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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-14 - Orange Coast Pilot/, •• Polanski 128 Sickened Tannery Gas KiHs Se~~ ... ~ ·'CHICAGO (A,P)-Toxlc 181 kUled seven people and slekened 28 today in a block-long leather tannery, authorities reported. Deputy Fire Marshal Charles Pierce said, "When we arrived inside it was an eerie scene. People were lying on leather Sunny Skies · · Continue on Orange Coast A storm originally forecast to arrive on the Orange Coast Wednesday has been pushed north by a high·pressure ridge and clear weather is expected through Thursday, the National Weather Service said today. The new forecast w&s welcome news to residflntA still NORTH STATE BRACING FOR ANOTHER STORM-AS beltS. <>u.1MD Ucl• HftN.e\lt over hiJ eye. They wire all un· conscious." Fire officials said the toxic gas was hydrogen sulfide, a poisonous combustible sub· stance that smells like rotten eggs. Pierce said the accident oc· curred as workers attempted to pump a chemical from a tank truck into a holding val He said the chemical from the tank eom- bined with a liquid already in the vat, producing the bydro~n sulfide. Firemen entering the Horween Leather Company two miles northwest ot the downtown area bad to wear gaa ma.ska. AuthoriUes a.aid t}\ere ap· parently was a small explosion, but most all of the deatba and Injuries came from inhaling the gas. . • Mayor Michael Bilandic visit· ed the scene and the hospitals where the injured were taken and said 176 people were in the plant at the tlm~ of ihe acddent. It oc:curred as shifts were cbang· ing at 8: 10 a.m. A spokesman at St. EUubeth'• Hospli.l aaid five victims were dead on arrival and appeared to have died by in· haling toxic gas. The aJx otber vtcUms at the hospital were sul· fering from gas inhalation and aome were in serious condlti°". Other bolp&tala repcwted two dead and 1akl that in addition to beine overcome by aaa aome victims bad been lnjUNd tn the exploelOQ. J>-Jerce said th& toxtc fumes ~mDC.• ... ~> ...,· ~ .. .. • Mrs. Larry Morgan of Costa Mesa pre. sides over her family's curbside firewood sale on East 20th Street. The Morgans saw seven trees tall in t~ir y8l'd during last week's b.ig wind. They hired a pro- . . .. .. • .: -... , • .. · . 1 Del8yM ................ f esslonal logger to cut up the tr~ and now have al>Out 12 cords of wood on sale, turnitlg their weather•caUS'ed adversity tn· to what they hope will be at teast a break· even pro~tlon. J1;1dge Accused Of Bias I i SUTA MONICA (AP) -• RQman Polanski's lawyer ac- euae<t bla Judte today of .bias l&alnlt the movie director -a ~cat move which brlefi7 de. layed Polanski's sentencing ia absentia for a sex crime involv· inl a J.3,year-old girl. Superior Court Judge Laurence J. Rlttenband reJuc- t~Uy allowed attorney Douglas Ualton to take the matter to another judge for decision. Rittenband said be believed he ha(l the right to go ahead and sentence Polanski on the spot. "Tti~re ls no atanding on this motion ii the defendant doesn't appear .here," the judge said. noting that Polanski, a French ciUzen. fled to France two weeks ago to avoid sentencing. "With tbe defendant not here. the defendant has lost any right ·he had." tbe judge said. .. Counsel cannot appear aJone." However, both Dalton and the prosecution urged t.he Judge to follow legal procedures which provide tor a hearing on bias before a ~tr4ll judge. Dalion cited in hls motion comment. made by Rittenband to news rePodet'S after Polanski lied the COQbtry. The attorney said thoso colDJDenlS showed prejudice. The JucJge said Polanski was unfit to remain in the United Stalea end said be would have urged hla .deportation had be re. ma.ined here. Su~rior Court Judge Edward Rafeedie was to assign a Judge later today to bear the bias mo- tion. .(See,JtOJ..ANSU, P1ge A.2) Co ast Fair tonipt. Vari1ble cloudines~. Wednesday. Lowa tonlaht 40 to .n • . Hieb• Weclnaday 80 toss. ; I % DAILY PILOT s Tuea:day. Fet:ruary 14, 1978 ... Te~n Slayer &;ed Did Clever 14-year-old Kill .Six? COLUMBUS, Ga. <A P > Police say the killer who strangled six" womea may be a "diabolical.\)' Clever .. "14-y•ar-old boy. Detective Commander H . W. Boone said Monday that a pro· fil e provided by psychologists and other experts indicates that the Jcillel' is '"possibly a young m a~. aged 14 lQ 20, ot something under 2J). "They say maybe he's bad problems with his mother or grandmother and is a possible schizophrenic," Boooe s aid. And the killer probably lives tn or near the neighborhood where the six women. aged 60 to 89, have t>een killed the last five months, the detective chief said. It is the middle-class Wynnton section rA the city "He is f amiliar with t.be neighborhood." Boone said whed· news men noted that th.e stran~ler had successfullf picked the homes or widowed .. elderly women. All but one of the victims was ~ widQW. '!'he last attacks traced t9 the ,. stranjler occurred over ·'the weeltend. Police say an intruder ~ ' I I' APWI,..,.... was i,~ared off by one W0~"1 - although he may have stayed in · · the !louse and slipped pastpc)lice when they arrived. NEIGHBOR COMFORTS STR•NGLER VlCTIM'S KIN Mrs. Perry Borum ~ost Mothtr·ln-la~ to Kiiier Stoek Exchange Offiters believe he may ~ve s lipped away a nd killed a worn an just two blocks away Saturday morning. Pepsico Acquires Irvine's Taco Bell Boone and Muscogee County Coroner J . Donald Kilgore said they believe the killer sneaked past police. who were called to Ruth Schwob's home Saturday, and instead strangled neighbor Mildred Dismukes Borom. Law enforcement officers said t h ey feel \h e man is a psychopathic tntroverl wbo con- t'tdes in no one. a J ekyll-and· Hyde character wht1 manages to move freely through higb!Y con- centrated police patrols,..and slrikes almost at will. LOS ANGELES <AP) -The If\ ine-bascd Taco Bell fast-food rhain will be acquireC: by Pepsico Inc. in a S125 million tax free stock exchange, 1t was annou nced Monday. Under the ugreement, 1.43 shar es of Pepsico stock will be . exchanged for each share or Monday ]wt Wasn't This Driver's Day SAN DIEGO (AP) - The superstlUous never mention bad luck on Monday 1.he 13th. But don't tell Johnnie Sanders. The 28-year-old San Diegan was stabbed Monday by a motorist after Sanders asked him lo move his car because it was blocking traffic, police said. After plunging a knife into San- ders' stomach, the other driver fled. As he walked back lo his car, dripping blood from his wound, another driver being blocked by Sanders' car yelled at him to get out of the way. That driver pulled out a pistol and squeezed off a shot, missing Sanders and then driving away. Police later arrested Jose Luis Avila. 'l'T. of San Diego for in- vestigation of assault with a deadly weapon. Police said they found aspentshellinAvila'scar. Sanders was taken to Center City Hospital where he was list- ed in satisfactory condition. Police were still lookihg for Lhe man who stabbed him. F,....PClfle A I TOXIC .•• escaped as a truck or the Chemical Leamen Tamk Lines Inc. of Wyoming started pump- ing 27 ,fiOO pounds of a chemical containing sulfur Into a tank containing an acid. He said the mix created hydrogen sulfide gas which im· mediately killed one man closest to the tank. Three other un- conscious victims were round 100 feet from the ta"k. DAILY PILOT Taco Bell, the companies said. The announcement came only 10 d ays a rL er Taco Be ll Chairman Robert L. McKay de· nied his company was being ac- quired. New York-based Pepsico had reportedly been in the market for another fast ·food chain since its purchase last November of the Pizza llut restaurant chain. Glen W. Bell, who owns 21.6 percent of T aco Bell's sha res, and McKay, who owns 9.9 per· cent, said in a press release that they "were enthusiastically in favor of the transaction." The exchange is subject to ap- prov al by both companies' shareholders. His Number's Not Up Yet r.tINNEAPOLIS CAP ) - Michael Dengler Jost his bid lo have is his name changed lo the number "1069'' when a judge said the idea was ••an offense lo basic hum an dignity aJld in- herently totalitarian." Dengler, a former social s tudies teacher . from Fargo, N.D., said t he number sym- bolized his interrelationship with s ociety and reflected his personal and philosophical iden- tity. In denying the request, Hen- nepin District Judge Donald T. Barbeau cited Monday a New J ersey Supreme Court dec1s1on which said courts could refuse official recoiroition to a name that is "bizarre." SWAT Team Nabs Suspect W ESTCHESl'ER (AP) -~A man whom tear gas failed to dis- lodge from th4: house where he barricaded himself for rive hours was taken into custody without incident by a police Special Weapons and Tactics u- sault team, authorities sald . A poUce spol<esman said Mon- day Gerald BergiJchneider, 35, was booked for investigat~on of assault with a deadly weflpon. The SWAT. team was dis· patched t o the ho~se after Ronald. Fabian, 24, ol El Seaun- do sta"Re r ed ou t o f Berpcbneider's house, bleedlng rrom, stab wouMs lD tbe &nm and leas. "He's diabolically cle~er a.nd he's got plenty or guCS," said 6ne offioer. 'IJle leaves few crlues." Poli ce' h.i\'e no suspects in the case. A coroner's report revealed that Mrs. Borom, 78, had ~n dead about 30 hours when she was discovered Sunda)!. That would indicate 'she was ~Ull?d al about the time an assailant was trying to strangle Mrs. Scb,wOb, 10. with a stocking. • ".lf he h ad been to tbe -Borom house first, it wouldn't have made sense for him to go to the Schwob ho~." Kilgore said. aoone feels that the killer. trustrated in his attempt to strangle Mrs. Schwob when she touched off the burglar alarm, immediately picked another vic- tim. Mrs. Borom was strangled with a venetian blind cord. Rescuers II.um ' l M~sing Youth SONORA CAP) -A rescue team was to resume a search to- day for• a teen-age Salinas boy who disappeared while tobog- ganing m the snowy Sugar Pine area 17 miles north of here. Tuolumne County Sheriff's of- fice said Jeff DeWitt, 14. left a r ented cabin early Sunday fllOrning and was reported miss- ing by his mother at about noon that day. Bad weather iiUerrupted the search Monday night by three tracking dog$ and abertff'!I def>. uties. Temt>eratures tn the area were Jn the low 30s but the youngster was reported to be wearing warJD clotll)ng. .. ... ,....,..... llp to Bis Neek F ..... Page.4J POLANSKI .. Polanski, "ho met with Daltoo last wttk in Paris, sent word throu h hut French attcu•ney thal the movie director plans never to nlum to the United Stal~ because he reels he would not re- ceive an ·•equitable sentence." The director or such films as ''Chinatown" and "Rosemary's Baby" was described as "ex- hausted by a year of uncertainty about hJ& fa~ and dlu,poinled by t he abandonment o formal ;udlclal pcomlses made to bis lawyer and Jdmselt." The atatemeni from Paris - where Polanski has a home - came after Rlttenband told re- porters he planned to send the director to prison Cor 48 days and then offer him voluntary de· port a lion. Lester Martin, a prisoner in the Floyd County Jail in Rome. Ga .. finds t h at he can neither get out nor come· back in his attempted escape. Deputy Ray Kiton (top> stands by as Martin awaits extraction. Below, an untd~ntificd inmate holds Marlin's legs. stuck in a screen. to lessen the pressure. The in- }ll ale said he'd heard that "if you can get your head through the bars you can pull your body through." lie couldn't. "What I wanted was to get him out or the country." the jud~c saad. "lie doesn't belong here." Po lanski, w id ower of murdered actress Sharon Tate. pleaded guilty to one charge of uAlawfuJ sexual intercourse with the 13-year-old schoolgirl. lie had been arrested last March and subsequently indict· ed by a grand Jury on s ix drug abuse und sex pe rve rsion charges But on the eve of Polanski ·s scheduled trial, the district attorney's office said it would agree to a guilty plea on one count in order to spare the young girl the ordeal of testify. 1111'{ in court. In his pica, Polanski admitted he had sex with the teen-ager'ut I h l' h o m l' o f a c to r J a c k N1C'holson while Nicholson was out or town Thc C'nmc of unlawful sexual intercoun.c formerly known us statutory rape carries a maximum r>enalty of 50 years in prison The minimum can be straight probation. Polanski ~n~ '12 days un- dergoing psy~nc tests as a prisoner at California Men's Ins titute at Chino during December and January. 011~ Inches' Four davs after his release - and one dav before he was to be looCntl.'n<'ed · Polanski hopped a plane to London and later phoned his lawyer to s ay he :.kipped the country. Northeastern U.S. The director. a French citiz~n. later fl ew to Paris. lie cannot be f'Xtraditcd rrom France, but his case C'ould bl' referred for study by the French Judiciary, which could' decide to try Polanski there By 'nte Associated Press ~ A ~ that los~ strengtb as it .. mov ~'8t\Vud dlftl\oed ~e now on the bllzzard-w.ear y Northeast today, but lhe N•· Uonal Weather Service said ac- cum ulations were expected to reach no more tlleQ1'0l.lt'1nehes in most parts. Meanwhile. a secondary low pressure system de'velo~ over the North Catollna coast. · The main storm system dumped )luvy snow on the Midwest 0n'Monday before mov- ing ifll.b tba Eut today. It was the heaviest snowfall in Kansas City i~ 16 yejlrs. Thfs morning, the speeds on the New Jersey Turnpike were limited to 35 mph , and snow p lows ·a nd salt spread e r s roamed that roadway and the Garden Stiate Parkway. In New York City, nearly three Inches of fresh snow fell this morning. Forecasters pre· dieted that no more than one more inch would rail before the snow ended, and changed lo freezing rain. In Philadelphia, a little more than (our Inches of new snow fell by late this morning, and there were predictions that new ac- cu m ul attons would reach six inches t*fore the snow s~opped. New Eng1and is be1iiiiung to take on a normal appearance after a week of disaster condJ · tions. Federal troops flown into the area after lpt Monday's blizzard were gathering at airpo$ today and were expect ed to return to bases around the country Wednesday. A ban against commuting by car was lifted in Boston. As the storm moved East 1l dllrnpe<S three 1nohes and more in areas of the Midwest. Schools and businesses were shut Monday in Kansas City and other areas of Missouri. Kansas City police were hampered, with some 40 patrol cars stuck in the southern part or the city. 11 in Mexico Catch Typhoid BOSTON CAP) -State health officials say 11 Massachusetts residents who went on a week· long charter tour to Puerto Vallarta. Mexico. have come down with typhoid fever since their return Jan. 30. Dr. Nicholas J . Fiumara, director of the Division of Com- municable Diseases, said Mon· day that 306 o people who were on the r, all but 34 or them fro assachusetts. have been ask to have blood tests taken to determine whether they also contracted the disease. Fiumara said typhoid fever 1s spread by contaminated food and water. Symptoms include headaches. chills. fever, aches and a stomach rash. Attacks Renewed? BANGKOK. Thail and (AP) Ca\'nbodia accused Vietnam lo· day of renewing at.tacks Into the Parrot's Bea}( region of southeastern Cambodia and the northeastern province of Rat- . tanaklri. It claimed the attacks were repulsed. - f'rort1 Page A J SEEDING ..• $30.000 paid to a cloud-seeding firm 1s i::enerally In the San Gabriel watershed, which is a 200-square mile drainage area udJacent lo the Bi g T ujunga watershed area. Asked about the possibility of lawsu1 L'i i.temming from flood damage. Martin said, ··1 think theres a chance or lawsuit. there always 1s. but they've ra•ver won a cloud -seeding lawsuit It's so hard lo prove you 'n• i::ot an increase that it's hard to prov e we hurt anythinl!." The California drounht was declared officiall,Y over Jan. \6, but flood C'ontrol officials satd they continued seeding lo bring ground waler levels, which had been depicted during the past dry seai.on. to capacity Hughes Case Nearing End HOUSTON <AP ) -The de· rcnsc and the State of Texas. after 10 weeks or testimony. rested their cases Monday in the legal domicile trial involving the multimillion-dollar estate or the late eccentric Howard Hughes. Probate Judge Pat Gregory sai~ he would begin preparing hi:; charge to the two-man, foi.O-· woman jury Tuesday, with final arguments expected I Wedne~­ day. The jury also was to have con· sidered the validity of the so- called Mormon will, but none of the attorneys representing those upholding the legality or the document was in court, and the issue was bypassed. SROU? Hal,ts Green Berets TRUCK EE (AP) -Fifteen Green Berets parachuted int.Q. three feet of snow, camped all night in sub-zero wea\ber, played war games all day, and · piled into t.hear jeeps to drive to San Fra ncisco. But they didn't figure on the California Highway Patrol. A ch ain control officer was waiting where the Anow began sllckening Interstate 80 toward the 11300-Coot Donner Pass, about 90 miles east of San Franch1co. • ''No vehicle goes past here unless it has tire chains:• they wete told. ,...4,. The Green Beret~ had sleeping bag , camping gear, "thow kits, weapons, electronic combat equlp- ,ment, uid •~lal night vision enemy.dettcUon de· vices. B..t no Ure ch•in~."·,,...... . .....,......__.... _____ ......... ,~--~~~-= ..;;~-""i.e' ~LO• motel. I r ' l , Orange Coast EDITION. VOL. 71 , NO. 45, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1978 C TEN'.CENTS Clouds Seeded Before Killer Storm. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Just hours before last week's killer storm, the county Flood Control Department was busy seeding douds to increase rainfall -on- Jy 10 miles from Big Tujunga Canyon later devastated by massive flooding. Flood control operations engineer Hank Martin conceded t.0day that cloud-seeding - which officials say increases natural rainfall as much as 15 * * * No Rain Due Until Weekend A storm originally forecast to arrive on the Orange Coast Wednesday has been pushed north by a high-pressure ridge and clear weather is expected un- til late Friday or early Saturday, the N alional Weather Service said today. Another storm is expected early next weekend, he said. The ne w forecast was welcome news to residenLc; still NORTH STATE BRACING FOR ANOTHER STORM-AS --clearing away mud. debris and fallen trees from a series of storms during the past week. Damage to public and private property in Southern California h as been estimated at $43 billion, spurring Gov. Edmund O. Brown J r. to declare much of the re~ion a disaster area. The -governor's action paved the way for low-Interest federal loans to farmers. businesses and bomeownen. <Relat9C;l•lO!Y~ John Uletzen of the Orange County Flood Control District confirmed today what many Oran~e Coast residents have suspected -the rains have set a record. percent but does not cause storms -was conducted ffom 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday, when rain from the storm bad already started falling heavily in some areas.· . The storm bit hardest FrJday morning, accompanied by hur- ricane-force winds. One flood control official told The Associated Press las·t Wednesday that he didn't expect. there would be any seeding Valentine Kiss Thursday because the oncoming storm looked like a "tiger." The storm, which turned out to be one of the worst in Southern Ca lifornia'1 history. caused .millions of dollars in damage and claimed at least 10 lives throughout the area, lncludin1 one in the Tujunga Canyon area. Ten other persons are missing a nd presumed dead in the washout of Hidden Springs, high in the canyon. Ron P1are of Houllhan's restnrant ln Newpect 8-ch has a very happy Valentine's Day, with Karen Gant's help, as the Irvine Junior Ebell Club sells kisses today at 50 cents a pucker to raise money for UC Irvine Medical Center. Lips will be on call until 1 a.m. Wednes- day. "It seems a little strange they ere seeding clouds with such a bi storm comin n, if the pur se of seeding is to produce more rainfall,•• said forecaster Oscar Nichols with the National Weather Service. "There were some heavy rains during the day Thursday.'' Flood control officials say the effect of cloud seeding is limited to a 200-square-mile target area· nnd a one-hour time frame after seeding, but Nichols said the strong winds could blow silver iodide, which is used to seed the, clouds, around to neighboring areas. Nichols said weather service officials are investigating the cause of the massive Oooding, and "We're aware that cloud seeding was done and we'll In- clude that in the report." · Martin said: •·we seeded until 3 in the afternoon, at wbicb time we decided, look. we've cot a big one coming. There's no need of se~ding any more." The impact of the seedlnl - which bu been conducted by the county at an annual cost of $30,000 paid to a cloud-seeding firm -is cenerally in the San Gabriel watershed, whlch is a 200-square mile drainage area adjacent to the Big Tujunga watershed area. Pay Hike Eyed l. . N-M Teachers Ask 10 ·Percent By MICHAEL PA.SKEVICH Oft• D4111y ...... l4atf A contract proposal calling for a one-year 10 percent pay hike for teachers will be presented tonight to Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees. "We don't feel it (the pro· posal) is out of line costwise, even though the district is plead- ing poverty," said Don Kimble, president of the Newport-Mesa Education Association <NMEA). Teacher picketing and a one- day work slowdown set the scene last s pring b e fore teachers ratified a three·year contract that granted them about a nine percent pay hike. The first year raise was retroactive with a S percent raise being granted this school year. However , a r eopening • clause on salaries, grievance proce dures and employee benefits has led to the latest teacher proposal. The NMEA, which represents. the district's 1,.250-plus teachers ls an affiliate or the California Teachers AaloclaUon. Kimble ls a music teacher at Rea Middle SehoollnColta Mesa. . "n.w••..,.• lnew ror district teachers is about $17,200. Ap instructor who earned $14,081 per year before last April's agreement wlll see a salary increase to $15,348 by the time the current pay contract expires on June 30 of this year. An added 10 percent would push this annual income figure to $16,882. A highly credentialed teacher with many years of ex- perience could earn as much as $24,116 per year with the 10 per- cent raise suggested by the Dollar Value Drops A.gain LONDON (AP) -The value of the dollar dropped sharply again in early trading today on Europe's money markets. A Frankfurt dealer said the downward push on the U.S. currency was' "enormous." He said the heaviestpressurewasfrom the Swissfran~, · Tradlp& was c;\escribed as hectic and nervous. Some of the .uncertalnty stem med from apparent .............. United Stat.es and trest Germany over how best to s timulate th e In· du s trialized world 's economy. NMEA. First year teachers would make $11,317. Kimble said the NMEA would leave room ror compromise and negotiation on the latest pay re- quest, adding that a district- wide five percent increase could be funded through a normal (See PAY BIKE, Page AZ) 7Killed By Tannery . Toxic Gas CHICAGO CAP) -Toxic gas killed seven persons and sickened at least 28 others today after a chemical was pumped in- to the wrong Yats at a block.Jong tannery. olCiclals said. 'Workers dropped one aftet' another u the fumes spread. ''I •een one gaT patllec • =rr..m_:t. C:.~:'• an employee who Via& alckmed by the fumes. -rbe guy who was pulling the man out, he went down too." lie said Santa Ana's season total so far of 18.49 inches is the most rainfall the county has re- ceived to this date during the rainy season since r ecords began in 1908. Callers Misrepresent Chamber? "When we 9J'f'lved, It was aA eerie scene.'• said Deputy Fire .Marshal Charles Pien:e. "Peer pie were lying on leather belts. One man had a severe cut over his eye. They were all un- conscious." Gietzen also said that even if no more rain falls between now and the end of the season in June, this will be the third r~lniest season on record. ; Season totals so far are: Hunt- ington Beach, 17.76 inches; Costa Mesa, 18.93 inches; Newport .Beach, 16.76 inches; t agun-. Niguel, 19.55 inches; Jnd Santiago Peak on Sad- dleback Mountain, 45.6 incbes. Phone calls that urge a .. no .. vote on the March 7 homeowners initiative while misrepresenting the Chambtr af Commerce's stand on the issue have been re· ported by a number or Costa Mes a resident.a. The callers, usually a young man or a woman named "Cin- dy," have been identifying themselves as members of a group known as the Active Tax· payers Association. Inte rns h i p A d v oeated Half of All Lawyers Incompetent-Belli. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -· Melvin Belli, one ot the nauon•s leading trial lawye{'S wlth nearly l.400 courtroom lights behind him, agrees with Chief .Justice Warren Burger that half of today's lawyers are incompe- tent. ••After Jaw school, new lawyers should have one year of internship before they're turned loose on an unsuspecUne public who thinks beeauae • euy•a aot his lJcenso .he's equlpped to pracUce •· ~· said th• '70-YMl'• old author al aa boob~ law. Belll elltlmated be bu waa Henry Panian, a director or the Costa Mesa County Water District, said be received a call from' the group Friday evening. He said the caller urged a "no" vote on the North Costa Homeowners' initiative that would rezone 63.8 acres in the area for single-family homes. He said the caller referred to the ln - itlative as a "rezo.nescheme." The caller said the Costa Mesa City Council, Mayor Norma Hertzoe and the Costa Meaa Chamber of Commerce have come out against the initiative. With the exception of Coun- cilman Dom Raciti, who favors the initiative, the council bas re- gistered its opposition through a writt~n argument that will ap- pear on sample ballots. However, the Chamber of Commerce has taken no stand on the issue. Panian said he "bristled" at caller's mis- representation. "We have nothing to do with it and It's against ou~ byla.~s ~o 1aKe a stand on the issue, S8ld Nate Reade, executive director of the chamber. "If individual members want to tait' a stand t hat's their own business," Reade added. J ean Robbins, acting presi· d e nt of the Mesa Ve rde Homeowners Association, said today she also received a call from the taxpayers' 1roup. "I resented their evasive- ness, .. Mrs. Robblns said today. Mrs. Robbins obtained the: group's phone number, 558-1318, but was unable to get any in· fotmation at all when she called back. There was no answer at the number this morning. The telephone is listed at a rented office at 3001 Red mn Ave., Costa Mesa. City Clerk Eileen Phinney said a man named Phillip Rowe obtained public information on the in- itiative last Thursday and left the phone number and address of the taxpayers' committee at city hall. She sail the group is not re- quired to take out a bus~ess license. More informatlQll should be available when the committee riles a required financial disclosure report no later than Feb. 23, she said. Flo Confirmed BALTIMORE (AP) -Russian nu has been confirmed as the disease that swept the U.S. Naval Academy last week. A city Environmental Protec- tion Agency official said sodium bydrosulfide brought to the tan- nery ln a tank truck was .. er- roneouslY pumped" into storage tanks containing an acid. He said the combination created • hydrogen sulfide, a poisonous combustible substance that smells like rotten eggs. The EPA official said the cbemlcalS were mixed In open. top wooden storage tanks in the basement of the block-long Horweeu Leather Co. plant. Firemen entering the flant two miles northwest o the downtown area bad to wear gas masks. One wurtman said be realized something was wrong when be had difficulty breathing and saw a man running frotn the area · containing the storage tanks. "l was passing out. before the explosion, .. be said. "l couldn't get any air. It knocked me out. It was a while before the other gu.ys 1ot me to a window and I J{Ot SOm_!! fresh air:. ~ Coast We a t•er Fair tonight. Variable cloudine111 Wednes4ay. Lows tonight 40 to 47. Hlgbs'Wednesday 60 to 6S. I I I I I ---· .... . A:? C'. !L'( !'!LQ~ c Marine Work Aided $37 Mi llion Targeted for Coast? Pres1dt"nt Carter has included • in his proposed budget requests for more than $37 million for Maram• Corps construction proj- t•cts along the Oran~e Coast, according lo U.S. Rep. Robert I'~ nudham. R-Newport Beach. The requests include $9 .4 million for 216 m1htary depen- dent housing units near the Marine Corps Helicopter Air Station at Santa Ana. a Badhom spokesman said today. The housin~ units, the Cirst of a 500-unit project, were oril'inal- ly proposed for Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley, but replanned for the Santa Ana locallon because of protests by Fountain Valley residents. the spokesman said. Ufe Threatene d Armed Masked Rob Man in lroine :\ n lrvml' man answered the knock at h1~ front door Monday night and wai. confronted by two ·men. one of whom pointed a :-.awed.off shotgun <.1t the man's ~lomach. their features, green army fatigue jackets, denims and black jump boots, rans acked the house. He saJd the units a,re needed because of a shortage of 16w-cost housing in Orange County. The request is part of Pres!· dehl Carter's proposed $126 billion defense budget, currently before the House Armed Services Committee. Badham is a member of the committee. If approved, the budget will go Into effect Oct. l. The spokesman said Carter s also requested $6.4 million for a b ac helor 's enlisted quarters at the Marine Corps Air Stat.ion at El Toro along with $750,000 for a communications center. plus nearly $1 million for an operations training facility. Carter's budget alsp includes $19.7 million for new construe· tlon at Camp Pendleton, the spoke~man said. The breakdown for Pendleton 1s : $7 .3 million for bachelors' enlisted quarters, $4.6 million for a maJntenance hangar at the uirf1eld, $2.9 million for armory projects, $2.3 million for a new dining facility, $2 million for eh('rgy monitoring and control systems and $600,000 for improv- ing the telephone system. Roi& off Newport Police said Gail V. Anderson, 52. of South Pasadena, lost control of his car Monday and it rolled over embankment off Newpott Boulevard near Hospital Road. Anderson spent the night in nearby Hoag Memorial Hospital, but was released to· day. He told traffic investigators he - swerved to avoid another car and went over the embankment. The drin)r of the other car was identified as Christopher Leigh, 25, Garden Grove. Neither driver was cited at the scene. Police said their investigation of the accident is continuing. Robert C Antan10. 4951 .Firc:.idc Circle, was marched to e.1 back bedroom and hog .tied on th<.• floor. ''Uon't move or I'll blow your head off," the man with tht• s hotl(un told him, ·Anzanio reported. Tht" other robher had held a knife to Anzan1o's back as they "cot into lhc room. The t'rtm1nals, hoth of whom wore knit ~k1 ma~h lo cover They took S2,455 in stereo and television equipment, plus $23 in cash -and Anzanio's car keys. Police said they loaded up the victim's black 1978 Cadilllic Seville and drove away with the loot. Anzanio eventually managed to free himself and called police. Anzanio told police he believed he wouJd have been killed if he hadn't cooperated with the rob-bers. r· 'Clever Teen' Sought in Killings COLUMBUS. Ga. CAP> - Police say t he killer who strangled six women may be a. "diabolically clever" 14-year-old boy .. 89. ha~ been killed th'e last five months. the detective chief said. It is the middle-class Wynnton section of the city. Shifting Cloud Patt~• .Jason Clark, 7, takes advantage of a break in the rainy weather to chuck driftwood back at the sea on Laguna Beach's Main Beach. Overhead the dark clouds formed beautiful, restless images Monday and hinted at more rain to come. The National Weather Service today, however, foresaw clear weather until late Friday or early Saturday. Bandit Leader Sought A heavy set young woman SUS· Westminster Ave .. about 10:30 A . id th . . ber edt peeled of bcing the ringleader of a.m. Monday. na sa e WO!fl8:fl is 1ev . o a gang of bank bandits responsl· The suspect, who reportedly have pulled a s1ma.lar robbery m . ble for several recent holdups is works with at least three others Santa Ana l~t Friday, also at a sought today after another rob-deployed as lookouts, walked up BaTo~ of Amenca. bery in Westminster. to the teUer's cage and present-e get aw a Y c. a r was r u t Id th an ed a note demanding money described as a white, 1965 abonu~°f.v~8 f~~ sfour ~ch:s"'taJl Loss in the robbery wa~ re· Chevrolet sedan. and estimated' to welgh about ported to be allghUy more tban 170 pounds sauntered into the $500, but FBI agents in Santa B a n k of' Am er i c a, 6 9 s 1 ~t~c;':!,dre~~~ si!c~s fi~~~e~eir Search Called Off SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The . Coast Guard has called off a i;earch for an unidentified man . who apparently leaped to his death from lhe San Francisco Bay Bridge. c DAILY PILOT Authorities saJd the-chubby bank bandit, believed to be about in her mid·20s, never dis- played a weapon in robbing the Westminster Avenue bank but made it clear she meant busi· ness, The crypUc note warned the teller was being watched .throughout the episode. Wlt.- nesaes reported seelbg a thin man hancint around the front door u though he might be post. ed .. a lookout. They added that the chubby female bank bandit •caped IQ a car driwen by anotber COQJ>le. A IPOkesman for th• J'edfrat Breau ol IitvutiJtatlon tn &nta No Laughing Matter. • • Huntington Intercom-· munit y Hospital oUiclals ar·e n 't amused about the theft of a 160-pound tank ot laughing gas valued at $163. PoUce aald tbe four-foot Jong blue tank was diacoa· nected from a pipe iQ a fenced outdoor 1tor age area atl7772 Beach Blvd. PoUce believe the theft occurred 1omellme Sun- day nllbt or early Mondty morntnc. Detective Commander H.W. Boone said Monday that a pro- file provided by psychologists and other experts indicates that the killer is "possibly a young man, aged 14 lo 20, or something under 20. "They say maybe he's had problems with his mother or grandmother and Is a possible schizophrenic," Boone said. And the killer probably Uves in or near the neighborhood where the six women, aged 60 to Driver Dies As Car Hits Stalled Auto Louis Florez, 57, or 31416 Los Rios St., San Juon Capistrano, was killed Monday morning when the auto he was driving hit a stalled car on the rain-swept San Diego Freeway, the California Highway Patrol re-ported. The report s:ud Florez was driving northbound on the freeway just south of Oso Creek at about 6:SO a.m. when his car struck the rearend or a van stalled in the outside lane. Driver of the disabled car was identified as J. Buczko, 33, of Los Angeles. Buczko was treat· ed for minor injuries at Mission Community Hospital. Florez, according lo a CHP spokesman, died in the hospital about an hour after lbe freeway accident. Fro•Page A l PAYWKE. • • "'He Is familiar with the neighborhood," Boone said when newsmen noted t h at the s trangler bad successfully picked the homes of widowed, elderly women. All but one of the victims was a widow. Tbe last aUacks traced to the strangler occurred over the weekend. Police say an intruder was scared olf by one woman - although be may have stayed in the house and slipped past police when they arrived. Officers believe he may have slipped away and killed a woman Just two blocks away Saturday morning. Boone and Mliscogee County Coroner J . Donald Kilgore said they believe the killer sneaked past police, who were called to Ruth Schwob's home Saturday, and instead strangled neighbor Mildred Disi:nukes&rom. Law enforcement officers said they feel the man i s a psychopathic introvert who con- fides in no one. a Jekyll-and, Hyde character who manages to move freely through highly· con- centrated Police patrols and strikes almost at will. "He's diabolically clever and he's got plenty of guts.'' sa1ci on<! officer. ''He leaves few clues." Police have no,suspeets in the case. A coroner 's report revealed Mesa Heart ~tSet Tickets are still available for the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce's seventh annual Heart Award banquet Wednes- day night at the Mesa Verde Country Club. Dodger Manager Tommy Lasorda will recejve the award. The event begins at 6 p.m. A prime rib dinner wlll be served a t 7:30p.m. The cost is $12.50 per person. Reservations ~an be made Wednesday by calling the chamber at 979--0536. that Mrs. Borom. 78, had been dead about 30 hours when she was discovered Sunday. That would indicate she was killed at about the time an assailant was trying to ~tranglc Mrs. Schwob. 70, with a stocking. "If he had been to the Borom house first.., it wouldn't have made sense for him lo go to the Schwob house," Kibiore said . Boone feels that the killer. frustrated in his attempt to strangle Mrs. Schwob when she touched off the burglar alarm, immediately picked another vie· tim. Mrs. Borom was strangled with a venetian blind cord. Seminar Set For Refugees A seminar for Jndocbjnese ref. ugees will be sponsored Feb. 24 by the Newport-Mesa Unified • School D1st.Jict's adult education department, with a workshop on income Lax laws scheduled for the refugees Feb. 25. The seminar will include in- form atlon on the law and the l('~al status of the refugees. Ad· mission is free and the seminar wi ll be ·held from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Feb. 24 at Costa Mes a High School. 2650 Fair view Road, Costa Mesa, in the Lyceum. T he income tax workshop will be held from 10 a. m . to 4 p.m. the next day in Room 119 at Costa Mesa High School. TONIGHT NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOA RD Regular meeting Costa Mesa city council cham: bets, 7:30 p.m. BEHIND THE HEADLINES -Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer. OCC Forum, 7:30 p.m . -•• 9t ....... '"" -..._.._ -... . ' ~·~ •• r ~~~~~.F~e~bfua~~~L1~~~·~19~7~8~~~..!-~~~~!:!!!i!!!!!~~M!!. 1;More SnoW Dumped ·o~ .. ,~~w-. ., , :. Bia.s Charged .: Polanski Case :Ap~aled. Again ff1 a~w1 ... ,..... CHARGES JUDGE BIASED Fugitive Polanski ~ ........ --~~ Edison Uses Extra Help For Repairs Southern Cal1forn1a Edison Company officials said today they had to C'all in crews from as far a wav us Bars tow and the San Jou'qum Vnllcy to repair dam age in Orange County dur- Jn~ the last two r;11n s torms. A company !>pokesman said 112,000 Edis on customers rn Orange County were without power al some po\nt during the weekend period beginning late Thursday night to early today. Those outages varied from five • ·minutes to 15 hour8. he said. Describing effects of the hur· r1cane-force storm that hit the county late Thurs day as "un be lievable, .. the spokesman said a total or 90 ci rcuits were knocked out by wind and rain Of those. he said 22 were locat- ed in hard-hit Huntington Beach and the Harbor area · A total of 43 power poles we re knocked down throughout the rounty, 13 of them in the Orange Coast area. He said re pairmen . were called upon lo work on 804 downed power lines. He said cost estimates will be difficult lo pin down until the i;torm-rclaled damage has been repaired. lie sa id crew s from I California 's central valley, I Oars tow, Palm Springs and f Ridgecrest augmented Edison's J 250·man repair c rew working r ound the clock over the • weekend to clean up storm • damage. 11 ·in Mexico Catch Typhoid BOSTON (AP) -Slate health officials say 11 Massachusetts residents who went. on a weelc- long charter tour to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, have com~ ~ :iown with typhoid fever since ~·their retu.rn Jan. 30. . .; Or. Nicholas J . Fiumara, :. .. director of the Division of Com· : municable Diseases, said Mod· day that 306 other people who were on the tour, all but 34 of ' them from Massachusettl, have been asked to hbe blood tests taken to detennine wbelber they ~also contracted the disease. SA NTA MONICA <AP> Rom an Polanski 'a lawyer ac· cused his judge today of bias against the movie d\r~tor a legal move which briefly de layed Polanski's sentencing in absentia for a sex crime Lnvolv· ing a 13-year-old girl. Superior Court Jud gt Laurence J . R1ttenband relut tanlly allowed atl.omt;y Douglas Dallon to take the matter to another judge for decision. A hearing was set for Feb. 24 Rittenband said he belleve<l h(' had the right to ~o ahead and sentence Polanski on the spot ·'There Jl> no standing on this motion if the defendant doesn't appear here." the judge said noting that Pohmsk1 , a F~nch citizen. fled to France two weeks ago to avoid sentencing. "With the defendant not here. the defendant has lost any right he had." the judge said . "Counsel cannot appear alone " However, both Dalton and the prose<'ulion urged the judge to folio'" l<'gal procedures which prov1dl' fur .t hearing on b1a!> bdorl' "' nl'ulral Judge Dalton rited tn h1~ motion eom m enti. made by Htllenband 10 news reporters after Polanski Oed the country . The attorney said lho!>c <'Ommentl> s howed preJud1ce. The judge said Polanl>ki was unfit to remain 1n the United States and said he would have urged his deportation had he re mained here. Superior Court .J udgc Edward Rafeedie was to assign a Judge later to hear the bias motion. Polanski. who met with Ualton last week m Paris. sent word throu gh his French attorney that the movie director plans never to return to the United States because he feels he would not re ceive an "equitable sentence ... The director of such films as ''Chinatown" and "R06emary's Baby" was described as "ex hausted by a year of uncertainty about his fate and disarpolnted by the abandonment o formal Judicial promises made to his lawyer and himself ... Crew Ready To Search for Crashed Plane Riverside County Sheriff's dep· uties were poised today to fl y into a box canyon east of San· tiago Peak where a uthorities believe a Piper Twin Comanche with six people on board crashed Monday. The airplane-piloted by a Scottsdale, Anz.. physician lost radio contact with Phoenix air traffic controllers Monday afternoon. Wreckage authorities believe is the Twin Comanche was local· ed late Monday in the box can· yon . Tbe plane was en route to Long Beach. "We're just wa1t1ng to get clearance from the Marine Corps ¥! use their helicopter," a Rivers1de sheriff's deputy said today. ''They will be dropping us in t.he canyon so we can de· tennine if it's the right aircraft. . T.be canyon is located Just in- side the Riverside County line. A grim radio report late Mon· day from another M artne Corps heUcopter searching I.he area described the crash site as "Ill· tered with bQdies." A Phoenix-based Federal Aviation Administration officlaf said today he beUeves aJJ the passengers aboard the Twin Comanche -tncludln1 the pbysician's wite --were rrom ScOttsdal•, Ariz. State Hit J . ~ ' D•ll~ f'llM S'-11 -lo GOVERNOR BROWN MINGLES WITH AMTRAK COMMUTERS AT SAN JUAN TRAIN DEPOT Just Another Face In the Crowd Today as New San Diego to Los Angeles Service Inaugurated Commuter Launched Bruwn Boards Initial Run in Capistrarw By DENNIS McLELLAS DI IM Dlllly 1"1194 Slltt Los Angeles Supervisor Bax- ter Ward's VaJentine to Soulhem Clllifornia commuters a S'l 5 million commuter train -rolled through Orange County this morning, picking t:p a surprise com muter, Gov. Jerry Brown, in San Juan Capistrano. The new eight-car El Camino. which will run five days a week between San Diego and Los Angeles. was designed to offer an alternative to the congested fr<'eway system Waid, \\hO ~a!> ont of lhi: fu-<,l passengc ri. aboard thl' train wlum 1l left San Diego at 5:45 a m.. spent nearly three years fighting to win approval of the early-morning train. WhJle some critics of the con- cept argue thnt it will not make money, Ward belteves 1t will show a profit. The weekly ticket price for a round trip between San Diego and Los Angeles 1s $76. Go\' ~rown. who spent the night in San Juan Capistrano, rode the train into Los Angeles. Low-interest Loans HB~ Disaster Area # ~-- Gets Federal Aid It \\as scheduled lo depart at 7.03 a.m., but ll wa~ late 1n ar· rn 1ng. "ll 's <Jn attempl to provide another alternat1 ve , ·' said Brown. wailing, along with several dozen c1v1c leaderi.. <'Om muters aAd reporters, for the train lo arrive · It 1s good because the freeways are gel· hng more crowded .. By the time: the El Camino ar rived in Los AnJ!l'lcs · 35 minutes lale · the numbrr of passengers picked up a loni.: thl· \\av had swelled lo 500 Hrvwn and his ft>llow com mutt.'r s were gretded b y television cameras and a marching band, which for some unknown re11 son played "On Wisconsin." "l eajoyed 1t vt-ry mut·h.'' re ported tbe .1overnor. "It was ex· ceUent, bur' I warft more trains Why c.ao·t...,..J\ave one. that rum. to Chatsworth•" Noting that train traHI !>aves e nergy , Brown ::.aid thal "millions of people are coming 3:>1T2UI. _.I~~~ 1'1.IDUut1 By The Assodat~ ~,... A s torm that lost slft!Ni~~·t movt>d eas tward dum :.now o n the l>li ua Northeast today. bi,t l~'""~IP llonal Weather ~rvic~~~Jlls!f cumulations were exp o reach no more than foµ I! es u1 most part:. .,,.q1 ~1can\\tule. J secondaWiut~"' prcsl>ure system develop~syr the North Carolina coast.. 11~ The mu1n s torrt\ sy dumped he a vy s now on, .e M 1dwest on Monday before ~v· 1ng into the East loday. lt !fS thc ht>av1est 11nowfall in Kansas l'1ty 1n 16 yt.>urs This morning, the !>peeds bn lht• N('\\ Jl'r.sey Turnpike were limit ed to :15 mph, and snow p I o \\' s ll n d s a I t !> p r e ad er s roumQd thul roadwnv und the <iardl'n Stall' Parkwa\·. In New York City. neal"ly three inches of fresh snow fell this morning Foreca!lterS pre- d1ct<'d that no more than one more inch would fall before the ~now ended. and changed to frCCllng rain l n Ph1ladelph1a. ;i htlle more I h <1 n fo ur inc he~ of nc\\ ~now fell by laH• th1-. morning and there '"l'n' l>l'l'<i1<·t111n -. th,1t new ar· c umulations \\ould reach six inchc!> before thl• sno\\ ~topPed New Englund 1s beginning to tak<' on ;1 norm<1I appearal'lcc after a week of disaster condi· t1oni. Federul troops Oown tnto the urea a ftC'r last Monday's blizzard were gathering al airports tnduy and we re cxpect- t•d to return to bases around the country Wednesday A ban against com muting by l'ar wai, lifted in Boston. As lhe storm moved East it clum pcd three tnC'hes and more 1n areas of the Midwes l SC'hoob and businesses were !>hut Monduy m Kansas City and other areru; of Missouri Kans 11s City police were hampered, with some 4Q patrol C'ars stul'k in the southern part of the <'ity. By ROBERT BARKER losses in Huntington Beach are to California all the time 01tMo.t1y1"11e1s1.111 expectedtohit$3milhon There's JUS l not room on the Ne\\port Reac h attorney A devastated Huntington Fountain Valley a lso was bat· rreeweys." .James Pa rker has filed to Ex-.Newpon · Planner Bith For Assembly Beach mobile home park is of-tered by fierce winds which Train travel. ht' said. 1s "less beC'o m e a C'andidate for the fi cially included as part of the were measured in some areas at ex pensive It '.s interesting and nemoC'rallc nomination in the Southern California disaster 90 miles per hour it's American.·· 74lh Assembly District area. a state official confirmed Director of Public Works Th<' distrtct , which runs from today· Wayne Osborne said that losses Newport Beach to Oteanside, Governor Brown proclaimed are expected to reach $170.000 y h W d s hows a t wo·to·one ratio of a n emergency in Orange and with falling trees expected to ac· OUt e 8 Republicans to Democrats, yet Los Angeles counties as well as countfor SlOO.OOOof lhe total. Democrat Ron Cordova has insixotheroountriesMonday. Four homes also suffered G dm 7 7 represented it since winning thf' Al Villere, a coordinator with $70,000 in damages, Osborne re-ran a, ~ea t in a stunnin~ upset in 1976. the state Office of Emergency Ported. Cordova will run for the State Services, said that Brown's ac· Th<' city of Huntington Beach LONDON <AP> -Mark Good Senate this y('ar lion makes it possible for resi-also may come in for federal man. 21. marned his 77 year old P a rker. 4•l . is a former dents of the Huntington-by-the-compen'°at1on because of los t step-grandmother 1n a secrel Ntwport Bc.·ach planning com- Sea Trailer Village to get low in· costs incurred during day-long ceremony at lnglewood, Caltf . missioner and a past president terestfederalloans. e mergencywork. London 's D ai l y Expre ~., of the Newport Harbor Area Approval still has to be given Damage also was reported at newspaper reported Chamber of Commerce. by the Small Business Ad-the emergency ramp at the end The report did not ~ay when A grad u ate of Loyo la ministration which would supply of the pier There also was some the C'ouple were marned t 'n1vers1ty 1n Los Angeles and the lo~1_ytllere said. . damage to water and sewer Goodman. an Amer1<'an. an t he Southwestern Universit y ln adamon, BT'own has asked fac1Uties. nounced plans last December 10 School of I.a~. Parker said he that President Carter declare Officials also estimated that marn· Mrs Rav Goodman. a \ 1ew!> the election as · a huge op. the bard-hit Southern California up to J.000 trees fell during the Briton. wtth whom he share!> an portunity" and predicted that areasasadisaster,makingresi· windstorm Thyden said some apartment 10 Maida Vale. 1978 could ht' the year in which dents eligible for federal as· federal rmanc1aJ help might be northwest London. Br1t1sh law Democrat!> in Orange Counly slstance. forthcoming In these areas. forbids s uch a marriage outnumber Ri*ubllcan:- Such a declaration by Presi· ----------------------------------:,.,u.__ ____ _ dent Carter would make more money and more personnel available and would expedite e mergency loans, ofCicials said. "All our official reports are back tn Washington," Hunt· tngton Beach Civil Defense Director George Thyden said lo· day. "The next step is to wait.'' Twenty.four mobiJe homes were destroyed and 45 more suf· fered major damage when tornado-like wlllds rampaged through the Huntiniton Beach ttaller park shortly before 2 a.m. Prt<lay. Structural dam11e to the trailer park was esUmated at Sl.2 mlllton alone. But whe.n damaae to contents and other property Jn the city is tallied up, • Ironic, Isn't It? I spend e1gh· *"1 days In t"e worst -ather the East ha had fn over thirty yeara and I had lo come back · home lo be hit by the flu bug I admit "Suony ' Cellforn1a haan·t ~ wwy 1unny aince my relum. A eoupi. ot club talkl on ffff 9CMc:lui. '"' the P•t wee6Cend hed to be can- celled at h •• minute and I'm very 90fry about that I hope the groupe will be ,,,,. tereated Jn asking me again 1t a later date whert I'm lesS 1ntec- t1ous A few more not .. on my tnp . ® EiEM~WISE had several opportunities to t:ilk 10 oeoole buyino "sights · at OeBeers and they feel p(ac· t•cally cenain 10 get another price hike th1c: spring . . . . especially 1n lhe sizes under one hall carat These tacts would tend 10 m<Ule some of th• pi.ces already selecwct for our halt pnce aale IOOk llke awfully QOOO buys. The sale starts tomorrow. It is • .,,._ 1nvento.y reduction..,. and lrt- cludea Mlected items from .i1 cat99orl• of our regulat stock: One of the manulactUl'9fS lhat I v1Slted had 1ust hnllhed a beautiful necklace •••• d1amondS and rubles . . • • some of the most beautiful gem rubla I h8Y9 ever seen. The uklng price 11 '365,000. lf you are planning to attend a ~ onatlon or royal weddlttg sometime soon and •r• Mrlou.ly lnteteated tn bU)llng somathlog of this tyoa. IM)I will b• happy to fly -lt out by apeolal ntetMnget tor your conslderat!On. Sofnafiow, I t\ftt can't ._ oc.ir Ulnf'l'*"t:>lcyfng, golfing,~. eesual C&llfo,.. nfant In aomathlng ao •l•boratiia end fO\"IMI ••••• but U t Kid, H It ...,allable, 110 you Cjn ltt me f!now. 'HOP• you ttmembered ~ Vel4iinuna todey. ' JUSTICE DEPT. Here we ~are on St. Valentine's day, when ou~hts iurn lo love and hudhfll ~ess. Upon such OC· • iJ. mpkes you a bit ill to J µt Ule acts of inhumam- Ul plague us. s:I eslerday, we carried a 'f about a 16·year-old · from Monrovia who was · fed in Corona del Mar on 0 ed robbery charge. z~ s crime was a $3 pursc.- s patching. To pull it off. the ~bn'iiway teen-ager ullegedl~ 1~R~ked down an 80-year-old man, causing her to s uffer a en hip. A fractured hip, or 9 se, ts no run for anyone But ·VW-.s a gravely serious injury for 1'\lie elderly. .. &fz YOU WONDER, under our ' ~~ystem of juvenile justice today, ~'--wltal wip happen to this ., younest.er if he is found guilty a5 ch~rged. And t.tiat in turn reminds you 'of an article by Robert Gardner 'of Corona del Mar, presiding justice of the Fourth District Court of Appeal, which was re- .cenUy reprinted i n Modern ,Mattµ'ity magazine. Titled, .. When Justice Was Swift," Gardner's piece recalled , the early days in Laguna Beach ~when the Justice of the Peace . was Judge C.C. "Gavvy " Cravath. Cravath Jacked legal _training. lie retired to Laguna after being a m ajor league baseball 'home run king and prompUy got elected justice of the peace. . DESPITE IDS LACK or Jegal background. Justice Gardner observed, "Gavvy was fair, he was honest, he was fearless, he was just -and after all you can't ask for much more than that from a judge." Gardner recounted two in ci - dents of the swift justice of Gav vy Cravath. When the town drunk, Pete, was hauled in before him, Cravath ordered him hauled off to county jail on the back of a police motorcycle. Pete protested he badn 't even been arraigned yet. Whereuoon Cravath growled. "Now, look here. P ete, YOU know you were drunk. I know . you were drunk. Now we're not going to waste any or the tax- payers' money on any goddam trial. Get on the goddam motorcycle and go to j ail for a f ew d ays and dry out." THE OTIIER SIDE or the old Laguna JP was recounted by Gardner when a youngster was broug ht into c ourt on a multitude or charges. Police had him manacled. "He bad more chains on him than a logging truck," Gardner recalled. "I have never seen ._ nore de- moralized human being." Cravatb ordered h i m un- manaclcd. flipped the youn~ster a coin and told him to eo down to Benton's cafe for a cup of cof- fee, then return to court to face his charges. And he did. You don't see this kind of home grown justice any more. You wonder what would hap- pen to the kid charged with the Corona del Mar purs~snalching ii he bad come up before the late J'ustice of the Peace Gavvy Cravatb. • TtJnday, Fubr~ry 14, 19;a e By The Associated P ress Power cutbacks were spread mg and hundreds or thousands of workers faced la,yof't1 u the na- tional coal strike ground into tts 7 lst day tod ay. Talks are s talemated and President Carter r efuses to order the miners back into the pits. A White House official said Carter was likely to take some action soon, but not an im· mediate back-to-back order. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall met in Washington today witli representatives of th e Bituminous Coal Operators As - sociation, the bargaining arm for mine owners, and emerged saying he was optimistic about getting joint negotiations re, sumed later this week. MA RSHALL TOLD reporters he would confer again separate· Iv with leaders of the industry Guts and the United Mlne Workers union today and Wednesday. l{e said he is exploring conditions , and assurances that both sides need before they can return to race-to-face begotiations. Uolon Preaident Arnold Miller, meanwhile, met with his bargalninc council, which had rejected a tentative aetUement Sunday. Carter has said be willr not try to force miners back to tbelr jobs by invoking the Taft-Hartley Act, which pro- vides for an 80-day return to work if a strike poses a national emergency. • "THERE IS NO question in our minds that the situation is very serious," Marshall said .• "But whether or not that's suffi. cient to justify saying whether we have a national emereency isn't known.'' EPA Vows Revamp Of Auto Estimates WASHINGTON (AP) -The Environmental Protection Asen.Cy is beginning Lo act on complaints from disappointed new car owners who say EPA mileage estimates are inflated by as much as 14 per- cent. The EPA is ready lo change the mileage estimates after conceding its figures are seldom achieved under normal driving condi--PUBLISIUNG ONLY one twns. figure instead of the three cur- "T he EPA t,atings s hould rently Jlsted. Lis tings give refl ect what drivers can rea-mileage estimates for city driv-~onagly expect to achieve on ing, highway driving and com· the road," EPA Administrator bined city and highway driving . Douglas Costle said Monday in The city driving fi gure is con- <innouncing plans to revise the sidered the best ''since it most estimates. c losel y corresponds to the EPA CONCEDED errors of from 7 pe~ent to 14 percent on the high side, and Costle said that is too much. Some in- dividual car owners claim the errors are even larger . "We've received a lot or con- s umer com plaints that customers are not getting the mileage our tests indicate,'' said EPA spokes m an Marlin Fitzwater. The agency is considering three proposals to bring figures into line with reality: average mileaee t hat most drivers are experiencing," the EPA said. -Listing the three fi&ures, but lowering the estimates by 10 percent to 25 percent for each category. ~ Abolishing the estimates and substituting a compalison index. putting a car's fuel economy on a sliding scale from one to 10, with lop performing cars receiving a 10 ratiqg. The n ew ratings would appear on 1979 model cars, EPA said. U.S. Eyes Cuba's Gain in Red Pilots WASIIlNGTON (AP) -U.S. officlals are expressing concern about a sharp increase in the ranks of Soviet pilots in Cl.Iba, the first visible rise in Russian presence on the island since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. · The heightened presence this time, however, appears limited to men, not armaments, according to one administration source. The source said a recent significant increase in the number of Soviet pilots operat- ing in Cuba indicates that the Russians are taking the place of Cuban pilots flying missions for Ethiopia in its war against Somalia in the Horn o( Africa. THE SOURCE, WHO asked not to be identified, said Monday that the number of Russian pilots in Cuba is still "pretty small," but be declined to say precisely how many. The Soviet pilots are believed· to be flying routine air defense missions for Cuba. There has been no known increase in the number of Russian-built planes " ...... •U M a. 12 ... , " 0 ... a t7 A ...... .. .. ~ .. ,., SI .. . ,. supplied to the Caribbean i1land, according to the source, who keeps close watch on actlvities in that region. The Soviets have maintained a small group of pilots in Cuba for a numt>er or years, presumably to train Cuban pilots. "But now it's gone quite beyond that. The number of R~an pilots has in- creased substantially," sald the source. Asked tr the adntlb11tration were alarmed about the Soviets flying missions for Cuba, be said: "'What difference does it make if you have Russian or Cuban pilots tlyinl MIGs (Sol'iet . fighters> so close to our coun· try? We don't like either:• The miners have ignored three· Taft-Hartley court orders since 1948. - Indiana ordered mandatory power cuts Monday because of ahrinklnl coal suppUea. CUTBACKS WERE _,,ut into effect ln West Vlrgln\a last • week. In both states, tens of thousands ot workers face the . posslbllit.y or layotts as earty as ibis weekend. Indiana Gov. Otis Bowen, wor- ried over the possibillUea of theft or vandalism , ordered units of the National Guard today to protect coal stockpiles. Meanwhile, as offlclals try to plan ways of moving coal to states that need it, at least one state has made lt clear that it doesn't want to part witb what coal Uhas. MICWGAN PUBLIC Service Commisslonel' Daniel Demlow warned that drastic conserva- tion measures may be necessary if energy due for Michigan is shifted to fuel-short states. Ohio Edison 'co., facing the prospect of 50 percent cutbacks to some areas of northeutern Ohio, purchased power from uWitles in other states. A com- pany spokesman would not name the other companies In· volved. FORD MOTOR CO. plants will start closing Late this month and Chrysler Corp. faces a complete· shutdown after March 1 unless the coal strike is settled quickly, the a utomakers warn. The biggest problem stems from electrical power cutbacks in ObiQ, where the three major U.S. car makers h ave some 3S assembly and parts manufactur- ing planti. NATION I WORLD An industry-wide shutdown would idle more than 700,000 hourly workers at Chrysler General Motors 81\d Fo11. ' . .............. BELT STRETCHES WHEN DOOR OPENS, THEN SNUGS Cindy Hermes of GM Demonstrates Chevette Option 'Automatic' Belts Due Chevette Option Expected to :Debut in May DET ROIT CAP> -The first "automatic'' seat belt to be of- fered on an American-built car will make its debut this spring on General Motors Corp. 's sub- compact Chevrolet Chevelte. The passive restraint system, which closes automatically around the driver when the door s huts, will be an option on Chevettes starting in about mid- May, GM said Monday. THE ONLY OTHER car sold Jn thfa country with a passive belt system is the top-of-the-line Volkswagen Rabbit, in which the belt is atandard equipment. VW first ottered the system as an op- tion in 1975, and says about 90,000 such cars had been sold through l!r11. No price ha& been set for the Cbevette option, said Wilson H. West, manager of the project center formed by GM last fall lo s tudy ways to meet federal passive-restraint requirements of the 1!8>5. The Chevette system was un- veiled lo reporters along with 15 othe r experimental seat belt systems. They ranged from sim- p 1 e mechanical devices to pneumatic-powered multlstrap S.Ystems whose buckles slide along tracks in the roof and side door as the door opens and closes. GM'S OFFERING IS a "two- point" shoulder harness similar to .the Rabbit's. One end at· taches to the door and the other to a point between the front bucket seats. The system is identical for the driver and front-seat passenger. The back seat has conventional lap belta. When the driver opens the door to get in the car, the belt moves out of the way. When the door closes again, the belt set- tles across the driver along a line from the hip to the shoulder. Som e reporters who tried out the system got their Jaaads caught under the belt as it closed, and one got her purse t&l\gled. But it was-t.be siJDPlest of tho • wide range of experimental passive belts under s tudy by GAf. Daily Pilot Staff Wins Top Press Club Honors .. NICJ.• first place and 10 second place cash awards were made to seven Dally Piiot editors, writers and photographers Jn the recent 23rd Orange County Presa Club competition. ,___...,_ ..., ..... The club'• moat preatlgloa:as honor-the Sky Dunlap Award -went to Dally Piiot Managing Editor Thomas Murphlne. The award hono~ service to journallam and particularly a ... 1latance given to young Journallats. Ora• County Bureau Chief Gary Granvllle earned three· nr1t place awards and became the first recipient ot the club's · ••watchdog Award.•• I \ I CJ I CALIFORNIA II '•I .. · Fluuael Clo a d s North Braces For Omlaught By 1'be Aasoc:lated Press As California's northwest comer 1ear~ for yet another Pacific storm tonight, residents ot tbe central valleys 1Ull were buzting over the rare ap- pearance of tornado-like runnel clouds. The National Weather Service and a host o( private clUzens reported seeing more than 12 of the fuMel clouds late Monday afternoon ln skies over the area between Sacramento and Delano. TOE CLOUDS, caused by cold, unstable Pacillc air flowing in behind Sunday's weather frollt, were sighted over Lindsay, Visalia and Stockton. where one observer reported seelng six s uch clouds just before 6 p.m. DAIL V PILOT A5 F reezing Tfmtperatures Seven Hikers .Rescued . SAN DIEGO (AP> -Seven hikers. includint five tet:n-agcrs, an adult and a child. reported miss- ing m freezing temperatures on snow-covered Mt. Palomar, were located ln iood condition early today. Sheriff'~ Lt. Del Kay said au seven were rescued in good condition on the north slope of the mountain. When the group was reported missing about 9 p.m., they were five houra overdue. Atton.ew f'atalltf S laot Ka~I Nl.r~• S11~'11 LOS ANGELES CAP) -Stunt motorcyclist Evel Knievel, 39, servin1 • six-month Jail term for assault, has decided to let "Mother Nature take Its course" and not undergo sur1ery to correct old fractures ot the vertebra and right arm. l<nJevel was exa~ined by a team of surgeons at County-USC Medical Center Monday alter he complained of back pain. · PASADENA <AP) -Attorney Robert Daniel B Vi• Lynch, 34, was fatally shot, as his wife and two -..-~ •,n .. ~ .,e young daughters looked on, by a masked intruder • .., IA/ &1.:::;;. SN~ who entered Lynch's house through an unlocked, sliding glass door. · Police said Lynch E g Pl was shot once in the bead ( ) ne~ y an when he stood up and STATE confrpnted the intruder, 111 • The unstable air mass also caused a rare hailstorm in downtown San Francisco and dumped two lnches o( snow on nearby Mt. Diablo. TONIGIIT'S STOR M was expected to strike mainly to the north. The Bay area's chances of rain were 30 to 40 percent, according to forecaster Jim Kaplam. who fled alter the shoot· LOS ANGELES (AP> -Olive pits, manure ~~~~~~· ing. and dead trees have something ln common. ~ Lynch died nine hours later in Huntington They're all potential sources of energy on Memorial Hospital. which California may find itself increasingly re· In the Sierra Nevada at Norden, near Donner Pass, recent storms have brought the accumulat· ed, seasonal snowfall total to 420 inches. the ~ normal average for an entire season, officials re- "" ported. · ' FEBRUARY AND MARCH usually are two of • the snowiest months Jn the Sierra, and current, long.range forecasts indicate snows should coo· Unue to fall regularly through end of the two· month period. Robert C. Bernash, head of the Federal-State River Forecast Center in Sacramento, said that even with no additional snow in the Sierra, the San Joaquin Valley could face a serious flood problem from runoff this spring if the mountains have ab- normally warm temperatures. 1.2 ltlilUon Pesos No, it is welder Bill Harris ~urrounded by a wire mesh as he peers down from the apex of a gazebo that w111 be part of a new public park alongth~Santa Cruz River. The park is in the first stages of development and one. day could stretch for more than a dozen miles along the Santa Cruz river bank in. Santa Cruz. 6 Held in Robbery ,r SAN DIEGO (AP) - Mexican authoritie~ :.• aided by San Diegc police have arrested six persons and recovered 800,000 pesos taken in a 1.2 million pesos payroll robbery in Tecate, Baja California, offlclals say. Mexican investigators had been in the planning said Monday they enlist· for four months, police ed .the aid ~f San Diego said. pohce Mexican Liaison Equivalent to about officers in capturing the $53,500, the payroll was thieves. being taken to a civil Th_e holdup last "Fri-engineering campsite dny lf_l front of El Banco near Tecate that is Serafin de Tecate, S.A.1 ·building a project to bring Mexicali Valley water across the peninsula mountains to Tijuana and Ensenada. llelar'• BHI f'lenlJle liant, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. said Monday. SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Sen. Peter Behr, author of this year's major property tax re. lief bill, says his tax on the saJe of owner-occupied housing can be reduced without cutting the bill's benefits. But two business groups urged at a hearing Monday that no new levies be included. They said it would be better to cut property taxes Jess than to add new taxes. Train S elaedtde \/le1Hd SAN DIEGO (AP) -Bechtel Corp., consul- tant~ studying whether San Diego should have a commuter railway, foresee trains operating every 15 minutes during daylight hours between downtown and the San Ysidro border crossing. Members or the consulting team told Metropolitan Transit Board members Monday that trains would be be able to pass in opposite directions; "IT'S VERY EXCITING new technology, .. Brown told reporters after he and Democratic ~n. Alan Cranston met with energy experts on alternative power sources. "Instead of these huge, gigantic power plants, we have the opportunity for smaller plants and more diversified sources of fuel." "This is just a beginning for what ls going to be a very important source of energy in the future," Brown added. \ BROWN AND CR ANSTON were briefed on various methods of blo-mass conversion, the use ol crop residues. manure and other waste products to eenerate electricllv. While current blo-mass technology could sup- ply less than five percent of the state's energy needs, more than 30 percent or Callfornia'sj>Ower could be generated through such alternative sources in the futute, they said. I ' Strangler 'Has U.S. Border Patrol agents at the San Onofre checkpoint seized a van Saturday believed used Jn the heist. The driver fled, officers said, but a group ot aliens smug- gled into the United States were arrested in- side the vehicle. j , .. Nothing to Fear' ,. • r • I ' ' I LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Hillside Strangler has nothing to fear from the police and should sur- render, says an act.or who himself was under ar- rest for two days after phoning police to say be committed the 12 killings. Ned York, 32, said at a press conference Mon- day that he was under the influence of the drug PCP, commonly known as "angel dust," when be told police he killed the women. York was released after police determined bis only connection to the case was that a friend or his had been acquainted with one of the victims. York said the police were "very kind to me" and "could not have treated me better ••• I know they'll treat him the same way." Four persons were captured by Mexican State Judicial police .ac· com panle<l by San Die10 officers ln a raid at a ranc h home 12 kllometers south of Tecate where part of the loot was recovered, of. ficials said. Four days, four nights from $80.00 New daily nonstop Now HI Callfomlo fllet you nomtOS) to Tahoe frcm nGCllbV Oranoe Coun1Y 01~. And we'll orronoe o complete SunJet TOUf to Heavenly vonev. Nneif. 00'1 lorg•t ski area. Your four to seven night tour pockoge Inch.Ides fine lodging ond dOll't lift tickets wltti letsOnS ond rental gear ovolloble. Tour s:M1dill ~ ot Just ~.oo COltfo1'9 not Included) fOf fOQf. dClyl, fqur f'llOh" (dOu-bte ocaupancy). And dlrfOl'e \$ ~f $35,00 one~~ ~I dlsCount.for fomlllt and OfOUPl.send tOday fOf a fUll color~. fl'len ~If all "'1th)MOM Call toAlr<;'cllfomla oryCKKTrowl Agent. Nd take It~ RCA ColorTrak 25'" - RCA COLORTUI 25" .... TAILE MODEL RCA COLOITIAI CONSOLE G.E. REFRIGERA Toa---w. llG FREEZER NO DEFROSTING 4.l .... ft. ~. r .... ko 'N &..y tooy.. ,_ ...... Md\."'°'" ........ ........ ~ ... IM. NOW ONLY 5429°° COMT'INUOUS CLEANING OVEN/RANGE SAYE 5100 FOR DAVIS-BROWN'S AWARD-WINNING FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVlar.NJ. 548·3~37 I t I 1 t . . • ' I . A8 • Orange Coast Oa1ty Pilot .. I t . . 1Bus Rare Boost .. lBetter Than Tax 1f the Orange County Transit District <OCTD) needs lo increase local funds over the next few years, directors should look at. modest fare hikes rather than an increase , in property t ax rates. During an OCTD meeting last week, staff members presented a five-year budget projection which calls for an incr ease in the tax rate from the current 3.71 cents per $100 of assessed valuation to 4.05 cents. That hardly seems in tune with the demands of today's taxpayers who already feel overburdened by property taxes and who ar~amoring for relief. • OCTD patrons have en yed low fares during the bus company's five-year histo . A 5-to 10-cent hike in the basic 25-cent fare, while regrettable, would still leave bus , travel a bargain. At present, passenger fares bring in about $3.3 .million a yea1· to OCTD coffers while property taxes •generate about $3.6 million. But the bus company's operating budget 1s $28 million a year and the difference in funds is made up chiefly from state and federal tax sources. · That means taxpayers as a collective group already ·finance the bulk of OCTD operations. If more local ,dollars are needed, il would seem fair that those who use the bus service should be asked to pay a modest increase. • This definitely would nol be the· right time to discuss •raising property taxes. • ~Tiine-wasting Probe Dr .. Michael Levine, the former chief administrator ut Fairvitw State Hospital in Costa Mesa, has come un· der renewed fire in recent times. The allegations are that he misappropriated some state secretarial resources to 'promote his personal viewp<)int on care for patients in state mental institutions. Apparently this probe of Levine and some of his as· sociates continues. A most recent statement issued suggested that the 'former hospital chief should reimburse the state for some of these secretarial and duplicating services. The same statement, however, declared that the doc- t or was under no suspicion of criminal misconduct or any -wrongdoin~. Then what in the world goes on here? One would sus- pect what goes on is an unmitigated case of nit-picking. Let's just briefly examine the record. When Dr. Levine was elevated to the chief administrator's thair at J<'airvicw, it was well known that he disagreed with a number of policies being followed in state mental hospitals. In rather large measure, he disagr.eed with the operational theories of his predecessor. So Dr. Levine was given the top job and he sour.ided off a few too many times. So he got.fired. You .challenge the boss one tOQ many times and you get shown the way out. So much for that. / But Dr. Levine remalned on the staff. And it should have come as a sunnise to nobody that he continued to promote bis vie\YpOint. He even sent carbon copies to the new director. Then Dr. L.evint! resigned from the staff. He is now in ' • private practic~ ·Yet some state officials seem to keep pecking away at bim, despite the declaration that he ls guilty of no crime or wrongdoing. • I Perhaps it is now time that state officials just forget about any preoccupation with Dr. Levine. Just get on with the job of improving Fairview State Hospital for the I good of the clients it serves. · .. Cal Trans at Work Recently is this space, we lamented' the vulgarity demonstration .by th$ California Department of Transportation when highway workers patched the side of the Newport Bay Bridge on Pacific Coast H1Jbway by slapping a piece of metal railing on it. t The gap in the cemen\ siding on the bridge was caused by a tragic double-fatal accident early New Year's morning. But the "repair job" was slapdash ~t best. · , Now. when public improvements are accomplished ltt the face of criticism, these should be duly acknowledged. So we shall acknowledge. The highway crews have now come along and ln· s talled two flw:xrescent orange cones on top of the. patchwork metal railing. Some motorists along the Coast lligbway route might suggest that (falTrans bas now added obscenity to vutaarlty. But you m·ust admit; ther•re working on it. • Opinions exp,,,ased In the spac. above are those of the Dally Pilot. Othet views expreseed on this .. ge ._,e thase of tOelr a~Ofl and l artlsi.. Reader comment la lnviled. Address Th• Dally Piiot. P.O •• Box 1560. Costa Mesa, GA 92628. Phone (714) 642--4321. ......... _ Robert N. Weed /Publisher Tueed•y, February 14, 1171 Barber• Krelblch/Edltorl•I Pa.ge Editor .. Arms, ·on Tangle~ Mideast WASHINGTON -President Carter's fallure to wln Saudi Arabia's consent to delay the promised U.S. sale or 60 F-15 aircraft con· fr on LS him with bis clearest test to this ques· tlon: can the U.S. have its own Mideast policy, or only one tied to Isreal? The answer to that question may well decide lbe future ot the vital U.S.-Saudi connection. At issue Is whether Saudi Arabia will continue to un- derwrite U.S. domestic oil needs over the bitter opposition of Venezuela, Iran and other oll-'rich mem hers of the Organization ot Petroleum Exporting Countries <OPEC) lobbying for higher prices. Earl Waters Change. in Saudi oil produc- tion and pricing, moreover, could wedge Western Europe and Japan away from the U.S .. underminln& political unity of the industrialized democracies. As provided by Sen. Frank Church, soon-to·be chairman or the..,...Senate Forelan Relations Cdmmittee. the abswer to thls crucial question j15 a cleat' no. In· deed, Church's felt.er protesUng the sale to Secretary of State Cyrus Vance -•lgned by at least nine' other Senators -was couched with generous over- statement in terms of how Israel views the sale, but not in terms of U.S. interest.!. "CHURCH WROTE his letter like a Senator from Israel," one or ·church's co}leagues (by no stretch of Imagination anti- Jsrael) told us. Church's letter was so devoid of sensitivity for the U.S. interest that Sen. Jacob Javil.s, lone one or Israel's chief congressional defenders, did not slin it. · Instead, Javlt.s wrote a letter ot his own to Vance, along with Sen. Howard Baker. the Republican leader, and two other Senators. They asked for a delay tn the sale until a commit· tee study ls finished. That study is expected to go beyond Saudi· Arabia to the implications of U.S. arms sales throughout the Mideast. Sen. Abraham Riblcotr, a llfelona leader of the American Jewish community who cannot be faulted on friendship for Israel, signed neither letter, but privately Informed one Senator that he agreed with the Jav1ts, not the Church, approach. IN A CLUMSY attempt to fi. nesse the political dilemma of either delivering on his pledge to sell Saudi Arabia the planes -. or surrenderln~ to Church and Jsrael -President Carter so f has struck out. DURING his stop in Riyad~ month ago, Mr. Carter reo his pledge -then, after readi Church's Jan. 23 letter, b second thoughts. He orde Ambassador John West to s Saudi agreement to delay sale (which can be blocked Congress during a 30-day peri following its submission Capitol Hill). The predictable failure Qt West's mission threw the Wh House and the National Secur{br Council <NSC) into a tailsplni: new NSC study was order , which meant postponing s · mission of the F·lS deal. with or without Saudi agreement, beyond the Feb. 1 date originally planned. These delays are feeding pro. Israeli propaganda. which ts now warning about an laratli ''pre-emptive" air attack OJl Saudi F-15 bases if war agairt threatens between Israel and the Arabs. The political reaction ui Saudi Arabia lo Jimmy Carter's equivocation in the face of Israel's displeasure was predic· table. 1t bef:M with a private Jetter to Mr. Carter by the Saudi ambassador politely asking th~t the pledge (first made by the Ford administration) be carried out. . BUT THE Saudi government would not be human if in lbe face of a dishonored pledge it continued lo r esist oil price hikes demanded by other OPEC countries or continued high-rate oil production just to satisfy President Carter. Underlying these surface hazards is the spectacle of the U.S. superpower once again squirming in public over an arms sale in tbe Middle East clearly tailored to its own in- terests. This spectacle reflects an increasingly dim image of the U.S. -not only to Saudi Arabia but around the whole world. 7 ... MeCartliY ' a S'nq)rise Brown Challenger? ·· -An undereurnmt of-reaction , than wishful thtnklngon the part among Democratic politicians ·•or a few. And it is yet to surface, may catapult a surprise entry being only something quietly into the race for governor. talked aJJout. Criticisms of Governor Jerry At fint'bJush it would appear Brown•s t b ut fth ti F leadership or 0 e 0 o e ques on. or l"ckofit,h~ve ~ ~cp~~~eh~ ~w~o~ee t~!~ ~en lncreas-i ' in g am otng ~:c'1 ::haf~ :!:~e~~ ~ Democra le warned by bis colleagues in the leglalators for elosidg da'is of last year's many months. z N 0 w w l t b sess .. ons to put more distance their' ~wn sur· between hl~elf, and the gov- viyal at stake em or• i ft t b e OBVIOUSLY eopizant that a forthcoming elections. some • Speaker can be unelected just as counter actlon seems to be 1 quickly u be can be elected. crystamring. McCart)ly bas ln fact withdrawn Uthedismalfalluretodevelop · Hmewhat •lU~ough he bas an acceptable propetty tax relief refrained from direct criUclsms meJSure wu -. enoueb of a of the 1ovemor. An exaq>ple of catalyst, the publlo eruption ot • bis cban'8 of attitude waa seen \ftdespread Clllaens1on witblll the iii Jamaary when he atqod by Brown admJnlstratlon appeara to while the Assembly overrode pf!Videai..tstraw. ' two of Brown's vetoes. IN ANY ~ there ls a de-Whether that tan be taken as tlnlte mol'e to push Al.9embl,y an fndlcatton that McCarthy Speaker Leo McCarthy into a might be 1Uiteptible to over· challenge ot Brown tor the • turea f9r hi'in to enter the Democratic nomination for aov· / gubernatorial race ls 0"'1 to ·emor. It mq be nothing more ~nJe~.Mceartby isn't·~ ' Mailbox tng. As it stands his position is the same as ft was when he became Speaker later in 1974. Asked his plans be said: .. All I want is lo be a good Speaker. I think there is a great opportuni- ty to accomplish many things. I would like to be Speaker for about eight years." THAT STATEMENT closed the doors·to speculations about his seeking higher office in the immediate future. And. whHe M cCartby is a sincere in- dividual, much more so than many another politician, it re- mains that Umes and events change Me's viewpoint. Govem<>r Brown bad scoffed at ques&loal •bout his using the governor's ofOce merely as a 1tepJln1 ataDe to the Presidency duriDJ bis 19'1' campaign. "If I'm elected l .W devote the next four 1ean to being a full time governor:• h8 vowed. yet it bas since beeo Jeamed be was plan- nin& evm ~ to run tor Presi· denimms. · Since It Is crystal clear that Brown. lt re-elected. will turn bis fall. attention to running again for the Presidency in 1980, McCarthy would have a tremen- dops campaign advantaee over Brown if he decided to contest him. For McCarthy can make the unequivocal pledge that he wm never run for President un- der any circumstances thus as· s uring the voters of a full time governor. Further he can prove the irrevocable quality of that pledge. A native of New Zealand. he is precluded from becoming President. IT WOULD take some strong persuasions to induce McCarthy to run fo~ governor since il would mean not only giving up the Speakership but bis As~ sembly seat as wtll. The other important tact.or is the time needed to put a campaign together. With barely more than 30 days before the close of filing. it would be cutting things short. • StiJI, it is known that Mccari.hy fl8.S been toying wjtb the idea Of running for Lt. GovJ emor or Attorney General and may have a campaign alre4dy planned. And, be bll'.s until March 10 to decide which wa1 to jump. MisunderstanmDg of sex Therapy Unfortunate ~ . ' To tl}e Editor{ I would like to ~u to your •t· tention art -em>'r printed 1n JOUr paper The n..tb' Piiot oa Ju. e. Pllte A5. Tbe story WU 1J Sex Therapy Hit, llelat taaed to bu~est and t\ co tft• preseotatic'9. ol a Pll .t e..CSPA ~ntlon in San ri'Aklaco. 1 level, and that of hundreds of further atiem.-by the fudiciLf others like me who are only try. to obviate the popular will. ing to aet IOmewhere on time, . Fearful tba\ the electorJ we•d appreciate it if the follow-may s ucceed 1n cboc~ln in' types of people would stay escalatlne taxes and cov out or the fast lane: • ipent spending (where the 1. Those wbo are al~lag. ed representaUves have fallllll 2. Those not paytng attention. Jud;; SuD\bel'•s aUit would 3. Those smoking, eating, ap. nut la effort under the prettas plying makeup, read~!:.. tha it "unconstitutionally" cov '4. Those 4rlving vw s, and ers more than one subject. otber underpowered or older can. 5. Tbole drivina trucks. 6. Tboee who have taken lt up. on tbemsel'feS to make sure that no one let8 "lthln ftve mUes of tbe •peed limit. f, ftole IO buy talklq to u.ir p~pr that the~ twaet theJ'l'e GrivJlil, t. Thole afral4 to drive the apeed Jl111it. U IOllMOQt behind YoU flubea their ll~ or toots thelr born, ~eua mov• ewer. 1'bant ~. ltoa> tb8 ~my hea~ L&BUllGESS ia ........ ' YUBA CQ'Y' (AP) -IW> Mil. 1911, police dug up sliatf'O'W graves in fruit orchards by the Feather River here and found the bodies of, 25 mlgraJtt workers. Five years ago, a jury eonvicted Juan Corona in those murders. Today, Cor,ona, a burly 43· year-old man., is ln the state prison at $oledad, 100 m11ea Sc>uth of Sati Francifco Jn the Salinas Valley. He ls serving 2S consecutive life terms 16. the' mache\e lc1llings ol tbe workers, all between the ages o( '° and ea. ~· -,.b,u•z 1•. 1910 ''Jle teeps 1'lnu•U oc· cup{ed Vt/l'Y well. 'He does quite ' a bit of reading and studyl.ng: Other inrQates treat btm just like anyone eJse, •• said R. A. Smith, t.be prisoft official wbo handles hls cue. When Corona's attorney, Michael Mendelson, visits him, he tlnds Corona quiet and &0Qtber. ••Anytime anyone has been in- c.u·cera~ that l<>na, you don't knQw wbat they were ~e betore they wereintheslammer. lt'a like anybody el5e. It'a been my ex· perlen'~ t.bat the~·s a general dullness anilflatneh of personall· ty, •• Mendelaonaaid. 11.NDE• CWFORNIA 1~ Corona oould be considered for puole ~ter seven years, as e.ar- ly as February 1W79. But ho has no parole date. and state of- ficials do not expect he will bavo one in the ~ear future. .. ~ .......... .... 1 ......... KEEPS OC~UPIEO Corona In Prison ~ EATING CHAMP 'BOZO' MILLER Hf\S 10 SCUARll MEALS A DAY Corona, who was a 37-year-old farm labor contractor wh-:n ,J}e was arrested, waits for the re· sult of an appeal of bis convic· lion peoding in a st.ate appeals court in San Franciaco. In Oakland, He Meets With His 'Eatln'and.Drlnkln'Club I ;Bozo Never Misses C~rort'a declines to talk ~ re. porters. Once in 1973, when he was at the state prison in Vacaville, Corona agreed to an interview. He said then it was ••tmpoesible" tor ~ to think of BE UVES IN an 8-by 10-foot cell in the prison's J)rotective custody win~. He wears an artificial eye, a replacement for the one he lost during a prison attack by fellow inmates in.1973. ,, :.J Eating Cha'!'P Pref en Drinks Corona's wife, Gloria, who said when he was first arrested, "I love him and always will ·want him ba~ home, .. divorced him in 1974, 1:1ting irreconcilable differences. OAKLAND (AP) -Don't dare tell 1 Eddie "Bozo" Miller half a loaf is ·better than none. He's liable to gulp 1 '.down the bakery and knock of( the 'entire menu of the restaurant next 1 ''door for good ,measure. t:dward Miller , a jolly gent right I •out of Damon Runyon. is the certified World's Champion Eater. The title, 11which he claimed in 1931, was 'enshrined in 1963 in the Guinness , ''Book of Worfd Records after he gob- 'bled 27 two-pound chickens at a ' single silting. ~ •'YEAH, THAT (;HICKEN number," "Bozo" recalled with a nostalgic glint in his eye at a testauranl interview, surrounded by I ·Retired Couple ; ~Find Peaceful , • I I Rural Setting ... LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz. (AP> -Raising your own food and animals is a great idea, but not when you live in a Los Angeles sul:>urb. ,. the awed members of ••my eatin' and drinkin' club." A brisk, energetic and rotund 69, • "Bozo," the name t\e prefers, COD· ~ ' t s• sumes 2S,000 1ca1ones· a day -11 i es lgtlUp limes the recommended amount. . And although that amount may Deadline Set vary somewhat from day lo day, "Bozo" is certain of one thing! "l ' • can kill <outeao anybody." For Feb. 22 . . ~ Someti.mM be plays bis gUitar. He takes aome oollege courses. exerciSes in the prison yard and llftl weights with other prisoners. From time to time, members of bis family visit~ MILLER, 5 FOOT 7~ and 300 pounds, held court in tb4;' restaurant's darkened confines. sipping cbam· pagne over ice and eyejng a table of appetizers like a general preparing for batUe. P~sons wishing to taker!, nex* Calllwnia..high s~o0l 400/-Juntp ciency e¥amlnation mu' re. '('IV . gister by mall JtOt latfl' ~ · ~ "I dunno," he said, reaching for a slice of smoked salmon. "Lately I've been gettin' tired. My appetite's OK. If I have to eat, I eat. But why should I? I 'd rather drink than eat." That last statement bas more to lt than just preference.,Miller, married and the father of two daughters, is sales manager·for a major wine and liquor distribution business -and he likes his work. WAVING A BARBECUED s'pare rib like a baton, "Bozo" confided, "I drink maybe 40-50 drinks a day. That's easy. 1 drink anything. Cham· pagne, then I go "toXScotch, Ulen, bourtiOb; like lhat." ' As h~ talked, hrs friendS came around to kid him and gaze admir- Deitartment• ot EducaU~ Tbe Feb. 22, acc;qrdlng ~~.,-State • Hous1· ng test is aet for March 18. The exam, open to ~sons 16 or older, costs $10 and ls ~ven three times each yea!' throuabout the state. A certificate of eroficiency is awarded by the State Board of Education upon successful com· pletion of the test. The cerUticate ,is .leially -~ to a high school diploma . Applications are available at all high schools and most public libraries. ~--writin( to_ Hit~ f)chOC>l~x'lOO,·~~ CA 94701. 1 • >-' DAILY PILOT MiJc~ pnd Esther Shurtz wanted lo be s_elf-:sofficient, so they left their West Covina home and moved to an isolated mobUe home park in the des· ert 19 miles northwest of here. 0 WE BAD lived direcUy under the San Bernardino Freeway in what piust have been the heart of the ~mog and noise belt," Mrs. Shurtz.. said. ingly as he dow.oed one drink after '~~~5;~mir11-----:------'-----:.:--;~------------i:~~---~ another, one chicken wing after another -aJl the while talking of the fine luncheon to c~e. _ The retirees seem to have fulfilled their dream, turning 3.8 acres into a mini-farm. Since ).~6f, they've cultivated peas, beets, carrots, , ~fnach, bush beans, lettuce, corn, ~trawberries, greens, squasb, pumpkins, watermelons, okra, green , peppers, eggplant, rutabagas, grapes, nectarberries, plums, ' loma\oes and figs. And they are raisinlt Nubian and Alpine goats, rabbits, hare and #inickens, Three does and two young mated pe_~ks round out the mini· barnyarcl cjthenry. ONCE A WEEK, the Shurhes in ake the trip Into Lake Havasu "for ab;solute necessities." "We don't have time for other t.ravet," Mrs. Shurtz told the Arizona R-epubllc. "We ha.ve too maoy responsibilities at home. Everything needs constant att.eDUon.'' " Deer Slow Trains ' LANDQUART, Switzerland (AP) -Night expre!s trains in this i!ast Switzerland region have beeQ. or- 8ered to cot speeds to 18 mlles an hour to protect deer straying across the tracks. "Bozo .. said his health is fine, a lthough his doetor i§ worried about his high _b1o00·pre~su~e~ TOSSING OFF A PAIR or powerfUl g~een c)l41rtre~es. "Bozo" strolled toward a sit-down lunch describing hls breakfast. ~~====:===~ .. The doctors talk about cholesterol1 :-..-;.......__....., __ ...., in eggs/9 he chttped.. ~'Hahl Mlne's okay. t tn"obat>ly eat ~ore eggs per day than anybody in the eatin1 busi· ness. For break{JISt' I have 1rnaybei eight or 10 eggs, sometimes 14, sl1t ' slices ot mutfins, 8·10 slices of•ham. A quart, ofJllilk." 'f.hat'fi •the. first f.11 about 10 meali he eats daily, be said. "Bozo'f said; he's got t9 stay '1n practi~e for eating -keeping the · .stomach stretched -to accept any ct.•llengC$ that come al.,ng. AFTER AN 'aoua of preU~ eating, he marched into the l~cltq for a boisterous meal16f crabs. thr:.ff. lamb chops~ pota\Oes and at lef# l6. drtnks. , ,· "· D~spit~ his g6rnntuan capaclty for comestibles, Miller eats Ute a gentleJ:Dan..,AlmOlt .daintily. NO$. a speclc on his neat suit, not a stain on bis dark tie. Bozo's target was hls mouth, and he never misses. ·, ·lih&t'Jou're an indlwldual-°' ui)lQue as your. thumb- print. Thars Y4fl.Y we adopted "Thumbody," ~ little character who will help you tell the rest oi the world WeVe been respecting people as in- dividuals slnce we '1rat ~ cu doo4 ·. Re,pectlnQ them and prcividlr,g them With per90n8J banking and OJMOf1l service. If you'd like to tell the woltd, stop by at our bf Ok'; We'U gtw you "Thumbody" pins for each ~ fqdividual in yotlr flpffy-free. ~nd If you'd llke, • 'l wa'trtell you1all atiout lhdi\Udual banking services. ~ . ' M OM. V PU.OT MARMADuKE •. ·~ "''m sorry I didn't send you e VaJentlnel Now let me lnl" :~UNKYWINKERBEAN ·------------------~ ; OID ~ lJlL.K wrrn ~AT :. PARENi WOO WA& UP&ET ~ ABOOT HI& DPmHTER HAVING ·• ro 6Eil. SAAD CA ,• ,. ·:: ·~ .. .. .. .. ·:· Al.l OF ™E. 11ME. ; ... - -.. by Tom Batiuk by ChlrlH R~rigUH DR.SMOCK "(ON,IWUt.ATIO>J~ !" tr 5AIP, ~Ill.:" "P.S., ~T TIME C>OE~ Ti'' "'"'i WATCJ4MAN '° OH OOrY A1" pL(.fJa)... ~ HOOVER C¥un·· GORDO by Gus Arriola J .-------. ...... ----.. ·----.... ----....... -~-----.--------llW' ... .... _~,. ~~f. QJ"fi!irt PgfJZ J.OPEZ 16!P1T · 8'/)tC., ~-If by Harold Lt Doux WOOLO/(T rT &E UNlJ50Al FOR SOMEONE TO MCNE INTO THE 5TATE AAO HAVE Hl5 NEW Pl.ATES IN LESS ____ ..,.. THAN A WEEK? I ,..EVER TH006HT Of' f>\AT! WANT TO TAl.K TO HIM 7 .. ) COMICS/ CROSSWORD PEANUTS 1lW'S A PRE I TY · FEESlE EXCUSE!! by Templeton and Forman -----, ~lt"m' \ { ~j_·_..,, ', ~~ i\Q )_)-----.; VQ D- TIDAT'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLI .. ..... oss lanou•oe UNITED Fe11u .. Su.At.. .. te _,,, SO Signal ,,..,.,.. 1 E11etrlcal 51 Sllln di.. Mond1(1 Puule Solvtd: fitting HM S Bunglea 63 West Ind 10Caaatlon MtlfTlry 14 ltallln~ 65 Hidden 15Anolnt;An:f\ danger 1 e Are: Pmbl 56 Mott 17 Al around: .... ble 3worda 81 "Whit-- ' 9 Fenclfto of non-eword ..,.. .. 20 Deter'I 12 ~or 2t Elect. ei. A111ur: 2 perts 1'0rda 22 Wellllllllft 14 BrulM 23 Sbrlveta 85 ~ 25 fltlllly 86 Fottl Pf°"O INfllber. rn--97To be: latlft ·~ blade '°""'' 68 0$llnlon 12 USSR city •e ~It 218. Am.. r~ 8911 not 13 -leureata wlllsperlng 30 =::Scot. DOWN 18 Fleur· de· aound 31 Hltleml• 1 Drudge 24 Vk,41nmaket 48 Miik 34 a.flu 2 VttM uni 25 E COlgulator T1•dae 3 U88A rl¥et 21 ~=ant 6621 PTlt~agewat 3t MN "ti" • c.tebr1tlon 27 or Norway 11o;,,°' 38-le la S Church Hf• 28 Reaembllng 63 Noted 39 War."°"" ~Ice• chalk IMtallttlon: es1na11: 29"--Blue" ~=dw~ 2 wordt Prefix 31 Haoeard 54 8orrowf 1 •2 Educattd 7 Quldrennlat nowt WOfd u ouee1: u.u ~2 Uroe• H Tr•tt NiOI. ewlftl: 2 87 "-~ 430..,Gf worde 33 Hindu W• ._,,,,_.., '**-I Le1ve1 111tnt: Var. ..., tot lnvttY 44 ~ QU!ckly is le ol one ..., lflluttoue .4s ftlllM t Couftcll"' "''nd M ANan 1 •1t:t'Je 1otL._,· "Lrt, eorr:r1o1 : "*" "*"Y l*tlW ea~ ""°'* 11 NnlPIPlf 400wMcf Nltll. : 41 WiftdtlllQ • ................ ,_!'- • I ~NGc co~~Ty I OBITUAR1ES I AT YOUR SERVICE TIMday, February 14, 1978 OAILV PILOT --ollt~al Notes Jet Noise No School Hazard onnally to Speak I .... anyone who goes to work for th~ state and {llao receives a public service pension to choose between the two in· El Tor<> Marine Corps Alr Statton Jet nolle doesn't pose a health hazard for trainees who would attend a proposed law enforcement-fire academy near El Toro . the acldemy can be joJntly used for both law in· forcement and fire training. , The report noted outside aircraft noise may ~ terf ere with normal conversation up to 23 minutes a d~y but buildings c.ta be eoostructed so th~e would be no interference for indoor acUvlUes. By O. C. HUSTINGS Of tllllt o.tty PlleC st9ft • Former Texu 1ovemor John Con· nally will be the speaker Feb. 22 when Oranee County Republicans pay tribute to former first ladies Mamie Eisenhower. Betty Ford and comes. The move by Briggs apparently ls aimed at former Los Angeles police chief Ed Davis and stale Attorney General Evelle Younger, who, Uke Briegs, are seeking the Republican gubernatorial nomination in the June In fact, a consultant hired by Oranee County supervisors has conclud~d that the academy's flr· Inc ra.nae, fire drills an\l. tests or fire engine pump· inl equipment would produce nol.se over longer periods of time than jet flights. THE FACILITY'S' FtalNG range could ln· terfere wtth normal conversation up to three hours a day, pumper testinc up to six hours and other ac- tlvitlea such as fire dril~to 80 minutes. at Nixon. I Vic Andrews of Emerald Bay. •chairman of the GOP funckalser, :aays about 1,000 of the party faithful •are expected to pay $125 per plate to •attend "A Tribute to Our First iLadies." primary. DUE IN COUNTY John Connally SUPERVISORS APPROVED the report on noise at the proposecklte. on grounds of the James A. Musick Honor Farm. The consultant sald the various training faciliUes could be desllJ)ed to keep oolse levels down and so the nearby community would not ~ impacted by noise. Davia and Younger both curtenUy receive retirement benefits from County offldala now will 1tudy whether or not : It is acheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the .Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. . : CONNALLY ONETIME secretary of the Navy and treasury secretary in the Nixon Administration, will dis· •cuss "Vital Issues Facing America." So far, Mrs. Ford is the only former first lady to definitely accept an invitation to attend the event, ac- ~ording to organizers of the dinner. Andrews said proceeds from the fundraiser will be used to help the •campaigns of GOP office seekers in Orange County. Tickets can be purchased through Orange County Republican Central Committee offices in Orange. ••• ' GUBERNATORIAL HOPEFUL John Briggs, the Republican state h nator from Fullerton, says be will push legislation that will force their prmous public service jobs. U---------- ·Davis becomes eovemor, his com· bined pension and state salary would exceed $97,000 annually, while Younger's combined pension and state salary would amount to more than $82,000 if he becomes the state's chief executive. Briggs bu said that such "double dipping" into taxpayer funds could seriously damage GOP chances of winning against incumbent Gov. Edward G. Brown Jr. ••• THE DEMOCRATIC Women of Orange County plan a recepti~ for new members from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Feb. 23 at party headquarters, 2002 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Shirley Walton, president of the Democratic women, says her or- ganization is looking for new faces. For further information about the group's act.ivities, call 898-3831. • Social Policies Lecture Sllit~d Measuring the effects of social programs and social policies is the purpose of a three lecture serin beginning al 4 p.m. Thursday at UC Irvine. Dr. Peter Rossi, professor of sociology and director of the Social Demographic Research Institute at the University of Massachuset\s· Amherst, will begin the series with his lecture, "Why Human Services are Difficult to Evaluate.•• The session is scheduled in the Physical Science Building, room 101. On March 1 Dr. Howard E. Freeman, director of lhe Institute for Social Research at UCLA will discuss "The Promises and Potential of Evalu&• lion Research in room 178 of the Humanities Hall. The aeries will conclude March 9 with an ad· dress by Dr. Robert Perloff, professor of business administration and psychology at the University of BUSINESS 1n1urence TWO ADDITIONAL YEARS · OF GUARANTEED . "NO INCREASE IN PREMIUMS" Business Packages, CotnmerciaJ Fire. Condominiums and Apartment Packages Deaths Elsewhere Canal Treaties Set for Forum Pittsburgh. Perloff will lecture on .. The States of ··A11.1••••-.•lllil••••••••••••••111!~,..~~~ the Art of Evaluation Psychological Services" in ::_. =~-....... .....,.=~=========:i::=-===--;;;;;ii:iiiiiiii:iiii;;;:;;:;;;;;;.­room 178 of the Humanities Hall. ·BOB p ALEY NOITH oc. 546-3205 & ASSOC, INC. soUTHoc-642·6500 , STORRS, Conn. CA P) ""' Albert Nels J or gensen, 78. president -0f the University of Con· necl1cut from 1935 until retirement in 1962, and ·former director of the Office of the Institute for International ·Education, died Saturday i n Scottsdale, Ariz. MONTPELIER. Vt. : CAP> -Wllllam Field, · 67. a former owner and pubhshcr of the Rutland ' Herald and co·founder of the Pico Ski Area in Sherburne, died Sunday ,.!n Tiburon. Calif ·• LOS ANGELES <AP) -Comedienne ·Charlotte GreeDwood, :87, who appeared in the Broadway productions !-·1 Remember Mama" ·a nd "Out or This -.'world," and the Cilms ; .. Moon Over Miami" and "Tall , Dark and : Handsome,"hasdied. ·~ SAN DIEGO CAP> :1' memorial service was held for inventor ·wuuam D. Thompson, ·79, who died in a con- valesent hospital Thurs- day. Thompson held pa· .s,enls for photogr aphic ·equipment. locomotives ·und motion pleture sound recorders. SACRAMENTO <AP) -Private services were held · for Harry Arlbur Lyness, 69, developer of the H.S.L. Heads used on the engines of midget race cars. Lyness died S aturday in a Sacramento hospital. TORRANGE (AP) - 'A Mass d the Re.surrec· tion will be celebrated . Sunday for Monsignor Thomas McCanby, 66, who quadrupled the circulation of tbe Loa Angeles Tiding• durinir SMnH-TV1MIJ...l.AMt wmcu..awa 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa• &4M888 SentaAna~I 518 N. 8roadW8y Santa Ana• 647-4131 -,.Ci llOTMaS SMl1MS' MORTU•H . 821 Main St. Huntington Beech 630-6539 ,_MN&.Y COLOMA&. N RAL ~ 7901 8ol11 Ave. w.t""nettr ~6 t h e year s he was managing editor of the archdiocese's official newspaper . The monsignor died Monday. MONTROSE, N.Y. CAP> -Actor- playwright Daniel Reed, 86, author of "Scarlet Sister Mary" and founder of the Town Theater of Columbia, S.C., died Thursday. TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -E. Harris Drew, 72, who retired in 1971 from the Florida Supre me Court after serving nearly 20 years on the bench, died Thursday. NEW HAVEN, Conn. CA p) -Dr. Gertrude van Wag-enen1 84, a pioneer in the. Jteld ot reprod~cUve en· docrlnology and an authority on the use of monkeys to stud y human conditions, died Wednesdjy. . Death Notlcn Th~ Panam a Canal treaties will be dis· cussed Thursday during a public forum set for 7:30 p.m. in the Blue Room of the Mesa Court Commons at UC Irvine. Dr. Luigi Elnaudi, director of policy plan· ning In the U.S. State Department's Bureau of Inter-American Affairs, and Dr. Roger Fontaine, director. of Latin· American studies al Georgetown University, wi ll speak on the rela· tlonshlp of the treaties to the U.S. interests. • More Cakl ... The series is open to the public free of cbarse. Upper Bay Tour .t Planned Sat~day A public tour of the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve is beinl sponsored by the Friends of the Newport Bay on Saturday beginnin& at 9 a.m. The walking tour takes two hours and covers his tory of the bay, fossils. marsh plants and wildlife in the bay. Tours in groups of 25 will de· part from the assembly point until 10:30 a.m. · The tQUr will meet near Jamboree Road and the East Bluff Drive traffic signal. The lour is free of charge. Cot a ptO!Mm• Tllni umlt' lo Pal Dwul. Pot ICIU etil red laps, pc>,ll•rt!t I/II OIUtllt'Fa. and Cid-wau nftd lo .alw ~1t1 111 llO~mcnl Giid bulNia. Mml JIC)llr quot-to Paz °"1111. Al Y-~Or.,. Coo.ti /)(ulf Pl/ol, P.O. Bo:r '*• COlfo Mno. CA m?f, Al ~ 14111.rr GI po#i~ will bit -ed. JM ,.,_ blqtunu or Idlers _, lnd•1d1111g U.. rtotkr'• lull ocmr. oditrtqflltd ,,..,_ ,.,.,.,.. ,,_ '"'"'btrninllOC b.icoftddng Tlllacolalmll~daj.. Iii uc'll( Sohlrdoy1 " ble. Alt.bough several International aJrllan have offered to lhlp bodies ~home free as a'llumanltarlan 1estue to poor famllJea, tbe U.S. CIYll A~ronaatic1 Board carrently pro. JONATHAN'S ANTIQUES Wholesale to the Trade in Fountain Valley Sale Feb. 15th Preview AU Day Tlll 5:00 Sale Beglns 6:30 Featuring •.... Brass Items Chairs Desks Display Cabinets Hallstands Lamps Leaded Glass Mirrors NauUcal Gear Roll Tops Showcases Sideboards Tables Tlns Trunks UnusuaJ Pieces Wardrobes r Washstands ·~.'f . ) . •i.' blbita ....... . .---.-..... .... -:-:--~-- Bot Uae Delft• DEAR PAT: A friend of mine told me she's beard there ls a hot line to help parents having normal, every- day problems with their toddlers • We'd both like to know bow to con-tact this service. S.B., Costa Mesa You can reacll '"Tot Line,., a telepbone co11a1ellng aervlce sp0naored by the Family Senlce As· soclatlon of Oran1e County, by pbon- laf IJl.7371, h'em t un. to I 1t.1n. weekda11. Counlelora trained la ear- ly chlldbood ilevelopmeat wUJ prompt- ly call baclc with &OIWen eo s1IU pro- blems udlltarbance• bl aleepma. eat· 1111 aDd COiiet U'alala1, •• ,... .... truna1, fears, lade of dladpUae, Jeato.a1 and tnabllltf to set •lollC ..... cMJtera. MedJcaJ qaesttou will • ... aDIWerfld. U.S. Ufe luuraace compules wlB pay deaU. beaeflts apo• ff«tp& Of an official dealb cerU.fleate, aceo:rdlllg to the American Coaacll of LHe lasurance, but because of delays wJtb local aat.laorldn aad mall dlf. Ocnm~ a familJ mlpt watt weeks or lon1er Wore tbea necessary cJoca- ments anive. Tbe coandl advlles oveneu tnvelera to bave ...._te We lnlunnce and to mike pn-&raYel arraaselDitlria wJt.b dtel:r famlllea. la tbe event of •• utlmely deatll. beaeOclariN dlea wwld bow wbt &odoudU..Ufe~apatcu act qa.ldb • paperwork. SJN!•llnSttppae.I DEAR PAT: Where can I get coplea or P resid e nt Carter:• apeecbes! P.N., Newpo~ Beach Yo. cu order .. PrestdeDUat Doc11· ....... , lcw $15 a year fnm: Sapeda· tendent of Docameat.a, Goverameet Printing Olftce, Wa~ D.C. 2040%. YQ9 will J«elve a week& com• We want Your savings account ••• and here's what we'll d~ to get it! p&laU. ef 1iate•.U. ......... . ou.u ,res1c1ent1a1 mater1 ... re&euec1· ir~~~~~~~~~iiii~~~!!~~;;S!~I by tile Wblte House. 81e11 .... ~ 0ptn ,_,new entnge eocount at Califomla'e oldest state chartered bank •nd..,. ~a 1llllt ......... Into your future. We offer MV9ft 8"""""9 Savlnga Plane paying the highest Interest allowed by In. en f.Ct our &5.00 Head 8Wt Account helps you get started with a $5.00 tldvance from tl'le Bank In ~r aavlngt,accaunt of $100.00 or more (Limited to $5 per cMComer). Our tnatant lntereat Account pays yoa .,...t In advance, in cash. You can tau It home with YO}I fm"'!edlatety, or put It back In the bank to eam even more lntemL Come ln eoon end ffnd out about our new Sunshine Savtno-Plans. You'll get a tree pereonallzed coffee cup )uat for coming In and talklng It over. You may hawt to go a lhtle out of your way to flhd Ut, but we'll go out of our way to he~ you..,,. .•. Juat a1 we tiave for well over 100 years. SMN SUNSHINE SAVINGS Pl.ANS • $5.00 tt9m:I Start • Famlly Care Savings • Instant tntereat • ReUrement PlannlnO • ~ Account • Hlgher frrterfft Eamlngs • Hotiday $~ Pllf'la CAl.Jf;ORNIA , '!I -~CANADIAN BANK fl JO DAIL V PILOT Tuesday, February 14, 1171 Business ,,Airline Ticket Plan Goes Awry ... . WASHINGTON (AP> A com putcriied program that would have St:'l up one-day mail delivery or airline tickets to those making reservations ap- pears to have been killed by op- position from travel agents. Postal Service sources, declln mg to be publicly Identified, said tC'sts had proved the feasibility of the progrnm But they said the' airlines. which depend on trav('l agents to send passengers their way, refused to participate out of f('ar of alienating the agents . THE SOU RCt:s SAID t.ne one· day mail serv1<'e could have lowered costs for airlines, and : this might have resulted in sav · ings for travelers ' Under the proposed program, a traveler would call the airline to make a reservation, as onen happens now. The flight in· form a ti on would then be transmitted electronically to the Post Office. where a ticket would be printed and delivered w.ith the next day's 'Jtail. The airline would pay a small charge per ticket to the Postal Service but would avoid paying u much larger commission to a travel agent. Travel agents eam commissions of at least 7 per· cent of the ticket price, which 1s included in the overhead or aarllnes . THE PROGRAM WOULD have made it unnecessary for a traveler to visit a travel agent to pick up his airJlne ticket. Recause of this, the sources Travel A.gents' Qpposition Blamed for Eru#ng Experiment said, the idea was vehemently opposed by the American Sode· ty of Travel Agents. One Postal Service source, who also preferred to remain anonymous, said a society of- ficial al one time threatened to take legal action or to lobby Congress for a ban on the pro- ~ram . "We are very much opposed to a ti.'• said Lynn Routao, a s pokeswoman for the travel agents group. "Most travel agents are small businessmen and this ls like big brother tak· mg on the small businessman. It is unfair compebtlon for the gov- ernment to get involved In this." The Postal $ervlce sources sald two airlintSs expressed In· terest in the program. i.uggesled by United Alrllnes in Ctlicago. United backed out. however. after travel agents heard of Ule program and expressed their op position. the sources said. radio pager WIDE AREA COVERAGE New York Li/ e Hailed For Policy Language LATER, BRANIFF lnterna· tlonal Airlines agreed to try the program 10 Dallas. Officials of the airline reported a favorable reaction among customers, and postal sources said Braniff agreed oraJly to expand the pro- gram to two other citiei. However, Braniff then decided to can.eel the program. Walter Conrad, Braniff senior vice pre· s ident, notified the Postul Service that the program would end Feb. 12 . Ile said the technical viability had been proven but that questions re- mained about economics . ORANGE CO.-L.A. .. · "' '~ '17.10 ;.:c~ NO DEPOSIT ON APPROVED CREDIT CAPITOLIZE WITH CAPITOL CAPllOl.ILAllON M[ANS ro CONVERT CAPITOt TO CASH •wio~"t"'oOt.t Vt),, SW '°"'"·'''' tnd """' °""" .1 ''<I•~• °' t·''""'' '"or• 111 10" "·1 ,.,, .-1•1r 'L HOt-J! • L.OAN arrain9e to t1011ot11e Yt>Ut tty •nlo .1 CMll toAf'\ w~1n fa-\t M\d '*'°IV<ONC)lt ,,. •' '· . .. Capitol Home Loan 0.. d Colo• '9 lat9Mt l o.in &OMef~ f.,~, C.ll011eolour•--•"' 1rsc1,11Ctotr~fcw1~••cu '"' . We'd Really hke to help COSTA MESA 31:.0-llMI 714/ 540-4412 ANAHEIM m1w~112c 1 wne-0450 LONG BEACH 6474 E. Del Nloo ....... 213/421-6333 By MILTON MOSKOWITZ The New York Life Insurance Co has done the impossible: It has craft· ed an insurance policy that can be read witlloul a magnifying glass and understood by someone who dosen't happen to have a Ph.D. I don't know how many years it took the writers at New York Ufe to simplify the basic document of its business. nut they've done it and thcv must feel a little like those peo.. pll'. in their TV commercials who thrt>ad their way through a football t .. :am for a touchdown TUE SIGNIFICANCE OF the T\' commercials is that a person protecl- t'd by a New York Life insurance policy can make his or her way through the hard knocks of life. The significan('e of .New York Lif~'s re- vamp of its policy statement is Ulat writers can battle their way Ulrough .. the obfuscation and hot air that are the natural weapons of lawyers. The jargon that passes for lanl{uugc in an insurance policy bas lonJ! been the butt of humor. Now New York Life feels so good about what it has done that it can aftord to Join those who poke fun. In announc- ing its new policy format, the com· pany said: "Readability tests have determined that it is easier lo un· dersland Einstein's theory of rel· ativity than the average insurance policy." ChuckJe, chuckle . How did New York Life accomplish this monumental task? Well, for one thing, it reduced the verbiage. The new policies carry 30 percent fewer words Ulan the old ones. NEW YOKK LIFE A~ found that it could do .wtthout complex words understood only by insurance people and lawyers. Eliminated were such terms as .. encumbrance," "duly outstanding," "deemed'' and "pro-rata.•• The legalism. "'post-mortem· dividend," was changed to read .. dividend at death." And "indebted· ness" is simply called a "loan ... The old policies used to stipulate that accidental death ·benefits will not be payable "if death ta caused by or contributed to by infirmity ot mind or body, or any illness or disease other than a bacterial infection oc- curring in consequence of an ac· Money Tree cldental injury on Ule exterior or the body." TllE NEW POLICIES stipulate that these l5encf1ts will not be paya- ble "if death 1s <'aused by any dis- l'ase or infirmity or body and mind." Finally, to make its policies easier to read, New York Ufe increased the size of the type. And the policies open with a band}' table or contents show- ing where you can find what. New York Life is the nation's fifth largest life insurance company. It collects from iu policyholders pre· miums of more than $2 binlon a year. And it's nice to know that it has final- ly discovered that the English language does not have to be used to confuse IL<; customers Who knows what 1t will discover nt'X t? Strong State ll, Economy Eyed For Next Year Asked If opposition from travel agents were the reason the· program was dropped . Braniff spokesman Jere Cox said. "We collected a Jot of data. Both Brantrr and the Postal Service are going to assess the data now." BUT POSTAL officials, who at one time had considered makin~ the ticketing service available nationally. say they consider 11 dead. "Braruff was ready to l<ikl' on the travel agents. They said they wanted to expand th~ program Then they were awarded a new route from Dallas to London. They must have figured that they needed the s upport or travel agents to nu those planes. so they canceled," a Postal Service source said _,...)...,_,_,..,. r _. ........... NEW K I' OowCp ;; ~l>e~c:li.!~ g:::~r::· •Gn•I s.c..ttlee Oi\ISllr OHi-~ -OnwT .. tM cowrtw ~. Cetwl<left !7~= .. ·-If> ~.::: AU. llMJ Sia S~ C..stG• AFAProt Slit ._., Cullrl'ed AIO Inc f1~ ,..,.. ~trM AVM Cp N Wt I.IOU» Add!MIW A lllt I.I 100 =~~ ~ ~ 8::::~· Ali.rts • 10 0.-ll>Ao California's economy should con-!:~~ =~~ g:~~.ft. hnue to outperform the national •lf'tfl8 """1~ 0eu ... e averages throuabout, 1978, unaffected !~1 ~ ~ ~~' by Some Of last year's pol""'tially A<>rftt """ '1\11 Oh111c"' ~· ~kros 11'111 ll" Ooculel threatening developments that mig~t ',,~ ~ m; g:::~c;:: have severely damaged the econoonc ,._,.. 1v.' 1-1• ~Gj growth of many other regions, Securi-Z::u':e ~ 1~ =~,,g ty Pacific Bank's chief economist bas· A111.c:p ,.,.. 141. ourlnMI •. ,,,,_..., I'll> 2 ~-llfle> predicted.. · ::~_.:·,' ~ i= ~ t;:!-~ Speaking before a seliilnar Atlo.su ~"Yt el:re• sponsored by the National Association ft:'.=~ ,~" 1~ l~H.:,', of Business Economists and tbe =::::: 'm 1~ ~~~~i Economic Roundtable of Jacksonville, BHsettF 11 '™ EcrlOll. Fla., Dr. Robert T. Parry. senior vice ::z:r.:._ ~ '~.,. J!':t"t' president, outlined his fon;cast of ~~ ~ 2;'4 "14'u'l-~' Callfomla'sgrowtbprospectsml978. :::::: ?~2;-~!':!.• He said california's broadly bQed e11tH111~ ""~ FIEA,lt economy bas enabled it to absorb and =..... r'4 :.,., ~~" recover &om mocks that mlgbt have =~-L ~ F:.~u caused trauma!-fc economic problems 1:=:: ;: 't: ~~ia!.' for a Jessdiversifledorreslllentstate. &ucuY'9 ""~ ,, •• E'i e: ._ 4't. Fmdlc. ~.~~~~~~~~~~~----------------------~.· ~ 7~ ~=~Est Chey I If" Qlll"NH 7 l ~ ·.. s er t ~ r' " o,..,~, ~ ~"·E C.llV\PS ~IS R call f i .,~ ; OW91LA• \Wt ~-e CMsUtl 11 11 H..,.,.t • • Cl~lef' ,. r=""' ¥, :•• CltlUtA ~ oCM\ Upheld ~ · ~ ~lt ""119il. Missile Competition Engineer John Lyon al Hughes Aircraft Co's missile systems group, Canoga Park, adjusts gi~ball assem~ly of the guidance unit for an advanced medium-~ange air· to·air missile development model. Hughes is one of several companies competing to build the missile. Pro· ject is funded by the Air Force. Navy and Defense Ad- vanced Research Projects Agency. Ove·r The Count_.r MASO Ustinqs MUTUAL FUNDS !: The Newport Beach Office I of Jotephthll 6 Co. Inc. II open. ~Ahd If you're buldlng a retirement plan. lhafa good news fOt you. W.'I bultct, re"1le ~ I seMc9 YCU1 qualfled pension, profit·shating Ind I ·tc~ plans. Also, we'll m.,.. your ponfolo, AH for no fee Of 8eMoe Charge, If your plan quafi.. I ~ In tem19 of lfZ•. F"'1hermont, your account l wm be personalty hand*! ~ ~hard A. Adler, one ~of Josephlhara prioclp.I ownet'I. Mr. AdJif 11 e broker'• broker. He'• a CPA with"""' twenty years· experience in taxation, nltirement pta°' ri money manegeo..m. He knows an the ins and out• ot tait~antflQed tnrvn&mentt~ So If YotJ think your "ietQfntnt oortf olio can be~ jt.l9f maD the coupon below. Or call (800) 432-7218 And dt fof Rk(wd Adler. &At OU'·~ WOftc far JOU. i I c i I I t STOCKS I BUSINESS Tuetday's Closing P rice• NYSE . COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS !.1.. ""' I t I "'(!GM I•~ Tu.day. Februaty 14. 1978 l/N DAll.Y PILOT AJ J Deduction List Aids Preparation ! A tboroufb check of deductible items can help muny taxpayers reduce thtir lederaJ income tu bill•, according t.o Commerce Clearlng House: national reportanc authority on tux and b\Wnesa law. Deductions that are not conneettd with a trade. busi- ness or profession•~ divided Into two classes: I . DEDUCl'lBLE FROM GROSS INCOME in order to arrive at the proper flgure for "adjusted eross Income ... 2. Deductible only from "adjusted aross income." The first dass has no effect on the taxpayer's dlspOsi lion of the second class, leaving him fl'ff Lo itemise dedUC· tion11 on Schedule A, Form 1040. You can deduct the followinG items in arriving al your "adjusted gross Income." whlch will be shown on Form 1040: Alimony and separate malntcnance payments; limited capital 106Ses, Including nonbusiness bad debts; contributions by self-( ·.··] em ployed people to re· rr ~ V TIPS t l r e men t p 1 ans ; iaA. deprecJation on income-'------------produclng property; en· terta inmenl expenses of employ«S, to the extent they are reimbursed by ttae e mployer: losses on stock becoming worthless; moving e'IC- penses of cmpJoyees; outside salesman's expenses; rei'd.I· bursed employee's expenses: rental or royalty properi>• expenses; traveling expenses and business trips; traYel expense for education that i.s "directly related" lo tu- payer's bw.lness or employment and interest that has be~n reported on long-term or time-savings account and de- posits with banks and other financial institutions that :is later forfeited under premature withdrawal or redemp- tion. . ~ . THE FOLLOWING ITEMS ARE deductible only ;ir they are Itemized on Schedule A, Form 1040. They may rf.>L be deducted in arriving at "adjusted gross income:" : Casualty losses and personal theft losses, to the extept each loss exceeds $100; limited contributions to charttabje or ganizations; cooperative housing taxes and inter~. employment agency fees for seeking or securing emplO)r- ment in the same trade or business; unreimbursed enty- tainment of customers, if not an outside salesman; cost<>( preparing income and other tux returns; interest on non- business mortgages or installment purchases: medicil. dental and hospital expenses in excess or 3 percent of a'd: justed gross income: state and local taxes; uniforms and protective clothing and union dues. Here are some items that cannot be deducted rega~· less of the method used in computing the tax. The · ·. among others, are considered as personal and family e · penses: Adoption fees (pre-adoption m~ical expenses are df· duclible under certain conditions), attorneys reef . a\itomobile upkeep expenses for pleasure cars; baby s\t- ters, unless qualified as child care credit; child·suppoJ'l payments: clothing; commuters' expenses; depreciatlqo on property held for personal use; diaper servic«t: domestic t>ervants • wages: dues for social clubs fot' personal use: employees' ins urance (other than hospitalization) if the amount is deducted from salat,y; fines for violations of law or police regulations; fooO: funeral expenses: nonbusiness gifts; house rent; ~1 - lowance paid as spouses' household salary; insurance 'bn residen~: life insurance premiums; mortgage insuranC:, pre miums and other fees paid to obtain a reslden'f mortgage, except for interest; repairs to residences; tal penalty payments; most nonbusiness travel and unifornff thatreplaceregularelotbing. ~· N ezt · DeductinR Tcuei Market Stumbles Over Dollar Drop NEW YORK <AP) The stock market surrered a sharp setback today in selling attributed to persistent weakness in the dollar and rears of a slowin~ economy. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 9.27 points to 765.25, dropping to within hailing distance or the 33-monthlowofT65.16illoucbedJan.26. Losel's outstripped gainers by close to a 3·1 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Tb~ dollar slumped •ea.inst leading foreign currencies for 'th~ second day ln a row. Analysts noted uneasiness over report& that the Uatted Stat~ and West Germany fa iled to agree on a strateo designed to stabilize the .dollar. St~la 111 Tiie Spo11f9ltt Nl!W YOtllt tAPI· :Mi••• 4 p.m. Pl't<• •nd net U\M9I 9' IM tJltfftl ,_. Klt .. .. _ y-Slodl ~ ._ trMli"O 1160-UY ft-· fl'611 ti. "-"f JOhll...... nol/llO ,,... • \j, ""'"' Cll. ....... .,.,. ,. -" ~~:' ~.,. ...... -~... .\t . " Attiif: .. · ;..::: . : m= t= = t: w ... ~o •• ..... 121.2DI t + "' U$ StMt......... ~.290 ~ -Vi ~El«......... Ttt,900 *"' _,,,_ "· ...... • .. ~5'4t -~ lt•llEQ .. .. . .. 1lS, 40 -- ·-...... ..,.: ltYi ••••• ll ... Et....... 1•,100 11 -~ jlllf ... Co111....... 1S1.AOO ,,._ -" G4t11 Miit.,>..... 1 .. ,100 JI"' -1141 'f" OUI...... .... 1-.100 191'> -"' .. N_.,. vr~PI i;,,.., Oow·.loM• • ...,.._ STOClt ()peft HIOI\ I.ow Ct-CllQ • lrld 1n I) 71J '1 IU 4S 7.S.141 t.21 211 Tr" 1°' JI 2MUO )01 00 207 ... -1 'Cl 1S VII 10491 IOS 71 101 I• 104 »-Q.64 U 6llt 710.«I 171.09 ,_., .. ,.._OS-f.TJ ~, .... . .. . . l·m:= iis·~ •. :.:·:::.::·.:·: ...... :. . 1.lli::: Whal Sto~b D i d NEW Y~I( ~Pl SALIS NEW Y=lt (AP) NV S10<1t wits ~rnr~ •• ·:. .. .. .. 771·~~= ,.,..,,_ _.. • ... .. .... ., ,.. • • • 4,730.GOG ~II , .. , , • • .. • ... • • ltM,llOO ., .. , "° ....... . . . . 11,t20,000 1= .~:.::.:· .. :·.::·.~·-.n~~s--,m lo date ................. m.110 tm to-.. ................ "•..us.!' wHAT AM•X. DtO "llW YOlll( IAPI ' I I t -- :.4)2 OM.YPl\.OT \ ~Haw \'8fly ~.""' :safely. : L Always use dry string, wood and paper in your kite. 2. Never use metal wire or metallic string or doth. 3. Don't fl y your kite in the rain. 4. Don't cro:.:. streets or highways • ~hen kite flying. .5. Always fly your · ~te away from TV and ··radio antennas. .1. Always fly your • kite far fro m power . Jines! Don't try to : tetrieve kites caught :-in power lines! ~ see. ~,Wn c.Jlfom/e Ed/MM MAUSTON. Wis. <AP) -A judge who fired a courthous e clerical worker for being single and pregnant is trying to block payment of the settlement she woo from the .county after alleging sex discrimination. Kristy Gwin, 19, of Mauston was fired from her job as the county's register in probate by Juneau County judge William Curran last s ummer when be learned she was preg· nant. _ HE SAID her pregnan- cy proved· she bad violated a Wisconsin law prohibiting sexual in· tercourse by an unmar· ried person. Miss Gwin told The Associated Press last week that she was out of work for several months, but finally was given another clerical job at the same pay in the county's Child Sup- port Agency. HOWEVER, SHE said, she filed a sex discrimination com- plaint with the state last summer, seeking back pay. The resulting out- of-court settlement with the county amounted to $2.000. But the judge has a s ked the County Board's persoMel com· mittee to withhold the payment. In a letter lo board members, Curran said the county should not pay the settlement because that could make the county liable for tax- payer suits. THE JUDGE said he had to fire the woman under Wisconsin law prohibiting unmarried persons from sexual in- tercourse. A copy of the letter was obtained by the Capital Times in Madison. NATIONAL ~ Amnesia Victim, 24, Searchea for ldeniity DEN VER CAP ) -A rev/ weeks ago, David Dl'olel woke· up. He was standing at a bus stop in suburban Aurora, waiting for be knew nQl what. He still doesn 'L DROLET'S LIFE IS a blank from June 30, 1972. wben be was discharg~ from the Army at Fort Dix, N.J., to Jan. 23, when be found himself in Aurora. "I can't remember a thing," he said. "It's like I didn't even exist for six years." Drolet, now 24 and a patient at the Colorado Psychiatric Hospital here, says h e ls ••scared and nervous'" about his predicament. Hospital personnel refuse to discuss the particulars or his case, except lo confirm that they believe be is telling the truth. DR. ALLAN BROCK Willett of the Department of Psychology at the University of Colorado Medical School iiays that am~ nesia is so rare be bas seen only a couple of cases in 10 years in psychiatry. Willett. who is not directly involved ln Drolet's case but is familiar 'with it, added that six years "is a ratherlong time" to forget. · Willett defined amnesia "as a pathological loss of memory ... and it ls close lo 100 percent in its effect." When Drolet "kind of woke up" he boarded a bus and rode it into Denver and back.to Aurora. nothing along the way looked familiar. All be seemed to know was that be dido 't know anythln&'. He went to a motel and too,k stock of hls situation. In bls wallet, he found $30, some 6-year·old military iden- tification that provided his name and pictures of "a pretty good looking, brown-haired ·girl." On his left hand was a gold wedding band. "It didn't mean anything, so I took it orr," l>e recalled. He spent two days watching television newscasts and riding. buses, looking for clues. Jf they were there, he didn't recognize them. CONFUSED AND frightened, Drolet rode around aimlessly in , a cab. When he saw a sign that said ''Hospital," he decided to uk for~lp. "If I had seen a cop car first. l would have gone with him, but I saw the hospital instead." Aftt:r s.ix hours of interviews, be was admitted to the hospital. "Tl)ey tell me I must be block· ing something out," Drolet said. "But l don't know what it is." HE REMEMBERS HE lived in Denver as a child, then moved to Florida with his fami- ly. He remembers his parents broke up when he was 15 and that he had a brie( marriaJe · before he joined the Army in 1970. He remembers he was waiting for his mother at the gates or Fort Dix that day in 1972, and that he was going to Florida to take a job. But he can't remember if his mother arrived, if he went to Florida, how he got lo Colorado or who the girl is ip the wallet .4 ~Fl'D"I' c...wrr -'Y photographs. 4 ..:JUV.H:a J.a./:I. DROLET SAID, "I've tried to -'~ .4 C!'rfD -'Y contact my parents, but they•ve ~ A Ji~ moved away. i'or all I know LONDON (AP) -Tyegarth they're dead. Nobody knows Bottoms Up, a prize boxer that anything about them -about disappeared Friday from the me either, I guess." Crufts Dog Show in the Olympia The FBI bas determined from Music Hall, was found un· his fingerprints that,...be is not harmed in a kennel for stray .. w~nted, and authorities say no animals. · missing person reports flt bis Owner Sheila Cartwright said eituatlon. S01lle Fat Cat . \ she took a "shot in the dark" As he sat explaining his life, and went lo the Battersea Dogs Drolet chain-smoked and re-.Consuelo Cabaron pats her pet feline on H M d Tb l. ~eatedly folded his atlt\$ across the head at her Brooklyn, N.Y., home re- ome on on ay. e Po ice 1·s chest lo control bi's '"'h~ t had found the 13-month-old bitch " ce.n ly. The corpulent cat, who weighs 46 ' ·i HE HAD HOPED the trlp would jog his m emor)'., but "Of course I'm scared," ds · ed P d near the Thames River without poun , J.S nam u gy. a collar. said. "l feel like I'm missing i .. ~~~---=--,..,.,.;,,,===========--~lo~t~o~f~m~y~li=·r~e·~"----~----~----~~~~------~~~~~~---~~~·\ Readers May Get College Credits To register for two units of college credit, readers of Popular Culture Course by Newspaper may call a college in their district. Coastline College serves the communities of Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. To register, call 963-0824. Residents of the Rancho Santiago College dis- trict -may enroll at Santa Ana College by calling the admissions office at 835-3000. The· at 1978 take-off I . ·,t . , .. .. ·, • .. " . ... t .. She knew sh~ was discharged because, as ......... -------~ a slngle girl, !let preg· nancY. was obvious evidence to the public that she had violated the laws of the state of Wisconsin,'' he wroie. Saddleback College serves all of south Orange County, including the cities of Irvine, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente. To refister at Saddleback College phone 831-9700 or 495-4950, extension 291. •• .; Peoplewbo need people aboulcl al••JS cheek the Service Directory in the DAILY PILOT Courses by Newspaper ls offered as a public service by the Daily Pilot in cooperation with the participating colleges and UC San Diego Ex· tension. Mutual's bringing in. H&RBLOClt THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE Now you can have your tax returns p,.pared free of charge by th• nation'• largest tax sel'Vfce. We'll arrange for H & R Block to prepar• your Federal and California Income tax returns . FREE If you open a oertlflc4te account for $5,000 OR If you are a Mutual saver wfth an account of $6,000 and have never used ttle tax service OR If you have pr.wloualy used the tax service and your saving.• balance has Increased by $2,500 since last Aprll 15, 19Tf. Tax preparation la also available for a modest fee If you open or maintain an accQUnt In the amount of $3,000 And the service Lncludes the special achedules for Itemized deductlont, pension lnce>me, aala of property. lnterett aod dwtdend Income. Income averaging and much more. AJI backed by H & F\ Block's famous guarar,tee, For more Information, call your nearest Mutual Savings office~ Tax Service trom H & R Block. It' a Just one of the many reasons why your savings should be at Mutual Savings an,d Loan AUoclatlotl. , <Ply Air California to s.n Francisco, and take $1938oftyour1'00lq at the St. Francis.) . . '1: Why wait any longer? Air California offers plenty of convenient non-stop flig_hts to g_et you to the San Francisco Bay Area. And the St. Francis is waiting onc.e you arrive. · Come for a weekend, a week, or as long as you like. From now until February 28th, 1978, the St. Francis will take $19.78off any individual stay of two nights or more. · You get superb accommodations on UniQn Square in the heart of San Francisco's theater district for as little as $39 a night.# 24-hour room service. The cable car stopping at your front door. And all the traditional .arhenities that make the St. Francis uniquely the St. Frands. And Air California makes it 811 even easier to take with special dlscoJJntfares, advancedcomputerized reservations and ticketing. and an adusive family plan that can save Yo.U up to 30% any d.,y of the week. Just show your Air California ttd<et when _you're ready to check out, and the great 1978 t.ake-off is on. I , . • '•I . " · 1: ti ,.. •I • , . .. i, .: i . ~ 'll 1 • ... , ., . . . ' I ........... ' ' ·1 1~ ' .. , ... 1 .u . •• " . ~ . ft r ·~ "' ,; .11 •;•I ,,, "' ,. , .;i it I "' , ., . •Movies LONDON <AP!~ -Kalb)' Uler was an ~e $wlmmer and athlete a year ago, berore an auto accident put her in a com a for 10 weeks. Now the 14· year-old blonde from Phoenix ls cbura1eously making a come- back u a long-d.iltance runner. . But there's more to her story ~r iron-willed determination than that, as she has shown after just three days in Brifain where' she ia tn the running for a bravery a,,..ward being presented in L<>ndon Wednesday. GOttfried ' Rolls· P ast ~ ' Tennis Foe RANCHO MIRACE -Derend- jng champion Brian Gottfried scored a ooe·sided first round victory, and Manuel Orantes, Roscoe Tanner and Jaime Fillol a·lso advanced in Monday 's matches of the Tennis Games al Mission mils Country Club. G otUried ddealed Jim Osborne, 6-2, 6·3. Orantes ousted Brian Fairlie, 7-6, 6·2, Tanner defeated Ted Williams, 6·1, 6·2 and Fillol defeated Byron BerU'am, 6-4, 6·2. Johl\ Austin, brother of women's tennis prodigy Tracy •Austin, scored the day·s major 1 upset over John Alexander, 4·6, 6·4, 6-2. I Firs t·alternative George 'Hardie was summoned Monday when Colin DowdesweU did not f appear for his match against Victor Pecci. Hudie beat Pecci, l6·4, 3·6, 7.5. . AUo In the first rou11d ,,.ond•Y: An•nd Amrltr•I __ .., Sttw Docllerl.,, •·1, • 4; P•I o .. _., -em Loyd ..... •·I: JOH H~H 1oetuted 8111 Scanlon ... 2. 4.J; Peter """"'flO ft-d Andrew Palllson. •~. 7-6; Tim Gulllk'°" be•t Bruce Minson. 6~. 4·3. Tom Gulllk\On t~d IMlk~ MK,,.lte .. ~. 1·S, Sl\torwoocl SttwMI r• <...,.rtd 10 ci.tul Terrv M-1·6 •·> ._. CllH '"'Jl6y t~ MIU H•rrl119t0ft ... l, ~1, .. 3. l~lft Dll>ley OtfH l.0 Trey W•ltke 3 ... •~. 6 3. Dick Cr .. tey bHI Butch Wall' l·S. 6·l. •nd NIO f S••l•no dfl••llCI Jlrl Gran•I. M. 4·4 V.S. Nettft"• .FaJJ TOR.QUAY. England - Ameri~an hopes of retaining the men's Wtder·21 tennis trophy in the amateur BP Cup series were jolted on the first day of the tourney when ltaly beat the U.S. ttam 2·1 Monday. J. The Italians got the edge when Q'lanni Ocleppo and Gratiaoo R.ici defeated Matt Mitchell of stanford and Dan Valentlncic of Houston, 6..._ 3·6, 6·3 in a l·hour. SS-minute doubles match. Earlier, Valentincic got the U.S. squad off to a good start by beating the Italian No. 2 player, Luca Rlnaldini, in a har<l.foughl slngles match 7-6, 7·6. Ocleppo, wbo had beep given special leave from the ltalian at'my to play, then beat Mitchell 7 4', 6-4 to tie the matches 1·1. Oerulcaltb Sfgn• ~EW YORK -New Yorker Vitas Gerulallis. the colorful Italian Open champlon11 has signed a one-year contract to play with the New York Apples of Worl<l T~m Tennis. In a complicated deal, the Al>- p1Jts got Gerulaltis from the Golden Gators in return for longtime doubles partn,r Slllldy Mayer. *~'"'fie .Fo-d WIMBERLEY, Texas Searchers reached the wreckage thi• moming ()f a }>lane wll~ two bodies insid~1 believed to be those of Soulllwest Conference buketball ofrlclals missing sbtce J'riday ni1ht. "They advised me tMre were two bodies in the plane and that tt\ere are no survivors," a dis· patcher with the Hays County etlerlft'• office said sh,ortly after abe got a call from seatdiers at the site in cra1gy, cactus- albdded Hill Country terrain. ' UCI Netter ... . Nil 6M8 SALISBUJ!.Yt Md. -Slrth· seeded Curt ~der of UC Irv~• an• Hventb·Htded Jodi Ap-• Jlltlbaum were ~t ln their first rltQnd men's and •omen's etcM9 at the U.S. Tennis Ai· .1911 naliODal amateur in· dalrip6obablpe bere Kon· WIUI bubbly personality and ao lftcandescent smUe, it's hard to tell at first glance that Kathy baa recovered from critical brain damage and other injuties that made doctors doubt whether she would ever emerge from the eoma into which she sank last March . When she did emerge she was unable to speak, read or write, couldn't eat normally and was barely able to walk. Yet with sheer will· power, she battled toward recovery and went on to compete in the annual Phoenix ·10,000·meters marathon last Nov.6. Her remarkable story makes her the favorite to wtn the third Victoria Sporting Club lntema· tlonal Award for Valor in Sport. The award previously went to Austrlan racing driver Nlkl Lauda and Belctan cyclist EddY Merckx. Other nominees this year - only some of whom will be at the ceremony -include Los An1eles Dodgers pitcher Tom· my John, who made a sensa· tional comeback from arm in! .......... BILL ROGERS, WIFE BETH CELEBRATE AFTER VICTORY. m g T oraaround! R Obinson ls Key To USC 's Future LOS ANGELES CAP) -Coach Bob Boyd. who sufrered through rather miserabl~ seaspns the past two years at Southern California, says he sees brigbt days ahead and freshman curr Robinson tould well be the key to the Trojans' basketball re· surgence. "l think we've turned our team around," Boyd said Mon· day. "We should have a winning record this season, and with a couple or recruits, we can be very good next year.'' The Trojans, 6-20 last year and 11·16 the season before that, are 13-9 overall this campaign and tied for second ln the Pacific·& with Oregon State .at 6·3. They try to improve their conference mark this weekend wben they host Washln1ton and Washington State ih the Sports Areba. Robinson, a 6-Coot-9, 215·pound center, seems en route to becoming the top scoring and re· bounding freshman Jn Pac·8 his- tory, Roblmon, out ot Castlemont High in Oakland, is leading the Pac·8 in scoring wi~ a 19-point average and is third in ttebound· tng wtth 10 a game. If be main· taina the pace, he'll rewrtt• the conference freshman scoring mark set by l\on Lee, ud the reb0Undln1 record -e1tabl11bed by Gres BaUard, both al Oregon. Boyd wasn't particularly highly recruited as a high school player in Oakland, but that he isn't sur- prised by the )'oung center's sue· cess. "We were in the Bay Area where Cliff played bis high school basketball and some high school players and other people were surprised at how well he's doing," Boyd said. "However. I'm not surprised at Clirf. "I saw him practice at Castle-· mont High two years ago as a junior and began recruiting him," Boyd continued. "He real- ly impressed me with his speed. His potential is unlimited." Boyd said Robinson is a good scorer because he can shoot from both inside and outside, and added that ii he puts on welfht, he should be even tougher on the boards. "It would help him to gel a stronger upper body," the Tro- j ans coach remarked. "He is slender, yet he &till gets a lot of defensive rebounds." Baske &ball P oll .... A• • juries, and Steve Cauthen, the 17-year-old who recovered from being trampled by a horse to take top honors as the wln· nlngest jocke)' in Amerlc•. "I'm very excited to be here and thrilled with the prospect of getUn£. an award," said Kathy, who speaks very slowly and de- liberately. Her speech and some memory problems are the major obstacles she sUll bas to over- come. Said her father, Larry: "If Kathy wins this award il will be the culmination of eight months hard work and eight months of hope. Her recovery has been like a miracle." When Kathy landed in London last Saturday she mentioned her fondest desire was to visit Ireland -her mother's family came from there -and to nui with Mary Peters, the 1972 Olympic women's pentathlon winner from Belfast, Northern Ireland. So Kathy was whisked to Belfast Sunday and ran barefoot on a snow-covered track with her idol, telling the British star that her own ambition was to run in the Olympics. She wants to meet other idOls. too. And on Wednesday, she will -music star Elton John and Prince Charles. WbeD it•s lime• to go back home, the ~lllers are talking about stoppin1 ott in Washington to show Ute Valor Award to President and Mrs. Carter -Lr Kathy wins tt. The winner gell a eold replica or the magnificent golden wreath on which his or her name. is inscribed. The replica is& valued at $7 .800. Miracle ·60-·foot Sliot • • Spurs Rogers to Vietocy t ~ PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Bill Rogers will not soon forget the 11th hole at Bermuda Dunes in the 1978 Desert Classic. For that matter, neither will Jerry McGee. Rogers. e 26-year·old Texan, won the tournament by two strokes with a 21-under-par 339. But the whole story was told Monday on the 371-yard. par-4 No. J 1 on the rinal day of the rain-delay~ five-round classic. Rog_ers. a nQn·Winner during his four years on the tour, led McGee by three strokes after 82 holes, but hit his drive into the right rough on No. 11. His next shot caught a branch and fell JO yards short of the elevated green and in front or a sand bunker, setting up what both players agreed was an impossi· ble shoL At that point Rogers said he was willing lo just put the ball on th e green and settle for a 2· putt bogey. "Then I shanked my chip shot on the hole," he said. describing his third shot. "l got a good break because it r olled up against a man's foot and stayed away from the cart path. Now I got myself clear from the sand trap but l 'm looking at another difficult chip shot. remembering the. one I just hft." McGee, at the timer was lying 25 reel rrom the hofe, w•ltlng for a try al a birdie. "After looking at the shank I just performed, Jerry's looking al a 3-stroke s t.'ing," said Rogers. Indeed, McGee said he was think ing: "'I've got a 25-foot birdie putt and I'm three back. I Football Stars Charged With Burglary STILLWATER, Okla. <AP) - Two starting defensive players for the Oklahoma State rootball team were lo be arraigned this afternoon on burglary charges, ct,istrlct attorney Charles Headrick said: Sophomores John Corker of Miami and &like Robinson of Glenville, Ohio, were accused by a woman here of takin~ a $600 Jite~eo set from her apartment early Sundaf. · · Police said OSU student Cyn· thin z. Aldridge noticed an ppen window when she came home Sunday about 1:15 a .m. Sbe looked out the window Jnd saw two men lbading the stereo into the trunk of a car, police said. omcers said they later found the suspects transferring the · stereo to another car. Oklahoma State coach Jim stanley, athl•Uc direct.or F1oyd Qau and defensive coordinator Deek Pollard reportedly were out of town Mo~dar olght and w:aavailable tor comment. Crocker, • 6·6, 228·pound lmebac~er, bas started since his fre~bman year, when be wu l\amed the defen5.lve Jl•Wcomer or the iyear in the Blg 8. Roblns()O, a f·61 2.45-pound tacklet \)ecame a starter 1Mt year but then drifted lo and out or the lineup because ot wbat the coaches called lacltluater performances. know I'm golne to be two back and, tr 1 make it, I 'll be one back." "And darned1tr he doesn't hole it from 60 feet," said McGee. "He pitches it in. "It was the turning ~point of the whole tournament. He prob· ably thought at that point there he was no way for him to l~ the golf tournament," McGee said Rogers later commented: "l'm nol going to say I knew I was going to win. It was just like a strange type of feeling that came over me. It was just un- believable. I was just elated. You can't believe bow excited I was. "A.nd then 1 just .calmed dowrt and it was llke starting all over again," he continued. "From then on I just tried to knock the ball on lhe green and 2 putt. If I made a putt, fine.'' Rogers said things just hap- pened for blm during the tourna. ment. "I put mysetr in good position at the start or the round." he said, referring to tbe rounds of 69·67-67-69-270, 18 under par, be shot before finishing with a 69. , Rogers picked up SCS,000 tor ' first place to add to the SJ.6,882 he had won previ~usly this year.1 Lt.cliflO-ffl ttte 0.•rt Cl•Mlc:! 8111 A-n '4UOO .... , .. ,_.,.._..,. ' Jerry McGee SU,650 7Wl-4S.,..,~t ...ter OMltrllWiUIS.t7S 6'·11 ....... 1....U Ru C•10Wttl •t0.S7S 1\ ..... 71~ Tom W•ttonst,ns ....._n.,~ J.C. Snod '1.J.. 70.,.....72~ l(ellll F•r9usS1,J.. ...Jt.JN~I LOft HIMle\l,>!6 71_.1·70-11~ # Ltt TrHtno U.&50 12-41·1t~ Tim SI..._ U ,bl ,,_. ....... II~ Gent LlllltrM.tSO 12 .......... 1'2~ Fo,,ut '*•!er ,.,,)0 11·11*10·11-G Ooll 81tUl.tl1 1>-7Hl~SI Miii• Morley U.111 14·7MH~I SI•.,. v ... 1Mou.111 n.,._.1.n.J0-4S1 llllt M••'*'Ple U.111 61-1t·71-4f.71-~l Dnld Gr-'3.111 ... ,,..._~1'>-451 Oa1111y EclW..,. S.>.71? ll-47 ....... Jt-.isl Lff El•r SJ.JOO 11·7M .. 11~ II ~=~n::1~'2,700 !t~~~~ t tc:ennlt 1..,..., ll,tsa 1'-11-1~ G4'~rJ-1t,t51 ....,_.,,_,...._..." Mlkt MCCutiou911 Sl.tW lo-7 ....... 10-$ Woody 81.Kkbufn Sl,tSI 7Mt-7'"71ilO-m "-•,_ r..,111v st,951 ,...,..,.11.1i-m Rod Curt S1.tll 1 .. 1047-4f.7i-a53 • Miii.,. ....,.,.\1,-'S 11-1 .. 10*11~, !lob ~urpt.y SI.HS ,,.,._,..._n-au L ... ., N•ltonSl,495 ... n.1 .... n~ ' Mlk• Hiil Sl-"S 7).1 .. 7'~ llOd Fu~MUI Sl,4,S ll-IUS-49-Jt-3$.I JOlln M6Miff9y Sl.UO 11·1W.11·1Mss e.-.y W••ce 11.iso ?O*lt-ll·'l'S-.1SS o.ve S'«•ton 11.oa n.71.n.1w1-356 , Jim WllU• SUll3 ... 11·7>70.11-& • O••• El<'*bel"tff ''·OU •1·1 .. IS·11~ Gary GrOll St,.i 11·11*10-~ , Tommv Aaroroum , ,. a.7.,,...._n....., Klkuo Anl s1,oa 10-1\. ... 14·1>-UI J .. 1""'6ft ''·°" 11·1S.11·11-1t...a51 Gii Moro.,. si.oa 10..r .. n-~ • T°"' l(lleSl,Oll 1 .. n.10~ Tom Nl..-nu1.oel 10-1>-IS.IWl-JSJ Ali ·-LoolQna Ahe~d, ~. , ~ . I May Fight N<)r f on 1 LAS VEGAS CAP) - Heavyweight champion Muham~ mad Ali's immediate concern is Leon Spinks, but Ken Norton ls ·on his mind and he appears headed for a defense against the No.1-ranked contender In May. .. A Ii spoke to me and Jose Sulatman <the World Boxing Council president) and said that with the good condi\ion he's in he wants to go right into Norton." said Butch Lewis, vice president of Top Rank, Inc. "The fight would be in May," Lewis said Monday. "I CAA see Ali getting at least $10 mUlion. l feel fairly confident that Ali wUJ accept $10 million." All bas been s aying that he wanUI $12 mlllion to fight Norton for a fourth tfme. Norton ba..s ac- cused Ali of trying to price the fight off the market as a way'of ducking btm. Of course. before Ali geta anythine he must beat Sp.inks Wednesday night 1n a Top Rank production for which he is beiJll paid $3.7 millh>n. · "We are dellghted," SulaUnan said oC AU•s apparent ch~e ol heart about llghtln~ someone otbe.r tl\an Norton after he meets Spinh. It is a change whictl -if it stands -could relieve the WBC oC the possibility or making an unpleasant decision. lfhe WBC bu ruled All must •ien by April S to fight Norton within 90 days of that date or be stripped oltheUUe. Sulalman said that he had telephoned Sob Biron, Norton's manager, arid that Biron was due here ror a meeting. AJ for a site for an Ali-Norton fight, Lewis said, .. The Phillip. pine• are interested. Ptesident Marcos has sent a represen· tative. '1be Iranian government i.t very lnteresled and a group frorn Hong Kong is interested." And tbere are others, L•wJs added. Ali and Spinks both concluded their training Monday. The official weigh·in was scheduled for today, with the fight set to begin at about 7:1S Wednesday night. "I'm in condition ," said Spinks. preparing for his eighth pro fight. He has gone as far as 10 rounds only twice. "I can go the whole 15 smokin ·. not Uke Joe Frazier but like Leon Spinks." he said The ~ar-old Ali 's Jast three del~nses have all gone the dis· t.aawc:~. including h is con- troversial decision win over Norton Sept. 28, 1976. r. II:? DAILY PILOT Huntington Beach Hiah 's Ollers may have a shot to pull off the shocker of the year in the ClF 4-A basketball playoffs with Verbum Dei (Los Angeles) High's No. 1 rated Eagles loom- ing in the second round, but first there is the matter of dealing with invading Corona High Fri· day night (7:30). Coacb Roy Miller's Hunt- ington Beach quintet, although favored to advance to the second round, la raced with an opponent featuring a starting Jlneup that has virtually been intact for three years under coach Denni& Pratt. The tlghUy-lmlt group of Pan- thers seniors revolve around 5-ll Kelly Nicholson and 6·2 Doug Fritz, whlle 6·4 center Stan Longfellow, versatlle Wayne DllflY """ ....... UP FOR TWO-Huntington Beach High 's Pierre Ayala shoots as Curt Wooten (40) watches. The Oilers of HB are in action Friday night in the first round of the CIF 4-A playoffs against invading Corona High. Rowe Pulls Switch, Will Stay at GWC BlC CRAIG SHEPP -6f .. o.11y NetStMf Don Rowe has changed bis mind.• ' "' Selected as Santa Ana College's football.coach a~ . ago, Rowe told the Dally Pilot today be will Instead stay at Golden We.at Colle1e. Rowe, 42, la the Rustlers de- f ensi ve coordinator and also servu as GWC'a tennla coach. CiUnt penonal reuons and long-time Ues with Golden West, Rowe said he will definitely re- main at Golden West. .. Yes, I'm ataytna here. I'm just too clon to the people here. I've lcno'wn these P>'• for 20 to 30 years and it (the coacbtnc staff) ia like a family.'' aa1~ Rowe • .. I reall)t went after the Santa Ana Job ••• I thoulbt tbat ls what I "antecl to do. i.ut the ti• are Just too much here. "But I feel badly about lt. TboH peopl• at Santa Ana went through a IOt ti wort and they treated me ~~-They're try. inc to do • ~ Job there. I still believe I toUld MY9 buUt a win- ner, bat other~· cmme up and It W'Ouldn't bave been falr to . tnt other CU11. ''MW BOwe. I "Thia is my life at Golden West. This school ls just great to work for, not that Santa Ana Isn't a great opportunity. Sani* Ana treated me great. But I'm 42 years old and I don't plan to move. ThJs is it. •• they got me, lock, stock and barrel, whether they want me or not ... Rowe has been on the Golden West staff since the school began operation in 1966. He and head coach Ray Shackleford have been personal friends for over 20 years. "Raymond and I are much allke. We don't work to Uve, we live to work. And this ta our Ute at Golden West," aaya Rowe. Rowe was lelectedlfrom a list of approximately '10 eandidates after a careful tcreenlnl proc- ess. The otlaer flnallat. wbo ts e"pect.ed to be aehtoted the new Dona eoa~s Tim Miils. Pasadena e's linebacker coach. Baldwin (S-0) and 5-11 Marty Wtlkeraoo round out the aUack. Junlon off the bench who add their talenta Include 6·4 Rick Irlart and 6-2 Glen Allen. .. Baldwin was a vanity starter u a sophomore," says Pratt. "I was the Junior varsity coach when this group was sophomores and they all came up with me to the varsity the next year. We're not real bia so we rely on a running game lf we can control the boards. We ha~ trouble early in the season doing that, but we've improved a ,reat deal in that department." In lm, when these starters were junlon, Corona finished the campaign with a 6·18 record. Now it's 18-6 and Pratt says the improvement is simply an ex- perience factor. "Lul year wu a learninc experience and we took our lumps ," says Pratt. This ls also a team that can win under adversity. In a do-or· die effort against Redlands High in the race for the Citrus Belt League championship, the Pan· thers won at Redlands without Fritz or Nlcbolaon, both on the bench with injuries. A double overtime loss to San Gorgonlo (San Bernardino> later, however, killed Corona's chances to share the crown. Nicholson is the leading seorer with an 18.1 average, while Fritz puts the ball in at a 16.5 rate. Longfellow has been averaging in the 10s and Is the leading re- bounder with 10 caroms per game. This isn't just another game for the Panthers-It's the first lime Corona has been in the playoffs in eight years and to Pratt's knowledge, Corona has never won a game in the basket· ball playoffs. COltONA 11MI 16 COllOfl 51 74 Pacific '6 .. Arll~ 74 M ,.,..,_ U 71 ~nyon 14 74 EIM-.r 7• 11 Ooml-1 JV ~1 n San Gor9ofllo 59 M Hortll 11th• I 11 J7 Chaffey ~ 'I EIH"'-r 70 U Aedl~ 41 U MOAftO V.tlfY 87 1l San 8rclo. .a 11 Awllldo\I• St •• Pacific 59 n Hlr Dame IRlv.) 60 •t FonloN Ml U Perris 3'-11 EIM"'-' M S1 A4Hfl-Ml SJ Sot\ Gor. IJ oO SS 61 NII •roo. '"° 74 Cllattey •1 BASKETB~LL I MISCELLANY o.llt'I Ptllt ..... PLAYOFF ENTRIES-San Clemente High's John Carson (31) goes high to block a shot by Mission Viejo's Mike Roberts (25). San Clemente will host Canyon (Anaheim) High in the first round of CIF 3·A action, while Mission Viejo is at top-seeded Ganesba <Pomona) High. . Arkansas ln82•S6 Triumph .. FAYETTEVILLE. Ark. - Guard Sidney Moncrief connect· ed fe>r 15 polnta in the llnt bait as No. l·ranked Arkansas built a 13·polnt halftime lead and coast- ed to an 82-56 Southwest C.00- ference basketball vtcto~ over Baylor Monday night. · Moncrl6f flnlshed wltb 20 polots as the Ruorbacks re- malned tied with Texu atop the SWC standi.ni with a record ol 12·1. Arkansas ran its season rec· ord to 24·1 and extended lt& home court ftdor7 ttreak to Z1 games. Vinnie Johnson led the Bears, now 5-8 in leque pl~ and 11-12 overall. wttb lfS pobitl'. Ruuell Oliver had 12 po(bts Ud Wendell Mays scorecUO poUita. Moncrief scored the Razorbacks' first el1ht points and Ron Brewer. who finished with 16 points, sparked an Arkansas surge midway tbrouih the first ball. The spurt put Arkansas ahead 37·2:5 with 6:03 left in the periol!. Keat•• 84-52 OXFORD, Miss. -Forwardr Rick Robey and Jack Givens blew open a low-scoring cont.est Monday night and led lhlrd- ranked Kentucky to a 64-52 vic- tory over Mississ ippi in a Southeastern Conference basket-ball game MondaynlghL Neither team scored for the first three minutes of play, and nelth81' team was very effective from the field in the t\rst half. Mississippi shot SS percent from the floor for the first half, while Kentucky was bitti.ftg 42 i>ercent. But with Givens, Robey and big center Mike Philllpa con- trolling the boards, Kentucky was able to build an eight-point lead with six minutes to go in the opening half. T&Y .. AAM, 90·88 Comanches· Like to Run AUSTIN, Texas -Jim Krivacs popped in 24 firat·balf points as 12th-ranked Texas overwhelmed Texas A&~ 9CHi6 Monday night to keep pace with top-ranked Arkansas in tho Southwest Conference basket- ball race. Kri vaca finished with 34 points -many of them set up on si&- :zling passes from John Moore - - as Texas raised its SWC record to '.12·L Canyon to Duel San Clemenle Friday If you've watched Saddleback Colleite's racehorse tactics, con· sider yourself an expert on Can-y~n (Anaheim) Hlgh's basket· ball team. The Comanches like to ·emulate the Gauchos and that's what San Clemente Hlgh's Tritona must cont.end with Fri- d ay night. The Tritons duel Canyon in the first round of the CIF 3·A basketball playoffs at San Clemente with tipoff set for 7:30. Both' teams entel' as their leaRue's No. 2 representative. but the similarity ends there. While San Clemente fin!shed second to South Coast League champion Corona del Mar, the Comanches tied Brea tor the Orange League crown. In contrast to San Clement~·s style of slowtng the tempo, Cab·. yon runs at every opportunity. .. If San Cl'!md\te bolds the · ball on us lt could cauae ua prof>. lems," says Canyon coach Bob Schermerhorn. ..U we have to play a half court gam we'll get beat but I wouldn't run with us. .. What we have to do islet the game ln our tempo an we'll change our presses and bait them. And of course, when we get Ule ball, we've got to co with it." The guns ln the Canyon attack include 6-4 Gary llllton and 6-0 Carlos Cuero, a pair of wings in the double poet system. Hilton bas a 15. 7 average and CUero has turned a 1$.8 scoring averace in lea2Ue warfare. ThA nthf!I" Vlaver scorintr In double ftcures i• 6·3 Bolsa Grande (<Jarden Grove) Hip traufer Jeff Snevog, a Junior with an 11.1 ••er•fe. Tbe Comancbel use a lot ot ptayen (10 were ln the came before haJftime aaatnst Brea) and Schermerhorn says that's one of his team's best asset~. Speaking of assets , point guard Dave Fremont. in the $-6 range, spearheads a feisty de- · fense and sets up the attack. Others wbo figure to give San Clemente trouble are 6-4 senior Rick Wheeler and reserves Cr aig Donahue (6-4 ), Rod Spencer (6-5) and Doug Price (6·4). Hilton (knee) and Cuero (ankle) have been bobbled late· ly, but both figure to stltrt Fri- d a y. ''If they don't," says Schermerhorn. "we're really in trouble." Canyon is also a team that thrives on fourth quart~r rallies. The Comanches rallied from a 29-poinl deficit to defeat Edison <Huntington Beach) Hi(h, and beat Palmdale alter lrallinf by eigltt points with 1 :35 to go, . among other endeavors on the way to a 17·6record. CANYON (11 .. 1 Reserve Dave Shepard added 14 pointa for Texas and Ron Bax· ter and Tyrone Branyan, a former El Dorado lllgb (Placen. tia) and Cypress College star. each had 10. Willie Foreman bit 19 points far Texas A&M, but made only eight of %7 field goal attempts. Oarloct~ ... 7. 67 FUii-'9 11 L• H•Dr• 10 CHARLOTTE, N.C. -The ~ e~T~ia 1! Untversity of North Carolina at ,. N'pert W.rbnl' 7' 11 FonlllOa SI M eolson 63 u Soflo<'• 10 Charlotte used an impressive de- : :~:,: : tensive effort and a 32-point n F1111er10n 11 performance from Chad Kinch 1• J..-~.~,. .. to upend 14th-ranked Florida :! e:!ct.. (CC) ~ State 88-'19 in college basketball 7S Pelrnclole ll .,.. Norco 7J 7t CoroM (cO 71 !ti l!I OoredD S7 IJ E-enz.a ... 70 VIiia Porlt 53 71 CyPf"ffl n n 0n111rlo 1$ ., ~· S4 • action Monday. Ti • Ji The game bad )>een rated u a •1l1ans arpanese close batUe between the un· • .., .J ' ranked leaders of the Sun Belt Con'f e~ence and the leac:\ers ol the Metro Seven. B l Ucl But tbe '9ers turned In an oat- 0 att e at standlne def~ive performance that forced 18 or the Semlnotes• ball and volleyball. The other new face is Pat Power, a starter on Sant.a Monica College's l9Tl state cbampionahlp squad. The Japanese squad ls led by head coach Masaru Saito, who served as an assistant coach for last year's NCAA·Japan series and is the head coach al Tokai University. Pro Scores NeU.. ......, \Miiie T-104, &llff•IO? .. ...................... . Petrott 125, New Jer9Y IU 24 turnovers 1~ the first halt and gave the 49et'li a lead they never relinquished. Brewers. Sign Nolan MILWAUKEE (AP) -El Toro resident Gary Nolan. the former Cincinnati Reds' rilbt· handed pitcher recently re- leased by the California Angels, s igned wlth tht9 Milwaukee Brewen today. Nolan, 29, was pla)'ln• out his opt.ion with the Reds last year and in June they traded blm to the Angels. VlllldtrN ' n '·' Miiie Hiii 1 t7 ,., Total& ,..., • ... McCkltlln 15 Ut ,.. __ ltS 11.t "91141M -tU Orolll u. ..... °""" :: .. , ervSll ... "°'" us ... Wlllt a u OMey • u "M'fflll .. u .... • ,, .. ~ u ' • . .. tu --..... ---.... SPORT§ I BOATINq /?CAA €age _T~umey Is a Waste of Ti~ • Believe lt or not, UC lrvloe'a 'basketball team. with an 8-13 season l'ecord. could wiDd up playing in the NCAA (Di•illon I) cbamplonahlp 1ame thla March. • Of course, It won't happen. UCI'• •ebucea .~ wlnnlnc the NCAA are about 1,000.1. But the possibWty ls then-however remote. . 'UCI ts cunentty in last place in the PCAA with a 2-S record and must de- Jeat Cal State (Long Beach) at Cl'awford Hall Thursday night to )lave any •hot of gaining the seven- , ea m conference playoffs at Anaheim Convention Center March ~j. 'l'be PCM playof(s were set up to (1) .catn money and (2) give the CRAIG SHEFF PCAA more exposure. But having this tournament Is downright dumb. The winner ol the 14-game race should autom atically gain the NCAA regioaala and not bave to prove its worth all over again in some Mickey Mouse toumamenL And even If UCI gets into the, tourney, the Anteaters are s ure to be embarrassed once again since they h•ve to play the No. 2·seeded school in the opening round. T he PCAA tourney is a definite waste of time and money, to say the JeaaL ••• Saddleback aa.sociate dean ol stu· dent.a Bill Kelly, who doubles u the Gauchos' a thletic adminstrator, won't sooo for.rel Saturday night's basketball (&me with Palomar. Kelly bad the unenviabl .... task or telling an estimated 250 people they What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC couldnJ see the .rame. And one of them 4'1Jl'l take it lightly. In fact be was soiJJ.fwiated bedecked Kelly. .. He tfad a pus. but we were filled to capaqity," s~s Kelly. "He tried to sneak bl. but I stopped him. 'lben he decked ~e. I didn 'l see the punch coming. But it was no big thing, we just got him out of there." Kelly •ays he Celt sorry for those that didn't get in. "There were a lot of people upset, includinc many from Palomar who had already bought tickets. And a lot of those people we bad to turn away I've known !or years. Some of them stayed around and we let about 30 in at halttlme," says Kelly. When the doors were opened at 6:45 (game time was 8), about 75 people were waiting. At 7:30 the gym was nearly full. And it was a very loud crowd. cheering the Gauchos' every move. "I used to dream about that kind of crowd when we were nlaylng at Mis- sion Viejo High a couple or years ago, .. said Gauchos coach Bill Mulli f{a n. "Th ey we r e really something, weren't they?" Saddleback has been drawing well all season, in contrast to near empty gyms at Golden West and Orange Coast. There's nothing like a winner to bring them In. SKIPPIN' AROUND: Alex Black, the former Corona del Mar High basketball standout, is no longer at Nevada <Reno), having returned home ... ex-Marina <Huntington Beach) cage conch Jim Stephens has a 7-18 record nl LA Valley College to date ... Herb Uvsey. the ex-Orange Coast basketball coach, is lhe tourna· ment director of the slate JC tourna- ment, set for March 15-18 at Long Beach Arena ... coaches from Colorado, Texas, Iowa State and Hilo, Hawail viewed the Saddleback· Palomar game last Satur day . .. Ma tt Palmer , Golden West's shortstop, will be sidelined for some time with a broken band. MV Girls In54-53 Shocker MO&l Southland ouldoonmen usually turn to fishing when the hunting season ends, but•due to all the rain and wind anglers have not been able to cet out much. There could be a very. good yellowtail bite 10- ing on at both the Coronado Islands and CataUna, but no boats are getting out on a regular basis lo test the fishing. If one boat a week iets out anglers have been lucky. Skippen are not sure as to bow long the yellows will stay around the Islands what with winter currents, changing water tem- per atures and dirty water being nu.shed into the ocean by our usually dry riverbeds. Mission Vlejo High's girls basketball team upset 1977 CIF cham- pion Huntington Beach in the quarterfinals of the Cypress tournament Monday, in a 5'·53 over- time decision. Most ol the party boats aren't going outside. Instead, they are staying clo,,er to abore fishing the kelp beds and some of the shallower reefs for a com blned catch of rock cod and assorted surface feeders. 'lbe shark-only fishing trips being run out of tbe Pavilion in Balboa have been very popular and anRlers are averaRinl better than one blue shark per rod, according to landing officials. Surf ftahing bas also been slowed by poor weather as have the clam digcers on low tides. Bay fbhlnl bas been turned off due to dirty water and Iota ol Junk floating in the bay. It will be a few day1 befoc'8 fishing returns to anything close to norm al around the harbor. .... Fw.er.e. Walt Ot•U aASICETIAU. 0•,_ 0.-lflYIUtMMf M•I« o.t (J41 t•I ...._i M•t.r Del-Gt-17, •tll l, Ga99 13. O'CoflnOI' 2, Ur.,.lcll 7, Mlnur 4, WlllftOI s. ~ 4, Dauer t. Ntwport H.,bor-Catn•r' 2, Echlemacll 2. s.aiono .. r •· Woll• ti, Hvrn t . lhisll 4, Hecl2. Halftl-: .Mall< 0.1, S6-14. -1..-Otl's •111 QMM: $alunMIV, 7 .. "'·· c~P ...,.n.ni...1s 11\•l&MPAIMt. DH~ Hiiis C..I (JI) SI. l'wl 0•11• Hll~ll .. r It, l'•ldtr e, l'ettffSOll 1', Hi9DIM .. Oulllelte I. College Baeketball Gauchos' Spike Outlook Rustlers Battle Southwest -- Tl*day, February 14, 1978 DAILY PILOT S:J S11111mer TratUpac Solo Race Field Mixed If .early entries for this sum· mer's solo Transpac race from San Francisco to Kauai, Hawaii, are any indication, it will be one or the most mixed fi elds of boats · and skippers to ever start a yacht race. Two starts will beheld on San Francisco Bay' -the first June 15 for boats 20 lo 30 feet length overall, and the second June 22 for boats 30 feet and up. The race is sponsored by the Singlehanded Sailing Society and cosponsored by Pacific Skipper MagaiineofNewport Beach. Amooe the early entries .a~e • Jim Carson Of Newport Beaeh in a new Crealock design, and Harvey Berget' of Newport Beach in Newporter-40 ketch Globetrotter . THERE WILL BE six monohull categories breaking at each five feet LOA above the minimum 20 feeL There is also one section for multihulls of any slie, but by J an. 15 none had en- tered. Other early entries include Karl Burton of Hollywood, a Luft- hansa Airlines executive tn a Columbia-57 Magic (ex Con- certo). HeJs a member of both the Loa Angeles and CabrUlo Beach yacht clubs. . Deadline for entries ls ?tfay l and there is a limit of 100 yachts. Entry fee is szso. or $200 for members of the Singlehanded Sailing Society. Y AClfl'S WILL BE measured and rated under the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet <PHRF) ocean handicap list. The finish line will extend from the mouth of the Hanalei River to Makahoa Point. Sail c,.J,ising Talks· Sl<!tted "Cruising Under Sail.'' a series of five three- hour illustrated lectures will be given at the Costa Mesa Women's Club, 610 W. 18th St. on Wednesday evenings from 7 to 10 p.m. Moderator for the lectures will be Al Nelson, sailing enthusiast and educator. Zthuatanejo and back aboard bis Cal 2-46. LARRY DUNMIRE, MARINE photoerap}ler, . will discuss the "Camera Afioat" March 8. He ~as cruised the Hawaiian Islands and other areas and wtll reveal "tricks of the trade" in pbotoeraphy under saH. The final speaker, March 15, will be Elly Dowd THE FntST LECTURE on Wedneaday will be with the query .. How Do You Know If You Will "Tahiti and Beyond" by Phil Thurman, publisher Like Cruising." Miss Dowd is a licensed ·ya~ht or the cruising magazine, Pacific Skipper. He and broker and marine consultant with worldwide his !amUy have cruised and lived aboard their 40· cruising and racing experience. She recenUy col- foot motor sailer for the past 2\1'.a years. Thurman laborated on the design of the Morgan OClt· will concentrate on the important things necessary Island·41 while cruising and doing charter work in to get to the South Pacific and back with the least the Caribbean. amounto_fhassleand the most enjoyment. ------------------- "Sails For Cruising" will be the subject 01 Mike Schachter. skipper or the half·tonner Hawkeye. He is vice president of Hood Sallmakers in Costa Mesa and has cruised extensively in Mex· ico and along the Pacific Coast of the U.S. His lee· lure will be Feb. 22. ••Preparation For Cruising" will be the sub· ject of Ed White, president of Mariner Yachts, March 1. He has a worldwide cruising background, Including a recent trip from Ensenada to Readers Lose Out HONG KONG (AP) -Newspaper readers in some parts of China are complaining that they orten do not get their papers because their postmen have been sent to the countrysid e to help on farms. "For postmen lo help agriculture production is encouraging but for the authorities lo neglect everything else is totally wrong," a reader wrote the Peking People's Dally, the Chinese Communist Party newspaper. 0 •~ser WIDE AREA COVERAGE ORANGE CO.-L.A. '17.10 ......... ....... NODEIUITON APPROVED CREDIT . - nisefunds for your club, organlz~iQn If your non-profit ciub or organlr.atlon needs to ntlM funds tall Huntington Center 897-2533 and we will send vou our Community Help ~Char1~:!: ~~ ... .-.:amu.r..:.:__:__.J-..11--..i~~-L.J~..__-.....-..~~------=-..~.-.....; EconomY. Radial Close-Out Values. • • • . ' DAl.VPILOT TU41Sday,Februaty14, 1971 TelevisiOn 11 l· ... 11 \\ EVEHSNO ... Ii :. NIWS ~OHEI A young llrtN at-ci- relutH to allow the peramedtc:a 10 I.real her IOf ·.,.-doee. 0 NHt. HOCKEY Lo. Mgllee l<lnge .... New YOfil lllendere G) THe IMOV aUHCH Jan het • c:r\iWI on a boy In herd .... • THa M>Ol<JE8 The ton and d~hter Of • man who died In prieon we datarmlnad to sea11 ~-• IELECTllllCCOMPANY . ' ID P£A&OHAL FINANCE Iii AION£W8 . . l::30 • MOVl£ ***~ "Oownl\111 RKar" ( 19891 Robert RedfO<d, Gana Hackman. As • result of drcumstanee. a.n American ekl bum becomH an Olympic champion. (t hr .. 30 min I QI HWITCWED TabHha 1urn1 a fairy ••le intoarNllty Valentine Special fll OVEREASY Gue1t. ac:treas Naneue Fabray. Q:j) GROWIHO YEARS (J) UNTAMED WORLD "Survtval" Billy Davis and Marilyn McCoo are among the !:>lan. performing on the Valentine's Day variety special "I Love You" tonight <tl 8 on NBC. Channel 4. ll§l MERV GRIFFIN 7:00 0 NBC NEWS 0 UARSCLUB • A9CNIW8 ID I LOVI LUCY Wldo-...d by a fight night on TV, Lucy and Ethel Mardi for adventure. Q)~12 Malloy and Reed try 10 help • young beakelblll pl8)'1f' from returning to n11cotlca S) MACNEIL I Lfl-IRER REPORT fl!) HOME OAAOEHER Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 D CANDID CAME.AA 0 NEWLYWa>OAME U 9 HOU YWOOO 8QUAR£8 «D THIE BAAOY BUNCH The Bfadya do a aatlre ot a fairy tale. II) AOAM-12 The olllc¥t hall a blec;l( market baby lranNCllOn and ~ 9 IUsplciouS pill progrwn at • college fl) LA. INTEAa4AHOE "lnalde Straight" €1'!) NEWSCHECK An lnl0fm1t1va collecllon Channel Lbtblfl• 1J KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles a KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles U KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego G) KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles CD KCOP·TV (Ind ) Los Angeles fD KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles 11) KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunhngton Beach or Orange County newt, govemmant and consumer altalrs, people a.I'd tpOflt. Cl) TI4E GONG SHOW 9:00 iJ Cl) CELEBRITY CHALLENGE Of' THE se<ES Wllllam Shatner 111. Kr111y McNlchol, go.carts: Reggie Jaclt '°" 111. Barbi Benton. bicyclel. SYzanna S-s vs Ckllon Oav11, aWlm- ming. D ILOVEVOU A Valentina'• Oey vanety hour with a look at love lhrough tha eye1 or celeb· riues 0 MOVIE • *'It ··Legend 01 Cougar Canyon ( 19H) Advet>- rure Two 12·year-old boys. trapped In an ancienr cave, light !Of 1helr hves agalnll a vk:lou1 c~.(2hrtl U 0 HAPPY DAYS "Ba My Valentlna"" Joanie, thrlllad to ba hNded IOf her !Int annyaJ dance at Arnold'I with II boyfriend, is crushed whOn her date canQlla 11 the lat minyte. ontalhan f.omes a TV Winner l= p By BOB THOMAS go. Montalban was suffering untold agonies. He wanled the series vel')' much . As a professional actor, he has to g o wh e r e t h e work is . He calculates thal In hls 33 years of mar· riage to Georgiana Young, he bas been away from home on locations and stage tours nine and a half years. Now that their four children have left the nest, the Montalbans hoped they could s pend time at home toi ether. HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The most tomising newcomer in television's ce for the ratings is Ricardo Mon-ban, who happens to have been in ~ollywood for 30 years . The Mexican-born actor stars as oarke/ the genial, myslery-tinged l)Osl o "Fantasy jllland," which ap· ,>ears to be ABC's -Oew winner on Saturday night. In ts.s debut a s a n r:ur·long series, b e Spe lling· oldberg produc- tlon scored sixth P!l'*Ong the week 's ibows. walloping Me>11U1.1AN ~ojak" and "Doc Savage" with an Qnpressive 40 percent share of the tJdience. tt's a good feeling," Montalban d at his hllltop home on a rare day work. "BuL I still find it hard to eve. Television is suc.h a roll of ~ d ice. Just to get a series on is lllce 4aring at a precipice. "DO YOU REAUZE that I made t e pilot for 'Fantasy Island' a year d a half' ago? Imagine -all that e ! The tint show was two hours, icl it did well, so ABC ordered other two hours. Theo they said, ay, go ahead with two one·hour ows and one two-ttarter -two urs with a continuing plot. ••Finally ABC said to go ahead with one-hour 'hows. r never realized ~t a tenuous thing actors face with elevislonaeries." While ABC was playing stop-and- "IF THE SERIES didn't work, I would have to go on the road again,·• the actor remarked. ''Like a year ago, when I was doing a play in Chicago in the middle of winter. "But every titne I built up my hopes for the series, I would have them destroyed by a rotten review. Cr itics seem to find joy in putting down the show. Every time I read one or them, 1 said, 'There goes my livelihood.'" ·Indeed, "Fantasy Island" has drawn some of the most scathlng re· views in recent times~ But then, many critics round bad things to say about "Charlie's Angels," "Love Boat," "Laverne and Shirley" and even "All in the Family." I JOtWt'I WU> CAAOI.~ AHi>~ QuMt St-L.a"r- • MOVIE • • \; •· Aneurt °" A ~·· (19ee) Frat\k Sina- tra, VlfNI l.1111. A woman and her ~· rac>Of'dl- \lon • eubmarlna to UM In their robbery of the~ Mary. (2 lvt I 9 SPEQAL. "Of Race And Blood" Hit~ lar uMd propogenda att to ~ the doctrine of the auparlol'lty o1 the "Aryan R-"; the U.S. Army now owna Iha larQMI collaction ot Garmen combM end ptopOgande 811 In Iha WOfld. U!> TURNA80UT "The New ~IOfmeuon" A group of former Catholic n~. • wom1111 Rel°'m rabbi. a female E.p!Koplll· an pria51 ,_ on changes .., their dlUrd\N. 1:30 IJ (I) SHIELDS AND YAAHEU. Robot Johnny Clinker hosts a late night talk llhOW with ciueat , Slllrley McChnk, • "mlltlMed'' Laa V111• dancir, I baby on '"' 100.. olacovera • unique playground; Robett Sh ... mlmN • high dive into an Imaginary 1wim- mlng poo1 G O LAVERNE~ SHIRLEY "Bus Stop" l.avlmfl end Stlltley plan to spend an ex.citing -log In Olh- koall Whan they meat end mllile datea with two medl· eel 1tuci.nt draemboats whll• being lnt«Vlawed by a rOlllng TV reporter D CONCENTRATION m~wrra '1i) OV!A EASY Guest: actraat Nanette Fabray. 9:00 IJ (J) C8S MOVIE **Vt "TwlllQl\I' t LHI 01 .. mlny" ( t977) Burt lancettar. RtC:hard Widmark An e•·U S Alf F0<ce Oflleer. Wllh three fellow prl10n eacapeas, HIZllS control ol a nuclear m11111e ba1e to blackmail the U.S. Government. 0 llAOVIE ''King" Martin Luther King Jr. beglnt 10 locua on I-outllde Iha South; houtlng .11\d high unem- ployment In Chletge>; Mal· cotm X; America'• Involve- ment In Vletalm; white In TUBE TOPPERS CBS 8 9:00 "Twilight's Last Gleaming." Bw-t Lancaster and Richard Widmark head t he cast of this T V pre· m iere of the 1977 movie about terrorism on a nuclear missile base. NBC CO 9 :00 "King." The final chapter of the three-part series following the career or Martin Luther King (Paul Winfield> to his assassination in Mem- phis. KOCE 9 10 :00 ·-Hollywood Television T heat er. Two J apanese families weather the Dep ression in California in the drama "And the Soul Sha ll Dance." MORNING 1l:OO I (I) NEWS TWlUOttT ZONI. "The Fe«'' • MO\'IE Memphll, he la UIUllNll· ad. (Patt 3 ol 31 fJ l1J THREE'S OOMf>AHV ··w111 Th• AHi Jack Tripper .. "Jack'I In• pan- ic and in the dogtlOule with Janet and Chrlasy when a young pregnant women arrlvee at ttielr houae and namaa him at the lather. 0 IAONSIOE .. MERV GRIFFIN '1i) MASTEAPIECE THEATRE "Anna Karenina" Lovin vilill his aleohOllc brother In • alum. providing a 11t111p contrut balwMn Rualan ar11toc:racy a.I'd tha common people. Anna Charma Count VrOf\lky, who foffowa her bactt to St. Pet«Sbtlrgl\ .. (Patt 2 of 10) 11:30 fJ ®' SOAP "Eplaode TWenty" ChMler and Jesalca Ta1e are In IOf anorteCI ~ ..men they go to Iha judge'a chambers with their lawyer 10 dlacun Jeulca'a ~rng murder trial W SPECIAL. · Allred I. Ou Pont • Colun,. bl• Uno_...ty Award• For Broadcett Journall1m·· Thll awaros and dip• from various antrlea wOI be l)feaented. 10:00 8 0 NEWS u a FAMILY "Th• Traneylvanla P,.,ilion" On Iha -of 111$ 2 111 birthday, Wiiiie thWatta pllria !Of • party and goea 0\11 •Iona. ti) HONEYMOONER& 11.n une11pectect wmrnont from the IRS thtowa Ralph .,.1,.... .. Into a pal\lc. 69 HOU 't'WOOO TEl.EVl8ION THIATVI "And The Soul Shall Danca" Two Je~ tamHlfl In California's lmc>arltll Valley raect dlffet· antly to the ,._,dahlp1 ol Iha DapraetlOf\. 10:308)CI) NlW& 11:000e(!]IJ NEWS 8 LOVE. AMEIUCAH STYt.E "l.Dve And The Hidden M"nlng" A plumber'• wife conlronll Jacquellne SuMlll With en 8CQ!N tlon. 001.Dve And The Modal Apartment" A young oou- ple move Into a model aparttnanl 0 MOVIE 1'r **~ "The Pa-bro- ker'' (1965) Rod Staiger, Geraldine Fltzg«ald. A Jawfah pewnbroker. the victim of Nut ~Ion. 1trvgglel to cope with his nawty.arOUlad _.Ions (2 l\ra.) QI THE 000 COUPLE Fell11 aeleeta a grave Ille and an1rvata Oacer ,.,jth 1he fl'IOf>ay tor • down payment. Q) LETS MAKE A DEAL 11:30 0 TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson. Guat1tt: Bobby Ooldaboro, Steve l.andeabarg. 8 LQYE. AMEAICAH SlY\.E "l.OV. And The H~ Bachelor" Dan'• best lriand lovee .ioyc.•a toe*· il®J A8CMOVIE • • •n "Stay Away Joe .. ( 11188) El'lll Pratley, Bur· ···~ ''Scandlt SMtl" (1tS2) 8fOClarick Crewbd. 0onN Aaed. A."9r I MWto paper adl1or klla 1111 ..._ ha wlllta fof two )IOllrlO ~to ~hla crime.(1hr.,30mln I • MOYIE *** "Sanctuary" (1Mt) Lea Rernlcl!, YWi Montancl. A prominent ~t~" women't sllanc• oon. damnl the ~ • io- to the gllloM.. ( 1 IW., 30 min.) 12-.30 8 Cl) eas LA 1' MOVW * • ~ "Foeter And Llurle" (11175) Perry 1<1119, Dorian Harewood. The true-Ille llory Of two New Yof11 City polloel1*' Idled In an amb11all by mllltant utramlats. (R) D MOYIE *** "T.._ Of Mllnllllt-tan" (1M2) CNttiN 8o)tar. Rita Heywottt!, The hM of ...,.,., ~ lbout to IC*ld an •wening on the town" -followed. (2 llra,,Hmln.1 1:00 D TOMO#low ~. Elubattl l<ublar·Aoel ~cllacy9atN~ cal aepecta 01 daelll. l •ur 1:*> MOYIE * *°* "You Cln°t Ru" AWfl'/ Frol'(l It" ( 1t5e) June A~ Jaeti IAmfllon. An abducted heir.., trying to 9'11 blllCtt to her hlllband. croH.. patll1 with a rapoiw Oii • a-. .~ .. aCllM\.) ··~ "A Vwy Ptllllta Alf•lr" ( tHa) Brifllt• Berdot , Matoetto Mattrolannl. Alt lntatna- llOnll ...,,.. .. pllQU8d Wftl11ndar•· D••''~"··"~ I 'IJke Gr.Bduat_,,~!1 Carol Burnett w Tape Uist Shmo;;_ ByJA~SHARBUTT , LOS ANGELES (AP> -Marcb lT us u a lly is party time . It'a St. Patrick's Day. which means strong drink, cheers for the Irish. But In a way. it'll be a sad day for C•rol Burnett. It's when the red-haired star nys s he'll tape the 268th and last chaJ>ter o r CBS' weekly "Carol Burnett Show," ending an 11-year·nan t:bat outlasted the reigns of three preast- dents at her network. "It's like graduating from school," she said. ''It's that feeling you get where another door is opening. We've seen births, deaths, divorces, mar. riages here, and it's like another family. · "AND TIIAT'S THE sad Pm. or not seeing those people on a d ·to- day basis.'' Miss Burnett is voluntarily g .. arm, "sajcl, 'Look. )'OU c• c; another 10 years as far as Q -network is concemed/ J said, 'Gofl.. God. no, Who wants to do that?' ~ •· "Then I wouldn't be young MMM"2' to do what I want to do." : . . . ,, WHAT FINALLY convinced h• j~ was Ume to bang it up, sbe said, wU when she began noticing that ~ cooked up for her abow often~~· mlaetf she'd done in se.asoftl ~ · The wrlUng still was excelleq~ •be' said, "but about 80 J?ercent ot the· time I found myself, or tbofle of "!. who've been here a whilei sayjq., 'We've done thta before: · • "Sure, you can approach t~ d)f. ~ ferently, bi.it the first Ume al a)'I .Ji~ the best. · · ' Miss J)., who s~s )ier·f.,:ewell .0: her weekly sbo~ d04l5n1t mean she'll; never do a 1e.{its 'a1&in, was ~' about rumors. U.e wee1t11 v~: show is finis) past.Jtl prime time a a ! TV form. • • · •. CAROL BURNETT IN FAMILIAR REGALIA After 11 Years, She's Hanging Up the Mop her weekly show, following the path previously taken by CBS' two er top ladies of comedy, Mary yler Moore and Lucille Ball. Like them, she bas no plans tiring from television. ... •ECAU ONE. )'UP "When we . were the only variety sbowr oa." ahe ; replied. "Everybqdy was=· Ellen Corby Due· Back on W altons "I just want tQ exhale for a says the lady, owner of rive my awards, who sprang to na onal notice in 1951 with a gag sons alled "I Made a Fool of Mysell Ov John F oster Dulles.·• MISS BURNE1T, 42, born ' LOS ANGELES !AP)-Ellen Corby. who suf-Antonio. Tex., but raised and lered a s l.r<>ke in November 1976, wlll return to , ed here, bad cellar-dweller ''The Waltona"' for an episode to air Thursday, for her variety show this se March 30. s ays that's not the reasot\ ab6 On the show, G~andma Walton will return ing It. home after treatment for a stroke. Earl llarnner, "We've been in the toilet creator of the series, said, "We have conatructed she laughed. add.inc that CBS er Ellen's role in such a way that it will not in any even brought up the subject those way jeopardize her fleatth." low ratings with her. DurmJ her convalescence, Miss COt'br. corn-· • In fact, abe said, Robert A. pleted writing a philosophical novel cal1ed' Peb... president or CBS• entert variety is dead. But it wllJ ... The revue form -ln my b~~· .; nion -will alwayJ exist. · "The ptoblern. I think/ bat ~.; that somebody bu a hi~ r~conl, "\kil. they say, 'Glve them a varief1 · show!" But a mainstay .°J,.~1 a ett ii ~ .. edy and, said th& wbO bu-.. peared in 1,SOO ~m •lta ~-Mr series. ''there is aa to1 ~-? ptaylna. But they ha . '6 ~. comedic actors wbo t d9 it... ,. t The future: Aft.er ~· •·i she'll vacation with •• husband Joe J{amll d. j three dAu&bters, make a C8S • movie ... The Gr a ·I• Alwa1•, Greenet Oftr the Se;lJc !'at.•• : . -. ·~ERTAINMENT I THEATER ., r··~hree Shows ()penµig . . ! ·. An old comedy returns, a new theater .opens : and another 700ftC producing group unvella an .. orlclnal orie·act play alona the Oranae Cout this :-Meek. : The oldie. -.hi ch basn 't been seen. locally for : about a decade, ii ''Never 'l'oo Late," a ll&btheart· • ed look at hnpe.ndtng middle-aged parenthood. It : ol>ens toolgbt at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse : for a f~~·W~k eneagement. : 4 t.AlSING ITS nRST curtain on Friday will be : tbe Newport Be•ch Theater Arts Center with an ;-..nl>ltious production of "A Man For All ~asons" •for a brief, three-day staging. Also on th~~ for : only three d~ wUl be a one·act festival y the Mis· : s1on Vii~ Repertory Theater, nmnin Thursday · tbrouah.SaWday. : ' -M Qariacy and Belle )!:lllg play the older cou· : pie wbo pt a aurprtse call from the stork In the · Harle6.Wii'1 .. N~ver Too La~." Also in the cast ·~re Robert COrtin, \J'bylll Ward Fo~ Art Koustik, ; ,-_,d RIJ¥~ond and Annabelle Quigley. ' Harvey Levine is directing the show, which will. play nlgbtly except Mondays through March ·~9 at the Harlequin, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., just north. ot Costa ,Mesa. Curtain is 8:30 following a .bUffet dinner aod reservations are being taken at 979-~11. . THE TRUE STORY of Sir Thomas More Is the '!lubj~ct of ."Man fo~ All Seasons," being directed l>Y Mttcli Teemley for lJl e New'port Beach Theater +rt.a Center, 2501 Cliff Drive. Bil1 Gekas plays the .Jnartyred archblshbp, with Ladislaw Reday, Ray ·lJod"on, Daryl Strandllen, Diane Mcintyre, Monica Myers, Corey Young and John Palafoutas complet· ing the casL Curt.ala time is 8 o'clock Friday through Sun- .day at the former church building at Oliff Drive . I SWqley ~Holl~way ·HOllored.-Finally 1' ·LONDON CAP) -Stanley Holloway, the 87- , ear-old musical comedy star who played Eliza oolltUe's father 1n ''My Fair Lady," has won what he says is bis first show business award, but he's not let· ting lt~ot.ohisbead. Before leaving bis country home in Sussex to receive the award, Holloway said, "I'm not ungrateful but I've always believed Kipling's line about ~uccesa and failure and how these two impost.ors should be treated Just the same." · J"'!""""'"Y Holloway received a S~ial Aw ardl(onfthe VarletyC1irt>Gf Britainatce~D!Onies in Lof\don'sSavoy Hotel. "In The Realm ·Of The Senses'' 8:~00nly . HELDOVB "DERSU UZALA" ........ Wttfttffl , A movlng story. A romantic stor)'. A~ ol ~bat.red. friendship, trluinph. and lme.. Intermission Tom Titus and El Modena Avenue. nckets are available at Newport. Beach City Hall, the CoasUlne Communl· ty College office at 1665 Westcliff Drive or at the door. THE ONE·ACf PROGRAM by the Mission Viejo Repertory Theater will spotUCht the pre- miere performance of "Manhole," an original drama by Brian Harnetle•ux. Other works on the program are Edward Albee's "The Zoo Story" and a cutting from Arthur Kopit's ''Ob Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad." Tbe three plays will be presented at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday at the little theater at Mission Viejo High School. Reservations are being taken at 586-0110. CLOSING OUT THEIR res1_>ecUve engage- ments along the coast this weekeild are two pro- fessional productions, "A Doll's House" at South Coast Repertory and "Guys and Dolls" at Sebas- Uan 's West Dinner Playhouse. "Doll's House" has been sold out throughout its run at SCR, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, while "Guys and Dolls" is on at.age at Sebastian's, 140 Avenjda Pico, San Clemente. Both will play toni_ght through Sunday with SCR tlctet informa- tion at 646-1363 and Sebastian's at '92·9950. The Huntington Beach Playhouse will present its second of five weekends or "How the Other Half Loves" at the Edgewater Hyatt House in Long Beach this weekend. Ron Filian ls dl.recting the comedy, which will be on stage Friday through Sunday at 8:30 following a buffet dinner. Reserva- tions 828-0583. BACKSTAGE -A new non·profit organization called Women and Men in Music and the Arts will hold a kickoff party tonight al 8 in the Idle Id, 1734 Kaiser Ave., Irvine ... further details can be ob- tained by ca.Wnc ~8836 ••• '1t80H'" . .,,.. STltW' 1 J.ji D ACtila . Calf .a QiRy Pilot AD-VISOR 642,5678 T~. February 14, 1978 DAILY PILOT .$ SHJtEVEPORT, (AP) -Dav.id Soul, a star in the TV seri s .. Slarsky and Hutc " bas won a court fight o suppress iseveral "r t- ten" recording be ma e before he became a teenaee Idol. U.S . Pistrict Co Judge Tom Sta1g dered Soul lo pay $16, to Sound City Re® • ings Corp. ot Shreve as the price to obtain It's Partg Time 1969 recordings. s wants to keep them Sylvester Stallone joins singer Olivia Newton John and comics the market because e Shields (right) and Yarnell Cleft) at a party celebrating t,he com-Hid their poor q · Y pletion of his new movie. "Paradise Alley." would dama1e h s ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:---~~~~~~~ car~er. Man of Year Burt Role LOS ANGELES (AP) E'..:1----d ,4 _ IJ d -Burt Reynolds wlll u;ioaJi ~lleT 0 011DTB star in "Rough Cut," a sophlsUcated romance about a Jewel thief who emerges fk'-Om ,.retire- ment for the seemingly · impossible burglary. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Edward Asner is the Man of the Year in ~roadcastlnc selected by the ASlll•• Hollywood Radio and Television Society. Asner, currently starring in the CBS series "Lou Grant," re- cently appeared 1n "Roots," "The Gathering" and "Rich Man, Poor Man." He concluded seven years on ''The Mary Tyler Moore Show" last year. He will be honored during the society's 18th annual awards dinner on March 7. Soul, a South Dak a native, lived Shreveport for sever l years before he b e into television. He ma e several .recordings t Sound City, bu~ t studio never used the ca11 M2-sua. Put • few words to work for ou. .. _..,_ --···------·--. • .. DAILYPtt.OT NEWYORK (AP)-Buffy Saint.e·Marieis the Sesame Street mommie who bug• lltUe Jctda, te•ches the Count to count in Sioux and Cree •nd shows Bl& Bird how to make Indian fry bread. Off camera she shakes a fistful of bll1s pending in Congress, shakes her head and speaks with urgency about lost Indian rights, broken treaties and the need to stop legislation. • ••SMILE," SAID A. PHOTOGRAPHER as she ~lared at bills on hunting and fishing rights, lmergy proposals and criminal code reform. : "You couldn't smile tr you knew what I know," :;aid the granddaughter of Cblef Starblanket of .Saskatchewan. "But l'H try to lhlnk of the future. She managed a taut smile. : The JG.year-old Canadian Cree Indian who ~ows kids on television that Indians say more l.hln "Ugh" and "How," is talking off camera ~bout terror, murder and forced sterilization or In· 4ians. •• SHE IS WRITING A COOKBOOK of Indian re· ripes, a remjnder or the power or maize and sun· flower seeds. But she Is ever mindful of starvation. Buffy said that because she speaks out, she has been "blacklisted" as an entertainer in the lJnited States, her songs gel little play and her c areer has languished here while nourishing abroad. • Just a year ago, she said, after three years' THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane ''That's on 'O.' To make o 'Q' you just put a handle on it." Saccharin F oOds MuSt Be I abeled . WASIIlNGTON. (AP) -Warning labels on products containing saccharin will soon be re· quired, and the government is proposing similar c:aullons for vending machines. Prohibited, at least temporarily, from banning the artificial sweetener outright, the Food and t>rug Administration will require that labels of products containing saccharin carry a health w~ t ning starting Feb. 21. SACCHARIN HAS BEEN ASSOCIATED with bladder cancer and FDA had sought to ban the .sweetnener, but that was delayed for 18 months by congressional action last November. In the mean- time, further tests are being conducted by the Na· tional Academy of Science and the National Cancer Institute. Meanwhile, FDA is proposing warning labels fbr vending machines which dispense food contain· ing s accharin. IF YOU BUY AN ITEM from a machine and only then see the warning, you can't get your money back, explained FDA. • 8efore requiring the labels FDA is asking for tom ments and suggestions from the public, and In- terested persons should write to the Hearing Clerk OIFC-20), Food and Drug Administration, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, Md .. 20857. 4 Guilty .in Killing LONDON CAP> -Four young people ranginc in age from 12 to 20 years old were convicted of beatlna an alcobollc tramp in an abandoned house last July 1nd then ldllinl him because be said be could ldenUfy them. le1al battle, the Jl'BI released a IUe on her •hieh ahe calla ••paranoid nonsense, a waste of the tax· payer's maoey." "' STRONG STUFF. BVT, THEN, Buffy Sainte· Marie b known for 1tron1 stuff, ever since tbe 1960s when she wrote and sane .. Universal Soldier," an anUwar classic, and "Now That the Butralo'a Gone," a ballad of Indian suffering. 8he was known as an agitator, not so proml- n~t or SQ controversial as Jane Fonda, but she waa knqwoJ tbls writer or sensual Jove soocs and unabatlnc oemands for justice. "Tbe B\lffalo was a rather nalve plea at that time," But!Y said in an interview during a visit here to fdm Sesame Street. For three years, abe bas been a regular on the show with her husband, Sheldon Wolf child, and her l6·month-0ld son, Dakota Slarblanket -called "Cody" by Big Bird. HER IMAGE HAS BEEN TEMPERED but her temper has .JlOt been stilled. "I believed tl)at if people Ol)ly knew abo'1l In· dian problems they would help," she said. "I was wrong. They did not help. "I was black.listed for years, and 1 sUll am." she said. "People will deny it, some dQt\'t know it exists. I used to think it was a matter of taste that my music did better overseas." She speaks evenly and without rancor: "There is a deliberate effort oil the part ot certain private interests, government, and radio broadcasters who each felt that 1 deserved to be suppre55ed for my• s upport of the' Indian people and songs Uke 'Universal Soldier'!' OVER THE YEARS, BUFFY had been invited to sing in the White House by former presidents Johnson and Nixon and to appear on television. "But I declined," she said, "'because they just wanted nice songs. not songs of content." She remains in the public eye in her role on Sesame Street where Buffy the spangled enter· tainer tap dances and sings and Buffy the mom· .~ , Paul Cahoon, 20, who dropped a piece of brick wall weighing more than 100 pounds on t,b~ man's tiead, aot life imprisonment. His 12-year-old half-~' brother, WilliamRoyCahoon,andWendyAnnStone, " 15, were ordered imprisoned inde.finitely because they are minors. Wendy's boy friend, Henry Georae Ruaael, 17, will be sentenced later. mic h.a.s a heart: t'o h~rt ~alk with Big Bird about sibling rivalry. But sbe no longer bas a recording contr•ct. .She plans to do ~dren's records for Sesame Slreet. ••NOW I FELL FltEE AND in control of my music," she said. "Someday I hope to find a re· cord company with (Umption, one that doesn't want fluffy·B\lff~, th• .,OP 4in1er. Th~t company will have to ijeal with real problems, like blacklist- ing." MeanUme, she does benefi~ concerts for American Indiaos and performs overseas. Recent- ly sh~ returned on the Concorde SST from a Pari$ concert that drew 55,000. Last October 1be laJ>I for Queen Elizabeth 11 at her jubiJffcelebraUoniaot;tawa. . She livd ln Hawaii where sbe feels comfort•· ble with the racial mlx. · "WE HAVE .A VOLKSWAGON, a Mustan1. 8 dirt road ~· wxne ~ace there," she said, "and sometimes ha\>~ a tffP« for our ettjoyment." When Seliaine St.l'e'et was IUDl4d there, Buffy Sainte·Marie seemed fv &om agitator or sub- versive as she aave Big Bitd a bi8 hug on a lush, untroubled hillside. But her immediat~ concern is legislation in Congcess. She. and Indian activists HY there are 11 bills which would barm Indians. "The bllls would do away with hunting, fis. hlng,..trapping, mineral and <>Ut~ rights. Treaties would be extinguished," she said. SHE RECITES A MORBID litany: "There is terrorism against activist Indians and over 200 un- solved murders of Indians in South Dakota. '"More than 3,000 Native Am~can women have been sterilized without thelr knowledge or consent in the last three years. Genocide ls not too strong a word. ' ''Yet we entertain and baby·sit America's children day after day, year after year as a con· tribution to art and the American family. But we will not keep quiet." .. J • J TV PAIR SPEAK WITH URGENCY ON RIGHTS Buffy Selnt•Merte and Husband HOME OWNERS RABBITT IMS. si.c. 1n1 ltl4HAltlOl IL\IO. COSTAMl8A 548-5154 NEED A LAWYER? Low Legal Fff •Divorce • Bankruptcy •Criminal • Wiiis-Probate • Incorporation • Accident-Injury • Eviction 640-2507 ~HR. OON$ULTATION-$t0 .. I \ 'C \ J INSIDl:: •Ann Landers •Erma Bombeck •Horoscope •Lifestyle DAILYPLOT' From left: Assemblyman Ron Cordova (D-Newport Beach), Hon. Paul 'pr1o1o (R·floor l~ader), Eileen Padberg and Assemblyman Bruce Nestande (R·Tustln) discuss legisla- tion. A Day in the LUe Of. a Lobbyist !fieronly woman lobbyist from Orange County often puts 1n a 1~-hour day. She says her real work is done over dinner and a drink because during the day an elected of· ficial's time is limited. By CHERVl.i ROMO Of lM D•lly l'ti.4 St.It Eileen Padberg is a lobbyist -though she dislikes the word -preferring instead to call herself a "legislative coordinator." She is one of a handful of women lobbyists (about 39-of the 750 registered) in the state capital -and the only woman from Orange County. Ms. Padberg represents the Orange County Employees Association and a .W,000- member organiza tion of non-union state , employees called the California Independent Public Employees Council. She commutes between her Santa Ana apartment and Sacrament0i.. where she main-tains a tiny, $150-a -month bachelor f1a~ Her apartment, located just steps away from the Capitol, is only two floors above "David's" - a regular hangout for lobbyists and elected of· ficials. The 33-year-old's day be~ins early as she runs into State Sen. Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach, who is also on his way to the capital, at Orange County Airport. They agree to sit together and share a morning paper on the· flight. On the plane, the Republican senator and the woman lobbyist discuss pending legislation -and Carpenter good.naturedly says be could never "back her socialist schemes." She smiles at Carpenter, an old friend, and says that when she started her job four years ago, she couldn't even get some Orange County legislators to talk viablewayofllfe ln Sacramento. There ls one rule 1n the state capital. sbe says, and that's tbe rule of credibllitJ. When yo u give your word, you had better st.,id by it:· "A woman has to work twice as bard. U a man. makes a mistake, they forgei lt; but 1f a woman makes a mistake, they never forget.'' · Ms. Padberg says sbe was hired without ex··, perieoce, but she always has be4!n inV9lYed jn politics ("no formal education though' ). She has managed numerous campaigns, including the s uccessful 1974 Oran1e Count)' sheriff· coroner e\eCti<>D ot Brad Gates ud tbe Southem Callfornia campaign of U.S. Senator s. I. Hayakawa. "WNR I~ caa;w. l ••told to'IMt 1111 nose cl••n ... 1a1• tile •ta.lac• tive single woman and she bas done just that: "I never date when I'm in Sacramento.". The state capital, she explains, is like a very small town, and the biggest part of her work "is just being visible" -letting the· legis lators know she ls there and why. "It's the kind of thing that the minute I get to the airport I'm working. Whether I'm having a cup of coffee, am out for a drink, or sitting in their (legislators') offices -it's all p.r." . Ms. Padberg says the real wort of •·lOb- byist ls often done not ln an omce 1ltuatloo but perhaps over dinner or a drink-because dur· ing the business day au elected official's tillle is limited. • s CJ -- De6ly ............ ~ClllfWI....; e State Sen. Dennis Carpen(er with Ms. Padberg on floor of Senate Chambers. They also must fill out monthly reports stating exactly how much they have spent on everything from plane fare and cabs to food. Lobbyists are not allowed to spend more than $10 on,any one legislator per month, making it difficult, she complains, to even take someone out to dinner. "I believe in full disclosure, but I don't think these kin& of limits are useful," she says. .. Therearealwayspeoplewbogetaroundit." Occasionally, Eileen Padberg is even called Gil to present a bill to the legislature: .. A 1obbyist will present a bill when the Ie~lator can't be there ••• I have to be pre- pared for all the obstacles in between. A Jeg\51attr ts-not up on exactly everything and sometime be needs to talk to a lobbyist ••• I belieytf lobbyists are a very important part of Once.fmlde the ~ic building, she has coffee with two male lobbyists and discusses an upcomtni Jegislator-Jobb)'ist tenn1a toumament. Afte~', as she makes her way through the balls, she JS greeted by various lawmakers with com- ments like, "Hello beautilull What are you here for?" Eileen Padberg stresses the importance or understanding political maneuvers and "games." She recalls that one of her bills was defeated because two state senators bad a dis· agreement -and one of them voted "no" to get back attheother. - ,. IJ •'1 -··· ., .. ,, .,. • about collec)ive bargaining for state and county employees. Now they sit down and discuss it. "I wort a lot of 11lghts and a lot of weeken&," she says ()f bet $1,200 a-month, plus expenses, position. · thes~m.:' . " · Arter arriving at Sacramento Airport, the Orange ~ty lobbyist asks Sen. Carpenter if A lobbyist has to be able to gauge .. the In· teraction between people" and she admits It's often "nerve-wracklng." It ls not uncommon, s he says, for a legisJatot" to •ole "no" on a bill just because he doesn't like the lobbyist who proposed it. "Legislation isn't always passed on its own merits." I' • Iler biggest problems, says Ms. Padberg, stem from dealing with elected officials who have inflated egos. and the fact that she ls a woman. "The Old Boys Club," spe explains, is a · • ..I Became of the P-OUtlcal )\eform Act ol 19'1«, which went into effect in 1915.')ls. Padberg, as · ar e all lobbyists, is 1"Ulred to resister with the ~ stateoneeeverysession-eveey.J"eara.. ' she can drl'°" with'him to town in his chauffered state car ("ltsavescabfare").Sheisdroppedoff at her a~ent, leaves her suit.case, and walks aerossthe~trtlettl>tbeCapitoL After checking the daily state calendar Ms Padberg decides Lo visit the assembly, whi~h ~ <SeeLOBBYJST,Paiea) We sent each other oomlcal Valentines. Girls sent each other Valentines. They piectged endless friendsbJp. Well, those dafl are .gone (but not forgotten), dear hearts. Now we run up a tab with the drug store. Go in bock with the eonf ectioners. De~ hangs around our necks from the expensive restaurant, the specialty shop, tlie cbampasne salelman. The banker bl$ us by tho throats. .-,, . ' ~ , .. ,,, I• 11•1 ,,. ,, • •1tl .,, . 'I • i rt •IJ H l. .,. • I i C2 DAILY PILOT Tuesday, February 14, 1978 (Fr•m Pa&eCU just going anto session. Entering the gallery door, she is ucknowledeed by a cuard. who knows au the lobbyisll by ale.ht. ·She ls not allowed lo speak to any lawmaker until the session is over. IC an usemblyman forgets, and even leans over the raUlng to tallc to her, she will be asked to leave by the guard. After being invited into the' assembly lounge to be Introduced to some officio.ls, Ms. Padbere is stopped ln the hallway ~Y an Orange County assemblvman who ls anaey because his name was mentioned in a county employee magazine. S h e listens calmy to tbe ou tburst - and then tells hJm his name was mentioned only as an elected official to whom letters could be written. Lunch with Sen. Carpenter cons\sts of a brief walk to Pose)"'s -lhe "In" restaurant for lobbyists and leglSlators. It's a place where deals are made over steak sandwiches as easily as over de$k tops. Carpenter asks the lobb)'ist when she's go· ing to "get out of this line of work ... Ms. Pad- berg, agreeing her job is difficult. says she hopes to "some<lay go into government affairs with a private industry." After lunch, It's a visit to the senate cham- bers -where the session is ending after a brief 30 minutes ("It's an in·between time of tbe year"). Because the session is oyer, libe is free to speak to various state senators -knowing a favorable impression can mean as much a.s anythine else. prepared to inform and assist lawmakers in un- derstanding the details and ramifications of ~ bill. Back in the corridor, where lobbyists first earned the name by making deals ouuide legislative chambers, she stops to talk with John Wendt, an independent advocate for several clients. As she walks away, she comments about how difficult tt must be to represent so many clients and keep the legislation 1Q"aigbt. Many of the lobbyists, like Wendt. live in the capital and Ms. Padber& admits sho ls sometimes at a disadvantage traveling to Sacramento for only a few days every other week. Back on the flrat floor of the Capitol build- ing, s he passes the governor's oflice. About 30 people are staging a sit·in demonstration In the reception area, and chantina: "We want Brown.· We want jobs." It's a protest over the aov· emor's plea to cut unemployment insurance benefits. The lobbyist remarks: "These things hardly ever happened when Ronald Reagan was gov· emori now there's a demon.stratiQQ.every day." As • 1riend ~es her on a personar tour of Gov. Jerry Brown'• complex of offices, she once aJ(ain remarka about the dllfereoce in style bet ween Brown and Reagan. The balance of the afternoon is spent mak- ing courtesy calls on Oranae CoWlty legislators in their Sacramento offices. Part of her job, Ms. Padberg says, is polling elected olflclals to find out their positlona OD certain issues. ANNLANOERS /H OROSCOF Lobbyis ts, "on the whole are preuy apolitical," she s ays, bul admits that most of the lawmakers know she has been act.lveJy ln· volved ln Republican polltka. "But 1 don't brin1 my penooaJ feelin1&5 tnt.o wort." Of t.be county's elected at.ate ofnclall, she aaya: "Orance County has a ~ share of J(ood le&Jalat.ors. We have a couple of bad oaes (she terms them those who •'barely know bow to read and write"). but basically, they're pretty good auys and they all have tbcir own area of specialty." Would Eileen Padber1 Uke to run ror otnce someday? 0 No," she replies. "I'm not in tune wltl\· that. MosUy, because you owe part of your lite tosomeoneelse-toyour constltuents." Her first love, she says, is managlna cam- paigns. During election years, Ns. Padberg takes a leave of absence lrom her lobbyist posi· \ion: "I keep sayin& I'm never going to do another campaign. Bul lt's like a gun that goes off in my head. It's my first love, but it's not a good livelihood. I was the first woman to go into i~ so I sort of broke a barrier." After visiting a new state as$emblyman, who asks her if she has developed ''Sacramento Fever" yet and to which she curtly replies ·'no," the lobbyist is off to Ellis• for a drink and more elbow rubbing with lawmakers. Then it's on into the night as she meets other legislators at "Frank Fat's" for dinner. Later, she will stop In at "David's" for a nightcap-and more business. Eileen Padberg Behind the pleasant smile, Eileen Padberg has done her homework. She knows of upcoming and pending legislation that might affect her two orpnlzations and, she s ays, she is always "t want to know how our legislators stand ••• My board of directors and my association want to know who their friends are. I am the on- ly !ink with these people and l have to give them a clue about where they stand ••• •• By the time she walks up the stairs to her tiny apartment wlth \ts fold·down bed, Eileen Padberg will probably have put in a 12·lo·H hourday •. Everybody's Different ( Horose~pe ) DEAR ANN: My wife and I have shared 23 years of good compan- ions h Ip. raised two daughters and a son, and we enjoy a healthy sex relationship. The purpose of this letter is to share our secret with others. If may work for some and sound crazy to others. Everybody's dif- ferent. About six years after our marriage the honey- moon (ever cooled down. Since my wife Is the frugal type I decided on the "economic" ap- proach. When the mood overtakes me l playfully luck a ten·dollar bill in her bra. lf· she is in· terested she pockets the ten. If not, she returns the leR plus flve Of her own A•• -Laaclers WEDNESDAY, FEB. 15 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <March 21-Aprll 19): Accent on movement. ideas, neighbors. relatives, short journeys, knowing difference betweetl wi&hlnC and wishful t.blnk.ing. TAURUS (April 2Q.May 20): Ac~nt on power. financial wizardry, assuming authority, be •II bad. Some folks emotlou.1 problem that responsibUity. might say tbe:re are cer· bas aborteoed your at· · GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Cycle high· - taln tblnp money can't tentlon a spaa _ or a take initiative. Hake new starts, di&play in- buy -but apparently wtsh to fill or a fear of dependence Of thought, action. y o u b ave prov e d aacceedl.DC -I 1a&1est · CANCE& (June 21-July 22): Look behind otherwise. couaaeUai. the scenes -check aspects related to cloaed- D E A R A N N DEAR ANN: That let· door meetings, secret agreements. LANDERS: Please tell ter about the "Com-LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)°:-·~mphasls on the 26-year-old genius pulsi ve Pack Rat" romapUc Involvement, creaUvlty, lntuJUon. that he is very lucky. At 'describes my mother to VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent OD ambi- least he was able to a ••T." I learned long tion, politicel aspiration, civic duty, makin1 finish college. I am a agotolooktheotberway. room at more elevated position •. 19-year·old "genius" I'm sure the (ear of pov-LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accent oo the who may have to drop erty caused th.ls. Keeping future, potential, ability to perceive, to com· out ot school because I things makea her feel munlcate. Aquarius, Leo and Scorpio figure don 't want to put secuce .. _. .. . prominently. Plan ahead, fill in missing pieces. another load of Ds and Molher lives alone and SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. ~1): Dtg deep, re- Jo's on my transcript. has a lways treasured ject the superficial, study bidden meanings, de- The problem is that her junk. I realize that tect subtle nuances. Financial position ol mate. Maturity Grows Up What are you goJ.ng to be when you grow up! I've seen mothers lean over a crib and bold a hand no bigger than an AJJca-SeU.ier tablet and ask the question. I've seen grand-. mothers ask it of a. child who could walk under a coffee table to try to make some without bitting his head. sense out of it. They I've seen .teachers couldn't. po.ae the quest~on or • Most sit in the mlddle children who cant color of their beds surrounded lnwtheulllnesdn't' ·t be t 'f by t:ollege catalogues o a grea 1 and wonder "Where do ••g ..... u_..• d "be-· ' . row6&oe ., an,. I fit?" They listen to ing something oc· career specialists ahd curred on the same day? t r y t o i m a g l n e . My children's am bi-themselves ln any one or hons read Uke tbe the niches. Am J aimlmt y e llow pages of a tooblgb?Twolow? Manhattan phone book. Like Pippin, they are One wanted to J>e a doc-all special. tor unW be discovered One of my kids wanted you had to wash up to to be the President, but the elbo~. • he didn't want to work One w~ted to be the out of his home. mother, but she was forever watching ber weight. We act like we are on a timetable. The day a fter graduation we roll o ut of bed and l•Y. "Well, here I am all grown up and a physicist right on schedule." Maturity is a time when you begin to know yoursel(. Who you are, what you are.. and what you can be. The other day I heard a visit.or say to our col- lege son, "What are you going to be when you ' I fi~ure in the past 22· years I have handed out SJ,000 in unreturned ten· ' dollar bills, but l a m at leas t a million dollars ahead if you can put a price tag on mutua l satisfaction, together- ness and a good night's sleep. Just sign me - HAPPY WALLY WHO MAJORED IN ECONOMICS everyone was so im-one person's junk is partner grabs spoUight. Be discreet. play cards pressed with my brains a n o t her person 's cloee to dlest.. I didn't bother to learn treasure. Yet my SAGIT?AJUUS (Nov. 22-l5ec. 21): Accent Pope until be figured out One wanted to go to you had to work Sun· sea in a flabing boat, but days. he refused to wear boots grow up?" 1 • He said, .. With a lot of DEAR WALLY : Like you satd, it may work for s ome and sound • crazy to others. • Everybody's dHfereot. <Some people are more different than others.) But anything that pro- duces mutual satlsfac· tlon, togetbemess and a good night's sleep can'L ';- Club Calendar run.v each \\'ednt.sday an the Do.ily Pilot and contoinl notticea of women's and smrice club meetings and ~Is for thP following ioeek - ThundaJI through Wtdnts· day. Send notice• lo Club Calendar, ~ Pilot, P.O. Box 1~. Costa lfe'IO, CA 12626. B• ~ to include 11our nam~ and phone number. how to exercise self· brother is in a constant on marital status. circumstances. understand· con troL I mas tered s tate oC rage because ing public pressure or reacUoos to your efforts. every subject so easily I Mother hangs on to so Taurus, Ubra figure promlnenUy -ao does the soon became bored. By much ''trash." He talks number 6. Be patient, diplomatic, avoid forcing the tlme I reached high a bout lt incessanUy. issues. Yes,youcanaffordtowait. school I didn't have the How can I get him to un-CAPIUCO&N <Dec. :za.Jan. 19): Go slow - self-discipline to do the derstand? A word from study Sagittarius message. Ae<:ent oo employ• humdrum stuff. I failed you might help. -NO ment, diet. health, dependents, pets. Avoid see. one subject three times NAME PLEASE ing only as you wish situations, people could be. because I couldn't keep DEAR N.N.P.: Ac· AQUABJUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Good lunar my mlnd on it. I barely tually, l&'s none of your aspect coiDcides now with si8Dlficant declsloos. got out of high school. brother's bualneu wb•t changes, love and children. Tendency to Now I'm having the your mother banga on speculate is accented -stick to number 8. You same problem in col-to. Are you sure she are involved.. Nothing is halfway -it is bot or Jege. hung on tO IDM when he cold, all or nothing. Know it and be ready. Please tell the parents was a baby? Sounds like · PISCES (Feb. 19·Marcb 20): You can soc- of gifted children not to she m~t have dropped ~esafully complete transaction. You also d.ts- let them get mentally him on tµa he~. · cem truth about a relationship. , lazy. And while you're .---~~;;;;;;;?~~-=:---"-----------~------ at it tell the so-calJed RUFFELL'S educators of America to UPHOLS-RY give us bright ones a 111: challenge instead of the standard pap that they are dishing ouL -TOO · SMARl' FOR MY OWN GOOD DEAR T.S.: It's tqo bad some alert t.eacbe.-dld a 't dta,nose your l)roblem eub. Bralaa are a eerrn.te dalng SQ waate. Oil the oaulde cbaaee tbal ~ llave u W...Y•W-' ...... ''"...._. •• 4 c-. ,..__ 141-0Jlt __ .. , Pre-Inventory Reduction SALE %OFF 'Tm really amazed that only one treatment removed the lines I · hated so much. This is selected ~rchandiae from out stodc, regularly sold In our own at ore. Chains Rings Pendants Pins Watches Bracelets Necklaces Charms I can't .m!1. for my next treatmentt" Eatrtngs of all Klnds Another wanted to be .for anybody. a real estate man so he One wanted to be a luck .•• old.'' He's getting there. could play on step& all day long. · .. What are you going to be when you erow up? The pressures of know· ing became so impor- tant that a generation or kid.a took off ln the '60s T~ Jingles calendar rum each Thtrndafl in thf! Daily Pilot .and conlam.s not1cu o/ .actloUle• /~ 3'ingle• for the followmg ~ek -FridaJI through Thursday. Send noti«s to Chnyl Romo. Daily Pilot. P.O. 80% 1560, Co$fa Meta, 92626. Be eure to intlude your name,. oddr•sa. and phone number. Noffcn must be in our band.a two Wfflu m. ad~ REVOLUTIONARY VALUES SWEET-HOT MUSTARD SA ¥E lOC 60'";.r R~79C BIGUARN CHEDDAR SAVESOc Off Ha. lb. price, NF.WYORK CHEDDAR Colored & white'. t1harp SAVE20c BEEF STICK: Summer S.Ul4U~e Cut any 11iu 20C OFF Re". pound pri~ Buy th~ whole atick with th~ usual clillmunt 40COFF k(!j(. pound pric:. t I • l ' , i .. ..... -- ANALYSIS I CAR EERS I BUSINESS \ \ Tuesday, February 14 197a DAILY PILOT c 2 A Coast Companies Report lllllll!!lflll!lll!!lfllll!!!![llllll.!!~ Saered CoUJs Auurds, Acquuitions, Activities Listed ~~~ftu..f~· River OliangeS An energy conservation program has earned ShE>raton's Newport Beach hotel a Southern California Gas Co. Commercial Concern Award for energy conscrvulion. The program, put into effect by Jeffrey Morse. general manager and Ed Schwartz, Sheraton·~ chief engineer, has reduced gas consumption by 31 percent, equal to the amount s~ficient lo serve over 465 average homes for a month. To achieve this drop in gas usage, Sheraton had now restrlctors Installed in showers and water saving kits installed in toilet tanki.. Solar panels help heat the therapy pool and u i.olar cover helps to maintain pool temperature. reduceb evaporation of water and chemical& and also helps keep the pool clean. In addition, the Sheraton had a s pecial boiler installed for kitchen use, replaced 150 watt bulbs w1lh special energy reflector bullJs, adjusted gas· r1red equipment to operate al peak efficiency and lowered the swimming pool temperature. Circulating hot water temperature has been reduced from 150 to 125 degrees where possible : thermostats were lowered to 68 degrees for heal· mg and 78 degrees for cooling. Air conditioning equipment is started and stopped manually ai. needed. Me•a Fi,... BUfl• Btdldiag M e::.a A!.~oc1<1te::.. a Costa Mesa-based engineering firm . has purchased an 8,000-square· foot bwJdmg from Two Potato. Inc .. a women'::. casual dress wholesaler. Terms of the transaction were not released. The building is behind Mel>a Associates' ex.isl· ing faC'ility on Airport Loop Drive. Two Potato plans to build a 20,000.square-root building in the lrvine industrial Complu-Tustin. ~ete1port Fl,.. Atlu ·~ Newport Equity Fund!!, Inc. Newport Meach. has opened a branch office ln Palm Springs. ll is the firth omce for the brokerage firm. Jr,,lne IJoolutore Opetq The Sc1ent1f1c ·Technica! Book and Copy Center has opened 1n the Irvine Indus trial Complex. Irvine Books, supphe~ and services cater to the in- terests and needs of engineers, scientis ts. mathematicians and businessmen, according to James Harrod, manager. 1'1.,.af14!-.ettt Ff raa Olff!ll• Michael Flynn b"as -opened Flynn Financial Management in Irvine. The firm will serve com- . panies that require financial management but are not lar~e enough lo hire full-lime executives for the purpose. Operation• Shift Due Computer Automation, Inc .. Irvine, plans to shift marketing. engineering and manufacturing ~perations for its smallest minicomputer product family to Richardson, Texas, a suburb of Dallas. Selected engineering management will transfer to Texas Crom company headquarters in -t-~;...+~:i.-...-4 • ...-~ Irvine. but most employees will be hired l<><:ally. C'Jaarter Ser.,,ee 01(.'ff A. charter pai;senger and cargo service firm t' 1';::;t:t"'t~~~~: .. ;!:., has been granted authority to schedule regular flights between Calexico. Mexico, and Orange ~· i, :.~~tJIUl!lli County and Los Angeles International airports, the · California PubllC' Utilities Commission has an 1-tl~~M-~!2~ nounced. tlj~~~~~.J;'.~JB~ Martin Av1at1on h&i. ~chcduled two round trips ~ each weekday from Orange County to Calexico on •••••••••• an e1ght.pa:,scnger pl&nc One-way fare from Orcsnge County to Calexico will be SJ6 04. From Los Angeles, the cost is $45.58 fJCI Cal& for Al .... •l The UC Irvine Graduate School of Adminislra· tion has announced formation or an alumni as- sociation to help bridge the gap between students and the community, according to St.eve Irvine, chairman of the association steering committee. For the Record • .............. OIM•rrlafl' "Our general intent is to help in building nM"*-Tt bridges from the graduate school of administra· THOMPSON, LAwr• K•r~ •no th . .• 1 .d tl•f'TY Cwrtb; HliNDeASON, IHI .. t1on to e commumty. rvme sai . 8 .,,d ellt•eeti. .1.· eLYTHE. Development of internship programs, student •"1•1 E....._d arid M.rv C•r0•• . , . 5"Y0~"1 ,,..,"I Ii,~ H•twl<o t·ounsehng ;.ind career development services will w etsBAAT, l)M)(e £. oftd 111c,..rcr be offt>red uy thl· U~M){'lat1on, Irvine said. •.;BRIGGS. Sondr• "I(" MICl N•I ..... 0111; JOHNSON, Wllllem Allfl Md Fi,... PlaM Acqubidon Computer Automation, Lnc.. Irvine. bas an- nounced the signing of a letter or intent to acquire the entire busines!t or General Computer Systems, lnc., an Addison, Texas, firm that manufactures and services data entry and word processing systems through 35 company locations in the Unit· ed States and the United K.Lngdom and through a dis tributor network in 18 other countries. General Computer Systems bad revenues of $13. l million and earnings before taxes and ex- traordinary credits of Sl million for its fiscal year ended June 30, 19'17 The pureha~~ will be for cash and notes totaJl· mg approximately $4 5 milhnn. The agreement is ~ubJect to the approval of the shareholders of Gener al Computer Systems, directors of both com· pames and the execution or a definitive. agree- ment. ~~~={ lti~l~t.'tr~lii1~~· Jr ond 0.'VI A., GOAT, JKkle lH -G4trMdl.Aoe, GREEN, Llll•n 0 • ..,., .. n)1ll'll1> Thom•1; WIEANICZ, Jamel J. ill'O Cor• Su.; RADLEY, Slloron Ind Aov A.; WOOD, Vltllt. L. -Cr1IO 9., SHAFER DI-K. end Oovld L.; DAES8ACH, Ne11<y E"ller lll\d Terry Loe; WAlLI"' C.04 J • .,.d Rober1 W.; OUIHUIS, Motl• Ind lt9"rt Oertle; "'AlllNER, JNM ond Al• 14.; ANOEftSOfj, Wllli.nt Robert •nd Ullde Sue. FOSTE"-~ A. Mel AMrll'l'!I J ,; IEAAY,Mlc.hMt E.INIJudvA.; DEATON, Molly """ 11\CI Jeno Wymort; l!MCH, Held• M. ol\d J•mu R.; WILLIAMS. 8111\1 D. •l\O AllOltcl.t L ; CORNELL, Arthur M •nd Ell&Mletll A.; A8001!ELY, K.., ...U.Morek-J.-111~; l'AAIA5 Cllrlstll\e II Ol'tl Rob•rt H CARPE:lllTEA, ltlc!Wlrd L. """ VMry; TtBetnS. Sonclr• Koy ....., JeMH E~: MAIK\JM, 51\•ron °"" Sllerrln Ali... OUETOT, ~Mr• ""'""" .,,d Tllomn 1..tt; Hl!NDERSOH. J•~ Akllord -(¥04 Jnne; SANDY. S11erry Key ..... 0eorve ~01; 8AKER. Herbw\ 0.. 1N1 Eulo M.; MCKEOWK. a.wrty H. IN Roblfl Western Pacific Financial Cor:>., Newport J.: ALLEN, W1111-L. -E•'- Beach, has reported net income of $889,000, or 93 :'k~~~::: J!:.': :4 ~"= cents a share, for the first six months of the fiscal e.; HANSEN, Unde .-on •Nt •- year, compared with $1,136,000, or $1.19, in the like ~:~,~~~J~iue1t. Dotlolo L. •114 months a year ago. · HUSE A, 9en\ko v. INl <>-'ee J .; Revenues for the six months were $9,513,000, wesT, 0·-~ •"" """"r J•n· nl"91; WOOD, Hol"lld E oftd SvM• compared with $8.565,000 in the prior year. c For the three months ended Dec. 31. the BAOWN. Tllno111., •no S•••ll; d t · TEFTS, Petrl<le A. end AUQUtl M • secon quarter. nc income was $326,000, or 34 . L£HHEA1, """""' ... "'· -s..~ C'ents. compared with $695,000, or 73 cents, in the L.; cox, ~· o. •nd ~· L . Year carhcr period Revenues for the quarter were OAK. oe~• "· •nd Ro11er1 s , . POLITANO, Oi-F Md Jolw> J Not Too 14kely. By THOMAS D. EUAS Spurred by the recent drought. Southern and Central California interests are comlng up with one idea after another for exploJtatlon ol riven to the north. Last summer it was DemocraUc Slate Seo. Ruben Ayala of San Bernardloo who ottered a pla11 for damming the Smith, Eel and Klamath rivers and diverting their now to Southern California and the San Joaquin VaJley. THEN A LOS ANGELES County supervisor proposed sending much of the flow from the Columbia River south. Now two legislaton are pustunc a sllpUy less ambitious plan with the same goal. ___ so_ur __ H_E_R_N __ Republican Seo. CALIFORNIA William Campbell or Los FOCU Angeles and Democratic ---------Asse m blymao Daniel Boatwright of Contra Costa County want to spend $3.6 billion to exploit lhe Eel Rinr and send !ts water south. Their idea is to create moN than 2 million acre feet ot new water supplies annually for the state's farming areas and the population centers of Southern California. The idea bas picked up sup- port from several agricultural area lecislators and from the Callf ornia Farm Bureau. BACKERS BA VE ALSO ID&ED the expensive Los Angeles polltical consulting firm of Joseph Cerrell. muaJly associated with established Democratic politicians, to publicize lbe Eel l\lver proposal. lt's doubUul, however. that the plan will get far, even with Cerrell's assistance. His last maJor legislative push was for a proposal to ban lo('al rent control laws. a project that failed. It is the Eel River's status as a protected wild river that makes the Campbell·Boatwricbt plan unlikely to succeed either in the Legislature or later if it is put before the voters as the two legislators would like. • ENVIRONMENTALISTS con· sider wild and scenic rivers like the Eel one of Calltornia's most precious resources and will go to almost any length to protect them. And The Association with the project or Cerrell and some of the Legislature's more con- servative members wUl further irk the conservationists. The alst time ebv1ronmen· ·~1t• Im migration Com m1ss)oner Leonel J Castillo says h e sometimes travel!- incognito to imm1 gration office~. speakin g Spanish and dressed us a poor immigrant finds the trips "\'ery in- t1·uctw~ ... Chemical In Spray Banned WASHJNGTON CAP > -The chemicals widely used as propellants in s pray cans are being eliminated through bans ins tituted by the Food and Drug Administru t1on . Environmental Protect.ion Agency a.nd Consumer Product Safe- ty Commission. Th e c hemica1 s, chlorofluorocarbons. have been accused of dam aging the ozone layer, a part of the at· mosphere which pro- tects Earth from hazardous radiation. $4 ,394,000, compared with $4,923,000 last year. lEMBERGER, Ak:IWlro An.,, .,,o Alic• M.rle; THOMPSON, lynell• J one! fl.Obe<t S.; HUHHl!L. T•rl -' 90ATWltlGHT • taf interests became alarmed over development of a river was in 1914, when they qualified and almost passed an initative banning the New Melones Dam, a federal proje<:t not fmanced directly by state taxpa7en. Rut besides pro · pcllunL'> the chemicals have other uses and the three a~encies have scheduled a meeting to discuss whether to try and regulate these also. FilmD~ On Aging A film on th P AmeriC'an way of grow- ing old and diffe re nt ways of coming lo terms with age will be s hown al 1 p.m. Feb. 21 at Orange Coast Colleg<."s Women's Center in the student center building. "Aging: The Sean·h for Eternal Youth" will Q he followed by a di~­ ~ <·ussion led by counselor Belly Inman. $ Information is nvuila- ble at S.56·55.57. -Senior Sex :Talk Set A four-part lecture series on sexuality de- sign e d for senior citizens will begin Feb. 23 at Orange Coast College in C.OSta Mesa. The series. taught by Sylvia Livingston Bogen, will meet from 2:30 to 4 :30 p.m. in ' Science Leeture Hall 2. Admission is free. Topics include trends in sex education and adult attitudes toward sex. AddlUonal 101orma- tion is available by call· jng s56-Q80. Reptiks Res lated Fighter Jets Planned For Mideast Nations ' >t • K~ll; TOPOl.HAK, JoM A. •no Jollft. Pl!ET, F,_,. 1!119"1t 9'ld C-• FreOtrlcll; "°ltN£A, D.E •• ,,o ~,., 1..; ~Al!'Z. DeMIS Wlntem or\4 P1lr1ci. AM; GUTl£AA£1. Ei.M C.tllld --.n.R.J ICIEl'l'&ll. MfrtMft 0. _. St-S.; PIUCE. ICOy Ito 8114 .._.,, ll, Jr.; llOWL£A, Ketll1',... L. .... U-rd P. Jr . McCAAVILLI!, l!dW•rd w. •110 Oet1c:a IC.; OUMTttOl'f', ~ C.. end Petric.I• /ll·1 ;ltlKOWSKt, J---~,.. WASHINGTON CAP ) President Carter haa4iecided on a Middle East warplane package that will give Egypt, Israel and Saudi Arabia some or the jets they seek, but deny Egypt the most sophisticated planes on its shopping list. Carter's plan was disclosed today by administration officials who said Israel will receive both F-15 and F-16 fighters l<> augment earlier d e- liveries. Egypt, whicb also had sought these sophisticated aircraft. will receive only F -SE fighters. Eg'ypt had asked for up to the 150 of the!ie craft in ad· dition to some of the more costly ~o<fels that are being denied. Saudi Arabia, the sources said, will be pro- vided with F-15s. Boston Roads Open BOSTON (AP) -llalf of Boston's highway commuters heeded warn- ings of huge traffic jams today and went to work on trains and buses in· stead, highway officials reported. lt was the ru-st day commuters were allowed to drive into the city since a blizzard buried southern New England on Feb. 6. . CHARLOTl'E, N.C. <AP) -By pleadlng guilty ~ misapplying cor- porate funds, Southern Bell Telephooe Co. avotdecl a Jury trial O'\ a string of charges stemmtng from .. ~ ( IN SHORT J allegations of a political sJu.sh fund. The company admitte4 Monday that some of its employees violated North Carolina law during the early 1970s by falsifying expense vouchers "for the pµr~ of unlawfully divert· ing corporate funds ... lo political candidates ... ESTA811001(. Ullr .. 1!11~1" -O.•lf A/tlerl; HEP8UAN, All· tonl.t• o. Mid am fl.; SANCHEZ. Federico 011d J11e"• Crell11. CARMICHAEL, c.ot'fl\ ofld D•Yld. SMIPPS, ~ lllldt ond N•MY 1.011; ESQUEDA, ArltOftlO It. •Ml IS.HI; CUZICK. f, Metedr •Ml ,._Id H'"'Y; Nl!IU.. l..IMa LO<llU and Vwl*I; MICHELLE, ~ .. A. ond WVl'lttna T.; ICOAEN, Svt.., Gove ond Wlttlem o..I•. VICTORINO, Pllylfls A, end NllcllHI 0 .; GftEtH, 1(--.,,., EHlr'd Anion; SGI AC:CA, M«Jof'le · A. 1!1C1 .......... J.; YOUNG. WIUlem e. •"Cl Cllortott• A.J LANTAY. Tllom•• J •• ,,. Slllrfey M ; MEDL&Y. (.llrl1tt11e M.,., ond ~ Tey!et; DUNCAN, VMi L. -AH• K.; VALl!NTINI!, Juno Ml~lltl• el\d Doml11lcll JoH . , PllOOST, Jolll\ L. ol\d J•en , Pllo ,.·~-DI -.JI PAAOEE,RobertJ.-Holen. t, ..,1117 ff Grll~ STEVENSON, Anti LMIM el\d Devld Je-s; LYTLE. 9.L. and CRANBROOK. British Columbia ~ ... J.; OU>t'llLD. Jlldl.,_ 1#.. (AP} -Eight minutes before a plane _. Del-: sPtte• .. E. Lut1110 v. crash in wbicb 42 people were kilted, :.<; ~ "::" ~ ~:0::.""so~. the pilot was told of snow-removal ,...,, .,. .. "'.,, M•tur1110 . operations on an airport runway, in-~~~~~~':..:"..:='~~ vestigators say. · wRtGHT, 1ta,,t1•1t 1t••011• .,,o to addition, the snowplow operator ~=1::.:"i. STAHLEY, '-1d working on the runway was told that CAMPHu .. Mitt o. _, • ..,. l hin th airport AIMI; 5"AHElt. Qefy _,_ 9olWe L.; a p aae was approac I e veuv. Olflltl t."' .w Def• wer· in this southeastern British Columbia ••n: KHOSHFEKlt, A1111u .,,d l Aaclt*I; MISTI"-a.rtatto L. _.., own. Er111n> w.; HA&.E. DoNld e..,... IJ.S., Israel Meet JERUSALEM (AP) -U.S. Am· bassador Samuel Lewis confer?'ed with Prime Minister Menachem Begin today and told reporters that relations between the two countries have not changed fundamentally despite intensified controversy over J~rael's setU•ments in the occupied Ara& tetritories. But, sald Lewis, close ties do not ''preelude misunderstandings and disagreement.a from time to tune,·• The ambassador described U.S.• Jsraell relations as "close, warm, fr~!od(y and constructive." .. ~ IBTennis ol\d ~ ~; HEWITT. Jesse TIM!Ofte1 .._. Elltft E.; MINCKS, ,._ .. J, ... hf'tl' a.; WHITI!, ElllLMeQI 1!11411 _, J-~; FINN~~...,.,...._,.. lt-tll H.,,,.., JACKSOH, llNfl'ft9 o.illtM _,,. S.f!llllt OllMllft: WEftit. ~ .Joftll eilCI Ker'llll Mert9; CU9UA"• l'tlllli. L Md .Wth A.; tUlt~K. 4-le U.eMl ltldlwdW.: IMl'l'H, Jaee A,. ~· 8IMI ..... ft =~•':c..°":.~= NorlnH l!,J 'ST1'1H~.Dtlll•lo '-•Wre11~ .... SllMft EUUMtll; SOMMl!A, Del'9 Sw IN Mklleel HIM; VIUNWllV.-,, , _ _. G. .... 1.,"'f•G. Families so~ '. 1 .... t.:. . ForHosts · The difference in scenic values between the Eel River and the Stanislaus, the stream cut by the New Melones project. is like nlgbt and day. Jn addition, the Stanislaus is not a protected river, as it already bad some substantial projects along its course. But the Eel has virtually no ma- jor development along its rambling path th.rough Mendocino and HumboJdt countia THE EEL. UKE THE SMITH and Klamath, is therefore a blt of a sacred cow. To reach the ballot. the Eel River plan would ; also need to pass through the Legjs.lature's most ecology-minded committee, the Assembly panel on Resources. Land Use .and Energy. Tbat alone would make it all but impossible for the plan to reach the November ballot. There Js always the chance, though, that legislators looting for votes on proposals Uke farmland ~ation might trade their votes on tbe Eel lot support CJO other issues. IF THAT HAPPENED, THE Eel Rivers fate would be up t.o the voters, and they bave also *n quite comervatioo·minded in recent years. · These factors 111ean agricultural interest wellld be far safer looting to other proposals for tile nu. waw they want, because the chances are slim that IUlYGDe will subject the Eel RJver lo a major disturbao.ca tn the .oear future. Golf Coarse Super Under consideration will be uses of the chemicals in refrigera· lion, foam-blowing. sol· vents, wbipped toppings. local anesthetics and fire extinguishers. The meetings will be held Feb. 21 through Feb. 24 in the Humphrey Building, 200 lndepen dence Av e. S W . Washington. D.C. Nine Make Dean's List Nine Orange Coast students were placed on the dean's honor list for academic excellence al UC Riverside for the fall semester. The students are Henry Churchyard . Costa Mesa; Rebecca Baker, Kathleen Courtney, and Ronald Spicer, all of Huntington Beach; Eric Anderson and Jan Kolar, both of Laguna Beach : Catherine EUinger and David Neal, both of San Clemente and Micbaf'I Courtney, Seal Beach. .t 'Long Green' Beckons ( CAREERS J four years of colleae is a good idea. A few aupers bave master's degrees: others have ..-two-year a~iate degree. K~or in turf management. agronomy, bortlculture. entomology or a related d1sdplloe. Ho.t's the job market! A«ording to the Golf Courie Superintenden~ Auoclatlon of ,.merica. th.ls lm't yet an appticant-dutterecl netd. There are al!Out 7,000 supers at reeuJatfo.n courses, plus several thousand more perlOllS who SU,pervise other~ 0( I areas used ror 1olf. • The auoclaUon, which operates a job referral service, est.ima~ the~ ~. are 900 jOl) openhJP each year. · • (U OAll... Y l'tl.OT Tueeday, Februaty H, 1'71 J . I Mystery Ma.ster Turns 75 H Simenon's Life: 'Everything's Happiness' From AP Dlspa&dael . Master of mystery Georges Slmenoa turned 75 his Just ror life undimmed by an ear problem th~t forced him from the typewnter after writin& 214 novels. "I have organized my hfe in a way so that everytblng is happiness," Simenon said in a b~rth­ day interview published in the Lausanne weekly '-: Je Vols Tout. r WeUwiBhers and Interviewers lined up outside f'l Simenon's house on the outskirts of Lausanne, a '· city beside Lake Geneva to talk to the prolific pro. genitor of plpe·smoking Paris police inspector 1 Maigret. If Simenon's Italian-born companion, Teresa, re-.~ mained in the background. Simenon says be has • :.lept with 10,000 women * Bess Tr um an celebrated her 93rd birthday, quietly as usual and adding another year to her record as the oldest former first lady. Mrs. Benjamin Harrison died in 1948 at age 90, the same year Inde pendence's most famous resident, Harry S. · Truman, was elected president. Mrs. Truman's daughter, . Margaret Truman Daniel, was · •tn Independence, Mo. for her .'birthday. · Mrs. Truman's lifestyle has 0 l>een relatively constant since <December 1972, when the MAS.TaUMA 1ormer president died at age 88. Since his death, _she has made only one public appearance -the 1974 funeral of the family cook. ,, Dale P. Wren, president of Feather River CollC'L{C since its founding in 1968, resigned, effec- tive a~ soon as a successor is hired. Wren a~kct.I the l'C'ralta Community College Dis· · tm·t 's board of trul>tces, which ac~epted ~~ re_s· H~nation, to al>!>l~n him to c. teachmg pos1t1on 1n QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi . ·: ~~· ~ .... : "" . --· .. -··,·:" .. , . f . ,.._ ... -::rii·>. -., . . I ; ... .. •. · .. -1-.· f I I j I I "He didn't read the small print 1n his agent's contract." Author Awards ;Contest Opens , Orange County 'authors who have had , books published during ,1977 are eligible to enter •the book and author •8W8rds competition Of ;µc Irvine's Fl"iends or 1ihe Library. ! Awards will be pre· rienled May 8 at a dinner l';l the Santa Ana Elks Club. Entries may be fic- ~~on, non·Ciction, poetry •, PUBUC NOTICE .. or juvenlJes. Deadline is March 1 and nomination forms can be obtained from the group at UCI, P.O. Box 19557, Irvine. Books submitted will be added to the universi· ty library's special col· lectlons. Reprints, re- vised editions, compila- tions, translations and illustrations are not eligible. PUBUC NOTICE one or the district's East Bay colleges whtcb in· elude Alameda, Laney, Merritt and Peralta col· leg es • A woman nicknamed "Big Mama .. pleaded guilty in San Francisco to the S'l,G88 armed tobbery nf ~ Wal nut Creek bank Nov. tl. Cathy lhwlll, 23, ( )~lttsbur(, who i1 5· PEOPLE foot·3 and welabs 155 _ unds, was dubbed "Big "----------Mama'' by police on the basis or bank robbery surveillance pictures which led to her arrest. She wW be sentenced March 9 by U.S. District Court Judge Cecil Poole and could draw a max- imum or 2S years. • Bill Ballance, a Los Angeles area radio personality for two decades, is moving his show to San Diego. The one·t1me newscaster who turned talk show host was with station KFWB io Los Angeles for 11 years, then with KG BS, KABC and KWIZ ill Orange County. Station KFMB said Ballance would take ~o its airways from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Saturday, starting March 6. • Lt. Gen. Alton D. Slay, once under Senate· attack for his role in unauthorized bombing raids against North Vietnam, was named for promotion to head a top Air Force command. Defense Secretary Harold Brown atinounced that President Carter approved Slay 's nomination to fuJl general and his assignment. lo head the Air Force Systems Command, which handles re· ;..earch and development of new weapons. Slay was operations ofhcer at Air Force headquarters io Saigon at the time of the un- authorized bombing strikes between November 1971 and March 1972. · • Actress Connie Stevens was Malibu home following her re- lease from a hospital after five days of treatment for a blood clot in her right knee. Miss Stevena was released from Los Angeles' New Ho::.pital. She entered the hospital after complaining of a swollen leg, which probably re· suited from a fall two weeks ago during a dance act nt a Las Vegas hotel. ,, resting at her The chairman of a federal ugency declined lo at- tend a closed meeting of his commission, saying he was pro- testing the panel's decision to shut out the public. Wlllbm T. Bagley, chairman or the Commodities Futures Trading Commission. also termed "perverse" the rule un· der which three other·members of the board voted over his ob· jection to close the meeting per· taining to legislative changes involving the agency. aAG\H' "Nobody's angry -we're all over 21," Bagley said, hooking his thumbs into his sus~ders and gazing al the closed door or the conference room where the other commissioners were In session. "I just won't go to a closed meeting." Bagley, 49, is a former California assemblyman. • The bible on which New Jersey Gov. Brendan Byrne took the oath ol otfice tor his second term is one of the un- p a~d debts of the Byrne Inaugural Committee. a rewrt says. Joseph Santangelo, the gov- ernor's chief spokesman, said he bought it the day before the inauguration last month, and hasn't yet been reimbursed. "Does it say when I'm going to gel my check?" be asked about the report. PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 4471 PICT1T1CIUS aUS4MUI fllOTIC910Clt•DtTOltS "CTIT10U1 IUSIMest MAMI nATl!Ml!MT PICT'ITlOUS aUSINHS MAM• S'TATEMUIT IUl'UM* CllMlltT 01' TH• , .. -. STATIMIMT • . Tiie tollOWlftg IM•SOllS .,. .... nATaO.CAUl'OltMIA ,Olt ' t 11e 1011-1,.. perW<ts ••• ct.Int tw•l11n• e•: TH• COUNTY W Otl~oa ellllMUOl' S .O.S. ASSOCIATES ond -"4J7n • STARBORHE RECORDS, •u RELIABLE EHTERPRISl!S, 7JSS E1tote of EOHA v. FRALICK, t:o.n Vltw 0.1 ... L-e .. c:ll, CA. Sl•ter 11 ... 11u«-, Huntlntlon .. ocll, Oe~eolecl. J1.st ca111orn1a t2W NOTICE IS Hl!Al!BV GIVl!H to Ille Marlor Co<POr•llon. • CalllOf'nla StePl'ltn O, Weft99, 17'1? a.ron c;rwO•t• al lllt...,.. .._.,.......,, h<Poratlon. ,.S eoan VI-Ori.,., Ctr, Hunltll9Dft Madi, Collfef..ia lflM all ~"-"l11t<i.ilt!S eealfltt L)Quna S.Kll, CA 9?6) I tU47 I,_ Hid dlCOOlllt Me ,......,..., IO fllt 1 Tiiis buslnns "<'onduclecl by • co.. Debro S. W."09, '79'2 9anln Clf'~ lllem, Wlllt h -uory llOIKlltrit, Jn tt••Oon. Hunt11191on Beach, c..tllornlo '26-41 u.e oltlct ol ,,. cleft\ Of ""•llOvt ,,,. • MARLOR CORPORATION Tlllt blltlnHS ,, c:onciucttd .., • """ G9""-°' to ........ tliem, wlllt • .. _ R. ,..,_ 99nerat JNlftn'ratilP. IM ._.,,.._., ,,_.,.,._ .. Ille u,.. • Vice~ si....-o.-. ~."tlleofflCltof~rldl& Tiit ftllOWlnt --Is CIDlnt """" MMH: SAIL IHl4 MOl'l!L, 1'17 -.ort 81¥d., M--1 ae.ticll, Col"ornla ._., J, 00119 9'"9rtSOfl, .MIO ... ,, Blwo •• M ..... c:Mlfer'lllo'17A '"'' ...,._,. CllftdMc1od ..., ... ..,. dMdu11. • Tiiie ,_ •• 111td wltfl tt. ll'lls •tet......,e -111 .. wtlll tlle F.,., a t.-cotpor·•tlo(I, 21SIS (..,111y ct.,k of Orlll9t count'I' on County Cltrll of 0H1199 Gounty on Howtllerne Bl1td., Suitt tOSt, lor· _________ _..-..;.; ~uarv 17, 1t1t.. January 70, 1'11 ranee, Colllorflla, Wlllcll 11 IM PIK• of --..-11 .a-,.... ~JI f1f ttw lllldlf'~ Ill •II mfl• NTOM It • .._... ' .... Publlsllecl ()l'lnglt e-t \)ally 1'11411, '°" pertellll111 to,,.~°' Mid ... "4t lo• Yk..,. .. ..._, •M Jen. u, 31 atlll Feb. 7.14, tt71 21$,11 cMetlt, Wllfllll _. ll'!Ofltllt Ollel' tlle l--,-""-.-lt-IOlt-COU-•ltT-Ofl--TH-1-- A ....... CM.._..... lltSt MlkatlOnol tllls N!ll<a. 1.TlTa W CALlf'OltlllA f'Olt • ,11111 O.\eclJ-vto. "'' "" 0 ~~tlslttd Ol'anoe C:O.tt 01lly PllOI, $yltt It, l<rotkfl Jr. • COUNTY OP ltANff Jan11ery 2A. JI, •1111 Fttlrwry 7• "· P\JBUC N&l'ICB l~f/ftllilWlllef ...,...,.... "1• . ... ...,._...... l*Mtftt • *°71 PICT'lnous aUMM• otwo••tCM • POii! l MAM9STA111M .. T ~U.tt•' :-..::.:--.... -na• •c NOTICE Tiit r1110W111e ,.,_ .,. Mi '""'.. -cvua. _._, .. 1 ........ •-----------1 "AClf'lC Tit.• a WOO T-..~­Pl.OOltlMO, -H..._ .. 14, C. Tit: UU) ..... -.a.c.t ........ *IP .............. ...::..1.. ......_ 0... llctic• 1 , 6MA W .........,._ CltlltJlllllllf' ..... :=,•t'"'4 c. .. ~ c.. .... " ....... ~"--.. ,. ,,..... ••I• f'l9'4, t16 Dtt M.r __ .;...,_..:...-....;-.~..._...._ ....... A-..., Ollta ...... Clllterllla til17 TIUa..,_ls~tMI., ..., ........... Jolll'cM1., .... Tllfttlt1-wat1 ... ~ ~ty C:tertl ef Or.,.._ C-. .,.,.,.".'( .. ,.,., PUBUC NOTICE lt4119 "°"~TO et1•0IT08I ......... SU .. lrltlOll COUltT 0, TMI: PUBUC NOTlCS PEOPLE I LEGALS PIJllUC NOl'ICE PUBUC NOTICE 4411 ~ICTITtCIUS •ustN•U '4AMlr STATaMl.NT '"• ftlltwlftl penoftt ••• """' .,., ........ IVf •SOM RAHCH LIMITED, MIO Newport '-"'•' Orlwe, No•port ...<11,CA.~ Wittie"' 11 Corp1rat1011, • Celltornla «<11Wt1•. toe ~ <:afll., Orlw, NewtMWt loedc. CA · Lo11ll SttlllMI, 1..S Wffl O'n- Clltlt. AnolltllTI. CA. fttOt 1111, buitneu ti condlKted 11., • ""'''" .,..,,.nfl!p. Wilt._ 11 Cot11ofatlOll Wllli.MO.l"oetl,Prttl*ftt Tiiis Slal-l'lt WM filed "'1tll tN Go11nly Clerk of Or-C-ty on JeflUer, 11, tt71, .an11: Davi.A........_ • ._. l'AC..T, ltOSS, WAltMI, ••llNMAltD & HAllS., INC. .anw-.nat&.a• t•A••-tf-"9n. SMltl M LM"-1-.CM ..... •""1 .......,,. P11l>tllllecl Or-.. ()Ast 0.lly ,....,._ Janua,., 14, it, -FeeNarv 7, u . "" ,.,.JI PICT1TIOUS •USIMUI NAMlr STATIMUfT Tiit foll•lllt --era dol1>9 MlllO\tH: A08EAT FIELDS COMPANY', JJJ) Brlllol 5trHl, Golt• Mno, COi i tor nl• .,._ l'l•tcJ's ~ Inc •• • ~tlt;tt.,.• c°'"'olloft, Ju:I ~ 5trwt, C.SIA -.a, CalllOr'nla 92'» This blnlftell IS ~t.d lrt a CIW- -•tlOfl Flekb $Mel, Inc. lt._,,A-sloit PretleltM l~IS Sta..,.,.,,. •OS Ill .. •1111 t ... C•u"'' Clef• of Orange ~e11ntv "" JOll"'ry 2~, 1'7L ,..,,, Publtslled Dr01191 Qast 0.11'1' .. lktl, Ft0r11ary 1, u. 21, 21, lf71 PUBUC NOTICE ' •• > ,; BE f;f< 'E ~ALENTI~ ~· 'fte \o~e 1ou. \.o~e, 'ft1att, 1 tat1 1.. tameton With all our Love on Valent ine's Doy .. --· Lori l Lisa Dave Bourke to Janie Jim Flagg to Margaret Jack Hall to Julia Ray N. Stewart to Joann Ed Cathcart to Angel Vaughn M. Redding to He10f1 Bob Nord to Margaret Bob Ross to Cathy Bob Green to Helen John Lamson to Pearl George Hammond to Mane Lloyd Budw1g to Evelyn Lotha1r Green to Joy Paul Linowsk1 to Sue . COSTA MESA Bob Duggan to Joanne George Alvarez to Kay Bill Bailey to Sharon Russ Bangert to Dolores Dale Carrison to Kathy Terry Cole to Kathi Wayne Crawford to l11tan Daryl Heinly to La Dons Ed McFarland to Pat Alan Miller to Claire Vernon Nickels to Evelyn Don Rhoades t9 June Weldon Smith to Carleen · Tl*Clay. February 14 1979 DAILY PILOT Q . ,., ~ c ~ ~¥-:::=:::I~ ~~~ ~ ., f {' . . . ' • : . • ···----···· . ' .,. ---~ ()I DAILY PILOT T~. Fet>ruuy 14. 1978 of!ove ~ ~ /Jtut & :lJave We~~t~ YOU fill rrT'f heort with lo\'e~day! .. ----.. .... .. .... ... ..,,., ;J ........ - Come bring your "SWE.ETIE" to J.P. MACS For Dinner Sweetheart Valentines Day Special PRIME RIB · · · $5.9S . Entertainment by Sam Parsons Trio ldlfie-'( ou're my ~\ioveyou .., ry much: HopPY '1eo\entines OoV• ~ left • .. ' . ' • t . . "' lo . ... . • .. .. ~ . .. .. .. ~ t n··· • .. ~\' MOM.DAD, STEVIM. ROllM, NORMA & JASOM I LOVE YOU ALL VlltYMUCH 10P OF THE WORLD S(}K)()L VOLUITTEERS Thank you tor sharing your day & helping a hltd & learning tus way. ~rom att the Parents. fnends & Staff T.O.W. . ~. Febnulty 14, 1178 DAILY PtLOT " I Love You Cbattie Katb11 M " ·~"Iberg DAILY PILOT ' ~ • . . ,. ' lO W.S. So g\ad 10~ are my Va\enttne A.S •. • . '1 ·~· :o ' ... • ,._.;..~ ·--· ··""° ..... ~ .. - lrett&Tom • ea To,._,.,... 0c-. •.. ., .... ~Cos. Day. M&-$an th ' Happy \lalentin · Easter Egg In ~he 8~1ttle luCk I'll hide YO~~ doesn ·r tum red arh. I hope Stephani to Brand;, Flut"' ~ Vatentine·a Day. KJsse! .,, uby, & Eserow. l ove. Pai>a-!en Hippy Ydcntine's Day lo••· Irving, IRVINE, DEVINE, "'Come Sail Away with Me." We hope y~r day 1s as nlce & full of fun as you are. HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY ! Love, Julie, J ohn. Kathy & Terry ~. ffebruary 14. 1978 DAIL V PILOT C7 ·1 . I .... tll ••• Ir~ n;e or u ••• Ill No l '"· )l.. -lx ... .... t4 •• z I· 4, . IO (lt DA.IL V PILOT Tundlly, flltruary 1•. 1979 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY CillACIOUS U•AISLI 5000 Sq ft + sllp. Pool. jacuz.z.i, sauna, 6 BR. ;Ai~ ,.......,..,Motte•: 64lboa Island Really All real estate advertised '"""" ,,,..~._._..,.," in this newspaper is sub· 673•1700 ject to the Federal Fair ------- Hous ing Act o f 1968 which makes it illeeat to ad verlise "any pre rerence, hmitat1on. or dlscnrrunatJon based on race. color, rellg1on, sex. or natJonal ong1n, or an intention lo make any such preference. lim1ta llon, or dacrim10atJon." NEWPORT HEICiHTS Rustic 3 BR, ram-rm, brick frplc. range & oven, dishwasher $149.950 JACOIS REAL TY 675-6670 IVY COVERED SHIHGU COTIAGE No fool·in! 2 bedroom, 1 bath shingled home with beamed ceilings, paned windows. shake roof and a winding brick walk thru and ivy covered yard. No fool -in, but there's more: a s unny detached one bedroom income unit' with its own private patio yard. Both fo r $145,000! No fool-in! U pii.jl()UI: liVM I:§ REAL TORS ·~ 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar .ilso m Mesa V1•rtl\',Jt 546-5990 I This newspaper will ool CH ARM 1 NG NEIGH· Getlef'OI I 002 GeMt'ol knowinf ly accept any BORHOOD 3 Br, hdwd ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• advert sing ror real nrs. oversz'd lot, Sad· -----------------1 esule which is in vlol1&· dleback schl district. tJon orthe law. Owner must sell VA FHA terms. Call agl, --------1 5'9-8062. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA ________ 1 Beautiful 5 year old duplex Each unit has EIUlORS: Adnrttwn ..... checll tt.lr od1 dally .... report ff'- ron 9-clahty. TIM DAILY PILOT ..-1 l abllty for tM flnt ltt- cornct IMertiOft oftly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Gwral 1002 lung sized bedrooms, 3 upstairs + 2 downstairs. t-.:ach has wood burning fireplace, bw It-in elec- LIDO ISLE Newly remode led 4 bdrm., den, 4 baths. living rm. w/cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. llGo CANYON 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broadmoor Plan 3 w/patio views from each room. 5325,000 IAYFROHTS Several fin e bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR t n ca I a pp LI a n c es . J us t """!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! NEWPORT IEACH tike a home. $146,soo. = ••••••••••••••••••••••• J ol i Boy~odP Orov" NB blS· blbl 450 NEWPOHT CENH:H OHIVE 7!.>'J 0.11 I GcMr.. 1002,CiHcral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;;;;iiiiiiiir.P.~mr.m;;;:m· MESA VB.DI CHARMER -Big beautiful 5 Bdrm. 3 bath home with formal dining, comfortable family room, has open beamed ceiling and massive firepl ace. Pres ti ge location. Immaculate in every detail Call 546..4141 NOUVEAU RICH -Enjoy the view from the top. This brand new 4 bdrm home may fit your needs now. Move in immediately. $275,000. Open Daily, 32 Drake Bay, C.dM . Cal 640.61'9 Serving Costa M esa-Irvine Huntington Beach -Newport Beach f002G~· 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PRICB> TO SB.&. COM DUPLEX. Each unit remodeled with new RXB-UPPEA 1£11:::.i\ Two l ·bdrJD. units on Prap•l l ... 30ll85 lot: ree land lta 752•1920 West. Newport, Just ates» !400 ®"n... NACM to bell beach! Asking _ $125,000 MISA M-, H 2 UMfTS DREAM HOMI 2 Bdrm. ~e with cute New c:ari>eQ • drapes. 3 bachelor apt .. on corner Bdrm +family room . lot. near water. Priced at ac.e to O.C.C. Seller is $139,500 moving! $89,900. Call 673-36163 &42·2253 Eves 546-2313 CJl'tl'I 1119• II S fON 10~1 N1CI• [e..lft$11 associated 811 "JI< EAS-AE Al TOA'· l •J .. , '-' 9..,1boo 6 11 1, • paint in/out. Cpts & drps, I~~~~~~~~' built-in kitchen. 21-20MALOT •IASTSIDI* LIVE IN ONE-RENT THE OTHER! Rar e find I Complet ely separate livlng in a cbarmlnl upgraded 2 bedn>om, home AND a 3 bedroom ho.me- eoclosed g1uaaea too! $68. 7SO each. Bdrms. frplcs. Owner will carry 2nd. No pay- ment for 1st year. Better hurry! $171,500. 644-7270 •AYCllST Immaculate 3 Br & den, ~Ba, tge kitchen, cor· ner fplc, recentJy cpt,'d, beaut. yard. $138,500. Burr Whit~ U.:.dt ~r 290 I Newporl 81~<1 ti d t71 4 j 67~ 46JO HEAR WATER Will exchMge. COU OF NEWPORT Super duplex tn excellent REALTORS coodiUon. Copper plumb· 675-5511 ~~••••••••••~~!~ ~~ .......... ~~!~ GeMral 10021G.,..ral 1002 i--------· ............................................. . CHAIMIMG mg throughout. Walk to--------beach, canals & Lido Village. Best duplex buy in Newport Beach To in· spect, call 962-7788. CAPI COD FAMILY HOME HACH VILLA Highly upgraded w /top In a ereat neighborhood. SI 05,000 quality material. View of 3 Big bd.nns. dlninl rm., ,Q. KE'.Y V 1 P.€ALTOP.5 ft Unbelievably low price!! Old CdM. & sunset. l'h baths, big yard, Just blocks from the 4Bdrm, 3Baths + l fencedfroot&back.Cov· water. Xlnt Newport Bdrm. !Bath rental unit. ered patio. See qulck, Beach locauon. Sprawl· Am e n it I es PLUS ! as klng $69,500. Ca 11 mg contemporary home. Including huee mstr ~1151 Wood deck entry . suite w/stttlnit rm. Spacious livlnR area . Jacuz.zi in mslr bath. A with massive fireplace. p e r { e c t p r i d c o f ru&tic family room. Open ownership property w I ... ~HERITAGE FIXER UPPER REALTORS Bargain hunters, see this dJs11Sler. 4 Bedrm, l~ both, needs paint and n,c, It's a money maker at $60,900. cau 546·5880 beam ceiling:i &wet bar. income besides! 646·77 11 ~~~~~~~~ Circular stair leads lo ( I X fantastic _sun deck .O l/ID!;rn1>11m 1 Ff a Hurry on this one!! Call $63,000 today646-7171 RfflEltate FHA·VA TERMS TOO!! OPfNll!9•" 1vNrot1Nl(r• Handyman's special for [ -~1--------•I thoee short on cash look· ~~~~~~~~I ··~ . ' ·. PIUYACY ing for a great 3 bdrm , 'Ibis 4 bdrm haven is an home. Step saver kitchen executive reward · green & large yard. Don't m iss hills, blue Pacihc, a this one! Call today ... ~,:. HERITAGE • • REALTORS •VETS• lM'oDoWR lM'o~h Homes ln all area.~. all sizes. C.11. Vettta.n Housing Agt. 541-0IOO CAPICOD FORMER MODS. One year old, 3 bedroom, 2 bath In executive neighborhood with a long lisl ol extras & upgardes. Uoobstructable view of rolling lulls. Priced for a qwck sale al $134,000. CALL 751-3191. $53,900/$2,150 .S ELECT . TOTALDOWH Winding roadway to PRQP ERTIES :ioaring 2 story retreat! Pnvate grounds protect secluded entry lo lavlllh hving room. Gourmet kitchen overloou sun· • shine courtyard! Wlnd· ing stairway leads to sweeping master bdrm plus child's retreat!,__ ______ _ Hurry! SeUer ls anxious. 847-liOlO Of'fN Ill 0. H ~ IUN ro 1\1 Nl(I' [9 1HAiHil M8C&f1Nlt VALENTINES CEYESH ROELY GIODLA YP S NLM CLUADAP YTM IOMY ALOM PQN E,IS RIC SAU ECUT AKl k DL HT KVIC NJA ~R AZE UEH NNDY A HOY EVW CP AWTEE AYI TEUIOB k RSE£L WOOH AJG KRk WA SRCANGEL TIN EEk MC T NNYYAPA CTYINOA~UT EORT NC NRk £RLD 8 RMO TEO E R CE6Ml l EAOT •X R l%0 E V A D A P N " ft s·• T H Q 0 V S R P OSLU F DAEROY}NEP ELPU UMCAL LNOHP ENNYO RE AL home to make 1t all 646-nn worthwhile. Corona del Ol'fN "' 9 • "s 'll"l 'Ollf N>CI' ;..:::~:~\.,'~ [ti 1&11\\1 ~ 11 ,._ _. l<I \I" ' ' ~I~ I Cu~1 He1 Ctll'I ~•' IC11 GASSAVBI Perfect for the l car family-walk to major shopping. park, schools & bus stop. • Spacious bdrms, l ~ baths , fireplace. Your cbolce of VA. FHA or conveatiooaJ terms. New lilUDgs at just $183.SOO. HURRY! s.11·5800 Open Eves. W'I u. Metwortr $54,t50 MUAOCIAN! Pillared porch entry to gracious living at af· fordable prlc:es! I Rich wood decor. Step aaver kitchen wtwalk·an pan· try I Enclosed patio room. Spac:ious famlly townbome offering FHA & Gl terms! Won't last cau 645-0303 FORE ST E OLSON ....,, f"lfl A~•l>ll•• •·c.ioo...o-~ IEACHYALUU 5 Bdrm Peninaula Pt. steps to beach. $l97 ,500. MANAGER.:_aEAL ESTATE NEWPORT BEACH A prime opportunity with an outstanding real estate organization + high earnings! Experience is a must. Prestigious location. All applications h e ld in str ictest confidence. Please r epl y to Ad #68. Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92.626 :G....,.al I OO:Z GeMt"al I 002 _ ...... _....,.. ...... ,,......,,..,...ti>eninsula Pol.ot fixer. By ~ ... .,Condo owner. 3 brm, l~ ba . Be on the front row with 673-SmS Prine. only panoramic view from --,-,-,.-.w'-a_P __ ...:.-L..&--CUSTOMIUILT t.hl8 3 bdrm, dining room -uwn home ln Newport Crest. 2 Bl', 2 ba, frplc, new 4 Bdrm, 2 balb, wood Very tasterully d e· Plumb i D g , n ew noors,newwaterheater, tailed-builtin wetbar, crpt/drps. Prolessdecor. water softner, copper and all the accouter-Complete remod. plans plumbl.oJ. Beautilul pool • menta ot enjayable liv-avail. $UD,OOO. 673-7249. with beater Ir tilter . ~ inf. Attached 1ar age _PriD_._c._OnJ_...:;y_____ Many xtru • ., ,500 • wltJ;lopener. $151,500. ~Mee ... SU••atSE!! PETE BARRETT CorwdelM.-1022 lllOMewportlhcl 4••···················· ······················· VETS IU'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• e-. w... 541-7729 FREE Cil ...... UstofHolM1 Crecltlwfo Where can you live in -REALTY-Trtplu ~~~~~~~~ Newport Beach with a 2 Bdrm.. 1 batb homer.: boat marl n a, pri vate 642·5200 with rear unlts. Sound in· beach, clubhouse with a CUSTOM CHALET! OHLY $79,tOO!! jacuni. .. l know where & ~~~i::i~~~~~ vestment ln Corona del you can have all this for A SWEE'l'HEART Mar. $175,000. Lodle like living under ' bold &c zucged bums 1 Co•1 flreplace accents unique wall ot brick! Hobby room & workshop tool Reunion 1iae cov- ered patio overlooks family orchard 11 J ust listed I Woo 't last at lhil pn~!Call $44,500. Please call for OF A IUY! MORI MS REAL TY del.alls. * 494-8057 * Beaulliully decorated 3 bdrm plus office, atnum. CQZYJbr, 2ba + guest 2 pools, 1 ~ ~terfa II, house. F'rpl, 2 patios, R-2 many amenities plu:s Jot. Pnn. only. $157,000. storage. profess1onally Owner 6'0-7030 landscaped, deck, plus ---·--- playa a re a for s mall RB>UC ED! children. Close lo South 645-0301 Coast Plaza. Give this Duplex. each 2br, 1 ba, VALENTINE to the one frplc in lower urul. 2nd you you love. $104 ,900. unit, brand new, view FORESTE OLSON deck, open beamed cell· 400llr'tb'°--?~ ~;,1,"' •"· '"'·""' ··---C.M'~ Costa MHa 1024 ------·····;;::;;~······ MODEL -. .. ....... , COSTAMISA F..astaide triplex: 1 year new. Live l.o one dlx. 2 BR. unit & rent the other 2. Ea. w /frpl. Ask. $185.000 E. COPELAND, Bkr ssz.-0.iU 836-7~ LAK.EFRONTHOME Llke appearance! Near 0 n P riva t e I a k e New I Meta Verde North I w /cl bbs e, poo 1. at 4 Bdrm.1, hu,ie family jacunl, or So. Coast room!Beautifulatriuml Ptua. 2 atory, 2 or 3Br REDCARPET156-1J02 w /dim or game rm, c:en· tral air, bltn liv rm MUSTSB.LU around frplc, up1raded OUtoltowu owner, Kesa t.hruout. Asking Sl2S,OOO. Verde, c:ul de sac. I BR, 2 55Ml87 oc 556-0Ul By ba. lllS,000 owner. A. Johruon Btr m-4964 E /Side Custom home. MesadeUlar b1owner 4 2000Sq.rt., SBr, huge BR, Pool, 0:dnt con~l. ram. rm., 3 car gar., on Owner 'lriU carry 2nd R-2lot.Ael64&-TI7l llD,000. 947 Preaidio Dr: SHOW & SBl. call anytime 979-2251 Orli. owner's are selling Dl~-s 5 ..... 11: the Ir b e a 11 t. & ~,._. ~ PER FECT bome lo 4i&2 Cambrld&e, Newport cJdce Mesa Verde loc. Hg!a. 1800 Sq."'-,.family AaldnJ s101,ooo. Aat. room. $99,900. T.rbell 645-ll03 Rltrl, bus., :W0-1720, res .• ...;_:....;.;;.;.__~~~~-1 ~ BACKIAY Mo .... c:.cltioa Spaclot11 4 Br 3 Ba twnlune. Din Rm, fplc, modsD bl\ns, F /H. pvt pat.lo, •tt.ach dbl gar, 1.850 eq.ft. Comm pool, jacuni, 1au.na, teuls crts, clbbse ... ,IOO. Ast. 6.11-12116 Cll' 50-1'31 . WTSIDE STEAL . Thls lovely S bedroom bocQe la clean " ready to move l.oto. New crpta, no wax floors • copper plumbin.1 make it tJ>e be.st buy in the area. Cilll today lot appointment to NL r ........... Ho..att Fof' W.r H~H for Sak Howu for Sat. Hotnes kl' Sde T~. February 1•, 1978 DAILY PILOT ·········••••···•······ ...................................................................... ··•··•••·•••··•··••···· ·••····•·••········•··· Cost.Mu 1024 ~ MiCJlll9f 1052 Lagmlt...... 1052 Mlwportt.odt 10'9 s.t..... 1010 Co.do..tal .. ~ow•· °"'9f' Real &tot• HMMS Unfumlshed ••••• • a lnlne I 044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• a......-~ -...s 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• u ••••••••••••••••••••• • •• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~TUii'"" NWPT HBGHTS He CAPTJYA'tt;D b>' lhls ....................... Loh for S. 2200 c.,bttmo ~ 1211 REDUCED! Far immediate d061n11 ~ br, older h omt', . aaraae.i E llldl" Cui.I Mesa, R·2. ~.ooo BEST BUY in WOODBRIDGE Q.ASStC $6400 pnce reduction. Condo Specialist 2 3 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Just lisled 3 Bdrm, 2 Co?Jtempor1arily. d,e· bdrms, ffunli1uton COROMAD&MAR 3brmhouse,frpJ,iba.lri: b&th, 2 frplc's, formJ I cord. centra au. S. Cst Beach, Fountain Vall<·y yrd. $3'7~. • duuni room, double de Plua area. S•cnf•l'~ at 968-2297 or 8163~ Agt * * YllW LOT** 498·5'00 LI n g 0 tac bed garage. Corner S79.500 Hul'T')' & <'•II -ONE OF A KIND' 125' lot. Boat access poss1blt> VERN JOHNSON RLTR RAN CHO SAN JOAQUIN Corona del Mar bluff lot. 2 BR Beach 11.ou e. largl• +many more amentlles 540-4646 2 B.R, 2 ba, iur cond. den, Expansive views oC the yard. $3'7S. 493-tM:l or Rul EST.an 546-Zll.3 wet bar• fully furn 'd ocean, harbor ~trance 661-1161 "'"'"', , .,, . , ,. $48 000 For-mer model. Pnme &penin.slllal WlU. NOT --------[ I: ~I~ , gotI~elocati?nover· ~-HURRY! c.n.adelM4r 3222 11)11 ,f1,' StCll'"fer• looking lake. Pnnciples •••••••••••••••••••• ••• •Ullt<AllT S O't" HOUSf llUl l1 1>&30t•f'I~ Co•la Mtt•• 645-9161 PRIVATE AREA •liSTSIDb· 3 BR. 2 ba., !rplc. Super clean! Next to park. Best buy in area. S72.500 ! ~luxe StonewOOd in pre- s 11g1 ous Woodbridge Place Ideally located on un open corner with loads of upgrades. Easy acceas to Woodbridge Lake and Irvine's ex cellent schools. Aslung only $118,500. --lo•efy 3 bedroom. 2 bath townhouse. Loc:oted In OM of LCICJWHI M,...'t flnnt c~ Al'ff lltcludn pool, hmfa. clubhous•, and prlYete beach. ••• $109,000. i1 . ii: only, ~29•500· 7~ 1211• Im. ,QU.all l 2 Br, 1 bath on nJce !<l ~~~~~~~ 3 Bdrm! after 5• 7~·0380 Plac• • Frplc & pool. $375. No Great for the til'!it home Prop...tl•• pets. C.11 &44-7129 CHARMING buyer! 3 Bedrooms or lncOIM Properly 2000 7S'J-1970 -NEWPORT HEIGHTS den, eatini area, wood ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1400 oua1u1 Nlwll'Ou 11acw $350/mo. Mini home. 1 STVARTFIHE llALTOI. 6l 1·5454 495-1720 3 BR .. BA f ii cab•..,..a, newly C&"""led Br +secl~ded garden. ... ·am yroom •-p':':":'led "--ntra·1 .. -8 ·1r NEWPORT Mu t•o...rt. Stv~refna.Cpt.s&drps. home w /wood decks & .,. ..... . ""' • Resort 2400 AdJtsooly. 759-0.lSS guebo.Newcarpet&re-sbort walk t o pool. tfEIGtfl'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• - ..._4.5&.4*1 REDUCED. Attr 3 Br+deo. Mi to beach. New landscaprng. cvts & drpll. Makeofr. 557 2006 WOOOIRJDGE IEALTY 551-3000 1'i\'llA POINT 493-11812 SOUTH LAGUNA 49!MS51 LACUNA BEACH 497-3331 ally SHARP! Offered at $48,000, BKR540-1720 DUPLEX At Snow Summit. Big JASMJNE CREEK-Dix $13:5,000. Extra •harp 2 BR unit~. Bur. furn. townhouse 2Br +den, cpts, dr~. 540-3666 TAAllll!LL botb w/prvt patios. facllll aid slopes. Great MOO mo .. 6 mo. lse. IUali Owner will help f1.nance rent.al record. Partners _559-__ 7139 _____ _ For sa le or trade s pllUio&. must sell. $1.39.SOO. ~..500. or trade for local Coeta Mete ll24 Whelc41n ""t I llt C.._,.a" EASTstDE C.M. R·l. $72.500 Nice 2 br on 8100 i.q fl lot. Room to bwhl Can assume private loan Courtesy to brokl'rs. Owner/ broker, $46-9950 1026 ....................... Sp•lishMCIMion Un ique Dana Point landmark bas been c:on vertAld to 3 umts. Perfect for owner occuput1on plus incomt•. Ot'l'Un view, impressive rat'itdc $21.S.OOO. NORINS REAL TY * 494-8057 * POOL HOME This fabulous Plan 106 in tbe calJfomia homes IS now only SSS.900. Heated and filtered poo l, t'Ourtyard entry, fire pal. Newly pamted mside and out HURRY! HURRY! CALL 640.S 112 property. &42-9666 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RtAl ESIAH lrtiM I 044 Mewporl leach I 069 1091 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Turtlt.>rock. V111w lot Brand new, ch~e new crpt.s & elect !1xtures. l stry, Jbr. fam rm. dm rm. $166,800. Wnte Ad 1196, Owly P ilot, 1'.0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA.9262fi DEERFIELD 2 BR, 2'..., ba twnshse. 1''rplc. dbl gar, very DJt'e, f74,500 for quick sale. 99~ 3Mll LOIJIBI leach I 048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 80degree VIEW Catalina sunsets, & city lights by night. J brm 2\rJ ba . By ownr IAYSHOIES RecenUy redecorated, 3 bdrm., 2 ba. garden home. Beautifully ap- pointed features tbruoot. Still at la.st year's pnce ! 4-Plex, 100 ft. from ocean; ••••••••••••••••••••••• $248,000W/land! 3br Coodo. 2a,,ba, frplc, Marshall Rllr. 675-4000 dbl clsd gar. Shows hke a R c rAvL.OA CCMPAt\,tv Rt: Al Tons o~ \ll L.OP• ,.., .. :;. IY OWMR model. Bnght open 1nl. Sell by owner. $76,900. 0111 ,..MGI! Charming Npt Hts. 3 Br. 891H722 ~ m; FR. 2 ba, 2 bib to Npt --------COUNTY C F C I rth Bay. Trop aardens, OlherlHll &tat. • • 8 8SW0 :Y gazebo. Ask tor Dan or ···-·••••••••••• •••••• PRIDE OF R!ALTOIS 640.0oio Frank, agt. 751..Sl.89 or MaWletto..s OWNERSHIP .y OMA.I-64.>25f.9. S129.ooo. For S-. 11 oo POTENTIAL SAU ""~ $10 000 DOWN ••••••••••••••••••••••• o.tof~ EA.STSIDE, new 3 Br. 2 ,...,., ty 2550 ba, 2 car gar, pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• jacmz.i. Filed yard, frpl, ~/mo. Kids 4r pets ok 495-1786 67s-6670 , .. ,....Oc • ..w. Z63B£DROOM VA-FHA ..SA WOODS GARDENTOWNHOME. 3 BR, 2 BA, bl« fenced 2 car garaees. yard. 4 yrs old. $SZS/mo. hn 1·757-1'21 CAU.7Sl-3191. Out of State C:. SELECT "'°Party 2600 T' PROPERTIES Bia Canyon "Green-• OCEAN IREllE CONDO'S briar" Townhome. Up-SEA VIEW Fleetwood expando, over JO. 4-year old, 2 bedroom, Idaho, Beaut 20 ac farm, New 3 Br 2YA Ba, 2 car graded cpts , drapes, Brand nu abr comer lot well bit home, t,2 blk 1\.-llbathtownhouseunits. 2.0minfromSUnValley 3 gar, fplc, cpts, drp:-. levelors. $137 ,500. home. Owner will carry from ocean. Must sell. Excellent area. Garden BR, 1 ba home. Barn, E/Slde, $S50. 631·0303 & ....................... --------- G73-9023 &833-082l bal. oC $230,000 al $16SO FUm or unf. Best offer Grove. Beautifully bunlchouse, loa!ing shed, 646-7085 • * OPEN D .._.LY * per mo. No qualllying over f7,000. SJG.lSM or I ands c • p e d ' pro -etc $92 SOO 714/ti45 8121 "" nee, vac. move right in. 536-&U1 fessionally managed. · • · • . • 1 Br, cpts, drps,. 2 enc·. RANCH REALTY 551-2000 _ $134 ,500/o!r. 499-4685 1718 Part Wf!9tboume Guarded gates. &«-1452 1...:.:..:________ Refinance or contract. 2081788·2832 or w Tl te porches, !ncd yd. $300. Call for appt to see. NEWPORT BEACH Wtll ex.change. An ex· ~.:UF ' D •1 .. ~.:-Box 9 O' Wtr pd. 675-5810; 642-0393 Price cut lo the quick. ~OA CONDO One Br. t0x4-0, rent $80, elusive offering -0f uc vue, ,_...,83313 1~ 3 b 2 ba 2 evens. lmmed po&SeUIOn. 3 Br, Elegant, large lbr condo xlnt cond. Adult park. Q U A I L P L A C E lmclln. ,_... r, nillewls Breathtakin9! 2 batb Harbor View 00 bay front. Pool, boat $7,800. Prine only. Pb PROPERTIES. INC. ~" · 2700 ~· f::'~"j1 W e A home Cor au seasons. Home. Tremendous buy slip avail. Full sec. bid&. dys, 542·5644; evs (714) 752-1920, 1400 Quail ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ • • eves Enclosed patio with atanly$134,SOO. $99,SOO.Owner/Agt.. _l_·il_G-0662 _______ Street, Suite 135, MINI IAHCH - brick firs. & open DOUD REALTORS 675-7S20 •IEACHl'EOPLE• =~orl ~acb, Ca. 2 Br, 2 car ea.nee ODs BestMESAVERDEarea. beamed ceiling; n ear __ (7_1_4_1_6_7_5-1 __ 6_0_0_1-w ___ o_c_e_a_n-fr_o_n~t-4_B_R-.• See us for your Mobile acreswilhanlmalpens& De!uxe4Br,2ba,famrm, Victoria Bch. Big vu. J ~sT~IT beacllbouse. $.135.000 Home. We specallze in GOOOfMYESTMINT corrals. Fruit trees & bltm, frplc, new paint & BR.Culdesac.si39.ooo, "'" "'""..-"' MarshallRJty 675-4600 Beach Area homes. SEYIHUMITS grapevines. $37,500. Call carpet, gardener ts-4~. DU"-EX PACIFIC COAST This is a HOT ONE! Geo FreyatS42~ •-~-------~ UDO IY OWHER RESALES, INC. 21036 Sharp investment with __ B_EN_HIN __ KL_E_R_.E_._ Nwpt Hgts, 2 Br, den, Openl2..Sdally. Br ookhusrst H.B. great income & priced ESTATE huge yard & gar. $350 20S Via Jucar. 963-0091 right at '130,000. BET· mo. 675-2305 Deluxe 4 lg brm 3 ba. ---------TER HURRY!!! 2 Acra, large pool, huge ---------WOODBRIDGE huge liv rm, Jl!a Job, AcnogeforS. 1.200 " 66 home with 5 bdrms, or-New condo w /tranqu1l patio. nrtennis & beach. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 54v-36 flee space & too many pa o o r• m a view. OCEAN VIEW ~,.a,soo 67S-62S9 xtras to name. Horses Flreplace, 3 master sire A Driftwood model Sweeping ocean view 2br _.., 0.K.Sl•"'oools b bdrms b tbs 3 brm, den wet/bar, 2 ba, G pool l.._.VESTORS ...,, a uy. , 3 a • cerarruc ava1lable immediately. apt. real storage, · 40' BO •T SUP " F"' a ..... EBS R.E. ·1 be 'f II 2 sty, 2 frpl, patm. Ir~ Featuring 3 large $89,SOO. FinanciJli avail. A ,.. Five acres South or _,.._ u.!.!~'I·dr ~ta.; ~ suodeck overlookin.: bedrooms,2"9baths,fuJ. Ownr.499-2094 comes with thi s Corona on paved road.---------l714)H6-5540 c .. ,......,.. a-. as Marina. Many extras. wat.erfront home over· Good' ,_, llt BKR 2 + HOUSE ---------compact.or. Balcony & ly landscaped, g_as BBQ, • -Hih I 050 .or""' sp . . ·~ fs&...L.. 2YA car oara"e w/elect Quiet residential area d d d k d ....,--looking the bay! 3 (714)677~1 --.... e e OR excellent investment re WO? ec ang an ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0""'~ms. 2 baths, large OR.,...,~.... COSTA MESA h:ttcagt 2800 (lpener. Kids OK, nope~. fountain. Asking only ~ &J<n.Uvu ..-""""" ... ..,. ~910• · at $125,000. 33881 Zarzito $'97,500. Call for addi· UDO ISLE patio&cloeetoscbools! 1---------Owner'suoitin rearwith -••••••••••••••••••••• _..,mo . ..a.>-cro. shown by appl on-tionalinlormation. GoWe. flrS Great house for enter· I IQ ii ~ TROPICAi.iSLE huge fireplace in Willtrade2Br,2Ba. 3 br 2 b 2 c r g r g ly.Howey Jnvest Co. b . UD w1·11 ~el l lntnre•t t"n beautiful family room! homeooLido+caahfor • a, a a a e, 540-~ 3 Bdrm., 2 ath, h1lllop tain.ing; large liVUli rm. Plac• UNJQU"E ISLA~No" with Slidina glass door to _3_b_rm._on_Ll_do __ 67_3-_1202_ frplc. Kids ok. No dogs. ~ suite in Lei11ure World. surrounded by pal.lo & Pro t • I "nhl d ....,. $US. mo. 64.S-2274 PRICE SLASHED Brand new with fantastic gardens; impressive en-p.,. t•s · mi I cs of bea ut if u I poo ! Hi...,y lan seal""'. a..a fatale ---------1 iew of the valley & try, sundeck upst8U"S; 3 757-1970 beaches ln WORLD $137,SOO. W..t.d 2900 EASTSIDE 3 Br. 1 ba, ~hlyO~~i!~~~ ~~ie ~talm. $85,900. bdrms. & family rm. _14_oo_ou_a•_L...;:;st"'"'. M:..lW_ll'Oll_1_1_"'_cH1 F'AMOUS AREA. Near enQuail ~ ..... •••••••••••••••••• avail 2 /10.KS~OO. l st. inDanaPomt.HURRV• ..._Rl .... SRll!•LTY $258.SOO Jetport&c1ty.Nowbe· Plac• . W ttob 3BRh o last+dep. Is, pets. """ " ~ LIDOREALTY · CAMALFRONT mgMASTERPLANNED • an uy ome n O.K.C.11546-5880.Aakfor =ce! Owner/Bkr * 494-1057 * 67l-7lOO Huge4 BR., 2h baths+ by INTERNATION· Prap•ti•a Lldol:ro~~~-_Les...;._U_e _____ _ WOODlllDGE rumpus rm. + fam. rm. ALLY KNOWN planning 752-1920 Country ldtcb, fplc. POOi. 4 SToro 1032 REALTY SUPER VIEW I IHAMIWOH w/pool table. Steps to farm. HJGH RETUnN 14000UAll~'-Hl\!'ill'OllfHACM 2..J BR. 2 ba. forced air, Br 2 ba,frplc,pool. $5.:;() ••••••••••••••••••••••• 551-3000 MOQUAUFYIMG A spacious " beaut. 2 ocean!SlSS.900 with beach frontage nJPLEX.C.M.. be&t.,frplc. call~or979-3079 10% DOWN MoCncltM.eded Huge 4 BR, 2 story. cor- ner lot. 2 wet bars, only 6 mo's old. No closing cos· ts. Owner w/carry con· tract. See to appreciate. THE HOME STORE 964-2455 tt.a.lhjte11t •actt I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 2 BR townhouse W/a super new, tennis, pool, clubhouse. Vacant & ready to go. S87 ,900. ICATB.LA RUJ. TY 961-330 I 54'-9132 ---------1 Five year new ome, •ty~-" br w/a bonus vu. CAYWOOD REALTY WITH VAST POTEN· G t E .d I 646-8301 ' .. ....., 1290 TIAL' -000 · d rea astu e oc, .., __ br..._.._ Pool WOODBRIDGEPLACE t.oe.a.ll.yupgradedpnced Seriou.ssellers-aotor-INC S48-· ~· reqwre . 3b 2b fled ncw2 ... .......,. ,spa. S l ff · to sell in a hurry at _r_ers_. -"=-.,.·-~_1_1_00 ___ 1 ..,_ ,.,_....._ 1076 ~1314 Pnn only. Call ~) br rba, 3 • _rp •Yd· a-.&-a.. From $400. Also 3 br bse peci a o ertn g. 3 · 5 ..,.. """' Sell 11 n&• _, ..__""' today for appt (2 2 , 1 • patios, en • --S400 Kids & ta k. bdrm. Contemporary de-~ ... ,.,.,.,. er Lo carry a •••••••••••••••••••••••1--;;..__.:...;...._·____ gar $165 ooo •••••••••••··~··••••• · pe 0 tacbed family homes in financing. GOIGEOUS VIEW To~~. R0ltr, 642-1603 Homes Fa illsMd 67S-49l2 Bia. open, woodsy design. 754-7100 Seaview New Bedford 3 SUCH DOU HOUSE COUNTRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• VERY PRIVATE lBR all J~tshortwalltlola.ke& bdrm +den, family Walk to Riviera Beach. MlderdoMCMlt ..._.,.._.. 3106 Ull.lpd.$300.Newcpts. parksmVillageofWood· room, security. By On natural canyon with 2DUPLEXESLEfT ••••••••••••••••••••••• drps,adulta,oopeta.Dys bridge. From $115,000. owner.49'HS59 ~view. 31Br,N2 ba, LIVING Near s.c. Plaza Bkr L«e2sty,2Br2 ea.study, 548-413S; Eva,642-C83S or 5324101 WESJCllff .. , ... ,extra v.a · ot. ever 557-9710 fullyfum.AvaU2/15~/l7 _fM6.-e4Z3 _______ _ again at only $125.000. New 3 Br. 2 BA house on 1---------....,..., 67 .. ,,..,.. .UILDER•s 2T ...... __ ... mo. ~-· -------· --.. 111 acre in beautiful area, * n...-•H* ---------CLOSEOUT • -..u-. I 052 CONDO rRICED RIGHT' 1.800 sq. ft. Xlnt. terms. Near Lake Park. Min. to lallcNa , ...... a l I 07 KIDS Ii PETS.OK _,.._ • ._.,...... Sanetemente'sforemoet Immediate occupancy. bch.1-4BR,3ba; l -3BR. •-•••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 1 Ba unfurnished IN IRVIHE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Walle lo Westcliff Pla:za value. "Omtamar" 4 Br , BKR. 2YA ba; 1-3 BR, 2 ba. s 2 br oceanfl'ODt cottage, bouae. lge renced yard.. Only 2 patio homes left. V ALBCTIHE rrom thts spacious 2 tamil1 home on cal-de· <n•> 676-5711 garages, trplcs. $18S,ooo extra parm1• t'lS. t.hru $350 per mo. cau Sue, One 2 Br+den, & one 3Br SPECI ... I bdrm home in elegant sac corner, high above OR 522-2080 each. 1709-1713 Alabama. June.~ MS-7707 plan, botb w/2 baths, with , __ .. _ of ,...ebarm & "DoTer Village''· the city, Cell for Jong list,._ rclal Hunt. Bcb. 536-1718 --------,.-.1~~~~~~~~~ Crple, refrigerated air .....u:. Includes· pool, sauna, & d outstanding features -•== Owner LalJlllllleCIClt 31- conditioning, mirrored privacy. Airy 2 BR, 2 BA clu~. If you want Tr f . . Properly 1600 •--~·------••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br, 1 ba duples. pvt gar. wardrobe doors, 2 car +den home w /formal quality living with easy $154~~· asking only ••••••••:,:.-.::••••••••• 7 UNITS C.M. For rent Top al the WorJd patio, laandry. Adlts on· garw/autoopener ... plus dilling room. Vaulted care,callloday!645-7221 BER111AHENRY $AM_...,EMJE Beaatifulbnmdnew4-1 fromMatl,for4moe3 J.y,nopeta.~0.~7532; Cull recreation fa<:ilities ceilin gs, ceramic REALTORS Me•ctlllldcJ br,loft,f/p.3-2br,l~ba Br 2 Ba. view. S600 per _646-4 __ 1_7_4 _____ _ courts, 2 pools and a pair kitchen. Roman bath. crpt.s drps Hurry buy ~· o( Jacuzzis. All this ~od ~,500. $19,500 87::=~~:S now : lat ~r d.;prec. Emerald Bay, walk to 4Br.2YAB&.availimmed, lncld'g 8 lightea"'tennis counter tops io•large ~ 21SDelMar 492-4121 Sal•Lease-Trade townhouse, all llltns, mo.Callil'-G-1965 r .a""' SIDE CHABllER-- Irvine too! On Irvine A'MCHOIAGE I Add on. or build new. 2 llSAvenueSerra TomLee,JUtr,142·1603. ~~~!-o."' den, 'ti1 ~:OK.• mo. Center Dr. (Moulfoo Bdrm home on duplex J.JWY .... C .....-u.•·-- __ _.;;.._---''-----1 Prtcway)justeastofJef· IHYESTMEHTS Wfttdffi.......Mw lot..So.SanClemente. 4_ ..... 60 4H 2°2•37 4PLIX-nACH TURNERASSOC. 2.er cpts .._ ~o.v -------~hey. (7141496-7711 ._., -.-• $115,000 4.M-UTT 4111M.581 i"'";;;.:;~:sns. n.. U.CllidlaSOllp f71.995tof16.995 1--------1 WALITOOCEAN (71C) .-.. ~ 40'll50'Lotwtth900sq.ft. Xtra sharp Covi11gton Blue Lagoon. yr Jae. 145-2274 ... ll couldn't hurt lo coll OlllMl·l.283da)'11 MIGUa SHOl.ES 4 bdrm, 2 bath, new '75-4160 bids. Monthly income. 4-plex. Prime H.B. loca· PoolttenoJs 3Br 3ba ,,_,_ .. N-·"' bout orSSl l.3tleTeS ,.._ .......... .._..._ he d .,_ lmmac• .... _ _.fa~ . • 3Br, lBa, dbl , ....... e, Jg """""'"' .... a •re-.;..... ___ . ____ • __ Formal 11·v1n1 at its .... ve, .... .,..., """uwu r, Bu11 Newport Blv · ....... ...,...,.. "" caad9.-.a.J&~ -- w--a.,;... cueer in real I tr; It t be t Joe sale. siss,ooo. 752·1700 or fncd yd. lMI mi from at;.~Free tratniDJ if WOODllJDGE finest in this 4 bdrm., 4YA s n wa er a er. ~ •.SOO· 7SZ-J7QS Ml w-rf IHdt 316' beach. qtiet meet. $390 youqualit1.seo.s101. Bn>admocrbome,4BR., ::: :: .. s~c!: ~°:~i =~\1~~· Just --=-:;..._SUIFSIO ____ l_...;__-'fi. IQP::~· ..,.,.,..,...,,. . ...,, --'-•-m-••uu m>.1'1-lm ~~~~~~~~~ fa.m. rm., atrium, pool, 353VJAUDOSOUD L.I = spa, decking, lndscpd., believe.Ask.in&$350,000 DRIVE BY 2 bd 3Br1 Ba, lge yard, &J&, SI00.000 fenced. "The works". ~ Lm~ Prop .. ti-elegantly~ ~'. JIN. welcome. 1st, last .,.._HIOIHOOO ~to$125,000 · ~~l:P& 1UMAllT'9 'Ibe ahimate in swfside ... ~~-1~ 11Aa1 or TV, deck, view o ::S.:S mo. 5:11-32&8 or OHLYS6f.tQO AGENT 640-5560 ~nw ~ °"" u•llE•tTT u.n .... Panoramic "View._ ..... ..mTON ... JNco~E WIMl'.fTOO/mo. Larile4Brbome, nestled 499·2800 1113<>-t-.c..t•....., ·-· · lAddng for CC11111Dercial ~...,. • -WA'J'EllFRONTBOMES Newly decorated 4Br, amongS.trSl&Sandcastle GlllNTREE --------• 645·~161 rrom this 2 bedroomt a or industrial pa.ttel in Eastsidehugeold redone Cll-lM>Oforappt. 2Ba, den. 2 car 1aragl'. By owner, 2 brm + ram, ra.--•-3 Bedrm bath coodo in MCU.nt)' Or Ct.y from v. •-s a 3 br, den. 2 ba. Bach. apt l-.J 1.,. ,,.. *-'""' =Dev:11n°!!~~~~tlrr~ 2doonfrompark&pool, 'd'::"i'b~~. fam-r: gau.dcomplex.$1.SS,000 bout.rtgbl;;bueo overbl11arage.LupoC S.C-.wh 3176 ~~~-~. -ho......... many extra&. $79,900. A/C, French drs,, ....,t tit().,,......, Joint development. a\'OC8doe ready to pjdt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------...... ., Dys 833·6405, eves r · llil\IRA .. , __ ....... 'IC Loads~ cbara~ter. zBreotta '-1 be 754-7IOO 5.51 ..-front courtyard, $123,900. cu ... •1.1.1 ~Gen ontrat SllS 00 0 /A t ge, •• ., c, am ----------1 O...U1·708I """"'• Ba Pl wl1h ucelJent finances. • • wnr C PANORAKJCVlEW cellin11. patlo, closed 1....;.--------1 YOll pa.y for tbe Big Ca· 3Mcoarcb Y ua Principals only. sea _;IG_.._4182;,.,;.;_;..______ Del.ux 2 BR. den, 2Y. ba pr.Adultaooty. No pets. Beaauf\d bome, I br ! b&. frpl. upcJ'1lded tbnlout. m:zso. Shown by appt. Owner. Mr.aut ONE OF . THE BEST .. Qd-de-eac locattoos bl Culverdale. Expaaca.cl Plu 43, I bdrm., 2 ba., ram. rm., a few doors awar from put.-~i. tenoil.. $19,llOO So.• -~•'s oyoaGolfOouneVlewlt 49._rz7ft1.oa16 ""1toBox155,c/oDal CCIDdo. Devat«lobeacb SMO • .£.Side.646-IMi ~--~!!' .. ~.~.!'°"' In \bi.a 17 Pilot; P.O. Bos 11..J-• .... --or jmt watch the su.rr. a• 3232 ,,1 Be tt -....... ......, qpfnded 5 C..lh9aCa mll ---~ Pool, Spa. •••••· ,.,.. S • bedroom I ltatb • ~1 ... Wlllir'allllit. poolroom, security ..................... .. cat ol &be finest homes SxunetlallarwVlew fa.test 41raw In the aMlft9d Ads 1e1l big Aubaim-.._.. ... N ~sac park'&. $1050 per mo. ~beautiful I bdrm, z OP the market today. Baaries.c..ttbentns West. • .a Daily PlJot ltema, azull ltema or SL t.rse. spac. uaita. Agt, 1141418·0500, ba, wtram-rm. frplc, ~I~:~ home from uud brJdc to Oa•(CMlli.W.143-51'11. llQ'lWm.t42.s11. llo•t see t• apprec. l6W 11W, A/C, auper aMa. ._ • s.IY....., ........ •pee· r..twood dee). A real Prte.d tD tel! fast! Call "5(>. 9SMSl7 Aleut. No t.ec:War vle<n, a~ooo aq. bareaia 8&$1.87,500. Call .............. '°'' Mlwpuui..... '°'' ..... rs.rm. u.-~........... &le. mlarrematr.Mte . now. ... ......... •••••••••---·-••••••• ..... • ,__ -••• .... ~~.000J::,uu1., ; ~ ·-~-·--t1;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;; .. -...................... ..._ ...... l240 -~ ~ ·-·" 3202 _ ...... -.......... . 2• -·--••••••••-•-• LOVBLY I B.R, 2 Ba ~ ~ l ..._ __ ' . . • • 1 ~ • • 1 ' ' . ' Nemrly new, the bat 6 *Ym* w/frpl,DW,erpt.tid/pet = ~:; Yoe~ for ll, own a at. IUG. m-4Sr Aaent. ~,,.-00111 ILlllfS CD. 11~~~" =;t=on:.a.dotrn··-~--.-:.-... -r-.Ms-mi_to_bc_l\ Ov£/f 60 YEARS OF SERVICE IU:.71JJ It ~:=. •·fail na. lrt rnut.cr All.,.. all prlce1 bdnQ.pool. t'15 8-ple; •1t1r,Plb•~ SIJO!br, klda•• saoo2hr.1d61 •P141 un:l'DIKSERVJCE U7..olll .... JOOI. .. ml to OC181ft!, -'IH .. ,BDl)Graf ,, I t • """""" Lo.t. Fo.d 5300 C'J• DAILY PILOf T..-day. F9br1.1wy t•. 1971 £-t•nh u.fw& ......... h u.fw-R,.. a · •.-L.t-. ..L........ ft --•/ •••••••••-·•••••••••••• -;;..,;...;,.. ______________ ~--------~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• • •••••••• •••• • -to Ill.-..1300 -' ••sw ••••••••••••••••••••••• tiiil ~ ""' "' l''OUND C k bl HwHUwfw .... d H.MtU•fweekllllcl C ti I ' ,._ .. .._._ 3122 W... 3124.,_..._. ll6f .......................•r• "··h _... losoc •pool St• un ~ _ •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• •• ws r"'-'. t a at~ & •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• &Wm'll1btd l42S ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Wanted: fem roomll'\At. ......_., AJnentan C.M. 548-40l3 U N __ .._. 1140 te.wport..._. 3269 ....................... B.l .. 11Uamo, llt6lut. °n.1 I tt.r SOOS - ••-..... •••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• WESta.JFFarea. 2 Br. 2 % Br, 2 8a, ~ mo. 98tJ BACHEl.01 APJ. f11.8S32 -r w. LOST Male Cockapoo .. 'aslon Drive, se• -••••••••••••••••••••••• wht ~1b-...... oo baAk, llACH HOU~l Ir. NOF'EE! Homel. eoodos, ba, frplc. patio, pool ' ..,,. • .. a..--... ,.... .. P ·-•·-67r. -izBlt 'Tl,. 100' from tbe oceao. ....... 4350 Marllet NH SJ.$.000 yr Jured 1n arrldent on MSOmo ~duplexes . Rental ..OO.'J»-'T111t,4t6·00'29t<V re1 • JUna&er,ApU. ALLlfl'ILSPD1 _ ... , MUSTSELL1 OcHnlroot nolD,mllybavebffnm ~~ia~~.cr~:d>~~· a;;;;;;VllWr. -''J:t:r~ 3525 z<:r~~, ~~~ult~n:~~ ::'1i~~~il!T:oa~r~ ;:;;~;;;;~:·;;;:~·:~; Ar,~!aSTO•tt ~=~ 11 B Thur:. Kids • peti fine $395. 3 Br z Ba. pool, tennis,••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ARDEN APTS Nrabopa. $430. UT~ Yrly $2SO per mo NO double aaraae lo Costa """"~· 15 96:M567 All·nofee Jae . .,Uyrly.61s.<1562 Huottncton Bch 38r. 2 ~~RTOo~~!>-~M. ARfrnlA. WESTIAYTllPLDIS F'EE. C~~. Sue at Meu aru Power ry Sqown.ne~0~23?t!ll04:o'r ~Id 2[!7.8, ST: ~l~l". WaBa. ti bv rm 4t din Uf ••'°""""' .,. .. COSTA MESA 5.'56-'TW7 an,. ... me available. Pnvate party 675-0.W '" ~ .. ~8r2Ba,fplc,bltm,dbl Mewport~ rm. bltm, refng. pool. Pool.tennis.Someocean """°'3 BDRMFAMILY notabminess64S·59L3 ~It w too collar gar, walk to 1cbools & 3 B?'2 8a,newlydeeor'd blll cond, SJ.SO mo No &Catahn• views. Close •~""" ---a.--t....1 IR. E. ..._. ··Kokcu · 4!*4 31101 • bch. $460 per mo. 962·9351 pas, !Nl3-u'52S to Fasb.lco ~lmd " fine AFI'S FROM $395 BEACH YEARL y ~ -440 • "· 4fM.0082 ' or213-371771S ~.64().2981 ............. ••--lB .... 2611 Private b•ck yard•. 3 Br. 2 b• duplex wltb •••••••••••••••••••••• Franchise for 11•Jl', W . · -Bii Canyon Townhome. ... Ultfww 3600 ....,....:u. ru3U r. ...... garaces. 2 children ok. ocean view. $475+uUI. Jltg lkh area tr you've L 0 S T F l' m N t c e 3 BR, 2 Ba , Br, pool. Coovenient loc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• no pets. Near South . <:all Oebble 714-6311-7871 becMIHYe llow lac bet'n thinlung of own1n1t Shephard /Samoyed on cpts/drps, frplc. Nr. By owner. 644•5187 Unlurolahed Duplex Spotless. Wallttobc:h. Coast Plasa. Rental of· • <:Xe •JNice lJl Newport· your own office then 2/12/78. Vic. Magnolau & Goldenwesl & £dmaer. 2Bdrm, 1i,o,Ba, brand 48r38aFmrm2100sqft fu:e~daUylOtoS.820 Luxuryadult2br.Stepcto Airl>ortArea.R~eption. Ca11847-4437 ' Ellis.968.s&Slaft3PN $42Smo.961J...G()M New BroadmoorSeavlew new crptlng. drapes. Yrly,S09Acacia645-71»8 Baker St, 1 bUt w. of bcb, ~an view. $425. phone serv., conference :.._;___:_;__ _____ 1 Hme,snghty,3Br3Ba. refrlg. Electric 2 door Bristol,55'7·52U. up. 5515 River Ave rm,kitch.~yserv.d1c· ntHTSHOP Lost: Tan Cocker-male. Vacant3 br condo, l ~ b1&. 2 fplc's, dbl gar, all elec garage. Smoke alarm 1 Luxury lbr w/mini ocean 642-~ tating & copy m.achlne. NETS$3500/MO Wilson It Placentia New crpt.s, drps, paint. kilcb. pool, tennis. spa, Block from Laguna &jettyviews.onJysleps New2Br,D/W,enclear, C'-OSE TO BEACH From$290.(714>752·'1170 BusyBlvd.locaUon.90'.o Reward.645-3641 - Rec. area. Singles view of Orange Co All Be h 5495 to China Cove. $42Stmo. $270. Avl Mar. L 202S ~ l i 1• Re,._.tbuslness. Terms. p-~ 5350 welcome.557-3623 · ac · per mo Cha.rleAptB.548-5763 •Incle. $275. UU nc · 7 Rm Dental . 8 Rm .... --· thlsinapvtgrdcomm References required. No 67S.2S3Sor751·4117 1r.10W.Balboa,815-T101 Tl...e 751-1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NB -U\ I ~ Medical. Prof bldg. Agt . _,.,mo. children or pets. No ease "-~ (7l4) 4..., -.....,. 2ZST ----Orin lung problem? 963-3111or 968-6623 required. Available Feb ~~ 2Br. vault.eel ceilings, pvt Owner's unit Sacrifice ............., or.....,.. · Plant.s & GlfU & Import~ Call Alcohol Helplint:< IAYCllEST -~~~1~!a/~~11ii a 1 PRIME LOCATION gar .• 'S:?75/mo. Call ~.:J:·tobt!:!l:ea~t: THEIEFACIB4T 1 =· ~:~~n sJ.~ 3'hrsaday~ 8 din 2 BEDROOM . fplc. $350 S46-5880Ask(Of'LesUe O 3 R, 2 ba .. form. · ing ----$395. winter. 873·2 58 ALTEIHATIVE 571115 •MICHELLl'S* 2 BR, 1 Ba condo. nr Hunt· ington Harbour. Pool. _ laundry fac1I. $310 mo. Call Unda, 846-1371, or eves 846-4292 2Br~lh-Condo Nr Hunt. Hrbr. Pool, laund factl. $310/mo. Call Lln· da 846-1371 or 846·4. eves 1 Bedroom coodomin1um. pool, tenrus super loco· lion. $250. Call 646-4477 rm .. frplc . lge. cov'd. 2 BR. l Ba duplex. gar, per mo 675-2311 days. Luxury 2 Br 2 Ba. Patty; or eves & wknds Mo. to mo. rent incl Outcall Mll.ilSage patio, entry court. Beaut. fncd yard. on PomOGa in aRent. no ree East.side coodo. prof de· 675-67'9 ,.._ 1u roof Co. lOAM-2AM 7314462 decor 2 Car gar w /door C.M .. S230 mo. S41H809 ~~ cor'd air cond. attach dbl ,,..__ b ~~z!d P~; ~'O·v W..jlm.t• .. *' opener Aborticulturist's -------gar W/O{mr. adlt.s pref'd, ""~an view, yearly. 2 r. l ...-~ ofautosunroolsfor retail dre in 1 nho $34.S. Sharp 2 BR. pool . 00 pas. $365 mo Call ba duplex. $450. mo erage, conf rm. ma1 am. c . gree use. Af hwRh FwWahed adlts , no peli.. 462 646-5945 644-6790or842·3639 serv .. underground prk cani It new car dealers W/D, refrig & grdnr. In ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~award No ree. agt ___ _ &more in Newport Luc r • t Ive & we 11 ooe of Newport Beach·s lcAoCI l"-d 3706 833-330'7 S23S 2 br adult.s no pets Shores aru. 1 bd. 1 ba THE EXECUTIVE eatabbsbed company finest areas! S800 Per ••••••••••••••••••••••• 313· l7tb Place' Apt 1· duplex apt. Refrig. $290 SUITE.640-:M?O w/x.lnt polential lo ex mo. oo lse. Mr. Hester Dix 2 Br, &ar, ytly "SO. Spacious 2 Bdrm. l ba. &42·2'64 • • Incl. util. (1109.58-5871 pand. Call 642-4040 for SpiritualR.-,. 1815So. El Camino Real San Clemente. f\illy he Fot a~. 492·7296_ 833-9781 Adults onJ . Phone. new p I us. h c ~co a 250 ~-ft. deluxe office. W appt. Must sell due l J BR condo. Vacant. Near ---------•I ~Y k ds cpt/drps. pamt, lutchen New spacious 2 bnn 2 ba 3 Br, 2 ba. frplc. some 19th St. C.M. $lSO mo other business tnteresl beach, dbl gar. tennis. ON WATER 2 Bd 675-eves/w n floor. Bright & airy. sun dk w/bluff view, lrg ocean view. Walk to Tom,540-2200 R.El..AX.l.NG MASSAGE BobJames·Uc Masseur Outcall 9-9, 494·5ll 1 MASSACiE FIGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCJi.LL OHL Y 6l 1-3111 pools. "00 lease. Call Cond . · s·d r0m Cotto Mesa 3724 $425/mo. Agt. 644·7270 kitchen/din area, no beach. $425. yrly. -Wanted: Persons wbo de 962-6365. o wtv1ew. 1 e e ••••••••••••••••••••••• cruldren or pets. $335. Property Howse642·3850 sire a suppllmeotaJ in· -----1 ava.il.'650/mo.. IBRWaterfrontApl. &i5-007Sor S36·363S OCJ;.lrpoft..,... come w/a potential or 8thSl.Apt,2 BrH~blksfr DOVER SHORES area $3SOmo.yrlylse. 3 Br. 2 ba, frplc, some on MacArthur Blvd. earning $1500 monthly beach. $275 mo. Large s Bdrm, deo, run· SSO WIEIC Ir UP 675-3282, 9·SPM 2 Br townhse. $300. Bltns. ocean view· Walk lo Prestige office space. after 6 mo's or effort 714-846-7226 mg rm & pool. $1200/mo MSt~d10, l ~room1 gar. lndry facil. Adlts on· beach. $425. yrly. 4200sq .. ft. Attractive im l~e a I for cu up I es Lovely 3 bdr home , lse a1 service.po<> ly.nopets.19l9Anabelm Property House&42·3850 provements, Broker. 4M-5168aft6pm rcnced,dbl.garoge.$425. CORONA DEL MAR. 237S:SN~~;1~1.ais~· 2 ~-:S!~~~:i?an St.Mgr.645-5106 _ 2Br1Baw/garage,ncw 114-568-1701 ....... sWonted 5010 54&-Sl.20. Cbarming2Br, ram rm, 2 ----· -w1ocean view. Inclds New spacious CONDO. cpl, drps. paint. Yrly ~~~~~~~~~~••••••••••••••••••••••• ba house. Walk to beach SUS CASITAS frplc. W/D. bltru. crpts & 2Br, 2'hBa. frplc. patio, $t00mo. 28thSl. 675-8229 TOP DEC sums Boutique/Qualified client DANCE OF FUN 8tl1 nude girls dance & rap session IOAM \(} lAM Mon·S..l. 12PM ~~ 8PM Sun. 625 N . Euchd. Anah. SS9-61SO 3 Br condo, 1',2 Bu. D/W. lndry facll. SI ater & Newland. S!rJ.<1586 $525/mo. Ni.cely fumlSbed t bdrm. d rps. s un porch & $tOO mo. 673-9208 2 BR bay front · condo. Personal services for all seeks well estubhi.hed Watwfront ttow.s Clt>sed gar. $230. up. garage. $465/lse. 675-6061 . -Beaut. cond. Avail. now types of businesses: profitable boullqUl' 10 C .. 631·1300 Adults. no pets 2110 2br.crpts.drps,kidsok. y I $BOOM Phone coverage, Oronge County area lrTN 3244 Newport Blvd l..r~ 2 brm, elec. kitchen. No dogs· S27 S mo. ear y.ted Bk o. 673 3663 secretarial services, re· Send details to <:onsul ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---dishwasher. priv. beach 831·90819toSpm. Associa rs · ceptionlst, much more tant. Box 156. cto Daily S .._.DY'S F'R~ESESSION W,i\U RENTALS SEAVIEW, 3 Br.popular Spac. I br garden apl aettSS. $395.673-7631 Adults. no pets. 2 br, CllTE Bachelor Apt, 2nd Ex<.'l'llenl location nea Pilot, PO Box 1!>60 * An * J BR 2 Ba .,..,r.1575 Bar Harbor. pnme ocn Pool & rec. All ulll pd. tory • • 32nd "~t M c "'26"" • ' ...... ......., vu$97S.S47-7044 ;8J3.321S Adults, no children, no CostoMno 3124 jacuni&pool. ~ ~ 't'::~pv~:_::'osula, So. Cst Plaza & Frwys. ~_!Sa. a..,, "" OutcallMassage 3 BR. 2 ~ ba • _ •.... $S25 pets $?IS P mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-2498 Call 979-2161 today. Mo..y to LoCM so25 973.0329 4BR.2"'.i ba .... $625/850 WATERFRONT, Nwpt .EIPu.eurtoMDsa • "'.._."'...,.H"' "'"S $175 mo. Call to see .. --"'-~ ~ b E IEXPAHDIHG '71? ••••••••••••••••••••••• •SHERI LEE• Certified Ma.sseui.l' House Calls· By appt 838-6838 1BR,3 Ba · • · · $625/745 Shores_ large 4Br. 21 iaba. l959 Maple Ave, C M Large 2&3 bedroom $450. New 3 br. 2 a. · S7S-7l67 T "Ci I t W Ir lrd TD ' Beaullfully decorated. AptS garden apls. Dshwbr, Tde1, delrduxe. encl. gar. WATEllROMT in~b~cdayt.esna!,~~ ~.S: ~ANSAVAlLABL~ Pallo on water. Comm --- -bl 1 bbq rp c, ya · pools. Lennis. Yrly lse. $260 1 br. Mature adults lns. enc · gar. gas · TSLMgmt 642·1603 LIDO ISLE Airport bus. area. Space Credit no problem fam $82S/mo. Alter 6PM only. No pets. Quie l, ~~a3s pd 778Scoll Pl. -2br-.-2-ba..;;,_so_la_n_'u_m_._2_c_ar_ 64S-S044Agent -avail: 1533 to 3200 sq. ft .--~. 752-5903 645-3370 N U'04 >N• Call Prop. Mgr Judy -----secure. 1991 ewi><>rt gar, bltns, pool, 1 ch1ld 3 Br, or 2 & den. car, 2 ba. Clark, 833-8813 or stop by Money Available. many SEAVlEW. 3 br 2l~ ba. _646-&373. Adult 2 bedroom, super OK. MonteceUo Condo. patio. Yrly$SOO. Commerce Park. u sources, all proJecb. lo cation. No pets s3•s 893 3292 ocean view, pool/tenms ..._...,.Oft leach 3740 $2SO/monlh. 568 \'/. 751 .. 359:°0. · • 675-6670 631·5550 BittbSt. ~min.752-6052 FOXY LADY OutcdlM~ 731-3561 If 523 CAMPU5 Da: IRVl"E S87CSAm.MoE. 2013S/43{).H03629RES ••••• •• ·w·S=TUDRi~s···· ••• WU.son. rnquire apt. E.o.a --·-p-.. ----3826 3 c::·a!r~~r:~~· b~~kYr: l ~Rr~!~0~~~ all Swi~gd:;sa~;~v;r·· ....... WoodE d v·nHe ................•.....• ly. $SOC). Submit llids & services. No lease rtq'd Credit l\O( Important Woodbndge, New 4 br. 3Br.lgcomerlol.ocean Fulllutc en&TV an I •r, Duplex. s pectacular peU. From$14S.mo.2082S.E ConstructJon&cBusin~s 3ba, !am rm , AIC. nr view. $1.000 mo. 673-2464 Linens & Ut1Lll1es 845 Paularino ocean view. New IMO sq. 675-6670 63l·SSSO Bristol, Suite 200. N.B. Loans PREGNANT? Carini:. confidenllal couosell.ng & referral. Abort100, adop t1on & keeping. APCARE 547·2563 park & pool SSSO/mo MILE TO OCEAN Beautiful, new, adull ft.. 2 br + <.'Of\V. den, 2~ (714)$.57-7010 Call Mary 979 7297 640-1044 Steps to bch, cute 2 Br Royal S.itff Mot.i 11pt.s. Great location. 2 ba. $450. mo. 759·0706. 2 Br house $295. 2197 Cu· ESCORT SERVlCE tl31·SC*l l'"emale" Wanted bse. D/W, patio. $42Syr. 727 YorktownBlvd pools.2jocuzzis. nyon <rear housl'I . 811sqft.Sofcsonamonth MofteyWmthd 5030 N~w 3Br. 2Ba. 2 car ly.673·5439or 833-6118 BeachBlvdatYorklown Moveinimmediately 2 BR 2 BA. I mHi frboom IS!nglesok.673-6336 to month for no longer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~arage. pool. jucua,1, -beach & DIU\a ar r. ---thanSmonths Pvt prty needs S1S.OOO 2nd Phys1cul Ma!>s agc By tennL'I, $'60 mo. 559.5050 BluHs l ·level 3 Br .. green· 536--0411 Bachelor $225-$245 $!9S. 493.0075 S. Ca...fth 1176 586-9070 T.D. private loan Tl'rm!> Therapist. /\pPomlml'n'' -belt. $525. vrE I Bdrm $265-$275 2 BR 1 od t ••••••••••••••••••••••• N C -M --5 80 negotiable. 955·3395 Only Steve ~·2817 Walnut Squure. 3 Br 2 Ba. Agent 644·1133 SMALL BEACH llCJ • L 2 Bdrm ......-..$325 ·• ge. m ern ap · . o. osta esa. rm 3 -• _.,. g?'dnr. pool, park. Adlts ROOMS$32.50 Wcek _., Brkfst bar. bltns : encl. 2Br .. l'taBa, near beach. !IQ. rt . $32 1 mo All ~a. Trust MODELS/ESCORTS , only.$395.645·9799 Drive by 111 Via Lido AptSJSO/mo 536-7056 Rental Office Cgha1~l.d rwe nshOrK/d. rSy3eoro .· ~stm~.co!°::~ss~f g?'OWld floor. front prkg. DHcli 5035 VIPSERV1CE640·9490.~ -Nord and you'll see the •--•-It 3748 OpenDaily9.6 A/C, prof. bldg. elc ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----... l 'nivcrs1ty Park · The prestige of these lwo ren· ~ -ac 498--0318 eve 83().6725 540-2200 LOWEST LINDA & YICXI TeJTace. Dover. 3 br, 2 tals: 2 bed. din rm & ••••••••••••••••••••••• TSL Management 311 l I d GUNA BEACH MTR 7~-0081or6'2·1603 HMl!t• leoch 1140 s.to Ji.act 0 --------1 OMkatl Moss~ ba, sing e evel con o. pabo. $700/mo. 2 Bed. + · -...:.:..~:..:..:...;;_;_.:..::~--1 •••••:;:'••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lllltereat Rotes For ......... ..,._of '· lli&hly upended. prof. denandpatio.S'850/mo. INN.16S/wk&up.Ma1d YllaYlsfo&...,. 1 $100/PBMO. I tT.D' al .,......._. decorated. Wd. paneled. See and submit your of· serv. color TV. heated -r•• SHARP, beach, I, 2, 3 BR, Newl>N dec~rat.ed arge with bath & walk to s • S. so Servmgall Orange Co Jacuui .. pool. $475. fer. pool. (714) 494·5294, 985 B and2078Th1uringe 2 br frpl, dshwshr, gar , ~ .:e.~~ls. beach 3153rdSt. H.B. WT.D. Loan5. IJ3S.7313 _752-2881. __ Wohtfront ttow.s N. Coast Hwy r new. ar • patios. 96().23511. _,.,. • SCOTT REALTY Fairest Term!> i.mce 1949 JR KEYES 1•12 ba townhouse w/fam ..,,_ I ... ,_,.._d -SaftterMtg. Co L.ogimaleoch 3248 631-1400 2 Br . 2 ba . furn . room.Xlnlarea.$350. IRJi.HDMEW «for=fwRllM4 3900 536-7533 642-2171 545.0611 ••••••••••••••••••t.•••• Redecorated. Ut1I incl TSL Mgmt 642·1603 3 n-pt/--.1-~~~~~~~~- llappy Valenune :. Da' • LO Oceonfronl. Woodi. U>ve PRJDE. 2 lge Br's, P• Pvt prkg. Laundry facll. o• a '""""""'• conve· ••••••••••••••••••••••• - J BR. 3 ba . comµ ~c Ba. fplc. dbl attach gar. Avail. now! $SOO mo )r· E/S1de. light. all")' 3 Br. 2 nient loc. Sunits avJ. $400 THE EXCITING :n>sqtt. 2ofcs + storagl', Reltred couph• ha' mnni' Penoft<lf Senices 5360: done . lse Turner As:.oc Coed. 2 blks bch. $44-0 mo. ly 497.3493 Ba .. bltns m triplex. $360 up. 964-1507.640-1751 PALM MESA Ans. on campus Dr. N.B $125 to lend 1~t & ~nd ·i ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• CollDonnw ·19'J-4591 Avl Mar. l . 673-3909 aft -----No pets SS2·4201 or UVENearTheBeach ' MINUTESTONPT mo. Util pd 557-6011 or A)!enl l\.T.' 37 11 Hn' .t11, L1mouo;111<'" Emerald !lay T<'rrace. while water view. 4 bdrm. 2 fplc. 2 story, 2 ba. private.~-621 1621! DOWHTOWN LAGUNA s 30PM Studio & l BR apls. rurn. S.Sl·l241 Cosodet Sol BCH. 548-3297 ~l'ftWnh/ "' "111 ll;i1h. llrl\,: -------all uul incl, lndry !Jc1I. MES"' ...... ES BeautifulAdultApt:. Bach,1&2BR Cb ff Pen4ftds/ \\• .1..1, r .•I•' ·"'"~ REMTMENOW! pvtpark·g. avail Apnl I . An" G •-wt p d rrom$220.&up. oice 0 ice :.pat:l' Lost&Fotind IJ''''·il' to I.." \l'i.!·" nr: 3 B 21 Ba do ly f d 1 Br-"'. 2 Br r>U\. Some as"' a er ai · Desi on Plaza Newport r, con .new or perm . re:,1 cnts -_, 216618_,_h lllB Adult.s.NoPets .,,.. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• :-..111 11.111 llo· ,\ t\111,. dccor'd. $495 mo. 640-2981 497.3493 w I garages. Po o I. •uua urs • 1561 Mesn Dr. Beach. Call Century 21 Lost Ir fowtd 5300 I 111 "'·" I ll\111' + 111 Jacuiu. Adults. no pets. 962-6653 -<SBlks Easlof Newport Marten Real Estate, .. ur II•" ''"I""' lt111ll BAYSHORES LarJ11110 NICJW' 3752 3 Br. 2 ba, frplc. pvt ••••••••••••••••••••••• beaches. $675/yrl y · Scenic \•iews. luxury 642·3286. __ --adult apts. furn & unr. Open daily. 2650 Harla 28 "'ld 1 Blvd ) ~7 •••••••• ••••••• • • •••• •• t. 1 11, .. I" 1 • ,, 11 • " r Ave. C.M. (Mesa Verde r, cm ren we come, no 546-e&so Loftl or Fou11cl ,1 1><'1·1 C:.itl 1111,,,11,11 , 11 ~I X:tll Or E. oH Harbor Blvd). pets,st.artlngat$24Smo. ------PROFESSIONALS Animal ""'1,.,t.111 1 ,. M9-2447 846-mo7 100M1 4000 LETS T AUC Lcagut· s.n -~'7:i. nu ft·•· 1111' 111< II pl,. \I\ 1tt1 lcl Deluxe 2 bdrm .• 2 b11lh duplex rental. Outsland· mg ocean & village view, yet only 11 rew short blks DESIUILE Near Regional Shopping Center. Heu led pool, Jacuizi. Nr. comer Alicrn Pkwy & Paseo de Valen· cia. .. New 1 sty Huntington Con· ••••••••••••.•••• ••••••• LAllGE 2 do, 2 Br l~ Ba. adlts. Room w/lutchenette 1800 sq ft, 11 s ma II ur ficei. 16 parking spaces. 3 lrg trees. Bwtwn 8·4 call 581·2800. Eves 67S-0&28,67J.8955 LOST Whitt• W nt Jl1 J:hlanll 'l'l·rr1 "1 "Wcst1c" nr ~dM 111.:h Sehl, Mrs Lehr, 759 !14h7 reward or!ered ltk•• lo hull• I' II '"" dr1~k1·r '" '"'"'~'''' H "' ~ I I I I ' I I.I xi 11; $215 MO . 4.0+. $395.536-1757 ~week &up. Qwet bldg w /beouhful 548-9755 lndscpg. cov'd garages, Deluxe poolside xtra lge - I L.1g11n;1 :-..111 .I uan 11r S;m Cl1•1111 lo town & beach. Hug<' F.XEC CONDO, Nwpt hv rm. & dining alcovl' Terr. altr 3 Br 2~ Ba. Lge. kitchen w/bilt·ins. encl patio, pool. $490. 1 n c I. w a s h I d r Y e r . 631-1475 Separate 2 cur garage 1--------ALICIA PLAZA An ouL'ltandmc oHenn LIDO ISLE 581 ,,15&1 VJLLAG~1.6130 adults. no pet.s. Ideal fo 2br. 2ba. bltns. dshwhr. Ambasaador lnn in Costa adults 3S o r older. Nr.beacb.Adlt.s,nopet~. Mesa.2277Rarbor.Cen-.. bnsRtwhll 4450 LOST:ToyGermanShep. LEEWARD APTS. $2:50. 536-8362. trally located, 235 rooms. • •• ;~';••••••• ••••• •••• rem. 3 yrs. blk lbm. Ua ck Med1l:il1on <;q1 mt.'l'llOI!~ 1:vry Thuri. 1:Vl'!> II pm. (upsla1r1'1 1809 W. Ra I boll A v1: f" R at $500 Mo. Ref. re 3 b 2 b lg So to ..., r, a. e . pa 1 • So""" no """ls qwred. C311 $750 mo. Aft 5 pm call • •J • ..-• F\lllerton Ave, 1 bUt E. o MANY with k!tcbeo. 4 DauxE OFC'S Bay area 640 7320 or Newport Ave, 1 bUt s. 0 2 Br. 1 bath apt. Bltins. phone & TV. Swimming Conf. rm .• seat 2S, all 646-5031 MISSION REALTY 631-3193or963-8818 ........,.. leodl 376' ~494-0731 Bay. 631-0397. Ga r • s m 1 p a t I o . pool, jacuni, and rec. paneled, sm. whse in re· .r--•at c··~ 5 400 Downtown ..,9S Agt D ·1 •· •6 '-ly 1 -t in B1° Cyn . Yellow.~ ..n • · -· · room. a1 Y • w....... ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake ...._ .. i Lease or rent spacious 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRIME RENTALS bedroom. 3 bath con· LAGUNA a•£CH dominlum Newport New 2 Br 2 Ba, bllns, cpts. 536-7542 rates starting from $48 a For est 3 r e a . Kent orange & wht male rat. •••••••••••••••• •••••• drps $350 East&lde _...., "Morris ... Reward CHRISTIAN DATIN<; "' '""' CresL 1900 sq. ft. with Priced from $300 & up view. Pool, tennis & walk per mo. Summer rentals to beach. s&OO/mo. QuaU avall$300u.pperweek. Place Properties, Inc. l2S7 S Cat Hwy Lag Bch 752-1846. Ask for Teddy 494-1031 lll-941 I Mair. BONO REALTY ADULTCOHDO 2 BR, 2 ba. yrly. $42.S 51VS TO IEJi.CH 3 BR, 2 ba, uni. "75 Bach. unit, yearly $235 3BR, 2 ba, yearlY $47$ 2BR. 1 ba, winter $325 IAYROMT CONDO Sec. bids. 2 BR. yrty saoo 63l-03olor&4&-708S · Close to beach. 3 br, 3 ba, w_,.. 64.S-4840 ~i4_581,9393 644-4904 SERVJCK For mforma frplc, encl. gar. Fncd _ lloncall,89'>..-8995 Large 3 Br Townhous patio, dsbwbr. $415. 21702 Lovely bme & pvt ba. No-.....,.., ....... 4500 LOST Feb 1. lg Reward! --- w1tb patio, aarace + Brookhunt.982--0'178 smoke or drink Male ....................... Male Siamese. dark Seal ~..+Ir pool. Quiet c:omplx. "'--B~ 2 Br2 Ba Cplc ovtt50646-103S COSTAMISA Point. Vic. Grand Canal. ~ Adults no pets $3"1S ''""" • • • ---Balboa Island. Please ••••••••••••••••• •• ••• • M.W3Bior67S-5'9t9 · lge fn back yd, 17701 Mee furn. room ror work· M4 ZONE caJI 67S-2971 anytJme Jobs WCMted, 7075 Van Buren. btwn Slater 1ng penoo w/pvt bath. Build to suit 5.000 to .... Mew I-~ & The Hospital. 847-3241 c.M. $125. 7Sl·SS88 20.000 Sq ft. Placentia LOST: Doberman pup. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deluxe2br, 2baloA&2 & af\5:30 Avenue Fem. 5mo. or Mruntl7th PRAC NURSE. p/t day· den split-level. F rplc, $27.50 PER WEEK Wesley N . Taylor Co St HB Nds med alln rught Refs . lOam·lPll\ ak)'llabta, deck. Country am. 1144 t BLKFROMBCN.HB. Realtors 644-4910 RNard 960-2764 · ~-8S4l.Afl s.494-689\ l..alJlm-MMJ-1 setting. No clilldren o ....................... tll0-35fJ,LV!!N.SG :z ..,_ .Jf ::-Found · Male ;O.spd bike, HetpW.ted 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••1----------pet.a. 180 E. 21st. 645-954 3 Br 2 ba Ind""' bllm 2 y---•--"-'-4250 111 lU space. & .,. ice m vi • ~ B h Jd bf ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~d ' ' •J• ' --salllott Perfect Corc:ov-c ....,g. c . en y, ____ - associated BROl<fR~ JIEAl TORS lf11 ' W 'olkiuo ti" liitl a Br. 2~ ba condo. A/C, bltn11 & microwave, law\d rm. $42$. 831·7459. wport Crest condos. 3 It eves, ays story· $?(>0/mo. l11t le ....................... er shot?' or other sewing claim. 494-8178 ......__~SISK 4 Bl\, Nr pool & tennis. 1 bi' $240. Refri&. patio. l&Avail.now.963-2187 Hawail S Bdtma on the buSineSs. $225. 6'2-&Ml; ,_Found..;.__:_w_ht_/_b_m_fe.m dog ~~~~~ttr K l&OOmo.Agt,MS-029$ i------~-1 Adulta, no pets. 731 W. ~IHdl 3141 water IP' Hcoo. Statioo ~. w/tt'bt puppy. Slater & <knMgr/R E + 3276 a·--HnOR APT. lBth.873-7781 . • ...................... waaon Incl. $50/day. s. 4550 Newland.847-7378 Secretaries' • to "" NIWl-SIDa Lower cluplox, 3 brm, l~ ~ -!!.~............... Irvine Personnel Agency ALLUTILSPD! U ba, carpets, drape., ....... ~ 4300 c._..9 ,onl~· frolQ $1S FQgpd: 2/lZ Terrier dog. 488El7thCoslaMesa 100' from tbe ocean. 3br, 2ba. 2 atory. . P· f~ air beat. lrg priy, ••-•••••••••••• .. ••••• ";;l'odoor i:'outdoor RV We : Brook hu rsl " Suite224 M2-147<> Seml rumlsbed. Avail craded. L1e patio, -patlo,eocJoeedcu{close e•S.,..E'..-.u~ .._ .:._. .. _.., ....... G.arlield. Well froomed. ---· ---· I 01l1dren ok. From $390. to b•aeb. WiU ease i;. .i:.a. ~•1•"'~ • -~ ...... _e. -r .... 968-"352 · ---=~ nowt 201 E. Balboa B vd. 645-9543 eves. H8·426 -.teoi Oatn a reU.ble prembe, 31 hrs security. Yrl)t SZ50 per mo. NO .. _.,. room.mat.. 11-e Stonl&e Place. 18305 Found : Med st ma I e FEE. Call: Sue a t ... ,w. F....Uc'f'8w2BrapU. CallShareAHocne/Apt lft.LantleY.Ne>.ofEllis. Cockapoo. newly ACCOUNTING U71 .. ·~~'fl07~~anytlm~~·~~~ 1350/mo • $400/mo. MS-1465or~ FountalnValley. Rroomed . Vic · On i: LACASA~A Lndry fac., adtll only. 2 -'----aunat.oeedM ~9&4-lWT _ Fatrv!ew belwn Alton & CLERK 111-....1i. l .... ..a. ..a ....___. '1/'1"2191 ma1e ,_, McArthur. 2/10. 639-535 l a Bdrm • den. New carpna. ChlldHn/pe\a ()1t.; Wuber , d1'7er ft refrtS. avail. t.115/mo. ..... ~1 GNewland st.(Garden Groff> Bea\SUfw t bdrm -'"""'•' ..._...... to aba.N lrl a BR fl pool Waot worbth ttor•&e or A ruJt time potition iii AJ1 ut11s pd., cpta, drpt, L11f11911...... JIU home lo C.M wl\1ChlU· double ,.,.... ln COsta FOUbd:Sml b!k • brwn available for u in ,. pool, lndry rac·a. Adu.11 •••••••• .. •••••-•••••• deal. '1JO mo lit 6 last. Mesa area . Pow«r ln&hrd do• w/ta& "Hop dlv1dual who like• to. o•er SS, 110 pa t• o . Nlcelli2BR.-Sln•P· MS-3'57 aHU.a!He. Priv&«> Party pyKelly",bulpbonedis work with fiiures •ncl children. Call Sue. Quiet area Pool notabl•int9"5-$91J. coonttt. Vlc ·Standard hu 1& lugh level oC slull.• ::;;;,01 or Bnry . ISl·rNs ft! .._.. w...-4600 Ave, S.A. 96H7st accuracy and speed. Of .... d S I J d fkoe expen«!n~ ls ~...-. ••••••-••••v••••••••• •OUD • m ma • 0•· tial for th11 Position. woman detir'e9 wbt w/brn. AtMIH on W 1 1 lO -•oca•• r•1ldenc• r1Jbl aboulder. Vac : ork n P eaaant en-~ •• 05 Go vlr~nmenl wtth &OOd' ..,.tow~. llllJt· Tal~rt • ldernwest. t.'Ol'DP&nY beoe8U tnclud~ --li8d IA>-Ooct.a _MT_-3...;Qic...;D ______ , tn' 2 week.a •acaUo"' Kesa area. THAer or r o 11 n d : w b t m a le after GOa )'e.tr, com~ ~;.;;;,.~;..;.::~..;....;.~-1 ...._ ap&.•-. a. ..a &unoyect. N mo-'• ,... pald IJ'OUP hmlranco..i ......, ... ~ b1 April ctat Ulr eut. V\c: Hoa• Credit• •• unton. tlt. ApplJ , L(m)--Hosp.~ . al: tor:abriD•B.l. FOUND: Au,tnllat1 Olt.ttealCOAS'I". B..,..l*reetat2 = do1 io SAIL DALYPILOT imtuit...._ ID<_,., be. Aft $.MO-OZW S10 W. BAY ST. .. COSTA MESA twa.a tbc hours I' A.M • 5 P 11. cau for ap polnliriiGl,..... - 64MUl.ID.Z7' ~ ~&mplic)J . .. Sehools and Instruction TWs Yariety of flRe sc:hooh could 9'troduce you to a Mw '°"'°''ow F•f' Jwttlw lllf.....tlDll ri::t ,e.c-t of .edvWl II .... ttle Delly Piiot w1 ._.._.._. Drr.ctory Call 642-5678 ht. 325 • BALLET • JAZZ • GYMMASTICS • PRMALLET •TAP • DISCO • TRJMTO RHYTHM. HOW REGISTERING /.l'.ra~ BEA 1•1• ~ TRAVEL I. II~ AGE'4f ,,r/ Day & Night Classes For· Men & Women PACIAC TRAVEL SCHOOL . "0 t.117111 Street. S..te ~ C. '2701. CALL l7141 543.9495· Established 1963 F1nanc1al Aid Programs. · Accredited By ThP Accred1l1ng Comm1»1on of The Nallonal Assoc1Jhon of Trade & Technical' Schools · Accounting AjPAYAILECLK Heavy Input to com· puterized payables system for dynamic --------1 arowlng restaurant ................. 1 chain. Salary com- mensurate w /expor. Rataurant background helpful. Apply. Jolly Roaer. lnc., Wpm, Mon· Fri. 170'2 Gillette Ave, Irvine. A.DMIMISTRA TIVE ASSISTANT A.cdnl Bkkpn~~~~~~~~ TIMPOUIY 1. Resia• Today to -.+1·--------Mvert1aing SECRETARY 00 varloua aCCDWJtiq f& booltkeepln1 11sl1n ment.t. Work close t your home. Fl1ur Clerks to Sc. Accoun tants needed thruou Orange Co. Robert Half'• Account.em pa SOOS. Main. Ste501 .No. TO'ftl', UaiooBaok Jn TheClt7 o( Orut• 71'/83H103 ................. • TtfEATRICAL WORKSHOfll • DANCE ACCESSORIES DISCO/ lXIYlCISI JAU. TAP, I DISCO IALL!T Complete Range Of courses For All Ages • Self Awarenttss %750 ..... RBOR al9D. COL[ 4~ COSTA MESA. CA '262' (714) 540-SffS I MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES LflW11 How To Use Yow New CJrlshnas ftNseet Personal Instructions Complete S.lect1on Microwave Acces.ories • Learn to really use your expen11ve invest• ment."' We teach every phase of MICROWAVE COOKING Complete 7VJ Hour - 3 Week Course .,._ ....... reter'f.tfOlll & HW ............ & HettU., claws be9iit Oii J-. I 7tlt ,., ... lllllltM ........ For ......... l11fonMtiole c ... 768-5011 MICROWAVE MAGIC COOKIMG SCHOOLS ... .CHILDREN· TEENS-ADULTS. PLEASE. CALL l-962-5440-I 9191 YwtdOW9A•e. H•l .... •leoda Just W. of Brookhurst. next to Sklnny Haven Restaurant SATURDAY NIGHT ~FEVER~ EVERY NIGHT Learn the "TANGO·HUSTLE" Plus Disco-Tango Swlno·ChaCha No Contracts $10 & up PRIVATE CLASSES 645-0758 AmMBLERS :io Tralne&Aueuablers ~Immedlately Lon&• Short Term Asal en men ta 3Sblfta Available. Must have own transp. CtlTocMy 556-1520 Free. Top Pay. Vac Pay Vlchr Tt .. ,,_., StM'lcet I>lv Walter Kidde •co ~s. &. llrlatol Steio Newport Beach (Corner or artatot • campus behind Carl'a Jr) AUTO ALT.STAITllt ltllUll.DIR PERK, TO:P PAY I PAIDVAC,UfSUR, 'PROFITSHAlUNG I Rrl'IREMlllNT PLAN 31121 w lit St Santa Ana Tu.dey. February 14, 1878 \!R Irvine College. ~ of Business IOdePendence and Confidence are ye>urs with an interesting. well paid job' At lrvlne we care •.. about you .•• about the good 1ob that you want to have. We II help vou to get there. Take your choice of careers! ·stCIETAl'I • llCIPTIO..IST MiDIC~Al. WICfAUIATIOM STIMOMUHIA • IOOIUCUfU · TYPIHG • SHOITHAHD JIUIH-W' CHHllAL OfRCI AIS&IT!-NT . . . • . DAY AHO IYB41MG PIOGIAMS , A prqper and oorrect business environment. localed in the hub or the Newport-Irvine Business a.nd Industrial Complex. Job Placement Aasistanoe? Moet certainly! In the lut 15 monthe aver 400 employers have l"GQUested Irvine graduates. • c• MOWfw _.. '"':ie-r;ro r.'ntrrva.. SAMJA AMA 92701 ~--·.....:....... (N~6~1i'8'Rd.) MORI 1HAN JUST A JOI BEGIN A CAREER FACIALS & MAKE UP MAD 4iOOD MOHIY l et Richard's Beauty College help you etart developing new slolls as a Cosmetician. Aher only 20 weeks you can be earning a good' IMng. COSMETlCIAM C&.ASSES MOWI Umited Enrollment'--Call Now! iop Instructors give Help and Guidance. Plenty of Practical Experience. Too. TUITION PA YIMG PROGRAMS AVAILABLE PLACEMENT ASSISTAMCE MAMY OPPORTUNITIES: •Interesting Work • Personal Sati"ac11on • Secunty-Jobs not tied to economic 11tua1ton . • You progresa rapidly to ~ome thoroughly skilled. • Self.employment 0PPortunlhes. CALL 962 .. ll I FOR l..oRMATION "1CffA~l15 BEAUTY COLLEc+E ......._ Cirola 962-IU I 190601r .. ld111nt, Hllllffllltt• .._. ART CLASSES · MIWPOIT HACH Mohd Artist ..... 1.,.. .......... ~ CB A. lJnN oC ML "-°'9dl Maintaining the same degree of Instruction from individual to gr()Yp a 8SSOC18110n classes.. For ............ ,. 644-5415 AVON 'llme on bandsi tired of •la1tnl at home? Meet people, mate money & have fun. Become an AVON representative. For more information call ~7041 or Zenith 7-13.'18. Boat Manufacturer \ WE CAN.HELP. • READING • MATH •GRAMMAR • STUDY SKILLS GIT YOUll PIOILIM HAMDUDMOWI STuDENT IMPROVEMENT C~ 901 DoYer, ........... 17141 '4Z.tOU CALL IMMEOIATELYI: ... QP~:~ ~Air Auor;I .... • AlcJht Sc'-' & RyWtcJ Aatodetiolt LEARHTO FLY $805 (GZ$ 00 o-n1 • •fAA Al'PIOYID• Courae lnclu<Ms: 35 Hours flight time ln Cessna 150 s with 20 hours dual 1nstruct1on. lnd1v1dual instruction tailored to YOUR ao1hty. 38 Hours Ground School. 20AllCIA" AYAtLAIUAT LOWJ.ST uns IH OIAMGI COUNTY '--.. fly ... -4 ..... flat OM. y PK.OT CJ J ....,w ...... 7100 ....................... DmtaJ A.laistant. X-ray Ii~ required. Lquna Hilla aru. 830-lm DIMTAL AS UST. Good oppor. ror recent llS. cr•d. X-ray exper prd'd. &U-1988. DBn'AL UC.-r Do you lib people? Are : you lntere1ted ln a ~ challencin1 career in the ii dental bealtb field? u 90, we need you. Bualneu Opel'. neceasary. Dental I erper • UMtul. IOSS61 ; DIHMa Ll1ht1n1 Fhttures . Mechank al drafting & rendenn1 skills req'd. KnowledJ.e ol inter. de- cor pref d. lrvlue loca- tMm. MS-280L DISIC&.BI/ MICJlif • =ors Good benerlt.a. Contact Holiday Inn, Lacuna Hills, 586-5000 ext 3'.5. Draftinc Young, multi·faceted architectural design of. rice needs run time draft.sma n. Experienced in all phases of com-mettlal architecture. Ir you are chained to the board lo a "Hum-Drum'• omce. call us now ror an exciting opportunity. WE NEED YOU ! Please calJ for ID appt: (71' )548·34M F.am xtra $$$in tbe even4 inf wit.bout exi>er. SelJ Beeline Fasb.ioos at in· borne style shows. Use or c.ar & phone. Samples at no C06L Call for intervw. 962-7C70. El.EC.TECH lmmed. position avail !or sha.r1> ind.iv. who is k>otlni !M an entry level pm. u production tech tot ttpalr dept & QC dept of O.C. electroaics mlgr. 1 Yr exper. or 2 yrs achoollne req'd. Xlnt. benefits lnclude med/- dental Insur. DISC IMSTIUMEMTS 102 E. Baker St Coata Mesa 9'79·5300 Equal Oppor Employer B.ECTRICIAN JOURNEYMAN NEEDED" IMMEDIATELY Long t.enn aulpment. Ho&pit.al & vacation pay. Hos ltalhatloo plan aval . ll41C.....-Dri•e 54M741 <Across From Orange Co. Airport) Equal Oppor Employer r "' .. • ¥' CJ2 DAIL y PILOT ,.Add 1t. Build 1t Diaper it .. Hammer 1t... Carpet io-n. Cement 1t Wire 1t . Hoe 1t ... Clean it ... Move 1t.. Press 1l .. Pc!l1nt 1t .Na1l 1t...Plaster 1t.. Fix 1t . SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb lt. •. Patch 1t...P1pe 1t .Remoae1 n ....... , Roof it...Landscape 1t .•• Tlle 1t •• Trim lt .•• Sewlt... Haul it... Add it... Plant it... Alter it ... Learn It.. ... -+~4-«n• Ccw ps::tee C.tlChr Gw&tsnkg H~ Hde .. g IM:wTa P~Pape"-9 M 0 J ..•.•••••...••..•....•. ·•·•••••··········••··· •··•·······•··········· .................................................................................................................. . Pnce bulllrr only P.~. CUSTOM FRAlllJNCi. RJ Hdfman 4' Son. Geo Prat Japuese Laodscap. llou1•cluoln1t with a Would you pn!fe!r • pro All PR01''ESSIONA HOMESAVERS. Plumb-trtnuPhlf. repaJr, l.U.20 addtUoo include• com. Res. rm adds. Coalr. Custom Alt" Add, lnl 6 1ardenin1. MainL penooal touch. Refs. fessional? 30 yra up. Painting. Jnter/Exter. l.nc & 11eaun1 Free est. removal, over 3t yn. all labor and matMials rin1sb & repaar wort Pat 1 o •. cab an et s • ind. mowtnc. tnmmlng, 536-6'128or546-2420 For even. oppt in yr Reas, worlr guar64!·0388 Sl.0 br Hooest fl N"hable combUlednper97'1M31n pJu.t 100% bank flnanc: 551..m> formica. ~lew ~~.Res lpl'll)'i.n,e, wffdiog Free -It"" ....... G home, 968-3182 P . tin a ., .... _/lo•• r .. Stt\'l~. BofA, MIC OK. mg torrteeeslirnatecaU • -& comm . 54.,.,..,_ or estimata.~7072 --"'"'" •-..&..--a-. am__. """'u ~. ~· 751-llSOor847-0:t83 & yard wort. misc. DOOM 36.S4 c.p.tSeneu ~.Licflboock..od. -Painting&repaini. ._.....-JI pr'd.. honest. neat. reas. Dum.pUucll/aktploader. assey 848· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Japanese gardener, 15 yrs &&>'1918 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lic'd 964·104.S Dave PL u MB IN O. fl' re e 131·12:S7 ....... lepain C.rptot Man wall lay yours Gfll1: contractor, new. ad· up. Mainlenance & LANDSCAPING. esUmale Work cuar .. ....................... or mine. Repair!! & dltaons, re mod .. res., aomeclean-up.646-4871 TM S..1M111 Girts Reasooablepnces. ~OUNG MAN .. 5 Jn> eXl)r fast serv. 6•5· 1700. Has rain damaaed "OUr deaning too! Guar work co!l'm· Free est. Call , fl'orstormcleanupwil a -.a783or547·5846 in wallcQ11enng. Free SA.M·lOPM n.tortlsg " 1 al bi·gg-savings. ""'ee Spiro547-0ZCH Q..EAN·UPS/HAU.LlNG ests. 64S-8576 Andy --•••••••••••••••••••••• • asphalt? Call 631-2440 u ... "'-·-•-Pl ti smile Bonded i..oa ..__. ,.._, __ •--'-Bond«!. Uc . insured est 645-31146 "---' nUllUJIJ• an ng Free~ts. 540-!152.s Fine Exler Painting by ~__..now, -r-• Gultar lessons, qualified ' -.... .,........ Fteeest 6"62·9!!07 R. Sinor st u ins T •••••••••••••••••-•••• teacher your taome, • & Shampoo & steam etean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 HOUSECLEANING is our Brickwork. Small Jobs. me 0.,.. ;,,.:24Ch.,rs · ry Paraaon Pool Service. mine.~ Ga-4173 1.....a .... 1 Color brighteners · wht Drapery Fab rac Sale G .... , .. -. Cff business Reliable Newport. , Costa Mesa & ._....._. · Complete swimming -.,-...... 'ct ... 000 vds ·-"lock must ......................... Irv ""'".,. 7"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpt.!llOmlobleach. ean '"'· 1 1 u•" • service. Janice's Rag· me.v•.r.il .. eves. Pror fiaint'g & paper pool maintenance. IJv. din rm. hall $15. Avg be sold . 70% l~VUlgs in· HANDYMAN. (;~try. gedy Ann's at64H800 675-9796 wt.dDw Ct. mll 9 SlS·ANY MATIER rm f1 50 couch SJO chr ventory reduction guar. electncal, plumbing & MoY'-J hang ng, work guar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eve&wlmdsbyappt SS Guar' elim pet ~or 1st quality. Ken Bu~cber floon.847·2787.S57-4504 General House clearung ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free e!il. 536•4383• .._..&lepolr SPARKLINGCLEAN Uefault/Dlvorce ~?~: Cpt repair. 15 yrs expr. Drapery 1510 £. Edmger HANDYMAN Homes & Ask foe &tana "Two Meo Wall Move 538-47&0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W\odows & houseclean· Collection& $300 Do work mvi.elf Refs Santa Ana 541·0203 C . 543-4926 You" We handle lrg & p-1..&y-c-i.1-WU:ld.&ftajn,Damapre-~~.5318-7711 _ Drunkdnv1nl( ~ · u 1 . ...-. apts. oni.cuinl1ous 8 I 0 es offic •-....-.. -_,... G d N lo I> s:n 0101 ... ~ Crafts Cal1645-0302 m m v . e .. c~•aJiM'-. 'd pa a r. oo e w I Wi d l d tup Lna · man ___ _ Housecleaning 673·2457 household. Dastance & ~ ...,.g !-0 resi en-Remodeling Total Dis n ows c eane , re- Unlwfl detainer defaull Carpets & upholslery Custom drapes. SJ>N!llds. -All.er 4 P .M. H11ve owe local, also packing. tia1 bolnet. 10L & ext. <n•)&Gll8l3 .. onable, businesses, ~5000fu.llpnce steam cleantld. 3 rms shutt~rs & all ~lndow GeecAiog transportation Lowul legal rate . Please check our re· bomes"apb.N7"4461 Simple wills SJ5 00 SJ•.9S (4-00 sq n> Chairs ro.venn4s at discount ....................... Uc/i.osrd. Cit! T 111.964. ferences. Lie t 320881 lt.oaftllg •Court costs extra $10 Lie, ins.rd, guar. L·I· pnces. Shady Deal, 743 SKIPLOADER. Dump Reliable, dependable, Pb8C7·7278 Guar .. insrd, free est. ••••••t•••••••••••••••• You doo't need a IUD to T1mothyLashJee.Att> 1"·1!: Syi;teiru. 631-SJSO. BaJterSt,C.M.549-332S _ truck. HAULING. tree ownt.ransportallon,rers Ted.636-7<Jl5 __ ROOFSl.n.stalled factory "draw fut" wbm you 1714)636-7200/af\ 7PM ~3939 work. grading. demo etc 8CU625 _ MOVING , HAULING & ,.__./Repair direct; e;tab 35 yrs. C.U place a.n ad ln the Daily call <213)434-8915 Bedrical 83J.l.257 ___ Ex:per. reliable Japanese CLEANUPS. Reason. ••••••••••••••••••••••• llarWd Gunn~2961 Pilot Wanl Ad.st Call now ~ S..-.1 c-..t/COltCl'ete ••••••••••••••••••••••• lady will clean your Ftee est. COii. student.I. VERY NEAT PATCll -642-5678. I Clt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELECTRICAL SERVICE M...A... B •. B .,..,.1166 RooCs For Lesa. AU types. --------- ••••••••••••••••••••• • • ._., home. Needs trans. H B "' · uo..-JOBS &TEXTURE Uc/bond•d.. Insur. Free Bkkpmg wkly monlhly In Concrell!, Masonry. slabs, CALLS $15 hr, & SMALL ••••••••••••••••:•••••• 4389 __ ~ Sft""#ket Free est. 893-1439 estimate. 894·0421 or \our oCC Ka~en Hannah foundations. highwalls. JOBS842~ OCC Student ·'-e 1 truck. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• $37-4133 t'f'DIU •m ·17141642 87411 ( 714 1 patios. Licensed Eves -Trash. tree t.nm. Handy Have lime for yOUnielf, PATCH PLASTERING ~ ~7-4&H 5568241 ~Electric 642-5703, 979-6489 caJI the ~oppells Clean· Nurse consultant 30 yrs Ai I t Y Pe s' Free . Llc3271J6 645-0074 mg Service. 540.2393 re exp Pnv. duty w1fam1ly estimates. call~ ,. ••ms HESUMES prcpar;ilion All LYPl'" concrete, Slrng i.tudenl. big truck, ferrals oriented care Call -••••••••••••••••••••••• ftn.l & typing .of your re blockwork . plantcri. ELE<.:TRICIANPnced trtt cuts. clnup, demo. 213/8676776formforrna-PLASTERING ~ramtc Tile pee. in Depule-Lowly - 'umes 548 7180 cu~tom brirk lie & right-Cree estimate on 494_76m&<l!M·2129 Rosemane's Houseclean· tion&appt Homes, addattons, Te· entrlea&noon,2$yrsex Haven-Carpet- . bonded. 642·689-t larl'(e or small JOI>:. ing. Refs, ~ason .. own P..&..M-fP-rinwo stucco. free es ts, low per. 962·1883 UP the HOLE Licensed 67J OJS9 ......... ___ • __ 1 trans. 642·1403, 645·3439 -·~ -r-· "'7 ates 5116-4892 Id y w I f e 1 a very C~et CJd11Jacs lo Go-Curts --. ~"CJ ....................... r · CERAMIC Ute. New or re-cooperative. 1 told ber ••••••••••••••••••••••• Whuteverthe Jo'ad K-Mel Electric Ind .. •••••••••••••••••••••••The fastest draw in the PETERSPAINTlNG Dry Wall Finish. Hang . model. Free est. Sml jbs there wu a button miss- :\fasler Cra fl:> man Holl 'emofflhemarkel comm. res. & m::unt svs. Want u REALLY~EAN West. .• a Daily Pilot Expr'd. Reas Rates. Tape -Spray. Quality welcome.536-24211alt5 ing on my coat. so sbe Specialty. Remodeling. WithaClassifiedAd Hooe.st & reliable. Jo'ree HOUSE? Call Gmgham Classified Ad . Phone Fr ee Eat. Call Gene controlled. Richard, ----------1 MwedUPtheHOLE finish & repair. 499.3105 ca 11 Now! 642-5678 est. 979-8542 Girl. Free est 645-5123 642-5678. 552·°'58 98().l787 Free eat. Want Ad Result& 642·5878 1---------- HsJp W.tecl 7100........., W hd 7100 HelpW.tecl 7100 Hetp W ant.d 7 I 00 Help W antH 7 I 00 Help Wanted 7 1 00 Help W.ted 7100 Help W ..titd 7100 Http W ont•d 7100 w__,.. • •••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MATURE WOMAN k h •-------•1•--------1 SECRETARY·30hrswt.4 •TELEPHONE• llOSTESS "t•t•kcnd ~ , Part bml'. wor mit w1l RESTAURANT SALES CLERK wanted day wk. accounts rec, Sal.+ Extra Cd Bonus Pref RE ltt·cn:.ce SJO p/l lml' lo welco'."e the ma1lroom inserting PRODUCTION for Kodak .Drave-Thru. lype50WPM,10keyad· ca11spm-8pm 839·21161 WOMAN over 40. PBX ex- per helpful. Busy N.B. olc. Notypincor i.aJes 40 Hr "k Eves 4r wknds. wm tm. st.art $3/hr can AMs or PMs 646-4071 J>er day Lill li73 itatl, newcomeri. & contact ~achme for lhe Daily MEW Mon-Fri, 1.30 to 6PM. dmg machine. general .. ~ ror 1\l1('n mt'rchanb ~1ex1ble hr.. Pilol IH!r'r .... u .......... T othe Sal 1().5PM .... ~£.SS HR ~.. ' Ne..·d tar. hte typing Contad G }-; Arau1 ~IA -" every r o fCice work. Chi Id 'a.a"""'"'" lfousekeeper ba b)' 1Ltt•r for "'irk'g molhl•r 2 !>l'hl .t)ll' l'h1ldren LO'l'I) homl' in CdM. h\l'Ool pref'd ftef re(l\I !lam~ >UJ.tll88. aft 5 673 72-15 llousekeepcr. lite cook. llve-10 for mulure cpl ltt'fs. 833-2382 aft I lam llousekecper. ll\l' an . l'OOm /boord TV ~lllU mo 963 ·1Jru llousek\'l'Pl'r, chaufrt•ur. frmale. hvc-10 &168301 tr you'rl' o<•l laking homt• S.'00 per week Call Ml' We h a v t' t· s.t a b 1·u;.tomers wu1t111)l LO be :.ervl'd. Roull':> ovuil 1n II 8 Fuller Brush Co 154-6471 Jn~uranct• Group llealth Claims £xum111cr. t:xp dt least 1 yr. F /time/P/· 1 umet llomework. Sal open. 549-1767 I -- Jnt.enor landscape main tenanc·e " 1nslallat1on Expcr ncces!iary Call m 0150 wkdys. 8 30-4 ~ Jarutonal Part & f'Jt1ml! l,ocal F.vl'S F:xper'd adull!. only. llrly or sub l'C>ntract. !n9·3923 JEWLERY WAXER t:xpenencl.'d Call 714/979·6124 . lnurncy man· 1-:lectncrnn. nun 5 yrs cxpcr. New re· s idenlial & comm'I {179-8542. ~7 3095 642·4321. ext 338 TYPIST OPBillMG! Apply 500 W Balboa Guidance Center 646-77~ No selling, no appl's, sur 67B~v!.., Newport Bcb Moo-Thur9-4. vey ooly. Part tame or EqualOpportunit) IBM c:.t•sJr.-Cooks& .,..,,_, MecllanH' F. 1 fullUme.Workdaysonly Woodworking exper. GrowMb Eq.ipmeRt .mp oyer eo.hrPenoNMI SECRET ARY in CM office. 549·1819. P/t.une. Dana Pt area . Medt.ic PBX Answer Sen SELECTRIC II SALESjMA.MAGEM FUJI-tame in Santa Ana "Kr.Lee CaUM&-5200. Co • 11 cd Expenenced accurate Part-lime, full-tame. Oranlo(e asl c.;o ege. Operators. Imm open· Typist needed •m · days&ni&hts.JBOrovcr u.....alOppoe..it, Law Office. Typing 6S Telex opr. exper. only . ......._ ... ___. __ Salary range $1031 lo LOgstoworkvanedhrs& mediately 70 wpm for closing. Apply in New dwisioo of major WPM.SH90WPM,2yrs Sm. Npt Bch exporung ~ $1256 pt>r mo + frin~e wknds. Exper. prcf'd, (must). person Mon Feb 13, lhru corp. needs sales people secretarial nper,_rringe farm looking for person, ••••••••••••••••••••••• bcnef1Ls Repair or but will tram. Apply in VACATION RELIEF Sun. Feb 19, 2·7pm. App· & managers. Excellent bellefita. Contact Nancy 2~PM Max. S days a .......... IOOS powered grounds equip.. person, 155 Rochester St, MUST BE ABLE TO Jy al: training program, hilb 547-8151 week. $3.50 hr. Please ••••••••••••••••••••••• lurge & small engint.>S. CM earning potential, paid c---./T~ ~ . .,.aall_, 5 1 •0·6291 ask for Contact Coast COmmuni---WORK DAY ORNIGIIT vacations, health & Ufe --··-F .,...,., MUSIC IOXES ty Colle~e District, 1.370 PIX SKIF'TS CARL'S JR. insurance program. Cail Strong typing" s . App-CLOCKS Adnrns Ave Costa Mesa F/or p, t shi .. s. Work a Excellent Working 31852 Del Obispo St .. _ p ,.,.A •"•7 I j t M '9'lltl • -s · ' " CondJtaons ...... erry,'""'._ Y n person ° r . •~ .,,ot Ma-.. '-~. Nic'-elo· Ca 92626. 714/556·5947 . busv switchboard !';OJ:: SanJuancapislrano.CA·-.--------·1 Fuentes Robert Bein ur.wacco• ...... s .,. UWICO> .. l-'malflllngdale2/27178. 546-°3333 Apply in Persoo ,. William "Frost & Assoc· .._ ~ "'"' deons. phonographs . Op ORANGE COAST -SALES . .. Per manent. full-time. World's largest selec· Equnl po~_E"'!_Pl~y_er DAILYPILOT Restaurant inCdMnceds Needed at once 10 mfg 1401QuailSt.N.B. typmgreq. Previous ex· t1on . Also gifts, Mechani(' needed for pizza man & gen'I help sales rePt>. M/F, cxper. s.c...tcry..GtllFri per desired but not nee. furnit ure. antiques. trurumussion & radiator PBX OPERATORS 330W. Bay St. p/lime. eves. 673·1121. not necessary, we will . Mutual Savings & Loao, Amencan International; shop. l!:xpcnence re Costa Mesa 673-4647. train For appt. cull Gdsh/lypuig. 645-266'7 2867 E. COast Hwy, CdM. 1802 Kettering; Irvine. quired. Call 847 -5593 All Boards N;k For Paul Ward 847-9655 C & K .En· SECRETARY TO VP of Bill Kull 675-5010, E 0 .E. 754-lm.Open Wed.-Sal. Mon·f-"ri .. 8.5 PM. Long & short term K:. 1-;qual Opportunity '""""rises '102.Sl Finance. good ..,_mg & ~F __ ------·~~~~~~~~~ __ ____ s1gnments. Holiday & Employer RETAIL _,, .. ,,, 1- MB>ICAL RECORDS vac pay. Hospitahzation1-~~~~~~~~I r ~people ----~ct~:o~biliv~~~t:b~~ TELLER . Sr. Clerk. Must have pre· plan avatl. PRODUCTIOH ~ CLERKS l. HHDID AT ONCE con-espondence. worlc on P /time. Good spot '" vious exper For details OIUCEllS 'l for Lu%ier cosmetics in coof'ldeotial data apply Dana Pl. Must type 40 please call •96-1122, ext W this area. Call 52'7-1346 or Hobie C.t CorP. 2026 wpm & bave good bead 236 M a I e I Fe m a I e . UTOTEM $-410l McGaw Irvine. for rlgures. Call (1 > STEWART ROTH ANTIQUES .Ameriun Oak Dealers 750 E. Dyer Rd. S.A. (at Newport Fwy) 751-8922 . Alumanum rurn mfg. eon.~ Mortltk · ~ ext 168. Equal Medical Ofc/A.ssist 3141 C ..... Orin Jobs avail m metal shop, H 1 W ed tsa.lesJ~?fe, Ass•t mngz-. Secretary. congenial . ..::OW:!:!:.:E::m:::.!:pl:!yr.:...:M::.;1:.;F..:.1.:.H:___.1 _________ _ Front office assistant 546-4741 lacing & final assembly. e P anl Import gill sbopt in N.B. adaptable individual wtth billtng experience (Across From Start1ng rate $3.37 pro-lst,2nd&3rd Shifts & C.M .• full le pt-Ume. w/gen'I ofc slrllls for fast TE.STER needed for physical Orange CO. Airport) ICre5S lo $4.10 hr In 8 Noexper. req'd. We train Exper. mature. Jn· pace 1-glrl offc. Pay O.C. electronic mfgr has therapy oUtce m Hunt· Equal Oppor Employer moolhs lligbcr starting those hjred. Applicants lerviews, Tue. teb 14, negotiable. SR Engineer· pos1t1ons avail for lester~ 1ngtoo Beach. Good rate w/exper Jmmed apply al Utotem Stores 4-6pm. Mediterranean ing,642-8584 & QC inspectors. 1·2 yrs working cond & salary --------operungs. Thuiline Mfg., localed al· Imports, SO The Caty aper. in electronics lest can (714)848~7 · Peno.Ml Clerk S.A. 979-0131 l11 Del Mar Ave, C.M. Center, Orange or ull SECURITY GUARD ing or assembly or 2 yr!' v· I d f -1390N. Pacific Cit Hwy &:B-2643 Security patrol euard. b I 'd XI t MOTOR ROUTE ita coo~ • unction P/l1me Eves &Sats. Earn Laguna Beach -------f,.; ...... must have cauf ac oo aog req • n w/.new reg100al ofc. for ..._$7 per hr. t-'-.' ·-0 or. W 1 ,_._ benefilll include med' D~a .. Pilo l ~ """""' e are an equa amer to sew nylon & an· Stale certification to dent.al ' Large ......, l rou e quack sell starter. C.ll derl/delivery. Must opportunityemployer. d/ordacronsalb.. Exp'd. carry weapon, min inaur. m South Lagwui·Laeuna lJ:arbara. ~2700. Den· have dependable car & F /T. Marshall Sails, DISC Niguel. Monday through rus & Denrus Penionnel pbooe. Fuller Qrusb Co. 646-0038 1 ~~~ :!.~ =;"' INSTRUMENTS WHOLESALE TOTHETRADE NOW OPEN TO PUBLIC OPEN7DAYS AWEEK&-6. s.c1o ........ ..... 15292 ... Ctiica H.I. 17141193-7509 Fr iduy arternoons. Service of Irvine 2082 7.,.l!A'f1 rao11trca•Em9 • vsmsg. I02E.BakerSt Saturday and Sunday Michelson. ' .....,.., · ~ _.._ -----1 3Yeartralningprogram. Seamstress wanted for Service Sta. Attendant. CostaMesa 979.5300 . f°Y ~~g!,.Af:i~i:thimg:~:~ Personnel REAL ESTA TE salary+ comm. St.Arting sailmaker exper'd. Full or p/time. Equal Oppor Employer Empu-e chest of drawers. e:Og;-$50.00 cash de· AdlNn Asst Professional licensed salary up to $18,000. Call548-3467 Apply Arco Slallon, 17th (5 >, g I ass knobs, posit required. Phone Animal Rospllal person· ~:~o~:i;~:i~~: =:O!!'.;. ~I~~~~ ecretary I Bookkeeper &Irvine, C.M. T~.zr~: ~~~e~PP~;~ ~~~~Yd~~~:1~~)~ LEGAL SECRETARY 642-4321, ask for circula· net & management, Advancedtraining. Bradley83S-8S50. with some typing skills. Service Slatjo11 Atten· G&WTowing, lOOOlrvme mahogany $350. Empire tion. Leave name and NwptBch. 644-5460 64~5062 EQUAL 0 pp 0 R Requl r es r esponsible dant. exper'd. Day & Avt,NB64Z-l252 buffet ba nd carved 'iajor Real i.:state number and malte of ---'-------.,. P et p--,._......._ EMP .. """"RM F pe.rsoo. erman n u.a Eves. Full le p/Ume. Ap-mahogany heavy claw Developer localed in auto to be used and your Pharmacy clerk. Mon r_._ 21 ~ LN>u :. · · itl ...,,... T I k I h · d ... _ • ..,_,. 9" ... t t ------··-....... '-----lime poll OD, .....,... mo. p1u, Shell Station. 17Lh & r a nee s lo m a e feet, Sl.000. 4 poster bed. rvane 3!> an Imme calt ··-'ll '-•returned uu u .. .. .... .uU.S ype c 2 " J .. , ....., · Real Dilate Sal p 1 lo start. entury l Irvine, NB. telephane appt.s for rg single. walnut $2SO. opemng to our <'hier legal & do Ii te boo keep• g. es eop e 1---------· we s l c 11 rt Re 8 It y, estab co. No exper nee. 494-594I ~o unsel. Candidate Needsomeonewboenjoys 847~11 wanted. Up lo 90/103 Sales NewportBeach,645-7221 ServiceSta.Ni(htAtt.end Xlnlbrlypay&bonu.s+ ----------- 'ho\Jld possess J -5 yrs tropical fish & people. -.---comm. split. Nwpt Bcb GOOD TALKERS 2 Or 5 n.it.es a wk. Apply, comm. We have the best Genuine Anliq Oak Roll 'ooperate law exper or F..xper. not nee. Aquatic Photographic models. 631..(llOO SECRET •RY th NB .... Desk ~75 """l ...... ""'posure to 0 large law Tropacals, l5lOBllkerSl, Great looking guys & ---We are Time-Life A SbeU.17 lc1"1ne. program for making .op . *" . _, ·- firm Xlnl clerical & CM gals needed for photo· R.E. APT SALES-Well Libraries & we market O\Uludlng opportun1ly Serv. Sta Help needed im mone y. A pp I y , _d_ll.YS-=-_or_ev_es _____ _ \'Ommunicatave skills. graphic work for our established ofc nds 2 Time·Life Books by for a people oriented med. Full or p/\.. Apply. Coldenwest lnsul. 3034 ..... CH · IOIO We orfer outstanding Newport Beacb Sandwich clients prodiacts. We are hi i bl y moll val ed telephone loc:ally " in person with efficient _, E. Cst Hwy, Nwpt S. ~'~· S ~· lOa~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'Ompany benefits and Shop wants p/t help frm a marketing firm. No salespcnon.I, will train.. surrounding areas. We secretarial skills. Sh pre-Bc.b. noon pm-pm, Wbl 1 1 h S6S "Int workmg conditions. 11.30-2:30 M-F wm train n\¥lity. No exper. nee. P/l'ok. Bkrw.&n. bave one ol the most en· !erred. Enjoy excellent Wynn. 540-SMt. Fri~e =-~~ dis: Pluse call or apply in 833-32!M Aft.2 call Ttna. c " K n,. --------·1 joyable telephone Jobs company benefits. ~ OPRS Travel Agent TraJnee We bwaaher $SO. S4&-8672 person (714)752-2073 lerprisu. 84T·96S5. avail. Our base pay + Apply9am·DOOO SpeciaJ machines. All will train if necffSary. ---------- PONDEROSAHOMES ..__..,.,., Delftr'Y #1025) RECEPTIONIST commission & bonus al· Mon·Fri.Penonoel around girl. S200 wk Bi· Good t)'l>ing required. FRGHT DAMAGED \Member or the Alena mature rHp. edult for l ows reps lo earn MAIRJonHOTB. lingual. 642-3472. N.B. Non smoker, must have HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 Realty0roup.2082Busi-early AM deliv. Must Exper'd at inex· between$3.S0.$6per hr. eooN---CenterDr ext3 airllneoperortravel W. Warner or Harbor, nessCenter Dr. Irvine bavetrao. 840-275&. per le 0 eed. He av Y P/Ume & F/time work N;;;;.t Beach courses. Full travel Santa Ana. 979-2921 ---"""'UISES "'"DES phones, Ute typing. Get -schedules avail. Mom, 'L'"nuaJ Opp E-plyr m/r Sbarp & attract. recept. be efit Call 640.11671 LegalSecretary " .._ back into touch w /a afln Ii eve abU\s. XJnt ""'I -Good typing skills n s. CASHPAID Law firm in Newport 7·3 & ~ll. Exper. pref'd. woridnlscbedule. beoefrt.s at opportunities needed. Contact Lorena. M·Ft-5PM For W1hr/Dryn/Refrig center w / business · CALL TODAY I foc rapid advancement. i---------i 752-«i65 TYPIST working or not 957-8.W t'lients needs an ex ~Q~ offi c e • U you are energetic, •Secret.tn. ....... --------E·-• .. o ... _.repetitious --------- LOAMPIOCISSOR wilb secy atlll1 f or mortgq• brolm' ttrm. Loao ~ prcf'd. __________ , Near· Fulatoa lale. '71.,.... articulate. agereaslve ~PIMG CL.Bl( ......... unt 0 ove rload we want to talk to you •A/P_.,C_,,tnlc. Eitper tequir'ed . need piece work in our ofc W ...... &Dryer about making money. To$18,000 person for f ut erowing Mat card exp pref but Llte nu delux m ulti· 157.0061 catl: ErrrployersPayAUFee• COIDl>QY. Send resume" _noc._reca ____ "'-__ 1_180_. ___ 1 cycle models only. 3723BlrcbSt.N.B. 133-1095 Li~Bndeirc:hrs.SlAe1en1~Y to: 3201 West McArthur TYPIST/CLEltK Completely niblt M re· ac.TIOMIST For pvt men's club , Nwpt Bcb, Mon·Tbur 'l'TUE/T T""E -.,. Bl d san•A A a ca tin is bed • ye• r •A.a ~ "'-rt Beach 833-3190 v ·• .. n • · 60 wpm. 10 Key helpful, LlBRAR.llilS,JNC. ,_ .. _ 92704 # p ~· l price only. Equal ()pp Emptyr m/f Oall f« Appt/F.ata.b ·es ---· ------,or 1eo'I olc "Al ay as· your cboicre SllO each. ~~~~~~~~~,Swticb~ ()pr. P/bme sistant. Xlnl toe & free delivery. Sale ench SICltl'f AIY to F /time. Will train. beaefill. 644-8824 · Feb. U. Also new A like can 6'$-8772. new rerria'1, C.-.esen & e:::rl!:r:t:~'::i TAX PREPARER, exper. ~es~~ .=:ce:! Bead> tttl .Ute omee. neceaa. P'luiblre brs. 537.~ Bookk.,.m,•pbohea H.B. loe. U i ·OU4. cauCber)'1875"1n -~-am-fpm..-='--~~~--i ~we. ..-MOMIY? CAU;US! 1.;..~..;...;.~~~~"':"'.""----1 We need •••raetlc, . • ' 1 J • MotarH..a,s.M/ .... wmhd 95'0 Aaltos,IM~ T-.Y.Febru•ry14.191J OAILYPILOT CJS ,, .. ,.. 9030 a..t/Sforeve f 160 ·--···-············· ....................... I DOG TR.AJNINC ••••••••••••• •• ••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,......,. 9711 AMtot., .__..... ... ...&-.. I =4ooA ... ......... , _ _.,._. Your Place Of Mio ewport Bucb Ti:nnl• Prem. pr1 r •ml «1 WE BUY _....... r-!._, --· -•p•..---•· -r-,,._ Jobu KA-•-e club membenhlp best c. or 111 MOTOR DOMES ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• •••••••• •••••-•••••••• •••••••••• • •••••••••• •• ___ .. _u.n __ S41.....;...:-G05t~ ol 640-1793 • John$on-Evlnrude 0 /B FORRENT Q.IANCAIS ~leM 9740 ... .., '7S6 VotYo '772 Toy Poodlel. ctrts apricot. r IDOC«S. Zl.3/~ From~-wk. T'f().0822 & TRUCICS "73 = Ald·Fr c~u. ru •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• •••••••••~•••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • F., AXC. Fem l~ yr, Npt Bc h THnls Club 10' ftberllass diolhy E•· ~ ~~~e utc ' x n\ lt71..-X210 #l DEALER IN U.S.A. llfOUYOU IUY puppylwb.873-0l3 membustup .• Superde cel.coaCl.BHtofluover ~~1_!:HY11·Daie. 21', nu cn.1unL · SEOAN.T~•ccobri>wn AU5eVOLVO al. Call 644-aoo wltdys or Sl.50. ~ 7217 Eves. _.. .. , ae en cont. A/C. unn •72 ca ri aooct t It ln tmmacutato eood • ~ ROY • Adorabl wblte to M4--73'aov1. Aaklna $7800/bat ofr. CHEVROLET lllOO ~Ii Mt-~"ct°:f. lion! (22llU'W) M t CARVER See ua at Soutbern poodles. ale,.fem. IMh.Poww 9040 _..,, Evea.67M203. aeetoQ>Pntelate . ua ROUS·ROYCE Oranae C.OU.Oty's Volvo '15l-5511 c.ootw;cei Stabtleaa eo' -····················· Cblnook/Toyota '75. lo 2828 U--bor Blvd. How~ StffS I ... ,."'._.. Hr=ers•s'"OLVO ,.._ .. Y• I045 ::S.sai~.'~ st ~~=~~~on m!'a, new oond. Air. 3 ccm'AllESA atr..... 9716 _, ='omt1 ~ONVJ&IO ••••••••••••••••••••••• TwinChrygV8'a/2beads Way refrlg. $5500. 546.1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971Ml%210C IJl-lU0495-IJIO Registered atand1rd Refrig. $1100. Salad ~ar Hauled,sW"VeyAl,pntd 968-6238 '73 SY. kpd. Llke'new. Sunroof, stereo tape, ClOSlOSVt-IOAYS silver poodle, unapayed ~·lee flalter w/dnnk •'12.000 AY64&-9000 WEPAYTOPloLLAR Cbocolalebrown. v ... A_ cruise control & pwr. XLNTBUY S....USb Volvo Mecbanal: fem, 4 yn. 644)..8998 dispens"" heads $1800. T,...,... T,.,... "70 FOR TOP USED CARS .__.I w l n d 0 w. -A r l n e ---------I Uke new. Used 1 mooth. ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOREIGN, DOMESTIC A/C compresaor. 1"°° ml Sharp '66 Silver Sbadow now at Ivan$ Forei1:n =->0'1"1alvan.lzedplpein Muat sell 536-8834 Alt YOUR '73Travelllat.eTentTrlr, orCLASSICS on SM World en1. automobile!(08SMJF). wblte.R.R.-Rl&bthand Carrepa.irs,199.5Harbor excellent condition. lPM slpe8,llllenew. Hyourcarisextraclean '12.750• 731·29U Wkdys, lt72Ml%llOD dr. Xlnt cond, SU.900. Blvd.CM.MS-1982 S48-6306 FISHING S4C).S2Zl seeusftrst. 551·22180evs CallPatrick,552-4414 ... ...-.... •1..-..1 Me,,a Verde Country Club IOATl! IA Automatic & air cond. -- Need (ood home, for lg equity membership 21Ft.CHAMPIOM 'T1 sell-contained 31' ln a UBIUICIC For the luxury of a Toyah 9761 ••••••••••••••••••••••• beautiful blk cal Available673-8039 CF5'l7BB. FJvbrid"e, park.•·•· By owner. 2925Harbor8Jvd. .,.._ t720 Mettfletes &theefflclen· ........... , ........... GeMral 9901 _w/coldeneyes.557-4435 WANTED: Baby bed, slnfle icrew," Jall;y, 642-2841 Costa Mesa m-2500 •••N•••••••••••••••••• cyofadle6el. (834EIE). llFOllYOU ••••••••••••••••••••••• Golden Lab/Golden Ret, Cwsinart foocl proc, pad· hea~, bait tank. Slffps 5. Going out of busiaess TOP * DRIVE A * We have other diesels & TSB.l.OvOTYOU! PROPERTY female, 6 wks, need:. die board, Hobie 14. Eng1ne completely re· sale• A & E Systems DOLLAR * LITILE. * other MBZs to thoose • -. home. MS-1139 675-9831 built. Electronic 1ear in· auto· ro11 up aWlllllP ro~ P "'ID •• trom. SEE US.' cl. depth finder & brand the motor home "travel A SA VE A LOT RmlETION 8"'2moScotTerrier.male. PORTAIUSPAS De'lfo'.• unused 2-way FM trlr. Over 100 to choose FORCLEAN SHOP&COMPARE MA.RqUISTOYOTA t.o good home. 646-1800, Redwood or fibe<gloss. radio & RDF. $7500 or from. all colors & siJ.eat. It.WORT CARS ~JON VIEJO f'll( sep05eves. -Doy delivery. 898-9370 best olfer. Call eves & lmmed. free home in· ..... uooa.s 131.zuo 4t'61210 '1AL Fa •twe 1050 wt:nds. 645-9376 su llatlon. I· lOAM & ,,,_.,., -F1Ht replatements rt> ••••••••••••••••••••••• Queen size hand crochet-23• 1 . / 1 3 57PM (213 )592·5020 77 M1% •SOSL T,... 9767 quire the Daily Pilot to h· STOREWIDESALE =~~$lOO Call Joanne tr:i~sr~~~~· :4":50: ....,.s.r.ke,P.... Silver, blue lthr int, ••••••••••••••••••••••• q1aclatel2 PlymoulhSta New"usf'<I f~m. appl's. _ ~JU7day,67J.3484 eve &Acuuorf" 9400 •711Are""'9 stereo cass. alum wbl.s. 1975 Triumph Sp•t· lion Wagons rrom ex1sl mlsc. Wilson s Bargatn 22"Rot.aryPower Mower AJJmodelsfrcolors. All lltras. like ou. PP. fire·!O,OOO mil es. a.nglnventory Nook. MS & 814 W. 19th. $35 Donut Maker new' 165 Rayson Crall Flalbol· ~··•.••••••••••••••••••• ,_.... ~31113 AM/FM atereo lape & an CM.642·7930"S48-3262 never used. $15. ti46.LS25 • tom. Tandem Trailer. 64· 77 Used Mustang ..._. excellent condl\aon ----new upholslery. Less Parts 990 No. Parker, -Y.-yToclay! lt65MBCmES meclanlcally, inside & 5'2ft.longcustompadded Mi.__.__ motor. S8 50Jo rfe r . Orange.Call997-~ WE 190 (gu> 25 MPG, lllnt out.. $3,300. Call 548-5163 portabl e bar with ~ 5408852 days 956 l897 Lutcbaooe lorfantasuc cl ..,~Be f atter6pm. multiplex tuner. 8 track W..ted 8011 . . vw parts. all kinds. NEID savings OD au rema lruo& con _,.,.,/ sl or er. --~----- &turntable-all are built ••••••••••••••••••••••• eves. CHEAP 'Tlmodelslnstock. -.a.no Volrs,.,.... 9770 ans-plus two c ustom SHOTGUN WANTED '71 Glasstroo 17', 170HP _ 894·9404 CLEAN '67 250SE $4000 or best of. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wrou&ht iron bar stools. Prefer 12 ga. w /full Volvo eng, Z70 JB /OB. USB> CUS fer. Must sell quick! HUGE SELECTION Sharp!S8l·7446. choke. Very good cond. $3000. AlllosforSale MOW 73HM9;556-8000 NEW&USEDCARS f>42-2073 673-7529 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• c ... I I '-... RTH ' **I BUY** --------RKreaHOMll ~•"' 2845 HARBORBLYP. "10 Mercedes 2805, Make Topcash$$1oryourVW. Want lo buy: King Tut 1976 SKJPJACK 20', like V~ tSJO 540•5630 540.6410540.0213 offer or trade. Days: Paid for or not. Call Good used FUmlture & llckets. new, fully equipped 548-3881, Eves: 493-9188 Keith or Jerry. Appliances-OR I will 645-<»I04 aft6pm w/cu.stom trlr, $10,ooo: ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOB WlTHAM VW scllorSELLforYou. -Ml·3056 Coovt 4 seat atreet legal Ma 9742 7600Weslmi.n.sterAve. MASTERS AUCTIOM WANTED man's flat top dune buggy. $800. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• 893-7551 or638-78llO 646-1616 & Ill 9625 desk w/ file drawer, lap 32' Uniflite uns. llk~ new :i.29-8486 2626 HARBOR BLVD. •77 Cli•..u ------·--drawer,cheap.673·7332 loaded. Auto pilot . 4 ua.._. COSTA MESA Demo & executJve aale '70 MGB-GT. Nu clutch, vw Bug '71 rebuilt eng. CASH PAID Radar. sonar+ many n.,...Drfyn 9550 nu eng. Will sell to besl Nu paint. 'IS body $850. xtras $48 ooo P /P ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEIUY nowgolneon-burry! olfer.675·2978 C.alluA_c .. 1A For gd used furn . anti·~ · ' 881DOVESTREET .,.... ""• ques & cir TV's. 957 8133 lns..._fth 1013 994·535t Days, 840 4474 COSTA MESA USED CARS! CNear MacArthur Blvd. -Wl--l-U_Y_&_S_BJ. __ Factory Direct Pane LIV· •••••••••••• _........... Eves & wkndi. AMC & JEIP ~e _ _'fe lt'~ n~wthCbe~~~t N&EJWPOamboRrej!!BRoEAaCdH) ~ ............. !?.~~ v~ .,SW"' ~~s •ngRm"'·m1lurn.See1t GUITAR<G11tson> Les lS'VALCOalumlnumfo, .. , ._,._f -·-u..-.1erswp lD e UYute Tl ~ AW ..... ;..de C:1)97g.312s Paul Custom. Xln_tcond. hing boat, & trlr , " ""·~w1f'iillo Auto Center. We need 133-1300 1967 MGB-new engine. LorlntSolectlon ---·--Slit body w/gold p1clcups. w/complete access. int FltE your used car! ---------paint. lop, interior & In The Area!!! Modern Mpl tbl, chrs SlOO. $450 w /case. 752-7626 boat cover & awning, 100 gallons ol gas with JOI '78 2+2 2IOZ, only 2300 stereo. In cherry condi· WEST GERMAN walnut credenza. onen-eves 15hp J ohnson motor. each new car or Jeep .._..._C ,.._.SOM one mi's. 3 )'t wuranty, Uon. l983HDEl. Pri pt.,y. tal $300 L lk h -trolling motor. bail tank sold walh thlS ad only. ~ nl5ft new car. Lower than de· Call631-5767 aft.er6 pm. IMPORTS · ampssi s alle Yamaha EM 100. 2 C aler 's price. 963·7171. SlOOea. Ca II 846-3841 M.atchell spkrs. mike & cpt 'ng & much more '' 549.a023 HEVROLET 963-2333 eves. lll8S Harbor BJvd .. C.M. real s~al at Sl895. Call 2S24HARBOR BLVD. 21A toCe t D . n.....i 9746 714'/541 IJl6 SoUdoak lable48" stand. xtras $700. blwn 9-4PM . wkdys COSTA ~"'"A u IRVlNn eEr nve '74 26-_,..,. ----''----·---with 312'" ll'3ves. 546-4798 All 6pm. . 714-546--0348 "'"""' Y6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $300 8428271 ~ --768-7222 Super clean. low miles, 'SJ Opel K:idell. clean, VWW..ted. ---Bundy trumpd '73 Saber Craft model 77 J eep <;J7 · hardtop, Must sell SCOOO/bal ofr. manual transm $650. Not nm.nine preferred. .,.,., . · wheels-rams, AM/FM vw ed N .u .. .,,.... Near New Kan.: St Bed. mattr. frame. Xlnl cond 494-_2417 2530 Caban Crwser. twin ca'!s ~or '--t olt want . ot runrung 673-8279 Call~. ~-...... 140 Mere cruiser oul k • ..,.,.,., . "" er. preferred. drive 250 hrs. Radio, ~ tor Chns Brown, 642·2003 '77 Datsun 8210. xlnt ,..ot 9741 '76 VW RABBIT. AM/FM _SJ._50 __ . SS.2_·5424 10 paete Ludwig drums. Captain's Buth in bed, Cases and stands $425. pine. wllh 3 largl! offer493-7348eves. drawers & book:.helf. 6-pc. Rogers Drums, ..¥25· 494·2417 Zildjian cymbals, Sofabed, Herculon. green 673-3048 & white, $100. Good cond - i42·0616 aft 5. Offlu fwftitwe Ir Canopy bed frame, anti-Eqlll,....+ 1015 que wht gold trim.••••••••••••••••••••••• f'ormica table. sqr, n.'<i-1---------111 storaee. 2 bdrm chalrs. l king bedsprd. 644· 7453 _ 8-l0.30am, 5:30-lOpm ' Duung rm, Bdrm & many extras. Cookware & dis· hes.SS6-899S GcropW. 8055 ••••••••••••••••••••••• depth sounder . sell con· ·2271 ---c:cod, under wmty, S3100 .... •••••••••••••••••••• casa. new tires. 32,000 tained. Xtras incl. On '75 Chevy Bla-'A!r under Alltoa. lmport.d 631-5025 alt 6PM 1975 50il low mileage. xlnt mi. $:250/blst. 492-3751 Tandem axle trlr. Manor 40,000 miles. xlnt cond ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 210 Htchbck. Lo mi, cond. Av. 21 mj per gal. 19'70 VW Pop·top camper. repaJr &; save money. Mer6PM 675-9453 G•••• 9701 AM·FM, orig ownr. 42 ~.?OO. 9S2-4256 under 10.000 mt on new :~~farm. Aft 6pm ; Tnsb 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mpa. $2300 or best ofr. Porsche 9750 eng; tach; AM-FM tape: -----____ •••••••••••••••••• ••• •• Brlcldin '74 rare 4-spd, Jo 1/6.19-2744 dys, 675-4424, ••••••••••••••••••••.••• xtras; new starter, brks, FHRU ... RY mi, AIC. tape deck. Best 67s-8l.27 eves/wknds. '74 Porsche 914 1.8. Jm· clutch. tires; $2400/bst "' ofr. 761-8711or 0 ""-2610 mac CO"d "· must sell olr; 644-2a71 Russ C&.EAlit:ICE ~ '76 Pickup, o r ange, •• "" · A.1111 9707 s...Jo.ers, excellent cond. Pvt pty, 496-lS28 '82 811". sunrool, fixer up· on all GMC trucks & ...--van 9 ! We• r e 0 v er. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3500. Evea. 788-8253 '61Porsche911L, $WOO. or per, .Runs good $350 stocked r ! o All models For sale 1973 Audi lOOLS. fMt 9725 best of(er. Must sell Dave 7·3, 640..3718, Mon - ue A~/FM stereo, 60,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• quick. 7314449;SS6-8000 Fri. 417 Poplar, Lag. PRICED TO SB.I. ::;i;._~ ~J:'°· Aft 6 19'76 tu Spider, AM /FM '61 PORSCHE 1600. new Bdl. ---------1 rMilo, P/antenna, lug rk, btb. Ures, run1 great. ·ss VW Bua, rbll, nu paint. xlnt cond., 10 K mi, noech body work. tires, many xtras. Sl500. oranae w/blk tnt. s;ooo S.U00/Best842·1088 Call768-0716aft5PM firm. 752·7179 dys. or 152-7896 eves. 1.973 911T, elec. sun roof. Vol•o 9772 alloy rims. AM/FM. 5· ••••••••••••••••••••••• spd, lo ma, must sell 110,400 or offer. 644-6933 ORAMGI COUMTY VOLVO ---------1987 9115 Targa Classic. EJCCLUSJVV• y VOLVO 1976 VOL.ARES 3tochoo&cfrom. AJI -.1th rac:tory air conditioning. 318 engine. luggage racks. tr ailer towing package, AM /FM stereo. 2 . equipped with power windoW&. Priced from . $2175 <Uc.n858PCW l 1976 GRAHFURY Slallon Wagon. 2 to choose from. 440 4 bbl. engine. AM/FM stereo. power windows. roof racks and factory aar cond1t1on1og. Priced from $2150 <L.tc. fl.600PCY) 1975FURY Cullom Suburban Waaons. s to choose from. AJI wilh factory alr, root racks. 360'4 bbl. engine. Dllferent choice of extras on each car . Prtoed from $1975 <L.tc. #223MCG ) 1976 GRAM FURY C\lstom Suburban. Fac-tory air. 360 4 bbl. engine. lugga"e r nck, heavy duty sbockll. lint· eel glass. gold metallil' finish. $1950 <L.tc. 11799NCF) 1975 SPORTS FURY Wafoo. AM/FM stereo, air conditlon1og: 360 4 bbl. engine, lJnted glass. power windows, Salver Cloud met.alllc riniah. $2225 (Uc. #846MPQl HMd9 9727 New clutch, brka & rear ~ ( i d M Largest VolvoI>ealer All cA-may be 1·ns.....,.t · 10 t w n ow. ags. · Or Coo t • .... .,.., Bl k m aoge n Y. .A.I inJ'""age ar·ea. .. ~k ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Courier. Runs like new! $1400 &&5-2529 ---------i •'73 El Cam. Estate, aJr, 1978 BMW's HERE NOW! COMPLETE IOOYSHOP MOWOPEH EXCB.UNT S&ICTIOMOF IMWUSALES We may have your next car in our inventory. Call us today I 131-2040 495-4949 CREVI E R ..._...._w.77 HONDA Cars MANY To Ct.DOM Fro.I UNIVERSITY a. .... ..._. c_.. • GMC Trweb 2860Harbor Blvd. Coat.a Mesa 640-9640 1972HOND>. COUPE 4 speed,roof nck as only 39,000 actual miles. Ideal for skiers as surfers. (anGBZ). OMLYSl275 ~ UlTIMAft OlllVIMO MAatNC ....... •US. IMW't• .................. !?!~ ~:=:n~~ '8T XKE. NearlY ~tored. aupun t AM /FM. BUY LEASE ""' ., ""' muataell, best offer. Call nf~ECT forRJ or Oscar. Stephanie. 645-3167 OIAMG-E COAST -9755 ·~..-.~ .:;!~';MyesL~a~t ......................• ~-~~ ~ ~-~ ~ .......... TIST DRIVE OUR 202.6 S Manchester For =ltion: ·u CAR Anaheim 750-2011 Of THI va .._au -78 GMC Suburban Sierra • 5AA NOTICE Classic,% Ton, every opt Good lnventof1 Pt stock. bow Daily Pilot Class-avail exce~ 4 wbl dr. Hu.rrywhilethqlast! ified ads dl.aplay their Incl dU&l atr. Uses re-MIUCl.IE messages with Jefibllit.)' gular JU, $78,00 or ofr. MAJDA,1184AULT and impact? Our ads, we _11&2._as _____ _ 2150Harbor Blvd. areproudtosay.reallyTry a Dally Pilot COSTA MESA get reaulla. Phone Classified Ad to buy, sell 645-5700 642-56'111. orrenuomething. _......;:.. __ _ A..tol, M•w 9&00 .... Mew 9100 ~ M•w '800 • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• The Datsun 610 is back. The 510. Best all around Datsun yet. A whole new line of economy cars. Datsun 510. Perfect size. Perfect price. The Datsun 510. P/8, P/8 1 tilt whl, poei, bltch, CB, runa xlnt. G:l815, lm-4612 Art •75 2002A Ser. me Must eell s,wi5. 83S-1414 '762002 41apc1SfR MSNLF _cr_SS&-Cl98S _______ 1• '10 Datsun P .U. Maas. AM /FM, good body1 must sell. '1000. 548--081» 5115 W. 19th St., C.M. '773:nAS/Rl71RSK 'CT 420 Saloon Claaslc CloNdO.S•dap $4500 or beaL oHor. OIAN(WE COUMTY'S. , '731-4441;55MOOO OLDEST 11 JAG '2X> Sedan. Mint & CIODd. Lo ml. '3395-can eves 1-S2541T7 .. .._ .... ....................... Sales..servtce-Leaain1 '7• KanDau Ghia. Ped lov C• •er,"9c. ecmd.· Lo mlleace. cau BoUafco.vt:e B•W ---aft~m. 9731 ____ ...;:...... _____ , _ __,'--------·-·· .. -············ m1ri1cle n i . l zda T ~ ....... The blWld new Dattuft 61 o .•• Prdlce rNktt J*fect The Datsun 610 ••• MOfe oUta. Ifie 9u1p,,~fe Ilk• a big car. SaY99 l•k• a am•tl car. The all new O.taun 610. CJ4 DM.YPILOT ....._UIM ......_U*t · .............................................. Mm ttlOQun•t ttJO .......................................... ~··· •72 Bulcll: Le Sabre. "72 R.ally Nova 3$0 kpd, Ollledor wW MU, dee· '-L AlllJFii a trk tric blue coavenlble • new ... • • white t.op Ir I.Iller. lm· ,,_ &ood $1700. ~ maculate. 714/5'0-71'4 _lllLW723 ______ ---1 ullfor.RalJ*orSaUt For sale, 67 Chevy 1971 Buick RetaJ fu.11¥ lmolla, •. New ti.res. equlJ>'d.. Lo mi,. • MZ-MS4 • n•t53S-5790 • C ••c ftlS Cu tf1 1 11' 9930 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 75 Mark IV, all p0wer items, cruise, AM·FM stereo, $89()0,. Pvt. pty ~7800,8-S '6' XKE Rdslr. rettore & make $M ~ or trade IJ········u Howard .. ..... . . °= Co..ty's tor truck. Mf.0862 C....... tinenW 82-4dr Partly • restored. New blk paint. • Handsome New · : '78 Monza Station Wagonl OVER 100 CADILLACS TOCHOOSINOM ATAU.TlMIS Beat ofr over $650. 6'2.SSU car~ loaded. All blk. • d7} ~ ts:IOO, Ptp. 494..fl07 eves • .,...... • Nabers Cadillac _'75_M_ar_ll:_IV_E_x-ec-u-ti-ve-1 • ~ fs wknds; ~9781 days. • • Popular, smaller wagon! Auto. trans. power steering a. RtallV Zlpsf Has tour-speed manual transmission ;}~;~I oni;··;··~i459i O~IY "~$3i9i 2600 H.irbor Blvd. Cusld Mew 540·9 I llO --------• DOVE &QUAILSTS. <Near M•cArthur, Jam- boree & BriJto.1 > NEWPORT BEACH '7f Cad Eldorado Conv. All xtru. Reg. gas. Good cood. $5200. 759-1676. '76 Brougham. Less than Vette '60, restored In ex· 10,000 ml. Fuel in;. cell. cond. throughout. Cruille, etc. 4944001 675-9899 '71 Cpe DeVille, Ute blue, Doclp 9935 vin. top. Good cond . ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1600/bstolr.642·9602 '67 Dart, clean, orig. :eeautillll '74 wbt & blk ownr, lo mi, V-8, auto Cpe de Ville, loaded. Lo tram. 644-2023 mi'•, ~-586-SMO ,_,. '940 '74 CdV, fully loaded, ••••••••••••••••••••••• leather int., xlnt cond. ~----P~L $4750. 67s.-07S4 evea & l wknds . G '9J Cadillac, PS, PW, PB, FORD AC, good cood. $8SO, best olr.646-7978 '71 Cadillac El Dorado Convt. Xlnt cond, $311C>O. Must sell as soon as JJ05Sible 644-6194 Glamorous New '78 Caprice Seclanl ~--.,. ••• • • Sturdy New '78 V2 ton FIHtslde Pickup! Auto. Trons .• air cond., pwr. steering & brakes, ,,wr. .• windows, tinted glass, radial whtes, etc. tlfl08l06/1468. H78-15 tires. power steer no & brakes, tinted glass, Exciting New '78 Calnaro LT Coupe! ·<e-Auto. trans., radial whites, power steering & brakeL air c:ond .• tinted glass, etc. No. S06108/l"'· Only $5898 Gorgeous New '71 Monte Carlo Coupel ~ • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Only $6598 OR'ii''"'449.8 ~~~~----~~----~ ........ --~--~------- '76 ... , .,..,.. ,. ""'" ... «Jdr• CtSJ4tl ONLY flAf SPIDH $5195 '78 COIYmr T-, '11 DAflUN 210Z • • ~ lr•M· •Ir con«. I. 1'9rM. '67 V-8, air, P /S, auto. Only .!OGO "'''" -Ulle Hl!'WI $1200. Dy 549-9928, eve. • (IMTGOI • II $7995 ''74 $3295 '14 ,... on1ies. •xl1• 1111rp cm itse» ONLY $3995 '77 $1995 '7& Slt""r aml .. rstry ~Inf low lo. 1"•IH~l1l9"di"9 (171SOXI ONLY 731-0900 Ask for Mike. 196S Mustang Fastback. $800. Good mechanical cond. 548-4416 ..... ttl7 ;:ii-=·:e Ir tiltt. Auto, air. 11.U orr. a1-1'* att s '76 '77 '75 PLYMOUfH AllOW • l4lffd • only 10.000 mllH. \.Ill• Ntwl (_,195'1 ONLY' DAfSU .. MO cou" A ..,..ci, air cOtlCI •• tic. Alltolut.l't fltwlltll 11'1SQH) AUDI FOX o ... ow,,., ctr with Ill IN lldf.i 1.ow, ltw mliet. <*"KAI. ONLY fLlf 124 WAGON A Uloo alt, reek elC. lrtW'nlClllUI C'12HCAI OM.Y s3195 CA,., AulO. _.tlft'loW O.UKl.Ol ONlT . '74 COlvml t-tOP Tllll_.,,.___.. ......... ...-'41111.al ONlT COIYITll f ..fOP AU tlW a ir• lllUOI $9995 '74 sa995 '74 MAKE OFFER '11 $9895 '74 $7895 '77 '73 '74· caawrn f.fOI' t s9995 L..-. ...... ,.... ..... • • I ••HfJlllCIO. ONLY . '74 COlmH f·fOP AU ~•lrft•IOW IOw mlle1'1!lce cer ,., .. , ONlY COIYmr T-TOP Fully eqo.1lpPeC1-IOw low m1141S (017") OLDS OMIOA COU" Reeoy tor Ille most mettclllout Duywl C1'tSLltl. ONLY DOOOI DAar ~W1t11e11e.ir.slncMllfte ~t Milb. a.fleets eactl ..... t c_,.1 (131KY81 ONl Y :1·1 -,,.--, • .-· •--~···-~ • • • • .... -·.trri ... ::m·: r . • .,. . ~ I . • ·~· ~ •• ."1 • ' • • 0., "' ' I •" > • ~ • F~ ... ~ •• ~. \.t • 7 VOL 71, NO. 45, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES By ROBERT BARKER Of Ille b.ity ,.!Nt St.tll • A devastated Huntington· Beach mobile home park is of· ficlally included as part of the Southern California disaster area, a st.ale official confirmed today. Governor Brown proclaimed ap emcrgQncy in Orange and Los Aneeles counties as well as 28Sickened in six other countries Monday. Al Vlllere, a coordinator with the state Office or EmergeMy Services, said that Brown's ac- tion makes it poHible for resi· dents of the Huntington·bf·the-Sea Trailer Village to get low in- terest federal Joans. Approval still bas to be given by the Small Business Ad- ministration~blch would supply the loans, Wlere said. 't ln addition. Brown has uked that President Cane\'. declare the hard·hit Soutbfrn CaUtornta areas u a disaster, malc}U resi- dents eUsibl~ lo~ l~dedl as-sistance. Such a declaration by Ptesi-- dent Carter would make more money and oiore .personnel available and would apedit.e ~ Toxic Gas KillS J~· .. . . . Tannery Wo_.k~i-s CH ICAGO <A P )-Toxic gas killed seven people and sickened 28 today in a block-long leather tanner y, authorities reported. 1Deputy Fire Marshal Charles Pierce ~aid, "When we arrived ipside it was an eerie scene. People were lying on leather belts. One man had a severe cul HB Trustees To Study &undaries Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees will con· sider a plan tonight to change school attendance area boun- daries for six district schools. The boundary shift proposal will be discussed al a 7 o'clock meeting in the district offices at S20t Bois a Ave.• ,Huntington Beach. District Superintendent Jake Abbott has recommended boundar y ch anges between Marina und Westminster high schools, Ocean View and Hunt- ineton Beach hi~h schools and Edison and Fountain Valley high schools in an effort to ease over- crowdini:. Abbott also has recom-mended that eight relocatable clas~rooms be moved to Ocean View J hgh School to meet an- ticipated overcrowding next fall. BOOK TITLE MISLEADING SAN DIEGO (AP) Margaret Bergstadt of Calumet Cjty. Ill., says $400 hidden ln a book was stolen !rom her sixth· floor hotel room. • The· book, which the burglar also took1 is titled "How to Gain Financial Security. over his eye. They were all un. conscious." Fire officials said the toxic gas was hydrogen sulfide, a poisonous combus tible sub- stance that smells like rotten eggs. Pierce said the accident oc- curred as workers attempted to pump a chemical from fl tank DMly ..... ,, ... ,.... S11per Citizen Diddy Lammers was named Fountain Valley Citizen of the Year today by the city's Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. Lammers, 18931 Santa Catherine St., was cited for her work with a wide varie- ty of civic groups. She is president of Women's Division of the chamber. Flu Confirmed BALTIMORE (AP>--Russian flu has been confirmed as the disease that swept the U.S. Naval Academy last week. truck into a holding val. He said the chemical from lhe t.Ank com- bined with a liquid ~lNgdy i~ the vat. producing~ eydroger\ sulfide, Firemen entering th e llorween Leather Company two miles northwest of the .downtown area had to wear tfas masks. Authorities said there ap· parently was a S"1all explosion, but most all ot tile deaths and injurles cam& f oom inJta1ing the gas. Mayor Michael tlilandtc visit· ed the scene and the hospitals where th~ injured were talcen and said' 176 people were In the plant at the lime or the acddent. It occurred as shifts were chang. ing al 8:10 a.m. A spokesman at St. Elizabeth's Hospital said five vicllrus were dead oo arrival (\{ld appeared to hde died by in· haling toxic gas, 'I)e six 4)lher vietlms at the tto.ptil weri suf- ferinc fl'OOl ... JNMa M'l<l some were lia ae~ ~i °"' Ckbel" hbspitaf1 r ~w~ dead and said that tn additJoa to being overcome by gu some victims had boon injured ln the ex11tosion. Mmimjored In Explosion A Westmlnst~r man is hosP,italb:ed today with m-.jor burns suffered Monday whe!l he went to check a aas leak odot in his mobile home aad was engulfed in flames when fumes exploded. Edgar C. Doolin •• 69, of ?282 Weslmlnster Ave., Wfl~ lis\ed in saUara~ eondiUOG today a~ UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange. • WestmiJlSter Flre Department investieators $a1ci they . we:re called to the scene abc>ut 4:30 a.m. after the accident that ~eared the vlctiJti. ernHgent)' lbins, otfic!Jlla sajd. ''AU _ our 9fficial HPorts . aro back in Washin,\on," Hunt· 'nJton Beach C1vH Defense Director George Tbyden said to- day. •1be Mxt irtep is to walt ... Twenty-fo\ll' mobile hollles were desttoYed ud 45 more~­te red AtaJor damage when torna.db-Dke \lllnd~ Nmpa9ed tl\rouiJli the lluntington Be_ t..railer ~ark shortly b~re i a.mLFn_.. Struettit.al damage to the ttailer park fiV48 estimated at $1.2 mUUon aJon,. But wben dam a&e to COlll~ll and other property ln tbe cUy is tamed up. losses In HWltingtOn Beach are pected to hlt.$3 milllon. Fountain Valley also was bat· (ere~ by fierce wlnds which .. ,. ........ FORESTRY WORK~RS SEARCH FOR fL.000 VICTIMS • J Nine P9ople Mlsslng In Hidden Sprlngs Area Befere Killer Storm L4. 'ClQ.Ud Seeding Aifrniite'd by Agency t TEN CENTS . were men;sured in some areas al 90 r:qUes per hour. l>irector of Public Works w,y~e Osborne said that losses u, e~ted to reach $170,000 With falling trees expected to ac. eount foe $100,000 or the total. Four homes also suffered j701000 In damages, Osborne re-ported. * * * No Rain Due Until "·' A stotlll originally forecast to aniv.a oa the Oranae Coast Wednesday bu b"I\ pushed n())lb by a hilh-pressure ridge and clear weather ls expected un· tilJate. Friday or early Saturday. \be National Weather Service saicl today, A-nother storm is expected early next weekend, he said. The new forecast was welcome news to r esidents still NORTH STATE BRACING FOR ANOTHER STORM-AS clearing away mud, debris and fallen trees from a series of stotms during the past week. Damage to public and private property in Southern California has been estimated at $43 billion, spurring Gov. Edmund C. ~rown, Jr. to declare much of tile realon a disaster area. The governor's action paved the way for low-interest federal loans to farmers. businesses and homeowners. John Gietzen of the Orange County Flood Control Dist.net confirmed today what many • Oranie Coast residents bave ~-thera&uhue set a record. ... He "aid Sant• Ana•s season t total •o far of 18.49 inches Js the most ralnfall the county bas re· celved to this date during the 1 rainy season sinco recotds 1 began tn 1908.. I Gietzen also said that even ir 1 no more rain falls between now and the had of the season in June, this will be the third rainiest lleASOn on record. · Season totals so far are: llunt• ington Beach, 17.76 inches; C-Osta Mesa. 18.93 inches; Newport Beach,, 16.76 inches; Laguna NigQel, 19.55 inches : and Santiago Peak on Sad· dleback Mountain, -45.6 inches. 11 in Mexico ~tch Typhoid IJOSTON (AP) -State health oWcials say 11 Massachusetts residents wbo went on a week· Jong charter tour to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, have coma down ""1th typhoid f~ve...-GincQ lheit return Jan. 30. Dr, Nitholas J. Fiumara, direct6r of the Division ot Com· municable t>iseascs, said Mon· day that 3(16' other people who were OI\ the tour, all but 34 of them from Massachusetts, bavo been 8$ked tQ have blood tests tat-en to determine whether they al.so tonU'acted. tile di11ease. ~oast We.a th er Fair tonight. Variable cloudiness Wednesday. l.o"s tolli1tht .CO to 47. Hf1hs Wednesday 60 to ss .. IN8mE'l'eDA.Y \ A2 OAIL Y PILOT lJp to Bis Nee!k Leste r Martin, a prisoner in the Floyd County Jail Ill Ho me, Ga .. finds that he can neither get out nor c·omc hack in his a ttempted escape. Deputy Ray l\1ton <Loµ) stands b y as :\Jartin awaits extraction. Below, an unidentified inmate holds Martin's legs, ~luck m a scr een, to lessen the pressure. The fn - mate ~~id he'd heard that "if you can get your h«.!ad through thl· b a rs you can pull your body t h ruugh. ·'Ile touldn 't. Life Threatene.d 1 ~ Armed Masked Men Rob Irvine Man An lr\'ln~ man answered the l<nock <1t his front door Monday night and was confronted by two men. one of whom pointed a :.awed.off s hotgun at the man's :.tomach R obert C Anzanio, 4951 l''ireslde Circle, was marched to a back bedroom and hog-tied on PB History Society Sets ·sunday Me~t Old-time residents of Hunt- mgton Beach will have a chance to gel together and reminisce at a tea Sunday sponsored by the <:ity·s historical sotlety. Nin e ty ·thre e.-year-old Josephine Antonowltsch will en- lt'rtaln the group. Orange CoQJl· 1y artist Glenn Yost also will dis· 'Play his paintings of Huntington Beach historical sites. Among the old Umerl inyj\e<J ·to the a!fa1r are Cap Sheue, a form er coach ;.it HuJltinglon Beach lligh School, City Coun· <'i lman Ted Qartlett and cil.y his- torian Bud Higgins. The tea wUI be held from 2 to 4 p. m. at the home of Ralph and Charlene Bauer In }{unlington Beach. Historical Society members will provide transportation to the affaJr ror the old timers. Air Fare Rej ected DALLAS CAP> -A Braniff Airways proposal fo,r a $349 round-Uip fare from Dallll!l·Fort Worth Regional Airport to Lon· don has been reJected by the British io~mei\~. the floor. "Don't move or l'll blow your head off," the man with the shotgun told him. A nzanlo repoqed. The other robber had held a knife to Anzanlo'-' back as they went into the room. The criminals, both. of wbom wore l<oit ski masks lo cover t heir features, g reen army f<.1ti gue jackets, denims end black jump boots. ranSllcked the house. They look S2,45S In stereo and television equipment, plus S23'1n cash -and Anzanio's car keys. Police said they loaded up the victim's black f9l8 Cadillac Seville and drOve away with the loot. Anzanio eventually managed to free himselC and c~lled poUc.e. Anzanlo told policd'he believed he would have been killed if he hadn't cooperated with the rob- bers. Nuke Pipe Breaks MUNICH, West Germany <AP> -A small amount of radtoactive steam escaped last week from a nuclear power plant being tested In Bavaria, the slate Environment: "M1111!ltry reported Monday. No one was injured when a pipe carrying the radioacUve steam burst tn a re- actor facility on tl}e lsar River near Landshut, the minletry satd. COLUMBUS, Ga. <AP> Police say the killer who strangled six women may tie a "diabolically clever" 14-year~d boy. Detective Cort1mander 'fl.W. Boone said Monday that a pro- file provided l>Y psychologists and other experts indicates that the killer Js "possibly a young man, aged 14 lo 20, or something under 20. ·'They say maybe he's had problems with his mot.her or grandmother and is a possible schizophrenic,'' Boone said. And the killer probably lives m or near the neighborhood where the six women, aged 60 lo 89, have been kilJed the last five months, the detective chief said. It' is the middle-class Wynnt.on section~ the cit)'. 1'He is familiar with tbe neighborhood," Boone 4aid when newsmen noted that the 1trangler had successfully picked the homes of widowed, elderly women. All but one ol the victims was a widow. The last attacks traced to the strangler occurred over the weekend. Police say an intruder was ecared off by one woman - although he may have stayed in the house and slipped past police when they arrived. Of(lters believe he may ha,•e slipped away and killed a woman just two blocks away Satur<hay moming. Boone a~ Muscogee County Coroner '· Donald Kiigore said they belHive the ktn~ sneaked past police, who were called lo R\&lh Schwob's t\Ome Saturday. and in~ead strang1e1f ne,ighbor Mildrec;J Dismukes Botom. Law el\forccment officers said they reel the man is a psycbopalhic 1.1\trovert wha con· fide~ in no one, a Jekyl9'a.W~ Jlyde character who manaees.to move freely through blghl)' con- centrated police patrols and strikes almost at will. ''He's diabolically clever and h~'s eot plenty of guts," said one otncer. "He Jeaveii few clues." Crew Ready ToSeJ°chfo~ Cra8hed Plane ruv~ide Cot.lntY Sberi1Fs dep· ullea were pojsed today to fly into a box canyon ea.isl or San- ta a~ Peak where authorities believe a Piper Twin Comanc he l\'1th six people on boa rd crashed llt>ndav. The airplane-piloted by a Scottsdale, Ariz., physician - lost radio contact with Phoenix air traffic controllers Monday afternoon. Wrecka&e authorities 'believe is the Twin Cbmanche was locat- ed late Monday In the box can- yon. The plane was en route to Long Beach. · ••we're just waiting to get clearance from the Marine Corps to use their helicopter," a Riverside sheriff's deputy said today. "They wUI be dropping us in the can~n so we can de- term lne Jr it's the right aircraft. The canYQn is located ju:st in· side the Riverside County line. A grim radio report late Mon· day from another Marine Corps helicopter searching the area described the ctasb site as "lit· tered with bodies." A Phoenlx-¥sed Federal Aviation Admin!Jtration official said today he believes au the paaseniers aboard the Twjn Coman che -includiqg the physielan'a wife -were trom Scottsdale, Ariz. Daill ,. .... SUltt ,,_ GOVERNOR BROWN MINGLES WITH AMTRAK COMMUTERS AT SAN JUAN TRAIN DEPOT Just Another Face In the Crowd Today as New San Diego to Loa Angeles Service Inaugurated. <lemmuter Launched -, •' • Brown BoardJJ Initial Run in Capistrano By DENNIS McLELLAN Of 11te o.i1, ~li.t •~1• Los Angeles Supervisor Bax- ter Ward's Valentine lo Sputhern California commuter11 -a $2.5 million commuter train -ro1led through Orang~ County this morning, plckin&: up a surprise commuter. Gov. Jerry Brown, In San Juan Capistrano. The ntw eight-car El Camino, which "'ill run five days a week beL-..·een San D1ego and Los ,.\ngeles, was designed to o!Cer an alternative to the congested freeway syste m. Ward, who was one or the first pass en11ers aboard the tratn when il left San Dlego at 5:45 a .m .. spent nearly three years fighting to win approval of the early.mornlnil train. While some critics of the con· cept argue "'al It wlll not make mondy. Ward b~llev•s it will show a profit Tht; weekly t.lckel price for a round trip belween San Diego and Los Angeles is S76. Go''. Brown. who spent the . night \n San Juan Capistrano. rode the train into Los Angeles. 11 was scheduled to dep.,-t at 7:03 'a .m .. but it was late In ar. riving. "It's an attempt to provide another alternative," said Brown, wailing, alone wilt\ seve ral dozen c ivic leaders, commuters and reporters. for the train to arrive. "It ii. good because the freewavs are get- Beal Wife? Go /Jou;ling LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -The billboards blazed "Beat Your Wife'' In huge letters. In smaller letters, lhe signs added , "Go Bowling." The Bowling Proprietors AssociaUoo was trying to utch the eyes or potential bowlers. But what it generated Instead was a c ontrove rsy with the Spouse Abus e Center, wl\ich provides shelter and COW\Seling for victims of abuse. Carole Monie, director of the center at a YWCA. said that when she ~aw the b i llboard , "I almos t cracked up my car . . . This is just the sort of humor we have~ stop.'' ling more crowded ... · By the tltne the El Camino ar· riv ed in Los Angeles -35 minutes late -the number of passengers picked up along the way had swelled to SOO. Brown and his fellow com- muters .were greeted by t e levision came ras and a marching band, which for some unknown reason played "On Wisconsin." Fro•~age A J .. I t.'OJO~ td 1t vl'ry much," re- ported th~ goH•rnor. "It was ex-: t ellent, but I want more trains.• Wh \' cun't we hav<· one that runs to Chatsworth.," Nollnit lhut trn1n travel saves e n e r gy, Bro wn snid that "millions of people are coming to Califo rnia all the time .. Thl'rc·s JU:.l not room on the I rl'C\' uys · · Train tran•I. he said, 1s ''less ('Xpens1H• It s interesting and 1t s American ·· HBAID ... ~~p t · -:_/ p r e ve n Tbe city of Huntington Beach also may come, in for federal • SJ d compensauon bec~use or iost M e ate costs Incurred during day-long emergency work. Damage also was reported at In Huntm• gton· the emergency ramp at the end of tt)e pier. There aJSQ w.a11 some damage to water and sewer facilities. Offklul'> also estimated that. up to l.000 trees fell during the wlnd.storm. Thyden said some federal financial help migb( be forthcoming in these areas. Monday/wt Wasn't This Driver's Day SAN DIEGO <AP> • Thc s uperstitious never mention bad luck on Monday the 13th. But don't tell Johnnie Sander:.. The 28-year·old San Die~an was st<.1bbed Monday by a motorist after Sanders asked him to move his car because it was bloc king traffic, police said. After plunging a knifo into San. dens' stomach, Lhc other driver fled. As he walked back to his car, dripping blood from his wound, another driver being blocked by Sanders' car yelled at him to get out of the way. That driver pulled out a pistol and squeezed off a shot, missing Sanders and then driving away. Police later arrested J ose Luis A vi la. Z1. of San Dtego for in- vesti galion of asuult with a deadly ..,eapon. Police said they found a spent shell in Avila's car. Sanders was taken to Center City Hospital where he was list- ed in satisfactory condition. Police were still looking for the man who l!llabbed him. A s t'lf·de fensc movie for wom en titled "How To Say No To A Raµbt and Survive" will he i.hown Wednesday night by llunlin l!lon B ea c h 's Neig hborhood Watch crim~ fig hting organization. The film will be shown in city council chambers at 2000 Main St. at 7:30 pm. and the public is - invited. There 1s no admission cha rge and li tera ture will be ava i lable dcta1hng other a c, t1vil1 cs of Neighborhood Watch which recruits c1t11.ens to aid "' law enforcl'menl. 1-'eoturcd s peakers will be police offi.ce r Da n Mc Kerren and .Mart~· Gegner , who is Wo m en's S afNy Committee Cha1rmun of the Huntingt on Hl'arh Junwr Wom c·n·s Club. Neig hborh ood watc h is pri m arily i nvoh ed In anti- h11rglary work and has been cit.- t·d as hi ghly t·ffcehvc in cutting thl' C'1ty·s crime ratt• 1n res1den- 11al areas. Stolen Tapes Al,l in A rabic Rock and roll isn't in store for the thieves who broke into a Costa Mesa resident's car late Sunday and m ade off with a tape deck and SlOO worth of casellt's Poll e<• smd the 25 tapes taken from Saleh Musa Saleh 's car contain only Arab music and language instruction f . ' Irvine EDITI ON Today's Closing .Y.Stocks VOL. 71 , NO. 45, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1_., 1978 . TEN CENTS Probe ·D.lspute8 An ln·house investigation or charges by a part·lltne Irvine ci- ty employee that he was paid for work be did not do and other llls. concludes that rec r eation supervisors need more training. A report from Assistant City Manager Paul Brady, however, also d e termined that the employee, John Francis Codde Jr .• 20, was neve r paid extra hours for a job well done, as Codde apparently believed. Codde, who worked on and off for the city recreation division at University Community Park, appeared before lbe City Council Jan. 24 to claim that: -He was pajd extra hours last Dec. 3 for working a Christmas party at the Universi- ty Park community building and Pumping Error advised to take tips if offered. -On Jan. 13 worked an event at the clubhouse with two other people, which he said could bave been tiandled by one person. -On several occasions, two people are employed at the building jus t to keep the restrooms open and answer the telephone. -On other occasions, city Tannery Gas Kills ... 7 Chicago Workers ClllCAGO lAP> --Toxic gas kille d seven pe r sons and sickened at least 28 others today after a chemical was pumpct.I in· to the wron~ vats al a block-long tannery, officials said. Workers dropped one after another as the fumes spread "l seen one guy pullin g another guy out of the !lase- ment," said James Reynolds, so. an em ployee who was sickened by the fumes. "The guy who was pulling the man out, he went down loo." "Wh en we arrived, it was an eerie scene," said Deputy Fire Marshal Charles Pierce. "Peo· 1>le were lying on leather bells. One man had a severe cut over his eye. They were all un- conscious." A city Environmental Protec- tion Agency official said sodium Life Threatened Armed·Masked .Men Rob Man in Irvine An Irvine man answered the knock at his front door MOhday night and was confronted by two men. one of whom pointed a l sawed-off shotgun at the man's :;tomach. Robert C. Anzan io, 4951 Fireside Circle, was marched to a back bedroom and hog-tied on the floor. ''Don't m1Jvc or I 'II blow your head off," the man with the s hotgun lold him, Anzanio reported . The other rolJber Jlttd hl•ld a I ~nife to Anzanio's huck us they went into the room. The criminals, both of whom wore knit ski masks lo cover • the1r Jo,tu.res, ereen army fatigue Jackets, denims and black jump boots, Tansacked the house. They took $2,455 in stereo and television equipment, plus $23 in cash -and Anzanio's car keys. Police said they loaded up the victim's black 1978 Cadillac ~evallc and drove away witb the loot. Anzanio eventually managed lo Cree himself and called police •. Anianio told police he believed he would have been killed if he hadn't cooperated wilh lhe rob- bl·rs. Unit Seeded Clouds Before Killer Stonn LOS ANGELES (AP) -Just hours before last week's killer storm, the county Flood Control Department was busy seeding clouds to increase rainfall -on- ly 10 miles Crom Big Tujunga Canyon later devastated by massive flooding. Flood control operations engineer Hank MarUn conceded today that cloud-seeding - which officials s4y increases natural rainfall as much ·as 15 percent but does not cause storms -was conducted Crom 9 a.m. to a p.m. Thursday, when rain from the storm ha~ already .started falling heavily JI\ some .. ' Coast Weather Falt toruebt. Variable doudJnesa Wednesday. Low.s tonight fO to 47. HJgha Wedaesd_, to to 65; INSl~ET08AY areas. The storm hit hardest Fril1ay morning, accompanied by hur- ricane-force winds. One flood ~onll"ol official told The Associated Press 1as't Wednesday that be didn't expect. there wou)d be any seeding Thursday because the oncoming storm looked like a '"tiger." The storm, which turned out to be one of the worst in Southern California's history, caused millions of dollars in damage and claimed at l~ast 10 lives throughout the area, inclUdif\I one in the T\rjunga Canyon area. Ten other persons are missing and .,resumed dead in the ~asbout of Hidden Springs, high m the canyon. (Seo SEEDING, Pap A2) • hydros ulfide brought to the tan· nery in a tank truck was ''er- roneously pumped" into storage tanks containing an acid. He said the combination created hydrogen s ulfide, a poisonous combustible substan<:e tbal l>mells like rotten eggs. The EPA offi cial said the che micals were mixed in open- top wooden storage tanks in the base ment or the block-long llorween Leather Co. plant. Firemen entering the plant two mlles northwest of the downtown area had to wear gas masks. One workman said he realized something was wrong when he <See TOXIC, Pjg~ A2 > NewStorin . f Will Skip Wast Area ~ storm originaJly forecast to arrive on the Orange Coast Wednesday has been pushed north by a high-pressure ridge and clear weather is expected un- til late Fridaf or early Saturday. the Naliona Weather Service said today. Another storm is expected· early next weekend, he said. The new forecast was welcome news to residents still NORTH STATE BRACING FOR ANOTHER STORM-AS clearing away mud, debrl~ and f allen trees from a series ot storms during the past week. Damage to pnbUCl and private property in Southern California • has been estimated at $43 billion, spwiing Gov. EdmUnd G. Brown Jr. to declare much of the region a dlsaster·area. The governor's action paved the way for low-interest federal loans lo farmers, bwslnesses and bom eowners. John Gietzen of the Orange County Flood Control Diatrict confirmed today what many Orange Coa,st residents have suspe~ -the rains have set a record .... He said Santa Ana's season total so Car of 18.49 lnchea is the most rainfall the county bas re. celved lo this· date during the rainy aeaaon alnoe records begllp ln 1908. 016tzeo a1Jo said that even if no mote rain falls between now and the end of tile aeUOD Jn June, th,\f will be the tblrd rainiest ....,. on reeord. Seuon tota1a 10 farm: Htmt.. Jnaton Beach, 11.11 tncbes: Costa MeS'a, 18.t~tncbes: Newport Beacb. 18.~ lncbei; La•ana Nltuel, 19.5$ lliebes~ and Santl•to 'Peak on Sad· dJebea INiafttaln. 45.8 frcbes. ~Extra P~y Rap staff mem~rs inanned a locked buildlnJ for no llpparent purpose. The toUnClJ~alled tor a full ln· vesligaUon~ Brady clailnecl Codde never receive.d payment for the Dec. 3 party beyond what he actu:ally worked, tbouih said a supervisor misled him lo believe be would.be. 1'alentfne Ktas The supervisor, Brady said, had complimented Codde for .a good job and told blm she'd ask her own supervisor that Codde be paid a couple of extra hours. However, Brady will report to the council at 7 :~ torucbt that she forgot about the matter and Codde dldn 't get the pay. Further, Brady said, Codde wouldn't bave been given it Ron Fiore· of Houlihan•a restaurant in Newport Beach has a very happy Valentine's Day, with Karen Gant'g help, as the Irvine Junior Ebell Club sells kisses today at 50 cents a pucker to raise money for UC Irvine Medical Center. Lips will be on call until l a.m. Wednes- day. Pepsico Acquires Irvine's Taco Bell LOS ANGELES <AP) -The Irvine-based Taco Bell (ast-food chain will be acquired by Pepsico Inc. in a $12S million tax-free stock exchange, it was announced Monday. · Under the agreement, 1.43 shares of Pepsico stock will be exchanged for each share of Taco Bell, the companies said. The announcement came only IO days after Taco Bell Chairman Robert L. McKay de- nied his company was bein' ac· quired. New York·based Pepsico bad reportedly been in the market for another fast-food chain since Jts purchase last November of the Pizza Hut restaurant chain. Glen W. Bell, who owns 21.6 percent of Taco Bell's shares, and McKay, who owns 9.9 per· cent, said in a press release that they "were enthusiastically in favor of the transaction." The exchange is subject to ap- prov al by both companies• ~barebolders. ~o:Uege Boar_d ~yes •'- Fi1n d Interest Code Saddleback Community Collue Dislrict trustees are ex- pected tonight to consider a re- vised conflict of interest code which will require them and other district officials to discJc>se their penonal /lnancial Jn- terest.s. ln the past, several trustees have been critical of the oode which is now in its third version. Claiming it is an invasion of privacy, Tnastee Donna Berry once said ab• would resign berore reveallnc bet husband'• personal holdings. The eode ii required under terms ol the PoUUcal Reform Ac~o!Wf. the district. The code is designed to pro- hibit officials Crom muing de· oisions which might be fn- fluenced by personal financial COPSlderations. In other action, trustees will be •sked to approve 31 teaching polttions for tbe district's northern campus which is scheduled to open in" lrvine in August. . ne trustees wm begin tlteir meetlng with a curriculum com· mittee report at 7 p.m. in tl\e llbrar1 on lbe Mission Vlejo campus. because that would be "a girt of public monies." Brady also said Codde's supervisor had joked about tips, but Codde never received any because he never was olfer'ed any. Brady said the supervisor was unaware of policies about extra pay !or good work. 1 <See EXTBA. Page Al) Water Curbs fuopped Irvine Ranch Water District director s voted Monday to rescind drought-imposed waler and sewer service surcharges that have been in ef!ect aince Jasl June l. The act.ion is etrecU\'e March 1. The surcharees bad ~ost dis- trict customers an average or $30,000 per month, or a tow oC about $270,000 in extra fees. The penalties were imposed not because users were wasµng water, but because they were good al conserving it, which, ac- cording lo district officials, lost money for the district. 'Board Pres ident Lansing E&erling said lRWD customers achieved a peak 19 percent re- duction. That's nearly twice what the district was under manadate to conserve. The Metl"f)politan Water Dis· trlct <M WU), which supplies water to Southern California through the Colorado River aqueduct and tile state water proje~ bad ord~red cutbacks to. 90 percem ol 1976 use. IR WD eustomers have been • billed an utra thr" cents per 100 cubie feet of water used. as a water conservation surcharge. The sewer service surcharge is 50 cents per household. Of- ficials said it was needed to cov- er increased wastewater treat- ment costs because of lesser nows to the district's Michelson Drive treatment plant. The average cost of both sur· charges was $1.10 per month. per customer. In a related action Monday. the board directed district of- ficials to prepare a resolution re· pealing drought measures that prohibited several water uses. The rules prohibited hosing ofC sldewallcs and driveways, refill- ing ornamental pools and foun- tains, and washing cars with a , • running hose. E~rling said, "It's probably no longer necessary to have restrictions on water use in · some of the areas causing incon- venience to our customers." But at the same time Eberling emphasized that "the IRWD lll- tends to continue Its long• standing policy of water con. servaUon." (See WATER, Page A%) Irvine Burglar Gets Stereo, TV' Burglars forced open tha kitchen window of an Irvine home, at 4 Chicory Way, MOSl- day and stole stereo equipment and a portable television, valued by owner Gerald Eischen at $2,280. police said. The 37-year-old naval officer reported that a red, white and blue bedsJ>te&d alao was taken. .-Dolliir Value ' Drops Again LONDON (AP) -The vaJ u~ of the dollat" dropped sharply acaln In. early tradlnlf today on. Europe'• IDOQey markets. A Frankf\lrt dealer said the downward push on the. U .s. eurronc)' was uenormou1.'' He aald the hia•ltllt~rewutrom th• S~IMfranc, TradiaV was described 11 h•~e and nervous. Some fl tho 11e.certalnty 1t.emmed lrom .~arent clllaareement between lbe Unlted States and West otrmur over hOw belt to •Umuhl the ln- •du.strlallted "ortct•• .COOOlllJ. ~. \2 DAI' 'Y P:I OT SEE DING REPO • • •·It St't'ms a lHUe'strange U>ey were aeedina clouds wilb sulh a big storm coming in, if the purpose of seeding 1s to produce -fllOrt' n;mfall," said forecaster Oscar Nichols with the National Weather Service ... There were some heavy rains during the day Thursday." Flood <'onlrol official• aay the effect or cloud seeding ls limited to a 200-square-mile taraet area' and a one-hour lime frame after seeding, but Nichols said the strong winds could blow silver 1od1dc. which is used to seed the, clouds, around to neighboring areas Nichols said weather service Pioneer Carl Ronier Dies at 8 5 FunNal .Services were held M o nday at Mi ss ion San Capistrano for pioneer rancher and forme r San Juan post mas ter Carl Anthony Romer. lie was 85. Mr. Romer came to California from Iowa with his family 82 years ago. From 1910 to 1920 he was secretary and confidante to. J erome O'Neill, owner or the Santa Margarita Rauch that stretched from El Toro to Oceans ide. In 1920. he opened a general merchandise store in the settle- ment or San Juan Capistrano and continued operating the store until he was appointed postm ru.ter in 1944 by President Franklin Roosevelt. Mr. Romer retired in 1962. Hurial was held al Ascension Cemetery in El Toro. Mr. Romer is survived by a son, Carlos, of Santa Monica; a brother, Leo, of Laguna Hills; and four sisters, Mr11 . Mary Jensen and Mrs. Helen Gofoerer of Watsonville, Mrs. Claire Melancon of Santa Barbara and Mrs. Clarence Sorenson of Salinas Monday JU8 t ·Wasn't This Driver's Day SAN DrEGO CAP) -The superstitious never meiUlon bad luck on Monday the 13th. But don't tell Johnnie Sanders. The 28-year-old San Dietan was stabbed Monday by a motorist after Sanders asked him to move his car because it was blocking lraHic. police said. Aller plunging a knife into S~­ ders · stomach, the other driver fled. As he walked back to his car, dripping blood from hls wound. another driver being blocked by Sanders' car yelled at him to get out of the way. That driver pulled out a pistol and squeezed off a shot, m[s&ing Sander!! and then driving away: Police later arrested Jose Luis Avila. 27. of San Diego for in- vestigation of assault with a deadly weapon. Police said they found a spent shell in Avila's car. car Sanders was taken to Center City Hospital where he was list- ed in satisfactory condition. Police were sUIJ Jookint tor the man who stabbed him. Ambassador Q uits WASHINGTON CAP) - Ethiopia's ambassador to the United States, Ayalew Man- , defro. has resigned and wants to . remain in this country. the State Department said today. : Department spokesman ! Charles Shapiro said Mandefro 1 i& not seekln~ political asylum, : but is applying for admission un· · der this counlry'1 immtiration i laws. l l 01'ANOI COAIT . DAILY PILOT offat111s are lnvesU1allnf the cause of UM mauive fl t>Odini, and "We·~ aware tbal cloud seed.Inc wu done-and we 'll in· elude that in lhe ~\)Ort." 'Martin satd: ''We seeded until 3 in the afternoon, at which time we decided, look. we've cot a bag one coming. There's no need of seeding any more." The impact of the seeding - wbicb has been conducted by the county at an annual cost or $30,000 paid to a cloud-aeedlna firm -1s generally in the San Gabriel watershed, which is a 200-square mile drainage area adjacent to the Big Tujunga watershed area. Asked about the possibility or lawsuits stemming from flood damage, Martin said, "I think there 's a chance of lawsuit, there always is. but they've never woo a cloud-seeding lawsuit. It's so hard to prove you've got an increase that it's hard to prove we hurt anythin~." The California drou2ht was declared officially over Jan. 1', but flood control officials said they cqntinued s~lng lo bring ground water levels, which bad been depleled during the past dry season. to cap1clty. . Martin saJd flood control of- ficials believe the cloud-seeding had no impact on the ensuing flooding because the seeding took place in the San Gabriel Canyon area, which is "so far away it isn't funny." He said it was about 10-12 miles from the Tujunga and La Crescentia areas. ''For 15 years, we've been told by seeding people that an hour after you shut them (the silver iodide generators) off. there's no effect. "What you do in seeding is enhance rainfall. You don't make il rain," Martin said. "We figure we get something like a 10 to 15 percent increase. We have a rule around here that the minute we hit five inches of rain at San Gabriel Dam we quit seeding. There was about five inches when we quit." BOOK TITLE MISLE4DING SAN DIEGO CAP> Margaret Bergstadt of Calumet City, Ill., says $400 hidden In a book was stolen from her sixth-· floor hotel room. The book, which the burglar also took, is tilled "How to Gain Financial *urity. Neae Line of Work Mrs. Larry 'Morgan of Costa Mesa pre- sides ov.et her family's curbside firewood ~ale on East !Ot.h Street. The Morgans saw seven trees fall in their yard during last week's big wind. They hired a pro. res&ional logger to cut up the trees and now have about 12 cords of wood on sale. turning thcu-weather-caused adversity in- to what thl'y hope will be at least a break-even proposition. .,. . $3~t Million 'to Coast? Outer Targets Marine Bui ldi:rig Projecu President Carter has included in his proposed budget requests for more than $37 miJUon for Marine Corps construcUon proj- ects along lhe Oranae Coast. according to U.S. ~p. Robert E. Badham, R-Newport Beach. The requests include $9.4 million for 216 military depen- dent houfing units near the Marine Corps Helicopter Air Station at Santa Ana, a Badham spokesman said today. · The houslnir units, the first of a SOO·unit project, were Original- ly proposed for Mile Squal'e Park in Fountaip Valley, but replanned for the Santa Ana location because ·of protests by Founlnln Valley residents, the spokesman said. He sald the unita are needed because of a shortage of low-cost housing In Orange County. The request is part of Presi- dent Carter's proposed $126· billion defense budget, currently before the House Armed Services Committee. Badham is a member of the committee. If npproved, the budget will go into effect Oct. l . The spokesman said Carter has also requested $6.4 million for a bachelor's enlisted quarters al the Marine Corps Air Station at El Toro along with $750,000 for a communications center, plus nearly $1 million for an operations trajning facilily. Carter's budget also Includes S19. 7 million for new construe- tion at Camp Pendleton, the spokesman sa.td. The breakdown ror Pendleton is. $7 .3 million for bachelors' enlisted quarters, $4.6 million (or a maintenance hangar at the airfield, $2.9 million for armory projects, $2.3 mlllion for a new dioing facility, $2 milllon for energy monitoring and control systems and $800,000 for improv- ing the telephone system. Internship Advoeated Half of All Laivyers · Incompetent-Belli equipped to do a simple appen- dectomy,'' 5-4 and 170 Pounds SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Melvifl BeUi, one Qf Ute aaUon's leading trial lawyers with nearly 1.400 courtrpom fights behind him. agrees wilb Chief Justice Warren Burger that half of today's lawyers are incompe- tent. .. Arter l aw school, n ew lawyers should have one year or internship before they're turned loose on an unsuspecting public who thinks because a nuy's got his license he's equipped to practice law." said the 70-year- old author o( 33 books on law. Fledgling barristers ·•get out or Jaw school without any in- ternship and they send them out to try homicide cases . . . He doesn't know which door the Judge comes in from ... " Belli points to himself as an example: he leaped inlo three homicide cases shortly after get- ting bis law degree and lost two. He said the experience persuade4 him to learn as much as he could about medicine. Pudgy ·woman Said Leader of Bandits A heavy set young woman sus- pected or being the ringleader of a gang of bank bandits responsi- ble for several recent holdups is sought today after another rob- bery in Westminster. Investigators said the woman. about five feet, four inches tall and estimated to weigh about 170 pounds, sauntered into the Bank of America, 6951 Westminster Ave .. about 10:30 a .m . Monday. The suspect, who reportedly works with at least three others F ,...PageAJ TOXIC ••• deployed as lookouts, walked up to the teller's cage and present- ed a note demanding money. Loss in the robbery was re- ported to be slightly more than $.WO, but FBI agents in Santa Ana said today it is not lbeir policy to release s uch niures. A uthorlties said the· chubbv bank bandit. believed to be about in her mid-20s, never dis - played a weapon in robbing the Westminster Avenue bank but made it clear she meant busi· ness. The cryptic note warned the teller was being watched throughout the episod e. Wit- nesses reported seeing a thin man hanain( around the front door as though he might be post-ed as a lookout. They added that the chubby female bank bandit escaped in a car driven by another couple. A spokesman for the Federal Breau of lnves Uaauon In Santa An.a said the woman.ls believed to have pulled a similar robbery in Santa Ana Jast Frtday, aJso at a Bank of America. The getaway car was describe.ct as a white, 196~ Chevrolet sedan. Beat Wife? (',a Bowling Belll estimated he has won $100 million fn civil damages during his stormy, 4S·year law career. New lawyers, uld Belli, are not competent to act as ad- vocates ln a courtroom "any more than a guy who gets out of medical 11chool is F ,...PapAJ WATER ••. The resolution is due at the board's Feb. 27 meeting Most or IRWD's 14 ,000 customers are In Irvine. There are some ln Tustin, and the di s- trict furnishes water to the Irvine Industrial Complex, parts of which are in Newport Beach and Santa Ana. At the American Bar Associa- tion meeting in New Orleans Monday, Burger won a standing ovation alter the ABA House of Delegates rejected a proposed resolution that in effect told the chief justice lo put up or shut up on the competency iss ue. Belli says Burger is "pretty t1early right ... Fifty percent of law is medicine. We don't try law. we try facts, and the facts are medical facts. You can't go into a courtroom today unless you know medicine." Attacks R enewed ? BANGKOK. Thailand (AP) - Cambodia accused Vletnam to- day or renewing attacks into the P arrol' s Beak region o( southeastern Cambodia and lbe northeastern province of Rat- tansklri. It claimed the attacks were repulsed. Teen Boy _Sought in Slayings COLVMBUS. Ga. (AP) - Police say the kJUer who atrangled six women may be a "cUabollcally clever" 14-year-old bo}'. Detective Commander-H. W. Boone said Monday lhat a pro· file provided by psycholotist.s and other experts indkates lhat the killer ls ''PoSSlbly a young man, 8'ed 14 to 20. or somet.hlnc under 2!0. "They say maybe he's bad problems with his mother or grandmother and ls a possible 1cbhopbrenlc," Boone said. And the killer probably lives in or near the neighborhood where the six women, aged 60 to 89, have been kllJed the last five months. the detective chief said. It ts the middle-class Wynnton section of tbe city, "He la familiar with lhe nelahborhood," Boone said when newsmen noted that the strangler had successfully picked lhe homes of w1duwed. elderly women. AU but one ot lhe vicUms was a wldow. The last attacks traced to lhe strangler occurred over the weekend. Police say an intruder was scared olt by one woman - although he may have stayed in the house and slipped past police when they arrived. OCficers believe he may have s lipped away and killed a woman just two blocks away Saturday morning. Boone and Mus co gee County Coroner J. Donald Kilgore said they believe the klller sneaked past police. who were called to Ruth Scbwob's home Saturday, and instead strangled neighbor Mildred Dismukes Borom. Law enforcement officers said they feel the man is a psychopathic introvert who con- fldes In no one, a Jekyll-andr Jlyde character who manages to move freely through highly con- centrated police patrols and strikes aJmost at will. "He's diabolically clever and he's got plenty of guts," said one officer. "He leaves few clues." Driver Dies As Car Hits Stalle~ Auto Louis Florez, 57. of 31416 Los Rios St., San Juan Capistrano. was killed Monday morning when the auto he was driving hit . a stalled "car on the rain-swept San Diego Freeway, the California Highway Patrol re- ported. The report said Florez was driving northbound on the freeway just south of Oso Creek at about 6:50 a.m. when his car s truck the rearend of a van stalled in the outside Jane. Driver oC the disabled car w1s Identified as J . Buczko. 33. of Los Angeles. Buczko was treat- ed for minor injuries at MissiQfl Community Hospital. Florez, according to a CHP spokesman. died in the hospital about an hour after the freeway accident. E',...PapAI EXTRA •.• He a™> aaid work schedules at the park need review. But Brady also said Codde wasn't a particularly good employee and had been recom- mended for termination only 10 days before his public complaint to the council. Codde's Job performance. Brady will report, "was Jess than satisfactory and could war- rant termination.·· 70 Restaurant Workers Due Compensation The O'.S. Department of Labor has announced that 70 Oranee Coast workers employed at two Monarch Bay Restaurant Corp. facUfllcs will receive more than $22,000 ln unpaid overUme com- pensation. T he U.S. District Court Judi• ment resulted from lnve1U1a· Uona conducted by Elmore Wilcox, Orance County director for the department's W•1e·HoUr Dlviaion, Emplorment Sten-' dards Ad ml!"lltraUon. 1Vllcoit s~d Wday th• arttct.d r••tauunts are the Crown Hout~ .tn Lqu.oa NJfuel and the Ivy Kouae ln UiguM Beach. The fedetal waa•hour 11• ,. Quires that employees be paid at lea1t tJtM and • bat! for all boUn worked over 40 In a rea· uJar work wet:k. .• . . . :· Laguna/South Coast Aft ern oon· N.Y. Sto eks VOL. 71, NO. 45, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUf'JTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOAY,FEBRUARY1~1~8 TEN CENTS .. - .San Juan ~Oses ~~.Pilots in H11ling By WILUAM HODGE Of -o.11'1' ...... , .... An Orange County Superior Court Judge has ruled against Slln Juan Capistrano in a dispute klvolving authority to regulate takeorr and landing patterns at tlle city's airport. The lawsuit was filed against Uie city by Capistrano Airport pilots angered over the city'a airfield regulations. In a letter to litigants in the case Monday, Judge James Jud~e said the city had no authority to regulate aircraft once they leave the ground. That authority, he said, is vested in the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) a nd the federal government. The ordinance called for pilots to execute a sharp left turn on takeoff to avoid c!Jmbing over houses west of tf\e airfield. The law also specified right turns in the traffic pa_ttern around the Cleld rather than standard left turns. "We've )Dade our point," Frank Dimino, attorney for the pilots, said Monday. "Now we think that the city should look over the ordinance again." ''The city by passing the law put pilots in jeopardy," he said. LB Panel Eyes Taxing Pageant By STEVE MITCHELL Ol 11• Delly "194 Si.ff A heavy tax on Pageant of the Masters seats and elimination of sum mer lifeguards is being rec· om mended by the Laguna Beach Human Needs Committee should lhe Jarvis-Gann tax initiative pass . The panel ts recommendjng the City Council slap a surtax of $2 onto all Pageant of the 1 Masters ti ckets beginning this I year, and a $4 surcharge onto : loge seats. should the tax limita· I lion measure pass June 6. In addition, the committee suggests the council eliminate seasonal lifeguard positions un· less tbe county, state or private foundations pick up the tab for summer lifeguard service. Human Needs Committee chairman Jay Murley says his group is serious in its proposal, which will go before the City Council Wednesday night. "There's no way in hell we're going to have much in the way or police, fire or marine safety I More Clear Days ;Expected on COast A storm originAny forecast to arrive on the Orange Coast Wednesday hu ~o P••be41 north by a hlgh-pressure ridge , and clear weather is expected un- i ti1 late Friday or early Saturday, the National Weather Senlce said today. Another storm is expected e .. rly next weekend, he said. NORTH STATE BRACING ~ FOR ANOTHER STORM-AS • The new forecast was l''elcome news to resident~ still clearing •way mud, debris and !alien ir'ees from a series of storms during the past week. Dnmngc to public and private property in Southern California has been estimated al $43 btllion. spurring Gov. Edmund 0, Brown Jr. to dedare rnuch of Uie region a disaster area. The governor's action paved the way for low.interest federal loans to farmers, businesses and horn eowners. John Gietsen ol the Orange Qbunty Flood Control District confirmed today what many Orange Coast residents have suspected -the rains have set a record. . · ; He said Santa Ana's season total so far of 18.49 inches ts the most rainfall the county has re· ceived to this date during the rainy season since records beganinlM. ~ also .-S Ulat even if no more rain talhi between now and th~ end of the season in June. this wm be the third rainiest season on record. Sea900 totals so far are: Hunt- ington Beach, 17. 76 inches; Costa Mesa, 18.93 inches; Newport Beach, 16.76 inches ; Laguna Niguel, 19.SS inches ; and Santiago Peak on Sad· dleback Mowitain, 45.6 inches. . Vandals Hit · School ill SC Vandals broke six windows at a San Clemente elementary school this weekend, ate cookies and milk and disappeared with four calculators and $20 in small change, police reported today. Principal Corene Barr said she discovered the damage Mon- day, when she went to Concordia Ele'ITu~ntary School, 3120 Ave. del Presldente, to catch ·UP on work. Monday was a school holi· day. . Six windows were broken, making the total Joss about $120, Mrs. Barr said. Repairs bad been made before school opened this mominc. protection in this town if Jarvis is approved," said Murley. "We're going to be in rough · 'financial s hape and we have to !ind new sources of income that are palatable to as many of Laguna's citizens as possible." Murley said lhot while festival proceeds to the city last year "did a good job of supporting Main Beach Park, It didn't do much forthecitiiens. '' He said people from outside or town who purchase Pageant (See PAGEANT. 'Page AZ) SC Seals Ex posed to Rail Beath San Clement4's erode<J beaches are e-Xpoalog' younc seals tD the danger of being hit. by rugh.speec:t trains. "Our beaches are eroded so much, that if a seal comes to the beach, he'll be on the railroad tracks," said a state life1uard. Recent storms have carried away sand wbicb usually makes n wide strip of beach between tide lines and the Santa Fe Railroad tracks, running parallel to the shore. San Clemente police received two reports Monday of young seals beached near the tracks at A venida Calilia in south San Clemente. The first early morning caller s aid a baby seal was ''flipping around" neal' railroad tracks. At 10:35 a.m. a second caller said he'd seen an injur~ seal inland of the tracks in the same loca· lion. Lifeguards did not respond to the first call, poJice said: As Jong as tlle animal did not appear in·· jured. lifeguards do not interfere with the seals, which often beach and make their own way back to the Seal Rock colony. Following the second report. lifef uards looked tor an injured sea , but were unat>Je to !ind it., they said. ••A pllot would receive a etearaoee Otat 'lolJ~d \he city's ordin&Qd and 11 be dldn't follow it be would be taking a chance on losing hi!I pilot's license." The attorney, also a pilot who file& out ol the U11y airfield, aa.id the <:ourl also st.Opped the city from requiring landing and takeoff forms to be liled with the city-mandated airport com· pliance officer. • But City Manaaer James Mocalis' today dlsputed that point. "It doesn't .really say that •• Mocalis said. "The jud1e Sild the procedure appeared to duplicate flight plans required by the FAA." Mocalis said be would have to consult with City Att.orney James Okazaki lo determine whether or not the city could continue requiring the forms. But, MocaUs said the city would not appeal the court de- cision. "The City Council has already determined that they're golna to close ttle airport next June or within 90 days of that," he said. "There•s no sense in spending the publlc':r ~oney to fight the case becau5e Qt that.·· <See ADlPORT, Page A2) ' Delly"""'""' ...... GOVERNOR BROWN MINGLES WITH AMTRAK COMMUTERS AT SAN JUAN TRAIN DEPOT Just Another Face In the Crowd Today aa New San Diego to Los Angele• Service Inaugurated. Broun Boards Initial Rwi in Capistrano By DENNIS ~LEWN Clf .. Nly,...ltaff Los Angeles Supervisor Bax- ter Ward's Valentine to Southern CallfornJa commuters -a $2.5 million commuter train ...-rolled through Orange County this morning. picking up a surprise commuter, Gov. Jerry Brown, in San JaanCapistrano. T~ new eight-car El Camino, which will run five da~s a week between San Diego and Los Angeles, was designed to offer an alternative to the congested freeway system. Ward. who was one of the first passengers aboard the train when it left San Diego at 5:45 a.m .. spent nearly three years fighting to win approval of the early-morning train. While some critics of the COil· cepl argue that tl will not make 'Chico' TY Actor J To Lead LB Parade Seatman Crothers, who has been singing and playing jau for mMe than 50 years, and who portrays Louie the garbage man on TV's "Chico and the ¥an•• series, will be in Laguna Beach Saturday leading the l2tb annual Patriot's Day Parade: The Los Angeles actor, wbo also portrayed Mingo the cockflgbter fD the black his· tortcal aeries "R()ot&" will lead 19 band&. nine marching units. 15 antique cars, seven noata, 34 equestrian groups and 11 novelty entrie• in lhe Laguna Beach parade. which .steps off at 11 Satll.rda7 morning. money, Ward believes it wilf show a profit. The weekly ticket price for a round trip between San Diego and Los Angeles is $76. Gov. Brown, who spent the night in San Juan Capistrano, rode the train into Los Angeles. It was scheduled to depart at 7:03 a.m., but it was late in ar- riving. "It's an attempt to provide another alternative," said Brown, waiting, along with several dozen ci vie leaders. commuters and reporters. for the train to arrive. "It. is good because the freew~ys are get- ting more crowded." By the time the El Camino ar· rived in Los Angeles -35 ·minutes late -the number of passengers picked up .along the way had swelled to 500. Brown and bis fellow com· muters were gre eted by televis ion cameras and a marching band, which for some unknown reason played "On Wisconsin." ••1 eJtjoyed it very much," re- pqrted the.govemor. "It was ex· cellent., but l want more trains. Why can't we have one that runs toChat.Swortb?" Noting that train travel saves enercy, Brown s aid that "millions pf people are coming to Callf6rnia all the time. There's just not room on the freewap." Train travel, be said, is 11less expensive. It's interesting and <See 1'BAINS, Page A2) Coast Weath er Fair bmlght. Variable cloudiness Wednesday • . Lowa t011igbt 40 to 47. IDgbs Wednesday 60 to 65. INSIDE TODAY , . l ! DAIL V PILOT San Juan City Aide To Move San Juan Capistrano's assis- tant city manager wUl be mov· mg north shortly to accept a position March 1 as director of adminis tr ative .!i ervices tor Walnut Creek ln the Bay area . .. It's almost exactly the same position." John O'SulUvan said today. "It will be on a larger :.cale and I'll have a larger staff but the job is essentially the same." O'SuJUvan has been assistant city manaaer in San Juan for a bout nve years. He characterized the move north as one of opportunity. "Walnut Creek contacted me and asked me to apply for the position." he recalled . "I wasn't really looklng for another job. but the poslUon did meet my ·criteria ror changing jobs. .. Professionally, it's an out standing move !or me . He described Walnut Creek - located eaat of Oakland -as "physically similar to San Juan." ''They have about 15 s(luare ·mnes of land and they protect their hillsides," he explalMd. ••sut the population up there Is around 47,000." The move will mark the third generation southern Callfor· nian's first time living in the Bay area. O'Sullivan said City Manager James Mocalls would be talkl°' with city officials and the City Council about a replacement for the exiting official. O'Sullivan said, however, he would be returning to San Juan periodically until April to help smooth over the transition. Crew Ready To Search for Crashed Plane R i verslde County Sheriffs dep- utaes were poised today to ny into a box canyon cast of San· tiago Peak where authorities believe a Piper Twin Comanche with she people on board crashed Monday. The airplane-piloted by a. Scottsdale, Ariz.. physician - lost radio contact with P hoenix air traffic controll ers Monday afternoon. Wreckage authorities believe is the Twin Comanche waa local· ed late Monday in the box can· von. The plane was en route to ·Long Beach. "We're just waiting to get c. ·arancc from the Marine Corps to use their helicopter," a Riverside !i!hcriff's deputy said today. "They will be dropping us in the canyon so we can de· tcrmlne II It's the right aircraft. The canyon is located just in· side the Riverside County line. A grim radio report late Mon· duy from another Marine Corps helicopter searching the area described the crash site as "lit· \t>red with bodies." A Phoenix-based Federal Aviation Administration official s aid today he believes all the passengers uboard the Twin Comanche -including the physician's wife -were from Scottadale, Arli. SUJlen Tapes AJJ in Arabic Rock and roll lsn 't ln store for the thieves who broke Into a Costa Mesa resident's car late Sunday nnd made off with a tape deck and $100 worth or casettes. Police sa1d the 25 tapes taken from Saleh Musa Saleh'• car contain only Arab music and lanpage inatructlon. DAILY PILOT New Line of 11' ork Mrs . Larry Morgan of Costa Mesa pre· s ides O\'C•r he r Jam1ly's curbside ftrev.ood sale on East 20th Street. The Morgans s aw seven trees fall in their yard during last week's big wind. They hired a pro· f essional logger to cut up the trees and now have about 12 cords of wood on sale. turning their weather-caused advers ity in- to what they hope will be at least a break- even proposition. F,....PogeAJ PAGEANT TAX EYED. • • tickets, "can well afford the ex- tra cost.'' M urley's group believes the surtax on Pageant tickets could raise perhaps 10 percent of what Jarvis will cost the city in lost finances. "We're talking in lhe low six· fiaures." he said. But Festival of Arts officials call the pageant surcharge pro- posal "outrageous." Festival board member and treasurer Paul Griem said the festival "already has a sur· charge to the tune of 17.S per· cent." Last year the festival handed over a check for $190,093 as th• clty's share of festival proceeds. Griem said the city could possibly pass an ordinance that would place an amusement tax on the f~sllval. ··u could be done, but it would be horrendous," Griem said lo· day. "This is a real life example of killing the goose that laid the golden egg," he said. "There is no way we could support a S4 surcharge on loge seats, or even S2 increase on poorer seats that go tor ~ now. That's a 33 percent increase.•· T he seeond recommendation by the human needs panel would eliminate summer lifeauud positions, including an end to re- corded surf reports. Murley said his committee's una,nlmous approval or that rec· ommendallon also includes a request that the r~ul\S of City Council action be sent to other counclla of cltles with beacbfront access. He said art Aasembly blU co· authored by Dennlk Man1ers (0. Huntington Beach> would relm· burse city expenditures for beach-related costs. "The Mangers bill looks good this time," Murley said. ''All it needs is a lltlle extra push, and this recommendation might do it 1f 1t reaches other beach cities." Before Killer Storm L4 Cloud Seeding Admitted by Agency . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Just hours before last week's killer ~torm . the county f'lood Control Department was busy seeding clouds to Increase rainfall -on- ly 10 miles from Big TuJun.ga Canyon late r devastated by massive flooding. Flood control operations enginet>r Hank Martin conceded today that cloud-S'eeding - which offi cials say increases natural rainfall as much as 1S percent but does not cause storms -was conducted from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday, when rain from the storm bad already started falling heavlly ltr aome areas. . The storm hit hardest Friday mornina, accompanied by hur· ricane·Corce winds. One Oood control official told The Auoclated Presa last Wedneada.y that be didn't expect. there would be any seeding Thursday because the oncoming 1torm looked like a "User." The atorm, which turned out to t>. one d the worat in Southern California's hlatory, caused million• ol dollars ln damage and claim-.t at least 10 lives throughout the area, including one ln the Tujun1a Canyon area. Ten other persons are ml1slng and presumed dead in the wastiout of Ridden Springs, hl&h in the canyon. "tt •eema a Uttle atran1e ttie:v were •eedini clouds with 1ucb a blfr atorm comint ln. it lb• purpose o( seedhtg Is to produce more ralnlan, .. •&id lotecutet Oscar NlcholJ with the National Weather Service. ''Thu. were some heavy rains during the day Thursday." Flood ec>ntrol oftlcial1 Say the effect ol cloud ae~lng Is Umlted to a 20C>-square-mUe target am and • one.hour Ume frame an~ aeedfn1, but NlchoJs saJd the strong winds could blow sUver iodide, which ls used to seed the clouds, around to neighboring areas. Nichols said weather service officials arc investigating the cause of the massive flooding, and "We're aware that cloud seeding was done and we'll in- clude that in the report." Martin sald: "We-seeded until 3 in the afternoon. at which time we decided. look, we've got a big one coming. There's no need of seeding any more." M artJn said nood control of- fici als believe the cloud-seeding had no Impact on the en&utng flooding because the seeding took place in the San Gabriel Canyon area. whJch ls "so far away it isn't tunny." He said it was about 10-12 · miles from the Tujunga and La Crescents areu. "For .1S years, wfve been told by seeding people that an hour arter you shut them (the sliver Iodide generators) oct, there's no ertect. ''What you do in seeding is enhance r ainfall. You don't make tt rain," Martin said. "We figure we get somet.hing like a 10 to 15 percent increase. We have a rule around here that the minute we hit five inches or rai,n at. San Gabriel Dam we qwt seeding. There was about live inobes wbetl we qUlt." HOUST9N <AP) -'the de- fense alMi the &t•te of Tuas, after 10 w•ek1 of te.Umony. reated tbelr cu• Monday ill the legal domicile trial lnvolvln1 the mulUmillion·dollar estate ot the late eccentric Howarcl Hu1bea. Probate Judse· Pat Grqoey said bo would beam pr1puinf hit cb.,-J• to &.be two-mao; lour-: woman Jury-r.d.,, wl&h final araumeata upect.ecl Wtd11e1- day. Dollar Value Drops Again LONDON <AP) -The value of the dollar dropped sharply again in early trading today on Europe's money markets. A Frankfurt deale.r said the downward push on the U.S . currency was "enormous." He said the heavlestpressurewaafrom theSwisdranc: .. Trading wals described as beetle and nervous. Some or the uncertainty stemmed from apparent disagreement between the Unlted States and West Germany over how beat to s t.lmulate the In· dustrialized wo rld 's economy. F...-PageAJ ~ AIRPORT ••• MciieaJll aaid t.bo elt;)' .w<Mtld ask the FAA to approve the Jen turn on takeoff required by the city ordinance. "Until we determine What the FAA wants to do, we won't be enforcing the traffic pattern." he said. Attorney Dimino said pilot& at the airport would voluntarily continue to follow the traWc pat· tern for noi s e abatement purposes unless It contradicted a clearance from FAA air t rarric control facilities. "We're not trying to create problems Cor anyone," Dimino said. ''But iC the pilot wanls to fly strajght ahead for aafety reasons. we wanl him to have that option." San Juan Holding Candidate Forum San Ju&n Capistrano's third candidates forum will com- mence at 7 tonight at the Capistrano Valley Baptist Church School, ~ Del Obispo. 10 candidates are vying tor three councU positions open In March 7 electtons. Tonight's forum is sponsored by the local . chamber of commerce. Oe.eente c .... e11 . Park, Complex: ' • Proposals Eyed Proposals for an Industrial park. homes and businesses on two sprawling San Clemente ranches wlll be considered tonight by the city's planrU.nc commission. The meeting is scheduled to beein at 7:30 p.m. in the Caty Council chambers at city ball, 100 Ave. Presidio. Planning commwlonert will be asked to recommend to the City Council approval of the following : -A draft environmental im· pact report on an industrial park proposed on 380 acrea, located east of the San Diego Freeway and north of A venlda Pico, at the intersection of the Forster. Reeves and Visbeek ranches. -An environmental impact report and use permit for res· identlal. commercial and tn- dustrlal development of the Forster llaMh, 2 ZOO acrea in· land of the Sao Dlego F'rffway, just south of the ShorecUffs de· velopment and the Estrella golf course. -A draft environmental Im· pact repc>rt. use permit and an- n_exatlon request for t.he Marble Pool Repair Studied by Panel in SC San Clemente'• municipal pool may not be worth the ex· pense ot repairs, accordinc to fi ndin11 whlch city consultants Keisker-Johnson wlll present tonight to the parks and recrea- tion commission. Tonisht'a commllsion meetin1 will bealn at. 7:30 p.m. at the San Clemente communjty clubho~e. 100 Calle Seville. Refurbishing the pool, built SO years ago by city founder Ole Hanson, would cost between $40,000 and $70,000, said planner· a rchitect Brent Dageett of the Keisker-Johnson Clrm. An alLert\aUve the city 11hould CO(l&ider iS fillJof in the Old pool, located at the San Clemente beach club, 106 W. Ave. Pico, and building a n ew pool somewhere else, Daggett sald. The consultants' presentation to the commission wUI focus on the condition of the beach club and pool, cost of refurbishing both and the posaibillty or con· verting the pool area to other recreational use, Daggett said. His Nwnber's Not Up Yet MINNEAPOLIS <AP ) Michael Dengler l06t hh1 bid to have ia his name changed to the number "1069" when a judge said the idea was "an offense to basic human dignit.y and in- herenUy totalitarian." Dengler, a former social studies teacher from Farao. N.D., said the number sym· boliied hia Interrelationship with society and reClected hia personal and philosophical iden· tity. In denyina the request, Hen· nepln District Judie Donald T. Barbeau cited Monday a New Jersey Supreme Court decision which said courts could refuse official reco.inition to a name that is "bizarre." Head planned community, pro- posM ror 762 acres or the Ree~ R ancb, located dl!'ffUy south 4' tbe Forster bnch. the 'Marble Head developm . -Two tentative tract rnapsi proposlr\g a total of S26 sin family Jots, three mulU·famil)< lots for 615 condominiums and town houses, three commercl'1 lot.a adjacent to t.he San Dleao Freeway, part of an induslritl lot, a school and park site, a ree - ervolr sJte and five open space lots . Pioneer Carl Romer Di,es at 85 ~. Funeral services were be).<! Mon day a t Mission Sao Capistrano lor pioneer rancher a nd former San Jua1' poatmaster Carl Anthon~ Romer. He was SS. Mr. Romer came to California from Iowa with his family 82 years ago. From 1910 to 1920 he was secretary and confidante to Jerome O'Neill, owner of the Santa Margarita Rauch that stretched from El Toro to Oceanside. Ila 1920. he opened a general merchandise store In the settle- ment of San Juan Caplstrano and continued operating the store until he was appointed postm aster In 1944 by President Franklin Roosevelt. Mr. Romer retired In 1962. Burial was held at Ascension Cemetery in El Toro. Mr. Romer Is survived by a son, Carlos, or Santa Monica; a brother, Leo, or Laguna Hill4; and four sisters, Mrs. Mary Jensen and Mn1. Helen Gofoerer of Watsonville. Mrs. Claire Melancon of Santa Barbara and Mrs. Clarence Sorenson of Salinas. Tannery Gas Kills Seven Plant Workers CHICAGO (AP)-Toxlc gas killed seven people and sickened 28 today in a block-long loather tannery, authorities reported. Deputy Fire Marshal Charles Pierce said. "When we arrived insid9 it was an eerie sceM. People were lying on leather belts. One man had a severe C'lt over hla eye. They were all un· conscious." Fire officials said the toxic gas was hydrogen sulfide, ~ poisonous combustible sub· s tance that smells like rotten eggs. Pierce said the accident OC· · curred as workers attempted to' pump a chemical from a lank truck lnto a holding vat. He said the chemical from the tank com. blned with a liquid already in the vat, producing the hydrogen sulfide. Firemen entering the Horween Leather Company two miles northwest of the downtowa area had to wear ias masks. Authorities said there ap. parently was a small explosl()Q1 but most all or the deaths ana injuries came from inhaling the 1aa. Mayor Michael BUandlc vlslt· ed Uae acene and the ho1pital1 where the injured were t.aken and said 176 people were in the plant at the Ume of the accident. It occurred as ablfll were chanc- ing at 8:10 a .m. • A s pok esman at St. Ellaabeth's Hospital aaJd ftve vlctiru• were dead on arrtva1 and appeared to have dted by ln.' hattn1 tollic au. The •he othet' vlcUm1 at the holpnat were •ul· ferlnl from aas lnbalat.lOft aa4 some were tn aerious condltJon. Other. hospitals reported two dead and aald t.hat 1n addJt.lon to ~ln1 overcome by I•• some victim• had been in.Jund In the explo1lo0. Plerc4 aald the tcruc t\unea escaped as a truck of th• Chemical Leamen Tant LlDes Inc. of Wyomln1 started JMUDP- 1n1 21 ,eoo pounda of a chemical contalnlna sulfur Into a tank contalnlU an acld. He ufd the mtx C?'eat•4 hydros• wlftde '" wbltb tm· mediat.11 kill.cl OH mD eloHst to tbe tank. Three ~WI· COfttelOUI YleUmt ... found 100 f .et tron._ tbe tut. 'l1iief Gets TOOie I 'A La1una Beach inan tohl Uce Monday 1ora"'" stole tn '°°" rrom u.o ,.,..,. ot taom e over the wffisend. Leonard D. Stftrl, lot!. GaYiota Drlve. told olll ceu aoautont biied open the door to aalli -.. !z'uce to t.M cu-ie. ( Orange Coast EDITION . . .Today's Closlol N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 45, 3 SECTIONS, 3' PAGES N TEN CENTS . Clouds Seeded· efore Killer Storm LOS ANGELES <AP) -Just hours before lasl week's killer s torm, the county Flood Control Department was busy seeding clouds to increase rainfall -on- ly 10 miles from Big Tujunga Canyon later devastated by massive flooding. Flood control operations engineer Hank Martin conceded today that cloud -seeding - which officials say increases natural rainfall as much as 15 * * * percent but does not ~ause storms -was conducted from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. Thursday, when rain from the storm had already started falling heavily In some areas. The storm bit hardest Friday morning, accompanied by bur· ricane.force winds. One flood control official told The Associated Press ras"t Wednesday that be didn't expect there would be any seeding Thursday because the oncoming storm looked like a "tiger." The storm, which tumed out to be one of the worst in Southern California's history, caused millions or dollars in damage and claimed at least 10 lives throuahout the area, including one in the 1\uunga Canyon area. Ten other persons are missing and presumed dead in the washout of Hidden Springs, high in the canyon. "It seems a little strange they were seeding clouds with such a big storm coming in, if the purpose of seeding is to produce more rainfall," said forecaster Oscar Nichols with the National Weather Service. "There were some heavy rains during the day Thursday." Flood control officials say the effect of cloud seeding ls limited to a 200-square-mile target area• and a one-hour time frame alter seeding. but Nichols said the strong winds could blow silver iodide, which is used to seed the, clouds, around to neighborlns areas. Nichols said weather service oCCicials are investigating the cause ot the massive flood.lllg; and ·'We're aware that cloud seeding was done and we'll in· clude that in the report ... · Martin said: "We seeded until 3 in the afternoon. at wbietl time we decided, look, we've 1ot a big one comint. There's no need or se~na IJ\Y more." · The impact or the aeedlng - wblch has been conducted by the county at an annual cost or $30,000 paid to a cloud-seeding firm -ls eenerally In the San Gabriel watershed, which is a 20()..square mile drainage area adjacent to the Bl& Tujunga watershed area. No Rain Due Until Council Defuses Weekend A storm originally forecast to arrive on the Orange Coast Wednesday has been pushed north by a high-pressure ridge and clear weather is expected un- til late Friday or early Saturday, the National Weather Service said today. Moratorium Another storm is expected early next weekend, he said. The new forecast was r welcome news to resident<\ still NORTH STATE BRACING FOR ANOTHER STORM-AS ~learing away mud, debris and fallen trees from a series or storms during the past week. Damage to public and private 1 property in Southern California I h as been csli mated at $43 I billion, spurring Gov. Edmund I G. Brown Jr. to declare much or . the region a disaster area. The· governor's action paved the way for low-interest federal Joans to farmers. businesses and Jlomeowners. ~Rel at~ sto[Y ~ John Ulet.zen of the Orange County Flood Control District · confirmed today what many ~ Orange Coast residents have I suspected -the rains have set a r ecord ... " Valent!ne Kiss Ron Fiore of· Houlihan's restaurant in Newport Beach has a very happy Valentine's Day, with Karen Gant·s help, as the Irvine Junior Ebell Club sells kisses today at 50 cents a pucker lo raise money for UC Irvine Medical Center. Lips will be on call until 1 a.m. Wednes- day. By JOANNE REYNOLDS °' uw e»Uy I'll-' s~ Calling ror an end to "the game playing" Newport Beach city councilman Don Mcinnis re- fu sed a potentially explosive building moratorium plan Mon-day by calling for a clty- s ponsored series or meetings between developers and the pro. moratorium forces. As it was, councilmen couldn't have enacted a moratorium Monday anyway. The action would have required six votes. Mayor Milan Dostal missed the council meeting and Mayor Pro Tern Pete Barrett abstained because of his financial ties to the Irvine Company. That left only five voling coun· cil members. Mcinnis' move was backed by the Irvine Co., represented by Dick Reese, the company's vice president f~ planning. Reese pledged his firm 's con- tinued seU-imposed moratorium on major building projects while changes in the city's f(lture de- velopment plans are made. He s aid company representatives "are willing to sit down with members of LEAF and SPON and any other interested "parties" to discuss changes in company plans. LEAF (Legal Environmental Analysis Fund> is the group that presented the. demand for a building moratorium. According to LEAF organizer DollQr Value Drops Again LONDON (AP) -The value or the dollar dropped sharply again in early trading today on Europe's money markets. A Frankfurt dealer said the downward push on the U.S. currency was· "enormous ... He said the hea vtest pressure was from the Swiss fr an~ .. Tr~& wq descriW as hectic and nervous. Some of the uncertalnt7 stemmed from •Pl>.,_t dfaal\ eeme:nt bet wee tlht' United States and West Germany over bow bat to stimulat e the in· d ustri alized world's economy. I lie said Santa Ana's season I total so rar or t8.49 inches is the I most rainfall the county has re- ceived to this date during the I rainy season since records began in 1908. N-M Trustees Study Pay Hike II Gietzen also said that even it no more rain falls between now and the end of the season in I June, this will be the third ! rainiest season on record. Season totals so far are: Hunt- ington Beach, 17.76 inches; Costa Mesa, 18.93 inches: Newport Beach, 16.76 inches; Laguna Niguel, 19.55 inches; and Santiago Peak on Sad· dleback Mountain, 45.6 inches. By MICHAEL PASKEVICll Ott•o.11, 1'119'S!Mf . A contract proposal calling for a one.year 10 percent pay hlke for teachers will be presented tonight to Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees. "We don't feel it (the pro- posal) is out or Hne coslwise, even though the district is plead- ing poverty," said Don Kimble, president of the Newport-Mesa Education Association <NMEA). Internship Advoeated Half of All Laivyers Incompetent-Belli SAN. FRANCISCO (AP) - Melvin ~. one of the natioo's lead inf trial lawyers with nearly 1,•00 courtroom fights behind him, agreei with Chief Justice Warren Burger that ball of today'$ lawyers are Jncompe- tent. ••After law scbool, new lawyers should have one year of lnternsbip. before the)''re turned loose on an ~l)eeltng P'lhltc who tblnka beUule a auy's rot . bis license he's equipped to l practice &aw," Uld t.be 70.)'Ul'· J old author oU3 bOokl on law. Belli esthneted he has won Teacher picketing and a one-• The current median lncome day· work slowdown set the for district teachers is about s cene l ast spring before $17,200. teachers ratnled a three-year An instructor who earned contract that granted them $14,081 per year before last about a nine percent pay hike. April's agreement will see a The first year raise was salary increase to $15,348 by the retroactive with a 5 percent time the current pay contract raise being granted this school expires on June 30 of this year. year. However, a reopening An added 10 percent would clause on salaries, grievance push this annual income figure procedures and employee· to $16,882. A highly credentialed benefits has led to the latest teacher with many years of ex- teacher proposal. perience could earn as much as The NMEA, which represents $24,116 per year with the 10 per- the district's 1,250-plus teachers cent raise suggested by the is an affiliate of the California NM EA. First year teachers Teachers Association. Kimble is would make $11,317. a music teacher at Rea Middle Kimble said the NMEA would School in Costa Mesa. leave room for compromise and l negotiation on the latest pay re- quest, adding that a dlatrict- wlde five percent increase coufd be funded through a normal teacher attrition ~ rellrement loss of 50 instructors. The possibility that as many as 100 teachers may lose their jobs because of budget cutbacks and the potential effects of the Jarvis initiative is expected to be brought before trustees this month. Kimble said the NMEA op. poses the Jarvis ioitiatlve. which iI passed by CalilomJa voters in June would drastically reduce property taxes. Under employee benefits, the NMEA is seeking inclusion of dependents on existing health benefits and "vision insurance'' to go aloog witb a current Blue Cross dental plan. Teachers also are asking foe a sabbatical leave fund (50 per- cent of reaular salary) to be financed through district rev- enues reali~ through the aalo of teacher-developed materials. (See PAY IDK.E, Page AZ) Candidate Quits Race ID Newport J ean Watt, all of its 60 members also are members of SPON <Stop Polluting Our Newport). Mrs. Wattis pruidentofSPON. Jn a letter sent to the City <See COUNCIL, Paie AZ) 7 Killed By Tannery Toxic Gas CHICAGO CAP) -Toxic gas killed seven persons and sickened at least 28 others today after a chemical was pumped in· to the Wl'Olll vats at a block-long tannery, oJficlals ~aid. Workers dropped one after • another .., the fumes apread. "f Hen one guy pulltng another guy out of tbe base- ment, .. 11ld James Reynolds, so. an empioyee wbo was sickened by the rumes. "The guy who was pulllac the man out, he went down too." "When we arrived, it was an eerie scene," said Deputy Fire Marshal Charles Pierce. "Peo- ple were lying on leathel' belts. One man bad a severe cut over his eye. They were all un- conscious." A city EnvlroomentaJ Protec- tion Agency omclal said sodium hydrosUlfide brought to the tan- nery in a tank truck was .. er- roneously pumped'' into storage tanks containing an acid. He said the combination created · hydrogen sulfide, a poisonous combustible substance that smells like rotten eggs. The EPA official said the chemicals were mixed in open· lop wooden storage tanks in the basement of the block·Jong llorween Leather Co. plant. Firemen entering tbe plant two mllea northwest of the downtown area had to wear gas masU. One workman said he realized something was wrong when be had dif.llculty brea1hing and saw a man n.innlnl from the area conulnlng the storage tanks. "I wu passing out before the explosion," he said. "I coflldn 't get any alr. It knocked me out. It waa a while before the other' guye cot me to a window and 1 ~ot some fresh air." Coast Weather Fah' tonlgbt. Variable c loudt11us Wednesday, Lows tonlgbt 40 to 47 • Highs Wednesday 60 to 65. llUIDBTODAY I lj •I 11! DAii YI'"' OT N lnsuran@e Plan ·OK NB Joins Unemploymen t Prog ram In a 3 2 \Ole, Ne" port Bearh r 1ty councilmen decided Monday lo Join an unemployment in- s urance program that will cost th<' cit~ S252,000 over the next lhrt'C year:.. The two d1ssentmg \oles were 1· a s t by Co u n c i 1 m an Pa u I fl} ckoff and Councilwoman Trudi Rogers who wanted the ci- ty to join an unemployment in· surance plan which could cost as lilll• u S.S0.000 for the nrst year. Mayor Mllan Dostal and Coun eilman Don MclnnJs missed the vote. The dispute over the two r>lans arose during a discussion or lhe new stale law requiring ciltcs lo join one or four plans. One proposal was rejected as being too costly with an annual premium of $140,000 Another was turned down because coun·· 5-4 and 170 Poands Pudgy Woman Said Leader of Bandits A heavy ~ct young woman sus pertcd of being the ringleader of a &ang of bank bandits responsi- ble for several recent holdups is !>Ought today after another rob· bery in Westminster. Investigators said the woman. about five feet, four inches tall and estimated to weigh about 170 pounds, sauntered into the Rank o f America. 6951 Wc:,tmansh.'r Ave .. about 10:30 u.m Monday The suspect, who reportedly "orks "ith Ht least thr<'e others deployed a:. lookouts, walked up to the ll•ller's cage and present ed a note demanding money. Loss an the robbery was re ported lo be slightly more than $.500, but FBI agents in Santa Ana said today it is not their policy to release such figures. Authorities said the chubby bank bandit, believed to be about in her mid·20s, never dis· pla) ed a weapon in robbing the Wc~tminstcr Avenue bank but made 1t dear she meant bus1· ncss Seminar Set For Refugees A seminar for Indochinese ref· ugces will be sponsored Feb. 24 by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District's adult education clepartment, with a workshop on income tax Jaws scheduled for · the refugees Feb. 25. The seminar will include in· formation on the law and the legal status of lhe refugees. Ad· mission is free and the seminar will be held from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m . Feb. 24 at Costa Mesa High School. 2650 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, in the Lyceum . The income tax workshop will be held from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. the next day In Room 119 al Costa Mesa High School. FrOllt P•ge Al PAY HIKE. • • Binding arbitration, a grievance procedure that offers no recourse to a third-party de· cision regarding complaints filed by either teachers or dis- trict officials, Is once again be- ing requested by teachers. The current system, known as advisory arbitration. allows the district to reject a thl.rd-party ruling· on a grievance. Tonight's regular meeting of school trustees begins at 7:30 p.m . at the Costa Mesa High School Lyce~r:n· Attacks Renewe d? BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Cambodia accused Vietnam to- • dn)' of renewing attacks into the Parrot's Beak region of southeastern Cambodia and the northeastern province of Rat- tanskirt. Il claimed the attacks were repulsed. 09'ANQI COAST ,. DAILY PILOT . ....,, ......... .... ~-~- Vl(ll ~-·~~:0~"'!1 .. ""'~ ,._ .. _,.... Molutoflt .. W ~~·~..-. ..... ~-· The cryptic note warned the teller was being watched throughout the episode. Wit- nesses reported seeing a thin man hanging around the front door as though he might be post· ed as a lookout. They added that the chubby female bank bandit escaped ma tar drtvc.'n by another couple ,\ spoke:.man for the Federal Ureau of Investigation in ~anta Ana f.aid lhe woman is believed to have pulled a similar robbery an Santa Ana last Friday, also at a Bank of Aml•ric;.1 T h c g e t a \\ a y t· a r w a !> <l esc rabcd <i:. a wb1te. 196~ Chevrolet sedan No Laughing Matter. • • Huntington lntercom- mun1ty Hospital offtc1als aren 'l amused about the theft of a 160·pound tank of laughing gas \'alued al $163. Police said thl1 four-foot long blue tank was discon- nected from a pipe in a fenced outdoor storage area al lm2 Beach Blvd Police believe the theft occurred sometime Sun· clay night or early Monday morning Anned Mmked Bandits Rob lroine Victim An Irvine man answered the knock at his front door Monday mghtiand was confronted by two men, one of whom pointed a sawed-off shotgun at the man's stomach. Robert C. Anzani o. 4951 Fireside Circle, was marched to a back bedroom and hog-tied on the noor. "Don't move or I'll blow your head off," the man with the shotgun told him Anzanio reported. ' The other robber had held a knife to Anzanio's back as they went into the room. The criminals. both of whom wore knit ski mas ks to cover their reatures, green army fatigue jackets, denims and black jump boots, ransacked the house. They took $2,455 In stereo and television equipment, plus $23 in cash -and Anzanio's car keys. P_oli~e said they loaded up the v1ct1m 's black 1978 Cadillac Seville and drove away with the loot. Anzanio eventually managed to free himself and called police. Anzanio told police he believed he would have been killecl if be tladh 't cooperated with the rob- bers. Driver Dies -~ As Car Hits , Stalled Auto Louis FlorQZ, 57, of 31416 Los Rios St., San Jµan Capistrano. was lctlled Monday morning when the auto he was drlvlng hJt a stalled car on the rain·swept San t>te10 Freeway. the C~Ufornia JU1hway Patrol re- ported. cilmen would hove no control over rates which would be set by the state Thal left the two plans debat ed ut Monday night's meeting. The more expensive of the two, the $84 ,000-a-year local public entity e mployees fund, was recommended by City Manager Robert Wynn because the rates would not change even 1f tl'le city were forced to lay off l'm ployees bec ause of the passage of the Jarvis-Gann tax initiative. Wynn said the city could lose up to 140 employees with passage or that measure, but he said under that insurance plan . the unc•mployment ln· i,uranrc rates would remain fixed for three years. Even if the rate~ would have to be raised at the end of the three ) l'ars, the city would huvc that time to bu sNting uside funds lo meet that increase in rates, Wynn pointed out. The method sought by Mrs. Rogers and Ryckofr is a form or self insurance based on the city's previous unemployment r ccorcl and would cost about $40,000 a ye;ir. Wynn !-.a1d the problem with M·lf insurance as that the ril v could tw fal'inf:! huge expenses with tht• layoff.., that might re suit from the pu:.sagl' or Jan;:, c;ann Ill' abo nokd that. 1f the city dOl'S not h;J\ e mas'.'> layoHs un dcr thl· public entity employees fund . the money not s pent in un· employment rompcnsation will be returned to the city with in- terest at the end of three years. Nuk~pe Breaks M UNICll , West Germany {AP l A small amount of rad1oachve steam escaped last wl'ck from a nuc:lear power plant being te:.ted in Bavaria. the s tate Environment Ministry reported Monday. No one was injured when a pipl' carrying the rad1oact1ve steam burst m a re actor facility on the ls nr River near Lands hut. the ministry S<tld Rolls off Newport Police said Gail V. Anderson, 52, or South Pasadena, lost control or his car Monday and it rolled over embankment oH Newport Boulevard near Hospital Road. Anderson spent the night in nearby Hoag Memorial Hospital. but was released to- day. He told traffic investigators he swerved to avoid anolh('I' cur and went over the embankment. The dri\'('r of the other car was identified as Christopher Leigh, 25, Garden Grove. Neither dri\'er was cited at the scene. Police said their investigation of the accident 1s continuing. $37 Million to Coast? Caner Targets Marine Building Projects President Carter has Included in his proposed budget requests for more than $37 million for Marine Corps construction proj- ects along the Oranl'e Coast, according to U.S. Rep. Robert E. Badham, R-Newport Beach. The requests Include $9.4 million for 216 military depen· dent housing units near the· Marine Corps Helicopter Air Station at Santa Ana, a Badham spokesman said today. The housin.i? units. the first of a 500-unit project, were original- ly proposed for Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley, but replanned for the Santa Ana location because or protests by Fountain Valley residents, the spokesman said. He said the units are needed because of a shortage of low-cost housing in Orange County. The request is part of Presl· dent Carter's proposed $126 billion defense.budget. currently before the House Armed Services Committee. Badham ls a member of the committee. H approved, the budget will go into effect Oct. 1. The spokesman said Carter has also requested $6.4 million for a bachelor's enlisted quarters at the Marine Corps Air Station at El Toro along wilh $750.000 for a communications center, plus nearly $L million for an operations training facility. Carter's budget also inl'ludes $19. 7 million for new construc- tion. -a1-Camp Pendleton. the spokesman said. The br eakdown for Pendleton is: $7.3 million for bachelors' l.'nlisled quarters, $4.6 million for a maintenanl'C hangar al the airfield, S2.9 million for armory pro1ects. S2 3 million for a new dining facility, S2 million for energy monitoring and control systems and $600.000 for improv· mg the telephone system 'Ckver Tee.n' Sought in Killings COLUMBUS, Ga. CAP) Police say the killer who stran~led six women may be a ··d1abolically clever " 14-year·old boy. Detective Commander H.W. Boone said Monclay that a pro- file provided by psychologists and other expert.<; indicates that tfie killer is "possibly a young man. aged 14 to 20, or something under 20 "They say maybe he's had problems with his mother or grandmother and is a possible schizophrenic," Boone said. And the killer probably lives 1n or near the neighborhood where the six women. aged 60 to 89, have been killed the last five months, the detective chief said. It is tht' rniddle·class Wynnton section of the city. "He is familiar with the neighborhood," Boone said when newsmen noted that the strangler had successfull y picked the homes or widowed, elderly women. All but one or the victims was a widow. The last attacks traced to the strangler occurred over the weekend. Police say an intruder was scared off by one woman a lthough he may have stayed an the house and slipped past police · when they arrived. Officers believe he may ha\'e s lipped away and killed a woman just two blocks awav Saturday morning. · Boone and Muscoge<' County Coroner J . Donald Kilgore said they believe the killer sneaked past police, who were called to Ruth Schwab's home Saturday, and instead strangled neighbor Mildred Dismukes Borom. Pepsico Acquires lroine's Taco Bell Law enforcement officers said they fe el the man 1s a psychopathic introvert who con- fides in no one. a Jekyll-and Hyde character who manages to move freely through highly con- centrated police patrols and strikes almost at will. "He's diabolically clever and he's got plenty of guts," said one officer. "He leaves few clues." LOS ANGELES CAP) -The Irvine-based Taco Bell fast-food chain will be acquired by Pepsico lnc. in a $125 million tax·free stock exchange, it was announced Monday. Under the agreement, 1.43 shares of Pepsico stock will be exchanged for each share of Taco Bell, the companies said. The announcement came only 10 days afte r Taco Befl Chairman Robert L. McKay de· nied his company was being ac- quired New York-based Pepsico had reportedly been in the mark et for another fast-food chain since its purchase last November of the Pizza Hut restaurant chain. Glen W. Bell, who owns 21.6 percent of Taco Bell's shares, and McKay, who owns 9.9 per· cent, said in a press release that they "were enthusiastically in favor of the transaction." The exchange is subject to ap· proval by both companies' shareholders. Police have no suspects in the case. A coroner's report revealed that Mrs. Borom. 78, had been dead about 30 hours when she was disrovered Sunday. That would indicate she was killed at about the time an assailant was trying lo strangle Mrs. Schwob, 70. with a stoeking. "If he had been to the Borom house first. it wouldn't ha\'c made sense for him to go to the Schwob house." Kilgore said. Boone feels that the killer. re~sional logger lo cut up the tree!I and now hove obout 12 cords of wood on sale, turning their weather-caused adversity in- to what they hope will be at least a break· even proJ)OSition. frustrated in his attempt to strangle Mrs. Schwob when sh~ touched off the burglar alarm. 1mmed1ately picked another vie tam . l\l rs. Borom was strangled with a venetian blind cord. Front Page Al COUNCIL ... Council and in testimony offered Monday night, ·Mrs. Watt ex- plained that her group wanted a moratortum imposed while the city's general plan is reviewed and the amount of future build· ing lo be allowed In the city is changed. She said that her groups have · established llmill'I to future building that ought to be set by general plan changes and unless those goals are met, LEAF will <'irculate an initiative petition which, if ultimately approved by voters. would impose those goals on the city. Mcinnis was critical or the group, sayin~ he could not con- ~ider tht' request when he had not seen the petition and sug· gesting that the city's problems would be better solved through some serious nc,::otiat1ng. "If you're really serious about solving these problems -and I believe you nre -then let's get together. rather than standing around pointing the finger al one another." Mcinnis told the au- d len l'e conlainini;t both de- velopers and LEAF members. Reese was the only developer to address the council. He said the Irvine Co. was willing to lower proposed densities on its remaining vacant land in Newport Beach and offered to conduct public meetings in which discussions of density changes would take place. He said lhe company was will· ing to do so in order to "put to an end the surprisingly persis- tent fears that have produced this latest moratorium pro· posal," and lo be allowed to con- tinue projects currently under way as wtll as 1tetlin2 a "Ume- Jayed by the company's self- imposedmoratorium. Other spokesmen from LEAF did not immediately accept or reject the idea of public neaot!J- tl on s. The matter ii to be brouebt back to city councilmen for turther discussion Feb. 27. One LEAF spokesman, Dan Emory, charged that. Without a buildin& moratorium, the general plan review wUl Ile m eaniniless ~ause "too mueh development will occur be.tore the changes can~ made. Councurnen voted unanh1>owt· ly to bring Mcinnis' ldta of public sesslona becl to the ne.i councU meettn1 to dectde hoW the aeaaions will be nm. • • ~ Saddlebaek EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 45, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES By DENMS McLELLAN Ol IM o.111 ~let Shit Los Angeles Supervisor Bax· t er Ward's Valentine lo Southern California commuters -a $2.5 million commuter train -rolled through Orange County this inorning, picking up a surprise commuter, Gov. Jerry Brown, in San Juan Capistrano. The new eight-car El Camino, which will run five days a week between San Diego and Los Angeles, was designed to offer an alternative to the congested freeway system. Ward, who was one of the first pas sengers aboard the train when it left San Diego at 5:45 a .m ., spent nearly three years fighting to win approval of the early-morning train. While some critics of the con· cept argue that it will not make P~mp~ng Error money, Ward believes it will show a profit. The weekly ticket price for a round trip between San Diego and Loi Angeles is $76. Gov. Brown, who spent the night in San Juan Capistrano, rode the train into Los Anceles. It was tcheduled to depart at 7: 03 a.m .• but it was late in ar. riving. <See TRAINS, Paie A2) Tannery Gas Kills 7 Chi~go Workers CHICAGO (AP) -Toxic gas kiJled s ev e n persons and sickened at least 28 others today after a chemical was pumped in· to the wrong vats at a block-long tannery, officials said. I Workers dropped one after another as the fumes spread. · · 1 seen one guy pulling another guy out of the base· ment," said James Reynolds, 50. an employee who was sic;kened by the fumes. "The guy who was pulling the man out. he went Snow Kidding Kids Get More Than Wanted ABOUT 100 YOUNGSTERS were promised snow during a Saddleback Valley YMCA campout this weekend and they got it, plenty of it. . The fulfillment of that promise, however, caused them to return home about 16 hours late. The group originally was expected back at 5:30 p.m. Monday. Jnstead, the last bus pulled up to the Y at about 9:30 this morning. All the campers, seventh through loth graders, were reported tired but happy and healthy. "I CAN"r TELL YOU how muth snow we bad,•• said Steve Young, Y director. But he said there was enough of the wet, white stuff to block buses from getting back to the camp near Big Bear to pick the group up. 1 le said the youngsters were shuttled in two four· wheel-drive vehicles down the four-mile road to the waiting buses throughout the night. lie added that the youngsters were never in danger because the YMCA camp contains its own J!encrating system and radio phone and an ample food supply. Young also said that parents of the youngsters had been informed that they would be returning home late when a storm dropped more snow than ex- pected. .. IT WAS AN EXPERIENCE," the director ad· milted. ''I think the kids will all remember it and I think they will be back again next year." Search·Set for Six On Crashed Plane • Riverside County Sheriff's dep. uties were poised today to fly lnto a box canyon east of San- Uago Peak where authorJtles believe a Piper Twin Comanche wltb six people on board crashed Monday. Jost radio contact with Phoenix air traffic controllers Monday afternoon. The air2lane-piloted by a1 Scottsdale, Ariz., physician - Coast Weather Fair tOOJ1bt. Variable· doudine11 Wednesday. Lowa toal1bt '° to ,7., llitba Wednelda1 eo &o 6S. i JNSl•BTe•AY Wreckage authorities belleve is the Twin Comanche was local· ed late Monday in the box can- . yon. The plane was en route to Long Beach. "We're j ust waiting to get clearance trom the Marine Corps to '1se their beUcopter :• a Riverslde sheriff's deputy sald today. "Tbey ,'kill be dropping us in the canyon so we can de- termine if it's the right aircraft. JU!lge Called PrePJdiced in Poliliu"Ri 6a.e down too." "When we arrived, it was an eerie scene," said Deputy Fire Marshal Charles Pierce. "Pea. pie were lying on leather belts. One man had a severe cut over his eye. Tbe)· were all un- conscious." A city Environmental Protec· lion Agency of(jcial said sodium hydrosulflde brought to the tan· nery in a Lanie truck was "er· roneously pumped" into storage tanks ,containing an acid. He said the combination created hydrogen sulfide, a poisonous combustible substance that smells like rotten eggs. The EPA official said the chemicals were mixed In open· lop wooden storage tanks In the basement or the block-long Horween Leather Co. plant. Firemen entering the plant two miles northwest or the downtown area bad to wear gas masks. One workman sald he realized something was wrong when he had difficulty brealhlna an4 saw a man runnlog from the area containing the storage tanks. "I was passing out before the explosion," be said. "I couldn't get any air. It knocked me out. It "1as a while before the other guys got m e to a window and I got some fresh air." Authorities said there ap· parently was a small explosion in the basement but most or all of the deaths and injuries came from inhalin~ the 1tas. Mayor Michael Bilandic visit· ed th~ scene and the hospitals ' (See TOXIC, Page AZ) Storm D11rnps On Midwest; l.Dses Punch Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks TEN CENTS Oelt.,l'lMt5"" ..... GOVERNOR BROWN MINGL-ES WITH AMTRAK COMMUTERS AT SAN JUAN TRAIN DEPOT Just Another Face In th• Crowd Today as New San Diego to Los Angeles Service Inaugurated. Corridor Fears Voiced \ But Benefits of New Higlaroy Praised By JERJlY CLAUSEN 01 1M DallJ .... _. ltatt Proximity of Leisure World to possible San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor routes and proposed route junctures with the San Diego Freeway were concems voiced by Sad· dleback Area Coordinating Council <SACC> members Mon· day night. Meeting in El Toro to review conldor location &tudles pre- sented by the C.ounty Environ· mental Management Aftncy (EMAJ, SACC directors and an audien~e of nine had little criticism for three possible routes under study. Generally, it was conceded that the corridor -a proposed lj·mile-1ong, high-capacity highway linking Newport Beach with Mission Viejo -probably would ease traffic congestion ex- pected on already crowded ma· jor surface streets and freeways in the rapidly developing Sad· dleback Valley area. Only Herb Tellman of Laguna Niguel, a SACC board member, pushed bard for a northerly terminus or the , corridor's eastern end with San Diego Freeway. Tellman argued that any terminus south of Crown Valley Parkway would produce cor, ridor ramping problems and re- s ult in hiih traffic volumes alone proposed Cbaparosa · Parkway (a southerly extension of Moulton Parkway) through Laiuoa Niguel lo the ocean near Dana Point. The study shows three possi· ble corridor routes over the last few miles of its juncture with San Diego Freeway -one along Oso Parkway to th• north and two just south of Crown Valley Parkway and through Laguna Niguel on the south. SACC board members also echoed concern beard at similar study meetings in Leisure World two weeks ago when county EMA planners were questioned about the route's nearness to the Laguna Hills retirement com- munity. County representatives said the northernmost route would pass "within several hundred feet" of the last Leisure World unit proposed for development. Robert Rende. EMA project planning division manager, said an open-space "window" had been planned into the 57-acre. 533-home tract for routing either the corridor or an extension of (~e CORRIDOR, Page A2) MOre Clear Days . . .. Expected on Coast A storm originally forecast to arrive on the Orange Coast Wednesday has been pushed north by a high-pressure ridge and clear weather is expected un· til late Friday or early Saturday, the National Weather Service said today. Another storm is expected early next weekend. be said. The new forecast was welcome news to residenL' still clearing away mud, debris and fallen trees from a series of storms during the past week. Damage to public and private property in Southern California has been estimated at $43 billion, spurring G<>v. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to declare mucb oC the region a disaster area. The governor's action paved the way for low-interest federal loans to farmers, businesses and homeowners. John Gietzen ot the Orange County Flood Control District confirmed today whltt many Orange Coast residents have :-us pected -the rains have set a record. lie said Santa Ana's season total so far of 18.49 inches is the most rainfall the county has re- NORTH STATE BRACING FOR ANOTHER STORM-AS ceived to \his date during the . rainy season iiince records began in 1908. Gietzen also said that even if no more rain falls between now and the end of the season in June, this will be the third rainiest season on record. Season totals so far are: Hunt. ington Beach, 17.76 inches; Costa Mesa, 18.93 inches: Newport Beach. 16.76 inches: Laguna Niguel, 19.55 inches: and Santiago Peak on Sad- dleback Mountain, 45.6 inches. II in Mexico .Catch Typhoid BOSTON (AP) -Stale health t>fficials say 11 Massacbusetts residents who went on a week· Jong charter tour to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, have come down with typhoid fever since lhelr return Jan. 30. Dr. Nicholas J. Fiumara. dlrectot of the Division of Com· municable Diseases, said Mon-· day that 308 other people who were on the tour, all but 3' ot them from Massachusetts, have been asked to have blood tests ~aken to determine whether Ule7 also cotitracted the disease. Fiuman said tJpboid. fever fs gpread by contaminated food a nd water. Symptotns ln~lude headaehes. ~hrus. fever. aches and a at.omacti rash. . \2 DAIL V DILOT $8 f'ro•P•~AJ CORRIDOR O!>o Park"ay The :.oulhernm~t route would curry conidor trafftc 1.S rralles !>outh of l..t>i~ure World. cro&sing El Toro Road near Lal(una Can. 'on Hoad, an area d1Htcult for ~onslrucllon and environment tontrol. Rt!nde Mud. SACC members expressed mos t interest an traffic and population projections showing polcnt1al use of major parkways , streets and area freeways. Most valley residents com· mull' northward to jobi;, return· mg over congested freeway ~ystems in the evening. Figures presented by county planners and cons ultants :.-howcd that 133.000 vehicles use the San Diego-Santa Ana freeway interchange dally.· Projected figures Indicate that without the proposed transporta· t ion corridor. the freeway ~yslem eventually would be dogged with 265,000 vehicles daily. With the corridor, the rreeway system through tbe 'alley eventually wou)d handle 194.000 vehicles daily, the study :-.hOWli "Clever' Teen Killer Eyed in Six Murders COLUMBUS, Ga. <AP) Police say the killer. who !>trangled siJC women may be a "diabolically clever'' H·year.old boy. Detective Commander H.W. Boone said Monday that a pro- f li e provided by psychologists and other experts indicates that the killer ts "possibly a young man, a~t>d 14 to 20, or something under 20 "They say maybe he's had JJroblems with his mother or grandmother and is a possible ~l·h'*ophrcnir." Boone said. A1"d the killer probably lives 111 or near the neighborhood whe9 the six women, aged 60 to 89. have been killed the last five months, the detective chief said. It is the middle·class Wynnton :.ection of the city. "Ile is fumiliar with the neighborhood," Boone said when newsmen noted that th e :,lrangler had successfully picked the homes of widowed, elderly women. All but one of the victims was ..i widow. The lasl attacks traced to the . o;trangler occurred over the weekend. Police say an intruder was scared off by one woman - .. 1thou1:h he may have stayed In the house and slipped past police wt-en they arrived. drricers believe he may have s lipped away a nd killed a woman just two blocks away Saturday morning. Boone and Muscogee County Coroner J . Donald Kilgore said they believe the killer sneaked past police, wbo were called to Ruth Schwob's home Saturday, and instead strangled nolahbor Mildred Dismukes Borom. Law enforcement ofricers said t h ey feel the m an is a psychopathic introvert who con- fides in no one, a Jekyll-and, Hyde character who 11)anages to move freely through highly con- ('Cn tr ated police patrols and strikes almost at will. "He's diabolically clever and he's got plenty of guts," said one afficer. "He leaves few clues." Auto Crmh Kill.s Officer CARLSBAD (AP) -A police· officer was killed when hls patrol car skidded on rain·swept El Camino Real and was in- vo 1 v ed in a collision with another car Monday, police said. Patrolman Wesley Fox, 33, was on duty when the accident occurred one.quarter-mile south of the Chestnut Street intersec- tion. The other motQrist and occu· pants or his car esca~ serious Injury, polli,:e said. O .. AHOI COo\IT sa DAILY PILOT Shifting Cloud Patterns Jason Clark, 7, takes advantage of a break in the rainy weather to chue:k driftwood back at the sea on Laguna Beach's Main Beach. Overhead the dark clouds formed beautiful, restless images l\londay and hinted at more rain to come. The National Weather Service today. however. foresaw clear weather until late Friday or early Saturday. College Board Eyes Fund Interest €ode Saddleback Community ColleJ<?e District trustees are ex· pected tonight to consider a re· vised conflict of interest code which will require them and other district officials lo disclose their personal financial In· terests. ln the past. several trustee>s have been critical of the code which is now in its third version. Claiming it is an invasion of privacy, Trustee Donna Berry once said she would resign before revealing her husband'i; personal holdings. The code is required under terms of the PoliUcal Reform Act of 1974. The district's first proposed code was rejected by the county Board of Supervisors. the agen· cy designated by the slate lo re· view local codes. A second version was returned recently with several language changes by the county counsel. Under the code. trustees. ad· min1 strators and consultants would be required to disclose such things as real estate bold- ' ings, stocks and bonds and any other property and income which might conmct with the performance of their duties in the district. Tbe code 1s designed to pro· hibit officials from making de- cis ions which might be in· flucnccd by personal financial considerations. In other action, trustees will be asked to approve 31 teaching positions for the district's northern campus which is scheduled to open in Irvine in Aug ust. The trustees will begin their meeting with a curriculum com- mittee report at 7 p.m. in the library on the Mission Viejo campus. Frorra Page A J TOXIC ••• where the injured were taken and said 176 people were in the plant at the time of the accident. It occurred as shifts were chang· ing al 8: 10 a.m. A spokesma n al St. Eliza~th 's Hospital said five victims were dead on arrival and appeared to have died by in- haling toxic &as. The six other nctims at the hospital were sUf- fering from gas inhalation and some were in sert9us condition. Other hospitals reported two dead f&Dd said that in addit.ion to being overcome by gas some victims had been injured in the explosion. Pierce said the toxic fumes escaped as a truck of the Chemical Leamen Tank Lines Inc. 9f Wyoroing &tarted pump· ing 27 ,600 pounds of a chemical containing sulfur into a tank. containing an acid. He said the mix created hydrogen sulfide gllS which im· mediately killed one man closest to the tank. Three other UD· conscious victims were round 100 feet from the tank . Life Threatened SACC Tables Armed M ked Men _Vote System as Change Plans Rob Man in lrvi~ An Irvine man answered the knock at his front door Monday night and was confronted by two men, one of whom pointed a sawed·oCC shotgun at the man's stomach. Robert C . Anzanio, 4951 ,Fireside Circle, was marched to a back bedroom and hog-tied on Stol,en Tapes All in Arabic Rock and roll isn't' in store for the thieves who broke into a Costa Mesa resident's car late Sunday and made off with a tape deck and $100 worth of casettes. Police said the 25 tapes taken from Saleh Musa Saleh's cu contain only Arab music and language instruction. the noor. "Don't move or I'll blow your head off," the man with the shotgun told him. Anzanio reported. The other robber had held a knife lo Anzanio's back as they went into the room. The criminals, both or whom wore knJt ski masks to cover th eir features, green army fatigue jackets, denims and black jump boots, ransacked the house. They took $2,455 in stereo and television equipment, plus $23 in cash -and Anzanio's car keys. Police said they loaded up the victim's black 1$78 Cadillac Seville and drove away with the loot. Anzanlo eventually managed to rree .himself and called police. Anzaniotold police he believed he would have been kUled if he hadn't cooperated with the rob- ber$. Bylaw revisions that would change the voting system at Saddleback Arca Coordinating Council (SACC) general meet- ings were tabled Monday night by SACC's executive board. Tabled for lack of a mem- bership quorum at an El Toro meeting were revisions that would allow member - homeowner-associatlons three votes, m e mber·civ\c - organizaUons two votes and in- dividual members only one vot~. Individuals and organiiaUoos each have one vote under exist- ing bylaws. SACC president James Bone said votes would be cast under the proposed sy15tem during general membership meetings in the election of omcers or vo~ ing on area issues. The revisions are aow scheduled for eeneral mem- bership consideration at 7 p.tn. March 13 at Peoples Federal Savings & Loan commUJiilY room, 23688-El Toro Road, El Toro. Clouds Seeded Before Storm LOS ANGELES <AP> -Just hours before lust week's killer storm, the county Flood Control Department was ~uay seedlnar clouds to increase rainfall -on- ly 10 miles from Big Tujunga Canyon later devastated by ma}lsive Poodlng. Flood control operations en1ineer Hank Martil\ conceded today that cloud-seedine - which officials say increases natural rainfall as much as lS percent but does not cause storms -was conducted from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday. when rain from the storm had already started falling heavily in some areas. . The storm hit hardest Friday morning, accompanied by hur- ricane.force winds. From P.,,e AJ TRAINS ••• "It's an attempt to provide a nother a Jternattve," said Brown, waiting, along with several dozen civic leaders, commuters and reporters for the train to arrive. "It ls ·aood b;tcause the freeways are get· tang more crowded." By the time the El Camino ar- rived in Los Angeles -35 minutes late -the number or passengers picked up .along the way bad swelled to 500. Brown and his fellow com- muters were greeted by television cameras and a marching band, wbicb for some unknown reason played .. On Wisconsin." "l enjoyed it very much," re-. ported the governor. "U was ex- cellent, but I want more trains. Why can't we have one that nms to Chatsworth?" Noting that train travel saves e n e rgy, Brown said that "millions of people are coming to California all the time. There's just not room on the freeways." Train travel, he said, is "less expensive. It's interesting and it's American." · The LO$ Angeles County- owned train, which is operated by Amtrak in partnership wllh tbe California Department of Transporta•lon. will make Orange County stops in San .Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana and Fullerton. Five other trains currently run between Los Angeles and San Diego, bot their schedules were too late for most com- muters with normal working hours. Fro•PogeAl STORM ••• Schools and businesses were shut Monday in Kansas City and other areas ol Missouri. Kansas City police were hampered, with some 40 patrol cars stuck in the S'.outhem part or the cily. People in Illinois were socked with a variety of precipitation. Sotttbem-portions of the state were soaked with rain, freezlng rain and sleet, while in the north up to a · half·foot of new snow fell. Freezing rain iced roadways in central Illinois before 4 inches of new snow fell. "It's quite a mess, .. said a state police officer in Pontiac, Ill., where blowing snow blocked Interstate $5 in several spots. Heavy s now bit southern and central Ohio and travelers' warnings were posted for the northern half~ the state. One Oood control official told The A!lbociuted Press laa't Wednesday that he didn't expect there would be any aeedlOe Thursday because the oncomijlg storm looked like a "tlger." The Jlorm, which turned o\lt to be one of lhe worst ln Southern Catifornln's history, caused millions of dollars in dam-.e and claimed at least 10 Uves throuchout the area, Including one in the TuJunca Canyon area. Ten other persons are misslhg a nd presumed dead in the washout of Hidden Springs, high in the canyon. "It seems u little strange they were seeding clouds with such a big storm coming in, if the purpose of seeding 1s to produce more rainfall," said forecaster Oscar Nichols with the National Weather Service "There were some heavy rains during the day Thursday." Flood control offic1uls say the effecl of cloud seeding is limited to a 200-square-mlle target area and a onc·hour time frame after seeding, but Nichols said the strong winds could blow silver iodide, which is usc..'<l to seed lbe clouds, around to neighboring areas. Nichols sn1d weather service officials are investigating tbe cause of the massive flooding. and "We're aware that cloud seeding was done and we'll fn. cl~de that in the reoort." · Martin said: "We seeded until 3 in the afternoon, at which time we decided, look, we've got a big one coming. There's no need of se~ing any more.•' From Pase Al POLANSKI •. citizen, fled to France two weeks ago lo avoid sentencing. "With the defendant not here. the defendant has los t any right he had," the judge said. "Counsel cannot appear alone.'' However, both Dalton and the prosecution urged the judge to follow legal procedures which provide for a hearing on biab before a neutral Judge. Dalton cited In his motion · comments made by Ritlenband to news reporters after Polanski ned the country. The attorney said those comments showed prejudice. The judge said Polanski was unfit to remain ln the United States and said he would have urged his deport.aUon had he re· mained here. Superior Court Judge Edward Rafeedle was to assign a judge later today to hear the bius mo- tion. Polanski, who met with Dall.9Jl last week in Paris, sent wotd through his French attorney that the movie director plans never to return to the United Stat'-' beca6se he feels he would not rC· ceive an "equitable sentence." The director of such films as "Chinatown" and "Rosemary's Baby" was described as ''ex· hausted by a year of uncertainty about his fale and disappointed by the abandonment of lormaJ judicial promises made to his lawyer and hlmself." The statement from Paris - where Polanski has a home - came after Rittenband told re- porters he planned to send the director to prison for 48 days and then offer him voluntary de- POrlaUon. Polanski. widower of murdered actress Sl\aron Tate, pleaded guilty to one charge or unlawful sexual intercourse with the 13·year-old schoolgirl. 5 DAI\. Y PllOT ,4J OOnc ~t Abaµdo.rwd Ca}>o Fa~es Still ' Wait for Housing FfN!ets of a Greenbelt Lagun<1 Beach photographers have been invited to display their pictures of the v a nous pastoral scenes in the Laguna Greenbe lt during the Winter Festival, Feb. 17 to M:arch 5 The e xhibit is s ponsored bv La~una Greenbelt, Inc . an orgamz.al1on that works t.o preserve lhe ope n space girdling the Art Colony. Pic- t ur~ above was taken on east side of LC:Aguna Canyon Road near El Toro Road. Old cattle chute <below) 1s located near El Toro Road in La~una Hilb By KATHY CLANCY °'* o.11, HMt SUH Three dozen Caplstrano Beach families who have hoped since 1976 to help build their own n~w homes with government as- sistance are still walUn& in what has been described as some of Orange County's worst housing. And, though county officials still are trying to offer the families new and swtable homes they can afford, the original building concept has been aban- doned. motel property m1ght be resold 11t a profit later with .tbe p,ro- ceeds being pumped into the housing effort. Another prospect involves the Marlborough property adjacent to San Juan Creek. County or ficlals hope part of th~t project wUI be approved for federally subsldiied low and moderate in· come renta1 units .for up to 75 families. Major said a consultant con- tract also lS being sought to identify parcels throughout South Orange County that might lend themselves t-0 s ub.9idized homes. A parcel of roughly 10 acre3 would be needed to accom· modate the Capistrano a e11ch families, be siud ''The number one priority right now lS to eet land," Major explained Once land 1s available, be said. the county might find a de· velopor willlng to build sub· sadited housing either for rent or for sale He noted the county has set aside $267,000 in federal Housing and Community Development funds for the Capistrano reloca- llon project ln addition. the county bas another Sl l m1U1on in low-eosi housang 1ncenli.ve funds that might be used to offset part ol the program cosls. Edison Uses Extra Help For Repairs County officials have said that the 36 homes in the vicinity of Doheny Park Road and Las Vegas Avenue violate county he allh l aw!> and mus t be vacated. Eightee n months ago s upervisors selected Com- munitas Associates as a consul- tant to find a site for the new homes and develop a plan for a federally subsidized community. 5-4 and 170 Poaads Southern California Edison Company officials said today they had to call in crews from as far away as Barstow and the. San Joaquin Valley to repair damage in Orange County dur mg the last two rain storms A company spokesman said l 12,000 Edison custome rs in Ora nge County were without power at some pomt during the weekend period beginning late Thursday nlght to early today Those outages varied from 11ve m inutes to 15 hours, he said Describing effects of the hur· n cane-force storm that hit the county late Thursday as "un· believable," the spokesman said ·a total or 90 circuits were 1<nocked out by wind and ram. Of those. he said 22 were local· ed jn hard-hit Huntington Beach . and the Harbor area. A total of 43 power poles were knocked down throughout the couaty, 13 of them in the Orange Coast area. He said repairmen . were called upon to work on 804 downed power lines He said c06t estimates will be difficuJt to pin down until the ,.sterm-related d amage has been repaired H e sa id c rew s from C::ali£orn1a's central valley, 'Ba rs l ow. Palm Springs and iJlidgecrest augmented Edison's 250-man repair crew working r ound th e cloc k over the week end to clean up storm dam age 70 Restaurant ·Workers Due Compensation The U S. Department of Labor has announced that 70 Orange Coast workers employed at two '.Monarch Bay Reslaurant Corp. facilitiP.S will receive more than .$22,000 in unpaid overtime rom· pensation. The U S. Distr1cl Court judg- ment· reaulted from investlga· tions conduc ted by Elmore Wilcox, Orange County director for the department's Wage-HouT Division, Employment Stan· clards Administration. Wilcox said today the affected :restaurants are the Crown House in Laguna Niguel and tbe Jvy House in Laguna Beach. • The federal wage-hour law re- quires that employees be paid at least time and a half for all hours worked over 40 in a reg- ular work week. As part of that plan, county of· ficials envisioned asking reai· dent.a to help with some ot the building tasks to cut down on costs . But it look more than a year oC negotiation before the consul· tant's contract was finalized. And last week, with Just $2,900 of the $32,000 in the contract spent. county officials reported condi- tions had changed and the proJ- ect couldn't proceed as planned. As a result, supervisors can- celled the remainder o( the <!Oil· tract. County Planner Pete Major said land values in Capistrano Beach escalated so fast during the past two years that the original concept ·'disappeared from reality." In addition, federal recula· tions changed so that the Hous- ing and Community Develop- ment funds targeted for the proJ· ect couJdnot be used for engineer· · ing work as once planned, hesald. "Conditions changed that just took it out of our hands..'' Major continued. But county officials still have hopes of relocattng the three dozen families. Pudgy Woman Said Letuler of. Bandits A heavy set young woman sus- pected ot being the ringleader or a gang of bank bandits responsi- ble for several recent holdups is sought today after another rob- bery in Westminster. Investigators said the woman. about five feet, four inches tall and estimated to weigh about 170 pounds, sauntered into tbe Bank of Am e rica . 6951 Westminster Ave .• about 10·30 a .m . Monday. The susped, who reportedly works with at least three others deployed as lookouts, walked UJ> to the teller's cage and present- ed a note demanding money. Loss in the robbery was re- ported to be sligbUy more than $500, but FBI agents in Santa Ana said today it is not their policy to release such fi«iures. &Newport Pfunner Bids , A uthoritaes said the chubby bank bandit. believed to be about in her mid-20s, never dis- played a weapon in robbing the Westminster Avenue bank but made 1t clear s he meant bust· ness. The cryptic note warned the t e ller was being watched throughout the episode. Wit· nesses reported seeing a thin man hanglng around the front door as though he might be post- ed as a lookout. They added thal the cbu~y female bank bandit escaped in u car driven by another couple. A ~pokesman for the Federal Breau of Investigation in Santa Ana said the woman is believed to have pulled a similar robbery in Santa Ana last Friday, aJsoata Bank or America. The gelaway car •as described as a white, 1965 Chevrolet sedan. Internship Advoeated Major said one promiaing possibillt;y ii the creation of a non-profit eooperatlve to build subsicfu.ed housing. lo addition, county officials are considering the purchase of a 12-uoit former motel where some of the families now live. ForAsse~ly Driver Dies · As Car Hits Stalled Auto Half of All. Lawyers lru:ompetent-Belli The families' rents could be held 1n a down payment account ror future home purchase, a re- port to supervisors said, and the Newport Beac h attorney James Parker bas tiled to become a candidate for the Democratic nomination in the 74th Assembly District. The district, which nms from Newport Beach to Oceanside, SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Melvin Belli. one of tbe nation's . leading trial lawyers with nearly 1.400 courtroom fights behind him, agrees with Chief Justice Warren Burger that halt of • today's lawyers are fncompe· tent. "After Jaw school , new lawyers should have one year of internship before they're turned loose on an unsuspecting pUblic who thinks because a goy's filOt his license he's equipped to practice law," said the 70-yur· old author oC 33 books on law. Y h U7 ·...i~ shows a two-to-one ratio or Belli estimated he has won Ollt W eu.e Republicans to Democrals. yet $100 milllon in civil damages Democrat Ron Cordova bas during· his stormy, 45-year law G dm 7 7 represented it since winning the career. ran a, . seat in a stunning upset in 1976. New lawyers, aaid Belli, are Cordova will iun for the State not competent to act as ad-LONDON (AP> -Mark Good· Sena\ethls year. vocates in a courtroom man,21.marriedbls77-yea.N>ld Parker, 44, is a former •·any more than a guy who gets step.grandmother in a secret Newport Beach planning com- out of m e dical s chool is ceremooy at Inglewood, Calif.. missioner and a past president equipped.to do a simple appen-London 's Dally Express of the Newport Harbor Area dectomy." ·newspaper reported. Chamber ot Commerce. Fledgling barristers "get out The report did not say when A graduate of Loyola or Jaw school without any in· the couple were married. University ln lA>S Angeles and ternsrup and they send them out Goodman, an American. n-the Southwestern University to try homicide cases . . . He· nounced plans last December to Scbool cl. Law, Parker hid be doesn't know which door the marry .Mn. Ray Goodman. a views the eled.icn as ... huge op. judge comes in from. . ... Brit.on, with whom he shares an portunity" and predicted that Belli points to himself as an apartment in Maida Vale. 19'18 could be the year in which example: he leaped into three northwest .LondOft. British law Democrats in Orange County Louis Florez,. 57, of 31-116 Los Rios St.. San Juan Capistrano, was ktlled Monday morning when the auto he was drivlng bit a stalled car on the rain-swept San Diego Freeway, the Calllorrua fllghway Patrol re· ported. The report said Florez was driving northbound on the freeway just south of Oso Creek . at about 6:50 a.m. when his car struck the rearend of a van stalled in theoutside lane. Driver of the disabled car we., identified as ~-Buczko, 33, of Los Angeles.. Buczko was treat- ed for mioor injuries at Mission Community Hospital. Florez, according to a CHP s pokesman, died in the hospital about an hour after the freeway No Laughing accident. homicide cases shortly after get-forbids socb a marriage. outnumber Bepabtieans. ting bis law degree and lest two.·_-------------------------------------Re said the experience Matt,er. • • 1 Huntington Intercor;n- munity Hospital omcials aren't am~ about the theft or a 160-pound tank of laughing gas valued at $163.. . Police said the four-fool long ti\ue taQ. was di~ nected from a pipe in a fenced outdoor stor_.ge area et 17'172 Beach Blvd. Pollee believe the theft occurred BOmetlme Sun• day Dilbt or early MonUy • ~ .. persuaded him to learn as much as be could about medicloe. At the American Bar Asaocia- lion meetiog ln New Orleans Monday, Burger won a standing ovation after the ,ABA House of Delegates rejected a proposed reaoluUon that In effect told the chief justice to put up OJ" shut up on :tbe~y issue. Belli s~a Barger is "pretty nearfy tight ..• Fifty percent of lfw ls medicine. We doD'l try law, we try lac~ and tbe facts are medical tacta. Yw cart go tnto a courtroom today uaJesa you know mediclne.'' Ironic, i.n•t n? I eip9nd •gh· -.. -. In 1h9 wont wellthef Che East '* had In ~ tt\lrty years end I Md to come back home to be hit by the nu bUSJ. 1 admit .. Sunny .. Callfornla hMn't --Wl'f tunny ..,,. my r9IUrn. 1' couple Of club tllkS on my ecMdute for tti. peat .... ,.Id h.ct to be can.- oefted at .... minUte end I'm very eqfTy about that. I "°'"' the ~ wiff be ift-wested In 8lklnQ me again at ...... cWe~ l'n. .... lnlec- tJoua. A,._~,_.O"ftW"1p, had MWl'al oppartunltin to 1alk 'to peopte buvtnQ "atghts" er o.ee.ra and ttwv feef pr.c;- 11ce11v cer;taln to get another prfc. hike this Sl)l'lng • • , • espec:l11lly In the elzes undcW' on• half catat. Th ... fM:t• would Nnd to make 90fM °' the P*-9''99dy aeleoted fQ!' our half prtoe ule loo« Uk• ewfully VoOd buys. The aai. start• tomonow. It i. a p.- lnYentoty "*9Uetlon Nie end m.. cllldee Mlected· Items from ail ~teg<>Ma of our reguler ltOck: One of the manufacturef'8 tNt I vllitld Md Juet fl~ a C>eeutlfut necklace • • •• d'9~ end rvblea •••• 90m9 o1 the "'°" beaut1ru1 oem ~ I h.-. ever teen. The ..aung pttce 111 13115.000. It YoU are pJM()l"G to an.nd • oor• onatlon or royal w9ddlng aometlm• aooo and ar, ~ ., .. ..,ed In tMlytnQ 901Mthlng °' -typtl. 1My will 0. hippy 10 fl)' It out by apeclal ~· for your oon,.iderallon. ~'~· l Jim cant ... out t.M..,.•Ylno. golfing,~...-e.Mfor .. nlana Jn eomathlnO ao ef•t>Or• -fOnNI ••••• but • I aa6d, It 19 ... llblt. 90 ~ can ,let l'"9 know. 'tiop• yov r•m•mb•red tpl'~~.' ,I • JUSTICE DEPT. -Here we are on St. Valentine's day. when our thought.a turn to love and 'human kindness. 'l]pon such oc· caslons, it makes you a bit ill to read aboot the acts of inhumani- ty that still plague us. Only yesterday, we carried a dlspatcb about a J&.year·old youth from Monrovia who was captured ln Corona del Mar on an armed robbery charge. His crime was a $3 r.urse IOlatcblng. To pull it of , the runaway teen-ager allegedly knocked down an 80·year.old 'Woman, causing her to suffer a broken hip. A fractured hip, or course, b no fun for anyone. But it is a gravely serious injury for tbe elderly. YOU WONDER. under our . ,;fystem of juvenile justice today, what will happen to this · youngster if he is found guilty as charged. 1. And that In turn reminds you · bf an article by Robert Gardner of Corona del Mar. presiding justice of the Fourth District ~ourl of Appeal, which was re· c:ently reprinted in Modern Maturity magazine. . Titled, "When Justice Was f;wift," Gardner's piece recalled the early days In Laguna Beach when ~e Justice of the Peace was Judge C.C. ••Gavvy .. Cravath. Cravath lacked .legal trainlng. He retired to Laguna after beini a major league baseball home run king and prom pUy got elected justice of the peace. DESPITE JDS LACK of legal background, Justice Gardner observed, .. Gavvy was fair, he was honest, he was fearless, he was just -and after all you can 'l ask for much more than that from a judge ... Gardner recounted two inci- dents of the swift justice of Gav· vy Cravatb. When the town drunk, Pete, was hauled in before him, Cravath ordered him hauled otr to county Jail on the back of a police motorcycle. Pete protested be hadn't even· been arraigned yet. . WbereUPOn Cravath J!rowled. .. Now. look here, Pete, YOU ' know you were drunk. I know • you were drunk. Now we're not going to waste a ny of the tax- payers• money on any goddam trial. Get on the goddam motorcycle and go to }ai,l for ·a few days and dry out." THE OTHEa SIDE of the old L 1guna JP was recounted by Gardner when a youngster was brought into court on a multitude or charges. Police bad him manacled. ..He bad more chains on hlm than a logllng truck, .. Gardner recalled. ..I have never seen a more de· morallud human bein1!' Cravath ordered him un- manacled. flipped the younister a coin and told him to co down to Benton's cate for a cup of cof· fee, then return to court to face his cbar1ei;. And be did. You don't see this kind of bome grown Justice 8ft1 more. You wonder what would hap- pen to the kid cllar1ed wltb the Corona del Mar pune-matchlng if he bad come up before the late JuaUce of tho Peace Gavvy Crava~ T"9eday. ~ 14. tt11 e By '111e.AeNtlat.ed Preli Power cutbacks were spread· lng and hundreds of tbowsanda of workers faced layoffs as the na· tional eoa1 •trike ground into ita 71st day today. Talks are stalemated a nd President Carter refuses to order tbe miners back lnto the pits. A White House official said Carter was likely to take some action soon, but not an im- mediate back·to-back order. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall met in Washington today wlUf representatives of thr Bituminous Coal Operators Aa· soclation, the bargaining arm for mine owners, and emeried saying he was opUmiallc about getting joint negol..iaUons re~ sumed later this week. MARSHALL TOLD reporters he would confer again separate- ly with leaders of the industry- and tb6 Unlt.ed tne Workers union today and Wednesday. He said he ls explonns condiUons and assurances that both sldes need before they ean return to face-to-face negotlationt. Union President Arnold Miller, meanwhile, met wlt.h his bargaining council, which bad rejected a tentative settlement Sunday. Carter has aaid he will' not try to force miners back to their Jobs by invoking the Taft·Hartley Act, which pro- vides for an 80·day return to work \l a strike poses a national emergency. .. THEBE JS NO question in our minds that the Situation is very serious," Marshall said. .. But whether or not that's suffi· clent to justify saying whether we have a national emergency isn't known." EPA Vows Reva~p Of Auto Estimates WASJDNGTON (AP) -The Environmental Protect.ion Agency is beginning to act on complaints from dlsapP._Olnted new car owners who say EPA mileage estimates are inflated by a.s much aa 14 -per. cent. The EPA is ready to change the mileage estimates after conceding its figures are seldom achieved under normal driving condi· -PUBUSIUNG ONLY one lions. figure instead of the three cur· "The EPA ratings s hould rently listed. Listings give reflect what drivers can rea-mileage estimates for clly driv· sonagl)'. expect to achieve on lng. highway driring and com· the road," EPA Administrator blned city and highway driving. Douglas CosUe said Monday in The city driving figure ls con· announcing plans to revlse the sldered the best "since it m015l E!l6timates. closely corresponds to the EPA CONCEDED errors of from 7 percent to 14 percent oo the hlch side, and CoeUe aald that is too much. Some in· dividual car owners clalm the errors are even larger. .. We've received a lot of COft- sum er complaints that customers are not getting the mileage our tests Indicate," said EPA spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. The agency is considering three proposals to bring fig\ires into line with reality: average mlleau that most drivers are experiencing ... the EPA said. -Listing the three figures, but lowering the estimates by 10 percent to 25 percent lo. each cat4'gory. -Abolishing the "tlmates and subsUtutlng a comp,arlson index, putting a car's fuel economy on a sUdlng scale frvm one to 10, with top performing cars receiving a 10 rating. The new ratings would appear on 1919 model cars. EPA &aid. U.S. EYes Cuba's .. Gain in Red Pilois WASJDNGTON (AP) -U.S. offtdals are expressing concern about a sharp increase in tM ranks of Soviet pilots in Cuba. the first visible rise in Russian presence on the island since the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. The heightened presence this time, however, appears limited to men, not armaments, accordlnl to one administration aouree. · · The source aald a recent supplied to the Caribbean island, algnillcant lncreHe tn the according to the source, who number of Soviet pllota operat. keeps close watch on activities Jng In Cuba lncllcates that the in that regioo. Russians are taking the place of The Soviet.a have maintal.ne4 a CUban pilots flyln1 tnluiona for small g_roup of pll~ in Cuba for Ethiopia in its war against a number of yeaf11. presu19ably Somalia in the Hom of Afrlta. to train Cuban.pllota. ''But now THE SOU.CE, WHO asked not to be identified, said Monday that the number of Ruaalan pilots in Olba la ltlll .. p,.Uy amall," but be decllned to aq precisely bow many. The Soviet pilots are believed· to be flying routine air defense mlallona for CUba. There bas been no Iman tocrease ht .&be number Of R~·bullt planes it's Jtone quite beyond tlillt. The number of Russian pilots hu ln· creased substanUally.•t aaid the source. Asked If the admlniatratlon were alarmed abOut the SoYleta flying miaalona for Cuba. be aald: "Wb•' difference does it make if you have Ruaalan or C\aban pilots ftytng MlGa (Soviet . nahten> ao dose to our coun· trft We don't like either.'' Powe~, The mlners havo lsnoted three· Taft-Hartley court orders at.nee 19'8. -. Indiana ordered mandatory power cuts Monday because ol shrinking coal supplies. CUTBACKS WEil£ .put lnto effect ln West Virginia last • week. In both statv. tena of thousands of workellt face the . possibility of layoffs u early as tbla weekend. Indiana Gov. Otis Bowen, wor· ried over the posplbllltlea ot theft or vandalism. ordered units oft.heNaUonaJ Guard tod•f to protectcoalstockpUes. Meanwhile, a1 offlelal1 try to plan ways of movln1 coal to atatea that need lt, at least ooe state bas made it clear that U doesn't want to part with what coal it bas. JUCmGAN PUBLIC Service Commissioner Daniel Demlow warned that dra.sllc conserva· tion measures may be necessary if energy due for Michigan is shifted to fuel·sbort statea. Ohio F.dison Co., facing the prospect of 50 percent cutbacks to some areu ot n()ftbeaatern Oblo. purchased power from utiUUa In other stat.ea. A com- pany 1pokeaman would not name the other companies in· volved. FORD MOTOR CO. plants will start closing late thls month and Chrysler Corp. faces a complete' shutdown after March 1 unless the coal strike ls setUed qulckly • the automakers warn. The bluest problem atema from electrical power cutback.a Jobs, in Ohio. where the three m.Jor U.S. car makers have some 3S assembly and parts manufactur- int plant.a. NATION I WORLD CarS An lnduatry-wlde abutdown would ldle more than 700 000 hourly workers at Cbeyaier. 0fttra.l Motors and Ford. A~ Wll 19 'a Ill BELT STRETCHES WHEN DOOR OPENS, THEN SNUGS Cindy Hermes of GM Oemonatr•tH Chevett• Opdon 'Automatic' Belts Due Chevette Option Expected to ~Debut in May DETROIT (AP) -The fint No price ba.5 been set for the "automatic" seat belt to be of· Cbevette option, said Wilson H. fered on an American·built car West, manager ot the project will make Its debut this spring center formed by GM last fall to on General Motors Corp.'s sub-study ways to meet federal com pact Chevrolet Cbevette. passive-restraint requirements The paulve restraint system, of the 1980s. whlch closes automatically The Cbevette system was un· around the driver when the door veiled to reporters along with JS shuts. \vlll be an option on other experimental seat belt Cbevettes start.Ina in about mid· systems. Tbey ranged from sim· May. GM said Monday. ple mechanical devices to TUB ONLY OTHER car sold pneumatic-powered mulUstrap ln this country with a passive a~stems whose bucklea slide belt •)'Item ii the top-of·the-llne alon1 tracks in the roof and sJde Volkswacen Rabbit, tn which tbe door aa the door opens and belt ls ltudard equlpment. vw closes. first oUered the system as an op- tion in 1975, and says about 90,000 such cars bad been sold through 1977. GM'S OFFERING IS a .. two. poioi" shoulder harnes$ 1imilar to .the Rabbit's. One end at- taches to the door and the other to a point between the front bucket seats. The system ls identical for the driver and front-seat pauenaer. The back seat has conventional lap belts. When t.be driver opens tho door to get ln the car, the belt moves out of the way. When the door closes a1a1n, the belt set- tles across the driver alone a line from the hip to the shoulder. Some reporters who tried out the ayatem got their bands caught under the belt u U closed, and one got her purse tan&led. . But it was the simplest of the ' wide range of experimental passive belts WJder atudy by GM. Daily Pilot Staff Wins To·p Press Club Honors Nine flrat place and 10 second place cash awards were made to seven Dally Piiot editors, writers and photographers In the recent 23rd Orange County Presa Club competition. .............. ..,.._.. The club'• most prestigious honor-ttae Sky Dunlap Award -went to Dally Pilot Managing Editor Thomas Murphlne. The award honors service to journalism and particularly aa- al1tance given to young )oumallata. Or•nlfe County Bureau Chief Gary GranvJlle eamed three· flrtt place award• and became the first recipient of the club's .. Watc~ A~.•rd:• , ... STOCKS I BUSINESS Sdltt .... SGlo\ Mlt ~ -~ ..,, s..... Not ........ t... ~ lit• P.t "1U Qiee 0. 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Lance Seeks Bank Buy org,. •• • • -+-.. .,"''I' .so u 11 -GI y$ I et" . Si IPfl·• t!. $ IM+ \It ~StO 'E • 107 1~ l'o t:t•"s ,, • ~ ... ~!?' uo a m 2i11e-Momt•ttc J! U ie. -. .. u t1.t11111u sd1*"-1,1i ~..-1. • 21 22\4+111t W ASHINOTON (AP) -Bert aos .Pf rn ~~ ~ u-.,.... 'f,';~11 t't fl J ~ ....... ~. \~ 1J i -il"'J.lt ii J u~::::: OUMtOf' .:.. ~I~ ·\<Ii-"' Lance, former Carter admlnlstratlon eeosllswf 1.! ·; 1,s, '10' !. fJ"" I I m 1't':'... ;i;ro .,,, , ;t!t:, •• 't • 14 l~" •cA i.20 • 4.fl t4V>-~ budd'*t d'reotor report •dly i• flll ff -~ (••8 t.4t . 7 ltft• \.\ t • 2"°"' , 00. 'f J 26 .. ., .. , ltTlil f. • 43 131-+ 'l't 9v I r " o e8r•1 "'.~ .70 1s a, ~-l!Y'* "1e io 10 llh-" ,, .40 IO 1t ti -" Ut 1. m.+ "' 1111iP~ 10 ts1 14~1 .... r--re•enUng a ......,.op of fon=.l""" lO· rt ...• n~ { 1• u .. -1111~ AafO Ull 1~14 U 11 tf I.MCI-, \lo§!"' t t• ._ flt1n•!I .1 •13 I02 • .. +" ~.. """ .,... g~::::pr;;, "J ~; :;;."'1:!·, ~ ~·~ .. t.21 .', t n ~::· 1:~ '::a' . I , •. ~ :::: ... rn''o. ~ A! ,=+·v; vue~o~!ntetres:e: ~a~'t~ __ eoab~ :rll"-t ·~ ,.. u -... ~H .• l il ••••• 1n.tc ~. ~ I .u, I ~ "" """' ... 1.>S .. '1 2•~..... n.., am.oi;ttl 0 uan.-.~ ~ e~~,, '·'° J .: 'm:.:· • . 4 u ,f ~"iii ,:» J tt! ~ ... ~ 1:?.t '~! ~ "U:J"" 1 JI ~::=:: bankboldinacompany. l:::o"" 1:: 11 ,f~· ~r. · ~ .:&1 1 -~ •;Ji ' ~ tt; i II~• ljj • , I ~ a!l:.':at t t ~ ~~~ Th~ Securities ud Exe!hange Com-ewnF•r :JI • = m::: r 1.: f!! ... . j t ttot tt4'• r.•~ .ao • 1' -; -~ • o ... _ v. mission on Mopday 1uapeoded trld• c=~ I t '..-1E Dlt ut •.• , fl -'9 t J A 1' ~ ~ •·1! I ~ I lte«•Of .to. • ·~· 14 toa ln I~ Of the aompany Ftoan· !~ECor ~-s7 4111 1 • ... "" lie K 1:-Jt ::"' ;:"'::::: =· ·"' '' ~ re • ;.r .. ; l "' :::;; ::7t'~A 1:n ' J ~-~ clal G•nerft• B&tWbares Ide 'to ""'ve. ;:::;; "' --..... '-P.·t .... 1 .to • lm•,., "" ., • , .... ,. l!a!ll61r1 -7 2 ~...... _,. ~ •• e-lud~ ~ · · •IO!f ':~! :41 -" ~J ·+ ··~ ... ,.. '~ v. ;••11e1 1.io S 1112 '°"" • .. the SF:C time to t1Dd out who ls tn:. 1::ra:· .~] i ij~ '*:"' ~'° )I 'm::::: n~\" :: • -11-,-~ ~ 1'° iI s; ~-~ :::r ,:& .. 11 m;=,~ volved in lb• attempted purchase. Bii~~ •• 1l r .. ~" I ~-'I'· • ... -1~ !..-"''.ft J t ~·~ "'4,.,"',t .. :· Jr~ l: The Wub.ln"°'1 Pott rePC>rted to-~8u:fr tJ •~ ~J t•-:;'" 'ft • t i .,_,.:!.'WI~'~ lt~ ': It::::: a.• If I' • ~ ==~1.10 ! It u~~!'~ day thlll Lan~a~!!!.a olft~!~t bof =~Ult .~ 12• {~~... 0' ,. • 1" mt::.111 ti':co u. I~·" u1.:!' 1 '.7 •• ~~.:-.-·· J .===~ the CQWpan)' -•~a)' wa • "'l~,..,'1'"' ~ ~·;--" ~tr • • fi tt. ..... l"~•if -.• t UJ ~· .. 'l'; ii 1 -(\ "~n l~ J .. JO + ~ repreHbted foreJiu Investors lD· """.. •t ..,.: ti~,.," .. U..!.,.., II u,i. J i.... • ·'° i ... ~ ~~. "'l~l& ~ 't n~,. ter.,sltd to b111loa cobll"QWAI ID· aw1111 • =-'"Ott J J1~~!_ * f f f,411) 'f 'j .. t.• ~ •f 14 ._O .• t lo6 H -" le~lt. ' a~,· :. ·•t..-~ ,k .. , •• ~::I ~' « ··c: 1~1:1 tm:',.. :: t. J ~ ~=~ , tllt.'91 .2At • M~ 1:..,1. :.& ~t ~Ai 4 " rAm ~ ~tt I•-"'"' t" 21 m•u ~ GI\I Plant Reopens I ~~-rf I ~ '",. -" l~co ·~ ':'-::::: iJ. 'J' t:::.., ~:a. f : ~~tt ·souTH GA'l'B <AP> -A ftft.clQ' ~(, .~ ~ 1-=•r.• i ;: g::~ .:::: 11AtS :..1J !! tr'::::: f!:r:111;1: ;· ..J.u .=..• shut.down ot the General Motors 'f ~11 "1• .aftt • = I ·i 1f +): ' 1~1 ~Ti ,t~~'(t ~ 1:! i1 'ti ~~; ~ plant1JaSGIO (Wa~ JJli;oMd lllllllUe ,,. ~ ";;: 1 ... • • "' I •" 1 ui; ; 1~····· 1now1t.D ia tM Sait ~ • iji• -.. '1:. .. , .... "l! , t -i th _ __._.. 'J __ , ............. ~. 1 'I •H • • 4i M•!1,'. • Ill " t• •.t .. " 1..... 0 aTTI .. U VII....-~ -__.. 1 I "' "'~ Lff n ~ _...__ ..... • .... _. "Bv~• ij'"'"' --~" -• ' ; ~ ec : •• ..., ' f ~ e \. .. !'f:: .. and ·-Ml ....... 8' ._ ~ • -' I ! Yt I:;;;·• •I I • .,, • ~ U•f C"untrj WeN eJolld lailt ..... ~ '' .. ·• ~~ • ~ 1=ili.. ':: .:z ~ ~ct~·ot ~ parti ..... *'-. ··~ ""l'J "' 'I ~;:,.'I! •t. ~'f 41i ~--~~ • ... ... •• . .. • -.. " It • .' " '-" "' • + • ' . ~ Tu.cs.v. februart 14. 1971 s DAILY PILOT A J J Deduction List Aids Preparation A thorough check of deductible items can help maby taxpayers reduce their federal income tax bills, according to Commerce Clearing House, naliooal nlporting authority on tax and business law. ' Deductions that are not connected with a trade, bWJl· ness or profeS&lon are divided into two classes; l. DED\JCJ'll~LE FROM GR~ INCOME in order to arrive All thu proper figure for "adjusted gross income.·• 2. Deductible only from "adjusted gross income." The first class has no effect on the taxpayer's disp(>sl· Uon of the second class. leaving him free to it.emi.10 deduc- tions on Schedule A, Form 1040. . You can deduct the rollowlng Items In arriving at )'Our "adjust.ed gross income," which will be shown on Forsn 1040: Alimony and separate maintenance payments; limited capital losses, including nonbusiness bad debts; em ployed people to re· ,... .. v ,.,JPS contributions by self-( ;~,·,] tirement plans; i.tIA ii depreciation on income·~----------~!""' producing property; en-( tertainment expenses of employees, to the extent they are reimbursed by tl\e employer: losses on stock becoming worthless; moving 4x· penses of employees: outside salesman's expenses; reim· bursed employee's expenses; rental or royalty propetty expenses; traveling expenses and business trips; tra~el expense ror education that is "directly related" to Ux- payer's business or employment and in~rest that has ~n repocted on long-term or time-savings account and de· posits with banks and other financial institutions that.is later forfeited under premature withdrawal or redemp- tion. THE FOLLOWING ITEMS ARE deductible only'. if they are itemlied on Schedule A. Form 1040. They may not be deducted ln arriving at "adjusted gross Income:" : Casualty tosses and personal theft losses. to the ext4$nt each loss exceeds $100; limited contributions to charitalile organizations: cooperative housing taxes and inlere~t: employment agency fees for seeking or securing empldy· ment in the same trade or business; unreimbursed enter- tainment of customers, if not an outside salesman; cost of preparing income and other tax returns; interest on Fl. business mortgages or installment purchases; medic , dental and hospital expenses in excess of 3 percent of · justed gross income; slate and local taxes ; uniforms a~ protective clothing and union dues. ! Here are some items that cannot be deduc~d regarO· less of the method used in computing the tax. These. among others. are considered as personal and family es· penses : , Adoption fees fpre·adoption medical expenses are df" ductible under certain conditions), attorneys feef. automobile upkeep expenses for pleasure cars; baby sit· ter~. unless qualified as child care credit: child-supi>Of.t payments; clothing; commuters' expenses: depreclaU~ on property held for personal use; diaper servi~~ domestic servants' wages; dues for social clubs ft$)' personal use ; employees' ins urance (other th~ hospitalization> if the amount is deducted from salar~-' fines for violations or law or police regulations; roo(! funeral expenses; nonbusiness gifts; house rent; aJ. lowance paid as spouses' household salary; insurance oi> residence; life insurance premiums; mortgage lrtsuran~ premiums and other fees pai4 to obtain a residen~ mortgage, except for interest; repairs to residences: t~ penalty payments; tnost nonbusiness travel and unifor"! that replace reguJarclothlng. · , .. Nezt: Deducting Taxes ; . ~ .> .. ~ ·~ Norman L. Lilley, Laguna Hills, vice president a~ man ager with ~urity PacllJc Blnk. has been transferr from the bank's· Palm Desert district trust office to vi president and mal)aaer at-the La,guna mns district tru office. •. • Cbadei A. "Bud'• Green, Fountain Valley. hcis l>ttn named labor relaUons and compensation director far General Tdephone of California. He will be responsible for labor relations, management and hourly compensution, employee benefits and employee records He bas been with the company since joined General. as a lineman. 1956. when •ht .; ~ • Heletl M. Townie}', San Juan Capistrano. has joioe4- Soutbwest Bank u an escrow olficer at the bank's Mission Viejo office. ·• ;. Her duties will Include acqulsltlon of tract busines~; resale escrows, loan escrows. exchanges, mobile home, and bulk sale escrows. Sbe has 10 years' experience in :thd escrow field. * Jamet E. Cowan, Latuna Beach, Insulator procesJ manager. bas bffn. named general manaier. circular CQn· _ nectora, for JTI' Cannon Elfftltet Santa Ana. ; He will have complete mama.1emcnt responslbllity fort design, manufacture and markettn1 of circular conneCS.Or ·products, one of the two largest lines In the division. • •, . . . Dou.Id E. Anckno.. Jl"°tfnltoll Beach. has been pro,. Jnoted to vice president fJf ¢omputer services at MeDonnell: Do•1lu Antomatlon Co.. LOnd.:u•ch. ' •, lle succeeds S&ephell.l'. et. who ac:ceptM a senior posttlon at the Union Dant In Los An,celes. Di.rector.of McAutb computer servicts JJ) CaWomJa 1Jnce 1973, Anj , derson joined McDonnell ...,.... to 1AQ1 Beach 11 an ~ eniloeer in 1955 and was ll81D~~Nc:Mtoltftformatlon pro-~ ceasing systems at the comptAY. • division of Mcl>on.Nlt, Ddu1Jas Corp •• in 1970. \ • • t. Norman A.. Hodp0a. nunUngton Beaob1 bas come out: of retlrtm"'l to as.sill d~rlft1 the metger of two of LSo1tts • Buk Ca.llfonli•'s offlcu in dOwntown Loa All&eles. He ht.a: be.-n JJ•med as.1Jlsunt vice president at tb• Loi Aniel., • headquarters corporat. ofllce. He Joined the bank tn 1914 as assistant manater of the: Loni Beach corp0ra~ om~. He reUred 12 yeare lai.r as auf.atam vice president Gd manager o/ that ottSce. - • 'odJ Clark; lrllilSOD V1$1 bl been named muapr • of the Santa Alta tii'antb of.._..~ . Sh~ 11 former br&Ub ma@qtr fcii Santa Barbara SaY.. • tnr• ln San Cl«ri~ • Ariold s-dal, vlee J>C'*lldent 'Wilb 8enrtq Padlle : Bu,, "-been tral'l&fUreid from tM bank'I 0.la Meu o(., flee to beraimo vice ,,._cSlltt • U. W«wt• HJU. o««:o. j'jilMCJ Oie bnlC lD 1Ml u a bookk~- r. \ AJ.t OAIL y PlLOT T~. F9b"*Y 14, 1978 NATIONAL 1. Always ui.e dry string, wood and paper in your kite. 2. Neveruse metal wire or metallic string or do th. 3. Don't fly your kite in the rain. 4. Don't cross streets or highw:iys when kite flying. 5. Always fly your kite away from TV and radio antennas. &. Always ny your kite far from power lines! Don't try to tetticvc kites caught in power lines! By]uJg~ MAtJSI'ON, Wis. CAP) -A judge who fired a courthouse clerical worker for being single and pregnant is trying t.o block payment of lbe settlement she won from the county after alleging sex discrimination. Kristy Gwin, 19, of Mauston was fired from her job as the county's register in probate by Juneau County judge William Curran last s ummer when b e learned she was preg. nant. . HE SAID her pregnan- cy proved she bad violated a Wisconsin law prohibiting sexual in- tercourse by an unmar- ried person. Miss Gwin told The Associated Press last week that she was out of work for several months, but finally was given another clerical job at the same pay in the county's Child Sup- port Agency. HOWEVER, SHE said, she filed a sex dis crimination com- plaint with the state last summer, seeking back pay. The resulting out· of-court settlement with the county am<mnted to $2,000. But the judge has asked the County Board's persoMel com- mittee to withhold the paymenL Jn a leUer to board members, Curran said the county should not pay the settlement because that could make the county liable for tax· payer suits. THE JUDGE said he had to fire the woman under Wisconsin law prohibiting unmarried persons· from sexual in- tercourse. A copy of the letter was obtained by the Capit al Times in Madison. .. She knew she was discharged because, as --------~ a single girl, her preg- Peoplewboneed people abould always cbec:k the Scnice Dirfttory ln tho DAILY PILOT n a n c Y. was obvious evidence to the public lbat she had yio11te«1 tbe laws of the state of Wisconstn." be wrote. . nn11~rrBP!llftlf.:-·~Jl4,~'/er-Me1rtitT . DENVER (AP> -A few weeb ago, David Drolet woke Up. He was standing at a bus stop ln suburban AW'Ora, waiting for he knew not what. He still doesn't. DROLET'S UFE lS a blank from June 30, 1972, when he was discbareed from the Army at Fort Dix, N.J ., to Jan. 23, when he found himself in Aurora. "I can't remember a thing," be said. "It's like 1 didn't even exist for six years." Drolet, now 24 and a patient at the Colorado Psychiatric Hospital here, s ays he is "scared and nervous'" about his predicament. Hospital personnel tefuse to discuss the particulars of his case, except to confirm that they believe he is telling the truth. DR. AIJAN BROCK Willett of the Department of Psychology at the University of Colorado Medical School says that am- nesia is so rare he bas seen.only a couple of cases in 10 years in psychiatry. Willett, who ls not directly involved in Drolet's case but is familiar 'with it, added that six years ••is a ratherlong time" to forget. · Willett defmed amnesia "as a pathological loss of memory ••• and it is close to 100 percent in its effect." When Drolet "kind or woke up'' he boarded a bus and rode 1t into Denver and back.to Aurora. HE HAD HOPED the trip would jog his memory. but nothing along the way looked familiar. All he seemed to know was that be dldn 't know anything. He went t.o a motel and took st.ock of his situation. In his wallet, he found $30, some 6·year-old military iden· Uficalion that provided his name and pictures of "a pretty good looking, brown-haired glrl." On his left band was a gold Wedd.inc band. "It didn't mean anythlng, so I took it of(," be recalled. He spent two days watching television newscasts and riding buses, looking for clues. U they were there, be didn't recognize them. CONFUSED AND frightened, Drolet rode around aimlessly in a cab. When be saw a sign that sajd "Hospital," be decided to ..4SHOKr STAY ~ASTR4Y LONDON (AP) -Tyegarth Bottoms Up, a prize boxer that disappeared Friday from lbe Crurts Dog Show in the Olympia Music Hall, was found un- harmed in a kennel for stray animals. • Owner Sheila Cartwright said she took a "shot in the dark" and went to the Battersea Dogs Home on Monday. The police had found the 13-month-old bitch near the Thames River without a collar. aak ror help. "IC I had seen a cop car first, I would have gone with hlm, but I saw the bospltal instead." After six hours of Interviews, he was admitted to the hospital. "They tell me I must be block- ing something out," Drolet said. ''But I don't know what it ls." DE REMEMBERS HE Hved in Denver as a child, then moved to Florida with his fami- ly. He remembers his parents broke up wbep he was lS and that he had a brief marriage before he joined the Anny in 1970. He remembers he was waiting for bis mother at the gates ot Fort Dix that day in 1972, and that he was eoing to Florida to take a job. But he can't remember if bis mother arrived, if be went to Florida, how he got t.o Colorado or who the girl is in the wallet photographs . DROLET SAID, "I've tried to contact my parents. but they've moved away. For all I know they're dead. Nobody knows anything about them -about me either, I guess." The FBI has determined from his fingerprints that J>e is not wanted, and authorittes say no mlsslng person reports flt his situation. As he sat explaining bis life, Drolet chain-smoked and re- peatedly folded his arms acrou his chest to control b1a sb~. "Ot course I'm scared," hf said. "I feel like I'm miuln.g ' lot of my We." Some Fat Cat Consuelo Cabaron pats her pet feline on the head at her Brooklyn, N.Y., home re- cenUy. The corpulent cat, who weighs 46 pounds. is named Pudgy. Readers May Get College Credits To register ror two units of college credit, readers of Popular Culture Course by Newspaper may callacollegein theirdistricL Coastline College serves lbe communities of Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. To register, call 963·0824. The· great 1978 take-off I · Residents of the Rancho Santiago College dis· trict may enroll at Santa Ana College by calling the admissions office at 835·3000. Saddleback College se"es all of south Orange County, including the cities of Irvine, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente. To register at Saddlebaclt College phone 831·9700 or 49S-4.9:JO, extension 291. Courses by Newspaper is offered as a public aervtce by the Daily Pilot in cooperation with the participating colleges a.od UC San Diego Ex· tension. · Mutual'& bringing in H&RBLOClt THE INCOME YA~ PEOPLE Now you can have your tax returns prepared free of charge by the nation'• largest tax service. (Fly Air California to San Fnmdseo, llDcl take $1938 olf Joal'room at the St.Prands.) Why wait any longer'? AJr California offers plenty of convenient non-stop flights to g_et you to the San Francisco Bay Area. And the St. Francis is waiting once you arrive. l . • ' ' • . -• -, ~ • t I .. I , . f '- •{ • We'll arrange for H & R Block to prepare yaur Federal and California Jncome tax returns FREE If you open a certrftcate account for $5,000 OR If you are a Mutual saver with an account of $5,000 and have never uaed the tax service OR If you have prevloualy used the tax llervlce and your savings balance has Increased by $2,500 since last Aprll 15, 1977. Tax preparation la also available for a modest tee If you open or malntafn an account In Come for a weekend, a week, or as long as you like. From now until February 28th, 1978, the St. Francis will take $19. 78 off a,ny individu~I stay of two nights or more. You get superb accommodations on Union $qua rein the heart of SanFrandS(()'s theater district for as little as $39 a night-24-hour room service. The cable car stopping at your front door. And all the traditional amenities that make the St Francis uniquely the St Francis. .,, ,,, the amount of $3,000. · And the service Includes the epecfal schedules for lteml~ed deductions, pension lncome,1ale of property.lntereat and dividend fncome, 1ncome averaging and much more. All l>ac'*f by H&R Block'• famous guaran~ FoC' rnoN lnfonnauon. call your neareat Mutual Stvfnga~ce\ Tax s.Mce from H&R Block. It's Juat one of the many reuone why YQUreavfngt lh®ld be at Mutuat Savfngs an_d Loan AA<>cietlon. I , And Air CalffomJa makes it aU even easier to take with special discount fares, advancedcom~rlzed reservations end ticketing, and an exduslve famJly plan that can save you UJ> to 30% any day' of the week.• Just show your AirCalifornla ticketwhen_you're readytochedcout,andthegreat1978tak~lson. For St. Frands reservations call 800-2'2.8-3000 toll free or your trevel e~ t