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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-01-24 - Orange Coast PilotThief Fakes Gun ·. 'Dogfather' 1· ' . In $603 Robbery PleadS Guilty ,_ At Mesa Bank To Land Swindle _______________________ , 'If You mo V~ Jt, NO. II, J HCTIOMI, SI ~AO•I . .. ............ WHERE SOVIET NUCLEAR SATELLITE FELL TO l!ARTH No Danger From Radloacttv!tj, Canadian,• Sar . 1tbanca .. nrr JJW. that i8n1 cont.a mtn'ltlcm rMUtted.' • B neilnaJri •a ann°"ncement climaxed about two ween of consvllatlou bM.WMll U.S. and Soviet Gflldals • lt beclm ap. aren< tbat the :ammo 1atellite WU IOib!C to drop dUt of ortit. Qovel'llDilftt oUICIUI 1aJd a• ;p_ett.1 u :r:eceatlY •• lfobl&Y !:!:~...ta eome down .... OIUll'l',bp.AI) DOctor Loses Practice in J;)ftig Charge Boy, 1, Maule Baron'• L;te Threatened PARIS(AP) -A nrvolu. tlonal')' group Is going to kill kidnapped Baron Edouatd-Jean Empaln, head of tbe Empaln· Schneider industrial em· plre, unless imprisoned · member. ol the aroup,are freed before noon Wedries--day, an anonymous caller said today. uwe, the Armec1 Nucleus for Pofular Autonomy, c aim resPonsibllil1' ror the kld· napping ol Baron Empaln. We deliland the llberatloo of our comrades before Wednesday noon. U not WO will kill tbe baron. Other bosses will follow," tbe caller told tbe Paris oftlce of Radio Laxembourc nearl1 24 hours after Em· pain wu gabbed. Police bave Jallec! at least six members of tbe onranization. Rob'ber Fakes GuiitoROb Reveale 1 WASHINGTON (AP> -Tb1 federal co•emment an.noun~ today that women •bo buy birth control pm; after April a must recelve a brochure w81'1llna that ••women who uae oral contracep- tlvu should DOt amolce!' The caution acatnat both llllOkinl and taklil• the pill will be contained ln an updated brochure aDd ieparate leaflet written ln simple laniua1e thn physicians or pba.rmaclltl ~ penlin1 tho pill will bo r~ to glve to consumers. Food and Drur Commlsst Donald Kennedy said that tbe aaeney•a moat lmportan1 masase '11 a atmple one: JI you take tbe plll, don't smoke. If 1ou do smote wbile on tile pill. you blcreue dramat1call1 ,car cbuces ot awtertni a bean -.. tack or 8110ke." The FDA decl1De4 to reqmre a arnlng that th• put can Jn• ere e the rlsk Of breast cancel'. A lawsuit la pendlhc tn fedeial dllttld ccmt ha BrooklJD. N.Y~ 1eek.ln1 a eourt Order that w0014 force the FDA to lnclude IUdl'a warntg. Th•,,.,, 1Abetlnt ~ (See WAJlNING, Pase Al) , ... ···ft'• a Rare Bird · • This little hummingbird, shown sipping ·· from a f ceder bas attracted about 60 bird watchers to Three Rivers, Calif., where it ··· is nrsting in a back yard. It's a female blue-throated hummingbird, believed to be the t'irst of its kind e~er seen in Califonua. ., .:()akie Autop~y Ord~i;-ed ·· A.ctOr's Death Due to Bursting Artery? ·'1 HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Come· dian Jack Oak1e, who in one •whirlwind year made a dozen ·m ovies and was rumored to be among Hollywood's wealthiest actors, has died al the age of 74. TV talk shows because they paid only minimum union scale, and he had once earned 10 times lhat amount -$7,500 a week. "Jf you do a job, you oughta get paid," he said. known for bi's portrayal of ~tussohni m Chari.le Chaplin's ''The Great Dictator." The Sovi I llltc. s lnlUal· IJ launChed Into an e at-w t or- bll \bat ~n e y circuit Of\th w l atellite passed over every Jana mus in lhe wor\d. ln~udinc eyery area ln the V~t.ed Sl4les. Its orbit did ot cover Antarctica and th ex· trieme northern parts of Cfnada, Russia, Scandinavia ·and most of Greenland. Brzezln•kl said the Soviet .. coamoa aatelllte contalnlng highly nadioaeUve enriched uranium·US ent d tbe •at- mosphere at 3:53 a.m. PST 4'and it proceeded lo Clislnte~te and burn up" <>Ver n Obarlotte Island on Canada'• weat coaat. He would not comment Oil the satelllte's ll&fl>OSe. He i4 the ••telli~'i. JWlear' J'leQC\Or~was used to potf'ate electrieity· and was not a weapon. 11 any tr•!oact.i 'ly re ched t.lle eairth'S • acc.~--ould be 1l1nilar in'1m unt toul cl\.tsed by a nuclear exploelon In the bllh ata;•r• whkb tould Uiten 4'la ~· •lobe fOl' aeveraf years, B ~ilftllfr &aid. Government sources said the vehicle waa a navigation satellite launch'ed last Sep- tember under the deaipation OoamOll954 The lburcea, who kl'd not to be identified, said the Russians had been unable to get lbe satelUlC to wort success£ully despite repeated radio com· mands. The Soviets also tried to ctt the satellite back lhto orbit, they said. In Ottawa. Ivan Head, Piime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau's special adviser on foreicn affairs, said he had known for some time that. the aatelllte wu l01in1 tts orbit but that it had been unclear !Jntil to- ' day precisely where or wben it would land. • Phone Bilker . • The onetime vaudevillian died "Monday only S'h hours after his wife of 30 years, actress 'Victoria Horne. rushed him fo Northridge Hospital when he complained of ~tom ach pains. H& never disputed his reputa· lion as one Hollywood's wealtbl~t acl9~-• "Ode of my p~s said I boug6t General Ele<:tric when it was General Candle," Oak1e once said. "He could be right." Among Oakie's other memora· ble films were "Million Dollar Legs,.. ·•u I Had a Mlllloa:• "Call of the-Wild,'' ~e Texaa Rancers," "Thieves' Hlchway" and "Ar~ ~e World fn ~ Dan." -.-T ~ Oakie riiarned actreS"S \renita Vardon in 1936, but she divorced him nine xears later arter.e~us- • Told to Make · ·' Hospital spokeswoman Kay Murphy said Oakie had an aneurysm, or swellln1 or a ma· jor artery in the abdomen, whtch may have burst. An 'autopsy was to be performed to- day. Oakie's last film, "Lover Come Back" with Doris Day and Rock Hudson. was made 15 ')'ears ago. He last appeared on television three years aeo qn tbe Johnny Carson special "Sun City Follies." But he refused to appear on Fr-:M,.. Pfffltl'Al I,, ., i· Ir .. r ' .u. ' l , WARNING. • gives women consslderably more iflf!lf1DatioUllN. ~hue receiveC:l• rn brfiif ~th'lrY.,s that have accompanied plll packewsincel970. · . :- The ttW\tlml.dlf afso ltafed't -The pill should not be taken by those who have had blood clot-• tin1 dlaordera, oauicer of the • breast or aex organs. unex· Rlalned •acinal bleeding, a iitroke, heart attack or anatna pectoril <>r who suspect they may be precnant. · • ,-Women. with scanty or lr· rrgular periods are stron1ly ad· v.iSed net to take the oral Con· t.rtceplive. : ,,.....Birth control plUs aro of no value in the prevtnUon or treat· ~nt of venereal dbeue. i .~ r.-"Other forms ot cc:mtracep. UC>n have lesser rtak.s or none at ltth They are also len ettectiv tbAn oral contraoepljtes, but, ¥ltd properly, may•W effectlve enough for many women ... On the question of breast cancer, tbe new brochure•=: "Sln~e eatro en, an in r t.1 ln moat blrtt contr~• p a.~ causes cancer ln certain animals, theso findln11 sufleat that birth contrOl pllla contalri· In# estro1en mu also cause cancer tn people, thouab atudles to date of women taktna current.· If marketed pllla have 11ot eon· firmed that th~ cause cancer in people." - DAILY PILOT Oakle's name sprung from lus. boyhood in M\lsko~ee, OkUi .• where he was christened Louis Offield. When his family moved to New York he was groomed for a career on Wall Street. But his irrepressible humor steered him toward show busi- ness. His first job was as a chorus boy in George M . Cohan's "LitUe Nelly Kelly." That was when be adopted his breezier stage name. From the chorus, Oakie ad- vanced to comic and dancer on the vaudeville st.age .before aet- tjng his first movie role with ParamounL He stayed with the studio nine years, makin& his favorite fllm , "Elmer the Great." He may have been best ... Vig tiim Cl! being <wer1:els0me, jtaJous and .;hot-te19pered .. He had no children Crom either of his marriages. A funeral service ls planned for noon Wednesday at Fc>rest Lawn cemetery In Glendale. Frma Page Al SWINDL.E •.•• guilty plea. Mark Aspey,1 the prosecutor, said he was compl-etdly sur-, prised by the move. ' Dinnell was jailed last week for violation or an earlier agree- ment with tho court which had allowed him bil freedolb. Ford hlitioeed· Korea Probe That freedom enabled hhp lo , live in Turtle Roe!\ antt•operate a local ffOSeQ ~utitdfi&i f-Ousi- riess, the l>dgfath ... along with hls son Anthony. also an Irvine WASHING~ON CAP> Former President. Gerald Ford be&an the tnveatigaUon into al- le1ed Jtorean lnfiuencfhbuylng in Congress in 1975, and the re- sults were liven the Carter ad- m lDistraUon "on a silver plat- ter," says the Ford man who ran ,the investl&ation. RetiuWni ewller statements that U)e investigation did not begin uoW late lo Ford's term. fornier Assistant Attorney General Richard Thornburgh aaid Monday that the in· vesUgation required only. "prov· in1 what you already knew" by the time President Carter took omce in January 1977. 11Ttie matter was turned over to our criminal division late lo l9'1',' l>ecemj)Cl'l" l )thtnk,'! 1 Thornburgh Old. ,n11ldent. " ~ Anthony l• ourNntly fe~ a one ·tt>-lou~)le\i': 1infence tn Arizona state prt~ for bla part in tl~e Combined Equity As· 1urance operation. The land belnJ. sold b1 COm· blr1ed Equity ~u ln an unlm· proved, deio1ate area of ApaclM County in northeastern Arizona. The flrm'• sales abrupUy halted in September 197C when lt "u placed in stato receivership. The lndf ctmenta were ti&Qded down tn September 1976. . • · Dinnen wu ,ranted a week's ttme off from hfJ atay ift county jall to come baek lo Jrnne to move hla wife to PhQenb. · However, Juc11e McDonald noted that, If DiMell falls to ap< pear for hi• aent~nclnJ, ht atanda to receive the maximum sentence on each ~unt, which ~ould brittl hla prilcn term up to :'12)'.tarl. ..... Restitution . . ·1N~ YELLOWCNIFEt • A•IE Rumu, who nms a janitorlat service, said she saw a bnaht ob)ecl nashin1 acroas the sky when she was driving home frotn1'Ptk. She was facing the airport. and tbouaht lt was a Jel takiftl olf. "It was,quite a way up, flJ\nl a\ an an,.., like a Jet that bad just left We airport." she said in a telephone mtervlew. Then ~e realized it roust be somethinc else. Sbe uld ahe was so excited that she called bet son and dauahter O\lt of the house to have a look at. lt. · "THE MAIN PART WAS USE a bright nuorescent llaht. When it1ame ovepead and we coiJld et a C,ood look at it. I could see doz~~doW\s of.~ • • '!Ill'~ was• main pert. lift• brl~t U1bt, d lo of small parts traiung behind it. Each part had a lone, bri&ht tall." She said it sped over her house in thb town on the north shore of G rei¢ ~ve !;,ak.e, )leadi east. ., • t :J . aan't oleo hi dldn,.'l make• ," n. Ulllan addc!U. "I knew the dogs -they were pets," ahe said. "They're not danserous dogs." Pa1e aaid the do11 were picked up on the ranch and were caged at the Napa County animal pound. He said them:· l be held for observation lo io get a lead on wh't caused vicious behavior. Testa for rabies were to be iqcluded. 4 Strike Called MANAGUA, Nicaragua CAP) ·-A workers' committee called a nationwide strike tOday t.o pro- tut. the assassination of publl1her Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, a leading foe of the Somcna dlctatorablp. 1 , .I VOL;. 711 NO! 24, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 2 .. , 1978 c Hom.eowners Stiffen on B11llCHAEL PASKEVICR Of .. O.,,, .......... 'J'hree developen and the t(orth Costa Meaa Homeowners Association a1reed Monday nJcbt to take a compromise land use proposal to the City Council, but not before the homeowners voted to add tough new condi-llona on the proposed omce com- plex near South Coast Plaza. About 6S homeowners turned out at Bear Street School to get a glimpse of the compromise pro-, pout Intended to reverse the · homeowners' stand on their con- troversial rezone initiative set for a March 7 citywide vote. With council approval of the alte rnative plan, the home· owners would come out against their own initiative. IC passed, it would limit develop- ment on the 63 acres to single- family hoQ)es. The agreement reached Tues· day night calls for a combina- tion of single-family homes and a proCeasional office complex on the land bordered by Sunnower Avenue, Bear Street and the San Diego Freeway. After a prei;entation by de- velopers Harry .Rinker of the Arnel Development Co., Henry Roberts and Henry ~1erstrom, t.he homeowners met sep rat~ and •ddcd th followlng a:neri<I· meots to the 14·1>oint com· promise: -A new boi'd r that limits the ortlce complex to the 600-foot strip between Bear Street and the back wall of the exlstln& Greenbrook Homes tract. The border would extend throu1b the Arnel property to th south, thus sllcinc about 10 acres from Arnel'• plans for Its .. ,ai'den type .. omc complex. -Ttie bomeowners 'Want that 10 acres of Arnel land deslgnat. ed for ains!l .family homes Qn}y. Tb'il c0u1a mean mor aingle. tamlly homes alone the San Diego Fr-~ay. -Feating trafrtc congestion on South Coast Drlve. the homeowncn :rejected the id of drivewey acceu trom that roadway to the 5efer1trom l)rop-e rtY <about 13 acres> ana Rob rta' JUU"«\ (about • acres> to tbe nOrth. This wowd leave only one entrance-ex.it to the twO properties oo Bear Street. The new amendments, comin on the heels of an unofllclal agreement that places exteDSivc land 1etbacka and height llmita· tions on the three parcels, "1ould <See COMPLEX, Page Al) Red Sp~ce Spy Falls • m Canada Did Satellite Burn in Atmosphere? YELLOWKNIFE, Canada CAP) A nuclear-powered So viet spy s atellite fell from orbit into the atmosphere above this remote reeion of northwest Canada today, strellkine vividly and &oundlessly across the pre- da wn sky and raisin& some fears of radioactive contamination. Canadian and U.S. officials sa.id there was probably no S l'rJOU'> d a nger But fi ve American military airplanes, to be Joined later by four Canadi1itn planes. flew to the scene 850 miles north of the U.S. border, to check for radioactivity and possible remnants oC the Callen spacecraft. Canadian orricials said any piec~s or the sateJlite would have slammed into the earth ln Signatures Ne~ded CM Candidate Runs For Senate Seat By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH Of,.. Diiiy ..... St.Ill Joel Bender, a 25-year-old Costa Mesa resident and a night chef at an Irvine restaurant, is bent on makin1 himself tbe most , visible and outapoken or thjt Republieans J'unnlllf for state senate se11t beint vacated by Qennis Carpenter. Unab~ to atr°"1 the cost er runnln1 an all-ou\ race for the nomlnatlon ln the nth Senatorial District, Bender bu been pounding the pavement in search oC the 3,000 si1natures needed to place his name on the ballot in June. He hopes lo meel 60 percent of the registered Repul)Uuns in the district between now and the Feb. 23 fihng deadllne. By aet- tlng the necessary signatures be can avoid the required $22S fll· ing fee. Bender estimates that &e spends a 70-hour campaign week m addition to hls lulMlme nlaht job. "None ot my 0PP91lents lt any business running for tee· tive office," he ded • "J6hn Schmitz 11 a politic ~ anlrnaJ Of the worst kind/' aid Bender, claiming tht&t Schmltz'I eariy switch has Jett hitn ... tarnaahed borae." • Former HB -:Planner Huns for Assembly a sparsely settled area 60 miles east of Yellowknife, a frontier town of 8,000 on Great Slave Lake. Canadian Defense Minister Barney Danson said he was "98 percent or more" certain the satellite, carrying 100 pounds or highly radioactive enriched uranium 235, had burned up 1n the atmosphere. "I don't think there ls any cause for hysteria," he said at an Ottawa news conference. Within hours, Prime Minister Pierre Elhott Trudeau was de- fend1ng the government's han- dling of the incident in Parlia- ment. He said he bad been informed about a week ago that the Cosmos 954 satellite was tum- bling from orbit, but that the pre- cise location o( its fall was not known even an hour beforehand and that he therefore cho!ie not to wam "every square inch" of Canada of the po11sible danger. Dapson told reporters that res· idents of Yellowknife, cap\ta1 of the Northwest Territories, were not forewarned ~cause it cpuld have caused 'unnoceuary hyslf!ria." The chances that 'Vetlowk'nite wouli:I be imperHed were •·somewhat less than beine struck by Ug'htnlnc," he said. Other Canaclian and U.S . of· fidals indicated the location could not be predicted until ear- ly today. American oCficials 'said the s atellite entered the atmosphere at 4:53 a.m. local time -3~53 a.m. PST -and within a few minutes President Carter and Prime Minister Trudeau were discussing the situation by telephone. Carter's national securitv ad-vi aer, Zbigniew Bnezlnskl1 who made the first announce· ment of the spacecran•s fall to earth,. 5Aid U.S. and Soviet of- ficials had consultations about the satelllle for two weeks. Brzezinski said U.S. satellite trackers detected 'Problems in Cosmos 954 10 late December and decided \t might fall to earth. In an exchanae of messages through Soviet Am- bassador AnatoJy Dobrynln, Brzezinski said, the United States learned there would be no danger of a nuclear explosion when the satellite plunaed into the atmosphere. ~.~~~~~~~' Th t UJ)JQJ\~ c:on('Wm today 1ih t on OfJ It.a sat~lUtes dropped from or: bl t ov r 'Rii;i~i~~~.;.~~~i..-•.ijj.i.i .. ~ ... ~--~~ northern Can da and claimed its 111 atomic ~r rupitly wa• de- signed to completely selt- destruct in the event or such a fall CM Planners Approve Complex South Coasi Town €enter Largest in lJrange County Al\hough the future traffic congestion was compared to Newport Boulevard on a busy aummer Sunday, Costa Mesa plannln& commissioners accept· ed a draft environmental impact report for: what ts expected lo be the largest commercial, enter- tainment and office complex in Oran c COunl)' Monday night. In three separate actions, the · commlas'°° approved expansion or the 62-ucre South Coast Town Center t the nottbenst corner of Bristol Str and the San Dieao Freeway. -When cornrlct.ed In 1990, the c nter wll employ 12,000 per ons Who Will g netate urr w rd 10f ,000 car :c:rtps daily, planning .tatters noted. A II of th Pl nnin1 Com· m)s ion d Cl1SlOns wlll be forwarded to tho Cl~ Council f ot oction .Feb. 6. The TOwn Cent r, financed by th Scg rsttom Company and P.rudcnuat 1 ur ~, ofiginally wos pprovcd in 1973 t a llmlt of two million SQUal"dect ' onday night. d velopeu asked to ~iq>Jnd tht complex by 150, 00 ~uare feet }>1 nnln« C&mmluJon Chairman C. C. Clarke CUC th looe vot os wt ill ion excepUon permit, g. 1te&Un1 that UM9 development be bum tO lt.s prevtous UmlL bet y ftpanalOft ls ~rov d. The cOmml on ace ptcd plans tor • 1 9[flcc build· Ing (Prudential) that wo~ld ex- tend about 76 feet above the Federal Aviation AdmiDlstratJon safety level o! 204 feet. A condition wu added that will force the developer• lo get approval from the FAA if they wish to exceed the limit: Although the Town Center falls wlt.hln city plannlnf guidelines, concerns were ex- pressed over traffic and the ensuinc noise and alr pollution it would generate. Besides the comparison to a busy day on Newport Boulevard, . tho traffic situation was likened to a year-round Chrlatmu rust\ at the adjacent South Coast Plua Shopping Center de· . veloped by Secentrom. The new employee are exped· ed to have an impact on the (See TOWN, Pa1e A2) Carter orders CIA Curb . WASHINGTON CAP) -Preti· dent Carter staned an executive order today reorganblnl the U.S. intelUaence community, puttina new curbs on covert ac-tivities and givint a tar1er role to the CIA director, Adrn. Stansfield Turner. Carter Uld his order wu "the product of th most extensive and hi&!) t level review ever conducted tbro,.agb the National SC!curlty Coundl 1y1tem of our nation's foreign intelllaence ac• tivltiea •••• " The president said he wanted to make sure that CIA and othet' lnte1l11enee agencies operated .. Jn f\111 complian~ with tho lawa or the United States." noun a White House denial or • report ln Mond11's Detroit News that Carter's 1Wf was trylni to ease Tum.er out o{ hls CIA. ~t. (Story, A12) Turner blinself paraP.hrased Mark Tw.Un, tellinf rej;orters tOday that "the reporU of roy demise are creatly exa1· aerated." DAI YPU.OT C Puffing And PiH Perilous , WASHINGTON (AP> -The lederal eovernrnent announced today that women who buy birth control pills after April 3 must receive a brochure warnlns that "women who use oral cont.racep. 'lives should not smoke." ' The caution aaainst both smoking and taklna the pill will • be contained in an updated brochure and separate leanet written in aimple lan1ua1e that physicians or pharmacists db· penaiflg the pill will be required to tlve to consumera. Food and Drue Commissioner Donald Kennedy said that the agency's most important 111essa1e "is a simple one: If 1ou take the pill, don't smoke. If wou do smoke while !>n the pill, you increase dramatically your chances of s"~rering a heart at· tack or stroke." The FDA declined to require a warnine that the pill can in· crease the risk of breast cancer. A lawsuit is pendine in federal district court in Brooklyn, N. Y., seeking a court order that would force the FDA to include such a warning. The new labeling requirement gives women conssiderably more Information that they have received ln brief :rnmmaries that have accompanied pill packets since 1970 ,.,,., ......... IRVINE'S CLYDE DINN!LL (RIGHT) LEAVES COURT In Phoenix. a Qulfty Pie• In Arlzon• Land Fr•ud Cate The new warning also stated: -The pill should not be taken by those who have had blood clot- ting disorders, cancer of the breast or sex organs, unex· plained vaginal bleeding, a ~troke, heart attack or angina r>ectorls or who .suspect they tnay be pregnant. . -Women with scanty or ir- regular periods arc stronaty ad- v\sed not to lake the oral con· traceptive. -Birth control pills are of no value in the prevention or treat· mcnt or venereal disease "Other forms of contracep- Uon have lesser risks or none al all. They are also less effective than oral contraceptives, but, u.sed properly, may be effective enough for many wome"." On the question of breast cancer, the new brochure says: "Since estrogen, an ingredient JD most birth control pills, causes cancer in certain <lntmals. these findings suggest that birth control pills contain- ing estrogen may also cause cancer tn people, though studies to date of women taking current- ly marketed pills have not con- firmed that they cause cancer ln people." OC Recorder Wylie Carlyle To Quit Post J . Wylie Carlyle. Oranae County recorder for 13 or his 42 years in couf\ty covernment service, will retire from office March 30. Carlyle's letter of resignation was sent Monday to Supervisors Chairman Thomas Riley. Carlyle announced late Jut year that be did not plan to seek re.election to the recorder's post and planned to retire before his term expires in January or 1979. Supervisors al10 have com- bhled the elected recorder and county clerk'• ortices effec:tlve with the upcomlng elections. Jn his Jetter Carlyle laid, "For nearly "2 yean it bu been my honor and privtleae to serve the 1ood people ot tbla county and throuah thla 1ettef I would llke1o expreu my aratltude to them with the knowledte th•t thelr trust ha8 been returned by my best aervlce!' Loesee Estimated OCEANSIDE <AP) - Damage ftom r~ent ral!ll, wirid and fiood.lns In Oceanside 11 •atlmated by clt,y Olftcial1 at $2.3 mUUon. DAl lV PILOT I County 'DOgf ather' Faces Arizona ]ail Irvine's Clyde DiMeU faces 10 years in prjson today alter ad- mitting in ci>urt in Phoenix that he masterminded a $9 mllllan Arizona land awlndle. In Orange County more Pe. cently Dionell hu headed a firm "'hi ch markets Doefatber .sandwiches with a Mafia motif. His prosecutor in Arizona commented today that "the Dogfather made us an offer we couldn't refuse. He ag~eed to spend up to 10 years ln our . prison, We had to accept." Dinnen, with his attorney Tom Henze at his side, pleaded l\lllty to 11 ot the 20 felony counts handed down again!t him more Doctor L oses Practice in . Drug Charge San Juan Capistrano's Dr. Paul H. Esslinger -a Mission City physician since the early 1930s -was ordered Monda1 by a south o.-an•e 'County Municipal Court Judge to quit his practice by Jun~ 1. Judge Blair Barnette'• ·o~ came In the wake of EuUn1er'1 plea of no contest last December to two charges of me,ally dis· pensin1 d1U11erous dru••· Esalln1er, 78. wu a110 fined $6~ and placed on unaupervbed probation for three years. Judie Barnette also· •ave tho elderly doctor unill June 30 to forefe!t his st•te and federal licenses concerntne medicine and dJ1. pensation ot dru$ls. The San Juaai phyalclan wu arrested in mld·Aueuat. Jaat year after a five-montb lnvettlgaUon by agents ol the Califomta Of. fice ot Medical Quality A•· aura nee. Eultnaer was lnltlally charcect with 12 \'f011tlons Of tbt state Buainess and Proleuto111 Code. than a year ago by the Maricopa County trand jury. DinneU's guilty plea came on the second <fay of testimony in hjs trial stemming from tbe case involving 1S emJ>loyeel of ~ de· wnct land firm, Combined Equi. ty A11urance. Dinnen, 57, or 9 Wandering Rill, Irvine, and his co· defendant, Ken DUff1 of 1870 Park NeWIK\,.. . ":'t. 104, Newport Beach1 were the last or the 15 to face cnarges that the firm '.s de- velopment at Concho Lakes/Land was a fraud. The other 13, Jncluding Dinnell's son, pleaded guilty to a variety ot charges. Duffy, who is being tried on one count of conspiracy and one count ot O'and theft. will have a new trial Feb. 20. Maricopa County Superior Court Judge A. .Melvin McDonald declared a miatrial in Duffy's case after Dlnnell pleaded guilty. Dinnell., ls to l"tturn to McDonald'• courtroom Feb. 21 !or formal sentencing. However, as part of an agree ment with the state Attorn'''' Genei:al's prosecutor who h1:1s been handling the case, Dinnell aireed to a nine-to·lO-year prison sentence in return for his guilty plea. . .Mark Aspey, the prosecutor. said be wu completely sur-prleed by the !hove. Dinnen was Jailed last week for viohat.lon of an earlier agree- ment With the court which bad allowed him bis freedom. That freedom enabled him to live in Turtle Rock and operate a local frozen sandwich bUSi· ne11, the Dogfather, along with his son Anthony, at.o an Irvine Anthony ts currently se~ a one-to-four.year sentence in Arizona state prison for his part Jn the Combined Equity As· . aurance operation ... The land ~ sold by Com· bined Equity was ln an unim· proved, de10late area of Apache County 1n nortbeastem ArilOlla. Th• flrm'1 Illes abruptl)' batted tn September J.V14 when it WU placed tn atato recelverahlp. 'ft• tndlctmenta were banded down In September 1978. .., DhmeU wu 1ranted a week'• Ume orr from his stay in county J•U to ~ome back to Irvine to moYe hit Wile to Ptioen11. Howe.-er, Judce McDonald noted that, If Dtnnell fails to ap. pear tor bla Hntenelna, he 1tand1 to receive the maximum sentence on each count. which could brln~ bis Jll:fson t rm up to 72y Evidence Assalled B1 TOM BARLEY , Ot rllf IMllr l'li.«i SC.ff Lawyers tor seven defendants accused or involvement In the kilUng ot Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley araued today that the grand Jury might not havr inc:Ucted their clients had au the evidence held by the dis· trict attorney been presented Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert. P. Kneeland was told that a great deal or evidence favorable to tho defendants was held back by the prosecution to ensure that the indictment would be obtained. The argpmenta came u Judge Kneeland"bpened a hearing Into defense presentation of what has come lo be known as a ~·Joh0$0n molion"-a piea that an mdict- inent is based on insufficient and slanted evidence. • .F,....PageAJ COMPLEX. • Defense attorney ~l\lllp DeMaasa. represenuna Al x· ander Kulik, 28, told Judae Kneeland that the ,Prosecution story of a murder plot ln which • contract was put out tor lheJUU. ing or Bovan Jast Oct. U w "absolute non.sense.·• And he areued that had the irand jury been eiven all the evidence related to that alleced plot inchadine statements made • by several witnesses, Jt would have reached the same con· clusioa. Defense '•ttorney William Sbe((teld told Judge Kneeland that the district attomey'a office unethically acted as a fact finder ror the 1rand Jury throuchout the Bovan invuU,a· Uon. ''It would have been far better for the grand jury 1tsell tO d~ termine the value of'tbo enUre evidence and then reach an enlightened decision,•: Sheffield ar1ued. U Judie Kneeland rules that the indictment waa based on a study Of only partial evidence he ~ill be urged to set the bullet· ment aside. Police claim Kulik, Richard, Jo eph Gabriel F.rdorow•Jd. 28, and Joseph Shelton Davis lit 28, hued three men to kill BOvan. AU !our defendants are iden· ttrled u partners Jn l>rasadam Di trlbuUnc Jnc .. ; NH;port B4' ch investment firm. Police ct. m Indicted :AnthOny "lJttht T<Jt'y'' Marone ~r., 23, and Ra,ymCJld Ste\·en l\caco, 28, both Of HunUniton B Ch, were worJd with Fiori at the time Bovan wu allot ud killed in NewPOtt Beach. - have the heaviest Impact on Arnel's 46 acres to the south of South COast Drive Arnet partner Harry Rinker said he was not prepared to comment on the elimination of the 10 acres or the development company's planned otrice space in favor of more single.family homes. Amel already plans 126 He has delayed the setUnt of a trial date for the seven defen-t' dant.s pending completlon of the Johnson motion hearing and other pretrial motions still to be resolved. Homing Bill Ckan ~nate SACRAMENTO CAP> -Ren- tal houslnc discrimination afalnst families with chUdren would be banned under a bill that has cltared a Senate com-mittee. homes on 23 ot its acres. Homeowners association President Jon Paradis .said the agreement with the developers depends upon support from the City Council. The indictment alleges that Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, of Hunt- ington Beach, shot BoYan nine times out.side the EJ lbnch1to restaurant in Newport Beach. Fiori. who faces the death penalty, is held in the county Jail with bail denied. kullk, held with bail set al sa.35 IDWion. is Monday's 4·2 vote by the senate Locil Govemment Com· mlttee aent the measure, SB 3S9 :,y Sen. David Roberti. D·Los An1etea. to the Senate noor. Beaches S till Shut Without this support, the homeowners would return to their position or voting to downzone the area for slngle- family homes instead or the Of· !ice complex and home com· blnation. s s •11 The Arnel Co., which original-. °V. ,,W-.m ewa~e p • ly planned apartments where I.' i ..., ., the omce complex would go, maintains that passage of the ' initiative would set the stage tor new court battles over what the developers claim would be spot zonine. The City CouncU has support- ed Arnel's plans for S39 apart· ments and has drawn up an argument aga1.0st the inltlaUve. It is now up to the council to hear the proposal from the horn eowncn; and developers, most likely at a special 1tudy session. The counl·il is not in a legal pos1t1on to takt· formal action on the 1•11mprnm1!>~ proposal prior 10 llw :\J,ird1 i l'lcclion, accord· 10 ~ to C1t\ Attorney Robert Ca 111 p .1),!n.1 1111\\ •'H 'I rouncil support or r<'Jl'1 t111n of the plan "ln con· <'~pt · rnuld .sf'! the stafe for the homl'ownn.s r><>~•lion in the UP· rom1n~ 1ml<' Beaches on Lido Ille, at tbe Sea~ Scout base, at the Balboa Bay Club and at Banhorc probably will remain closed until this weekend while beaJth orticers try to 1auee the eftect ot a l\llf. mUUon·eallon se.age aplll In Newport Harbor, aut.horitJ said today. The aplU occurred Sunday when a aewace main under w Coast Hiehway rupt~. • int the raw aewa1e cucadin into the r baY, through & torm drain. .. · Mike Wehner of the coanty Health Department said he took water samples from the are Monday and expecta to Ket lo· itJal result.a back Wednesday. It those results •how no COO· tamfnation, then the beaches quarantined by health ollidill will be reope!)ed. · However. he said it bas been hl• experience that spills auch"'as Sunda7'1 usually take about a week to clear up. Meanwhile, workmen con- linutd to work on tho broken line to repair the break ud aome of the undermloln1 Jt cauied bene•th the highway. Monday. ofllci•ls ot the Oranee County Sanitation ~ trJcta' eald they couJd not • u6mate the amount of 9"tace that flowed oat of the pl~ from 10:30 a.m. when tbe rupture was flrat reported to police until about 3 p. m. when sanitation workers cot the sewa1e flow diverted to anothermaln. . . -.• However, Wehner .. Id Hnlla· tion dtJtrict offlclala told bltn they e1tlmated that •bout 500,opo sallons went Into the bay durlbg the mishap. Unlike his counterparts in Little Red Riding Hood and the Three Little Pigs, this timber wolf called Sundance is a real pussycat. Raised in captivity in Miami, he's perfectly tume and even lets children pet him. Noted Navy Artist Mr. Beaumont Dies Arthur "Bcuu" Beaumont. "artist laureate" or the United States Navy, died at his home in Leisure World Monday. He was 87. A private sen tCl' for family membent will be held Wedne.'> day at Fairhaven Memorial Park, Santa Ana Friends are in· viled to a memorial service at 2 p.m. Thursday in St. George Episcopal Church, Laguna Hills Mr. Beaumont had been an of flcial artist for the Navy for 45 years. A!! a combat artist during World War II, his sketches ap- peared ln numerous newspapers and periodicals. He was the first nrtl!lt to paint scenes at the South Polo, where be lived under the ice and used alcohol to keep his oils from freezing He trained himself to paint in 30·second stints so his fingers wouldn't freeze. Mr. Beaumont painted the atomic bomb blasts at the Bikini Atoll after witncasing them and their ruinous aftermath. or the numcrou~ navlll shlps he had painted. Nr. Beaumont once said, "I've had to be as much histonan aa painter. "Remember. I've got 3.5 million critics out there -Navy men who are ready to jump down my throat If I mla a detail on a i;hip they've sailed. My paintings have to be accurate." His works hang in the White House, Library of Coneresa. Pentaaon. Naval Academy and Los Angeles Museum as well as numerous other public and private collections In 1968, Mr. Beaumont was • awarded the Meritorious Public Service Citation. the hlahest honor arnnled to a ctvlllan by lhe Navy Department. As a younJ man, Mr. Beau· mont left his nati.e ngland fOJ'I the Northwest Ter.rltorles of Canada to become cowboy.,, NOTED ARTIST DIES Arthur Beaumont, 8l ' ' haven~t t id edyet. Diedrich, 11ttioa aa a mem~ of the Oran1e CouaHy Tran1portatlon Commie Ion Monday, Insisted th t m t of the U sltea on llCAA'a llat already have befn 1lud!ed d ruled out .. by tho v1rloua players in the same." Vote Right Uplwld by High Court LANSING, Mich. tAPl -Her vote still a secret, pre·law stu dent Susan VanHattum says she 1s glad she braved the chance of a jail sentence to make a point in court Miss VaoHattum, a student at the University of Michigan, had been ordered by the Court of Ap· peals to tell how she voted in an Ann Arbor mayoral contest de· cided by a single vote. The loser contendc< 23 votes wero cast il- le1ally by non·reaidents of Ann Arbor. The :;tutc Supreme Court on :\tondny reversed the lower court decision aria ruled that a dtiten's ri~ht to a secret ballot in all elections cannot be taken away if there 1s no evidence ol fraud. 1'l'm glad that rtght pre· v1uled," Min VanHatlum said in a telephone interview. "It brings home points I already knew that it. takes time. lt's been three monthi. And it lakes a lot of money unless you have a lawyer who's willing to do it tor free. .. Jf you know what you feel is right and demand it, you'll win out. I always knew those truths, but this brings it home. I'm glad il's all over." Miu VanHaitum was represented by Jonathan Rose. who works for a branch or the c·ounty legal aid society that ttives 1>ludcnl.8 Cree help. He was a~s1stcd by four lawyers who al~o donated their time. An attorney who represented the other side in the case estimated that if Rose bad been charging a normal fee. the bill "ould have been bet'f~en $2,500 und $5,000. \tiss VanHnttum. 21. refused to say whether she voted for Dem ocral1c Mayor Albert Wheeler or his Republican ch Uengor., Lewis Belcher Belcher lost the election by on vote and asked the c1rcu1t court to find out what votes were cast by 23 people he said voted illegally because they were not Ann'Arbor residents But Mils VanHattum argued that the secrecy of a vote "is a fundamental right" and refused to tell visiting Washtenaw Coun• ty Circuit Court Judge James Kelley how she cast her ballot. Kelley held her in contempt of court. Anot~er i;tudent. Diane Lailnsky, also refused to reveal .tier vote but was not held in con· tempt. The Supreme Court's ruling· refuaed to comment on the validity Ol the election but said there w no rraua because tho 23 volei were cast accidentally by people who mistakenly had rC!gistcrCd rcsidenlb. The c e was sent back to the clrcu t court to determine the outcom(! of tho election. As Diedrich 21eroed In on JCAA ortlclals with gucstlon~1 they ad· rriltted that 11u1.11y of uie ~· tlal sites atrencty nre recognl * * * Orance County plannin1 com- mlaaioncra said Monday no en· vironmental impact report is needed before county omclm proceed with what they call safety improvements at Oran1e County Airport. Newport Beach city offlclals said ln an appeal to the com- mtasion that f atlure to require an EIR results lb "piecemeal .. approval" or what they termed oneolng expansion and airport refurblahment. They said the projects -pav· ing a road aurroundlne the airport and l>&riDI a five-acre airport ramp -are deslfned to serve increased demands on the airport. But Airport Manager Robert Bresnahan termed the improve· ments "minor things that we are doing to the airport for safety." The road project will provide * * * ;a lO·foot:·Wlde paved atrip m atbOu' }0.000 feet to permit at- c~a bysecuritY, emeraency d maintenance vehicles in all weathtt. " Bresnihan said, for example, had a crash occurred north or the runway during recent ral~ the now·unpaved road would have been inaccessible,. County oUlcia.ls said the ac- cess road ls required by Yederal Aviation Administration reguJa. lions. The other improvement proj· ect calls for paving five acres r.djacent to the aircraft parkln1 romp in front of the alrport terminal. County officials said the ex.isl· ing ramp is overcrowded arid unanfe. Th~ new ramp ~Ill Im· prove aircraft operation and eliminate jet blast on adjacent taxh,G)'s, they said. * * * NB OKs $250,000 For Airport Fight The Newport Beach City Coun· cil set aside $250,000 Monday for its flght against apy expansion of Orange County Airport. The decision came nrter eight residents, includln1 Planning Cominissioner Paul Hummel. told tbe council airport noise Is already disturbing their neighborhood~. The funds, which will reauun under the cont.rot ef the council. will bo Used to hire attorneys or. experts as necessary, The city already is >nvolved tn * * * a ch~llenie to the adequacy ot the airport's environmental Im· pact report and several proceed· ines before the PubUc Utl11Ues Commission and Civil Aeronautics Board on proposed n~w routes or expansion of atr ~ervlce. ''The COl>ls for these sen· ices have been great and will con Unue to grow u our eCfortl to protect the city from further un · v. uranted encroac.hmen by the airport are accelerated." Ci· t)' Attorney DeMiS O'Neil told the eounc.'11. * * * Airport Passengers Church Set I • For Concert • Sm-pass Two A concert or chamber music M ·11· • ) 100 featurlng the works of Boc- cherini, Brahms, Debussy cln4 Just as Oranae county Airport admlnlstratora predicted, passengers departln1 or arriv- ing at the airport topped tho two million mark Cor 1977, an 18.3 percent increase over 1978. The 1W7T statlallcs 1bowed 2.158,505 pauen1ers used the airport. an increase airport of· nciata aUiibute to runer aircraft rather than additional mehta Year-end data noted the number of air carrier fli1hts totaled 29.~ for tm, up -4.-4 per· cent from the 1976 figure of 27,983. As the airport handled more paseengers in 1977, airport park· ing lots also contained more cars, 3()5,293 vehicles In 1977. up from the 1976 figure of 300,397. In addition, air freteht. Jumped 9. 7 percent or 217.5 tons to total 2,-455 tons for 1977. Ttie statistics show~ take~ffs and landinp 1n private plane:. increased 1.3 percent durina 1917 to tOta1 592 .093 nights. Those figuro filclude what are referred to as touch and 10 flights. 'Which arc practice takeoffs aiid landings. Chopin will begin at 5 p.m. Sun~ day In lbo sanctuary of St. George's Episcopal Church hl Laguna Hills. Sponsored by Saddlebaok ·College'' Chamber m1.1st Series, tho free program will in- d ude cellist Kathleen F.ran. ceschi and pianist Steve S Vr cov1ch. Miss Pranccachi is first cetY§.l in the San Dioco Opera Orchestra und the San Die,&9 Symphony. Sivcovich is a r •: dent or Mission Viejo and a sWf ccompan11t al Saddlebaclc College, GREAT SIGHS: At tone last. there is some &ood news out of Washington for a chance. No, it doesn't have anythina to do with Prealdent Carter'• new budset. That's part of the bad news. Jn that arena, most of us are sUll bead-scratching today. tryins to fipre just bow much is one-half of one trillion dollars. Foraet about that. The good news out of the capital is that the bureaucrats back there have finally discovered something that won't kill you. You can cheer about this because clearly in recent times. the various federal offices of health. safety and welfare have found plenty of common items in our society that surely will brin~ about your early passing from the planet. THE FEDERAL PEOPLE have reported that sugar wtll do you in. On the other hand, they 'have also warned that sugar substitutes may also bring about your departure. Pederal authorities have r~­ newed their attacks upon the evil of cigarette smoking, ex cept, of course, in the federal of fices where they are trying to encourage tobacco production. Air pollution, noxious auto ex· haust fumes and und<'rarm de odorant sprays have all been al· tnrked at the federal level as threati. to end .,.·our breathing habit But now v. <.' have the good news. It com<'s to us from tht' United States Department of Agriculture THE AGGY PEOPLE haH d<'clared that the Killer Bees won't kill you What a relief. What a bright note amid all the doom and gloom In <'vent that you have not bN·n wnngmg your hands over the Killer Bees, you should know that these little devils have been breeding down in South .\meriC'a. This happened when i.ome ferocious African bees ~' <'r<' 1mportro and crossed with 1 t•guh1r honey bees in an experi· mrnt 'iomc escaped and started mult1ply1ng all O\Cr Brazil. FRIGHTENING REPORTS • liave l'OffiC out or South Amenca mdicating these mean devil bees have attacked e1hzens rn great i.w arms. stinging the haplei;s '\)Clim m wild attacks Then came tho terrible warn \bg that the Killl•r Bees are now m1grat101-: toward the United Stales in srarch of new victims 1 But now the Agriculturt Department people have told us not to v.orr\ Th<'se bees don t really sting worse than any ther bees. They may b<' 11tean<'r. but they re not stingier Al1'o. the Aggy people soothed, no K1lll•r 1Jtt5 have been seen closer than 2,500 miles from our southern border NOT TO CAST darkly upon 1-duch pleasant news but tbe Ariculture people didn't bother t~lling us how swiftly these bees might be able to cover 2,500 '"11\lles. By golly, I've seen some of our very own Yankee bees !'bat could move right along. And they're no slouches in the sllna- tn« department. either. But the Agriculture savant!IJ y we are all safe from the Uler Bees that aren't Killer ees. Fine. fl:ow I can go back to "orrying about how much ia one-half or one trillion dollars. Wilmington Group Vows To Fight RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Stunned and dlaappolnted, sup- porteu of the WilJntngton 10 have vowed to keep fightlng for the group's freedom after Gov James Hunt chose to reduce sen· tences rather than pardon the nine men still imprisoned. Hunt told a statewide television audience Monday night he believed the white woman and nine men dubbed the Wilmington 10 received a fair trial in 1972. THE MEN WERE convicted of firebombing Mike's Grocery, a white-owned store in a blaclt neighborhood of Witminaton, N.C .. during racial violence in that city in 1971. The woman was convicted on a lesser cbarae or being an accessory. But Hunt added that minimum sentences or 20 lo 25 years iJVen the men "are loo long." The woman was paroled earlier Hunt had billed the announce· ment as bis final action In the case, which brought int.ema· lional criticism from civil liberties organizations The So· \'1ct government called the case an example of human rights v1olaliona in the United States. "rM REALLY shocked that he would make all the to-do about it and then do nothina," said defense attorney James Jo'rrguson 11. Ferguson said Monday night that earlier in the day, he had filed a wrtt of habeas corpus ln federal court here, seeking a new trial arp exchanges and resume th search for P,CAce throu'b .. quiet dlptomlCJ. • A Whlte House statement i•· sued MciDd~ nl&ht Hid Carter and V ante • expl"elled hope that tho public ftthancu of r~t day• are hdw behli\d us and that •very effort Will be rnado to re- capture the •Plrit°' that pre- vailed a month~ VANCE tErO&TED to Corter at the White House on hls trip last week to the Middle East and on hlS .aorta to iet EIYPt and Israel to aaree on a declara- tion Of principles that would &OV· ern the negotiaUon of a com, prebenslve peace s~tUement. the effort was set back when Egyptian Pre.ident Anwar Sadat broke off the negollations last Wedneld"f and called the Egyptian delqation home from Jerusalem. The White House · atatement said Vance and Carter hope Sadat and llraeli Prime Minister Menahem Be1in will "turn full attention through quiet diplomacy to the substance of the ne10Uatiom." THE STATEMENT reflected the administration belief that the Middle East peace process is prone to extreme swings and that public opiJlion should not be "exceuively influenced by them.'' Earlier Monday, Vance told reporters on Capitol Hill that Israel and Egypt are "in one of those down periods one finds in any neaotiation. "l believe the parties wm pass through this period." he said. ACCORDING TO the state· ment, Vanco told Carter he believes that whUe the work of the Israell·Eayptian poHUcal comm lllee is suspended, the negotiatinf process can con· tinue, presumably in the mllltary committee. In that committee, meeting In Cairo. the two sides have been dlscussin& an Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai. But the Israeli cabinet decided Sunday to postpone sending its delegation Critics Open Attack On Carter's Budget WASIDNGTON <AP) Con~essional critics already are takina aim at President Carter's propos«t $500.2 billion spending bud1et, although rorrnal consideration of it does not begin for another week. His proposals for revising tax laws drew their share o( criticism u well The administration will have its chance to defend tbe pro- posa ts early next month when the House and Senate budget committees be&in bearlngs on the plan, the first step in pt'epar· \ng the budget Congreaa wUI enact for the fiscal year begin- ning Oct. 1. THE SENATE committee set Feb. 1 and the House committee Feb. 8 for the start ot hearln&s. Federal law requires the com- mittees to report on a tar1et fia· cal plan by Aprll 1S and for Conuesa to adoot a nlan by May 15. <ltelated story. Pace A12.) Thia plan serves as a guide for spending and revenue leaislallon until the bindilli bud1et reaolu· tlon is passed. That must be completed by Sepl. 25. The president's bud1ct pro· poaal carr~es a prospective $60.6 bilUon deficit, a little under this year's, and Rep. George H. Ma hon. D·Texas, said "the greatest risk is mflation." MABON, CHAIRMAN ot the House • A'ppropr1aUona Commit· tee, applauded Carter's an· nouoced intention of working with the private sector to reduce unemployment and promote 1rowtb, but aaid there is too lit· tie restraint on 1overnment spendin1. Mabon also said the proposed US billion tax reduct.ion may be t.oo lar1e and that some tax law revisions that would pick up revenues may be ill-advised. But House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. aaid the Democrats' first commitment ta to employ· ment, waget and a strong economy, "and we are not cotng to sacrillce those for increases In defense or any other." Melting Snow Threatem Urban Fl.oOdi,ng HI LO ~ltC ti .. .. t7 as :n a 42 " la I• -" . " ,.. ,, ,, " n n 41 " o n It ti )J 1l back to UM 111.111~ commit.tee talks lD caJro. Bt'ctn told the laraeU parlla· ment llondat tb dele1a\lon owd return to tbe C.ll'o talks lf the. EIYPtlan press Jto What he called tta antitaD cam- palan lo ··ua. nean. tew da,ya. .. CAaTEt, WllO retumed to Wuhin,toa on Mont'la1 from a weekend vacat1on ln GeorcJ~ atresaed that the United Stat.et ts prepared to rontlnue tbe ex· cban1ee With Be&ID and Sadat that Vance be1an last week. M- slstant SecretarY of tate Allred Atherton bu remained ln tho Middle East for that pu~. Administration officials con- firmed that they are conaldenn1 the sal~ ot F·5E ftj(hter planea to Egypt aa a meant of dem· onstralin«i U.S. supeort for Sadat's peace lnlUatlve. Sadat bu made repeated ap- peals for western mlUtary sup- plies to compensate for the Joss of Soviet military 1upport. He asked Vance last week for U.S. approval of his rfituHt.a for American arms to match U.S. weaPona tales to Israel .. Abortion Protested Thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators jammed Pennsvlvanla A venue In WaRhlncton. D.C., Monday after· noon, <Related story Page AH.) Trolky Crash Hurts 48 Car Rear-ends Another During Philly Rush PHILADELPIDA (AP) -A trolley car jammed with morn· ing rush-hour commutes aJammed lnto the rear of a second cu stopped at an under· cround station today, authorities said. Forty-eight people were in· ju red, apparently none seriously. Man1 of the passenger•, who were taken to hospitals in police vans and ambjlancea, com· plained of back pains, bumps and brulaes. Several had bloody noses. "People were bleeding and hollering, and there was screaming everywhere," said Ken Rich, 3S, a passenger Jn the moving car. Cathy Ruck, spokeswoman at Uni verslty of Pennsylvania Hospital where many of the in· jured were taken, said, •'As far as we know there are no serious mjuries." She said several •P· peared to have broken bones and head injuries. ( INSHORT J l..ealc E•lftla Plflat PLATTEVILLE, Colo. (AP) - A break in a cooling pipe aent radioactive helium fiowlna out of a nuclear power plant'• ven- tll1tlon system and forced a five-hour evacwaUon. The Nuclear Regulatory Com- m isalon will inspect the Fott St. Vraln plant t.od"f to try to ftnd out why the line ruptured. The evacuation Monday was a "pre· cautionary measure,'' a spokesman said Battl.e Cond11ae• BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP> Rlght-wtng Christian forces and Palestinian guerrlllaa foutht nighUon1 bat.Ues in and arqsmd a guerrilla poslUon a aalJe north of the auuuan atronahold of Marjayoun, leavtnc 10 dead and 16 wounded, some ln reportedly savase band·to-hand combat. Rilbt.lsta claimed they over· ran the PalesUnlan-beld village of Blat. But olfidala ln the south sa1d Oeeing villagers reported Blat chanced hands almost hourly in repeated attacks and countentta~. s..,..ua1'19ftd MOSCOW <AP) -The two cosmonauts aboafd tho orbiting Salyut 6 apace station have atarted tran1rerrin1 .supplies from the unmanned apace ahlp that ferried them up durina the weekend, TUJ reported today. The Soviet news agenc1 sa.id cosmonauts Yuri Romanenko and Georai Grechko also be1an preparations for refueling the apace station from the Progress 1 supply abip. Ah, the comforts of home delivery. unnnu SAN DIEGO (AP) -San I>le10 Gu & Bleetric Co. aaya t will •PP'7' for a $10Gdll1Won .rato lncrea1e b0oietln1 t1l averaae homeowntrs monthly bUI b7 S3 or$4. Io word sent to tht Calltonua Public UWlt1es OoQamlialoa, the uUUty aaid tbe hi&her rate la ~eeded to pay it.I eott increase.a throughl.979. ftrhtgFe•red · SACRAMENTO <AP) -The state health director aays be • 'eot a stet feelin1 in my ( J atoma~h"' when he learned that dru1 abuse director Josette Mondanaro had written an ob- scenity-laden letter on st•te sta- tionery -because he feared Health and Welfare Secretary II arlo Obledo wanted to fire her. Deqmlaill D&a.ter This $125,000 home in Tam Valley, Marin County, broke l~e from its steep, rain· soaked perch Monday and slid down the hillside to total destruction. The house 'began slipping a week ago, according to .owners Bill and Ann Welch. County of· .. -. ,, ·t··· . AltWl ....... ficials found the cause of the slippage was a faulty underground drain put in when the 200-bome subdivision was built in 1969. No other homes on the hillside are known to face stmilar problem. But, Dr. Jeroaie Lackner told a state Personnel Board bearing conslderin& Dr. Mondanaro's dl1ml11a1 appeal Monday, he was forced to •tin the dismls.saJ letter because Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. finally ordered the flrin1. Nudity Denied License BUl Appro,,~d SACRAMENTO (AP) - A biU making available Interest-Cree loans for solar collector installa· tion.s on dwelllnp damaged i.n disasters bu been aiped by Gov. EdmW\d Brown Jr. High ~ourt Refuses 'First Amendment' Plea The measure will affect only disa1ten after July 1, 1977 - such u the Santa Barbara fire -and eUgibllity will end Dec. 31, 1980. The loans could not ex· ceed $2,000 per dwellinf. .. Bealtla Hazard LOS ANGELES CAP > CalifornJa physicians have been ' advised not to prescribe a Joni· acting, injectable hormone drug called Depo-Provera ea a COD· tracepUve because authorities , HY it ii a heaU.b huard. '58,000 Needed W ASIDNGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court has again refused to hear a challenge to the con· sUtuUonality ot a Californla law denym, liquor licenses to nightclubs which feature nude danci.n1. The justices Monday let stand a federal ap- pea ls court ruling that upheld the revocaUon ot the license of a San Diego club owner who contended the nude dancmg at b1s club wu protected by the First Amendment. ' THE CASE WAS one of nearly a dozen such cases to be refused review since October. ln each case, the bars featuring nude dancers were denied a stale license to sell alcohol and raised the con· stitutional issue of state interference in freedom or expression. The Supreme Court, since lta U72 declslon called California v. Larue, hu 1usi.tned the con· sUtutionality ot California's niulat.lom ln re1ard to nude dancln1. Ciiy to Rebuild· . Pat Nixon Home? CERRITOS (AP)-Pat Nlxon'1 cblldbood home la ln ashes, but the city's mem0?7 ot ber will • remaln Intact. •'The worst that could happen ls that it (the two. acre alte) will alwaya remaiJi Pat Nixon Park without the bulldinJ," ---··· _..__ ___ _ Aaslatant City Manager the public to help defray Jim Bowenox aald Mon-the eaitmated •.ooo or day. ''The best ia that mort in rec!OMtructlon the buUdiq will be re· costs tr the city decides THE IATEST controversy already WU denied review once -last OcL 17. The appeal bad been made by Paul A. Richter, owner of a San Dieco Diibtclub. tM Body Shop. Richter last August Jost In b.ls appeal to the 9th U .s. Circuit Court ol Appeala, and belore that loet in a federal trial court on cla!ma tbe state's rev· ocatlon of hls liquor Ucense was an uncon1t!tu· tiooal infringement of hi~ First Amendment rtebta. lllCJfl'ER'S APPEAL said the club offers "in· terpretive jazz dances .•. conslsUng of rhythmic body movements accompanied by popular muslc which presents the nude human body ln an artful, artlstlc, expreaslve and non-obscene manner." The Body Shop lost It.I liquor license in 1V16. arter state offlclala determined the nude entertain· ment wu obscene and violated apecJ.fic state re1ulatloaa. DAILY .... OT . lrioome Tax Cuts Killed I SACRAMENTO (AP> -A $1.1 bUUoo property tax reUef blU h• advanced to the Senate fioor but am ure provid11ll $8SO miWon fn tncom tU cuts has been ldUtd. The Senate Finance Committee vot f..S Monday to approve a bill by Sen. Peter Behr, R·TtbW'on, that Ou.ld cut property taxes, 1Jl part by sharply ralahll the homeowner property tu txemp-tion. . But the aame commlttee dealt a deadly •·7 vote to &Jl income tax rebate propoeal, SB U83 by Sen. George DeukmeJlan. ll· wo'11d dJfcourare voter• from backlnt the Jarvis property tu lnlUatlV•. Loni Beach. The Jarvil lnlUative, to ~ on the June ballot, would llmit property taxes to one percent ol market value, which some say would cripple local 1ovemment by taltlDI away $l bllllon Jn re· venu • THE IUU WOVLD ortlbially have provided a $1.7 bUJfon In- come tax cut, with lndl~ldual tax payers recelvin1 between $100 and $250. JPi ~ G But the committee exprased ; e ;ves fear that the bill mitht force a &I &I future tax hike so it cut that al· location 1n half -then voted. ' D h down the bUL nesearc BEHa'S BILL would· raiJe tho homeowner's property tu cz. empUon from $7,000 to 82 per. E ...... ; •n Pay cent of hls home's valat or I U&1• C' . $200,000, wblchever ts lower. It would alao . provide $300 million to f'°° mtWon 1n renter relief, require the state to u. 1ume the bomeownen' abare of certain welfare costa, and place revenue lirnita Oil local 1ovem· ment. TO BELJI! MAKE up for tho revenue loss, the bill would place a 20 percent 1urchar1e on homeownen' Income taxes, 8Dd estabUlh a five percent properb" tranater tax on the 1a1e of owner~ homes. AccordiDc to Behr'• flfal'l9t a famllT earnmc tu.ooo with a $40,000 bome would hav• lta tu· es cut by US1 ~ when the 20 percent IUl'Char&e la ~ lido account. BtJT TBB ~GU.BS do not take into account the impact lt the famll)"Ud to pay a five per. cent transter tax. Behr said the bill would benefit most homeowners, partlcularJy thole who remain in their homes a lone time. DOtJG GIWES, a lo'bbyist ror the California Auoclatlon ot Realtors, complained that the bill would d1acriminate aialmt penou who had to 111ove tr.. quentb'. He Nld he doubt4ICl lt . 1'1RESNO CAP)-A'fter watching her husband wute away and die of leukemia. Alma Maraoslan decided to donate her eotlre 1971 salary to cancer re-search. It means atvtnc up $8,000 to $10,000 ln paycheCu and Uvin.r on t•08 a month from her hu1band'1 retirement. A dau1hter llvlna at bome while att.endlnl collqe receives Social Security survlvor'• benefit.. ~·~v• UFESTYLB 111o1nr to cban1e con1lderably," Mrs. Mar1oclan A)'I ... We worked aU our lives to reach a time wbeza we could enjoy thlngt. Then Ed'• 1l1Dea came and brouabt that to a abrupt end." If r1. Mar101lan'a commit· ment d eloped from watcblnc .. the fUtllity of my husband's ef- forts" over 2~ years to comt>.t the spread o( leukemia witb chemotherapy. EDWARD MAftGO~A~ a sheriff's lieutenant who died lut May, was "an extremely strq,nc man," she saya. "But from tbe moment treatment beaan, it wu aa. downhill. Jt juat seems )'OU cannot lntroduce Poison into the body .:.. wblch chemotheri:u II -wltbout somethtog to d the bod ... • c o n • tr u ct e d w tt b to rebuild. The buildlna cban1es to make It con· was insured !~ $26,000. form to current bull~ he a aald. standards." So far, a fraternity at Cerrlto1 Colle1e in THE FOR D first Norw•lk has YOIUD• lady, born In Ely, teered 40 laborers io Nevada, lived hs the helpwithtbework. eight-room farmhouse --------- from a1e 2 until 1be . • • • • • • • • • • • ~ married Rlcbai'd Nixon. • On Jan. JJ, the house, • Wblch bad been UJM U lit' a recreatioll center and it am all museum lD th1.I • Los Aftleles aubu.rb, wu It autted bJ bomemade ! .firebombs, authorit1u ~ aald. • KAILUA BROWN JORDAN PATIO FURNtiURE SALE TAMIAMI ,.. TWO 811111Aa tncl· • dentt, which caused Ut-: tle dam.,e, occurrtd in 1875. No arrf.ltl ba'H : been mad in any of tho ............... _.H;;:E;;:;;;R~B:==i ftf•·bom!Qp. * 8owereox 1at4 be1u.o • FRIEDLANDE 1*t1 camn~ from ., IMPORTS • ISMAKJNG • GBEATDEALS ·-~~!!!!~~ Reg. Now DtnJng Arm Chair $110.00 $ 85.00 ~Chair lS0.00 99.-00 OttOman 74.00 59.00 OCcaslonalTable 98.00 79.00 42• ROUnd DlnlngTable 199.00 159.00 Umbrtll8/Ahiriilnum/VIDJ,4ori 198.00 155.00 Umtnlla Stand 6~00 49.00 '95.00 • 79.00 175.00 131.00 66.00 65.00 94.00 72.00 89.00 69.00 ' t: I I Save now on easy I fitting polyester Sale sa Reg. *10. Begin ihe new year with a lot of fashion eawy and aavJnoa. Claseic double knit PolYelter pull· on pants with ltltched front crease. The perfect Wll'f to atart layering all the eu~ look:8. And they're proporUOnect mtaeea• elzee, petite, average nd tatt. . pants. i f . . Pf&ltY .Poly.est~r • I ' • .,,... pant ·lops. Sale 6..99 Reg. '10411. Cl'ioosefrem pretty~ prtnts or &Olfdt In thae '1 O<>•k " polyester pant fOps that are as practlcal as they are pretty. Misses.' sizes 8-18. They come tn many styles -all of them f emf nine. Alf are polyeater/ cotton with factt trim. Done In i>aatela with anger sleeves eraetlc bOttoms, ehf rred walata and other favorJte atylea. Flower bouquets for yOur bath. Special 1·.88 ro.!i Flower bouquets create ' p~nel ' effect on cotton/polyester sheared velour towels. Also tn coordlnattng sollda; yellow, bltife, bone, pink. Hand towel; Specl811.31 Wash cloth; 8peclall8; • Large enortment of deoonltor plllon lets you ptck and choose plueh velveteen fabrlC8, exotic prln1a, Indian naturals and more. Perfect for apatklng up a drab room, filling In an empty room, ddlng extra comfort to any kind of room. Put them jn the den, bed or llvlng room. At this gre.f price you may aa well get eome fo.r all YoUr rooms. Quii1tftlle llmhld. A great yarn! Special 66~ .... Knit warm afghans and more front 41'>1Y acrylic knitting yam ln handY pull1kelna. Machine washable, dryable, ahrlnk·realatant 3.5 oz. aketn. DAIL.YPU.OT Al' • - I Youth DeteDtion • Bill Should Be Fair Orange County parents ahouldn't ra1ard the county's ~ juvenile ·institutions as dump:r...:ott rroundi where they l cab aurrender troubled and autded children at tax- payers' expense. But neither should cowity officials surprise families with unexpected and unreasonable bills for the care ot de- tained youngsters. County supervisors took steps in the rlgbt direction last week when they decided to try setting an average stan· dard rate that could apply to all seven county juvenile in- sUtutions. The standard fee, if ruled legal by County Counsel Adrian Kuyper, could replace a rate now calculated in-· stitution-by-institution which varies from $26 to $91 a day. Supervisors also asked that the new rates be calculat- ed as though institutions were nearly full 10 parents wouldn't be charged for what in some cases might be inef- ficient operation due to periodlc overstaffing. . . CoWlty officials say fewer than 20 percent of fa!"lihes pay the charges anyway since payments are based upon a family's ability to pay. In many cases having a youngster detained in an in· stitution is traumatic all by itself. Bllls charged for tbat de· tention should be reasonable and parents should be told at the outset what kind of fee they can expect to pay. . . . The Language ·Barriei;- For many generations, immigrants arriving in the United States felt the most immediate task for the poten- tial wage-earners in the family, and especially for the children, was to acquire a working knowledge of English. With admirable dedication, they set about conquering this last barrier to freedom, and were proud o( the fact tbat their youn~sters soon spoke like "real Americans." Now the tide has turned. At a very large cost -some $50 million in state and federal funds in California alone -the drive to educate children in the language of their parents, whatever it may be, is under way. Inspired by a 1974 U.S. Supreme Court decision having to do with Chinese-speaking children in San Francisco schools, the state Legislature passed the Bilingual· Bicultural Education Act of 1976, an incredible document which places upon all the state's public schools the burden of identifying, dassifying and providing special instruc- tion tor students who speak limited English. The bill. AB 1329. does not content itself with special efforts to help these children learn English, though this is jncludcd. It requires that school districts train and provide both teachers and teacher aides who are fluent in the primary ·language of the Umited-English-speaking pupils and also are f amlliar with the cultural heritage of such pupils. There is no argument against encouraging cblldren of other languages and cultures to r~ their mother tongue. This has been done on a community basis by many iJDmigrant groups over the years in special classes funded by interested parents. And there is undoubtedly an ar1UJ11ent in favor of pro- viding temporary bilingual insttticUon for older children who should not be deprived of an education while they are learning EnJllsh. . . But the state measure provides priority in funding for • children in lower school grades, starting with kinder· garten an age when the acquisition ofa new language is easiest and when the emphasis on learning English should be made. • And one is impelled to wonder how some school dis· -.,. trlcts can possibly implement the law -for example Irvine, which has identified more than 60 lanauages itpoken at home by stuaettts. • This appears to be a cosUy an{I unwieJay program (!which, in the long run, may pnly further segregate non· English·speakinf: students and delay tbelr entry into the society and work force ot their new land. • ODlnlons expressed fn the space above are thOH of the Dally Piiot. • 'other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and 11ts. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. llox 1560, Costa Me!a, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Wives • Mideast Peace DreamFadm.g WASHINGTON -actlt one month before EfyptlW\ Prell· dent AD\\'U' Sada caltoo h1I en· voys baclc to Cairo to bait peace talks with larael, tbe warnlnl that !allure loomed wu 10undeCl during Ianell Prime Ml.D.later Menahem Be1ta•a vl1lt to Waahinctoo-· The wamine took tblJ form: an extremely clever and lar1ely successful political ploy by Beein dur- ing bis Dec. 16 flying trip here to show that be had won Prut· dent Carter's ~otal' support for the laraeli reaponse to Sadat. That set off alarm bells that the President muted tn bopea ~ an lnten·eninf miracle. His hope: that the old millta.nt ZlonlJt Meoabem Begin, acbJev· int power late• la life, bad become a crwader for peace. Events 1lnce then 1u11est th.at, whether because of domestic politics. lnflexibllity or ulterior motive, be is the same old Bc&in. After long talks with Mr. Carter a month ago, Begin ad- dressed bis Parliament Dec. 28 In that speech, be referred to the American leaders "who praised our peace plan as fair, as con· stntctive, as a breakthrt>uah." He claimed the "JJ)aulve moral support" of the administration and · conarenlonal Jead.,-a ln both parties. . MR. CARTER was pressed hard by Begµl to give Justaucb a glorious -though Ullrt.u.tlc -• appraisal of Begin's peace plan. The Presidertt wisely refused. Instead, deeply disappointed by what Begin was otferlng Sadat, Mr. Carter actually &ave the lowest possible response he could conceive; Bee in 's plan was a "constructive" 1tatt for negotiations. The State Depart· ment later paned word to its diplomats tbat the Israeli offer reapondfng to Sadat's courageous trip to Jeruaalem should be deecribed aa ... good betlnniil&.'. lt ts bard to believe but the pollttclan1 stlll haven't UD· deratood the meua1e sent loud and clear by the mor ... than oae million voten who 1tped the petition placing the JarVla in· inttlative on the June.ballot. Oh, they are ninnlnc acared all'rtght. Governor Jerry Brown, in calling a special 1es11oD of the Legtetature on property tax relief, said he wanta a bill on bis desk by Jan. 27 to meet the deadUnt for placinl an op. positioo proposal on that ballot. Legtalators responded tiy In· troducm1 a new ruh of tu relief bllJL Colnbl.Ded, the1 contalD au of the 1chemes which resw~ In t.U:• reform dtorta boaaln1 doWD 0 lastyeer. • Fri1ht.ened Uiouab tb y arc the~ have yet to eompr hend t.be momtm.wn bChlnd Jam25 •• 'J'bey ju t on't beline the :lnlti :v ~mpa • ernlni coalttlon. Sai1eatln1 Slaai conquered by Israel in even modeat conce11Jon1 to 196'1. Such a alap in Sadat'• face Sadat loet Beatn hi• lons·tlme was perceived by them 11 a political lntlmatt, Shmuel ic.ta. Hlcul.i ted humiliation of-Sadat. and •fcrificed support from tbe other officials felt It also meant · fanaUcal rdleloua croup called Beein feaHCI to perauad rua Gush Emunlm and 1osne re· country to ac«P' the klDd of Ua!oua facUona in the parlla· peace Sadat ottettd, and de· ment. . llberately cOurted failure. Nevertheless. U.S. omcllls)'e-This view was 1tttnllbened 'cently started womhl1 that when Becin delivered hl1 ln- Beein wu mini these potential-sen.sit.Ive toast at the Jan. 17 ly serious cracks 1n bla political· atate dinner in Jerusalem for the aWance as a pretext for lnex· • .'EtJPtlan peace delegation. It cuaable ne,otlati.Dt ~Uona. was the second tim. Be,ln bad used a formal IOcial occasion to · SOME OFFICIALS here were compare the Paleatine Libera- ao1ei'ed bf Beatn'a bard atate-tion Ortanizatioo (entirely cut ment.early thJa week that l•ael. outof t.he~t talka) to .. Nazi would never yield on Jewub~ murderers ... It seemed de- "aeUlemema•• -actually aood· Uberately inteod&d to affront the alzed towns -ln the EQpt.laa. Etyptians. ·: Such laneua1e added to 1row· lng aipals that Belin wu court-inl failure In the moat bopefUl peace op_portunity ever offered since the blrtb Of Juael. An earUer sip WU Beain'• ln- 111tence on calllnc the West Bank ol Paleatme by th blbllcal DI.met •'Se.maria aDd Judea"- thereby clalmlnt its bbtorical llnJt to Israel -in wrtttns the aienda for the .Tenasatesa falki .• Only a threat by Mr. Carter to boycott the talks brouaht Becin around, permiltin& an acenda to be inscribed. FOa SADAT, the Jerusalem bteakup bolds unknown dan1ers • ot aw-.ome dimenslon. But for Becin 1t po5es at least a allm pqaibWlJC Uiat tho SO.year Jove • affair bet'ft'een the U.S. and Israel will aoon enter a •llCbt coolln1 period. That dan_aer mllht llve aophlstlcated Jewish Jeader1 and pro-Israeli pollt1- chu11 here a chance to penuado Ml rebnbUl'Mmcnt by the atate of l'OVemJel JOll by property UX reductions but demanW more atate·ftnatteed local· apendlnc m th form Of JMW and expanded public boulln1 protrama. He ha.an•t tumbled to ono of the un·· derlytog causes of the houa.m, 1borta1es. tho high property taxes. • Bealn tttat Sadat's diplomatic demands do not carry auch fearsome dangers for Israel's security. . ,. , Rep Clem Zablocki of Wisconaln, wbo as chairman of the House International Rela-tions Committee bu never cSe. vialed from lupport for Israel. confided to an laraell official ln Jerualem th.la week: ••11raea bH not yet responded to Sadat." Now, tor the Ume beln& at leut. tbere ii notblq left to ~ to. ( I • ........... Mtt«>RtTY LEADER Robert C. Byrd Adjournment Opening Item WASHlNGTON <AP} The 95th Congress has returned to town rested and raring to tackle the great issues that face the nation. Minutes after the Senate convened the great issue being discussed was how early Congress might rullsh for the year. Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd had just finJ.sbed reviewing the record of the first year or the 9Sth Congress and giving members a pre- view or what would be up the second half of the session. SEN. HOWARD H. BAKER, R-Tenn .• the minority leader, got to his feet to say he thoupt the session would be "issue oriented. We see OD our agenda a number or items which will create controversy and ~trong divisions." And then Haker noted that 1978 1s election year in which he, among others, is up for re·election. ··1 would ask the majority leader if he would ~ivc us any insight he has on this first day of the !'econd session about what he sees in prospect for an adJoummt>nt," said Baker. "I WOUl,D ONLY SAY, .. the majority leader replied, "that I hope the Congress could complete Jls work and allow a reasonable time before the election for members to concentrate their atten- tion on mcettn~ the people." That was nil right as far as It went, but Baker ·then commented that, if the time grows too close to elf'ction duy, "the minority leader may adjourn. "The re1-1t or the Senate will continue no doubt effccl1vcly \\tlhout him," he added. 2 Administration Officials N aDied SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. EdmUnd Brown Jr. has naml-d two current adminl.stralion otnct&Ja to head new state departments. Thl' J.tovernor appointed Rita Saenz as director of \he D<'partmcnt of Alcohol and Drug Abuse and \farton Woods as director or the Department df Social Sc-rv1ces on Monday. Ms. Sa€'nz, 28, Is the director of lbe Office of Alcoholism. and Woods, .C6, heads the Department of Ben<'f1t Paymcnu. Both are Democrats. Their upi}omtments, which require Senate COD· ft rm atton, take effect July l. Th<' new departments were created by Jeglala· lion pasi;cd last year which divided the Depart- ment or Health into six entitles. Brown aJso appointed Richard Rios, 35, of San Jose, as director oC the state Office of Economic Opportunity. Rios l" executive director of Economic and Social Opportunities Inc. SACRAMENTO CAP) -,..,o state lawmakers bave Pl"Cll*led eoostruetton Of three eta.at dams • tho FAI River. th• bJic ol CaUtornJ•'• remalninc lree-nowtoi •'lvfJd riven.•• • Tho $3.8 bl1Uoa Dian UDVeiled Monday by Sen. WlWam Campbell, R·lladenda Hel1bt1, aod A11embJ1man Daniel Beatwrtlbt, J>.Concord, also \WUld in- C!lude two dams on Caebe CneJr and OQe on Stony Creek ln Nortbe?Q Clllforola. IF ADOPl'ED 8Y THE Califomla Le1t.latuN -a bt• queaUoa in view of Ute Brown edmlalltritton•11uppmt for a rinJ »lan -tbe meuure would 10 ca RCA ColorTrak 25" •eooir.•t . RCA COLOmAI 25" clfag. TABLE MODEL the Nonmber ballot for voter approval of a. $3.1 billlon bond lasue. The plan alao envisions constn1ct.1n1 three tunnel1, eacb H to 17 feet lo diameter and tot.allnc '8\'f mi.lea, to connect the reservolrt wlth the exlst.ln1 water eyrtem eervtn1 tho San Francileo Bay area, San Joaquin Valloy and Soutbem California. Tbe plao wu preHnted •• an alternative to Go•. Edmund Brown Jr.'1 M.t bllll• water propoea,!, wb!cb t. deslinfid 8round the Peripheral Canal in the s.ctamemo.san Joaquin Delta. TBB CA•PBELL-BOATW&IGRT plan would not provide for c:cmtructloo of the canal. Instead. q1stiD( ch the Delta would be sect to~ wa tbe San Lat1 Rei nolr and C•lllonila Aqueduct. Cam~· ll 1alcl h1I J>)IJ\ :would unlf)' COJDPi' fadlou fiabtin• OV the Brown p an because lt would mean more f::£y. But 1t would also reopen tbo fl t won five )'eatt .eio by environ to outlaw dam. on the l!leL "You wUl bear a lot ot ~ erlUc1 ot thJa bW, wbo will say lt Is •· vlron111eatallJ damac;lq,'" Boatwrt;ht tald. can M2· 1111. "'' • , .. worn to Wottt few u • LOW, LOW PllCE 'c:::::::;~ WASH RCA COLORTRAI CONSOLE G.E. REFRl&ERATOR llG FREEZER NO DEFROSTING 43 cu ft. fr-Two ke N Eo,1 trays. ,,_ --ch. F-o,, (~ ~~eqt1b.n NOW ONLY s41r 'DRYER PAIR SAVE SSO!! . ... MCCOIMIC« MOITUAlfH Laa\Jna Beach •.49~9•1& Laguna Hiiis 748-0933 San Juan <:aplstrano .C9S·1178 ORANGE COUNTY J OBITUARIES Jury Clears Jail Activist ' _._..; ................ 1 ...... ... .. 'Senate Panel Urges Le WASHINGTON <AP) -A nate p nel th t foe ted an r um li,t ilb the American edic l AsM>claUon and meJor OQd Industry sroup la atick[Q& o lll dv1ce that consumert can essen their chances of 1ettin1 Iller dlseues by changlns their lets. The Committee on NutriUon eleated the ucond edition of lts tart 1tudy, "Dietary Goals for he United Stales.·• on Monday. 1kln1 only minor chanaes rom the earlier report issued a ·~ar aao. TBE&E HAD BEEN specula· ion amon1 critics of the 1m re· rt that the committee would itbdr w aom or ill dieW>' re- ommendaUons. but the major lementa of that report remain tact, 11 ri -,editlon chan ed tbtl'Co ''decrease conaumpllon of nimal fat." This ould alJow for consumption of lean meats. but not. sucb foods as the \hick, Juicy steak. THE &£PORT SAID that cancer, heart dlseast. diabetes ond hypertension are associated with the rich American diet. Committee Chairman Geor1e McGovern, a Democrat trom the beef-producing state of South Dakota. endorsed the aecond edlUon despite some mllaivtnss from some other com mlttee members. Howev , t broadest attack came lrom the AMA, which saJd that ch inc American eatin1 habits micht l d fo ecooom.lc dlsloc Uon. "ln1ufflclent evld nee eidst.s at tbl1 Ume to support the need for or the benefit from major than es ln the national diet as pr~1ed," the AMA aaid. THE MEDICAL association· aid the,TelaUoDshlp between diet and deaths from heart dis- ea e ii. " ugeestlve, fra1men· tary and even contlictlna." The link1 between diet. and cancer ot the colon and b~ t cancer are "very tenuous," It aaid. And It said th r• i no proof "aalt COil ump on 111 a maJ factor caus- ing hypertension," AT 8ADDLE8ACK Oray Panther .Kuhn The new version aeain recom- ends that Americans decrease onaumption of processed su1· rs, e111 and alt. It 1u11ests ubstituting skim milk for whole McGovern , the 1972 Democratlc preaidentlal can· didate. said in a for rd to the new edition that the rtcommen· daUon1 are "based on current 1clentinc evidence and provide guidance for mulne personal . decisions about one's diet." He aald the 124-page report offers "nutrition knowttace with which Americans can betln to take responsibility for maintaininc their tiealth and reducln1 their risk of Ulness.'' Tr.easurer Ricked Ilk and increasin& consump- SAN FRANCISCO (AP.) -Herbert Gordoa, a11oclate treasurer of the Univ•ntty of Callfoma re1ent•. wlll be P1"9moted to trouurer July 1. the wilvenity aatd. on of fruits, veaetables and bole arruna. The most important chanae ame in a recommendation to ecrease consumplton of meat. a proposal that brought heavy rltic1sm from cattle producers. IN M>DrnON TO cattle pro- ducers. the first report was criticized by egg producers, SUi· ar lntereata and the canning and dairy industries. Gordon, 41, was with tbe Bank of America for 11 years befc>re joinlnr UC tn 1970. Owaley Hammond, chief manager or the universlty11 biWon· dollar pension and endowment fullds for the last 15 year$, la retlr· ln1 as treasurer in July. The Job pays _.,,000 a year. Gtdde Delp• Ba11df~appftl s...,, DEAR READERS: Accent on lnlormatJon, Inc:., a nonprofit organization tbat provides publlcaUon1 and «>'her aervlcee &o pbylleally bu· dlcapped IAdlvlduals, haa sent AYS lDformaUon about Its new book, "The lt78 Bu)'er•a Gulde.0 It llat.a products and devlcea for &he dltabled from more Ulan fOO sources. and lt destined to help disabled person• and rebabUUaUoa pro· feaalonals find out what procluell are OD tlle market and where to 1et them. The nlde contains 41 categories, such u automobile controla. eating, marriage and family, travel and tourln1, etc. It also includes a c:omprebenslve U1t of pubUc:atlom and or1anlaatlona of Interest to clll· abled penioas. The $10 postpaid book caa be requested from: Aeceat Special Publlcatloaa. Bos 711, Bloom· lnfton, W. 11701. lnformaUo OD other pabllc1Uon1 will be free apon request. Tl•~ f..lalt tor Baeldrtfl o.t1 DEAR PAT: I am thinking about Joining a health club. IC I sign the contract, bow long do I have to chanae my mmd and cancel. J .J., Spn Clemente Current law proyldea for a three-day coolln1 ofr period for dance hullo fflltraeb and door-to. door aal . After tbal time, eucellaUon of bealUl studio C'OIJtract.a are allowed y ba casea el tbe customer'• deatll or dlaabl.Hty. Proposed legl!!latlon (AB 737 -Lockyer> would ~rmlt a c:ustomtr to cancel a health studio contract up to 45 days after recelvtn1 a copy of tile contract. All money paid would be refunded extept the amount necessal')' to cover sen1c:ea received prtor to cancellation. If a customer caacelled after 45 days he could receive a refund Cmlnu1 payment for 1ervtce1 received), but the bealtb 1tQdlo would be entitled to 10 percent of Ute unpaid balaac:es. Save 50°Al High fashion designer comforters Our poofy, quilted comforters don't jUst add warmth, they add beauty, too. EaCh one Js designed by a talented artist and H's sure to make your private wortd even lovtier. Come see our collection toctay. All polyester/ cotton with polyester filling. Twin comforter. Originally $50, 24.99 Full oomf orter. Orlgf nal!Y $70, 34.99 Kltlg comforter. Originally $90, -«.99 In Bedroom Accessones Selected lzes, styles and cotors. Gray Pantlwr Head Speaks at College craft• exhlblta and entettaln· ment. • The day will begln al lO a.m. witb format cu.monies mark· lnJ the opemn1 ot the umpua' Emeritus Center on the lower camput Bulldint M quad. Mlsa Kuhn'• l p.m. addreaa ln the new nne Art.I Theatre ;nu follow • luneb on ea.mpu for partl~fpat.lnl aeniorl. The septua1enarlan orcanlJed the Gray Panthers movement when she faced mandatory re· Urement. at ace U. She travels more than 100,000 mllea • year ii cblef spe>kesperson for th~ na· A rec~UOll vttll follow the Emeritus l>ay J>roc~am. Further WormaUcm about the r.rograni la available from call· n1 Robin Leftwich ln the col· lege'• community aervice1 otnce at Nl-78\.3 'A.I T . Move to Oust CIA Director~· Denied DETROIT lAP) ~ Tbe White House 11 t.eylog to aae Adm. • Stansfield TW1l out or b1s job as beacl of tbe Cen~al Intelligence A1ency, accord.int to the Detroit Newt. Tbe NeM, quotin1 unldentltled aources, said ldooday that Preai· dent Carter's neUonal securtty adviHr, Zbl&n.lew Brzezlnakl, la lead· HEWSeasion Lighkned . With Levity WASIDNGTON (APl -A re· mark by HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr. about sex educa· tion added a touch or levity to the serious buainesa of federal budcet mektnf. At a briefinl on the proposed budcet of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, CaWano was uked whether the eovemmeot could require sex education In schools. Califano replied that he has no power to decide whether sex education is taught, but he added, "Jn the schools my sons went to, I fouaht hard to have a sex education proaram in· troduced.'' .. UNFORTUNATELY, IT was too late for them," said Califano, drawing bursts of laughter from several hundred reporters. HEW employees und lobbyists at the briefing. Califano. turning red. hastened to add, .. What I meant by that was lhcv were loo old, according to the experts, by the lime the program was in· troduced to really get the max· imum benefit of it." Califano's three children at· tend parochial schools. His 50ns a re 1n high school and a daughter 1s in ~econd grade. inc the eft'ort to remove Turner and that Secretary or State Cyrus R. Vance tacltly ls sup- porting the effort. Asked about the report, White House Press Secretary Jody Powell vehemently denied that Turner was belnc ousted. ''There's no truth in that," he said. ANOTHERadmioistralion source, who asked not to be named, said Wh.iteHou.seofficiala were "completely dlscounUna" the report. He pointed out that Carter was to sien a reorcaniia· ti on directive today that enhances Turner's authority. Carter, a classmate of Turner at the Naval Academy, was ea1d to be lookinf ror a face·aaving solution that would avoid his having to conced9 thal he made a mistake in appointine Turner, the News said. The News' sources said Turner is willing to leave for an assignment as chief or naval operations, the top Navy post, or us chairman or the Joint Chiefs or Staff THE SOURCES SAID the pres· ident is considering turntni over control of the CIA in fact to its new deputy director, Frank C. Carlucci, whale permittin1 Turner to stay aboard &lli direc· tor in name only Turner 1s known to have aroused widespread dissatiatac· tion in CIA ranks, particularly for his abrupt dismissal of many \'eteran agents on the grounds they were no longer needed. -~.-.,..,..... CIA DIRECTOR Stansfield Turner Farmen Use OldTechni~ By 1be Associated Press For days, hundreds of farmers were on Capitol Hill lobbying for higher price sup- ports for their crops. They but tonholed everyone they thoueht might be a member of Congress or rongre..,sional starr aide Two farmers were chatting on an elevator about the technique and one 1.ummed it up by say· ang , "It's 1uat like the chicken pu lier sa1cl: Grab any leg you SC(' '' Big Bucks Budget One-half Trillion Boggles Mind By Theo ANi.odaled Press President Carter's budaet 1n · troduces a nt>w term to the mind· boggling lexicon of government spending. Ile 1s asking for more than one·half trillion dollars One trillion dollars has 12 ieros It looks like this: $1 ,000,000,000,000. Carter's budgt>t, not so impreasive by comparison, looks like this: 5500,174,000,000. That is big bucks. IF YOU PUT THAT much money in a hne of dollar bills end on end, at would stretch around Ute earth more than 1,800 times. It would reach to the moon and back 250 tames. . Weather Site Wilh that much money. you could make. every man. woman and cblld in Atlanta a millionaire, or you could buy everybody in Minnesota a SI U,000 top.of·the·line Rolla· Royce Cam argue. Oosure Slated In Long Beach WASHING TON CAP 1 The Na· tional Weather Service will close 19 weather stations by Sept. 30, 1978, to trim $1.7 million from its bud1ct for fiscal l!r79, a spokesman s1tid. Included are statlon1 in Loni Beach o.nd stockton. Spokesman Richard Hultgren said the 58 persona affec~d by the closine would be offered equivalent Po*llions in other weather 1tattons. He aaid people m preas affected by the closures ..,ould still be able to make local phone uUa to obtain a pre·reCClC'ded weather forecast. Hallgren :;aid several of the sta· tions w re on~pt'.r on poits and two· thirdR opcrnted "Ii s than 24 boun a day. • The closlli resulted from the uro· base bUdgcUn procedure 1nsliluted under the current dmlnlat.t Uon, Hallgren srud Carter's budget would have pro· vided $6.50 to every human being who has lived and died in the past 600.000 years. It would 1ive everyone in the world now S12Q. IT IS 10 TIMES the 1976 sales of General Motors, the world's laraest manufacturing company. It is more than the tax receipts ln 1970 of Australia, Austria, Be)alum. Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy. Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand and West Germany -combii'ied. CONCORD, N.H. CA~i - After yean of flghtin1 financial · problems, bad pubUclty and con· servatives, Franconia Colle&e, an avant·earde school bom ln the tumultous 19609, closed Mon· day with hardly any wamina. "We beard rumora Saturday and dldn't get orltclal noUce W\· tll Sunday;• said Pat Grady, 22, an art. major from SayvUle, N. Y .. who haa been attending the tiny collecein Franconia, N.H. "TODAY t•M TRYING to deal with it .•. I'm burtln1." ahe said . She had expecledtbe sprint semester to begin on schedule Wednesday. -But from th• time the school set up ln in a former White . . . NEIDA LA~?: &..w&:9fll'" • Divorce • Bankruptcy • Cnminal • Wiiia-Probate • Incorporation • AccldenHnJury • Eviction 640.-2507 \.1 H" CONSULTATION·S10 . ' NATIONAL CIMty ...... _.,,.,.... BARCELONA HILLS THIRD GRADERS PRACTICE Vlollnlata K8rln Vargo, left, Kathy Carriker DAH.Y l'Jl.QT AJ3 aury Finils Duty Pleasaat By JULES LOH ........ C.illJIA1 1'1* HACKENSACK, N.J. -Jury duty. 1D tbe view of some wbQ have 1uivlved the tedium to tell about tt, hu about as many re- deemtng rirtues u the manee. .. You're about to have a two- w ek paid vacation • "Tllo pay ain't too &ood, I ad· mit. But my jokea aln 't worth tDOr-t than five bucks a day." It i• the fll'St alp tbat Jury duty Dllght not be tedium after all. ' To alt for endless hours wait· Inc to be called, to be called and then rejected, for what reuon worthy counsel aayeth not, to re· tum and wall some more, to do thl1"'4ay after day for a ·fortnight; bu reduced many a R£ JS A DROLL llttl~ civic-minded citizen to the creature, $8, stocky, a~ut .J-mumbles. root-9, With a larte bead ana a constant lri,n. He is bent 1UpUf MQ1UJger KeeJNI 'em~~ WhiJ.e Waiting to Be Called . ( ..4MEBIC4. . J the room turns to warmth. bar- riers betw atranaen breU down, convenatton be1lna. "Wby, I don't think ol th1s job u work. I Jove it. "l'VE SEEN people 10 upticJit anC! walka with • cane. His face thtt when they finally 1et is always upturned and aa brt1bt picked on a jury they're ready to as a sunburst. · "IN TBE H MONTHS l' hang somebody," aald Lou Rug· Just when the boredom be1ins been here I've seen romance giero. "Me, I like happy jurors. to weigh heavily, wheQ. the •• 1 LIKE TO make jury: d..... blossom ri ht In th1I room. I've If you were in court, wouldn't 1·urors, for •vample, .... ,,·0 to ob· .. ~ seen lifetime frtendahl-m.Se. l h j '" ~ uc pleasant, and I beUeve I do," be -t you wan a appy ury. serve that there are in Room 328 said . .:•At least SO people in Some 1 wbo :were here alx Lou .Rucliero la the redeem· exactly 311 cellinc paneli, 15 .every irout>-thisunoexa•sera· months atilt meet .once a ing virtue of jury duty in Beraen light flxtuk'es, aeven windows ·tion~e up w~en it"s over and month for lunch and always County, N.J. . •. out abufllea Lou Ru11lero. beg me to let tbem -:stay a third come by to see me. i.~-week." .. .. He ls the jury manaaer, the He steps to the mlcropnuoe .. I dOQ't mind aayln' ao.1 Uk• man in charge of keeping track and unloads a · new batch of tbat. l like belnC liked.'• or, and preserviDJ the sanity of. jokes. 'He keeps them in a rue Tbouth he probably should the 350oraopotentialjuron who drawer alone with various 1a1 have been a protesalonal It 11 alto a tact tbat Lou Rut· dutifully respond to a summons item• that squirt, or buz1. that 1reeter, or • poUtlclan, Lou Ktero can't 10 to the arocery twice a month to Room 328, the sort of thing. · Ru11lero waa a Cbnltable for 18 store, or a restaurant. annrbere Central Jury Room, ta the Some minutes later be will re· years before arthritis forced in the county where crowd• Beraen County Courthouse. He him to give it up. He la not 1atber, 1'lthout people eoJDini ia their shepherd. He faithfully ~fl.~ar: b1a l!ming ls remark•· sorry. up to uk ndtedly if be remem· aeea that they shall not want. In the atmosphere that he. bera them from jury daty. . ..DON'T LOOK so sad,'• be .. ANYBODY WANT TO play , c.reates. the orl,UW chilliness ln Happy jurort every one. welcomes each new group, ~~~--~~~---:~--::::::==:::::::::;::::::==============::;::====----m-im.11111!1 .. _. .. =-=::::- HOME OWNERS , Mm·ic Fill.s Capo Schoo& A DISCOVER COASr MUSIC DISCOVER 1HE JVKISIC IN YOO ~Sl.a~Aal:slol­ end jult etQ.t fMf'j nuloll hllNrltft IRlwri llO .. ~err • . Program Benefits Elementary Student COtlst.MUSIC RABIITTINS. , ...... ., By ANNE COOPER Of .. .,..,., ~ ltMf tt will be years before the re- s ult s are in, but so me Capistrano Unified School Dis· trlct teacheu are bett1n1 children who 10 throuab their proeram wlll arow up loving music. Second fl'aders are atud)'inl keyboard 1nstrwnents in many of Caplstrat\o Unified 'a 1' elementary school&. THIRD GRADERS play violin.I, fourth graders flute. and clarinets, and fifth aradera braaa instruments. By sixth grade, tbe youn1 muslclana are able to ronn their own school or- cbestr* This beayy saturation oC music ls a big change In a burry for Capistrano arn uhoola. Thirteen years aao these schools had no music pl'()1ram at all, said Truman Benedict, retfrint deputy superintendent. "I tblnk it's safe to say that our music program is one or the best -ii not the best -in the atate." he said. Teachers, administrators. parents and student.a ln the dis· trlct appear to agree that most oI the credit for the program belongs to Cyril Gallick, dlatrlct music coordinator until bl.a re· llremeQ1 lut year. HIS su~a. AusUn Buf- fum~ bas pied.led to carry on the program Gallfck establlabed, in- cluding instrumental training for all student.. The first semester of each scb.ool year children lD 1radts tAfh thiOugla five are )Matwed in playing instruments. ~Not all schools in the dlatrlct l>rOvide keyboard training for second graders.) "WE HAVE A STOCK FROM •ACM TO ROCK .. COSTA,..,_, -~ G ....... 643.ZSSI • '460Z71 l'OOlfTAlrt VIUE/, ......_. TllMft._ ... ..,flllA,.16>'1» Ttie lehool dietitct provides ttl4NAltoalLVD. both lnltructJon aDd the lnstru· COITAMmA ments for cblldreo to play at this 541.5554 initial stage. :========~..:::::=::::::;:::::==::=====:::::;;:::;:::::::;:::::=======~~ AT 11lE END OF the first semester, cblldren can opt for more intensive trainln& on tbe io1trument1 they have been playins. lnstructlon is still pro- vlded by the district, but st~· dents are encouraeed to rent tbelr own instrument&. A chUd whO shows ablllt.1 and contlnuinl interest ln playing an instrument often takes private leasona after the first )'.ear of school training, wblle continu- in1 to play with schOol mates as well. BUffum said the district's cen· tral &,oal or edqc.atlnf ever)' school ch ld iR.'r lnstusneQtal mu le does pot ditute the quality of the music program, saying stu- dents have done ell in regional and tatecompeti\ion. Ma]eltlc Lake T~ Is a year 'round pla,'ground Ilk• none other In the wortd. Here YoU con akl challenglno 1lopes. step Into nlghtl ftlled with gllt· terfng entertainment ••. or aln1:>tv bt8athe the rncxl'fOln olr and watch the seasons change. ira all within easy reach when you toke on tor TCll"IOe on ~ Cotlfomla. ·---· We'r eosvto1dke. '"IT~tJSED TO BE very, very rare for us to find anyone in their early 201. Not any more," says Don Schwartz of tbe Volunteers of America. "You gotta be wonderln1," be eaya, piJlnln~ Widely. "I met th1s lady lut ntpt and now 1he'1 in jail. I don't th1nk I should. Just throw her 1tu(f away." 'BHll .....,.. llere ~ wears ••• ..-•• ~ •etitallfl ret•rflefl e•IW~ 4lllt IH!e•me •I t•e •••z~. I get ••, ............. ,, ... --"The median ase has dropped rrom about 55 seven or eight years ago Into the bisb 30s now.•' There are bumed·out alcoholics. abuaen of many dru11 -any drug. There are vacanl-eyed psychiatric ~ ,. patient.a and there are angry youna •'THOSE THAT GOT addicted AS RE T~ he sbltts his weight there or devel~ 1ertoua problems n~rvouslf trom foot to loot. "I know atterw.ai'ds had, ill fact, been abUslng you can amen the Wine on my breath, ctru11 beCC>N they sot into the war." in an, bUt I'm~• &oodbye to that. At the VOA. Scbwarta theorties, I aot a job .... preaatn1 clothes ln. ''Durtu tbe Vietnam War. there waa the Bronx-$200 a week." a areat deal ot narcotJca available. Other1 bave liven up. They~ Then afterwards, tbo men weN un. lt. and ~'ll NY Jt. On a Bowery der a strain. -tryt01 to readJult, ftnd alcohol treat.meat ward, a If~ a atrt,rpta job-U he't tiaYiQ~bed man wbO appears to be ill bJ.a ~ ts. luck, thole pressures 1omeo.mea curled Oil bll aldo atop a diaheveled. force a man to turn to drlnk." • men who have no skills and no job. LIKE MOST OF the Bowery'a real· aentl, this young man cannot explain why be came there. As he talks, he keeps hJs eyes down. They do not aeem to focus. bed. But liateD to Ed Geffner, dh'ectGr "Been down here seven 1ean. of tbe 1(1nhattc Bowerr Project, an since I wai 30. No OPe bothers you alcohol tteatment. proaram: much here. l used to teach mentally retarded cbild.ren; quit because ot · "TllE YOVNGEB EN we see the booze. I &et by. panbandlln1." have bistOries limllar to the older '1Jya -they juat:Jot ~here more He has been in the Bowery one month. His home, l)e says, is in Bakersfield. Jlis family, he asserts, is "very wealthy." He bas no place to sleep. He b tall, thin. A threadbare tray A STATE SENATE Tut Force qulck.JT. Gerierallf th y don't have found that In ms, 25 percent ol the mu~h educaUon, 11.xtli or anentb men who~ al tho Men'• Sbelte1' •rade, and tbere waa a aerloua were under 30, en Increase or more alcobOJ Problem in thelrt ... At Saddlehaek TV Leaming Series Slated Saddleback College'a Leaming Via Television series will offer seven home study cour a on local :.tallons thts spring Scheduled to aJr over local commercial and educaUonal television stations are Dimensions in Culture, The Home Gardener. The Loni Search: Religions of the World, Bl.story of Mexico, Search: A Quest for Penonal Meaninl, Maldnl It Count and Personal flnance and Money ManaaemenL Students who enroll only 1n ~o televillon courses pay the health service1 fee of $5 requli'ecl of students wbo attend clu1e1 CICl campus. No fea are required except for the pvchaae of tenboota available in the colle1e lM>oUtore. The boob are to supplement televiaJoa eoune • work and aid students Jn preparing formldterm and final examinations. which are ad.mbdltei'ed at the college. Registration in!ormation and schedulea for the programs may be obtained from the Leamln1 VJa Television office at 831·9700 Qr~. exten.slon ~3. or the admission.a office at 831·2NO Ol' '95·1000. Abortion Fighters Vow Fund Blocks , 18 2FarmBill Facing Fight SACRAMENTO (AP.) -lllvu bllb to presttVe fann land bave IUrvived close committee votes but are aded for what iniaht be enn atUfer re-liltance. AB 1900 b1 Assemblyman Victor Calvo, »-Mountain VJew, cleared the 21·member A11embly Waya net Means Committee on a 1%_. vcq ?don. day after crtUca missed by <me vote ol adding an amendment that may baye been !ataL It went to the Aaacmbb' floor. SB 193 by Sen. Georee Zenovtcb. D· Fresno, was sent to the Senate f1oOr on a 7·5 vote Of the Senate Finance Com· mlttee -thO bare m1Dl.mum needed forpuaa1e. .... --U•MC. •MC.. \ "lllft•1 '"' 0 H Dttt•linld l:mlM :iall061nf is .0qlOQl 10 Yi ................. Iii ... IDE: OAKLAND <AP> -'l'herC! wu UtU Joy in Snn FranclSc.o aild Denver t(jday after Oakl nd A's owner Qiarles 0. Finley truck out lri bis bid t.o ai!ll the once mlgbty b ball club to oilman rvinDavis. Davi. wlthdiew Monday a $12 million orter t.o purchase the A'a and move them t.o Denver. He aald he balked because of a lawsuit by tho Oakland Collaeum to teep ·Finley from bOWIQc out of a lO·year lease. A disappointed Finley aaid he would be forced to keep the A's Goal Weren't WitllMe, He Tells Press PEBB~ BEACH CAP> A watnlnt to America's touring golr pr01: Watch out, fellers Tom Watson is on another ram· page. He's woa twice In three starts. And If that's not strooe enoulh. try this: He says he isn't even playinJ verf well yet. He hopes to get hit game sorted out in tile next two or three weeka. ''It's kind of hot and cold," ho sald after a playoff victory Mon- day over Ben Crenshaw ln the rain-delayed Bing Crosby Na· tlonal Pro-Am. "The club doesn't feel as iood in my hands as it did last year. I've still aot some pro- blems." llls start la even better than last yew. In 12 rounds he's I~ or shared the lead seven times. More importantly, he led or shared the lead on two last rounds. Th ls one was a tic, at 280, elght urtder par, at the end of the re1- ulatlon 72 boles. Watson had a chance to win lt outriebt on that final bole but lipped out a 12-foot birdie putt that would have won it. "Tho aodl weren't with me," ' he aaid. He tapped in for a 69 and headed into the playoff with the man they've com• to call Gentle Ben. Crenshaw had 1ained a spot in the playotf With a five·under· par 81 in the lut round. Both pari'ed the flrst playoff hole. On the aecoftd, the tough, 218-yard lar•three 17th at the 8,115·yar Pebble Beath Golf Links, Wats:on hit to tbe frmt of the rrecn and Crenshaw burted It. in a t>uDJter. Ben made b01ey from there -hla llrat of the sun· ny. windy day-and Watson two- putted from 70 feet for victory, hollnc a f oo~·foot putt. * * * UCI,LOyola Clash Tonight . ·- I . Giants m Oakland -at Jea1t for now. In Son Franeiaco. Mayor G org Moscone and Gl-nts ~resident Robert Lurie 1lumly prcliicted the baseball bom bsh ll meant the battle tor fic.'klc Bay area baseball fanJ would drag on. San Francisco and Oa~l ntl have suffered lauina atten· dance since Finley moved hi5 team out rrom~ansas City prior to the l9G8 ea.son. Finley con· ceded MOPday the area is too mall tor two teams. "Two teams can't survive," . -· -. .. .,, .... t DAA.;Y PILOT DAILY PtLOT Th• Junior' Rou Bowl ••Poll orahlp .1ltu1Uon 1tlll ha not been ~ved, but ftsurea to ht Within the Atilt month. aays Hant lvtl, who coordinated mucb at tM acUvtty durlna tho p_ut two JRBI lot the lpOftlOf· l.n• LA Ttmee. ... there bH bten DO de- rmlnaUon yet, .. 1ay1 Jvea, • ."but lt doesn't look very promls- lDf. They haven't bal~ced the books yet <on the Dec. to 11me), but-it'• going to loee money~· RB •n bad to have at leut 20.~ In attendance to break n, but only drew 15,56t. ~· 'We filured , alnce mOlt Of the !I JCa pled1ed to sell 200 j:iJ(eta each, we would be 1oln1 u wlth an advance aale or 7,500, '1t. many Of th<>le schools didn't ..eeU anythln1," aaya Ives. : .. ' lvea ls hopeful someone else .. lb •Ponaor the same if the toes backl out. But be l.sn't tly opUmiaUc. ... J "'':°Golden West Collete'• Tem ormfea wu reentted by about • ,;:achoo1a before deeldlDI te ~lay rootball ••id 11aaoa at ~@lorado state tJnlvertJt)'. Formica -.ad narrowe4 UM list to ColoradD S&a&e, VSC u4 the t1atver11t1 ol Mlnaeaota, d1oos· I'll CSU became die aeltool of· fe"d veterinary medicine, the fl~ld be someday hopes to enter. "That's what made me proud," said Formica'• dad, Tom, Sr., "he based hla dec:laton oo;· education. Had be picked l!$C he would laave a..ea tohtl "7Jl>"i a degree be really dJdA't ~t." • -l"ormlc:a WH contac:&ed by all ot the Pac:lOc:-8 1ebool1, all of the ea&era Atllletlc CHfereaee 1c:llool1 ud foar or nve Bl•·•• WIHnlliel. • Aad cme daJ last week, with 1J$C coach .Jeba aoblDMD ltt· .. Una la Illa Uvlq room, Forllllc:a, a •1·5. Ht·poaad ofleaalve ... Ua.-ea. rentved a call from a Baker, Kauaa lllllvtnf&y foot· -a'1) coac•. • •tt &old the coac:b Tom waa ~~¥'1 talldJl1 to aoblllloa ... re1at. 'id'Jl'ormlc:a, Sr., aad tbt Baker '"¥tr.ell IJIS'Wered. •yM med tbe ··aoblDIOD at tJSC, wow!'. Tiie c:aOer qulc:kl1 •llbed Formica llack and buDI ap. -* * * Cougars Defense Bert Fenenga (34) and Mike Dunivin (52> of the Capistrano Valley Hign Cougars surrounded Irvine High's Bryan Joyce in Austin Rally Wins L4 Tourney Opener Popov ts the flnt player ever drafted by the pro eoccer circuit from Golden West. He scored both 1pal1 in a 2· l victory for Golden West In the Califorllla st.ate Junior colleae soccer c:harnploruhlpa this ye•r 114lnat El C&mino. CM; Uni~ Dolphins At Bonte ' . Hm 1EJ.;1. Reeom By OWARD L. UAM>Y Of ... ....., Pllolll IUH Gary Bohay 1• IDON In his natural element tbll aea.aOo a wrestler Ulan he was • y ar aio when he won the CIF 1CJS.~ title for Fountain Valley's Utle- wtnnins team. Anl he is el\joyiDI th cam- pal1n much more because ht doean 't have to worry about tak:· • tn1 ort pounds to meet the welaht restriction. Alter winning the 123-pouDd division at the Five Counties wrutlln1 tournament last weelteoCI, Boha>' bad improvid bll teuonll reeord to 18-1. Lat year he finished 32·2, loilnJ lD the aemift.Dals ot the state meet to a wrell!er be bad def .. ted in the Five Counties a!f air, l-0. ff ftDlabed third ln t.M at.ate at OI pounds. Whl1e wresUln• ls hLa f avorlte at the moment, be aaya that Id• alltaiances can switch once the aeaaon la ended and he becom Fountain Valley's top 1ymnut. •·1 guess l like the •Port that la In season better than any otheta," he aaya. Last summer Bobay was a member ot an MU t.eam that traveled to Denmark foi three match ea. "I went to Mtch11all for an Olympic tryout camp,0 be aays. about two h<>ura tO tbe extra welchtoff.0 I~ CYfMutlpa be Performs In tbree evenu-paralltl , floor exerdae and vaultinc. A• a fruhman be pl~ d Ji • ball, then decided lie was 't growlnt that fast and turned io hli two current sports. ·•1 wanteehomethlna w a Uttle 1uy could ncell," b ex· plains. How does coach John Rosales 5CH Bohlly! "His attcn11,h lies ln tho faet he ts very coachabJe, lntClllgent and extrem b' lleXJble. Be\na tbe top varsity 'ymnast ln school helps blm. "Once be is delej\ed by an. op. ~eat. he dOes much better the second time. He b the b1Uty to com~at for bll mlsiakes and rectify them. ''He 11 a top colleae ~ and naht now he has a~tonese style. I think he ean make it at a major untvenuty in wre&tllOI a rre$hman." With a 3.7 grade point avera1e and the ability to compete on :the varalty level ln two aportl for three years <four in, nm· nastlca), un1venilty coachet Will be beatin1 a path to hls dOOl' to recruit the youn1 Fountai11 Valley wresUer·1ymnast. "I learoed a lot ot new moves in tbe week I was tbere. Bat moet Rustlers of the other cur• were ln col~e and that helped a lot." Alter tM ... 1n 11icb• an. T SMCe th team flew to Germ&nY. , thcD est h•d a 17·hour bul ride to J)(m. • muk. c G d ••1 pµt an some dltbt. vp to SANTA ltONJ A-oJ en 138 pOqn4s because tliey eat a lot· \\'eat CoU ge, virtually lhnlript• or potatoes and have some very • e~ from ehamplonahlp ~on· nice bakeries over there. But it s1deraUon. \ties to 1tay 1n ~ didn't matter. They would tention for a pc>st,-aeasoa playolf match us with another wrestler berth tQnighl when t~e JlusUen about our 1lJe. One 1ruy 1 take on Santa Monica Colle1e, WTesUed was 3S years old.Ii here. at 7 : 30 ln Southern How d1'1 the constant baWe Califo~ta Conference baaket. with wel1ht affect h1m last bacll ac onb · Dl ... St 1 '"II , year? oac c.. r c.. n • "I got tired very easUY and 1 Rustlers have dropped three waa ditty some of tbe ttme," he SoCal aamoa In a row and are says. "But my famlly really now ln fifth place wlih a 2·3 re· cooperated and helped me a tot. cord. GWC mu.at flnfah fifth or At tho slate meet, J was six better to &•In the conference pounds over lbe niaht before my playoffs lnvolJin1 the second first mat.ch and had to run for throuah nftb place team1. Sant.a Monica lJ aparlted by U MoDarclla, L V:G' Face~enta ' ater Del Wlb Olanta Ana> trJH to cUmb back into tbe Angelus Leatue balltetball nee tonl1ht with a 1:30 came qa.Lost St. Paul Hl&b' of Santa Fe Sprlnp ln th Mat« t>et gym. Liberty Chri.IUan HlO of Hun· tln1t0n Beach tatea to the road for a beketball clash wit.b Vlc· tor Villey Christian tont1ht in Vlctorvme. Tbe Chrlatlan Lea1ue same ii achedUltd tor a '1 o'ctoa Upoff. : = if "' • • • " • if I .. Matt Jordan. Golden Welt ton· · tlnues to get top play Crom 1uard Harold Cbambllaa. a 1o0c:t· out· 1lde 1bc><Ur, and leadln• aeorer Todd Zirbel. * * .......... ~ • .. fl • Mt .. 2' '" tJ 21 ... 2! ~ 2: ,, tO • ,, 1' .. " .. u 20 ,. • s • 1 " ,. . tO II n ' " ta " . I • Soccer Report •OURTM aacs -eo Y!lrdS., .,._. ............ C111ml ... ~ '2,100 Tl11yl1• cw .... , .... , .• , .. .._ ""' ltWO ... uo T~CltkMltl._.., 1 '° Tl--21.JS .'i Ser~ -Atlltle Nlwf. w.nt • C11111ce, *II • MIMI, C11te ,,.. ......., "'""aAC9--~,.,­..cn ...... a.....,~ ..... Qulcn.i a.I• IP'MI-) 22.ot 1UO '1.)o o.rr.•1 IUcMt (0-..W) 1.tltl J .. ....... Joflft(Hett) .... T lllM -f1.t2 Al10 ret1 -Gl•a!Mtvt, Tollle ...... 1'..it • Klllfr T•, V-lndlM, f1V11erot1, 0,.... Te.O..llfl kretcllH -C.Wrlor c.fl. F.tlloM o.. o._., Asten111 61 •IC.eta f.411k ... 0. .. & 1 .. euno•,,.._.,,. .. .,... llXTN •At• -!JO Ylrcb. 3 ., .. , eldS & up, SC.-tw .i1-ance, Pvrs.' '4,200 Oree 11 CTrNr.ure) 6.40 1 60 1.20 MicMl9llt Speed (Qllll J olO 2.10 I'm Gonne Go (Ward) 1 20 Tlme -31114 Alto t...-wlld Olerry. 8rancly1 t:H\"1 Felly, l'i"'9 P.ss ~rtldled -~. a.tlbtt s•vunH RAC• -JSO Yerdt J yur 01111. Allow1n«, F• fllllu. PllrM ~.200 BlrOIUmlt • Clerd) ll» uo .... 1HO 7.20 ... Cemytlortll <Calll D11t1tlute CJllc !Herl) llm•-"·" Al .. ,.,. -Telt a.ctr, 81n1y kid, ltu Joy, E~ The l'Mrl, Tll•'*· lne ol Glory ScrllcMd-INtyCM U l:u ct• 7·81rd1 """'" & I • c. ... ,...,.,,. ....... llOHTH RACE -400 Orel•. J ye.tr Old$ & ... AllOWMU. P\l<M '7,SOO Tu•-Junct- (l'A<iliMI 19 ... I olO U O Ooc'1 E•Pf'ftr caroeu1t1c11 1' 60 • 20 ICl""•S-11141tdl 400 Tlmt-11" Al .. r~ -Je>t ewt S.m, .. II• Tu, Al•• Alibi, Go WI-.,,, Think Mollty, Prl11cu1 Tidy Too, Soutn.,n C..nll•mtn S<ra1<11ed-OneF1,.o.v NINTH ltACI! -Jjj r•r<ls '., •• , 01d1 " u11. Clelnwng. Fo-11111• tnd mar ... Pun. l',JOO c.11 Mt Martlle <••l'dl s 10 •.oo a.oo MIU Oo LIQM (l'.U11MI •UO 4 40 1'0lld Al\llel (O'e'Otf) ~tO Tlme-1t 77 Al .. rtn -.....,. • Go, L.ar11 Doo, Lffrlll, r .. t Bow, SlftMlll ff l'ec>9a 5<ralclled -Cntme ll«MI, ll•U 0.nclftO Glrl, Lad\"• fled Trll'litt, A!M'lltnt Chic " ... <,. 6-Cell Me ~ & .. Miit 0. utllt, .......... Allt,..,_.-) i27 ''Convert Your Van" Show Seethe nifty customb:ed vans here at Huntington Center, Thurs thru Sun, Jan 29 More than •dozen parlk::lpetlng dealers Join In with the lat"t conversion Ideas and aecel80f'les. Pr8Mnted by Meea Spec111t1es 1n the mall -Beach & Edinger at the San Diego Fr.way, H.B. Ride the BIG WAVE coming to Southern ca Jfomia from the beach in Orange County. ·'>-V at the crest of your FM radio dial • fo''""'' K APX San Clemente. All to the accompaniment of the refreshing ounds of the sea!~ _.....,.. 108 81tREO PVBUC NOTICE ¥ .... ........... .,......... .. ,. . . ......... . . ' ~·· .. -. ........ T • 1 -------- ----- Al' ........ 'WIND FARMS' MAY ANSWER STATE ENERGY NEEDS MUI• Could Provide 1 O Percent Electrtclty by 1995 SACRAMENTO CAP> - Call!ornla, whtcb uses huce amouotl ol eoer11 to push water from wet plac to dry ones, 11 thtnkln& about usl.nJ th• wind as one of the piilln pu1fter&. The state Water Resources D•partment, whose many purnp1 make it one of the state'• lar1est electricity usen, wants several small wtndmUla operat- Jnc In the next year or ao. s•y• Ronald Roble, the Department director. IF THEY wou. be SlY•· bis department could by the ~ be usin1 wtndmUla to . provide the electrlclty the state now buys to push Northem California water down the state and 4,000 feet ovrr the Tehachapi Moun· taln1 to Loa A.nieles. . "We need more enern for the state Water Project to operate our pumps .... W, would lik"e to aet sources near the aqueducts that don't use fossil fuels,.. be said. Water Reaourcea bas to buy 75 percent ol the electricity it uses; the rest it generates itself when the water cucadet down tbo Tehachapi.I. THE 1175 COST wu $20 million, but when the state loses its preferred power rates when present contracts run out, the power blll is expected to rise to $300 milllon a year. said Ed Terhaar, the department'• energy director. The plan tor windmills to pump water is only one of state 1overnment'1 efforts in wind power, an energy aource u old and as picturesque as tbe Netherlands' crealdnc wooden wlndmUls but one often lsnored in the 1970. ru1h tor eneray altemaUvcs. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has· uked the LegiJlature to give -Credit Costs Come Due At Same Rates, Interest Payments Vary BJ LOlJISE COOK ._... ""'-Wrtw Consumers who did their Christmas shopping with credit cards are beginnlnl to aet the bills, and some may find themselves paying more than they expected. · You bave to shop juat u carefully for credit u you do for the items you buy with lt. Such things as tb,e type of cbarae card you use and the way in which the hinder calculates Interest can affect how much YoU pay. .. BE WARY OF ADVERTISEMENTS (or "free" credit. The bank cards are "free" only lf you pay your bUl ln full every month. And the 10· catted travel and entertainment cards like American Express and Diners Club cbarae an an· nual membership fee. Credit purchases have become a way of life in the United States. Industry offlclall estimate that there were more than one billion credit card tranaactlOM in 1977, more than double the number five yean earlier. They also aay that ' . ) five out or every seven ( CONSUMER Amorlcans who are eligi-_ ble for a card have one. At the start ol the flnal quarter of Jut year, consumen owed more than $207 bllllon ln inatallment debt. That worka out to almost Sl,000 for every man, woman and child. There are two baste types or credit. With tloaed-end credll, • specific amount ot money ls borrowed for and repaid in a specific tlme period. Cat loam are a common uample of cloced-end credit. OPEN·END C EDIT, ALSO callecl revolYlnl er d1t, ls inore complicated. You cu pay yout bill at once « you can spread out the payments. U you pay at once, there II no interest char1e; if you diooa to "rcvOlve," as J.De»t custom l'I do. you p • t,y. ~tpJ Home Loan 1::':=-wrt: Ford, ·'royota Eye "Vehicle ReCall8 hlm $10 million to St~ mUUon over nve ytan to pay for wlnd· electrlclty 1enerator1. That amount t1 part ol bls r~u '250 million Enern Develop- ment Fund to boo&t alt rnatlve ener&Y proj~tl. Pic'ttde8que 01.d Windmills May Brighten &ate'a Futilt:e "WIND POWE TODAY ap. pears to be cheaper over SO yura per ldlowatt hour than coal, oll or nucl at," Wilson Clark, the 1ovcmor'1 enera ad- visor, ~ "Construction COila are aboUt tho amt, but there are no fucl costs over tho llf e Of the plant; cptus no racUoacUvo waste or strip mlnes." The state Enerty Commb on hu prectlctcd that by 1995 "wtnd farms," or 1rouping1 of a total of a,ooo am t windmills, could well predictable and Call!omia bu pi't\dictablo weattier." Wlnd power talk is a comblna· tlon of hlstor:r and modern technology. .. Perhaps part of the re· •i•lftnce to Wind energy a1 a vla- bl ltematlve for the 11oar term ts with tho hlstorleal Im or l)rlmltlve_ Q,ld-f as)ilcmed de- vices Which were used to grind. rain or pump wat r, •• the Ener'y CommiSsion report said. TUE VNrl'F.D STATES b d a lar1e wlnd rnacbine eeocralln& ~ be provtdlnl up to 10 percent of e1ectrlcity at. Grandpa'• Knob, the electrlclty uUlltles provlde Vt .. durlnaWorld WarU, butsl'lut for homes and bulln sea. it down because it could not com- Jloble•a oUlco ta1ued a "Wlnd pete with then·inexpeUlve oU and fn California" report thls month. natural1u. The report surnmarlaea wind The Netherlands, w,hleh measurements at more than ~ pumPed water 'from one level to· Callfornla places. another wllh buudreda of windmUJa, also switched after ALL THOSE looking lpto wlnd the war to electrical pumps. agree that California has plenty But Europe, tA>o, b con tder· of it. inf a return to the traditional "There are three aeneral windmlll. one ustna all the areas for ~d an~ California tecbnolou that has C:teveloped has all three, Robin Reynolm. sincetbedayaoU,hewoodenlhoe. deputy Water Resources dltec· · tor, aald at a recent press brief· I CLARK SAID BIS office, lo its inc. Thole are couta, mountain search for practical wind slopes and h1lb plalns. machines, looked at several One ol the state's wlndy places European models. En1lneer is Pacheco ~us near the Water Marshal Merriam of Unlvenlty Project'• San Luia Dam in the of California, writms in Raln state'• centet. Water Resources magazine, describes a 150·foot- haa beiun an iec>1ooO computer tall windmill wltb blades of study to ftnd the oest place for fiberglass and plastic foam in itl llnt-M.nd.nilll. Denmark. .. ONB MISCONCBPTION is A 200-Jcilowatt Americanized Uiat wlrid .not predictable," version of another Danhb said Mat GID01ar, co·author of windmill is providlng half of the the Enero COrnmiaslon'..s wind electricity for the illand of Cut· energy rePort. ..Wind ts talrly tyhunk' off Massachusetts. ut tho on California ll f nterested In la a 1 0-IUW.ttt wlndmlll that bas •'-" ~n1 1tnce last May at Lake, Waah. Jta dn loper, Charles &hacllle, •lY• a ao kilow tt model, whic~ Waler R sources would Ilk , ould ~oat S•OO,OP.O hillltlly aacl $250,000 when bi or&lucUbn. SCHACK.LE'S WINDMILL la a brl1ht yellow and While p ot m chinery 80 f tall aembllng a clant alrpl pell r aboul to take or1; Althouan the Jederal Ene:rv Departm t baa alloeated tts smallest research allotmen~ S3I> million thia year, to~ wind power, it I.I tho alternate ~ source that could come flnt because ft has 'IO few probl HYI Glnoaar of the state 1:'n.-v Com mission. The federal Enera ~ .. ment hu run a 100-kUowatt tx• perlmental wtndmUl .noai San· dusky, Obto, llnce lt'JS and ls thlnldn& of aeveral mQJet one probably in Callrom.la, PROBABLE SITES ARR Point Arena or the San <forpto Pats near Palm Sprlna.. which had 18.6 mph average windS dur· inc nlne months endinl Auiust 1977, accordin1 to a federal tudy. The San Goraonlo Pan is a1ao .the place where Souttiern California EdlioD II thlftkiDg ol puttin1 wind turblnee to cenerate at least 100 mecawatts · of power between 1918 end 1111, the Energy Comnilliloa report , Hid. •"fbe wind ls tree, .. polnta oUt Brown'• adYlsor Clark. ••t wouldn't be aurpriMd lf rou'.U be aeeina some purple or oranse or yellow colored machines bum· mlne away atone freeways ta the next few years." DOWNS Ult °" Pct. s -1 OH 10 , ... -~ tu t -\ja "·' t -v. "·' t -\lo U.t !~& -"" I ft .. 7 -\< •. 1 • -"" u 7¥1 -.... '·' ... -" ... , .. -~ ... ~-"' u -"' u _, ti -"" -"' -" 1.1 flt -.... '·' , .... -+it , .. lPlo _, ... 31'> -It .. , ~ -... .., -"" •·' t -·~ .., , -~ .., - ... AT nr SA £Tl £, TllB Social Seculity tu rate on incomes h n In "Plretsd too. 11\ family will pay $1,071 in Socfal Security taus tbll year on a ••re base of St?,700. By 1182, 1f pny 1ncreeset tllte thla famll,y to the S3I .800 incozno bracket, the Social ~l,y tn Ill be S2.211. Thia ls a ~greulve tax -hjUJnt' aJl Income btack in a similar w-.y -tO~a.red to the proa lvo income tax. But the result ts tb -aame. A8 incom m , Ute Security tu: nses, A third answer I• that moct people uso fat more services than ever before and thoy cost mOl'e. AND nNALLV, ALTBOVGlf llUCR tnore subtle, is the factor ol ever-expandln1 upiraUons, conUnual uparad- ing in demands. The luxurlea ot yen.rday are th nece$alUes of today. Most people have beCorne atcUJtomed to yearly Increases ln their budfeta. Whatever form th upgradini takes, the general rise n asplratlou ta undenJa. bfe. And sudden retreats usually are no more tbq tem-porary. These then are four reasons many people feel o "broke" at a time when they're eamJ.n1 the hJghe$t pay or their U 'lea . .,, J speak for mlJllona as well 11 for my1~1r. l suspect. when l admit tb tan hon t look at tbe way l live ~Qes\S tbat if t ever 10 bnlke, l'll 1u.re.1J be IO~ broke tit Q)'le! •i SoTTW Blue Ckips .. Finally Recover [r'1i- tl•t JR, 0 ,. ,, u ' .. . -..... -....... ,,.. ..... -, .. AT n ME nM •THE Social Secllrity tu rate on Incomes has n in up\relld too. The family will pay $1 ,071 in Social Security taxes thla year on a wage baae of. $17,700. By 1182, tf pay lncreesee take thla family to lhe $31 .800 income bracket, the Social Securtty tax wall be $2,271. Tbla 1 a re1resslve tax -hit~ all income brackets ln a sf mUar way -co~a...S to the proaruslve Income tax. Bm the result la the aame. Al income rllea, the Sod SecUrity tu nsu. , A third answer ls that most people use far moro services than ever bcCore a.net they cosl more. AND nNALLY, ALTBOVGH MUCH more 1ubue. Is the Cactor or ever-expand! nt 11Pltatiom, COfttJnual uperad· ing in demands. The luxuries of yesterday are the- neceiSiUea of today. Most people bave become accustomed to yearly Increases in their budget.I. Whatever form th upgrading takes, the general rise In atplraUons la undenla· ble. And 8UddJ?n rel?eat.s usually are no more tb n tem· porary. These then are four reasons many poople feel ao "broke" at a time when they're eamJna lbe hlthest pay of their lives . ..,, 1 speak for millions u well 11 for myself, I au pect. when I admit that an honest look at the way 1 Uvo uqesta that if I ever £0 brote, I'll 5uttl' be lq lbrok in st,ylet •. ! I Some Blue Cliips .. (2nre.. "*', l1J HAl'PY 04Ye M rJon'a Mi.owtngt" WIMoft Marion feer9 lflt la lotlnp Howard lo • )'Olll)Oet' WOCl'IMI ( &IUI °'*1Q), • trtnflOn'na hlf ... lnlOI~ and """' "" ~ hOIM ln10 • IOlll9 ,,_ '"!The~ ... l ~M.O OAAOL IUllHITT AHO .MOW! ,..~ ''t<laNI '°' My ,.,....,.t.. (ftl4) frfd MaoMl#'rmy, ~ ~. ,. WorMll ~ flptfenWeU.t.~ *'4 IW IMbMd l'lal IO eooe '*"9 aie flrll mal9 .. ,., .. l..tdy." (2"") • HOU.YWOOO IOWO'"""'-YHIA "~ '"' A Nutt" Haney MaM!gOe ~wy ltb). Ula "IM\'0 °' ttw ttti.. la on trllll lol' the ft!IK· Rendnfseing dar of "" tbl-IMl'lt!Mlld ctllld cf oawi at~ (LMttr "-411 and hil' wife Tempe (llaflh t.tn.lt. D I, TOO, W1U. eotaTHINO MAKI Milton Berle and Bob Hope talk aoout the early days of broadcasting on the Kraft 75th Anniversary Special. tonight at 9:30 on CBS, Channel 2 A IOOll at tM UIC lcMIW!ld 8otlOOI cf Ml.ic ~ Arw, ~ tMlr belltl tl\at ptlltloipel19tt In IM .,,. lft 1 llMlltltut. rllAlled Mttlng la the .. "'"" ~ '°' the body, mind 911d.-. Chcan11~I Ll•tl11gs 8 KNXT (C86) Los Angeles KNBC (NBC) Loi Angele• I KTLA(lnd ) Loa Angeles KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angelea (I) l<FMB (CBS) San Otego G KHJ-1V (Ind.) Los Angeles QI KCST (ABC) Si n Olego I KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles • KOCE· 1V (PBS) Huntington Be1ch An Inf-live colleetSon of ~ County r-. government lilld coneumer att..,.e. peoole ertd ~ (I) THI OOMO SHOW uo• GI LAVPHU 8HlfUY '1'1le Stow CMd" The oifte wtU.. Ille~ of • MCWlng r~ ~ tlley allow Mra. 81bl•h'• "•x~ptfo11al" C19JOM• to go out wl1'I Lanny. HO 8 (I) CU RIJIORTI The econon\ICe of the • ,.,_ 8ou1h" Ill ,.,_ Or1een1: fumert turn poltll~I aotMlta when '•* W11h financial -; update of "Tiie CIA'a CONCIN'TMTIOH CftOll.WTTS ~l!AIY s-et """" .. Cl NIOMOV~ "The Owit Beotec Of H8'· vett Home" (Premiere) 8•11• Davit, David Adltoyd, ~ M-. Aft.r a fatnllY from Nft Y one Clly l'llO¥a8 to • t1rty N.w !ngtand ,..,,., Vie mottler end daughter a68Clt to ttie mor• Of ._ new anYlronmant, bUt the hu1banel ellc:oulltara b!ZW19oppa.ICIOn wMn"' at1empt1 to recotd IOCll hatY98t .... l',lltlel. (Patt 2 01 2)(~~ Vl-dltCntloa) D MOYie George Uontgomary: ., "'"" found ,,, the ,,,.... CilW cablr'9f. hl08(1) M•A•e•H Rad.Ir'• In!~ ot • diao JOcQy ...,. .. teOOrd taverl'-8 WllCI ~ . lli'IO peUar piped OllW .. toud•PHk•r eyetam, bOOtl* '"°"" .. • .,. ...tll'I .. akut ~ offantlYe Miida • OM Of ,,., ..... pouttno In. .. ,...,... ~PAHY .. ~ McMal.. etwi.r *** "N~ Mount-ed Poloe'' OMO) Oety C<lopef, M~ CWfol. A Texaa Ranget, In C- dl to cepnn a ~. N n1 l"'o an lndlan uptlt- "19 lad by the WM!*'"*' «**• °"' Mla'9Ur lnCMaa Of J9Ck Ind J#let 8lld }I mialed Info UllMfnt 1119 llMa,.lltt." • lltONllOI An A-«111, hie ~ llfld ~ teoa IN wn- ~°'an 111tdelw0ftd PITTSBURGH <AP> -It's all in the famlly at KDKA television, where Bill Burns and d1uahter Patti anchor the noon news from both end• of the Journalistic generation 1ap. "IC I misspell one word ln my copy, he's on me like a cheap suit. And people watehlng don't even see my apelUng," 25-)"tar- oJd Patti aald with a ahrut. "I've been here 2S yean. I have the expe_.ence, whlch en· liUes me to aet on her -and l do," said BHI, who makes his parental pointers off camer~ sometimes dtidna commerclilli. INDEED, BILL Bum speaks wlth auth<>HLy in a Job wher at· ttntlon is pald to pancake makeup. correctnes of cowllcu and n ttiness of nccktle knots. Pittsburgh ls hi• beat. He know• th crackle of rouce radios, the nuancu o tbla •town '1 backdoor Politics. And there's not O\UCh pavement here he hasn't pOUnded, Som times, though, f alher ihd daughter don't s eye to eye on Just what't out there on the street. "We'll argue about a story:• sald Patil. "He'll say1t. thould be a dllne. I'll s he ho ld btJtY lt }:leCf llS it out with b'1tt<rrl shoCS." NBC • 8:00 -"The Dark Sec t of llarvest Home/' The conclusion of thl two.part TV drama ba ed on l'hQm Tryon's best-selling novel \\ith Bette Davi in the stardn,g role. KCET QJ 8 ;00 -Holly wood Television Theater. 'Jjhe dramn .. Re· quicm lor a Nun,'' nbOut the trial of a woman accu ed of murdering a coupJ ·s infant child, Is presented. CBS U 9:30 -Kraft S~cial. Show biz greats populate this variety stiow ob· ervlng the 75th anniversary of }\.raft· SROnsorcd shows. flit f'IWln, eMEWo ou..ta: Ce.fol OhaMlng Jetry ....,"*!, OdytMy. OOt~ H ~Clo Monfllball -~ """' "I, CllUdlul: A God 111 Colona. er" Clau~tlua' ,. NII becOIM II tor• did "'411 oorrupt M dMlM Of Illa-~~ ~ "°. (J) l(fWT PwloNll.let ~Un:o every feotM Of ttie enter· ~wottct.~ memor•bfli pat J*fOI'-~ •tured on ttpt, lllm Wld"' ~ _loll\ 1n the 7 '" Attnlvw· M1Y -.ot111Gft of Krah· •r~ (~~l l\lt1• ..,.,,,. betlaYIOr INd• ,,. ~ ,.ly to lleW toltoue doUtita llboUt 1111 Unity, Md,.,,,_ Tim Ftot• ellyMt80IM~- a~eortnn.. "Aeaon· Thi Oi:tOOar 1170 , Crialt'' A ~llM Of tile .,,,.,,.. ~ .,. kid-,...,,. .. '*"" k. CfoM and ,...,,. ~bf' '"' '"o 1n October 1110; "' updll'9 Ol'I ttie lltUltlon In frandl ~now. 10lOO. 0 'MAY ........... 8enalng ha( ,_,,.no IOMill' i..aa '*· ~~totutora t.ctlr!Uy llllndld OOllt08 •!Uderlt Md tit* .... O.COf'lllno • eu"OG"• mother. John f'l'tldtlGft, DMI Dew f1.dll/A Mat. NEWI HONE\1otOOHIM ....,, .... .,, !mpending Wit °' hit motJIW ·law .cut • ·~ .... of tat • 8PmAL ' O&mltn" T 9f ar'Oe KllaPf! ~.,,,.. ~ Oamlen. ti. flOtnln C.UlOllO P'ielt -.tlo WOr1ced 111'11h "'*' conflnod on Mo!oflal ltleltd ~ lie, NmNlf, di.o a ..... =1u.=H a *** "OtW' (1 >Tam Couftan8)', Ao!ny 80hnefd.. ., • Alt aai'f1IOlno loaf9t'• '°"' t9d .... ,._ .. Mlatttted ...,_ "' volt· ...... o..12tw .. ) THe 000 COWLI LET'8 MAKI A 06Al. OtOK~VIT1' I 1UO8 ()) CU L:ATE M0\119 '*** ''Maetoud AMuM • , To Tiie Alamo" (1t76) Dennie WMYW, Teri Gttr. McOolJd MllcMI for 1 m1n11c1t bon1ber, •11 li'>lent In ,... Of lrmnedl- 118 IMdlclt attention lilld t111 ldn1pp1d 891. ·~(R) G TOMGttT Ouett hOltl~ .,.__, au.ti: JIMl'nle WlllrM, f'IP Teylor, Hiii ...._ loO'-"«*•· • lO\fE,, AM!NCAH ITYU! '1.oioe And Thi Four-8lded ,.,.._ .. ~ .. ll'IWuat· ... """" "" """''" bot&. • 0 A8C 'itOVll "*·~"Two..,._ F« 111- • S.." (1t71)CM\ e..t- WOOCI, I~~, An AIMtbn "*OllWY ~ • """ With • pifnc:lllnl f()f' dim. Ii.tor and ~ jOln fOfOllll In ... trip • Franaf\ Qltrlaon Ill ~CAI ·~ Miii • 1n etlllgn ind uie firal wlth a amlte. "I wa!\ look· inl for a new angle." she said. "It's just that there's a genera- tion gap. I do a feature tbat peo. pl will really Jove. and he'll s 1 , 'That'• a real winner.''· That kind of banter is done ore camera. Well, m06t of it. "WE RAVE A hockey player named Mahovllch. I added an ejtlra syllable in his name, and Patti told me about it right on the air," said But, acUn1 hurt "Dad.Jays it took hlm 2S years to build hii reputation and that I killed it tn two minutes," said :PatU, wbO "also addresses her father u "'Dad" on the air. Moat baSically, however" the two share hiib profeaalonaJ re· gard tor on another, od their noon newscut 'CtominatC)s that me lot with an lmpr~slvt 57 percent ahnrc In th raUng . "I like workJ.n8 with P.aW. l really and trUly do. She'.a do· velopcd into qui~ a reporter,'' aid Blll. Mary ·Tykr Moore Ready to Go Again "Last time he made ua use the radar to see how fast he could run!" Three profesSlonal performers, tn· cludinc Laguna Beach's Teri RalJton. Will heaa the cast Ol "La ;;~..-rt~~ Mancha," e>penln T unday for two weekcndS and nine ~rormances. · Elsewhere on the colleti le drcult, "King Le r" will refgn from Wedn • ... ~ day th r ouch · 'BODY CR!AKINO' Saturday In the ''TIL\T' THE TAOVBLE with being railed in Debbi Reynold• 0 r a m a L a b lh movies," tie tined. ''I don't like to repeat -'-'-----=-~_...:.....-Theater t Oranse mysclt with the same act, and J, won't com· Coast College, promi e.J hadJ10me pretty good teacher!. while Wallla m "Like Bette Davis. When we made 'A Catered G J d Inge's popular Affalr.' he intiStCd on three days' rehearsal of a 8r 8D drama "Picnic" cooking scene. so the actions would seem natural. takes up residence The crew loved It at flrat, but they got tired of eat· Es•nte al Golden Wetil ing fried fish and mashed potatoes every day. ..a Colle1e Friday for "Gene Kelly was the perfectionist or all time. two we~kenca. lma1ino me at 18 making my first big musical <'Singin' in the Rain') w1lh him and Donald O'Con· Riddled JOINING' MISS R ala ton. who nor, who had :50 years' experience between them. plays the firebrand Aldonza, in the Gene virtually Jocked me in a stage for a month NEW YORK (AP) -Saddleback musical, are David HolU· until 1 learned to dance." Althou1h JuCly Garland day as Don Quixote and Rudy Tronto THAT TRAINING PAID OFF when Debbie found herself deeply In debt after 15 years of mar· rla1e to Karl. It was the result of reverses in his shoe business, gambling debts, bad investments pnd other disasters. "I auppose I could have declared bankruptcy and solved· it that way," the star said ruefully. "But that ould have meant selling everythinl I ha<!, including the costumes that I have collected for years for a Hollywood museum. 1 didn't want v. to do that." ·n "So l went to work. And 1 mean work -•2 weeks a year. In 1976 I did 16 weeu in Vegas, 9, where I am a resident now. I played only eight ... 1 week• last year, because I toured wUh 'Annie Get .,, Your Gun' for 19 weeks. I "HOW MUCH DID I pay oft? Three million 1 dollar•. That means I bad to earn six million. Is there any wonder that I'm tired? · "It was no fun, believe me, having all those 0 people after me so that 1 "bad to run for the money • -I mean literally run ror the money. But I am lucky to be in a business when I can earn that kind of money. l,. "I don't want to dwell on regrets: I'm Just like Scarlett in that regard. If you live in tbe past, then you can't build (or the future." One source of her good feeling is the way her children have turned out. Carrie Fi.Sher, 21, Is the leadtne actress or "Star Wars" and owner or one· fourth or one percent interest in the profits, which should earn her a handsome awn. Althou1b she ts in demand as an actress, Came plans to study film writina and technique ln New York. I "I WISH TODD WOULD 10 back to eolleae," Oetibie said of her l9·Y r-old aon by Eddie Fish· er, "but I'm pleased with how &erious he la. He likes technlcalthlng1 nd ts r at builder." Debbie herself Is lookU:a,8 rorward to a less hec- tic 1971. made mUlioos, abe w 1 as Sanco Pama. All three have ap- actlcally broke 'When pured ln Broadway procluctlqns. he died. SupP9f\lna the three pros Will be a , company of some 40 student, staff That • the picture re-and community acton as the Misslon vealed in court docu· Viejo colleie opens its new Fine Att ments nled lftfonday by Theater. Performances will be given h~r three children -Thursday through Sunday of this Lua Mlnnelll, Lorna week and Wednesday through Sun· Luft and Joseph Luft. day or nu.t week with curtain at 8 When their mother p.m. ever">'. oJ1ht but Sunday when died in 1969 from what the abow wdl start at 5 p.m. R.eserva· was ruled an accidmtal tions are bdn& taken at 831·741' r overdose of barbiturates 495·2790. the three estimated her OCC'a "King Lear" ·a Tom estate was valued at Bradac. a part·time drama um.rue:· between us.ooo and tor at the Costa Mtsa coUeae whO $40,000. They u d it may ~lao performs professionally. F.elicla have earned an addt.' ··hm1andei, Carole KnickerbOeker lional $40,000 In royaltJea and Frances Hubble will pl9 Lear'• ·Crom records, films and threedauibtera. television reruns after WILUAM PURKISS of the OCC her death. drama department ts directin& the New Tarzan 'INSIDE: •Erma Boft'!beck . ~I t • . .r.J Disability In a course on the psychology of dis- abilif;y, Ilene Goldkind hopf3S to brea'/( down the .myth of what it's like to be handicapped. BJ DENNIS MeLELLAN Of91eo.llf ........... Ilene Gotdkind spent the maJori· ty of her life not wantlne to deal with the conaequenoes of havtng c rip.pllng rheumatoid artbrltls, which often prompted 1tares and : un.tllllnkln1 remarks from ' stranaers. Durin& an intensive weekend joumal·wrilinC workshop about a year ago, the 29-year-old Lona Beach rHldent reahzed abe couldn't kid berHlf anymore. .. I hid avoided the whole tJUnc," she, says. "It.'s rid1cutous for Z1 years to tblilJc: you'r~ somethlnl elae or try to be somethlns else. l think I deluded myself and created hardships I ehOuldn.'t have had. AnotMr revelaUon prompted by that weekend workshop came when Mtss GoldldDd woke up one morning and slld to her.elf: "I have to teacb this class." That class, The PayeholC?JY of Dls.atilUty, beilna at e:ao p.m. on Feb. "1 in room ,B;a of Fou.ntal.n Valler Jll&h ~bool. ' ... • .. .... • • • • • • • • 9'9 • • Dr~ing to €ode Most companies, having gone through a stage of more casual dress at the office, are seeing a swing to dressing up. 87 JUDITH O~EN Of .. o.lty ........... In one Orange County lnlurance or· nee recently, a male employee showed up for work ln shoru. He wu aeot home to chanee. · Five years ago be might have made it throuch the day but today ccmpenies •eem to be more concerned at)out what employees wear to work. There is a 1eneral trelld, atcordlnC to spokesmen for aeveral ~rge corpor· tlons and eowlty agencies, for people to dress more formally for the olflce. Some companies are upcSatina ana reprinting old dreu c~es and oth are publishing remt.naen lb employ newsletters abOut appropriate oUlce dreaa. Tank tops, Jeans, 1vn4reuel and the "bralea& look., are.1tartln1 to d1sa-ppear from offices, one company 1pokeaman said, "much to the disappointment of those of us who appreciated them." AVCO FINANCIAL Services led the way with an illustrated article ln tts January, 1978, ipue of it.a employee publication, "Money Tree." In a fOUf·PllSe spread entitled "Your Future May Be In Your Cloaet," employees were told why clOthlri& aelec· tlon 11 imp:>rtant to job advancement, what 1• appropriate and wliat ls not for the Avco office. It waa publlstied, Edltor DOnn E. • 'SUvl• said, tiecau.se "we bad some re- quetts from some people out in the field who had problems with d~ In fleld offices. .. Our company depends a lot on our imaae. Our people are realty tho com- pany'• imace;" ho added. 'Silvis reported that empioyet response to the rath delicate Ut.iele was "eood. They like the cartoons," ht said. Avco',s dress cOde, which hu been maintained even ~ut the recent years ot Cll!ual dres1, calls for clotbea in Sood taste. No beach · ttlre, abort 1klrt1, sandals, low-cut blou$el GI' evD iDI wear is allowed: ~ I J Dixy Rides On By DAVID AMMONS OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) -If politica l enemies accuse Gov. Dixy Lee Ray of driving ambition, they're at leaat. partly rl1bt. WashtnJt,on's No. 1 citizen also is the state's No. 1 transportation junkie. As a kid, Gov. Ray made two lists. One was of "famous, classical, unique animals, things often called missing links." She checked off nearly all durin1 her travels as zoology professor at the University of Washington, Atomic Energy Commt1111lon chairman and U.S. Stale Department of- ficia1. The second list! Thina:s she w1nted to pilot or drive. Throup the years she's checked off many of them -sports urs, boats, cable can, 1ondolas &12d even a bot alr balloon and heavy construcUon equipment. Since abe took office in January 1977, she's piloted an oil supertanker, climbed aboard an a ntique Canadian s team locomotive, floated down a river in a rubber raft. Still on her list : Piloting a blimp, riding a submarine and mushing through the snow on a dog sled ·'Let me assure you It's notb.lnl contrived," the 83-year-old· Democratic governor aays. •'These are JUlt thlnl• I enjoy dome and &hlnaa I have elwa111 done. I Just love drivlllf. I alw-.ys have. The flrlt thlni was a ldddy cart. and then a coas.ter wagon . . ... . She saYi her idea of luxury would be to buy tbe fastest. jazziest sports car 1he could flnd. Although she once owned a Jaguar, she drives a four-wheel· drive vehicle on her island farm in Puget Sound and. 1Ull owns the motor home ahe lived in when she was in Washlneton, D.C. She cheered Washln1ton U'a Huskies in the Rose Bowl earlier this month after traveUn1 from Olympia to Pasadena in a caravan of motor homes. She = an oil aupertanker and a hydrofoil on Pqet Sound. To help celebrate Queen Elizabeth ll's Silver Jubilee, Ibo' hopped aboard an anUque Cana. dian steam engine and rode to nearby Tacoma. With her stater Marton and her pet poodle Jaqua, she was pad- dler of honor in a bl1h·style flo.t trip down the Yakima Rlver. 7he Catholic Diughters of. 'America, · Court Stella Min #1448, celebrattd its 30th annlve~ Saturday With mass and a brunch. From left are charter members Lynette Gifford and Therese Conde, Chsrter. Regent Madeline McGuckin, the Rev. G. Sul/Ivan, Regent EvetYn Pappas, and charter member Lucille A/faire. IJ 1 • • '...... ....., .. . . .. . . . ....... . . <l'rom Paa• Cl) cut aOO.e their shoulders· and beards aod mustttchel neatly trimmed. The company also pre/en that men wear awta and ties because 0 Jeana are not in goodtute!' .. We have never been challellfed on the cloth but we have been on )lair." stated BUl Math n, vice president of pertonnel. '"Dresa ts mUC!i \Vorse now by my. 1tandard. 1"blrtY. yurs aio you had to wear a coat aDd tle even when you were workln1." Matheson cred1tl Vietnam and the youth movement for brlneinl cuual dre11 to the omce. Many younc people felt that dress codes "violated their rt1bta," be explaShed. Tbere also ta a prwtalllng attitude to- day 1D m1n7 corporations that "if ~ don•t bave to meet the publl~ doil't bave todreaup," Matheson . "But if you're sloppy in appearance you'll be aloppy in your work habita." MATHESON SAID there is "no ques- tion" that there is a swing back to more .dre11y otncea. "We have fewer pro-blems today than we bad three years .ago," be sald. State Farm Insurance Company re- ~rta petbapa tbe m°'t eaaual attitudes toward dress of any company polled. A 1pokesman fl'01f\ the peioloanel de- partment aald that there ta a "very re- laxed, informal approach" to dress at. the compuy'a Coata Meaa head· quprters. · Many Ol tbe clerical workers, 1¥ho do not meet the public. wear jean1 but the spokesman said that the kind of attire selected is "very personal." "One day a penon may feel like dresalng up and the next may want to juat Jump out ol bed and pall on a pair of Jeana," the spoke.man said. .. Our career people tend to dress more. Some ol the men wear ties, 10me don't. But in personnel our people do dress." VTN Corp. hu "no formal dress code" but does encouraa• tbOM who ••• Shape <Prom Pa1e Cl> m ee t t he public to .. drea •P· pro pr lately." A COMPANY 1pokesman 1&1d, ••t tblnk in aeneral everyone dress more casually than they did five years aco - not Just at our otnce." She added that lt'1 very dlfflcult to tell whether a denim 1arment la• "hflh fashion or just je&n1. So many thlnas are made of del\im. • ''Our people are mostly profession l thou1h. They never did 10 that route (jeans)." New employees at SmJlh Tool are 1n· atructed ln proper office dtels at the time of their hlrin1 but the' company said It is .. very connrvaUve'" and hu had no problems with dress. The University of Callf ornla, Irvine. baa no written dress code and mOlt banks d they usual11 leave IDdhidUal policy ~to the man.aser. Bank ol America•• Westcllfl Plua I branch mana1er aald be expects people to come to work "dressed like they work for a bank.•• "We've had no problems since I've been here, though," he added. While there la no encompusinf Polley for county emplv,rees, BOme qenctea • have their OWll codes, 1uch u tbe ProbaUon~cnL THE DEPA&TJIENT' p0Uc1 manual statea that "a, DOlltl\te Smaa• 1hould be projected" ancf that cuo.l at· Ure la not. acceptable. Deputized employees must be prepared to appear ln court at all times. A spokesman for the d~ said that the cO\ll"tl have reJaXed toinftbat and now per!llit women depUU &o wear pant.sul~. She added UW the chance allowlnl women to wear pantsuit.I bu perhaps been one of the most controvcr&1.al dress i>0llctea in the department. • The problem bu J;een, the 1814, ts that there ls no acce~ definlUon ot what a ·~ ~t.1u1t•• is. Some emDIOYees have taken it mean Madl ·like· am. • (From P~ge Cl) The blanks shaped by Hawk, who uses a Skill 100 planer to work down the thickness and a screen to make the rails round, eventually become awillow, square and wiJll tallJ, logs or whatever ahape a cUJtomer may want. ••A IWfboard hu to be a foil in the water. SOME OF THE areas covered in the course include: • Physical barriers in society. These include steps, une'\leD fioor surfaces, pay phones and drinkini fountains that are too hleh and restroom COhlt.ruction (the lteDo dard door iS 24 lricbes wblle a 1 wheelchair measlU'es 27 iilcbel). You have to have the ttcbt thickness now and you have to have Uie rlcbt rodcer,•• ho taya. •"There are juat a number of tJlAA ••• U you ao to extremes, tbey won't do the~ thfDa for you ••• " . · In addWcm to abatlnS blanb for dl ta •ho • come IDto ~ lbOP to watch him W9._tk, ho does custom boarddor local abops. . • He ttedltl Dick Brewer c''Jie•1 the Big Guru. number one in Hawilll, and the hlahest paid aurfer in the world," exclaims Hawk> and hta brotheT Sam <"He's probably the second beat'') with teaching him what be knows about ahaplne. . Currently, the youngest Hawk ls trablin1 . two local surf era in bis craft. Wtiat changes does be see ln the future for surfboards? "We have run as small u we can 10 and now people are going lnto Ions boarda. Thia year there have been • lot of stiqen <a ' new abape). · •'The loni boards are brlnllDI a lot ot peo- ple back •• ·• 7he older cuya are 1urf- in1 ,, •• You can really aee the difference: it'• euler to team (on lont boardS) but they're not aa :maneuverable u abort boardl, .. .tie ·~· He beUeves "ahOrt boards are the future."' Since the youqat of the Hawk brothers opened for buatneaa, be bas been credited with 1hap1.Da more than 4,000 boards -a quanUty Surfer Masaline calla "an amount. to be reckODid With. ·u What'• in ~e future for Cbrl1 Jlawk? ••1 llk'e bet.DJ ~ent like tb1a and I may come out witb my own line IOOller or Jater • • • 111 ~b17 &et mto other buaiDURJ like Boble < Alter w~ befan with autfboarda d upanded to~ aporta) did." . •Paycbological methods for de111n1 wifh disabWty, such as cte:- rual, anger, reslpatlon and depeo- dencyvs. lndependency. •The 10clal sticma of betrit dis· a bled: employment discriminallon and interperaon1l relaUomblps such as deallng with stranien, lam lly, friends and aesual partners. She descrlbel the clus as belna "bani loose. It conforms 'to What the people's needs are-: AU the topics become pirt of the di•· cuaalon. I can talk for daya on de- nial because that's how 111ved for alon1t1rne." ' Aion1 with watching films and hearinc 1peakers, students aiio wlll keep a penonal journal. "I think it helps to Write do"11 wbat•a going on with you. Sometimes tt you Just keep them lri )'Out head you 1ocrny. . "IT'S JllPOaTANT TO write posltives too. Give credit where credit ls due. Thia applies to ever.v· body." When the Cal State Loot Beach pduate, wbo la a au~ at the Sarita Ana Socl&l Securltr of. flee. Ant proposed the clasl she was met Witli ·akepUclsm. Who would ~ttend 1\ltb a coune, ahe was astect BecauH it received little publicity, ahe, f.D fac:t. barely met the 15 student minimum reqllite- ment ... I wu twtstinc arma and off erlq bribet.'' she 11ys With a 1 ul!J. Sbe bad to enlist her ~ti to fill the cl ... But that worked to her li.dvantaae in more ways than on : Her bind.leap bad never been dllc atbome. ••tt ally Wll the first x· PfOlll*ft1_ ~ B,,,,,,_ ...,..,, .,,,..,. ,Q.,, . . 'pe:rlence we bad in verb•llJinf, 10 it was really beneficial 'for me:• sbe11ys. BECAUSE SHE WON'T laiow until the class be&h;la bow P\a1\y people will abow up this time, ..that kind ol makes the first night a thriller." Sho lausba: "I can't talk my frlencls into 1oln1 a aecond M01ester. "I th1lik the b.lneat tld.U ln get· tins people into tbo cJasa ta that they have to be at • point where they want to deal wlth lL" Sbe ~ tbiit • )'e&r er two· aco abe wouldn't even have COD· sldered taldrif the claa. "AD4 lt'• aad," abe says. 0 lt meam you are dealing with your necatl.e feel-. 1011, )'OW' rtjectklDs and unbappl· neas all by yourself." Oceulonally unhappineu and ne1atlve fedinp are caused by those unthinking strangen ._,ho atop and &tare. MlH GoldJdnd recalls one lnei· dent when ahe and a friend were walk.inf out of the office. A womm at.opped ttiem and aalcid Mlss Goldklnd what her name was. "I find you lntrl1uln1,•• the woman told her. "I don't mean to offend you, but here :you are walkl11garound ... 1' APTER THE WOMAN 1eft Miss Goldk1Dd's tricnd Uked, "Do peo- ple really d0that!'1 It'• totally unnece11aey, saya Mis• Goldkind. "It makes JOU f ee1 like )ou should be In a caJe. There'• noth1D& worae thu feeling llke afreU. •'I think tho bindlcapi>ed in- dividual bu to realize there ls eo- iDI to be a cUl'tosity. But people who aren't handicapped have to realbe ll'• juat b sic lly dis· courteoU1 ti> bo olril~. Some days YQU f · JUit • 1 someone's o\ito'' She , "I think: t Will be an ongoln rm Of my life. But at 1 I can Ult bout lt. rH over f Un1 Uko a freak. And l f1rijt f l can relax about tt, ll'• ... ier r tti person I'm wtth.'' SAL80A 8AVCWB ref .MOl1fD OQWr'HM't .. nu•n .... l.«I A.M • &flO P.M ,.,..,,,..,. /Ta,,,;t,, ,- SKN Q\RE. df:NTER Cll ........... ,.,. •• ' ( aome l me but &wore be had ver con out in public lbat W•Y He sa)'I h get.s a big kitk out of It and h0pe1 I wm un der1tand. Well -I DON'T un deratand. We have two lovely thlldren. Rob 1s a wonderful father und husband. Our sex IHe Is fine. lie is an attorney and docs very well. ls h e a closet homosexual " Do vou think he has a boyfriend on tho !lid<''! What should I do? ZONl<EO DEAR Z.: Your bu.sband 11. a treanHdte. I ban rud Horoscope ) By SYDNEY. OMARR l •• a rea& d al tra n m few m &b tom C.O COftcl&IJloa, belatedly, I'm rry to ..,. Utu ·~ tew are llomo1exuala. Tbeae mea Jel their JoJlles dr«:11lnJ up. TbtJ afe very mach ••are of tbelr malnea1 ancl a.ave no wtsb to be feruJu, nor do &hey want to O· pertente sex with other me•. Mosl &.ra03veaU&ee are naarrled aad ltav,. famllle1. Tbelr whea HY tlM)' are wooclerful buabaDds aucl fathers. I u11eat tbat you set some COUHUng so )'OD un acljust to and tope wUti tbe altmtton. DEAR ANN I.ANDERS: You do un awful Jot of good io the "orld. I wonder 1f you will do fest a Ht.tie rnorc. ll might aeem Ii ke a sample thine too dumb to put ln the paper, but It ~ould mean the dif(eTence between hfe and deatt). My job reqmrea \hat J go to different homes in different neighborhoods Parents Of Gays React .. . --- SECOND GROUP TAKING OAl'H ON JANUARY 12 BROUGHT TOTAL TO 241 Huntington Beach Topped Uat of Contributing Communltlft With 21 241 BeCome Citizens 83 Coast Residents Join Tiro-day Ceremony Gleefully tossing alien re· gistratlon cards aside, 83 resi· dents of 13 Orange Coast Com· munities became American citizens in Orange County Superior Court naturalization ceremonies. The total of 241 former aliens led court officials to hold the ceremonies over two day• in Presiding Judge Byron K . McMillan's courtroom. Flanked by fellow Judges Wilham Thomson and Betty Lou Lamoreaux of Newport Beach, Jadge McMillan presided over the colorful courtroom proceed· mgs and then led the way to the nearby Plaza or the Flags for group photographs. The three judaes were Joined by representatives of the American Legion, the American Legion Auxiliary, the Daulhten ot the American Revolution and the League ol Women Voters in welcomlna the new citliens. Huntington Beach topped the list of contributing Orange Coast comm uni ti ea with 21 of the former aliens clalmlna residence there. Faat growing Irvine was second with 10, Fountain Valley had nine and Costa Mesa had etcht. Then came Newport Beach wilb aeven, Mlaaton Viejo six, San Juan Capl1trano four, Laauna Beach and Lb1 Alamitos, three each; El Toro ttro. and Capl1trano Beach, wauna mns and Laauna Niiu•l aa. each. Heading the 31 cootrlbutin1 CkrgYJli!lti 'Watched' 6 4 z • s 6 '1 8 p I L 0 T c L A s s I F. I DE D 5 6 7 W t·:s1 .t-:Y N TAYLOR CO. HEALTOHS ~.11w1 · !!Hu lVIM TEllACE-VIEW Impeccable custom 2 Ii den charpler! Spacious rooms full of comfortable contentment. Superb quality " desiin. Copper hooded f rplc. slJte entry ball & modesi view of ocean & Catalina. $215,000 Including land, WISUY M. TAYLOl CO .. lWTOlS NIW.J.:.: 1c= ;:ta_ 1 °6':Mtto ~~HERITAGE . . REALTORS - Serving Costa M e~.1 ·lrv1nc Huntington B each N ewport BccJch HAllOR VIEW WSI PlllVACY-PRIY&CY -PRIVACY ·Thi~• bedroom havens~ an e~ecuUve hiiiiiiiiiiiiiililiiiilillliilillliililiillllll rewaro -green hills, blue ;racillc. home to make it all worthwhile. Corona del M r at its best! 1436 nus new1paper wall not know1n1l1 accept any adverti1lo1 for real eltate which ii an viola· Uonoftbelaw. HeuMtfws.t. • •••••••••••••••••••••• Ge•r.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTSIDE FIXER $63,000. Potential pl\11! Nice a Bedroom, 1~ Bath home. Need• a lot of TLC. carpet.a, drapes, paint. If you 're handy and bave a lot ol Im· 8'SJlatiol'I tall ftOW. 645-0JOJ S:O REST E OLS ON ................ THE -........ CulYerdal• Premium 1be oul·de· sa¢a=1>' 4 bedrm, ram rm ~"' baths and fireplace. All tbe ac· tlvllles-pool, tenni$, dubbouse, volleyball. Owner'• ready to go. ea.ooo. PETE BARRETT -REALTV- &4Hnt Kcyview. ()pen doily till sold.•$259,000. TWO IEAUTIFUL PORTS! Jt'I great to have a chotce between two lovely homes m "The Ports" for less than $140,000 each; both homea are the popular ''MONACO'' model with 3 bdrms., 2 baths & dining rm. The landscaping is nice Ir the prices are very realistlc -one is $135,000 & the other $139,500. Let us show them to you &: convince yourself! 759-0811 4~ NEWf>OH l CE l\IT U I l>lllVf /£>') o:-;1 1 Ge•r.. I 0021 G~ol I 0021 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALMOST OCEANFllOMT Big Corona Beach is just a few feel away from this terrific family home; 5 bdrms., 6 baths, 4 car garage. Expensive mahogany paneling a<!cetats the tropical feeling of this spa~lous home, built around a private, lushly landscaped patio. Owners are moving out of town & have priced their lovely home far below replacement at $330,000. 673-4400 DM1i0tt of H.-. ln·Htlmettt Co. Ge•uwl 100 •••••••••••••••••••••• YA TUMS OM. y $62.500 Beat but lo the area. Air conditioner and 11ome other ruce 11lra'1. Callin& us 15 a must --T he do& bttea! A qwclt e1cow and this y e ar '• beat Chr1stm111 present ss vours 546·2313 f14 '' I• I , 1" I I • [~li&ll asso.ciatcd £AOKC IJ ~·-lt l/1 1 TOllS 101\ 'W 1011, .... '' l Ju 1 SMALL HOUSl7 Walt""1 to tell hfoNY•lllY7 Trade your 11•naller home for thla ftH\ 4 bdnn.. I bath botpe In Irvine: chooH your caJ'l)et colors. nlAMID EX CHANGO IS US.1761 OPEN DAILY I ·5 1139 5*-IHTfft'. Corona del M• $425.000 VIEW-LIGHTS and glumour dose to yacht dubs Beuulifully dee. 4 bdrm+fam room home Bcaulsful pool & pallo. ~·cetand . .. llEAU.Y UMl9QI IM H.V. HlU.S . • • . and also ~lean and nice. Three bedrooms and a den, and open living area that include living, dining. entertaining and kitchen areas all surrotmding a fireplace. You should see it! Done lit Country' French. You should see the w~ flooring, harbor and ocean view and pool size Jot. A Unique Home at just $180,000. UNl()UI: ti()Mf:S REAL TORS•. 675·6000 2443 Eut Coast Highway, Coron1 del Mer dlso 10 Mesa Vf'rc1u a1 546 5990 1002 Gefttt>ol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4 baths, liv1ng rm. w /cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,950 8'G CANYON 4 BR, fam. rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broadmoor Plan 3 w /patio views from each room. $325,000 81 LL GRUNDY , REALTOR Joli Buy\1.I•• 01•~•· ti 8 o/'J 6101 Balboa le.land Realty A 111\\t l"W-.'\ftJ('~~ H'I 673•8700 ------ IUCH RETREAT Jus t !\trp'I from th t· beach. Surrounded by 2 1arden patios. Your own private Newport retreat. lluae open llvlne area w/walll of natural wood & &lus. Vaulted celling & COt)' fireplace. RusUc formal dinlnl room & modem culinary cenur. Owner ls leavtn& area £i wan.ta a quick ult. Don't miA um e>pportunity 11 Call today "8·1171 Ol'fHIN ollSIUHIO•lftt't• . "' . . .... MANAGER-IEAL ESTATE NEWPORT BEACH IM'YISTOl"S SPICIAL 4PLIX 2llAUMEW MIAAOCIAH S4S,OOO DOWM Pride ol ownership unit with fantaatlc aton lireplaeea. Encloae &araaea. All be,utlfu spacious unlta. Owne boulht another • mu1 aocrificel Hurry! Man additional iovestmen opportunities. Call now 913-7881 OPfN 1119 • 11 S 11,JN 10 ~IM(I t ----1 THE REAL ESTATERS --~ -J No Waist Se111! LUSKUBR VU HILLS 3 br 2 ba, lri lot, beaut. lndscpd. Prof. decorat· ed. By owner. $205,000. Fee 1226 Seacrest Dr. &M-4201 . ,. . . . /Jn NIGlL OAIL(Y & ASSUCIArUi .... I YESTOIS!lf OWHIR DISPllATI Newport Hel1ht1, .f42 Cambridge Clrcl . $28,000 Below last sale. 1800 Sq. ft. $99,900. 3 Lg. BR, 2 ba., fam. rm .• 2 fireplaces, Take advantaae of this rare opPortunlty now! Seller will rent back on your terms. Call Sally .De.Brun, owner/asent 842-3494, 5'0-1720 • 1024 .............................................. raJDIOF OWNllSHIP lilDIMS Sbak• rocl beauty. Fmly nn. Separate moUter·in· law or t eena1er quarters. II ,ou 're fu11y & demand the beat, lbil Is a mwit on your llat. One bdrm could be for din rm. Don't wait PH(>N& TODAY . MS-9'91. ~ Walkr.r C lee ., ~ ~11-HERITAGE REf\lfORS HANDYMAN'S DREAM HOME J'anliatlc opportunltY. tor Ule handyman • lnS a latte worubop a home. f;Jll ae~arat bulldlol ln back 1uitabl for mecbanlc, woo won.1', e1ectrlolim. t> T'!f Bitter hurry 1 Ca M.S4'I03. F Ol:lFST E O LSON ........... _ .. Sleclroom Lewin bultt-bJa family ~ dinlnl room, I car &ara&e• plus man)' UJI• araded extru. On a qu4! cul-de-sac, near ahop.; pin&. For more delaUa. call MS--0303 1 FD~ESTE OLSON . .............. .. 'I •• Jt • 1 .. . . . .. . .. , Open Untll Sold By 1,C Owner. PreaUaioua 3 bdrm condo. 2 very ...::;::;_:::.;,.;.. _____ -t ,_. private end. pati<MI ~ad· i---------c 11 joinlq 2 car aar. Xlnt beach-area. May carry 2Dd TD XlDt upgraded cood. S7S,OOO. 962·022t ' JRVINEGROVES Tri·Jevel .. Aspen'' 3 BR, FR, w/up1rades & xtra Jge. prem lot. ~13,500 Fee land. 11100-.MIYI ........ r:o~GSTE , OLSON ...... •I ,.,,., .. " ... ·-· ....... , .. fllf I H?l..r, II ',, - f I I t '\'° ~ I tit • 'tr",,• I 'I\ I .ol " .... "' l .... , •••• 111'•• llh I ......... v.- gar, fplc, cpte, E/Sldt, '550, 631"°303 4' 6'6-7~ • KIDS/PITS OK ,E!&de3Br, gar, $395. 2 Br. pr. ms . .._..orf1W258 • , lam rm. llc mute bdnn, pool, "75 ............... 3252 4.br, pool, ,, au to ocean, ••••••••••••••• ••••••• • Beautiful Sea Terrace _____ ......, ___ , 71'-N-~. Bob Graf home. 3 Bdnn. 3 ba, fam. - associated UUO~lAS-REALTORS 1u1•, .,. 1011> .. o tll-J6tl rm.,frmldln1n111Uv1nc. s.a.-• 3276 Nice Sbr, 2ba clbl Jar., Pvt COft\mun1ty w/pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• llK'd, many xu&1. 2 Klcb Jacuui, tennla & beach. Pres llst• condo view 2 0.K. or Qu allifled STzs/mo. Poss. lae/opl. br~ 2 ba, c~rpeta, · tln1IH. $430/mo. Nr 752-9223or'9!HB11 drapes.$4.25.6'4·0At t-11111111!11!1~----• Yorktown & Newland. . BACHELOR •pJ ~ Imagine lmna an a ne San.Jum ,. • Spacloua dplx, 2br, 2ba, THEEXCITLNG '92.000patiohometoron ec.nlraM 3271 ALLUTJUiPD' encl'd aar, deck, lndry '.a.MMISAAP.TS. Sharp 2 BR. 1 Ba w/crpt, ly 1422 mo! near ocean,•••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 100' from \he ocean. Bl•Bdchrmelor.~~7~5 fac.D'l&mo.~806$ MINUTESTONPT fed yrd. kids 4' pell O.K. 2Br. Fam Rm, pool ...... l f '·h d I -... " $375. 963-4567 Aaent No dbhse,otherxtraa.110 2 brm l ba. brand nu, 1:11111\ urn .. e. Ava1 2BdrmS295·s.'12S 8Toro 3132 BCH. fee over. 9114'623 locat. ln ,San Juan VIII. now! !01 l!:. Balboa Blvd. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• J\ach, 1"2 BR. · SS50. Peta/ktda OK. Yrly SZ50 per mo. NO RentalOffice Ntw3Br2Ba,m4·plu, from$220.an1p. 11!.ll...IJOY Sharp 4 Br 2 Ba. wtr pd . 731·5581. Hayward· !~17E.~~-~H : Sue at OpenDaUy9·8 AC, epta, drpa, bltns. A~lt.iM,No P0eis ..,.,. Spac:efor RV.~-Wat.on Real E:.tate. ....,. '" .. .., .. me TSLMana&emftll end aar. nopetl. 58&-'7a7 i.. .. 1 esa r. THI HACH UN 497-2268 5-la AM Uto 754-<0l or 642-1603 or 511.am '5 Bib ~r~t>Newport ,..Jifji. ±£7 4 ., ......... , ......... New21tory 3 br, fam rm, ..................... ~. BeauU!ul Promontory Pt. ..__._._ y...aa-. ... ,.4 5"8·9980 3 ba, tr-pie, laund hook· "'· 1 3 b ....... aubl.et 2 brm 2 ba view .---.... , -· •n lRCI• ... / up •. dbl aar. $$25/mo, LA*e Forfft 3255 ~per va ue. r, 2 ..... IJNl, tennt.1 etc. Pet oK: W'ESTIAY TllPLIXES ••••••••••••••••••••••• LA.RGI 1&2 R ,_.1•m/ Chald/peta OK. Aeent ••••••••••••••••••••••• ffl>IC, OW, c•rpeta. Klcb Avail 2/1. s75o mo. COSTA MESA 2br. Zba Tiburon Twnhse. I I.Mt&,.._.. 846-1311or960-6161 r-ec <Br home Wood & pet OK . $395. 963-4567 <UA-e BRANO NEW wahridrvr, mn1, pool FIOM $205 c.tolyn Pattcnoe, leas-•••••••••-•••••••••••• """ " · 5 • &0 ent noCee .....,.,.._, ves Fr .,, n..iet '"'' .. C wlbeaullful in11&t. NEAR A1C. Beach tenms club. "6 • 1 Br om$280. pr.$1110.5S4·a550 ~ .,,iu 14'7 M33 *'$3.N Lolt&'-cl 5300 I PARK. 3 Br 2 Ba. lmmed occup. S'700. Can SOlllttL-3116 Oteanfront 2 Br. l~a over 2 Br From $305. 1._11._. le--'-•1 .. 0 lndacpa. cov•ct 1araae1, · ••••••••••••••••••••••• db ear, fplc, many puAifaca Rlty 770."""" •••••••~-:.......... 1ar. ~/mo incl i ulll. 3 Br, 2 Ba Jt'rom $395 =+• ~" ~ .. adult., oo pet.I. Ideal for ()ffl .. p 8 .. Lo tr MSO 147 4525 .... -Wi .. •-. •A• -10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• older ..-1. LEEW .. n ~ ce apace o.. .. • st Blk w /1ome brn x u . . FOR RENT COAST ....... .._,.., .... APTS"7o F ll ~U# eo.st Hwy. DP. 4SO lo male Germ Shep. Very SUPER 4 Bdrm, 2 ba 3bror 2 +den. fam rm. ROYALE section of So Beautiful new 3 un11 -MD MEW . • 20 u erton 1200aqft XlntnSeaU1y4c lrs Rive aid C.O l w/lrplc. Cfl>l, fed yrd. All ~e pnv1le1es. ten· l..al\U18. Fantaitic ocean ~:· i~~t l~~~.~~ ~!'t r!:~'~:':a~t~'S::O ~ve, 1 1b1:1:· t '!fwfn1 parklni. ,19,3117 or Ndi soedlcaiion. • C~~i f Sf.25. 16.l-4567 Aeent, oo ~Smo~~e~~'.~~1":~: ,view wh/edveryoodroonm. Un· ~ lwllb Children welcome. No up.9M-150'f,l40-1'76l m~. . .ay, 131·2283 41M·3221 or 914·1100 ee. 751-~dya um, ar w rs, aep. u..fwwltlllH pet.s. Rental omce open TOPIXIC SUITIS _IQYtWn..,;;. __ e ____ _ $.WI/mo Brand new home. . d•'!..:.T . Very lae lot ••••••••••••••••••••••• daily 10.5 840 Balcer St I New deluxe twnbs apbl 11 Cteme.nle, I or 2 br, n--al --ltee for all Lott: White kitt~n. ap-w/.-.. ener. $750. mo. 4 Qene;.. 3102 bl.kW ofBnstol ' ,.,,_ 2ba fplc' bllnl·WD lndry " utll incld . ..-... -. -· 3 Blk from ocean. 3 Br, Newport •och 3269 br, 2 ba OR ssso. mo 2 br, •••,••••••••••••••••••• · 557~1.5 hkup pat.lo dbl attach gar &»2550 typ" of buaineaaes: IJl'OX I mo'• old. Ana to 2~' ba. family rm. fr-pie, ••••••••••••••••••••••• l ba, call 7am to lpm --$395.545-311M, 963-4.lllS P b one COTer •• e. ··s.manlha ... Reward. attchd dbl car gar., 'IJOFEE! Houses.condos. daUy496-452 ~l n>owerL St.<1G•brdd en ?Br 2ba all bltnt frplc a«tetarial eervkes,,.. Vic. Talbert le Beach. 84o.Z372 duplexea Rental rove aree rm '1 • b t' • lJVENearTheBeacbl looms 4000 ceptlonlst, much more. 11818()..3278. Pavilion 675·.912Bkr Can1h•1tns apt., cl0te to •hopplng. eLanc. gar., I\ cony. Coto ... -'Sol Excellenl locaUon near LO_ST_·_2_M_a_le-At-•h_a_"_u 2 Bedrm. 2 bath. fr-pie, ' . u.rfwnished 3421 Laundry facihtiea. No wldry rm. $32S. ,_.. ....................... So. Ollt Plau " 1'rwf1. l • • .... clOHtoocean.$325.moHarbor View Monaco 3••••••••••••••••••••••• child ren : no pets . TSLMgmt 6'2-1603 BeautlfulAdultApll Roomw/kllchenelle Call 97t-2lSUOda)' bonde, flea collar, !!~ .. {7or 962Kel44th7• Bkr. Br. or 2 Br + dt!n. xlnt Newport Riviera condo. 3 Spd.19$Ca/G1105/mo Utilltm VlRaVlatoAph 2~S:~~~~~~l~B S.SO~~up. ••li•MI~ · .... 50 Or!!',.*!J'or2~!t5:JM· _.....,._...,_or · 1 __ cond. S575mo me grdnr. BR .. 21,2 ba., family rm ..• _ _carol a_tG36·7343 2078Thun·n 962·6611 -.,,..., --· -.-.. ~ -· _.... 644 728 ··-'··················· 2 Story Condo New __ 4_ _ tenrus ct .• pool, Jacuua, l.3'142NewlandSt.<Garden Brand new, large 2 br, Am.basaador Jnn in Costa .. _11vlOFC""' FOUND: Poal hole di&· belgetone cpts, drps. WESTCLIFF sauna. $450 Month. Grove) Beautiful 2 bdrm l'·'I ba townhouse w/tum New dlx 4Plu. 3Br. Keaa, m7 Harbor. Cen· ,._A .,, 1er,t"boreb132"1haft, New paint, 3 Br, H'2ba, 4 BR 2 BA (pie re d 646-3t02 apt 1 1 n x I n t room.XJntarea.$350. Frplc, bit.DI, w/d hkp, trallylocaled,23.Srooma. Conf. ntt., ttat 25, all fowldn a.rGlenneyreSt. pool, tennis., rec: hall. yard.' rn.ut ·tree~. 2 n~~r WESTCLIFF area. 28r nel1hborhood. Pr1 vale TSL Mcmt 642·1603 ~:,11car $395 545-3604, MANY with ktlchen, psoel.ed, 1m. whH in re· tn Lacuna Bch. Call $375 Ph557-8623 &ar .. spacious, SfiOO mo. 2ba. Crplc , patio, pool. paUo view from lovely NEW2 BEDROOM ....,.. ._ s phone• 1V. Swimmln1 ar.1or2 yr. lease. Lake .., ........ _______ _ B b d lsl&lasL67J..4545 5'25.S44..Sl84,752·7799 kitchens ; enclsd 2B .... A/C *"15 ............ "'"""_.,.,._ pool, jacmzi, pd NC. Forest area . Kent • d· K b d f 3 r. 2 a. ear cner I a r a I tl •: Po o I : r, -aee, . -. ""_.,........._ _. room Daily • Wef'kly H.artlM. .-oun . ee1 on em, $425 mo <1625 moves SPECIAL .,..._" u.fun1 3'00 clubhou.ae: no peis. sa15 mo. 645-4655 2 Br 2 Bl. new cpts/drp1, r•tel 'atarUnc rrom S'8 a ~ 714-511·93N l ilt vtc of Marauer. 4' you a.n> IM6-4288 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call c I 536-?3"S car. patio, nr beach '-week Avt.ry Pkwy. •9~-4950 L.ndmar ._ Plan 26 _ 3 3Br21,.2Bacondo,newly ZB C d d mo. aro 2Brtownbse.Alao1&2br lihopplog, SUO mo. • M5.e&O Approx. 400 sq. ft, C2. _t:_,25'1 ___ • .;,_ ___ _ • decor'd Opt avail Near r, •ada1e, jc ~ • ...._ ,....._ 3107 apts w/pool & Jacun1. 116().1Z79 A/C, at lJO E. 11th St, frplca. conv pit, huee Hoa& Hosp. $525 mo. m!ddje coup •Id on Y' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-a498 i!leaanl rm. Pool iort Slm/mO. Doyte541·11GI Lost Macaw Parrot Vic. ram rm, liv rm, mailer 640-2981 nu e •&e or o er, no •A""' 2Br, dilldren welcome no Faah.loa bla d. Edi ij .Nwpt Bcb. Dec.12th. swte. 48r. 3 car car. lads, am pet OK, SlSS mo. -· yrly. 2 br. 2 ba, 2 2 Br. 1~ Ba townbou1e, peu. 1tartln1 at $X5 mo. X.tl.lnl Un p NEW SHOPPING Rewerd. 5'9·1617 or ~/mo. Pb146-4281 8!\dCs condo; 3 BR, 2 ba, C.M. 5'1·5945 It.or)', 2 car encl. ear. garage, patio, pool, 84l-GI01 ;..;,,.,;,,a. J~ .!!".~ noo c~ G'fS.TTM ---------•like new' S550Mo Balt'OQY. Nopets. Jacuzzi. Adult• only. ,,...,..e,...-.~. snttrOR _;.__ ______ _ 3 Br2 Bl. D/W, BBQ. rncd Agenl&M-1133 ..__._.,.."'""shed TSL M1mt 642-1603 646-2010 2 Br. 1 Ba, l Jr old. Good Beaut rm pvt .bath F\n Valleytc-1891 FOUND: Pres. GI~. yd, Nr shope. achla pref ..,..._ • .._ loc Encl ear. 142-1184 or ,... t' t d Lit' brown caae, Vac. fam. 751-0348 avl2/3. Duplex, 2br, lba, new cpt, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 bdrm 2 ba, carpet, E1Sidc. babt, a1ry 3 Br. 2 goo:1o14 emp ... ma,ure a y. •ART CENTER. L•1una Anaheim HI.I, serruo drps. pot. wshr/dryr, lalaoal.a-d 3706 drape1.yrly$SOOprmo. Bl.bltnaintnplex.$360. prh, ref1.'.LaC Bcb. Bch. SlTJ mo. <805) SL1;1J4.J..158 _ l"M 3244 stv. refng. Mature adlts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64&-2148 eves, 548-9341 No pets . 552-4201 or 2 Br l Ba, $235 mo. l child *·TMS 5Z1-0030or (805) 528-8100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• oopets S350 /mo 517'2 Olx2Br.gar,yrly$4SO Lux. Oplx. Yrly. resp. 551·1241 ok,nopet.1.1ar,an1laty,V...._t .... 42&0 FOUND: Pu p py, Univ Pk 111, 3 Br 2\2 Ra. Bo Is a . N w pt 11 gt :. Adulta only Phone couple No children peti.. FOUR SEASONS A PTS 962 ... 522 • •••••••••••••••• ••••••• SHOP IENT AlS C.rman/ Collie, male: + bonus rm, Oxford, S48·5041 6'7S..30S3eve1/wknd11 Lr& 3 Br. 2 ba & xtri111. Spacious 2 brtwnlu.e 1'2 Tahoe Condo. SIPI 8, clr Ar111ticatm011phere, Miulon Viejo. 830-N45, ~ 547 7044,833·3215 Bluffstownhomecndumt. CostoMHo 3724 1535 mo 676·6590 Ba. pool, pvt put10. S ·!:'i~e~'':!'ach 1V. full)' fum'd, nr re-~veratav!i~~~,!'! _sa_....1._um ______ _ IEHT ALS 4Br. 3ba, lge country kit.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Barn 4pm Adults. No pets. 1275. 735 a~ea. 2 at!ry 3 br, 2'rt ba aortl. Rav.586-277' "'5to~per mo. SCRAM IEJS 2 BR, 2 ba ......... : $525 patio, '1r shope. school & 2br. lba. garage. polio. Joann ~3 tr-pie. laund hook-up. dbl lttMGlt to SIMiN 4300 "L 3 BR. 2 Ba .S475/S3!5 pool. SSSOtmo. 559-8444 SSO WEEK & UP $300 mo yrly. 67541229. 1or. '4~.mo. chlldtpeta ••••••••••••••••••••••• IU$WER$ 3BR,21-, ba .... $4~/495 NR HOAG HOSPITAL Studio, l bedroom 67~ OK. A1enl 841H31l or M·F shue Lult Parle M <4 BR, 212 ba •... $500/850 3 BR, 2 ba.. apUt-level Ma1d aervtce, pool Caphtr.o •och 3118 960-el81 Ntwpe>rt apt. Pool, ten· Hidcttn-Dowel- ' BR. 3 Ba. . .... $6251745 townhouse; races pool. 3 2376 Newport Bl. C.M. •••••••••••••••• • •••••. nls, rac.tuet.bllll, clbhle. &1'1lW1-TH.Ex~Eme--Car carport, ref rag.. 548·97S5or645·3967 A&tie4$-74e5M4·5GSI lndilltrt .. lftttll 4500 • Wlhr/dryer·, adult cpl. 2Br, 28a , ocn view. lg Here'• a aoberln g . only. *A"". RJtr•A2.~.,.,., SUS CASIT AS pallo, bltns. DW. F.P.. Fem. matu~,sbare : .......... ,............ th "t Af' fifl _,., ..... a..>.>.> 28d,Z8a.Apt.. 34005qft0lladuatflalpro-OUJ": ~•r ~en E 3 Br + 11e den, tennla. pool &: bch.. $480 mo. 328 Prospect. 545-4157 •---------•Completely rurn 1 BR.------Br A-Frame beach house $600. mo. 645-97!M Ml Jarvis Ail. l SSl-ZMO. Gene. =:J'. w/1900 aq fl or air =-J!illJ::!.:~i~:.'r - "LiveBetterf'orLets'' olc:.. 541.tw. 29M discovered t.be1've been ~lpbAve,CM • ....-, to keep up wrm Hwt Uatta UNtd .. ,, ... Yourbeet~elor ~0$TA MlSA ,_M.,..E_. _____ _ LocaUn1 •Roommate M4 IOHE Found: Cocker Puppy, InOr.C.O. lncelf'll Build to •Ull 5,000 lO Mapaolla "Ellls. HB/F. 132-4134 20,000 Sq. Ft. Placentia Vly Jre&. I dentlfy, Ave. 9D-M31. Wetley N. Taylor Co. -;___..;. _____ _ Realtors t . . . . . .. ... . . . . .. - • C:lf DAILY PJLO T . . Add 1t ••• uild It .. Diaper it .. Hammer it.., Carpet SERVICE DIRECTORY lt. .. Ccment IL.Wire 1t...Hoe it. .. Cl~an it ... Move · it ... Prcss lt. .• Pamt it...Nait it ... Plasler it ... F1x it... . ......... .,..... ...................... 1U1J ApJll.ianceSen. 11t1P CHAR CI'! 110 ,2CmS Maia.SA S&J.302 9S7 01 Calllat ........ ...................... Ca • •MIYUI& fo 1ar .. utll 'rm, CUhl mlde. M0-7154; 4jf-9M3 c.,.ts.mc. c.. ... •••et•s.niat ...... , .... ",..,., ,.....,...,.,.99 ....., -........ ········•••············ ....................... ..................•.... ....................... .•.•••••............... ..••.•......••••....•.. ...•••.....•....••..... ·••··••······•··••···· mpoo • ateam rlean. P'SYCHtCWIDIUM RAND\'XAM:Cwpent.ry. •ROtUMG· PETERSPAINTlNCi AVAILABLENOW! ROOfo'S ln:1tallN ftctory Plnc " Solid Oak Color bnahtenva: whl Bnct'ncw W~ el~cal, plumbi~ " Dc1De in ti\)' bo~e. t:.x 1!1pr'd. Rua Ralu PainUuau repain. dir.rt: Clllab 3.\ ynt. C.U walerbeeb OomP1tle l ne cpta10mloblnch.C1eaa-............_~ Ooon.M7·2'Tt7,$$7~ nlleat •ork at ralr free E1l. Call Oent C.IJ8ruce.I0-2CM.5 HaroldCW\ll~ 1 "OlCC'. Reuonablc•. il\',dmnn.haU$1.5 Ava_.,... pnce Phone 1422•60 ~o..511 p...a...a....ist Terry 'a Nwpt.fta y rm S7 50 couch po chr -••••••••••••••• •• •••• r__.__ £ _ _., • -..., • Roots For Less. AU lY'PC'I M:~li 1 · ' • c• ._._, ......,, .. me. pon-"'IONAL Palat •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ',_,.....__ ....... I .... ..o..;;~_;_ _____ _ SS Guar ~lim pt't odor. !LECJ'IUCAL SERVI .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ft"''"~ .._ ~ ,., naur .... tc ~ repair. 1.5 yn eapr. CALLS Sl.5 hr," SMALL Sltiploader. Dump truck. lnttt/Eictf'r. l\u1, Arl11l1pa1nter 1pec .. 1n at1mate. IH·OfJl or Wlliidctw ~ 1>o work myaelf &efs JOBS84Z-IZ33 H J a t ... .. ...... •••••••-. •••••••• .ar'tlUUIC-«llf l'DW'all, 1u~rar1ph1n. m.-133 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • au an • r..e wor.., ip "dni.na Cwt.om SP~UNG Q..EAN 5>1.0101 H•••••Uledric 1r~dlo1, demo etc ~JNG . ~· F.~t.t/lnlr. Ex· Graphld>t:slanaoo.um F.Qu\de Roofing. Sbieal WiAdo•• " boulecl an· Stam Clean Cpt 6 Upbol. ~ '"' _.... • .... -74 1311JS'f ~ .!,'1~.; pr d, hoMat, DNt. reu. ~... roat.1111 It repalnns. F'TH Id eeo. ...... "-TTU ...... -·~ .....,..., .....,..,.,'",._ Ut'd'61-.JOOl>a\'e ._ cst.1M6-81Mt -.. ~.- Uctamrdtauar.Jrm, up ELECTRIClANPriced th111de , I t' I! = .......,., • .,.... l do wladow1. My Lou' H R to«JOaq ft Slt.115, balls. b r ....................... -C'I y,..,,._ , ......... I yn ClX"f • ....._ I llhood d d I ome epa.ira, batbrm free. Ltf<' "' t· ree ettJmate oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• v"'"""'~· .. •••••••••••••••••••••• ·-1ve e~ I on )'1'.SCIP-Doorw, panehna Syatema 131-5350, larporsmalljot.. Want a REALLY CLEAN Coalm'latlnd •1 In willcovtrlas. Fret VERY NEAT PATCH ••••••••••••••••••••••• quality work &: ~ulP· wmdow1, patlo1, etc M5-3Nlla.ftera. Licaaed 671.-03.58 HOUSE! Call Gia&ba, .,._.....,._ •..... • .ia.~1'And)' JOBS.t;TEXTURE Ceraouc Tlle-S~c. In mmt. 551'2:0.'W Glrl P'reeeatM5-SlZJ .-W°IW!fHJ .. Plnf p-a-av _.._...._ Ftee~t. 893·lt31 ati;•6floon,2Syne.1· D·3'100 Jac.'k -~/~ Roon uam1om'~"" -per.9C·1813 ------- Jleopair, remodel, 10 y . ....................... ....................... SUHSHI l .. ILS u1111 y AveraaoExtt 1Stry P9$ PA'ICH PLASTERING GAHAGfo: S.\LE ads ln cupm&ry a:pene.nce. Concrete• Block Floor &: window cover· HoulecJeaDln1 6 ()(flee ••••-••••••••••••••••• 25tory $$4$. llltr$4Srm A 11 l >' p • 1, Free CERAMIC Ule, New or re lhu Oailv Pllol btaog hap. 49l-az2 wort. Patio coven & 1n1s. cork wall tiles, ipecla.li.lta. We welcom! Brickwork. Small job•. Prtca lnel matrl/labor estlmai.. Call~ model. f'ree e1t. Sml Jbei l)Y l'\."lulu.1'o place your r.-•~ice bnck. Lie ~ Bonded tarkett, etc. 27 y ra R.E.. aceouDta. Speclab. Newport, C:O.ta Mau 6 Gu.arJlnsr·f'rttest. ,. •1 welco~.~auaat\S dr.1v. ln11 card, phone -....... _...... .... -. 1 I I I t c m"" Apls & Condo• Day •-"'--Uc32mlt Ted al-'10IS n I •• , ·~ G'2 tQUaw, •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1c. 1a es coo r. a -.v • • ..... .._m-s17Seves. • ·-•••••••••••••••••••• ,, ' lnleno-""1 .... o week or month. Bonded, --------Ca tM Lilla ···-"""' ROM~Avtns Plumb ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'l>C! an w 1 )'OUC'!I onrrele, M~111on ry, tic' d, ln1rd. Reh. u.-&.... Fine paint.inc at 1tay buay . · · uo USI THI or mine. Repairs slabs, foundations, k•nl•IJ 540-9525 .,._y-. pnc. Try me fr ut at lna "Heatmg. Fl'ee est. PIA" clean.inc too! Guar work b 1gbwa11 a, pa t 10 s, ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••-••••••••••••••••• hcttn.s'rct ~ ' $l0 ht. !bleat le reUable IMSTRUCTIOM DAILY PILOT &l tqau 1avi..o&a. Fr Lirrnsed E\les 556-8241 WEEDlNG·CLEANUl'S T1lle tt.se W... "Two llcn Will Move . aervlce. BofA, MIC OK Xlnt CredenUula -ln "FAST est.&U-3N6 • , WeeltlyMaintenanre QualttyMN.w/that You" We handle bla CUSTOM PAINTING. 751·31SOorM7.o:ISS your home -Call T..-rry EM ENT WORK . All Free eat M.2·9907 "Penooal Touch... move 1 • o rt ice 6 Exterior Speciali.t. 15 .-_. •--'-• 1 _._ -m.-1005 USULT" We care Carpel Cleaners k:lnds. Reasonable. Free -Uc,, ref's,~ houlehold. Distance ,, yrs local rcla. l..lc(bon· ~ _. ... -.... -r-W. ---------t SRVICl 5'.eamcleanorahampoo eiita.Cal17S<Hi625 Ralph Caballero Ir Son'• local, alao packlnc. ded/lnsrd, 1war work.••••••••••••••••••••••• t'tencb wt.or.• Yrt Paru. Alloupholst.ery.AJlwor C Freeest.C1eanUJ>'s,tree Xlnl houleclean.lnr done Lowest 1e1al rate. Free esll. Won't be uo Paraaon Pool Service. will travel <chct vous.) DlllCTOIY euar. 'rruck mount un1t 41ltt ec:tor !Jim. 646-4654 alt 4PM by lady w/up. De~nd.· Uctin.srd. Cal T J.11·9'4. derbld &U-SOOS Complete awimmln I ~-61M8. For Result Fr est, reas rates••••••••••••••••••••••• ble,owntrau.M7..as17 Pb84'7·1278 pool maintenance. --~------1 ~:me MARKS!LERCONT. CJu,Mfwd ads sell b11 --F\rsl clua atllol paw. 6754798 Don't 'we up the sbap! Service C•ll NewcomL Rea/comm'l. 1t4wb, ~mall items or HouaecleanlDI " win· Wlll do Ute movina 1n1 Patnbeo1Ln1. ··ust' 1t In clautCieJ. 642 5671 SELL Idle ltems w1lh 11 Rmadd,remode1,pauo any Hem. Jus t call dowa. Rea. Local re· w/vao. Beu. Rlck Cab&neU refinJJMd etc. Kave aoawUunc to Hll! Ship to 6hOr• resuJls! • Dally Pilot Classified Ad Lie contr. Call 91'1M411 642 561H. rensacea. Aoyce. 5'9·1M9 1132.-., aft l :IO wkdya. 25yn np. 919.~ Classified ad.I do It well. &&.:?·50'78. ._ __ tst_._•_u __ _. P..-son~1 SlSOHelpW..ted 7100Heft»Want.ct 7100 W..tM 7100tWpW..tH 11ootWpWcilttH 7100HelpWmhd 7IOOHltpW.t.d 1100H.lpW•hd 7100 .........••............ ·····~················· ................................................................................................................................................................ . PREGNANT! AccamtlltgCl«tt BABYSITTER wanted-Bar hdy for mellow a.tCorH.B.d"'ltt.ore. Delivery Draver" Housecleaneu nteded. taaurece Carina unf1den~1al Mu 1 t be 1 0 0 d top~~5yro~~y&: tavern by beach In HB. P/Ume. Mr/Mra. Hatch =~-=-=r; 13to G&tlaALOFC Must.. ha1;e tran!I, win T~t/Auelllbler coun.a~hn&" referral w/telephone & the ~Ydayi wk .1~85 ~1~~ Noexp.nec.S36-Dl0 8C'1·25G. ' ' P/tlme ~metypLD&. train. 5•0·1152$ The Immediate openanc an Akbortlon, adoption & public. ~uslbewUlineto Creek CdM Susan IU.UTYorBATOI Clerlt· Mature -raon for DBJVIRY CaUll402991 -!klnshlneGirl11 lyptnf. depart. Rtc1wres eepina be traiUled computer ""' M /Oo rt • ..,.. 50 I APCARE 547 256:1 knowledR~ helpful wkdys, 833-8100, Barb&r1t Earn more by renUn& full time eMployment euenaer u er ~ai office. rouUne8• HOU.itma111t .. luG ..,,.inic wpm, pNv ou!I Please call fo l wknds, 559·6.'ifS apace Leading CdM 1'lt8. Apply T·ll Food .5 l>a)' wk. P/Ume am or Older woman pref. call • .,.....,.... " tnsuranrtexperprefd *MICHELLE'S* Outcalt Mauace Mon-Fri~SOOOEx~~ Bab tt ---hlf salon. Jim, s••-7321, Store. US73 Irvine Ave, pm. Know Ora Co, afteri.OOPM .&42·1280 PORTB C_.1L.lnc1l.t,.. _ _ )'Ill er. reput.a e, or M2-0043 Cll Pbooe ~. M, ~H9betwnS& 10AM. Must be avad to work Commercial rater w 2 5 yr child, wbo attends wlulya. . hOfcT,.. toSIOO wknds & evt:1. Hea\y )'earsuperlnetlberpro· • ACCOUNTING CLERK Vu:toria Elem. CM . Ca II Deatal Autatant, l/Ume FrM. Tbll II an Jtlnt OP· c I ea n 1 n I I si v o Ive d . petty or casually ral1n1. • Spktt.alRNder 10 Key calculator, by 6G-42lOorMG-8090 Q.ll«ijTYP15T :ck~~c 1:i,1~:.f.cx~ poc-.rora~raoowbohaa Please call Tor appt. Tbis poehion .i. in our lOAM·2AM 731 ·4462 181.SSo. El Camino Real touch a must, ty~ s.s Babysitter needed my n..a..~~~~::.~;~r'd 'f!!1'1-r1c,~!°" bill· ~_, certllicate necesa. tome tuurance back· Moo·Frl64.5-5000ext520. muJU line nun1 d,epart. San Clemente. Fully Uc. WP Id. p I ea a ant home Moo·Frl Approx ..,.,......... ,,... .... cler or .,..urance Salary 142.eao sround "wanll to leans . & we will cl'OSI U'lln tho For appt. 492.72911 ldepbone voice, froot of. M. v;c 19th & Pomooa 3 Bonders Co. In Newpof'l Beach. open. comm1 Una In a arow· KOUSEKEEPER live-m, selected tantlldate to rice appearance. Call llo.oldboy.~aft& ExcelJempay Good typln1 aktlls, DeD1alS.Cy/Btpr tni8Pftcy.Tbltcanlead I& bch hocne. lather" become a multl "ne . RELAXING MASSAGE btwn8;JO.l1Al4,S4.9-<nl3 atfnn&ebenelu. aalarytoSSOOA1oodOo. aper or eollea•, cbalr toanaccountutt. po1l· son .. Pvt rm le tMltb, rel rai.r. BobJamea·Llc Museur __ __;._....;..._.:....;_;_..;..;..:::..1eABYSITTER, mature IALIOA YACHTS beoeDtl.~ aut poaltlon aao open Um w/m\leb cllt:#Sl con· reqwredl46-2288 Salary comrneonrale Outcall 9·9, 4M·5ll t Ambltaou.1 Coo9le Wanted lady, for a mo old baby, 2912 Century Pl, CM Cl.BK TYPIST llOOn 548-3000 tact. Al.lo Fee Joba. Call Kousek li . f w /exper, xlot bener111. MASSAGE RGURE MODB.S ESCORTS OUTCAUOHLY 611-3111 ~~~~: ~'fJ1~0~u~: ~Wed, my home, 5.'56-S'720, E.O.E. Mature peuon. Co. ~ISHW~H!tl ~?·~enc~~a~ yne N~Bchvef~~ilc;: ~-=1foo~0rc~f;~~ t.erfere w/your present beoeftla +bonus. Mon· Apply lo per1on, HaJ'bor.CM . Sal1ry open. Ref. app\. EOE Job, Must be w1lhng to IOOKKEEPB Fri. M. IBM carda •ad· Stavro'• 5830 w Cout 8'2·2191 Tran Amnc• -lt>_..a.~_. M_r._1_1a_11_. "2_·_1634_._, BANK COMMISSIONS drw rues. $Z.'7$ Per hr to HWy Ne' • GJ.nlham Girl houleclna Housek--r for elde I htMI GftC• f\mb1t1ous cpl needing mor e 1nroml". work together, full or P/T ~2403 OutcaJJMaua1e An1. Serv. telephone l734S29 o~ralor, wk.oda only DANCE OF F UN Must N oYer SS yra old, Btn ntxle &Iris dance 4' ll·7 lhl1l. m Forest. LB. rap seulon. lOAM lo A P A R T M E N T JAM Moo.Sat. 12PM lo MANAGER Realdeot SPM !kin. S!:S N. Euc:hd, manaaer for Coeta MeH Ana.b. 55&-6150 10 unit buildlnl, near all FREESESSJONW/AD convenience•. No UMDA la VICKI children, no ~ts. Call 64M4'7'7. o.tc411Moa..,. For ttw ,_ of Mt Servin( all Orange Co. lmm«t1ate opemnis for atart. Apply, Pen· aef"Vlce nds women PIT, ~~ .... · r > the followlna positions 1n Npt Bcb Invest Farm. nyaaver 1660 Placentia DOG GROOMING top$. car nee. &U-5123 womll'.' & M>n, must hon ~ f' charae comm1n's bk CM ' ' car. lh·e out $HO mo. our La1una office kp ·r Req exp in i>el hrd Alslat&Dt, expenenred. GIRL FIUDAY tl45-1M3 lnsurance TEL.LEI sys, knowledee ln read ~~ ...... -11w.......___, USV.Broadway,C.M. c-... w 11 Conwa1Pron. P•0 TTIME •-t --~ --· . ...,.... .. wear co. e or· H.owiekeeper. ltve·ln . .5 r-~ 111& compu er reports. ScMol Dome.he, Liv~·ln. Lile pnued, motivated, self days. Priv. room & ba. u.dtrwrihr ~!~"~'x.,'e~e!'coean,r~~ 640-01.23. Learn an uciting, ~~!'~!o~!' d. Call ~~~: Jliypln1h. P11hone cir TV. School aae Requires expl'r cum· ferred. lluslbewillioglo Bookkeeper, full \tme, &lamoroaa bi&hly paid ._._,_...._.. .,._.,. •• ~· c • en1· children. No amoking, merc1al property un- work SatW'days and 00 bk/rec Cuatomer con· proh••· Dar /eve NUTSHO~ ear&yAM 1.ngpoa.Se resNumeto rets. S12S wk , &4.2·5358, derwr1ter for our call as needed for work. tact. Postin& to ledler • ei... Placement Al· ahitt. w • ,. 25 PO Bo1 %135 ewport ~ Southern Callf Branch an · acct payable. Fashion ll•t. i141751·tlH. or over. p::'ua::~ r:.ci Beach, Ca 9*3. eo.ta Meu. S1lary com. NEW ACCOUNTS Isl. Cell Bruce bet lOAM· 21'/~. So. Calif. time. Apply in putOO. GIRLAIDAY. mmaurale w/ex~r. xlnt ; CLERK 51>11'44-8860 Cocktail Wa1treues. Dlppity Donut•, 115, L B b K HOUSEWIYfSl.I. benefits, contact Mr. PART TIME loc. lnioe 6 Loni Bcb Newport Bl d CM La(uns eac · ey Ni.lei, 714·s.:56-1700 for In· Savina• and Loan or Booltlceeper Sec'y run locailom v ' • dupllcatlnfs A ca.th re· nr.dof ter'VWwappt. EOE ban .. experl•nce r•. tame. dlctapboae, book· . DRIVEa ~ e ...... 'f1 •tart. •O H • .l.dD~ • , ....... rte• .. ... "' keep1n1. aoott typ1nf. COLLECTORS ••&R .......... _...,._ •••Cllv :uwt•'Y' Qtlred. 1YPllll 4S wpm. speed, lmowledfe of 0 . far itasa comp1n1. Pick Work temporary" make la..-c:e Must be willina to work fice procedure, 1 g\Tl Of· Salaried poalllon in up/del • trainee for GfRLSM • ma money. ~ Saturdays. nee. Pia aubout resume Colla M_. ofc. llln 1 yr other work. Apply at 125 Sandwich dell ory, & T..-. AtMll!ilMrl to Box 1150, % Daily exper. Finance co ex~r. Rochea~St. CM Q)"I wt, 4 hn day. Own Pacbn Insurance r;'~':'!d'~~·s w:~kd Pilot, P.O. Box uso, hdpfw. Call R. Acaba, RIVERS le HELPERS tramp. Earn ovr 13 50 Lodi le short term aa· SECIETARY •SHERlLEE• benefita. cau or apply Olst&Mesa,C..921826 714/s&GlO. NEEDED. Loe a\ hr. Call lam·lpm, 1l1nmenll. Holiday• Accur typ t. CrOOd ore· Cer1.inedMaueu1e ASSEMILEttS Thursday, Jan 26, 9 30 BOOKKEEPER COMSUM bouaehold mo•lnf· 5*8339. 't'Acpay, :.~~in Oppty for adv. 13$-7313 ~--~ -~~ Apt Mana1er, couple (semi-relired)for 61 unit adult complex tn Costa Mesa. Salary "70. aross. Nopeta '31·2951 ' HouseC.lla·B)'appt. Sm product aaaembly, lol1:30Al\landl 30to4 FuUcbargebook~eeper, ltlSl.l.llCH Fullfp·time. EJtpu d Grillcookevet,1:»10.00 Ho•r.ltaliution plan, ___ • _____ _ ___ 838·6U8____ wtll lrain. 1240·K Logan' PM. Y•cht club. Prev. c:lub INT&VllWPS need only app&y, 847-7278 PM, xlnt benefit• Is avaJ . lnsurance Mlgrunea·Sciatlca· or Baker & Fairview, AMBICAH experience prererable. HOMEMAKERS! forappt worldn& eond. 557-4700 GROUPHIALTH bur1itl1. try ac· C.M.979-2494 SAVINGS Salary open. Mr. C'booee Tbe Da)'S You Dl\YQ.;EANING ext.,.. CIC11m1hcmlner cupresaure muaaae. AlsemblY-No exp nee. 23S3SC.HedelaLoulaa Ca.rtwnsbl Wm Pait tJn:ie days" PRESSE.R Min 2 yr.1 exper. Should OW:alla.~1916 Axelson Filhlnc Tackle U.una l44..as30 eves, wknda. PG.rtioa.a Exper not neceaaary, GUAl.DS 3'4'C..,..Drhe be ram1bar w/RVS COB Regl1tered Pbyalcal Ml&.173M.MurpllyAve, Ka.Goklblau77G-281& 8ook.llleper, full chars•, av1ll. in new ceell'aJ willtraln,C~.m...as7 ~lUsPl&ilbe.Worltany 5'4M741 le Medical 1ro'}ft coo· Th er •PY. G 1vln 1 Irv. am Equal Opportunity eiper. Stat tl'PiJll. Var. ~~i(:Ulo at F11malePaekacen.Mer1t ~~area. UnUorm (Acniu'From ::!~~~a':n:,~;~~~ physical muaa1e a my ---.------£mployer M/F of acct a. Pa1roll U2) • r-.at Rabel It car req~ °fiaI-~'e:o~ Or&Die Co. Airport) Promotion to cJal m 5 studio, NB. No prank Alloc:la~rm~.-~~~~~~~~~! $900 Nwpt Bch. )fr. bn.lM.!_!_«N ... Pll + Call $4a.sus. lUT C.ll Bq\ia}OpporEmployer au• .. rvlaor tor capable calls please. IA&lllmate A " Crawford Ml).2200 · some w......... o exper. llol¥oYl A NB ~••m·2pm. .... masare.M1·28t7t-s. H.S. 5 •--------1--....;_ _____ _, needed, will train. Must a •a. examiner.Call549-1761. Yi1I man wboae car was hit lo Ed•ard'a Cinema Center parkln• lot on &Co119tTroieecl BanJc:inl IOYS·GllLS behhct.aooln:en· Mrlla11 Worker-All P/U~'!r~only ffa&eepa', llon Is Fri l>-3. IMSUIAMCI F·~TIMI 12-l8yaanofa1e.Even-joypeople. o lln· A.rouad·LamlnaUDs·Otl __ ._..._...ft&:...iue•~~" $250 1110. Tboroulh 0 1 N 8 .. 1• We have Immediate ~ work. Obtain new vol\'9d. Coat·Toucbcap. uper'd --... ...,....._ ~ clean'1, dnl ref•, own row n1t wpt c .. Sat. tl, lOPM. Piie con· U you are atblctlcaJJ.y ln· tadto-flOI cllned or people----------' oriented. work la av.U.· FOR YOUR VALENTIN! ble ll you are freo Crom Taateful, clusie, Vic-3PM·10PM. Flu.lble tori•n style, aeml·nude wort 1chedule. Op· pcirtralt. Black/white or portunlty to &•In bUll· color. Info and appt. nt11 ••P•t. J.f'or In· _o._.31ZJ ______ __. teniewcaU: ,_,...·11111 lwTlcff IHO ... to .. What JOO r.al· b'wantmur •• Barbdale SeU·Eatum Center '7SMJ:M or151·1S77 Roy1Jty Llmoutne . Ht-tllJ ope:nlhplnourSanJuan auliec:ript.ionsfortbeDal· C.UofftcetO.SPM. 0011• n.ta req'd. HAPP~AREER tuna. Nonamolcer. Ai\mcy needs 1lrl with Capt1ll'ano office for 1.1 PUot worldni wi~ ara _..,. U4·40lO. Bounty J!:n. and eM..ass mlnlmum & monlhl com-• ..__-'"'-•.. a.A..·•t , ............. -am merclal ratin1 uper. ..__._ uw -~··-· COOICS terprlae lne. UHl P'INANCIA.LlflNDED HSICJIPl/Go•.,.... Must be neat, consclen- laUA ~ ~ ~)~ or Breakfut, Lundi. dln· Producer I,,n, Volt. 1• UlllimJUld 0&>POrtonlty Live lo/out. i youna liOUI & have Iota of In· 0008 to $pm. (JU) .... Exper'd. ApplJ la H.B. ava.llaf)l.e ·~ ll\t.taa• cbUdreo. Molberl .. s t1t.laUve. XJnl car ... op· DuU• Include worklnl wtt!t new accounta ana 1eneral teller work. Ill* bave at t ... t l year aparieoce. __,.71.. Spm.fpm. Call c::a• Me Barter'• WERALOf'flCI tioaal company. Sale• home. Mon thrll Fri. portunlty • many ,,_.,_...., uran• 212 K l?UI badtpWnd prtf'd. Toi> En1l apeaklne, muat ben•rih. Call Sue ~-.. • Non 1moker. Type 50 mua1ement -J•lont St. C.M. w.~tn.. _. 10 ht b, &llabl 4 ..... ..,... ' dl'h-e. Refs req. Salary McLeod. 844-4100 IUSIOYS ,__.11 a>· d.a •. _,....,. 1 tiuh. CoOd matb :ekU.11. av • • ..,.n~ our .,a. MCotiable.644~ NeecW rot c1.ay boun. ~ ,...1f • ......... Pie t &.el...,._• man· UOn • lntUnational ex· Imurance Undenrrlter ~ly dal~ at UAM, 11'·e1Pef.;...;~.._.. oer. win~Ci'ucan>t .Plmfan, Seed rtia~• to lJIJtallAlanns TnlnM to &11bt U/W lllOUa, Jiiii &. 17&11 at. ,_...._. • •zsoo. (t A.M. to 5 PO Box._ Aaabeita, Ca Xlnt0pp1yflor Must live policy typiaa C.M. P.M.). =~~-7tt/JU.a3S MIH WOMEN ;.~~0i•hry open • A" t aatt • 1t b .......... « ............. USID TO LUNllil~ RELIABLE INSURANCE ~ . .,:;·~:~t~ *$8 .. 50HR ,=:~: Noapar a.re, we tralll FEMALI •INSTALLERS To wort In Oran10 c~. •SALIS Send r ea um• to .c1:11V1CI Clusilled ad no. lU, c/o ~•• Dally PUot, PO Box lJGO, •MQ.MT ca.ta M••· ca tzas " 1'WAINllS JaM.onalWor~P~m•~ Y\allorPQ1Um l'Jllm• en1. C.K. &: c.IMr.Mafon N.B. ....... 141-wo. *957-8189• .._....,.,. . ,.;;,;.;;.,;;;;;.;.;;......,...,. ...... ..._ ....... ._ ___ .......,. _____ 1 PJUme cnotm. Matun., ,, .. ...., w..w 7100 ~ palOft; Bl)'.wtow • ,~..._,..._ ••••••• .. ••• ...... -... O:mv .. aJ.Tburln An, -CM.ecw5Q5. !-. • f • I f .-. "" I "' e -..-L--~- MANAGER TRAINEE r I This Valentina's Oay send your lovd a greeting ell the world can ahare with a Dally Piiot Heart of Love. · It's easy, compose your ' personalized greeting & we'll set your message In type to f it the border of your choice or your own handwritten thoughts may appear In the bOrder you select. Borders come fn 3 sizes: $15. $10, & a special child's elze for $2. (You must be under 12 to qualify for thla one). If you wish .to create your ·own gntetlng, use a black pen & write your message In the heart below or draw your own Valentine of thltaln. •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAST CHANCE! 28 fL UnlflJte Sportfiaber. 1 owner, In -""'-------- mint cooditlon & loaded! CUstom interior, pilot, A.D.P', V.H.f'., sunloa. outrl11ers. AC/Dci----------' nawral 1aa relrigcrahon HotnH. Sde/ ~ cookloc. b1minl top Rtftt/9toroge t 160 w/encloaure, new••••••••••••••••••••••• Cbryaler manifolds . ent a 1977 Excutive iuen le elbows plus ex-Motorhome or Mini· &ra fuel. Call Dale at motorhome from Herb .a.2708. Friedlander. Call any of 28 fl. Thunderbird theseoumbers Formula (offshore). 351 191-6777 V8s, all nav11at1onal 537.7777 gear & iround tacklu. 121-1881 Sleeps four. Under soi---------- hours used since new. 6 MOTOR HOMES wheel trailer included· FOR RENT also Cull canvas. Call From$100. wk. 770-0644 John Felter at 6'2·0010 or 640-8211. SUPER 21 FT. FISHING IOAT CFS4118B. Flybridge, single screw. 1alley, bead, bait tank. Sleepe 4. Eniiae completely re·,._ ____ _..._ __ _ built. Electrooic gear In· 'motor home, alpa 8, for cludea dept.b finder and aale $1.0,000 or rent $100 lJraadnew, unused2·wi.J wk opt. pUt"Cbue. Fully J1( radio " RDF. $'1500 cont. &CU301 or best ofler. Call ev• le wknds 645-9376 WANTED by pvt pty med ' GMC or Revcon motorbome. Ca 11968-8236 1978 E '78 Midas, S A RA Y'S Lomlles, loaded. 49'T·Z15e NOW T ........ Tf'9Yef 9 I 70 JS 114E TIME TO BUY le ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAVE.OVER112BOATS llUSTSELL JN STOClt. 18'-30' FOR li'llKomfort-17' JMllED. DELIVERY. Sleeps 8, R&O, .... Sul>atanUal ptlot ln· electric refric, •bower BARWICK OAT::,UN '·11' t u.1111 .qu t f.11~" SJl.1375 4q3.3375 WE BUY CLIAMCARI &TIUCkS ~~] lilt! l~ tJI A( •t lll VI• HUN 11'41._, I u" HI A(.11 cr..ue Feb L. and nuab atool, 10,000 HAIUUSON'S BTU heater. Hitch and1---------..., SIA RA y new battery ln•luded. M :.> ne1 ~40 04.n 3101CoutHwyN.B. 63'7""158SatlsSun. 'JI "547 Z' Luxury Vae.UOneer, •• loaded w /xtrae. Xlot 25' CN a-aft, xlnt conct. cood. 67$4401 maD1 xtru, '" to ap-~ Ser\'lu Pert. prec. S.c. $52-7868 & AccetscWtH 9400 ......... , Q •• I WllUY COMPl.ITI IOOYSMOP HOWOPIN .. -IXCEU.IMT S&ICTIONOll IMWUSALIS We lD&1 bave )'OUr next rar ba ow-lavtntory. Call Ultodayl Ml~~l l)N VII Ill IMPOPI'. 8Jl l '48 ol9'.>11n, IJl-2040 4tMtCt oaANel COUMl'Y'S Of.DIST & Salea.servt~Leaslna 1tDRIVIA* •UTI'LL.• SAVE A LOT SHOP&tCOMPARE BARWICK DA 1 ~UN ··•'•I 1.11' 'I' t1 "'. 8)1-1375 493.3375 COSTA MESA DATSUN 284.SHARBOR BLVD. UCMt4Io140.0%1 l NEWPORT DATSUN 77C..•we t>eroo • eucutlve sale now 1otn1 oa....,..urry ! •OOVESTREET <Neu NacA~ur Blvd. ~.Jam~Roadl ,tiEWPORTJJEACH lll-1300 '66 Porsche, runa food $C,OOOor best offer. 5S4-0814S 177 cuu.,. Broqban:a A•tFM atereo. P~ P/B. A/C, tlt·•lal, mt. tlrm. s.sz. n.w • ..... ttl7 ....................... '74 HMtl> PlMTO sq-.WA.GOM • ~ 1,ranslDWloa Is rid.io. <IOKBP>. Now OMLYSlttS MAltqUIS TOYOTA 11.JSSJON VIEJO nt-ZPO 495-1%10 '74 Duster, lmmac., 37k ml. lJ.20 MPG, 1 oar. tz'l'a). Must sell. m.e&61 eves m-•knds. POllfloc ,,.s ....................... ....... _________ _, '7Z cataJma, xlnt oond, PS, J7 . VOL. 71, NO. 2~, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES Puffing And Pill Perilous WASHINGTON CAP) -The federal covernmenl announced today that women wbo buy birth control pills after April 3 must receive a broch~ warning that ••wpmen who use oral contracep- tivea ahould not smoke." The caution tfalnst both amokln1 and taking the pill will be contained in an updated • brochure and separate leartet written in simple lan1ua1e that physicians or pharmaclsta di•· penslng the pill will be required to live to consumers. Food and Drq Commissioner DonaJd Kennedy aaid that the a1•ncy'a moat Important message "ia a almple one: IC , yoa take the pill. don't smoke. If 1 you do smoke while on the pill, . you Increase dramaUcally your cbancet or aufferlng a heart at- tack or stroke." The FDA declined lo require a warning lhat the pill can in- t crease the risk of breast cancer. I A lawsuit is pendlne in federal I district court in Brooklyn, N. Y , aeektnc a court order that would force the FDA to include such a warning. The new Jabollnc requlretnent stvea women conaaiderably more Information that they have rectlved In brief aummarles ' tut have accompanied pUl ~cketaa.lnff 1970. Tbe..., warnlDI a1M stated: -The Pill Uould Dot bi taH '1 those who ban bad blood clot· tine diaordera. cancer of the breast or lex or•an1, Wlft• plained va1lnal bleedln1, a stroke, heart at.t.ut or aneina pectoris or who auspec& they may be preenant.. -Women with scanty or fr. regular periods are atron&ly ad- vised not to take the oral con· tnceptlve. -Birth control pilll ate of no value in the prevention or treat- . ment of vene~al dlaeue. • -·'Other forms of contra~p. tfoa have lesser rlJkl or none at alL Tbey are also less effective than oral contracepttve1,. but, t uaed properly, may be effective enoulh for many women. .. I SEEKS COUNTY SEAT Huntington'• Wieder Wieder's Campaign Mapped ... ---·--'"""'"" ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA I TUESDAY, JANUARY24, 1978 :I TEN CENTS 2Dogs Maul Boy To Death ST. HELENA (AP) -A year; old bo~ JOit bis life m a maulln6 by two lai&• dOp dNcltbM by ntlihbors u friendly petl, COl'o! oner'a ottlclab said today. Youns Vincent Madrisal, child of ~obn and Joy~e Madr:-lgal, was prooounced dead at a Joca1 doctor'• omce aft« tbe attack Monday by two rott· weilen1 -dark-colored, heavy- joweJed, German hunting dogs. Joe P.,e, Napa Cowlt7 clliet deputy coroner, said tbe child'• mother sustained eye injuries · when she tried to pull the do•• from tbe baby. The child •uf· fered "10UDds all ovel' bll body. prlm&rily about the bead, he Hid. Pase aaid the Madrl1alt worked u caretakers on tbe ranch about .seven mUes eut ot here wben1 the attack occurred. He Hid the Robert Stouts, who own the propertJ and the dop, were away oo vacaUon: Madrigal WH at work away from the house when hla wt!• and child were as- aaulted, investtgators said. Pace said authoriUes have "no idea" why the dogs at-tacked. "We have not been able to talk to the mother who could 1lve us the story," Paee 1ald. "We're a111umJng that the dop were loose tn the yard." The Incident shoot nefchborl In th.la community of about 8,000 In the famed Napa Valley wine re1lon, a~ 70 m.U. Dortb ot S•• ... ,, ...... _ ... - .. n wu a •lmPle, diUd!ul ac• cfdent ewer tit a inbtute," 1&ld .i encs PlicoAZ> Bonfa Takes ODt P~pers in .,. Attorney Race • m llUCLIAI SAlfUlff OISl#1f GIA 11S • ... ,.J ~ ~ ... ~ ~,., s1,,. •••• _ ........ --I -~----.-I I I • BRITISH I : : COLUMBIA/ Alf A'/ t MANIJOBA ' 1 SASK. I ' '-\'\\ Yancouvei \ C 1 ' 1 . ( , • a 1a1y t i 11 W1na1ptt e I UNITED STATES . . . . .. ......... WHERE SOVIET NUCLEAR SATE1.UTE FELL TO EARTH' No Danger Frora Radk>llettvlty, Canadian• Say 'Balls of Fire' Light Sky: Fallirlg Star? -nlBRB RAD BEEN FAJ.UNG stan/arller lD the niaht so I J'lf\lred it wu aometbln1 very logtcal," aat Potts, wbo spotted the dillnte,.-atln1 aatellJte from tbe RCMP 1tatloa at Hay Nver on the aouth ~ ot Great Slave Like. Ho utd the sight did not alarm htm. ··1 Just didn't lb.Ink •bout It. t tboulht at flrat tt WU Just • meteorite unW l heard about lt on the r.dlo," be aald. He said tbe ball of f1re aeemed to lad J..-Mribea1t of Hq JUver. ft plasamet!nf 11telllte, wbtch U.S. and Culdlan otnclt!I •t!_d_i ~1' dlatntepatect. wu aeon 1D a number Of com. JDq:uatks 1n the Great Slake Lake area. IN ntl.OWDllFE, Mas. M.U.1£ RU!ftl:Dt who nnta a Jariitorlal aervlce, aaf" •tie ..,, • br1Cflt object 011b'nc acrou the •kr when Ibo was drivlni home from won. She wu facln& the airport and thoutbt lt WU a Jet tatJni otl. .. It was qwte a way up, ~ at an aniie, lite a Jet that hid Just left tbt airport,'' •be nld fJl a tdepboce lntentew. 1'J*l lhe reallied U mmt be aomet.hla1 else. She Mid IM waa ao eadted that she called ber IOD and da\llbter om of &be Jaoale to bate a look • lt. #.J'BB M'.AlN P.UT WAS IDB a bdtM ft~ US}lt ~ It ume ovnead ud we cauJ4 cet a cood loot at ti. l au.14 ... -doeaas., partl. ~ w• • 1n&1.o P&rt. like a brlCbt u~ mt iota ol lmaD »&rta tra111Di behind lt. EaCh put bad a loat. brloit tall." She aalct lt sped onr ber home la Uda towa • Uao DOl'tb tbore • of Great Slave Lake be~ east. ••Jt W&lll'\ Ver'/ blth u4 U cUdn't mate a sound. n ~ a'11D ac!dld. "Alt TUE PIECES WRE bls«er than •hootln• at.an. As It WH dfsappeartJll the maha P.lece turned biipt red. ft WU Jt.aal fan• to1t1c." TIU> aatelUte was also •POtted at J>tne ~t oa the eoi1itJi ehOre ot tho like l.Dd at Fort Smlth cm tbO Albert&·Nortbwest Terrttonu botd r lo 1M eouttio Ttie late Ii 850 mll Dorib o1 the U.S. bord WASllJNGTONCAP)-A. ~ net mllltary •PY 1atelllte powered by a nuclear reaetcr fell from orbit today an4 . plum~ t.oW&rd a ~ populated area of Canada. .Prealdqt Carter'a DaUual aeeurlty met qld. e;olreeman in Ottawa aatd tMtV •H noreuon fof'concem abOQt any danpr from nd1oact1vlty. Ho 1ald It was unclear whetbei" all the satellite dlalbteerated and bUmed When It re-entered tile atm01pbere about 8SO miles. nonh of thO Kont.ana bordeO With C811111da. • Howe•er, Zblgnlew Br1ealn11d. Carter'• national HCUrit1 81de, Aid the YddcJo broke apart and burned wbeD ~ blt Ute ·~ Alkecl •b.t be tboaabt the ute1llte dllbJte. srated before bltttna tJJo ~ be said &Mt bued oa sdenWlo ex;pert.ence, "lt wa1 •ffl'1 ~ probable tt would burn up ... Bnez:lnltl aald tb1a wQ tbe l'lnt tJme a aatelUte powered by a nuclear reactor crUbed into the earth'• atmosphere. Brzezinski wbo made t~c an• nouncement about the eatolhw at a news brleftng, said, --rbe' chances are very little tbU ID1 • c:ontamlnaUoo resulted." Brzeilnskl'a announcement • tUmued aboUt two weeu ot cooaultatlcm between u.s; UIS Soviet oftlctall as lt became .- parent that tho &asalan aatelllie WU loin& to droj> out of «bit. Govwnment otfldala Hid ex.o m u rettnUy •• llondq · (_D~ :.!~· ftuld CO eq ~ pear.~ • Tile Sovt a:ateUlte WU biltlalit' Ju u i-._._. b on drcutt ot that satellite p~ over eveey 1a.Dd mus IA th• world. includm. e•erJ area 1D the United States. Ila orbit did not eover AatarcUca and the ex• tremo aottbem parts of~ Ruuaa. SC.NHnavta an4 most of Greenland. BrseilmJd aald the SovJet Coamoa aatelUto containing bltlllJ radloactlve enrlcb94 ' vaAl&am·231 entered tho Q. (See ORBIT. l'qe AZ) A Hantlnltcln Beath 1lrl has been ldentlfled by autboriUea as one ot thrcte Brltham Younc UDl•enltJ ttndent.a mted alcaa 'trith a Provo man SU a ~ J'ane C!l1lllb. Dia.De Petenon. 20. ~ died ln tbe craab tbat alM claimed U.. lint of pilot Ga17 Weal, 28, ol Provo; C\Utls Ji KlovaDIQ JI, .-Catlada; and Maret• MeDonald, ai, of ~riwonL , Sbetura 4cpUt.lea a 11lc! Uta tl•ll•·enilno Celma Cardin~ WH fl)in8 frOm Salt Lake qlf to Provo Sunday when lt ~ dUtiAI a IAllOW lbower. 1 Delly '*' IWtt ...... II COMES OUT SWINGING Sen91• Hopeful Bender .Candidate '' Pounding Pavement By MICHAEL PASKEVICR °' Tiit DMty ........... Joel Bender, a 2S-year-old Costa Mesa resident and a ni&ht chef at an Irvine restaurant, is bent on making himself the most '·isible and outspoken of the Republicans running for the state senate seal being vacated by Dennis Carpenter. Unable lo afford the cost oC running an all.out race for the nomination in the 36th Senatorial District. Bender bas been pounding the pavement in .search or the 3,000 alenatures needed to place his name on the ballot in June. lie hopes to meet 60 percent oC the reaistered Republicans in the district between now and the f'eb. 23 filing deadline. By get- ting the necessary signatures he can &\'Oid the required $22S fil. mg fee. Bender estimates that he spends a 70-hour campaJgn week ln addillon to his full-time night Job "None of my opponents bas any business running for elec- 1ive office," he declares. "John Schmitz is a polltical animal of the worst kind," aald Bender, claiming that Schmltz's party switch has left him "a tarnished horse." He says another GOP Senate candidate, Gll Ferguson, "needs a hobby." According to Bender, who re· fers to Gov. Brown as "a boio," "I am the onJy candidate attual· Jy takine hJs campaigh to the pevple. J don't have ~ lqe .construction industry dollars paying my way and telling me what to say, nor do I have the radical fringe of 'good ole .)>oys' to organiz4t my CfnlPJUID and scream frommfe' wfien th1n11 don't go my way." By frequenting shopplnJ cen· ters and tuhbarkfn• oo a daily door-to-door campalcn, Bender hopes to get tbe needed "In Ueu" signatures by Feb. 10. "By then, Gilbert Ferg\J$0n will have spoken only with bis moneybags and ~ackroom b9Y1 . . . <and) John Schmitz will have succeeded only in maklnc a bigcer fool of himself than before," Bender insists. The bearded candidate often sports an ··nce" pin on hla lapel and saya he ls concerned about the need for tax reform and the needs or the little man. 1"l want the opportunity to •cream for your money. ~ ltome1 ud your r11ht1, • he ••ya. Parents Group Slates Meeting . A 1roup called the conceri>ed parents for the Hunttn1ton Beach City School Dlatricl has scheduled a meetin1 to dlscuu concerns with baalc education. The meetina will be held al 7:4$ p.m. Feb. 2 at Ediaon eon,. m1.1nlt.t Center, 213'71 Ma~a St. More Wormatlon can be ob- tained by c~ 860-1872. "'' DAILY PILOT Oceu VJ.,, HJcb School tn Huntincton Beacb will receive a s.se.• state plannlnc aranl to betln a school improvement pro- •ram as outUned in recent lt&ialatloa lcnown u Aa1embly BUI 1$. · Ooean View Hilb ScbooJ, the neweat HunUngton Beach Union Hlah School Dlatrlct campus, ia amona three or Oran1e County 1chool1 and 46 California schools to receive the ataie 1rants. Next year, the Hununaton Beach school will be eUalble to receive about $122,000 in state funds to further the improve- ment procram, officlals said. Ocean View Principal John Viculln aaid the money will be used to deslcn a proaram em- phasiling basic academic skills and career education. Fund.I could be used to pay substitute teachers while ref· ular Instructors are planning the program, Viculln s&Jd. The state cash could also be uaed to allow parents, students and teachera to visit otber school• to oblerve model pro-erams, the principal said. The Ocean View School site council, a 32-member commit tee, will gather the information about proposed lmprovemets and recommend a plan to the school board, V1culin explained. The acbool site council is com- posed of nine teachers, seven non-teachjng employees, eight parents and eight students all elected by the1r peers, VlcuJin said. No Treatment For Humphrey In I.mt Days MINNEAPOLIS CAP> Hubert Humphrey wanted to live his tut hours to the fullest, and refused both hospitalization and dnlgs lo lessen his pain. says the doctor who was with him during that time. Dr. John N-.Jarian, chief or sureery at the University of Minnesota Hospitals, said cancer riddled the abdomen and pelvic area or the 66-year-old Minnesota senator, who died Jan. 13. The cancer reached the top or his lees but, in a pattern typical of bladder cancer, it spread no further, Najarian said. Humphrey wu In a coma the entire day he died. Najarian said be could be nudaed partial- ly awake but could only mumble a few words before dropping back into a sleepllke state. F...,.PflfleAJ ORBIT •.. mospbere at 3.S3 a.m. PST "and it proceeded to disintegrate and bum up" ovet Queen Charlotte Island on Canada's weal coast. .He would not comment on the satellite'• purpose. He said the .sateJUte11 nuclear reactor wu used to 1enerate electricity and was not a weapon. If any radJoactivity reached the earth'• surface, it would be slm liar in amount to that caused by a nuclear exploelon in the htth atmoephere whlch could then drift around the ctobe for several years, Bnezinsld aald. Government aources 1ald tbe vehicle wu a navisatlon satelttte launched last Sep· tem ber under the deairnatlon Coamoees.t. The aources, who,uked not to be identified. 1.ald the Ru11lana bad bftn AA•ble to cet the Htellite to work aucce11fully deaplte repealed radio com· mandl. 11M SoVieta Abo trltd to 1et the aatelUt. ba~k fnto orbit, thOYH1d. In Ottawa, Ivan Bead, Prtme MlnJ:ator Pltrre Elliott Tnd au•• •~cial advlaeri on ford affaln. uld he nad knon for aomo lime that th 1ate1Ute w loali\1 lta orbit but th t I d n nUl:\o. Yilll 1 {t OU d • AP---IRVJNE'S CLYDE DINN!LL (RIGHT) L!AV!9 COURT In Phoenix.• Oultty Pl•• In Artzona Ltlnd Fraud CHe County 'Dogf ather' Faces Arizona Jail Irvine's Clyde Dinnell faces 10 years in prison today after ad- mitting m court In Phoenix that he masterminded a $9 million Arizona land swindle. In Orange County more re· cenUy Dinnell bas headed a lirm which markets Doefather sandwiches with a Marla motif Jhs prosecutor in Arizona commented today that "'the Dog(ather made U3 an otfer we couldn't refuse. He aireed to spend up to 10 years in our prison We had to accept." Dinnen, with his attorney Tom Henze at his aide, pleaded guilty to 11 of the 20 felony counts handed down against him more than a year ago by the Maricopa County grand jury. DlnneU'a fUJJty plea came on the second day of testimony in his trial stemming from the case involvinJJ IS employees of a de· fun<'l land firm, Combined Equi· ty Assurance. Dinnell. 57, of 9 Wandering Rill, Irvine, and his co. defendant, Ken Durcy of 1870 Park Newport, apt. 104, Newport Beach, were the last of the 15 to face charges that the firm'• de· velopment at Concho Lakes/Land was a fraud. The other 13, including Dlnnell's son. pleaded cutlty to a variety of charges. DufCy, who ia being tried on one count t>l conspiracy and one count of erand theft, will have a new . trial Feb. 20. Maricopa County Superior Court Judie A. Melvin McDonald declared a mistrial in Duffy's case after Dinnell pleaded guilty. Dlnnell is to return to McDonald's courtroom Feb. 21 for formal sentencina . . However, as part or an agree. ment with the state Attorney General's prosecutor who hu · been handUne the case, DlMell aareed to a nloe-to-10-year prt1on sentence in return for bis auilly plea. Mark Alpey, the prwee\ltOr, said he was completely aur- prlaed by the move. F,.....PageAJ DOGS ••• Dlnnell was jalled laat week for violation of an earlier acree- ment with the court which had allowed him his freedom. That freedom enabled him to live jn 'J\utle Rock and operate a local frozen sandwich busi· neas, the Dograther, along wiLh hia son Anthony, also an Irvine resident. Anthony Is currently aervlna a one-to-four-year sentence ln Arizona state pnson for his part in the Combined Equity As- surance operation. The land belna sold by Com- bined Equlty waa In an unim- proved, desolate area of Apache County in northeastern Arizona. The firm's sales abruptly halted ln September 1974 when it waa placed in state recelver1hlp. The lndlctmenta were banded down In September 1976. Dinnell was granted a week's time orf from his stay Jn county Jail to come bock to Irvine to move his wife to Phoenix. However, Judae McDonald noted that, If Oinnell falls to ap- pear for h1a sentencin1. he stands to reeeive the maximum sentence on each count, which could bring hli prison term up to 72 years. ,. ' ra. Wl -hedaeid OQ onl,y one q lion 4urlnc th• press conf trence announctn ber e&n· didaey. "l"d r thet .,ot 1a1." •ho HIWend Qd r . She did y. bow ver. that •ho's beel'i mamed S4 years aa4 11a1ra.ndmother, When uked 9thet poulble l&-J>•ct beln& a woman mi•bt have on bor cand.ldttey for 8Jl omce never held by woman. aho said, .. rm a prOfeulOnal can. dldate tullY quallfted tor the of. fice. I h~ppen to be a worn an." ''Maybe," abe added, ''Jt't '°" In& .to take a woman to sweep out a1l the ~lculldugiery On county politic•>·'' Other decliu-ed candlda ln· elude: -Incumbent Supervisor Schmit. who wlll be seeking a aeco,,d term umed for the political co1teat with a war chest esUmattd at up to $100,000 and 1trate1l1ta Arnold Forde and WUllam BUtcher to coUDHJ him. -Former supervisor David Baker who wtU be attempting a polltkal comeback after losing the 2nd District seat he held for 12 year• to Schmit in 1974. I OC Recorder Wiley Carlyle To Quit Post J. Wylie Carlyle, Oran•e County recorder for 13 or his .f.2 yeara ln county 1overnment service. will retire from office March 30. Carlyle's letter of reslgnaUon was aerU Monday to Supervisors Chairman Thomas Riley. Carlyle announced late last year that he did not plan to seek re-election to the recorder'• po.t and planned to retire betore bis term expires ln January of 1B'l9. Supervisors also have com· blned the elected recorder and county clerk's offices effective wath the upcornint elections. In ht• letter Carlyle said, "For nearly a year.a it has been my honor and privUeac to serve the good people ol this county and tbrou1h this letter I would lib to expreu my gratitude to them • with the knowledce that their trust hu been returned by my best service.'· {A)8ses Estimated OCEANSIDE <AP> - Damage lrom recent ralM, wind and flooding ln Oceanside is eatlmated by cJty olficJals at $Z.S mllllon. ·-· . . ' I VOL.. 71, NO. 24, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES Red Space Spy Jails • m ,., .......... IRVINE'S CLYDE DINNELL (RIGHT) LEAVES COURT In Phoenix, a Gullty Plea In Arlzon1 Lind Freud CH• I 11 'Irvine 'Dogf ather' Faces Arizona Jail I , Irvine's Clyde Dinnen faces 10 )'ears in prison today after ad· )nlltlng in court in Phoenix that. Jle mutenninded a $9 mUlion +\rlzona land swindle. , ' In Orange County more re- eently DiM~ll has headed a firm which markets Do1rather 1andwiches wilh a Mafia motif. His prosecutor in Arize>na tom menled t oday that "the X>o1father made us an offer we couldn't refuse. He a ereed to apend up to 10 years in our prison. We had to accept.'' Dinnell, with his attorney Tom )Jenze at his side, pleaded &ullty So 11 of the 20 felony counta handed down against hlm more than a year ago by the ?dart~ County irand jury. · Dinnell's gullty plea came oa the second day of testlJJt<m.Y 1n his trial stemming from the ca.se lnvolvlni 15 employe ol a de- funct land firm. Combmod J:qul• ty Assurance. Dinnell, 57, of 9 Wandering Jtlll, lrYJne, and his co- C!efendant, K Duffy Of 1870 'Park N~ apl, 104, Newport ;!each. wcr th lost of the U to 'face ch es that Ah firm's de- v e l~~mcnt t Concho l,akd11iund a fraud. The ether 13, lnclucting J>lMell's son, :Pleaded lty lo a variety of charge~ -DUffy, who being tried on e count or c piracy and one ' tount or ~gr d th n, wt11 have a ew trlal • F b. 20. Maricopa County Superior Court Jude• A. Melvin McDonald declared a mistrial in Duffy's cue alter Dinn ell pleaded eullty. Djnnell ts to return to McDonald's_courtroom Feb 21 for ~ormal sentencln&. However, a1 part of~n a1ree· m ent with the stat' AUorney General's __ prosecutor who baa· been bandll.ng the cue, Dlnpell agreed lo a lline·tO·lO·year prison sentence 1D return for bis guilty plea. · Mark Aspey, the prosecutor, salct be was com,Plet Jy aair· Prlied by thO move. Dinntll wu jillled Jaat week for violation of an earlier ~: Jnent With the court wblcb tiid allowed hlm hls freedom. That treedom enab!id hlm to ( &WINDLB, Pa1e A:) Thieves mt New · . Homes m Irvine Irvine bur1Jara 1trlpj)ea 11 homes under construcUon on Sandstone Street of .'81630 IA equipment. poUCe salcl iooa1. Taken were elibt microwave ovens, a disbwalher, a kl li1ht, a dlnlni room llaht, a din· ln1 room tlXture and two smoke detector nlarms. The th wu reported onday bf constrOc• tion m 3~ Law~ W'ASJDNGTON (AP )-A So· vlct lllillt•rY spy 11te1Ute powered l>y a nuclear ctor ·fell from orbit todaf and plummeted towvd a~ populated area of Canada PrHldent Carter'• naUonal security adviser laid. ne •ie- hlcle wu dellgned to keep track of U.S. Navy ahJ~ and subs. A Canadian 1overnment spokesman In Ottawa aaid there wu no reason for concern abOut any danger from radJoactlvity. He said lt was unclear whethet all the aateWte dlalote•rated and burned when tt re-entered the atmosphere aboUt 850 miles north of the Montana border with Canada. However, Zbll(nlew Bnezlnski, Carter's national s,.curity aide, aatd the vehicle broke apart and burned when it hit the atmosphere. Alked wb7 be thought the satellite di11nte• srated before bltUne the earth. he said that based on acleDllflc expecience, .. It was very highly probable it would bum up." Brzeilnski said this was the first time a satellite powered by a nuclear ~actor crashed into the earth's atmosphere. Brzezinski who made the an-nouncement about the satellite at a news brlefina, aald, "The chances are very litUe that any contamlnaUon raulted. •• Bnezlnskl '• announcement cllmaxed about two weeks of consultatlonl between U~. and Soviet Qfftciall as lt became ap- parent that the R~laD 1itellit. was 1otne to drop OU\ Of orbtt. Governme&it otflclala aal a. (See 0 rt, Pap A2) Birth Control Pil.,, Smoking . Said PerilltWI WASHINGTON (AP) -1be federal covernmeot aanounced today that women who buy blrth control pills after April 3 must recelYe a brocbure warning that .. w9tnen who use oral contracep. tlv 1 ebould not smoke ... The caution aialnat both 1mottna ana taJc.1nc the pill will be contained ln an updated l>rocliiir encl separate leaflet wr1 atm e laniua1e that ph,-aldans e>t;_J>b&nnactata dia- penlln1 the p{U:" 11 be requlred to 11 veto coosum • • o<>a ina DNg Commtssloner J)Onald K~ said that the a1enc11• mo1t important ~ sap ••11 a 1lmpl one: lf ,-ou toe thi9 tu. dOn't smoke. If )'OU do am While on tho plll. )'DU tn'Crealt dtamaUcelly your cane of :auff erlq a heart at. tact or~~ The FDA ~ed to reqlllre a wal'Ql.D&. ·that the plll ~can In· u iuo.thO ot bre n cancer. A 1aw1illt S. ~ lo fed ral (8" WA&NING.-P AZ) ' " ' , I I I t ·' ' ' I I I ~ , , \ I I ,, . ,, I> ,r t JCALr ,, I r-.oiJll I ' . MAP SHOWS PROPOSED ROUTE OF MAJOR SOUTH COUNTY HIGHWAY 13·Mlle TranaportatJon Corridor Planned for Next O.Cede ----~--------------- San Joaquin Jlills Corridor Weighed Gunpoint Tbe San Joaquin Hilla .Transportation Corridor, a pro. posed major '°uth county traffic link, is the 1u1Uect of a public hearlni scheduled for '1:30 p.m. Jan.3L t r affic capacity highway la a seament of the county muter plan of arterial hJ.ihways. Tlie 13-mlle road would extend from the San Diego Freeway, near Saddleback Colleie In MiJ. 1ion Viejo, to the vicinity of MacArthur Boulevard Ju Newport Beac~ T nst-:i)b11St!l'Jlr ed 30-montti An autstant man11er of a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant In Irvine wu forced at cunpoint to band oYer $1,100 from a company safe Mooda7, tben was Jocked In a reatrooaa •• wbU the bandiU escaped. ne •41eaNJld JUll brob th• atUc 1*0ko through o cellhi ol a.oouier reatroom to He said. two men erabbed him Northwood Condo . "' ocnt u.en wlod police. ,. as he was leavtnc for the night, having Jocked tbo reataurant. at ~ 14401 Culver Drive, closed. Both l men, be 1ald, wore women'• DYl?n 1tocldnp pulled over their heads to dbtort" the teaturea c4 t their faces. .. Appeal Vote Due One Of the !Den helcl a re. , ' volver, · '1\e Irvine City Council may de~ldi tOililht whether the only •.P•rtmenta proposed for the NortbwOOd housing development wlll be allaWed bastead to be sold aa cond0min1um1. A cOodiUonal use permit al· lowing conversion of 356 unoc· cupied apartments· at Yale Avenue and Irvine Boulevard was approved last December by tho PlannioC commission. But the commission declslon was appealed and brou&ht to the ·City Council by Counciswoman GabrleUe Pryor. The appeal has bounced arouncl !or a month at the coun- cil because of an lriabllity to break 2·3 tie vote on the mat· ter; Cowic11man John Burton ba• been absent from meetmp tJitl mootb. · Burton ls apected to be at todiY'• 7:80 p.m. meetin1 at dty l:iall, 1'1200 Jamboree Blvd. • The m111a1er aatd that after ~ Unless be abstains, h1I vote be opened the 1ate, he loote4 up· ~ will be either.wltb Mn. Pi)'or at the man with the aun who hit and Mary Ann Gialdo to· prevent him In the cheek with• a black convenlon, or with Mayor Bill leather.:;toYect flat, then PUlbecl Vardoulis and David SUI.a to him hitQtberestroom. permit it. fte rObbera jammed tho door The councilwomen contend ·shut "1th a mop wedeed there are few enouah apart· between the door and a wall. ments in ~rvine. Th~ro are 2,0S2 The manaaer described both rental units tn lrvJne, ouly 15 Jnen u -cauea'aian, 20 (o S percent of tbo total houstnc years old. 1be aunmao wu WJ. atock. The county overall and solidly buUt; h4 .rore a averaie la 3S percent apart,.. green 4rin1' tatlcue Jacket. bl1lO ments. Levis ancs bush puppy •hoes. Planntni Director Eddie Hla ~pllce wore a llillt Peabody •aid the Nortbwood blue wladbreaker and bfuo conver1io11 request, made by Levll. Sterllnl Homes, causes "con· cern ••• that the request ... may represent the becinDl.ne ot a trend." Such a trend,, Peabody warned, could endan1er the city's ~ commitment to provtd "a range of boµslng for va income ranies ilnd tuest)'les thtouP.out the city,•• which 11 being.,~9111ldered as part 01. the City howiiDf plan. "CbOnirin.c these units from ren •' to ownerlhlps makes it &or dlfficnlt tor guch g((>Upl'al etudenta end mllltary ~l <SeeAPPEAI; Paie'AJ;-:·· Mobile Home Tax SACl\AM;ENTO <AP.) - Mobile homai could be set U.POD foundatiooJ °"private properb': -where they •ould be taxecl Ute convenUcmal homes .._ UD• der a bill Just re blDC the M- aembly floor. lofnbtfl · C'Jta•ber Jeannie Peck, currently with Nev.porter Inn, will 1010 the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com- merce Feb. 1 as marketing. director. Candidate Pounding Pavement By MICHAEL PASKEVICH OI Tiie o.ltr l"ii.t 11.eff Joel Bender, a 2S·year-old Costa Mesa resident and a night chef at an Irvine restaurant, is bent on maklni himself the most v1s1ble and outspoken or the Republicans running for the slate senate seat being vacated by Dennis Carpenter. Unable to afford the cost ol running an all-out race for the nomination in the 36th Senatorial Di1Mict, Bender has been pound.ine the pavement in search of the 3,000 signatures needed to place his name on lhe ballot in June. I le hopes lo meet 60 percent of the registered Republicans In the district between now and the Feb. 23 filing deadline. By get· ting the necessary signatures he can avoid the required $225 fil. ing fee Bender estimates that he spends a 70-hour campalfn week in addition to his full-time night JOb. "None of my opponents has any business running for elec- tive ofCice." he declares. "John Schmitz is a political animal of the worst kind," said Bender, claiming that Schmlti's party switch has lert him "a tamJshed horse." lie says another GOP Senate candidate, Gil Ferguson, '1need.s a hobby." According to Bender, wbo re· fers to Gov. Brown as "a bozo," ··1 am the only candidate actual- ly taking his campaign to lhe people. I don't have the large construction lnduatry dollars paying my way and telling me what to say, nor do I have the radical fringe of 'good ole boys' to organize my campaian and scream 'commie' when thlogs don't go my way." f'ro• Page AJ WARNING. • district court in Brooklyn, N.Y., seeking a court order that would force the FDA to include auch a warning. The new labellnl requirement gtves women conulderabl)' more information that Uiey have received in brief summaries that have accompanied plll packets since 1970. The new warning aho atated· -The plU should not M taken by those who have had blOOd clot· t1n1 dlaordera, cancer of the breast or sex or1an1, unex- plained vaginal bleedln1, a stroke, heart attack or anlln• pectorls or who auspec~ they may bo prepant. WASHlNGTON (AP) -Presi- derit Carter siped an execuUve order today reorganliinc tbe U.S. tnte1U1ence comm\lpity, puttln1 new curbs on cov rt ac· tivitles and glvlnc a larcer role to the CIA director, Adm. Stansfield Turner. Carter said bis order was "the product of the most extensive and highest level review ever conducted through the National Security Coundt system of our nation's fareign lntelli1ence ac- tivities .... " The president said be wanted to make sure that CIA and other intelligence aiencies operated "in full compliance with the laws of the United States." SEEKS COUNTY SEAT Huntington'• Wieder HB's Wieder Starts Drive For OC Post It is 18 miles or a 25-cent bus ride from Huntington Beach·City Hall to the Orange County Ad- mlnlstraUon Buildinc in Santa Ana. However, City Councllwbman Harriett Wieder said Monday the political journey from Hunt· ineton Beacb to Santa Ana will cost her at least $SO,OOO and lake her from now until either June or November. Nonetheless, Mrs. Wieder said. after ~·many months ot soul searching and frustration with the lack or responsible represen- tation" in Santa Ana. she has de· cided to attempt the journey. If successful, she will have forsaken her seat on the Hunt· ington Beach City Council for the 2nd District seal on the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Mrs. Wieder did not jump into the 2nd District race empty. banded, however. In addiUon to what she called a pled1e of $SO,OOO In campaign support, she claimed the en-· doraementa of five of her fellow Huntington Beach City Council members. Tbe five council endorsements Mn. Wieder cited came from Ron Pattinson, Ted Bartlett, Alvin Coen, Richard Siebert and Ron Shenkman. Tho only council endonement not 111ted wu that of Coun- cilwoman Norma Glbbe. "Norma appaN12Uy WU out of town over the weekend and I was unable to contaet her," Mn. Wieder said., Reaction cit cou.ncU members today, bow••er. varied· somewhat frora outrlcht en· donement. Siebert •pltd toclay that he had never at~nde.d one of ti. She told ber exptrlence With her cltY'• ~cet-;a d e>ther 1ov- ernment ex~cc 1lve her the expertl141.il0idea ••to make these (IP ndln1>~,tn ltle>na wJthout ere ~total ch " • • In that connection, Carter not· ed that bo la baMlna political aaaauinatlon11 medlcal ex· perimentaUon and ..some othet" activltl• that have drawn fire from conareaalonaJ crlUca of the CIA. Although Turner dJd not 1et all the additlonal authority be sought, Carter said be will bead a policy review committee of the National Security Council that will eM.abllsh intelligence priorities and make sure they are reflected in bud1et de· clslons. ... Another NSC croup, the special coordination committee headed by presidential national security adviser Zbi1nlew Brzezln.slti, "will review and make recommendationa to the president on tho rn03t sensitive intemience operations •.•. " he said. Carter held a formal Cabinet Room ceremony to sl1n the ex- ecut1veorder. This followed by less than 24 hours a While House denial of a report in Monday's Detroit News that Carter's staff was tryin1 to ease Turner out of bis CIA post. (Story, A12) Turner himself paraphrased Mark Twain, tellin1 reporters today that "the reports of my demise are greatly exa1- gerated." (Jp tlae Creek An Irvine Company crane operator works to clear debris from the San Joaquin flood control chaMel near Culver Drive in Irvine. Rainwaters from recent storms eroded banks or channel and swept away approaches to Culver Drive Bridge. Street will be· closed ait\)thel;' month, city officials estimate. .. • • Beaches Still Shut From Sewage Spill • live in Turtle Roek and ~ate a local frozen sandwich busJ- ness, lhe Dogtatber, alona with Beaches on IJdo Isle, at the Sea Scout. base, at th9 Balboa Bay Club and at Baysbores probably will remain closed until thi• weekend while health officers try to gauge the effect or a half· milllon·gallon sewage spHl in Newport Harbor, authorities said today. The spill occurred Sunday when a sewage main under West Coa.t Highway ruptured, send· mg the raw sewage cascading into the bay through a storm drain. Mike Wehner of the county Health Department sald be took water samples from the area Monday and expeda to l(et in- F...-PageAJ ORBIT ••• perts as recently as Monday thought it would come down near Brazil. The Soviet satellltewu initial- ly launched into an east-west or." bit that changed on every circuit or the e)obe so that the ••telllte passed over every land mass in the \\'.Orld, including every area in the United States. It.a orbit did not cover Antarctica and the ex- treme northern parts of Canada; Russla, ScandJnavia and most of Greenland. Government sources said the vehicle was a navl1at1on utell\te launched lut Sep- tember under the deslpaUon • Cosmos 9:54. The IOUJ'Cta, who uked not to be identified, said the Ru11iam bad been unable to get the satellite to work successfully deaplte repeated radio com- mands. 'lbe Soviets also tried to 1et the aalelllte back into orbit, thq1ald. Jn Ottawa, Ivan Head, Prime Ml nhter: Pierre Elltott Trudeau's special adviser on forel1n •flairs, said he had known for aozno Ume that tbe satelllte was loeln1 it.I orbit but that lt had been unclear unW to- day preclst!ly where or when it would land. iUal results back Wednesday. If those resul~ show ns con- tamination, then the beaches quarantined by health officials will be reopened. However, he said lt has been his experience 'that spllls such as Sunday's usually take about a week to clear up. Meanwhile, work"rnen con- tinued to work on the broken line to repair the break and some or the undermining it caused beneath the highway. Monday, officials of the Orange County Sanitation Dis· tricta sald they could not estimate the amount or sewa1e that flowed out of the pipe from 10:30 a.m. when the rupture was first reported to police until about 3 p.m. when sanitation worker:; got the sewace flow diverted to another main. . _ . However, Wehner said sanita- tion district orncials told him they estimated that about 500,000 ,aaJlons went Into the bay during the mishap. his son Anthony, also an Irvine resldent. I • DOctor Loses Anthony is currently semp a one-to·!our-year sentenc• In Ari~na state prison ror bis Pau:t Practice in in th• Combined Equity-~:AS· surance operJtion. " ,. The land being sold by -~. Drug Charge bined Equity was in an U.Chn· proved, desolate area of AP.ache San Juan Capistrano's Dr. County in nortbeast~rn Ariiona. Paul H. Esslinger -a Mluion The firm's sales abruP:UY Kilted City physician •Ince tbe early in September 1974 -.vheJ\ It \¥as 19301 -was ordered Monday by. 1 ed . •ft•A ei h. • a south Orange County P ~c 111 ,_...,rec ve~• ip. Municipal Court Judge to quit The iDdtdments wert handed h1a practice by June 1. down ln 5eptember 19'18. Judie Bla!r Barnette'• order Dlnnell was granted 8 weel"s c•me lo the wake of Easlinger's ' plea of no cont.est last December time off from bis stay in county to two charies of Ulegally dlS- jail to come back to Irvine to pensina dancero s drues. move his wife to Phoenix. Essllneer, 78. WM also fined However, Judge McDonald $635 and placed on unauperviled noted that, if Dinnell !ails to ap-probation for three yeara. Judge pear for his sentencing, he Barnette also gave the elderly stands t'1"eceive the maximum doctor unUl June 30 to forefelt sentence on each count, which his state and federal licenses could bring his prison term up to concerning medicine and dis- 72 years. penaation or druia. n Laguna Beach police officers Terry MacAdam (foreground) and Brad Smith inspect antique coins, turquoise jewelry and other items found on two burglary suspects they captured on Brooks Street Monday afternoon. Santa Ana resi<lents Raymond Goudrea, 25, an.d Warren Kunder, 28, were captured by the two of· ficers after neighbors alertetUhem to SUS· picious activity ln a Cress Street home. They were jailed in lieu of $10,000 bail on suspicion of buralary and being vnder the inrtuence of a narcotic. _2 Dogs Maul, Kill -0}1< Young~ adrlga1, Orily chlld ot John ancl 'oyce Madrital. was pronounced dead at .a local doctor'• office after \lie attac\ Monday l>Y two rott· wellen -dark·colored, heav)'.· joweled, German buntJng dop. _ Joe Pate. Napa C9Un~ chief deputy coroner, said the cblld'a mother sustained eye injuries when she tried to pull the dop from the baby. Tho child suf· It red wound.a all over bit body, prlntarlly about the bead, be tad. ills DOOtor Loses Practice in Di:µg €barge .. TEN CENTS ASHINGTON(AP>-A So· vlet military spy satellite powered by a nuclear reactor f~ll from orbit today and plummeted toward a spai'aely populated area of Canada, Prealdent Carter's national aecurlty advber said. The v~­ hlcle was desl1ned to keep track or U.S. Navy ships and subs. A. Canadian 1overnment apokeamao in Ottawa said there waa no reason lor concern about any danger from radloacUvtty. He lald it wu unclear whether all the satellite dlaintearated and burned when it re-entered the atmosphere about 850 miles . north of tho Montana border with Canada. However. Zbl1nle~ Bneiluki, Carter'• national aecurity aide, said tht veblcle broke apart and burned when it bit th• atmosphere. Asked why be thought the satellite dislnt• • 1rated Wore hlttlnt the earth, he 11id that based on scienunc . • experience, "It was very h' :•ly probable it would burn up.• Bnerinsld said this w .u •I·• first lime a satellite poweree or . a nuclear reactor crashtli : the earth's atmosphere. • Bnednskl who made tho an•: noun cement about the aatellitAf • at a news briefinl, 1ald, .. The chances are very litUe that any contamination resulted ... Bncnlnskl'• announcement climaxed about two weeks or coosuJtaUCN between U.S. and Sovi df1 as lt becam ap.i •' pa the auaaCan latelllte wu aotna to drop out. of orbit. Government oftlclals said ex• ens s recently H Monda~ thou ht ll would come down near Brazil. . The Soviet satellite was Initial· ly launched into an east-west or· bit that changed on every circuit of the &lobe ao that the satellite passed over every land mass ln the world, lncludin1 every area . In the United States. Jta orbit did not cover Antarctica and the ex· treme northern parts of Canada, Ruasi.-, Scandinavia and mOlt. l of Greenland. In it• last moments, the eatelllte had fiown over the Pacitie, movln1 nortbeuterly. then onr A!uka and bad betun its southeasterly course when lt • hlt the alJri91Phere. Brieilnski said the Sovlet Cosmos utelllte containlnr bi&bly radioactive enriched uranlum-235 entered the al· mosphere at 3:53 a .m. PST "and it proceeded to dlslnteguto and bum up .. over Queen Charlotte llland on Canada's west coast. He v..ould not comment on the 1atetllte'1 purpo.e. He 1ild the 1atelllte•1 nuclear reactor was used to 1enerate electricity and was not a we_apoa. Jf any radioactivity reacbeCI the earth'• surface, it would be alrnllar ln amount to that caused by • nuclear explosioo in Ute hltti atmosphere which could then ~ around the globe for aeverat 1ears, Btzcnlnsld sald. • .. 'Pulling in ·Tandena · It took two tow trucks to set an over· turned produce truck back on its wheels Monday morning after the vehicle fUpped when driver Donald Lee Bellini Jr. at- lem pted to miss a car pulling out of SACC to Support La Paz Acquisition . ·:County condemnation of La Paz Hill at the northern Up of Laguna Niguel Regional Park is ~ be considered Wednesday by the Harbours, Beacbes and Parka Commission. The Saddleback Area Coordinating Council (SACC> executive board voted to support c:ounty acquisition durin1 its Monday night meetlng In LagunaHHls. La Paz Hiil is owned by Narland Corporation with a purchase option held by Shapell Industries which reportedly plans a restaurant near the -crest. The hill has been eytd for more than a year by the coun- ty's environmental management agency as a regional park ex- pansion possibility. Located at the intersection of Alicia Parkway and Aliso Creek Road, Laguna Niguel, the ap- proximately 26-acre hill la a part of the Ahso Creek 1reenbett con· cept plan, said Larry Leaman. county recreation and open apace program manager.1 Jn a letter to SACC pl"eSident James Bone. the program mana1er justified hill acquis1· tion because o( its "dominance o( lhe park setting, a desire to preserve the hill in its natural state as a scenic/natura' re· sources area aval)•b\e-Cqr nature walks, hiking and view- ing purposes <and) a wish to meet the conllnued recreatloq-1 d•· mand of model r•dlo codt'roUM glider flying ... " He said that based on an ap- ,, Fl"09I Page A.J WARNING. • received in brief summaries tbat have accompaaled ' plll packets alnce 1rro. The new waminl alto stated: -The pill should not be taken by those Tibo have bad blood elot- ttn1 disotdera, caacer of tbe breast or aex or1an1, un•x· plained va1lnal bleedlaf, a atroke, heart attack or anatna ~eloris or who 1u1~ct they may be presnant. -Women with 1canty or lr· r~1ular perlodl an atroqly ad· vised not to take the oral COD· t.racepUve. • ~· ; • l • ' -Birth control pill• are Of no value in the prevention or treat· ment of venereal dlluse. -"Other forms of contracep- tlon have lesser rlaka or none at all. They are also leas eUecUYe •than oral conlraceptlvea, but. used properly, may be effective enough tor many women." OftAllQI C0MT LISC DAILY PILOT praisal authon.ed by the board of supervisors, Narland has been made a purchase offer. However, Leaman said, t>.th Narland and Shapell Industries are urging only partial county purchase to tµlable restaurant construction. Tomorrow's 7 .p.m. hearing in the Co1'nty pJ-.nn11\.i' cofn· · mission heir\ni f(>Qm in-1 S'1ll4 Ana is the first step toward possible public acquisition of the property, Leaman said. T)le final decisioll rest'& with the boa rd of super\Jisors ~ SEEKS (;QUNTY SEAT ...... tlwrtington~• Wieder • ·· .. .. . llB's Wieder Starts Drive For OC Post Baron's Life Threatened . PARIS(AP) -A revolu· tionary group ia eoin1 to kill kidnapped Baron Edouard·Jean Empaln, head of the Empain- Schneider industrial em- pire, unlen imprisoned mem hers or the group are freed before noon Wednes- day, an anonymous caller said today. ··w, .. the A·l'med' '. Nli}cle~ .fop Pofular Autonomy, c alm responsibility for the kld· napping pf .Baron Empain, We, demand the liberation ,o(. our co~rades before Wednesday noon. Ir not we will kill the baron. Other bosses will follow," the caller told the Paris office of Radio Luxembourg nearly 24 hours after Em· pain was grabbed. Police have jailed at least six members of the orianlzaUon. Jpgge1it .Hun . In3 a.m. Laguna Jaunt .. A young Laauna .Beacb joner t lsted h~ •nkle 'n her: 3.a.m. run thl& morning ;.,alon1 North Coast Highway. J>olice said Linnea Vikl~nd. 23, injur84 '9er rt•ht foot wh!l jhe becalhe entan•led in iceplant alongside the highway. Police stt. Terry Temple said firemen applied an Ice pack to the lnJured llrnb, and Mtas Viklund was transported by taxJ to South Coast Community Hospital where ahe was later re- leased. ''Who eoes Joggtne at 3 in the mornin&," S1t. Temple marveled? "She WJllS wearing jo11ln1 shom too, and it wu cold." 2 Clemente Youths Hurt ID~ccident Two young San Cl~mente men were Injured late Monday when a dot ran tn front or !their cu u they drOve south on So\lth Ola Vista.• By WDJ .• LUI HODG £ . .,.....,,.... .... Members of a committee op- Monday as unoonaUtutlonal. "A eoveroment haa aald to two or three c:iUrens •you cannot do "'hat the CoNUtutlOD aays you ean'," San Juan tar mer Blll Bath&ate asserted. "The prime issue is not tax~s ar conirolllng growth, it's a whole philosophy of govemrnent. •' Bathaate and aeverai other reJ1ldeau and farmer'$. Voice Of 'lbe El~ate (VOTE) commit· tee members, are 1upportln1 a municipal ballot meaaure aimed at re~alJb~ a clt~mandated 230-acN aariewtural ptesetve. At a press conference Moo· da~'. the •~P criUclJed city of· (lqals fOC' doinJ fftOfe barm to larmlntin SaD uan. • · I FORUM SHOWS VARIETY. • I all&nmeot l1 1n tho belt Interest of the ell)'.". .!-Jam.et Bllbop. le1at COl\IW• tut: . Sal.d he ls oPpOaed ·to the San J'oaquln Comclor as pro- posed, ••ari(l orj>9sed to any road , extenalon Ula mlaht. com• lnto our clty." Believes public lnput ls necessary in pro~ed plans for parJdoa atructurH and perlpberal parkln1 In .LalUDa Beach. Said the JUYI• meuu ... imposes a financial criala tor the city, and su11ested a solution would be zero bud1et1n1, where eacb praaram ls reviewed each year at budlet Ume. -Boward DaWIOll, brokerage firm manaaer: Said the city should not Ignore San Joaquin Corridor, "by taklng the ostrich approach and hldlnc our heads 1n the sand... Said the inland route, u proposed, would re· lieve much of the congeallon on Pacific Coast IUghway, "which now carries 34,000 vehicles a day. and soon will carry 56,000." He aaid Laauna can't atop the growth in ~he Saddleback Valley. and needs to take a hard look at the San Joaquin route. Dawson I.a opposed to spending $12 mlWon for parking struc- tures in the central business dis· trict, saying, "I don't think 8,200 taxpayers in La1una Beach can arrord it." • Road Sinking MALIBU CAP) -A 240-foot section of Tuna Canyon Road ap- parently is 1inJdn1 and sliding its way into a more comfortable position as county roadworkers attempt to patch It up. The road has been closed. • • r -Jlhale Me1p, bOuioWUe! The former Grau Valley coun- cilwoman said ahe wanta to "prevent Oranae Count)' from b~omtng LM Anaeles south." s·he satd. abe would brine Gov. Edmund Browo, Jr. to Latun• Beaeh 11to see the Laguna Oad· yon Road deathtrap, even 'if I have to go up tbere and kidnap hlm." Sbe said tlJf talt)'.OD rou e needs to be ••dug b\!t, resurfacid and fixed, and the state ot CaUfornla needsj4 do it DOW.•• . .. 2 MaChhies Stolen ... Opeoratora of John Mdnnea Conatructton Company, 1401 South Coast Hi1hway told Lacuna J!eacb PoJlce Mond.a1 someone broke Into theft om~. takln.: a t~pewrlter and calcalator vallied at M,50. I ORANGE COUNTY, ~LIFORNIA TEN CENTS~ . ·'Balls of Ei~e' Light Pre-damn Hours , -Y~WJCNJFE. Canada CAP> -E)'ewitnessM eald the arulum·laden Sov1f!'t sat.clUte that foll from orbit today streaked .UeDUY acrosa the pre-dawo sky like a ball of fl.re. "There was.this mus of ll&ht Just u I wu walldnf out Z office, 0 eaid Constable Pbll Potts of tho Royal Canadian Ko Police. He · d it was large fireball followed by about 20 smaller flrebaUs. · "THERE JUD BEEN FA.LUNG stars evlier in the nl&bt so I • fttured ,it was aomethin& very loilcal.'' aaid Potts, who a potted the diainteO"atlnf eatelllte from the RCMP station at Hay River OD tbe aouth shore of Great Slave Lake. He said the si1ht did not alarm him. . "I just didn't think about it. I thoulbt at first it was just a ,tneteorite until I heard about it on the radio," he .said. * *· * * * * He aald the ball of ft.re seemed to land Suat nortbe . t of H~ ~~ . . The plummet.In satellite, w ch U.S. and Can 41an official sald apparentlr· dislntesrated. U\ a number of eom· munltlea ID the Great Slake Lake area. IN YELLOWKNIFE, MU. A I Ruman, janltortal ~rvice, said 1he aaw a bright obj~ n hln1 acrosa tho aty when ahe wu drivinc home from work. She was factni the airport and bt It wu a et taklnC oft. "It wu quite a way up, flyint at an an;1e, like a Jet that b d ju.at ldt the airport," 1be taid In a telephone inte:vtew. Then she realized tt must be somethlnt el e. Sbe sald she was 10 excited that 1be called her son and daqhter out of t.he house to have a loot at it. "'THE MAIN PART WAS UIE a brl1ht nuoreacent lhcht. * * * * * * a l<>;Od loc>k at it. I ecitJd l ••AU.THE PJE was disapPcuirln.: the malD tastic ... Tho satellite botder to th south. The lake 1a 8:50 miles nort.b ol. tbe U.S. border. • * *. * * * * Red Space Spy ·Falls • In Canada SEEKS COUNTY SEAT Huntington'• Wieder l • It is lJ miles or a 25·cent' bus l rtde from Huntin~n Beacl( City Hall to the Orange County Ad· mlniatratlon BuildJn1 in Santa .Ana. However, City Councilwoman llarriett Wleder said Monday the political journey from Hunt- ington Beach to Santa Ana will c:ost her at least $50,000 and take lier from now unW either Jwie ~r November. Pqffing And Pill Perilous WASHINGTON (AP) -The federal government announced today that women who buy birth control pills after April 3 mu.wt receive a brochure warnin& that · ~omen who use oral contracep- ltvt•s should not smoke." The caution against both smoking and taking tbe pill will be contained in an updated brochure and separate leaflet written in simple lancuage that physicians or pharmacists dis- pensing the pill will be required to give to consumers. Food and Druf Commissioner Donald Kennedy said that the aiency's moat important mesaage "is a simple one: lf you take the pill. don't amoke. If you do smoke while on the pUI, you increase dramatically your chances of sutrerin& a heart at- tack or. Jtroke." The PDA d~lined to require a warninc that the pill can in· crease the risk or breast cancer. A lawswt is pendln1 ln federal district court ln 'Brooklyn, N.Y., seeking a court order that would force tilt FDA to include such a warning. The new labeling requirement gives women conulderably more int<>nnatloo that they have receivell In brief aummaries that have ccomp nled pill p ck sibcellrn>. ~The new' warnmg alaO;.atated: -TJie pOI 1hoWd aot be taken ~Y those who have had blood clot- t1Di diaord1r1. cancer of the • bro tt or sex ofiana. unex· ::ph•lned vaginal blecdio~, ~lte,· rt attack o W~tt:a pectorls Ol" who suspect ..... ~ m be pregnant. -Women. with 1cant1 or lr-re1ular perlOd.8 are atrogly ad· vised not fO t&ko the oral co~ traceptlve. -Birth control pills are ot DO value in the prevention or treat· ment of venereal dlaeue. -·'Other fo[jms of eontracep. lion have leaer risks or non at all. They re also less effectlve than oral J:Ontraccptlvea, but. , uaed properly, may be effect.Sve nougb lonnany women:• Irvilie-C~~ty He~Se~ On Road I~ink ,'. . . . , ' t. ., , .,... ' . ~ ) ~iation / Danger I \ / Belittled . ·"' ,. \ I t ', . ,, ' ,, • \t I ICAU' " r f'•ftit//t/ ' I , ' :WASHINGTON (AP)-A So- viet muttary spy satellite powered by a nuclear reactor fell from orbit today and plummeted toward a sparsely populated area of Canada, , President Car.ter's national 4 security adviser said. The ve-4 hicle was designed to keep 1 track of U.S. Navy ships and subs. • A Canadian covernment spokesman In Ottawa aaid there was no reason for concern about any danger from radioactivity. He said it was unclear whether all the satellite dislntesratecl and burnied when it re-entered the atmoephere about 850 miles north of the Montana border • with Canada. .. ''Ho:Wever, Zblcntew Brtozl1Uk1, Carter's national Hcuzity aide, said the vehicle broke apart and burned when it ldt the lltmolpbcre. Asked wby be thoulht the satellite d.i1inte· 1rated before hit.tine the earth, he aaid that hued on scientific experience, "It was very hi&hly probable it would burn up.'• Brzezinski Hid thia was the first time a satellite powered by a 11uclear reactor crashed Into th• earth's atmosphere. 1 SA.CC to Proiest Liquor Store Plan BneziDakl wbo made the an• nouncement about the satellite at a Daws briefing, 1ald, "'The uor·11le1 outlets reportedly ebances are very little that any scheduled for ttie aame I.tea, fn. contamlnllli~ resulted." By SP.UY CLAUSEN • .. o.My .... ...,, SpllWns. 6=.4. the Saddlebeck Area Coordiilatin1 Council's ex- ecutive board voted Mooday to prote1t the estabU1.hment of a liquor atoreacrou the street from the DIW La1una Hill• HiCh School. The store ta proposed by Save. Most Development, Inc. which is developing a abopplba center at Alicia Partway and Pa1eo do Valencia. Laguna Hills. The ~ecuUve board ordeled a letter sent td the state depart· ment of Alcoholic Bevera1e Con- trol (ABC) which must rule on prote ts reeeived rqardln& the a tore'• locatiOIL The bi>ard also a1Jth6rlzed Its treu~UJ'1. Gary Streed, to In· ve.auaale the status of other liq· clpdil)C a piua parlor and a Bnezlnaki 1 announcement supermarket. cllmaxec:t. about two weeks of Board inember BUI Tellman • consbltations between U.S. and of Lacuna Nle'ilel voted a1aimt Soviet official• as it became ap. the motion sou11ht by preiident pareat that the Russian satellite James Bone. Tellman aaki be wu aolng to drop out of orbit. . doubt• that location of the liquor GOwrnment officlal• aald ex• store bas a bearing on purchases <See ORBIT, Pare AZ) by hilh acbool lhldeots. ~"Whether It'• two mlles aYIY or acrou the street, if they are 1oln1 to bUJ lt Cllquor) they're aoiog to buy lt." be said. Dryer Fire Ruins Clothes Board member Marcia Rudolpb of Ae1eaa Hills summed up a majority of bOard members' feiliD81 ll'.l Aylnf, .. n Tf i.:..!!,.~~-_..:mat "It's an attractive nuisance fnd •J iAUU~ a moral ISsoe It not:hln1 else." She added, •'We have a responslbllity toiithe lddi wb09e parent.a dOi:l't car«J." Board member H&HJ' <See UQt1o , Pace AZ> Someone•• weekly laundry cot dryer than city Monday. It waa burned to' ashes aftel" the lint under a gas dryer caught fire in Launderland at 250988 Mar1uerite Parkway, Mission Viejo at atiout I p.m. Ftremeo aald the lint, a fUll load Of clcJtba and a small space around ~ dryer burned and filled the facility with smoke, torcto1210to ao customers out.· Flremtn sala the fire was out Within a ew minutes but It took another hOUt to clear tbe smote. Although no dama1e estimates ere llYaUabl , they aalcl they "• ved0 a buildinl value4 ,at $70,000 and content& worth ,000. Tb penoa whoce laundry wu lost was unidentified. ..Some uy Ju t cam In and ald, 'Enough of that•:• a fir m plained. 'Gong Show' Jtladne•• '"Gong Show" contestants at Capistrano Valley High School Wednesday will in· elude <left to right) Robin Carter, Shen Carter, Tara Warner and Robin Berverly, whose variety act is called "Silver Streaks." The show will begin at 7:30 p.m. m the mall at the school, 26301 Via Escolar in Mission Viejo •. The format ts modeled on the television show of the same name and includes music and com· edy numbers. Tickets are $1.50 for adults and Sl for children under 12. They will be sold at the door. Fro.Page Al ORBIT ••• perts as recently as Monday thought it would come down near Br&Jtl. . SACC to Support La Paz Acquisition: It'• a trip neither of the teen·a1ten could even dream about just a few months aao. But by now, they've done m!isch more ttian dream. They've finished their class work early, gotten pa11porta, vt1u and shota, packed clothes and written to people who live hallway around the world. The moment of truth is Sun· day when Carol Petrine and Malt Poblhammer board an airplane bound tor two far-away places. They will bffome El Toro mcb School'a fint foreip exchan&e students. M111Petrini,o1enlor and the dau1bt.er of Mr. and Mra. James Petrin«, will be 1olng to Pltlanuloke, north of Banakok ln 'Thailand. Pohlhllmmer, a junior and the ion of Mr. and Mrt. Charles Pohlbammer, will be headine toward a rural area north of Tokyo, Japan. The two applied for the American F1eld Service (AFS) Amerlc1m Abroad program in· September when tbe achool was "fflcially notified tbat lt met all tbe requirements. "W.ben I fint. beard p.bout it. I was just really determined to make my chances really eoo4," Pohlhammer 1ald. He recalled that whenever be did anythln1, he asked himself whether it would help him &et accepted into tbe 1>roararo. _ .. • "If I'm 1otn1 to see the world and learn about the world, I've eot to do It when I'm youne:• he said. Since he doesn't thlnk he will be able to 1tudy abroad when he'• in college or worldne, he decided, "Shoot the vork1." 1diN Petrin&, a three-year ... OFF TO THAILAND Senior carol Petting meta ber of AFS, knew her first chance was her last chance to get into the pro1ram. Since she was in her U.St year of school, she bad thought ahe would "Just pasa on" without gelling the op- portunity. The two went throueb in· tensive interviews atd waited for three montha before finally recewlnc "a 1reat Cbriatmas present" -word that they were accepted in the program. "Once you're told, It's ham, bam, bam," 11111 Pet.rtnc laid. She e)Cplalned Chat lhe'a been doina. ao mueh •h• feela she's been living 26-~ days alnce abe WU notifiect. The Soviet satellite was lnlUal· ly launched into an easl·west or· bit that changed on every circuit of the globe ao that the satellite passed over every land man in the world, including every area in the United Stat.es. Its orbit did not cover Antarctica and the ex· treme northern parts of Canada; Russia, Scandinavia and moat of Greenland. Mesa Senate Umdidate On the Move County condemnation of La Paz Hill al the northern tip or Laguna Nituel Regional Park is to be considered Wednesday by the Harbours. Beaches and Parka Commission. The SaddJeback Area Coordinating Council (SACC) executive board voted to support county acquisition during 11.s Monday night meetin& in Laguna Hllh. Alicia Parkway and Allio Creek Road, Laguna Nicuel, tbe ap- proximately 26·acre hill is a part o( the Aliso Creek &reenbelt COD· cept plan, said Larry Leaman, county recreation and open apace program manaier. Jn a Jett.er to SACC president James Bone, the program manager justified hill aCquisi· lion beca111e of its "doroinance of the park setting, a desire to preserve the hill in its natural :.late as a scenic/natural r•' sources area available for nature walks, bikini and view· ing purposes Cand) a wish to meet the continued recreational de- mand of model radio controlled ilider fiying .•. " SA.CC Board Cuts 19 of 27 Panels By MICHAEL PASKEVICB OI Tiie o.i1, "lei tUff Joel Bender. a 2S·year-old Costa Mesa resident and a nllht chef at an Irvine restaurant, is bent on malctog himself the most visible and out1poken of the Republicans runnln1 for the state senate seat being vacated by Dennis Carpenter. Unable to arrord the cost ot running an all-out race for the nomination in the 38th Senatorial District, Bender hu been pounding the pavement in search of the 3,000 sicnatures needed to place bis name on the ballot in June. He hopes to meet 60 percent of the re&jsteted Republicans in the district between now and the Feb. 23 filing deadline. By get· ting the necessary signatures he can avoid the required $22S fll· mg fee. Bender estimates that be 'spends a fO-hour campalp week 1n addition to h.ll full·Ume nleht job. .. None of my opponents has any business running for elec· tive office," he declarea. ~ Viejo Botanicos t 1'o Bear Speaker I I ·Bob Fassett of the Inaer Garden plant abop will apeak on the care ot home plant.I at 7:30 p.m. Wednesda1 at a mMtlJlc of tbe Mi11ion Viejo Botanlcoa aardendub. Tbe meetlaf, open to tbe publlc, will be held at the tiome of Mra. V.L. Minier. 2W2 Bollnr, MisaJoa VitJo. lDforma· tlon I• available: by caUlna 830JG80 or *"8Sl8. .. t DAILY PILOT La Paz Hill is owned by Narland Corporation with a purchase option held by Shapell Industries which reportedly plans a restaurant near the crest. The hill has been eyed for more than a year by the coun- ty's environmental 111anagement · agency as a recional park ex· panaion posaibility. Localed at the· intersection of Docior Loses Practice in Drug Charge San Juan Capistrano's Qr. Paul H. Esallnger -a MissiOn City physician since the early 1930s -was ordered Monday by a aouth Orange County Municipal Court Judge to quit hls practice by June 1. Judge Blair Barnette's order came in the wake of Esalinger•a plea of no contest last December to two· chargea of We1ally diJ. penalng dan1eroua dru11. Easllnger, 78. was also fined ~ and placed on unaupeniaed probaUon for three years. JudYi Barnette a1aO eave the elder doctor until June 30 to forefe t bl• state and federal licenses c:oncemln1 medicine and diJ. pemaUon of~·· He said that based on an ap- praisal authorized by the board of supervisors, Narland has been made a purcbaae offer. However, Leaman 1&ld, both Narland aqd Sbapell Industries , are urging only partial county• purchase to enable restaurant construction. Tomorrow's 7 p.m. hearlnJ{ tn the ·county· plannh1g com· mission hearing room in Santa Ana is the first atep towa.rd possible pubUe acqul&ltion of the property, Leaman said. The final decision rests with the board of supervisors. Froill PflJP JIJ UQUOR. ~. Springer of Lltuna Niguel a1lo voted against OPJ>O'in( the U· quor store, saying: "Nobody hu pinpointed thaMbe tcbool baa a responsibility that it is ahrlk· ing." Springer 1u11ealed that the • school adminllti'aUon clOM the campus at noon lnatead of allow· ing open luo.cb periodi. Ttte other board membmi wt. ing against protesting the 1tore'1 location ¥/ere Streed, of South Laauna Hilla, and Irene Puhlman of Lelaure World. Tlae Sn Juan physlcfan was President James &ne Yotea Oft• arreated in Dlld·AUl\llt last year ly to break ttes, and ~oard aftu a fiv.._onth invesU1atlon member Michael Claaet1 or by aients of .the Cillfornla Of. Late Forest wu absent. fice ot Meilcal Qa•lit.Y As·.. ll'avorina the letter ef Jfttelt auraace. • were Mrs. Rudolph of Aesean ' Hill!, Mary Coroeliu1 ef Let.sure lnltially World, Howard enaett" New ona of the World, Mildred.Hudciu OI Lato ofeaslons Forest and H rold B ck~ ot Laguna HlllS. • The Saddleback Area Coordlnatin1 Council's ex- ecutive board cut 19 committees from it.a standing list of 27 Min· day ni1ht and named chairnlen for the remalninc eighL James Bone, SACC's new pres- ident had ordered the board two weeks ago to come up with a 1trea1nllned committees list in wbat he said wu a move to make the organl%ation less cum- bersome and more efficient. The eight committees and their newly appatnted chairmen include: membership, Harry Sprin1er of Lacuna Nlauel; education, Mary CornellUJ ot Leisure World; recreation and oarka, Marcia Rudolph of Aeeean Hilla; public relaUona, Howard Bennet of New World; soclal stmeff, Irene Puhlman of Leisure World; president's, Bone. Harold ~Jc of LatuPa Hi)Is and Blll Tellman .of Laguna Nlc~l. were named ~airmen of both the long ranee planning and plannJ.ai nvie• commit-. tees. · In a aeparate orcanlsatlonal move, the board unanimously approved WUUam Hatton of Lake Forest u itl 11th. member ..in anUcipaUoa" of tbe realcna· tion of Michael P. Clancey ,of Lake ForesL Claneey, board members polnted out. has not attended ex· 'ecuUve board aesalona in recent month!. • o.ity ...... Ii.et ..... HEADING FOR JAPAN Junior .Matt Pohlhamrner Neither of the two hive traveled outside of the United States and nearby Mexico before. Now, they will be 1ono for more than a year. They will live with families who speak no Ea1llsb and attend claaaet i.uaht in 'IbJ.1 and Japan e. This week, Poblhammer la learnine 60 character• and sounds from the Japanese lantJA•ce. Ho wW bave•on)y 11 day• of Jansoace schooling tn Tokyo before be meets bla now family. · Ml.as Petrini hu been sent OD· 11 a list ol Thal wordl abe may need for ••urgeDt u.ae." But ahe ls 1cbeduled to apend her fll'lt month in Bancltok Jearnin, the lantuaae. Durlnl a recent lntenlew, the two 1eemed undaunted by the different and dltf lcult laoiuaeea. new foods and strance custom.a they SOOA wtU face. • Mils Petrlng tbrul(ed ott a question and joked, "Just becaua, they respect their elder• aDd we don't • • • " Poblhammer noted, "I'll be taller than everybody.'' But he admitted be had been depressed unW be got a letter from tbe Enell•b Spealdag Society at bl1 future achool. They told bfm that his school bas only 200 bo19 aad 8>0 elr1'. In typtcal American fashion. • he wrote back and said, .. I don't think it will bother me." ~es Estimated OCEANSIDE~ CAP) ·- Damage from recent ralm~ wind and floodine f n Oceanside ta estimated by city offlclala aU2.5 million. • ' ESS NYSE COMPOSffE TRJ\NSACTIONS L I Tonci.v. Jonuaty 24, 1171 s DAILY PILOT s,Riehes tJ Year of Bof!i y IYLVlA PO&TEa U'• _.,that at tho tut ot 1171, lh brndwinner In a family rour earned $15.000 after deduction for f al in· come · Sodal SecUrft1 wes. but not lndudiJll deduc· tioruJ f cw te ind ocal tu.a. LeL'1 ,., thal 1lnce theo, annual nlJ hl\'e hlk at income to more tblft RJ,500 . ... Tb t• a h n¥ pay ln ue -ID tb D pwceftt ftve y • But it tll menty enou1b to hep th.ll f amlly even In ~ pow • b\&ylq aboUi the Hmt... . market k Of .roe 1ervitt11 al t.M bestDnln• of lt'la at tbe atnnlnl Of 11171 BVTWAIT. B OP livlna, 11 meuurtd by lh olRdal pnce lndi 1 aa mc.rb5cd "only'' &l'O\llld '5 Pt?:· c nt la thlJ ft ·year 1pan. How come an lncome l.Dcreue of more than SO percent 1J Ual just to stay even! The flnt ansMr it I.bat u lbe family moves up the pay 1calt, lt move1 into ver•hlaber Income tu bracltet1. subject to ever·biah income tax ratea. Call lt the tu.bracket "crttp," aa Commerc• Secretary Juanita aa. Krtps did the other d.,, or call It t.h• progressive lax "aqueeie,'' as 1 have doae 10 oftc ln tht put -the teeWllS tb Hme. A1 Income rl1e1, ----------uoder the procressivc tax ayatem, • great~r percentace of lt •oea lo the federal 1ovetn· ment. . A second answer la that on Social Security Money's Worth taxet *22.~ are more ln 1978 than on $15,000 in 1'73. Th• wage bue on which SocJal Secllrll.Y taxes are llpred ii alat.ed to continue cllmbl.Da. "T nm SAME TIME. TUE Social Seet.rlty tax rat• on incomes hu been In an \Q>trend loo. The family will pay $1,071 ln Social Security taxes this yur Oft a wa10 base of Sl 7, 700. By 1982, ii pay Increases take tl\11 f amlly to tht S31,800 income bracket, the Social ~urtty tu will bO $2,271. This Is a re&resalve tax -hitt1nc all lncomt brackets in a similar way -compared to tb• proaNMslve Income tu. But tho result ii tho aame. M Income riaet, the Socl&I Security tax rtaes. A third auwer a th•t most people UH tar moro aervlces than ever before and they ca.t more. AND FINALLY, ALTHOUGH MUCH more subUe, ll the factor of ever-expanding uplraUou, continual up1rad· Ing in demands. The luxuries of yeaterday are the necessities of\oday. Most people have become acC"UBtomed to yearly Increases in their budceta. Whatever 1orm the upgradln& takes, the general rlae ln asplraUona la undenla· bJe . .t\nd suddett retreat.a usually are no more than tom. porary. These then are four reuoos many people feel so "broke" at a lime wheo they're earntnc the hl1beat pay o thclr lives. , I speak for millions u well as for myself, J suspect, when I admit that an honest look at the way I Uve 1u11esta that if 1 ever go broke, l 'U aureJy be 1olng broke ln 1tyle! PrUcllla Felix, Fountain Valley, has been apJJOlnted • . loan officer at Bqk of America'• Hawa!Jan Gardena branch. She began her BofA career u a staff member in the bank'• tralninc department at Loi A.D&elea Headquarten in 1968. She went to the Oran1• County·IM AD1ele1 Cout reelonal be.dqua.rtera u a iec:retuy 1D 1973, then aened as execuUve a~aary at N8'*p0rt Beach branch. Upon completJn1 lhe'ban.k'1 extemiv. manai-ement cNdlt train· lng prorram this year, abe wu promoted to officer rank and aa1l111ed to Hawaiian Gard • • Alida II. t1uk, MlHlon Vlttfo. has bffn •PPointea u ,1 a loan officer at the Fountain Valley Barak ti America. Mn. Clark, who w111 apedallu ID real eatat, and com· merclat buildlnJ credlt1 bad lel"Yed aa a consumer loan of· !leer at the Fontana BorA alnce 1914. • With the bant alnce 1862, tho becan her career at the San Gabriel office u a secretary. Sb1 completed th• , b1nk'• credit tralnln& prorram lo 1.970, wu promoted to ' officer rank and ualped to Pomona for two years prior to 1 the Fontana uslinment. • • Cutomwene C1r,.&1, Jae., Fountain Valley, h11 named BUI Gra"ea to tho ntwlY created poalUon of na· t.lonal marketln1 manaaer. He ia rt:apaoiihle for naUonal markelln• actlvitl or residential and pubtlc aNa llnea. He it former W11tem martetlni ma1141er. • L. Kell Baaiidtfet': bH been Mmed prafdent ot Lanoa Eaterprtlel, Ioe.~ P'ountaln Valley. a. Geori ........_, founder, bu moved to the potlUon of chairman of the board. He had 1erved u president for 18 yean,; B&M11ter bad 1entd as aecuU.e vice presldeAl • and 1eneral man.qer for 1lz years and wUI continue with bi1 1enri ui1D11ea1tat retPQl)SlbWUa. · * Tnldl Wilker hu been Pamed ualstant m1n11er at Peetftc Ot1 Bank'• branch office In Huottniton Beach. She beian her bankJni carter aeven y.,ra aeo in tho mail room or a major chain bantc. Since then aht h11 worked In bookkeeping, oote department, collections. i.ller. 1afe depoalt and atatementl. '* EdWa,.. I. F'reer, Fcnmtaln VaJte1. h11 been promoted to account officer In arltf PattDe Bank'• corporate bankln1departmcnt. He Joined the bank to December . • Re1N I. 'lllatclln, • mernber ol tho ataff 1t 14runa aaot In wgun Beach. bas been named admlnlltrator or the residential retlremeat residence. Her p vious experltnce locluda aervtce with the Red CroH ln England and 1-·rance durlnt World War J1 and, more rGCtnUJ, u a IOClal worker and b anch mana1er • wltb tho Or ter Milwau chapter of the American Rid Cross. ' .. DAILY PfLOT EVEN . .'.00 I cea NtWa D NEWS ~ONll A Clui.n w Ill •tr*'.!O• Ml;NrM ~a lltpped OllC ~"' 1tratlded In hie Ollln ~ arer--S by ........... • MOYll ••• '"Otlef' (1Mll) lorn Cout111'18)', Aomy khneld- •. All ~ loefer'• oontemect Miit-11 ~ .... he wit· -•lnUfder.(2hr•.) THI IMO'I' IUHCH THI AOOe<IEI A QOC> for a ctOOll, Ulat'• tl'le 69111 of*ed b)' • ltwtWd opetltar; l\lt coo oflloat Denko. I El.£Cl'NC «Ml'Nff U.8.EHEMY POUCV:WHICH DIRECTION? Chairman of Ille HOUM lftltl'IOr Conwn1tt• M«rll \.IOall, felmMlt "9ofetllty Of Oelente Melvln R l#d, Fedttal ~gy Adnlulte- 11.uon Chief JoM O'lewy and 9'1ef'OY economl1t ECIWatd J. Mnctltl wlll dll- C"'8 U 8. -gy p0Ucy'1 dlreollOn. Reminiscing I MONawa Milton Berle and Bob I lope talk about the early days of broadc:asling on the Kraft 75th \nnn cr~ar) Special, tonight at 9 : 30 on CHS. Channel 2 1:30 MOVIE '**'* "PHuge To MWMlllM" (Pa11 1) ( 11«) ~ lllogef1 Claude "-"''· EKIPHI from o.vll'1 laland at1emo1 to l!Qtlt Ille Hull llong with ti. Frtll'dl l"r .. fore419 ( t fir •• 30 lllln.) I 8E:WITCHIO OYIA!MY O•oro• Montgomery, 11-found In the -- Cine cabinet. Cl) Cl8NIW8 0 MDW QNmN • ~' carol Chann.ng Jwr/ Harman, Od)'IMY. Oofothy Ha.m1A. 7:00 I NtlC N~ UAMCUJI A8CNr#I llOWLUCY Cl) ADAM-12 A pr .. 11 a.lie In tl'MI polic. to try 10 ,,,..,, a ,_, ~ ~ngwtf 611 MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT CID AO! OF SPACE TMHSl'OATATION (I) TO TIU. THl TRUTH UO 0 CANDID CAMERA 0 NEWLYWED GAME D 9 HOLL VWOOO 80UAAE8 CD THI! BRADY BUNCH Cl) ADAM-12 ~b«e ot a latr11ly who epeciala In phOny ho~ r1patre rero In Ol'I a neogh· botho<>O ti) l A. INTERCHANGE "lnlide Slr910ht" m NEWSCHl!CK Channel 1..lsdngs 9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNSC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind} Los Angeles g KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego CIJ KHJ·TV(lnd) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) Sen Diego I KTTV (Ind) Los Angela KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles fO KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles Cl) KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach An lrilorm•llv• eollecmon or Orenge County ,_., govamment ano conaumer •""". peOj)le end sp«t• (1) THE OONO SHOW 1:00 fJ I)) CU AE90ATI The .conomoe9 of the N-South In New Orlean1; l1rmera turn polllloal ae11vi.11 .,,.,,.n rac9<1 with 11nancial -. updal• ol The CIA't Sect91Army CJ N8CMOVIE "The Dar1I Sectet Of Her- ~•t Home (Prem1111) Belle Devit, David , Ackroyd, Joanna Mllee. """' a lamlly from New YC>fll Clly ~ to • tiny New England ll8"n4el the mother 1nd deughl•r 1d1pt to the mor" ol the4r new enworun.nt. but the l'tu1b1nd eneounter1 f)lllffl oppoe!llOn wn.n he 111emp11 lo record IOcel l'lllVMI letllVlllM. (Pa11 2 of 21 (Networll aovie. ,,_ dllO'ebon) D MOVIE ••• "NorthwHt Mount- ed Poloe9" ( 111401 01ry Cooper, M1,,._. CMrOll A Teua Rano«. in Cana- d• 10 e101ure • murderer, runt Into In tnOlan upri., 1ng led by Ille want~ n\lfl .... ~ ... (_2 iw. .• 80 min ) 89 HAP'V~'Q '':Mafloft I M l~a" wnen ~ ,..,, .,. ,. lotlno Howar• to • ycwng•r women (8ull av.trol. ihe trlll'lllomll ......, ir.to a \o'llll9d bMuty end t\.Wnl Ille~ llome Into a eaene .-om "The Arab!M Ntghtl." I JOUWIWILO OAllO\. ...... ITT ANO ""fHDI • M()\111 ··~ ''KluM ~ M)' Pr....,.,t'' ( t"4) l"rM Maca.Aurrey, POiiy hrgtn. A women btc:ornM the """'*'*us. ~t and 11w flUIDal'd Ilea to cqie """" .,. "" ,.,.. m• "'k"st I.My •· (2 twa.) • HOU.VWOOO ~TH£\TM '"Reql.llefn For A Nun" Nancy Manniooe (Mmy Ala). tM "non" ot the 1111e. It on '""' tor the !Mt· det Of tile --ftl.old Child Of Gavin 8t'Pf*W (Leet• Allwll) end Illa Wlf• Temple (Sanlh Mlllt) UD I, TOO, WILL IOMfiTKNO tAAKa -' 1001c at the USC ldytlwild Sc:hool of MIJtlo and 11.11•. wnpllUWng "* belef that per\lot~llon In ttle artt In a be9.ltlful. relued Nltlng 11 the beet ~ etne tor the body, mind andMIUI. •:JO. 9 tAV!.AHa' atllRLEY "The Slow Child" Tiie glrle Wit_ the~· 01 I mowlQ ..... liONhlP wtten 1ti.y anow Mr•. Bat>l•h'1 "•xcepllonat" dtugt'llW 10 go out with -~TlON IS OVEAfAIY George Montgo111•ry; ttemt found In the ~ -c:ablnel. •:00 a Cl) ., ..... .. Radar'• ~ion of. Oleo JOC*-r wl\h okl "'°°'° lllVOtlt• Ind ~ Ing pall• piped av« IN loud1pe1k•r l )'lt•m. tioo.11 mot'ale at I ._ ""'*' .,., ""°"' a.-otfanfllve ..ad• • glut at Ptlllente pout\nO lft. GOTHAH'I ~AllV .. .._~-·~ erri• out Mllteur fllO\lfea ol J.cic and JIMI and la mi*d Into thonlcJng an. "" ... ,.,,,, .. D lltOHllDE An ex-oon, hll glftlrlend !Ind ~ ._ the --,..,.. of .,., 111.-wor1d -TUBE TOPPERS · NBC CD 8:00 -"The Dark Secret of Han·cst Home ... The conclusion of this two-part TV drama based on Thomas Tryon 's b<.>st-selling novel with Bette Davis in tho &tarring role. KCET "9 8:00 Holl\'wood Television Theater. The drama ''Re· quiem for n N'un," about the trial of a wprnan accu ed or murdering a couple's inf ant child, 1s pre. ented. CBS fJ 9:30 Kraft Special. Show biz iireau populate this variety show ob· serving the 75th anniversary of Kroft· sponsored shows. Mofnan, • """"OIUf'PIN GU911t Catot Channing, Jwr/ Harman, ~. Dofo&ny Helnll. Alca'do Monllllbln. ' Cl) MAlllRPl&CI THl!ATilll ~1. Claud'ual A God In ColohHl•r" Claudlu1' reign haa ~ • aot• did and OClfnlpt ., thOM of hll .... noble 1)1'.0-. -.. .. IO. CJ) KM1T lrlCW. PereonahU. r•tMnt"'ll ~ ltcet of the ... ,.,_ talnl!Wll wotld, lnlllurllflll !MlnOf~ p .. t perlor· m11nOM 011Pturect on ,.,., l~m and In photographa. Jolfl In tile 16111 Annlwr· .-y celeOfllllOfl of Kraft· -~.._, (Epltode Etotlt_,) 8urt'1 91r9'1Qt ~ le9d1 lhe Campbel fll'ftlly to hew Mt1oul doUbl9 aboll\ hi• eanlty, and ~t-Tim Flot- lky hu ~ hMrtbrMk· ;~eo.wi.. "Actian: The Ootober 1970 Crlltl" A ~lion Of tM .....,,t. lrlYoMt'V Ult llld· napping of Jen'9 "' ~-81'1t P19rre Laport• by the FLO Ill OcWtler 1'70: an "'Pdate on ~ llltua!lon w, ~9"Ch Cenada ,.,., 10:00. UI ,Allll.Y ''a-.Baw" ....... Mr 1111111)' no tongar Med• tier, Kate volunt-. to tutor • ~ binded colege •1Udenl and flndt ....., b9comlng • 1urrog•I• lllOll*-. JoM Fri.drlell, Dela l!lcat "'*' .,., _ 0 HlWf HOHEYMOONERI Ralph vleM an lmpendlf'SI Wit of hie mo..~ wtth a growing ...... of dllMl•-G UECIAl "Oelnlen" TtAll!Oe Knepp portrtiy1 '•"* Darnten. the Roman Catt'Clllc .,,..., ""° w'orktd w+tn Mperl confined on Molokal leland unut lie, lltnlltlf, died a t.per. ~=1u::NIWI *** "~' (1M9) TOI!\ Courteney, Aonly kMeid- w. "" ~ k*er'• eontentH exlattnoe 11 an•tt9N<t w11en tie wtt· ....... 8 lftUrdw. (2 lv9) I THI 000 COUPL.! L.1r8 WJ<£ A DIAL DD<CAWTT • 11:30 II Cl> cas LATI MOVll * •• •·MeQouO: A9tlitn To The Alamo" (1975) Oennlt WMV«, Teti Garr McCtoud IMrdl9a for • m•ntae11 bo"'b•r. an ln,.,,t In nMd of lmmecll- •1• medlo&I at1-.itton Wld th• kidnapped lgt. 8toedtll.ttlt (A) G TONIGHT GUMC ~ David Btemer. Gueatr. Jimmie Walllar. f'\jp Taytcw, Nell a.ci.u, aoet U«*w. 8 LOVI, AMENCAN STYLI • Low Md The Four-61ded T~" Ab la lltta1Uat· ed With tier~ bolt. •O AllOMOYll ••·~''Two M"'-For 11 ... ,., • .,.... (1171) Qlnt i..t- ..ood, ~ MMUlnt. An Amltlcan mtrOMary eod • -wjfh a penclllnt tor clgare, llquor and ...mg~ forC* In lak· Ing a French prleon In Meltioo. (R) CD HEWI • QETIMAJff Mu • II\ an11Q11 and the MORNING 12:00 e TWUOHT l'Mleaderota~ train acrou Irie ,..._Maxi. GO tertllory In 1 ... 7 .,.,_ amiu•~· • FOMVa '1IWWOOO • MOYll * * ''T!ftt lloftdlt .. Hla Ute" (IMO) Oieta T,.,,... MC\, Jock M8110ney. An ln~ator c:Nc:lla c.A tt.. 61•9"-•-°' '""""1 and llnOO'flr9 a ~. ( 1 "' . 30 min.) tl:WD M0\111 ••• ''DecepUcln" (19 ... 1 a.tt• 0....... Qlilde Aalnl. 1 A l"t mlrf'lel 811 Old flame .,,..UMM telltng tlln\ of a preYloul ao... •"-· (1 tv. 56ll'lil'I) CD MOVtl • *'h "Conquered c.ty~ (1"5) David NIWll, ~In ltlHm. AlllH fcwc .. •ttlmelt to pr-i a OrMk ll'*llla bend tron1 ~tur­lr!f • ml.Wllllolw lltllpment. (2 llr•.) 1:00 G TOMOMOW Pto and OOI\ 4ilO .ion °' the liq\lld PfO'W. di« 01Mt1 .,. Or Robert Unn. *''"°" of ..,. .... L.aa1 CMrict o.M;· and Nathan PnlAk.in, cftteCtor of the ~·ty ~ lnttl-Wt•. B"" 1: ti Cl) l<OJAI( ''One l"or The Morgue • Whan ~potn .. con- ~""Y tO. r1Y"ll ~ u Mino rwpo1lelb6a ror trae attempt.i ........... tlon of a young head, Kojak'a tnatlnet C*Me hltn to probe lurther, (A) 1:t0. MOW! • * 1~ ~0utllde The Wall'' (1ff4) Alctwd 8-tlett, ~ Maxwal. All --con. WOftdnv In • ~ IHI\ dlaooWIPa the IMdW °' a rntllton dollr robbery la • patient. (1ht.,30 ll'Wf\) 1:418 HIW8 tlOO Ntwl G MOVIE **Yr "The Blue l.eooon" j1149) Jean SlTnmona OoNld .._,on. A ~ Girl and boy, -~ed on an i.tand In the Pactfte, ciome to loofe ...:II other .. the)' metwe. (2 hrt.) 2:20• ~ Keeping the News in tbe Fa~~~ PITTSBURGH (AP > -It's all tn the family at KDKA television, where Bill Burns and daughter Patti anchor the noon news from both ends of the Journalistic generation gap. first with a smile. "I Wft look· Ing for a new angle," ehe eald. "It's just that there's a genera- tion aap. 1 do a feature that. peo- ple wlll really love, and he'll aay, •That's a real winner .• "' That kli\d of banter ls done off camera. Well, most of lt. "IC I miaspell one word in my copy, he's on me Uke a cheap suit And people watching don't even see my spelling," 2S·year-••WE HAVE A hockey player old Patti said with a shrug. named Mahovllch. I added an 'I've been here 25 years. 1 extra ayllable jo his name, a.Dd have the experience, which en-Patti told me about it right on titles me to get on her -and I the air," aald Bill, actinc bu.rt. do," said Bill, who makes bis "Dad 1-.ys it took him 25 years parental polnten off camera. to build his reputation and that 1 sometimes during commercials. ldlled it in two minutes," said Patti, who also addresses her lND~ED, BILL Bums speaks father u uDad" on the air. with authority in a job where at-t ention la paid to pancake Most bailcally, however, the makeup, correctness ot cowlick.a two •hare hJ1h protusiodlll re- and natti~· ~necktie knota. ca.rd for one another, and their ·~ noon newscast dominates tb•t • Pittsburgh is hla beat. He tlme slot with an lmpresa\,ve 57 knows the crackle of follce percent lbare in the raUDgs. radios, the nuances o tbis .. I like workinf with Patti. l ·town's backdoor politics: And really and t.ruJy do. She'• de- there'a not much pavement here veloped into quite a reporter;• be hasn't pounded. . said BW. Sometimes, thoueh, father and dauahter don't aee eye to eye on ••1•M 80 GLAD 1 came here. just what'• out there oo the Dad'• been aucb a help to me,•• street. "We'll ariue about a •aid Patti, who started her story," aaid Paw ... He'll HY it televlalon career in Dallu and should be a headline. I'll aay ho wu offered a KDU Job after should bUJ'1 It beCause it. went another Pitubureh station tried out'Wlth WttO!uhoet." tO hire her. • With that; she turned her at· teotion to a •t.otY about a 1tan- 1Di do1 that had been rescued. .. Another hard bitter," Bill kidded from h1I newsroom stall. Burns. who adnilt.a to bdDg at leut 55 years Old. wu ~ in Phlladell>hUI, aon Of Bnt ,Jlurm Sr. and':Mary cGlinn. Hl1pent. bw youth 111 th central Pen- nayl vaola town ot Ho zd le, h r he droV a wagon for hJ father' d tributonbl,p and \ Oran ~., ....... IRVINE'S CLYDE DINNELL (RIGHT) LEAVES COURT In Phoenix, a Guilty Plea In Arizona Land Fr.ud CIH Irvine 'Dogf ather' Faces Arizona Jail Irvine's Clyde Dinn cll faces 10 years 111 prison today ofter ad mlthng in court in Phoenix that he masterminded a $9 million Arizona land swindle. In Orange County more re- cently Dinnell bas headed a firm • which markets Dog!ather sandwiches with a Mafia moue. t Birth Control L l 1 Pill,, Smoking Said Perilous . ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A Red ·spy Satellite Falls WASJUNGTON (AP)-A So· vlet mtlltary spy utelllte powered by a nuclear reactor !ell from orbit today and plummeted toward a sparsely populated area or Canada. President Carter's national security adviser said. The ve- hicle was desi1ned to keep track ol U.S. Navy ships and subs. A Canadian covernment spokesman in Ottawa said there was no reason tor concern about any dancer from radioactivity. He said it was unclear whether all the aatelllte dlslntegralerl and burned when it re·entered the atmoephere about ~ miles north of the Montana border with Canada. (See ORBIT, Pace AZ) CIA Reorganized Carter .Curbs Spy Activi-y WASIUNGTON CAP) -Presl· dent Carter signed an executive order today reor1anidn1 the U.S. intelligence community, putUnc new curbs on covert ac· ttvlttes and 1Mng a larger role to the CIA director, Adm. St.amfield Turner. Carter said his order was ''the product ol the most extensive and bl&hest level review ever conducted through the National Security Council system or OW' nation's fore1an lntellicence ac· Uvities ..•. " . The president said he wanted to make sure that CIA and other intelli1ence a1tnclea operated "in full compliance with the laws of the United States." ln that connection, Carter not· ed that he is banning political auuslnatlons, medic-al ex· perlmentatlon and some other activities that have drawn fire from congressional critics or the CIA. Although Turner did not get all the additional authority he sought, Carter said he wlll head a policy review committee ot the National Security Council that will establlsh intelll1ence priorities and make sure they are reflected in budaet de· clsions. Another NSC iroup, the special coordination committee headed by pres1denUal national security adviser Zbi&niew Brzezinski, "will review and make recommendations to the president on the most sensitive intelligence operations •• , • " he said. Carter held a formal Cabinet Room ceremony to sign the ex· eculiveorder. This followed by Jess than 24 hours a While House dental of a report in Monday 's Detroit News that Cart.er'• staff was trying to ease Turner out of hi• CIA post. <Story, A12) Turner hlmsetr paraphrased Mark Twain, telling reporters today that "the reports of my demise are 1reatJy exai· gerated.0• Beaches Still ShUt F~om Sewage Spill tinued to work on the. broken line to repair the break and some ot the undermlninlt 1t caused beneath the hJehway. Monday, officials of the Orange County S.ri.ltatlon Dis· rlcts said tbey could not estimate the amount o! sewage that flowed out or the pipe from 10:3Q a.m. when the r\Jpture was first T6ported to police untll about 3 p.m. when aanltatlon work~rs got the sewage /low diverted to another main. • . -.• However, Wehner said sanJi.. tion district offlcim told him tbey estimated that about 500,000 callons went into the bay dUJ'inl the mishap. No Treatment For. Humphrey In Last Daya UNIJED STATES .. ~ .... 'WHERE SOVIET NUCLEAR SATELLITE FELL TO EARTH No Danger From R8dloectlvlty, Canadl1na Sey CM Candidate Runs. FOr Senate Seat DAA.Y PllOT Hearing Slated The San Joaquin HlJll TransportaUon Corridor. • Pf'Oo posed major IOUth county traffic link, is the subject or • public heiiring acbeduled for 1;30 p.m. Jan. 31. 1rvine city otliclala and area homeowners aasoclationa will meet wtth county planners and consultants in the multlpurpocse room at University High School. 4171 Campus Drive, in Irvine. Tho proposed hiah·speed, ~J&h traffic capacity hl1hway 11 a ae.cment of the county muter plan or arterial highways. The 13-mllc road would extend Crom the San Die10 Freeway, near Saddleback Colle1e in Mt.· aion Viejo, to the vicinity of MacArthur Boulevard ln Newport Beach. The Cint phase of the project· cd 30-month highway study la to select a basic route for the road, for recommendation to the coa& ty board or supcrviaora. .lofnl"fl Cha•hr Jeannie Peck, currently with Ncwporter Inn, will join the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com· merce Feb. 1 as marketing director. · Doctor Loses Practice in Drug Charge San Juan Caplatr1no'1 Dr. Paul H. Easlln1er - a Mluloo City IJ>hyaiclan aince the early 19301 -wu ordered Moftda1 by • south Oran1e Co~nty Munlclpal Coutt Judie to quit hla praC:tlie by June ~ Judie Blair Bamet •e cder e~me in the wake of EUil • plea of no contest lut I>eeember to two cbar1ea of Utega11J &.. penalnc ttaneeroua drul•· Eaallngcr, 78. wu also fined $63' and placed on un.aupeivtled probation for thNo years. J~ Barnette aJao 1ave the elder doctor until JW1e 30 to f oref t his state and federal llotnsea concerning medlclno a.bd dl.a· pensatton ol druJCL Houaing Bill Ckan SemitB SACRAMENTO CAP.) -Bin• tat bousln1 dltcrlmln•Uon a1aln1t famtJI Wllh chlldrtn woald be b&Med under a bUl that hu cleared a Senate ctm• mttte.. Monday•1 4·2 vote b1 the Senat• !Mal Govtnnn t Com· mttte aent the meaaure. SB aw by Sen. l>a\id llobettt, J>.Lae An1el •to the Senato noor. . . I ( ' I / I I I I , . ' , I r I I I , , ,, ,, ,, : IC~f _ ' r r·~' I I I ... INK*. Yll.IO I MAP SHOWS PROPOSED ROUT! OF MAJOR SOUTH COUNTY HIGHWAY 1 S-Mlle Tranaportatlon Corridor Planned for Next O.Cade Teens Said 'Critical' SA Youths Suffer From Drug Overdose? Two Santa Ana youths were Hated In crltlcal condltlon at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital after allqedly breutn1 into a Newport Beach pharmacy early thls momlng and ln1e1Un1 a lar1e quantity ot drui•· F,....P.,,eAJ ORBIT ••• However, Zblcnlew Braezinskl, Carter'• national a'lcurlty aide, aaid the vehicle broke apart and burned when lt hit the atmolpbere. Asked why he thouiht the satellite clislnte· srated before bittln1 the eart-Jl. he aaid that based on scientific experience, "It waa very hllhly probable it would bum up.•• Bnednakl said thla was the flrat tlme a satellite powered by a nuclear reactor cruhed into the earth's atmosphere. Briednlld who made the an· nouncement about the sateWte at a news brlefln1. Mid, "The chances are very llttle tbat any contamination resulted ... Bnezlnslti '• announcement climaxed about two weeks ot conaultatlom between U.S. and Soviet oftlclall u It became ap- parent tbat tbe Ruuian 11telllt.e wu eainl to drop out of orbit. Government officlm 11ld ex• perts u recently as Monday thoucbt lt would come down' near BrUll. The Soviet aatelllte was inltlaJ... Jy launched lnto an eut-weat or· bit that chanced on every circuit of the globe. IO that the aatelllte passed over every land mu1 ln the world. includlnc every . area in the United States. Jta orbit did not cover Antarcttca and the ex· treme northern parts of Canida; Ru111a, Scandinavia and moet of Greenland. Government sources said the veblcJe waa a navlcatton iatelltte launched last Sep· tember under the dealpaUon C•m01854. The 10UrCe1 who ••ked not to be Identified, ••Id the Russlant had been unable to set the aatelllte to wort aucceaa(ully despite repeated radio com· .mudl. The Soviets a1&o trted to 1et the aatelllte back lnto orblt, they tald.: Raymond Lon1orla and Samuel Munoz, both 19, were ad- mitted to the hospital's intensive care unit after they were found unconscious with two compan· ions beside lJdo Drugs, 344$ Via Lido'. The two companions. Jose Rodri1uei and Joe Venezuela. also both 19, and both of Salata Ana, were booked into the jail ward of UC Irvine Medical Center, also sufferin& lhe effects of what police described as a druJ overdose. Detectives said the four men were lylni on their backs on the sidewalk beside the pbarmacy at abouts a.m. They noted that Lonaoria and Rodrteuez were part of the crew that cleans the bulldin1 in which the drue store la located 'and tbe two men had keys to the doors and the alarm ayatem. Detective John Furrow aald that Inside the drut stor~. of· ficera found qtaantlllea of barbiturates and methqualones that bad been transferred from large jars into small bottles. ap- parenUy for transportaUon and sale. Furrow said officers aurmlsed that the four bad taken aomo or the drup themselves. Center Expansion Approved by Council A request to almost double the alze of the aenlor clUzena center In Corona del Mar won city council approval Monday nlaht. Representatives of the center, OASIS, said that when they originally asked for a 4,000. aquare·foot faclllty late last summer they bad fewer than 500 members. Now. with 1,433 members, they said they believe at least a 7 500-aquare-Coot building is n'eede'd. Council members agreed, with the provision that the faclllty be available for other community activities when there ls no scheduling con- West Newport Surfing Plan Up For Study Should West Newport beaches be divided up to permit board 1urfin1 all day ln some areas and ban It completely in others? The Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Com· ral11lon 1ViU hold a public hear· lna on the issue at 7:30 p.m . Jan. • 31 at City Council Chambers. The commtsston Ls considerl.ng a propo1at to divide West Newport•• beaches into rour· block area.; Some would be for bo.rd 1titf'm1, Others for 1wlm· mln1 anil bOdy aurfln1. and ot.li.-. would teta1D the current blackball *Y•tem. 11.ndtt the blackball ayatein, boai'd 1urfen muat leave the water when, In the oplnloa of liteguardl, there are IO many awlmmera that 1Urfboarda CO'dd prcaenl a 1at ty hazard. . p...,p.,,,,Jl.J met. The building will be constructed under a federal Housing and Urban Develop- ment grant. CouncU members adjusted the budget to take $50 ooo budgeted to landscape an adj'acent park and add 1t to the bulldlng's budget. Cal Stewart, city parks. beaches and recreation director, aald HUD has expressed no ob- jection to the chan1e. The city wtll have to finance landscaping of the park later. . . The city will also be responsi- ble for a remaining building def- icl t of about $30,000 on the $435,000 project. ited immunlly rrom pr ocuUon ln r turn for h11 p!'oualaecl thnon.r, a prosecuUon· wit.o ne . 1 ....... _, killing ()f &epbcn John PoUco ct m Kulik. R "....,."• Founlaln '\'alJei araued ~ J<>seph Gabriel Fedorowlkl, •· that th 8falld Jury mlgbt not nd.J, ~Sh lton Da~l• 111, a. have Indicted their client. had hlr ~d th men to ktll Bovan. all the ev:lclenco held by th Cl1s.-Alf four defendants ate lden- trlct a~1 been pre.sented. • tin d u partners 1D Pruadam Oran Coulity SUpetior C~ Dlatrlbullnt Inc., a NeWJ>Ort Jud Robert P. Knffland w Beach ln~tment firm. toJd thdt a er t deal ol evldcnc Police claim indicted Anthony favorable to the defendant. wu .. Little Tony" Marone Jr., 23, held ba~k by the ~utlQn to and R ymond Steven Rosco, 28, ensure that the lndtctrnent both HuntinlloG B acti, were would be obtalned. work g th Jt1arl at the time Tbe argumenta came u Jud10 Bovan •u hot ancl killed in Kneelaocl oPeiUed a bUtiDa :Into Nt port De ch. defense ~tation of what b ~OJDe to be knbwn U a "JO mf)Uon'!-a plea that an lriaid· ment ts based on lnaufficlent slanted evidence. Defense attorney Philip DeMaaaa, repreaontins Alex· ander Kullk, 28, told Judce Kneeland that tho prosecuUon story of a m\irder plot ln which a contract wu put out for the•kill· inC of Bovan last Oet. 22 wu •1ab1ol\lte nonaenae." And be arcue4 that had the srand"' jury been Jlven au the evldenco related to that alle1ed plot; lnclucUn1 statemenb made by several witnesses, it would have reached the same con· clualon. Detenae attorney WHH•m Sheffield told Judie Kneeland that the dbtrlct attom11'• office unethically acted as a fact flnder for the criand jury throuabout the BOvan lnvUUs•· tlon. "lt would have been far better for the grand jury Itself to de- termine the value of the ent.ire evidence and then reach an enllcbtened decision," Sheffield araued. If Judge Kneeland rules that the indictment wu baaed on a study of only partial evidence he will be ur1ed to 1et the tnaltt. ment aatdo. He has delayed the setU~• of a trial date for the seven· defen· dants pending cprnpleUon·of the Johnson mqtioo bear1nf and oUler pretrial motions 1Ul to be resolved. The lodlctment alJHts tllat Jetry Peter flqri, ~l, of Uftt· lnaton Beach, •bot SOvao hlne Umes outside tho El ,):tenchito restaurantln NewpqrtSMf h. Fiori, who f acia it.e death penalty, ls held in the county Jail with bail denied. Kulik. held wllh bail set at $2.35 million. ia tbe only other defendant in custody. Former defendant Roy Christopher Richard, 28, at one time a hiah ranking devotee in the H~re ~na movement in Laeuna Beach, bu bee.n &ranted 00 Recorder Wylie Carlyle To Quit Post J. Wylie <;ar1y1e, Oran1e County rtt0rder for lJ of hiJ •2 yeara In county 1overnmtnt service. Will retire from of8co MarchJO. • Carlyle'• letter of reslanat1on waa aent Monday to Supervilon Chairman Thomu Riley. C rljle pnounced late Jut 1ear <hat be did not plan to seek re:elecUCll'I tO the recorder'• poet and plinned to re Ure before h1I term expires ln January ol 197t. Supervl1or1 al.lo have com· bined the elected recorder and county clerk's offices effective with the upcoming elections. In bis letter Carlyle said, "For nearly 42 years it has been my honor and privileae to serve the cood people of thil couqiy. and throush th11 letter I wou141ike to expreu my rraUtude to them with the knowledse that their trust has been returned by my beat 1ervice." Gray Panther Chief in NB Haute Kuhn, one or the founders of tho national Gray Panthu. oraanbatlon, will be the featured speaker Thunday at tbe Newport Beach aenlor elUzen center. The Gray Panthers ls an or· ganlzation founded to promote the cause of the senior citizen in the Unltod States. Hra. Kuhn will 1pe1t at 2:30 p.m. at the OASIS (Older Adults Social, Inrormatlonal and Service) Center, Plfth and M arauerite avenues, Corona del Mar. Admission la Cree.