Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-02-17 - Orange Coast PilotHaldeman Book MlodiDn Balli Claims Nixon . . l FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUA RY 17, 1978 f~----~------_;_VO~l~·'~'·~-~~~-,;,;_·";.;...;..c_•°"~'·-·-~-A_o•_,~------~--~ I • . SIWll' Doggie Tammy Sutton of Lincoln, R.I., a freshman art major at Rhode Island College, uses her creative talefil8 to create this giant St. Bernard snow carving. A little spray paint adds dimension to the work. . . .... '· • . .. · .. 1tD·ess 'Nixon Did It - All;' Haldeman NEW YORK <AP) -H.R. Haldeman, once Richard Nix· on 's alter ego, went public oo Watergate with a single1 strident theme: Nixon, the presldebt, was behind it all. Accordlng to Haldeman: -Nbon "himself caused lbo1e burl1ars" to break into Watergate. -Nixon "was in on the cover· up from Day One." -Nixon may have submitted * * * HalJ.eman's Book Mf11y Be Best Seller WASH{NGTON (AP) -The dty that spawned the Watergate scandal dil5Dlayed a great thirst to read-the latest b9:<>k about tt.• but because of dist.ribution prob· le ma. no copies were to be had im- mediately. When word 1ol out that H.R. Haldeman's "The Ends of Power" was to to on sale today instead of the previously an· nounced publication date of Feb. 27, local bookstores were swamped by telephone callers and prospective buyers. At Trover Book Shop, the bookstore nearest the White House, tM-manaier told a re- porter: "I've got money already on more than 50 copies. The pllone calls are drivlna me crasy." Many stores sent employees to the ..-arehouae of District News Co. In the surburbs to pick. up coplea. District News la the sole local distributor. "It caU&ht us by surprhe.'' · said Joee Gonsales, assistant manager of tbe fb'm. "People were lined vp &GOD a• the boolr hit lM loedhil ®Ck. I WU ln New Yon to attend an affair and ''-•• a blC •ul'Prlae when I cot bact arid foUAd th4i book was he ... to blackmail from Charles W. Colson. · -Nixon threatened lo embarrass the CIA lf it refused lo participate in the cover·up. -Nixon ''simply begaq to e rase all of the Watergate material from the tapes when he started to worry that they might be expoged." Witt.out offering any new evidence, Haldeman makes HIGHLIGHTS ANO REACTION. TOBOOK--02 these conjectures in a new hoc*, "The Ends of Power," rushed to bookstores today -10 days ear- ly -because of a headlong media race to publish excerpts. The only reaction from Nix- o o 'a seaside villa in San Clemente, was a ope sentence statement: "Former Presldeot Nixcm's memoirs will be published ln May." Not all of the book is ac- cusatory. Haldeman (1) praises Nlxoca for bis mastery of foreign policy, (2) discusses a tensely declined tnvitation to join the Soviet muon in a nuclear attack on China, and (3) dwells at length on Henry Klsllftlel'. The lnsiabts lt offers, (See NIXON, Pase AU , . . Hustler. €bief sees Stripper • • nuts .. Nude' Millionaire Son Arrested SANTA ROSA (AP> - The 3l·year-old son of a Santa Rosa millionaire has been arrested for in· vestigation of the s tabbing deatt\ of a man \\>hose body was found in a dltch. Hug~ Codding. Jr. was taken into custody Thurs· day at his Rohnert Park home by Sonoma County sheriff's (i eputies and charged wlth murder in lbe death Wednesday of M~lvin Matteri, 29, of Santa Rosa. The victim's body was found by a fi.aherman near Cazadero, a small lumber· ing community. Pair Rescue Westminster Mom, 5Kids The lives of a Westminster woman and her--five young children were saved late Thurs· day night by-two 2l·year·old men, a city Fire Department spokesman sald today. The two men £~1ht their way th~ugh flames tmd smoke to rescue Diana Woodruff, 34, and her children rangina in ate from 11 months to 8 years. Mrs. Woodruff was treated for first degree ~ on the neck and shouldera at Westminster Community Hospital. One of ber children was treat- ed at the scene of tbe fJre for sJDoke inhaJalion, as Wt!re tbe two men, Larry Dykea ot Bellflower and Jay Joyce of Santa ,\.na. The Fire DepartmeQt spokesman said the two men 'tr'ere viliUn1 ftlends nearby when they heard a window bteak at Mra. Woodruff's apattment, 13751 Edwarcb St. Tbey rushed to the scene and broucht Mrs. Woodruff and her chlldren to 1ateiy., ~ fife tamed an estimated . $14,0001ii dama1•. lnveati1ators were PtoblD• it.a ' cause today. Fourteen fl...neb~rs responded to tbe 11:35 p.m. blaio and 1'ept it from 1preadln& to otber apartments. Joined --==' Douglas In Vegas By KATIIY CLANCY Of .. o.lll' 1"11.C Si.ff A prosecution witness in th~ trial of a Costa Mesa man ac- cused of plotting to torture and dismember two women admit· ted Thursday she bad posed nude for defendant Fred Serre Douglas. · Diane Smith Brown at first telftified in Orange County Superior Court that she refused . Douglas' offers to pose for pornographic photos. But when pressed by defense attorney Terry Giles, Mrs. Brown admitted being photo- graphed nude with a Polaroid camera by Douglas while the pair were on an overidgbt trip to Las Vegas last May. Mrs. Brown surprised the de- f ense by testifying that she felt threatened last April by a gun. toling Douglas when she agreed to take part in a so-called lesbian bondage rum seasion that allegedly was to end with the dismembering of two pomo models. She said the threat occWTed on aitrip to the desert April 11 when Douglas purportedly di&- c us sed former film-malting sessions on this pl'Qperty. Kn. Brown testified that Douglas told her "the eirls were tortured and made to do un- naJ,ural acts." Later, as they overlooked a ravine oo the desert property, sbe said 'lie continued to tell me that once the photographs were taken the girls were taken up there ind tortured fwilier IJDfi dismembered." (See'roaTllRE, Pap A!) Coast Fair through Saturday. W•rtner Saturday. Lowa tonight 47 to 52. Highs Saturday $1 to '13. •••ex .. ,. 2 DAI V Pt1..0T ' City ·Assails · . Freedom Vote • ' . AN D (AP) -Tbe San Dle10 City dl baa ob)tded to the prop0ted 1111 re &H from prlaon of lrlple-1layer Joseph Bernard Morse. Neapaper's PubliahBd Ex,cerpt. Fo~ Early PUblication· • Monday will mark the annual observance or Wuhinglon 's Blrthday and will be a holiday for all rederal, slate and coun· ty offices and pubUc 1choolB in Orange Cou.nty. The council voted unanlmout· ly Thunday to condemn the dt· cislon tetlcbed by th• atate CommUJ!lty Rtleue Board to free the 34-year-old Chula Vista man. . Mosrse was sentenced to life In stale prlsQO after beln1 con· vlcted ot murderlnt bta mothet, sister and a county Jail Inmate. · NEW YORK (AP> -The Washington Polt'1 td.ltor says bll ne•tPtlpet obtai.Ded portJord of ''The Ends ol Power" by R.R. Haldeman at no cost f>tyond normal reportlnf expemes, while t'WO other newspapers say a roysteriows woman caller offered to eell them the book. ''The 1tory ls ln.llnltely less complicated than you sus~t.'' editor Ber\Jamin C. Bradlee said Thursday Dl1ht ln a telephone interview in whlch be denied receivtn1 a cau from Ule woman. "We got it froin someone whose name you don't know, whose af. filiation you don't know. Nor have you ever heardot them.'' THE POST PUBLISHED IN 'l'huraday'1 edlUoos what it said was 1materlal from tho litter two-thirds of t.bo book, prompting Messy Joh in Mass~la.WJetts • Crews clean up some of the 10,000 gallons of oil that coal three miles of shoreline in Marblehead, Mass., after the stuff was spill ed . by the Greek-registered tan~er Global Hope, shown in background. The ship ran aground during last week's blizzard. ,. Coal TaJ.kS Reopen, Ailll for 'Deadline' WASHING TON (AP) -Ef. forts to end the 74·day-old national soft coal strike resumed today against the background of an informal Carter administration deadline to get a contract accord by the end of the day. Labor Secretary Ray Manhall met with union orticiala this morning and planned a aeparae session with representatives of the Bituminous Coal Operators AssociaUori before reconvening a joint sesstoo. Marshall, taking the role of chief mediator, kept the parties around the bargaining table nearly contlnuously from Thurs- day morning until 2 a.m. today, when the bargainers recessed for a rest. Marshall said-Thursday that bis goal to get a settlement sometime today was not a hard- and-fast deadline. But he said: "We don't have Jong. This thing can't goon." One administration orttclal, amplifying on Marshall's re- marks, said privately today that "we have to be ttlatively close or at a sett.lement" by day's end or "it's time to talk about options." He did not elaborate. There was other pressure from the administration, retreating step-by-step in recent days from ita policy of non- intervention in labor disputes. President Carter met with governors from a dozen states hit bard by the strike. Gov. James Thompson of Illinois said Carter remarked be would personally "step in" -a term that wu not explained -if the talks do not result in agreement. Tbe White :Uouse dllpatcbed ptesidenUal aide Landon Butler to the Labor Department to monitor U>e necoUaUon.s. The admlnlltraUon also wu beainninl to talk more ORenlY about the poalbWty of invoicing tlie st:rike·b•ltinl provision of DAILY PILOT the Taft-Hartley Act. "People are certainly talking about Taft.Hartley if this effort (the talks) fails, but no final de· cision bas been made " said ooe adminislration offlcial who asked oot to be named. White House press secretary Jody Powell satd, however, there are "no plans to invoke Tall-Hartley" today or at "any specific time." Sentiment in favor of invokin1 the act ls tempered by a widespread feelini that miners , will ignore any back·lo·work court order Issued under the act. And Pennsylvania Gov. Milton Shapp said the governors' advice to the president was not to invoke the law. In an interview with journalista Thursday. Carter said that "We ••. have to p~ pare for the eventuality. that I hope we never see, or a breakdown in the negotiations." The president said if the Taft· Hartley Act is invoked, "it will require a llUle mott attention to law enforcement to make sure there is no violence perpetrated against persons or properties." Meanwhile, dwindling coal stockpiles in the Midwest con- t1 n ued to pressure electric utilities and their customers. State police and National Guardsmen escorted convoys of coal trucks to generatinJt plants in Illinois, lndiaoa and Ohio. In Springfield. m., 200 atrlld.ng miners protested the arrival ot non-union coal at the city's power plant, but the presence of 80 policemen kept the situation peaceful. 3TeensHeld In San Juan" Store Holdup Three mu~ed bandits who took $200 from a San Juan Capistrano store at 1unpolnt Thursday proved to be thrff W-Ye-&F-014 ~ -f'-4t1ldent•, Orange County Sherifra officers aald. · Deputies aald one member ot the trio was arrea~ about J1S minutes after the boldup at the Minion Newuta»d. 81'7H CamlnoCapiatrabo. •. They said information pro- vided by the capt'11'ed auapect led to the arreata four boura later of h1a two companions. Of· flcen MlcJ they recovertd the $200 and. the two tuna uaed Ill the robbery •. otmeen said one of lb• pns waa identified aa a weapon taken fna • tDeal--. on.a a recent burtJ117. Tber aaid &be other ran wu found at th• hom ot one otthe J~. The thfiM 14-Jtar.c>ldl were booked loto: larialle ball on cbt.rfH of anne4 rob1Mr1, de1ut1e1HlcL ~ I",.... Page Al TORTURE. • "He said that two bodies were buried there," said Mra. Brown. a former employee of a bar tbe 54 -yea r -old Douglas bad operated. Police later, however. failed to find any bodies. ''He said I could participate or I could become one of the persons buried up there," she continued. "Re had the run In his band. I told him I would participate." Later, she said, she told Douglas she would not \Ue part. After the testimony Giles asked that Mrs . Brown's statements be stricken rrom the record. He charged that pros- ecutor William Morriuy •P· parenUy "intended to prosecute by SUTprlse." Giles contended ·the deputy district attorney had violated a court order which sald tbe de- f enae would be oven coplee of. report.I dealine with the cue. ones· also objected to other parts of Mn. Brown's testimony which be said caught him by surprtae. • TboM Included statements abe attributed to Douglas that be bad a contract due ln November for five porno-t«tu.re fllms and that Mrs. Brown •ould be paid $1,000 for each seaalon in which she took part. Morrissey, however. argued · successfully that be bad just learned of that testimony ln a Wednesday oven.Int telephone connraation with Mn. Brown. Al a result, Judge Mason Fenton aaid be could see no evidence that the informaUoo was purposely 1Vithheld from Giles and ft would be admitted for the preaent. During quesUonlnt. Giles ac- cused Mrs. Brown of "chaniinl your testimony to fit what you tbo"1ht the police wanted to hear after you bad bad time to learn about the cue." M ra. Brown admitted she wanted to cooperate and that police at fint had arrested her as an accomplice. But she aaid her testimony re1ardlng the desert trip wu faotual. She co"ld not recall w1th wblcb police officer she dis· cu11ed Ute &uapolnt desert 'Setalon or the contu.cl!. ll wasn't contained to police tape recordlnp of ber •tatementa, she saJd, because she ottered that inlormaUon the day after the recordlnp were made. The barmaid teatlfled that ahe bell•ve4 Dou1laa when be purporttdl1 uld two bodies were burled on hi• desert property. Yet, she aald. abe dld not believe two would·be porno modelt WV4I ln any dan1er of bell\1 tortured or killed when she and Doullas soUclte4 ~r strvlc• tn a Calta ...... b•r. Slayton Gordon, 18 one of. the two. Hid almulated lesbian aeta and tlmal.ted boftdase were dtt· ~ CUIHd d\lrln1 1he meetint list 1prtn1 but torture waa not. menLlooect. Ml11 oordon eatd •b• WU hHltalit to ·~ to tab put ta tM ponlO 1Um ........... and. r""-d to aame • ilate tM .film lna coUlcl take pl .... HrlY publication of the 353-Pace vOlumo ttlelf -•blch 1ella fot $U.9S -in addlUon to hlah·priced eacerpta. Suapiciona of tbe publltbet, Ttmea BooU. and t.be Tlmta ayndlcaUon service centered on a pouible seewity bnach at tho Scranton, Pa., press where U ~as produ~. · ln part, the suspicions were bued on the Poet•s statement that it bad not obtained all the book, which was bound from printed pages collected into 11 sections called "signatures." AL'1110UGll THREE G\JAKDS OVERSAW the blndln1. ex- ecullves believe "The Enda ot Power" wu most vUin•table to the theft of substantial portions ln sequ~ce at th1a st•C•· Further, the New York Tlmes aald today that a ''Nancy Collins." checked out of a Scranton motel Thursday. Nancy Collin• is the WashinJ{lon Post reporter credl~ wtth ltttlq the book. The reporter declined comment. Speculation about a Scranton $0urce was also t'Ueled by a telephone call the nmea received one ftll,ht laat week. A Times editor who requested that bis name not be used Hid the woman caller &old.him Q8 would alv• \be book to '"t.be hllbd ~J' THE EDITOR QUOTED HEB as saying she was a reporter for a Scranton newspaper, that the newspaper had rejected the book, that she was angry and that she intended to quit. "ll sounded as though it mi&ht be real," the editor observed, sayinc~woman never calledbackaaJmLntcted.. He aald th& woman 'Wbo sounded like someone in her mld·20a and spoke without an accent, iave blm a cover name of 0 Naiicy" so that he would know her when she called again. Pet.er Mlchelmore, metropolitan editor of the New York Post, also said that a woman of similar description called him last week. SHE SAID mAT SHE Oil someone she knew worked at the printer's and that abe was auctloninc the book in calls to the New York Post, the Wasbin,ton Poet, the Ttmes and the New York Dal- ly News. She did not call back, Micbelmore said. The News said it did not receive a call. Executives of the two Scranton" newspapers, the Times and Tribune, said they would have printed stories if given the book and that they did not think anyone on their ataffs could have been in· volved. ABC, whlcb was allowed to react "Tbe Ends of Power" at the publlsher's office after slcning a confidentiality .-UpulaUon to pre- pare a special on the book, branded as "preposterous" any poutblJIV lb.at the n.tworlt wu the source. BRADLEE DECUNED TO DISCUSS the source in any de.tail but did say that ABC was not it. Nor, Ille adcSM. WU Nftaw• magazine, which Is published by Tbe Wug:Poet Oo. Althouih be de.scribed the source u rOuttDe. it .,. tbM die Post and othen viaoroualy sought to obt* tM befON Ua ~ - leue. • Security was ao stringent that tbe president of Ttmee Books hlmaelf Thomas Lipscomb, sbepbuded Callen of the Vol\lme to Califonha for the Book-of-Uie Monda Club1 •hicllputchued l\ u a main lelnction. Othe..r security precautions ln•tl\led ~·--iua I , throughout production, code names, se.,rcbe9 .t Uail ~ a . restricted press room, midnight dell•eries. iiMlUDa t,ne ~it was set, burnil1i production scr• and ..tu.boldlaa c:oPMi .,._' from the agency that drafted ads. * * * *' * * Fro•Pase AJ NIXON BLAMED ••• however, are strengthened by the source. Haldema.o was at Nixon's side from 1962 until the beat of Wa~ate forced b..la res- ipation as White House chief ol slafl ll years ht.er. "I was never a social friend or Nixon 'a, .. be writes. But be was ''cloaer than anyone else pro- f essionally." Says Haldeman: "Few men in .all history have bad the privilege of beln1 raised as high as I wu; and rew bave had the tragedy of being brought as low." · But elsewhere he recalls once saying out loud: "Nixon was the welrdeat man ever to Uve in the White House." Other accounta have laid the genesis of the June 17, 1972, Democratic Party headquarters burglary to the eqerneu or Nixon re-election officials to &at.her poUUcal intelll1e.nce. No one has come aa close as Haldeman ln placln1 Nixon at the planning staee. Nixon. be writes, "someUmes seemed to lose touch with ~all­ ty" on matters pertaining to in· dustrialist Howard Huehes, whom be blamed ror bl.a election def eats In 1960 and 1962. And the president lonk suspected that Lawrence F. O'Brien was a paid Hutbe4 Jobbyiat while Hrvinl u DemocraUc Party chairman. -r belfe.e tf Wafmost certatn that Nixon uked Colson to help him 'naU ' O'Brien," Haldeman writes. ''Colson naturally turned to HwtL And Hunt tried to do I\ by tapping O'Brien's telephone at the Watergate." E. Howard Hunt, a retired CIA agent wlth a lone string of clandestine assignments, was Colson's protege at the While House and the Nixon re-elecUon committee. He and G. Gordon Liddy, the elecUon commiltee's lawyer in charge or political in· telllgence, recruited the five burglars who were caught inside Watergate and they were convict- ed with them. Colson denied Haldeman's charges that be and NJxon or- dered the burglary. "False, it just didn't happen that way .•. There was probably the most exhaustive investigation in the history of the Republic to determine if that happened and the investigation determined that it did not happen," he said Thurs- day in an ABC-TV interview. In addition, most city halls along the Orange Coast will be c losed. . Westmlnater is the ex-. ception. Traah plckupa in all clues wtll remain on th~r ~gular schedules. In keeplnl wlth tho holi- day, such facWUes a1 UC lrvlne, U.S. post offices and state Department of Motor Vehicle offices will bt closed. So will the CO.OD l..¥1 .. 04Mlfb •nd libraries. Most banks also plan lo close for the holiday, but it would be best to check your branch by phone to make sure. Naked Man . Rapes Woman At Knif epoint . A bearded man, wearing only a knife sheath belt, broke into a South Huntington Beach con- domlolwn and repeatedly raped a 32-year-old woman at knlfepoint Thursday, police re- • ported. ~uspeet est aped. The nude rapist entered the home through a sliding glass doo~ at •:30 a ,m. He tbJ'eatened Ule woman with the knife_ and ••• al~ed heft accordtn1 to police Set. Dave MWer. Miller 1aid the rapist dis· tossed hia personal problems with the victim during the heut· lOng attaclt. Pollce said the vlctun 's five· J,.a'-Old ~ u\eep ln another 1'00Dl ..... Dot 8'0lelted. during tht lttatk. Tbe WOJD•D wu treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital and -relt!ued, -police said . The rapist was described as a dark-haired male in his 20s, about five feet, nine inches tall and weighing 165 pounds.-.. Frot11 Page Al DOCTOR ••• commented after his questioning • of Benlrschke that. the defense intends to ca ll its own pathologist to counter many of the prosecution witness' con-~lusions. "I 'm not worriedr.by his testlmooy," Watson smlta.t. "He dldn 't lay a glove on me.'• The trial wlJI resume at~; a.m. Tuesday in Judge ,Jam K . Tumcr·s Department~ , Police Probe Bomb Attacks- SAN DIEGO CA P) - Firebombing and robbery at- tacks on Winchell's doughnut s hops in ' the San Die10 area · were under investigation today after plans were announced to open another shop. The opposition of some Ocean Beach residents to a new store there was rejected on appeal to the planning and r egional coastal commissions. Traffic congestion and a glut of fast-food outlets were cited in the op- position. PASSWORD • •• A good word Pa$&ed around abOut a business is invaluable. A bad word can be unfortunate. Our growing. success in the past 25 Yct&rs has been due to the "good words" and referrals sent to us by our customers. No amount of advertising can replace a personal recommendation. We are not ln~lllble. but we are wondng towards that goal by giving our customers the best service and quality pcsslble., ' ,_ • \ • VOL. 71, NO. 48, -4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES Coal ·Strike CRANSTON, R.1. <AP) - J>reaident Carter said this af\ernoon that coal strike neaotiators "are making good frogress" but warned that if hey tail lo reach early agreement to end the 74·day strike he will take "more serious action." The president told a news coo- f ere n c e that he asked the negotiators "lo stay at the , bargaining table until a final settlement is reached." In his reference to more serious action if a settlement isn't reached, Carter seemed to hold up the threat or invoking the 80-day coollng-off period un· der the Taft-Hartley Act. "The future of the unions, the future of an effective collective bargaining process. the future of the coal industry and the welfare of our nation depends on the success of these negotiation.a." Carter said. Union and coal industry negoti•tors were summoned to the White House on Wednesday night and have been bargaining except for brief interruptions ever since. Carter discussed the coal negotiations in an openine statement in which he also made Haldeinan Says . . Nixon to Blallle NEW YORK CAP) -H.R. Haldeman, once Richard Nix- on's alter ego. went public on Watergate with a single, strident theme: Nixon, the president, was behind it all. According to Haldeman: -Nixon "himself caused those burglars" to break into Watergate. -Nixon "was in on the cover- 1 up from Day One.·~ -Nixon may have submitted 1 to blackmail from Charles W. !Colson. I * * * Nixon threatene d to embarrass the CIA if it refused to participate in the cover-up. -Nixon "simply began to HIGHLIGHTS AND REACTION TOBOOK-02 erase all of the Watergate material from the tapes when he started t.o worry that they might be exposed.'' Without off~ring any new * * * evidence, Haldeman m akes these conjectures in a new book, "The Ends of Power," rushed t.o bookstores today -10 days ear- ly -because or a headlong media race t.o publish excerpts. The only reaction from Nix- on's seaside villa in San Clemente, was a one sentence statement: "Former President Nixon's memoirs will be published in May." Not all of the· book Hi ac- cusatory. Haldeman (1) praises (See NIXON, Page AZ) Post Won't Divtilge Ri_ley Asks I 'Normal' Sources DA to Probe "' NEW YORK (AP) -The Washington Post's editor says his newspaper obtained portions of "The Enda Of Power" b'y H.R . . Haldeman at no coat beyond normal report.inc expema, while two other newspapers say a mysterious woman caller ottered to 1ell them the book. --.. ' ''The story is lnfinltely Jess complicated than you suspect," ' editor Benjamin C. Bradlee said Thursday night in a telephone interview in which be denied receiving a. call rrom the woman. "We got it from someone whose name you don't know, whose af- filiation you d9n't know. Nor have you ever heard of them." \ l I TIJE POST PUBLISHED IN Thursday's editions what it said was materi~l from the latter two-thirds of the book, l>rompting early publication of the 352-page volume itseU -which sells for $12.95 -in addition to high-priced excerpts. Suspicions of the publisher. Times Books, and the Times syndication service centered on a possible security breach at the Scranton, Pa., press where it was produced. · In part, the suspicions were based on the Post's statement that it had not obtained all the book, which was bound from printed pages collected into 11 sections called "signatures." ALmOUGR THREE GUARDS OVERSAW the binding, ex- ecutives believe "The Ends of Power" was most vulnerable to the Utert of substantial portions in sequence at this stage. Further, the New York Times said today that a "Nancy Collins" checked out of a Scranton mot.el Thtµ"sday. N~ncy Collins is the Wasbinl(ton Post reporter credited with getting the book. The reporter declined com menL Speculation about a Scranton source was also fueled by a telephone call the Times received one night last week. A Times editor who requested .that his name not be used said the woman caller told him she would give the book to "the bi1hest bidder." THE EDITOR QUOTED HER as saying she was a reporter for a Scranton newspaper, that the newspaper bad rejected the book, that she was angry and that she intended to quit. "lt souodttd as thoueh it might be real," the editor observed, saying the.woman never called back as instructed. He said the woman who sounded like someone in her mid-20s and spoke without an accent. gave him a cover name of "Nancy" so that he would know her when she called a1ain. Peter Micbelmore. metropolitan editor of the New York Post, also said that a woman of similar description called him last week. SHE SAID THAT SHE OR someone she knew wor~ed at the printer's and that she was auctioning the book in calls to the New York Post, the Washington Post, the Times and the New York Dai- ly News. She did not call back, Michelmore said. Tbe News said lt did not receive a call. Executives of the two Scranton new1papers, the Times and Tribune, said they would have pJ'inted stories if given the book and (See BOOK, Page A2) 'ViQlation' Orange Co~X Supervisor Thomas Riley tbunday he wtU tstN!le dtltriet1ttotveT to "look into" a political rival's charge that Rile)''s appointee to the County Planning Commission bas violated state political campaign regulations. ·~1 am going &o aend the whole thing over to the district at- torney to find out what be <Tom Rogers) is talking about," Riley said. Rogers is a candidate for the Fifth District supervlsorial seat held b)'Rilcy. In a · letter to Riley, Rogers c harged that Planning Co mmi ssi oner William MacDougaU violated campaign regulations when be failed to me a report in Orange County sbow- lng that he was co-chairman of a fundraising breakfast for Democratic Stale Assemblyman John Knox of Richmond. A statement filed by Knox in Sacramento showed the Sepl 12 fuodraising breakfast grossed $8,000 and netted $7,193 after ex- penses. Because Knox reported the rundraising on his campaign finance statement, state Fair Political Practices Commlssioo spok esmen said "there is nothing serious about the Orange County oversight." They indicated, however. that MacDougall and co-sponsor, former Irvine Company President Ray Watson, will be asked to file a statement in Orange County. Today, MacDougall acknowledged acting as co- cbairman fo~ the breakfast. "I don't see anything wrong with that," be said. "I have known John Knox for <See ULEY, Pace AZ) fJanal Sovereignty Eyed/ &company Chairman Opposes Panama PactJJ C TEN'.CENTS or Else Carter a s trong a ppeal for con- gresslonai action on his tax pro· posats. "I don't care how many martinis people have for lunch," said Carter. "I am concerned about who picks up the check. "I don't thln.k a small minori- ty has a divine right to ex- pensive meals, free theater tickets, country club dues, sport- ing tickets pa.id for by heavier taxes for everyone else ... On other topics, Carter said: -The sale of fi&hter planes to l srael, Saudi Arabia and Egypt would not disrupt relations between Israel and Egypt. -Each state should decide• whether to permit construction of nuclear power plants, and the federal government snould not prohibit construction lf federal standards are met. Defid Beat Fiaisla Carter said that, "in many ways our economy last year was good" but added that "we need tax reduction and tax reform." He said the tu packaae he sent to Congress included $17 billion 1n family income tax cuU! and $8 billion lR business tax cuts. but be said that the re· ductions could not be made without eliminating unnecessary subsidies. This is the way two or the 40 yachts, Mirage and Secret Love. finished after 1.140 miles of sailing in the San Diego to Manzanillo race. The race committee aboard the Mexican naval vessel Cback- ground) declared it a dead heat. The dark hull ed Mirage, s kippered by L es Harlander of Richmond, wound up as the Class B corrected time winner. <Related column, Page B6) Candidate Switches m 'arvis Proposal Candld.atet runnlnf for two seats on the Costa Mesa City Council March 7 continued their puab for votes Thursday night al an open forum discussion "S ponsored by the Newport Harbor·Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. Candidate and real estate broker Don Bull, who last week said he was opposed to passage of the J arvis-Gann tax initiative because of the negative impacts on the local school district, ~~ versed his stand , saying he weuld now vote for It "if nothing better comes up" (from the legislature). Incumbent Norma Hertzog and Planning Commissioner Arlene Schafer said they are op- posed to the initiative because of a potential loss or $3.7 million in city revenue currenUy derived from local property taxes. Snuff Trial Both Mrs. SCtla!er and"llayor Hertio~ continue to stress their past experience in city 1ov- ernment as primary reasons why they should be elected to the City Council. Paul Raver, an Orange County public administrator. is also stressing governmental ex- perience in his campaign. He suggested that five committees be formed to advise the council on bow to handle the effects of revenue loss should the tax in- itiative pass ln June. Raver said the committees (including four homeowners' groups and a group of busi- nessmen) would forward sug- gestions to the council before any specific cutbacks are made in city services. Candidates Christopher Steel and Thomas Keefer remained <See COUNCIL, Page AZ) Witness Admits ' NUde Plwtography Mexico First LadywSee Wast Ex/Ubits TJteWaWMafoo•s Pre1ldent. Jose, Lo p es Portillo. will visit two art exhibits on the Orange Coast u part of a day· long trip through Southern California on Sunday. Mrs. Carmen Romano de Lopez Portillo, and an entourage of or. ficials will open an exhibit of paintings by four prominent Mex- ican artists al noon at Laguna Beach's Wmter Festival. Following her Laguna Beach appearance. Mrs. d~ Lopez Portillo will visit the Newp<>rt Harbor Art Museum for a private viewing beginning at · 1:30 p.m. M: l. de Lopez Portillo will at- tend ribbon-cutting ceremonies on the Laguna Beach festival g rounds at noon for the special "Mex-Art International'' exhibit higbUgbUng artisans and con- temporary painters of llexJco. Works by internationally known Mexican artists Zapfe. Lameiras, Sanchez and Casas will be viewed by the Mexican First Lady. /--.. Sh'e will be accompanied by Baja, California Gov. Roberto De La Madrid and Dr. and Mrs. Julio Tejeda. He ls the d1reetor of the Mex-Art International or- ganization which is introducing Mexican artists to the United States. A private reception for Mrs. de Lopez Portillo and her party will follow in Laguna Beach, ac· cording to festival organisers. W.eather Fair throulh Saturday. Warmer Saturday. Lows tonight 47 to ~2. Highs Saturday 68 to 73. INSIDE TODAY The Treau1re1 of Tutankbamun ha~ j1nally amved Jn Los A•ln.amfd me.ch lloopla. Tha nh1bU it ~ jn mn.,,:ciM photo• on.P,ag1 Cl. Ia•ex BRUSSELS, Bet,lum (AP)-A• Roman Catholic nun has been charged with mwderinr three el~erly people by inJecUnt them with overdo.ea of ln1ulln olftclala said. ' Magistrate Leo Tas sald Sister Godfrlda, a drug addict, con- fessed to murdering tbe.Jhr" persons, aged 75 to 80 but did not exp!ain why she kilied them. He said Thursday the tn-vesti'a~oo is conUnulnr to see it s~e ts involved in other su.s- p1clous deaths at a home for the elderly. 2Women Named for Annapolis Two prange Coast women are among 10 candidates nominated by U.S. Rep. Robert E. Bad.ham, R·Newport ·Beach, for the U.S. Naval ~cademy at Annapolis Md. ' They are Ralinda Bozelli of Laguna Hills and Susan G . Talley of Irvine. . Also monimated to vie for a sang le vacancy, with selection to be made by the Annapolis admissions office, are George A. Moore, Costa Men; Raymond K . ~ynne, Fountain VaJJey; Oevm P . Bower, Mission Viejo; James F. Refalo, Santa Ana, and Carl M. Holmberg and Patrick D. O'Farrell both of Tustin. ' In addition, Badham has nominated Shelley Ames Jones J r. and Daniel R . Waldman. both Orange Coast residenls l'Urrently 1>lat1oned at the Naval Training Center in Newport, R.l. Badham has also nominated Mi ss Talley , Miss Bozelli , Refalo and O'F'arrell to the US M i_litary Academy at W ~;t Point. Also nominated to West Point are Lawrence H . Harada and David R. Bachlor of Costa Mesa Rena M. Loesch of El Toro, DaJ~ E. Brant and Edwards S. Morris of Huntington Beach and Alan A. Parker ol MiNJon Viejo. CountY Withdiaaws SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Marin County has withdrawn from the Association of Bay Area Governments after the board Thursday refused to delay c?nsideration or a controversial air quality plan until October. Sister Godtrlda was arrested Jaat week on charges of theft, forgery and drug addiction. PoUce said she became addicted to morphine alter sursery eJght years ago for a brain tumor, and the earlier charges were brought in connection wllh the theft or morphtne and use of false documents to obtain access to the drug. Officials said orders have beea issued to exhume a number of bodies of persons who died in the geriatric ward tn a home for the elderly in Wetteren, northern Belgium . Sister Godfrida, a member of the Apostolic Order of the Holy Joseph, was in charge of the geriatric ward. Judiciary sources said there were about 10 suspicious deaths at the home. They said Slster Godfrida was suspected of hav- ing killed some of her patients to steal their belongings and money which she needed to buy morphine. The nwt was dismissed from her position at the home in Augus t and she was confined to a private Cline for treatment. Judiciary authorities have or- dered her to undergo psychlatrtc examination. Fro• Page AJ TORTURE. . had a contract due in November for five porno-torture rums and that Mrs. Brown would be paid $1,000 for each session in which she took part. Morrissey, however, argued successfully that be had just teamed or that testimony in a Wednesday evening telephone conversation with Mrs. Brown. As a result. Judge Mason Fenton said he could see no evidence that the Information was purposely withheld from Giles and it would be admllted for the presenL During questioning. Giles ac· cused Mrs Brown of .. changing your testimony to fit what you thought the police wanted to hear after you had had time to learn about the case." Mrs. Brown admitted she wanted to cooperate and that police at-.Jint had arrested ber as an accom_plice. But she said her testimony regarding the' desert trip waa factual. She could not recall with which police officer she dis· cussed the gunpoint desert session' or the contracts. It wasn't contained In police tape recordings of her statements, she said, because she offered that information the day after the recordings were made. Fro• Page Al COUNCIL RACE ••. the most vocal in supwrt of the Before a small turnout al real· Jarvis initiative. t y o fr ices on Newpo rt Steel maintains that passage Boulevard, Mrs. Schafer and of the Jarvis initiative wouJd oot BUll announced their support for have that serious an effect on city a new citiuns committee to take services. i:e also asked requests for the completion of Mayor Hertzog wby Costa Mesa the Costa Mesa Freeway to Gov. does not have cable television Brown. an inland marina and a com: AU of the candidates have said munity swimming pool. they support the rapid com· Mayor Hertzog said she would pletion of the Costa Mesa o nl y · support private de· Freeway into the downtown area velopment of a community pool in order to save the businesses because of higb maintenance in the area and cut down on in· costs and said a proposal for a creasing traffic congestion. high quality cable television Candidate Darrilyn Oliver an· service will come before the nounced a plan to form a junior council in the near future. city council to aid city leaders. Mrs. Schafer and Long Beach She was the only candidate state student Carl Merkle came Thursday night to directly ad· out in favor of renewed efforts dress the controversial north for the marina, but opposed Costa Mesa rezone initiative due Stee~·s push for councilmanic~for a March 7 vote. di5tr1ct elections. Saying she is very concerned Support for the SO.m~ter com-about tbe 11\lDlber of "adulta on- munlty pool request came h'om ly" complexes ln the area, Mn. attorney Godfrey Sandeen, 'ftlak• Oliver saJd she would vote in ing bl.I ftnt appearance at one of favOl' of the inltjative that would many candldates forums tbat force the reioninc of 63.8 acres have been held. for sl.ng:le-family homes. c M a1or Hert:Joa drew written questions about her stand on the initiative process and her al· leged comments quesUoninJ the honesty of the people who slped the rezone initiative. Yay<Jr llerhof said sbt? supports the initiative process. but claimed that many people wbo s~gn them don't undent.and the ramifica\iom and are often , swayed by the emotionalll~ of the petition circulator. BUll stressed bis role aa a mediator in the on1oln1 COD· trovn1y Mtween tbree de· velopen and tbe North Colta llleu Jfomeownera' AuocJatk>n which •enerated the drlv. orislnallY wltlf'"B~l'a auppon and •linature· Snowtinae in Paris Parisian youngsters make the most oC snow covering park in the French capital near the Eiffel Tower Thursday. This was the heaviest snowfall that Paris had re- ceived in more than a decade. Motorists known for their daring traffic maneuvers: were not nearly as elated over the pres· ence of the white stuff. F,.._PageAJ BOOK STOLEN? •.• that they did not think anyone on their staffs could have been in· volved. ABC, whtch was allowed to read "The Ends or Power" at the publisher's office after signing a confidentiaJlly stipulation to pre· pare a special on the book, branded as "preposterous" any possibility U\ilt the network was the source. BRADLEE DECLINED TO DISCUSS the source in any detail but did say that ABC was not it. Nor, be added, was Newsweek maauine, which is published by The Washington Post Co. Allhobgb be described the source as routln"!, it was known that the Post and others vigorously sou&ht to obtain the ~ before lt.s re- lease. Security w~ so stringent that the president of Tim~ Books himself, Thomas Lipscomb, shepherded galleys of the volume to California for the Book-of-the Month Club, which purchued it as a main sell.-ction. Other security precautions involved continuous guarding throughout production, code names •. searches at the plant, a rcstncted press room . midnight deliveries, melting type after It was set, burning production scrap~ and witbhold.ing copies even from the agency that drafted ads * * * Front Page A J NIXON •.• Nixon for ttis mastery of foreicn policy, (2) discusses a tensely declined invJt.ation to join the Soviet Union in a nuclear attack on China. and C3) dwells at length on Henry Kissinger. The insi,ghls it offers, however, are strengthened by the source. Haldeman was at Nixon's side from 1962 until the heat of Watergate forced his res- ignation as White House chief o( staff 11 years later. I "I was never a social friend or Nixon's," be writes. But he was "closer than anyone else pro· Cessionally." Says Haldeman: "Few men in a ll h istory have b a d the privilege or being raised as hi,gh as I wa.s; and few have had the tragedy of being brought as low.'' But elsewhere he recalls once uying out loud: "Nixon was the weirdest man ever to live in the White Home." Other accounts have laid the genesis of the June n 1972 Democratic Party beadq~arte~ b~rglary to lhe eagerness of Nixon re-election officials to gather political intelligenee. No one has come as close as • Haldeman In placing Nixon at Ure planning stage. Enraged Man Kills Boy, 15 NEW ORLEANS <AP) -A man apparently enraeed because a Frisbee b1t his parked car shot and killed the IS-year· old boy who threw the plastic toy. polJce said. Dead was Roland Andry, who )"as tossin11 th~ plast.ac disc to a playmate Thursday night when the Frisbee hit the car. lnv~tigaling officers said the owner ran out into the strfct and began shouting at the two youngsten1. drew a gun, l'hot Andry 10 the head. then fled. Daylight Burglar Hits Mesa Home A dayUght burglar who pried open the front sliding glass door of a Cost.a Mesa home Thursday escaped with two color televisions and diamond rings valued by the owner at $4,3:50, poUce said today. The Joss from the Mesa Verde area home was reported shortly before noon by Jeane Seare Olson, who was attending classes al Orange Coast College when the residential burglary occurred, police said. <A>ast Firm Wins Heavy U.S. Contract Newport Beach's Ford Aerospace and Communications Corporation Aeronutronic Division has been awarded a $48.S million contract for pro· duction o! an airborne weapon system for the U.S. Air Force. The weapon system, destgnat. ed Pave Tack by the Alr Force, will be carried on three Alr Force fsg:btera. -the F·4E, the RF-4C and the F·UlF. The laaer-aimed system to go into production In Newport Beach is an improved ver sion or Ford-developed equipment used during the Vietnam war. The contract calls for pro- duction of 149 units over the next four years. Aeronutronic officials say about 400 people will be aas1gned to the proje<:t. Froa Page Ai filLEY .•• 24 years and I don't know ot anyone who bas done more for municipal and count y gov- ernments than he." "My long-time professional re· lalionsbip with Knox is one based on re s f)ecl and ad miration." MacDougall said. He pointed out that he dld not contact any people to ask them to attend the fundraiser. Nor dld he soUcit ·any Knox con ·. tributions, MacDougall said. "I have no idea who was solicited and who did not respond to invitations," MacDougaJJ ~aid. "The wbole tbing was · managed by Frank Michelena. He was the tot.al staff for the entire function," MacDougall said. T h e Knox d is cl o s u re' statement showed that it was Michelena who transmitted the $7 .193 fundra islng protlt to Knox. I v away S'1 bllllon in~&~ bl·, v nnentt act •2 c•ah. • Also. Veysey .. id bis U·. perience in running the canal zone leads him lo do1.1bt that tb,e Clroposed commlulon of th•• U .S. members and foa1"" Panamanian members could et- fectlvely administer the zone W · tll the year 2000. t he former congressman ~·. crttJclied wbat he called tbe.~' · J stable and dtctatorlal aov- ernment of Gen. Omar Torrijos. •'Torrijos knows very little · about political economy. He has made Panama something like 4 tropical veraJon of New York a. ty,'' Veysey aa1d. The result, he said, would be that the U.5.- would have to ball out Panama in operaUng the canal within five years. - He said he believes the treaty should not contain a clause it now Includes giving Panama thr right to veto construction of an!, alternative canal, even in' another country. And he said there is no usurance the canal.. will be maintained as a neu~ waterway. TONIGHT .. A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS" Theater Arts Center, 2501 ClifC Ori ve. Newport Beach, Feb. 17, 18, and 19, 8 p.m. K IW ANIS TRAVEL · ADVENTU RE SERIES - "Guatemala and the Yucatan:• Ralph Gerstle lecturer, OCC Auditort~. 8 p.m. . OCC PLANETARIUM ._ ''From Here to Infinity," Feb. 17-18, 7:30 and 9 p.m. OCC LECTURE -Assertion Training, Science Hall, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY, FEB. 18 BACK BAY TOUR -Walking tour of Upper Newport Bay spon~ored by Friends oJ Newport Bay. Meet at EastbluJf Drive a nd Jamboree Road traffic aignal. 9 to 10:30 a.m_ Free. "MAN AND THE SEA" - OCC Auditorium, 8 p.m. $L50. Most to Get Holiday Off Monday will mark the annual observance of Washington's Birthday and will be a holiday for all federal, state and coun- ty offices an<J public schools in Orange County. In addition, most city halls along the Orange Coas t will be closed. Westminster is the ex· ceplion. Trash pickups in au cities will remain on their regular schedules. In keeping with the holi- day, s uch facilities as UC Irvine, U.S. post offices and state Department of Motor Vehicle offices will be closed. So will lbe county's courts and libraries. Most banks also plan to close for the holiday, but it would be best to check your branch by phone to make sure. Nixon, he wrilelt, "aomedmes seemed to lose touch with reali- ty" on matters pertaining to in· dustrlalist Howard Hu1hes. whom he blamed for bis election defeats in 1960 and 1962. And the president long suspected that Lawrence F. O'Brien wu a paid Hughes liobbyiat while serving as DemocraUc Part)'. chairman. PASSWORD •.. "I believe U ls 81most certain that Nixon Asked Colson io help him 'O.U' O'Brien." Haldeman 1 wrltea ... Colson naturally turned to Hunt.. And Hunt tried t.o do lt by tapping O'Brien's telephone, at the Water1ate." · E. Howud Hunt, a rettred~CIA acent wttb a long strtnc of clandestine a1aJenments, was ColJon's protep at the White Howse. and theEW>D re-election committee. Hero Xnwker ldentifWd EL DORADO, Kan. (AP) - Randy Jones ii "Blue Ft.ab," the OB·radlo~ofce which guided a .uddenly .,-,llnded truek driver and h• 40-ton tlg to a safe stop on the Kansas TumpUte. Jona, 30, reached at bia home Thuradql said be wu "quite •urprlaed ' to read about the in· cldont ln the Wlchltt. Eaglt· Beacon. Storlu 1ald tbe anonyrno\S dtlvv who bel'ped GUmon dilappta.ted. Joo,. Mlfl>honed t.be tnlcker F.unda Gllmore .,, Grand RapJd1. Mich., and lduUfied hlnutlf a1 tba volee tb•t <?llmor. cf*tlted with avln.t his llle. ' A good word passed around abOut a business is invaluable. A bad word can be unfortunate. Our growing. success in the past 25 years has been due to the "good words" and referrals sent to us by our customers. No amount of advertising can replace a personal recommendation We are not lnfalhble, but we are working towards that goal by giving our customers the best service and Quality possible. DEN'S ~~llt.~l!ii~ o.a1111S' :insiailatian:·custam draperies linOleum • Wood floor COSTA MESA. CALIF. 92627 • ~HONE 6 .. 6."838 -6 .. 6·'23SS .· .. " .. ' .... ,,...... · HE'LL 'TELL TRUTH' MelvlnDumm•r "Feared 'forgery' . CAS VEGAS <AP) -Melvin Dutnmar testified today that he reated from the start that b1s wife might have forged a disput- ed 1f oward Hughes will because "sb~ used to tell me someday Uncle Howie was gonna leave us in his will." Dummar, increasingly nervo\IS during his testimony said Ile didn't tell his wire: Bonnie, that a disputed will leaving millions of dollars to Dum mar had been delivir'ed to his gas station. "I was afraid because of her joking that maybe she might even be involved in it," he told the jury. Dummar, who married Bonnie in 1973, said he eventually de- cided she was innocent of any in-volvement. But he repeatedJy declared from the stand, "I was scared to death that either she was ln· volv.ed or somebody would ac- cuse me of being involved with it .•• In a mqre detailed story than he has told before, Dummar dncribed bow he used an electric frying pan to ateam open the envelope contalnlng the will and lat.er balted it in the oven 'to make the glue stick aeain. He said he had learned to steam open mail during bis first marriage to his wife. l.Jnd.a. He sajd he steamed open love letters she wrote to a boyfriend during their marria,e. Earlier in the day, Dummar enied seven times under oath bat he had anything to do with the writing of the will "The charge is," said at.t.n>ey Harold Rhoden, "that between pril S, 1976, the day Hughes led and April 27, you did the re- earch and your wife forged the I. Is that true?'' ''No sir," Dummar said lJ'Jllly. Rhoden is trying to prove that he handwritten. three-pa1e 0cument is authentic. Millionaire Son ArrestRA, SANTA ROSA CAP) - The 81-year-old sod of a Santa Rosa millionaire bu been arrested for in- vestigation of the stabbing death of a man whose . body was found in a ditch. Hugh Oodd.lng, Jr. was • taken Into custody Thurs- : day at bis Rohnert Park ; home by Sonoma CouDt;v ~sheriff'• deputies aD4 : charged with murder fn : the death Wecinelday of • Melvin Matter!, 29. of : Santa Rosa. ; The victim'• body was ~ Couad by a filberman near : Cuadero. a 1mall lumber· : in& co11lJDtDlitY. ' Increase When taken •L face value, 1Late n1ur., 1bow Oraoae County's unemployment rate jumped from a reeord low of 3.9 pereent In December to S.7 percent ln January. But State Employment Development Department f'EDD> ofrtclal1 said their December estimate that only 32,900 _county residents were Wl· employed should oot be taken at face value. Jnatead , they revised De¥mber's unemployment calculatioos to abow the county's unemployment rate was 4.4 percent, not 3.9 percent, and the number of unemployed persons was 42,600 rather than 32,900. Wbateve,r the December counts were foul weather and post-tourlat season layoffs in January shoved Orange County's unemployment ft,ures upward. EDD's monthly labor statlltic report baaed on a new method or calcµlating unemployment set Orange County's unemployment at 5.7 percent and esUmated there . were M,400 unemployed county residents who ..,anted jobs. Hard hit by the rains that dampened the county in January were construction and agricultural workers. EDD's figures show that 5,400 construction jobs were lost between December and January. while the number of aaricultural jobs,.troppecfby 1,100. State labor analysts also noted there waa a decline of 6,000 re- la ll trade jobs between December and January. a drop caused by the layoff of worken hired for the Christmas season. · Those employment setbacks notwithstanding. EDD figures Orange County to be in far better shape than its neighbor- ing counties. · In Los Angeles County, 'ror ex- ample. the unemployment rate for January was set at 9.( percent. Jn San Diego QM.mty the monthly figure was 7.5 percent. , Orange County's January 5.7 percent unemployment rate was also well below the county's flcure for a year" earlier when El) D said lt stood at 6.9 percent. Pair. Rescue Westmimter Mo"" 5 Kids The lives of a Westminater worn an and her five 7oung children were saved late Thurs. day night by two 2l·year-old men, a city Fire Department spokesman said today. The two men fought their way throup names and smoke to rescue Diana Wood.ruff. M, and her children ranging bl age from 11 months to 8 years. Mrs. Woodruff wu treated for first degree burns oo the neck and abouldera at Westminster Commumty Hospital. One of ber children was treat- ed at the scene of the fire for smoke inhalation, as were the two men, Larry Dykes of Bellnower and Jay Joyce of Santa Ana. The Fire Department spokesman aald the two men were visiting friends nearby wben they beard a window break at Mrs. Woodruff's apartment, 13'1Sl F.dwards St. They rushed to the scene md brought Mrs. Woodruff and her children to safety. The fire caused an eetlmated $14,000 in damage. Jnvesttaators were probing its cause today. Fourteen firefighters responded to the ll:M p.m. blue and kept it from spreadln1 to other apartment.. owaen liift lopped oft their big 1pn..S )l •~tana and no one'a ••1tac for l!'ow much. Dally Pilot Writer Joanne Reynolds sbarea the estimates of expert. 1pecul•ton on Sunday's Busi-ness page. Snotf'J Boggle Friday, February t7. 11171 DAILY PILOT AS Waddill Witness Infant Lived 30 Minutes?· - 81 TOM BARLEY Of .. OIMy f'IMt IUlf A pathologist teaUfied Thun· day that the baby tbe pro- secution allegea was strangled by Dr. William Baxter Waddill last March 2 llved for at least» minutes in the Westminster Community Hoapital nursery. ·Dr. Kurt Benirschke, identified· in Orange County Superior Court as a nationally reco1nlzed authority on pathology, told the jury that the infant Waddill failed to abort had dled from lack of oxY1en. / commented after b1a quest.I~ of Benlnlcbke that the defense intends to call Its OWQ pathologist to counter many ol the prosecution witness• con· clualons. •'I'm not worried by hi• testlmoay," Watson 1mUed. "&. · dldn 't lay a tlove on me." The trial will resume at t :ao a.m. Tuesday in Judee.Jamn K. Tumer'a Departme.nt is. Tammy Sutton of Lincoln, R.I., a freshman art maj~r at Rhode Island College, uses her creative talents to create this giant St. Bernard snow carving. A little spray paint adds dimension to the work. The UC San Diego lec~rer testifll!d for the prosecution that a bruise on the neck of the 28.. week Want was inflicted after the unwed. 18-year-old mother delivered the fetus and before it.s death. It is alleged that Waddill, 44, of Huntington Harbour. strangled the baby when be re- alized that the saline be injected into the moth« bad failed to ·abort the chlld. NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe Muhammad All·S~lnks heavyweight champlonshlp n,ht on CBS came bl third oa tbe all· time list of television ratlqa for boxlnJ. a , network 1pokeaman said tbday. Sta~e Panel Backs Tax Trans/ er Bill The defense contends that the infant never lived, ln terms ot meaninlful life and that Waddill cannot legally be charged with murder. CBS estimates that SS m1Ulcn people saw at least six mimlta of the fiat. The show drew a 3'.4 ratlnc, meaning 34.4 percent of TV lets in the natiOu were turned ln, and a st share. meaning 61 pen:ent of the sets ln uae "re twaed to the fight, the 1pote1man •aid. By JERRY CLAUSEN at 11111 0.11, ,.. ... S&Mf An amended version or State Senate Bill-1 the proposed prop- erty tax transfer law, was ap- proved, S-4, today by the A3- sem bly Revenue and TuaUoo Committee. Two Republicans and two Democrats, including As· semblyman Ron Cordova, D-El Toro, voted against passing the bill on to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. Passage through tbe Ways and Means Committee would place the controversial blll, con- sidered the leglalature'a attempt to bait voter-passage of the J arvi~-Gann initiative (Prop. 13>. would assure floor COO· slderaUoo. The amended YWaim of StMe Sen. Peter Bebr's SB-1 reduces the finaoelal savinss a homeowner could expect through this year'• prcSperty taz. es but also cuU the amount ol. new tax dollars the measure would1~ As amfmded. the bill would C'S current homeowner property tax bUla by at leal 40 ~ lQ. stead ol so perceaL The m&Jor amendment sub- stitutes a fiv6 percent profits tax on the sale of most sinlle-family homes for a five percent transfer tax on gross income CUSD Buses Sabotaged By Vandals Students throughout the Capistrano Unified School Dis-o t.rtct were late to ICbool today after pnmksten struck at three locations late Thursday night aod deflated tires on the dis- trict's entire fleet of nearly 70 buses. ''Tb.ii was a ea.refull:r planned attempt to sabotaae our s~l buaee," District Superintendent Jerry Tbornsley said today. "Whoever did this didn't leave us with c;ive movable bus." Dietrkt personnel notified radio stations, pollce and schoola to pus the word that busea would be half an hour or so late ln ptcklna up children. Thornstey said. The entire fleet -stored in three locaUooa in Caplatrano Beach. San Clemente and Latona Niguel -was dls- conred lmmoblllJed when bus dri.ers arrived for ·work today ats:aoa.m. uwe IOt comprUIDl'I to the three locatlom where our "'-8 ar-e kept aod tnfJated the t1ree as quickly u we coold.'' Tbornaley explained.. "And then we bid many volunteers in the affectod eom- m unltlea wbo drove out to the bus stops In thetr can to •XPlain to tbe students what bad happened,., he added. The late night pranksters made their way over a fence at a dlalrict-c:ontrolled stora1e yard ln Oaplttrano Beach and also atruck ln SID Clemente and La1una Be&c1' where private compflill• House the buaee. "We have no leads at this time, ... 1alcS Thornaley. "The project waa apparently coordinated to bit 111 threo locations. We'll be conducting an JnveaU1aUoa." from the sale or owner-occupied homes. The new tax would generate about half the revenue of the original transfer-levy proposal,. .according to Revenue and Tu- aUon Committee fiprea. Committee member Cordova had proposed an amendment and supported another Wednes- day that would have softened the tax blow to Californians selllnt their homes. Both were defeat- ed, 7-4, in committee. The Oranee Countian first .:supported a motion that would have limlted state governmental spendinf, with excess tuea re- turned to taxpayers. Examining slides as he testified. Benirachke told pros- ecutor Robe.rt Chatterton that there were other bruises on the baby's neck which be bad been unable to Identify in terms of their origin and the time they were tnfllcted. Benlrscbke told Chatterton that he could not define what had caused the lack of ~gen that led to•the baby's death. He said hypoxia, an oxygen deficiency that ls often found in otherwise healthy premature babies, could bave been a fact.or in the death of the child. Defense attorney M'albour Watson, who is also a physician, The entire abow ran for 3~ hours Wednesday night and In- cluded three preliminary bouts. <Related story, BO The most watched boxing show ever wu 1ut September's All-Earnle Shavers bout on NBC. It drew a 37.3 ratiq and 57 share. Second place was NBC's showing of the AU· Richard Dunn bout la March 1976, which had a 35 rating and 53 share. The ratiJ1'5 for Ali·Spinb Im- proved considerably once the main event began and averagal about a 43.3 rating over the last l~ houra. Bamellia Jest ival Sat. & s .... , Feb. 18-19 9-5:30 A beautilul display.of near)y 100 diffenmt camellias presented throughout our 211.a acres ~ landacaped selling area. Be sure to pick up a complimentary show program to guide your way tbrouab this once-a-year dazzling display. Lwdw• -.,. ... att.r. Wit s.-e.. s... .. 2,.... SMw•t..ct...•Fa•l•Ylllyt.clllH°""'t• A complete balanced f ertiltaer rcr begonias, fems. camelllas. fuchsias, and other shade plants. An organic nitrogen base product for long. slow feeding action. Contains calcium. sulfur, iron, man~anese and other important minerals. Conditions alkaline soils. Apply in early spring. summer and fall. Ctaa m ...... Al.SO fOA AZALEA& FUCHSIAS. BEGONlAS AND FERNS 5-10-6 ANAl VStS 10LB.BAG R..,_ U.2t SALE tft 59 PRICE .... ;&., ... :ci .... I>eUcatelJ One f0l.l&1• Ulla f~ vine, makee excellent .1reens f« beuquota of bower arran1ementa. TbrlJea ln abade er part IUD. 11 M._ J s'i.ft . = 99c Aatu••Tree,_. Gracetul ard\lni fronds lend a tr1Jptcal toacb to any abady farden spot. Choose from lush, deep.sreeo apec:tmem emir 4 ft. tall. I• SAU ...... PtUCI r.gl ........ hlly-Wc..ued pl&nta anUable ln ~ enlar'I make e.cellent low banter plants for~ Ua«r ... partly sunny location. Blanda well wUh ea1Dllliu la landaespt me. . 4•,... .... SAi.i 4 ... ,,. l'llCa . Anmfr0!19 .... Try the new Armstrong planter packqe. Jaat plant earton and all ln soll. Awld t:ranaplant f.thrre ar aet-back by J>lanUnl these welMeftloped pa-.. · I SAU ,.._..,,_._,_..,. tLft NICI '4.99. COS'tA M8A OM.Y . .;.-~ ....... ._ .,aClll-4;&.lrf • I• • • ._ .. • Roll out the green . ,carpet with fresh sod· 5 ~::·Hybrid Bermuda ....... tl.39 from Bluegrass ............. ~.;.~•1.39 ~P..ll!IM~-.•••..-M•~•,.••_.. Dlchondra ···········-···•1M SAN 5 DIEGO ;> ... • FWY, ~. ·ELLIS 8 -. 11420 llOOIHUISf , l'OUMTAIM f AUAY Uf• ............. Stii ..... "ffJ PHOMI: tH-6771 ONM7DAYS ,Ali..:m;.w.···· The aprawllna Capl1trano School Dlstrlct covers nearly 20 perc•t of Orance County and aerYea tb~ commwllties of 81.D Clement., Capllt.tuo Beach. Duu Point, S~D .Juan Capttttano. LaM• IQpel and """"''""""'""....,....---'J'""'' ~ Of MllliO!l .V\oJO. J THE BIG STEAL: Kenny Hahn, the ton1·Ume Los An1etes County supervlsor, a poke today Uke a mm who bad juat been rudely awalcened by a aneak thief. He flaured fie waa belns burglarized by Orange County. • Hahn wu like a vlcUm who awakened to realize the thief was already i n h l a darkened bedroom, fleeing with his trousers and wallet. He was be· .ing fleeced while in a .help 1 es s p r o n e position. HAHN Thus Hahn did what any veteran politician would do un· der the circumstances. He called a press conference. Then he screamed foul, Iona and loud. THE ALLEGED THIEVERY, in Hahn's eyes, was the fact that Orange County is attempting to Jure away his professional football team, known as the Rams. For those gentle readers unac· qualnted with this gridiron ag. gregatlon. it should be noted that the Rams play football in Los Angeles within an aging, crumpling 46-year-old structure called the Coliseum. It is alm06t in worse shape than the original which is located in Rome, Italy. The dilapidated condition of this place has become an ir- ritant to the Rams' owner, one Carroll Rosenbloom. He bas been pleading with the Collaeum Com mission, of which the aforementioned Hahn is vice president, to fix up the old dump. BUT ALAS, the LA com· mission has been more pre· occupied with fixing the p lace s o it can lure the 1984 Olym· pies to the t h e Never mind wbat tbe football team needs. They already h8d the footbtlll team. Had may be right. That's where Oraqe County •ot into I I I . I Me~coEyes Use of Pot . In Therapy SANTA FE. N.M. (AP) -The New Mexico Legislature ap. proved a bill Thursday that would legalize marijuana use as a therapeutic drug under strict controls . SUPPORTERS had cited re- cent research indicating that the use of marijuana can alleviate the side effects of cancer chemotherapy and ease the physical effects ot glaueoma .. A patient qualillcallon review board of three pbysiclaJ}S would be established under the st.ate Health and Environment Department. Tbe physicians would review appllytion.s from persons seeking to participate in a health research program and determine whether Oley qualify. THE DIRECTOR of the Health and Environment Department would be authorized to contract with the Nattooal Institute on Drug Abuse for doses of marijuana to be made ' available to thole patients in the pro1ram. The initial beneficiary of the bill would be a 28-year-old Unlverslty of New Mexico ••udent, Lynn Pierson. th picture. A lar1e dele1atton ot Oran10 County leaden have now 111id Mr. Rosenbloom. slr, how woul~ you like to move your flne football squad down l}ere to Orange County? Play your games in our nice, new, clean, pretty Anaheim Stadium? To sweeten the deal, An&Mlm Stadium offlclala have promised to expand Anaheim Stadium's seaUng capacity so it wlll house 75,000 Ram fans ln comfort. PENSACOLA, Fla. <AP) - 7beodore Robert Bundy, a cun- l)lng rugltlve accused or one murder and suspected In 35 others, has been tracked to a Jail cell by FBI agents who used fingerprints to penetrate hts latest guise -that or a college track star. Bundy -who untl1 late Thurs· day wu simply a prisoner who had beeo held 40 hours ln the Pensacola City J all -was being q ue1Uoned today bJ In· veat11ators in the .tao. 15 blu4aieon murders of two Chi Anaheim Stadiw:n bu other side benefits when compared to the aged LA Coliseum. Fans can find a clean rest room where the toilet.a actually fiuab. They can park outside and figure there's a good chance to return and find their bubcaJ>S, tires and wheels still on the car. GRANTED PENSION' Paula Or081man · Ome1a sorority sisters at Florida State Uni ver11ty in Tallahassee. MR. ROSENBLOOM has visit· ed Anaheim Stadium and been wooed extensively. He was served dessert upon one oc· casion wherein miniature Ram helmets were used as dessert cups. It was suggested these novelties might go over bil in "the concession stands. Mr. Rosenbloom was reportedly pleased and dellJtbted. All of this wooing apparently eluded the attention of LA Supervisor Habn until the Orange County boosters took out a full-page ad in the LA Times, urging Rosenbloom and his Rams to make the move to Anaheim. THIS WAS WHEN Hahn suddenly woke up. He must have still been funy in tbe bead. He didn't know what crime was be- ing committed. He called it kidnapping. A terrible error. Kenny just can't recognize a real-life romance when he sees it happening before bis very eyes. His Winning 'Ihreatens Fire Pemion NEW YORK (AP) -Gary Mubrcke retired from the New 'York Fl.re Department four years qo and beau coUectin& an fll.822 annual pension, "claiming a beck lQJuey. But the diaabillt;)' didn't keep him from winDing ;a race up 85 fil&bta ol stairs inlbe Empire State Build· ing. The rire department is in- vest.igatine. MVIDCKB. 11, topped a field of 1' marathon runners in Tuesday's contes~1~n;:in1 the 1,515 steps iD 12 an4 82 seconds. The department confirmed Thursday tbat Mubrclce joined in 1962 and claimed that the in· jury occurred while fi&btinl a fire in Queens. ''lie applied for Ind recelnd a three-quarter pay dJnbWty pension. wblcb wu granted on July 23, 1973," said an un- 1 den tif i e d department spokesman. "WE AllE ciondudiDa an tn- vesti&atioo.'' uid nm Deputy Fi re Commiaeloner Stephen. Murphy, acting cbalrman ol the department's Pension Fund Board. "Tbe case will be placed on the agenda of our next meeting on Feb. 28, ancf a determination will be made at that time whether Mr. Muhrcke sbould be -reexamined.'' Dismissed Transsexual Pensioned TRENTON, N,J. (AP) Paula Grossman, a teacher who was fired almost seven years ago after a sex change ope.ration, says she is not dis· abled, but she's taking a ·dis· ability pension as partial com- pensation for the trouble she's been throU&h. "I'm very happy with the de· cislon -at least I woo that much of the case at last," she said Thursday after a New Jersey appeals court awarded her the pension. THE APPEUATE Division of Superior Court, which in 197' up. held her dismissal from the Bernards Township school system, said tbe sex change operation bad resulted in a physical incapacity to teach. It was not the operation itself that made her incapacitated, the · court said, but the fact that no school district would 1 hire a transsexual. "I'm not disabled," she said, .. The at.ate dlaabled me and they dido 't want to pay me for it." THE APPEALS court acreed that ii ·111. GrOHt:il•ll bad always beell a woman and oner bad the t.nDlleXual operation• sbe would be mentally and physically flt to perform ber duties u a teacher. Her condition amounted to a physical disability under state pension laws, the court ruled unanimously. Ml. Grouman, who was then . Paul Grossman, bad the sex chan1e operaUon in March 1971. and was fired a few months later from her tenured teaching job. She currently works for the city of Plainfield as a community aemca planner. THE COURT decision over- niled the rejection of her dis· abilJty pemton by the state Teachers Pension and Annuity Fund, which held the Legislature did DOt intend to consider emotional effects on students when it devised the dis· abWty pension prosram. • 0.-,PWW..., ............ Mond~lday. II you do nJt haw YolK peper by 6-30 I> m. call belore 7 pm. anCI your C00Y Wiii be dlllWred. SlturdlY ~Sunday: If you do no1 ~ your c:oov by e a.m.. call before 10 a.m. and Y'Ot" <XJtJY will ce dellwred. ~T1ltph II Meet Orange CountY Areaa 64Ml21 Northwest Huntington Beach MVDCKE SAID be could justify the dlsabWty pension, but added that "I'd 10 b•ck on " active duty in a mlnulel U they'd let me." and wntmrn11~ • • .. &.o.1220 San c:i.m.111a. Capistrano Beach San Juen Cal)l•trano, Dana Point. South Laguna. \AQUl'l& NlgUel • • . 4'MIOI "BE 1S ALREADY cooperat- in g and talking with in- vestigators," said Wayne Smith, a spokesman for tbe Leon Coun· ty sheriff's office in Tallahassee. 200 miles to tbe east. Bundy, 31, escaped from jail Dec. 31 in Glenwood Springs. Oolo., while waiting trial for the 1975 sex·slaying of Dearborn, Mich., nllrtle Caryn Campbell. ACrlNG FBI Director James Adams satd ln Washington, D.C., that Bwidy WU wanted for questioning in 3S other sex slay- ings that began in California in 1969, extended throughout the Pacific Northwest and into Utah and Colol'ado. Bundy was arrested Wednes· day at 1:30 a.m. when Pensacola patrolman David Lee stopped a man in a Volkswagen that bad been reported stolen in Tallahassee earlier tbis month. THE MAN SCUFFLED with the orncer, who fired two shots before subduing the man. The man was charged with resl.stlnc arrest and possesslon of stolen property, including the car, a television set and charge cards reportedly belonging to Florida State women. . ............. The priaooer g~ve his name as Kenneth Raymond Misner, 29, of Tallahassee. He carried Mia· ner's identification papers, police said. SUSPECT IN CUSTODY Theodore Robert Bundy BUT THE REAL Kenneth Misner, a former Florida State track star, soon came forward ln Tallahuaee, where be is attend· ing graduate sebool. BUNDY'S ARREST came 30 days aft.er the Chi Omega kill- ings. Two other sorority sisters and a~ female student Uv-ing nearby were badly beaten the same night. Detective Norman Chapman said police developed a b\DlCh late Thursday atlerDOOD tbelr prisoner mi&bt be Bundy. 'nley summooed FBI agents, who ar- rived two boors later with want- ed posters and fingerprints. ."We know be was lo TallahBSlee during the month of January," said Smltb. "But at this time we can't be 4ure /Je was In Tallahassee on Jan. 15 when the ldllings took place." SOllE OF THE murders ln Brighten your day,! Eectt d8y the Dally Piiot edda a ftttte brlghtn••• to your llf• with colorful columnleta, lntereattng feature•, eye-catchtng picture• -and of oourae, 16 humor panel• and comJca. Our own Tom Murphlne poke• gentle fun at the life and polltlca along the Orange Coaat, In hlawry "Juet Coe1tlng'" column. A•Y• of hop4t and humor can be found In the new Fenartng page• of the Dally Piiot. That la ...,e Ann Landera glvH her c09ent and pungent ltdVlca. And Erma Bombeck turn• ~aehofd happening• Into hilarity. (And don't min your horoecopal) On Satwdaya, chlldren find garnet and glgglH In Uncle Len'• Comer, whU• .club turn to Heft» Ceeft'• entertaining col"""' "from San Ftandeco. The bt1Qbt, new, eaalar-to-f•ad page• of th• Oalty Ptlot bring you the newt yo" nHd, Information. you can u•• and '•ome day.brightening anoment1. Kff P up with your wortd and have a good tf me doing It, with the .. ' which Bundy b a au.aped ID· volved bl'8\t weapom, MaUll M• 11ult and atrwwallon. SIDitb said ... Some ·of ttioso facton were Involved ln tho Florid• State \Jlllvenlty traied1." bo said. Investigators were searching an apartment wbc!re Bundy had lived In Tallahusee, Smith llld. BUNDY'S CAP'l'\JRE baited the filgbt of a man adept at dis· auln• and mimicry, a student ol psychoJocy and the law. authorities said. He once feigned a Britiah accent and sported a mustache, the FBI saJcl. "He's 1ot a capacity of losing a tot or weight and combin• bis hair in different ways to avoid capture," Smith said, notin( that Bundy lost 6S pounds while in custody in Colorado and escaped through a ceiling llcbt fixture. BUNDY'S ONLY convicUon has been in the November "'' kidnapping of Carol DaRmche in a Salt Lake City suburb. Sbe was lured to a tan Volkswaa~ bf a man who poset\ as a de- tective lo a shopping man: Miss' 'DaRonche identilled Bundy at b1s trial as the man who abducted her and who trled to handcuff her and assault her with a steel bar. Officers in Utah and Colorado later said they had linked Bandy to a series of missing and murdered girls -all of w~ resembled each other -in late 1973and1974. BOdy .Foun~ In Bos DepOt CORDOBA, Argentina (AP) - Bus company employees mak· ing a routine inspection of un- claimed packages found the body of a man wrapped in sheets or plaatic and houoJ neatly in brown paper and nylon cord. the news agency Noticias Argen. tines l'ejlorts. The bulky package was Jie- livered to the company's Buenos Aires terminal 15 months ago by an unidentified man.. tbe report said. The pacltaae was consigned to an addreu in Salta. 1n oortbem Argentina, but tbe address was - fictitious. So was the Buenos Aires address given by the s~nder. ";•1.1.: ~·· 'i "' ~::· 'Black Sheep La•IJs ........... ~r .. ,,1: In a Los Angeles taping of NBC's "Black Adams. center front. The women. r'• • Sheep Sooodron" are. left to right "Pappy's Lambs" and Adams, son or the actresses Denise DuBarry and Kathy late actor Nick Adams, will appear in the McCullem, actor Robert Conrad, his "Forbidden Fruit" episode Wednesday at n · . daughter, actress Nancy Conrad and 9 p.m }\"{. : t ~l ·~-a_c_r_e_s_sA~~-ia_n_n_e_L~e_a~ry:__w~it_h_a_c_to_r_J_e_b __ ~~----~-'--~~~---~~ sit : · ""•' :· n1..: .Ex-toy Execs Indicted J; .· . ,,c, : . . .......... ~·;" . LOS ANGELES CAP) -Four former ex- ecutives and one current official of Mattel Inc., the toy manufacturer, were indicted Thursday on stock manipulation charges . A federal grand jury in Los Angeles issued a 10-count indictment that included charges that of- ficia~s of the suburban Hawthorne-based company had inflated sales figures by SlO million to boOst the price of the com- pany's stock. (---------) Named in tbe in-ST. dletment were Ruth 'ATE Handler, 61, of Los"'---------"· • Angeles. former pres- ! : iden~ of Mallel; SeylJlour Rosenberg, 54, of Santa Mo01ca, former executive vice president and director; Yasuo Yoshida, 51, of San Pedro, former vice president; Gloria Sears Billings, 48, of -·. ~·. . . ,•p ' ·. Ill' •. :.:·:~.Fake Cruel~ :~5'. Actors Back ~.~-:: ;~/. Animal Care ~·j '-· SACRAMENTO <AP> -If m~ makers can ,. • fake human gore and burning skys(:rapers, why can't they fake cruelty to animals? ask television actors 'Betty Whlte and Earl Holliman. r~ I • They spok~ Thursday in favor of legislation that would provide a maximum penalty of Sl,000 and six months in jail for exhibiting movies in which animals are killed or injured. • t ·~ After the hearing, the As- sembly Judiciary Committee wH1T1 postponed a vote oD SB 490, by \ . Sen. David Roberti, D-Los Angeles. in order lo .. study amendments. MISS WHITE, A BOARD member of the •• American Humane Association, said it costs more to use a trained animal to simulate death or injury than to kill or hurt one. "Why separate the people from the animals? Why not make it all pretend, ketcblq> and not bloOd?" asked the star of the cancelled "Belly White Show" and the former "Mary Tyler Moore Show." Holllman, president or Actors and Others for Animals, . saJd in his years as a cowboy actor the branding of calves was always faked. MOVIES ARE "the busi- ness of illusion," said Lbe co- &tar of "Policewoman." ttOUJMAM Joseph Hilpert of the Hollywood office of the American Humane Association said cruelty to anlmals has been a problem since 1967, when the Motion Picture Production Code was discarded. · lesser charge afteT the substance was found to be non-narcotic. Torrance, former accounting director and Paul Ashcraft, 48, of Torrance, the current accounting director. 'OtJenl9ltt' Cited SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Los Angeles County official says it was through "an oversight" that the state wasntt notified in advance -as reqlJired by law -of the cloud seeding that preceded last week's storm. But C.F. EShelby, division engineer or the Los Angeles County Flood Control District, added Thursday that he felt he cdmplied with the intent of the law because the district advertised in local newspapers for three wee.ks that it was aoing to seed. Water Tra .. terred LOS ANOELES CAP) -Delivery of Northern California water t•Southem California. halted to ease drought effecCS in the San Francisco Bay area and the San Joaquin Valley, will be restored in full, officials at the state Department of Water Resources announced. Ronald B. Robie, director of the department. said Thursday the state's water Slq>ply has in - creased enough to allow the water transfers. (h,ntdo9e •~•"• c ... ~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -The 21-year-old sister of actress Mary Tyler Moore died of an apparent drug overdose, an autopsy snows. Coroner's Investigator James Kono said Thursday the autopsy on Elizabeth Moore found "pulmonarv edema. a lung congestion that is con- sistent Wlth someone who has taken an overdose." Kono said investigators would penorm more tests and probably be able to say by today what drug Miss Moore had taken. GOPA••alled LOS ANGELES <AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has reacted angrily to a Republican at- tempt lo attack his alternate energy source sug- gestions as ··wood chip-and-windmill" ideas. "What I see In the Republican attack is not on- ly partisanship but a total lack of vision/' he said in a telephone call to the Los Angeles Times. "These are the same people who didn't think we could get to the moon," Brown was quoted in today's editions. ~Spread North Gets light Rain By 'l1le Auoelated Press A new Pacific weather froal located 300 miles off the extreme Northern California coast brought light rain to Eureka and Crescent City today and spread cloudiness as far south as San Francisco. The National Weather Service predicted high pressure would continue to hold the fro0L Lo the north, allowing mostly fair weather south of a line from the San Franclsco Bay area to Sacramento and Lake Tahoe. HOWEVER, CLOUDS and showers were liltely through early Saturday for northwestern California and the Mt. Sbaala-Slsldyou uea. · No lmpo~t temperature chanl• were ex- pected but scattered frost will con\inue 1n some of the colder central vallen, according to meteorologist Mike Pecbner. Daytime bigbs will be mosUy in the upper 50s anc:HIOs and lows ln the hitlhOs and tOs. ·No major preclpltatton was pre:!~ed for Central California until the middle of week, Pechner said. Fifdly. ~*"ary 17, 1971 S DAILY Pl\.OT 1· S ..,,.,.~ Reveakd·· ••• I•! OAKLAND (AP) After 19 mQOtbs of silence one of three younf men who kldnapped a busload or Chowcbllla school chlldren has tried to explain the outrageous episode In public. "Il was a eood plan," said James Schoenfeld, shaklna his head and laughing half· heartedly. ''But il was crazy." Sometimes chuckllng, sometimes pulling nervously on hla fingers, the 26-year·old Schoenfeld testified for three hours Thursday in a court session prior to sentencln&. 4 SCHOENFELD'S testimony surprised a half-filled courtroom of mostly reporters and rel· alives. It also stalled what was ex peeled to be the final arauments before Superior Court ~udge Leo Deegan sentences Schoenfeld, his brother, Richard, 23, and Fred Woods, 26. The trio pleaded guilty last Ju- ly to 27 co\lnts of simple kidnapping in the July 1976 abduction of 26 children and bus dt"iver Ed Ray. The captives clawed Lo freedom after being imprisoned in a buried moving van for nearly 17 hours. But the tllree sons ot wealthy San Francisco Peninsula families fought and lost three counts or kidnap with bodily harm. In California, the bodily .,..,,.,.... SURPRISE TESTIMONY Jamea Schoenfeld harm conviction carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison without possibility of parole. BRIEF DEFENSE arguments over whether the punishment is either unconstitutional or cruel and unusual were scheduled to end today. Deegan was expected to rule promptly. Public defender L~er Gendron said he put Scb0engild on the atnnd to clear q~Uons about moUve which were ra1aed ill the proaecutlon'• fl)lal araument. But prosecutor Dave MintJr'a cross-enmlnation also n~ from Schoenfeld bow the ~~e was planned a o d •h Y Cbowchllla was • th~ targef; .in· form atlon previously reve.,ed only to authorities. : :· .. IT JUST SEEMED like a likely spot,"· &aid SchoeqfttW. who like bis brother and WOods. looked pale and bedraggled. · He said the emphasis had l)een on finding a locaUcto at least 100 miles from a Llvermore 1,'0Ck quarry where a makeshift. c:eU had been prepared. ·•1 tbc>uibt the police weuld search for about 100 miles. searcb every inch," Scb~eJd told Mlnler. In reality offici~ had fanned out over a SO-sqoar~ mile area around ctiowchttta-the day after the abduction ln an.a,\r and ground search which proved fruitless. SCHOENFELD also explafuod why c)tlldren -ranging in age from 4 to 14 -were chosen fdr the kidnap. "One of the reasons for pic~­ ing children," he said "w8.$.· if they got away you could cafJ:h them." .. SUit Seeks $50 Million· LOS ANGELES <AP) -The ~Las Vegas Desert Inn hotel and ·its owner, Summa Corp., have been named in a SSO 3 million suit by a woman who wu raped, robbed and kidnapped from the hotel because of what she termed inadequate security. "This case is' going to reform security rer the benefit. or the consuming public sta)'ing at all Las Vegas hotels aitd other hotels," the woman's attorney. David Glickman, said Thursday . "WE WILL PROVE that Summa Corp. guarded only its money In the casino and paid no attention whatsoever lo the security or ils guests." Off1c1als for Summa Corp declined comment.. Jane Carroll Grey', 30, of Los Angeles claimed in her suit. filed Wednesday in U S Distnct Court, that the Desert Inn failed to provide adequate security in living areas of the hotel where she was kidnapped by two men -one a hotel employee -while going to her room last July 28. THE AB.SAULT began a rught long ordeal in which Mrs. Grey, her mother and stepsister were raped and robbed. Poth at- tackers have been senl'1lced to fou'r consecutive life terms plus 100 years 1n the case. The suit claims that the two men raped Mrs. Grey repeated· ly in her hotel room, then led her through hotel hallways and parking lots to her car with a knife at her throat and a gun at her back wilbQul being seen by hotel guards. Glickman said that despite other attacks in the past on guests, the hotel never placed guards or video cameras in hallways and left several hotel entrances unlocked and un- guarded 24 hours a day. MRS. GREY STILL suffer' nightmares from \.he ordeal, Glickman said. asks $10 mlllion punitive and.e:i- emplary damages for each_ QC the four plaint.Lffs, including Mr. an.d Mn. Grey, her mother .and stepsister, plus SlO million actual damages for Mrs. Grey and $300,000 actual damages for the other plaintiffs. ChiWrenBan Overruled :BAKERSFIELD <AP) ·- Children cannot be barred from living in a custom-built sub· division here which was de signed for people over 50. a Supcnor Court judge has ruled. A homeowners' association Coe the develQpment called Kem Ci- ty as.kecl.tlte court to require Or. Albert Ingalls 'lo live up tn a .deed covenant barrio g The suit names Summa, th' • .pe.manent residents under .18 Desert Inn and the propert~ ~e~rs old. The suit was r~id own~r. Hemsley.Spear Inc. or afte'l' Ingalls married a woman New York, as defendants. It fhO has an 11-year-old son. .>~~-.. .~ in all it's. warmth ~nd splende~ I E~·\t found it's way to oranse county! furniture .made of Soid Teak is an art treasure that you can afford in your home. Superb. far E.lstem craftsmanship combined with the rich · q~lity of real teak and styled"' in Contemporary, Spinish, Italian, Eastern or Modem give it unsur- passed value and beauty. Brouse through our exceptional collection of Master Bedrooms, Dining Rooms, Tables, China Hutches, Screens, Bars and hundreds of home furnishings. Whatever you desire-let our import and design specialists help )'OU decide just what item will enhance your home the most and give you the best service. The Solid Tak Chin& Hutch Shown Is Now Wt Priced Smart, CX>l'lt~my desl811 1s incOf· porated lnlo tti'' luxurious hutch to pro- tect youf {1\#0fite chill• and eo idd idd1· tion1I be,luty lo .your home. .... $64. Solid T elk And Blue Marble C..lbfne To GM You The Ubnalt la l.iviw IOom Tables 5plnlsh in lt)4e Y9t dJdy done 10 ~ hanoe your homtl • .,.,. tftll'bte top inlays .,. "Ifie finest impofted qu.,lify and-· cool blue ~· ,,., ..... ...., All 1190 TAllB ...,:sus SAYI 1111.M $485 .. Voters' Choice ~akes Back Seat. Oranic County Clerk Wllllam St John ls havlne trouble hanging on to the Job be was elected to ·do. First, the county's Superior Court judges declded ey didn't like the way St John was directing the clerks st1ned to thelr courts. The judges last fall said they ould assume what is their legal prerogative and an sf er the clerks to the court administrator's office. 1 When County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said such a move may not be legal, the judges backtracked a bit. ~ Meanwhile, initial support for St John that came Jrom cowit!r supervisors dwindled. When that happened, St John made a strategical error. He said the troubled qounty supervisors might be befriending the judges as a 11eans of gaining their good will, a co'mmodlty, he i{uggested, two indicted supervisors might need. ' That slight touched off a county supervisor rush to •,endorse emergency legislation sponsored by four state .• ~ssemblymen from Orange County. That would legalize the transfer of the clerks to the judges' care. ' · ln the meanthne, county Recorder Wylie Carlyle decided to retire and county supervisors decided to combine the clerk's office with the recorder's. Now they talk of appointing Carlyle aide Lee Branch rather than St John to act as interim recorder. This means that when St John faces re-election in June he would be confronting a non-elected incumbent. Add all that up and it means that as an elected official St John is scraping to keep himself and his office go- ing. · Without commenting on St John's abill\y or his suitability as county clerk, it is obvious that other elected officials in the county have treated the elected county. clerk's office as if it is something they, not the electorate, controls. · That's not right. No matter what the int.rUders' : motives, in the final analysis it should be the voters who : say who holds office and what the duties of the office : shall be. I N ~~ ~~!!~!.!~!rough some key • amendments to the Senate's latest criminal code reform i bill (S 1437), California Sen. Alan Cranston proceeded to ~ vote against the measure when it recently passed the ~ Senate in a 72-15 vote. ~ This was not unreasonable. Cranston still sees serious flaws in the legislation which has been worked and re.worked in Congress over the past dozen years . The latest version cleans UP. many of the more . :ilarming threats to individual freedom that surfaced in ( the bill that was put forward during the Nixon i administration, but there's room for much more f improvement. Perhaps that will be accomplished as ~ 51437 makes its way through the House. ~ The most important amendment authored by ~ Cranston removed a section that would have made the j bill what he termed "a prosecutor's dream'' by allowing ~ wide leeway for prosecutors and judges to interpret ~ many of the bill's provisions as they saw fit. f The version that reached the House strictly curtails a J judge's discretion in sentencing aft! requires a written , explanation if a sentence outside fixed guidelines is ~ imposed. At the same time it phases out provisions for ~ parole. ; But the bill still contains some loose wording ! regarding what may constitute a criminal conspiracy and : another section that would make it possible for : authorities to break up almost any demonstration, ; parade or picket line deemed offensive to the : government. ·:.. There's no doubt the hodgepodge of criminal statutes I·.-ccumulated over 200 years -some 3,000 at this point - in dire need of a major clean-up job. I We really don't need a law, for example, that makes a crime to interfere with a government carrier pigeon. ~ Many of the corrections in the current bill make ~ense. The abolishment of indeterminate sentencing ls in l ne with policies already adopted in California and some her states. It is wise to give judges the authorit~ to order ~retrial etention for persons accused of murder, treason. rape, ~abotage or trafficking in narcotics. ~· Tightening the laws on racketeering· and consumer I~ frauds is in order. as is reduction of overbanb federal penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana. ' But, as Cranston notes, toomucb of S 1437 as lt stand.S I "represents a vote of confidence in the discretion of our ~ f eder'a> }aw-enforcement agencies at a time when they have ~ yet to demonstrate that they have earned our confidence ~ and trust after the disclosures of Watergate and of CIA and FBI idsclosures." Tidy up the federal criminal code, yes, but not in a manner that makes it too easy for government to throw the new lawbook at any citizen who, in government's view,stepsalitUeoutof line. • nlona expreseed In the apace above are ttloee of the Dally Piiot ~1hAI' Vlewa expreeeed on thla ~ge ana those of their authora and wtklts. Reeder comment It Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. ~ 1560. Coeta Meaa. CA 92828. Phone (714) 642-4321. , ~ . Boyd/Atlantis . ~ IJl. llOYD Q. "If tben'a ner been a 'korM TV abow than "The. Jt~ an ttom Atlan.tla. • pleue ame it. And where'd .. eet be noUon about a loll conti· ent of Au.ntls. anfWQf'" A. In reply to your flnt uery. none worM comes tb lnd. My me1DOl'1 muat be allpplng. M for the Atlant11 leaend, Plato the Greet~ pused aklu that cme from what eylcJe1.:u11 wai"'a t?un.ted tra.alaUon of the 1tt>l'f es of bis ancettbr Sotoa. Students of ancleqt h1ttory now tblttk a volcanic ex· ploslon on tbe Aepan Sea island of Then around 1470 B.C. wiped out • IOpblltlcat.. ed UtUe clviUJ8tlon then ant! sank the whole illand. kd reporting parlayed that event Into the Allant.11 111ytb. WASHINGTON -Far from a routine pollUcal call, the 90- mlnute closed-door talk Feb. 1 between top presidential aide Hamilton Jordan and North Carolina Senate candidate Luther Hodges Jr. was a desperate SOS to gel HEW Secretary Joseph Califano to shut up for a while. Hodeea is the leading Democratic hopeful against Sen. Jesse Helms, charismatic leader of the Republlcan right wine. · Helms bas trans ferred himself from a nukish 1972 winner into one of North Carolina's most formidable politicians. Private polls show Hodies movln1 into a slender lead for · the May 2 primary elecUon, but his long-range hopes are chilled by Califano'• new anU-smoking Von Hoffman Marijuana 'Farming' Propos~d From Kentucky comes the sugeestim of a dil!erent way to cut the unfavorable American balance of payments. Gatewood Galbraith, president of the Ken- tucky Marijuana Feasibility Study, says we might save a large number of dollars from crossing over into foreign hands ii we stopped importing pot. How many dollars that might add up to is a matter of COQJec- ture, but here in Wash · ington · the 30--40 crowd or no longer quite so young lawyers. journalists and upper middle level bureaucrats are paying about $40 an ounce for thelr cann.abls, unpicked and unstrained. Somebody ls makin& money. You can tell by the ~ about the slze of the ships the smugglers are using to 1et the stuff into the country. It seems the Cout Guard seise11 a new one every week and these craft aren't little skiffs. They have caraoes welghin& many tons and the offtdala whole job it ls to stbp ,the grua trade treely admit they catch a Vflrl small pe.rcen· tage of the ooatraband being shipped lD hen. EVERY lDtelllgmt point to be made in tbe mariJHH debate - pro « con -bu lone al.nee been made, but um lm't limply a de- batlna topic. The laws are being flouted, mllUona of people· routinely condone and en· courae• this Weaal 'business ~ buyin1 the dnla and tbe scale which all thla takes place a parently continue& tb grow. The adminlstntlon'a position of decrfmlnallr:tn1 the act of in· dindual me but continuing to make the ale al what's used a felony la lDdefenalbJe. Politi· dam oaebt DOt to make it so ob- ?rlday.~"*Y 11, t979 campaign. It la undermlnln1 all North Carolina Demoerat.s. Hodges complained bitterly tb Jordan lD the unusually lenathy meeting that Calltano'a public campalan. Including a $23 million public relations fund to educate Americana on the health dan1er ot smoking, could assure not only Hdms'a reelection but help Sen. Strom Thurmond, ._nother Republican con- servaUve, in South Carolina. Tobacco, a m-.)or economic sup- port for North Carolina, a1ao al· fects South CaroUna si1nlflcantly. IN ADDmON to protesting Calirano's anti-smoking habit, Hodges complained about the civil ri&hta secUon of Califano'• Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) Department forcing North Carolb\a to end "racial duality" In its colleges and un- iversities. Also grating to North Carolina Democrats was a second anti- tobacco decision by the Carter vioua that., since they 11'8 too cbicken-autted to repeal the pro- hlbiUoo, they would tather en- courqe a paMem of massive law breakma. As Mr. Galbraith puts it. "The present media focus on . 'decriminaliz.atfoo' is a waste ~ time, 1'!80Uroes and the futun!s of thouunda ol citizens. That concept doe• not even actnowledae contlnued prob- lem• with marijuana amua· d1u. lldalterated products. con- sumer ripdfs. buae profits to organlaed crime and conse- quenUy er-ter exposure tb tru- ly dangerous drugs, inflated prices, undermined credibility or the govern.meat and especial- ly their' drug-edacaUou pro- grams, and llnally, the con· tloued preclwiioo of our own farmers from supplying an already ailtent mulU-billlou dollar agrlcultoral market wlUiin the United Stat.es. MR. GALBllAJTll would like to make it legal for bis Keotuc)cy farmers to grow cannabis sativa along with their burleigb tobac· co. He says the tobaceo raising stat.es are Ideally suited for rais· int pot u well, and wby, if Amertcans are going tb bay the stuff from aomeoae, shouldn't the mCXM17 10 to our American farm era? Rober1 N. Weed/Publisher admlnlstratton: clo11n1 down tbe Oxford Tobacco Research Laboratory with lts J1 million annual budget. That decialon. was the Agriculture Depart. ment's, not Califano"•· But the political fallout ls similar. Jordan Ustened, witb frequent telephone lnterruptlona, ud seemed aymf>athetic tb Hods•'• long list of grievanc ... He made no promises, and mlJht not be able to keep them II be bad. ID early encounters wlth Califano, Jordan has come off second beat behind the cabinet's mott pne• tlced and eff ecUve lnft&ht4r. SEN. KISSINGER! Prominent New York Republicans are seriously talk· lng about Dr. Henry Kissinger as candtdate for the Senate ti, u expected, Sen. Jacob Javlt.s does not aeek a fifth term ln 1980. Nobody has yet approached the matt.er to Kisslnier, and some friends doubt the former Secretary of State would descend from his Olympian heights to serve in the Senate. Nevert.btfe11, Kluln14'r's celebrity statua makes hh6 a clearly elect.able candldat'4 in the eye1 of Repu.bllcu ~U· cians. • Amons them 11 lb• bl&Jily ~spectable Rep. Barber Cqna· bJe, aenlor Republican oa_jhe Houae Ways and Means OQm- mlttee. Conable bellevea ~e at.congest proepectlve OOP Gan· dldates In New York are Kw. Jack Kemp for 1ovenior thla year and Klul.uer for Senator in 1980. Cooable hu been tr7in1 to persuade Kemp to M>p ills 1980 Senate plans, uat111 tbe Kias!Ner protpect as an BJllU- ment with Kemp. • A footnote: Repul)licana JOot to the election of Democ\'at. Daniel Patrick Moy,nlhin, former ambassador to India lnd the United Nations, tb the Semtt.e in 1916 as an example of a diplomat 1ucceedine tn New York politics. An older examj>le of a diplomat falling was lhe miserable showing in the :QM9 Senate race by John Fo.\er Dullea. • ~ ~ .. .. ,• ·: ·' .. ,• .• .. .~ .• Under the plan Galbraith ls tame sort of automatic, antbink· propbsing, large corporations, iog bab;,tuation that ez.1.sts with however. would be excluded tobacco cigarettes. H yoa have from any part of the marijuana lo st.op and roll your otm, evety business. Heublein, Schlitz or time ycu want one. Galbralth !'Ela· the rNt d them would be con· sons, lt woo't tMf quite 10 e.Uy fmed to selling their one, tradi· to get irretrlevablY hooked lite tional drug of pleasure. the tobacco Junldea. : • Galbraith would have mari• Und~ this propoaal the st.ate juana acreage allotmenta given would not sell Its marijuana~ to farmers in much the same mass mercbandl1er11 cha n way that tobacco allotments are. stores. or the like bot only Something in the order ~ 200 small 1 buslnessmen, prelera pounda per farmer would be the already selling marijuana ap- maxl mum amount permitted, parat\lses and papers. as well ~ enough be estimates to add from people now ln the business i>f $3,000 to $6,000 in income. a selling the drug it.self -so lodg significant sum for tbe small as they weren't connec~ with farm families of his state. Since ally malla·Uke criminal ot-- it seems that marijuana ls euy 1anlzations. : to crow, that lt grows well In A modified plan along thde tobacco land like Kentucky and lines ls already in existence In since it needs little lud lor • those st.ates which attempt Co large yields, lt mlpt be ol at control alcohol by selling ~ least marginal help to some of liquor themselves. State llqu0r the men currently drlvln1 about stores are generally more el• the country ID their tractors pensive with less variety tb$l pleadJ:ne for assistance. free enterprise at.ores in ~ states. Nor does the monopob' TO KEEP IT Ollt of tbe bands approach seem to have dif· of K Mart and Safeway, the en-couraged abuse or alcobolism: . .i.. tire pot crop would have tb be Nevertheless, tbe state liq~ sold to the state, which would monopoly or the Galbraith plm process it and package it in lids. for pot may be the best we cap Galbraith is dead set against hope for in a democracy wbeo e selllne erass in cigarette form. majority or at least a very larie He ar1t1es that lf you can buy minorlt;y will break the law _., reef en cheaply and connnienUy, &upply themselves with theae 1\ increases the chances of the chemicals. : Charles McCabe ;~ • Boswell: Greatest English Language Reporter so~tftcfalness~ iii all my D<>- tions," he once said. ..I un- deratand nothlng clearly, notbin1 'to the bottom. l pick up frag- ments, but never have In my memory a mass of artY srzo. ~· It was tbls knowledge ot his own lack of excellence and bis admiration of the excellence of the fierce old man he chose to de- pict. tbat dvee lta own curious tixtu~tot.6e Ufe. i . servatloo on Toi;n Sberldan's at· tempt to improve the En&J,l.sh laneuage by tea~hlnt oratory. lo the IJle Johnson ls quoted as saying: ''What Influence can Mr. Sberldab have upon the l~age ot thls great country? Sir1 1t ls burning a farthing canale at Dover to show light at Catala!" IN BOSWELL'S ori(lnal notes, what Johnson said ap- BB WAS much more than a pears as: "He is like a man at· lackey. H• eootrlbuted to. and tempting to stride the Enaliah ottea tmtJat.d, inany of the con. channel. Sir, the cause bean no venaUons wlth the great man. proportion to the elf ect. It la •et· He wu rather like ibe picador In Uni up a CJDdle at WbJtecbapel a bull riD8 wbo tantalizes the bull to atve light at. Weltmla.ster. •• lnto torocttJ with hla lance. Ho The beir to Auchlnleck bad no 9'U aware of this and often com• 1maU OD.lnion of·blmaell. At a1e pared blmaeltto a 'Nilllnl victim. 24 be lnfroducecl htmaelf by letter •tt don't Ul'tt .. be hid, "bow to tbe great ftousseaa as ·~ often or bow bl&b he tblHI me • youna man ot alngular merit." whft onl1 frteDdl ·are preHDt, He added· .. Althoueh but a tor then r fall ~n 1oft rrouftd; young D)U i Kue ba~ a v&rtety ~!:t.~auc~:r.:= ot expirieOce.. with which~ • will be ~ ••• Open 10Ut door. then. alt. to a u:aan who darea to aay tbat be dtMrV• to enter there. Triat. a uolque o~11n#. You wlll never~\ it.;'' -,, c - He liked t.o talk t.o me genlus, DOt necessarily m power. lt la wholly charactari• of Boswell that wblle be met conv.ersed with Kina Geo11Je llJ. be bas left us no notes to record t.hiB" royal talk tX> set beside U., record of his lalks with .tohmon.' Boswell's devotion to Jo~ was about the only unsullied thing in hls life. He was a fail~' as a son.~ a husband and as. parent. He was forever ae the ~lAp, or wmna about wben be didn't ~ave it. He never really succeeded u a lawyer. · ~ ·' YET the We. which a~ in 1191, "'la u.nmatcbablo and ex.baustlble'' -aa bu been ~ aald. '1be discovery of anat boa.rel ol BoneU papen.it Malahlde Casile and at l'e(· tetc•lrn Houao reveal th~ Boaw.ell himself wu a man bl 1enha1 very nearly in the cl~ with. h1I adored Johnson. lf b4! badn \ wrilltn a fl'hl book abOtl .Johnloa. it· ts almosf certaJi that bO Would ha\re writtaa • &reat bloer==ph of aom= ..... nat .. =~most~ ~J~ Sclwols' Bible . ._ Classes Halted \II If H it I'll \II ~ \I I "'·' 1; I ' I \I .. 1: I ... , IC\ I '\tt\\ . . ... ' ; I \I "" ;rERIYi\Kl . STEAK · ... A delicious Teriyaki Steak. prepared the $2 65 way y!lu like 11. and served ":'1th crisp green • salad or home made soup, nee pilaf or choice of potato, roll and butler.. • Served Friday and Saturday from 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. 'SPIRES are. '. BEVERLY HILLS <AP> -There's oil In Beverly Hills, where riches and beauty already gusb. Oil may make the place richer, but il won't do much for its beauty. And that, in this town. ls a dilemma. The school district wants to put a 130·foot drill- ing tower on the Beverly Hills High School campus, looming above 26 acres of palm trees, lawns and six tastefully designed buildings where Benjamin Bailar bus signed a s postmaster general. three years after tak- ing over the financially troubled Postal S~rvice. He said he will join U.S. Gypsum Co., Chicago. as a vi~e president. OM. y flltLOT A~ 2,540 pupils -many the children ot film stars -----~---~--~--=-....,..---.,.~ learn about the world outside. THE WELL WOULD POUR money int.o the 5,700-student district and the town. and into the pockets or several hundred residents. Reclpe1 to add dining ple11ure whll• tubtractlng calorl••· Wedne1day In the DAILY PILOT But it. won't be pretty, and it probably won't smell good. "The contract with the driller provides for _;__...:;. __ _...-4~-========~;:::=::::::::=:::~ screeninl( and sound bafflln_g and all that sort of thin&. but no matter bow you slice it, it's going to b~ly," lfaytt Mayor Richard Stone. "There's jusL no way to make an oil well beautiful." THE CITY OF LOS Aoeeles, which surrounds the independent city of Beverly Hills, has long been familiar with such eyesores. The city was built above a pool of oil, and wells sprout in many back yards and empty lots visible !rom its freeways. . But Beverly Hills ls something else -a traditional home to movie stars, where a more familiar slgbt is a llblls Royce, maybe two, in the driveway. Until now, the school district's oil drill. ing bas been confined to three small wells that since 1958 have been quietly S\lCkinl oil from an . out-of-the-way SPot OD the caoipUS athleUc field. A · FEW WELLS HAVE also been dr,illed around the perimeter of the city, but moet or that money went lo Los Angeles and several oil com- panies. • Officials say surveys of the school oil field in- dicate it could contain oil worth Crom $60 million to $150 million. "We mi1ht bave gushers," Dr. Reuben Cordova, assistant superintendent for business of the Beverly Hills Unified School District. said jok· inely. Then Cordova looked at a $2,300 royalty cbltck from last December's drilling In the three old wells -and noted that lf the new fteld ls oM)ed. officials estimate royalties lo the school~ ~ld range from $30,000 to $500,000 a year. THE DISTJJICT SPENDS more than $11 million a year -$2,129 per studenL The city would gel 5 percent royalties, and neighboring property owners would benefit too. The problem with lbe three inconspicuous wells is tbal production ls dropptnc. They are vertically drilled, and the Beverly Hills Oil Co. wants to start vertical and slant drtllinl in a new site it expects to be more productive. But it is right alongside Olympic Boulevard, a major thoroughfare leading to downtown Los Angeles. "It will be highly visible," says City Manager . George Morgan. "Some migbt call it an eyesore. But there will be some cosmetic barriers to pre- vent it from being t.ernl>ly obnoxious.'' THE AMERICAN BROADCASTING Company's headquarters al Century City is just down the street. A hearing on the well's environmental impact will be held Feb. 22. Ugly or not. the school district likes the idea. It would free the entire athletic field for SPorts and provide larger royalties -with the city treasury sharing in them for the first time. As for odor, St.one says the new well may smell better than the old ones. "Often the delicate odor or oil would come wafting across the athletic fiel4." he said. "Sometimes it seemed actually hard to breathe." Composition ·cited· As Ma,sterpiece 8)' MUY CAllPBELL NEW YORK <AP> -A piece of music which has been described u Pierre Bouln' masterpiece and aa OJMl of the most lmpartant compoaltions of the 20th century lived up t.o its bUUac at its American premiere. MEE1; & SEE- PLA YERS ••• COACHES ••• EXHIBITS . I DEMONSTRATIONS . ·OF ·., ORANGE COUNTY'S .. MAJOR LEAGUE SO€CER-lEAM SEE DEMONSTRATIONS STAGE COURT FASHION ISLAND . .. ; . . . .. Sat .. Feb. II; 11 to J p.-..2 to 4 p.& • S.a.. Feb. 19; I to ~ 4 p.-. M-.. Feb. 20; 11 to I p....,.2 to 4 p.-. PltlUS AW AIDED DUllMG SHOWt D•'t ti11a Clt•c• to Wa. PAIR TICKETS TO SURF GAMES .... OTHER PRIZES DUllMG SMOWt 1 • . • ,• · "Pli selon pli," written 1n ftve seeUona, tor soprano and small orethutra. wu performed Wednesday nlebt by the Contemporary Chamber Ensemble in Carnegie Hall Tbe audience, alm01t a sell·out crowd, called the perfon:ners back for a number of encores. Excellent shade, part-sun plant, for cont.allier or ground. Pink and red flowers, col9rful foliage. BOULEZ WAS NOT PRESENI' because of a conducting enga1ement in Loodoa. Leonard Bernstein gave the second section .ol- the work its American premiere aeveral years aeo and said then that in 50 years it would sound like Debussy. Wednesday's audience rot a cb.aDff for that comparlaon1 since conductor Arthur Weisberg led Debussy's "PFelud•. tQ 'The Afternoon of a Fa\lfl'" before the impressif'e performance of "Pli selon pli." • THEY DON'T SOVND AUltE now. However; it ii easy to know What Bern.stein meant and to ~v&lhal his proj)hesy will prove rl&ht. De~'• a.,~ents of musfc flow across each other like dtffennNcilada of clouds, at differen\ levels. making up a harmonious, peacetul 1ty. Boulez's seimenta of music are more dls~nct from each other. , Bunts ()f melody from trombones followed by a theme from xylophone and bells, wbi.l• aome str- ings pluck and others bow, make Boulu's musical sections more hard-ed1ed and separate than • Debussy's. Yet. Boulez's musical layers definitely make up a whole. No part ts a.lmplJ nolay or tllln& off without dlrecrtion. Park Pea,ce Hit 1 Gal. [lll!"'fi 'lbru Reg. 2.50 ~Feb. 21 ) · I ( I ( I I I Blrda. MOAOMaMOltlAl. "°'"TALl'1tauna1tlAN .-...ryM,lf1t Mr. •nd Ml'i. °""''' IUckeltt, 4n Abbie Wey, C:O.i. Mesa. boy Mr. •nd Mn. Klrtc l.olhtlnoe•. 271U .No..,I, MIU!eft Vie Jo, boy Mr. end Mr\. W1111¥n Berl\lrel, 1M01 Estencl...., Orlw , Mlulon Vlelo. 9lrl Mr. •nd Mn. Mlclleel Prfllon, 73'1 , ,Peulerlno "-•IOI, Cosu Niese, ,•.boy Mr. •nd Mn. Manc Trl-t, 20111 T••"'l'lll Lane, Huntl"91on Be.ell, glrl Mr. e nel Mrs. Rlcllerel Noll, Ut Albert Pl«e, Cosi. MeNI, boy .. ~ry17,1'11 Mr. end Mn. M"*'Y CAllme, IUO Mefl\t A-•CIOf, Gotq Meu, girt Mr. • nd ""'-RIC-Cl .HMtt, 9131 • £mmon• Circle, F-leln VeUey, !·91" ,,.,. and Mn. 0.Mll l"l'~ll. ''°' YedltT ...... '"'-199«71,bOY Mr. ef'CI Mn. Pllttklt Hemllloft, 20l9 , '°'1 llrhtd, ~ &eecl\, girt · ,,_,.., ia. 1m 1..Mr, end Mn.~ Arml ...... 2Sltl ~ lAN, ~ Hiits, boy Mr. end Mn. Gltl.,.. Fel--._ . Dftlda Notice• NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -Ale;c Bradford, 51, com poser of most of the muatc to· "Your Arma Too Short To Box With C1od ," a recent Broadway musical nominated !of a Ton:r · award, and winner of an, Obie award foe bis role ltn the piay .. Don't· Botber Me I Can't Cope," died W~1. f . STOCKHOLM , !Sweden <AP> -Swedish author BarrJ Edmdd Ma rtla1on 73, co· reeipient of the 1974 Nobel Prlse for llterature, died here· ·after a loog Olned. "Road, to Klockrike" and "Anlara" were among hla better-known works. Y.Ja LiClo Plaza 'One picture 1s worth 1000 words." lloun lo.g, 7 Da)!I Per Wttk GAFE c:./illITRO Featuring I RISH COFFEE 95<t ___________ ..... ____ ,,_ __ _ .l \(\(,. (\OS• Dolly's Shop ·for Children . 20°/o-70°/o .Off: 99c Table ~&Girts lnf•nts thru 14 3418 Via Oporto, #3 .· ... . . ~ f> ~O\) hci111tud10 ~O free tiair a~IJsis Udo Village, Loc•ted lft lhe foufttlllft Courtrard •..• UDOVILLAGI 3105 Yla o,.no. 671-4101 o,..o.ity 11:10 ...... ze... . " A DISTINCTIVE GALLERY ·- CUSTOM DESIGNED JEWELRY FINE ARTS & GIFTS ·LI.DO VILLAGE ~16 al VIA OPORTO NEWPORT BEAOi, C>.. 92660 .(714) 675-)123 ~% ~. Ste. 250 Newport Beach • 673.J:H/J. . MEN'S aOTHING Spectallzlng In Gifts from the Sea ~ . . ., I 0°/o-25°/o-50°/o Off .. ·'"" . StlK:h4 ..... . SPECIMEN SHEUS PICTURES • JEWELRY DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES Ml6 Yleo,.te •I.We~· 67Mtel • 30°/o-50°/o Off Co~ & Daytime EYenJng W ecr . Selected Sport1w•• & henhlg Wear .. · Special ~ack 'I o• And Less · Sizes S.20; 12~24~ · 1477 Vlo Oporto • Udo V-. • '7MIJO 1/2 Price I . l43Z Yi. Oporto #6 • Ude Vllop • 6J.MUt 3400 V11 Udo, Newpott lleectl F'ine BoutiqueClothing. VIA ill LIDO D~UGS ,.. 50°/o-75°/o Off Gifts and Gourmet Su~r Savings 1h Price & More Saturday only .. • ~nusual Imported Gifts ·20%·50% Off Selected Items All Things Marine You don 'thave to be a b(>at owner to epjoy browsing at Charlie's. Come inandsee whatfun ltis t Nautical Attire, Gifts"Jewelry Distinctive Cabin Accenorles From The World Over. H•sak Slalioelrf • &ws Ir,..._• Ccmcles --~ Ir Col•lflct • Hah Ir Sc_.... Lu>ttk... 4 DAYS ONLY 3445 va. Udo' 675-0150 Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday February 17th thru February 20th Hours Dally 9:30 • 5:30 Sunday 11 :00 .. 4:00 ftl.q~ • Weltftec ll11d.-M11 cll•••tr.. Laa v..-...... dellllt ..... .._,..11Hott1 ................... , ...... cl• .... ... Stl • ........ Al .. -a•I• um N•1 • Uu•IJ wfl .. Ndilced tf .._. 75% of lh -4rjall price Cnce,f Sfiit.I ......,_ I* •• ,., 0.. Sellctecl .,._,, Purch•Je one Item at regular prfw and • for only 1c more, purch'te • prment Of·equal or leM price BRAS • TOPS • CAPRIS • COATS PANTSUITS • RESSES • GOWNS M 200/o OFF ALL MEW SPRIM& DRESSES 4 DAY~ OMLY ......... llftC..... auo....,•a• Sl.OOIACI .......... .~•bf Ms · ..... • 110.00IACll ~.,.,. ........ , .•.. - " .. .. ,. . . . .... ~!'°· . .,:. . . .. . •. . . '!- . . . • • .. I ' Sat11r:daf & Sun(lay MoetStores VILITS .1atin (] mpa'tt~ Apparel Jewelry 25°/o-50°/o Off On Selected Items ................. ~ MtJ Vie~. 67a.llf2 Artifacts• TUE ~1 p• ~ ~) ~~ -•llJ ~ · .coffee Grinders ~ ~ 6 l'«YourOWn ~ ~ ~ ~ahOround -~ .,, ~ C9ffff $6 ~-------~· ~eg.$9.95 ····~·· .95 .. ' . 10°/ooff · · - All Merchendlae In Store ~ •0,-IWJ• &MllfAlct .., ...... 673-2620 Time For A Treat1 Wblleenjoylngyoarday at Lido Village, stop in, relax and enjoy a cap of coffee and any one of our One desserts •.. oar specialties, delicious cheese cake and carrot cake · Discover our imported scrumptious cookies and candies Lowest prices in Orange County We also off er espresso and cappuccino 3412Vla Oporto• On1beBoardwalk • 115-9193 H.ECK'S MEM'S STORE Sidewalk Sale Saturday, February 18th Only , SU ITS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • •••• Now '29" to s5CJ99 . : ..... , ... '" ~ ' SPORT COATS •••••••••••••• Now s 19" to s3999 ..... 17t.IO SWEATERS •••••••••••••••••• Now 111 99 to '1599 ....... ,. ... PENDLETON & LEATHER COATS •••••••••••••••••• How ~ Price LEISURE SUITS ..•••••••••••• Now '39" to s4999 ' ........ 1.00 ••.••••••••••••• Now s599 & 1799 ............... ". In CtUe Of Rain Sidewalk Sale Will Be lmide! 514 BIDTIQUE 25°/o to 50°/o Off •dmore 3417 Vla Udo, Newport Beach Parklng LG& Entrance 61M510 SIDEWALK SALE Shoes •••••• s I 0.00, va1ues to '3e Accessories Dnntlccily w.t&ecl DoWll Salacltlyo.t, ~...,.._ -~ . UDO VILLAGE. 349' VIA OPORTO PH9NE 87M454 @nd1i:r c:#eduse @mpdrts INDIA Embroidered Han~ocheted Blouses Up to 50% Off From Indio and the For East Men's Shirts, Dresses & Skirts JeWetry, Brossware Woodcarvings & Giftwore UDOft.LA• .. .,.. ..., .... • Htl ¥19 Oplrt. • 67WHI ~The G:rden will hove o final deaonce of di Foll merchandise offered for the lost time ot below-cost savings ~ }y1Y11f#tl ( /Ntft'J Via Lido Plaza ~23 Via Lido. Number 13 (neat cloor 10 ~ ~) 675-0321 Hours 1~ Sun. 1 f-5 ·antiques objets d'art )9welry UDO VII.LACH I 00/o-30°/o Discount ~Via Udo•Newport Beach. Ca 192663 . (714)673-771() · Selected ffem 300/o-50°/o Off _, 3440 Mo. I Via 0,..... • '7M720 Selected Jewelry & Paintings Up t~ 50°/o Off AT UDO VILLAGI • "Oa TM lo•ctwall'' • 673-7207 ,,_ ______________________ __ Midi CLE~llCE . ~ R Boots ••••• Now 543 Up to S75. Shoes ••••• Now 5 17 Up to S41 ··canvas Casuals •••• Now 5 12 ' Up to $25 ,GENE BUKrON Sport8Welit·· Dealgner Faahlona • 3411 Vla Ud9 ~ 87'4250 Affordable Prices 10°/o Off O.ltlCle ... (Wttti8d) Featur1no Flded Glol'Y. °'9mln de F• Love 'n Stuff & tnltlVoa.r. Lockers Ordered • For Bikes PALO ALTO CAP> - Palo Alto bas become possibly the first city in the nation to requfr.e that a minimum number of bicycle lockers be supplied for bikes in all new commercial dl?'· velopmentl. The City Council adopted controvers~ zonlng rules requirifc that there be one· enclosed, aluminum· frame, burglar-proof locker for every 10 auto parking spaces m any new project. • Councilwoman Ellen F I e t ch er , w ~·o campaigned for lhe biie parking ordinance to coax people away from cars, predicted the lay.. would "have a ripple df• fect ln planning de .. partments across U1e country." ·~ DangerollA W ASHTNG;ON (A~) -Chemical tests or Laetrile show the su)- stauce smuggled into the United States frotn Mextto is potentlal(y. dangerous and sub- standard. according tO" reports by dQCtors a.Qd scientists. • One doctor, J . Pa»l Davignon, said tire thousands of people wbo lake what they believe is pure Laetrile cannot lie sure of what they are getting. ·• The reports were pre. 1ented at the anna~l m e e t i n g o f t b:;e. American Assoclati"" for the Advancement ot Science. •• ~ ... .. . Encountei:? TOKYO <AP) -Re4. w h i le and bl u~ spotlights will flash in~ the Tokyo sky tht'l weekend in wbati Japanese radio stall is billing as this nation first •tlempt to conta t 'visitors from outqr <Space. · • · The aerial light sbotr. ls being launched in coi· junction with t~ Japanesepremiereof~ American film "Clol!Ge Encounters of the Thhti Kind," a<5clence flctich movie about a U.8.-Rf-~· fort to communica~ with unidentified flyir&'' objects. : • . • NEED A LAWYERt Lo'#Upl Fff ' •Divorce * aa,,kruptc:y * Crlmlnal •Wills-Probate • Incorporation • Acclc:Mm·lnJurv •Eviction 64NI07 ' l r Ill ~ ~ \ I ' ., ,I 4 Coastal Cities By JACIUS BYMAN • a. .... ~ ... • Wbat do )'OU~ wit.ti a YoUDI' boy wbo fltllte wttb blt playma&e*" won, ~centrato lft 1cboo! or arauea with bl1 parent.sf .. ff•'• not neceuartty a delln.. quent. and be zna1 not b~v• serious emotional problems, but. he la havlne_ some dlftlculUes that miJht. lri time, get bJm into trouble. WHAT TUE BOYS Club of the Harbor Area and aeven Other county boys dul» are doinc ls hiring specfal counselors with $104, 733 In crant ~ey frm tbe James Irvine FouodaUon and The Anderson Trost of San Francisco.. , Susan Dahn. who received her masters degree in clinical eom· munity psychology rrom Cal State Fullerton, just tObk over ·:··&ard Orders ,~ ~ . raffic Study ~.;- ! A Central Orange County traffic study, which W111 take in live Orange Coast cities, has been or- dered by county supervisors. ;__ Tbe board asked county officials to work with n:vresentatlves Crom Costa Mesa, Irvine, Newport Beach, Fountain Valley, Huntir;igton Beach, ~rden Grove and Santa Ana lo define the scope or Ute study. -:· Supervisor Thomas Riley said he and ~pervisor Philip Anthony in the past few weeks h_ave received r esolutions from several city ~uncils requesting such a.study. . "Significant concern has been expressed by 'the cities ... that sufficient transportation -plan- ·mng. to head off serious traffic congestion in the growing central business district is not now being accomplished," Riley said. • Officials from the county Environmental Management Agency <EMA) were asked to create an advisory comm it tee composed or city r~presentatlves to offer guidance in transportation ~lanning. Supervisors also want to find out if a con- $ultant will be needed lo assist and how the cost t8r the study might be shared between the county Gild the cities. · ;,_ Riley said the county probably would have to mce an extra .employee to dlrect the work. :-Supervisors two years afo completed a traffic 5-tudy ~or Southeast Orange-County and a similar rcort 1S underway for the Dortbet1t county regioo.. · Social Workers To Get Training A proposed two-year trainine proeram lo help social workers deal with the aging problems ex- perienced by senior citizens has won the endorsement of Orange County Supervisors. County mental health officials said they would be 5-* eking a $282 ,580 1ederal grant to finance others who work re- tpe program over the g ularly wHh senior !H!xt two years. citizens. · ·The funds would pay the salaries or five s· mental health workers 3 o,o·oo w!lo would develop a Mining program deal- the COW\HllDJ; position at the Harbor Area club In Costa Meta tbls month. Sb 'a coordinaUn1 the hiring of tJ.e seven other coan.selors, in· cludlna one In . Laguna Beach, and hasn't liad tlme yet to do much counseling, But she has a lood idea ol where she's headed.· FIRST OF ALL, Ma. Dahn said, she's got to win the boys' trust. To do that, she'll join ln va~lous games and acµvmes so lbey 1et lo know he.r. She'll also rely oo existinl staff for their knowledge of ..the- younJsters a1e 7 and up. "They know who is displaying antisocial patterns," Ms. Dahn explained. • Sbe aJao hopes that, eventual- ly. parents will feel free to con-t.act ber as problems com~ up. .. This isn't to be looked at as therapy for mentall.y disturbed· .bag with the problems or Funding O(ing. . :1he free classes would ~offered lo physicians. A warded f.Jergy, police, 1'88~Y now to the ~ . 1\<11 'l."'1. &.: :a.. . .4. ~ , ~· y c b o l o g i s t s , 't h e P I a n n e d .f~chtatrists, nurses, Parenthood Association. ll}!clal workers and of Orange COUlQ,T baa ~· · · been given a chillenge : .... oster grant oC $30,000 by the £ James Irvine ·.~ Foundation, according .~. hi J J to Planned Parenthood 5' U,l, board President Ralph ·•4• Jenson. ·_ .. fl med The grant, to be . a matched by other funds raised in Orange Coun· an Wilhoit of Santa ty, will be added to the has been named organization's capital· nge County March of funds. The organization es Poster child for. hopu to raise $1.1 . . mUllon over a five-year be 11-year-old boy period. W:as born with OS· • ·tl'Otenesis imi:~rfecta, a E CJ• • cfi1abu111 birth defect. . ye1n1c ·i--~T b e county w l d e mpalgn by the March ~-d Dimes ls aimed $t the ".ttDUOUDCe eHntJon of birth de-• · ta. About 1,900 babies lAn eye health cllnlc Oran1e County last fqr anyone 3S or older is ar had physical of planned Feb. Z5 by the tal damage ~t btrtti, Red Crou Well--Oeunty. cording to the Orange S.rvlce Center and the unty Chapter of the Southern California )Jareb of Dimes. Collea• of Optometry. ' a'he clinic will bt open . an's Liat -· from 9 a.m. to2 p.m. at . e . 7511 Westminltu Ave., .-<Nancy J. Englert of. WeatmiMter. ~ron a del '"ll ai-'1las ~-uo-c"'1""'11D'"'P'. (Or ~en ndm.ed to 1.h.e ~rt.b' ~ht ap. tf~1l n-~ lbt at he polntmeata 1au1t be ~lverstty of Anicin-. for mide Jh advaace. Calt ~~demlc excell~hce 111·3$47 for an ap~ ·pt.ncthefalleemesCer. · polrat"ent. • '-· fi \ Thu.... ~ ',.n. Ollob (11.r~ (L ~ (~ (RGwld· S.TY ; U;p lop) c;-.p) ~) Up~~ NewYorkC1t.Y $234 $256 $277 8426 $192 Washingum.D.C. 234 256 277' 402 168 Philadelphia 234 256 277 416• 182 Hartford/ Spr!ng11eld 283 Breakaway~ Feb. 27. i.: '· lbr1 rrt. ~ Thu., Sat Sun. ~ (~ ( lltul4-(llNlf-Sa~ Tcr • U"\p) Ill!)) .,., Up To Cleveland $~ S256 $366 $146 • Detroit 214 249 356 142 Breakaway starting March -27. Chicago $193 ·~ $322 8129 Denver 112 130 186 74' Beattle 122 143' 204 82 Super Saver doell noc. apply l.o ~vet Wl.hlh Ule 11&-.e ot OMdllm\la. ' _,,. 'P "ALL ..KIDS ARE goln1 to show disruptive behavior at some point, but a rew do it over and over again. Maybe they're fighting a lot with their peers, maybe they're not doing well in school. It's like a middle ground betw~ kids who do tt only oc· casionally and juvenile delin· quents." "Some mea just clarlf yln1. wbat'• wanted Will help," Ms. Dahn lald. "A lot of times a grown-up will tell a child to be. good or 'atop sassing me,' but they doo't givt them anythiq to "ln our 1odety we train people In eve:rfuWne ln tho world except par a. and tbat•a me thing most people end up do·.' Ing." · • put In tta place. such as, 'l want you to ask me this way."' . Counsellng will require talkln1 to the boy or girl (some boys clubs 'alao have girl members> to find out what's upsettinc him or her. Tbep it may be necessary to 1et the family together. Then comprom.lses can sometimes be worked ou~ aucb u a parent agreeing to speod more time with a child in return borbetter~vior. EVENTUALLY, Ms. Dahn, who bas worked at a residenUal .treatment center in Mlchlcao tnd as an intern in children's services for the Orange County Department of Mental Health, hopes to begin classes at the boys club in parenting. "Parents don.:t have all the in· formation tbey need in order to be 100 percent effective," Ms. Datto sal~l. "J!!,ery.bocly bas pro- blems at aome polnt b1t11dling theit' chtldren and tt•s good to: share that and come up with solutions you never thou1ht oC A Newport Jteaeb man ai: legedly discovered Inside ·a clo,ed and locked nstaurabt was booked on a char1e of ·burglary early th.la mornl.og. · . befo~e., Newport Beach poUce artere- ed David Baymood Beyerl•, 22, of 124-8 W. Balboa Blvd.; wlHio be aasertedJy was unable to ex· ·plain bis presence inside El Torlto restaurant, 4221 Dolj)bin ltrik.er Way • ICE e:GASSICS SKATING SPECTA~R FRI.. 12, 4, 7 P.M~ SUN.. P.M. SAT., 11A.M.,1, 3 P.M. MON .• 12 4, 7 P.M. SOUTH ·COAST PIAZA BRISTO T T United is ma.king it easier than ever to brea.ka.WB\Y to more cities than ever. Right now you can brea.ka.wey to nine cities 1n the East and save up to 45%. Including New York, PhiladBlpbia., WashiDgton, D.C., a.nd Baltimore for $2.34 round-trip. 8ta.rt1ng February 27, subject to C.A.B. approval.you can brea.kawey to Detroit or Cleveland at Super Saver d1sOOUlltS. And beglnn1ng March 27, subject to C.A.B. approval, you ca.n save 40% to all United Cities. Florida. effective April 26. Ha.wail excluded. Kids under 12 tre.velin8 With you save 50% otr regular C.oa.ch tare. Make your reservations a.hd b\q your Super Saver ticket 30 da.ys before departure and~ 7 to 45 days. ~flight reservations ma;y be changed, but you must do so at least 30 days before the new date of your return or the d1scount for the entire fa.re is lost. Bea.ts are 11rn1ted, so call your Travel Agent today. Or call United at 537-7621 or consult your local d1rectory. Partners in Travel with West.em International Hotels. . . , 1 • . . . . Their sole purpose is to unravel the elusive answers to questions that ha e fa/led to plague mankind for centur: s. B7 DENNIS McLELLAN Ol .. Oellyl'lletlWlt Anyone observing the parade ot people entering Marty Fuchs· Westminster home one recent Saturday evening may have paused to wonder, "Just who are these people with 'Klaatu Barada Nlkto' emblazoned on their T-sbirts?" The esoteric message is enough to make even the most blase Southern Californian stop dead in his tracks. But there is no need for alarm. The Klaatu Barada Nikto Socie- ty is not out to overthrow the gov- ernment. lts sole purpose is to un-ravel tbe elusive answers to ques- tions that have failed to plague mankind for cent uries. The Klaatu Barada Nikto Socie- ty la the name of the Orange Coast's foremost trivia club, an in- formal organization made up of school t eachers, firemen , housewives, students and assorted oUier trivia addicts. \f osl are regular devotees of the Daily Pilot trivia column. The weekly feature, which made its debut in October, 1973, is responsi- ble for bringing out into the open a horde of clo.5el trivia freaks. Knowing that they were not alone, these masters of minutiae soon began meeting once a month in order to engage in their favorite pastime. The group took its name from a key, but certainly trivial, phrase from the science fiction movie classic "The Day the Earth Stood Still." Spaceman Michael Rennie, mortally wounded, utters the cryp- tic message-"Klaatu Barada Nikto"-to earthling Patricia Neal. It is up to her to repeal it to Rennie's menacing robot before it destroys the earth. It is lbls kind of inconsequentia. overlooked by the average mov· iegoer, that prompted 18 purveyors of the picayune to show up at the February meeUDg al Marty Fuchs' tiou.e. Armed with 10 questions apiece, the 1roup as usual broke into two teams aeleet.ed at random. They picked captains and began the , questioning. I W.)llle they usually meet at a dif. ferent location each month, Fuchs' , house was the perfect setting for I what usually turns into a I marathon session that runs well pastla.m. Pam Bigelow, Womens Law Center director, or/ght, and admln/$trative assistant Nancy Fullerton. Current champ Ed Schmerter. The walls or his antique-flJled house are laden with old movie posters and assorted memorabilia. Rows or books bear UUes such as ''The Trivia Encyclopedia," "The 'B' Movies," "The Nostallfa Quiz Book." T he obvious question upon at- tending a fll'St meeting is easy: Why, in the name of Sonny Tufts, would grown adults want to clutter their minds with such irrelevent trifles? Dave Schmerler, a UC I journalism student, whose father, Ed, gave the first trivia party, sumsitupintwowords: "It's fun ." A trivial answer to be sure. But how else to do you explain why anyone would put themselves tbroulh tbe mental strain of dredging up answeri to question.a like, "What was Moondoaeie's real name in the 'Gidget' TV series?" (Jeff Mathews). "I've always been interested In trivia"' admits Howard Solomon building a sandwich in the dinini room durinr a break in the action. u1 came to a party and eot booked." (8eeTBMA, Paie 82) ,,...., PIMt.,....,_, ~ ...... From lef!: trivia addicts Katherine Yarosh, Tracy Godfrey, David Schmerler. Like to try your brain on trivia:?-AnsWf!rs are or:i-Page-82. I. b Ck•ovle "Pat aad Mlb.'' dat b1 K•tll•riae Bepbna•s SOlf llHdJHp before •Ile tamed pro! Burt Reynold• 2. la tbe mnle ''Aa· 3. N a m e t b e 4. In ••Smoby and Ille lbll." D1ue Keatoa Vu.akea Jester ID . &be the Buell&," what was lau a..._ aaio.t na~ comle strip the Wizard Bart Jleyaoldl, CB Jlan· famou~ ofld. dlelorSally.FleJd! (jooperative EXtension 'Ouijob Is gleaning, gathering, trans/at--:: ing and getting information out to the .. ~;.;_ people.' 87 MA1lCJA FORSBERG Of .. Dlllly PU1Hl.lff Dorothy Wenck•s teiephone rang more than 68,000 times last year, and just about every time, th~ callers had questions. A home gardener·asked, "What are. thes.e bugs nibbling my dlchondra?" A supermarket clerk wapted to know. "ls cheese a daity product or a deli item?'' A hof1lemaker asked, .. How long can I safely freei~ orange juice?" A teenager was looking for a 4-H club to jOb:l, llDd a farmer wanted to know whel:e to buy fungtelde apreya for bJ.a strawberry flelds. • Dorothy Wenck won't tell you how to make a cherry pie. mn!'!he won't give yoq a re~ipe over the pbone, but Part of her job ts to find· an.awers to question& about wooly wbltemes and stain removal and COO(\ preservation and jutt about anythlni else that has to do with home econo~ics orfanni.oJ. SHE 18 COUNTY directQr and home advisor for the Uni~lty of . . -. ...... .,,. California Cooperative Ezteasil,Jll Jn Orange County. Alth®Ch the title is a tnouth61fe the concept is basically simple. CooperaUve· Extension Is .,.._ tlonwide program, established by an act of COn~ in 1914, u a part of the.land grant university in every state, she ei~ains. The pw:pose, sbe adds, ls educ:a· tfonal -to answer questions and ext.end information which willbelp people improve their homes. farms and communities. "WE EXIST AS part ot Ula University ot CaUrornia, 1>i~ of A1rlcultural Sciences... ~ . ,1aya. ..·~ . • TbY~e levels of governme.t : "cooperate" in ·providmg the~· : gram. 1be United States ~ : 10~nt of ~cultUre provi • • portion of the budget, PafS r~ malling costs and supplle.5 IMbil"~ · pblets and literature, Mn. Weeil1i' . says. · Tt)e state, tbrouah the Uni <See EXTENSION, Papq ~ . ~ ..... .. \ \ I m E A R A N o nt l~ If my teeth dentJat .,on 't do lt. J DBRS: My dad W didn't Ille£ out. 1n froot Uamk lt If 1ro11 that be Ill were div~ two.: l.Ute a tblpll)unk. hat enough mon411 to Y•ara •to. It •IYI bi tile l went to tbe dellU.t. buy hit second Mfe a div.orce decree that. my 11Pbo 1tr1l1htena teeth nl~ fur coat but can't dad ls ''-'PPoted to pay and t• Hid I have a afford to have h1a own all medical and dental ver)' act ~Ion and d a u I b t e r ' a t e et h bllla foe 1D1 brother ancf aho"'1d have braces for 1tral1btened. My DlOm me. thri!Je ~an •t least. 'But worka but abe can't af. 1 am a lJ.year-old' ,irt \my dad refuses to PllY ford the dentist btu and azad would be qu.lt.e de-for the work ao the bas no money to bJre a lawyer to make my dad live up to bis .,.reement. 1 ) • .I' Please live rne some advice. -WISHING FOR THOSE RAILROAD TRACKS DEAR WISHING: caaasln1 divorced fathers to make ti.em pay for tblap ls anally a loslaa battle, espeelal-.. -1t7 SYDNEY OMA.RR 1 <> n g • a t a n d l n g Jy If there'• DO moaey MTVaDAY. FEB.18 aspirations. Hi_.bllgbt for lawyen. 1 ·"A1llES (ftfarch 21· harmony "'th.in family Aak you mom CO take April 19): Emphasis on circle. Mako neces1ary yoa t• a aahenU1 1!'0tbpletlon, taxes, prop-domestic .adjus.tments .. •••tal• "'••L T~ey ert'yl security, efforts Ta urQa. Llbra and •ftea do,.-,,. work to es ablisb a solid base. Scorpio lndlvtduala plsy ud tile pdee9 are mac1- Leo, Aquarius could key roles b:ueena:.rio. tower tltaa Ua•ae of f'gure In important UllU ,t5ept. 23-0ct. prac:Udo• de•Uah. ways. Stick to number 1. 22): Accent on 1oal, Good luidl, ditar. I bope $dve ror new starts, in-am bltion, honor, rep-, you get dlole •traila-oacl 1tat on a clear, bard, utation. how you relate trac-1 . ., • cold. liJi?bt-of -day to professional as-DEAR ANN: Here's all'eement where prop-sociates, superiors. See better advice toe ''San ertylaconcerned. ' places, situations, 9erdoo," whose guest T AUllUS (April 20· people io liaht of actuall· neglected to pay for llay 20): Perceive OUl· ty. Avold trap i>l seU .. long-distance phone llMs, potentials -don't deception. Define terms. calb. The hostess should npect anything to be Steer clear of one wbo suggest in the future ltanded you on silver broods and wants you to that the dellnquent boor platter. Relatives, close join in a c~ session. inltruct the operator to neighbors "close in."· SCORPIO (Oct. 23· charee her c:aalla to her Yoo h~ve right to more Nov. 21): Harmonious home pbone. It's very space. more room to live lunar aspect coincides easy to do and would your own life. Aquarius, now with long-distance eUmlbate tbe prOblem 4oean't want to t ell completely. -MR. Jnybody the detalls ex- KNOW HOW tept the penon be Is DEAR MB.: 1t•a asking for help. The e.-..r to eUmlli.at.e tile screening is a real turn· 1t1eu. A perHJI w•o off. After a couple of w•uld try to a&lff .a seutons wttb a go- heateu with IODI· between you just decide dl1\aace eal11 l• not to sweat lt O\Jt by about to follow aay 1D· yo. ursell and 10 QuieUy •tncdoas. Insane. D E A R A N N I know you won't print LANDERS: I am not tbJs letter because you spea~ for myaell PD· don't like criticism, ly, butfor ~t hatrtbe Also, it's nGt a big deaJ, teen .. 1«1 ln tie •orld. like bow to bani toilet· I aaukt <I l'OUI' adticeL pAper. -..NE.WSDA y "S..ee your acbool READER GOING NUTS' 1UidancecouQSelor. IN N.Y. In our school anyone DEAit READE&: The who want.I to aee the 1lta1Uoa 1oa cleacrlbe guld~ce ~or has dOfl 11ot nlat ID mu7 to go tbr0u1b a third 1cioolt -oaly la the degree just to 1et an ap-la r a e oaea. I a my pointment. The person opi.Jon, It lboeldatt ex· w b o arl'anges •P· lat la ANY HMol -no pointments asks matter loW' lar1e. A questions like, "Wby do atade.at wt.o wuts to see you want to see tbe a l•ldanee to•aaelor guidance counselor?" .. o.act be abl& to mate What do they expect ~u o ap,....eli' without to aay -"I'm nuts,' or u1weijtas Uy questions "I'm pregnant.." or "I reJaUaf a. Ute ptare of. th1nklhaveVD?" bis problem . It's When a person is uobod1'1 hniN!ll. Aad worried and seared he you can quote me. • l Cancer and Leo figure communication, bring. prom inenUy. l n g a s p i r a t i o n s , GEMINI cMay 21· priorities into s h arp June 20): Emphasis on focus. Write, publish , Jun-and-games in re-s ubmit concepts, fation to celebraUon as f o r m at s , d e v e I o p .. fin an c i a I nut" is advertising or public re· cracked. Sagittaria n l ation s program . f1 gures in picture -and Capr icorn, Cancer in-so does the number 3. dividuats figure prom. Ele ment of luck rides inently -so does the wfth you -stick, with numbers. ~·. ...... ·1vta cohcept that status quo SAGITl'AlllUS (Nov. lu1ot final answer. 22·Dec. 21): You gain • CANCER ·(.{une 21· rare insights; tulure July 22): Lunar cycle trends are c larified . coincides now with Lime Your sense of knowing is when best, most appeal-heightened -give full ing productive qualiUes play to intuitive in· surface. You can get teUecl. U you dig deep, almost anythinj you de· you could strlke pay .ae. Strive also for what dirt. What you dream ii needed. Be direct. in-could be transformed in· dependent, original and to reality. 1peclfic. Aquarian is in CAPRICORN (Dec . picture. 22·J an. 19): New ap- LEO (July 23·Aug. proach, attitude may be 22>: Analyze what oc-ne cessary. What was curs behind the scenes good ror the past may be -articulate desires, .wanting for the future. secrets, w1Shes, whims: Know it -give more or long -ran ge goal s . yourself , b e more qem inl, Virgo, figure selfish, wist on satisfy. p~minenlly. Be ready ing your own standards for change or scene, of quality. Contractual variety of experiences o b 11 gal ion -or -and the excitement of m arrlage -is very dlscovery . Y e s, a much inpiclure. <From Page Bl) Solomon's black Kiaatu Barada Nikto T-shirt reveals that he ls the 1976 co-ct).amp. He shared the honor with Max Fraley, wbo r&- Hshea Westel'Jls, horror -1nones · and "B" pictures. When not holdlng forth on sub- jects like actresses who shared the s a me actor · husband, Solomon works as a systems programmer for McDoo.neU Douglas Automa· • ti on Company. What does he like best about tbe meetings? . "Oh, lhe competition -lt's keen," he Ja)'I. "Jl I can allSWer one or two questions I'm happy." He added with a touch of pride: "Tonight 1 'answered haU a ques· tion." . 0( course, the evening WU StiJl young. Seated near the fireplace was Tracy Godfrey, who works for tile sl ate employment development department. He's a club legeQd, having been amone the first thr~ to participate in the premiere trivia column. "1 saw a lot of movies and listened to a lot of radio as a kid ," the bearded lrivla bulf ex· plaJns between puffs oo h1s pipe. tbe column," he sayir. (Club mem· bers usually assume pseudonyms such as Third Kind and Ed and Trixie Norton). Bee.use bis wife doesn't share bis.interest. be attends the meet- 1ncs alone. "Other things are more Important to her ," be says. "That's why we (members) meet -because · our real desire· is trivta." Some buff's, like Tim Clawson. spend a lot or time wilb research. He~ throuth books at home . and at the library. He explai.Jls why be enjoys trivia: ''It'• a matter of picking details; tt's getting th e mos t out or everything in lbe movie." M ut.ery Of detail la obviously the oameofthegame. Timekeeper Carla Trlclt poiaed the stopwatdl for action as the red team posed the next question: "In 'Love With lhe Proper Stranger' Natalie Wood offers Steve McQueeo an unusual dnnk. Whal was it?'' T he black team had 30 seconds to come up with the answer for two points. •••• <From Pale BU . ty of California, pays 1alarles and provldts operattpa e1peqaes for the nat.ewide pfi)p'•m. The county provides the office buildings and operattnc expemes, including salaries ol 1uppo.rt atarr, for l ocal exten1lon otrlcea. <Orange County Cdoperattve Ex· tension offices are localed in Anaheim.) COOPERATIVE Extenaton ts an off-campus teachtnf arm ot tbe University ol Calltomla. (Campus teaching, ln terms of agrlculturll science and research, ls done at UC Davis, Rive rside and Berkeley.) Jleaearcb ia carried out at tt· p~rlme~t staUona, lncludlna 13 field atatloos -ooe of which ls Orance County's South Coast 11eld Station ln El Toro. ·Sulrj4tct matt.er speclaliat.s tn varioui fl'elds • Q'f acrtculture, ramlly and eooaumer screace con· duct research and supply tntonna· lion !or di&seminatloo by county sCaff (made up of le.rm, home and youth advilon). uoua IOB 18 &leaning, J•tber· ing, tranalaUni and 1ett.lng ln- formatloa out to the' people." qys Mn. W41>Ck. For example, lf fannen doo't know about fteW research and QeW f armln&!";elopmenta, "tbey keep doing s t.tie old way. JO the extensiop aervl~ waa established as a way of 'extending' research to those people out there:• abe ex· . plains. Information iJ "ext.ended" to growers, landscape mana1ers, professionals (home etonomist.s, dittltians and others in the field of home and family livlDJ), con- sumers, home cardeners, youth and youth leaders (4-H groups). Cooperative Extension bas nothinc to do.with University Ex· tension, Mrs. Wenck says, adding, "we don't teach courses roe credit. Our teaching methods are in· form al, providing e>ut-of·schooi learning." . SHORT COURSES. semi.nars, meetings and field demonstrations are some ol the ways the public ls informed. For example, says Mrs. Wenck, "People in the retail nursery trade -those wbo talk lO the customers -we get them up to date on pla nts, so they can maintain their plants better and better servt! their clientele." At the . field demonstrations, "growers come to learn about the IJltest research in in.sect or weed control, or to look at dlfferent varieties of grasses. We also con· duct safety lralning ror farm workers," sheaays. Answers 1.Sh: 2. FrankS6nalra 3.Bung ... Frog S.Barber LEAJlN·BY·DOING ~ectl - .C·H Youth Proctam1 -a.re 1l1ned u eduuUonal ~ .. • that are ''more ru.o and ..... u school," says Mrs. Wenck. GtOUJ> leaders· are elven ln!orm'aUoa on "rabbltl, eblckena, J>lan~ pd IO on, then they take It ~fk to tile clit~ and teach the kids.' Tlle overall miasloo of Extension in conductl~ .C·H youth pl"Op'aDUI is tb• development of )'OUtb as responaibte and productive cilisen.s and lndJviduaa. In addition to lf'OUP clanee of. fered by Cooperative Exteftlioa, information ts dispensed throu&h newspapen (.Mra. Wenck writes a weekl1 colum.n that covers the gamut of homo economica topics, usuaUy_. empha1ldn1 foods), television (she writes a weekly, one-minute spot for KOCE, Chan- nel SO), radio and throup printed matter, which is a major means ol reaching a ~ed aud.ienQe. IN l'Acr, she says, "wt year almost 200,000 publications were dispeD.IEl(f." I . She also Mites Tegular newslet· ters for consumers aDd 'Pro· fessionals in the field of bOme and famUy living. Ninety newsletters, published last year, were di•· tributed to more than ~000 peo. pie, she says. "My newsletters go out every month to homemakers. We cover all subjects in relation to the home and family, but quite a lew or them have to do with food. .. Other topics are things llktt family relations, nutrition educa· lion, obeaity, conserving water and energy. credit, money management, insect control in the home, fad diet frauds ••. " THE COOPEllATIVE Extension Consumer Prosram co~lsts of ap. · proximately 10 consumer educa- tion volunteers who are home economista or dietltiana. "When we have requesta for speakers, these gals fill tbe blll, .. notes Mns. Wenck. The volunteers ar e available to groups, and tbelr topics range from weight control to home management. Education, therefore, is the ma- jor purpose of Cooperative Ex· tension, Mrs. Wenck indicates. "We are a basic resource or- ganization. Our audience la varied, but our prime audience is the grower. "If we can help him do a better job or erowJ01. then what he grows will be of better Cfualit;)' few the consumer. Our ultimate au- d lence then, is the consumer, wbo m tty benefit from the lnformatioo that 1oes out to the grower.'' special member of op-AQUARIUS (Jan. P.05ite sex is very much 20-Feb. 18): You may tn 'picture. feel as if progress has : VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. been halted. Key is to !2): Good lunar aspect know that you are pre- s potli gh ts friendship, paring, build.int, that as-· romance, fulfillment of sets are .bei n~ con· Notlng that be is especially adept al voice recognition, be de- monstrated hJs knowtedge by re- vealinf that the unbilled voice of Cleo the dog on "People's Choice,.. Jackie Cooper's 19509 series, was nooe other than Mary 'Jane Croft. Team members immediately pushed their recall buttons: Tom Bosley was Natalie Wood's boyfriend. som eone offered. Herschell Bernardi played ber FEI. 19. 1971 12 MOOH ----------. solidated_ Check diet, health resolutions. Don't boll food. Moderate pace can result in marvelous .. . . -I •' , . ••I •••• l . .. '•, .. Does you group ·nP.ed to raise funds? benefits. PISCES (Feb. 19. arch 20) : Movement. change, affair or heart, creative endeavors are compressed into exclt· Ing period. Gemini, Sagittarius figure prom· ink.lly . You gain populatity ~mber of opposite sex ls very much attracted and it ls If your non-profit • obvious. organliatlon ne.dsf,p;iiiiiiii~~~~~~;;;;;::-;- help raising funds, RUFFEll'S call Huntington Oantar and utc ut to m111 UPHOLSTllY Comm4.lnlty Help W.. Y• W• (fonner~hartty ,.. •.t FeJ dlttalle • Phone 4533 ltJJ...._. .... Celt• ...... -141-0t 1 ONE DAY ONLY (RaJMid Old lAd WHkJ Antiqµe Dealers & Decorators PARKING LOT. SALE Featurin'g Furniture. China, Silver. Paintings, Baskets, Folk Art Pottery, Jewelry, Rugs Collectibles · Ali At Prlces Y au~u Like! And wblle many members have specialties such u "Star Trek" or g an gater film s. •'Godfrey said he ls. "probably what might be caUed • generalist: 1 know a little bit about a lot or thlnp." He adtb, however, "I get very frustrated if I know the answers but can't quite dredge lt up. I've been known to pull out what's left of my hair." Tom Felerabend of the FOUGtain Valley Fire Department bu ~ a dub member about tbree yean. ''I'm Ed Wynn, the Fite Cblef, In ••• (From •• ,. au brother. She was ItaUan so the ClubColndar"'"' toeA drinlt must have been... WedMtdaJI flt t~ DaUJI •'Cappuccino.·' the team capt.ai~Pllot and contoint notice• sa.ld. of toe>mft'• and 1.nnce "Wrong," sa.ld the ·red team. club meeunoa mid~ "The clue (foe one point) ls, it was /or ttw JoUowfttg wek - an abomination or a good liquor." Thur3daJI "'"*oh WedUI· "It's got to be something like JI. ~ notjce1 to Chai Scotch 8nd 7·Up." a black team C~. DcJlr PUot, P.O. membersuuea~. Boz 1560, Costa Meto, CA ·•or Scot.ch and Coca-Col-.," 12626. Be 1&&n to tncta.ct. someoneelsesaJd as Ume ran out. 11our no1H o"d ph~ ''Seotcb and Coca.cola," a aid the ~. Noflt:n tn'fd be bl~teamcaptain. tn our haltt$I t&DO toftb C1t ''Wroa1." said lhe red team od1'0nCC. t,nember with obvious satisflctton. To requm o pfctur•. ''Itwu-Soocebandtoofc." writ. or call tM ftohn'tt , SCQTCH AND TON1C!" cried a l>eporlmat, '42-4.121. Pfc. member ot the black team. "Oh, hire• en ltm.iUd to fwtd· my God." nmera OJ>ttt to Utt public. Law atudenta are dO lonier lll«I. ahe explala.s, because the Staee Ba,r bu, calltsd it tan\amou.nt to "pracdclnc without a license. 1t la very Dfeult to have all that lnfonnattoo. on the Up of your tontue and not uae If;•• Wby is there a need tor a •~al women•s center, •Qd nqt I«.• center for all people who need Ullstm~! onaolng <>ranie .County grand jury tn- vuUJation ot delinquent child support ptymenta: , "We found a nuinber of women una· ble to 1et back support payment&. even tbou1h they bad an· add.tell, social security number and a \IVWlt addreu (of their former spouse) .• ·. The District Attorney's ofClce was unable to do anything." ?da. m.e&pw say& m'em•blp ls open to both males and f tJnales -bul. add.I ~that men don't usually feel "comfort&· bW' comiq to the center. Clarifying her statement, the director says our C\\lture atlU trainl "men to stand up•• for their riahts and trains women to believe what they are told. 'I'berefore, the •AY!t women need more help. '111• women'• Law Center, aays the director, wu direetl,y reaponalble for an . The at.art It the center also makes ar- ransementa for battered wives to atay at the Wome~'s Transitional Living Center in Orange and is currenUy con- ducting Its own investigation or depart· ment stores tbal witl do ttee llteratlona for men and not for women. The center ia funded through private donations and bu received fund.in& from the Irvine Foundation. It ls one of three women'1 law centers in the coun. try -and Uie only one in California. TEAKWOOD FURNITURE A complete selection for every rrom m the houee. Bdrm. sets/Dining Rm. Sets/L1V1ng Rm. Set1/B1r1/0e1k1/Wall Units/Camphor Cheets/Korean Chests/Orum Stoots/Room Screens/Hiii Cablnett/Grandfathe< Cloci<a/China C1blnetl/CUrlo Cabinets/Nest Tables/ ANO MORE. Pt.US: A complete line of beautiful hand painted deootator Items. Lampi/Decorative Plat99/Vases/Figurlnea/ 8amul'lll Swordl/T en'IC>le Jars Newpon Fwy. ,,.._. Tustin Av•. • 431 I. KATBJ.A OIAMGE t t HOUSI Of TIAIC. IMC. II. • 111.1110 .g i II. .... • ii ~ • ~ • ~ " CM9Clrl ~ « SfllCW Nl'¥11W SAT ..... IM Orange Fwy. CLOCKS•BAROMETERS •WIND INSTRUMENTS . by Chelsea, Colonial, Hamllton. etc. TABLES & DESKS bv Allen Keith PRICE REDUCTIONS UPTO 75°/p " l' OHIOMlrnNS TO C&.OSI OUT IMrlll lfflNrOltf. LAST CHAMcll . . SATURDAY, FEB. 18tlt ONLY 10 ..... tos,.. -• LO ANGELES (AP> -0>s Ana•lea County supervisor Keqneth Rahn eaya that in con· nectlon with Oran1e County's ... tl•m~ed kidnappln1 or the Rams,' he ls 11declartn1war.11 At a DJIWI conference Thurs, day, Rahn called an Orange County advertisement ln a Los Antela n~11paper "an insult and we are not going to be in- timidated in an ope-a letter like lbis from Orange County supervisors. • . " The Rama -have played their home 1amea in the Los Angeles Collseum since 11M6, but Orange County officials are attemptlnJ to lure the National Football League team to Anaheim Stadium, home or lhe Callfomla Angels and located some 25 m Iles south of the Coliseum. Hahn. vice president of the Coliseum Commission, called Thursday's news conference, which was also attended by Coliseum Commission president William Robertson Hahn said o( the advertisement, "These are below-the·belt tactics and I'm declarin.g war on Orange Coun· ty. They're trying lo kidnap the Rams, but we're aoing to win." Rama' owner CarroJl Rosenbloom recently expressed hh displeasure wllb the Collaeum, bum for the 1932 Olympics, and said he might move the team lf improvements were not made. Robertson said the Coliseum waa in danger of losing the Rama beca.use Rosenbloom told the Comrtdssion that Orange County ma~ him -an offer he "could hardly retuse. 11 Hardy aald the Rams owner has a1reed to wail until at least May 18 before making a decision Optometrist Eyes Title After Hot Round of 66 LOS ANGELES (AP) -A bunched field ln the Los Angeles Open golf tournament set sights today on an optometrist who leads his closest competitors by two strokes. Dr. Gil Morgan. who has postponed a career or looking in- to eyes to look down the fairways, fired a 5-under-par 66 in the dpening round of the tournament and says it might be nine years or so before he stops playing competitive golf The 31-year·old eye doctor from Wewoka, Okla .. shot seven b1rd1es with putts of up to 30 feet to head 146 rivals in the quest for a $40,000 winner's purse in this 7Z·hole <.'ven t at the Riviera Country Club. Dr. Morgan, winner of the B.C. Open at Endicott, N.Y., last year. banked' $104,817 in tournament earnings in 1977 and admits that's more than he would make any of his first few years as an eye doctor. Bruins Hos t Wugars; USC Plays UCLA creeps closer to another Pac-8 basketball title tonight as the Bruins host Washington State at 8 in Pauley Pavilion, while the second-place USC Tro- j ans face the University of Washington. also at 8 tonight, in the SPorts Arena. The Bruins are 9·0 in the con- ference and 18-2 overall. They boast a three.game lead over USC . H UCLA wins tonight and again Saturday against Washington, the Bruins would clinch no worse than a tie for the P ac-8 championship. USC's only hope is to finish strong and earn a bid to the NCAA or NIT tournament. Washington and WSU are tied for fourth with 4·5 records. UCLA's main concern tonight will be stoppin1 WSU 's 7-2 center James Donaldson, who is second \n conference rebounding (11 .0 per game) behind the Bruins' own David Greenwood (11 .2 per outing). • The Cougars are also the con· ference's top defensive team, al· lowing just 62.4 points per game, but they're last in offense, averaging 64. Oregon, 65-6 4 STANFORD Mike Drummond hit a pair or free throws with five seconds left to lilt Oregon over ~Lanford, 65·64, -rn-PaciCic-8 conference bHketball Thursday night. Stanford bad gope ahead 64-63 with 24 seconds left when Wolfe Perry saqk a 15-foot· jump shot, brin1ing Stanford back after Oregon 'fe!lt into the final two minutes leading 83-60. "I think 1'"11 continue playing golf until I'm' 40 or until I'm not competitive," he said. On the current situation, he said : "I think this is a course, if conditions stay the same, where it won't take real low numbers to win. After winning last year, l 've set my goal on winning multiple tournaments." He faces tough competition at Los Angeles. Deadlocked at 68 after the first round were Danny Edwards and Forrest Fezler with five more at 69, another five al 70 and yel another five at 71. A dozen were at 72, including Jack Nicklaus, Billy Casper and last year's Los Angeles winntt, Tom Purtzer, plus Bill Rogers, who captured the Bob Hope tournament just last week. Winds ranged up to 35 miles an hour for the opening round although ski es were sunny and the 7,029-yard Riviera course was drying out from the rains of recent weeks. "It will get faster as the days go by ," Dr. Morgan commented. GET IN! -Gary Koch grits his teeth as he watches his birdie putt drop on the seventh hole during the LA Open Thursday. Koch shot a 70. The game of the optometrist, who actually hasn't practiced that profession alth ough licensed in both Florida and Oklahoma. came on the greens. He started with a 10.foot birdie putt on the first bole, dropped from 20 feet at both the third and fifth and then sank from 30 at the sixth. He missed the green at both the fourth and seventh to card bogeys and then had only a 4-foot putt for a birdie at the ninth. Two mo~~ birdie putts dropped from 20 feet at the 10th and 13th and he dldn't have a .bogey on the back nine to finish 32-:W. Lurking · from contending Position was Nicklaus. "I was playing better golf than I was scoring," he said. Nicklaus is playing his first tournament since the Bing Crosby Pro Am in January. Among those who didn't enter the LA Open were Tom Watson, Lee Trevino. Arnold Palmer and Hubert Green. Morgan has already earned $9,506 in five tournaments since January. "I reel I'm ready to win a ma· jor event," Morgan says. "When J first came on the tour [ wasn't so sure. I said I'd give myself three years:" Le"'"'_,,, ~·s 1lm -of u. L" A~ Opeft 9911 ...,_,,..,, ,....,.., Oft IM 1..02t-JArCI p.w 12 lt1"'9ra Cow!4ry OYbc--; G.-.-12·M-46 . D EUwtwtr ~-17 D eciwerdl ~ S.L.. ,._,._n F.l'uler ,._,,.__., J.Whit• »-lJ-13 G Cadle ,._»_.t P.M<GowAft 31,._IJ 8 JM<UI ;i...~ 0 Sftlpl•J 31·1'-n L.W-IM ,,..._ H.lrwln •ll-n L.Grer.ern •»--.. P.Moren ~-n L L•tl ~~· a Wedllln$ :»-:11-ll J '""'•n J1·l>-111 R.R-u.Jl-1J W.Armsl.._ 31.U-IO J ,Fl•O JJ.._n G Ar<her .,._,,, A.Norlll 31·»-n G ICOCll -.U-IO I .SM-»-l'-12 llZe.W.r ~IO M.M<Le-Jt.U-1l J .MtGff »-U-71 J"SlmOtl\ l~»-n P.Otl.,1111 ~t J .C'll•ftUY ...V-n M.Merley ~· T.WehllOllf JS.1f-l4 C SIMier l~l6-11 O.lver!IOfl l1·l6-14 V.Ae.-lado ls.J6-11 O,S.,,.,ers »-31-14 l.Ll~llle ,..._n 8 .Cr•M-»-ll-14 A.ll'liftMtlll l7·U-n J.Schroeder JJ.JJ 14 J.Nl<klaut l6·l6-n 0 .Hlll »-JI-14 T Purlrer 3'-l6 n S.Mtl"Y~ »-31-14 II.Casper »-11 -n o .J•llV•rv ••-1• A.Miiier :u.a-n J C.SM•O »-»-I• 1C.Ger9i;1 U·J1-n E.Sebo ,....._,. J .Wle<lte" •u-n M.M<CulOllh ..... ,. P Han<ocll »-»-n M.lteaM>r »-»-1• O.Me-,.r ,...._,, J.Aenfttr J.M0-74 P.JacollHft Jl·U-'1 J.O.nl ,..._,. II.II-" Jt.U-n T SlrnP!IOfl l1·l1-7• T Kiie ...V-n G.J~ ~»-14 Lutz Ousted I By Orantes PALlf SPRINGS -San Clemente's Bob Lutz was eliminated from a men's tennis tournament at Mission Hills Country Club, here, Thursday, losing to Manuel Orantes, 6-3, 7.5 In other matches, Arthur Ashe turned back Harold Solomon. 6-4, 6-1, Brian Gottfried downed Stan Smith, 3·6. 6·3, 6-1 and Tom Leonard topped Ismail El Shafei, 3·6, 7·6, HJ. Also, Peter Fleming eliminat· ed Tom Gullikson, 4·6, 6-1, 6-3, Raul Ramirez topped J aim• Flllol, 6-t. 6·4, llie Nas,ase whipped Cliff Richey, 6-2, 7-5 and Roscoe Tanner nipped Colin Dibley, 7-6, 7-6. .. sources, a.ccordln1 to Hahn. Rosenbloom hal a1ked for in\· on the possible move. That is when the Internatlonal Olympic Committee wlll decide whether Los An1eles 1eta the 1984 Olympic Games. provements that would lnchade I{ • · more parking facllitlea, better "t seating, more eacalators, and ) n gs If the city is awarded the Olympics, money would be spent to prepare the Coliseum for the Games -and mett Rosenbloom's demands at the same time. upgraded VIP and press areas. He also has requested that the s mnbl playing field be lowered and the stadijlm used sole!~ for loqtball, t e Money to improve th e Coliseum for the Rams - estimated at between $3 million and $9 million -would be raised from televlalon rights to the Olympics and other related a demand that could be met only after 1984 if Los. Angeles does bost the Olympics. Hahn, terming Rosenbloom'a requests legitimate, said Los Angeles ls willing to go to any reasonable length to ~eep the Rams in the Coliseum. HavUcek BOID• Out Boston's John Havlicek makes his last appearance as Ci player al the Inglewood Forum_ tonight as the Lakers host the Celtics Cit 8. The NBA great has announced he will retire at the conclusion of this season after 16 years in the sport. Anteaters Tumble To 49ers, 73-64 On a night' they outshot, out· rebounded and generally out- played their opponent, UC Irvine's Anteaters went 1iown to another PCAA basketball defeat Thursday night. . That's because visiting Cal State (Long Beach) shot enough free throws (31) and made most or them (27) to overcome de· flciencies In other areas and post a 73-64 victory that crippled UCI 's chances of gaining the conference playofrs. The glim story at the free throw line spoiled one or the Anteaters' better shooting nights. UCI clicked on 29 or 49 field goal attempts, a .594 percentage, and had a 29-27 edge in rebounding. But the hosts shot just nine free throws, sinking six, and that proved to be the de- ciding factor In the 1ame. Wayne Smith once agaln led the Anteaters, scoring 24 points on a 9-for-18 performance from the field. Steve McGuire chipped in with 12 points. Sophomore center Michael Wiley led Long Beach with ·20 points. He had eighl of his team's 23 field goals. Guard Rickey Williams tossed In 16 Points. UCI led 23-21 with 2:22 left in the first half before Long Beach !"CAA STANDINGS FrttnoSlale PeclU< s." 01990Stitle Cal Slele lll'uli.r10ftl Cal Stile (Long 8eeclll S.ft Jose Slalt UC S.nla Benlillr• UClrvl11e w l. .... "" • 3 610 J51 IJ1111» • J 177 ,. ' s m 7'4 ~•'52 ... 1 111 761 I n7 ,_ • 114 117 TlllHMIY'tkens C•I Stat• (Lii I n. UC I rvlM ~ Pacfllc 71, Cal Slelt (Fullerloft) U Sen 01990 si.te o. Fresno Sl•I• 41 Sen Jose S!ftt 61, UC s.n1• B•rlMr• .. loll s.turiay's c;.mH Cl.I Slate (Fl.lllertonl al S.n Jose Sl•le Fresno Slate 11 C.I Slate (Long Beaclll S.n Ole90 Sllltt •I UC I rvlne UC Santa Barl»ra 11 PKlll< closed with a 6-2 burst to take a 27-25 h alftime edge. The Anteaters never led after that. . BlJUAI..;O (AP) -Don Edw•rds rellstered his 80tb Joal· tendin1 victory, moat amGbg National Rockey Leal'Ue netmlnders, and bis fourth · shutout of the sealOD 'thu~ nicht as the Buff#lo Sabre. blanked the Los Anaetes K.Lnaa. S·O. Gil Perreault scored his 37tb goal and usisted on another as the Sab~ scored their seven\h victory agai.naL one loss ..and tWP tle'll in their last 10 gamea to tie the Boston Bruins for first place in the Adams Division. The 4e· feat extended the Kings• winle$5 streak to six games. ; Buffalo took a 2-0 lead 1n tbB first period on goals by Rene Robert and Jlm Lorentz. R•rt scored on· the rebound of a. 40· root shot by Lee FogoUn. Lorent.%, who started that play. scored on a short shot from the slot on a pass from Gary McAdam three seconds after the Kings' Bob Murdoch went into the penally box for interference... ~ . BOSTON -Roy Emerson Will return for his second season as player.coach of the Bost9n Lobsters in World Team Te~ Emerson, 42, winner oI virtually every major single$ and doubles title during Ii.is ctireer, led Boston to first place in the WTl"s Eastern Division last season. The team had finished lru.t in 1976. Playing mainly doubh~·s, Emerson last year won 156 games and lost 146. · VCI'• Scot.t RYii• SAN DIEGO-Dick Buerkle, holder of the men's world indoor mile record of 3 :54.8, bas withdrawn Crom the field of tonight's San Diego JnvilatiONO track and field meet. - Buerkler has suUered a stress rr•ch1re of the right loot. Still entered in the mile are UC Irvine's Steve Scott, Filbett Bayi of Tanzania, Mark SchilJ- i n g, Jeff Jirele, Eamonft Coghlan. J ohn Konigh, Pa'11 Cummings and James Munyata. Bran1dag BU• 14 N E W Y 0 R K -K e ~Ly Tripucka and Dave Batton eaCb scored 15 Points to l~ad seven\1)- ranked Notre Dame to a runaway 95-76 college basketball victory over Fordham ,a_t Madison Square Garden Thub· day. · _ '. The powerful Fighting Irish had too much strength for Fordham, racing to a 46-34 halftime lead as former Marina High (Huntington Beach) star Rich Branning scored JO of his 14.PO!nts. SC Get• 8%28,eM HOUSTON -Texas A&M and Southern California, the compet- ing teams in las t year's Bluebonnet Bowl football game, are assured of a record payoff of $220,000 each. -The game, played Dec. 31 in the Astrodome, was won by USC 47-28. ffard11 to St.•11 SAN FRANCISCO -Hiil\· leaping forward James Hardy has denied saying he will give (See Briefs, Page 84 > The lead changed hands 10 times during the closely fou&ht second half. During the first half, Stanford led by as many as seven points and went into the intermission with a 35-29 lead. AzteCs Outlast Fresno Late in the game, UCI did manage to cut the lead to 64-60. But with just 45 seconds remain- ing, the Anteaters were forced to gamble on derense. Forcing the foul, Long Beach scored its last seven points on free throws. With just three games remain- ing, UCI is 2-9 in conference play and laces an uphill batUe to reach the playoffs which include all but the last place team. UC Santa Barbara and San Jose are tied for stxtb W'fth 3·8 records. Feltofl Sealey led Oregon with 20 polnts. Perry topped Stanford with 20. Oreron ls now 4·6 in the Pac.a •nd Stanford ls 1·9. 'IJrree Teams Tied /or. PCU Lead The AJtecl held a 3l·29 lead at halfUme. 1be pace slowed con· 1lderably after the lntermwlon. Durln1 one span of mote tball alx minutes, neither team aco~d. Neither team led by more than four polnll 1n the game, played before a crowd ot 7 '"8 at th~ San Dlego Sports Arf1na. minutes Jett and coasted to the victory. Pacific Increased lts con· ference record to 8-3 and ta now tied with Sao Dlego St . and Freano St. lo the race. Kellb Anderton and Mike Nllta each acored 1' po$GU s.a1 ... s1 .. ••·'U SAN JOSE -Ron LOwe hit a ~foot jumper shot with one eeocmd left •n uattday nt1ht to enable San Joee Sl. to U. UC Santa Barbara in re1ulaUon as San Joso ~n\ on to win 1 68·86 ovorUme vlctory In PCAA action. The contest went batlt uCi fortb allh0011t Santa Barbita P-Ulled to a seven·~nl m..-stn 'With 1' mlnUU. remalaia1. LMllMCllCnl .... I U~ll"llM ....... , .. " .. " Wlw 2 4 2 I Sml\11 t 4 J tA Hddson O O S-O MC Oul,. 6 O 4 II Wll•Y • • , • CllrlSI 0 0 I 0 Wllll1rns J • J 16 CenOft 4 0 t • • ltvswn 1 2 5 • eotelt" ' 0 • \0 ~1411' J t 1 u Slewn1 I o J • W!lll• • t o 19 ttooen o O I o lapp t044 Tot••• u tt '' n Tote\• It •.2A" Meflllm• -Lone 8M<ht7·U . ~ Sports Tonight 10 p.m. (5) -COLLEGE BA S K ET BALL -The Wuhtngton Stal• Cougars meet the UCLA Bruins at Pauler. Pavilion. Taped. (13) - COLLEGE BASKETBALL - Tb• Wuhiniton uakJOI me.et the USC TroJam at 0.e Sports Aren•lnLosAngeJu.Taptd. Neill Armstrong' has selected head coach of Chieago Bears, reptac Jack Pardee, who bee~ coach for the Washin~ Redskins. Armstrong defensive coordlnatot the Minnesota Vikings Jng the past eight se'.a:scaii~~ . .. I ' • Oelfy,. .. t,_ CIF PLAYOFF ENTRIES-Edison (Huntington Beach> High 's Darin Bowen battles Fountain Valley's Mike Heide in Sunset League basketball action. Tonight is the first round of the CIF 4-A playoffs with Edison dueling St. Anthony <Long Beach l at Lakewood High, while Fountam Valley hosts Dos Pueblos <Goleta) High. Tortoise vs. Bare SC, Canyon Match Contrasting Styles Wjlh a tortoise-hare fiavor, San. Clemente Higb's Tritons host Canyon <Anaheim) Higb's rapid Comanches tonight (7:30) in the flrst round of the CIF 3-A basletball playoffs. Coach Rich Skelton's tempo. <'onscious Tritons, bent on talc· ing :the opposition out with its quidker pace. are faced with an oppbnent that thrives on speed und Skelton says that's his first obj~tive. "l don't think we can play Ca nyon 's tempo and beat them," says Skelton. Converse· ly ,· Canyo411 coach Bob Schermerhorn says: "I don't think we can play San Clemente's tempo.and win." Canyon enters with depth in talept, spearheaded by 6·4 Gary Hilton and 6·0 Carlos Cuero, wini players in lhe point-guard o!fehse. Ali Admits Battle Plan Was Wrong Hilton averaged 15.7 points a game in the Orange League, where the Comanches shared the crown with Brea. Cuefo's average is 13 .8 and 6·3 Jeff Snevog, an aggress1ve sort. has a deceptive 11.l average. While Schermerhorn has utilized his bench often, Skelton has rallied bis San Clemente forces around 6·6 John Canon, the South Coast League's player of the year Carson can do it all, playing j(uard or moving inside. He's scored 42 points in one game. and firushcd lhe regular season with a 19.3 average for 21 games. Mark Klein, San Clemente's 6-S inside strength, has been bothered by a shoulder injury, hut should start. If not, Shawn Mulligan will be inserted at guard and Carson will move in· side. The rest of the Tritons' start- ing lineup includes guard John Stephens. 6-3 center Gene Gednov and 6-1 forward Mike Wade. As for combai'ng Canyon's gambling defense., Skelton says: "We'll try to get a lot of mov· ement and we may spread things out a little to offset Canyon's zone defense and trapping ... BASKETBALL ~taneia Challenges Los Altos Estancia (0.ta M •> HJ&C;s EAA!et .. winaen of 1l of r last l• 1amu and posnsst.na Jetbal firepower eight players dee_p. battle lnvadln1 Los Altos (Hacienda Heights) W1b'a Con· querora ton11.&t (7:30) to the first round of tbe CIF 3-A buketball playoffs. lt's • colllslon between two ·highly respected outfits u Los Altos enters with a flossy 21-4 re- cord, lncludin1 the Sierra Leacue co-clwnpionahip and a 10.game wlnnin1 streak~ M at.cbed are two fast-t.mpo outfits with Estancia coach Larry Sunderman's •••les , operating b•htnd th e qu•rterbactm1 or ~-2~ John Carrido, aeafn1t the potent depth, Jed by junior Dennis Tho01pson, of the Conquerors. Estancla'a heavy 1uns include flnt teatn All-Century Leaeue aelectlona Dou' Jardine (6-7) and Jlm Price (a deceptive W). Jardine averaged 19.5 points a game in league and Price added 18.7. Jardine bas the soft touch from ts feet. Price ls a battler on the boards and works the In· side abot.s. Too, Estancia baa M Mlko Camp on the boardS and S.11 Dan Maddock i.a the etarting Uneup. WhUe tboee four get most of the credit wldl their scorine. It's Carrldo who makes thin1s co with his h~Ue, steals, aasists and 1eneral court aavvy. .. Without Carrldo we wouldn't have tlnlshed 12·2 in Je11Ue." says Sunderman. "I constder him tha best gaard In our leaeue. He's Uke 1old to me." Sunderman says his quint.et will do nothing different in style tonlgbt against the rapid Con- querors. FV Battles D.os Pueblos ~ * * * * * * * * * Oilers Take On Corona Barons Tabbed To Capture Playoff Opener The tallest starter for Dos Pueblos <Golha > Hlih'a basketball team will have to look up to four of the five pl~ers Fountain Valley puts on tho court toni"hl D"os Pueblos visits tbe Fountain Valley gym for a '1:30 game to open the CIF 4-A playoffs. The Sunset League ~amplon Barons start three M . pl~en and a 6-7 center, Mike Heide, a nd have a distinct beleht advanta1e over the Dos Pueblos Chargers. "Dos Pueblos doesn't have a lot of slze and we have to make sure we take advanta1e of it in- side," says Fountain Valley coach Dave Brown. Fountain Valley would appear to have all lhe cards stacked in ita favor. The Barons have a solid ...- cord (19-<f), a 10.&am• winnlng streak and tbe home court advantage. Dos Pueblos carries a modest 13-10 mark and four-game wino· ing streak. The Cbar,ers bad to beat Loara High o Anaheim W ednesdly in a playo(f just to qualify for a <;IF berth. But coach Bruce Lofthus says he's accustomed to being the un· derdog. Nine of his 10 defeats came at the hands of teams which eventually made the playoffs. Dos Pueblos starts two juniors and one of them-5·11 guard Brad Clark-ls the team's lead· ing scorer with an 11.3 average. "We're a young team and in- ex perlence hurt us in the early part or the season," Lofthus says. "But we're playing good defense now. Our passing is good and we like to keep the tern po up on offense." Also averaging in double figures for the Chargers are 6-2 guard Bob Fiala (10.5) and 6-3 forward Ken Frederickson (10.2). Jerry C4thcart, at 6-2 and 210 pounds, is the other forward and junior Rick Clark starta in . the backcourt in Dos Puebl0&' three·guard offense. "They attack the basket real well," Brown said after he watched Dos Pueblos beat Loara in the playoff. "We'll need to keep control of the tempo against them." DONLEAVEY St. Anthony, Edison Clash At 1.akewood LAKEWOOD-Edison High <Huntington Beach> coach Don Leavey found out this week that be can't go home again, and nothing could have made him happier. · 'liome" is St. Anthony High in Long Beach. where Leavey reared be would have to take his Edison Chargers for tonight's CIF 4·A playoff basketball game. Leavey is a graduate or St. Anthony High ("Just say it was .many years ago,"), and he fondly remembers playing in the Saint.s' home gym. He calls it "the Pit." But because Edison bas a student body enrollment of near- ly 4,000, the ClF ruled that "the Pit's" seating capacity of l ,200 was insufficient for a playoff game. So t onight's 7: 30 opening round game will be played in spacious Lakewood Hieh, and Edison won't have to contend with a frenzied crowd breathing down its back. St. Anthony is 13·9 but won the Del Rey League race with a 9-1 record. 1be Sainta are coached by Tony Marques, a St. Anthony graduate who played there UD· der Jack Errion. now the Corona del Mar High coach. "They run a very methodical olfense," Leavey says of bls op- ponent. "St. Anthony tries to lull you to sleep. Our challenge will be to bring up the tempo. Huntington Is Favored To Advance . Huntington Beach Hlgh's playoffs-rich Oilers, in the basketball eliminations for the 14th Ume within the last 18 seasons, tangle with invading Corona IIlgb tonight (7 :30) in the opening round or CIF 4·A competition. The Oilers of first-year coach; Roy Miller, who guided his team to a secOod place finish ln the Sunset League with a squad that included no re~g starters and only one retumiDg varsity letterman.. are favored over a Corona quintet which does not possess oyerpowering credentials. Corona, the Citrus Belt League runnerup with a respectable 18-6 overall record. however, has been consistent and has shown the ability to score over a zone defense. "We don't go inside too much,•• says Corona coach Dennis Pratt, "because we don't have a lot of height. . This is Corona's first venture into the cage playoffs in eight y~ars and the Panthers have never won a game in the playoffs. according to their coach. The Oilers will be going with the same lineup that has carried them to a 16-7 record against competition considered better than that of Corona's. All-Sunset League choices Curt Steinhaus and Curt Wooten lead the way with their scoring, Steinhaus with an overall mark of 16.4 <never less than double figures) and Wooten at 13.4. An Oilers' trademark has been balance and Tom Pestolesi and Marco Pagnanelli provide it, each with scoring averages of 10.0. Quarterbacking the Oilers is 5.9 junior Rico Thompson with his ballhandllng and rebounding (be'a third on the team with 7.5 caroms per eame). Corona's ace ls 5·11 senior Kel· ly Nicbolson, who sports an 18.0 scoring average. Other threats Inc lude 6·4 center Stan Lona!ellow, 8-2 Doug Fritz, 6-0 Wayne Baldwin and playmaker Marty Wilkerson. Fritz baa a 16.0 scoring average. The winner qualifies for the second round Tuesday with No. 1 seeded Verbum Del <Los Angeles) an overwhelmhig favorite to be waitlnc. "We're playlng ~Uer and more ql"Cilvely and the de- fense has ttihtened up t.be 111t three games. The kldS are doing a great job and we're just going to go out there and play our aame." . ' Los Altos, ratd No. C in the cur 3-A poll, eotera wlth six playoffs entries 1n a row and aside from Thompson'• n percent ability from the field, teatures 6-2 Tom Bales, f.O Tom Tebbs, 6-3 Marvin Allen and 8-4 W aUy Martin, Ute latter reolac· in& 6-6 Clark Smith, reportedly out wlth an artkle htjury. BOB MINIER MVTests Talented Ganes ha WALNUT-Mission Viejo High faces its toughest oppol)eot ol the season tonight (7:~) as the Diablos travel to Mt. San Antonio College to meet Ganesha High (Pomona) in a Cl F 3-A basketball playorf game. G anesha is ranked No. 1 in the 3·A pairings with a flossy 22-3 record while Mission Vlejo is a third-place entry from the Sooth Coast League with a 15-10 slate . The Ganesha Giants are an e.X• Dl~wMt.S.__..C-... Nortll on S... 0i99o Fr_., .. ~-i;·S1. NOl'llt °" J1, .......... DI ........ 8M ...... ~ FrM••Y 60, .. T ...... Allt. t..-,. Lllft • Temple,-1-IOCMlllKllo. • . - plosive, running team with a 79.2 average per game. They win by an average of 13.3 points. Mission Viejo's style ~ also been to use the Cast break, and coach Bob Minier says be in- tends to stick wilh that offense. It may be a matter of which stable has the fastest horses. The Diablos' top scorer is Pete Decasas, who averages 14.0 per game, cl05ely followed by Mike Roberts (12 0) and Mike Boster (11.3). Rick Kreuzer also averages in double figures with a 10.2 clip. Gan es ha answers with J a.mes Verdon, a 6·4 forward who scores 21.1 per game. Two other starters, George Hawthorne and . James Dowe, average over 16.S per game. Besides being severely tested in the footrace, Mission Viejo will also be in trouble on the boards. Oane.o;ha starts a 6-10 cent e r (Hawthorne) and averages 6·5 across the front line. Minion Viejo, meanwhile. bas no one oo lhe squad who stands taller than 6-3. Team strenglb.1 are speed, shooting and rugged defense. Fountain Valley banks on M senior Roger Holmes, currently scoring at a 23.1 clip. He's Joined in the backcourt by ~ll Mike Israelsky, while Heide plays the front line aloog with Chris Maclc and Charlie Rei.ft. 0 lt will be a good contrast ot styles. Their strength is in the front line while oun is at the guard9," Leavey says. "We'll see which preva.lls." SPORTS BRIEFS ..• Forward Mike Ramsey, a 6-4 senior, ls St. Anthony's leading scorer with a 14.9 averaee. Coatbiaed From Page 83 LONDON <AP) -A beaten but trrepreasible Muhammad Ali fie'( into London Friday and saitt he'd have a new battle plan the :next. time be fiehta Leon Spi.riks. Sea Kings Duel Spartans up hla senior. season at the University of San Francisco to join the NaUonal Basketball As· sociation. .. I never aaid I was leaving school and would turn pro," Hardy sald Thursday. He m aintalned bis orl gin al statements were mlsconstru~ The Razorbacks eittended their season record to 25-1. Their 13-1 SWC ledger puts them a eame ahead of second-place Texas. Tfle ~)'Ml'-old former Marine from St. IAula took the world heavyweigh• boxln1 champioolhlp from the aging All io • apllt decision in Las Vegu on Wednetdat. , "It WU a long fight alld I now rea.llle that my battle plan was wroo.i/• All, 36, told reporters at Heathrow Airport on hb way to bo m-e an honorary citisen of Banktadeeh. ' • .. l lpve away the fint five J'OUndl tblnldn' that be would puodl blmMlf out. Boy did he profe me Wl'CllC· Nest Ume I = out d.andnc and keep IU"OUDC1 tbe rlnf and oat jut out wUtin8 for h1lll to ·bit• .. El aot &obtf to ndN. .. All 1 "I mu.t ean'J •· I c rettr• without the cbamploa1'1p. Jt would di•· appol.At and Jlumlliate my fanl. Verj IDOll I wUl win bact the cham~P for the third time -U..Jlnt ever to do it.•• 'he~-dwDpioo taJd he 1>1.UMil '1o n1t for IOlbe time a11d dltft b&Ye ~... IO to pfOM I am .UU the Cteat.llt GI'. • &It ~ bU MaW1 me. BUt l .... ..,... . Coron.a del Mar mah•s Sea Kings begin defense of their um C IF 3-A basketball championship tonight (7:-30) .. Weal Covina High's Spartans m. vade ln the '78 eliminations opener. At stake ls a second round batUe Tuesda)I with the winner . of the Los Amigos <Garden Grove)·Santa Ana duel and coach Jaclc Errion•1 Sea Kinp are favored to do just providin& All-South Coast Leacue 1tandout Dnid Koehler ii tn reuonable form an.r m1Minl the last four eames with • aboulder Injury. Koehler make• Corona del Mar'• cftenae 10 with bis tethal out.aide •bootlnl' Th• f.O Junior aver11ed l&.8 polnta • came in Cdll'• first 17 Outlnp and lt'• hll out.tide ability which forces detente from collaptlnC lr11lde. · Tb• Sea KJnp bave plenty or othv tblnp aoinl tor tbem~ll· lea1u• 1tat'1 Shawn Abeun -<•ophoraore) and 9·T Jeff Burden_. &-a Cbdl 1~, a traml• trcim BrM irtD w• IU1 well be can perfonn after a lq layoll 11 the big~ ~ueltian muk. ErrtQQ-S a U..eiup con- .allta ol 81alden, earn, Matt Os1ood. Mark Rains and either Koehler or S.10 junior Todd Pickett •. Says Errlon: "I understand Weit Covil\a la very aoresaive .aid appears to like a fut pace.. but U'a bard to boapeclflc about {t because we Just don't know that much.'' "We're capable ot plafing well," •IYS Weet Covina coach Bart)\ Porter. "But we could do aaytbinf. We're unpr•dlct· able." Pacm, Welt Oovtna's attack ts 6·J junior Chuck North. wbo bu averaced 21.8 potnta a 1ame durln1 the Mason. • threat f.n>m outald• or inside. North ta alao· the Spartana' leadtn1 ,rebounder, and lt batktd bY a unit of W JerrOld Whitmore (the ool)' ret~ 1tartu), 64 J., OlliQao. •1 Brlan. !Callen and ~·• Bon su .... lt'llBa•• Plelced BOSTON -Baseball Hall of Famer Ted 11'Jlllams, one of the greatest bitters to play for lhe Boston Red SOx, will join his old club as a spring training batting teacher. 111..n Ta• Ceae• ST. LOUIS -Wlnleas in 12 1ame~t the St. Louis Blues. reacbea Into their or1anlutiooall rankl Thursday and aelectecl former defenaeman Barclay- Pla1er the coach of the N atiooal Hockey Leaiue team, succeed· in& Leo BoivinF Arft• .. u,a..'1• DALLAS -Top-ranked Arkansas riddled Southern Methodist'• zone defenses with the outside bomba of Ron Brewer and Sldney Moncrief Tbur1day nt1ht to run away from the Muatanp 88-75 in a Southweu Ooofel'encc Wketball 1amo. Cougars Open CTF Action EAGLE MOUNTAIN-It could be a run-and-gull shootout tonight (7: 30) when the Caplstrano Valley ffigb Cougars tangle with host Eagle M~taln Jtigh's Eagles in a first TOUnd CIF l ·A basketball playorr game. Both teams like to run but a height problem exists for the host Eaalea whose tallest man is 6~L For coach Paul Smith's Couf a.n, Bob Charles Is the cata1Y9C. with a 26.8 pol.Dt per game acoring average over a first aeuon that has aeen the team go, lT-6 tncludinc lb:ffe opening loaaes. The Cougars have won their last 10. E•gle Mountala is pa~ by Alan Tlmonen (17.1) and CbarJe1 Tbaxton (1'.0) and bas • 10.'1 record. Alabllt the only commClll fc.-• ~ Mhodulea, Julian Hlab. the Baites woa by seven aod CarpO Valley bJ tt. \ I Victory A abort. but clutch re- llel stint by Mlke Heil preserved Saddleback College's 5-4 non - conference baaeball victory at Cypress Colleie Thursday. . UeU came in wlth tl\e tying run at tblrd base and the winnin1 run on flrat but struck oul a Cy press pinch hitter to end the game. Bob Clements went the first seven innings for the Gauchos, strik- ing out five while aUow- ine lZ hit.s and four runs. Mark Engle went 1¥.i in- nings, striking out one and eiving up three hits. Howle Houk bad lhe hot bat tor the Gauchos, now 2· 1. lie went three- for-three, walked twice, scored a run and drove in another. Mike Horvath and Vic Hasler both went two.for-four. Hasler opened the scoring in the second when be walked, stole a pair of bases and scored. on Horvatb'a double. Chris Moline's single put Saddleback ahead to stay. Singles by Houk. Seven 01"an10 Coast area w7esUers, lAclUd-lng three from Fountain Valley, are seeded No. 1 in their weight divisions fo r Saturday's CIF sectional quallfylng wrestling tournament at Cypress College. · Action gets under way at 10 Saturday morning and will continue straight through the finals to determine four entrants and two alternates for the CIF finals a week la~er al Westminster High. Fouqta!n Valley's trio •.,.nt wtt.b the top rour of Gary Bobay (123), Ufe e line wltb four Larry Buqen (178) and entrants from three M l t c h F I n k J e a other aeetlonal meeta in (heavywei&ht), clve the 18-man finals. coach John Rosales'' Other area favorites Barona a s .. ot at the CIF include Jamie Roberson cbam:plons hip for a (UO) of Huntlneton seeond strai&bt year. Beach; Dan Schroede· But E 1 Dor ad o ( 157) <>f University t.•c.J.t- (Plaaentla), with the (Irvine); Todd Boyer lwanaga brothen Kerry (168) of Edison (Hunt--_;;.=..;.;..;..;__;_;:..;..:.;:.::..;.;::...:._ and Kevin alon• with inlton Beach) and Chris . Bill Weiskopf, will press Roll (19C) of C«ona del F• aJ CIF t b e B a r on a f o r Mar. · m . supremacy thla aeaaoo. Bobay fln.lshed i,hird S a turday's com -in the state meet last R • peU~on la a n~-~°' seuoa at 106 pounds and&nkinoa ls t b e 12 3 • p 0 U D d "'"' • Frtdlly, Februaty 17, 1171 .. Mater Dd mill Sch~'• MOQarchs (Santa Ana) have put>thlQCt t,ocetherln tbe lut portion ot the regulu season and aw.it toalcht'a ('1:30) open· lng CIF 4-A baslcetball pllyOll fame at home against llwena lf,lgh (VeQtuta) with eonndence. Coach J~ TAl'dl1'1 Moall'Cbl have won their laat four a.mes, have been able to/lay with a healthy ch"l> fl.nally, and look forwar to a re- match ln ptayotf eompetltlon against Buena. Two years aao the B~na Bulldop ellmlnated Mater Del 1n the quart.erflnals ol the playoff com· petilton ln a game playefl In VaturL Gettlnl a ho.me mat.ch too11bt ,wes·u.e Monarchs the edit Inf an support In• IYJD 'J'vdle calll tbe pavi.lioa. Cage Plagoff• champion ot the Sunset Anno Leaiuetbisaeason. • onced 0 '1beY have had IOID• hUurl• tbil yeu but everybody is bealtlly for tbe p1Qotf11 ° Tardie 11y•~"Dlvid Cook.did a ~ t JQti for us when be replaced Sal ()ayta du,rlft#-the tlme he was ln· tured." · Finklea. a state meet entrant at 191 pounds a year aeo. is undefeated in 25 h ea vywe ight matches this season and has woo 19 of those de- cisions by pinning his ..,. ....,._. The game figures to be a nmnln& affalr with Sites Listed T...._,I Sdllllllle C1:•> .. ,. Notre o.-vs Verbllm Del et Compton Coll1g;1 Ill Coron1o1NIMlll ... 19Mclt euen•el--D.a Torrence et COmpton EIMni.o-el Kelefto It) 8h/lop AINI et Newllurr Perl! .,,_YI 5' • .V.U-y 9t Lek~ H1911 l11tlewood 'OI& 0.-ntll \1111•'1' et Gl.ndeloColll!llf Oxnerd vt UI Pol'f ot LB Mllll-on Mlllrotlt.,.elldl Serre at Servllo Cl'Pl•ll n Ve11t11re ot Ventllf'• Coll ... Doi Pw4llol el .._.... Velley L 8 Mlllllloll et Morlllfltlkll lo.,..te et Simi VIII.., MU<pllJll,._ .,. MlutM Vhje ..s 0-..stlo .i Mt. Sen Ant001lo Cllllego Rl'Hnldt flely .. '"""°"°"' OOl'IOl,...l et Soutll Ton-• ~nueeo .. •• Modll\A Sent• Mente• YI O.wney et Meyf1tr Hltill C...YMet•~ """ .... ,. si-v "411• GW•'I' .. °""1111 Sent• AN .. IA Alnlp Wett Co'Me MC:--• MW .... ,._ ...... UpllllOMa.-~erti LOI "Itel M l"-Cla \11lencl1 M tllllr Cul,,., City .. Lrnwood Bohl Of ... It RMnlde Mortll .. M..-Vll19¥w llew!Md .. W..t Covt,.. Hltlt Meyfllr a4 o.dlllle v .. 1.., 0.-W .. Onllwto Arroyo Gr-M SMlgut C••llrel M SM Merino S...te GI•• M -ttl• El M.-• 8"'lfllwW Wn-ll VlcW \lllltey ,.._..llQIH\tllCI) opponent. Budgen, an All·CIF football star this aeasoo. ls alao Sunset Leaaue champion at 178. Other area wresUers seeded In the top four ln· elude: Mike Provanzano (98) Huntington Beach se cond an~ Paul Spalenka (98) Mission Viejo, fourth: Sean Mccann (106) Dana Hills. second: Bill Taylor (115 > Edison, second; Bob Larwood (123) Dana Hllls, aecood. . P9& .. 1c ..... _..... ,.._ both teams employing a IUll-court presalng de- '· v.,......, Del 1~11 1oo fense. 2.P-CJHI .. a. c~-.v1111.., 122-l> 1• "We will use both the man praa and the tone t ~:"..:: :~: :: press and we like to do lt a lot durint the came,,, •· K•lfl•• cn.11 SJ Tardie says. !: :=:~;-1%>-u ~ "We press a lot and like to run the fut break •· eemp1on c1M 1 n on offense," bis counterpart, Bill Wood, of Buena 10. ·-(JIM) 14 8 ..,...,..... say . . 1. ~ CJNI " Tardie feela the two teams match up well. He t t::£:;:~;> E ~ :a~~cc?~'s°~v~~~!'f:~~~?a:~~~~ ~ ~:::",~' ,, (6-2) and John Garcia (6-5) on the front llne. 1. up1anc1 oui :! Top reserves are John Saunders (f.3) and Tim •• Rlwnldt f'Otf lltoS) 2' Peabody (6-4). Both h~ve come off the bench to t. El MOC11N 116-51 1' 10. So. Tor•-c1N1 , heh> ~ \{onarchs during the late part of a 17·7 ,, R-•-~~ camapt(ll. 2. c111nne1 •-119-ll : • For the Bulldogs (20-4), Mike Johnson l6·2) i. v1c1w v....., 121.,, eo and Duke Lyskin (6-!lh) are in the bac~court with ~~':c:~~1 ~! Brian Dunn (6-5), .cbarlea McKinney (6-2in) and •· s.n Mor111o ,,.., ,, Paul Shoenberger (8-2) up front. ~ =:•=.cri~, ~ Lyskin ls averaging 18.0 and Dunn 15.0 for the •· s.weus cf7.s1 u Bulldogs. Four Mater Del starters are ln double 10· Tem,..~.:::... " ficures with McCrea at 12.3, Gayton at 12.2 DAil Y Pll.OT ... Hasler and &ti!,ve Carro ll produced a rlm in the third. A single. three walks and a sacrifice fly added two more runs in the fourth. Sports Calendar ~ v-.,•Nte l.MM ........ ~ Cetwlllo .. c.. Sl«'ra V... • Pw••-IC At1l ...... Vlll9¥M ~ t Steve Barreto (136) Fountain Valley. fourth; Ryan Craig (1'8) Corona del Mar fourth; Ed Thorp (lSl) Marina <Huntington B,each), fourth; Mite Oc:boa (168) Mlasion Viejo, fourth; and Kerin Sloan ,heavyweight, Estancia (Costa Mesa). fourth. i. ....... nM>: .... ~1); and Steele at U .L I . Velley Cltrlttl•• CH4); •· C.Uledr•• c11-s1; ._ Levai ... r MD N 1 • Girls' Po' ll Cit.tel; ............. m ... J; '· St. 0 m MaRko ttw>; a. i....... et•m; • •. MonMU 411·•: ............ . S-1-ttUI •• r It nl 8•-"'·" ... 1 0 0 Mollne,cl • 0 1 1 ._lt,311 l I J 1 Hill,< 1 0 0 I Weir,< 0 0 0 0 Austin, .. ,. s 0 0 0 HHler, 11) • I , 0 C.rroll, '1 l 0 I 1 Ho•"•'"· lb ' 1 , 1 Urqull•r1," l 0 0 0 Tillor<I, pn ' 0 0 0 Aometo, '' 0 0 0 0 C.lemenl•, p 0 0 0 0 Eno••· p 0 0 0 0 Htll, p 0 0 0 0 1 01111 lo4 ) ' 5 S.001-<lt 021 200 000-S t I Cypren 021 ooo tao-. u J Vanguards Nine Dealt 10-0 Loss Notll ... llT ...... Oty Sl«r• •a.-i ........ ... °"911 ....... s.e.Ur C ...... 111 C.llPMIY IC LA l..0-lft l••ketbell-f'110ert.11 Coll• et "-~ ... • Menllell Or6f\9e c-t Coll ... O:•I; O..ftoy BoKO T.ai ll llt e.., •t ~Coll• Cl); s-Qteoo ACllllMS • i.-uzinoer Stete e t UC lrvlM C7:MI),. Cel Br .. llnll• 1 ...... 181 Llllll•t•n YI SolltlletA C:.llfHlll• 54 • .-..... •t ClrlllnlMfe Colteve et er ... Goist c.tleoe u Tefll<Mpl ~ CetNc:trel et loeco p.m.I. Ted i Wru lllng-Cl F Secllet11l1 •I ............... Vlli.tOwlstlM CypressCoffeQ11 lt01.m.I At111<~oM l'lllrnere GoS:~'::"!~tt:.~=-~~!~tre .. \11119' et Eegle Colleve ., Oo6d Cont lnvltet'-It E.IMllOAIC-IW o.n.. Wk) UC S1nt1 Bet11ere Cell deyl; UC ...,,1111 '--'dele lrvlne, s.n Diego Stete, Ut.., et C.11 et Seftt• Vllft NIYICIA ILH \1191t) lnvlteti-1; St. Menlca .. Monklllr "'"' ~Ollllletn \lllley Md Edi.-Hltill et St • ._.... ....... PenlMule ln"41m1Jc1M! flMll ll Aoll-..... Sclmlt Int Hiiia Hltfl 011. S ttl .. eu•111--0r1n91 CINtt CAii• It l.Mt::,.,. f ••••t et OrMt• SlddlelNKll Coll ... ltll; Golden L .. VINflt•~Orl1illM WKt COOl!llf ll s..t. Ano 011; Cel IEI ~ -.......... Stell CLont lee<lll et Sovthlfn ---·~ C.UterAle 0111e1it 411Dollll .... _ et St. Mk"'911 .. ~ noon I ; University of Colllor11la ShanOoft ¥t ~ • ~ I I• r II• I• I' I • t UC I"' In e Hl9'1 Cs.LI O.&.wle•~ ,,._.., . ..,.-•u>. P•lflcowt.elM•.,,.. Girts_..____,.......,., Cel,,.ry 19'1lltt ,,. M-1 ..... c..wio•-........ DelMO-W.. Yeller t•f'hU .. •t le•t11ern Groft.....,,.,,~ ...... CallfwlMGollltl Mlul111 VleA IMrlM, E Two et ea,.ttr_ ven.., ca.rt.U• at • Cy,...._~ UC WW. It UC ,U_..Olriltlm Sant• lar!J.Ma Cll; ,.....,ll"tl""' "-'-T--•S.W-(1.&) The r ain-delaye d v.u.., OW1111Na•1.Amt.,01r1.eSM ----·--· season opener finally ar-"':.',,~:~ ,,_. • ~ ~.:.~· Lttt .. ,.• •• ... ,.., ... rived Thursday for the State1nv1...._.. H.,...~liAwMll South ern California to!~:.,ir;a~~~.4: Tw1o~•s..-,_ College (Costa Mesa) ...... >. &:.-:=.-:.'==~ baseball team but coach -r:=================--Dou g Adams almost ~ wishes it hadn't. "When we needed the rain, it didn't," Adams said dryly afler the . V a n g u a r d s w e r e -;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ throttled ln their 1978 de-' but, 10·0, by visltlng Chapman College of Orange. .. We did not do a nything rigbt," Adams said. "We didn't hit and no one threw well ~ day." sec was held to just four bits, two by Stan Thom as, while starting pitcher Kent Miyashiro and ·relie ver Tony Brennan •ue raked few 14 safeties. "I tblnk it was a case of o•erreadineas," Adams said ... We'•e been preparing oun1elves two weeks for the opening game. Now that we've got that out of our way, we should be okay ... .-... Cal eett. c•• .. r ..... Planll,n .. 0 • • StOtltleke, I( .. 0 0 0 Gllff,cf 4 0 ~= Tllol'no .. 1b • 0 wtoaft.• .. • $dlMl.C 2 • • • WOoCI. rf .. 0 0 . ... ~··"' • 0 • 0 ,,..,..,$ .. 0 1 •• L":".-t 0 0 • • M ,._, 0 0 • ' ·~· 0 • • • TQI t'I t • • . ... "' ...... .. . . 9outllef'll Cit ----• .. l CNllllllM • .. ,. __,. " 1 JC Tennis RENTAL E9UIPMENT SALE! ... •Wlf'Ws .......... s . ·~ Car'f••~=• •Mmb ..... _.. Pro Scores NttMMlltedllY~ Detroit S. AllMte l Ml..,,.'°'94. Ptllt ... pllleJ 811lfe1os,a.....,.....o Ny Iii-. 4. C060f'MO. ....... ._... .......... Clewtond 11', OitfM;f 17 ..... Jerwy tCll, IHttle '2 WesNfllltal\ na. 8uff4llo '°' ....... ,.._,,..., '*11 •• ... .... ~ llaterDeiHlgbScbool ....... ::.~ ..... t.Not1t1~c•w>:t.Seut11 (Santa Ana) continues i nrreftU.' 4 M1r.°c.1t1· ,1 r~ "C1=~ t,..Tf:. ~~ to hold the No. 1 spot In Ti--.t o.b; ... ......, Hltk1 1: • ' • -·• th CI F i 1 4 A' 11 '"0 P Amet; 1 • e .. rre1111u fl4-t4); 4. S. ~ Cts-M); 7. e £ r S • C8urbl11tt1; t. LI JordlA; to. 0 --<11441. a. Stm1 vo1..., basketball coaches poll VMtur•. CIW.Ol; I. Oline C..,.11; 10. Sollll J.ADtvtllC* -•c• c1 .. 1-11. w i t b d e f e n d l n g 1• ~ion .. ~=; t. v .... ., cbampi~n Huntington c11r1111e11 11s.M1: a. A1c. '-•"'• Beach in the second ct .. 1-21; " MoM..c1o c14-s.21; s. spot Mlaal111 Viele C14<NI; 6, ~«Ilka ' 11>+o1: 1. "" WI'-oi.w>: 1. Results of tournament A1_,.. ::"'Ti ''"'"' •· ~. games at Cypress and ::r.;:w.:..:::...~~ v ... .., Garden Grove were not 1. IEI o..t~<*llPI:,. included in the balloting. c110111191 111..-: ... Nettw o.-Huntington Beach lost to 11t1-.ldt>; "s-. l'e;"....,. Minion Viejo by one !:.::.!:~~:\"=:•::~ point in overtime at _..._ Cypress . ~ , eas 1. R lgllettl; l. \hlland; :a. s.nte ; vi•; •. ltUlllclilulr; s. Loi AMl9ol: •. Los All•; 7, Hewtllome; L CW.. .,, Mer; t. Quartz Hiii; tO. $c!Wf'r. •A OIVlllON 1. Ale. lolnl; l. Brewtey; :a. Sent• Clore; <1. Le Cenede; S. ~City; 6. Cll1111111 llllllda; 7. 81nlte; I. Imper Ill; t. Ctlenl 10. lftll-.cl. 1-ADtVISION 1. Bltllop 01110; t . Ontorlo OlrlltleA; J. VMl91' CllritlllM; •· ..u,_..; S.2' ,.._:'" ~: 1. St • ._... .... ; .. ~; t. Sllermen I ndlM; 10. .. .,.,.. 0.IM , .. lwrat•>. • & ""111.. 4 SUPER SPORT SHOPS ..... ,_.. •.. .., __ _ lWEEIOflLY SPORT We can save you money and you can save Iii~ tool SALE~~ sKAnaoa..s Golf Putt Contest Free entry dally ttvu Mon. 9t Huntington Center Mall. Sink your putt and receive IUrPri• gift envetope wttt\ .: prlzee of •2 to t25. Beach Blvd. & Edinger at the San Diego Fwy. SPEE DO "JAWS" =.~~~~~ .. 19'1 SPEEDO WAlll UP TOPS SWIMSUITS =~~ ........ 13'1 .? WILSON JOHNNY MILLER STARTER GOLF SET 5 Irons 2 Wood1 . Reg. 89.25 ~7191 oi..c.. .......... Stripe1 Panela Pat...,,s FOR GALS 591 Reg. to 17.95 fANTAmCIUY st Right For Before After Swim SIU SOCKS Reg. 3.95 2•s Xtro long for high boots. 85% wool 15% nylon Bound for Ariz ona State These four Fountain Valley High football· standouts - (from left) quarterback Doug Thompson, tailback Willie Gittens and tackles Al Koenig and Bryan Caldwell, .. signed national letters of intent to attend Arizona State University Wednesday night. They're flanked by their dads, Bob, Bill, Al and John. Twenty·ftve perpetual trophies will be at stake when tbe Southern California Midwinter Re1atta geu under way Saturday. The world's largest wlnter saillne event will draw more tban 1,000 entries in about 121 classes, plus a sizeabl~ group of power boatl for the annual Midwinter Predicted Log race. ALL OP THE 16 yacht clubs hostlng the event will conclude the activi-ty Sunday, except the Los Angeles Yacht Club which will continu~ the racing Monday. LAYC handles the ocean rac- ing classes plus farge one-design keel~t.s. H ere is the lis t. of awards that will be up for grabs: Ben R, Meyer Trophy, ~»---tiers ._,,.an·na G;rls ;n F;nals CV Tennis g~~~'Ua1!a1s~:a.ci~)>h~: .A.'1.U!t lf.JJ ., ., ., Ocean Racing Class B; 'T' Don ~ Trophy, Ocean Tl.ed, 2-2 0/ C ~ i.ourney Ractngctassc. KENNETH E. Street 'Vp•nss ourney . Trophy, PHRF·A ; In Softball J J • c; . " SchedQled ~z;;~tF ~;~r J~orpohl'ci Golden West College, thtee-time national women 's s oftba ll champion, didn't win its 1978 season opener Thu r s d ay . But the Rustlers didn't lose 1t either. After lwtce rallying to ti e th e sco re, the Rustlers had to settle for a 2-Z deadlock with visit· ing Moorpark when the game wa s ca ll ed because of darkness after 10 innings. Kathy Rosenbery had a no·hltter going for fi ve innings before Moorpark ended the string with an RBI single in the sixth inning. Th e Rustlers the n went down to their final r egulation out before pin c h hitter Lori Rodman's single drove in Pam Knox with the lying run in the seventh: 1 After Moorpark scored in the top of the eiglith, Golden w.est tied it again on a wal~, two sacrifices and an error. Oe._.. WHt UI CJI "'--" Go•Cl•t: WUI -MtClurl•. lb. 4"0-0-0; A-. 1111. 1~1 I, Brlmon, cl, S·O·l ·O: Glllh1an, lb, S•0-0-0; Wln~l•PIKk, II, s.4-1-0; Nl<llOIS. P•'. 0.0-; v-. c, S-0-1-0. Er ... rt. 4-f.Q.O; Croft, lb, 441-0, ~ 11<, " ~. ic-. u. 4 1 1-0. Var ........ pr. 0·1·0·0 ; Rosenbery, P. 2·0·0·0; McHa11, ""· CHM>-0, ~noano, P. N-40. TOl•IS,._1 .. 1. $ate., 1 ... 1,... Moor!Mlrlt 000 001 010 0-2 S OolCIWil 000 000 110 0-1 I Women's Tennis Mission Viejo High tries to make it an all all· area ch ampionship final in the Cypress girls basketball tournament when the Diablos face Foothill ('fV.stin) High tonight (5) in semifinal action. Marina (Huntington Beach> High reached the finals by clipping the host team, 51-46, Thurs· day. The title game is set for 6:30 p.m. Satur- day. J eanette Weston scored 16 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead the Viking~ to hie victory. H.u.ntington Beach, b ehind a 27·point performance by Debra Burrows. down ed Wa rren (Downey > Thursday. 65-52, to reach S alurday afternoon'• (3) con-·solation flnals. Mission Viejo, meanwhile, was busy in South Coast League action, rolling by El Toro, 71 ·44, as Jean Hershberger and Jeanne Beauprey each scored 20 points. Vikes, Millikan 'Ile in Swimming ., W innin g the 400 freestyle relay, the final event of the afternoon, gave Marina <Hunt· ingtoo Beach) High a 71.77 tie with host-Long Buch Millikan in a DOD· league swimming meet T hursday. Weln enbvreer CMa) I U .J; J, Parker IMll l 01 6 JM IM"'.°'.'f"lper IMll t :".2; t. W111frn ~I 1 n • J II~ C-1 1 14.0. " st lrte-1 14-CMI) n.5; I S..W.e UIYI :U !, S. Oete119 IMO 14.7 .. fly.-4. Jtlter CW> SIA: l. llMler CN:ll I.&,; J. arllltr( tMll 1·01.:1. Ml ,,......., ~ IMll SU: 2 Mc.,Jllll «Mel tu; J. **" 4-WI ~L SOI Ir-I. JordM CMll 4:,,.S; I. Weh•e11•ur .. r lMal J: 14.t; J, Par11er CMO S.77 I. 100 becll-1. W\flfrey CMal 1;11.J; t lleMt:. UM!I I.OU, l. Co'lllll CMll I.OU. Ito ltre.,t-1. Moral>lto IM•1 t:ts S; t. ftUllN& CMU hlS.S; S. YM ~ll:IJO. _,,...,..~a:au. . ...,,,Mitty ,....cn•1m1 .............. . MllllM!I CllPI (ltl M.tftM van11y d · ·Adams Trophy, PHRF·C r.11u1• au *' •• Tw• Th. e th 1 r a n nu a 1 <for yachts racing out of El TorO-Uker4. v -.20 .... ~ c ap_i Strano Valley Little Ships Fleet or ~.:~· •. o.111s s. RlcltHauell 1. tennis toumam.ent will Long Beach). r.11u10" v1e1.-....-, .... 20. get un.der way Saturday Harry John March s.1mon 1•, a._., lQ. <:«rau •. at the Capistrano Rae-T r 0 p h y pH R F _A . IM"ll•ll 1, ltllirler 7, w.iu t. C'·ub d 1 ' H••111tne-.wu1an vi.io ""1•. quet ~ an a our area Charles Brown Trophy ·1..::"~!:*:.~r.1~ .. '· school courts with more PHRF-B· Harry Will~ ,._,..,., WHOllrd 1. hWMft •. than 100 men and 30 Trophy, PHRF-C. w.1a1 •. Et\d<Mlt '·~ 11. women competing in the pc c n er pet u al , Cost• ~ s. DletHf •. Ii e-d t r KrMlorlen "· Y•i<" a. K__., •. iv ay even · Pacific Cruising Class ; 0o,1et, lleedS.~s. Among the top_ men Lido Isle Yacht Club Htt~u'i'::!.!!"' competinc in the smgles Trophy, MORF; Coast u"i.era11,-u111•rit•1t•• J, E . play will be Mike Klarr, Rbodes Association =~51::,;._~ •· Smtu. •. Bob Wright, ~erry Trophy, Rhodes-33; Coro"• d•I M•r-Goett•• u . Ehlers and Denrus Of* Santa Monica Civic · :.:..!!:~·1~2• Kirt"°"" p~ltz. In the wom~n s Regatta Association Ha1111~,._,_ division, defending Trophy, PC (Pacific ~~ .. "111aw1 CM15M~ c h a mp ion Tin a Cla"'s) .-11c1~ot4.--mp M h'-·1.-• and p tCod ,. . 4, 1C1"' 2.c.in n. ur1M 10. OC uwu 8 Y MAX MILL Trophy ~ oa11a H111s-.11er "· ,. .. ,_" ·are the top two seeds. T . M · d 1 t' 13, H11uey t. Felcltr 12, Nlel:lla 4. l d b 1 0 n 1 i W n e r Ha1111--o.n.H1111u-1._ n . ou es com . Olympic Classes ••1MNC.1tM1v111.,._ petition. John Wayne Trophy winner of the es1•11c1-Fra11c., 4. Hym .. ·1. Tennis Club pro Jerry 01 i' cl with h TllOmPSOn '·,,_,,son 11. OOl\!9111 "· V Ling4 and Marriott yrnp c ass t e "'~~~~!. .. n. :g Robeyn Ray are lar~e~t 011mber or c... ,,...., Mt CMl .,.,._ P d d b. h · tb u C entries, Frank BQ.rzage 1rv1..-or-•. vwre" ~ see. e •C wa . Trophy Star· Midwinter • ~12 """"-L Irvine's Bob Wrights · 'cl ' · c ••• ,,,,...; v.11e11-...••1•uu '· d D · E t i nape ass Trophy ; """' '· wim-,,,..._.,.._. an ave as man n Geary·l8 SCYA Trophy; 11.o-H....,1t.c.t.r4. the No. 1 s pot. Rob Malibu Outrigger H••"~=~ ~a. Cunningham and Dennis Trophy; 0-,1 :rs s-is Trout wlll also play Harry L Brittain Mar~.~~!.!:~~••• l. otogeth~. Trophy, Clas; A.predict· Nvti.r 11. ~a..-"· In muted doubles com · ed Jog· Junior Naples o.w'-...,._..~ ....... ._ petition, former world Sabot A Trophy· Senior "~--=:-: team tem1s star Betty Naples Sabot Trophy ; ....._._,.'611-0.11•-Ann Stum is teamed Harlan F "Hook" Hu..Clngt~.,.. 16. .. ..__ 2• ith Cunnin b hil • "•lml••• t, c.o., •. T___,. '· w . I ~m w e Beardsley Trophy. awr-sn.w_._ Van Lmge ii w1th Susan Lehman-12· Windsurfer "1111t~._.,._.1. Warfield. Trophy· 0Jim Tyler c.r-ur1 cmu.1__, Finl day action wlU Trophy, Lldo-14 Class A. c., .... -s,11111 s. o, ... '· also be at Dana HillJ =~..:.t••'-""''""" and San Clemente high u..i~rJ,ZJ1<•1ss.c.e s cbool1 along with 4 ..... a.1 m>•"-Marco Forster and ,.~~::.!i.s51:~;.:y~··. Cahpll~anwo ele"?ent•1ry Mlstl• ~' 1. s.oaa sc oo.... omen s p ay •. c.1. 11, t.Mtilll "· ,.....,_ 2. ia at 12:30 wltb doubles "•=-::·::r:.':'.2~ at 2 and 3:30 and mixed Your Boat . Radio NOt Marina coach Topper Horack had put his best sprinte r. freshman Cb,ris .Rehak, on the t eam's second r elay team in a bid for a 1-2 finish that would give t.be Vikings a narrow victo ry. But Rehak . starting the final leg two body lengths behind, was nipped by inches at the finish line. ·Rustlers l..e9W• Rat1truon s. T..ncw 10. doubles at s. ~ ~:'. ~ O.Or•ll 4• Jo"""" '· Admission ls free all ACB Unit Carl Morabito a nd H SMC Jerry WUlfrey gave the 08t Vikings key victories/ late in t.be meet to avoid Gotdeo Wett Cellege a defeaL Morabito won bids ror a berth in the the last individual race. Southern California the 100 breastatrolce Conference basketball after Wlnfte)' won the playoffs ton11bt when previous event. the 100 tbe Rustlers host Santa backstroke. MOilica College a1 7:30 l ID elrcuit play. Marina bad w:on on Y GWC has a 4.7 SoCal c .. ,. Mau-t..u• •· .,.-, '· f i v ~ · d a y a o f t b e 9-t• 4, L.ewtsi o.11 7• ~ tournament with free WASHINGTON (AP) 1 Ha11~-..u-u. park.lo& QeJCt to the club. -When you part a =:-c=:.=._~ The Gapla~AllO Racquet pleasure boat Jn the 2 ttodlr " ...._ 1. Sta ..... s i. Club la located on the driveway you no longer n...s a. ..,...... s. -v .... sc , east aide or the San can use the maritime Tr~ •• ~•t F.,••K •· o..oe .; Die&o ~ay at the radio on Jt .to com-.,...,_a.o.et. ~ SanJuanCreekex.it.one munlcate w1tb your "~'=c.::;:,..!!;. mile south ot town. nautical good buddies. h-•• , ••• t. ...._, "· For f u r t be r In -t h e F e d e r a 1 51111,._ 11• ~ "'.l.elllf .... •: formation. call 493-7676 Co m mun i cations c.-2 . .._l.fleidt. c . . 'd Ha1tt1~•11. or 831-2523. ommwaoo sai • one prior indivtdual mark and a rutb place College Basketball ... ..-.",a111••1t:" race, tbe 100 buttetfly, all'bdlnl with tu1111bt's _ ----- ic-111 cs1 .=-: ..... ..,..,, ... : where Frallk Jett-er tilt Wt'aJ)Ptng up the reg.' hlT ,...,.,,.,......._St• ._.,.,, cs1 1111t •• Lvlko ....... ,; turned in a 57 6 ~g l 1 n If the ~.._. ClDftne'9CSl1est1o,.....,11e11 .. 1,M1 ff t The 'ln~ .. -won u ar 1ea o • o..r..-...0.c.11.~• s1111tto11-.wTn111H LHlnsat "' • .._ w. ,.., '4: e or · • -.....~ Bullen of eoach Diet ...,.,,.,._St. .....,...11 wtct11i. s. ~ TIAu ~IT --·-...................... . SWl~MING I GIRLS SPORTS I BOATING ... By ALMON LOCKABEY A computer gag which bu been around for a .. while relates the story ot the mall wbo paid bis • • utlllty bill on Ume but kept getUna overdue duns : : from the company -and finally a threatenln1 · letter, despite the tact that the customer had in· sisted in repeated correspondence tbat he had p-1~ hls bill -only to be Informed by the credit . manager that the computer 1nd1cated otherwise. In desperation, tbe irate customer wrote a ~ letter to the computer, inslsUni be paid his bW oo time. The computer alle&edlY wrote back: 11You know you paid your bill and I know you ' paid your bill, but those &UY" who feed me in- formation -they don't know it." AND SO IT WENT at the end of the San Diego to Manzanillo yacM race. After all of the 36 yachts bad tiniJhed, the race committee fed ratings, handicaps elapsed times and time allowances into the computer and came up with "official results." But wh-:n some of the skippers and crews u.w •• the Hat, they also saw red. They knew when and ~ ahead of whom they had finished -who had to ~ give them time -and whom they gave Ume to. · <Never mind the preposition endinc sentence. . Reporters are not perfect either.) So what happened? The harried race com- mittee fo<.tnd they bad fed the wrong information to : the computer, in some cases. So back to the com· · .. puter. THE SECOND SET OF .. official results .. did " not change the overall correctA!d tlme winner. Mike Satt.erlee's custom, second·hand Ericson·35", Reisende, was still at the top of the list. . But the new results dropped Bill Chapman's · Cal-33 Bones V, San Francisco Yacht Club from second to third, and moved Hugh Rogers' . Yan~ee·38 Whimsey Tres, Los Angeles Yacht , 1 Club, up to second. The new Lnformation cranked into the com· puter also came up with some changes in the class trophy winners. Here is the latest "official re- sults" -at least. these are the ones who received trophies at the Wednesday night cocktail party at the Las Hadas Hotel race headquarters: · OVERALL -l, REISENDE: 2, Whimsey Tres; 3, BOnes V; 4, Audacious. Mike Kennedy, Dana Point Yacht Club; S, Merlin, Bill Lee, Santa Cruz Yacht Club. CLASS A ,;-1, Merlin; 2, Drifter, Harry ~ Moloshco, Long· Beach Yacht Club; 3, Fantasia <Etchells-45) James Gleason, San Diego Yacht Club; 4, Tribute (Columbia·52) Conrad Banks, Long Beach Yacht Club. CLASS B -1. Mirage CC&C-40) Les Harlander, Richmond Yacht Club; 2, Mamie (Carter-2 ton) Mill Smith, California Yacht Club; 3, Regardless (Tartan-41) Robert Cole, St. Francis Yacht Club; 4, Mas Alegre (Standfast-40) Robert Welsh. San Die10 Yacht Club; 5 Saeta (Kiwi-40) Rogelio Partido, Manzanillo Yacht Club. CLAS5 C -1, Reisende; 2, Wbimset Tres: 3, Bones V; 4, Audacious; S, Tinsley Light (Mull-36) • Henry Grandin, St. Francis Yacht Club. ;_ ·~ V alef!tine Regatta Winners Revealed Fifty-four entries in eight classes turned out for the annpal Valentine Regatta co-sponsored by the Bahia Corinthian Yacht. Club and the Udo Isle Yacht Club. Trophy winners:1 LID0-14 A -1, Peter Mac.D.onald, NHYC; 2, Mary Tyler, BYC; 3, Roy W~y. LJYC. L!D().148 -1, Fred Toepel, BYC; 2, Brian Hencb.BYC. SNIPE-l , Brooks Benjamin, NHYC. LASER A -1, Mitch Madruga, SDYC; 2, Kevin Kirk, BYC; 3, Steve Otto, BCYC. LASER B -1, Jose Guthrie, WCYC; 2, Gary Moon, BCYC. SABOT A -l , Jon Pinckney, BCYC; 2, MaU Tingler, LIYC; 3, David Franco, LIYC. SABOT B -1, Blaine Griffith, BCYC. SABOT C -1, George Dashiell, UYC. Boating Safety <lasses Scheduled The Suntan.a Power 'uadron, a unit of the ~ United States Power Squadrons, has announced ~ three spring classes in boating safety to be given in Orange County. 'TllOm•-CSl•toONiocHs ..... the first event on· the Stricklin win they will =~':r' .... "'"" ... :,.-:"1111...,.'"'•':. An.-=• w ;oost..,,,.,....cs1def1Wna1 H. card.the20().medleyre• probably 'race LAL• Net,.Oel'nttS."'"91M!Yt NEUIUllMN'-\~11• "" o..t• lay. ~ Southwe,t m the opening =:=:-'~~ twT•llltltt~••rn The commission said it is rewriting its-rules to specify that shipboard radios m~ be used only when a boat is in the water or In repair drydock. A class at Placentia will st.art Feb. rr at 7 p.m. ~._a•.a lt'NCMt-at the El Dorado High School and will be held for .,.... 13 consecutive weeks. ~::'~~~~~,,:~~:: . v~ round of the conference v111-•t1,a.,__._.,. •r•-St1'.9r"'*"Youno1s l'•lrt!W'llllhtlllway. cs1 1ost to Po11..,.PrK11dt .. ,_ "4: • lllarlM m1 at• ... ....._ l ff c11apm.,. 7'-CM it c0omi..,., ~ ~~'!!-t.!!~~'1n•1~ Magnolia High School will be the location for a , u..1ontoot1r·S1ac• cs1 ctlf Ouboc~· 11M111iWc11ey11e1~1N11:.,.s. p ayo s. IOUTM H11111ts ....... " .... '-"" ---· "'" I j Anah Im t W•o•n•'"'·'"'·'"'· •tr..-1.Gardfl\<M1)1:s1.0;t. _A loSI( toni1ht could O•dl>emlltlon7t.~10 H1w111-H11e101.0leM1Nc1e11 ....,...._ caas n e SartlngTuesday,Feb.28,anda . -----..,...---=----------end GWC'a season. ~==-:....:,r·oT· =~~~::~rv~11964 ~~l\~~:"':s~l1"r:'::. olaa.sinFW.lertonwlllbegivenatt.heLaderaVista• Santa Mclllca baa a 3·'1 v •. C•m-w .. u" ••· UNC• C>Aeen8', ., ...,., ...... _1t_ wt11 I,,,,,..~_... Juruor Hieb School starting Wednesday, March L -"'_,,,th .J..-lo Clllt.-W7S OJ..-lt~c.::111•.. .. ... Tiit .._ """"" ..... Wiii • ' reco"' "'' one _.._a wu111.....,,.~.,.-......,,. '°"1Md11, ._.,.n "'"· The cl.asses are dealgned to help both sail and • co ~.~':t. W est ~ .. -:;:;.gsu' =~~-::~u• B-, "'!:.':'Tl•• ~d; Z:!':!=·a~~~e ~~df~!!~~:i~: ..,.__i!m---...... b.~~55mdwedt ... ~ Cors0 ... ~~.· ==~ONo"" ._.., =':,~_.:i~, .. Slcoftd111t1t 1:no.m. a.s and common emer&encles, rules ot the road, aids • -Wl9 -u.au Mkllltilll ... wi-i..• S-JeteM. ... uc:1111ta.._• •TU•DAv to navfcation, compass and chart familiarization. roun : ~ .,...... ,,. ,.._... • .., '1f l'lrtt ,_ 12:01 ...... ~', • run.ning l,igbta and ~uJpment., boat trailering, in· ..:.::.:;:;;~~:;;..:~;;.:;;.:::;..;;~.:;.:;,~~~~::.;;;=:,;;~~~..;;;.;;.;.~~~--~----~·r:, ;;:;:: .:.·; · land boaQiig, calculation of time. speed and dis- IKOftll llllllt 1:pp.ll\; u ,,·t.ance, and instruction in course plottin&. su•~...... u · ~ A cwtlficate ol completJoo is awarded to those · •:l4 .. ,,,,. ~ who pass a final examination. The course is free. ~~ :;~:~ a:: Classes are taught by expert skippers from the -14M••-•:•a.m..•S:»o.M. U.S. Power Squadrons who volunteer their time • ! MM11fl•t11?0.111.; ... 2:••·'"· and akll.lS. • • • I I PUBUC NOTICE' l'ICTIT10US •USINISS NAMa STATaMaNT Th• follcn-1111 IM"Olll ._,.. ctolng b<lllllHI .. P.J, ELl!CTIUC, '421 Neotelll ----------Ori .... , HunllnQlon 8Ndt, CA.-. .PUBUC NOTICE Jemtt B. S.h1m, "'" NeolMI , 0.1"9" H\.ftlnQlon ~.CA. '2646 -----------1 Peter At•11 Glov•11I, 21041 SUP••IOM coun OIO TM• STAT• Ol'CALll"O•NIA 1'0111 THIE COUNTY 01' OUNOIE _......,, NOTICI! 01' HEA•tNG 01' PETITION ~Ill l'lllOaAJt 01' WIU. ANO Ll!TTllllS TllTAM .. eTAlllY, f'Ofll AUTHOlllZATION TO AO· MltllSTElll UNOllll THC INOllPENOENT AOMINllTlllATION 01' IESTATIIS ACJ. Ettet e o f JOSEPHI N E Chube1<0, Munt11>9ton aucll, CA. n._ Thh bu•lnff• Is concluc\11d br • 11""8••1 PMtnenhl ... ~Glov_,I Tftll S~ WM 1111111 with UM Cov11ty Clerk 01 OrM(le c.untr on Febr~ry 6, tm. KATHERIHEHALL,l>Ke•..O -----------1 NOTICE IS MEREIY GIVEN th41 GARY KEH06 HALL NI~ llled -•111 PUBLIC NOTICE • petition lot Probete of Wiii •nd Is-----------1 wMke of L.e1 .... t"twnent1ry 111 IOlhe l'ICTIT10US •UllNIEU Pfllll-r -for euthorlzallon lo.,,_ NAME STATllMINT mll\lsttr under the lnde,,...dent eel· Tiie loll....,1"9 PWIOtl Is dalno busl- mln1streUon of E•t•IH Act, reteren(• neu at: townlclll•m-lorfurtherpertlcul•n, N.N.E. NATIONAL NOZZLE and !bot ti-. lime end pike of i..orinQ l!XCHANGE OF CALIFORNIA, 11.15 n.. tame ll01 t>Mn Ht tor Feb<u•ry 21, Wllltller Avenue, F2, Colla MHA, 1911, •I 10 co a m,, In the courtroom 0,. C.lllornl• n.21 Deptrtm..,t No. I of Hid court, 1t NO Jeen·Clallde l11fe11te, 91t •· C\vlt Ctnler Orlw WHt, In the City or Balboa, NewP«t a..cb, C.lllornle !>dnl• Ano, C.1ttorn1• '*' D•l•d February 2, 1'18 T1111 buSlnes& Is eoftdlKl.o br ... In· WILLIAM E SI JOHN, dlvfduel. County Clerk JH1>-0-lnf.,le DOUOLASL. 14AMILTOH Thll SIAIWNnt wes tli.d wlth the 11411 lrvl,,.al.,.,, .... teN Countr Clerk of Orllfl99 County Oii '"'""· c:.11 ....... ·-J ...... ,, JO, 1'78 AttorneJ lw .,_.111..,.,. ""tit Publlshect 0r.,. eo.u oe11r Pllo«. Publlahed Or-CO.St o.lly Piiot, Febrvary U, lt,1!1, tt71 1'.WU.ry l, IO, 17, 14, lt1a -.11 i----------~-" PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTtTIOUS au11N•H NAMI STATl ... NT PUBLIC NOTICE ... _ l'NM2 Publl•1*1 Or-C:O.st Delly Pilot, Publl•hed Or-COA" Dally Pllol Feb. 17, 14, Mer'chJ, 10. "" Jan. 27, Feb. J, 10. 11. 1'11 ' •zs.111 111 71 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICT1'10US aUSINISS l'ICTITIOUS IU$1NHS NAMll STAT•M«MT NAM• STATIMIENT TM fot-.it __.. Is dDin9 bull- Tlie lollow1109 -'°"' are dolne llffli as: bu•lnH> •• PREFERRED LIGMTIHG ANO N E WPORT ARCtHTECTURAL REPAIR COMPANY, U400 Los AIM ASSOCIATES. 3'1l8 MUCU\ ..... Street, F-1•1n v.11..,. Cellfornl• N••DO•t IHctt, CA.,,..,, n70I Loui e Wenctell Rylff, 3'131 WAiter A. BAIM, 15'°' Los Alm M.,cus AY9., -119'1 IM«lt, CA StrHt, F-••n Vall..,, c.llfo<Na "1 .. S n7'1 ~nor• CerOI fl'flff, Jtl)8 MArcu• Thi> --•Is~ .,.,. ... 11>- A.,. , Nt-1 llekll. CA 82 .. J di•l-1 Tnl• 1>U11ne11 1> conducted by • Well« A. llaleS 9',,.••I pertNt'\1\10 Tiiis sltt-•• 111911 willt h LOUlew.ndell RylH County Cl-of Or-C:-y OI\ ~· C.rot "'""' ,.,.,.,.,JO, 1'11. Tnlt >talement WH ftl.O with tM _,11 (OlllllY Clerk Of Or•noe Countr 011 Publl•-Orat199 c.DHI Dally Pile!, 1-•bf.,.ry 15, 1'11. F..W..arr >.IO, 17, J4,"" ,. ... , Pllbih hed Or~ C:O.>t Detty PllOt, 1--·--------- •lllOuy 17, 14, -Moren l, 10. tt71 611·11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Mab Alft1. N.wpon·~ lormer aceount- tng otftce mpqer for C........,_ <:.;, he., bu been appOibted personnel muaier. He 11 reaPoQllble fol' ~· :.tu.neuou. • Before jolnl.Qg the compau .bi•June·lt7t; be was ion.tor etaff aud.ltbr for Oout 1"ecMtal Savmp and a rHearch asalltant for A.tthut Shaw and C.· pany, an economic research firm, Enc:luo, .California. • GeGqe R. JUHD, Newport e.ach, hes beell named director ot fil-1lt operaUoaa ln tho fll~t and laboratory testlq department -tbe O.atu Aircraft Co.. a divlalon ot MeDoaMU Douclaa Corp. He succeeds CUffml L. se.. .-~ after serviQg as dlrector-IUMbt ~atlclftl 11nc:e 1970. Stout joined McDo~ell 1)oullu u a test pilot in 1856 and wu pilot ol ~ DC·lO cm lta maiden Olgbt in 1971. * .Joba Karpan bas beell appointed salea manaeer fOI' the Oranie County diriskia cl ae.-. ly llllla Tn.uler It S&ora.se Co. He 11 vice preat. dent of the Newport Irvine Prdesslooal Aasoda- tion and ts a member of the Newport Irvine Rotary Club, die Greater Irvine Industrial Leape ancl the Citrus Belt Traffic Club. • Rod V. Grlmmoa bas been named manager of purchuine for Westera Dflltal Coip., Newport Beach. He has held positions with General Dynamics and LlltoQ and lllOSt recently waa vice preai4ent, material, at Poly Optics, Santa Ana. • Dr. Earl .Jacobs bas been named vice presi- dent and aeneral manaeer ol the industrial pro- ducts division of Compater Aa&omaUoa, he., Irvine. Jacobs, elected to the new post by the com- pany's directors, bad been &eneral manaler of the division since late 1975. • Eocom Corp., Irvine, bas awarded Its technical achievement award to two employees in recognlUon of individuals who have made a special contribution to the company. The awards were presented to Graat W. Scblelser, manufacturing manqer, and Normaa L. McGowan, mechanical deslp manater. Schlelger received the award for bis coatribu· tion to the design, development and fabrication ol the Laserlte l33C plat.emater l)'ltem for com- mercial application . .McGowan received the award for his contribution to the design, development and fabrication of the La.serite lOOE for use with ELFASOL U plates. * Patricia M. Cochran, account executive for The Mechanical Artist, Newport Beach, and Orange County free-lance writer, has been named Orange County regional correspondent for Ad· vertlslng Age, a national publication that covers advertising and marketing news. • * The Newport ~nter AuoclaU.. bas eleeted the following officers for 1978; president, Tllo•aa Sutley of Pacific Mututal IJfe lnaurance; vice presidents, Tbomu Casey, First American Trust Company, and Larry Ba.rn.U, Barrett Property Services ; secretary, Roa &ollrer, Glendale Federal Savlncs, and trea.sW'ft", Tllomu Y....ta, Crocker National Bank. Otfler directors include: EarllM Loop. Avco Financial Services; Oeer1e Bl11ell, Bisaell/August/A.ssociates; ADea 0. CoWe, M.D., Robert Warreta. the Irvine Co.; Mnrlee DeWald, Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.; Jab S&elabnlae. Steinbrugge-& Thomu, Inc.; T•••Y Cea, Fashion Island Merchants A.ssodaUoo, and Daa Bogen. Newport Harbor Chamber ot Commerce. * Qarles A. lln.rdoa, Newport Beach. bu been promoted to credit officer in 8enrt'7 Padlk Beak's credit services department. He was formerly specia.llat ln that department. Arncord to Pay Cash Dividend l'ot Donny Oamood; 'lt. wu a 21·foot wall deallned u a piano ic.yboa.rd. 'lbe black keys are cabinets and the white keys doors to other rooms. Marie Os~ond'a wall hu 25 feet of broozed mlrron, some ~ wblcb opop into dlutn1 ~nd clwJalnc room•. TJIB CVSTOMQ&D walls in the OsmoOds' $& miWoa rtooed-1.oe •tudlo In <>rem, Vt.ate, ~e tbe •ork Of Les Youn1. • do-alJ.Dtr-cleCorator·bUllder whole inctlvlduallaed interiors craeo banks and boardroom• .throtltboot the We1t. Youns'• primary buaineu la creatlnl corporate lnterion that convey a dealted lmpreuloo - atablllty and retROntlbillty for a banker, tasteful luxury for a succeastul performer, understat- ed eleeance for the chairman cl tbe board. "The most Important thing is for me to understand tho penoo I'm dOiQg the Job for and what be wants the job to do," aays the 47-year·old preatdent of Les Youni le Aaaoclat.es. 0 LBT'8 SAY rrs a land sales company. Well, you want the of. lice to make an Investor feel, WANTED INSIDE TREE NBBankerRarH••• 'Gee, I'm lucky tb1s euy ia Coins to take my money.'" . Young, who employs 60 craftsmen on a four-acre plant in Soui.b Los .Angeles1 controls every JJbaae of the C1ecoraUng process. Hls company designs an lnt.erlor, &hen manufactures, DAILY PILOT ~;. . :· delivers and 1Dalntah11 tlat! furniture, -draperJe1. wall •: coratloa and J>Jantll that IO ital• tide. • "I take tbe tbemo hom ·.tW ell ot," says YOUDI. ''bu\ lftelJ that all be b• to l\(pply 1s u.c: workl!rs. We even dedde •-.! tho electJ1cal outleta 10.'' .. ·~;$ .. CLIENT8 INSIST ON b~ their own way OQ eomo ~ For American State But 1;f! Newport Beacb, Youn& c~ a pol11bed 1ranite counter. encircling several tellen ancl a:· live tne. Pr91dent Ra, llaal:. ordered remote-controllect.· draperies for bil ottlce. .. Some cl YOWll'• other m..:: to· order I urnltu.re includes a but• llaas cooterence table with; exotic llab awimmlnl inside, an• 80·foot square deak that cost $%8,000 ed, •gain tor the Oamonds, a conference table aeatlng50. · Les Youns & Associates. start-· ed 22 yean a10 with $500, aroe•ed around $3 mllllon last: year with such clients as Dart .. lnduatrles, Dayltn and Home Feder'1 Savine• & Loan. . The company ls eying over\ aeu conU-acts and recently de-· stgned a luxurious mockup of ... flee for a $2 billlon airport com-• pl ex Lockheed Corp. is building• in Iran. House Paael C'lai- Schemes Muddle Credit: WASHINGTON (AP) -MllDY banks that issue credit cards are levying new fiDanee charges but few consumers can wade throueh the leeal11Uc lanauqe that tells them they're paying hicher rates, the staff of a House panel sa.ya. The banks are devisinl "new schemes to reap more revenue from credit card uaen," the staff of the House banking sub- UWI ....... lleptftN!llt•Che Nancy Seaver and her husband, Cincinnati Reds Pitcher Tom Seaver, have signed a $250,000 two-year contract to represent Alcan Building ?rOOucts in print, radio and television advertis- ing. ' ' ~ ( CONSUMER ) . the cbarce went uneommented · on •by all b1I customers except the attorneys of those "'bo paid' in full each month," ltaaid. Tbe memo says banb bav~ "cban~ed the rules of the game· after booking consumers into the credit' card service." committee on consumen said in a memo to Chairman Frank An· nuncio, D-111. A copy of the memo was obtained by The >Js.. soclated Press. THE MEMO CITED this section of one dlscloaure statement as an example of the confu.alng language eonsumers sometime$ confront: .. The Finance Charge at pertodlc rate for purchases is computed by (1) multiplying each portion of the purchases finance charge balance shown on the face of the statement by the number of days in bUling cycle. (2) applying to the result- ing products the applicable daily periodic rate of .04109 percent, (3) adding these products together." Wbat ihat means, in simple English, is that the 15 percent. finance charge is based on the purchaser's avera1e daily balance starting from the day he makes the purchase. -'NUMEROUS PIECES of evidence are now available that indicate that bankers have not onJy purpoaely begun uaint methods which would be difficult to understand, but they have takm pride in designing diado~nve 'statements that will confuse," tbe staff memo aald. ''Thia Clffke bu a tape cl a banker announcing to other bankers that bis atatement of THE SUBCOMMITTEE staff memo aald the new charge&• began more than 18 months ago- when the gt.ant Citibank of New York started levying a 50-eeDt charge on Master Charge bills o( those who pay their monthly bills in full. The extra charge,. which was clear to everyone paying it, wai dropped early this year because of consumer re-siatence. A new, more subtle de- velopment involves banb com· putlna the rmance charge from the time of purchase rather than after the customary 25-day grace period, the memo said. This cb.ar&e is obvious only to the minority cl credit card users who pay their bills in tun. The majority. accustomed to paying finance charges, is less likely to notice the new -and more ex· pensive-way of computing this char1e. BILL MORONEY. a spokesman for the American Bankers Association, said that any confusing language results from the Truth-in-Lending Act and government regulations that enforce it. "We are supporting a. · bill bl the Senate to dwlge the law. we•d love to see the . language simplified." be said. (See CllEDIT. Pace.., ·. Security Pacific Bank presents a "Financial Management Series· for the Siclll Business~ Location lnloe, Newport~ a.an. Del Mlir Hiab School 2101 Eastbluff Or. Loo&_a.cb Sccurtcy l'ldflc Bmk 102 Plne Ave. Suda A. (twolCSlloro) Security Pacific: &nlc 890 N. Mtin St. Dates Tuadr,it Feb. 28-Mar 2 ~,, Mal-M.73 .. ... . . . i • . t I I " ~ c '· ' ' ' ~ ~ • • . "' 8ylCLESLOH Af> .... IMCPi 0 .... CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas - Goln1 oo 27 yeara Gene Looper bu been an the Job, never ~ sertlnt lt1s post. Now. aft.er all those tatthtul years, bis post has deaerted him. Dogged RepQrter Hangs Jn Ther.e Daily Gene Looper is the man-on- tbe-street interviewer on the radio. EVERY MORNING during the quarter hour before noon. 1tlx dll)"I a week, be shows up on a downtown sidewalk, microphone in band, asldng pa,aers})y their opinions on current topics. He has done this over a span of time ranging from: 0 Sbould General Eisenhower return fl'om Europe and run for pre- sident?'' (14 yes, four no, two no opinion) down to: ••should the Senate ratlry the Panama Canal treaties?" (four no). Gene Looper la nothing it not Joyal to hla task. Counting this mol'ning's broadcast, he bas been out on that sidewalk 7,867 times. The irony ls that while Looper is still downtown, downtown isn't . a lusterless landscape of empty builclinp. ln the block where Looper does his broadcast, all but one storefront is boarded up. Alas poor Looper, tbe man-ln- the-street bas become as rare a species downtown as the whoop- ing cranes that winter nearby. "I used to have people lined up to get on the air," Looper said wistfully ... Now I'm lucky if I can snag three or four. l've had to mue do with ... few as two. It's sad, really. to watch downtown just die." SAD, AND A shame, because Corpus Christi at.ill is a aparkl· ing, br~areesed city, a city festooned with spires and palms and beaches washed by ~yal blue waters. Like other cities Its 9ile a c ross the nation, thou1h, downtown yielded inexorably to the big shopping malls that are out where -the people and the parking spaces are. "l' d like to move out to a abopplng mall DtYSelf:• Looper said. "It's been talked about, DOWNTOWN HAS moved to hut 80 far the station has been the suburbs. What used to be--1eluctant.. It would be sort ~ downtown in the Sparkling City admitting that downtown is . ~----'l'VE HAD TO MAKE DO WITH AS FEW AS TWO' Gene Looper Looks for Interview Six Daya • Week by the Sea, as the postcards dead. You've cot to admit it call Corpus Christt. bas become sooner or later." Teader Prodlld• tM Same DEAR PAT: I have a recipe for summer -;ausage that I'm eager to make, but I can't find one or the ingredients. It's Morton's "Tender Quick." J'vc looked for it everywhere with no l~k. Can you locate it or a substitute? N .L., Newport Beach 1'1orton Salt Co. iold A VS that "Tender Quick" i& sold at only four places in Southern California. Fortunately, one of them -South Bay Butcller Supply -ls located ia HuntlngU>o Beach (5'12 Research Drive). The store's spokesman says ·'Tender Quick" ls very popular with homemade ;um mer sausage cooks, and they occasionally nan oot. la that case, ••Heller's Complete Cure" works iust as well. SEC Encourages Analytic Reports WASHINGTON (AP) -The Stturities and ~xchange Commission s ays it intends to •ncourage corporations to publish more forward· ooking and analytical reports to shareholders. Respooding to an SEC advisory panel, the ·ommisskln also agreed with a recommendation .o encourage publication or management ·orecasts, management plans and objective future .:apital structure and dividend pollc.ies. However, the commission indicated it favors J "safe harbor rule" to protect companies from liability if their forecasts turn out wrong. The SEC's division of corporate finance will 'lr epare recommendations to set up the new rules. The commission also promised to consider re- 1uiring corporations to make available copies of their disclosure statements to shareholders · without cb~ge. "Got a problem? Then write to Pal Dunn. P.o.t will cut red tape. getting the,aMWeT&and.action you Med to solve inequltiu in governmnt.a:nd bwmeu. Mail your questiona to P.o.t Duma, At YOUT Servi«. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P.O. Boz: 1560, Costa Meia, CA 92626 • ..U many letten.aa posabl.e wiU be.trMtDettd. but <phoned tnquit'W• or ldten no( mctudbtg Ute reader's full uamc. oddreu. and buiMu hours• phone number cannot be coii&idered. This column appear1dai- ly ez:cept Saturdays." · ·SUJdd .. s.,.,, s..,p11ed DEAR PAT: I received four pairs of Mojud hosiery for Christmas from a friend in Illinoi.s. The shade is too dark for California, and rather than send them back to Illinois, I would prefer to ex- change them here. The problem is that I can't find any store willing to make the exchange. ·I've c hecked both department stores and hosiery specialty s hops. What do you suggest? B.T., Costa Mesa Mojud Hosiery Dlvlalon of Kayaer-•oU. Hosiery Co. lD Loa Angeles llYI yoar bell& bet la to write to MoJud beaclqaanen 8DCI reqaes& a Mllde exchange that cu be •udled b)' mall. AddNA your letier to: MoJad. Qaallty Ccmtrol, 1Dl SbUt Ave., New York. N.Y. ltl'ZL Be sure to IDdllde Ute style Ramber. abe aad abade of dae g1lt lloGerJ you wish to excbaJaae. · ~ DEAR PAT: I understand changes have taken place in· benefit amounts paid ander the disability insurance· program. What are the new btaefita. and is an increase or a decrease involved? H.P •• Costa Mesa Due to leglalatlve cbuges. tM Baplc;•a& Development Depanmeat repGIU tlaat weeklJ' beaem amoata wlll be pea&er. hr dluMJltlea -be11Dnmc oa or an.er Jn. i. 1111. u.e aumam beaeft& paJable oder Ute em....,_.flaueed pn>- gram baa lacreued from Sllt a weS to u •Hl9 as $14' a week to Ulo9e paylq tbe ~ pre. mlams (persons earalDg SS,SZS or more per qaarttt). The mbdmam beMftU bYe blcreued from SZ5 &o Sit a week. Wbrbr eoldl'llMdilU re-· malJl at t percent of ea.nlap 1IP to w.-uc~ yeaT. Bowe•tu-. empl_oyor• OT HU·employed peraoM wbo ~t coftl'aie wlll be &an4 a& 1.7Z pettellt dmtu 1'7L Continental Mark l'-CAPITOLIZE WITH CAPITOL • THE MARK OF SUCCESS. More. people Qyy this luxu.ry car; more people lease this luxacy car~ than any comparable American luxury car in Galifornia M>aay! YA'Yf~the leader~ )'OU can drtwt lt~Wl'lethef'~ t>uv« ._the meanifleent Continental Merk v, you wm ~the~ of c:trMng one of the most IU008SSful luxury an buOt In~ Trad1tlenaltY. ea evidence Of thtlr ovetwhelmfng ooouWttY. out~ ratum8d mol1t of their otfglnel etlcker l)ftce thls'l ,Cldlllao Hel'9 In the Goklen State, the Continental Marlt v ti the undisputed ~In "8 field of~ penonal llD<urycera. BaMd on R. L ~ reatttmlon d9t-. mote ~ft>mlanS buy Md lelte ttle ConHnentet Meltc'Vth1n ottw oomonbklAmerican tuxury '*"There ere good"""'"' f« MJCh P<>OUllrit'Y.: NcMhere wt11 they be~ obYkU U. dlJrlnQ a~ felt~ II"' Wheel of a Mar1<V. Let UI ..,.ange It for you at your ..tMilt oorNenlence. c:APITClllATIIW MEANS TO .caMRT rNIHl TO OOH' "'°" -••.00010"50.090--. Mt! --·-°'~· ....... °'-. .. LOAN......,. to "°"' ....................... ........, __ GD ~pitol· Home Loan o..•c:. .. .._ . U.,-..... llrlili Cilll _____ ,_,.,....., .......... "" ....... W.'d .. Rd/ Ike ID help MEANWHILE. GEm: Looper has become a past masta' at filling whaf the radio people call dead air. Waiting for somebody to wander by on the deserted street, be tells hls listeners wh a t the w~ather is like downtown.. He tells them what the responses were to last week's question. He tells them what's oo at the movies. ••After so many years, you get the knack cl il" Looper gets nosta!ldc when be thinks ·about the Clays when dead a.irwas no problem. .. n' WAS A Uvely show. k had ( v· resulan who would come by all ~ UE'D•L" ~· the time. When the question ln· ·4l0. Ra:~ ' volved some hot local lasue . .. , people used to pull up to the curb and wave me over. ll was ahead ol Ume whet.her I'm ._.,.. never any trouble getting In& to have trouble wlth someone on the air." somebody, and 1 just avoid ••· Getting them off was another· I've onl) bad one bad word •lb> thing. He's had to contend with through and it was probably 11\Y more than a few drunks and, own fault. back when people walked the "I try to get the person to"- street.a, a few streetwalkers. lax, to foraet about t~e E•en 10, Looeer disdatns microphone. c those voice-delay devices most "Well. I got one fellow so~ talk-sbo• announcers use to taxed that when I asked ~ forestall cussing and such. .. question he said, 'Aw bleep, Gene, I jmt don't know.' It sounded so natural I don't UdJik anybody even bu.rd ll" ••1 THINK THEY take from the spootan.iety. I've done the show Iona enou&b that I can tell Anyhow, it beats dead air. ~REDIT CONFUSiON ••• , <CoailDaedFrom Pa1eB7) The staff memo quoted an estimate by an unnamed ac- countin& firm that the new method of computing finance charges could coat consumers $580 million a year ln extra cbar1es. The cbarCe '6wlll not only be costly to the eonaumer. but un- 1 es a a massive consumer edacatJoo campailn la ~iUD. the comumer will eo on paying thOle extra C(ISta without really understandblg why the bUJs are ereater," ltaaid. TB& SUBOOM1111TEE staff memo discussed bank credit cards and not travel and entertainment cards such as American Express and Diners Club. The trayel and ·entertainment cards rarely char1e interest beeauae they re- quire that all bills be paid in full. Tbe memo did not say bow many banks have adopted the aew method of computing finance cb.aues. but a aub-com mitt.ee source said that about half of the banks that is- Over The Counter MA5D U.tiags sue credit cards have made change. • Visa and Master Charge, ~ two lea,ding bank credit ed. are issu'ed through bank.a [! the country. The banks termlne the method of com ing finance charges. The memo 1ald the changes Sn finance charge metboda ubaYe not been clearly disdolecl to Gte consumer."' UGHTER SJ'EEL . EYED FOR C4BS BERKELEY <AP>-Aatunb. lightweight steel that coulcl re- duce automobile weigh~;:! fuel consumptJon has been veloped by California the University cl ~omialQ8. Gareth 'lbomu, a materiil science engineer 1Jh9 helped .... velop the new alloy at the • iveralty's Lawrence BerteJv Laboratory. uid tbe welgbtol• 3,000-pound automobile could be reduced by 400 pounds. ;. · ' I l/H DAil. Y PILOT D ·Some Special .· Roles Applied: Wklowl widowers and buds of bquaebotdl can take advant.io Ot 1peclal income tax rules. aaya Commu~ Clearlni Jlouae, national reportili& 1utbor1ty oo tu an4 bualneulaw. , . Wldowt « widowers can conUoue to pay the rates •l'- plyinc to joint reh1rn1 tor two 1eara after apwsq death. - lfBA.06 OP HOtJ8EROLD8 PAY ON A schedule ot rates that are approximately midway between those of an individual flUng a separate return and a married eoQJ>lt flllng a Jolot return. An wunarrled widow or widower wboee spouse died th 1975 or 1978 and who malntaJns a household •• the principal place of abode of a dependent chUd or 1tepcblld will be taxed on the 1m return at the same rates Imposed on a married couple m. log jointly, If at th• time of the spouae'a ( J death, the couple was ~~v TIPS entitled to file a JoltlL &AA return. '---------------------~ An lndividual ii a \ bead of household if be or sbe ls unmarried at tbe end of the year. l• not a 1urvlv· ing spouse and malntalna u bis home a household wblch ls the principal place of abode of (a) a child, lncludlna a st.epcbild, grandchild, foster cbUd or an adopted cblld, even though the child ls not a dependent; ot (b) aay other related person for whom the qualifying individual ia entitled to a deduction for an exemption, unless lhe de. ductloo arises from a multiple support arreement. He or she must also furniah more than half of the cost ol maintaining lhe household. AN UNMARRIED TAXPAYER IS ALSO A head Of household if he or she maintains for his or her molhe(, father or both, a household that is lhelr home even thou@ the taxpayer liv~ elsewhere. However, at least one of the parents must have less than $"150 gross lncome, and t~ taxpayer must bave contributed over half of that parent-. support. A mat!'ied individual who lives apart from his or her spouse during the entire tax year may qualify for head-of- housebold status l.f he or she: (1) files a separate income tax return, (2) maintalm a home for a dependent son, daughter stepson or stepdaughter for the lax year aod (3) furnbhes more than half ol the c°"t of malntainln& tbe household. Generally. a married individual is not' entitled to the head-of-household benefits. However, he or she can be a head of hou5ehold if married to a non·resident alien. An id- divjdual who is legally separated or divorc~ is not con· sidered as married. However, a person is considered married even though hls or her spouse dies during the year. Swck Rally Fails As Market Mixed NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market was mixed to- day after an early attempt at a rally faded. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up about 3 points in earlyLrad1n1, wudown0.60points to752.89. The average had fallen 2'.S2 points lD the five preced-ing sessions. Gainers maintained a small lead over losers among New York stock Excbange.llated iuues. Brokers traced the early upswing partly to Internal market forces. In particular, they noted short-covering by traders nailing down profits on borrowed stock sold earlier. Another evident plus was the Federal Reserve's report late Thursday of a smaller-than-expected increase In tbe basic measure of the money supply. The news tended to ease fears that the Fed would soon Ughten credit further. But continued weakness in the dollar in foretin ex- change helped keep the upturn from gatherinc much fon:e. Do.,loMnA1:1~r~• H-'l'Of-IAP) AMI Oow~aftf-..S ITOCICS 'i. Hlgl\ Low (1-0.0 » lod IS 7ff .. ,.._,. ~ 0..0 JO Tr11 JO 205.H IOI.ft + 0.lf IS Utl IOU$ 16'.• IO?.• r-UIJ ~ s1-JM. 12 M." 2uos 261.*-om !fr~ ::::::::::::::: ·:.: ·.: ·: 11:~ ;;: Utlts ...................... 1M,1CO '5 Slit ..... ................ 2.l00,1111 Whal Slork• Did NEW Y<>fll( (AP) IALes' Nl!W YOltK <API ..f>IV SIOClt w tn ~ fl!IM • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • .. 11.500,000 Prwlov• .., ........ •.•• .••.• 21.J10,ooo W.11 -00 ....... ... • .. .. • .. • • • ltAI0,000 #lefltll ..., • .. • •• .. .. . • • • • • .. • • '.-.ooe "-.... • • •• • • • • .. • • • • • .. • .. • 11,otO,CllO TWo /"" 4llt ............. , .. ,Sil.OM Jlft .... ·~·............ '1$,AJO,ooe Hn~e .................. 1".UO.oot .. .,. .. .... ... .. .......... 1,G»,917.tl't -.-T AMH: 010 Haw Y°"K <Al"I t LONDON (AP) -Every~wo days, say Britlab press reports, B11 John Knight dom a track suit and races over tbe rueged Comlah hills of IOUtbwest En1Jand to visit hta neighbor, who ts also his eom· mon·law wife and the mother ol 11 of the 20 children in his extended houaeh~ld. · After a 48-bour vlllt with Clare, 37, the newspapers say, he jogs two miles back to his own rustle cottage to be with his 33-yur-<>ld Jegal wife, Carole, and their childrep. The ninth weigtied in at more than 12 pounds Sunday. THE -4.!·YEAR-OLD former civil servant supports his stair·step brood through ~tate welfare • payments totaling $250.51 a week, according to the reports. ••rm no scrounger .... London's Daily Mirror quoted Knight as saying. ''I'd cladly work if someone offered m e a job I'd like -like teaching, or lecturing on re· Jigious teaching," he reportedly said. His companion Clare, who has five children by an earlier mafl'laae and alx by Knl1ht. ls U· pectlne her l2t.b cbild in April. CLARE SAID THAT aince the newspaper articles began appear· Inc the famUy has beel) plaaued by Jet.ten from angry Britons who criticize their Ufestyle and means of financial support, the Daily Mirror reported. "We have no luxuries and the money covers the bare ea· aenUall," the bi1·aellln1 tabloid quoted her aa saying. Government welfare spokesman Keith Lockwood refused to dl4cuss individual cases, but noted that child-benefit payments equal about $3 per child per week and that there ls a range of other "dis· cretionary" benefits. THE bAILY MlllROlt quoted both of Knight's wives as sayln& they do not believe in con- traception and plan to have more children. "It's not that there are too many people in the world," added their husband. "It's the way things are shared out that's wrong." NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A husband does nclt legally have the sole say in hand.line a couple's property ,a state judge has ruled In declarlng. unconstitutional Louisiana's unique ''head and master" law. a survivor of the days of Spanish machismo. Tbe law. embedded Jn Louisiana's lecal code in the late 1700s, when Spain held a huge area. atates: "The husband is the head and master of the partnership or com· munity of gains. He admlniste.rs its eCfecta, dl:fcC:es of the revenue w they produce. and may alienate them by an onerous uue. without the consent and permission of his wife." NOT SO, SAID Civil District Judge Gerald Federoff in a ruling in a suit brought by Corpus Best Feet Fo""ardt Three members of the San Gorgonio High School's girls swimming team in San Bernardino float in the school pool with their legs draped over the deck. Sa Bernardino was enjoying its first sunn day after several successive rainstorms. Christi Parish Credit End of Outhouse "----------------------------Union against Selina PUBLIC AUCTION • . . . . . Martin and Lawrence Joseph Martin Jr. of ))~.,. PUBLIC ""~~~AUCTION Amnesia A Ruse? N~~00~times there Era for Army Post is utterly no justification . · • for the state t.o arbitrari- TO THE TSADE & PUBLIC REMOVED FROM SoUTH AFRICAN CUSTOMS NO. US1257 16 BALES HAND MADE ORIENTAL RUGS DENVER <AP) Relatives of a man hospitalized for amnesia say he bas pretended to lose his memory several times to get free room and board. ly grant to the husband LAWI'ON, Okla. <AP> -Fort Sill may soon the sole administr1ttlon lose the dubious distinction of being the ooly Army of properly l eg all y postinthenationwithoutbouses. The above shipment w,s ordered by Tehera House (PTY) LTD of JHB South Africa arrl Durban 11 /~/17 Via Good He>pe castle voya~~o. 81. Due to f1nanclal difficulties the shipment coul not clear Sooth African customs. The entlr. ship. ment was sent to Los Angeles on the Nedll Kingston for complete llqul~tlon to raise money to pay ~ Incurred. Note: This shlpme~a hand picked and contains ver,i fln. ca I varying qualities and .sizes. This Is a greet U.S. CUSTOMS STOPPED HANDMADE ORIENT AL CARPETS & RUGS shipment entry 1178-136671, 27 bales date of entry 12/1/77 stopped by U.S. Customs under secilotl 304.T.A. marl(lngs and RELEASED FOR SALE on 1/16/78. We will auction the aboYe shipment of fine woots & Siiks & others to recover vanous charges Incurred due to long delay in clearanoe. .AUCTIOH WILL TAD PLACE SUHD.AY FllaUAIY 19 .AT 2:00 P.M. HOUD.AYINH NotlTH IALUOOM 25205 LA PAZ ID. LAGUNA HIW, CAUF. ...0 CJl-ll Hl-114J Davi~ Drolet, 24, of •Hollywood, Fla., ap- peared at a Denver hospital sev~ral weeks ago where he claimed he did not remembe r anything since his dis· charge from the Army at Fort Dix, N.J., in 1972 . When Drolet's story received national at- tention this week his mother, Mrs. Bobby Hunter, was locat ed through a Florida newspaper. "He doesn't have amnesia," she said. owned in common, and in fact as often as not actually produced by the joint earnings of husband and wife," be said. MARTIN SIGNED a mortgage in 1974, over b is wife's protests, as collateral for a $5,000 loan be took out for his mother. Martin was then job- less and bis wife was the family breadwinner. Mrs. Martin, since divorced from Martin, was told by the loan company that her con- sent was not necessary to make the note legal. WHEN NO payments were made on the loan, ----------·the company moved to Call 842-5178. Put a t•Jr word• to work tor u. seize the home. When that move was blocked, the loan company sued the Martins. Orange County at th&-'·' ·saJuies··-the. ... Au tom9bil e! ANAt£IM CONVENTION CENTER ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF. -The biggest and best ever ORANGE COUNTY INTERNATIONAL AUTO SHOW opens TODAY Frid.ay, Feb. 17th. Anaheim Convention Center and runs through Mondny. ft'.b. 20th, Washington's B1nhday, a holiday for m~t people. New hours this year: 10:00 a.m. to IO·oo p.m., daily. This is the 14 th yur for the Orange County International Auto Sho~ .iReny innovations have been incorporated in trus year's show, however, • including a truly outstanding collection of Concours d'Elcgance cars, most of which arc award winners at other shows throughout the nation. Here arc some or the major exhibits: THE U.S.A. CARS r otd. the "better idea" people. have two new ~ntries 111 1hcir 1978 lineup -the fairmount and F1es1:i. Also foatured will be the Corrida, a special ~:\p.!rini.!ntal model which may be a tr~nd·setter in t he industry t,. the future. A ~ar that many people feel is destined to become d modern classic. Oldsmobile's Cutlass Supreme, will dr.:ss up the Oldsmobile display, and visitor's will get :a li>ok at the diesel entries in Oldsmobile's 1978 line ut' iull·slze luxury automobiles. C'henolet is coming forward with its new size, new style. and new models for 1978, which includes a thjnl·8COCratlon Monie Carlo. Topping Chevy'' •"-· hibil will be a Caprice Classic. Anuther GM entre.e Is the 1978 edition of Pon tac \.":If$. hiJ)ill~lltd by.Jhe new Ctan4 Pttx.,, a Juxurioui Bw1nt\'tllle. hot new fireblrda, a sporty Uttle Sun· lllrd. anJ tilt Phoc11bt U. Chr)·ster Corporation'• exhJbJt spaoe is the largest square foi>tage area ever taken by one exhibitor at the Or:1n~ County Auto Show. They will be !ea· turlna their 11ew Dod~ Omol and PJymouth's oe..., HarJzoo. . t THE IMPORTS Imported cars play a big part in Orange County\ Auto Show for 1978, one reason why the shqw 1s called an "International" auto show. Datsun wtll be showing its best alt-around Oat ~un. the new S l O. And, visitors 10 the Datsun u1~pla) will have an opportunity to have their portram made 1n 60 seconds by a computer. Known a1> Instant Image. the computer has bern stopping foot traffic at sho""s and conventions all over the country. Subaru is highlighting the BRAT. the fun-on· wheels' off·road car that is anticipated to capture the leisure·minded, rccrcatlon-ortt:nted people !'f Or3nge County. The Honda people are going all out in their e\h1bit plans and wiU be featuring six models. From the heart of Germany come'\ \\h:tt thcr term, the "ultimate drivinl machine." the 8\IW luxury sedan whkh achieved an impressive re.:ord 11() a race tr~clc. the Nurbur~ing. To)'Ota will havo a complete lineup ol all their imperts, as will Saab, Volkswqen, Porscftlt, Muda, AJfa Romeo, and Peuceot cars. RoUy·Royce, con- stdCled the worm's leader In luxury cars, will be . there. THE MOVfE CARS With lhe cooperation of'Ulc Mm ic World of C:a•:;. 0!1rlie ChapEn's RoUs·Royc~ will be displ:l)'cd ~t the Orat1f)C County Auto Show. And th~·rc·s 1111¥~: The Beatles' Bentley. and the -Pea~~ Rat ... a ~ar whlcb will dellgf1t Tho klds. both will be there. ,\l\1\, a rare Presidential parade cg, :i 1939 Packard -'·Joor conver,tible sedan with bullct·prool windo'' s. \\ill ~ 4isplaycd. That one was Franklin Dclann R,,oscwlt's favorite c:ar, a 1rue dassk. Ther1•s more. But )'Ou must come lo tho AnahC?i1u Conmitfoa Cenltr lo ue 1t all. Make a date. Pion to attend the Oran~ Count)' lntemationAl Auto Sh!JW Fe~nwy J7·20, JO 1.m. to 10 p.m. Sen. Henry Bellmon, R-Olda., announced that $17.3 million bas been included in a proposed. budget ol the Senate Budget Committee to replace the old facilities at the post with a new trainee barracks complex. Currently the 4,000 soldiers who undergo Fort Sill's 13·week artillery course are ·housed in barracks built in 1942 and designed to last five years. The l2S barracks have-no indoor latrines, and personal hygiene is attended to in 40 outbuildings scattered throughout the complex. Survey Ttillies De~ons portunlty to acquire oriental rugs. THE AUCTION WILL 1'AK£ PLACE SUNDAY,FEBAUARY19 AT1 P~ VIEW DAY OF AUCTION 12 PM NEWPOR1ER INN · 1107 JAMBOREE RD •• NEWPORT BEACH • AUCTIONEER R. ASHER --WASHINGTON CAP) -'Ibe nwnber ofl\on:ian Info: <213) 99s.«!2l Terms Catholic permanent deacon.t In the U.S. tot.ala Call Collect • CaSh. Check 2,387, accocding to an annual survey by a bishops' commiUee. CATALOGUES AVAILABLE AT AUCTION Permanent deacons, • role restored in tbe SPONSORED BY A • A. 01'1EHTAL RUGS rNC. church in 1967, may perform many llturlical .. 14141 VENTURA ILVO.. SHERl&f.H OAQ. CA. <futie. other tllan celebratial Holy Communion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ They can bapthe, officiate at marrt.aces and [ ) funerals and pl'eacb, amoq other thlnga. •ctine aa _ L:-IL BOYD ustst.ants to pariah priest&. INFORMS In the -1his broChUfe . -.i " could sme JOU a. stay ;.j in the hospital. -i (or keep your costs down if you do have to go.) Most people don't think about hospital costs until after the bill arrives. But lt9s when you're active and healthy that you can do the most to hold down rising costs. By staying well and tak- ing advantage of less costly services when you can. Leam more.In this FREEbrodlurefrom the ;.. Hospital Council of South em Calif om la. It con- tains practJcal lnfonnatlon you should.know before you have to go to the hospital. __________ Zip ___ _ Malito: Ho.pl\91 Counc:U of Southern C.llfomla 6255 Sunset Bouleverd, Suite 8t1 ; , ~: • . . . • • . Guarded by lions, air god Shu $holds up heavens in ivory head- , rest used by King Tut(above). Translucent unguent jar (below) in one piece of carved alabastor. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of-. Daltr l"llM Miff "For a moment, ttme.a3.a /actOT in hurrtan life ho! lo3t il3 meamng ... The very.air you breathe, un· changed through the centurie3, you $hare t.Oith tho3e who laid the mummy to re31 " Howard Carter. 1922 It is mystery and magic, a dreamworld. The rise of ancient Egypt is 6,000 years re· moved from the 20th century, so remote in time and distance as to seem unreal. FOR THE NEXT four months, that dream will become part of our reality in the Treasures of Tutankhamun on exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The 1.S million people lucky enough to have tickets will be treated to a di splay of SS of the more than 5,000 items found in the young king's tomb. It's dlCficult to put it all in perspective. Egypt, as an Independent nation existed for more than 4,000 years. It disappeared under conquest of Alexander the Great, before the time of Christ. When Tutankhamun, or Tut, came to his throne in the 18th dynasty, the great pyramids of Gizeh were already 1,800 years old . TUT, FOR ALL the treasures to be seen in the year·long U.S. tour, was a minor king. hasti - ly burled with a relatively small funeral board. It is imJ>()S3ible to view the 11le·sized mum· my mask. made of solid eold and the eold· covered statues and not be struck by the wealth -and power -they represent. Yet what is shown Is about one one· hundredth of the wealth found in the tomb, a tomb that by ancient Egyptian standards was poorly endowed. Even with the haste in which the IS.year· old monarch was buried, the pomp of office re- mains. It can be found in articles such as the llvinter .Festival .· .... . mummy's collar, a 2SO·piece gold and semi- precious gem neck ornament depicting the vulture goddess Nekhbet. symbol of Upper Egypt. The neck piece was meant to be worn by a prone object. It would collapse on It.self if sub- Jected lD the laws of gravity oo an upright figure. It makes an interesting contrast with other necklaces in the exhibit. The jewelry worn about the neck of the Jiving king was long in shape, meant to hang nearly as far down t.be back as the chesL THE BIGGER, better knDwn pieces in the exhibit -the golden mummy's mask and the 4-foot golden goddess Seikel -are so near to frozen perfection that it is with effort that they can be related lo the people who believed in them and m ade them. Look at the animals they -carved. There is a lot of life there, whether the beasts are chipped out of alabaster or cavort around the decor on a chest or chair. The tails twitch, tongues lap over teeth, they run from predators. The liveliness of the animals is in contrast to the 'stylized way in which the people and gods were represented. THE PHARAOH, believed to be the physical incarnation of a god, destined to join the confuslna host of Egyptian dieties after death, was usually given a stiff, formal represen· tatlon. In flat works, he appears with feet. leis and bead in profile and the rest of his body 1n a full front position, giving him a disjointed look. Yet in the three damensiooal carvings, the pharaoh and his servants come to lite, even granted the depictions omit real 11le defects because of the King's exalted rant. (Sff 'tBEASUaES, Page C3) :::· :~~; Jazz, Patriots' Parade, Mexican Art in Laguna . . ·::).estivals tn the Art Colony daily t.Ju:ough March 5 from 10 ·iaen't confined to the big sum-a.m. loSp.m. ·i:ner one synonymous-with the· A pancake breakfirst from 7:30 ' l p tofth M sters to 10:30 a .m. at the covered f9PU ar agean e a · library lot. 357 Glenneyre St., • The 15th Laauna Beach Wint.er kicks off Saturday's slate of ac-Festival, featuring art, poetry, tivlties. music, drama, dancing-and athletic events, opened today in Floats (135 are expected), \be spacious Festival· of Arts marching bands, clowns and grounds, 650 Laguna Canyon equestrian units will make up Road. Saturday's Patriots Day THE OUTDOOR show with 12S artiets displaying and de· :,nonstrating their work runs .. .· Parade. The procession with its "Service to Country" theme st.arts at 11 a.m. and awards will be presented at 1:30 p.m. at the Irvine Bowl on the festival il"IUnds. "M !!XICO·AR')' lnterna· tional,'' hi&hli&hting the work of lour major contemporary painters-Zapfe, Lameiras, Sanchez and Casas -Is a special feature of the festival. Carmen ~-Portillo, wife oC Mexico's president, and Roberto da Mandrid, governor of B~a California, will be at the festival g rounds at noon Sunday for formal ceremonies to open the exhlbit. The art of Mexican painter, Coronel, will be exhibited at the Laguna Beach Museum of Art, 307 Cliff Drive, throueh March 4 fn connection with the festival. BIG ~AMES in jazz will offer everything from blues to Latin, Vixtelancl, mainstream and con- temporary Jfuslon at th.e Forum Theater on the festival grounds. Bil Joe Turner, aclmowled&ed as orleinator of the "Blues Shout," wtll perform with tho Hollywood Fat.s band at 3 p.m. Sunday. Ttck.U are $S advance, $5.SO at t.ht dOOr. Tony RJzzl, 5 Guitars t>lus 4, wW present mainstream jau in the 5:30 p.m. Sunday concert. \ Rizzi. a resident of Huntington Harbour, is.a sa.xophonist. The Jazz Minors, seven Dix· leland musicians aged 16 through 20, also will perform at the 5:80 concert. Tickets are $5.50 advance, $6 at the door. SEA WIND, WIDCH does con· temporary fusion and Ss one of the moet popular music fl'OUP8 In the country, will come from HawaH to appear at 5 and 7:30 p.m. Feb. 2$. I Willie Bobo and his octet will play Latin jazz at 3 and 5:30 p.m . March S. · Emme tt Chapman will perform on his electronic strinf invention. The Stick, at 1 and 3 p.m. Monday. Feb. 20. Les DeMerle, a drummer, is on the same program. TICKETS FOR the Feb. 26 and March 5 concerts are $6 ad· vance, $6.SO at the door. Mon· day's concert tickets are $2.SO. Carroll Coates, creative direc· tor of the Jazz Forum in its second' year, notes that seating at tbe Forum Theater is limited to225. Other festival events in the Forum Theater will include: -Festival FoUies at. 2 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday. This is billed as "a Laguna showcase potpourri of Broadway songs." Tickets are $2. Senior citizens and chlldren under 12 will be admitted for $1. -DUNA.J FOLKLORE Ensemble at 12:80 and 3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 25 and Sunday, Feb. 26. Tblrty costumed dan· cera will perforlJ'I. Tickets are $3 adults, $1.SO children under 12. -Poetry readings at 2:30 p.m . March 4. Oranae Countians Alice Jackson, Priscilla Hazlewood, John Kolyer and Nancy Josbin Wini will read from their wortc.s. Mike Ryan will play clasatcal auitar •. Tickets are $2.SO at the door. In addition to the dls(>laya aQd demonstrations, singer Bobby Brown, a "one·man band'' with his variety of instnament.s1 will entertain each Frlday on the grouqds. There will bo trolley toun of Laguna Beach each Sunda, arid Wednesday dwing the f eaUval, leavin~ the Festival of Artl CJ\• trance aU:30 p.m. DillfY ,.... ...... .., f'M'ldl 12-INCH GILDED COBRA NETJER·Af'KH • Wea to Gulde King Tut Thtough Underwori(J:~ .... I Pianist Martha Ar•erlch will be featured as guest soloist and Erich Lelosdorf will conduct. when the Los An_aeles Philharmonic Orchestra performs at 8:30 p.m. Saturday ln Santa Ana. The concert at Santa Ana Hi&b School Audltorium, 520 W. Walnut St., ls sponsored by the Orwe County Phllharmontc Society as one of it.a sllbscriptioo 1erles of eilbt concerts. 'Mlss Argericb, a native ot South America. will be feat.ured ln Prokofieff'• "Concerto No. a in C for Piano and Orchestra. Opus 26." 'l'BE PIANIST WON three m.Sor eompeti- tiODf by the time she wu ~ears-old. They we.,, the Geneva InternatlooaJ, tbe Intern.a· tlontl Bvsoni Piano 'Coot.est ln Bo11ano ud the Sev,nth Chopin Piano Compet:ltlon in Warsaw. She.A was born In. BuenOI Al.res,. began her stucues at 4 years of a1e and made her pro- f esslonal debut at 8. Miss Argerich's American debut eame in - 1966 as part of Lincoln Center's .. Great PerCormers at Phllbarmonlc Hall" "series ln New York City. ~utO Show, Plays on Tap· ~he first appeared with tbe I.or_ An&eles Philharmonic in 1967. Leinsdorf, born ln Vienna. bu conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic many times at in· door con~rts and Hollywood Bowl. .. E PRESENTLY APPEARS a& pianist at Chaiqber Music Society concerts at the Music. Center's Mark Taper Forum. TONIGHT, ll'SlllUAH 17 alWITOllMO 'llU.' llOINI -G.,den ~ (.ommwllty ThHler .opens ..... 1, llOoll and CMlcllt'' ION 9'lt •I l :JO •I L••• School, IOIOI Or•"'ewood. Gen.r•I •dmlsslon S2.50, tenlon enchtudenlSSI iO. RUM fr14•ys•ndS.tur«MysllvO<lgl>Mercll 11. IMOW WMllLING IN -Most of AIMMlm ConvltlUon c.nw I• fllled Oy 14111 Anno»! Mio SMw, lncludff m.cMrn, Cll\IOM, •nll<111e •I'd H · perlment•I •Ill°"-C.11 Ceolvenllon c.ntw lo11 Otlk• tor dlt.ells. . ''OITTINO OUT' llXAMINIO - tw PIO by MerlM NonMft 1-• proOI-of • yo1.W1t "WOlftell )int used lrom prl-. Ollefls Sunci.y I! 7:l0 p.rn., TllHdey ltlf'OUlll Satur- UY cur1eln et a p.m. Mltll,... Sun<Ny Ill 2:JO p,rn. Tlcltets from 16 to •"· ~·" 21 'l-•n-n111or 1ntormet1on. :'°SATURDAY, ll'llaUARY • .. 1 MllllD IAO Ott ITMlll -llleftd tfi mu1lc, clellce, mulllnMCll• end • 9')1N lft • 111t9e ......,,_.by Ille tiet "'Footrloe ... In Ille recite! ,,.II Gil Stlltful'-'Onetlp,m. tkats ee-•. $1 tar Gel SUte Fwllwt.oft fib. a.Aue INTO TMll PUT-Or8n99 Cl9folMY " ...... HbtorY ~.ml' ~Nl'lll>r., ~ 9Mc:ll, Off«· •&t .. cit art wellts from IO•-"'· to J •'"· 15-'ed by Frleftdt of Ille aldt lley, dl._i_., ts In .. yvlew ~~t.,., ktlool.I ,.,.._ : ueuNA HACM 1ASM -c1"' •"' Its ISllt _, Wl•r FtMJ,,al Wttl'I .,11 ... •1 1.i ... .merwtnment e'91 ~L Perade SaturNY at IJ •"1"· -ntown. Admlulon fr ... •HallS.. POURS ANO l'IVll - Verl-comolnetloM of lnotrumenu llf' concert at United M1tllodlsl *rcll, CI Mi.u1,,,.,,ic1>e91nuU lO Ill SHI Beech Ulurcll looted •t Tellth 5'. OoMtlolllof IUtlted. . ~CLA CMOrlN RECITAL - •n•st Peter S...ln Plevs et UCl...A's "iyce Hell •I 1·>0 p.m. Tickets 5450 • .,,50, stucknll of unlverSllJ, ~iO.C..lllU-QlfordltellL # • SUNOAY;flaltUARY1' M(D ALL THAT JAR -Orat199 Coest College -•• Jui enwm· bl• Concert •I 2 p.m. In tlw OCC •udllorlum teeturlno tour -bl~ MmlulonP. . 'OaANO SLAM l'Olt STAN -~u1lclan SI.., Kenton's m11tlc It ! .. lured In ttl~ <OMert on Ill• blrtllday by The alt 8Dfld R-rec.- tlen, Aclmlltion ~ In ..._e, U at dtof. Al HUl'lllflllon llHcJI IM, 2112 Pklfk C:-1H._....y.5terta7 p.m .. "''~-Ill fenNtlof\. :Wooow1NO w1v.1tos -""' ..,_.,.. Weodwllld QIArut ..,.._ et 5'1M Ill blf'I IWI, ~ et I p.m. ~ P .Jt, UCLA ttudtftlt A-to. ~II~.-' MWleJ .av• ••o•ws uac -Alld t11e NI-Mn In LOI Allletet ,,_ llef' In '"Alllurd "'"°" SlllQlll• ... • -tllY, 011•M tod•Y •t.. a:ao, '"ns tfr411t 11 Mllt S•U.tr~y. Tlcltata 411.U•ll!o M ... lfflce, 21J.ofn.7211, llWlc.ad SIM6. MQMOAY,NUUAaY• . ~ 'M~ MONOAV M•LOOIOUI -()1 ltt Ltftl llMCll °*"*"' OIOlf' Ptr orll'lt I• Mo11d•Y lva111111 ~ti s.1" Ill ICDtlfll 1.lllrery, sti0 Clarie, ........._, Ill Mollie ._ ,..~ ___.... ......... "' ilt 1)-m. , TUl'°"V,NMIUAHrt IV.NI ... CW "AR,.ICMOtlO -~LA ,,.._ .. nMlc ~ .-minoM perf_. • ~ ef ~I _.,. M UC ll'VllW't '1119 NU Conctft Hell et I"""° ,.,..., •. WllONIUDAV,PSHUUY& . TILIYtlfOM ITAM PSATUHD -.. ,......_ .. v~ .....,.,, ,.,.. taetly lffle Ill "0..r 1.ltr" •t , ff•lltr .. 11 Ctll"t't '911111mtr AlliilA-'-ln.,.._ ~scan Otll• .... •left• -~ .,, . Times/ Places The remainder of Satimiay's program will include Mozart's "Symphon::t }lo. 35 ln D, •• Brahms' "Symphony No. 3 in F, c!)pus 90," and Brahms• "Three Hungarian Da.rt(.es," or-chestrited by Dvorak. · Dr1 William D; J{all, director of the W!lliam l'IUDAY, ll'llUUARYM sea o"'" 'VOl.POflll" -8eft Jel'ln1011's wtl•• •bovt • cr•llv scoundrel'• ...i1r9 wlOI lepcy llun-tero of Venice, opens Its ftOll· Mlbt< rl 119< NII lflrOu9ll Mwch t. Ad· mlulon U.»SUO. Giii ~ c.o .. t R-rtory llDll office llor ,_Uons .1-.1>61 ( L. ~I. BOYD ) INFORMS in the DAILY PILOT UNIVERSITY OF CAUFORNIA, IRVINE COMMrTT!I FOR AITS pPSl!MTS: FOUCLORICO LOS MEJICAS ,.,._ akg Miiiie & Dw" from ,_. Maior bcJlofts ~~xJco SATURDAY, FEI. 25-8 P.M. COHCIU HAU W SEATS SZ.00 COMMITT& OH LECTUllS P'l.ESIMTS: DONALD BOOlE "TOMS. COONS. MULAnOES. ~IS. A>4D IUQS• An 1.nterpretlve History of Blacks In American Films WIDNISOA Y, Fii. 22-4 P.M. SCIB4CI LECTUU HALL UCI STUDENTS $2. GEM. ADM. SJ Tickets available for both events at the ASUCI Box Office. Gateway Commons from 9·30 a.m -<4.00 p m. For further information. call Committee for Arta ~78, Committee on Lec:tures 833-5588. H• Has th• l•1t Honn mtd Grows the lntProSe. Frank Cozza, president of Cozza Farms gives us his horse "L.ong lllOe" who has won 15 races In a rowt And now he glve1 us. theae 4' Big "'Produce Winners.." we· won monev on "Long laaue" (5 times) eo we we selling his produce Ill cost lot thls week. so oua cusro1 •s CAM WIN. TOO • CCllllA,._. CODA Mmd .-----n•1•r:ltlil----1 r---«il'TtI•JaJ----, I ....... II ....,....., I I eua4 CAllAM I l UMllCD I f I Ge,_ II · STIAWllllllES l : CUC1Nml 1l 79c ~ I I 6 soc II ...... I '°" .f l UWJ•- 1 === II WnNCOWOM I ._ ____ . ·---__ , , _____________ _, ·CClllA ,._ COllA Mae .--..:-l(•l'Iil•ltl--.,,. ---((1llJ:2'J1t'---.... I II cow.-I ec-. 11 CB.ERY l I LmucE I! HIAITS l I 2 ... ~.9c !' 3 -.. 25c i I """'~ I I . =~ I , ____________ .. ____ , ,......_.___._..._ _________ , . ---flil1T:l5Jt---. .--11•1•Jil•J1J---., I toeMAft-OMm I I WMCOAO!MA I ,.... I I MAPINUfT I I I .-=-I f 0 1100 I 1 -~ I '°" I I UMIMAIM'f .. I 8 s I 00 11 ....... UIT l I ,_.. 11 8 ,..s1oo I I ~e!:.. 11 UNIYI w 11 wnM co.oOM I l--~-~c~-·~----''-----~--~--------' COWOMS DM11MUIS.. ... u-• P.M. ··.cov .. a = of Produce Pt..s .,..._., ... ~.. ··""'· ........... nvw ""'"''-.... . :::m ......... • PIANIST MARTHA AROERICH SOLOIST Hall · ctiorale at Chapman College tn Orange, will present a concert preview lecture at 7 p.m. Saturday. It Is 1cbeduled at LlWe Theater on the- Santa Ana High School campus. Concert tickets at $1UO, $.1 students, may be obtained at the Orange County Philharmonic of- f lc e, 1801 Newport Blvd .• Costa Mesa. Telephone 646-6UL I • CONCERT /TIMES AND PLACES 1811'!ASTFOVRTHITRDT,UHTAANA 114'...,_ HOUWIOOO . HAYE YOU FOiGCllTEN? ---1 CDB I ---CHAIUl'S DISCOIU~ . ltz4 ....... .... "l!!!!l!!!!!!!I C.... ...... tZ617 • iiiil 14 .... Amwa ........ 114-tlWIM ~ WSK INTERIORS' MIWON DOLLAR WAREHOUSE SALE SAVINGS UP TO 50% ON EXQUISnE HOME FURNISHl~GS For rrutan amun'• tomb, there wu an un. usual fiQd, a 1old staluetie ol the k1n1 as 1 child. mounted atop a three to four.root lon1 aold walk.in• 1laff. Children appear rarely lo Eoptian art, usually shown as mlnfature aduJl1. THERE IS ANOTHER unusual fiture that ~ scholars say was meant to be either Tut or hls prede~ Akhenaton. The detail is flawless, yet the fll\ll"e, posed in a crouch U1 less than two inches taJl. .. .. . - . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . The value is incalculable, yet the achieve· ment, even in the era of technology of the 1970s, Is stunning. The attraction of the TutankharQun treasures has equal financial stun power. Joseph Duffey, cbairman of the National Endowment fol" the Humanities, the gov· ernment·backed agency that is shepherding the exhibit across the country, says the fascination with Tut is unique. NEVER, HE SAID. has there been a reac· lion to an exhibit as there has been to this one In the six American cities in which the. ex· hibit has been displayed, tickets have been grabbed up months in advance. .. It's been an uncanny public-response," Duffey iHl.id. "I personally tbink it is caught up with the Americon obsession over youth and death. "And any museum director will tell you, that where there is a mummy, there is a lot or interest. That's the first thing they ask you, 'Where's the mummy?"' BUT DUFFEY, A scholarly type appointed by President Carter to head the humanities en- dowment, said the interest goes deeper than the youth fad or morbid fascination with death. "As a nation, we have be-en a people ob· sessed with the future," Duffey observed. "We are now beginning to rediscover our past. I guess you could say the interest here 1s part or the 'Roots' phenomenon." The Egyptian curator or the traveling ex hibit, Dr. Ali El·Kh ouli says the U.S. is not the only country to rediscover the past. The exhibit will probably spend a year in Europe after leav- ing the U S. before it is returned to the Cairo Museum THE EXIOBIT WAS loaned to the U.S. as a goodwill gesture. ..The Egyptian people," he explained in his clipped English accent, "want· STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21s t Pl.. Newport BHch ORiole l-9560 H~ lo Mi.tlqM Dllly-W~ Ulttil I :00 ._.._ O•U U _, .. HAaM>I .UU. 494-1011/9 0,...24H~ TM a w ... S......Oi ..... • J • SPECIAL! DURING FEBRUARY YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE AN EARLY BIRD TO SAVE WHEN ORDERING OUR FOUR SPECIAL LOWER-PRICED DINNERS! We have changed the hours of our Early Bird Menu just for February· Sundays, 4:3().9;30 pm.; Monday : through Thursday, 5-10 p.m.; Friday's sltll an Early Bird day, 5-7 p.m.; not "Served on Saturdays. . . • • , . ., Daily features include rice, soup, tea: SHRIMP TEMPURJ\ and SESAME CHICKEN $4.95 Tt:MPURA SEAFOOD DINNER $4.95 YAKI NIKU $3.95 STEAK TERIYAKI $4.95 11nn1ftt11 Find Us on the North Side of f ash Ion Island, Newport Center SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR YOUR PARTIES *Re servations honored: 644-4811* &tt,.., S,..n.11 HotSnwllla Ow,.,.,..., S.., ~ ~ ... ....., ·~-,__ . .. l .. ··---··· .... IHll\t ''-" .... CHILDHOOD CHAIR AMONG ARTIFACTS Fashfon9d From Ebony, Ivory end Gold ed to show their ancient culture to the rest of the world." · Southern California began picking up on that ancient culture months before the treasures came to Los Angeles. A whole range of copies of ancient art have been cranked out by manufacturers. Most can now be purchased within a few blocks of the Wilshire boulevard museum, if not on the sidewalk at the museum's gates. 1'he commer~ial aspects of the exhibit have not been lost on museum officials who set up a boutique next to the Tut gallery where a variety of copied treasures, catalogs and post.cards may be purchased. A spokesman for the Endowment for the 'Humanities pointed out that in two of the last three cities where the exhibit has been dis· played, financial impact was calculated at $74 million. • That's a lot of financial clout for an 18·year- old king -eVet\ a pbaroah -who died more than 3,300 years ago. CROWN HOUSE RESTAURANT 32802 COAST tfWY. LAGUNA NlGUEL tAtC-V .. ..,l'-•rl 499-2626 496-5n3 $outh Conat'• Fin~•I Cui•inf' IVY HOUSE RESTAURANT 314 AMEST AYE. LAGUNA BEACH U.fl!lt' a ,..., NOW PLAYING Tbru March 19th Matinee Perf. Wed. with Belle Ellig • Robert Cartin • PhyU. Ward fox Art Kooatili: • Ted Raymond • Annabtil« Qula~ Special Valentine Week Performance Sunday, Ftb'. 19 .................. $11.00 3503 S HARSOR BLVD.SANTA AHA ~If mile north of s.n Diego FW'J. behind Downey s.vtrlgs. betwftn Sun1lowei G Mec:Anhur CHAROE BY PHONE ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS Grow S.lee-Nk For ArroY Boie Office & telerlhont R~lons Open Deity 9:00 • .,,,. to 9:00 p.m. (714) 979-5511 Frtcf-v, Febru91Y 11! 1178 DAILY PILOT Mfckey Rooney, who's currently enchantlnc the •mall fey in the Disney movie "P~te's Dracon," brings his comedic talents to the Oranae Coast next week wben he takes the lead- ins role in "'Ibree Goats and a Blanket .. at Sebastpn's West Dinner Playhouse. Rooney Is the first in a promised series or "name" gue.st artists for the San Clemente din· ner theater. His show opens Wednesday for an abbreviated (for Sebastian's) five-week engage· ment, after which be and hil "Three Goats'' move on to the other Sebastian's playhouse at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. THE TITLE OF THE PL\ Y -wbicb had its local premiere in lt7S by the Lldo Isle Players -refers to ancient times when a 5ultan co~ld divorce his wlle by giving her three toats Almost Knfghtlg From Monday through Saturday from 9 p. m . to 1:30 a.m., Sounds Royale perform excit· ing music in the lounge of Mr. Stox restaurant, HOS E . Katella Ave .• Anaheim. i 202S. MAIN ORANGE (7H) 839-7264 NOW!! BOBWHITE PLUS LISTZ & COMPANY Intermission Tom Titus The 16th century classic centers on a.,_ aristocrat who ,feigns a terminal illness to ensnare his ilft·bearlni friends ln a web of avarice. Mich ael Keen a n , who was Bird~oot in SCR •s .. The Real Inspector Hound" will return as a auest arlist in the title role. . Other:s in the Costa Mesa company will be"' Charles Lanyer, Don Tuche (who directed·· SCR •s original 1965 production). Ronald Boussom, Hal Landon Jr .• James dePriest,: John Elllngton, Stephen Godwin, Caroline:. Smith and Anni Long. * OPENING TONIGHT FOR a four.weekend. engagement is the Garden Grove Communit)' Theater's production or "Bell, Book and Cau- dle." Carl Castiglione is directing the John van Dru ten comedy. Laurie Sendag and Jay De Vore play the leading roles of the modern-day witcb and the obj~t ol her spella. Others in the cast are Ruth Seigall, Robert Leivobicb and Robert Kokol. Curtain is 8:30 on F ridays and Saturdays for the show, at Lake School, 10801 Orangewood Ave. Reservations are being taken at SM-1'52. . F1enth .;:· C!>'!ntry~· D1n1ng •• I maglne kett;es of hearty soup simmering o~ open hearths. crusty rolls still warm from brick ovens .•• the ambience of a French country Inn. The Pleasant Pe.asant serving your favorite en tree . .. • .· and delightful lunches from a blackboard menu, complemented • by an exquisite wine and pastry .. · selection. · ..... ~UNQJE DINING ~,: . . 4151 MArttngAle Way• Newpon lead9 • bMnMlou: 714/9SS.11SS ., presents ••• ~: ~~~~~~ Eatertalnlnc for yoar «lanclns or llatenlas ••)~meat Tuesda~ th-.. ~ .... :-~ Jffo..day. Fell. 20 ONLY Great eoan~ •••le · by Plaaato• Hercl • . , BJ u:aaY HERTENSl'EIN ·~"I ...... , ........ . ~· Kini of OAe-liners. • Henny Youqman walks on ata,e. • • He wut.es no Ume. ' . '.'~allmJ1batroduct10M,that'atM'"°"recal.'' . x.iauatiter. '' The poirUy New Yorker. vtolln \Dlder arm. . .is rolltnc alon1 at '11 just aa at JS. Tb• jokes ven't chanlect. aut the audience rocb with ter, I x orTa· • bemused amne across his e. tell.I em all. 1tH-jci:es eboQt showbiz penanalltles, Tolle e1u, ltoman PolaMkl, Farrah Fftcett. He pokes fw:a at tb~ Polllll and Italian. his •'idiot" brotber·in-law a.in! takes jabs at Detrott. New · York. i.. Ve1u and Miami. ••toaMIJ f'11" $SIJ,000 to do.a TV ahow with P.mTala l F.awcett. TMJI ~ mt boclc.ond taid the but U1eJ1 couiddowa.s $20,0IJO. l .oid l 'Upauft ... A 10.aecond joke. l Twenty aeconds of laughter. -"MJI idiot brothn·in-law during .a Nev> York -&c1rout um lfuck on.cm eicalat'11" four lroutt'. 1. cuk- tl'im whJI ht didn'& walk down. He~ 'l waaoamy 1DOJ1 ~up.•" On and on be goes. ~ Someono yells "What about the doctor ~okea? .. "' Youngman doesn't be.sltate. I ''GUJI goes to the ~tor, aays I CGf(t.offord the +>i>erotton. The doctor touchea up tM X·TCY•·" ·i Tbepsycblatrlst: G . "GUii '°i/i to the psycmatrist, no one talb to mt. .: P'71cldalmt fOJI! 'nezt' ." " There's more. ' And or course Henny finally gets to fid. dling around with the violin. ~ His slnglng s tarts out sounding serious. ' ·~People, people who need people .are -~BOKE." la. "Tlw.aidumn leaw• fall outaide my window - WHAT A MESS." The audiences who caught Youngman's act at the Lall Stop in Newport Bea~ Wednesday •and Thursday night& Jaug~ hugbed and :Jaugbed some more. ' : u·~ been written t.bat 1be comedian has jmade a comeback in recent years. l But Youngman, wbo it doing four :television appearances in Hollywood before fly. :Jng to Boston Monday, chuckles and says, •"I've never been away." j He keeps eoing be«use "people want me laJld I make a good living .. - ! They wanted him at the Larr Stop. : But not once while in Newport Beach was :'Yungman heard to say his most famous one· f)mer of all, "T4Qmywi/e-PL.EASE. ,; ~ SUNDAY BRUNCH AT THE ARCHES "Newport's Finest" 10:30 A.M. to 3 :00 P.M. pac:mc Coast Hwy. 4tNewport Blvd. &4s-1on GRANDHOT£l No. One Hotel w.y ANAHEIM (ACl'OSS f"AOM OISNEY\.ANO) Open7 Daya ALL SPORTS EVENTS GIANT 7 FOOT TV SCREEN Mon.-Tlu. 11 :30 o.m. to 10 p.m. Frt & Sot. I 1:30 o.m. to 11 P.f'(I. CQCKT AI LS ~ "4 p.m. to 10 p.m. ·9093 E. ADAMS, HlmTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 ... TUdy Beal Md Company, a Sinta Cru1·bUed troUpe ol 10 performera, concltide an iD·realdence program at Golden West Colle1e with a "con· cert" tiJnlfht and Saturday. two mullet ns, a musical dlrtetor and three techruclans Jn t.hf' tr(IU\)e which has tieen working toeeµi.er since 1971 . Tbe troupe wtll perform each ni&bt at 8 o'clock tn the community theater on the Huntington Beach c.u>pus at 157« Golden West St. Each performance includes pantomime, 10101, duets, eroup dancea and a dance-theater piece. Admiaslon is $S aeural, f14 studeJlt.s, and $3 with a Golden W t <,;;olden · SJ;;;;tagon· GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIWDISHES Specializing In Chinese A La C.orte Dishes ·m i ...._ .... WE "-AY MUSIC Havlnt a party or rettinl married? Calf The Wynnloew'1. All kinds of music, verutlle s pc band, 1 vocalist . 11526·2985 There are six dancers, two mimes, student identtncaUon card. .. ~GJJi8'titZ •• llom~FltiDCe Not Finey Frtneh ... juJl Superb! YVn and Yvan hav~plaMed the settUig from exptrience. Intimate ;and f rimdly. The menu Is tat0neble and the Home-cooked mnlt ire artfully prepa~. From rack-of-lamb lo sole bonne femme, you wUI avor delightful tastes. LUNCtfe~ DAILY foodtOT•Out t1:30AM.to10P.M. COSTAMISA MJ.7162 • 646-9911 ''ALLYSONS'' INVITES YOU TO OUR 8 A .M . GOOD MORNING S/'(1.H1r.l•t I• EK.r•1n•1 B-iJ.a1 I I Oilock LUNCH TIME 3:30 AFTERNOON 1 EA 5:30 10 J J :00 EVEN/N(; CUISINE 3421 VIA U DO. NEWPOR'f BEACH h Bl«• fr-F.Ji.wnh ut/to 7 /.rutrr RESERVATIONS 67H>l20 Clmtti /tl1mdtJ) 1 ......... Wed.· Sat. 8:30 P.M. a.uv I Z62 S. lrlstol CosftlMese 546-1390 And Dessert. Very irnporl4lnt at ouc French restaurant. It's tht fanatst part of ouc unfancy mmu and worth every delialte bile . Thu is your 1nv111tion 10 llh 1 mp 10 Fr1ncc ... 1onisht 11 ~ BlanuL Rcmnnbcr, you'll be haven1 dlnn<r "nhr~ds! ~E SlfiRRIT.Z . FRENCH RESTAURANT 414 North Nc!wport Blvd .. Newport Beach For ~rvations Phpne 646· 6700 • Cc>cktail5 •, Open Monday thru Frid.ly for lunch, dinner~ cbya, . Come jo urney with us back through time. To a place where the atmosphere and decor is ¥ictorian. Where antique chandeliers softly highlight treasured tum-of-the -century mementos. ~This is ~~ ...... ,., . ' I, • . , ',._,, ' ... , ~--· The Big Yellow House. A restaurant where you can enjoy a very special cining experience.~. Food is fixed with old-fashioned goodness, with all the trimmings. Everything is served iri · bowls and on platters -family style . The main course features our famous golden- brown fried chicken and a second entree, which changes daily. Adults pay only $5 ~95, with beverage and dessert extra . Kids pay according to how much they weigh. • We also serve terrific cocktails and lunches.# So next time you'd like a relaxed,Afun-filled dining experience, come to The Big· Yellow Nous We know ¥OU'll enjoy it-; 30l0 Harbor Boulevard • Costa Mesa, Caltforn ia 92626 • (711) 549..0319 , LUNCH: Mon., Fri. 11;30 a.m.·2 p.m./DINNER: Mon.· Thurs. 5-9 p.m., Fri. 5· 10 p.m., Sat. 4· 10 p.m., Sun 12 ·9 p.m. '\I \ ~ . . .. -------... .. L .. p r--.. -·--------.. ~,:-· J I Chinese Cuisine 1 1. ''*' ORJENTALCOCKTAlLLOUNGE ' I' Fea\unn& Tropical Drinks f BAMBOO · FEBRUARY I I . l tEaR&CE SPECIAL I : I t~ tt. D.._,_,....,....,.. ·1 ' ,-,,-· suuwr.n. ~ ....... PriceSUO' f 1 IE ~-.i::..~-~~:f:. I ( •. · m -~ t I l aY :::._,_..._..._. ~llce·~ I ~I ~ ·~ ~':.!:..":~-.ca ·1 I . .. . ,,_ °""...,... ,....,, .. ,171 I • ~S3 EAST lITH . . . COST AM ESA 64~5500 \ ________________ _ L • . ~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- I ~ ' t 1TI1st€R. Gs · <i{ediotlranl'~ (!orhizitl· EARLY BIRD DINNER ..., Served 4 to 7 P.M. Sunday Thru Thursday $2.95 Spec.lal L.-c:heGI Fa• t Newport's Biggest Soup & Salad Bar SUNDAY IRUMCH I 'Hoa;;v·~1rw~~· J 'A.M.·2 r.M. 3100 lmne An. IMewport lhoch Goff CowwJ HEWrORT HACH 751·5223 4 A NEW DINING ADVENTURE . mAnDAn1n CHINESE . Geurmet cu1s 1NE· PEKING • SHANGHAI _ SZECH\Vt\N • HUNAN £ Daily Lunch And Dinner YOIWHost mdHoshss- ........ AMC"-g (Former Chef of the Twin Oregona-Anahetml I 500 ADAMS AYE. •At ......... IW' • ~ Ii la · ,COSTA ..-sA 540-lt.J). NEW FRENCH RE.5TAURANT LUNCH & DINNER SEVEN DAYS A WEEK 11 A.M.·3 P.M. • 6 P.M.·ll P.M. CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SATURDAY-SUNDAY-9A.M. to3 P.M: 225 Marine Ave. Balboa Island 673-4001 . Hµntington . . Play . Cliche? Mona Lee Michon bas a relatively minor role as nervous Mary Detweiller in the cW'rent Huntington Beach Playhouse production or ''How the Other Half Loves ... Tbe nall-blUng woman asks at one point in a scene bordering on cbaoa, "I& anything wrong?" Another time, In an acting job well dooe by the newcomer to Southern California theater, she queries, "Is anything the matter?" Those same things could be asked or the hilarious play about tbree couples and in· fidelity. That's not to say the production at the Edgewater Hyatt House in Lone Beach Isn't well done. It is. THE TIMING AND concentration required when each of thl' six performers is on stage de· ~rves prala&. Mueb eredit has to go to dinctor Ron FUian. The first two acts xlng along, keeping the audience chuckling and getting the three couples entwined. But the third act, in which the unraveling begins, especlall)' scene one, is rather con· trived. And the questions have to be asked, "ls the message cl~ it work?" FOR EXAMJ»t'E, Teresa Phillips (Beth Titus), leaves hubby, Bob (Michael Frym). when she thinks he is becoming amorous with Mrs. Detweiller. Predictable. It's actually Bob PbUlips and Fiona Foster (Penny Hayes), who have the love interest. And it's Fiona's husbaod, FranJL (Clark Burson). who tries to patch things up. Poor Frank. He never quite catches on that it's his better half who has been unfaithful. Typical. HIGHLIGHT OF THE Roger D. MUls pro- duced play has to be the performers' handling or tb'e Detweillers' dining with both the Fosters and Phillips at the same time. This occurs although tbe dinner dates are different evenings, Thursday at the Fosters, Friday at the Phillips. Author Alan Ackyboum, however, puts everyone at the table at the same time. Clever. A red-checked tablecloth indicates dinner at the Phillips, a white cloth the meal with the Fosters. The timing is nearly nawless in what could be difficult to carry off for lesser performers. Each or the six in this production has many credits on community theater boards . THE PLA YEllS HAVE been well cast although Burson and Frym are a bit too dramatic. Beth Titus is believeable in her role as the T-shirt wearing, bitchy wife of a young Don Juan. Pemy Hayes comes across convinclnjly as the more sophisticated Mrs. Foster. But the Detweiller's are the scene stealers. BOB GOFF PLAYS William Detweiller wbo is nearly as nervom u b1s wile. Karil McGtll is stage ioanager. Other members of the production •taff tndude Skip Neeley, Charlie Comins, Kathie Normand and Mickey Shaffer. Set construction is bandied by · Mllls, Paul Sullivan, Filian, Grace Shaw and 7.oe Ralph. 'Gettmg Oat, Emmy Award-winning actress Susan Clark is making her Los Angeles stage de- but 1n '*Getting Out" at the Mark Taper Forum through April 2. It plays Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. at the Mark . Taper-Forum, Sunc1ayg af7:3> p.m., S-atur- day and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. OCCJazz Concert Sunday Bill Watrous, Frank Rosolino and Tom Kubis will be featured in a jazz ensemble concert Sun-day at Orange Coast College. The concert is scheduled at 2 p.m. at the OCC Auditorium. Watrous, director or the Manhattan Wildlife Refuge, is a trombonist. Ro.solino also plays trombone. Three arrangements written by Kubis, a graduate of OCC's jau program, will be featured. They are ''Star Wars," "Kickback," and "Just Friends." • RUssian ~ong, Dance at OCC Odessa Balalaikas, a Tickets, S2 adults. S1 company or five slncers children under 12, are on and musicians. will aale at occ·. 'J')cket or~ perform Russian fQlk face in the Aclmlnlstra· music in an e p.m. ap. lion bulldlq, Hours ar~ pearance next Thursday a a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon• atOr&n&eCoastColle~. daya tbrougb Fridays . The group spent five and Saturdays, 8 a.m. to yeare on tesarcb and ~·n==oo=n=. =======- through perfonnl.ril ue ·reputed to have a "deep underata ndln1 of .Russian folk sty.le.'' The womeft wear ·hand-embroidered CO$· tumes, replicas ol drts* worn by the Russian .peasant women a ce._. tury ago. · Hand-made balalaikas :are used for instrumen'-5 ..cL.S v.oell as domra-~1 zbaleikas, kuvykly and loz~ki. -~. . Four of the school's jan groups, Advanced, Evening, Saturday and Beginning, will also perform. Tickets are $2 at the door. MADELINE KAHN • CLORIS LEACHMAN· HARVEY KORMAN Bob Hope At Benefit Bob flope, Helen 0 'Connell and Les Brown and his Band of Renown will be featured at a benefit scheduled March u to raise funds for an Iltler-Faitb chapel at Anaheim Memorial Hospital ... DICK YAN PATTEN · RON CAR£t!!l!'U!0!!!L (PG) Newport Fashion llland Newport Center Between MKAtttiur 1nd Jlfllbone I t Pldflc: CoHC Hlghwly l44-01eO Oalty 7:15, 1:00 Fri 7:15, t:OO, 10:45 S1t/Sun/Mon 1:30, 3:20 5:10 7:00 1:50 10-.30 Dinner is at 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays ~ Sundays through March 12 in the 1Uviera Room of lhe Hyatt House, Pacific Coast Highway and Westminster Boulevard. Reserva· lions 828-0583 or 213-598-4403. -J er ry Herte.metn Reservation deadline for the S125 per person dinner show is Friday. -------------------. Feb. 24. Reservation in· Catch all the formation Is available by telephonina 774-14SO, local sports . exib!7~er show will n 8WS be held at Disneyland Hotel 'a Grand Ba.ll.room In the and is being presented DAI LY PILOT by th~ Anaheim Memorial Hospital 'The One and Onbr''is Funny,Hilarious and Hfsteri (We're very serious about this): &42-4321 Development Founda-................................ ~ ~------------......0....-.--..;...o..-------Uon. FOR A REAL • "Classlc Eastwood ••• fast, furious and funnJ" R~Eb#I Cltic.ooSuro-TI- TASTE TREAT ~ # .I q 1111-rJ.o,e, Z11irt'orter • GOURMET DINING -MEDITERRANEAN RM. 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. • CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS to-3 PM IRVINE. CALIFORNIA • DANCING NtGHTL Y -CASARET LOUNGE • CAPTAIN'S TABLE COFFEE SHOP -2~ HRS. (Of!P011te 0,..,ge CountyAlrpon (714) 833-2770 A c:arl Reiner Film HENRY WINKLER • ... • t "Gee, I thought we were having meatloaf tonlghtr • Jlf U.V !CMC:OL. VALeNf1WE : ~)CtHANGF I Ptol>MM I ~ <p > by Tom Batluk AAS A 81NDING1 CONTAACT ! • MOON MULLINS' by Ferd and Tom Johnson . . .. :: .· . · . :· WELL., IT /SA PUP TENT ... IHe~e's ONLY So MUCH ROOM IN 1HERE N./D MAMIE'S NEW PIANO'S <iQ[ Ii . • . . ll-.......,-e~-....::::::::111'1 ·.i..:.--.:.......-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~--. . . • . . GERIATRIX GORDO ·----··· .. . .. DR.SMOCK ANP NOW WHA"T'" IS MY PA"rlE!N;-IN 01-ACKFOO"T'", ~PAHO, SAY'INCS, CHIE!!F? MOTLEY'S CREW n9 .. ~IR:1T' W€ 60 ().! -smnc:e, 1'MEN WE GO IN ~ONI OF A MEDlA'flON ~ ... by Gas Arriola rr's IMPROPER 10 PICK YOUR TEETH IN PU0L.IC PEANUTS . i!i~/·,f ( J Ji 1'( )"' I 'l. i-.. .,,.. I i I I I o I ] J , I I ' . I ,, l 1-n by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont Q Q 0 0 0 TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS •9 lonoblt 50Ump 1 Exlorted 62 Of a Roman money lroll9 tyrant 5 Hindu group 64 rarewell 10 SwMllOP word UNITED Feature Syndicate lhtndly'a Pum. Solved: 14 °"'°lion &8 Bold • 15 Noted CeQ. 69 8htm'l ICln IA-llu.i.r.l~ 18 :::.oru. :g =II\ 11 Oft IN 95 Fall to fn. ooeen elude 18 CclM of 17 Dladaln Iran gealufe 19Tak~ 89 .... t.ry order 70 Large beg ~~M 71Sua~naef~~~WGWlil~ 20 Holy -72 Gutl8f alte j.a!M.~~ 22 Tell all: 731"'ldll: Slang COmb.lara , 24 Mountalft: 741,.cte atlm 38 Greek coJ. Prefix 75 Klli.d 11 Go aa a onnade 25 BuencMt-throng 3!1 Seeded 27Trampled 12 Tidal bore •' Evil heavily DOWN 13 Remained 43 Cenaln 29 Protections: afoot tranafers Btit. 1 Sheep'e cry 21 Frtnell riYet 48 School S2Ani1Nlpertc 2RldOMHlt 230il111ilr. •period ~ 33 Desert • OI Slang •a Implement one•a con.-3 For an time: 26 Fr. upper 51 Fnllval fide• 2 worda houae 53 Puahes 34 Heating '4 Darling:,,,. 28 P.1.Moatem against devlcts formal 29 "Flower -gently 38 Bind 5 A111en~ SOng" 54 Ntw •o Kind of auto 8 •-• w11 30 Red~• 55 Of mankind •2t>kln't go to OOlng to SL preaaure H Command btcU fVel :u Mtn'tgrMt &70°"°'11e WOf<Sa f~~ a«Mraary 81 ltlllHNw 44 Hei> dltlon 3& Aftnatlv• 63 <:-. . 458--IWllliamancl anewera "El9d . qua11t1 eon 31 L.01n11 ee Alie dtci-Old ..a-.. 18ubatltu'9 --"It. alon:Abbr. 47 tno~r'dr 10TOOIWard\he ;;~ e&A.160:A*. . . .. 9 GALLERIES I MISCELLANY 1 awe Galler9 I . ' 1 i State . Ar:tists At Exhibit SCULPl'UftE, CRAFTS -Exhlblt of con· temporary 1culpture and cralta by California artiste through Sunday, Feb. 28 at Golden Weat Collese 1allery, 1S7'4 Golden West St., Hunt· tngton Beach. More than 100 pieces bf 31 ex· hlblton on display. Works in glass, Jewelry, ceraml08, wood, enamel and fiber. HOW"l l to' p.m . weekdays, 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday. ART DEMONSTRATION -David Solomon of Laguna Beach will 1tve a demonstnUon of Galleries./ Exhibits watercolor painting at Thursday's meetinc or the Costa Mesa Art Lea1ue. The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m . at Mesa Verde Elemen- tary School, Mesa Verde East and Baker Street, Costa Mesa. MUSEUM WITHOUT WALLS -SelecUons of original works from Security Paclfie Bank's extensive corporate art collection Monday throueh Thursday at bank's Newport Beach of· rice, 3475 Via Udo, Newport Beach. Maxine Rubenstein, UCLA professor of art, will be at the office Thursday, Feb. 23, to discuss the ex· bi bit, teclmlques and tools used in various forms of art. Hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. . . Bay Tour Set The filth or six public tours ol the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve is scheduled Saturday. The tours fonn in groups of 25 or more from 9 to 10:30 a.m. at a meetinl spot at Back Bay and E.,ibluff drives ln Ne~rt.Beach. THE FREE WALKING tours take about two hours. Lecture stops along the way Include discussions on the history of the bay. foesils, marsh plants, fishes, tidal mudflat qanlams. shorebirds and waterfowls. Participants are urged to wear comfortable walking shoes and bring bioocular1 and cameras. Further information 15 available by teleph~g~. '·' ~±~ . . " '. ......... An Oranae Coast College special • study aeries. "Ws y and Review of Ear Fllms," will survey · silent and early sound movies. The series opens Friday, Feb. 24 and will meet for eight consecutive Fridays in DAILY PILOT C7 Science Lecture Hall 2 w. OF '"'STOL on the C.OSta Mesa cam· • A pus. Houra are 2:30 to s ...:¥~.._Mlimtme~~.I p.m. r PAUSE -A stylistic chair, created by Sterling Johnson King, is one of more than 100 pieces of sculpture and crafts on exhibit at the Golden West College gallery. ART LECTURE -Suzanne Lacy will speak on women in the art of our time as the fifth lec- turer in the series, ".Just for Meo Unleu You're A Woman." Lecture scheduled for 7 p.m. today at Newport Barbor Art Muaeum. 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport Beach. 'nckets $4. Telephone 759-1122. INDIAN PAINTING -Frank Tauriello, professor of art at Orange Coast Colleee, Costa Mesa, will demoastrate techniques in painting of Indians at Monday meeting of the Anaheim Art Asaoclatioa. Meeting set for 7:30 p.m. at Anaheim CUitural Arts Center. ~1 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. Mmi£Ttilk Due in NB DAILY PILOT • 1NllS . GRAPHICS ~ Work of artist Hun- dertwaaser through March 10 at Muirhead Galleries, South Coaat Plaza. 3833 S. Bristol. Costa MesL Hours Mondays through Fridays, 10 a .m. to 9 p.m .• 10 a.m. tO 6 p.m. Saturdays and noon to s p.m. Sundays. "An Evenln&WlthCole ------------------------.. Porter:• ia the title of GAUl!NT WORKS -Exblbit by Robbin Hendenon, Kathleen Newton. Syhia Simpson. and Nancy Yoodelman. Santa Ana College Art Gallery, Seventeenth at Bristol, Santa Ana. Hours 11 a .m. to 3 p.m. Mondays through Thrusdays, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Fridays and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays. Wednesdays and Thursdays. Exhi.btt ~March 10. the third Pf'OIJ'UD in the series. "Evenlnp With Amerlea•1 Great Soaprlten." ICheduled Tuesday at the Ebell Club tn Newport Beach. Goy and 'PhyJlls HaUert1 will conduct the diac:m:don on Porter. ·The Pl"Oll'UD bedns at 7 :30 p.m. at the efub. 515 W. Balboa Blvd. Winner of 4 Golden Globe Awards! Beet Picture &Ml Adtltt, Co••ctJ or M11alcll Nah9d ~ BMI Actreea. Comedy or .................. Maeon Beet Soria...-, Nell 81"'on ef •'The Goodbye Girl' Is a joyous eomedy- )ustwbatthe doctoronle.Nd. ·Nell Simon makes feellng'good legal ••• •. GENE SHAut, NBC-TV . "The talk around Hollywood Is. that our. movie may be a heavy favorite for an . Academy Award -No kidding, an Oscar! I may even have to rent a tuxedo!-' JRL ~ llRl'."I" r.•r.i l I --·- A rat Reiner Fi1m HENRY WINKLER . .. .. •• .. EV£NtNO .. , :. .... IMIWMCV OHi> /\ TV ,.. -'•I« •nd '* ••-combat pholo- oraphar -aNlgned 10 do a TV documenlaty on ~51. • MOYIE ***~ "Mldnlgtll Laoe" (1MO) Dotie Day, AaK Hlffllon. Alt• • woman la Mettled tor tlltM l'l\Olltllt 10 a .,....lly man, Iha beQlfw to t-iw f~ ~ phone calla. (2 llrl.) Qt nff!IMDY 8UNCH G1ag'1 ._..,. catch him ll'nOklng. e ntEAOOKIU A tattooed toot II IN took· lea' ori'f IMd .. t/ley -ell '°' • runaway girt. 88 lOOM G HllTOln' OF MIXICO (!I A8C Nl!W9 1:30 fl HERE AIC> NOW Qt BeWITCHEO "Samantha'• Curloua Cfavlnga" ID OVERU.SV Gue11: Sen. Gaorga McGCMNn G CONSUMEA SURVIVAL KIT "Tota. llJt fare, Ulillllea" CJ) LINTAMEDWORLO ''Sc:andlna"'-" (ti MERV O~"'IN 7:00 8 THE MUPPETS GIMt .kltle Andrews. I N8CN!W8 UARSClUB A8CNEWS ,. .... Bis Achi~g B~k Don Rickles. seeking a rubdown for an aching back, is surprised to find a gorgeous masseuse (Sondra Currie) in tonight's episode of CPO Sharkey, the second of two shows, beginning at 8 p.m. on NBC, Channel 4. CJ) THE MUPPns Gu.t:Julle~ ... _ ~·-·· I i.l()l(IR'S MD CMOL.-..rr AHDFMNOI ou..i aanwnv o.... "'. -~Wll.aY. MA "'* aa ~ P'llll lo ,..... ry, • patllologlet le ~ lie tacaa Mtlol.-~ •ID WA8HINOTON WUJC IH REVteW e;ao 0 Cf'O IHAAICEY ''llllarkay'a 8aok Problal'll" Worried that a back Injury wlll lnvelldal• Ille nomination IM '1CPO of the v.., ... Sllatiley Made lol' a T~lttl belt\ --1 IN1 It It -• ma.aoe S*1or· *• MaM1U vu-1 ..... l ~TION ~WIT8 ID WALLtTAHT wax "fnletnallonal Update" Oueet: Landcw\ Tl!Ofnaa, uacutf\oe vice ptaeldent and dlrae!or of Flduclwy Tl'Ult Company of New • Yorll. l:OO fl CJ) 08ll MOYIE • * * "Big Mo" ( 1873) 8ernla cuav. eo ~. The tru.llfa drama of MAU11e SIOkN, a crlppled llMketball ~.and Illa fallow player, Jac:k Tw)tl'Mn. """° triaa to IMtp him. ·~At.a "Tlla Prt1oner 01 ~t ...... Aocll1onl inv.tlgat• the Nldng death °' • )ICMHlg -. f¥1efld, end, In ttla proceaa, ~. aecoilCI kidnap- G) ILOVELUCY Lucy "'9nglee lhe atar role In a,_,. on Ille promiM Iha! Ricicy emceM eoma of the moet anoct<lng alr ecc:ldenta and what la being done IO pr-t more. uo 9 CJ) WONOER WOMAN ~~· _.althy Arab etudent. F-Laa McCain, Kan 4D ADAM-12 The omc.rs. aided by • hallc:opW rei.ylng inl1rUC• Ilona, puraua robbery -.-... fJ:I MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT I!) CALIFORNIA TONIGHT (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 8 WHEN HAVOC STRUCK "How Seta i. It To Fly?" Eycwilnaa KCOUnll of Q WILO IONOOOM "Land Of The Dingo" 8 NEWLYW£DOAME 0 @ HOU.YWOOO SQUARES G) THE MADY BUNCH Greg Is plctted to become a rock atar. m ADAM-12 Malloy and Reed play mother han over • young reservist. 6!1L.A.1~ "Informed Souroaa" m VOTP1tPIP£UNE Claa11.wl Lbtl•fJ• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles G KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles a KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles fl KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles CJ) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ. TV (Ind.I Los Angeles 9J KCST (ABC) San Diego 0> KTIV (Ind.) Los Angeles Q) KCOP-TV (Ind.) Los /\ngeles fD KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles 6t1l KOCE·TV(PBS) Huntington Beach CAREER OF PAUL MUNI NEW TV DRAMA Georgia Brown With Herschel Bernardi Wonder woman 1s pltt.s against a oomt>UW geM.is (Roaa Martin) wtlo ateala Iha alec:tronlc: "*'10tllll and progr81'11a of Illa worid'• iargaaa c:omputera. .. pal't of .,.. meeter '*" to Wl(e c:omrol of IN WOf1d.. a CflO 8HARl(EY "Sharkey '""a Prvltt'a $later'' 0..C-•ta to llnd a candidmt for ble ~ to entw In ihe .,_., "Mlaa Topalda" ~ c:cnt9t, 8lwby ~ a-.cl by Iha pll~ ..... ol Pnlltt'• --IM--' AIU!ur).. D MOVIE ** "o.dly FathOme" ( 1t72) Doeu-laty. A craw of~· pr... challanga ~- Ing "*"' and deadly coral to lllm the alomlc graveyard of lhlpa off Illa Mar9hall lllands. C2 llrl.) fl 9 OOHNY & MAM! Guaeta: Engelbert Humperdlndc, Peul Lynda, Pnarsi-. 811 MCMOYtf ''ThrM On A l>IM•' (Prem- iere) Nie~ Ray llolgar. Tha ~ °' lour oouplM. wlflMrS on a telelllllon gaftla ..... and tllalt young c:haP«ona on a H.-llan llOlldey. D 1AOH8101 I MERV ORIFJ1N MAACU& WILBY. M.O. ~ active ~ gift '""" 8d)usl to • llfetlnle In a ~Ir followllllg • -----• THllOCWIVU Oft HENlrfWI ~ Jarie ..,._...After Pf9o -ting Hanry~ • alc*ly ..... tM moths, ... ~~ 10:00. O<JIMCY "Now Vw llee It, Now You Don't" An., .. ,.,,., edltOt (Joan Van Mc) llllpe auw.. Cf UMMll the ~ ~ofM~bll­ llonltf9 l!WMt°". JoM Colool, """°" llart ... TV • By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES <AP) -Eight yeara ago the Hollywood Television Theater came on roaring like a lion wltb "Andersonville" and it is not about to steal away like a lamb for its farewell performance. Instead, It ts atgnlng ott with "Actor," an ortelnal musical by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee, the playwrights wbo gave us "Mame;• "Inherit the Wind" and "f'lnt Monday in October." .. Actor" Is •et against the bact1round of the Yiddlah theater at the turn of tbe cent\ltY· It has the same rldl, robust navor of .. Fiddler on the Roor," and, as producer-ditector Norman Lloyd says, "Chronolot1caUy it takes up wbere 'Fiddler' left off." IT WAS ADAP'l'ED from Lawrence's b101raphy of A lllD'rillg ~A J"CllDAndc llt.or)t A IWf'Y '11 ~ blltnd, Mend1hlp, triumph. and loft. WINNER-2 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE SHIRLEY MaclAINE TUBE TORPERS KUJ 11 6:00, '11 ;00 "Midnight Lace." Doris Day is terrorjzed by threatening voices Jn this 1960 morle drama with Rex Harrison and John Gavin. CBS 8 9:00 -''Big Mo." Bernie Casey stars as basketball player Maurice Stokes whose career was cut short by a crippling injury in this new TV movie. ABC O 9:00 -"Three on a Date." Four couples win big dates on a TV game show and a chaperone goes along in this · new TV movie with June Allyson and Ray Bolger. • cwnoHB>MC NeWI MORNING 1t:cl0. 1WUM4T %0HI t,llttler Qlnole II ttie unlik• IV oendldata ot ,in a11an \ ~with'--"•· • WOfl&.D OF SUfWIVAl • MOVIE **°"' "Eelher And The King"' (1'8110) Richard Egan, Joan Colllna. A king 1111'81 ~ a bf1de from Iha moat ~ malclene In 11 .. kingdom. (1 llr., 30 min.) t2:06. CJ) CM LATE MOVIE **~"The Meting Game" (1~581 o.b01e Aaynoldl, Tony Randall. The agent the oovernment Mnde to in....tlgate • llapPY-go- !udfy 18'"11y.Wfl0 Ilea_ paid lrlCQN .......... In love with ,,.,. tanner'. dllugrltM. arid dlec:oYws the Federal gowrnmenl -tMrTI mAonL 12:30. MOVll! * * * \t "Tiie Olea Key" 11842) 8rla11 Oonlavy. Veronica I.Me. CrOOlled polllllft end gangat«• c:ompkata a detactlve'• ~tioatloll. (1 ht • 55 "*'-1 81 MOVIE .... ''Hall Below Zero" (1954) AIM Ladd, Joan TatDI. Aft« a -la fl'IKdarad, Illa daughtw tall• -Iha lhlp lo find 1111 ll.llar. 2 hn.) 12:11 • 8TNmME "Gully Of Not OUilty'" Robert Ryan, Rlollerd .,...... AIW a ...._ of · mugglnga, a group d dtf... -otsaanii-a Ylgllanta pWol. 12:409 MOVE *** "Th• Young Warn. ore" (19871 J-On.lry, Staw can.on. A tough -gMl'lt and -of hie young, bltt« racNlte l'Mc:t .-.My to the llOmlr OI ... (llw .. ao "*'-1 1:00 D M!OH1GHr IPmAl. ................ °' :n~ Hoit: Wollrnan Jac:ll. OIM11: EMon John With l<lkl °"· au.n. Aod St-'. OllVla ~ Jollf\ The Deetr1c IJOlll Or~,., ~ Boone, Pia,..,, Heel Waw, Ctyittl ~ I JPY 1:15 TAUCA90UT Momtoldel, aocklantal encl ofllerw!M. committed by chlldlan under 1he • of ten ao-IM1 other Chlldterl .,. cllac:uNad. 1•• MOVlf **"The~Guwd" (1955) ~ MAMey, Aobert s~ eour .. ga«.a eokllll'I Mm ttla right In battle IO be the °'*"'• g\llfd. (1 hr.. 30 min.) 1:'68 Nl!WI rM8 MOYll **'A "'Hoffman" (1117') Petar Sella11, Slnaad CuHc:k. A l1uatratad mkklle-4lged man black- rnW a young typlet itllo tlaylng at Nt apartmenl for I WMfl. (2 hte.) • MOVIE ** "Lael Of Tiie Comandlet" (111$2) Bto- darictl er.wfotd, Barbara Hate. &it ~ of a ~raid lead ..... gecoec:ri to Mlaty. (1 hr •• 30mln.) 2',151 NEWI 2::IO NEWS MOVll! • •ft~ "Tiie Hout Bafore TM Dawn" (1944) Fren- c:hot T-. VatDcllca Laite. A Nazi agent rnan1M a Btttlth Pefllilt. (1 "'~ 25 min) 2;'6 1J HEWS s:oom HEWS a:aoe MOYla • • "Soul $oldier'' ( 19711 Rarer Johnaon, Caear Romaro. A grouci of former ..._are hated by Teune and lndiMa '**'" of Ill* peat and ttlalt dedica- tion to their country. (1 tv., 35mln.) 3:811 NEWS 4:00 ~ ••• "'Hold TNt Blonde'' ( tt'6) Eddie Btadleft, Varonloa Ulke. M....ing i... an ~ kiwi wl1h • bealrtlful girt, a ....ithy kfaptomn- ac~ llhe la a mem- b« of a JeWel gang. ( 1 llr •• 30 mill.I D MOY1J * * * "And Soon Tha Dartt,_" (1971) Pamela F11111klln, Mld*e Oolrlca. One of ._ ~ glrll, on a blo)dlng . llolld~. dlMppe«a. ca me.1 • MOVIE ••• "T'ha o._ w .. · MORNING 1l00 8 CAMIAA n4Af~ "Olmltff 8hoetlkOVIC 1t01· 1t75" Shottallo- w:ll'a ~Sonata Ho. 0.-12.~-­ lle Wll ~. le parfoi med *"i Robert da O-.no. (PM of2) • ~l(ONQ l'T~ B..8«HT Alff NEWS wo.MH: REAL TO AEE1. e YOGA f'Ofl HW. T'H Cll ~A l.OOtCINO 01./\88 7:301 STEPSTd ~ QOQO OLOMTAOTTERS 1:::rrm.a ••Yt "Tiie Good MM" (18501 Jacll Lala Anlrlgllt A _ ... "' miaad....murae balall ''Good .._., man 11111 gll'lfliand. ~· hr., » min.) . ., IK>WERY IOY8 ~~o<J=j ~. • NATJONAL OIOGMPHIC~ "The Great w.,.._.• Tf* Ate f1' tile Mtttl'e latgeet and a6daat Mng ~ fadooumanted IUSIHESS .:00 CJ) A080NIC STOOGES 8 MOW • • "Sltwr Loda" (18$4.L John Pama, Llt•be\~ Sc:ott. A man ac:c:uMd Od murder on hie wedding ~ bacomM Iha object of a manlluht While lie trlel ~ ctaar lllmeatl, ( 1 llr.. 30 min.) • 9 LAFF-M.VMPQ D MOVIE ***~ "A-..y Al eoet."' (1151) Jeff Chandla<, 0-.Hadar.A~1 ctflff Pf'O¥W lte worth -... undat attadl during World Wrll. (2 lllS.) l::IO 1J CJ) 8PEB> BUGGY • MOVIE 11'• "BalUe At Bloody 8Hc:h" (18111) Audie Murphy, Dolor• Mlc:haele. A young IOldler flnda Illa wlta da'loled 10 a Fillpplno panlaan --• ( 1 llr ~ 30 min.I m MNONQ THtNOS WORK I CHARLIE'S PAD Fighting Academy Award-winning actor Paul Muni. and focuses on bis early life in tbe theater -and most parUcularly on Muni't parents, wbo led a f amUy troupe of "llnal•tancle" players. "Actor" airs Tuesday at 8 on .the Public BroadcasUni Sentce over KCET, Channel 28. lt is a spleodid production. alt.bough its ti&bt budget gives it the look of a filmed play. The music by BJlly Goldenberg duws heavily from Yiddish. origias, and "Actor" is.a show-. stoppi~g tune ~~' by Bernardi. was !durin1 the production ~ LawJ' ence came to know MUQl. •• WAS ABSOLUTE t' fas inated by the famhy troupe's life in Europe and t.beU- coming to America," salO Lloyd. "ll was the story of im- migrants struggling to make it in a special way, as actors. Herschel Bernardi of "Fiddler .. and "Zorba" stars as Muni '.s father .· Fa v el Weisenfreund. Bernal'Ot.'s own fat.bu occasionally played with Weiaenfreund. Geor11a·Brown of "OUver" and .. Side by Side" ls Munl's.motber, Salche. Cboreoc· rapber-director Michael Kidd 11 Munl as an adult Waller Mittbau appears in a cameo role u (be great Yiddish actor 8orl1 Tbomuhe"kY Howat'd Dul! and Harold Gould an the two movie moguls who chanee<l Munl WelJenfreund tnto Paul Mwil. HOLLYWOOD TELEVISION Theater, which made its debut in 1970, is 1oing oil the air due to a lack of CDnds. Producer Lloyd and station KC.ET were unable to find any foundation or cor- poration willing to put up the money to keep\it going. The origin ol "Actor" is filled with more coineidences that "Little Orphan AMie.'' Nearly two years ago a friend gave Uoyd a copy of Lawrence's biography of Munl as a birthday present. Lloyd, an actor bimsel/. was interested ln Munl. having seen him perform on BroadWay in "Inherit the Wind." and it "I felt it would make a great musical. So, with all tbo~e thoughts in mind I did a~h1td)' nothing ..:... f« 10 days. ~c:c!;~ happened to be at a dinner JHIJ'f' where Jerry Lawrence was ~ sent. I suggested to him that~ and Lee write It as a musical ror the Hollywood Televisi6 Theater." . Lawrence and Lee agreed, tNt . even after the script w&f finished it la,y on the shelf for~ year whUe Lloyd and KCE:f scraped together enough mooq to produce it. . ~------- See It again for the fourth or fifth tJme, you wtll dis- cover new pleasures each time you see "Annie Hall" WYJ)( C4Al-.E 1(N( CAin.. RU. ALLEN t<.EATO'J ~ KAf'E 9.o4 JM.ET 9-£1.l.EY OffSlm£R cru.EEN ~ D.MLL ~ reMi.RST ':ANN IE HALL£~ NOW TOGETHER WITH L!..: Thirteen Orance Coast reJldenta wW be among the 200 Southwest artists invited to exhibit at the 18th annual Hllk:rest • Festival ol Fine Arts, Feb. 23-218. .. .. ...... -........ . . . ALAN RIBERA WITH WAX MODEL OF ONE OF HIS SCULPTURIS . . PainUnJ'· sculpture. photography, ceramics, ------------------------.;--.-.• jewelry, macrame and weaviJll will be on dla· play at the Hillcrest Congregational Church, 2000 West Road, Whit.- tier. Exhibit hours will be~ to 9 p.m. 'l'bunday, 10 a .m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday and U : 30 to s p.m. Sunday. Repreaentlne the Orance Cont will be Hal Akins, Pb1llls BrodJe, Vivian Caldwell, Ervin Darar, li,Q'ma Jay, Julita Jonis) Alan Ribera, David Solomon, Rock Martin and James Tatum, all of Laguna Beach; Costa Meaans Sue Krause and S. Dani Leyrer and Alice CUislck of Newport Beach. Among the fe~tured demonstrating artists will be Adam and San- ta o a of the Martinez famlly of Indlan potters, famous for the develop. ment of their "black-on· black" ware. Amparo and her partner Moz:.eno wlll lead a troupe Of Span.lab dancers that will perform Seturday eve- ning. iudges wlll confer fl.rat place and honora- ble mention awards for watercolors, other paint· lnra, rellrioua art, cera mica, acuJpture, arapbic art and cratta. To Place your .. Fut Result•• Sentce Directory ad •••• Call Now 642-1671 Id. JU "'LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR'IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTION PICTURES EVER MADE-AND ONE OF THE BEST! Richard Brooks shoJlld get two Oscar nominations, one for his 8Cl'eenplay, one for directing. And Diane Keaton should get the Oscar to take home as best actress of the year in this UNFORGETTABLE, IIlGH- IMPA CT FILM!'!...uz Smith, New York Daily Newa 'll#lfl".liilll~ A TRUE LOVE STORY. .. For everyone who believes in happy endings , ---~ IQWS111 ..... rill I., .. ..,....._. ....... ue71UI t.U ......... SingerinLA Peggy Lee will make her first performance in 10 years in Los Angeles when she gives a concert Wednesday at Dorothy Chandler Pavilion at the Music Center. She will perform with a 32·piece orchestra at 9 p .m. Remaining tickets are $12.50, $10 and SB-. Credit card charges may be made by telephoning 213-629-3262 and information ob- tained by dialing 213·972· 72ll. GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATION BEST ACTOR -HENRY WINKLER 'Finding tire one you love ... is finding yourself. 1-IEIK .. :S <PG) A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTION "HEROES'' Co-st&trfn'flAR~ISON FORD \ llY BOB THOMAS , ... ~..,.... •'THE ONE AND ONL'f" continues the Heory WiD.kl er role as Uae exuperat1nt but lr· rt1S1tible kook. Tb.e formul• WOt'ks better Ulan 1t did ln "Heroes, .. laraely because of Carl Relner's 1ure comedic toueb. He directs the ""' tllm with an understand· lng ot the cr•zlness of campuses and television in the 1950s. The lau1hs are often explosive as Winkler, playing an ac- tor whose ge{lius is re- cognized only by himself, achieves lame a s a bizarre TV wrestler. Kim Darby is fine as the wife who almost understands the young eccentric, and the supporting cast is splen· did. Especially Herve Villechaise, the dwarf on TV's "Fantasy Island," who is the best argument against the libelous hit song "Short People." Rated PG. "THE OTHER SIDE ANNE BANCROFT. OF TBE MOVNTAtN, PAaT Z" -Cootlnuo the sa1a of JUI KJnmont, the champion skier who refused to be defeated by paralysis. Tbls tiQie. the focus ls on her re.luc· tant romance with a shy truck driver, John Boothe, whom she final- ly married. 'fhe sequel understandably lacks the dramatic Power that made the original a sur- prise hit or 1975, but Marilyn Hassett ls ualn warmly convincing as Kinmont and Timothy Bottoms displays an emotional aide he bas not shown on tbe screen before. The ratinat is PG, but except for a brief motel scene. there is nothing to offend anyone. TueTummg plmi: BEST PICTURE -GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD .. T\\ f,'.\ Tl,. rll ('f; VTI HI' H J.\' r .-\ m :RDl:RT HOS.<; >'IUJ A.\\~ II~" /Ulf/ -;1ftRl.£Y "" 1.~1\'f: ·r11f. Tl 'H.\'1.\'G P<>J\'I rot.t SK ER RITT -, .... --Jlll\llAll. 8.tl.RY!.ll.\'/J..OV -u :.'1,JK RROl''\f. '.VAHnl,\ "( flTT • IHH<:llAIJ. TlfOAIJ>S0 \1 .. A.\Tl/0/11)' U'HBF. • 1}11::11~ BAU.ET TlllIATRi Dally 7:00, 9:15 Fri. 6:00, 8:15, 1Q:30 Sat/Sun. 1 :30, 3:'5, 6:00. 8:15, 10:30 • Mon. 2:15, 4:45. 7:15, t :30 ~edwards HUNTI GTON .. j HACH AT B.US. H.L 848-0388 • MEL BROOKS . in NIGH ANXIETY MAOEUH~KAHN ·CLORIS lEA&HMAN ·HARVEY KORMAN .... ID YU PATIH·RON CAREY· HOWARD MORRIS l ll ms FU,,.. .. h ltOy llDS·hl-lllDS· .. Wll· m 8dl·1&91Y l.E1llSl·llllit- '*~OUIU£" a AUil MWCl ·- ~;;.::::::J I lllSIC r1111""w1m-MWlll °" nmwmw• ucom' t1rttl (ii). .... ..,.,,._C(~...llOI WINNEAOF 4 GOLD£N GLOB£ AWAAQS HILLCREST FESTIVAL See It again for the fourth or fifth time, you wtll dis- cover new pleasures each time you see "Annie Hall" NOW TOGETHER WITH .............. .. ... ---.. Thirteen Oranee Coast residents will be amoo1 the 200 Southwest artists invited to exhibit at the 18th annual Hllkreat Festival of Fine Arta, Feb. 23-216. Paiotingi, sculpture, ALAN RIBERA WITH WAX MODEL OF ONE OF HIS SCULPTURES . photography, ceramics, --------------------------• jewelry, macrame and weavina will be on dis· play at tbe Hillcrest Congregational Church, 2000 West Road, Whit- tier. Exhibit hours will be s to 9 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. to S p.m. Friday and Saturday and U : 30 Lo 5 p .m. Sunday. Repreaentto1 tbe Orange Cout wJll be Hal Aklo1, Phyllis Brodle, Vivian Caldwell, Ervin Darar, Norma Jay, Julita Jones, Alan Ribera, David Solomon, Rock Martln and James Tatum, all of Laaun.a Beach: Costa Meaans Sue Krause and S. Dan! Le)'Ter ~ Allee C\ialck of Newport Beach. Among the fe~tured demonstrating artists will be Adam and San· tana of tbe Martinez family of Indian potters, famous for the develop- ment of their "black-on· black" ware. Amparo and har partner Moreno wlll lead a troupe of Spanish dancers that will perform Saturday eve· nlng. Judges wtll confer flrat place and bonora. ble mention awU'da for watercolors, other palot· logs, rellgloua art, cer amlcs, acolpture, graphic art and crafts. To Place your "Fut Result0 Senice DlrfftorJ ad •••• Call Now 642-5671 bt. l22 "'LOOKING FOR MR. GOOD BAR' IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTION PICTURES EVER MADE-AND ONE OF THE BEST! Richard Brooks should get two Oscar nominations, one for his screenplay. one for directing. And Diane Keaton should get the Oscar to take home 88 best actress of the year in this UNFORGETTABLE, lllGH- IMPACT FILM!'!..Liz Smith, New York Dail1 Nell& ~~·~ A TRUE LOVE STORY. .. For everyone who believes in happy endings l .. ~.~~ ... .. WlllG~,_ .MARJIN ERUCHMAN ~ .MlllWL CRIOOJN,.. GlNEVIM BUJOlD · MIDWl DOUGLAS ;mMA· E~Eltl A.SHIIY·RlPTORN"" RICHARD WIDMARK~ M1awt r.RICHIDN·ieftlil·Jirf lll19t11TH ""':::f,"l_n """•Ot ,._.~ MlllW:t faCffJON·MAIUIN ERllCH>MN re==....-:.:J ·---··---1 .. -- •···---· MOM T ......... . ·- ......... _ IQUUSl9) ..,.....,1 ....... .................. .u.7111& ~--•.u ·-- \ - ' ~ . _.,..,._ ... _____ ... ,,... .......... "iil.-..... -..-.,. ................ J ~ ..... -· ............... -----·-- ·1~.?!2!.-';9 OF TBE MOVNTMN; PA&T t" -Conttnu the ,. •• ot JW Klnmont, the champion skier who refused to be defeated ..... ....,. -"'"""' ._ i. • b a1y · -.."'. ti -vie thet cretllMV -,. t!NI Y par llS •• ,.._.. rpe, pll9M of tM Yletitem 1'ttere11, the focus la on her reluc· "H"' ... :' ,.,,,.. ~ w1'*1er t•nt romance with a shv •I'd s.nv l'lel4. 11 • -~....., -· "· ". ,,, ... ""° ~-...,. ... _ tl'uck driver. Jot\n ~·¥~~·~..._.. Boothe, whom ~be final-~ e:.~:!C ~rn_i::n°: ly married. The sequel ""°°'"· 1 k .. ~ .. dlOfect.,. understan~ably lacks • ~~-;:,:,:~-::n·::.:=:.: the dramatic power that .i111 • ,_,,, 1erm 111 Gellfotftl• ""''" made the original a sur-• ,.,. ,,. Ill• • ., buddl ... SWMwMr• lle'-filtwYont,....,..IW_.... prise hit of 1975, but trom e mMt•I 11oslaJtof, o• r•------- ·------ ••THE ONE AND ONLT" contlnqes the H~ Winkler role as tb• exuperaUng but ir· reaiatlbl e kook. The tor .. ula worlul better tJ\an It did to "Heroes,'.' lariely because ot Carl Relner'a sure comedic touctt. Ho dlrecta the fi lm with an understand- ing ot the cr•zlnesa ot campuses and television in the 1950s. The lauetis are often explosive aa Winkler, playing an ac. tor whose genius is re- cog n i z ed only by himself, achieves fame as a bizarre TV wrestler. Kim Darby is fine as the wife who almost understands the young eccentric, and the supporting cast Is splen- did. Especially Herve Villechaise, the dwarf on TV's ".Fantasy Island," who Is the best argument against the libelous hit song ''Short People." Rated PG. MarUy1n Hasse!i Ls1 aaain ~=:'~ '::::::J..c::': =ty warm y convmc ng as ,., .... SM'• NMl"I ... Y ,...,. • ..._ _____________ ......;. ___ _..;;. _ _;,. ____ ....;.. _____ ,. Kinmont and Timothy """'•· ,,.., lfYlftt 1e tlfld -· vet Singer i n LA ~eggy Lee will make her first performance in 10 years in Los Angeles when she gives a concert Wednesday at Dorothy Chandler Pavilion at the Music Center. She will perform with a 32-piece orchestra at 9 p.m. Remaining tickets are $12.50, $10 and S& Credit card charges may be made by telephoning 213-629-3262 and information ob- tained by dialing 213-972-7211. GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATION BEST ACTOR -HENRY WINKLER '"Finding the one you lave ... is finding yourself _ HEl~>l:S (PG) A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTION •HEROES" CCHfurtnsttAA(USON FORD \ "THE OTHER SIDE ANNE BANCROFr B tt d · 1 1MY ore o lee 111111, ._ llloll 11'1 o oms i_sp ays an , .. rc111r,,, netu.r ..,,e et •"•t emotlonal s1de be baa tfMY'll 11• ..,..,_ .. is -'°" • not shown on the screen c._._ .... .._,., ... ,,.."""" . _.,,. '""' .. -... -no: before. The rating is treclteflfttiwir-11n111wt1t11t1"' PG, but except for a "'.__..._ .. .,.~ .. ,.,. brief motel scene, there "TM• oau1nLaJ" cot1t111ue1 is nothing to offend CUM ~._., • ..._Vwt! .. "''' .,,,.. ...... ....,__ ...... c.-. anyone. ., • ,,,,,.., • rtC1.r11 • u. v..--. tor'-'""-" ........ IN,,..... Hit jo;;mey Is frtuQN wiu-Mnllll>- lngs, 11\Mtl,_ .,. C.OllOut cltb . ...., ...... ff WfY ..... ..._ Clll!l ..,. "'' C110roe, _., Played ti\' $oft.. di'• Locke. OfNClor ao.MWIM-... "MIOM AltXIETY" 11 dlldlcated by Mtl BrOOICsJj) All....S lilldw.0<~ • ..,. ICt an aflt<tlonal•, umellmos t>ll•rlovs tribute to tl>e m .. ier ot ws- pen se. 8rOOICs ,.,., may be '"' sellsf lad tine• aclllef ttl'OI to ,,.. ws- 1MR1e 09,.,. --to IWmpw ... , .,,. lie ert. Still I/le Olllraot011$ IWQht ••• ,,.., •. ..,. e.-. oeu ,.,,. wt>- POtt from Medellne KOl>n, H1rvey Kormen, Cloris Lea<'lltNn -H · -led ia-. Reted PG, but lt>et'e'I 11111• to olltnel anyone, e.cept POSSlbty psychlMrlJll. • .,. Pl<• ...,. • .,_...,.........cl• ""tll IOfle ~-at 1111 ClfmH ... .,. ortnol'N i..ow ,_.. tM ...., tut l>Omber;,...... 111>ee MOflfe C.ul .... ~ltalllllwd. llMad II. "SATUllDAY NIGHT ... Y.11" "'''Ill '"• erae•1111ce ti Johlt Trawlll H • ftlm AW In mud> tlliJ NIM met"llW' n Sylwattr sc.11°"" 1heTummg ~mt BEST PICTURE -GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD T\I "' T/f Tll ( ,. \Tl RI" f(I.\ .... :\ H1':R8tRT H()S.<; nut ,+.,\.\Jo 11.\\1 /lt1f7 '-'llllll.>. l' \h J.U.\'I:; TllE Tl"H.\"/,\"f:f'(l/\'1-TOM SNeRRlrT -, ... ., ..... M//\//Afl. 8ARY::,W\'/ll'OV -· U:.'1,J/>: RHOl\'!\f, :11,+.Hfl/ \ ·'< r117 • II \H.'\//A.J,1 Tiio.\tl'sro;-::A\TifO,Vt' Zf."HBf. • 1'\tER~ BA.UBTTHKA.TR& Dally 7:00. t:15 Fri. 6:00, 8:15, 10:30 Sat/Sun. 1 :30, 3:45. 8:00, 8:11, 10:30 Mon. 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 1:30 edwards HUNTINGTO HACH AT &US. H.L 848-0388 MEL BROOKS A PSYCHO-COMEDY MADEUNrKAHN ·CLOms lOOiMAN . HARVEY KORMAN .... ID YU PAOO·RON rJREY.lllWARD Mm Allms FUP*d •hi0fll8l·Ml~lllB·81Wl·PJllllW·"'81£1D.llli., C*}flllXE"· •llEMUl ·- lW,Z:.'!'i..:-O#J I MUSIC-"!""Alll'f""'MWlt! GI B.CmAI~ ll(COROS ~ wu.I Aii::.\ • . Lill.J .. -·" . ..,.,.~ WINNER OF 4GOLD£N GlOBE AWARQS l l \ '4-speed manual transmission, front disc brakes. ract< . and pinion steering. duraspark Ignition system. cont~ured bucket seats, color-keyed cut pile carpetlng, .sound Insulation package, tachometer. amp & temp. gauges. full vmyl roof. 2.3 litre 1-4 englne-2V. ~ radial tires. exterior accent group. Ser. t8R02Y103882 Stock 1101 ·ouRPRICE $3899 1.6 hire transverse mounted engine, 4-epee,d fully. synchronized manual trans .. front wheel drtw:' nlCk & pinion steering. front disc brakes. Michelin stMl-Oelt radial tires, bnght aluminum bumpers, bucMt aeatl, ' fold-down rear seat. pass. compart. carpeting. AM r11dlo, tinted glass. Ser. tGCFBTD53599 Stk. .fOTIM OUR PRICE $3899· MEW '71 FORD FAIRMONT 4DOOlSIDAN Carpeting. 6 cylinder engine. cruisomatte transmisst0n. radial tires. convenience group. power steering. PoW9f' front disc brakes. front & rear bumper gU#da, tinted glass complete. vinyl bodys1de mouldings. Ser t8X92T 155089 Stk #0790 OUR P~ICE $ 44 99 LEASI• All Makes & Models c.5 & Trucks For The Most Cotttpefftive Bid . In Town Call Matt Mattllews 546-7010 -1977 POMTIAC V9f1'UIA -e. auto. trans., factory air nditlonlng. pawer steering, er dtsc btakes. radio, cloth nterlor. mags. Wide track. (2Y27L7W109321). 11119. 1976 DATSUN · ., ,,. P.U. 4 c:/f .. 4 epeed, AM/FM radio.' custom Interior. ~ep bumper Al mirrors. white apoke wtil$.1 (1<;.42054i • . 1975 FORD FIOO P.U. V-8. auto. trans .. power steering. power dlac brakes. radio, knit vlnyt Interior. Grau cutters ideal. (~2Y). s3399 I 76AMC HOa.T SPOllTAIOUT e C)l1 .. auto. trans.. factory air' conditioning, power steering. power dlac brakes. radio. whitewall tires, vinyl roof. lux. Interior decor. lug. rack. Clean "'s°"· (A8A087A154483). \ . --· ,.,. " ' ... - FROM WINDOW SUCKER 1977 'fatt'ADA 1968 MERCEDES e eyt .. auto. trans.. factory air nos conditioning. pOW8f' ateenng, e cyt •• euto.. rw:fio, wtritewall power (dist) brakes. radio. tires. wheel covert. One 4 cyl .. 4 speed, radio. 8 tl"ldc. whitewall hres. tinted glass, own« a.sic. Uc. VOX608. Collector's Item. (543.JML). wheel OCMWS. landau te>p, vinyt ~;44n·c · s2199 1974 E200 SUllaVAM v..a. auto. tntns.. side pipes. cttrome spoke whls., custom Interior. custom paint. (E240Hl31~ 1974HONDA QYIC 4 cyt .• 4 9P88d. rwlio. heater, vinyl roof. maga. See to appreciate. (543NZ~. V.S, auto. trans., factory air · cond1t1onlng, power steering, power disc brakes. AM/FM Tadio. vinyl roof. split bench. vinyl Interior. tilt. Sharp and ready. (224NKR). DAILY ptLOT '4-speed manual transtnlsslorl. reek and elnion steering • durupark Ignition ayatem. all vlnyl bucket seats. co16\'.keyed cut pile carpeting. mlnrconsole. Power front disc brakes. wheel covers. AM radio. electric rear • window defroster. v1nyt Insert bOdyalde moldings. tinted glass. 2.3 litre 2V engine. deluxe t>umper groyp. Ser. IBR1.0Y119057Stk.1480 s3aoo OUR PRICE i£77 Sefeatshlft crul~tlc. pawer front ditc brakes. Power steering, bright wtleellip moldings. bright rocker panel moldlngs, deluxe sound package, directalre ventilation system. 5.8L 351 CID 'ZV engine, bsw radial . .tires. Unted gl~e. buc:bt seats & conaole. front & rear bumpt guards. opera windows. Ser. t8A30H170897 Stk. #0857 _OUR PRICE s4999· NEW '71 FORD LTD 2 PILL.AUD HAJtDTOP FACTOttY Ala COHDmOt•.a 6.e litre .WO CID v.s engine. aJHlinyt seat trim, wsw • radial tires. convenience gruop. deluxe bumper groyp,: AM/FM stereo racho. tinted gla.complete, deluxe wheel covers. heavy-duty auspenalon. Ser. 18Je2S100621 Stk. 1078 MACHI . V-8. auto. trans.. factory air condlt1onlng, power steering, PoWer (disc) brakes. l'8<bO & tape, rear spoiler. mags & wide tires Red and Racy. Lie. .. 53399 1973 LTD 2D00tt V.S, auto. trans • factory air conditioning. pc>wer steering, PoWer brakes. AM/FM radio. 8 track. whitewall tires, vinyl roof, wheel covers. (805JPN). ES5a99. .. y .. · v.s. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning. power steering. Power brakeS. r11dio. heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof. wheel covers. Clean as a --s·1·499 . 7IOWAGOH 4 cyl.. auto. trans.. radio, whitewall tires, Wheel covers. vinyl interior. Family economy. (290PKK). s3999 · · s2399 s3399 SQUIU • cyl.. auto. trans., air, radio, roof rack, tux deCOr Interior. Brite red beauty. (OMMXT). 1975 vw scuoco .. eyl.. .. tPeed. llr. AM/FM radio. heatet. dettQce Int .. brite orang•. (838MYMJ. 1977 RANCHERO IOO v.s. auto. trans.. factory air conditioning, power steering. Power dlsc brakes, AM/FM radio. wheel covers, vlnyl Interior. low milee. C1G93742). s4799 I 9761COURIER PICIUP 4 eyt .. euto. tra'\8., air. step bump •• mlmn. twcury Interior deoor. extertor decor. Low · mllea. (1F19$63). YI: ai~ing on tax your refund • in- to J l l- .. WASHINGTON (AP>"""' WhDe B.R. Kaldemau'a ~l&Uom set Ur new q11e1Uoo1 •bout. tbo ateraate alfalra:d.aa,y ot U..-1 ose to tbe ep lffm ,.. luctant to us-. the ptcture be drew of the sca.odal't evolvUon. · Sam Ervtn, tbe retlre4 tbahman ol the S•111te Wat.ersate Comm~ttee, aaid UtUe . ' . bOut the lllbstance or th• boot, wblda eoes on nle today. by Blcbard M. Nixon'I cbltf of &a1f. ••1 WOULD SAY that before l would accept bll book at credible, l would want tt COl'- robonted ~all tb• apottl• es· eept Juct11. • tbo North Carollna ·-·-··· Democrat 1aicl. .. A man that would commit perjury under patb mt1bt poulbly be tempted to commit it when he ls not under oatb.'' Ervin aald in a telephone in· tuvlew. In Calltom.ia, Haldeman told an ABC News reporter at the Lompoc tederal penitentiary ...... ,, that people were ··reacttac to dartlal lalle)'l'I -wait untll the whole book comes out." BOB WOODWARD, whose re- porting of tbe Wateriate case with Carl Bernstein won a Pulltaer Prise for the Wasblncton Poet, aald there wu DO new evidence revealed in the book apd that lt u maiDly theoriet. "These are the people wbo said the truth ls ne10Uable, and I think we have another vel"IJOn ot lb~ neiottated truth. l'm not sure that Haldeman bu told us everYthl.nt. I tblnk be'• boldlns back tome~a.' • 'Wocachrard .said today on NBC.TV'• 'To- NATION day .. abOW. Woodward · alto 1atd he believed Nixon's Wateraate troubl• 1nvolved more than just 1eodin1 out Nbon Alde Cbatlea W. Co1'all to c• t 1omeW.nt cxi Lawrence O'Brl•n1 then Democratic natiollal chauman. "IT SHOULD BE re· mem beted from the test1mqn,y that this break·in team dld not work for Mr. Cobon,'' be said. "Tbel wereworklq tor tbe.,,... ldent 1 re4lectlon com.mlttee..:" "I think all of the evidence abows that Nixon lit lots ot matches, and banded one to Colson perb aps. one to Haldeman, one to Dean, one to Erllchman, .. be aatd. Henry Ruth. former special Water11te prosecutor, wanted to talk more about the et.hies of the scandal's participants profi~ from such boots. · .. , HAVE LONG been bothered by the commercial aspects of all these Watergate boob," he said. ••v ou've really cot to make • lot of money and I guess all these tellows do. All of the ..,. er-up co-consplratora now aeem to be turning on oae ane>Uu!f," Ruth continued, without ad· dresalnc Haldeman'a major ac- cuaaUona. THESE THREE IN CENTER OF NEW STORM OVER BOOK ON NIXON'S DAYS IN OFFICE Author H. R. Haldeman, Former President Nixon, St.te Secretary Henry Klnfnger Haldeman, who long remain~ lo)'al to Nixon's p05lUon on !e 1972 break·ln at Democra c Party headquarters, sudden y changed course In his bodk, charging -the former presldeint and Colson with pushing tbe bur&lary to obtain inside in- form aUon about Democr~c chairman Lawrence F. O'Brl~ whom they suspected was on the payroll ot Industrialist Howa,}d Hu&hp. ·Leak Speeds Up Sal~ A NIXON SPOKBSMAN' ln San Clemente ~ded oqly that .. Nixon'• book will come out in May.'' $1 Million in Agreements JeopanBzed THIS BOOK SAYS NIXON'S THE ONE ON WATERGATE Former Aide Haldeman Blames Chtef for Br••k-in FroOI the White House omee occupied by Haldeman durtna h.la days of power at NiltOll'I aide, President Carter's chief aide, Hamilton Jordan, said be was surprised by the flutter the book is causing, at least in the news media. NEW YORK CAP> -Rarely has a book been held In such sec re cy, but "The Ends of Power" by II. R . Haldeman leaked llnyway and precipitated ~m assive publishing brouhaha. The publication of parts of the book in Thursday's Washington J>o s t p rompted Newsweek magazine to accelerate its re· lease of excerpts purchased for 'bout $125,000. Jt caused lbe New York Times to publish all oI its five-part series today, tn- * * * stead of starting next Monday. IT JEOPARDIZED AN e s timated $1 million in syndication agreements signed under a pledge or confidentlali· ty. It raised the possibility of numerous lawsuits. And it threw Times Books into turmoil. Executives of the publishing house, which is affiliated with the company that publishes the New Yort Times, .went into DOD· atop huddles, finally decldinc to * * * Highlights: Nixon 'Caused' Watergate NEW YORK (AP) -Here are hlghlights of the 30,000·word ex- cerpt ot H .R . Haldeman's forthcomi1»! book, "The Ends of Power,'' released by Newsweek magazine: WATERGATE BREAK-IN - Richard Nixon caused the Watergate break-in in an effort to get evidence to prove that Democratic national Chairman Lawrence O'Brien waa on Howard Hughes' payroll at the time be was head of the Democratic National Com mlttee. Nl.xon and alde Charles W. Colson weTe furious at O'Brien for capitalizing on the JTT scandal. NIXON AND COVER-UP - Nixon was involved in the Watergate cover-up from the very beginning, Haldeman said. He wanted the cover-up for three reuoos: So he would not be linked. through Colson, to the break-in; to preTent dlsclosure of any responsibility Job'n Mitchell might have had; and to keep secTet other activities such as the break·in at lbe office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist. CHINA INCIDENT -The· Soviet Union asked the United Statea ln 1969 to Join a pre· emptive nuclear strike oD China and, when rejected, planned to * * * go ahead on lta own. Tbe attack was averted by diplomatic moves, Haldeman said. ALLEGED BLACKMAIL - Kenneth Clawson, a former Colson aide, told Haldeman that Colson 'was blackmailil)C the president wllb tapes Colson. made of his cooversations with Nilton. CIA JNVOLVEllENT -Tbe CeAtral Intelligence A1ency monitored the progress of the Wateuate operation and lheo sabotaged it. As evidence of sa bot.age, Haldeman cited adions by former CIA agent James McC.ord. He said the buf placed by MtCord on O'Brien's phone did not have the range to reach the place where the re- cei vers were. He also said · McCord placed tape on doors ID the Watergate c(Mnples where it could easily bedlatovered. 18~-IONUTE GAP-Rqn. ing the 18Jh·mlnute 1ap tn a Irey tape, Haldem8'1 said be believed that Nixon may have started to er41se the tape blmlelf but was too clumsy to finlsb the job. The conv-'raation Utal waa ellminat-· ed.t Haldeman wrote, mltht have J>Ol.lltect to· Nixon and Colaoo. aa the mea bebiDd tbe break·in. * * * Dedon or •• ~ • • 'The Company' Rings True NEW YORK <AP) -Jn bis novel, "The Company," John 0 . Ehrllcbman desctlbes how a adnnce tbe Feb. 27 releue dale to today. The order went out Thursday to begin shipping 300,000 volumes stacked eight feet high on sealed pallets in sealed trucks. An order was also placed for a second printing ot 50,000 copies ol the 352-paee volume that sells for $12.95. IN ADDfl'ION, THE Times· syndlcatioa service abandoned the embar&O It had demanded ol the 21 U.S. aewapapen. plm 15 to 20 foreign ouUet1, tbat planned publication of the 10,000.ward Mriea atartlal Mon- day. The price for the newspaper series ran&ed trom $5,000 to $25,000. The book 'a co-author, Joseph l>lMona, said the West Germ an maguine Stern alone paid $250,000 for rights. Memos Faked Nixon Name Used on.Nudea NEW YORK CAP> -John Ehrllchman spent bours faking memos from Richard Nixon and at- taching them to pbotol of nude starlets he then sent to Heney _Kissinger in otflclal·looldng folders, writes R.R. Haldeman. Haldeman, the former White House chief of staff, said ln his new book. ''The Ends of Power," that the photos were or women the former secretary of state had dated and that Ebrlicbman wrote the memos as if they were "bizarre 'demands' for certain types of action." Ehrllcbman would dispatch the memos one by one at various times and places, Haldeman said. "They always looked official -until Henry opened them and saw the nudes," said Haldeman, who also recounted tbat Nixon secretly got a kick out of Kissinger's love life. ''Most or us are concerned about ~e Middle East a~s package and the coal strike," Jordan said. He added that he had been monitoring network television Thursday, ~cttna to see the coal 1\rtke aDcl the arms deelto receive m.tor .U.doa -dot the Haldeman book. • · COLSON, aEPOaTBDL~ a Haldeman rival durtus the MX· on years, hotly denied the cbarses that be and Nilton er.. dered the bt.a'gl1r1. "I"~ it just didn't happen that wa1 .•. There was prob- ably the most exhaustive in- veaUeaticXl iD the history of the Republic to determine lf that happened and the investigatkm determined that it did not happen," Colaon said during Jin interview on ABC· TV. * * * The publishing house, tbe syndication aervlce and Newsweat each said tt was too soon to say what tbe rmanclal or le&al ramlticationa might be. U the leak I.I traced to any of the oreanllationa that pledged teerecy. It couJd be open to a dama1e11utt. BOMB OP TllDI were ~ at bavtna paid for material that le alt ed. Haldeman Served Cause The Los Anp1el Tlmee ract-ed LDIU.U, by qytng ••we may throw the whole thing out" but later anDOUDCed It would publbh the entire five-part seri8I today. Wife Says He Would Work for Nixon Again · "We have bad better da.n." •. Newsweek ma1uine atforaey quoted editor Edwaid Komer u saying. The weekly released all 30,000 words of its excerpts while COD· tinui.ng with plans to publlab half oa Mcaday and the rest in a week. * * * "Madman' Ruse Eyed by Nixon From AP Dllpatcbel Kn. B.ft. Baldemaa says her imprisoned husband aerved a cause as President Nixon's chief of 1taff, .. and if be'could turn back the clock, he would consider tt a prtvllege to serv~ again." Jn an interview in the March issue of Ladies' Home Journal, Joanne Haldeman declared: .. As far as Water&ate 1oes, I certainly don't admire the president'• actlom. However, I -and I mean this with tremendous alncerity -I think what hal)l)t'Ded. to Bob, to .Yellll EMlldlmu and to Jo•• llla.D has been very hard on Richard[""" _______ ] Nix~~i feel that lt bu af. PEOPLE · fected him emotJonaUy, --------'-deeply, it's Just what he'• not able to expHea these feelinp openly. What to ~ say? ·oee, l'nuon-y'l'" To End ar? . Norman Wed~ pr:ducer and sereea writer !fEW YORK (AP> -IUchard wboee credits Include "Serpico" and "loe," bu Nixon once advanced a plan be -n arrested acatn -W. time tor allegedly called b1a "Madman Tbeary0 to 11t1pptng out on a $38.eo motel blll in Colorado end the Vietnam war, D.R. Springs.Colo. . Haldeman writ.es in bis boot. Weiler, 511_ posted $1,500 bond and wu re-''Th• Ends of Power." Jeued from jau. Ht la accused ot nmnlna out oa Haldeman, who wu Ntxon'a the bill at the Ralntree Inn. cblef of staff until the Watergate He was arrested l n acandal toreed 'bi.a resignation., Colorado Sprinp less than two said thetheorywas that a threat months ago after trying to buy oC lrratlonal military action several guns. Wexler was coupled with lromlses of' granted deferred prosecutton h• financial aid coul quickly bring Ddver in 1915 in two cues a settlement with the North after agreeing to remaLtr free VletnameM. • · troni .,.,...uor a year ud to re- Haldemaa aal4 Nlaoa •Jr· main under a~lli• ot a plained. b1a tl*l'Y dm way: "I J)l)'Cblat$t. Gall tt U.. Veihf" 'l'IMCll'J, Bob. I want t&t 1'1i1Ja ~-to billtT• l~ ...,wu; ,... Wlaere I .,_ dD .-, tf lltOp U.. war. Wetll jmt 1Up Cblno"8taprison. Word to tlMm tbct •for ·Ood'1 Jn hll nilty plea Ian. 19, be 1aid be provided a Hite. )'OU ICnow Nllllon '-9b-atolen mlorowav• oven for anotlier man. ... ,94 about eoau1)uQ.lam. We Pl'oaecUt01' itlehu-4 Balfmaa claimed t.owe can't Nltnln blm when be'• an·• a4mltted ba¥lng been blvolvt!d In tenctna goocU (or m -Uill be ha bia band on Hveral ytart. thenuelntbuttoa' -and HoQU ''Prominent per.oM llkt hlm are held to a Minh hlililelf wll1 be 1n Paril ln higher standard of CODduct," COll'lmented Superior tn~ ..... forpeM... Court JlldQe Edwn T.lhder. Biit tt dkS not work, be Uid, * blc:a_. u.e ~· wwld ....,. Dr • .1...-a . ...._ the flnt blact to 1*.oin• 1lilt A•1riee•• woald aot) .,..1chntct a ml.ter Y!~ America unl'nlirilt.1, e1INGrt tM war Ud ev..-a~ uld he \rill rillP d Jlead ot Silcramento S*ate waald *" _,,,ay_ lJnlveralty 00 J\Ble JO. • • I f Bood gave no reuon for the declllon, saying only that "several new c~ opportuniUes ate under consideration" and that be would anoounee details later. The announcement 1ald Bond would devote Iris time dUJ'in2 bis remaining moolba in offlce to ex-ternal unf venlty relations. Executive Viee President w. Uoyd Joen will take over day-to- day manaiement or the campus. * A judre ordered S111pended V1r71ud gov- emor Manta Mandel, wbo claims he ta destitute, to pay back alimony of about $30,000 to his first wife. Baltimore Circuit Judie James A. Perron granted a judameut against Mandel at the request of Barbara Oberfeld Mandel, whom the governor divorced tn 1974 to marry .rea.ae Dane7. Mandel's lawyer, Lee Sae••• relt«ated bls client's clalm that be ti lDdlgent. The . I~ Maryland go'fel'nor bas said th•t be anO hla · famll)' are llytq on aavtnp aceumul&ted b~ bJs current wt.re. Tb• Judp allo ordered Mandel to mate bia first wife the lrrovacable beneficiary of a $100,QOP Jife lmurance policy. * Opera star BeverlJ SW. is accustomed t6 ovations, but aays a simple pudd1q pot "11 apecia1 tome.'' Mia SW. became the Hnb' Puc14tn' Tbeatrtcal1' 28th •'Womu Of the Year." Her a'J'ard, tn engraved paddiol pot, was preaente• b' tile HuY'1"d UnlvenltJ sr<JQp after 1b• roct• ln a motoreadt tbrouab Cambrld ........ Hutt r.ctdJlll NJI it Is the oldest theatrical oflanilatSon ln ~e nation and the third oldest in the wod.d. - \ --.. -..... -·---. "' ... -. • I /. ! • Dl:TROIT (AP) -l'otd MoW Co. proftlJ lea.,.cl 1S perc.eat to a record '1.t billion In 1'7'. Ch-lrmu Henry Ford l1 saya th• automaker needl ~ ~1 of It. .. • Jt waa the .flnt Um• Ford profits toPl*l $1 biWon. 1'SublUllUa1 •antlaO aN an absolute n~ ty" If tbe coml)l.ll)' ts tO niiD.11n $)'fc>lltable la Ult fact of pernnitnt detnaodl for smal.Mr, ct~ . more tuel-at.lngy cars, Ford ~d Tbunday. :· .. Sw ..... PNlteil ;: F AplBANKS. Alaska <AP> -Autb•rlties s.j tbey are tnve1tt1aUng a suspect wbo may hav' bE!en involved ID an expl°'ion and leak tbq temporaril,y abut down oil flow In the tr&M·Alasb plj>e ll Ile'. • But ~te police are • releaaJ,nc few d«a!S. ol ( ']. tbetr lnvesttcauon into IN SHORT the second act of _ aabotap qalnst the $7. 7 :. hl~~. • OU WU nowtns AOrmally th~b the 900-mll~ line today alter bein1 abut oU almost 24 ·bourt- becaust ol ~•Y'• blast, which ripped a ~..: lncb bole ~b the crud&-tarrylng line. · :: SlrllteA~M :: WASHINGTON , <AP> -American AlrUne&> avoided a strike wben lt reached agreement short· Jy before midnight Tbursday with the Transport Workers Unl()O. Tbe 1trike, wbicb would have shut down the naUon's second lartert airline bad been scheduled for 12:01 a.m. EST today. The union represents 12iooo American employ~. moat of whom ho d mecbanlcal. malntenance, inveJltory, communications and meteoroJoa Jobe. A•• eeu1e11t"Near SALISBURY, Rhodesia <AP) -Prime · Minbter Ian Smith and three black leaders were reported near agreement today on the la.st issue remaJnint 1n their negoUationa lo draw the blueprint for BhodNla '• transition to black m•· jority rule. After reacblnt accor4 on constitutional principles aodthe makeup of the security forces, in· formed sourc• said th~ agreed today that the in· terim cabloet would be dtade up of five members from each al. the four partla Involved in the t.allts, meanlnglSblacbandfivewhit.es. Tbet saJd a comprehensive agreement could be signed by the end of the month . . ...,.;. .,..,,,, ... LONDON (AP) -The dollar edged lower in nervoWJ trading on Europe's money markets toctay but reoovered a bit in Tokyo and Southeast Asia. O,ne Zurich dealer said in the absence of any encourlgl.ne news, the U.S. currency was not in demand and was lending to drop lower. A Fraokturt dealer said the muket was af- fected by U.S. Treasury Undersecretary Ant.bony Solomon's statement in Paris Thursday that the Federal Reserve Board had not Intervened in support of the dollar for three wcm. PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICB , ' . . ·• ' r • I t ,I ( non •ur-. Mottu: CO'IY, Wmf UAD• GLASS Newport Heights pool bome on a 75' x 150' lot that is comfy, cozy, tlean and only $138,'SOO. This 3 bedroom home f e:atures leaded glass windows, outstanding landscaping, a formal dining room and a covered patio. All Jn a ~tUet, f arftily neighborhood within walking distance to schools. A new listing at just $1.38,500. <Owner is a Re alt~ :Tll STAINES COMPANY REALTORS 64().5711 180 Newport Center Or., N.B. . PUSINTS lll 1Clnf@! Goff Course rstite The ultimate in llvlng luxury on tiearly ~ oc. lot. Enter parking court thru remote control gates for privacy & security. Marvel at nearly '7000 sq. rt. home ideally designed and decQrated for formal entertaining, yet has a cozy den for relaxlni, a separate game room /wet \>~t f gr. casual parties, spectacUlar lreetf~~!:' pool/Jacuzzi and separate pool •MIU'!! tor wet fun, 5 huge bedrooms, Slh baths, break! ast nook, and of course an exercise room. Lingo Rlal&1ldt WOODUIDGl-ClllKSIDI ,.,.... J .... DO • ..,_ .... - lot. DKONttd la Htfft tous, le•ef ........ ,.Ho. cloM .. ,.... poo1,..+w.111o111w •••• 193,IOO CAMEO HIGHLAM>S ~"-•CdM.lla+ ... .............. to pnt ........ tpec• fw pool. lxc1l1•t ..._ .. $169,tOO CDM DUPLEX All rel\ W\ate advertbed la thla newspaper la 1ub· Jed to the FedcraJ Fair Hou11n1 Act of 1848 wblcb makes It Ut.e1al to ad•ertlae "any pre· f~reoce, llmltaUon. or U,._1(.)UI: li()MI:§ REAL TORS~. 675·6000 ' 2«3 ~att Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde, al 546 ·5990 GtMNI 100210.••r.. 1002 ' l11ew ,..,.rty. bcltf9t old CDM •le4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• w /pod • ;mi. 2 ll-oww; 3 ··~. -~ d.l.acrialinaUon baaed on ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~ nee, color, reU1lon, aex, , or naUonal orilin. or an &i1Mr81 1 ooz' G1111r81 I 002 )nf.eilUon to make any ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• auch pre:Cereoce, Um.It•· ----------------lion, or dlacriminaUon:. ''. . Thia newspaper will not knowinf lr accept any advert 1 n1 for real ·eat.ate which is 1fl viola· 'Uoooltbelaw. FAMILY SIUD HOME CORONA DB. MAR Just a short walk to the beach from this spa~ious 5 bdrm. home on two valµable Coro.Da del Mar lots. Owners -------·qi ,have mbved & priced this lovely home aaoas: AdYertlsen below replacement at $330,000. MAJESTIC ISTATI -Towering trees s urround this estate. POOL - TENNIS -HORSE PROPERTY. Only $255,000. e• '4CMl61 HA YE POOL PARTllS Neat 6 yr old home with sparkling pool and lot.I of patio. Excellent for enterthlnlna. ~ Bdrm, fireplace, all modern kitchen. You'll be delighted at $'14,900. C .. 146-4141 IMTaT AIHB'S DBJGHI' Street or fine homes enhances large 4 bdrm incld master suite & private bath. Formal candlelight dining, massive rock fireplace, 3 car gar .. steps to park & golf course. Priced for fast sale. $13S,OOO. AltnST'S HIDEAWAY 20' IDgh beamed ceilings, family room & frplc enhance 3 bdrm incl master s uite & pvt bath. Spiral staircase leads to loft or 4th bdrm. Entertaining all offers 540.9922 A...nc.. Hw SW.W I ~ ,.. ..... '°'1CJ .... Sllt,SOO EMERALD IA Y--IEACl:fSIDE L•x•rlou 5 II, wood & tl•u bt11Wen/dtdp1r11 .......... .,... ,.. bHc ........ cOlri • ,.,.. ~ la aecflldtd seffl119. 1.-ect to. • • $5'5,000 • '644-7020 2123 SAM JOA9UIM HIU.S IOA MEWrORT IEACH ........ cMcl& ........... .., .... ,.,..... ~ ,... ksm•stclt• Tiie DAILYPILOTa.-1 • ..., ...... tint 671-4400 Serving Costil Mr· .. 1.frv1nc H untington Be<1ch · N t_•wpL •' He .lL ti ~ ~ .......... !~~~·=~ .......... . carred latlf'tlo. Ollfr. ........... w. ....................... Gau .. I OOJ !!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• m.ftAI ...... u•c 9 u 1rt' I 002 G.. .... I 002 ..-~·~"' ............................................. . IOMUS IAlt•AIM FIXB $65,500 $63,000 Cbaleau Blanc 2 story, 3 FHA·VA TERMS TOO!! twin siied bedrooma, ffandyman's apedaJ for plua h1.11e booua room ! t t &hole abort oo cash too«. Z Car carage & pnvate hie for a great 3 bdrm patio. $6,:iOO Cash moves home. Step saver ltltcben you In. Hurry please call ls large yard. Don't tniss 962-7788. lb is one! Call today $41,000 1bia ii not a rnlaprint ! Jl la a super Z Br twnhme. w/pool. clubhouse & sauna. Prime eod unit location w~vt palio, claM lo •boll 11. 754-IDO 10021 IALIOA fSUte Stlt,HO Glowing corner fireplace in the charming living room of this 3 bdrm 3 balh hqme. Swmy study or .sewing rm off upstairs master suite. Lge dbl ga.r age. Short walk to beach & shops. WESUY M. T~YLOl co .. UALTOIS 21115-J~ ........ .... ,.. I OOZ G1w el I 002 ••.•••..........•...... ...................... . IFYOU HAVE LOOKED BEFORE .ror a 4 bdrm, 2 bath-with a breatf ast area plus formal dining, a good floor plan with lovely decor, ample yard "1th inviting patiHge attached dbl. garage. You must see this at 3207 Dakota. 400ltr. fOIAU. se~:O. CJlit'MRt aaw ~' UDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den, 4 baths, livin~ rm. w /cathedral ceiling . Lge. master bdrm. suite .. ltG CAMYOM 4 BR, f am. rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broad moor Plan 3 w /patio views from each room. $325,000 IAYFIOMTS Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J·l! ~orod1· D1•v•· NB t.JC., blbl .. K£Y &t6-'n71. • I: MN r11Q•HTftP<1011( NICI• R£ALTOP.Sft ·•· .,. · I o NEWPOllT CBfT9, M.I. 644-49 I 0 1002 G1Mf"el Ge•r.. 1002.GeMrel . I 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... •••: .. •••············ --------i . i . . I'~~~~~~~~~·-============= •UM19UEIM 71 !: < ··"'.s ·- Does the tbouaht appeal .._,.. I 002 G11Mrel .............................................. IRAHD M1W Wllliam E. Doud ti Co. to you7 II ao, conalder , $54,950 jolnl.q the prestigious NIAi OckMl ISLAMDCOn'A$! A pioneer Real Eatate l U.$65,900! firm HM llOVED to $169,500 Ill t.rael A brand new new headquarter• ia Sunny & bri1bt 3 custombuilthomeaton-NewportBeacb. bettroom home witb \y ~.900 Cull price. EX· SalelpencGDelwbowisb Corm'.al .-......am aod cdl~atJoo on tree outatMdiq opportunity private -patlo . .Juat lined Eltabli.abed lnlleaJ~t.eaaJes, enoush yard to plant Del ood. 3Spaclou.a ~ YoUr pansya beblnd the bedr s + Z baths. Ineamete I FMILYHDME ln a peat. Mi&bborhood. S Bl& bdnns, dinin1 nn .. 1"11 batha, bl& yard. leoced Croat A back. Cov· ered pa~. ~ quick. ukln~ $69,SOO. Call ~llSl . • •.. HERITAGE $51,900 We ll maintained townbome in convenient locaUon. Btfi around• w/mature trees & 1hr1&ba. 3Bd, 2Ba, 9'./chabhoue. pool & aa una . Owner tramferred. Muat sell NOW! 146-'1711 offices ol Unique Homes PUlared porch entry to fer• fmitutic 19'11. Ac· gnclous living at af· celeraled commiulon fordable prices!! Rieb acMduJe. in-bouae awing wood deeor. ~ saver loaaa, creative Aal ldtctmi~ W/walli-in pan. aids, compUter terminal try!· Enclosed patio & adlve trainlnl • ad· room. Spacious family mm.l.stntioa. a. unique towubome olfutnc nlA in i&witb Un.iqudloma & GI terms! Won't last Real F.stat.e. Contact Jim can Wood at 8'75-eOOO, Jackie Handleman at. 5*-5990 ph!ket fen~! Tll1a bome Family room. Trailer ac· CommettlaJ olfen the opportunity to cess.Caltrut752-1700. are now betn1 lA · ~~~~~~~~ RealEat.ate . REALTORS ~ Walker & lee '45-0303 MAHAGER-IEAL ESTATE NEWPORT BEACH A prime opportunity with an • outstandin_g r~al estate org~tion + high earnings! Experience is a • mus t . Prestigious location. All. applications held in strictest confidence. Please reply to Ad #68. Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 -t~!~~r~~:~~ r•iifi ==~~~ fe"!!i n. ~~ to, __ H.4_•_...a:.:.Wmt:.:l::..OR.:::;..;..;_~.;..:.IE_W __ EAL ESTATE • ~ouo come property may be Balbo•ltl&nd COSTAMISA ~ ~wbatyouarelookln,1 HARIOllVIEW G FJXER UPPER t173-fl800 Eutalde triplex; 1 year RNtt.on, E•• 1 .. 1 ,.__ • t...irm, % bath & lo the ori~_., section of Ge1Mr81 I OOZ••rel ·~~~~~~~~ U In dl 2 ... ~•UU ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• .. •• ••c....o-~ 1: new. ve one &. (71') '71CMM22 2 ooe bdrm Ullils. Cloae Harbor View Hills. On ·-------•I FOREST E OLSON ........ .. . .. Barpln bunt.en, Me.thia1--------BR. unit• re.at the ot.ber •--------t 0 a b o p p l n r Ii the view side of While disaster. 4 Bed.rm. 1~ IUCHVALUES WATWN1' 2. Ea. w /frpt. Aak. MOll.IMOMI &rwpar\aUoD.94&:n u . Salb Way. Exceptionally bath, ~eeda paint. and 5 Bdrm Peninsula Pt. e---$1.15,000 . -.. sharp 4 Bdrm, 21,; ba, TLC.Itaamoneymaller Stepatobeach.$197,.500 -..-· E.COPELAND.Bkr -• fam rm home with attB0,900.C.llS46-S880 · SZJt.SOO 562'°'34 836-7824 V.-y abarp I bdrm unit formal dining, lovely ---~-:... HERITAGE • • REALTORS Newer Oc ean vi e w duplex , Dana Pt. $149,:iOO. ~~~~~~~~5 Bd rm , Corona --------. Highlands $167 ,soo . IAYROMT private beach/ World Balboa ·a best locaUon ! 2 Wide Brokers 67S-454.5 Bdrms., 2 bath condo 1n._ ______ _ adult, all aecurity bldg. GllAT HOUSI! Wallt to ocean. pier. MIAT~J! vWa1e. ~hopping; boat 3 Bdrma. Newport Beach slip sv7 All this Jor home. 91UO,OOO SlC9~UMRoMT 323WALHUTST. CbarmlnC 2 BR. bome; 2 OPIM SUM. 1-4 &JJoy year round Uvtnc MESA VBDI ID a btfl p&r1l ill lntoe. __ .::Re:::.:. a1=.::r..::..;ta;,;;;.te~--f poo1 & Jacuui. Low care on tbe water and be Park baa _.,., Jaeuni, _ ~o ..... CH yard mesmerbed by the boat-POOL 1urd Hrvlce lawa -• - lng action and aJI the ~ally fine home bowllat, bllllarda, $17.100 night llj2Jta. Truly a pre· on ah ady cul·de· .. c ctubrm, • bobbJ 'I'm. Prol...Sooally decorat· 1Uglou.a addreH with atnet. 4 Bedroom, 2 bath Woa 't lut at p.t,$00. ed. w a r m b r l c k aecurity, privacy & lwt· with craclrllDI brick PhaDe todq to lntrped. fireplace . Randy uiioul livl.QI. Spacloua 2 fireplace 6 blt endoaed ~. C:--rutdtea oYer· bdrm with UM of pool, ps1io_ SeDood ltor)' Jacuszl & sauna. Boat pmio. Full price $lllS.500. '-ta mut4!r • z more dock may be nallable. CALLSSl-218tO. • ..-me bdrms. Fan· OwDU will leue option. C: SELECT __ ..;;;RW:.;:;;;:;.;;:El:;.:tat.;;;;..;.;._--.i laltie Nwpt Terrace bu)'. - WATERFRONT T'PROPERTIES r::=~~;,,.oo'°",."'' HOMES 1--------REALESTATE 631-1400 AND-apectacular ocean, bay, Laland and Dig.ht U1ht view. $29,500. e.1644-7211 FOR DETAILS rJn NIGEL lll\ll[Y & l'\"J"JLJ( 11\TfS car pra1e. Bat •wim· mini • fi1hin1 area. L great neig~bora! awson··------1 rm.ooo~PLIX RHlty Comp~ny PllYACY STARTER•= Otnwli..... -tbe7 .. m 'ncl\ld• the refrlJ•ra\or. waahr/ ryer ud 'of c:aarae-tM kftehea link'. Uri• Kaat.ef Bedroom • liltclMa/dlalat area. _.. taom.. cau SM-2.313 OflfN Ill 0 •II ( AIN ro w"""''. ~THE J\£At ~ ~~T.l\Tt:RS, t 1'bla 4 bdrm haven ii an eseculift nward · INeD JalU., blue .Paclfic, a bome to mah It all wmtlnmlle. C.Orona del Kar at ll'• beaU 1416 Kefvt ..... Open daib' Ull ..... 000. GASSAVIR! Perfect for the 1 car famil)'·walk to major abopplng, park. lchools " bus it.op. 4 Spaclaut bdrma, ll!<t baths , flreplac.. Your choice of VA. FHA or conventJooal tsma. New U.Unp at Just $63,500. HURRY! 531·5800 Open Eva. ..,, ........... Two l·bclrm. unlta on 30ldl5 lot; fee land la West Newport, just ltepa to beat beach I A1kln1 $125,000 2UMITS 2 Bdrm. house with cute bacbeJar apt.., on comer lat. near water. Priced at $1!1,500 873-93 ~Eves associated oun.-f ,,,., f,ft fl~ 1ou•; • 1.' ..,._ •o'O·in t 1 I t.#i I IAYCUST Immaclilate s Br 4 den, 2~ ea. 1p k1tcbea. cor-ner tplc, recently cpt'cl, bUuL JUd. ll•,500. Kur: Wh:tl ~~ •. !:t~r ,,> ~ 1 N,.,.,..,,. ,,, t~1\o • N n I. I~' fl:~ lb I ' : Clfflt.. ....... Oner uWous to • this neut and Tad7 Bdrm ls fami.17 roo bmne. BxeeUeat borlrna-.... ~ locale. -come . 611 ... Pl.M.I. Open Home Sat/Sull 1-S PETE BARRETT -REALTY- '42-52M . OCIAM FIOMT DUN.El FANTASTIC VIEWfl'om either tbe upper 5 bedroom 11Dit. or 4 ~ lower. Each unit has fi~plece Pl~ many built·ins. Located between Newport & Balboa Pier. ~.ooo. 644-17'66 ttll IAN JOAQUIN tfU.• 9'0. tN NIMOftT aN'TU ) I l ~ ., . I • I -• • c • .. • l c $ ~ J 'i 41 I FINIR HOMIS FIOM $lt,500 TO SI ,100.000 . HST IA YNONT V AWi Custom home w/4 BRs. lg. formal dining rm + brkfst rm in patio garden setting , cozy '8mily rm w /f pl. Separate wing for children or i!uests. Private community w /sandy beaches. $495,000. Appt. only. Beverly Morphy 642·8235. <K ·ll > TUT·T\IT-l(OM-OM MOW! Thi~ Ivan Wells, single owner Baycrest gem is no artifact -but is preserved in royal condition! Enter private gates past gardens to this pharaoh-type 4 BR home w /spacious family rm & living rm w /stone fpl, formal dining rm + B·I island kitchen & finis hed garage. Super buy & investment at $210,000 incl. land. Tom Allinson 642-8235. IK-121 FAMILY ORIENTED Single s tory li v in g in ~o-convement Eastbluff 4 BRs + s pacious family rm w /cozy gas lit fireplace. opening to private patio & play yard. Easy walk to shopping, parks and schools. Only SJ 52.500~ Larry Dyer 642-8235. CK -13) SIEAYIEW Beautifully up g rad e d "Nantucket" plan at end of cul-de-sac. 2 BRs + den -earth tones Priced to sell at ~19,000. Martha Macnab 642-8235 (K-14 ) LUSH GREE:H SITTING A bt.>st buy in Harbor View Hills ! Ne~ ly painted & ready! Lovely 4 BR & family rm home w/enclosed l'Ourlyard. nice patio w/views of park green. some ocean & city lights $195.000. Marjorie Mahon 644 -6200 <K-15 1 EXCLUSIVE LIVIHG IN IAYCREST Lg t·orner. prof. landscaped lot ! Spacious 4 BR. 3 bath home w /Jg . attractively fenced pool. Brand new "lop-of-line" kitchen w/dining a re a Com pact workshop in garage + chi ldren's play rm. lmmaculate & ready for immed. occupancy. S219,000 fee Jeanette llaH•ns ~4 -6200 CK-16) HIEA THER U.HE 1 BH + family rm home w/lg. pool Priced for 1mmed1ate s ale! 'lo"e-1n re~dy' Roy Romey n42-823.5. CK 17 1 DOYER SHORES IA YFtlONT Spa c.·1ous 5 BR r eside nce w/sllp for lg. boat. Walnut paneling. terrazo e ntry, l'ustom wet bar. formal dmmg + dramatic pool & jacuzzi in sheltered courtyard. $550,000 • leasehold. Appl. only. Cathy Schweickert 642-8235. (K-18) CATALINA VIEW Spectacular ocean view from this 4 BR+ office (or maid's quarters) i home w /Ught, open feeling living area. hi-beam ceiling & s unken c onversation a rea . Haw aiian-Or1ental decor w /bridge to stroll ove r free-rtow pool. $329.000. Appl. only. Donna Godshall 644-6200. CK-191 A HOME FOR ALL SEASOHS Beautiful & spacious 3 BR home on handsome tree-lined street. Garden entry; soaring ceiling; · formal dining; garden kitchen & brkfst rm overlooking pool. Oversized family rm w /bar & fireplace + coov. den. $250,000 fee. Barbara Aune 642-8235. (K-20) llG CA.MYOH TOWNHOMI Views from nearly every room t Deluxe 2 BR home -adult ~ oriented -security bldg. -1-yr. 1 new -fully carpeted & draped. Tinted windows, private courtyard " patio + 2 view decks. Hurry -1 'this Is "a buy" -$168,900 fee. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. <K-21 > LOOIC & COMPARE! This ".E" pla n Is unequalled! Superbly decorated & upgraded 3 · BR + lg. family rm w /2200 sq. ft. of country charm & beautltul greenbelt location. See it tod•Yl $157 ,SOO. Jean Dales 642·82:1&. (K·22> CdMlla +. D8f-Sl6J,000 Lovely. rustic 2·story home~w /lots of wood paneling, master Bl\ suite w /wrap-around balcony, living rm w /floor-to-ceiling, used·brk fpl :+ easy maintenance .front Is rear yard. R-2 zoning. Paula Bailey 642·~. <K·23) CUSTOM..._T ' Bdtm. a beUa, wood noon. 09W water heater. water roftaer, copper phunbiq. BHutJful pooil wilb beater • filter. Nuy xt.ru. t17 .600 ~..-~ 1110Msw,...t .. irL C:....Mile 141·772' CUSTOMC~l OMLY S7t,tOOll Lodi• like llvtu under ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:!!!!!!!~ bolcf • runed l>ea ma 1 G----l 'oo• Cozy fireplace accents _... • C:.-.. Mtr 1022 unique W11ll of brick! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• llobbyroornlcworkahop llACH WALK Hart>or View Home. au' too' ReW\Jon size cov II perf~ delcription for ~ 2 Br 3 Ba. xtra lge ered patio overlooks thlacoqeouaabclrm.S~ dta. eully coavert to.4 famlly orchard!! Just ba plua aep. quarters Br, all thb + panoramic listed' Won't last at thlll OV'e!' aarage Ev~ bas view. abown by appt price! c.11 own private jacuul United Brokers. Bill 645.0lOl 1111-0321 Fernanda, 646-7414 MOllUHOMI UV ..... 5STA.I Very sharp 2 bdrm, 2 bath mobile home in xlnt Colt.a Mesa 5 Star Park · UOl&l.ft. coach. Vacant Ai waiting! Adult park, pool & 1pa. Boat & camper 11toraee tool Out ot area owners are au· tOUS. Hurry, call today! 646-7171 )I (t>. It 'i • ~ • .. t,, '\ [~11111 PANORAMIC VIEW of <>c... & llNM Rare 5 Bdrm single story Lusk home in Harbor View Hills with lovely courtyard entry and 3 car garage on tree-lioed low traffic str ee t sm.soo C•644-72t I /.Jn NIGEL BAILEY & ASSOC IA TES FORESTE OLSON .............. ··~-e CIKTUl.AIR -:w Priced for Immediate sale Immaculate 3 bdnn, fmty rm, din rm unit. Btftly upgraded thnaout. Rec rm, pool, tennis. Upgraded floor. Ing, smoke detectors Don't hesitate Act! Alone now! 54S-9491 10%DOWN "IETTlll"' ConJparably low prlce w/aU xtrae of model. Cpl llke laWM. manicured abrubs. 2 Sly, 4 Br l.&ndmark. A value$115,950. Real ~te by M.cVay, Brookhurst Inc. Call (714) -.aitl or 968_.. BtU Ancneau ... ~ ..... 4 Huce 4 BR. 2 11A117. cor-............. I 040 llWllllagt• IMclt I 040 Der' lot. 2--blan, only e ... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo'• old. No cloitlnt cot· Open boule bJ owner. Sat. ts. Owner w /carry ~-LUSK USALa Feb. lltb to Kon. Feb. W'• to ladl hy tract. See t.o app~iate. SllCIALIST 20th. t1oa llacklloe Dr. And the beautllul new Tll HOME HRI( 3., 4 oc $ Bdrm IDode1s Glen Mar HoUM 4 br, be. eoU cou.rse. County pro· .., avail. SocM tf/PQOls + patio, autol .. ~-door perty, Costa Mesa ad· ftrJ 2•55 ~. Member MuJU-opener1 water .oftener. dress. Darling bouae, In .,.... 't pleLiatmaSUvice. lots oc fruit treet. Nr. the $70'1. 11.ildnd, Devin Schools, puk 6 beach. R.E.1H2-f3118orM2-9065 F t•Y.., 1034 '71.S00.962>09ff. • •••••••••••••••••••••• MESA YllDI A'ITENTIONGOLPERS! DfVOIC• 0.. of~ O'WDet' must 2 Blocb to Mlle Square $61,SOOYA sell 3 BR. 2 ba.: ooculde Clubbouae. 1 Story, ' Owneu m u a t a ell. A.•ac1. P-:'!! n.. _ ....... b d r m , ta m • r • • , beautllul S lk home lm· __ .. _ .. ._ __ ua_r __ .,,_ .. ,..,._ ftteplace, pool, Jacuul. medlat.e.ly. Loan 13 u - >wner movlnc over aeu. Suptr tar1e cul-de-sac 1--------•1 sumable, jutt painLed WW sac. lhil hnmac. cot· lot. CaJl aow $11.2,900. Sf Ana HoMl w /MW C'Pta & drpl. tage style 3br home. Bltr~ in p rtme Joeatlon. 3 714-7800 "" d Bdrm. l ~ bath. larre ... any goo features. D--t & dJnlnt area, p rivate $75,750. For lmmed. sale rUIUll paUo Condo. Close to call 751·3082 or e'Jl-3430 )rnrL$14,500 sb0ppin1. Hurry! ~Macnab ·lrvme In tbla area-that's un· believable! 3 Bedroom home, lots ol cabilleta. couD&.ry kitcben. DiniDI area, brick ~!replace. Co•ered patio, nearl,y ~ ; I ~-Ill i \I ' I 122) lllllf1 ~1 ti11111M (IQO 9rKb BAS7M 0 h··• I ""• ''" I042 9UllT oew pool ls JacUS%l. BKR, •••••-••••••••••••-•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPEN HOUSE SAT /SUN 1·5 213 Coral, cust hme, prestige area. lst Ume ollered. C&a,01-SAC E/Side Custom ._ome. Is the setting for t.hls lov- 2000Sq. ft ., 38r, h1&&e eb'3BRcuatomdecor•t· call ~1120 1-------•1 SIASCAPICOMDO rt'&Uu 1 BR. 8IO sq. A. Looks like a 11\odel, teanb, POOl, ~. bar, etc. J ust ~uct!d. Call DO'W. HEW EXCLUSIVE Lovely ba)'front llome on beautiful sandy beach: 3 bdrms., S'h baths, rormal dining, wood paneled den with wet bar, soodoff-streel park- ing By app't. As king ~.000. ram. rm •. sear gar., 'Cft'I ...,. h L ..... R-2 )«.Ail 646•7171 "?' ome. g. coun-,, kitchen opem onto pool- Grilfith Park Realty 3'5-3560 (213) ATllHTION sized yard. A perfect FHA-VA IUYEIS familY home at "95,000. VerJ nlce 3 bdrm home <K·2S m gdod am lo C.M. RV Dorothy Hardcastle SUIMIT ..._,,' rllla 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac«*S. Bi.& J~. Only ___ 64.2-823.S ___ , __ ts.5,000 Woo't lat• Act --------AHOFPH On th.II ~ bl' beachwalk w /separate mother-In· law quarten ·that lolvea these problems. One of the nicest units available in best area. 968..:rn l MAGMIRCENT·VIEW on Newport Bay. 2 story. 5 BR, room to park your boat. One of • kiod pro-perty. Call us Cor appt to MAURY STAUP'FER SEALlON REALTY •1 E. Cst. CdM 673-53$1 1213 N. Cst, Laguna 4.97-3388 VALLEY 640.99001~~~.~~~~~ ,,..;..~;;;;.;....,.,,.~~~~Ocean side. lmmac Jbr. ~ 3ba. Easily convert to 2 ~~ units. Prim.e R-2 loca. ~ Den. form din rm w/wel OPEN 12-5 bar. $225,000. Peggy Taylor Reahor, 494-1015 C.IOlw 5 .... M 4'1 !>.SOLA a+aa P-.Pt. <Corona Hlghlands> -OPIH SAT /SUM 1.5 421 s..• BeautlfuJ, CU!ltOm bit. 4 Completely remodeled bdrm .. 3 bath home with executive home! Better large mstr. swte, com than new w1lh custom plete with study. Top of amenities too numerous the line appliances in· t.o menlloo. H1.1&e family elude microwave O\·en, rm. den, formal dining & trash compoclor +-all more. 4•; Baths, 2'2 car the other goodies garage + worllshop Call DelighUul Uvlq u.eJ 964-1681 for details wi1h voulted ce1l. & step· now!MS-~\ c::= Walkm & lee Real F.atate SCARCE 4BDRM +-POOL COLLEGE PAIK sat.too Cb ·~~ •IEASTSIDE• 3 BR, 2 ba , frplc. Super clean! Next to park. Best buy in area, $72.500! STUA.ITRME HAI.Toa '31"5454 Colonial Real Ea tale down wet bar $198.000. -------- PtninsuJo Point fixer ~Y l~Lf!•Jf tl :,E~l:.~,.' owner J brm. 1'°4 ba -~J _ 1!!!1~ ii~ New landscaping, cpt.s & 673..-& Pnnc. only • 675-HlO * cfrp,, Makeofr.SS7-~, IALIOADUPl.EX .Mi:!i E c t ll~v. l 'tl\I BY OWNER. Completely \lesa Verde Super clean remodeled. 2Br+1Br up---------3 br 2 lja, good local . per. 310 Coronado ' newly redecor. Open 673-9'31 Sat/SUn. 754,()687 Pcralu .. a PoW 2 Br, 2 ba. frpk, new plumbLag ~ n ew crpt/~. Profess decor Complele remod. plans avail. SUl9,000. 673-7249. Prine.Only ••••••••••••••••••••••• South of Hwy $139,500 ·TWOIMOME 2 Bdrms. each, bOth xlnt bay view : 2 dbl. gara,es. secluded.. Xlnl condition . s:m.ooo MAURY STAUFFER SEA LION REALTY 3li01 E. ~. CdM 673-s.»4 1213 N. C.t., Lagwia 45'1·3388 E.UTSIDI C.M. 1·2. $7%,500 Nice 2 br on 8100 sq. ft lot. lloom to build. Can a111ume private loan . Courtesy to brokers. OwMr/ brolleT, 541-9950 MODEL An abeolutety cbamung 2 ~ oo Pob!Mttia with beautiful hardwood noon. Owner occupied ~~~~~~~~ Like appearance! Near new! Mesa Verde North! 4 Bedrooms Ruge fami- ly room ' Beautiful atrium! f~er and in xlnt cood. thru-0ut 2 F\Jtl double aar•gea(Not tandem). A real doll house offered for the fint time in over 12yean. C41164 .. 7Zl l for.wk RED CAR PET 754-1.202 OCEAHVllW PrlvN ~to beada: custom 5 bdrm., falllilyl _______ _ rm .• 11earln1 comple-MIAT & NIFTY t.iaa; pidt colon to your Wrth a price that's thrif· ta,te. $375,000 ty. This 3 bdrm home 1s 51.AVIEW waiting fo't the family OPIMSUN. l·S I I 40 MISSION Owners leaving area &t are anxious to sell this exceptional 3 bdrm. home, located 10 good Colla M.aa area. Move- in QOnditioa. Frplc., shut· ten, shake r'oof. etc . etc .• etc. $83.000 NIWPOIT HACH IEALTY 675-1642 ::lean 3 br l ba, new root, carpets, drapes. lrg lot, S&S R~ale Specialists. 3,4 or S bdrm models avail. some w /pools. 968-4602 Pennington ProJte.rtles rm for expansi o n .1 .. ---------0wner's motivated tBB.900. Agt. Century 21 OMF. ~504or~56U b", 2''1ba. Pool, Jacuni. 118.900. Delperale, muat. sell 631-4317 1850 SQUAJ\ E FOOT TOWMHOME lnThe BACK BAY 4br, Jba. dUl rm, frplc. bltns. F /H. pvt patio, al· tacbed dbl pr, com m pool, jacuzzi, suana, ten- nis crtB, clubhse. '9.SOO . AP. 631·12166 or 549-1'31 uucwca.s.. . It couldn't hurt to call Chuck Nub about a re-wardin& ciu-oer Ln real est.ate. Free troinln& if you qualify. ~5101. 611112 Silver Beach. Open House Sat/&lo 1·5 ~­ inaton Seacllff. super tocatioo, soil course,. l•· nls. new cpta. window coverings, 3 Br, Fam Rm. see, or call 846·7996, Ownt/a&l By owner, +BR, 1~ ba, Vu lot. fll,900. 19422 >-PoW I 026 Harding La., 963-4i77 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DICUTIVE IDEAL FAMILY $140.000 HOME 2 Story executive home. •--.. _,_ ho Wood pegged floors. c ....... to sc.........,, s P-Hqe family kll cben. pane & Dana Poiat Formal dine! l''antutic Martna. Thia 4 BR home bu over 2000sq. f\. of liv boous room loo' Custom lng space. Fireside living Covered patio. Spec- room hideaway master tacular family Jlom e · 'tt kit h priced t.o sell. 752-1'200 Nle. me-saver c _en OAN t119·•1Hvo10N1< t• make for great family ., j ·-a:_=i l~llMI 4 17141496-7711 DIVOICI COUHs&Olt ltL TY t6MJU JUSTUSTID Harbour> Laoe J Br, 2 i., ba end unit w /1A. boal slip ... S u per s h a r p ! $1SS,OOO Call now. PUIC&LRIALTY ('7!4) 846-2828 When you steal this 5 br, -------- 2 ba beauty with fam rm lnlM I 044 & Swed.I.sh npto. See t ••••••••••••••••••••••• believe! ONLY $80.000. WOODllJIKH Hurry.won't last long al zPBESCOTJ'S this pnce Llugeat Woodbridce ·The HOME STORE 964-2,55 UM8l Brookl\u.rst Huntlqt.on Beach homes. 2J600sq.ft. + 3 car gar. 5 or 4 br+den. 3 Ba. atrium. air cond., fully lndsc. hi&hlY upgr. Mex- ican Paven We. L&e lot. Nr Park & lake. $186,000 & $196,000. Lse 1821/mo. Bkr/Ownr 552·4121 or wkda.ys 83.S-3535 SUK & llNll YEAST C S H D S T U 1 B S S T E R C N T A I TCR Ml t ~I HEIW URAQBJ S 0 I Of I 5 A' Yt1' G U f U N G G N L L Y H G E T " S l H 1t<rT ,G t Q U V ,IM, ,P 0 Y C N " 0 I T A T N E M R E f E S .0 C£S AU£lt AIJRKRE AHKT P 0 M R E F C C D S R W T R V M J 0 A -w A M L W 0 S D T W £ A M E S T A X R E l I P H 8 U P T T S f M E R D E R , H S K 0 R 8 I $ 0 E E I I U 0 H £ £ £ S N L M 0 E T ~ H H N S M S B 0 ~ T M A T A E G H S Y J G G S E U S Z A 8 A A C l I N T Z S P V l E 0 A Y t C W M S I T V I N Z K E 0 6 0 " M I C 0 R 0 TFCXEK HY EONN£0LWX NC nttructiOl'I; WOtdl -IPP9lr • -d, Up,~ Of dltfMllly. find Mell ltld boll It"'· • Fung1 Buddfng fel'lltntat1on : Sugar Ffsston Collpresse4 ~ Sponge EftlYlti Le&Yen1ng ~ Alcohol Dfastase lnvertase TOlllOrrow: Wendell Wfllkft "1D.NIG[L [lAILf Y £,, Broedmoor,newlbdrm, loolinc for a way to + family r m ., ocean 1tretch their budget. view: C\lardedcommunl· Kids will love the larse IY OWMst • "-pool ...... 000 fenced yard, Abo plenty Beautiful. new 2 story FORCES SALE Super Meredith Gardens home, • Bclnns, family, !ormal dln iaa. taree lS.36 swlmmlna pool. ty; temm. · ...-... ~ apa<le to park RV's. Dana Pt. home. 4br •. 2in JLHTDWLIX Klnhen cabinets ba. liv. rm .• fam. rm .. •---------• Two frplc.., 2 bdrm1. per .. nenlly finlahed form. din. rm .. upir kit., NEWLYREKODELED each; comer louUon , with rormic• ln1lde & Scar gar., Lge cul-de-sac 3BR.S.OFHWY Lopcond.$lTJ,500 out . luat wipe clHa . view lot. $120,000. A550[1Al ES 875-7931 ltA.UI. MAaTIM Blanket or h asb · aha~ aera, 493-2871 JtlAL ISTA11 ' wall-to-wall carpeUnc, --------oozy 3br, 2ba + C\lesi 644-7313 brud newt You're e•ery home. Prpl, 2 patiol, R·2 wish for a a11111U price tag lot. Pria. only, $l51.000. ~ $78,900! Don't delay! Owner, 64().7030 call tbe PetaCIOaJ Service C... .. M .. 102JC... .. Mw t022 People toct;yt ....._ ....................... ....................... ... ,..,. ..... -_, ______ lll!lll ___ .1!111111 "2·113P OYER 50 YEARS OF SEAVICE COIOMA DB. MAil 111 PL.Ur TOWNHOUSE Located In The PopullJ' Newer Canyon Crest Estates Area Just Minutes From Fashion Ialand & Your Favor!'-Sbops t 2 Lovely Bedrooms. 2~ Bathe, 2 Fireplaces. 3 P a tios. Built In All-Electric Kitchen. Beautifully Carpeted " Draped. Er\joy The Pool, J acuw & t ennis Courts . $125,000 By Appointm~nt. GARAGE SAl..'E .acta 1D tile Delly Pilot brine )11p py .... wt.I, 'l'o ,Place your drawtna ~•rd, phon• IC2·5e'18 tod•r. i+----. . •• CD Coldwell Boni..er Hurry " aee UU.., ll'Mt i:w.:=..;.;~ famlly home al · only Sl41.SOO Call M0-1151 ·~~ HERITAGE . . 'UALTO R!> ~ I I • lij; , I • .' '. M)M '41~ 'Mt 'W !1-IJC• I' )1, 1111 .......................................................................................................................................... ~.~.~ ....... ~.~~ ....... ~.~!4!'! ....... :~ .... .!~ ~.! ... ~ .... !!!~ ... . ... ~ ... !~ !~:~ ... ! ... ~~:er.!~ ... !~!~ ............ ~~ JN. 'M4 .,.._ 104 ~~ ..... !!~ MOITM.. . MOlmMIW LOWIST ttwpt lflts, z lh'"'1 B:I. OUCHI \lAN~F;R~'E'j, Rn --• .. •••·•~•·-• ...................... _ OCIAM 'YllW 1'WO ST0aY PRICE IN tU:WPORT pool. AU Slate Rltra. LosiDa opdoa . plclr Ul> P'oot.hlll Sehl Dlstrtcl , COMDO O.bau.Dup&u-Nwr 'Far.-byowner,IBr, 2BR.1BA,dbl.w1de $1H,t00. 586·3300, U0,000 dwn NEW Owocrb lwlrsto..U. S.. f~~.-~ wa~~ z Bll. z aA. l Bll.. 1 BA, I~ ba, I&• fam. rm.1 mobile adult park. S».-s Nft'port V\I 4 BR home. ~ tJJr. 3~ ba Vlf'W, _.. .......... u w/ttolo W11t bar bum w/frpk. L1• fncd ya $26.$00.C..U~ '454758 home: tull.Y cont.alMd ba1 bHa b=b1y up c:elllois. airy '1t1bt. w/do1 rWL NH1 up-HA&.PSMCHIM $79,fOO ~•P'-XLra la boat«! iraded. ~._ INILba, balcoolt1. t l\lh to cndmf 1125,000. Prine. &EAi.TOR ~ S-Clem• to7' pool, aunlrea llv rm, SIMlrp Piao 1• lD OM microwave, .. com-beach. $llt_.\erml. only •• -. ,,_....,r.vw• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •loae fr-pie. oew w/t# Oall(onJ.a Hom. wt.b p1ctor. Olt•d for ·· IASTll.URI II.ACM Sit IOO C1U ,..u .crubbed <Or• heated and filtered pool, TurU.roelr. View lot. prlva~y • ucurity. ACIOSSFIOM Lm,.... IOH 4 ldril Sl21000 Bea& priced Hdo In Add on er 0buUd D6w 2 Mr lot. bul• palm tl'MJ, codoMdatl.r)'wdhfl'Odt Brand oe•. cboole new iaa.ooo .. SlaPAU --·•••••••••••••••• OwnerlookillltC:..quiclr .,...aBr1Ba,meadow· Bdrm bc>me oo duplft SUS,$00/0fr. 1.aM·2318 p11tlo and fl re pit . crpea " cltd fixtu~ l 1 ~ :"° Oceao view coodo. bqe I c•.J. IDJEYE!!I •al• I Lovely • bdrm Uk• aettlnac. Prld• of lat. So. San Clemente. pll.3S1 llPrlaleoa .Or. appla NEWLY pa.lAted blalde ltrJ, Jbt, fain rm, clln mma a • ome 00 li~roomw/beam cell· MI townbome lD f1bulou1 ownenbtp. ..... ll. and out •od aewly rm. Slfle1IOO. Write Ad ocean~ ol bwy. Short 1.... ...t ....._ 11 ...... A ......... _._ •~--i.. F.altblllf Quiet 1trett W w ....... ••~ draped. A11tln1 on.ly tae, Dallt PUot, P .o. walk '° er.cent BaJ " :;.;u~.i :a;; 'die~ 2 aft: ~ea"b:m":~t: Wood paneled family: •·8' l&'U50. Box 15S>, Coista Mesa, =-u:-c;:J•· a~· ta BA, deck, priced t.o sell. l&riie family room" lot Cuatom decoullon1. ~ Ooado 2Mibe. f-_CA._km1 _______ 1 P..00 ecor. u · lmmec!pos1es1ion avail. ~ce, wilh a PIU't.1 ~aver kitchen. Pvt "' dbl clld 1;... Sbo~ Uket DEERFIELD 2 BK, 21-1 OCIAM VllW A.MIAICAM HOME pat o, landscaped to ~tc!::e~~~ value. dif8> mo. ,.,c.oa model. Bri1bt open lal. ~ ba twnshse. Prple. dbl A 2 bdrm. OYO, with REALTORS perfection la still for OKNtu9•11PvNro1r Noe1• '""'\ 645·~161 Sell by owner. 176,llQI. aar.verynlce,J13,800tor many extru ... pool , 494-1001 494-7513 nletl! Owner is very !• I PrelldentJ.aJ Rita Pb= -.17'22 IAMCHIJALTY 511..JOOO IXICUTIYI llDIM OMLY SI 11.000 Great home for a bll fm· ly 0( ID entelt&in'd. de- light. P'rml din rm. over· sUed fmly rm, 3 baths, vaulted celllnp " bvy shake root · Lvly tennis crta In Lbis subcliviaJoo. 75-lSOl ~ Walker t; Lee _q_u1_ck_s_a11e_._-._as1_1 __ , ~~~~h ~~.·do:~~ SUPaSTAIS =~=:·=:: ~11m!iH;tJ IYOWNll ~t~d::1~~b~~2 0...-IMllltah TUIT\IROCI Shown by app t. only. .la what we call these 6 da.Y only 995,000. Submit .""· ... .-!!!!!!~~~ Spacloua Executive ba, on 1 level, pool ti ••••••••••••••••••••••• flMtl'-' Ao.s '85,000 commercial & residen· d!ers. =e,,5 ~ea~.\>:~ jacuui. fft,900. •·11.tl ..... .._., Brand new on market' UaJ units In t.be beart of M.I. CONDO Dover Shores OD Galaxy GARDEN VILLAS Par S. I I 00 Plan!O, louledatendof ~ La1uoa, overlooking JUST .. UCm Dr.Me-1312 By the ""'a 1 .. un ro d""' •••-•••••••••••••••••• uil ul d Main Beac h. A1kln1 ...__ "" .. c w "" M1111e ..... u..a.... a t.ranq e e aae: J• 1\5116,000 ~ mile to uo:acb. Btfl •CAMYOM San Clemente. 3 Br 2~ Atlh.....i_, spectacular view ol sur· m"· "-~ pra( .. klaallt de· 8J1. ocean view, $84,950. 2 roundinJ bills & li&bt.s. H-.1.._ u.~u.::111'~ corat.ed. 3 btl bclrm4, 2 S br •be c.tom bome, Br2Ba,\\illVA,$75,000.2 We ~ave numeroua • Theu1Umateiniml)05lng U05N.COClltttwy .. Leg-l13t»&!l~~ baths -clo .. to pool, larJefamllyrm.onaolf Br + library, next lo beaotit\al mobile bom• comfort.I. 3 Bdrma .. 2\; 494-1177 ~99·2800 646 640-6600 sauna. &cjacuui or walk counew/1arse lake. For park, $81,900. 2 Br one for aale ln establlabecl b&Uls, fam. rm., brkfst. Jl60lCoottHwy..s.u.si-==~=-----to tbe beacb. Only aa1e by Owner. $4.50,000. level PLUSH, sua.soo . .P9rb In cu. Nwpt Bch. nook, dloh:ll rm., wet 499.4591 8Y Owner Z~t>r. <.:ustom tll0.000. 19-UOl WW trade for coo4o or Some avail for tse or opt. Hu D t l D •ton B c •, bar, aerv:lce rm.; 3 car--------• r::_eU~!·B~::::: ~~: ...._Vleio 10..7 summer home in Aaents: Ray Smith or Lacu:na. El Toro, Ftn 1ara1e. 2 Fr plea. of !fa.,ooo. 49'--0m alt 3 •••••••••••••••••••••-Newport Beach. &M-4141 Muy Clark, 491,9700 or VI y , An a he l m & driftwood stme. A jewel OCLUROMT -831·2255 Weatminaler. In prite in a perfect settin&! a..,....,_. 1052 VlaYLOWDOWM Real l'lltate Cl.WHAY... ran1ea to flt mo'at si•.9L'50 PARADISE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Only ts.ooo. Laree Mia· 3 BR. 2 ba, compl re-OP84 HOUSI people'• pockelboota. DAYIOD.CAILSOM Romantic old bome on 1ioo Viejo two atory CHAlMIMG turtJiabecl.Beautbackyd ••Y&••h.l l•S $lO.OOOt.o.,,OOO. Weare RIAi.Tott IJ3·92f3 over~ acre, facln1 lhe MOMAACHIAY home. Take over pay. MIWPOIT .... HTS w/POOI. Lowest la ex-~• ~ uoearuyourpbone. setting sun. Loo& lime 999•~cE mllltl.$130.000.542-3176 SBll.llL\.~·-"uroom elusln Cllff Haven. 306 A•• Sel••dor, CALIFORNIAPACIJ1C Beaut Woodbriclae place, owner oCCenna tor Hie at • -hoall9 ., /WOOd ~ • Open Sat• !lln, 848-9251 Panoramic: oeean view. 4 Mobile Homo Realty ---------1 highly up(raded Green· $398,000. New custom home w/f ---.Newc:•re-u.lnnorooo ernnas-BR wilh 1parklln1 pool. 270IHarbor,Ste208 TODAY'S briar. Call 558·8420 McCOl.MACX BR. 3 BA, family & din· OPll:ll..I HOUSE --DRPoWn "'~ -...inu• ho e; th ~ ln• room. High beam ...-.. ailJ SHARP! lend at new=-: creet Con· c•..u--m •or e Ownr/agt. UAL.TY 494-7551 ,. *"•ooo family. BEST VALUE'' 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1~~~~~~~~~1 ceU.lnp w/many 1la11 Sat.SUn1·5 _. · do. upcraded, 2 BERTHA HENRY SIASIDllEAUTYHI . . ,. TUULIROCK , ________ , ~ a~:!:t~re'ol~: :UC, ~~-~~j: 540-3666 n~~s=-. = REALTORS f:!u~ i!!r-2Br~ A n..i•wood thit la fully • · ~ HOUSE vlew. 2 Fireplaces, spa Owner. 23951. Juaneno. .-. Reduced for lm· Z15DeUlar 49Z-412l bonus rm tn El Morro By &nm hwi or,._ I VI"~ olf mastM bath atrium. 586-6192 med. sale. Owner. 5 .1111•~ the Sea your own J)\'t Janda::ged. ~as BB~ 2 Bdrm, dea, 2 baths; Sat/S.•dmy 1·5 Owner wlll consider Sl.29..:iOC>.SG--•P•3 .....-ce bch. rfk rent only sieo. redw dee lnr an end ot cul-dwac, near Whi't•water "lew from 1 1....,., -.. 000 -'--'--.--------• LoC:ated in excluaive C A L T 0 D A y ! fouatallllnyard.Interior p-eenbelt. New carpet-walls~ ot g1...;. Exciting ea.serATio"ffO'ME . EXICUTIYIHOMI 4-P\ex,lGOft.fnlmoeeu; ClllATISTIUY MariDen PcinL View of (PK1096> feature• 3 lar1e inJlhru-out.Owneranx· bi_i_.a u..... uit.e Large5br aba.lJbr&rT $Z4SOOOW/1.mdl 1 N t C t ocean 4' canyona. CALIP'ORNIAPACIF1C bedrooms, tile baths and lous. $107,750. Open ~·.r-·-emat.ra • 2BR.2BAw/outstand· li cllo' 1 ' ,.._..:.,.__"Bltr --ll ewpor rea • SpealahWerool formal obll Ho R al wet bar. UUIEDlATE S.t/&lo 1.s, 18682 Pueo C0me to 31812 Circle Dr. ln& view ol Mtna 4'coun· U~ rFc :;;1:ui ...... _. . .,,_...., Spedombatb. Klatc':!:·,,• ft~ dlniq. 1ame & f1mlly ~os:Ut!:.St!~ MOVE lN AVAIL·,..__ SouthlAIUDJI. • ..... ide.~p.,..adea, • • • $IO,OOOD0MA.1 room.-000.n.....oSat., ABLEl l Aakinl-7,500. ....,...,_. J.C..._.•~ -caJ·· .. _.-aJ ce ~""· n.n. cargar.$1•7.SOO "" seperatedilliDgarea, l1P-_....., ...,,,.. 540-S83'7 KtiQLPllOraT11S ~ r·~ ,.,..__ ~7,,.., ~---'·•-.._-., $mlcMool·S i--------Ctl 497·1761 feuiooally Ian caped vw..... -,_. SIAYllW .. -------~ 67~7390 II 71~U31 644a2542 ard & t.Jos Priced t.o 2 cu J•rare wltb ~ •FAMU.'f PAIUC 1~~~§;::~~~~;~~~;;;;;;;;;;1 Y pa • 8Y owner, Vu of ocean le Brand nu Sbr cior..-lot automatic o-er. Ex· • SPECIAL I 1-aell aUB&,500. only steps out froa.t door bame. Owner will cvry r- JUST US11D .=.Con AGE "10U're oa the beach. 2 ba1. ol $230.000 at $W0 =-,..:::~~: : ' , IHI Estah ~U: f:~e ti;:. r:~ vtry ct.irable 3 bdrnl., ~ I on quiet cul-de-st;y, 3 or' BR. 2 ba bse per mo. No qaallf)'illl Ja---' etc. p•-ty ol _ _...._ All pn·ce r ........ •-fami.17 rm. Plan I ln best sac ln iuard pt.e com· OR can be 2 apta; 1 BR nee. vac, move riCllt In. " ...... • .... .,_.,..., _ .... . area of Turtlerock. nnm.lt1. Uke new home down, 2 BR up. SlJ0,000. Guarded1ata.f4'.H5I CUfSt paitin£ ~. areas. Call ua today. DelJPtful terraced yard. w /2 BR. 4' den. upgraded Principles oalJ. 6801 W. BJ oner· Leavina for P AC I FI C C 0 A ST WOODUIDGI UM.TY Hla3000 · · ·th intericr & profea1ionall1 Sm'an Dr, eonier ot IALIOA CONDO :Europe.Call6e188&. RESALES, INC. 2105 Inner a t r I u m w i LOVa y 4 II. ln landacapecl. $1.59,000. ~-#e. ,._._ Hoee Sat & El~ '·-• lbr coodo Ba 11 Rd. An ab e i m waterfall. Close to pools 2bathbomehu stain ""-...,_.. .... lllHl660 titennia.$112.~Fee. t.o climb. -.~ doon U.-....,...a..lty SUn,lM.6ttrS701 m fruaS. Pooi, boat UDOISU ---------------• c F Cole rth .-.~ 49s;&220 4ol-94f4 $66.toOU aliprnil. hllaec. bid&. IAYFllOMT lmtLlated,SkJlme,ZBll, COLUMBIA Wi.Toas s~Lofo r:!i w~::f~~~1~49~w~4~1~J~1~JO.~s~o~so~I ~=~Flag .. .-.soo.~~AIL =.,~ir::,~ ·==El~ ~ S:J:,oe;t~.=: NOW AVAILABLE! -------1 with frplc overlooks r•~fta••v11w . -w. Oceanfront .. BR. !17~~~000 You're comaa love me! Act.~ ArtUDENT blllside lucean. Leaded ~·~ ............... 10'9 beadlbouH.$D5..000 .u Beautifully decorated 3 OWMHM•JSTSB.L glass and tile etilry aets Mooarcb Summit ll Plan ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marsball Blty ~ 67J.7loo BR t.ownbome w /frpl ln lO'UO'. remodeled, xtn College Park offers this fabulous and ideally located 2600 1~. ft. home for the execuuve wlth a large arowlog family . NOW ASKING $14',500. ,_ .~~OmbVn~ctaEMTe Model the mood ror a bome that B. 3 Br. 2 bda. prfdf. WESTCUFf UDO IY 0 __._ living rm. & master clean, 1 br, $7800. F\lm. .. ...,. "'41 i's perf-..6 for entertain· lndscpd & ecrt . ......._ ---t., plus a spacious A f K M t in Greentree. Four "'""~ SU&.900. Owner bol.&ght a CONDO 0penU.Sdail1. 8Y Owner. 3 br 2~ ba h;;iess kitchen/brklst cross rom · ar bedroom.a on a single ing. $189,500. is motivated. Open dally. J05 Vla lucar. white water view. lm· rm. 886,000 (K·29) Shop Ctr. 2191 Harbor Bl ground level, with ceo-3HEATUHm 494-1035 131·941 I Walk to Weatdifi Plaza Deluxe' lg brm 3 ba, mac. Nwpt crest condo. DclaoaCUst.erMU235 ::a.~M Adults only .• tral air coodilionlng. 2 wit.b beautirul ocean 12S7SCstHwy La&Bch from t.bia apacioaa 2 huie Uv rm, 1~ Iota, Owner Jenla1 state.I~~~~~~~~ huee family room, island views iD North Laewia. ' bdrm bome In ele1ant patio. nr tmGia "beacb. Sac. Prill only. 87>-5313 Aaeoge fer s. 1200 kitchen; next t.o park; l~ blocks to beach. "Dover Village". $3tt,SOO ~ llACHDOU.HOUSI ...................... . covered paUo, used brick $1115.000. Inccl ~~-poolu, s~~··an"t ....._ U&../n-........__ NEWPORT BEACH !.~-~vtera Bewtacllb. 1..avES•oas flnplace. A ireat family u............. y.,.. w ,...._.,. nn -r--INVESTJlENT 'UU .......... c.anyon t "" '1 home at a modal price co•CYI • ..... --quaW.y livirle wiUI euy Sat fl Suo 1·5. 2 Br, ocean view. 3 BR, 2 BA Fin acres South ef _ otsioz.soo _,..._ ........ care,calltodayt 8'5-7221 pub+eueat apt. Sl37,SOO. C.pit.alplnaproblem? with extra~ lot. Never Ccle'ooa OD peved road.. Spadol.m I Bdnn. 3 bath Charmi.oc oew 3 Bedrm + 211.s Brolld. 64S-482t B)' Owner. Neat old 3 qatn at only S12S,OOO. Good for lot split. BKR. UHCHUALTY 551-JOOO red hill.-:. 552-7500 bomewlillel-antlarse den, 2 bath, fam·rm. ~ bdrmfa.rmbomelD"'-t B"'DTHAHENRY ~. BYO.,..Ell ··-r ~ (714)677..Bl ••'ry and wladln1 A/C, French dn, pvt """ Bcb-'" .. "--'•-This R""••·roRS Dinln HARBORVJEWHOllES • ...., ...... _.... ~ OR522-0530 =·a.mple:W..~!: ~~~~.sw.900. . . Moot.eco • brm 2 ba, includes an nocado ZSSDelMar 492-4121 si•.-. lsbJd, corner lot, OU pUn ~ ~ ~~ S.. ..... . .. Deerfield, Aspen: 3 BR. 2h ba .. gu BBQ. end of cul de aac. ()pen Sat. SUll.12·5. By owner. DOUtt9t I.I. Culdesac • 1011 course -· m-ou&. -Q)' ~ .. _ --- BETTER nbrM. spac 4 Br 2t,A, Ba Wesldlffa_., Co•e-d patio, pri•. for 11COlllbor1 WW C .. llh-1071 CALL 494-IU I • ~ .. •-~ ""'".._.. otI--··-·-••••••••••••• xtra lge lot. $185,000. llST IUYll • 1 a rd• D, b •a• ll Y ._._.._. .._.._... ..,._ COUNTRY LIVING 916.500 552.31144 THAM NEW ~~~~~~~l _-.om ______ ..... lf)Qlarelooldugfortbe ludaeaped. WIU betp ~=-'~7 ..UllACH 4 Bdrm .• 2~ ba. home in d /i.'L r~ PACIAC ISLAND best home in t.be best finance. Courtesy to • Dana Point Marina. New 3 Br, 2 BA home. WOODBRIDGE PLACK Special offertnc. 3·5 bdrnl. C-ontemporary de- tached family bomea In open, woodsy design. J~t short walk t.o lake fl para In VIilage ol Wood . bridge. From SllS,000. 5.52-001 TURTLEROCK. with ~ '-'() are&. Uds ii tt! BuuW\11 broken. 7Sl-47&0 Sbarp Harbor Lane ~acre in beautlf\11 area. 1or1eou1 wallpapers. "~· VILLAGE bomewitb3bdrma.,den, ~o••y NEWPORTBAYPBONT home on greenbelt near 1800 sq. ft. Xlnt. terms. carpel. drapes and r,..V ~ \\ Out.standing ocean/Mlll famll7 rm., 3~ baths, * Vl"'son """" * 2Br, 2Ba Condo, new community pool &c lmmecliat.e oecupancy. L USH landscaping! ~if '· . ;,.::: ~· View trom lhlll 2 BR, 1~ l&e. laandry rm .. walk-in 1718Purt Westboume cpta. full 9«Urlty bldg, .:lubbo1:.se. Two Story BKR. $139.900 ..._ ,-BA, adult commllD.ily paatry, 2 brick !rpb.. C.Ufonpptt.oaee.. boG elip, Slll,000. Prill with charming brick C710676-S717 toW11.bouae. Priced at hdwd. Ora., latercom. Price at t.o the quick. only. m..MCeve/wbds firepl2ce. A steal at OR 522-2080 llot.500. OPEN HOOSE ~ wtlb abutters, Immld I tn•r\oD. J Br, p),~. W SA.TJ.M.PM. panellnL,lr wallpape.r. 2 batb Harbor Vlew PAl40IAMICYIEW ...... HlpelRedty ru,ir+r 1600 IRVINE GROVES :'J'ri.Jevel "Alpen" 3 BR, FR. w /uplJ'ades & xtr• l&e. prem Jot. $113,500 't5Z3 CAMPUSl>a:fJMME Fee la.nd.. Log111a leodt I 041 Get this-3 BR, FR, incl. -••••••••••••••••••••• washer, dryer , trig. OCEA.MV1EW w/bOUDID freeur, cust. OPEN SUN U..C poolW>Je.$ll.5.000Fee. Lwcury cutom home, dramatic • very spedom. (Al)prox) 3000 • RED CARPET* sq ft. 2 br, 2~ ba. 1oc ln 111..-11:. -:ii~4 : PreaU1ioua Portaflna, ~· 659 Bollana. S213,000. ~~~~~~~~ ValenUneR.E. -~ ISJ.92165 auua·s EXIC.D&.UXE CLOSEOUT 4 BR. a taa., diDinl rm., 1M llYhG den. bar lluah carpeting <lab' 2 patio bomea left. • Cll!lramic tile fin. Pool. 0Da2Br+den,&oae3Br view. 2 Kin. to beach. plaa. botb /./2 baths, fll0,000 ~ erated air Pro ALLEN 111 minored REALTOR .._75'1'8 wardrobe doon, 2 car I ,... w/auto opener_.ptm Arch Beacb He 1ht1. full recna.tloa fadlltlell Total privacy, airy, 5 lnd!lt•. ·~ ~ ~~~it; ....-... a poOla.,.. • --artb. Plrat. J covered ol~.All WI ud 1ntffto01 On(ll tn1t1ne ~~~ F~~a:;.,= Ctlltft Dr. ou 00 patio, 2 car pr., wood • PdnrQ)Jun ... tofJef. burn frplc. Leveler win· rr.,. dow shades. Reduced for S'11,"5t.o f18d·995 quick sale by owner can 551-1283 ays · arS5HM1eva. su7~.499-l66.S WOODlllMI. Bro+4>••« borlM •• BR., t.aia. rm.. a&num. pool. SJNI. dlclrln1. 1Ddlcpd.. teated. •-na. worb ... Redaeedto saa,ooo AODIT ._.Plyt.afC\oad Lee· pa It playbOuae Home. TJelX'9'di• bay IAILY&UFF 4tS.S220 49J..t4f4 ...................... . NOEi.JOHNSON for children. Walk to atanl,Y$UUOO. Lmury c:wdo. Pictures LINGO ·park, shops it school., DOW) llALTOllS qoe Tlew. Sparklln~ 4'6"2413 130.5050 SAHCLEMEMTE OPEN HOUSE llALISTATI Sl70~S.t.1a5 17141675-1600 tre.h latertor. Relax OD Meclcdlldg Sablrda712to•pm 49 •• 112 'WI'"'"''' 1---------t encloMdl}aulanaLlbr, Spacloaa a Bdrm, 21ft f:!:=~t! 844Acapuleo,Lapna .-. 1808Ruthl..ane WIST..wPOtn' 2~bL BnDd DeW tit. liath, Mission Park aamu-a•--•su .. ~ TAKE A LOOK! Tbl1 ---------1 NEWfr=-•R•CH i!:ldamft m1rrGa, prol. home. Owner Jeavlna -~ ._,,. spotlesa 1 Bdrm .. 211t ar toweboaM. View Jot. DJJ..n-' ~1642 DUPLIX deco. End u:n1t. Tram-atate. sios,eoo. Open :!AwftOUeYeahSerraCo. . IMl&b, 2 atcry bome bu A/C, frplc. JUJhly up-1=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiif • lh'e in tbe We.tRlt;r.11"8-TlllO Sat/Qm 1-5. 28C111 Paseo -, =a=·~~ ~.~~:,~~~11• MODftA :.a:e~ apmtaln. 2 ~flnrt1Pl*'4br. ~~~Marquard 4tM660 4tt-ll.17 Famlly rootm plus an cu• •A• BR downstairs. Both 3ba. Tbia pool bome is ' RT-COl"Del' loc&- euellent floor plan J"UIU'Wllt wtLb ocean riew. Great lYm Wells bit w /Wllimit· 5-M Ama I 080 tion. tdaal for nnall basi· , ~-• f ._ ln HAIDTOrt.IASI You P97 for the Bll Ca· ,,,,,,.UU,,,, Sbowlpride ed Po81lbilities. ~ •-•-•• .. ••-• ...... neu. $97,600. Rutll .or .• .._..... ea ..... ~ · You won't be wbesl you QY'OO Golf Coune View 4 OWIMl'Sbtp. $181.000. aellieriaownr Be CAPTIVATED b1 th.la Laurie. RJt.r . ......, ~beam= aee this quallty con· owner lbrows in th1a YALLIY 640--fto tMOO price reductlon.i--------.... _area. ltrUCt.ed bome in N1cue1 beautilWly upsraded 5 IYOWt& Comtemporartly de· •IT•,.._ room, u.c entry' auto. bed r o o m 3 b a th POITOAMO cc:r'" central alr, S. Cit a.a.es fer MM f 71M praee door°'**'• etc. Sborea; over 3200 aq. ft. ... ,.-.. AND tt' prteed t.o IJ lnt.blalovely4bdnn.,4~ Somen«inll&rborVlew 4 BR 3~ ba Inc l Plaza area. S.atnee at--·•••••••••••••• faatlltSl~.SOO. K batb home W'lt.b formal Haam. Count the extraa bouuaicueat/teena1er 119.SOO.HWTJ 4'call: o Specialist: 2·>4 dinin1, latte living • from uaed brick lo rm. Paddle teunis crt & VERNJOHNSONRLTR bdrms, Huntingt6b OPIMHOUSI family rooms with redwood deck. A real New . Btl Canyon Iota of amenities. 540-4fW8 Beach, FOU11tain ValJeJ. Sundul2to•pm beaot.lful fireplaces Ir !:'&in at 1117.SOO. C.ll =-~~00::~~ ~~~~ bse SCllA~ IOl6 -.m7or963-088'7AIU 28707.elfDr.,Laguoa ~ amenitJ•l Aslrlnl . Bdrm, 2 ba, wet bar, ' •"••••••••••--•••••• RANCHOSAN lOAQutli OCEANVJEW,newtyre-PiO,OOO ~ trplc,~.SlJl,.SOO. ASSUMIYALOAM JBR.,2ba.aireood.dca. decorated eaecutln •• p JP G. L 1t1 t er lcel bdrm. a bath. lam wet bar. fully rum•'- bome.11.aaterBdrm. bu ~ .. "tr.J Da71(2U)U7·27'10 rm, formal din rm Former model. Priflle prtvate balooa.1 J>lua a EveaCUJ)~ brHkfaat nook, fuil ciL:nelocationov.,. connectlDI offfce or ~~~~===-1 IYO_._ balcoa~. VACANT. lake. Prind* a tu d I o • Q ll I e t ............ ..... ....,..,.. ~ to IDO\'e in. Will Clbly, $129,500. 7SZ.1ZU. pelpborbood. '1M.SOO.. Weekender or7 '4N317 ~m!:. i::.==: Br c 0 na l d. r term I •• after S; 752-0788 A sncrALiioKB far Onl1 2 abaft I bib. to~~~~~~~~~~ fraded • t•·mdl' • Olnwr/A6;t. TM-JJ3S or Br. 2Ba, Huntlnst4e aped.al peoplel lnJo1 oc.m. 1 Bedrood • mmed occupauc m•to. · Le.ndmark Condo, .,,.. beeilltiAtl aUDMtl ftom llMlll quara..a. locat.ct CAMAl.lllOMT Frplc. at uae ot roe "WISTCUA= OCWROMT sraded. $72,500/0fr. _, tlduwticlBdrm. bum ~~ ~~ m.e' BR.. 2'41 bat.bl+ around pool le frptc. CUltotnlsed SWrtnant MOll.IHOMI owner 549·8338 da,-. home. ZH1 walk to bomt. '18'1.SOO (11) rmnpm rm. + lam. rm. Won't la.at $1'5,000. baUl a bdrm• den. oat l·Bdrm., carpeta. blt· lllO-mlevea bucb II down&.own w/pool table. Steps to for appt, S.5-ZUI o .noon. baY window i.. tu: oceanfroot patio. llllCwProperty 200D Laluna. SU3,000. ocean! $155,.llOO ~--. PTank. ar 1ee tbia one! Open Only ate])I to prhate ••-•••••••••••-••• .. • CAYWOOD REALTY IOI' s.t. • am_ 1l1I DoY• beach. XJnt eoddJlion ! ' INC. 5418-1290 5..-i ~ 0.-/Aat 642-0751 • SM,000 ............. •••••-" • • MAURYSfAUF'FER llrc:W ........... tiEWPOR1' CUST SEA LION REALTY IArx• J br owner's wait · 1Y OWMB 31n E. est. CdJ4 87J.53S4 Anlhetm_ Pvt C!Ul~c lbr, Iba. Hllbly up· 1213N.Clt,Lapna :-.. ~:~ ~:-~p;i;:·. P'eded. Lota °' wooc1. l. 1111!!!!!~·~--~~~!I Pdced to ...u futr cau --;::: .. J!100 ·~ ........... !~ --·-· , _____ ..._ ___ -t ~·=='-=ti lllCUml =::s~it!~ ~1 I be. cmpl\11 up. llAUTY •ctwn.Justr~A sru'd. "* • eec. Sacr OCIANROMI" OMLY stJ,tOO amnmmtQ-tmllil ca11rt sua.a Fw' ·-call -s............,; L-....:..i ......._. .. --._ .....,..._. ..U. • 11111 6pooll. Yoa on LANJ>. Qanil .O,-;r-l'halr ~ -• ._.. -•--IYlJ-llom• haa ' bl1 BJO...l6CTll • ...--... -~..,.. 0.&1£1 •• ~., cai .. bdml9,J~fmlJnDt I·-------· hi••• ..... C.... _.. il.rf .,, " I • carmr lot wtrm for yocar --_._ ·rocb "9ow, Int ... ..._ fre. trhl.t boet or tn.Uer. am. to Good location ea -........ ~ ................ WihP MDoola.'19-1501 ~ ••• , bdnn. r • ., UIMler replacement CQft.. Lf00&.411 4~-........ ( .... ~1'111195111$ Aat.~ . ,,.,..... 1.,.., ceHttr• wJ,. h• --·-···---.., e.a~ ~ WWitwa ._. e1•1Mt A. RealFJstate o::~·~~~u~ ednil. • ' .S11l,OOO. IPYOU • aave. AUtQ. '80.C$. 499-455 I mve a temce to oft•• _asz.m:s~------ D"°"A 9*11toRU,pla~uad ·~bomes.Blsa.2 POINT [n th Dallr PUo& 1c1L..-1mot.ncome. aMIU O...tfW s.ttJGa •• • • .... aa.&e CoueaUGll ,....... ....flMCIS REALESUTE I ........ 'I.... ..... .. u........... Hoa.. URfwnl"-d ...... ~sh.cl 1--------~ ........................ ,, ................ ·~ .... ····· ... . ...... ........ . ........... ·········· lmCll•• 1176 C..W... Jll4......... 3244 Nf....,......_h "" "-t.ttUttfwwllhed Afatwlt1.._wl ... d ....... DAA.YPtl.OT •..........•......••.•. ....................... ....................... ....................... ······~··· ..... ········ ....................... . .................... . ' WTALS .... ,_ • ...._ ..,_Alie UIO Me..,_tlHdt 17'9 c..t.W.. llZ4 PAHOMIOC VIEW a BB I Ba $525 57& 3 Br J Ba newly decar'd ..................................................................... . ,_."8a:Ocir,. Delwi 2 BR. dm, 2 ba 38a;2~t>&.'.'.'.'.' .... ~ ~.&t0-2.1 • 4Br,l~b•.MSO/m". .._......,,~ coodo t:Jevatortobeacb1-----------1 '4BR,Z'ttba •••• am~ lmS.Salt.a • Ddwielbr !beloft•Ui Z •\~A~M or just w1tcb the aurf. • LOOX • •BR, 3 Ba. .•.... J52$/74.S et• Oinyon Townbome. 3 751-t'102 B de.a aplit·levet l'rplc, • CA.R.DENTOWNltOME poolroom. IHUrlty ltlol eood, "°° + lul + 8YOWDcr.M4-5117 • 2Car IU~ E. wP":. .. ~-lldt.inS No c.bildreD °' Pool. ~pa. aauaa, a BR. 1 ba.. fJ)Cd Yard. ar. pool, Con•entent toe. 2.BT 2Ba ered 11 11 ~e lk)rUibta. dedl. O>uaVy 2carpracea. park'1 tlOSO per mo. sec:. Pvt ply, &as-!700 ~ ... ~. pcta JllO E nst ~ l'Yesl·1'7·162l A"l , '1U J 08·0500, i.avt'maaap. Newero.dmoorSeavlew t400.lmo.6'e-a01 · da. l~~~~~~~~I MS.:w& Hme,1ql1ty,38rSBa, w..-...tw l2tl BIG' eves.f4&...ua 'IS ............... ---------M ... Vento 1barp clean a 2 fple'e, dbl car. all elee ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIWa.stDI o.tof _... 11_. __ 1_ ..... _, Br, % Ba, family rm, lolcll, pool, teruWI, 1pa, G s Bd b 8br, 2ba, a llO!'y. Up· · ,.,,,...., 2600 ......._~ trplc, or uhool•, view ol Oranae Co All rut rm, 2 a ....... •••••••••••••• .. •• .. ••••••••0 ••••••••• children OK. Vacant. thla lD a pvt &rd comro of w/famlly room. fl'l)lc , • araded. Lt• patio. JdAho, S.aut 20 ac farm, Ga•nll 3101 MZ5. mo. Cati Dave, NB. a50mo. dabwsbr, kida ct pet O.K. Cblldrcn ok. From $390. f 'I I• I I. I I II~" .... ,~ f ••• ,,1 I t 11• '' 20minlrom&lo Valle1.3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _540-__ im_A_ct.;;._.. ----lm-3lllor98MQ.l ~/mo. 86S-"5e'1 ~-No GREAT RECREATION: 64$-85'3 eves, Ht-4262 Deluxe TRIPLEX CM BR, 1 ba boma. Barn, •VETS• 4llrocden.28a, F.P.,.nu· lf523CAMPUSDl:fRVIME fee. Swlmmioa, saunH, 2 ,_cSays_;._·------ --------~ w/ownt1n un,lt, pride o! bunkbouae, loafing abed, You fQU4!bt 1~ it own a in & out ~ mo 348 IAYCAIST CVI'E 3 Br 2 Ba w/cpta health cluba, bilUards. r--------Ownershlf, nr. •hops . etc.$92,500.714/l>U-8121. llieceolttnow,nodown. Hamilton'CM6"2-T7'3 New 3Br, 2Ba, 2 ur 3Bll,2 ba.,form.dl.Dloc fcod yard ki~ le pet.i nlght-ltghted tennle LACASARAMCA Seller wU carry paper. 208/788·2832 or write Vet.er11nffou.slnJAJt, iarage, pool, jacu:nl, rm., frplc; Ice. cov'd. OK $.195 ~agent cowu. Pro" pro al\Op, t.dt. I .._. .. Mow Bier, 5.'16-61'11. :eJv!."rd!ho~~ 90 • 541..0100 •1brm a baisJ!lesa V~e, tennis, $660mo. SS&~ C.~'&~·,!%:,; oo;ee. · ' ~m~vina ranae, party All utill pd.I c~, ~· 0•.&NfiE am rtn, rm, car WalnutSqu.are 3BrZBa opeoer.Abort.lculturlat's 3.Br. fam rm, 9342 Am· FUN ACTIVITIE S: ~~ ~. n~c•f·.~:uo~ ~ ~ '--• HOMEFINDERS pr, S'lOO. 557-M75 crdnr. pool, park. Ad.J~ dram, Incl. 1reen.house. baasador. Vacant, im-Fulll1me d' .......... or, fr .... COUNTY Giro•.. 2700 Thousands of Rentals only. $.195. 645-9799 W/D, rern1 "cntnr. Jn med occupancy Ha-2297 Sunday ~~· BBQ:;' ~:!~~;~;· 0~a Je:~Ye ~ PRIDIOF •••n•••••••••••••••••• Allareu•llpricei 3 BDRM 2 BATll fplc, u · · ooe ol Newport Be•ch'a or913-011S7 traps, partui~. sport 15t2.9137 OWNBSHIP MINI RANCH S75Bacb~~~t,beach aaraae. no peta. $42S. ,:uversity Park · The finest areu! S800 Per u.unamenu&morel ~~~~~~~~ 2 B 2 c ....,,,2br""'taue .... •-o'-AvaU Apr. lS, $48-4135, .. ~a.ce, Dover. 3 br. 2 mo. co lie. Mr. Hater .._..,_llltlaador B""'"UTIF\JLAPTS· I--Tam.&• r, car gar1fe on ..... ..., '"'"' • _ ... • Evs.._.., __ ·6'4Ml423 ..., ~e level condo. m.mi U.v• lled 3100 "-" · 8 d ...-v ,... acres'wtth animal ""'n.9 & ~3brtncd·klds/pets _.._., }fidht·u~-aded, prof. -c.-.. •-. 1112 bedrooms. l r, cpts. 11111. atove, CONDO r--.,,._., 6MV' o--••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ kids ok no ...-. -'5 corra.14. Fruit trees & LIFETIME SERVICE IMO()t(VllW decora Wd. paneled. --------l'Um. & unlurn. ModeJ.s ~2274 • --· -· 30,4·Ye&rold,2bedroom, grapevines. $37,SOO. Call 557..0122 3 SR, 2in ba. condo. Jacuul, pool. $415. ON WATER. 2 Bdrm open daily 10to7. Room----------l~bathtown.bouse unlts. Geo.FreyalSU-34.56 B d N S '752-2.881. Ccodo w /vlew. Side tie mate service avall. No Br, Z Ba, 1295 mo. 9U Excell~t uea. Garden BENHINKLER.E. C•llfrmoleodll211 ran new t r. 0 • ---------avall.'65()/mo. lease required. Sorry, MwlonDrive Grove. Beautifully •••• .. ••••••••• .. •••••• Coaat l>laia. Pool, UniversityPark·2Sr 2Ba DOVER SHORES area. adultsooly ts M-0659 l all d s c a p e d , pr 0 . EST A TE 2 BR Beach House, lar1e Jacunt, tenzu.a: comes kit w /oook, frplc, ~ ,; Lars S Bdrm den di.a • 00 pe · 'ess1ona lly man aed 2Acres, large PoOI. huge yard. *'"S. "93-CS3 or wit~ wsbr., dryer, trellis,newcpts, SUS mo. in• rme •-poot.' ... ....:./mo. Oakwood WHTIAYTIJPUXIS Reftna.nce or con~act: home with S bdrms, Of· 681-lllli' reLriJ., auto. gar. door 67S-58'2 or S56-66.10 ext b; • -DOYIR SH<ills Garden Apartments COSTA MESA Will excbanae. An ex-lice space & loo maoy opeoer.$47SPermo.Aat. 60. CORONA DEL MAR. POOL .....,_.IMdi/...,... NEW3BDRMPAXI.LY elusive olferina of Xlras to name. Horses 3br,3bainduplex.Ocean 640-SS&O •---------•Or 5 BR executive 880 lrvinecat l7th) APTSFROY$39S. QUAIL p LA CE OK.$145,000isabuy. view, double 11rage, COLLEGE PK3Br 2Sa Spac. hmhse, 3br, nr Cbatmin12Br,famrm,2 home in beat Newport 645-0MO Private back yards, PROPERTIES. INC. F.A...l..MHS Ill. fireplace near school. ·t.9 dtp8 f~I ' $42S ~· 2~ ba. bdrm frplc, ba house. Walk t.o beach loc1Uonl Family rm. M•ww-t '-IVs-tti 1araces. 2 children ok, <TI4)752·192'0,l400Qua1l 1714)996-5540 $3SO.~.l·528-Sl07 cp S.S2S84 c, brick patlo. $525, rec 8525/mo. w /bar, 11 . country 1700 l6th St. no pets. Near South Stree t S 't 135 Sq ft lb _mo_·-:--·-----:--f.!:pai=d.~S52::::::-0566::=:::.:.evs~--W•cu ,._, Hws kilcben w/'-1, form.al <Dover at 16th> Coast Plata. Rent.al of· · ' u 1 e 'lleClll Estate 2000 • • 2'' ba • 3 .,. _ _._Ide A_ .. _ b C:.. '31 1400 uv 642 8 70 Newport Beach, Ca. w·.-..........1 2900 bdrm, oceaaview, new ~... new .. vuuu,3 r2 Orangetree Condo OD • ciiniDi ; all W/Ql•ln.ili-~~~~~·~!~~~~ liceopendallyl0t.o5.S20 92660. --crpl & drpe $495. mo. ba, 2 car 1ar w/aut< waw, 1 Br, t.ennia, pool, ~~~~~~~~~ cent upper bay view, at _ Baker St, 1 blk w. of •••• .. •••••••••••• .. ••• 493-86511 • opener,'!Pl.diabwuher etc. $300 mo. Dya, SEAVIEW, 3 Br popular end ol qulet cul-de .. ac. --------• Briat.ol,SS7·5Zl5. GOOO INVESTMENT o w N Property in cmcl. paUo, $375 mo. DYi 842-4818: evs, m.3'65 ac Bar Harbor _. ~pp't. only. $2500/Mo. ADU&. T CONDO t---------SEVEN UMrTS Inglewood, Hawthorne CoronadetM• 322.2 ~. wlaull "eves 1~ • ., •• me ocn <K"'2) This ls a HOT ONE! orSo. Bayarea? •••-•• .. •••••••••••••• 6"-0522 !··----·-----Wtf1$.S4'M06C;m.3Zl.5 PaulaBalley64U200 2BR,Zba,yrly.$425 Sharp investment with WILlPAYCASHI! 2 Br, l bath on nice at. N BkBa :Plitlevel a..,..IMdl l14tl;w¥;A~T~EgjRRFHROONNTrT.,JN;;w;p;ttl~~;;~~~~~ STIPSTOllACH great income & priced Ph.TomD'Alle$Sandro Fn>lc. $37Smo. No peta. k,aB.a!'a'&a,s-ear= ........ -............. Sbaew lars•'8r, 2~ba. Cndla , 1 1 3BR,2ba,unt._.75 ri&ht at $130,000. BET· T.0.NOPERTIES Call&40-4829aft6PM pool, no peta •oo DOWMrOWM BeauWuUy decoraUd 1L..a 1 • II ~"'25 Bach.un.it,yearly$23S TERHURRY" 1 • 1.. p........ ..,._ ·Co · WIW I -3BB..2ba yearlyf47S · · · (213 )674-6907 o_r .<714) 2 BR, 2 ba. bayfront 541-7m _._UNA ...., on w....... mm. -·•••••-••••••••••••• "2BR. ba win 540-3666 546·6201 anytime or home; share pier & slip. Deluxe 2 bdrm .• 2 bath PoOll. teon.la. Yrly ls~J LANDMARK·2Br, 2Ba, IAY~NT c: (714)846-522.1 aft. 6pm Side & front patio, dbl. 1)-. PoW 3226 duplex reuW. Outatand· lam. "25/mo. AAeraP• pool, tennis, adulta. $.1SO Sec. bid&. 2 BR, yrly '800 llfllel.-.11 Want to buy 3 BR home on gar. $800 Mo. "••••••••• .. •••••••••• l.Dg oceAn & village view• fKS..UIO mo. 8fi0.5S3S or Tl..0014 Udo fromowner. Agent673-S354 Panoramic harbor & yetonl)'afewsboctblks. SEAVIEW, 3 br 2~ ba, •o , ••• 673-1202 white water vlewl 3 to town & beach. Huge oceaa view, pool/teQnl$ 1' w • •• ________ r--------•I bdrm .. _ 2.L ba f 1 liv. rm. & di.n.lq alcove. -mo. 2ll/uo.az9 U.'-ahW 3525 TRH~LEX. C.M. 2·3 BR, 2 ba, fc:trced air, ' ucn, TS • rp • Lge. ll:itcbeo w /bllt·l.m, ~"1 -"•••-••••••••••••• IUl\l HTATl associated blt-im. DJ02..B Dana Vis· l I h d Great Eastslde Joe. heat., frplc. No fixer up-la.MSmo.213/372-86Se DC • wa1 I ryer •. c11urm ('~ Buntinston Bcb 3Br, newer 3br, 2ba. frplc, yd per. Separate 2 ~ ear&Je. _ ~ MJUllW l~. J,c liv rm & din <z> 2br. Iba, patios, entl 648-&JOl An outsta""•ni olfen.o& IBr.11 coms lot. ocean rm, bltu, refrtg, piool, BllO l<EllS· IHALTCJl!l. l VJ', V. !olb')1.1 , '' J•6 I gar. $16S,OOO. 8Toro 3232 •t $SOO Mo. Ref. Te· view SUIOOmo 873-a&G4 bt1l cond. $150 mo. No Tom Lee, Rltr, 642-1603 PBACnY -··········-······ quired.. can: • . peta 963-0525 Dl"ffROR APT. Want bome in H.B., F .V.. Cl.ASSY !qier beaut1ftll 3 bdrm. 2 MlSSIONBEALTY Steps to bcb, cute 2 Br ...:___;_• ...;.;.__;,,.;,.,;,____ DM WldtrdoM oat C.M. or Seal Bcb. For bache&ol' or career ba, w/fam-rm. frplc, ,._494-0731 ~~..:..~~11'· ~tslui ~r~J ~~ ALLUTILSPD! Brtawnble. $3()0. Blt.ns, 2DUPLEXESLEFT 1400Sq.ft. or more. gal who waota privacy, DW, A/C, auper area.~--Woods Co .,, .... ._OI'--.-eodt.t-- 3 DA_ Zb 100' from the ocean. pr,lndryfaciLAdllaon· Near S.C. Plaza Bkr SS5-S'15.000. Fixer 0.K. comfort & chat'm Just "25. Sl63-4.Sa7 Alent.. No~~ ve. . ...... ,, -...u, •. Semi funmbed. Avail J.y,nopeta.191.9Anabeim 557·9'710 Ownr /Prioc. only. 1~.._. 1· •-tee. 3 BR, 3 ba., comp. re-Bldfal·lrlellBr.,pean. allbui.b.-in,jac.pool,etc. now!201E.BalboaBlvd. St..Mcr.MS-5108 Collect (213)433-Cl.56 comp""'"';"• spac oua ~ · done: 1se. Turner Aasoc. belt. $SZS. PriYaC"J. SilO. 84e-4408 Yrly $22.5 per mo. NO •2Trfp6ens• elegant 'guest bouae CallDonrue 49!MSl1 AteatlU-1133 FEE. Call: Sue al ew spacious CONDO, Near Lake Park. Min. to WAN'!ED TO RENT w /cozy f 1 rep I ace. f 1a..v._, 3234 556-7707aoytime 2Br, 2'h8a, trplc. patio, bell_ 1-4 BR 3 ba· 1-3 RR W/Option to buy 2 or 3Br $350/Mo. (K-30) ....................... Rl'IUlll'm $t00mo.67S.9208 2•2 ba: 1.j BR." 2 ba. s home in Santa Ana Hgts. NIFTY, NEAT Im/mo. Lrg, cln, 4 Br, 2 Uftftl garages, frplcs. $185,0001_~ __ 18______ & NICE be. acrosa from Mile Sq DRASJICAl.lY!! .J~· ~~~_ru:;:,:~dsm°!: each. 1709-1713 Alabama, ._.. Exceptionally nice 2 BR, Park. C.U 751·2060. pat.lo. $700/mo. 2 Bed. + Adultsooly. Phone: n••••n••••••••• .. •••• 83l-908l&f4Spm .. Hunt. Bch. 536·1718 ........... -. ........... 2 b~th , newly r e · tlllaltlwJ•leadl 3240 deandpaUo.ta=50/mo. m.3083eves/Wknds Gu a.. 3102 Owner. Himes ,,_,.,llMd furbished f_ront duplex -··-•••••••••-•••• 'Ibis fabuloal Deerfield See and submit Your ol· •-···--••••••••••• dulta, no pets. 2 br, w/buill·ln kitchen. Near Plan s Park Home .1 ..__._ •-LL...-ja-......a ... .......i 7u .... ITSC.M. ....................... LOVELY 3 BR 2 B fer· 2 ._...UUU& Ill 300 Ul!U'l:lt ..... ~ .. N-'--'"'"•(o-...o-\;t.IAAI-.. ~-" •..a..--1-•-...1 3106 shopping & ocean. • • fellturel over Z500 sq. ft. w f .,_...,.. .._._ IDOOt.h ............ UllJU.,.,. .......... ....,....._ Beautiful brand new 4-1 --$C75/llo (K-31) w/trpl. DW, crpt. Jdd,tpet ol ll"ldoas livfna wi1b 4 wtil&I .. "-9 ,._.,, -per Gro9e) BeautllUI Z bdrm 1----------br, loft, f/p. 3-2 br, IYJ ba ....................... BellecbMeLeeM4-GIO OK. $(10.113-"511 A&eat. larte bedrooma, com· 631-1400 Phonefn.28:21 a p t 1 i n s I n t . townhouse all bllns Cozy 2Br, frplc, pvt patio, Nofee. l>ldetY apcr•dechnd un-C...W.. 3724 nelibbort.ood. Private crpt.s drp9' Hurry t>uY forced air beating. Yrl)t Zbr 2bm. ~m.itobcb belteTabfy priced at PRIDE: 2 I«• Br's, 1 .. --....... •••-••• patio .tn-bom lovely DOW : l.st ~ de°prec. ~/mo. 673-'7550 3br ~ lrplc, beamed -aar. $128,,500. SELLER JS ea. fple, dbl att.eh ..,., ---·UP kl t e be n I; • D c •• d TSLJ4mt le1603 • TomLee,RJtr,60-1603. t.AooPi • I• 3107 =-~~·· ANXIOUSlt SUBMIT ~blbbc:h.tMOmo. Studio.lbedroom 1ar•1e1; pool; 2ba.IOlari 2 ......... •••••••••••••• 3br, fAID rm. lrs muter YOUROITEBNOWI :~M • L. mat aA llaideemce,pool ~~~~~ ,,~. bltm, PoOl."'°i_ ~ -8/15 Washer/dryer ........................ GaATLOCA110M se.8755«645-.:1967 ----sa's mo. ·~·3292, ....................... rul244-ss12 · EASTSID!!, n~ s Br. 2 4.br, pool,~ mi tooeeim., a :er Z\.\ ea cc.do, oewly -•••••• .. -··-· TSl-3591 Loh tw~....t-lZOO 4 br 2 ha, avail 3/1 thru CodaMel.a 3224 bdrm.PoOl.$475 • ~ Z176NewportBl.C.K. ......___,-t-...t ~ • .,,,. K. Moclecello ·Condo. 116CAHYOM ba, 2 car gar, pool/· tsZS ...___.d._ ·--SUSCASITAS Be t J ' bd a---------Largest remalning.Lagmaleoch 3141 jacw.zi.Fncdyard,frpl, Tl41tlrMll,BobGraf ~ -mo.~ Nlcei7fumtabedlbdrm. w/h;~·f~:trn"m. Br,lBa!lstary,lhag, pnme locauon. Senous ....................... $450/mo.Xldl •petaot BAY!BORES CIC»ed tar. UlO. up. RumboldRlty f7s-e:22 drps. PAUo. frplc:, beam 1 n qui r I• s on I y . Emerald Bay, walk to 49.'>l.,. ~ SUPER 4 'Bdrm, 2 ba 3 Br, 2 ba. frpJc, pvt Adlllu Do peta 2UO ceil.g.ar Adlts. 1295.2544 (714>MM111Wkdays9.5 beach. 3 BR. " den, 'ti1 •/frp&c, apt. fed )Td. beacbu, $615/yrly. Newport Blvd. ·, ..._., I ... 3107 PJdeD. ci>S3M408. April. $750 Mo. ~A WOODS SGS. 54517 Aleut. no •AMCM llALTY 60.aa. ................ -.... .. '.EMERA.LI> BAY, lge lot. nJRNERASSOC. 3 BR, 2 BA. lJft 1 __ _. (ee. 551..UOO Spac. l br garden apt. "'BR,lba lL''-tot.·-•-apt. CGter St. C.11. 100.000. Prine only. Pvt 494-1177 "9!MS81 ._ ~ ... -.. DfSllt.11.1 Pool "rec. All util pd. ~beach.~..;;.; .,_ • Gas I& wtr lacl'd. $165. Pty.496-9723 yard. 4 yn old. $525/mo. Sharp I Bdrm. 2 ba, DW, ............ 1252 EXEC CONDO, Nwpt Adultl, DO cJuldreu. oo MarshaiiRJty .,. ~ 54Wt02,54l-&270 H t• Desert Blue Lagoon. yr lse. CALL '7Sl.Jl.91. CTJ>ta, fed 1rd. Pff, ---......... Tin. attr I Br Z\1r Ba, pcca.1215. up mo. eltside Zbr C!Ottap. Nu it.... I 2400 Pool/tennis. 3Br. 3ba 4=SELECT SllMl5l7 ~Nore. a Br "' .. .-do. A.IC. encl patio, pool .• $&90. ElPuertoMe&a 2 Br 1 Ba w/prage. pew crpta drps Nopeta •••n••••••••••••••••u condo.499-298S•~ T'PROPERTIES cozy a bdrm, 2 ba, bltia. 6 microwave, m.1crs 1915iKapleAve,C.Jl. cpt, drps, paint. Yrly '$275..552-tJll( Colorado River, Needlea M.wpoefleadl 316t W/cpC. fed 7"I. tida A l.aundnn.'4ZS.831·76'. UDOISU AptS S.OOmo.281.hSt.675-9229 Callf.PP.hasqu&lityblt, ••••••• .. ••••••••••••••New 3 1Br 2~ Ba,~ car peta ok •. 1385. ~SEA TERJl.ACE Gardm lbr,2ba. ~eSo.. petio, $38Q.1 br. Mature adwu lBr,$225/mo.Nearbay& 'lBr m Ba, 12x6Smob~le ~~ide~l~~P~i~6 A&mt,Not.._ Home. 2 br4'dea. 2 ba, S1» mo. Aft 5 pm call only. No pets. Quiet, ~ <213)790-64.2.8 (71') ome. 12xSS .~ov d 64&-708S llACHHOUSa-31r. beads. temlia ,. pool. 6SW11i:Jortoall ~~ 1991 Newport. _673-_2'.U __ • -----carport & paUo. 4 walls, lll Via Udo Som • $ 5 2 5 4 9 3. g 4 9 o • ---------1 .,_....,.,.., 6'.' insul•Uon, W /D, cent. DRIVE BY-Two bdrm, 1 Br, cpta, clrps, z enc. tGOmo. S3IMlllS2 wa*'5an • U.. or nnt spadom I C... def M4r 3822 air, storage, pvt bch, elegantly furnished porches, fDcd yd. $300. iilooNlaloda.11 ~3Br bedroom, I b•tb COii· Lie furn bach. $160. Pref-• .. ••••••••••-•••••• boat dock, min t w/color TV, deeJt. view wtrpd.675-Sll0;842-0393 l'h.Ba w/epta. fDcd ycL BeaaWul Se• Terrace domlalum Newport =·mr:o pets. --------•I casinos, also selling oiw•ter. $100/mo. Kktl a: peta ftne. PIO home. I bdnA, Iba. f.am Chiat. 1100 1q. ft with • s 0 x 15 0 h 0 m es lt e . WATERFRONT HOMES Best M~ VER.DE area. 8SMS67 AO-Bo fee. • rm. frml d.lolnc ls llYlq. view. Pool, t.emm "walk .............. 37 40 v;e ~ - T r a o s f e r r e d . 631·HOOCor appt. Deluxe4Br, 2ba. Ca!J? rm. ht eomanmlty wfpool, to btecb. tllOO/IDo. Quall ....... -............. fl ,I v w /sacrlflce • .1. Ciaco, bltns, ftplc, new paml & Vacatlbroaado, 1~ ba. Jacam. tamla 6 beach. Place ~. Inc. SlUDIO ~ 1t~r~~-. ltt.<oofOrongtCounly's 714-328-3793 carpet, gardener ~. New crpg, drp palm. S725/• Po-. ._JopL m.11& AR few Teddy --most beoulN .__Property 2000lllcw,.,opwty 2000· S4S-3liOC Bee. area. sloslea 'l'D-9Z23cr-..U. llalr. -w....,...._,. · GARDENAPTS' communlles.Ao= .............................................. 3 br, 2 ba, 3 car garage, welcome.l.l)-1823 Lite new 3 brm + lam~ c br, 2 ba, all =~~ CORONA DELMAR setftngWlll'IS\'eoms,• frplc. Kids ok. No dop. 1 Bedroom ecmdom1Dium, rm. 2~ ';f .:t· aqJ loocUel r Quiet St. Nr. MU.E TO OCEAN ~c!. ~ =~ wote1101S. and ma,eslo $400. mo. ~2274 pool. teania super loca· lam. $WS. harbor BJp '-*ni• ..,.. Wtet Mohl le Catalina vtews. Close heS. Fealurtlg pools. . }II. ma~nab/lrvlne ?-realtg IEAUTIRIL HEW DUPLIX-C.. Great Jocatioo, just 2 short bJks to beach & So. of Bayside Dr. 3 BR, 2 bath tmits w /fireplaces & se~arate· laundry rms. Exceptional tree-lined street. Both units leased (1 avail. 2/15). $259,500. Haniet Perry 643-8235. tK-24) SUMITS-COSTA MESA 3 BR home, two 2 BR homes + duplex UBR/ea). All &ingle-story w/enclosed garages. No vacancies. Excellent condition. Vic JuhiDski 642-8235. CK-25) . TllPUX Loveb' 3 BR home attached to 2· BR & 1 BR. Pride of ownership! End garages -laundry rm - extra special cond. ONLY $169,000. Lois Miller 642·8235. <K·26) WIST MIWPOIT-Slll.000 EXCEPTIONALLY WELL MAINTAINED, spacious 2 BR. a bath vppa: & lower duplex. Lower w /lg. yard·llke patio, ~P er w /oYent.sed balcony & p Jal ocean vtew .. both w/fpt Ex eat. rental history. Owner. will exchanae or sell. Drive by 5406109 . NEPTUNE. (Please do not dilturb tenants.) Paula Bailey 8'Z-8235. (K'.·27) Nice 2 BR, 1 ba, filed tion.SZSO.C.UttMal .... ,__. 3215 =-~:·1 or '721YorlttownBlvd t.oFublonbland&fine Jot'Ullt.souno.~ yard, encl ear. S280 mo. 2BRcondo, Vacan&.Nev ............. -...... ~ BeacbBlvdatYorlttown beacb.AlsotBr.IU-211SU olldexellngellbhouse 25440raqe549·2T18 be9cb. dbl ear, tamll, i. ... 4B1l famfsdht•s 536-0411 v.111SOCialMnlS.T.._ EASTSJD!! a Br, 1 ba, PoOla. ~ lease. Cell rm. 3 1rp1c11 a ba air Newporter...tcoadoe,a 1_..___... -41 .=· Walktobch. gym.ond~ot av all 2/10. • .. 00. lat, ta.ass: ClaDd. eueim 1-..:.., '::/ ~ ' Bll.. Nr pool 6: tmn.la ~ _._. ra' •n-Fm rm 21""-Aft n... v....-u-~ ... WJ9 ~ .., A&f. "5-GZIS ....................... Q.Dm ~ 11.a ·~ """'""' laat+dep. Kids, peta. lth8t.Apt.JBrUftblbfr upcraded. supet clubbae mo. ' LAGUNA BEACH MTR. Yrly,S09Acacla~'TOC8 IM!Ylhlng~re~ O.K. Call 548-S880 Aak for beads. S11S mo. '650. 99&oe JNN. tss/Wk 6: up. Maid SpaeJoua 2 Bdrm l ba fOf. Ftlnl\n Is OYOlobee. Leslle:L 7l"61-7238 3 Br, 2 ba. corner lot. a&IFFSAllA aerv. color TV. heated new plush ~oco8 Orteond'Pft!OBeclroom New2~do. Pool,1f.a. L~ 3 bdr home, trplc, A/C, club & lake Lowiy2SrCondo. •ault ~ ('71') 49W21M. 985 cpt/d.rpe, Paint. kitchen AOulLMng. ~ KJ .. : 4~pea .~r ,,.e L ... ..:.dbl.praie.tm. IJrivp."'15.m.-;!:'!~-~!_Dlhop-paUo .Coutllwy. noor. Bright & alry. Olflcesopen 9:00!06.00. ~ Bkr. -..., 0 •· • _ _,,. ......_ Y1tfo 32'7 .w ;c-~· 2 ear 2 Br. 2 b a. furn . $&2.5/mo. A#. 644-'7210 Now ren1lng. 3 Br condo, 1~ Ba. D/W, •••••,••••••••-••••••• ,....,._ tc75 mo. Redecorated. Util. incl. ~1:-;B~R;'.W;;:a::'.Wfroo'.:;:=t~A~pt.:--11~=-..::.~~---.J VERY PRIVATE lBJl all ·lndry facll. Slater & 3Br house, !Ba, ffplc, dePll/Wlmda Pvt prkg. Laundry facll. $350mo.yrly Jae. uW pd. $300. New cpta, Nftfand.. 897..otill •vallA.P'U lat. Avail. DOW! tsOO mo. yr. 67S.3?.112, &.SPM m,., adults, no pets. DJs 76NTM OCEAN VIEW TWNBSE, ly.487-3493.. MMU5; Evl, ~or ~I Br I Ba, W/fplc, 2 Br, elm. I Ba. pool, ten ----.-------1 ~ D/W, fncd yard. f4i25. •II rt IHdt J2ff nia, SfOO. IU·21H: Studio Ir 1 Blhpta, furn, 0a-. of Hwy Delaxe'•-'•-coadonrS. .,_,qt,Nofee. -~••-••-••• MMZ1n · ~~~~~!'!1tI:rtrf: 2 Bdrm, 1 b•th, clean ,...._, 8aeudtQJ beach alk IB BIG CANYON .J Br 2 Ba ror 1d w /ocean view. loclda r,.1!b 1a~12~~· + bone c.on:.. av.ii fJ95. By owner. T.W.: ~..,.. .. enta. 250 frplc, W /D, bltns, erpt. Ii: pool, ~' March 1, wit to bch, AJ LASJ pool It Jacuat. 551-4211• drp1, aun porch fr ta ~ · llG-llN m.m:t.1W1torlle. 'L..-..... 3752 ...,..,._$4&5/lae.17U011i---------IDO. ....... ~ · ••••••••••••••••••-••• ...;:;.._...;;..__.;.._ _____ ,_ tilde ~ 2 br, riew Newly deCOf'at.cl 4Br, POOL BOid I Br 2 Ba, Y•C.htl' ltr, lbe. I ltl7 hanry Scenic views, luxury Ll'l 2 brm, elec. kitchen, deck. pr. No docs or ZBa. dee, 2 ear sarqe, D/W, epta, neat area. ccmdow/Sllpforl5'boat adult apta, f\lra "uof. diahwaaber, prl•. beach cbildrea.$DO.MS-~ frpk, 11 comer lot, tm tm>-...att.111tfee. At"'-Wllt lDcrct. fJOO mo 1rl7. Near Rectoul Shoppina accae.$3115.673-7631 mo.MWOOO WALITOllACH" WlflUAIAMTll l>nlidlmlt.lt.J,MS-'7511 Center. Heated pool, New pt beach 2 Br 2 Ba, NlwO...Alfs. Br.bablel295.21t'7C.··Near Bamllt._a 6 :waetectiOQposa. s.ai•iala . 327' Jacum.Nr.cornerAllda den,1.Ddry,p.r,nopets. New e.Pt~. clrpS, ct.h ( b ) _.,..,,.. *' ..._ 1 lllbaulecompm.a11. --••••••••••••••• Pkwy" Paseo de Valen-Adltl, refs. ssso. f73.20llO wsbn IDdrJ'. 1 lit $250 z ~:,a rear oose .. -... 1 __ am ·DtllJ~MnlC. u ,_..__. _._ da. 11 • tr .~7'31..SU.C esc*.f'73.t318 'rlll, DU CJ"pq • drw •VacandeivetUleddaUJ .. ._....._ ocecn ....... ALtClAPLAZA eo.t.W... -24 thnaoal. lat• e.bl'I do-•F\all.tatrolCOUDMlon ellecaU•• bom•: Lrt AVILLAOE ·--....... -....... BF.At1l'. aeo' Br 2 Ba, poatl onl7 $SU mo .,._toaced•lr°""' ram rm, tflr•tteN1pre-at.Q.51 511 E/lllde lr 2 br. Adlts am Adub. "1PDftt ~ paq, •!lam rm. lplc, D/W, ~ • • •f'reeretalcormH"nS 1tl1e JocatJoa, ~50. I!-. __ -c•A--,..,..,.._.&. -· retrtc. Cl,ltA, drJlS. sl09e. _.,... daps .,..._... -ODeotdQal:Ott:OO •1'1'12 ...... .,,.__...., I"'"' •c•uu_........ ......,. 387\,; Palmer 8t, RU. -...wrqt.Not... 2 ar:,, I Br, I BJ. b4at ............... »6f NMS4eeve. ~eollectl-tll/Kl·M49 .............. ,_, .................. _.. r--. m clrSll. 2 ear RENTIMES "= -Jn• ........ -....... -... 1•1 u .,... Dell!' .... ••• urw· llft&lf ~~ t. mo. can ..:::C:: .... --..-. m nm BEACll t.ch. "'*"·•· m Vlct.Clffa. 1J1U11W llaW ftUW1 l'arPralndmAl8antoe a Bdrm 6 dea. "•• 8'ttcb•n•tt• bath OpeliBouleSat/8mil-5 . a Br 2 i... MIO mo. aJJa-iBa,~~·•ar · Cll ..,,.,1 ~-CbUd1'8DtpeU ;"=.• ;:(1 ~ f'" m.czn,Aceat. m.m.JdQI. ~no pr,bltOI, ,..,per OIS'roPBY OK.: Wube.r, d.r7et le aec dep. IU·Una.n I Br nr Newpoct..._ __ _..._... __ _ 1 •· mo.'1N181. 140I Wlff , ttM ~ ••all. •imo. t.Ul-«Plf Blvd:. no peta, w•ter Br, ~launda7 full. (JblocbJ:.otBeach) 1.-..am NPt lt. I , men ..u ~5. w E. Bay. 2008 • Mltl, •· ACUlf. a.p. am r .. a Bl1nD ~. 2 betll. 1 third to~~ tee Mir apt MMllS. car sat+ carport. 2 pool. $255/mo. ' 3 Br 2 Ba apt. Qalat aea, EASl'SIDB 2 br, tarden NO nil! Hoaill. CODdoe •1rimm1n1 ~. '375 bltns, tpta, drpt, no peta. apt. pr bltns 9dJta. no ~u. Jlutai m.1m1vms1 *~'~·'*mo. '125.557-4m pets,. ins. 'ic.o IUt ~1'b'. .... ... Ult J)ltl. ' ~ aBR. IBA, owner'a Ml-21JT • .,..... ............ ~·· m.ocTI wlit = rtplc, Br. 1\41 Ba townlloiii. ............ .,.. Aftil. .. 1 I ~ 3 '9; Hr ~-~r.rn iar. loc.a at tar•1•, patio, pool, L .. 2 ~~.., •ICl'U. f»cd ,.... .._ •i.nnt.JTb. -.aw. &.Coast .Nopata. Jawad.: Ada.Ill ODJ1. ~ ., • .., •• _ .-.al7~Nor.; E~N.llti-..i •mo.m.am ....... -· ' t I I 'J I I ... ~- . . ~ ~ lt:!-BU1Jdll..-0'41per. lt..;Hammer. lt-..Carpet "SER'"''ICE .. rlt .•• c.em nt ll ••• Wire IL.Hoe lt ... Ctean lt ... Mov ~-:, it ... Press it...Palnt lt .•. Nalt it ..• Plaster lt. •. Fhc It ... __ . -• DIRE·e~oR~ P!wnh it ... Patcn lt ........ pe u .•• Remoa••~•t .... ,, .-... i 1 I ·.Roof lt .•• Landscape lt ••• Tlle lt .•. Trlm lt. .. Sewlt. •• _ _ Haul Jt... Add It ... Plant IL. Alter lt...Leam It ... AIM r l l1I.'" -~--Srfc:ds.-..k.-. .,. c:...t/Cit.I ,.. DI $11" •-lllS..lcft t+ ndl 'I ....._ , .. -.~..,., .. -~ ... -~ .......................................................................................................................................... -.-, ....................................... ~ ................... . •ter OGlY IMU; Bkkptqwlly. moaWf IJ:t All typ .. coacrth, a.tom._..., apreaclt, HAHDYXAN. Homes It !:xi-reliable Japanese MOVING HAULING • eo.t P&Ietiq. C.tm ext IROOFS liiit&lled fadory ~ ~ incl~ ,our ell. Kar. JIUA&b bloollwork, pluten ~but.tera • all window apta. Coosc1entiou1 lady' wlll cltaD your CL£ANUPS • .&euon. /iDL, a.Lrlw aprll)'iDJ, dlred: ellt.ab 3S 1'1'1· call Phil 1 bad ~uc •'714)10·8741 f1JO cuatqm brick Ile fs -cov•riAf~ _ _:; dlacouot cnftamain.cau~ ''borne. Nteda ttana. H.B. ,.._st. Catt. atadeata. 111-GO Hllrald0uan5*Ml f:raa,forfree.UrnatuaU ur.-a boaded.~ ~c:·St.c.il.~~ ·-~ ~ BtsB.CTJ.~ ....... ~ IBocifal'WlAA.Allb'Pel. Ooa liuNY aa.aaM. BllUMIS, PAl'W•Uoo a.modellq, new ccaatr. • ...................... Rave tJme few younelf, Mu _Lg 5errtces _.................. Ue/bOnd'd. Insur •• ~rr • ........ --... 6 lypln1 of your re· fou.ndatlona. bi1bwalll ...a. SKIPLOADER. Dump call the Moppetts Clean·....................... VERYNEATPATCtl e1Umalt. at•·OUl or ••••••••~•:••••••• 1wnee.548-7llO Uc Ge Cootr. ~1 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• truck. HAUL1NO , trff Ina Service. S68-2393 re· Nune OOlll&lltaot 30 )Tl 108S6TEXTU1U~ 537-41.JS _ Hu tal.n dama1ed your C.pe.eu eva. . ~c't1; 1EfJlff wort. 11.un1. demo etc ferrala :.f· Priv. duty w/fam.llY' n.est. -.14181119 - upbalt! Call 8Sl·:U40 .... •••••••••••••••••••• ~wort. Driveway1, JOBS~' 831·125'1 Xhit housecleanln1 done ;:, ent.::re ~!:hifo!:!~ PATCH PLASTERING ........ ••••-•••••- Booded, Uc., wured. Muhr Cr a fta m • n. Patial, Walkwys. Rea1. ...... by la<ty w /exp. Dependa· ~-A 1 l t 1 p e • , Fr e e ~ramie TtJ.-6PoC· lft Alpbalt __ ,_ rf Spee1aJty: Remodeling, l'ree~t.:s.5&-0751 IW.•lrdBectrtc ....................... ble,ownlrans.IW7·3637 .Umatea.C.US4CM825 .ate1lr0oott,ZSyraa.- 1ftft r .. :.,reau •c· finiab&srepair.~05 CNldC.. Uc32T191 ~14 QCCStudent. % T. truck. Wk;JP .... illlt p• ·-RING ,...ea.IMS ..... 1eal coat. str1plna. Trash tr tri 8 d m.c-Tu ....................... ..,,,,u.,. Comm/Rea. Free est. Wood fences & "'pairs, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELECJ'RlClAN-Priced &Q.srOs ~· an Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• PE:I'ERS PAINTl.NO Homea. addit1001, re· CIJVJIJC tile. NewOC',.... Allor eves. 6'5-3213 landac•pe construction. Child-care, bouaeJuwpln1, ri1bt·free eallmate oo • Would you prefer a pro-Expr'd. Rea• Rates. atueco, free ••ti, low model. Free eet. Sm1 jbs Attar.w't & ~7533, Mr Roberts llve·ln pref. 640·0818· larieoramalJJobe. Strai 1tude11t. bi& truck, fesslooaJ? 30 yrs. exp. Free Eat. Call Gene nwa.-..-wekome.~KalalU a..,.. S..lcH c.,.. S...lce References. Ueemed 873..Q3S9 tree cull, clnup, demo. For even. appt to yr ~ Dry Wall Flalab. Haq ~ ITrw Se +Ice .............................................. Ca •;ectar K·Kel Electric. Ind., 49'-76fl91r'IM·2129 home,968-8182 All P ROFESSIONAL Tape. Spray. QuaJity ............... •••••••• SU-ANY MAITER C.Jl)et Man will lay yours ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• comm, res, & malnt. svs. L + h Pai ll 1 l /E t controlled. Rlcberd, rr.. bh:Dmlol "pair Ev ... ._w'---'-bvappt. or mine. Repairs •· R.J .Hutfman •Son, Gen Hooeat & reliable. Free Ill tdeamg -••cnf-1 ° ng. 0 er x er. 181).1711Freeeat aJ '•u n' ... • ouJU:> , "' dd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.work IUU ~ · remov • ovtr ... 1 • Default/Divorce $175• dean.Ing too! Guar work Contr. Cwltom AJt Ai A • est.'19-8SU. $24.50 bl hr. •••••••................ p p 111 combiDed uperln'f.e»T CoUertlOM 30%• al bagger savings. Free patioa. cabin ets, hi 1 Wanta REALLY CLEAN LANDSCAPING. Paintlq. Extr/locr. Ex. ....................... _ a.yard~ -•·c Dnmkdrlvtng $300 est ~36"6 formlca. New coo.st. Res -•-•g HOUSE? Call Gln&ham Reuonablepricea. pr'd. hOoelt. neat, reas. &0~-·VERS Pl ... .a"""• wura, ...... (up to trial) • & comm'J. 645-4844 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Girl. Freeest~Sl.23 96&1'713oc54'Mi846 Uc'd-..10'5Dave ·--• um .... Dwnp&nacllt/lldploader. UnlWfl det&IJ\er-default Shampoo " steam clean. 548-6SU. Lie 4' bonded. Prol Japanese Landscap. ial ls Beat1n1 1'rM •t. 131-1257 WO oo full pnce Color bn&hteners ; whl lni 4: &ardenln&. Maint. Housecleanin1 witb a t1ll M'Y YOUNG MAN. 5 yrs e:rpr $1.0 hr. Hooeat • reliAble Simple wtllll $35 00 cplS 10 min bleach. Clean Gen. contnctor, new, ad· Ind. mowm&, trimming, personal touch. Refs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• io wallcoverinJ. Free aervice. Bot\, ll/C OK. Treesdamaled b~ storm? •Courtcostsextra liv, din rm. hall sis. Avg diUona, remod .• res .• 1prayin1, weed.ins. Free S38-8728or546-2'20 Brickwork. Small jobs. est.a ~A.ndY 751-31.:iOorN74'13 Prol.treet.rl&DllWlllsre- h Slo hr comm Free ~l Splro esti tes S&.S-7072 Newport, Costa Mesa 4c · moval. Free Ell. Is ref•. 1\motby Lashlee, Ally. rm S7 so. cooc • c • . mA . TM S ... Girts I.rvtne. 675-3175 eves. Fine Eder. Painting by Any plumblna. water C.U-..-Z (714)636-7200/aft 7PM ~-Guar eli(n pet odor. 548-82:50; 547~ PS HAUL G •• 1 R. Sinor. St. lie., inl. Try aerv ie.a, bathrm eocJ,1---------call (213) 434-891.S Cpt repatr. 1.S yrs expr. ~ CLEAN-U I . lN For: storm cleanup with a Brick, block, concrete. me ...... ,, .. ,,,...., b.rs. ce mlc tile. Reu. Removal cut Is baa I. ---------1 Do Ii: m sell Refs ... ..,....... PruniJJg.Planuna smile. Bonded. tmured. ---0 ,_ _. 1 ........ Ser-tke 531-0~~r y . • •••••••••••••••••••••• Freeest. 642-9907 Freeesta.540-9525 Free est. Call ~7S33, az.aMI ............ remova., 1ence ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Drapery Fabric Sale Joboaoberta • Prof palnt'1 • paper ,_..S.+lcit a.·-,-llra ftl)Un.etc.9G-030'7 SMALL BUSINESSES & Carpets & upholstery 47,000 yds in stock must Lands ca Pe s t o r.m B~ECLEANIN~ is our hanclnc. wort6 au38a3r ...... :::::::!!!!~: .. WLft w Cle • 1 ST A R T U P S steam cleaned. 3 rms be sold! 70% savings iD-damage, free est., ma~-bus!ness .. R~hable Mo.t.g Free eat. SS ·• • p p l Se i •••••• .. N••••••••H•- Management/Busineas $14.95 (400 sq ft). Chairs ventory reduction guar. ~ av~ Kim 1 service .. Jaruce s Rag-•••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 5Jll.4780 ~1p0~te O:wlm~l~ei Wlndowa cleaned, re- ........ ultant available on '"'0. Li.c, insrd, 0 uar. L·I· 1st qualUy. Ken Butcher "'-u-. peM tenance. gedy AM satM5-1800 "Two Men Wll...,ove bl b l """'' ~ 0 -e'lr P .. YOlrCGlfle pool maintenance. uona e, us ne11ea, unique fee arrangement. F·E System.a. 631·5350. Drapery 1510 E. Edinger Reliable, dependable, You" We handJe S le C--'all-'•• in r-ld-· 615-9191 bome&&apta.8474461 Benefit from expertise ~3939 Santa Ana 541·0203 G _. 1r-1c own transportaUon refs. sml moves-o ffice " ..,,_. ...,. .... .., .. usually only available to 5'1·2080 --N _...,, N · M2-862S ' household. Distance & till bomea, int. le ext. et.flt""'"°" 6517 large compa nies . Don't give up the sh.ip! •H•••••••••••••••••••• local , also packlnc. Please check our re· .......... ••••••••••••• Sellin1 anything with a 751-4760 "List" 1t in classified. SELL idle items with a HANDYMAN: Carpentry. Christian woman will Lowest le1al rate. ferenc~. Uc# 32C881 Refrtg. sales & sa:vlce. Dally Pilot Classified Ad Ship to shore results! Daily Pilot ClassiCled Ad. electrtcaJ, plumbing Ai clean your home s:; hr. Uc/l..nard. cal T ill·9". Guar.. msrd, free est. Reli1tble, honest work. 11 a simple matter ••• ~ed Ads 642·56'18 642·5678. 642-5678. noon. IW7·2'787. s.57-4504 Refer. 848-2362 aft 5pm. Ph M'f. 7278 Ted. 635-708$ cau Ernie 543-1585 Just call 642·5678. AparfMents lJnfur.. Apartments u.fwn. Apartments u..funa. Offb Rental 4400 Office...... 4400 OHlu ._... 4400 w..y Wmled 5030 I.Git & Fowl HOO r.11n,1b 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CodaMfta 3124 f .... 1i9G11leactt 3140 Mewportleodt 3169 Olxoffi~ In C.M. Nr ~ Pvtprtyneeds$1.S,0002nd Found: Sml crey 4' blllt DANCEOFFUN ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• fwy. S125/mo. UUI. paid. T.D. private loan. Terms sba.ggy male do1, curled Btfl nude lirll duce &: LAMAMCHA.ArTS Bsi~JL ti,1!. "; '::-d~;.~/e~~o.2 ~0~ EXECUTIVE ROW, Inc. m.-zAM's neptiable.955-3.185 ~~s. Central ~~·:O::~i.1~~ ~ Large 2&3 bedroom Br 2~ ea. D/W, W/D ~or642-36S9 Prestl-iMs office apace h• Mew__. BEACH TOWN SITE Mail IJ 1o Trmt 8Pll Son. 625 N. Euclid, garden apts. Oshwhr, bkup,FP;2 Br1Ba,all .,. ~·. PacificCoastHwyunilin Daldl· 5031 Found: Toy Collie, vie. Anah.S51M1SO bltns, encl gar, giu bbq w/DW, encl gar, lndry 3 Br, 2 ba, frpic, some lch/IJrport....., Tastet.I recepffoR ___,, marine complex, N.B .. ••-••••••••••••••••••• rr-~ee-~·J.!.unl· ,FREESESSIONW/AD Pool Gas pd. 778 Scott Pl. fac1I. Adi ts, no pets. ocean view. Walk to tet4tplt-. MffSOCJe HrTlce, c.t.......c• 840 1q fl, air cood; DU ..._. -.... __,.,.., 6'2.-5(773 ~5260 beach. $425. yrly. roo.s. ldtcMa. beYerop, Ill_.,.,, ..U crpt.s! uUJ paid! ample LOWEST FOUND: blllt Great Dane, *SANDY'S* .Adult 2 bedroom, super Deluxe poolside xtra lge PropertyHouseM2·38SO Mnlce. llctatt.g & copy -=ti II. trftel =·:~e~:it,U:~~ ............ ~ H~bor LCaane Oukallll ... age location. No pets 2br, 2ba. bltns. dshwhr. 2 BR bayfront condo. co111•lt ..... c..,.tfflted types.tff.f;g. deaired.~ext2l.S l .. T.D.'s..... • Juan po. wn.cml • S22S /month. 568 w Nr. beach. Adlls, no pets. Beaut. cood. Avail. DOW. co.,llft MCl•t•I .. senlcn .. Clilable.. WT.D.Lo.s. 2/13.4llf.133B •SHERJLEE• Wtlsoo, inqwre apt. E. $250. 536-8362. Yeartr. $800 Mo. ftffdecL ,,_ $290 per MO. f_J ••..... 4450 Falrelt Terms slnee 1949 Found Great Dane, brtn· Certified llaueme Associated Bli:rs 673-3663 ••••••••••••••••••••••• die cir. vie Alicia a& HouseCalll . By appt. Woodland Village 2cB!/ b:1! ~p~ aB:fos: WATEllAIOMT Cal 1714) 752-7170 4DB.UXEOFC'S 64=~~611 C«onel,M.V.837·2033 ....... 845 Paulanno Downtown. $295. AgL UDO ISLE ~edr:n6~~:i!.!'1~ :!~ Found bm & wht fem Spr· • Beautiful. new. adult SJ6.7St2 645-5<>44 Agent ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake Retired couple has money lo& Spaniel vie 17th & FOXY LADY apts. Great location. 2 R ~ooo to lend. I.st & 2nd T.D. 's Huntington 538-823.5 o.tc411 M91..-pools. 2 jacuzz1s Close tobeach.3br,3ba. 3Br.or2&den,gar,2ba, ow ., fMl-...s HarFo':.~!.t. area . Kent Ajent,837·3'1'4 --r- Movemimmediately frplc, encl. gar. Fncd patio. Yrly$SOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• far..., 4350 ...,,., FOUND: 21h mo. old :· 73'J·l5'1 Bachelor $225 $245 1 Bdrm 1265·$275 2 8d rm $295 S32S pauo, dshwhr. $415. 21702 6'75-00'TO 631.ssso Costa Mesa lgesunny rm, ....................... 714-581·9393 Ami :a•llh/ Fem. pup. Black & white PREGNANT? Carin g, Brookhurst. 962-0778 pvt ba, sep. entr. $125. We are looking for a seo.1191 4550 Pel nnh/ w/blaclt 1poll over eyes. confidenUaJ coumeling" 218 9th St 8 ... 3 Br, 2 ba. frplc, deck, 2 751·9258. wwkable atorage or dou· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Leet & ,..._. El Cortejo Ln. & El referral Abortion adop l · ... to water, car gar walltt.obch. Yr· blegara~inCost.aMesa .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Aldeoo. Call aft. 3:30 tionatk~..... • • lge2Br2Ba,gar,xtras. Ly. ssOO. Submat klds & Y~ ..... 4250 area. Power available. Stora&e un1l1 fromrSRIV5 • -i:••afl 5100 -«I0-6S7l "~AR~Er.._ 963-2Sl8or963-5891 ••••••••••••••••••••••• b mo lndoor"outdoo nc" 547-2563 Rental Office ' pets. Private party not a us1-•-boa. t •~· Mg ••-••••••••••••••••••• 1---------- ()pe D I 9 6 675-6670 MJ.sMO Hawaii 8 Bdnns on the nessMS-Sl9U "' s .... age .r on FOUND: Terrier, female, ESCORT SERVICE n 81 Y • l & 2 Br apt.s, newly re· water nr Hooo. Station prenuse. 34 hrs sttu.nly. _ leather collar cbam· fSL Management decora\ed. 2"2 blks to •NEWPORT !!&on incl. $SO/day. Near Newport Blvd The Storage Place. 18305 pagne color Fordham, ~=. _ 754·00UorM2·1603 beach. elec & wtr pd, OCEANFRONT rnr»-4 Avalloow.$3Smo. MLLangley,NoofEW., Colle1e Perk. CM.1--------=--- VllaYldaAph 887-3173 1..rg 1 BR. Fri>lc. tenms ._..to!IMre 4300 631-3273 Fountain Valley. BEV ~ Phyaical lla1u1e By 2078Thunn lbrtbaupperurut,blt·in Yrly.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pbone!IM-lll07 FOUND · 2 6 I 'Iberaplst. Appointment Brand new. large 2 br, stpve & dishwasher. BESELECTIVE We are looking for a C.ockap.oo: :io ~:s ~ go~y. Steve. S4&·2817 l'1batownhousew/fam crpts &drapes, patio, I S-0.•llh 3176 Galnare.Uable Offlul_... 4400 wanablestorageordou· !Jrookhurst&sCbapman,1 __ ._. ______ _ v•-t area rKI\ r>'75 + ti"" c t ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ""1-ln Co t ~ ,..,.. room IUIA _,.,, car gar..... -se . ••••••••••••••••••••••• roomma e. ,,_garaae 1 a .. esa uv.~16 MODB.SJISCOlrTS TSL Mgmt 64%-1603 dep.963-3211 2Br., llhBa. near beach. C&llShareAHome/Apt 1 Rm Dental. 8 Rm are.a. Power available. LOST.• ... aJe, Coc'--poo, VIPSERVJCE840-9C90. 64$-741!6orM4-56S8 Medical. Proi bldg. Agt Pnvate Party not a bus1· ... -E1Slde.ligbt,airy3Br.22br2ba.lowerunit,bltin 237 W. Elllcolones. S.C. (TI4)49IMl660or~2237. Df:llM5-Si13 It' --.a r...-...1 reddllb/lite bnm. Vic. •-.e.&...-I Ba. blt.ns in tnplex. $360. stove/dishwasher. crpts $285 mo. 492-SSS7: c:.tcloww s-. so-Fordham and P'alr. Ans. __ ,_ ...... No pets. 552-4201 or & drapes, encl. patio. 1 83IMi7'2S 1'-'-fzni_..! THEEFFIC .. T .... W.tecl 4600 tobe to"Josb".su-3712 o.tallMw.,. Ml 1241 car gar SJ.SO mo + $150 o -·-,...,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• &--.a&...-r-. of it• · · s.ta .._ 311 Sharea home or aptment AL Ta.NA TIYE ..._.. ... ..._ • MES ... Pl .... ES secur. 963-3211 ••••••••••••••••••••••• h .w .• ,..,..,.._. Working woman desires Lost tiny wblte ma le Servinl all Orulge Co. "" " &.(.'Mo'f·ULAJu UM.IMJTm Mo. t.o mo. rent incl. to relotate residence Maltese dog w/no taga. 835-'7313 1 Br $285. 2 Br $350. Some 3 brm 2'h ba studio. den. Newly decorated lar1e Ult-~~~" R e c e \> t . s e r v . . oeartt to her wort. Hun· Vic Big Canyon on Wed. i--------- w I garages P oo I frpl, wet-bar• bltins, 1.Br. No children or ~ta. penooalized pboo.e COY· Ungt.oo Buch t.o Costa 2:15. Face " backend Need a mailing addras? Jacun1. Adult.s, no pets: carpets & drapes, patio, $200. 8-2986. 495-44116 °' ~ ~MQ erage. conf. rm, mall Mesa area. Trailer or 40 I I clipped abort. Ans to A confidential pbooe Open daily. 2650 Harla stove/dishwasher. 1 car + 1 .... ,_,..-cl Forover-6yrs.832--tl34 serv., undeJ'\trou.od prkg bachelor apt. up to $lSO • • name or Ceasar. Very message service! Call Ave. C.M. (Mesa Verde 1,ar. S4SO mo. Sl50 secur. rl.fl u.*• ~ 3900 Female rmmte, lge &'=inNewport.E preferred. Need by April o&d. Family lost without Gail$51-se. Dr E. off Harbor Blvd>. ~3211 orw.. uu:.EX.EC'l.TnV l (213)SQ8.9966 him •100 reward 5'9-2'47 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Emerald Bay Terrace SUITE. 640-5470 · 6"-~ • · pef'IOlld Senrfces 5360 ---------12 Br 2 Ba, new cpts. <I.rps, THE EXCITING Hm. own room Ai bath. We are looking . for a ••••••••••••••••••••••• New2Br28a,bltos,cpls, enc gar, D/W, 2 bl.ks to PALMMESAA.nS. Friendly atmosphere. 250sq.ft.deluxeolfice, W. W'Oricabteatotageordou· LQST : Grey & white Royalty Limousine drps, $350. Eastslde. bch.960-5260 MINUTESTONPT Sl7S +.,, uUI. 49<1-M22, l9t.h St, C.M. $I.SO mo. bleaarage m CostaMeaa fem.ale Husky. Mesa & Service. Daily, HrJy. 631-0303or646-708S 1 ... l!w}tOll BCH. 4M-440l Tom.540-2200 \ area. Power available. Happy Riverside Dr. CM . w eekly r ates. Also, La"'~e l. Br T"""'nbouse 11wt a., 3842 Bach, 1"2 BR. Male 23+ Quiet, stable !\..Private Party not a busl· 548-4461 specials to Las Vegas or • " .,_ from$220 •un. _ ..... _ .. CA 1 lll OC .&a.--•-ness&&S-5913 Birtllda I San "'-an. "Be A "''-g wi patio, garaliJe + ••••••••••••••••••••••• · r-........ v.....,p usu · -..-• ....,._ • y Lost:MaJe Siamese cat, ... , n.a.u pool. Quiet complit. Ltwnhuxurio3uBs 3cBaare~i:_~ A~~::~ ~ on MacArftfhur Blvd. Mhc1I••-• Sealpoint. Hu nea col· !:r~~:>'·~·u~=b:i~ Adults, no pets. $375. me. r ,unuiu (SBJksEastofNewport llaleneededtolhare2Br Prestige o Ice space. ....... 4650 tar. Vic: Hamilton le Lincoln town car ~lor6'7S.S&49 new', many xtras. a $575. Blvd.) wtsame. 1 bllt from bch 4200sq . .ft. Attrartiveim· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor . Ans wsrs to limousine. 7l•/SZ3-833L Ask for Joan. 846-1.311 ; 546-l860 ln N.B. (7l4) 8'1J..5828 or provements, Broker. We are looking for 8 •'Wlkl".&&2·2209 Dmo r-.. 3126 846-2597 evs (2 ) 87 .o.ro 71~1701 workable stor8'e or dou-• Sodll CW. HOG ••••••••••••••••••••••• L..,... leach 3141 Spacious garden apt. 2 1.3 1 ble garage bi Costa Mesa "THE CLASSY Found. Senator Bicycle ..... ••••••••••••••••••• Duplex. spectacular ••••••••••••••••••••••• brm ~ ba, patio, A/C. Wanted: fem. roommate TOPIEXEC sums area. Power available. Gill.SI" Owner ~l. :::errj 00;; CHRISTIAN DATING ocean view. New 1640 sq. FA-•-·tic ew 2 Br apts poo~s. tennla Ai rec B.l., $142 a mo, lst& last, Pnvale party°°' a busl· color, 1,..., w s ze SERVICE For informa· fl 2 br 2'; ba $4SO mo "'4......., v1 · fadUU., ahade tree apt. m-11132 Penollal a.ervices for all ness645-Sil3 approx date le loca lost. lion a1J ~ 7Se-Oro8 · · · $350/mo & $400/mo. 10070 Gilbert St, types of bu1inesaes : C.UH.B.P.D. ~ c • · · Uidr)' fac., adlt.s only. Anaheim. 774-4080 Fem. to abare 2BR. hse Pho o e cover a 1 e , Lge 3 BR 2 Ba, W /D area, 497-2196 Cdll. Non Smoker oolJ. tee:retarlal services. re· fplc balcony rear patio · 1 util 1..-4000 SUS.AmyM'-1355 ceptiooist., much more. g 0Nopeta Sss 7194 ' Cozy 1Br, SUS inc· · -•••••••••••••••••••• Excellent locaUon near ar. · · Sngl girl with refs. Boomw/ldtcbeoette 3bdbomelDCMtosbare 2 BR .• lae. modem apt <l!M-1'7SS .____.. a..up. with I Females sus. • mo So. Cat Plaza le Frwya. .,....._.. Qall979-2161today. Brkf.st bar, bltns; encl. Lg Bachelor apt ocean s.t-9'155 l46-l3C7 or m.7090 uk 1---------g a r , w s b r Id r Y e r . · • bo for ADD AIRPORT OFFICES Children OK . $300. b~di.walkt.otown,s p-AmbasaadorlnninCosta 1"2 room suites, all 498--0318eve ptng, aduUs. no pets, 789 Mesa m7 Harbor Cen· Rmmate to shr bome, services. No lease req'd. ---------1 Gaviota Dr. 991·2155 trally'Jocat.ed,23Sr0oma. Cdll w/mother • 11 yr Lrg 2 brm. bit-ins. near Johnor~eves. MANY wltb kitchen. old eon. I .Br 3 Ba, fplc, From su.s. mo. 2082S.E. beach, fl7S mo. ...,... ...... 3152 pbooe "TV. Swimmlna D/W. patiO Pl'i, ut " ~~~-~~· 200• N.B. 558-5618 •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• pool, jacuul, and rec. laat, $250 .Ji ~ uti~ 1....;.. _______ _ &uony. 1parkUn1 clnn Nicelli2BR$!65&up. room. DaiJy" weekly ::,~: Bllaqrt,Sofcsooamonth lbr. Ocean vu, bltna, car Quiet area. Pool rates starting from $48 a • to montb fot no longer port. No kid• or pett. 831-7768 week. &45-4840 2BR,1 ba, SUS Includln1 tha.nSmon~o l?'J5.UG-12S1 • .IHdl 3169 utll. Female only .. cdll,1 _______ _ 11 I, rt• __ ., 3140 .;..: ... : .............. Lovely bme & pvt ba. No-'19M819 No. CO.ta Me.Ja, s rm 803 ,. --.. smoke or drink Male Pnll 11 " aeeb p 1q. It. $321 mo. All •••••••••••••••••••••• , .... MIWPOIT overSOMS-1.035 • ~ IOr 2 88 2 ba ~ ll'OUDd noor, front. prllc. llJARP,beacb,1,2,SBR, Bacbelor•, l or 2 ERWEElt condo Capo Pal.lud.. A/C, prof. bldlt, etc. f1'pl , d 1bw1br, tar, Bedrooma4Townboutes SlUOP IJrt.U: lim ar attract ,_540-_..;.2200 ______ _ ~.flll0.2351. From$2T9.50 lBLKFBOKBCH.HB. Jdeel. hot jacc $11S .+ -... ..-MIW Spectacular 1pa, total 960-3547,LVEMSG ~ut11.m.int ·• YaYUMlqul _._ recreation J>l'OJram, U JOILitesire-to__mak• a 3 Br 'Jlt/CCl1dOI. conve-soci&l pr<>tram. 'fOoO&. 8 Vitt woman Ir clautbter 11/F Non Smoker. 2 br, 2 penoulltatemeat In of· n.ienUoc, 5 UDltl avl. t'OO tennia courta. At fashion need 1'ome to share. ba, Apt. In N.B. $1112. flee elepnee. you ahould loll).9M-1.507,844).17Sl Isla.ad, Jamboree 4' Sall lJrlent! Pralse to God . .aoot:J0..5:30 cansldertheunlqueloca· Joaquin Hilla Road. Sll-6730 Mary ~ ticm t bave avail. l.n col· UVES::;':;;cbl 1714)644-ltoO Furn. room. Ftmalt. Y4IUl&llliDIJepareotaeek· orru1 Lldo Marl na BuutU'u1AdultApta Kitcb.. ldaundrJ prtvp . ~aameto=bouff. Village. Su1le Zaun, • Ga .. 1WamP.Scl. Dlxabr211elowerdplx.l C.Uarter4,'4M'T72 Ca Jldl..._ 1_'1$"882 ___ . ____ _ zua. Brookhunt, HB =~No pea. Sf,50. Furn. Roolll 10 Coata Rtlp feio to lhr Jae hs&, 20ll aq fl. 2 clcs + •tor•••· t6UHJ ·-·"' ~· Mea• Jn Ilic• • quiet 1: Hnla .l:lbr pool. walk to oo C.mpu.s Dr. N.B. $l2S --...;..;;~:..:..:~..:--11-------.....i ltolm. WortdlaC ,..._. bcb, $250 + ~ utll. mo. VUJ pd m.aon or ZBr,eblldrenWeJcom•,no Wlll.8I APT ~1'·t1M1M ., .,. !• .. <m> _, _.., '" ::..r.tarl1Al•t:M81QO., ALLUTILSPDl • ~fort9t.ftbelBR Walk to bea~tl . bu Cbolce ofllet lapace, _,, .. ,cioS• trom tu ~•aa. •l•~!J°t• Jace:, :i~=c:;r\fif, = ~T!'•c.::r;1 s..llil~-=~~;~~ ~Bl~~c:::.!: IGali. ~:t. ,,1,·. • llarlea l\e•I ~late, New 1':2 bdrm 1uiu11 Yr!l _. ,.. mo. JlfO !tomo.lttr,ea.mo ··uY.~rorlAM" f40.53l5T ' UuJl ~ ht 1' plau PIHL Call! Sue at ~ ~("t ~\Ji,ltd ,P'l9flSSIOMAtl :m waWt'f~l~~j -.rm..,-tiiDe ..--~ .,_,, Qultt;.np~:. Yow•IOIU'Cefor LlrSTAIM ~ Sa Dleto Fnry , JW.Oill ....... ~ liocaffqa...._.&e 1IOO IQ ft, n amaU of. drlye NcinJa on Beach t.o BEACRYEARLY ··-: ~ ·~ 1AOr.0>.sa.em1 nc., 1.t parldn1 ·~· .lilchddtn Uwn W11t OP I Br, J bli ~ Wttb TWo ... lain <MDI, ... 1.·. IJMIJ4_ ·--'~~-I Ira \reel. Bwtwn .... 1rih44kil to S.awl»d OCHD "'"'·)'tnJ+atlJ. '~~~Ind iii2-.... ~.;,. .. ;;d't ulf. Hl·JIOO. £yu. "'~vwafe.(T~•>awllt , ~U-~~~~ 711 _, _. ..:1:1.t~ ~-;,.;.•Ht ·~~ &J:t2MMll'°· bttnl, irvt ~rlilWttbr • ..,.ao ae'-o~ .. 1tm, P•t b1•!1l· .................... _. ornce~&wan J"ttn· f11t. 6 patJo. 'Mr ~ oeau ...-. -..._ em,.. mllvre ~· ~ .,., • pr mo. trr, I aula., reu. 1121 ..... ldrDOll61nt1.No ap. SIU l\lwer A!.' 'j=•· rib. 4~' 11• Ntu..._lllarW 1(,, WeateUff Ot. NB. , e•1mo.M0-11M ~ ~" ...... .., -. ~ -~_,.,....,,~ -_, •----~ ~ .. ~ -~ ·~", --..... r.r.u,1111nst/ •BEV* twnc1:N.B.,Ladle.btke. ••;;.-• ,._.. 26", wine color. fr~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wishing you rrony happy n'/875-«)25 ••••• •••••••••••••••• ....... retuns on ycxit Bi1hdoy-F d Bl'-/t I .W. Wmhd. 7075 ...JI fr .J... __ .J..._ d oun : .. ao 1rey ••••••••••••••••••••••• Opp a lweltt SOOS u11 om mem, ,._e ossy Husky Sbep mix pup, .,_, , aDds tut ••••••••••••••••••••••• knes we oil know too app a moa. B1k face. Vic: unver, aor ~ • SAN CLEMENTE well' Joa.Me, Cont'I "Wilson, minute ~ov1ng .• Reta. GroomiQi & Pel Shop. · CM.6'2·5583 4l4-85t1 9.30AM·l .30PM Relirinl( after 7 good C. Pool SI SO aft.er 5; 494.QWl years fine location Ir ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND: 2'At Blllt Lab" ~ -..... .. ee ..... avail.• Ind.iv U • .:.le ..,., soo Need 'd AM Cdu to Husky on Magnolia & ..,_.., r-: · c en.... . -· · a n e , ... Ad.a ff 8 A pro 4 'At or sm bus1oess. Plckvp Is BERTHAHENRY S.A. • PM return. dys ._:; Mt-27~ x. delivery or your bm or REALTORS 54M757,evaM0-0819 · ofc.642-4698. 2lSDe1 Mar -..Ul Loltlr,.... 5300 FOUND: Gray St.riped PRIVATE PRACTICAL Planll It Glft.t &Jmporta ........................ ~ ~~1?aM'ery NURSE 5 yr. esp. lli.sc. Good location • Excel. L4:llt or Found a pet! Call y. · · DuUes Own car Gd rd1. le.aae. Terms -848-0037. Animal Aasiatance Found Black fs Wbl\e -..2089 '568-7165 Leaaue5!7·227S, no fee. Striped Cat, yo1&n(. •-Secretart---at-Serri---. N-- TRAYa A~Y LOST: Wt.He Weal [ApnaVUlqe.rnMUO Ans. Letten, S:·ume!: Bt&~tlSI Hl1htand Terrier FOUND: arowa Cat. prop. Pbotocop1 Stat-~ "Westie" nr Cdll Rip MUt.ered male TabbJ, Aeeante540-08ll Start JOUr own Travel Scbl, Mrs. Lehr, 75&-N6'7 Vlc. Harbor Blvd It l---------Netwcr't a1ency. Be a NWard offtred. W1Jtoa CM NS-4110 a.ft. 6 Woman w /Cal. Teachine pal't of tbe crowln1 • credeotlal " aper ct. travel l.ndmtry. Start up, Ul6T: Feb 1. ta. Reward I i.t: Peacock atrayed or au. p /t teachlnc pae. trainJnc, technical & MaleSiamese,darkSeal t281211.euDr.Rewardl NB/Cll area Bolt 133 merchandising support Point, Vic. Grand CUal, 54W'103. Dally P\lot, P .0 . Box provlded. Total lnvtst· Balboa llland. PJea1e • l~IO ueo. Costa Mesa, CA me:nt ii ~000. Tele. Mr. call 87s.2911 anytime -----• l2lDI • Baa. 1l•taaa2 LOST Do .. -..... •••••••••••••••••• : ~man pup, I>rtnltiqproblem! Reliable woman Helli .._, t9 Lo.I SOH Fem, s mo. nr llaln/1'1th can AJe*il s.tpUne employment u compa· ... •••••••••••••••••••• St. HB. Nda med. atta. Mbnadayas.aJO niootoSr.Cil.648-9ZT7 ld,MAWT.O.•s RMranl.~ LOANSAVAILABt.E ~Ill I~ •MIClmlltt1r !!~'f.~~ ..... ?!!! CredilaoProbltm. ~hl Outt8DMUMC• ......,., 71Z.ltol c lOAIHA.11'• .: .• ,m.'4G llODeJ Anl1-b&e. m&Jl1 AllSWEI$ S.114W i1dar MdDI ... ~y IOUrc••• all JWOJtc&t. C}uJJet-lllcs,.-dSo. El CamlnO 'Beat '50Kmln. m.az PrOee-I~-SUI a.n-... h~Uc.. SwlnC.a.i•lrdTD'•· F ~ _. ... ___ _ 1 da1 t»Ol"OVaJ lutad of JlELAXING itAYAG& crtcJJtnotlrnponaDL u s..p bateball. we Bob.1.,,,..Llcll....,r Coutructlon68aaln... played little IHlut Oute&llt-t,.Wlll 1lfCialer 1'od*1 to wed OD various accoua~ ti boolc9'eepli,is a11ll•· mentl. Work clot• to lOUt home. Jl'l&un Club to Sc Accoun· tanta neede~ tbruout OtUMuy~.,.,.c " llUOOING. ~: ~ .__M_IA_S_SA_..._M __ _ 0 " 0 MOMiY . ··.~t: ~~;:1•C:= M ... MODm.S ~Rall'• Accounte111sa 5008. llalft, lte •1 NO, 'NWWr, Vnloil 8aiiik 1 • ID 11-Qty of 0rup ... 'II"-··-( i.ow r11t11 fut •~vat. ... m -7'8ftbieala· ISCOllS l>tpeadable. bone•t Jvr ;f l• nddeot oil ourcA&iOMLT .m.. ald'1, ard't, ••· OoAdlnwlll llB. 1'tllan Hl~l t ·biia.--Bob. alle.tcr42Sf -- - ~ ' ' !!!ft?.~.'•~auu?!!!'~!!~ ..... !1 ........ !!~ ..... ?!.~~ !~!'.!!~ ..... !!!! ~~.~.·.~ ..... ?!.~! ~~~ ..... ?!!~ Friday. February 17, 1978 DAILY P\LOT •• 1~-:==~~~--r--=~:~:~1BOOKX•EPE8 ~T«lmlclanfor ~c•Group llulU. tW;W-e.d 7100 ~W..titcl 7100 .... w..-. nw 'IC~ ... na ... •cu •~EIS lmllMll. ~ tore NlllllnlnOllAt t•Una de.lay Jloea • a.ta. x:x.m1.,-, ~•P ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••• ·-····••••••••••••• • •n,.Yw ~-.,.neoced r,c. booll· """'""" . pulH trauformeu. u MMtl n. F/U.rM/P/· U & Ol'PIC!!UELP-P'T ProductioOJlinapmeftl U..Y7 l•pat to <'om :JOTralMeAuembltrs btPlf Ubn1 P • L> ot LQ•M a,r•1 CrowUl opJ10rt"'1flJ' tor time/Homework. Sal •111 1~ Moo-Frtsa~r· P•ltrlud payable• Needetllmmed.latcly e•pandln1 ~trucUoo M LR penon 1"illia1 to fearft. open;548-1'711. Autt1..... •Call--• llPJ llAD/ • arnea for d)'l\I 1.-Loqfs&bortTa-m co. Kutt be 1bJe to 11• SanJuao Valor Elednlalcs, C.M. W~'tRei.ail · • 1ro•lca1 rutauranl Aatpmeoll sumo rapomibUJU• fs Caplltl'wBr&bcb Call~ ~~ency Fine wqmen•a 1pedalty Offaet Preuman, Hlsh W-4JC•ll d ~ tllafo, Saluy com Uhl.ft.I Available. handle a varlet7 of .lDlcnaUnl podt.IOft ror AltaaY DMda IU'I. ex-IUh lD Newport. Sl.roclC quality lhataot/com Top quality sailboat.a. muaurate w esper u.UtaYeownt.raup. dutlea. Ca•ual at· mcttvlcl\taJ wbo enjoy1 ~ '*· lo ~al l net1. personal aarvlc•. mattlal ahop. Exper on Challen1ln1 aHltn ~ backlfOW'd CtlT~llMllO mo1pbere, aalary com· botb public and phooe • ..,..... .. .,._,. rathapStart.-x>. Raptd Fublon aalu Ii AB Dick Ii/or Hamada ment-full benetit&, ~QJ Apply, Jolly 1"ree.TopPay.VacPay menaurau w /ox · contut Requires 40 MICHAMICI advancement. Snd re· mercbandialn1. Great equip nectuary. Goud mcdical.clftla.l,opt.lcal ,lnc.,l·~m.Moo VldorTtllflFtry J>eritnee.Scndreaumew WPMt)11bl&aod2yeara ClTYOt• 1U1Mto:BoJt.u:t,%Dal oppor. for trainlnt' oPPQrtwutyforl.heri&ht Call Bob Wallhaw. lTOU Gllleue Avt1, s..ices Boltl!W,DallyPllot,P.O. colle1e or equivalent NEWPORTBEACH &. Plklt P.O. Bo11 lseCI, IJ"Owth. Xlnt salary • quallty·~clousmanor EricsonYaehls.~l lnine. Div Walter IQddo" Co ~~·Cotta Mesa, Ca 'WOf'lt experience. Send Salary $8118-SU»l Mo ta Mesa, Ca t2D1 booua. Rawne to Pres., woc:mn. 540-lMS 20828. E . Brutol resume or letter of •P· Req's l .yr eaper. in an Interior Plant Main· Box 3179. Seal Beach, Ca Orc1e na..1. Rec io lit PIODUCTtOM ---------i Ste 10 Newport Be11ch Bookkeeper. Permanent pllcaUon to 32039 Camino automotive repair abop. tenance. Muat have 90740 r .,_.,./ ept 0 • WOlll8S (Corner of Bristol A P/l' wock io YOW' bome. Caplatrano, San Juan Apply by 3/3/78. For m· st.rona bortJcuJt\U'al bell· Accu.r. &ypllt. Pleasant M • l e I 1' • m a I e . " ACCOUNTING Campus behind Ji\&U charae bkkp'C thru c.pi.strano,Ca.92675. ronnauon & appllcaUoo smd or comm'l exper! ~kin~~~~.' Resp. Aluminum furn mfa. Cart's Jr) T/B, check wrillq, Ute call Personnel Office, f\dl t.1.me, $3.~ hr atart. MARKETING ..-Jobs avail in metal abOP. CLERK ~~~~~~~'in'•· Send reeume in-HOMIFIDBAL ::Jti~rt Blvd, N.B. C.U49MJJI& su•ERVISOR 'Pant Preuer. 1ood ladnJ. ttnal URmbt)r. cJ'd refs to Brian Bax-SAVl*tl & LOAM .-salary, plesant worldn1 Startln1 rato $3.3'7 fn8 !v~'t/,t:r.e,:;81!1:n 1~~ Some ~I~~ in· ~~.S38E.17thSt., FU,.._.. 1~~:ia~isfu~!:rrt~ ::n;::u!r~r!:J~., ~~.dri-J:~~~~eralty f:tha~.l,·~~~Mtln: divl~u~J...whno likes to volved . .uu • p/\ime. Cqol ~K'&~·::e~~~t:::! :,.::~lnh0elp for CaourU products located In rate w/exper. Imm~· war ...... ,... su.res and Call77().2967 IOYS·GflLS Dbmerlfouaeexper. Ao-responsible, exper only. _., ran&•· ~e.County. We are P ... t.•2111 opeoinp. 'l'bln.1ilWl Mf1 baa a blah level ot alull, tz.18 yea.rs of ace. Even-ply lo person, Sam's 6"-21622 Robiof7•1121 preMQtl)' ae.ekiq an In· Delael en cine d 11· S.A.f7M1Jl .,, accuracy IUld speed.()( Aaat Bookkeeper, ac· lnC work. Obtain new Seafood U, 3801 E. Cout JA.MIT-•u woa11 dMdual with 2 years of nee experience lS essen· curate 10 key, exper. subscriptj,oosfortheDai· Hwy,CclM Flab Fryer, pt·time. Part1tFiii=:.546-ia.:, ~ce. perhaps an AA lributonhlp. Req~irH PIOPRn MQ.I '• tlaJ for thla poaltlon. w/caah rtteipts, accts ly PtJot wOfkina with an Maturewomao. dearee. or 3-4 ye&n1 ex· experienced parts K&n-aetlJent It mmt ot WOl'k in pleasant en· ~able. cub dlsbu.rse-adult aupervillor. Earn Coot, eKper. full time, • 54tr79M • JEWLERY WAXER perience in Marketing &:i'::'eo.•r •. Jn~7'!~~!.~E. aca~red w.U1I ln H.B vlronment with 1ood men t s. j our n a Is· $20 w $30 per week or dinner house. ~meed &.lperviaicn. Experience '"......,. Exper'd pref'd. Good c:ompanybenefitaU1clud· pecboard system. Some more.Call '2!3)59'7-0396 642-9434 R.OWBSHOP Calln4~ lntbeareuofcustomer PAUnME pay . Aall for Ron-, inc 2 weeks vacation payroll• tax exper. de-noon to spm. C2l3 ) MANA.. eenice,orderprocesalng an:wt.u.t. Mn.L -.z.159. &fttrooe year, company sired. Salary D.0.E. OC 49tr3'73. Spm·9pm. Call COOIC. ~IME Salary commensurate Jewelery poll.sher. 11114 an undenta.nclin1 of 5Y...,.~ • •---------paid 1roup Insurance, lnt'I Raceway, 552-Mll "-''---u-a v__,-H / w t •-l u......i-...-.t -10 computers is Deeded Ex-r175 ---'-. n. .................. P/Ume Eves "Sats. Ear. --..au ""'""'"· •-"'"'"" nv. osp. w exper. es ma.us er ,_ • ..__,......_.....,. cell . _,_,,,! ~ .,.._ ~ ..... "'"""'• union, etc. Apply Auto M b · • ls 661 Ceoter St, CM Memorial Part F1oriat, n..m.1122 ellt typiog _....,. re· thuaiaaUc peraonahty. SS-17 per hr. taking or.: at· ec 1L01c,own.oo · o:..Mnu _.. ............ ......, qulred.HouraareS.Spm, Workin" wltb .,0 uth. dera/dellvwy_ Must OIAMG.ECOAST Ack'a Coul Garage, 412 BUSBOYS ---... _.--.A._........ J .H . Hall Jeweler&. Mcoclay·Friday. we of-Kuatbe~ver 2u/bavea tuave dependable car 4 N. Coast Hwy. ~7935 Buaboya needed for Cook, part ti me , Food S. ,ke Atst Responsible penon to do fer a competitive salary de p e 0 d 8 b 1 e c • r . phone. f\iller Bnash Co. DAILY PILOT •AUTOLOTMAM days, apply dail)' llAM, breaklasta, Pvt club. Ex-S.tiatlt .. • ~~l~i~.'ii~~.· and 'ood employee &Jpervisi.ncadulta4'car·1_754-6f7--'--L------ 330W. BAY ST. "'---' ed Mi Casa, 296 E. lTth St., f:'·-onl.YlS • After 12 noon. On-Call n--•-. "2~ hrs ...-·-"' , benetita. Please call rlers. Available eve. & n--• "'-ta•-Sal-P-le COSTA ~..,..,A .,......,.,.enc. person or 0 ,..._ ...,. .. ,.,. -w•• --~•toranap""''"l Sa•··-4--...,... .,. "" --.. Between th';' hours 8 we will tram. Immedlat~ C.M . ~d:· l:'v\~~u':'ir~.'d Jou:meyman·Electrician, ~_, ....--~:--~:en~~'.:~ ~·.~~. ~w:/~~ A.ll.-5P.M.Callforap-n.~0=~~;; -CANV~ER• cou•r•n1 School Diatrict, 2941 minSyrcexper.Newnt· WIWAMHARYEY lorJlm 631-<a>C> pointmentplease interview SSHr+Bonua 5:30·8:30 nALV AJtco Ave, Irvine. (714) sldeotlal " comm'I. 14255. Village Way 1--------- 64M321,bt. 276 ll7-41p 4tl-4lll p.'m . Call 5 ·8 p .m . Permanent PQ9itioa our 55M900. 9'J9.854.2. SantsAnan4/835-3'22 PART TIME R.E. APT SALF.5---WeU Opport~;~mployer AUTOPOUSH &»211Sl ~ ofc. No uper. EqualOpporEmployer Ladie11ArRmAtWnd.. !\:ip~~y ~~l;~~~b°!::~v~dtse~ F ti B Sh Car Waah Caahler, Nwpt : will train to test, GARDENER, reliable for 2 or 3 days pr mo, ldeall•--------1 EVENINGS ealeapenoos, will train, ACCOUNTING CLK EDP• bank rea>ncilla- ~me-Caus~ op &allLacuna Area. Please interview applicant&. small apt complex. $80 for Sr. Citizen. Priv. Adult.a with outstanding, Ptrok.BkrSS&-6171. et.ro r ash c 6"-"460 Mual have good mo~19l4 country club. Call MalltOri..e.d 2950Harbor Bl, CM CHEF ~lepbone ability. No typ-· ~ f ppt ,.... attractive personalil!es RECEPI'IONIST for ac· ,,. tioo exper. helpful. Xlnt co benefita w/growing financial or1allhation. Aslt for Jackie Chapin, 714 /644 ·4360 o r 213f62».12Sl. Autorenlaltrainee. Ing. Salary +com-General office. Pref. ora · To train for accounting -:ho enjoy working w1tb live Real Esta~ office Oppty. for intelligent. ~;-.J!~· r!!~!~ miaaicn "xlnt company lumber exper. Acc:ta re· Lac;AL SICUTAIY poa. MacGregor Yacht ~~ ~50,G,' Must be au.ractive, en'. fneod.ly, neat appearing beneflu.Callforappt. ceivable & invoicing. Major Real Estate Corp.642-a30. bet---3:00.5:00:.t.M. • thusias~c. self-starter. young man over 18. w: Clasailied ad no 147, YktwTtllfHGFY Must be good typist. Developer located In "-.:_'_1.--.Jt.! Ute typmg. Salary open. Previous expef'. not re-c/o Daily Pilot, PO Box Stwwlws Start $650. 540-6940 Irvine baa an immed MATURE WOMAN _.,_.. -. Apply in person only qd. St.art with lot man = Costa Meu, Ca 171415~5.20 NewportBch openinatoou.rchlefle1al p/time to welcome Equal Opportunity Mon-Tues, 3-S PM, 22311 duties, advancemeot ~~~~~~~~~I GENERAL OFFICE help counsel. Candidat newcomers at cootect Employer Brookhunt, HW'ltBeach. •.1 ACCOUNTANT avail. to auto rental Child care needed, part w /tctmte exp." good t:yp-·abould pcmeas S.S yn. merclwJta. f'.lelt.ible ~n. p A R T -T [ M E ·~STc~o• •RA counW!rman. Good driv-lime my home. S.E. COUMTa/FO• 00 ing &kills for Npt Bch in-cooperate law aper °' Need car, lite typing. RECREATION WSl.llhclllie.ce•pllltlii!!._...mt to $100 ,,_ ""'" --1Jl& reqd. Call 831·2480 for Hunt. Bch, 2 children, SHY. vatmeat firm. f1ex.ible aJIQ9W'e to • larae la 54'7-3'115. CPR, Senior lifesaving 100'1. FREE . Aaaoc. Dengn Studio appt. l :»-5:30. 968-7071 P/time d.a:ys. appl)> Pup· hrs, :!G-30,Jirs per week. firm. XJ..nt clerical ....._. Ofc/Assbt required. Ji\lll-Ume sum· New ofc, oce~n. Vlew. Newport Beach design N·Taco, Barbor at Good pay plua med. ins, communacaUn altilb merN4-5404 Need attract. indiv. for flnnb&simmed. opening Autoreplicarbuilderoeed Child care & some Wlllan.C.11.3-SPM vacat.ioa " sick leave. We offer oata~udln n-otlt office usi1tant ---------greeting clients & for penon with exper. in parts runner, helper for housecleaning Sun/Mon. CallUndaatMS-.$l4l eompany baaeflta a with billing experience Part time help. Fountain answer . phones. Lile G/L. A/P, EDP 6 Acct 'g apprenticeship. VW exp. MWlt have owu trans. CUSTOMER xlnt ~ tmdHfons. needed for phyai ca I Vly, Hunt. Bell area. type ok. Call Coastal mcmt. Xlnt growth op-helptul.831-2991 Refa.ttq.644-lOOOwkdys General ofc work, :W hrs Aee1e call or aPJ>l7 . therapy office iD Hunt· Work al home. Must Personnel Agency, 2190 portunlty. Salary com-aak for Eva or 497·3983 SERVICES week. 4-9 Wed-Fri, 1-9 person(TI4)7S2-2073. lnglon Beach. Good priot neatly ac have Harbor,CMS«MiOSS. memurate with ability. evee&wknds wtmds. Salary bued on PONDEROSAHOKES wortcinf eood & salary. phooe.Call9-5,848-9708 atE.l""-.i-.a•ST C7H)s.56-1601 AVON CLEANING MEWOPINIMGS exp.6M-lll530 A Member of the A C&ll ln4)84M877 · ___.. .. ..,... ACCOUNTING CLI nme on hands, tired of Japaneee speaking lady Larted .manufacturer· ex· Geleral Help wanted. Ap-:=1Je: =uai ._ICAL lllCOl.DS Payables & payroll ex· staying at home! Meet prefN 8 'dCallfor lday!~lt. in pan . an1 customer ply Tats Decorative Ac· · Sr.Clerk. Must have pre-PBX OPERATORS per. desirable. Call Mrs. people, make money & · · eves;.,....._... service d~partmeot cessories, 230 Newport LeealSec:retarJ vious exper. For details All Boards Smith, 499-2271 for appt. have fun. Become an ""*5 6 ind.ividuh, 00 Ctr Dr lower level NB Law firm ln Newport please call a.im; ext Loni & abort term as· AVON representative. QencaJ exper ~ary. to call ' . ' Ceoter w /buaineu 231. ,,algnments. Holiday & Accts Payable Clerk for For more information on retail a~ts. Muat Gen'I Offc, various duties, clients needs an ex-•---------vac pa:y. HoepitallzaUoo For pvt men's club. Nwpt Bch, Mon-Thur 2-10. Sun M . 752-79QS Receptionist/Sec'y weekends ooly. Karine type buaioess. Newport Beach. Call~7100 busy Country Club ore. call 540-7041 or Zenith JR. CLERK benut&ambitionl. 8:30-5. Muat be rood perieoced le1al sec'y. lledkal back offlce, ex· avail. Some acctn'g exp. nee. 7·1359. $600 ftlO. t:ypi.st.Pbcalll42-1S93 Oulatandioc akllla • perienced, limited x. jiijjijjjiil .. ~•11111 llECEPTIONIST, attrac- 644-5404 SR Cll'IHf <'•--•-1 · 'd • aborUlaod required Ex· ray, Lie. required. NB • Lftft ~uni aa ary, rap1 GtaLRIDAY ceUent work.lo c~di-Drs. Reply to Box 153 3 live girl for busy CPA ACC'TS PAYABLE Babysitter, full time for advancement, call for S.W. reOanal nJes Dl&r. tlcm. sw..zsog 1 Daily Pilot P .O. Box Ole, in Newport Center. CLERK 2tr! yr old girl. Care for & CLERICAL ASST appt.. needs self starter who l~. C041ta Mesa. CA 3141 C Drf Good telephone manner Immediate operung for your child as well as Vaned joba with A f6l-Ot4J can assume resp. ln un· LIFE INSURANCE aa ruiL J74 1 1 •• "abllity to type well a expenenced accounts mine. N. B. 644-8071 supervised enviroa. Gd SALES Will train, 1-2 yr•---------•-must. Call 644-82« or payableclerkofexp•nd· wilboul exper. m good DIUYBY teleph stllla esaen. trUntnc program, Med.. Lab Receptionist to (AcroaFrom B:B-8522forappt. 10g construction co. Babysitter: Grandma ~.!~din11. Call Meaenaer/Oc>Wier Dutiesi.ncludeTWX.typ-ruanult.eed salary. C.ll work in cl.inical OrangeCo.Airport) ·----ST Previom experience Ir bPe for 9 mo ~Y. Tuea .• .,...., t.U'Oo-..~ S Da7 wk. P!Ume am or i~. achedulini travel M.r.Scbabert~ laboratory io NB . Equal()pporEmployer __. .. ""'"' office machines skill• day, Wed. monuoi, CM. ""~ pm. Know Org Co. etc Co-·---· Recept_ exper and good 1"-AldlisCUlf•r necessary. Kun be able $20. Refs. 75'-0687 Q ff ' GIWW8bdWDH,lOAll. pqS.. "~~=::.: UC. Imur. AceDC'J' often lYPinl altills ·required. 1\lltin baecl real estate l 0 • • s u m e Ba.nking ~ ~ O lCe • devic9. EKper in either xlnt wort'1. cood to cau for •PIJt. Aak for Pharmacy clerk, Mon llrm. Typing, pboaes. responsibilities. Casual .... 1 .,. 0 overload Dtlw•y/Hwzcqnr of tbe1e attaS .will be • brigbt Individual for ilarpret.&40-0140 thru Fri M . Must type & etc. Good earirocunent. atmoapbere.Salarycom-. ,.....,_ Penmmmt~job pl:mn4~SL 91111oftcdudes.bPlo£,....--..._.-..111111111...__... ....... do lite bookeep•g. benefits, ...,owth op· mensurale w / 0 . FWJ.tiJile teller for S4&L 557.()061 cWl..tqectJmonU.D& · tele9bone, ad.din-;• . M7-«nl ~.7i•fa32.28Bl penence.Sendresumeto toN~Bch.Erperprel. 3'723Birch5&,NB LA nmes to bomes io GmLS.-.a macbloe •aptitude 11.E./Maint toS24Kl--::=====-=---1-~~~~~~~!!_ Box l!W, c/o Dilly Pilot.. Typanf req. Xlnt co. Inine/NB areas. Kut Sa.Ddwicb deUHry, 5 •lllcurea dealrable. Genll&r/R.E. $ZOK+ PHOMEraSOH ltlCOIDS Cl.Eal( P.O. Box 1560 Costa benefits. Gd 1"lll"ldllg at· berellabldttu&vedel>en· d.a1s .. 411rw da.f Own !brt-50. PbcneNuc.1, Accnt./Ccmtr S1SK +LITE CLERICAL POLICE DEPT. Mesa,Ca.9216216 ' mospbere. Pleue call dable tnmportatlon. tnmap. J!:wD on· p.50 m.aallforappt. =~l:= START $625 MO Satrance-.'813mo. Acm~vableclerkw ~Sandersf1B.31301or Qerical Salarypzsmo.$464ZJS. br. Call l••·lpm, Uqunrclertt,cmrZ5,part 4B8El7thCostaMesa ~ormal&lvironment R;?c'• shift work. o~ale Basic 4 Com· .......... S.,t.p SR. TYPIST Dmt&I Aa't. ortho. ebr, M>mt. dmaalabb. 9llt.e22L 642·WO ln~~m&h11Be~l ::._::;r:~ce~ puter for bwiy Country E/O(t M/F/H ./Dictaphone NB.4~dys.Ortboexp. & 45U.-S ___ I04Sl1 _____ ·1------'----Type 45 wpm. Final fll. Club ore .. Wiii train. ./Stat R.D.A.req.M2-XIJS J\aD frp/Ume.AD anu. Loan Officers, yoa de· N Ed9 Fa-11v Piua PIZlJ tng dale 2/'Mf'JS. Apply 644-5404 Banld.ng "1llll Executive -... ............... X·r•• Unibma funL-= 21 aerve tbe v-best. T...., ~ Penoanel ()(fice, Qtv of CIUIHTCHICICR u.Qlloa£ ,_......,. _,, D~ _, vr Parlor, Cooks, Bart.en· WANT I ./Repro llctmeniquind. Lacuna aron. ~ mo. IDOD87. top service, top den, Delivery Drivers. ED: Expr'd help Laguna Beach, sos AMMALCONTIOL For small independent ./Tedmical HWurea.ao.1385 ARllY UDiv.nal ~-r::&;m•. Call Kr. P/timeopeninpformen making piua and on the ForestAve.491-3311. OfffC.. bank w/xlnt beoefits. NEEDED tbl Seniee.1221W.5tb ,....-n. & women w/oulgoing _av_en_._ca_U_63_1_·3592 ____ 1~-------- ._ Call Irma lor appl. IIRIEDIATELY Dental ·Ant, school St, Sida Ana. Iatervw personalities & take Restaurant FOOD CITYOF 60S100. Long & Short Term~· trained,noexpernec. bnt-121i:l-41tCID·Fri. . LOAMNOCISSIM6 pride lo thei.rwork. Over Plumbing, ~yrs exper. PREPARATION-" c:~~$1.021RT.~~f'lCHMo R•Dv•rn1::... ... ,..... +for si1nmeou. Holiday & .•MS-7580• .,, ........ __ ,.._ 21 "able to ..O..k eves. ~drce_..r_e_P r. remodel· Sales lbtesl. Fast food .._....,,. ..-....-.L~_,.... v • c a t i 0 n p a y unu.-u u .• 1•:u0> F /ti 1 f S2 'IC). ... to ..,., ....... 979-806S. H.B. 10·3 Mon-Fri. Reel'• 3 yra public COO· sbarp&1rla,Portl7.C.M. Hoapltaliutlon plan Diamond aetter. Es· F/Umew/clleateleoaly &batl>~=-t~.:.~~~ aft~dall;~ol~~~ --uu.1 988-7S2lorl68-9112.. taCl work. EXJ>er. in the,_64&36181 ________ 1 avail. perten;t~ 65~•beaefita.5M-M41 proceuln1 trainee St.CM .---.n , care & bandlin1 of Bu Maid pt,ti N HelpenforcleantncApta w/lJplo' It ofc akilta.•---------F/time. Expel''d in pool ~urantb . animals hiibl:y deaira· • me, o ex· ~~-__._.by a.r..--_,..."Um• Call Jrvlne Savin11 maint. Capable of taking s waa er. F /hm e b•-........ l:yby 3/3/78 For pernec. ~ ._..... •--..-.•1•uu -..,.. __ e .-1 7 =·Send Days. Brown Bag•er .... """ • · &C7..SU1 ~fa . Lacuna -541-auo 'IW~EOE. ::::._-or ... n·es •-Restaur• ... • E. iTih ' informaUon Ir applica· __ _. ·-~5 ...__ wit. • --111 ... ......, • tion cootact Penoonel Bath /B h ded .... _. ---....,,.. • ........ -cusoa PO Box 1900, Ne--St, CM <across from • er rus er nee Kast have trans, J wUl u:..a,,.....J f._• _. ..-"" -""' · Oflice, 3300 Newport for a busy dog grooml.ol pay miluce. Ref's fWWW •11N with Hey ski Ila to Beach, Calif. 92660. Balpba) r, BlYd,N.B.~2101 sbop. Npt Bcb area. pl-. .,_2112, 979-S3CS Bas p/U.me aales oppor. ~&e broker llnn F.OE. , _ _..;;.. ______ _ ~ Fred.. eveni!lS• for mature Lom back1round pref'd , •A P A, R T M E N Ti•-------• lac1:7. Wlu' not let back Near Fashion Ille • M.ANAC. ... -.·Retired coa-Boat Manuractarer DllAF1SMAM into aeW.nc in • pleuaot n4~. pie to mana1e Costa 3Yn min aper. in elect-lntereatin1 Bicllory ---------4 Ken 10 unit building DEPT. HW Clerical-Gen1 Ole dlJties. mecb, mechanical, & Parms ~Jore. See Kr. LoeD Proeesaor, mio near all conveniences. Acour. typist. Oppor lor PCB detail " asaembly Tbom.,.1'ht So. Coaat mo'a exps. Salary open No chUdren, no pet.a. Wood/Ct1ldutSllop adv.549-1767. drawln11. Must bne Plm,Lawerltall. Po. avail lmmed. •• Plelila call ~TT. Top quality sall~ats. Clerical llJOd line woctc fr t~ I Pat....,, l Cballenglnf assign· Part ti •rt 15-20 L.-me. Xlllt pay at beoefrta.' I ' 1 W_... .,Arll1t for perspeetlve ment-Full benefits, week. :ipotlb, "'° _. EOE. Scientific Drilling P/Ume po&itiona, 4 days , drawiq oopools &spas. medical, de.DU.I, optical. customer coatact Co U:: Cont.nla, 4CMO Campus wk. 4 hrs day, approx MU1M Call Bob Walsbaw, • 1 Dr,N.B.~'MI05lukfor M-SIJ hr. Call Donna, EricsonYachta.~1. Mesa.~1.56 Xatbyl\emaon. 9S2-7470 Practical Nurse, exper. Care of elderly 1entleman. Mature, cheerful woman who en- joys cooldnt. 673·6812 dys RETAIL CLERKS UTOTIM C:atCnh1 i:e Ma•I• Help Wanted J.st, 1.nd •3rd Shift.a No aper. req 'd. JVe train thole hired. Applicant& rr.SdtoGITeodMr apply at Ut.otem St.ores Certificate or ex per. located at: J2:-.to6. $2.80 p/br. 111 DelMar AV'e, C.!I. 64().8820 . 1390 N. Pacific Cst Hwy . La&una Beach Printing Colla~. p/time. Weareanequal ~ accepting appllca-........-,. ...... em,ployer U~ for Kon & Tues .,..,.... .. ......., night ahifta. Apply hm· I~~~~~~~~ •pm, Penn.yaaver, 1660 RCltallSa.les Placentia, C.O.ta Mesa. SALIS flOSlnOMS · MOWOPEM for exdllng new stare in Fashion bland, exper not req1'ted but ODb' t!ll· tlNsJutlc 6 interested ·-~------•I Qplicuta need apply. 1;;;;;;;iiii;iiiiii;;;;;;; , . ~ Darid Moore -=:.----1 omcE/ PRODUCTION ' I . RECTllCWI JOUlllYMAll ND!DZD - VOLT . ~ ... ., ' . ' .. Sales CLERICAL TYPIST l(anqer. A.allt.. • 'Expef''d wome'a wear cbaln. Oood oppor. PAIT·nMI We need 8001eC1ae to help IBM Stronl pq Pf'Qlram '"' lltnlal retailer. -.ooeo. SELECTRIC 11 Experienced accurate ii--------• TJpiat n .. dad im· SADDl•Aal me4lataly. 10 wpcn C tr C.._ (Jml9&). .. .. arnaritePr&y VACATJONRBUEF IOIDonVi$Ca128TS MUST BE ABLE TO WOUDAYORNIGHT CITAnn.IYI SHU'TS • .... ........ ~· APJb'tnPenan 'J'etn~. OUMelCOAIT Tlu'oclWht•na . DA&YPILOf Cl~> • • •• BaY St. ~Lab Alliatant AM~!'::-.... 1•ocWrill.peAamtant AIV Tlli.VISll~ ~~t.J' BeQ'dftnl CDDantce ·~·-eo.a1MUn•-... IAamBdaN/C.-S ,,. S.J-c..--... ' . I l •It W --11 1001 ~--I04~ h+W. IOH ..tMd ·-101.0·IJ-1 ... ._. 1094 INtt.rqww t04t DAILY PILOT ·-'J'd!r. '!l?t!!!y 1'1, 1171 , .•••• !'!'•••-•••••••••••• iee-••• .. •••••••••••••' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -•• .. •••••••••••••••• twa w.._. 71 ooltWp w~ 71 M twp W..t.4 7100 ~ AaUq Oak JlOll DOGTRAJNINO Scbwtnn, 8'Ua: LU Chic. Flacber stereo record NordJca Meteor lkl bootl, 114• AJua:l,lnum 00 °"' trlr, .f~•_ ........... --...:.Iite1t...-.................... _._ • ._...._ ••. Topo.i, .., .. ., ... ,..!~~or~ .. St.Ha• R•YJ..,lrlt blue =:~~~ maw.~!UT ~~.=~to _ _ -TEL&PHON& d.a19orew. . ...,._YR _._ tlih, (DO Jean,) Rllwl· h , ...... ___ tboard --a. !• Sal .... Extra Gd Bonus " . .. l D' c. tc b. ra m it • 1~ p \IO-.a OU Wamed T et Piat.oi".:. + a awtvel ••la .. IC. HAYI YO. OWH •EAL ISTA11 OfACI CaJlSpm.epm tm-2881 N ~ Mll1GI bouM f\lll ~1:~c•F· drtl •Pl'lcot. baHball bat1, Bauer -Sldl.MNiu ~ll: . cesa. Beat offer over Operate an ~tabUsbcd office in a prame Costa Mes a area with profit rewards and without any major cash · investment. Creative advertising & sales lrainini provided. Exciting opportunity if you yearn for greater income through sales management and an office of Jour own. If inte rested phone im Wood at 675·6000. • ol aat.lqum, Sat/Slln l'eb •·· nA • em 1~ yr, NHL l~ allata 81 8 .-io. see oa Sun. Feb 11 T&D Of'I. • 11611 DuDtae lrPflYf• P'IPPYlwb.'13-4113.1 AUrcytle rldlai dirt Bundy Clari act $8S. 5'8·5'97 ' b two l ~ a P II • ~per:dollly.StaaUN.B. Oak,; varioua oenodJ: ....... ,. 1041 boots. 10' Salem ~= !!~in~a::blo~~ Skis 1~5cm, l'iacbera ~ '1-IPK only ~firm ii lookioJ Callfor~5Ji.70l4 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• SaUboat. 8""'8U, 1815 "5 e66-07'4 w/t.>i.ndioi A polca. $80.i.;-----· ------lfl penoo. i.6PM M••· GGtnloutollkwlneu Nwd cood home for 18 Port Abbey Pl. N.B. Sat . Neumatloboota,11.hlO~ lmuln. Sl>aya awll. *'·50 1 Alfpriceulubed beautiful bl'k cat .. L Steroo cabn't, Mahoa1 l20. Hana &llder. beJi11· 1978 per br. Please cal /I""'... 557-4435 SlOO/olr 'pioe chrt. olo oen ldte w/xtna .flSO. 640-GlukforSbuyl. OvertheBWAo~UtlS· w ._.eneyes. AD• Marla Dra~rlea, *50 Mecnt tbla (2) S3S m-ON1 rra UY · 1.125';doda8t; .M. Female Jong hair calico remnant cluruce . both, ottoman $3. ml.le. .)QI .-.1!'-c-.Sc_,-Al-«1111 ~,!!l_cat.flertlovable. ~~11ro7Ua.25ctoSl. fum.~7857atts. D1n.ca.141u1an 30•~fllll1r ._ .... "" vvn•• "'"""'-~ 1 aooo ~.S.I. prtbl com· ouut.,....VH.l'redlo Permanent.1.. fu!Mhne, ------· pn9ICI' Ir lJv aenerator. BIJttat-d•luound• ........ , ._., J:'NV10US ez. ONEDAYONLY Small Terri er mix Nu Butane Ovenatove 4.AIMA OUT . l Booka compreaaor _ __.Muclu ~dei~Sa~but ~Loo~.. <ra1Dedoutluhteelt) ft.male, 1 )'r old. very Porta potty mlac. boat ~IU .... US w/aJr vol\llne tank, 100' ~-~.1~11 Mutual • .... 20aadqwrdea.lera4'd• iooctw/klda.557·7625 windowa/ttas Jnd. ruaa -.-.. " of boae "re1ulator. --_, !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 21181 E. Cout 'CdM. con.tors puttq lot sale. tapeetries~1M1 $50.000tn merclwld.laeat 714111 a. n sa J a Y. Special Price HllpWmhtd 7'00 MllpWGEllh4 7l00 BWKull675-5010,E.O.E. :~~·~~·pa~~;~'. Fii:~~~.9 w1taold. Tre&IW'el 4 Traab from 50% to 80~ •av=. lll~lllke .............................................. Mt F pottery folk art 6"·2473 the former Peek Family ==~~ g "II....,.,.. $38,950. Salee SFCRETARY·TYPIST · Tow Truclr Drivers ex· · 1.... ' lle«lblu & Mansion. Sat 9-3. 18301 Ml-t. L-.a C " IOtl HAIUUSOM'S ... ov....•u•c 'd T A 1 Jewe-,,, co .. ,1 Lab-Female, 19 montba Pomona LD (Go.ldenweat "*•wa• • ....................... ••• ••y "" 111VUOU Architectural firm in per · op pay. PP y, much~.,.. alpricet old. Needs good home. &Edln&6r>l.iB 14161 MewporiAve. _ .. RCA '"•lor TV, 1 yr. ~ lllliA SAUSPIRSOM Newport Beach seeking G&WTowma. 1000 Irvine you'll like. Sunday Feb. Good with kicla. ~5282. (J t of the Santa .., .,..., 1101 Coast Hwy. N.B. Imported automollve viv.acioua peraon, erte-Ave,NBMi·l.252 ltth. lO·tPM . 177 . Misc. bahJd itema, tum, ua ao. warranty $1'8. For after market phone ciebt wider pressure. Ti-alneea to mate Riverside Ave, NB Loving Springer deaitta GE Refrig., Nat1 Geo-~Fwy) aervice alao 84.2·5340 6Jl.J547 salesperson wanted to Call bt.wn 9AM "lZPM. telephone appta for lrg (behind Newport Beach c b l I d r e n D r irapbic Maauioes. TU 2 DAYS ONLY C.M. •'73 SeaRay 24' cuddy, call jobbers & dealers 631-1100. est.ab co. No uper nee. P.O.) stay/at/home, spayed, &Old. 3097 Roanoke Lo, WM ll.9AM-tPM Comp. Elect Hme atud. y HS/TR Mere., mint throughout the United SICalTAAY Xlnt brly pay• booua + fem.673-8617 CM540-0814. c...A-It to IPM ea. 10 vol frm baalc elect ccmd., mutt sell, boqht States, wocldngfor a fast Exper. fOC' 1 girl office. comm. We have the beet Az='•cn 1010 [Springer Spanmiel, male, Ward a bea vy duty -r • tbruTVaerviceCoat$600 largerSeaRay, many ex. growing company aelllng Worktng for 4 men. Jm· proiram for malting .r.':'••••••••••• .. ••••• neutered. !>38·216' or automaUc dehumidifier ~-58 lo 80°' Sell $100548-1328 trM, frelb water boat. bran name products. -..tnR b d ot money Apply HER b 5'3tMISl3 $5().worbcreat751--09J.5 ~ /0 -~1r1.·---~ SlUiOOJok.P.P.833-0125 Draw + commission & ..-.-.t roa scope • uJ 3034 DISHWAS ·W ile · Thia store baa been -;n. -- unlimited earntna poten-responsibilities incl t)'J>-~eats 1T l~m·lZ Seara Ken.men, portable i(Hrman Shep/Samoyed Moped f75. Tape player doeed for 3 wb and will • •P ... , 19' Bell-Boy, 1/0. Many ti.al. call Mr. Wataon for in I • • b 0 rt hand • · •-~· . · 7° T d deluxe model. Puab but-female 8moa needa $60. Toola S.S.$20. 2133 open for tbae 2 ct.ya Oil· ••••••••••••••••••••••• lltru. $1500. appt,7!4/556-8840 telephone & reception. noon.,. pm· pm, e tao c:ootrola fore cycle home 99u775 '' OranieAve.CMSat.9-Z ly. To liquidate ever· eaamll 9010 673-5741 No agencys please. Call Wynn. 5t0-5:i8l. aettinp. Butcbtt block · )'thins to the w al la. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• loGfs. a..t/ --------•t (114)540-8227 TIAY&A~EMT lop. can be converted to Free lo good home male D~:&,: Europe-:' Waterbeda complete 18' Pacific Catamarrao C•lliw 9050 Sales M.C.PAITEN Exper.,NwptBchoffice. undercounter. $150.00. Keesbou~~ W /~.;9,!!era, ed awraaeJ·~~~ W/frame & heater. A. f.454, XlAt co.nd, mu.st •• ;; ••••••••••••••••••• . GOOD T AUCERS l2S Baker, C.M. 644-537S Call tm-0810 after 5:30 eooctw/ld,... 962...._.., -~ &ow u $119. Alto a com· aell this week make ot. Sel j ·w Time Li·r p.m. Happy, healthy puppy. f!ete line of living rm .. _ ......,,..,_ ,.,;..,._ l <;al f. boat mem· e are · e c-...,_./T~•f rravel ~ ot Trainee We 1"" • _._, ...,., • ........, .._hip in N-port n-h Libraries & we market --··-r FRGHT DAMAGED Part yellow Lab, 1 yr. ~"~b otlmoofvtnoodla Sale urnlture, lampa , i'•..,,..,._ off '&w -&' t T l.me·La·ce Books by Stroogtyplnglc s App-will tr if necessary. H,_.,.,,.INT SALE ,...,,.. old cc.,D•79 """ l<A18 o:xui avea ot I es spreada,plllows,&more loah.Mlrt.e or.,.,,.. . • a I . t M Good . ui d v.a CV • ........ • _..... • ....... _ _,_ ... ---'·--A -al ,_: water'--.. -. Phone tor ...... _.. 9030 Club, tn~ telephone locally & in Y io person o r . typmg req re . W W H bo .. ........, ._, .... ._. .... ..,..., _.... ~...-- surrounding areas. We Fuentes, Robert Bein, Nm smoker, must have ~ 8f::: ,;::Zfl'n ar r, Pa .. lwe 1050 Sat Ir &Jn gs.. MO Slerb more Information ............................. 511 9060 have one of the most en· William Frost It Assoc., air line exper or travel ta .... ••••••••••••••••••• St.Cll"2-11564 (7149 731-9747 •ZODIAC "'••••••••••• .. ••••••••• joyable telephone jobs l.OlQuallSt.N.B. courses. Full travel CASHPAID ~tl.klftacust.ompadded U.F.O. Yard Sale Coltec·------• Port-A-Marine IUJl·YAMAHA aval·1. Our bn•e pay + •-1 ,.,__..,.... benefits. Call 640-6671 -w br/n--/n..-..o portable bar with ..... -•-csv-m PM ...... a "'"I"'' ncin., tablefcuableitma. Fum rue cab " ... _ ltr *"5 JJ1flatable8oats o···-s commission & bonus al· .' M·FS.S .. ---.._ ..,.._,.. ..... multiplex tuner 8 track .. ..... •• - 1 ow s r e ps to e arn Gd sb/typmg. 645-266'7 wvir .... a or u ............. __. It turntable-all ;..e built· :U ~ P:~·. x:fu: £i.!1l,!bl as butch .: ~~=-~fl· Y~!.~!roll:w!~~ bet~een $3.50-~ per hr. Secretary part time, 9·1, TIAYELAGENT lna·plus two cuatom &m9-Sl821112BuahardSt _,._, ...... ......., P;bme & F/ti.me work typing,pbones&gen'lof. Career opportunity. Ex· WGlhlrlrDryer wrought iron bar stools. Fountain Valley Bt~ DoUHouse Prem.prtees~Ot'amlu.aed Saa:Aw"hn schedules ava!l. Morn, rice work for Npt Bch ~~:J;bedG1J.,B.C~!:: Like nu delux lnllltl· Sharp! 581-7446. Talbert•Ellla Victorian 3 stry San Jobnao.n·Evuirude O/B Ytldif S.. a!tn ~eve shafts. ?CJ.nt manufacturerofmedical cy.Pleasecall644·7373 cycle models only. Francisco town bouae motors.213/'22-5556 2.616NewportBlvd. benefits. & opportumlies supplies.645-Zlll Completely reblt • re-**I BUY** yarage Sale. Sat only. Stain 01811 windows ,., .,. ..... ,ac .. ,_'""Y w/oars, NewportBeacb Cor rapid advancement. f i Di a b e d • y e a r Good uaed Furniture & 113Q2 Duchesa Lo, H.B., • • """" ........ (714) 673-9211 Jf you are energe~ic, Secretary JYPISJS & iruarantee. 1 price only, A 11 -OR 1 111 Nrc...4Rgdale"11eil ~bw1all '!_ape[:tw~e xlo\ condition. $400. articulate, aggressive Work with executive your choice 1130 each. ~PP ances w ...,..... ...,.... . ue • WUle """'· 831--0429 INew 2•' American t t t lk to d -1 b ... _,. Sal _ ... _ aellorSELLforYou ........_ 1070 Beautarul & new $2SO Sailboat T-'-we wan o a you Vice Presa ent m pus SECRETARIES Free ucuvery. e e...... ..... .. -as •ucn·~ ---r .,_ -· WANTED: 18• Boat ..... e over pay. about ma king_ money. Newpt Ctr office. Ind.iv. Feb.15. Also new & like .......,, "" v" ••••••••••••••••••••••• v•.,.,...,... Trailer for direct drive menta.Haatrlr.'93-2612 Call: must have excellent typ· Seek temporary employ-new refrig'a. freezers & 646-1616 & 133-9625 WANTED Tools and Misc. For Sale. llM-0833or642-UI08 T·BIRDSLOOPWlTII 83)..8095 mg & shorthand sltills & meot where we make it ranges at~ the co.tat Craftsman abaper MOORING 18500 TlMEfldFE be diplomatic m screen· wolth)'OW'while. South Cout Appliances, "'or g~d~_ff.J'~~ ft-•i. TOP CASH DOLLAR w/atnd. Metal cutting Traner ~CAP. Adjust · • • LlB'lfARIF..S,lNC. ing visitors&telepbone TOPJOI 531.2542 r • & .._.. .............. PAID FOR YOUR ctropa.aw3HP3pbaae lnat.b&widtb.NaLBrDd CALI.675-1425 EquaJOppEmplyrm/f calls. Front office ap· y"8p•y ques clrTV'a,9157-81.33 JEWELRY, WATCHES, somebndpwrtoolaDrill "2-1.630Aft6 Lldo 1t w/trailer new ~~~~~~~~~ pearaoce. Starting ..,.... "" ...._ n.:__.. Pin U ART OBJEC'l'S, GOLD, bill used doors kitchen -11-n-t f u' I :: salary $'750-$800. Appli-You'reYourOwnBoss 30" Tappan Gu range, .,.a.ory uu~ e V· SILVER SERVICE , ~-2&' Flag Pole wood llMth.Power 9040 a ........ ~· W'l'J Salesgirl,Mustbeableto cantswiUbetested.Call ~Q~ office • gold. Used very litUe. tnaRmFumtture.Seeit FINE FURN le AN· W/)'ard le hardware••••••••••••••••••••••• Llnda. work any 4 days per Pers onn e l D e pt. $225/bestofr.830-ln27 made.Cal197'9·3129 nQUES.64.5-2200 40''x'72"Dratllngtbletop 35'CHRISCRAFT 13' Kite, 1976. Xlnt.cond. week l0·6. lPJ>lY in 114/646-4580. E .O.E. 0 overload RCA Whirlpool frener 28 Captain's Built in bed, Lapidary equip Lortone (2) Bu atools, Sml clak, Aftcabin/duatatatioa Yellow. $600firm. person. The erstmmon cuft,$175. pine. with 3 l a r ge cutter 2arbo~ \4 HP sclbuetanetank,&more TwinCbrysV8'a/2beada 642·2ll0 Tree, 229 Marine A ve, SECRl!...,.ARY TO YP of 557.0061 962.MJ2 drawers & bookshelf. motor Mate' orrer SatfrSun631-0723 Hauled,aurvey Al, pntd u.J..l 16 tr U Full Bal Isl Finance, good typing & 3723 Birch St. NB SJ..25. &·2Cl7 . · •SJ.2.000 AY 646-9000 ........ e + a er y dictation abilities. Able Washer dryer, dis · 549-23:50 Great Books of The equip. 642·1630 Aft. 6 or SALES to compose variety of bwasber'. trash compac· BAKER dining side piece th cM ••rr 1071 Western World. 52 leavemesaage HoppiMss-Careef' c~~e':1u~fnJ:taw,o;PkP~Yn TYPtST.f'AJtT.TJME tor, $80 each. Color TV $1200.T.V.STEREOcon· •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• volume, beat offer. NOWYOU 1-~ Slip1/ &FinmtdalMinded ""' Permanent position $120.646-5848 sole Magnavox . xlnt Puocbpress30toml972, fW0.1144 CAMGO ~ 907 " Opportunities avail. Hobie Cat Corp. 2026 available, 2 days per coad$450.644·7'47 'l 11 h A•~111 ' w/int'l co. Sales back-Mc:Gaw, lrvine. week (Mood& & Frida Rdrig.. 2'x4 ', white, like $3,300. Int ac -••••••••••••••••••••••• ~dpref'd.~opmi;mt SECRETARY,litebkpng, ~:JO). Mustybave fui. new, am.J. perfect for 2. Sola and loveseat Blue Wholesalers (213) t4nalan.. 21R.CHAMftOM NEED SUP for new 84' posataon~ ava1.1 ~unng shorthand, non-smkr. accurate typing skills. Free Del. $120/ofr. tuxedo style $150 . 961-3434 Wmled 1011 C™17BB. Fl7bri1ce, aailboat.MrWhite our .nat 1 & ant l e x-n -a1 "'-tate Ofc, Proper· $3.50 per hour. Call 75'2-9ZZ3,Sheryl. ~ Col-.. -t•r 13 • ., ... full ··-·--••H••••• 1,1in1le acrew. aal ey. 61$.1393 nc &:.O B b D . ,.,.,. .., ...._ • to '--• vs-.. Tut head, bait tank. Sleeps 5. pans1on. Send res~e to ty Mgmt, nr Airport, JS a r a r a av ls Wedgewood sto•e 40'' Dinini rm. Bdrm" many pr i c e S 1 • 9 S o • w._ -.;, • --. Engine completely re-$!00 reward, need aide tie PO Box 3, Anaheim, Ca hr week, Pb: 540-2960, weetdaysat64Z·l626 w/chrome grill: exc'. extras. Cookware & d.ia· LeBloud/~ lt"X24" Ucketa. buUt. EJect.raDicgeartn-or alip for Z.S' aaillloa.L 92.805 «call 778-2040 for 3400 Irvine, Ste 101, W......., &Cook ccmd. aao.5CS-6Ul bes.556-8995 '1.7:i0. Int llbch Whlalr. ~dtpm d. depth llnder A brand l>)'9 213/G&-1814, eva. inter. NewportBcb. Applyinpenon,Stavro'a 19 ea. ft. 2-dr froatlree POOL TABLE. l" Slate (ZJ.3)9lll-34M PrinteColledorwantato __.,unused J.way FK1-M).2881-------- Salealady-Gifta, p/time. Secretary, congenial! !!830W. Coast Hwy, NB Frieidaire retrti. $165. top, S' 5 " x 6' 2" Solid .. n•••w IOIO ko'f Goebel lmminela. ~ J. RD~11 $75: °6 lside 'ne for Power Boat Mature&reliable. Buggs adaptable individua PBX~ 557"'639. bU.lt W /CllfJJJ, rack, balls -·· ... •·•••••H•••••••• FM9aa dilba9. Noritake _..._ ... _ ~ms ev 16' Max, $2.50 per ft. International, 2043 w/po'loCc skillsforfut WOMANcmir4'0, ..... Ir wall hanaer. $350. w·· ...... ED Azalea.875-2SZ2 ........... _. NewportBcb.675-491'll. WestcliffDr.N.B. pace 1-girl offc. Pay per belpl~ Busy N.B. Wu.her, heaVJ duty Ken· 613-0638 Al"'lll • 19'16 SKIPJACK 20• Uke'---''-------- negotiable SRlllgineer· olc.Notypmcoraales.4'0 more. Good condllioo. TOP CASH DOLLAR Private party wants new fully eqwp'ped loah.Speed• SALES · 642-8.'iM Hr Wk. Eves & wlmda. "5.64M224 Queen aise bed, complete PAID FOR YOUR campllll 1ear. Low • • Sid tOIO Let's• Ho.est lJll, WUl tm. start $3/hr. Call new aprinp, mattress, JEWELRY, WATCHES, beacb cbalra, c&11vas w/custom trlr. $10,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ff you wern't looking for SECURITY GUilD AMaor PMs64M071 _._ 1015 frame, une headboard, ART OBJECTS. GOLD, ~etc. 67$--0877 alter lilSl-3056 i&Saoger20' Da;ycrui.ler a new caree r, you Security patrol guard, WOOD ••••-••••••••••••••••• elec. blanket, spread SILVER SE8VICE, S:30pm. J.a'VALCOalumiDumfia· w/covertitrlr.'5501da, wouldn 't be readinc this f/time, must have Calif FlnlahPr--&Flne PUBLIC"1RNJ1VRE Sl614'-l80' · FINE FURN. A AN· Mtldcll bing boat, & trlr, Berkley Jet. Jobn. llOY· ad,andilwewem'tlook· State certification to -r Ooldleafbeedboard,dual 11QUES.645-Z200 I 1 •• 1013 w/CIOllqllet.e aoc.a, inc tnamuataeU.60-S1M.or ang for someone to do a carry we apon, min Det&il.Haodwork. *lllf'TION* -•-2 ---.__,R .. _... b --boat cover & aWJlinc, 9113-1623. job, lhl.a ad wouldn't be salary$3.75br.Callbtwn Noexper.oecqsary. """ :;p.;:u:A~= in~ PUm.JCAUCT10H ·-0•••0••••••H••••• 15~P. Jobnaon motor.--------- here. If you are a career S.SPM Mon·Frl 4JK.8.S71 LADIES T_.. 7:10 P .M. cld. 9SWl'1'1 MANY ITEllS OF FINE Bundy ... ~pet trolliDi motor, bait tank, Ti f ~ . minded adult & want the Please Apply Too! CDi .... W*'-t ' ESTATE JEWELRY, otiUT crit°ne Is much mare. A-~ ............... . oppty to earn t.tm!e to Service Sta. A~ant, 32 .. /4DAY WIC COHSJGNJIENTS Morini: New fW'biture. ART OBJECTS, AN· real lteal at $1885. call C an.s.N/ five hundred dollan a exper'd. Full or p/Ume. Quick PayllaiHa STOCKUQUIDATIONS Mast be sold. Lovely nQUES. PINE FURN., &-pc. RopnDrums btwn t ·4PM. wtdya. ..!. 9120 week, call toll fr~ (1) Apply Atto Station, 17th 64.5-3321 Lovely 1'drm sell, 1\zrtlerOct. 7SZ.'1172. ETC. PllONE FOR IN· ZikUianeymbeia 7J.4.st&-0348 ••-•••••••-•••••••••• 800/327-9896anytime (for &lrvine,C.M. d .. I I FO. Ir BROCHURE. --• , recorded mess.ge). Woodworker, exper. in-reaaer. • ID rrora, Maple dinette, Riviera 66-2200 v•-"73 Saber Craft, model Wanted: 11 camper, 1 or _____ _.;::.. __ ~Service Stat~on Atteo· teri.OI' decorator, must be headbroada, cheats, couch. bdrm set, aewtng Gibson Lea Paul Custom, 2530 Cabin Crulaer, twin 2 yn old, aelf-eoatained Salesman. Need young dant, uper d. Day & able to read & un· ~ "ltanda, armoUe., macb •• carpetina. Newport Beach Tebnla nu•orolfer PreCBS 140 Mere cruller out-w/abower, aood shaP,e. ~ggre:ssive, bard work· Eves. Full & p/Ume. Ap-dentand print.a. Wort at It cbn, colfee tbu 6 MU111 club membenbip, best &.aper Beverb amp $350. drive 250 bra. Radlo, Paycaab. 6'5-0946 mg salesman to make ply, Shell Sta~, 17th & b ench w /minimum ~~TV' ~.~~-b<>f.:. ....._,1 , .. , ........ _ .. -.Wal afr.MCH1'1G n..llter iu • .,.i.--2 depth sounder, self COD· --.. ...... , __ ll"'·ft CJO top money selling vans It lrvlne, NB. supervision. Good coadl· \AaJUU&I ~ • 11.& &-. .... • uuKAa -b ma ' bottoml 1. tafnecl. Xtras I.Del. oo •v :rUlll&llllCI T>< • • Fiat.s Exp not nee Good · ._ be flt lfwtdtez ~~~ben W/'"'-· --tbl ..., -....... ._ ..... ._ o • • ...__..._ __, trlr I('--stv, lee box, etc. SJ.JOO. benefits. 712-9800: 1221 Service Sta. Nlaht Attend taona, pay • ne a. tbla •cnn ranpnator u--..:-:.-....• r::-~·----ehauel mixer{ &lave &...-.m ...... e • ~ NoHarborBlvd Ana. 20r5nitesawt.Apply, Ollllorappt.orapplytn atove, la~J)I. PLUS vrmrnr-.,.o.~ ~~I amp '500. Cal Jeff, repair & save moot)'. G&E.utbC.M.&G2l23 · ' Sbell.17th&lrvine NB person. Alfred M . LOO'S OF MJSC. •AN· White vin)'l couch tex· 0oy._..._7,o.,o-r.,,O IQ..., $11.500 firm. Aft 6pm; MafJtimd .... 9140. Sales Manager wanted. ' Gordon Dealcna, 250 Tl QUE O RINDING t d I d cond -M.-...................... . 501 comm. in-bouae, 10% Service Sta. Atte11dant Jl\cber Ave, CM. !M0-2880 . ure • 00 ,._ ft. ~ liA bud croc:bllt-Les Paul Copy le new _ ~__. _, _ _.-,lo c~ new accta, aelll.n1 P /time. Exper'd. Neat ~· • .., VIR • .._ va f'°°lbst olr. m.._.. 1 ~~ $100. cau Joane ~ $Z02~ ........ -SEA RAY d~...-. IUllNll~ _ .. aud io visual binders. appear. &c handwriting. Wooctworti.n ,.-.-5 ..,_,, • ...,...,.. .,.__.... -•M0-1538., ~~~::.~.~~~& W .. ~~~~~e!!~wport ~~!1J:::: :;::i;:~:r~ 't:.:~::.~ ~h':c1t~~ •c=:..,~::i.s ~~O: KJncTUtUckee. lilO Ludwii reel cln&mt, ~ial 11'17 Pucb Maxi, xlnt •tatnera. Exper req'd, CASH. No personal tble, formic~ tp. dull 4tickeU·llar.ttth ~ CDDd.ball' all11~wanll 17 low ccnd. eoo mi. like new. SALES·P /ttme Days. Serv.StaHelpneededlm· xlntpaylcbeneflt..3201 cbecb PLEASE! Food walll\lt wd ll'•in xlnt M0-4'50'1 • C1111 • ua. •e Inc dngtraller tm/Ofr.8'1'54182 Fabric Shop, C.M. med. Full or Pit. Apply, W. MacArthur Blvd. Sen· avail.able. Jtema aubject eand $20 ea. Brau tbl Racquetball Mbrabp. ._17NG1 akl, fish, cruise 1-.;...._ __ .;...... _____ _ canMIMIMO.Unda 990 E. Cst Hwy, Nwpt 1taAna. topreaeie. tuw.,._,_ Univ. MbJ.eUc Club. Nr OftlceFa law• 57 ISO ~ ·• I tlSO Sal to u d Bch. ~ MASTBSAUCTIOM o.c. Aprt. CHEAP! ........ IOll 1 • ~ ve~sfn~y te~ph:n~ SIWIMG OPRS ....................... ~NewpaltB= 8A~"J::~ J;!i <m>SMS70<m~ ....................... HAIUUSOM-S =~-;;;~~:;:; for weekly a hopper. Speclal machines. All '#' • 1001 ~ '15, bookcue Cbanpnc carpet! Ill W wood desU '85 4 SIA ltA Y tba 5 bn ra.onlng lime. ~:?' A~kco~~ ~.~!'1~ ~.al!!~ ~72 wkNBBI· .. ·--•••••••••••••••• • ...._ 1020 SL5. .. 'la5bef12:00 Yarduupspluahyellaw F1ooreacent light ihc 31010outJlw)'N.B. lncludi.n& l aet ol tie 540-6289 ...,pa · _..... · · · ~CAUCTIOHr=-lime abal • pacl. '1· mi. $10. DrafUnl tbh Hl.Jl47 dona, a ramp• a bike ---------1 at3 MANY ITEMS OP FINE ....................... 2 amt bedl W/Clblneta ai p/)Td. ~ ~ n--.. cbr -. Ex-• stand. •• c.n aft 4)>)1 '"""TATE JEWELRY """""'6"'°EDBJXES drawera bltnas mat-..... .,._.._ -...,. .. n .. v 1-21 OMC -1·._t Seamer, Hper'd in NW· Stock&Cleanup.SCMOhn ART OBJECTS, AN: ~ B;y,aeJJ.tnade. ~.'..!!'• f50 each. ~MlltStl ec ebn tu. Draftint ....,__O/D ~~·v·va VHF.__ ......... _._. ____ _ ~?~~,·-=·~: ~~~otc.372tSo. nQUES, FINE FURN., CJcle•Co.2488Newport --P9ddle boat. suo. sml H1bt• $20 . C.E CB.' '--~·adrlr' "13DKW125.kpdirtbike. tioo. Sal nqo. Will lead USASTEREO ETC. PHONE FOR JN. Blvd.C.M.642·7110 SPcGlrllwbltebedroom m.t fnaer, '15. cbelt SURPLUS OFPIC! SS200.df.!hell m.n11 · Veryfaal$1.95 to 11• aeamer poa. . FO ~ BROCHURE Ht SI.at cond $185 ol dmnn, J15. 21960'1 l'UBNITURZ, 2044 • 83().'6812 • ,.._ .... ~ .. Salla 6'l-003I Supen1sor1 wanted: . '~ • eraller 26" xtra ' ' ' 1..n. bim. mate ob. PllC9ltta. CM. 831-25'11 'M 25' l'abtiJler, 0C xlnt, __ . -n-t 100 .. -......... • ll'adea e 1 •a· Davia ~2300 ban)' dub' rim. Dart -....arorBNDda BCAat.ereoSU15. lh.Jtll orm-2777 hw1ed, pa1nt • •amlab. ._..,r..... • n .. !Mlwkdyg. Sebool. i~ Bra~ dally, W...$100.0SZ.'1954 J..NOblaDdmah. bdrm.-. WID. '300. nfril w/lce l/'11 llO Bra freeh eni., teat box, xlnt cond Seateatrell wanted for Mon tbru Fri. S3.11 per MUSeCIOXIS C a& 111 mlrror.z...!U Benb .U., $200, elec stot'e, cwtgera' T·&abl, nn. f/IZ/Olr. a rail motoTCY· sailmalter. br.Ca11BobNoel556-3430 CLOCllS ·-1.J••ll IOIO a.taatt.~Jotr.Antf. fl5.. flea' lamps. sio It com ore. furn, eon bait ~P w/Npt slip. detrtr$L50.Waldeosur· call • .,..., --que duu r dnn $30 Camel corduroy f • r • n e • • • t • -+ "500/Gl'bellt.-.aMl tbaanlllO. 848-UJO SO-M8'1 Swttchboerd ()pr. P/tlme Slot Meehl.,., Nlclcelo-....................... w/locb • ilit' mirror sleeper •ola t15. equtpm.n•t, mutt tt• -.. -BIKE! --------i to F/tlme. Will train. deons, pllono!rapb•·1Naro&c1Proatol\FL&od .• 1J..._ Portacrib tu. White lbkeotr.m.'leoL .. u ....... uuo •Sea11.t ... ~ ean~. ~'!~d.'• l~~·:-,f1~9:: :i:i;r~.1~~r~~ SOFA sm u... bla • Lam.b•iDlnkeoat.u10,,... IOl7 1978 ~==~; *A/P9'C-11... furniture. anu.i:.~· atamatlc ;,10, .. tao ¥1tdacoroM.eabl.bt mabotr.1'15«M8 -·-................ ~.!~.:& 1JOO m1. . To$11.000 TelepbooeSales Amedeo~ i 4M-KlT • CWl!lt tlO-li(od Oral c:of. llN I I 1Wlwrtr 10 Yoan1 parakeets, S£A RAYS -~=!;:~e!~ HEmMOMIY? ~~~tfec1-~ Dots 1040 !•U~UZS.141-4528 w/1Wd.$M.181).JID nrtou clra. '5 each. ~ ........... , 60 4020Birch,S&e1CM CALLVSI ........................... s. IOll -mate400Autotelt alleMT'll ~Sale 1.~~1.----fl NewpcrtBeach al4190 We need eoergetic, .,,,..._, .. -BOTH rLOODVIC'l'DIS ..-.~ ....... -.... ~ J:MC!b •remote "-A0.,1-lotO ................ . call for Appt/Eltab 'SS articulate "°1)le we can »u:•"'AA• ?llDDOOODHOKES --l -................... = Bl>w ~ a i.rrr Excutive ~~~~~~~~ train to introduce · ANTIQtJl:S Tb• dot• from tile PUalCAUCTIOM mah f / rec• ve -11-~..a.-•· --RP •.d-Ko•ol'bome or )llol· = lf B "' t AmericanOatDealera La 1'-SPC"' llAN1'J'llfl:JT131SOI' ..-...1nnan7phona "118 ---• ..,,.,,. t.•0 ·•· _..____ -Herb ' SICllTMY ~!:::~.!. 1~0 ;:an~ ?SOIU>yerRd.S.A. ~~'::.. J>M BSTATI! lEWSLRY. Coat taoo Sell $150. bmcb'Tai~~ (S&octl53Hswm> ;;n;. ~ aQY of Mbdmum2yeaneaper. (atNewportPwf) toOooda•amhlidi.the ·ABT OBJBOTS~~~-G9-!!8 WRuu.;-11' U..nambln Luxartoaa Ne1:&frt· areu. SSS 'f5f.ma SPCA II-::.:~ ~~"Bf. top71:A Kaolllnt for tJPIUGBTPIANO :::S•t~> ftl.6117 ~=et· HMO..V :u1T:.f:t eoqa,_aS~ J'O. • BROCHURE: =....:1:.~J:: tna. Jmttw481M711 ~:~ U1.m1 ~Cber11 ..... 1,.hlb ~& ~ oall to --....,., ....... -ae-_PJ.ao. KnUoer ~.~, .. ) .... . ,~ ~DW.U.. lllWOPDI \ ;-1~:._~~':":~~=•AKTJ:D:l-.aotate ~~ld~~t'lt;d ~· -=~~.~ ---•i _ _._. Hi!iflrW• . crl7MMI r ... ~1.:J';, faJDll)u. Som• t•n ~~ ..... WW _._.at-.-WW~ · IMHP ttlr.... ....,lii9&.MW281 111 , ... ce-TO POI.IC l'CruJ.s"a..-,_ -. DliW. Good ... , ..,._..,Jill-c;t;;11.;; .... .-oo (Stoctttoai•> FwM~ .=:.: ':'~.l.'. _ P•;f::.·.uo:;."~.~b :=.=::\·~· .. '=~'tf~~=-="2:,"1 ~~M ..:=£-~ ~ """=.::".,. ~.;:~ f:l._ . ;·,~;.. Attlt·ll°'IDl•Gar•f• ~~~~,:._·~4_.•m• -... ,i • .,,.,.,... tfAllllOM'S ~ ......... _ .,.., • 13A"I .:... 014tn•11tt : ••11 .,, c"':"1 . =:: ::._~~. t~ D't...._.~.-~ ~boat =:=:~:'::t SIA IAY ~ 1eva .. 1r 18 .,._ Tl.MU.In .... ;. L-.-SI.Ozaeta.• •r,n 1111 &. --~Bl. M 9Q; ~ ~ • thn cia....-n l101~Hn.J.N.~"i. hllYdett111Md • _.,.... UB-.WSIUNQ.. ,,_..,. Axe .. lilk1 ~lf$tl8lla. ·;r;.1.?·~'\.n·~.,-1 1:.,..,..uM~'"' -~ -~-, . 611:.n.41 }ti; 1:-............ 1« l fJ ia4·ull -,,.,.. i-. DaualCWa.otri'mlf Na••h twc-r.11h 1 11,1~ Sbota ifah!t• . ,, .. , :; _ _ Knit-Qi.Ila& cutota 110 ....._ .... -... ~ • 1 '....._.. Aldtnlitll,._,.,114,...._ f : Y1nUWelldiCll'Sldie. VENDJKQ llACHINES ............ ,c.l\llO;Kd -'·RllGM:'YllOJ'OR .:.•,u1r,, L~'--"-~~ ~ ·"' -Adi'?...U bf a.a.,. W Cl.._ ··-·-., i"')llM; .. lilUlllO .... Sat.1;~....,_ tJl~, Dll •••-ti•!1b!Uar. Jl'~l/O,V•lual!J.:.. ..... l::<i B*llUlll'ALS H -'" •••ma amaU n .... J {CapUUuo, ... :.JHi 1m.i. "°"9 tlulaf Widl~. l~cnlJ'K GD Nardiam, =.wroll\ab\e, .. c. Jut.r. hlcl. Betl oil': I· v ... hltlt ob ... ,oo. •lf ........ lhd.8.A. • ..:.i..'c':-,.,..1 ' t~ .... •' 11w~Ma-117t;·r·· .~.· a,o.•im ''" •·~ 1.DallJP1k1UDu.tWA4. a>M.: -" ·~ 111.-a .... .,..._ -1•*111.W.• .l i_, -.-:II -. r , .• -· -- - ~ ............... DOLPHIN ":.i= ...... , ,'G':,; ::;- s 7395 1111.ICl1* GYPSY 1'1" H..._, IWll .._, llllwyw..tor b.\RWICk OAT'>U"" B J I t l 1 r, ·1 q 1 l J 1 S · WEIUY CllWCAIS ltTmelrl - WAM!aTOIUY QuaUt1 UMd BllWa. IOYCA&Va IMW ~la.mboneaoad Nnl'OU B.J:ACB 64CM444 IMWllSAUS lt7J3.0CS ' •P"d wltb aurool. (Jll)IOO). 1'742002 4 apeed, air c:ond. It a t.ereo e111eUe . C'lUllOC). lt74J.OS. Autcmatie. air eoocl. "' .unroaf. (..a.I'). lt74l.OC.. Automatic, aUDJ'OOl & leatber ioterior.1~----~-~ (elLNT). lt76H• 4 speed witb IWlr'OOf. (EB.IN D). 3 to cMclH from. L.~ ~ A1l\\l(Jf4 I., ("\. "1'0R1,. ~1··~., Jo'/101 tt70MT 1115191a ConHl'tlble.. ' 1peed, ,..dlo. beater • maa ....... ExceUIDL condi· U. 6 extra low miles. (IWIJJI:). A ruper bu)' at OM. I l, l :.... fl;_ .!_I \1 •• tt•<llM ... l)flt, I . I JY '• j I J lt71tCJ41D ' biellllL pwr. .......,. Alf/I'll • HDfOO . (OGJ.). Mtimsm , ..... cs . YAl.UY NO«fl Ql.ZMl4'Mt4t lt71 MUJIOSI UCOUPI lMt of tbe baodmade ela11le1 I LUSQJ'Y equipped. low mn. " atio.n wperb care. 1 or cmlY a made f« uae U.S. lluat 1ee to ap· preclat..owned b7 • Holl y wood ataJ'. (513£110 ). . • .. -54848 GUSTAFSON llNCOtN MEKURY l 6&00 ho<ll .,._d lt77 32CI 133-1• Automatic, stereo A: Ur -.. • .. ••••-••••••• cand. (CJOlllUllX) '7S 210Z, air. All/PM M•, .i, 1•., V11 10 \11.JUlt'-. ..,, 'I'eny, 25', atereo, alr, many x traa. Perfect 11 hape. S a c:. $7200. $46-1'21 ""'"'"' .... leocft, i4Z-1144 ~~] • ltJ' ltf ,\(" flL l/ll ttUNTINGION 0. At tt --nereo cua., map, ._ 131-2040 49Mt4' ~w:·ooo mi.·~. 197' IMW 2002 "'ff_, LoMecl -...._ .......... , ... •~t40 1975 LUV PIOC-UP Fjord bloe wttb blue aty -• ., ... rv • '7 4 Data u a p. U. interior. Air eond., Belt otter over $30QI. w/eamper abell. Xlnt --------• c:ameU.e • aUDl'OOI. Im· •na 1'1t-51'51'ncl Kl.' ''1'1 "ld P\.I., ••••••••••••••••••••••• '64-'77 Used Mu1tan1 Parts. 980 No. Parker, Oranae. Call Wl·:M>OO 4 cyl., 4 speed. cond. All/Fii I trlt. WI macu1ate! (0581). 1'e'71fAN""9 $MOO/otr.SS1911 HEID ONLY $12'5 A11modela6eolon. VWputa, all kinda, CHEAP ~ve on gos oosts ith this one. uper buy. (Lie. 17 .. 18Z). IOYCARVB IMW 0 ... oman '74. emn int/ext., CLEAN uh> Dll .. _._l fllll boot, abell, c:rpt, US.CARS ..-lamboneB.oad'•• ,_, map. Must aell now. NEWPORTBEACll $2MIO/bstolfer.m..sm MOW HO '444 89'-9404 Wanted: Body & ct!Au for '68-'n C.maro o Cbenlle. 4H·'4SZ 0 .-..en s99 -_,,,..._ .... __ '" ¥. ._ '-4 r.a. CALL•MTH 540 • 5630 oaA.Mel COUNTY'S OLDIST 1011\SO\ & SO\ • LINLOLlll ·ME: RCURY COSTA MESA DATSUN ~ IZ1 eqiDe $100. 3 motorcycles; Yamaha llO·SlOO, Yamaba 1~$200. 8u.mkl 50C>-$500. ~ ................. T014-".,._lllll. ... a ....... 28».,........, "'2M.H kid. ta. la. a ...._. .............. _t7 ... $1.2D0•873-1640 \ 2626HAUOR Ill.VD. y-9170 COSTA MESA & REW ARD YOURSB.F PREVIOUSLY. OWNED MERCEDES BENZ SIHSllLI PA YMINTS 167 200 D •••••••••••••••• , ••• $4295 White and Blue (8628) ~ 17 6. 240 .D ••••••••••• •,• •• ' ••• S 11,500 Black wtth Red lntertor. (93581 • . 17 5 280 Seclml •••••••••• ; ••• SI 0,500 Deep o ..... (8427) ·13 2ao SE 4.s •••••••••••••• sa.soo twty Wlttt BlmbOO lnter10f. (81 &O) 173 450 SE •••••••••••••••• $10,900 Icon Gold. (9124) . 176 450 SL •••••••••••• ~.; ••• Sll,950 .. Red whh B&ICklnt*tor. (1331) • ~4 450 Sa ..•..• ., .•••• ~ .• ·.SIJ,500 8elo4i ~ (eoee) , '73 280 Seclaia •••••••••••••••• S7,ft9 u. °"""' (8447) • • 19788MW's ,HERE HOW! Coe.ftlTI IOOYSHOP NOWOfltt CREVIER GIP6~Y SAMfA AMA 835-3171 TI« UUlllATI DflMNO MAO-. •USIDIMW1• '73200241pd•UV '74 3'02Aat.o. 8ILPO ..,, 2lllllDW Air CIZILI& '113DCIZA S..2211 __ ,. '11510lAAlloJa.,,~ '11=1~mBBKD ~ .......... " .. !?!~ ca.-10.Sm ••w• lt76PIATXl/9 c.,t 9711 1'D ,..._ C:KJatta • ----·-•••• ~t,000 mil••· 1:t <::Ji:':~ 2:=. sAio....Aac new bc'b. sreat cond, YALLIY MOftJS .., . ....,.. IJl.-..0 4tMt4t "D 2800. AJl.P'I( CUI, AD "18 l"lat 121, 17,000 Ill ndlaia,. DQ c:Ja&dl. xlDt A)l/P'I( I tk. XlDt. Cond, OCR I..,. cmd. MS-JON l7S-Gr7 Aft. 5 SILEC110M OF '72 Capri. IOOd tramp. IMWllSAlB =·~-2M2 da'8 ~P=t:::. Wt Da7 baw Jom aat lllDt c:ond. 10 It ml arm~ Jawmtuq. Oa1l "7J O.pri. p .P., u.ooo mt. or-.. w iiilt lat. .,.,0 -.~odlaz._4'Mt4' All/FM eau .• Good ftrm. TU.TlTt dJa, or .... _ cand,$2000.~ ,..,.. ..... Allhe. Mew t100 Alllos. Mew tlOO .W0.. Mew ..................................................................... . . MOTICE bow Dally Pilot Claaa· lfted .els dlapl17 their ... .,.. w11h lellblllt7 adbn.,.ct? Ourada, we .. proud to •• , • real.11 l•t reaalts. Phone ea.5671. ......... Ml''>ll)"J •It ,q 1'\1,.,•Jlllf\ 11J111.:o 4y;110• 'SS 1IO (&al), lint coacli· tion$2100. '93.sM2 ,,11 '1.SH 49 ~ J7tol lf6f JIOSIL U you want an slnt 19'9 118 from original owner wblcb 1how1 excellent. care for $5900/finn call MMUOor~ lt72Ml%UOD Automatic • air coad. For the luxury of a Mercedes 6 t.be dfiden-c1 of a dieMll <834EIE) We have otbtr fine ... to eboole IJ'om. 1\1 •\',I I"" " I• J\~ f.• \...' ~ •) . - idJ117-l~ .:11Sl7U.J Ml\\t(H.i \o I# IU tMP(>RTS 1J 'I I I l~ IV, '•04 -----' .,,,,. BIUerUwaaew.D1.tl44 I t77Mii1000 With· low mlle9. ~ CMl!eUe, automatic, air cand., pwr. ·~ " -windows. lmmaculat.e! '-"'~ MIHION Vil JO IMN1ll'S .. ' . . -. BJl l148 •9,''0• 9742 llGB-GT. Na dalch. nu en&. WW Mil to best oller.875a71 lt73Ml%450SL 'TT MGB, 1AOO mi's. red. Automatic, pwr. ateeri.nl fully equip'd, moving out •windows, .U CIODd. Ar of area, $5295. Days; 1e1a Uwa :n.ooo mn... MN334, EYes; 646-9Z15 lmmaeulatel (fl'llND). Opel 9746 MICiSIO~ \lf.Jt~ '"'·1•1n'1'4l . . P .•' I 1 ..J a .Jv ~ 1 1CJJ ....................... '• Opel Kadett. dean. ~nual tramm. t&SO. caDM5-08SS. Mew tlOO ....._New 9100 Mtos. New HOO .................................................................. • • • 1974 DATSUM 12t0 HATOflACK 4 speed trana. & AM/FM tape tjeck. (e71JPX). lt76DAnut4 11I0 HATCHIACX 4 speed trans. w1ttt air cond 1tlon1ng , (011PUY). ••74c:Mln V• TON PICaUP Sierra Grande. Automatic. pwr. steerln~t & air cond. (~9845W). ltnDATIUM llOSIDAM Automatic, pwr. steering & air cond. Simply brand new - less than 11.000 miles. (686SPLI. 55995 For Classified Ad ACTION Call A Daily Pilot Ad-visor 642-5678 ~ ao. low mUeace •• slot cood. ~·· J1 ml per 1•1. '5.'100. --- '75 Ptuseot 50t Diesel, ver:y clean, mauy xtraa, --------must eee to appreclate, Iola ao,c. 9716 '8000/Belt otter. tSS-9163 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ,_... 9.710 •1 DEAUR IN U.S.A. ···············~······· ROY I.AR&! CAIV!I .s:: ,er,. ~l}.S~~E PORSCHI 9241 \...._ _ __, ::' .. .t(" See US few 1GUr beat buy Cl0$l0 SUNDAYS tod8)'·118ft)' ! Ill.I. YATIS XLNT BUY VW. laAaSC.... Sharp '&e Silver Shadow, ..-va ..,.. wtiite. R.R.-Rl&ht band San Jun C.JIUtrano dr. Xlnt coDd, $15,900. 137-4100 49M5 I I cau Patrick, 552Ml4 ltHPOUCHI 356COWI la excellent eondlUon with factory i:hrome wheels. (OIM). MUST SEE!!! SADDL84CI YAU.IT IMPOttTS 131·2040 4tMt49 97'0 • •••••••••••••••••••••• •SAAi• 1'11 Sui. from $S"5. (ocm&I). lAaH dealer di.red. We are DOW t.akinl re· eervaticlm foe the "turbo car'~!• llACH IMPORTS 1973 tllT, elec. tun roof, MSDOVESTREET alloy rims, AM/FM. S· (Near MacArthur Blvd. spd, lo mt, muat sell. 6:JambcneRoad). SLUOOocotfer. ~ NEWPORT BEACH lS&O. Good cond. New pnt, 7l2-0tOO rtit enc: AM·FM 8-trk, Torofa 97'5 llillcb lirel. 21J.t12-m1 •••••••••••••••• ••••••• . -. 'n Cell ca GT. 5·•Pt liftbec:k, silver, alr, sine cond, lo mi 'S, Be5t otf I mustaell. P/P,sa-trJa 53295 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 1111• tre<lilll••d •4 ' I\,\ HUN 'l""'.-!OH•t .. (~ 'T7 Celica lfAbact, lo mi, xlntcond. "9&-0168 or ~2872 52395 81ll MAXEY TOYOTA •••••••• '" .. 11•4 141 1'>\\ HUN f1N C,10NltA(.H WHALE OF A -SALE WE'RE UP TO OUR HUBCAPS IN TRUCKS! lO.ilDfO [~. "'"' '1ld<o e ~ 4 ......, .._ .......... ,,...,,:::.:;:. """'dlloc 59 , .. ::..:"• -.... ' . , ~ c:.vo ~ ta., ri.111,:r--..., c-. lifo . .. .. ,_ ...... ,._.:: --,., .. -Moo........ . IJ ........ ........__ ~ .liia. ... """'· -.., .....!.'"·•---. ............. _,,. -..... ....... .. _.._,.,~··· .. ,.. Check the example shown here and keep in mind, it's not just a "l of a Kind leader." We have super deals this week on ALL trucks in stock! CHOOSE f ·ROM:" ._,,,~ ,....,.._ LONGBEDS • .5 SPEEDS ;-. ~-~1111a~"""~~~--~n1.~'=6~·::"J SRS's • CAB & CHASSIS • RV!s BAHA CONVERSIONS • CAMPER SHELLS Ev.,-y ca' and truck In"'",..._. lnnntory hn been rwduc.dAurlnw our "Wh•I• of• Sale .. ! MAR9UIS $1:~ j1745 SALE PRIC! 8llf # 1978 TOYOTA COROLLA- ~,.,.=--~~ SJ645 l'IMIN.~761) MO. cash or ~tnde rn worth 1500 u down pmt. andl78.75 '* montti IOI' M month• Incl. tmc. llcenM and all flnence • ; . ctwgea. ~ pmt, pnce, 14114.00. APft ~~1~ Of It ~ pmar to pay oaeh $30 5 ...-tu and , li«*IMI .... · • 1978 TOYtTA ' CELICA I~ AM-FM ...... ,.,. s4995 cllc '"*-· ~ .. lft.. •lrUment1. tlnlld g1...., 1vto- m111c tr ansmlU Ion. • s2995 Bill MAXEY TOYOTA •1111 It• •I . ; I•' I•' •4"'""' .. ~·~··· tt 5 1095 it VW RABBIT. AM /PM cass, new Urea. 32,ooO ml. $3250/bet. '92-37Sl .4 lt'10 VW Pop.top caiQPtJ unditr 10,000 mi ca a~ -s: lach; All·Fll tape.~ &tru: new •tarter, brb. clu&cb, Uree; l2400/b$t otr; 644-2071 Ruu '81Baja BUlr. reblteni. DU : ==--1 Plint. a poke whls • 04 .. ,,...... 9767 tlres,$1'50.~ t ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 vw. good ccnd. $700. ~ lt'U Tri umph Spit-orbeat.olfer. " flre·Z0,000 m llea, 9SS-3619aft.Spm. :· AM/FM 1tereO tape It In ~ excellent condition 1; mechanically, inside It out. $3,300. Call $48-5 atler6pm. YolbwCllpll ••••••••••••••••••••••• HELPf w. NMd .., ... for al ... 71 VW1 IO we'I .... ft worfll ,.. ........ .. HADOUR VOLKSWAGEN MMocWll-ColonA•...._ ..... .. . t .. I I l. r -'.!,;!ii Nll~\ION VllJO IMPOlllS . . . 8 11 I! ·I' ·I 0 ~ I 7 0-1 :"H-• ., ,,.. VI~;;;; .. 1'117 AMC GREMLIN CPE. 6 o yl .• power .steering, radio &, !heater. air cond. This beauty has less than 11.000 'mlles. CSer . !A7A486E167$40). 1976 AMC PACER 6 cy l., 3 speed, with r adio , heo1er, and ·AIR •COND. too. (Lie. 097PIR). s99 DH. -~cl·---· monlllo Oft ~ crd. TOlll-..... !Nlt.&k tUM.lt. OelwNO ~­lno. lu, lio. & lnt., .. t. Annual ,_.,. flat• 17.12. LINCOLN MERCURY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BRARIREW 1978DAISUR 561~! 1078 batsun 8210 2 Doof -This ear Is fully equipped Including undtrMal, IP8Qlal detail, body side IJ'Oldlnos & radio. -38 month open •IJd le .... EJlad lease payment la $68.78 per month plus tax. Vehicle value ...:. 13529.95. Pay • ooty $142.91 lldvwice paymenta to take dell'*Y on a,pproved cred•L Total Of' tease PlYrllent -12886.08. Oc>tion price It~ of , .... -11938.71. (365018~ " ln'Difea yori to a USED ·CARJ.SALE on the most popular car.a in _Southem Og,lifornia at possibly the LOWES~ PRICES anywhere. . .t • . ~QUALITY · ••• COMPUTER TESTED AUTOMOBILES ==~ _,.IL Cllm'rm m•J Plllllllll• DllY 1111. ~CASH RRICES.OR BANK TERMS AYAIUBLE ON~:vm · ~ NOT JUST 011£ SPECIALLY ADVERTISED CAR, IUT OYER 100 JO CHOOSE FROM . 1976 CHIV. VEGA WON. Auto., oir condlffon. ..... .... 26,000 ..... (l7MI) ) I • New '78 El Camlnol • Power stftrlng •nd br•kes. 1111o. tr•ns- • mission, hHfer/dtfroster. badc·UP llghts, • etc. Or<Mr yOl,irs f'Owl ! ORiy _$4998 : '15 AUDt fOJl Oftt ow-C¥ wllll 111 IN «tt1tl LO#. IOW INlft. (.olH ICA I. ONLY ONl'f tl7 1!*""'91_. -mile 111 Hlfn 1.iw1w coavtili f.fOP ,. ......... 011•• llNCOlH MEICUIY 16IOOleodi~ .... ~ ..... 1424144 1917 T-BIRD OM~Y 5399 ... Ol!---0.. Loaded wltet option•. v~~ Mltomdc. AM/Fiw etereo. crul•• o6rilrof. dlt ....... pWl'.wifldoM,..~ roof. -comfort ... t-. Rell pr.tty earl One Only! ~-tttir• ~~== :,a ........ I > LOADED · .C8535) (3K47F8M481"17l- . With vlnyt tcp, air cond., tilt wheel, redlo, pwr. steering - brakes -wlndowl. heater, bucket eeata. (338AXN). ?6 AMC GREMLIN Air condlttonlnv. radio. heater • ..c • aoeed. CDEE429). . Automatic, air oond .• pwr. ateertng & brakes, radio. heater & ' low miles. (872TRS). Ph.II Tax & License . .BRAllD NEW 1978· GMC % TON ·LONGBED PICKUPS (TC0148Z510345) (TC0148Z511656) IMMEDIATE DEUYERY $ -· . . Brand Hew 1978 CIVIC CVCC 4SPEED HATCHBACK Brcmcl Hew 1978 BUllDNEW 1978 GMC CABALLEROS With power steering, power brakes. turbo hydromatlc. gauges. radials & much morel (5W80A8Z500822) (5W80A8Z5008!8l . IMMEDIATE· DELIVERY $ •75 GMC 114 TOM YAM ve. automatic. fYW'. steering & brakes. air c:ond .. radio. heater & low mllea. (1A04548). •77 CHEVY 114 TOM PICKUP 4 speed, radio, heater, pwr., steering. tinted QIH1. 1tep bumper & low miles. (123436). Plus Tax & Ucense .. 54577 Plus Tax & Ucenae. BrcillCI New 1978 . cmc BRAND' NEVI . 197·8 . PLYMOUTH ARR09• s37 w ·~-·-kel seats. 4 speed Reclining buc I side mouldlnos. AM transmiSSlon. vinY I r res. tini.d glass. radio. wsw ra.~ ~I adjustable steen•.,, I OUfSTANDING·. SAVINGS ·ON 51~E USED GARS 1975 PEUGEOT 504 SEDAN 4 cylinder. automatic, .ir conditioning, radio, •heater. whitewall tlr•, sunroof. lie. t 677PHY. 1971 DATSUN 210% 2 +2 6 cyl .. '4 apeed, air conditioning. power tnkM. AM /PM lt8f90 radio. hMter, mag wheelt, bOchet eeats. (939MXV). Landau V1nyl root. autom.ttc transmission, 3eO V-8 engine AM raidte. tinted Of-. ~ steenng & disc bnlkes, r8d al tires V-8, automltlc. elr condftlonlog, power steering. power tnlc-. '*'lo. Miter, whlteMll tires. vlnyt l"QC)f. (2811feN>. . V-8, automatic. air conditioning, POW9f' atMrfng radio, healer. wtt1tewall tires. (701AGT) • VOL 71, NO. A8, 4 SECTIONS, <t6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' f ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ l ~ Praise Gi"fm, Too 'I 'Nixon Did It All' -Haldeman NEW YORK CAP> -ll.R. Haldeman, once Richard Nix· on 's a lter ego, went public on Watergate with a single, strident statement: "Former President Nixon's memoirs will be published In May." ll theme: Nixon, the president, r was behind it all. Not all of tbe book ls ac- cusatory. Haldeman (1) praises Nixon for his mastery of foreign policy, (2) discusses a tensely declined invitation to join the Soviet Union in a nuclear attack on China, and (3) dwells at length on Henry KtsslngeT. According to Haldeman: -Nixon "himself caused those burglars" to break into Watergate. -Nixon "was in on the cover. up from Day One." -Nix~n may have submiUed HIGHLIGHTS AND REACTION TOBOOK-02 to blackmail frorh Charles W. Colson. -Nixon threatene d to embarrass the CIA if it refused to participate in the cover-up. -Nixon "simply began to e r ase all of the Watergate material from the tapes when he slarted to worry that they might be exposed." Without offering a ny new evidence. Ha ldeman makes these conjectures in a new book, "The Ends of Power ." rushed to bookstores today -10 days ear- ly -because of a headlong media race to publish excerpts. The only reaction kom Nix· on' s seaside villa in San Clemente. was a one sentence * * * The Insights it offers, however, are strengthened by the sour~. Haldeman was at Nixon's side from 19G2 until the heat of Watergate forced bis res- ignation as White House chief of staff llyearslater. "l was never a social friend or Nixon's," he writes. But he was "closer than anyone else pro- fessionally." Says Haldeman: "Few men in all his tory have had the privilege of being raised ~ high as I was; and few have bad the tragedy of being brought as low.'' But elsewhere he recalls once saying out loud: "Nixon was the weirdest man ever to live in the White House." Other accounts have laid tbe genesis of the June 17 . 1972. Democratic Party headquarters burglary to the eagerness of Nixon re-election alficiala to gather political lntelUeence. No <See NIXON, Pa&e A!) .. * ·-* Post Won't Divlllge 'Normal' Sources NEW YORK (AP) -The Washlneton Post's editor say1 his newspaper obtained portions of "The Ends of Power" by H.R. Haldeman al no cost beyond nOhnaltreporting expenses, while two other newspapers say a mysterious woman caller offered to sell them the book. "The story is infinitely less complicated than you suspect," editor Benjamjn C. Bradlee said Tbunday night in a telephone interview in which be. denied receiving a call from the woman. ''We got it from someone whose name you ~on't know, whoee af. filiation you 4@n 't know. Nor bJrve you ever heard of them.•• A THE POST PUBLISHED IN Thursday's editions whal it said was material from the latter two.thirds of the book, prompUnc early publication of the 352-page volume it.self -whim sells for $12.95 -in addition tob.ig~prlced ucerpts. Suspicions of the. publisher, Times Books, and the Times syndication service tentered oa a poisUble security breach at the Scranton, Pa., press where it was produced. In part. the suspicions were based on the Post's statement that lt had not obtained all the book, which was bound from printed pages collected into ll .secUons called "signatures." ALmOUGB mREE GUAKl>S OVEUAW the bind.in&, ex· ecutives believe ''The Ends of Pow~r" waa most vulnerable lo the .. thell of substantial portions In sequence at tbla staae. Further, the New York Times said today that a "Nancy Collins" checked out of a Scranton motel Thursday. Nancy Collins of is the Washington Post reporter credited with getting the book. Thereporterdeclinedcomment. Speculation about a Scranton source was also f\leled bf a telephone call the Times received one niibt lut week. A Times editor who requested that bis name not be used said the woman caller told him she would give the book to "the biebeat bidder." o.111 .................. CITY OFFIC1ALS SHOW FEDERAL AID DAMAGE AT HUNTINGTON TRAILER PARK Mayor Ron Pattlnaon, Councilman Rlcharct Siebert, Federal Gove"lm•nt'• Greg ~hnelder• Disaster Aid Readied· Cemer to Open Monday in Huntington A disaster assistance center for Huntington Beach victims of last week's storm ls scheduled to open Monday at the clubhou.a• at the Huntington-by-the-Sea Trailer Village. • Federal and state officials will staff the center to provide loans and relief services to the clt,'s storm victims. Clty otnclals also will be on hand to provi(fe counseling and assistance for low-interest loans, tern porary housing and un-employment assistance. The disaster center, al 21851 Newland Street, will open at 9 a.m. and will be in operation through Wednesday. The Huntington-by-the-Sea tr-ailer park, which bore the brunt ol tom~~e conditions, Naked Man Rapes Woman At Knifepoint A bearded man, wearing only a knife sheath belt, broke Into a South Huntington Beach con- dom lnhun and repeatedly raped a 32 -year-old woman al knifepotnt Thursday, police re- ported. 'lllesuspectescaped. The nude rapist entered the home through a sliding gtaas door •t 4:30 a.m. He threatened the woman with the knife and assaulted her, according lo police Sgt. Dave Miller. Mlller said the rapist dis- cuued bis personal problems with the victim durlni the .hou.r-Jon g attack. Police said U\e victim's five- year·old son, aaleep In another roomt wb n~molested during the attack. The woman was treated at Co~ta Mesa Memorial Hospital and released, police aald. The raplat waa described as.a dark-haired male ln hls 20s, about five feet, nine Inches tall. alfd ~ef&hlng 16S pounds. was lnspected Thursday by Greg Schneiders, White H-ou~e dire4ta{ of QtdaJ flOjectl, State and tec1era1 disaster of. fieiall and several ~ity ~ memben ablo toolt9e tour. Schneiders said U.at the extent of danlage wu •'treJDeftdOus" and that be woul4 ten the President so when be returns to Washington. The trailer park Is included ln the Southern California diaaster covered In declaratiops by Gov. Brown and the President. Storm victims wlll be eligible for state and federal loans of one percent interest for the fiot Sl0,000. 1be int.en.st then cllmbl to three percent. · <.;1vll Vetense worker Marcia Waddill Trial Harbin said that many residents of the parJc are senior cfUzens =-~--~~~.,., ·~be saicl Urat.: thos~ Yj~s wtlo l•D 1flt6 th« ea\ee~ WQialcl be eliaible f()r personal gt•nb'. TweQ\J·foul' mobUe 'homes were desln>)'ed and 45 JbQre suffered major damate when winds up to 90 mlles per hour rampa1ed through the park shortly before 2 a.m. last Fri- day. Civil Defense Director George Thyden said damage thro~out the c•ty is estimated at $1.2 million. . He said that when damaies to content.a are t.illied, the losses are expected to reach $3 million. , Pat~l!;>gist Says Jn/ant Had Li/e By TOM BAaLEY Of-~----A patboJoeiat teslified Tburs· day that the baby tbe pro- secution e.lle&es 'Was stranaled by Dr. Willia.., Balltet Waddill last March .2 lived for at leaat 30 minutes ln U\e Weatmlnster Commwait,y Hos'pital nunery. Dr. Kurt Benlucbke, identified lo Orange County Superior Court as a naUooal.ly ucocnhed auth.orUy od patholOI)', told the jury tbat the infant Waddill t~llf~ to abort had died from lack of ~1m. , The Ut San Dle«o l~\~r teatlfled for thel>toHeUUoa that a bruise on £be neck of the 28- week infant was inflicted after the un~. 18-year-old mother delivered the fetus and before its death. It is alleged that Waddill, 44, of Huntington Harbour. strangled j.be b•by when be re· aUced that the saline be irtjccted into' the mot.her had failed lo abQrt the chlld. Tb.e de(ense oontenps that the lnfant '"9'\'er li\'e4, ln term.a ol DleQ.Jndul life and thllt Waddill c•nno\ legally be (h1uged w.ltb murder. Examining sljdes •• be teatified.L.. Benlnchke told pros· ectltor Kebert "Cbattetton that there w«e othet bruba on the baby'• l\ecik, whfth he bad' been unable to ldentlty ln terms of their orilin • th time, they w~re.}nftiot~, ' i Benlraeb~e told Oh•tte~ that he ~d ~ ,4eflne what <See~_, •a1e AZ) Fl&mes Ili 'Bome ~ The lives of a Weatminster worn an and he r five young ch.ild.ren were saved late Tbw. day night by two 21·year-old men, a city Fire Department spokesman said today. The twp men fought their waf through n•mes and smoke to . rescue Diana Woodtuff, 34, and her children ranetng ln age froDl l 11 mon~Jle to 8 years. Mrs .. Woodru!f was treated for first I degree burns on tbe neck and shoulders at Westmlnster Communlty Hospital. One of f\er children was treat- ed at the scene of the fire for smoke inhalation, as were the two meJl, Larry Dykes of 1 Bellflower and Jay Joyce of Santa A~. · The Fire Department . spokesman said the two men · were visiting friends nearby when they heard a window break at Mrs . Woodruff's apartment, 13751 Edwards St. They naabed lo the scene and brought Mrs. Woodruff and her children lo safet¥ ._ The fire caus4<1 an estimated $14,000 in damage. Investigators · were problhg its cause today. Fourteen firefighters responded to the 11:35 p.m. blaze and kept it from spreading to other apartmen'-8. All-Spinks llating Only Third Place NEW YORK (AP> -The ) Muha m rn ad Ali-S pl.n.k.s.. beavyweJght championship fight on CBS came in third on the all- time list of television ratings for boxing, a network spokesman said today. CBS esUmates that 65 million people saw at least six minutes of the fight. The show drew a 34.4 rating, me1tnjn.1;w.4 percent of TV sets ln lhe nauoo were turned in, and a fil share, m~aning 51 percent. of the aets in use were tuned to • the (igbt, the spokesman said. Tbe en1lre show ran for 3~ hours Wedne&Qy night and in-.. ! . eluded Utree preliminary bouts ... (RelatedatorY, ~) l The most watched boxing .J show ever was last September's l All-Eatnle Shavers bout on NBC. It drew a 37.3 rating and 57 share. Second place was NBC's showing of the Ali- Ricllard .Dunn bout in March 1916, wblch had a 3S rating and 53 share. The ratings for Ali-Spinks Im- proved conslderably once the main event becan and avera&ed abQut a 43.3 raUng over the last 1'12 hours. Quadruplets Born OSAKA, Japan (AP) -A 29-. year-old Wotl\an gave birth to I ciuadropleta at a hospital bere I today. 'Pbyslcians said lbe ~ mother, her two boys and two , girl.a, were ln good condition. 1 The hospital decllnM to reveal i the woman:tt4entny. '. OAll. Y f"flOT H~ B1•08 B~a Ea °' ....... ~ ..... Tbere is a rnud dump in HWlt· lnat.on Beach tbal Is 110 big that it could 1upply all the children m the city with enouih material for jllUonaolmudpies. Jobless Totals Increase When taken at face value, state figures show Orange County's unemployment rate jumped from a record low of 3.9 percent in December to 5.7 percent in January. But State Employment Development Department <EDD) omcials said their December estimate that only 32,900 county residents were un· employed should not. be taken at face value. Instead, they revised December's unempl oyment calculations to show the county's unemployment rate was 4.4 percent, not 3.9 percent, and the number of unemployed persons was 42,600 rather than 32,900. Whatever the December counts were foul weather and post-tourist season layoffs in January shoved Orange County's unemployment figures upward. EDD's monthly labor statistic report based on a new method of calculating unemployment set Orange County's unemployment at 5. 7 percent and estimated there were 54,400 unemployed county residents who wanted jobs. Hard bit by the rains that dampened the county in January were construction and agricultural workers. EDD's figures show that s.400 constr uction jobs were lost between December and Januaey while the number of agricultural jobs dropped by 1,100. State labor analysts also noted there was a decline of 6,000 re- tail trade jobs between December and January, a drop caused by the layoff of wortera hired for the Christmas season. Those employment setbacks notwithstanding, EDD tJgures Orange County to be Jn far better shape than lts nelchbor· ing counties. HBProgram Guarantees Future Jobs The Hunting ton Beach Employment ond Training Center Is recruiting candidates for a tr aining program that guarantees future employment. Man power Director Bob Cun, ningbam said that appllcants will be paid $3.30 pet' hour while they go through a 90-day tralnine pro. gram in landscape maintenance. Upon completiOJ of the pro- gram , the clus graduates will move into $720 per month jobs with the c ity under the C omprehensive and Em ployment Training Act <CETA). Cunningham said those com· .,1eUn1 the program will be put to work in city parks and In median strips on streets. To be eligible for the prolJ"8Di, a HunUn1ton Beach resident must have been unemployed for the past lS weeks. Interested people can apply at the Employment and Training Center, S38 Malo St., no later than Feb. 27. The class, which will be of- fere d through Coastline Cmmunlty College, will begin March 1. There are openine for about 30 particlpants, Cun·. hlngbamaaid. ... DAILY PILOT acret of lL And lt consists large- ly of sticky, eooey and oily w aaLes from pasL oil drilllna oeeratlonll. o.i.., ............... LOSES COURT BID Supervisor Diedrich DA. Hicks To Remain On Case By GARY GRANVILLE OI .. o.llY ,.... ltefl Orange County Superior Court Judge John Flynn refused Thursday t.o oust District At- torney Cecil Hicks from the bribery p~ecution of indicted county Supervisor Ralph Diedrich and Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose. Judge Flynn ruled that Diedrich-Rose attorneys failed in a two-day bearing to show that Hicks and his staff are prej· udiced against his clients. The ruling means that unless Diedrich and Rose successfully appeal his conclusion that it will be members of the DA's staff wbo will prosecute them on bribery charges brought agalnSt them lut December in a Grand Jury indictment. It was Rose and Diedrich'• contention that Hicks and bis. staff should be ousted as their prosecutors beca05e they a.re prejudiced against them. But after hearing two days of testimony, Judge Flynn t.enely announced that the defense at. t.orneys bad failed to show there was prejudice or, for that matter, the appearance of pre- ju.dice.: Last November, another Superior Court judge dealing with another indictment lnvolvlng Diedrich and three co-defenitants found otllerwise ln a political ir- regularity case. Judge Philip Schwab removed the DA from the prosecution of that case after findi.ng that while· there had been no showing or real prejudice there was an ap- pearance of prejudice that might undermine public confidence ln the judicial process. T hursday, however, Assistant District Attorney Michael Capizzi argued that lhere are few similatilies between the cases. ''The charges are different The defendants are different. And the case Is different," Capin::l aaid as he urged Juctce Flynn to reject the defense move to oust the DA as the bribery case prosecutor. Ca phzi characterized Diedrich'• testimony during the hearing as "lacking credlblllty." T he Fullerton supervisor bad teattfled that In a aeries of clandestine meetings with Depu.. ty District Attorney Oretta. Seara and her husband, that Mrs. Sears said Hicks wu out "to get" him. Mrs. Seara denied maklnf that 1tatem•nt and contrad cted otber f eaturea of Dledrlcb 'a version of tbe1r meeUn1. Capt.al allo point~ out that It was the Board ot Supervllon and not Dledrfob actln• alone tbat ill ms and mt toot a series of actlona faulted by Hicks. And1 Capinl •aid, some of lhOH dedt(Of\I by the board did not directly involve the DA 's of- fice. "Id youn1aten. The property, owned by the Stever110D Brothers Co. of Hunt· in&ton Beach, ls located near recent rakn ua wind.storm. Earthen wallli or dikes con taining the sludge were eroded and water on the mud dump'!> !>urface passed through in places onto nearby streets. Mudslides also were detected in the dikes. ke ZambOry said Thursday th the dikes had n potent1ill for outnaht rallur~. "They were leaking terribl.Y.'' he said F~SD Proposal ]flayed Marie Buckland, a nearby tes- ident, said she bu fought the mud dump battle for years but had given ur because of an al· leged lack o responsa from dty offlc:lals. • "I aald I would never eet in· volved again," •be sold, 11until I saw drivers sliding through tbe mess on llamlllon Avenue," lht1 said. Parents Rap $3.3 Million Price Tag on Plan "I think I would be just as / guilty as the city if som~ were kJlled and 1 just sat here By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. OI .. Oelly P11ft MMf Parents criticized a $3.3 million price tag proposed for a new Fountain Valley (elementary) School Distrlct master plan presented to the public for the first time Thurs- day nleht. The plan includes a S.70,157 proposed jl.D\lor high school con- version and closure of two schools by 1981. Parent Bob Edwards of 1~2 Redwood St. called the plan "fia· cally Irresponsible" ana tc>id the school board "we would be uatpg money we don't have.•• District officials said Jast month cub reserves are at an all-time low. Orange County Education Department officlala said dl.ltrict cub reserves total about $60,000. • Edwards also pointed-to a dis· trlct altl"vey last year that sflowed 51 percent of the par-ents polled wanted no change in the current kindergarten through eig h t h grade school or· 1anization. Parent Jim Bay, of 8715 Sbannoo River Circle, rapped the plan'& cost and the ••inexcusable wait"forfLDaocialinformaUooon the proposal. The school board has held two other public bearings on the pro- posed plan. No cost estimates were available until Thursday night. B ay also ·terrned the plan "political" and said it was de· signed .. to keep everybod y happy." Bay also told the school board, .. The plan takes no position but offers whatever you want and that will cost more. It's typical of bureaucracy." Bay and other parents criticized the proposed junior high school's diverslfied classes. Parents said more "a.ding and writin& cluaa should be offered i n stead of ahop, home econ9mics, forei1n lasscuaao and other 1'llocl·baslc" courses. Superintendent BIU Plaster defended the need for a junior high scbool. He said the mast.er plan would allow teachers to spend more time on basic sub- jects and not •'be Interrupted by .. F~P9fleAJ NIXON ••• one bas come as close as Haldeman in placing Nixon at the planning stage. NlllOD, he writes. "sometimes seemed to lose touch wtth reall· ty" Qn matters pertaining to in· dust,rialist Howard Hughes, wbom he blamed for bl• election defeat.a in 1SleO and 1982. And the president long suspected that Lawrence F. O'Brien was a paid Hucbes lobbyist while servin« as Democratic Party chairman. "I believe It Is almost certain that Nixon asked Colson t.o help him 'nail' O'Brien," Haldeman writes. "Collon naturally turned to Hunl And Hunt tried to do it by tapping O'Brien's telephone at the Watercate. '' E. Howard Hunt. a reUred CIA a 1ent with a lone string of clandestine aaalgnments, was Colson'* protege at the Whit& House and the Nl"on re-election committee. He and G. Gordon Liddy, the election committee's lawyer in charge ot pollUcal in- tem 1ence, recruited the five bur8laJ"I who ware cautbt inside W ater11te and they were convict· ed with them. Coleon denied Haldeman's char1ea that he and Nixon or· dered the burglary. "False, it just didn't happen that wq ... Tbere was probably the m01texhamtbei.nvestJ1aUon In the history of the Republic to determine l( that bau>pened and the inf.U1attoe determined that lt did 11otb.appen," he said:l'hurs· dayinanABC.TVlntervtew. bus schedules." The proposed junior high school would allow students to learn faster or slower than others•to receive an "equitable education." . School board rnembers Snaff Trial scheduled another meettng ~ the proposed master plan Feb. 23 at 7:30 p.m. in the district Of· fices at the corner of Newland Street and Talbert Avenue. Officials said a fmal decision on the plan is due March 2. and did nothing about il." · added. Mrs. Buckland, who has com· plained of odors a.n.d traffic haurds, said she would be satisfied only when the dump is com plelely filled with solid material. But officials say fJllinC mi&bt co$t a million or more dollars. Witness Admits Nude Photography Meanwhile, representative$ from the California Regional Water Control Board are at- tempting to work out solutions with the city. Excess w~ters that caused pressure on the dlkes ls bemg drained into the sewer system. A channel also is bein& de· veloped to take water to less' concentrated areas of the sump. By KATHY CLANCY OI • o.llY f'tlM IUft .. A prosecution witness in the I trial or a Co6ta Mesa man 8C· cuaed of ploWng to torture and dismember two women admit· ted Thuraday she had posed nude for defendant Fred Berre Doug Lu. Diane Smith Brown al hr:sl testified in Oran1e County Superior Court that she refused Douglas' orrers to pose for pornographlc photos. But when pressed by defense attorney Terry Giles , Mrs. Brown admitted being photo· graphed nude with a Polaroid camera by Douglas while the pair were on an overnight trip to Las Vegas last May. Mn. Brown surprised the de· fense by testifying that she felt threatened last April by a gun· toling Douglas when she agreed to t ake part in a so-called lesbian bondage film session that allegedly was lo end with the dismembering of two porno models. She said the threat occurred on a trip to the desert April 18 when Douglas purportedly dis- cussed former film-making sessions oo this propertyj Mrs. Brown testified that Douglas told her "the girls were tortured and made to do un- natural acts." Later, as they overlooked a ravine on the desert property, she said, "He continued to tell me that once the photographs were taken the girls were taken up there and tortured further and dismembered." "He said that two bQdies were buried there," said Mrt.. Brown. a former employee of a bar the 54-year -old Doug l as had operated. Police later, however, failed to find any bodies. · "He said I could participate or l could become one of the persons buried up there." she continued. "lie had lhe eun tn bis hand. l told him I would participate." Later, she said, s he told Douglas she would not take part. After the lestamon y Giles asked tbat Mrs. Brown's statements be stricken' from the record. He charged that pros· ecutor William Morrisey ap~ parently ''intended t.o prosecute by surprise." . . Giles contended the deputy district attoruey bad violated a court order which said the de· fenae would be given copies of reports dealing with the case. Giles also objected to other parts of Mrs. Brown's testimony which~ he said caught him by surprise. <> Those included statements she attributed to Douglas that he had a contract due in November for five porno-torture films and that Mrs. Brown would be paid $1 ,000 for each session in which she took part. Morrissey, however, areued successfu\)y that he bad just learned ol that testimony in a Wednesday evening telephone conversation with Mrs. Brown. As a result, Judge Mason Fenton said he could see no evidence that the information wai; purposely withheld from Giles and it would be admitted for the present. During questioning, Giles ac· cused Mrs. Brown of "changing your testimony to nt what you thought the police wanted lo hear after you had bad time lo learn about the case." Mrs. Brown admitted she wanted to cooperate and that police at first had arrested her as an accomplice. But she said her testimony regarding the desert trip-was factual. She could not r ecall w1lh which police officer she dis- cussed the gunpoint desert session or the contracts. It "'asn 't contained in police tape recordings of her statements. she uid, because &be off~red thal information the day after the recordings were made. The ba;maid testified that she be lieved Douglas when he purportedly said two bodies were buried on his desert property. Yet. she said, she did not believe two would-be porno models were in any danger of being tortured or killed when she and Douglas solicited their services in a Costa Mesa bar. Slayton Gordon, 18, one of the two said simulated lesbian acts and'slmulated bondage were dJs· cussed during the meeting last s pring but torture wu not mentioned. Miss Gordon said s he was hesitant to agree to take part in the porno film 595sion, however, and refused to name a date the filming could take place . And tests are being made before reinforcing the dikes to make thein leak-proof. Zambory said that, during the height ot last l''nday•s tornado- hk e winds, wave action was de- tected in the sump and water was lappiog at the top of the dike at Hamilton. He said the material ts like quicksand or a "bag ooze." If the dikes were breached, the material could spread and cause substanUal cleanup costs, he said. Ile said the most major con- cern, h owever, would be ecological if the material washed into storm drains. The site was the dumping ground for oil drilling wastes un- til 1971. At that time. those operations were halted when the area was declared a public nuisance, Mrs. Buckland said. S he said that solid fi ll material is still being deposited. She wants the city to monitor the activity more closely. Haldeman's Book May Be Best Seller WASHING TON CAP) -The city that spawned the Watergate scandal d1splayed a great thirst to read the latest book about it. but because of distribution prob- lems, no copies were to be had im- mediately. When word got out that H.R. Haldcman's "The Ends of Power" was to go on sale today instead or the previously an· nounced publication date of Feb. 27, local bookstores were swamped by telephone callers and prospective buyers. At Trover Book Shop, the books tore nearest the White House, the manager told a re· porter: "I've got money already on more than 50 copies. The p,hone calls are driving me crazy." Many stores sent employees to the wareboie of Distract News Co. in the surburbs to pick up copies. District News is the sole local distributor. • PASSWORD ••• A good word passed aroond about a business Is Invaluable. A bad word can be · unfortunate. Our growing. success In ttie past 25 yelrs has been due to the "good words" and referrals sent to us by our customers. No amount of advertising can replace a personal recommendation. We are not Infallible. but we are working towards that goal by giving our customers the best service and quality passible. DEN'S , ••••••••••••••••• 1 ~··"·installation· cu6tom ilraperiss linoleum • ~ IOOr COSTA MESA. CALIP. 92621 • ,HONE 646-:-4131 -646·23.5.S 1 l VOL. 71 , NO. -48, -4 SECTIONS, -46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI ftORN IA TEN CENTS t I Planners Nix Mason· intersection that has no lralfic signal. T h e I rvi n e Planning Comm ission has rejected -for ·the second time a proposed The com mission vole was 3·1, with Lowell Johnson favoring the route. trail would increase the overall safety or the ar ea because it would take bicyclists off the on- street trails along University Drive, where the speed limit is 55 miles per hour. bicycle trail through Mason Regional Park off Campus Drive near UC Irvine. The planners said Thursday the trail would be uns afe, because il would require riders t.o cross University Drive at an The c ity Bicycle Trails Committee and Transportation Commission had. recorqmended approval, each on 3·1 votes. Those groups argued that the The p oli ce d e pa r t m e nt advised aeainsl the trail unless a traffic signal is installed at either of the proposed crossings I Hftldelllan Says Nixon to· Blallle .1 I NEW YORK (AP) -H.R. H aldeman. once Richard Nix-on's alter ego, went public on Wate rgate with a single, strident them e : Nixon, the president, was behind 1t all. According lo Haldeman: 1 -Nixon ··himself caused 1those burglars" to break into jWatergate. Nixon "was in on the cover- P from Day One." -Nixon may have submitted blackmail from Charles W. olson. * * * -N i xon threat e n e d to em barrass the CIA if it refused lo participate in the cover-up. Nixon "simply began lo HIGHLIGHTS AND REACTION TOBOOK-02 erase all of the Waterga te m aterial from the tapes when he started to worry that they might be exposed.'' Without offe ring any new * * * evid ence, Haldem a n m akes these conjectures in a new book, "The Ends of Power." rushed to bookstores today -10 days ear- ly -because or a headlong medi a race to publish excerpts. The only reaction from Nix- on 's s eas ide vill a in San Clemente. was a one sentence statement : "Former President Nixon 's m e moirs wi ll be publi shed in May." Nol all of the book is ac- cui>alory. Haldeman ( 1) praises <See NIXON, Page A2 ) ·Post Won't .Divulge Riley Asks 'Normal' Sources DA to Probe . NtW YORK (AP) -The Wasblngton Post's editor says his 1 newspaper obtained portions of "The Ends of Power" by H.R. Haldeman at no cost beyond normal reporting expenses. whlle two other newspapers s ay a mysterious woman caller offered lo sell them the book. . "The s~ory ls infinitely less complicated than you suspect, .. editor. BenJamin. C. Bradle_e said Thursday ni&ht In a telephone 1nterv1ew 1n which be denied receiving a call from the woman. ""!e .got it from someone wh<l5e name you don't know, whose af- fih allon you don't know. Nor have you ever heard of them:· THE POST PUBLISHED IN Thursday's editions what it said was m aterial from the latter two-thtrds of the book. prompting i early publication of the 352-page volume ltselr -which sells for $12.95 -in addition to bigh·priced excerpts. Suspicions of lbe . publisher, Times Books, and the Times , syndication service centered on a possible security breach al the , Scranton, Pa., press where it was produced. 1 In part, the s uspicions were based on the Post's statement that it had not obtained all the book, which was bound from printed pages collected into ll sections called "signatures." • ALmOUGll THREE GUARDS OVERSAW the binding, ex- ecutives believe ''The Ends of t>ower" was most vulnerable to the theft of substantial portions in sequence at this stage. Further, the New York Times said today that a "Nancy Collins" checked out of a Scranton motel Thursday. N!lncy Collins is the Washinltt<?n Post reporter credited with getting the book. The r eporter declined comment. Speculation about a Scranton sourJ:e was also fueled by a telephone call the Times received one night last week. A Times pditor who requested that bls name not be used said the woman call~r told blm she would give the book to "the highest bidder." THE EDITOR QUOTED HER as saying she was a reporter for. a Scranton news paper, that the newspaper bad rejected the book, that she was angry and that she intended to quit. "It sounded as though it might be real," the editor observed, s aying -Ole woman never called back as instructed. He said the woman who sounded like someone In ber mid-20s and spoke without an accent, gave him a cover name of "Nancy" so that he would know her when she called again. Peter Michelmore, metropolitan editor of the New York Post also said that a woman of similar description called him last week~ SHE SAID THAT SHE OR someone she knew worked at the p~lnter's and that she was auctioning the book in calls to the New York Post, the Washington Post, the Times and the New York Dal- ly News. She did not call back, Micbelmore said. The News aald it did not receive a call. Executives of the two Scranton newspapen, the Times and Tribune, said they would have printed storlH if given the book and _________ <::=See==....BOO::=.: K. Pace A2> 'Violation' Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley said Thursday he will ask the district attorney to "look into" a political rival's charge that Riley's appointee to th e Count y Plannin g Commission has violated state political campaign regulations. "I am going to send the whole thing over lo the district at· tomey to find out what. be <Tom Rogers) is talking about', ... Riley sa id. Rogers is a candidate for the Fifth District supervisorial seat held by Riley. In a letter to Riley, Rogers c harged that Planning Co mmissione r William MacDougall violated campaign regulations when be failed to file a report in Orange County show· ing that he was co-chairman of a fundraising breakfas t !or Democratic State Assemblyman J ohn Knox of Richmond. A statement filed by Knox in Sacramento showed the Sept. 1.2 <See ULEY, Page A!) Three. Really SuspicioWJ Police converged on Irvine High Schoo! al midnight Thurs· day after an anxious resident called about s us picious go- ings·on. "You'd better hurry," the caller told them. "There are at least three or them ... There were exactly three, and arter surprising them, police left the school district employees to continue thelr preparations for a scheduled local appearance Saturday of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. of Univer~ty, at Yale Avenue or Goldenglow Way. The Planning Commission in- itially disapproved the trail last month, but the City Council.or· dered further s tudy. mission reamrmed a city position that the Saddleback Community College District ouaht to pay for stre.et hn· provements along Jeffrey Ro8d, where a branch campu. of the institution is planned. -are the responslblllty of either Ute city cw th• utllily company. T he commlssloo also ap- proved construction of a com· munlty church and a pre.school in the Village of Woodbridge. Con1ideratlon of expansion plans for Christ College, on 115 • acres next to Mason Regional Park, was poatponed to another· meeUng. T he Plannina Commission action sends the matter back to the council. In other business, the ~om· Colle ge district trustees maintain the improvements - curbs, gutters &fld street Uabts Messy Joh in /tlassaehusetts Crews clean up some of the 10,000 gallons of oil that coat three miles of shoreline in Ma rblehead . Mass.. after the stuff was s pilled by the Greek-registered tanker Global Hope, shown in background. The ship r an aground during last week's blizzard. Diedricli .. Fails On Bid to Oust DA Hicks By GARY GRANVILLE OI .. o.lty ,..... Sutt . Orange County Superior Court Judge J ohn Flynn r e fused Tltursday to oust Di•lricl Al· torney Cecil Hicks from the bribery prosecution of indicted county Supe rviso r Ralph Diedrich and Aaaheim architect LeRoy Rose. Judge Fly nl') rul ed that Diedrich·Rose attorneys failed in a two-day hearing lo show that Hicks and his staff are preJ· .udiced against his clients. The ruling means that unless Diedrich and Rose successfully appeal bis conclus ion that it will be members of the DA's 1ta« who will prosecute them on bribery charges brought against them last December in a Grand Jury lndicUnenL It was Rose and Diedrich's contention that Htcks and his staff sl)ould be ousted as their prosecutors because the;y are prejudiced against them. But alter hearing two days of t estimony, Judge Flynn tersely announced that the defense at- torneys had faUed to show there was prejudice or, for that matter, the appearance of pre- judice. Last November, a nother Superior Court judge dealing wilh another indictment involving Diedrich and three co·defendant.s found otherwise in a political Ir- regularity case. J udge Pblllp Schwab removed the DA from the prosecution of that case af}er flndlng that wbile- there had ~ no showing of real. prejudice lh~r• wu an ap- pearance of prejudlc~ that ml&ht undermine public conllde:nce in thejudk ial process .. -(See FAIJ.8, Pa1e A2) State Hit by Thfee Strains BERKELEY CAP> -Outbre~ of various types of influenza in Calilornia have reached the epidemic stage, a state Health Department official said today. Ur. Loring Da les. a physician in the de· partment's infectious disease section, said a flu epidemic <><:curs when tbe nu.mber of deaths are h igher than would be expected normally. Specific figures on flu-related deaths were un· available, but Dales said a level of excess fatalities has been reached. . "There is flu virtually all over the state," he said, including the more common A-Florida and A· Texas strains plus t he new Russ ian flu, which has been reported in six other states. Witness Admits Nude Photography ' By KATHY CLANCY Ot -Oetty ""9t"$tarf A prosecution witness in the t rial of a Costa Mesa man ac- cused of plotting to torture and dismember two women admit· ted Thursday she had posed nude for defendant Fred Berre Douglas. Diane Smith Brown at r1rst testified in Orange County Superior Court that she refused Douglas' offers to pose for pornographic photos. But when pressed by defense attc>rney Terry Giles, Mrs. Brown admitted being 'hoto· graphed nude with a Polaroid camera by Douglas while the pair wue on an overnight trip to Las Vegas last May. Mt1. Brown surprised the de-- fense by testifying that sbe felt threatened last April by a 1un· toling Douglas when she agreed tb talre-vart in a so-called lesbian bondage film session that allegedly was to end with the dismembering of two pC>l"DO models. She said the threat occtated on a trip to the desert ~prtl 18 when Douglas purporte41Y dis- cussed former fllm-m akiDI sessions m this property. M rs_ Brown teatlfltd that Douglas told ber "the girls were tortor ecl and m ade to do un· .natullal acts." ·, 1 • Later, as· lbe~:.:erlooked 'a ravine en the J>C'Opet1.Y, the said, "He COAUn\led to tell me that once the pboto&r•pbs w~re taken the SiJ'l• 1tere ta.ken up there and tortured fUJther and dmnembered-'' ••He ssld that two bOdi .. were barfed tht,._ ••said Mrs. B'°""', a form*' emplofM ol a ~the S•·1 ••r ·old Doucllf bad operated. • • Po\lej J.ltei'. li01fever. failed to t find any bodies. "He sald I could participate or I c ould become one of the persons buried up there," she continued. "He had the gun in his hand. J told him l would participate." Later, she said, she told Douglb she would not take pa.rt. After the testimony Giles a s k e d that Mrs . B r own 's statements be stricken from th~ record. He charged that pros· ecutor William MorTisey ap· parently _.,intended to 1>rosecute by surprise... . Ghea conte'Dded the deputy district attomeY lrad violated a (~TORTURE. Page AZ) Coast Weather Falr through Saturday. Warmer Saturday. Lows tonigbt '7 to 52. Higbs Saturday 68 to 73.. INSIDE TODAY T h• Tr~ou1re1 of 1'uronkbcnntm how /inally orrf'ued bl Loa A~~s.amid much hoopla. The czfribU ti ttufeahcd ift .tOt'fl. ad photot on.P.CJ, l••ex a • I I ~ i S110Wtime in Paris Parisian youngsters make the most of snow covering park in the French capital near the Eiffel Tower Thursday. This was the heaviest snowfall that Paris had re- ceived in more than a decade. Motorists, known for their daring traffic maneuvers. were not nearly as elated over the pres- ence of the white stuff. 35· Teaching Posts OK'd Saddleback Community College District trustees unan- 1 mo us ly have approved 35 teaching positions for the new Irvine campus. ident, ·warned that trustees may t&en be in a position of shifting teachers and even re- considering the new campus. He also questioned whether teachers should be hired when the new facility probably won't be completed in time for it.s scheduled fall opening. three to four months are needed to advertise for and interview teachers for tbe new faclllty. He said prospective employees will be told·that the jobs are uncertain unW the dis- trict' a financial situation is known and the opeJling ol the northern facilit1.ls definite: • -- I TalkS Resllllle· tract 'Nearir.ig Agreement? • W'ASHlNGTON CAP> -Ef· foru to end the 74-day-old national soft coal strike resumed today against the backcround or an informal Carter Fro•PageAI FAILS ••• Thursday, however, Assistant District Attorney Michael Capinl argued that there are rew similariUes between the cases. •'The charges are different. The defendants are different. And the caae is different," Capizzi said as be urged Judge Flynn to reject the defense move to oust the DA as the bribery case prosecutor. Capizzi characterized Diedrich's testimony during the bearing as "lacking credibility." The Fullerton supervisor bad testified that in a aeries of clandestine meetings with Depu· ty District Attorney Orella Sears and her husband, that Mrs. Sears said Hicks was out "lo get" him. Mrs. Sears denied making that statement and contradicted other features of Diedrich 'a version of their meeting. Capizzi also pointed out that it was the Board of Supervisors and not Diedrich acting alone that in 1975 and 1976 took a series of actions faulted by Hicks. And, Capizzi said, some or those decisions by the board did not direcUy involve the DA's of. !ice. adminJstration deadline to get a contract accord by the end of the day. Labor Secretary Ray Manshall met with union officials this morning and planned a aepara~ session wit.ti representaUves or tbe Bituminous Coal Operators AssociaUon before reconventne a jolnt seuion. Marshall, taking the role of chief mediator, kept the parties around the bargaining table nearly continuously from Thurs· day momlng until 2 a.m. today, wben the bargainers recessed for a rest. Marshall said Thursday that his goal to get a settlement sometime today was not a bard· and-fast deadline. But be said: "We don't have long. This thing can't goon." One administration official. amplifying on Marshall's re· marks, said privately today that "we have to be relatively close or at a settlement" by day's end or "it's time to talk about options." He did not elaborate. There was other pressure from the administration, retreating step-by-step in recent · days from its policy of non· intervention in labor disputes. President Carter met with .governors from a dozen states hit bard by the strike. Gov. James Thompson of Illinois said Carter remarked he would personally "step in" -a term that was not explained -if the talks do not result in agreement. The White House dispatched presidential aide Landon Butler to the Labor Department to monitor the negotiations. Taft-Hartley" lodaay or al "any specific time." Sentiment in favor of invokina · the act ia ,tempered by • widespread reeling that miners will Ignore any back-to-wor~ court order lssued under the act. I',.... Page Al CANAL ••• Panamanian plebiscite. The treaties are now being debated in the Senate. He said there may be a legal challen&e ot the treaties because they dispose or lands and ap.. propriate money, acts which un- der the Constitution must be ap- proved by the House ot. Representatives. The treaties are only being voted on by the Senate, all that is required of treaties in general. Veysey also said be believes the treaties weaken the U .S, military poslUon because of the possibility that the passage of' warships will be restricted, and that the treaties unnecessarily give away $7 billion in capital iq •• · vestments and $3.2 billion in cash. Also, Veysey said hts ex-· perience ln running the canal zone leads him to doubt that the proposed commission or five U.S. members and four Panamanian members could ef- fectively administer the zone un· t1I the year 2000. The former congressman also criticized what he called the un- stable and dictatorial gov- ernment of Gen. Omar Torrijos. Before trustees approved the positions, this week, however, Superintendent Robert Lombardi promised the teachers won't be hired unW the district's financial situation is clear and the completion or the new north campus is certain. . Several trustees expressed concern that the Jarvis initiative will pass when it is put before voters June 6. If the initiative is passed, it would cut property laxes but reduce the college's in· come next year. Although opening the new campus on schedule is "absolutely no longer a posslblll· ty," Lombardi said administrators are considering several options in meeting their commitment to residents living in the northern end of the dis· trict. Mexico President's The administration also was beginning to· talk more openly about the possibility or invoking the strike-halting provision of the Taft-Hartley Act. "People are certainly talldng about Taft-Hartley if this effort (the talks) fails, but no flnal de- cision has been made " said one administration official who asked not to be named. "Torrijos knows very little about Political economy. He bas made Panama something like a tropical version of New York Ci· ty," Veysey said. The result, he said, would be that the U .S. would have to bail out Panama in operating the canal within five years. I He said these plans will be presented to truslees later. Wife to Visit LB He said he believes the treaty should not contain a clause it now includes giving Panama the right to veto construction of an alt.ernative canal, even in another coantry. And be said there is no assurance the canal will be maintained as a neutral. waterway. Larry Taylor, board pres· But the superintendent said l'ro• Page AJ The wife or Mexico's President, Jose, Lopez Portillo, will visit two art exhibits on the Orange Coast as part of a day- 1 on g trip through Southern California on Sunday. NIXON BLAMED ••. Nixon for his mastery of foreign policy, (2) discusses a tensely declined invitation to join the Soviet Union in a nuclear attack on China, and (3) dwells at 'length on Henry Kissinger. The Jn1#,gbh it otters, however, a.re streu1th~ed by the source. Haldeman wu at Nixon's side from 1962 until the heat of Watergat~ forced his res- ignation as White House chief oC staff 11 years later. "I was never a social rriend of Nixon's," he writes. But be was "closer than anyone else pro- fessionally." Says Haldeman: "Few men in all history have bad the privilege of being raised as high as I was; and few have had the County OKs Irvine Bridge Over Canyon Plans for a $260,000 bridge over Peters Canyon Channel on Walnut Avenue in Irvine have been approved by Orange Coun· ty supervisors. The bridge will be built in COD· junction with an Irvine road proj. ect lo extend Walnut Avenue across existing agricultural fields. It will connect with Walnut A venue in Tustin, currenUy a de- ad end street, for access to an in- dustrial area. .. . Cost of the bridge is financed with county funds derived from interest from gas tax moneys. The project is being designed. Construction is scheduled to begin in Auaust and be complet· ed by December. DAILY PILOT tragedy of being brought as low." . But elsewhere he recalls once saying out loud : "Nixon was the weirdest man ever to live in the White House." Other accounts have laid the genesis of the June 17, 19'72, Democratic Party headquarters burglary to the eagerness of Nixon re-election officials to gather political intelligence. No one has come as close as Haldeman in placing Nixon at the planning stage. Nixon. he writes, "sometimes seemed to Jose touch with reali· ty" on matters pertaining to in- dustrialist Howard Hughes, whom he blamed for his election defeats in 1960 and 1962. And the president long suspected that Lawrence F. O'Brien was a paid Hughes lobbyist while serving as Democratic Party chairman. ''I believe it is almost certain tbat Nixon asked Colson to help him 'nail' O'Brien," Haldeman writes. "Colson naturally turned to Hunt. And Hunt tried to do it by tapping O'Brien's telepbon~ at th!! Watergate." . _ •.... E . Howard Hunt, a retired CIA agent with a long strinc of clandestine assignments, was Colson's protege at the White House and the Nixon re-electioo committee. He and G. Gordon Liddy, the election committee's lawyer in charge of political in· telligence, recruited the five burglars who were caught inside Watergate and they were convict. ed with them. · Colson denied Haldeman'a charges that he and Nixon or· dered the burglary. "False. it just didn't happen that way .•. There was probably the most exhaustive inveatiaation in the history ot the Republic to determine if that happened and tbe investigation determined that it did not happen," he aatd Thurs.- day ill an ABC TV interview. Mrs. Carmen Romano de Lopez Portillo, and an entouraae ~ of· ficlals will open an exhibit of paintings by four prominent Mex· ican artist.$ at noon at Laguna Beach's Winter Festival. Following her Laguna Beach appearance, Mrs. de Lope& PortJlJo will visit the Newport Harbor Art Museum for a private viewing beginning at 1:30p.m. Mrs. de Lopez Portillo will at- tend ribbon-cutting ceremonies on the Laguna Beach festival grounds at noon for the special "Mex-Art International" exhibit highlighting artisans and con· temporary painters of Mexico. Works by internationally known· Mexican artists Zapfe, Most to Get Holiday Off Monday will mark the annual ob1ervance of Washington's Birthday and will be a holiday for all federal, state and COUD· ty offices and public schools In Orange County. In addition, most '"c.ity halls along the Orange Coast wlll be closed. Westminster la the ex-. ception, 'I'rasb pickups in all ciUes will remain on their regular schedules. In keeping with the boli· day, such facilities as UC Irvine, U.S. post omces and st.ate Department of Motor Vehicle offices will be closed. So will the county's courts and libraries. Most banks also plan to close for the bolidaJ • but it would be best to cheek your braoch by phone to mate sure. * * * F,...P-.eAI BOOK STOLEN? ••• that they did not thlnk anyoae on their 1taff1 could have been ln· volved. .. ABC, ftich wu allowed to read "The Ends of Power" at the publlaber"a oalce aftet> 1IP1n1 a confidentiality atlpulatton to pre- pare a apeclal on the boot, branded u ·~~·· Q1 pouibill\1 tba tbe network wu the aouree. . BUDLBE DBC'LIMED TO DISCVSS the~ bl~ detaU but did..,. that ABC WU not lt. Nor. be added, WU Newtw..t ma1allne, wblcb ll Pllbllllled by The Wuhln.-on Pott Co. Althotatb he d11crlbed tbe ~ U l'OUUM, lt WU bon that the PMt and otben v1g01'VUalJ IOUlht to olMln tbe boot Won lta ~ leue. . . SeCwtty wu ao atrllllent that the pnsldellt ol 11mti8 BoOkj hlmielt, Tbomu uPscownb, abepbel"ded ;anen Of UM wlWM &o Callfor'nla far the Book"Ol·tht Month Club, whlch oµrehued lt a1 a ma.In~ • Otber HCUrity preeauUO. lnvolwd c:ontiaaous tuTdlnl t.brou•hout production. codi nam•, .. ardMe at the plMt, • re&trtct.d ~ room, mldnlpt dellvW:rt~JHftl t.Jpe alW it: WU fft, blu"nlftl Jl")C)uet.\QD lerapl aDd .. ~ ft9ll trom tbe 1a-q Ulat dran.tledl. . Lamelras, Sanchez and casas will be viewed by the Mexican First Lady. White House press secretary' Jody Powell said, however, there are "no plans to invoke RILEY ••• "I suspect that Cuba is very likely to want to move in, in a military sense," Veysey said. Sbe will be accompanied by Baja, California Gov. Roberto De La Madrid and Dr. and Mrs. Julio Tejeda. He is the direct.or of tbe Mex-Art lotemaUonal or- ganization which is introducing Mex.lean artists to the United States. A private rttepUon for Mrs. de Los>U Portillo J,Dd her party will follow in Laguna Beach, ac· cording to festival organizers. fundraislng breakrast grossed $8,000 and netted $7,193 after ex- penses. Because Knox reported ·the fuodraising on bis campaign finance statement, state Fair Political Practices Commission spokesmen said "there is "I really feel that we need a new relaUoosbip with Panama - in regard to the Panama Canal." Veysey said. .. I believe that cbanee is in order. but that's a far cry from saying we ought to ratify those treaties the way they were presen\ed to the Senate." ·mwn Bates Lower, Higher Than Others F,....PageAI TORTURE. • court order which said the de- f ense would be given copies or reports deallng with the case. It costs more to buy your water from tbe Irvine Ranch Water District than from three other neighboring Orange Coun- ty water retailers. · However, four other neighbor- ing water agencies charge more than the mwn. That's the claim contained in a financial report filed by IRWD adm lniatrators with district directors recently. IRWD Revenue Manager Dick HUde Used an average use figure of 11,219 gallons of waler a month. Hilde determined the average Giles also objected to other cost of that water to IRWD parts or Mrs. Brown's testimony customers is $22. which he said caught him by Lower charges ror the same surprise. amount of water, be said are Those included statements she made by Costa Mesa County • attributed to Douglas that he Water District ($14.63), Tustin had a contract due in November Water Works ($17.42), and the for five porno-torture films and City of Newport Beach ($19.25). that Mrs. Brown would be paid Hieber charges were found in $1,000 for each session in which Laguna Hills Water/Sanitation she took part., Inc. ($23.07), Moulton Niguel Morrissey, however, argued Water District ($41.74) and the successfully that be bad just City or San Clemente ($25.35). learned ol that testimony in a according to his report. Wednesday evening telephone conversation with Mrs. Brown. PASSWORD ••. A good word passed around about a business is Invaluable. A bad word can be unfortunate. Our growing. success in the past 25 years has been due to the "good words" and referrals sent to us by our customers. No amount of advertising can replace a personaJ recommendation. We are not infallible. but we are working towards that goal by giving our customers the best service and Quality passible. DEN'S : iiisiiilatiiin: ·custom draperiss • linoleum • wOOd floor .. COSTA M£S~ C!J.lf. 92627 • P"ONE 646-031 -6~6-23.SS .-: ·.• ... . .. .. ,. ... 1 l . VOL. 71, NO.~.' SECTIONS,«> PAGES ORANGE COONTY, CALIFORNIA NEW YORK (AP) -H.R. Haldeman, once Richard Nix· on 's alter ego, went public on Watergat.e with a single, strident theme: Nixon, the president, was behind It all. According to Haldeman: -Nixon "hlmselr caused those burglars" to break into Watergate. -Nixon "was in on the cover· up from Day One " -Nixon may have submitted to blackmail from Charles W. Colson. -Nixon threatened to embarrass the CIA if It refused lo participate in the cover-up. -Nixon "simply begen to erase all of the Watergate material from the tapes when he started to worry that they might be exposed." Without offering any new evidence, Haldeman makes these conjectures lo a new book, ''The Ends of Power," rushed to bookstores today -10 days ear- ly -because of a headlong HIGHLIGHTS AND REACTION TOBOOK-02 media race to publish excerpts. The only reaction from Nix· on 's seaside villa in San Clement.e. was a one .sentence stateme,ii: "Former President Nixon's memoirs will be pubJlshed In May." Not all of the book is ac- cusatory. Haldeman (1) praises Nixon for hfa mastery Qf foreign policy, (2) discusses a tensely declined invitation to join the Sov{et Union In a nuclear attack on China, and (3) dwells at length on Henry Kissinger. The ioalgbU it offers, howev~r. are '1.renglhened by Buses Sabotaged Pranksters Flatten Tires on 70 Vehicles Students throughout the Capistrano Unified School Dis· trict were late to school today after pranksters struck at three locations late T hursday night and dcnated tires on the dis· trict 's entire fleet of nearly 70 buses. "This was a carefully planned attempt to sabotage our school buses," District Superintendent Jerry Thornsley said today. "Whoever dtd this didn't leave us with one movable bus " D1~trict personnel notified Mexican Fi rst Lady To Visit TtiA wife of Mexico's President, Jose, Lopez Portillo, will visit two art exhibits on the Orange Coast u part of a day· long trip through Southern California on Sunday. Mrs. Dona CarmJ>n Romano de Lopez P ortillo, and an entourage of officials will open an exhibit or paintings by four prominent Mexican artists al noon at Laguna Beach's Winter Festival Following her Laguna 6ea~b appearance, Mrs. de Lopez Portillo will visit the Newport Harbor Art Museum for a private viewing beginning at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. de Lopez Portillo will at· tend ribbon cutting ceremonies on the Laguna Beach festival grounds at noon for the special "Mex-Art International" exhibit hi ghlighting artisans and con· tern porary painters of Mexico. Works by internationally known Mexican artists Zapfe, Lameiras. Sanchez and Casas will be viewed by the Mexican First Lady, She will be accompanied by Baja, California Gov. Roberto De La Madrid and Dr. and Mrs. Julio Tejeda. He is the director of the Mex ·Art International or· ganizat1on which is introducing Mexican artists to the United States. A private reception for Mrs. de Lopez Portillo and her party will follow in Laguna Beach, ac· cording to festival organizers. Funding Curbed LOS ANGELES (AP) -The City Council on Thursday voted· 12·0 tot adopt an ordinance curb- ing expense and travel funds ror elected officials and municioal employees. Co ast Weather Fair through Saturday. Warmer Saturday. Lowa tonight 47 to 52. Highs Saturday 68 to 73. I NSIDE TODAY The Tr«a,urt'a o/ Tutankham1m haoe /lnall11 orriued in Loa Anoe'-• omkf much hoopla. TIW ezhJblt i• rmetDdl in •toru and photo• on Pag• Cl. ••••• radio stations, police and schools to pass the w<Jrd that buses would be half an hour or so late in picking up children, Thornsley said. The entire fleet -stored in three locations in Capistrano Beach. San Clemente and Laguna Niguel -was dis· covered immobilized when bus drivers arrived for work today at 5:30 a.m. "We got compressors to the three locations where our buses are kept and inflated the tires as quickly as we could," Thomsley explained. "And then we had many volunteers In the affected com- m unities who drove out to the bus stops in their cars to explain t-o the students what had happened," he added. · The late mght pranksters made their way over a fence at a d1strict·controlled storage yard m Capistrano Beach and also s truck in San Clemente and Laguna Beach where private companies bo~e the buses. "We ha~e no leads at this time," said Thornaley. "The proje~t was apparently coordinated to hit all three locations. We 'U be conducting an investigation." The s prawling Capistrano School District covers nearly 20 percent of Orange County and serves the communities of San Clemente. Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Niguel and part of Mission Viejo. San Juan Store San J uan Three Teen Boys Backs Los Charged in Holdup Rios Plan Three masked bandits who took $200 from a San Juart Capistrano store al gunpolnt Thursday proved to be three 14-ytar-old local residents, Orange County Sberifl'a officers said. Deputies said one member of the trio was arreste;d about 15 minutes after the holdup at the Mission Newsstand, 31793 Cam inoCapislrano. They said information pro· vided by the captured suspect led to the arrest. four hours later of. his two companions. Of· llc.ell.._a_a.ld_tbey recovered tbe $200 and the two cuns used in tbe robbery. ormcers s~d one or the guns was identified as a weapon taken from a local home during a recent burglary. They said the other gun was round at the home of one of the juveniles. The three 14-year-olds were booked into juvenile ball qn charges or armed robbery, deputies said. Candidates Censure SC Pier Handling By ANNE COOP ER OI .. o.tly -'""' San Clemente city councilmen were censured Thursday for their handling of pier-bowl re- development by ei1ht of 13 city council candidates. Only candidates eRoy Hamm and Charles fox defended the councjiAcision not to put its choice oderate commercial development of the depressed pier-bowl basin to a city-wide vote. Three other candldat~ did not side with either faction. All 13 candidates vyint tor three city council seals In the March 7 election spoke al the city's first forum of the campaign. Thursday's program Vet Facility Transfer for O.W. Price · was sponsored by the San Cleme nte Homeowners As· sociation. Jn December the association presented a petition signed by 1,908 city voters to the council, asking that pier-bowl re· development be put on the Ptf arch 7 ballot. The petition was "received and filed," with the council taking no action. Howard MasbeU, San Clemente Homeowners pres· Jdent, is one of the 13 city council candidates. "If I am elected, I will de- mand that the redevelopment is· sue go on the June ballot," Mushett told the audience of about 60 people, gattlered at Las. Palm as School Thursday. "The pier-bowl redevelopment bad plenty of public review - more than 2Q public bearings," said defender Roy Hamm, manager of the San Clemente Sears store and past president or the city's Chamber of Commerce. ••The City Council vote for moderate commercial de· (See FORUM. Pase A!) By WILLIAM HODGE Of .. o.lf\I "",.... Sa11-Juan Capi•tr~no ,city HUll~-ett ~-.tar~ ~roved planning aDd de- velopment criteria desianed to protect the historic Los Rios Dis· tract, Ocanae County's oldest residential area. 'Co\lncilmen voted unanimous· lY to accept the ~•lied Los 'Rios precise plan. a series ol stipulations outlin1nl ~arious zones in the area bordered by Del Obispo., MlWoo St., Trabuco Creek and the Santa Fe railroad tracks. The pl• caU for low del)Slty residential and commercial areas. a historical residential district, a park and bazaar area and open space. But the plan commissioned in part to prot.ect ·residents or the area, many of whom are descendents of the original 18th century dwellers. got some criticiam fro;n councllmeo. "Many of the r.,ide•ts who Ii ve there are t.eoiols, the)''re renting the houses," Councilman Kenneth Friess polot.ed out. "As soon as this i:>lan ls adopted, those land values wlll start to rise and their rents are going to go up.'1 Most of the Los Rios area land bas been in limbo since a plan· ning stUdy began more than two years a10. City otrlcials wouldn't entertain development plans for the area unUl !he study was completed. Now, since decisions have been made about what the land can be used ror, some bet,l~ve lbere will be many l)Otential buyers and developers seeking land in the dlstl'ict. P lanning Director 'l'homas Mertell cited a rental subsidy progT&m included in the Los Rios plan that is geared to support resldt!nts in lieu of rls· inf. rental rates. 'I'm not sure that the rental assistance concept is going to functlon adeoaately in that (See LOS atos. 'ace A!) State Hit by Three Stmim the source. Haldeman was "t Nixon's side from 196a unUl the '1cat of Watergate forced hlir ru- ignaUon as White House chief of staffll years taler. ''[ was pever a social friend of Nixon's," he writes. Bu~ be was ''closer than anyone else pro- fessionatlf .'' Says Haldeman: •·Few men Sn all bistor)' h•ve ~ad the privilege oC ~rais.<1 as hi.ih as 1 wu; and few have had the ' TEN CENTS tragedy of beine brought as low." But elsewhere he recalls once sayina out loud: "Nixon was the we1rde:»t man ever lo live in the Wblte Houa~." Other accounts have laid the gen~sis of thf;I June 17. 1972. DemocraUc Party headquarters burelary to the eagerness or Nixon re-election officials to gather Palltieal inteUlgence. No CSff NIXON, Pa1e Al) ...,,...,..... ..... W1L8UA THE PIG GETS NEW LOSH ON LIFE Tralne~ Kathleen McMullen, Son Danny, 7 €lass Pig Marches -To· Different Drwn ~ r By 9TE'VR MRCKELL Of tM0 ~Ir f>lleC Stall The 25 kindergart~ners in ¥rs. Cnun)~s .class lboughl it wu a gre~\Jdea. Let's get Wilbur to march in the Patriot's Day Parade i" Laguna Beach on Saturday, the Aliso School youngsters said. But convineing Wilbur was an entirely different matter. Wilbllr the pig is the classroom maseot. a11 d the youngsteri; foond out last month that he's not into leashes. "He just s tood there and squealed when we put on the col- . lar," laughed Kathleen Mc M ullan, whose daughter Heather Priest is in Mrs. Crum ley's class. It seems that no amount of · coaxlhg, stroking, enticing or threats could get the piglet to parade on leash. Thaf& when Heather's mother decided to take on the pigheaded pupil. "The t.eacher as1'ed me to try to work with Wilbur so he can be in Saturday's parade," Nrs. Mcfdullan said. SO W).lbur's been in training at the McMullans' Arch Beach Heights home ror the past week. ''Pigs can be trained just like dogs,'' Wilbur's Dew coach said. She said she let the pig get used to a collar at first. then began taking him on short walks up • Three Female Impersonators Held in Tlwft 8Jld dowp the steep hills in the e community. Three men police described as fem ale impersonators were ar· rested by San Clemente police Thursday night, after a w\tness reported seeing three cars driven from a downtown dealership. "I had to convince nelgbbors I w4&n 't raising farm animals in Arch Beach Heiebts," she said. After a .mile the squeals sub- s l d c d and Wilbur began to actually enjoy the short romps. csee WILBlia;Page At> Tw_o Sao-Diego men. Brl'-'1l Wayne Wilijams, 19, and k!m ~...:..._-d M Davis, 21, and a third map, l!dJC&ge 8D Shaun Austin, 22 (address un· ~r:.:-:~r =~ tt:~':'~ed on sus-Kills Boy, 15 A witness across the street frori'l Hal Gr(ene Chevrolet, •oi NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A S. El Camino Real, told pollce man lPP•rently enraged she bad Just seen tt\r~ w9men bfcause a Frtsbee bit his parked drive cllrli off lbe dealer'• park· ·car shot and .killed the 15-year- ing Jot. · old boy who threw the plastic Tw9 cars W'1'e stopped by toy, police said. patrolrJ'ten 10 blocks away, I"' n Dead was Roland Andry. who .alley behiltd a 'SetVice station, •t w•a tossing the plasUc dise to a HlH> S. ~J Camlno .Real, playmate Thursday lli&ht when California ltlghway ~alf'.01 QI. tbe FtiJbee hit the car. fleet• stopped' th~ tbtr~ cac °"' InvesUgalln1 officers said the the San Dteao Fte&W.,Y, $outh o( owner ran o~lnto the street arid Del Mar, Jiftd lranspor(ed the · b,gan shouttna at the two drtver 1b th~ Octanslde cily Jail. youngstAra, drew a gun, •hot The Wee men were being ' Andry In the head, tbeo (lid. htld fodl)' at th Sal\,Clel'l)et\te Af\dr31 diod at • hospital aboUt Jal!, th l t.o be ~et_,,~~~ roar h<>Un laler, officers tald. SOut O('a(l~'C()dQty M~ Police Rid they were s8arcb.iog Cbiirt. aliid 1L cutro:rd Gatts.: lo• a am~tt • nlopmeet ta .. ,,..,AC_ ~,llllt; ~as aJre,ady m de •h n lbc peUllOD WU pres tecl," be I . "In any cue, at would be difficult to put this iuue on a ballot. It takes pro! Jon.al expett.lse to evaluate such a comptu plan." In July the City Council voted 4 1, wlth Councilman WUUam Walker op~ecJ, to pass up leu intense redevelopment or the area immediately Inland of the municipal pier. in favor of a cornmerclaJ plan. The $t mllllon redevelopment design which councilmen ap· proved called for specialty !!hops, restatJrant.s and a lh.ree- tiered parking structure at the base or the city's SO-year-old wood pier. "It is characteristic or the pres· ent City Council that lt would put an issue like paramedics, which has no organized op· position, on lhe ballot and refuse to put on the ballot the pier-bowl redevelopment. which has all kinds of opposition."' s aid candidate Charles Mitchell, an insurance man. "I have no question the councilmen feel tbey are doing the city a service," be said. ''But J'd ralher have a service done for me than done to me. It was inexcusable for the City Council to refuse to put the pier· bowl redevelopment issue on the ballot." "We will have to pay for the redevelopment," said candidate Myrtis Wagner, a c lock manufacturer. "Why can't we vote on it?" Candidate Robert Rusin,· who l ist s his occupation as "politician" suggested the city eouncil should call a year's moratorium on the emotion· weighed pier bowl re- development, "for us to get hold or ourselves"and learn more about what is pcoposed. Candidate Carlo Bocci, who owns a San Clemente candy and gift shop. called the revelopmeol agency. which is made up of the fiv e city councllmen, •·a gestapo-type or&anization." "For five people ln city hall to take an Issue into their own hands, ignoring thousands who s igned petitions-that is totalitarianism," be said. f'ro91 Pflfle Al NIXON ••• one ha& corne as close as Haldeman in placln& Nixon at the planning stage .. Nixon, be writes, "sometimes seemed to lose touch with reall· ty" on matters perta1nlnc to ln- dustrialbt Howard Hucbes, whom be blamed for h1s eleetion derea ts in 1J60 and 1962. And tbe presid..t 1one 1ua1>9cted Ulat Lawrence F. O'Brten wu a paid Hughes lobbyist while serving as Democratic Party chairman. .. I believe it is almost certain that Nixon asked Colson lo help him ·naff O'Brien," Haldeman writes. "Colson naturally tUrDed to Hunt. And Huot tried to do it by tapping O'Brien's telephone at the Watergate." E . Howard Hunt, a retired CIA agent with a long string of clandestine assignments,. was Colson 's protege at the White House and the Nixon re-elecUon committee. ·He and G. Gordon Liddy, the election committee's lawyer in charge of political in· telligence, r ecruited the five burglars who were cauehl Inside Watergate and they were convicl- ed with them. F,..,.P"fle AJ WILBUR ••• ·•we went a litue farther each day so he can make it oq the half-mile parade route,.. Mrs. McMullan said. "The pig and I both have to get ln shape." But the Aliso kids are bringing along a wagon Saturd•y just in case Wilbur goes out on strike. And there will be dog food in the wagon to entice WUbur. You see, Wilbur goes hog 'Wild over doe food. OltAMGI COt\11' Uk DAILY PILOT . . • • I tJ ST VB Mrl'CllELL OltM~ ......... You 10.~ar-old kids won't remem~r this, but there waa a Umo ln the early days of the La1una Beach Patriot's Day Parade when controversy clouded the ceremonit1. It It was back ln Februa1" of 1968-.-a Ume when North Vletnamde sold1ers wereJlaytog bell with American Marines ""1 Gii in thtl city Hue. Parade day came right 1n the micldle or a 25-day televlsed sJege of tha\ Soulheut Asian city-a atege that changed oplnlons of the war held by many of the !olka back home. Those concerned Americans Ln· eluded members of the Orattge County Peace and Human JU1bts Council who wanted to enter a .. peace" float in the second annual Patriot's Day Parade in Laguna Beach. BUT O•GANllE•S OF THAT MITCHUI. parade feared the peace eroup might want to march to the beat or a dif!erent drummer. Parade orcanltera denied the request, telling the peace group its noat ••would not be in keeptna wttb the theme of the ~vent." WJtb that, the Peace Councll flied a writ of mandate in Orange County ~rtor Court to force the issue. ·Arnold Hano, a Laguna Beach writer, civic activist, and former anernber of the peace aroup, recalls the coo· troversy. ' "WE WE.a~ AT ALL interested In stopplnf the parade," be sl!d. "We simply wanted to participate in it." Peace Council altomeys ariued before J\Jdce James F. Judge tbat the refusal was "arbitrary and capricious,'' and charted the City or Laeuna Beach with dis· criminatioo. Judge Judge was sympathetic, Hano recalls, "but be felt the amount of parUcipatioa by the city (in the form of police. crowd control, etc.> wu minor." Parade or1antser Emily Rosa remembers the court appearance veiy well "I SHOULD ltEMEllBE& it." she laughed. "They subpoenaed me ... The 86-year old founder oC the Patriot's Day Parade said that year's parade cbairman also happened to be an .attorney. "He proved that the city did not assist us in the parade at that time, and the Judie said we could keep them out of the parade." "They (the peace 1roup) evet'I threatened to organize a parade 1ohii the opposite way of our parade," Mrs. Ross said. "Can you imaJiDe that?" BUT PEACE ADVOCATE Hano and his group did b.ave the final word. or. at least a last act. "We simpl)' stQod outside the festival grounds at ~ end or that year's plrade route with signs," he said. Han0 wore bis old World War II uniform with about a do%eo others, holding ll~ that read, "We wanted to be patrtotlc, but they wouldD't let us.·• · · ''I think 1'9 made our point.'' Hano said this week. "W-e wanted tA> abow them that peace ls an aspect of patriotism.•• L11auna »each Cit)' Council members have unanimously ap- proved a blufrt.o~ aetback or- dinance that will arfect the location or new or rebuilt bomes along the city's couUine. The ordinance was adopted Wednes day nl1ht lo bring Laguna Beocb lnto conformity with state guidelines established by the Coastal Acl of 1976. Ci t y planner Peter Lewandowski presented a slide sho.w illustrating da maac to blufCtop homes ln San Dteao County. The lat'k of structural damage in Laguna Beach might be due to the fact that homes ani newer ulona the Art Colony coastline. But Victoria Beach homeowner Howard Dlwaol1 said the proposed or<llnaoce ls restrictive, claiming his com- munity assoclatlon "does not feel lbis is the answer." Westminster Fire P air Save Woma"' 5 Y oung Children The liv~ of a Westminster worn an an-d her five youne children were aavecJ Jate Thurs- day night by two 21-year-old men, a city Fire Department spokesman said today. The two men fou ght their way through flames and smoke to rescue Diana Woodruff, 3', and her children ranging in age from 11 months to 8 years. Mrs. Woodruff was treated for first degree burns on the neck and shou Ide rs at Wes tminster Community Hospital. One of her children was ~at· ed at the scene of the fire for s moke inhalation, as were the two men, Larry Dykes of Bellflower and Jay Joyce or Santa Ana. The Fire Department spokesman said the two men we r e visiting friends nearby wh en they beard a window break at Mrs. Woodruff 's apartment, 13751 Edwards St. They rushed to the scene and brought Mrs. Woodruff and her children to safety. The fire caused an estimated $14,000 in damage. Investigators were probln~ its cause todav. Fourteen firefighters responded to the 11 :35 p.m. blaae and kept it from spreading to other apartments. Gr ant Given To Laguna Ballet Gr oup Ballet Pacifica, the Laguna Beach-based dance company has received a $15,000 grant from Northrop Corporation's "concentrated giving" program for 1978. Lila Zall, artistic director for the 15-year-old ballet company. said the Northrop grant will enable Ballet Pacifica to apply for a l'esident company grant from the Nallonat Endowment for the Arts in 1979. <To be eligible for endowment grants, a resident company must maintain a certain number of dancers on the payroll, and the SlS.000 Northrop grant puts Ballet Pacifica over the top.) Douglas Reeve, the ballet company's general director, said the grants allow Laguna to keep good dancens, Instead or losing them to New York and S~n Francisco dance companies. f'ro•PageAJ WS R IO S PLAN BACKED~ • "We believe the <'oastal COD\· mlu lon has overstepped 11s bounds on this. Our property owners do not think a 25-foot setback preserffS a bluff as much as lt destroys a (legah home site.'' "We don't think the t'lty hd a right to pus a law which is a legislated taking of property.'' But City Planning Dlrector Doug Scbmlll tald the ordinaoce on setbacks Is legally defensl~e. and that the city Is not taklhg away building sites. He said the current 10.foot setback requirement is less n•x- ible tor the property owner than that included under the blufftop ordinance. That ls because the setback is based on either a set 2S·foot re· quirement or the "stringline" method. That form or measurement in· eludes stringing a Une between two exisUng structures. allowing a prooerty owner in the middle to build his home to the atringtine. ln that manner. the builder maintains an ocean view and is not "punished" by having to go by a 25-foot setback when his n eighbors enj oy a lO·foot setb~ck from the bluff. Schmitz said there are about 275 s tru ctures a long the blufftops in Laguna Beach, with another 35 vacant lots. He said he is excluding lot s along Heisler Park in his figures. Councilman Carl Johnson said he could see no problem with lhe .ordinance in the Victoria Beach /Rockledge communities. "H their homes need to be re· built because of some catastrophe, they can use lhe slringllne method," he said. "It (the ordinance) favors the property owner." Suit Filed Over Soccer Field Beating A San Clemente soccer player who claims he was attacked and beatl'n by a member or a rival high school team has filed an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit seeking damages to be determined in trial court. 'l'BE INTDVENINC DECADE appears to have softened tome at tbe emot.lona ol 1968. ·Why, it wu juat lut year that Arnold Hano participat- ed in the Patriot's Day Parade -with the blessings ot the parade organbation. • area,•• Friess countered. "I don 't believe many of these structures will qualify for rent.al assistance because of their age and condition." He cited coacems over the on- going downtown plaza and part. iog study which be believes might confllct witl'i portions or the Los Rios plan. Named as defend ant in the - action fUed by San Clement.e High School student David G. Vollebregt, 16, of 2319 CaJle La Serna in that City, is William Fairbrother, identified as a member or the El Toro High School varsity soccer team. Vollebregt cl aims that Fairbrolher attacked him on the playing field at Los Alisos Intermediate School. Mission Viejo, during a game between• the Sat\ Clemente and El Tom soccer squads. . ''I marched with the Vill&ie La.runa volunteer litter squad at the end or the parade," he laughed. He mieht even do It again Saturday durint the 12th an· oual display of patriolilm in La&una Beach. For Needs Panel Pageant Ticket Surcharge Eyed La4una Beach City Council cand1elate Barbara Smith de. fends the Human Needs Committee's recqmmendatlon that the Cit)' Council place a S2 surcharge on Pageant of the Masters Uckets to help finance city operations. That proposal was broucbt. before councilmen Wednesday night. but Mrs. Smith asked that the matter be held over unW th• council'• Mardl 1 meettnr. The committee's rec· ommendation, she told local Soropttnm1s Tbundl)', WH 'in- tended as a possible answer to the expected passace of the Jarvis property tax tnlU•llve Jµne 8. Earlier this week Hum~n Needs Committee Churman Jay 3 Given Life InBusnap Murley estimated the added revenues !tom the Pageant could raise up to 10 percent of what the Initiative would cut from the city budiet. Soroptlmiats wanted to know what council candidates thou&ht of the idea and the quesUon came up at their candidates• forum at. the Hotel Laguna. Mrs. Smith, who is seeld..og one of three seals for the City Council is a member of the Human Needs panel. "The Human Needs Committee took def'mitive, con- structive action to save the ell)' money," she told lbe women's aroup. "W& came forth with two posalble solutions to cuts in our bud1et lt the Jarvi.a initiative is appro\'ed by t.hb voters.'' She noted that, as a com· mlttee, the croup could onty. recommend the1urcbar1e. But other COUbCil candict.t.a told tbe Sorop\hnilta that Lacuna ls not a chartM"elty and cannot inlUate a &urt.a.x of u,y form on the Festival of Aris. · Merrell also suggested a non- profit corporation could be set up by residents and supported with Federal Housing and Community Development Act <HCDA> grants to finance new housing to help residents stay in the area. "If new structures are built there, they will qualify for sub- sidies and people can move into. them," Friess admitted. ''But there's going to be an interim period -we need to help them through that transition." Councilmen agreed to provide counse~ for residents of the area. They believe Los Rlos res· ident.s could be re-located in the city unW new housing in the area ls builL Councilman John Sweeney also raised questions about the park and bazaar coocept.s. Planning Director Merrell conceded r esults of the downtown stu d y ma y necessitate changes in the plan. "The downtown study may make the bazaar concept an un- reasonable or unworkable pro- posal, .. Merrell said. "I feel the direction that study is taking will 1.dtimately lead us to come back and change the Los Rios plan. ''But I don't think we have an irreversible commitment to the park bazaar concept." So me observers believe the downtown study designed to enhance the old mission bus1· ness district could conmct with lbe park bazaar, which is de· signed to include small shops and tourist-oriented activities. Some believe the park bazaar could siphon off buslnesses from the downtown area. Named as co-defendants in the action ar e the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. the San Juan Capistrano Unified School District and the Ca liforni a Interscholas tic Federation. Cyclist Charged SACRAMENTO (AP) -Carol Dillahay, 22, was charged wilh drunken driving after her motorcycle collided with a car driven by State Sen. David Roberti, police said. Roberti was nolinjured. PASSWORD .•. A good word passed around about a business is invaluable. A bad word can be unfortunate. Our growing. success in the past 25 years has been due to the .. good words" and referrals sent to us by our customers. No amount of advertising can replace a personal recommendation. We are not infallible, but we are working towards that goal by giving our customers the best service and quality possible. 'HONE 6'6·4838 -646·2355 1 () " tjl • t 9 ~ I( ' • . 1 pku!k Slaeep LQ•IJ• . In a Los Angeles taping of NBC's "Black ':Sheep Souapron " are, left to right. ": actresses Denise DuBarry and Kathy . · McCullem, actor Robert Conrad, his ,•daughter, actress Nancy Conrad and > actress Brianne Leary with actor Jeb Ad a ms, c enter front. The women. "Pappy's Lambs" and Adams, son of the late actor NickvAJams, will appear in the "Forbidden F~ episode Wednesday at 9 p.m. ~Ex-toy Execs Indicted •• LOS ANGELES CAP) -Four former ex- ,iecutives and one current official of Mattel Inc., the ~1oy manufacturer, were indicted Thursday on • )!tock manipulation charges. r(.• A federal grand jury in Los Angeles issued a lO·count indictment that included charges that of- ;flcials of the suburban Hawthorne-based company ·!tiad innated saJes figures by $10 million to~ the price or the com- pany's stock. (---------) · Named in the in-STAT, dictment were Rutti 'E llandter, 61, or Los"----------'- :Angeles, former pres· jdent of Mattel; Seymour l\osenberg, 54, or Santa Monica, former executive vice president and 'director; Yasuo Yoshida, 51, of San Pedro, former ·vice president; Gloria Sears Billings, 48, or .. _..,ake Cruelty '..Actors Back · AniTnal Care . SACRA~ENTO <AP) -If movie makers can fake human gore and burning skyscrapers, why can't they fake cruelty to animals? ask television actors Belly While and Earl Holliman. They spoke Thursday in favor of legislation that. would provide a maximum penalty or $1,000 and six months in jail for exhibiting movies in which animals are killed or injured. After the hearing. the As· sembly Judiciary Committee -•TE postponed a vote on SB 490, by ~Sen. David Roberti. D·Los Angeles. in order to fetudy amendments. · MISS WHITE, A BOARD member of the tAmerican t1umane Association. said it costs more 'to use a trained animal to simulate death or injury hhan to kill or hurt one. k "Why separate the people from the animals? Why not make it all pretend, ketchup and not lood?" asked the star or the . ancelled "Betty White Show" ~.a,nd the former "Mary Tyler ~"Moore Show." t Holliman, president of ~ctors and Others for Animals, ~id in hls years as a cowboy ~actor the branding of calves ~was always faked. l MOVIES ARE ''tbe busi· JJ)ess or illusion," said the co- i_:ttar of "Policewoman." ttOU.JMAN ; J osepb Hilpert of the Hollywood office or the ·~merican Humane Association said cruelty to :·animals has been a problem since 1967,. when the ~olion Picture Production Code was discarded. ~ ~ Entertainer ~. l~~!!! ~~~~~~~me ·as been .charaed with misdemeanor marijuana • session instead or felony narcotics charges after ss than an ounce ot a drug was found in her pure cocaine before st reet sale, a deputy said. Torrance, former accounting director and Paul Ashcraft, 48, of Torrance, the current accounting director. 'Oversight' Cited. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Los Apgeles County official says it was through "an oversight" that the state wasn't notified in advance -as required by law -of the cloud seeding that preceded last week's storm. But C.F. Eshelby, division engineer of the Los Angeles County Flood Control Dfstrict, added Thursday that he felt he complied with the intent of the law because the district advertised in local newspapers for three weeu that It wias going lo seed. Water Tra1Uferred LOS ANGELES (AP> -Delivery of Northern California water to Southern Calllorn1a, halted to ease drought effects in the San Franc-isco Bay area and the San Joaquin Valley, will be restored in full, officials al the state Departl'l\enl of Water Resources announced. Ronald B. Robie, director of the department, said Thursday the slate's water supply has in- creased enough to allow the water transfers. Overdo•e D~ath Ca.ue LOS ANGELES (AP> -The 2l·year-old sister of actre!>s Mary Tyler Moore died of an apparent.. drug overdose, an autopsy shOws. Coroner 's Investigator James Kono said Thursday the autopsy on Elizabeth Moore found "pulmonary edema, a lung congestion that is con· sis tent with som<.-one who has taken an overdose." Kono said investigators would perform more tests and probably be able to say by t.Oday what drug Miss Moore had taken. OOPA••alled LOS ANGELES CAP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. hos reacted angrily lo a Republican al· tempt lo attack his a1ternate energy source sug· gestions as "wood chlp-and·windmill" ideas. "Whal I see in the Republican attack is not on· ly partisanahip but a total lack or vision, .. he said in a telephone call to the Los Angeles Times. .. These are the same people who didn't think we could get lo the moon," Brown was quoted in today's editions. daniel's HAIR DESIGNS SHAPING FOA FORM & BODY Compllrnentsy hair analyals with all conditioning and reconstruc:tlve work: By quallfled tr1oologlat. By~ M. WILLIAM & ASSOCIATES 2090 So. Coast Hwy. LagunaBMch • 494-9729 OAKLAND (AF> -Arter 19 monlhl ot silence one ot three youn1 men who kidnapped a busload ot Chowchilla achool children has tried to explain the outrageous episode in public. • "It. was a 1ood plan/' aaid James Sclloenfeld, shakln1 Ms bead and lau1blng half· heartedly. "Butit was craiy." Sometimes chuckling, sometimes pulling nervously on his fingers, the 26·year·old Schoenfeld testified for three hours Thursduy in a court session prior to sentencing. SCHOENFELD'S testimony surprised a half.filled courtroom of mostly reporters and rel· alives. It also stalled what was ex peeled to be the final arguments before Superior Court Judge Leo Deegan sentences-Schoenfeld, his brother, Richard, 23, and Fred Woods,216. The trio pleaded ruilty last Ju. ly to 27 counts of simple kidnapping In the July 1976 abduction of 26 children and bus driver Ed Ray. The captives clawed to freedom after being imprisoned in a burled moving van for nearly 17 hours. But the three sons of wealthy San Francisco Peninsula families fought and lost I three counts of kidnap with bodily harm. In California. the bodily ·~·~ SURPRISE TESTIMON~ Ja~s Schoe nfeld harm conviction carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison without possibility or parole. B RIEF DEFENSE arguments over whether the punishment is either unconstitutional or cruel and unusual were scheduled to end today. Deegan was expected t-0 rule promptly. LfSC DAILY PILOT Pubhc defender L.estw ~j Gendron sald he pot Scb6enfejld on the 6tand to clear quesUw.: I about motive <which were raisM • In lb~ prosecution's fln•l argument. But prosecutor Dave Minters cr<>ss-examtnatlon also nlished from Schoenfeld bow tbe cri~ was planned and why Chowchilla was . the target, bl· l form allon previously revealed only to authorities. .. IT JUST SEEMED like .a \ likely spot," said Schoenfeld,.. l wb~ like bis brother and w~·· looked pale and bedrauled. He said the emphasis had be@ on finding a location al least 100' mUes from a Livermore rode quarry where a makeshift cell had been prepared. "I thought the police would search for about 100 mile!', search every Inch," Schoenfeld: told Minier. In reality officials· had faMed ouL over a SO-square! mile area around Chowchilla the-' day after the abduction in an air and groWld search which proved fruitless. • . SCHOENFELD also explain~ why children -ranging in ace from 4 to 14 -were chosen foi- the kidnap. "One of the reasons for pick· mg children," he said "was if they got away you could catch • C them.•• OPENING TUESDAY. FEB. 14th at Mission Vieio VlllCICJe Center Mission Cobbler 25290 I. Mar gmnrltf' Pkwy. Mlssioft VJeio IAlplMa leta Cewterl 770-2282 ONE pa1r o1 HEELS WITH one pair at reg. price V .. apto$7.50 .. . • ... -------------... · >f~r ~ in all it's warmth and splender J ~ "found i~s way to orange coun~! Furniture made or Soid Teak is an art treasure chat )'(Ml can afford in your home. Superb Far Easten craftsmanship combined with the rich quality or real teak and styled in Contemporary, Spanish, Italian, Eastern or Modem give it unsur· passed value and beauty. Brouse through our exceptional coUection of Master Bedrooms, Dining Rooms, Tables, Chi~ Hutches, Screens, Bars and hundreds of home furnishings. Whatever you desire-tet our import and design specialists help you decide just what item will enhance your home the most and give you the best service. The Sored Tm Chin1 Hutch Shown Is Now Sale Priced SmMt, coneempomy design k incor· pomed ink> thi5 lumrious lniech eo pro- tect 'l'(Mll' fivori1e chin1 Ind ID .sci lddt· tionll be1uty IC>-youf home. ... SHt SAVI sioioo $449 Solid Tsk And Blue Mn1e Combine To Giw You The Utmost In Living loom 'tables · artme.nt, officials say. , The district attorney's lice s.Ud Thunday it as declded to file the sser charae after the balance was found to ----------=---..,..------.----"!-~-:"!""---:~;..._-~ SplliHh rn style ,.;., subdy c1one· eo ..,. hlnce )'1>111' llc>IM. The nwble 11>p inl•vs are of the finest itnpOft!d quality Ind ll'e • cool bf ue areet'o DOft•DarcotJC. SAYI ,, ..... S485 - ft n le' a a C• d n n 5• • • • r .. .. •. . I I oters' Clioice • Takes Back, Seat . . : Otange County Clerk Wllllam St John ls having t1ouble hanging on to the job he was elected to do. ; First. the county's Superior Court judees decided they didn't like the way St John was directing the clerks ~&igned to their courts. The judees la_s t fall said they \( ld assume what is their legal preroeaUve and lfimsfer the clerks to the court administrator's office. j •.· When County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said such a diwe may not be legal, the judges backtracked a btt. i, Meanwhile, initial support for St John that came ' om county supervisors dwindled. When that happened, t John made a strategical error. He said the troubled -'>linty supervisors might be befriending the judges as a ineans oC gainln~ their good wlll, a commodity, be 6.tggested, two Lndicted supervisors might need. : '. That slight touched off a county supervisor rush to ~dorse emergency legislation sponsored by four state issemblymen from Orange County. That would legalize be transfer of the clerks to the judges' care. · · ·· Jn the meantime, county Recorder Wylie Carlyle fecided to retire and county supervisors decided to timbine the clerk's office with the recorder's. , Now they talk of appointing Carlyle aide Lee Branch ~ther than St John to act as interim recorder. Thls peans that when St John faces re-election in June he yOuld be confronting a non-elected incumbent. Add all that up and it means that as an elected •fficial St John is scraping to keep himself and his office go. ng. Without commenting on St J ohn's ability or his uitability as county clerk, it is obvious that other elected CCicials in the county have treated the elected county I erk 's office as if it is something they, not the electorate, ontrols. That's not right. No matter what the intruders• 1otives, in the final analysis it should be the voters who ay who holds office and what the duties of the office hall be. -~ot Perfect Yet Afte r succeeding in pushing through some key mendments lo the Senate's latest criminal code reform ill CS 1437). California Sen. Alan Cranston proceeded to '.>te against the measure when it recently passed the ~nate in a 72-15 vote. This was not unreasonable. Cranston still sees serious aws in the legislation which has been worked and , !·worked in Congress ove r the past dozen years. The latest version cleans up many of the more 'arming threats to individual freedom that surfaced in ie bill that was put forward during the Ni xon dministration, but there's room for much more nprovement. Perhaps that will be accomplis hed as 1437 makes its way through the House. T he most important amendment authored by ranston removed a section that would have m ade the 11 what he termed ••a prosecutor's dream" by allowing ide leeway for prosecutors and judges to interpret a any of the bill's provisions as they saw fit. The version that reached the House strictly curtails a 1dge's discretion in sentencing and requires a written <planation if a sentence outside fixed guidelines is , nposed. At the same time it phases out provisions for arole. But the bill still contains some loose wordin g !garding what may constitute a criminal cons piracy and nolber section that would make it possible for uthorities to break up almost any demonstration, arade or picket line deem ed offensive to the overnment. There's no doubt the hodgepodge of criminal statutes ccumulated over 200 years -some 3,000 at this point - .·in dire need of a major clean-up job. ·• We really don't need a law, for example, that makes .!Si crime to interfere with a government carrier pigeon. .:. Many of the corrections in the current bill make ·tnse. The abolishment of indeterminate sentencing is in :Ge with policies already adopted in California and some ~}her states. ;:: It is wise to give judges the authority to order J!retrial :,tention for persons accused of murder, treason, rape, !zSbotage or trafficking in narcotics. ::: Tightening the laws on racketeering· and consumer :Cauds is in order, as is reduction of overbarsh federal :enalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana. ·:· But, as Cranston notes, too much of S 1437 as it stands :'represents a vote of confidence in the discretion oC our ;ederal law-enforcement agencies at a time when they have i et to demonstrate that they have earned our confidence :md trust after the disclosures ot Watergate and of CIA and . ~Bl idsclosures.'' • Tidy up the federal criminal code, yes, but not in a ~anner that makes it too easy for government to throw ~jie new lawbook at any citizen who, in government's :new, steps a little out of line. ~ . ;,ptnions expresaed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot :)ther views expressed on this page are lhoae of their authors and ;,tJsts. Reeder comment is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. :jox 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. , . . . .. ·: ~ . •. Boyd/Atlantis !· .. • . By L.11. BOYD :· Q. "U there's ever been a Ororse TV 1how than 'The. )jan from AUanUs, • please hme it. And where'd we get Clie notion about a lost conti· hnl of AUantls, anyway?" ;~A. In reply to your first ~ery; none--worse comes to (!llnd. My memory must be .. •. ~::.-~~---~--~~--.. slipping. As for the AUantls legend, Plato the Grtek! passed alone that one from what evidently was a bungled translation of the stories of his ancestor Solon. Students of ancient history now think .a volcaoJc U· ploslon on the Aegean Sea island or Thera aroutid 1470 B.C. wiped out a aopblatica~ ed little clvillzalioo there and sank the whole island. Bad reporting parlayed that event into the Atlantia m)'lb. ·Califano Riles Tobacco State WASHINGTON -Far from a routlno political c:all, th• 80· minute cloeocl·door talk Feb. 7 between top presidential aide Hamilton Jordan and North Carolina Senate candidate Luther Hodaes Jr. was a desperate SOS to aet HEW Secretary Joaepb Califano to shut up for a while. Hodges h the leading Democratic hopeful against Sen. Jene Helms, cbartsmatlc leader d the Republican right wing. · Helms has transferred himself from a fluklsh 19'12 winner into one or North Ca rolina 's most formidable pollt.iclans. Private polls show Hodges moving into a slender lead for · the May 2 primary election, but his Jong.range hopes are chllled by Callfano'a new anti·smoking Von Hollman Marijuana 'Farming' Proposed From Kentucky comes the suggestion of a different way to cut the unfavorJble American balance of paymen~. Gatewood Galbraith, president of the Ken· lucky Marijuana Feasibility Study, says we might save • large number ot dollars from crossing over into foreign.bands if we stopped importing pol. How many dollars that might add up to is a matter of conjec· lure, but here in Wash· ington· the 30-40 crowd or no longer quite so young lawyers. journalists and upper middle level bureau-crats are paying about $40 an ounce for their cannabis, unpicked and unstrained. Somebody is making money. You can tell by the reports about the size of the ships the smugglers are using to get the stuff into the country. It seems the Coast Guard seiies a new one every week and these craft aren't Utile skiffs. They have carcoes wei&hlnl many toos and the oft'ldala whose job it ls to •lol> ,the crasa trade freely admit the1 catdl a Vf!rf small percen· tage of the contraband being shipped ln here. EVERY lntelllgent point to be made ln the marijuana debate - pro or coo -bu lone alnce been made, but this l.an't almply a de- bating topic. The Jawa are being flouted, milllons of people· routinely condone and en· courage this Weaal business by buyln1 &be mu, and the acale on wblc:h all t.bls takes place ap- parently continues to ~w . The adminlatrat.ioo 1 posiUon of decrbninalldnC tbe act of in- dividual use but conUnu.ing to make the aale ol what'• used a felony ls indefensible. Politi- cians ouitit not to mate It so ob- campale.. IL ls undermlnln1 all Nortb dl.rollna Democrata. HOdaes complained bitterly to" Jordan in the uouaually lenathY mHUng that Califano'• pUbllc campaian. lncludinc a $23 million public relations fund to educate Americans on the health danger of smokinl, could asaure not only Helms's reelection but help Sen. Strom Thurmond. another Republlcan con- servative, in South Carolina. Tobacco, a major economic sup- port for North Carolina, also af. fecta South Car9llna slgnlflcantly. ) IN ADDITJbN to protesting caurano's anli·smoking habit, Hodges complained about the civil ri&hta sectlon or Califano's Health, Education and Welfare <HEW). Department forcing North Carolina lo end "racial duallty" in its colleges and un· iversities. Also grating to North CaroHna Democrats was a second anti-' tobacco deeision by the Carter vi.ous that. since they are too chickeo·gutted to repeal the pro- hiblUoo. they would rather en· couuge a pattern of muaive law brealdag. As Mr. Galbraith puts it. 'The present media focus on .'decriml.nalization' is a waste of time, resources and the futures of thou.ands of citizens. That concept doe4 not even acknowledee continued prob- lems with marijuana smug. gl.Lng. adulterated products. con· sumer riJM)ffa, bUJe profits to orgaolied crime and conse· quenUy greater exposure to tru- ly dangerous drugs, inflated prices, undermined credibility of the government and especial- ly their drug·education pro- grams, and finally, the con- tinued preclusion of our own farmers from supplying an already existent multl-billlon dollar agricultural market wit.bin the United States. MB. GALBBAITR would like to make lt legal for his Kentucky farmers to grow cannabis saliva along with their burleigb tobac- co. He says the tobacco raising states are lde.ally swted for rais- ing pot aa well, and why, if Americana are going to buy the stuff from someone, shouldn't the money ao to our American farmers? admlnlatratlon: cloaln• down the Oxford Tobacco Research Liiboratory wltb lta *1 million annual budcet. That dtcltlOD· waa the Agriculture Depart- ment's, not Califano'•· But the political fallout la sJmilar. Jordan listened, with frequent telephone lnterrupllona, and seemed sympatMtlc to H~'a long llst or grlevJD,ces. He made ·no promises, aod mleht aot tie able to keep them tr be had. ln early encounters with Califano, Jordan has come ott aeeond belt bebJnd the cabinet'• m0tt prac· Uced and effective lnflabttr. SEN. KISSINGER' Prominent New York Republicans are seriously talk· ing about Dr. Henry Kissinger as caodJdate for the Senate lf, as expected, Sen. Jacob Javtts does not seek a flith term in 1980. Nobody bas yet approached the matter to Kiasinaer, and some friends doubt the former Secretary of State would descend from his Olympian heiabts lo serve in the Senate. "/.Ml... CAIJ~O!'' Under tbe plan Galbraith ls proposine. large corporatlons, however, would be excluded from any part or the marijuana business. Heublein, Schlitz or the rest of them would be con· fined to selling their one, lradl· tional drug of pleasure. Galbraith would have m&Ji. juana acreage allotments aiven to farmers in much the same way that tobacco allotments are. Something in the order of 200 po\.IJldS per f ariner would be the maximum amount permitted, enough be estimates to add from $3,000 to $6,000 in lncome, a significant sum for the small farm families or his state. Since it seems that marijuana la easy to grow, that it grows well in tobacco land like Kentucky and since it needs little land for large yields, it might be of at least marginal help to some ol the men currently drivtna about the country in their tractors pleading Cor assistance. TO KEEP IT out of the hands of K Mart and Safeway, the en· tire pot crop would have lo be sold to the state, which would process it and package ll in lids. Galbraith ls dead set acainst selling grass in cigarette form. He argues that if you can buy reef en cheaply and convenienUy, it increases the chances of the NevertbeltH, ltl11ln1tr''(. celebrit,y 1talu. makes hlm a., clearly electabl• eandldat. tir the eyes of Republlcaa poUu; •. ciaru. : · ' Amo~1 tbem is tbe bllhlll!: reipectable Rep. Barber eoa.; . ble, •mlclr RepubUeu. co ~· Houae w.,_ and Meana Com-· mittee. Conable btUevu th'· 1tronse1t proepeetlve GOP eu~ dldah!• in New York are Rep:. Jack Kemp for rovernor UQ. year and Klaalnter for Senator' ln 1980. Conable bu bMll tr)'1Dr. to i>orauade Kemp to clrOp bW-ttao .Staate pJan1, u1ln1 the' Kt11tncer proepect u an arau~ ment wttb Kem(>. " A I~: .RepubUcana ~ to the election of Democra~ Daniel Patrick Moynihan:· former ambassador to lndJa ancr the United Nations, to the Senate" in 1878 as an example of • diplomat succeeding In NeW. York poUUca. An older exampl( of a cUplomat falling wu th~ miserable 11howing in the 1941l. Senate race by John Foster.:. Dulles. . ~:;: \'Ji ··~ . . . ; same sort of automatic, tmthinlil lni habituation that exlsta .uk tobacco cigarettes. U you have to stop and roll your own, every tlmeyaµwantone,Galbraltbrea- sons, lt won't be quite so easy. to get irretrievably booked like: the tobacco junkies. · < Under this proposal the at.ate• would not sell its marijuana to! mass merchandisers, chain! stores, or the like but only c.o j am all; businessmen, preferably : aJready selling marijuana ap-: paratuses and papers as well as~ people now in the business or: selling the drug itself -so longi as they weren't connected with! a ny mafia·like criminal or-: gan1zatloos. : A modified plan along these: lines is already in existence in 1 · those states which attempt to : control alcohol by selling hard! liquor themselves. State liquor; stores are generally more ex-; pensive with less variety than : free enterprise stores in other: states. Nor does the monopoly . approa.cb seem to ha'fe cUs· · couraged abuse or alcoholism. • Nevertheless, the state liquor: monopoly or the Galbraith plan~ for pot may be the best we can. hope for in a democra~y when a ; majority or at least a very large· minority will break the Jaw to~ s uppJy themselves with thesel chemicals. .. ------------... --------------------------------~--------... ------------' .. . ' . l Charles McCabe Boswell: Greatest English Language Reporter .. A couple of ua here Intellects were sitting around Powell's Restaurant in North Beach &be other night. ldb' trylq to ftiure out wbo mlcbt bave been the greatest reporter ever to use the En&ll•h Janauaae. A lot ol names iot mentioned -H.L Mencken, John O'Hara. Alva Jo~ .. Jloyce Brler of the Chronl· cle, and Webb Miller of the old United Preas. My ... own nonllna· Uon was H clearly of another clu. that I felt almost asbained to brlna him up. My boy 1.8 Jam• Boewell, who irl 1712. at tbe qe of u. tuc- eeeded I* fat.bu •• tho La1"I ot Auchlllleck. which he ilw.,.a pronouneed .. AfOeck ... TM Ox· ford idttlGii ot Bolwell 'j Life Of Samuel~ wbkibl9~ wi* me When I trav.l. li tbt 1reate1t book • tbe laq ...... Mill1i~-­~f1lnjiOrt1Df • .d.~~· ''Tbin JI an imped~ a a superficlalness, In all my no- tions ," be once said. "I un· dent.and nothine clearly, nothlng to the bottom. I lSfCk up frag· ments, but never have in my memory a mass or any size." lt wu this knowledge of bis own lack of excellence and his admiration of the excellence of ·the flerceold man he chose to de· ptct, that gives its own curious texture to the Lije. · · RE WAS much more than a lackey. He contributed to, and often lnJtlated, l1Jt.nY of the con- versaUom wfth the treat man • He was rather like tbe picador In a bull ring who taotalizh the bull Into ferocity with bl.I lance. He was aware of this and often com- pared blmse1l to a wUUnc vlcUm. "I dao't care," be aald, "how often or bow hllb be to.ues me wben oo!f friends ·a.re present. tor then I fall .upon left 1round; but I do not like f aJUnc pn stones, 'Which b tho case wh•q enemies arep~L" · · Like the rood ;tu, Boswell Oftea toot ll es With hll ma&ldll A famous tuce w11 wut be d.14 to J '•ob-. ! • servatlon on Tor)l Sheridan's at· tempt to improve the English language by tea~b!nl oratory. . . In the Life Johnson Is quoted as saying: ''Wbat influence can Mr. Sheridan have upon the lanauage of this great country? Sir, it is burning a farthing candle at Dover to11how light at Calais!" ' IN BOSWELL'S ori,_inal notes, what Johnson aaltl ap· pears as: "He Is like a man al· tempting to stride the English channel. Sir, the cause bears no proportion to the effect. It la Mt· Ung up a candle at Whllecbapel to give light at Westminster." The heir to AucbJnleck bad no small opinion of himself. At are 24 be introduced himself by let.WI' to them~at Rouaaeau as "• you"' of &J.ncular merit..'' He( added: "Althou1h but. a young man, I bate bad a variety of experiences, with which you will be Impressed .•• Open yW1 door, then, sl.r,.to • 1;0an • dna to say that J>. deserves to enter there. ~st • unique Jominer. :Yoa will HMI' npeei St." He liked to W.k to men genius, not necessarily men power. It is wholly charactertst:i or Boswell that while be met conversed with King George 1 be bu left us no notes to rmllir-. thia royal talk to set beside record ol bis talks with J ohnsoa.. Boswell's devotion to Jo= was about the only unsullied. thing in bis life. He was a fall as a son as a husband and as a• parent. Re was forever 1e~f the clap, or worryinc abo~t-~3 when he didn't have it. He neverl really succeeded as a la1Vyer. , l YET the Life, which appem!4~ in 1791, 0 ts unmatchable and le . exhaustible" -&S has betn Just. fy sald. 'lbe discovery of the great board of Boswell papen.~a · Malabldo Castle and at Fet· tercalrn House reveal tba Boswell h1mse1f wu a man .senlu• very nearly tn tb cl~ with his adored Johnson. U bel hadn't written a creat book~ .1oluason, tt ls alqiost. cerWA t.b•t lie wbul4 have written a ar••l bloiraphy of 1omebodt ... n..t tcmebo4)' els• woWcJ: :haY• .,... molt probabb' l Botwell: • ~~. I · VOL. 71, NO. 48; 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES -·TEN CENTS Coal Meri for WASHINGTON (AP) -Ef- forts to end the 74-day-old national soft co~I strike resumed today against the background of an informal Carte r administration deadline to get a contract accord by the end of the day. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall met with union otficials this morning and planned a separate session with representatives of the Bituminous Coal Operators Association before reconvening a joint session. Marshall, takin& the role of chief mediator, kept the parties around the bargaining table· nearly continuously from Thurs- day morning until 2 a.m. today, when the bargainers recessed for a rest. Marshall said Thursday that his goal to get a settlement sometlme today was not a hard· and-fast deadline. But he said: "We don't have long. This thing can't eoon." One administration official, amplifying on Marshall's 're, marks, said privately today that "we have lo be relatively close or al a settlement" by day's end or "it 's time to talk about options." He did not elaborate. There was other pressure 1'aldeDian Says Nixon to BlaDie NEW YORK <AP) -H.R. Haldeman, once Richard Nix· on's alter ego, went public on Watergate with a single, strident theme: Nixon, the president, was behind it all. -Nixon threatened to embarrass the CIA if it refused to participate in the cover-up. Nixon "simply began to HlGHLIGHT$ AND REACTION TOBOOK-02 According to Haldeman: -Nixon "himself caused those burglars" to break into Watergate. Nixon "was in on the cover· up from Day One." erase all of the Watergate material from the tapes when he started to worry that they might be exposed." -Nixon may have submitted ~o blackmail from Charles W. IColson. Without ofCe ring any new I * * * * * * '.Post Won't Divulge ''Nor1nal' Sources NEW YORK (AP) -The Washington Post's editor says his . newspaper obtained portions of "The Ends of Power" by H.R. , • Haldeman at no cost beYond normal reporttne expeosu, while two other newspapers say a mysterious woman caller offered to sell them the book. "The story is infinitely lesa complicated than you suspect." editor Benjamin C. Bradlee said Thursday night in a telephone interview in which he denied receiving a call from the woman. ··we got it from someone whose name you don't know, whose af. ftliation you don't know. Nor have you ever heard of them." THE POST PUBLISHED IN Thursday's editions what it said was material from the lat,ter two.thirds of the book, prompting early publication of the 352~age volume itself -which sells for $12.95 -in addition to high-priced excerpts. , Suspicions of the publisher, Times Books, and the Times syndication service centered on a possible security breach at the Scranton, Pa., press where lt was produced. In part. the suspicions were based on the Post's statement that it had not obtained all the book, which was bound from printed pages collected into 11 sections called "signatures." ALTHOUGH TIIREE GUARDS OVERSAW the binding. ex· ecutives believe "The Ends of Power" was most vulnerable to the theft of substantial portions in sequence at this stage. Further, the New York Times said today that a "Nancy Collins" checked out of a Scranton motel Thursday. N3ncy Collins is the Washington Post reporter credited with getting the book. The reporter declined comment. Speculation about a Scranton source was also fueled by a telephone call the Times r~ived one night last week. A Times editor who requeili\.ed that bis name not be used sald the woman caller told him sh~ould give the book to "the highest bidder." THE EDITOR QUOTED HER as saying she was a reporter for. a Scrantoo newspaper, that the newspaper had rejected the book, that she was angry and that she intended to quit. •'It sounded as though it might be real," the editor observed, saying the woman never called back as instructed. He said the woman who sounded like someone In her mid·20s and spoke without an accent, cave hlm a cover name of "Nancy" so that he would know her when she called aeain. Peter Michelmore, metropolitan edltor of the New York Post, olso said that a woman of similar description called hlm last week. ' SHE SAID THAT SHE OR someone she knew worked at the printer's and that she was auctioning the book in calls to the New York Post, the Washington Post, the Times and the New York Dai· Jy News. She did not call back, Michelmore said. The News said it did not receive a call. Executives of the two Scranton newspapers, the Times and Tribune, said they would have printed stories if given the book and (See BOOK, Page AZ) evidence, Haldeman make& these conjectures In a new book, "The Ends of Power," rushed to bookstores today -10 days ear- ly -because of a headlong media race to publish excerpts. The only reaction from Nix· on 's seaside villa in San Clemente, was a one sentence ~ statement: "Former President Nixon's memoirs will be published in May." Not all of the· book is ac- cusatory. Haldeman (1) praises <See NIXON, Page A2) Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley said Thursday he will ask the district attorney to ''look into" a poUUcal rival's charge that Riley's appointee to the County Planning Commission has violat~ slate political campaign regulations. "I am going to send the whole thing over to the district at· torney lO find out. whal he (Tom Rogers) is talking about," Riley said. Rogers is a candidate for the Fifth District supervisorial seat held by Riley. In a letter to Riley, Rogers charged that Planning Co mmissioner William MacDougall violated campaign regulations when he failed to me a report in Orange County show- ing that he was co-chairman of a fund rais ing breakfast for Democratic State Assemblyman John Knox of Richmond. A statement filed by Knox In Sacramento showed the Sept. 12 fundraising breakfast grossed $8,000 and netted $7,193 after ex- penses. Because Knox reported the Cundraising on bis campaign finance statement, state Fair Political Practices Commission s pokesmen said "there Is nothing serious about the Orange County oveni1ht." They indicated , however, that M acDoucall and co· sponsor, former Irvine Company President Ray Wa~on, will be· asked to file a statement in Orange County. Today, MacDougall acknowledged acting as co- chairman for the breaktast. ''I don 't see anything wrong with that," he said. "I have known John Knox for (See RILEY, Page A2) ~anal Sovereignty Eyed &company ~hairman Opposes Panama Pacts By JACKIE HYMAN Ol•Dell,flt ... tuff The former chairman of the board of the Panam a Canal Company aaid Tburaday ln Newport Beach that I.be Senate abould not raWy the proposed P•nama Canal treaties but that. the United States lhould relln· q"lab sovereJpty over the canal lOJ'e, Victor V. Veysey, a lao a 'former uaistant eecretary ol ttie Army w1th ruJ)OD&lbllity for tbe Peoama CanaLCOtnpany. Jaicl th trouble with the c"rrent pro.. poeed treaties 11 that tbi1 alao btnd over r~1pon1lblUty for malntalnlnl and defMdlnt the . zone to the Panamanlans. 'l'be ·P•Dama C•••l Co•pa•Y currently oversees operations of the canal. He told a Town Hall of Orange County forum at the Balboa s_, Club that the U .S. should ne1otlate ricba to a lon1·term mtut.ary base in the canal zone. "It b the eovereipty lssue that la the inflammatory on• to the Panamanl&nl'• and to other Latin Americans, Hld Veyse1, 'cur rentt1 director of t he ll\· du1Uial rilaUOnl center at the California lR•titute of eeb~. Hell ~ a fonner state usembly~an and U.S. CIOAlteumaD froiri th• lmpenal Valley. Vey14111 pointed out "hat be '"' ., the maJor nawa ln U.. trutlel ~ by Pr~ rrom tl\ administration, retreating 1itep-by·step in recent days from lts policy of non· intervention ln labor disputes. President Carter met with governors from a dozen states hit hard by the strike. Gov. James Thompson of Ulinois saJd Carter remarked be would personally "step in" -a term that wu not explained -if the talks do not result in agreemenL The White HQUH dispatched presidential aide Landon Butler to the Labor Department to monitor Utie neaotiatlons. The admh>i•tration also was be&i11n.lng to talk more openly itbol.4t the ~sibility or lnvoklog the strike·balting provision or the Taft.Jlartley Act. "People are certainly talkln& about Taft-Hartley if this effort (the talks) falls, but no final de- Dead Beat Finish cislon bas been made " said one ad m iniatratlon off let al, Wb1te .House press secretary Jod)' Jtowell said, however, there are •'no plans to lnvoke Taft-Hartley" today or at "any specific time." Sentlment In favor or invokinc the act Is tempered by a widespread feeling that mim!ra will ignore any back·tO·work court order lssued under the act This is the way two of the 40 yachts, Mirage and Secret Love, finished after 1,140 miles of sailing in the San Diego to Manzanillo race. 'fhe race committee aboard the Mexican naval v~sel <back· ground) declared it a dead heat. The dark hulled Mirage , skippered b y Les Harlander of Richmond, wound up as the Class B corrected time winner. <Related column, Page B6) Proposals to cut permitted deoalties on several larce parcels of undeveloped lapd in Newport Beach failed to draw any action Tbucsda7 as planning 'commissioners bogged down in a philosophical dispute. •'This city bas reached the point where we have to decide if we're going to be a residential city or a resort.'' CommJssioner Paul Hummel said, addlng that he pre(ers the former. Commissioner William Frederickson responded thai he - belleves California beaches belong to everyone, nol just those "lucky enough to live here," and that such proposals as a hotel on the Castaways property between J>over Drive and U_P.per Newport Bay would perm l~beach access to visitors. Saal f Trial, Under coutderaUdn was a group "' Pl"OPOMld eederal plan amendments to cut allowable com morcial and resHlentlal density on such sites as Newport Center, Koll Center Newport and the Callfontja Department of Transportation parcels In West Newport. Another amendment would link development to the com· pletion or planned im- provement.a ln the dty's roads. A public bearing on the amendtnenu was continued un· til Apru·e for two Teasons, com- misalonera aJid. One is to permit a March 16 public meeting ~th developers, especially the Irvine Company, to review their proposals for their remaining undeveloped parcels. · The second reason is to await <See CUTS, Pa1e AZ) Witness Admits Nude Photography Mexico First Lti(W to See Cotut Exhibit,s The Wlf• ot Mnlco'' PrMldent. Jose, Lope• Portillo, will visit two art exhibits on the Orange Coast. as part of a day· long trip through Southern Califorrtla on Sunday. Mrs. Carmen Romano de Lopez Portillo, and an entourage of of. ficials will open an exhibit of pain Unga by four prominent Mex· i~an artists at noon at Laguna Beach's Winter Festival. Followlna her Laguna Beach appearance, Mrs. dt: Lopez Portillo will visit the Newport Harbor Art Museum for a private viewing beginning at · 1:30 p.m. Mrs. de Lopez Portillo will at· tend n1>bo1.1·cutting ceremonies on the l.agUlla Beach festival grounds at noon for the special "Mex·Art International" exhibit hi.gblighUng artisans and con· temporary palnteTS of Muico. Works by internationally known Mexican artists Zapfe, Lameiras1 Sanchez and Casas will be vtewed by the Mexlcan First Lady. She will b8 accompanied by Baja, California Gov. Roberto De La Madrid and Dr. and Mrs. Julio Tejeda. He is the director of the Mex-Art International or- ganization which is introducing Mexican artists to the United States. A private teception for Mrs. de Lopes 'Portillo and her party will follow In Laguna Beach, ac· cord in& to festival organizers. Co ast Weathe r Fair throuah Saturday. Warmer Saturday. Lows tonight 47 to 52. Hichs Saturday et to 73. IN8 .. BT08&Y ..-h• fr«auar~• of rutonklamun boff /huall11 omt>«d i1' Loa Angela omtd much ~ Tlw alribU ff ,..,,~Wfd m ~ ol'td photot ~ Po~CI. ••••• BRU~Ets,Belglum <AP)-A Rom an Catholic nun has been charged with murdering three elderly people by injecting them wlthoverdoseaotloauUn,omclals said. Magistrate Leo Tes said Sister Godfrida, a drug uddlcl, con· fessed to murderln& the three persona, aged 75 to 80, but did not explain why she killed them. He said Thurs day the ln· vesligation is continuing to see if s he ls involved in other sus· picious deaths at a home ror the elderly. 2Women Named for Annapolis •. Two Orange Coast women are among IO candidates nominated by U.S. Rep. Robert E . Badham, R-Newport Beach, for the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. They are Ralinda Bozelli o! Laguna Hills and Susan G. Talley of Irvine. Also monimated to vie for a single vacancy, with selection to be made by the Annapolis admissions office, are George A. Moore, Costa Mesa; Raymond K. Wynne, Fountain Valley; Devin P. Bower, Mission Viejo; James F. Refalo, Santa Ana, and Carl .M. Holmberg and Patrick D. O'Farrell, both or Tustin. Jn addition, Badham has nominated Shelley Ames Jones Jr. a nd Daniel R. Waldman, both Orange Coast residents currently stationed al the Naval Training Center in Newport, R.l. Badham has also nominated Miss Talley, Miss Bozelli, Ref a lo and 0 ' Farrell to the U.S. Military Academy at We6t Point. Also .nominated to We.st Point are Lawrence II. Harada and David R. Bachlor of Costa Mesa, Rena M. Loesch of El Toro, Dale E. Brant and Edwards S. Morris of Huntington Beach and Alan A. Parker of Mission Viejo. ·: Free on Bail :· . " ·. : LOS ANGELES CAP) -A Burbank accountant indicted on charges or swindling investors out of millions of dollars in a get-rich.quick scheme has been freed on $50,000 bail. .. Robert Faro surrendered in Superior Court Thursday, only ,. oi:ie da)'. after he was secretly in· , dieted m a scheme in which In· vcstors were told they could • reap 200 percent pront by buying Hong Kong-made bicycles at low prices and reselling them in the United Stales at huge markups. ·, :: .• However, investigators said only three bicycles were ever purchased by Faro, and those were made in Taiwan and used to lure investors. TORTURE. • ·: •. had a contract due in November for five porno-torture tllms and· that Mrs. Brown would be paid , $1,000 for each session in which '.• she took part. Morrissey, however, argued successfull y that he had just learned of that le$tlmony in a ;· Wednesday e\tenlJ:ig telepbone · conversation with Mn . Brown. :· .. '· ... ... ··. .. .· ... :• ·:· I• . ... ~ O"ANOE COAST DAILY PILOT ·-... .... ....~ .... ,....- he11 11. ClfWt I ""-'""*"'•"'0.....~ .,...,,., """"' ••t.t -··.......J... MIMtl"'~ _ ... ~ -....... "'"" ...... ~ ........ N Sister Oodfrida was arrested Jast week on charges or theft, rorgery and drug addiction. Police said 1be became addicted to morphine after 1urgery eJ1ht years ago for a brain tumor, and the earlier charges were brought in connection with the theft of morphine and use of false document.a to obtain access to the drug. Officials said orders have been issued to exhume a number of bodies of persons who dled in the geriatric ward in a home for t h e elderly in We tteren , no rthern Belgium. Sisler Godfrida, a m ember of the Apostolic Order of the Holy Joseph, was in charge of the geriatric ward. Judiciary sources said there were about 10 suspicious deaths at the home. They said Sister Godfrida was suspected of bav· Ing killed some of her patients to steal their belongin1s and money which she needed to buy morphine. The nun was dismissed from her position at the home in August and sbe was confined to a private clinc for treatment. Judiciary a\llhorities have or· dered her to undergo psychiatric examination. 'lhat's Some High Interest JERSEY CITY, N.J . CAP> -The $85 in Charles W aJsb 's bank account belongs to him. But the $100,000 bank error he withdrew before dis· appearing belongs to a bank, officials say. An arrest warrant has bl'en issued for the quiet coin dealer who unUI re· cen_tly lived in the same house where he had grown up. Wals h , 52. began withdrawing the money from the bank Dec. 21 when a regular b a nk s tatement s h owed bis meager account had ballooned to $100.085, said police SgL Ben Riccardi. f're•Page AJ CUTS .•• results of a comruler traffic model that will tel what effects various densities would have on traffi c congestion in the city. Commissioners were able to lake a straw vote on another amendment. They agreed 6-1 that they want to redesignate a 17.2 acre CalTrans parcel at Superior Avenue and West Coast Highway from multi -famil y res· idential to medium-dens ity res· idential with a maximum of five building units per acre. Hummel cast the dissenting vote, saying he would like even less intense development permitted there. The CalTrans amendment was continued with the others until April 6. NB Planners Recommend Property Buy Newport Beach planning com· missioners said Thursday that, instead ot approving a variance for a house adjacent to Begonia Park in Corona del Mar, the city should bu1 the property. That recommendation on the lot at 2333 Paclflc Drive will be forwarded to the Clty Co1&ncll. Ownen Mr. and Mrs .. Donald G. Griswold bad requested a helgbt variance for the Jot, which is on a steep bluff. However, they bad earlier in· _dlc!U_!d to parks, beaches and recreation comm1sslonen ibat they would lte willing &o consider a reasonable offer by tbe city. Nel1hbors have opposed Jhe idea of building a hous• ()D the now-vacant lot. saying lt would cut off the view from Betonla Park . Af'Wl ......... Snowtinae in Paris Parisian youngsters make the most of snow covef'.ing park in the French capifal near the Eiffel Tower Thursday. This was the heaviest snowfall that Paris had re· ceived in more than a decade. Motorists, known for their daring traffic maneuvers. we re not nearly as elated over the pres· ence or the white stuff. Fro• Page AJ BOOK STOLEN? ••• that they did not think an,yone on their staffs could have been In· volved. ABC, wbich was allowed to read "The Ends of Power" at the publisher's c>ffice after signing a confidentiality stipulation to pre· pare a special on the boOk, branded as "preposterous" any possibility that the network was tbe source. BRADLEf; DECLINED TO DISCUSS ~ource In any detail but did say that ABC was not it. Nor, he added, was Newsweek magazine, which is published by The Washington Post Co Although he described the source-as routine, it was khown that the Post and others vigorously sought to obtain the book berore its re· lease. Security was so stringent that the president of 'Times Books himself, Thomas Lipscomb, shepherded galleys or the volurne to California for the Book-0f·the Month Club. which purchased lt as a main selection. · Other security prec.autlons involved continuous guardmg throughout production, code names, searches al the plant, a restricted press room, midnight delivenes, melting type after 1t was set, burning production scraps and withholding copies even from the agency that drafted ads * * * Fro. Page A J NIXON .•• Nixon for his mastery of foreign policy, (2) discusses a tensely declined invitation t.o jom the Soviet Uruon m a nuclear at.tack on China, and (3 ) dwells at length on Heriry Kissinger. T h e insights it o!Cers, however I are stren1thened by the source. Haldeman was at Nixon's side from 1962 until the heal or Watergate forced his res· 1gnallon as White House chief or staff 11 years later "l was never a social friend of Nixon's," he wnt~. But he was ''closer than anyone else pro· fessionally." Says Haldeman: "Few men in a II hi s tory h ave had the privlleee of being raised as hJgh as I was. and few have had the tragedy or being brought as low." But elsewhere he recalls once s aying out loud : "Nixon was the weirdest man ever to live in the White House." Coast Firm Wins Heavy U.S. Contract Cyclis t Hurt As Bike Rams Into Truck A motorcyclist surrered foot injuries this moming when his cycle slammed into the back of a truck In the intersection of Bristol Street and Jamboree Road in Newport Beach Donald Ohver N1bblett, 20, of fll4 1-: Iris Ave , Corona del Ma r ''as rushed to U<.: Irvine Medical Center wh ere he was 1m · mediately taken into s urjlerv. Police said N1bblctt apparent· ly rode into the inter~ection in anticipation of a green hght and ran into the rear of a truck already in the intersection Officers did not cite the truck driver, John Wakula J r .. 30, of Santa Ana Heights. Police said investigation or the 7:30 a.m. mishap Is contmumg. County Withdraws SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Marlo County has withdrawn rrom tbe A'soc1ation of Bay Area Governments after the board Thursday refused to delay considerallon of a controversial air quality plan 1mtil October. Jarvis Plan Debate Set For Newport The Jarvis·Gann initiative lo limit increases in property taxes will be debated Tues<iay in Newport Beach at a breakfast m eeting sponsored by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber ol Commer ce. The meeting, open to the public, will be held at 7:30 a.m. at the Marriott Hotel. J. Earle Christo. state vice c hairman of th e United Orga nization or Taxpayers, sponsor of the ballot measure, wtll speak on its behalf. He will be opposed by James Doherty. assistant city attorney for the City or Los Angeles. Reservations fo r the $4 breakfast may be made through the chamber, 644·8211 . F rOlll Page A J CANAL •.. give away S7 billion in capital in· vestments and $3.2 billion in cash Also. Veysey said his ex· perience in running the canal tone leads him to doubt that the proposed commission of five U S m e m bers and four Panamanian members could ef- rectively administer the zone un· t1I the year 2000. The former congressman also criticized what he called the un· stable a nd dictatorial gov- ernment of Gen. Omar Torrijos. ''Torrijos knows very little ubout political economy. He has made Panama something like a tropical version of New York Ci· ty.'' Veysey said. The result, he said, would be that the U.S. would have lo bail out Panama in operating the canal within rive years. He said he believes the treaty should not conlain a clause it now includes giving Panama thP. right to veto construction of an , a lternative canal, even in another country. And he said there is no assurance the canal will be maintained as a neutral water way. Fro• Page A J RILEY •.. 24 years and I don't know of anyone who has done more for municipal and county gov· ernments than he." "My long-time professional re· lationship with Knox is one ba se d on re s pect and admiration," Mac Dougall said. lie pointed out that he did not ('Ontact any peopf e lo ask them Lo attend the fundraiser . Nor dJd he solicit any Knox con· tributions, Mac Dougall said. "J have no idea who was so licited and who did not respond t o in vitatio ns," MacDougall said . "Th e whole thi n g was managed by Frank Michelena. II e was the to ta I staff for the cntite fun ction," M acDougall said. T h e Kn ox disclosure statement show ed that it was M ichclena who transmitted the $7, 193 fundrai s ing profit to Knox Most to Get Holiday Off Monday will mark the ann ua l observance of Washington's Birthday and wiJI be a holiday for all federal, stale and coun· t y offices and public schools In Orange County. In addition, most city halls along the Orange Coast will be closed. Westminster is the ex· ception. Trash pickups in all cities will remain on thei r regul ar schedules. In keepjng with the holi· day, such facilities as UC Irvine, U.S. post offices and state Department of Motor Vehicle offices will be closed. So will the county's co u rts a nd libraries. Most banks also plan to close for the holiday, but lt would be best to check your branch by phone to make sure. New port Beach's Ford Aerospace and CommunlcaUons Cor poration Aeronutronic Division has been awarded a S48.5 million contract for pro· ductlon of an airborne weapon system for tbe UJi. Air Force. PASSWORD ••• The weapon system, designat· ed Pave Tack by the Air Force, will be carried on lbree Air Force fightm -the F ·4E, tbe RF-4C and the F·lllt". The laser-aimed system to io into produ¢Uon In Newport Beach I• an Improved version of Ford·developed equipment used during the Vietnam war. The contract calls for pto· duction or 149 units over the rtext four years. Aeronutroolc officials say about 400 people will be assigned to the project. .. Hero Trireker Identified A good word passed around about a busi ness is invaluable. A bad word can be unfortunate. Our growing. success in the past 25 years has been due to the ''good words" and referrals sent to us by our customers. No amount of advertising can replace a personal recommendation. We are not Infallible. but we are working towards that goal by giving our customers the best service and quality possible . .· .. ·.· ... . . VOL. 71, NO. 48, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 1FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1978 TEN CENTS I Haldenian: 'Nixon Was Behind it All' NEW YORK (AP> ll.R. Haldeman, once llichard Nix· <m's uller ego, went public on Watergate with a single, strident theme: Nixon, the president, was bt:hind it all According to Haldeman -Nixon "himself caused those burglars" to break into Watergate. -Nixon "was in on the cover- \.lp from Day One." -Naxon may have ~ubm1tted S1ww Doggie to blackmail from Charles W. Colson. Nixon threatened to embarrass the CIA if it refused lo participate in the cover-up. -Nixon "simply began to erase all or the Watergate material Crom the tapes when he started to worry that they might be exposed." Without offering any new evidence, Haldeman makes these conjectures in a new book, 7 I• Tammy Sutton of Lincoln, R.I., a freshman art major at Hhode Island College, uses her creative talents to create this giant St. Ut•rnard snow carving. A little spray paint acids dimension to the work. Pathologist Sa~s Infant Had Life By TOM BARLE Y ot IM oau, f'llel St•ll A pathologist testified Thurs- day that the baby the pro- secution alleges was strangled by Dr. William Baxter Waddill last March 2 ltved for at least 30 minutes in the Westminster · Commwiity Hospital nursery. Dr. Kurt Be nirsch ke, identified in Orange Cou nty Superior Court as a nationally recognized authority on pathology, told the jury that the infant Waddill failed to abort had died from lack of oxygen. The UC San Diego lecturer testified for the prosecution that a bruise on the neck or the 28- week infant was innicted after the unwed, 18-year-old mother delivered the fetus and before its death. ll is alleged that Waddill, 44, of Huntington Harbour, strangled the baby when he re- alized that the saline he injected into the mother had failed to abor.i the child. The defense contends that the infant never lived, in terms of Naked Man Rapes Woman At Knif epoint A bearded man, wearing only a .lmile sheath belt, broke into a South Huntington Beach con- cJom inlum and repeatedly raped f 32-year-old worn an a t Jtnifepoint Thursday, police re- ported. The suspect e.9Caped. The nude rapist entered the home throu1h a sliding glass door at 4:30 a.m. He threatened the woman with the knife and a ssaulted her, according to police Sgt. Dave Miller. Miller said the rapist dis· Clussed his personal problems with the victim durin1 the hour· Jong attack. ·Police said the vlcllm's five- )ltar-old son, asleep in another .room, was not molested during the attack. "rhe woman was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hosplt.t and released, police said. The rapist was described as a dark-hair d male In hta 20s, • about five feet. nine inch 1 tall .Od weJghlnf 185 pounds. meaningful life and that Waddill cannot legally be charged with murder. Examining slid es as he testified, B:enirschke told pros- .ecutor Robert Chatterton that there were other bruises on the baby's neck which he had been unable to identify in terms of their origin and the time they were inflicted. Benirschke told Chatterton that he could not define what (See DOCTOR, Page AZ> Sex Torture Witness Says 'Posed Nude' By KATIIY CLANCY Ol 1111 O.lly "• Staff A prosecution witness in the trial of a Costa Mesa man ac· cused of plotting to torture and dismember two women admit· led Thursday she had posed nude for defendant Fred Berre Douglas. Diane Smith Brown al first t estified in Orange County Superior Court that she refused Douglas' offers lo pose for pornographic photos. But when pressed by defense attorney Terry Giles, Mrs. Brown admitted being photo- graphed nude with a Polaroid camera by Douglas while the pair w.ere:..on.aaovemi1ht trip to Las Vegas last May. Mrs. Brown surprised the de- f ense by testifying that she felt threatened last April by a gun. toting Douglas when she agreed to take part in a ao-caUed lesbian bondage mm session that allegedly was to end with the dismembering of two p0mo models. She said the threat occurred on a trip to the desert April 18 when Dou&}as purportedly dls- c usse d former film-makln1 sessions on thls property. Mrs. Brown teotltted that Douglas told her "the cltla were tortured and ~ade to do un· natural aci.s." Later, as they overlooked a nvlne on the detert proJ*t1, •ho i ald. "He conUnued to lell me that once. UMl ~fraphs w re tJikeo the 1lrll wwe t.kcn up there a.Del tortured further (SeeT0RTUaf:4 P•tt Al> · "The Ends of Power ," rushed lo bookstores today -10 days ear- ly -because of a headlong HIGHLIGHTS AND REACTION TOBOOK-02 media race to publish excerpts. The only reaction from Nix- on 's seaside villa in San Clemente. was a one sentence statement: "Former President Nixon's m e moirs will be published In May." Not all of the book Is ac- cusatory. Haldeman (1) praises Nixon for his mastery or foreign policy, (2) 'discusses a tensely declined invitation to join the Soviet Union In a nuclear attack .on China, and (3) dwells at length on Henry Kissinger. The i nsights it offers , however, are str engthened by Buses the source. Haldeman was at Nixon's side from 1962 unW the heat or Watergate forced hls res: lgnaUon aa White Ho1.&Se chtef ol staff llyears later . "I was never a aochal friend of Nixon's," be writes. But he was ''closer than anyone else pro- fessionally." Says Haldeman: "Few men in all h istory have bad the privilege or being raised u hlCh as I was; and few have bad the tra1ed,y of be!ng brought aa low." But elsewhere he recalls once aayinl out loud: ''Nixon was the weirdest man ever to live in the White HouSe. .. Other •~count.a have laid the genesis of the June 17, 1972, DemocraUc P~rty headquarters bur1lary to the easerness of Nhcon re·election officials to 1ather polWcal intellleence. No (See NIXON, Pap Al) Pranksters Flatten Tires on 70 Vehicles Students throughout the Capistrano Unifi ed School Dis- trict were late to school today after pranksters struck at three locations late Thursday night and deflated tires on the dis- trict's entire fleet of nearly 70 buses. "This was a carefully planned attempt to sabotage our school buses,·· District Superintendent Jerry Thornsley said today. ''Whoever did this didn't leave us with one movable bus." D 1 strict personnel notified Trustees Revise Boundaries Despite several parents' pro- tests, SaddJeback Valle)"'Unified School District trustees have a~ p r oved revised .attu•ance boundaries for seYeral "Schools. raced with overaott'~. The ~\I. wbo Uve In tMe Cordova homes west ot Los Alisos Boulevard in northern M 1sslon Viejo, ar1ued Wednes- day that the changes wlll force their youngsters to go to schools with different programs and teachinJ concept.$. Tl\~Y also complained that the changes separate their children from their mends. "What are you doing to-my children? You're just playing games with them. You're not lookihg out for their welfare," said one father. "What Is supposed to be good tor our kids is what our kids tell us," said another. "Our kids tell us t hey don't like changing schools.'' And a woman, whose daughter once attended three different schools in one year, declared, . "The kid can't take much more." But Robert Ferguson, director of racllities and services, said the district's procedures allow· ing transfers within the district can be used by these families. He said the changes, eCCective in the fall, are needed to prevent overcrowding in the schools and also to provide students ror th e new Aegean Hills elementary school and Laguna Hill s High School. With the new boundaries, about 274 children who currently attend Va l e n cia, Gates, Lomaren a a nd Del Cerro (See PARENTS, Page AZ) * * * School Fund Panel Plans Report Soon Members of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District's Community Budget Committee have agreed to make lbeir recommendations to district trustees Marek 15. The 1roup, which met Tbun- day for the first time, bas agreed to meet in the district of· fices at 7 p.m. every Thursday until it makes lts repOrt to the board. . W ~$ Diesel a Mission Viejo resident who {, budeet manager tor the J .C. P-..nty Company1 and J aclt Croft, a Letawe WorJa reaidtnt. were named • Coe?halnnen of~ eommlttee. ,; The fl'CNP'hu been aalceti bl truateee to review the dbttlct • ftnanclal prQJecUons aad Q • pendltures and recommend way ~~tM~. radio st ations, police and schools to pass the word that buses would be half an hour or so late in picking up chlldren, Thomsley said. The entire fleet - stored in three locations in Capistrano Beach, San Cle mente and Lagl.\na Niguel -was dis· covered immobiliz.ed when bus drivers arrived for work today at5:30 a.m. "We got compressors to the three locations wbere our buses are kept and inflated the tires as quickly as we could,0 Tbornsley explained. "And then we had many volunteers in the affected com- munities wbo drove out to the bus stops ih their cars to exp.lain lo the studepts what bad happened," hf! added. The late night pranksters made their way over a fence at a district-controlled storage yard in Capistrano Beach and also struck in Satr Clemente and Laguna Beach where private ... Flu Epidem~c St~ Hit by Three Strains BERKELEY CAP> -Outbreaks of various types of influenza ln California have reached the epidemic stage, a state Health Department official said today. Dr. Loring Dales, a physician in the de- partment1s inf ectiollls disease section, said a flu epidemie occ'-'rs when the-nuDlbel' 9! deaths '1'• , htghu Uwl woClld be expected QC>nnally. 1 Specific figures on flu-related deaths were un- available, but Dates said a level or excess fatalities bas been reached. ''nlere is flu virtually all over the state.'' he said, including the more common A-Florida and A· Texas strains plus the new Russian nu, which bas been reported in si)( other states. Mother, Five Kids Saved From Blaze The lives of a Westminater woman and her five young children were saved late Thurs- day night by two 21-year-old men, a city Fire Department spokesman s aid today. The two men fought their way through Dames and smoke to rescue Di.ana Woodruff, 34, and her children ranging in age Crom 11 months to 8 years. Mrs . Woodruff was treated for first deeree burns on tbe neck and shoulders at Westminster Community Hospital. One of her children was treat- ed at the scene of the fire for smoke inhalation, as were the two men, Larry Dykes oC Bellflower and Jay Joyce of Santa Ana. The Fire Department spokesman said the lwo men were visiting friends nearby when they heard a wU.dew break at Mra. Woodruff'• apartment, 13'751 ~wards St. They rushed .to the scene and brought Mrs. Woodruff and Mr children to safety. The fire caused an estlmat.ed $14,000 ln damage. Investlgaton were Pt'Ol>lng lts cause today. Fourteen firefighters responded to the 11:3S p.m. blaze and kept it from spreading to otber apartments. Wne Sovereignty Panama Question? By JACKIE HYMAN Cit .. DllMY llllltt le.ft Latin Americans, said. Veysey, currently director of the in· dustrlal relations center at the California Institute of Tecbnol0ty-He,is...atso·a fonner state assemblyman and U.S. conereasman from tbe Imperial Valley. Veysey pointed out what he 11ees as the major Oaws in tile treat~ ~ ~Y President Carter and ratified b)' a Panamanian plebiscite. Tiile trealla are now belftc debllted ln the Senate. He said there ma1· be a lqal cballenpof the ~aUea beeaun they cl ... of land& and .,.. propriate tnoney, acts which \ID-> der the Conltitutioo must be ap- proved by the Kouu of Represeotattvea. The treaties are only beina vote4l oa liy, \lie &mate, all that ls re.iuli'ed 'ot ltHtJes bl general. • Veysfl'/ also saJd be bel..._ tbe treaties weaken tb• U* mlUW, PotiUoa becnM Ol UM Poaibillt.J that the pan• .. ii wanblpe Will be ~. ~ <8" CANAL, Pace At> companies house the buses. .. We have no leads •t this time," seld Tbornsley. "Tbe project was apparently coordJna~~~ to hit all lhree locaUqos. we'll be conducting an iovestlfaUM." The sprawling Capistrano School District covers nearly ZO percent ol Orange County and aervef the communities of San Ctemente, Capistrano Beach, Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Niguel and part of Miaa1oo Viejo. Jobless l Rate Jumps InOounty Whtll taken at face value, state flautes •how Oranae • Cotln\1411 · llftem19loyme11t rate Jumpt(t ttom a record low of S.9 percent In December to 5.T perctnt 1n January. &qt lhte Employment De•elopment Department <EDD) otltclals said theJr December estimate that only 32,900 C'Q\llllY residents were un· employed abould not be taken at lace valcae. Jnate.ad, they revised December•s unemployment calculaUoos to show the county's unemplo:rment rate was 4.4 percent, not 3.9 percent, and the number ot unemployed penom waa 42,800 rather than 32,900. Whate'fer the December counts w.o foul weather and post-toutlst senon layoffs in . Jan .iatJ tibove'd Orange County'• ubemployment figures upward. EDD'; monthly labor statistic r.epart bU4ld on a new method ol calc.ulatint unemployment set Oran,. COUntJ'a unemployment at. 5.1 perceo.t and estim•ted there 1rtn $4..400 unemployed cmanty ruldent.s who wanted jobs. Batel bit by the rains Utat clp:ipened the county in January wer• construction and •1ricultural WQl'kers. EDD'S fisures show tbal S,400 conatrucUon jobs were lost between December and January while tbe number of agricultural jobs dropped by 1,100. . State labor analysts also noted there-wu a d~llne of 6.000 ~ tall trtfte Jobs between December and J~uary, a drop caus~ bY the la;yoU of workers hired (or tbt Christmas season. . ' Orange County Supervisor Thomas Rltoy said ThUJ'tJday he will ask the dlat.ric~ atWmey lo "look Into" a poUUcal rJval's char1e that Riley's appointee to the County Plan o l n 1 Commi•lon hu violated •tale political campaian regulaUona. "l am eoing to send the whole thing over to the dislrict al· torney to find out what he <Tom Rogers) is talklni(about," Riley said. Rogers is a candidate for the Fifth District supervisorlal sent held by Riley. In a letter to Riley, Rogers charged that Planning Jarvis Option Co mmissio n e r William MllcDOUllill violated campaign re1ulatlon.s when be fatled to file a report in Orange County show-ma that be was co-chairman of a (undraising bre akfa!ll for Democratic State Assemblyman John Knox ot Richmond. A 1tatement filed by Knox in Sacramento showed the Sept 12 fundraising breakfast grossed $8,000 and netted $7,193 arter ex· penses. Because Knox reported the fundraising on h is campaign finance statement, state Fair Political Practices Commission apokesmea said "there is State ~Panel Backs Tax Tram/ er Bill By JERRY CLAUSEN OI ,,_ IMllY ~HM 5~11 An amended version of State Senate Bill-1 the proposed prop- erly tax· transfer law, was ap- proved, 8·4, Friday by the As- sembly Revenue and Taxation Committee. Two R epublicans and two Democ rats, including As- semblyman Ron Cordova. D·EI Toro, voted against passing the bill on to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee. Passage through the Ways and Means Committee would place the controvers ial bill. con- sidered the legislature's attempt to halt voter-passage or the Jarvis-Gann initiative <Prop. 13). would a~sure floor con- sideration The amended version or State Sen Peter Bchr's SB· l reduces the f1nanc1a l savin gs a homeowner could ex pect through this year's property tax- es but also C-uts the amount of ne\.11 tax dollars the measure "ould generate As amended, the hill would cut eurrent homeowner property tax bills by at least 40 percent in· stead of 50 percent. The major amendment s ub- stitutes a five percent profits tax on the sale of most single-family homes for a fi ve percent 1 transfer lax on gross income from the sale of owner.occupied homes. · E',.._ Page Al PARENTS. • elementary schools will move lo the new school in the fall. Another 132 youngsters at La Mad era a nd San Joaqurn elementary schools will be shift- ed to other ,schools. These children all live within the developing area of northern Mission Viejo. Because of all the new construction in the area. Ferguson said, the number of children there will probably be four times greater within a year. A neighborhood school is due to be built there in a few years. Until then, the youngsters will be bused lo schools with space. Ferguson said La Madera Is currently at capacity with about 695 s tudents. Wilhout the boundary changes, he said, the school would probably have about 962 students in September and about 1,200 students in the following year. The boundary revisions also indicate that all 9th through 12th graders who currently attend Mission Viejo and El Toro High Schools and live e~\ of the San Diego Freeway, will be going to Laguna Hills High School in the fall. Additionally, about 13 current El Toro students who llve In northern Mission Viejo, and all high school students who move. into the area in the fu,ure, will attend the new high school. ORANOa COAST se DAILY PILOT The new lax would generate about half the revenue or the original transfer-levy proposal. according to Revenue and Tax· ation Committee figures. Committee member Cordova had proposed ao amendment and supported another Wednes- day that would have softened the tax blow to Californians selling their homes. Both were defeat- ed , 7-4, in committee. The Orange Countian first s upported a motion that would have limited stale governmental spending, with excess laxes re· turned to taxpayers. When that proposal failed, Cordova's bid for graduating the fl\"c percent tax into operation m one percent increments was in- troduced. l}nder his plan, property transfer taxes during the first year wou,id be one percent on capital gains, two percent the second year and so on until It would reach five percent in the hflh year. Cordova said he is "opposed to any transfer tax on the sale of real property " but thal 1t ap· peared to him SB-1 "had all the indications or being lhe vehicle that will proceed through the legislative process." lie said he knew his opposilJon would not defeat the bill. "I had the obligation to serve my con· stituency by attempting to re· duce the i mpact o r the detrimental portions," he said. "The capital gains tax, as it now stands, would really dis- criminate against 1nd1v1duals who would have to sell in the fir~t three years," he s<11d. Fro•PageAJ NIXON •.. o ne has come as close as Haldeman in placing Nixon at the planning stage. Nixon, he writes. "sometimes seemed lo lose touch with reali· ty" on mattets pertaining to in· dustrialist Howa rd Hughes, whom he blamed for his election defeats in 19f30 and 1962. And the president long s us pected that Lawrence F. O'Brien was a paid Hughes lobbyist while serving as Democratic Party chairman "I believe it is almost certain that Nixon asked Colson to belp him 'nail' O'Brien," Haldeman writes. "Colson naturaUy turned to Hunt. And Hunt tned to do it by tapping O'Brien's telephone at the Watergate." E . Howard Hunt, a retired CIA agent with a long string of clandestine assignments, was Colson 's protege al I.he White House and the Nixon r e-ele<:tion committee. He and G. Gordon Liddy, the election committee's lawyer in charge or political in- telligence. recruited the five burglars who were caught inside Watergate and they were convict- ed with them. Colson denied Haldeman's charges that he and Nlxon or· dered the burglary. "False, it just didn't happen that way ... There was probably the most exhaustive lnve1UgaUon in the history of the Republic to determine if that hapl)4!ned and the investigation determined that it..(lld not happen;.• he.said Thurs· dqtnanABC-TVlntervie'f. Curtis Wolter Services Held Funeral hrvlcea were con- ducted toiday for lona·tlnto Lelsun WOrkl naldoot Curtil R. Wolter, Mr. Wolter, '71, died of a heart attact Wedriesday. 8om ht ll· llnola, he had lived In .Califomia A yean and was a retil'ed 11leeman for PluUc • Rubber Producta of Le» Aftleles. · Re ii adrv1ffd by hia w1Ia Marlln. Servie. were conducted b1 the l\n. Ed~ J. Caldwell at the O'Collllor Laa•n• Hiila Cba~. Lal\M'• ~UIJ. lmermtnt was at Fcireat uwn, OJendale. nothinit serious about the Oranae County over5iiJbl.'' They indicated, however, that MacJ)ougall and co-sponsor , form e r Irv ine Company President Ray Wat.aon, wlll be asked to file a statement in Otunge County. To day , Ma c Dou gal l acknowledged acting as co- chairman for the breakfast. "I don't see anylhlng wrong with that," he said. "l have known John Knox for 24 years and l don't know or anyone who has done more for munlcipal and county gov- ernments than he." "My long-time professional re- lationship with Knox is one based o n r es pect and admiration," MaeDougall said. He pomted out that he did not C'ontact any people to ask them to al tend the fund raiser. Nor did hl' sol1 c1t a n y Knox con- tributions. MacDougall said. "'I have no idea who was solicited and who did not r es pond to invitations," Mact>ougall said. ''The w h o l e thin g w as managed by Frank Michelena. He was the total staff •for the entire function," MacDougall said. The Knox disclosure statement s howed that it was Michelena who trans mitted the $7,193 fundraising profit to Knox. Riley was Curi ous about a comment in the Rogers letter lo him that said, "far more serious i s the fact that you and your planning commission er can shake down individuals who do busmess before the county for purposes of partisan polillcs." "I'm not go mg lo get down in the gutter with that (expletive deleted)," Riley said. The Ne wp ort Beach supervisor said h e merely !>to p11ed by the fundra1sing breakfast for a few minute~ because he "heard this guy had done good Ulings for Orange County." Among the $100 donors to the rundraisl'r was Rogers who ad m itted h e allt'nded the breakfast Fro• Page A I TORTURE. • anit dismembered." "He said that two bodies were buried there," said Mrs. Brown, a former employee of a bar the 5 4 year-old Douglas had operated. Police later. however. failed to find any bodies. "He said 1 could participate or I could become on e of the persons buned up there." she conlinul'd "Ile had the gun in his hand. I told him I would part1e1pate." Later, s he said, s he told Douglas she would not take part. After the testimony Giles asked. that Mrs. Brown's statements be stricken from the record. He charged that pros- C'Cu lor Wi1liam Morrisey ap· parenlly "intended to prosecute by s urprise." Giles contended the deputy district attorney had violated a court order which said the de· fense would be given copies of reports dealing with the case. Giles also objected lo other . parts of Mrs. Brown's testimony which ho said caught him by ~urprise. Those Included statements sbe attributed to Douglas that he had a contract due in November for five po mo-torture films and that Mrs. Brown would be paid $1,000 for each session in which she look part. Morrissey, however, argued s uccessfully that he had just learned of that testimony in a Wednesday evening telephone convenatlon with Mrs. Brown. As a result, Judge Mason Fenlon said he could see no evidence that the information was purposely withheld from Giles and it would be admitted tor the present. · During questioning, Giles ac- cused Mns. Brown or "changing your tesU.mooy lo lit what you thoueht the police wanted to hear after you bed had time to learn about tbe case.•• ,,....Page Al DOCTOR ••• had ca~ tbe lack ot oxyaen that led to the babf's death. He said hypoxia, an oxygen deficiency that is often found in otherwise hHlth)' premature bablea, could have been a factor in the cleaU\ of tho child. D•fenH attorney M 1lbour W1taon, who 11 aJso a pbyalclan. .c.ommen.Led after hla queaUontn1 of Benlrtchke th•t the defense Intends to call ltt owb pat.bololltl to COW'lter many ot tb• p.roeecuUon w!tneu• ~ CIUl\oOS. ..I'm not worried t,,y Mt t a&tmOQf," Watloll 1muec1. 0 & dldn't 1'1 • ctoveoa me." l Tb. lrlal will re.um• at t:ao !.Ill. Tuilday in Jlldp Jail* JL Turner'• PePartment 2$. • o.11, ~, ... ''•" -.. 'GIVE UP SOVEREIGNTY' Panama Speaker Veyaey Fro• Pagtt Al CANAL ... that the treaties unnecessanly give away $7 bilUon in capital in- vestments and $3 2 b1lhon in cash. Also, Veysey said his ex- perience ln running the canal zone leads him to doubt that the proposed commission of fi ve U.S. membe r s and f ou r Panamanian members could ef- fectively administer the zone un· til the year 2000. The former congressman also criticized what he called the un· s table and diclatot.ial gov. ernment of Gen. Omar"t'orrljos. ''Torrijos knows very little about political economy. He has made Panama something like a tropical version of New York Ci· ty," Veysey said. The result, he said, would be that the U.S. would have to bail out Panama in operating the canal within five years. H e said be believes the treaty should not contain a clause It now includes giving Panama the right to veto construction of an allernal1ve canal. even in another country. And he said there is no a!>surance the canal will be maint.ained as a neutral waterway. ··t susJ)(!cl that Cuba is very likelv to want to move in, m a military sense," Veysey said. "I really feel that we need a new relationship with Panama in regard to the Panama Canal," Veysey said. "I believe lhat change is in order, but that's a far cry from saying we ought lo ratify those treaties I.he way they were presented to the Senale." Riley Backed r By Chamber The Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce board o( directors have voted over - whelmingly lo endorse fifth dis- trict s upervisor Thomas ltiley in the June pnmary. The decision came as a result or an executive board rec- ommendation to the board or directors at the regular monthly meeting, Feb. 14. A chamber spokesman said a s pecial committee had been ap- pointed to make an· In-depth study of the supervisorial race. lindsay Tested LOS ANGELES CA P) -City Councilman Gilbert W. Lindsay, 77, was scheduled for several days or tests to determine why he collapsed outside the council chamber in City Hall Thursday. Playing P~litics • At MAC Meeting? By WILLIAM HODGE Of-Dally .......... Shades of the McCarthy era: Misslon Vlejo MAC member Kathleen Kelly must have thought that Tuesday when Chairman John Noble began reading a prepared dis- claimer befored Unil.ed OrganbaUon or Taxpayers Vice Chairman James Christo spoke. Christo appeared before lhe MAC to discuss his or· eanlzation's controversial property tax Umitallon in· itiaUve, the Jarvis·Gann amendment. Noble cautioned Christo that the MAC was not a political body but received .their authority from county supervisors to of· fer opinions on certain communJty Is- s ues. That meant, Noble said, that Christo would have to avoid certain political things (unnamed> in his d.s- cusslon of the Jarvis-Gaon amendment. MRS. KELLY. WHO HAD invited Christo, reddened. "I did not ask him here on a HOOO• political buts:• she fumed. "Thia discussion is simply in-lormaUonaJ. "You're being very unfair to this community-this amounts to looking under rocks Cor things that aren't there." Arter Christo'& discussion, which included numerous pluss for the controversial measure, Noble charged back to the MAC's agenda board and placed "county response" to the Jarvis-Gann amendment on lhe MAC's next three meeting agendas. • •• AND EVEN NOBLE couldn't avoid Christo's efforts to woo-the audience toward supporting I.he Jarvis-Gann measure. During an earlier discussion of a request to convert Mission Viejo's only apartment complex to condominiums, Noble complained that his daughter couldn't afford to buy a home. He was arguing in support or keeping the apartments since they were the only affordable housing in Mission Vie· jo for many people who wanted lo live there. When Christo got up lo speak before the MAC, his first comment was directed toward Noble: "I assure you after Proposition 13 (Jarvis-Gann) passes your daughter wm be able to a!fore a home.'' *** LINDA BROCKHOEFT'S social life ls suffering. Sbe's the nursery supervisor at Lion Country Safari who often is faced with taking four-legged young ini.o her bacbelorette's home to nurse them back to health. Linda's latest venture 1s an attempt to save the lone s urviving cheetah cuh of a litter of four rejected by their mother, Maude. Round-the-clock feeding with a baby bottle or a throat tube is a part or Linda's routine-not exactly the same as a date at one or I.he area's finer restaurants. The next week will tell whether lhe homebody bit is worth it. The park's veterinarian says the cub will go all the way if it survives that Jong. Los A.lisos Retaim Trimester Program Los Alisos Intermediate School is lo conlinue with its once-controversial trimester pro- gram, but the SaddJeback Valley Unified School District's two other intermediate schools are to remain qn the traditional sem ester schedule. District trustees agreed Wednesday to allow the Mission Viejo school to continue the pro- gram which breaks the regular school year into three semesters rather than two. The program generated con- troversy two years ago when trustees agreed to place all three schools on the trimester calendar as a pUol proJect for the 1976-77 school year. But two months later parents objected. and trustees decided to begin the pilot program only at Los Allsos. 1t. was then presumed tbat the program would be expanded to the other schools 1f st proved better than the traditional semester system. But l>r .. Joseph Platow, the district's d irector of pupil services who e\ aluated the pro- ~ram, said lhe trimester pro- gram proved neither superior · nor inferior to the traditional semester system. II owevcr, pa rents, students and teachers at Los Alisos favor the program, he suid. Surveys also indicated parents and students from La Paz and Serr ano intermediate schools do not support lbe program. The faculty al Serrano, however, are in stronJ( support of it. PASSWORD ... A good word passed around about a business is Invaluable. A bad word can be unfortunate. Our growing. success in the past 25 years has been due to the "'good words" and referrals sent to us by our customers. No amount of advertising can replace a personal recommendation. We are not infallible. but we are working towards that goal by giving our customers the best service and Quality possible. DEN'S o•t1111: iiiiilllitioii: ·custom draperies llnOleum • wood floor CO$fA MESA, CALIF. 9l627 • ,HONE 646·4838 -646-235~ "-'"" ............... KAREN SMITH, 9, TRIES CAROIO-VASCULAR TEST Or. Richard Reeae Guldea Student at Health Fair Stay Healthy Eader Students Know How .. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI ... ~If P'IMt s.- Early to bed and early to rise makes a person healthy, wealthy and wise, according to one old proverb, but there's a lot more to it than that, as kids at Huntington Beach's Eader Elementary School know. Youngsters participating in Thursday's Second Annual Eader School Health Fair declare you should also: -Sleep well, free from emotional turmoil. -Eat a balanced diet from the /our food groups. · -Exercise regularly. -Shun s moking like the plague. -Deplore and never ever use .irugs, except the family doctor- preicribed type. -Order milk or fruit juice when the bartender ask.s you: What'll ft be? -Maintain good personal hygiene habits. -Brush your teeth after every meal and see your dentist twice a vear for a checkup. But the message waa much more pointed than all that to many among the 575 youngsters and their families who helped organize or visited the Health Fair. The southeast city elementary school campus' good health 'Ihat's Some High Interest JERSEY CITY, N .J . (AP) -The $8.S in Charles Walsh's bank account belongs to him. But the $100,000 bank error he withdrew before dis· appearing belongs to a bank, officials say. An arrest warrant bas been issued for the quiet coin dealer who until re- cen.lly lived in the same house where be had irown up. Walsh, 52, began withdrawing the money frorn the bank Dec. 21 when a regular bank statement s~owed his meager account had ballooned to $100,085, said police Sgt. Ben Riccardi. show lnchlded many exhibits by pupils, some of them rather blunt and right to the heart of matters, even if hastily com· posed. "Jogln is r ily hithy for you becase it macse you stroog," proclaimed one poster created by a very young, very phonetic speller. "Eat right food and you should run every day. Then take a shower," said another piece or health advertising copy penned by an author identified only as Kristen. .. Room 6 Says Please! Cover Your Sneeze," declared another student display. · Room 18, which houses a pro- gram for children with learning handicaps, demonstrated the proceases of grinding w,bole wheat into edible morsels or nutrition. Titer ~served the hundreds of vt11it.ors a variety of wheat- based snacks. Health care agencies also pro- vided a variety of booths, dis· plays and exhibitions including demonstrations of certain routine items of medical equipment. A small child being treated by a thoughtless doctor, for ex· ample, can be terrified by a routine blood pressure test If it isn't explained what it ls. how it works and why it is needed. Nearly 20 agencies and or· ganizalions dealtng with the varioua health sciences and dis· cipllnes provided more sophisticated and graphic material on the care of the human body. The Orange County Lung As· soclallon, for example, dis- played two slices of human lung, I /20th of an inch thick, showing a healthy organ and then one show· ing the effects of smoking and air pollution. But perhaps the Eader School Health Fair's mos t pointed poster was contributed by an anonymous young artist. "Being Healthy Is Good For You," is all it sajd. Seven Indicted SAN DIEGO CAP) -A federal grand jury bas indicted seven people, including four from Ule Los An&eles area, on charges of transporting iUegal aliens and extortion. . lnDeatKs BRU$EIS, Belflum (AP>-A Roman Catholic nun baa been char1ed with mutderinc three elderly people by tnjectln1 them wlth overdoses of lbau.Un. offlclala said. Magistrate Leo Tas said Sister Godfrld41, a dtul addict, con- fessed to murdertna the three persons, aged 75 to 80 but did not explain why she killed them. He sald Thursday the tn- vestigaUon is continulni to see if she is Involved in o£her SUI· plcious deatba at a home Cor the elderly. Slater Godfrlda waa arrested last week on charges of theft, forgery and dru1 addiction. Police said she became Jddlcted to morphine alter sur1ery eight years ago for a brain tumor, and the earlier chargea were brought in connection with the theft of morphine and use of false documents to obtaln access to the drug. omctals said' orders have been issued to exhume a number of bodies of persons who died in the seriatric w,ard in a home for the e lderly in Wetteren, northern Belaium. Sister Godfrida, a member of the Apostolic Order ot the Holy Joseph, was in charge of the geriatric ward. Judiciary sources said there were about 10 suspicious deaths at the home. They said Slat.er Godfrida was suspected of hav- ing kUled some of her paUenta to steal their belongings and money which she needed to buy morphine. The nun waa d.ismbsed from her position at the home in August and she was confined to a private cllnc for treatmenL Judiciary authorities have or- dered her to undergo psychiatric examination. Trustees OK 35 Teaching Positions Saddleback Community College District trustees unan- imously have approved 35 teaching positions for the new Irvine campus. Before trustees approved the positions, this week, however, Superintendent Robert Lombardi promlaed the teachers won 'l be hired until the dhtrict'a financial situation is clear and the completlon ot the new north cam pus is certain. Several trustees expressed concern that the Jarvis initiative will pass when it is put before voters JlDle 6. If the initiative is paased, it would cut property taxes but reduce the coUege's in· come next year. Larry Taylor. board pres· ide nt,. warned that trustees may then be in a position or shifting teachers and even re- considering the new campus. H e also questioned whether teachers should be hired when the new fztclllty probably won't be completed In tlme for its scheduled fall opening. Although opening the new campus on schedule la "abeolute\y no longer a posslbili· ty," Lombardi s aid administrators are considering several options in meeting their commitment to residents living Jn the northern end of the dia· tr let. · He said these plans will be presented to trustees lat.er. But the auperlntendent said three to four months are needed to advertise for and interview teacben !or the new facility. He said prospective empl01ees will be told that the jobs are uncertain until the d.18- trl ct' s financial situation is known and the openlnl of the northern facility b definite. Hero Trucker Identified ;Sunday Pilot Offers n!~.~8!~1.8~=n~~~1the ·~ v• CB-radio voice which IUided a .. . e &uddelUy blinded truck drlver . OD~emporary I WS andbts40-tonr11to••afestop · on the Xansu Turnpike. · • · Jones, 80, reached at his home i Wathtngton'a blrtbda1 ~ ] Tbunday, aaJd he was "quite }"Hkeod may re,mtnd you of hla· 51 TNDAY'S BEST surprised .. to read about the in· FOrt but 5und1,y'1 Daily Pl1ot ~"' cldent In the Wichita Ea1le- will pre&lbtthesecontemponry _ _ Beacon. Stories aald the )opic1. anOQJmous driver fto helped · Tile lrvlae .1Co.mpany'a new Gilmoredllapfeared. ' DEATH AND Ul'B -TW ownen have iopped of! thetr big .Tones '4Jr tile tnleker, !4ssoclated Prw stories eon· spread til Montana and no one'• Ftabct1 O hoore of Grand ti'ast the' llvea of a man wbO sa1tn1 for bow much. Dally Rapids! Mich .• and tdenUned )¥ritea for metcena~1 and a P~lot writer Joanne •Reynolds blmae f at the voice that roman ~ bu dovoted her llte shares the utlmates of expert Gllfnore credited with aavin1 his 1':o llelplfta India'i d•Utute aocS apee\llators oD Sunday's Busl· Ule. ~ylq. nets &>•P· . I ESCAPE'S EASY -1'btntlnl ~ .aeema a bit ol the =? fteduced rares and a th~ 1JC>rld have made it all eaalet, • 10u•u aee ln the lead YOU •tori ~ m• and outs ot tra.vil. Dead Beat Finish This is the way two of the 40 yachts. Mirage and Secret Love, finished after l , 140 miles ot sailing in the San Diego to Manzanillo race. The race committee aboard the Mexican naval vessel <back· ground) declared Jt a dead heat. The dark hulled Mirage, skJppered by Les Harlander of Richmond, wound up as the Class B corrected time winner. <Related column, Page B6) Weeping Dunnnar Talks .............. Witness PromiAes .Truth LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - With tears in his eyes, Melvin Dummar promlsed to tell the truth, then unraveled a tale about his desert highway encounter with a man who al· le1edly ldentlfied himself as Howard Hughes. The jury in the Mormom Will trial listened to Dummar on Thursday and will hear the 34· year-old ex-gas station at· tendant again today. The jury ls trying to decide whether a purported Hushes will delivered by Dummar to Mormon Church headquarters in Salt Lake City la the real thing. . Dummar stands to Inherit one- sixteenth 0( the Hughes estate lf the will is ruled valid. "I 'm going to tell the truth," Dummar said, and tears welled in his eyes aa he admitted to ly- ing before. desert on bis way to Los Angeles one chilly night in 1961 when be saw a maolytngontheroad. "My first reaction was the man waa dead. Then he stanecl tomove .•• " Dummar, now a beer salesman in Ogden, Utah, says the man be picked up .. was skinny, tall, taller than I am ... Dummar says be Ja 5-f~lO. ••He had blood comm, out ot bi& ear." His pU11enger bad no coat. and •'he was shaking quite violently," ln the cold nl&bt. Dummer recalled. "Possibly half way to Vegas he was shaking. Then be calmed. down." Dummar said the man never explained hll predicament. HEU 'TELL TRUTH' Metvln Dummer Dummar testified that he was driving throueh the Nevada .. I remember asking him how he got out there. I don't re· member him telling me anythl.ng." eamellia Jest ival Seit. & 5181., Feb. 18-19 Cf..5:30 A beautiful display of nearly 100 different camellias presented throughout our 21h acres or landscaped selling area. Be sure to pick up a complimentary show program to guide your way through th1a once-a-year dazzling display. uwsa. •• $11.ft ~ • ~ ...S ailhr9 botll Sat. & S-. at l,... SMw • a..ctwes .. ·-·· y..., locaffoa .,,. A com~lete balanced fertlllzer for begonias, ferns. camellias, fuchsias, and other shade plants. An organic nitrogen base product f<?r long, slow feeding action. Contains calcium, sulfur, iron, manganese and other important minerals. Conditions alkaline soils. Apply in early spring. summer and fall. Ccu•••aFoodt ALSO FOA AZAl£AS. FUCHSIAS. BEGONIAS AND FERNS 5·10·!> ANALYSIS 10 lB. BAG Res:. U .19 SALE ~ 59 • P~ICE ..,. 6.e. .~, SAU NICI Eft91•Pri---Fully-blouomed plant. av.U.ble 1n myriad colors make e•cellent Jow border plant. for aey shady GI': f.~ sunny location. Blends well with camellias iA cape use. . .. ,... ~~ = 49c AJ.tr~loln Try th• new Armstron1 planter pactap • Jast plant carton and aD in soil. Avoid transplant failure or set-back by planting these well-dewiloped plants. . .. • ... SAU 4 99 P.....W....._...... SI.ft PIUCR S • •. COSTA Mii• OM.T . INSTANT LAWN J Roll out the green ~~.carpet with fresh sod from • 0 ' ~ • ... " VCCTOIUA ~-· ~. FOUNTAIN VALLEY 11420 •OOIHUHf IOUMf Al .. YAU.IY Dflllf6 ............... ....,J '"OHi: t6W771 ONM7DAYS ., .............. r. :.·. Ja.t .::.-~~;.~outing j • .: • THE BIG STEAL: Kenny Hahn, the long-time Loi Anaeles County supervisor, llPoke today lllte a man who bad just been rudely awakened by a sneak thief. He figured he was beina burglarized by Oran1e County. Hahn was llJce a vJcUm who awakened to realize the thief was already i n h i s darkened bedroom, fleeine with bis trousers and wallet. He was be- .ing fleeced while in a ·h e l p 1 e s ·s p r o n e position. """" Thus Hahn did what any veteran politician would do un- der the circums tances. He called a press conference. Then he screamed roul, long and loud. THE ALLEGED THIEVERY, in Hahn's eyes, was the fact that Orange County is attempting to lure away his professional football team, known as the Rams. For those gentle readers unac- quainted with this gridiron ag- gregation, it should be noted that the Rams play football Jn Los Angeles wilhin an aging, crum pting 46·year·old structure called the Coliseum. It is almost in worse shape than the original, which is located in Rome, Italy. The dilapidated condition of this place has become an ir- ritant to the Rams' owner, one Carroll Rosenbloom. He has been pleading with the CoHseum Com mission, of whi ch the aforementioned Hahn is vice pres ident, to nx up the old dump. BUT ALAS, the LA com- mission has been more pre-occupied with fixing the place so it can lure the 1984 Olym- pi cs to the t h e Never mind what the football team needs. They already bad llOSIM•LOOM the football team. Had may be right. That's where Orange County got into Mexico Eyes Use of Pot In Therapy SANTA FE. N.M. <AP) -The New Mexico Legislature ap· proved a bill Thursday that would legalize marijuana use as a therapeutic drug under strict controls. SUPPORTERS had cited re- cent research indicating t hat the use of marijuana can alleviate the side effects or cancer chemotherapy and ease the physical effects or glaucoma. A patient qualification review board or three physicians would be established under the state Hea 1th and Environment Department. The physicians would review applications from persons seeking to participate in a health reseBrch program and determine whether they qualify. T HE D IRECTOR of the Health and Envtronment Department would be authoriied to contract with the National Institute on Drug Abuse for doses of marijuana to be made available to those patients in the program. The initial beneficiary of the bill would be a 26-year·old U n iversity of New MeJtico atudenl, Lynn Pierson. the pleture. A large deletatlon of Oranie County ludera have now HJd Mr. RoeenbJoom, •Ir. how would you llke to move your fine football aquad down here to Orange County? Play your games in our nice, new, clean, pretty Anaheim Stadium? To sweeten the deal, Anaheim Stadi\UD officials have promlaed to expand Anaheim Stadium's seating capacity so it wUI house 7~.000 Ram fans in comfort. Anaheim Stadium has other side benefits when compared to the aged LA Coliseum. Fans can find a clean rest room where the toilets actually flush. They can park outside and figure there's a good chance t-0 return and find their hubcaps, tires and wheels still on the car. MR. ROSENBLOOM has visit· ed Anaheim Stadium and been wooed extensively. He was served dessert upon one oc- casion wherein miniature Ram helmets were used as dessert cups. It was suggested these novelties might go over big in the concession stands. Mr. ·Rosenbloom was reportedly pleased and delighted. All of this wooing apparently e lud ed the attention of LA Supervisor Hahn unUl the Orange County boosters took out a full-page ad in the LA Times, urging Rosenbloom and bis Rams to make the move to Anaheim. THIS WAS WHEN Hahn suddenly woke up. He must have still been fuzzy in the head. He didn't know wh at crime was be· ing committed. He called it kidnapping. A terrible error. Kenny just can't recopize a real-life romance when be sees _ 1t happening before his very eyes. His Winning 'Ihreatens Fire Pension NEW YORK CAP) -Gary Muhrclce retired from the New Yor~ Fire Depart ment four years ago and began collecting an $11,8~2 annu al pension, 'claiming a back injury. But the dlsabilitY didn't keep him from winning :a race up 85 nights of stairs in the Empire State Build- ing. The fire department is in- vestigating. 'MUBRCKE, 37, topped a field or 14 marathon runners i,n Tuesday's contest, climbing t.be 1,575 steps in 12 minutes and 32 seconds. 'the department confirmed Thursday that Muhrcke joined in 1962 and claimed that the in- jury occurred while fighting a fire in Queens. "He applied for and received a three-quarter pay disabtUty pension, which was granted on July 23, 1973," said an un· identified depart ment spokesman. "WE ARE conductin1 an In- vestigation," said First Deputy Fire Commissioner Stephen. Murphy, acting chairman of the department's Pension Fund Board. "The case will be placed on the agenda of' our next meeting on Feb. 28, and a determination will be· made at that time whether Mr. Muhrcke should be reexamined.'' MUHRCKE SAID he could justify the disability pension, but added that .. r d go back on active duty in a minute if they'd let me~" GRANTEO PENSION Paula QroH man Disnllssed Transsexual Pensioned TRENTON, N .J . CAP) - Paula Grossman, a teacher who was fired almost seven years a go a ft er a sex change operation, says she is· not dis- abled, but she's taking a ·dis- ability pension as partial com- pensation for the trouble she's been through. "I'm very happy with the de- cision -at leaat I won that much of the case at last," she said Thursday after a New Jersey appeals court awarded her the pension. THE APPELLATE Division of Superior Court, which in 1974 up.. held her dismissal from the 'Bernards Township school system, said the sex change operation had resulted in a physical incapacity to teach. It was not the operation itself' that made her incapacitated, the court said, but the fact that no school district would hire a transsexual. "I'm not'disabled," she said, "The state disabled me and they didn't want to pay me for it." THE APPEALS court agreed that if 'Ms. Grossman bad always been a woman and never bSd tbe transsexual operation· shp would be mentally and physically fit to perform her duties as a teacher. Her condition amounted to a physical disability under state pension laws, the court ruled unanimously. Ms. Grossman, who was then· Paul Grossman, had the sex change operation in March 1971 and was fired a few months later from ber tenured teaching job. She currenUy works for the city of Plainfield as a community services planner. TOE COURT decision over- ruled the rejection of her dis- a blll ty pension by the state Teacbera Peuloo and Annuity Fund , w h ich he l d th e Legislature did not Intend to consider emotional effects on students when it devised the dis- ablllty pension prosram. ~ D.-,PllofN'My ........... Mondav·FndlY' 11 vou do not have )'OUf l)llOef' by 6·30 pm. Cllll belore 7 p.m. aind )'OUr COPY Wltl be deltwerecl S.turdly end Sunday II yo11 do no1 recllVe yoor coe>v by 8 a.m.. Cllll before 10 a.m. and )IOU( OOPY will be del<-ed. ~T .. lft 111 Most Orange Coun1y Area MJ•UJl Northwest Hunt1no1on Beach and Wdlmlr,.19' • . .. '4o-12U San Oementt. Capletreno Beach San Juan Caplatra~\. Dana Point. SQUlh Lalj\lna. lagun• Niguel • , • 4'Mt00 Snow Buries Panhandle .. '. . .. ACTING F BI Director James Adams s aid in Washington, D.C., that Bundy was wanted tor questioning In 35 other sex slay-ings that began in California 10 1969, extended throughout the Pacific Northwest and into Utah and Colorado. Bundy was arrested Wednes- day at 1:30 a.m. when Pensacola patrolman Davtd Lee stopped a man in a Volkswagen that had been reported stolen in Tallahassee earlier this month. THE MAN SCUFFLED with the officer, who fired two shots before subduing the man. The man was charged with resistiJlg arrest and possession of stolen property, including the car, a television set and charge cards reportedly belonging to Florida State women. ·. . .............. The priaoner eave his name as Kenneth Raymond Misner, 29, of Tallahassee. He carried . Mis· ner 's identification papers, police said. SUSPECT IN CUSTODY Theodore Robert Bundy BUT TH E REAL Kenneth Misner, a former Florida State track star, soon came forward in Tallahassee, where be is attend- ing graduate school. Detective Norman Chapman said police developed a htmch late Thursday afternoon their prisoner might be Bundy. They summoned FBI agents, who ar- rived two hours later with want- ed posters and flo&erprints. BUND\''S ARREST came 30 days after the Chi Omega kill· ings. Two other sorority sisters and another female student liv- ing nearby wete badly beaten the same night. ."We k n o w be was i n Tallahassee during the month of' January," said Smith.. "But at this time we can't be sure he was in Tallahassee on Jan. 15 when the ldlli.ngs too.k place." 8011£ OF THE murders Io Brighten your day! E•ch day tft• O•lly Piiot add• • llttl• brlghtn••• to your llf• with colorful columnlata, I nteresting feeturea, eye<atchfng picture• -and of course, 16 humor pitnef 1 and com1c1. Our own Tom "'urphf ne poke a gentle fun •t tft• IHe and polltlca along th• Orange Coast, In his wry "Just Co•atlng" column. Raya of hope and humor can be found Jn tft• new Featuring page• of the Dally Piiot. Th•t 11 where Ann t.ndetl gfvea her cogent end pungent 9dvlce. And Erma Bombeck turn• houHhold happenlnga Into hll•rtty. (And don't mfH your horQCC>pel) On Seturdaya., children find game• and glgglea In Uncle Len-. Comer, whlle edult• turn to Herb Ceen'• entert•lnlnt column trom San Francisco. Th• txtght, new, ••tier-to-read pages of '-• Delly Piiot brtng you the news you Med. Information you cen ut• and tome day-brightening ft'lomentt. Keep up wllh your WCMtd and have • good ttme doing It, wfth the DAILY PILOT NATION /WEATHE'4 B UNDY'S ONLY coDVicUon bas been In the November 197• kidnapplng of Carol DaRODcbe in a Salt Lake City suburb. She was lured to a tan Volkswagen by a man who posed as a de-tective in a shopping mall. Miss DaRoncbe identified Bundy at bls trial as the man who abducted her and whotried to handcuff her a nd assault her with a steel bar. Officers in Utah and Colorado later satd they had linked Bund;y to a series of missing an d m urdered girls -all of whom 1 resembled each other -in late 1973 andl!r74. Body.Found In Bus Depot CORDOBA, Argentina (AP) - Bus company employees mak· , ing a routine inspection of un- claimed packages found "the body o! a man wrapped in sheets of plastic and bounJ neaUy in brown paper and nylon cord, the news agency NoUcias Argen- tina& reports. The bulky package was de- livered to the cos.npany's Buenos Aires terminal lS months ago by an unidentified man. the report said. The package was consigned to an addr-ess in Salta, in northern Argentina, but the address was - fictitious. So was the Buenos Aires address given by the s~nder. • Trucklll Purcllue Eyed SANF'i'"ANCISCO (AP) -Of· flclall of a mljor New Jersly truck- tni firm HY tbey have been ap. proacbed about purchutnr the linanciMly troubled Pacilio Far iast Line. Executives of A-P .. A Tran1port Corp., of North Beraen,. N.J., c:on- finned that the)' mtl whn PEEL ot. Ileen in Ne-tW York for "preUmlnary dlsculllom about UHt lblppCns ._.._. future." . No detallt of the talkl we... re.a Y••led. A·P·A I.I a !naJor truckln!I Une -iD New En1Jand, New Jmey. and Pennsylvania with reveau ... which exceeded $5'0 mUlion I.a,..,.. DAIL y ""-OT .. Some Speciitl Rules Applie d .. WldQws, Tt'idoweia and ti.ecb ot houaebold.s can lake· advanta10 ol apectal locomt tu cuJea, uys Commer~ Clearlrit !fouae, aaUooal reportlttJ autbortly oo tu and bulioeulaw., • Widows or wtdow4trt ean conUnue to pay tho rates ap- pl7ln1 to joiot return• for two years after spOUI~ death. ~.. • READS OF ROU8EHOLDS PAY ON A schedule Ot. ratn Uuat at"e approxJmately midway between those of an IJidJvidual filing a separate return and a married couptl fllln• • jolnt return. • An unmarried widow or widower whose 1pouae died in lt75 or 19'78 and who maintains a bousebold as th• princlpel place of abode of a dependent ch.ltd or JtepchH~ will be tued on the 1&'71 return at tbe same rates imposeCI on a married couple ftl. lne Jointly~ i.f at th time of the 1pouae'• ( j· death, the couple wu rr ... v 1JPS entitled to ftle a joint . A.44 return. An lndlvtdual la • "-------------------~ bead of houaebold Ube or she ls unmlU'rled et tbe end of the year, la not a 1urviv· Ing appuse and maintain• as~ home a household wb.lch is the principal place of abode of (a) a child, including a stepc;hlld. grandchild, foster child or an adopted child, even though the child It not a d•nden_tLor (b) any other related penon for whom the qualifying individual is entitled to a deduction for an uempUon, unless the de· ductloo arises from a multlple support a1reement. He or· she must alao fumlsb more than ball or the cost of maintabiliie the household. AN UNMAJil.IED TAXPAYEJl IS ALSO A bead of housebold 11 he or sbe maintains for hls or her mother, father or both, a bousebold t.bat Is their bome even thoup the taxpayer lives ebewbere. However, at least one of °'8 parenta must have less than $'1SO gross income, and the taxpayer must have contributed over haU of that parent) support. A married 11)4Jvldual wbo lives apart from bis or her spouae during the entire tax year may qualily for head.of· bouaebold status If be or she: (1) files a separate inco~ tax relUm, (2) maintains a home for a dependent son. daughter. stepson or stepdaughter for the tax year anil (3) furnishes more than balf of the cost of maintainllll the bouaehold. .. · Generally. a man1ed lndMdual ls not entitled to the bead~of·bousebold benefits. However, he or she can be a head of bowlebold tr married to a non-resident alien. An in· dlvidual who la le1a11Y separated or divorced ia not COO· aldered as married. However, a person is considered married even though bia or her spouse dies durine the year. College Offers Business Classes Saddleback College•s Forums for Learniag provam will include two couraea dealened for prospective amall bualnea owners: . Pre-business seminars will be orrered S-aturday, May 13 from 8:30 •.m. 4 p.m. fo room 813 ol the scJence and math building oa the Mission Viejo campus. A SEllJNA.R ON STAaTING A business 'Will be of· rered Feb. 2S and May 2IO &om 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the same room. lt a1lo wU1 be offered oa March 28 and APril &, from 8:45 to 10 p.m. lD multi-purpose room C at Kiasion vreJo Jltgb Seboe11. · The pre-business seminars, cosponsored by the college and the Servtce Corps of Ret1ted Executives, will cover personal and financial factors. selection of buslaes1 locations. lqal aspects, taxes, licenses and business re-cordlnp. Pre-registntlon lee Is $10 a person or $17 for couples. IC space Is available, registration will be taken at the door for $12 a person or $24 for couples. PARTICIPANTS IN THE start-your.own-business sessions Will learn how to evaluate business trends and make theirplan1 work. The pre-reglstratlon cost or these seminars is sis a person or $25 for couples. If space is available, regi.!tralioa will be accepted at the door for $17 a person or $34 for couples. People may pre-register ln person Iii Building Q on tbe lower campua or by mail to Saoa1eoa.c1t (.;OUege Community Services, 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission VI ejo 92875. More information may be obtained by calling the Community Services office at 831-7532 or 495-4950, u -t.enslon 2166. Mexico Predicts Increase in Oil · TAKING STOCK ( ------~""!'"" __________ __.. LONDON (AP) -Every two days, aay BriUsb press reports, Big J ohn Knl1ht dons a track suit and races over the ru11ed Comiah hllh of southwest Eneland to vialt his neighbor, who 11 alao his com- mon-law wife and the mother of 11 of the 20 children in his extended houaeh.old. · After a 48-hour visit with Clare, 37, the newspapers say, be jogs t wo miles back to his own rustic cottaee to be with his 33-year-old legal wife, Carole, a nd their children. The ninth weighed in at more than 12 pounds Sunday. THE 4Z·YEAB·OLD former civil servant supports his stair·st.ep brood through state welfare payments totaling $250.57 a week, according to the rePQrts. ma.rrlaie and alx by Knlabt. is ex- pecting her 12th child ln April. CLARE SAJD THAT since the bewspaper articles beean appear. ing the family bas been plagued by letten from angry Britons who criUcize thelr lifestyle and means of financial support, the Daily Mirror reported. ''We have no l uxuries and the money cover!t fhe bare es- sentials,'' the big-selling tabloid quoted her as saying. Government welfare spokesman Keith Lockwood refused to discuss individual cases, but noted that child -benefit payments equal about $3 per child per week and that there is a range of other •'dis· cretionary" benefits. NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A husband does not leially have the sole say in h andllne a couple's property,a s tate judge bas ruled tn declaring, unconattt u tlon a l Lou laiana'a u niq ue "bead and mast.er" law. a survivor of the days of Spanish machismo. Best Feet Foracard~ "I'm no scrounger," London's Daily Mirror quoted Knight as saying. "I'd gladly work if someone offered me a job I'd like -like teaching, or lecturing on re- ligious leaching," he reportedly said. THE DAILY MIRROR quoted both of Knight's wives as saying t hey do not believe in con- traception and ptan to have more children. ··u·s not that there are too many people in._ the world," added their husband. "It's the way ttifngs are shared out that's wrong." The law, embedded in Loulalana's legal code ln the late 1700s, when Spain held a huge area, states: ''The husband is the bead and m uter of the partnership or com. mun ity of gains. He administers its effects, disposes of the. revenue which they produce, and may alienate the~by an onerous tiUe, without t he consent and permission of his wife." NOT SO, SAID Civil District Judge Gerald Three members of the San Gorgonio High School's girls swimming team in San Bernardino float 1n the school pool with their legs draped over the deck. San • Bernardino was enjoying its first sunny day after several successive rainstorms. His companion Clare, who has five children by an earlier Federoll in a ruling in a -:------------__,.------.jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili._ilii. suit brought by Corpus Christi Parisb Cr edit E d of Outhouse ~--------------------------"Union against Selin a ll Martin and Lawren~e PUBLIC AUCTION ' TO THE TRADE & PUBLIC REMOVED FROM SOUTH AFRICAN CUSTOMS NO. US 1257 ~+.-PUBLIC "°~t>" AUCTION U.S. CUSTOMS STOPPED HANDMADE ORIENTAL CARPETS & RUGS shipment entry #78-136671, 27 bales date of entry 12/1/77 stoPped by U.S. Customs under section 304.T.A. ma1Xmgs and RELEASED FOR SALE on 1116178. We will auction the above shipment of fine wools A silks A others to recover various charges incurred due to long delay in clearance. AUCTIOHWIU TUE PLACE SUNDAY FEllUAIY 19 AT 2:00 P.M. HOUDAYIMH HOITH IALUOOM 25205 LA PA% ID. LAGUMA HIW, CAUF. I Amnesia A Ruse? DENVER CAP> Relatives of a man hospitalized for amnesia say he has pretended to lose his memory several times to get free room and board. David Drolet, 24, of Hollywood, Fla., ap-peared at a Denver hospital several weeks ago where he claimed he did not remember anything since his dls· charge from the Army at Fort Dix, N.J., in 1972. When Drolet's story received national at· ten tion this week his m other , Mrs. Bobby Hunter. was locat ed throug h a F l orida newspaper. "He doesn't have amnesia," she said. Joseph Martin J r. of N~~00~~~times there Era for Army Post? is utterly no justification . • for the stat.e to arbitrari· ly erant to the husband LAWTON, Okla. <AP) -Fort Sill may soon the sole administration lose the dubious distinction of being the only Army of p r op ert y legally postin the nation with outhouses. owned in common, and in fact as often as not actually produced by the joint earnings o f husband and wife," he said. MARTIN SIGNED a mortgage In 1974, over his wife's protests, as collateral for a SS,000 loan be took ou.t for his mother. Martin was then job· less and his wife was the family breadwinner. Mrs. Martin, since div'orced from Martin, was told by the loan company that her r.on· sent was not n•sary lo make the not.e ll'gal. WHEN NO payments were made on the loan, Sen. Henry Bellmon, R-Okla .• announced that $17.3 million bas been included ln a proposed budget of the Senate Budget Committee to replace the old facilities at the post with a new trainee barracks complex. Currently the 4,000 soldiers who undergo Fort Sill's 13-week ar tillery course are housed in barracks built in 1942 and designed to last five years. The 1.2S barracks have no indoor latrines, and personal hygiene is attended t<> in 40 outbulld scattered throughout the complex. Survey Tallies De~ns WASHINGTON (AP)-Tbenumberofllonian Catholic permanent deacona in the U.S. totals. 2,387, according to an annual survey by a bishops' committee. • 16 BALES HAND MADE ORIENT AL RUGS The above shipment was ordered by Teheran House (PTY) L TO of JHB South Africa ·arrived Durban 11/4/17 Via Good Hope casue voyage No. 81. Due to financial dlfflcultles the shipment could not clear South African customs. The entl,.. shl~ ment was sent to Los Angeles on the Nedlloyd Kingston for complete llquldatlon to raise money to pay cost Incurred. Note: This shipment was hand picked and contains ve111 fine ~rpets In varying qualltles and sizes. This Is a great ~ portunlty to acquire oriental rugs. THE AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACE SUNDAY,FEBRUARY10 AT1 PM VIEW DAY OF AUCTION 12 PM NEWPORTEA INN . · 1107 JAMBOREE RD., NEWPORT BEACH AUCTIONEER R. ASHER Info: (213) 995·8323 Terms can Collect Cash • Check IMFO IJIJI tll-1142 ---------·the company moved to Perman~t deacons, a role restored ln the church in 1967, may perform m&Qf liturgical duties other than celebratiq Holy Communlon. CATALOGUES AVAILABLE AT AUCTION SPONSORED BY A & A ORIENTAL RUGS INC. 14141 VENTURA BLVD., SH£AMAH OAKS, CA. C.11 642-6171. Put • ,.,., word• to work for ou. seize the home. When that move was blocked, the loan company sued the Martins. at1he Automobile! ANAHEIM CONVEHT10N CENTER ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF. -The biggest 11nd best ever ORANGE COUNTY INTERNATIONAL AUTO SHOW opens TODAY Friday, Feb. J7th. Anaheim Convent ion Center and runs through Monday. Feb. 20th, Washington's Birthday, a holiday for most people. New hours this year: 10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m., daily. This is the 14th year for the Orange County International Auto Show; many innovations have been incorporated in this ye11's show, however, including a truly outstandin& collection of Concours d'Elegance cars, most oC which are award winners at other shows throu&hout the nation. Herc arc some of the major exhibits: THE U.S.A. CARS r ord. the .. beuer Idea" people, have two new entries 10 rheir 1978 lineup -the Fairmount and Fiest3. ,\lso fe3tured will be the Corrida, a special c~p.:rjnicnt3l model which may be a trend·setter jn the i11dustry i,. the future. A \!ar that many people feel is destined to become i modern classic. Oldsmobile's Cutlass Supreme, will Jr~ss up the Oldsmobile display, and visitot's wmget :a l\)\lk :it tlie die.set entries ln Oldsmobile's J 978 line u( iull·slze luxury automobiles. Che\-rolet is coming forward with its new size, new siyle. ond new models for 1978, which includes a third·scneratilln Monte Catlo. Topping Chevy's ex- hibit will be n Caprice Classic. Another GM entree is the 1978 edition o( Pontiac cars. ltie,hlighted by the new Graod Prix., a Juxurio~ Bonne\•cllle. hQl new Flrebirds, a sporty Utile Swl· t ird. :and the PhoeniX U . ' Chrysler Corporation's exhibit 1pace II the largest "lt>are footage area ever tabn by ont exhibitor at cl~ <mni:e County Auto Show. 'They will be fea· . ~ turina their aew.Dodl'll Omru and Jl2ymouth's new Hom.oa. THE IMPORTS lmponed cars play a big part in Orange County"!> Auto Show for 1978, one reason why the shl.lw 1s called an "International" auto show. Datsun will be showing its best all·aroun<l Datsun, the new 510. And, visitors to the Datsun displ3y will have an opportunity to have their portraits made in 60 seconds by a computer. Known as Instant lma£e. the computer has bern stopping foot traffic at shows and convenllons all over the country. Subaru is highlighting the BRAT, the fun -on• wheels off-road car that is anticipated to capture the leisure-minded. recreation-oriented people of Orange County. The Honda people are going all out in their e~hibit plans and will be featuring six models. From the hean of Germany comes \\hat ther ter~ the "ultimate driving maclune." the B\IW luxury sedan which achieved an impressive re~·ord on a race track. the Nurburitring. Toyota will have a complete lineup o( all their imports, as will Saab, Volksw1acn, Porsche, Mazda, Alfa Rome°' ud Peuaeot cars. Rolly-Royce, con· sidered the world's leader in luxury cars, ":Ill be . there. , THE MOVIE CARS With the cooperation of the Mmie W1irld ofC'u·~. Charlie Chapl!n's Rolls-Royce will bq displared ut Lhe Orange County Auto Show. And thcro's more: The Beatles' lentley. and the •·veal.'.~ Rat:· ~ ~ar which will delight lh¢ kids . both will oo ll~re.-t\l•o. a rare Presidential parade c:11r. n 1939 P.ack:ard +Jo)1r conve.rtible sedan with bullet·proor windows, \\ill ~ displayed. That one was f rankUn Ocllln1l Roum\llt's favorite car.•lrut classk. Thc~ls mofe. But you must come to the An~hclm Convention Center to.-. It all. Make a dato. Plan to atte~d tht Oran• County lntematlonal Autu Slh>w February 17·20, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. They caa4Ntpehe. officiate at maniaa• and [ ] funerals and preach, amoaa Otbel' tb1ql. ac:Uq .. " assistants to parish priests. ---1-N-F_O_R_M_S Jn fhe ~--·· ~, ~liHS~brOOhure · ~ f: ~Id sa11e you a~ ;. ' in the hospital. j (or1keep your costs down if you do have to go.) Most people don•t think about hospital costs until after the blll arrives. But It's when you•re active and healthy that yOu can do the most to hold down rising costs. By staying well and tak- ing advantage~f less costly services when you can. Learn more In this FREE brochure from the Hospital Council of Southern CallfomJa. It con- tains practical lnfonnatlon you should.know before you have to go to the hospital. ----~---------~--Z1p ______ __ M§llto: H08fltal Councll of Southern C:.Ufomta r