bmbud, llviq ber the riatht to make decisions for the 12-year- o&dJvtltlhHQ• can no 1onc6 care tor himself°' his property. Court Judie Neil Lake approved.tbe appointment~ •n. U'9l McComb Monday after • eourt session durln& wbiCh , .J.U cComb, the only witneu, wu unable to answer or 1tve more than vague answers to a series or questions about bis personal and tJuaiNa affairs. -Tbe appointment of a conaervalor bas no d1reet bea.rln& oo McComb'• present suspension from the court or pendin& actiona to formally remove him frooi the court. W'lllu Brl•fl Cold., Blgla SetU By Tbe Associated Press Gusty winds swept through Northern California today bringing colder temperatures and some local frosL • The National Weather Service predicted partly cloudy skies Womingfairthrough Wednesday. Gale warnings were posted from Point St. George to Point Con· ( J ception, out 20 miles, for northwesterly winds 25 to 40 stale knots and seas rising 10 to 14 feet. In the San Francisco Bay area the wind was. blow· ing at 20 to 35 miles per hOur and the mercury w;i.s expected lo dip to the mid 30s lo low 40s tonight. c.p Bo•tage Feared 'Boaz, WEST COVINA <AP> -A San Gabriel policeman who claimed he was held hostage by two young gang members as they fired shots at officers surrounding his home has been booked for investigation of kidnapmg and murder in lhe incident. ! West Covina police said the officer may have been doing the shooting all along, adding that there may never haye been two gang members in the house. Officer Bill Mcilwain. 32, \\as arrested and booked Monday at the West Covina Police stallon for investigation of murder in'lhe death of 19-year·old David Dominguez of La Puente. ea.·Goeerftor Rat.on Water7 SAN FRANCISCO (AP> Atty. Gen. Evelle J . Younger said Monday he 1s studying the l.iw to see whether Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has power to order water rationing in the state. "The governor has emergency power. but the question is whether he has legal power for rationing," said the attorney general. "Does he have to declare martial Jaw to get such action->·· He-said Brown had asked him for an opinion on the question. ·' Heant Seehlng New Trial SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Patricia Hearst should have a new trial on bank robbery charges because her jury was allowed to hear evidence covering her lire as a fugitive, defense attorneys say. A defense brief said the evidence had no place in the trial because il was not direclly rclatc>d to the crime for which she was charged. The defense l'Omments wt>rc filed with th<' 9th l'.S. Court of Ap- peal Monday in reply 1 o a prosecution tmer opposing a motion for a new trial. The prosc>cut1on maintains she was .. fairly tried.·· The newspaper h<'1ress wa., ronv1cted in March 1976 and sen· tenced to a seven·) ear prison term She 1s free on Sl 25 m1lhon bail pending outcome of the .ippeal ·Santa Barbara Gets Oil Drill Platforlll SANTA OARIJAHA (API After <in e1~ht·year delay, a Union 011 drilling plalfort;n h:i-1 arnved in the S.inta narbara Channel to be placed close to th<' lo<' a lion of an 800 :4<1uart·· mile 011 spillin1969. Platform C. lying on 1l!> sad<• on .i h.irgl', was brought into the chan· nel Monday, accompa111ed by t\\<o tugc; und a dernck barge. No protc-st<'rs wen~ prc~cnr Monday, although mcmbNs of Get Oil Out ccoo 1 had mustrrt>tl sailboaL'\ to hlm·k .irri" al ur ,1 Sun Oil Co. platform "'ht I\ dnllin,,: was resumed in 1!>69 UNION OIL i;pokesmen c;,ml they hoped Platform C \\oulrl lw producine by the end of the }'CJr It is a sister rii.t to Platform \. which caused the 1969 '>Pill. The platform will stand in :.'IK> feet of water a mile and a half west or Platform A in an eust west line or SIX Other platform~ 5.S miles off lhe coast or Carpio teria, Summerland and Mon· teclto. THE PLATFORMS 11rc ovd the Dos Cuadrcs l"ield. Union 011 Co. operates plat.forms A and B for a consortium that incluf1e~ three other oil <'ompanles, 1 ex aco, Gull and Mobil. Although platform C was hu1ll eight years ago in Vancouv<'r. Wash., the federal government withdrew the installat1on pt'rm1t after the 1969oil spill. The pl'rm1t Ski Shasta Lacks Snow MOUNT SHASTA <AP> -Ski Shasta won't even open this year because of the snow shortage. Resort manager Susanne Derby said Mon . day lbal persons who bou&ht memberships or aeasoo passes will have those ~gations honored next year. ••We're 1olng to call it a day; There will be no ski· • lnl on Shasta this winter, but we have every "inten- tion ol opening up next . aeuon. .. she taid. ''as granted this year. The-Dos Cuadres Field htl a iw.ik annu;1l produl'tlOn or 28 rnilllon barrPIS 1n 1970 and 1971. hut 1' clown to 14 mil hon barr<:'ls a Vl'Jr Oil firms hope the new p1at form will change the downward trend A bJrrel or 011 has •2 ~.illons Oat firms are required to re- move the platrorms when they < Cd'>t> production. Man AttemptJJ To Strangk Ray Charks LOS ANGELES (AP> -A man JUmped from the celebrity· filled audience at a h<-nefit con· cert and choked blind blues singer Ray Charles with a cord. police said. The unidentified man was sub· dued by security guards, but was not arrested because the singer declined to press charges after the incident Monday night. Charles was not hurt. Witnesses said that as the man attacked Charles. be yelled out, "Ray Charles will see and the Lord will come tonight ... Fonner football star Roosevelt Grier, a spokesman for the singer, called U\e episode "an in· ternal matter" and sald it would be taken care or. Police said the au.A.er was reported to be a rrklllber or Grier's Giant Step organization. ror which the benefit at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion .was · being held. GlanlStep is a pilot program ln Los Angeles aimed at providing programs to help the un· derprivileged and the elderly. Among those In the audience was Jacqueline Kennedy OnHsis. ~ . Ci e Ai Rape Vjctim SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-A rape•le W H allant down • bu1y San l"nAdleo ltr'el& Wiii JaUMcl ped.eltrtam wbo be1ped d.lurm and c.,wn UM bif•wWdlal • aaJ1ant. polkeaaid. . J Pol.lee u1d Wllliam SQJder; 21 wu booked for ln.-U,a of i r,pe, attempted robbery. Cd anUit with a deadl1 weapon. · J OPftCEJtS S.\11) he al1.,ed1y posed •• a amok;!:· 1ale1man to enter lhe apa,ftmort ol a 29-year-old woman M af· ternoon. The victim told police be raped ber at knlfepolnt fled with her wallet in one band and a ltiteben knife lo the other. With the screa.ming rape victim on tu. trail. the man bo ~ it down the crowded Union Street shoppidf area. There be was tackled by Alan Bridges, 3'. wbo waa stabbed in U.e Jes while atrua4 a ling with the suspect. 'Coming Jff r. Benng' Eddie (Rochester) Anderson, shown in 1974 with his longtime s how-business boss, the late Jack Benny, died Monday at the age of 71. Anderson, who won fame as Benny's gravel·voiced chauffeur and butler, succumbed to congestive heart !ailure. He had been a patient" at the Motion Picture Country Home and Hospital. MARCIE IS LIVING THE ALLEGED RAPIST got up and continued running, with Monique Bertrand, Z3, and Teny Neely, a 20-ye&N>ld ex·Marine sergeant, taking up the chase. Panicky and waving the knife, the man darted ln and around af. ternoon shoppers as. he fled down the street. Police said Neely led the posse that grew to more than a dozen an1ry citizens during the two-block sprint. . NEE~ Y WAS the f!rst to catch up with the exhausted usa.alant. Police said N«:ely stripped olr his wide leather bell and deftly snapped ~e knife from the suspect's hand, then tackled him to the groµnd. . "He could never have outrun me," Neely said later. "He made a mistake. He could have run five miles and t would still have been there." · Marines Abandon Naval Brig -SAN DIEGO CAP1 -The last Marine guard was pµlled off the 32nd St. Naval Station brig Mon· day, and the Marine barracks at that base since 1921 were lo be abandoned formally today . The move was ordered as the result of budget and manpower cuts. Sailors have taken over operation or tbe correctional center ... AND WALKING· PROOF . OF NEW SUCCESSES BY THE MARCH OF DIMES When Marcie Watz was born four years ago, doctors said she would never stand alone. But thanks to the National Foundation-March of Dimes-Marcie walks and plays with other children in Mi?Sion Viejo and is an inspiration to everyone who meets her. Marcie was one of 200,000 babies born annually in the U.S. with a birth defect. I-fers was called splna bifida, a.-defect of the spine resuJting in paralysis of the lower extremities. Through March of Dimes research and new techniques of surgery, Marcie gets around just fine now, and she is the 1977 March of Dimes poster child in Orange County. The National Foundation-March of Dimes-con4 tinues its work for humanity that began with its Jong fight and great victory over Polio. Now its goal is the prevention or treatment of birth def eds like Marcie's. On Saturday, March 19, thousands of people, young and old, will walk a 20-mile route in Irvine, on the annual March of Dimes Walkathon to raise funds for March of Dimes research, education and \ professional services. If you would like to know more about the National Foundation-March of Dimes, if you want to join the Walkathon, or if you can sponsor someone in the Walkathon, call The Natloul Fomldadoa-Mnda of 01 ... ' . Orange County Chapter Arthur l\.Mcl<enzle, Chairman Mrs. Dorothy H. ~and, Executive Dirort.J 111 West Oyer Roed, Sulte 10.G ~"\:) Santa Ana, California 9'l707 Telephone: (714) 979-2270 . ~ Number 41 in a sertes of publlc service advertisements sponsored by" Avco Financial Services, Newport Beach, California I --J·\ y Jt ii to lurn t dOv. BroWn IW de- dd to talce tbe (D 1"01tNfln1 UJ> diff f~'l.llUllll ln Ule 1tat.e'1 water wan an au.empt to altaln a can.. M.'f\l\la ml lqt laUGn needed to solve tbe Wala pro- bl~ throu&b they 8J' • .. The battle bet.WND north and south. betwe9 aufns and dUea. betw atate and federal qcn· fea, b been aoina on ever 1lnce Brown's father first .an aced to pw;h Uirouab the lnlUal pbasa of the state ater proj~t. • Now the job must be completed and Brown Jr iea the need for a $2 billion to $4 billion proaram to to it. Draft legislation to be pr,sent.ed to Congress •ould set forth criteria for coordinating state and ft!deral water projects and provide for joint state- (ederaJ participation in construction of the re· tJalning needed f aclllties. • Meanwhlle President Carter has generated a new problem by cutting off federal funds for 18 major dams, including the key Auburn Dam on the American River 32 miles north of Sacramento, for f.ihich excavation is nearing completion. • Carter has said some of the funding may be iestored after examination o~ environmental and ,afety factors related to theda~ : So this too will become a concern of the Brown task force. And. in light of this year's drought catastrophe, the consensus can't be r~ched too soon. Tax Shuffle 1 Orange County supervisors last week granted ¢ounty School Supt. Robe1t Peterson's longstanding ~equeslf or a separate tax rate for his agen~y. .-. While cr eation of more separate taxmg districts generalJy is a bad idea. this one seems to have justification. t lrol aay•ay. He lb are -. mbr prob1 and oc1Jnm.tsl111t v probl s:ns created by bavins 10m emploJw' pay. hllldays and other coodlUmrs sub eel to iostate educ«UOn code n&1es and the remainder sub· ject to county employ• labor 8.Jtffmerus. • The board's Mc'Uon means property owners next yenr wut pay as a aepara~ tax •bout two ttnLI on each SlOO of as esaed \'aluatiOo to fa.nance couoly educaUonaJ activities. coslb previously inchtded in the county's general tax rate. Having accepted Peterson's rationale and taken the act.ion. supervoors now heave an obligation to trim the co..mt,y tax rate by the same amount so the impact w1ll not be felt in homeowners' pocketbooks. Changing Views Cahf ornia public opinion experts have concluded that the American public-or at least Californians..._ already have lowered their expectations and accept· ed the fact that a certain amount of personal sacrifice wtll be the order of the future. Pollster Mervyn Field reports generally f avora· ble public reac\ion tp statements by President Carter and Gov. Brown in terms of limitations and sacrifice. It's not that people want less, says Field, but they're being more realistic .. Sparking the realism. apparently, have been the shortages of oil, gas and water. Says pollster Hugh Sch wartz.·· People are crisis-oriented. They don 't real· ly believe anything until it happens.·· There'::. still some skepticism. say the experts. but once convinced the problems are real. the public seems lo accept. and even welcome leaders who call for sacrifice. ~ Peterson argued successfull y that nearly three· fourths of his department's $11 million budget and all ~u.~O of b1.~ ern....e.loyes re financed by the state and Says Field. "There's been a fairly rapid realiza. lion by the American public that the world is different now." ''\ thought you s~id the. courts Are overwotkid." Chief Jllstice MQst Carry a Heavy LOad Reaction to G<>vernor Jerry Brown's nomiriltion of Rose Elizabeth Bird to be Chief Justice of the State Supreme Court h::u. divided into two dis· tinct groups and centered atten- tion on her limited legal ex· perience and complete lack of it as a judge. This has served t.o ob- scure the fact that the duties of Chief Justice, unlike those of the other six justices. arc far more than that of ruling on law. For the constitution provides that the Chief Justice shall also serve as chairman of the Judie ial Coun cil which 1s the chief ad min istrat1 ve body of the !>late 's court system. It is responsible fo r adopting rules and overseeing the practice and pro- ced u res or all courts. The chairman is personally responsi· hie for equalizing the worlr.loads or the courts throughout the state and empowered to assign Judg~ from one court to anotller as well us calling retired judges blck lo work. ADDmONALL y the council complies annual statlsUcaJ re- ports to aid In expedltinc judicial business. ll also Is heavily in· volved in maktnll rttommenda· lions lo the Le1islature ror ~· organlzatlons und olher 1mprove- mentaoflhe court system. It is presently engaged In two heavy studies. one of cal~ar management In the courts and the other u to criminal sentenc· ing practicet1 At the same t.Jme 1t is running several experimental three·year pUot projects on trlaJ procedures and small claims proce11Stng. ( EAltL WATERS ) The chairman . meaning the chief justice, directs the council's staff whose numbers are proposed to be increased by 25 positions in the upcoming budget. Since all of the juclJcial council positions are exempt from civil service it gives him a tremendous amount of patronage. The total budget pre· sided over by t He chairman amounts to more than S4 million annually. SO THE complaints that Bird's experienc.e is wanting as a Justice. shouted down by the charges of male chauvanism by her supporters. should not serve to divert scrutiny as to her ad· ministrative qua1Jricahons. Not that there isn't ment to the criticisms of lack or judicial ex· perience. But the mere absence of it does not nor should it bar one from salting as a justice. Fonner Chief Justice Phil S. Gibson was ai:loointed an associate JUStJce Without previously serving as a judge. Earl Warren b§:ame Chief Justice of the United'Sta(es with no judicial experience. So. too. did John Marshall, the na tlon's fourth Chief' Justice who aerved more than 30 years In the p()St. But each of those and others who have been appointed to the hl&hesl judicial posts without other court ~ence did have broad upetieocc an the practice ol law and solJd backgrounds m ao•emment to compenir.te for any lack ol wiadom whkh might have been gained by sitting as a Judie. And they bad a mature wtsdom which comes with age. Bird. al 40, is probably short a few year!I In acquiring the wbdom of age. She has no Dear Gloo1uy Gus A b o u t t h a t, n o b I e Congressman who is will· ing to retum his $50 tax re· bate to reduce the national debt: Is he going to protest his $12,000 salary increase. too? TIRED TAXPAYER Gloomy Cut comm•nh ~,.• ~uom.tted t>t rf'.adl'rt _.,.......o not necent1'1ly r~Ht<. t the ••IW'\ ot tht' newlpAper ~NI YO\.t' pet M•vt toGtoomy G\H, O•tlV P•IOI Jud1c1al experience And. despite the claim!> m"ade in the gov· ernor's press announcement o( her seleet1on of "extensive legal and court experience'" the bare facts are that her legal ex· perience wa:. limited to seven years as a deputy public de· render handling cases often as· sfgnect to lawyers newly ad· m1tlt'd lo practice. Th e cr1tic1sm of these shortcommgs have noth.ing lo do with her being a woman. There are any number of women judges in the state who could have been named whose qualifications would have gone unquestioned. THE POINT here however is th at Just having Judicial qualificuttons may not be enough because of the heavy ad· m1nlstrative duties. Even in this area, although she served two years as Secretery of Agriculblre and Services, she appears lac:k· mg. Insiders claim she couldn't make deci.tuons. They also claim she was abrasive and arrogant and bad treat difficulty getting along with those she directed, tolerating no disagreement. It is said h er failure to permit Agriculture Director Tim Wallace to run his department <'•used his resignation. Tbe con· flrmallon process should look hard al tbi~ aspect or Bird's quahtles. New Conservatives? Interes · n adlctlon: Acade lcalty. many of our achool·a era are noi learning the essenUals. Some parents in New York are 11uin1 schools for "educational malpractice" because their children are 1lven a high school diploma tbou1b they can't ade · quately read, write or spell. And they ·can't add 20 and25.. At tbeaametime~ however, we learn from the new National Opinion Survey that tht scholars are wiser than ever. JN THEIR OWN enlightened self-interest they are renewing lbrirfaitbinlradltbmal values. Tbe turna.rouncJ wu ln the lllOI -when they did what' they llked.. tmd then d\d not Ute what tbeydld. la lll'ePUinf the aeventh an· Q\&af "Who 1 Who Aaonff AnutrlHn ff1lh School Students' It wu w 111uy to suney ~.eoo IJmUorla--.. • ( PAUL HARVEY) I They've changed.' From the "do-your-own· tbina." "let·it-all-hane·out" pbUoeophy of the Sixtlea, these bi&b schoolers bave ~come morally conaervative. Understand, the interviewees in this instance were the scholars. the "outstancUng students." This surve1 ls conducted Nl· nually by Educational Com- mupicatlms. Inc. of Nortbbnd, m .. amonc ttudenta recom- mended by h1tb ac)ool principals or auldance counselors. They have to be '"»" or better stu-cthta. They are &lNad.Y "out· standln1" in acaderolc•. aUlletica, community service. 1 It c.n " tanmed that these will beeome our natlbn ... teadeH, 10 1helt opinions are especially •lanillcant. The DWoriv of lhMe 17-and J.&.1~ do not bell eve in pre- muttal sex, do not believe In amok1Qc pot. do not believe in drtnkln& liquor. Su.'11riMd' £ilhtof 10 of these ·"top teens•• favortndltlGnal mamaae. Seventy-four perc'ent have never had sexual intercourse. Flfty-tteven percent intend lo abstain from sex until marriage. Elghty·nine percent have never~ drugs. (Contrast thla latter figure with the um finding that 28 per· cent had tried hard drugs.) Eight percmt have not smoted cle arettes. AND HEAR this: 58 percent feel that the job of full-time homemaker can be totall)' f\llfill. • ing for a woman. May~ we've been worried about the wrong things. Because the school-agers who do mlsuM drugs and aex are like. Jy lo malre the tnOlt UUUatilfi news, we have overlooked tht<!' in- creuinab-tespooalble attitude and disciplined behavior ol the ··acbi~/' And this ls lnt«eatiDg; 68 per· cent woUld be wtWn, to atbmd a school when more than ball ol th• 1tudeots wen of a different race -but 75 pel'cent rdect the Id.ea pf baaing to achleve that ob- jectfTe. la tho bullpen wanning up II a 'ener.UOO ol ma.turi.ag loader. wbo are foinl to be •~er than our.were. Foreign-Policy 'ln1'estnaent_, CIA !Paid Israel, Too • WASHINGTON-:Secret, Un· der-tbe-l a ble CIA' payments amounting t o "tens o f millions"-far more than any sums paid to Jordan's King Hussein-have been regularly funnelled lo Israel's intelligence service for control and disburse· ment by the prime mmister's of rice. Whal is important about th<'se payments, whkh started around 1960, is not their secrecy or even their l!X 1sJence It is their purpose to give the anti· Communist West, \hrough the highly ef· fective good o ff ices o f lsrael, competitive equality in political penetration or newly in· dependent states in black Afnca. "Secret payments to a foreign government." one intelligence source told us. "are and always will be one or the principal OC· cupations of a good Intelligence service, whether it Is the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA> or the French Deuxieme Bureau or the British Ml-6." That such an obvious fact would need such a precise ex- planation is due to the uproar in President Carter's While House that greeted the Washington Post's revelation of the CIA 's payments lo King Hussein. As re· ported by the Post's Bob Woodward, Jimmy Carter's re· action was "distress" and be im· mediately ordered the payments terminated. WHAT MAKES that "distress" somewhat surprising is the fact that C~ Vance, Mr. Carter's Secret.IP'y of State, ls the only present top official fully aware of the history of these CIA subsidies to Hussein. He approved them as Deputy Secretary of Defense late In the Johnson administration, when he sat on the powerful "303 Committee"-ilo named because lt met in the elegant No. 303 cor~ ner offlct of the Executive Office Building, occupied by Gen. Max· well Taylor. · -.. The "303 Committee" (re- named the "40 Committee" in the Nixon years) was composed of the political Under SecrelaJ"y of State, the Deputy Secretary of Defen.ae (then Vance), the CIA director. the ChaJrman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the President's national aecurtty ad· viser. This committee controlled all covert CIA operations. A cc:ordin gly. when Mr _ Carltt-io ''distress"-ordered Immediate cancellation of the Hussein payments. he was ldlllng • program that Vance had ap- proved repeatedly durin1 his 116'· Im term u Deputy Defense Secretary and that bad had a~ foond and ttabilizlne-impact on Jordan. ' BVT .... CAaTER has sald nolhlo' about the far larcer laraell 1ub1ldlea-perhaps becau1e be does not tnow, peJ'baps ~aus.e he decided t.bat laraelJ operations ln black Africa <though not remotely so tue· ca&IW today at before the 18187 Arab-bn.ell 'War) aN ltill 1fcrth mOMJ. u llO, Mr. caner .w have to ~~*!:J l))at with h1a de-dsloll OQ n. ( EV ANS-NOV AK ) The huge Israeli subsidies had equal Justification with the pay. ments to the King of Jordan. They were designed to finance lsra.eh .. penetration" of the politics. culture, economics and military organizations of black African states rapidly moving out or colonialism into indepen· dence. . Against this llndercover t: S.· l!>raeh operation was arrayed the power of the Soviet empire, as well as the tenacious but smaller efforts of the Cht.nese Communists. So intimately con· nected with the CIA was the Israeli ~mpaign to woo black Afr1cA arhat at one point the Israeli army proposed a "joint" military advisory gr oup in Ethiopia: this was rejected oy Washington, which wanted a low profile. ANTl·ISRAELI sentiment began rising in black Africa soon after Israel seized the Egyptian Sinai. the Synan Golan Heights and the Palestinian West Bank in 1967. It boiled over Jifler the Yorn Kippur War of October 1974, Long before then, however, Israeli activities m black Africa had fulfilled expectations as a counterweight to Soviet·Chinese penetration. Black Africans were taught special Israeli talents. • /" such as frontler fighting and farming 1tk1lls . developed in Israeli kibbut.iim. One of the best dividends from this CIA investment came in Zair e (the former Belgian Congo). President Mobutu ol Zaire, leader of moderate forces in the Congo's civil war against Com mun 1st· backed radical&, might never have emerged the victor without Israel's help. Judging from his Hussein perforJllance. Mr. Carter may now be asking Vance why such hidden CIA assistance to Israel was ever permitted. He might also ask a more pragmatic ques· lion: considering that Congress unquestionably would have voted money for Israel publicly had it. been asked . why was the hidden money necessary'> THE QUESTIONS answer themselves: a public request for such funds would have exposed Israel as a proxy mission&r)' for the U.S .. frightened black Africa into refusing cooperation for fear or political back lash and sharpened onelof Moscow's pro- pag anda pictures of an Im- perialistic Uncle Sam with Israel as his tool. To be consistent, Mr. Carter should terminate CIA aid to Israel, as he did so publicly with Hussein. But such consistency would mean a foreign policy con- ducted by the new President with only passing relevance to the out- side world. Tales of Courage THEY ROSE ABOVE IT. By Bob Considi ne. Doubleday. 111 Pages. $5.95. The late Bob Considine bad a long and distingui$hed career as a journalist. Considine traveled widely. met many people, and the stories some had lo tell stay~ with him. Some ol these stories are in- cluded in the posthumous collec· lion ·';They Rose Above lt," a de· eply touching selection of pieces of varying length that deal with "'the heroism and stoicism of persons who were not born with silver swords tn their mouths. not lumpy with great muscles -just. people who discovered in themselves a measure of maJes· ty tbeymay not have known they J>OSMSSed when the chips were stacked Uailut them. P«>ple like you. let'' say.·· IJANY OF the people who .. rosNbove it" are well-known. There 'ne prae fighter Batney Ross. fliers Jimmy Doolittle and Eddie Rickeqbacker, and the great aportis figure Babe Didrlckson. Tbere'a Rine Lardner. who, while d.yi.na in a hQspital, twas writing a funny pieeo. A friend came ln and found Lardner cry· in1. Re aaked why. Replied Lardner: "I've been tryina to bo runny." And Jamea Thurber whose blindned grew 1te.cllly WOrJt but failed to Slop Thurber. "HI.a output." Considine writes, '1dur1Dai the period most men would conalder ala.rt tra&odY waa pbaomenall" And bateball immortal Lou Geflric. who ral1ed to be stopped bt a m11teri~ ma lady that alowJy ltllle4 h.IM. Others Con.1ldlinc: talka about ( THE BOOKMAN ) in his book are not widely know6 but they, too, demonstrated thik same courage under cond1Uons of tenible atress. There!s the Australian woman name4 Rosemary who devoted her Ur~ to nvtng the orphans of the vtet:- nam war. only to see 'many at those llbe hlld labored 10 hard ~ save dJe in a plane crasb, pa.rt ot an airlift trying to get tbe children out of embatllod S&llfOD. And many many others. . , · Con.sldine bu left behind a lo_v. ely remembrance. PHIL THOM APBoob ........ ..- 09tAHO£ COAIT DAILY PILOT Robm N. W•ed. Pv~ Thoma t K •l'llil. Edrtot 8or~ra Kr.,bkll. Editonal Pag• BcWor The editorial paae ot ~ f>.lly Plfot 1uk1 to Inform and 11timulut~ rHdera by pr41!M!ftUq on lhls Pli;t dlvene c01t1mentary nn topics or Jnteresl by aync:Ucat· fd columnlst'S ind carteonlst.s, by provtdln1 a forum for ruder.' V1ew. and by pren ntlr,« this • nflWSpapcr'• opinions and ideas on current toplu. Tho edJt.ortal opinions of the Dally PUoUppear ooly In the edllOrial eol~ et the top of the P•••· Oplniou e:ic· pre' sed by the c6lumnbts and cartonnl•ts and I tter wrt~ are th Ir o~·n a.net no ~ndorwmc:nt 'Of their vtt>wa by the Diill)' PUot Jhould be Inf err~. Tuesday. March 1. wn r Al' WILDERNESS SONG JQtm O.nv.r Croons Measure Backed In Song .JASHlNGTON (AP) -One witness who came to a House subcommittee hearing on wilderness legislation decided to present his testimony in an unusual way : h e whipped out a guitar and burst into song. "M y heart turns to Alaska and freedom on the run." he san~ into the microphone at the wit· ness tablc "l c·an hear her spiri t c all1n ~ me. To the moun t a i D"'s . . T o t h t' n ver ... To the forest . . To the wild country where I belong." THE IMP ROM PTU performance Monday by country singer John Denver brought o loud round of applause from committee members and those in the audience. Denver s aid the song was a new one which he flad sung before but never recorded He told the public lands suhcom mittee of the !louse In terior Comm ittee that the song summed up the way he feels about wilderness arf'as DENVER, a balladccr or the AmenC'an We~t who has espouscd many environmental cau'les. appeared in support of a bill by Rep Morris K Udall (0 Ari:r. I that would add, t1o m e I 2 million 1tcres to the na ti o n 's wilde rness system . He said he ravon·d tht> bill wholeheartedly. not ing. "We cannot crt>att> a wilderness. Wt: C'an .onl y ac knowl ed~l' ib ex istenct: and protect and -preserve lt. ·' THE POP mus1C' star talked about u recent 11k1 ing trip with hill w1fo near his home in Aspen He said the solitude and enormity of the sno"" capped wilderness 1m pressed him anew with the importance or pr~ serving wtld area~ He noted that the pa~t if our or five years b<• had j"spent a aroat deal of pirne and energy in my desir e to share with other people my areal Jove or the land ... AND HE asked com· mittee mem bers if It-Was all rl1ht t.o cocnplete his testimony ln sonte. say- in1 that he felt m ore coru,fortable alo~ing it 'lhalf saying It. : I IN!l'l'JLU). IV&GEON t£CU) D u a nabl .,. ~ to be rnovAld c.ao... lO bet' aote. They tboQa.bl this would cure the beada a aod eye paln.a abe'd ~ 1ufkrin1 because hf,f ey dJdn'l foc:ua properly. "I was scared the· first time alod ,.Qed all kinds of questions," said Jd •• no,. 11. "Thia Umt. l"m aittins there ~I brave. Tben they told.pte, and I lbougbt, Ok, l'mgoing throu1b 1t again, ob, ob, golJ)iU{ere we go •t· But 1'd1t.art-ed it, IO 1 've got to go throuih witj . · • ""THEY" ARE A TEAM OFsctreeons and other specialist.a beaded by Dr. John Marqws Coo verse, a plastic 1ur1eon wbo is direct.or~ the ln.sUtute for Reconstruct.ive Plastic Sur1ery here. "They promised me they wo.ldn't cut my hair this time. But they did ... said I~ in an interview. "They put f1le to sleep first, bee~ last time they had so much trouble from me about cutting m y hair. ' "And I didn't know if this ti~e they would drill into my head." The first time around, the sutgeons did drill in- to tda 's head. removing part or tfie bone in front of the s kull. Then they lifted qe brain up and backward, to make room lo o})frate from behind the forehead. , THEY CUT OUT PAllT OF 1'fE center of Ida's misshapen face. creating a spac~ into which the Or· bits -the openings in the skull tlat bold the eyes could be pushed closer togethel} Doing this left a s pace by the temple~. filled b)f bone taken fro• Ida's hip bones. J ''This time we didn't have tQopen the skull, just turn the scalp down" (calling f~ culling the hair), explaineiJ Or. Converse about the Feb, 9 operation. "Originally, the diversion or her eyes was so tre mtndous we were MEDICINE ' cc_:mld mo\'e the right or-( J limit.r. m hov: much we bit. We were able this ----------tJmt/to move 1t another 10 miillmetA;rS <a fraction of an inch>. and 1t shollld come out goOd eventually '' ALONG WITH A CHECKUP MONDAY, IDA planned a tour or The lo51.itute or. Rehab1hlallon Medicine at New York University Medical Center, because she's intera;ted i~ a possible career as a physical therapist. Ida still faces the "toucli·up" surgery to correC't a droopy eyelid. and mor(' ~urgery at the Un1vers1ty of Washington Medical School in Seattle, perhaps this summer, to correct jaw deformities Hut maybe the worst is over. "They fixed my nose . It ga\'e me headaches. I couldn't slay in school ." said thf' high school sophomore. "Tbe ,..alls were bright yellow. the sun came in and ltrove Jl"le crazy I s tudied at home Husbands Think Pregnant? -, Esquire Reveals Mystery Autlwr • ..... ~ ;:.._'.. I0.01 Qll.ESAil MD • .Til fa.LIM: ";_~-.:;..,j-:S a1ae11 P•ne Tams Junipers 69C ..... ·~.-~ ~-40 ~ N1nd1n1 Abella Oleander BOSToN <AP> -Gordon Usb, ncuon editor or Esquire magazine. says he ,...rote the unsigned story In the m agazine's February issue that generated speculation that J . D. Salinger was the author -' ~ Mofeas Ins. ond many "'°'" ~· ~ ~ jL .......... ..,. ...... ,,,.. .......... ..,. ...... ,,,..._,,.. ..... ., ...... ,,,.. .......... ,.,,. ...... ~ llOO MINIMUM --· Tbntory. "For Rupert -With No Promises," contained allusions to Salinger's writings and was printed with an editor's note saying it was the first time the magazine had printed an unsigned story R S.D. Whole~ Growers 11622 WAIMBlAVl. FOUMT AIM V AUIY PHOME 54~142' . IT FURTHt R SAID, "WE are not enttrely sure who the author 1s." "I wrote it for my own purposes," Lish said. ex- plaining 1t was an exercise involving Salinger's stories as well a s one by novelis t Bernard Malamud. Lish said he decided with someone else al Es- quire to get a story that would attract attention. > "I THEN DECIDED THE most interestmg would be to write a story that grew out of a gather- ing of fact and fiction that: mattered to me more tha n anything else around at the time." he said. For fast relief from that ~un down feeling ... ·'The story itself is an earnest and sen ous s tory ... .I wahted to write a story that wouJd lake people firmly by the neck. It's a good story a nd worthy of being printed," said Lish, adding that he is not a fiction writer. SENIOR CITIZENS m loot Off All /U Parch•••• SAVE: ON ALL PURCHAHS BY 8lCO ... l"'l. A, MLMHR or OUM SENIOR tlllllNS )Al.1'1(,) PL'-" AT NO CO.ST TO \OU RENTALS & AU Pre-P1id IX Pro9r111111 Honored Aur.1 Lo.in. ,1nd gu du.,ctly to ~uur d.-.;l\-r1 Thill• dll thcr~ b lu 11 Ui;>1m .ipprO\ ol c,f" '>lnlpl\' • r.'<111 <1pplocdlion. """II loe111 \•lltllll l• ~() •uflhl!pu1 , h"'" prlc\' of ~n\I ,,..,, tor \.nu .i,.,.,,,. lndu<l "I\! ""''"•<lfM?>-1allll'-.:-r-:-r""2. Anti h,,,~.._ n t c 1n11... ~inn• MAIN OFFICE Wij olleg~ Pharmacy •Al the Plaza in downtown Orange ~lOl'AIROR COSTA Mf <;A • • ~ t .. • • • ... • .. • • • ' o .. 11verv Sl'IYIC(' 'olb-37811 COSTA MESA: Me!><l Verde & Adams tRVINE: Umvers11y Dr & Michdson Dr LAGUNA HILLS: Ahrn Parkway & San D1l'!JO Freew.iv P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS eUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 1 rw toHnw•M pr..-Y>I\ ., <Somq h~ .• nf'" ... , HAPPY ~1'1(£R f'iF n~o w Ctntr4'1, S,...n1,111 Ant) C..•t.,.,,.,,,,. •/tnA (r,•rtt L.Ul\ 8o'ff'r ]1<1 ~M'tld f\•Ot·I A"'1t C.O~t• Mt•.,Jt (;olllff'l'f'\1tl .,,.,, f Ph'\ t>u\t~\ '' co"4:!ucr,o by an~" dtYH'Julll C~So\t"' 1 ~., \flltt~f'lt w t f1h'ff w1H\ t'°I~ Counfy Cltr~ rit Or.H'+4, .. Lo1.1nty .,., •~k!'Y ll ,.,, Flit.> Put>C•""'1t C>-tn°' C t"'t O~••Y P1I t F91l 11 ....., Mdrc" I I I\ 1 II' oSI 11 P UBLIC NOTICE P.U BLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSINlSS NAME STATEMENT l'ICTITIOUS aU\INEH NAME STATEMENT '",,.,,. tollOWlnQ Pff)On\ .,. 00•''9 bU\1 T ,,,. follOVWtflC) ()l•r\oOn ,, d04,,Q Dutt' tilt''\•\ nt-,._ A\ LO"'G JOHN S•LVER \lA~OOO 1'101'111.IE GR"H"M INTElllORS '>HOPPES. lO'S H•rbOr 8oull'V4td, S'H> \l-1lw1«W \I L.tQUl'W 8 •·''-" CA {.o~t,. M-. CA 97':i. •1&\I Pf\C.H CMl>Of'•hon 1750 Rfn .. oic• AO\.tlh f C,r.aP\Am \qo y,ht1ew C•nyo" 8f~rly Hill\ C.A '!0710 ~I \ <Qu"" 8<· l'h CA •7&\t Tht\ tM.l'\1nru I\ condv<•&a bv 0 tot Th.1' b4.t\mfl°'\ f\ tonOU<tf'fl by 11n 1n Pof"•ho,., O•v•Clu•I Pi1<1n Corpor••)M Rtr\.Al1~ f GrAMW\ St•vienS.ntord '"'" \t .t1""'4'''' w•'-fllt<O w1I,. ttw-~klenl Coun1y Crt-ra.. of Orian0t Count.,. on T'"' st•••Mil'f'\4 •• , fll•d with •tow-ftbruervJl 1911 F1?2" ~ubl1\htd ()" M'l:Of" («M\I 0•1ly P1IOl. l'lllH M•teh I 8 I~. n. lfll County Cl"'" ot Of 1JnQf County on J•n ll 1•11 PUBLIC NOTICE Cl'·l106 SUl'l!lll°*COVllTO,.TMI STATEOl'CALll'OllNIA 1'011 TMICOVNTYOl'ORANOE NO.A·-J HOTICIE 01' HE,._INGOI' l'ETITION 1'011 f'll0.AT& 01' WILL ANO 1'011 LETTEllS 0' AOMINISTllATION W ITH WILL A NNIXl!O ANO AUTMOlllZATIOfl TO AOMl .. ISTlll VNOEll THI INDEl'lNOINT AO· MllffSTi.ATtOflO,.tSTATESJ"CT E\lale ol EONA W Sl(ll'H.if!'R •-• E~~~~c"t,~e .. ~~e'~.-c~1VEN ,,.., EON"W SKINNER.dauqhl•r)>ld•U· oe-11 II•~ Iii.cf l\e,...n • 0«ttll011 ror PrQOalt of Wiii -tor luu.tnce ol L•I· t~r\ of Adm4nl\tr9flf')n wit,.. Wiii An -------------1nie-.-t:d to tnc .,.t.ttont"f' .,no autl'IOr11• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAMI! STATIMEHT Thf" foHOW1nQ °""\On' \r r OOtrMJ busi ""'" ... W E5TOVER PAINTINC. ANO OECORATIHf• 7'6S7 Cl'lro..,nta, Ml$· """ v .. 10 CA,•7MS 1 IOyd E'-"'"' Scnoo,,oveir .. ,..., C-.Orqe lflt'OV WKt, f04nt '""""''· 7 .. S2 t.hrlunfo\,Ml\11o'°"V•e10 (~9Jf<i7S Thh ""''""" I\ conduc ted by • C)e"'°r'91 partnPrtr'l•P (~rQt>Wft\1 FIO¥"dSchoonover Thi\ \l .. emenl w.a\ filed Wilft th~ County Clrtl< o• Oran0t-C.ounlY on February n, 1•71 ~tnt t1on to Admtf"l1\tt:r ,,,. '~tttt• ""'2• ,. ,.,., I tn~~ndrfnt Admlt\l'tr.'\f•ort OI E\t.Jff"\ Act ,,.,er..nc..• to ~1cti '' m•O. '"' h"''"~' Nr1•CIJl4r\ a/'d tt\4il t~ t•mf- At\d (>tac,. of hMrif'Y. tn-\Am• tw\ b4"f ~ wt tor Mar-("' 11 ,,., .. .Jt 10 00 .t m .,, 11\• c.ourtrQIOlln of 0erMr1tnenl No l ot Y•d cour1. •t 100 Cl-vtc Ct'ntcr 0f"iV"t· W•"· '" t~• C.llv o f S•nl• All• C1Utom1e. Dated Ff'bruary14 lt77 WILLIAMl.SIJOMM, {.ounty Cler• llllNUT J.SCttAO,Jll. • f'•o1 .. 11-1 COr-•••on P.O. lu 1716 NtW'9rt -..Cll, CA. '2"1 T.i; lrtO.,,__ Atterftt y ltr: 1'9l"l•tr Publl\Md °'"'"0<' Cod\! Dally Polot, MM Ch 1, 2.s.1•n Publ"""° !>M1Qff C.oHI Oolly P1lol IOl-11 M4rrft I.I. IS 11 1911 71\111-------------1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE l'ICTIT10US IUll .. ISI .. A.Ma ITATIMINT T ... fol._"'9 ... -•reOOJ ... l>UJI. MH•\: DONNA J£AN'$ CA II PET CAlll, ft7l I'-.. di., -nal9f0 CA.. .,.., c;.r.., O..rlft Smltll, llJf11 .,.. .. ~ Cir • WHtmlMter. CA.,,.., Tllfl l>llltftftt It COft<llKf" bf -I"· Olwl<Nal. o.rv~Sml ... T'llls .... .....,. -111.0 ..tlll "" C-1V CltA .. Or..,._ Gwftl~ ~ Fe0noervu.1m. n Dl6 Pwbll.-cl <> .... Coetl o.111 lllttet,. M<1rd11,1, U,22. "11 PUBLIC NOTICI-.: --.. -O~T-1 C~l!~T""o,...,.c""11""1""0""1 T"'o"'11"'1,---~ SUl'llllOll COUllT O~ THI! ' STATl!O~CALIFOllNIA l'Oll \ TNl!COUHTVO,OllANOl ~ Ne.A·'"IJ ~ E\Ule ol REX J WEAKLEY,j °'::~~~tE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo 1"6~ <r•dltOr\ of tht AbOv•• Mm~d dtceden'; '"4' -'" Pf',-~"~ "';wiNJ claim~ ~•ln\t t~ _,,_.d dK. .. cMnt "'• r~ir•O to hl1 i ,.,._,,, ¥1'tf" fhl' ~<f>'W'V ~ouc.Mr• "' ~f ~,,,,. ot t~ clr-r• of '"~ •bO'f"t ... n I tl,.d ctturt ~ too.-.'trtt thrm. w ith ow·. nf'<"°~'•rv Yl'Xtwn .• to,,,,.. u"df'rsu1n~~; •I th# c.Wct 01 LYlllC .. & lllELSON, <>°' Prot•\'\.on..tl (.twpc:M'".tUon, ,,. WO\.hlrC\ Blvd , ... 1.1010 LO' Ar>Qtlo. C.A 90011. TeltoflO..,. 11111611 $~1, wl\ICl'I I• Ill<., .,.K• of li<n•rw.• of n.e unotr~ ,,., •II m•ll"'' -•••nlnq to llMt e<i.te oh ~~l~:~=~a~l1:;.:::=~l'li llttf 0 Oalod FtbruArv1S. 1'11 • JOANNW WHITEMAN E"'tcutri• ot the Will of I"" •bOW Nl'Md 00C8Clefll o..'l'NC .. 6NELSON A l'refosl ... l~all.,. •UWlloM,.91 .... S"llt ltlO Ltt fln•IH, CA ... ,, Ttl~.._. (ll)Ua-UC1 Atttr .. tyl fw l•<Vlrl• I Publl\...., Or.lnot COHI D•llv PllOI, M.,ch 1,1, U.11. 1917 1~-17 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICT ITIOUS IUSINISS NAMISTATIMI NT The lallowlnQ per-••• <10l1191>U5l· MOH' H. SALT ESQ. FISH & CHIPS, nn . So 8rookllur1t Slretl, An•1'f'"'· C" nl04 I( UO• v .... c ...... ,,11 M•dl1on Ave No. J, W11tl,..IM1tr, CA tt61l Sl'lu·l'ffl CNn. '511 ~''°" Ave., Ho 1. Wn.,.,,.Mier. C.A9161l T hh bu•IMH h conouclMI t>v ii ~MUI ~'1-lll4P Kuo-Y •nv O>trn Tllil 11.i-1 ••< Ill.cf •Ill! tr..e c-•v Oerkol Or-CountyonJ•n. 12, 1'17 ' ' s Director . Gets Apology Sought M al new ,,..APW.,•r'-, . , • Or an 1 • Co u at y ORAICE C011f1Y • •• A P'~laco ~food-Tun1portatloa Com· · · natU?"fdb' a C.elntHd QOICCJ ft'OID the TV &bow :J:u1ce have qned &o • .. P'bylll1 " beaiD ncnalt.lna ao e. · Supervl80I' W ••t•I k a pa wud oatnp eeuUYe director early whe-n the Jan. Z3 tpl&ode "' UM a.bow Ml lo San um sprins. A Francisco contained a.a uch•l\I• about a The c ommlulon. ppraiser :iupervisor named Mendebobn foolins around witb •blcb bu authority lo hi11ecrt>tary. review county transit ·' As the CBS show betan Sunday nllbt. an an-a n d road bull ~a Fi.ghts for !I nouncer made a brief 1polo0 sayifti the show is bud.et.I, was creat~y fictional and "ot courae the sentence was not in· new state le1lalatlon • UID&lllJCn'lal~~b 1~ hard _. ad mOll ._ ,_ children." Dr. Elpen np......._ Howncr, fo.-tb.Udreo al:rudJ IA ldaoDl It Is sun .. too late to protect tban. •·~boob .,. prime plfle'el,... the apeead ol,..... ease and Wl,pl'Olccted ac:bool chlldnft a.boWd def. inltely ~ sivftl the ntffSa.ary vacdnea, •• be tald. Dr. El.pen added that adult.I need to raew their prated.I.on a1ainat t.tt.nus and dlpbtberta because lmmunliation a1alnst them Jut oa1.Y 10 years. \ tended to refer to a real penoo and certainJy not to ywebalrc.h took effect lb is Lower Rate the well·regarded real Supervisor Bob Mendelsohn of San Francisco.'' c c~ h s • . Weston Fiaber of the An antique appraiser ounty ~ ets 1 Fanne Fose, the Argentine·born stripper once ~~~~nC~o~:e~~: who claims ahe is being "" F REE tM MUNIZATlONS Aa E bein1~ .ad· ministered at clinics set up In Oran1e County. Jn Huntington Beach immunbatiom ~ available on the rirst three Wednesdays of the mooth at the Lake Street Club House from 8 to' 11 a.m. and in Colla Mesa at Fairview Community Church, from 1 to 4 p.m ., in Fountain Valley at the school district of· fices on the second Monday of the month from 1 tot p.m. and in Santa Ana at the Health Department Clinic on Fridays from 8:30 to 11:30 a m. and 1to4 Pm. ., romantically linked to former U.S. Rep. Wllbv forced to charfe $35 an ; Milla, baa come home to make a ments, who has been hour has sued the Anti· B h • Fl • J -- movie, and local newspapers se.rvi.ng, as tbc com· que Appraisal Associa· rQllC in on(l,.(l, say she is in love with her direc· musaon s temporary tion of Garden Grove for , tor. staff member' said one $3 million lD damages. 0 range Count Y H recruiting fl.rm has pro· e said the Florida The 4l·year-old Miss Foxe, ed cond · . . television evangelist church. to be qown as whose real name is Annabel Bal· pos uctmg a na· Au?ciation member. Robert Schuller has an· the Rolling Hills Com· t1stella,anivedin8uenosAlres tionwlde management Gloria M . L~avey .nounced plans to munHy Church, will be Dr. Elpers said parents should accompany their children and bring any immunization records fromNewYork-whereshelives. se~r.ch for the com · further seeks 10 h_er establish a branch located about~ miles p;;;;;;;;;;=;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;===--s;:;;;;=;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;~ She told reporters that the m sion. Orange C?unty S~~nor church in Florida 's north ofDlsney\forldon they have to the clrnic. movie is a light comedy and He said the cost would ~ourt action an tnJunc-Orange County. a lO·acre site doqated by musical in which she will do a be $5,350 with an addi· lion th~t ~ould. ~aJt the Schuller, whose the developer oqn adja. 't:lflN" /''.,. ~/· <Oii """"' ~ 2,..,..., strip·lease number. Its tille is ~ox£ tional charge of up to a.ll~g~ price ftxmg ac-•·Hour •f Power!S cent mobilehom~ ark. the Sparush equivalent of "Take Care OC What's Up $800 for travel and other ta vittes of the def en· television program is r--------4----lbl!t18tACM Hl vO Slllll :116 CASf llUILOING llUNllN<olUN WlACll.CAllfOllNIA 12 .. f Front." expenses. dants. now shown on some 160 One nt:'wspaper quoted Miss Foxe as saying./ But Commissioner Her lawsuit is accom· stations and whose JACK ANDERSON that sheplanstomarry Rafael Coheo,thedirector. Ralph Clark suggested panted by a companion Garden Grove Com· 1 announces o series of ... • th at the new agency legal action in which the munity Church attracts :: Assault charges against syndicated columnist might fi rst want to look district attorney's office up to 10,000 drive·in and ~ REVEALS I the ,. Mlke Roykohavebeendroppedafterheapologized loca lly for someone similarly seeks an in-walk-in worshipers each j to five persons for smashing a catsup bottle over a already famillar with junction that would pr e-Sunday. said his new • table when a 26·ycar-old actress turned down his of· California transport&· vent the defendants' al· church will be "almost EFFECTIVE PARENTING seminas beginning March 3, 19n at 7:00 p.m. DAILY PILOT f0t f""'o .nfatm<)IO\.•tl •)~ 848-0331 ~ fer to buy her a steak din· tion laws before looking leged viQ)ations of the entirely a ministry to ~ ( Jner. natioo~~. ~ermM,Act, ~ anti·~o~l~d~e~r~~l~e~.·~·~~~~L---------~================~=~ ~ PEOPLE Judge' Bea Edelstein Clark said local talent trust measure. R ffELl'S , of Circuit Court fined the is available for the post ' · p l' t p i · · It claims that associa· , u I zer r ze·wtnntng and coot.ended lhe COM· u~LSTERY ' cnl · t f th Ch.i g tion members who de· ..-nv 1 ., umrus 0 e ca 0 ~iasioo could conduct a W'-Y•W.d ~ Daily News $100 after he pleaded no contest to a ation~de search if no mur at charging $35 an ~ charge of disorderly conduct. hour for appraisal' work "'-9"t $,. ''l can assume that ~Y anger you felt, and I ne qualified for the posi· are being threatened lfll H.'bor lt•cl would have been outraged, cannot equal the anger ·on turned up locally· with expulsion. Code~ -54t·OJH > and acute disgust I experienced when I realized •••••••••••~---~----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiirl \\hat an ass I'd made of myself," Royko, 44, said in ! a wnllen apology to five membt!rs• of t.Qe play : "Knock, Knock " . • Senatt:' President pro tem James Mills has • another term as acting governor this week. • The San Diego Democrat, second in succession as acting governor when the chief executi\te is out of the sftlte. holds the top job 'i"" :•i between 9 a .m. Monday and 7:55 Y tonight if Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and U . Gov. Mervyn Dymal· Jy stick to current plans. Brown is attending the Na· tional Governors' Conference in Washington. Dymally also is in Washington with meetings in- volving the Border States Com- mission. .. Several fund raising tours by wor ld hea\ywe1ght boxing champion Muhammad All to ALI Arab naltons on behalf of the Na- tion of Islam failed because of drunken and sexual debauchery by members of bis entourage, says a complaint in federal t'ourt Constantine Kaagles. the at· 1orney who filed the suit in Chicago on behalf of a foreign fund-raising corporation. would not say wht>ther Ali himsell act- ed in the manner described by the suit The compl .. 11nt a~kb $S malhon in damages Cot (iarland M. Taylor, of Chicago, and his firm, the· AmN1can Ar;ib1un Investment Co Deaths Elsewhere I H · {"II E S l'lt 1-:, l.. ta h 1 AP I Mike l..oenlnt. 14, pr<'stdent of th1• NJ t1onal Pilot<. 1\<.soc1at1on, ha-.. hl'<•n k111N1 in the t•ruc;h of a h~hl a1rplanl• north'' l'Sl nf her.-. Authorit1<''> ~.11d lht• bod1t:'s of l..o<'nln~. his :-.on Stott and an un1df'n taf1cd \oun.: \\11man \\Cre found Mond11y. , IAL Tl·lllGHOH ~ •UHHAL HOMI Corona c101Mar613-9450 Co~ta Mesa 646-2424 HLLllOADWAY MOUUAU I tO Broadway CO'll!I MP'lil 642 9 150 SMrTM TVT'HtU. U M8 WISTCUH-CH•rn. •27 E. 17th St. Cost a Mesa • S.6-4888 Santa An11 Chapel 516 N Broadway ·Senta Ana • ~7 .. 131 SMTHS' MOlTVAlT 627 Main St. Hur;itington Beactt • 53~539 PIB FAMILY COLOH14L fUHUAt. HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893·3525 PACIAC YllW MIMOllAL 'All( Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1llc View Onve Newport, Cahlo.-n1a 644-2700 McCOIMIClt MOITVAIJH Laguna Beach •94·1M15 Laguna Hilla 768-0933 San Juan Cao1strano • .. 49S.1178 ~~ s ~NTA BARBA HA 1 \1'1 E d ward Dabl~rJ, 76, a oneltme expatn<Ate write r whose literary caret-r spanned more than SO year11. died Sunda\· Among his nov· <•le; \\t'r<' "Bottom Oogs." ··Kentucky Blue Gras~:· "Flea or Sodom.'' and h1~ autotiiof.!raphy ··eccausel Was Flesh.'' D..ad1 Nod~ eAltltlMl'.CMl'.A TF ltFSA llAAAENEC>iEA rr••loto!nl ~f N,.wCJIOr't ~Mh, (•llfO""•• Pe"'" ~w \V "f't ~·•Y •V'll'f\tn<) F•b'U:arv )1 "" '" -t ,_..,,uH t\f "*"' 4ttJfomt'l4)H--<4~11 """' n" Hlql\w•v JO Nr.tll "' Allrll•nto ,.,..,,, '4lif t\ f>orA Ott\ J•,,tMty 11, t•)• fn l'~mon~ CAii'°'"'·' S... !lad llW<t In Po~ .. ..., Cl•,.....,..t .,.,.,. lo mov· •fW) Nll'tWO')Pt n•Ml\ thr..._ .,..,..... ~. T ""'"'"WI\' A ,..,,,,or •t H.wpof'f Marbor H1q11 '<ll(Wll Sli"'M~ ere....., Nrt'lt• Mr Ar"ld Mr\.. LUI\ ""',"""""'""''· ~ broth,.,. R~l'tt .tnd ' "'''' NA1'C'f Atl ot M••-1 llfo«:h. C.. Al•o "''"'-.d 1rt h•r P•l-1 or•~t!flh Mr. el>d """ LOUIS 111.wr-hH of Ooll.,10. ll•r m.l.,."91 qr--...0"'9• M~ ()NI E CeMy of I.A-. A ,.,,..., wlll 1M ••<ll•d Oii ...,.._,.,., MAlr<ll? •1 1 JO PM I" OU< l.9CIY OI TM Anum!lllO" C•tt>o1tc 0-Vrcll cia ... ..-. ~ et llle Cllfl\llen 9,...,., will o. celfllrat" l>n f""t\Clrf Mar<llJ•t IO·OOAM l111i. Cllur(ll llM'fel .,.II IM •I Holy~ CPmolery Todd AM'"°'lal C~I • Pomo<1<1. C. I\ In <P>MO" ol ~ m•lll~. Fr-_., ,.,.,. el conlrlbullon• t" Tl•• Tot"• ll•r· """Ch<'e ~lfl F....,. Uf'lt of"- Loyola MMymouftt Unl .. Mlty, 7!01 W toll\ Sl-l L9 4'l'IOl'IH900fS. MUOM&S P4'UL V HUGtiES,,..lltH!lof~ Mua. C.lllO<nla, Pas~ a••Y Ofl F1Mu•l"f71,tt17 Heluurv!Wdll'tllll ,wife Rwll't ~; two -Midi"'' I HutM\ of Hunll'°9fo" e.ac11. c..; -0 .. 10 H~ Of Mlukln Vlelo. C• •• 11.,. ~r....itlll,._ Rourv _.,ic. on T.,.td•Y Mef'cll 1 e« l :OD l'M -' kn 11,.,,.dway ~I. M41H Of 1fW Olr1S· lieft 811<181.,, ~y -rel! 7 11 • 00 AM al SI. JollClll"I =lie Olur<h. ,,,.....,... at ~ rt! Celftfler,. .... .-.... Metl\IM't' d I rnlorL "'1•tll0. LAMa•aT MARY 8 , l.AMlll:RT, ~ of Ou1199 ~-so ....... Affl ... l •I "'"'oort OMcll. cat11on11a, P•KH •w•y ,. • ...._., 7'. 1'77. ~ lnwVI""' l>'f "" ---.... _,~ 11'11f Alie• M .. 1111; meny nlH•~ arid ~~wlll••W-y Mar~ 1. al t 00 """-St. JN<lllm Chuttll. ~ ot ,,,. Clvi.t'-....,. •• Wiil Mat t.00 AM• Ttlw'°"Y ,_.f'(ll J at St. ~"' C.l!IOll< a-ti\. '"""' 11\aM at Ho•• Seoulcher te-•~ .O~ ~ .. II~ MlrnMtl MJ tuo.. • 'ouAL1TY 1n1urance at reasonable prices! AUTO MAUJID OYH JS ........ COLLl .. I STUDIHT • StK6Ll OV aa J 0 • s116. rU YUl 5150. I'll YUi STORE KEEPERS FACTORIES APARTMENTS CONTRACTORS HOME OWNERS S YUltLY S 173 so.ooo .. . . . . . • s100.ooo •. '.1~~~~ 5363. 1'llole l..tthlg Hte Scrrinrp Ir Locm co.er Y• ... ar~ probefy paylllg fartoo...ch. YACHTS LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS EXTtNDED CRUISING TO MEXICAN WATERS COMMERCIAL BOATS BOB PALEY MORTHOC-546-3205 & ASSOC, INC.souTHoc-642-6500 torlhe PriCeOI <\pires 1s C'PIPbrJl1ng the ltrst anniversary ol lhe optm· ing of its Cosio Mesa and Irvine • dinners Restaurants ~ith n lantost1c treat for you ... rwo DINNERS FOR fHE PRICE OF ONE• ll'c; our way ol saying "thanks" tor being our customer ~-----------... I The only requirements are that you bnng this coupon with you. 8/1.d I both meals must be the same.The Two For One offer is good at Spires I Restaurants 1n Costa Mesa and Irvine only and includes Top Sirloin I Steak. Fish and Chips or Roast Beef. 'The Two for One offer e51ds I Saturday, March 31, 1977. Two lor One Dinner Specials are not pre· 1 pared lor take·out and are served lrom 2 p.m. to 10 pm. All other menu items are at regular prices. la 1 TOP S1RL01n mAK 1: $3.75 1 I A big 9~ Ol.-lf6t1 ccxh!d....,.,,, lJ ,._,., ~ VM• •• ..-i 'oce ol Dd8IQ, ~toll rd tllaet I I FISH I CHIPS TWO FOR S2.25 I I o.lclOllS lceWdc Cod. '*O lrl9d. Wlltl 5ol<IP or ~ ~.,.. I'! ''~'-re<. N's Ind latlaf ~ I I ROASI BEEF . TWO FOR S2.75 I I lonclM ~' rl rotr.I ~. tlr~Wl'I f13'ftl soop Of 'lllad ~e, dlcd d ~3'0. rtf'VI •Clll 11'1d bullac:J ------------ don't . fill out an· income tax form this year! Let cne of our special ists do it br you . No charge . Join the thousanos of Los Angeles Federal Savers who have their personal Federal and Cal1forn1a tax returns prepared without charge. All you need to do is deposit $5 000 rn a Los Angeles Federal Savings Passbook or $1 0.000 in a higher rate Investment Cert1fic1te. If your savings are now in a commercial bank or another institution. Los An~les Federal Savings wi!I make your tax appointment ndw and handle the details of transfer. Make your appointnent early. The sooner you ·file, the faster your refund can be mailed Plus: higher intere~t than paid by any commercial bank. Plus interest day in to day out. Plus the security of savings insured bf a Federal Agency. Plus extra hours. Plus free service~with a minimum deposit: sate deposit box, checking account at a commercial bank, docu-- ment dupllcat1or, Travelers Checks and more. It takes only one minute and one signature to start your savings account Alf Interest Compounded Daily Annual Yield 8.06% 6.72% 5.39% Fe~erel '"'ulaUM1> etl reducllon Annual Rate "$1000 for 6 to 1 O years $1000 for 1 to 2 years 6Y2% Paid day-in to day-out sv.% lt early wllhdlawal lrom •~•m eccoun11 1ub11<.t to ·~.,.1an111I 1nlr•· LOS ANGELES FEDERAL AVINGS ewport Beach Blvd. -across from City Hall • 675-4500 N 1-1 MON.-THUAS.• g.9 FRI. Head Office: L Angrles FE'derat S1wmgs and Loan Association One Wllth.lre, Los oles 90017 • 01h~r ofliccs throughout th• area • ... KJ U • I CM> "RJd r Oft the Rain." C~rlrs Bton~nn !Uur In t1UI mcn.1• drama w th Jill lrttl•nd und Marlene " Jobc:rt. NBC 8 10:00 --PoU ce Story. Gabe K:.plan of "Weloom~ JJack. Kotter" plays It :.cmi craous b .an orr beMl n rootie. of. facer batUmg both the drug pushers and his department su~raors. <.:BS 8 11.~ "How the West Was Won.·· The 1962 epic movie which inspired the current TV series. Spencer Tracy nurrates the film. which ft:atures James Stewart, Carroll Baker, Debbie Reynolds. Richard Widmark. John Wayne and many others. (TV DAILY LOG] TUESDAY ( EVENING 6 :00 0 0 d 10 ( 17 ) ) Nt9S 0 2J 6 ( 29 f €} Nein O 2e l1ktn Bultlbilll 1,,.,1 . A:,, , ' 6 Gomtr Pylt O Gunsmollt m Pi1tlt1d&t r1mily Q) Adim 11 m llectnc Com1>1ny ED Oum1tte Se11es lt M1h Ooutll\ ( @ L1tUt lluull -6.30-0 01n1h1 ,u• 1, •"d"n 9e11v M1•·1lr "' 6 Andy G11llilh 10 Mtr• Gulfin Show m f1m1lr Af1111 ( 17 3 ) Gun~lt fl) loom ( >9 O ) 8tw1lchtd £) To•n h ll 7:00 .. ~ " .. , oo n 6 mm"'"" 6 My Thrtt Son' 8 To hU lht l1uth 0 Concenll'll0!1 m 1 Lowt Lucy CD !ht FBI ffi Ame11u 1,11tl Jo11i.ll Hour ED llhcHe11 L•h1tr Rrport 1 19 a I The Pi1tr1d•• r1m1tr 19 £1t•1lnts\ on StNice @ McH1lt's N1vy -7:30- 0 C•ndod C•mm o lht Ocld Couplt 0 10 2l 6 ID Holly,.ood SQuues e Tht Gont S"°" 0 Tht lo~tr'I WJld m I 19 e I Br•dy Bunch ( '1 3 l Nu/lw1llt on lhr ROold W Chenn,I 71 T on1•hl J9 l11r1 Club ED f' Troop 8!00 0 ( 11 l ) 8 Wllo \ Who O 23 6 10 ID Bu Bu l l1tl s11 .. p 11 • • " • .. • ' ~f ' f Mo•ir C ({hr) lub•I' ,.. 1 n I 1 0 ( )'I e I ~· H•OPY 010 ~·j, , F , JI I I .. I ' 'I {) Mo•1~ C (7hr) ' R1Mr !In lh• R11n" 'I· • • I t'1 • ·t111t I '' ' • H .~ ' m Lui ol th• Wild m l't111 Moon ffi lltW\ l'vblte Afl111t i'> lilovit C 11hrl Hon• But lht 81ne" ' , • tD Solh Conducts Wa~n,, • With Ch1uco Sympnon• funded by K11ft lnr W Ch1u10 Syt'llpllon1 0°111•\IJJ !>0U1 Colldud\ W•tn•• Ir I , ~ .. {!) V•~ • C.1nt1• ED P1yrhJt ,!1tno11,.n.1 -8 JO- O Mo.,, c (~01 0•1t~•••I . . 0 ( 2t • ) lt llfflftt ' S11111ty lfo 1111111111 ''" ""'· ,,, ,, 11 11111 f'H'°''~ 1n1r m CrouWlh m Chlnt$t l'10111m ID S1tu1h1111 Comtdr 9:00 0 ( 11 • 3 ) 1 e llPA S H ""' Ano 111 rn p•nr1unl lo•• 1 II• fin~ w11 "'U•~m1>, htll1J1l'Cl ~V l1Pitrtrf" pohl W1ll1• ~lllllOn "h'' mA~C> 11 ' 1111 1nr\• lh~I ,ff•n lrArl\ I 1n1u11 IM ltu ~~ulhlul n It•••~ £~lhmn11 lh• b 1Hl•!.,1d b11c • buc ~'""'" l't •r ''' H•"'~'Y' ~nd fl I .. ~o dt<td• In do • 1T••lhu1~ 1bout •' fD Mu)l<Jf Vulfty fl) fllru Mists 1n the ltortll•t11 Oo<un. MJ•y 1 •• l'•e " ·~, a•J ~ ~ I '~n~t lrl14 ts 1n th, A111ertr ao l;c11~ .... t -o• "'"' Guv AndP11011 scul~t r l,•o•,• lwlJ"J'"• .nJ Pott It ••dL• Ro•!~·' 'O comn muo• r ·, 1 I·•'"• .trout art ,nd lh Jr' r t • ironment m Ch1mpion$h1p Wrestl•nl -9:30- 0 ( t 7 3 ) $ One Oiy •I A T1mt m to.istuu: OHIS In SP'Cf r,, Jin 1 t l 1fl ,,.r .t. ft1111J".(i•. ( " •t HI r•r1.,., I• 1 • tlem I "'~dd ti.r.• r 11 d 1 • pol•nl•dl ~lutoOf!I m Mu)JUI St11u 10:00 0 ( 11 ) ) 9 Ko11k ~ "ll}, I I I • I lull " •1 "' lr•H ,, 1,.p I.' .. ~ c• £,•', llit.1 ~, ..... , 14 c • •1 ... l'itl\ (ft;.,. I t.J ... (I ,.. ... ;J ( ·' H , .,:t., J ft-Ur\,. L ... ) CJ• rv • ~·· .. • 11t .. ..,;t O POLICE STO~Y. CABE * KAPLAN (TV's ltotttr) in blind new role! 0 23 6 m l'olKt Story Cr• ot Ou• O> I> C161y 1>•b• ~J~'J•o tt a •'1 1. ti tr,, r • •· tr h~ '"' 1 Jl " ~· • r, h 1n t ; It ti t ,,.. ,,, h I l'f t )'\'I It 11 ~' O O News t. Ctltbr11y Rtw~ 0 FAMILY · OOUC * BLINDED IN CRASH 0 ( 29 ij) J9fJm1ly D'I; I t11r11t··f J 1~ , ul• ,, l r.· ' 1 r ,, "~•·rl "·j rr~ I ~" 1dr b•"wt1 o 1w11·. ~ 1 ~ 'v v.h •, caofd t, IJ1"' , ·'Y*lt, 11,., IL 1 ,f n1·. 1 te: 111 21, Cunsmokt ID lo E1ptct to 01t i Film About l1Y1n1 I•• , I f • • , •'._.I -10 30-m al g)News 11:00 O O CJ 9 N~ 0 • 10 2J 6 Nn,, O ( 1'I ~ I loot Amt""" Stw ,, S1nr••· M•t<h Up O l1 .. vt11cl m •hry H11tm1n lbry Hllf"lil" m T~. Hln•111100••1S ( 11 3 1 Thr R•n<ll ~ io 8ul cl Ccnvc~o W l1t1no Consortium -11,30- 0 I I 1 • CBS l ite Moo.If C H°" 1~ i'IHI Wtt Won' '' t )?•# • 0 U b •O £) lDM9y Cmon ~ Th• Pit t •b O t n 1 lu•1d11 lllooot of ~' Wui mN•<n m s,, e.io,, 2'l Tht 700 C1u~ 12:00 O lot ot G101i<l>o CJ Mowot C: C-11f lu f m ~., m w .... Toc•tlltr Ac1•" f '\ t I 1~• Oth r l'lo"'•~ 'J ., (' •• -12 30- 0 Alt 'l•tM Sflow 0PtrU-W11 "'•d lht l1ctr Altt<ls lll.P lb ... 1:00 0 lJ b 10 '-"°' 2:00 0 ._.,If OelftlkfHlllTt' "'Ml( Ill t~t C1i. .. ·n~ b fl"I fldt-m All N1chl Siio•. "lht Suu Ol11m •.• ,,Olll ''f• Ster(" -3:05-0 Mowot C ""1~ of l'~Ytrs" ut• 1 R 111il Rurton DAYTIME MOYllS MUCH l If to.' IOf '°"' ~fllttlet. '" "" diy' s 11\CMH. 9.30 e "Hoti4ay IH" (mu~) 'J I red A.\( Alff, 81ng Cm~v 10:00 2t c "iu for r .... (m1;~t ~O Dom 01y. Gal'llOll 11!1cRu 121>0 m "Sta tf G11u" (d•11 '41-Sp,ncei lurv. K1thilr1nr ttrpbu1n Mtfvto Doueln I 00 e "fmntvla" (d•ill )S- I• hn Aur Lt<> C t.J11oll Q )l t l m hhct Womu t!rlnd~r• lo lrun •ho••\"'""• ~·bit for th, \CA1•ni •t 1 t ••' f ~min "'ho sturtJ 1n p. rno 11 IT\ ' Ptro" hdt•'1'n '""'''~ '" art.,, hstm•nl f, 1 1n 1 Ire•> IJ pl4v 1n Cl t ..... " Wllo "'* Wis" (d11l ~-Ch~1111 Wtl>b. Clo!" C• lhilmr Robert flemm1n&. 2f "C#ls ol '*"*"' ( dtt) '62-0aw•d llr;en. lesl~ C¥on • ~dult mo-1t 0 ( 2t f ) lt RICll !qn, ,_ lhn no "-: fC {2111) "G"nt" r d•t I 1d•AI ~-Ro<l Hud'IOn, (loubtth l1vt111 lilmu Onn 3111> Cl ct ~ .. (wn) !>4-Stf<f1n1 Hayde11 ll~ CJ "QtarHtillt•" (dr•) 10-lolln Orhrm Git!Y Co01ns m """ Gritti~ si-' Q) V1111n11n l:JO D C "1uttlf1..W I" (d11) '60 Ehnbtth h ylOr, l.aurenct H1rvtv [ddoe fish,. KOCE Television (50) J:eo ... •·11 ., .. ,. , ... •• SnAMlllT•llllT J:OOM lll.ICYIUC C0M'"ANY MISTI• II~ Ill NllONMtlMOOO IN"1NITY f'ACTOltY . , .. YO'T9111 '"I ... 1.IN ll ""•"•NI I nun .. OIMINSIOMS I .. CUL TUlllS ''Pitl..,.l"'k llr•"' TNI H°"41l0AllOINlll '()rvwlt>QV909t•hl0\ll'' • ,,. .. ..,..." u .c.1. fl'OttUM .. c1111 ... ,, .. ,.,.,,...,_, In IN Ii<-• ........ Wlq & to WOlll.O'"lllU 'M MA.JTlll~ICll TMllATlll ''UM1•'" Oo-1•1" Ottnl11tlelo" , ..... II.YIN .... 0 THll rtnHUllOM Mo1•n ., , .. eomo.-411'4 ~Ultor •· n .. Tl41lMA"'llU\.IN1tll•all"OllT .. am 8 Playhow_ . Opening .. Death of a Sale.man' Tia "Gr \'can" •t Lhe Laaun• ~wlllm Pae,.._. -O\'tt llbnqln1 d.lntrtw llep Oraham, 111 ho look oH-r rtkUc r n ot ~ county'1 lar1•t rommun~h ·theater ab ~·"' OJAO and wa:. tn 11trummtaJ tn turntnr.: 1h dc>bt of neut)· ~.000 into a i.urplu:5 of mort-than doublt.' th•t amount. I.ti calll.na U a carc.•er. Graham and hli; wife, Elsu. who also wa. mvolved m bwld in1 the playhou.<ie'11 membership lo nearly double it. 1971 fi&urt' have sold their Lagun11 home OHtMM and wall retire in Carli.bad. Owing his tenure at Laguna, Graham directed 15 of the theater's last 38 producttons Among h1::. finest sho":. were .. Long Day's Journey Into Night, .... Summer and Sm oke· and "How lhe Other Half Loves," 10 "hr ch he abo :!tarred THE ANNOUSCEME:-0.1 OF Graham·:. rehre ment com~ on the day the Laguna playhouse rs "IOUMD FOi GLORY" ,. -" "'"~' .... , ..... ''Vl&otLAMR FORCE" 1 6 II -·U I '"" ~ IM H SO. COAST PLAZA l~IH•nl04 SI ~'7111 ,.,,, .. ,.,, 11ROCKYu 7:)0 & 9:45 ·AT/SUK-I :)0-):40 S:4~:00-t 0: IS CINfMAUND UIHt bW lAlk., '-J) Ir.ti .. H.EAJCY RUDA Y" ••• -.. n , ... 1•11 1&1 ~--.. l .. l J .. , , ..... >• ~rAH" ~&''''' ~fl--J , .. , ....... • • lf ' I l~lt '"''•' ilfE SEVEN PER CENT ,~lP,~l~11!.'I '° "MAil.A THOH MAM" ""~' , __ ,, ..... ,., .. CINEMAUNli "NOAH'S AH" .-o "' ,....._) ... , ,. ---- ~YAWARO N<llit IN.AT IONS! --·· ...... , •!iii' ..._ .. ' ,. • ' • '"'I ... ,. 'I I • •• f .... "SWD'T AWAY" '"T\H4k ¥1510 .. w Ill THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •!>32 6121 CITY Cl .. TH CIMlNAS S.A fRWY IMANCHlS:'ER (X _s; G FRWY 1c;1rv OR.[)( I A "CASSAHDlA V C•OSSIHG" t•I •sAllO• WHO HU. F•OM GlACt ~l'Tff TMf SU " "SHAGGY D.A." "IN SEARCH OF NOAH'S ARK" (G) REVEALS. I g,tj ''1il l fMM ..... _,,,, -e .... -~·~----...... -... l .... , •• ,, •• • .......... , I""•• '"""'""a• •. ,.,. O••f' '"'" • NOW SHOWING PAUL NEWMAN IN ____ ,, SLAP SHOT """'' , -,. ti • ·• ,..,..\•-.• R ... --~- ill l ll"AMOS '9° rtl WPOM I tllll MA !dB ftj·j I I ••• h•t .. -.... ··---..... . ..._ ....... -.,.fl I \. '•• ••ti.4 11, \ .. NETWORk" llJ HSHAMPOO" ••• CRI "BOUND FOR GLORY11 PGI "LENNY" CRJ pr•panna to mOW1t lta most ambelioua production In many Y••rt, Arthur MUIC"r'a 'Ocall'I ol a SaJHman. ·· Htr:n-hel Zohn ts IU"l d1rwtor Cast In on.-°' the finnt rolea e\itt -ntten. that of Wllf>· Umtan, la Don Rboadt-'I, with Jun KObu plnin1 his Wlft.'. Linda. J~ Pawlak and Glenn H~fn<'r portray Wllly't aons em and Happy, while other ~!It . mtmbers ar• Tom Rav1laht, Erhe Ralrd. Alf~ l.utjeans, AJex Kob•. BUI Carden, J.tn~t Wt.'<•"er. Stanley Abruharnaen. Chery Schre1bu and Ginger Hancock "Death or a, Salesman" will ~ pr~aented Tuesdays throui.:h Saturdayii.ut 8:30 In the Moulton Playhouse. 606 Ltieuna Canyon Road. for a three- week engagement. Re11ervaU~ 494;0743 ALSO OPENING TONIGHT. after an im· pressive prevtew earlier, Is the South Afncan Black Theater ProJect on the Orange Coast College cam· pu:. The four-man ca:.t "111 present its 1mprov1~a· tional play "Sur\'lval," tomght through Saturday. Brought to the t;nlted State:. through a swamp of red tape by OCC dramlll leacher James Bertholf, ··oocnw DA.a.t AT J..J'._,L......,11 .. ,... .,UG. OA&t Af 4-..,.J tt ... ,.. ... h ...... ) 1~~,... "4·2400 'Town' on TV LOS ANGELES CAP1 -Another version of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town" is coming t o telev1s1on. Emmy win· ner George Schaefer pro· mist's "a fres h ap- proach" to the American classic. which will ap· pear on NBC May 30. &a ......... e YANllU tfMaAVl TMI SMMl4NT ICllvnoH tN I """ l&.ACKllllD I~) MATNll U.T • OHNI 11•>0 M•OOt<.t ......... ,... flwt t tt • '" '-' a .. t. • 1-...., II I O _,,..., eoo11n1 -'"-• ..,... .. u o u 1 ·--·-" ___ .... -·-·-I OOUIU~$MOW _,, I DOGS (I ) to I-. tr PUii ~lilli&a1i.mi...::1:::D-:::U=2t:..1 CMAWHOI fO WMnl fAHG (N I CM11 MA' •all e CMnMA ..._, ,. :~) TMl'::~ .. L~ ~I --~ir.;;~) --~;?.m~I --nm 1W IMOOl'llT IMt "Ill '"'--.... tbe blac:lr C"Otnpan, rmra Johann A((ln. bu !Htto tour1n1 C>th•r CaUfonva Curtain umt-1)1 It o'rlUC'k en •l'I• Or 1m11 l.ab Tbeaterontbt"OCC t'ampta. Admi"'k>n ta rr~ a.A151NC 11'8 CURTAl . l"nd•> nt.hl al the Founuun \'all•> Communal)' Theater •• tht- cbaldrf'n a ad\ .. nturl' pita) .. Tohy T> l~r · about a youna: boy'is l'Xperien,l'S "''lh Lhe l·trcull llowud Daniels and Ouutihas Young are doublo l'Hl tD the ti tit role Phil DeBurroi. 1:. darcelln.: lht• i,hnw, which will be presented for thrl'l' "l'l'kl•ncb .1t th~· lhealt'r, 18280 Mt. B1tltl~ r1rl'lt-. Fountain Vullcy Curtain tames are Fnd.1)1> 11l 7 30, Saturd!Q':. ut 2 30 Mnd 7 :30andSunda~:.,l4 30 A l"lllt of 2\1 )Oun1: pcopll' 111 tn\'Olv~ in \he pro- duction. Re:.en al1ons ure bema taken at 839-0173. HEADING INTO THE LAST week of lts lengthy run at S<.-bastlan's West Dinner Playhouse as the Rodgl'r:. and Hammerstein musical "The Sound ol Mu:.1c " Dan Verre directs the popular show \\h.ich sLar:. Juth O'Oea a:; M.inu and Darrell Sandttn as Capt.on \·on Trapp Final pt.-rformiince!> f"'lll be given tonight through Sunda~ ut vuryang curtain Lr mes at the din- ner theater, 140 Anm1da Pico, San Clemente. Reservations 492·9950. ALSO ON STAGE IX tli. l>et:ond \\eek of pre- view performances bdure its official opening March 12 is South Coa:.t Repertory's producl1on of "Two Gentlemen of \'1•rona " D1rectf.'d by Dan Sullivan. the SCH com edy s potlight!> Ronald Bous!:oom and R11:hard Ji>o) le tn lhc tr lie rol<.•s Performances urc grven nrJ.(hlly at H o'clock, except Mondays, with a 3 p.m. matinee un Sunday at the Third Step Thc:Hn, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 646·1363. SLAP SHOT " PAUL NEWMAN-I (R) "'~~~!.9,!.C}~~~~.L. "''"' • 0"~' ••• O?AO (RI e "TRACKDOWN" "TWILIGHT'S LAST GLEAMING .. PLUS (R) Freebie and "THE NEXT MAN" 1--the Bean r. w ... ~!~~~~-~c~H~ .... J- C AR F' EMl\4•~1~~~~ (R) CHARLES GRODIN "THIEVES" PLUS "A MATTER MARLO THOMAS (PG) OF TIME" , "VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED" PLUS "THE (PG) SHOOTIST" ~ EDWARDS CINEMA "••toe"'.,, .... , COU4MUA ,O .. JtOI . ... ,,.m~ P'A AD Tbe numbs fl...,,, Calllonai1 ' d r•m ata ~ m more 1u. acC'urdlftl 10 • • mwmbW ~ t.M !lase ftoud ut f!qua.lt.DUoo It chard Nevins u111 atatrwict. '91W"ft show 714 ,..,, ' "-'*" I.a tbe •tat Jan. 1 than on July i. lfTI. "With tbla latnt dttllne. the number ot 1n1tlon.a tn the Ma.le Is at at.a lownl lt'vel in 20 ,...rs," said Nf'vln!l. Th~re were 1n.144 stations m operation on Jan. 1. versus 22,431 six years earlier .,. "What makes these figures •even more remarkable 1s that the ·~otal amount of gasoline pumped in the stale tn 1957 lwh~n 18,524 stations were in operation) wa~ less than 5 b1 ll100 &allons," Nevins said. "Whereas the year 1976 exceeded 10.7 billion ~allon.\ for an all-time high." GM Plan• Dles~b GHICAGO <AP> -General Motors Corp will introduce a T ... Chapter to Meet American Right of Way As· sociation's chapter 67 will hold its luncheon meeting al 11 :30 a .m . Wedneilday at the Santa Ana Elks Lodge Reservations may be made by calling 834· 2550 Bert .. . • lcpl COWl:WJ al lta&JI Dilpartmeat ol I aad Com 17 1 Denlopmmt, will 1peak on lmpld ol new r-~•· Uon ~l' 1uade-lio . Tbe suldelinee atfttt public •aeod•. includin& utility compunlea, that 1cqulre real pfPPerty They re cenUy have been reviewed and reviwd Ferd te Sa&da1 I DEARBORN. Mtch. <AP> Ford Molor Co mp;in y will ..eplace the Mus tang 11 and the imported Mercury Capn 11 with two new 1979 models, an industry newspaper says. American Metal Market-Metal Working News said Monday Ford would introduce the new model!> tn September 1978 It quoted sources w1Uun Ford a::. ::.ayang CM:RwelGHT? Learn What rv1akes The Lindora Method So Effective lrrine Ba"k Rqort• Gal11 A complete program to instruct patients how to lose weight easily, then how to mo1nto1n their lean weight Irvine National Bank has reported a $3 million increase over year-end figures compiled less than two months old. The growth was revealed this week by Robert W. Creighton, executive vice president. Doily therapy with audio and sub-liminol visual 01d~to promote motivation and encouragement Irvine National was rounded in mid-1973 and i!> located at 2171 Campus Dr .. Irvine. Branch faciUties are planned in the Newport Beach-Costa Mesa area and m Woodbridge Village, an lrvane subdivision. H CG o tot mob1hz1ng substance. makes 1t easier lor polients to lose weight wtthout fat gue or e' F>Ss1•1e hunger Tentati.,e Mer~r A •••u•ced American Pacesetter, Newport Beach, and Dressen-Barnes Electronics Corp., Pa!>adena, have announced tenlat1ve agreement for American L1ndoro s very snec1ol diet. designed for ropd NE...g')I m er.cl ~Oved eatng hcbts. Behavior mod1fic.ollon lechrnques to learn weight control 1 Pacesetter·s s ubsidiary. American Electronics. Inc., to purchase assets or Dressen-Barnes for cash in the assumption by the buyer of substantially all of Dressen-Barnes existing liabilities. L1ndaro s easy-to tollow maintenance program to prevent regaining The cash payment will be approximately Sl million. The companies said the agreement was on ly tentative, that a definitive agreement was m the process of being negotiated, and that th~ agreement remained subject to ttte approvaJ by the directors of both companies as well as the shareholder:. of Dressen-Barnes . The entire program 1s under the slnct superv1s1on of medical doctors. specialists 1n borrotric med1c1ne co11 101 1mo1mo1tori Md{idoy U'llU f11doy , AM ro 'PM -2 PM TO b PM NEWPORT BEACH 640·6831 d • 'I~ 1 I l COSTA MESA 557-1893 Wl'C Rqort• l•pro.,~t WTC, Inc., Newport Beach, bas recorded im- provement Ul operating results in the fourth quarter of 1976 and for the full year compared with 1975 re- ' sults. For the year 1976, revenues increased lo $91,414,000 from $79,474,000 tn 1975 Nt•t income amounted to tsn.ooo. equal to 27 cents a s hare. com pared with "SS,000, or l ccnl a share, m l 975 5on Bernardino • E Long B~och • Mlss1on Hills ~0W1ho1ne • Orange • Newport Beoch Gorden Grove • Lon g Beach • Po}Odeno In the fourth quarter of 1976. the three months ended Dec 31. revenu<'s advanced to S25, J.11 ,000 from $21.615,000 in the year earlier penod. For t he quarter, oel income amounted to $626,000, equal to 29 cents a share, compared with minimal net in come m the corresponding three month!. or 19i5 Lo Habra ·Woodland Hills • Sherma n Oaks We~• Covino· f ullerton • llrvers1de • Sonro Monico Costa Mesa • Pomo na · Cemlos • Hollywood Atad• Co•p••fl Opnt• Offlcr 4tn00raArcod10 · TOfronce f MEOCAL CLNIC The Austin Company, designers, engmeers and builders, bas officially opened its new Western dis· tnct headquarters oHice in the Irvine lndustnal Complex. The new office at 18800 Von Karman Avenue houses a staff of 8.5 architects, engineers. and con structioo personnel ror the design and construction of maJor facilities In the industrial. commercial and 1nstltulional field~ Income Tax Senice by H&R BLOC~ THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE Open a new ctrt1f1cate savings account with us for $5,000 or more and we'll have H&R Block prepare your 1976 federal and California individual income tax returns free. This service Includes special schedules for itemized deductions, interest and dividend Income, sale of property, pension income, income averaging, and many "'<We without additional charge. Or open en account of $3.000 to $5,000 and the charae is only $15; a big savlnp. Present Mutual savers can also qualify. Call today. Appointments are Omlted. Free Income Tax Servk:e is Just another reason why you should have your savinp et t he Bia M, Mutual Savinas and loan Associ1ttion. C.s>Gtrano-Sen a.m.m.-: 570 Camino d4I Estrell•/493-5651 Coron. .. Mar: 'ZB<i7 East Coast HIQhWllY /675·5010 fount.In Velt.y•: 17900 Mqnoll1 Strett/963-8396 Santa An8: 631 North Main 547·9741 01>11n $aturays 10 AM to 2 ""4 , OffkeOprns Accountmg Re!>ources lntemat1onal has opened a new executive office at SOO C Newport Center Dnve, Newport Beach. llealltfl Lauded The California Landscape Contractors Association bas awarded Newport Beach's Ca· nyon Crest Community a s tatewide award for landscaping excellence The landscaping, in· stalled by Plant Control Corp., is maintained by Devine Properties, Inc .. Coronadel Mar. PllC!t Slped A contra ct for 2,190,252 h as been awarded to Ford Aeronutronic, Newport Beach, by the Naval Air Systems Command for m o d if i c a bl on o r a guidance control system f9r the Sidewinder mis- sile. lob ,.,.,. ... Sa!!ell and McAdam. Inc.., lrvine, has com· pleted M.eUes Griot Com· piny headquarters at 1770 KetterinR, a lso Irvine. From atut to completion.. cons truc- Uon took 120 days IAadllqfweed Golden West Airlines. Newport Beach, has re- ported a 55.60 percent load fact.or lor January. tbe hl&hest in the pa.'t 12 ·moot.bl. 1 Tbe airline carried *1,101 paaenaen during tbe moatb, wbicb ac- couoll fot a !18.58 percellt lncnu. over the eame period tut year. The aeb~ complltlon fat· tor f« the month wu ... ,1 percent. • ( h •• • C'Ofttnn '° M «'m f:n••Df"W\llJI n..: Compaa), 1n tt .. rkt" > Mk'b., fOf' lbe d 1111 I Pl' uoa Ford 01v111on .and l.tnC"oln Nttcury "5man had ni> c m- mt"nt About the r.-pun Offiw1l1 HJd 1t was too t'arly tn 111.'t• un~ dt"U1l1 ;about lhr 1171' modC'I )ear Sf!'91ia•r Slaard Orange Coast Colleiit-will ~ offering a one d.ay ::.eminar on the mad order bustnt>l!>:i from ti 30 a.m to 3 JO p m SaturdM) tn Fine Arb tlall 119 Pre reg1strat1on •fee ii. $10 and 1n eludes d luncheon Reg1::.lra1Jon at the door 1:. $12.50 Checks payable to Orange Coast College may be ::.enl to Business Management Develop- ment Center, OCC 2701 Fa1rv1ew Road. Costa Me::.a 92626 re g1stration at the door will be on space available basis only. For more information call 556 588) State Bank E11~d SACRAMENTO IAP 1 t\ Ile\\ comm1ltee headed b) Sen. John Dunlap <D·Napa) 1s to 1nqu1re 1n lo the feasibility of eslabli::.hmi: a state-run bank that would us1· slate funds to creal<· job~. The committee also will 1n vestigate investment~ of $18 billion by th~ l "n1 vers1ty of California and othN public re .l1rement system!. m firms with holding s 1n ·'th e white supremacist rcg1ml' of South Africa It's the ::.talc Senate Select Committee_ on Investment Pr1orat1 e:. and ObJt<:ll\c::.. formed last ~eek on a 3 2 \Oh: of the Senate Ru le~ Comm1ttl'c Three Democrats 'olt·d for t•rcCJ lion of th<' comm1llc•t-, <1ncl t"o Republtcan::. 11gain::.1 1t Dunlap said thr stall' funds would be surplus fumb NEW VO~~ !AP C1..1m-.-P41 t1 !.~~ .. /1~~'~:;;n1, '\ • ~,·:wµ (~~ ~ ,.,,.., .. , ~,v,•••• r,,,. r,, Ot-<tl .. t • A• n tJV• f ( •tll1 .. H1 I ho I ')yr'lt• ( fl If lo [)If\ ' ~ '" ur'11"1• \ lryj1pt n.' r1·-l'l ,,,,, \1i•" l.), ••• 1 , Afl od (l·tt' 't• 6 • Ii. fi, <. O• nr ,, A ( t' U " r1 A•1 A IM t l • • " Cl• ~ n A.nd r VV \( 0•1-Y•' Art~ Q., I,. O• t (..\f\1 A·'>·'' • tc 0• t '"IA1 A ""0 ti'\( 1r). 1l'. 0 ""' • 'I A •rrJ l>ni IO" 1 0 '"' (•t' Al '" 81't<"' IJ, Ii•• (1 1n f11, J\!TI f •C\ •• '" r) v'ol t\•n f .,, 11 • ~• 0<•'•' (I A"! f1,t• '. Oor· n r A"'T' r.1 ... 1• .. , 41 • Oo-t ,. (,:f A ~u rr -.. , • , Qu1u !"!I 0 A'T' f• •·<1 )'I) • 11 Out1•or Am N f<IO 11 • l' • fPl•rln In Am1r Ov t~ t• ') •• f o,, L H A.P\-t0'ff 't 'i • (IP)~ (I Anhfou' ij 10-... 1 • • f 't1•·, f\ -.nta(p \ • 'l f '' ,.... • Jobt•Budd Alan S . Boyd. first U.S secretary or transportation. has been n amed a member of the board of directors of the Budd Company, a Troy. Mich .. s upplier of automotive body compo- nents Bo)d served a ~ member and chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Board and was Commerce Depart mt:nt sel·r etary fo1 tr ansportation. assuming the Cabinet position of ~ccretary of trans portation w h c n established in 1966. TV Station Changes Network Affiliation SAN DIEGO <A P l Arter 24 years as the NBC n~work sta· t10n. KGTV will sw ch to the American Broadc a ting Com· pany June27, spokes en said. The Channel IO station is the first of the McGraw· Hall group to become an ABC television af. f1hat e. Its general manag.:r. Clayton H. Brace. is vice pret.1· dent of Mc Gr a~ -Hill Broadcast· '"!! 1 nc· ()\"t•r Tht-Counlt·r NASO Listinqs JI ,) • \ . ' '". 1ft • 1. ·~ • 11 • }) J1 • t • ,. I fi. I II\ • ti ~ ~ . '"' ... ...... ,.. . Pa•to P tH ;;\. •• P-4Uh "I f'' P~t'rl Mf Pd Ent• r Pn11or. Pr·O\I 0W p, '"" ... P11,01,t P., t •!ry,n ,, ·dm' A l ~" ,-wn f' f\ H1l '-'I lo- P\t' ro P•o1,.r Pur\' 'N( P A~n""'' PutO ( 11 Qu~t tfl• Qrlt;•P'I '-' qAh••t r RJ1'• ""' RiJymnrJ A.ro Mav '• 71, f r, M·•t._ • J" Y. ,,,,, C !~~~t~01 ~ • r! ' ~~· :,•, r • 1 • .,, .• "t ~ . P,-coq E:'l Ao.10 f • Roh•l"t M QQ .. • IOf"I s:l?u\• flu ..,,.,.., •• Sd<ft11 ~ AtlGr\\ lt IS • ti>) ' Equiv fA 1 10 , /' Mrl)u11y 81111ro At l '• 4 • Ettwin Al 1'1 1 U , M,..,. ut 04"') Mv 1~ 1~ F-~h ft .. 1 'It 1\1,. MPtJI,~ roam R•t 10 • 11' ~111Un l ' • • ll. M,.,,ct '"' :~!1'"'~~ ';~ ': : ~,Al'\~· .~ · J : ~?~;~ t, 8•~1•~ It • ~ ,.. r t Rn\t 1'' • ?4 M.rU 9.,..., a .. " L -''> 7' • 7M '-t[ mo~1 i P ~1C1w f.1t S•bb (o 1111 " 14. 'fWnl-n ... I . M1ll10, A+ra y,,, 1' l1 ~•o "fl' P , 1 . M1nt•r '" B1r1cnr I , 1 111 r. '•• W<4fU • • M!\\'/I C Ole .. >-fHI~ ,, • n 1• f-,.,,,. ' 0 ·~ 11\ Mt"lflf {t\I &oru .. 1n1 J J .. f" 1m1Ql1 , t Moo,,. t;. B, .:trt• n • • " 6 ,. l'llll"lmttt 11"1 10 M+"l•lr-· ,, P.r ,n• ' " ~ • f ''"" (..u /ii, MorQ Rn fin '",t , )1 ?J ~tnltln rt 10 • 10'• MO\t,_. I? 11 • .1-1 • I~ ,.. ·~·· ,,, ' '' .. , ... ~~ 1 ) 1q • 10• .. ' ~ '1 • n . 1•'• n '' Ull ,,.,. '. 1 . 1\1 • '~ " .. If). 11 '1 '" I 14 • IA•1 S..•" 0 ... 1 Scr•oo· H s,..,, Orll Y"~ra ,. s-v-nup StMw (p Sndo 11 .... '>ohdSI Sc s c~1w.i Swc; (n ''"El S; - Top Review WASHl OTON tAP> -Ttw- U 8. Court has~ to dtel whetbt"r atate ud federal court• must Yl•ld JurltdleUon to th National \.abor Re.laUons Board ln cua 1nvolvin1 lll•C•l p1cll•lin& oa prtvate pn>perty. The ju.sUces voted Monday to review • decaslon by lhe Califonua Supreme Court that federal law pre-empt.a both state and federal court ;urisdiction and that the federal shatule con- fers exclusive jurisdiction over s uch matters to the NLRB . SEARS, ROEBUCK and Com- pany appealed that ruling, made in a union picketing case at Sears store in Chula Vista four years ago. A Washington state law limit· mg the size or oil tankers on Puget Sound and other inland waters, also will be re\'iewed to determine whether states have such powers. The justices ~aid they will study a ruling b)"\a three-judge federal court in Se~tle that the s t ate law 1s pre-empted by federal statutes and presents an undue burden on interstate com· merce. SU PREME COU RT justices also will consider whether the Federal Mantime Commission has any authority over labor agreement s b et ween longshorem e n and their employers. They will review u U .S C1rcu1l Court dec1s1on that the com- m1ss1on in most cases bas no pow<'r lo approve or disapprove dock workers' labor contracts. The commission and the Justice Department challenged the decision by the appellate eourt fort he DistrictofColumbid. I/)>• and Do"''" N&m•· U"\ L,t .I (l'U') P f l 1 • t Uo .u f t Uo 16 ( ll"ti ' 1 • Up 1\ \ I • , Up 1\1) '1•• .. • Uo 1118 J • • \ 1& Uo 1~ 1 > • Uo u l 1 • '• Uo 14 l A • • Uo n l ... 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SI* "1 ll aowtnabl••Jmftpt for a $100 a week •xcl ~ ot dla· ablUtJpqfwpeNOD1under'5whOhav•~redondl1ablUa, beca-.~antotalb'a.n.dpermanenUydisabled. IY YOO BAD BnENSES toll CHILD 11.Dd depudent care, JOU -.•t ftnd a llne toe a dlild-care dechacuon:a, it LI now a credlt late dlrtttly .,.inst income Lu. Iut.ad ol deduct.lq child~ upensee from lnc:ome. you nd-.ce lbe amount ol income tax by the credit.. Tb.re are new nales for determln- lng who can take the credit and bow mucb the credit will be. You'll Cet the answers bJ rutlna In Form 241, "Credit for Child Care Expenses.'' Money's Worth .. Office-at-home deductions are restricted. The part ol your home uaed for an office must be used exclusively and reeularly for that purpose. IF YOU ARE U OR OVER, YOU may be ell&lble for the "cf edit for the elderly,·' the new name for a revised version of the retirement income cr~lt. Complete the credit on Schedule R of Form 1040: YoU'll find It much simpler than the old version. The chief drawback is that the more you col- lect from Social Security. the smaller your credit becomes. You won't be eligible for the credit if your adjusted gross income on line 15c of i'orm 1040 Is $17,500 or more on your join~ return, $12,500 or more if you are single, or $8,750 or more lf you are a married person filing separately. H you claim expenses conncctfd with renting your vacation home. you must check the box in Part II. S<:hedule E (Form l<KO). If you used the home for more than 14 days or 10 percent of the number of days It was rented, you can deduct such expensec ::..:.~~.--:-.:~.«!!!~~::.-4epr•~ Uon. etc., only to the extent of tne sross rental less the in· terut, taxes and casualty Jogses allocable to the rental use. H you rented lhe home for less than 15 days, Ignore both the rent and tbe npenses <other lh11n taxes, Interest and casually losses >. THOSE ACCUSTOMED TO COM PUTING their own tax by applying the appropriate tax rate schedule lo tax· able income are in for a chang~ 1f their income is leu than $20,000. A new tax table lists amounts of taxable Income h'om SO to $20,000 by brackets that 10 up by $2S or $50. with the amount of tax due for each ncome bracket shown alongside, according to the type or return (joint, atngle. etc.). If taxable income is $20,000 or more. figure the tax using the ppropriate tax rate schedule; they now start at $20,000. Jf you reaUzett a taxable net long-term capital gain of more than $20.000 (from sale of stock, a house, similar 81· set.a I. you must nte form 4625 along with the 1040. This requirement is not spotlighted where you would most readily note It, on Schedule 0 where capital gain ls re- ported. And you must get the form separately from the IRS. This is the form on which you fleure out whether you have enough "tax preferences" to require you to pay an extra 15 percent tax known as the minimum lax on tax preferences Nert: Medical expenses -........... Stock Prices Gain On Technical Rally NEW YORK CAP> --Stock prices turned up sharply to- day. as the stock market bounced back lrom recent lo88es in what analysts say was a technical rally. Trading was halted for more than an hour this momln& when a minor fire broke out, forclhg the evacuation of 2,500 people drom the New York Stock Exchange trading floor. No one was injured. • • · The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials gained 8.31 pointsto944.73. Among New York Stock Exchange-lieted Issues, the ad- vancers outnumbered the losers by almost3-1. Doar.Jone•A c~rag~• Ht• Yor•IAPI F1nol Oow·Jon .. eve••9tl STOCO ()ptft "la!> l-CIHe 0.. lO Ind '31 U ... _,., •>t U '" 11. 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Mtloftlll, ,, ,...,. i ... ~ Miii\ ., ... • OJ, tt .. + '• '"" .... • • • ,... ,. .... 11\ uer INI... ... n1, ~· '• Wtttth II • ,,,, 1 • \'1 Oow Cll .... 1Jl,lo0 l ' t + •• ~' toro 21t.* •'4 + '' l'IKO ! . .. , US,400 U il• .. ~~i:J!..-. .. m:: n .. : ;: Am hi& Tel. lU.600 ,,_._ 11, M<Grw "Ill ....... 1~400 ""• \\ Brit P•I , • • .. 1$4,JOO t~+ Yo fnon . ..... 111 • .00 g +I~' tUt O Inc .. ,. .. , lSl.000 ~+ '!f Houw l'\n. 14t.«l0 • lit "'l=Clill ~ '"=~ ~:tj a ~Y~·a&~f~-9 : ~ g * * ... ... ... * * .. • • Goorjia~ Menaces Eagles Falcons, Estancia Square Off Estancia HJgh's Eagles, with an eye on their 22nd \'ictory of.the year and a berth in lhe CIF 4·A basketball QUl\rterfinals, tangle with Foothill L eafue co- champion,.-Crtscenta Valley tonight at Fountajn Valley High. It's an 8 o'clock start for the Costa Mesa-based Eagles of Estancia coach Dave Carlisle, who once again are confronted with an opponent featuring a one· man scoring attack. This time it's 6·2 Greg Goor· jian, boasting a 32.0 points per game scoring average, who 1s the player the Eagles must stop. One rival, Glendale fligh coach Don Riddell, says Goorjian can't be stopped. "Un sto ppable?," asks Carlisle. "Well, if he is, we'll gel beat. Goorjian can't have 32 points.". "We'll match up with GoorJian out of our zone and pick ham up wherever he goes Ir he beats us, he'll have to do at from ouLc;ide, we surely don't want lo let him inside if we can keep from it " Another potential thorn lo the Century League c hampion Eagles 1:. Crescenta Valleys 2-2·1 press, led by guard Dan Davis. The Eagles have a few thmgs going for them. too. starling with Century League player of the year Ray Orgill and first team all-le~ueace Pete Neumann Or~ill Is averaging 15.0 points per game and as the Eagles' floor leader. And Neumann has added 12.5 per issue. But recent efforts by Estancia h ave seen the play of Greg Krohnfeldt, Jim Pri<.'e and Doug Jardine blending with Orgill and Neumann to form a solid fivc- man atla('k. All scort'd in double ragure~ m toppling Gardena's S<.•rra in fir-.. t round action and ea<.'h r1gures lo share th(' burden tonight. along With Make Camp orr lht! bench The Eagles l'nler 1n gOO<I s hape with ankle IOJUrtes to :'lleumann and Camp a thing o( the pa!->t As1dl' from Gc>0rJ1an. who has O\ er 200 ass1sh th as 'l'asrm in ad d1t1Qn to rl'houndini: and dl' rensl\ l' abaht). the Faltrins or CV roarh 1-:d Goorjaan have 6::? W ,1\ ne Wirth. n 5 Jerf Salo and Ii· I Keath Costt'llu 1n th<• attark But there arl' n.•Jll> onl:> tv.o things F.stanc1a mus t contend v. ilh tonight the' scoring of Goorj1an and lhl' run court prl's~ or(' rt•stent.1 \' ;i Ile) ... ~ PLAYOFF ENTRIES Corona del Mar lhgh's Alex Black (with ball) and Steve Esposito. along with Estancia High ·s Pete Neumann <23 l and Brad Cooper are in action tonight. Corona dl·I Mur meets Los Amigos al Estancia :.ind Estancia and Cn•st•enta \'alley collide at Fountain Valley ltigh Sports in Brief Assault Charges Stem From Fight EklE P a Rick J0<l1111 a right v.1ng for the Ent• Bladt•!'. of the :":orth American Hockey ~ague. has hied a.ia:rn' all'CI a~ :.a ult charge:. ;1ga1nst l\\o players for lht· Bangh;1rn1on :'\ Y . Bmomedu:.tt•rs Th~ chari.:es stem frllm J f1 ,1 sv. an~ing bt d\\ I Y.h1t h Ol'l'Urlt.'(I \., an thl' lobby of th(' Enc County Ftl•ldhouse after the Blades de- f eat('d the Broomedusters 7.3 ~Jlurday mghl W1tnt'!>ses 'latd about a dozen plJyers 1n street clothes joined in t lw fight Several S\JSlained cut.s hut tht.>re upparently v.. ere no St:r!OU!l lnjllrlt'S. /\ rev. hour& later. Jodz10 fil ed ,·harl'(es Kuhn Def ends Move In Tiff With Finley .Joma co Ink Vt::RO BEACH. Fla -Left· handt.'d comcba1:k patcher Tom- m } J ohn askt.'d for a three-year t'untrat·t . The Lo!> Angeles Dodger:. said nopl', how about t" o·· ClllCAGO IA P l . Thl• out t•omc of <:harlt•s 0 1''1n1t·\. ' S.1 '> m al hon lawsuit lllo:i..llni.t bas('ball comm1ss1oner Bowle Kuhn could :.hake lh<' foundation~ of the ~ame built up ovl'r 50 ytar ... Kuhn's lay, Yl'r' <;a\' They claim thl' Oaklanct ownt•r 1s not entatll•d to th<." mont•y bt'taui.t• Kuhn Jl'll•d v.1lhan his authonty in \md1ni:: tht• JUnf' IS !'tiles of thrl'e top A s player:. for that amount In addition. they contend. J<"anley ret um<.'d the services or the players for lhe r~:tt of the Si'a11on and obtained value from them. "With these services. Oakland was abl<' to roml' from firth place on June 15 to within two games of winning the Am('ncan League West title." the lawyers said in a legal bner , ta an compctall\e halant l in the ,\ m ertl an LA.•al(U<' Ha!I brief trart'd lht' OJll'r<Jlaon or the comm1c;<;1oner ' off1t·t· hack to l92l. v.. h<•n at "';i' cre;1ted arter the Chicago White Sox ~l andal of 1919 in "'h1rh t'IJ:ht players were ind1ctl·d for r1"n.i World Serae5 ~am<''i In thl' on1unal MaJor Leal(ue Agreement o f 1921 owner" a1trel'd to ~1ve Comm1,..,1oner Kenesaw 1 Mountain J Lanctas "broad powers of dec1s1nn." the brief said They also pl l•dgc<J lo accept his dec1s1ons. t>\ en 1f they believed them to be wrong, the brtef added. Since then. 1t said , team owners have shown they want a strong commissioner. And an 1964. lhey adopted amcn~ment.c; lo the agre('ment. li(a\'lng the commissioner power to void transactions wllich he feels are not in the best interests of baseball, even if they violate no rules ~ \ dac;gruntlt'd John replied ht> v. uuld sa~n a one-year pact Wed-n"'"da~ and becom<-a free agent JI lht• end orthei.eason. John and 37 other members or th<• 'llat1onal League baseball kllm wer('scheduled to bcginspr· 1nJ: training this m orning at the 1 lub ~ 1'1onda camp ' Slcatl"fl L~a.Wr• 10~ 'f0 '""' l~a-:k'n •ft .. , ff)Cldf'' (Om t' 1 \'l'., '°"""' 1n ,,,. ... "'°""'"' •or10 t1qur,. ,._ .. , ·~··'~OO-flt•Of'I ' ",..." "°"'"''" F "' e"'"'"'"" ,, ",_,,.""'"'1''· I~'' OO•nt\ 1 0-'QmAt LV'I WP'\t Gtrmanv. I~\ ' M l \u"tf'na O"'°'"'" 1t•11 ~ \ -4J All 4 LlM,. I • •"•'"~' U ~ 1• S 4" •• \ 8•rh1e ~mll,, US , "I •l 04 • M•"°" Wr .... r. E•\I v U"*'Y S9 ., 11 I W-.'<ly AUfO" U ~ ~, S, ;t •A ~ Lynn NIQnt •~q•I• C•'1..t• '' •O 8• 9 Cl•udl• 81,,.,,..r. .AuOn.t ~1 \ Jt 16 tO 0 •"'°""' O\t .. rtnf'•ftf' Wto'>I C,1 r mAny t) \ ,. '1f) I I F ml W .. ttJtna~ J•Pi&n 80 1 40.(M n 0.n''* 0ittHm•nn, Swlttttrl•l'td, Ill\ I ll M On TV Tonight 6 p m . (5) -NBA BASKET· BALL -The Lakers take on the Hawks in a game played earlier tonight in Atlanta. Ins Amigo s Has Bagged 15 in Row Los Amleos Hieh's Lobo6, Garden Grove League cbam· pions with thrte junior st&rten and a l~game w1nmng streak m the Hne, battle South Coast League champion Corona del Mar torught (8) at Costa Mesa's Estancia Hi&h. It's the second ro11nd or the CI F 3-A basketball playoffs and lhe victor qualifie s for a quarterfinals berth against the survivor of tonight's Ri-.ers1de Poly-Ganesha <Pomona> tiff. The matohups are somewhat similar with each team boasting a rugged interior and an all· league caliber guard. Corona del Mar's inside strength is the same as it has been for two years~-7 Alex Black and 6-6 Jack Tuz the combination that destroyed 25 opponents in 1976 and won lhe South Coast title this season. Black averages 18.6 per game in scoring, while Tuz is at a 16 6 clip. But It goes much deeper than lhat. Both are tough on the boards. Tuz adds an assist game and Black's muscle inside offers little room for the opponents Also, thtre is guard Paul Akan, the playmaker. along with Mark Rains and Steve E sposito in the starting attack for coach Jack Errion's 21 -5 outfit, ranked No. 2 in Orange County and in the final Cl F 3-A poll. The Fountain Valley-based Lobos of coach John Keating counter with a trio of their own one which Keating says 1s highly 'underrated. Juniors Orlando Ward !6·6 ) and 5·11 Warren Ellis. along with senior Phil Valoff <6·1 I are all an the 16-point scoring r1:1nJ!C and have been operating with ex cellent team unity Rounding out thc attack arc Eddie Orem and Angel Fu('rtc~. although Errion says he expects another in the Los Amigos at tack. 6·3 Tony Zuloaga, to be 1:1 factor. "Corona del Mar·.., size could hurt us ... says Keating "We'' c manned all year on dercnsc. but l"m reallv not sure 'o'hat "e II do tonight. V.•e want to keep the ball away rrom Tui :v'd Blatk If we play to our potential \\C can Y.'ln." Says Errion "W1..• re not too sure about Los /\magos. th ey seem to like a fast pace. ;and maybe they'll try to up the tern po, which we wouldn't mind. "We'll pvt Black on Ward at first and use Rains on Ellis and Esposito on Valoff oul of Qur man-to-man defense." ............. MARQUES JOHNSON (54) SOARS TO SCORE. Pros Had to Wait .Johnson's Decision Saved '77 Bruins LOS ANGELES CAP> Mar· ques Johnson decided at the last minute a} ear ago not to turn pro- fessional and that decision could be a maJOr reason the t:CLA Bruin:. once again pose as a col- legiate basketball power. ''I've thought about 1t, I could be playing with the pros. Johnson t ell~ rnends. "But I thank I made the rag ht decision · Coarh Gene Barto". "ho suc· cceded the legendary John Wooden a year ago. s ci ys. "If there as a more dominant player than Marques in the college game. I can't imagine it He's quick. tus game 1s complete. and he has phenomenal body con trol. ·· Rich a rd Washington and Johnson put their names on the hardstup hst a year ago. which would have permitted them to turn professional. Was hington did join the pros. but on the day of, the pro draft. Johnson sent word that he desired to remain a col- legian for his senior year. He believed a good 1976-77 season would put him again in a position to get big money. perhaps even more than after his Junior season when the Uclans finished third 1n the National Collegiate Athletic Association championships. Johnson, named after Marques Haynes of the Harlem Globe Trotters. was a regular on the lJCL/X team of 1974·75 that won the NCAA championship, one of 10 the Bruins have won in the past 13 years Johnson starred at Crenshaw High School in Los Angeles r where his father. Jess. is as in· dust rial arts teacher and still fan of the Globe Trotte rs. Marques' mother, Baas ha , is head librarian at Los Angeles High. Br1•ins Near ·Title Right now. capt. Marques and his Bruins lead the Pac-8 with Oregon a game back and one game remaining on the regular conference schedule. A tie at the end of the season would mean a playoff to determine which goes 1nto the NCAA tournament. USC Last Obstacle Saturday LOS ANGELES <AP1 An am proved defense and a SU'>taancd intensity have UCL/\ basketball coach Gene Bartow and has Bruins thinking about an 11th consecutive Pac·8 title and bigger things The Bruins. 10 3. mel'l Southern California. 2 11, Salur day afternoon (4 1 al the Spc>rt:- Arena. Ore~on. whith trails by a game, meets Oregon State Thursday. But Bartow said Mon day. "We know if we win Satur day. we'll be undisputed con rerence champs Cage Rankin gs fhe Too TWfllntv tti!•m\ '" ll"WI' .,,0<1at"'<t ""'"'"" coll•o .. b.t\-t1C.ll 0011 with tint pla<e vott' 1n Ol'trfn0.M\ w-a•ort rfl(Of'd\ """ I01•1 Polnh t USf Uol 7'> o 1 no It Tonn 10 \ 110 1 Ky 111 n 1 '1'16 •1 B•"'" 10.0 ?O\ ] M l<h ll·l 100 1) .... ,~CU\(' 1) l IP • UCLA 11 4 •II U C11.c., n 4 IAI ) N•v LV l:.\, .. , U O.lrofl 1• 1 •~• ' NO C-.> n • .., ,. w~. r "' 10• A? ] Aro 1S.1 S61 11 ..... ,_ JI • \I I Prvdt><• 71 1 lOO 11 Cl•m......, 11 ) 41) •Minn 11 1 ,_. It Mrqurllo ti• Y. 10l0<11\Y•M•11) 117 10 VI•" 10• H "I ttunk we played two or our better d efensive games this past weekend. We boxed out much better on the defensive boards than v.-e had before." UCLA beat California and Stanford last weekend If the Bruins win the con ference crown. they wall play m the NCM tournament :'rtarch 12, in Pocatello. Ida. The opponent. an al-large team. won't be picked until Sunday ··If Wl' maintain our intensity. I s ec no reason why we can't go on to Pocatello, con tinue to Provo and then to Allan ta," said Bruin Murqucs Johnson. Bartow said Johnson played two "almost indescribable" games against Stanford 11nd California with a total or 67 point' and 27 rebounds. The coach said he expects the Tro1ans to set the tempo Satur- day. "We do the same thing, bul we like to go a little faster Ab for an all-out stall, I don't know " Ov('r his first three years, Johnson averaged 12.3 points per game but this campaign, the 6-7 forward has averaged 21.1 for all games and 22 8 m the Pac-8 cam- paign He became a regular startrr the second half of his sophomore year after recovering from a bout with hepatitis. On the basketball court, he's the highest scoring forwjlrd in school history. going past Sidney Wicks this season. Overall. his t .529 points rate third behind Kareem /\bdul -Jabbar, Bill Walton and Gall Goodrich, all current pro stars. In rebounds, he's ranked No. S behind Walton .. Jabhar. Wtllle Naulls and Wicks Smith Bows; lutz Breezes MEMPHIS-Stan Smith wu upset in lht first round or the u.s.: ''Such a close race result.sin in· creased attendance and fans. there is no way of knowing h<>\V many rans were brought Into the Oakland ballpark or opponents' ballparks as a result o( the ~om· missioner's decision mainlairung these players on the Oakland roster." Briefs were nted Monday by lawyers for Kuhn and Flnley In the wake or the lS·day trial, which ended Jan. 13. Finley's brief was filed Monday and was not available for inspection. A spokesman for Judge Frank McGarr of U.S. DJstricl Court Hid he would not rule for at least two weeks. 500th Goal a Thrill and Relief National indoor tennis cham .. pionships Monday night as Soutl\ Africa's Byron Bertram scored a. 6·4,6-7,&-3vlclory. ~ Finley sued after Kuhn dlsap.· proved the sales of left-handed pitcher Vida Blue to t.he New York Yankees for $1.S million and outlielder Joe RudJ and re- Uef piteber Rollie Flneera to Boston for $1 million each. Kuhn aald he acted In U\e best tnteresta of bueball and to main· CHICAGO CAP> -Stan Mikita had two worries about becqming the eighth player in National Hockey League history to hit 500 eoats J. that It might be a cheapie and that it would not come before ~home fans ln Chicago. Mildta's fears t med out lo be ,dflfounded when he registered a picture goal before 14,5QO Chicago Stadium fans Sunday. His only disappointment was that the Black Hawks lost to the Van- couver Canucb, 4.J. "lt was a thrill and a relief." aaid Mik.lla, wbose goal was bis 17th or the seaaon ... What an ova- tion. I hadn't heard anything like that s~ Bobby Hull left.·· rt came ln the lbird period. Phil Russell dug the puck oul of the Chica10 zone and passed t.O Mikita who broke up t.he middle. · 'l was' trying to get lo t.he blue line and then pass off lo a winger," he said and thct.\ ln typical MJkita 1asbion t.he 36· year-old veteran or 18 sea.eons split~ defeosemen Dennis Kurns and Larry Goodenouah. "l bad a pretty Sood bead « irtum and hpt colnt," Nik.It.a said. "l lost lbe puck for a split - second and then picked It up again before l flipped it in." MikJta's reputation was one or the reasons goalie Cesare Mania10 was sprawled on the ice when Mikita flipped the puck over the Vancouver goalie's pads. ''I saw another guy coming down the ice," said ManJago. "and knowing how fancy Mlldta co.n cet. I thought he might pus off. Ile didn't. I tiprawled and all he did wu nip llover my pada." Mikita had appeared non chalant about the matt«r all w~k ainct be bad scored bis 49Skh 1oaJ &he prevloua Sanday and had gone two games without the milestone goal. "I've been calm outwardly but cranky inside," said MikitM wlao had gone to the Stadium nearly four hours before gametime. ''Instead of yelling at my wife and kids, I decided to come down early and take a nap. Instead, l watched 1olf on televislon. • 'lt was a weight oH my aboulden and the rest or the team J know the guys had bee.n trying lo set me up. passine up their shots and trya,ng to gel the puck to me lo score. Now. ma.)'be wc can 10 back to playing hockey." \ San Clemente'• Bob Lutz best .. , ed 0My Perun, 7-6, 6·3. '• Earlier, Mark Cox deleate4, Bernie Milt.on, 8·3, 3·6, 6·4, while Saahl Menon disposed of John i'eaver, 7-6...6·3. Olher results found Petet Flemln1 knocking oft Ove Beoitaon. 6-2, 6-2; Jose Higueru defeaUna Ch.lco Hagey, 6-t> 1~ Tom Gorman ellminaUng Je• Halllett. '1-3. 8-4. ;•• Also Victor AIDaya edted EM • F1'1edler, 7-6, 7-8; Tlm Gulllksqa! upset Sherwood Stewart, M, Ml"' ZelJko Prmulovlc &tDpped~te 1 tcrulevil&, l-3, f.l; end Mayer beiL Thomas Smld, • r 8~7~ ~ - -G , =~· --~ ... ., OI .... ....t n.'L. c a.:• •uUt~au ....... IJlll 'ftttanl tM ... IAtla =~lT·Td•..,....~ :-dlr.:c .. ~ TIM 'Dltl9 palUr'D i style ol ~,.,,,, Orepa... ~ alow 0. ..... din. tab aaJy eood ....,..,. .. tor Joelle babl md pa.yitl&M. naed defeme .• 1•'W• lmow..='D beld on to tbe ball,•• ecwn San CleDM!nte coada Stan DeKa11to, "but tbe)'-11 be a llUle out ol tbeir ele- ment wWlout tbe home game. I understand tbey haven't lost a home IUIM IA five years." DellagOc> aaid Earl Miller (UU> llDd lbrt7 Jaco (lJ.1) are tbe weapons San Clemente wW be trying to atop. "Those two JUYS are their ICOl'tn ud we'll have to stop them, or at least alow them down," De Maggio aays. The Trltom will send ID tbe same starting lineup lbat beat Culver City 58-57 Jut Friday. The front line of Bill Neely (6-7), John Canoo (6-i) and Ted Hetling& (6·6) towers over San Luis Obllpo, whose lront line averqes uoder 6-4. DeMaggio feels San Luis Obispo could pose some serious problems far his Trltons. ''Tbefr style requires you to be more selective, but we don't play lbat way," DeMaglglo said ... We don't want to alter our game. We operate better at a quicker pace on offense." DeMaggio admits he doesn't really know too much about his opponent from the north, but hia information leads him to believe the Tigers might be very similar to Mission Viejo ..... and we didn'l play well against Mission Viejo," the coach say1. . Mission Viejo's record 0-13 •. last in league) wasn 't • partlculary impressive, but lbe Diablos' ball-control offense bothered lbe wide-open· style of the Tri tons. "We'll just have to play goOd defense and be tough on the boards," DeMaggio says. "We'll have to make them work hard to get t heir 1bots, and hopefully they'll miss." San Luis Oblapo's paUent of. tense has led to some l ow-scoring games; on three different OC· casions thb season the Tigers failed to reach 40 points. But they won two of those three and 17 of their 24 this year. The Tigers en· tered the playoffs as champions of the Northern League. San Luis Obispo coach Jim Vegher, however, seems al least ea worried about toJqbt's game as DeMaggio. "San Clemente may be too good for us," Vegher says. "Our league isn't as tough as tbe South Coast." .Playoff Sites, T.....,..'1~tltH .. A-.tWll Peudeno "'"'°'"'""''"et Ill C.mlM Cell- crount• vo11.., n l1Molcle at l<o1Mtaln Vellrf HIQI\ SI Al\U-y vt VHllU"e el"'""""• CC Mu•Pl\•YILIMllllUl\•1 '--l•«"CC ,., n1ou•-O.h "' ~" v•".., .. ldl-Hl<1h Cnmnton ~SM!• A11e ac SelttaAMc..4'"" PolM v~-\Vl I.I ........... _ .... 11cc 171 Vtrbum Del¥\ AIM....,• et S... 0-1., H"" M......._M LI Hebro •t II~• It lltw~ .. CC !>ol\ 1.ul\ OblNIO O ... o-.Mlt llC S..-.Cl!i Collo<M> Werr..,.,.CW!tt.M L~ HIGI\ llomOftol"'°"'"'M4'tU .. -HI ... Lo•""''-"' C-e.t -.U• al ltW.Clo M!lll G•"~'"-"'IU ........ dtPolyet 11-MH .... Ovll\o vt~•.t u \e,_ Htoll OowMy n L.l IOll•ede 01 C.t Ste• U~•-t l·A •u.tottiell 11\dt•ut~VoHoY It I MOfllt It Alto Loma "'"''-' .. ~· ""· ti•~ It Mr11-.t .. .,-.. ~·--~ .. M.ttlMn HortlWlftf el ~--Hltfl lllnowt.,.-lltWttftlll M..-Vell*Y n K•llllN¥ ti kn-CiDll-1-A l-...lt -.m•11t-~0e-LALlll ___ , .. l~ .._MMe lay .. (el......,,... Lult Obl'llO 11 ..... '*""''""" 1-"k ............. cw-v ... ..,nMM•,..tf\a11LAs.11tHlt11 M-'ClllW ...... llCLWVI~ LtMft\'~llfl"' ............ ~ ..... IC C.011-H""'lllGllOftV•!l*YC!lf'IUleflat 0.Mll Vell.., Basketball .. REBOUNDING STRENGTii-Fountain Valley High's re· bounding, featuring Scott Ford (left), Bill Carroll (45> and Roger Holmes <with ball> will be one of the Barons' major assets tonight at Edison High where they tangle with Thousand Oaks High in CIF 4-A second round action. Base'fJaU Rmmdup Harsh, Fitzhugh Record Shutouts Mat« Dei Hlgh's Nick Harsh and Kevin Fltzhugh of Fountain Valley spun sbutouts Monday to hlghllcht Orange Coast area high school baseball action. Harsh limited La Habra's Sonora Hlgb to a sixtb·mning single ln posUnt a S-0 verdict Aldlnc the 10.bit attack o f Santa Ana '1 tater De1 wa<1 Bobby Meacham's 37>foot 60lo home ron. . At Fountain Valley High in the openine sal\!o of thr-Huntington Buch lnv1talion1l. Fltibugh went the distance, walking one and fanning eight batten. Thrtt of the flve bits he allowed wtte or the infield variety. In the other HB Invitational lllf, the Olien of Huntington Beech were S·O victims to Garden Grove'• Pacifica on the loser'• diamond. Jim O'Coonell'• baaes-loaded double in the sixth inning was enoush for Pacifica pitcher Doug Pruff\c, wbo struck out five and allowed ftve bit.a. Two other area nines were lours In tourney play at lbe Tu1Un lnvtleUonal. Dana Hills dropped a W deel1lon to host Tustin while University was shul down by Garden Grove's Rancho AlamltOI, •·l. on the winner's field. Dana Hilll had 1ome punch, wltb Dane Brown ptck.log up two stn1les and a double. alo"-with Stu Hdn'• triple and single. But T\latin struck for four runs early end took advantage of some Dana HUis lapses to record Its victory. Steve Tilles bad a homer for Jnlne'1 University in the aecood run, but that was about the llmJt of the Trojans' auact u Garden Grove'• R.ancbo Alamitos ad· vanced to tbel«()nd round. El TCll'O was a 1-5 lOMr to vi.sit- ing Cen'ltol ID a non-leque tlff. Bob IJvesay and Xachelein each hit triples ror the Chargers, but Cerntoo had scored four times in the rirst inning and withstood the El Torocomel)ack attampt. ,,_ .. .,.Do• ISi DeM HIN• ISi _. r 11 rtM ff•" rllt ""'"°"""" 11> J o 1 1 Crooo If J 1 O o Abbt>t\ r1 ) no O M1to''"-'" 1b 1 0 f" 0 S<hu1t1 ,, (l O o U !rgwn ct ' t l l o ... ,b• , .. ,, t o e.-th~t' c. 4 n 1 1 H•r\h O .& • , 0 Wll<O•. tf i 0 0 0 M1rUn JI) 4 I 1 ~ ~lt'ftOf'I rt 0 0 0 0 cr ... 1, 111 ) 1 1 o llomero, JI> 7 1 1 o Gum ... u ,1)11 t o o o Holl\ lb l o 7 IJ M•e(hem" ) 1 7 I l(enl'ey,H ] I I I) Slloqy1 cl 1 I I t 11 .... e dtl 1 0 0 I Gofllol .. II I 0 0 0 IC•""•'I P 0 0 0 0 Me(OYlo,. If t 0 I 0 Mol~IO\. P 0 0 ~ 0 T<1lt l> 11 ~' I Wlll0<~ P 0 0 0 0 Tolol• 26 ~ • S s. ..... , '""""'' Moor O.t -· U"'wnft'f 111 ... _ ... ~·l\1b 100$ Oel\lllo Jb I 0 0 0 ICo,.,ph Cl f 0 0 0 ~ ... ,. ,, 0 0 0 0 M~tt JI> '0 0 0 Tiii ... lb ) I I I 0 Oon""ll D ) 0 0 0 MurathllO.P M...,..,,. L•"O"'.oot c f.., • .,, It ·~ew '' ,,.,...,.,.., £1 Toro , o & n '(, 0 0 l 0 IO l OOn 1 0, 0 ooou 2C I J I "-'.i"v .. ..., 1t1 o.~.ct qOIMr'lt Ofl ~ ...... n. Mtl1t> 10 !' lll"IOO"· D °'"'·'' HU9M1.rf "°'"'"·· Wl-.tf "-"'"" M"ttet,._ .......... a o, o 100 0 7 000 I 0 0 0 lOOO '0 0 0 0000 2000 7000 1 0. 0 n.o .... p_,,, 3 1 I 0 0000 , I t 0 L""t,., Emll'llnci. c 511•1""·"'" T01ah I 0 I l 0000 u,. 1 ,_1.111ve111tt ICat .. le Hlq 9...m ~e<Kk• r " • ~ 1)1-' ' \ 000 on-, ' I r II • CMO 001 0-\ 10 , 000 000 0 0 I 7 att-m Grt1 .. va.2& CralO lb, II l(ey lb .ti r "rlH • 0 II n • ~ , 0 lte< ... IOll\ rl 'n ' o 4 1 1 I u ..... p J 0 I 1 Tell:Mlr1. < Mo\b.UQll. lb C ... l\Qalo Cl •nql!M'\art '' J 0 ' ' , 0 0 0 J 0 I I l 0 0 I) lolel• '°''' .... 010 000 0-1 , • 102 000 ·-· , 1 • II • ~ 000 l-• 11 l Olil 210 0-, ' I .... ._..It, ......... Klt<•,r• a 0 0 0 llMd.<I ~000 SancllO•.P lo 1 o Giii.< lo 0 0 '-"'"''·" , 0 0 0 T_o,. It 2 0 I 0 M119ev•nt, oh I 0 O 0 bfMhl....,,, 211 ' 0 ' 0 HlolmJt.....,.M> 1 I 0 0 Wr1fl\l,U t 0 I 0 T•telJ U 0 S 0 .. .. . 010 000 0-J ' 0 000 000 0--0 , 1 .. .. . 000 OCIO o-o ,, 0 100 t1J •-1 ' • Game Called Off . A M1alon c.onterence basket- ball tame acbedClled for Wednes- day ni&bt at Riverside City Collete I lnvolvlng co-cba.mps Saddleback College and Palomar Colletelaolf. The playoffs ror tbe Ml.Woo · Confennce have taken oa a new format wtth two gamet Saturday nltbt at 8-IUvenlde at Sad· dleback aad <ltnts at Palomar# The wt.men meet Mu. t or the tourney crown 111d tbe rtJbt to participate In tbd stale plQolfa. rfsplestl ..... • t Area's ·Tennis Margerum Leads FV; Jones Sparks Diablos • I Fountain Valley P~v-.<m.••4-<la <ss1, C..llMMCtcl Hlgb's Ken Maraerum no LH -1 ......,. ,,.v,., •. , Report turned ID a nifty triple Avr"" CCMI -..: 1 '-9>-<E1 e.ist•=:.'r:i~11~1...._ Monday in prep track "!o',.':.,~.1=:.v.11.y o.•. ,.,.._ and field action at Costa 2. e,,..,., ... , s1.io.11uc11c1a10e1mt•• .. 1 ....... : Mesa's Estancia High •F~ ;~1~~~(~"·M~=·.· £dlft IVCll .... Mille o.,,.,. W, "2; _... L•rr• 1uc11 o.i o.v ........ 2 ... ,, where FV toppl""' the •· M<tu tEI 1:01.•. H • .,, 1vc11 .... Gu o....an ,.., H : hosta and Coeta Mesa 100 -1. -......... ,,.v1 io o; ,, JoM..., (UCtldlff ~-.. 1 ... 1, ' Giiien• ll<VI 10.1; 1Co<*ICMI10.4; i.s; 1.11 ... CC$Ft ., "-""' •·l. Margerum leaped • Bueno '""' 10. ,.St•tder·Old•,,11.,9 iucii <Hf 48·1\4 ln bis favorite s.!~~1;.,.!t 1~:'~! ~£C:..~~~1 01.1ro11 o.w..., ... , ...... H_r,..,. event. the triple Jump, in u.•: •. ~-cFv1 u •· :.i:~;.!~:10:.:.:·rvc~.~""t~ additioo to winning the ,...:!:-~~··"'.~vi·~~.:.· O.•t~lal" .... ,4-4,W 100 in 10.0 and 120 high CCM\C:JU,c Goert£1• Jt t IClHNIS sticks in lS.0. s1!~~~,--;~ 7~.'t.": :;~: :~t !· .--c .. m uvottor Misalon Viejo's Greg MoMt1>9 (CMtt1.L 1(.)1•-•GI~~ ........... , Jones won the '40 in 52.3 '10 -Cook (CMJU.I. 2.H;og.n IE) c.11,,. 1G1 "" '*"-H . u . H ; at El Modena and turned ~! ~: >. H•r cu tu: •.$1>1-cFv> B•n tG>..., c;..w..., ..... ''· W : a 2:01.5 in bis fU'Sl ever 7-mue-~ tCMl •·uo:1 ,. ... Porer ....... , .... -k .. I ... 2. Del\101\ pell !FV) • '5.2 l. ll•om-ICM) «LA> def u1s1 .... 1 • ..i ... 2; •-CG> 880, while Markell ••so.>:• A o..~tCCM1t:JO.i. 001 Men11a11~!i~.~· Strauss doubled in lbe over1'oll co.11 •·sol. ocuv--s-101 ""'c;e._.i1.... hurdles and Alan Parker E:'~::·:~~-Costa Mowns s. 2· B•d•o•" 1.., M . 0 .... , .......... 2 leaped 20-~ in lbe long ,., -1. 0v111., 1Fv1 ... ,: 1. Go<tr •I.Al clof CellM·MH-•·4, •·•: · IEI •J.O. l 1om>w fFVI «i•. C Vt•ltr At .... IGl def 0....-""-l"\IMtl . JU mp. Be"kof CE>-8Ktll0< tEI <MH . H."1·"'· At Garden Grove the Pv -, Gf'OC1-tE1 12·•: 1. Mo11· VAllSITY M . ( H ti t Nf\4 ICMI i7·2. i ..... "" (FVI 12.0 .,o, .. v ...... ™'<'>> m~l....,.... arana un ng on •.PHrco tE11t.o ".,... Beach) High Vikings HJ -1 Horrlt 1Fv1 w · 2 !>t•r- Gr•c•o <NHI ~-... 1; 1.,.1 10 breezed behind double ;~~!1~!1~· IE 1 H ; s-e: '· ,.,... Evert H Iott lo EftltY H : clof Griep w i n 5 Ir 0 m K e n LJ -1 Gin~ fl"Vl 1'-••Ji: , l-2, B••lker IHH> -H ; io.1 i .. : Gabrielson and Fred B .. .,. IFVI t-•; >. s. .. ouon <t1 tl..S 1·1; _.,6ol; Geo INHl-.. 11 ., .. , .... FulElll-10\j, lo\t > •. t•. _., .. 1; 0.Moll fNMI Loy a. . T J -1. ~ (l'Vl 4-1'~ 1. IOSl•l,H,C_. WO<IO 8..,9,lon (El.._.~; l Siu IFVI 0....... VAllSITY d·J'~ · • Piper fFVI Cl-4'~ Btc~le•·Swedlund INH) d•I M•riM(ltU l>Oo..-o...... 01KUS -1.0bym•~o (E)tl7·4 1 D•wd•ll-Cop~r ._,, •·7 lo\I 10 100-1 Gebrlel-(Ml 10.• 2.1.AM Burow !FV) 121.s; J. 8rou111ard PooluCC1 T•ll..C ... r 1 •. l 6. S"'lth· (Ml J Scl\lr>der (Ml. IJ'VI 120-7 4 L.1,_ 11!1110-1 M-INHI clof -....... ,,loll H . ?10-1 GobttelW> IMl 22 7; 2. Slef· JUNIOllVAllSITY l •· IHI• !GI l Sc1>lne10r IMI. """"IAlft Vllley "OI, ltlAt>Cle <•11. JUNIOll VAllSITY '40-1. Loy• (Ml SC.O, 2. ,..,,.,.rva•I GMlO.Ww (1JI ~.1 .. v..-.111121 N._.H.-(M l ]. l rlrnme•CGI. JlOl.M -CftlrtV CF\11 CA J: uo , •. "..... .._, L.ov• !MtJ.01.1; 2 Vll\yud tav -'"°"""'" V•lltY .. o. MO I HotleMI fNM I IHI N••"'•" 6.0, IGI > G•-tGI. Horl\ol\dtr (f'VI t·lOO. tOO -Hl<k• ICe•M !NHI lool lo SIMrtTI.., l·•; Mitt -I. Ger<ta (Ml C.lt.6; l tEI ti 0 Mitt -~ot•r fCMI c·CS ). Bu•~mon lNHlclolMoll.,.O Horrl>fMIJ !.MdlGI. 4CO -WlftlKk fEI S8 t l?OHH VAllllTYTINNIS 7.,,.11e-I Entey (Ml I.OU; 2. Al>-Morry tFVI 11.J 110 -HIO\ (El -CUI (I) C.111 Mew dorto" IM)) El\Olcott !Ml 1' S, t mll• ltOlo• lCMI 10 11.l SP SI...... UOHH -t JUlltMO IGI 16 O. 2. Liii -1Co.11i11 !FVI J7.t PV -Cook lf l 1( .. ,., IMI clol Me•-OlllOll . J .... , fMl l HOOWr'9IOll IOI. It 6. HJ -PrlltlmMI !FVI ~· l.J -Hiii. I <It! NHI .. ,. def Chfl,lt< J-S. )301.H-l Lui fM) 0 4, , P<>•k· River• !El lt·l; T j M•"V IFI/) Er•m IMI ....... 6 7, 6-4, ... IO" P : fl\Qhorne (Ml l Hohll"IQtOI\ (GI 1' 2. Ol"ox-Slrl"9•r •El llb-10 PlclQf°" •Mll<»ll • w°" 6 l "'°" •·• uo rtl•y 1 Gord9ll Grow 4S c. IE I MMe•• ftl1), MIHlol\ Viole IO\I '. Crtw IM) ....... 1. -•.0. Mllutt.., I ~ .. "., 40, (CAl,l(ate41• (Sl tot1C•.t<»12• HJ -I White fM I •·1: 2. 100-t IC.Hlt fEll0'4,210-l.ICfftl Deullift Heldel\retc" fMI l C"'°" IM) IE) JC 0 ~-1 01'°" (Ml 57 1, SalH IC~lem !Ml def T oboa<I• Liu ' ) 1 • 0.1 01ftr &<>ria b-4 6.0 5-f•· ton·DlhmonlMI -.-•.• t,won6_., '. JUNIOll VAll"TY Muh .. fltl'tl !J\otl GMlll NIH.t Si"91H Pu<-ell !11111 claf --~7 Iott lo l••"• 1 • Morr'-' fMI lo\I "4. ""°" • 1 P&r1<•• <Ml 001 Tuoer •.o d@I Grutnlf\~I tr01 furst (M> won• 1 won b·O OwlllM Chow·T-IMI <RI Gt"s-ytr. Ptlt<\°" 7.5 dl1 0 N•olPon<ol\ 1 ... ; P1•11 T........,_. IMI ..on J ... lo\t ~1, won•' Christian Fives In Road Tests 1.J -1 l.•1ne IMI 10-•, 2. Jyilenne 110-1 Covtr CEI 2 (l' 2; Mii• l !Gil Golla•GI Stt•ft"' !El c:S. O; 7.mllt I T J -t. ul ... (Ml At. 42 .. : 2. Whit• Wltllemt fEI IO·S4 O; IJOMH-1 Miiis (Ml l JUI ....... IGI IE I 17 5, JlDLM-1 WllOlf\9 CEl C6 0, SP-l. O.rrv !Ml '4-5.\lo, 2. Slump UO , ... ,-1. ft_,.. '11: Mii• re· CGI) M<T~ IGI. •ev-t. El Mo<le11• )•5'.l ; HJ-t. Ol-1. Coml!Mll (Ml l1>·•: 2. Tucker (El ~l U -l Kent IEI lt-l; Stump COi> Che<'rY CMI TJ-t W<!lls !MIJt.l ; PV-l TMlvl<ll PV-1 tho<~ (Ml lM; 1. PM· fM ) 'O; SP-t. JOMS (f) 1' 11; ler\OfllMI) H-tGI. DT-1 Jor>MIEllll).5 Mlulol\ Viejo (QI, Et MMotl• 1611, Kot<!l .. 1211 , l-t. Jome• !Ml IO S 2 kol!M4Y IEI lO.S. J. Yori< CEI tO S, • 0.... !El 10. no-1. 1(-y IEI 73.1. 7 York fEI 24 O; Je'""" (Ml 2c.t; 3. Vl""'rtg IEll\I 440-1. Jot>e\ fMI S7 J. l Wtlll•""' IEI S-O· l ._ __ • CMI :M•. •Bini\ (Ml )S 2. HO-t IClf\9t1Md IEI 1.51.4; 2. JOM\ (Ml l :OU, 2 .. 1 Well ... -M !Ml2:CMO;• Fr-lfkl7 CIC•. Mite-I. Lal!loftle IMI ' tt.•: 1. M>P'HOMOlll• M•rlM'"' (7410•'*-Grovw 100-1 .101W!1011 IGI lO I; J. Toll\ lGI 3 N•l\Ofl IMI 110-1 Toth lGl 25. 2 Nel...,.. IMI l. Btltr (GI uo-1 Retd•no•r !G l 56 1: 2 T•••O< IMI, Flo•dllOuw !GI uo-1 Mon•or> !Ml 2·1•.• 2 Slolldor• IMI, Close IOI Miff I 1.t"IOI• IMI S I J,1• 2 Mtllor IMI l L""'I\ IMI. 1 mole I Boety CMI 10:01.5; 2. Burt IM1 l. l\OINrd 120HH-l ~ter IGI It>; 2. G•llo IOI l. Mello !GI. llOl.H-1 Or11l (GI '1 l . 2 Ca.s•dY l>V-t. nltoft IOI 9'0; t. H- IM I i. Plllltitle cot. . ,llOS .... ~ irew111al• v.11.., ,.,">t. •st.cl• IMVtl,Cettellleu 144) JlO LH -1. YMk (FVI 44 J: 'I. ICr..,~ Ce> .c.c; J Adams CEI CA.J; 4. ,.,,,.,.1£) .. , Mlle -1, o-Mll CCMl 4: s:J •; t. Lero lEI •:U .c; J. E•a11s ICM> •: S4.l: 4 Ct-(FYI,, U.O. ..io relev-t. F-i.te V .. 191 &2; tc~-•u. MO -~ ICMI 2:11.t: !. a-.,. IFVI t· 17 I; J. Kol.,. (CM) l :tt.t ; • Mc:V\ck., 11!12:106. . 100 I. CM\cerl fFVI lt.t; t. Zo<* (El tU; l . ....,._.. IFVI 10.t; 4 Te,.91>lCMltOt. uo -1 ""'"' u•vt ,. •: , eoc:°" CCMI $1 S, l. Poul!« IEI 9'.•; 4. HOral\I< IFV)tl.1. 110 HH -'· Pll\Ctl....,. ua IU; t. Revelo IFV) lt.I, J. AdMM IEI J0.3; ' ?10 1 Br-Cll'Vt U .2: 1. T .. ~, ICMI lS ,; l "--"°" IEI 2U; 4 Setilon I EI 2' 2. 2-Mllt -I 8. Overholt ICM) 1o·n 1· 1 Mceer111v 1e1 10·,. o '· Ler• lCMI tO·J4 I , '· lr~IM IFV) 10 lS 0 Mii• R<!lo• -I E•ltll<lll J:4t.S; 1. Foun1eff\ ll•tley l: S 1.2. PV I. Pllclle• (!\Ill U-4; 1. Plncl<M'f IEI ti 6 l Ml>siilM ....... dellOll ond ._...,, lE I •II tied et lO~. SP -I ~ (f"VI 40C l'"; 7, SltvtntOfl (El •).l, J T9'eg4S ICM) fl>.•''>:• Met-:tt-4\lo HJ -I. T~Ofl ICM) M ; 1. .. l11<1t••O I E)'"°' l 8atl0ft IFVI S.Cj l Stlctwell •FVI~ l.J -I. loot! (El IM; 2, C-011 !Fl/I It-~· l Va""""I !El lt-21'>; •· Mc Tur IFVI 11 s TJ 1 Cbwel\!FVl~;t Mcletr IFVI 1"1 l 6owHI l!'VI 3~ t 4 Br•wn ... (l'Vlll>t . DIKU\ -I A,,,,.r\Ofl IE) 110·11; 2, Stoven\On lEI IOC.O; J. So•ol ICM!' 100·4 4 8M>Qnme11 IFVl'l! 7 ICato+to IU\ltl, Ill ._._... IMVJJ, MltllOfl Ytefa l•I. 100-1 -"'"(IC) 10.2; 2.w11.- CIC I ). Er1,.....lEI. 210 -t Pewltwrt CICI U.A; 2. WllMlfl llC l lB-fEI. UO-t .._.,II fM) S7JI; 2. IMftM"O fl(I l Kou !El 110 I BY\llllot !Ml l ' 13 l . 1. W~ters IEIJ MerV>allM fMI. Mii• I Vtlldfrf.,.,\ !1111) 4 SO 2; 7. ScllllH• <Et l. F11roere1d !El. )-mll•-1 S<"lbl• IE I 10 4S S; l. Vel\Ot,..._ IMI l. M<AIM !Ml llOHH -I Miiter IE I 11.7; 2. 8rOI\• MrlKll CorcoralltMI. llOl.H -t H ... klm•r IE) CJ.Ip; 2. 'Brtl\M< (l(ll. N•k-a fl(). ooretrt-1 IC•lell•'6.I. Miia raf•y-1. K•lollo tc'6-'-HJ-t, Mii ... fEI s .. ; 2. ,.,,,..... .. n (ICll.HwrstlMI. u -1 Gebriet 1ic:120-11; t . •-r •El l F-flCI. T J-1 Ltlh'Wl>ll• IE) 1M; 2. 8-f (El J. Gebrll>I 11<:1 PV l M.9rtln !l(I 9.0J 2. 8Utll !Ml J lleff<>'ll IMI. SP-I Loni• CM) CS.10; 2. fti.t C- lot I •Ml Bool<•r IE I OT-I S<nl<t 11111) 111-4'1; 1 Coo<c IKI) Me!<llKI. Coaches' AII-S11nset Huntington Valley Christian and Liberty C hristian, the only Orange Coast teams in the CIF small schools basketball playoffs, will f•ce each other In the semifinals Friday if each can win its quarterfinal game tonight. M•r'll" MMw'! (Ml c:• O; J. Wolktr tEl•:•U:•.Mett-IM I 4•'7.6. 2·mllo-t. Mer!ll\ Menn !Ml ':st.A; 2. WetlorhOuH (Ml 10 01 l ; J, 1.aB°"t9 IMI 10 01.0; '· Matt MllM fM I IO:U•. (Ml l . O.Ollo !G). FOU11teln \lellt'f HIQll•s CIWlm!llOft uo rtley 1. GardM Gro...,. y;,,,... Ber°"' llDnllnat• tlw co.cllet ' att- Huntington Valley C hristian <Newport Beach> plays at Death· Valley High and Liberty Christian travels to Azusa Pacific College for a game against Rio Hon· do. Both games tip off al 8 Pro Hockey •20H H-1. Streuu !Ml n .•: 1, Wlli.on !El 16 7. l Col\nOr (El 16.J; 4. Wltfto.,...fMI .... UOLH-1. Slr•uu fMl •0.7; 1: WlttlOll'll rEI '1 J;). $(reto (£1 42.7; •Wl-(Ml •U .. Orel<IY -l EIModtno0.1;2.Ml$- SIOfl VlejoO.•. _ Miio relrt-1 MIKIOfl Viejo J::M.S; 2.EIM-J.c• HJ-I Corw..i IMl 6-4; 2 WlllOfl IEIM, l. Vllltlo (£1S.10,4. Yont CEI S.• 1..1-1. Perhr IM) 20·•~: 7. $411\dltedl CMI »-c; l. IConM<IV IEI JO.tYt;•.°""'71fltlll CMI t .. 11-.. TJ-1. c.arw..i IMI 41-JVt l . Wll'°" IE I fl>.1: J O>udrlMlll fM) :Jl.10; •· Wllllaml I El .... ,,. PV-1. !'let~ 11!1 11 .. ; l. C.IH ll( I 114; l Jenftl"9' (El 11.0; 4. Co<cor ... 1ic:110-0. SP'-1. 0.l'Ml"HI 11(1 M-•lo'J; 2. Slelb I KI tM; J. Wll""' (Kl 47 .. ; 4. Helt .. (Ml 0_,14. DT-1. Surllrnen (I() 1'°4; t, Petdl fl!I 1'4-Slo'J; l lllWl't llEI 1~11; •· Del'-IKl l~. Sports for Girls .. 6. tu9ue Wl«lloM wl111 fovr fl<1t IMm Mii• rotay-1. Mori!\•. Ttm• ~rtll\, ""'.,, MVP Goo~ BMrlos l 5' S tl\Ocoecllotlfte,,_0.w ll<OWI\, HJ-I HAmmer fGI SC, 2 HN!~S TlleHlocllons: !Ml l . All.tnt~ IGI ,qnlTo-Vconlty l.J-t. Mello fG) 1110, 2 Mlv•ol<• Cert IUr'I (H"""""°" IM«lll, 1100 CMll.J-IGl. Gel..., 1Newll0r1 Htrllofl, Scoct l'ofc<il T J-1. Mly-. IM) ••: 2. AMllo (Founlell\ Valley I, ,._, HOI"'" (GI l .nothlrd. CFoul\telo Va11..,1, !Int WllklM«I SP-I. Kim !GI co.av.; 1. Meck le (Foul\tet" v.11..,1. O.Of90 a.rrio. of (Gri~~e:::.!1~) 9H, 2. Brllt (G) Fount•I" ve11.., (MVP). ) KIM !GI llob =!~:=). ltOlf PV-1 ICucttltca CM) IO•; 2. Al\dr• S<l>w•lbe (~I H•r'llorl, Miko CMIJ.riolllird Soddort CWeslmf..,t .. I, 5le .. Ttm- PllllESHMAN "'°"' 1"-1 HerllCWI, lOfly W•r-MertM 1711tUl Oa ... Or .. t ,.,, IMtrlnol. Coecll of Ille YMr: 100-1 \ACY IMI l!H; l P•llerM>I\ Oew B ........ "-''"" V•llrt. IGI J M•rtln (Ml P'il'llT_..,.._. 110-t ~r11n !Ml 27.l; 2. t.1n1 CGI Ptorro Ayele encl Jim Etdr~ J Grel<rvk <GI. (HIHlllnofOfl a.oc:hl, JOI\ qomlret ... 0-1. oc-" (Ml 51.S; t. oe .. n· 9ftd C,.lt sio11 '"°""'•I" Velltyl. Po•I (MIJ.MM\l~yfGI. O>ucll Or-.n tM.rlNI, """"'' EP. HO-I Atv .. u fGI 7:11 l; 2. P.lhel~~-.... v.11..,(MVl'I., llOMl~WeQfMIJ WlllU•r(MI. ~T-,..,.._o Mii• I Por•lh (Ml 5.01 ), 2. Ed FOU«I\ IWftlmlMt .. 1, fll<t. Polomll'IO (Gl J. LfOl\I !Ml. Glel\11 (HUl\tlngl<>ft hoclll, P'eul J.mil• I Alv•rH (G) 10:37 O; 2. ll••o•n (!.dltol\I. 11•11 lllMlaM Palomlrio fGIJ.Dully fMI IFou .. tell\ V•ll•YI, lob SlrMt 70HH I Cl-IM) n '· 2 Jo""""' IN••Po<I Horbo<): Coecll of , .... IG)) l\OllMrd. v ... : Jlfll M<N•m•••. F01H1tel11 JJOLH I Menlo!\ (Ml ~l.I; 2. Velley, JOMIOlllGIJ Cl•r• IMI., ..... T_ff......_ CA0'91•V I Marin•. T•-· .. s. tlruc. Caldw9!1 ..,. AIM Ge401• M iit reley-t Mori"•· Tim•: IH•••on Horbor>. Sam Alolto •:OLO. IM•rl11t), Olrl• Co•on ,,.01111tel1t HJ-I • .-. (Ml j-2; 2. 0.-01<0 v.11 • .,1. kott 1(11\I IHunttftQIOll WOM•N'a SOPTIALL °'""'CM1Um COi J. Pllllllp\ IGI. BHtll), ICtllll o ....... of "M•rln• MlleAl..,._.t,M .. loftVloJo, T'l,.,.1 l.J-1, Pattertoll IG) 11·7; 2. (NIV .. I. 4:CA.2. Vll\Y•nl (GI J Butler CM). ......T_ ,,...,._ "-·cf Ht..,ere,( W•tk .. ,)11 Jetu~.:lb Hul•l ....... lt Woll If RO-.rt1.Jt Hor10f\ rt W.t¥ II> G•..Oolfo. lb .. .. • 2 ' , 2 2 t I . ' . ' J I 3 1 J I 3 I TOlt lt 32 " ~..,I ...... 11 ..i HJ-t. se.-. (1(1 t. 9edloldaf' T J-t llllttr IMI ,.._ri\; 2. PllC• T-Pldl (Marino), Scott Herl!W t 1 IMIJ.~IKl,...._,.,._tl, W-IGI> VlnyerdlOl. 1Edl$Olll, 8rlel\ Lt"'"Y (Now,...t J , u-1. Oatlll\ !Ml t. V..-.1• (M) J. SP-I. °'""" (Ml ...... ; 2. CM· H ...... """'P«• -Miiie T1mwr t I l«tH IM). OlllallClal IMI. tetto 101>.1,,.,,.,.., COi. IHUfttll\llOfl ... , .... Coatll of Ille J , s~-1. 111'"' CMI t. "8IM (I() J, DT-t. lloell IOI lllt-4; 1. l(ftOWIM "l'Mr:Aln~Matl" .. I • 0.W<ll(I. DIM-.: »P. ~l=M=l=J=. Y::W4l::;::;'G=I:::, =====::;===========~ 2 , .. I ) VAlllJITY I t .. ....,........, (14), P .... V ...... 2 I C•l,Sa11a.-Malnt. I 0 100-1. Martmol\ (NI 11 •: t , It IP MH......iWI ISi 11.7; i. Oltw CHt II t; 4 . ..._,., (P'J IU. r II a r.-1. Mtlr11Mf1 (f'IHI 27.A; t. Al• llto "°'* OOI .._. 7 S ttoMy INUHi. J. Oltttt .. (Pl t1.S;4, Ot ...... eo..i ,., 001-tl "2 ~-""'""1>1271. ........ um .-.-1. Pltlurft CPI 1:01.11 •• PIM wri...-flt l:IU; J. Wt1gN CNI t;OU; 4, Ollre.tll cf • J 1 O .... ., IN), ... O, Oe•ld1; t100 OIO-t."-IHl >:U.O;t ,LeltlllNI erow~.111 1 , t a t:n 01 J. Af"lldl 1~1 2:•.s; ._ Hiett 5-\INbO Ill 2 0 I I I"') 2.41.4. Wl...,ltolfck.c j O 2 I Mite-I. 1!1-11.,. (~I 9,91,t; t. •ml, rf 4 t J t AMlt !Na:ll.l; >. A'lff ISU:IO.IJ ._ Pott., 11 a I t o C>ll,rttt CNl6:2U • "khol~ 1!t JI o t t ·Mll-1, lllnt (Nt H :O.I : t . 11,..,,..~ p a t 1 • lfenlst• IHll•:tt.t; J. Cllft.nl 11'1 H1e11 ....... ,, 1 1 t t w·n • . ltl\Oll u ' e t O t 110\.H-t. AtMMY INI U .J; t . ~t~lfl a t 1 I 2 ..... _ 1'1'1IU;1 8aft ISi 11.S; &. Olan,~ 1 0 IO I~ nOIP~ HeWt rt l t 0 I UI ""'°f-1, ......,.. ..__, st.t; McH 1° 1b I I 0 0 1~ .... ""*9 ..... ---~It 0 t 0 0 Mlle rtf..,-1 • .......,. Maf'W 'T•IM • , •u wt •:nt;t.-..v.,....•1•&. " r a a HJ~t. ~ l•O .. I t. It,_ OefdlMIWillll lla cm ~t 14 o C'MI >t; a. 9'lt ISi 4'10J 4. Trttt (S) .... ,..,.,.,~. ,. • .... • 7 1.1-t.1ttwtno1u;t.OMwC'•o _....... 1"; I. lllft CSI 1•11 4 ~ ,,., •Ann' .... MlllltlllftllflrlCGt""""' S~t.~ l'Sl&M1t.t_. ,._. • ..,._ OU t. ...... llU J.. CNI DM; S. 9"'-t'$1 _...) 4. e.«lllfeCMI. on-1 tU. L~Ufl IN. 19-1 • ..._ 00 t. ........ (10.. ""9tOllYaan'f' ..... 00.11-1... .......,.....,,.,, ...... v..... .wt-1 U.CM>t.~IMI an .... ~f1'l. I...._.. UU. TI-1-... 1 .. -t. tf911 00 IUI ttf-1. •-t, II.it CMI L eon.tit CK) &. OaMf\11 fM) -.1: ~ ~ ..... f lt). TWM· t •G.t. no t :•U: 9-1 ........ (f'l 1t4UI M4 S. 1Wr IMt L Weftl IMI a. lillle-t Ollfwf l~I •: ... 1; I· ..... IKl'TlMtl •:.&t. lllllt-1 ~ <"> H:tt.t1 tMLH-1. t-Mll .............. IMl,l WlftJ !Ml lwecllo CPI tl.$t 4 .. roloy-1. &. a.....-MI, ,,IM: IJ!ft t. ~ H..W M.1: Mlle ,.....,_,. tMUt-4....,_UU&. ..... IMJ Ntw .. rt M••Mf •rti 4« MJ-t. a. ..._.CMt. nn.:,.._., ::\. _ ............ 00 ..._ u-t ........ CHI .. ,....,_..~ T1-. sa..-. ,..,,,...._.,-..,rCHllN. ,_ ________________ ....,...__;;...:;;,~~_.. .. I I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ... ., SVNO"ISOI' TME ANNUA~$TATl.-NTOI' NllWl'OltT INSUaANCf COMll'4NV ...., .. .., .. ,...,s-. "'-•·"'··--Yl!A• RND•O DllCIMHi a Jt, 1916 Total OIClmtlll'G M•f(' IP-1.11,,. ?1) Tot4111M»111t1_.,,p~l hl'W'1lt !ipe<l•l \U<of.,,1-IP-).""'° lAI GrO'\\ CM,d fn .w.dcnnlrlbul..O \UfOIU· !P-l llrw It.Al Unen1Qftltdfunch 1\Ut~u\l IPM!O l """ 'Hiil! Su'"'"' •\'flO-l'O' 0011r~f'IOln•• I '()() 000 I •11 , ... ~· W0.17 111• 14l IP-) llM711 •0117 ... l1>«1m• IOI' 1"9 ~~r Ip ...... 11 11,,_IJ ) 011 •ft Ol•bu•M"""'"'"''""••-• 1P-11 """111 l •~i.m We ,..,,..by r.-rtrty '""' '"' .. •bOYP-,,,.,,.,. •~ 1n .,.(Of~• ••tfll tr. .. "......,.' St1t•m•"' f04' 1~ ..,,. ... ,.,,,_,.d °"'-•""Clfl' J• l'l7• ~ tt> tr. tn-w'M-c.• Com mlts1on.f'al the s.-., .. m C:allfnrA•itt our,u.tnt to I•• "8 C•~,, Vlf'•·PF#-\·~· l A H~rb\t•r A\\t ~,.,.,., Publl.,,.,, Or-C.0.U D•Hv P1lol , • .,....,. H . n -M•r<fl I 1 ) ,,.,, PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ... " SY"°""Ol'TMR ANNUA'-U•T9-WTOI' ~C*IAL INSUlt4NC& COMP4NV 01' CALI l'OaNIA f.ftNIWl'OtlTCINTlaDltlVR 1tlw.otlT8IACtl.CALll'OltNl4 YIAll INOIO OlctM8laJ1. 1916 TCIUIMm!n.o~-(11'-) 11 ... n, Totet ll•i>'llllK IP-ot) Ii.,. 231 ~t•l Olld "I' 'C.U.rMllV C"Pll•l I Sl .. V1MV Otoo\ll IP-l. ll,,_ J\4 1 Gf'ol\ PMO In ...O t-r>bul.O \"'9111\ fP-JlllW~l Uftff\I~·-"''"'"''' ,,._ J I ,. , .... S..rc>llA •• ._m pa41cyllol<tor • 1 oaooeo IP ... l ,IJM 111 •Jlim 1nc ...... 1orn.ve..-C"-n.n .... 11 svm ~-1\l«IMy .. t l..._ll llMl'I I,..,,,. We w"'°' t•nlry ""' "'9 •llO.,. l!t-.,r• '" • r.,.._,, w•tfl -"".....,' Sl••-for,,..,..., -d O.Cemoer ll 1'1• tn«M 10 "-'"--• C...... flllll'-411Ille1tMUf C.lllolnl•. °"'-"'le•••· a I , (-Mn, VIC•· ............. L.A. 11¥illltff, ""' S.C•elMV ...,..ltlled ~-°"" Delly f'll•I. ~~ 1S, 1'. -MM<" 1, J J, "" -.... ,, PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE \ I , .4•••·· ..... ----~:--;;==::;;;:;;;;._.;:,l·"::-"biAll PAT: ~ f "I already got the cookies dowo 1(aU$e I thought you'd '°Y yes." Court Panel OKs Mardian WASHINGTON <AP> -Robert C. Mardian, whose 1975 conviction in the Watergate coverup conspiracy was overturned last October, has been reinstated as a member of the U.S. Supreme Court bar. Mardian, a sometime-s San Clemente resident and a former assistant attorney general in the ad- . ministration of President Nixon and an official in 1972 of the Committee for the Reelection of the President, had been s us- pended from practicing before the nation's highest court since 1975. Lower courts already have reinstated the 53-year-old Phoenix attorney's right to prac- tice law. MAaOtAN Mardian was convicted m the Watergate cover-up Jan. 1. 1975, and sentenced to 10 months to three years in prison for conspiracy. Former Ally. Gen. John MitcheU and John D. Ehrlichman. once a top White House aide to Nixon, were convicted of conspiracy, obstruction of justice and perjury in the same trial. Each was sentenced to a prison term of Crom 30 months to eight years. Last O<:t.ober, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington threw out Mardian's conviction. rul- ing that his request for a separate trial should have been granted. .. ., • ..,, whlter a.t I.al fall 1'.-e ........... lf t.b.e "••a c.Md wool" label meau that tbe wool material used ln the coat bad beal ~ befcn in 8DCllber cannent. wm you ftnd out •bout this for me .. G.T 4 l'OWltam Valley ... eproeeued wool .. refen ton~ .... pmloul7 "°""or felied lDCo a woet pndDd tbt WU MYeJ' ued b) e-. ... en. "a...ed •ool" ...... ftben reclalmecl from a ued wool .,..... ud reworke4 S.&o uo&hr CU1MDL "Vlrda woo\" or ••w.ol" Is ••T u1m al lleeff, ~•t us •e.er been ued to m.ake ~ predtld.. Tlaeae vartoa wool labels llave beell re-q•lred abace lNt, • ._. th WGOI Prodada Labellag Ad wm& Jato ef. feet. Reftald Defat1 DEAR PAT: I ordered Leet.Ta Fuel lgnilers for my car from Interna- tional Igniter Corp. in June 1976, and enclosed a check for $13.44. The ig- niters did not work in my car and I re- turned them and requested a refund. When I hadn't received a response a month Jater, I wrote to the company and was informed that they bad not received the package. In October I was told that the package bad finally arrived, but that I was not entitled to a refund because it bad not been re- turned within the 30-day guarantee period. What now? C.S., Coronadel Mar To" Wailers of lnter1tatloaal Igniter Corp. has authorized a refund. New lmerstate 15 Stretch Opens ESCONDIDO (AP> -A new. six- mile leg of Interstate 15 loping to the west or downtown Escondido has been opened to motorists. The California Highway Com- mission said the $38-million bypass leaves only 10 percent of scheduled freeway work left to be done: includ- ing a small stretch of Interstate 5 in Northern California and the Century Freeway in Los Angeles. n .. ftdla .,, DEAR PAT: Lut July I leM my Setb Tbomu dllital electrtc dock to General Ttme Senilce for ~ I laler ~eived an invoice for $10.15. I sent a cheek for t.be P!'Optr alDOUDl and have rece•ved tbe canceled check, but no clock. I've written to tho company many tµnes wlth no luck . H.111., Fountain Valley Loreua Mamoita of GaenJ · nme Service l'eparU &iiat ,..,. cledl ••• malled a. yoa wltM.a ti dQS of Ute date )'GU c.beck wa• ~eeelved. la ac· cordaKe wtua ... compaay'a warru· ty. In view of your coaplalat. however. abe has 11M9ed to ...S a replacement clock to yoa. Free Books Available From School Obsolete textbooks will be available Thursday at no charge from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the north parking tot of the Capistrano Unified School District offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto, San Juan Capistrano. ;rhe books have been used at all grade levels for math, science. music, English and, social studies. They may be obtained by individuals or by community groups working with educational projects, said Marge Taylor, dis· lricl coordinator for library services. Mrs. Taylor stressed that these books may not legally be sold to otflers once they have been ob. tainedfrom Ulescbool district. Sbe asked that an)'9ne lnteh!St- ed in acquiring boob brine boxes or bags lo hold books. Additional information is available by call- ing Mrs. Taylor, 4~1215. V.S. Stnger Drops Veil In Rome ROME CAP> Felicia Weathers, an American soprano. introduced nudity to the Italian opera scene with her in - terpretation of the Dance of the Seven Veils in Rich~rd Str auss · "Salome." Good values on tires -and ~~eries. The St. Louis-born Miss Weather s performed the part al the Opera Theater of Rome. concluding the dance by dropping the (inal veil. The audien ce ap- plauded Miss Weathers warmly at the end of the perfo'rmance of the opera. The dance previously had been performed in the nude in the United States and West Germany. .. _ilmL"- . · tftet yours m.y notl 1 COMPLITI OllANOI COUNTY COYIUM .. ~ ,, t ...... ';:f!: ................... ............ u.- 2 MONTH to MOWT'H UNTAL IASIS 3 NO DIPOSl1' 119U1U9 Otl Alf'IOYD CIDIT 4 C*LT f17.10 PD MONTH TOTAL con , ........ ,...., 5 NIW COMPACT UMIT 1121 uv •••• ..,, • wotCI llllSSA .. , ..... 0 A1SO All AYAIL.UU 7 ""1 NII MAINTDWtCI Otr.\SGf COUNl\ f?.\[)IUIHE PHO~l \1111.'lff "' Call IU-H7t. Pul .... 9'0t'Cf• to wof1l fOf OU. • Plue 11.1'2 Fed. Ell. Tax fOf' A7•13 ~II. wtltl trad9-ir1, Four-ply polyester cord for a emooth ride. a..--------...... WMc ....... aw-..-. Plue '2..2t Fed. 1111. TM fl>f £7•14 ~f. 'flllt lr'IOH\. Polyeeter cord body with twin llberg!Me cord belta. It: P!w t1 .14 it.d. Ell. Tax lor AR7•1S wlltS.Watl, with l'*·ln.. Raldlal performan~. 'aconomloally priced. J ' ... _ ~ .... -....... _. ,.~ .-..-.·--------. -.,.;- . T 'Mon NEW YO&& <AP> -rrom PorUad. M• nt, to P rthnd, On •. women Jiave bieLlQl to a Detr a ear .ett of tbef r own eco&\omk b«'in1. aa111 .-New York·baMd flnanclal advl~or wbo conducts aemlnan about women and money A.nd, accja"dina ID \Jean Pat tenon, at 2t an assistant vice praident at E. F. Hutton and Co., it'• about time. "It's important tor women to realla tllat ao oae lt ,_. to <"are man •bout tbelt ~ _Ah uau .... :· ·~ enner lhat tou ahrt to un· c:fenqnd yow flnaadat • lb• man likely ,. are to~· ceed." ~ Tb• new lO&.erat in moa.y mauen la a dlrect ren~uoo al the women'• movement and the chan1in1 attitude toward ' woman's role. she said. With more women workinc. lbe Idea BEA ANDERSON, Editor I. Tuesday, March 1. 1977 81 Rick Byers (left); who believes· anyone can make a million, checks refurbishing project with Richard Yocum, general contractor. The key to Byers ' ambition? Hard work: Realtor Knocks \ r On Right Door By JUDITH OLSON Olllleo.lty~l .. UlllH When Rick Byers was unlea¥· ing ~x.cars al the steel mills m Pittsburgh for $2 an hour, he thought it was a terrific wage. Now, at 28, he wants to make a million dollars this year He just might do it too, with his attitude that anyone can make money ii they really want to. "I 'm not any smarter than anyone else." he asserted. "They ' just don't have a big, burning de- sire to get ahead." For Byers, a successful Costa Mesa realtor, getting ahead used 1 to mean just getting enough to eat in his home s~ate of Pen· nsylvania. "We were so poor my neighbors had to raise me." he joked. Now, it means receiving the top unit sales and multiple hstina service awards from the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors and watchmR his money grow toward the million dollar mark. Byers' poor childhood is reflected in his business prac· tic es lod.ay. He started buying old or run·down houses in Costa Mesa and the north part of the county, refurbishing them and renting them to tbe elderly. d.is- a bled and veterans for just enough to satisfy bank pay- ments. HE NOW HAS worked his way up to buying larg~ apartment un- its. which he refurbishes. He kids that he'd like to buy an entire caly· to fix up some day. "I've been called Robin Hood," he -said as he drove by project after project in hls new yellow Mercedes with 1ts "25K" license plate'(the price of the car>. "But everyone benefits. The ci- ty benefits, the tenants· benefit and I benefit." Byers discovered real estate when he was training for the U . S Olympic we1ght-hfting team in a Costa Mesa gym. He had come to Califomla to play football at Golden West College but found the game couldn't be his entire life. One or the gym's customers suggested he try real estate and Byers was off and running. ··I knocked on doors 10 hours a r I t ll'OM1 Is In· C!D• i.DUrtaat ha • pel.l*l. lD tact. •aid .... ht· t.er'IOla. tod.17 ..., lab .. In vo&a.•· lb. Patle"llOll ftnt beeame in· '--led io the Id.a ct financial Mmlnan dalped ~tally tor womm when ah• discovered bow innocent and belpleu many women were in the world of stocks andbonda. -SHE crn:D THE case of a waitress wbo bad been left some securities by her father. The woman had no idea of lbeir value and left them literally under the bed for 12 years until she needed to sell some to buy her son a car. When counted up, they were worth more lban $180,000, said Ms. Patterson. The first Women and Money seminar was held in New York in April 1975, and it started a chain reaction. Ms. Patterson has 'now held seminars in more than 40 cities. "Why wasn't this done years ago?" asked one participant in Cleveland. Ten years ago, when the day listing houses," Byers re· called. "That year I listed more than anyone else in the county." From lbere it was all upward. He soon got tired of knocking on doors, began selling, de· cided t.o study for bis broker's license and finally opened his own office with more than 30 salesmen. BYERS RUNS a tight ship, which he credits to his weight training. "The sports world is good discipline for the business world,'' be asserted. Byers' day begins at 6 a.m . By 7 he's al the gym for a long workout, and a little after 9 he's in the office for a 14-hour day. Periodically be slips out to visit his various renovation projects, µstening to a motivational tape as he drives from building to building. ner•ia aUieodM a pnN!Pallll have n poaalbl•, Ya. Pat· tenoefeeb. • 8~ ~have bee-ome m\ltb more lndes-ndent. They have be(un to ru.IUe that they can control their own futures and want t.ok.now bow to deal with the worldollinllflCe. sMsays. "The res~e to the seminars hH been greatest in areas where tb'ere is Uttle educational i(l· formation on investment and where women have fell particularly left out," she said. MEN'S ATTITUDES HAVE changed, too. Ftve years ago a male stock broker she knows agreed reluctantly to take a woman's million-dollar portfolio. "I don't usually handle women's accounts," he said. Wall Street has ch13nged tremendously since then, Ms. Patterson says, noting that her broker friend now gives talks to women's groups about their (lnancial needs. Ms. Patterson feels most men have always known that women ct w.re capa fll biowtq ..... ftnUN but ne\'er U.,'d ~tos-. .• ..,. .......... U.O..Ot dtJlt tbe u abo•lu't bother. Aod m .. 1 wom fdtov«nwMlmed. •·n Juat seems like men are born knowin1 these tbln11," complaiDed one. Today women are deterullned to learn. The ~action to the women· oriented investment aeminars bas been great. Ma. Pat.tenon says. It is, sbe says, a women. inspired program. "Women wanted it. Women worked oo it. It was not done by a bunch of men who decided that It was now time for Dearie to learn." THE M,ALE RESPONSE has been good too. "We never expect· ed this program to be so popular with lbe male financial com· munity," she said. Many have agreed to lead discussion groups for the seminars. And, says Ms. Patterson. they encourage their wives ID attend. ·The seminars deal mainly with topics such as increasing your in- come. reducing taxes, financial planning and in vestment There are several thousand nessman. making money is a such tapes in Byers' library, all game that is a lot or fun and hr· telling how he can succeed. He ings a lot or iaughs. He doesn't has listened to each one and in· ) take it seriously and said he'd g e s t e d a 11 th e v a r i o u s just start over if he lost it all. philosophies. His business is au.consuming, "I've also read the life of every millionaire that's ever lived, even though I don't like to read," he said. Byers likens his life to that of a turtle. "The turtle has lo stick its neck out ID go anywhere. If I don't stick mine out I won't go anywhere either." One secret to his success is that he has rid hjmseU of limitations. "My whole mind thinks different- ly"' he said, explaining that he now thinks in terms of thousands of dollars rather than a weekly paycheck. though, and his social life con- sists of being with his staff and having dinner with friends. There are no discos or parties in ,Byers' life. "I'd just be thinking about houses anyway." he added. "I think about real estate all the time. "Other people coll ect stamps or coins but I collect money and houses.'' His newest acquisition is a 2500-square foot home in Dover Shores, where he simply hangs his hat. There's a pool and lots of . beautiful furniture, but Byers is never there long enough to sit FOR THE YOUNG busi· down and enjoy it. • n .... ,. .. , .... Mm.buan " '*"-81fall'l 1..,... tD ... ~~ ... lb.Piil• 1-._,.. • .._ candl'Cft a llbc1aled ....... deaiped te nt tnto a ""'1111 woman'• bulJ .cbedule. • Honworklnl •ome" h••• special pl'oblems. abe not.. "Every wo111an should ba~e some money ot her own and tbla ls UIClally not lbe cue •mmf nonworlting women," she said. 0 WOMEN TEND TO be over· generous and think about tbe family first. They pool their re- sources. not realizing the conse- quences. There are certain tax advantages in keeping property and money in your own name. "Every busband should teach his wife about finance," com- mented a woman attending one.of her seminars. Ms. Patterson, who learned about stocks and bonds by going to the exchange with her father, said she would take that one step further. "Every father should teach his daughters." .. Or you can go to a seminar. O.lly Pilol PllOIO DY Rt<~ .... l(oeflltr He'd rather be out tooling around in his Mercedes, anyway, with pencil in hand, looking for more houses for his collectiop. The chunky blond, who has hPen descnbed as "a very Quota· bltRoung man," and who spouls hi hilosophy as he drives along, sai he liked to play Monopoly as a child. "Now," he asserted, "I'm do- ing the same thing but with real money and real houses." He would like to build a huge apartment complex some day and thinks he might just like to ~de~lop a city after that. 1 The dream never ends for Byers. There always are houses . and buildings to buy and they march through his mind like soldiers on parade. . There are so many houses, in fact, that he has even dreamed he was a house too. Derby: From' Start to Finish By DENNIS McLE~ OllMOeltyl"llMIWt ' . Jon Clark of Newport Beach was 13 when he read a small newspaper story announcing a clinic for the Oranfe County Soap Box Derby Association. ~ ''I kind or alwavs liked the ldea (>f building a car,'' says Jon. "Me and dad just went to it.'' At the clinic the Clarks learned what the Soap Box Derby ls all about. They inspected plan.a for building a car and viewed tbe models that proved successful the year before. They also paid .fon's entry fee and sent away for the bulldlng plans. With the aid of his dad,' Jon in the next three years buUt three cars. Last year the third car, a steak, yell°' flbeTglass·coated model, helped earn him aecoftd place in the Orange County race. .... Now 16 and a Corona del Mar High School sophomore, Jon is too old to enter this year. But he and his father, Tony, are still just as enthusiastic about Soap Box Derby. "IT'S QUITE exciting," says Jon of the race. ''All the parents tum out. Each car bas its own rooting section. I probably would have entered earlier but I didn't know about it." That's why they want to get tbe word out to as many parents and children as possible about tbe first clinic to be held March 19 at Hart Park in Orange. In recent years, says Clark. on- ly a handlul pf youths in the Coast Area participated in lbe annual event. He feels this is primarily because "nobody knows about it .•• 'Retired' Soap Box Derby racer Jon Clark, left, wants to get word out about this year's race. "It's a good challenge for a guy (or a girl) and his dad," Clark says, adding it only takes five or six weekends to build a car and then "they're off and running." Wilb plans provided by the na· tional headquarters In Akron, Ohio, the relatively simple.to. make Kit Car for the Junior Division (ages 10·12) can be made for around $116. Sf;NIOR DIVISION Cages 12-151 models, which include fiberglass and resin, may run up ID$140. The Clarks emphasize how easy it Is ID build the cars. A~t the only tools need~ to build lbe Kit Car are a band saw, hammer and screwdriver. "The race is keen," says Cl11rt. "but ~at ts the climax. It's really the togetherness and building and testing it out." Tbere will be two more clinics after the flt'St one. Then tMt't will be pract.fce nms on the track 4R Peter'• Canyon Road on the Irvine Rach. First place winners (from the two categories> of the Orange County race Jul) 10 will have ex· penaes paid for the trip ID the Akron All·Amerlcan Soap Box Derby in August. B'lt every entrant receives. a amaU tropby for participating. First, MCQDd and tbird~pl~• w1nDen abo receive l_arger trophies and savincs bonds. THE ORANGE COUNTY Derby Asscfciallon, which Is largely just a group of fathers, currently is Jn need of a sponsor. It is{ adds Clark,· a registered char ty. He noted tbal the track used for the county race is deteriorated and in need or resurfacing. Materials needed for repaving would run about S3,000. Jon. who describes the race as fun, says tbe main thing he got out of his derby lnvolvemeot was the building of the car Itself. "A big part of It is just flnlshinc the thlnf,-carrying out what you started. ' While be bas bis second·place trophy to remind him of the derbJ, an opportunity recently turn~ up to take his car out of motbbill.I. WARNER BROS. STUDIOS, •hlob was making a television &>Uot about a family that entel'tl the derby. c9ntacted the counw associ•tion &o enlist 12 youths to eppear e&J'aeers in the film. Jon and the «hers were paid $S2 and lunch for the day's Shoot· inc. It w-.. a nice way to end hls racttD&career. The Oatu. who have offeffd to proVide advice to any pro1peo. tJv• CJll'kbuilden. may be r.- ached nenlngs at e•0·4236. - ....... S--S: <bladcl .. wonaea> an 1.ulna a betl.w bnU. Tblrd: Maldnl a livJ.ac bas aucldmly become lmgott.aDL The ecooomic downturn lA 1'10 made coll•1• ltudenta awar• or the stiff competiUon C• jobs. The 1ocif- otr1 decided they bad better an wltb it ll they wanted• eat atlu 1raduation. But the erammar school. junior and senioc biab school atu- : Sagittarius ,_ :~Trip Ahead WEDNESDAY, MARCH% By SYDNEY OMAR& ARJES (March 21-April 19): Fun replaces gloom -popularity increases. Pressures are re- t-• lieved. Young persons are part of scenario. ~ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Challenge is on ~ horizon -prepare by being thoroughly grounded "; in basics. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Good news may be cause for celebration. Member of opposite sex figures in picture. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Emphasis on costs, art objects, luxury items. vacation talk, plans. Family situation comes Into focus. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Lunar cycle is such that circumstances tavor your efforts. Means ! timing is on target. ·.. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): You find where • you stand; you solve a mystery. Spotlight on hospital. institution, backstage activity. LIBRA <Sept. 23.0ct. 22): Accent on desire and how to fulfill il. Conscience is cleared -you .:., get rid of burden you should not have carried in ;,-first place. Added recognition is due. 11P0 SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on prestige, roa d to the top, achievement. Cooperate in civic project. · SAGITl'ARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Favora- ble Moon aspect coincides now with journeys, publications, long-range projects, the breaking down of language barriers. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What had • been a "job logjam': is removed. Progress , replaces apathy. - AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): Accent on time, observation, legal technicalities. major commitments. including partnership and mar· riage. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Ba.sic material . deserves, even commands your attention. Leave flashy dlsplavs lo others. Cheryl Kl•ty, Mark HlrtJer ' • Nuptials ·Planned Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kiely, Costa Mesa, have announced the engagement of their daughter. Cheryl Kiely and Mark Hirtler. An April 2 \\ edding is planned al St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa Mesa. His parents are Mrs. Thomas Cox, Cost a Mesa. and Jack tl1rtler, Ut ah. Both are graduates of Costa Mesa High School. M1~s Kiely is a stud~nt at Orange Coast College, 'I' here her f1ancc graduated. Life: Plus and/ Minus I re11d ~mewhcre that one of the prohlems or m<irriag e i'\ that husbands and wives are unable to r espond to their difrerencrs. It's called the old ··1 clon 't care. 11 ·~ up to you" or "l will 1f you want to" blue!l. Your partner nrver really knows how you stand on somethmJ? husband and followed it up with. "What would you hke for dinner?" ··F arrah Fawcett· Majors·· "N ot who, CIO'l'n ... what., .. "How will I know how l feel about dinner until J know what we're hav. ing?" "That's the p01nt. Qf. fer 1omt? sueJi1estlons ... ''Okay. hvttr 1s a big 10 with me." ''I hate hver To me. liver 1s a minus 2 and you know 1t How about meat loaf '· when r ha\'(' chscussed having h\er .. "Lower your \'Oi C<'' We doo't ha\e to air our twos and three" to the neighbors flo" about an om elet" .. .. That sound!> like a firm 8tome." "Good Wl' agree. We're out or t>Jt.l!S. so ~ ou ·11 have to go to the store " "The car 1s a o I 'm ha\•lng batter, trouble Th•t a\•erages omelets out'loa4 " "Okav wr're down to peanut ·butter. It's a de· AT WIT'S END finite J, minus 1 for being cold. However. it's a plus 2 for nutrition. plus 4 for not being n leftover and a minus 3 for being fatten· 1ni:. That romcs out to a· 5. Whatyu think'!" "l don't care." s aid m y husband. "I was hoping you'd say that" As I recall. It was SUR· J?es ted that a husband or wife spell 1t out using a scale of one to 10. For u ample, 1f your husband says, "Wh\Ud you like to go to a movie"" Instead o f shruggi n g yo ur shoulders and saying. "Mak~ no d1ffttrenct•" vou respond bv <11ayini;: 'Tm five on atttmdini: a movie .'\C'tualh•, I m eight on seemgf!he pie lure. but J'm.Jl t\\o on 'l pf'ndang th~ m oney now." · · M r'at loaf with meat --~i!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i~--ls a 6, -.1thout meat and a W h a~ou Id be simpler? I plained the rating sy. tcm to my lot of bread , a 2 . Hov.-eq•r. If \OU ret'I 1sh <•bout 11 I 11 ·'lend one of tht• ku1" t11 lhl' l.olc1en \rc hes "hie!> 1" ('merg 1ng a'I :i b1~ 10 .. "Would 1l hurt you on· re to be 11 9 about meal loaf'"' .. Vou should talk In 27 yearo;. you ha\'en't got· ten off your two once Own Yow Own ••••• INTERIOR DECORATING & FURMITURE IUSlt'.4ESS Need ·Mature Adults for established Orange County tocatlons No Inventory. ~mall investment. Will train ft.~ Profr.1~1on1I white earning (Tell 11 Friend! 1now. Coast Hwy. Newport .. ach Want to l«t RID of (714) 631~ ............ , , ... , Fora..IGed A4 ACTION Call A hUr , ... U.¥4Mr Mt~71 CCMI: ('£;0\ IN ff'tt.I: MILO'S JACUZZI THERAPY IS THE HCHEF'S CHOICE" • 8EST AA TU, L-t ralfl envwt-rw. Bonk Arrwtlawd ll1d M .. i.. Cher99 ~led. • llEST HOURS. 01*'1 -tv 10< WCM\lng -; ~ -l~ay 7 --9 pm FriUt 1 - -7 pnt Sllllnf.Y 9 .... 3 pm • 8£5T SERVICES ...._hted atMnOOfl, Utf'tM c"-' te molllC •NOCOHlRACT AEOUIRED •SAUNA •JACUZZI •"ACOUETIIALL rn~ Ann Land &1141 c ncl tfttl.i!rUJN lbaJ rhar11 MY Pl It I HJ to ritef'J mother and tau,., •bo rudl uu. D&U Kl: YN certaa111 ... ........ ~. Lake Am LMdi • ""'~ A no-nollK approach to bow bu bMI teWaa '°' cmw 2IO yean tlW dlacfi · lt a 1pedal kind ol love -«!tat kids want fCUldellnes, they need to be toad bow rar they can go. t.o deal with 11r.-·1 mon dlmeult and most rewardln' arran,.. mtnt Ann Landers 1 booklet. "Marri.,e -Wbat to &xi*&." will prepare you for better or for worse. Send your request lo Ann Landers. P.O. Box 1400, Et1ln. lll. 60120, enclosln1 50 cents in coin and ~ long, stamped, aelf. addressed ~elope. They don't want everything they uk .for. They often hope you'll say NO. <It taku them off the home with their peers.> The child who can boss bis parents Coast Agendas Varied SILVI:& ANCHOR AUXILIAllY: The aux- iliary will arra.n1e tours of Huntington Intercom· munity Hospital for any group of interested peo. pie. Terry Tours also are given to children prior to their admission to the hospital for surgery. Anyone interested may call the volunteer on duty at the hospital. ~ CIDNESE CULTURAL CLUB: A Chinese folk and classical dance class has been organized by the county group. It will meet Thursday even· ings at 8:30 p.m. at the Lois Ell.yrt Ballet School, Fullerton. Frank Que of Los Angeles, founder of the Hwa Yi Ethnic Dance Co. in the Philippines, is artistic director of the new school. He will be assisted by Jamee Seamon of Glendale, not.ed teacher of Tai Chi Chuan. Information about the dance class may be obtained""rom Ruth Dlng, 644-8603, or Mrs. George Wan of Fullerton. INVESTMENT SEMINAR: Programs on in· vHtment.s are scheduled in the Catalina Room of the Park Newport Apartments Monday evenings throughout March. Free and open to the public. the programs will include Rick Crawford speakin~ on London Commodity Options: Are They for You? on Marcb7at7p.m . ~ FABRIC FASHION SHOW: Selections from recent designer collections will b<! shown during a Vogue summer fabric fashion s how at 9:30 a.m . Thursday, March 10 al Bullock's, South Coast Plaza. TROJAN LEAGUE: The Or ange County group will hold Its sixth annual benefit Thursday. March 10, on the USC campus. Members and guests will enjoy a program from the School of the Performing Art.-. and a luncheon in Town and Gown. Proceeds rrem the event will be. giyen to tbe U niversity Undergraduate Library Jor the purchase or books. Funds for your non-profit organization If y<::AS non-pro fit club .. ... __ Of organization needs ..... __ to raise funds coll r\Jn11ng100 Cenle<. s<n-2533, and we will send you Ot6 Cho11ty FOit detals s:l w IZARD IS OZ ., Carpet & Upholstery CleanincJ With the Hydra-Master:- ,, uck·mounted Carpet . Clean mg Pldnt' Carpet & Uphc;tstery Cleaning • CLEANS DEEPER • DRIES FASnR SPECIAL! 20°/o DISCOUNT ITHRU APA11 30 •OH CALl FOR FRH ISTIMA Tl r..-., 1---• Onl• ....,_541-1332 i..- LOOKING AND FEELING GREAT IS WHAT IT'S ALL ABOUT! L!.ittiaH, ~a{(a,zd, inquires: ~ HOW DOES YOUR FIGURE RATE? .~~ IS YOUR WAISTI.INE SUM? THIGHS, ARMS TRIM AMO • l ,1 . SHAPIL Y1 CURVES IN THE RIGHT PROPORTION? AGURE 1/.1 ~ .• • TONED AND FtRM7 POSTURE CORRECT? CIRCULATION J • ••• -t>'; ' G0007 COMPLEXION CLEAR? EH!ltGY UVEL MIGH? IF YO(.'R ANSWER IS "'t'ES'' ON A.LL COVNT.'i YO{! HAJ'E NOTHI NG TO WORRY ABOUT. ff NOT LltUA.'V BALLARD CAN SHOW YOV IIOW TO DEJ'ELOP l 'OUR FULLEST POTENTIAi, OF BEAUTI'. It all begins with your trained figure counselor. She will give you a thorough figure analysis to help you set your weight goals. Then show you how our method can help you acQuire your new proportions. "Double . .vour plt>cuurP Double You./' Fun" AT AMY AM MOTHIMca 9UfT1 COWAaS TO NIU• TOTALLY Ani4CTIVL "You-RI UH MOST WOl •I. YOU'U. Mtm SONI HIU' TO ACMIYI rr. Try itl Wt btltve you'I •• itl ttundteda of othet'1 havt . II Now For Your Complimentary ....... ANALYSIS 631-2444 ./No Strenuous Exercise ./No Disrobing I No Shots or Piiis ./Supervised AttentloQ ./Nutritional Guidance ./ 10 Yearn EXperience OPIM DAILY I to I SAT. tto 3 Ld/ialt Batfa,id I . 1 I FUNKY WINIERIEAM OA4J\.~, ~~ kaO;t._~~ ~ ..9&..-A IY\l • s~) FwJiW~ ~! !l:_', " . ..... " 1\1f NANCY 0ULLETIN.1.' A LARGE WATER MAIN HAS 6ROKEN ·-· JHE CITY HAS SHUT OFF THE WATER SUPPLY 01'f'' ................... - ; J by Jeff Miier & Iii Hhlds t THINK I'LL WASH THE DISHES AND TAKE A BATH byEmiellllltnWler TODAY'S CllSSIDID PUZZLE c:;:;> HERE. 816 r-----.i ~O'THfR .. 11 ifie EHVl~AL PROTECTION Abf.NCI(" UNI TED Feature Syndicate ACROSS delecl1V9 1 D·ardeA 44 RettHI -"' 46 Relent.cl anlmala '7 Cut a acrosa eCllrnb s R 10 h i lrop1G1I I u.,, 111lm llelOIO!lQ " ••••• •·Dalt ~ 2 U S A Robin NowirnClef Hood'a e¥enl 1,........ 5' Adluattd ,.,,,, into IOIO• 15 O• country 58 Gr"k letter 18 • • •• nen 59 Enll'lu11a1m 11'4.r 8 I European 11--common Senae" country llllhOr 8? NorH 9Qd I 8 Rldlea :! Oj ~:..n 9 Muell 39 Ul*ienctna Siano EUfooeen• arou..ci leet1119 19 RMtoftJI* 85 KICll tn IOot• Var 'O Maclllrle 20P11i..a>i 11en IOLondOn tender QUl(k )eflll 08 Comer In dlaraelet '2 Owldlt 22 Ea11tn110n lofmal I 1 Wallung · • &Ifft a 2' Siiier of 97 Cupidity Elated '3 LOOlling lrt- ArH 1 2 Kayak tently 28 Frtaked 13 -0o not "Pour of! 2, leoal data DOWN •la~ ••••• -'8 Mtnlalerwcl 31 o.face F 21 Oowrono to 321eflnto I IHUfH ;>JQn •. ••Ill '1 JanoltM 2P9ar1Buck .,~ ...... _ ., .... WOW anew hllfOlne <" ..••• nuw "'" 33 Aetln . 3 NaYll ~M '8 ••• -Otal>le 38 Elderly l(ino Hus· 27 ~ waa Oe¥1r1 ta• 38Nlpe palm Min's wife Latin lllld 39 Old elOak· 4 Orunk 28 R>rbld '9 ll'IMfl 2 and·d~ Slang 2 aulhottlaUYitty .ord• work .• \. 6&:~ 29Bulldlng SOOfth .. un 40 ~oodwl~ contemol ti.am S3 Church pert 41 Hlgll ••• 1 r 91110111 30 R1teas111 S5 Remc>ft Andlraon , 111y 34 M1k1 mud-OIMf akin S ouv• died s9 Addll1o1111 42 llrmly 1 Mad1tngry 35 Scotti.it 57 Old aootor· Ill P c• 8 Ohome burgh Ing )Ob 43 Sem ·-·· =IC 38 RICll soure. 80 ComlC Louie llctloftll 3 7 Act _, ---,, 'IOU60T A Lffm TUMILEWEEDS MISS PEACH ~Fo~e we eeGIN, 'ltOt.t~ HON~, GAN l BE .A~ UZIO THAT YCLt Wfl.L Hi.A" THI~ CME WITMOIAT PeiwtAC>IG&? .. • ~ SAie:>, ANYONI!! WHO ' P CHOOSE! )Ou AS HIS SHRI ._,I<. OUSHT "f'O HAV9 HIS HE!Ac:> l!!XAMl...,e!c:> .' MOoM MULLINS ® c..n ... ._. __ _ .. -- ~ ""''~· \.'011 ~HIF'T'Y·!Y&O, 61A11:ry. LOOl(ING THf\k), )Q. \ : • THE GIRLS • ,.. ''I'd better sray away from the humorous ones-after 10 ycan of mamed life I'm sure they won't feel much like tauahi• at anything " DatillS THE MENACE ) ' • ., :':!=:.!-~-• ia tala MWlpa ... la. Jec.t to UM r ...... at Fal ~ Walk t!1 1: l1~1· lfl!,lf lslJlr ·-.... Mouln• Ad of lH J ... OOM wtdcll malt• It W.,al l -tMt _... advertlae "any PJ• r-.v•.,... I.ace. ltmilaUoa. o $64,tOI. dliKrimlnatioll based AJmoat D1W I Wroom. race, cob". n.llPm. HX a.»etory, p....W 4ea or DaliaDa1 ori&ID. or pl1&1 fireplace. Prime intentioa to make a 1rea. Walk to major such preference, limit.a ahoppln1. b•• and Uoa..orctiacrimlDaUoo." acboola. Bl.&liDeu mu owner mu1l aautrlce. 'Ibis newapaper w1U Huny. take lldvu&aa•· k.oowlD&ly accept an 1162-1'111 advertlalnf for rea eatat.e which. is an viola ~ K€Y · _tioll __ ol_tbe_l_a_w_. ---1 V P.E:ALTORS~ ...... forw. ························!-.................. .. G_,.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASYUVlllC --------1 Quaint French QUJter Z Real Estate OPPORTUNITY Openin& for 2 lic'd real estate salespeople in an bednn c.oodo, •teplt to pool, private COUJ1.Yard. 'fakin& depoel'-now at. SSl,000.~ olflce with 21 yra exp and . ~ In the same localioo. ,~UPERB] Many referrals & wallt· ilia. Your owp desk fr ES phoae. B:rolet' pays au \' IHC advertiSJJ18, Top comm.I~~~~;;;;;; Call BILL LACHEN·I~ MY&R, for interview anytime. 1860\ N~wport 'Blvd.,C.M . . · ~l!m. eves67:M577 Lachenmyer Re.11tor • REDUCED $23.000 Maplficent view of Npt Back Bay & mountains. PresU1e home in private cul-d•1ac w/3 bds, 3 bas, fam rm. plus den, office or 4th bdrm. Owner has already bought another! 646-T7U -. . OLDIE IUTGOODIE l IA-IASTSIDI roo&.-$16. toot Qulel Cul·de-nc ln Eaahld•/Back Bay area. Double door entry. Formal llvlnc room. White Brick fireplace. Giant ramlty room. Chef's kitchen. Pantry. Secluded muter suite. 2 decorator baths. One • bdrm. convert.a to den u needed! Spacious patio. Huge yard. Sparklio& blue kidney-shaped pool. Jog to Newport. Golf Course. Take advantaie. call 752·1100 3 Bedroom with central air condJtion.ing. good Jocatioo for only $43,950. ta I t• WESTSIDE REAL TY INC 848-2J23 CATAL INA ISLE . CHARMER, Magnirlcent View or Avalon Harbor from Middle Terrac'e, 3-story with 4 BR plus maids room. 2~ baths. Sl69,000. 640·0609 for IQ>pt. to see. DESIGNED FOR COMFOITAILE u~.-aH MISAD&MAR Wow! Load.I~ charm in tbia decorated home. 4 bedroom• and family room~ venaWity for the cntaitve homeowner. Your fablily wUJ live lo warmth and privacy with 1eparale maater bedroom. Close lo all YOW' needl. Call now, the price 11 ri&ht! stl-2313 at'N 1110•IIS II.JN10111 t, f ' [!tdlill 4 ... aa• PLUS 20130 boaus room. (Ideal for teena1eu. mother-in· law etc.> Laree Costa M•a family home wJlh 1tep down U v rm. fplc, ..Uelec kitchen. dineUe area. 2 bath.I, " =e and RV atorqe. lied lot compl with covered brick patio. <>wner boulht new and m111t HU, don't rni11 lt! I --, ~~HERITAGE . . Rt.ALTOns --- I "1wso ' J I ] I' I t I TEiAN 1 [ I I IC 1; LYPNET I I I I I ) ()Pf,. 111 o. 11 s ,UN ro at N!(f • RIZO\ E.s'°tcz ~ SUPll FIVE IEDIOOM and famtly, 3 bath, Lemon Height.. bome. Formal dlnin& with bull tin buffet, pantry. private balcony otf master bedroom; pool and many abade tr-ea CALL 640.ttOO \ \IJ ,F' ta:\ IT' 1-l f(_l J,tol•l•(l•t~•· fh1 ,, ..... :,,,,,, 11 .... h 14&,000. DOLLHOUH 2 Bedroom, 2 bath, well constructed, with hardwood floor•, new carpets, new drapes, new kitchen ud just about everythio1 elle ii new! CALL 751·3111 C:SELECT T' PROPERTIES : ..... l • 11 O'S 111 lllE ~II • pool. Kot Pood. ome.:. Ubruy • . famtJ.7 rm. dbUq rm. 4 llech"'ms. I batlat, 2 f.lrep.laca AU dUa la a -1&°'7 ---&Q CMat· me Sot for only 8D.800. COSTAMISA Tonll 1111.$41,000. 2 Bedrm. 2a,;, batha wttb new carpets •nd solarium noon. End unit l"l\b large patio, dble 1v. & dose lo pool. clubbouae tac. Juat list ed. hurry. call 546-5880 . ~~ ~ HERITAGE VIEW MANSJOM OYER THE IA Y ' •. REALTORS JUSTUSTIDI COSTAMISA EASTSIDI Extra cltan. 3 bdrm. & family rm .• pool home. &s\ Eaatalde locaUon. Brlclt frplc. Low mainl. yard. 11111,500! , Tasteful Kings Road 4 bedroom that has a view that won't quit! Beam ceil· ings. newer construction, charming kitchen (with an over-the-sink view of the Turning Basin> and a incredible amount of storage area. This property has room for a tennis court. Presented a t $325. 000. Ul'llillfJUI: ti()Ml:S REAL10RS~. 676·6000 .... lay,,.. ......... 2443 E;nt Coast Highw1y, Cor-ona del M1< also m Mesa Verde, at 546 5990 • '75-7060. associated·· ~ Bf.l 1..1t/EQ ", Uf l\l T?O '..t l • ' " p, t-,, .. ., ,,.,. macnab / lrvlna realty SUPB LOCA TICHI Lovely 3BR. d1mng room San Lws Rey Model ove rlooking pool & park. Cl<r.ic to golr course. private tennis club. regional park. schools & shopping. Mallbu lights, patio stubbed for gas. Rancho San Joa- quin -$115.000 Laszlo Sharkany 752·1414. (f''64) 642 .. 2lS 644_.200 tOI Oowr Orlw Harbor View Otntw ltVIN ., C•mpus V•ll•y Center 752-1414 Tawc~P111et 1w1owd t.hta cllle 28R w/lnlle C1rtrJ kit. remod b9 " lt'a clean-as-• fin Sep wo~k•bop /k d1 lllunD beyood lra pal.lo deik. All loc OCl "liard to find .. Mvel 40' lot. w aOi: to tbop '1 • Lake Grqory, er.tllne. Xlnt te~ ownr w1carry lat . TD. Alk'g SD.500. "PS" ALSO. tO' eel). yac lot avail at oab •ooo. JACOISl.IAl.n '75-6470 IFYOU have a aervice to orrer or -:---- CALL NOW 752-7315 DONALD M. Bl Associates Reott Wl·.S l .t<Y ~ TAYLOR CO. 1 u.; " 1. T < 1 H ~-.: .., i 111 ·• • 1 ~ , · 1 • ; L.90 ISLE HOME FOi LIASI Lovely 2 story. 3 Bdrm & den home incl. lge master BR wnge sundeck. Spac. LR & formal dining. Cpts., drapes. Unfurnished. $1.000 mo. Z I t t S-Joaquift H11s Rood MEW_'POll._IT ... CIMTIR, M.I. 644-49 I 0 G1Mr:al I ooz!Ge.et-ol I 002 ·······················I······················· BA VFRONT. pier & float. lots $W,OOO to $295,000. to build your own custom home. Several areas to choose from. New, elasle le vel WATERFRONThome 2 Bedroom, 2a,;, batha, de lwre kJtclMo. P-riute uo derarouod parktn1. Unob9truct.ed Bay View. Don't delay, H• tbla bea"'11W home now! 64CMl61 µb COATS & WALLACE Rf-_f\L ~S TAT E. INC --- Df'IW.ef...._llltut 'C.. -------------- 1002 .............................................. WISTCl.lff 3 Bdnm .. 21,', baths. family rm .• pool, lanai. $149.500. UDO ISLE NEW ENGLAND CHARM. 3 bdrms., 2 baths. $159,500 DOLL HOUSE 2 Bdrms. + den. $145,000 IRVINE 3 Bdrms .• 2 }/albs. Lge. indoor aquarium. Covered patio. $63,900 COSTA MESA 17 Suite office bldg. 6,000 Sq. ft.; new· ly carpeted & draped. $295,000 LIDO REALTY ll77 Viau.. M.a. • 673-7100 o ... ,.. 10021.-... ,.. 1002 ···••••················ ····~·~················ Roods lo aeU. r••ce an ad Don't drop the balJ I Get a f n th e D a I )' P 11 O I Job w1tll a low-cosll>aily aa.wned SttUoo ... Pilot Claaalfled Ad. UEIC & ffNf11 ot(JllS FROM NUMALS I R B E S R A E T E L t D D C 0 R C R E E P H C D H A H H I D R I 8 L A S CE 110111 ILlllS aa. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE M\¥&COMI TO THI &1SfFS• Rare "Hermosa Plan". Two Bedroom Two ' Story Overlooklq Greenbelt & Pool. Extras Llke Marble Vaoltles, Mirrored Wardrobe In Master Qedroom. Cupboard Space To Spa.re. Room For Wet Bar Delightful Lushly Planted Patio. Close To Shopplnf Tennls Courts Schools. Attractively Priced At $U,,500. PbooeM2·5C78. Pbone'4.2·5e'18. 100.2 W H A C R E 8 C A W H C E 0 D E S G 0 A H I l 0 T 0 6 R L 0 A T C Ol'lt IM GTRWA T U T Y R R S T E 0 T t E K 0 P ASH GLOKIGDSFCA IS { ACEROCELOD6 ~OOTAEG OPEYROOP~EA 8 P H 0 C L 0 T 0 D S 0 H W V I A R E E Y A A R Y P L A Y A T Y 0 R C E C S RAHDE!SROHKRADRRO AS D~C RYWULFRCEMCASRSO E ~ C 0 S P A 0 0 0 D A S A D A E D H N A R S t H E C P L A P 0 J A M 8 t ~ 111 : Hidden .or1ie ;,::: ~ bedr· ~ "'*'°' up, ""*" or d""""1y. fl led\ 4llld bole '' Ill. t Cry WOff 81rd Jn Htll4 Ctt1rle~ Morse : Otrlt Horn C.t'• Plj&NS Crocod1lt TttNi Oo9 T1rtd bo9 h ,t Dog Ottd As A Dodo $capt90tt Sacred, Cow Play Possum T Oll'IOM'OW : The at.ns .. ,, --·-·-·--UCWhOMMIY StwtP wmt IAll FIMDI ·•• ASM4A••LOAM MeM Y .. Smart ~ a,1e lD 2 S&ory. 4 bednn. rC>r'IQJ' lhA Nonb wW lead _rou diDiq ud Camib' rm. iato tbla 4 Bll bailM. 'lb1a QWet cul-de4ac. Ext.r'a la re.dy lo moH lnto tarae parll·like yard wttn wtt.b no wort required auto apnnk.len and li&bl· and you should aee the lQc. 2 Pallol. LooU like a landacapttla. Call now model home. Aakin& for detaila oa flnanclnl as.9!50. eaus.o.w1 and your •ppoinlmeat! 56&-2313 Ol'fN ,., o • '' \ l l.llV r(111 ri;.r1 • 1-~Dmln CUTE AND NEAT-2 bedroom WliU. Excellent Olllt.a lleu area. ll0.000. UPER Townhouse 2 br. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- bltns. Call to see. M~ Rlty. Jeanelle Kaye.:. 213-432-6376 OwnerGOM Submit au orfen on lh.u. rambling ranch home. 1 ~ balhs. llv1ng room Wlth fireplace. Fo~ed air healing, eating are:i In the chef's kitchen. SSS.900. call ~ 1720. f.ORt:s 1 E" OLSON . , .~ .. ,. l L ~ Wal km :: I •:f! lluJI I :·.!nit: ~Uoa; ~ "'"' 4br, 2~b.a. lofl. den. lrplc. avall April. By owv. sias.ooo. .... 1118 I . 3234 •: . I • ... ~-u.. 5005 MoMytoLoan so2s •~,--~; / Lost&Fo.Md uoo Lost&FCMMd sJoo ~~: ••••••••• ~?.s.~ H.tttW•ted 1100He1pw..w 1100 HetpW.t.ct 1100 ~ ·-··r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PREGNANT., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 1-•,2-.. &lrdT.D.'• Lost&FoUnd FOUND 2-16 v1c ... ,. Lo5t Jan 17, male Sta/ C . · l ' REST ... UR ....... T .. nu • • ""'" r rdsb 1&r1ng conClden tal ASSIST. MGL BARMAJDS; Day. Night CAKE DECORATOR. ex-"' "'"' LOANS AVAILABLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• i n I er I E u c Ii d F . V o ire Bull Terrier, r & r I for rapidly expanding re· 4' Relief Shill.a. Call for per. Full time. lnqwrc Newport Beach Credit not important Lost & Fowtd 5100 Cockapoo mix, orr whl fawn & whl. Meredith ~ob'!,nr~~~~g d r~ierra & tail party supplier. Look· appt. S48-7'181. Prench 's Pastry• 11 70 Outstanding toe. w /pk•n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 839-6240 Hms. San Juan area. Anh k . · 11 op 00 n .. k s ,..__ M ty ol parkmg. Ideal for 673·4883 Broker to "Tug" Rew 11 rd . ·eeping , ing for eager person to B ti I .... er t .. ..,.,.,ta e:ia. Lost: Irish Setter.•·. Vly Found Lt la n. 49"09691837·'"'..,..evt~"~. APCAHE 547 mJ lea U h ( eau cans w!l ntt'd . Nophonccallsplease. OO·Hle liquor. Good rent Ans • M .. c 11 or vwv A ....., ~ a P ases o our Great opportunity for _....:-___ ..:.....__;_.._ Priced to sell immed 2nd J o !168-to . organ 1.1 Dachshund/Terrier mix business: Re.tall exp. hairdressers w/Newport Carowiel operator, part TIME, 751·1400 • • 2342· male. vie Nt>t Bch Poi.t LOST Blue Point Siamese *SHARON'S* nee. Whirligi& Stores Beach clientclc someone time. Soulh Coast Plaia. J,QW BANK RATES Lost: Money Clip with ap· ofc. 642·1366. 12 wk kitten. Fullerton OUTCALLMASSACE lnc. Costa Mesa. Call ror who would like to expcr Call Bobble.546-6682 MAMA~~EHT LOMG TERM prox SllO. Gold w/phonc Ave. Newport lits 499·122-1 appl.979-8570 the finest salon that - Laguna Beach'Exccultvc record trim & jewel. SCRAM·l(JS 631·2620or64S-3S42 Newport Beach has to of Cashiel"I for self serv i:a-; in wholesale supply bu1>1· FIHAHCIHG Keep money, please re· LOST: E. Bluff Area. *KAREN'S * ASST. MANAGER fer. 640-0023 stations. P11rt lime & full ness affiliated with MECHANICS turn clip for HEWA,RD ANSWERS /blk M p di --time openings thruout NATIONAL BANK gray • · oo e . OUTCALLMASSAOE Xlnt oppor. for am· Bea t y Salon r eccp O C F ( rt.h lnt 11 ~'j~:11~~te~~~~og:~w:~rll all& for Pat Groce ~ tx 718• Whittier. Newest -Swoon _ a nswers to .. Andy". 6PM-2AM 838·1780 b1Uous, dependable self tion~st wanted for El 821 -~ u er ° Ci.I poratlon needs people 523-82.2 ' A&tmt-Plenty -Heward.SM·7777 -----motivatedindiv.to work Torosalon Muslbcover - onented aS&OCiates full -FOUND: 'Whl Toy Poo· STOPS Lost: German Shep pup· AIOltTlOH at leading fut growing 21. exper preferred. ~rs or part time 494 5273 die, Fem. Vic. Garden We have one of those py, fem .. 4 mos, reward. Counsehna & Heft'rral health food store chain in 8S7_.74J KITCHEN SUPV . . . ·-~t,Tnttt GrovePound.67~1510 breakfast cereal en Vic Spr ingdale & Preg.test-avall.wknd11 So. Calif. •tust h ave • Sftdwchflce Cream DHdS 5035 radios. It goes !.nllp, Westminster. 894•2038 or 24 llr Helpline 547 9-lllS prior aroc~ry store or re· Boat Manulacturini: Working chefs & first So.Oran&eCounly •••••••••••••••••••••• F OUND· Yng femal crackleand STOPS. 536-2106 lated exper. to qualify. Stoc....._.S..perr cooks~W/mlnimum4 yrs Perfect Mom & Po Siamese. v ie. Dove MASSAGI Abwtytosuperv1se,plan wilh some purch11. ex· exper. continental operation. JI us band• LOANS 8Y2 % Shores. call 645-8999 Found, male Dog, blk Lost fem lnsh Setter v1c FtGURE M'Of>ILS work schedules. manage per. in boatin& lndu.lry. cuisine Ltte S. Cali(. work forces out or are· Abo 2nd TD Loans LOST: Male puppy a ~:1wbt PH'S. Tan collar. 19lh Sl & Ne~rt Ter. ESC personnel, control store Sal commeru.urute w/ex-bued reslaur'ant cha1n. move. A·l thru-out. Xln Fairest Terms since 1949 Golden West & Edinger. ..1c Mesa Verde 11r.ea. race Reward 645 8611 OltTS inventory. etc. very im-per. Apply to The Willurd Posit.Jons Ol>f'n. Ol'oni:;l.' terms avail. T IME SatfferM..._ Co. HB. Blk & wht, wbt ti CMS56-006Sor7Sl-1806. after6pm OUTCALLOHLY port.ant. Must be bonda-Co .. 13()6 Logan Ave. Co. Call for i.11Jpl. m-1400 • ..,. 1 h d 63 I ·3l I I ble. Position orrers at· C.M. 546-~. 711·634 t888 642-21 71 545·061 I tai . wt streak own Lost Lady's RX h Peno.ab 5150 tractive salary scale 41 --------- GIFTGALLERY muzzle.lookllhkeGerm gla!>s es Br"'n ,case. ••••••••••••••••••••••• great oppor. for advan· BOAT MFG.ha11opening!.CLEANINGwomenw11nl Newport Beach. Want PRIVAnPARTY Shrthr.Reward!898·505l metal framl' 17th & Dnnkingproblem" ~b1t!!~~ifc~~~~~r cement. Job secure for: ed lrv /Nwpt an·a . active partner or may Will pay more for your You don't nt'ed a gun to Irvine. Rt:wartJ. &12-4082 Call Akohol Helphne Oulcalls 9·9. 494-Slll fUlure including bonus & Stock Rm/Inv. Control $3.50 + hr. M u~l ha\ c purebue. Mr. Smith art 2nd TD. 642·3573 "dra_, fa~t" when you Lo!.t. male Irish Setter 2A hrs a day 835·3830 paid medical & hosp. CarpenterTr1um:c cur 968 ~11 10Ald,&7S..3080 1 d lh DaH 2 RVOTIC GIRLS benefits. No Sunday Gel Coat Touch-up __ ..;.._ _____ ~l::am 10<,;, on your sav pacc~na in , e Y 117177.V1c.l9th&Sanlu The Castcst draw in the iiaA work. t'or appl. phone AJajuelaYacht.s Cori'· mgs,buyaSecondTrust Pll?l\\anlAdi..Call now Ana. C.M. Reward We::.t . ':a Daily P ilot Massagc&Modcling Dave Moran. Lindberl'( 947 W.18thSl.C.M. CLERICAL W_an_t _A_ds __ c_a_ll_64_2·S678 Deed. Call 496-4095 -&U-5678. S48·lll10 ClassiCied Ad. &12-SG78. Outcall S42·31W/543·3'!50 Nutritio n. So. Coast ________ _.. __________________ ._ ________ ..,;,.-;.-;;.-;.-;.;;;;;;,;; __ -;;; __ .. SpJrituat R•ad•r Plaza Shoppin& Center !!\tv~ !n<?~~~~. For p£lu~~~nS co11lrnl 1815 So. El Camino Real Branch Store, 557-6161. 10% SanCl~mentc. Fully Lie. For appt. 492 7200 F:LITE SAUN A & l\IASSAG t-: • • $10. 1-'llLL • 1 II our with this ad P'REE Whirlpool w/1 llr. MassugC'. lndv. Rms. l.OAM·M1d . MON SAT. AE. BA, MC & Checks Accptd. 1400 W. MrFad· den,S.A. ATTEMDAMTS Full lime & part lime hr- 1 y attendants t o in· troduce new innovative health screening pro- gr am . Must be well groomed & able to deal w/lhe public. Flexible hrs & flexible days. Hrly wages. Call Deanna ror appt. 640-55UO All a8pects of small bo~· ,clcpl. Knowlcd g1• of inf:. Takinl( apphC'al1ons blueprinL'i & matl'.'nal fur for positions in sales, oul l ~ventory control de· fitting. fiberglass cun s1rf'd itruction & repairs STACOSWITCH. Mwntenonco, hurdwun· IMC. installa tion, riiu;ing. 1139 Haker Costa Mesa s tainless steel and 549·3041 aluminum fabrlcot1on 1,.~uaJ Oppor Emplo• er Send resume or apply 1n ""i ., person to West port•-------- DISCOUNT ~08195 OlllNKl:'\G crealei. problem:.. It d<>e!.(fl i.oh c them. If you nl'cd help. cull CAREMANOR Hoi.p1tol 1n Orange. 633 958:! AUDIT CLIRK Reqwres accurate rigur~ aptitude w /knowledge of 10 key. Ute typing. WilJ tr ain bright p erson w/rrun 1 yr business ex· per. !iPM-l :JOAM. Xlnl Munne. Inc. 124 Tust1ni--------- i\ve. Newport Bch, 92663 CLERICAL Call 642·6600 IOOt<KIEl'P MeedlA11l1t..t Assist in preparation of C/R, CJD journal• & h~ po6ting of G /L thru TB. Exper'd in bank re concillollon. Position also req 's preparation ol extensive cash & budget reports. Applicant must a lso be willin g t p perform misc. clerical functions. Jrvine area Send salary history & qualifications to: PO Boie l!lMJ, Irvine, Ca 92713. *TELEPHONE COMPANY* DURING MARCH,i' -/. cl Cash in on And Save Spring Cleaning With a Daily Pilot ~ MARCH SPECIAL Applies ANTIQUES APPLIANCES AUTOS BICYCLES BOATS CAMERAS 10% DISCOUNT 5 LINES OR MORE 3DAYS , • USE CASH BankAmericard OR MaBter Charge • 10% In The Following FURNITURE GA RAGE SALES HOUSEHOLD GOODS JEWELRY MACHINERY MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Categories MOTORCYCLES OFFICE EQUIPMENT PIANOS & ORGANS SEWING MACHINES SPORTING GOODS SWAPS ~-----------------------~-------~-----(4 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE) 5 Lines, 3 Times = $9.00 c • Clanfflc•tlon _____ _ Stert my Ad on thl9 dete:..-------· f'or •ddltlOftel llnea, •dd S1 .49 per llne. M•k• check or money order payable to DAILY PtLOT. Send or Brtng to: Ct.ASStFIED AO ORDER DEPT. ORANG! COAST DAILY PILOT BOX 1580, 330 W. BAY st. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92828 Q BankArMricard #--------------Exp. dat•-------- Q MalterCh•rge #_,! ____________ Exp. dat•-------- Ctlp .... ,...,. tr. "°''-"'d ,,,_.,., --°" 'tW' _ _. r--~-------------------------------FiR~- CLAss PERMIT NO. 13 COSTA MESA CALIFORNIA • BUSINESS REPLY MAIL NO POSTAGE NECESSARY IF MA ILl!O IN THE VNITEO STATES A SECOND CAREER working conds & co. professional training benefits. Call af\ 4pm, course m Hypnoi.1i. 1i. 0 r.,_6M-4360 ___ e_x_t_:w.s_. __ _ fered by oc 'i. only AUTO CASHIO H.E.C. i.lpproved school. Experienced. Immediate Qu;tltfles Grads t or d opening for experienced slatew1 t: registration & cas hier. Good working certtllcate. Can be taken for Cull academic credit. condition. Top pay for 3 umb. Ask about our qualified person. Contact Mrs. Hauser. Major degree pro~ram COllMll C!Mnold IOOIOCEEf'ER Mtartin~ March 3. P .11.1. 7S2-2S41 2828 llarbor Blvd. full charge ror busy con· Costa Mesa struction co In C.M. Rep- LIHDA It VICKI 546·1200 ly, staling education ex- Outcall Ma1:ri Automotive per & salary require· "'--..... _IL-of t'' menu to Ad 11825, Daily ~ n.. rvn J New Detail Shop needii Pil PO u-1560 c M Serving all Orange Co. help. ~· ""'" • · · S49 2743 Top wages paid. Engine --------- Steamen1, eng painters, IOOKKEEPEI Wanted. Rider lo In buffers •-polllhe-. up· d1 W· 11 1 "1 .,. •" F /C. Position req 's a ana. 1 eave " arc holstery shampooer s. f Ca I thinker & sel starlet'. Slh. I 498·0838 aft S check out, pick-up & de· Must be .xlnl w1r1cures li•f,:r"""ftt& rep•crti0tt •••••••••••••••••••••• Schook& htttnlctlOft 7005 •••••••••••••••••••••• MEN livery. Apply at Accounting knowledge & ~Harbor Bl, C~ supervisory exper pre fUS·lOJO f'd . Send resume " ---------1 salary bls torr t o : Cla&sif1ed ad no 881. c lo AYON Dail)' P\lot, PO Box 1500, <Aeta M1>11a Ca 92626 lf you're dependable, or· ~-------- ganized, llke ~aeet peo-Bookkeeper. exper. pie, & would like to 1ell tlmeorfull time. beautiful rraerances, S49·5277 Part Personnel Needed Immediately EXPERIENCED Q,...LY *Customer Rep *Operators 4 years recent exp *Clerks ·vot:.-r· ft ""''''ltf,..ff'\' h i ltV .. I 't 3141 c...,.,. Drin 546-4741 <Across From Orange Co. Airport > Equal Oppor Employer .ERK for HB drugstore. Min age 24 . P /time. I::Jt • per not nee. 847·2563. CLERK·P!TIME SomeTypinit Rcqwred Call 673·0460 WOMEN TllAIMFOl IARTIHDIH(J TWO WEEK CLASS .. NATION-WIDE JO» PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE OOODJOB · OPPORTUNITIES Jewelry, cosmetics & family product&, you can -~~~~~~~-1!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; earn good money. 1-'or in· BOOK SALES formation call S40· 7041 or Zenith 7·1359. Lookin& for ll part-time job that pays like a full time Job? If t!O, we've 80l what you're look Ina for! AMIR IC AN IARTIMDll SCHOO\. UOt E . 11th St., SA DHIMIO School.a Coast To Cout L .A. COLLEO E 0 MASSAGE, Low co1 Day-Eve-Sat ClHIH Sant.a Ana. 156-7171 JaMW..ted. 707 •••••••••••••••••••••• Babyallte r , permanen\. Weekdays 7 ;30·2: 30 here. I bab)'. Karen '31·3553 Babysitter In my CdM home. Refs Is tr•n1p. nee. at\. 3:45, 873-86!1 Beck Ofnce Aul, exper, for busy GP, Mar Hoac tbp. llall resume lo Ad. No. 183, Da11y Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, o..maa Man 55 with B cootractors ---------Uc. dalrtt poetllon ul•--------•I RME.142·21829. BANK Hltp W..t.d 7100 PULL-TIMI .......... ••••••••••••• COMSUMB LOAM noc:usoa """'° CAUFOl'41A IAHK Earn SlOO + + + per week doing enjoyablt' work repreaentl n g TimeUfe Bc¥>ke In oor of· f1ce uear lhe Orap~e Co Airport. You work only 6 hn per day In a pleasant Is relaxed atmotphere. 2 Shifts avallabl' 8.»2:30" 3 3().9.30 dayeaweek. Con~<S R~Uff ROSSI IJW0'5 For Panoafl Interview Noexper. ne«aaar)'. TJM&-Ul'E LIBRARlES, INC. Equal Oppor Empl9yer CLERKS FILE CLERKS SR. TYPISTS . REPRO TYPISTS .. STAT TYPISTS "r SECRETARIES Lon(" Short Term Aulgnmenls 14 C ..... Dt' 146-4741 ( ACrotlS P'rom Ora.nit! Co Airport) Equal ()ppor Employer Advertblaf lpaee &•la ~rte"* or Trainee A&,,...lve nl• atarter for sll'OOI reaJODal tnd pal>Q". Sal.a17+comm+. MOW IS THI TIMI Collector For LA Tlme!I. r~ job leelw'a to cbeclt Comm up to ssoo per tno. DISCOUNT POSTAGE WILL 8~ PAID av Oqn" Coast Daffy Plrot Box 1seo .. :nu;;;: tbe Dally PHo'• .Jhlp Prefer retlred per• • ::::::;!: 171,., .af'-t•?J Wanted clualtlcatt~n. u 548-1140. ''"' e 'Monarch Bay Pl.ua 8oCl.tll Lquna (21'~ ......... ARClUtl.iC'T " "' • tbo Job you want ra oot1 _______ ..,......, 0 DO IT NOW! 330W. lay St. Co1ta Mua, CA 1212' Ctaaalfted Ad Order Dept. :::::zl:: • ..-. . ..-. la C..Ut. 10 t7 I 4t ., ••• no there )'00 ml•ht. eont!der •••••• •• ~..-wu -'f rt I ::;;:-:: UN project ffad.1 t "' • n1 your Hrv cea • .... z::• .cart. Anncut elloUld Equal Opoomalt1 with an ad· la lbe J ob · !!UPni be famlll• r "/lrac ~111plo1• Wanted cat.c:1oni. Pbaoe ::;fl. !::: wOrtl,labecottcour~'C?U~~~~~~~~~ _ec.31T8 _____ ___;_ ••• n" la dHlan. Satar Clualfied •dt Hll bfl iii ;:H w /boaua tied t Imm small ttema orTry • Dally Pllol I FOl" Clau\lied M a ACTlON cana 1 o D1UyPUot AD-VlSOll IC-5878 Q J -. :::r.:::f ~rformance. 1n-aaso any item . Just call Oaailled Ad to buy, ult ~ ~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=::=:=:::::::=:::::::=:::::::;~;:;;:;;;:;:;:::;::;::;:;::;;::;~::::::::::::::::!L~C.olU~~N~esa~.========JJIG-~5671~~=====--~'\1ior~rent~~tom~eth~~~·==~J.:=:::;::==:=:::;::=;s:s;!' I . . . a• ._. -oplll •• vtdlo ... ~ ......... opsatar Car.-~ /Poar •l•l·COIDPUl.r. me ••• ..._. .. ......,._,but WW tit· antdlul wttb demoDStn1ed tndnl 8t· car1r1 _. speed. Wan ID p&euut n•lrocunent wllb cood compuJ beucftta IDcludtna 3 ..,. .,~ after one ,ear, com.p&Qy paid FOUP lmunace, credit unkm. etc. Apply at OIO•I COAIT DAILY ... OT ••. .., .... c.... .... betwew tbe boun of 8:00A.M-5:00PM ~:;,:.·.:.:~ Equal Opportunity Employer ............................. ~ ~~ .. ~.-~-~-. -.......... ............ l _, ,_, t .. CC1m1• --. .. •nna. llwJ,ODI. &.CMMGFAC• AU i• ~u•t .... , .-M:nuooe wad••• &ntqa a-4 ..._ _ .. _.,.. _____ _ I ~ ..._. d.. -'· -.le ....,., • •ovueo. ••" .. 11 Pl if WWW nc..&.U.OfMpC.... ........... drna _. _. .. .....,_ •e ......... I lllble, ere• •• •tr•r• •• • • .... ••II el••'•· .... dlll.. ..... .... -" -.aftllelll ~. '° tllW'ttS* .. air.r Mr tr•IMlf_athr e1"'-· 1111. ...._ ....... ... worll •t leadla1 fHt Y...!-1 .. ~.~1 ~-·-· _. 181,. wM -.,..., =~t .. :.8~ J::f. -.-..WuJ .... o.w • .-..... .... ........... . lla&St be 18let'ftt..S In .....a ,._. ..,.. tm· ~ ........... , _.., ~ 6 .._, ... ~.,...... := =ra:c:.-::.; I UCRftARY·O.. 'Jo.'. O.D r.; llm-Tltllaa!r ,......__ ....... ~ eoada Olllllonn .. ----u ...... __ ,___ A' ew•M ---•JP ., le v ,. In• St .• '"'"· Tel. --__...... rut"D. Ir · -.-..... -.,._._ ~ • ..,. =•dk --:, •...... • 'o,u n6-tm. o,. ... ,,,_... .,...: •~ • f ..Slut 6 boep developmeal ead In· y-..'-• II N B.A e "111 If you S&tAllto4 I'll. VWt! = ... 1!:'!-~ tl'Mt benefit• No a.day ten.al supervmbl. u JOUl~~~~~~~~~I _,__ · o oWatwwMel 5ead YOIU' ____ ....;__...;..;.;...;._g --·-W'Oltl. Apply, Ltadbers are~ tw • pwiUool: ~~ t.o *.UC.· BHy best wriUen reply to eou.tor. . u:rr Ed""'-_. __ _.;. _____ _ Nutrhloa. So Cout with • eom.,_, which MUISBAmS f: sae-. Good c-loa· Colllu .UWl1tes. Jl'1 En~yelopedlH. XI• H*-•·bed. SolJcl ballt. Plaza Sboppiq Cenccr. rwpect1 ~c.i:;_;blllUes ... Ordertle•. exper ~.!_ aver•lttb. co,m S..Nk:olu Dr. Newpor1 eond. Abo Old Boote. ~ 0..... 1 delver. ColU ..... and C'OOttt pie • u.,..k>ft p1ya le a tn a.ch. Records CSO's 6 •'a) --.-:r Help WHted M•le .. ~~raonHt :' <Zrn =~~=· ~ :.:~~~) SP£KETARY. l &irl ol· Aamm.ln·J»l Fem. Over l&. APPb' ln WALIFIDllAL ~-..... __ ••DIS .•~tt~lli~·~· (~T1~4~)4$.)~t~tl~t~. ~ flee. located an Nwpt ~ K.ea&uck)' Fried __ .-~-. .:..:. Bch. Heavy typloa A LA4MJMAllACH aDcti:.. Lquna Beadl. SAYIM5S 0.y Shift.. Will train. Zs· SA.LES PROS pbooes. 8·5. 5 days MU51UM °' Altf ............. ,...lac ...... ............ ,mlr. ror. q.a •bed w /bdbnl, • z e9d tbla. MOO. Sue MM300or-...zt ....... w~ 7 I ~!Hm .. w-•-~· 7 rOO HOSPWA. F.qual Opportunity per. pr.!'d. ApplJ In lllO ·lllOO p/mo. ~Ta2 .........,. _,_ 0 --Empk)yer persoa, Part Superior Pkk Up•. Earn DD0 ~ s.M • .... Sllew AS. ••••••••••••••-·•-•• -•••••••••--•••• LIAO Conv. Hoap., 1445 CaJJ..,_MlO · llARCH4,51t• KiQI & ~ w/sbeell, Cocktail B..ICTltOMIC TICH CUSTODtAH Su perior Au. NB . _ml! _____ 12>9 Frt & Sat, 1.Z-4 Sun. llU. refri1 UO. J Be A Prolsnl B1c1tgro~d ciigltal & Im m e d . 0 p e 0 1 n a LYM 7.3 1a-auo. SALES SICTY /PlllSOH 307 Cliff Dr. Ad · Dr.Mn. m ea. Sota Coclrtall WaJtresa • n •Io g cl r c u I t r y . 3. 11 : 3 op If . p r i 0 r MedluUoos ii :J.11 Team ---------1 Fl1DA y Sl.50 2:5' off w /Wud.. _llG. __ f7MI08_· ------ • $99 .00• Dlvenlfled wor1t load ln superybory .. floor can Leader. Mesa Verde PAITY Pl.AN Exper'd, aood typist r PROMONTORY PT . ExcitlDllcProfitable desis:n .. lest.lDI ol In· machinery exper . Coav. Hosp, 661 Ceoter ~o~ office • busyPRolflce.Seod.re-hd•c... 8010 MOVIN G SALE · 0 Prof stnaneaut.loo. oeceas. San Clemeate._St._C_.M_S48-__ 515&5 ____ 1 MANAGERS I ...,.. .... "'--'-h ....... lamoaroua ess1on ,. 0 overload sume. sa ary r equire· ...................... ---· --u. andque •Lum in 40 hrs rrom Adv~ Klnetics. Inc. G e n e r 1 I H o s p • LYN'S&....,~ ments t.o PO Box 1903, REFRIGERATORS cbrl 6 chests. Fri, Sat. prolsnl's lhe nne •rt o1 1231 VlctorlaSt.C.M. n41-..1122.Mn.Coco. MURSISAIDIS · 557 _ ... 1 <llie ol naUoa's taro-~port Beach. Ca WASHERS-DRYERS &anm.6r12forappt. waJtresatechniques ~7165. E.0 .E. -vvw '""""' _, 8cond •.,..___JobPlcm-• .. :.•st ' ______ ;,_,:. __ ,HOSTESS. P/Ume, over Allahlfta. Ouflekl Conv. 3723BircbSt,N.8 . Party P1anCompen1es ls ------• R itlons-Repros 6 Qoke fine run1, movl.ag rr...,., ~""""' FACTORY TRAINEE 21. Exper. pref'd. Appl,y. Hollp.,8C7·9811 NOW JQRING nowopea.iot ln this area. Frgt Damage. Ouar/Del. to 1 ma I I er h me •O.yorevenlogsesaloos Small local mfg. needs in person, Ben Brown's Ground Fl Opportuni 29Yrsln0ranaeCo ' CAu.<714)751·9194 trainees, to work In n-ta .. -... 31106 Coastl _________ , Jr.Clertls . b oor · SICYjUCl!PT DU...,, ••'S · Tomlinson rrultwood For a free conaull in 00, .._ ......... Sr ClltrfD ty wit ua establl.shed P' t 1 • 1 .__.. brukfront, shelves & dtbe most prollt profess plant. 40 Hrs p/wk, 8-4:30 Hwy, So. Laguna. MACHINIST w,-ella•' 1:-L-'-comp• n y r or ex . ~ J:!:i ':Jres,.rn>g"fi~~ 1815 Newport Bl, CM drawers, smo. Jul. 11th So.CalifWailreu. Inc. Moo-Fri. $2.60 p/br to•----_.:;;. ____ Progressive growth -.:.=, ~-·-r-J perimcedpeople. ;,.. Typ~ skills. fit. CALL~'1780 Cent. W1lnut wln1ed l'1922Sky Park Bl, Stec st.art. Apply in person. HOSTESS oriented electronics -I.a« 4r sh req'd. Apply or chair. down cusblon, Jrvine,Callf .. 92'1l4 Alternator Specia lties FUU.orPARTTlME manur. bas lmmed. Temporary medlaLe Mmager'sSalarieafrom nil, Newporter In· "50. Jul. oceaa. cba.lr. ---------t-~lnc~. 7~46~W'...:..·~17'..':lh~St~.~C~.M~. -1 Apply in person aft 2 PM. open.lop on day & swing Work. Call Today! $100.00 to $500.00 per dustries. 17851 Sky Park Late model, super de· Wal.out cut velvet upbol. FIELD SUPERINTEN· Harry's NY Bar/Grill. shifts for Machinist~~~~~~~~~ week. Top overrides. Cr. Ste B , Irvine. IWte. Multl-cycle, like s:aso.m..sms CONTRACTOR DANT·Houslna trac-t Ot8Martingale,NB w/mln 5 yrs setup & pluacarprogram 7Sl-Oll35 new. Perfed c:ood.IUoo. OPPORTUNITY ,. operation of lathes &tor OPPOllTUNITY No Investment · Sacrlflce al 1235 for both. Mer.tit. Style Desk. Very h'::~u,:~~/1~~n~ d'!~:,! HOUSICUAMIMG m ii I 1 & Mach In Is t Local business man look· .,. No Delivery Service Station Allen· 7Sl·5177. lovely. Nearly new $100. IE.P NEEDED torollowatightscbedule S4PerHour Traineesw/Gmo'stolyr log to expand businesa. NoCollecUng danl, exper'd. Day & 7Sl·2llOOor~~. EARN & should h•ve a proven 5Hrsaweek 673-2012 eicper.Hooehelpful.XlDt Needs as .. ociates. 1'..11997 jf!f!l Evee. Full&~/Ume. AP· SERflVELS7S Gu Reina. 17 Older 9& Philippine t t d S I benefits including Ptnmebuis673-4786 .,_. 4tVV fi'Y· Shell StaUon, l7lh & cu · ;............... y .. i.n.. DI"" Rm."~. nc r eror . . a ary ~. 2:30-ll. Mon· medl al/d taJ •--Ai _,._ ....,. ... ~ _._ · -~ ... ~ .... w I b on u s t 1 e d to Fri, own tr~S2.50 hr. c en1&1 p...... r r • •~ Por F9I Detolb rvme. NB. Sl.200. Kllcben Tbl w /4 ur "' rf .,., .. " cond., all benefits effec· -·-~~~~~~~~~ ...__ ...,. El n-•--$1.00TO $12.00 pe ormance. 751.__,, H.8.U7..QS14• /al\1 UvedateolemploYment. Kxp.er'd for apls •:. ServtceSta. SalesmaoAt· Kenmore Washer $75, ""~· ...,. ec. ""' ..... PB HOUR Costa Mesa area. DISC medical oles.«> Hn wt. SALISPBSOH tend1nt. Swing shirt Signature W11ber 175, asuorf,!O. 548-!157 FULL Oil P mME ;;ii-----i;;iiiiii;;iiiiiii;;iiiiii;:;IHi:;e~:=e~ .:~;tr,.~ lmh I... _Phtne __ &M-0808 ______ , Plumbio& fixturp le aup-N e a l a p p e a r . & G. E Wuher $50, Ken· h ... S. 1051 •MaJotenance to. Needs FmtOfc/Med Refs req. C.11 aft 4pm, 102E. Baker.C.lf. PBX Answer. Service, plies.Call$36-1'52 ~~~~~i1A~· 0=:'1d~l~er $85. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Help To Serv)ce Ac Library/Records 644-5891. 9'19-5300. EOE. plt.ime sb.l.fts. Varied brs "'"' c-c RSO CM v • 5 pc drum set + atand count.I Secretaries w/Weekends. PaJd wtille ~PE N · · Will buy some refngs Audk> Maw 110 Lota oi •Family Men In Need Of Construe. Bkkpr S900+ Housekeeper live·tn. 2 training. Call 64&-8000 ~,Seara Ar\ Galle~ Service Sta. Attendant. appl's. working or not'. m&ac.M.2-~ . Adcomed1tional Weekly In ~m:~~r~~!~~ ~·~~~r:nn:c: =~~~I E.O.E. weete'::s~nA;p,; it exper'd. Full or p/time alsoacrapmetal8'7W258 <lU.naC.blMta.OldFum, •Nat Afraid Of Manual 488Et7lhCoataMesa board.847-3567 2100NewportBl.C.M.p --ers-on_a_l_M_a_n_a_g-em--e-nt-,1 Sears Art Gallet'y, ~~ ~M&t-Uoo. 17lb Frigidaire cross top A.ntqs,DlnlngseUrdolls. Work SuileZM M2·147 ~w~s Agency, coaalderuig oew Brlatol.C.M. • · · freezer, white, S80. 1544 Off8eachon8iater. HB. -.. -----""""'~-MAlDSWANTED t lent f b r .,_ Sta.,_,_ Miramar Dr. Balboa •Mus t Have Truc k ,~--. .-..-..-. .. -~opwagespaJd!Tbelno 8 or possi ie •c••c_,_.,A.M(ll _.....,, -•-• n......-.n. .• 675-l.,... O•,..•e Sale. 17370 San Full & p/time. No exper employment ID com· -.....--"""" X1nt ...-uni f ra.u.u ,.-, ~ --. WagonOrAuto 1--------~ nee. Huot.logtoo Beach at l.al\RUI, 211 N. Coast mencals. TV & films Part or ru.11 time. Win· . op...,.. !y or ex· Mateo,Apt...4,F\nVly,ln •No Expenence Or Sales General Office Conv. Hosp , 18811 Hwy .• Lag. Bcb. 957-0282 dowunting. Transpe~nt per d s alesi;tllD. Good WANTED : Used apt alley. Many ml.le ilema. "Nttessary ....,.,c.TC. Florid St.H B 847-15 ----"------i sb1des. Mln1·bl1nds. pay & benefita. Mission stove. Must be wortuoa . .sm111 Investment Paid S_;.RET ""~a "1tts 8 . · . ..., · MAID WANTED ~ Viejo. 831·9640. 67J.6336or642-9866 Jewelry 1070 Out Of Earnings, 11 Yo '"'--15 HOUSEKEEPER-Live an LldoShon!s Motel ---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Qualify. Your skills are m de· must speak Eng. enjoy Call673-8800 SHHTMBAL WhirlpoolWasher&dryer WA~D Cal.__.tltefy mand al all levels or. ex· children, ref reqwred PHONE SALES SALESPllSOH MECHANIC $250. Amana microwave "15 r---'--W,,..,_1_ per. We have many Jobs ~1271 for young Orange Co. Mm. 5 yn exper. operat· ove.n. GE Obi door TOP CASH DOLLAR _...__, ... _, In the lrvme/Newport u~-nce Phone Sale& people, ligh t ing fixtur e ln,g shearbrake&strip· refng.548-65T1. PAID FOR YOU R 119 Yow Ano area Work where & IMMEDIATE nHllllUilMI maJe or female, 16 to 65 I JEWELRY WATCHES MR.SLOAN when youplease. OPENINGS yearsofage.Guaranteed s howroom. Ex per. pl req'd. sa.lary com· Westinghouse elec. eye ART OBJEcrs, GOLD'. 17141115-4127 1be St.raw Hal Pizza in Mechanic wages or commlaalons. helpfu.l lo decor1ting or memurate with educa· level oven & range. SILVER SERVICE, • El Toro has full & Electrical exper . & 250 East 17th Street, sales. WoodUghUna Fix-t.aon&exper. XlnlheaJlh White S'TS 646-3158 FINE FURN & AN · PJtJ·me,day&n1ghl""'"1 b'-·-Olm polyethylene Suite 0. Costa 'Meea, tureCo .• 2031 S.E. Main & eduutionaJ benefits.---·--· -----111QUES.64S-ZIOO ,......w tVWu bet 00 •-St, Irvine (MacArthur & Fuzan Corp.. 1006 W. 4IJctlolt 1015 ----------COOK, exp lo Country ':f · tioos oow avail. We are a sheeting extrusion ex· ween 5: • 8:30 J .m . Mainls.&-2801. Hoover Ave. Orange. ••••••••••••••••••••••• c.ookioi. for b~altfast. fun ram1ly restaurant peneoce. 646-4223. SJ&-L883. Fountain Valley Police Uu ... odr 8075 limcb&dioner.~ Tfff9114•'/S.... n w/greatpndemourpro-Equal~rtunity SALISSECRITARY Auction BlcyclesonJy ...................... . COOKS " COUNTER 4320CampusSte130 ducts&people.lfyouen· Emp ~er Heavyt)'J>lng&sb. C11l Sh1pp1ng & Recelv11~g SatMmb5 atlOAM.' Reg.Moraanma.re,broke - 'ffELP D1y 4r evenln Newpot•"!1SBcGhr--.. ~Ave8071 joypeople&havle•nout· betwu 9am Ir 4:30pm, Clerk. F/Ume. Experd lOOOOSater,F\nVl,y. to nde Ir drive, blk _.. ....., going persona 1ty , we 844.1700. ext SlJ. only need apply. Call panc1e Morsan aeldln•, ~~~~:v~l~e~~T:sc~~ SantaArui 558-9021 aught have what }Oti're Newporterlnn.E.0.E. Pete.S46-0&0S. licydft 8020 Eng, Western (714'> ~~~~~~~~~ looking for Apply -••••••• .. •••••••••••• 3S-10U Mesa Straw Hat Ptua, in San Power D-S.I Sales Station attend1nt full G"rts~...t-"bik n.•·b•-----------~OFftCE Juan CaptStrano~ 32095 Cal54o.4455 DIGa SB.LHOM!SHOW Ume. Salary open + ' ~.., ew,.....,. COOkS Tramee Type 40+ wpm Cauuno Qap15trano For 0 c-ommisSton. Mon-Fri. =handle ban , xlat Mlu1I• ,,. IOIO Must be experienced Neat haodwntuig. able more Info 496 ·0051 EqualOpporEmployer perator EXHmn'SPACE Appl,ylnperson.2500San $35 83~~ ";'1~· ...... ••••••••••••••••• 1\pply In person. 20th lo handle detail Goosi i':.O EN p ________ 1 ExperieOced only. ctoae Need l 1ddiUooal sales JoaqulntwlsRd.CdM. · · a · : Wl"Z!;•a.&t'•ft.s Century LTD. 1ns1de ~ work i n g lO nd s "---------MAHAGIR tolerance. dial caliper. person to sell Los c-ros& JIWW~WS ~- Coast Plaza, CM. <Sa benefits Apply Nauonal lmmed. P'llm~ Operun1 Kltt'henMar&coot.S800 workw/aJumioum. AngHomeel~-G&ardO~nge ~·. Ta~tl}-raOtRlonwsabnotpe.dXflonrt Epric•1..t 8030 ~~cb~tnesaforceanlacb. Dteao Frwy & Bnsto Systems Corp .. 4361 Avail. Perry s Pina. b ( • ..... Sho-.. ~ r <JaJU --.... _St_.l _______ 1 ~>·NB <Near OC ~3 '*· ask ror ~~oio.,+ ~ ;;~~~!: !fts~o~l5~~~o~':; bene~768-5268~6pm. ~=~~,.~~·;;;;:;:;·;:~ ~plus oae spare. ,w1e COOKS.So. La,a, CM. NB "''""'" lion ' Chulle's Chall appt. ~Am. Sttv. Ex-mcMe camera & Kodak wi:;na~!n~~ L P/llme & f/tlme. corr Gf:MERAL OFACI lmurance Secretary, ex· COfporaUoo.~t ha.91 Calauls P or will train. Swint Ek~aaound 245 movie strap. meettn1 airline shop exp Refs please per pet"IC)OaJ boft N B -.........._ .... _ lbill. Over 2S yrs old. project.Or + case, never I D ... n-- Chal'Ue 's Chiu Ofc. 1714 lnterest1011 poa1t1on °' Fr . MAHACMMIEMTTl.ME ~--540-&777 used,S300.642·3647 .. req ... remeot.a. n-anawenDg s tudent in· c:. S.»4:30 Mon-l. y •---------•----------..---------• vent loss & theft! For a _S49-03.'l __ l ______ • qwrles by maJI R-.'s ~~open to ex per oung m1n lo wort! In C.-., ... " ..a455 SALES · TYPIST "'"-1040 penooa!ized tag enctoae ~.. .,,,,-. growing tool rental bulll· ..,_, -...... wallpaper, fabric or COOK Wanted, Pantry mature Jud11menl. aood ness Must be neat ln ap· Equal{)pporEmployer The Red Balloon Ltd Needed fu.IJ Ume. Mual ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Day Glo" paper & we Man. Kitchen Helper. memory. detai l ability. pear. ac have very nea Fine Chi ldre n 's & be accurate w/recep-DOG OBEDIENCE will back 4r trim your Phooe499-2271, ask fo Lyp1ng 4 :,+ wpm . KEYPUNCH handwriUna.6Dayweek Women's apparel bas Uomatbackgrouod.Sao· CLA.SStostartThl.U"llday •·-Or chef' ~tonM!r aerv1c-e back w1weeltd1y orr. Pre(er PRESS.MAN, small abop, C/time openings In ta Ana/Tustin ar ea. March 3rd, 7:30 PM. i;.d;to~~ two carda &round very helpful. Ap-11£11D NOW! man1ed man for perm. AB Dick. Salary open. Fas1Uonbl.form1ture& Salary com mensurate Nwpt/lrvine area . PRIC""".· ~:Y11~rc:C:r:,~~c~~t ply National Systems respoosible pos. Exper. Call644-8233. dynam1c sales person-w /experlence. Call 546-4928 S2eeorJ/.., Ill.-> Corp,. Ult Birch Sl, N.B. not req'd. Apply 19 a••• EST•TE nel. Call Jane6'4-a08. 544-""""' bl ..... 1"11 AJ:'• o perm. r1Ume person (~ OCAlrport --Jo.NI -u.,. .o r 1 Adorable rem ale 4/51-pl1.AIOea. work In copying busl ~ -1 NewportBlvd,C.M. Ucense required, 4 day SALES Z-3PM GermanSbepberd puppy 8/9tlp$1.50ea. =\Ill be pleasant ~L PIJDA Y MASSAGI TICH week, no sellinl, for an THI LOOI( TYPIST left. All black, 8 wka, lOormore S1.40ea. to work hard Ca (2l GU'I otc needs p/Ume appointment call Tom 11 looldnl for 2 sharp Ptn Good S 11 pedigreed, AKC. abota & SalelTu lncluded • 7$1-1050 r l'M"lp Hrs fleiuble Bk With d iploma for to Tumer, Mgr. Red C1rpet people interested In a me. pe er. wonned. 494-3117 NOCARDT a5tJNTE klJnlexpun« Utetyp-dwLEOITIMATEspa. Rea.ll.on.75'-1202 f/Ume perm. poatUoo ln Accurate.rut. (80wpm.> Draw your own or aeod R OIRL. p/Um ing Apply, 1981 Pla~n M Gt 752 9561 men's European clothlog well oraaniled. Houn to Alaskan MaJ1mute. Show name, ~. pbooe. ~~::.~·Fl~:~~. ~1~P~ uaAve,C ~ 6421583 r •=GE. '=/T:::b~ri 6s~saleew/ad· ~~~e~:; :!!d:.~~~ ~=e~':tt;:;::nce ;:~-===-dLCMtper 19'h8t.CM. GLAZER £XPER'D T•ECH FEM tn,t & general ore~ vaocemmt tomaug CM .,__._ .. _.,or Awtytn~ 21lLos · • req 'd . Salary ·com· lbel)t.Ellper.inc AKCToyPoodles,wbJte, der~to~. • mooeyor- Counter Help ror IC' !'doll ..-·~ FulJSS'"'~CommPT -Gu~r.~_in meoaurate w1abn1ty. sales neceas. Call TYPIST Sl50tol200. --, ... rn•· Cre1m Parlour Exp .oos.Saftelem & wor ... ...,..,at ~l. appt. *-0274 r-.v1 ·--pnlerred cw will train ________ _. ELITESPA ~819 644-6500 w/Llte recept duties. P.O.BoxlMO Ptnme.MU101 GUARDS C ...... "--.... 55 RICEPTIOMIST needed lmmed. S500 mo Weimanner male, I yr easi.11 ... ea.ma ~ M AT U R E W 0 Ill A N start. For interview call old, AKC baa outcrown COUPL • a mblt lous SECUllTY Equal 0ppor Employer P / l1 me to we lcome Busy lnsuraaee agency Kathy Adams at833"8435. ourhme. XJnt &uard dno, Beerdraft.er. bOlda ~It .. wllll t I t newcomers & rontact needa outgoing penon lov -• of beer oew CODd SIOO inua:e 1m0 1u t::,~. su••os mercltanta. F1elllble bra. for front omce. P1ld tramp. 542-$307. TYPIST olr ~n1n. SlOO/bst mcri. Call aft u.A.11. ' ~-0215 M Need car, llle typlna. vac1tlon, sick leave, Sandwich Sbop, ieneral Lg loaurance agency --------i Jot» 1 procnulve. rut lABOIEIS Sf7.J085. ~1 bel~r. P t tlme. Cal needs P•rt·Ume typist Cocker Spaniel pupe, 6~ CUSTOM DentaJAaalst.ruu orpa itowtq co. w/rte• •P· MANYN~EOF.D' RIC8'TIOHIST 97-GK2blwo2-1:30Pll. for IBM memory wka, Buff, AKC rept. WO.,...WOODS 1U1Mt n>ver ln 4 hind Pf'Qacl'la t.o security. If • · Medical Xny, part Ume, Fash ~-· typewriter" hl'I U Moo· llllbot.$12S.566-0'720. ~'"" _ol_c_._N_pBc:_b_,1144_·_92_1_1 _ _. you're til"9d ol the old Noexper.nec...Should Saturdays. Other 1kills Isl. noaoc1a1..., .... SEAllSTRESSJ. exrr. Frt.Mf.8151 --toY-IA.Al ~TOllO"JllOPP time (IUard comp.aniea !lave car• pbooe. Short ~.94&-519' ftrm. Recept~y. front Scboonmaker \;&m~ ~ --Ow.40lJHtocti:pau.ma DENTAL Assist. exp'd w/tMlr old ideas or lf le 1001 term IHllD· ---------• deak. Exper. Refs req'd. SaUa.. (21J)f81.N41. TYPIST. Must be ac· •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• AJaolll.Nl·BllDda chalnlde. Nwpt. orr . ou' lookl r IDlllU.AlUlblftl. MEl'J, Perm p/Ume for 1YPe 60 wpm. • San curate w/some sh ror Needa lovlna family btf1 MS.-o --848·5411 or 1ft.5PM Y "' ng Of'• new LA nma ddlv. ln N.B. Mlluel Dr. N.B. Suite Seautute.JQ.wnl 1en'I ore duUes. N.B. Shepherd female 6 mo. _., .. v -~--------' ~~ excltloa career-&C.M. $115-m>permo 2>0. rroot.oSL300Mooth Moo tbru Fri. 8:3CM:30. alliboc.s912-3170 IAITHWCMtMS.AU D E NT A L A s t I a t • 54&-1740. llCB'T /TYPtST Emp&o,en Pay All Fees 8'1Mim l Yr Lab mix trt-color. JIOR GARDENS. Let lM Cbalnlde, F /tlme. A ~.. llgmL Bus. man seeb "111-Ume. Experteoced UzftetndenAaeocy Wa1tren Food/Cocktaila. Oood retriever. sbota 6 wormMfp)'OUeuWvaw. lea.Umos.exp.O>Sat. motintedladiv.orcplto JnvoicH, Cor respoo· N='f;~!,th·~~ AIJpbafUpm,SAd'sBlue obedience tralnlaa. lOOOfol1rli.acJOO.StO.At.o ,__,.. H B ...... '"'°""' l t I b p T .,._ _.... a-p worm c:aat1n1s. B'S ,_....,, · ·--;:tJm n us. I · dent'e,CJerie&J &a.cep. forAept/f'.aub'65 -.10721at l.N.B. 1168-2801. Worm Farm, 17H2 DltSK Clerlt/Telepbon If you meet tbHe C411MM455 ---------1 tlonlsl Duties. Nur -----"-'-'----• W ........ /~ 1111 OcCa.rd HB.14'7.aJAl ()pr, l:qler'd. See Bill qu1llriutlons·you will Equal 0ppor Employer II 0 DBL . Bl k In I It Aitpori. Phone Helen forl•--------t 1 tr Fw•uu IOIO ' ~.Sa.nQemeolelllll ~ve. •·-------• =•ar, flttlo1 Is ~4370 Seer ._. Exper'd 4r oeat. 21 or --•••••• .. -•••-•••• •MATTllSSIS• -..: liiillS OYtf'. Apply, Two 0uYS SAVE! FBB. SALE. New JOl. -&stPA.)'/bene(llt LMALSECalTAAY pby. Some U · --------118DJNeedWNowlll From 11.aly, 1750.Z Beacb It used furn, appl'1, !'~/Dbla ~c:!. ~ Newport Beach Law ti':i1:i~ ~::SmR~;~1---------1 Ea• cut I • e • Ad . 8l'Yd. HB mbc. WUaon's 8aJ"l&lD ..-... ..... .50 iG=-:~. ·~=~rs -&nusforsuLecert F1nn in the al.rport area lpm. RETAIL mbUCntbe._ Teelmlcat, Waltreuee So. Lal CM Noot.2 st«a. 5'S It 814 B&J~Stfudory omla1 L a1una 4Jnlhnlted seeks l atelll1 en1 ---------• llarkclbaslcJhl~.n:ba•· NB. P/time • (/time: W. 1ldl. CM. Ma-1llO It 838m.t ht .SA HI U l ·OUZ or Advancement 9ttl"l!tary wttb .ome ft· 12SOMuJtiUtb c• MKS 1n1. No • u Cdfee 1bop H~. Refs ~ 547 .... «Dforlacensew. --wPNSQualS280hr perimce la civil tUica· c::;:a~ th. GOODSKILLS pl ..... Ch1rUes CbUI J'ura.ltmmonpa -Drapery---Roo--.. -wor-k-er-1, MaturePenoanel ~=:t 11 • --------• UTOTIM 'lbpflllll•S Otc. <n4>54H!51. **I BUY** r6w..-. female, M :JO. uper o S~er;;:y C41171J.Utl MMM4T AUDfTOI C.t11d11ed4m ... 1 .,.._.AheAt.1'tmPo Wdteeaes/Holleus Good med hndtare It ~ not apar. APOlY btwn IDdUltrtal Service. Need euepdooal P9ftOD Positicm opm 284 ft 3rd -~/Buaboys =r!~~~~~ wlU SELLING l'U.LDJRT HPlf. 1w· Whittler 4320Campuia. si. 130 for private dub. We IMtY lhil'll in Sao Oemeote Is -"af1 need app:t; MASTllSAUCTIOM lneapeulve, approx ::-t'· Cll. or Clll ~s~~ ~ =~i:r ,:: ·:~ ~:::-h:::c:p.~:;! =:... ~~~ '46 ... , a IJJ.f6U =ratLr.'c!~.~ ~ --------1 Sanl&Ana 5&8-902t._-'--------" 114/MMOOOPenoaneL aJao. No exper. reqd. NwYorbrft.tlla.uraat, °*"'J TrabllCo El . ..._.W..._. u ,,... ·-Apply at aD'/ of oar -·1-.. "'·c·w raola.WliBMWSl& .....__,._. --.:. c. No.. ""177 LEO AL TRAINEE . MUllBYMAN ~ --, ... ...., .... 2 bar~. eodjab&al, •U1V.-.-.a.,_ fl:t25.:::'o:rl:i;:t; Bright. xlnt tntna i ktlls Exper'd, f/\lmo. lfat\lft 2519Newport81 d Worklnt woman needs queenetaebed,ete. ~· W•ltl"D Sadd1e. =~'to!:~:;, GUAIDS ~r~;=~r't:O~:_ ::8~~0:7.:7S::.a{;:.; eo.u-. ~Tro2 1:qua10ppor..(m..,_ ::::,:;a~~~~~ ~.iuai.&~ aRia=~ =·~rwt-:1:: i....,. Bt•eb or call c..t.W.. estate pl1nnln1 c:or-w/plntslrtreea.PHr& 4686dolitabouHke.p. pede.'500.&11..f52lewea. .... PtrmlMDL Full• P•rt· pant.el•• pradJce. 11aft up. Overtime. Ins. Salo i1r1 ... omen1 SECRETARY ,_~k 1n1. PYt room. color TV. lledl.ttum --------• time. Phone• t.roap re-U Hl*· Df'ef'd, b\I\ wl btnellt.. Aclwanc:.me~t 'c:1otll1Q&. Xlnt oppor for Brokerqe, "ewpt Ct Newport 8Nch. MO-lteo b 1100 alet~lta:!.!Sold eDow wroulht ltOD ataaa DRIVD, TOW TRUCK. cf~. Rellred welcome . train.Calf(TU>m._, =· J.aiuna lUUI aper'*~ pet"IOft Loulloa\. Pref ax.,. orm-11'11 ~ _ : ... ~ _ _.."':"/$11, top kkcbnltt. tbl w/4 ADDb' at 114 w. t'1't.b St.. Call ~4. ofc bra t o-2, , lac. !I Toro. c M · w/NVSE F\nn. Must :;::-....,:"'• ....._._ '100: cba!n1 _ s:aoo. ort1tllal C.ll.~lllllt be 21 oc over CloMd W~. H.evuomsbt YoO waat l».al5L · · lami.Ual' wtt.h bac:ll otc OARAOE SAI..E ad• lo ·-Sllna JUD, UA new IDO. Ooall dttwtQa record It SELL ldl I to~,, ,,.. ___ DI ye _,,._do operaUooa. Call Held the Dail1 Pilot brina hip. Dca't llrlve up u,. abtpf AIU, -5793 _, •tedk.t. tcm.a wlt.b a -.. .... ..-Uliad -we IOlllMltblu you w1nt 1d1e ttema wtlb a ,..,., PJ ...WU. To place your "Uat',.. lt ID cluallltill _ _... """...__. __ .._ ... Adttault.t 142 ~PtlotCJU&llJedAd. ~ -Call NOW, C1D""1fC1tu1ll~1dado IWlJPOotauatftedAd. drawln.i c-ud, pboH Ship to •bore resuttai i::=:--~w llwtU.MJ.S11. eo.sm, ~ KMmt.oda1 ~. SIOO.s.t-"Pal...;,- \ .-.I HAMMOND Spinet Organ M-3. Hammond Nova OM>nl. LellUe apkra. ALL Bargains! 752·6870 Spol"thlcJ Gooch 1094 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '89 Honda 90. 900 mt . S200. Model 12 Winchester. 28" '71 Triumph soo. 4,000 brl., F.C., Moneymaker mi $800.6'75-1689 IANKR!PO '75 Kawasakj 900Z1 A Unit avail for shvwing ---------•Crocker NaUonal Bank. store, lntw .t, 112() Newport Center Dr ... 1095 N.B. 644·8832 Ask for vent.. rib. Monte Carlo stock. Ext. fo regrip. XlnL $300 firm. 548·5497, ~to8P.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PaulEdler SHOWCASES. 4 matching ACCEPTING SEALED &lighted. WALLCASES, BIOSONLY 3 matching • ha.bled Call Bobor RJck 548-110 19Suauk1 TSOO. xlnt cond TV __._ new tares, w1ndsbld ,I_ ~. S81·967S Hlfl. St.no 1091 ....;,__ _____ _ ............................... tto.. .. GE color TV. 23" COOIOle S.jl..t 9160 walnut cabinet. needs ••••••••••••••••••••••• work $.'SO-Offer 552-8028 20' Dodie Mlnl M H .. sips · 8. beautiful cood. fully Teac 33408 4 channel equipped, many xtras SlmuJ.Sync Stereo tape lllllOOfinn. 540-5112 =~ever U5ed. seoo. T........_ TraYet 9170 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-:·.-; !!'3•'-fHAc><Bl\:• ••I ••,f ' .,,_,•I~~ l"'~ h,( ·~ "I, ..• ' I 1.\, ..... ,, .... Mi\RQUIS MOTOR 5 · 10-,1~ ~, .... .,,.ufil1t1 , .... ""' \,. {I ' I ~ • ""' , • fl.•• t I I ~ 1t ""''''~lN \II( .JO , J -J~dO 49'). I 11f"\ .,, 14 MU5W\I Mad» I. va, 4 spd. air. AM/Fii tape. PS. PB. 36.00l>ml. map.·• $285C> ~or SZl-1982 1' 'T.J Mustang. ~llow. VT, auw PS. PB. AC. xlot cood $2595. ~2500 Ext 364, or 548-3355 '' 9'55 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 750LDSMOllU ST~RF4Rl vs. automatic, pwr. steering. pwr. brakes, r a dio • heater • .- <M2NLEl. OMl.YS2991 •DP·76 Is a Plymouth F\ary Custom Sul>Urban 3 Seat ataUQa ·~100. Flni1hed lfl Jilbt blue wtth bhle v1nyflnuri0r. Pnced M only: ~UI ll TURSDA_J. MARCH 1, 1'77 TEN CENTS liuntingt~n Dome, •D.WA•OS I I I 13 Vie for 3 Board Jobs I Thirteen candidates are run- ning for three seats on the Board · . of Tl'Wltees of the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- . trict. The eleclion is March 8. Candidates were asked two quesUoos: What is the key pro- blem facing the di1trict today? Wby do you believe you are bet- ter equipped to solve it than other candidates? Here are the candidates' responses: · Donald E . Fraak, 42, is an elec· tric!tl engineer who lives al 18805 Las Leond St., Fountain Valley. He and his wife have one daughter. Frank has a BA in electrical engineering from Northrop University. He has served on the Fountain Valley School District and the Golden West College ad- visory boards. Frank said he believes there has been a Jack of management direction on the current board. He also sees a need for a com- pnhensi ve district vocational currf culµ.m . "For example, when the dis· -..trict ldeatifled re di.al and wrft.. tq deftclencles, • he said. "the board spent a mUllon dollars lo hire spec1a1Jsu. Now they dis· cover they are overstaffed by 40 teachers " Frank satd he would analyie situations and take appropriate action on matters before the MUNOl..81' UN'T••Nl88 board, "rather than just react- ing." He said he has been Involved 1n education since 1982 He has also served on the USC and UCLA curriculum advisory boards In electrical ertgfneertni. Tlmethy W. Tbompao11, 12, ls a flnanclal ~utive who Uve1 al 9212 Crocus Ave., Fountain VaJley. He and his wlfe hue three ION. Thompson uid the district's mljor problem Is "a curriculum run amuek." Holder of a BS from Cal State Lot Ana1tes, Thompson &aid, •·ctauea are beln1 offertd which HUaty kidl, bul the11 are Ju.at fr- inge alutr and add to the cOlt of our aehools." He aakl he believes all buain1 1hould be canceled beeause, "No kid Uves far away enou1h to need a bus." Thompson said Ocean View Hl1b School "should never haye been built because of decllttthg enrollment.a ln the elementary school dtatr1cta." • ~ believes he is besl qualified as a candklate becaUH, "I am nol beholden to t.eachen' iroups who ~ contributed funds to the ct.lllPalps of board mem- bers." B,_.... Naes·Cnlll, IS. is an lutnactor-coordll\•tor al Golda West Oolle1._ Sbe bas• Ilk la comparative cultures from UClrvtne. M ra. Nunea-Croak. btr husband, and three chOVer& live at 11312 Hartford i.u.. 8\lftl- lniton Beach. She was a Weatmlna~. lfi&h Scbool teacher for ~ years. Ku. Nupes-Crorst nld abe heJP4M1 orlinhte the Indian Bluff llomeownera Association and bae been 1ct1ve In Sc:outa and Ut- UeLeNQe. LoW 1billtc lkiU lost ROHi In the dlltrtct are bar m.p: c:Ai, cen.!t Mn. Nan.u-Oonk•.W. "TD• board waa aovln1 ~·ftJDedY lD tb1t Sf. 'eowta to a • adt..i-... ~ •. 'Wt I should put more effort In the classrooms since many students can't read when they reach col- lege." Mn. Nunee-Cronk said her ex- perience in the Huntington Beach Union High School District and witb other schools "gives me an insight." Terry a. Madden, 31, single, ss a busioess manager in the Para- mount Unified School District. He lives at 21161 Brookhurst St , Huntington Beach. Madden received an MA in e c onomics from Cal State Fullerton and has a community college instructor credential. He worked for the Huntington Beach Union High School District as a auditor-business assistant and controller from 1973to1975. The key issue in the district, Madden s~ 1ia that property taxes are &b because of ex- cessive district e.ipenditures ... Madden said he Is beat qualified because of "my knowled&e of e high school dis- trict in bu ss and school budsets r wttere costs can be teducd." • Mklaael v ..... 22, single, ls a third-year studenl at Cal State Long Beach studying political science. He lives at 14 221 Edwards St., Westminster. Vandor is a former Manna High School student body presi· dent. He has been involved with tf • I . . th• Huntinaton Beach Human Resources Council and Boy Scouts. He holds an AA decree from Golden West College. The high school dJstrfci's fiscal •talus .. IJ the number ooe pnori- t.y.'' said Vudor. He •OS be supports bud1et cut· bacb .. in areu Jeut necessary for students' bask education."• He propoaes extensive cutbacks m atuden.t t.ransportaUon. "The last place you want to cut .,, areat which dlrtcUy afftcl atUdeml 1n the clusroolJ' auch as purcbaaeof tutboob, classroom aides and oeceaaary at.air," Van- dot'added. vli.ndorsald be is qualified aa a trui....candidate because of his comanmlty involvement and his wdentandina or student needs. .... J[. llDcUeJ. 35, and his wlf e have tbrte children and live al 9S12 Cloudhaveo Drive, Hunt- iDgton Beach. Hundley operates his own busi- nes9, an educational service. a, bu an M de(ree rrom Cer- rttGt Colle1e and • teacbina • credential from UCLA. Hundley baa tauebt criminal Ju1Uce COW'MI a cal State Loni s.acb, Cerii'IOI aiicJ 1!ut IM Aqeles Colle&•· HUDCDeyw.idtbekeyproblem in tM:lil@. school 4ti9trtct Is • ......, .m ... ftsnlly eoand ·.ttb tbe )>09llbill7. deellidAI e.rou.. ment!' .. H~ .al he b ezpertenee In de.ltrc wtth st.le educational lUlllatlCD. b11 ~ U. U\re9 wtth btt huabanc1 and two sons at 1571 War~ Drlv•, H...U~n Btacb: Mn. Funck sald she ill an ex- .eutlve dlrectol' and •roeram ~ for the Natlonal1As· aodatton for the Visually Han- d! upped. She hH attend~ Pierce Coll~e, Golden West COllep iDd Trtall1Um•ertl\11n Tau.: • Kn; l'\lnck '-u \be eqwvalmt ~ a BS troiD &M WL' /ttrJ'A:1 ....... IWd~Sdliol. SH laid I.ht key lia1ae 1n \be I district ls a "twofold problem- fiscal responsibility and fhe kind of education we are offering tor the mone,v." Mrs. Funck said, "I feel we must look very closely at the value al education our students are getting for every dollar our tax1>ayers are paying.'' She said her professional ex- g,erlence in writing budgets and other administrative duties qualify her for a trustee post. Walter J . Carpenter, 29, his wife and daughter, live at 17131 Erwin Lane, Huntington Beach. Carpe,11ter Is employed as a re· babilltauon therapist He has an MA in planning and public ad- ministration from Pepperdine Unive~ity and has completed advanced studies in vocational education. ' ) Carpenter said tht key pro- blem ln the district is "trylng to make sure appropriate pro- grams remain after budget cuts are Qiade io the WoJ>er places." He aald, "U teachers need to be cut, we must be able to conti"ue our basic educatlon procrams. I would hope we could mainU.in O\tt cunent teacher-student rauo. But we should g'et rid of electives that may be fun but don't rully help students '' c~ taid he his educa· t1on in public administration pro vides him with extensive budget an1 bacJcaround. Edward N. Bynon, S4, lives wltb hil wit• and four children at 14141 Ely,11lan Circle , Wntrmnater. He is a printer and form~=paperman. Bynon bu U8C. "8nicaliJ. tht!problem is that 40 perctnl of the district IJ'.,l(luates don't meet standards and reqwre remedial English,·· aaid Bynon ln ldenutyinc the key l111ue in the electi°". · BynoQ alto believes ·'there is a vlto"°'9 effort Lo gain control of the board by acbool labor unions. CbUdnm Ire t>.inc used as pawns br teaeherl." He added, "I am not a1ainst teachers. bat the board m\J.st represent the public ln salaries Hd 1*Mftta for the dislrict 's emp'°"•·" . He l&id be 11 bes~ qualltied for the board because he is a parenl and ndt * t.acher. "A teacher aervtoa CID the board is a conflict of Interest Trustees aboald be 111 people who ret>resent the public.·• Zita w..... 43, her husband and four children live al 18540 (»rk St., Founiaia Valley. Sbe is a homemaker and la ~mploJed u , • conau!tanl Mrt. WllA bu sened on the bl&b ICbool boald •Ince last )lay ... abe ... apjoiau.d to 101 • ••eaney. Sbe bM been president ~ h1ll\ acMol dlatrict, Fountain Valley StbOOI Dbtrictt Fountain Valley hi1b School ana Harper Elemen· ~ lkhool parent-teacher a· atianl. n. w-a said the k~ pro- blem tadq the diltrkt ls ''tty· ma to provide a aood. 90UQd trcfucaUooal pro1run an~· bold comtralnu In the bud l .. • She tald ahe li beat qu bicaUM, ••t b'ive experfente W bac~ln lbe dlllrlct lid in the feedel' dlalikta ... l Th• tltnie candlidli. b-•t ~to nm .. • .aaae f0t1-dl9lllllt.._.MiH. ( ...... AJ) $13,000 Che ck · Extorted B7 AJlTllUa ll. VINSEL OfU.o.ily"*4St.ft \ Southern California lawmen J are seeking two Hollywood-lllyle debt collectors who allegedly burst into a Huntington Beach movie produoe,r's home again Monday l)lgbt. forcing him to write a $13,000 c~eck at gunpoint. Investigators believe the episode -the second to occur there in two weeks -could be linked to a bizarre extortion ring apparently involving people within the motion picture in- dustry. • llaaLlfted. Americans staying in Ugan- da (dark area of map) are now free to leave the coun- try. according to President Idi Amin. (See story, Page A4.) Similar incidents have been re- ported in recent weeks in the San Fernando Valley area, according to authorities. James T. Flocker, 36, of 7271 Little Harbor Lane, called police shortly before 9 p.m., after the duo gave a repeat performance of an earlier incident. The two suspects, both dressed in business suits and evidently meaning business, reportedly burst into tbe Seacliff Country Club region residence two weeks ago, unarmed that time .. · $1.5 ·Million In DB Jobs ~proved . One then grabbed a shotgun kept by Flocker and his room- mate, Phil Catalli, the pair told police, and forced Flocker lo write a $3,334.40 check allegedly owed to their employer. "This account will be settled tonight,'' one assertedly snapped as the 1.rembling victim -star- ing down the shotgun barrel all the while -wrote out the de- manded bank draft. Flock• \Ol4 Det•ctive hell Welsh at the time be was shaking so badly<1t took three tries lo make tta. ~heek letlble. <see FORCED. Page A!) Mys teriow Ailment Fatal to Tiro ATLANTA CAP) -Two employes of the national Center for Dise~e Control who worked in the laboratory where virus dis- eases are 1tudied have died of a mysterious ailment, the center said today. Laboratory tests were under way to try to determine the nature of the ailment from which the warehouseman and main· tenan~ man died. Neither was involved in actual research on "legloonaires' dJseue" or other diseases investigated in the building. Both displayed similar symptoms, which the CDC saia appear to be related to Ou. Don Berreth, director of the of· fice of information, emphasized that only the tett.a would de- ter ml n e it It was flu . A spokesman said ll may take several days lo find the cause. "Clinkally, this does not seem to be "leetonnalrea' dlaease," Berttt.bHld, .. but we are looking at averythlni. "There dQei bOt appear to be any ulual Illness amon1 the other employes.'' he added. ' <See AILMENT,, Pase AJ) Aft e r. Crash -Huntington Beach City Council members have approved $1.5 million in community projects to ~ financed under the federal Housing and tommunily Development program. In the process, council mem- bers eliminated a swimming pool for handicapped persons and re· sidents al Ocean View High School and plans to buy land for a park east of~ civic center. Both projecu will be con- sidered under dilferenl types of flnandng. Projecls approved Monday nllbt include: Senior citizen housing land ac- quisition, $250,000: Bushard com- munity center and boys club, $205,000; Del Mar storm dr~n. $200,000; Oldtown storm drain, $300,000! rehabilitation ·toans, $100,000; and Oak View Day Care Center, $165,000. Also, code enfortemenl, $40,000; handicapped moblllty, $43,000; renovation of the city gym, $20,000; improvements at the senior Citizen center, $105,000 and the Oak View outreach pro- gr·am, $12,500. The swimtnth~ pobl at Ocean View had r~e1ved $215,000 in previous RCD allocations. Councilman Al Coen said he believes there i~ greater need for J>roject.a other than the pool. City Administrator Bud Belsito said il would have a better chance of being approved under nneiaJ reyenue;sharing funds. Planners to Stud y High 8Qe Is1ue Huntington Beach planning commiuloners will conduct a public bearing tonight on a high rise ordinance and a plan to build two senior aitl~en residential towera. The meeting will be held at '1 p.m. in cily council cham· bera. Included in toni1ht,1 dis· cusalon will be a, proposal calling for the cj)l'tltnrct.ion of two 14· 1tory wwen with about 400 living living ul.lts near Pacifica Ho1pltal la the Five Polnt4 area. Three FV tJlii11lren Marsh Counci l Subject By ROBERT BARKER Of fM o.tly ,. .... S-an Assemblyman Dennis, Mangen <D-Huntington Beach) told Huntington Beach City Coun-; cit members Monday night t.be: proposed purchase of Bola.a . Chica marshlands would provide an opportunity for man and: nature to live together. : Mangers• prope>sed legisJation · aimed at acquiring 123. 7 acres of' wetlands was greeted without· criticism from council members. Mangers said state SenaU)r Dennis Carpenter CR-Newport Beach> ls co.author of the bill. Il also has been co-signed by the en- tire Orange County delegation in Sacramento, Mangers said. : Mangers said during his brief.' ing of city officials that he has lived on the fringe of the Bolla Chica for 12 years and hoped that· urban encroacbmehl would not destroy ·'this •st natu~al treasure.·· Mangers told the city council he has no plans for the low-Jyi~, tidelands. • "Plans are not appropriate now." he said. "A decision wiil ultimately be ma~e based on the people's aspirations." "The main thing"ow is to save the area, restore _,.e Udelan~. - create open sceniipace and lo implement a bu r zone," be said. Mangers said e most vi9"' ionary possible fu e use would be tbe establishment of ·a cultural-education center with peripheral trails and observation centers. . "Il will allow hundreds or thousands of school children to observe wildlife they'll never see again," he said. Maogers' bill prohibits dredg- ing of navigable water chaMels for shipping or recreational boat- ing and landfill projects for de· velopment of residential, com- mercial or industrial sites. Boy, s, mi By Car, Hurt A 5-year-old Huntington Beach boy was struck by a car th.is morninf when he allegedly datt- ed into the street near his home. He was hospitalized with critical injuries but police said hospliat spokesmen predicted the ctUld. would survive. LitUe AU Swan of 17111 SL An- drews Lane, was admitted to Huntington Int.ercommunity Hospital followlnc the 8 a.m. ac· cldent on Graham Street south of Warner Avenue ln the city's north ald~. / Police ofricer Patrick Gildea said motor11t David Moore, 29, of 5792 Lourdes Drive, had no op· porturll\y lo avoid striking th& lad. He was not cited. Coast I Weather Sunny with northwest to nortb't.IY winds 15 lo 30 miles )>er hour tbrouah Wednesda)'. Cool el' with Iowa ton.llftt 37 to 42. Highs Wedneedayneareo. . .... "'" .. , ..... P-AJ 1IDRTEEN CANDIDATES •• Doris Allen, 40, lives with her husband and two children .i 1'551 Fairmont Circle. Westmlrnster. She ls a bousewtfe and businesswoman. Mrs. Allen has served oo the board since last December alter "'inning a special elecUoo in Nov· Qlllbertofill a vacancy. She bas attended Long Beach City CoUeee and the Unlveristy of Wyoming. The incumbent trustee has serv•d on the Westminster Cultural Arts ~om­ mission. She said the key Issue in the district is ''that we haven't pro- 'O'ided basic education for stu· dents to go out into the world and be proficient in any neld or endeavor." Mrs. Allen said. "The board has adopted unproven ex· perimental programs that. are very costly and have turned out uneducaled students. This ia not a good use of tax dollars.'' Vaughn Edewards, 33, his wife and child live at 8169 Deauville Drive, Huntington Beach. He is manager of a local insurance firm and holds a BS from Cal State Long Beach in manage- IJlent. Edewards identified the key is- sue in the district as one of "ac· countability and the quality or education despite increased taxes." He also blamed "incompe - tent decision-making. along with unproven programs for many of the district's Ills.'' Edewards said "Consistent discipline procedures are riecessary to maintain a hulthy learning environment.•· He said he is qualified as a trustee candidate because, "I have prove ,\management abili· ty, experierwe with large finan· cial and educational organiza· tions and experience In decision· 111aklng posts." Ralph Lantunler, 50, hl.s wife and four children live at 6531 Christa Palma St in Huntington 'Beach. He is a product manager With a BS rrom Syracuse tlniversity. Lantern1er has served as thairman of the Mesa View Elementary Advisory Comnut· tee. II c said the key issue in the dis· tnrt is "poor education at high costs " Lantemier said, "We hear a lot about Basic education Crom the · t'urrent board. but tb.elr di rec· lions and proerama a r t' Val.ley Mayor °p;c~d Tonight t'ounta1n Valley C'lty coun- cilmen are slated to choose one of their number as mayor for the next year at an 8 o'clock mffting tonight. · Current Mayor Al Holltnden said he would not actively 1eek re-election by his peers. Said lfolllnden, "All five coun· cilmen (lnt'ludlna b.lmself) are ~ualiflcd. We won't know wbo ~ill be mayor until he's elected. I 1didn't know last time." ' Counc1lmt'n Bernie Svalstad tr'd Geor~e Scott have served es ruayor in the past. 1--~~~~~~~~~-- O"ANOl COAST "'' DAILY PILOT • t diametrically opposed to that. buic akilla pbilosopby." He cited tbe current teacher· advisement Procram approved by the board recenUJ as an ex- ample. "Coumelin& ls ,aot our number ooe concern,'' be added. "lt'a a concern, but it's not going to tducate kids." r ..... rageAJ AILMENT • • Dead are George F1owers, 49, who died in an Atlanta hospital Sunday, and Robert Dubingon, 43, a retired military man who died at Ft. McPherson Army hospital in Atlanta about 3 a.m. today. Both worked in Buildine 7, one or 14 that make up the center. It con t ains the re search laboratories ued for investiga- tions of diseases such as in- nuenza. smallpox, measles and "legionnaires' disease." Of about 1,200 employes who work at the CDC here, about 900 have access to the r esearch laboratories. Flowers, a warehouseman, de- 1 i vered laboratory supplies throughout the building, and Dubingon, employed in main· tenance, worked in the basement and the first two floors, a s pokesman said. They knew each other only casually, s aid Berreth. who described their symptoms as fever, chills, vomiting and diar· rhea. The cause or "legionmjres' disease," which killed 29 pekons who attended a state American Legion co nv e nti on in Philadelphia last July. was Iden· tirled as a bacterium only a few weeks ago. T he source or that bacterium still ls ti'llcnown and research in- to its origin still is being carried out in Building 7. Although there was some tenseness among CDC employes today, a spokesman said none re- fused to go into the restricted areas. Suspect Held In Santa Ana Store Holdup Santa Ana police have urested a Huntington Beach m.an who thev say wd' attempUnR to rob an oriental rut abop. Taken lnto custody Monday at Shao-N-Sban Oriental Rugs, ~ S. Main St., Santa Ana, was Michael Wayne Tyndell, 21. of 428 Huntington St.. Huntington Beach. Aetonling to poUce, Tyndell t>ntered the store at 4·35 p.m . pulled a bandeuo from the waistband of his trousers and herded two women clerks into a rear room. Tbere. police say. he tied lhe women with mas~nc ta~ and wa1~ to lhe ttont of the st.ore to app ently signal an accomplke wai g outside the store, police said. It was then that a Santa Ana poltceman responding to a anent alarm arrived and arreeled Tyn· dtll. Police said apparent ac- complice escaped undetected. Former Candidate VIClim of Burgiar Former Huntington Beach school 'board candidate and prio\la1 copipan)' president Robert "Bob'' DinfWall reported the 1'* ot a camper •bell and camplng ~ent worth $S,445, pollceaald • J>tnawan. wbo operates the Butinltoo Valley Pr~L!.~ Lotl• Otcle, ld north HunWll\00 S.aeh, told lpvestlgaton his ••lllcte waa atrlpped while ,puktd~. ·Students Protest STANFORD (AP) -About 80 atu4eata .ia,ed a two-bour 1lt-ln ovtalct. tbe otnu of St.a.nrocd" U~tr.tea~ RoNrt Au......,. ~w protest ·-~ tall.T. St.e• ... eo.. • New Yon te1rt11e finD. •1u •• ..., ... ~ A aupe,..erlset ••••l•r wresUed a PD Cram a baDdl1 Md thw_,,.. U. atUmpad ,.._., ol Illa hilltw• Valley atlll'e llkm- dQ' pollce l'lfOIUd toda'/. Pollce n• aUU co•bt .. r::=a::c~~frJ; In their attempt ~t the Voa'a Supermarket al 18201 Harbor Bouley a.rd. Boar suspect.a, described as male blaeb in their mid-a's, wore wtsa to diacuiae themselves, said"police SgL Mar· ty Engquist. One or the brown, curly wigs wu recovered at the scene. The robbery attempt began about 10 a.m. Mond.ay when one of th• suspects uked a store clerk where the restroom was. The clerk pointed for him but the suspect beaded for the store of- fice. The suspect, light complected with freckles and a large ban· daee on hi& cheek, brandished bis . 22 caliber pellet air gun at another clerk and told him to open the store office door. But the petrllled clerk said he could not open the door because it was locked, Enequist related. The suspect had the clerk kn~k on the door. The bandit then r ushed in when store manager St.even T. Hoffman, 32, of Mission Viejo, opened it. Before the sus pect could speak, Hoffman grabbed the man's arm and began w~ with him. Tbe clerk joinllt the melee and said be heard the sus- pect's weapon "click" but failed to fire. All three men fell screaming for help down a flight o( stairs. The su.5pect lost his grip on his weapon and fled to the store's front doon Engquist said. The second suspect waited at the door for his accomplice and brandished a .357 or .44 cliber revolver with a six-inch barrel, Engquist said. The two bapdits hightailed it for a block wall near the rear of the store. One of the suspects dropped his revolver, witnesses told police. but recovered it before leaving the scene. The suspects ran through a condominium coQ)plex on Ed· inger Avenue and were not seen again, Engquist said_. ·The thwarted b&Ddit.a reported- ly fled in a brown Cadillac, police said Meanwhile, back at the s upermarket, store manager Hoffman was recovering from a small cut on hts right hand and a bump on the back of his head. Santa Ana police have joined Fountain Valley lawmen today in their search for the robbery sus· pects because the incident OC·. r urred near the two cities' boun· daries. Engquist said. The s uspect who lo1t his weapon was additionalty described as about five foot, 11 inches m height and weighing about 185 pound.a. He wore a brown corduroy jacket, jeans and a hat, saJd Engquist. The other sus~ct was about six-foot. one Inch in height and weighed about 180 pounds. He has a dark complexion and bushy medium length Afro-style haircut and a mustache. police said. UnionBo111 • Still Gone LAS VEGAS <AP> Hopes that Nevada labor leader Al Bramlet would be found be.ran to wane to- day a.a the fifth day puaed without word from the powerful unJon boss. The 60-year-old Bramlet, president or Ul• 22,000- member Local 226 of th• Culinary Workers Union and thestate A f'L.CIO, bas oot been beard Crom tlnce Tbum.y ntlbt. The last direcl word from Bramle t was a telephone call to an ex- ecuUve at the Dunes Hotel. Bramlet flked that tto.ooo be delivered immediately to t.be cap ol a dowDtown culn<l. ~View~ Candidates Meet Ocean Vlew (elementary) School Dl•trlct trustee can· 41dat• wW dlleusa tbetr 'fiews wltb the public at Wutmosat. ~bool 1bunclay at T:JO p.m. n ICbool ts locatecf at 8ZSl Hell A ... in Huntlq\on B4ach. Tbe. W..amoet Parent·Tueber • ~on lt •poGIOt:l.a,J UM .. \ r , ...... _.41 FORCED.:. Circumstances Pl,ea . Juat as in the previous lnci· dent, police aald, the au.aped.a - one black and the other Caucasian -ripped l"lodt•'• telephone wires from the wall Monday night . Mak in HB Killins He told investigators in the latest apparent extortion inci· dent both men burst through the f pmt door armed with what ap- ~~red to be .357 Magnum re- volvers. The pair in both Incidents wiped any possible fingerprints they may have left from the telephone and other items which were touched with a towel from Flocker's bathroom. Detective Welsh said today the apparent web or inlrl&"M ln· volving Flocker, Cat.alll and •P- parenUy previous business as· sociates becomes more com- plicated as the lnvesllgaUon continues. Orange County District Al· torney's Office Investigators have been studying what criminal charges may be filed ever since lht! first occurrence at Flocker's new home. " B110M BASLBY 01•N'f"'9 .... William Gene Campbell's lawyer readily admitted in court today that his client stiot and killed bis esttanged wife and her form~ husband in het; Hunt· ington Beach home. But the attorney pleaded with the jllf'Y to-recognize what he describe d as mitigating circumstances in the killings. Deputy Public Defender Tom MeDoaaJd told the newly-formed Orange County Superior Court jury in bis opening statement that Campbell, o. wu "dnmk. emotionally dist1'essed and out of bis mind with anguish .. la.st Nov. 4. It ls alleged that the defendant fired eight shots from a .38· caliber revolver into Beverly HoweU CampbeD. 39, and Verne Edward Howell, 42, as the couple lay in bed at her home at 17847 Beard Lane. Deputy District Attorney Bryan Brown told the jury in his opening statement today that a key witness will be Laurie FREEi Taxpayer's - Survival Kit One kit per fam!Jv, end adults only, pleuc. Supply ls limited. Sorry, not available by maU. Hoftll. &bell 10. 'Wbo raa 'to her mother's bedroodrand witnessed the slayings. McDonald said his witnesses will tesWy th'1. Campbell, who married Beverly Campbell in April, 1916, "literally Cell apart" when she sued him for divorce In October. McDonald said the jury will be told that Campbell beeao to drink heavily. spent hour& aJone in a room staring at the wall and broke down and wept when friends tried to console him. "He feJt that b.e could not live without his wile and he was abat· tered at being discarded by her," Mc Donald said. "The emotl.nonaJ impact on him was so great that be lost his voice.'' Brown said the jury will be told that Campbell fled from the home after the kUlings, atole license plates from a car in Whit· tier and put them on tiis ·own • vehicle. A tip to poli ce Jed to Campbell's arrest 48 hours later in Costa Mesa, Brown said. Am erican 's high inter est-compoun·ded daily ~ 8.06~ 7. 797: 6.98~ 5.92~ 6. 72":; 5.39,. YlaO• ANNUAi.. 73'4,. 7%'-6%~ 6%3 53,4,. 5%", RATE •IO \'I.AM • VV.1111 Of' MOM 2~ VlAAS o-1 MOM l Y'!M °" ..am: SMOH™S OA'I' fH-()ltf OUT' ""6HOOK llOGO 0-. MOM t 1000M MOM I IOOO OR MOR& ltOOO GA MOAE llOOMMOM .. ~ * ''"''"' compoun<*t dally etrnt lndk:attd annual yield wtt.n maintained lor OM year.** Fede,.I ragul•!lont .• · require a .aubltantlal lnw•t penalty for Mrly withdrawal from certificate account•. F8EE ..._ 8cawlc:w (some with mlntmurn belance required): Safe Depoltt box• • 1\-avelen c:hecka • Checking account• wlth a majoc ltatewtdc bank • Automatic aavtnge/toah payments Save-by-mall tervtc. • Money orders • Free "over 62"' checking accounta • Social Security d~ ckpoelt • Notary terVlcet • Statement aavinga • Ched<·•month plana Tacphone Tr•nafa/Dlal·e-OMok eavk:ie • Tnast deed andn6te col*tk>n . . . . , _,,,. .. •\-.k c1h11ut 0111 Douhlf· Y1111r M mwy At-cotmt. I 92 Years Safe ii ti AMERICAN SAVINGS . ... .. .. As9ets over$~ BUllon •trong Co11•ilantoMole ...... Soulhemend*',.n c.ilforna., ~ S....Partc 8231 La Pllma AYe. et Buena Plfte Cent• 52N801 eo.....m 82.5 Sunflower Ave. 1t South Ca.t Plaza 879-0800 0.-den Grow 12141 Giiden Grove Blvd. al Harbor Blvd, 534-8690 ·Huntington Buch , 7830 Edinger Ave1 at H\nlngk>n Cent• ~ YOl.. 70, NO. 60, 2 SECTIONS, 2' PAGES MaiD The Irvine TransportatJon Commiaiclo rtt0mmmded Moa-ftJ that Main Street be moved to a ne.w location norlb of CuJ•erdaJe Elementary School. However, commissioners al- tacbed IODl• conditions to their recommendation. Culverdale residents said lhey were anxious to keep Main Street from· becoming a major Street . tbOJ'oqhfare lo fniat of their homes. T,be tranaportatlon com- mission recommendat.ioo will 10 to t.be pl~ coaunls&lGD and ultimately to the city council, which will have the final aay on the matter. Transportation com misalonen said they aupport the Main Street realigrunen~ ii the city council chooMa l..s UM optloa one or four -both ol which show the de- velopment ol Villqe 14 which surrounds Mala St.t:Mt. • • Howevet, if oPtloa tbr• is chosen, a plan tltat would keep Villa&e IA an a1rtcultural area. tbey would neat support ~be street's reaUPJnent. they said. There ii no •longer an option two undereoosid~ration . . ·Cam.pus Site OK Faces Challerige ( SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Gel.,,.... ... MYFORD-BRYAN PARCEL, TOP, SECOND CAMPUS CHOICE College IHue Hot; Som. FavOf attt.r Site Colllpanylnfluence Cited in 5-2 Vote By JOANNE REYNOLD8 Ofllll O.tlr Pl ... Sllltt of the Jiit 900 amss °"1Jed bJ the I rvlne Company h1 Newport Beacb. That stuclY was ... uaaeated by the lrvina c:otnPlln)' Jut sum· mer, bUt tbeclt.y did not 'P'ff to partldpate until OctO'ber. At that tlme1 com~ officials made an informal ·~ tMit ~Y would bolcl ctr oa dev~meot projects wblle the 1tud7 •as UD· WWQ. L The two dettlopmenw ~ tloned bY JtJetoa. the 21-'-:ne w .. teUtt Grove-u.d th• -.Ut Sea lalilDd apartment.I,• were ln the wOib beloH·th• 8'rMment WU reached, ... WU told, -to have atOppe4 work unUl the ltuelY ll com~ in JOH wou'4 bavo been too C:OftlY. Tbe BialbOa hind COUD• cU'¥.ll~ aat au.ck cam• .t U.. ev .... bullw1 selilan when &M ea.al •• pyUic AM .... <&le &1'0lon, PlifliAI). Action In Court Studied By WIU.IAM SCHaEIBER Of .... o.lly l"IMt ... " In a surprise move lhat may be challenged In court, three Sad- dleback College trmlees voted Monda.y to buy a now - controversial 20-acre second campus site al Mylord Road and Bryan Aveaue Gp tbE. Irvine ftancb. • . "Laguna ~b !J'i'ustee Larry Ta)'lCll'. ~--aptnst the ac-t.ion, slkft#111-~ w»I dQiannine W~ay J.t leaal action is . nec.essary ~ . alt the purduase proc~. t'We are so cl~ i9 the CWarcb I) etelllaa ~ tti•t ll H4P1 ,.....,:.~~­................ Taylor aaJd. ~ seats, lnclud1ng t that are presently vacant. are up for eleetlon. "There ~ still a lot of things to be done before that site can be med," Taylor added. "I think this will to on for a year. '· Taylor and Board President Norrisa Br&Jldt favor a parcel of. fered by the trvine Company as an alternative to the Myford- Btyan Site. The company opt.ion ia located at Irvine Center Drive <Moulton Parkway) and Jeffrey Road. The vote ordering "im- mediate" negotiations with the Irvine Company for purchase of lhe Myford-Bryan site came as 1 . aurprise because of an Orange County counsel's ruling issued laatweet. Tbat ruling declared that, white three members of the board constltuted a simple ma- jority Jn ita current, depleted state, It would require a two- thirds vote (four members) to coodeinnl...i. Jlecauae tht M)'fOfd·Bryan aite a .. in -11rt¢tural preserve. it waa ""euuy for the college to take condemnation •ctlon to withdraw it prior lo t~rmlnatlon of the preserve. But TuatlD Truatee Frank Greinke. wbo en1~ered Mon- day's action, said the property had already been condemned when tbe board voted Sept. 24 to buy the Mytord-Bf)'ansite. Tbat 5-1 vote was shunted aside by the board when the Irvine ComPlll)f rmde lta offer ol an aUemaUve alte in January but Gre•nk• ia ar1ulna tbat it LI still valid. Slnee that vote, one trustee has reatped ad 'UOtber hu died. Taylor wu absent at the time and tbit lme DIC&Uve vote was ~ut bJ • ...._ Vl•Jo'• Donna Berry, wbo JiO,r aupporta Myford-Bl)'an. Greinke baaed tbe valldlty ol <See CAllPllS. rate .U> • Tbe uistina Main Streel that nma in trool of Ute ~ul ventaJ,e Hom• could either ~rema.bl a • .Japane s e Ve s sel Boarded The U.S. Coast Guard cutter Confidence. boarded the Japanese ship Tomi Maru Mon- day. hours before the 200-mile Umit took ef- fect. 11\e cutter was searching for violations of fis hing regulations under treaties already in effect. None was found aboard this vessel, but a search-of a second ship turned up a tiny a{llount of illegal king crab. <Story, Page A4.) Dis ease Center Site of 2 Deaths • Qrpgl,ey-Blmu; Doesn't Deny, Report of List ·BylDLARYKAYE ATLANTA CAP > -Two employes of the National Center for Diseue Control who worked in the laboratory where virus dis- eases are studied have died or a mysterious ailment, the center said today. Laboratory tests were under way lo try to determine the nature of the ailment from which the \Yarehouseman and main· tenance man died. Neither 'was involved in actual research on "legionnaires' disease" or other diseases investigated in the building. .Both displayed similar symptoms, which the CDC said appear to be related to nu. Don Berreth, director of the of· fice or information, emphasized Ol 1111 0.lly l'llot St•ll that only the tests would de-E. R~ Quigley, a director of the Irvine Ranch Water District, termine if it was flu. A called Monday's newspaper spokesman said it may take story that reported hls name on several days to find lhe cause. an exclusive housing list a "de- "Clinically, tills does not seem liberate smear attempt." to be "legionnaires' disease," The Daily Pilot article report- Berreth said, "but we are looking ed that Quigley {llld City Coun--. at everything. ciiman John Burton are on a list · ''There does not appear to be th t gi th r· t h .;.. any usual m-'esa among the other a ves em trs c ance "'· u.u• buy ooe of the new Turtle Rocle: employes," he added, Highlands houses being built ht; Dead are George Flowers, 49. the John o. Lusk and Son Cont-wbo died in an Atlanta hospital pany. Sunday, and Robert Dubingon. Quigley did not deny that he i& 43, a retired military man who on the list. But said he has don~ died at Fl. McPherson Anny nothing improper. He accus~ hospital in Atlanta about 3 a.m. the newspaper of "making neW9.,. today· . . not reporting news." Both worked m Building 7, one People included on that lis(; of 14 that make up th-e center. IL c9mpiled by the Lusk Compan~ (&eAILMENT, PageA2) .,.re mostly friends, family anl;\ March in Like Lion On Orange Coast employes or the builder. The~ will be given a chance ll>, purchue up to 30 percent of t.bt> 62 uQjta, which will sell for between SUS,000 and $160,000. • The rest of the 82 houses wHl be bought by people on the In-• tereat list that bas been compllecC by the builder over the past fe"( yeara. An original list of 5,0<q True to form, Marcb~ wind& came roarin1 like a lion into Orange County b>day, Justing up to 50 mph In local harbors and causing sporadic power outages due to trees blowlrte info residen- tJal aervice lines. Tbe National Weather Service forecut call• for diminished wind.I by Wedneaday with con· lin11ed clear akiet, but coolw 'temperatw-e.. Wednead•1 hlebs should reach about 60 dqrees with crisp ntchttime lows a~t 45 •Ions the Oran1e Coallt. Tod1y•1 susts led. to small craft adviaori• fo, ~ eatJre c.g_utal area. Coutal aeaa had ~wells of five to 10 feet. At Dana Point Harbor, a isr>okeaman reported waie,r thraihtna over the breakwater. Ho~er. no aertoua nautical problema were reported aloce mo.t yMbtlbtn cboM not to WO· lure out ln the rou,h seas. lndlvtdual JaoQles In ~ata Mesa Jtuntlnatoo Beach, l"oun· taln Valley aQd Newport ~ach were "'1hOut power tor a sbott Umt early tbday after ~ata ~lew tree _,ranch~• IQto powe Un~. ' A apotesmal'\ tor th Edlloo Company •Ill~ UJe °'fl es w abqrt-ll•ed ~ Uiat ~l Unea were o~er&Uaa 1aorrban1 by Dlht· m~ 1 Tra\teler•a adYltona a.a • • lMiiiit liiiUild for 8D ID~ Del • cte.«rtwea& WMre wlDdl~t0"5 •Pll · Mve ld_.lil up aa idW mad~ drlvh•a tond tloQ1 banrdoul. . (See U ST, P••• AZ> I Coast· Weathe r Sunnl with north~t to northerly wl~ .30 • mile. per bou:t' roue.ti Wednesday. Cooler ~th Jaws tonllbt 37 to f!. HJ1ha Wednesday neat 60. • (__ • I / t .. --.w ... Anmicans staying in Ugan· da Cdark area of map) are now free tD leave the Coun· try, according to President Idi Amin. <See story. Page A4 .) Jury Urges -Punch Card Vote System The Or ange County Grand Jury i:iecom~ today that the Board of Susfervtso~ put money in next year'• budCet. to buy a punch card vo&ma ·~ • 'Inaamucb as tbe present (vote counting system) ii eosUJ Jn ter ms of manpoweT and materials and the tallyia,c ii slow. it is lime lo couider an altemale mdbod, 0 lbe iU17 aald. It al5o noted lbat aa m any as 960,000 county residents may vote in 1980, roughly 100,000 men than last year. And, the jury added, at 1,eneral election time the county's Coleman-Gyrex vole counters are already work.ins close to capacity. The Grand Jury also noted that Orange County's votes last fall weren't counted unUJ 9:25 a.m. the day alter the electioo, a finishing lime that ranked tbe county S7th among Calilomla 's 58 counties. The 1974-7S county Grand Jury also recommended that the coun· ty abandon its vote counting machines in favor of a punch card system. But the '75-76 jury praised the Boar't of Supervisors for hanging on l() the Coleman-Gyrex system "rather than (votjng) to replace it .. ' But today's Grand Jury report pointed out what the jury sees as the advantages of the punch card voting system, including: -Versatility that allows them to be used in primary and general elections as weU u ln local elections. -"SHnple and efficient" voter use. -More economical upkeep ~nd storage. -Lower ballot printing costs. F,.._rage.AJ RYC K O FF •• provaJ to a final tract map for Harbor Ridge near Spyglau Hill. That development•s leolallft tract map wu approved la.st fall .md. accord1nc to City Att«ney Dennis O'Neil, the ~ouncil must approve the final m.ap lf lt com- plies with conditlooa of lbe ten· tatlve map. But Ryckoff used \!I• o-p- portunjty to bring up one ol bis favorite suggesUona -a pt'O- posal to force lhe developer ~ new homeowners to malntaia parks dedicated to the city. Thal proposal wu d'feat.ed twice before tn relation to Harbor RldRe and Ryckoff's protat took the form oC the lone "no" vote on lht final tract map. Ryclloff balked a1a1n a few minutes later at lhe staff pro- posal to set exact llmill an the amount of development to be ~rmitted Jn NeWJfort Center. Hoean explalned lh•t \be num- bers recommended by tbe plan- ning commlssk>n for city council approval are the ones upon wblcb the city's leMraJ plan ta based, but l.boM numbers. have never been specified in the general plan. DAILY PILOT , '1"11Mu•-.9'tldf•• ...,....,,, $ ........... ..... ,...... /or uw ,_ °"" .... -ta. ,,,.. u..,.., ~ ~ ....... n.a.a.. 6tlllld &.) .. • C•wtktlde Jaobat Q .. ~aope wants to redraw achootl . district. boundartet, fiVoh afore •m- pbam GD n.. arta iD ~ scboab a9CI tbiDb tJaat ooe. e«ectlve aehool buildlna model slDdd be reuaed ID t.be cbstnct. SlalQMt, a attorney. believes local tax- payers would benefit ii the db· trict '• boundaries were-Ule same u tboee ot the city. That would brine major induatrlal t.-x- payers, aucb aa tbe Fluor Corporation, entirely within school district boundaries. Shupe ex~ed that a.t'ler a district bas ill exia~ five 7ean. taxpa)'en may petitloD to cbanie the bounclma. Tbe dfs. trtct will be five yean oJd tbil year. "lt'a a kJaC =ure, but it's one wa, foe ayers here to belp 1owel' taxes," said Shupe. wbo lives at 3112 Beaver S&. with bis wife. Sman. and two pre- acbool age dauehters. Sb.upe said he's 1eoeraily pleased wiUa what ls offend for Irvine acbool c~. But be said be.d nte to 18\ more em· pbuis on the fine arts -~Ulic. art, and enns. · "Riabt now, in the elemetary scbooll, there are onb' t"° art teachers, plus volunteers, wbo travel to each · school," said Shupe. "It's yery Important to give kida an opportµnity to create." "The board needs to-.t real priorities to counterbalance artistic education wltb fun· damental education," the can- didatecom.memect. However, Sbupe also supports the district's Pasica PlUI CHANGE llOUNIJMtES RoMrt 0. Shupe damental acbool. although he notes "tt's sad we have to call a separate school Basics Plus. 'lbe three Ra should be ta11gbt at every school." . Shupe said h• belle.ea in educatioaal aJtematives, and fD.. ~ations but he thlnU frequeat evalutica. are eueatial. ·'Tbe district ia IOlna off in a dozen different directiOos. tt•a easier to come op with new ideas lb an to evaluate exiafln• cnes. .. Sbupe asserted. · 1n t.enm o1 bWldina acbools, Shape auae$ed Ulat • commit- tee study all of tb.e exiat•ni schools aD4I colQe a.p with a model that lpcorporates all ot the goodpobU.' - That mocJeJ cqu.ld lben bla used on all future schools with' dif. ferent facades on eacb one. thus savine money. Slwpe aald. • The a~ was also etjticaJ of what be referred to a the db· trict 's wtaecouatability "4ard· ing the budget. He noted that t.be budget "robs Peter to pay Paul" in some categories like lnstruc· tional aides. Shupe received his bacJ!don decree in political scien~ from Briabam Young Uninrsity and bis law d~ from UDivenity of the Padfic. Co1nniittee Leads ~ In Vote Spe11di11g A commitl« backing three candidates in the Saddleback Community College District has emerged as the bigges t spender in that district's March 8 trustee· election so far. According to statements on rile with the Orange County Registrar oC Voters, the Commit· tee for Quality Education bas spent $508 to support candidates A la n Gf'e'en wood . Eugene McKnight and Robert Price . The group. which also lists col- 1 ec ti onJJ of $1,3SS. lists it.s treas urer as Paul Brennan. pre- sident of the Saddleback College Faculty As3oc:iation, an atriliate of the California Teachers As· •sociaUon. · The statements on file cover campaign collections aQd ex· penses through Feb. 24. The six trustee candidates themselves all filed rout,ne forms stating they bad neither received nor spent more than $200 on their campaigns. Those forms ~o not require a disclosure of any funding sources or expenses. Greenwood, Wllliam W8lts and Clifton Brooks Sr. are running for election from trustee area two. McKnight and Patrick Backus are candidates for the seat from area four. Price is the lone candidate in area five althc:Ngh the lale James W. Marshall's name also will ap- pear on the ballot. Marshall died in early February. F ..... PageAJ CAMPUS ••• Mon day ·s acUon oa his conleo· lion that the land •u condemned lut fall and Hlectioa ot one oC Ute two available sites wu all that remained. Gonion Cek~l. manager or planning administration for the lrvlne Company, said today his firm wUJ not cont.eat the coodem- natJon deci.aioo. "Whlle we fell one site ls su~rior to the other, we are not inlel'ested in tnll~ncing the ln· temal proc:as or the eoUese ... Get.cbel said. "We aren•t ln the educalioo business." serve the northern part of U.e dis· trlct and Tustin tn particular. l>ependin& on the outcome of next week's eltttion, the entire issue may 111aln be thrown into turmoU because most of the can- didates for the board tend· to favor the company's 11tematJve orter The earliest a new board could meet wouJd be about three Wffks after lhe ballotJn1. ,,,..... P,,,,e AJ Left open, however. L5 the mat-UST ter of land price, which will be • • • decided duria1 negotiations between lhe company and the names now has 3.000 names. college. They bave recently r~turned The college has appraised lhe pastcareds atatinr they are aUll ldy(ord-Bl'yan site al $30,000 an • interestedinlheproJect. acre, which ~pany officials Qulaley challenged anyone have indicated is too low. The crltJcal cl b.LI hlcluslon on the U.t company's offer on the to phone blm at home ud tell alterudft alte pl"DYkled Ute in-hi their co la.lntl d.lrec•1~ itial 20 acres for $30,000 an acre m '!\P t.q• but involved a ftye.year option to "lly number is 5.51.aaG, but buy up to 80 acres more land al appanmt.17 the people ~plain·• hi•her cost. in& about th1.s don't bave lbe tuts A key Issue involved ln tbe dis· to call me directly," saJd put.e over wbich slte aboWd. be Quliley. who was a councilman chOHD was Uae relatJve cost of on the oripuJ Clty Council. developinctbetwoparcell. Qui&Iey complained that be· Pr4'IUlblnl the Cj)mpany ac· was not contacted bet the cepta t.be $30,000·in-acre ap· story ran Monday. and s d he pralall ror tbe Myford-Bryan was at borne all Monday . :,~:·be-:rect':':Op~ ing. AD attempt waa made ty land, wtdcb ll l"°'lytq, Curnml· ~c:::• ~~=~ r ly uaed to crow asparagus and lbe phone book -wat used. lac.kina required uUUUa. flat Pa--acte ct.'fel~t COil QuicJer lDltltecf tbat the of U... a'lterNtlve 1lt. at fntD• niasoo be wu placed Oft tbe Cellter and Jeffrey bas btell llll lilt was beeauae be AJrlll"Malild est.mated at $10,000 bleause lt ls tnteJ111t, hi UM bom• at tn a deYeloolna area. aod that be la a lelnatf me rrtend Ro1 Barletta, diatrfct buihws lhe Luab. mana~er. said Mood-r that • "I dmene to ban trltndll tbe. one·tlme tax rate In.crease ol six • ume as the next penon does. eenta per $100 of auaaed value And that's whv I'm an the lilt. would be required to buY ~ We're triendl -;'f ho said Mff ord-Br7an land, compared tO • • • • rated about s. '75 ceota for &be .iternllhe alt.e. o..-..a~wboarped iii fnar at tM ¥Jford~en ~~ cmc:ed..t tt will eo1t anon ~ ... Aid lt Will ...... \ . , • W (APl -"-1· <r&A>~ U.. 1tMra laU. __ _..,......,._ C.... eoqr... .. and Dl'e-.m-._ ......., .a.trlc .. ..... "*1-.. ._• ...... a Dtpatmat lloo lDDA> m tM ........... pncnn• _. "' l:asu ....,, ~H·· all PowsCo=-'n'm (J'PC). -...... ,... ..... • pa.rt ol It teat 'aine a1rsttn1 AD4 11a an al ltttliftP' 1ram: ~ ov UM r&I _.. qadet.rthm tr•Gl•"na •••t, lt •ould 4t•ld• =U.M...a&,...' " ... r'7Z.•. ty for tM ....._ ..,.....,. m AlM&a. a --to• Tia• "on11d ••,.rtmnt ~=-of CiTF' ... all -4 mu H by laterlor; aad ::w .. ~·.tz:._lr =:,::...--:.--:.~ ·~ .. c.:;:.r:::-.,.::. Carter'• bW w'*'4f u meet ~ Interior wh!eb bM um tnc and ahal9 NMn9 independent ac•ndu tbe ruPGGllbility. Colorado mt Utab, .,. mder Feela'~ P.Derv Adm':e'~ Tbe ..,.._.i ~ ~ pl.ee ~.=_af ~of CM Dd~e ~ .L.-. ~Se l • m°!!:~7,~~ .1Illt1.,r .. ,R C flSlOR, sram• from the Com .. rce ,.,, Departmenl. t.be Depart.meal ol 1,ogize~ to Town SH, Vt. CAP) -Ex· "I like it very much here, but I RUSSJ author Alexander • don't want· the fence .to be un· ~lzbenitsyn bu emerged from pleas~t for you her.e, '' he said, his estate to apologize to sp~aldn&~gh an '!'terpreter. neigbbon to.-buildla& a fence. . All my life consiSta ol only whlcb be said be needs be<:a\&Se one thing -work," be added. notes threatening his ll!e have "And the ~haracter:tstlc of l"!1Y been slipped under his gate. work does not permit sudden lD· He appeared Monday night at terruptlons and~uses.:· Cavendish's New Eogland·style SoJ~e~tsyn exiled f1:<>m town meeting not to help the Russia in Fe uary 1974 and town decide' its budget and lived in Zurl! b, Swit.serland, leaders, but to explain hla before moving to Vermont late secluded lifestyle. laat year. Solihenitsyn, wbo moved lo this town of 1,200 last fall and erected a fence around his spacious estate, told neighbors tbal the rmce was to discourage Soviet agents from harassing bim. "Messages have been put un- der my gate with threats to kill me and my family." he said without elaborating. "My fence prevents your snowmobiles and bunters from going cn tbetr way. I am sorry for that and ask you to forgive me, but J bad to protect myself from certain types of disturbances," he said in his 20-mioute speech. Tba SS.year-old Nobel Prize-winnin& author, accolhpanied by his wile, Natalya, also said the seclusion was vital to bis writinJ(. He said his decision to selUe in this south-central Vermont town, nesl~ed In the rolling Green Mountains, was no accident. He chose Cavendish becaine vi ~n:­ ''simple way O( Ufe ol the people, the countryside and the long win- ters with snow which remind me of Russia." ··1 shall soon be 60: But i.n all my life before, I have never had a . permanent home,'' he said. When h~ finished, Solzhenitsyn received a standing ovation from those gathered in the local school:s assembly hall. He paused to shake hands with several townspeople and left the meeting as quieUy as he entered -leaving the Lown to transact business. Now from Ho~ and Urbu De...._ men, the SeoeurttJa and h- eh ComprlsaJoll and tbe In- terstate Codfm«ce Commfsaioll. In thiJ letter transmlttiftl tbe bill to Congress, Carter said. "Even with a new Depart1nenl of Energy problems of ln· terdepartmental coordination will remain, Ii.ace virtually all aovernment acUvily affects energy to some extent. •'Establishing -this depart- ment, however, will glve us one government body with sufficient scope and authority to do the missive job lbat remaina to be done," be added. Froa P ageAJ AILMENT • • c o n t a i n s th e r 1e search. laboratories ued for investiga. tions of dise·ases such· as· lo· fluenza. smallpox, measles and "legionnaires' disease." or about 1,200 employes· who work at the CDC here, about 900 have access to the research laboratories. Flowers, a warehott1eman, de- Ii v e red laboraton supplies . throughout the bulJding, and Dubingoo, employed in main· tenance, worked ln the basement and the first two floors , a spokesman said. AMERICAN SAVINGS FRE£f Taxpayer9s Survival Kit An easy.to-rad guide to~nderandlng some slgntftcant upetta of the ci)q.plex new Income tax laws. The tax preparation pro~sslonals at Tax Corporation of America have developed this informative kit that will help you organlte tax records and may save you money on tax preparatlon. As a special bonus you11 get the American Savings' Gulde to Personal FlnancJaJ Planning: a simple and euy-to-malntaln svstem for contrdtllng your budget. Coma In to your neighborhood American Savings oftke and ask for your &ec Taxpayer's Survival KJt. One kit ~ famlfy. and adulu only. p&eate. Supply ls llmlted. ~not available by mall. -· .. -~._ •• American's high interest-con1pou nded daily ANNUAL 8.06?: 7.19!: 6.98~ 5.92~ 6.72~ 5 ,394' VIEL.0- ANNUAL 7%~ 7%~ 6%~ 6%'-5%~ 5%" RATE b YSAAS OR MOM ' VIAii °" fllOlllE 3~ OA't IH OAY 0Ut •tOV£Mla • VEAAS 09I MOM ""'8UOOI< 11000 °" lllOfW S1000 OR lo10M 1'!000 OR MtW llOOO Of' MORE llOOORMORE .. ~ - •In~ compounded deity •rn• lndlc:ated annuaJ ytetd ~ melntelned tor one year.•• Federal reguletlont requlrw • ewbltantlel ln-..t peMtty fot Mrty wltfldrawal from eertltieete eccounts. FREE .. ,,....,.._. (some with minimum balance requlntd};,Safe Deposit boxa • Trnelen chec:kt • Cheddng .a:ounta wtlb a maJor Qtcwkk benk • Automatic aavlnga/loap paymenta Sa~·mall HMcie • Money orders • n. .. over 62" c:hecldng accounts • SodaJ Securtty direct depoltt • Notary M1'Vlcet • ~t savings • Check-a-month plana Telephone lransfull>W-a·Check ..... •Trull dnd and note c~Uecdor\ 92 Years Safe I& 8 . AMERICAN SAVINGS A8eet8 over $6 Billion etroag • Conftnld oftlcee ~ ~ ..... Ncw9*n C.Sltom6a, lncludlrw: BUIMPwtc 82'J1 La,._ ~\1'9. "' 9t 8U1M PnC..... 522.2901 C09tll ..... 825Scdlowei Ave. 8*'Soud\ Cout PfaU 9'79-9800 ' • t TUESDAY,MARCH1,f977 TENCeNTS €am:pns. Site Vote MBy Go to By "8.UAM 8COEIBEa °' .. ......,"-.... Jn a IWPlile move that may be challeapd in cou.rt, three Sad- dleback Q)Ueae trustees voted Monday to buy a now - co111rovuslal !O·acr' second e'mP'* she at Myford Road and Bryan Avenue on the Irvine Ranch. " La•tma Beat:b Trustee Larry Taylor, who -voted against the ac· lion, said today he will determine --. Del•,~· ... ,-~ 4 ROBBER¥ V1CTI~ Pot~ "•Mrvfat Straua Heroic SC Reserve Cop Robbed in LA A S~ Clemente reserve police officer who last year won the state's highest award for law en· f orcement aervfoe, was the 'ric· tlm ol ao armed robbery today in Los Al\leles. James R. Straus reported hls wallet and badre were stolen In the euly mornin& incident re- portedly al hls hotel room D.!t.Ut d tM crime were nol L av1aUable-.nd Straua could not be , reachedfQr~nunjn(. Straus. -~ toaW-ance agent, was ·~a a f>usiness cmven· ,tfon. Slrius wzs u uted, bis 'wile said. The raervopo iceman w,u cit· td in ~ tor heroism during t'be areal ~an Clemente flre wblcb dMlroyed or dmaged 144 bc)cnea and caused &9 eatlmaled $1.$mi1lionlndalpa&e. Straus was iDJured in the fire u h• stood on the roof of a home :. at '710 Avm.lda Columbo and beat .. back the approaebina names . -.u.a=hoee. ~ 11fbe next <toot exploded \=aQJ~O.-~ $traut "''°: out on UHt 'iool ol lbe · . ~ deer •u "8cued by ,.&emta and hb actlooa in wlllln1 down lhe root of \be lacMn• aved lt. b rot bli acUona. Straus wu ., -.. ... lhit eerttllcate ot valor by t t .. n. Youqer. Callfornla at. ~~al. Wednesday if le1al action is ~ecesaary to halt. the purcbase . proceedinp. "We are so close to the (March 8) election now that it aeems roolisb to do anything untJl we see what happens there," Taylor said. Three seats,•including two thal are presently vacant, are up for election. •'There are still a lot of things to be done before.that 1lte can be used," Taylor added. "I think this will co oo for a year." Taylor and .Boird Plwidet Norriu Bnndi Javor a~ ol· fered by the IMne company as an alternative to the Myfotd· Bryan site. The company 4*llJn is located at Irvine ~r Orive (Moult.on Parkway) and Jeffrey Road. . The vote ordertn1 "llJ'f· mediate" negotiations With the Irvine Company for purchpe Qf the M)'ford·Bry.an site came as a Mother; Tot Hurt In Cle01ente Crash A young mother and btt year· oJd baby were U\JUred today in a sincle car rollover accident along Interstate 5 in San Clemente. . . Lon R. l't1ulhcan or El CaJOO and her child ~re f\!Shed to San Clemente Ge I Hospital by San Clemente nr en after the 7:45 a.m. au1dent in the north· bound free-. ay lanes at Lhe Basil~ Road overcrossll\g. Mrs Mulli~an sutrered from· shock and multiple abrasions and bruises. also fN>m oil and broken glass In her eyes, Fire Company Commander Nick Maule said. The baby received scratcbes but was otherwise uninjured. It had been strapped ln a protective car seat at the time of the mis· hap. Wilnesses at the scene said the woman's car was northbound in the center lane when it suddenly veered apparently oul of control across adjacent traffic lanes and hit an on·ramp embankment causlng\M car to roll over. The foreign sedan was heavily damaged. Ca~ of the accident is under investigation by the Callfomia Highway Patrol. Erwrgy Dep11;rtment Goes to Congress · W ASHl'.NG1'0N (1'P> -Presi- dent Carter sent Con•ress his proposal to create a Department of Energy today, combining all or part ot at least nine existinr agencies wttb manpower totaling nearly 20.000. Tbe proposed department would hav~ a bud1et of moni than Sl0.6 blllion in.final 19'78. Clelnente Boy Rescued From ,.- Security Gate A. 4-,.eardcl San Clem..te boJ was pinned bet•••n 10 automatic wrou&bt·lron teeur'ily gate and t!Mi 1arage ~mne Mon· day in a Sao Clemente con· doftltDhUD. Jared w. mcdon 2'4 Lobeiro, had been resc\led by bls father upon the am val Of Sari Cl-.nenl• Fire unlta. 1be l~ wu taken to Sen ~te 0.0.ral Holpftal for tr•at..me•t of cuts altd abr.-.. He wq rel..-l tlter: emerpaey care. Fittr.nan Jell Remmele aild lt waa unknown whether the W hacS climbed \be iate and wedled b1mMlf bet~ the top of lt aocs the celllng,-oru Wi aate automaticalb' closed wtilJe the ~~aster WU on tO Pinnlna S&&rJ>tbe beeause of an Oranie County ~ •• ru11n1 issued lutwee:L That rullnf declared that. while three members of the board CClftltituted a simple ma· jorlty in its current, depleted state, it would require a twe>- thirds vote ((our memben) to_ condemn ltnd . Because the Myford•Bryan site lies in an agricultural preserve. it was necessary for the college to take condemnation action to withdraw it prior to termination ot tbe preMrVe• But Tuatin Truale.e Fr .. k Greinke, who en11inee~ ac~­ day's action, said the property bad already been cQJtdemned when the board voted Sept. 24 lo buy the Myf ord· Bry, an site .• That 5-1 vote waa shun~ a•lde by the board wbeo tbe Irvine Company made iu offer ot an alternative site in January but Greinke is arguing that it ls still f' •ilW. J ~an tbat vote, on• t.tUUle .UJ reslfned ~ uoth« bas d5ed. T•f lor was absent at the lime anq the \cine nesative "* waa cast by M~ Vie.Io's' Doon• Berry, who now supporU Myford·Bryan. Greinke based the validity of Monday's actlGn on his c:onten· tion that th& land was coodem.ne4 last fall and selection of one of the two available sites w~ all that remained. - Illness Kills 2 Cause of Ailment Mystery ATLANTA <AP > -Two tmployes ol the.National Center for Disease Control who worked in the laboratory where vlru11 dis· eases are studied have died or a mysterious ailment, the center said today. Laboratory tests were under way to try to determine the nature ol the ailment from which the warehouseman and main- tenance man died. Neither was involved in actual research on "legionnaires• disease" or other dl5easea investicated in the building. Both displayed si milar symptoms, which the CDC said LB ·Voiers Ques~if?~ canmwttes. By PIDUP aos•AJUN Of .. a.fir ll'fkrt SC.H Laguna Beach voten. in a public forum at the high school Monday. tried to pin down can· didates for the school board about what t.hey would do if elected. The candidates were asked, "Where would you make budget cuts?" One of them, foundation. direc· tor Bruce Hopping, said he was more concerned with finding ad· dllional funds outside the scope or the taxpayer. than with cuts. Another. James Hoenig, a lawyer, said he would apply pro- blem-solving expertise to the solution. Board incumbent Michael Sacar said he'd seek ideas from the community about budcel cuts. Marylyn Pauley. a school volunteer coordinator, agreed. The other !our candidates ac· Uvely campaignin& for the gov- erning board, Mira (Mrs. Jamee> Hoenig, Wllllam S. Ken- tle, Raymond C. Lawsot'I and Michael Onorato. did not respond, to tbe quesUon. Several of the candidates privately aaid after the Pl'A· sponl(IC'ed meet.ins that the Ont tar1ets of budget cuts are alw~ (See PIN OOWN. Page AZ> Flag Pledge Prote&ted By Candidate appear to~ related to nu. died at Ft. McPherson Arm; Don Berreth. director of the of hosp1tal in Atlanta about 3 a.m\ flee of information. emphasized today. 1 that only the tests would de-BQth worked in Building 7. on~ term in e if it was rt u . A of 14 that make )JP the center. l spokesman said it may take c 0 n ta ins the res ear c se~eral .days to fl.nd the. cause. laboratories ued for invesU~a· CU~~a111. th1~ do~s f!Ot see~ tioras of diseases such as m· to be le~to~naires disease. nuenza, smallpox, measles and Berreth s3;1d. but we are look mg , ·'legionnaires' disease." at everything. "There d~s not appear to be Of about 1,200 employes who, any usual illness among the other work at the CDC here, about 90Q employes," he added. hav~ access to the research Dead are ~-e Flowers, 49. laboratories. who died in an Atlanta hospital Flowers, a warehouseman, ~e­ Sunday. and Robert Dubingon. livered laboratorr supphe~ 43. a retired military man who throughout the building. r Program Prov~ SC Pian Aids Older ·~uple An elderly ii>valid San Clemente couple -both mem· bers ol the Sal\ ~rnent~ Police Departnieot's You Are Hot Alooe (YANA> pr4gum -were rescued by firemen Monday when they fnlled to answer their morning Y ANA phone call, t Firemen f()Und that Pierre La Coste, 84, and his wife bad faJlen on ttl~ bedroom floor and were unab1e to get up. LaCoste apparently suffered a stroke and was taken by am· bul ance to San Clemente General hospital where he was reported. ''doing very well" to· day. Fireman hf( Remmele saJd the fire department ambulan~ was ~spatcbed when the police omcera sent to the LaCoste home at to check on the couple found theql on the ROOI'. It is believed they were ' stra'nded there for about an hour and a half prior to the arrival of belp. The Police Department's Y ANA program ~s initiated to help the elderly or-incapacitated citizens involved in such mis· haps. • ll was becun after an elderly San Clemente citizen died aft~ falling at his home, and unable'° summon aid. starved before his disappeara.Qce was noticed. " Language,lttother Candidates' Topics 87 ANNE COOPER Ot-Dally"'" 5laff Candidates spoke Co Issues ranging from bilingual educaUon to motherhood at a San Clemente forum Monday featuring conten· ders ln the March 8 Saddleback College and Capistrano .unmet school board electJons. Wtlllam Managan, a teacher in the adjacent Saddleback Valley Uniffed School D.iatri~t. is run· nlng in Capistrano UnUied truatee area .c. Dana Point and coHlal Laguna Niguel. Manahan said Mooday it is time for educatora, wbo work directly with tbHdren. ua· deratand children '1 needs and parents' concerns, to take creater resporuitbUicy for educ•· tion. "A full·Ume educator bas tb be an asset to the school district.." be saldJ.. J'a heiltliy one.•• Jan uvertoa 1 the lnc~t In Capl•trano's area 4 sln she de- feated Manahan by tbr votee ln a recount following Ute Nt}V. 2 electton, aid the schools must reacb children where they .are. "We snuat ~ th~m p~ to becoDle rtlJ)Onalble. wdl· runctkialni adWll. .. tlle,u.ld., sa.u JtomM, the Uaint ~ ... dldate la· u.a •1. teact-H en~neerln& at Cat ~t.&e ton& Beach. He said Monday about 45 percent of the young people start· ing college spend u mudt as twC) years making up academic defi· ciencles. "It all depends on the teachers, to deliver 1ood education.·• l\bman said. "The district caq have a lot ol tnbney tnvelrted In bad teachen." Robert Bachelor, like Manahan a Saddleback Valley Unified School District tdchet. is rurinf og ip Capistrano Unified (See llOPEJ'ULS, Pa1e AZ) Coast . ... Weatller S\Ulft)' wttb northwe.t to northerly· winds 15 to 30 miles pef hour throo1b , Wedielday. Cooler wlth . Jowa tonlaht 37 to 42. HIJhl Wedpeeday near 60. , r. .. STRUS£8 BASICS Candidate Lawaon Candidate .Puts Stress On Basics fEdilor'• Note -Thu .Clrlfcle ii OM oJ a iem1 profiling tJw eight can. •!dates sn1cing thrf!e uata on the Laguoo Beach Vmfied School Du· trict board. A ninth candidate, whose name will aPJ>l!ar on thf! March 8 ballot. Kay Hunt~. h4I withdTalDn /rom the contf!!!J_ By PHILIP ROSMARIN Ol llM Oally 'llot Stefl Raymood C. Lawson worked in the Laguna Beach Unified School District for 21 years. During the 18 years before his retirern~t. he was supervisor of transportation and later director or main· tenance, operations and transportation. Having carried out the policies of school boards over all those years, Lawson. 67, has decided it's time to make some of that policy. The school board candidate bas seen enough variety among policy makers to have hashed out some of his own. "I served under six different superintendents." says Lawson, "and three business managers, each with a unique philosophy or educ•Uen." He hasn't been happy with re- cent school boards. "For many years there has been a rel4(· lance on the part of the board to meet its responsibilities at the local level." Lawson feels the board loo often hu been a reactor to st.ate l~glslat1on, rather than aft in· itiator of ruJes and regulations. State legislaUon, Lawson says, "In effect takes away local con- trol." Campaigning in a school dis· trict that hu been marked by in- novation, Lawson would like to tee a back-to-basic!! approach~ "The emphasis on education should be teaching the buic skills at the primary\. level. because the earlier a chHcr learna to read, the more be will benefit from h.ls schooling. "Why wait unW hJ1h scbool to initiate a crash reading program lo qualify a student for &radua· lion?'' Among other proposals J.awson would work for, if elect· ed. as what he calls a common :;ense approach to annual salary hikea. He doeen'l thlnk the standard method of giving a slta1gbt percentage acrosa-lhe-board pay ralae Is a fair one. Lawaon uJd wa&e incrusa sbould be based on a dollar amount Judged a fair rabe for the average employe who b• a family o( lour. or a llk• formula. flO the superintendent would t•t the aame raJH the cuatodlan gets. Request Rejected :Los ANGELF.S (AP) -The cf. ~ school board has rejeded a re- (Jlest by its only black member, Diane Watson, that she be aJ- l•wed to seek a more ambiUous dlesecrecaUon plan.in court. DAILY PILOT U..QM--~ "-"---~ . ..... .......... ........... . ,u .. uoa •boPt eoa-araa.4 clatMI. Mid U.. ,,_. ot Kadira Oll&lll to be to ba" a cbUd eeb5ne at bit PG(mdal a.oct. 11 ~w. letter sr..s. ...... IJllMelted. Mra. ~said tbe eflectiv• neu ol tacb1na and ~•8fll'OOft;l proanma could be IDOG.l.Crired by a communit)' committee wbich aeta eoala and meaaures pro- areaa toward them. 'a Candidate Hoenic called 1'or ••creative ldeas" for ftnandng educ:aUao t.btou1b meam other titan property taxes. He listed de· veloper fees, home transfer fees for families new to the di.strict, and a more active volunteer pro-gram. Hoenle said at.her .. tentative" ldeu for financing are through tbe employment of a grants specialist to seek state and federal funds, sales of teacher akllls and services to private cor- l>Orations, and donations of parent money and time. To a question about whether the goal of education should be to produce eraduates employable and productive in society, Mn. Pauley replied that the schools are "not primarily for teaching students jobs." But, sbe said, the schools ought to give students the learning skills either to get jobs or pursue further leam1n1. To the same question, Hoenig said "If the schools have done their job right, the graduate ought to have the skills to go on to do what he wants t.o do." Hoenig said Laguna Beach High School only partly produces such graduates. Sagar, who's been the school board liaison with the ReglonaJ Occupational Program <ROP) for four years, said Laguna High sends a greater percentage of students through the vocational studies program than does any school in the state. 9ne audience question was about lowerine the student/· teacher ratio in the classrooms. Candidate Lawson sald It would take a great deal of study. Lawson, as did the other can· did ates. said he fa vored a ratio of fewer student.a per teacher, but said to attain a 20-1 ratio, the goal or the California Teachers As· sociation, would take "four or live years -tr It could be ac- complished at all." Kentle said a tenet of bis educational philosophy is to stress at an early age the de· velopmcpt ot baalc akilla ot read· ioe, compoaitioo and m athematiC$. He aaid the basics are the com· munlcative tools on which higher education Is built. Someone asked whether teachers and other school employes might be paid on a merit system. in.stead or the ex· isling met.bod wed almost total· ly on years wocked Onorato, himself a university professor (at Cal Stal4' Fullerton) wbo Is paid on the merit aystem, S&ld the method has problems of being misused as a weapon or entJcemenl. "It's the carrot and the stick," aaJd Onorato. "It tan 't fun." Hoppin& diaa1?'9ed. Students, he 1ald, are forever tested and eraded on their merits. so why not tt~hers ! "It's a bot potato," Hoppins aald, "only because some people don't want to adrJlil we need stncter evaluation of teachen." Spying Suspected W ASHI NGTO°N (AP) Several Indian official• auspect· eel of puain1 nuclear and in· dustriaJ ffCNtl to forelpen are under arrest In their o"'n country and oae IOW'Ce •A.Y• Americana may be Involved. YOUNOEST IN RAce C.ndld.t• Hoenig Candidate' Sees Cash Top Need (Editor'• Nole -Tms.arlkle u OM of o NNI protwng tlw dght can· didalts .eeking lhrtt sf!ats on !he Laguna Beach Unified School DU- t rict board. A n.intl) candidatf!, whosf! name will appear 'ltl tfle March 8 ballot, Kt111 Hunter, hal unthdTawn from t~Conlf!tt.) At 32, Mira Hoenig la the youngest of the candidates for the Laguna Beach scbool board. She's running on a slate with her husband, James Hoenig, which calls for preservation and improvement of the "high quali- ty'' of the Laguna Beach schools. That unusual quality of her candidacy bas been a source of criticism at some of the local public f0n1ms held in the Art Colony to question the can- didates. She defends the charce that, if both she and her husband were elected, they would vole as a bloc by pointing out the infrequenc~ with which husband and wife agree. Like most of the other can- didates, she sees adequate fin anclng as the toughest challenge ahead for the school board. "The recent Serrano de· cision," Mrs. Hoenig says, will mean less state money for the ' Laguna Beach schools." She advocate. a strQn1 com- mitment with Schools for Sound Finanee, a state consortium of wealthy achool districts. like Laguna, which lobbies the stale legislatUA for favorable school bills. She-has not, however, eamed henelf the reputation of a tight- fisted ~al conaervatlve. Mrs. Hoenig believes in spending money to keep quality. Al a candidates forum recent- ly. for example, she referred to the pay of Dr. Robert Sanchis, achoola superintendent, as being lbe lowest among unified school districta. Sbe praised Sanchia' ablUty, then told about 50 members of the Laiuna Beach Taxpayers Aa· aocialaoJS, "There are some lhlnga we should be &lad to pay for." Mn. Hoenit. who works u a volunteer aide at Aliso School and baa taught primary educa· lion, a.-ys "I have always been interested in education. Most of my work experience la in th.la field. "I would bring an experienced, com moo aenae approach to educatklnal problem solving. As a board member, I would build on HnSible pollclu. 1 would aeelt l\ddance from our com- munity ln aettln1 policies that would facilltate iHrnlnf and best me tu dollars.'· F,....PageAI BOARD HOPEFULS • • • trUlt.ee area 6 (inland Lq\m• Ni1Uel>. Bachelor hit hard at distrlct apendina priorities, which be eald -.... linln& tbe pocketa of publiahinl companies and out· aide ~onaulUnU wHbout otcHnrily beuefitln1 1cbool chlldra. Bob Jtunt, lbe l.ncumbent in area., defended diltrlct poUctes. blamtila. much of what ls wroai tn 1cboiill on apathetic students. ·~ wW do aometbinc om, wbeD tl\e:v bave be• eod- vtnced they 1bould.'' be 11ld, aqlq tbe remecly l• for parent.I to wotk more cloaely with acboo1a. Al.lo twnlnl ln area I ii Pat ........ wllo•UillondQ ...... corn m•nlcaUon mu at be est.blilbed alllOllJ ICboal td· ~. t.achers, parenb and oUaen concerntd with eduealbl to Maure \Mt each daUd II able to ~eJop bll Alll late to college, can weigh . alternaUn opt.iooa and learn to read and write. ti need be. Alan Greenwood, also nntnlng lo area 2. said the Saddleback faculty, in addreuln1th• central probmn ~ our time -tbe buUd· ing of individual cbara.eter - should exprua human values and need.I. He "1d tM coDece procram ahoWd be duloed f« >'OUlll ltadenta, but alto-for at.Mr memben of the eoQlmullitr. 1ucb as women returnlq to school once their children are railed. Eu1ene McKn.llht, trulteecan· dldate ln Saddleback'• ana. ' <San aemente, Dua Pot.at and San JUus Caplalrano). aald tM (Unction d a eommunlt.r ~ like Saddlebaclt ti maaltold, Ile 11Jd the coll•• 1Duat proyide re-. mecllal'edoc-ation. ~to trandtr to. fOQr'·)'UI' coDep, •ooatlonal edu.:atlon aad coWlMilJ1'. "'TbeM .,. all WOl'\by r.mc- Uant and thould be 1upported. '' heaaJd. ~Brooks. nmnlq Sn Sad· dleback COUeae trustee area a. tailed hlmMlf • comervttiYe. caectldat4t ~ TUIUD. JM 'AMI h ti• COGlbl\IDlt1 cOll•C• a a plaee wb•r• bl1b 1chool ""-----....i...-..;;;;;...., -..-ililtQMji. umure ot~U.,,.. Both the Saddlebaet Colle&• and the Caplat,rano UnlflH tnlltel electlam llartb ... dll, U1ctwtde. ~ fttM bl u.i dllt-= utci wtu ... for an1..c•.,..1t. lo eacb tNlt.ee area., t 118 Spenders t lt Cd ~ Mldaael P. be coUected ... tbe stat.· ODont.o to • tM blaat mata lbow. ·~ -record la ... Lquna Tit• ...... b!a1est ·~ Baell UllUW 8dlool Dbtric\ bu..._ MsJtyn P. P-*1..._ tnmta ncoe MIGi' ... to atat. ' laa eallectad *3 lD lililr cam. mata • rUa wtlh the Oran&• pala Wll'deit but apetSISD. County RetSatrar ol Voten. T\e atatemtDt.a cover cam· Onorato, one of Qlne can· palp coUecuons end expemes didata for three d.ialrict aeata, ~Feb. at. Planners Postpone Wmplex Consideration of a 48-untt Lacuna Niguel cqndominlum complex, which could be left without .sewer hookups for as lon1 aaflveyean, wupottpooed Monday by the Orance County · Plannlnc Commlaalon. Com~ulo n Cbair1J1an William MacDou1all said the propoeaJ, now set for conaldera- tlorr Mar~b 15, ~ely will Mt com- mi•alon policy for homes alfect- ed by a atate ruling two weeks aao. MacDoucall wu r.ierrtna to a 3-2 vote by members of the St.ate Water Resources Control Board Feb. 17 to deny sewers to tte- vefopen to stave off the amo1 in· crea1e they said would result from population erowth. MacDoutall aald It WU IOOd the commiHion was waiting before ruUne on a tentative tract inap for the 4.8-acre project to welch future county policy. County officials explained the com miulon either could de~ th~ tract, on the West aide of Crown Valley Parkway opposite Paseo del Niguel, or approve it providing that no construction begin until sewers are guaran· teed available. TbNt candidates, Jlm Roads, llln Hoenic and Kay H\lnter rued routine discl01ure fonns aaytn1 UM')' had neltber reeeived nor 1pent more than $200. Miss Hunt.er earlier withdrew from lb• race aJt.bouab her name sWl WUl appear OD the ballot. Two other candidates, Michael C. Satar and Bruce S. Hopping nqted their only expenses have been S2SS each, spent to have a candidate's atatement or quaUflcaUon.s malled to voters. Major receipts and expenses tn other campaJgns. according to lbe atatementa, include: -Ma. Pauley, received $803 and spent '533 on her candlda~e·s statement and cam patgn material. Major donations were $100 from Shella Sonen.sbine of La1una Beach, S50 each from PhUlp French and Sunn French o! Santa Barbara and $50 from Peter and Nancy Townsend of La1una Beach. She received a $100 loan from Dr. Stephen Pauley and 1353 ln small dona- Uons. ---Onorato, received $888 and spent $724 prlmarily on fliers and poata1e. Major donations were $374 from hi& own pocket and S50 each from Barbara Painter of Lacuna Beach and William Thomas Ill of Laguna Beach. He listed saoo In amaJl donations. -WUllam S. Kentle, received $153 and spent $.'MS on fliers and hla camp.attn statement. He con· tributed $118 to· hia own cam- pail!l. · -Raymond Lawaon, received $83.72 and apent $359, including $26S from bla own pocket for hia statement of qu&Wicaliona. ... u,,.. Americans staying in Ugan· da <dark area of map) are now tree to leave the COU.O· try, aceording to President Jdi Amlil. (See story. Page A4.} March Lion Earns Name In County True to form, M arcb wlods came roaring like • lion into Orange County today, cuaU.nc up to 50 mph in tocal harbors and causing sporadlc power outqea due to trees blowing into rulden· Ual service lines. The NaUonal Weather 5-vice forecut calls for dimlabbed wlnda by Wednesday wllb CCl6- tinued clear skies, but cooler temperatures. Wednesd&J b1&hl should reach about 60 deirees with crisp ni1httime Iowa about 45 along the Orange Cout. -• Today's gum led to small Cnan advitoriel for the entire coastal area. Coastal seas had swells of five to 10 feet. At Dana Point Harbor, a spokesman reported water thrashing over the breakwater. However. no seriouA nautical problems were reported "Since most yachtmen chose not to ven· ture out in the rough seas. Individual home• In Coata Meaa, HunUniton Beach, Fouo· taln Valley and Newi>ort Beach were without power for a abort time early today . Now from AMERICAN SAVINGS FBE£f TaxpayerS Survival Kit An ea~to-read guide to understanding some signlftcant aspect• of the complex new Income tax laws. The tax preparation profeulonals at Tax Corporation of Amerlca have developed this informative kit that will help you organiH tax records and may save you money on tax preparittlon. As a 1peclal bonua you'll get the American Saving•' Gulde to Personal flnanc.tal Planning: a almple and easy.to-maintain system for controlling your bu<tget. Come In to your neighborhood American Saving• office and uk for your free Taxpayer'• Survival Kit. One kit per famll11, end adults only, pleaM. Supply la limited. Sorry. not available by mall. An1t'ricdn's high interest ·-co1npounded daily ANNUAL 8 06~ 7 79~ YIELD• • ** e ** 6.98~ 5.92~ 6. 12'!'. 5.39~ ANNUAL 7%-X-7%~ 6%3 6%" 5a;:,,,, 5%'-RATE 3MONTl'IS OAV IH-OAY 0VT ••ovtMS •VIARS ()Ill~ 2" V(Af'I ()Ill MOfll I vtAA Oii MOAE ""888()()1( ''°°° Ofl MOM l lOOO Ofl MOM $•0000fl MOii! 11000 OR MOR£ llOOOA~ .. MIHIMUM t.' • 1ni.reat compound9d dally .. rna Indicated annual y\eld when m1intalned tor o~ year •• Federal regulation. require a aubltantlal lnttrest J)9nalty for e1rt~ withdrawal from certiltoate accountl. FllU ..._9•wkM (90me with minimum bel8nce required): Safe Depo1tt bout • Travelen cbtcb • Owddng acxounta wtth a ~ ut.cwidc bank • AutomMk aavlngalloan payments Save-by-omall aarvke •Money orderl •Free ••ovu 62" chcckJng account.• Social ~rtty direct c1tpoe1t • Notary aervicea 0 Statement savings • Check·•month plana Tdcphone ll-~/Dlal-•Check Hrvtce • Trutt deed and note C()U9Cdon f\M f f{ILf\N r,;\\'INC'; 'll 11' , ........ c 1\-.I, .ilu111t our D1111hll' Your Morwv Af'c o11nt. · • 92 Years Safe 11 9 ·AMERICAN SAVINGS ~ f • ~ over $6 &Wion atrong • Ow•....,.oftloet .................. Cdomta. fnCNdlnl: "\ • VOL 70, NO. 60, 2 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALtFORNtA TUESOAY, MARCH 1, 19n N TEN CENTS -Congress ~Gets Energy Unit PYoposal WASHINGTON <A P) -Prell· dalt carter aent Coniresa bla ,proposal to create a Depart.in• of EnercY t.od~. combinlna aU or part of at least llhle ulstlne asendea witb maupower tot•""I nearly 20,.000. Tbe proposed department would t\ave a budget of more than Slt.6 bi1liGn in file al 1W71. .Trustees' . Policies !;Recapped ' . I I By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of Ille D•llY '°"let Ji.fl In what may be the last public debate before next Tuesday's school board election, seven of the nine Newport-Mesa trustee hopefuls recapped their plan5 for improving the district before a small audience in Newport Beach today. Although the impending fman· cial cutbacks of the Serrano de- ' cision has loomed as a major is· f sue thrQUghout the race, can .• l didales zeroed In today on local f issues such as school curnculum, t potential strikes and the middle school concept. Incumbent Rod MacMilllan (area 7, West Costa Mesa) and Vickie Ann Bridgeman (area 5, Balboa Island and Peninsula) were absent from the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com· merce sponsored breakfast meeting. Once aealn the exchanges between candidates were cor- dial, althoueh area 5 candidate Thomas Crosson said, "I'm not as thrilled as my opponent On· cumbent Carol Martin) about i~s district." Crosson claimed the tUstrict'a reading program ls lnade(laate, there is insufficient counseling, ' vandalism is going unchecked • and that drugs have Infiltrated to the grade school level. Mrs . M arlln believes the school board is working well, meeting its challenges and that "we should be educatln~ our children to be contributina mem-bers of society.•• Here is a brlet summary of trustee candidates commeots on I the following key issues: TEACHER STRIKES: Can- 1 didates N.C. O'Brien <area 2. I Northeast Costa Meta), o.nlel Wallace (area 4, Corona del Mar l and Thomas Crosson , stressed a hard line admlnlatra- tion stance In the event of a teacher strike under the new col· lective bargalnin& law. Rlchn:iond Westlake Jr. (area 2> and Peggy Carey (area 4) IUI· seated Improved communlcat.lan as the most effective means of minimizing the chance or a teacher walkout MIDDLE SCHOOL CONCEPT : All candldatea a"reed lt la Ume to re-evaluate <See TRUSTEES, Pa1eAZl NB Agenda Economy Tactic Hit ) Prlntlns Newport Beach City Council atenclu on both •ldes of the paper may be a iood COQServa- tlon meuu•, but some councll members say they'd prefer to so back to their w..teful ways. City Man11er Robert Wynn ordered the councll agendas and the vol u.m l no u a b act up materials printed on both sides ol each abeet ol paper to save the cost of supplies and to do the clty'1 bit ln conserv\QS tree.. But councilmen Paul Ryckoft'.kTrudl Rosen and Lucille uebn complalDecl Mond11 that lt wu more • work to read the materi~ Ryckoff ulted Wynn to check into the increased labor cGlts to see i.( lt lan't m ore economical to 10 back to lbe old l)'ltem. Mn. Bopn complained tbat she found beraelf ao- lns backw..-da tbrou1b material ahe bad aJreadl nad ad Mrs. Kuehn said sbe "practJcallY bad to stand m 1Q1 bead .. to l'M4 U..acmda. .. • CalUr'• btU would aboliab as indepeodeat aaenolH tbe Federal l:lili D Mtnl•letration <J'EA), tbe EliiiO Reaeareb and Development Admlnlstra- tloa <ERDA) Did "the Federal Power Commilakie (PPC). And in an wnasuaJ arranie- men t , lt would divide raponaibllit1 for tbe leasinf and ma• .. mm' fl olfabon OU and uuaral Pl ..... between iM aew deplirtJMat and tbe l>epart- mm fll lnt«1or wbieb bas tb.i .... poaalbillt7. Tbe propoaal wotald also place lD the aew ~department 10- tarior'• naianat electric power markeUn.g .. cnm• and t.be Bureau d fuels data pro- Delly""' •tr SOUMOEO UKE THE ROOF BLEW Wind Victim Jan Bucttenen OUttlldi Her Com M•aa Hom• March in -Like Lion / On Orange Coast True to Corm, March winds came roarln& like a lion into Oranae County today. 1'15tin& up to SO mph in local harbors and causine sporadic power outages due to trees blowing into residen- Ual service lines. The N.tional Weather Service rorecaat calls for diminished winds by Wednesday with con- Unued clear skies, but cooler temperatures. Wednesday highs &hould reach ·about 60 degrees with crisp nlaht.Ume lows about 45 along the Orange Coast. Today's gusa led to small craft advi.toria for the entire coastal are,. Coutal seas had s wells of five · to 10 feet. At Dana Point Harbor. a spokesman reported water thruhlne over the breakwater. gdj; ~over the rat. of U.· ploraliaD fll tbil Naval Petroleum Reserw ID Ahilka. an area to be maaaiect by Interior: and jwUdidkla Oftl' petroleum re- aervee In Callfomla and Wyom- ins and oU abale reserves in Colorado And Utah.. · Tbe ProP-ed energy depart- ment would pick up other .~ 1r••• from tbe CQmmerce • terdei>artmental coordlnatlon Dep.artmmt, the Department ot will remala. since virluaUy all Boualal ·and Urban Denlop-sonrnment acti vi\y affects m•ot, the ~uritiea and Ex· eaerl)'tosomeextent. claanae commission and the In-"Eatabllshin& tbl• depart· teratateOommerce Commission. meat, however, will sive us one "ID tJU letter transmitting the ltOVernment body with sl&fficienl bill to Con&ress, Carter said, scope and authority to do the .. l;ven witb a new Department of massive job that remains to be Enerc1 problems of in-dooe,"beadded. C Su1·v~y OK Queries Slated .on Traffic On a 4·3 vote with Councilmen Trudi Rogers, Ray Williama and Paul Ryckoff dissenting, the Newport Beach City Council agreed Monday to spend $6,300 to find out what residents or Corona del Mar think about traffic. Approval of the two-part ques- tionnaire came nearly a year after members of the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce and area homeowners associations got together to start a grassroots project to tackle traf- fic problems. As has been the case Private . Use Of Beaches. On Agenda N\?wporl Beac h Parks, Beaches and Rttreatlon Com- mlssiooera will rulndle public debate tonight over private use oC public beaches on the Balboa Penlnaula. The colftroversy surfaced last July but commissioners have de- layed actl9n on the matter in or- der to seek recommendations for a solution to the issue. The Commission is urging easier public access to the sand along Buena. Vista Boulevard and Edgewater Avenue. That proposal is opposed by some bay front homeowners who contend they have been allowed, over the years, to build and maintain patios, landscapfni and fences throughout the year. Monday's action was preceded by heated debate. Opponents of the questionnaire 'lccused proponents of using it as a propaganda device with the ul- timate aim or building a freeway along the Fifth Avenue corridor. Bob Stoessel, a director Of tbe Corona del Mar chamber and one of the oneinal worker~on the project, likened those op nents to people who "go to bed niibt and look under the bed see if there's a bogey man there · The debate also drew i council o.11, f'll .. '*-" ....... LASHES COLLEAGUES Newport Council'• Ryckoff ·. on the water. aide of the public siC:::n~:eachfront homeowners Angry Ryckoff in the neighborhood ariiue there should be un~mited access to the Rene~8 Attack beach which is listed as a pubUc d '" right-of-way, The public hearing begins at On J • C . 7:30 p.m . in city council cham-rvllle O. be rs. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Oft• o.11, f'll1Ut•H Residential Speed members as the three dissenters lost two moves to have the pro- posal delayed or set aside in· definitely before proponents ap· proved the request. Rfckoff said the questionnaire, which is divided Into twQ parts, is "inconsequ~tial" and charged that some af the quesUons which were designed to probe resi· dena' attitudes have no rela- tions hip to reality. "Your reaUt.y or mine," coun- tered questionnaire backer Luci Me Kuehn. <SeeTRAFFIC, Page AZ> Jury Urges Punch Card Vote System , The Orange County Grand Jury recommended today that the Board of Supervisors put money in next year's budget to.- buy a punch card vo,Ung system. "lnnmuch as the present . (vote COUntlng system) is cosUy in terms of manpower and materials and the tallying is slow. it is time to consider an alternate method," the jury said. It also noteq that as many as 960,000 cour• residents may vote io 1980, roughly 100,000 more than last year. And, the jury added, at general election time the county's Coleman-Gyrex vote counters are already working close to capacity. The Grand Jury also noted that Orange County's votes last fall weren't counted until 9:25 a.m. the day after the election. a finishing time that ranked the county 57th among California's 58 counties. · The 1974-75 county Grand Jury also recommended that the coun· t.y abandon Its vote counting machines in favor or a punch card system~ Arts Festival . Fllllds Sliced Ho••··· 'no nrioua nautical . I.imit Held at 25 problems were reported since • Newport Beach City Coun- cilman Paul Ryckof( renewed bis attacks on the Irvine Company Monday night and accused five oC bis colleagues of being under the influence of the lllJ1d develop- ment firm. But the '75-76 jury praised the Board of SUpervisors for banging on to the Coleman-Gyrex system. .. rather than <voting) to replace it. .• A p1C>PC19M SlS.• aUocatloa ... pared down to ··-Koa.. day nllbt a Newport Beach city couodlmen approved tbe budget for tbe aprina Arts Festival. Coundlmen aireed to the ex· ~nditure alter members of the clty'1 Arla Commission ex- pla.illed that an addlt.ioaal $1,500 ... wm be donated by ttse Fasblon Ill.and Merctwrta Aa.s«fatloo. Comm.lssionets turther u· sured ·coun,cll m~mbers that moaeiy ralled ~ a ~al preview m,.ht will be used to of. ffft tbe OCIA of tM feeti¥aL '1be faUval will be held i.D KQ at Fastpan hland. moat 1acbtmes cboee not to ven-Newport Beach city coun- tureoutln tbe~b seas. cUmeo agreed Monday to a ne• Individual homes in Coats Mesa. Huntincton Beach, Foun- tain Valley and Newport Beach were wttbout power for a abort Um• early today after suats blew tree branches tnto power lines. A spokesman for the F.c:titon Company said the outases were ahort·bved and that all lines were operattq not-mally by mld· morn!Q8. Traveler'• advl1orlea have been laued for all mountain and delert areas where wiDda up to 45 . mph bave kicked. up aand and m a4e drlvi n& condHioor basa.rdous. city policy which will bold speed limits in residential netahborhoods to 2S ll)ph. Tbe plan was offertd after rett· dents ot Harbor View Homes and Westcltlf protested plans to raise speed limits l n their oeiabborboods. Help Refused LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe City Council hu r.fused to in- tercede to at.op the eviction of re- sldent.9 ol a condemned hotel in Little Tokyo. An aoery and disappointed Ryckoff made the accusation . after be lost a vote on develop· ment ceilings for Newport Center. Ryckoff did not want the cell- ing set Monday nieht and qu~­ tlon ed the motives or Dlck Hogan, director of the city's Com munJty Development Department, in brinalng the sub- ject before the council. When he and CollncUman Ray Wllliams came out on the short end of a 5-2 vote, RyckoCI read a statement Into the record. He charged that the vote wu not in the public interest ~d added. "The public should Jook to the motives of those who tUpport this meuure. They are serviq the private interest at the ex- pense ot the public's interea" Wllllama d.ld npt otter any com-. ment aftef Rtckotf's brief ·~b. The Ryekoff 1tatemtnt ob- YioutlY anaered )layot Milan Dostal a11d co"-"cll members Pete Barrett. Trudl Roters. L\actne Kuelm and DoD Me~ who Md ta.St favorable votes. 'b\it non• rwpunded tc> tbe tbai-aes. Ryckotf, ae.rviq bis aecocnd urm on tM ~cu. by JOne heel\ an opponent of lf'OWtb. Tw9 weeks aio he, untucceufully tried to 1et U.e ~ncU to lJnpoee a motatoliUM cm retldenltal .de- vtlop111~t aimed at the Irvine Company. \ M~ ~ continued bis at- tack. Durtq ~ atlf'mOQD llUdY MUian tie want41d to ltno• -wb)t tbe .~y bad propo1eicl two • Nil~' developmeni. WbliD .•. UleencDn, ,.Al• But today's Grand Jury report pointed out what the jury sees as the advantages of the punch card voting system, lncludJng: -Veraat1llty that allows them to be used In primary and general elections as well as in local elecUona. -"Slmple and efficient" voter use. Coast Sunny with northwest to northerly winds 15 to 30 mllea per hour throuch Wedoesd.ay. Coolet wlth low1 tonisbt 37 to 42. Highs 1 Wtdnesdayn•60· .. * * * MacMillian ~B1111ning Unopposed (E~• not•: Rod.nclc Jfoc.. NUUon ii ramdng llnoppoMd bl ,,,... arwa 7 (W_, C°"4I 11#11.). TMdCiM .. ~I.) ... ~ .. MH•llllH, 4t, 1875 ~aheim Ave., Costa .,..., 19 JDarrled with sJ,s cbilld'en, oae ~whom is still enrolled in a d istrict •cbool. Ei•caUoa: Graduate of Newport Harbor High. Oranie Coast ~•L.UAM College and Long Beach State. He bas served on the Newport- Mesa school board for 12 years while employed as a social worker. Special Qllallfleadou: "I have lived in the district for 45 years and have been director ol the Harbor Area baseball prolfam for 31 years. I think these two fac- tors help give me a fine perspec- tive or the district that other can- didates don't have." Key knee facing the district: "Well, the major problema are collective bargalnint, Serrano and declining enrollment. There is also the traditional problem ot improving communication between parents and the dlatrict. .. Tenure is eenerally good. It keeps the teaching profeuion clean rrom personal tnterests and political efforts or those who exercise 'clout' ir possible. But a review or tenure laws is needed ... Wby are you more qualified than others? "Bas1cally, my knowledge o( the district enables me to look at problems better than a newcomer. I have great interest in the youth or our community and have formed a pipeline to that part of the district through my cowiseling work." Guild Pact Vote Tonight LOS ANGELES <AP> -A con- tract vote alftcling nearly evtry network entertainment show will be t~en here tonilt\t and In New Yor by memberAf the Wr1ten Gui . a guild apokesm an says. M re than 3,200 guild members . are voting on three.year pact.a with CBS, NBC and ABC. the M · !10C1atlon or Motion Picture and Television Producers, an an al· liance or six maJor program sup- pliers, among thtm Paramount and Universal studios, Allen tt1v1kan. a guild s pokeamanaald. The guild's current contract was approved In the summer ot 1973 after a 15-week 1tr1ke that de- layed production o( almott every ttlevialon sertft scheduled for the 1973-74 seuon. Victim's Name Corrected A story In Monday '1 Dally Ptlot incorrecUy ldenWled the victim of a knlfe HUult ln Corona del Mar as Allen Norman Gordon. The correct name la Alltn Norman. Norman. 30, suffered a one- inch laceration on hi• nn1er when hi• roommate attac-ed tfim with a knife durine a dispute ~ver living exiH?nSC!'I. The roommate, Deborah Jef. f(les, 20, was arrested on a qbsr1e or aasault with a deadly 'fr'eapon. DAILY PILOT I T I ,11eua cn4J...., a ...... ~...,. 1, V1dde ._ .. =-.11. m Ruby A._, BaJ 111,ad. ls HeeaU~ married with ao ~hil*m. a. ls a part-tlm• 1tttdl11&.. houaewile. raa:rcb .......... ln public ad- miniatraUon and oc · ca1lonall1 wort• •• a ~~ neyland. EdwcaU..: Attended Oranie Coun-t y p u b l i c aa1ooa ..... schools and ia a senior in public administration at Cal State Fullerton. 8,edal QllallftHtJolu: C\l.r- reat education in public ad· mlnlstntion and bodieUDI ex-perience. Ke1 iAaes faclai the district: "Obviously the Serrano fund· ing issue ii a key problem. It will take tax money away from the area and no one ls ahxioua to aee local quality go down. I'd like to aee a move towards equaliling poorer districts up to our stan· dard.s." Mn. Bridgeman supporta clos- ing more schools to help minimbe financial problems and alao favon a more sophisticated screenill& process for teachers under the present tenure system. "There's an overaupply of teachers ~ there's no reuoo to accept low quality," sbe said. "1l)' are 1• mon qualified than otben'! "I doo't have any children, which ii a benefit, and I have an eye on the future of district stu· dents. I wish to start input into the community and I reet the school board ia a 1ood vehicle.'' ftp S. Clun'11• G, ol DZ ....... Aft., Bal.boa laland, i:a m¥'rild wtlA fOfll" dt1klNm. all ol •bo• curnntJy --dbtrld' ~. A local retidd for' 23 ,_,... Cro1aon runa an adnrtilln1 a1enct lo Newport Beaeb. &•11eaU..: B.A. m bml· Dell f.rQID St. llary '1 Collqe. 8•eelal 4 '•allflea· t I o a s : ' ( $11 t . ~ ~ Member Btg cROSJOtt Brot.ben and president•led ot Newport-Balboa Rotary Club. KeJ ~ factD1 tlae dist.rtct: "Baktes the widely pubtidsed Serrano sltuaUon, I feel there is a problem with the lack of fun- damentals such as reading and writing." "I tbiok we need a complete re- vamping of the counseling system as far as the number or students each counselor handles and an annual testtne program to evaluate atudenta." Croason would also like to see further in\resti1atioo into student drue use and suecesta more on- premlses caretakers as a possible solution to vandallsm at local schools. Wily an ,._ more quallfled than others? "I thlnk I would be a st.ronier personality on the bor:/ than the tncllmbent. I would eli lnatetbe noddinl of heads I s at board meetings, and lf sometblng ls im- portant, it should be dug into more deeply. To much idle time is bein1 spent s imply fillinc up the mlnutesofthe meetine." Disease Center Site of 2 Deaths ATLANTA <AP > -Two employa of the National Center for DiJease Control who worked ln the laboratory where vtrua dis- eases are studied have died o( a myatertoua ailment, the centew- saJd today. Laboratory tests were under way to try to deterintne the nature ol the ailment from which the wareboueman and main- ieaance man died. Neither wu lnvolved in actual raearch on "legionnaires' dbeaae" or other diseases inveattsated ln tbe build in&. Both dl1played aimi lar symptoms. which the CDC said appear to be related to nu. Don Berreth, director or the of- fice of information, emphasiied that only the test.a would de· termlne it It was flu . A spokesman said it may take several days to find the cause. · 'Cllnlcally. this does not ~m to be "legionnaires' disease," Btrretb said, "but we are lookin& at everytbinl. ''Thtte does not appear to be any usual Ulness amon1 the other ~mployes," he added. Dead are Geor1e Flowel'9, 49, wbo died in an AUanta holpltal Sunday, and Robert Dublnaon, 43. a reUred mllilary man who died at Fl. McPher.on Anny hoeplt.al in Atlanta about a a .m. today. 8otb workfd In Bulldln17, one of 14 that make up the center. It l'reaaP-.e..tJ TRAFFIC ••• Mn. ~ baa betn a vocal proponent ol tbe llll'V~ and she took exception to the demands tbat all quest.Ions about PIM A venue be drop~ from the" questJonnatre. "Io ~ Vlct.orlan era no one tallled about sex. but people did have bibles," she said. "I think we all have to rHllie there is a 1treet In Corona del Mar called Fifth Avmue. '' Tbe »r'OPOlal ap_proved by dty cound.linen calb for hh1q ol an opinion 1urtey ftrm to ad- mln1ster tbe questionnaire to soo ,_tdents in aeven Corona del Mar neqbbortsoods. Tbe 1Ur"1 la divided into two pam -tbe nm 11 dmoed '° nas• ddtudea towatcl the pc'O- blemt ..s tbe loeoncl 11 aidMld al ftlldSal oat boW nsld•ta feel • &bOutlClcrdan&. CoaDcOma l>OD Meimill ~ ed Chit the terults can th• be uatd b1 t.be etty council in &ldd· ibi Wbat. ii aJlYUl.lna, lbould be «On• to solve t.be ar.. .• en.me problems. '"l'hll will be one tool of many that we wt11 be able to un," be Hid. Mrt. kbebn ltnlMd that "aall:· 1q • QUIStlan wW DOt reswt la • Jn"OJtci. All ...... trJtai to ., .. r wome~e ao.Jaomefn,J Ital&" co ntain s the researc h laboratories ued for investiea- tlons of di1ease1 sucb as in· fluenia, smallpox, measles and "le1ionnaires' disease." or about l ,200 employea who wor k at the CDC here, about 900 h ave access to the research laboratories. Flowers. a warehouseman. de- livered laboratory s upplies throughout the building, and Dubin1on. employed In main- tenance. worked in the basement and the rtrst two floors, a spokesman said. Frwaa Page AJ TRUSTEES .•• the dialrtct'a lO·year-old concept which presently has 1lxth 1radera enrolled with seventh and et hth 1rader1 at five of the distric s six middle scboola. W e support.a a parental opUon ether to enroll the.it six- th gra ers in a middle schonil or keep em an extra year in An elem ary environment while oppon t O'Brien said he 1up. porta the present concept because Of the C06la involved in chanlina lt. Miu Carey and Wallace both said they were philosophically opposed to the middle school e<>n· cept and would llke to see a de- eper analysis ot it.a tffectlveneu. Betty Jo Balley, who la running asalnat Wallace and MlH Carey In Corona del Mar. tald •h• would maintain objectivity on the subject even thouah she has a child currently enrolled in fifth grade al Harbor View Elemen- tary. Harbor 'V(ew parents recenUy called °" the tchool board to al- low ttMrlr ruth 1raders to remain at the school for another year rather than be tramferrtd to Un· coln Middle School. SCHOOL CUR RICUL U M : Candidates a.ereed there is a need for a cloetr look at In· dividuaJ claues wtlh an eye on sterner preparation for colleie. Candidates ~ Cotetm that high school l e.ntors are ol\en lert wt~ UWe to do dW'iac tbt final ,..,. and contecded that some te11eben are doublllll up 1n el&IHI tbe1 are N)t qua.llfted to teach. ... Pt•• P.,,e .41 Canl ........ ol Ila •. <kHD rr-. Jfewpon hlleb. ii tlM ti' wt.& r.ltowtD& ._ • ~two,..,.qo. Sb• 19 ma.rrted wUlt ~ daa1btera. all atteDd.lna dtltrtct .achoola. ··-··-= B . A . aad te aelala, credentla from UCLA pd ll'8dwde work la educaUoo at Slaaford Univ.-.it)'. 8 p e c I • 1 MAH1M QaaUfleaUeaa: Incumbent wttb bu1lneu experience aervtn1 on Newport Beach Tramportatioo Committee. Sbe . la alto a local PTA board member. K91 ~·---tbedlatrt~: Jn l1lbl ~ tbe lmc:•n1 ftnan· clal eutbacb of ano, lln. Martin bellev• •'tu reform la esaentlil." "\fe need ttsbt flacal control and effective com· muntcation between pareota and the dlatrtct to lnlun tbe 1ucceu of the board In malntal.nlna local control. "Teacher tenure la a problem, not Just to the adminlltr~tkln but to teachers becaue of the dtl· fkuJty,of operaUns under decllD· ln1 enrollment condlUons. AlthOQCb tenure is a r.roblem, Its aometbin1 the le1is ature mull become involved with. "Allo, we must work at aettlnc· education prloriUea for every child and maintain hitb quality." Wla7 are ,._ more qualifted· thanotben? "I know the strenstht, pro. blem1 and neech of t.be dlat.rtct. I can, and wtll 1tve the time necessary to do the Job and help the dlatrlct n:>ove ahead tro.m whereltisnow." ' Pilot Profiles 4 RYCKOFF ATTACKS ••• tbe compcy and c~ are in the mldlt ol a compnbenalve ltudy· of the last 900 acrea owned by the Irvine Company la Newport Beach. That study was suicested by the Irvine Company last sum-m ... , bul tbe etty did not -.ree to p~ until October. At that Ume. compqy otfidals made an tntormal 81fttment that they would bold olf on development projeda wblle the ~ wa un- der wQ. The two developments ques- doaed by Ryckoft, tbe 28-bome Wettdltt Onwe and the •untt Sea Wand as-tment.a, were In the worb before t.be .,reement WU Naebed. be WU toJd, and to have •topped work until tbe study ls complfted ln June would bave been too eolt1y. Tb• Balboa bland COUn• cl11Dan'1 next attack came at the eventni bu,t1neu seuion when the councU wu aivtna It.a ap. provaJ to a flDaJ tract map for Harbqr ~e aarSpyl)u1 IDD. That development'• tentaUve tract map wu approved lut fall and, accordlna to City Attorney Denllla O.'Nell, the council must approve the final map Utt com· pllu wlth ccmditlona of the teo- taUve map. T But Ryckoff uaed the op- portunity to brtni 'lJ> one of hil favorite •uuestJooa -a pro. poaal to force the developer or new bomeownert to maintain par kl dedlc-.S to the city. . That proposal wu defeated twice bdore In relation to Hart>or Ridge and Ryckolf't protest toot the form ol lhe lone '"DO" vote on the final tract map. Ryck~r balked qain a few m1outes lat.er at the staff pro- posal to set exact limits on the amount or development to be permitted in Newport Center. Ho1an explained that the num- bers recommended by the plan· ning et>mmission for city council approval are the one. upon which the city's seoeral plan is based, but those numbers. havd never been speclfied in the general plan .• He said that the cellJne should be established so that the ongoing study with the Irvine Company can be baaed oo definite data for measurtni traffic and other fac- tors resultine from completion or development. But Ry ckoff qeuatloned Hogan's timing and jotned by Williama voted acatost the p.n). poaal aayiog he wants the study completed befOl'e any actloo ls taken. Drinking Talk Set Dr. Jack H. MendelSC)n, a member of the American Medical Society on Alcoholism, will discuss problem drinking Wednesda~ at 12: 15 p.m . at Raleigh tulla HotpltaJ, 881 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. The lec- ture ia open to the put>Uc. Now from AMERICAN SAVINGS JiBEEf Taxpayers Survival Kit An easy.to-read guide to understanding some significant aspec:U of the complex new Income tax laws. The tax preparation p!'°'8ulonalt at Tax . Corporation of America have developed this lnformaUve ktt that will help you organlu tax record• and may aave you money on tax preparation. As a special bonu1 you'U get the Amertcan Savfngs' Gulde to Personal Flnanclal Planning: a simple and easy-to-maintain system for controUlng your budget. Come In to your neighborhood American Savings office and ask for your free ...... _"'!"* ___ •• Taxpayer's Survival Kit. One kit per family, and adult. only, please. Supply ia llm:lt:ed:.--iit:c:l:::::::::::::::;;~f=~ Sony. not av.Uabl. by maU. An1erica n's high int<'rest -cr.rnpou nded daily ANNUAt. 8.06~ 7. 797: 6.98~ 5.92~ 6.72~ 5.39~ v1ao•· ANNUAl 73Ja~ 1112~ 63}&'-6¥2~ 53Ja~ 5¥4~ RATE .. :d:IAM 4 YIAAS Ofl lotOM 2~ YIAAS Ofl MOAI t YIAl'I OA MON a lolOl'flHS OA'f IN-DAY 0VT ""'NIOOIC JI °"~ llOOOOA~ SWOOOAMOAE llOOOOAMOM JSOOOAMOAE .. MIMMUM * Int.mt oompou"'*1 dally .. rna Ind lea~ annual ylJld vm.n maintained for ona year. 0 'ederal r99ulallonc require a 1ubetantlal lnta,..t penalty for early .wlthdrawal lrom cartllicata acco\lntt FREES....., 8enlc• {IOme wtth m'tnlmum belence requ~d): Safe Dcpc\.lt boxet • Trevdera checkl • Checking eccounta with a major atewtdc lMink • Automatk: aovlngllloln pilymcnta Save-bv-malJ MrVk:e •Money orden •Free ••0Ytf°62 .. checking accounta •Social Security dl.rec:t dcpottt • Notary ~ • Statement NYlng1 • Check-a-month plant ,.. Telephone Tranafer/Dtal·a -Chedt servic. • 'Trult deed and note collectJon A"h .sho11 t 0 11r I )ouhli• Yci111 Monc•v A c co1111t 92 Years Safe 119 AMERICAN SAVINGS -A8Ht9 over $6 &Wion •troag ...,.,. 8231 La Palma Ave. 9t ~ Pwtc Cents 622-2801 CoetaU.. 826~A'19.~ at South Coatt Ptua 919-9800 Oaiden Grove 12141 Oeden Grove Blvd. -Htrt>or Blvd. 534-eaGO .. SP!aAl. lfOUltS·tD _,.. ,_ ...._, 9'.30 am toS:30 pm Monda~ lhrough ~F~'tl6~~~emto2pm.· l ,_. , ' . . l \ . • ORANGE a>UNTV, CAl.l~OANtA T!!NCEHTS · ~ani}>us Site Yoie May Go • to d ~181 WILUAll SCBal!JBEa ... ....... .......... In a surprile move that may be dltlleasecl In eourt, three Sad- dlebadr Colle•• truateea voted •on4•J to buy a now - cq~troveraial 20-ac re second c4tnpus site at Myf ord Road and Bt'yan Avenue on the Irvine Jlancb. Laiuna Beach Trustee Larry Taylor, who voted a1ainst the ac- tion, aaid today he will determine .. We are 10 dole to the Cllarcb S> election now that tt Hems foolish to do anything until we see what happens there," Taylor. s aid. Three seats, includ.ID8 two that are presently vacant, are up for election. ·'There are still a lot ol things to be done before that site can be uaed," Taylor added. "I think Tayler and Board PreDdent Norrlaa Bnadt favor a parcel of- fered by I.be 1"lne Compuy as an alternaU'ff to the MJford- BrJa:n lite. 1be company option ia located at Irvine Center Drive <Moubon Parkway) and Jelfny Road. The vote ordering • 'im- mediate" negotiations with the Irvine Company for purcb&.w ol the Myford-Bryan aile came as a a~rlle because of an Orange Cocty counsel 'a ruUna issued l•tweek, Tbat nallna declared that, while three members of the board ecnatltuled a simple ma- jority in its current. depleted stale, it would require a two- thl~ vote (four members) to condemn land. aecause ~ llyford-Bryan site lies in an atrlcultural preserve, it wu necessary for the co1Je1e to take condemnaUon actlcn to withdraw it ptlor te termina11on ofthe~e. But TulUa Trustee l"raak Greinke, who engineered Mon- day's actloo, said the property had already been condemned when the board voted Sept. J4 to buy the Mytord-Bryb site. That 5-1 vote was shunted aside by the board when the I.nine Compur made its offer of an alternaUve Site in January but Greinkris arguing that it is still .a.lid • Slnee tbat vote. one trualee baa real1oed and another bu died. Ta7lor wu et.ent at the Ume and U. lcM nefatlve vote was cut by Mlaloa Viejo's Donna Berry, who now s upports Myford-Bryu. Greinke biased the validity ol Monday's action on his conten· u.tltbat the land was condemned lut tall and selection Qf one of the two available sites was all. <SeeCAJIPUS. Pa1e A%) 111ness Kills 2 . " I• Cause of Ailment Mystery ' I ATLANTA (AP) -Two 1 employes or the National Center for Disease Control who worked 1 tntbe laboratory wher e virus dis- eases are studied have died or a mysterious ailment, the center 1 aatd today. I Laboratory tests were und~r w•y to try to determine the , ~ure of the ailment from which tile warehouseman and main- tenance man died. Neither was ln.volved in actual research on "legionnaires' disease" or other d~eases investigated in the bolhftng. ltOth displayed sim i la r svmptoms, which the CDC said appear to be related to nu. Don Berreth, ~tor of the of- fi ce or information, emphasized that only the tests would de· t e rmine if it was flu . A spokesman said it may take several days to find the cause. "Clinically, this does not seem to be "legionnaires' disease," Berreth said. "but we are looking at everything. "There does not appear to be any usual illness among the other employes," be added. Dead are George Flowers, 49, who died in an Atlanta hospital Sunday, and Robert Dubingon, 43, a retired military man who Deroin Daul Rock GuitarUt Charged TORONTO CAP> -Rolling6tones guitarut Keith Richard has been charged with possessing heroin for the purpose of traUick.ln~ police say. . The 33-year-old r~k musician was convicted qi England last January of poeieSSlng cocaine and was fined $1,275. A spokesman for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Monday that its officers seized an ounce of heroin with an estimated street value of $4,000 in a · downto"wn hotel. Earlier, Richard's girlfriend. Anita PaUenberg, wa atTeSted at Toronto International Airport and charged with possessing hashish and heroin. ~ommittee Leads l11n Vote SpenJing • A committee badlng three I e11ndidatn in the Saddleback Community Collese Dlatrict bu , emersed • the bln .. t ·~ 1n that district'• March I trustee , ·electiceuofar. Ac~to statements on fiJe wHh the Orange County Jtellatnr cfVoten • .._ Commlt- "9 for ~t:J Education bas ·cpeat .. to luppart wadlda• 1ejo Cycliat ·~juredin "( lrVine Crash A JI.year-old Minion Vlejo •torc1cllat wu reported in ..Wactor)' condition tod_,-at 'laaUn Community Hoapltal aft.er Ida motoreyele and a car collided ~du in lrvlne. ":' Jim & LQport. 2a001 eor-~ ,.. tutle5 bJ Onmp ~hrlmdc1lmmedlalelt .iter dMt 4 p.m. accident at Jam-~ree BoeleTard and AltoA e Palleeuid be suffered. · lift.arm &n4 c:uta cm bla ....... AlaD Greenwood , Eugene McK.n.i&ht and Robert Price. The poup, which also u.ta col- lectiona of $1 ,355, lists its jttuuret" u Paul Brennl!'-_pre- sident ol the Saddleback Colle&• Faclllt.)' Association, an affiliate of the California Teacben Aa· aod8Uan. '._ Tbe at•ement.a 00-m. cower campeiCD collectlOU ~ u -peaseadlrouah hb. 2'. Tlte aix tnaatee candidates themselves all IUtd TOatlae forms st.tin&~ had neiUler receiftd nor apent tnore than $200 oa t.beir campalps. · Thole form.a do not require a dlaclomre of aa.J fllndin& sources Ol'ft~. Oreenwocd, WlUiam W atta and Clift~ Sr. a.re ru.nni.ng for e from trustee area two. cKnl«bt and Patrick Bactul are cendidatea for the seat fl'OID area four. P.rtce is the lone cudldate in area ftve altboulb tlie late Jam• w. Manllall'a name al8o wm 81>' pear OQ die bl1lot. llai'lball died in ead7 Febnaary. died at Ft. McPherson Army hospital in Atlanta about 3 a.m. today. Both worked in Building 7, one of 14 that make up the center. It contaln s ·the re s ear c h laboratories ued for investiga- tions of diseases such as in- fiuerua, smallpox, measles and ··1e1ionnaires' disease." Of about 1,200 employes who work at the CDC here, about 900 have access to the research laboratories. Flowers, a warehouseman, de- livered laboratory s upplies <See AILMENT, Pa&e AZ) Secluded Wianing a Strain CA VEND~ " A'P.) -Ex- iled a.aiaa autMr Aleunder Solzhenitsyn bu emerged from his estate t~ -~P.ologize to nei&bbcn for bQUd1ftl a fence, wbfch be aaid be needs because notes uareat.en1ft& bis life have been slipped under bis gate. Chris Molburg. 3. of New Ha mpshire. strains to make the winning dash down a quarter-mi,lf1 course in the ''kid and mutt" event in the Canadian dogsled competition in Ottawa. He appeared Monday night at Cavendish's New Eo1land-atyle town meetlo&... not to help the town decide its budget and le aders, but to explain bis secluded lifestyle. SOli.benitayn, who moved to this town of 1,200 laat fall and \. erected a fence around bia spaciom estate, told neighbors that the fence wu to discourage Soviet asenta from haraaasing him. E•ergy Bill Presented "Me1n1es have been put un- der my 1ate wttb threats to kill me and my family." be aald wit.bout elaborat.iq. "•1 fence prevents your nowmobtles and bunten from cotnf en t.betr way. I am sorry for ·din md lllk 1" to fOl"llve me, but I b.d ~-~mnett from eertaiD ~~.;f-~cUllUlrbanet!I," 11e said a. bit »mute ·~l The •year-old Nobel Prtse- wtnnhw .utbor. KcomPanlecl by Mt wife, N~at al.lo •aid the aec:lUIScp wu vtw ~ hla wrltlGa. • •t Ute It Vf!r/ muc'k here, but 1 doe 't want the fenc• to be. 'Pl· pleaant for YOU here," • •d. •PlatinltbrouP an lnte,rJnier. .. AU my llf t comiat.a ot caly one ~ -work, .. he added. .. And tbi cbaradertstlo ol. my WOl't ... nat~ 1udd• 1n• ~., .... .. Solghmttsyn ... •died from Ruala ID hbnla17 1'74 and li'fed hr Zurich, Swltaerlaad, before anovlnC to Vennont. late wt JUI'. I W!Jgress t.o Mull New Department, Budget WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi- dent Carter sent Con1ress his propoeal\o create a Department of EnetlY today, combining all or part ol al least nine existing agenct. With manpower totaling nearlfJ0.000. Tb• proposed department• would have a budget of more than $10.6 billion in fiscal 1978. Carter's bill would abolish as independent agencies the Federal Energy Administration <FEA>. the Energy Research and Development Administra- tion <ERDA> and the FMeral I.aanguage, Mothers €andidates' Topics -ANNE COOPE& or• Del''""-', ... , C_...tu •J>Ok• oo sues r~from billnsual atlon to .-otherhood at a San Clepiente forum Mcoday featuring conlen- deri lb the March 8 Saddleback Colle1e and Capistrano Unifled school board etecUona. Wltu.m Manahan, a teacher in the adjacent SacldJeback Valley Unifted School Dl1trlct. la run· ninf In Capistrano Unified tnlatM area 4, Dana Point and coMtal Lquna Ni.fuel. Manahan aaid llonday it la time for educators who work dlre-ctl1 with ehltdren, un· dent.mil daildND'• needa and parents• ~oncerna, to take greater ftllPoDlibilltJ for edUU· Uoa. '"A ftalI.umt edu~atar ha to be .. · UMt to tbe ecbool 4Ultrlct. •• bo I*·~ btaltb)' OM.'' Ima o.wtOD, tM l.Kvml>mt.tn Capllltuno'• area 4 l\Pce •M Cle- feated Ma.DatiP lJJ three vot.eain PowerCoaimJsslon (FPC), And tn an unusual arrange-• ment, it would divide responstbWty fbr the leasing and manap~t of otfahore oil and natural gu areas between the new department and the Depart- ment d Interior which bas that re1ponaltillty. The proposal woaJd .alJo place in the new eneray departm,nt In· tertor'1 resJoaal el~c power markettns pTosrama and t.\)e Bureau of Mines fuelJ data pro. cram; ccntrol over tbe rate~ ex- ploration ot1he Naval Petrol~ Reserve In Alma, att area to be maaa,ed by Interior; and ju~ 9Vet petroleum re- aerv .. th Calif'orni• and Wyom· Ins •Jkl oU Ibale reserves ln (Bee £Nft01(. P,ae Al> · co .. t . . . ' l Blows In Tr. to form. Mattia 1f{Dda c:1me routq llke • lloft -.0 Oruc-c.ouaty tod.,, plhlf. to so ftlDh ta aoea1 hubon 8Dd ca•lnl qandle powa out.11te1 due to tre. blowlnt Into reslda- Ual Hf'Vice llnea. The National Weather Service forecut calls for dlmlnll!Md wind.a by Wedoeaday wit.la con- tinued cle.v tides, but cooler temperatures. Wednesday bichs should reach about eo dep-ees with crtap nilhlUme Iowa about '5 aloac the Orance Coau. Today's custa led to am all craft advbories foe the enUre coastal area. Coutal sea1 had swells of five to 10 left. Al Dana Point Harbor, a spokeaman reported waler thrashinc over the breakwater. However, no serious nautical problems were reported since motl yachtmen cboH not to ven- ture out in the rouib aeaa. lndlvtdual homes in Costa Mesa, ffuntincton Beach, Foun· tain Valley and Newport Beach were without power for a •bort time early today. LAGUNA BEACH SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Otilt\l ... Malt MYFORD-8RYAN PARCEL, TOI', SECOND CAMPUS CHOICE College IHu• ~;Some Favor Ottter Site .. Callaidate Silver CAMPUS ••• -.. __ -._.4 'Stir:s Up' Public that remained. Gordon Getcbel, manager of planning administration for the Irvine Company, aaid today his firm will not contest the condem- nation deciaion. (EdU.or'• NC>U -Thia ts one in.a •em• of prc1fik• on JO .actiw can- didotu for tht SoddUboclc VGUey Unif'" School C>Utrlct Board of Educatton. Two tnutee •eaU wUl be fill«l ~the March I election.) Marvin Silver. a SO·year-old re- sident or Mission Viejo, says there's aomethlng more impor- tant in his campaign than getting himself elected to the Sad· dleback Valley Unified School Dlatrict Board of Education. "The important thing is to make the public aware of what is going on, to stir them up," he said. The father of four chOdren, in· cludine an adopted black Viel· namese boy. has been Involved In the parent-teacher organization for two and a half years -ever since bla wile volunteered hlm lortbejob. But be said he be1an asking queallons a year ago when trustees and administrators were predicting a deficit and cut- ting school expenditures Ois- sat1sfied with the answers given him, he explained, "frustration has bwlt into battlt>." The district's def1c1t predic· lions ended with a budget surplus or more than S2 million. Silver cha ra cterized this as a "credibility gap" and added. "To me, that's never been satisfied " He aaid it bothers him thal cuts have affected the classroom. Teachers' aides have been taken out and more children put in classes, he said, while the db· trict continues bulldlni "Taj Mahala" and apendlnc money on landscaplnc diltrkt offlcea. He said he i1 not a1a1Nt build· ~ng new schoot. or they're need· ed. Bul be queaUons the dbt11ct's future enrollment rt1ures because he doesn't believe peo- ple with youn1 achool·•1e children can now afford a home in the~a. Sliver, a telephone directory saJes ttpreseataUve, also objects that under a new merit pay ayatem, administrators• raJ.ses are not belni made public. Dls- • trtct oalc:lals aay this would be an unwarranted invasion of prtvacy because the ralaes att baled on work evaluallOM. But the candidate ar1ues that the public bu the ri1ht to know the ra.lsee and the JusllftcaUon for lhem because public dollars are belna spent. Sliver bas been endorsed by the teacher•' auoclallon but says he ls "nobody's candidate." DAILY PILOT 'MAKE PVBLJC AWARE' Candidate Sliver He argves the fact that he agrffS with teachers on some LS!>ues does not mean he has been "bought." And . he said he dis· agrees with some of the teacher contract requests. He believes leacbers should have tbe right to vote oo the LSsue of agency 6hop. In collective bargaming, he said, district of· ric1als h.ave been isolationists and set in their ways. The unset· tied negotiations can be resolved, be s11d, but both sides have to 11ve m. He objects that one incumbent has aaid a teachers' strike would have liWe effect because there ar~ so many unemployed teachers l.n the county. "ls th.ls a problem aolVUlg solution to it." • SUver asked "ls this bringing better morale"" ,,...... P..,e AJ ...,,. HOPEFULS edu~•tion to assure that each child Is able to develop his full potentiaJ. Clifton Brooks. running in Sad· dleback College trustee area 2. called himself a conservative "While we felt one site Is superior to the other, we are not interested in influencing the in· temal process or the college, .. Getcbel said. "We aren't in the education business." Left open, however, is the mat· ter or land price, which will be decided during negotiations between the company aod the college. The college has appraised the Myford-Bryan site at $30,000 an acre, which company officials have indicated is too low. The company 's offer on the alternative .site provided the in· itial 20 acres for $30,000 an acre but involved a five-year option to buy up to 80 acres more land at higher cost. A key issue involved in the dis· pule over which site should be chosen was the relative cost or developing the two parcels. Presuming the company ac- cepts the $30,000-an-acre ap· praisal for the Myford-Bryan parcel, another $27,000 an acre would be needed to improve the land, which is low-lying, current- ly used lo grow asparagus and lacking required utilities. The per-acre development cost of the alternative site at Irvine Center and Jeffrey baa been esUmatect at $10,000 because it is in a developing area. Roy Barletta, district business mana~er, said Monday that a one·lime tax rate increase of six cents per $100 Qf ag,,essed value would be requlred'to buy the Myford-Bryan land, compared to a rate or about S.75 cents for the alternative site Greinke and others who argued in favor of the Myford-Bryan parcel conceded Jt will cost more initially but said it will better serve the northern part ol the dis· trlct and Tustin In particular Depending on the outcome of next week's election, the entire issue may aaain be "1rown lnl-0 turmoU ~auae most of the can· dldates for the board tend to favor the company's altemallve offer. 'Ibe earliest a new board could meet would be about three weeks alter the balloting. p,.... P"fll! Al candidate from Tustin. He said AILMENT he views community colle1e u a place where b l&h scbool • • throu16out. the · bulldln& and Dubinson. employed In maha· ten~. worked in the basement a nd the flrst h•o floors, a apolresman said. araduates, unsure of how they re· late to college. can welsh alternative options and learn to read and write, if need be. . Alan Greenwood, also ntnnlng in area 2, said the Saddleback faculty, In add.ressini lhe central problem ol our time -th• build· iq of lnd.lvidual cbaracttr - should express human •alues and needs. He said tlle coUeae program should be dafined for young students, but alao for other members of the community, aveb u women returnln& to acbool con tbetr cbJ.Jdren are ralaed. l!IQ8ene Mcltnip~ trustee CAD· clldate in SaddleNe~·· area 4 <Sao Clemel\te, Dana PC>W and Su Juan cap&atraao>. said the fUDC!tion ol 1 eonun~ collqe like Saddl~ b Dl Old. He said tbe eoUete must prcmde re- medial educatloG, preparatica to tnmter to• fou,..year eollep voeaUObal educatloa and Th~ knew each otbel' oalY c11ually, uld Berreth, wbo described their symptoms ¥ fever, chllla, YOmiUn' and diar· rhea. Tbe cause of .. ledonnalre:s' · dJseue." which ldllecf 29 penom who •ttended a 1tate Amencan Leston c oniventloll In Philadelphia lut July, wu lden· Ufied u a badaiwn onl7 a few WeeUaao. I The llOW"Ce ol that baetmum still la wdl:noft and researeb in- to Ila ortctn 1UU ll ~ canted out lb BUl.ld•na 1. Altbou1b there was aome temene11a anaona CDC employes toda,, • llM*•mn said~ n- !u.ed 14> IO lato U.. .remfcted areu. · · ·" coanad.lnc. ~ •"J'bae are all WCll'lb7 fanc· . r~-~ Uona and lbo&aJd be qpclltAad... ~ e~ he said. LOSANOELllS (AP)-Acoo-BOt!l tbe Saddlebact OoQc, ftdaaUal alldlt ., the ......_., aod dl• Capl•traao Unilttd-offioe clahaa tlaat co•at1 tn;(Melecuo. ll.ardl t ertdls.-em~ ~ ffln• llP:-' tttct~ EftQ YOtft lD tbe db-pralNli CG ~ tl .. tar tbe . trlct wW Wite '!tit one candlftte ann.r Cbiailcal ~. tbl' LD each~ area. IM,r-n1D411 W4 todq. ~' Noe,, -Tlllllt u °"' A a ,.,.,.. "' ~ -".oditlt ('Cito. ...,_ • die H 0 1t'11cllr vwz. • Jo eyj I PaysO , HOMC KONG CAP) -'ften.. W etterD cndlie llr1p lo ftatt Cam- maaill C111D1. tM G...U ... l>aue., .m..s ta Roat ..... Uf'bor t.o4Q after a ~ vialt to Canton. U..,..,, SdlMl J>tdnct Boord o# S'-ic rt«1 I n.. """-aiaat UllW bt Mlled ~ Uw Marcia I el«t60llJ. Michael Pabick Cl.atey. a 30-year-Gld attornef and restdimt of £1 'hro. describes blmaelt u a r•••onable. Jo1ical ud fair penaa. Tb.• 21' pasaen.1ers, tnclud16i 1.25 Amerlc&JU, vlslted a tom· . mtane, th• Cantoa 100, tbe Kw an"1m* Provincial Hospital and otber Jiahta. Because these are cbuac- teriltics people in public oftlce alaoald have, be believes he abou1d be elected to the board of the Saddlfbacll: Valley Unified School District. He'a seekinc a tnistee•a seat because "I've alwaya been in- terested ln community actlviUes. That s~ms to be a place where a person can really get involved." If elected, the school board won't be bis lasl stop. Clancey, who msuccessfully sought the Republican nominaUon in the 40lh Congressional Diatrict last aprinJ. admits his goal b to be seated in Congress. Clancey currently sits on the executive board of the Sad- dleback Area Coordinating Coun- cil. He la a vice president of the Mission Viejo J aycees and a member of the Lions Club. He has two daughters, one of whom attends Rancho Canada Eioi::mett&.1~ This candidate ues the teacher-related iasues of agency shop, binding arbitration and col· lective bqaining generally as the issues in this campa.igl). "Everything elae has la.ken 'a back seat to it and that really is a problem," he said. GETTlNG INVOLV£D Cancldate Ct.ancey should be done. He suggested lbe district's building program be reviewed by an outside professional to be sure that decre•sing enrollments which have affficted olher school district's won't be happening here in the f\lture. But Clancey also believes pro- blems with teachers should be re- . solved. Currently, negotiations are at a standoff, Clancey said. He believes a change among trustees will change the al· mospbere of negotiallons so a comprom.iae can be worked out. Clancey does not believe it is bis place to take a stand on ac~· cy ahop. Rather, be believes iris something wbicb should be put lo the voteofteacbera. However, be says be has changed bis feeling about bind· Ing arbitration. Now. he said, he favors it as the only way to reach an agreement with the teachers. Marpret Brayt.oa of Pomoaa, Calif., tr\ed acupuncture at tbe hospital roe a headache. She re- ported: "lt was nol an un- pleaaant ellperience. Ua- fortunately ll didn't c ure Ill)' headache." A spokesman for the cruise operaton said Ruth MacNelll of Leisure World ln ~aguna Hills. Calil., had better ruck. She bad a swollen knee. the spokesman said. and "upon examination lhe doctor produced Ulree needles from a case and Inserted them in her ankle. A balf·hour later. Mrs. M acNeW told the doctor the pain wugone." Paul Rich of Buffalo, N.Y., said the Chinese "gave us a very broad exposure ol the city and the people. We were taken on lours from 8 in the morning to 10 at night." He said he was f!ur· prised that Chinese of{icjals knew about the devastattng weather in Buffalo. · F,...PageAI ENERGY ••• Colorado and Utah, now under the authority or the Defense Department. Clancey said other issues. as the district's budget an~uilding program, need attnlion. Although he said the district is spending "an enormous amount of money. H 's got lo stop someplace," he said he needs more facts before deciding what Clancey said the education given in the district is good but could improve. "But in ordet to Improve it," be said. "we certainly need the support of teachers and the school board is just not getting it." The proposed energy depart· 1 ment would pick up other pro- gr a m s from the Commerce Department, the Department of Housing and Urban Develop- ment. the Securities and Ex- change Commission and t.be In- terstate CommPrc:e Commission. Now from AMERICAN SAVINGS FREEf TaxpayerS Survival Kit An easy.to-read guide to understanding some sJgnlfkant as~<:U of the complex new Income tax laws. Tiie tax preparation professionals at Tax Corporation of America lulve developed this lnfonnatlve kit that will help you organize tax records and may save you money on ta)( preparation. As a tpeclal bonu1 you'll get the American Savings' Guide to Personal Financial Planning: a simple and easy.to-maintain system for controlling your budget. Corne In to your neighborhood Amerlcan Savings office and ask for your &ee Taxpayer's Survival KJL • One kit per family. and adults only. pleasf. Supply Is limited. Sony. not avdab&c bv maU. ~ Am,~rican's high interest-compounded daily ANNUAL 8.06~ 7. 79'!: 6.98~ 5.92~ 6. 72!! 5.39-X. YIELD• ANNUAi. 7%,.. 71/2'° 634'° 61/23 53f.i% 51/4'° RATE < MOvtMS 4 VL\11$ OR MOM %" Y£AA8 OR MOM t \'£All OR MOR£ OM lf-~Y OUT )~THS "'SMOOk ''*Oft..,.. llOOO OR MORE SIOOO OR MOAE SIOOOOAMOAE '500 OR !o'()AE l&MINIMUM • ln~t compounded d&lly eam1 Indicated annual yi.ld Wh9n mclntalned tor o~ r•r. ** ~.,., regulallon1 require 11ubetantlal Interest penalty for Mrly withdrawal from certlflcete ecpounl1. . Faa ..._._....._(some with minimum balance required): Sale l>epoelt boxa • 1niwlen chetka •Checking acoounta wtth nn.jor ltatcwtde bank• Automatic anl~a/loan'payments Save-.bv·mall eervlct • Money orden • Free ••over 62" checking accounts • ~I Security dind ct.pollt • Notarv ~ • Statement aavlJJt• • Chedc-a·month planl Tdcphone 1\-ansfer/D~k eavk:a • Trutt deed and note colJectlon I 92.Yeitrs S~fe Ii ft r AMERleAN SA\llNGS . .. AaHU over $6 Billion etrong QerdenQrow 12141 ~Glove BM1 II Hllt)or &Mt. A4eeGO I Hufltlngton lllllch ; 78IO Edinger Ave. at Hootlngton C«lllr . 848.2222 I . . I ' IF YOU ARE CS OR OVER, YOU may be ell(lble ror the "credit for th,.eldert~ •• the new name for a revised ver1lon of the retirement lftcome credJt. Complete the credit oo Schedule R of Form 1040; you'll rind It much shnpler than the old version. The chief drawback is that the more you col· lect from Social Security. the i.maller your credlt becomes. You won't be eligible for the credlt lf your adjusted Jross lncome on line I5c of Form 1040 Is $17,500 or more on your·jolnt return, $12,500 or more if you are single. or $8,760 ' or more if you are a married person fllipg separately. ' It you claim expenses connected with renting your vacation home, you must check the box in Part II, Schedule E (Form 10.0). If you used lbe home for more than 14 days or 10 percent of the number of days it was rented, you can deduct such expenses as maintenance, utilities, deprecia· Uon, etc., ority to the extent ot the eros1 rental less the ln· t.ereat, taxe.s and casualty losses allocable to the rental use. If you rented the home for less than 15 days, ianore both the rent and the expenses Cother than taxes, interest and casualty losses). THOSE ACCUSTOMED TO COMP UTING their own tax by applytng the appropnate tax rate schedule to la¥· able income are ln for a change ii their income ls less than $20,000. A new tax table lists amounts or taxable income from SO to '20.000 by brackets that go up by $25 or $SO, with tbt amount of tax due for each ncome bracket sbown aJonatkJe, according to tbe type of return (joint, sinal~ e&c.). U taxable income is $20,000 or more. figure the tax usina the pproprtate tax rate schedule: they now start al $20,000. U you realized a taxab1-net looa·term capital gain of more than .$20.000 <from sale of stock, a house .. similar al· sets). you m ust file Corm 4625 along with \,he 10.0, This ~\lirtment is not spothg~ed where you would most readily note It. on Schedule D wliere capital gain is re- ported. And you must gettbe form separately from thelRS. This is the form on which you figure out whether you have eno~h "tax preferences" to require ypu to pay an extra 15 percent tax known as the m1rumum tax ontax preferences. Next: Medical u:pense$. Here's to Us Wnfiknce Bubbles Up NEW YORK CA P ) -People are drinking more French champagne these days, and thal) a sign of changing tastes and a better economy, an indualr)' spokesman says. The Champagne News and Information Bureau, a trade group, report& that shipments to the United States of the bubbly French wine roae . 40.S percent in 1976 over 1975. Slightly more than 4 million bottles were shipped to America last year. and an information burea~ spokeswoman said this indicates a change in drinking styles as well as a vote or economic con- fidenc:C: · '°Many people used to consider champagne a celebration drink." said Marie-Claude Stocki. "Nowtbey dritlk 1l as an aperitlf inatead of hard li· quor, or they aefve lt wlth dinner for their wine.·• The Unit.ed states ranks fourth behind England, -Belgium and Ualy in champagne consumption, she said. America to Expand Market in Taiwan t .. •